had also been published
lately. I was truly pleased to hear this.
On my next visit to town we met at a lunch. I saw a young man of
medium
stature and
slender build, with very steady, penetrating
blue eyes, the eyes of a being who not only sees
visions but can
brood over them to some purpose.
He had indeed a wonderful power of
vision, which he
applied to the
things of this earth and of our
mortalhumanity with a penetrating
force that seemed to reach, within life's appearances and forms,
the very spirit of life's truth. His
ignorance of the world at
large--he had seen very little of it--did not stand in the way of
his
imaginative grasp of facts, events, and
picturesque men.
His manner was very quiet, his
personality at first sight
interesting, and he talked slowly with an intonation which on some
people,
mainly Americans, had, I believe, a jarring effect. But
not on me. Whatever he said had a personal note, and he expressed
himself with a
graphicsimplicity which was
extremely engaging. He
knew little of
literature, either of his own country or of any
other, but he was himself a wonderful artist in words
whenever he
took a pen into his hand. Then his gift came out--and it was seen
then to be much more than mere
felicity of language. His
impressionism of
phrase went really deeper than the surface. In
his
writing he was very sure of his effects. I don't think he was
ever in doubt about what he could do. Yet it often seemed to me
that he was but half aware of the
exceptional" target="_blank" title="a.异常的,特别的">
exceptional quality of his
achievement.
This
achievement was curtailed by his early death. It was a great
loss to his friends, but perhaps not so much to
literature. I
think that he had given his
measure fully in the few books he had
the time to write. Let me not be misunderstood: the loss was
great, but it was the loss of the delight his art could give, not
the loss of any further possible
revelation. As to himself, who
can say how much he gained or lost by quitting so early this world
of the living, which he knew how to set before us in the terms of
his own
artisticvision? Perhaps he did not lose a great deal.
The
recognition he was accorded was rather
languid and given him
grudgingly. The worthiest
welcome he secured for his tales in this
country was from Mr. W. Henley in the NEW REVIEW and later, towards
the end of his life, from the late Mr. William Blackwood in his
magazine. For the rest I must say that during his
sojourn in
England he had the
misfortune to be, as the French say, MAL
ENTOURE. He was beset by people who understood not the quality of
his
genius and were antagonistic to the deeper
fineness of his
nature. Some of them have died since, but dead or alive they are
not worth
speaking about now. I don't think he had any illusions
about them himself: yet there was a
strain of good-nature and
perhaps of
weakness in his
character which prevented him from
shaking himself free from their
worthless and patronising
attentions, which in those days caused me much secret irritation
whenever I stayed with him in either of his English homes. My wife
and I like best to remember him riding to meet us at the gate of
the Park at Brede. Born master of his
sincere impressions, he was
also a born
horseman. He never appeared so happy or so much to
advantage as on the back of a horse. He had formed the
project of
teaching my
eldest boy to ride, and
meantime, when the child was
about two years old, presented him with his first dog.
I saw Stephen Crane a few days after his
arrival in London. I saw
him for the last time on his last day in England. It was in Dover,
in a big hotel, in a bedroom with a large window looking on to the
sea. He had been very ill and Mrs. Crane was
taking him to some
place in Germany, but one glance at that wasted face was enough to
tell me that it was the most
forlorn of all hopes. The last words
he breathed out to me were: "I am tired. Give my love to your
wife and child." When I stopped at the door for another look I saw
that he had turned his head on the pillow and was staring wistfully
out of the window at the sails of a
cutter yacht that glided slowly
across the frame, like a dim shadow against the grey sky.
Those who have read his little tale, "Horses," and the story, "The
Open Boat," in the
volume of that name, know with what fine
understanding he loved horses and the sea. And his passage on this
earth was like that of a
horseman riding
swiftly in the dawn of a
day fated to be short and without sunshine.
TALES OF THE SEA--1898
It is by his
irresistible power to reach the
adventurous side in
the
character, not only of his own, but of all nations, that
Marryat is largely human. He is the enslaver of youth, not by the
literary artifices of
presentation, but by the natural glamour of
his own
temperament. To his young heroes the
beginning of life is
a splendid and
warlike lark,
ending at last in
inheritance and
marriage. His novels are not the
outcome of his art, but of his
character, like the deeds that make up his record of naval service.
To the artist his work is interesting as a completely successful
expression of an un
artistic nature. It is
absolutelyamazing to
us, as the disclosure of the spirit animating the
stirring time
when the nineteenth century was young. There is an air of fable
about it. Its loss would be irreparable, like the curtailment of
national story or the loss of an
historicaldocument. It is the
beginning and the embodiment of an inspiring
tradition.
To this
writer of the sea the sea was not an element. It was a
stage, where was displayed an
exhibition of
valour, and of such
achievement as the world had never seen before. The
greatness of
that
achievement cannot be
pronouncedimaginary, since its reality
has
affected the destinies of nations;
nevertheless, in its
grandeur it has all the remoteness of an ideal. History preserves
the
skeleton of facts and, here and there, a figure or a name; but
it is in Marryat's novels that we find the mass of the nameless,
that we see them in the flesh, that we
obtain a
glimpse of the
everyday life and an
insight into the spirit animating the crowd of
obscure men who knew how to build for their country such a shining
monument of memories.
Marryat is really a
writer of the Service. What sets him apart is
his
fidelity. His pen serves his country as well as did his
professional skill and his
renowned courage. His figures move
about between water and sky, and the water and the sky are there
only to frame the deeds of the Service. His novels, like