登陆注册
18998600000080

第80章

Whether the facts and doctrines contained in the Bible were true or false was not the question that appealed to me; it was rather that they had been presented to me so often and had sunken into me so far that, as someone has said, they 'lay bedridden in the dormitory of the soul', and made no impression of any kind upon me.

It often amazed me, and I am still unable to understand the fact, that my Father, through his long life--or until nearly the close of it--continued to take an eager pleasure in the text of the Bible. As I think I have already said, before he reached middle life, he had committed practically the whole of it to memory, and if started anywhere, even in a Minor Prophet, he could go on without a break as long as ever he was inclined for that exercise. He, therefore, at no time can have been assailed by the satiety of which I have spoken, and that it came so soon to me Imust take simply as an indication of difference of temperament.

It was not possible, even through the dark glass of correspondence, to deceive his eagle eye in this matter, and his suspicions accordingly took another turn. He conceived me to have become, or to be becoming, a victim of 'the infidelity of the age.'

In this new difficulty, he appealed to forms of modern literature by the side of which the least attractive pages of Leviticus or Deuteronomy struck me as even thrilling. In particular, he urged upon me a work, then just published, called The Continuity of Scripture by William Page Wood, afterwards Lord Chancellor Hatherley. I do not know why he supposed that the lucubrations of an exemplary lawyer, delivered in a style that was like the trickling of sawdust, would succeed in rousing emotions which the glorious rhetoric of the Orient had failed to awaken; but Page Wood had been a Sunday School teacher for thirty years, and my Father was always unduly impressed by the acumen of pious barristers.

As time went on, and I grew older and more independent in mind, my Father's anxiety about what he called 'the pitfalls and snares which surround on every hand the thoughtless giddy youth of London' became extremely painful to himself. By harping in private upon these 'pitfalls'--which brought to my imagination a funny rough woodcut in an old edition of Bunyan, where a devil was seen capering over a sort of box let neatly into the ground--he worked himself up into a frame of mind which was not a little irritating to his hapless correspondent, who was now 'snared' indeed, limed by the pen like a bird by the feet, and could not by any means escape. To a peck or a flutter from the bird the implacable fowler would reply:

You charge me with being suspicious, and I fear I cannot deny the charge. But I can appeal to your own sensitive and thoughtful mind for a considerable allowance. My deep and tender love for you; your youth and inexperience; the examples of other young men; your distance from parental counsel; our absolute and painful ignorance of all the details of your daily life, except what you yourself tell us:--try to throw yourself into the standing of a parent, and say if my suspiciousness is unreasonable. I rejoicingly acknowledge that from all I see you are pursuing a virtuous, steady, worthy course. One good thing my suspiciousness does:--ever and anon it brings out from you assurances, which greatly refresh and comfort me. And again, it carries me ever to God's Throne of Grace on your behalf Holy Job suspected that his sons might have sinned, and cursed God in their heart. Was not his suspicion much like mine, grounded on the same reasons and productive of the same results? For it drove him to God in intercession. I have adduced the example of this Patriarch before, and he will endure being looked at again.

In fact, Holy Job continued to be frequently looked at, and for this Patriarch I came to experience a hatred which was as venomous as it was undeserved. But what youth of eighteen would willingly be compared with the sons of Job And indeed, for my part, I felt much more like that justly exasperated character, Elihu the Buzite, of the kindred of Ram.

As time went on, the peculiar strain of inquisition was relaxed, and I endured fewer and fewer of the torments of religious correspondence. Nothing abides in one tense projection, and my Father, resolute as he was, had other preoccupations. His orchids, his microscope, his physiological researches, his interpretations of prophecy, filled up the hours of his active and strenuous life, and, out of his sight, I became not indeed out of his mind, but no longer ceaselessly in the painful foreground of it. Yet, although the reiteration of his anxiety might weary him a little as it had wearied me well nigh to groans of despair, there was not the slightest change in his real attitude towards the subject or towards me.

I have already had occasion to say that he had nothing of the mystic or the visionary about him. At certain times and on certain points, he greatly desired that signs and wonders, such as had astonished and encouraged the infancy of the Christian Church, might again be vouchsafed to it, but he did not pretend to see such miracles himself, nor give the slightest credence to others who asserted that they did. He often congratulated himself on the fact that although his mind dwelt so constantly on spiritual matters it was never betrayed into any suspension of the rational functions.

Cross-examination by letter slackened, but on occasion of my brief and usually summer visits to Devonshire I suffered acutely from my Father's dialectical appetites. He was surrounded by peasants, on whom the teeth of his arguments could find no purchase. To him, in that intellectual Abdera, even an unwilling youth from London offered opportunities of pleasant contest. He would declare himself ready, nay eager, for argument. With his mental sleeves turned up, he would adopt a fighting attitude, and challenge me to a round on any portion of the Scheme of Grace.

同类推荐
  • 送陈判官罢举赴江外

    送陈判官罢举赴江外

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 白雨斋词话

    白雨斋词话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Waifs and Strays

    Waifs and Strays

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 出曜经

    出曜经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 大乘无生方便门

    大乘无生方便门

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 梦醒黄粱

    梦醒黄粱

    踽踽千年,一梦醒黄粱。叮铃惊醒三世沉迷,回身不过灯影绰绰。情何以相轻哪等那轮回几回。情不论深浅幸不负这三生情缘。等你,三世,岂可忘这三百年?悠悠轮回,黄粱惊醒,你可负我三生等待?
  • 桐的异闻录

    桐的异闻录

    五十年后,科技发展进入滞缓阶段,能力者却异军突起,各式各样的能力开始发展,让能力者成为常人体系中的巅峰,而修仙、修武虽然衰落,但却仍然有着自己顽强的生命力。作为S级能力者的儿子,苏桐自小就远超常人,之后更是迈入修武一道,成为门派的大师兄,但就是这样的苏桐,最大的梦想竟然是和自己的S级老爸作对!技能绚丽,美女多多,欢迎一看。
  • 穷小子创富记

    穷小子创富记

    去亚丁,是这群大学生的梦想。因为参加了一次商业活动,他们意外得到了两个去亚丁的名额。为了选出去亚丁的人选,在一次城市定向活动 中,徐歌遇到了在夜市摆地摊的女孩苏雯,开始了一段草根式的浪漫爱情。而傅凯,则因为一起事故,背负巨额债务。校园生活因此而改变。初时 ,为了偿还债务,大家想尽办法赚钱,后来,徐歌与苏雯在爱情中,忽然生出创办大学城网上购物中心的念头。 七个大学生,从此开始了他们的在校创业生涯。没有资金,没有货源,凭借的惟有一股不怕挫折与失败的勇气和青春的激情。大学城网上购物 可中心历经波折终于开业,很快就走出低谷……
  • 暗杀行动

    暗杀行动

    在这个时代,人类文明不断提高,外星人则到处侵略,最终把命运锁定地球,人类的命运会变成什么
  • 北山孤王极道人生

    北山孤王极道人生

    为什么最后立于武道之巅的人会说出“天下无敌是诗人”这样的感叹?看我的朋友北王胡不肖的人生,你大概会重拾心底的力与情。士为知己者荣。
  • 冥火清言

    冥火清言

    她是亡国公主,被人剜去双眼,生在这样一个乱世里,无意被他所救,她并不知道他是谁,她跟着他,直到他因为神器将她抛弃,再遇到那样一个仙人般的男子,他替她治好眼睛,然而她并不知道自己正慢慢走进一场阴谋之中....他说:“我做的一切都讲求等量交换,你不要让我失望才好”
  • 灵武至尊

    灵武至尊

    灵武大陆,灵武为尊,天生废材的他如何逆袭而上?传承家族,觉醒属性,未来将有多少掩藏与黑暗中的谜团被他揭开?祭祀教团,幻影药盟,他又将如何推翻一个一个阴谋?
  • 极品校园霸主

    极品校园霸主

    一个古武少年称霸校园,闯荡都市,历练红尘的故事。
  • 缘浅梦长

    缘浅梦长

    青梅已逝,竹梅已老,从此我喜欢的每个人都像你。
  • 武霸天极

    武霸天极

    少年意外穿越虫洞,机缘巧合身具逆天武魂;真元大陆武道至尊,少年无甚根基委身平凡;命运眷顾一朝巧合,天地规则的秘密灵动于心;左手是创世规则的智慧右手是世间逆天的武魂平凡少年自此再不受强者欺凌、天道束罚!楚风纵身狂笑,神州颤动:“既然如此,我便践踏苍穹,以武道登天极!”