the letters-2-第7部分
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thinking; wouldnae be muckle thought o' by Puggy Deas。 … Yours
ever;
R。 L。 S。
Letter: TO THOMAS STEVENSON
'SKERRYVORE; BOURNEMOUTH'; JULY 28; 1886。
MY DEAR FATHER; … We have decided not to come to Scotland; but just
to do as Dobell wished; and take an outing。 I believe this is
wiser in all ways; but I own it is a disappointment。 I am weary of
England; like Alan; 'I weary for the heather;' if not for the deer。
Lloyd has gone to Scilly with Katharine and C。; where and with whom
he should have a good time。 David seems really to be going to
succeed; which is a pleasant prospect on all sides。 I am; I
believe; floated financially; a book that sells will be a pleasant
novelty。 I enclose another review; mighty complimentary; and
calculated to sell the book too。
Coolin's tombstone has been got out; honest man! and it is to be
polished; for it has got scratched; and have a touch of gilding in
the letters; and be sunk in the front of the house。 Worthy man;
he; too; will maybe weary for the heather; and the bents of
Gullane; where (as I dare say you remember) he gaed clean gyte; and
jumped on to his crown from a gig; in hot and hopeless chase of
many thousand rabbits。 I can still hear the little cries of the
honest fellow as he disappeared; and my mother will correct me; but
I believe it was two days before he turned up again at North
Berwick: to judge by his belly; he had caught not one out of these
thousands; but he had had some exercise。
I keep well。 … Ever your affectionate son;
R。 L。 S。
Letter: TO MRS。 THOMAS STEVENSON
BRITISH MUSEUM 'AUGUST 10TH; 1886'。
MY DEAR MOTHER; … We are having a capital holiday; and I am much
better; and enjoying myself to the nines。 Richmond is painting my
portrait。 To…day I lunch with him; and meet Burne…Jones; to…night
Browning dines with us。 That sounds rather lofty work; does it
not? His path was paved with celebrities。 To…morrow we leave for
Paris; and next week; I suppose; or the week after; come home。
Address here; as we may not reach Paris。 I am really very well。 …
Ever your affectionate son;
R。 L。 S。
Letter: TO T。 WATTS…DUNTON
SKERRYVORE; BOURNEMOUTH 'SEPTEMBER 1886'。
DEAR MR。 WATTS; The sight of the last ATHENAEUM reminds me of you;
and of my debt; now too long due。 I wish to thank you for your
notice of KIDNAPPED; and that not because it was kind; though for
that also I valued it; but in the same sense as I have thanked you
before now for a hundred articles on a hundred different writers。
A critic like you is one who fights the good fight; contending with
stupidity; and I would fain hope not all in vain; in my own case;
for instance; surely not in vain。
What you say of the two parts in KIDNAPPED was felt by no one more
painfully than by myself。 I began it partly as a lark; partly as a
pot…boiler; and suddenly it moved; David and Alan stepped out from
the canvas; and I found I was in another world。 But there was the
cursed beginning; and a cursed end must be appended; and our old
friend Byles the butcher was plainly audible tapping at the back
door。 So it had to go into the world; one part (as it does seem to
me) alive; one part merely galvanised: no work; only an essay。
For a man of tentative method; and weak health; and a scarcity of
private means; and not too much of that frugality which is the
artist's proper virtue; the days of sinecures and patrons look very
golden: the days of professional literature very hard。 Yet I do
not so far deceive myself as to think I should change my character
by changing my epoch; the sum of virtue in our books is in a
relation of equality to the sum of virtues in ourselves; and my
KIDNAPPED was doomed; while still in the womb and while I was yet
in the cradle; to be the thing it is。
And now to the more genial business of defence。 You attack my
fight on board the COVENANT: I think it literal。 David and Alan
had every advantage on their side … position; arms; training; a
good conscience; a handful of merchant sailors; not well led in the
first attack; not led at all in the second; could only by an
accident have taken the round…house by attack; and since the
defenders had firearms and food; it is even doubtful if they could
have been starved out。 The only doubtful point with me is whether
the seamen would have ever ventured on the second onslaught; I half
believe they would not; still the illusion of numbers and the
authority of Hoseason would perhaps stretch far enough to justify
the extremity。 … I am; dear Mr。 Watts; your very sincere admirer;
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON。
Letter: TO FREDERICK LOCKER…LAMPSON
SKERRYVORE; SEPTEMBER 4; 1886。
NOT roses to the rose; I trow;
The thistle sends; nor to the bee
Do wasps bring honey。 Wherefore now
Should Locker ask a verse from me?
Martial; perchance; … but he is dead;
And Herrick now must rhyme no more;
Still burning with the muse; they tread
(And arm in arm) the shadowy shore。
They; if they lived; with dainty hand;
To music as of mountain brooks;
Might bring you worthy words to stand
Unshamed; dear Locker; in your books。
But tho' these fathers of your race
Be gone before; yourself a sire;
To…day you see before your face
Your stalwart youngsters touch the lyre …
On these … on Lang; or Dobson … call;
Long leaders of the songful feast。
They lend a verse your laughing fall …
A verse they owe you at the least。
Letter: TO FREDERICK LOCKER…LAMPSON
'SKERRYVORE'; BOURNEMOUTH; SEPTEMBER 1886。
DEAR LOCKER; … You take my verses too kindly; but you will admit;
for such a bluebottle of a versifier to enter the house of
Gertrude; where her necklace hangs; was not a little brave。 Your
kind invitation; I fear; must remain unaccented; and yet … if I am
very well … perhaps next spring … (for I mean to be very well) … my
wife might。。。。 But all that is in the clouds with my better
health。 And now look here: you are a rich man and know many
people; therefore perhaps some of the Governors of Christ's
Hospital。 If you do; I know a most deserving case; in which I
would (if I could) do anything。 To approach you; in this way; is
not decent; and you may therefore judge by my doing it; how near
this matter lies to my heart。 I enclose you a list of the
Governors; which I beg you to return; whether or not you shall be
able to do anything to help me。
The boy's name is …; he and his mother are very poor。 It may
interest you in her cause if I tell you this: that when I was
dangerously ill at Hyeres; this brave lady; who had then a sick
husband of her own (since dead) and a house to keep and a family of
four to cook for; all with her own hands; for they could afford no
servant; yet took watch…about with my wife; and contributed not
only to my comfort; but to my recovery in a degree that I am not
able to limit。 You can conceive how much I suffer from my
impotence to help her; and indeed I have already shown myself a
thankless friend。 Let not my cry go up before you in vain! … Yours
in hope;
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON。
Letter: TO FREDERICK LOCKER…LAMPSON
SKERRYVORE; BOURNEMOUTH; SEPTEMBER 1886。
MY DEAR LOCKER; … That I should call myself a man of letters; and
land myself in such unfathomable ambiguities! No; my dear Locker;
I did not want a cheque; and in my ignorance of business; which is
greater even than my ignorance of literature; I have taken the
liberty of drawing a pen through the document and returning it;
should this be against the laws of God or man; forgive me。 All
that I meant by my excessively disgusting reference to your
material well…being was the vague notion that a man who is well off
was sure to know a Governor of Christ's Hospital; though how I
quite arrived at this conclusion I do not see。 A man with a cold
in the head does not necessarily know a ratcatcher; and the
connection is equally close … as it now appears to my awakened and
somewhat humbled spirit。 For all that; let me thank you in the
warmest manner for your friendly readiness to contribute。 You say
you have hopes of becoming a miser: I wish I had; but indeed I
believe you deceive yourself; and are as far from it as ever。 I
wish I had any excuse to keep your cheque; for it is much more
elegant to receive than to return; but I have my way of making it
up to you; and I do sincerely beg you to write to the two
Governors。 This extraordinary outpouring of correspondence would
(if you knew my habits) convince you of my great eagerness in this
matter。 I would promise gratitude; but I have made a promise to
myself to make no more promises to anybody else; having broken such
a host already; and come near breaking my heart in consequence; and
as for gratitude; I am by nature a thankless dog; and was spoiled
from a child up。 But if you can help this lady in the matter of
the Hospital; you will have helped the worthy。 Let me continue to
hope that I shall make out my visit in the spring; and believe me;
yours very truly;
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON。
It may amuse you to know that a very long while ago; I broke my
heart to try to imitate your verses; and failed hopelessly。 I saw
some of the evidences the other day among my papers; and blushed to
the heels。
R。 L。 S。
I give up finding out your name in the meantime; and keep to that
by which you will be known … Frederick Locker。
Letter: TO FREDERICK LOCKER…LAMPSON
'SKERRYVORE; BOURNEMOUTH'; 24TH SEPTEMBER 1886。
MY DEAR LOCKER; … You are simply an angel of light; and your two
letters have gone to the post; I trust they will reach the hea