登陆注册
15446200000046

第46章 VII(3)

And here I wish to take breath for a short, separate paragraph. I have often felt, after writing a line which pleased me more than common, that it was not new, and perhaps was not my own. I have very rarely, however, found such a coincidence in ideas or expression as would be enough to justify an accusation of unconscious plagiarism,--conscious plagiarism is not my particular failing. I therefore say my say, set down my thought, print my line, and do not heed the suspicion that I may not be as original as I supposed, in the passage I have been writing. My experience may be worth something to a modest young writer, and so I have interrupted what I was about to say by intercalating this paragraph.

In this instance my telltale suspicion had not been at fault. I had printed those same lines, years ago, in "The Contributors' Club," to which I have rarely sent any of my prose or verse. Nobody but the editor has noticed the fact, so far as I know. This is consoling, or mortifying, I hardly know which. I suppose one has a right to plagiarize from himself, but he does not want to present his work as fresh from the workshop when it has been long standing in his neighbor's shop-window.

But I have just received a letter from a brother of the late Henry Howard Brownell, the poet of the Bay Fight and the River Fight, in which he quotes a passage from an old book, "A Heroine, Adventures of Cherubina," which might well have suggested my own lines, if I had ever seen it. I have not the slightest recollection of the book or the passage. I think its liveliness and "local color" will make it please the reader, as it pleases me, more than my own more prosaic extravagances:

LINES TO A PRETTY LITTLE MAID OF MAMMA'S.

"If Black Sea, Red Sea, White Sea, ran One tide of ink to Ispahan, If all the geese in Lincoln fens Produced spontaneous well-made pens, If Holland old and Holland new One wondrous sheet of paper grew, And could I sing but half the grace Of half a freckle in thy face, Each syllable I wrote would reach >From Inverness to Bognor's beach, Each hair-stroke be a river Rhine, Each verse an equinoctial line!"

"The immediate dismissal of the 'little maid' was the consequence."

I may as well say that our Delilah was not in the room when the last sentence was read.

Readers must be either very good-natured or very careless. I have laid myself open to criticism by more than one piece of negligence, which has been passed over without invidious comment by the readers of my papers. How could I, for instance, have written in my original "copy" for the printer about the fisherman baiting his hook with a giant's tail instead of a dragon's? It is the automatic fellow,--Me-Number-Two of our dual personality,--who does these things, who forgets the message Me--Number--One sends down to him from the cerebral convolutions, and substitutes a wrong word for the right one. I suppose Me--Number--Two will "sass back," and swear that "giant's" was the message which came down from headquarters. He is always doing the wrong thing and excusing himself. Who blows out the gas instead of shutting it off? Who puts the key in the desk and fastens it tight with the spring lock? Do you mean to say that the upper Me, the Me of the true thinking-marrow, the convolutions of the brain, does not know better? Of course he does, and Me-Number-Two is a careless servant, who remembers some old direction, and follows that instead of the one just given.

Number Seven demurred to this, and I am not sure that he is wrong in so doing. He maintains that the automatic fellow always does just what he is told to do. Number Five is disposed to agree with him.

We will talk over the question.

But come, now, why should not a giant have a tail as well as a dragon? Linnaeus admitted the homo caudatus into his anthropological catalogue. The human embryo has a very well marked caudal appendage; that is, the vertebral column appears prolonged, just as it is in a young quadruped. During the late session of the Medical Congress at Washington, my friend Dr. Priestley, a distinguished London physician, of the highest character and standing, showed me the photograph of a small boy, some three or four years old, who had a very respectable little tail, which would have passed muster on a pig, and would have made a frog or a toad ashamed of himself. I have never heard what became of the little boy, nor have I looked in the books or journals to find out if there are similar cases on record, but I have no doubt that there are others. And if boys may have this additional ornament to their vertebral columns, why not men? And if men, why not giants? So I may not have made a very bad blunder, after all, and my reader has learned something about the homo caudatus as spoken of by Linnxus, and as shown me in photograph by Dr. Priestley. This child is a candidate for the vacant place of Missing Link.

In accounting for the blunders, and even gross blunders, which, sooner or later, one who writes much is pretty sure to commit, I must not forget the part played by the blind spot or idiotic area in the brain, which I have already described.

The most knowing persons we meet with are sometimes at fault. Nova onania possumus omnes is not a new nor profound axiom, but it is well to remember it as a counterpoise to that other truly American saying of the late Mr. Samuel Patch, "Some things can be done as well as others." Yes, some things, but not all things. We all know men and women who hate to admit their ignorance of anything. Like Talkative in "Pilgrim's Progress," they are ready to converse of "things heavenly or things earthly; things moral or things evangelical; things sacred or things profane; things past or things to come; things foreign or things at home; things more essential or things circumstantial."

Talkative is apt to be a shallow fellow, and to say foolish things about matters he only half understands, and yet he has his place in society. The specialists would grow to be intolerable, were they not counterpoised to some degree by the people of general intelligence.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 暗黑血统:四骑士

    暗黑血统:四骑士

    几千年前,人类诞生,天使恶魔征战不休,焦灼会议留下七道封印。如今封印解开,凡尘大乱。四骑士接受召唤,开始了恢复秩序的任务,而正义的背后,会议的阴谋也相继浮出水面。
  • 天人合谋

    天人合谋

    原本一片清明,是谁染了浊气?是仰望敬畏的苍穹开了个不大的玩笑,还是难测的人心隐隐作祟。那片光明何其美好,凑近了才发现光明下照耀的是地狱。你问我该如何自处,哼,一笑而过或是斩尽屠绝。笑问天际,庶人何为。俯视坤寰,是主是奴?既然你给我了这么多,那我何必为奴,脚一踢就是朗朗乾坤,手一举便是浩宇星辰。遇则破,当破而立!
  • 亚元战记

    亚元战记

    从小到大几乎没有存在感的少年,拥有着离奇怪异的身世。一天,当一名唤灵士在他面前死去时,他那平凡的人生也开始了天翻地覆的变化。在前方等待他的,是人心的堕落,还是异族的抹杀?又或许是……
  • 神医强者

    神医强者

    李明是孤儿,从小跟着他师父鬼谷子生活。李明是个可造之才,得到鬼谷子的认可,他把毕生的医术和武功都毫无保留的传授给了李明。高中毕业后,李明凭着优秀的成绩被保送到了市上知名大学,从此开始了纵横都市的生活.
  • 云修天下

    云修天下

    林天本是京城、林家大少,奈何父母不被家主看中,连自己也受到几个堂弟的凌辱,到最后还被逼得离家逃走。…………还经常被追杀……
  • 英雄联盟之灭世世王者

    英雄联盟之灭世世王者

    什么,你说我们中国电竞后继无人?那就让我——叶峰和我的小伙伴来虐杀你们吧。请记住,我可是要拿世界冠军的人!每天更一章
  • 下一个是谁

    下一个是谁

    女法医破案精彩连连看:水泥块里包藏祸心;半张纸上隐藏杀机;女模特写真集风波;女医生怪病谜团;变态狂的血样与圈套。他是她神秘的理想,她是他圣洁的女神,他们的爱情却为何走上一条永不交汇的绝路?
  • 复仇公主之月下残泪

    复仇公主之月下残泪

    三个同龄女孩儿同样的遭遇,父亲外遇,小三陷害母亲。三女志同道合的在了一起,好朋友,好闺蜜,一起生活,一起复仇。当在复仇的途中遇见了王子们,那么,结局又将如何?
  • 重生六年前

    重生六年前

    回到六年前2010年,许乐抄抄书,谈谈爱,开始了一段惬意、悠闲的人生生活。
  • 诡异话君社

    诡异话君社

    六界大战让身为六界圣君的妄言动用血祭之羁,不料力量过于强大以至于撕开虚空裂缝进入轮回。在东海之渊醒来的妄言发现随之而来的还有一股不知名力量,将其封印却不料修为大大折损之后妄言和这股不知名力量一起沉睡在了东海之渊。妄言醒来之后却发现随之醒来的还有那股不知名力量,妄言只好将其封印在六界法外之中。而在六界法外之中的妄言却不知身为六界护法的余儒早已布局好一切等待王归……却让余儒始料未及的是这一切似乎是有人早已算计好的,谜题随之一个随着一个接踵而来...