登陆注册
14331300000035

第35章

Nor was Cummyns the only valuable member so lost to society. Hawkesworth, the pious, the virtuous, and the wise, for want of that fortitude which casts a shield before the merits of his friend, fell a lamented sacrifice to wanton malice and cruelty, I know not how provoked; but all in turn feel the lash of censure in a country where, as every baby is allowed to carry a whip, no person can escape except by chance. The unpublished crimes, unknown distresses, and even death itself, however, daily occurring in less liberal governments and less free nations, soon teach one to content oneself with such petty grievances, and make one acknowledge that the undistinguishing severity of newspaper abuse may in some measure diminish the diffusion of vice and folly in Great Britain, and while they fright delicate minds into forced refinements and affected insipidity, they are useful to the great causes of virtue in the soul and liberty in the State; and though sensibility often sinks under the roughness of their preions, it would be no good policy to take away their licence.

Knowing the state of Mr. Johnson's nerves, and how easily they were affected, I forbore reading in a new magazine, one day, the death of a Samuel Johnson who expired that month; but my companion snatching up the book, saw it himself, and contrary to my expectation, "Oh!" said he, "I hope Death will now be glutted with Sam Johnsons, and let me alone for some time to come; I read of another namesake's departure last week." Though Mr. Johnson was commonly affected even to agony at the thoughts of a friend's dying, he troubled himself very little with the complaints they might make to him about ill-health. "Dear Doctor," said he one day to a common acquaintance, who lamented the tender state of his INSIDE, "do not be like the spider, man, and spin conversation thus incessantly out of thy own bowels." I told him of another friend who suffered grievously with the gout. "He will live a vast many years for all that," replied he, "and then what signifies how much he suffers! But he will die at last, poor fellow;there's the misery; gout seldom takes the fort by a coup-de-main, but turning the siege into a blockade, obliges it to surrender at discretion."A lady he thought well of was disordered in her health. "What help has she called in?" inquired Johnson. "Dr. James, sir," was the reply. "What is her disease?" "Oh, nothing positive; rather a gradual and gentle decline.""She will die, then, pretty dear!" answered he. "When Death's pale horse runs away with a person on full speed, an active physician may possibly give them a turn; but if he carries them on an even, slow pace, down-hill, too! no care nor skill can save them!"When Garrick was on his last sick-bed, no arguments, or recitals of such facts as I had heard, would persuade Mr. Johnson of his danger. He had prepossessed himself with a notion, that to say a man was sick was very near wishing him so; and few things offended him more than prognosticating even the death of an ordinary acquaintance. "Ay, ay," said he, "Swift knew the world pretty well when he said that--'Some dire misfortune to portend, No enemy can match a friend.'"The danger, then, of Mr. Garrick, or of Mr. Thrale, whom he loved better, was an image which no one durst present before his view; he always persisted in the possibility and hope of their recovering disorders from which no human creatures by human means alone ever did recover. His distress for their loss was for that very reason poignant to excess. But his fears of his own salvation were excessive. His truly tolerant spirit and Christian charity, which HOPETH ALL THINGS, and BELIEVETH ALL THINGS, made him rely securely on the safety of his friends; while his earnest aspiration after a blessed immortality made him cautious of his own steps, and timorous concerning their consequences. He knew how much had been given, and filled his mind with fancies of how much would be required, till his impressed imagination was often disturbed by them, and his health suffered from the sensibility of his too tender conscience. A real Christian is SO apt to find his talk above his power of performance!

Mr. Johnson did not, however, give in to ridiculous refinements either of speculation or practice, or suffer himself to be deluded by specious appearances. "I have had dust thrown in my eyes too often," would he say, "to be blinded so. Let us never confound matters of belief with matters of opinion." Some one urged in his presence the preference of hope to possession; and as I remember produced an Italian sonnet on the subject.

"Let us not," cries Johnson, "amuse ourselves with subtleties and sonnets, when speaking about hope, which is the follower of faith and the precursor of eternity; but if you only mean those air-built hopes which to-day excite and to-morrow will destroy, let us talk away, and remember that we only talk of the pleasures of hope; we feel those of possession, and no man in his senses would change the last for the first. Such hope is a mere bubble, that by a gentle breath may be blown to what size you will almost, but a rough blast bursts it at once. Hope is an amusement rather than a good, and adapted to none but very tranquil minds." The truth is, Mr.

Johnson hated what he called unprofitable chat; and to a gentleman who had disserted some time about the natural history of the mouse--"I wonder what such a one would have said," cried Johnson, "if he had ever had the luck to see a LION!"I well remember that at Brighthelmstone once, when he was not present, Mr.

Beauclerc asserted that he was afraid of spirits; and I, who was secretly offended at the charge, asked him, the first opportunity I could find, "what ground he had ever given to the world for such a report?" "I can,"replied he, "recollect nothing nearer it than my telling Dr. Lawrence, many years ago, that a long time after my poor mother's death I heard her voice call 'SAM!'" "What answer did the Doctor make to your story, sir?" said I.

同类推荐
  • 天史

    天史

    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。
  • 七元璇玑召魔品经

    七元璇玑召魔品经

    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。
  • The Errand Boy

    The Errand Boy

    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。
  • 九转流珠神仙九丹经

    九转流珠神仙九丹经

    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。
  • 心意拳拳谱

    心意拳拳谱

    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
  • 我想我们在一起

    我想我们在一起

    第一次,她用憎恨的眼神望着他,“我恨你,总有一天我会杀了你!”“是吗,我很期待哦!”男人依旧是如此邪魅,但在她看来,却是让她更恶心。伸手从背后拿出刀,走到男人后面,一刀挥下,却被男人抓住了手腕,“你想杀我,至少你现在没那个本事,好好练个十年八年吧!”五年后,她带着天才宝贝回归,“仇人叔叔,你好帅啊!”某男顿时发怒了“儿子,谁教你这么喊的!”“她不是你儿子,你忘了我说过的话吗!”谁料,“某男一脸恩赐的说”“老婆,我原谅你了,你带儿子滚回来吧”!
  • 桃花障

    桃花障

    意外落入这个陌生的大陆,她孑然一身,只想安静地度过余生,却未想在发展自己喜欢事业的同时,邂逅了各色美男,霸道冷酷的他,绝美可爱的他,温文尔雅的他,人小鬼大的他……
  • 爱若有情天

    爱若有情天

    我们每个人,在走入婚姻的时候,都曾经有一个王子和公主的美梦,都不相信婚姻是爱情的坟墓。直到身处其中,我们才明白为什么所有关于爱情的童话,都只在“王子和公主幸福地生活在一起”之后戛然而止。当婚姻遭遇背叛,当爱已不能回头,那些曾经幸福的男人和女人,是应该沉溺在往事中作茧自缚,还是应该放下过往重新起航?秦天和若雨会告诉你:不是所有的海誓山盟,都能够天长地久;不是所有的执子之手,都能够与子偕老!
  • 世间再无你

    世间再无你

    今生爱一回恨一回是是非非来世若再会还与你双双对对
  • 建筑工

    建筑工

    一个铺盖卷一个饭盒,以天为被、以地为席,混迹于城市的钢筋水泥体,这就是建筑工。他是一个建筑工,一个有梦想的建筑工,从小工到匠人,到技术员,再到经理,他的事业他做主;从食堂姑娘到省城白富美,再到清华才女,他的爱情他做主。怀念一代人,怀念一个特殊的群体,是他们用青春和汗水参与浇筑了共和国的繁荣昌盛,撑起了我国城市建设飞速发展的巅峰。可是,他们没有得到社会应有的尊重,在高楼林立的都市里,没有他们的一席之地,甚至公交车上都没有人愿意坐在他们的身边。谨以此文献给青春已逝的八零后建筑人,感谢他们曾经或是现在仍然默默奉献在都市丛林里,参与缔造了我们当代社会的繁花似锦。
  • 三小只之缘来爱上

    三小只之缘来爱上

    也许真的是因为我们太过无知了。所以上帝才会决定剥夺我们的缘分。那天。天黑了。风大了。你哭了。我慌了。我在人群中拼命的想要抓住你的手,却将你越推越远。就像一具没有灵魂的傀儡,我带着疲惫不堪的心,在世态炎凉中沉浮,在阴谋暗算中求生。但,我一直相信,你就在不远的前方,等待我们相见的奇迹。
  • 未夏已秋

    未夏已秋

    窝在角落里,轻轻的说:夏天什么时候才会过去,好想念九月的天,繁华不过一场梦,一句誓言岂当真。乌黑的夜,或许能陪伴的,只有瓢泼大雨和能把黑暗短暂照亮的闪电。当你走了我才发现,原来夏天那么短,转眼就秋。
  • 月下,箫声

    月下,箫声

    她,原是大陆的黑帮杀手;他,是神界的纨绔二少。她在一次执行任务中与同组六人一同灵魂穿越到神界。她转世成为兵部尚书家的二小姐。在这里,她天赋异禀,芳龄十二就达到八级,在晋升九级时遭遇雷劫成为废柴。幸得他救助,演绎了一场“麻雀变凤凰”的传奇。
  • 穿越之宅女的奇遇

    穿越之宅女的奇遇

    天要我亡我不得不亡,倒霉就是出去买个吃的也被天降横祸砸死,说好的穿越都是爹疼娘爱有房有车有钱!为什么她爹不疼!娘不爱!自己的房是自己买的!钱是自己辛苦赚的!嫁人之后以为可以过过悠闲潇洒的日子却还是有人就是要来找茬!以为玩游戏天天来找茬吗!
  • 一剑流星

    一剑流星

    有比烟花更璀璨的剑只在出剑刹那是流星更是死亡