登陆注册
15439100000025

第25章 CHAPTER VII--GEORGIAN OXFORD(1)

Oxford has usually been described either by her lovers or her malcontents. She has suffered the extremes of filial ingratitude and affection. There is something in the place that makes all her children either adore or detest her; and it is difficult, indeed, to pick out the truth concerning her past social condition from the satires and the encomiums. Nor is it easy to say what qualities in Oxford, and what answering characteristics in any of her sons, will beget the favourable or the unfavourable verdict. Gibbon, one might have thought, saw the sunny, and Johnson the shady, side of the University. With youth, and wealth, and liberty, with a set of three beautiful rooms in that "stately pile, the new building of Magdalen College," Gibbon found nothing in Oxford to please him--nothing to admire, nothing to love. From his poor and lofty rooms in Pembroke Gate-tower the hypochondriac Johnson--rugged, anxious, and conscious of his great unemployed power--looked down on a much more pleasant Oxford, on a city and on schools that he never ceased to regard with affection. This contrast is found in the opinions of our contemporaries. One man will pass his time in sneering at his tutors and his companions, in turning listlessly from study to study, in following false tendencies, and picking up scraps of knowledge which he despises, and in later life he will detest his University. There are wiser and more successful students, who yet bear away a grudge against the stately mother of us all, that so easily can disregard our petty spleens and ungrateful rancour. Mr. Lowe's most bitter congratulatory addresses to the "happy Civil Engineers," and his unkindest cuts at ancient history, and at the old philosophies which "on Argive heights divinely sung," move her not at all. Meanwhile, the majority of men are more kindly compact, and have more natural affections, and on them the memory of their earliest friendships, and of that beautiful environment which Oxford gave to their years of youth, is not wholly wasted.

There are more Johnsons, happily, in this matter, than Gibbons.

There is little need to repeat the familiar story of Johnson's life at Pembroke. He went up in the October term of 1728, being then nineteen years of age, and already full of that wide and miscellaneous classical reading which the Oxford course, then as now, somewhat discouraged. "His figure and manner appeared strange" to the company in which he found himself; and when he broke silence it was with a quotation from Macrobius. To his tutor's lectures, as a later poet says, "with freshman zeal he went"; but his zeal did not last out the discovery that the tutor was "a heavy man," and the fact that there was "sliding on Christ Church Meadow." Have any of the artists who repeat, with perseverance, the most famous scenes in the Doctor's life--drawn him sliding on Christ Church meadows, sliding in these worn and clouted shoes of his, and with that figure which even the exercise of skating could not have made "swan-like," to quote the young lady in "Pickwick"? Johnson was "sconced" in the sum of twopence for cutting lecture; and it is rather curious that the amount of the fine was the same four hundred years earlier, when Master Stoke, of Catte Hall (whose career we touched on in the second of these sketches), deserted his lessons. It was when he was thus sconced that Johnson made that reply which Boswell preserves "as a specimen of the antithetical character of his wit"--"Sir, you have sconced me twopence for non-attendance on a lecture not worth a penny."

Sconcing seems to have been the penalty for offences very various in degree. "A young fellow of Balliol College having, upon some discontent, cut his throat very dangerously, the master of his College sent his servitor to the buttery-book to sconce him five shillings; and," says the Doctor, "tell him that the next time he cuts his throat I'll sconce him ten!" This prosaic punishment might perhaps deter some Werthers from playing with edged tools.

From Boswell's meagre account of Johnson's Oxford career we gather some facts which supplement the description of Gibbon. The future historian went into residence twenty-three years after Johnson departed without taking his degree. Gibbon was a gentleman commoner, and was permitted by the easy discipline of Magdalen to behave just as he pleased. He "eloped," as he says, from Oxford, as often as he chose, and went up to town, where he was by no means the ideal of "the Manly Oxonian in London." The fellows of Magdalen, possessing a revenue which private avarice might easily have raised to 30,000 pounds, took no interest in their pupils. Gibbon's tutor read a few Latin plays with his pupil, in a style of dry and literal translation. The other fellows, less conscientious, passed their lives in tippling and tattling, discussing the "Oxford Toasts," and drinking other toasts to the king over the water. "Some duties," says Gibbon, "may possibly have been imposed on the poor scholars," but "the velvet cap was the cap of liberty," and the gentleman commoner consulted only his own pleasure. Johnson was a poor scholar, and on him duties were imposed. He was requested to write an ode on the Gunpowder Plot, and Boswell thinks "his vivacity and imagination must have produced something fine." He neglected, however, with his usual indolence, this opportunity of producing something fine. Another exercise imposed on the poor was the translation of Mr. Pope's "Messiah," in which the young Pembroke man succeeded so well that, by Mr. Pope's own generous confession, future ages would doubt whether the English or the Latin piece was the original. Johnson complained that no man could be properly inspired by the Pembroke "coll," or college beer, which was then commonly drunk by undergraduates, still guiltless of Rhine wines, and of collecting Chinese monsters.

Carmina vis nostri scribant meliora poetae Ingenium jubeas purior baustus alat.

同类推荐
  • 童蒙训

    童蒙训

    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。
  • 六十种曲昙花记

    六十种曲昙花记

    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。
  • 金碧五相类参同契

    金碧五相类参同契

    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。
  • 金楼子

    金楼子

    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。
  • 佛说大乘日子王所问经

    佛说大乘日子王所问经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 重生穿越之腹黑复仇九公主

    重生穿越之腹黑复仇九公主

    先是被自己最爱的人背叛,然后又被自己最爱的人害死,后来重生加穿越,有谁比我更倒霉?
  • 仙剑之轩辕奇侠传

    仙剑之轩辕奇侠传

    钟剑斧壶塔琴鼎印镜石若是轩辕剑中的十神器进入到仙剑世界中,又会引发怎样的故事?本书力求大宇双剑合璧,新人新书,请多关照。
  • 一个主神的自我修养

    一个主神的自我修养

    这是昭阳可以穿梭万界,在权与欲中把握心神,在龊与婪中看透人性,在灭与戮中遏制嗜血。一统江山,美人在卧,仰望苍穹,登高摘月。笑望沧海一声笑,俯瞰群神一朝泯!(新人作者求支持,求点击,推荐,收藏,来啊!尽管砸过来吧。)
  • 梓心悦冉

    梓心悦冉

    “韩梓伦,她把你放在心中一共八年,前三年视你为珍宝,后五年你以为伤痛,她是这样待你,就算是石头心,也该为之打开了吧。”爱上一个遥不可及的人,如果是你,是会选择奋不顾身的追求,还是默默无言?看腹黑女神安冉如何逆袭成为当红明星一生挚爱。
  • 灵魂彼方

    灵魂彼方

    最初的最初,她只是想要超越一个人,仅此而已。可是为什么,在这条并不宽敞的路上,她会失去这么多。朋友,家人甚至是……难道她的出生原本就是个错误?她真的不甘心。天真,底线,真的有人看重它们吗?她究竟,究竟要不要放弃?
  • 华严心要法门注

    华严心要法门注

    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。
  • 无限透支

    无限透支

    一张不能买东西的信用卡,那还是信用卡吗?当然是,而且还是一张让人欲罢不能的信用卡。因为它能透支运气、武力……,甚至是生命。项洋就拥有这样一张信用卡。不过不要忘了,透支是要还的。求收藏、求推荐,真心求!求动动手指!动动!
  • 英国大冒险(环游世界大探险)

    英国大冒险(环游世界大探险)

    据情报显示,卡西欧博士越狱后准备和英国的大毒枭进行一场交易。于是莱恩和卡奇、米娜一起来到了英国,开始了他们的英国冒险之旅。在旅途中他们还结识了很多的朋友,发生了很多新奇有趣的故事。通过他们在旅行中的所见所闻,我们可以了解英国的地理、历史、名人、古迹、人文、科学和风俗习惯……
  • 原始老公是巫师

    原始老公是巫师

    嘶,我的头好疼,看了下四周“我这是在哪,怎么周围都是树?我刚刚不是还在上班嘛”,对了,刚刚急着给总裁送资料,高跟鞋滑了一下摔倒了,可,这是哪里?我为什么不在医院?反而在荒郊野外?“啊啊啊啊啊啊”、“啊啊啊啊啊啊”什么声音?感觉像是尖叫声,我心里有点紧,看向声音的地方,一堆?不是、是一群穿着有点落魄,确切的说应该是一群裹着树叶的野人
  • 呓语惊醒梦中人

    呓语惊醒梦中人

    这些都是自己曾经做过的梦,跟神秘学无关,零零碎碎记录了有两年,仍在记录之中,有些跟现实串成了可以写下的故事,有些跟现实交汇成无法分别的沉浸.黑暗的光明的真挚的的荒唐的压抑的释放的、真的假的,信到不敢再信不信到无法克制去信,却都是人生.