登陆注册
15439100000034

第34章 CHAPTER X--UNDERGRADUATE LIFE--CONCLUSION(1)

A hundred pictures have been drawn of undergraduate life at Oxford, and a hundred caricatures. Novels innumerable introduce some Oxford scenes. An author generally writes his first romance soon after taking his degree; he writes about his own experience and his own memories; he mixes his ingredients at will and tints according to fancy. This is one of the two reasons why pictures of Oxford, from the undergraduate side, are generally false. They are either drawn by an aspirant who is his own hero, and who idealises himself and his friends, or they are designed by ladies who have read Verdant Green, and who, at some period, have paid a flying visit to Cambridge. An exhaustive knowledge of Verdant Green, and a hasty view of the Fitzwilliam Museum and "the backs of the Colleges" (which are to Cambridge what the Docks are to Liverpool), do not afford sufficient materials for an accurate sketch of Oxford. The picture daubed by the emancipated undergraduate who dabbles in fiction is as unrecognisable. He makes himself and his friends too large, too noisy, too bibulous, too learned, too extravagant, too pugnacious.

They seem to stride down the High, prodigious, disproportionate figures, like the kings of Egypt on the monuments, overshadowing the crowd of dons, tradesmen, bargees, and cricket-field or river-side cads. Often one dimly recognises the scenes, and the acquaintances of years ago, in University novels. The mildest of men suddenly pose as heroes of the Guy Livingstone type, fellows who "screw up" timid dons, box with colossal watermen, and read all night with wet towels bound round their fevered brows. These sketches are all nonsense.

Men who do these things do not write about them; and men who write about them never did them.

There is yet another cause which increases the difficulty of describing undergraduate life with truth. There are very many varieties of undergraduates, who have very various ways of occupying and amusing themselves. A steady man that reads his five or six hours a day, and takes his pastime chiefly on the river, finds that his path scarcely ever crosses that of him who belongs to the Bullingdon Club, hunts thrice a week, and rarely dines in hall. Then the "pale student," who is hard at work in his rooms or in the Bodleian all day, and who has only two friends, out-college men, with whom he takes walks and tea,--he sees existence in a very different aspect. The Union politician, who is for ever hanging about his club, dividing the house on questions of blotting-paper and quill pens, discussing its affairs at breakfast, intriguing for the place of Librarian, writing rubbish in the suggestion-book, to him Oxford is only a soil carefully prepared for the growth of that fine flower, the Union. He never encounters the undergraduate who haunts billiard-rooms and shy taverns, who buys jewelry for barmaids, and who is admired for the audacity with which he smuggled a fox-terrier into college in a brown-paper parcel. There are many other species of undergraduate, scarcely more closely resembling each other in manners and modes of thought than the little Japanese student resembles the metaphysical Scotch exhibitioner, or than the hereditary war minister of Siam (whose career, though brief, was vivacious) resembled the Exeter Sioux, a half-reclaimed savage, who disappeared on the warpath after failing to scalp the Junior Proctor.

When The Wet Blanket returned to his lodge in the land of Sitting Bull, he doubtless described Oxford life in his own way to the other Braves, while the squaws hung upon his words and the papooses played around. His account would vary, in many ways, from that of "Whiskered Tomkins from the hail Of seedy Magdalene."

And he, again, would not see Oxford life steadily, and see it whole, as a more cultivated and polished undergraduate might. Thus there are countless pictures of the works and ways of undergraduates at the University. The scene is ever the same--boat-races and foot-ball matches, scouts, schools, and proctors, are common to all,--but in other respects the sketches must always vary, must generally be one-sided, and must often seem inaccurate.

It appears that a certain romance is attached to the three years that are passed between the estate of the freshman and that of the Bachelor of Arts. These years are spent in a kind of fairyland, neither quite within nor quite outside of the world. College life is somewhat, as has so often been said, like the old Greek city life.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 秘密契约:二婚总裁宠娇妻

    秘密契约:二婚总裁宠娇妻

    和前夫无法生育,我帮一个有钱男人生了两个孩子,我没想到他后来向我求婚了,二婚女人,真的会幸福么?
  • 女界鬼域记

    女界鬼域记

    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。
  • 三神界

    三神界

    三神界,世间本无此世界,几十亿年前,时空错乱,无数世界的一部分空间板块被带入了错乱的时空中,经过不知多少岁月的时空漂流,渐渐的汇聚在了同一个时空,而形成了无数种族,不同文化共同生活的一个世界——这就是这个世界的由来。少年李仙凡,莫名其妙的被卷入残酷的战斗,神与魔的争斗,各种族间的纷争,天使与魔鬼的战争种种传说尽在三神界。新人新书,如喜欢该作品的读者,请大方的点击收藏,加个粉丝支持下小子
  • 最终契约——弑王之刃

    最终契约——弑王之刃

    人与武器之间的默契与背叛,三大派系之间的合作与角逐,以及这个星球无可避免的命运……在雾石逐步探索这颗星球的神奇与危险的同时,两个星球的科技与文明之间的较量也逐渐拉开了序幕。(本系列故事的大纲已经完成,该系列将会分为七本书来叙述,弑王之刃为该系列第一部。)
  • 霸天不杀戟

    霸天不杀戟

    霸天不杀戟,出天地变色,风云变幻。霸天出戟天地荡,七式不杀无人荡!灭天诛地灭神魔,一戟九式万世消!不杀传人出世俗,万般仇恨卷大陆!白骨堆,血流河,碎日耀,灭神魔!到底为哪般?
  • 我的日记123

    我的日记123

    这个可以说不是小说,而是我的日记。名字是真的,故事有三份之一是假的其他的都是真的!
  • 倾国倾城之从凤

    倾国倾城之从凤

    夜里,好不宁静。当景言知道那个她天天欺负的小丫鬟是公主的时候,她震惊,她恨。为什么,她不是那个公主!景夫人走了进来,对她说......
  • 至爱萌妻:三顾男神轻轻亲

    至爱萌妻:三顾男神轻轻亲

    如果说在L大遇见了初恋情人是巧合,那么一连三天天天以不同形式见面,可不可以算作是缘分未尽?第一天:林安然怒气冲冲得闯进公开课的教室,却见到他西装革履德站在将桌前,手捧一本书。第二天:林安然在图书馆旁边的小路上捡到他丢失的借书卡,毫不犹豫地扔进垃圾桶,却被他逮了个正着。第三天:林安然晚归,在风雨凌乱中被关在大门外,他却手执教师证站在一旁。顾自清说:“林安然,几年不见,你变化好大。”林安然沉默,而后道:“可能是我这几年吃的太好了,所以发育得也不错。”顾自清······
  • 大女皇

    大女皇

    万物皆空,无极无道。是为无法众生诸会,神魔共舞。是为无遮太上忘情,无色无味。是为无阴灭神刀,噬魂鞭,通天锄,此乃大女皇
  • 混沌玄帝

    混沌玄帝

    一个少年,走出大荒,肩负大任,天玄洪荒中五域,任其闯荡,一颗玄玉种会给他带来怎样不同的人生呢