the letters-2-第20章
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note of it。 … With much respect; believe me; yours sincerely;
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON。
Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
'SARANAC LAKE; MARCH 1888。'
MY DEAR DELIGHTFUL JAMES; … To quote your heading to my wife; I
think no man writes so elegant a letter; I am sure none so kind;
unless it be Colvin; and there is more of the stern parent about
him。 I was vexed at your account of my admired Meredith: I wish I
could go and see him; as it is I will try to write。 I read with
indescribable admiration your EMERSON。 I begin to long for the day
when these portraits of yours shall be collected: do put me in。
But Emerson is a higher flight。 Have you a TOURGUENEFF? You have
told me many interesting things of him; and I seem to see them
written; and forming a graceful and BILDEND sketch。 My novel is a
tragedy; four parts out of six or seven are written; and gone to
Burlingame。 Five parts of it are sound; human tragedy; the last
one or two; I regret to say; not so soundly designed; I almost
hesitate to write them; they are very picturesque; but they are
fantastic; they shame; perhaps degrade; the beginning。 I wish I
knew; that was how the tale came to me however。 I got the
situation; it was an old taste of mine: The older brother goes out
in the '45; the younger stays; the younger; of course; gets title
and estate and marries the bride designate of the elder … a family
match; but he (the younger) had always loved her; and she had
really loved the elder。 Do you see the situation? Then the devil
and Saranac suggested this DENOUEMENT; and I joined the two ends in
a day or two of constant feverish thought; and began to write。 And
now … I wonder if I have not gone too far with the fantastic? The
elder brother is an INCUBUS: supposed to be killed at Culloden; he
turns up again and bleeds the family of money; on that stopping he
comes and lives with them; whence flows the real tragedy; the
nocturnal duel of the brothers (very naturally; and indeed; I
think; inevitably arising); and second supposed death of the elder。
Husband and wife now really make up; and then the cloven hoof
appears。 For the third supposed death and the manner of the third
reappearance is steep; steep; sir。 It is even very steep; and I
fear it shames the honest stuff so far; but then it is highly
pictorial; and it leads up to the death of the elder brother at the
hands of the younger in a perfectly cold…blooded murder; of which I
wish (and mean) the reader to approve。 You see how daring is the
design。 There are really but six characters; and one of these
episodic; and yet it covers eighteen years; and will be; I imagine;
the longest of my works。 … Yours ever;
R。 L。 S。
READ GOSSE'S RALEIGH。 First…rate。 … Yours ever;
R。 L。 S。
Letter: TO THE REV。 DR。 CHARTERIS
SARANAC LAKE; ADIRONDACKS; NEW YORK; U。S。A。; SPRING 1888。
MY DEAR DR。 CHARTERIS; … The funeral letter; your notes; and many
other things; are reserved for a book; MEMORIALS OF A SCOTTISH
FAMILY; if ever I can find time and opportunity。 I wish I could
throw off all else and sit down to it to…day。 Yes; my father was a
'distinctly religious man;' but not a pious。 The distinction
painfully and pleasurably recalls old conflicts; it used to be my
great gun … and you; who suffered for the whole Church; know how
needful it was to have some reserve artillery! His sentiments were
tragic; he was a tragic thinker。 Now; granted that life is tragic
to the marrow; it seems the proper function of religion to make us
accept and serve in that tragedy; as officers in that other and
comparable one of war。 Service is the word; active service; in the
military sense; and the religious man … I beg pardon; the pious man
… is he who has a military joy in duty … not he who weeps over the
wounded。 We can do no more than try to do our best。 Really; I am
the grandson of the manse … I preach you a kind of sermon。 Box the
brat's ears!
My mother … to pass to matters more within my competence … finely
enjoys herself。 The new country; some new friends we have made;
the interesting experiment of this climate…which (at least) is
tragic … all have done her good。 I have myself passed a better
winter than for years; and now that it is nearly over have some
diffident hopes of doing well in the summer and 'eating a little
more air' than usual。
I thank you for the trouble you are taking; and my mother joins
with me in kindest regards to yourself and Mrs。 Charteris。 … Yours
very truly;
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON。
Letter: TO S。 R。 CROCKETT
'SARANAC LAKE; SPRING 1888。'
DEAR MINISTER OF THE FREE KIRK AT PENICUIK; … For O; man; I cannae
read your name! … That I have been so long in answering your
delightful letter sits on my conscience badly。 The fact is I let
my correspondence accumulate until I am going to leave a place; and
then I pitch in; overhaul the pile; and my cries of penitence might
be heard a mile about。 Yesterday I despatched thirty…five belated
letters: conceive the state of my conscience; above all as the
Sins of Omission (see boyhood's guide; the Shorter Catechism) are
in my view the only serious ones; I call it my view; but it cannot
have escaped you that it was also Christ's。 However; all that is
not to the purpose; which is to thank you for the sincere pleasure
afforded by your charming letter。 I get a good few such; how few
that please me at all; you would be surprised to learn … or have a
singularly just idea of the dulness of our race; how few that
please me as yours did; I can tell you in one word … NONE。 I am no
great kirkgoer; for many reasons … and the sermon's one of them;
and the first prayer another; but the chief and effectual reason is
the stuffiness。 I am no great kirkgoer; says I; but when I read
yon letter of yours; I thought I would like to sit under ye。 And
then I saw ye were to send me a bit buik; and says I; I'll wait for
the bit buik; and then I'll mebbe can read the man's name; and
anyway I'll can kill twa birds wi' ae stane。 And; man! the buik
was ne'er heard tell o'!
That fact is an adminicle of excuse for my delay。
And now; dear minister of the illegible name; thanks to you; and
greeting to your wife; and may you have good guidance in your
difficult labours; and a blessing on your life。
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON。
(No just so young sae young's he was; though …
I'm awfae near forty; man。)
Address c/o CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS;
743 BROADWAY; NEW YORK。
Don't put 'N。B。' in your paper: put SCOTLAND; and be done with it。
Alas; that I should be thus stabbed in the home of my friends! The
name of my native land is not NORTH BRITAIN; whatever may be the
name of yours。
R。 L。 S。
Letter: TO MISS FERRIER
'SARANAC LAKE; APRIL 1888。'
MY DEAREST COGGIE; … I wish I could find the letter I began to you
some time ago when I was ill; but I can't and I don't believe there
was much in it anyway。 We have all behaved like pigs and beasts
and barn…door poultry to you; but I have been sunk in work; and the
lad is lazy and blind and has been working too; and as for Fanny;
she has been (and still is) really unwell。 I had a mean hope you
might perhaps write again before I got up steam: I could not have
been more ashamed of myself than I am; and I should have had
another laugh。
They always say I cannot give news in my letters: I shall shake
off that reproach。 On Monday; if she is well enough; Fanny leaves
for California to see her friends; it is rather an anxiety to let
her go alone; but the doctor simply forbids it in my case; and she
is better anywhere than here … a bleak; blackguard; beggarly
climate; of which I can say no good except that it suits me and
some others of th