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第47章

westward ho-第47章

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ing of the stomach; there's no herb like unto it under the canopy of heaven。〃

The truth of which eulogium Amyas tested in after years; as shall be fully set forth in due place and time。  But 〃Mark in the meanwhile;〃 says one of the veracious chroniclers from whom I draw these facts; writing seemingly in the palmy days of good Queen Anne; and 〃not having〃 (as he says) 〃before his eyes the fear of that misocapnic Solomon James I。 or of any other lying Stuart;〃 〃that not to South Devon; but to North; not to Sir Walter Raleigh; but to Sir Amyas Leigh; not to the banks of Dart; but to the banks of Torridge; does Europe owe the day…spring of the latter age; that age of smoke which shall endure and thrive; when the age of brass shall have vanished like those of iron and of gold; for whereas Mr。 Lane is said to have brought home that divine weed (as Spenser well names it) from Virginia; in the year 1584; it is hereby indisputable that full four years earlier; by the bridge of Putford in the Torridge moors (which all true smokers shall hereafter visit as a hallowed spot and point of pilgrimage) first twinkled that fiery beacon and beneficent lodestar of Bidefordian commerce; to spread hereafter from port to port and peak to peak; like the watch…fires which proclaimed the coming of the Armada or the fall of Troy; even to the shores of the Bosphorus; the peaks of the Caucasus; and the farthest isles of the Malayan sea; while Bideford; metropolis of tobacco; saw her Pool choked with Virginian traders; and the pavement of her Bridgeland Street groaning beneath the savory bales of roll Trinadado; leaf; and pudding; and her grave burghers; bolstered and blocked out of their own houses by the scarce less savory stock…fish casks which filled cellar; parlor; and attic; were fain to sit outside the door; a silver pipe in every strong right hand; and each left hand chinking cheerfully the doubloons deep lodged in the auriferous caverns of their trunk… hose; while in those fairy…rings of fragrant mist; which circled round their contemplative brows; flitted most pleasant visions of Wiltshire farmers jogging into Sherborne fair; their heaviest shillings in their pockets; to buy (unless old Aubrey lies) the lotus…leaf of Torridge for its weight in silver; and draw from thence; after the example of the Caciques of Dariena; supplies of inspiration much needed; then as now; in those Gothamite regions。 And yet did these improve; as Englishmen; upon the method of those heathen savages; for the latter (so Salvation Yeo reported as a truth; and Dampier's surgeon Mr。 Wafer after him); when they will deliberate of war or policy; sit round in the hut of the chief; where being placed; enter to them a small boy with a cigarro of the bigness of a rolling…pin and puffs the smoke thereof into the face of each warrior; from the eldest to the youngest; while they; putting their hand funnel…wise round their mouths; draw into the sinuosities of the brain that more than Delphic vapor of prophecy; which boy presently falls down in a swoon; and being dragged out by the heels and laid by to sober; enter another to puff at the sacred cigarro; till he is dragged out likewise; and so on till the tobacco is finished; and the seed of wisdom has sprouted in every soul into the tree of meditation; bearing the flowers of eloquence; and in due time the fruit of valiant action。〃  With which quaint fact (for fact it is; in spite of the bombast) I end the present chapter。



CHAPTER VIII

HOW THE NOBLE BROTHERHOOD OF THE ROSE WAS FOUNDED


〃It is virtue; yea virtue; gentlemen; that maketh gentlemen; that maketh the poor rich; the base…born noble; the subject a sovereign; the deformed beautiful; the sick whole; the weak strong; the most miserable most happy。  There are two principal and peculiar gifts in the nature of man; knowledge and reason; the one commandeth; and the other obeyeth: these things neither the whirling wheel of fortune can change; neither the deceitful cavillings of worldlings separate; neither sickness abate; neither age abolish。〃LILLY's Euphues; 1586。


It now falls to my lot to write of the foundation of that most chivalrous brotherhood of the Rose; which after a few years made itself not only famous in its native country of Devon; but formidable; as will be related hereafter; both in Ireland and in the Netherlands; in the Spanish Main and the heart of South America。  And if this chapter shall seem to any Quixotic and fantastical; let them recollect that the generation who spoke and acted thus in matters of love and honor were; nevertheless; practised and valiant soldiers; and prudent and crafty politicians; that he who wrote the 〃Arcadia〃 was at the same time; in spite of his youth; one of the subtlest diplomatists of Europe; that the poet of the 〃Faerie Queene〃 was also the author of 〃The State of Ireland;〃 and if they shall quote against me with a sneer Lilly's 〃Euphues〃 itself; I shall only answer by askingHave they ever read it?  For if they have done so; I pity them if they have not found it; in spite of occasional tediousness and pedantry; as brave; righteous; and pious a book as man need look into: and wish for no better proof of the nobleness and virtue of the Elizabethan age; than the fact that 〃Euphues〃 and the 〃Arcadia〃 were the two popular romances of the day。  It may have suited the purposes of Sir Walter Scott; in his cleverly drawn Sir Piercie Shafton; to ridicule the Euphuists; and that affectatam comitatem of the travelled English of which Languet complains; but over and above the anachronism of the whole character (for; to give but one instance; the Euphuist knight talks of Sidney's quarrel with Lord Oxford at least ten years before it happened); we do deny that Lilly's book could; if read by any man of common sense; produce such a coxcomb; whose spiritual ancestors would rather have been Gabriel Harvey and Lord Oxford;if indeed the former has not maligned the latter; and ill…tempered Tom Nash maligned the maligner in his turn。

But; indeed; there is a double anachronism in Sir Piercie; for he does not even belong to the days of Sidney; but to those worse times which began in the latter years of Elizabeth; and after breaking her mighty heart; had full license to bear their crop of fools' heads in the profligate days of James。  Of them; perhaps; hereafter。  And in the meanwhile; let those who have not read 〃Euphues〃 believe that; if they could train a son after the fashion of his Ephoebus; to the great saving of their own money and his virtue; all fathers; even in these money…making days; would rise up and call them blessed。  Let us rather open our eyes; and see in these old Elizabeth gallants our own ancestors; showing forth with the luxuriant wildness of youth all the virtues which still go to the making of a true Englishman。  Let us not only see in their commercial and military daring; in their political astuteness; in their deep reverence for law; and in their solemn sense of the great calling of the English nation; the antitypes or rather the examples of our own: but let us confess that their chivalry is only another garb of that beautiful tenderness and mercy which is now; as it was then; the twin sister of English valor; and even in their extravagant fondness for Continental manners and literature; let us recognize that old Anglo…Norman teachableness and wide…heartedness; which has enabled us to profit by the wisdom and civilization of all ages and of all lands; without prejudice to our own distinctive national character。

And so I go to my story; which; if any one dislikes; he has but to turn the leaf till he finds pasturage which suits him better。

Amyas could not sail the next day; or the day after; for the southwester freshened; and blew three parts of a gale dead into the bay。  So having got the 〃Mary Grenville〃 down the river into Appledore pool; ready to start with the first shift of wind; he went quietly home; and when his mother started on a pillion behind the old serving…man to ride to Clovelly; where Frank lay wounded; he went in with her as far as Bideford; and there met; coming down the High Street; a procession of horsemen headed by Will Cary; who; clad cap…a…pie in a shining armor; sword on thigh; and helmet at s

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