登陆注册
19306600000085

第85章 IGNORANCE(1)

"I was alive without the law once."--Paul.

"I was now a brisk talker also myself in the matter of religion."--

Bunyan.

This is a new kind of pilgrim. There are not many pilgrims like this bright brisk youth. A few more young gentlemen like this, and the pilgrimage way would positively soon become fashionable and popular, and be the thing to do. Had you met with this young gentleman in society, had you noticed him beginning to come about your church, you would have lost no time in finding out who he was.

I can well believe it, you would have replied. Indeed, I felt sure of it. I must ask him to the house. I was quite struck with his appearance and his manners. Yes; ask him at once to your house;

show him some pointed attentions and you will never regret it. For if he goes to the bar and works even decently at his cases, he will be first a sheriff and then a judge in no time. If he should take to politics, he will be an under-secretary before his first parliament is out. And if he takes to the church, which is not at all unlikely, our West-end congregations will all be competing for him as their junior colleague; and, if he elects either of our Established churches to exercise his profession in it, he will have dined with Her Majesty while half of his class-fellows are still half-starved probationers. Society fathers will point him out with anger to their unsuccessful sons, and society mothers will smile under their eyelids as they see him hanging over their daughters.

Well, as this handsome and well-appointed youth stepped out of his own neat little lane into the rough road on which our two pilgrims were staggering upward, he felt somewhat ashamed to be seen in their company. And I do not wonder. For a greater contrast you would not have seen on any road in all that country that day. He was at your very first sight of him a gentleman and the son of a gentleman. A little over-dressed perhaps; as, also, a little lofty to the two rather battered but otherwise decent enough men who, being so much older than he, took the liberty of first accosting him. "Brisk" is his biographer's description of him. Feather-

headed, flippant, and almost impudent, you might have been tempted to say of him had you joined the little party at that moment. But those two tumbled, broken-winded, and, indeed, broken-hearted old men had been, as an old author says, so emptied from vessel to vessel--they had had a life of such sloughs and stiff climbs--they had been in hunger and thirst, in cold and nakedness so often--that it was no wonder that their dandiacal companion walked on a little ahead of them. 'Gentlemen,' his fine clothes and his cane and his head in the air all said to his two somewhat disreputable-looking fellow-travellers,--"Gentlemen, you be utter strangers to me: I

know you not. And, besides, I take my pleasure in walking alone, even more a great deal than in company, unless I like it better."

But all his society manners, and all his costly and well-kept clothes, and all his easy and self-confident airs did not impose upon the two wary old pilgrims. They had seen too much of the world, and had been too long mixing among all kinds of pilgrims, young and old, true and false, to be easily imposed upon. Besides, as one could see from their weather-beaten faces, and their threadbare garments, they had found the upward way so dreadfully difficult that they both felt a real apprehension as to the future of this light-hearted and light-headed youth. "You may find some difficulty at the gate," somewhat bluntly broke in the oldest of the two pilgrims on their young comrade. "I shall, no doubt, do at the gate as other good people do," replied the young gentleman briskly. "But what have you to show at the gate that may cause that the gate be opened to you?" "Why, I know my Lord's will, and I have been a good liver all my days, and I pay every man his own.

I pray, moreover, and I fast. I pay tithes, and give alms, and have left my country for whither I am going." Now, before we go further: Do all you young gentlemen do as much as that? Have you always been good livers? Have you paid every man and woman their due? Do you pray to be called prayer? And, if so, when, and where, and what for, and how long at a time? I do not ask if your private prayer-book is like Bishop Andrewes' Devotions, which was so reduced to pulp with tears and sweat and the clenching of his agonising hands that his literary executors were with difficulty able to decipher it. Clito in the Christian Perfection was so expeditious with his prayers that he used to boast that he could both dress and do his devotions in a quarter of an hour. What was the longest time you ever took to dress or undress and say your prayers? Then, again, there is another Anglican young gentleman in the same High Church book who always fasts on Good Friday and the Thirtieth of January. Did you ever deny yourself a glass of wine or a cigar or an opera ticket for the church or the poor? Could you honestly say that you know what tithes are? And is there a poor man or woman or child in this whole city who will by any chance put your name into their prayers and praises at bedtime to-

night? I am afraid there are not many young gentlemen in this house tonight who could cast a stone at that brisk lad Ignorance, Vain-Hope, door in the side of the hill, and all. He was not far from the kingdom of heaven; indeed, he got up to the very gate of it. How many of you will get half as far?

同类推荐
  • 续高僧传

    续高僧传

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 入若耶溪

    入若耶溪

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 江氏伤科学

    江氏伤科学

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛顶尊胜陀罗尼经

    佛顶尊胜陀罗尼经

    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。
  • 重订囊秘喉书

    重订囊秘喉书

    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
  • 三国之孔明之师

    三国之孔明之师

    一个机械学博士穿越三国成为诸葛亮的老师,看他如何在三国解决各种麻烦,如何立足。
  • 竹叶青跟老娘回府

    竹叶青跟老娘回府

    某女是掌管天宫神草的低级神女,每天的消遣方式就是偷偷仙丹,吓吓众神,可众神却又及其宠爱她,无奈天宫的头头——天帝,派笑天犬把她驱逐天宫,初次下凡的她,又遭受了某人的‘虐待’,她不爽,非常之不爽!
  • 僵尸王的童养媳:你丫的别咬我啊

    僵尸王的童养媳:你丫的别咬我啊

    本来是偷学师傅的招魂术,谁知道倒霉催的我竟然召唤粗了僵尸王上来就给我一口!WHAT?你说我是你媳妇?不可能不可能!伦家明明是一个美少女哪里能和你这个凶残货在一起!虽然说我不是你媳妇,可素你也对我太好了一点吧?唯一让我不明白的是为啥你丫的上来说不几句话就咬我呢?被摧残了一段时间后我竟然奇迹般的不被他咬就觉得的他不是我认识的那货?卧槽!难不成是姑娘我被你咬傻了??“小乖!龇!你看牙齿痒痒”某凶残货龇着牙软萌软萌的看着我“喏!给大黄的磨牙棒你先用用吧!”“不要磨牙棒,要兔叽”凶残货扔掉磨牙棒蠢蠢欲动的看着我说道“我擦!你要兔叽,我特么还想要母鸡呢!”“母鸡没有公鸡要吗?”凶残货指了指特殊地方问道!
  • 洪荒崛起者

    洪荒崛起者

    洪荒大陆之上大山林立,有蛮荒凶兽蛰伏于大山深处,而在大山之间亦有无数大小不一的部落艰难存活。蛮龙部落,作为生活在大山深处的小部落,每日为了食物,都要深入凶险的大山之中,与凶猛的凶兽厮杀。在某一天,蛮龙部落当代族长——蛮山狩猎时意外捡到一个弃婴,后来..........勇敢可爱的小蛮星迅速崛起,变异的图腾,神秘的血脉...................(新书《尊主纪》已发。希望到时候各位书友能够前来捧场,小天感激不尽~)新一代洪荒巨作诞生了!欢迎加入星族:593972981
  • 重生之最强仙路

    重生之最强仙路

    生与死,轮回不止;爱与恨,阴阳两隔。他本是一名普通医学院校的大学生,无奈为情所困,酗酒归来,意外出车祸,穿越回古代,遇高人,踏仙路。拥有现代人思维的他会有怎样的奇遇和艳遇呢……
  • 极风剑豪

    极风剑豪

    死亡如风,常伴吾身。剑之故事,以血为墨。其实我不适合写网文,不过还是当做一个兴趣爱好吧。
  • 西域行程记

    西域行程记

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 天下第一小妾

    天下第一小妾

    她,21世纪令黑白两道都闻风丧胆的美女杀手,却不料被男友狠心背叛,在临死前,她笑着说:“下辈子,不再相信任何人。”他,是凌越国冷酷无情,杀人不眨眼的轩王爷。穿越而来,竟成了他的小妾,靠,老子可是21世纪的美女杀手,杀人于无形,让我当小三?做梦去吧!
  • 中世纪生活变成这样居然没错

    中世纪生活变成这样居然没错

    这是一本关于身处中世纪的青年守护心中之人的书。为了她,他层层布算,但也难免伤痕累累。此间恋爱奋斗,阴谋诡计,斗智斗勇,攻城围城,幕幕上演。··················感谢腾讯文学书评团提供书评支持
  • 每天读一点世界文化常识

    每天读一点世界文化常识

    《每天读一点世界文化常识》是一部世界文化百科全书,从人类历史、衣食住行、文学艺术、政治经济、军事技术、风俗传说、名胜古迹七个方面讲解世界文化常识,展示世界文化发展的轨迹,为读者提供科学性、趣味性、知识性的阅读体验和感受,使大家尽情畅游在辽阔深邃的世界文化知识的海洋中。