登陆注册
20288000000002

第2章 PREFACE(2)

One thing we are at last beginning to understand,which our ancestors evidently had not learned;that it is far more needful for theologians to become as little children,than for little children to become theologians.They considered it a duty that they owed to the youngest of us,to teach us doctrines.And we believed in our instructors,if we could not always digest their instructions.We learned to reverence truth as they received it and lived it,and to feel that the search for truth was one chief end of our being.

It was a pity that we were expected to begin thinking upon hard subjects so soon,and it was also a pity that we were set to hard work while so young.Yet these were both inevitable results of circumstances then existing;and perhaps the two belong together.

Perhaps habits of conscientious work induce thought.Certainly,right thinking naturally impels people to work.

We learned no theories about "the dignity of labor,"but we were taught to work almost as if it were a religion;to keep at work,expecting nothing else.It was our inheritance,banded down from the outcasts of Eden.And for us,as for them,there was a blessing hidden in the curse.I am glad that I grew up under these wholesome Puritanic influences,as glad as I am that I was born a New Englander;and I surely should have chosen New England for my birthplace before any region under the sun.

Rich or poor,every child comes into the world with some imperative need of its own,which shapes its individuality.Ibelieve it was Grotius who said,"Books are necessities of my life.Food and clothing I can do without,if I must."My "must-have "was poetry.From the first,life meant that to me.And,fortunately,poetry is not purchasable material,but an atmosphere in which every life may expand.I found it everywhere about me.The children of old New England were always surrounded,it is true,with stubborn matter of fact,--the hand to hand struggle for existence.But that was no hindrance.Poetry must have prose to root itself in;the homelier its earth-spot,the lovelier,by contrast,its heaven-breathing flowers.

To different minds,poetry may present different phases.To me,the reverent faith of the people I lived among,and their faithful everyday living,was poetry;blossoms and trees and blue skies were poetry.God himself was poetry.As I grew up and lived on,friendship became to me the deepest and sweetest ideal of poetry.To live in other lives,to take their power and beauty into our own,that is poetry experienced,the most inspiring of all.Poetry embodied in persons,in lovely and lofty characters,more sacredly than all in the One Divine Person who has transfigured our human life with the glory of His sacrifice,--all the great lyrics and epics pale before that,and it is within the reach and comprehension of every human soul.

To care for poetry in this way does not make one a poet,but it does make one feel blessedly rich,and quite indifferent to many things which are usually looked upon as desirable possessions.Iam sincerely grateful that it was given to me,from childhood,to see life from this point of view.And it seems to me that every young girl would be happier for beginning her earthly journey with the thankful consciousness that her life does not consist in the abundance of things that she possesses.

The highest possible poetic conception is that of a life consecrated to a noble ideal.It may be unable to find expression for itself except through humble,even menial services,or through unselfish devotion whose silent song is audible to God alone;yet such music as this might rise to heaven from every young girl's heart and character if she would set it free.In such ways it was meant that the world should be filled with the true poetry of womanhood.

It is one of the most beautiful facts in this human existence of ours,that we remember the earliest and freshest part of it most vividly.Doubtless it was meant that our childhood should live on in us forever.My childhood was by no means a cloudless one.It had its light and shade,each contributing a charm which makes it wholly delightful in the retrospect.

I can see very distinctly the child that I was,and I know how the world looked to her,far off as she is now.She seems to me like my little sister,at play in a garden where I can at any time return and find her.I have enjoyed bringing her back,and letting her tell her story,almost as if she were somebody else.

I like her better than I did when I was really a child,and Ihope never to part company with her.

I do not feel so much satisfaction in the older girl who comes between her and me,although she,too,is enough like me to be my sister,or even more like my young,undisciplined mother;for the girl is mother of the woman.But I have to acknowledge her faults and mistakes as my own,while I sometimes feel like reproving her severely for her carelessly performed tasks,her habit of lapsing into listless reveries,her cowardly shrinking from responsibility and vigorous endeavor,and many other faults that I have inherited from her.Still,she is myself,and I could not be quite happy without her comradeship.

Every phase of our life belongs to us.The moon does not,except in appearance,lose her first thin,luminous curve,nor her silvery crescent,in rounding to her full.The woman is still both child and girl,in the completeness of womanly character.

We have a right to our entire selves,through all the changes of this mortal state,a claim which we shall doubtless carry along with us into the unfolding mysteries of our eternal being.

Perhaps in this thought lies hidden the secret of immortal youth;for a seer has said that "to grow old in heaven is to grow young."To take life as it is sent to us,to live it faithfully,looking and striving always towards better life,this was the lesson that came to me from my early teachers.It was not an easy lesson,but it was a healthful one;and I pass it on to younger pupils,trusting that they will learn it more thoroughly than I ever have.

Young or old,we may all win inspiration to do our best,from the needs of a world to which the humblest life may be permitted to bring immeasurable blessings:--"For no one doth know What he can bestow,What light,strength,and beauty may after him go:

Thus onward we move,And,save God above,None guesseth how wondrous the journey will prove."L.L.

BEVERLY,MASSACHUSETTS,October,1889.

CONTENTS.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 连鬼神也哭泣

    连鬼神也哭泣

    凯贾,影之鬼神。原暗影迷宫的守护者,“变异”开始时凯贾被迷宫里狂暴的怪物杀死。因为其生前拥有强大的暗黑力量,死后变为影之鬼神游荡在迷宫里。洛迪,凯贾灵魂的转世,与鬼神之间有密切的联系,成为第二个真正掌握鬼神力量之人,身为黑暗之躯的他却有耀眼的名为“希望”的光明之心。尼禄,原魔剑教神圣骑士团骑士,应为右手受恶魔之毒感染变为恶魔之手而改变了自己一生。两个人穿越时空的相遇是带来奇迹还是带来灾祸,谁也不知道.......
  • 异世之血斧纵横

    异世之血斧纵横

    一把血斧,一路横行。大哥级人物流落以异世,以一把斧头砍出一片大大的天下。
  • 重生正室手札

    重生正室手札

    唐朝叱咤风云的女相,穿越为胤禛正室,翻手为云覆手为雨,笑傲前朝后宫手札一本!
  • 惹上豪门冷少

    惹上豪门冷少

    他是年轻富有的官三代,也是跨国公司的总裁,俊雅而高贵。她是没有父母的小孤女,过早进入社会,顽强而美丽。三年前的一段恋情,因她的背叛而告终。再重逢时,她却沦为待宰的羔羊,只能任他蹂躏。如此相逢,对二人来说究竟是福是祸?
  • 黑色盛宴

    黑色盛宴

    有些东西以正常人的眼光很难去理解,也很难给出一个客观的评价。但在某些方面,一个思维异常的人并不是神经病,也不是疯子,他只是有着一些很独特的想法。有些事你可以隐藏,可以逃避,但终有一天你迟早要面对自己内心的那份黑暗,那份黑色的盛宴。
  • 终级保镖

    终级保镖

    他,从小就跟着一个神秘人修炼《苍穹诀》,十六岁时便成为了一名顶尖的修真者!……他不爱看书,当然,除了XX书以外……他,竟在凑巧之下成为了“校花”的保镖?!……
  • 千宾

    千宾

    界之桎梏,道之枷锁,观沧澜涧,登天诛峰,悟道万物归无,破天地界面,主宰万方。
  • 漫步在神雕

    漫步在神雕

    现代社会一不为人知的少年天才,苦于身患不治之症,只能活到二十岁,在生命即将消逝之际,不愿面临与亲人之间的生死离别,于是毅然离家,等待生命的终结,却在看日出时被一束紫色光华所笼罩,导致其穿越到神雕世界,随后经历了一系列的事情后,携美一起漫步在神雕世界,逍遥世间的故事。新人新书,需要大家的帮助,还请多多的收藏和推荐,小环在此致谢!(郑重提醒:本故事纯属虚构,如有雷同,纯属巧合,切勿模仿!)
  • 逆天之阵

    逆天之阵

    介绍什么的真麻烦→_→干脆就不介绍咯→_→读者们表打我,就是这么懒。。
  • 响彻山河

    响彻山河

    七年光阴,他从天才变成废物。一夜之间,他重获元气,飞速成长。为了变强,他踏遍大陆河山,战破宗族异兽!顶级符文、超强元武、破天剑法无不信手拈来!就在他魔剑恸指天下,威名响彻山河之际,一声叱问划破天际,你是谁?!