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historical lectures and essays(查尔斯金斯利历史讲座)-第34部分

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monk; as teacher of mankind; and that scholars should form; for a while; a 

new   and   powerful   aristocracy;   limited   and   privileged;   and   all   the   more 

redoubtable;   because   its   power   lay   in   intellect;   and   had   been   won   by 

intellect alone。 

     Those who; whether poor or rich; did not fear the monk and priest; at 

least   feared   the   〃scholar;〃   who   held;   so   the   vulgar   believed;   the  keys   of 

that magic lore by which the old necromancers had built cities like Rome; 

and     worked     marvels     of   mechanical      and    chemical     skill;  which     the 

degenerate modern could never equal。 

     If the 〃scholar〃 stopped in a town; his hostess probably begged of him 

a    charm     against    toothache     or   rheumatism。        The     penniless     knight 

discoursed with him on alchemy; and the chances of retrieving his fortune 

by the art of transmuting metals into gold。             The queen or bishop worried 

him in private about casting their nativities; and finding their fates among 

the stars。    But the statesman; who dealt with more practical matters; hired 



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him as an advocate and rhetorician; who could fight his master's enemies 

with   the   weapons   of   Demosthenes   and   Cicero。         Wherever   the   scholar's 

steps were turned; he might be master of others; as long as he was master 

of   himself。     The   plaints   which   he   so   often   uttered   concerning   the 

cruelty of fortune; the fickleness of princes and so forth; were probably no 

more just then than such plaints are now。                 Then; as now; he got his 

deserts;   and   the   world   bought   him   at   his   own   price。   If   he   chose   to   sell 

himself to this patron and to that; he was used and thrown away:                       if he 

chose to remain in honourable independence; he was courted and feared。 

     Among the successful scholars of the sixteenth century; none surely is 

more notable than George Buchanan。                 The poor Scotch widow's son; by 

force of native wit; and; as I think; by force of native worth; fights his way 

upward;       through    poverty     and    severest    persecution;      to  bee      the 

correspondent        and    friend   of   the   greatest    literary   celebrities    of  the 

Continent; parable; in their opinion; to the best Latin poets of antiquity; 

the    preceptor     of   princes;    the  counsellor     and    spokesman       of   Scotch 

statesmen in the most dangerous of times; and leaves behind him political 

treatises; which have influenced not only the history of his own country; 

but that of the civilised world。 

     Such a success could not be attained without making enemies; perhaps 

without   making   mistakes。        But   the   more   we   study   George   Buchanan's 

history;   the   less   we   shall   be   inclined   to   hunt   out   his   failings;   the   more 

inclined to admire his worth。          A shrewd; sound…hearted; affectionate man; 

with a strong love of right and scorn of wrong; and a humour withal which 

saved himexcept on really great occasionsfrom bitterness; and helped 

him to laugh where narrower natures would have only snarled;he is; in 

many   respects;   a   type   of   those   Lowland   Scots;   who   long   preserved   his 

jokes;    genuine     or  reputed;    as   a  mon       household     book。    {16}     A 

schoolmaster        by   profession;    and    struggling    for  long    years   amid    the 

temptations which; in those days; degraded his class into cruel and sordid 

pedants; he rose from the mere pedagogue to be; in the best sense of the 

word; a courtier:         〃One;〃 says Daniel Heinsius; 〃who seemed not only 



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born for a court; but born to amend it。               He brought to his queen that at 

which she could not wonder enough。                For; by affecting a certain liberty in 

censuring morals; he avoided all offence; under the cloak of   simplicity。〃 

Of him and his peers; Turnebus; and Muretus; and their friend Andrea 

Govea; Ronsard; the French court poet; said that they had nothing of the 

pedagogue about them but the gown and cap。                   〃Austere in face; and rustic 

in   his   looks;〃   says   David     Buchanan;      〃but   most    polished    in   style  and 

speech;      and    continually;     even    in   serious    conversation;      jesting    most 

wittily。〃     〃Rough…hewn;         slovenly;    and    rude;〃     says   Peacham;       in   his 

〃pleat Gentleman;〃 speaking of him; probably; as he appeared in old 

age;   〃in   his   person;   behaviour;   and   fashion;   seldom   caring   for   a   better 

outside   than   a   rugge…gown   girt   close   about   him:          yet   his   inside   and 

conceipt in poesie was most rich; and his sweetness and facilitie in verse 

most excellent。〃        A typical Lowland Scot; as I said just now; he seems to 

have absorbed all the best culture which France could afford him; without 

losing   the   strength;   honesty;   and   humour   which   he   inherited   from   his 

Stirlingshire kindred。 

     The story of his life is easily traced。             When an old man; he himself 

wrote   down   the   main   events   of   it;   at   the   request   of   his   friends;   and   his 

sketch has been filled out by mentators; if not always favourable; at 

least erudite。      Born in 1506; at the Moss; in Killearnwhere an obelisk to 

his   memory;   so   one   reads;   has   been   erected   in   this   centuryof   a   family 

〃rather   ancient   than   rich;〃   his   father   dead   in   the   prime   of   manhood;   his 

grandfather       a  spendthrift;    he   and   his  seven    brothers     and   sisters   were 

brought up by a widowed mother; Agnes Heriotof whom one wishes to 

know more; for the rule that great sons have great mothers probably holds 

good in her case。 George gave signs; while at the village school; of future 

scholarship; and when he was only fourteen; his uncle James sent him to 

the University of Paris。         Those were hard times; and the youths; or rather 

boys; who meant to bee scholars; had a cruel life of it; cast desperately 

out   on   the   wide   world   to   beg   and   starve;   either   into   self…restraint   and 

success;   or   into   ruin   of   body   and   soul。    And   a   cruel   life   George   had。 



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Within   two   years   he   was   down   in   a   severe   illness;   his   uncle   dead;   his 

supplies stopped; and the boy of sixteen got home; he does not tell how。 

Then he tried soldiering; and was with Albany's French Auxiliaries at the 

ineffectual attack on Wark Castle。             Marching back through deep snow; he 

got   a   fresh   illness;   which   kept   him  in   bed   all   winter。  Then   he   and   his 

brother were sent to St。 Andrews; where he got his B。A。 at nineteen。                        The 

next summer he went to France once more; and 〃fell;〃 he says; 〃into the 

flames   of   the   Lutheran   sect;   which   was   then   spreading   far   and   wide。〃 

Two years of penury followed; and then three years of school…mastering in 

the College of St。 Barbe; which he has immortalisedat least; for the few 

who care to read modern Latin poetryin his elegy on 〃The Miseries of a 

Parisian Teacher   of   the   Humanities。〃          The   wretched   regent…master;   pale 

and suffering; sits up all   night   preparing his   lecture; biting his nails   and 

thumping his desk; and   falls asleep   for a   few m
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