太子爷小说网 > 英语电子书 > little travels and roadside sketches >

第6节

little travels and roadside sketches-第6节

小说: little travels and roadside sketches 字数: 每页4000字

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!






The priests of the country are a remarkably well…fed and

respectable race; without that scowling; hang…dog look which one

has remarked among reverend gentlemen in the neighboring country of

France。  Their reverences wear buckles to their shoes; light…blue

neck…cloths; and huge three…cornered hats in good condition。  To…

day; strolling by the cathedral; I heard the tinkling of a bell in

the street; and beheld certain persons; male and female; suddenly

plump down on their knees before a little procession that was

passing。  Two men in black held a tawdry red canopy; a priest

walked beneath it holding the sacrament covered with a cloth; and

before him marched a couple of little altar…boys in short white

surplices; such as you see in Rubens; and holding lacquered lamps。

A small train of street…boys followed the procession; cap in hand;

and the clergyman finally entered a hospital for old women; near

the church; the canopy and the lamp…bearers remaining without。



It was a touching scene; and as I stayed to watch it; I could not

but think of the poor old soul who was dying within; listening to

the last words of prayer; led by the hand of the priest to the

brink of the black fathomless grave。  How bright the sun was

shining without all the time; and how happy and careless every

thing around us looked!





The Duke d'Arenberg has a picture…gallery worthy of his princely

house。  It does not contain great pieces; but tit…bits of pictures;

such as suit an aristocratic epicure。  For such persons a great

huge canvas is too much; it is like sitting down alone to a roasted

ox; and they do wisely; I think; to patronize small; high…flavored;

delicate morceaux; such as the Duke has here。



Among them may be mentioned; with special praise; a magnificent

small Rembrandt; a Paul Potter of exceeding minuteness and beauty;

an Ostade; which reminds one of Wilkie's early performances; and a

Dusart quite as good as Ostade。  There is a Berghem; much more

unaffected than that artist's works generally are; and; what is

more; precious in the eyes of many ladies as an object of art;

there is; in one of the grand saloons; some needlework done by the

Duke's own grandmother; which is looked at with awe by those

admitted to see the palace。



The chief curiosity; if not the chief ornament of a very elegant

library; filled with vases and bronzes; is a marble head; supposed

to be the original head of the Laocoon。  It is; unquestionably a

finer head than that which at present figures upon the shoulders of

the famous statue。  The expression of woe is more manly and

intense; in the group as we know it; the head of the principal

figure has always seemed to me to be a grimace of grief; as are the

two accompanying young gentlemen with their pretty attitudes; and

their little silly; open…mouthed despondency。  It has always had

upon me the effect of a trick; that statue; and not of a piece of

true art。  It would look well in the vista of a garden; it is not

august enough for a temple; with all its jerks and twirls; and

polite convulsions。  But who knows what susceptibilities such a

confession may offend?  Let us say no more about the Laocoon; nor

its head; nor its tail。  The Duke was offered its weight in gold;

they say; for this head; and refused。  It would be a shame to speak

ill of such a treasure; but I have my opinion of the man who made

the offer。



In the matter of sculpture almost all the Brussels churches are

decorated with the most laborious wooden pulpits; which may be

worth their weight in gold; too; for what I know; including his

reverence preaching inside。  At St。 Gudule the preacher mounts into

no less a place than the garden of Eden; being supported by Adam

and Eve; by Sin and Death; and numberless other animals; he walks

up to his desk by a rustic railing of flowers; fruits; and

vegetables; with wooden peacocks; paroquets; monkeys biting apples;

and many more of the birds and beasts of the field。  In another

church the clergyman speaks from out a hermitage; in a third from a

carved palm…tree; which supports a set of oak clouds that form the

canopy of the pulpit; and are; indeed; not much heavier in

appearance than so many huge sponges。  A priest; however tall or

stout; must be lost in the midst of all these queer gimcracks; in

order to be consistent; they ought to dress him up; too; in some

odd fantastical suit。  I can fancy the Cure of Meudon preaching out

of such a place; or the Rev。 Sydney Smith; or that famous clergyman

of the time of the League; who brought all Paris to laugh and

listen to him。





But let us not be too supercilious and ready to sneer。  It is only

bad taste。  It may have been very true devotion which erected these

strange edifices。







II。GHENTBRUGES。





GHENT。 (1840。)





The Beguine College or Village is one of the most extraordinary

sights that all Europe can show。  On the confines of the town of

Ghent you come upon an old…fashioned brick gate; that seems as if

it were one of the city barriers; but; on passing it; one of the

prettiest sights possible meets the eye:  At the porter's lodge you

see an old lady; in black and a white hood; occupied over her book;

before you is a red church with a tall roof and fantastical Dutch

pinnacles; and all around it rows upon rows of small houses; the

queerest; neatest; nicest that ever were seen (a doll's house is

hardly smaller or prettier)。  Right and left; on each side of

little alleys; these little mansions rise; they have a courtlet

before them; in which some green plants or hollyhocks are growing;

and to each house is a gate; that has mostly a picture or queer…

carved ornament upon or about it; and bears the name; not of the

Beguine who inhabits it; but of the saint to whom she may have

devoted itthe house of St。 Stephen; the house of St。 Donatus; the

English or Angel Convent; and so on。  Old ladies in black are

pacing in the quiet alleys here and there; and drop the stranger a

curtsy as he passes them and takes off his hat。  Never were such

patterns of neatness seen as these old ladies and their houses。  I

peeped into one or two of the chambers; of which the windows were

open to the pleasant evening sun; and saw beds scrupulously plain;

a quaint old chair or two; and little pictures of favorite saints

decorating the spotless white walls。  The old ladies kept up a

quick; cheerful clatter; as they paused to gossip at the gates of

their little domiciles; and with a great deal of artifice; and

lurking behind walls; and looking at the church as if I intended to

design that; I managed to get a sketch of a couple of them。





But what white paper can render the whiteness of their linen; what

black ink can do justice to the lustre of their gowns and shoes?

Both of the ladies had a neat ankle and a tight stocking; and I

fancy that heaven is quite as well served in this costume as in the

dress of a scowling; stockingless friar; whom I had seen passing

just before。  The look and dress of the man made me shudder。  His

great red feet were bound up in a shoe open at the toes; a kind of

compromise for a sandal。  I had just seen him and his brethren at

the Dominican Church; where a mass of music was sung; and orange…

trees; flags; and banners decked the aisle of the church。



One begins to grow sick of these churches; and the hideous

exhibitions of bodily agonies that are depicted on the sides of all

the chapels。  Into one wherein we went this morning was what they

called a Calvary: a horrible; ghastly image of a Christ in a tomb;

the figure of the natural size; and of the livid color of death;

gaping red wounds on the body and round the brows: the whole piece

enough to turn one sick; and fit only to brutalize the beholder of

it。  The Virgin is commonly represented with a dozen swords stuck

in her heart; bleeding throats of headless John Baptists are

perpetually thrust before your eyes。  At the Cathedral gate was a

papier…mache church…ornament shopmost of the carvings and reliefs

of the same dismal character: one; for instance; represented a

heart with a great gash in it; and a double row of large blood…

drops dribbling from it; nails and a knife were thrust into the

heart; round the whole was a crown of thorns。  Such things are

dreadful to think of。  The same gloomy spirit which made a religion

of them; and worked upon the people by the grossest of all means;

terror; distracted the natural feelings of man to maintain its

powershut gentle women into lonely; pitiless conventsfrightened

poor peasants with tales of tormenttaught that the end and labor

of life was silence; wretchedness; and the scourgemurdered those

by fagot and prison who thought otherwise。  How has the blind and

furious bigotry of man perverted that which God gave us as our

greatest boon; and bid us hate where God bade us love!  Thank

heaven that monk has gone out of sight!  It is pleasant to l

返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0

你可能喜欢的