fabre, poet of science-第11节
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But might he not also expect auditors of another quality; in love only with
the ideal; 〃who; without troubling about the possible applications of
scientific theory; desired above all to be initiated into the action of the
forces which rule nature; and thereby to open to their minds more wondrous
horizons〃?
Such were the noble scruples which troubled his conscience; and which
appeared in the letter which he addressed to the administration of the
city; when he was entrusted by the latter with what he regarded as a lofty
and most important mission。
〃。。。Is it to be understood that every purely scientific aspect; incapable
of immediate application; is to be rigorously banished from these lessons?
Is it to be understood that; confined to an impassable circle; the value of
every truth must be reckoned at so much per hundred; and that I must
silently pass over all that aims only at satisfying a laudable desire of
knowledge? No; gentlemen; for then these lectures would lack a very
essential thing: the spirit which gives life!〃 (4/26。)
Physically; according to the testimony of his contemporaries; he was
already as an admirable photograph represents him twenty years later: he
wore a large black felt hat; his face was shaven; the chin strong and
wilful; the eyes vigilant; deep…set and penetrating; he hardly changed; and
it was thus I saw him later; at a more advanced age。
The ancient Abbey of Saint…Martial; where these lectures were given; was
occupied also by the Requien Museum; of which Fabre had charge。 It was here
that he one day met John Stuart Mill。
The celebrated philosopher and economist had just lost his wife: 〃the most
precious friendship of his life〃 was ended。 (4/27。) It was only after long
waiting that he had been able to marry her。 Subjected at an early age by a
father devoid of tenderness and formidably severe to the harshest of
disciplines; he had learned in childhood 〃what is usually learned only by a
man。〃 Scarcely out of his long clothes; he was construing Herodotus and the
dialogues of Plato; and the whole of his dreary youth was spent in covering
the vast field of the moral and mathematical sciences。 His heart; always
suppressed; never really expanded until he met Mrs。 Harriett Taylor。
This was one of those privileged beings such as seem as a rule to exist
only in poetry and literature; a woman as beautiful as she was
astonishingly gifted with the rarest faculties; combining with the most
searching intelligence and the most persuasive eloquence so exquisite a
sensitiveness that she seemed often to divine events in advance。
Mill possessed her at last for a few years only; and he had resigned his
post in the offices of the East India Company to enjoy a studious retreat
in the enchanted atmosphere of southern Europe when suddenly at Avignon
Harriett Mill was carried off by a violent illness。 (Mill retired in 1858;
when the government of India passed to the Crown。 He had married Mrs。 John
Taylor in 1851。 'Tr。')
》From that time the philosopher's horizon was suddenly contracted to the
limit of those places whence had vanished the adored companion and the
beneficent genius who had been the sole charm of his entire existence。
Overwhelmed with grief; he acquired a small country house in one of the
least frequented parts of the suburbs of Avignon; close to the cemetery
where the beloved dead was laid to rest for ever。 A silent alley of planes
and mulberry…trees led to the threshold; which was shaded by the delicate
foliage of a myrtle。 All about he had planted a dense hedge of hawthorn;
cypress; and arborvitae; above which; from the vantage of a small terrace;
built; under his orders; at the level of the first floor; he could see; day
by day and at all hours; the white tomb of his wife; and a little ease his
grief。
Thus he cloistered himself; 〃living in memory;〃 having no companion but the
daughter of his wife; trying to console himself by work; recapitulating his
life; the story of which he has told in his remarkable 〃Memoirs。〃 (4/28。)
Fabre paid a few visits to this Theba?d。 A solitary such as Mill had become
could be attracted only by a man of his temper; in whom he found; if not an
affinity of nature; at least tastes like his own; and immense learning; as
great as his。 For Mill also was versed in all the branches of human
knowledge: not only had he meditated on the high problems of history and
political economy; but he had also probed all branches of science:
mathematics; physics; and natural history。 It was above all botany which
served them as a bond of union; and they were often seen to set forth on a
botanizing expedition through the countryside。
This friendship; which was not without profit for Fabre (4/29。); was still
more precious to Mill; who found; in the society of the naturalist; a
certain relief from his sorrow。 The substance of their conversation was far
from being such as one might have imagined it。 Mill was not highly sensible
to the festival of nature or the poetry of the fields。 He was hardly
interested in botany; except from the somewhat abstract point of view of
classification and the systematic arrangement of species。 Always
melancholy; cold; and distant; he spoke little; but Fabre felt under this
apparent sensibility a rigorous integrity of character; a great capacity
for devotion; and a rare goodness of heart。
So the two wandered across country; each thinking his own thoughts; and
each self…contained as though they were walking on parallel but distant
paths。
However; Fabre was not at the end of his troubles; and secret ill…feeling
began to surround him。 The free lectures at Saint…Martial offended the
devout; angered the sectaries; and excited the intolerance of the pedants;
〃whose feeble eyelids blink at the daylight;〃 and he was far from
receiving; from his colleagues at the lycée; the sympathy and encouragement
which were; at this moment especially; so necessary to him。 Some even went
so far as to denounce him publicly; and he was mentioned one day from the
height of the pulpit; to the indignation of the pupils of the upper Normal
College; as a man at once dangerous and subversive。
Some found it objectionable that this 〃irregular person; this man of
solitary study;〃 should; by his work and by the magic of his teaching;
assume a position so unique and so disproportionate。 Others regarded the
novelty of placing the sciences at the disposal of young girls as a heresy
and a scandal。
Their bickering; their cabals; their secret manoeuvres; were in the long
run to triumph。 Duruy had just succumbed under the incessant attacks of the
clericals。 In him Fabre lost a friend; a protector; and his only support。
Embittered; defeated; he was now only waiting for a pretext; an incident; a
mere nothing; to throw up everything。
One fine morning his landladies; devout and aged spinsters; made themselves
the instruments of the spite of his enemies; and abruptly gave him notice
to quit。 he had to leave before the end of the month; for; simple and
confident as usual; he had obtained neither a lease nor the least written
agreement。
At this moment he was so poor that he had not even the money to meet the
expenses of his removal。 The times were troublous: the great war had
commenced; and Paris being invested he could no longer obtain the small
earnings which his textbooks were beginning to yield him; and which had for
some time been increasing his modest earnings。 On the other hand; having
always lived far from all society; he had not at Avignon a single relation
who could assist him; and he could neither obtain credit nor find any one
to extricate him from his embarrassments and save him from the extremity of
need with which he was threatened。 He thought of Mill; and in this
difficult juncture it was Mill who saved him。 The philosopher was then in
England; he was for the time being a member of the House of Commons; and he
used to vary his life at Avignon by a few weeks' sojourn in London。 His
reply; however; was not long in coming: almost immediately he sent help; a
sum of some 120 pounds sterling; which fell like manna into the hands of
Fabre; and he did not; in exchange; demand the slightest security for this
advance。
Then; filled with disgust; the 〃irregular person〃 shook off the yoke and
retired to Orange。 At first he took shelter where he could; anxious only to
avoid as far as possible any contact with his fellow…men; then; having
finally discovered a dwelling altogether in conformity with his tastes; he
moved to the outskirts of the city; and settled at the edge of the fields;
in the middle of a great meadow; in an isolated house; pleasant and
commodious; connected with the road to Camaret by a superb avenue of tall
and handsome plane…trees。 This hermitage in some respects recalled that of
Mill in the outskirts of Avignon; and thence his eyes; embracing a vast
horizon; f