登陆注册
18325000000019

第19章 CHAPTER V--SOME SCHOLARS OF THE RESTORATION(2)

The statute required all scholars to be in their rooms before Tom had ceased ringing. It was, perhaps, too rash to say that the Oxford of the Restoration was already modern Oxford. The manners of the students were, so to speak, more accentuated. However much the lecturer in Idolology may dislike the method and person of the Reader in the Mandingo language, these two learned men do not box in taverns, nor take off their coats if they meet each other at the Clarendon Press. People are careful not to pitch into each other in that way, though the temper which confounds opponents for their theory of irregular verbs is not at all abated. As Wood grew in years he did not increase in honours. "He was a mere scholar," and consequently might expect from the greater number of men disrespect.

When he was but sixty-four, he looked eighty at least. His dress was not elegant, "cleanliness being his chief object." He rarely left his rooms, that were papered with MSS., and where every table and chair had its load of books and yellow parchments from the College muniment rooms. When strangers came to Oxford with letters of recommendation, the recluse would leave his study, and gladly lead them about the town, through Logic Lane to Queen's, which had not then the sublimely classical front, built by Hawksmoor, "but suggested by Sir Christopher Wren." It is worthy of his genius.

Wood died in 1695, "forgiving every one." He could well afford to do so. In his Athenae Oxonienses he had written the lives of all his enemies.

Wood, "being a mere scholar," could, of course, expect nothing but disrespect in a place like Oxford. His younger contemporary, Humphrey Prideaux, was, in the Oxford manner, a man of the world. He was the son of a Cornish squire, was educated at Westminster under Busby (that awful pedagogue, whose birch seems so near a memory), got a studentship at Christ Church in 1668, and took his B.A. degree in 1672. Here it may be observed that men went up quite as late in life then as they do now, for Prideaux was twenty-four years old when he took his degree. Fell was Dean of Christ Church, and was showing laudable zeal in working the University Press. What a pity it is that the University Press of to-day has become a trading concern, a shop for twopenny manuals and penny primers! It is scarcely proper that the University should at once organise examinations and sell the manuals which contain the answers to the questions most likely to be set. To return to Fell; he made Prideaux edit Lucius Florus, and publish the Marmora Oxoniensia, which came out 1676. We must not suppose, however, that Prideaux was an enthusiastic archaeologist.

He did the Marmora because the Dean commanded it, and because educated people were at that period not uninterested in Greek art.

At the present hour one may live a lifetime in Oxford and only learn, by the accident of examining passmen in the Arundel Room, that the University possesses any marbles. In the walls of the Arundel Room (on the ground-floor in the Schools' quadrangle) these touching remains of Hellas are interred. There are the funereal stelae, with their quiet expression of sorrow, of hope, of resignation. The young man, on his tombstone, is represented in the act of rising and taking the hand of a friend. He is bound on his latest journey.

"He goeth forth unto the unknown land, Where wife nor child may follow; thus far tell The lingering clasp of hand in faithful hand, And that brief carven legend, Friend, farewell.

O pregnant sign, profound simplicity!

All passionate pain and fierce remonstrating Being wholly purged, leave this mere memory, Deep but not harsh, a sad and sacred thing." {1}({1} Poems by Ernest Myers. London, 1877.)

The lady chooses from a coffer a trinket, or a ribbon. It is her last toilette she is ******, with no fear and no regret. Again, the long-severed souls are meeting with delight in the home of the just made perfect.

Even in the Schools these scraps of Greek lapidary's work seem beautiful to us, in their sober and cheerful acceptance of life and death. We hope, in Oxford, that the study of ancient art, as well as of ancient literature, may soon be made possible. These tangible relics of the past bring us very near to the heart and the life of Greece, and waken a kindly enthusiasm in every one who approaches them. In Humphrey Prideaux's letters there is not a trace of any such feeling. He does his business, but it is hack-work. In this he differs from the modern student, but in his caustic description of the rude and witless society of the place he is modern enough. In his letters to his friend, John Ellis, of the State Paper Office, it is plain that Prideaux wants to get preferment. His taste and his ambition alike made him detest the heavy, beer-drinking doctors, the fast "All Souls gentlemen," and the fossils of stupidity who are always plentifully imbedded in the soil of University life.

Fellowships were then sold, at Magdalen and New, when they were not given by favour. Prideaux grumbles (July 28th, 1674) at the laxness of the Commissioners, who should have exposed this abuse: "In town, one of their inquirys is whether any of the scholars weare pantaloons or periwigues, or keep dogs." The great dispute about dogs, which raged at a later date in University College, had already begun to disturb dons and undergraduates. The choice language of Oxford contempt was even then extant, and Prideaux, like Grandison in Daniel Deronda, spoke curtly of the people whom he did not like as "brutes."

"Pembroke--the fittest colledge in the town for brutes." The University did not encourage certain "players" who had paid the place a visit, and the players, in revenge, had gone about the town at night and broken the windows.

When the journey from London to Oxford is so easily performed, it is amusing to read of Prideaux's miserable adventures, in the diligence, between a lady of easy manners, a "pitiful rogue," and two undergraduates who "sordidly affected debauchery."

同类推荐
  • 佛说月明菩萨经

    佛说月明菩萨经

    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。
  • 兰闺恨

    兰闺恨

    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。
  • 广动植之二

    广动植之二

    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。
  • 九日

    九日

    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。
  • 周易略例

    周易略例

    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
  • 我的金手指是恶魔面具

    我的金手指是恶魔面具

    顾黎重生了,一重生就在擂台上惨遭残废,最终顾黎发现自己胸口上有一副刺青。
  • 幻之天空城

    幻之天空城

    第四次忍界大战后,人们过上了平静的日子,十五年后,新的一批忍者也开始磨练了。
  • 太上洞玄灵宝十号功德因缘妙经

    太上洞玄灵宝十号功德因缘妙经

    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。
  • 风落梨花

    风落梨花

    三角虐恋,一个是少将军,一个是叛臣之子,一个是民间商人弃女。他们之间的爱恨纠葛、痴恋情深、求之不得。是各自放手还是纠缠不休?故事短小,情节发展快。
  • 狼空间

    狼空间

    狼,每一只都是天生的猎手。狼王更是其中的佼佼者。当他们遇到一起,便是连猛虎也要退避的群狼!狼啸明月!世界的一切都会因我而震撼。——孙傲新人首次创作,希望大家喜欢。
  • 传承瓦洛兰

    传承瓦洛兰

    你得到正义铁拳的传承?那你想见识德玛西亚的正义吗?你领悟了流浪剑豪的追风剑?那你想领略利刃华尔兹吗?你是天才,传承多重英魂?呵呵,哥传承的是整个瓦洛兰。英魂等级:觉醒-凝魂-悟技-通能-降神-?
  • 余生染辉

    余生染辉

    余染作为一个常年年级前十的大佬级人物,由于大大的意外来到了市二中,却巧合地遇到了另一个中考失手的同学。开学的第一天。邢晖:你不行啊。余染:你个乐色。*开学一个月。邢晖:你就不能回我消息一下吗?余染:不好意思退网。余染看着聊天界面上闪闪亮的大火花面不改色。*高一下学期。邢晖:余染,下五子棋?余染:试试就逝世。下完一局,邢晖把他下在格子纸上的棋子用线连起来。*后来。朋友问余染是怎么看上的邢晖。余染:我喜欢他的憨。#大佬与憨批的爱情故事#(1v1高甜双向暗恋)
  • 望不见的秋叶

    望不见的秋叶

    那年的情书漫天飞舞……可是她秋小叶,这个平凡到无法再平凡的女孩,竟然引起了他陆夜的注意力。她是一个平凡人家的女儿,而他是一位有着上百亿的总裁……俩人的差距好大,她说“我们不合适”而他却不介意……(宝宝还有一本书:风声广陌,关照一下哦!)
  • 醉墨染雪

    醉墨染雪

    雪飞扬,舞蓝裳。裙袂飘飘,舞入谁的梦境。水墨图,画白衣。墨香点点,画出谁的心殇。经此一眼烙心万年。一生一世一双人,随之君旁待花开。
  • 高冷校花:樱花之约

    高冷校花:樱花之约

    早已被仇恨蒙闭情感的她,遇到命中不该相遇的人。她执著而冷酷,他霸道却深情。冰与火的交织,天选人择他们命运将会走向何方。面对沫兮的择决,允默辰黑着脸,霸道地吻住了她,舌尖用力撬开沫兮的贝齿,然后将舌头探了进去,不给她挣脱的机会。他是想以狂热吻宣告自己的主权,而她却……