登陆注册
34562400000032

第32章

We have seen things fall: but we never saw a little flying thing pulling them down, with "gravitation" labelled on its back; and the question, why things fall, and HOW, is just where it was before Newton was born, and is likely to remain there. All we can say is, that Nature has her customs, and that other customs ensue, when those customs appear: but that as to what connects cause and effect, as to what is the reason, the final cause, or even the CAUSA CAUSANS, of any phenomenon, we know not more but less than ever; for those laws or customs which seem to us ******st ("endosmose," for instance, or "gravitation"), are just the most inexplicable, logically unexpected, seemingly arbitrary, certainly supernatural - miraculous, if you will; for no natural and physical cause whatsoever can be assigned for them; while if anyone shall argue against their being miraculous and supernatural on the ground of their being so common, I can only answer, that of all absurd and illogical arguments, this is the most so. For what has the number of times which the miracle occurs to do with the question, save to increase the wonder? Which is more strange, that an inexplicable and unfathomable thing should occur once and for all, or that it should occur a million times every day all the world over?

Let those, however, who are too proud to wonder, do as seems good to them. Their want of wonder will not help them toward the required explanation: and to them, as to us, as soon as we begin asking, "HOW?" and "WHY?" the mighty Mother will only reply with that magnificent smile of hers, most genial, but most silent, which she has worn since the foundation of all worlds; that silent smile which has tempted many a man to suspect her of irony, even of deceit and hatred of the human race; the silent smile which Solomon felt, and answered in "Ecclesiastes;" which Goethe felt, and did not answer in his "Faust;" which Pascal felt, and tried to answer in his "Thoughts," and fled from into self-torture and superstition, terrified beyond his powers of endurance, as he found out the true meaning of St. John's vision, and felt himself really standing on that fragile and slippery "sea of glass," and close beneath him the bottomless abyss of doubt, and the nether fires of moral retribution. He fled from Nature's silent smile, as that poor old King Edward (mis-called the Confessor) fled from her hymns of praise, in the old legend of Havering-atte-bower, when he cursed the nightingales because their songs confused him in his prayers:

but the wise man need copy neither, and fear neither the silence nor the laughter of the mighty mother Earth, if he will be but wise, and hear her tell him, alike in both - "Why call me mother?

Why ask me for knowledge which I cannot teach, peace which I cannot give or take away? I am only your foster-mother and your nurse -and I have not been an unkindly one. But you are God's children, and not mine. Ask Him. I can amuse you with my songs; but they are but a nurse's lullaby to the weary flesh. I can awe you with my silence; but my silence is only my just humility, and your gain.

How dare I pretend to tell you secrets which He who made me knows alone? I am but inanimate matter; why ask of me things which belong to living spirit? In God I live and move, and have my being; I know not how, any more than you know. Who will tell you what life is, save He who is the Lord of life? And if He will not tell you, be sure it is because you need not to know. At least, why seek God in nature, the living among the dead? He is not here:

He is risen."

He is not here: He is risen. Good reader, you will probably agree that to know that saying, is to know the key-note of the world to come. Believe me, to know it, and all it means, is to know the keynote of this world also, from the fall of dynasties and the fate of nations, to the sea-weed which rots upon the beach.

It may seem startling, possibly (though I hope not, for my readers' sake, irreverent), to go back at once after such thoughts, be they true or false, to the weeds upon the cliff above our heads. But He who is not here, but is risen, yet is here, and has appointed them their services in a wonderful order; and I wish that on some day, or on many days, when a quiet sea and offshore breezes have prevented any new objects from coming to land with the rising tide, you would investigate the flowers peculiar to our sea-rocks and sandhills. Even if you do not find the delicate lily-like Trichonema of the Channel Islands and Dawlish, or the almost as beautiful Squill of the Cornish cliffs, or the sea-lavender of North Devon, or any of those rare Mediterranean species which Mr.

Johns has so charmingly described in his "Week at the Lizard Point," yet an average cliff, with its carpeting of pink thrift and of bladder catchfly, and Lady's finger, and elegant grasses, most of them peculiar to the sea marge, is often a very lovely flower-bed.

Not merely interesting, too, but brilliant in their vegetation are sandhills; and the seemingly desolate dykes and banks of salt marshes will yield many a curious plant, which you may neglect if you will: but lay to your account the having to repent your neglect hereafter, when, finding out too late what a pleasant study botany is, you search in vain for curious forms over which you trod every day in crossing flats which seemed to you utterly ugly and uninteresting, but which the good God was watching as carefully as He did the pleasant hills inland: perhaps even more carefully; for the uplands He has completed, and handed over to man, that he may dress and keep them: but the tide-flats below are still unfinished, dry land in the process of creation, to which every tide is adding the elements of fertility, which shall grow food, perhaps in some future state of our planet, for generations yet unborn.

同类推荐
  • 上清道类事相

    上清道类事相

    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。
  • 搜神记

    搜神记

    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。
  • The Enchanted Island of Yew

    The Enchanted Island of Yew

    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。
  • WILD SONGS

    WILD SONGS

    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。
  • 大云无想经

    大云无想经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 风起云涌战江湖

    风起云涌战江湖

    铁血江湖,恩怨情仇,血雨腥风,谁主沉浮,看风起云涌战江湖。
  • 穿越之寻心追梦之旅

    穿越之寻心追梦之旅

    偶遇女鬼,本来只是为了女鬼寻心,最后不知,是谁丢了心,又找到了谁的心。王嘉熙看着眼前狼狈的男子,笑道“我本不是为了躲你,既然你找到了,那么你可曾娶妻生子?”“不曾”“那你娶我吧”
  • 鲸鱼晚安

    鲸鱼晚安

    无限好书尽在阅文。
  • 乱世医女传

    乱世医女传

    “对不起,我要娶的人不是你。”“你究竟是吃了多少熊心豹胆?我的人你也敢动!”“对于她,我志在必得。”多人的爱恨纠葛,多人的深情厚谊,不为至尊天下,只为能与她相伴终老。白薇从无忧无虑的单纯中,被迫介入了现实的残酷!承受着多份极致的深情厚爱,挣扎在国与家的选择之中,当面临滔天的权势,富贵、地位、各种各样的威逼利诱时,她又该何去何从?是该选择爱她的人?还是会选择她爱的人?
  • 2020微博恋

    2020微博恋

    2020年疫情爆发的初期,一群年轻男女被关在家中,通过网络聊天,而爆发的爱情,家庭碰撞之间的故事
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 宿命:欲逆者何求

    宿命:欲逆者何求

    命应由己,岂能由天?若由天定,此生何意?屹于天地,傲视万物。任天之广,吾乃强者;任地之袤,吾乃霸主。天地虽大,唯吾独尊!
  • 低调为人强势做事

    低调为人强势做事

    本书分十章,告诉读者:低调,是一种品格、一种姿态、一种风度、一种修养、一种胸襟,是为人的最佳姿态。强势,是一种能力、一种气魄、一种战术、一种技巧、一种策略,是做事的最佳智慧。低调为人和强势做事,两者不但相辅相成,而且互为表里,是为人处世的必修课程。
  • 对你Overdose

    对你Overdose

    喜欢天空中那一朵朵飘渺的云彩,也许是因为它所给人带来的无限遐想;喜欢那淡淡的栀子花香,也许是因为它所带来的清新与美好,于此而已....但是这些远远抵不过那十二个少年的一颦一笑,那是超越所有美好事物的最美好...时间会消逝,青春在变老。但是依旧有一句誓言在人心,青春不老,我们不散。也许有些人天生就很普通,但是经过比常人的努力,只为着那心中唯一的信仰努力,也许也会迸射出不一样的光彩。也许有些人天生就会是个奇迹,他们令很多人仰望,令很多人倾慕,却没有人会知道他们背后的艰辛......
  • 要放弃你,我做不到

    要放弃你,我做不到

    在一所魔法学院里。一间实验室突然发生了爆炸,有一位小女孩因这场爆炸失去了十年前的记忆。如今,已经十七岁的她和她的好朋友——栢栖再度回到了学院。温柔的嘉辉像个大哥哥一样照顾着她们。幽默的致伟然。心地善良的雪玲。被喻为冷漠校草的耀为什么会对初次见面的她那么温柔呢?一直对她们很好的魔翼吴怎么会想要害她们呢?为什么会对大家有一种无比亲切的感觉?十年前到底发生了什么事……