登陆注册
19690000000017

第17章

I mentioned to you before that my expectation of rough usage,in consequence of my German nationality,had proved completely unfounded.No one seems to know or to care what my nationality is,and I am treated,on the contrary,with the civility which is the portion of every traveller who pays the bill without scanning the items too narrowly.This,I confess,has been something of a surprise to me,and I have not yet made up my mind as to the fundamental cause of the anomaly.My determination to take up my abode in a French interior was largely dictated by the supposition that I should be substantially disagreeable to its inmates.I wished to observe the different forms taken by the irritation that I should naturally produce;for it is under the influence of irritation that the French character most completely expresses itself.My presence,however,does not appear to operate as a stimulus,and in this respect I am materially disappointed.They treat me as they treat every one else;whereas,in order to be treated differently,I was resigned in advance to be treated worse.I have not,as I say,fully explained to myself this logical contradiction;but this is the explanation to which I tend.The French are so exclusively occupied with the idea of themselves,that in spite of the very definite image the German personality presented to them by the war of 1870,they have at present no distinct apprehension of its existence.They are not very sure that there are any Germans;they have already forgotten the convincing proofs of the fact that were presented to them nine years ago.A German was something disagreeable,which they determined to keep out of their conception of things.I therefore think that we are wrong to govern ourselves upon the hypothesis of the revanche;the French nature is too shallow for that large and powerful plant to bloom in it.

The English-speaking specimens,too,I have not been willing to neglect the opportunity to examine;and among these I have paid special attention to the American varieties,of which I find here several singular examples.The two most remarkable are a young man who presents all the characteristics of a period of national decadence;reminding me strongly of some diminutive Hellenised Roman of the third century.He is an illustration of the period of culture in which the faculty of appreciation has obtained such a preponderance over that of production that the latter sinks into a kind of rank sterility,and the mental condition becomes analogous to that of a malarious bog.I learn from him that there is an immense number of Americans exactly resembling him,and that the city of Boston,indeed,is almost exclusively composed of them.(He communicated this fact very proudly,as if it were greatly to the credit of his native country;little perceiving the truly sinister impression it made upon me.)

What strikes one in it is that it is a phenomenon to the best of my knowledge--and you know what my knowledge is--unprecedented and unique in the history of mankind;the arrival of a nation at an ultimate stage of evolution without having passed through the mediate one;the passage of the fruit,in other words,from crudity to rottenness,without the interposition of a period of useful (and ornamental)ripeness.With the Americans,indeed,the crudity and the rottenness are identical and simultaneous;it is impossible to say,as in the conversation of this deplorable young man,which is one and which is the other;they are inextricably mingled.I prefer the talk of the French homunculus;it is at least more amusing.

It is interesting in this manner to perceive,so largely developed,the germs of extinction in the so-called powerful Anglo-Saxon family.

I find them in almost as recognisable a form in a young woman from the State of Maine,in the province of New England,with whom I have had a good deal of conversation.She differs somewhat from the young man I just mentioned,in that the faculty of production,of action,is,in her,less inanimate;she has more of the freshness and vigour that we suppose to belong to a young civilisation.But unfortunately she produces nothing but evil,and her tastes and habits are similarly those of a Roman lady of the lower Empire.She makes no secret of them,and has,in fact,elaborated a complete system of licentious behaviour.As the opportunities she finds in her own country do not satisfy her,she has come to Europe "to try,"as she says,"for herself."It is the doctrine of universal experience professed with a cynicism that is really most extraordinary,and which,presenting itself in a young woman of considerable education,appears to me to be the judgment of a society.

Another observation which pushes me to the same induction--that of the premature vitiation of the American population--is the attitude of the Americans whom I have before me with regard to each other.

There is another young lady here,who is less abnormally developed than the one I have just described,but who yet bears the stamp of this peculiar combination of incompleteness and effeteness.These three persons look with the greatest mistrust and aversion upon each other;and each has repeatedly taken me apart and assured me,secretly,that he or she only is the real,the genuine,the typical American.A type that has lost itself before it has been fixed--what can you look for from this?

Add to this that there are two young Englanders in the house,who hate all the Americans in a lump,making between them none of the distinctions and favourable comparisons which they insist upon,and you will,I think,hold me warranted in believing that,between precipitate decay and internecine enmities,the English-speaking family is destined to consume itself;and that with its decline the prospect of general pervasiveness,to which I alluded above,will brighten for the deep-lunged children of the Fatherland!

同类推荐
  • 六十种曲龙膏记

    六十种曲龙膏记

    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。
  • 金刚经鸠异

    金刚经鸠异

    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 Marriage Contract

    The Marriage Contract

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 三法度论

    三法度论

    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。
  • 徐霞客游记

    徐霞客游记

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 冥使在现代

    冥使在现代

    一个青年因为任务来到人间,遇到同样从冥界出来的小美女,两人携手同行,降妖除魔。
  • 倾国倾城四皇子

    倾国倾城四皇子

    爷也不想长成这副是人都想扑都小受样子好不好……虽然你是太子,也不能这样欺压我……什么?你以后是皇帝,现在让我提前适应侍寝?人家,人家好歹也是个四皇子啊……侍寝的事找别人干好不好……太子也就算了,为什么连大皇兄你也欺负我,5555~你是我皇兄所以我要听你的话,是这样没错啦……那那个长得像王力宏的尚书大人为什么又可以压榨我?顶头上司的话是要听的啦,可是,办公室恋情不利于工作啊……喂喂喂,那个什么慕国的皇帝,你不要跟我说想要搞什么和亲哦,我才不会同意。额?你是皇帝,你最大?
  • 重生之医路商途

    重生之医路商途

    一场空难、苏言带着一身超前的医术和丰富的医研经验,回到了十八年前新医革命后最年轻的高级医师、成绩卓然的医研专家,今生如何周旋在官场和商场之中缔造医学上的神话!-------------------------------------新书期间,求推荐、求收藏、求各种支持!
  • 穿越之佣兵大小姐

    穿越之佣兵大小姐

    二十四世纪的天才佣兵夙玥在执行任务时“不幸牺牲”。灵渊大陆有楚国,楚国有南宫家,南宫家有南宫玥。南宫玥之所以出名是因为她是一个天才。五岁测出天灵根,十岁便达到大灵师,十五岁达到灵将却在同年被废修为、灵根碎裂,从此天才变废物,荣耀变耻辱,南宫玥被逐出南宫家。废物,是吗,当夙玥变为南宫玥,且看废物再变天才。
  • 梦中红楼

    梦中红楼

    每个人的梦中都有一种红楼,我梦中的红楼,不再只是繁华落尽!每个人的心中都有一个黛玉,我心中的黛玉,不再只是伤春悲秋!
  • 斗渣剩妃经商记

    斗渣剩妃经商记

    卫国公嫡女,苦熬十年,为他筹谋,助他登基,却在凤临天下的当晚被囚禁。屈辱求生,却等来嫡兄被乱箭射死,外祖家斩首抄没!终一日,她对天起誓,若可重来,绝不为后!本应香消玉殒,睁眼却是重回十三岁,庶姐想毁我容?做梦!换我来毁你节!庶母欲破我身?没门!让我来揭你丑!渣男望纳我为正妃?妄想!堂妹才会去爬你的床!本以为这世要独孤一生,却偏偏遇见了他!(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 这个阴夫不易养

    这个阴夫不易养

    被陌生人一夜糟蹋,遇到了点她台的初恋。叶微微以为嫁入豪门,没想到,入的却是鬼门。被未婚夫一家穿着红色喜服,绑着手脚装在了棺材中,和一具早应腐烂的尸体为伴。而那具尸体,趴在她耳边低语:“微微,你现在是我的了。”
  • 我爱你,我有罪

    我爱你,我有罪

    唐小染说:我的执念太深,如果我活着,却不能够拥抱你,我会疯的。每个人都有执念,唐小染的执念就是沈慕衍。唐小染太执着,执着就变成了执念。而执念,伤人又伤己。沈慕衍说:那个女人死了好,我们去喝一杯庆祝。醉酒的他,却问好友:我是不是错过了什么很重要的东西?“是,你错过了这个世界上唯一一个只因为你是沈慕衍而爱你的傻瓜!”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 爱无助

    爱无助

    是—本从男人的视角来透视生活中女性的书,故而所写的人物皆为“男人的另一半”!
  • 还好爱着你

    还好爱着你

    女主筱晴微博上偶识龙飞,两人在网络头日渐熟悉,龙飞开始俘虏筱晴的芳心,龙飞一次别有用心的设计将筱晴骗进情网,龙飞便抛弃现女友(可恩),一次偶然的机会,可恩告诉她龙飞所有的事实,欺骗她的家庭背景,还酗酒暴力,仇家漫天,惹是生非,筱晴一心只有害怕,但又因为很多原因没办法离开他,直到有一天筱晴的前度(凛风)的一个信息,筱晴心中又燃起旧爱的火焰,相见的那天,筱晴将现状全部告诉了凛风,于是凛风便一度要求筱晴离开龙飞,筱晴犹豫不决,无法做下决定,龙飞闻势不对,便飞赶筱晴与凛风见面的地方,三人陷入尴尬的气氛,龙飞让筱晴在他和凛风中做一个选择,迟疑不决的筱晴究竟会选择过爱她的龙飞还是她爱的凛风呢......