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Father Payne
Chapter 33. Of Meekness
Arthur C.Benson
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       _ CHAPTER XXXIII. OF MEEKNESS
       I had been having some work looked over by Father Payne, who had been somewhat trenchant. "You have been beating a broken drum, you know," he had said, with a smile.
       "Yes," I said. "It's poor stuff, I see. But I didn't know it was so bad when I wrote it; I thought I was making the best of a poor subject rather ingeniously. I am afraid I am rather stupid."
       "If I thought you really felt like that," said Father Payne, "I should be sorry for you. But I expect it is only your idea of modesty?"
       "No," I said, "it isn't modesty--it's humility, I think."
       "No one has any business to think himself humble," said Father Payne. "The moment you do that, you are conceited. It's not a virtue to grovel. A man ought to know exactly what he is worth. You needn't be always saying what you are, worth, of course. It's modest to hold your tongue. But humility is, or ought to be, extinct as a virtue. It belongs to the time when people felt bound to deplore the corruption of their heart, and to speak of themselves as worms, and to compare themselves despondently with God. That in itself is a piece of insolence; and it isn't a wholesome frame of mind to dwell on one's worthlessness, and to speak of one's righteousness as filthy rags. It removes every stimulus to effort. If you really feel like that, you had better take to your bed permanently--you will do less harm there than pretending to do work in the value of which you don't believe."
       "But what is the word for the feeling which one has when one reads a really splendid book, let us say, or hears a perfect piece of music?" I said.
       "Well, it ought to be gratitude and admiration," said Father Payne. "Why mix yourself up with it at all?"
       "Because I can't help it," I said; "I think of the way in which I muddle on with my writing, and I feel how hopeless I am."
       "That's all wrong, my boy," said Father Payne; "you ought to say to yourself--'So that is _his_ way of putting things and, by Jove, it's superb. Now I've got to find my way of putting things!' You had better go and work in the fields like an honest man, if you don't feel you have got anything to say worth saying. You have your own point of view, you know: try and get it down on paper. It isn't exactly the same as, let us say, Shakespeare's point of view: but if you feel that he has seen everything worth seeing, and said everything worth saying, then, of course, it is no good going on. But that is pure grovelling; no lively person ever does feel that--he says, 'Hang it, he has left _some_ things out!' After all, everyone has a right to his point of view, and if it can be expressed, why, it is worth expressing. We want all the sidelights we can get."
       "That's one comfort!" I said.
       "Yes," said Father Payne, "but you know perfectly well that you knew it before I told you. Why be so undignified? You need not want to astonish or amuse the whole civilised world. You probably won't do that; but you can fit a bit of the mosaic in, if you have it in you. Now look you here! I know exactly what I am worth. I can't write--though I think I can when I'm at it--but I can perceive, and see when a thing is amiss, and lay my finger on a fault; I can be of some use to a fellow like yourself--and I can manage an estate in my own way, and I can keep my tenants' spirits up. I have got a perfectly definite use in the world, and I'm going to play my part for all that I'm worth. I'm not going to pretend that I am a worm or an outcast--I don't feel one; and I am as sure as I can be of anything, that God does not wish me to feel one. He needs me; He can't get on without me just here; and when He can, He will say the word. I don't think I am of any far-reaching significance: but neither am I going to say that I am nothing but vile earth and a miserable sinner. I'm lazy, I'm cross, I'm unkind, I'm greedy: but I know when I am wasting time and temper, and I don't do it all the time. It's no use being abject. The mistake is to go about comparing yourself with other people and weighing yourself against them. The right thing to do is to be able to recognise generously and desirously when you see anyone doing something finely which you do badly, and to say, 'Come, that's the right way! I must do better.' But to be humble is to be grubby, because it makes one proud, in a nasty sort of way, of doing things badly. 'What a poor creature I am,' says the humble man, 'and how nice to know that I am so poor a creature; how noble and unworldly I am.' The mistake is to want to do a thing better than Smith or Jones: the right way is to want to do it better than yourself."
       "Yes," I said, "that's perfectly true, Father: and I won't be such a fool again."
       "You haven't been a fool, so far as I am aware," said Father Payne. "It is only that you are just a thought too polite. You mustn't be polite in mind, you know--only in manners. Politeness only consists in not saying all you think unless you are asked. But humility consists in trying to believe that you think less than you think. It's like holding your nose, and saying that the bad smell has gone--it is playing tricks with your mind: and if you get into the way of doing that, you will find that your mind has a nasty way of playing tricks upon you. Here! hold on! I am rapidly becoming like Chadband! Send me Vincent, will you--there's a good man? He comes next." _
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本书目录

Preface
Chapter 1. Father Payne
Chapter 2. Aveley
Chapter 3. The Society
Chapter 4. The Summons
Chapter 5. The System
Chapter 6. Father Payne
Chapter 7. The Men
Chapter 8. The Method
Chapter 9. Father Payne
Chapter 10. Characteristics
Chapter 11. Conversation
Chapter 12. Of Going To Church
Chapter 13. Of Newspapers
Chapter 14. Of Hate
Chapter 15. Of Writing
Chapter 16. Of Marriage
Chapter 17. Of Loving God
Chapter 18. Of Friendship
Chapter 19. Of Phyllis
Chapter 20. Of Certainty
Chapter 21. Of Beauty
Chapter 22. Of War
Chapter 23. Of Cads And Pharisees
Chapter 24. Of Continuance
Chapter 25. Of Philanthropy
Chapter 26. Of Fear
Chapter 27. Of Aristocracy
Chapter 28. Of Crystals
Chapter 29. Early Life
Chapter 30. Of Bloodsuckers
Chapter 31. Of Instincts
Chapter 32. Of Humility
Chapter 33. Of Meekness
Chapter 34. Of Criticism
Chapter 35. Of The Sense Of Beauty
Chapter 36. Of Biography
Chapter 37. Of Possessions
Chapter 38. Of Loneliness
Chapter 39. Of The Writer's Life
Chapter 40. Of Waste
Chapter 41. Of Education
Chapter 42. Of Religion
Chapter 43. Of Critics
Chapter 44. Of Worship
Chapter 45. Of A Change Of Religion
Chapter 46. Of Affection
Chapter 47. Of Respect Of Persons
Chapter 48. Of Ambiguity
Chapter 49. Of Belief
Chapter 50. Of Honour
Chapter 51. Of Work
Chapter 52. Of Companionship
Chapter 53. Of Money
Chapter 54. Of Peaceableness
Chapter 55. Of Life-Force
Chapter 56. Of Conscience
Chapter 57. Of Rank
Chapter 58. Of Biography
Chapter 59. Of Exclusiveness
Chapter 60. Of Taking Life
Chapter 61. Of Bookishness
Chapter 62. Of Consistency
Chapter 63. Of Wrens And Lilies
Chapter 64. Of Pose
Chapter 65. Of Revenants
Chapter 66. Of Discipline
Chapter 67. Of Increase
Chapter 68. Of Prayer
Chapter 69. The Shadow
Chapter 70. Of Weakness
Chapter 71. The Bank Of The River
Chapter 72. The Crossing
Chapter 73. After-Thoughts
Chapter 74. Departure