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Father Payne
Chapter 65. Of Revenants
Arthur C.Benson
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       _ CHAPTER LXV. OF REVENANTS
       I was sitting in the garden one evening in summer with Father Payne and Barthrop. Barthrop was going off next day to Oxford, and was trying to persuade Father Payne to come too.
       "No," he said, "I simply couldn't! Oxford is the city east of the sun and west of the moon--like as a dream when one awaketh! I don't hold with indulging fruitless sentiment, particularly about the past."
       "But isn't it rather a pity?" said Barthrop. "After all, most emotions are useless, if you come to that! Why should you cut yourself off from a place you are so fond of, and which is quite the most beautiful place in England too? Isn't it rather--well,--weak?"
       "Yes," said Father Payne, "it's weak, no doubt! That is to say, if I were differently made, more hard-hearted, more sure of myself, I should go, and I should enjoy myself, and moon about, and bore you to death with old stories about the chimes at midnight--everybody would be a dear old boy or a good old soul, and I should hand out tips, and get perfectly maudlin in the evenings over a glass of claret. That's the normal thing, no doubt--that's what a noble-minded man in a novel of Thackeray's would do!"
       "Well," said Barthrop, "you know best--but I expect that if you did take the plunge and go there, you would find yourself quite at ease."
       "I might," said Father Payne; "but then I also might not--and I prefer not to risk it. You see, it would be merely wallowing in sentiment--and I don't approve of sentiment. I want my emotions to live with, not to bathe in!"
       "But you don't mind going back to London," said Barthrop.
       "No," said Father Payne, "but that bucks me up. I was infernally unhappy in London, and it puts me in a thoroughly sensible and cheerful mood to go and look at the outside of my old lodgings, and the place where I used to teach, and to say to myself, 'Thank God, that's all over!' Then I go on my way rejoicing, and make no end of plans. But if I went to Oxford, I should just remember how happy and young I was; and I might even commit the folly of regretting the lapse of time, and of wishing I could have it back again. I don't think it is wholesome to do anything which makes one discontented, or anything which forces one to dwell on what one has lost. That doesn't matter. Nothing really is ever lost, and it only takes the starch out of one to think about it from that angle. I don't believe in the past. It seems unalterable, and I suppose in a sense it is so. But if you begin to dwell on unalterable things, you become a fatalist, and I'm always trying to get away from that. The point is that no one is unalterable, and, thank God, we are always altering. To potter about in the past is like grubbing in an ash-heap, and shedding tears over broken bits of china. The plate, or whatever it is, was pretty enough, and it had its place and its use; and when the stuff of which it is made is wanted again, it will be used again. It is simply fatuous to waste time over the broken pieces of old dreams and visions; and I mean to use my emotions and my imagination to see new dreams and finer visions. Perhaps the time will come when I can dream no more--the brain gets tired and languid, no doubt. But even then I shall try to be interested in what is going on."
       "I see your point," said Barthrop; "but, for the life of me, I can't see why the old place should not take its part in the new visions! When I go down to Oxford I don't regret it. I go gratefully and happily about, and I like to see the young men as jolly as I was, and as unaware what a good time they are having. An old pal of mine is a Don, and he puts me up in College, and it amuses me to go into Hall, and to see some of the young lions at close quarters. It's all pure and simple refreshment."
       "I've no doubt of it, old man," said Father Payne; "and it's an excellent thing for you to go, and to draw fresh life from the ancient earth, like Antaeus. But I'm not made that way. I'm not loyal--that is to say, I am not faithful to things simply because I once admired and loved them. If you are loyal in the right way, as you are, it's different. But these old attachments are a kind of idolatry to me--a false worship. I'm naturally full of unreasonable devotion to the old and beautiful things; but they get round my neck like a mill-stone, and it is all so much more weight that I have to carry. I sometimes go to see an old cousin of mine, a widow in the country, who lives entirely in the past, never allows anything to be changed in the house, never talks about anyone who isn't dead or ill. The woman's life is simply buried under old memories, mountains of old china, family plate, receipts for jam and marmalade--everything has got to be done as it was in the beginning. Now most of her friends think that very beautiful and tender, and talk of the old-world atmosphere of the place; but I think it simply a stuffy waste of time. I don't tell her so--God forbid! But I feel that she is lolling in an arbour by the roadside instead of getting on. It's innocent enough, but it does not seem to me beautiful."
       "But I still don't see why you give way to the feeling," said Barthrop. "I'm sure that if I felt as you do about Oxford, or any other place, you would tell me it was my duty to conquer it."
       "Very likely!" said Father Payne. "But doctors don't feel bound to take their own prescriptions! Everyone must decide for himself, and I know that I should fall under the luxurious enchantment. I should go into cheap raptures, I should talk about 'the tender grace of a day that is dead'--it's no use putting your head in a noose to see what being strangled feels like."
       "But do you apply that to everything," I said, "old friendships, old affections, old memories? They seem to me beautiful, and harmlessly beautiful."
       "Well, if you can use them up quite freshly, and make a poetical dish out of them, for present consumption, I don't mind," said Father Payne. "But that isn't my way--I'm not robust enough. It's all I can do to take things in as they come along. Of course an old memory sometimes goes through one like a sword, but I pull it out as quick as I can, and cast it away. I am not going to dance with Death if I can help it! I have got my job cut out for me, and I am not going to be hampered by old rubbish. Mind you, I don't say that it was rubbish at the time; but I have no use for anything that I can't use. Sentiment seems to me like letting valuable steam off. The people I have loved are all there still, whether they are dead or alive. They did a bit of the journey with me, and I enjoyed their company, and I shall enjoy it again, if it so comes about. But we have to live our life, and we can't keep more than a certain number of things in mind--that is an obvious limitation. Do you remember the old fairy story of the man who carried a magic goose, and everyone who touched it, or touched anyone who touched it, could not leave go, with the result that there was a long train of helpless people trotting about behind the man. I don't want to live like that, with a long train of old memories and traditions and friendships and furniture trailing helplessly behind me. My business is with my present circle, my present work, and I can't waste my strength in drawing about vehicles full of goods. If anyone wants me, here I am, and I will do my best to meet his wishes; but I am not going to be frightened by words like loyalty into pretending that I am going to stagger along carrying the whole of my past. No, my boy," said Father Payne, turning to Barthrop, "you go to Oxford, and enjoy yourself! But the old place is too tight about my heart for me to put my nose into it. I'm a free man, and I am not going to be in bondage to my old fancies. You may give my love to Corpus and to Wadham Garden--it's all dreadfully bewitching--but I'm not going to run the risk of falling in love with the phantom of the past--that's _La Belle Dame Sans Merci_ for me, and I'm riding on--I'm riding on. I won't have the hussy on my horse.
       "I set her on my pacing steed,
       And nothing else saw all day long,
       For sideways would she lean, and sing
       A faery's song.
       She found me roots of relish sweet,
       And honey wild and manna dew.
       And sure in language strange she said,
       'I love thee true,'"
       He stopped a moment, as he often did when he made a quotation, overcome with feeling. Then he smiled, and added half to himself, "No; I should say, as Dr. Johnson said to the lady in Fleet Street; 'No, no; it won't do, my girl!'" _
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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