登陆注册
37830200000108

第108章 CHAPTER LIII(1)

The foregoing conversation and others like it made a deep impression upon my hero. If next day he had taken a walk with Mr Hawke, and heard what he had to say on the other side, he would have been just as much struck, and as ready to fling off what Pryer had told him, as he now was to throw aside all he had ever heard from anyone except Pryer; but there was no Mr Hawke at hand, so Pryer had everything his own way.

Embryo minds, like embryo bodies, pass through a number of strange metamorphoses before they adopt their final shape. It is no more to be wondered at that one who is going to turn out a Roman Catholic, should have passed through the stages of being first a Methodist, and then a free thinker, than that a man should at some former time have been a mere cell, and later on an invertebrate animal. Ernest, however, could not be expected to know this; embryos never do.

Embryos think with each stage of their development that they have now reached the only condition which really suits them. This, they say, must certainly be their last, inasmuch as its close will be so great a shock that nothing can survive it. Every change is a shock; every shock is a pro tanto death. What we call death is only a shock great enough to destroy our power to recognise a past and a present as resembling one another. It is the ****** us consider the points of difference between our present and our past greater than the points of resemblance, so that we can no longer call the former of these two in any proper sense a continuation of the second, but find it less trouble to think of it as something that we choose to call new.

But, to let this pass, it was clear that spiritual pathology (I confess that I do not know myself what spiritual pathology means-- but Pryer and Ernest doubtless did) was the great desideratum of the age. It seemed to Ernest that he had made this discovery himself and been familiar with it all his life, that he had never known, in fact, of anything else. He wrote long letters to his college friends expounding his views as though he had been one of the Apostolic fathers. As for the Old Testament writers, he had no patience with them. "Do oblige me," I find him writing to one friend, "by reading the prophet Zechariah, and giving me your candid opinion upon him. He is poor stuff, full of Yankee bounce; it is sickening to live in an age when such balderdash can be gravely admired whether as poetry or prophecy." This was because Pryer had set him against Zechariah. I do not know what Zechariah had done; I should think myself that Zechariah was a very good prophet; perhaps it was because he was a Bible writer, and not a very prominent one, that Pryer selected him as one through whom to disparage the Bible in comparison with the Church.

To his friend Dawson I find him saying a little later on: "Pryer and I continue our walks, working out each other's thoughts. At first he used to do all the thinking, but I think I am pretty well abreast of him now, and rather chuckle at seeing that he is already beginning to modify some of the views he held most strongly when I first knew him.

"Then I think he was on the high road to Rome; now, however, he seems to be a good deal struck with a suggestion of mine in which you, too, perhaps may be interested. You see we must infuse new life into the Church somehow; we are not holding our own against either Rome or infidelity." (I may say in passing that I do not believe Ernest had as yet ever seen an infidel--not to speak to.)

"I proposed, therefore, a few days back to Pryer--and he fell in eagerly with the proposal as soon as he saw that I had the means of carrying it out--that we should set on foot a spiritual movement somewhat analogous to the Young England movement of twenty years ago, the aim of which shall be at once to outbid Rome on the one hand, and scepticism on the other. For this purpose I see nothing better than the foundation of an institution or college for placing the nature and treatment of sin on a more scientific basis than it rests at present. We want--to borrow a useful term of Pryer's--a College of Spiritual Pathology where young men" (I suppose Ernest thought he was no longer young by this time) "may study the nature and treatment of the sins of the soul as medical students study those of the bodies of their patients. Such a college, as you will probably admit, will approach both Rome on the one hand, and science on the other--Rome, as giving the priesthood more skill, and therefore as paving the way for their obtaining greater power, and science, by recognising that even free thought has a certain kind of value in spiritual enquiries. To this purpose Pryer and I have resolved to devote ourselves henceforth heart and soul.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 守护甜心之蜕变的心

    守护甜心之蜕变的心

    是背叛,她伤了她的心,心冷了。她走了三年,三年后,她回来了,不是复仇只是蜕变。当她回来后,他再一次背叛,她火了。
  • 穿越蚂蚁女侠

    穿越蚂蚁女侠

    他是谁为什么我要嫁给他,我的宝贝们,我爱你们
  • 唯情逆道

    唯情逆道

    天地已灭,生灵轮回,诸天万道,是劫?念灭苍穹,星辰陨落,是魔?天地无欲,梦中因缘,只为见证那逝去的悲哀.林天,平凡少年,为情寻仙,看他如何逆天成仙,执掌情道.
  • 青云志之羽忧

    青云志之羽忧

    萧无忧,通天峰道玄关门弟子,被誉为青云第一高手,年轻一辈翘楚,身世成迷,性格古怪,却受众首座疼爱,与陆雪琪并列“青云双姝”,萧逸才,通天峰首徒,未来掌门人,最是疼爱小师妹,林惊羽,龙首峰首徒,清冷孤傲,独为萧无忧留一抹温柔,
  • 主神的无限世界编辑器

    主神的无限世界编辑器

    以凡人之资,执掌神明之力,窥探众生念想,掌控命运轨迹。诸天万界于意念之中诞生,生灵经历着被随意修正的坎坷命途。一名最卑微的青年,承担着神明的力量,迈上独自一人孤独成长和救赎的旅途。(主神建设流,大概可能也许是吧.....轻笑,不过希望大家能够喜欢~)
  • 灵之来兮如云

    灵之来兮如云

    小说又名《鬼帝慕云》。【文案】纪云瑶总是梦到自己一身锦衣华服,嫁给一个面容模糊的男人;而场景变化之后,却又能看到一个满脸是血的男人伏在冰湖上。她去了东海著名的鬼市,买到了前一世的自己写的一幅字画,而一枚戒指也进入了她的口袋。她明明记得自己出了车祸,车子掉进了海里,可是前来查案的警察说,她亲自报案,车子丢了。因为那枚无意中得到的戒指,纪云瑶的生活开始出现诡异的事情,老父亲在庙里中邪;闺蜜被鬼缠身;自己也险些丧命妖物的口中......大家都说纪云瑶是十世纯阴命格的月初沧海,是灵戒天选的主人......这究竟是怎么回事呢?
  • 椿芽薄荷

    椿芽薄荷

    故事大概嘛,我也不是很想想,只是随笔。反正。不是很吊胃口嘛。
  • 我真不是弱鸡啊

    我真不是弱鸡啊

    “从今往后我也是有异能的人啦!!”“待我仗剑长歌,出去这欺我、辱我、逆我的世界里杀个来回!!哈撒给!辛辣天森!我命由我不由天!!”觉醒异能的刘积胸怀激烈,推开家门,满脑子想着把户口本的名字改成刘傲天…………楼下抠脚的修鞋老大爷,一拖鞋凌云直上,遮天蔽日;老大妈跳广场舞之余,扛着真(核)理(弹),满世界飞来飞去;街边的调戏女孩的混混,拔下黄毛一吹,遍地开花;被调戏的女孩,周身掀起火浪,将天烧了个窟窿……刚出门的刘傲天看着自己指尖上飘飘摇摇的小火苗,突然陷入了沉思……
  • 一曲秋华

    一曲秋华

    一望十载,郎已去。只是偶有念起当年事。短文,很甜。
  • 别歌离华

    别歌离华

    人生如果没有遗憾,那就没有意思了。但是……