Books are to mankind what memory is to the individual. They contain the history of our race , the discoveries we have made, the accumulated knowledge and experience of ages; they picture for us the marvels and beauties of nature; help us in our difficulties, comfort us in sorrow and in suffering, change hours of weariness into moments of delight, store our minds with ideas, fill them with good and happy thoughts, and liftus out of and above ourselves.
There is an Oriental story of two men: one was a king, who every night dreamt he was a beggar; the other was a beggar, who every night dreamt he was aprince and lived in a palace. I am not sure that the king had very much the best of it. Imagination is sometimes more vivid than reality. But, however this may be, when we read we may not only (if we wish it) be kings and live in palaces, but, what is far better, we may transport ourselves to the mountains or the seashore, and visit the most beautiful parts of the earth, without fatigue, inconvenience, or expense.
Many of those who have had, as we say, all that this world can give, have yet told us they owed much of their purest happiness to books. Ascham , in “The Schoolmaster”, tells a touching story of his last visit to Lady Jane Grey . He found her sitting in an oriel window reading Plato's beautiful account of the death of Socrates . Her father and mother were hunting in the park, the hounds were in full cry and their voices came in through the open window. He expressed his surprise that she had not joined them. But, said she, “I wist that all their pleasure in the park is but a shadow to the pleasure I find in Plato.”
Macaulay had wealth and fame, rank and power, and yet hetells us in his biography that he owed the happiest hours of his life to books. In a charming letter to a little girl, he says:“Thank you for your very pretty letter. I am always glad to make my little girl happy, and nothing pleases me so much as to see that she likes books, for when she is as old as I am, she will find that they are better than all the tarts and cakes, toys and plays, and sights in the world. If any one would make me the greatest king that ever lived, with palaces and gardens and fine dinners, and wines and coaches, and beautiful clothes, and hundreds of servants, on condition that I should not read books. I would not be a king. I would rather be a poor man in a garret with plenty of books than a king who did not love reading.”
Books, indeed, endow us with a whole enchanted palace of thoughts. There is a wider prospect, says Jean Paul Richer , from Parnassus than from a throne. In one way they give us an even more vivid idea than the actual reality, just as reflections are often more beautiful than real nature. “All mirrors,” says George Macdonald . “The commonest room is a room in a poem when I look in the glass.”
Precious and priceless are the blessings which the books scatter around our daily paths.We walk, in imagination, with the sublime and enchanting regions.
Without stirring from our firesides we may roam to the most remote regions of the earth, or soar into realms where Spenser's shapes of unearthly beauty flock to meet us, where Milton's angels peal in our ears the choral hymns of Paradise. Science, art, literature, philosophy, --- all that man has thought, all that man has done, --- the experience that has been bought with the sufferings of a hundred generations, --- all are garnered up for us in the world of books.
書(shū)籍之于人類(lèi),猶如記憶之于個(gè)人。書(shū)籍既可記錄人種之演變,亦可記載人類(lèi)之發(fā)現(xiàn);既有日積月累之知識(shí),亦不乏世代相傳之經(jīng)驗(yàn);書(shū)籍之于人類(lèi),可描繪自然之奇跡與美麗,于困難無(wú)助之際予以提攜,于悲傷痛苦之時(shí)施以撫慰;讓困倦之時(shí)刻變?yōu)闅g樂(lè)之時(shí)光,讓頭腦充滿(mǎn)豐富之想象,讓心靈布滿(mǎn)美好快樂(lè)之思想,恃此而人可走出自我,超越自我。
有一東方典故,言及二人:一為國(guó)王,一為乞丐。國(guó)王夜必有惡魘,魘中成乞丐;乞丐晚必做美夢(mèng),夢(mèng)中變王子,居宮殿。國(guó)王是否泰然處之,余不敢肯定。想象之于現(xiàn)實(shí)或更栩栩然。是否如此,姑且不論,然讀書(shū)時(shí),恁可想象自己即為國(guó)王,居宮殿;且讀書(shū)乃美差之事:既可使人縱情山川,嬉戲海灘,亦可使人遍訪世之美景;既可使人除身心疲憊之慮,亦可使人解囊中羞澀之憂(yōu)。
其實(shí),造物恩寵,應(yīng)有盡有者不少。然多有感于心,曰,其真正之快樂(lè)源自書(shū)籍。阿斯克姆著有一書(shū),題曰《教師》。書(shū)中云及其最后拜訪簡(jiǎn)·格雷小姐之故事,甚為感人。書(shū)中描寫(xiě),格雷小姐坐于飄窗之前,覽讀柏拉圖所寫(xiě)之精彩文章:《蘇格拉底之死》;然其父母狩獵公園,人喧犬吠,敞窗之內(nèi)亦可聞見(jiàn)。然阿斯克姆甚為驚奇,狩獵之樂(lè),格雷小姐竟無(wú)動(dòng)于衷,無(wú)意與焉。格雷小姐曰,雖然,園中狩獵之樂(lè),較之于柏拉圖書(shū)中之樂(lè),不過(guò)皮毛耳。
麥考利既有財(cái)富與名望,亦有地位與權(quán)力,然其傳記曰,其一生最快樂(lè)之時(shí)光在于讀書(shū)。麥考利嘗書(shū)信一封于一女童,曰:“來(lái)信收悉,內(nèi)容精彩,深表感謝。悉知汝喜好讀書(shū),且能樂(lè)焉。余倍感欣慰,若到吾今日之年歲,汝定會(huì)曉解,較之于餡餅與蛋糕,較之于玩具與游戲,較之于世之名勝風(fēng)景,讀書(shū)之樂(lè)遠(yuǎn)勝焉。若有人請(qǐng)余當(dāng)史上最偉大之國(guó)王、享宮殿花園之樂(lè),品美味佳肴,駕華車(chē)著麗服,差數(shù)以百計(jì)之奴仆,惟無(wú)讀書(shū)之條件,余寧可棄做國(guó)王,而做窮人,居斗室,享書(shū)無(wú)數(shù),亦勿做厭書(shū)之國(guó)王。”
書(shū)籍確能予人以思想宮殿,魔力無(wú)比。里希爾特曰,帕納塞斯山較之于御座,視野廣而闊焉。較之于客觀現(xiàn)實(shí),讀書(shū)所予于人者,更栩栩然,猶如投影之美,常勝于自然。“凡事必有鏡像,”麥克唐納曰,“鏡中視屋,平常之屋則成詩(shī)中之屋?!?/P>
有書(shū)則有福,且其貴無(wú)價(jià),無(wú)時(shí)不在,無(wú)處莫有。有書(shū),則可馳騁想象,暢游美景圣地。
即或靜坐爐火之旁,亦可遨游地球之邊際;既可翱翔斯賓塞所繪之王國(guó):仙女婀娜群相迎;亦可暢游彌爾頓所述之天堂:天使娓娓歌樂(lè)園。科學(xué)、藝術(shù)、文學(xué)、哲學(xué)——人之所思、人之所做——即或以世代痛苦換來(lái)之經(jīng)驗(yàn)——凡此種種,書(shū)海之中,應(yīng)有盡有,享之不盡。
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