登陆注册
37887700000049

第49章 III(3)

The maid-servant takes away the samovar and puts on the table a large piece of cheese, some fruit, and a bottle of Crimean champagne -- a rather poor wine of which Katya had grown fond in the Crimea. Mihail Fyodorovitch takes two packs of cards off the whatnot and begins to play patience. According to him, some varieties of patience require great concentration and attention, yet while he lays out the cards he does not leave off distracting his attention with talk. Katya watches his cards attentively, and more by gesture than by words helps him in his play. She drinks no more than a couple of wine-glasses of wine the whole evening;I drink four glasses, and the rest of the bottle falls to the share of Mihail Fyodorovitch, who can drink a great deal and never get drunk.

Over our patience we settle various questions, principally of the higher order, and what we care for most of all -- that is, science and learning -- is more roughly handled than anything.

"Science, thank God, has outlived its day," says Mihail Fyodorovitch emphatically. "Its song is sung. Yes, indeed.

Mankind begins to feel impelled to replace it by something different. It has grown on the soil of superstition, been nourished by superstition, and is now just as much the quintessence of superstition as its defunct granddames, alchemy, metaphysics, and philosophy. And, after all, what has it given to mankind? Why, the difference between the learned Europeans and the Chinese who have no science is trifling, purely external. The Chinese know nothing of science, but what have they lost thereby?"

"Flies know nothing of science, either," I observe, "but what of that?"

"There is no need to be angry, Nikolay Stepanovitch. I only say this here between ourselves. . . I am more careful than you think, and I am not going to say this in public -- God forbid!

The superstition exists in the multitude that the arts and sciences are superior to agriculture, commerce, superior to handicrafts. Our sect is maintained by that superstition, and it is not for you and me to destroy it. God forbid!"

After patience the younger generation comes in for a dressing too.

"Our audiences have degenerated," sighs Mihail Fyodorovitch. "Not to speak of ideals and all the rest of it, if only they were capable of work and rational thought! In fact, it's a case of 'I look with mournful eyes on the young men of today.' "

"Yes; they have degenerated horribly," Katya agrees. "Tell me, have you had one man of distinction among them for the last five or ten years?"

"I don't know how it is with the other professors, but I can't remember any among mine."

"I have seen in my day many of your students and young scientific men and many actors -- well, I have never once been so fortunate as to meet -- I won't say a hero or a man of talent, but even an interesting man. It's all the same grey mediocrity, puffed up with self-conceit."

All this talk of degeneration always affects me as though I had accidentally overheard offensive talk about my own daughter. It offends me that these charges are wholesale, and rest on such worn-out commonplaces, on such wordy vapourings as degeneration and absence of ideals, or on references to the splendours of the past. Every accusation, even if it is uttered in ladies' society, ought to be formulated with all possible definiteness, or it is not an accusation, but idle disparagement, unworthy of decent people.

I am an old man, I have been lecturing for thirty years, but I notice neither degeneration nor lack of ideals, and I don't find that the present is worse than the past. My porter Nikolay, whose experience of this subject has its value, says that the students of today are neither better nor worse than those of the past.

If I were asked what I don't like in my pupils of today, I should answer the question, not straight off and not at length, but with sufficient definiteness. I know their failings, and so have no need to resort to vague generalities. I don't like their smoking, using spirituous beverages, marrying late, and often being so irresponsible and careless that they will let one of their number be starving in their midst while they neglect to pay their subscriptions to the Students' Aid Society. They don't know modern languages, and they don't express themselves correctly in Russian; no longer ago than yesterday my colleague, the professor of hygiene, complained to me that he had to give twice as many lectures, because the students had a very poor knowledge of physics and were utterly ignorant of meteorology. They are readily carried away by the influence of the last new writers, even when they are not first-rate, but they take absolutely no interest in classics such as Shakespeare, Marcus Aurelius, Epictetus, or Pascal, and this inability to distinguish the great from the small betrays their ignorance of practical life more than anything. All difficult questions that have more or less a social character (for instance the migration question) they settle by studying monographs on the subject, but not by way of scientific investigation or experiment, though that method is at their disposal and is more in keeping with their calling. They gladly become ward-surgeons, assistants, demonstrators, external teachers, and are ready to fill such posts until they are forty, though independence, a sense of ******* and personal initiative, are no less necessary in science than, for instance, in art or commerce. I have pupils and listeners, but no successors and helpers, and so I love them and am touched by them, but am not proud of them. And so on, and so on. . . .

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • EXO之占有欲

    EXO之占有欲

    首次写甜虐文,不怎么会写,组织语言的能力也有所欠缺,本文有甜有虐,感兴趣的可以看看,哪里有不足也欢迎各位读者提出来,不喜勿喷谢谢。
  • 每天学点领导学大全集(超值金版)

    每天学点领导学大全集(超值金版)

    伟人说:“读书是学习,使用也是学习,而且是更重要的学习。”好的书籍是智慧的结晶,如同良师益友,它既教你做人,也教你做事。周一波编著的《每天学点领导学大全集(超值金版)》是您学习领导学的良师益友。领导者应该具备的素质,领导者的领兵技术,领导者运筹帷幄的能力,以及领导者刚柔相济的艺术,等等,都是《每天学点领导学大全集(超值金版)》探讨的重点,它深入浅出地讲述如何成为一个优秀的领导者,即使您现在是一个初学者,一个渴望掌握领导能力的普通人,你也能从中挖掘金子,助你成为一个领导者。
  • 燚龙神帝

    燚龙神帝

    燚龙神帝再次降临异世大陆,只为解救这混乱的宇宙!
  • 封歧

    封歧

    想要成为一名真正的炼器师,需要凝练出属于自己的本命兵器。
  • 命运之选择

    命运之选择

    这个世界总共有四块大陆。东方的尘封大陆,南方的隐之大陆,西方的禁忌大陆,北方的精灵大陆。在这些大陆上生活着很多种族,这些种族分为七大族群,魔神,神,魔,仙,人,鬼,妖。而只有南方的隐之大陆不同,这块大陆被森林所密布,而在树林中似乎有一种奇怪的力量,让进入森林的人迷路,然后又绕回在大陆边缘的港口。人们把这片森林称之为——隐者之森。而在这片森林中生活着一个不属于那七大族群的种族,没有人知道他们的来历,他们什么时候存在的,他们的外表与人类一样,但是却有着十分强大的力量,每当这个世界发生毁灭世界的战争的时候,他们就会出现。因为他们的神秘,其他种族便称他们为——隐者族。
  • 永恒奥古

    永恒奥古

    由于奥古之树的果实提前萌发,导致守护者没有尽早消灭黑暗果实,是代表正义的迹和代表邪恶的煞同时诞生,一场空前的战争即将打响。
  • 迷茫诡记

    迷茫诡记

    无意间串起那些细节,那种后知后觉、细思极恐接近真相的感觉无可言语,心里笑着告诉自己现实就是这样的,也就坦然了
  • 跟我吃不得痛风

    跟我吃不得痛风

    本书由痛风防治专家张明医生等人精心编著而成。全书共分七章,依此论述了“怪病”痛风的流行病学及遗传倾向;痛风的发病机制;痛风的诊断和鉴别;痛风的并发症;痛风的预防、保健及饮食原则;痛风患者的日常注意事项和动动原则等。并收集了几十种低嘌呤类的动、植物食物推荐给痛风患者食用。
  • 万世尊宠

    万世尊宠

    木夕幼年失怙失侍,只剩下唯一的亲人——哥哥木越。但哥哥木越却是亲手将他送进了“地狱”,使他成为了一名冷血的杀手。一次任务失败,木夕不幸身死。但因特殊原因,木夕借尸还魂重生在了混沌天木家。凭借过人的天资和心机,木夕得到了老祖的青睐,也因此参与到了一件牵连家族的阴谋中去。阴谋最后被破除,嫡系地位更加稳固。之后木夕前往星宇仙海拜师,但中途却出了意外,阴差阳错来到了另一方天地——太极天。仿佛命中注定般,木夕在这里遇到了与他纠缠了万世也悲剧了万世的许愁。但这一世却是苦尽甘来,享尽宠爱!
  • 本命之原

    本命之原

    一场怪梦,一棵古树,一位老人,一个命运中的选择。周炎所在的世界发生了巨大的变化~魔族所在魔界,住着仙人的仙界,神秘的天界…………“我靠,这是什么鬼?”周炎玩命般的跑着。只见他后面还有一个身上散发着黑气的怪物向他伸着爪子。“主老头儿,我想的世界不是这样的啊~”这是一个周炎(天)和他的小伙伴们在新世界中改变自身命运的故事。新手作者,前几章水份有点多,求大佬们多多照顾!第一次写,有写的不好的地方,希望大家多多包涵。感谢大家的支持。