"So may it be for him, and me, and all of us!" I mused. "All that is evil, and dead, and hopeless, fading with the Night that is past! All that is good, and living, and hopeful, rising with the dawn of Day!
"Fading, with the Night, the chilly mists, and the noxious vapours, and the heavy shadows, and the wailing gusts, and the owl's melancholy hootings: rising, with the Day, the darting shafts of light, and the wholesome morning breeze, and the warmth of a dawning life, and the mad music of the lark! Look Eastward!
"Fading, with the Night, the clouds of ignorance, and the deadly blight of sin, and the silent tears of sorrow: and ever rising, higher, higher, with the Day, the radiant dawn of knowledge, and the sweet breath of purity, and the throb of a world's ecstasy! Look Eastward!
"Fading, with the Night, the memory of a dead love, and the withered leaves of a blighted hope, and the sickly repinings and moody regrets thatnumb the best energies of the soul: and rising, broadening, rolling upward like a living flood, the manly resolve, and the dauntless will, and the heavenward gaze of faith—the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen!
"Look Eastward! Aye, look Eastward!"
SYLVIE AND BRUNO CONCLUDED
Published in 1893, this second volume to Sylvie and Bruno was also illustrated by Harry Furniss. It was Carroll’s last novel to be published in his lifetime.
The frontispiece of the novel
CONTENTS
PREFACE
CHAPTER ONE
BRUNO’S LESSONS
CHAPTER TWO
LOVE’S CURFEW
CHAPTER THREE
STREAKS OF DAWN
CHAPTER FOUR
THE DOG-KING
CHAPTER FIVE
MATILDA JANE
CHAPTER SIX
WILLIE’S WIFE
CHAPTER SEVEN
MEIN HERR
CHAPTER EIGHT
IN A SHADY PLACE
CHAPTER NINE
THE FAREWELL-PARTY
CHAPTER TEN
JABBERING AND JAM
CHAPTER ELEVEN
THE MAN IN THE MOON
CHAPTER TWELVE
FAIRY-MUSIC
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
WHAT TOTTLES MEANT
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
BRUNO’S PICNIC
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
THE LITTLE FOXES
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
BEYOND THESE VOICES
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
TO THE RESCUE!
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
A NEWSPAPER-CUTTING
CHAPTER NINETEEN
A FAIRY-DUET
CHAPTER TWENTY
GAMMON AND SPINACH
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
THE PROFESSOR’S LECTURE
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
THE BANQUET
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
THE PIG-TALE
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
THE BEGGAR’S RETURN
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
LIFE OUT OF DEATH
PREFACE
I MUST begin with the same announcement as in the previous Volume (which I shall henceforward refer to as "Vol. I.," calling the present Volume "Vol. II."), viz. that the Locket, at p. 405, was drawn by ' Miss Alice Havers.' And my reason, for not stating this on the title-page that it seems only due, to the artist of these wonderful pictures, that his name should stand there alone has, I think, even greater weight in Vol. II. than it had in Vol. I. Let me call especial attention to the three “Little Birds" borders, at pp. 365, 371, 377. The way, in which he has managed to introduce the most minute details of the stanzas to be illustrated, seems to me a triumph of artistic ingenuity.
Let me here express my sincere gratitude to the many Reviewers who have noticed, whether favourably or unfavourably, the previous Volume. Their unfavourable remarks were, most probably, well-deserved; the favourable ones less probably so. Both kinds have no doubt served to make the book known, and have helped the reading Public to form their opinions of it. Let me also here assure them that it is not from any want of respect for their criticisms, that I have carefully forborne from reading any of them. I am strongly of opinion that an author had far better not read any reviews of his books : the unfavourable ones are almost certain to make him cross, and the favourable ones conceited ; and neither of these results is desirable.
Criticisms have, however, reached me from private sources, to some of which I propose to offer a reply.
One such critic complains that Arthur's strictures, on sermons and on choristers, are too severe. Let me say, in reply, that I do not hold myself responsible for any of the opinions expressed by the characters in my book. They are simply opinions which, it seemed to me, might probably be held by the persons into whose mouths I put them, and which were worth consideration.
Other critics have objected to certain innovations in spelling, such as " ca'n't," " wo'n't," " traveler." In reply, I can only plead my firm conviction that the popular usage is wrong. As to "ca'n't," it will not be disputed that, in all other words ending in " n't," these letters are an abbreviation of " not" ; and it is surely absurd to suppose that, in this solitary instance, "not" is represented by "'t"! In fact "can't" is the proper abbreviation for "can it," just as "is't" is for " is it." Again, in " wo'n't," the first apostrophe is needed, because the word " would " is here abridged into "wo": but I hold it proper to spell "don't" with only one apostrophe, because the word " do " is here complete. As to such words as " traveler," I hold the correct principle to be, to doiible the consonant when the accent falls on that syllable ; otherwise to leave it single. This rule is observed in most cases (e.g. we double the " r" in " preferred," but leave it single in "offered"), so that I am only extending, to other cases, an existing rule. I admit, however, that I do not spell " parallel," as the rule would have it; but here we are constrained, by the etymology, to insert the double " 1".
In the Preface to Vol. I. were two puzzles, on which my readers might exercise their ingenuity. One was, to detect the 3 lines of " padding," which I had found it necessary to supply in the passage extending from the top of p. 35 to the middle of p. 38. They are the 14th, 15 th, and 16th lines of p. 37. The other puzzle was, to determine which (if any) of the 8 stanzas of the Gardener's Song (see pp. 65, 78, 83, 90, 106, 116, 164, 168) were adapted to the context, and which (if any) had the context adapted to them. The last of them is the only one that was adapted to the context, the " Garden-Door that opened with a key" having been substituted for some creature (a Cormorant, I think) "that nestled in a tree." At pp. 78, 106, and 164, the context was adapted to the stanza. At p. 90, neither stanza nor context was altered : the connection between them was simply a piece of good luck.
In the Preface to Vol. I., at pp. ix., x., I gave an account of the making-up of the story of " Sylvie and Bruno." A few more details may perhaps be acceptable to my Readers.
It was in 1873, as I now believe, that the idea first occurred to me that a little fairy-tale (written, in 1867, for " Aunt Judy's Magazine," under the title " Bruno's Revenge ") might serve as the nucleus of a longer story. This I surmise, from having found the original draft of the last paragraph of Vol. II., dated 1873. So that this paragraph has been waiting 20
years for its chance of emerging into printmore than twice the period so cautiously recommended by Horace for ' repressing' one's literary efforts!
It was in February, 1885, that I entered into negotiations, with Mr. Harry Furniss, for illustrating the book. Most of the substance of both Volumes was then in existence in manuscript: and my original intention was to publish the whole story at once. In September, 1885, I received from Mr. Furniss the first set of drawingsthe four which illustrate "Peter and Paul" (see I. pp. 144, 147, 150, 154): in November, 1886, I received the second setthe three which illustrate the Professor's song about the "little man" who had "a little gun" (Vol. II. pp. 265, 266, 267): and in January, 1887, I received the third setthe four which illustrate the " Pig-Tale."
&nbs
p; So we went on, illustrating first one bit of the story, and then another, without any idea of sequence. And it was not till March, 1889, that, having calculated the number of pages the story would occupy, I decided on dividing it into two portions, and publishing it half at a time. This necessitated the writing of a sort of conclusion for the first Volume : and most of my Readers, I fancy, regarded this as the actual conclusion, when that Volume appeared in December, 1889. At any rate, among all the letters I received about it, there was only one which expressed any suspicion that it was not a final conclusion. This letter was from a child. She wrote " we were so glad, when we came to the end of the book, to find that there was no ending-up, for that shows us that you are going to write a sequel."
It may interest some of my Readers to know the theory on which this story is constructed. It is an attempt to show what might possibly happen, supposing that Fairies really existed; and that they were sometimes visible to us, and we to them ; and that they were sometimes able to assume human form : and supposing, also, that human beings might sometimes become conscious of what goes on in the Fairy- world——by actual transference of their immaterial essence, such as we meet with in ' Esoteric Buddhism.'
I have supposed a Human being to be capable of various psychical states, with varying degrees of consciousness, as follows :—
(a) the ordinary state, with no consciousness of the presence of Fairies ; (b) the ' eerie' state, in which, while conscious of actual surroundings, he is also conscious of the presence of Fairies ; (c) a form of trance, in which, while unconscious of actual surroundings, and apparently asleep, he (i.e. his immaterial essence) migrates to other scenes, in the actual world, or in Fairyland, and is conscious of the presence of Fairies.
I have also supposed a Fairy to be capable of migrating from Fairyland into the actual world, and of assuming, at pleasure, a Human form ; and also to be capable of various psychical states, viz.
(a)the ordinary state, with no consciousness of the presence of Human beings ; (b)a sort of 'eerie' state, in which he is conscious, if in the actual world, of the presence of actual Human beings ; if in Fairyland, of the presence of the immaterial essences of Human beings.
I will here tabulate the passages, in both Volumes, where abnormal states occur.
In the Preface to Vol. I., at p. x., I gave an account of the origination of some of the ideas embodied in the book. A few more such details may perhaps interest my Readers :
I. p. 203. The very peculiar use, here made of a dead mouse, comes from real life. I once found two very small boys, in a garden, playing a microscopic game of ' Single-Wicket/ The bat was, I think, about the size of a table-spoon ; and the utmost distance attained by the ball, in its most daring flights, was some 4 or 5 yards. The exact length was of course a matter of supreme importance; and it was always carefully measured out (the batsman and the bowler amicably sharing the toil) with a dead mouse!
I.p. 259. The two quasi-mathematical Axioms, quoted by Arthur at p. 259 of Vol. I., (" Things that are greater than the same are greater than one another/' and " All angles are equal ") were actually enunciated, in all seriousness, by undergraduates at a University situated not 100 miles from Ely.
II.p. 10. Bruno's remark (" I can, if I like, &c.") was actually made by a little boy.
II. p. 12. So also was his remark ("I know what it doesnt spell.") And his remark (" I just twiddled my eyes, &c.") I heard from the lips of a little girl, who had just solved a puzzle I had set her.
II. p. 55. Bruno's soliloquy ("For its father, &c.") was actually spoken by a little girl, looking out of the window of a railway-carriage.
II. p. 138. The remark, made by a guest at the dinner-party, when asking for a dish of fruit (" I've been wishing for them, &c."') I heard made by the great Poet-Laureate, whose loss the whole reading- world has so lately had to deplore.
II. p. 163. Bruno's speech, on the subject of the age of ' Mein Herr,' embodies the reply of a little girl to the question " Is your grandmother an old lady?" " I don't know if she's an old lady," said this cautious young person ; " she's eighty-three."
II. p. 203. The speech about 'Obstruction' is no mere creature of my imagination! It is copied verbatim from the columns of the Standard, and was spoken by Sir William Harcourt, who was, at the time, a member of the ' Opposition,' at the ' National Liberal Club,' on July the 16th, 1890.
II. p. 329. The Professor's remark, about a dog's tail, that " it doesn't bite at that end," was actually made by a child, when warned of the danger he was incurring by pulling the dog's tail.
II. p. 374. The dialogue between Sylvie and Bruno, which occupies lines 6 to 15, is a verbatim report (merely substituting "cake" for "penny"; of a dialogue overheard between two children.
One story in this Volume' Bruno's Picnic '
I can vouch for as suitable for telling to children, having tested it again and again ; and, whether my audience has been a dozen little girls in a village- school, or some thirty or forty in a London drawing- room, or a hundred in a High School, I have always found them earnestly attentive, and keenly appreciative of such fun as the story supplied.
May I take this opportunity of calling attention to what I flatter myself was a successful piece of name- coining, at p. 42 of Vol. I. Does not the name 'Sibimet' fairly embody the character of the Sub- Warden? The gentle Reader has no doubt observed what a singularly useless article in a house a brazen trumpet is, if you simply leave it lying about, and never blow it!
Readers of the first Volume, who have amused themselves by trying to solve the two puzzles propounded at pp. xi., xii. of the Preface, may perhaps like to exercise their ingenuity in discovering which (if any) of the following parallelisms were intentional, and which (if any) accidental.
" Little Birds.'' Events, and Persons.
Stanza 1.Banquet.
2.Chancellor.
3.Empress and Spinach (II. 325).
4.Warden's Return.
5.Professor's Lecture (II. 339).
6.Other Professor's song (I. 138).
7.Petting of Uggug.
8.Baron Doppelgeist.
9.Jester and Bear (I. 119). Little Foxes.
10.Bruno's Dinner-Bell ; Little Foxes.
I will publish the answer to this puzzle in the Preface to a little book of "Original Games and Puzzles," now in course of preparation.
I have reserved, for the last, one or two rather more serious topics.
I had intended, in this Preface, to discuss more fully, than I had done in the previous Volume, the ' Morality of Sportwith special reference to letters I have received from lovers of Sport, in which they point out the many great advantages which men get from it, and try to prove that the suffering, which it inflicts on animals, is too trivial to be regarded.
But, when I came to think the subject out, and to arrange the whole of the arguments ' pro ' and ' con I found it much too large for treatment here. Some day, I hope to publish an essay on this subject. At present, I will content myself with stating the net result I have arrived at.
It is, that God has given to Man an absolute right to take the lives of other animals, for any reasonable cause, such as the supply of food : but that He has not given to Man the right to inflict pain, unless when necessary: that mere pleasure, or advantage, does not constitute such a necessity: and, consequently, that pain, inflicted for the purposes of Sport, is cruel, and therefore wrong. But I find it a far more complex question than I had supposed ; and that the 'case', on the side of the Sportsman, is a much stronger one than I had supposed. So, for the present, I say no more about it.
Objections have been raised to the severe language I have put into the mouth of ' Arthur at p. 277, on the subject of 'Sermons,' and at pp. 273, 274, on the subjects of Choral Services and ' Choristers.'
I have already protested against the assumption that I am ready to endorse the opinions of characters in my story. But, in these two instances, I admit that I am much in sympathy with ' Arthur.' In my opinion, far too man
y sermons are expected from our preachers; and, as a consequence, a great many are preached, which are not worth listening to ; and, as a consequence of that, we are very apt not to listen. The reader of this paragraph probably heard a sermon last Sunday morning? Well, let him, if he can, name the text, and state how the preacher treated it!
Then, as to ' Choristers,' and all the other accessories—of music, vestments, processions, &c.,—which have come, along with them, into fashion—while freely admitting that the ' Ritual' movement was sorely needed, and that it has effected a vast improvement in our Church-Services, which had become dead and dry to the last degree, I hold that, like many other desirable movements, it has gone too far in the opposite direction, and has introduced many new dangers.
For the Congregation this new movement involves the danger of learning to think that the Services are done for them ; and that their bodily presence is all they need contribute. And, for Clergy and Congregation alike, it involves the danger of regarding these elaborate Services as ends in themselves, and of forgetting that they are simply means, and the very hollowest of mockeries, unless they bear fruit in our lives.
For the Choristers it seems to involve the danger of self-conceit, as described at p. 274 (N.B. " stagy- entrances " is a misprint for "stage-entrances"), the danger of regarding those parts of the Service, where their help is not required, as not worth attending to, the danger of coming to regard the Service as a mere outward forma series of postures to be assumed, and of words to be said or sung, while the thoughts are elsewhereand the danger of ' familiarity'
breeding ' contempt' for sacred things.
Let me illustrate these last two forms of danger, from my own experience. Not long ago, I attended a Cathedral-Service, and was placed immediately behind a row of men, members of the Choir; and I could not help noticing that they treated the Lessons as a part of the Service to which they needed not to give any attention, and as affording them a convenient opportunity for arranging music-books, &c., &c. Also I have frequently seen a row of little choristers, after marching in procession to their places, kneel down, as if about to pray, and rise from their knees after a minute spent in looking about them, it being but too evident that the attitude was a mere mockery. Surely it is very dangerous, for these children, to thus accustom them to pretend to pray? As an instance of irreverent treatment of holy things, I will mention a custom, which no doubt many of my readers have noticed in Churches where the Clergy and Choir enter in procession, viz. that, at the end of the private devotions, which are carried on in the vestry, and which are of course inaudible to the Congregation, the final " Amen" is shouted, loud enough to be heard all through the Church. This serves as a signal, to the Congregation, to prepare to rise when the procession appears : and it admits of no dispute that it is for this purpose that it is thus shouted. When we remember to Whom that " Amen " is really addressed, and consider that it is here used for the same purpose as one of the Church-bells, we must surely admit that it is a piece of gross irreverence? To me it is much as if I were to see a Bible used as a footstool.
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