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My Wood |
作者Author /  E.M Forster 福斯特 |
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My Wood
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1
A
few years ago I wrote a book which dealt in part with the difficulties
of the English in India. Feeling that they would have had no
difficulties in India themselves, the Americans read the book freely.
The more they read it the better it made them feel, and a cheque to the
author was the result. I bought a wood with the cheque. It is not a
large wood--it contains scarcely any trees, and it is intersected, blast it, by a public
footpath. Still, it is the first property that I have owned, so it is
right that other people should participate in my shame, and should ask
themselves, in accents
that will vary in horror, this very important question: What is the
effect of property upon the character? Don't let's touch economics; the
effect of private ownership upon the community as a whole is another
question--a more important question, perhaps, but another one. Let's
keep to psychology. If
you own things, what's their effect on you? What's the effect on me of
my wood?
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2
In the first place, it makes me feel heavy.
Property does have this effect. Property produces men of weight, and it
was a man of weight who failed to get into the Kingdom of Heaven. He
was not wicked, that unfortunate millionaire in the parable, he was only stout; he he struck out in
front, not to mention behind, and as he wedged
himself this way and that in the crystalline
entrance and bruised
his well-fed flanks,
he saw beneath him a comparatively slim camel
passing through the eye of a needle and being
woven into the robe of God. The Gospels
all through couple stoutness and slowness. They point out what is
perfectly obvious, yet seldom realized: that if you have a lot of
things you cannot move about a lot, that furniture requires dusting,
dusters require servants, servants require insurance
stamps, and the whole tangle
of them makes you think twice before you accept an invitation to dinner
or go for a bathe in the Jordan. Sometimes
the Gospels proceed further
and say with Tolsoty that property is sinful; they approach the
difficult ground of asceticism here,
where I cannot follow them. But as to the immediate effects of property
on people, they just show straightforward logic. It produces men of
weight. Men of weight cannot, by definition, move like the lightning
from the East unto the West, and the ascent
of a fourteen-stone bishop
into a pulpit is thus
the exact antithesis
of the coming of the Son of Man. My wood makes me feel heavy.
3
In the second place, it makes me feel it ought to
be larger.
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4
The other day I heard a twig snap in it. I was annoyed at
first, for I thought that someone was blackberrying,
and depreciating the value of the undergrowth. On coming nearer, I saw
it was not a man who had trodden
on the twig and snapped it, but a bird, and I felt pleased. My bird.
The bird was not equally pleased. Ignoring the relation between us, it
took fright as soon as it saw the shape of my face, and flew straight
over the boundary hedge
into a field, the property of Mrs. Henessy, where it sat down with a
loud squawk. It had
become Mrs. Henessy's bird. Something seemed grossly
amiss here, something that would not have occurred had the
wood been larger. I could not afford to buy Mrs. Henessy out, I dared
not murder her, and limitations of this sort beset me on every side.
Ahab did not want that vineyard--he only needed it to round off his
property, preparatory to plotting a new curve--and
all the land around my wood has become necessary to me in order to
round off the wood. A boundary protects. But--poor little thing--the
boundary ought in its turn to be protected. Noises on the edge of it.
Children throw stones. A little more, and then a little more, until we
reach the sea. Happy Canute! Happier Alexander! And after all, why
should even the world be the limit of possession? A rocket containing a
Union Jack, will, it is hoped, be shortly fired at the moon.
Mars. Sirius. Beyond which . . . . But these immensities ended by saddening
me. I could not suppose that my wood was the destined nucleus of universal dominion--it is so very small
and contains no mineral wealth beyond the blackberries. Nor was I
comforted when Mrs. Henessy's bird took alarm for the second time and
flew clean away from us all, under the belief that it belonged to
itself.
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5
In the third place, property makes its owner feel
that he ought to do something to it. Yet he isn't sure what. A
restlessness comes over him, a vague sense that he has a personality to
express-- the same sense which, without any vagueness, leads the artist
to an act of creation. Sometimes I think I will cut down such trees as
remain in the wood, at other times I want to fill up the gaps between
them with new trees. Both impulses are pretentious an empty. They are
not honest movements towards money-making or beauty. They spring from a
foolish desire to express myself and from an inability to enjoy what I
have got. Creation, property, enjoyment form a sinister
trinity
in the human mind. Creation and enjoyment are both very, very
good, yet they are often unattainable without a material basis, and at
such moments property pushes itself in as a substitute, saying, "Accept
me instead--I'm good enough for all there." It is not enough. It is, as
Shakespeare said of lust,
"The expense of spirit in a waste of shame": it is "Before, a joy
proposed; behind, a dream." Yet we don't know how to shun it. It is forced on us by
our economic system as the alternative to starvation. It is also forced
on us by an internal defect in the soul, by the feeling that in
property may lie the germs
of self-development and of exquisite
or heroic deeds. Our life on earth is, and
ought to be, material and carnal.
But we have not yet learned to manage our materialism and carnality properly; they are
sill entangled with the desire for ownership, where (in the words of
Dante) "Possession is one with loss."
6
And this brings us to our fourth and final point:
the blackberries.
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