Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,188 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works.

Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,188 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works.

Romance!  Was there ever a boarding-house in the world where the seemingly prosaic table had not a living fresco for its background, where you could see, if you had eyes, the smoke and fire of some upheaving sentiment, or the dreary craters of smouldering or burnt-out passions?  You look on the black bombazine and high-necked decorum of your neighbor, and no more think of the real life that underlies this despoiled and dismantled womanhood than you think of a stone trilobite as having once been full of the juices and the nervous thrills of throbbing and self-conscious being.  There is a wild creature under that long yellow pin which serves as brooch for the bombazine cuirass,—­a wild creature, which I venture to say would leap in his cage, if I should stir him, quiet as you think him.  A heart which has been domesticated by matrimony and maternity is as tranquil as a tame bullfinch; but a wild heart which has never been fairly broken in flutters fiercely long after you think time has tamed it down,—­like that purple finch I had the other day, which could not be approached without such palpitations and frantic flings against the bars of his cage, that I had to send him back and get a little orthodox canary which had learned to be quiet and never mind the wires or his keeper’s handling.  I will tell you my wicked, but half involuntary experiment on the wild heart under the faded bombazine.

Was there ever a person in the room with you, marked by any special weakness or peculiarity, with whom you could be two hours and not touch the infirm spot?  I confess the most frightful tendency to do just this thing.  If a man has a brogue, I am sure to catch myself imitating it.  If another is lame, I follow him, or, worse than that, go before him, limping.

I could never meet an Irish gentleman—­if it had been the Duke of Wellington himself—­without stumbling upon the word “Paddy,”—­which I use rarely in my common talk.

I have been worried to know whether this was owing to some innate depravity of disposition on my part, some malignant torturing instinct, which, under different circumstances, might have made a Fijian anthropophagus of me, or to some law of thought for which I was not answerable.  It is, I am convinced, a kind of physical fact like endosmosis, with which some of you are acquainted.  A thin film of politeness separates the unspoken and unspeakable current of thought from the stream of conversation.  After a time one begins to soak through and mingle with the other.

We were talking about names, one day.—­Was there ever anything,—­I said,—­like the Yankee for inventing the most uncouth, pretentious, detestable appellations,—­inventing or finding them,—­since the time of Praise-God Barebones?  I heard a country-boy once talking of another whom he called Elpit, as I understood him.  Elbridge is common enough, but this sounded oddly.  It seems the boy was christened Lord Pitt,—­and called for convenience, as above.  I have heard

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