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biographical study of a. w. kinglake-第14章

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n the much…read 〃Quarterly〃  article; declaring their belief to be that it was a clergyman's  baby born out of wedlock。

Madame Novikoff's political influence; which he recognized to the  full; he treated in the same mocking spirit。  She is at Berlin;  received by Bismarck; he hopes that though the great man may not  eradicate her Slavophile heresies; he may manifest the weakness of  embroiling nations on mere ethnological grounds。  〃Are even nearer  relationships so delightful? would you walk across the street for a  third or fourth cousin? then why for a millionth cousin?〃  Madame  Novikoff kindly sends to me an 〃Imaginary Conversation〃 between  herself and Gortschakoff; constructed by Kinglake during her stay  in St。 Petersburg in 1879。

〃G。  Well … you really have done good service to your country and  your Czar by dividing and confusing these absurd English; and  getting us out of the scrape we were in in that … Balkan Peninsula。

〃MISS O。  Well; certainly I did my best; but I fear I have ruined  the political reputation of my English partizans; for in order to  make them 'beloved of the Slave;' I of course had to make them;  poor souls! go against their own country; and their country; stupid  as it is; has now I fear found them out。

〃G。  TANT PIS POUR EUX!  ENTRE NOUS; if I had been Gladstone; I  should have preferred the love of my own country to the love of  these … Slaves of yours。  But; tell me; how did you get hold of  Gladstone?

〃MISS O。  RIEN DE PLUS SIMPLE!  Four or five years ago I asked what  was his weak point; and was told that he had two; 'Effervescence;'  and 'Theology。'  With that knowledge I found it all child's play to  manage him。  I just sent him to Munich; and there boiled him up in  a weak decoction of 'Filioque;' then kept him ready for use; and  impatiently awaited the moment when our plans for getting up the  'Bulgarian atrocities' should be mature。  I say 'impatiently;' for;  Heavens; how slow you all were! at least so it strikes a woman。   The arrangement of the 'atrocities' was begun by our people in  1871; and yet till 1876; though I had Gladstone ready in 1875;  nothing really was done!  I assure you; Prince; it is a trying  thing to a woman to be kept waiting for promised atrocities such an  unconscionable time。

〃G。  That brother…in…law of yours was partly the cause of our  slowness。  He was always wanting to have the orders for fire and  blood in neat formal despatches; signed by me; and copied by  clerks。  However; I hope you are satisfied now; with the butcheries  and the flames; and the … ?

〃MISS O。  POUR LE MOMENT!〃

She is absent during the sudden dissolution of Parliament in 1874。   〃London woke yesterday morning and found that your friend Gladstone  had made a COUP…D'ETAT。  He has dissolved Parliament at a moment  when no human being expected it; and my impression is that he has  made a good hit; and that the renovated Parliament will give him a  great majority。〃 The impression was wildly wrong; and he found a  cause for the Conservative majority in Gladstone's tame foreign  policy; and especially in the pusillanimity his government showed  when insulted by Gortschakoff。  He always does justice to her  influence with Gladstone; his great majority at the polls in 1880  is HER victory and HER triumph; but his Turkophobia is no less her  creation: 〃England is stricken with incapacity because you have  stirred up the seething caldron that boils under Gladstone's skull;  putting in diabolical charms and poisons of theology to overturn  the structure of English polity:〃 she will be able; he thinks; to  tell her government that Gladstone is doing his best to break up  the British Empire。

He quotes with approbation the newspaper comparison of her to the  Princess Lieven。  She disparages the famous ambassadress; he sets  her right。  Let her read the 〃Correspondence;〃 by his friend Mr。  Guy Le Strange; and she will see how large a part the Princess  played in keeping England quiet during the war of 1828…29。  She did  not convert her austere admirer; Lord Grey; to approval of the  Russian designs; nor overcome the uneasiness with which the Duke of  Wellington regarded her intrigues; but the Foreign Minister; Lord  Aberdeen; was apparently a fool in her hands; and; whoever had the  merit; the neutrality of England continued。  That was; he repeats  more than once; a most critical time for Russia; it was an object  almost of life and death to the Czar to keep England dawdling in a  state of actual though not avowed neutrality。  It is; he argued; a  matter of fact; that precisely this result was attained; and 〃I  shall be slow to believe that Madame de Lieven did not deserve a  great share of the glory (as you would think it) of making England  act weakly under such circumstances; more especially since we know  that the Duke did not like the great lady; and may be supposed to  have distinctly traced his painful embarrassment to her power。〃  So  the letters go; interspersed with news; with criticisms of notable  persons; with comments enlightening or cynical on passing political  events: with personal matters only now and then; as when he notes  the loss of his two sisters; dwells with unwonted feeling on the  death of his eldest nephew by consumption; condoles with her on her  husband's illness; gives council; wise or playful; as to the  education of her son。  〃I am glad to hear that he is good at Greek;  Latin; and Mathematics; for that shows his cleverness; glad also to  hear that he is occasionally naughty; for that shows his force。  I  advise you to claim and exercise as much control as possible;  because I am certain that a woman … especially so gifted a one as  you … knows more; or rather feels more; about the right way of  bringing up a boy than any mere man。〃

Unbrokenly the correspondence continues: the intimacy added charm;  interest; fragrance to his life; brought out in him all that was  genial; playful; humorous。  He fights the admonitions of coming  weakness; goes to Sidmouth with a sore throat; but takes his papers  and his books。  It is; he says; a deserted little sea…coast place。   〃Mrs。 Grundy has a small house there; but she does not know me by  sight。  If Madame Novikoff were to come; the astonished little  town; dazzled first by her; would find itself invaded by  theologians; bishops; ambassadors of deceased emperors; and an ex… Prime…Minister。〃  But as time goes on he speaks more often of his  suffering throat; of gout; increasing deafness; only half a voice:  his last letter is written in July; 1890; to condole with his  friend upon her husband's death。  In October his nurse takes the  pen; Madame Novikoff comes back hurriedly from Scotland to find him  in his last illness。  〃It is very nice;〃 he told his nurse; 〃to see  dear Madame Novikoff again; but I am going down hill fast; and  cannot hope to be well enough to see much of her。〃  This is in  November; 1890; on New Year's Eve came the inexorable; 〃Terminator  of delights and Separator of friends。〃



CHAPTER VI … LATER DAYS; AND DEATH



FOR twenty years Kinglake lived in Hyde Park Place; in bright  cheerful rooms looking in one direction across the Park; but on  another side into a churchyard。  The churchyard; Lady Gregory tells  us; gave him pause on first seeing the rooms。  〃I should not like  to live here; I should be afraid of ghosts。〃  〃Oh no; sir; there is  always a policeman round the corner。〃 (24)  〃Pleaceman X。〃 has not;  perhaps; before been revered as the Shade…compelling son of Maia:


〃Tu pias laetis animas reponis Sedibus; VIRGAQUE LEVEM COERCES AUREA TURBAM。〃


Here he worked through the morning; the afternoon took him to the  〃Travellers;〃 where his friends; Sir Henry Bunbury and Mr。 Chenery;  usually expected him; then at eight o'clock; if not; as Shylock  says; bid forth; he went to dine at the Athenaeum。  His dinner seat  was in the left…hand corner of the coffee…room; where; in the  thirties; Theodore Hook had been wont to sit; gathering near him so  many listeners to his talk; that at Hook's death in 1841 the  receipts for the club dinners fell off to a large amount。  Here; in  the 〃Corner;〃 as they called it; round Kinglake would be Hayward;  Drummond Wolff; Massey; Oliphant; Edward Twisleton; Strzelecki;  Storks; Venables; Wyke; Bunbury; Gregory; American Ticknor; and a  few more; Sir W。 Stirling Maxwell; when in Scotland; sending  hampers of pheasants to the company。  〃Hurried to the Athenaeum for  dinner;〃 says Ticknor in 1857; 〃and there found Kinglake and Sir  Henry Rawlinson; to whom were soon added Hayward and Stirling。  We  pushed our tables together and had a jolly dinner。 。 。 。 To the  Athenaeum; and having dined pleasantly with Merivale; Kinglake; and  Stirling; I hurried off to the House。〃  In later years; when his  voice grew low and his hearing difficult; he preferred that the  diners should resolve themselves into little groups; assigning to  himself a TETE…A…TETE; with whom at his ease he could unfold  himself。

No man ever fought more gallantly the encroachments of old age … ON  SUT ETRE JEUNE JUSQUE DANS SES VIEUX JOURS。  At seventy…four years  old; staying with a friend at Brighton; he insisted on riding over  to Rottingdean; where Sir Frederick Polloc
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