登陆注册
25529700000027

第27章 LATER DAYS, AND DEATH(1)

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." "Pleaceman X." has not, perhaps, before been revered as the Shade-compelling son of Maia:

"Tu pias laetis animas reponis Sedibus, VIRGAQUE LEVEM COERCESAUREA 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 - ONSUT 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 Pollock was staying. "Imastered," he said, in answer to remonstrances, "I mastered the peculiarities of the Brighton screw before you were born, and have never forgotten them." Vaulting into his saddle he rode off, returning with a schoolboy's delight at the brisk trot he had found practicable when once clear of the King's Road. Long after his hearing had failed, his sight become grievously weakened, and his limbs not always trustworthy, he would never allow a cab to be summoned for him after dinner, always walking to his lodgings. But he had to give up by and by his daily canter in Rotten Row, and more reluctantly still his continental travel. Foreign railways were closed to him by the SALLE D'ATTENTE; he could not stand incarceration in the waiting-rooms.

The last time he crossed the Channel was at the close of the Franco-Prussian war, on a visit to his old friend M. Thiers, then President. It was a dinner to deputies of the Extreme Left, and Kinglake was the only Englishman; "so," he said, "among the servants there was a sort of reasoning process as to my identity, ending in the conclusion, 'IL DOIT ETRE SIR DILKE.'" Soon the inference was treated as a fact; and in due sequence came newspaper paragraphs declaring that the British Ambassador had gravely remonstrated with the President for inviting Sir Charles Dilke to his table. Then followed articles defending the course taken by the President, and so for some time the ball was kept up. The remonstrance of the Ambassador was a myth, Lord Lyons was a friend of Sir Charles; but the latter was suspect at the time both in England and France; in England for his speeches and motion on the Civil List; in France, because, with Frederic Harrison, he had helped to get some of the French Communists away from France; and the French Government was watching him with spies. In Sir Charles's motion Kinglake took much interest, refusing to join in the cry against it as disloyal. Sir Charles, he said, spoke no word against the Queen; and only brought the matter before the House because challenged to repeat in Parliament the statements he had made in the country. As a matter of policy he thought it mistaken: "Move in such a matter openly, and party discipline compels your defeat; bring pressure to bear on a Cabinet, some of its members are on your side, and you may gain your point." Sir Charles's speech was calmly argumentative, and to many minds convincing; it provoked a passionate reply from Gladstone; and when Mr. Auberon Herbert following declared himself a Republican, a tumult arose such as in those pre-Milesian days had rarely been witnessed in the House. But the wisdom of Kinglake's counsel is sustained by the fact that many years afterwards, as a result of more private discussion, Mr. Gladstone pronounced his conversion to the two bases of the motion, publicity, and the giving of the State allowance to the head of the family rather than, person by person, to the children and grandchildren of the Sovereign. Action pointing in this direction was taken in 1889 and 1901 on the advice of Tory ministers.

同类推荐
  • The Argonautica

    The Argonautica

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 园笔乘

    园笔乘

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • HOW TO FAIL IN LITERATURE

    HOW TO FAIL IN LITERATURE

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 阿育王譬喻经

    阿育王譬喻经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 青磷屑

    青磷屑

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 骄纵

    骄纵

    严纵从来不觉得自己是个循规蹈矩按部就班的人,严纵什么意思,严于律己,纵情恣意!身世凄惨?噢上帝。白莲妹妹?呵呵哒。后母欺凌?你确定?作为N市圈子里最为凄惨的严家长女,管她是圣母白莲花还是清纯绿茶妹,单挑吗?端的就是高调任性!
  • 温润如玉:温如玉

    温润如玉:温如玉

    姨娘变主母再狠毒又怎样,我温如玉定会保护唯一疼爱自己的姐姐,惹不起躲得起,暂且韬光养晦,暗中成长,待羽翼丰满时,便是展翅之时,俊美太医与邪魅皇子一路扶持成长,该如何抉择。
  • 妖妃皇后

    妖妃皇后

    入宫的初年,她俩,是一对好姐妹。依旧是,一个天,一个地。但她们依旧在一起了。什么都无法阻挡她们的友情。她甚至以为,她能永远安安心心地做这个宫女的位置,从不奢望宠爱。之后,她发现自己只是别人的玩物。而深宫,并容不下单纯的她。她不想被欺负,不想自己的姐妹也被别人践踏。可她始终没有狠下心。她被皇帝看中的那一天,她就已经是别人的替代品。躲不了别人的陷害和嫉妒。而她,溺在情海之中无法自拔。紧接着,自己的好姐妹背叛了自己,自己信任的人接连被背叛。她痛恨害她的皇后,就害得她无家可归。她也痛恨自己的姐妹,就让她被满门抄斩。而当别人告诉她真相的时候,她更是痛恨。
  • 鬼医王妃很倾城

    鬼医王妃很倾城

    她原本是二十一世纪的天才医者,阎王叫人三更死,她可留人到五更,因此得了个鬼医之名。一朝穿越,竟穿越到了慕家的废物大小姐身上。没关系,既然我占用了你的身体,我就帮你好好的活下去!丹药难炼?甩你一堆。阵法难成?弄一个分分钟的事。灵兽难驭?神兽都来给姐捶腿了。生活多姿多彩,可是为什么,在她打脸白莲花,狂虐负心男的时候,一个妖孽缠上了她?
  • 霸气冲天系列13

    霸气冲天系列13

    杀人有罪吗?当你的命运掌握在别人手里的时候,当你带着不凡的使命去杀人的时候,当你不杀人便被别人杀的时候--你不杀人,便即意味着死亡,意味着有罪……
  • 蔷薇少年与神秘的魔影少女

    蔷薇少年与神秘的魔影少女

    一抹黑红飘渺,一刹魔音笛响,一点殷红笼罩,这在天空中的一幕,引起了一位少年的注意,少年随着光点望向天际,在少年的目光中,他注意到了在黑红的天际间,若隐若现的闪现着一位少年的形态,尽管只是若隐若现的形态,也足以在这位少年的脑海和意识中留下了永远难以移除的地位、空间。下一瞬间,若隐若现的少女形态已逐渐消失了,仅仅留下了那一片在黑夜中闪现着的星星点点。究竟天空中出现的若隐若现的少女,是虚是实,是真是假?那位若隐若现的少女究竟是何方神圣?为何会突然出现,然后又突然消失?少年与少女的邂逅又将会是怎样的呢,将如何发展?神秘的少女与迷茫的少年又能否获得月老的亲睐,为他们连上一根永不间断的红线呢?
  • 上清洞真元经五籍符

    上清洞真元经五籍符

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 鬼啸九天

    鬼啸九天

    巫蛊、鬼术与道术的碰撞,人性善与恶,正与邪的较量这是一个修仙的末法年代,一个冥鬼崛起、鬼气啸天的时代故事要从九月初九说起......
  • 修量者

    修量者

    世间万物都有其质量,人体和灵魂都是由质量组成的,修量者是一种以灵魂质量法为修炼基础的人群。
  • 黑暗豪宠:老公,你真棒

    黑暗豪宠:老公,你真棒

    那天,她被男友背叛,在走投无路的时候,他如神一般出现了,他说:“我娶你,好不好?”就这样,林夏惜成了A市大名鼎鼎的君少君默笙的老婆,他宠她,宠上了天,无人敢欺她。可为什么他前女友的出现,让他们走得越来越远呢?又该何去何从?