登陆注册
4806800000026

第26章 MADAME NOVIKOFF(5)

"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 1880is 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 "Ishall 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. Iadvise 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."

同类推荐
  • The Market-Place

    The Market-Place

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 画山水赋

    画山水赋

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 往生集

    往生集

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 蛮书

    蛮书

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 诸法无行经

    诸法无行经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • Z:泽尔达·菲茨杰拉德的故事

    Z:泽尔达·菲茨杰拉德的故事

    本书是讲述美国现代文学史上的传奇夫妇菲兹杰拉德与泽尔达的纪实小说。1918年,17岁的泽尔达·萨耶尔在一个乡村俱乐部舞会上遇见了斯科特·菲茨杰拉德,并立刻爱上了他。不顾家人的反对,泽尔达乐观地登上了北上的列车,与菲兹杰拉德结婚。接踵而至的是璀璨的爵士时代。
  • 百鬼夜行长篇系列:阴摩罗鬼之瑕(全集)

    百鬼夜行长篇系列:阴摩罗鬼之瑕(全集)

    由良昂允伯爵是一个与世隔绝的人,隐居在白桦湖附近的“鸟城”之中,不但是个鸟类专家,也是一个博学的儒学者。伯爵在几十年间曾经四次娶妻,而四位新娘都在新婚之后的第二天早上离奇死亡。似乎并没有凶手,甚至看起来连作案的时间都没有,是不可能的犯罪吗?书斋中伫立着的巨大漆黑的鹤就是阴摩罗鬼吗?伯爵即将第五次娶妻,这一次他下定决心无论如何都要保住新娘。
  • 是你,引我入局

    是你,引我入局

    花开花败终有时,人聚人散纷扰乱。绿茵山上一棵老树说过,用无穷无尽的光阴去寻活在世间的意义。可木芙蓉没有生死,又何来寻字一说。 第一次,木芙蓉避开禾璋,拉开距离。 第二次,一丝甘甜引诱禾璋步步为营。 无数次…… “老板,木小姐回来了。” “嗯,我刚好想她了。” “……” PS:不吓人、不恐怖的探案爱情小说……
  • 重生之鸾凤还巢

    重生之鸾凤还巢

    重生一世,她定要让那些伤害过她的人付出代价。还有那个一直默默守护她的他,她要将他送上那至尊之位。“宛儿,为我生个孩子好不好?”“陛下,我已经生了两个了,不想生了。”一生中最好的记忆,不过是与你相依相守的那段时光。
  • 华灯星桥耀百枝

    华灯星桥耀百枝

    我从黑暗中出世,生长之中再无光明。华灯初上,在星桥遇到唐华,他头顶映着满天星光,手中一支星烛向我递送。我从未追寻过光,它降落在我头顶时,我只想着避躲。黑夜渐渐将我堙没,如果我从黑暗中来,注定会到黑暗中去。届时只想多看看你的星眸,好让我在生命尽头触到最后一缕烛光。华灯何煌煌,百枝火树,星桥铁锁,梦里花凉。唐华和乔百枝,一个降生在光明之中,一个生来被黑暗包裹。两人牵了手,从此光不再炽热烫手,夜也不再黯淡冰凉。
  • 半吊子爱情

    半吊子爱情

    生活在繁华的都市,却过着各自的落寂生活,一场朋友的婚礼,让她结识了极品男。当她接受了这原本不相信的爱情馅饼时,旧爱的出现,让她陷入纠结。再打算理清头绪时,却发现她的这份爱情并不是她想象的那么简单。朋友的出轨,让她再次陷入混乱局面,到底这是怎么了,是什么让原本平静的生活陷入一片混乱,女主人公将如何面对她的爱情。
  • 都市修仙狂少

    都市修仙狂少

    因为一次意外的救人,赵子成从此收获神龙玉佩和真仙门的传承功法。修仙炼丹,力量无比!校花,警花,都市女神,主动送上门来,让赵子成不由大呼,美女太热情,有些受不了……
  • 家庭按摩边学边用

    家庭按摩边学边用

    按摩疗法作为传统的医疗保健疗法,日益受到读者青睐。而本书作者用严谨的理论基础,取穴精准的拉页,翔实精炼的文字说明,让您没有任何按摩基础,也可以一边学习按摩一边对症进行治疗或者保健养生。为了让普通读者掌握按摩知识,本书分七章从基础讲起,根据家庭成员中各群体的健康需求,介绍了多种常见病的按摩治疗方法,且有针对中老年、女性、男性、小儿等特殊群体的按摩方法和日常保健按摩方法。
  • 失踪法则

    失踪法则

    她们为何失踪?到底是谁策划着一场场冷血的失踪案?
  • 此情渺渺,终于宠到你

    此情渺渺,终于宠到你

    听说人见人爱,花见花开的讨厌鬼云渺离婚了,众人:活该,红颜祸水,祸国殃民!听说颜美心善的季先生谈恋爱了。众人:羡慕使我丑陋,嫉妒使我面目全非,心碎+祝福,长长久久。听说季先生和云渺求婚被看到了。众人:造谣一生黑!坚决不信!!--情节虚构,请勿模仿