登陆注册
5469700000006

第6章 CHAPTER II(2)

I speak here of my introduction to Holland House, for although Lady Holland was then in the zenith of her ascendency, (it was she who was the Cabinet Minister, not her too amiable husband,) although Holland House was then the resort of all the potentates of Whig statecraft, and Whig literature, and Whig wit, in the persons of Lord Grey, Brougham, Jeffrey, Macaulay, Sydney Smith, and others, it was not till eight or ten years later that I knew, when I met them there, who and what her Ladyship's brilliant satellites were. I shall not return to Lady Holland, so I will say a parting word of her forthwith.

The woman who corresponded with Buonaparte, and consoled the prisoner of St. Helena with black currant jam, was no ordinary personage. Most people, I fancy, were afraid of her. Her stature, her voice, her beard, were obtrusive marks of her masculine attributes. It is questionable whether her amity or her enmity was most to be dreaded. She liked those best whom she could most easily tyrannise over. Those in the other category might possibly keep aloof. For my part I feared her patronage. I remember when I was about seventeen - a self-conscious hobbledehoy - Mr. Ellice took me to one of her large receptions. She received her guests from a sort of elevated dais. When I came up - very shy - to make my salute, she asked me how old I was. 'Seventeen,' was the answer. 'That means next birthday,' she grunted. 'Come and give me a kiss, my dear.' I, a man! - a man whose voice was (sometimes) as gruff as hers! - a man who was beginning to shave for a moustache! Oh! the indignity of it!

But it was not Lady Holland, or her court, that concerned me in my school days, it was Holland Park, or the extensive grounds about Charles Fox's house (there were no other houses at Addison Road then), that I loved to roam in. It was the birds'-nesting; it was the golden carp I used to fish for on the sly with a pin; the shying at the swans, the hunt for cockchafers, the freedom of mischief generally, and the excellent food - which I was so much in need of - that made the holiday delightful.

Some years later, when dining at Holland House, I happened to sit near the hostess. It was a large dinner party. Lord Holland, in his bath-chair (he nearly always had the gout), sat at the far end of the table a long way off. But my lady kept an eye on him, for she had caught him drinking champagne. She beckoned to the groom of the chambers, who stood behind her; and in a gruff and angry voice shouted:

'Go to my Lord. Take away his wine, and tell him if he drinks any more you have my orders to wheel him into the next room.' If this was a joke it was certainly a practical one.

And yet affection was behind it. There's a tender place in every heart.

Like all despots, she was subject to fits of cowardice - especially, it was said, with regard to a future state, which she professed to disbelieve in. Mr. Ellice told me that once, in some country house, while a fearful storm was raging, and the claps of thunder made the windows rattle, Lady Holland was so terrified that she changed dresses with her maid, and hid herself in the cellar. Whether the story be a calumny or not, it is at least characteristic.

After all, it was mainly due to her that Holland House became the focus of all that was brilliant in Europe. In the memoirs of her father - Sydney Smith - Mrs. Austin writes:

'The world has rarely seen, and will rarely, if ever, see again all that was to be found within the walls of Holland House. Genius and merit, in whatever rank of life, became a passport there; and all that was choicest and rarest in Europe seemed attracted to that spot as their natural soil.'

Did we learn much at Temple Grove? Let others answer for themselves. Acquaintance with the classics was the staple of a liberal education in those times. Temple Grove was the ATRIUM to Eton, and gerund-grinding was its RAISON D'ETRE.

Before I was nine years old I daresay I could repeat - parrot, that is - several hundreds of lines of the AEneid.

This, and some elementary arithmetic, geography, and drawing, which last I took to kindly, were dearly paid for by many tears, and by temporarily impaired health. It was due to my pallid cheeks that I was removed. It was due to the following six months - summer months - of a happy life that my health was completely restored.

同类推荐
  • 菜根谭

    菜根谭

    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。
  • 高上神霄玉清真王紫书大法

    高上神霄玉清真王紫书大法

    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。
  • The Book of Tea

    The Book of Tea

    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。
  • 士容论

    士容论

    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。
  • 起信论疏笔削记

    起信论疏笔削记

    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
  • 王牌校草的天才宝贝

    王牌校草的天才宝贝

    这家伙简直就是妖孽下凡,FB学院的半个神,为何总对她纠缠不已,那邪魅半眯的深眸,那英俊帅挺的鼻子,还有那因为有着四分之一混血的妖孽外表。反抗无效,那高达的身躯渐渐压迫而来,富有磁性的声音就在米小夏的耳边响起:“告诉你,你是我的女人,休想逃!”
  • Sein喜剧的诞生

    Sein喜剧的诞生

    行之而不著者,习之而不察者,终身由而不知其道者,迷信也。最后谢谢,能看完这本书的读者们,希望这本书能够败坏你们对其他书籍的品味。
  • 等待古董店

    等待古董店

    昏暗的小巷里,一家名为“等待”的古董店静静的开在一个角落。白天里这家店总是关闭着,却总在午夜之后点亮店前的红油纸灯笼静静等着属于它的客人......每个进入这里的人需带着一件对自己来说十分珍贵的东西和一个故事只为和老板娘交换某样东西......
  • 醉美不过相遇

    醉美不过相遇

    乔太太有世纪妖女之称,听说她极美极恶,而且夫控。某天牌局,乔先生优雅起身,公子甲愕然:“才十点不到,乔总这就撤了?”乔先生微微一笑:“不好意思,惧内,回晚了不让进门。”“哪有哪有,豪门中的惧内不叫惧内,叫宠妻!宠妻!!”
  • 飘飞的风筝

    飘飞的风筝

    夏小雨是一个不谐事故的女孩子,分别和三个不同性格的男人有着不同的爱情故事。最终因法律意识的淡薄而触犯了法律。出狱后,她励志要为社会多做出一点贡献,随时代的变迁扬帆起航。
  • 领导学

    领导学

    本书集MBA(工商管理硕士)理论之精华,系统地阐述了领导科学的各类实质性和实务性问题,内容全面具体,结构严谨有序,语言通俗易懂,对新时期领导者加强自身修养,提商领导能力,汲取领导经验,探求领导方法提供了可资依循的理论指南和行为范式,是各级别各行业领导者集中培训学习的最佳读本和首选教程。
  • 神秘校草是女生

    神秘校草是女生

    (隔壁新书《死对头好像喜欢我呀》已经发了!大家快去看呀!)神秘美少年左凌空降北赢高校。第一天就登上了校园风云榜的第一名,成为了女同学们心中的头号校草。【这是一对欢喜冤家的故事】
  • 做个禅女人:女人善待心灵的100个阳光禅

    做个禅女人:女人善待心灵的100个阳光禅

    女人,很多时候都会感到累、感到无助、感到孤单、感到迷茫……”其实在没有月光也没有星光的时候,你也不要绝望和哭泣,禅的智慧会带你走出黑暗和迷雾,走向幸福和光明,让你学会自已送自己一枝鲜花,自己给自己撑一柄避雨的伞,自己给自己一个明媚的笑容。
  • 妖尾之忍术之神

    妖尾之忍术之神

    继承了宇智波力量的宇智波千叶,携带着包含众多忍术的忍术之间穿越到了妖精尾巴的世界。忍术与魔法之间的碰撞,究竟会闪出何等的火花?纳兹:千叶,和我决斗!千叶:没空!去找拉克萨斯去!纳兹:火龙的咆哮!千叶:哼!看来有必要让你瞧瞧水遁的厉害!千叶:随吞,大坝谁修哈!
  • 怒婚

    怒婚

    深夜,原本应该在医院里保胎的我悄悄打车回到家里。今夜是我们结婚一周年纪念日,我想给我的老公一个惊喜。虚掩的卧房门里,他却跟另一个女人睡在床上,他们缱绻缠绵,刚刚享受完鱼水之欢。“浩轩,为何要跟她结婚?”女人柔媚入骨的依靠在他结实的怀抱里,美眸泪水盈盈。“还不是为了我爸爸那份遗嘱,你知道的!”他用我从未见识过的温柔轻轻为她揩去眼角的泪滴。“什么时候跟她离婚?”她不依不饶的追问。“等……她生下孩子!”我浑身大震,双手不由自主的抚向微微隆起的腹部,天,原来这场婚姻里,不止是我,就连这未出世的孩子都不过是他利用的筹码。他不温柔不深情不细腻,我却一直以为他性格使然,没想到他的温柔深情细腻只展现给那个女人。我以为他对我多少总有些真情,却没料到从始至终都是我一个人的独角戏。泪落,转身,逃走!片断一:“把这份离婚协议书签了!”他冷漠的嗓音听不出什么情绪,将两张纸拍到我的面前。“好!”我心头一喜,总算可以解脱了。连忙挥笔落款,再小心奕奕的推还给他,低眉顺眼不敢表现出太明显的欣然,为怕这个变态的男人心理失衡又要折磨我。“为什么签得这么痛快?”突然拔高的嗓音表明他心情极度不爽,阴鸷森寒的目光在我脸上逡巡着,威迫力十足。“……”古言说唯小人与女子难养也,为何这男人也如此难缠呢?是他拿出的离婚协议书,我不签是违逆他,签了是看不起他……无语。“哼,你那点心思以为我不清楚!以为离婚就可以摆脱我?”他冷笑着,声音冷如夜魅:“你永远都无法摆脱我,再把这份合同签了!”我呆呆看着他重新拍过来的这张纸,居然是——卖身契约合同!我——穆雪馨,一夜间从他的妻子直接降级成情人,世界上还有比这更荒谬更可笑复可悲的事情吗?沈浩轩,不要以为我是任你柔捏的软柿子。我爱你才给了你伤害我的权利,我不爱你了——你狗屁都不是!片断二:老外帅哥指着沈浩轩好奇地问道:“他是谁?”“我的下堂夫!”我回答的同时顺便睇了沈浩轩一眼,他脸色瞬间发青。“下堂夫是什么东西?”老外帅哥显然无法理解如此深奥的词汇。“被我扔掉的东西!”片断三:“跟我回家!”他的眼中有着我从未见过的慌乱和痛楚,紧紧抱住我好像要勒断我的身体。“跟你回家?回去做你的老婆还是情人?”“……”有些伤害可以原谅,有些事情做过了却不可挽回。抖落昨日的满身心伤痛,我坚信我的未来依然美好!