登陆注册
5435400000054

第54章 I(1)

In 1851 the Prince's fortunes reached their high-water mark. The success of the Great Exhibition enormously increased his reputation and seemed to assure him henceforward a leading place in the national life. But before the year was out another triumph, in a very different sphere of action, was also his. This triumph, big with fateful consequences, was itself the outcome of a series of complicated circumstances which had been gathering to a climax for many years.

The unpopularity of Albert in high society had not diminished with time.

Aristocratic persons continued to regard him with disfavour; and he on his side, withdrew further and further into a contemptuous reserve. For a moment, indeed, it appeared as if the dislike of the upper classes was about to be suddenly converted into cordiality; for they learnt with amazement that the Prince, during a country visit, had ridden to hounds and acquitted himself remarkably well. They had always taken it for granted that his horsemanship was of some second-rate foreign quality, and here he was jumping five-barred gates and tearing after the fox as if he had been born and bred in Leicestershire. They could hardly believe it; was it possible that they had made a mistake, and that Albert was a good fellow after all? Had he wished to be thought so he would certainly have seized this opportunity, purchased several hunters, and used them constantly. But he had no such desire; hunting bored him, and made Victoria nervous. He continued, as before, to ride, as he himself put it, for exercise or convenience, not for amusement; and it was agreed that though the Prince, no doubt, could keep in his saddle well enough, he was no sportsman.

This was a serious matter. It was not merely that Albert was laughed at by fine ladies and sneered at by fine gentlemen; it was not merely that Victoria, who before her marriage had cut some figure in society, had, under her husband's influence, almost completely given it up. Since Charles the Second the sovereigns of England had, with a single exception, always been unfashionable; and the fact that the exception was George the Fourth seemed to give an added significance to the rule. What was grave was not the lack of fashion, but the lack of other and more important qualities. The hostility of the upper classes was symptomatic of an antagonism more profound than one of manners or even of tastes. The Prince, in a word, was un-English. What that word precisely meant it was difficult to say; but the fact was patent to every eye. Lord Palmerston, also, was not fashionable; the great Whig aristocrats looked askance at him, and only tolerated him as an unpleasant necessity thrust upon them by fate. But Lord Palmerston was English through and through, there was something in him that expressed, with extraordinary vigour, the fundamental qualities of the English race. And he was the very antithesis of the Prince. By a curious chance it so happened that this typical Englishman was brought into closer contact than any other of his countrymen with the alien from over the sea. It thus fell out that differences which, in more fortunate circumstances, might have been smoothed away and obliterated, became accentuated to the highest pitch. All the mysterious forces in Albert's soul leapt out to do battle with his adversary, and, in the long and violent conflict that followed, it almost seemed as if he was struggling with England herself.

Palmerston's whole life had been spent in the government of the country. At twenty-two he had been a Minister; at twenty-five he had been offered the Chancellorship of the Exchequer, which, with that prudence which formed so unexpected a part of his character, he had declined to accept. His first spell of office had lasted uninterruptedly for twenty-one years. When Lord Grey came into power he received the Foreign Secretaryship, a post which he continued to occupy, with two intervals, for another twenty-one years. Throughout this period his reputation with the public had steadily grown, and when, in 1846, he became Foreign Secretary for the third time, his position in the country was almost, if not quite, on an equality with that of the Prime Minister, Lord John Russell. He was a tall, big man of sixty-two, with a jaunty air, a large face, dyed whiskers, and a long sardonic upper lip. His private life was far from respectable, but he had greatly strengthened his position in society by marrying, late in life, Lady Cowper, the sister of Lord Melbourne, and one of the most influential of the Whig hostesses. Powerful, experienced, and supremely self-confident, he naturally paid very little attention to Albert.

Why should he? The Prince was interested in foreign affairs? Very well, then; let the Prince pay attention to him--to him, who had been a Cabinet Minister when Albert was in the cradle, who was the chosen leader of a great nation, and who had never failed in anything he had undertaken in the whole course of his life. Not that he wanted the Prince's attention--far from it: so far as he could see, Albert was merely a young foreigner, who suffered from having no vices, and whose only claim to distinction was that he had happened to marry the Queen of England. This estimate, as he found out to his cost, was a mistaken one. Albert was by no means insignificant, and, behind Albert, there was another figure by no means insignificant either--there was Stockmar.

同类推荐
  • 明诗别裁集

    明诗别裁集

    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。
  • 续诗品

    续诗品

    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。
  • 栲栳山人诗集

    栲栳山人诗集

    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。
  • 优波离问佛经

    优波离问佛经

    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。
  • A Bundle of Ballads

    A Bundle of Ballads

    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
  • 重生之璀璨反扑

    重生之璀璨反扑

    按理来讲,身为端王正妃的崔粲然跟着自己老公造了大伯子皇帝的反,她就应该顺理成章成为皇后了。可是不!她老公,以前的端王,如今的皇帝,一纸圣旨封了她当了贵妃,另一道圣旨封了自己的初恋成了皇后。心高气傲的崔粲然一怒之下烧了圣旨,烧了椒房殿,也烧了自己。然后,所有的故事都是从这里开始的。
  • 痞女杠上九千岁

    痞女杠上九千岁

    简介她被敌人劫持,他当着所有人的面说不认识她。她被带上瞭望塔,剥光衣服当众羞辱,他冷眼旁观不说,还想亲手射死她!君子报仇十年不晚,这笔帐,她聂欢记下了!她是镇国大将军的小女儿,因一场政治婚姻嫁给大曜王朝的凯旋侯——邢浩宇。可惜却在一场战役中被敌人杀死,从而迎来一条顽强不屈的生命。聂欢,专门为人编织梦境的科学研究员,一场科学事故将她带到这个男尊女卑的落后时代,她一来便遭遇前所未有的虐待,简直就是小白菜的生活。继母说她不知羞耻被人看光了还有脸活着。大姐告诉她,侯爷娶她只因圣上旨意,根本不存在情谊,侯爷喜欢的其实是她。二姐嘲笑她不知廉耻,抢了别人的丈夫,活该被敌人抓去羞辱。换做其他自尊心强的早就不知道死过多少回了,可她却顽强的活下来,不光活着,还活的风生水起。丈夫既然爱的人不是她,那好办,临走之前拟写一份《休书》,用工整的字体刻在侯府的承重墙上,要想抹去字迹,你得把房子拆了。三年后,她再次回到这里。原本被人弃之如敝的她却成为整个家族的依靠,所有人都要看着她的脸色行事。不爱她的前夫气急败坏的指控她始乱终弃。不光是他,华丽的转变之后,原本声名狼藉的女人竟然成为皇族权贵向往的女神。面对一干男子,某女风轻云淡道:“师傅帮我算过了,我的真命天子是一人之下万人之上的九千岁!”
  • 全职猎人之揍敌客长子

    全职猎人之揍敌客长子

    意外重生到了全职猎人世界,成为了揍敌客家的长子,是伊尔谜异卵同胞的哥哥,出生便被检查出了先天性心脏病,体质比普通人还弱,没有办法修炼家族传承武技,一出生便被判注定为弱者,在这个弱肉强食的世界,且看路伦嘉如何抗争命运的不公
  • 我认罪:日本侵华战犯口供实录

    我认罪:日本侵华战犯口供实录

    2015年是中国抗日战争暨世界反法西斯战争胜利70周年,中国国家主席习近平表示,要坚决捍卫中国人民抗日战争和世界反法西斯战争胜利成果,坚决维护战后国际秩序,决不允许否认和歪曲侵略历史,决不允许军国主义卷土重来,决不允许历史悲剧重演。针对日本否认战争罪行的系列举动,此书整理日本战犯或战俘被审判时的口供和笔供编辑而成。《我认罪——日本侵华战犯口供实录》一书,以这些战争亲历者讲述日军在中国杀人、强奸、屠城,用毒气、细菌……
  • 黄油猫假论

    黄油猫假论

    宋益也这辈子没遇上过什么好事,为了和自己这深受恶鬼喜爱的体质做抗争,与地府签定契约,成了鬼主令的令主,可还是没啥好事,依然躲不了要和非正常的事情打交道的命运。以为这辈子也就这么过去了,直到有天遇上了个牛郎风的美男子,美则美矣,这个人却全身透着古怪,他身份尊贵,又偏对她一界凡人大献殷勤,实在搞不懂这人是敌是友。最后,更是连她自己是谁都搞不懂了……
  • 天边有座不哭的城

    天边有座不哭的城

    很小的时候,我听过一个传说。据说在遥远的天边有座不哭的城,那里从来没有悲伤,也从来没有人哭泣。那里的人没有情感,他们从来不说爱情,友情,亲情。他们每天都生活得很快乐,也永远没有眼泪。其实,如果可以,我多么希望自己可以永远生活在那里,永远永远的生活在那里。【请给我一段时光,让我可以带你们走进另一个人间】这里有我的情有独钟,但愿也会有你们的情有独钟。
  • 恩怨情深只为你

    恩怨情深只为你

    “离开我的视线,很烦”邢仲冰冷的看着魏心语“你放过我,也放过你自己,我们本就有缘无分”魏心语本文纯属虚构,不要代入
  • 云雀

    云雀

    《云雀/当代中国实力派女作家书系》由金仁顺著,系当代中国实力派女作家书系中的一本,由中国作协创研部主任梁鸿鹰主编。《云雀/当代中国实力派女作家书系》选录了当代知名女家金仁顺在国内著名文学期刊上发表过的中短篇小说15篇。
  • 公务员法律知识学习读本

    公务员法律知识学习读本

    2016年是七五普法的开局之年,本书根据中共中央、国务院转发《中央宣传部、司法部关于在公民中展开法制宣传教育的第七个五年规划》的通知而编写,各级公务员,尤其是司法和行政机关执法人员要带头学法用法,提高依法行使公共权力的能力,促进严格执法、公正执法和文明执法。本书几乎涵盖了所有行政法律法规,是广大公务员熟练掌握依法行政必备法律知识的重要参考。
  • 地狱重生之绝代天女

    地狱重生之绝代天女

    地狱界中,一个小女孩的出生会改变整个诸天万界的局面吗?(无男主)