登陆注册
34544600000032

第32章 LATER DAYS, AND DEATH(6)

"On no account hurry the servants, but still let us be off." The last thought which he articulated while dying was, "I don't exactly know what it is, but I feel it is something grand." "Hayward is dead," Kinglake wrote to a common friend; "the devotion shown to him by all sorts and conditions of men, and, what is better, of women, was unbounded. Gladstone found time to be with him, and to engage him in a conversation of singular interest, of which he has made a memorandum."Another of Kinglake's life-long familiars was Charles Skirrow, Taxing Master in Chancery, with his accomplished wife, from whose memorable fish dinners at Greenwich he was seldom absent, adapting himself no less readily to their theatrical friends - the Bancrofts, Burnand, Toole, Irving - than to the literary set with which he was more habitually at home. He was religiously loyal to his friends, speaking of them with generous admiration, eagerly defending them when attacked. He lauded Butler Johnstone as the most gifted of the young men in the House of Commons; would not allow Bernal Osborne to be called untrue; "he offends people if you like, but he is never false or hollow." A clever SOBRIQUETfathered on him, burlesquing the monosyllabic names of a well-known diarist and official, he repelled indignantly. "He is my friend, and had I been guilty of the JEU, I should have broken two of my commandments; that which forbids my joking at a friend's expense, and that which forbids my fashioning a play upon words." He entreated Madame Novikoff to visit and cheer Charles Lever, dying at Trieste; deeply lamented Sir H. Bulwer's death: "I used to think his a beautiful intellect, and he was wonderfully SIMPATICO to me."But he was shy of condoling with bereaved mourners, believing words used on such occasions to be utterly untrue. He loved to include husband and wife in the same meed of admiration, as in the case of Dean Stanley and Lady Augusta, or of Sir Robert and Lady Emily Peel. Peel, he said, has the RADIANT quality not easy to describe;Lady Emily is always beauteous, bright, attractive. Lord Stanhope he praised as a historian, paying him the equivocal compliment that his books were much better than his conversation. So, too, he qualified his admiration of Lady Ashburton, dwelling on her beauty, silver voice, ready enthusiasm apt to disperse itself by flying at too many objects.

He was wont to speak admiringly of Lord Acton, relating how, a Roman Catholic, yet respecting enlightenment and devoted to books, he once set up and edited a "Quarterly Review," with a notion of reconciling the Light and the Dark as well as he could; but the "Prince of Darkness, the Pope," interposed, and ordered him to stop the "Review." He was compelled to obey; not, he told people, on any religious ground, but because relations and others would have made his life a bore to him if he had been contumacious against the Holy Father.

Kinglake was strongly attracted by W. E. Forster, a "rough diamond," spoken of at one time as a possible Prime Minister.

Beginning life, he said, as a Quaker, with narrow opinions, his vigour of character and brain-power shook them off. Powerful, robust, and perfectly honest, yet his honesty inflicted on him a doubleness of view which caused him to be described as engaging his two hands in two different pursuits. His estimate of Sir R. Morier would have gladdened Jowett's heart; he loved him as a private friend; eulogized his public qualities; rejoiced over his appointment as Ambassador at St. Petersburg, seeing in him a diplomatist with not only a keen intellect and large views, but vibrating with the warmth, animation, friendliness, that are charmingly UN-diplomatic. Of Carlyle, his life-long, though not always congenial intimate, he used to speak as having great graphic power, but being essentially a humourist; a man who, with those he could trust, never pretended to be in earnest, but used to roar with glorious laughter over the fun of his own jeremiads; "so far from being a prophet he is a bad Scotch joker, and knows himself to be a wind-bag." He blamed Froude's revelations of Carlyle in "The Reminiscences," as injurious and offensive. Froude himself he often likened to Carlyle; the thoughts of both, he said, ran in the same direction, but of the two, Froude was by far the more intellectual man.

Staunch friend to the few, polite, though never effusive, to the many, he also nourished strong antipathies. The appearance in Madame Novikoff's rooms of a certain Scotch bishop invariably drove him out of them, "Peter Paul, Bishop of Claridge's," he called him.

To Von Beust (the Austrian Chancellor), who spoke English in a rapid half-intelligible falsetto, he gave the name of MIRLITON(penny trumpet). His allusions to Mirliton and to the Bishop frequently mystified Madame Novikoff's guests. For he loved to talk in cypher. Canon Warburton, kindly searching on my behalf his brother Eliot's journals, tells me that he and Kinglake, meeting almost daily, lived in a cryptic world of jokes, confidences, colloquialisms, inexplicable to all but their two selves.

He cordially disliked "The Times" newspaper, alleging instances of the unfairness with which its columns had been used to spite and injure persons who had offended it, chuckling over Hayward's compact anathema, - "'The Times,' which as usual of late supplied its lack of argument and proof by assumption, misrepresentation, and personality." He thought that its attacks upon himself had helped his popularity. "One of the main causes," he said in 1875, "of the interest which people here were good enough to take in my book was the fight between 'The Times' and me. In 1863 it raged, in 1867 it was renewed with great violence, and now I suppose the flame kindles once more, though probably with diminished strength.

同类推荐
  • The Red One

    The Red One

    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。
  • 四民月令

    四民月令

    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。
  • Stepping Heavenward

    Stepping Heavenward

    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。
  • 众仙赞颂灵章

    众仙赞颂灵章

    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。
  • 伤科补要

    伤科补要

    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
  • 冉尘

    冉尘

    这是一部古风言情小说,女主在一次寻找宝物时意外穿越,原来世界上还有其他大陆……
  • 为乐趣而读书

    为乐趣而读书

    读书之乐乐何如?林丹环编著的这本《为乐趣而读书》精选的文章,有的谈论读书方法,有的分享读书之趣,有的回忆书海琐事……不一样的文字,一样的纸墨情结。一起走进这个书海世界吧,聆听作者独步书林的内心独白,体会畅游书海的真正乐趣,感悟书籍之于人类精神世界的独特魅力。
  • 一本正经地胡说三国演义

    一本正经地胡说三国演义

    一本正经地胡说三国演义我们的目标是让小学生也想去读三国
  • 兽当道

    兽当道

    一部东方神话与西方科幻结合的魔幻巨作《兽当道》,尽请关注!万事开头难,如果标题能吸引到你,麻烦看完前7章。如果这部作品有受到100人以上的关注,我将花费3年的时间来完成它!
  • 滴水青莲

    滴水青莲

    单纯少女离奇穿越天庭失误是什么鬼?架空王朝孤身一人,她应该如何生存。世界上还有可以信任的人吗?
  • 百年巨匠:齐白石

    百年巨匠:齐白石

    本书以大师在艺术上的孜孜不倦和“一意孤行”为纬,生动的故事写实和赏析文字为内核,辅以对大师亲友的采访对话,讲述了齐白石传奇的生命之旅和罕见的艺术创造。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 燃丘

    燃丘

    《半王》前传之燃丘。人呐,总有段日子过去了才意识到幸运。
  • 快穿总有人喜欢我

    快穿总有人喜欢我

    天苍苍,野茫茫。仙女不想睡牛郎。不怕苦,不怕累。千里牛郎来相会。白七只想完成任务后蹦野迪,不想总有男人暗恋她。于是白七:我是仙女,你就死了这条心吧。狗男人:我心里就只有你,你没死,我这条心怎么会死呢?所以我这心不会死的。系统小爱:论一个暗恋者,怎样变成明恋的。一世界:知不知道我喜欢你好久,南期笨蛋!二世界:高冷男神内心:我女朋友真好看,好喜欢,今天也要拿着偷拍的照片睡觉。三世界:听说大叔和小萝莉更配哟。::想知道后面就乘乘看奥,其实一点都不正经,一点都不虐,很甜很宠,不要嫌弃啦。
  • 无忧酒馆之斜阳

    无忧酒馆之斜阳

    又闻东风过小巷,青山脚下寻酒香。人生多少悲欢事,莫如一杯敬斜阳。