登陆注册
5236200000022

第22章 II(2)

But the influence wielded by the Baroness, supreme as it seemed within its own sphere, was not unlimited; there were other forces at work. For one thing, the faithful Stockmar had taken up his residence in the palace. During the twenty years which had elapsed since the death of the Princess Charlotte, his experiences had been varied and remarkable. The unknown counsellor of a disappointed princeling had gradually risen to a position of European importance. His devotion to his master had been not only whole--hearted but cautious and wise. It was Stockmar's advice that had kept Prince Leopold in England during the critical years which followed his wife's death, and had thus secured to him the essential requisite of a point d'appui in the country of his adoption. It was Stockmar's discretion which had smoothed over the embarrassments surrounding the Prince's acceptance and rejection of the Greek crown. It was Stockmar who had induced the Prince to become the constitutional Sovereign of Belgium. Above all, it was Stockmar's tact, honesty, and diplomatic skill which, through a long series of arduous and complicated negotiations, had led to the guarantee of Belgian neutrality by the Great Powers. His labours had been rewarded by a German barony and by the complete confidence of King Leopold. Nor was it only in Brussels that he was treated with respect and listened to with attention. The statesmen who governed England--Lord Grey, Sir Robert Peel, Lord Palmerston, Lord Melbourne--had learnt to put a high value upon his probity and his intelligence. "He is one of the cleverest fellows I ever saw," said Lord Melbourne, "the most discreet man, the most well-judging, and most cool man." And Lord Palmerston cited Baron Stockmar as the only absolutely disinterested man he had come across in life, At last he was able to retire to Coburg, and to enjoy for a few years the society of the wife and children whom his labours in the service of his master had hitherto only allowed him to visit at long intervals for a month or two at a time. But in 1836 he had been again entrusted with an important negotiation, which he had brought to a successful conclusion in the marriage of Prince Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg, a nephew of King Leopold's, with Queen Maria II of Portugal. The House of Coburg was beginning to spread over Europe; and the establishment of the Baron at Buckingham Palace in 1837 was to be the prelude of another and a more momentous advance.

King Leopold and his counsellor provide in their careers an example of the curious diversity of human ambitions. The desires of man are wonderfully various; but no less various are the means by which those desires may reach satisfaction: and so the work of the world gets done. The correct mind of Leopold craved for the whole apparatus of royalty. Mere power would have held no attractions for him; he must be an actual king--the crowned head of a people. It was not enough to do; it was essential also to be recognised; anything else would not be fitting. The greatness that he dreamt of was surrounded by every appropriate circumstance. To be a Majesty, to be a cousin of Sovereigns, to marry a Bourbon for diplomatic ends, to correspond with the Queen of England, to be very stiff and very punctual, to found a dynasty, to bore ambassadresses into fits, to live, on the highest pinnacle, an exemplary life devoted to the public service--such were his objects, and such, in fact, were his achievements. The "Marquis Peu-a-peu," as George IV called him, had what he wanted. But this would never have been the case if it had not happened that the ambition of Stockmar took a form exactly complementary to his own.

The sovereignty that the Baron sought for was by no means obvious. The satisfaction of his essential being lay in obscurity, in invisibility--in passing, unobserved, through a hidden entrance, into the very central chamber of power, and in sitting there, quietly, pulling the subtle strings that set the wheels of the whole world in motion. A very few people, in very high places, and exceptionally well-informed, knew that Baron Stockmar was a most important person: that was enough. The fortunes of the master and the servant, intimately interacting, rose together. The Baron's secret skill had given Leopold his unexceptionable kingdom; and Leopold, in his turn, as time went on, was able to furnish the Baron with more and more keys to more and more back doors.

Stockmar took up his abode in the Palace partly as the emissary of King Leopold, but more particularly as the friend and adviser of a queen who was almost a child, and who, no doubt, would be much in need of advice and friendship. For it would be a mistake to suppose that either of these two men was actuated by a vulgar selfishness. The King, indeed, was very well aware on which side his bread was buttered; during an adventurous and chequered life he had acquired a shrewd knowledge of the world's workings; and he was ready enough to use that knowledge to strengthen his position and to spread his influence. But then, the firmer his position and the wider his influence, the better for Europe; of that he was quite certain. And besides, he was a constitutional monarch; and it would be highly indecorous in a constitutional monarch to have any aims that were low or personal.

As for Stockmar, the disinterestedness which Palmerston had noted was undoubtedly a basic element in his character. The ordinary schemer is always an optimist; and Stockmar, racked by dyspepsia and haunted by gloomy forebodings, was a constitutionally melancholy man. A schemer, no doubt, he was; but he schemed distrustfully, splenetically, to do good. To do good! What nobler end could a man scheme for? Yet it is perilous to scheme at all.

With Lehzen to supervise every detail of her conduct, with Stockmar in the next room, so full of wisdom and experience of affairs, with her Uncle Leopold's letters, too, pouring out so constantly their stream of encouragements, general reflections, and highly valuable tips, Victoria, even had she been without other guidance, would have stood in no lack of private counsellor. But other guidance she had; for all these influences paled before a new star, of the first magnitude, which, rising suddenly upon her horizon, immediately dominated her life.

同类推荐
  • 温热暑疫全书

    温热暑疫全书

    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。
  • 证道歌

    证道歌

    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。
  • 佛说明度五十校计经

    佛说明度五十校计经

    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。
  • The Spirit of Place and Other Essays

    The Spirit of Place and Other Essays

    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。
  • 文史通义

    文史通义

    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
  • 战神小医妃

    战神小医妃

    元国公主死后重生成燕国小神医胡依依,她要替冤死的神医阿爹复仇,更要扶持自己的小皇弟重夺元国皇位,这很难哦,那就一步步慢慢来!
  • 采购总监实战手册

    采购总监实战手册

    《采购总监实战手册》是《中国企业培训大系?高管实战手册系列》丛书中的一本,本套丛书作为企业高管走向职业化、提升领导力的实用型图书,立足中国企业实际,充分借鉴东西方成功企业与企业家的管理思想与方法,剖析企业管理精髓,灵活体现“管理理念+实用案例+操作要领”的思路,全面阐述了各高层管理职位的基本素质要求、工作职责和管理技能,解答了管理实践中可能遇到的各种问题,并提供具体可行的操作技巧或行动指南,是一套集操作性和指导性为一体,颇具指导价值的管理经典丛书。
  • 杯酒流沙

    杯酒流沙

    天地万物,混沌初开天之骄子,一场偶然的邂逅!杯酒流沙,世间万年,不过,你指尖一瞬!轻声问,滑过指尖的是流沙还是流年!花开倾世,大雪纷飞。可花开的那一年没有漫天飘雪,却有你的落寞!
  • 非演员系列

    非演员系列

    要不是一个偶然的机会,魏克柱倒真的要当一辈子快乐的单身汉了。所以他心中总是忘不了他姑妈的恩情。其实,在剧团里,论业务,魏克柱也是挺棒的,唱起歌嗓子像小钢炮,拉起小提琴也是占据首席。身体各部位也不缺少零件,就是身高量到1.54米以后就再也不长一分毫,要是在旧社会也还无所谓,高老婆矮汉子现像也不鲜见,但在当今女性眼中就被判为三级残废一流,你说恼人不恼人这新月姑娘自幼失去父母,跟着姨妈姨父生活在一个小县城,好不容易读到中学毕业,在家里没吃上两天闲饭,姨父早就嫌弃她是个累赘,整天指东骂西的,弄得新月终日难堪。
  • 楚少追妻:冷傲大小姐

    楚少追妻:冷傲大小姐

    “妈咪,门口有个人自称我爹地。”“你认识他吗?”“不认识。”“不认识还让他站在门口碍事,轰走!”某宝贝贼兮兮的来到门口,看着这个和自己长得几乎一模一样人说:“我已经替你和我妈咪求过情了,可是她说她要你给她买她最爱吃的草莓奶昔。”某男跑遍了这个城市买了她最爱的草莓奶昔,然后全装进了某宝的肚子里。气的某男晚上翻墙进门,看着这一大一小抱在一起睡得正香的两个人,气的牙痒痒!
  • 清歌微澜

    清歌微澜

    文案:“我以为你会是我的救赎,不曾想,你却是亲手将我推进深渊之人。”她在仇恨的苦海里沉浮了十年,终于遇到了那个她认为可以交付一生的人,可谁能想到,那个温暖她,呵护她,包容她的他,竟是她苦难的始作俑者。她纠结,颓废,逃避,可烙进心底的身影却总是挥之不去。“这如画江山,权倾天下于我如浮云,唯独你是我的遥不可及。”说什么权倾天下,江山如画,与他何妨?他的过去,现在和未来的全部愿望,不过是护她余生安好罢了。然山可平,海可填,唯独跨不过的,是横亘在她心间的鸿沟。
  • 蓬折直辨

    蓬折直辨

    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。
  • 一念,半生

    一念,半生

    世间的圆满大同小异,残缺却可有万千种演绎。十八个故事,十八段孤独情缘。联合报文学奖首奖得主陈麒凌深度解读爱之无常。她深谙人性之变,又信仰人情之美,笃信求之不得是爱情最好的信仰。在其笔下,佛教苦谛“爱别离”“求不得”被赋予浓烈的宿命主义美感。读她的文字,你是可以略带一点猎奇的。书中女子,或一身孤勇赴会,却在万水千山后蓦然止步;或卑怯柔弱,却会为一个疯狂的念头孤注一掷。藏在文字背后的讲述者有时像是一位天真善言的少女,有时又似惜字如金的沧桑老人,哪一个都是她,哪一个又都不全是她。
  • 首席专宠一妻二宝

    首席专宠一妻二宝

    离婚后,前妻消失四年竟生了一对龙凤胎!重逢后,沈三少步步逼婚,奈何前妻心门紧锁。软萌女娃操碎了心:“沈叔叔,要不你绑架我,威胁我妈妈和你结婚吧?”一看就是亲女儿。傲娇男娃专业拆台,亮出某人的果照:“你要是再纠缠我妈,我就把这个发家长群里!”一看就是坑爹!
  • 南少蜜爱

    南少蜜爱

    好好的一场豪门恋情怎么尽是和小鬼啊僵尸啊连在一起。说好的宠婚呢,说好的蜜爱呢。南少还是跟我一起打怪升级吧。