登陆注册
5236200000074

第74章 IV(3)

For in spite of everything he had never reached to happiness. His work, for which at last he came to crave with an almost morbid appetite, was a solace and not a cure; the dragon of his dissatisfaction devoured with dark relish that ever-growing tribute of laborious days and nights; but it was hungry still. The causes of his melancholy were hidden, mysterious, unanalysable perhaps--too deeply rooted in the innermost recesses of his temperament for the eye of reason to apprehend. There were contradictions in his nature, which, to some of those who knew him best, made him seem an inexplicable enigma: he was severe and gentle; he was modest and scornful; he longed for affection and he was cold. He was lonely, not merely with the loneliness of exile but with the loneliness of conscious and unrecognised superiority. He had the pride, at once resigned and overweening, of a doctrinaire. And yet to say that he was simply a doctrinaire would be a false description; for the pure doctrinaire rejoices always in an internal contentment, and Albert was very far from doing that. There was something that he wanted and that he could never get. What was it? Some absolute, some ineffable sympathy? Some extraordinary, some sublime success? Possibly, it was a mixture of both. To dominate and to be understood! To conquer, by the same triumphant influence, the submission and the appreciation of men--that would be worth while indeed!

But, to such imaginations, he saw too clearly how faint were the responses of his actual environment. Who was there who appreciated him, really and truly?

Who COULD appreciate him in England? And, if the gentle virtue of an inward excellence availed so little, could he expect more from the hard ways of skill and force? The terrible land of his exile loomed before him a frigid, an impregnable mass. Doubtless he had made some slight impression: it was true that he had gained the respect of his fellow workers, that his probity, his industry, his exactitude, had been recognised, that he was a highly influential, an extremely important man. But how far, how very far, was all this from the goal of his ambitions! How feeble and futile his efforts seemed against the enormous coagulation of dullness, of folly, of slackness, of ignorance, of confusion that confronted him! He might have the strength or the ingenuity to make some small change for the better here or there--to rearrange some detail, to abolish some anomaly, to insist upon some obvious reform; but the heart of the appalling organism remained untouched. England lumbered on, impervious and self-satisfied, in her old intolerable course. He threw himself across the path of the monster with rigid purpose and set teeth, but he was brushed aside. Yes! even Palmerston was still unconquered--was still there to afflict him with his jauntiness, his muddle-headedness, his utter lack of principle. It was too much. Neither nature nor the Baron had given him a sanguine spirit; the seeds of pessimism, once lodged within him, flourished in a propitious soil. He "questioned things, and did not find One that would answer to his mind;

And all the world appeared unkind."

He believed that he was a failure and he began to despair.

Yet Stockmar had told him that he must "never relax," and he never would. He would go on, working to the utmost and striving for the highest, to the bitter end. His industry grew almost maniacal. Earlier and earlier was the green lamp lighted; more vast grew the correspondence; more searching the examination of the newspapers; the interminable memoranda more punctilious, analytical, and precise. His very recreations became duties. He enjoyed himself by time-table, went deer-stalking with meticulous gusto, and made puns at lunch--it was the right thing to do. The mechanism worked with astonishing efficiency, but it never rested and it was never oiled. In dry exactitude the innumerable cog-wheels perpetually revolved. No, whatever happened, the Prince would not relax; he had absorbed the doctrines of Stockmar too thoroughly. He knew what was right, and, at all costs, he would pursue it. That was certain. But alas! in this our life what are the certainties? "In nothing be over-zealous!" says an old Greek. "The due measure in all the works of man is best. For often one who zealously pushes towards some excellence, though he be pursuing a gain, is really being led utterly astray by the will of some Power, which makes those things that are evil seem to him good, and those things seem to him evil that are for his advantage." Surely, both the Prince and the Baron might have learnt something from the frigid wisdom of Theognis.

Victoria noticed that her husband sometimes seemed to be depressed and overworked. She tried to cheer him up. Realising uneasily that he was still regarded as a foreigner, she hoped that by conferring upon him the title of Prince Consort (1857) she would improve his position in the country. "The Queen has a right to claim that her husband should be an Englishman," she wrote. But unfortunately, in spite of the Royal Letters Patent, Albert remained as foreign as before; and as the years passed his dejection deepened.

She worked with him, she watched over him, she walked with him through the woods at Osborne, while he whistled to the nightingales, as he had whistled once at Rosenau so long ago. When his birthday came round, she took the greatest pains to choose him presents that he would really like. In 1858, when he was thirty-nine, she gave him "a picture of Beatrice, life-size, in oil, by Horsley, a complete collection of photographic views of Gotha and the country round, which I had taken by Bedford, and a paper-weight of Balmoral granite and deers' teeth, designed by Vicky." Albert was of course delighted, and his merriment at the family gathering was more pronounced than ever: and yet... what was there that was wrong?

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 农家病媳

    农家病媳

    她是一个跆拳道高手,却在新婚夜晚死了!怎么死的?你猜!史无前例有木有?魂穿而来,竟是被亲奶用草席、白布打包丢到乱葬岗喂野狼的农家病秧女。身娇体弱却身负力大无穷,要不要这么违和?那个少年,咳,你捡我回去,我给你做媳妇儿,不要钱……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 十世琉璃

    十世琉璃

    三千年的等待,十生十世的轮回,等的是谁?轮回的又是谁?他是高高在上的仙人……又怎么会在意如同蝼蚁般卑微的她的死活?然而他却对她说:“谁说我不爱你?我觉得我从很久很久以前,就开始爱你。”她冷笑一声:“可惜,我不爱你。”多年后,她神色凄惨的望着他,她的身后是一具面色惨白的尸体,看不清死活。她咬咬唇,双膝重重的跪下:“师傅,我错了。”他淡漠如水的目光扫向她;声音平静“哦?知道错了?错在哪儿?”她颤抖着嘴唇,声音里甚至带着一丝祈求:“师傅,求你救救他,求你,只要你能救他,怎样都好。”“若是我不愿救,你又当如何?”她忽然抬眼定定的看向他,目光中甚至带着一丝决绝;“若是这样,那么你我师徒,从此恩断义绝。原谅我简介无能……
  • 重生九十年代

    重生九十年代

    一觉醒来,安静娴发现自己回到了小时候,还带着一个空间,回到过去,真的就能肆意改变未来吗?拥有种植空间,又该怎么发家致富?不不不,安静娴只想安安静静的做一个懒女子!(作者本人已经自暴自弃,不喜勿扰!)
  • 汉起

    汉起

    这是一个膏粱跋扈不法,商贾豪掷千金,贫贱一捧黄土的时代。有这样一个人,他的一生是千万草根励志地奇迹。年幼丧父,长于单亲,虽受大儒之教诲,平生却好衣马。寒门白身,从军搏命,鲜兄弟伯叔襄助,一生坎坷百折。兄弟义气,铁马弯弓,刀剑生辉,问,这江水属谁之物?红妆迷醉,枕戈入梦,登高赋诗,望,哪块云是我的天!群号:429629561
  • 姜家有娇女

    姜家有娇女

    姜姝雅是现代的知名服装设计师,更是双面秀技艺的嫡传弟子,却因体质十分孱弱,早早的便去世了。可是没想到胎穿到了一个不知名的玄幻世界,依然生在姜家,只是这个姜家不太一样……母亲性格温柔体贴,护短的时候却战斗力爆表。权势滔天的父亲对任何人都没个好脸色,在家却是个女儿奴。姜姝雅表示:这辈子不嫁人,也可以安心做个身体健康的米虫啦!可是计划往往赶不上变化,此生注定会因一人改变……
  • 柔情王爷酷王妃:舟醉流云

    柔情王爷酷王妃:舟醉流云

    “乐流云,朕给你两条路,一、做朕的女人,让朕宠一辈子。二、现在就滚上床,服侍到朕满意为止,朕放你自由。”她冷笑,森寒的银蓝色军刀横在他脖颈上“聂雩霁,你做梦。”他温柔低笑“你没有第三个选择,一炷香时间,好好考虑。”“皇上,你错了,她还有第三个选择,跟本王走!”江山美人,孰轻孰重?弟兄红颜,作何取舍?前年穿越,演绎盛世华爱。
  • 靳后传

    靳后传

    这是一个帝王和一个世家贵女的日久生情爱情故事,他们是打破常规的胜利品。但是却也是皇室斗争倾轧的一股清流,他们之间有很多的算计,但是到最后却都归结到真心上。从幼年时期开始一个个的写起,在他们的生活里也许缺少更多的轰轰烈烈,但是绝对不缺少平平淡淡的相依相守,也许最长久的不是轰轰烈烈而是长久的陪伴,他们之间不缺少矛盾,但是在时光的慢慢流逝中,慢慢弥合。闲杂人等慢慢消失,最后发现他们日久生情今生不弃。世间安得双全法,还好不负如来未负卿。
  • 奉旨离婚

    奉旨离婚

    本文已设置成五折半价,一次性订阅仅需1.93元!!********************************************还未从穿越中回过神来,便一道圣旨将丁宁和她那所谓的夫君给和离了!吖吖个呸的!离婚就离婚嘛!还和离!用的着搞的这么冠冕堂皇的!什么?昨晚才把她那什么XXOO了,今天她就成下堂妇了!还是顶着圣旨下堂的!奶奶你个大腿的!我操你祖宗十八代!这么一千零一夜的事情也让她丁宁给碰到了!她到底是好运还是倒霉!离就离,谁怕谁,乌龟怕铁锤!这个世界不会谁少了谁就停止转动的!不就是那什么少了一层膜嘛!她全当是419或是叫鸭了!她可是新新人类,怎么可能会为了那一层膜寻死觅活!什么?就那么一次就中奖了!老天爷,你不至于让我丁宁如此吧!瞎了你的狗眼了!刚指天对骂,却一阵晴空霹雳,吓的丁宁缩缩脖子,再也不敢骂老天瞎眼了!好吧,好吧,勉强接受肚子中这块突然之间多出来的肉吧!也省的她一个人在这鸟不拉屎,鸡不生蛋的地方无依无靠!至少还有一个唯一的亲人!什么!这个儿子不是那什么狗屁前夫的?她进门三年,那什么狗屁前夫根本就没碰过她?那那晚上她XX又OO的那混蛋是谁?吖吖个呸的!给她等着!最好别让她找到那个将她吃干抺尽却不负责任的拍拍屁股走的混蛋是谁!否则,哼哼!一定让你好看!不将你大卸八块,她就不叫丁宁!可是为什么,被大卸八块的不是他而是她?而且还是被把光了衣服在床上被红果果的卸成八块了!为毛她还似乎是心甘情愿的?这又是虾米情况?(一)清风阁内,某老鸨正满脸兴奋的数银票数到手抽筋。“柳清书!”某王爷咬牙切齿的声音传入她的耳中,随即只觉一阵风卷过,某王爷已然铁青着脸立于她面前“赶紧给本王回去,别在这里丢人现眼!”却见某老鸨以顺雷不及掩耳之势将那叠银票往胸前一塞,露出一抹盛开的桃花般的笑容“对不起,姑娘我是三草原则的忠实坚持者!”某王爷:……“哦,你一定不知道什么是三草,那姑娘我大发慈悲,告诉你吧!”于是侃侃而谈“所谓三草就是:兔子不吃窝边草,好马不吃回头草,天涯何处无芳草!所以,为了不防碍姑娘数银票寻芳草,请你无视我的存在,大门在那边,不送!”未了还很客气的补上一句“Thankyou!”只见某王爷面部肌肉狠抽。(二)“柳清书,本王最后再说一次,给本王回去!”某王爷狠狠的盯着那一脸欠抽的女人。
  • 洞山大师语录

    洞山大师语录

    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。
  • 重生之凤倾九州

    重生之凤倾九州

    [架空历史]凤华十四年,秋末冬初,北风其凉,雨雪其雱。洛穹将军擅自闯入皇宫,悄无声息地盗走双生花,锦衣卫全力追踪,宋辞州发现洛穹将军带着双生花已经逃到了江北南都境内。同一时刻,南都知府大人的《比翼双飞图》被盗,霜降之日,行知观尊主派淮宁和季隐调查此案。…………所有人都没有想到,令凤华国几百年来百思不得其解的问题——永夜王朝灭亡的原因,就藏在此案背后。