登陆注册
5236200000080

第80章 II(3)

It is, at any rate, certain that the Queen's enthusiasm for the sacred cause of peace was short-lived. Within a few months her mind had completely altered.

Her eyes were opened to the true nature of Prussia, whose designs upon Austria were about to culminate in the Seven Weeks' War. Veering precipitately from one extreme to the other, she now urged her Ministers to interfere by force of arms in support of Austria. But she urged in vain.

Her political activity, no more than her social seclusion, was approved by the public. As the years passed, and the royal mourning remained as unrelieved as ever, the animadversions grew more general and more severe. It was observed that the Queen's protracted privacy not only cast a gloom over high society, not only deprived the populace of its pageantry, but also exercised a highly deleterious effect upon the dressmaking, millinery, and hosiery trades. This latter consideration carried great weight. At last, early in 1864, the rumour spread that Her Majesty was about to go out of mourning, and there was much rejoicing in the newspapers; but unfortunately it turned out that the rumour was quite without foundation. Victoria, with her own hand, wrote a letter to The Times to say so. "This idea," she declared, "cannot be too explicitly contradicted. "The Queen," the letter continued, "heartily appreciates the desire of her subjects to see her, and whatever she CAN do to gratify them in this loyal and affectionate wish, she WILL do... But there are other and higher duties than those of mere representation which are now thrown upon the Queen, alone and unassisted--duties which she cannot neglect without injury to the public service, which weigh unceasingly upon her, overwhelming her with work and anxiety." The justification might have been considered more cogent had it not been known that those "other and higher duties" emphasised by the Queen consisted for the most part of an attempt to counteract the foreign policy of Lord Palmerston and Lord John Russell. A large section--perhaps a majority--of the nation were violent partisans of Denmark in the Schleswig-Holstein quarrel; and Victoria's support of Prussia was widely denounced. A wave of unpopularity, which reminded old observers of the period preceding the Queen's marriage more than twenty-five years before, was beginning to rise. The press was rude; Lord Ellenborough attacked the Queen in the House of Lords; there were curious whispers in high quarters that she had had thoughts of abdicating--whispers followed by regrets that she had not done so. Victoria, outraged and injured, felt that she was misunderstood. She was profoundly unhappy. After Lord Ellenborough's speech, General Grey declared that he "had never seen the Queen so completely upset." "Oh, how fearful it is," she herself wrote to Lord Granville, "to be suspected--uncheered--unguided and unadvised--and how alone the poor Queen feels! " Nevertheless, suffer as she might, she was as resolute as ever; she would not move by a hair's breadth from the course that a supreme obligation marked out for her; she would be faithful to the end.

And so, when Schleswig-Holstein was forgotten, and even the image of the Prince had begun to grow dim in the fickle memories of men, the solitary watcher remained immutably concentrated at her peculiar task. The world's hostility, steadily increasing, was confronted and outfaced by the impenetrable weeds of Victoria. Would the world never understand? It was not mere sorrow that kept her so strangely sequestered; it was devotion, it was self-immolation; it was the laborious legacy of love. Unceasingly the pen moved over the black-edged paper. The flesh might be weak, but that vast burden must be borne. And fortunately, if the world would not understand, there were faithful friends who did. There was Lord Granville, and there was kind Mr. Theodore Martin. Perhaps Mr. Martin, who was so clever, would find means to make people realise the facts. She would send him a letter, pointing out her arduous labours and the difficulties under which she struggled, and then he might write an article for one of the magazines. "It is not," she told him in 1863, "the Queen's SORROW that keeps her secluded. It is her OVERWHELMING WORK and her health, which is greatly shaken by her sorrow, and the totally overwhelming amount of work and responsibility--work which she feels really wears her out. Alice Helps was wonderfully struck at the Queen's room; and if Mrs. Martin will look at it, she can tell Mr. Martin what surrounds her. From the hour she gets out of bed till she gets into it again there is work, work, work,--letter-boxes, questions, etc., which are dreadfully exhausting--and if she had not comparative rest and quiet in the evening she would most likely not be ALIVE. Her brain is constantly overtaxed." It was too true.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 判官法则

    判官法则

    叶冰,北城市EDC负责人,一个专门破获悬案、特案的组织。越狱狂魔案、苗疆蛊术案、无头尸体案、金光佛教案,带你走进人性的最邪恶深处……人不犯我,我不犯人;人若犯我,我必犯人!
  • 第二块血迹

    第二块血迹

    一份有关国家的绝密文件不翼而飞,里面的内容一旦外泄,整个欧洲都会战火纷飞……首相亲自造访贝克街,力图挽回损失……紧张的国际局势一触即发……福尔摩斯能把失窃的文件找回来吗?神奇侦探这次可以力挽狂澜吗?
  • 途中口号

    途中口号

    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。
  • 大清绮梦

    大清绮梦

    他对她说,“数年之后,我会给你一个不一样的人生。”17岁的大一女生段紫苏,因为一段走秀事故,莫名其妙的来到了大清朝。他为她,终于龙登九五,成为权倾天下的一代君王;他为她,却流落到了注定悲惨的命运,无奈的被人安排自己的人生所属,却终究无言的看到她幸福的笑容。段紫苏,年妃娘娘传奇的一生。饼干开新坑了,是个系列哦!我们不会乞求男人怜悯,我们不会仰望帝君将臣尊权,在这男尊女卑的世界,我们偏要打造出属于女人的最绚烂天空:
  • 贵平吟草

    贵平吟草

    主要包括:无题;登庐山感赋;清明扫父墓;寻诗;七回乡偶书;重走砍柴路;重游黄龙寺;三过双井村(三首);读《石湾诗草》(两首);一二怀乡;赠妻;修江月夜等。
  • 日出酒店

    日出酒店

    《岛》已在中国创下了百万销售奇迹,维多利亚·希斯洛普携其长篇力作《日出酒店》亲自来华出席首发式。《日出酒店》满溢着友情、爱情、忠贞、背叛,在史诗般的家族传奇和历史冲突中,饱含着希望。这里的错爱延绵一生,醒悟却只有一瞬。这里的恨是盲目的,爱同样也是。地中海滨,日出酒店在静静地等待。每个人的清晨,太阳都会升起。但很少有人体会到,晨曦是为自己而来。
  • 神医九小姐

    神医九小姐

    “夫人,为夫病了,相思病,病入膏肓,药石无医,求治!”“来人,你们帝尊犯病了,上银针!”“银针无用,唯有夫人可治,为夫躺好了。”“……”她是辣手神医,一朝穿越成超级废材,咬牙发下宏愿:“命里千缺万缺,唯独不能缺男色!”他是腹黑魔帝,面上淡然一笑置之,背地里心狠手辣,掐灭她桃花一朵又一朵。
  • 回首又见他

    回首又见他

    这世上没有任何一种爱是不费吹灰的,哪怕从一开始它就存在。兜完这个圈,抵达同一个原点。你我何其有幸。这是一部关于成长与爱的女性都市情感小说。讲述以麦蓝为主的几位个性迥异的女性在现实与爱中跌撞受伤后,明白真正的幸福是:经过努力后,可以按照自己想要的方式去生活,去爱。我们的一生都是一个寻找的旅程,有人寻找爱情,有人追逐名利,有人寻找自由……但是,路一定到蜿蜒到这个路口,我们也必须要走过这么多看似迷失的弯路,才会与内心真正的向往相遇,哪怕到最后你发现:从一开始,那个人或那种生活就在你身边。每一刻看似虚度的时光,其实都是为了这一刻的重遇做准备。
  • 间谍的战争

    间谍的战争

    作为一个普通人却要向间谍宣战,最好的办法是同样成为一个间谍。作为一个间谍,要向一个实力强大的间谍组织开战,那就加入一个同样强大的间谍组织。如果无法加入任何一个强大的间谍组织,那就自己建立起一个间谍组织,然后再去战斗至灭亡,或者获得胜利。这就是间谍的战争,讲述一群平凡的人如何成就不凡的故事。
  • 天真与经验:梁遇春散文

    天真与经验:梁遇春散文

    现代作家废名评说梁遇春玲珑多态的散文,称他“酝酿了一个好气势”,“将有一树好花开”(《(泪与笑)序一》),讲得相当漂亮,相当贴切,不温不火。本书收录了梁遇春的多篇精美散文,根据其内容的不同,分为“文艺杂话”、“随笔趣谈”、“大师小品”和“海外书话”四个部分。