登陆注册
25622500000165

第165章

Queen Sophie Dorothee of Prussia was always eager enough for treaty, and conclusion to her scheme. True to it, she, as needle to the pole in all weathers; sometimes in the wildest weather, poor lady. Nor did the Hanover Serene Highnesses, at any time, draw back or falter: but having very soon got wafted across to England, into new more complex conditions, and wider anxieties in that new country, they were not so impressively eager as Queen Sophie, on this interesting point. Electress Sophie, judicious Great-Grandmother, was not now there: Electress Sophie had died about a month before Queen Anne; and never saw the English Canaan, much as she had longed for it. George I., her son, a taciturn, rather splenetic elderly Gentleman, very foreign in England, and oftenest rather sulky there and elsewhere, was not in a humor to be forward in that particular business.

George I. had got into quarrel with his Prince of Wales, Fred's Father,--him who is one day to be George II., always a rather foolish little Prince, though his Wife Caroline was Wisdom's self in a manner:--George I. had other much more urgent cares than that of marrying his disobedient foolish little Prince of Wales's offspring; and he always pleaded difficulties, Acts of Parliament that would be needed, and the like, whenever Sophie Dorothee came to visit him at Hanover, and urge this matter. The taciturn, inarticulately thoughtful, rather sulky old Gentleman, he had weighty burdens lying on him; felt fretted and galled, in many ways; and had found life, Electoral and even Royal, a deceptive sumptuosity, little better than a more or less extensive "feast of SHELLS," next to no real meat or drink left in it to the hungry heart of man. Wife sitting half-frantic in the Castle of Ahlden, waxing more and more into a gray-haired Megaera (with whom Sophie Dorothee under seven seals of secrecy corresponds a little, and even the Prince of Wales is suspected of wishing to correspond);a foolish disobedient Prince of Wales; Jacobite Pretender people with their Mar Rebellions, with their Alberoni combinations;an English Parliament jangling and debating unmelodiously, whose very language is a mystery to us, nothing but Walpole in dog-latin to help us through it: truly it is not a Heaven-on-Earth altogether, much as Mother Sophie and her foolish favorite, our disobedient Prince of Wales, might long for it! And the Hanover Tail, the Robethons, Bernstorfs, Fabrices, even the Blackamoor Porters,--they are not beautiful either, to a taciturn Majesty of some sense, if he cared about their doings or them. Voracious, plunderous, all of them; like hounds, long hungry, got into a rich house which has no master, or a mere imaginary one. "MENTERISIMPUDENTISSIME," said Walpole in his dog-latin once, in our Royal presence, to one of these official plunderous gentlemen, "You tell an impudent lie!"--at which we only laughed. [Horace Walpole, <italic> Reminiscences of George I. and George II. <end italic>

(London, 1786.)]

His Britannic Majesty by no means wanted sense, had not his situation been incurably absurd. In his young time he had served creditably enough against the Turks; twice commanded the REICHS-Army in the Marlborough Wars, and did at least testify his indignation at the inefficient state of it. His Foreign Politics, so called, were not madder than those of others. Bremen and Verden he had bought a bargain; and it was natural to protect them by such resources as he had, English or other. Then there was the World-Spectre of the Pretender, stretching huge over Creation, like the Brocken-Spectre in hazy weather;--against whom how protect yourself, except by cannonading for the Kaiser at Messina;by rushing into every brabble that rose, and hiring the parties with money to fight it out well? It was the established method in that matter; method not of George's inventing, nor did it cease with George. As to Domestic Politics, except it were to keep quiet, and eat what the gods had provided, one does not find that he had any.--The sage Leibnitz would very fain have followed him to England; but, for reasons indifferently good, could never be allowed. If the truth must be told, the sage Leibnitz had a wisdom which now looks dreadfully like that of a wiseacre! In Mathematics even,--he did invent the Differential Calculus, but it is certain also he never could believe in Newton's System of the Universe, nor would read the PRINCIPIA at all. For the rest, he was in quarrel about Newton with the Royal Society here; ill seen, it is probable, by this sage and the other. To the Hanover Official Gentlemen devouring their English dead-horse, it did not appear that his presence could be useful in these parts. [Guhrauer, <italic> Gottfried Freiherr von Leibnitz, eine Biographie <end italic> (Breslau, 1842); Ker of Kersland, <italic> Memoirs of Secret Transactions <end italic> (London, 1727).

Nor are the Hanover womankind his Majesty has about him, quasi-wives or not, of a soul-entrancing character; far indeed from that. Two in chief there are, a fat and a lean: the lean, called "Maypole" by the English populace, is "Duchess of Kendal,"with excellent pension, in the English Peeragy; Schulenburg the former German name of her; decidedly a quasi-wife (influential, against her will, in that sad Konigsmark Tragedy, at Hanover long since), who is fallen thin and old. "Maypole,"--or bare Hop-pole, with the leaves all stript; lean, long, hard;--though she once had her summer verdures too; and still, as an old quasi-wife, or were it only as an old article of furniture, has her worth to the royal mind, Schulenburgs, kindred of hers, are high in the military line; some of whom we may meet.

Then besides this lean one, there is a fat; of whom Walpole (Horace, who had seen her in boyhood) gives description.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 八十一号当铺

    八十一号当铺

    【史上最火爆的奇葩灵异小说】这是一个与鬼纠葛、与妖纠葛、与人纠葛的复杂故事。这里有人鬼情未了、这里有冥界几日游、这里有小人物奋斗史……,这里只有你想不到的,没有作者写不出来的……与妖魔鬼怪斗,累心累肺,与人斗,举步维艰,与天斗,还是歇会吧……
  • 天空泪

    天空泪

    “小姐,到了。下车吧。”司机替南晔洛打开了车门,可南晔洛却并没有要下车的意向,只是静静的坐在座位上,看着车窗外那张苍老的脸。“小姐,今天是老爷夫人的忌日,有什么事过了今天再说。”夏尔在南晔洛的耳边说道,南晔洛眼神黯了黯,下了车。夏尔笑笑,给南晔洛披上披肩,跟在南晔洛身后。“晔洛。。”老人想要说什么,南晔洛只是淡淡的看了南景4一眼。“有什么事,以后再说,今天我不想谈这些。”就匆匆向墓园走去。南晔洛在墓园的工作人员的带领下,走到一座墓碑前。是一座合葬碑,她的母亲和父亲就在这里。夏尔递上一束百合花到南晔洛手上,默默的站在一旁。
  • 北大凌晨四点半

    北大凌晨四点半

    凌晨4点多的北京大学图书馆、大学周边的各类小店都灯火通明,座无虚席……优秀的北大学子们本已天资过人,但他们依然不放过所有可以用来学习的时间,连凌晨四点半也不例外。由此可见,北大人的成功不是机遇!不是巧合!而是来自不懈的努力!北大不是神话,只要我们跟他们一样,勤奋、努力和坚持,我们也能获得成功!《北大凌晨四点半》从北大精神和气质出发,从培养青少年的品质切入,从理想志向、习惯、性格、情商等方面引导青少年从平凡走向卓越!
  • 原谅那个你爱就一辈子

    原谅那个你爱就一辈子

    本文讲述的是一个女孩子在车祸中失去了父母亲,被孤儿院的院长收养,在孤儿院他遇到了很多人,他们带给了她心灵上的快乐,她也不想让她的小伙伴们为了她的不快乐而不快乐,于是她选择忘记了悲伤,记住欢乐。只是忘不掉哪个占据在她心头上的男孩。
  • 《我的完美替身总裁大人》

    《我的完美替身总裁大人》

    腹黑狡诈的霸道总裁VS聪明睿智的全民女神,她们之间会碰撞出怎样的火花,这场爱情游戏的结局又会如何?“我不要当你的替身,我要在你的心中无可替代”(总裁)
  • 乌塔哥达

    乌塔哥达

    他是这么跟我说的,抚摸着我的头,语气温柔的让人产生溺在水里一般。“凯尔佛,你要记住,这个世界上一切不公的存在都是正常的。而公平的存在,往往是不正常的。这是一种不可能的存在。”虽然他在说完这句之后立马死了。遥远的岁月,唯有这句话我一直记着。
  • 快穿童话之魔女曦月里

    快穿童话之魔女曦月里

    一醒来就遇到怪爷爷?!Excuseme?!你说什么!我是平行魔女,要穿梭各个童话!老爷爷:对不起,拯救世界的大任就交到你头上了,我支持你哦!曦月里:Excuseme?你说什么我听不到!这信号不好!系统小幽:喵~恭喜曦月里攻略完【傲娇火柴】进入下一童话。曦月里:我不玩了〒_〒..系统小幽:我相信你。曦月里:蓝瘦~香菇~有一天。系统小幽:曦月里...我重要吗?宿主曦月里:嗯?再重都要!毕竟你重不影响系统运行。宿主曦月里:算了,不重要。【毫不犹豫】系统小幽:好吧我放心的走了。宿主曦月里:重要!【肯定】系统小幽:那我先跟你说一声喵,我走了不要哭喵。宿主曦月里:套路...
  • 哈佛最神奇的24堂成长课

    哈佛最神奇的24堂成长课

    照亮生命旅程的智慧心灯,描画美好明天的成长箴言。成长究竟是什么呢?有人说:成长就是走向成功。也有人说:成长就是珍惜生命中的每一天……哈佛像一位久经沧桑的老人,他用低沉的声音告诉我们:成长不是冷眼细数时间的流逝,生命唯有付出才有意义。与本书一起走近哈佛,共享成长。
  • 伊梦星空——前生

    伊梦星空——前生

    千年幽梦轮回转,今朝我欲破乾坤。百番滋味谁来尝,伊梦星空续前生!!!
  • 浮生望

    浮生望

    望断千古浮生路,红尘之主唯双木。异界大陆,强者林立,群雄荟萃,主角如何踏上强者之路,俯视浮生,为了亲人,为了兄弟,战!