登陆注册
26265700000074

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
  • 金液还丹印证图

    金液还丹印证图

    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。
  • 东西汉演义

    东西汉演义

    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。
  • Much Ado About Nothing

    Much Ado About Nothing

    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。
  • 运气要诀

    运气要诀

    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。
  • 圣武亲征录

    圣武亲征录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 玉无垢

    玉无垢

    玉无垢身体里住着一个来自现代的灵魂,家破人亡后不幸沦为歌姬,怀揣着为家族沉冤昭雪的目的进入楚王府中,在利用与被利用,算计与被算计间辗转几个男子之间,一步一步逐渐接近事实的真相时却发现仇人原来是恩人,亲人原来是敌人?!
  • 这个男友是妖精

    这个男友是妖精

    古有麻雀衔环结草,今有狐狸以身相许。古有海螺姑娘做饭,今有狐狸王子煮面。言雪溪就不明白了,她只不过是发挥充满正义与勇气的母爱光辉救了只萨摩回家,怎么仔细一看竟然是只狐狸?还是只白狐?那她这算不算是捡了个宝贝回来?好吧,这些都是小事,但是白狐居然变成了美男?这就不对了吧!在这个充满科技与智慧的时代,聊斋的故事是根本不可能发生的啊。嗯,美男身材真不错。等等!现在是看这些的时候吗?言雪溪关上浴室门,她可能要换个方式开门。“嫁给我吧,我的身子你已经看过了。”美男这么说。黑人问号脸?喵喵喵喵喵?言雪溪不服了,“开玩笑,要嫁也是你嫁。”论一只腹黑狐狸如何一步一步把智商上线...
  • 冥缘归

    冥缘归

    从小到大,洛轩辕每晚都做同一个梦,在梦里,她很幸福,有人宠她,但是一觉起来,却是孤孤单单的一个人;唯一的知心闺蜜——唐萱,从小就在她的身边,陪伴着;之后的某天,她认识了那个人,也正因为他,她才会来到一个陌生的世界,之后才发现,原来还有他······
  • 销释大乘正宗神默然宝卷

    销释大乘正宗神默然宝卷

    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。
  • 寒冰印

    寒冰印

    十万年前,邪恶神器意外失踪;十万年后,韩冰在贫瘠的低阶星域,被一个小修真家族收养;他是冰印之魂所化,他的性格亦正亦邪,他的未来,是个未知数。
  • 奇侠柳云传

    奇侠柳云传

    你心中还有武侠梦吗?眼下的穿越与架空,重生与无敌能让你了解到江湖情仇吗?能让你感受到舍生取义吗?江湖就是社会,江湖险恶,无限坎坷,没有一帆风顺,只有坚持信念,不低头,才能得道成名,侠耀人间!
  • 末世之异食癖

    末世之异食癖

    末世,看异食癖如何活下去。(异食癖:异食癖又名嗜异症,是由于代谢机能紊乱、味觉异常和饮食管理不当等引起的多种疾病综合征。)
  • 庶女才是狠绝色

    庶女才是狠绝色

    她满腔柔情痴恋一人,却容颜尽毁一剑穿心,谋逆大罪加身,亲儿惨死眼前。重生一世,她心坚如冰,情难再起,却被前世枉死的他一次次舍命相救,热血柔情,当冰封的心再起波澜,命运却开起了玩笑。她的出身竟成了他至尊之路最大的阻碍……这一生,她终将重蹈覆辙吗?他吻着她的泪眼,“没有什么比你更重要。”既然如此,那么与天争、与人斗,又何妨?
  • 我爱你到地老天荒

    我爱你到地老天荒

    去年,各大媒体电台的关注焦点全都放在了红遍全球的两大重量级组合:“篮球宝贝”与“MomentGod”篮球宝贝,顾名思义:篮球界的长年擂主,人尽皆知的四大成员:鬼魅、罗刹、幻夜、幻昼组成。一直都是篮球界闻风丧胆的虐人利器。MomentGod:则是一个全能型男女混合天团。由:天使、伪天使、恶魔、撒旦、死神、弑神、梦神、夜神八人组成。琴棋书画——样样精通;拍戏广告——小菜一碟;唱片MV——都是强项!他们是...此刻的上帝。但正是他们大红大紫的青春时代,正是他们称霸娱乐圈的事态,却莫名隐退了。除了第一集团雪魄外都上上下下忙碌起来了,不用担心:他们回来咯~
  • 末日菜刀队

    末日菜刀队

    一个十八岁的小胖子,跟兄弟闯末世的故事。看看吧,...万一明天就是世界末日呢...