第 6 节
作者:竹水冷      更新:2021-02-20 05:39      字数:9322
  ng to fire till the ship was out of  sight。  〃Lord Raglan is dead;〃 said Kinglake as vol。 viii。 was sent  to press; 〃and my work is finished。〃
  Ten years were to elapse before the opening volumes should appear;  and meanwhile he entered parliament for the borough of Bridgewater;  which had rejected him in 1852。  His colleague was Colonel Charles  J。 Kemyss Tynte; member of a family which local influence and  lavish expenditure had secured in the representation of the town  for nearly forty years。  Catechized as to his political creed; he  answered: 〃I call myself an advanced Liberal; but I decline to go  into parliament as the pledged adherent of Lord Palmerston or any  other Liberal。〃  He adds; in response to a further question: 〃I am  believed to be the author of 'Eothen。'〃  He broke down in his  maiden speech; but recovered himself in a later effort; and spoke;  not unfrequently; on subjects then important; now forgotten; on the  outrage of the 〃Charles et George〃; the capture of the Sardinian  〃Cagliari〃 by the Neapolitans on the high seas; our attitude  towards the Paris Congress of 1857; while in 1858 he led the revolt  against Lord Palmerston's proposal to amend the Conspiracy Laws in  deference to Louis Napoleon; in 1860 vigorously denounced the  annexation of Savoy and Nice; and in 1864 moved the amendment to  Mr。 Disraeli's motion in the debate on the Address; which was  carried by 313 to 295。  His feeble voice and unimpressive manner  prevented him from becoming a power in the House; but his speeches  when read are full; fluent; and graceful; the late Sir Robert  Peel's remarkable harangue against the French Emperor in the course  of an earlier debate was taken; as he is said to have owned; mainly  from a speech by Kinglake; delivered so indistinctly that the  reporters failed to catch it; but audible to Sir Robert who sate  close beside him。
  With his constituents he was more at ease and more effective。  His  seat for Bridgewater was challenged at a general election by Henry  Padwick; a hanger…on to Disraeli and a well…known bookmaker on the  turf; who; with an Irish Colonel Westbrook; tried to cajole the  electors and their wives by extravagant compliments to the town;  its neighbourhood; its denizens; a place celebrated; as Captain  Costigan said of Chatteris; 〃for its antiquitee; its hospitalitee;  the beautee of its women; the manly fidelitee; generositee; and  jovialitee of its men。〃  Kinglake met them on their own ground。  In  his flowery speeches the romance of Sinai and Palestine faded  before the glories of the little Somersetshire town。  What was the  Jordan by comparison with the Parrett?  Could Libanus or Anti… Libanus vie with the Mendip and the Quantock Hills?  The view  surveyed by Monmouth from St。 Mary's Tower on the Eve of Sedgemoor  transcended all the panoramas which the Holy Land or Asia Minor  could present!  But his more serious orations were worthy of his  higher fame。  In the panic of 1858; when the address of the French  colonels to the Emperor; beseeching to be led against England; had  created serious alarm on this side the Channel; he went down to  Bridgewater to enlighten the West of England。  〃Why;〃 he asked; 〃do  we fear invasion?  The population of France is peaceful; the  'turnip…soup Jacques Bonhomme' is peaceful; the soldiers of the  line are peaceful。  Why are we anxious?  Because there sits in his  chamber at the Tuileries a solitary moody man。  He is deeply  interested in the science and the art of war; he told me once that  he was contemplating a history of all the great battles ever  fought。  He holds absolute control over vast resources both in men  and money; he has shown that he can attack successfully at a few  weeks' notice the greatest European military power: gout or  indigestion may at any moment convert him into an enemy of  ourselves。  Until France returns to parliamentary government this  danger is imminent and continual。  Our safety lies in our fleet;  and in that alone。  If for twenty…four hours only the Channel were  denuded of our ships in time of war with France; they would hurl  upon our shores a force we could not meet。  Such denudation must be  made impossible; our fleet so augmented and strengthened as to  provide impregnably at all times for home defence no less than for  foreign necessities。  Our danger; I repeat; lies in no hostility on  the part of the French army; in no ferocity on the part of the  French people; in no PRESENT unfriendliness on the part of the  French Emperor: it arises from the fact that a revolutionary  government exists in France; which has armed one man; under the  name of Emperor … Dictator rather; I should say … with a power so  colossal; that until such power is moderated; as all power ought to  be; no neighbour can be entirely safe。〃  This speech was reproduced  in 〃The Times。〃  Montalembert read it with admiration。  〃Who;〃 he  asked Sir M。 E。 Grant Duff; 〃who is Mr。 Kinglake?〃  〃He is the  author of 'Eothen。'〃  〃And what is 'Eothen?'  I never heard of it。〃
  He found great enjoyment in parliamentary life; but was in 1868  unseated on petition for bribery on the part of his agents。  Blue… books are not ordinarily light reading; but the Report of the  Commissioners appointed to inquire into the alleged corrupt  practices at Bridgewater is not only a model of terse and vigorous  composition; but to persons with a sense of humour; inclined to  view human irregularities and inconsistencies in a sportive rather  than an indignant light; it is a sustained and diverting comedy。   Of the constituency; both before and after the Reform Bill; three… fourths; the Commissioners artlessly inform us; sought and received  bribes; of the remainder; all but a few individuals negotiated and  gave the bribes。  So in every election; both sides bribed avowedly;  if a luckless Purity Candidate appeared; he was promptly informed  that 〃Mr。 Most〃 would win the seat: highest bribes decided each  election; further bribes averted petitions。  When once a desperate  riot took place and the ringleaders were tried at Quarter Sessions;  the jury were bribed to acquit; in the teeth of the Chairman's  summing up。  At last; in 1868; the defeated candidate petitioned;  blue…book literature was enriched by a remarkable report; and the  borough was disfranchised。  Of course Kinglake had only himself to  thank; if a gentleman chooses to sit for a venal borough; and to  intrust his interests to a questionable agent; he must; in the  words of Mrs。 Gamp; 〃take the consequences of sech a sitiwation。〃   The consequences to him were loss of his present seat; and  permanent exclusion from Parliament。
  He was keenly mortified by his ostracism; speaking of himself ever  after as 〃a political corpse。〃  Thenceforward he gave his whole  energy to literary work; to occasional reviews; mainly to his  〃Invasion of the Crimea。〃  In the 〃Edinburgh〃 I think he never  wrote; cordially disliking its then editor。  A fine notice in  〃Blackwood〃 of Madame de Lafayette's life was from his pen。   Surveying the Revolutionary Terror; he points out that  Robespierre's opponents were in numbers overwhelmingly strong; but  lacked cohesion and leaders; while the Mountain; dominated by a  single will; was legally armed with power to kill; and went on  killing。  The Church played into Robespierre's hands by enforcing  Patience and Resignation as the highest Christian virtues;  confusing the idea of submission to Heaven with the idea of  submission to a scoundrel。  Had Hampden been a Papist he would have  paid ship…money。  He wrote also in 〃The Owl;〃 a brilliant little  magazine edited by his friend Laurence Oliphant; a 〃Society  Journal;〃 conducted by a set of clever well…to…do young bachelors  living in London; addressed like the 〃Pall Mall Gazette;〃 in  〃Pendennis;〃 〃to the higher circles of society; written by  gentlemen for gentlemen。〃  When the expenses of production were  paid; the balance was spent on a whitebait dinner at Greenwich; and  on offerings of flowers and jewellery to the lady guests invited。   It came to an end; leaving no successor equally brilliant; high… toned; wholesome; its collected numbers figure sometimes at a  formidable price in sales and catalogues。 (15)
  The first two volumes of his 〃Crimea〃 had appeared in 1863。  They  were awaited with eager expectation。  An elaborate history of the  war had been written by a Baron de Bazancourt; condemned as unfair  and unreliable by English statesmen; and severely handled in our  reviews。  So the wish was felt everywhere for some record less  ephemeral; which should render the tale historically; and  counteract Bazancourt's misstatements。  〃I hear;〃 wrote the Duke of  Newcastle; 〃that Kinglake has undertaken the task。  He has a noble  opportunity of producing a text…book for future history; but to  accomplish this it must be STOICALLY impartial。〃
  The beauty of their style; the merciless portraiture of the Second  Empire; the unparalleled diorama of the Alma fight; combined to  gain for these first four…and…twenty chapters an immediate vogue as  emphatic and as widely spread as that which saluted the opening of  Macaulay's 〃History。〃  None of the later volumes; though highly  prized as battle narratives; quite came up to these。  T