第 9 节
作者:竹水冷      更新:2021-02-20 05:39      字数:9322
  dined alone with him in his tent on the evening of the eventful  day。
  If Lord Raglan was the Hector of the Crimean Iliad; its Agamemnon  was Lord Stratford: 〃king of men;〃 as Stanley called him in his  funeral sermon at Westminster; king of distrustful home Cabinets;  nominally his masters; of scheming European embassies; of insulting  Russian opponents; of presumptuous French generals; of false and  fleeting Pashas (LE SULTAN; C'EST LORD STRATFORD; said St。 Arnaud);  of all men; whatever their degree; who entered his ambassadorial  presence。  Ascendency was native to the man; while yet in his teens  we find Etonian and Cambridge friends writing to him deferentially  as to a critic and superior。  At four and twenty he became Minister  to a Court manageable only by high…handed authority and menace。  He  owned; and for the most part controlled; a violent temper; it broke  bounds sometimes; to our great amusement as we read to…day; to the  occasional discomfiture of ATTACHES or of dependents; (19) to the  abject terror of Turkish Sublimities who had outworn his patience。   But he knew when to be angry; he could pulverize by fiery outbreaks  the Reis Effendi and his master; Abdu…l…Mejid; but as  Plenipotentiary to the United States he could 〃quench the terror of  his beak; the lightning of his eye;〃 disarming by his formal  courtesy and winning by his obvious sincerity the suspicious and  irritable John Quincy Adams。  When Menschikoff once insulted him;  seeing that a quarrel at that moment would be fatal to his purpose;  he pretended to be deaf; and left the Russian in the belief that  his rude speech had not been heard。  Enthroned for the sixth time  in Constantinople; at the dangerous epoch of 1853; he could point  to an unequalled diplomatic record in the past; to the Treaty of  Bucharest; to reunion of the Helvetic Confederacy shattered by  Napoleon's fall; to the Convention which ratified Greek  independence; to the rescue from Austrian malignity of the  Hungarian refugees。
  His conduct of the negotiations preceding the Crimean War is justly  called the cornerstone of his career: at this moment of his  greatness Kinglake encounters and describes him: through the  brilliant chapters in his opening volume; as more fully later on  through Mr。 Lane Poole's admirable biography; the Great Eltchi is  known to English readers。  He moves across the stage with a majesty  sometimes bordering on what Iago calls bombast circumstance; drums  and trumpets herald his every entrance; now pacing the shady  gardens of the Bosphorus; now foiling; 〃in his grand quiet way;〃  the Czar's ferocious Christianity; or torturing his baffled  ambassador by scornful concession of the points which he formally  demanded but did not really want; or crushing with 〃thin; tight;  merciless lips and grand overhanging Canning brow〃 the presumptuous  French commander who had dared to enter his presence with a plot  for undermining England's influence in the partnership of the  campaign。  Was he; we ask as we end the fascinating description;  was he; what Bright and the Peace Party proclaimed him to be; the  cause of the Crimean War?  The Czar's personal dislike to him … a  caprice which has never been explained (20) … exasperated no doubt  to the mind of Nicholas the repulse of Menschikoff's demands; but  that the precipitation of the prince and his master had put the  Russian Court absolutely in the wrong is universally admitted。  It  has been urged against him that his recommendation of the famous  Vienna Note to the Porte was official merely; and allowed the  watchful Turks to assume his personal approbation of their refusal。   It may be so; his biographer does not admit so much: but it is  obvious that the Turks were out of hand; and that no pressure from  Lord Stratford could have persuaded them to accept the Note。   Further; the 〃Russian Analysis of the Note;〃 escaping shortly  afterwards from the bag of diplomatic secrecy; revealed to our  Cabinet the necessity of those amendments to the Note on which the  Porte had insisted。  And lastly; the passage of the Dardanelles by  our fleet; which more than any overt act made war inevitable; was  ordered by the Government at home against Lord Stratford's counsel。   Between panic…stricken statesmen and vacillating ambassadors; Lord  Clarendon on one side; M。 de la Cour on the other; the Eltchi  stands like Tennyson's promontory of rock;
  〃Tempest…buffeted; citadel…crowned。〃
  Napoleon at St。 Helena attributed much of his success in the field  to the fact that he was not hampered by governments at home。  Every  modern commander; down certainly to the present moment; must have  envied him。  Kinglake's mordant pen depicts with felicity and  compression the men of Downing Street; who without military  experience or definite political aim; thwarted; criticised; over… ruled; tormented; their much…enduring General。  We have Aberdeen;  deficient in mental clearness and propelling force; by his horror  of war bringing war to pass; Gladstone; of too subtle intellect and  too lively conscience; 〃a good man in the worst sense of the term〃;  Palmerston; above both in keenness of instinct and in strength of  will; meaning war from the first; and biding his time to insure it;  Newcastle; sanguine to the verge of rashness; loyally adherent to  Lord Raglan while governed by his own judgment; distrustful under  stress of popular clamour; Panmure; ungenerous; rough…tongued;  violent; churlish; yet not malevolent … 〃a rhinoceros rather than a  tiger〃 … hurried by subservience to the newspaper Press into  injustice which he afterwards recognized; yet did but sullenly  repair。  We see finally that dominant Press itself; personified in  the all…powerful Delane; a potentate with convictions at once  flexible and vehement; forceful without spite and merciless without  malignity; writing no articles; but evoking; shaping; revising all。   The French commanders were not hampered by the muzzled Paris Press;  which had long since ceased to utter any but dictated sentiments;  they suffered even more disastrously from the imperious  interference of the Tuileries。  Canrobert's inaction; mutability;  sudden alarms; flagrant breaches of faith; were inexplicable until  long afterwards; when the fall of the Empire disclosed the secret  instructions … disloyal to his allies and ruinous to the campaign …  by which Louis Napoleon shackled his unhappy General。  In  Canrobert's successor; Pelissier; he met his match。  For the first  time a strong man headed the French army。  Short of stature; bull… necked and massive in build; with grey hair; long dark moustache;  keen fiery eyes; his coarse rough speech masking tested brain power  and high intellectual culture; he brought new life to the benumbed  French army; new hope to Lord Raglan。  The duel between the  resolute general and the enraged Emperor is narrated with a touch  comedy。  All that Lord Raglan desired; all that the Emperor  forbade; Pelissier was stubbornly determined to accomplish; the  siege should be pressed at once; the city taken at any cost; the  expedition to Kertch resumed。  Once only; under torment of the  Emperor's reproaches and the Minister at War's remonstrances; his  resolution and his nerve gave way; eight days of failing judgment  issued in the Karabelnaya defeat; the severest repulse which the  two armies had sustained; but the paralysis passed away; he showed  himself once more eager to act in concert with the English general;  … when the long…borne strain of disappointment and anxiety sapped  at last Lord Raglan's vital forces; and the hard fierce Frenchman  stood for upwards of an hour beside his dead colleague's bedside;  〃crying like a child。〃
  The lieutenants of Lord Raglan in the Crimea have long since passed  away; but in artistic epical presentment they retain their place  around him。  Airey; his right hand from the first disembarkation at  Kalamita Bay; strong…willed; decisive; ardent; thrusting away  suspense and doubt; untying every knot; is vindicated by his Chief  against the Duke of Newcastle's wordy inculpation in the severest  despatch perhaps ever penned to his official superior by a soldier  in the field。  Colin Campbell; with glowing face; grey kindling  eye; light; stubborn; crisping hair; leads his Highland brigade tip  the hill against the Vladimir columns; till 〃with the sorrowful  wail which bursts from the brave Russian infantry when they have to  suffer loss;〃 eight battalions of the enemy fall back in retreat。   Lord Lucan; tall; lithe; slender; his face glittering and panther… like in moments of strenuous action; wins our hearts as he won  Kinglake's; in spite of the mis…aimed cleverness and presumptuous  self…confidence which always criticised and sometimes disobeyed the  orders of his Chief。  General Pennefather; 〃the grand old boy;〃 his  exulting radiant face flashing everywhere through the smoke; his  resonant innocuous oaths roaring cheerily down the line; sustains  all day the handful of our troops against the tenfold masses of the  enemy。  Generous and eloquent are the notices of Korniloff and  Todleben; the great sailor and the great engineer; the soul and the  brain of the Sebastopol defence。  The first fell in the siege; the  second lived t