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The Adventures of Harry Richmond
Book 4   Book 4 - Chapter 26. In View Of The Hohenzollern's Birthplace
George Meredith
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       _ BOOK IV CHAPTER XXVI. IN VIEW OF THE HOHENZOLLERN'S BIRTHPLACE
       Our cruise came to an end in time to save the margravine from yawning. The last day of it was windless, and we hung in sight of the colourless low Flemish coast for hours, my father tasking his ingenuity to amuse her. He sang with Miss Sibley, rallied Mr. Peterborough, played picquet to lose, threw over the lead line to count the fathoms, and whistling for the breeze, said to me, 'We shall decidedly have to offer her an exhibition of tipsy British seamen as a final resource. The case is grave either way; but we cannot allow the concluding impression to be a dull one.'
       It struck me with astonishment to see the vigilant watch she kept over the princess this day, after having left her almost uninterruptedly to my care.
       'You are better?' She addressed Ottilia. 'You can sit up? You think you can walk? Then I have acted rightly, nay, judiciously,--I have not made a sacrifice for nothing. I took the cruise, mind you, on your account. You would study yourself to the bone, till you looked like a canary's quill, with that Herr Professor of yours. Now I 've given you a dose of life. Yes, you begin to look like human flesh. Something has done you good.'
       The princess flushing scarlet, the margravine cried,
       'There's no occasion for you to have the whole British army in your cheeks. Goodness me! what's the meaning of it? Why, you answer me like flags, banners, uhlans' pennons, fullfrocked cardinals!'
       My father stepped in.
       'Ah, yes,' said the margravine. 'But you little know, my good Roy, the burden of an unmarried princess; and heartily glad shall I be to hand her over to Baroness Turckems. That's her instituted governess, duenna, dragon, what you will. She was born for responsibility, I was not; it makes me miserable. I have had no holiday. True, while she was like one of their wax virgins I had a respite. Fortunately, I hear of you English, that when you fall to sighing, you suck your thumbs and are consoled.'
       My father bowed her, and smiled her, and whirled her away from the subject. I heard him say, under his breath, that he had half a mind to issue orders for an allowance of grog to be served out to the sailors on the spot. I suggested, as I conceived in a similar spirit the forcible ducking of Mr. Peterborough. He appeared to entertain and relish the notion in earnest.
       'It might do. It would gratify her enormously,' he said, and eyed the complacent clerical gentleman with transparent jealousy of his claims to decent treatment. 'Otherwise, I must confess,' he added, 'I am at a loss. My wits are in the doldrums.'
       He went up to Mr. Peterborough, and, with an air of great sincerity and courtesy, requested him in French to create a diversion for her Highness the Margravine of Rippau during the extreme heat of the afternoon by precipitating himself headlong into forty fathoms, either attached or unattached. His art in baffling Mr. Peterborough's attempts to treat the unheard-of request as a jest was extraordinary. The ingenuity of his successive pleas for pressing such a request pertinaciously upon Mr. Peterborough in particular, his fixed eye, yet cordial deferential manner, and the stretch of his forefinger, and argumentative turn of the head--indicative of an armed disputant fully on the alert, and as if it were of profound and momentous importance that he should thoroughly defeat and convince his man--overwhelmed us. Mr. Peterborough, not being supple in French, fell back upon his English with a flickering smile of protestation; but even in his native tongue he could make no head against the tremendous volubility and brief eager pauses besetting him.
       The farce was too evanescent for me to reproduce it.
       Peterborough turned and fled to his cabin. Half the crew were on the broad grin. The margravine sprang to my father's arm, and entreated him to be her guest in her Austrian mountain summer-seat. Ottilia was now her darling and her comfort. Whether we English youth sucked our thumbs, or sighed furiously, she had evidently ceased to care. Mr. Peterborough assured me at night that he had still a difficulty in persuading himself of my father's absolute sanity, so urgent was the fire of his eye in seconding his preposterous proposal; and, as my father invariably treated with the utmost reserve a farce played out, they never arrived at an understanding about it, beyond a sententious agreement once, in the extreme heat of an Austrian highland valley, that the option of taking a header into sea-water would there be divine.
       Our yacht winged her way home. Prince Ernest of Eppenwelzen-Sarkeld, accompanied by Baroness Turckems, and Prince Otto, his nephew, son of the Prince of Eisenberg, a captain of Austrian lancers, joined the margravine in Wurtemberg, and we felt immediately that domestic affairs were under a different management. Baroness Turckems relieved the margravine of her guard. She took the princess into custody. Prince Ernest greeted us with some affability; but it was communicated to my father that he expected an apology before he could allow himself to be as absolutely unclouded toward us as the blaze of his titles. My father declined to submit; so the prince inquired of us what our destination was. Down the Danube to the Black Sea and Asia Minor, Greece, Egypt, the Nile, the Desert, India, possibly, and the Himalayas, my father said. The prince bowed. The highest personages, if they cannot travel, are conscious of a sort of airy majesty pertaining to one who can command so wide and far a flight. We were supplicated by the margravine to appease her brother's pride with half a word. My father was firm. The margravine reached her two hands to him. He kissed over them each in turn. They interchanged smart semi-flattering or cutting sentences.
       'Good!' she concluded; 'now I sulk you for five years.'
       'You would decapitate me, madam, and weep over my astonished head, would you not?'
       'Upon my honour, I would,' she shook herself to reply.
       He smiled rather sadly.
       'No pathos!' she implored him.
       'Not while I live, madam,' said he.
       At this her countenance underwent a tremour.
       'And when that ends... friend! well, I shall have had my last laugh in the world.'
       Both seemed affected. My father murmured some soothing word.
       'Then you do mean to stay with me?' the margravine caught him up.
       'Not in livery, your Highness.'
       'To the deuce with you!' would be a fair translation of the exalted lady's reply. She railed at his insufferable pride.
       'And you were wrong, wrong,' she pursued. 'You offended the prince mightily: you travestied his most noble ancestor--'
       'In your service, may it please you.'
       'You offended, offended him, I say, and you haven't the courage to make reparation. And when I tell you the prince is manageable as your ship, if you will only take and handle the rudder. Do you perceive?'
       She turned to me.
       'Hither, Mr. Harry; come, persuade him. Why, you do not desire to leave me, do you?'
       Much the reverse. But I had to congratulate myself subsequently on having been moderate in the expression of my wishes; for, as my father explained to me, with sufficient lucidity to enlighten my dulness, the margravine was tempting him grossly. She saw more than I did of his plans. She could actually affect to wink at them that she might gain her point, and have her amusement, and live for the hour, treacherously beguiling a hoodwinked pair to suppose her partially blind or wholly complaisant. My father knew her and fenced her.
       'Had I yielded,' he said, when my heart was low after the parting, 'I should have shown her my hand. I do not choose to manage the prince that the margravine may manage me. I pose my pride--immolate my son to it, Richie? I hope not. No. At Vienna we shall receive an invitation to Sarkeld for the winter, if we hear nothing of entreaties to turn aside to Ischl at Munich. She is sure to entreat me to accompany her on her annual visit to her territory of Rippau, which she detests; and, indeed, there is not a vine in the length and breadth of it. She thought herself broad awake, and I have dosed her with an opiate.'
       He squeezed my fingers tenderly. I was in want both of consolation and very delicate handling when we drove out of the little Wurtemberg town: I had not taken any farewell from Ottilia. Baroness Turckems was already exercising her functions of dragon. With the terrible forbidding word 'Repose' she had wafted the princess to her chamber in the evening, and folded her inextricably round and round in the morning. The margravine huffed, the prince icy, Ottilia invisible, I found myself shooting down from the heights of a dream among shattered fragments of my cloud-palace before I well knew that I had left off treading common earth. All my selfish nature cried out to accuse Ottilia. We drove along a dusty country road that lay like a glaring shaft of the desert between vineyards and hills.
       'There,' said my father, waving his hand where the hills on our left fell to a distance and threw up a lofty head and neck cut with one white line, 'your Hohenzollerns shot up there. Their castle looks like a tight military stock. Upon my word, their native mountain has the air of a drum major. Mr. Peterborough, have you a mind to climb it? We are at your disposal.'
       'Thank you, thank you, sir,' said the Rev. Ambrose, gazing enthusiastically, but daunted by the heat: 'if it is your wish?'
       'We have none that is not yours, Mr. Peterborough. You love ruins, and we are adrift just now. I presume we can drive to the foot of the ascent. I should wish my son perhaps to see the source of great houses.'
       Here it was that my arm was touched by old Schwartz. He saluted stiffly, and leaning from the saddle on the trot of his horse at an even pace with our postillion, stretched out a bouquet of roses. I seized it palpitating, smelt the roses, and wondered. May a man write of his foolishness?--tears rushed to my eyes. Schwartz was far behind us when my father caught sight of the magical flowers.
       'Come!' said he, glowing, 'we will toast the Hohenstaufens and the Hohenzollerns to-night, Richie.'
       Later, when I was revelling in fancies sweeter than the perfume of the roses, he pressed their stems reflectively, unbound them, and disclosed a slip of crested paper. On it was written:
       'Violets are over.'
       Plain words; but a princess had written them, and never did so golden a halo enclose any piece of human handiwork. _
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本书目录

Book 1
   Book 1 - Chapter 1. I Am A Subject Of Contention
   Book 1 - Chapter 2. An Adventure On My Own Account
   Book 1 - Chapter 3. Dipwell Farm
   Book 1 - Chapter 4. I Have A Taste Of Grandeur
   Book 1 - Chapter 5. I Make A Dear Friend
   Book 1 - Chapter 6. A Tale Of A Goose
Book 2
   Book 2 - Chapter 7. A Free Life On The Road
   Book 2 - Chapter 8. Janet Ilchester
   Book 2 - Chapter 9. An Evening With Captain Bulsted
   Book 2 - Chapter 10. An Expedition
   Book 2 - Chapter 11. The Great Fog And The Fire At Midnight
   Book 2 - Chapter 12. We Find Ourselves Bound On A Voyage
   Book 2 - Chapter 13. We Conduct Several Learned Arguments With The Captain Of The Priscilla
   Book 2 - Chapter 14. I Meet Old Friends
Book 3
   Book 3 - Chapter 15. We Are Accosted By A Beautiful Little Lady In The Forest
   Book 3 - Chapter 16. The Statue On The Promontory
   Book 3 - Chapter 17. My Father Breathes, Moves, And Speaks
   Book 3 - Chapter 18. We Pass A Delightful Evening, And I Have A Morning Vision
   Book 3 - Chapter 19. Our Return Homeward
   Book 3 - Chapter 20. News Of A Fresh Conquest Of My Father's
   Book 3 - Chapter 21. A Promenade In Bath
   Book 3 - Chapter 22. Conclusion Of The Bath Episode
Book 4
   Book 4 - Chapter 23. My Twenty-First Birthday
   Book 4 - Chapter 24. I Meet The Princess
   Book 4 - Chapter 25. On Board A Yacht
   Book 4 - Chapter 26. In View Of The Hohenzollern's Birthplace
   Book 4 - Chapter 27. The Time Of Roses
   Book 4 - Chapter 28. Ottilia
   Book 4 - Chapter 29. An Evening With Dr. Julius Von Karsteg
   Book 4 - Chapter 30. A Summer Storm, And Love
   Book 4 - Chapter 31. Princess Ottilia's Letter
   Book 4 - Chapter 32. An Interview With Prince Ernest And A Meeting With Prince Otto
Book 5
   Book 5 - Chapter 33. What Came Of A Shilling
   Book 5 - Chapter 34. I Gain A Perception Of Princely State
   Book 5 - Chapter 35. The Scene In The Lake-Palace Library
   Book 5 - Chapter 36. Homeward And Home Again
   Book 5 - Chapter 37. Janet Renounces Me
   Book 5 - Chapter 38. My Bankers' Book
Book 6
   Book 6 - Chapter 39. I See My Father Taking The Tide And Am Carried On It Myself
   Book 6 - Chapter 40. My Father's Meeting With My Grandfather
   Book 6 - Chapter 41. Commencement Of The Splendours And Perplexities Of My Father's Grand Parade
   Book 6 - Chapter 42. The Marquis Of Edbury And His Puppet
   Book 6 - Chapter 43. I Become One Of The Chosen Of The Nation
   Book 6 - Chapter 44. My Father Is Miraculously Relieved By Fortune
Book 7
   Book 7 - Chapter 45. Within An Inch Of My Life
   Book 7 - Chapter 46. Among Gipsy Women
   Book 7 - Chapter 47. My Father Acts The Charmer Again
   Book 7 - Chapter 48. The Princess Entrapped
   Book 7 - Chapter 49. Which Foreshadows A General Gathering
   Book 7 - Chapter 50. We Are All In My Father's Net
   Book 7 - Chapter 51. An Encounter Showing My Father's Genius In A Strong Light
Book 8
   Book 8 - Chapter 52. Strange Revelations, And My Grandfather Has His Last Outburst
   Book 8 - Chapter 53. The Heiress Proves That She Inherits The Feud And I Go Drifting
   Book 8 - Chapter 54. My Return To England
   Book 8 - Chapter 55. I Meet My First Playfellow And Take My Punishment
   Book 8 - Chapter 56. Conclusion