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Charles Lever, His Life in His Letters Volume Ii Part 27

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"I am sure you are right as to some ill-feeling towards me of the London press, though I cannot trace it to any distinct cause. If I had lived amongst them I am well aware they might hate me roundly, but I have not,--I have all my life been abroad, and never knew Grub St. That the fact is so I have a strong suspicion, and certainly 'Tony Butler,'

anonymous, fared better till they began to discover [who wrote it]."

XVII. FLORENCE AND TRIESTE 1867

_To Mr John Blackwood._

"Villa Morelli, _Feb_. 6, 1867.



"Up to this I have no tidings about the Queen's Speech, and am as much in doubt as ever what the Government means. One thing I feel sure: if they do not propose some measure of reform, they are done for as a _Party_; and if they do, they are done for as a _Ministry_. Reform is a dose that will always kill the doctor that prescribes it.

"But there are graver mischiefs abroad. A great European war is coming, and I see already signs that the Yankees have their task a.s.signed them by Russia, and which will immensely complicate the coming struggle.

Jonathan is to sympathise with the distressed Cretans: he is to come into the war as a philanthropist, but it is a philanthropist with a six-shooter!

"I send you three short O'Ds. If the month is propitious I may find bones for another. Send me (if you have them) the rejected ones: I think I could transfuse blood into them and revive them. It is important that they should not be all political, and it is often hard to find a new social evil, particularly for a man laid up like myself, and not street-walking. You will see, without my telling it, that I am not myself. I am far from well, and my spirits, that I always thought would have gone on with me to the end, are flagging.

"There will be a strong session, and no quarter given or taken. How I envy the fellows that are in it. If men really wanted to see what the effect of numerical representation is, they ought to look at the French and Italian Chambers,--the one a closely packed crowd of Ministerial followers, the other a set of jobbing hounds representing neither the intelligence, the property, nor the enterprise of the country. The proprietary of Italy is scarcely seen in the Chamber, and the Parliament has neither credit with the country nor influence over it. One of Garibaldi's ill-spelled silly proclamations is more law in the land than all that pa.s.ses the House.

"I hope the Ministry will declare they want no measures of severity in Ireland, and will have the pluck to restore the Act of Habeas Corpus and give the lie to the Kimberley fabrication. I don't say Ireland is sound, but she is no sicker than she ever was. As to the Established Church in Ireland, I am convinced that they who urge its destruction are less amicably disposed towards the Catholics than that they hate the Protestants. They always remind me of what Macaulay said of the Puritans, who put down bear-baiting not because it was cruel to the bear, but because it amused the people.

"There are many in Ireland who think that to abolish the Church would at once cut the tie that attaches Ireland to England. I myself think it would weaken it. There was a.s.suredly a time in which, if Protestants could only have been a.s.sured that their religion would be respected, they would have joined O'Connell in Repeal. Though too loyal and too self-respecting to make outcry upon it, the Protestants in Ireland are far from thinking they are fairly dealt with."

_To Mr John Blackwood._

"Villa Morzlli, Florence, _Feb_. 17,1867.

"The short month compels me to beg you will look closely to these in proof, as I cannot hope to see them. I am 'off the hook,' but I wrote these last O'Ds. _di cuore_, as I feel, especially in the Irish affair, the Cabinet is wrong.

"I am not sure of my appointment, but I believe it will take place.

I was only waiting for certainty to tell you, well aware of your kind feeling for me. It is not a 'big bird' but, after all, I only shoot with a popgun.

"The Irish judge, Keogh, who tried the Fenians, dined with me yesterday. He has come abroad by special leave to escape the _risque_ of a.s.sa.s.sination with which he was menaced."

_To Mr John Blackwood,_

"Villa Morelli, Florbnce, _Feb_. 20, 1867.

"I write a mere line to say that I have this morning received my appointment to Trieste, and from all I hear of the climate, society, and place itself, I am fortunate. It is only eighteen hours by rail from this.

"In my last proof I corrected 'La Marmora' wrong: it should be 'La Marmora' (as it stood before I changed it). The Italian newspapers, however, spell it both ways.

"I intend to ask for a leave till May, since it would be dangerous to move my wife in bad or broken weather; so that if you should visit Paris (I mean, of course, you and Mrs B.), there is still time to come over to Florence before we leave it, and I hope that you may manage it.

"The promotion was made with great courtesy, and if I have not got a big slice of the pudding, I have been certainly 'helped' with all possible politeness.

"I suspect Dizzy has made a sad mull of his 'resolutions.' It is, however, hard to say what conditions his own friends may have imposed.

At all events, if the Government be allowed to carry a bill, it will be to get rid of a troublesome measure and a party together. They will permit the horse to win, with the condition that the race shall break him down for ever.

"I scribble this hurriedly; but I knew you would like to hear I was safe out of the ship, even though it be only in a punt.

"Italy is going clean to the devil. It will be soon the choice between a Despotism or a Republic. Parliamentary government they never did understand, but so long as Cavour lived he made the nation think it was a Parliament ruled them,--and, stranger again, the Parliament itself believed so too!"

_To Mr Alexander Spencer._

"Villa Morelli, Florence, _Feb._ 21,1867.

"As I know of no one who will be more pleased to hear of any piece of good fortune having befallen me than yourself, I write this to tell you that the Government have given me the Trieste Consulship. It is one of the best in all respects--worth at present 700 a-year, and with fair prospect of being increased. The place itself, climate, people, and position are all that I could desire. The way the thing was done was most courteous, and as Spezzia is to be abolished, it is clear that both my last and my present post were specially created to serve me.*

* Dr Fitzpatrick (on the authority of Mr Whiteside-- afterwards Lord Chief-Justice) makes the statement that Lord Derby exclaimed, "We must do something for Harry Lorrequer." Also, that in offering him the appointment, Lord Derby said, "Here is 600 a-year for doing nothing; and you, Lever, are the very man to do it" It does not seem probable that Lever would have considered the somewhat cynical observations attributed to the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs as being exceptionally polite or exceptionally courteous.--E. D.

"Of course I am very glad to have some of the pressure of eternal authorship taken off my shoulders, for I can easily, by O'Dowd and such like discursive things, double my income without calling upon me for the effort of story-writing.

"I might have had something higher and more remunerative if I had been disposed to go farther away, but my wife's health and my own inclination to keep in this part of Europe (only eighteen hours by rail from where I am) decided me to take Trieste.

"It is not, of course, without regret we leave the city we have lived twenty years in; and I believe I am not deceiving myself if I say that we shall be regretted here, for we have a large acquaintance, and are almost Florentine. Still, it would be madness to refuse such an offer and the security it gives that when my hand and head get more wearied I shall yet be able to live, and, like the princess in the fairy tale, only 'kill mice' for my amus.e.m.e.nt."

_To Mr John Blackwood._

"Villa Morelli, Florence, _March_ 6, 1867.

"I send you the Fenians altered--and, I hope, for the better. As the Government _have_ called for the New Powers, there is no need to deplore their omitting to do so, and the paper will not read the worse that it does not censure them.

"I have thought over what you suggested about Gladstone,--but it would be too personal, and I hate him too much to trust myself to speak of him individually. As for the charm of his manner--his fascination, &c,--I think it is about the most arrant humbug I know. Joseph Surface, with a strong Lancashire burr, is the impression he left upon me.

"What a precious fiasco the Tories have made of their bill. Like the Chinese with the plum-pudding, they forgot to tie the bag, and all the ingredients have got loose in the pot. I see Lord Cranborne and Peel have left them. Both are losses, but it matters little how the crew is to muster when the ship is among the breakers.

"I set off for my post immediately, and hope that a new place, new situation, and new people may rally me out of my dreariness. Austrian politics, like Scotch law, confound one by the very names they give things; and I lose all pleasure in a trial when the plaintiff is called the 'Promovent'! I know it will be many a day before I resign myself to believe that 'Reichsrath' means a council: it looks and sounds so like a tonic bitter. Still, I am going in for a strong acquaintance with Austria and Austrians, and mean to give up Italy when I cross the frontier.

"If Newdigate had not been such a good fellow I'd have liked to have quizzed him about his absurd speech concerning the Irish Catholics. It is hard to understand men so imbued with prejudice and yet mixing with the world. And as to Cardinal Cullen's red stocking, why, good G.o.d! have we not seen the West Kent Rifles or the Dorset Fusiliers strutting about Paris in knickerbockers and cross belts, and there was no more thought of imitation in the one case than Papal supremacy in the other. Rome derives immense power and prestige from our unreasonable jealousy of her influence. The Prussians are far wiser: they ignore all cause of offence altogether, and outflank the priests in this way."

_To Mr John Blackwood._

"Hotel de la Petri, Trieste, _March_ 24,1867.

"Your packet with proof followed me to Vienna, into Hungary, and at length caught me here this morning--I need not say, too late for correction. I have had what Yankees call 'a fine time,' and talked myself hoa.r.s.e in strange tongues; but I have seen strange men and cities, and, on the whole, filled my head while emptying my pocket. I have stories for you when we meet, and I trust that might be soon.

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Charles Lever, His Life in His Letters Volume Ii Part 27 summary

You're reading Charles Lever, His Life in His Letters. This manga has been translated by Updating. Author(s): Edmund Downey and Charles James Lever. Already has 659 views.

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