Volume I Part 26 (2/2)
P. S. Don't think of reading for the Fellows.h.i.+p, I beg and entreat of you. If you will take to ”monkery,” do it among our own fellows, who at least enjoy lives of ease and indolence. Besides, it is a downright absurdity to suppose that any man ever rallies after four years of hard study and application. As Tiverton says, ”You train too fine, and there's no work in you afterwards.”
LETTER XXV. KENNY DODD TO THOMAS PURCELL, ESQ., OF THE GRANGE, BRUFF.
Eisenach, ”The Rue Garland.”
Mr dear Tom,--You may see by the address that I am still here, although in somewhat different circ.u.mstances from those in which I last wrote to you. No longer ”mi lor,” the occupant of the ”grand suite of apartments with the balcony,” flattered by beauty, and waited on with devotion. I am now alone; the humble tenant of a small sanded parlor, and but too happy to take a very unpretending place at my host's table. I seek out solitary spots for my daily walks,--I select the very cheapest ”Canastre” for my lonely pipe,--and, in a word, I am undergoing a course of ”the silent system,” accompanied by thoughts of the past, present, and the future, gloomy as ever were inflicted by any code of penitentiary discipline.
I know not if--seeing the bulk of this formidable despatch--you will have patience to read it: I have my doubts that you will employ somebody to ”note the brief” for you, and only address yourself to the strong points of the case. Be this as it may, it is a relief to me to decant my sorrows even into my ink-bottle; and I come back at night with a sense of consolation that shows me that, no matter how lonely and desolate a man may be in the world, there is a great source of comfort in the sympathy he has for himself. This may sound like a bull, but it is not one, as I am quite ready to show. But my poor brains are not in order for metaphysics, and so, with your leave, I 'll just confine myself to narrative for the present, and keep all the philosophy of my argument for another occasion.
Lest, however, you should only throw your eyes carelessly over these lines and not adventure far into the detail of my sorrows, I take this early opportunity of saying that I am living here on credit,--that I have n't five s.h.i.+llings left to me,--that my shoemaker lies in wait for me in the Juden-Ga.s.se, and my washerwoman watches for me near the church. Schnaps, snuff, and cigars have encompa.s.sed me round about with small duns, and I live in a charmed circle of petty persecutions, that would drive a less good-tempered man half-crazy. Not that I am ungrateful to Providence for many blessings; I acknowledge heartily the great advantage I possess in knowing nothing whatever of the language, so that I am enabled to preserve my equanimity under what very probably may be the foulest abuse that ever was poured out upon insolvent humanity.
My wardrobe is dwindled to the ”shortest span.” I have ”taken out” my great-coat in Kirschwa.s.ser, and converted my spare small-clothes into cigars. My hat has gone to repair my shoes; and as my razors are pledged for pen, ink, and paper, I have grown a beard that would make the fortune of an Italian refugee, or of a missionary speaker at Exeter Hall!
My host of the ”Rue Garland” hasn't seen a piece of my money for the last fortnight; and now, for the first time since I came abroad, am I able to say that I find the Continent cheap to live in. Ay, Tom, take my word for it, the whole secret lies in this,--”Do with little, and pay for less,” and you 'll find a great economy in coming abroad to live.
But if you cannot cheat yourself as well as your creditors, take my advice and stay at home. These, however, are only spare reflections; and I'll now resume my story, taking up the thread of it where I left off in my last.
It is really all like a dream to me, Tom; and many times I am unable to convince myself that it is not a dream, so strange and so novel are all the incidents that have of late befallen me, so unlike every former pa.s.sage of my life, and so unsuited am I by nature, habit, and temperament for the curious series of adventures in which I have been involved.
After all, I suppose it is downright balderdash to say that a man is not adapted for this, or suited to that. I remember people telling me that public life would n't do for me; that I was n't the kind of man for Parliament, and so on; but I see the folly of it all now. The truth is, Tom, that there is a faculty of accommodation in human nature, and wherever you are placed, under whatever circ.u.mstances situated, you 'll discover that your spirit, like your stomach, learns to digest everything; though I won't deny that it may now and then be at the cost of a heartburn in the one case as well as the other.
When I wrote to you last, I was living a kind of pastoral life,--a species of Meliboeus, without sheep! If I remember aright, I left off when we were just setting out on an excursion into the forest,--one of those charming rides over the smooth sward, and under the trellised shadow of tall trees, now loitering pensively before some vista of the wood, now cantering along with merry laughter, as though with every bound we left some care behind never to overtake us. Ah, Tom, it's no use for me to argue and reason with myself; I always find that I come back to the same point, and that whatever touches my feelings, whatever makes my heart vibrate with pleasant emotion, whatever brings back to me the ardent, confiding, trustful tone of my young days, does me good, and that I'm a better man for it, even though ”the situation,” as you would call it, was rather equivocal. Don't mistake me, Tom Purcell, I don't want to go wrong; I have not the slightest inclination to break my neck.
The height of my ambition is only to look over the precipice. Can't you understand that? Try and ”realize” that to yourself, as the Yankees say, and you'll at once comprehend the whole charm and fascination of my late life here. I was always ”looking over the precipice,” always speculating upon the terrible perils of the drop, and always half hugging myself in my sense of security. Maybe this is metaphysics again; if it is, I'm sorry for it, but the German Diet must take the blame of it,--a course of sauerkraut would make any man flighty.
Well, I 'll spare you all description of these ”Forest days,” at whatever cost to my own feelings; and it is not every man that would put that much constraint upon himself, for something tells me that the theme would make me ”come out strong.” That, what with my descriptive powers as regards scenery, and my acute a.n.a.lysis on the score of emotions, I 'd astonish you, and you 'd be forced to exclaim, ”Kenny is a very remarkable man. Faith! I never thought he had this in him.” Nor did I know it myself, Tom Purcell; nor as much as suspect it. The fact is, my natural powers never had fair play. Mrs. D. kept me in a state of perpetual conflict. ”Little wars,” as the Duke used to say, ”destroy a state;” and in the same way it's your small domesticities--to coin a word--that ruin a man's nature and fetter his genius. You think, perhaps, that I 'm employing an over-ambitious phrase, but I am not.
Mrs. G. H. a.s.sured me that I actually did possess ”genius,” and I believe in my heart that she is the only one who ever really understood me.
No man understood human nature better than Byron, and he says, in one of his letters, ”that none of us ever do anything till a woman takes us in hand;” by which, of course, he means the developing of our better instincts,--the ill.u.s.trating our latent capabilities, and so on; and that, let me observe to you, is exactly what our wives never do. With them, it is everlastingly some small question of domestic economy. They ”take the vote on the supplies” every morning at breakfast, and they go to bed at night with thoughts of the ”budget.” The woman, therefore, referred to by the poet cannot be what we should call in Ireland ”the woman that owns you.” And here, again, my dear friend, is another ill.u.s.tration of my old theory,--how hard it is for a man to be good and great at the same time. Indeed, I am disposed to say that Nature never intended we should, but in all probability meant to typify, by the separation, the great manufacturing axiom,--”the division of labor.”
Be this as it may, Byron is right, and if there be an infinitesimal spark of the divine essence in your nature, your female friend will detect it with the same unerring accuracy that a French chemist hunts out the ten-thousandth part of a grain of a.r.s.enic in a case of poison.
It would amaze you were I to tell you how markedly I perceived the changes going on in myself when under this influence. There was, so to say, a great revolution going on within me, that embraced all my previous thoughts and opinions on men, manners, and morals. I felt that hitherto I had been taking a kind of Dutch view of life from the mere level of surrounding objects, but that now I was elevated to a high and commanding position, from which I looked down with calm dignity. I must observe to you that Mrs. G. H. was not only in the highest fas.h.i.+onable circles of London, but that she was one who took a very active part in political life. This will doubtless surprise you, Tom, as it did myself, for we know really nothing in Ireland of the springs that set great events in motion. Little do we suspect the real influence women exercise,--the sway and control they practise over those who rule us.
I wish you heard Mrs. G. H. talk, how she made Bustle do this, and persuaded Pumistone do the other. Foreign affairs are her forte, and, indeed, she owned to me that purely Home matters were too narrow and too local to interest her. What she likes is a great Russian question, with the Bosphorus and the Danubian Provinces, and the Hospodar of Wallachia to deal with; or Italy and the Austrians, with a skirmis.h.i.+ng dash at the Pope and the King of Naples. She is a Whig, for she told me that the Tories were a set of rude barbarians, that never admitted female influence; and ”the consequence is,” says she, ”they never know what is doing at foreign courts. Now _we_ knew everything: there was the Princess Sleeboffsky, at St. Petersburg; and the Countess von Schwarmerey, at Berlin; and Madame de la Tour de Force, at Florence, all in our interest. There was not a single impertinent allusion made to England, in all the privacy of royal domestic life, that we hadn't it reported to us; and we knew, besides, all the little 'tendresses' of the different statesmen of the Continent, for, in our age, we bribe with Beauty, where formerly it was a matter of Bank-notes. The Tories, on the other hand, lived with their wives, which at once accounts for the narrowness of their views, and the limited range of their speculations.”
All this may read to you like a digression, my dear Tom, but it is not; for it enables me to exhibit to you some of those traits by which this fascinating creature charmed and engaged me. She opened so many new views of life to me,--explained so much of what was mystery to me before,--recounted so many amusing stories of great people,--gave me such pa.s.sing glimpses of that wonderful world made up of kings and kaisers and ministers, who are, so to say, the great pieces of the chess-board, whereon we are but p.a.w.ns,--that I actually felt as if I had been a child till I knew her.
Another grand result of this kind of information is, that, as you extend your observation beyond the narrow sphere of home,--whether it be politically or domestically,--you learn at last to think so little of what you once regarded as your own immediate and material interests, that you have as many--maybe more--sympathies with the world at large than with those actually belonging to you. Such was the progress I made in this enlightenment, that I felt far more anxious about the Bosphorus than ever I did for Bruff, and would rather have seen the Austrians expelled from Lom-bardy than have turned out every ”squatter” off my own estate at Dodsborough. And it is not only that one acquires grander notions this way, but there are a variety of consolations in the system.
You grumble at the poor-rates, and I point to the population of Milan paying ten times as much to their tyrants. You exclaim against extermination, and I reply, ”Look at Poland.” You complain of the priests' exactions, and I say, ”Be thankful that you haven't the Pope.”
Now, Tom, come back from all these speculations, and bring your thoughts to bear upon her that originated them, and don't wonder at me if I did n't know how the days were slipping past; nor could only give a mere pa.s.sing, fugitive reflection to the fact that I have a wife and three children somewhere, not very abundantly furnished with the ”sinews of war.” I suppose, if we could only understand it, that we 'd discover our minds were like our bodies, and that we sometimes succ.u.mb to influences we could resist at other moments. Put your head out of the window at certain periods, and you are certain to catch a cold. I conclude that there are seasons the heart is just as susceptible.
I cannot give you a stronger ill.u.s.tration of the strange delirium of my faculties than the fact that I actually forgot the Princess whom we came expressly to meet, and never once asked about her. It was some time in the sixth week of our sojourn that the thought shot through my brain,--”Was n't there a princess to be here?--did n't we expect to see her?” How Mrs. G. H. laughed when I asked her the question! She really could n't stop herself for ten minutes. ”But I am right,” cried I; ”there really _was_ a princess?”
”To be sure you are, my dear Mr. Dodd,” said she, wiping her eyes; ”but you must have been living in a state of trance, or you would have remembered that the poor dear d.u.c.h.ess was obliged to accompany the Empress to Sicily, and that she could n't possibly count upon being here before the middle of September.”
<script>