Part 46 (1/2)

”The Imperial family will never forgive an insult offered to one of their own blood,” said the Princess, haughtily.

”We shall not ask them to forgive anything, my dear Princess. We shall only prevent their natural feelings betraying them into an act of injustice. The boy's offence, whatever it was, occurred outside the frontier, as I apprehend.”

”How delighted you English are when you can convert an individual case into an international question! You would at any moment sacrifice an ancient alliance to the trumpery claim of an aggrieved tourist,” said she, rising angrily, and swept out of the room ere Sir Horace could arise to open the door for her.

Upton walked slowly to the chimney and rang the bell. ”I shall want the caleche and post-horses at eight o'clock, Antoine. Put up some things for me, and get all my furs ready.” And with this he measured forty drops from a small phial he carried in his waistcoat pocket, and sat down to pare his nails with a very diminutive penknife.

CHAPTER x.x.xVIII. A DIPLOMATIST'S DINNER

Were we writing a drama instead of a true history, we might like to linger for a few moments on the leave-taking between the Princess and Sir Horace Upton. They were indeed both consummate ”artists,” and they played their parts to perfection,--not as we see high comedy performed on the stage, by those who grotesque its refinements and exaggerate its dignity; ”las.h.i.+ng to storm” the calm and placid lake, all whose convulsive throes are many a fathom deep, and whose wildest workings never bring a ripple to the surface. No, theirs was the true version of well-bred ”performance.” A little well-affected grief at separation, brief as it was meant to be; a little half-expressed surprise, on the lady's part, at the suddenness of the departure; a little, just as vaguely conveyed, complaint on the other side, over the severe requirements of duty, and a very little tenderness--for there was no one to witness it--at the thought of parting; and with a kiss upon her hand, whose respectful courtesy no knight-errant of old could have surpa.s.sed, Sir Horace backed from the ”presence,” sighed, and slipped away.

Had our reader been a spectator instead of a peruser of the events we have lately detailed, he might have fancied, from certain small asperities of manner, certain quicknesses of reproof and readiness at rejoinder, that here were two people only waiting for a reasonable and decent pretext to go on their separate roads in life. Yet nothing of this kind was the case; the bond between them was not affection, it was simply convenience. Their partners.h.i.+p gave them a strength and a social solvency which would have been sorely damaged had either retired from ”the firm;” and they knew it.

What would the Princess's dinners have been without the polished ease of him who felt himself half the host? What would all Sir Horace Upton's subtlety avail him, if it were not that he had sources of information which always laid open the game of his adversaries? Singly, each would have had a tough struggle with the world; together, they were more than a match for it.

The highest order of diplomatist, in the estimation of Upton, was the man who, at once, knew what was _possible_ to be done. It was his own peculiar quality to possess this gift; but great as his natural acuteness was, it would not have availed him, without those secret springs of intelligence we have alluded to. There is no saying to what limit he might not have carried this faculty, had it not been that one deteriorating and detracting feature marred and disfigured the fairest form of his mind.

He could not, do all that he would, disabuse himself of a very low estimate of men and their motives. He did not slide into this philosophy, as certain indolent people do, just to save them the trouble of discriminating; he did not acquire it by the hard teachings of adversity. No; it came upon him slowly and gradually, the fruit, as he believed, of calm judgment and much reflection upon life. As little did he accept it willingly; he even labored against the conviction: but, strive as he might, there it was, and there it would remain.

His fixed impression was, that in every circ.u.mstance and event in life there was always a _dessous des cartes_,--a deeper game concealed beneath the surface,--and that it was a mere question of skill and address how much of this penetrated through men's actions. If this theory unravelled many a tangled web of knavery to him, it also served to embarra.s.s and confuse him in situations where inferior minds had never recognized a difficulty! How much ingenuity did he expend to detect what had no existence! How wearily did he try for soundings where there was no bottom!

Through the means of the Princess he had learned--what some very wise heads do not yet like to acknowledge--that the feeling of the despotic governments towards England was very different from what it had been at the close of the great war with Napoleon. They had grown more dominant and exacting, just as we were becoming every hour more democratic. To maintain our old relations with them, therefore, on the old footing, would be only to involve ourselves in continual difficulty, with a certainty of final failure; and the only policy that remained was to encourage the growth of liberal opinions on the Continent, out of which new alliances might be formed, to recompense us for the loss of the old ones. There is a story told of a certain benevolent prince, whose resources were, unhappily, not commensurate with his good intentions, and whose ragged retinue wearied him with entreaties for a.s.sistance. ”Be of good cheer,” said he, one day, ”I have ordered a field of flax to be sown, and you shall all of you have new s.h.i.+rts.” Such were pretty much the position and policy of England. Out of our crop of Const.i.tutionalism we speculated on a rich harvest, to be afterwards manufactured for our use and benefit. We leave it to deeper heads to say if the result has been all that we calculated on, and, asking pardon for such digression, we join Sir Horace once more.

When Sir Horace Upton ordered post-horses to his carriage, he no more knew where he was going, nor where he would halt, than he could have antic.i.p.ated what course any conversation might take when once started.

He had, to be sure, a certain ideal goal to be reached; but he was one of those men who liked to think that the casual interruptions one meets with in life are less obstruction than opportunity; so that, instead of deeming these subjects for regret or impatience, he often accepted them as indications that there was some profit to be derived from them,--a kind of fatalism more common than is generally believed. When he set out for Sorrento it was with the intention of going direct to Ma.s.sa; not that this state lay within the limits his functions ascribed to him,--that being probably the very fact which imparted a zest to the journey. Any other man would have addressed himself to his colleague in Tuscany, or wherever he might be; while he, being Sir Horace Upton, took the whole business upon himself in his own way. Young Ma.s.sy's case opened to his eyes a great question, viz., what was the position the Austrians a.s.sumed to take in Italy? For any care about the youth, or any sympathy with his sufferings, he distressed himself little; not that he was, in any respect, heartless or unfeeling, it was simply that greater interests were before him. Here was one of those ”grand issues” that he felt worthy of his abilities,--it was a cause where he was proud to hold a brief.

Resolving all his plans of action methodically, yet rapidly; arranging every detail in his own mind, even to the use of certain expressions he was to employ,--he arrived at the palace of the Emba.s.sy, where he desired to halt to take up his letters and make a few preparations before his departure. His Maestro di Casa, Signor Franchetti, was in waiting for his arrival, and respectfully a.s.sured him ”that all was in readiness, and that his Excellency would be perfectly satisfied. We had, it is true,” continued he, ”a difficulty about the fish, but I sent off an express to Baia, and we have secured a sturgeon.”

”What are you raving about, caro Pipo?” said the Minister; ”what is all this long story of Baia and the fish?”

”Has your Excellency forgotten that we have a grand dinner to-day, at eight o'clock; that the Prince Maximilian of Bavaria and all the foreign amba.s.sadors are invited?”

”Is this Sat.u.r.day, Pipo?” said Sir Horace, blandly.

”Yes, your Excellency.”

”Send Mr. Brockett to me,” said Sir Horace, as he slowly mounted the stairs to his own apartment.

Sir Horace was stretched on a sofa, in all the easy luxury of magnificent dressing-gown and slippers, when Mr. Brockett entered; and without any preliminary of greeting he said, with a quiet laugh, ”You have let me forget all about the dinner to-day, Brockett!”

”I thought you knew it; you took great trouble about the persons to be asked, and you canva.s.sed whether the Duc de Borodino, being only a Charge d'Affaires--”

”There, there; don't you see the--the inappropriateness of what you are doing? Even in England a man is not asked to criminate himself. How many are coming?”

”Nineteen; the 'Nonce' is ill, and has sent an apology.”

”Then the party can be eighteen, Brockett; you must tell them that I am ill,--too ill to come to dinner. I know the Prince Max very well,--he 'll not take it badly; and as to Cineselli, we shall see what humor he is in!”

”But they 'll know that you arrived here this afternoon; they 'll naturally suppose--”