”
« There's the archduke!
« There's the archduke!
Warner - World's Best Literature - v03 - Bag to Ber
Few men are
gifted with the power to see; still fewer have the power of
expression. Now, at the hour when others are asleep, this man
is bent over his table, darting on his paper the same look which
a short time ago he was casting on the world, battling with his
pencil, his pen, his brush, throwing the water out of his glass
against the ceiling, wiping his pen on his shirt,—driven, violent,
active, as if he fears that his images will escape him, a quarreler
although alone, - a cudgeler of himself. And the things he has
seen are born again upon the paper, natural and more than nat-
ural, beautiful and more than beautiful, singular and endowed
with an enthusiastic life like the soul of the author. The phan-
tasmagoria have been distilled from nature. All the materials
with which his memory is crowded become classified, orderly,
harmonious, and undergo that compulsory idealization which is
the result of a childlike perception, that is to say, of a percep-
tion that is keen, magical by force of ingenuousness.
MODERNNESS
T“ tainty his man,"such as I have portrayed him, this soli-
hus he goes, he runs, he seeks. What does he seek? Cer-
tainly this
.
tary, gifted with an active imagination, always traveling
through the great desert of mankind, has a higher end than that
of a mere observer, an end more general than the fugitive pleas-
ure of the passing event. He seeks this thing which we may
call modernness, for no better word to express the idea pre-
sents itself. His object is to detach from fashion whatever it
may contain of the poetry in history, to draw the eternal from
the transitory. If we glance at the exhibitions of modern pic-
tures, we are struck with the general tendency of the artists to
dress all their subjects in ancient costumes. That is obviously
the sign of great laziness, for it is much easier to declare that
everything in the costume of a certain period is ugly than to
undertake the work of extracting from it the mysterious beauty
which may be contained in it, however slight or light it may be.
The modern is the transitory, the fleeting, the contingent, the
## p. 1630 (#428) ###########################################
1630
CHARLES BAUDELAIRE
half of art, whose other half is the unchanging and the eternal.
There was a modernness for every ancient painter; most of the
beautiful portraits which remain to us from earlier times are
dressed in the costumes of their times. They are perfectly har-
monious, because the costumes, the hair, even the gesture, the
look and the smile (every epoch has its look and its smile), form
a whole that is entirely lifelike. You have no right to despise
or neglect this transitory, fleeting element, of which the changes
are so frequent. In suppressing it you fall by necessity into the
void of an abstract and undefinable beauty, like that of the only
woman before the fall. If instead of the costume of the epoch,
which is a necessary element, you substitute another, you create
an anomaly which can have no excuse unless it is a burlesque
called for by the vogue of the moment. Thus, the goddesses,
the nymphs, the sultans of the eighteenth century are portraits
morally accurate.
FROM (LITTLE POEMS IN PROSE)
EVERY ONE HIS OWN CHIMERA
U roads, withoue grass, without a thistle, without a nettle, I
1
met several men who were walking with heads bowed
down.
Each one bore upon his back an enormous Chimera, as heavy
as a bag of flour or coal, or the accoutrements of a Roman sol-
dier.
But the monstrous beast was not an inert weight; on the con-
trary, it enveloped and oppressed the man with its elastic and
mighty muscles; it fastened with its two vast claws to the breast
of the bearer, and its fabulous head surmounted the brow of the
man, like one of those horrible helmets by which the ancient
warriors hoped to increase the terror of the enemy.
I questioned one of these men, and I asked him whither they
were bound thus. He answered that he knew not, neither he
nor the others; but that evidently they were bound somewhere,
since they were impelled by an irresistible desire to go forward.
It is curious to note that not one of these travelers looked
irritated at the ferocious beast suspended from his neck and
glued against his back; it seemed as though he considered it as
## p. 1631 (#429) ###########################################
CHARLES BAUDELAIRE
1631
making part of himself. None of these weary and serious faces
bore witness to any despair; under the sullen cupola of the sky,
their feet plunging into the dust of a soil as desolate as that sky,
they went their way with the resigned countenances of those who
have condemned themselves to hope forever.
The procession passed by me and sank into the horizon's atmo-
sphere, where the rounded surface of the planet slips from the
curiosity of human sight, and for a few moments I obstinately
persisted in wishing to fathom the mystery; but soon an irre-
sistible indifference fell upon me, and I felt more heavily
oppressed by it than even they were by their crushing Chimeras.
HUMANITY
At the feet of a colossal Venus, one of those artificial fools,
those voluntary buffoons whose duty was to make kings laugh
when Remorse or Ennui possessed their souls, muffled in a glaring
ridiculous costume, crowned with horns and bells, and crouched
against the pedestal, raised his eyes full of tears toward the im-
mortal goddess. And his eyes said:— "I am the least and the
most solitary of human beings, deprived of love and of friendship,
and therefore far below the most imperfect of the animals. Never-
theless, I am made, even I, to feel and comprehend the immortal
Beauty! Ah, goddess! have pity on my sorrow and my despair! ”
But the implacable Venus gazed into the distance, at I know not
what, with her marble eyes.
WINDOWS
He who looks from without through an open window never
sees as many things as he who looks at a closed window. There
is no object more profound, more mysterious, more rich, more
shadowy, more dazzling than a window lighted by a candle.
What one can see in the sunlight is always less interesting than
what takes place behind a blind. In that dark or luminous hole
life lives, dreams, suffers.
Over the sea of roofs I see a woman, mature, already wrinkled,
always bent over something, never going out. From her clothes,
her movement, from almost nothing, I have reconstructed the
history of this woman, or rather her legend, and sometimes I tell
it over to myself in tears.
## p. 1632 (#430) ###########################################
1632
CHARLES BAUDELAIRE
If it had been a poor old man I could have reconstructed his
story as easily.
And I go to bed, proud of having lived and suffered in lives
not my own.
Perhaps you may say, “Are you sure that this story is the
true one ? » What difference does it make what is the reality out-
side of me, if it has helped me to live, to know who I am and
what I am ?
DRINK
One should be always drunk. That is all, the whole question.
In order not to feel the horrible burden of Time, which is break-
ing your shoulders and bearing you to earth, you must be drunk
without cease.
But drunk on what ? On wine, poetry, or virtue, as you
choose.
But get drunk.
And if sometimes, on the steps of a palace, on the green grass
of a moat, in the dull solitude of your chamber, you awake with
your intoxication already lessened or gone, ask of the wind, the
wave, the star, the clock, of everything that flies, sobs, rolls, sings,
talks, what is the hour? and the wind, the wave, the star, the
bird, the clock will answer, "It is the hour to get drunk! ” Not
to be the martyred slave of Time, get drunk; get drunk unceas-
ingly. Wine, poetry, or virtue, as you choose.
FROM A JOURNAL
I
SWEAR to myself henceforth to adopt the following rules as the
everlasting rules of my life.
To pray every morning
to God, the Fountain of all strength and of all justice; to my
father, to Mariette, and to Poe. To pray to them to give me
necessary strength to accomplish all my tasks, and to grant my
mother a life long enough to enjoy my reformation. To work
all day, or at least as long as my strength lasts. To trust to
God — that is to say, to Justice itself — for the success of my
projects. To pray again every evening to God to ask Him for
life and strength, for my mother and myself. To divide all my
earnings into four parts - one for my daily expenses, one for my
creditors, one for my friends, and one for my mother. To keep
to principles of strict sobriety, and to banish all and every stim-
ulant.
## p. 1633 (#431) ###########################################
1633
LORD BEACONSFIELD
(1804-1881)
BY ISA CARRINGTON CABELL
B
ENJAMIN DISRAELI, Earl of Beaconsfield, born in London, De-
cember, 1804; died there April 19th, 1881. His paternal
ancestors were of the house of Lara, and held high rank
among Hebrew-Spanish nobles till the tribunal of Torquemada drove
them from Spain to Venice. There, proud of their race and origin,
they styled themselves “Sons of Israel,” and became merchant
princes. But the city's commerce failing, the grandfather of Benjamin
Disraeli removed to London with a diminished but comfortable for-
tune. His son, Isaac Disraeli, was a well-
known literary man, and the author of
(The Curiosities of Literature. )
On ac-
count of the political and social ostracism
of the Jews in England, he had all his
family baptized into the Church of Eng-
land; but with Benjamin Disraeli espe-
cially, Christianity was never more than
Judaism developed. His belief and his
affections were in his own race.
Benjamin, like most Jewish youths,
was educated in private schools, and at
seventeen entered a solicitor's office. At
twenty-two he published Vivian Grey' LORD BEACONSFIELD
(London, 1826), which readable and amus-
ing take-off of London society gave him great and instantaneous noto-
riety. Its minute descriptions of the great world, its caricatures of
well-known social and political personages, its magnificent diction,
- too magnificent to be taken quite seriously,- excited inquiry; and
the great world was amazed to discover that the impertinent observer
was not one of themselves, but a boy in a lawyer's office. To add
to the audacity, he had conceived himself the hero of these diverting
situations, and by his cleverness had outwitted age, beauty, rank,
diplomacy itself.
Statesmen, poets, fine ladies, were all genuinely amused; and the
author bade fair to become a lion, when he fell ill, and was com-
pelled to leave England for a year or more, which he spent in travel
on the Continent and in Egypt, Nubia, and Palestine. His visit to
III-103
## p. 1634 (#432) ###########################################
1634
LORD BEACONSFIELD
the birthplace of his race made an impression on him that lasted
through his life and literature. It is embodied in his Letters to His
Sister? (London, 1843), and the autobiographical novel Contarini
Fleming' (1833), in which he turned his adventures into fervid
English, at a guinea a volume. But although the spirit of poesy, in
the form of a Childe Harold, stalks rampant through the romance,
there is both feeling and fidelity to nature whenever he describes
the Orient and its people. Then the bizarre, brilliant poseur forgets
his rôle, and reveals his highest aspirations.
When Disraeli returned to London he became the fashion. Every-
body, from the prime minister to Count D'Orsay, had read his clever
novels. The poets praised them, Lady Blessington invited him to
dine, Sir Robert Peel was “most gracious. ”
But literary success could never satisfy Disraeli's ambition: a seat
in Parliament was at the end of his rainbow. He professed himself
a radical, but he was a radical in his own sense of the term; and
like his own Sidonia, half foreigner, half looker-on, he felt himself
endowed with an insight only possible to an outsider, an observer
without inherited prepossessions.
Several contemporary sketches of Disraeli at this time have been
preserved. His dress was purposed affectation; it led the beholder
to look for folly only: and when the brilliant flash came, it was the
more startling as unexpected from such a figure. Lady Dufferin told
Mr. Motley that when she met Disraeli at dinner, he wore a black-
velvet coat lined with satin, purple trousers with a gold band running
down the outside seam, a scarlet waistcoat, long lace ruffles falling
down to the tips of his fingers, white gloves with several rings out-
side, and long black ringlets rippling down his shoulders. She told
him he had made a fool of himself by appearing in such a dress, but
she did not guess why it had been adopted. Another contemporary
says of him, “When duly excited, his command of language was
wonderful, his power of sarcasm unsurpassed. ”
He was busy making speeches and writing political squibs for the
next two years; for Parliament was before his eyes. “He knew,”
says Froude, he had a devil of a tongue, and was unincumbered by
the foolish form of vanity called modesty. ” Ixion in Heaven,' (The
Infernal Marriage,' and (Popanilla' were attempts to rival both
Lucian and Swift on their own ground. It is doubtful, however,
whether he would have risked writing (Henrietta Temple) (1837) and
(Venetia' (1837), two ardent love stories, had he not been in debt;
for notoriety as a novelist is not always a recommendation to a con-
stituency.
In (Henrietta” he found an opportunity to write the biography of
a lover oppressed by duns. It is a most entertaining novel even to
## p. 1635 (#433) ###########################################
LORD BEACONSFIELD
1635
a reader who does not read for a new light on the great statesman,
and is remarkable as the beginning of what is now known as the
« natural manner; a revolt, his admirers tell us, from the stilted
fashion of making love that then prevailed in novels.
(Venetia' is founded on the characters of Byron and Shelley, and
is amusing reading. The high-flown language incrusted with the
gems of rhetoric excites our risibilities, but it is not safe to laugh at
Disraeli; in his most diverting aspects he has a deep sense of humor,
and he who would mock at him is apt to get a whip across the face
at an unguarded moment. Mr. Disraeli laughs in his sleeve at many
things, but first of all at the reader.
He failed in his canvass for his seat at High Wycombe, but he
turned his failure to good account, and established a reputation for
pluck and influence. «A mighty independent personage,” observed
Charles Greville, and his famous quarrel with O'Connell did him so
little harm that in 1837 he was returned for Maidstone. His first
speech was a failure. The word had gone out that he was to be put
down. At last, finding it useless to persist, he said he was not sur-
prised at the reception he had experienced. He had begun several
things many times and had succeeded at last. Then pausing, and
looking indignantly across the house, he exclaimed in a loud and
remarkable tone, “I will sit down now, but the time will come when
you will hear me. "
He married the widow of his patron, Wyndham Lewis, in 1838.
This put him in possession of a fortune, and gave him the power to
continue his political career. His radicalism was a thing of the past.
He had drifted from Conservatism, with Peel for a leader, to aristo-
cratic socialism; and in 1844, 1845, and 1847 appeared the Trilogy, as
he styled the novels Coningsby,' Tancred,' and (Sibyl. ? Of the
three, Coningsby' will prove the most entertaining to the modern
reader. The hero is a gentleman, and in this respect is an improve-
ment on Vivian Grey, for his audacity is tempered by good breeding.
The plot is slight, but the scenes are entertaining. The famous
Sidonia, the Jew financier, is a favorite with the author, and betrays
his affection and respect for race. Lord Monmouth, the wild peer, is
a rival of the Marquis of Steyne,” and worthy of a place in Vanity
Fair'; the political intriguers are photographed from life, the pictures
of fashionable London tickle both the vanity and the fancy of the
reader.
(Sibyl’ is too clearly a novel with a motive to give so much
pleasure. It is a study of the contrasts between the lives of the very
rich and the hopelessly poor, and an attempt to show the superior
condition of the latter when the Catholic Church was all-powerful in
England and the king an absolute monarch.
## p. 1636 (#434) ###########################################
1636
LORD BEACONSFIELD
(Tancred' was composed when Disraeli was under the illusion of
a possibly regenerated aristocracy. ” He sends Tancred, the hero, the
heir of a ducal house, to Palestine to find the inspiration to a true
religious belief, and details his adventures with a power of sarcasm
that is seldom equaled. In certain scenes in this novel the author
rises from a mere mocker to a genuine satirist. Tancred's interview
with the bishop, in which he takes that dignitary's religious tenets
seriously; that with Lady Constance, when she explains the Mystery
of Chaos” and shows how the stars are formed out of the cream of
the Milky Way, a sort of celestial cheese churned into light”; the
vision of the angels on Mt. Sinai, and the celestial Sidonia who talks
about the “Sublime and Solacing Doctrine of Theocratic Equality,” –
all these are passages where we wonder whether the author sneered
or blushed when he wrote. Certainly what has since been known as
the Disraelian irony stings as we turn each page.
Meanwhile Disraeli had become a power in Parliament, and the
bitter opponent of Peel, under whom Catholic emancipation, parlia-
mentary reform, and the abrogation of the commercial system, had
been carried without conditions and almost without mitigations.
Disraeli's assaults on his leader delighted the Liberals; the coun-
try members felt indignant satisfaction at the deserved chastisement
of their betrayer. With malicious skill, Disraeli touched one after
another the weak points in a character that was superficially vulner-
able. Finally the point before the House became Peel's general
conduct. He was beaten by an overwhelming majority, and to the
hand that dethroned him descended the task of building up the ruins
of the Conservative party. Disraeli's best friends felt this a welcome
necessity. There is no example of a rise so sudden under such con-
ditions. His politics were as much distrusted as his serious literary
passages. But Disraeli was the single person equal to the task. For
the next twenty-five years he led the Conservative opposition in the
House of Commons, varied by short intervals of power.
He was
three times Chancellor of the Exchequer, 1853, 1858, and 1859; and
on Lord Derby's retirement in 1868 he became Prime Minister.
In 1870, having laid aside novel-writing for twenty years, he pub-
lished "Lothair. ) It is a politico-religious romance aimed at the
Jesuits, the Fenians, and the Communists. It had an instantaneous
success, for its author was the most conspicuous figure in Europe, but
its popularity is also due to its own merits. We are all of us snobs
after a fashion and love high society. The glory of entering the
splendid portals of the real English dukes and duchesses seems to be
ours when Disraeli throws open the magic door and ushers the
reader in. The decorations do not seem tawdry, nor the tinsel other
than real. We move with pleasurable excitement with Lothair
## p. 1637 (#435) ###########################################
LORD BEACONSFIELD
1637
from palace to castle, and thence to battle-field and scenes of dark
intrigue. The hint of the love affair with the Olympian Theodora
appeals to our romance; the circumventing of the wily Cardinal and
his accomplices is agreeable to the Anglo-Saxon Protestant mind;
their discomfiture, and the crowning of virtue in the shape of a res-
cued Lothair married to the English Duke's daughter with the fixed
Church of England views, is what the reader expects and prays for,
and is the last privilege of the real story-teller. That the author has
thrown aside his proclivities for Romanism as he showed them in
(Sibyl, no more disturbs us than the eccentricities of his politics.
We do not quite give him our faith when he is most in earnest,
talking Semitic Arianism on Mt. Sinai.
A peerage was offered to him in 1868. He refused it for himself,
but asked Queen Victoria to grant the honor to his wife, who
became the Countess of Beaconsfield. But in 1876 he accepted the
rank and title of Earl of Beaconsfield. The author of Vivian Grey)
received the title that Burke had refused.
His last novel, Endymion,' was written for the £10,000 its pub-
lishers paid for it. It adds nothing to his fame, but is an agreeable
picture of fashionable London life and the struggles of a youth to
gain power and place.
Lord Beaconsfield put more dukes, earls, lords and ladies, more
gold and jewels, more splendor and wealth into his books than any
one else ever tried to do. But beside his Oriental delight in the dis-
play of luxury, it is interesting to see the effect of that Orientalism
when he describes the people from whom he sprang. His rare ten-
derness and genuine respect are for those of the race that is the
aristocracy of nature, the purest race, the chosen people. ” He sends
all his heroes to Palestine for inspiration; wisdom dwells in her
gates. Another aristocracy, that of talent, he recognizes and ap-
No dullard ever succeeds, no genius goes unrewarded.
It is the part of the story-teller to make his story a probable one
to the listener, no matter how impossible both character and situa-
tion. Mr. Disraeli was accredited with the faculty of persuading
himself to believe or disbelieve whatever he liked; and did he pos-
sess the same power over his readers, these entertaining volumes
would lift him to the highest rank the novelist attains. As it is, he
does not quite succeed in creating an illusion, and we are conscious
of two lobes in the author's brain; in one sits a sentimentalist, in
the other a mocking devil.
plauds.
La barsington babell .
## p. 1638 (#436) ###########################################
1638
LORD BEACONSFIELD
A DAY AT EMS
From (Vivian Grey)
“I
THINK we'd better take a little coffee now; and then, if you
like, we'll just stroll into the REDOUTE” [continued Baron
de Konigstein).
In a brilliantly illuminated saloon, adorned with Corinthian
columns, and casts from some of the most famous antique statues,
assembled between nine and ten o'clock in the evening many of
the visitors at Ems. On each side of the room was placed a long,
narrow table, one of which was covered with green baize, and
unattended, while the variously colored leather surface of the
other was very closely surrounded by an interested crowd.
Behind this table stood two individuals of very different appear-
ance.
The first was a short, thick man, whose only business was
dealing certain portions of playing cards with quick succession,
one after the other; and as the fate of the table was decided by
this process, did his companion, an extremely tall, thin man,
throw various pieces of money upon certain stakes, which were
deposited by the bystanders on different parts of the table; or,
which was more often the case, with a silver rake with a long
ebony handle, sweep into a large inclosure near him the scat-
tered sums.
This inclosure was called the bank, and the myste-
rious ceremony in which these persons were assisting was the
celebrated game of rouge-et-noir. A deep silence was strictly
observed by those who immediately surrounded the table; no
voice was heard save that of the little, short, stout dealer, when,
without an expression of the least interest, he seemed mechani-
cally to announce the fate of the different colors. No other
sound was heard save the jingle of the dollars and napoleons,
and the ominous rake of the tall, thin banker. The countenances
of those who were hazarding their money were grave and gloomy;
their eyes were fixed, their brows contracted, and their lips pro-
jected; and yet there was an evident effort visible to show that
they were both easy and unconcerned.
Each player held in his
hand a small piece of pasteboard, on which, with a steel pricker,
he marked the run of the cards, in order, from his observations,
to regulate his own play: the rouge-et-noir player imagines that
chance is not capricious. Those who were not interested in the
game promenaded in two lines within the tables; or, seated in
## p. 1639 (#437) ###########################################
LORD BEACONSFIELD
1639
recesses between the pillars, formed small parties for conversa-
tion.
As Vivian and the baron entered, Lady Madeleine Trevor,
leaning on the arm of an elderly man, left the room; but as she
was in earnest conversation, she did not observe them.
“I suppose we must throw away a dollar or two, Grey ! ” said
the baron, as he walked up to the table.
"My dear De Konigstein -- one pinch- one pinch! ”
“Ah! marquis, what fortune to-night ? ”
“ Bad — bad! I have lost my napoleon: I never risk further.
There's that cursed crusty old De Trumpetson, persisting, as
usual, in his run of bad luck, because he will never give in.
Trust me, my dear De Konigstein, it'll end in his ruin; and
then, if there's a sale of his effects, I shall perhaps get the
snuff-box-a-a-h!
"Come, Grey; shall I throw down a couple of napoleons on
joint account? I don't care much for play myself; but I sup-
pose at Ems we must make up our minds to lose a few louis.
Here! now for the red — joint account, mind! ”
« Done.
”
« There's the archduke! Let us go and make our bow; we
needn't stick at the table as if our whole soul were staked with
our crown pieces — we'll make our bow, and then return in time
to know our fate. ” So saying, the gentlemen walked up to the
top of the room.
“Why, Grey! - surely no— it cannot be — and yet it is. De
Bæeffleurs, how d'ye do? ” said the baron, with a face beaming
with joy, and a hearty shake of the hand. “My deardear
fellow, how the devil did you manage to get off so soon ? I
thought you were not to be here for a fortnight: we only
arrived ourselves to-day. ”
“Yes — but I've made an arrangement which I did not antici-
pate; and so I posted after you immediately. Whom do you
think I have brought with me? ”
« Who?
« Salvinski. ”
And the count ? »
« Follows immediately. I expect him to-morrow or next day.
Salvinski is talking to the archduke; and see, he beckons to me.
I suppose I am going to be presented. ”
The chevalier moved forward, followed by the baron and
Vivian.
“Ah!
## p. 1640 (#438) ###########################################
1640
LORD BEACONSFIELD
“Any friend of Prince Salvinski I shall always have great
pleasure in having presented to me. Chevalier, I feel great
pleasure in having you presented to me! Chevalier, you ought
to be proud of the name of Frenchman. Chevalier, the French
are a grand nation. Chevalier, I have the highest respect for
the French nation. ”
« The most subtle diplomatist,” thought Vivian, as he recalled
to mind his own introduction, would be puzzled to decide to
which interest his imperial highness leans. ”
The archduke now entered into conversation with the prince,
and most of the circle who surrounded him. As his highness
was addressing Vivian, the baron let slip our hero's arm, and
seizing hold of the Chevalier de Boeffleurs, began walking up
and down the room with him, and was soon engaged in very
animated conversation. In a few minutes the archduke, bowing
to his circle, made a move and regained the side of a Saxon
lady, from whose interesting company he had been disturbed
by the arrival of Prince Salvinski - an individual of whose long
stories and dull romances the archduke had, from experience,
a particular dread; but his highness was always very courteous
to the Poles.
«Grey, I've dispatched De Bæffleurs to the house to instruct
the servant and Ernstorff to do the impossible, in order that
our rooms may be all together. You'll be delighted with De
Boeffleurs when you know him, and I expect you to be great
friends. Oh! by the by, his unexpected arrival has quite made
us forget our venture at rouge-et-noir. Of course we're too late
now for anything; even if we had been fortunate, our doubled
stake, remaining on the table, is of course lost; we may as
well, however, walk up. ” So saying, the baron reached the
table.
« That is your excellency's stake! — that is your excellency's.
stake! ” exclaimed many voices as he came up.
What's the matter, my friends ? what's the matter ? ) asked
the baron, very calmly.
« There's been a run
on the red! there's been a run on the
red! and your excellency's stake has doubled each time. It has
been 4-8-16—32 — 64 — 128 — 256; and now it's 512! » quickly
rattled a little thin man in spectacles, pointing at the same time
to his unparalleled line of punctures. This was one of those
officious, noisy little men, who are always ready to give you
unasked information on every possible subject, and who are
## p. 1641 (#439) ###########################################
LORD BEACONSFIELD
1641
never so happy as when they are watching over the interest of
some stranger, who never thanks them for their unnecessary
solicitude.
Vivian, in spite of his philosophy, felt the excitement and
wonder of the moment. He looked very earnestly at the baron,
whose countenance, however, remained perfectly unmoved.
"Grey," said he, very coolly, “it seems we're in luck. ”
The stake's then not all your own? ” very eagerly asked the
little man in spectacles.
“No, part of it is yours, sir,” answered the baron, very dryly.
“I'm going to deal,” said the short, thick man behind. “Is the
board cleared ? »
“Your excellency then allows the stake to remain ? ” inquired
the tall, thin banker, with affected nonchalance.
“Oh! certainly,” said the baron, with real nonchalance.
« Three - eight - fourteen – twenty-four -- thirty-four, Rouge
34 — »
All crowded nearer; the table was surrounded five or six
deep, for the wonderful run of luck had got wind, and nearly the
whole room were round the table. Indeed, the archduke and
Saxon lady, and of course the silent suite, were left alone at the
upper part of the room. The tall banker did not conceal his
agitation. Even the short, stout dealer ceased to be a machine.
All looked anxious except the baron. Vivian looked at the table;
his excellency watched, with a keen eye, the little dealer. No
one even breathed as the cards descended.
"Ten-twenty-
here the countenance of the banker brightened — «twenty-two-
twenty-five-twenty-eight — thirty-one - Noir 31. The bank's
broke; no more play to-night. The roulette table opens imme-
diately. "
In spite of the great interest which had been excited, nearly
the whole crowd, without waiting to congratulate the baron,
rushed to the opposite side of the room in order to secure places
at the roulette table.
“Put these five hundred and twelve Napoleons into a bag,”
said the baron; “Grey, this is your share, and I congratulate
you. With regard to the other half, Mr. Hermann, what bills
have you got? ”
“Two on Gogel's house of Frankfort — accepted of course
for two hundred and fifty each, and these twelve napoleons will
make it right,” said the tall banker, as he opened a large black
## p. 1642 (#440) ###########################################
1642
LORD BEACONSFIELD
pocket-book, from which he took out two small bits of paper.
The baron examined them, and after having seen them indorsed,
put them calmly into his pocket, not forgetting the twelve napo-
leons; and then taking Vivian's arm, and regretting extremely
that he should have the trouble of carrying such a weight, he
wished Mr. Hermann a very good-night and success at his rou-
lette, and walked with his companion quietly home. Thus passed
a day at Ems!
THE FESTA IN THE (ALHAMBRA »
From The Young Duke )
ou entered the Alhambra by a Saracenic cloister, from the
of
This passage
some Eastern arms hung up against the wall.
led to the armory, a room of moderate dimensions, but hung with
rich contents. Many an inlaid breastplate — many a Mameluke
scimitar and Damascus blade -- many a gemmed pistol and pearl-
embroided saddle might there be seen, though viewed in a sub-
dued and quiet light. All seemed hushed and still, and shrouded
in what had the reputation of being a palace of pleasure.
In this chamber assembled the expected guests. His Grace
and the Bird of Paradise arrived first, with their foreign friends.
Lord Squib and Lord Darrell, Sir Lucius Grafton, Mr. Annesley,
and Mr. Peacock Piggott followed, but not alone. There were
two ladies who, by courtesy if no other right, bore the titles of
Lady Squib and Mrs. Annesley. There was also a pseudo Lady
Aphrodite Grafton. There was Mrs. Montfort, the famous blonde,
of a beauty which was quite ravishing, and dignified as beautiful.
Some said (but really people say such things) that there was a
talk (I never believe anything I hear) that had not the Bird of
Paradise flown in (these foreigners pick up everything), Mrs.
Montfort would have been the Duchess of St. James. How this
may be I know not; certain, however, this superb and stately
donna did not openly evince any spleen at her more fortunate
rival. Although she found herself a guest at the Alhambra
instead of being the mistress of the palace, probably, like many
other ladies, she looked upon this affair of the singing-bird as a
freak that must end — and then perhaps his Grace, who was
charming young man, would return to his senses. There also
a
## p. 1643 (#441) ###########################################
LORD BEACONSFIELD
1643
was her sister, a long, fair girl, who looked sentimental, but
was only silly. There was a little French actress, like a highly
finished miniature; and a Spanish danseuse, tall, dusky, and lithe,
glancing like a lynx, and graceful as a jennet.
Having all arrived, they proceeded down a small gallery to
the banqueting-room. The doors were thrown open. Pardon me
if for a moment I do not describe the chamber; but really, the
blaze affects my sight. The room was large and lofty.
It was
fitted up as an Eastern tent. The walls were hung with scarlet
cloth tied up with ropes of gold.
of gold. Round the room crouched
recumbent lions richly gilt, who grasped in their paw a lance,
the top of which was a colored lamp. The ceiling was embla-
zoned with the Hauteville arms, and was radiant with burnished
gold. A cresset lamp was suspended from the centre of the
shield, and not only emitted an equable flow of soft though
brilliant light, but also, as the aromatic oil wasted away, distilled
an exquisite perfume.
The table blazed with golden plate, for the Bird of Paradise
loved splendor. At the end of the room, under a canopy and
upon a throne, the shield and vases lately executed for his Grace
now appeared. Everything was gorgeous, costly, and imposing;
but there was no pretense, save in the original outline, at main-
taining the Oriental character. The furniture was French; and
opposite the throne Canova's Hebe, by Bertolini, bounded with a
golden cup from a pedestal of ormolu.
The guests are séated; but after a few minutes the servants
withdraw. Small tables of ebony and silver, and dumb-waiters of
ivory and gold, conveniently stored, are at hand, and Spiridion
never leaves the room. The repast was most refined, most ex-
quisite, and most various. It was one of those meetings where
all eat. When a few persons, easy and unconstrained, unincum-
bered with cares, and of dispositions addicted to enjoyment, get
together at past midnight, it is extraordinary what an appetite
they evince. Singers also are proverbially prone to gormandize;
and though the Bird of Paradise unfortunately possessed the
smallest mouth in all Singingland, it is astonishing how she
pecked! But they talked as well as feasted, and were really
gay. It was amusing to observe
that is to say,
if
been a dumb-waiter, and had time for observation - how charac-
teristic was the affectation of the women. Lady Squib was witty,
Mrs. Annesley refined, and the pseudo Lady Afy fashionable.
you had
## p. 1644 (#442) ###########################################
1644
LORD BEACONSFIELD
« What
As for Mrs. Montfort, she was, as her wont, somewhat silent but
excessively sublime. The Spaniard said nothing, but no doubt
indicated the possession of Cervantic humor by the sly calmness
with which she exhausted her own waiter and pillaged her neigh-
bors.
The little Frenchwoman scarcely ate anything, but drank
champagne and chatted, with equal rapidity and equal composure.
«Prince,” said the duke, "I hope Madame de Harestein ap-
proves of your trip to England ? »
The prince only smiled, for he was of a silent disposition, and
therefore wonderfully well suited his traveling companion.
« Poor Madame de Harestein! ” exclaimed Count Frill.
despair she was in when you left Vienna, my dear duke. Ah!
mon Dieu ! ! I did what I could to amuse her. I used to take
my guitar, and sing to her morning and night, but without the
least effect. She certainly would have died of a broken heart, if
it had not been for the dancing-dogs. ”
«The dancing-dogs! ” minced the pseudo Lady Aphrodite.
«How shocking! ”
"Did they bite her ? ” asked Lady Squib, and so inoculate her
with gayety ? ”
“Oh! the dancing-dogs, my dear ladies! everybody was mad
about the dancing-dogs. They came from Peru, and danced the
mazurka in green jackets with a jabot! Oh! what a jabot ! »
“I dislike animals excessively,” remarked Mrs. Annesley.
« Dislike the dancing-dogs! ” said Count Frill. "Ah, my good
lady, you would have been enchanted. Even the kaiser fed them
with pistachio nuts. Oh, so pretty! delicate leetle things, soft
shining little legs, and pretty little faces! so sensible, and with
such jabots ! »
“I assure you, they were excessively amusing,” said the
prince, in a soft, confidential undertone to his neighbor, Mrs.
Montfort, who, admiring his silence, which she took for state,
smiled and bowed with fascinating condescension.
"And what else has happened very remarkable, count, since I
left you ? » asked Lord Darrell.
“Nothing, nothing, my dear Darrell. This bêtise of a war has
made us all serious. If old Clamstandt had not married that
gipsy little Dugiria, I really think I should have taken a turn to
Belgrade. ”
“You should not eat so much, poppet,” drawled Charles
Annesley to the Spaniard.
## p. 1645 (#443) ###########################################
LORD BEACONSFIELD
1645
“Why not? ” said the little French lady, with great animation,
always ready to fight anybody's battle, provided she could get an
opportunity to talk. “Why not, Mr. Annesley? You never will
let anybody eat-I never eat myself, because every night, hav-
ing to talk so much, I am dry, dry, dry -- so I drink, drink,
drink. It is an extraordinary thing that there is no language
which makes you so thirsty as French. I always have heard
that all the southern languages, Spanish and Italian, make you
hungry. ”
“What can be the reason ? ” seriously asked the pseudo Lady
Afy.
“Because there is so much salt in it,” said Lord Squib.
Delia,” drawled Mr. Annesley, "you look very pretty to-
night! »
"I am charmed to charm you, Mr. Annesley. Shall I tell you
what Lord Bon Mot said of you ? ”
“No, ma mignonne! I never wish to hear my own good
things. ”
"Spoiled, you should add,” said Lady Squib, "if Bon Mot be
in the case. ”
Lord Bon Mot is a most gentlemanly man,” said Delia,
indignant at an admirer being attacked. “He always wants to
be amusing. Whenever he dines out, he comes and sits with me
half an hour to catch the air of Parisian badinage. ”
“And you tell him a variety of little things? ” asked Lord
Squib, insidiously drawing out the secret tactics of Bon Mot.
Beaucoup, beaucoup,” said Delia, extending two little white
hands sparkling with gems.
“If he come in ever how
do you call it ? heavy — not that in the domps - ah! it is
that — if ever he come in the domps, he goes out always like a
soufflée. ”
“As empty, I have no doubt,” said Lady Squib.
“And as sweet, I have no doubt,” said Lord Squib; «for Del-
croix complains sadly of your excesses, Delia.
gifted with the power to see; still fewer have the power of
expression. Now, at the hour when others are asleep, this man
is bent over his table, darting on his paper the same look which
a short time ago he was casting on the world, battling with his
pencil, his pen, his brush, throwing the water out of his glass
against the ceiling, wiping his pen on his shirt,—driven, violent,
active, as if he fears that his images will escape him, a quarreler
although alone, - a cudgeler of himself. And the things he has
seen are born again upon the paper, natural and more than nat-
ural, beautiful and more than beautiful, singular and endowed
with an enthusiastic life like the soul of the author. The phan-
tasmagoria have been distilled from nature. All the materials
with which his memory is crowded become classified, orderly,
harmonious, and undergo that compulsory idealization which is
the result of a childlike perception, that is to say, of a percep-
tion that is keen, magical by force of ingenuousness.
MODERNNESS
T“ tainty his man,"such as I have portrayed him, this soli-
hus he goes, he runs, he seeks. What does he seek? Cer-
tainly this
.
tary, gifted with an active imagination, always traveling
through the great desert of mankind, has a higher end than that
of a mere observer, an end more general than the fugitive pleas-
ure of the passing event. He seeks this thing which we may
call modernness, for no better word to express the idea pre-
sents itself. His object is to detach from fashion whatever it
may contain of the poetry in history, to draw the eternal from
the transitory. If we glance at the exhibitions of modern pic-
tures, we are struck with the general tendency of the artists to
dress all their subjects in ancient costumes. That is obviously
the sign of great laziness, for it is much easier to declare that
everything in the costume of a certain period is ugly than to
undertake the work of extracting from it the mysterious beauty
which may be contained in it, however slight or light it may be.
The modern is the transitory, the fleeting, the contingent, the
## p. 1630 (#428) ###########################################
1630
CHARLES BAUDELAIRE
half of art, whose other half is the unchanging and the eternal.
There was a modernness for every ancient painter; most of the
beautiful portraits which remain to us from earlier times are
dressed in the costumes of their times. They are perfectly har-
monious, because the costumes, the hair, even the gesture, the
look and the smile (every epoch has its look and its smile), form
a whole that is entirely lifelike. You have no right to despise
or neglect this transitory, fleeting element, of which the changes
are so frequent. In suppressing it you fall by necessity into the
void of an abstract and undefinable beauty, like that of the only
woman before the fall. If instead of the costume of the epoch,
which is a necessary element, you substitute another, you create
an anomaly which can have no excuse unless it is a burlesque
called for by the vogue of the moment. Thus, the goddesses,
the nymphs, the sultans of the eighteenth century are portraits
morally accurate.
FROM (LITTLE POEMS IN PROSE)
EVERY ONE HIS OWN CHIMERA
U roads, withoue grass, without a thistle, without a nettle, I
1
met several men who were walking with heads bowed
down.
Each one bore upon his back an enormous Chimera, as heavy
as a bag of flour or coal, or the accoutrements of a Roman sol-
dier.
But the monstrous beast was not an inert weight; on the con-
trary, it enveloped and oppressed the man with its elastic and
mighty muscles; it fastened with its two vast claws to the breast
of the bearer, and its fabulous head surmounted the brow of the
man, like one of those horrible helmets by which the ancient
warriors hoped to increase the terror of the enemy.
I questioned one of these men, and I asked him whither they
were bound thus. He answered that he knew not, neither he
nor the others; but that evidently they were bound somewhere,
since they were impelled by an irresistible desire to go forward.
It is curious to note that not one of these travelers looked
irritated at the ferocious beast suspended from his neck and
glued against his back; it seemed as though he considered it as
## p. 1631 (#429) ###########################################
CHARLES BAUDELAIRE
1631
making part of himself. None of these weary and serious faces
bore witness to any despair; under the sullen cupola of the sky,
their feet plunging into the dust of a soil as desolate as that sky,
they went their way with the resigned countenances of those who
have condemned themselves to hope forever.
The procession passed by me and sank into the horizon's atmo-
sphere, where the rounded surface of the planet slips from the
curiosity of human sight, and for a few moments I obstinately
persisted in wishing to fathom the mystery; but soon an irre-
sistible indifference fell upon me, and I felt more heavily
oppressed by it than even they were by their crushing Chimeras.
HUMANITY
At the feet of a colossal Venus, one of those artificial fools,
those voluntary buffoons whose duty was to make kings laugh
when Remorse or Ennui possessed their souls, muffled in a glaring
ridiculous costume, crowned with horns and bells, and crouched
against the pedestal, raised his eyes full of tears toward the im-
mortal goddess. And his eyes said:— "I am the least and the
most solitary of human beings, deprived of love and of friendship,
and therefore far below the most imperfect of the animals. Never-
theless, I am made, even I, to feel and comprehend the immortal
Beauty! Ah, goddess! have pity on my sorrow and my despair! ”
But the implacable Venus gazed into the distance, at I know not
what, with her marble eyes.
WINDOWS
He who looks from without through an open window never
sees as many things as he who looks at a closed window. There
is no object more profound, more mysterious, more rich, more
shadowy, more dazzling than a window lighted by a candle.
What one can see in the sunlight is always less interesting than
what takes place behind a blind. In that dark or luminous hole
life lives, dreams, suffers.
Over the sea of roofs I see a woman, mature, already wrinkled,
always bent over something, never going out. From her clothes,
her movement, from almost nothing, I have reconstructed the
history of this woman, or rather her legend, and sometimes I tell
it over to myself in tears.
## p. 1632 (#430) ###########################################
1632
CHARLES BAUDELAIRE
If it had been a poor old man I could have reconstructed his
story as easily.
And I go to bed, proud of having lived and suffered in lives
not my own.
Perhaps you may say, “Are you sure that this story is the
true one ? » What difference does it make what is the reality out-
side of me, if it has helped me to live, to know who I am and
what I am ?
DRINK
One should be always drunk. That is all, the whole question.
In order not to feel the horrible burden of Time, which is break-
ing your shoulders and bearing you to earth, you must be drunk
without cease.
But drunk on what ? On wine, poetry, or virtue, as you
choose.
But get drunk.
And if sometimes, on the steps of a palace, on the green grass
of a moat, in the dull solitude of your chamber, you awake with
your intoxication already lessened or gone, ask of the wind, the
wave, the star, the clock, of everything that flies, sobs, rolls, sings,
talks, what is the hour? and the wind, the wave, the star, the
bird, the clock will answer, "It is the hour to get drunk! ” Not
to be the martyred slave of Time, get drunk; get drunk unceas-
ingly. Wine, poetry, or virtue, as you choose.
FROM A JOURNAL
I
SWEAR to myself henceforth to adopt the following rules as the
everlasting rules of my life.
To pray every morning
to God, the Fountain of all strength and of all justice; to my
father, to Mariette, and to Poe. To pray to them to give me
necessary strength to accomplish all my tasks, and to grant my
mother a life long enough to enjoy my reformation. To work
all day, or at least as long as my strength lasts. To trust to
God — that is to say, to Justice itself — for the success of my
projects. To pray again every evening to God to ask Him for
life and strength, for my mother and myself. To divide all my
earnings into four parts - one for my daily expenses, one for my
creditors, one for my friends, and one for my mother. To keep
to principles of strict sobriety, and to banish all and every stim-
ulant.
## p. 1633 (#431) ###########################################
1633
LORD BEACONSFIELD
(1804-1881)
BY ISA CARRINGTON CABELL
B
ENJAMIN DISRAELI, Earl of Beaconsfield, born in London, De-
cember, 1804; died there April 19th, 1881. His paternal
ancestors were of the house of Lara, and held high rank
among Hebrew-Spanish nobles till the tribunal of Torquemada drove
them from Spain to Venice. There, proud of their race and origin,
they styled themselves “Sons of Israel,” and became merchant
princes. But the city's commerce failing, the grandfather of Benjamin
Disraeli removed to London with a diminished but comfortable for-
tune. His son, Isaac Disraeli, was a well-
known literary man, and the author of
(The Curiosities of Literature. )
On ac-
count of the political and social ostracism
of the Jews in England, he had all his
family baptized into the Church of Eng-
land; but with Benjamin Disraeli espe-
cially, Christianity was never more than
Judaism developed. His belief and his
affections were in his own race.
Benjamin, like most Jewish youths,
was educated in private schools, and at
seventeen entered a solicitor's office. At
twenty-two he published Vivian Grey' LORD BEACONSFIELD
(London, 1826), which readable and amus-
ing take-off of London society gave him great and instantaneous noto-
riety. Its minute descriptions of the great world, its caricatures of
well-known social and political personages, its magnificent diction,
- too magnificent to be taken quite seriously,- excited inquiry; and
the great world was amazed to discover that the impertinent observer
was not one of themselves, but a boy in a lawyer's office. To add
to the audacity, he had conceived himself the hero of these diverting
situations, and by his cleverness had outwitted age, beauty, rank,
diplomacy itself.
Statesmen, poets, fine ladies, were all genuinely amused; and the
author bade fair to become a lion, when he fell ill, and was com-
pelled to leave England for a year or more, which he spent in travel
on the Continent and in Egypt, Nubia, and Palestine. His visit to
III-103
## p. 1634 (#432) ###########################################
1634
LORD BEACONSFIELD
the birthplace of his race made an impression on him that lasted
through his life and literature. It is embodied in his Letters to His
Sister? (London, 1843), and the autobiographical novel Contarini
Fleming' (1833), in which he turned his adventures into fervid
English, at a guinea a volume. But although the spirit of poesy, in
the form of a Childe Harold, stalks rampant through the romance,
there is both feeling and fidelity to nature whenever he describes
the Orient and its people. Then the bizarre, brilliant poseur forgets
his rôle, and reveals his highest aspirations.
When Disraeli returned to London he became the fashion. Every-
body, from the prime minister to Count D'Orsay, had read his clever
novels. The poets praised them, Lady Blessington invited him to
dine, Sir Robert Peel was “most gracious. ”
But literary success could never satisfy Disraeli's ambition: a seat
in Parliament was at the end of his rainbow. He professed himself
a radical, but he was a radical in his own sense of the term; and
like his own Sidonia, half foreigner, half looker-on, he felt himself
endowed with an insight only possible to an outsider, an observer
without inherited prepossessions.
Several contemporary sketches of Disraeli at this time have been
preserved. His dress was purposed affectation; it led the beholder
to look for folly only: and when the brilliant flash came, it was the
more startling as unexpected from such a figure. Lady Dufferin told
Mr. Motley that when she met Disraeli at dinner, he wore a black-
velvet coat lined with satin, purple trousers with a gold band running
down the outside seam, a scarlet waistcoat, long lace ruffles falling
down to the tips of his fingers, white gloves with several rings out-
side, and long black ringlets rippling down his shoulders. She told
him he had made a fool of himself by appearing in such a dress, but
she did not guess why it had been adopted. Another contemporary
says of him, “When duly excited, his command of language was
wonderful, his power of sarcasm unsurpassed. ”
He was busy making speeches and writing political squibs for the
next two years; for Parliament was before his eyes. “He knew,”
says Froude, he had a devil of a tongue, and was unincumbered by
the foolish form of vanity called modesty. ” Ixion in Heaven,' (The
Infernal Marriage,' and (Popanilla' were attempts to rival both
Lucian and Swift on their own ground. It is doubtful, however,
whether he would have risked writing (Henrietta Temple) (1837) and
(Venetia' (1837), two ardent love stories, had he not been in debt;
for notoriety as a novelist is not always a recommendation to a con-
stituency.
In (Henrietta” he found an opportunity to write the biography of
a lover oppressed by duns. It is a most entertaining novel even to
## p. 1635 (#433) ###########################################
LORD BEACONSFIELD
1635
a reader who does not read for a new light on the great statesman,
and is remarkable as the beginning of what is now known as the
« natural manner; a revolt, his admirers tell us, from the stilted
fashion of making love that then prevailed in novels.
(Venetia' is founded on the characters of Byron and Shelley, and
is amusing reading. The high-flown language incrusted with the
gems of rhetoric excites our risibilities, but it is not safe to laugh at
Disraeli; in his most diverting aspects he has a deep sense of humor,
and he who would mock at him is apt to get a whip across the face
at an unguarded moment. Mr. Disraeli laughs in his sleeve at many
things, but first of all at the reader.
He failed in his canvass for his seat at High Wycombe, but he
turned his failure to good account, and established a reputation for
pluck and influence. «A mighty independent personage,” observed
Charles Greville, and his famous quarrel with O'Connell did him so
little harm that in 1837 he was returned for Maidstone. His first
speech was a failure. The word had gone out that he was to be put
down. At last, finding it useless to persist, he said he was not sur-
prised at the reception he had experienced. He had begun several
things many times and had succeeded at last. Then pausing, and
looking indignantly across the house, he exclaimed in a loud and
remarkable tone, “I will sit down now, but the time will come when
you will hear me. "
He married the widow of his patron, Wyndham Lewis, in 1838.
This put him in possession of a fortune, and gave him the power to
continue his political career. His radicalism was a thing of the past.
He had drifted from Conservatism, with Peel for a leader, to aristo-
cratic socialism; and in 1844, 1845, and 1847 appeared the Trilogy, as
he styled the novels Coningsby,' Tancred,' and (Sibyl. ? Of the
three, Coningsby' will prove the most entertaining to the modern
reader. The hero is a gentleman, and in this respect is an improve-
ment on Vivian Grey, for his audacity is tempered by good breeding.
The plot is slight, but the scenes are entertaining. The famous
Sidonia, the Jew financier, is a favorite with the author, and betrays
his affection and respect for race. Lord Monmouth, the wild peer, is
a rival of the Marquis of Steyne,” and worthy of a place in Vanity
Fair'; the political intriguers are photographed from life, the pictures
of fashionable London tickle both the vanity and the fancy of the
reader.
(Sibyl’ is too clearly a novel with a motive to give so much
pleasure. It is a study of the contrasts between the lives of the very
rich and the hopelessly poor, and an attempt to show the superior
condition of the latter when the Catholic Church was all-powerful in
England and the king an absolute monarch.
## p. 1636 (#434) ###########################################
1636
LORD BEACONSFIELD
(Tancred' was composed when Disraeli was under the illusion of
a possibly regenerated aristocracy. ” He sends Tancred, the hero, the
heir of a ducal house, to Palestine to find the inspiration to a true
religious belief, and details his adventures with a power of sarcasm
that is seldom equaled. In certain scenes in this novel the author
rises from a mere mocker to a genuine satirist. Tancred's interview
with the bishop, in which he takes that dignitary's religious tenets
seriously; that with Lady Constance, when she explains the Mystery
of Chaos” and shows how the stars are formed out of the cream of
the Milky Way, a sort of celestial cheese churned into light”; the
vision of the angels on Mt. Sinai, and the celestial Sidonia who talks
about the “Sublime and Solacing Doctrine of Theocratic Equality,” –
all these are passages where we wonder whether the author sneered
or blushed when he wrote. Certainly what has since been known as
the Disraelian irony stings as we turn each page.
Meanwhile Disraeli had become a power in Parliament, and the
bitter opponent of Peel, under whom Catholic emancipation, parlia-
mentary reform, and the abrogation of the commercial system, had
been carried without conditions and almost without mitigations.
Disraeli's assaults on his leader delighted the Liberals; the coun-
try members felt indignant satisfaction at the deserved chastisement
of their betrayer. With malicious skill, Disraeli touched one after
another the weak points in a character that was superficially vulner-
able. Finally the point before the House became Peel's general
conduct. He was beaten by an overwhelming majority, and to the
hand that dethroned him descended the task of building up the ruins
of the Conservative party. Disraeli's best friends felt this a welcome
necessity. There is no example of a rise so sudden under such con-
ditions. His politics were as much distrusted as his serious literary
passages. But Disraeli was the single person equal to the task. For
the next twenty-five years he led the Conservative opposition in the
House of Commons, varied by short intervals of power.
He was
three times Chancellor of the Exchequer, 1853, 1858, and 1859; and
on Lord Derby's retirement in 1868 he became Prime Minister.
In 1870, having laid aside novel-writing for twenty years, he pub-
lished "Lothair. ) It is a politico-religious romance aimed at the
Jesuits, the Fenians, and the Communists. It had an instantaneous
success, for its author was the most conspicuous figure in Europe, but
its popularity is also due to its own merits. We are all of us snobs
after a fashion and love high society. The glory of entering the
splendid portals of the real English dukes and duchesses seems to be
ours when Disraeli throws open the magic door and ushers the
reader in. The decorations do not seem tawdry, nor the tinsel other
than real. We move with pleasurable excitement with Lothair
## p. 1637 (#435) ###########################################
LORD BEACONSFIELD
1637
from palace to castle, and thence to battle-field and scenes of dark
intrigue. The hint of the love affair with the Olympian Theodora
appeals to our romance; the circumventing of the wily Cardinal and
his accomplices is agreeable to the Anglo-Saxon Protestant mind;
their discomfiture, and the crowning of virtue in the shape of a res-
cued Lothair married to the English Duke's daughter with the fixed
Church of England views, is what the reader expects and prays for,
and is the last privilege of the real story-teller. That the author has
thrown aside his proclivities for Romanism as he showed them in
(Sibyl, no more disturbs us than the eccentricities of his politics.
We do not quite give him our faith when he is most in earnest,
talking Semitic Arianism on Mt. Sinai.
A peerage was offered to him in 1868. He refused it for himself,
but asked Queen Victoria to grant the honor to his wife, who
became the Countess of Beaconsfield. But in 1876 he accepted the
rank and title of Earl of Beaconsfield. The author of Vivian Grey)
received the title that Burke had refused.
His last novel, Endymion,' was written for the £10,000 its pub-
lishers paid for it. It adds nothing to his fame, but is an agreeable
picture of fashionable London life and the struggles of a youth to
gain power and place.
Lord Beaconsfield put more dukes, earls, lords and ladies, more
gold and jewels, more splendor and wealth into his books than any
one else ever tried to do. But beside his Oriental delight in the dis-
play of luxury, it is interesting to see the effect of that Orientalism
when he describes the people from whom he sprang. His rare ten-
derness and genuine respect are for those of the race that is the
aristocracy of nature, the purest race, the chosen people. ” He sends
all his heroes to Palestine for inspiration; wisdom dwells in her
gates. Another aristocracy, that of talent, he recognizes and ap-
No dullard ever succeeds, no genius goes unrewarded.
It is the part of the story-teller to make his story a probable one
to the listener, no matter how impossible both character and situa-
tion. Mr. Disraeli was accredited with the faculty of persuading
himself to believe or disbelieve whatever he liked; and did he pos-
sess the same power over his readers, these entertaining volumes
would lift him to the highest rank the novelist attains. As it is, he
does not quite succeed in creating an illusion, and we are conscious
of two lobes in the author's brain; in one sits a sentimentalist, in
the other a mocking devil.
plauds.
La barsington babell .
## p. 1638 (#436) ###########################################
1638
LORD BEACONSFIELD
A DAY AT EMS
From (Vivian Grey)
“I
THINK we'd better take a little coffee now; and then, if you
like, we'll just stroll into the REDOUTE” [continued Baron
de Konigstein).
In a brilliantly illuminated saloon, adorned with Corinthian
columns, and casts from some of the most famous antique statues,
assembled between nine and ten o'clock in the evening many of
the visitors at Ems. On each side of the room was placed a long,
narrow table, one of which was covered with green baize, and
unattended, while the variously colored leather surface of the
other was very closely surrounded by an interested crowd.
Behind this table stood two individuals of very different appear-
ance.
The first was a short, thick man, whose only business was
dealing certain portions of playing cards with quick succession,
one after the other; and as the fate of the table was decided by
this process, did his companion, an extremely tall, thin man,
throw various pieces of money upon certain stakes, which were
deposited by the bystanders on different parts of the table; or,
which was more often the case, with a silver rake with a long
ebony handle, sweep into a large inclosure near him the scat-
tered sums.
This inclosure was called the bank, and the myste-
rious ceremony in which these persons were assisting was the
celebrated game of rouge-et-noir. A deep silence was strictly
observed by those who immediately surrounded the table; no
voice was heard save that of the little, short, stout dealer, when,
without an expression of the least interest, he seemed mechani-
cally to announce the fate of the different colors. No other
sound was heard save the jingle of the dollars and napoleons,
and the ominous rake of the tall, thin banker. The countenances
of those who were hazarding their money were grave and gloomy;
their eyes were fixed, their brows contracted, and their lips pro-
jected; and yet there was an evident effort visible to show that
they were both easy and unconcerned.
Each player held in his
hand a small piece of pasteboard, on which, with a steel pricker,
he marked the run of the cards, in order, from his observations,
to regulate his own play: the rouge-et-noir player imagines that
chance is not capricious. Those who were not interested in the
game promenaded in two lines within the tables; or, seated in
## p. 1639 (#437) ###########################################
LORD BEACONSFIELD
1639
recesses between the pillars, formed small parties for conversa-
tion.
As Vivian and the baron entered, Lady Madeleine Trevor,
leaning on the arm of an elderly man, left the room; but as she
was in earnest conversation, she did not observe them.
“I suppose we must throw away a dollar or two, Grey ! ” said
the baron, as he walked up to the table.
"My dear De Konigstein -- one pinch- one pinch! ”
“Ah! marquis, what fortune to-night ? ”
“ Bad — bad! I have lost my napoleon: I never risk further.
There's that cursed crusty old De Trumpetson, persisting, as
usual, in his run of bad luck, because he will never give in.
Trust me, my dear De Konigstein, it'll end in his ruin; and
then, if there's a sale of his effects, I shall perhaps get the
snuff-box-a-a-h!
"Come, Grey; shall I throw down a couple of napoleons on
joint account? I don't care much for play myself; but I sup-
pose at Ems we must make up our minds to lose a few louis.
Here! now for the red — joint account, mind! ”
« Done.
”
« There's the archduke! Let us go and make our bow; we
needn't stick at the table as if our whole soul were staked with
our crown pieces — we'll make our bow, and then return in time
to know our fate. ” So saying, the gentlemen walked up to the
top of the room.
“Why, Grey! - surely no— it cannot be — and yet it is. De
Bæeffleurs, how d'ye do? ” said the baron, with a face beaming
with joy, and a hearty shake of the hand. “My deardear
fellow, how the devil did you manage to get off so soon ? I
thought you were not to be here for a fortnight: we only
arrived ourselves to-day. ”
“Yes — but I've made an arrangement which I did not antici-
pate; and so I posted after you immediately. Whom do you
think I have brought with me? ”
« Who?
« Salvinski. ”
And the count ? »
« Follows immediately. I expect him to-morrow or next day.
Salvinski is talking to the archduke; and see, he beckons to me.
I suppose I am going to be presented. ”
The chevalier moved forward, followed by the baron and
Vivian.
“Ah!
## p. 1640 (#438) ###########################################
1640
LORD BEACONSFIELD
“Any friend of Prince Salvinski I shall always have great
pleasure in having presented to me. Chevalier, I feel great
pleasure in having you presented to me! Chevalier, you ought
to be proud of the name of Frenchman. Chevalier, the French
are a grand nation. Chevalier, I have the highest respect for
the French nation. ”
« The most subtle diplomatist,” thought Vivian, as he recalled
to mind his own introduction, would be puzzled to decide to
which interest his imperial highness leans. ”
The archduke now entered into conversation with the prince,
and most of the circle who surrounded him. As his highness
was addressing Vivian, the baron let slip our hero's arm, and
seizing hold of the Chevalier de Boeffleurs, began walking up
and down the room with him, and was soon engaged in very
animated conversation. In a few minutes the archduke, bowing
to his circle, made a move and regained the side of a Saxon
lady, from whose interesting company he had been disturbed
by the arrival of Prince Salvinski - an individual of whose long
stories and dull romances the archduke had, from experience,
a particular dread; but his highness was always very courteous
to the Poles.
«Grey, I've dispatched De Bæffleurs to the house to instruct
the servant and Ernstorff to do the impossible, in order that
our rooms may be all together. You'll be delighted with De
Boeffleurs when you know him, and I expect you to be great
friends. Oh! by the by, his unexpected arrival has quite made
us forget our venture at rouge-et-noir. Of course we're too late
now for anything; even if we had been fortunate, our doubled
stake, remaining on the table, is of course lost; we may as
well, however, walk up. ” So saying, the baron reached the
table.
« That is your excellency's stake! — that is your excellency's.
stake! ” exclaimed many voices as he came up.
What's the matter, my friends ? what's the matter ? ) asked
the baron, very calmly.
« There's been a run
on the red! there's been a run on the
red! and your excellency's stake has doubled each time. It has
been 4-8-16—32 — 64 — 128 — 256; and now it's 512! » quickly
rattled a little thin man in spectacles, pointing at the same time
to his unparalleled line of punctures. This was one of those
officious, noisy little men, who are always ready to give you
unasked information on every possible subject, and who are
## p. 1641 (#439) ###########################################
LORD BEACONSFIELD
1641
never so happy as when they are watching over the interest of
some stranger, who never thanks them for their unnecessary
solicitude.
Vivian, in spite of his philosophy, felt the excitement and
wonder of the moment. He looked very earnestly at the baron,
whose countenance, however, remained perfectly unmoved.
"Grey," said he, very coolly, “it seems we're in luck. ”
The stake's then not all your own? ” very eagerly asked the
little man in spectacles.
“No, part of it is yours, sir,” answered the baron, very dryly.
“I'm going to deal,” said the short, thick man behind. “Is the
board cleared ? »
“Your excellency then allows the stake to remain ? ” inquired
the tall, thin banker, with affected nonchalance.
“Oh! certainly,” said the baron, with real nonchalance.
« Three - eight - fourteen – twenty-four -- thirty-four, Rouge
34 — »
All crowded nearer; the table was surrounded five or six
deep, for the wonderful run of luck had got wind, and nearly the
whole room were round the table. Indeed, the archduke and
Saxon lady, and of course the silent suite, were left alone at the
upper part of the room. The tall banker did not conceal his
agitation. Even the short, stout dealer ceased to be a machine.
All looked anxious except the baron. Vivian looked at the table;
his excellency watched, with a keen eye, the little dealer. No
one even breathed as the cards descended.
"Ten-twenty-
here the countenance of the banker brightened — «twenty-two-
twenty-five-twenty-eight — thirty-one - Noir 31. The bank's
broke; no more play to-night. The roulette table opens imme-
diately. "
In spite of the great interest which had been excited, nearly
the whole crowd, without waiting to congratulate the baron,
rushed to the opposite side of the room in order to secure places
at the roulette table.
“Put these five hundred and twelve Napoleons into a bag,”
said the baron; “Grey, this is your share, and I congratulate
you. With regard to the other half, Mr. Hermann, what bills
have you got? ”
“Two on Gogel's house of Frankfort — accepted of course
for two hundred and fifty each, and these twelve napoleons will
make it right,” said the tall banker, as he opened a large black
## p. 1642 (#440) ###########################################
1642
LORD BEACONSFIELD
pocket-book, from which he took out two small bits of paper.
The baron examined them, and after having seen them indorsed,
put them calmly into his pocket, not forgetting the twelve napo-
leons; and then taking Vivian's arm, and regretting extremely
that he should have the trouble of carrying such a weight, he
wished Mr. Hermann a very good-night and success at his rou-
lette, and walked with his companion quietly home. Thus passed
a day at Ems!
THE FESTA IN THE (ALHAMBRA »
From The Young Duke )
ou entered the Alhambra by a Saracenic cloister, from the
of
This passage
some Eastern arms hung up against the wall.
led to the armory, a room of moderate dimensions, but hung with
rich contents. Many an inlaid breastplate — many a Mameluke
scimitar and Damascus blade -- many a gemmed pistol and pearl-
embroided saddle might there be seen, though viewed in a sub-
dued and quiet light. All seemed hushed and still, and shrouded
in what had the reputation of being a palace of pleasure.
In this chamber assembled the expected guests. His Grace
and the Bird of Paradise arrived first, with their foreign friends.
Lord Squib and Lord Darrell, Sir Lucius Grafton, Mr. Annesley,
and Mr. Peacock Piggott followed, but not alone. There were
two ladies who, by courtesy if no other right, bore the titles of
Lady Squib and Mrs. Annesley. There was also a pseudo Lady
Aphrodite Grafton. There was Mrs. Montfort, the famous blonde,
of a beauty which was quite ravishing, and dignified as beautiful.
Some said (but really people say such things) that there was a
talk (I never believe anything I hear) that had not the Bird of
Paradise flown in (these foreigners pick up everything), Mrs.
Montfort would have been the Duchess of St. James. How this
may be I know not; certain, however, this superb and stately
donna did not openly evince any spleen at her more fortunate
rival. Although she found herself a guest at the Alhambra
instead of being the mistress of the palace, probably, like many
other ladies, she looked upon this affair of the singing-bird as a
freak that must end — and then perhaps his Grace, who was
charming young man, would return to his senses. There also
a
## p. 1643 (#441) ###########################################
LORD BEACONSFIELD
1643
was her sister, a long, fair girl, who looked sentimental, but
was only silly. There was a little French actress, like a highly
finished miniature; and a Spanish danseuse, tall, dusky, and lithe,
glancing like a lynx, and graceful as a jennet.
Having all arrived, they proceeded down a small gallery to
the banqueting-room. The doors were thrown open. Pardon me
if for a moment I do not describe the chamber; but really, the
blaze affects my sight. The room was large and lofty.
It was
fitted up as an Eastern tent. The walls were hung with scarlet
cloth tied up with ropes of gold.
of gold. Round the room crouched
recumbent lions richly gilt, who grasped in their paw a lance,
the top of which was a colored lamp. The ceiling was embla-
zoned with the Hauteville arms, and was radiant with burnished
gold. A cresset lamp was suspended from the centre of the
shield, and not only emitted an equable flow of soft though
brilliant light, but also, as the aromatic oil wasted away, distilled
an exquisite perfume.
The table blazed with golden plate, for the Bird of Paradise
loved splendor. At the end of the room, under a canopy and
upon a throne, the shield and vases lately executed for his Grace
now appeared. Everything was gorgeous, costly, and imposing;
but there was no pretense, save in the original outline, at main-
taining the Oriental character. The furniture was French; and
opposite the throne Canova's Hebe, by Bertolini, bounded with a
golden cup from a pedestal of ormolu.
The guests are séated; but after a few minutes the servants
withdraw. Small tables of ebony and silver, and dumb-waiters of
ivory and gold, conveniently stored, are at hand, and Spiridion
never leaves the room. The repast was most refined, most ex-
quisite, and most various. It was one of those meetings where
all eat. When a few persons, easy and unconstrained, unincum-
bered with cares, and of dispositions addicted to enjoyment, get
together at past midnight, it is extraordinary what an appetite
they evince. Singers also are proverbially prone to gormandize;
and though the Bird of Paradise unfortunately possessed the
smallest mouth in all Singingland, it is astonishing how she
pecked! But they talked as well as feasted, and were really
gay. It was amusing to observe
that is to say,
if
been a dumb-waiter, and had time for observation - how charac-
teristic was the affectation of the women. Lady Squib was witty,
Mrs. Annesley refined, and the pseudo Lady Afy fashionable.
you had
## p. 1644 (#442) ###########################################
1644
LORD BEACONSFIELD
« What
As for Mrs. Montfort, she was, as her wont, somewhat silent but
excessively sublime. The Spaniard said nothing, but no doubt
indicated the possession of Cervantic humor by the sly calmness
with which she exhausted her own waiter and pillaged her neigh-
bors.
The little Frenchwoman scarcely ate anything, but drank
champagne and chatted, with equal rapidity and equal composure.
«Prince,” said the duke, "I hope Madame de Harestein ap-
proves of your trip to England ? »
The prince only smiled, for he was of a silent disposition, and
therefore wonderfully well suited his traveling companion.
« Poor Madame de Harestein! ” exclaimed Count Frill.
despair she was in when you left Vienna, my dear duke. Ah!
mon Dieu ! ! I did what I could to amuse her. I used to take
my guitar, and sing to her morning and night, but without the
least effect. She certainly would have died of a broken heart, if
it had not been for the dancing-dogs. ”
«The dancing-dogs! ” minced the pseudo Lady Aphrodite.
«How shocking! ”
"Did they bite her ? ” asked Lady Squib, and so inoculate her
with gayety ? ”
“Oh! the dancing-dogs, my dear ladies! everybody was mad
about the dancing-dogs. They came from Peru, and danced the
mazurka in green jackets with a jabot! Oh! what a jabot ! »
“I dislike animals excessively,” remarked Mrs. Annesley.
« Dislike the dancing-dogs! ” said Count Frill. "Ah, my good
lady, you would have been enchanted. Even the kaiser fed them
with pistachio nuts. Oh, so pretty! delicate leetle things, soft
shining little legs, and pretty little faces! so sensible, and with
such jabots ! »
“I assure you, they were excessively amusing,” said the
prince, in a soft, confidential undertone to his neighbor, Mrs.
Montfort, who, admiring his silence, which she took for state,
smiled and bowed with fascinating condescension.
"And what else has happened very remarkable, count, since I
left you ? » asked Lord Darrell.
“Nothing, nothing, my dear Darrell. This bêtise of a war has
made us all serious. If old Clamstandt had not married that
gipsy little Dugiria, I really think I should have taken a turn to
Belgrade. ”
“You should not eat so much, poppet,” drawled Charles
Annesley to the Spaniard.
## p. 1645 (#443) ###########################################
LORD BEACONSFIELD
1645
“Why not? ” said the little French lady, with great animation,
always ready to fight anybody's battle, provided she could get an
opportunity to talk. “Why not, Mr. Annesley? You never will
let anybody eat-I never eat myself, because every night, hav-
ing to talk so much, I am dry, dry, dry -- so I drink, drink,
drink. It is an extraordinary thing that there is no language
which makes you so thirsty as French. I always have heard
that all the southern languages, Spanish and Italian, make you
hungry. ”
“What can be the reason ? ” seriously asked the pseudo Lady
Afy.
“Because there is so much salt in it,” said Lord Squib.
Delia,” drawled Mr. Annesley, "you look very pretty to-
night! »
"I am charmed to charm you, Mr. Annesley. Shall I tell you
what Lord Bon Mot said of you ? ”
“No, ma mignonne! I never wish to hear my own good
things. ”
"Spoiled, you should add,” said Lady Squib, "if Bon Mot be
in the case. ”
Lord Bon Mot is a most gentlemanly man,” said Delia,
indignant at an admirer being attacked. “He always wants to
be amusing. Whenever he dines out, he comes and sits with me
half an hour to catch the air of Parisian badinage. ”
“And you tell him a variety of little things? ” asked Lord
Squib, insidiously drawing out the secret tactics of Bon Mot.
Beaucoup, beaucoup,” said Delia, extending two little white
hands sparkling with gems.
“If he come in ever how
do you call it ? heavy — not that in the domps - ah! it is
that — if ever he come in the domps, he goes out always like a
soufflée. ”
“As empty, I have no doubt,” said Lady Squib.
“And as sweet, I have no doubt,” said Lord Squib; «for Del-
croix complains sadly of your excesses, Delia.
