按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
enough;〃 I added。
She laughed and looked at me。 〃You'd like to make us;〃 she said。
〃What?〃
〃Hard。〃
〃I don't think you'll go on if you don't get hard。〃
〃We shan't be so pleasant if we do。〃
〃Well; there my puzzled wits come in again。 I don't see why an
aristocracy shouldn't be rather hard trained; and yet kindly。 I'm
not convinced that the resources of education are exhausted。 I want
to better this; because it already looks so good。〃
〃How are we to do it?〃 asked Mrs。 Redmondson。
〃Oh; there you have me! I've been spending my time lately in trying
to answer that! It makes me quarrel with〃I held up my fingers and
ticked the items off〃the public schools; the private tutors; the
army exams; the Universities; the Church; the general attitude of
the country towards science and literature〃
〃We all do;〃 said Mrs。 Redmondson。 〃We can't begin again at the
beginning;〃 she added。
〃Couldn't one;〃 I nodded at the assembly in general; start a
movement?
〃There's the Confederates;〃 she said; with a faint smile that masked
a gleam of curiosity。 。 。 。 〃You want;〃 she said; 〃to say to the
aristocracy; 'Be aristocrats。 NOBLESSE OBLIGE。' Do you remember
what happened to the monarch who was told to 'Be a King'?〃
〃Well;〃 I said; 〃I want an aristocracy。〃
〃This;〃 she said; smiling; 〃is the pick of them。 The backwoodsmen
are off the stage。 These are the brilliant onesthe smart and the
blues。 。 。 。 They cost a lot of money; you know。〃
So far Mrs。 Redmondson; but the picture remained full of things not
stated in our speech。 They were on the whole handsome people;
charitable minded; happy; and easy。 They led spacious lives; and
there was something free and fearless about their bearing that I
liked extremely。 The women particularly were wide…reading; fine…
thinking。 Mrs。 Redmondson talked as fully and widely and boldly as
a man; and with those flashes of intuition; those startling; sudden
delicacies of perception few men display。 I liked; too; the
relations that held between women and men; their general tolerance;
their antagonism to the harsh jealousies that are the essence of the
middle…class order。 。 。 。
After all; if one's aim resolved itself into the development of a
type and culture of men; why shouldn't one begin at this end?
It is very easy indeed to generalise about a class or human beings;
but much harder to produce a sample。 Was old Lady Forthundred; for
instance; fairly a sample? I remember her as a smiling; magnificent
presence; a towering accumulation of figure and wonderful shimmering
blue silk and black lace and black hair; and small fine features and
chins and chins and chins; disposed in a big cane chair with wraps
and cushions upon the great terrace of Champneys。 Her eye was blue
and hard; and her accent and intonation were exactly what you would
expect from a rather commonplace dressmaker pretending to be
aristocratic。 I was; I am afraid; posing a little as the
intelligent but respectful inquirer from below investigating the
great world; and she was certainly posing as my informant。 She
affected a cynical coarseness。 She developed a theory on the
governance of England; beautifully frank and simple。 〃Give 'um all
a peerage when they get twenty thousand a year;〃 she maintained。
〃That's my remedy。〃
In my new role of theoretical aristocrat I felt a little abashed。
〃Twenty thousand;〃 she repeated with conviction。
It occurred to me that I was in the presence of the aristocratic
theory currently working as distinguished from my as yet
unformulated intentions。
〃You'll get a lot of loafers and scamps among 'um;〃 said Lady
Forthundred。 〃You get loafers and scamps everywhere; but you'll get
a lot of men who'll work hard to keep things together; and that's
what we're all after; isn't ut?
〃It's not an ideal arrangement。〃
〃Tell me anything better;〃 said Lady Forthundred。
On the whole; and because she refused emphatically to believe in
education; Lady Forthundred scored。
We had been discussing Cossington's recent peerage; for Cossington;
my old schoolfellow at City Merchants'; and my victor in the affair
of the magazine; had clambered to an amazing wealth up a piled heap
of energetically pushed penny and halfpenny magazines; and a group
of daily newspapers。 I had expected to find the great lady hostile
to the new…comer; but she accepted him; she gloried in him。
〃We're a peerage;〃 she said; 〃but none of us have ever had any
nonsense about nobility。〃
She turned and smiled down on me。 〃We English;〃 she said; 〃are a
practical people。 We assimilate 'um。〃
〃Then; I suppose; they don't give trouble?〃
〃Then they don't give trouble。〃
〃They learn to shoot?〃
〃And all that;〃 said Lady Forthundred。 〃Yes。 And things go on。
Sometimes better than others; but they go onsomehow。 It depends
very much on the sort of butler who pokes 'um about。〃
I suggested that it might be possible to get a secure twenty
thousand a year by at least detrimental methodssocially speaking。
〃We must take the bad and the good of 'um;〃 said Lady Forthundred;
courageously。 。 。 。
Now; was she a sample? It happened she talked。 What was there in
the brains of the multitude of her first; second; third; fourth; and
fifth cousins; who didn't talk; who shone tall; and bearing
themselves finely; against a background of deft; attentive maids and
valets; on every spacious social scene? How did things look to
them?
7
Side by side with Lady Forthundred; it is curious to put Evesham
with his tall; bent body; his little…featured almost elvish face;
his unequal mild brown eyes; his gentle manner; his sweet; amazing
oratory。 He led all these people wonderfully。 He was always
curious and interested about life; wary beneath a pleasing
franknessand I tormented my brain to get to the bottom of him。
For a long time he was the most powerful man in England under the
throne; he had the Lords in his hand; and a great majority in the
Commons; and the discontents and intrigues that are the concomitants
of an overwhelming party advantage broke against him as waves break
against a cliff。 He foresaw so far in these matters that it seemed
he scarcely troubled to foresee。 He brought political art to the
last triumph of naturalness。 Always for me he has been the typical
aristocrat; so typical and above the mere forms of aristocracy; that
he remained a commoner to the end of his days。
I had met him at the beginning of my career; he read some early
papers of mine; and asked to see me; and I conceived a flattered
liking for him that strengthened to a very strong feeling indeed。
He seemed to me to stand alone without an equal; the greatest man in
British political life。 Some men one sees through and understands;
some o