summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 05:33:39 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 05:33:39 -0700
commit672a64e44dd863eb0310b822a48d16d5de9af2d9 (patch)
tree0ebc00509fdce905f92a9396691824bb43ba670c
initial commit of ebook 9768HEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--9768.txt2141
-rw-r--r--9768.zipbin0 -> 48364 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
5 files changed, 2157 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/9768.txt b/9768.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b6ccd91
--- /dev/null
+++ b/9768.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,2141 @@
+Project Gutenberg EBook, Alice, or The Mysteries, by Lytton, Book VI
+#208 in our series by Edward Bulwer Lytton
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
+
+This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project
+Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the
+header without written permission.
+
+Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the
+eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is
+important information about your specific rights and restrictions in
+how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a
+donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**EBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These EBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers*****
+
+
+
+Title: Alice, or The Mysteries, Book VI
+
+Author: Edward Bulwer Lytton
+
+Release Date: January 2006 [EBook #9768]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 15, 2003]
+
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+
+
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, ALICE, BY LYTTON, BOOK VI ***
+
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dagny; and by David Widger
+
+
+
+Corrected and updated text and HTML PG Editions of the complete
+11 volume set may be found at:
+
+https://www.gutenberg.org/files/9774/9774.txt
+
+https://www.gutenberg.org/files/9774/9774-h/9774-h.htm
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK VI.
+
+ "I will bring fire to thee--I reek not of the place."
+ --EURIPIDES: _Andromache_, 214.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ . . . THIS ancient city,
+ How wanton sits she amidst Nature's smiles!
+
+ . . . Various nations meet,
+ As in the sea, yet not confined in space,
+ But streaming freely through the spacious streets.--YOUNG.
+
+ . . . His teeth he still did grind,
+ And grimly gnash, threatening revenge in vain.--SPENSER.
+
+"PARIS is a delightful place,--that is allowed by all. It is delightful
+to the young, to the gay, to the idle; to the literary lion, who likes to
+be petted; to the wiser epicure, who indulges a more justifiable
+appetite. It is delightful to ladies, who wish to live at their ease,
+and buy beautiful caps; delightful to philanthropists, who wish for
+listeners to schemes of colonizing the moon; delightful to the haunters
+of balls and ballets, and little theatres and superb _cafes_, where men
+with beards of all sizes and shapes scowl at the English, and involve
+their intellects in the fascinating game of dominos. For these, and for
+many others, Paris is delightful. I say nothing against it. But, for my
+own part, I would rather live in a garret in London than in a palace in
+the Chaussee d'Antin.--'Chacun a son mauvais gout.'
+
+"I don't like the streets, in which I cannot walk but in the kennel; I
+don't like the shops, that contain nothing except what's at the window; I
+don't like the houses, like prisons which look upon a courtyard; I don't
+like the _beaux jardins_, which grow no plants save a Cupid in plaster; I
+don't like the wood fires, which demand as many _petits soins_ as the
+women, and which warm no part of one but one's eyelids, I don't like the
+language, with its strong phrases about nothing, and vibrating like a
+pendulum between 'rapture' and 'desolation;' I don't like the accent,
+which one cannot get, without speaking through one's nose; I don't like
+the eternal fuss and jabber about books without nature, and revolutions
+without fruit; I have no sympathy with tales that turn on a dead jackass,
+nor with constitutions that give the ballot to the representatives, and
+withhold the suffrage from the people; neither have I much faith in that
+enthusiasm for the _beaux arts_, which shows its produce in execrable
+music, detestable pictures, abominable sculpture, and a droll something
+that I believe the _French_ call POETRY. Dancing and cookery,--these are
+the arts the French excel in, I grant it; and excellent things they are;
+but oh, England! oh, Germany! you need not be jealous of your rival!"
+
+These are not the author's remarks,--he disowns them; they were Mr.
+Cleveland's. He was a prejudiced man; Maltravers was more liberal, but
+then Maltravers did not pretend to be a wit.
+
+Maltravers had been several weeks in the city of cities, and now he had
+his apartments in the gloomy but interesting Faubourg St. Germain, all to
+himself. For Cleveland, having attended eight days at a sale, and having
+moreover ransacked all the curiosity shops, and shipped off bronzes and
+cabinets, and Genoese silks and _objets de vertu_, enough to have half
+furnished Fonthill, had fulfilled his mission, and returned to his villa.
+Before the old gentleman went, he flattered himself that change of air
+and scene had already been serviceable to his friend; and that time would
+work a complete cure upon that commonest of all maladies,--an unrequited
+passion, or an ill-placed caprice.
+
+Maltravers, indeed, in the habit of conquering, as well as of concealing
+emotion, vigorously and earnestly strove to dethrone the image that had
+usurped his heart. Still vain of his self-command, and still worshipping
+his favourite virtue of Fortitude and his delusive philosophy of the calm
+Golden Mean, he would not weakly indulge the passion, while he so sternly
+fled from its object.
+
+But yet the image of Evelyn pursued,--it haunted him; it came on him
+unawares, in solitude, in crowds. That smile so cheering, yet so soft,
+that ever had power to chase away the shadow from his soul; that youthful
+and luxurious bloom of pure and eloquent thoughts, which was as the
+blossom of genius before its fruit, bitter as well as sweet, is born;
+that rare union of quick feeling and serene temper, which forms the very
+ideal of what we dream of in the mistress, and exact from the wife,--all,
+even more, far more, than the exquisite form and the delicate graces of
+the less durable beauty, returned to him, after every struggle with
+himself; and time only seemed to grave, in deeper if more latent folds of
+his heart, the ineradicable impression.
+
+Maltravers renewed his acquaintance with some persons not unfamiliar to
+the reader.
+
+Valerie de Ventadour--how many recollections of the fairer days of life
+were connected with that name! Precisely as she had never reached to his
+love, but only excited his fancy (the fancy of twenty-two), had her image
+always retained a pleasant and grateful hue; it was blended with no deep
+sorrow, no stern regret, no dark remorse, no haunting shame.
+
+They met again. Madame de Ventadour was still beautiful, and still
+admired,--perhaps more admired than ever; for to the great, fashion and
+celebrity bring a second and yet more popular youth. But Maltravers, if
+rejoiced to see how gently Time had dealt with the fair Frenchwoman, was
+yet more pleased to read in her fine features a more serene and contented
+expression than they had formerly worn. Valerie de Ventadour had
+preceded her younger admirer through the "MYSTERIES of LIFE;" she had
+learned the real objects of being; she distinguished between the Actual
+and the Visionary, the Shadow and the Substance; she had acquired content
+for the present, and looked with quiet hope towards the future. Her
+character was still spotless; or rather, every year of temptation and
+trial had given it a fairer lustre. Love, that might have ruined, being
+once subdued, preserved her from all after danger. The first meeting
+between Maltravers and Valerie was, it is true, one of some embarrassment
+and reserve: not so the second. They did but once, and that slightly,
+recur to the past, and from that moment, as by a tacit understanding,
+true friendship between them dated. Neither felt mortified to see that
+an illusion had passed away,--they were no longer the same in each
+other's eyes. Both might be improved, and were so; but the Valerie and
+the Ernest of Naples were as things dead and gone! Perhaps Valerie's
+heart was even more reconciled to the cure of its soft and luxurious
+malady by the renewal of their acquaintance. The mature and experienced
+reasoner, in whom enthusiasm had undergone its usual change, with the
+calm brow and commanding aspect of sober manhood, was a being so
+different from the romantic boy, new to the actual world of civilized
+toils and pleasures, fresh from the adventures of Eastern wanderings, and
+full of golden dreams of poetry before it settles into authorship or
+action! She missed the brilliant errors, the daring aspirations,--even
+the animated gestures and eager eloquence,--that had interested and
+enamoured her in the loiterer by the shores of Baiae, or amidst the
+tomb-like chambers of Pompeii. For the Maltravers now before her--wiser,
+better, nobler, even handsomer than of yore (for he was one whom manhood
+became better than youth)--the Frenchwoman could at any period have felt
+friendship without danger. It seemed to her, not as it really was, the
+natural _development_, but the very _contrast_, of the ardent, variable,
+imaginative boy, by whose side she had gazed at night on the moonlit
+waters and rosy skies of the soft Parthenope! How does time, after long
+absence, bring to us such contrasts between the one we remember and the
+one we see! And what a melancholy mockery does it seem of our own vain
+hearts, dreaming of impressions never to be changed, and affections that
+never can grow cool!
+
+And now, as they conversed with all the ease of cordial and guileless
+friendship, how did Valerie rejoice in secret that upon that friendship
+there rested no blot of shame! and that she had not forfeited those
+consolations for a home without love, which had at last settled into
+cheerful nor unhallowed resignation,--consolations only to be found in
+the conscience and the pride!
+
+M. de Ventadour had not altered, except that his nose was longer, and
+that he now wore a peruque in full curl instead of his own straight hair.
+But somehow or other--perhaps by the mere charm of custom--he had grown
+more pleasing in Valerie's eyes; habit had reconciled her to his foibles,
+deficiencies, and faults; and, by comparison with others, she could
+better appreciate his good qualities, such as they were,--generosity,
+good-temper, good-nature, and unbounded indulgence to herself. Husband
+and wife have so many interests in common, that when they have jogged on
+through the ups and downs of life a sufficient time, the leash which at
+first galled often grows easy and familiar; and unless the _temper_, or
+rather the disposition and the heart, of either be insufferable, what was
+once a grievous yoke becomes but a companionable tie. And for the rest,
+Valerie, now that sentiment and fancy were sobered down, could take
+pleasure in a thousand things which her pining affections once, as it
+were, overlooked and overshot. She could feel grateful for all the
+advantages her station and wealth procured her; she could cull the roses
+in her reach, without sighing for the amaranths of Elysium.
+
+If the great have more temptations than those of middle life, and if
+their senses of enjoyment become more easily pampered into a sickly
+apathy, so at least (if they can once outlive satiety) they have many
+more resources at their command. There is a great deal of justice in the
+old line, displeasing though it be to those who think of love in a
+cottage, "'Tis best repenting in a coach and six!" If among the
+Eupatrids, the Well Born, there is less love in wedlock, less quiet
+happiness at home, still they are less chained each to each,--they have
+more independence, both the woman and the man, and occupations and the
+solace without can be so easily obtained! Madame de Ventadour, in
+retiring from the mere frivolities of society--from crowded rooms, and
+the inane talk and hollow smiles of mere acquaintanceship--became more
+sensible of the pleasures that her refined and elegant intellect could
+derive from art and talent, and the communion of friendship. She drew
+around her the most cultivated minds of her time and country. Her
+abilities, her wit, and her conversational graces enabled her not only to
+mix on equal terms with the most eminent, but to amalgamate and blend the
+varieties of talent into harmony. The same persons, when met elsewhere,
+seemed to have lost their charm; under Valerie's roof every one breathed
+a congenial atmosphere. And music and letters, and all that can refine
+and embellish civilized life, contributed their resources to this gifted
+and beautiful woman. And thus she found that the _mind_ has excitement
+and occupation, as well as the heart; and, unlike the latter, the culture
+we bestow upon the first ever yields us its return. We talk of education
+for the poor, but we forget how much it is needed by the rich. Valerie
+was a living instance of the advantages to women of knowledge and
+intellectual resources. By them she had purified her fancy, by them she
+had conquered discontent, by them she had grown reconciled to life and to
+her lot! When the heavy heart weighed down the one scale, it was the
+mind that restored the balance.
+
+The spells of Madame de Ventadour drew Maltravers into this charmed
+circle of all that was highest, purest, and most gifted in the society of
+Paris. There he did not meet, as were met in the times of the old
+_regime_, sparkling abbes intent upon intrigues; or amorous old dowagers,
+eloquent on Rousseau; or powdered courtiers, uttering epigrams against
+kings and religions,--straws that foretold the whirlwind. Paul Courier
+was right! Frenchmen are Frenchmen still; they are full of fine phrases,
+and their thoughts smell of the theatre; they mistake foil for diamonds,
+the Grotesque for the Natural, the Exaggerated for the Sublime: but still
+I say, Paul Courier was right,--there is more honesty now in a single
+_salon_ in Paris than there was in all France in the days of Voltaire.
+Vast interests and solemn causes are no longer tossed about like
+shuttlecocks on the battledores of empty tongues. In the
+_bouleversement_ of Revolutions the French have fallen on their feet!
+
+Meeting men of all parties and all classes, Maltravers was struck with
+the heightened tone of public morals, the earnest sincerity of feeling
+which generally pervaded all, as compared with his first recollections of
+the Parisians. He saw that true elements for national wisdom were at
+work, though he saw also that there was no country in which their
+operations would be more liable to disorder, more slow and irregular in
+their results. The French are like the Israelites in the Wilderness,
+when, according to a Hebrew tradition, every morning they seemed on the
+verge of Pisgah, and every evening they were as far from it as ever. But
+still time rolls on, the pilgrimage draws to its close, and the Canaan
+must come at last!
+
+At Valerie's house, Maltravers once more met the De Montaignes. It was a
+painful meeting, for they thought of Cesarini when they met.
+
+It is now time to return to that unhappy man. Cesarini had been removed
+from England when Maltravers quitted it after Lady Florence's death; and
+Maltravers had thought it best to acquaint De Montaigne with all the
+circumstances that had led to his affliction. The pride and the honour
+of the high-spirited Frenchman were deeply shocked by the tale of fraud
+and guilt, softened as it was; but the sight of the criminal, his awful
+punishment, merged every other feeling in compassion. Placed under the
+care of the most skilful practitioners in Paris, great hopes of
+Cesarini's recovery had been at first entertained. Nor was it long,
+indeed, before he appeared entirely restored, so far as the external and
+superficial tokens of sanity could indicate a cure. He testified
+complete consciousness of the kindness of his relations, and clear
+remembrance of the past: but to the incoherent ravings of delirium, an
+intense melancholy, still more deplorable, succeeded. In this state,
+however, he became once more the inmate of his brother-in-law's house;
+and though avoiding all society, except that of Teresa, whose
+affectionate nature never wearied of its cares, he resumed many of his
+old occupations. Again he appeared to take delight in desultory and
+unprofitable studies, and in the cultivation of that luxury of solitary
+men, "the thankless muse." By shunning all topics connected with the
+gloomy cause of his affliction, and talking rather of the sweet
+recollections of Italy and childhood than of more recent events, his
+sister was enabled to soothe the dark hour, and preserve some kind of
+influence over the ill-fated man. One day, however, there fell into his
+hands an English newspaper, which was full of the praises of Lord
+Vargrave; and the article in lauding the peer referred to his services as
+the commoner Lumley Ferrers.
+
+This incident, slight as it appeared, and perfectly untraceable by his
+relations, produced a visible effect on Cesarini; and three days
+afterwards he attempted his own life. The failure of the attempt was
+followed by the fiercest paroxysms. His disease returned in all its
+dread force: and it became necessary to place him under yet stricter
+confinement than he had endured before. Again, about a year from the
+date now entered upon, he had appeared to recover; and again he was
+removed to De Montaigne's house. His relations were not aware of the
+influence which Lord Vargrave's name exercised over Cesarini; in the
+melancholy tale communicated to them by Maltravers, that name had not
+been mentioned. If Maltravers had at one time entertained some vague
+suspicions that Lumley had acted a treacherous part with regard to
+Florence, those suspicions had long since died away for want of
+confirmation; nor did he (nor did therefore the De Montaignes) connect
+Lord Vargrave with the affliction of Cesarini. De Montaigne himself,
+therefore, one day at dinner, alluding to a question of foreign politics
+which had been debated that morning in the Chamber, and in which he
+himself had taken an active part, happened to refer to a speech of
+Vargrave upon the subject, which had made some sensation abroad, as well
+as at home. Teresa asked innocently who Lord Vargrave was; and De
+Montaigne, well acquainted with the biography of the principal English
+statesmen, replied that he had commenced his career as Mr. Ferrers, and
+reminded Teresa that they had once been introduced to him in Paris.
+Cesarini suddenly rose and left the room; his absence was not noted, for
+his comings and goings were ever strange and fitful. Teresa soon
+afterwards quitted the apartment with her children, and De Montaigne, who
+was rather fatigued by the exertions and excitement of the morning,
+stretched himself in his chair to enjoy a short _siesta_. He was
+suddenly awakened by a feeling of pain and suffocation,--awakened in time
+to struggle against a strong grip that had fastened itself at his throat.
+The room was darkened in the growing shades of the evening; and, but for
+the glittering and savage eyes that were fixed on him, he could scarcely
+discern his assailant. He at length succeeded, however, in freeing
+himself, and casting the intended assassin on the ground. He shouted for
+assistance; and the lights borne by the servants who rushed into the room
+revealed to him the face of his brother-in-law. Cesarini, though in
+strong convulsions, still uttered cries and imprecations of revenge; he
+denounced De Montaigne as a traitor and a murderer! In the dark
+confusion of his mind, he had mistaken the guardian for the distant foe,
+whose name sufficed to conjure up the phantoms of the dead, and plunge
+reason into fury.
+
+It was now clear that there was danger and death in Cesarini's disease.
+His madness was pronounced to be capable of no certain and permanent
+cure; he was placed at a new asylum (the superintendents of which were
+celebrated for humanity as well as skill), a little distance from
+Versailles, and there he still remained. Recently his lucid intervals
+had become more frequent and prolonged; but trifles that sprang from his
+own mind, and which no care could prevent or detect, sufficed to renew
+his calamity in all its fierceness. At such times he required the most
+unrelaxing vigilance, for his madness ever took an alarming and ferocious
+character; and had he been left unshackled, the boldest and stoutest of
+the keepers would have dreaded to enter his cell unarmed, or alone.
+
+What made the disease of the mind appear more melancholy and confirmed
+was, that all this time the frame seemed to increase in health and
+strength. This is not an uncommon case in instances of mania--and it is
+generally the worst symptom. In earlier youth, Cesarini had been
+delicate even to effeminacy; but now his proportions were enlarged, his
+form, though still lean and spare, muscular and vigorous,--as if in the
+torpor which usually succeeded to his bursts of frenzy, the animal
+portion gained by the repose or disorganization of the intellectual.
+When in his better and calmer mood--in which indeed none but the
+experienced could have detected his malady--books made his chief delight.
+But then he complained bitterly, if briefly, of the confinement he
+endured, of the injustice be suffered; and as, shunning all companions,
+he walked gloomily amidst the grounds that surrounded that House of Woe,
+his unseen guardians beheld him clenching his hands, as at some visionary
+enemy, or overheard him accuse some phantom of his brain of the torments
+he endured.
+
+Though the reader can detect in Lumley Ferrers the cause of the frenzy,
+and the object of the imprecation, it was not so with the De Montaignes,
+nor with the patient's keepers and physicians; for in his delirium he
+seldom or never gave name to the shadows that he invoked,--not even to
+that of Florence. It is, indeed, no unusual characteristic of madness to
+shun, as by a kind of cunning, all mention of the names of those by whom
+the madness has been caused. It is as if the unfortunates imagined that
+the madness might be undiscovered if the images connected with it were
+unbetrayed.
+
+Such, at this time, was the wretched state of the man, whose talents had
+promised a fair and honourable career, had it not been the wretched
+tendency of his mind, from boyhood upward, to pamper every unwholesome
+and unhallowed feeling as a token of the exuberance of genius. De
+Montaigne, though he touched as lightly as possible upon this dark
+domestic calamity in his first communications with Maltravers, whose
+conduct in that melancholy tale of crime and woe had, he conceived, been
+stamped with generosity and feeling, still betrayed emotions that told
+how much his peace had been embittered.
+
+"I seek to console Teresa," said he, turning away his manly head, "and to
+point out all the blessings yet left to her; but that brother so beloved,
+from whom so much was so vainly expected,--still ever and ever, though
+she strives to conceal it from me, this affliction comes back to her, and
+poisons every thought! Oh, better a thousand times that he had died!
+When reason, sense, almost the soul, are dead, how dark and fiend-like is
+the life that remains behind! And if it should be in the blood--if
+Teresa's children--dreadful thought!"
+
+De Montaigne ceased, thoroughly overcome.
+
+"Do not, my dear friend, so fearfully exaggerate your misfortune, great
+as it is; Cesarini's disease evidently arose from no physical
+conformation,--it was but the crisis, the development, of a
+long-contracted malady of mind, passions morbidly indulged, the reasoning
+faculty obstinately neglected; and yet too he may recover. The further
+memory recedes from the shock he has sustained, the better the chance
+that his mind will regain its tone."
+
+De Montaigne wrung his friend's hand.
+
+"It is strange that from you should come sympathy and comfort!--you whom
+he so injured; you whom his folly or his crime drove from your proud
+career, and your native soil! But Providence will yet, I trust, redeem
+the evil of its erring creature, and I shall yet live to see you restored
+to hope and home, a happy husband, an honoured citizen. Till then, I
+feel as if the curse lingered upon my race."
+
+"Speak not thus. Whatever my destiny, I have recovered from that wound;
+and still, De Montaigne, I find in life that suffering succeeds to
+suffering, and disappointment to disappointment, as wave to wave. To
+endure is the only philosophy; to believe that we shall live again in a
+brighter planet, is the only hope that our reason should accept from our
+desires."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ MONSTRA evenerunt mihi:
+ Introit in aedes ater alienus canis,
+ Anguis per impluvium decidit de tegulis,
+ Gallina cecinit!*--TERENCE.
+
+ * "Prodigies have occurred: a strange black dog came into the house;
+ a snake glided from the tiles, through the court; the hen crowed."
+
+WITH his constitutional strength of mind, and conformably with his
+acquired theories, Maltravers continued to struggle against the latest
+and strongest passion of his life. It might be seen in the paleness of
+his brow, and that nameless expression of suffering which betrays itself
+in the lines about the mouth, that his health was affected by the
+conflict within him; and many a sudden fit of absence and abstraction,
+many an impatient sigh, followed by a forced and unnatural gayety, told
+the observant Valerie that he was the prey of a sorrow he was too proud
+to disclose. He compelled himself, however, to take, or to affect, an
+interest in the singular phenomena of the social state around
+him,--phenomena that, in a happier or serener mood, would indeed have
+suggested no ordinary food for conjecture and meditation.
+
+The state of _visible transition_ is the state of nearly all the
+enlightened communities in Europe. But nowhere is it so pronounced as in
+that country which may be called the Heart of European Civilization.
+There, all to which the spirit of society attaches itself appears broken,
+vague, and half developed,--the Antique in ruins, and the New not formed.
+It is, perhaps, the only country in which the Constructive principle has
+not kept pace with the Destructive. The Has Been is blotted out; the To
+Be is as the shadow of a far land in a mighty and perturbed sea.*
+
+ * The reader will remember that these remarks were written long
+ before the last French Revolution, and when the dynasty of Louis
+ Philippe was generally considered most secure.
+
+Maltravers, who for several years had not examined the progress of modern
+literature, looked with mingled feelings of surprise, distaste, and
+occasional and most reluctant admiration, on the various works which the
+successors of Voltaire and Rousseau have produced, and are pleased to
+call the offspring of Truth united to Romance.
+
+Profoundly versed in the mechanism and elements of those masterpieces of
+Germany and England, from which the French have borrowed so largely while
+pretending to be original, Maltravers was shocked to see the monsters
+which these Frankensteins had created from the relics and the offal of
+the holiest sepulchres. The head of a giant on the limbs of a dwarf,
+incongruous members jumbled together, parts fair and beautiful,--the
+whole a hideous distortion!
+
+"It may be possible," said he to De Montaigne, "that these works are
+admired and extolled; but how they can be vindicated by the examples of
+Shakspeare and Goethe, or even of Byron, who redeemed poor and
+melodramatic conceptions with a manly vigour of execution, an energy and
+completeness of purpose, that Dryden himself never surpassed, is to me
+utterly inconceivable."
+
+"I allow that there is a strange mixture of fustian and maudlin in all
+these things," answered De Montaigne; "but they are but the windfalls of
+trees that may bear rich fruit in due season; meanwhile, any new school
+is better than eternal imitations of the old. As for critical
+vindications of the works themselves, the age that produces the phenomena
+is never the age to classify and analyze them. We have had a deluge, and
+now new creatures spring from the new soil."
+
+"An excellent simile: they come forth from slime and mud,--fetid and
+crawling, unformed and monstrous. I grant exceptions; and even in the
+New School, as it is called, I can admire the real genius, the vital and
+creative power of Victor Hugo. But oh, that a nation which has known a
+Corneille should ever spawn forth a -----! And with these rickety and
+drivelling abortions--all having followers and adulators--your Public can
+still bear to be told that they have improved wonderfully on the day when
+they gave laws and models to the literature of Europe; they can bear to
+hear ----- proclaimed a sublime genius in the same circles which sneer
+down Voltaire!"
+
+Voltaire is out of fashion in France, but Rousseau still maintains his
+influence, and boasts his imitators. Rousseau was the worse man of the
+two; perhaps he was also the more dangerous writer. But his reputation
+is more durable, and sinks deeper into the heart of his nation; and the
+danger of his unstable and capricious doctrines has passed away. In
+Voltaire we behold the fate of all writers purely destructive; their uses
+cease with the evils they denounce. But Rousseau sought to construct as
+well as to destroy; and though nothing could well be more absurd than his
+constructions, still man loves to look back and see even delusive
+images--castles in the air--reared above the waste where cities have
+been. Rather than leave even a burial-ground to solitude, we populate it
+with ghosts.
+
+By degrees, however, as he mastered all the features of the French
+literature, Maltravers become more tolerant of the present defects, and
+more hopeful of the future results. He saw in one respect that that
+literature carried with it its own ultimate redemption.
+
+Its general characteristic--contradistinguished from the literature of
+the old French classic school--is to take the _heart_ for its study; to
+bring the passions and feelings into action, and let the Within have its
+record and history as well as the Without. In all this our contemplative
+analyst began to allow that the French were not far wrong when they
+contended that Shakspeare made the fountain of their inspiration,--a
+fountain which the majority of our later English Fictionists have
+neglected. It is not by a story woven of interesting incidents, relieved
+by delineations of the externals and surface of character, humorous
+phraseology, and every-day ethics, that Fiction achieves its grandest
+ends.
+
+In the French literature, thus characterized, there is much false
+morality, much depraved sentiment, and much hollow rant; but still it
+carries within it the germ of an excellence, which, sooner or later, must
+in the progress of national genius arrive at its full development.
+Meanwhile, it is a consolation to know that nothing really immoral is
+ever permanently popular, or ever, therefore, long deleterious; what is
+dangerous in a work of genius cures itself in a few years. We can now
+read "Werther," and instruct our hearts by its exposition of weakness and
+passion, our taste by its exquisite and unrivalled simplicity of
+construction and detail, without any fear that we shall shoot ourselves
+in top-boots! We can feel ourselves elevated by the noble sentiments of
+"The Robbers," and our penetration sharpened as to the wholesale
+immorality of conventional cant and hypocrisy, without any danger of
+turning banditti and becoming cutthroats from the love of virtue.
+Providence, that has made the genius of the few in all times and
+countries the guide and prophet of the many, and appointed Literature as
+the sublime agent of Civilization, of Opinion, and of Law, has endowed
+the elements it employs with a divine power of self-purification. The
+stream settles of itself by rest and time; the impure particles fly off,
+or are neutralized by the healthful. It is only fools that call the
+works of a master-spirit immoral. There does not exist in the literature
+of the world one _popular_ book that is immoral two centuries after it is
+produced. For, in the heart of nations, the False does not live so long;
+and the True is the Ethical to the end of time.
+
+From the literary Maltravers turned to the political state of France his
+curious and thoughtful eye. He was struck by the resemblance which this
+nation--so civilized, so thoroughly European--bears in one respect to the
+despotisms of the East: the convulsions of the capital decide the fate of
+the country; Paris is the tyrant of France. He saw in this inflammable
+concentration of power, which must ever be pregnant with great evils, one
+of the causes why the revolutions of that powerful and polished people
+are so incomplete and unsatisfactory, why, like Cardinal Fleury, system
+after system, and Government after Government--
+
+ . . . "floruit sine fructu,
+ Defloruit sine luctu."*
+
+ * "Flourished without fruit, and was destroyed without regret."
+
+Maltravers regarded it as a singular instance of perverse ratiocination,
+that, unwarned by experience, the French should still persist in
+perpetuating this political vice; that all their policy should still be
+the policy of Centralization,--a principle which secures the momentary
+strength, but ever ends in the abrupt destruction of States. It is, in
+fact, the perilous tonic, which seems to brace the system, but drives the
+blood to the head,--thus come apoplexy and madness. By centralization
+the provinces are weakened, it is true,--but weak to assist as well as to
+oppose a government, weak to withstand a mob. Nowhere, nowadays, is a
+mob so powerful as in Paris: the political history of Paris is the
+history of snobs. Centralization is an excellent quackery for a despot
+who desires power to last only his own life, and who has but a
+life-interest in the State; but to true liberty and permanent order
+centralization is a deadly poison. The more the provinces govern their
+own affairs, the more we find everything, even to roads and post-horses,
+are left to the people; the more the Municipal Spirit pervades every vein
+of the vast body, the more certain may we be that reform and change must
+come from universal opinion, which is slow, and constructs ere it
+destroys,--not from public clamour, which is sudden, and not only pulls
+down the edifice but sells the bricks!
+
+Another peculiarity in the French Constitution struck and perplexed
+Maltravers. This people so pervaded by the republican sentiment; this
+people, who had sacrificed so much for Freedom; this people, who, in the
+name of Freedom, had perpetrated so much crime with Robespierre, and
+achieved so much glory with Napoleon,--this people were, as a people,
+contented to be utterly excluded from all power and voice in the State!
+Out of thirty-three millions of subjects, less than two hundred thousand
+electors! Where was there ever an oligarchy equal to this? What a
+strange infatuation, to demolish an aristocracy and yet to exclude a
+people! What an anomaly in political architecture, to build an inverted
+pyramid! Where was the safety-valve of governments, where the natural
+vents of excitement in a population so inflammable? The people itself
+were left a mob,--no stake in the State, no action in its affairs, no
+legislative interest in its security.*
+
+ * Has not all this proved prophetic?
+
+On the other hand, it was singular to see how--the aristocracy of birth
+broken down--the aristocracy of letters had arisen. A Peerage, half
+composed of journalists, philosophers, and authors! This was the
+beau-ideal of Algernon Sidney's Aristocratic Republic, of the Helvetian
+vision of what ought to be the dispensation of public distinctions; yet
+was it, after all, a desirable aristocracy? Did society gain; did
+literature lose? Was the priesthood of Genius made more sacred and more
+pure by these worldly decorations and hollow titles; or was aristocracy
+itself thus rendered a more disinterested, a more powerful, or a more
+sagacious element in the administration of law, or the elevation of
+opinion? These questions, not lightly to be answered, could not fail to
+arouse the speculation and curiosity of a man who had been familiar with
+the closet and the forum; and in proportion as he found his interest
+excited in these problems to be solved by a foreign nation, did the
+thoughtful Englishman feel the old instinct--which binds the citizen to
+the fatherland--begin to stir once more earnestly and vividly within him.
+
+"You, yourself individually, are passing like us," said De Montaigne one
+day to Maltravers, "through a state of transition. You have forever left
+the Ideal, and you are carrying your cargo of experience over to the
+Practical. When you reach that haven, you will have completed the
+development of your forces."
+
+"You mistake me,--I am but a spectator."
+
+"Yes; but you desire to go behind the scenes; and he who once grows
+familiar with the green-room, longs to be an actor."
+
+With Madame de Ventadour and the De Montaignes Maltravers passed the
+chief part of his time. They knew how to appreciate his nobler and to
+love his gentler attributes and qualities; they united in a warm interest
+for his future fate; they combated his Philosophy of Inaction; and they
+felt that it was because he was not happy that he was not wise.
+Experience was to him what ignorance had been to Alice. His faculties
+were chilled and dormant. As affection to those who are unskilled in all
+things, so is affection to those who despair of all things. The mind of
+Maltravers was a world without a sun!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ COELEBS, quid agam?*--HORACE.
+
+ * "What shall I do, a bachelor?"
+
+IN a room at Fenton's Hotel sat Lord Vargrave and Caroline Lady
+Doltimore,--two months after the marriage of the latter.
+
+"Doltimore has positively fixed, then, to go abroad on your return from
+Cornwall?"
+
+"Positively,--to Paris. You can join us at Christmas, I trust?"
+
+"I have no doubt of it; and before then I hope that I shall have arranged
+certain public matters, which at present harass and absorb me even more
+than my private affairs."
+
+"You have managed to obtain terms with Mr. Douce, and to delay the
+repayment of your debt to him?"
+
+"Yes, I hope so, till I touch Miss Cameron's income; which will be mine,
+I trust, by the time she is eighteen."
+
+"You mean the forfeit money of thirty thousand pounds?"
+
+"Not I; I mean what I said!"
+
+"Can you really imagine she will still accept your hand?"
+
+"With your aid, I do imagine it! Hear me. You must take Evelyn with you
+to Paris. I have no doubt but that she will be delighted to accompany
+you; nay, I have paved the way so far. For, of course, as a friend of
+the family, and guardian to Evelyn, I have maintained a correspondence
+with Lady Vargrave. She informs me that Evelyn has been unwell and
+low-spirited; that she fears Brook-Green is dull for her, etc. I wrote,
+in reply, to say that the more my ward saw of the world, prior to her
+accession, when of age, to the position she would occupy in it, the more
+she would fulfil my late uncle's wishes with respect to her education and
+so forth. I added that as you were going to Paris, and as you loved her
+so much, there could not be a better opportunity for her entrance into
+life under the most favourable auspices. Lady Vargrave's answer to this
+letter arrived this morning: she will consent to such an arrangement
+should you propose it."
+
+"But what good will result to yourself in this project? At Paris you
+will be sure of rivals, and--"
+
+"Caroline," interrupted Lord Vargrave, "I know very well what you would
+say: I also know all the danger I must incur. But it is a choice of
+evils, and I choose the least. You see that while she is at Brook-Green,
+and under the eye of that sly old curate, I can effect nothing with her.
+There, she is entirely removed from my influence: not so abroad; not so
+under your roof. Listen to me still further. In this country, and
+especially in the seclusion and shelter of Brook-Green, I have no scope
+for any of those means which I shall be compelled to resort to, in
+failure of all else."
+
+"What can you intend?" said Caroline, with a slight shudder.
+
+"I don't know what I intend yet. But this, at least, I can tell
+you,--that Miss Cameron's fortune I must and will have. I am a desperate
+man; and I can play a desperate game, if need be."
+
+"And do you think that _I_ will aid, will abet?"
+
+"Hush, not so loud! Yes, Caroline, you will, and you must aid and abet
+me in any project I may form."
+
+"Must! Lord Vargrave?"
+
+"Ay," said Lumley, with a smile, and sinking his voice into a
+whisper,--"ay! _you are in my power_!"
+
+"Traitor!--you cannot dare! you cannot mean--"
+
+"I mean nothing more than to remind you of the ties that exist between
+us,--ties which ought to render us the firmest and most confidential of
+friends. Come, Caroline, recollect all the benefit must not lie on one
+side. I have obtained for you rank and wealth; I have procured you a
+husband,--you must help me to a wife!"
+
+Caroline sank back, and covered her face with her hands.
+
+"I allow," continued Vargrave, coldly,--"I allow that your beauty and
+talent were sufficient of themselves to charm a wiser man than Doltimore;
+but had I not suppressed jealousy, sacrificed love, had I dropped a hint
+to your liege lord,--nay, had I not fed his lap-dog vanity by all the
+cream and sugar of flattering falsehoods,--you would be Caroline Merton
+still!"
+
+"Oh, would that I were! Oh that I were anything but your tool, your
+victim! Fool that I was! wretch that I am! I am rightly punished!"
+
+"Forgive me, forgive me, dearest," said Vargrave, soothingly; "I was to
+blame, forgive me: but you irritated, you maddened me, by your seeming
+indifference to my prosperity, my fate. I tell you again and again,
+pride of my soul, I tell you, that you are the only being I love! and if
+you will allow me, if you will rise superior, as I once fondly hoped, to
+all the cant and prejudice of convention and education, the only woman I
+could ever respect, as well as love. Oh, hereafter, when you see me at
+that height to which I feel that I am born to climb, let me think that to
+your generosity, your affection, your zeal, I owed the ascent. At
+present I am on the precipice; without your hand I fall forever. My own
+fortune is gone; the miserable forfeit due to me, if Evelyn continues to
+reject my suit, when she has arrived at the age of eighteen, is deeply
+mortgaged. I am engaged in vast and daring schemes, in which I may
+either rise to the highest station or lose that which I now hold. In
+either case, how necessary to me is wealth: in the one instance, to
+maintain my advancement; in the other, to redeem my fall."
+
+"But did you not tell me," said Caroline, "that Evelyn proposed and
+promised to place her fortune at your disposal, even while rejecting your
+hand?"
+
+"Absurd mockery!" exclaimed Vargrave; "the foolish boast of a girl,--an
+impulse liable to every caprice. Can you suppose that when she launches
+into the extravagance natural to her age and necessary to her position,
+she will not find a thousand demands upon her rent-roll not dreamed of
+now; a thousand vanities and baubles that will soon erase my poor and
+hollow claim from her recollection? Can you suppose that, if she marry
+another, her husband will ever consent to a child's romance? And even
+were all this possible, were it possible that girls were not extravagant,
+and that husbands had no common-sense, is it for me, Lord Vargrave, to be
+a mendicant upon reluctant bounty,--a poor cousin, a pensioned
+led-captain? Heaven knows I have as little false pride as any man, but
+still this is a degradation I cannot stoop to. Besides, Caroline, I am
+no miser, no Harpagon: I do not want wealth for wealth's sake, but for
+the advantages it bestows,--respect, honour, position; and these I get as
+the husband of the great heiress. Should I get them as her dependant?
+No: for more than six years I have built my schemes and shaped my conduct
+according to one assured and definite object; and that object I shall not
+now, at the eleventh hour, let slip from my hands. Enough of this: you
+will pass Brook-Green in returning from Cornwall; you will take Evelyn
+with you to Paris,--leave the rest to me. Fear no folly, no violence,
+from my plans, whatever they may be: I work in the dark. Nor do I
+despair that Evelyn will love, that Evelyn will voluntarily accept me
+yet: my disposition is sanguine; I look to the bright side of things; do
+the same!"
+
+Here their conference was interrupted by Lord Doltimore, who lounged
+carelessly into the room, with his hat on one side. "Ah, Vargrave, how
+are you? You will not forget the letters of introduction? Where are you
+going, Caroline?"
+
+"Only to my own room, to put on my bonnet; the carriage will be here in a
+few minutes." And Caroline escaped.
+
+"So you go to Cornwall to-morrow, Doltimore?"
+
+"Yes; cursed bore! but Lady Elizabeth insists on seeing us, and I don't
+object to a week's good shooting. The old lady, too, has something to
+leave, and Caroline had no dowry,--not that I care for it; but still
+marriage is expensive."
+
+"By the by, you will want the five thousand pounds you lent me?"
+
+"Why, whenever it is convenient."
+
+Say no more,--it shall be seen to. Doltimore, I am very anxious that
+Lady Doltimore's _debut_ at Paris should be brilliant: everything depends
+on falling into the right set. For myself, I don't care about fashion,
+and never did; but if I were married, and an idle man like you, it might
+be different."
+
+"Oh, you will be very useful to us when we return to London. Meanwhile,
+you know, you have my proxy in the Lords. I dare say there will be some
+sharp work the first week or two after the recess."
+
+"Very likely; and depend on one thing, my dear Doltimore, that when I am
+in the Cabinet, a certain friend of mine shall be an earl. Adieu."
+
+"Good-by, my dear Vargrave, good-by; and, I say,--I say, don't distress
+yourself about that trifle; a few months hence it will suit me just as
+well."
+
+"Thanks. I will just look into my accounts, and use you without
+ceremony. Well, I dare say we shall meet at Paris. Oh, I forgot,--I
+observe that you have renewed your intimacy with Legard. Now, he is a
+very good fellow, and I gave him that place to oblige you; still, as you
+are no longer a _garcon_--but perhaps I shall offend you?"
+
+"Not at all. What is there against Legard?"
+
+"Nothing in the world,--but he is a bit of a boaster. I dare say his
+ancestor was a Gascon, poor fellow!--and he affects to say that you can't
+choose a coat, or buy a horse, without his approval and advice,--that he
+can turn you round his finger. Now this hurts your consequence in the
+world,--you don't get credit for your own excellent sense and taste.
+Take my advice, avoid these young hangers-on of fashion, these club-room
+lions. Having no importance of their own, they steal the importance of
+their friends. _Verbum sap_."
+
+"You are very right,--Legard _is_ a coxcomb; and now I see why he talked
+of joining us at Paris."
+
+"Don't let him do any such thing! He will be telling the Frenchmen that
+her ladyship is in love with him, ha, ha!"
+
+"Ha, ha!--a very good joke--poor Caroline!--very good joke!"
+
+"Well, good-by, once more." And Vargrave closed the door.
+
+"Legard go to Paris--not if Evelyn goes there!" muttered Lumley.
+"Besides, I want no partner in the little that one can screw out of this
+blockhead."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ MR. BUMBLECASE, a word with you--I have a little business.
+ Farewell, the goodly Manor of Blackacre, with all its woods,
+ underwoods, and appurtenances whatever.--WYCHERLEY: _Plain Dealer_.
+
+IN quitting Fenton's Hotel, Lord Vargrave entered into one of the clubs
+in St. James's Street: this was rather unusual with him, for he was not a
+club man. It was not his system to spend his time for nothing. But it
+was a wet December day; the House was not yet assembled, and he had done
+his official business. Here, as he was munching a biscuit and reading an
+article in one of the ministerial papers--the heads of which he himself
+had supplied--Lord Saxingham joined and drew him to the window.
+
+"I have reason to think," said the earl, "that your visit to Windsor did
+good."
+
+"Ah, indeed; so I fancied."
+
+"I do not think that a certain personage will ever consent to the -----
+question; and the premier, whom I saw to-day, seems chafed and
+irritated."
+
+"Nothing can be better; I know that we are in the right boat."
+
+"I hope it is not true, Lumley, that your marriage with Miss Cameron is
+broken off; such was the _on dit_ in the club, just before you entered."
+
+"Contradict it, my dear lord,--contradict it. I hope by the spring to
+introduce Lady Vargrave to you. But who broached the absurd report?"
+
+"Why, your _protege_, Legard, says he heard so from his uncle, who heard
+it from Sir John Merton."
+
+"Legard is a puppy, and Sir John Merton a jackass. Legard had better
+attend to his office, if he wants to get on; and I wish you'd tell him
+so. I have heard somewhere that he talks of going to Paris,--you can
+just hint to him that he must give up such idle habits. Public
+functionaries are not now what they were,--people are expected to work
+for the money they pocket; otherwise Legard is a cleverish fellow, and
+deserves promotion. A word or two of caution from you will do him a vast
+deal of good."
+
+"Be sure I will lecture him. Will you dine with me to-day, Lumley?"
+
+"No. I expect my co-trustee, Mr. Douce, on matters of business,--a
+_tete-a-tete_ dinner."
+
+Lord Vargrave had, as he conceived, very cleverly talked over Mr. Douce
+into letting his debt to that gentleman run on for the present; and in
+the meanwhile, he had overwhelmed Mr. Douce with his condescensions.
+That gentleman had twice dined with Lord Vargrave, and Lord Vargrave had
+twice dined with him. The occasion of the present more familiar
+entertainment was in a letter from Mr. Douce, begging to see Lord
+Vargrave on particular business; and Vargrave, who by no means liked the
+word _business_ from a gentleman to whom he owed money, thought that it
+would go off more smoothly if sprinkled with champagne.
+
+Accordingly, he begged "My dear Mr. Douce" to excuse ceremony, and dine
+with him on Thursday at seven o'clock,--he was really so busy all the
+mornings.
+
+At seven o'clock, Mr. Douce came. The moment he entered Vargrave called
+out, at the top of his voice, "Dinner immediately!" And as the little
+man bowed and shuffled, and fidgeted and wriggled (while Vargrave shook
+him by the hand), as if he thought he was going himself to be spitted,
+his host said, "With your leave, we'll postpone the budget till after
+dinner. It is the fashion nowadays to postpone budgets as long as we
+can,--eh? Well, and how are all at home? Devilish cold; is it not? So
+you go to your villa every day? That's what keeps you in such capital
+health. You know I had a villa too,--though I never had time to go
+there."
+
+"Ah, yes; I think, I remember, at Ful-Ful-Fulham!" gasped out Mr. Douce.
+"Your poor uncle's--now Lady Var-Vargrave's jointure-house. So--so--"
+
+"She don't live there!" burst in Vargrave (far too impatient to be
+polite). "Too cockneyfied for her,--gave it up to me; very pretty place,
+but d-----d expensive. I could not afford it, never went there, and so I
+have let it to my wine-merchant; the rent just pays his bill. You will
+taste some of the sofas and tables to-day in his champagne. I don't know
+how it is, I always fancy my sherry smells like my poor uncle's old
+leather chair: very odd smell it had,--a kind of respectable smell! I
+hope you're hungry,--dinner's ready."
+
+Vargrave thus rattled away in order to give the good banker to understand
+that his affairs were in the most flourishing condition: and he continued
+to keep up the ball all dinnertime, stopping Mr. Douce's little,
+miserable, gasping, dacelike mouth, with "a glass of wine, Douce?" or "by
+the by, Douce," whenever he saw that worthy gentleman about to make the
+AEschylean improvement of a second person in the dialogue.
+
+At length, dinner being fairly over, and the servants withdrawn, Lord
+Vargrave, knowing that sooner or later Douce would have his say, drew his
+chair to the fire, put his feet on the fender, and cried, as he tossed
+off his claret, "NOW, DOUCE, WHAT CAN I DO FOR YOU?"
+
+Mr. Douce opened his eyes to their full extent, and then as rapidly
+closed them; and this operation he continued till, having snuffed them so
+much that they could by no possibility burn any brighter, he was
+convinced that he had not misunderstood his lordship.
+
+"Indeed, then," he began, in his most frightened manner,
+"indeed--I--really, your lordship is very good--I--I wanted to speak to
+you on business."
+
+"Well, what can I do for you,--some little favour, eh? Snug sinecure for
+a favourite clerk, or a place in the Stamp-Office for your fat
+footman--John, I think you call him? You know, my dear Douce, you may
+command me."
+
+"Oh, indeed, you are all good-good-goodness--but--but--"
+
+Vargrave threw himself back, and shutting his eyes and pursing up his
+mouth, resolutely suffered Mr. Douce to unbosom himself without
+interruption. He was considerably relieved to find that the business
+referred to related only to Miss Cameron.
+
+Mr. Douce having reminded Lord Vargrave, as he had often done before, of
+the wishes of his uncle, that the greater portion of the money bequeathed
+to Evelyn should be invested in land, proceeded to say that a most
+excellent opportunity presented itself for just such a purchase as would
+have rejoiced the heart of the late lord,--a superb place, in the style
+of Blickling,--deer-park six miles round, ten thousand acres of land,
+bringing in a clear eight thousand pounds a year, purchase money only two
+hundred and forty thousand pounds. The whole estate was, indeed, much
+larger,--eighteen thousand acres; but then the more distant farms could
+be sold in different lots, in order to meet the exact sum Miss Cameron's
+trustees were enabled to invest.
+
+"Well," said Vargrave, "and where is it? My poor uncle was after De
+Clifford's estate, but the title was not good."
+
+"Oh! this--is much--much--much fi-fi-finer; famous investment--but rather
+far off--in--in the north, Li-Li-Lisle Court."
+
+"Lisle Court! Why, does not that belong to Colonel Maltravers?"
+
+"Yes. It is, indeed, quite, I may say, a secret-yes--really--a
+se-se-secret--not in the market yet--not at all--soon snapped up."
+
+"Humph! Has Colonel Maltravers been extravagant?"
+
+"No; but he does not--I hear--or rather Lady--Julia--so I'm told, yes,
+indeed--does not li-like--going so far, and so they spend the winter in
+Italy instead. Yes--very odd--very fine place."
+
+Lumley was slightly acquainted with the elder brother of his old
+friend,--a man who possessed some of Ernest's faults,--very proud, and
+very exacting, and very fastidious; but all these faults were developed
+in the ordinary commonplace world, and were not the refined abstractions
+of his younger brother.
+
+Colonel Maltravers had continued, since he entered the Guards, to be
+thoroughly the man of fashion, and nothing more. But rich and well-born,
+and highly connected, and thoroughly _a la mode_ as he was, his pride
+made him uncomfortable in London, while his fastidiousness made him
+uncomfortable in the country. He was _rather_ a great person, but he
+wanted to be a _very_ great person. This he was at Lisle Court; but that
+did not satisfy him. He wanted not only to be a very great person, but a
+very great person among very great persons--and squires and parsons bored
+him. Lady Julia, his wife, was a fine lady, inane and pretty, who saw
+everything through her husband's eyes. He was quite master _chez lui_,
+was Colonel Maltravers! He lived a great deal abroad; for on the
+Continent his large income seemed princely, while his high character,
+thorough breeding, and personal advantages, which were remarkable,
+secured him a greater position in foreign courts than at his own. Two
+things had greatly disgusted him with Lisle Court,--trifles they might be
+with others, but they were not trifles to Cuthbert Maltravers; in the
+first place, a man who had been his father's attorney, and who was the
+very incarnation of coarse unrepellable familiarity, had bought an estate
+close by the said Lisle Court, and had, _horresco referens_, been made a
+baronet! Sir Gregory Gubbins took precedence of Colonel Maltravers! He
+could not ride out but he met Sir Gregory; he could not dine out but he
+had the pleasure of walking behind Sir Gregory's bright blue coat with
+its bright brass buttons. In his last visit to Lisle Court, which he had
+then crowded with all manner of fine people, he had seen--the very first
+morning after his arrival--seen from the large window of his state
+saloon, a great staring white, red, blue, and gilt thing, at the end of
+the stately avenue planted by Sir Guy Maltravers in honour of the victory
+over the Spanish armada. He looked in mute surprise, and everybody else
+looked; and a polite German count, gazing through his eye-glass, said,
+"Ah! dat is vat you call a vim in your _pays_,--the vim of Colonel
+Maltravers!"
+
+This "vim" was the pagoda summer-house of Sir Gregory Gubbins, erected in
+imitation of the Pavilion at Brighton. Colonel Maltravers was miserable:
+the _vim_ haunted him; it seemed ubiquitous; he could not escape it,--it
+was built on the highest spot in the county. Ride, walk, sit where he
+would, the _vim_ stared at him; and he thought he saw little mandarins
+shake their round little heads at him. This was one of the great curses
+of Lisle Court; the other was yet more galling. The owners of Lisle
+Court had for several generations possessed the dominant interest in the
+county town. The colonel himself meddled little in politics, and was too
+fine a gentleman for the drudgery of parliament. He had offered the seat
+to Ernest, when the latter had commenced his public career; but the
+result of a communication proved that their political views were
+dissimilar, and the negotiation dropped without ill-feeling on either
+side. Subsequently a vacancy occurred; and Lady Julia's brother (just
+made a Lord of the Treasury) wished to come into parliament, so the
+county town was offered to him. Now, the proud commoner had married into
+the family of a peer as proud as himself, and Colonel Maltravers was
+always glad whenever he could impress his consequence on his connections
+by doing them a favour. He wrote to his steward to see that the thing
+was properly settled, and came down on the nomination-day "to share the
+triumph and partake the gale." Guess his indignation, when he found the
+nephew of Sir Gregory Gubbins was already in the field! The result of
+the election was that Mr. Augustus Gubbins came in, and that Colonel
+Maltravers was pelted with cabbage-stalks, and accused of attempting to
+sell the worthy and independent electors to a government nominee! In
+shame and disgust, Colonel Maltravers broke up his establishment at Lisle
+Court, and once more retired to the Continent.
+
+About a week from the date now touched upon, Lady Julia and himself had
+arrived in London from Vienna; and a new mortification awaited the
+unfortunate owner of Lisle Court. A railroad company had been
+established, of which Sir Gregory Gubbins was a principal shareholder;
+and the speculator, Mr. Augustus Gubbins, one of the "most useful men in
+the House," had undertaken to carry the bill through parliament. Colonel
+Maltravers received a letter of portentous size, inclosing the map of the
+places which this blessed railway was to bisect; and lo! just at the
+bottom of his park ran a portentous line, which informed him of the
+sacrifice he was expected to make for the public good,--especially for
+the good of that very county town, the inhabitants of which had pelted
+him with cabbage-stalks!
+
+Colonel Maltravers lost all patience. Unacquainted with our wise
+legislative proceedings, he was not aware that a railway planned is a
+very different thing from a railway made; and that parliamentary
+committees are not by any means favourable to schemes for carrying the
+public through a gentleman's park.
+
+"This country is not to be lived in," said he to Lady Julia; "it gets
+worse and worse every year. I am sure I never had any comfort in Lisle
+Court. I've a great mind to sell it."
+
+"Why, indeed, as we have no sons, only daughters, and Ernest is so well
+provided for," said Lady Julia, "and the place is so far from London, and
+the neighbourhood is so disagreeable, I think we could do very well
+without it."
+
+Colonel Maltravers made no answer, but he revolved the pros and cons; and
+then he began to think how much it cost him in gamekeepers and carpenters
+and bailiffs and gardeners and Heaven knows whom besides; and then the
+pagoda flashed across him; and then the cabbage-stalks, and at last he
+went to his solicitor.
+
+"You may sell Lisle Court," said he, quietly.
+
+The solicitor dipped his pen in the ink. "The particulars, Colonel?"
+
+"Particulars of Lisle Court! everybody, that is, every gentleman, knows
+Lisle Court!"
+
+"Price, sir?"
+
+"You know the rents; calculate accordingly. It will be too large a
+purchase for one individual; sell the outlying woods and farms separately
+from the rest."
+
+"We must draw up an advertisement, Colonel."
+
+"Advertise Lisle Court! out of the question, sir. I can have no
+publicity given to my intention: mention it quietly to any capitalist;
+but keep it out of the papers till it is all settled. In a week or two
+you will find a purchaser,--the sooner the better."
+
+Besides his horror of newspaper comments and newspaper puffs, Colonel
+Maltravers dreaded that his brother--then in Paris--should learn his
+intention, and attempt to thwart it; and, somehow or other, the colonel
+was a little in awe of Ernest, and a little ashamed of his resolution.
+He did not know that, by a singular coincidence, Ernest himself had
+thought of selling Burleigh.
+
+The solicitor was by no means pleased with this way of settling the
+matter. However, he whispered it about that Lisle Court was in the
+market; and as it really was one of the most celebrated places of its
+kind in England, the whisper spread among bankers and brewers and
+soap-boilers and other rich people--the Medici of the New Noblesse rising
+up amongst us--till at last it reached the ears of Mr. Douce.
+
+Lord Vargrave, however bad a man he might be, had not many of those vices
+of character which belong to what I may call the _personal class of
+vices_,--that is, he had no ill-will to individuals. He was not,
+ordinarily, a jealous man, nor a spiteful, nor a malignant, nor a
+vindictive man: his vices arose from utter indifference to all men, and
+all things--except as conducive to his own ends. He would not have
+injured a worm if it did him no good; but he would have set any house on
+fire if he had no other means of roasting his own eggs. Yet still, if
+any feeling of personal rancour could harbour in his breast, it was,
+first, towards Evelyn Cameron, and, secondly, towards Ernest Maltravers.
+For the first time in his life, he did long for revenge,--revenge against
+the one for stealing his patrimony, and refusing his hand; and that
+revenge he hoped to gratify.
+
+As to the other, it was not so much dislike he felt, as an uneasy
+sentiment of inferiority. However well he himself had got on in the
+world, he yet grudged the reputation of a man whom he had remembered a
+wayward, inexperienced boy: he did not love to hear any one praise
+Maltravers. He fancied, too, that this feeling was reciprocal, and that
+Maltravers was pained at hearing of any new step in his own career. In
+fact, it was that sort of jealousy which men often feel for the
+companions of their youth, whose characters are higher than their own,
+and whose talents are of an order they do not quite comprehend. Now, it
+certainly did seem at that moment to Lord Vargrave that it would be a
+most splendid triumph over Mr. Maltravers of Burleigh to be lord of Lisle
+Court, the hereditary seat of the elder branch of the family to be, as it
+were, in the very shoes of Mr. Ernest Maltravers's elder brother. He
+knew, too, that it was a property of great consequence. Lord Vargrave of
+Lisle Court would hold a very different post in the peerage from Lord
+Vargrave of -----, Fulham! Nobody would call the owner of Lisle Court an
+adventurer; nobody would suspect such a man of caring three straws about
+place and salary. And if he married Evelyn, and if Evelyn bought Lisle
+Court, would not Lisle Court be his? He vaulted over the _ifs_, stiff
+monosyllables though they were, with a single jump. Besides, even should
+the thing come to nothing, there was the very excuse he sought for
+joining Evelyn at Paris, for conversing with her, consulting her. It was
+true that the will of the late lord left it solely at the discretion of
+the trustees to select such landed investment as seemed best to them; but
+still it was, if not legally necessary, at least but a proper courtesy to
+consult Evelyn. And plans, and drawings, and explanations, and
+rent-rolls, would justify him in spending morning after morning alone
+with her.
+
+Thus cogitating, Lord Vargrave suffered Mr. Douce to stammer out sentence
+upon sentence, till at length, as he rang for coffee, his lordship
+stretched himself with the air of a man stretching himself into
+self-complacency or a good thing, and said,--
+
+"Mr. Douce, I will go down to Lisle Court as soon as I can; I will see
+it; I will ascertain all about it; I will consider favourably of it. I
+agree with you, I think it will do famously."
+
+"But," said Mr. Douce, who seemed singularly anxious about the matter,
+"we must make haste, my lord; for really--yes, indeed--if--if--if Baron
+Roths--Rothschild should--that is to say--"
+
+"Oh, yes, I understand; keep the thing close, my dear Douce; make friends
+with the colonel's lawyer; play with him a little, till I can run down."
+
+"Besides, you see, you are such a good man of business, my lord--that you
+see, that--yes, really--there must be time to draw out the
+purchase-money--sell out at a prop--prop--"
+
+"To be sure, to be sure! Bless me, how late it is! I am afraid my
+carriage is ready. I must go to Madame de L-----'s."
+
+Mr. Douce, who seemed to have much more to say, was forced to keep it for
+another time, and to take his leave. Lord Vargrave went to Madame de
+L-----'s. His position in what is called Exclusive Society was rather
+peculiar. By those who affected to be the best judges, the frankness of
+his manner and the easy oddity of his conversation were pronounced at
+variance with the tranquil serenity of thorough breeding. But still he
+was a great favourite both with fine ladies and dandies. His handsome
+keen countenance, his talents, his politics, his intrigues, and an
+animated boldness in his bearing, compensated for his constant violation
+of all the minutiae of orthodox conventionalism.
+
+At this house he met Colonel Maltravers, and took an opportunity to renew
+his acquaintance with that gentleman. He then referred, in a
+confidential whisper, to the communication he had received touching Lisle
+Court.
+
+"Yes," said the colonel, "I suppose I must sell the place, if I can do so
+quietly. To be sure, when I first spoke to my lawyer it was in a moment
+of vexation, on hearing that the ----- railroad was to go through the
+park, but I find that I overrated that danger. Still, if you will do me
+the honour to go and look over the place, you will find very good
+shooting; and when you come back, you can see if it will suit you. Don't
+say anything about it when you are there; it is better not to publish my
+intention all over the county. I shall have Sir Gregory Gubbins offering
+to buy it if you do!"
+
+"You may depend on my discretion. Have you heard anything of your
+brother lately?"
+
+"Yes; I fancy he is going to Switzerland. He would soon be in England,
+if he heard I was going to part with Lisle Court!"
+
+"What, it would vex him so?"
+
+"I fear it would; but he has a nice old place of his own, not half so
+large, and therefore not half so troublesome as Lisle Court."
+
+"Ay! and he _did_ talk of selling that nice old place."
+
+"Selling Burleigh! you surprise me. But really country places in England
+_are_ a bore. I suppose he has his Gubbins as well as myself!"
+
+Here the chief minister of the government adorned by Lord Vargrave's
+virtues passed by, and Lumley turned to greet him.
+
+The two ministers talked together most affectionately in a close
+whisper,--so affectionately, that one might have seen, with half an eye,
+that they hated each other like poison!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ INSPICERE tanquam in speculum, in vitas omnium
+ Jubeo.*--TERENCE.
+
+ * "I bid you look into the lives of all men, as
+ it were into a mirror."
+
+ERNEST MALTRAVERS still lingered at Paris: he gave up all notion of
+proceeding farther. He was, in fact, tired of travel. But there was
+another reason that chained him to that "Navel of the Earth,"--there is
+not anywhere a better sounding-board to London rumours than the English
+_quartier_ between the Boulevard des Italiennes and the Tuileries; here,
+at all events, he should soonest learn the worst: and every day, as he
+took up the English newspapers, a sick feeling of apprehension and fear
+came over him. No! till the seal was set upon the bond, till the Rubicon
+was passed, till Miss Cameron was the wife of Lord Vargrave, he could
+neither return to the home that was so eloquent with the recollections of
+Evelyn, nor, by removing farther from England, delay the receipt of an
+intelligence which he vainly told himself he was prepared to meet.
+
+He continued to seek such distractions from thought as were within his
+reach; and as his heart was too occupied for pleasures which had, indeed,
+long since palled, those distractions were of the grave and noble
+character which it is a prerogative of the intellect to afford to the
+passions.
+
+De Montaigne was neither a Doctrinaire nor a Republican,--and yet,
+perhaps, he was a little of both. He was one who thought that the
+tendency of all European States is towards Democracy; but he by no means
+looked upon Democracy as a panacea for all legislative evils. He thought
+that, while a writer should be in advance of his time, a statesman should
+content himself with marching by its side; that a nation could not be
+ripened, like an exotic, by artificial means; that it must be developed
+only by natural influences. He believed that forms of government are
+never universal in their effects. Thus, De Montaigne conceived that we
+were wrong in attaching more importance to legislative than to social
+reforms. He considered, for instance, that the surest sign of our
+progressive civilization is in our growing distaste to capital
+punishments. He believed, not in the ultimate _perfection_ of mankind,
+but in their progressive _perfectibility_. He thought that improvement
+was indefinite; but he did not place its advance more under Republican
+than under Monarchical forms. "Provided," he was wont to say, "all our
+checks to power are of the right kind, it matters little to what hands
+the power itself is confided."
+
+"AEgina and Athens," said he, "were republics--commercial and
+maritime--placed under the same sky, surrounded by the same neighbours,
+and rent by the same struggles between Oligarchy and Democracy. Yet,
+while one left the world an immortal heirloom of genius, where are the
+poets, the philosophers, the statesmen of the other? Arrian tells us of
+republics in India, still supposed to exist by modern investigators; but
+they are not more productive of liberty of thought, or ferment of
+intellect, than the principalities. In Italy there were commonwealths as
+liberal as the Republic of Florence; but they did not produce a
+Machiavelli or a Dante. What daring thought, what gigantic speculation,
+what democracy of wisdom and genius, have sprung up amongst the
+despotisms of Germany! You cannot educate two individuals so as to
+produce the same results from both; you cannot, by similar constitutions
+(which are the education of nations) produce the same results from
+different communities. The proper object of statesmen should be to give
+every facility to the people to develop themselves, and every facility to
+philosophy to dispute and discuss as to the ultimate objects to be
+obtained. But you cannot, as a practical legislator, place your country
+under a melon-frame: it must grow of its own accord."
+
+I do not say whether or not De Montaigne was wrong! but Maltravers saw at
+least that he was faithful to his theories; that all his motives were
+sincere, all his practice pure. He could not but allow, too, that in his
+occupations and labours, De Montaigne appeared to feel a sublime
+enjoyment; that, in linking all the powers of his mind to active and
+useful objects, De Montaigne was infinitely happier than the Philosophy
+of Indifference, the scorn of ambition, had made Maltravers. The
+influence exercised by the large-souled and practical Frenchman over the
+fate and the history of Maltravers was very peculiar.
+
+De Montaigne had not, apparently and directly, operated upon his friend's
+outward destinies; but he had done so indirectly, by operating on his
+mind. Perhaps it was he who had consolidated the first wavering and
+uncertain impulses of Maltravers towards literary exertion; it was he who
+had consoled him for the mortifications at the earlier part of his
+career; and now, perhaps he might serve, in the full vigour of his
+intellect, permanently to reconcile the Englishman to the claims of life.
+
+There were, indeed, certain conversations which Maltravers held with De
+Montaigne, the germ and pith of which it is necessary that I should place
+before the reader,--for I write the inner as well as the outer history of
+a man; and the great incidents of life are not brought about only by the
+dramatic agencies of others, but also by our own reasonings and habits of
+thought. What I am now about to set down may be wearisome, but it is not
+episodical; and I promise that it shall be the last didactic conversation
+in the work.
+
+One day Maltravers was relating to De Montaigne all that he had been
+planning at Burleigh for the improvement of his peasantry, and all his
+theories respecting Labour-Schools and Poor-rates, when De Montaigne
+abruptly turned round, and said,--
+
+"You have, then, really found that in your own little village your
+exertions--exertions not very arduous, not demanding a tenth part of your
+time--have done practical good?"
+
+"Certainly I think so," replied Maltravers, in some surprise.
+
+"And yet it was but yesterday that you declared that all the labours of
+Philosophy and Legislation were labours vain; their benefits equivocal
+and uncertain; that as the sea, where it loses in one place, gains in
+another, so civilization only partially profits us, stealing away one
+virtue while it yields another, and leaving the large proportions of good
+and evil eternally the same."
+
+"True; but I never said that man might not relieve individuals by
+individual exertion: though he cannot by abstract theories--nay, even by
+practical action in the wide circle--benefit the mass."
+
+"Do you not employ on behalf of individuals the same moral agencies that
+wise legislation or sound philosophy would adopt towards the multitude?
+For example, you find that the children of your village are happier, more
+orderly, more obedient, promise to be wiser and better men in their own
+station of life, from the new, and, I grant, excellent system of school
+discipline and teaching that you have established. What you have done in
+one village, why should not legislation do throughout a kingdom? Again,
+you find that, by simply holding out hope and emulation to industry, by
+making stern distinctions between the energetic and the idle, the
+independent exertion and the pauper-mendicancy, you have found a lever by
+which you have literally moved and shifted the little world around you.
+But what is the difference here between the rules of a village lord and
+the laws of a wise legislature? The moral feelings you have appealed to
+exist universally, the moral remedies you have practised are as open to
+legislation as to the individual proprietor."
+
+"Yes; but when you apply to a nation the same principles which regenerate
+a village, new counterbalancing principles arise. If I give education to
+my peasants, I send them into the world with advantages _superior_ to
+their fellows,--advantages which, not being common to their class, enable
+them to _outstrip_ their fellows. But if this education were universal
+to the whole tribe, no man would have an advantage superior to the
+others; the knowledge they would have acquired being shared by all, would
+leave all as they now are, hewers of wood and drawers of water: the
+principle of individual hope, which springs from knowledge, would soon be
+baffled by the vast competition that _universal_ knowledge would produce.
+Thus by the universal improvement would be engendered a universal
+discontent.
+
+"Take a broader view of the subject. Advantages given to the _few_
+around me--superior wages, lighter toils, a greater sense of the dignity
+of man--are not productive of any change in society. Give these
+advantages to the _whole mass_ of the labouring classes, and what in the
+small orbit is the desire of the _individual_ to rise becomes in the
+large circumference the desire of the _class_ to rise; hence social
+restlessness, social change, revolution, and its hazards. For
+revolutions are produced but by the aspirations of one order, and the
+resistance of the other. Consequently, legislative improvement differs
+widely from individual amelioration; the same principle, the same agency,
+that purifies the small body, becomes destructive when applied to the
+large one. Apply the flame to the log on the hearth, or apply it to the
+forest, is there no distinction in the result? The breeze that freshens
+the fountain passes to the ocean, current impels current, wave urges
+wave, and the breeze becomes the storm."
+
+"Were there truth in this train of argument," replied De Montaigne, "had
+we ever abstained from communicating to the Multitude the enjoyments and
+advantages of the Few, had we shrunk from the good, because the good is a
+parent of the change and its partial ills, what now would be society? Is
+there no difference in collective happiness and virtue between the
+painted Picts and the Druid worship, and the glorious harmony, light, and
+order of the great English nation?"
+
+"The question is popular," said Maltravers, with a smile; "and were you
+my opponent in an election, would be cheered on any hustings in the
+kingdom. But I have lived among savage tribes,--savage, perhaps, as the
+race that resisted Caesar; and their happiness seems to me, not perhaps
+the same as that of the few whose sources of enjoyment are numerous,
+refined, and, save by their own passions, unalloyed; but equal to that of
+the mass of men in States the most civilized and advanced. The artisans,
+crowded together in the fetid air of factories, with physical ills
+gnawing at the core of the constitution, from the cradle to the grave;
+drudging on from dawn to sunset and flying for recreation to the dread
+excitement of the dram-shop, or the wild and vain hopes of political
+fanaticism,--are not in my eyes happier than the wild Indians with hardy
+frames and calm tempers, seasoned to the privations for which you pity
+them, and uncursed with desires of that better state never to be theirs.
+The Arab in his desert has seen all the luxuries of the pasha in his
+harem; but he envies them not. He is contented with his barb, his tent,
+his desolate sands, and his spring of refreshing water.
+
+"Are we not daily told, do not our priests preach it from their pulpits,
+that the cottage shelters happiness equal to that within the palace? Yet
+what the distinction between the peasant and the prince, differing from
+that between the peasant and the savage? There are more enjoyments and
+more privations in the one than in the other; but if, in the latter case,
+the enjoyments, though fewer, be more keenly felt,--if the privations,
+though apparently sharper, fall upon duller sensibilities and hardier
+frames,--your gauge of proportion loses all its value. Nay, in
+civilization there is for the multitude an evil that exists not in the
+savage state. The poor man sees daily and hourly all the vast
+disparities produced by civilized society; and reversing the divine
+parable, it is Lazarus who from afar, and from the despondent pit, looks
+upon Dives in the lap of Paradise: therefore, his privations, his
+sufferings, are made more keen by comparison with the luxuries of others.
+Not so in the desert and the forest. There but small distinctions, and
+those softened by immemorial and hereditary usage--that has in it the
+sanctity of religion--separate the savage from his chief. The fact is,
+that in civilization we behold a splendid aggregate,--literature and
+science, wealth and luxury, commerce and glory; but we see not the
+million victims crushed beneath the wheels of the machine,--the health
+sacrificed, the board breadless, the jails filled, the hospitals reeking,
+the human life poisoned in every spring, and poured forth like water!
+Neither do we remember all the steps, marked by desolation, crime, and
+bloodshed, by which this barren summit has been reached. Take the
+history of any civilized state,--England, France, Spain before she rotted
+back into second childhood, the Italian Republics, the Greek
+Commonwealths, the Empress of the Seven Hills--what struggles, what
+persecutions, what crimes, what massacres! Where, in the page of
+history, shall we look back and say, 'Here improvement has diminished the
+sum of evil'? Extend, too, your scope beyond the State itself: each
+State has won its acquisitions by the woes of others. Spain springs
+above the Old World on the blood-stained ruins of the New; and the groans
+and the gold of Mexico produce the splendours of the Fifth Charles!
+
+"Behold England, the wise, the liberal, the free England--through what
+struggles she has passed; and is she yet contented? The sullen oligarchy
+of the Normans; our own criminal invasions of Scotland and France; the
+plundered people, the butchered kings; the persecutions of the Lollards;
+the wars of Lancaster and York; the new dynasty of the Tudors, that at
+once put back Liberty, and put forward Civilization! the Reformation,
+cradled in the lap of a hideous despot, and nursed by violence and
+rapine; the stakes and fires of Mary, and the craftier cruelties of
+Elizabeth,--England, strengthened by the desolation of Ireland, the Civil
+Wars, the reign of hypocrisy, followed by the reign of naked vice; the
+nation that beheaded the graceful Charles gaping idly on the scaffold of
+the lofty Sidney; the vain Revolution of 1688, which, if a jubilee in
+England, was a massacre in Ireland; the bootless glories of Marlborough;
+the organized corruption of Walpole, the frantic war with our own
+American sons, the exhausting struggles with Napoleon!
+
+"Well, we close the page; we say, Lo! a thousand years of incessant
+struggles and afflictions! millions have perished, but Art has survived;
+our boors wear stockings, our women drink tea, our poets read Shakspeare,
+and our astronomers improve on Newton! Are we now contented? No! more
+restless than ever. New classes are called into power; new forms of
+government insisted on. Still the same catchwords,--Liberty here,
+Religion there; Order with one faction, Amelioration with the other.
+Where is the goal, and what have we gained? Books are written, silks are
+woven, palaces are built,--mighty acquisitions for the few--but the
+peasant is a peasant still! The crowd are yet at the bottom of the
+wheel; better off, you say. No, for they are not more contented! The
+artisan is as anxious for change as ever the serf was; and the
+steam-engine has its victims as well as the sword.
+
+"Talk of legislation: all isolated laws pave the way to wholesale changes
+in the form of government! Emancipate Catholics, and you open the door
+to democratic principle, that Opinion should be free. If free with the
+sectarian, it should be free with the elector. The Ballot is a corollary
+from the Catholic Relief-bill. Grant the Ballot, and the new corollary
+of enlarged suffrage. Suffrage enlarged is divided but by a yielding
+surface (a circle widening in the waters) from universal suffrage.
+Universal suffrage is Democracy. Is Democracy better than the
+aristocratic commonwealth? Look at the Greeks, who knew both forms; are
+they agreed which is the best? Plato, Thucydides, Xenophon,
+Aristophanes--the Dreamer, the Historian, the Philosophic Man of Action,
+the penetrating Wit--have no ideals in Democracy. Algernon Sidney, the
+martyr of liberty, allows no government to the multitude. Brutus died
+for a republic, but a republic of Patricians! What form of government is
+then the best? All dispute, the wisest cannot agree. The many still say
+'a Republic;' yet, as you yourself will allow, Prussia, the Despotism,
+does all that Republics do. Yes, but a good despot is a lucky accident;
+true, but a just and benevolent Republic is as yet a monster equally
+short-lived. When the People have no other tyrant, their own public
+opinion becomes one. No secret espionage is more intolerable to a free
+spirit than the broad glare of the American eye.
+
+"A rural republic is but a patriarchal tribe--no emulation, no glory;
+peace and stagnation. What Englishman, what Frenchman, would wish to be
+a Swiss? A commercial republic is but an admirable machine for making
+money. Is man created for nothing nobler than freighting ships and
+speculating on silk and sugar? In fact, there is no certain goal in
+legislation; we go on colonizing Utopia, and fighting phantoms in the
+clouds. Let us content ourselves with injuring no man, and doing good
+only in our own little sphere. Let us leave States and senates to fill
+the sieve of the Danaides, and roll up the stone of Sisyphus."
+
+"My dear friend," said De Montaigne, "you have certainly made the most of
+an argument, which, if granted, would consign government to fools and
+knaves, and plunge the communities of mankind into the Slough of Despond.
+But a very commonplace view of the question might suffice to shake your
+system. Is life, mere animal life, on the whole, a curse or a blessing?"
+
+"The generality of men in all countries," answered Maltravers, "enjoy
+existence, and apprehend death; were it otherwise, the world had been
+made by a Fiend, and not a God!"
+
+"Well, then, observe how the progress of society cheats the grave! In
+great cities, where the effect of civilization must be the most visible,
+the diminution of mortality in a corresponding ratio with the increase of
+civilization is most remarkable. In Berlin, from the year 1747 to 1755,
+the annual mortality was as one to twenty-eight; but from 1816 to 1822,
+it was as one to thirty-four! You ask what England has gained by her
+progress in the arts? I will answer you by her bills of mortality. In
+London, Birmingham, and Liverpool, deaths have decreased in less than a
+century from one to twenty, to one to forty (precisely one-half!).
+Again, whenever a community--nay, a single city, decreases in
+civilization, and in its concomitants, activity and commerce, its
+mortality instantly increases. But if civilization be favourable to the
+prolongation of life, must it not be favourable to all that blesses
+life,--to bodily health, to mental cheerfulness, to the capacities for
+enjoyment? And how much more grand, how much more sublime, becomes the
+prospect of gain, if we reflect that, to each life thus called forth,
+there is a soul, a destiny beyond the grave, multiplied immortalities!
+What an apology for the continued progress of States! But you say that,
+however we advance, we continue impatient and dissatisfied: can you
+really suppose that, because man in every state is discontented with his
+lot, there is no difference in the _degree_ and _quality_ of his
+discontent, no distinction between pining for bread and longing for the
+moon? Desire is implanted within us, as the very principle of existence;
+the physical desire fills the world, and the moral desire improves it.
+Where there is desire, there must be discontent: if we are satisfied with
+all things, desire is extinct. But a certain degree of discontent is not
+incompatible with happiness, nay, it has happiness of its own; what
+happiness like hope,--what is hope but desire? The European serf, whose
+seigneur could command his life, or insist as a right on the chastity of
+his daughter, desires to better his condition. God has compassion on his
+state; Providence calls into action the ambition of leaders, the contests
+of faction, the movement of men's aims and passions: a change passes
+through society and legislation, and the serf becomes free! He desires
+still, but what? No longer personal security, no longer the privileges
+of life and health; but higher wages, greater comforts, easier justice
+for diminished wrongs. Is there no difference in the quality of that
+desire? Was one a greater torment than the other is? Rise a scale
+higher: a new class is created--the Middle Class,--the express creature
+of Civilization. Behold the burgher and the citizen, and still
+struggling, still contending, still desiring, and therefore still
+discontented. But the discontent does not prey upon the springs of life:
+it is the discontent of _hope_, not _despair_; it calls forth faculties,
+energies, and passions, in which there is more joy than sorrow. It is
+this desire which makes the citizen in private life an anxious father, a
+careful master, an _active_, and therefore not an unhappy, man. You
+allow that individuals can effect individual good: this very
+restlessness, this very discontent with the exact place that he occupies,
+makes the citizen a benefactor in his narrow circle. Commerce, better
+than Charity, feeds the hungry and clothes the naked. Ambition, better
+than brute affection, gives education to our children, and teaches them
+the love of industry, the pride of independence, the respect for others
+and themselves!
+
+"In other words, a deference to such qualities as can best fit them to
+get on in the world, and make the most money!"
+
+"Take that view if you will; but the wiser, the more civilized the State,
+the worse chances for the rogue to get on! There may be some art, some
+hypocrisy, some avarice,--nay, some hardness of heart,--in paternal
+example and professional tuition. But what are such sober infirmities to
+the vices that arise from defiance and despair? Your savage has his
+virtues, but they are mostly physical,--fortitude, abstinence, patience:
+mental and moral virtues must be numerous or few, in proportion to the
+range of ideas and the exigencies of social life. With the savage,
+therefore, they must be fewer than with civilized men; and they are
+consequently limited to those simple and rude elements which the safety
+of his state renders necessary to him. He is usually hospitable;
+sometimes honest. But vices are necessary to his existence as well as
+virtues: he is at war with a tribe that may destroy his own; and
+treachery without scruple, cruelty without remorse, are essential to him;
+he feels their necessity, and calls them _virtues_! Even the
+half-civilized man, the Arab whom you praise, imagines he has a necessity
+for your money; and his robberies become virtues to him. But in
+civilized States, vices are at least not necessary to the existence of
+the majority; they are not, therefore, worshipped as virtues. Society
+unites against them; treachery, robbery, massacre, are not essential to
+the strength or safety of the community: they exist, it is true, but they
+are not cultivated, but punished. The thief in St. Giles's has the
+virtues of your savage: he is true to his companions, he is brave in
+danger, he is patient in privation; he practises the virtues necessary to
+the bonds of his calling and the tacit laws of his vocation. He might
+have made an admirable savage: but surely the mass of civilized men are
+better than the thief?"
+
+Maltravers was struck, and paused a little before he replied; and then he
+shifted his ground. "But at least all our laws, all our efforts, must
+leave the multitude in every State condemned to a labour that deadens
+intellect, and a poverty that embitters life."
+
+"Supposing this were true, still there are multitudes besides _the_
+multitude. In each State Civilization produces a middle class, more
+numerous to-day than the whole peasantry of a thousand years ago. Would
+Movement and Progress be without their divine uses, even if they limited
+their effect to the production of such a class? Look also to the effect
+of art, and refinement, and just laws, in the wealthier and higher
+classes. See how their very habits of life tend to increase the sum of
+enjoyment; see the mighty activity that their very luxury, the very
+frivolity of their pursuits, create! Without an aristocracy, would there
+have been a middle class? Without a middle class, would there ever have
+been an interposition between lord and slave? Before commerce produces a
+middle class, Religion creates one. The Priesthood, whatever its errors,
+was the curb to Power. But, to return to the multitude,--you say that in
+all times they are left the same. Is it so? I come to statistics again:
+I find that not only civilization, but liberty, has a prodigious effect
+upon human life. It is, as it were, by the instinct of self-preservation
+that liberty is so passionately desired by the multitude. A negro slave,
+for instance, dies annually as one to five or six, but a free African in
+the English service only as one to thirty-five! Freedom is not,
+therefore, a mere abstract dream, a beautiful name, a Platonic
+aspiration: it is interwoven with the most practical of all
+blessings,--life itself! And can you say fairly that by laws labour
+cannot be lightened and poverty diminished? We have granted already that
+since there are degrees in discontent, there is a difference between the
+peasant and the serf: how know you what the peasant a thousand years
+hence may be? Discontented, you will say,--still discontented. Yes; but
+if he had not been discontented, he would have been a serf still! Far
+from quelling this desire to better himself, we ought to hail it as the
+source of his perpetual progress. That desire to him is often like
+imagination to the poet, it transports him into the Future--
+
+ 'Crura sonant ferro, sed canit inter opus.'
+
+It is, indeed, the gradual transformation from the desire of Despair to
+the desire of Hope, that makes the difference between man and man,
+between misery and bliss."
+
+"And then comes the crisis. Hope ripens into deeds; the stormy
+revolution, perhaps the armed despotism; the relapse into the second
+infancy of States!"
+
+"Can we, with new agencies at our command, new morality, new wisdom,
+predicate of the Future by the Past? In ancient States, the mass were
+slaves; civilization and freedom rested with oligarchies; in Athens
+twenty thousand citizens, four hundred thousand slaves! How easy
+decline, degeneracy, overthrow in such States,--a handful of soldiers and
+philosophers without a People! Now we have no longer barriers to the
+circulation of the blood of States. The absence of slavery, the
+existence of the Press; the healthful proportions of kingdoms, neither
+too confined nor too vast, have created new hopes, which history cannot
+destroy. As a proof, look to all late revolutions: in England the Civil
+Wars, the Reformation,--in France her awful Saturnalia, her military
+despotism! Has either nation fallen back? The deluge passes, and,
+behold, the face of things more glorious than before! Compare the French
+of to-day with the French of the old _regime_. You are silent; well, and
+if in all States there is ever some danger of evil in their activity, is
+that a reason why you are to lie down inactive; why you are to leave the
+crew to battle for the helm? How much may individuals by the diffusion
+of their own thoughts in letters or in action regulate the order of vast
+events,--now prevent, now soften, now animate, now guide! And is a man
+to whom Providence and Fortune have imparted such prerogatives to stand
+aloof, because he can neither foresee the Future nor create Perfection?
+And you talk of no certain and definite goal! How know we that there is
+a certain and definite goal, even in heaven? How know we that excellence
+may not be illimitable? Enough that we improve, that we proceed. Seeing
+in the great design of earth that benevolence is an attribute of the
+Designer, let us leave the rest to Posterity and to God."
+
+"You have disturbed many of my theories," said Maltravers, candidly; "and
+I will reflect on our conversation; but, after all, is every man to
+aspire to influence others; to throw his opinion into the great scales in
+which human destinies are weighed? Private life is not criminal. It is
+no virtue to write a book, or to make a speech. Perhaps, I should be as
+well engaged in returning to my country village, looking at my schools,
+and wrangling with the parish overseers--"
+
+"Ah," interrupted the Frenchman, laughing; "if I have driven you to this
+point, I will go no further. Every state of life has its duties; every
+man must be himself the judge of what he is most fit for. It is quite
+enough that he desires to be active, and labours to be useful; that he
+acknowledges the precept, 'Never to be weary in well-doing.' The divine
+appetite once fostered, let it select its own food. But the man who,
+after fair trial of his capacities, and with all opportunity for their
+full development before him, is convinced that he has faculties which
+private life cannot wholly absorb, must not repine that Human Nature is
+not perfect, when he refuses even to exercise the gifts he himself
+possesses."
+
+Now these arguments have been very tedious; in some places they have been
+old and trite; in others they may appear too much to appertain to the
+abstract theory of first principles. Yet from such arguments, _pro_ and
+_con_, unless I greatly mistake, are to be derived corollaries equally
+practical and sublime,--the virtue of Action, the obligations of Genius,
+and the philosophy that teaches us to confide in the destinies, and
+labour in the service, of mankind.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ I'LL tell you presently her very picture;
+ Stay--yes, it is so--Lelia.
+ _The Captain_, Act V. sc. I.
+
+MALTRAVERS had not shrunk into a system of false philosophy from wayward
+and sickly dreams, from resolute self-delusion; on the contrary, his
+errors rested on his convictions: the convictions disturbed, the errors
+were rudely shaken.
+
+But when his mind began restlessly to turn once more towards the duties
+of active life; when he recalled all the former drudgeries and toils of
+political conflict, or the wearing fatigues of literature, with its small
+enmities, its false friendships, and its meagre and capricious
+rewards,--ah, then, indeed, he shrank in dismay from the thoughts of the
+solitude at home! No lips to console in dejection, no heart to
+sympathize in triumph, no love within to counterbalance the hate
+without,--and the best of man, his household affections, left to wither
+away, or to waste themselves on ideal images, or melancholy remembrance.
+
+It may, indeed, be generally remarked (contrary to a common notion), that
+the men who are most happy at home are the most active abroad. The
+animal spirits are necessary to healthful action; and dejection and the
+sense of solitude will turn the stoutest into dreamers. The hermit is
+the antipodes of the citizen; and no gods animate and inspire us like the
+Lares.
+
+One evening, after an absence from Paris of nearly a fortnight, at De
+Montaigne's villa, in the neighbourhood of St. Cloud, Maltravers, who,
+though he no longer practised the art, was not less fond than heretofore
+of music, was seated in Madame de Ventadour's box at the Italian Opera;
+and Valerie, who was above all the woman's jealousy of beauty, was
+expatiating with great warmth of eulogium upon the charms of a young
+English lady whom she had met at Lady G-----'s the preceding evening.
+
+"She is just my beau-ideal of the true English beauty," said Valerie: "it
+is not only the exquisite fairness of the complexion, nor the eyes so
+purely blue,--which the dark lashes relieve from the coldness common to
+the light eyes of the Scotch and German,--that are so beautifully
+national, but the simplicity of manner, the unconsciousness of
+admiration, the mingled modesty and sense of the expression. No, I have
+seen women more beautiful, but I never saw one more lovely: you are
+silent; I expected some burst of patriotism in return for my compliment
+to your countrywoman!"
+
+"But I am so absorbed in that wonderful Pasta--"
+
+"You are no such thing; your thoughts are far away. But can you tell me
+anything about my fair stranger and her friends? In the first place,
+there is a Lord Doltimore, whom I knew before--you need say nothing about
+him; in the next there is his new married bride, handsome, dark--but you
+are not well!"
+
+"It was the draught from the door; go on, I beseech you, the young lady,
+the friend, her name?"
+
+"Her name I do not remember; but she was engaged to be married to one of
+your statesmen, Lord Vargrave; the marriage is broken off--I know not if
+that be the cause of a certain melancholy in her countenance,--a
+melancholy I am sure not natural to its Hebe-like expression. But who
+have just entered the opposite box? Ah, Mr. Maltravers, do look, there
+is the beautiful English girl!"
+
+And Maltravers raised his eyes, and once more beheld the countenance of
+Evelyn Cameron!
+
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, ALICE BY LYTTON, BOOK VI ***
+By Edward Bulwer Lytton
+
+******* This file should be named 9768.txt or 9768.zip *******
+
+Produced by Dagny; and by David Widger
+
+Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+We are now trying to release all our eBooks one year in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+Please be encouraged to tell us about any error or corrections,
+even years after the official publication date.
+
+Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final til
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg eBooks is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so.
+
+Most people start at our Web sites at:
+https://gutenberg.org or
+http://promo.net/pg
+
+These Web sites include award-winning information about Project
+Gutenberg, including how to donate, how to help produce our new
+eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter (free!).
+
+
+Those of you who want to download any eBook before announcement
+can get to them as follows, and just download by date. This is
+also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the
+indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an
+announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter.
+
+http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext03 or
+ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext03
+
+Or /etext02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90
+
+Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want,
+as it appears in our Newsletters.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any eBook selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. Our
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If the value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour in 2002 as we release over 100 new text
+files per month: 1240 more eBooks in 2001 for a total of 4000+
+We are already on our way to trying for 2000 more eBooks in 2002
+If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total
+will reach over half a trillion eBooks given away by year's end.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away 1 Trillion eBooks!
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users.
+
+Here is the briefest record of our progress (* means estimated):
+
+eBooks Year Month
+
+ 1 1971 July
+ 10 1991 January
+ 100 1994 January
+ 1000 1997 August
+ 1500 1998 October
+ 2000 1999 December
+ 2500 2000 December
+ 3000 2001 November
+ 4000 2001 October/November
+ 6000 2002 December*
+ 9000 2003 November*
+10000 2004 January*
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created
+to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+As of February, 2002, contributions are being solicited from people
+and organizations in: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut,
+Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois,
+Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts,
+Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
+Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
+Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South
+Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West
+Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
+
+We have filed in all 50 states now, but these are the only ones
+that have responded.
+
+As the requirements for other states are met, additions to this list
+will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional states.
+Please feel free to ask to check the status of your state.
+
+In answer to various questions we have received on this:
+
+We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork to legally
+request donations in all 50 states. If your state is not listed and
+you would like to know if we have added it since the list you have,
+just ask.
+
+While we cannot solicit donations from people in states where we are
+not yet registered, we know of no prohibition against accepting
+donations from donors in these states who approach us with an offer to
+donate.
+
+International donations are accepted, but we don't know ANYTHING about
+how to make them tax-deductible, or even if they CAN be made
+deductible, and don't have the staff to handle it even if there are
+ways.
+
+Donations by check or money order may be sent to:
+
+Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+PMB 113
+1739 University Ave.
+Oxford, MS 38655-4109
+
+Contact us if you want to arrange for a wire transfer or payment
+method other than by check or money order.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been approved by
+the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) organization with EIN
+[Employee Identification Number] 64-622154. Donations are
+tax-deductible to the maximum extent permitted by law. As fund-raising
+requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be
+made and fund-raising will begin in the additional states.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+You can get up to date donation information online at:
+
+https://www.gutenberg.org/donation.html
+
+
+***
+
+If you can't reach Project Gutenberg,
+you can always email directly to:
+
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+
+Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message.
+
+We would prefer to send you information by email.
+
+
+**The Legal Small Print**
+
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this eBook, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you may distribute copies of this eBook if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS EBOOK
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+eBook, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this eBook by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this eBook on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM EBOOKS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBooks,
+is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart
+through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project").
+Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this eBook
+under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market
+any commercial products without permission.
+
+To create these eBooks, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's eBooks and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other eBook medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may
+receive this eBook from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook) disclaims
+all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this eBook within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS EBOOK IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE EBOOK OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation,
+and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated
+with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including
+legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the
+following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this eBook,
+[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the eBook,
+or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this eBook electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ eBook or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this eBook in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word
+ processing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The eBook, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The eBook may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the eBook (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ eBook in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the eBook refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the
+ gross profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation"
+ the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were
+ legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent
+ periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to
+ let us know your plans and to work out the details.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of
+public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed
+in machine readable form.
+
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time,
+public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses.
+Money should be paid to the:
+"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or
+software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at:
+hart@pobox.com
+
+[Portions of this eBook's header and trailer may be reprinted only
+when distributed free of all fees. Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 by
+Michael S. Hart. Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be
+used in any sales of Project Gutenberg eBooks or other materials be
+they hardware or software or any other related product without
+express permission.]
+
+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END*
diff --git a/9768.zip b/9768.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7a1098b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/9768.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3ef03fa
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #9768 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/9768)