登陆注册
19623800000076

第76章 IV(5)

For indeed, before the year was out, a far more terrible blow was to fall upon her. Albert, who had for long been suffering from sleeplessness, went, on a cold and drenching day towards the end of November, to inspect the buildings for the new Military Academy at Sandhurst. On his return, it was clear that the fatigue and exposure to which he had been subjected had seriously affected his health. He was attacked by rheumatism, his sleeplessness continued, and he complained that he felt thoroughly unwell. Three days later a painful duty obliged him to visit Cambridge. The Prince of Wales, who had been placed at that University in the previous year, was behaving in such a manner that a parental visit and a parental admonition had become necessary. The disappointed father, suffering in mind and body, carried through his task; but, on his return journey to Windsor, he caught a fatal chill. During the next week he gradually grew weaker and more miserable. Yet, depressed and enfeebled as he was, he continued to work. It so happened that at that very moment a grave diplomatic crisis had arisen. Civil war had broken out in America, and it seemed as if England, owing to a violent quarrel with the Northern States, was upon the point of being drawn into the conflict. A severe despatch by Lord John Russell was submitted to the Queen; and the Prince perceived that, if it was sent off unaltered, war would be the almost inevitable consequence. At seven o'clock on the morning of December 1, he rose from his bed, and with a quavering hand wrote a series of suggestions for the alteration of the draft, by which its language might be softened, and a way left open for a peaceful solution of the question. These changes were accepted by the Government, and war was averted. It was the Prince's last memorandum.

He had always declared that he viewed the prospect of death with equanimity.

"I do not cling to life," he had once said to Victoria. "You do; but I set no store by it." And then he had added: "I am sure, if I had a severe illness, I should give up at once, I should not struggle for life. I have no tenacity of life." He had judged correctly. Before he had been ill many days, he told a friend that he was convinced he would not recover. He sank and sank.

Nevertheless, if his case had been properly understood and skilfully treated from the first, he might conceivably have been saved; but the doctors failed to diagnose his symptoms; and it is noteworthy that his principal physician was Sir James Clark. When it was suggested that other advice should be taken, Sir James pooh-poohed the idea: "there was no cause for alarm," he said. But the strange illness grew worse. At last, after a letter of fierce remonstrance from Palmerston, Dr. Watson was sent for; and Dr. Watson saw at once that he had come too late The Prince was in the grip of typhoid fever. "I think that everything so far is satisfactory," said Sir James Clark.[*]

[*] Clarendon, II, 253-4: "One cannot speak with certainty; but it is horrible to think that such a life MAY have been sacrificed to Sir J. Clark's selfish jealousy of every member of his profession." The Earl of Clarendon to the Duchess of Manchester, December 17, 1861.

The restlessness and the acute suffering of the earlier days gave place to a settled torpor and an ever--deepening gloom. Once the failing patient asked for music--"a fine chorale at a distance;" and a piano having been placed in the adjoining room, Princess Alice played on it some of Luther's hymns, after which the Prince repeated "The Rock of Ages." Sometimes his mind wandered; sometimes the distant past came rushing upon him; he heard the birds in the early morning, and was at Rosenau again, a boy. Or Victoria would come and read to him "Peveril of the Peak," and he showed that he could follow the story, and then she would bend over him, and he would murmur "liebes Frauchen" and "gutes Weibchen," stroking her cheek. Her distress and her agitation were great, but she was not seriously frightened. Buoyed up by her own abundant energies, she would not believe that Albert's might prove unequal to the strain. She refused to face such a hideous possibility. She declined to see Dr. Watson. Why should she? Had not Sir James Clark assured her that all would be well? Only two days before the end, which was seen now to be almost inevitable by everyone about her, she wrote, full of apparent confidence, to the King of the Belgians: "I do not sit up with him at night," she said, "as I could be of no use; and there is nothing to cause alarm." The Princess Alice tried to tell her the truth, but her hopefulness would not be daunted. On the morning of December 14, Albert, just as she had expected, seemed to be better; perhaps the crisis was over. But in the course of the day there was a serious relapse. Then at last she allowed herself to see that she was standing on the edge of an appalling gulf. The whole family was summoned, and, one after another, the children took a silent farewell of their father. "It was a terrible moment," Victoria wrote in her diary, "but, thank God! I was able to command myself, and to be perfectly calm, and remained sitting by his side."

He murmured something, but she could not hear what it was; she thought he was speaking in French. Then all at once he began to arrange his hair, "just as he used to do when well and he was dressing." "Es kleines Frauchen," she whispered to him; and he seemed to understand. For a moment, towards the evening, she went into another room, but was immediately called back; she saw at a glance that a ghastly change had taken place. As she knelt by the bed, he breathed deeply, breathed gently, breathed at last no more. His features became perfectly rigid; she shrieked one long wild shriek that rang through the terror-stricken castle and understood that she had lost him for ever.

同类推荐
  • As You Like It

    As You Like It

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 衡山禅师语录

    衡山禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 酒人觞政

    酒人觞政

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 菩萨戒本疏

    菩萨戒本疏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 岳游纪行录

    岳游纪行录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 孟子学院:孟子的仁政思想

    孟子学院:孟子的仁政思想

    本书以孟子的观点为基本出发点,融会古今,多方位地阐释了孟子学说和现代人的紧密联系,既不乏理论上的严谨性,又有着优美的文笔,是一部可读性极强的好书。
  • 火影系统闯异世

    火影系统闯异世

    二十一世纪的青年,偶然间“来到”异世,身怀神秘系统,一步步强大,破开层层迷雾,发现一切都有一双无形的大手在操控着一切……红颜若雪倾世佳人八门遁甲冲冠一怒浩劫降临唯笑天地间!“你若是神,那我便弑神!”——叶笑
  • 大清三杰

    大清三杰

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 黑道公主请站住

    黑道公主请站住

    十年前“我一定会找到你的”十年后“我终于找到你了”“和我在一起好不好?”他真诚的告白,被她婉言拒绝,好不容易才找到她,怎么可能轻易放弃?各种无厘头死缠烂打之术,只为她她是黑道门主,她不能爱上别人,不管怎样,她死不承认“你是我的!我一定会让你说出你爱我!”他的坚决让她有些动摇……
  • 人生不必太计较

    人生不必太计较

    《人生不必太计较》从财富、欲望、名利、处世、人际交往、个人生活等几个方面,通俗地将一些不计较的智慧贯穿其中,不失为当下人们让心平静恬淡的上乘之选。 愿此智慧能引导你走出浮躁、摆脱困顿、避开炎凉,活出真实圆融的自己,并收获一个幸福、快乐、成功的人生。
  • 亡灵武神

    亡灵武神

    前世大战中的彭烈陡遇突如其来的天劫,醒来发现重生成了一具亡灵,原来这具亡灵的主人是这个大陆上昔日强盛一时的华族大周王朝的‘孝英武皇帝’,武帝自创功法《武道》被彭烈所得,彭烈照此重新开始新的修炼。走出苍山,百年变迁,改朝换代,北方草原劣牧夷人取代了中原华族的数千年统治,面对新的环境和挑战,彭烈将如何克服万难从一具亡灵修炼成一代传奇武神。※※※※※※※《武道》中的修为境界:筑基、凡武、先天、武婴、破天、武天、天将、天王、武神。【召唤收藏和推荐~~~】
  • 蓦然回首

    蓦然回首

    因其短小,在构思和行文时才更讲究字句的凝炼,不允许文章中有赘词冗句。它的创作,是将时间、场所、人物压缩到一个小舞台上尽情展现,它的创作犹如做一件微雕的工艺品,精巧之间尽显功力。在某种程度上,微型小说就是一种敏感,从一个点、一个画面、一个对比、一声赞叹、一瞬间之中,捕捉住了小说的——一种智慧、一种美、一个耐人寻味的场景,一种新鲜的思想。也正是因为这些,微型小说自出现至今,一直深受读者的喜爱。
  • 中华哲理故事精编

    中华哲理故事精编

    中华古代哲理故事历史悠久,丰富多彩,这些作品熔哲学、文学、艺术干一炉,蕴含着深邃的哲理、智慧的思辨和宝贵的生活经验,凭借其思想性和艺术性叩动读者的心扉,带给人们借鉴和启迪。
  • 猪圆玉润

    猪圆玉润

    你是否曾祈求过上天“让我过上吃了睡睡了吃的幸福生活吧!”,如果老天听到了你的祈祷,却很不靠谱地让你心愿得偿,代价却是——变成了一头人见人爱的小猪呢?不愿意?如果这小猪可以修炼成仙重返天庭呢?如果这小猪还有白素珍撑腰,猪八戒当后盾呢?或者说,如果这小猪还有一个人见人爱的夫君呢?
  • 捡来的娘子

    捡来的娘子

    这是一个穷乡僻壤的穷秀才,一不小心捡回来一个贵妇回家当娘子,并附送一个儿子的有爱故事。凌云施礼:夫人,在下姓凌,名云,字卓凡……苏月抬了抬眼皮,优雅启唇:免礼,平身。凌云:……