第 14 节
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and the Honorable Gentlemen; I must say; are small。 The hour; little as you dream of it; my Honorable Friends; is pregnant with questions that are immense。 Wide Continents; long Epochs and AEons hang on this poor jargoning of yours; the Eternal Destinies are asking their much… favored Nation; 'Will you; can you?'much…favored Nation is answering in that manner。 Astonished at its own stupidity; and taking refuge in laughter。 The Eternal Destinies are very patient with some Nations; and can disregard their follies; for a long while; and have their Cromwell; have their Pitt; or what else is essential; ready for the poor Nation; in a grandly silent way!
〃Certain it is;though how could poor Newcastle know it at all! here is again the hour of tide for England。 Tide is full again; has been flowing long hundreds of years; and is full: certain; too; that time and tide wait on no man or nation。 In a dialect different from Cromwell's or Pitt's; but with a sense true to theirs; I call it the Eternal Destinies knocking at England's door again: 'Are you ready for the crisis; birth…point of long Ages to you; which is now come?' Greater question had not been; for centuries past。 None to be named with it since that high Spiritual Question (truly a much higher; and which was in fact the PARENT of this and of all of high and great that lay ahead); which England and Oliver Cromwell were there to answer: 'Will you hold by Consecrated Formulas; then; you English; and expect salvation from traditions of the elders; or are you for Divine Realities; as the one sacred and indispensable thing?' Which they did answer; in what way we know。 Truly the Highest Question; which if a Nation can answer WELL; it will grow in this world; and may come to be considerable; and to have many high Questions to answer;this of Pitt's; for example。 And the Answers given do always extend through coming ages; and do always bear harvests; accursed or else blessed; according as the Answers were。 A thing awfully true; if you have eye for it;a thing to make Honorable Gentlemen serious; even in the age of percussion… caps! No; my friend; Newcastleisms; impious Poltrooneries; in a Nation; do not die:neither (thank God) do Cromwellisms and pious Heroisms; but are alive for the poor Nation; even in its somnambulancies; in its stupidest dreams。 For Nations have their somnambulancies; and; at any rate; the questions put to Nations; in different ages; vary much。 Not in any age; or turning…point in History; had England answered the Destinies in such a dialect as now under its Newcastle and National Palaver。〃
3。 OF WALPOLE; AS RECORDING ANGEL。 〃Walpole's George the Second is a Book of far more worth than is commonly ascribed to it; almost the one original English Book yet written on those times;which; by the accident of Pitt; are still memorable to us。 But for Walpole;burning like a small steady light there; shining faithfully; if stingily; on the evil and the good;that sordid muddle of the Pelham Parliaments; which chanced to be the element of things now recognizable enough as great; would be forever unintelligible。 He is unusually accurate; punctual; lucid; an irrefragable authority on English points。 And if; in regard to Foreign; he cannot be called an understanding witness; he has read the best Documents accessible; has conversed with select Ambassadors (Mitchell and the like; as we can guess); and has informed himself to a degree far beyond most of his contemporaries。 In regard to Pitt's Speeches; in particular; his brief jottings; done rapidly while the matter was still shining to him; are the only Reports that have the least human resemblance。 We may thank Walpole that Pitt is not dumb to us; as well as dark。 Very curious little scratchings and etchings; those of Walpole; frugal; swift; but punctual and exact; hasty pen…and…ink outlines; at first view; all barren; bald as an invoice; seemingly; but which yield you; after long study there and elsewhere; a conceivable notion of what and how excellent these Pitt Speeches may have been。 Airy; winged; like arrow…flights of Phoebus Apollo; very superlative Speeches indeed。 Walpole's Book is carefully printed;few errors in it like that 'Chapeau' for CHASOT;〃 which readers remember:〃but; in respect to editing; may be characterized as still wanting an Editor。 A Book UNedited; little but lazy ignorance of a very hopeless type; thick contented darkness; traceable throughout in the marginal part。 No attempt at an Index; or at any of the natural helps to a reader now at such distance from it。 Nay; till you have at least marked; on the top of each page; what Month and Year it actually is; the Book cannot be read at all;except by an idle creature; doing worse than nothing under the name of reading!〃
4。 PITT'S SPEECHES; FORESHADOWING WHAT。 〃It is a kind of epoch in your studies of modern English History when you get to understand of Pitt's Speeches; that they are not Parliamentary Eloquences; but things which with his whole soul he means; and is intent to DO。 This surprising circumstance; when at last become undeniable; makes; on the sudden; an immense difference for the Speeches and you! Speeches are not a thing of high moment to this Editor; it is the Thing spoken; and how far the speaker means to do it; that this Editor inquires for。 Too many Speeches there are; which he hears admired all round; and has privately to entertain a very horrid notion of! Speeches; the finest in quality (were quality really 'fine' conceivable in such case); which WANT a corresponding fineness of source and intention; corresponding nobleness of purport; conviction; tendency; these; if we will reflect; are frightful instead of beautiful。 Yes;and always the frightfuler; the 'finer' they are; and the faster and farther they go; sowing themselves in the dim vacancy of men's minds。 For Speeches; like all human things; though the fact is now little remembered; do always rank themselves as forever blessed; or as forever unblessed。 Sheep or goats; on the right hand of the Final Judge; or else on the left。 There are Speeches which can be called true; and; again; Speeches which are not true:Heavens; only think what these latter are! Sacked wind; which you are intended to SOW;that you may reap the whirlwind! After long reading; I find Chatham's Speeches to be what he pretends they are: true; and worth speaking then and there。 Noble indeed; I can call them with you: the highly noble Foreshadow; necessary preface and accompaniment of Actions which are still nobler。 A very singular phenomenon within those walls; or without!
〃Pitt; though nobly eloquent; is a Man of Action; not of Speech; an authentically Royal kind of Man。 And if there were a Plutarch in these times; with a good deal of leisure on his hands; he might run a Parallel between Friedrich and Chatham。 Two radiant Kings: very shining Men of Action both; both of them hard bested; as the case often is。 For your born King will generally have; if not 〃all Europe against him;〃 at least pretty much all the Universe。 Chatham's course to Kingship was not straight or smooth;as Friedrich; too; had his well…nigh fatal difficulties on the road。 Again; says the Plutarch; they are very brave men both; and of a clearness and veracity peculiar among their contemporaries。 In Chatham; too; there is something of the flash of steel; a very sharp…cutting; penetrative; rapid individual; he too; and shaped for action; first of all; though he has to talk so much in the world。 Fastidious; proud; no King could be prouder; though his element is that of Free…Senate and Democracy。 And he has a beautiful poetic delicacy; withal; great tenderness in him; playfulness; grace; in all ways; an airy as well as a solid loftiness of mind。 Not born a King;alas; no; not officially so; only naturally so; has his kingdom to seek。 The Conquering of Silesia; the Conquering of the Pelham ParliamentsBut we will shut up the Plutarch with time on his hands。
〃Pitt's Speeches; as I spell them from Walpole and the other faint tracings left; are full of genius in the vocal kind; far beyond any Speeches delivered in Parliament: serious always; and the very truth; such as he has it; but going in many dialects and modes; full of airy flashings; twinkles and coruscations。 Sport; as of sheet…lightning glancing about; the bolt lying under the horizon; bolt HIDDEN; as is fit; under such a horizon as he had。 A singularly radiant man。 Could have been a Poet; too; in some small measure; had he gone on that line。 There are many touches of genius; comic; tragic; lyric; something of humor even; to be read in those Shadows of Speeches taken down for us by Walpole。 。。。
〃In one word; Pitt; shining like a gleam of sharp steel in that murk of contemptibilities; is carefully steering his way towards Kingship over it。 Tragical it is (especially in Pitt's case; first and last) to see a Royal Man; or Born King; wading towards his throne in such an element。 But; alas; the Born King (even when he tries; which I take to be the rarer case) so seldom can arrive there at all;sinful Epochs there are; when Heaven's curse has been spoken; and it is that awful Being; the Born Sham…King; that arrives! Pitt; however; does it。 Yes; and the more we study Pitt; the more we shall