`ON THE COURT OF GRUNEWALD,' BEING A PORTION OF THE TRAVELLER'S MANUSCRIPT
IT may well be asked (it was thus the English traveller began his nineteenth
chapter) why I should have chosen Grunewald out of so many other states equally
petty, formal, dull, and corrupt. Accident, indeed, decided, and not I; but I
have seen no reason to regret my visit. The spectacle of this small society
macerating in its own abuses was not perhaps instructive, but I have found it
exceedingly diverting.
The reigning Prince, Otto Johann Friedrich, a young man of imperfect
education, questionable valour, and no scintilla of capacity, has fallen into
entire public contempt. It was with difficulty that I obtained an interview, for
he is frequently absent from a court where his presence is unheeded, and where
his only role is to be a cloak for the amours of his wife. At last, however, on
the third occasion when I visited the palace, I found this sovereign in the
exercise of his inglorious function, with the wife on one hand, and the lover on
the other. He is not ill-looking; he has hair of a ruddy gold, which naturally
curls, and his eyes are dark, a combination which I always regard as the mark of
some congenital deficiency, physical or moral; his features are irregular, but
pleasing; the nose perhaps a little short, and the mouth a little womanish; his
address is excellent, and he can express himself with point. But to pierce below
these externals is to come on a vacuity of any sterling quality, a deliquescence
of the moral nature, a frivolity and inconsequence of purpose that mark the
nearly perfect fruit of a decadent age. He has a worthless smattering of many
subjects, but a grasp of none. `I soon weary of a pursuit,' he said to me,
laughing; it would almost appear as if he took a pride in his incapacity and
lack of moral courage. The results of his dilettanteism are to be seen in every
field; he is a bad fencer, a second-rate horseman, dancer, shot; he sings -- I
have heard him -- and he sings like a child; he writes intolerable verses in
more than doubtful French; he acts like the common amateur; and in short there
is no end to the number of the things that he does, and does badly. His one
manly taste is for the chase. In sum, he is but a plexus of weaknesses; the
singing chambermaid of the stage, tricked out in man's apparel, and mounted on a
circus horse. I have seen this poor phantom of a prince riding out alone or with
a few huntsmen, disregarded by all, and I have been even grieved for the bearer
of so futile and melancholy an existence. The last Merovingians may have looked
not otherwise.
The Princess Amalia Seraphina, a daughter of the Grand-Ducal house of
Toggenburg-Tannh?user, would be equally inconsiderable if she were not a cutting
instrument in the hands of an ambitious man. She is much younger than the
Prince, a girl of two-and-twenty, sick with vanity, superficially clever, and
fundamentally a fool. She has a red-brown rolling eye, too large for her face,
and with sparks of both levity and ferocity; her forehead is high and narrow,
her figure thin and a little stooping. Her manners, her conversation, which she
interlards with French, her very tastes and ambitions, are alike assumed; and
the assumption is ungracefully apparent: Hoyden playing Cleopatra. I should
judge her to be incapable of truth. In private life a girl of this description
embroils the peace of families, walks attended by a troop of scowling swains,
and passes, once at least, through the divorce court; it is a common and, except
to the cynic, an uninteresting type. On the throne, however, and in the hands of
a man like Gondremark, she may become the authoress of serious public evils.
Gondremark, the true ruler of this unfortunate country, is a more complex
study. His position in Grunewald, to which he is a foreigner, is eminently
false; and that he should maintain it as he does, a very miracle of impudence
and dexterity. His speech, his face, his policy, are all double: heads and
tails. Which of the two extremes may be his actual design he were a bold man who
should offer to decide. Yet I will hazard the guess that he follows both
experimentally, and awaits, at the hand of destiny, one of those directing hints
of which she is so lavish to the wise.
On the one hand, as Maire du Palais to the incompetent Otto, and using the
love-sick Princess for a tool and mouthpiece, he pursues a policy of arbitrary
power and territorial aggrandisement. He has called out the whole capable male
population of the state to military service; he has bought cannon; he has
tempted away promising officers from foreign armies; and he now begins, in his
international relations, to assume the swaggering port and the vague, threatful
language of a bully. The idea of extending Grunewald may appear absurd, but the
little state is advantageously placed, its neighbours are all defenceless; and
if at any moment the jealousies of the greater courts should neutralise each
other, an active policy might double the principality both in population and
extent. Certainly at least the scheme is entertained in the court of Mittwalden;
nor do I myself regard it as entirely desperate. The margravate of Brandenburg
has grown from as small beginnings to a formidable power; and though it is late
in the day to try adventurous policies, and the age of war seems ended, Fortune,
we must not forget, still blindly turns her wheel for men and nations.
Concurrently with, and tributary to, these warlike preparations, crushing taxes
have been levied, journals have been suppressed, and the country, which three
years ago was prosperous and happy, now stagnates in a forced inaction, gold has
become a curiosity, and the mills stand idle on the mountain streams.
On the other hand, in his second capacity of popular tribune, Gondremark- is
the incarnation of the free lodges, and sits at the centre of an organised
conspiracy against the state. To any such movement my sympathies were early
acquired, and I would not willingly let fall a word that might embarrass or
retard the revolution. But to show that I speak of knowledge, and not as the
reporter of mere gossip, I may mention that I have myself been present at a
meeting where the details of a republican Constitution were minutely debated and
arranged; and I may add that Gondremark was throughout referred to by the
speakers as their captain in action and the arbiter of their disputes. He has
taught his dupes (for so I must regard them) that his power of resistance to the
Princess is limited, and at each fresh stretch of authority persuades them, with
specious reasons, to postpone the hour of insurrection. Thus (to give some
instances of his astute diplomacy) he salved over the decree enforcing military
service, under the plea that to be well drilled and exercised in arms was even a
necessary preparation for revolt. And the other day, when it began to be
rumoured abroad that a war was being forced on a reluctant neighbour, the Grand
Duke of Gerolstein, and I made sure it would be the signal for an instant
rising, I was struck dumb with wonder to find that even this had been prepared
and was to be accepted. I went from one to another in the Liberal camp, and all
were in the same story, all had been drilled and schooled and fitted out with
vacuous argument. `The lads had better see some real fighting,' they said; `and
besides, it will be as well to capture Gerolstein: we can then extend to our
neighbours the blessing of liberty on the same day that we snatch it for
ourselves; and the republic will be all the stronger to resist, if the kings of
Europe should band themselves together to reduce it.' I know not which of the
two I should admire the more: the simplicity of the multitude or the audacity of
the adventurer. But such are the subtleties, such the quibbling reasons, with
which he blinds and leads this people. How long a course so tortuous can be
pursued with safety I am incapable of guessing; not long, one would suppose; and
yet this singular man has been treading the mazes for five years, and his favour
at court and his popularity among the lodges still endure unbroken.
I have the privilege of slightly knowing him. Heavily and somewhat clumsily
built, of a vast, disjointed, rambling frame, he can still pull himself
together, and figure, not without admiration, in the saloon or the ball-room.
His hue and temperament are plentifully bilious; he has a saturnine eye; his
cheek is of a dark blue where he has been shaven. Essentially he is to be
numbered among the man- haters, a convinced contemner of his fellows. Yet he is
himself of a commonplace ambition and greedy of applause. In talk, he is
remarkable for a thirst of information, loving rather to hear than to
communicate; for sound and studious views; and, judging by the extreme
short-sightedness of common politicians, for a remarkable provision of events.
All this, however, without grace, pleasantry, or charm, heavily set forth, with
a dull countenance. In our numerous conversations, although he has always heard
me with deference, I have been conscious throughout of a sort of ponderous
finessing hard to tolerate. He produces none of the effect of a gentleman;
devoid not merely of pleasantry, but of all attention or communicative warmth of
bearing. No gentleman, besides, would so parade his amours with the Princess;
still less repay the Prince for his long-suffering with a studied insolence of
demeanour and the fabrication of insulting nicknames, such as Prince
Featherhead, which run from ear to ear and create a laugh throughout the
country. Gondremark has thus some of the clumsier characters of the self-made
man, combined with an inordinate, almost a besotted, pride of intellect and
birth. Heavy, bilious, selfish, inornate, he sits upon this court and country
like an incubus.
But it is probable that he preserves softer gifts for necessary purposes.
Indeed, it is certain, although he vouchsafed none of it to me, that this cold
and stolid politician possesses to a great degree the art of ingratiation, and
can be all things to all men. Hence there has probably sprung up the idle legend
that in private life he is a gross romping voluptuary. Nothing, at least, can
well be more surprising than the terms of his connection with the Princess.
Older than her husband, certainly uglier, and, according to the feeble ideas
common among women, in every particular less pleasing, he has not only seized
the complete command of all her thought and action, but has imposed on her in
public a humiliating part. I do not here refer to the complete sacrifice of
every rag of her reputation; for to many women these extremities are in
themselves attractive. But there is about the court a certain lady of a
dishevelled reputation, a Countess von Rosen, wife or widow of a cloudy count,
no longer in her second youth, and already bereft of some of her attractions,
who unequivocally occupies the station of the Baron's mistress. I had thought,
at first, that she was but a hired accomplice, a mere blind or buffer for the
more important sinner. A few hours' acquaintance with Madame von Rosen for ever
dispelled the illusion. She is one rather to make than to prevent a scandal, and
she values none of those bribes -- money, honours, or employment -- with which
the situation might be gilded. Indeed, as a person frankly bad, she pleased me,
in the court of Grunewald, like a piece of nature.
The power of this man over the Princess is, therefore, without bounds. She
has sacrificed to the adoration with which he has inspired her not only her
marriage vow and every shred of public decency, but that vice of jealousy which
is so much dearer to the female sex than either intrinsic honour or outward
consideration. Nay, more: a young, although not a very attractive woman, and a
princess both by birth and fact, she submits to the triumphant rivalry of one
who might be her mother as to years, and who is so manifestly her inferior in
station. This is one of the mysteries of the human heart. But the rage of
illicit love, when it is once indulged, appears to grow by feeding; and to a
person of the character and temperament of this unfortunate young lady, almost
any depth of degradation is within the reach of possibility.
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