Tragic Comedians, the — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 224 pages of information about Tragic Comedians, the — Complete.

Tragic Comedians, the — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 224 pages of information about Tragic Comedians, the — Complete.

‘Would this ambitious little head know everything?’ said Alvan, putting his lips among the locks.  ’Well, we met:  he requested it.  We agreed that we were on neutral ground for the moment:  that he might ultimately have to decapitate me, or I to banish him, but temporarily we could compare our plans for governing.  He showed me his hand.  I showed him mine.  We played open-handed, like two at whist.  He did not doubt my honesty, and I astonished him by taking him quite in earnest.  He has dealt with diplomatists, who imagine nothing but shuffling:  the old Ironer!  I love him for his love of common sense, his contempt of mean deceit.  He will outwit you, but his dexterity is a giant’s—­a simple evolution rapidly performed:  and nothing so much perplexes pygmies!  Then he has them, bagsful of them!  The world will see; and see giant meet giant, I suspect.  He and I proposed each of us in the mildest manner contrary schemes—­schemes to stiffen the hair of Europe!  Enough that we parted with mutual respect.  He is a fine fellow:  and so was my friend the Emperor Tiberius, and so was Richelieu.  Napoleon was a fine engine:—­there is a difference.  Yes, Ironsides is a fine fellow! but he and I may cross.  His ideas are not many.  The point to remember is that he is iron on them:  he can drive them hard into the density of the globe.  He has quick nerves and imagination:  he can conjure up, penetrate, and traverse complications—­an enemy’s plans, all that the enemy will be able to combine, and the likeliest that he will do.  Good.  We opine that we are equal to the same.  He is for kingcraft to mask his viziercraft—­and save him the labour of patiently attempting oratory and persuasion, which accomplishment he does not possess:—­it is not in iron.  We think the more precious metal will beat him when the broader conflict comes.  But such an adversary is not to be underrated.  I do not underrate him:  and certainly not he me.  Had he been born with the gifts of patience and a fluent tongue, and not a petty noble, he might have been for the people, as knowing them the greater power.  He sees that their knowledge of their power must eventually come to them.  In the meantime his party is forcible enough to assure him he is not fighting a losing game at present:  and he is, no doubt, by lineage and his traditions monarchical.  He is curiously simple, not really cynical.  His apparent cynicism is sheer irritability.  His contemptuous phrases are directed against obstacles:  against things, persons, nations that oppose him or cannot serve his turn against his king, if his king is restive; but he respects his king:  against your friends’ country, because there is no fixing it to a line of policy, and it seems to have collapsed; but he likes that country the best in Europe after his own.  He is nearest to contempt in his treatment of his dupes and tools, who are dropped out of his mind when he has quite squeezed them for his occasion; to be taken up again when they are of use to him. 

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Tragic Comedians, the — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.