Queen's
expenditure with a view to a root and branch
reform of the Civil List,
the Prime Minister brought all the resources of his powerful and ingenious
eloquence to the support of the Crown. He was completely successful; and amid
a scene of great
disorder the
motion was ignominiously
dismissed. Victoria was
relieved; but she grew no fonder of Mr. Gladstone.
It was perhaps the most
miserable moment of her life. The Ministers, the
press, the public, all conspired to vex her, to blame her, to misinterpret her
actions, to be unsympathetic and dis
respectful in every way. She was "a
cruelly misunderstood woman," she told Mr. Martin, complaining to him bitterly
of the
unjust attacks which were made upon her, and declaring that "the great
worry and
anxiety and hard work for ten years, alone, unaided, with increasing
age and never very strong health" were breaking her down, and "almost drove
her to despair." The situation was indeed
deplorable. It seemed as if her
whole
existence had gone awry; as if an irremediable antagonism had grown up
between the Queen and the nation. If Victoria had died in the early seventies,
there can be little doubt that the voice of the world would have pronounced
her a failure.
III
But she was reserved for a very different fate. The
outburst of republicanism
had been in fact the last
flicker of an expiring cause. The
liberal tide,
which had been flowing
steadily ever since the Reform Bill, reached its height
with Mr. Gladstone's first
administration; and towards the end of that
administration the
inevitable ebb began. The
reaction, when it came, was
sudden and complete. The General Election of 1874 changed the whole face of
politics. Mr. Gladstone and the Liberals were routed; and the Tory party, for
the first time for over forty years, attained an unquestioned
supremacy in
England. It was
obvious that their
surprisingtriumph was pre-eminently due to
the skill and
vigour of Disraeli. He returned to office, no longer the dubious
commander of an
insufficient host, but with drums
beating and flags flying, a
conquering hero. And as a conquering hero Victoria welcomed her new Prime
Minister.
Then there followed six years of
excitement, of
enchantment, of
felicity, of
glory, of
romance. The
amazing being, who now at last, at the age of seventy,
after a
lifetime of
extraordinary struggles, had turned into
reality the
absurdest of his boyhood's dreams, knew well enough how to make his own, with
absolute completeness, the heart of the Sovereign Lady whose servant, and
whose master, he had so
miraculously become. In women's hearts he had always
read as in an open book. His whole
career had turned upon those curious
entities; and the more curious they were, the more
intimately at home with
them he seemed to be. But Lady Beaconsfield, with her
crackedidolatry, and
Mrs. Brydges-Williams, with her clogs, her corpulence, and her
legacy, were
gone: an even more
remarkablephenomenon stood in their place. He surveyed
what was before him with the eye of a past-master; and he was not for a moment
at a loss. He realised everything--the interacting complexities of
circumstance and
character, the pride of place mingled so inextricably with
personal
arrogance, the superabundant e
motionalism, the ingenuousness of
outlook, the solid, the
laborious respectability, shot through so
incongruously by tempera
mental cravings for the coloured and the strange, the
singular
intellectual limitations, and the
mysteriouslyessential female
elements impregnating every
particle of the whole. A smile hovered over his
impassive features, and he dubbed Victoria "the Faery." The name delighted
him, for, with that epigrammatic ambiguity so dear to his heart, it precisely
expressed his
vision of the Queen. The Spenserian
allusion was very
pleasant--the
elegant evocations of Gloriana; but there was more in it than
that: there was the
suggestion of a
diminutive creature, endowed with
magical--and mythical--properties, and a portentousness almost ridiculously
out of keeping with the rest of her
make-up. The Faery, he determined, should
henceforward wave her wand for him alone. Detachment is always a rare quality,
and rarest of all, perhaps, among politicians; but that
veteran egotist
possessed it in a
supreme degree. Not only did he know what he had to do, not
only did he do it; he was in the
audience as well as on the stage; and he took
in with the rich
relish of a connoisseur every feature of the entertaining
situation, every phase of the
delicate drama, and every detail of his own
consummate performance.
The smile hovered and vanished, and, bowing low with Oriental
gravity and
Oriental submissiveness, he set himself to his task. He had understood from
the first that in
dealing with the Faery the
appropriate method of approach
was the very antithesis of the Gladstonian; and such a method was naturally
his. It was not his habit to harangue and exhort and expatiate in official
conscientiousness; he liked to scatter flowers along the path of business, to
compress a weighty
argument into a happy
phrase, to
insinuate what was in his
mind with an air of friendship and
confidentialcourtesy. He was nothing if
not personal; and he had perceived that
personality was the key that opened
the Faery's heart. Accordingly, he never for a moment allowed his intercourse
with her to lose the personal tone; he invested all the transactions of State
with the charms of familiar conversation; she was always the royal lady, the
adored and revered
mistress, he the
devoted and
respectful friend. When once
the personal relation was
firmly established, every difficulty disappeared.
But to
maintain that relation uninterruptedly in a smooth and even course a
particular care was necessary: the bearings had to be most assiduously oiled.
Nor was Disraeli in any doubt as to the nature of the lubricant. "You have
heard me called a flatterer," he said to Matthew Arnold, "and it is true.
Everyone likes
flattery, and when you come to
royalty you should lay it on
with a trowel." He
practiced what he preached. His adulation was incessant,
and he
applied it in the very thickest slabs. "There is no honor and no
reward," he declared, "that with him can ever equal the possession of your
Majesty's kind thoughts. All his own thoughts and feelings and duties and
affections are now concentrated in your Majesty, and he desires nothing more
for his remaining years than to serve your Majesty, or, if that service
ceases, to live still on its memory as a period of his
existence most
interesting and
fascinating." "In life," he told her, "one must have for one's
thoughts a
sacred depository, and Lord Beaconsfield ever presumes to seek that
in his Sovereign Mistress." She was not only his own
solitary support; she was
the one prop of the State. "If your Majesty is ill," he wrote during a grave
political
crisis, "he is sure he will himself break down. All, really, depends
upon your Majesty." "He lives only for Her," he asseverated, "and works only
for Her, and without Her all is lost." When her birthday came he produced an
elaborate confection of hyperbolic
compliment. "To-day Lord Beaconsfield ought
fitly, perhaps, to
congratulate a powerful Sovereign on her
imperial sway, the
vastness of her Empire, and the success and strength of her fleets and armies.
But he cannot, his mind is in another mood. He can only think of the
strangeness of his
destiny that it has come to pass that he should be the
servant of one so great, and whose
infinite kindness, the
brightness of whose
intelligence and the
firmness of whose will, have enabled him to undertake
labours to which he
otherwise would be quite
unequal, and supported him in all
things by a condescending
sympathy, which in the hour of difficulty alike
charms and inspires. Upon the Sovereign of many lands and many hearts may an
omnipotent Providence shed every
blessing that the wise can desire and the
virtuous deserve!" In those
expert hands the trowel seemed to assume the
qualities of some lofty masonic symbol--to be the ornate and glittering
vehicle of verities unrealised by the profane.
Such tributes were
delightful, but they remained in the nebulous region of
words, and Disraeli had determined to give his blandishments a more
significant solidity. He
deliberately encouraged those high views of her own
position which had always been native to Victoria's mind and had been
reinforced by the principles of Albert and the doctrines of Stockmar. He
professed to a
belief in a theory of the Constitution which gave the Sovereign
a leading place in the councils of government; but his pronouncements upon the
subject were indistinct; and when he
emphatically declared that there ought to
be "a real Throne," it was probably with the
mentaladdition that that throne
would be a very unreal one indeed whose
occupant was unamenable to his
cajoleries. But the vagueness of his language was in itself an added stimulant
to Victoria. Skilfully confusing the woman and the Queen, he threw, with a
grandiose
gesture, the government of England at her feet, as if in doing so he
were performing an act of personal
homage. In his first
audience after
returning to power, he
assured her that "whatever she wished should be done."
When the
intricate Public Worship Regulation Bill was being discussed by the
Cabinet, he told the Faery that his "only object" was "to further your
Majesty's wishes in this matter." When he brought off his great coup over the
Suez Canal, he used expressions which implied that the only gainer by the
transaction was Victoria. "It is just settled," he wrote in
triumph; "you have
it, Madam... Four millions sterling! and almost immediately. There was only
one firm that could do it--Rothschilds. They behaved
admirably;
advanced the
money at a low rate, and the entire interest of the Khedive is now yours,
Madam." Nor did he limit himself to highly-spiced insinuations. Writing with
all the authority of his office, he advised the Queen that she had the
constitutional right to
dismiss a Ministry which was supported by a large
majority in the House of Commons, he even urged her to do so, if, in her
opinion, "your Majesty's Government have from wilfulness, or even from
weakness, deceived your Majesty." To the
horror of Mr. Gladstone, he not only
kept the Queen informed as to the general course of business in the Cabinet,
but revealed to her the part taken in its discussions by individual members of
it. Lord Derby, the son of the late Prime Minister and Disraeli's Foreign
Secretary, viewed these developments with grave
mistrust. "Is there not," he
ventured to write to his Chief, "just a risk of encouraging her in too large
ideas of her personal power, and too great
indifference to what the public
expects? I only ask; it is for you to judge."
As for Victoria, she accepted everything--
compliments, flatteries, Elizabethan
prerogatives--without a single qualm. After the long gloom of her bereavement,
after the chill of the Gladstonian
discipline, she expanded to the rays of
Disraeli's
devotion like a flower in the sun. The change in her situation was
indeed
miraculous. No longer was she obliged to
puzzle for hours over the
complicated details of business, for now she had only to ask Mr. Disraeli for