CHAPTER XXXV.
WEARY AND FAR DISTANT.
Twice already, in accordance with my promise to Dalrymple, I had calledupon Madame de Courcelles, and finding her out each time, had left mycard, and gone away disappointed. From Dalrymple himself, although I hadwritten to him several times, I heard seldom, and always briefly. Hisfirst notes were dated from Berlin, and those succeeding them fromVienna. He seemed restless, bitter, dissatisfied with himself, and withthe world. Naturally unfit for a lounging, idle life, his active nature,now that it had to bear up against the irritation of hope deferred,chafed and fretted for work.
"My sword-arm," he wrote in one of his letters, "is weary of itsholiday. There are times when I long for the smell of gunpowder, and thethunder of battle. I am sick to death of churches and picture-galleries,operas, dilettantism, white-kid-glovism, and all the hollow shows andseemings of society. Sometimes I regret having left the army--at othersI rejoice; for, after all, in these piping times of peace, to be asoldier is to be a mere painted puppet--a thing of pipe-clay and goldbullion--an expensive scarecrow--an elegant Guy Fawkes--a sign, not ofwhat is, but of what has been, and yet may be again. For my part, I carenot to take the livery without the service. Pshaw! will things nevermend! Are the good old times, and the good old international hatreds,gone by for ever? Shall we never again have a thorough, seasonable,wholesome, continental war? This place (Vienna) would be worth fightingfor, if one had the chance. I sometimes amuse myself by planning asiege, when I ride round the fortifications, as is my custom of anafternoon."
"Next to a military life I think that of a traveller--a genuinetraveller, who turns his back upon railroads and guides--must be themost exciting and the most enviable under heaven. Since reading thesebooks, I dream of the jungle and the desert, and fancy that abuffalo-hunt must be almost as fine sport as a charge of cavalry. Oh,what a weary exile this is! I feel as if the very air were stagnantaround me, and I, like the accursed vessel that carried the ancientmariner,--
As idle as a painted ship, Upon a painted ocean.'"
Sometimes, though rarely, he mentioned Madame de Courcelles, and thenvery guardedly: always as "Madame de Courcelles," and never as his wife.
Sometimes he broke into a strain of forced gayety, more sad, to mythinking, than the bitterest lamentations could have been.
"I wish to Heaven," he said, in one of his later letters--"I wish toHeaven I had no heart, and no brain! I wish I was, like some worthypeople I know, a mere human zoophyte, consisting of nothing but a mouthand a stomach. Only conceive how it must simplify life when once one hassucceeded in making a clean sweep of all those finer emotions whichharass more complicated organisms! Enviable zoophytes, that live only todigest!--who would not be of the brotherhood?"
In another he wrote:--
Here is one more extract, and it shall be the last:--
"You ask me how I pass my days--in truth, wearily enough. I rise withthe dawn, but that is not very early in September; and I ride for acouple of hours before breakfast. After breakfast I play billiards insome public room, consume endless pipes, read the papers, and so on.Later in the day I scowl through a picture-gallery, or a string ofstudios; or take a pull up the river; or start off upon a long, solitaryobjectless walk through miles and miles of forest. Then comesdinner--the inevitable, insufferable, interminable German table-d'hotedinner--and then there is the evening to be got through somehow! Now andthen I drop in at a theatre, but generally take refuge in some plebeianLust Garten or Beer Hall, where amid clouds of tobacco-smoke, one maylisten to the best part-singing and zitter-playing in Europe. And so mydays drag by--who but myself knows how slowly? Truly, Damon, there comesto every one of us, sooner or later, a time when we say of life asChristopher Sly said of the comedy--''Tis an excellent piece of work.Would 'twere done!'"