Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science - Volume 12, No. 31, October, 1873 by Various
page 93 of 289 (32%)
page 93 of 289 (32%)
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part in the gayeties of the season. He conforms, indeed, to the
customs of a court in giving the stated number of balls, dinners and concerts; but it is easy to see that necessity, and not inclination, prompts him to the task. There is plenty of work to occupy his mind during the session of Parliament, and books enough to read and ponder over in the solitude of his chamber; and so long as he is alert and well prepared on every question of business to which his attention is called, affable and polite to persons with whom he is brought into official contact, gentle and generous to the poor and oppressed who appeal to him in person--and no one can deny that he is all this--why should he be blamed for preferring to spend his time as A being breathing thoughtful breath, instead of making himself a gazing-stock for the curious and a companion of the gay and the foolish of his generation? It may be that in the far-off future, long after the titles and prerogatives of royalty shall have been done away with and wellnigh forgotten, the virtues of this king, who is so poorly appreciated by his contemporaries, will be commemorated in some beautiful legend, like that of his favorite story of the Swan-Knight; since even now, when that chaste hero appears in the dazzling purity of his enchanted armor upon the Munich stage, one turns involuntarily to recognize his counterpart in the solitary occupant of the royal box. E.E. ON THE CHURCH STEPS. |
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