Part 48 (2/2)
[In 1638, Prince Thomas having raised the siege of Hesdin, the Cardinal was much vexed at it. A nun of the convent of Mount Calvary had said that the victory would be to the King and Father Joseph, thus wis.h.i.+ng it to be believed that Heaven protected the minister.--Memoires pour l'histoire du Cardinal de Richelieu.]
”This is another of your absurdities, sir,” said the Cardinal; ”you will make me as ridiculous as yourself, if you go on so; I am too powerful to need the a.s.sistance of Heaven. Do not let that happen again. Occupy yourself only with the people I consign to you. I traced your part before. When the master of the horse is taken, you will see him tried and executed at Lyons. I will not be known in this. This affair is beneath me; it is a stone under my feet, upon which I ought not to have bestowed so much attention.”
Joseph was silent; he could not understand this man, who, surrounded on every side by armed enemies, spoke of the future as of a present over which he had the entire control, and of the present as a past which he no longer feared. He knew not whether to look upon him as a madman or a prophet, above or below the standard of human nature.
His astonishment was redoubled when Chavigny hastily entered, and nearly falling, in his heavy boots, over the Cardinal's footstool, exclaimed in great agitation:
”Sir, one of your servants has just arrived from Perpignan; and he has beheld the camp in an uproar, and your enemies in the saddle.”
”They will soon dismount, sir,” replied Richelieu, replacing his footstool. ”You appear to have lost your equanimity.”
”But--but, Monseigneur, must we not warn Monsieur de Fabert?”
”Let him sleep, and go to bed yourself; and you also, Joseph.”
”Monseigneur, another strange event has occurred--the King has arrived.”
”Indeed, that is extraordinary,” said the minister, looking at his watch. ”I did not expect him these two hours. Retire, both of you.”
A heavy trampling and the clattering of arms announced the arrival of the Prince; the folding-doors were thrown open; the guards in the Cardinal's service struck the ground thrice with their pikes; and the King appeared.
He entered, supporting himself with a cane on one side, and on the other leaning upon the shoulder of his confessor, Father Sirmond, who withdrew, and left him with the Cardinal; the latter rose with difficulty, but could not advance a step to meet the King, because his legs were bandaged and enveloped. He made a sign that they should a.s.sist the King to a seat near the fire, facing himself. Louis XIII fell into an armchair furnished with pillows, asked for and drank a gla.s.s of cordial, prepared to strengthen him against the frequent fainting-fits caused by his malady of languor, signed to all to leave the room, and, alone with Richelieu, he said in a languid voice:
”I am departing, my dear Cardinal; I feel that I shall soon return to G.o.d. I become weaker from day to day; neither the summer nor the southern air has restored my strength.”
”I shall precede your Majesty,” replied the minister. ”You see that death has already conquered my limbs; but while I have a head to think and a hand to write, I shall be at the service of your Majesty.”
”And I am sure it was your intention to add, 'a heart to love me.'”
”Can your Majesty doubt it?” answered the Cardinal, frowning, and biting his lips impatiently at this speech.
”Sometimes I doubt it,” replied the King. ”Listen: I wish to speak openly to you, and to complain of you to yourself. There are two things which have been upon my conscience these three years. I have never mentioned them to you; but I reproached you secretly; and could anything have induced me to consent to any proposals contrary to your interest, it would be this recollection.”
There was in this speech that frankness natural to weak minds, who seek by thus making their ruler uneasy, to compensate for the harm they dare not do him, and revenge their subjection by a childish controversy.
Richelieu perceived by these words that he had run a great risk; but he saw at the same time the necessity of venting all his spleen, and, to facilitate the explosion of these important avowals, he acc.u.mulated all the professions he thought most calculated to provoke the King.
”No, no!” his Majesty at length exclaimed, ”I shall believe nothing until you have explained those two things, which are always in my thoughts, which were lately mentioned to me, and which I can justify by no reasoning. I mean the trial of Urbain Grandier, of which I was never well informed, and the reason for the hatred you bore to my unfortunate mother, even to her very ashes.”
”Is this all, Sire?” said Richelieu. ”Are these my only faults? They are easily explained. The first it was necessary to conceal from your Majesty because of its horrible and disgusting details of scandal. There was certainly an art employed, which can not be looked upon as guilty, in concealing, under the t.i.tle of 'magic,' crimes the very names of which are revolting to modesty, the recital of which would have revealed dangerous mysteries to the innocent; this was a holy deceit practised to hide these impurities from the eyes of the people.”
”Enough, enough, Cardinal,” said Louis XIII, turning away his head, and looking downward, while a blush covered his face; ”I can not hear more.
I understand you; these explanations would disgust me. I approve your motives; 'tis well. I had not been told that; they had concealed these dreadful vices from me. Are you a.s.sured of the proofs of these crimes?”
”I have them all in my possession, Sire; and as to the glorious Queen, Marie de Medicis, I am surprised that your Majesty can forget how much I was attached to her. Yes, I do not fear to acknowledge it; it is to her I owe my elevation. She was the first who deigned to notice the Bishop of Luton, then only twenty-two years of age, to place me near her.
What have I not suffered when she compelled me to oppose her in your Majesty's interest! But this sacrifice was made for you. I never had, and never shall have, to regret it.”
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