Part 46 (1/2)

”'What was it?' I asked.

”'That righteousness was not a joke; that Christianity was not a solemn plaything for one day in the week, but a real, practical, working proposition for every day in the year; that the main support of the structure is industry; that its most vital commandment is this, 'six days shalt thou labor'; that no amount of wealth can excuse a man from this duty. Every one worked. There was no idleness and therefore little poverty. The days were all for labor and the nights for rest.

The wheels of progress were greased and moving.'

”'And our love of learning helped to push them along,' I suggested.

”'True. Our people have been mostly like you and me,' he went on. 'We long for knowledge of the truth. We build schools and libraries and colleges. We have pushed on out of the eighteenth century into a new time. There you were born. Now you have stepped a hundred years backward into Europe. You are astonished, and this brings me to my point. Here I am with a great task on my hands. It is to enlist the sympathy and help of France. I must take things, not as I could wish them to be, but as I find them. At this court women are all powerful.

It has long been a maxim here that a diplomatist must stand well with the ladies. Even though he is venerable, he must be gallant, and I do not use the word in a shady sense. The ladies are not so bad as you would think them. They are playthings. To them, life is not as we know it, filled with realities. It is a beautiful drama of rich costumes and painted scenes and ingenious words, all set in the atmosphere of romance. The players only pretend to believe each other.

In the salon I am one of these players. I have to be.'

”'Mirabeau seemed to mean what he said,' was my answer.

”'Yes. He is one of those who often speak from the heart. All these players love the note of sincerity when they hear it. In the salon it is out of key, but away from the ladies the men are often living and not playing. Mirabeau, Condorcet, Turgot and others have heard the call of Human Liberty. Often they come to this house and speak out with a strong candor.'

”'I suppose that this great drama of despotism in France will end in a tragedy whose climax will consume the stage and half the players,' I ventured to say.

”'That is a theme, Jack, on which you and I must be silent,' Franklin answered. 'We must hold our mouths as with a bridle.'

”For a moment he sat looking sadly into the glowing coals on the grate.

Franklin loved to talk, but no one could better keep his own counsel.

”'At heart I am no revolutionist,' he said presently. 'I believe in purifying--not in breaking down. I would to G.o.d that I could have convinced the British of their error. Mainly I am with the prophet who says:

”'”Stand in the old ways. View the ancient paths. Consider them well and be not among those who are given to change.”'

”I sat for a moment thinking of the cruelties I had witnessed, and asking myself if it had been really worth while. Franklin interrupted my thoughts.

”'I wish we could discover a plan which would induce and compel nations to settle their differences without cutting each other's throats. When will human wisdom be sufficient to see the advantage of this?'

”He told me the thrilling details of his success in France; how he had won the kingdom for an ally and secured loans and the help of a fleet and army then on the sea.

”'And you will not be surprised to learn that the British have been sounding me to see if we would be base enough to abandon our ally,' he laughed.

”In a moment he added:

”'Come, it is late and you must write a letter to the heart of England before you lie down to rest.'

”Often thereafter he spoke of Margaret as 'the heart of England.'”

CHAPTER XXV

THE PAGEANT

Jack began to a.s.sist Franklin in his correspondence and in the many business details connected with his mission.

”I have never seen a man with a like capacity for work,” the young officer writes. ”Every day he is conferring with Vergennes or other representatives of the King, or with the ministers of Spain, Holland and Great Britain. The greatest intellect in the kingdom is naturally in great request. To-day, after many hours of negotiation with the Spanish minister, in came M. Dubourg, the most distinguished physician in Europe.

”'_Mon chere maitre_,' he said. 'I have a most difficult case and as you know more about the human body than any man of my acquaintance I wish to confer with you.'