登陆注册
5386900000095

第95章 MAMMA QUEEN.(10)

"I hope your majesty is satisfied with me," answered Marie Antoinette. "You feel, like me, that it is a new humiliation for us if we are to allow our very enjoyment of nature to be under the control of the people's general, and if even the air is no longer to be the free air for us!"

"I have only thought that in such unguarded walks you would be threatened with danger," answered the king, perplexed. "Lafayette has painted to me in such dark and dreadful colors, and I have so painfully had to confess that he speaks the truth, that I could only think of your safety, and take no other point of view than to see you sheltered from the attacks of your enemies, and from the rage of these factions. I have therefore approved Lafayette's proposal, and allowed him to protect your majesty on your walks."

"But you have not fixed definite hours for my walks? You have not done that, sire, have you?"

"I have indeed done that," answered the king, gently. "I am familiar with your habits, and know that in autumn and winter you usually take your walks between twelve and two, and in summer afternoons between five and seven. I have therefore named these hours to General Lafayette."

The queen heaved a deep sigh. "Sire," she said, softly, "you yourself are binding tighter and tighter the chains of our imprisonment. To-day you limit our freedom to two poor hours, and that will be a precedent for others to continue what you have begun.

We shall after this walk for two hours daily under the protection of M. de Lafayette, but there will come a time when this protection will not suffice, and no security will be great enough for us. For the royal authority which shows itself weak and dependent, and which does not draw power from itself--the royalty which suffers its crown to be borne up for it by the hands of others, confesses thereby that it is too weak to bear the burden itself. Oh, sire, I would rather you had let me break away from the rage of the people, while I might be walking unguarded, than be permitted to take my daily walks under the protection of M. de Lafayette!"

"You see every thing in too dark and sad a light," cried the king.

"Every thing will come out right if we are only wise and carefully conform to circumstances, and by well-timed concessions and admissions propitiate this hate and bring this enmity to silence."

The queen did not reply; she stooped down to the dauphin, and, pressing a kiss upon his locks, whispered: "Now yon may tell every thing, Louis. It is not longer necessary to keep silent about any thing, for silence were useless! So tell of your heroism, my son!"

"Is it of heroism that you talk?" said the king, whose nice ear had caught the words of the queen.

"Yes, of heroism, sire," answered Marie Antoinette. "But it is with us as with Don Quixote; we believed that we were fighting for our honor and our throne; now we must confess that we only fought against windmills. I beg you now, sire, to inform General Lafayette that it is not necessary to call out his National Guards on my account, I shall not walk again!"

And the queen kept her word. Never again during the winter did she go down into the gardens and park of the Tuileries. She never gave Lafayette occasion to protect her, but she at least gained thereby what Lafayette wanted to reach by his National Guard--she held the populace away from the Tuileries. At first they stood in dense masses day after day along the fence of the park and the royal garden, but when they saw that Marie Antoinette would no more expose herself to their curious and evil glances, they grew tired of waiting for her, and withdrew from the neighborhood of the Tuileries,--but only to repair to their clubs and listen to the raving speeches which Marat, Santerre, and other officers, hurled like poisoned arrows at the queen-only to go into the National Assembly and hear Mirabeau and Robespierre, Danton, Chenier, Petion, and all the rest, the assembled representatives of the nation, launch their thundering philippics against a royalty appointed by the grace of God, and causing the people to believe that it was a royalty appointed by the wrath of God.

同类推荐
  • 难经古义

    难经古义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 柳非烟

    柳非烟

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 大慈恩寺三藏法师传

    大慈恩寺三藏法师传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说无上依经

    佛说无上依经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 注华严同教一乘策

    注华严同教一乘策

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 快乐的人生

    快乐的人生

    卡耐基生前总是建议读者把本书与《人性的优点》放在一起阅读。两者的不同之处在于,《人性的优点》主要告诉人们克服忧虑的一些基本原则,《快乐的人生》则更多的是指导人们如何获得快乐。
  • 重生六零驯夫记

    重生六零驯夫记

    曲长歌在军中那会没人叫她的名字,都叫她女魔头。名字能止小儿夜啼,就算是最横的兵痞听了她的大名,也会腿肚子发软。曲长歌糙汉子似得活了二十多年,金戈铁马,征战沙场,终于在打败了蛮子可以休息的时候,一觉睡醒来就穿到一个小可怜身上。曲长歌头疼的想知道这是为什么,好端端的怎么就穿越了,可是看着眼前这些人,一茬比一茬能折腾的时候,她手就痒了......。
  • 天降萌宝:总裁宠妻成瘾

    天降萌宝:总裁宠妻成瘾

    外界传闻,她是一个被总裁包养的小明星,但她以为他们之间有爱,可当她拿着怀孕诊断书准备报喜的时候,看到的却是站在他身边的白月光初恋,以及一声冰冷的“分手”。几年后,独身带着小包子的她成功加冕影后,她在颁奖典礼后台再次遇见了他。“你好影后,我是你的头号粉丝,‘摘星’。”
  • 傅斯年讲国学

    傅斯年讲国学

    本书收纳了傅斯年在诗经、《史记》以及对于诸子百家的研究论述,重新解读诗经,更深层次地理解《史记》的价值,以及了解春秋战国时期文化争鸣现象的历史根源。本书以简体横排的方式,方便读者阅读,对于晦涩难懂的部分给予读者注释。
  • 昆腔原始

    昆腔原始

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 传诵千古的历史掌故(下)

    传诵千古的历史掌故(下)

    掌故是指关于历史人物、典章制度等的故事或传说。中国历史悠久,文化丰厚,社会生活中各种现象一般都可以找到相关掌故。诗文中也经常引用古代故事和有来历的词语。懂得历史掌故可以增强我们的文化素养,加厚我们的文化底蕴。
  • 南北史演义

    南北史演义

    本书叙述内容从刘裕代晋至隋朝灭亡,约两个世纪的历史。南方经历宋、齐、梁、陈,朝代更迭频繁,战乱不止。北魏统一北方后,孝文帝推行改革,吸收汉文化,后分裂东、西魏,进而被北齐、北周所代。
  • 革命烈士书信

    革命烈士书信

    本书中收录了大量革命烈士的书信。其中有这样一段,1921年高君宇与石评梅相识,经过一段时间的交往,他们从相知到相恋,感情甚笃。在他们交往的过程中,经常鸿雁传书,表达自己的理想和人生的追求。此信是高君宇写给石评梅的一封回信。作者以改造世界的志向和积极奋斗的人生观,勉励女友和青年们勇敢地追求光明。书中除了这篇《给石评梅的信》,还收录了《给佩卿贤甥婿爱弟的信》、《给鸣时的信(一九二七年)》、《就义前给熊竹生的信》等共计七十三封信。
  • 忠肃集

    忠肃集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 齐天

    齐天

    新书<第一横〉已经上传,希望大家喜欢。一不小心就成了三大祸害之首,又不小心受到女剑仙的重托,铲除三大祸害,你是要我除掉自己吗?