登陆注册
15323200000023

第23章

Journey to Choisy--The comtesse du Barry and Louis XV--The king of Denmark--The czar Peter--Frederick II--The abbe de la Chapelle--An experiment--New intrigues--Secret agents-The comtesse and Louis XV--Of the presentation--Letter of the comtesse to the duc d'Aiguillon--Reply--Prince de SoubiseUp to this period I had resided constantly at Versailles or Paris, according to the pleasure of the king, but had never followed his majesty in any of his journeys. He wished to pass some days at his delightful chateau at Choisy, situated on the banks of the Seine. It was decided that I should be of the party, taking the name of the baroness de Pamklek, a German lady, as that would save me from the embarrassment in which I should be placed with the king in consequence of my non-presentation. The prince de Soubise, the ducs de la Trimoulle, d'Ayen, d'Aiguillon, and the marquis de Chauvelin, were also to attend the king. The king remained nearly the whole time with me, and the < entree > to my apartment became a favor not accorded to every body. A small committee met there, and talked of every thing except what is rational; and I can assure you that with such conversation time passes very quickly.

One day the king entered my apartment holding in his hand a letter.

"I am about to receive," said he, "a visit that will not give me much pleasure. My brother of Denmark is traversing Europe, and is about to come to France. <Mon Dieu>! what inconvenient persons are your travelling kings! Why do they leave their kingdoms? I think they are very well at home.""Yes, sire, but there is an excuse for them: they are weary of admiring your majesty at a distance, and wish for the happiness of knowing you."At this compliment the king rubbed his hands with a smile, which he always did when he was satisfied, and then said,"There is not in the hearts of foreign potentates the same affection towards my person as you feel. It is not me but France they wish to see. I remember that when very young I received a visit from the czar Peter the Great, Peter the First I mean to say. He was not deficient in sense, but yet behaved like a boor:

he passed his time in running over the academies, libraries, and manufactories: I never saw such an ill-bred man. Imagine him embracing me at our first interview, and carrying me in his arms as one of my valets would have done. He was dirty, coarse, and ill-dressed. Well, all the Frenchmen ran after him; one would have supposed by their eagerness that they had never seen a regal countenance.""Yet there was no occasion to run very far to see the handsome face of a king.""Hold your tongue, madame la baronne de Pamklek, you are a flatterer.

There is a crowned head which for thirty years has desired to visit France, but I have always turned a deaf ear, and will resist it as long as possible.""Who, sire, is the king so unfortunate as to banished by you from your majesty's presence?""Who? The king of philosophers, the rival of Voltaire, my brother of Prussia. Ah, my dear baronne, he is a bad fellow; he detests me, and I have no love for him. A king does wisely, certainly, to submit his works to the judgment of a Freron! It would be outrageous scandal if he came here. Great and small would crowd around him, and there would not be twenty persons in my train.""Ah! sire , do you think so?"

"I am sure of it. The French now-a-days do not care for their kings, and <la Fronde> will be renewed at an early day. After all, philosophers believe that Frederick II protects them: the honest man laughs both at them and me.""At you, sire? Impossible."

"No, no; I know the impertinences he is guilty of towards me:

but let him. I prefer making my court to the pretty women of my kingdom instead of to my pages. You may depend upon it that if he came to Versailles he would debauch some of them."The king, charmed at having said this malicious speech, rubbed his hands again.

"Really, sire," I replied, "I am astonished that this prince, having such disgusting inclinations, can have much <eclat>

attached to his name."

"Ah, that is because he has great qualities: he will not allow himself to be cheated. Do you know that he is acquainted with the disposal of his finances to the last farthing?""Sire, he must be a miser."

"No, madame, he is a man of method. But enough of him. As to his majesty of Denmark, altho' he would have been as welcome to stay at home, I shall receive him with as much attention as possible. The kings of Denmark and Sweden are my natural allies."The king changed the subject, and said, "There is an abbe, named la Chapelle, whom I think half cracked. He flatters himself that he can, thro' the medium of some apparatus, remain on the water without sinking. He begs my permission to exhibit his experiment before me; and if it would amuse you, we will have the exhibition to-morrow." I accepted the king's proposal with pleasure.

On the next day we went in a body to the terrace of the chateau.

The king was near me with his hat in his hand; the duc de Duras gave me his arm. M. l' abbe waited us in a boat: he flung himself bodily into the water, dressed in a sort of cork-jacket, moved in any direction in the water, drank, ate, and fired off a gun. So far all went off well, but the poor abbe, to close the affair, wrote a letter to the king. The letter was carried in great pomp to his majesty. It contained two verses of Racine, which had some double allusion to the experiment. This, you may be sure, was interpreted in the worst manner. The duc d'Ayen gave the finishing stroke to the whole, on his opinion being asked by the king.

"Sire," said he, "such men ought to be thrown into the water; but all we can wish for them is, that they should remain there."The abbe was not more fortunate in the evening. He presented himself at supper, but the king did not address a word to him, and he was compelled to bear the malicious jokes of the courtiers. But let us leave Choisy and the experimentalist, and return to Versailles and myself.

同类推荐
  • 宦乡要则

    宦乡要则

    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。
  • 佛说梵网经

    佛说梵网经

    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。
  • 大方广三戒经

    大方广三戒经

    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。
  • 医方证治汇编歌诀

    医方证治汇编歌诀

    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。
  • 汀州府志

    汀州府志

    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。
热门推荐
  • 梦回大唐

    梦回大唐

    尹文漓原以为能过上丰衣足食的好日子,却不想在一夜间遭遇了满门被灭、手足背叛之事。即便从小练武也禁不住那样的追杀,心灰意冷中,又是李隆范伸出了援手,救了她。本以为逃脱了,却进入另一个漩涡。为报仇,她借机亲近来王府做客的太子李隆基,并且设计跟李隆基回宫。在皇宫内,妃子争权、宫廷暗斗、朝堂诡谲,她看似不愿深陷斗争,却在暗中一步步将王皇后、赵丽妃和皇甫德仪送入冷宫和地狱。隐忍后的反击,委身于李隆基,不惜以腹中胎儿做筹码,甚至与假意相好的武惠兰同流合污。 为了不连累李隆范几次三番做出决绝之事,可是他始终温柔地守候着她。就算到最后,她自刎于殿前,他依旧履行诺言前来接她。
  • 佛陀的下午茶:佛经中的人生絮语

    佛陀的下午茶:佛经中的人生絮语

    前世菩提树,今生因缘果。命运岑寂流离,佛颜嫣然常悦。作为红尘俗世中的人,且让我们问佛观心,于纷繁的生活中得到一些安宁与淡定。
  • 人生若只如初见

    人生若只如初见

    人生若只如初见,何事秋风悲画扇。骊山语罢清宵半,泪雨零铃终不怨。四段生死离别的爱情,四对为情所困的有情人,他们各自有各自的结论,不论悲喜,但都震撼天地……
  • 无非物是人非

    无非物是人非

    年少时,谁没暗恋过几个人?谁没谈过场单恋的恋爱?结果呢?也许成功的在一起了,又也许揪着心看着他和别的女孩在一起了。过程么,是无奈的难熬。有过气愤为什么自己这么不争气,不能引起他的注意,可是却又无奈于自己的不够优秀。谢谢过他的出现,也怨过他的出现不是为了自己。可终究还是不顾一切的在意他。即管会痛,会累。——点开序语,傲娇的你喜欢吗?心,颤动了吗?如果有,请加入你的书架!爱你!
  • 草本天南星

    草本天南星

    20岁的年纪,再大的爱恨情仇不过是过家家一样的喜怒哀乐。可那件事之后,一切的嬉笑怒骂都被涂上一层厚重的灰色。她是南星,一棵顽强的草本植物,一味有毒的中草药。她把一切的罪责归因于自己,她如救世主般的去承担,如恶魔般的去报复。她曾身比金贵,奈何命比草微。她在最后一首歌里写道,我们活在命运的捉弄里。
  • 情绪谷

    情绪谷

    普通人一生会产生多种情绪,有开心,会难过,时而豁达,时而抑郁。情绪不分积极与消极,适当的情绪能使生活更好,让生命更强大!然而大多数人的情绪总是不受控制,受环境影响,被生活放大,伤害他人,伤及自身。陈教授为了解决这一难题,情绪计划因此诞生。只是随着研究的深入,情绪谷渐渐被发现与了解。情绪谷里的人能自由控制情绪,可以是自己的,也可以是他人的,随着了解,陈教授发现这些只是他们能力的一部分,微不足道的一部分。
  • 史上最贪的穿越:财迷小女人发家史

    史上最贪的穿越:财迷小女人发家史

    【原创作者社团『未央』出品】要房子?行,拿钱来,卖了;要地契?行,只要有钱,卖了。要老公?呃……用租的行不行?左右算盘,右手美男,看财迷小女子玩转古代。         
  • 花月正春风

    花月正春风

    旧时笛声金戈隐,梦回方知乱苍生。曾经是江南郡首富之女,衣食无忧;曾经是乌衣堂杀手之一,心狠贪财。遇见他之后,命运慢慢发生变化,开始和过去一一道别。小三?打走打走。还来?叫上人,继续打走。然而隐藏的事情浮出水面,是选择家族,还是爱情?三年又三年,雾云山庄外车如流水马如龙,不知他是否还会回来,陪她看这场花月正春风。
  • 相思谋:妃常难娶

    相思谋:妃常难娶

    某日某王府张灯结彩,婚礼进行时,突然不知从哪冒出来一个小孩,对着新郎道:“爹爹,今天您的大婚之喜,娘亲让我来还一样东西。”说完提着手中的玉佩在新郎面前晃悠。此话一出,一府宾客哗然,然当大家看清这小孩与新郎如一个模子刻出来的面容时,顿时石化。此时某屋顶,一个绝色女子不耐烦的声音响起:“儿子,事情办完了我们走,别在那磨矶,耽误时间。”新郎一看屋顶上的女子,当下怒火攻心,扔下新娘就往女子所在的方向扑去,吼道:“女人,你给本王站住。”一场爱与被爱的追逐正式开始、、、、、、、
  • 同光体派的宋诗学

    同光体派的宋诗学

    本文主要以同光体派的诗论为研究对象,对同光体派的宋诗学进行一次较全面的梳理,力图理清其宋诗学面貌,揭示同光体派宋诗学的特点和成就。