登陆注册
14724300000095

第95章 THE SECRETS OF THE RUGGIERI(4)

The Fuggers of Augsburg, in whom all modern Luculluses will recognize their princes, and all bankers their masters, were gifted with powers of calculation it would be difficult to surpass. Well, those practical men, who loaned the funds of all Europe to the sovereigns of the sixteenth century (as deeply in debt as the kings of the present day), those illustrious guests of Charles V. were sleeping partners in the crucibles of Paracelsus. At the beginning of the sixteenth century, Ruggiero the elder was the head of that secret university from which issued the Cardans, the Nostradamuses, and the Agrippas (all in their turn physicians of the house of Valois); also the astronomers, astrologers, and alchemists who surrounded the princes of Christendom and were more especially welcomed and protected in France by Catherine de' Medici. In the nativity drawn by Basilio and Ruggiero the elder, the principal events of Catherine's life were foretold with a correctness which is quite disheartening for those who deny the power of occult science. This horoscope predicted the misfortunes which during the siege of Florence imperilled the beginning of her life;also her marriage with a son of the king of France, the unexpected succession of that son to his father's throne, the birth of her children, their number, and the fact that three of her sons would be kings in succession, that two of her daughters would be queens, and that all of them were destined to die without posterity. This prediction was so fully realized that many historians have assumed that it was written after the events.

It is well known that Nostradamus took to the chateau de Chaumont, whither Catherine went after the conspiracy of La Renaudie, a woman who possessed the faculty of reading the future. Now, during the reign of Francois II., while the queen had with her her four sons, all young and in good health, and before the marriage of her daughter Elizabeth with Philip II., king of Spain, or that of her daughter Marguerite with Henri de Bourbon, king of Navarre (afterward Henri IV.), Nostradamus and this woman reiterated the circumstances formerly predicted in the famous nativity. This woman, who was no doubt gifted with second sight, and who belonged to the great school of Seekers of the Great Work, though the particulars of her life and name are lost to history, stated that the last crowned child would be assassinated.

Having placed the queen-mother in front of a magic mirror, in which was reflected a wheel on the several spokes of which were the faces of her children, the sorceress set the wheel revolving, and Catherine counted the number of revolutions which it made. Each revolution was for each son one year of his reign. Henri IV. was also put upon the wheel, which then made twenty-four rounds, and the woman (some historians have said it was a man) told the frightened queen that Henri de Bourbon would be king of France and reign that number of years. From that time forth Catherine de' Medici vowed a mortal hatred to the man whom she knew would succeed the last of her Valois sons, who was to die assassinated. Anxious to know what her own death would be, she was warned to beware of Saint-Germain. Supposing, therefore, that she would be either put to death or imprisoned in the chateau de Saint-Germain, she would never so much as put her foot there, although that residence was far more convenient for her political plans, owing to its proximity to Paris, than the other castles to which she retreated with the king during the troubles. When she was taken suddenly ill, a few days after the murder of the Duc de Guise at Blois, she asked the name of the bishop who came to assist her. Being told it was Saint-Germain, she cried out, "I am dead!" and did actually die on the morrow,--having, moreover, lived the exact number of years given to her by all her horoscopes.

These predictions, which were known to the Cardinal de Lorraine, who regarded them as witchcraft, were now in process of realization.

Francois II. had reigned his two revolutions of the wheel, and Charles IX. was now making his last turn. If Catherine said the strange words which history has attributed to her when her son Henri started for Poland,--"You will soon return,"--they must be set down to her faith in occult science and not to the intention of poisoning Charles IX.

Many other circumstances corroborated Catherine's faith in the occult sciences. The night before the tournament at which Henri II. was killed, Catherine saw the fatal blow in a dream. Her astrological council, then composed of Nostradamus and the two Ruggieri, had already predicted to her the death of the king. History has recorded the efforts made by Catherine to persuade her husband not to enter the lists. The prognostic, and the dream produced by the prognostic, were verified. The memoirs of the day relate another fact that was no less singular. The courier who announced the victory of Moncontour arrived in the night, after riding with such speed that he killed three horses. The queen-mother was awakened to receive the news, to which she replied, "I knew it already." In fact, as Brantome relates, she had told of her son's triumph the evening before, and narrated several circumstances of the battle. The astrologer of the house of Bourbon predicted that the youngest of all the princes descended from Saint-Louis (the son of Antoine de Bourbon) would ascend the throne of France. This prediction, related by Sully, was accomplished in the precise terms of the horoscope; which led Henri IV. to say that by dint of lying these people sometimes hit the truth. However that may be, if most of the great minds of that epoch believed in this vast science,--called Magic by the masters of judicial astrology, and Sorcery by the public,--they were justified in doing so by the fulfilment of horoscopes.

It was for the use of Cosmo Ruggiero, her mathematician, astronomer, and astrologer, that Catherine de' Medici erected the tower behind the Halle aux Bles,--all that now remains of the hotel de Soissons. Cosmo Ruggiero possessed, like confessors, a mysterious influence, the possession of which, like them again, sufficed him. He cherished an ambitious thought superior to all vulgar ambitions. This man, whom dramatists and romance-writers depict as a juggler, owned the rich abbey of Saint-Mahe in Lower Brittany, and refused many high ecclesiastical dignities; the gold which the superstitious passions of the age poured into his coffers sufficed for his secret enterprise;and the queen's hand, stretched above his head, preserved every hair of it from danger.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 超时空商城

    超时空商城

    超时空商城为您服务,大千世界的产品,这里应有尽有。这位客人,您想当皇帝?好说,等我去科幻世界给您进几批纳米装甲,代价就是你们世界的所有人以后都得为我采集金矿。还有您,是想要武功秘籍?巧了,我刚从天龙世界回来,这里有六脉神剑,还有段誉同款的凌波微步,您只要把手中这柄倚天剑给我就好。咳咳,这位客人,您有点过分,竟然想要嫦娥姐姐的内衣?我修为还不够,您五百年后再来吧。赵天本以为自己是老板,结果变成了进货员,穿越大千世界,收罗一切珍宝。
  • 血欲焚天

    血欲焚天

    窗外花开美如画,可怜知音难寻觅。这武之极,孤之切!心入焚!天地灭!
  • 穿越之蔷薇凋谢

    穿越之蔷薇凋谢

    她!为了追一只猫,不慎穿越到清朝,面对深情于她的将军之子,还有幽默搞笑的阿哥,又该如何抉择呢?十年后,一次千载难逢的时机。她!会放弃自己的爱人回去吗?还是留下来继续她的古代梦?
  • 时空恋人:顾校草请收货

    时空恋人:顾校草请收货

    “为什么要把我拉入你的生活?”“我爱你呀”“为什么要和她在一起”“我不想你受到伤害,因为我爱你”“你可以不可以不要再说你爱我了,你爱我,就可以把我伤的粉身碎骨,也只是一句我爱你就过去了对吧?我累了,再见,不负遇见”“我错了…你回来吧”爱你如果结果是粉身碎骨,我也愿意去闯一闯但是,你亲口告诉我的,让我粉身碎骨我累了,真的累了,再见了,顾九辞。
  • 站住给本宫把钱乖乖交出来

    站住给本宫把钱乖乖交出来

    她发誓,如果知道他是皇帝,借她一百个胆子也不敢跟他抢茅房,还险些把丫一脚踹进茅坑,最后沦落到这里扫落叶!她,作为一个眼里只看得到钱的顶尖杀手,性格怪异让人望而生叹—不涉及钱的时候,她是冷静、睿智、杀人不眨眼的嗜血修罗!涉及钱的时候,瞬间变为抽风、暴走、癫狂的二货女!艾玛,谁说杀手穿越之后日子过得统一牛叉?面对掌握着千军万马的皇帝,谁特么牛叉一个给我看看,被射成刺猬有木有?算了,算了,咱隐藏实力,图个清闲。可是,清闲不是那么容易的……每天对着众位主子跪来跪去;每天被众人讽来讽去;还要拿着扫把扫来扫去!KAO!老娘——忍!可当她做宫女的第一笔俸禄也被扣掉时……——他姥姥的!老娘跟你们拼了!
  • 诅咒面具

    诅咒面具

    无论你是平凡或者伟大,在生命中,总会遇到各种选择。有时,你会为了做正确的选择拍手庆幸;有时,却又为错误的选择后悔不已。不管怎样,这都是由你自己决定,喜悦或痛苦都由你来承担。但是当你遇到一生中最重要的选择,你必须做出正确的的决定,因为它不但能改变你的命运,甚至会改变整个世界。
  • 俗话倾谈一集

    俗话倾谈一集

    《俗话倾谈》是岭南晚清著名的民间小说家邵彬儒创作的通俗短篇小说集,是古代通俗短篇小说衰落时期的代表作品之一,在古代小说史上占有不可或缺的一席之地。
  • 被抓住的风

    被抓住的风

    本文是一篇现实和回忆穿插的故事,部分真实部分虚构,主要是为了纪念曾经年少的日子和想像中的日子,和如今的现实,世界是如此的多变,那群好友你们现在又在哪儿呢,虽然文字无法记录曾经的美,但试一试又何妨呢,留下一份回忆,至少对于我来说,应该还是值得的。
  • Robin Hood

    Robin Hood

    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。
  • 我恨我青春

    我恨我青春

    屌丝大学生金榜千里迢迢来到北京读书,在这繁华城市中的一隅,却经历令人啼笑皆非的友情、爱情。也许在这里有你的影子,有他的影子,但是这是我的青春,也是我们的青春!