登陆注册
15688000000002

第2章 CHAPTER I. THE QUEEN$$$$$S GOOD-BY(2)

The marriage which had set all Ruritania on fire with joy and formed in the people's eyes the visible triumph over Black Michael and his fellow-conspirators was now three years old. For three years the Princess Flavia had been queen. I am come by now to the age when a man should look out on life with an eye undimmed by the mists of passion. My love-making days are over;

yet there is nothing for which I am more thankful to Almighty God than the gift of my wife's love. In storm it has been my anchor, and in clear skies my star. But we common folk are free to follow our hearts; am I an old fool for saying that he is a fool who follows anything else? Our liberty is not for princes. We need wait for no future world to balance the luck of men; even here there is an equipoise. From the highly placed a price is exacted for their state, their wealth, and their honors, as heavy as these are great; to the poor, what is to us mean and of no sweetness may appear decked in the robes of pleasure and delight.

Well, if it were not so, who could sleep at nights? The burden laid on Queen Flavia I knew, and know, so well as a man can know it. I think it needs a woman to know it fully; for even now my wife's eyes fill with tears when we speak of it. Yet she bore it, and if she failed in anything, I wonder that it was in so little.

For it was not only that she had never loved the king and had loved another with all her heart. The king's health, shattered by the horror and rigors of his imprisonment in the castle of Zenda, soon broke utterly. He lived, indeed; nay, he shot and hunted, and kept in his hand some measure, at least, of government. But always from the day of his release he was a fretful invalid, different utterly from the gay and jovial prince whom Michael's villains had caught in the shooting lodge. There was worse than this. As time went on, the first impulse of gratitude and admiration that he had felt towards Mr. Rassendyll died away. He came to brood more and more on what had passed while he was a prisoner; he was possessed not only by a haunting dread of Rupert of Hentzau, at whose hands he had suffered so greatly, but also by a morbid, half mad jealousy of Mr. Rassendyll. Rudolf had played the hero while he lay helpless. Rudolf's were the exploits for which his own people cheered him in his own capital. Rudolf's were the laurels that crowned his impatient brow. He had enough nobility to resent his borrowed credit, without the fortitude to endure it manfully. And the hateful comparison struck him nearer home. Sapt would tell him bluntly that Rudolf did this or that, set this precedent or that, laid down this or the other policy, and that the king could do no better than follow in Rudolf's steps. Mr. Rassendyll's name seldom passed his wife's lips, but when she spoke of him it was as one speaks of a great man who is dead, belittling all the living by the shadow of his name. I do not believe that the king discerned that truth which his wife spent her days in hiding from him; yet he was uneasy if Rudolf's name were mentioned by Sapt or myself, and from the queen's mouth he could not bear it. I have seen him fall into fits of passion on the mere sound of it; for he lost control of himself on what seemed slight provocation.

Moved by this disquieting jealousy, he sought continually to exact from the queen proofs of love and care beyond what most husbands can boast of, or, in my humble judgment, make good their right to, always asking of her what in his heart he feared was not hers to give. Much she did in pity and in duty; but in some moments, being but human and herself a woman of high temper, she failed; then the slight rebuff or involuntary coldness was magnified by a sick man's fancy into great offence or studied insult, and nothing that she could do would atone for it. Thus they, who had never in truth come together, drifted yet further apart; he was alone in his sickness and suspicion, she in her sorrows and her memories. There was no child to bridge the gulf between them, and although she was his queen and his wife, she grew almost a stranger to him. So he seemed to will that it should be.

Thus, worse than widowed, she lived for three years; and once only in each year she sent three words to the man she loved, and received from him three words in answer. Then her strength failed her. A pitiful scene had occurred in which the king peevishly upbraided her in regard to some trivial matter--the occasion escapes my memory--speaking to her before others words that even alone she could not have listened to with dignity. I was there, and Sapt; the colonel's small eyes had gleamed in anger. "I

should like to shut his mouth for him," I heard him mutter, for the king's waywardness had well-nigh worn out even his devotion.

The thing, of which I will say no more, happened a day or two before I was to set out to meet Mr. Rassendyll. I was to seek him this time at Wintenberg, for I had been recognized the year before at Dresden; and Wintenberg, being a smaller place and less in the way of chance visitors, was deemed safer. I remember well how she was when she called me into her own room, a few hours after she had left the king. She stood by the table; the box was on it, and I knew well that the red rose and the message were within. But there was more to-day. Without preface she broke into the subject of my errand.

"I must write to him," she said. "I can't bear it, I must write.

My dear friend Fritz, you will carry it safely for me, won't you?

And he must write to me. And you'll bring that safely, won't you?

Ah, Fritz, I know I'm wrong, but I'm starved, starved, starved!

And it's for the last time. For I know now that if I send anything, I must send more. So after this time I won't send at all. But I must say good-by to him; I must have his good-by to carry me through my life. This once, then, Fritz, do it for me."

The tears rolled down her cheeks, which to-day were flushed out of their paleness to a stormy red; her eyes defied me even while they pleaded. I bent my head and kissed her hand.

"With God's help I'll carry it safely and bring his safely, my queen," said I.

同类推荐
  • WILD FLOWERS

    WILD FLOWERS

    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。
  • 华严经旨归

    华严经旨归

    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。
  • 文堂集验方

    文堂集验方

    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。
  • 脉经

    脉经

    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。
  • 礼运

    礼运

    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
  • 皇家鬼奴

    皇家鬼奴

    紫微星大盛,帝皇震怒,帝魔教南下寻找,穆家得知惊天秘闻,天下大势,扑朔迷离
  • TFboys之水情缔音

    TFboys之水情缔音

    三只和三个清纯美丽的少女会擦出什么样的火花呢?桃花的芳香,她们的迷人;翠竹的挺秀,他们的英俊........
  • 唯你唤我旧时名

    唯你唤我旧时名

    我已不是那个我,却还是怀念那时的你我将一生难以忘怀
  • 辛昕相印

    辛昕相印

    爱情总是在自己最不经意的时候到来,我们自己品尝爱的滋味。
  • 尸乐园

    尸乐园

    一个丧尸病毒爆发后的海岛,五十人展开最残酷的生存斗争。周旋在人与丧尸之间,游走于善与恶的边缘。波谲云诡,如何分辨敌我?丧尸围城,怎样挣扎求存?隐藏在阴谋背后关乎人类存亡的巨大危机又是什么?一切尽在《尸乐园》。
  • 沐少的心尖宠妻:柒清延墨浊

    沐少的心尖宠妻:柒清延墨浊

    第一次偶遇,第二次救了她,第三次呢?一张陌生的面孔,熟悉的气场,呈现在她面前。她被他耍得团团转,其实她早该意识到他是那个他。没有印象,但潜意识告诉他,她是他要找的人,他的女人!
  • 花事未茗

    花事未茗

    在少年韩煦随着父母的离异后性情突变,由于着阴郁的性格跟一群阴秽的东西交结。他跟随着母亲一起搬迁到岭镇本书红丰镇,本身不近人性的性格让他受到很多不公的待遇和欺辱。内心的压抑终于在和那些花儿的交涉中迸发出来,接受了花儿的保护和契约。。。。。。本书是由少数流传的花的故事改编的,插入的较贴近生活的故事情节。其余大体是由老废自己编撰,由于是新人,对于文笔不成熟的现象请包涵
  • 吸血鬼们的爱情

    吸血鬼们的爱情

    在一个遥远的国度、有个叫苏岭的小城,里面最出名的学院是希虐学院...
  • 盗墓随说

    盗墓随说

    因为村子发现古钱币,樊曦跟随发小进行盗墓,却不知却成为了一个大阴谋的开始。亲情、友情、金钱他该如何抉择。。。。。
  • 布衣怒

    布衣怒

    一个秦朝刺客的故事。