登陆注册
19627100000161

第161章 SECTION XIX(4)

[A very remarkable circumstance was related to me when I was at Vienna, after this horrid murder. The Princess of Lobkowitz, sister to the Princesse de Lamballe, received a box, with an anonymous letter, telling her to conceal the box carefully till further notice. After the riots had subsided a little in France, she was apprised that the box contained all, or the greater part, of the jewels belonging to the Princess, and had been taken from the Tuileries on the 10th of August.

It is supposed that the jewels had been packed by the Princess in anticipation of her doom, and forwarded to her sister through her agency or desire.]

There was no friend of the Queen to whom the King showed any deference, or rather anything like the deference he paid to the Princesse de Lamballe. When the Duchesse de Polignac, the Comtesse Diane de Polignac, the Comte d'Artois, the Duchesse de Guiche, her husband, the present Duc de Grammont, the Prince of Hesse-Darmstadt, etc., fled from Paris, he and the Queen, as if they had foreseen the awful catastrophe which was to destroy her so horribly, entreated her to leave the Court, and take refuge in Italy. So also did her father-in-law, the Duc de Penthievre;but all in vain. She saw her friend deprived of De Polignac, and all those near and dear to her heart, and became deaf to every solicitation.

Could such constancy, which looked death in its worst form in the face unshrinking, have existed without great and estimable qualities in its possessor?

The brother-in-law of the Princesse de Lamballe, the Duc d'Orleans, was her declared enemy merely from her attachment to the Queen. These three great victims have been persecuted to the tomb, which had no sooner closed over the last than the hand of Heaven fell upon their destroyer.

That Louis XVI. was not the friend of this member of his family can excite no surprise, but must rather challenge admiration. He had been seduced by his artful and designing regicide companions to expend millions to undermine the throne, and shake it to pieces under the feet of his relative, his Sovereign, the friend of his earliest youth, who was aware of the treason, and who held the thunderbolt, but would not crush him. But they have been foiled in their hope of building a throne for him upon the ruin they had made, and placed an age where they flattered him he would find a diadem.

The Prince de Conti told me at Barcelona that the Duchesse d'Orleans had assured him that, even had the Duc d'Orleans survived, he never could have attained, his object. The immense sums he had lavished upon the horde of his revolutionary satellites had, previous to his death, thrown him into embarrassment. The avarice of his party increased as his resources diminished. The evil, as evil generally does, would have wrought its own punishment in either way. He must have lived suspected and miserable, had he not died. But his reckless character did not desert him at the scaffold. It is said that before he arrived at the Place de Greve he ate a very rich ragout, and drank a bottle of champagne, and left the world as he had gone through it.

The supernumerary, the uncalled-for martyr, the last of the four devoted royal sufferers, was beheaded the following spring. For this murder there could not have been the shadow of a pretext. The virtues of this victim were sufficient to redeem the name of Elizabeth [The eighteen years' imprisonment and final murder of Mary, Queen of Scots, by Elizabeth of England, is enough to stigmatize her forever, independently of the many other acts of tyranny which stain her memory. The dethronement by Elizabeth of Russia of the innocent Prince Ivan, her near relation, while yet in the cradle, gives the Northern Empress a claim to a similar character to the British Queen.] from the stain with which the two of England and Russia, who had already borne it, had clouded its immortality. She had never, in any way, interfered in political events. Malice itself had never whispered a circumstance to her dispraise. After this wanton assassination, it is scarcely to be expected that the innocent and candid looks and streaming azure eyes of that angelic infant, the Dauphin, though raised in humble supplication to his brutal assassins, with an eloquence which would have disarmed the savage tiger, could have won wretches so much more pitiless than the most ferocious beasts of the wilderness, or saved him from their slow but sure poison, whose breath was worse than the upas tree to all who came within its influence.

The Duchesse d'Angouleme, the only survivor of these wretched captives, is a living proof of the baleful influence of that contaminated prison, the infectious tomb of the royal martyrs. That once lovely countenance, which, with the goodness and amiableness of her royal father, whose mildness hung on her lips like the milk and honey of human kindness, blended the dignity, grace, elegance, and innocent vivacity, which were the acknowledged characteristics of her beautiful mother, lost for some time all traces of its original attractions. The lines of deep-seated sorrow are not easily obliterated. If the sanguinary republic had not wished to obtain by exchange the Generals La Fayette, Bournonville, Lameth, etc., whom Dumourier had treacherously consigned into the hands of Austria, there is little: doubt but that, from the prison in which she was so long doomed to vegetate only to make life a burthen, she would have been sent to share the fate of her murdered family.

How can the Parisians complain that they found her Royal Highness, on her return to France, by no means what they required in a Princess? Can it be wondered at that her marked grief should be visible when amidst the murderers of her family? It should rather be a wonder that she can at all bear the scenes in which she moves, and not abhor the very name of Paris, when every step must remind her of some out rage to herself, or those most dear to her, or of some beloved relative or friend destroyed!

同类推荐
  • 明实录宪宗实录

    明实录宪宗实录

    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。
  • 太上清静元洞真文玉字妙经

    太上清静元洞真文玉字妙经

    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。
  • 松窗梦语

    松窗梦语

    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。
  • I SAY NO

    I SAY NO

    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。
  • 少仪

    少仪

    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
  • 野蛮公主的炫酷王子

    野蛮公主的炫酷王子

    10大家族现已分成了两个5大家族,小时候的诺言,还记得吗?果然想的没错,你们都忘了
  • 碑震天下

    碑震天下

    夕阳下,一个弥留之际的老人怔怔望着天空,忽然他的手颤了起来,状若疯癫道:我看见了,那是一座碑,镇着天下!
  • 我的二次元后宫

    我的二次元后宫

    统天下,逆苍天。宙斯算什么?咱在弑神者里虐他!后宫算什么?咱是二次元后宫!能和我比吗?能与我匹敌吗?哼,哥随便找个能力就能把你虐得半死!
  • 只想做个小透明

    只想做个小透明

    若彤是为了摆脱过去四年错误的感情而投身的网游小白。别人打怪她挖草,别人抢装备她喂宠物,说好的开荒呢?怎么变锄地了!这个带着这么多宝宝的新手一定是个bug!GM~GM我要投诉!
  • 重生瓦罗兰大陆

    重生瓦罗兰大陆

    陈晓宇,大四学生,面临毕业压力的他,莫名穿越到瓦罗兰大陆,与英雄联盟中各个英雄产生各种匪夷所思的关系。
  • TFBOYS校园之恋

    TFBOYS校园之恋

    这本书是小汐和闺蜜一起写的,希望大家多多支持。
  • 重生之趋吉避凶

    重生之趋吉避凶

    吴官回到了99年,吃着2块5的肉丝拉面,喝着5毛钱的汽水,看着同桌妹子青涩的模样,享受着学校里青春的气息,感慨着重生——真好!再来一次,成就人生赢家。这是一本带着无实践意义且不科学金手指的写实类都市重生文,敬请收看。本书已经签约,请放心收藏……
  • 若惜莫离

    若惜莫离

    黑色童话,一场赌局游戏,他为了保她安全不惜伤害她,她始终爱他甘愿被害,只是谁都不愿说出那三个字爱一个人很容易,忘记他就不容易了。恨一个人就说明你足够爱他,这样就更加难以忘记了。男人有的时候就是这样,永远都想让爱他的女人不忘记他,他会不择手段的让女人因为他受伤,让女人恨他…就是这样女人才会遍体鳞伤,心里面亦是。
  • 弑杀神魔曲

    弑杀神魔曲

    他原本是中国异能特种部队指挥官,混战中穿越到古代,带着体内的火神决,重新成长成为一代大将,惊人的发现体内的潜力几乎就是亚瑟的再世,连名字都一样。
  • 独步登仙

    独步登仙

    血族唯一的继承人,苦苦寻找获取异能的方法,强大的崛起,却牵出一个个上古遗留下来的秘密。盘古的遗命,神族的阴谋,构筑着一个新的神话的出现。从此,天不再高,因为天上地下,任我遨游。