登陆注册
4132100000022

第22章 CHAPTER IV.(1)

The King's character.--His proverbial grace.--He tells a story well.--"A warmth and sweetness of the blood."--Beautiful Barbara Palmer.--Her intrigue with my Lord Chesterfield.--James, Duke of York.--His early days.--Escape from St. James's.--Fights in the service of France.--Marriage with Anne Hyde.--Sensation at Court.--The Duke of Gloucester's death.--The Princess of Orange.

--Schemes against the Duke of York's peace.--The "lewd informer."--Anne Hyde is acknowledged Duchess of York.

Whilst the kingdom was absorbed by movements consequent on its change of government, the court was no less engrossed by incidents relative to the career it had begun. In the annals of court life there are no pages more interesting than those dealing with Charles II, and his friends; in the history of kings there is no more remarkable figure than that of the merry monarch himself.

Returning to rule over a nation which, during his absence, had been distracted by civil strife, King Charles, young in years, brave in deeds, and surrounded by that halo of romance which misfortune lends its victims, entirely. gained the hearts of his subjects. Nature had endowed him with gifts adapted to display qualities that fascinated, and fitted to hide blemishes which repelled. On the one hand his expressive features and shapely figure went far towards creating a charm which his personal grace and courtesy of manner completed; on the other, his delicate tact screened the heartlessness of his sensualism, whilst his surface sympathies hid the barrenness of his cynicism.

With the coolness and courage he had shown in danger, the shrewdness and wit he continually evinced, and the varied capacities he certainly possessed, Charles II. might have made his reign illustrious, had not his love of ease and detestation of business rendered him indifferent to all things so long as he was free to follow his desires. But these faults, which became grievous in the eyes of his subjects, commended him to the hearts of his courtiers, the common purpose of whose lives was pursuit of pleasure. Never was sovereign more gracious to those who came in contact with him, or less ceremonious with his friends; whilst abroad he had lived with his little band of courtiers more as a companion than a king. The bond of exile had drawn them close together; an equal fortune had gone far towards obliterating distinctions of royalty; and custom had so fitted the monarch and his friends to familiarity, that on his return to England neither he nor they laid aside a mutual freedom of treatment which by degrees extended itself throughout the court. For all that, "he was master," as Welwood says, "of something in his person and aspect that commanded both love and admiration at once."Among his many gifts was that of telling a story well--a rare one 'tis true in all ages. Never was he better pleased than when, surrounded by a group of gossips, he narrated some anecdote of which he was the hero; and, though his tales were more than twice told, they were far from tedious; inasmuch as, being set forth with brighter flashes of wit and keener touches of irony, they were ever pleasant to hear. His conversation was of a like complexion to his tales, pointed, shrewd, and humorous;frequently--as became the manner of the times--straying far afield of propriety, and taking liberties of expression of which nice judgments could not approve. But indeed his majesty's speech was not more free than his conduct was licentious. He could not think, he gravely told Bishop Burnet, "God would make a man miserable for taking a little pleasure out of the way."Accordingly he followed the free bent of his desires, and his whole life was soon devoted to voluptuousness; a vice which an ingenious courtier obligingly describes as a "warmth and sweetness of the blood that would not be confined in the communicating itself--an overflowing of good nature, of which he had such a stream that it would not be restrained within the banks of a crabbed and unsociable virtue."The ease and freedom of his continental life had no doubt fostered this lamentable depravity; for his misfortunes as an exiled king by no means prevented him following his inclinations as an ardent lover. Accordingly, his intrigues at that time were numerous, as may be judged from the fact of Lady Byron being described as "his seventeenth mistress abroad." The offspring of one of his continental mistresses was destined to plunge the English nation into civil warfare, and to suffer a traitor's death on Tower Hill in the succeeding reign.

"The profligacy which Charles practised abroad not being discontinued at home, he resumed in England an intrigue commenced at Brussels a short time before the restoration. The object of this amour was the beautiful Barbara Palmer, afterwards, by reason of her lack of virtue, raised to the peerage under the titles of Countess of Castlemaine, and Duchess of Cleveland.

This lady, who became a most prominent figure in the court of the merry monarch, was daughter of William, second Viscount Grandison, a brave gentleman and a loyal, who had early in life fallen in the civil war whilst fighting for his king. He is described as having, among other gifts, "a faultless person," a boon, which descended to his only child, the bewitching Barbara.

同类推荐
  • 六十种曲双烈记

    六十种曲双烈记

    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。
  • 扶天广圣如意灵签

    扶天广圣如意灵签

    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。
  • 上清九丹上化胎精中记经

    上清九丹上化胎精中记经

    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。
  • 古今词话

    古今词话

    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。
  • 续集古今佛道论衡

    续集古今佛道论衡

    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
  • 换票儿

    换票儿

    龙七爷踱出茶馆,看到县公署门前围聚着一群人。他蹊跷地眯起眼睛,老老地朝人群那边看看,“喀巴喀巴”转动两圈左手的核桃,而后“歘歘歘歘”地朝人群走去。龙七爷年过花甲,依旧体健腿轻,走路像是竞走,带动得脑后一条小辫子左摇右摆,如同喝醉了酒。看到天福号饭庄大掌柜的走来,人们的目光都聚焦在龙七爷身上。就像龙七爷是块磁石,他们的眼睛是铁球,眼神复杂,有的惊恐,有的忧伤,有的企盼,有的彷徨。龙七爷扫视一圈各色人脸,目光落到一个年轻人脸上,问:“怎么回事?”
  • 禅里禅外悟人生

    禅里禅外悟人生

    本书是弘一法师透悟佛学要义与人生真谛的集大成之作,书中除了弘一法师的著作之外,还包括他的演讲稿与处世格言,这些内容被梁实秋、林语堂等名家誉为“一字千金,值得所有人慢慢阅读、慢慢体味、用一生的时间静静领悟”。
  • 阴魂超市

    阴魂超市

    千万不要随便答应帮别人的请求,那晚我自己开的超市来了一个奇怪的女人,她买完东西后向我提了一个匪夷所思的请求,那个要求说实话不光让人摸不着头脑,更加是让我觉得慎人,这事我一直不敢跟身边的人说,只敢来网络上提醒下大家,平时不要看别人漂亮,就轻易答应别人的请求,到时小心自己的命都没了?
  • 佞相倾国

    佞相倾国

    灯光如豆,光影晦暗,她掀开了帘子,发现自己的塌上躺着一个美人。“陛下劳累,现在让臣伺候陛下休息吧!”“人说红颜祸水,你要做那蓝颜祸水?”“陛下认为臣是什么,臣就是什么。”她微微一笑,欺身上去,呵气如兰。“那,你便做我的夫君吧!”“臣谨遵圣意!”他是将门世家的遗孤,她是罪臣之后的女儿。他想恢复世家荣光,她欲为亲族平反昭雪。乱世枭雄,谁人争锋?
  • 白面书生无情手

    白面书生无情手

    邪教魔头魏大通,他凭借高深的邪道功夫,向武林正派组织发出“一战定乾坤”的狅妄战书,这样狅妄叫嚣的战书太目中無人了。如是,在正派组织中,谁去应战?谁敢应战?武林危在旦時。虽然他遭受阴阳教无数次的追杀和暗害,但他没有死,并神奇的活了下来。在生与死的面前,他深爱着她,哪怕失去生命,他带着她,他护着她,没有把她当作累赘。而她,更深刻的体会到,她们那有苦,有甜,有惊,有喜的生死爱情,是天注定的,是牢不可破的。
  • 你是微笑便是我的春暖花开

    你是微笑便是我的春暖花开

    本书在优雅的文字中洋溢着一种正能量,在甜美的阅读中,得到人生和情感的滋养。本书为散文随笔集,收录了作者百余篇精品文章,其中多被《思维与智慧》等刊物转载。你是微笑便是我的春暖花开家不仅仅是存放财富的地方,更是存放情的地方、多想和庄子一样做一个蝴蝶梦、你是微笑便是我的春暖花开、人生快乐品牌、在梦最高的地方、遥远有多远,一篇篇精美文章,为我们描绘了生活中一幅幅场景。本书以美丽、婉约的笔触,感悟人生、思辨哲理,文笔优美清新,读来赏心悦目。
  • 星际重生:拒当太子妃

    星际重生:拒当太子妃

    她易容成满脸斑的丑女设计指腹为婚的太子殿下退婚,一心只想找回万年前宠她如命的师父。可是,谁能告诉她,她师父怎么突然从温润如玉的仙人变身吃人不吐骨的狼人了?“师父,你…在做什么?”“傻落儿,师父突然想起来,有件事忘了教你……”“什么事啊?”“傻落儿,别捂着嘴,会呼吸不过来的…为师设了结界,不会有人听到的……”第二天晚上,她悲愤地跑去质问他:“师父你骗人!不是说没人会听到么?!”他微微一笑,“是没人听到…不过,你在我床上睡了一天一夜,他们可都看到了。”“落儿,你该好好补补了……身体这么弱怎么行?”“…………”
  • 古邪魂炎

    古邪魂炎

    少年得神秘力量,亘飒大陆强者林立?呈神秘力量的意志,少年化身铁血战士,强势成尊。
  • 重生之霸爱夫人

    重生之霸爱夫人

    前生,因为误信“良人”,晋城第一美人尹丽君抛夫弃子,落得身败名裂,不得善终。从地狱深处回归,尹丽君誓要保护挚爱的家人,扫除一切妖孽,在这个乱世找到自己的真爱,活出自己的精彩。【片段一】“冉家成,你可信我?”女子临风而立,双目含笑地看着眼前一身戎装的男子。“你叫我如何信你?放下布兵图,我便······”男子一脸沉痛的望着女子手中的染血的布兵图。“可是······我不能”,女子笑得凄然,爱而不信,爱何其深?万丈悬崖,女子迎面跳下,只留下满目仓惶的男子在悬崖边痛苦咆哮。【片段二】“无论是尹丽君还是君飞凰,我都不会再放手。除非,我死!”妖娆绝美的男子深情无悔地说。“飞凰,无论以何种身份守护,对我来说都不重要。”清冷俊美男子的眼中一抹瑰丽一闪而过。【片段三】“娘亲,便宜爹爹说,你要是再不回去,他就纳妾了。”粉雕玉琢的小女娃向拿着金豆喂宠物的娘亲打小报告。“女人,难道你要看着别的女人睡你的床,霸占你的夫君,甚至打你的娃吗?”一脸严肃的男娃娃在一边耳提面皮。“告诉他,他敢纳妾,我就敢娶夫!”女子将一把金豆扔在一边,眸中含笑,芳华潋滟。
  • 妙趣人生

    妙趣人生

    《妙趣人生》是著名作家蔡澜的散文集。其中精选蔡澜回忆悲欢往事,品鉴生活细节,阐述生命哲理,抒发人生感慨的文章。作者妙笔生花,叙事、状物、写人、说理,皆明白如话,妙趣横生,而又余味无穷。蔡澜已在国内出版了近百本简体字版的著作,《妙趣人生》选文的角度比较独特,其中不少文章是首次结集出版。