In our island the sensation produced by the news was great. The Whigs loudly called both James and Lewis assassins. How, it was asked, was it possible, without outraging common sense, to put an innocent meaning on the words which Grandval declared that he had heard from the lips of the banished King of England? And who that knew the Court of Versailles would believe that Barbesieux, a youth, a mere novice in politics, and rather a clerk than a minister, would have dared to do what he had done without taking his master's pleasure? Very charitable and very ignorant persons might perhaps indulge a hope that Lewis had not been an accessory before the fact. But that he was an accessory after the fact no human being could doubt. He must have seen the proceedings of the Court Martial, the evidence, the confession. If he really abhorred assassination as honest men abhor it, would not Barbesieux have been driven with ignominy from the royal presence, and flung into the Bastile? Yet Barbesieux was still at the War Office; and it was not pretended that he had been punished even by a word or a frown. It was plain, then, that both Kings were partakers in the guilt of Grandval. And if it were asked how two princes who made a high profession of religion could have fallen into such wickedness, the answer was that they had learned their religion from the Jesuits. In reply to these reproaches the English Jacobites said very little; and the French government said nothing at all.315The campaign in the Netherlands ended without any other event deserving to be recorded. On the eighteenth of October William arrived in England. Late in the evening of the twentieth he reached Kensington, having traversed the whole length of the capital. His reception was cordial. The crowd was great; the acclamations were loud; and all the windows along his route, from Aldgate to Piccadilly, were lighted up.316But, notwithstanding these favourable symptoms, the nation was disappointed and discontented. The war had been unsuccessful by land. By sea a great advantage had been gained, but had not been improved. The general expectation had been that the victory of May would be followed by a descent on the coast of France, that Saint Maloes would he bombarded, that the last remains of Tourville's squadron would be destroyed, and that the arsenals of Brest and Rochefort would be laid in ruins. This expectation was, no doubt, unreasonable. It did not follow, because Rooke and his seamen had silenced the batteries hastily thrown up by Bellefonds, that it would be safe to expose ships to the fire of regular fortresses. The government, however, was not less sanguine than the nation. Great preparations were made. The allied fleet, having been speedily refitted at Portsmouth, stood out again to sea. Rooke was sent to examine the soundings and the currents along the shore of Brittany.317 Transports were collected at Saint Helens. Fourteen thousand troops were assembled on Portsdown under the command of Meinhart Schomberg, who had been rewarded for his father's services and his own with the highest rank in the Irish peerage, and was now Duke of Leinster. Under him were Ruvigny, who, for his good service at Aghrim, had been created Earl of Galway, La Melloniere and Cambon with their gallant bands of refugees, and Argyle with the regiment which bore his name, and which, as it began to be rumoured, had last winter done something strange and horrible in a wild country of rocks and snow, never yet explored by any Englishman.
同类推荐
Island Nights' Entertainments
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
霸宠女将军:妖孽夫君太腹黑
新书:爆笑小萌宝:仙君,么么哒,已发布,还望大家多多支持~前世,她是一名现代明星金牌保镖,一朝穿越,怎料,却成了朝堂上独当一面的女王爷、沙场上呼风唤雨的‘第一女将’。原以为这一切只是个开始,谁知……直到她在一次青楼之行中无意救下了他,于是,便展开了一段“养成”与“被养成”、“扑”与“被扑”、“吃”与“被吃”的精彩故事。妖孽正太腹黑夫君?绝代神医敌国王爷?……一连串的阴谋与智慧全部接踵而来。他说:“朕爱你,无关乎江山。”而他却说:“我只愿为你,放弃万顷良田。”刀光剑戟,共赴沙场,无怨无悔;笔墨丹青,共度韶华,一心一意;一曲终了后,终是谁先失了心?又是谁先输了情?南风知我意,爱你已成疾
新婚之夜,君思恬得到老公送的一份特别的新婚礼物。半个月后,她将新婚丈夫送上法庭。一夕之间她成了江城人人唾弃的白眼狼。当她将离婚协议书放到他面前时,他红着眼掐着她的脖子,“君思恬,离婚你想都不要想,我的婚姻里,只有丧偶!”