登陆注册
5386900000045

第45章 THE BAD OMEN(1)

The day was drawing to a close. That endlessly long day, that 31st of August, 1786, was coming to a conclusion. All Paris had awaited it with breathless excitement, with feverish impatience. No one had been able to attend to his business. The stores were closed, the workshops of the artisans were empty; even in the restaurants and cafes all was still; the cooks had nothing to do, and let the fire go out, for it seemed as if all Paris had lost its appetite--as if nobody had time to eat.

And in truth, on this day, Paris had no hunger for food that could satisfy the body. The city was hungry only for news, it longed for food which would satisfy its curiosity. And the news which would appease its craving was to come from the court-room of the prison!

It was to that quarter that Paris looked for the stilling of its hunger, the satisfying of its desires.

The judges were assembled in the hall of the prison to pronounce the decisive sentence in the necklace trial, and to announce to all France, yes, all Europe, whether the Queen of France was innocent in the eyes of God and His representatives on earth, or whether a shade of suspicion was thenceforth to rest upon that lofty brow!

At a very early hour of the morning, half-past five, the judges of the high court of Parliament, forty-nine in number, gathered at the council-room in order to pronounce sentence. At the same early hour, an immense, closely-thronged crowd gathered in the broad square in front of the prison, and gazed in breathless expectation at the great gate of the building, hoping every minute that the judges would come out, and that they should learn the sentence.

But the day wore on, and still the gates remained shut; no news came from the council-room to enlighten the curiosity of the crowd that filled the square and the adjacent streets.

Here and there the people began to complain, and loud voices were heard grumbling at the protracted delay, the long deliberations of the judges. Here and there faces were seen full of scornful defiance, full of laughing malice, working their way through the crowd, and now and then dropping stinging words, which provoked to still greater impatience. All the orators of the clubs and of the secret societies were there among the crowd, all the secret and open enemies of the queen had sent their instruments thither to work upon the people with poisonous words and mocking observations, and to turn public opinion in advance against the queen, even in case the judges did not condemn her; that is, if they did not declare the cardinal innocent of conspiracy against the sovereign, and contempt of the majesty of the queen.

It was known that in his resume, the attorney-general had alluded to the punishment of the cardinal. That was the only news which had worked its way out of the court-room. Some favored journalist, or some friend of the queen, had heard this; it spread like the wind all over Paris, and in thousands upon thousands of copies the words of the attorney-general were distributed.

His address purported to run as follows: that "Cardinal de Rohan is indicted on the accusation, and must answer the Parliament and the attorney-general respecting the following charges: of audaciously mixing himself up with the affairs of the necklace, and still more audaciously in supposing that the queen would make an appointment with him by night; and that for this he would ask the pardon of the king and the queen in presence of the whole court. Further, the cardinal is enjoined to lay down his office as grand almoner within a certain time, to remove to a certain distance from the royal residence and not to visit the places where the royal family may be living, and lastly, to remain in prison till the complete termination of the trial."

The friends and dependants of the cardinal, the enemies and persecutors of the queen, received this decision of the attorney-general with vexation and anger; they found fault with the servility of the man who would suffer the law to bow before the throne; they made dishonorable remarks and calumnious innuendoes about the queen, who, with her coquetry and the amount received from the jewels, had gained over the judges, and who would, perhaps have appointed a rendezvous with every one of them in order to gain him over to her side.

"Even if the judges clear her," cried the sharp voice of Marat from the heart of the crowd, "the people will pass sentence upon her. The people are always right; the people cannot be bribed--they are like God in this; and the people will not disown their verdict before the beautiful eyes and the seductive smiles of the Austrian woman. The people will not be made fools of; they will not believe in the story of the counterfeited letters and the forged signature."

"No," shouted the crowd, laughing in derision, "we will not believe it. The queen wrote the letters; her majesty understands how to write love-letters!"

"The queen loves to have a hand in all kinds of nonsense," thundered the brewer Santerre, in another group. "She wanted to see whether a pretty girl from the street could play the part of the Queen of France, and at the same time she wanted to avenge herself upon the cardinal because she knew that he once found fault with her before her mother the empress, on account of her light and disreputable behavior, and the bad manners which, as the dauphiness, she would introduce into this court. Since then she has with her glances, her smiles, and her apparent anger, so worked upon the cardinal as to make him fall over ears in love with the beautiful, pouting queen.

And that was just what she wanted, for now she could avenge herself.

She appointed a rendezvous with the cardinal, and while she secretly looked on the scene in the thicket, she allowed the pretty Mademoiselle Oliva to play her part. And you see that it is not such a difficult thing to represent a queen, for Mademoiselle Oliva performed her part so well that the cardinal was deceived, and took a girl from the streets to be the Queen of France."

同类推荐
  • 俱舍论实义疏

    俱舍论实义疏

    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。
  • Tik-Tok of Oz

    Tik-Tok of Oz

    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。
  • Pillars of Society

    Pillars of Society

    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。
  • 水石闲谈

    水石闲谈

    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。
  • 密藏开禅师遗稿

    密藏开禅师遗稿

    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
  • 香江鸿儒:饶宗颐传

    香江鸿儒:饶宗颐传

    本书为"大家丛书"之一。饶宗颐是我国当代著名的历史学家、考古学家、文学家、经学家、教育家和书画家,是集学术、艺术于一身的大学者,又是杰出的翻译家。饶宗颐和季羡林齐名,学界称"南饶北季"。本书记载了他的人生经历和杰出成就。
  • 德隅斋画品

    德隅斋画品

    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。
  • 落花生

    落花生

    许地山,民国最富盛名、也最有特色的才子之一,以佛的空灵思辨的笔墨,展示出散文的美与光、诗歌的色与香。 他早年受佛教思想影响,文笔风格绮丽空灵。作品往往取材独特,想象丰富,充满浪漫气息,呈现出浓郁的南国风味和异域情调。
  • The Light Princess

    The Light Princess

    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。
  • 异能强妃太子接招

    异能强妃太子接招

    原以为是重生了,没想到只是回到自己该回的世界。姐姐背负了艰苦的命运,苏汐染为自己而活,到后来却为身边的人而活。而他,原本是27世纪的,却阴差阳错的来到了异界大陆,他为她而活。两人都是逆天的存在,他们之间又会发生什么样的故事,请期待。男主女主身心干净。有虐有甜,喜欢看的收藏。(作者性格随性,完全按照自己的性格来喜欢看的收藏,谢谢!第一次写书,多多关照,谢谢!)
  • 倒霉特使

    倒霉特使

    述:这世界有各种各样的倒霉事件而:这世界有一个人看见并知道它主:单女主(李知恩)能看到人身上的黑色火焰怎么破?整天与倒霉打交道怎么办?!从小能从人们身上看到黑色的火焰~ 粉丝群(826529039)
  • 我在末日有家店

    我在末日有家店

    木秀从末日之后五百年回到了末日后一百年的现在,曾经在部队里厮混的她决定要换一种活法。拿着金手指,开家店,闲暇时坐看云卷云舒,无聊了打打怪,这样的小日子过着挺好。 当初,苏月白让她懂了爱情是图穷匕见; 而他,却让她明白原来爱情也可以是细水长流。 我本一介纨绔,愿为你洗手做羹汤; 我本冷心冷情,愿为你柔软眉角; 遇见你,连曾经的苦难都变得理所应当。
  • 绝代锋芒

    绝代锋芒

    【玄幻版】她是异世界苏家庶女性格懦弱的三小姐,斗之力从7岁之后一直停留不前,某一日因撞破情人和小三的奸情,被扔下冥河,死不瞑目,之后还被未婚夫弃如敝履,退了婚。当灵魂进入备受歧视的庶女身上,一朝穿越,万般皆变!一本天阶斗技,一本炼金入门书,一只九尾妖狐,一条远古腾蛇,四大神兽与九阶魔兽的臣服。匕首一出,绝代锋芒!苏九衣淡然地笑了笑:“天上、地下,唯我独尊!”
  • 一个神秘事件调查员的秘密笔记5:长白山鬼王墓

    一个神秘事件调查员的秘密笔记5:长白山鬼王墓

    主人公假死后随同团长来到了古老的长白山山脉,随着事情的逐渐发展,一个惊天的秘密显露了出来。原来那里有阴阳书生的坟墓,几方势力聚集在那里各有目的。
  • 剑心轮回

    剑心轮回

    段痕,为剑术天才的转世,自小跟着师傅学武,然而一场意外彻底改变了他的命运!三足金乌,盘古后裔,修罗剑道!为他打开了一扇成为强者的大门。杀尽天下该杀之人!剑,让他从一个弱者领会了杀戮,从杀戮中学会了用剑!直到成为万人敬仰的巅峰强者!剑心轮回!