登陆注册
5390000000085

第85章

The foregoing reflections occur,in a cruder form,as it were,in my notebook,where I find this remark appended to them:"Don't take leave of Lamartine on that contemptuous note;it will be easy to think of something more sympathetic!"Those friends of mine,mentioned a little while since,who accuse me of always tipping back the balance,could not desire a paragraph more characteristic;but I wish to give no further evidence of such infirmities,and will therefore hurry away from the subject,hurry away in the train which,very early on a crisp,bright morning,conveyed.me,by way of an excursion,to the ancient city of BourgenBresse.

Shining in early light,the Saone was spread,like a smooth,white tablecloth,over a considerable part of the flat country that I traversed.There is no provision made in this image for the long,transparent screens of thintwigged trees which rose at intervals out of the watery plain;but as,under the circumstances,there seemed to be no provision for them in fact,Iwill let my metaphor go for what it is worth.My journey was (as I remember it)of about an hour and a half;but I passed no object of interest,as the phrase is,whatever.The phrase hardly applies even to Bourg itself,which is simply a town quelconque,as M.Zola would say.Small,peaceful,rustic,it stands in the midst of the great dairyfeeding plains of Bresse,of which fat county,sometime property of the house of Savoy,it was the modest capital.The blue masses of the Jura give it a creditable horizon,but the only nearer feature it can point to is its famous sepulchral church.This edifice lies at a fortunate distance from the town,which,though inoffensive,is of too common a stamp to consort with such a treasure.All I ever knew of the church of Brou I had gathered,years ago,from Matthew Arnold's beautiful poem,which bears its name.I remember thinking,in those years,that it was impossible verses could be more touching than these;and as I stood before the object of my pilgrimage,in the gay French light (though the place was so dull),I recalled the spot where I had first read them,and where I read them again and yet again,wondering whether it would ever be my fortune to visit the church of Brou.The spot in question was an armchair in a window which looked out on some cows in a field;and whenever I glanced at the cows it came over me I scarcely know why that I should probably never behold the structure reared by the Duchess Margaret.Some of our visions never come to pass;but we must be just,others do."So sleep,forever sleep,O princely pair!"I remembered that line of Matthew Arnold's,and the stanza about the Duchess Margaret coming to watch the builders on her palfry white.Then there came to me something in regard to the moon shining on winter nights through the cold clerestory.The tone of the place at that hour was not at all lunar;it was cold and bright,but with the chill of an autumn morning;yet this,even with the fact of the unexpected remoteness of the church from the Jura added to it,did not prevent me from feeling that I looked at a monument in the production of which or at least in the effect of which on the tourist mind of today Matthew Arnold had been much concerned.By a pardonable license he has placed it a few miles nearer to the forests of the Jura than it stands at present.It is very true that,though the mountains in the sixteenth century can hardly have been in a different position,the plain which separates the church from them may have been bedecked with woods.The visitor today cannot help wondering why the beautiful building,with its splendid works of art,is dropped down in that particular spot,which looks so accidental and arbitrary.But there are reasons for most things,and there were reasons why the church of Brou should be at Brou,which is a vague little suburb of a vague little town.

The responsibility rests,at any rate,upon the Duchess Margaret,Margaret of Austria,daughter of the Emperor Maximilian and his wife Mary of Burgundy,daughter of Charles the Bold.This lady has a high name in history,having been regent of the Netherlands in behalf of her nephew,the Emperor Charles V.,of whose early education she had had the care.She married in 1501Philibert the Handsome,Duke of Savoy,to whom the province of Bresse belonged,and who died two years later.She had been betrothed,is a child,to Charles VIII.of France,and was kept for some time at the French court,that of her prospective fatherinlaw,Louis XI.;but she was eventually repudiated,in order that her fiance might marry Anne of Brittany,an alliance so magnificently political that we almost condone the offence to a sensitive princess.Margaret did not want for husbands,however,inasmuch as before her marriage to Philibert she had been united to John of Castile,son of Ferdinand V.,King of Aragon,an episode terminated,by the death of the Spanish prince,within a year.She was twentytwo years regent of the Netherlands,and died at fiftyone,in 1530.She might have been,had she chosen,the wife,of Henry VII.of England.She was one of the signers of the League of Cambray,against the Venetian republic,and was a most politic,accomplished,and judicious princess.

She undertook to build the church of Brou as a mausoleum,for her second husband and herself,in fulfilment of a vow made by Margaret of Bourbon,mother of Philibert,who died before she could redeem her pledge,and who bequeathed the duty to her son.He died shortly afterwards,and his widow assumed the pious task.According to Murray,she intrusted the erection of the church to "Maistre Loys von Berghem,"and the sculpture to "Maistre Conrad."The author of a superstitious but carefully prepared little Notice,which I bought at Bourg,calls the architect and sculptor (at once)Jehan de Paris,author (sic)of the tomb of Francis II.of Brittany,to which we gave some attention at Nantes,and which the writer of my pamphlet ascribes only subordinately to Michel Colomb.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 当龙王传说回到八千年前

    当龙王传说回到八千年前

    龙辰,身怀四个武魂,身体里面相当于有四个老爷爷,本书可直接跳至十五章观看,并不会影响太多的观感体验。希望大家支持我,更新的话大概就是一周两到三更左右,当然啦,除非有一些特殊状况,请大家理解。还有就是新人写书,请多见谅,谢谢大家。然后还有那个QQ群号:960646341时间线是龙王的八千年前。
  • 喉科集腋

    喉科集腋

    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。
  • 法医小狂妃

    法医小狂妃

    21世纪天才毒医,穿越成人人喊打的杀人犯,大婚当日放着好好的太子妃不做,竟然和别的男人跑了。前有弑父杀兄之罪,后有通敌卖国之嫌。容词仰天长叹:活了两辈子,还真是没有这么狼狈的时候啊!锒铛入狱,生命垂危,幕后一双黑手却再一次将她推向了皇室争斗的漩涡之中。再次相见,她是下品官员收养的义女,他是下身瘫痪,备受白眼的皇子。新婚夜,她握住他的手,眉眼坚定:“从此之后,我便是你的妻,与你共同承担一切。谁敢欺负你,就是跟我容词过不去!”他摘下面具,嘴角轻扬:“好。”从此之后,脚踹狗皇帝,棒打白莲花,手劈渣男,强强合体,天下无敌!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 再来一次,是你

    再来一次,是你

    她出身农村,却拥有逆天的经商头脑。婚礼之上,她一身黑裙狂笑而入,血染新人纯白无暇的婚纱!却不曾想,灿烂而悲壮的死亡背后,一朝重生回十八岁芳华,她傲笑如盛开的罂粟花——所有负过她的人,她必将以百倍的奉还!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 至尊神石

    至尊神石

    一块奇异的石头,一个不朽的传奇!千百年的布局,谁能笑到最后!在光明与黑暗之中的挣扎,叶言武究竟会如何选择?
  • 天妃白若

    天妃白若

    三千年的执念,换来的只是你爱上了她!纠缠三世,也不过是我以为!倾尽所有,换来的只是一句你不配!相遇终有时、爱恨已无期。蟠桃宴会,西王母小女儿白若遇见九重天太子帝墨寒,一次误会之下,白若失手将他师妹月玲珑打入极寒之地,从此消失无踪影。太子帝墨寒生气之下,娶了白若万般折磨。她终于死心跳下诛仙台!她三世度劫,受尽折磨,却在晋升为上神时再出事端。万年后三方相遇,是孽缘的开始,还是爱情的新生?谁又是当年花海之中的明珠……万年菩提花已开,你可缓缓归矣……
  • 追妻有道:总裁的独家专宠

    追妻有道:总裁的独家专宠

    他很早以前便见过她,再次遇见她时便霸道的宠着她。一宠入婚。
  • Who Goes There?

    Who Goes There?

    A distant, remote scientific expedition taking place at the North Pole is invaded by a space alien who has reawakened after lying dormant for centuries after a crash landing. A cunning, intelligent alien who can shape-shift, thereby assuming the personality and form of anything and anyone it destroys. Soon, it is among the men of the expedition, killing each in turn and replacing them by assuming their shape, lulling the scientists one by one into inattention (and trust) and eventually, their destruction. The shape-shifting, transformed alien can pass every effort at detection, and the expedition seems doomed until the scientists discover the secret vulnerability of the alien and are able to destroy it.
  • 朱自清作品集(3)(中国现代文学名家作品集)

    朱自清作品集(3)(中国现代文学名家作品集)

    “中国现代文学名家作品集”丛书实质是中国现代文学肇基和发展阶段的创作总集,收录了几乎当时所有知名作家,知名作品的全部。
  • 策林

    策林

    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。