FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3321   3322   3323   3324   3325   3326   3327   3328   3329   3330   3331   3332   3333   3334   3335   3336   3337   3338   3339   3340   3341   3342   3343   3344   3345  
3346   3347   3348   3349   3350   3351   3352   3353   3354   3355   3356   3357   3358   3359   3360   3361   3362   3363   3364   3365   3366   3367   3368   3369   3370   >>   >|  
, although so crippled by the gout that he could scarcely walk up stairs. There was an end to the triumvirate. Sully's influence was gone for ever. The other two dropped the mask. The Chancellor and Villeroy revealed themselves to be what they secretly had always been--humble servants and stipendiaries of Spain. The formal meetings of the council were of little importance, and were solemn, tearful, and stately; draped in woe for the great national loss. In the private cabinet meetings in the entresol of the Louvre, where the Nuncius and the Spanish ambassador held counsel with Epernon and Villeroy and Jeannin and Sillery, the tone was merry and loud; the double Spanish marriage and confusion to the Dutch being the chief topics of consultation. But the anarchy grew day by day into almost hopeless chaos. There was no satisfying the princes of the blood nor the other grandees. Conde, whose reconciliation with the Princess followed not long after the death of Henry and his own return to France, was insatiable in his demands for money, power, and citadels of security. Soissons, who might formerly have received the lieutenancy-general of the kingdom by sacrificing the lilies on his wife's gown, now disputed for that office with his elder brother Conti, the Prince claiming it by right of seniority, the Count denouncing Conti as deaf, dumb, and imbecile, till they drew poniards on each other in the very presence of the Queen; while Conde on one occasion, having been refused the citadels which he claimed, Blaye and Chateau Trompette, threw his cloak over his nose and put on his hat while the Queen was speaking, and left the council in a fury, declaring that Villeroy and the chancellor were traitors, and that he would have them both soundly cudgelled. Guise, Lorraine, Epernon, Bouillon, and other great lords always appeared in the streets of Paris at the head of three, four, or five hundred mounted and armed retainers; while the Queen in her distraction gave orders to arm the Paris mob to the number of fifty thousand, and to throw chains across the streets to protect herself and her son against the turbulent nobles. Sully, hardly knowing to what saint to burn his candle, being forced to resign his great posts, was found for a time in strange political combination with the most ancient foes of his party and himself. The kaleidoscope whirling with exasperating quickness showed ancient Leaguers and Lorrainers banded with and pr
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3321   3322   3323   3324   3325   3326   3327   3328   3329   3330   3331   3332   3333   3334   3335   3336   3337   3338   3339   3340   3341   3342   3343   3344   3345  
3346   3347   3348   3349   3350   3351   3352   3353   3354   3355   3356   3357   3358   3359   3360   3361   3362   3363   3364   3365   3366   3367   3368   3369   3370   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Villeroy

 

meetings

 

council

 
streets
 

citadels

 

Epernon

 
Spanish
 

ancient

 

Trompette

 
exasperating

Chateau

 

traitors

 

soundly

 

chancellor

 

declaring

 

whirling

 

speaking

 

kaleidoscope

 

claimed

 

refused


banded

 

imbecile

 

denouncing

 

claiming

 

seniority

 

quickness

 

showed

 

occasion

 
Leaguers
 

presence


poniards
 
Lorrainers
 
protect
 

chains

 

combination

 

thousand

 

political

 

strange

 

resign

 

candle


knowing

 

turbulent

 

nobles

 

number

 

appeared

 

forced

 

Lorraine

 

Bouillon

 

distraction

 
orders