登陆注册
18895800000025

第25章 THE BURGHERS(1)

Christophe shook the iron railing which closed the stairway on the river, and called. His mother heard him, opened one of the windows of the back shop, and asked what he was doing there. Christophe answered that he was cold and wanted to get in.

"Ha! my master," said the Burgundian maid, "you went out by the street-door, and you return by the water-gate. Your father will be fine and angry."Christophe, bewildered by a confidence which had just brought him into communication with the Prince de Conde, La Renaudie, and Chaudieu, and still more moved at the prospect of impending civil war, made no answer; he ran hastily up from the kitchen to the back shop; but his mother, a rabid Catholic, could not control her anger.

"I'll wager those three men I saw you talking with are Ref--""Hold your tongue, wife!" said the cautious old man with white hair who was turning over a thick ledger. "You dawdling fellows," he went on, addressing three journeymen, who had long finished their suppers, "why don't you go to bed? It is eight o'clock, and you have to be up at five; besides, you must carry home to-night President de Thou's cap and mantle. All three of you had better go, and take your sticks and rapiers; and then, if you meet scamps like yourselves, at least you'll be in force.""Are we going to take the ermine surcoat the young queen has ordered to be sent to the hotel des Soissons? there's an express going from there to Blois for the queen-mother," said one of the clerks.

"No," said his master, "the queen-mother's bill amounts to three thousand crowns; it is time to get the money, and I am going to Blois myself very soon.""Father, I do not think it right at your age and in these dangerous times to expose yourself on the high-roads. I am twenty-two years old, and you ought to employ me on such errands," said Christophe, eyeing the box which he supposed contained the surcoat.

"Are you glued to your seats?" cried the old man to his apprentices, who at once jumped up and seized their rapiers, cloaks, and Monsieur de Thou's furs.

The next day the Parliament was to receive in state, as its president, this illustrious judge, who, after signing the death warrant of Councillor du Bourg, was destined before the close of the year to sit in judgment on the Prince de Conde!

"Here!" said the old man, calling to the maid, "go and ask friend Lallier if he will come and sup with us and bring the wine; we'll furnish the victuals. Tell him, above all, to bring his daughter."Lecamus, the syndic of the guild of furriers, was a handsome old man of sixty, with white hair, and a broad, open brow. As court furrier for the last forty years, he had witnessed all the revolutions of the reign of Francois I. He had seen the arrival at the French court of the young girl Catherine de' Medici, then scarcely fifteen years of age. He had observed her giving way before the Duchesse d'Etampes, her father-in-law's mistress; giving way before the Duchesse de Valentinois, the mistress of her husband the late king. But the furrier had brought himself safely through all the chances and changes by which court merchants were often involved in the disgrace and overthrow of mistresses. His caution led to his good luck. He maintained an attitude of extreme humility. Pride had never caught him in its toils. He made himself so small, so gentle, so compliant, of so little account at court and before the queens and princesses and favorites, that this modesty, combined with good-humor, had kept the royal sign above his door.

Such a policy was, of course, indicative of a shrewd and perspicacious mind. Humble as Lecamus seemed to the outer world, he was despotic in his own home; there he was an autocrat. Most respected and honored by his brother craftsmen, he owed to his long possession of the first place in the trade much of the consideration that was shown to him. He was, besides, very willing to do kindnesses to others, and among the many services he had rendered, none was more striking than the assistance he had long given to the greatest surgeon of the sixteenth century, Ambroise Pare, who owed to him the possibility of studying for his profession. In all the difficulties which came up among the merchants Lecamus was always conciliating. Thus a general good opinion of him consolidated his position among his equals; while his borrowed characteristics kept him steadily in favor with the court.

Not only this, but having intrigued for the honor of being on the vestry of his parish church, he did what was necessary to bring him into the odor of sanctity with the rector of Saint-Pierre aux Boeufs, who looked upon him as one of the men most devoted to the Catholic religion in Paris. Consequently, at the time of the convocation of the States-General he was unanimously elected to represent the /tiers etat/ through the influence of the clergy of Paris,--an influence which at that period was immense. This old man was, in short, one of those secretly ambitious souls who will bend for fifty years before all the world, gliding from office to office, no one exactly knowing how it came about that he was found securely and peacefully seated at last where no man, even the boldest, would have had the ambition at the beginning of life to fancy himself; so great was the distance, so many the gulfs and the precipices to cross! Lecamus, who had immense concealed wealth, would not run any risks, and was silently preparing a brilliant future for his son. Instead of having the personal ambition which sacrifices the future to the present, he had family ambition,--a lost sentiment in our time, a sentiment suppressed by the folly of our laws of inheritance. Lecamus saw himself first president of the Parliament of Paris in the person of his grandson.

同类推荐
  • 竹西花事小录

    竹西花事小录

    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。
  • 大明皇陵碑

    大明皇陵碑

    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。
  • 任光禄竹溪记

    任光禄竹溪记

    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。
  • 通制条格

    通制条格

    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。
  • 赋得春风扇微和

    赋得春风扇微和

    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
  • 播音主持高考攻略

    播音主持高考攻略

    这是一本凝聚了众人智慧的播音主持专业考前参考书。围绕专业考试的特点和要求,设计了七个攻略,攻略一播音主持专业分析,攻略二播音主持考场探秘,攻略三走近播音主持考官,攻略四走近播音主持学长,攻略五播音主持院校辑录,攻略六艺术高考政策解读,攻略七播音主持真题选登,满足考生对相关各方面信息的需要。其中攻略二详细介绍了自我介绍、指定稿件、作品朗诵、模拟主持、主题讨论、即兴评述、才艺展示、化妆造型等各个考试环节的训练和应试技巧。
  • 古墓密码

    古墓密码

    我因盗墓入狱,被判无期。我以为这就已经很糟糕了,没想到——龙首迷宫,飞来古宅,海上鬼船……它们都将我指向一个天大的秘密。“打开这扇门吧,门内有你想知道、想得到的一切。”
  • 神座

    神座

    传说天地之中有一张神座,谁拥有它,就拥有无穷无尽的寿命和天地间最至高无上的权势,它是天地间所有强者征战的最终宿命。通往神座道路上,白骨累累,鲜血成洋。神座无主,然而只有最强大的存在,才能踏上至高神座!少年高中生林熙,在十七岁的家族试炼中,无意遇上山洪暴发,灵魂穿越,进入了另一个世界,成为一个颓废的少掌门。身体残废,无法练武;父亲丧命,靠山倒塌;长老议会,联名弹劾。刚刚苏醒的林熙,面对着重重困境。人善被人欺,马善被人骑,且看少年林熙如何逆境崛起,快意恩仇。最终踏上征战神座之路。
  • 最让你受益一生的感恩故事(智慧背囊16本)

    最让你受益一生的感恩故事(智慧背囊16本)

    感恩父母,因为他们给了我们生命;感恩朋友,因为他们给了我们友情;感恩帮助我们的人,因为是他们让我们体会到这个世界到处充满爱心;感恩关怀鼓励我们的人,因为是他们给了我们温暖和力量……人在社会中生存,要学会感恩,凡事感恩,才能拥有一颗爱心,爱自己,爱他人,爱这个世界……本书汇集了几百个感恩故事,以感恩寄语来进行点拨,使广大读者在故事中得到启发、领悟、受益,更加以一颗感恩的心去面对生活、开创生活。
  • 重铸神坛

    重铸神坛

    曾经的帝国第一人,毅然决然的放弃那高高在上的神坛。是乎,世界风云再起!什么?你们是什么官、富、黑……各种牛叉二代人物?
  • 狂魔K

    狂魔K

    年少本应轻狂,我却低调不敢嚣张。如果可以重来我愿成魔,我愿放纵一生铸就那一缕轻狂,嚣张。
  • 废材逆天:三小姐饶命

    废材逆天:三小姐饶命

    凡是风间,万古追云。她,是现代著名公司的堂堂总监,办起事来从不拖拉。突如其来的坠机事故,令她阴差阳错地穿越到了自己的前世。一夕穿越,原来自己的前世竟是大户人家的废材女儿!废材又如何,看我分分钟秒掉千万人!正当她准备迈向自己修炼征途的巅峰,却又在情场跌入底谷……
  • 邪王娇妻来袭

    邪王娇妻来袭

    她,现代排名第一的杀手,因一次任务的失败,导致她在现代死亡穿越到了古代;他,梧桐国的王爷,腹黑难以对付;当腹黑遇到腹黑就变得更腹黑,一场你追我赶的游戏现在开始…………
  • 梁公九谏

    梁公九谏

    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。
  • 如何面对绩效考核

    如何面对绩效考核

    本套书正是基于国家的劳动法律法规和人力资源管理的理论与实务,针对劳动者在职业生涯中的各个阶段,以及职业管理中可能面临的各项问题,从实用的角度给劳动者以提示和讲解。其目的在于帮助劳动者防范职业风险,维护合法权益,提高职业生存与竞争能力,获得良好的职业发展。