Marguerite de Valois
Copyright, 1900, By THOMAS Y. CROWELL & CO.
On Monday, the 18th of August, 1572, there was a splendid festival at the Louvre.
The ordinarily gloomy windows of the ancient royal residence were brilliantly lighted, and the squares and streets adjacent, usually so solitary after Saint Germain l'Auxerrois had struck the hour of nine, were crowded with people, although it was past midnight.
The vast, threatening, eager, turbulent throng resembled, in the darkness, a black and tumbling sea, each billow of which makes a roaring breaker; this sea, flowing through the Rue des Fossés Saint Germain and the Rue de l'Astruce and covering the quay, surged against the base of the walls of the Louvre, and, in its refluent tide, against the Hôtel de Bourbon, which faced it on the other side.
In spite of the royal festival, and perhaps even because of the royal festival, there was something threatening in the appearance of the people, for no doubt was felt that this imposing ceremony which called them there as spectators, was only the prelude to another in which they would participate a week later as invited guests and amuse themselves with all their hearts.
The court was celebrating the marriage of Madame Marguerite de Valois, daughter of Henry II. and sister of King Charles IX., with Henry de Bourbon, King of Navarre. In truth, that very morning, on a stage erected at the entrance to Notre-Dame, the Cardinal de Bourbon had united the young couple with the usual ceremonial observed at the marriages of the royal daughters of France.
This marriage had astonished every one, and occasioned much surmise to certain persons who saw clearer than others. They found it difficult to understand the union of two parties who hated each other so thoroughly as did, at this moment, the Protestant party and the Catholic party; and they wondered how the young Prince de Condé could forgive the Duc d'Anjou, the King's brother, for the death of his father, assassinated at Jarnac by Montesquiou. They asked how the young Duc de Guise could pardon Admiral de Coligny for the death of his father, assassinated at Orléans by Poltrot de Méré.
Alexandre Dumas
Auguste Maquet
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CONTENTS.
MARGUERITE DE VALOIS.
MONSIEUR DE GUISE'S LATIN.
THE QUEEN OF NAVARRE'S BEDCHAMBER.
THE POET-KING.
THE EVENING OF THE 24TH OF AUGUST, 1572.
OF THE LOUVRE IN PARTICULAR, AND OF VIRTUE IN GENERAL.
THE DEBT PAID.
THE NIGHT OF THE 24TH OF AUGUST, 1572.
THE MASSACRE.
THE MURDERERS.
DEATH, MASS, OR THE BASTILLE.
THE HAWTHORN OF THE CEMETERY OF THE INNOCENTS.
MUTUAL CONFIDENCES.
HOW THERE ARE KEYS WHICH OPEN DOORS THEY ARE NOT MEANT FOR.
THE SECOND MARRIAGE NIGHT.
WHAT WOMAN WILLS, GOD WILLS.
A DEAD ENEMY'S BODY ALWAYS SMELLS SWEET.
MAÎTRE AMBROISE PARÉ'S CONFRÈRE.
THE GHOSTS.
THE ABODE OF MAÎTRE RÉNÉ, PERFUMER TO THE QUEEN MOTHER.
THE BLACK HENS.
MADAME DE SAUVE'S APARTMENT.
"SIRE, YOU SHALL BE KING."
A NEW CONVERT.
THE RUE TIZON AND THE RUE CLOCHE PERCÉE.
THE CHERRY-COLORED CLOAK.
MARGARITA.
THE HAND OF GOD.
THE LETTER FROM ROME.
THE DEPARTURE.
MAUREVEL.
THE HUNT.
PART II.
FOOTNOTES:
Язык
Английский
Год издания
2010-09-02
Темы
Historical fiction; Biographical fiction; Henry IV, King of France, 1553-1610 -- Fiction; Saint Bartholomew's Day, Massacre of, France, 1572 -- Fiction; Queens -- France -- Fiction; Marguerite, Queen, consort of Henry IV, King of France, 1553-1615 -- Fiction