登陆注册
18782200000038

第38章 CHAPTER VI.(6)

Moreover, he had proceeded so far in the business, that if not successful Lady Castlemaine would be subjected to all imaginable contempt, and be exposed to universal ridicule. If, he added, the queen conformed to his wishes in this regard, it would be the only hard thing he should ever require of her; and, indeed, she might make it very easy, for my lady must behave with all possible respect in her presence, otherwise she should never see his face again. Then he begged the chancellor to wait upon her majesty, lay bare his arguments, and urge her to receive the countess with some show of favour. The chancellor, though not pleased with his mission, yet in hope of healing private discord and averting public scandal, undertook to counsel the queen to obedience, and accordingly waited on her in her private apartments.

Now her majesty's education had been such as kept her in complete ignorance of the world's ways. The greater part of her life had been spent in the peaceful retirement of a convent, which she left for her mother's country palace, a home scarcely less secluded. Maynard, in a letter preserved in the State Paper Office, written from Lisbon when the royal marriage was proposed, says the infanta, "as sweete a disposition princess as everr was borne," was "bred hugely retired. She hath," he continues, "hardly been tenn tymes out of the palace in her life. In five years tyme she was not out of doores, untill she hurde of his majestie's intentions to make her queen of Ingland, since which she hath been to visit two saintes in the city; and very shortly shee intends to pay her devotion to some saintes in the country."From a life of innocence she was brought for the first time face to face with vice, by one who should have been foremost in shielding her from its contact. All her training taught her to avoid the contamination sought to be forced upon her; all her new-born love for her husband prompted her to loathe the mistress who shared his affections. A stranger in a strange land, a slighted queen, a neglected wife, an outraged woman, her sufferings were bitter, Her wrongs were hard to bear. Therefore when my lord chancellor came and made known the object of his visit, she broke into a passion of tears, and could not speak from force of sobs that seemed to rend her heart, and wholly choked her utterance.

The chancellor then retired with some dismay, but waited on her again next day, when he found her more calm. She begged he would excuse the outburst of feeling he had witnessed, but added very pitifully that when she thought of her misfortunes "she sometimes gave vent to that passion which was ready to break her heart."The advice, or, as he terms it, "the evidence of his devotion,"which the chancellor gave was worthy of a courtier and a philosopher. He told the young queen he doubted "she was little beholden to her education, that had given her no better information of the follies and iniquities of mankind; of which he presumed the climate from whence she came could have given more instances than this cold region would afford." Had she been properly instructed, he furthermore hinted, she would never have thought herself so miserable, or her condition so insupportable;and indeed he could not comprehend the reason of her loud complaint.

At this she could no longer suppress the tears which came into her dark eyes, and cried out she did not expect to find her husband in love with another woman. Then my lord besought her submission to the king; but she remained unshaken in the resolution she had formed. She was ready to ask his majesty's pardon for tiny passion or peevishness she had been guilty of, but added, "the fire appearing in her eyes where the water was,"she would never endure the presence of his mistress; and rather than submit to such insult she would "put herself on board any little vessel" and return to Lisbon.

Back went the chancellor, with a heavy heart and a troubled face, to the king. He softened the queen's words as much as possible, and assured his majesty her resistance to his will proceeded "from the great passion of love she had for him, which transported her beyond the limits of reason." But this excuse, which should have rejoiced a husband's heart, only irritated his majesty's temper. That night a violent quarrel took place between the husband and wife, yet scarce more than bride and bridegroom. When they had retired, the king--being inflamed with the words of his courtiers, who assured him the dispute had now resolved itself into a question of who should govern--reproached the queen with stubbornness and want of duty; upon which she answered by charging him with tyranny and lack of affection. One word borrowed another, till, in his anger, he used threats when she declared she would leave the kingdom. "The passion and noise of the night reached too many ears to be a secret the next day,"says the chancellor, "and the whole court was full of that which ought to have been known to nobody."When the royal pair met next morning, they neither looked at nor spoke to each other. Days passed full of depression and gloom for the young wife, who spent most of her time in seclusion, whilst the king sought distraction in the society of his courtiers. The chancellor, after his second interview with the queen, absented himself from court, not wishing to be furthermore drawn into a quarrel which he saw himself powerless to heal.

During his absence the king wrote him a letter which evinced determination to carry out his design. This epistle, preserved in the library of the British Museum, runs as follows:

"HAMPTON COURT, THURSDAY MORNING.

"I forgot when you were here last to desire you to give Broderich good council not to meddle any more with what concerns my Lady Castlemaine, and to let him have a care how he is the author of any scandalous reports; for if I find him guilty of any such thing, I will make him repent it to the last moment of his life.

同类推荐
  • 皇经集注

    皇经集注

    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。
  • 太上洞玄灵宝净供妙经

    太上洞玄灵宝净供妙经

    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。
  • 近代名人轶事录

    近代名人轶事录

    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。
  • 近三百年名家词选

    近三百年名家词选

    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。
  • 师子庄严王菩萨请问经

    师子庄严王菩萨请问经

    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
  • FBI身体语言密码(插图版)

    FBI身体语言密码(插图版)

    很多时候,我们之所以在人际交往中产生误会和 摩擦,是因为我们没有读懂对方的真实想法。而观察 和分析一个人的身体语言,则是读懂人心的利器,当 我们能够通过一个人的身体语言读懂他内心所想时, 我们与人的交流一定能够*加顺畅。《FBI身体语言 密码(插图版)》教你美国FBI超强的识人术,让你能 够**时间探知他人的内心世界。表露人真实想法的往往并非人嘴里说出来的话, 而是身体语言。一个手势,一种坐姿,一个眼神,一种声音,并 非偶然,都是内心的外在呈现。
  • 顾少,战神喊你回家暖床

    顾少,战神喊你回家暖床

    多年后的重逢,还未来得及寒暄,就被对方甩了一巴掌。顾小北眼里的寒光像极了当初我们一起在大院里养的那只狼,琳琅笑了,战神的脸从来都不是谁都可以揍的!目标:顾小北;计划:打晕拖走;目的:拖回家暖床!
  • 开店赚钱有门道

    开店赚钱有门道

    本书从13个方面100个门道入手,细致的回答了开店不吃亏的问题。内容分为上下两篇,上篇讲述了开店的一些需要注意的事宜;下篇列举了具有一定代表性的行业。
  • 重山烟雨诺

    重山烟雨诺

    苏伊诺一个什么都懂的逗B女,季曜沂一个一根筋的大好青年。携手经历了一些不敢想象的人生,出现了各种不忍直视的狗血桥段。从一个武功高强的高手,变成一个打架除了看就只能跑的逗B女,从一个天赋异禀的大好青年,变成快当配角的小男子。请看小女子和大,大,大豆腐的爱情和不同常人的人生。
  • 如果有一天之死神契约

    如果有一天之死神契约

    如果有一天,发现自己死于非命,你是否有做鬼都不想放过的人?不管你有没有,反正乔艾是有的。第一个,就是错把乔艾当成别人而取走她小命的死神银洛,帅的要命的脸蛋却长了一颗稀里糊涂的脑袋。不过这个糊涂死神却给了乔艾一个愿望当做补偿,命都没了,还要愿望做甚!好吧,那就让她回到高中时代吧,弥补当年的遗憾。等着吧,叶诚,今日的乔艾已经不是过去的乔艾了,就不信再给她一个机会,她还会搞不定一个高中的小屁孩!不过,怎么觉得这个死神有点不太对劲呢,哎,或许世上真就是没有白吃的午餐吧,送她回去也是需要代价的。死亡,也许并非意味着结束,它恰恰是美妙爱情的重新开始。
  • 极品校花的秘密
  • 无敌铠甲

    无敌铠甲

    穿越到异界的陆风是自命不凡的,幼时虽历经坎坷,但总归是没有消磨掉陆风的豪情和傲气。怎奈造化弄人,一直表现优异的陆风止步于强者之路,心灰意冷之下的陆风已生出了欲要平静过完这一生的想法。而这时命运又和陆风开了个大大的玩笑,命运又一次逼迫陆风立下了成为最强的誓言。当陆风哭着发誓的时候,三界战争的结局就已经注定了....
  • 2013散文排行榜

    2013散文排行榜

    散文是作者借助想象与联想,由此及彼,由浅入深,由实而虚的依次写来,可以融情于景、寄情于事、寓情于物、托物言志,表达作者的真情实感,实现物我的统一,展现出更深远的思想,使读者领会更深的道理。
  • 全才相师

    全才相师

    相人、相事、相风水,看天、看地、看红尘!三国大术士周轩跨越时空,来到现代社会,开启了一段辉煌的都市之旅。女记者:周董,据我们掌握的材料,您不但是商界领袖,还是国学大家、易经泰斗、相学、风水大师、书法家、天文学家等,本世纪少有的全才。请问,您在哪件事情上最成功?周轩四十五度角望向天空,无限感慨:那些成就都不值一提,我个人最成功的是,拥有了妇女之友的荣誉称号。
  • 琴箫问月

    琴箫问月

    南唐末年,节度使割地称霸,形成五代十国,天下战乱纷飞。武林人士自然也避不开名利这一关:四大家族明争暗斗;玄天宫,一剑阁,洞庭西子门三足鼎立。然而玄天宫一心修道,西子门也无心天下,唯有一剑阁仗剑问鼎江湖。名剑谱上一百零八剑,究竟谁才是天下第一?而与此同时,血月红楼也重现江湖。究竟何为正义?何为邪恶?情义还是名利?一场腥风血雨伴随着改朝换代渐渐登上银幕……