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Man in the Iron Mask, The
CHAPTER XIII - Nectar and Ambrosia
Alexandre Dumas
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       _ M. Fouquet held the stirrup of the king, who, having dismounted, bowed
       most graciously, and more graciously still held out his hand to him,
       which Fouquet, in spite of a slight resistance on the king's part,
       carried respectfully to his lips. The king wished to wait in the first
       courtyard for the arrival of the carriages, nor had he long to wait, for
       the roads had been put into excellent order by the superintendent, and a
       stone would hardly have been found of the size of an egg the whole way
       from Melun to Vaux; so that the carriages, rolling along as though on a
       carpet, brought the ladies to Vaux, without jolting or fatigue, by eight
       o'clock. They were received by Madame Fouquet, and at the moment they
       made their appearance, a light as bright as day burst forth from every
       quarter, trees, vases, and marble statues. This species of enchantment
       lasted until their majesties had retired into the palace. All these
       wonders and magical effects which the chronicler has heaped up, or rather
       embalmed, in his recital, at the risk of rivaling the brain-born scenes
       of romancers; these splendors whereby night seemed vanquished and nature
       corrected, together with every delight and luxury combined for the
       satisfaction of all the senses, as well as the imagination, Fouquet did
       in real truth offer to his sovereign in that enchanting retreat of which
       no monarch could at that time boast of possessing an equal. We do not
       intend to describe the grand banquet, at which the royal guests were
       present, nor the concerts, nor the fairy-like and more than magic
       transformations and metamorphoses; it will be enough for our purpose to
       depict the countenance the king assumed, which, from being gay, soon wore
       a very gloomy, constrained, and irritated expression. He remembered his
       own residence, royal though it was, and the mean and indifferent style of
       luxury that prevailed there, which comprised but little more than what
       was merely useful for the royal wants, without being his own personal
       property. The large vases of the Louvre, the older furniture and plate
       of Henry II., of Francis I., and of Louis XI., were but historic
       monuments of earlier days; nothing but specimens of art, the relics of
       his predecessors; while with Fouquet, the value of the article was as
       much in the workmanship as in the article itself. Fouquet ate from a
       gold service, which artists in his own employ had modeled and cast for
       him alone. Fouquet drank wines of which the king of France did not even
       know the name, and drank them out of goblets each more valuable than the
       entire royal cellar.
       What, too, was to be said of the apartments, the hangings, the pictures,
       the servants and officers, of every description, of his household? What
       of the mode of service in which etiquette was replaced by order; stiff
       formality by personal, unrestrained comfort; the happiness and
       contentment of the guest became the supreme law of all who obeyed the
       host? The perfect swarm of busily engaged persons moving about
       noiselessly; the multitude of guests, - who were, however, even less
       numerous than the servants who waited on them, - the myriad of
       exquisitely prepared dishes, of gold and silver vases; the floods of
       dazzling light, the masses of unknown flowers of which the hot-houses had
       been despoiled, redundant with luxuriance of unequaled scent and beauty;
       the perfect harmony of the surroundings, which, indeed, was no more than
       the prelude of the promised _fete_, charmed all who were there; and they
       testified their admiration over and over again, not by voice or gesture,
       but by deep silence and rapt attention, those two languages of the
       courtier which acknowledge the hand of no master powerful enough to
       restrain them.
       As for the king, his eyes filled with tears; he dared not look at the
       queen. Anne of Austria, whose pride was superior to that of any creature
       breathing, overwhelmed her host by the contempt with which she treated
       everything handed to her. The young queen, kind-hearted by nature and
       curious by disposition, praised Fouquet, ate with an exceedingly good
       appetite, and asked the names of the strange fruits as they were placed
       upon the table. Fouquet replied that he was not aware of their names.
       The fruits came from his own stores; he had often cultivated them
       himself, having an intimate acquaintance with the cultivation of exotic
       fruits and plants. The king felt and appreciated the delicacy of the
       replies, but was only the more humiliated; he thought the queen a little
       too familiar in her manners, and that Anne of Austria resembled Juno a
       little too much, in being too proud and haughty; his chief anxiety,
       however, was himself, that he might remain cold and distant in his
       behavior, bordering lightly the limits of supreme disdain or simple
       admiration.
       But Fouquet had foreseen all this; he was, in fact, one of those men who
       foresee everything. The king had expressly declared that, so long as he
       remained under Fouquet's roof, he did not wish his own different repasts
       to be served in accordance with the usual etiquette, and that he would,
       consequently, dine with the rest of society; but by the thoughtful
       attention of the surintendant, the king's dinner was served up
       separately, if one may so express it, in the middle of the general table;
       the dinner, wonderful in every respect, from the dishes of which was
       composed, comprised everything the king liked and generally preferred to
       anything else. Louis had no excuse - he, indeed, who had the keenest
       appetite in his kingdom - for saying that he was not hungry. Nay, M.
       Fouquet did even better still; he certainly, in obedience to the king's
       expressed desire, seated himself at the table, but as soon as the soups
       were served, he arose and personally waited on the king, while Madame
       Fouquet stood behind the queen-mother's armchair. The disdain of Juno
       and the sulky fits of temper of Jupiter could not resist this excess of
       kindly feeling and polite attention. The queen ate a biscuit dipped in a
       glass of San-Lucar wine; and the king ate of everything, saying to M.
       Fouquet: "It is impossible, monsieur le surintendant, to dine better
       anywhere." Whereupon the whole court began, on all sides, to devour the
       dishes spread before them with such enthusiasm that it looked as though a
       cloud of Egyptian locusts was settling down on green and growing crops.
       As soon, however, as his hunger was appeased, the king became morose and
       overgloomed again; the more so in proportion to the satisfaction he
       fancied he had previously manifested, and particularly on account of the
       deferential manner which his courtiers had shown towards Fouquet.
       D'Artagnan, who ate a good deal and drank but little, without allowing it
       to be noticed, did not lose a single opportunity, but made a great number
       of observations which he turned to good profit.
       When the supper was finished, the king expressed a wish not to lose the
       promenade. The park was illuminated; the moon, too, as if she had placed
       herself at the orders of the lord of Vaux, silvered the trees and lake
       with her own bright and quasi-phosphorescent light. The air was
       strangely soft and balmy; the daintily shell-gravelled walks through the
       thickly set avenues yielded luxuriously to the feet. The _fete_ was
       complete in every respect, for the king, having met La Valliere in one of
       the winding paths of the wood, was able to press her hand and say, "I
       love you," without any one overhearing him except M. d'Artagnan, who
       followed, and M. Fouquet, who preceded him.
       The dreamy night of magical enchantments stole smoothly on. The king
       having requested to be shown to his room, there was immediately a
       movement in every direction. The queens passed to their own apartments,
       accompanied by them music of theorbos and lutes; the king found his
       musketeers awaiting him on the grand flight of steps, for M. Fouquet had
       brought them on from Melun and had invited them to supper. D'Artagnan's
       suspicions at once disappeared. He was weary, he had supped well, and
       wished, for once in his life, thoroughly to enjoy a _fete_ given by a man
       who was in every sense of the word a king. "M. Fouquet," he said, "is
       the man for me."
       The king was conducted with the greatest ceremony to the chamber of
       Morpheus, of which we owe some cursory description to our readers. It
       was the handsomest and largest in the palace. Lebrun had painted on the
       vaulted ceiling the happy as well as the unhappy dreams which Morpheus
       inflicts on kings as well as on other men. Everything that sleep gives
       birth to that is lovely, its fairy scenes, its flowers and nectar, the
       wild voluptuousness or profound repose of the senses, had the painter
       elaborated on his frescoes. It was a composition as soft and pleasing in
       one part as dark and gloomy and terrible in another. The poisoned
       chalice, the glittering dagger suspended over the head of the sleeper;
       wizards and phantoms with terrific masks, those half-dim shadows more
       alarming than the approach of fire or the somber face of midnight, these,
       and such as these, he had made the companions of his more pleasing
       pictures. No sooner had the king entered his room than a cold shiver
       seemed to pass through him, and on Fouquet asking him the cause of it,
       the king replied, as pale as death:
       "I am sleepy, that is all."
       "Does your majesty wish for your attendants at once?"
       "No; I have to talk with a few persons first," said the king. "Will you
       have the goodness to tell M. Colbert I wish to see him."
       Fouquet bowed and left the room. _
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本书目录

CHAPTER I - The Prisoner
CHAPTER II - How Mouston Had Become Fatter without Giving Porthos Notice Thereof
CHAPTER III - Who Messire Jean Percerin Was
CHAPTER IV - The Patterns
CHAPTER V - Where, Probably, Moliere Obtained His First Idea of the Bourgeois Gentilhomme
CHAPTER VI - The Bee-Hive, the Bees, and the Honey
CHAPTER VII - Another Supper at the Bastile
CHAPTER VIII - The General of the Order
CHAPTER IX - The Tempter
CHAPTER X - Crown and Tiara
CHAPTER XI - The Chateau de Vaux-le-Vicomte
CHAPTER XII - The Wine of Melun
CHAPTER XIII - Nectar and Ambrosia
CHAPTER XIV - A Gascon, and a Gascon and a Half
CHAPTER XV - Colbert
CHAPTER XVI - Jealousy
CHAPTER XVII - High Treason
CHAPTER XVIII - A Night at the Bastile
CHAPTER XIX - The Shadow of M Fouquet
CHAPTER XX - The Morning
CHAPTER XXI - The King's Friend
CHAPTER XXII - Showing How the Countersign Was Respected at the Bastile
CHAPTER XXIII - The King's Gratitude
CHAPTER XXIV - The False King
CHAPTER XXV - In Which Porthos Thinks He Is Pursuing a Duchy
CHAPTER XXVI - The Last Adieux
CHAPTER XXVII - Monsieur de Beaufort
CHAPTER XXVIII - Preparations for Departure
CHAPTER XXIX - Planchet's Inventory
CHAPTER XXX - The Inventory of M de Beaufort
CHAPTER XXXI - The Silver Dish
CHAPTER XXXII - Captive and Jailers
CHAPTER XXXIII - Promises
CHAPTER XXXIV - Among Women
CHAPTER XXXV - The Last Supper
CHAPTER XXXVI - In M Colbert's Carriage
CHAPTER XXXVII - The Two Lighters
CHAPTER XXXVIII - Friendly Advice
CHAPTER XXXIX - How the King, Louis XIV, Played His Little Part
CHAPTER XL - The White Horse and the Black
CHAPTER XLI - In Which the Squirrel Falls, - the Adder Flies
CHAPTER XLII - Belle-Ile-en-Mer
CHAPTER XLIII - Explanations by Aramis
CHAPTER XLIV - Result of the Ideas of the King, and the Ideas of D'Artagnan
CHAPTER XLV - The Ancestors of Porthos
CHAPTER XLVI - The Son of Biscarrat
CHAPTER XLVII - The Grotto of Locmaria
CHAPTER XLVIII - The Grotto
CHAPTER XLIX - An Homeric Song
CHAPTER L - The Death of a Titan
CHAPTER LI - Porthos's Epitaph
CHAPTER LII - M de Gesvres's Round
CHAPTER LIII - King Louis XIV
CHAPTER LIV - M Fouquet's Friends
CHAPTER LV - Porthos's Will
CHAPTER LVI - The Old Age of Athos
CHAPTER LVII - Athos's Vision
CHAPTER LVIII - The Angel of Death
CHAPTER LIX - The Bulletin
CHAPTER LX - The Last Canto of the Poem
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