您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Queen’s Necklace, The
Chapter 55. The Minister Of Finance
Alexandre Dumas
下载:Queen’s Necklace, The.txt
本书全文检索:
       _ CHAPTER LV. THE MINISTER OF FINANCE
       We have seen that the queen, before receiving Andree, was smiling over a note from Madame de la Motte. She was, however, rendered serious by the interview with Mademoiselle de Taverney. Scarcely had she gone, when Madame de Misery came to announce M. de Calonne. He was a man of much intellect, but, foreseeing that disaster was hanging over France, determined to think only of the present, and enjoy it to the utmost. He was a courtier, and a popular man. M. de Necker had shown the impossibility of finding finances, and called for reforms which would have struck at the estates of the nobility and the revenues of the clergy; he exposed his designs too openly, and was overwhelmed by a torrent of opposition; to show the enemy your plan of attack is half to give them the victory. Calonne, equally alive to the danger, but seeing no way of escape, gave way to it. He completely carried with him the king and queen, who implicitly believed in his system, and this is, perhaps, the only political fault which Louis XVI was guilty of towards posterity. M. de Calonne was handsome, and had an ingratiating manner; he knew how to please a queen, and always arrived with a smile on his face, when others might have worn a frown.
       The queen received him graciously, and said, "Have we any money, M. de Calonne?"
       "Certainly, madame; we have always money."
       "You are perfectly marvelous," replied she, "an incomparable financier, for you seem always ready when we want money."
       "How much does your majesty require?"
       "Explain to me first how you manage to find money, when M. Necker declared that there was none."
       "M. Necker was right, madame; for when I became minister on the 3d of November, 1783, there were but one thousand and two hundred francs in the public treasury. Had M. Necker, madame, instead of crying out, 'There is no money,' done as I have done, and borrowed 100,000,000 the first year, and 125,000,000 the second, and had he been as sure as I am of a new loan of 80,000,000 for the third, he would have been a true financier. Every one can say there is no money, but not that there is plenty."
       "That is what I compliment you on, sir; but how to pay all this?"
       "Oh, madame, be sure we shall pay it," replied he, with a strange smile.
       "Well, I trust to you," said the queen.
       "I have now a project, madame," replied he, bowing, "which will put 20,000,000 into the pockets of the nation, and 7,000,000 or 8,000,000 into your own."
       "They will be welcome, but where are they to come from?"
       "Your majesty is aware that money is not of the same value in all the countries of Europe."
       "Certainly. In Spain gold is dearer than in France."
       "Your majesty is perfectly right. Gold in Spain has been for the last five or six years worth considerably more than in France; it results that the exporters gain on eight ounces of gold, that they send from here, about the value of fourteen ounces of silver."
       "That is a great deal."
       "Well, madame, I mean to raise the price of gold one-fifth of this difference, and where we have now thirty louis we shall then have thirty-two."
       "It is a brilliant idea!" cried the queen.
       "I believe it, and am happy that it meets your majesty's approbation."
       "Always have such, and I am sure you will soon pay our debts."
       "But allow me, madame, to return to what you want of me," said the minister.
       "Would it be possible to have at present--I am afraid it is too much----"
       Calonne smiled in an encouraging manner.
       "500,000 francs?" continued the queen.
       "Oh, madame, really your majesty frightened me; I was afraid it was something great."
       "Then you can?"
       "Assuredly."
       "Without the king's knowledge?"
       "Oh, madame, that is impossible. Every month all my accounts are laid before the king; however, he does not always read them."
       "When can I have it?"
       "What day does your majesty wish for it?"
       "On the fifth of next month."
       "Your majesty shall have it on the third."
       "Thanks, M. de Calonne."
       "My greatest happiness is to please your majesty, and I beg you never will allow yourself to be embarrassed for want of money." He rose, the queen gave him her hand to kiss, and then said, "After all, this money causes me some remorse, for it is for a caprice."
       "Never mind; some one will gain by it."
       "That is true; you have a charming mode of consoling one."
       "Oh, madame, if we had none of us more reasons for remorse than you, we should all go straight to heaven."
       "But it will be cruel to make the poor people pay for my caprices."
       "Have no scruples, madame; it is not the poor who will pay."
       "How so?" asked the queen, in some surprise.
       "Because, madame, they have nothing to pay with."
       He bowed and retired. _
用户中心

本站图书检索

本书目录

Prologue.--The Predictions
Chapter 1. Two Unknown Ladies
Chapter 2. An Interior
Chapter 3. Jeanne De La Motte Valois
Chapter 4. Belus
Chapter 5. The Road To Versailles
Chapter 6. Laurent
Chapter 7. The Queen's Bed-Chamber
Chapter 8. The Queen's Petite Levee
Chapter 9. The Swiss Lake
Chapter 10. The Tempter
Chapter 11. M. De Suffren
Chapter 12. M. De Charny
Chapter 13. The One Hundred Louis Of The Queen
Chapter 14. M. Fingret
Chapter 15. The Cardinal De Rohan
Chapter 16. Mesmer And St. Martin
Chapter 17. The Bucket
Chapter 18. Mademoiselle Oliva
Chapter 19. Monsieur Beausire
Chapter 20. Gold
Chapter 21. La Petite Maison
Chapter 22. Some Words About The Opera
Chapter 23. The Ball At The Opera
Chapter 24. The Examination
Chapter 25. The Academy Of M. Beausire
Chapter 26. The Ambassador
Chapter 27. Messrs. Boehmer And Bossange
Chapter 28. The Ambassador's Hotel
Chapter 29. The Bargain
Chapter 30. The Journalist's House
Chapter 31. How Two Friends Became Enemies
Chapter 32. The House In The Rue St. Gilles
Chapter 33. The Head Of The Taverney Family
Chapter 34. The Stanzas Of M. De Provence
Chapter 35. The Princess De Lamballe
Chapter 36. The Queen
Chapter 37. An Alibi
Chapter 38. M. De Crosne.
Chapter 39. The Temptress
Chapter 40. Two Ambitions That Wish To Pass For Two Loves
Chapter 41. Faces Under Their Masks
Chapter 42. In Which M. Ducorneau Understands Nothing Of What Is Passing
Chapter 43. Illusions And Realities
Chapter 44. Oliva Begins To Ask What They Want Of Her
Chapter 45. The Deserted House
Chapter 46. Jeanne The Protectress
Chapter 47. Jeanne Protected
Chapter 48. The Queen's Portfolio
Chapter 49. In Which We Find Dr. Louis
Chapter 50. Aegri Somnia
Chapter 51. Andree
Chapter 52. Delirium
Chapter 53. Convalescence
Chapter 54. Two Bleeding Hearts
Chapter 55. The Minister Of Finance
Chapter 56. The Cardinal De Rohan
Chapter 57. Debtor And Creditor
Chapter 58. Family Accounts
Chapter 59. Marie Antoinette As Queen, And Madame De La Motte As Woman
Chapter 60. The Receipt Of Mm. Boehmer And Bossange, And The Gratitude Of The Queen
Chapter 61 The Prisoner
Chapter 62. The Look Out
Chapter 63. The Two Neighbors
Chapter 64. The Rendezvous
Chapter 65. The Queen's Hand
Chapter 66. Woman And Queen
Chapter 67. Woman And Demon
Chapter 68. The Night
Chapter 69. The Conge
Chapter 70. The Jealousy Of The Cardinal
Chapter 71. The Flight
Chapter 72. The Letter And The Receipt
Chapter 73
Chapter 74. Love And Diplomacy
Chapter 75. Charny, Cardinal, And Queen
Chapter 76. Explanations
Chapter 77. The Arrest
Chapter 78. The Proces-Verbal
Chapter 79. The Last Accusation
Chapter 80. The Proposal Of Marriage
Chapter 81. St. Denis
Chapter 82. A Dead Heart
Chapter 83. In Which It Is Explained Why The Baron De Taverney Grew Fat
Chapter 84. The Father And The Fiancee
Chapter 85. After The Dragon, The Viper
Chapter 86. How It Came To Pass That M. Beausire Was Tracked By The Agents Of M. De Crosne
Chapter 87. The Turtles Are Caged
Chapter 88. The Last Hope Lost
Chapter 89. The Baptism Of The Little Beausire
Chapter 90. The Trial
Chapter 91. The Execution
Chapter 92. The Marriage