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Vicomte de Bragelonne, The
Chapter 39. Mazarin's Gaming Party
Alexandre Dumas
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       _ Chapter XXXIX. Mazarin's Gaming Party
       In a large chamber of the Palais Royal, hung with a dark colored velvet, which threw into strong relief the gilded frames of a great number of magnificent pictures, on the evening of the arrival of the two Frenchmen, the whole court was assembled before the alcove of M. le Cardinal de Mazarin, who gave a card party to the king and queen.
       A small screen separated three prepared tables. At one of these tables the king and the two queens were seated. Louis XIV., placed opposite to the young queen, his wife, smiled upon her with an expression of real happiness. Anne of Austria held the cards against the cardinal, and her daughter-in-law assisted her in the game, when she was not engaged in smiling at her husband. As for the cardinal, who was lying on his bed with a weary and careworn face, his cards were held by the Comtesse de Soissons, and he watched them with an incessant look of interest and cupidity.
       The cardinal's face had been painted by Bernouin; but the rouge, which glowed only on his cheeks, threw into stronger contrast the sickly pallor of his countenance and the shining yellow of his brow. His eyes alone acquired a more brilliant luster from this auxiliary, and upon those sick man's eyes were, from time to time, turned the uneasy looks of the king, the queen, and the courtiers. The fact is, that the two eyes of the Signor Mazarin were the stars more or less brilliant in which the France of the seventeenth century read its destiny every evening and every morning.
       Monseigneur neither won nor lost; he was, therefore, neither gay nor sad. It was a stagnation in which, full of pity for him, Anne of Austria would not have willingly left him; but in order to attract the attention of the sick man by some brilliant stroke, she must have either won or lost. To win would have been dangerous, because Mazarin would have changed his indifference into an ugly grimace; to lose would likewise have been dangerous, because she must have cheated, and the infanta, who watched her game, would, doubtless, have exclaimed against her partiality for Mazarin. Profiting by this calm, the courtiers were chatting. When not in a bad humor, M. de Mazarin was a very _debonnaire_ prince, and he, who prevented nobody from singing, provided they paid, was not tyrant enough to prevent people from talking, provided they made up their minds to lose.
       They were therefore chatting. At the first table, the king's younger brother, Philip, Duc d'Anjou, was admiring his handsome face in the glass of a box. His favorite, the Chevalier de Lorraine, leaning over the back of the prince's chair, was listening, with secret envy, to the Comte de Guiche, another of Philip's favorites, who was relating in choice terms the various vicissitudes of fortune of the royal adventurer Charles II. He told, as so many fabulous events, all the history of his perigrinations in Scotland, and his terrors when the enemy's party was so closely on his track; of nights spent in trees, and days spent in hunger and combats. By degrees, the fate of the unfortunate king interested his auditors so greatly, that the play languished even at the royal table, and the young king, with a pensive look and downcast eye, followed, without appearing to give any attention to it, the smallest details of this Odyssey, very picturesquely related by the Comte de Guiche.
       The Comtesse de Soissons interrupted the narrator: "Confess, count, you are inventing."
       "Madame, I am repeating like a parrot all the stories related to me by different Englishmen. To my shame I am compelled to say, I am as exact as a copy."
       "Charles II. would have died before he could have endured all that."
       Louis XIV. raised his intelligent and proud head. "Madame," said he, in a grave tone, still partaking something of the timid child, "monsieur le cardinal will tell you that during my minority the affairs of France were in jeopardy,--and that if I had been older, and obliged to take sword in hand, it would sometimes have been for the purpose of procuring the evening meal."
       "Thanks to God," said the cardinal, who spoke for the first time, "your majesty exaggerates, and your supper has always been ready with that of your servants."
       The king colored.
       "Oh!" cried Philip, inconsiderately, from his place, and without ceasing to admire himself,--"I recollect once, at Melun, the supper was laid for nobody, and that the king ate two-thirds of a slice of bread, and abandoned to me the other third."
       The whole assembly, seeing Mazarin smile, began to laugh. Courtiers flatter kings with the remembrance of past distresses, as with the hopes of future good fortune.
       "It is not to be denied that the crown of France has always remained firm upon the heads of its kings," Anne of Austria hastened to say, "and that it has fallen off of that of the king of England; and when by chance that crown oscillated a little,--for there are throne-quakes as well as earthquakes,--every time, I say, that rebellion threatened it, a good victory restored tranquillity."
       "With a few gems added to the crown," said Mazarin.
       The Comte de Guiche was silent: the king composed his countenance, and Mazarin exchanged looks with Anne of Austria, as if to thank her for her intervention.
       "It is of no consequence," said Philip, smoothing his hair; "my cousin Charles is not handsome, but he is very brave, and fought like a landsknecht; and if he continues to fight thus, no doubt he will finish by gaining a battle, like Rocroi--"
       "He has no soldiers," interrupted the Chevalier de Lorraine.
       "The king of Holland, his ally, will give him some. I would willingly have given him some if I had been king of France."
       Louis XIV. blushed excessively. Mazarin affected to be more attentive to his game than ever.
       "By this time," resumed the Comte de Guiche, "the fortune of this unhappy prince is decided. If he has been deceived by Monk, he is ruined. Imprisonment, perhaps death, will finish what exiles, battles, and privations have commenced."
       Mazarin's brow became clouded.
       "It is certain," said Louis XIV., "that his majesty Charles II., has quitted the Hague?"
       "Quite certain, your majesty," replied the young man; "my father has received a letter containing all the details; it is even known that the king has landed at Dover; some fishermen saw him entering the port; the rest is still a mystery."
       "I should like to know the rest," said Philip, impetuously. "You know,--you, my brother."
       Louis XIV. colored again. That was the third time within an hour. "Ask my lord cardinal," replied he, in a tone which made Mazarin, Anne of Austria, and everybody else open their eyes.
       "That means, my son," said Anne of Austria, laughing, "that the king does not like affairs of state to be talked of out of the council."
       Philip received the reprimand with good grace, and bowed, first smiling at his brother, and then at his mother. But Mazarin saw from the corner of his eye that a group was about to be formed in the corner of the room, and that the Duc d'Anjou, with the Comte de Guiche, and the Chevalier de Lorraine, prevented from talking aloud, might say, in a whisper, what it was not convenient should be said. He was beginning, then, to dart at them glances full of mistrust and uneasiness, inviting Anne of Austria to throw perturbation in the midst of the unlawful assembly, when, suddenly, Bernouin, entering from behind the tapestry of the bedroom, whispered in the ear of Mazarin, "Monseigneur, an envoy from his majesty, the king of England."
       Mazarin could not help exhibiting a slight emotion, which was perceived by the king. To avoid being indiscreet, rather than to appear useless, Louis XIV. rose immediately, and approaching his eminence, wished him good-night. All the assembly had risen with a great noise of rolling of chairs and tables being pushed away.
       "Let everybody depart by degrees," said Mazarin in a whisper to Louis XIV., "and be so good as to excuse me a few minutes. I am going to dispatch an affair about which I wish to converse with your majesty this very evening."
       "And the queens?" asked Louis XIV.
       "And M. le Duc d'Anjou," said his eminence.
       At the same time he turned round in his _ruelle_, the curtains of which, in falling, concealed the bed. The cardinal, nevertheless, did not lose sight of the conspirators.
       "M. le Comte de Guiche," said he, in a fretful voice, whilst putting on, behind the curtain, his dressing-gown, with the assistance of Bernouin.
       "I am here, my lord," said the young man, as he approached.
       "Take my cards, you are lucky. Win a little money for me of these gentlemen."
       "Yes, my lord."
       The young man sat down at the table from which the king withdrew to talk with the two queens. A serious game was commenced between the comte and several rich courtiers. In the meantime Philip was discussing the questions of dress with the Chevalier de Lorraine, and they had ceased to hear the rustling of the cardinal's silk robe from behind the curtain. His eminence had followed Bernouin into the closet adjoining the bedroom. _
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本书目录

Chapter 1. The Letter
Chapter 2. The Messenger
Chapter 3. The Interview
Chapter 4. Father And Son
Chapter 5. In Which Something Will Be Said Of Cropoli...
Chapter 6. The Unknown
Chapter 7. Parry
Chapter 8. What His Majesty King Louis XIV Was At The Age Of Twenty-Two
Chapter 9. In Which The Unknown Of The Hostelry Of Les Medici Loses His Incognito
Chapter 10. The Arithmetic Of M. De Mazarin
Chapter 11. Mazarin's Policy
Chapter 12. The King And The Lieutenant
Chapter 13. Mary De Mancini
Chapter 14. In Which The King And The Lieutenant Each Give Proofs Of Memory
Chapter 15. The Proscribed
Chapter 16. "Remember!"
Chapter 17. In Which Aramis Is Sought, And Only Bazin Is Found
Chapter 18. In Which D'artagnan Seeks Porthos, And Only Finds Mousqueton
Chapter 19. What D'artagnan Went To Paris For
Chapter 20. Of The Society Which Was Formed In The Rue Des Lombards...
Chapter 21. In Which D'artagnan Prepares To Travel For The Firm Of Planchet & Company
Chapter 22. D'artagnan Travels For The House Of Planchet And Company
Chapter 23. In Which The Author, Very Unwillingly, Is Forced To Write A Little History
Chapter 24. The Treasure
Chapter 25. The Marsh
Chapter 26. Heart And Mind
Chapter 27. The Next Day
Chapter 28. Smuggling
Chapter 29. In Which D'artagnan Begins To Fear He Has Placed His Money...
Chapter 30. The Shares Of Planchet And Company Rise Again To Par
Chapter 31. Monk Reveals Himself
Chapter 32. Athos And D'artagnan Meet Once More At The Hostelry Of The Corne Du Cerf
Chapter 33. The Audience
Chapter 34. Of The Embarrassment Of Riches
Chapter 35. On The Canal
Chapter 36. How D'artagnan Drew...
Chapter 37. How D'artagnan Regulated The "Assets"...
Chapter 38. In Which It Is Seen That The French Grocer...
Chapter 39. Mazarin's Gaming Party
Chapter 40. An Affair Of State
Chapter 41. The Recital
Chapter 42. In Which Mazarin Becomes Prodigal
Chapter 43. Guenaud
Chapter 44. Colbert
Chapter 45. Confession Of A Man Of Wealth
Chapter 46. The Donation
Chapter 47. How Anne Of Austria Gave One Piece Of Advice To Louis XIV...
Chapter 48. Agony
Chapter 49. The First Appearance Of Colbert
Chapter 50. The First Day Of The Royalty Of Louis XIV
Chapter 51. A Passion
Chapter 52. D'artagnan's Lesson
Chapter 53. The King
Chapter 54. The Houses Of M. Fouquet
Chapter 55. The Abbe Fouquet
Chapter 56. M. De La Fontaine's Wine
Chapter 57. The Gallery Of Saint-Mande
Chapter 58. Epicureans
Chapter 59. A Quarter Of An Hour's Delay
Chapter 60. Plan Of Battle
Chapter 61. The Cabaret Of The Image-De-Notre-Dame
Chapter 62. Vive Colbert!
Chapter 63. How M. D'eymeris's Diamond...
Chapter 64. Of The Notable Difference D'artagnan Finds...
Chapter 65. Philosophy Of The Heart And Mind
Chapter 66. The Journey
Chapter 67. How D'artagnan Became Acquainted With A Poet...
Chapter 68. D'artagnan Continues His Investigations
Chapter 69. In Which The Reader, No Doubt...
Chapter 70. Wherein The Ideas Of D'artagnan...
Chapter 71. A Procession At Vannes
Chapter 72. The Grandeur Of The Bishop Of Vannes
Chapter 73. In Which Porthos Begins To Be Sorry For Having Come With D'artagnan
Chapter 74. In Which D'artagnan Makes All Speed...
Chapter 75. In Which Monsieur Fouquet Acts