登陆注册
19315300000005

第5章 THE QUEEN AND HER FRIEND(2)

"Your majesty weeping!" said she, in her most insinuating tone. "My God, you are then unhappy; and I received with a loud cry of joy the news of my friend's unexpected good fortune. I thought to meet a queen, proud, happy, and radiant with joy; and I was anxious and fearful lest the queen might have ceased to be my friend. Wherefore I urged my father, as soon as your command reached us, to leave Dublin and hasten with me hither. Oh, my God! I wished to see you in your happiness and in your greatness."Catharine removed her hands from her face, and looked down at her friend with a sorrowful smile. "Well," said she, "are you not satisfied with what you have seen? Have I not the whole day displayed to you the smiling queen, worn a dress embroidered with gold? did not my neck glitter with diamonds? did not the royal diadem shine in my hair? and sat not the king by my side? Let that, then, be sufficient for the present. You have seen the queen all day long. Allow me now for one brief, happy moment to be again the feeling, sensitive woman, who can pour into the bosom of her friend all her complaint and her wretchedness. Ah, Jane, if you knew how Ihave longed for this hour, how I have sighed after you as the only balm for my poor smitten heart, smitten even to death, how I have implored Heaven for this day, for this one thing--'Give me back my Jane, so that she can weep with me, so that I may have one being at my side who understands me, and does not allow herself to be imposed upon by the wretched splendor of this outward display!'""Poor Catharine!" whispered Lady Jane, "poor queen!"Catharine started and laid her hand, sparkling with brilliants, on Jane's lips. "Call me not thus!" said she. "Queen! My God, is not all the fearful past heard again in that word? Queen! Is it not as much as to say, condemned to the scaffold and a public criminal trial? Ah, Jane! a deadly tremor runs through my members. I am Henry the Eighth's sixth queen; I shall also be executed, or, loaded with disgrace, be repudiated."Again she hid her face in her hands, and her whole frame shook; so she saw not the smile of malicious satisfaction with which Lady Jane again observed her. She suspected not with what secret delight her friend heard her lamentations and sighs.

"Oh! I am at least revenged!" thought Jane, while she lovingly stroked the queen's hair. "Yes, I am revenged! She has robbed me of a crown, but she is wretched; and in the golden goblet which she presses to her lips she will find nothing but wormwood! Now, if this sixth queen dies not on the scaffold, still we may perhaps so work it that she dies of anxiety, or deems it a pleasure to be able to lay down again her royal crown at Henry's feet."Then said she aloud: "But why these fears, Catharine? The king loves you; the whole court has seen with what tender and ardent looks he has regarded you to-day, and with what delight he has listened to your every word. Certainly the king loves you."Catharine seized her hand impulsively. "The king loves me,"whispered she, "and I, I tremble before him. Yes, more than that, his love fills me with horror! His hands are dipped in blood, and as I saw him to-day in his crimson robes I shuddered, and I thought, How soon, and my blood, too, will dye this crimson!"Jane smiled. "You are sick, Catharine," said she. "This good fortune has taken you by surprise, and your overstrained nerves now depict before you all sorts of frightful forms. That is all.""No, no, Jane; these thoughts have ever been with me. They have attended me ever since the king selected me for his wife.""And why, then, did you not refuse him?" asked Lady Jane. "Why did you not say 'no' to the king's suit?""Why did I not do it, ask you? Ah, Jane, are you such a stranger at this court as not to know, then, that one must either fulfil the king's behests or die? My God, they envy me! They call me the greatest and most potent woman of England. They know not that I am poorer and more powerless than the beggar of the street, who at least has the power to refuse whom she will. I could not refuse. Imust either die or accept the royal hand which was extended to me;and I would not die yet, I have still so many claims on life, and it has hitherto made good so few of them! Ah, my poor, hapless existence! what has it been, but an endless chain of renunciations and deprivations, of leafless flowers and dissolving views? It is true, I have never learned to know what is usually called misfortune. But is there a greater misfortune than not to be happy;than to sigh through a life without wish or hope; to wear away the endless, weary days of an existence without delight, yet surrounded with luxury and splendor?""You were not unfortunate, and yet you are an orphan, fatherless and motherless?""I lost my mother so early that I scarcely knew her. And when my father died I could hardly consider it other than a blessing, for he had never shown himself a father, but always only as a harsh, tyrannical master to me.""But you were married?""Married!" said Catharine, with a melancholy smile. "That is to say, my father sold me to a gouty old man, on whose couch I spent a few comfortless, awfully wearisome years, till Lord Neville made me a rich widow. But what did my independence avail me, when I had bound myself in new fetters? Hitherto I had been the slave of my father, of my husband; now I was the slave of my wealth. I ceased to be a sick-nurse to become steward of my estate. Ah! this was the most tedious period of my life. And yet I owe to it my only real happiness, for at that period I became acquainted with you, my Jane, and my heart, which had never yet learned to know a tenderer feeling, flew to you with all the impetuosity of a first passion.

同类推荐
  • A Room With A View

    A Room With A View

    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。
  • 洪恩灵济真君礼愿文

    洪恩灵济真君礼愿文

    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。
  • 洞麓堂集

    洞麓堂集

    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。
  • 赴冯翊作

    赴冯翊作

    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。
  • 黄檗山寺志

    黄檗山寺志

    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。
热门推荐
  • 苦恼的叙述者

    苦恼的叙述者

    《苦恼的叙述者》由赵毅衡所著,大部分篇幅,都是讨论叙述形式问题,过于深入到细节之中。为了醒目起见,我把《苦恼的叙述者》的分析原则在此作简要说明。在全书开头讲这问题,有先人为主之嫌,实际上,下面的讨论应是全书的结论。建议有兴趣的读者看完全书后不妨再读此节。
  • 穿越之龙凤呈祥

    穿越之龙凤呈祥

    当一个女人遇到许多男人的时候,是该自叹倒霉还是好好享受温存?
  • 惹火影后Boss宠上瘾

    惹火影后Boss宠上瘾

    上山采个药都能穿越!?刚穿越过来就被车给撞倒?在医院醒来,还被星探选中进军演艺圈?这是中了头奖的节奏啊!虽然都不是本人的意愿,但是第一次演戏再次穿上古装感觉自己信心爆棚!(看一国公主如何在现代一步步当上大明星,俘获总裁芳心)
  • 史上第一男配

    史上第一男配

    网络写手李大年一觉醒来发现自己穿越了,还穿入了自己写的小说中,最坑爹的是他竟然穿越到小说中的第一男配身上。幸好李大年是这部小说的作者,知道小说中所有故事发展顺序,知道所有想要害自己的人是谁,知道所有男主角会遇到的奇遇。于是他便先下手除掉要害自己的人,抢先一步找到男主角的奇遇,打乱小说故事的发展顺序,只为改变被男主一路虐到死的命运。文中虽然美女众多,但不开后宫,绝对一对一。另:文中的《仙魔世界》一书为虚拟存在,请不要对号入座。
  • 胡适散文

    胡适散文

    中华散文,源远流长。数千年的散文创作,或抒情、或言志、或状景、或怀人……莫不反映出时代的风云变幻和人们的思想情感。中华散文的这些优良传统在二十世纪以降的新文学那里,不仅得到了全面传承,且不断有所创新、有所发展。为了展示二十世以来中华散文的创作业绩,我们在新世纪之初即编辑出版过”中华散文珍藏本“凡三十种。自二○○五年始,我们在此基础上先后选出二十六种,作为“中华散文插图珍藏版”第一辑、第二辑出版。此次又选出十种,作为第三辑出版。
  • 只属于公主的田螺骑士

    只属于公主的田螺骑士

    单纯得对校园生活一无所知的女主角韩千金,在15岁的时候终于摆脱家教迈进了校园。即使是扮丑的样子,依然吸引了校草崔允浩以及同桌姜熙元,再加上家人派来的卧底老师玄又彬,注定了这次的校园体验生活不平静。体贴的玄又彬,霸道的崔允浩,变态的姜熙元,校园风波一浪接着一浪的打来。当身边的男孩一个一个的离千金而去时,她又在飞往美国的飞机上遇到了多嘴又罗索的尹明哲,意外的是两人竟是将来的校友。在美国的MZ中学,千金竟然又遇到了曾经离她而去的崔允浩,新学校里有了崔允浩和尹明哲,又是一场风浪……真正的王子到底是谁,公主长大后就会发现。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 三国金戈传

    三国金戈传

    一个普普通通的大学毕业生在一次次面试碰壁后终于得到面试通知一张,谁料一觉睡下睡到了三国。谁说穿越就是美滋滋的?他姓刘,但却是一介布衣。他一身武艺,却又不愿卖与帝王家。在这到处讲究地位出身的地方,别人做做样子唾手可得,他却只能慢慢争取。本书无科技,无玄幻,无种马为三无产品
  • 天仙错:暖雪岁岁寒

    天仙错:暖雪岁岁寒

    她是他妙笔生花的赋予,天人之姿,倾城之貌,却终洗不尽一身铅华。人人都惦记她的鲜血,她只惦记给了她鲜血的人。魔界公子,不过吸血恶魔;亲近兄长,竟换身魔界之人。情人牵系她人情劫那又如何?昨日牵挂找上他又如何?她满怀一腔热血等雪来,他一身白衣踏雪归。欢声笑语,暗算误解,扑朔迷离。本是一世牵挂,奈何伤他最深。生生世世她从不拖欠,却欠他永生永世。
  • 三公主的清纯爱恋

    三公主的清纯爱恋

    世界前三富的女儿们假扮穷人进入了贵族学院,才一天就不演了?遇见了三大帅哥,她们的小心脏有没有“扑通扑通”直跳呢?最后的结果究竟如何呢?一起期待吧!
  • 九尾狐之通天狐月苼

    九尾狐之通天狐月苼

    为爱深陷、为爱痴狂、为爱执着。一生万世不复心,万世钟情只一人。