登陆注册
20277800000199

第199章 THE BARON DE EICHEMONT.(7)

"Hush! young man, hush!" replied Desaix, "you are bitter and sad, and I understand it, for the horizon is dark for you, and offers you no cheerful prospect; but a million francs is a good thing notwithstanding, and one day you will know how to prize it. This million of francs makes you a rich man, and a rich man is a free and independent man. If you do not wish to live longer as a soldier, you have the power to give up your commission and live without care, and that is something. My next business will be to assure you your fortune against all the uncertainties of the future, which are the more to be guarded against, as we are soon to advance into Italy again for the next campaign. I can, therefore, not put your property and your papers into your hands, for they constitute your future, and we must deposit them with some one with whom they shall be safe, and that must be with a man of peace. Do you know who this man is?"

"I know no one, general, excepting yourself," replied Louis, with a shrug, "whom I should dare to trust."

"But, fortunately, I know an entirely reliable man; shall I tell you who he is?"

"Do so, I beg you, general."

"His name is Fouche."

Louis started, and a deathly paleness covered his cheeks.

"Fouche, the chief of police! Fouche, the traitor, who gave his voice in the Convention for the death of King Louis--to him, the red republican, a man of blood and treachery, do you want to convey my papers and my property?"

"Yes, Louis, for with him alone are they secure. Fouche will protect you, and will stand by you with just as much zeal as he once displayed in the persecution of the royal family. I know him well, and I vouch for him. Men must not always be judged by their external appearance. He who shows himself our enemy to-day, lends us to-morrow, it may be, a helpful arm, and becomes our friend, sometimes because his heart has been changed, and sometimes because his character is feeble. I cannot with certainty say which of these reasons has determined Fouche, but I am firmly convinced that he will be a protector and a friend to you, and that in no hands will your property and your papers be safer than in his." [Footnote:

Desaix's own words--See "Memoires du Due de Nonuandie," p. 61.]

Louis made no reply; he dropped his head with a sigh, and submitted.

On, in the new century, rolled the victorious car of Bonaparte, down the Alps, into the fertile plains of Italy. The conqueror of Lodi and Arcole meant to take revenge on the enemies who had snatched back the booty--revenge on Austria, who had broken the peace of Campo Formio. And he did take this revenge at Marengo, where, on the 14th of June, he gained a brilliant victory over Austria, and won all Italy as the prize of the battle.

But the day was purchased at a sacrifice. General Desaix paid with his death for his impetuous onset. In the very thick of the fight, mortally wounded by a ball, he fell into the arms of his adjutant Louis, and only with extreme peril could the latter, himself wounded, bear the general away from the melee, and not. be trampled to death by the horses of his own soldiers.

Poor Louis Charles! He now stood entirely alone--the last friend had left him. Death had taken away every thing, parents, crown, home, name, friends. He was alone, all alone in the world--no man to take any interest in him, no one to know who he was.

Sunk in sadness, he remained in Alessandria after the battle of Marengo, and allowed his external wound to heal, while the internal one continued to bleed. He cursed death, because it had not taken him, while removing his last friend.

And when the wound was healed, what should he do?--under what name and title should he be enrolled in the army? His only protector was dead, and the adjutant was reported to have died with him. He put off the uniform which he had worn as the soldier of the republic which had destroyed his throne and his inheritance, and, in simple, unpretending garments, he returned to Paris, an unknown young man.

Desaix was right; it was, indeed, something to possess a million of francs. Poor as he was in love and happiness, this million of francs made him at least a free and independent man, and therefore he would demand his inheritance of him whom he formerly shunned because he was one of the murderers of his father.

Fouche received the young man exactly as Desaix had expected. He showed himself in the light of a sympathizing protector; he was touched with the view of this youth, whose countenance was the evidence of his lineage, the living picture of the unfortunate Louis XVI., whom Fouche had brought to the scaffold. Perhaps this man of blood and the guillotine had compunctions of conscience; perhaps he wanted to atone to the son for his injuries to the parents; perhaps he was planning to make of the son of the Bourbons a check to the ambitious consul of the republic; perhaps to humiliate the grasping Count de Lille, who was intriguing at all the European courts for the purpose of raising armies against the French republic. The son of Louis XVI. could be employed as a useful foil to all these political manoeuvres, and subsequently he could either be publicly acknowledged, or denounced as an impostor, as circumstances might determine.

At present it suited the plans of the crafty Fouche to acknowledge him, and to assume the attitude of a protector. He put on a very respectful and sympathetic air to the poor solitary youth; with gentle, tremulous voice he called him your Majesty; he begged his pardon for the past; he spoke with such deep emotion and so solemn a tone of the good, great, and gentle Louis XVI., that the heart of the son was powerfully touched. And when Fouche, with flaming words of enthusiasm, began to speak of the noble, unhappy Queen Marie Antoinette, when with glowing eloquence he celebrated her beauty and her gentleness in time of good-fortune, her greatness and steadfastness in ill-fortune, all the anger of the young man melted in the tears of love which he poured out as he remembered his mother.

同类推荐
  • 书法离钩

    书法离钩

    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。
  • 古书隐楼藏书

    古书隐楼藏书

    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。
  • 人天宝鉴

    人天宝鉴

    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。
  • 李尔王

    李尔王

    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。
  • 金液大丹口诀

    金液大丹口诀

    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
  • 左手羊皮卷,右手塔木德

    左手羊皮卷,右手塔木德

    《羊皮卷》:被誉为全球成功人士的“启示录”和超越自我极限的“奇书”;《塔木德》犹太文明的智慧基因库。大量智者的案例、风趣的解说、汇集人类历史上最伟大的成功大师的经典励志之作,全方位挖掘你内心的潜能,引领你走向卓越与成功。……如果你有心改变生活,想要追求成功,它会是你引航的明灯!
  • 打破无限

    打破无限

    一名普通的高二学生,在白天上课期间经历了一场噩梦般的经历后获得了一块神奇的手表,从此成为了一名“轮回者”。且看他如何打破自己的轮回宿命!
  • 倾世恋之两世的爱恋

    倾世恋之两世的爱恋

    她,本是天上仙子。不食人间烟火,只是有一点那就是太贪玩了。一次犯错被玉帝打下凡间进行磨练!他,本是魔界魔尊。因一次意外受了重伤,不想被魔界人知道,来到了凡间!初次相遇,两人只是陌生人,再见已是夫妻关系!她被他的体贴温柔所感动!他被她的善良可爱所征服!就在两人决定愿得一人心白首不相离时,一场意外!让他们分开,最后各归其位!但她知道她始终忘不了他!千年之后,再聚首!彼此都不认识。只是有一分熟悉的感觉藏在心头!感谢创世书评团提供论坛书评支持
  • 霸道的大叔

    霸道的大叔

    听说每个人的心中都有一个霸道总裁,孩子别傻了世界上哪来那么多的霸道总裁。来,既然没有霸道总裁,我们来个霸道大叔。全文轻松愉快好玩哟,走过路过千万不要错过哟。
  • 能给你带来好运的100个智慧

    能给你带来好运的100个智慧

    本书内容丰富,包含了很多人生智慧和哲学思想,从人性本质的角度挖掘潜藏在人们体内的种种理念,为一个人不断认识自己、改造自己提供了有益的帮助。
  • 百姓:翠婆婆的故事

    百姓:翠婆婆的故事

    此故事时间背景为二十世纪七八十年代至二十一世纪初,以社会热点的农民工问题和留守儿童成长问题为主题,主要讲述的是一个普通农村女人刘翠翠及其家庭的故事。
  • 仙侠奇缘之阿芃

    仙侠奇缘之阿芃

    一朝醒来,前尘忘却。只是为什么看到那对鹣鲽情深的狗男女我却不忍不住的咬碎了一口银牙又兼撕碎了几沓方帕呢?终有一天我在凡间勾搭上了一个面白肤嫩的小将军。七夕乞巧,晚风习习,花木飘香。“芃儿,我于你的心就像那牛郎于织女。”小将军指着牛郎星含情脉脉的看着我。我欲说还拒,“奴家于将军的心就像那织女于……牛郎星旁边怎么突然多了那么多颗莺莺燕燕的星子?”很久很久之后,太熙殿中,我窝在某腹黑男怀中小憩。“求求您行行好收回那些围在我身边莺莺燕燕的女星君,为了这事织女已经三年不理小仙了。再这样下去小仙都要孤独终老了呀,那还不如让小仙死了算了。”堂堂的牛郎星君哭的抑扬顿挫,说罢还欲作触柱态。
  • 冰心命运

    冰心命运

    浮华如水,用水晶打造的心,被背叛的友情,千年难遇的爱情,失而复得的亲情。被称为女王的神秘女孩,神秘古堡和神秘少年。真相...扑朔迷离。无月之夜里,是谁在弹出的忧伤琴声。“月光下的天使,折翼了,陨落了,变成了伪天使。”人界校园里演绎的冰心故事,命运将把她们引向何方?
  • 神魂岛之巅

    神魂岛之巅

    竹萧的传奇经历!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  • 童颜教主美肌养成法

    童颜教主美肌养成法

    外貌协会的同学都知道,懒是美女和丑女的分水岭。一个勤于帮助自己改善外貌,并涵养众人眼球的女孩,是可敬的。想让树木从60岁变成30岁的状态,你会说“NO,那不可能”。我们要改变的是外貌而不是年龄,你可以把老树的新枝栽培好,让它看起来像30岁。同样的,我们可以通过努力,让童颜常驻。童颜究竟能不能实现,做了才知道。我从人类外貌的先天遗传和后天改造两个角度入手,结合中医知识从体内到肌肤组织进行调理修护,重塑形体和容貌的美。并结合灵修使得自己达到身心愉悦的境地。