登陆注册
25622500001283

第1283章

KING. "'I ask your pardon for having plagued you so often with that; I regret it for the sake of all mankind. But what a fine Apprenticeship of War! I have committed errors enough to teach you young people, all of you, to do better. MON DIEU, how I love your grenadiers! How well they defiled in my presence! If the god Mars were raising a body-guard for himself, I should advise him to take them hand over head. Do you know I was well pleased (BIEN CONTENT)with the Kaiser last night at supper? Did you hear what he said to me about Liberty of the Press, and the Troubling of Consciences (LAGENE DES CONSCIENCES)? There will be bits of difference between his worthy Ancestors and him, on some points!'

EGO. "'I am persuaded, he will entertain no prejudices on anything;and that your Majesty will be a great Book of Instruction to him.'

KING. "'How adroitly he disapproved, without appearing to mean anything, the ridiculous Vienna Censorship; and the too great fondness of his Mother (without naming her) for certain things which only make hypocrites. By the by, she must detest you, that High Lady?'

EGO. "'Well, then, not at all. She has sometimes lectured me about my strayings, but very maternally: she is sorry for me, and quite sure that I shall return to the right path. She said to me, some time ago, "I don't know how you do, you are the intimate friend of Father Griffet; the Bishop of Neustadt has always spoken well of you; likewise the Archbishop of Malines; and the Cardinal [name Sinzendorf, or else not known to me, dignity and red hat sufficiently visible] loves you much."'

"Why cannot I remember the hundred luminous things which escaped the King in this conversation! It lasted till the trumpet at Head-quarters announced dinner. The King went to take his place; and Ithink it was on this occasion that, some one having asked why M. de Loudon had not come yet, he said, 'That is not his custom:

formerly he often arrived before me. Please let him take this place next me; I would rather have him at my side than opposite.'"That is very pretty. And a better authority gives it, The King said to Loudon himself, on Loudon's entering, <italic> "Mettez-vous aupres de moi, M. de Loudon; j'aime mieux vous avoir a cote de moi que vis-a-vis." <end italic> He was very kind to Loudon;"constantly called him M. LE FELDMARECHAL [delicate hint of what should have been, but WAS not for seven years yet]; and, at parting, gave him [as he did to Lacy also] two superb horses, magnificently equipped." [Pezzl, <italic> Vie de Loudon, <end italic> ii. 29.]

"Another day," continues Prince de Ligne, "the Manoeuvres being over in good time, there was a Concert at the Kaiser's.

Notwithstanding the King's taste for music, he was pleased to give me the preference; and came where I was, to enchant me with the magic of his conversation, and the brilliant traits, gay and bold, which characterize him. He asked me to name the general and particular Officers who were present, and to tell him those who had served under Marshal Traun: 'For, ENFIN,' he said, 'as I think Ihave told you already, he is my Master; he corrected me in the Schooling I was at.'

EGO. "'Your Majesty was very ungrateful, then; you never paid him his lessons. If it was as your Majesty says, you should at least have allowed him to beat you; and I do not remember that you ever did.'

KING. "'I did not get beaten, because I did not fight.'

EGO. "'It is in this manner that the greatest Generals have often conducted their wars against each other. One has only to look at the two Campaigns of M. de Montecuculi and M. de Turenne, in the Valley of the Rench [Strasburg Country, 1674 and 1675, two celebrated Campaigns, Turenne killed by a cannon-shot in the last].

KING. "'Between Traun and the former there is not much difference;but what a difference, BON DIEU, between the latter and me!'

"I named to him the Count d'Althan, who had been Adjutant-General, and the Count de Pellegrini. He asked me twice which was which, from the distance we were at; and said, He was so short-sighted, Imust excuse him.

EGO. "'Nevertheless, Sire, in the war your sight was good enough;and, if I remember right, it reached very far!'

KING. "'It was not I; it was my glass.'

EGO. "'Ha, I should have liked to find that glass;--but, I fear it would have suited my eyes as little as Scanderbeg's sword my arm.'

"I forget how the conversation changed; but I know it grew so free that, seeing somebody coming to join in it, the King warned him to take care; that it was n't safe to converse with a man doomed by the theologians to Everlasting Fire. I felt as if he somewhat overdid this of his 'being doomed,' and that he boasted too much of it. Not to hint at the dishonesty of these free-thinking gentlemen (MESSIEURS LES ESPRITS FORTS), who very often are thoroughly afraid of the Devil, it is, at least, bad taste to make display of such things: and it was with the people of bad taste whom he has had about him, such as a Jordan, a D'Argens, Maupertuis, La Beaumelle, La Mettrie, Abbe de Prades, and some dull sceptics of his own Academy, that he had acquired the habit of mocking at Religion; and of talking (DE PARLER) Dogma, Spinoism, Court of Rome and the like.

In the end, I did n't always answer when he touched upon it. I now seized a moment's interval, while he was using his handkerchief, to speak to him about some business, in connection with the Circle of Westphalia, and a little COMTE IMMEDIAT [County holding direct, of the Reich] which I have there. The King answered me: 'I, for my part, will do anything you wish; but what thinks the other Director, my comrade, the Elector of Cologne, about it?'

EGO. "'I was not aware, Sire, that you were an Ecclesiastical Elector.'

KING. "'I am so; at least on my Protestant account.'

EGO. "'That is not to OUR account's advantage! Those good people of mine believe your Majesty to be their protector.'

同类推荐
  • 元经

    元经

    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。
  • 弥勒菩萨所问经论

    弥勒菩萨所问经论

    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。
  • 未来星宿劫千佛名经

    未来星宿劫千佛名经

    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。
  • 茶谱

    茶谱

    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。
  • 般若波罗蜜多心经注解

    般若波罗蜜多心经注解

    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
  • 弃后大翻身:誓夺圣心

    弃后大翻身:誓夺圣心

    最近宫里有个留言,皇后病了,一大早总是老是恶心干呕!御医点头道:皇后是怀孕了。纳尼?她居然怀孕了,那孩子爹都没了,她该怎么办?两年后,孩子断奶了,她毅然踏上了找孩子他爹的路。我的娃,怎么能没爹。我,怎么能没丈夫做个寡妇。
  • 恶魔占据师

    恶魔占据师

    身怀人族血法师血统的少年为何成为了亡灵天灾的死亡骑士?邪恶的占据师和神秘的占星师如何主宰他的命运?在扭曲草原的尽头他又为何杀死自己最爱的人?他拥有无数奇遇、无数法宝、无数女人的爱慕……所以实际上他数学不好,但这无法掩饰他在魔法、武技、历史、机械制造方面的盖人光辉。
  • 情缘情未到

    情缘情未到

    华文大陆,这是一个原始而古老的时代,与现代世界不一样,这里文明落后,人们还停留在传统的农耕时期。一个名字叫作陈琉夕的女子,因为一次科研实验而不幸穿越来到这个陌生的大陆,携带着现代的科技知识与智能机械,她开始在这里生活并且经历着种种不同的事情。爱情本来就是一场被上帝安排的缘分,陈琉夕从来没有想过自己来到这个时代后会遇上属于自己的爱情。在这里,她遇到了一生所挚爱之人,她痛过,伤过,恨过,但最终她还是选择去爱。可惜,爱情之路哪能一帆风顺,国家的斗争,人心的复杂,这一切种种成为了她的挑战,而她最后能否与心爱之人在一起?【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 重生都市之全能系统

    重生都市之全能系统

    主角作为一个宅男,在一次意外之中带着一款名为全能系统重生到了1990年.看主角叶浩天如何成为一个全能天才。
  • 食灵之殇

    食灵之殇

    一切的一切,只为挽回那当初的遗憾。PS:原创为主,乱入为辅
  • 相思不胜醉颜欢

    相思不胜醉颜欢

    一世等待,一世寂寥。一生轮回,岂非朝夕。五百年的情缘纠葛,五百次的爱恨别离。只愿来生,再不见君。
  • 神魔王座

    神魔王座

    我欲五指触青天,诸神笑卧冷旁观。待得微风稍拂时,一脚踏破九重天!一张无形的巨网渐渐张开,究竟是谁在黑暗中翻云覆雨?野心,欲望,一连串的血案,牵扯出万年前的腥风血雨!仇恨,宿命,一连串的阴谋,即将拉开另一场惊天浩劫!滚滚红尘,王朝兴灭,历史长河,群星闪烁,叹多少天骄红颜?执三尺青锋,快意恩怨情仇!掌百万将兵,睥睨八荒六合!日更万字,保证完本,绝不太监!求推荐!求收藏!求点击!求打赏!
  • 网游之宙斯

    网游之宙斯

    《宙斯》是一款以古希腊神话为背景的网络游戏,陈逸为了给弟弟筹集资金治病进入游戏,然而,大部分玩家都是以公民身份出生在各个城邦,而陈逸却莫名其妙的成为一个奴隶,一切从零开始,他能否一统希腊七大城邦得到那1000万人民币的巨额奖金呢?一切尽在《网游之宙斯》....
  • 我们一起经历的青春

    我们一起经历的青春

    我们的青春都有遗憾,但我们可以弥补,我的青春高八度……
  • 迷人未婚夫:丫头,别乱跑

    迷人未婚夫:丫头,别乱跑

    郑瑾萱,郑家的长女,一级逗逼妹纸。被死老头逼婚,达成约定后以女扮男装的身份进入死老头的学院。学院里,遇到了自己的未婚夫,以郑瑾萱这逗逼的智商能逃过这个大的圈套吗?