The Princess of Cleves
by Madame de Lafayette
THE PRINCESS OF CLEVES
Grandeur and gallantry never appeared with more lustre in France,
than in the last years of Henry the Second's reign. This Prince
was amorous and handsome, and though his
passion for Diana of
Poitiers Duchess of Valentinois, was of above twenty years
standing, it was not the less
violent, nor did he give less
distinguishing proofs of it.
As he was happily turned to excel in
bodily exercises, he took a
particular delight in them, such as
hunting,
tennis,
running at
the ring, and the like diversions. Madam de Valentinois gave
spirit to all entertainments of this sort, and appeared at them
with grace and beauty equal to that of her grand-daughter, Madam
de la Marke, who was then
unmarried; the Queen's presence seemed
to authorise hers.
The Queen was handsome, though not young; she loved
grandeur,
magnificence and pleasure; she was married to the King while he
was Duke of Orleans, during the life of his elder brother the
Dauphin, a
prince whose great qualities promised in him a worthy
successor of his father Francis the First.
The Queen's
ambitioustemper made her taste the sweets of
reigning, and she seemed to bear with perfect ease the King's
passion for the Duchess of Valentinois, nor did she express the
least
jealousy of it; but she was so skilful a dissembler, that
it was hard to judge of her real sentiments, and
policyobliged
her to keep the
duchess about her person, that she might draw the
King to her at the same time. This Prince took great delight in
the conversation of women, even of such as he had no
passion for;
for he was every day at the Queen's court, when she held her
assembly, which was a concourse of all that was beautiful and
excellent in either sex.
Never were finer women or more
accomplished men seen in any
Court, and Nature seemed to have taken pleasure in lavishing her
greatest graces on the greatest persons. The Princess Elizabeth,
since Queen of Spain, began now to
manifest an
uncommon wit, and
to display those beauties, which proved afterwards so fatal to
her. Mary Stuart, Queen of Scotland, who had just married the
Dauphin, and was called the Queen-Dauphin, had all the
perfections of mind and body; she had been educated in the Court
of France, and had imbibed all the
politeness of it; she was by
nature so well formed to shine in everything that was polite,
that
notwithstanding her youth, none surpassed her in the most
refined accomplishments. The Queen, her mother-in-law, and the
King's sister, were also
extreme lovers of music, plays and
poetry; for the taste which Francis the First had for the Belles
Lettres was not yet extinguished in France; and as his son was
addicted to exercises, no kind of pleasure was
wanting at Court.
But what rendered this Court so splendid, was the presence of so
many great Princes, and persons of the highest quality and merit:
those I shall name, in their different characters, were the
admiration and
ornament of their age.
The King of Navarre drew to himself the respect of all the world
both by the
greatness of his birth, and by the
dignity that
appeared in his person; he was
remarkable for his skill and
courage in war. The Duke of Guise had also given proofs of
extraordinaryvalour, and had, been so successful, that there was
not a general who did not look upon him with envy; to his
valourhe added a most
exquisitegenius and understanding,
grandeur of
mind, and a
capacityequally turned for military or civil
affairs. His brother, the Cardinal of Loraine, was a man of
boundless
ambition, and of
extraordinary wit and
eloquence, and
had besides acquired a vast
variety of
learning, which enabled
him to make himself very
considerable by defending the Catholic
religion, which began to be attacked at that time. The Chevalier
de Guise, afterwards called Grand Prior, was a
princebeloved by
all the world, of a
comely person, full of wit and address, and
distinguished through all Europe for his
valour. The Prince of
Conde, though little
indebted to Nature in his person, had a
noble soul, and the
liveliness of his wit made him
amiable even
in the eyes of the finest women. The Duke of Nevers,
distinguished by the high employments he had possessed, and by
the glory he had gained in war, though in an
advanced age, was
yet the delight of the Court: he had three sons very
accomplished; the second, called the Prince of Cleves, was worthy
to support the honour of his house; he was brave and
generous,
and showed a
prudence above his years. The Viscount de Chartres,
descended of the
illustrious family of Vendome, whose name the
Princes of the blood have thought it no dishonour to wear, was
equallydistinguished for gallantry; he was
genteel, of a fine
mien,
valiant,
generous, and all these qualities he possessed in
a very
uncommon degree; in short, if anyone could be compared to
the Duke de Nemours, it was he. The Duke de Nemours was a
masterpiece of Nature; the beauty of his person, inimitable as it
was, was his least
perfection; what placed him above other men,
was a certain agreeableness in his
discourse, his actions, his
looks, which was observable in none beside himself: he had in his
behaviour a
gaiety that was
equallypleasing to men and women; in
his exercises he was very
expert; and in dress he had a peculiar
manner, which was followed by all the world, but could never be
imitated: in fine, such was the air of his whole person, that it
was impossible to fix one's eye on anything else,
wherever he
was. There was not a lady at Court, whose
vanity would not have
been gratified by his address; few of those whom he addressed,
could boast of having resisted him; and even those for whom he
expressed no
passion, could not
forbear expressing one for him:
his natural
gaiety and
disposition to gallantry was so great,
that he could not refuse some part of his cares and attention to
those who made it their
endeavour to please him; and accordingly
he had several mistresses, but it was hard to guess which of them
was in possession of his heart: he made
frequent visits to the
Queen-Dauphin; the beauty of this
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princess, the
sweetness of her
temper, the care she took to
oblige everybody, and the particular
esteem she expressed for the Duke de Nemours, gave ground to
believe that he had raised his views even to her. Messieurs de
Guise, whose niece she was, had so far increased their authority
and
reputation by this match, that their
ambition prompted them
to
aspire at an
equality with the Princes of the blood, and to
share in power with the Constable Montmorency. The King
entrusted the Constable with the chief share in the
administration of the Government, and treated the Duke of Guise
and the Mareschal de St. Andre as his favourites; but whether
favour or business admitted men to his presence, they could not
preserve that
privilege without the good-liking of the Duchess of
Valentinois; for though she was no longer in possession of either
of youth or beauty, she yet reigned so
absolutely in his heart,
that his person and state seemed entirely at her disposal.
The King had such an
affection for the Constable, that he was no
sooner possessed of the Government, but he recalled him from the
banishment he had been sent into by Francis the First: thus was
the Court divided between Messieurs de Guise, and the Constable,
who was supported by the Princes of the blood, and both parties
made it their care to gain the Duchess of Valentinois. The Duke
d'Aumale, the Duke of Guise's brother, had married one of her
daughters, and the Constable
aspired to the fame
alliance; he was
not
contented with having married his
eldest son with Madam
Diana, the King's daughter by a Piemontese lady, who turned nun
as soon as she was brought to bed. This marriage had met with a
great many obstacles from the promises which Monsieur Montmorency
had made to Madam de Piennes, one of the maids of honour to the
Queen; and though the King had surmounted them with
extremepatience and
goodness, the Constable did not think himself
sufficiently established, unless he secured Madam de Valentinois
in his interest, and separated her from Messieurs de Guise, whose
greatness began to give her
uneasiness. The Duchess had