authoritative a manner, that he durst not
disobey her; that he
gained her in a manner as soon as he courted her, that they
concealed their
mutualpassion for each other from the whole
world, that he never visited her
publicly, that he had the
pleasure to remove her sorrow for her husband's death, and that
lastly he was to have married her at the very juncture in which
she died; but that this marriage, which was an effect of love,
would have appeared in her an effect of duty and
obedience, she
having prevailed upon her father to lay his commands on her to
marry him, in order to avoid the appearance of too great an
alteration in her conduct, which had seemed so
averse to a second
marriage.'
"`While Etouteville was
speaking to me,' said Sancerre, `I
believed all he said, because I found so much
probability in it,
and because the time when he told me his
passion for Madam de
Tournon commenced, is
precisely the same with that when she
appeared changed towards me; but the next morning I thought him a
liar, or at least an
enthusiast, and was upon the point of
telling him so. Afterwards I came into an
inclination of
clearing up the matter, and proposed several questions, and laid
my doubts before him, in a word, I proceeded so far to convince
myself of my
misfortune, that he asked me if I knew Madam de
Tournon's
handwriting, and with that threw upon my bed four
letters of hers and her picture; my brother came in that minute;
Etouteville's face was so full of tears, that he was forced to
withdraw to avoid being observed, and said he would come again in
the evening to fetch what he left with me; and as for me, I sent
my brother away under
pretence of being indisposed, so impatient
was I to see the letters he had left, and so full of hopes to
find something there that might make me disbelieve what
Etouteville had been telling me; but alas! What did I not find
there? What
tenderness! what assurances of marriage! what
letters! She never wrote the like to me. Thus,' continued he,
`am I at once pierced with
anguish for her death and for her
falsehood, two evils which have been often compared, but never
felt before by the same person at the same time; I
confess, to my
shame, that still I am more
grieved for her loss than for her
change; I cannot think her
guilty enough, to consent to her
death: were she living, I should have the
satisfaction to
reproach her, and to
revenge myself on her by making her sensible
of her
injustice; but I shall see her no more, I shall see her no
more; this is the greatest
misfortune of all others; would I
could
restore her to life, though with the loss of my own! Yet
what do I wish! If she were
restored to life, she would live for
Etouteville: how happy was I yesterday,' cried he, `how happy! I
was the most afflicted man in the world; but my
affliction was
reasonable, and there was something
pleasing in the very thought
that I was inconsolable; today all my sentiments are
unjust; I
pay to a feigned
passion the
tribute of my grief, which I thought
I owed to a real one; I can neither hate nor love her memory; I
am
capable" target="_blank" title="a.无能力的;不能的">
incapable of
consolation, and yet don't know how to
grieve for
her; take care, I
conjure you, that I never see Etouteville; his
very name raises
horror in me; I know very well I have no reason
of
complaint against him; I was to blame in concealing from him
my love for Madam de Tournon; if he had known it, perhaps he
would not have pursued her, perhaps she would not have been false
to me; he came to me to
impart his sorrows, and I cannot but pity
him; alas! he had reason to love Madam de Tournon, he was beloved
by her, and will never see her more:
notwithstanding I
perceive I
can't help hating him; once more I
conjure you take care I may
not see him.'
"Sancerre burst afterwards into tears, began again to regret
Madam de Tournon, and to speak to her, as if she were p
resent,
and say the softest things in the world; from these transports he
passed to
hatred, to
complaints, to reproaches and imprecations
against her. When I saw him in so
desperate a condition, I found
I should want somebody to
assist me in appeasing his mind;
accordingly I sent for his brother, whom I had left with the
King; I met him in the anti-chamber, and acquainted him with
Sancerre's condition: we gave the necessary orders to prevent his
seeing Etouteville, and employed part of the night in
endeavouring to make him
capable of reason; this morning I found
him yet more afflicted; his brother continued with him, and I
returned to you."
"'Tis impossible to be more surprised than I am," said Madam de
Cleves; "I thought Madam de Tournon
equallycapable" target="_blank" title="a.无能力的;不能的">
incapable of love
and falsehood." "Address and dissimulation," replied Monsieur
de Cleves, "cannot go further than she carried them; observe,
that when Sancerre thought her love to him was abated, it really
was, and she began to love Etouteville; she told the last that he
removed her sorrow for her husband's death, and that he was the
cause of her quitting her
retirement; Sancerre believed the cause
was nothing but a
resolution she had taken not to seem any longer
to be in such deep
affliction; she made a merit to Etouteville of
concealing her
correspondence with him, and of
seeming forced to
marry him by her father's command, as if it was an effect of the
care she had of her
reputation;
whereas it was only an artifice
to
forsake Sancerre, without his having reason to
resent it: I
must return," continued Monsieur de Cleves, "to see this
unhappy man, and I believe you would do well to go to Paris too;
it is time for you to appear in the world again, and receive the
numerous visits which you can't well
dispense with."
Madam de Cleves agreed to the proposal, and returned to Paris the
next day; she found herself much more easy with respect to the
Duke de Nemours than she had been; what her mother had told her
on her death-bed, and her grief for her death, created a sort of
suspension in her mind as to her
passion for the Duke, which made
her believe it was quite effaced.
The evening of her
arrival the Queen-Dauphin made her a visit,
and after having condoled with her, told her that in order to
divert her from
melancholy thoughts, she would let her know all
that had passed at Court in her
absence; upon which she
relatedto her a great many
extraordinary things; "but what I have the
greatest desire to inform you of," added she, "is that it is
certain the Duke de Nemours is
passionately in love; and that his
most
intimate friends are not only not entrusted in it, but can't
so much as guess who the person is he is in love with;
nevertheless this
passion of his is so strong as to make him
neglect, or to speak more
properly,
abandon the hopes of a
Crown."
The Queen-Dauphin afterwards
relatedwhatever had passed in
England; "What I have just told you," continued she, "I had
from Monsieur d'Anville; and this morning he informed me, that
last night the King sent for the Duke de Nemours upon the subject
of Lignerol's letters, who desires to return, and wrote to his
Majesty that he could no longer excuse to the Queen of England
the Duke of Nemours's delay; that she begins to be displeased at
it; and though she has not
positively given her promise, she has
said enough to
encourage him to come over; the King showed this
letter to the Duke of Nemours, who instead of
speaking seriously
as he had done at the
beginning of this affair, only laughed and
trifled, and made a jest of Lignerol's expectations: He said,
`The whole world would
censure his imprudence, if he ventured to
go to England, with the pretensions of marrying the Queen,
without being secure of success; I think,' added he, `I should
time my business very ill to go to England now, when the King of
Spain uses such pressing instances to
obtain the Queen in
marriage; the Spanish King perhaps would not be a very formidable
rival in matters of gallantry, but in a treaty of marriage I
believe your Majesty would not
advise me to be his
competitor.'
`I would
advise you to it upon this occasion,' replied the King;
`but however you will have no
competitor in him; I know he has