circumstances I am
ignorant of."
The Duke de Nemours'
passion for Madam de Cleves was at first so
violent, that he had no
relish left for any of the ladies he paid
his addresses to before, and with whom he kept a
correspondence
during his
absence; he even lost all
remembrance of his
engagements with them, and not only made it his business to find
out excuses to break with them, but had not the
patience to hear
their complaints, or make any answer to the reproaches they laid
upon him. The Queen-Dauphin herself, for whom his regards had
been very tender, could no longer
preserve a place in that heart
which was now
devoted to the Princess of Cleves. His im
patienceof making a tour to England began to abate, and he showed no
earnestness in hastening his equipage. He frequently went to the
Queen-Dauphin's Court, because the Princess of Cleves was often
there, and he was very easy in leaving people in the opinion they
had of his
passion for that Queen; he put so great a value on
Madam de Cleves, that he
resolved to be rather
wanting in giving
proofs of his love, than to
hazard its being
publicly known; he
did not so much as speak of it to the Viscount de Chartres, who
was his
intimate friend, and from whom he concealed nothing; the
truth is, he conducted this affair with so much
discretion, that
nobody suspected he was in love with Madam de Cleves, except the
Chevalier de Guise; and she would scarcely have perceived it
herself, if the
inclination she had for him had not led her into
a particular attention to all his actions, but which she was
convinced of it.
She no longer continued to have the same
disposition to
communicate to her mother what she thought
concerning the Duke de
Nemours, as she had to talk to her about her other lovers; though
she had no settled design of concealing it from her, yet she did
not speak of it. Madam de Chartres, however,
plainly perceived
the Duke's
attachment to her daughter, as well as her daughter's
inclination for him; the knowledge of this could not but sensibly
afflict her, nor could she be
ignorant of the danger this young
lady was in, in being
beloved by, and
loving so
accomplished a
person as the Duke de Nemours: she was entirely confirmed in the
suspicion she had of this business, by an
incident which fell out
a few days after.
The Mareschal de St. Andre, who took all opportunities to show
his
magnificence, desired the King, under
pretence of showing him
his house which was just finished, to do him the honour to sup
there with the two Queens. The Mareschal was also very glad to
display, in the sight of the Princess of Cleves, that splendid
and
expensive manner of life, which he carried to so great a
profusion.
Some days before that appointed for the
entertainment, the
Dauphin, who had an ill state of health, found himself
indisposed, and saw nobody; the Queen-Dauphin had spent all that
day with him; and in the evening, upon his growing better, all
the persons of quality that were in the anti-chamber were
admitted; the Queen-Dauphin returned to her own
apartment, where
she found Madam de Cleves and some other ladies, with whom she
lived in familiarity.
It being already very late, and not being dressed, she did not
wait upon the Queen, but gave out that she was not to be seen,
and ordered her jewels to be brought, in order to choose out some
for the Mareschal de St. Andre's Ball, and present the Princess
of Cleves with some, as she had promised her. While they were
thus employed, the Prince of Conde entered; his great quality
gave him free
access everywhere. "Doubtless," said the
Queen-Dauphin, "you come from the King my husband, what are they
doing there?"
"Madam," said he, "they are maintaining a
dispute against the
Duke of Nemours, and he defends the
argument he
undertook with so
much
warmth, that he must needs be very much interested in it; I
believe he has some
mistress that gives him
uneasiness by going
to balls, so well satisfied he is that it is a vexatious thing to
a lover to see the person he loves in those places."
"How," replied the Queen-Dauphin, "would not the Duke de
Nemours have his
mistress go to a ball? I thought that husbands
might wish their wives would not go there; but as for lovers, I
never imagined they were of that opinion." "The Duke de
Nemours finds," answered the Prince of Conde, "that nothing is
so insupportable to lovers as balls, whether they are
belovedagain, or whether they are not. He says, if they are
belovedthey have the
chagrin to be loved the less on this
account for
several days; that there is no woman, whom her
anxiety for dress
does not
divert from thinking on her lover; that they are
entirely taken up with that one circumstance, that this care to
adorn themselves is for the whole world, as well as for the man
they favour; that when they are at a ball, they are
desirous to
please all who look at them; and that when they
triumph in their
beauty, they experience a joy to which their lovers very little
contribute. He argues further, that if one is not
beloved, it is
a yet greater
torment to see one's
mistress at an
assembly; that
the more she is admired by the public, the more
unhappy one is
not to be
beloved, and that the lover is in
continual fear lest
her beauty should raise a more successful
passion than his own;
lastly he finds, there is no
torment equal to that of
seeingone's
mistress at a ball, unless it be to know that she is there,
and not to be there one's self."
Madam de Cleves pretended not to hear what the Prince of Conde
said, though she listened very attentively; she easily saw what
part she had in the Duke of Nemours's opinion, and particularly
as to what he said of the
uneasiness of not being at a ball where
his
mistress was, because he was not to be at that of the
Mareschal de St. Andre, the King having sent him to meet the Duke
of Ferrara.
The Queen-Dauphin, and the Prince of Conde, not going into the
Duke's opinion, were very merry upon the subject. "There is but
one occasion, Madam," said the Prince to her, "in which the
Duke will consent his
mistress should go to a ball, and that is
when he himself gives it. He says, that when he gave your
Majesty one last year, his
mistress was so kind as to come to it,
though
seemingly only to attend you; that it is always a favour
done to a lover, to
partake of an
entertainment which he gives;
that it is an
agreeable circumstance for him to have his
mistresssee him
preside in a place where the whole Court is, and see him
acquit himself well in doing the honours of it." "The Duke de
Nemours was in the right," said the Queen-Dauphin, smiling, "to
approve of his
mistress's being at his own ball; there was then
so great a number of ladies, whom he honoured with the
distinction of that name, that if they had not come, the
assemblywould have been very thin."
The Prince of Conde had no sooner begun to
relate the Duke de
Nemours's sentiments
concerning assemblies, but Madam de Cleves
felt in herself a strong aversion to go to that of the Mareschal
de St. Andre. She easily came into the opinion, that a woman
ought not to be at an
entertainment given by one that professed
love to her, and she was very glad to find out a reason of
reservedness for doing a thing which would
oblige the Duke of
Nemours. However, she carried away with her the ornaments which
the Queen-Dauphin had given her; but when she showed them her
mother, she told her that she did not design to make use of them;
that the Mareschal de St. Andre took a great deal of pains to
show his
attachment to her, and she did not doubt he would be
glad to have it believed that a
compliment was designed her in