II
SCHEMES AGAINST
SCHEMES
The thirst for power which consumed
the queen-mother, her desire for dominion, was so
great that in order to retain it she had, as we have
seen, allied herself to the Guises, those enemies of
the throne; to keep the reins of power, now obtained,
within her hands, she was using every means, even
to the sacrifice of her friends and that of her children.
This woman, of whom one of her enemies said at her
death, “It is more than a queen, it is monarchy
itself that has died,”—this woman
could not exist without the intrigues of government,
as a gambler can live only by the emotions of play.
Although she was an Italian of the voluptuous race
of the Medici, the Calvinists who calumniated her
never accused her of having a lover. A great admirer
of the maxim, “Divide to reign,” she had
learned the art of perpetually pitting one force against
another. No sooner had she grasped the reins
of power than she was forced to keep up dissensions
in order to neutralize the strength of two rival houses,
and thus save the Crown. Catherine invented the
game of political see-saw (since imitated by all princes
who find themselves in a like situation), by instigating,
first the Calvinists against the Guises, and then the
Guises against the Calvinists. Next, after pitting
the two religions against each other in the heart
of the nation, Catherine instigated the Duc d’Anjou
against his brother Charles IX. After neutralizing
events by opposing them to one another, she neutralized
men, by holding the thread of all their interests
in her hands. But so fearful a game, which needs
the head of a Louis XI. to play it, draws down inevitably
the hatred of all parties upon the player, who condemns
himself forever to the necessity of conquering; for
one lost game will turn every selfish interest into
an enemy.
The greater part of the reign of Charles
IX. witnessed the triumph of the domestic policy of
this astonishing woman. What adroit persuasion
must Catherine have employed to have obtained the command
of the armies for the Duc d’Anjou under a young
and brave king, thirsting for glory, capable of military
achievement, generous, and in presence, too, of the
Connetable de Montmorency. In the eyes of the
statesmen of Europe the Duc d’Anjou had all
the honors of the Saint-Bartholomew, and Charles IX.
all the odium. After inspiring the king with a
false and secret jealousy of his brother, she used
that passion to wear out by the intrigues of fraternal
jealousy the really noble qualities of Charles IX.
Cypierre, the king’s first governor, and Amyot,
his first tutor, had made him so great a man, they
had paved the way for so noble a reign, that the queen-mother
began to hate her son as soon as she found reason
to fear the loss of the power she had so slowly and
so painfully obtained. On these general grounds
most historians have believed that Catherine de’
Medici felt a preference for Henri III.; but her conduct
at the period of which we are now writing, proves the
absolute indifference of her heart toward all her children.
When the Duc d’Anjou went to
reign in Poland Catherine was deprived of the instrument
by which she had worked to keep the king’s passions
occupied in domestic intrigues, which neutralized his
energy in other directions. She then set up the
conspiracy of La Mole and Coconnas, in which her youngest
son, the Duc d’Alencon (afterwards Duc d’Anjou,
on the accession of Henri III.) took part, lending
himself very willingly to his mother’s wishes,
and displaying an ambition much encouraged by his
sister Marguerite, then queen of Navarre. This
secret conspiracy had now reached the point to which
Catherine sought to bring it. Its object was
to put the young duke and his brother-in-law, the king
of Navarre, at the head of the Calvinists, to seize
the person of Charles IX., and imprison that king
without an heir,—leaving the throne to
the Duc d’Alencon, whose intention it was to
establish Calvinism as the religion of France.
Calvin, as we have already said, had obtained, a few
days before his death, the reward he had so deeply
coveted,—the Reformation was now called
Calvinism in his honor.
If Le Laboureur and other sensible
writers had not already proved that La Mole and Coconnas,—arrested
fifty nights after the day on which our present history
begins, and beheaded the following April,—even,
we say, if it had not been made historically clear
that these men were the victims of the queen-mother’s
policy, the part which Cosmo Ruggiero took in this
affair would go far to show that she secretly directed
their enterprise. Ruggiero, against whom the king
had suspicions, and for whom he cherished a hatred
the motives of which we are about to explain, was
included in the prosecution. He admitted having
given to La Mole a wax figure representing the king,
which was pierced through the heart by two needles.
This method of casting spells constituted a crime,
which, in those days, was punished by death.
It presents one of the most startling and infernal
images of hatred that humanity could invent; it pictures
admirably the magnetic and terrible working in the
occult world of a constant malevolent desire surrounding
the person doomed to death; the effects of which on
the person are exhibited by the figure of wax.
The law in those days thought, and thought justly,
that a desire to which an actual form was given should
be regarded as a crime of lese majeste.
Charles IX. demanded the death of Ruggiero; Catherine,
more powerful than her son, obtained from the Parliament,
through the young counsellor, Lecamus, a commutation
of the sentence, and Cosmo was sent to the galleys.
The following year, on the death of the king, he was
pardoned by a decree of Henri III., who restored his
pension, and received him at court.
But, to return now to the moment of
which we are writing, Catherine had, by this time,
struck so many blows on the heart of her son that
he was eagerly desirous of casting off her yoke.
During the absence of Marie Touchet, Charles IX.,
deprived of his usual occupation, had taken to observing
everything about him. He cleverly set traps for
the persons in whom he trusted most, in order to test
their fidelity. He spied on his mother’s
actions, concealing from her all knowledge of his
own, employing for this deception the evil qualities
she had fostered in him. Consumed by a desire
to blot out the horror excited in France by the Saint-Bartholomew,
he busied himself actively in public affairs; he presided
at the Council, and tried to seize the reins of government
by well-laid schemes. Though the queen-mother
endeavored to check these attempts of her son by employing
all the means of influence over his mind which her
maternal authority and a long habit of domineering
gave her, his rush into distrust was so vehement that
he went too far at the first bound ever to return from
it. The day on which his mother’s speech
to the king of Poland was reported to him, Charles
IX., conscious of his failing health, conceived the
most horrible suspicions, and when such thoughts take
possession of the mind of a son and a king nothing
can remove them. In fact, on his deathbed, at
the moment when he confided his wife and daughter
to Henri IV., he began to put the latter on his guard
against Catherine, so that she cried out passionately,
endeavoring to silence him, “Do not say that,
monsieur!”
Though Charles IX. never ceased to
show her the outward respect of which she was so tenacious
that she would never call the kings her sons anything
but “Monsieur,” the queen-mother had detected
in her son’s manner during the last few months
an ill-disguised purpose of vengeance. But clever
indeed must be the man who counted on taking Catherine
unawares. She held ready in her hand at this moment
the conspiracy of the Duke d’Alencon and La
Mole, in order to counteract, by another fraternal
struggle, the efforts Charles IX. was making toward
emancipation. But, before employing this means,
she wanted to remove his distrust of her, which would
render impossible their future reconciliation; for
was he likely to restore power to the hands of a mother
whom he thought capable of poisoning him? She
felt herself at this moment in such serious danger
that she had sent for Strozzi, her relation and a
soldier noted for his promptitude of action. She
took counsel in secret with Birago and the two Gondis,
and never did she so frequently consult her oracle,
Cosmo Ruggiero, as at the present crisis.
Though the habit of dissimulation,
together with advancing age, had given the queen-mother
that well-known abbess face, with its haughty and
macerated mask, expressionless yet full of depth, inscrutable
yet vigilant, remarked by all who have studied her
portrait, the courtiers now observed some clouds on
her icy countenance. No sovereign was ever so
imposing as this woman from the day when she succeeded
in restraining the Guises after the death of Francois
II. Her black velvet cap, made with a point upon
the forehead (for she never relinquished her widow’s
mourning) seemed a species of feminine cowl around
the cold, imperious face, to which, however, she knew
how to give, at the right moment, a seductive Italian
charm. Catherine de’ Medici was so well
made that she was accused of inventing side-saddles
to show the shape of her legs, which were absolutely
perfect. Women followed her example in this respect
throughout Europe, which even then took its fashions
from France. Those who desire to bring this grand
figure before their minds will find that the scene
now taking place in the brown hall of the Louvre presents
it in a striking aspect.
The two queens, different in spirit,
in beauty, in dress, and now estranged,—one
naive and thoughtful, the other thoughtful and gravely
abstracted,—were far too preoccupied to
think of giving the order awaited by the courtiers
for the amusements of the evening. The carefully
concealed drama, played for the last six months by
the mother and son was more than suspected by many
of the courtiers; but the Italians were watching it
with special anxiety, for Catherine’s failure
involved their ruin.
During this evening Charles IX., weary
with the day’s hunting, looked to be forty years
old. He had reached the last stages of the malady
of which he died, the symptoms of which were such
that many reflecting persons were justified in thinking
that he was poisoned. According to de Thou (the
Tacitus of the Valois) the surgeons found suspicious
spots—ex causa incognita reperti livores—on
his body. Moreover, his funeral was even more
neglected than that of Francois II. The body
was conducted from Saint-Lazare to Saint-Denis by Brantome
and a few archers of the guard under command of the
Comte de Solern. This circumstances, coupled
with the supposed hatred of the mother to the son,
may or may not give color to de Thou’s supposition,
but it proves how little affection Catherine felt
for any of her children,—a want of feeling
which may be explained by her implicit faith in the
predictions of judicial astrology. This woman
was unable to feel affection for the instruments which
were destined to fail her. Henri III. was the
last king under whom her reign of power was to last;
that was the sole consideration of her heart and mind.
In these days, however, we can readily
believe that Charles IX. died a natural death.
His excesses, his manner of life, the sudden development
of his faculties, his last spasmodic attempt to recover
the reins of power, his desire to live, the abuse of
his vital strength, his final sufferings and last
pleasures, all prove to an impartial mind that he
died of consumption, a disease scarcely studied at
that time, and very little understood, the symptoms
of which might, not unnaturally, lead Charles IX.
to believe himself poisoned. The real poison
which his mother gave him was in the fatal counsels
of the courtiers whom she placed about him,—men
who led him to waste his intellectual as well as his
physical vigor, thus bringing on a malady which was
purely fortuitous and not constitutional. Under
these harrowing circumstances, Charles IX. displayed
a gloomy majesty of demeanor which was not unbecoming
to a king. The solemnity of his secret thoughts
was reflected on his face, the olive tones of which
he inherited from his mother. This ivory pallor,
so fine by candlelight, so suited to the expression
of melancholy thought, brought out vigorously the
fire of the blue-black eyes, which gazed from their
thick and heavy lids with the keen perception our fancy
lends to kings, their color being a cloak for dissimulation.
Those eyes were terrible,—especially from
the movement of their brows, which he could raise
or lower at will on his bald, high forehead. His
nose was broad and long, thick at the end,—the
nose of a lion; his ears were large, his hair sandy,
his lips blood-red, like those of all consumptives,
the upper lip thin and sarcastic, the lower one firm,
and full enough to give an impression of the noblest
qualities of the heart. The wrinkles of his brow,
the youth of which was killed by dreadful cares, inspired
the strongest interest; remorse, caused by the uselessness
of the Saint-Bartholomew, accounted for some, but
there were two others on that face which would have
been eloquent indeed to any student whose premature
genius had led him to divine the principles of modern
physiology. These wrinkles made a deeply indented
furrow going from each cheek-bone to each corner of
the mouth, revealing the inward efforts of an organization
wearied by the toil of thought and the violent excitements
of the body. Charles IX. was worn-out. If
policy did not stifle remorse in the breasts of those
who sit beneath the purple, the queen-mother, looking
at her own work, would surely have felt it. Had
Catherine foreseen the effect of her intrigues upon
her son, would she have recoiled from them? What
a fearful spectacle was this! A king born vigorous,
and now so feeble; a mind powerfully tempered, shaken
by distrust; a man clothed with authority, conscious
of no support; a firm mind brought to the pass of having
lost all confidence in itself! His warlike valor
had changed by degrees to ferocity; his discretion
to deceit; the refined and delicate love of a Valois
was now a mere quenchless thirst for pleasure.
This perverted and misjudged great man, with all the
many facets of a noble soul worn-out,—a
king without power, a generous heart without a friend,
dragged hither and thither by a thousand conflicting
intrigues, —presented the melancholy spectacle
of a youth, only twenty-four years old, disillusioned
of life, distrusting everybody and everything, now
resolving to risk all, even his life, on a last effort.
For some time past he had fully understood his royal
mission, his power, his resources, and the obstacles
which his mother opposed to the pacification of the
kingdom; but alas! this light now burned in a shattered
lantern.
Two men, whom Charles IX. loved sufficiently
to protect under circumstances of great danger,—Jean
Chapelain, his physician, whom he saved from the Saint-Bartholomew,
and Ambroise Pare, with whom he went to dine when
Pare’s enemies were accusing him of intending
to poison the king,—had arrived this evening
in haste from the provinces, recalled by the queen-mother.
Both were watching their master anxiously. A
few courtiers spoke to them in a low voice; but the
men of science made guarded answers, carefully concealing
the fatal verdict which was in their minds. Every
now and then the king would raise his heavy eyelids
and give his mother a furtive look which he tried
to conceal from those about him. Suddenly he sprang
up and stood before the fireplace.
“Monsieur de Chiverni,”
he said abruptly, “why do you keep the title
of chancellor of Anjou and Poland? Are you in
our service, or in that of our brother?”
“I am all yours, sire,” replied Chiverni,
bowing low.
“Then come to me to-morrow;
I intend to send you to Spain. Very strange things
are happening at the court of Madrid, gentlemen.”
The king looked at his wife and flung
himself back into his chair.
“Strange things are happening
everywhere,” said the Marechal de Tavannes,
one of the friends of the king’s youth, in a
low voice.
The king rose again and led this companion
of his youthful pleasures apart into the embrasure
of the window at the corner of the room, saying, when
they were out of hearing:—
“I want you. Remain here
when the others go. I shall know to-night whether
you are for me or against me. Don’t look
astonished. I am about to burst my bonds.
My mother is the cause of all the evil about me.
Three months hence I shall be king indeed, or dead.
Silence, if you value your life! You will have
my secret, you and Solern and Villeroy only.
If it is betrayed, it will be by one of you three.
Don’t keep near me; go and pay your court to
my mother. Tell her I am dying, and that you
don’t regret it, for I am only a poor creature.”
The king was leaning on the shoulder
of his old favorite, and pretending to tell him of
his ailments, in order to mislead the inquisitive
eyes about him; then, not wishing to make his aversion
too visible, he went up to his wife and mother and
talked with them, calling Birago to their side.
Just then Pinard, one of the secretaries
of State, glided like an eel through the door and
along the wall until he reached the queen-mother,
in whose ear he said a few words, to which she replied
by an affirmative sign. The king did not ask
his mother the meaning of this conference, but he
returned to his seat and kept silence, darting terrible
looks of anger and suspicion all about him.
This little circumstance seemed of
enormous consequence in the eyes of the courtiers;
and, in truth, so marked an exercise of power by the
queen-mother, without reference to the king, was like
a drop of water overflowing the cup. Queen Elizabeth
and the Comtesse de Fiesque now retired, but the king
paid no attention to their movements, though the queen-mother
rose and attended her daughter-in-law to the door;
after which the courtiers, understanding that their
presence was unwelcome, took their leave. By
ten o’clock no one remained in the hall but a
few intimates,—the two Gondis, Tavannes,
Solern, Birago, the king, and the queen-mother.
The king sat plunged in the blackest
melancholy. The silence was oppressive.
Catherine seemed embarrassed. She wished to leave
the room, and waited for the king to escort her to
the door; but he still continued obstinately lost
in thought. At last she rose to bid him good-night,
and Charles IX. was forced to do likewise. As
she took his arm and made a few steps toward the door,
she bent to his ear and whispered:—
“Monsieur, I have important things to say to
you.”
Passing a mirror on her way, she glanced
into it and made a sign with her eyes to the two Gondis,
which escaped the king’s notice, for he was
at the moment exchanging looks of intelligence with
the Comte de Solern and Villeroy. Tavannes was
thoughtful.
“Sire,” said the latter,
coming out of his reverie, “I think you are
royally ennuyed; don’t you ever amuse yourself
now? Vive Dieu! have you forgotten the times
when we used to vagabondize about the streets at night?”
“Ah! those were the good old
times!” said the king, with a sigh.
“Why not bring them back?”
said Birago, glancing significantly at the Gondis
as he took his leave.
“Yes, I always think of those
days with pleasure,” said Albert de Gondi, Duc
de Retz.
“I’d like to see you on
the roofs once more, monsieur le duc,” remarked
Tavannes. “Damned Italian cat! I wish
he might break his neck!” he added in a whisper
to the king.
“I don’t know which of
us two could climb the quickest in these days,”
replied de Gondi; “but one thing I do know, that
neither of us fears to die.”
“Well, sire, will you start
upon a frolic in the streets to-night, as you did
in the days of your youth?” said the other Gondi,
master of the Wardrobe.
The days of his youth! so at twenty-four
years of age the wretched king seemed no longer young
to any one, not even to his flatterers!
Tavannes and his master now reminded
each other, like two school-boys, of certain pranks
they had played in Paris, and the evening’s
amusement was soon arranged. The two Italians,
challenged to climb roofs, and jump from one to another
across alleys and streets, wagered that they would
follow the king wherever he went. They and Tavannes
went off to change their clothes. The Comte de
Solern, left alone with the king, looked at him in
amazement. Though the worthy German, filled with
compassion for the hapless position of the king of
France, was honor and fidelity itself, he was certainly
not quick of perception. Charles IX., surrounded
by hostile persons, unable to trust any one, not even
his wife (who had been guilty of some indiscretions,
unaware as she was that his mother and his servants
were his enemies), had been fortunate enough to find
in Monsieur de Solern a faithful friend in whom he
could place entire confidence. Tavannes and Villeroy
were trusted with only a part of the king’s
secrets. The Comte de Solern alone knew the whole
of the plan which he was now about to carry out.
This devoted friend was also useful to his master,
in possessing a body of discreet and affectionate
followers, who blindly obeyed his orders. He
commanded a detachment of the archers of the guards,
and for the last few days he had been sifting out
the men who were faithfully attached to the king,
in order to make a company of tried men when the need
came. The king took thought of everything.
“Why are you surprised, Solern?”
he said. “You know very well I need a pretext
to be out to-night. It is true, I have Madame
de Belleville, but this is better; for who knows whether
my mother does not hear of all that goes on at Marie’s?”
Monsieur de Solern, who was to follow
the king, asked if he might not take a few of his
Germans to patrol the streets, and Charles consented.
About eleven o’clock the king, who was now very
gay, set forth with his three courtiers,—namely,
Tavannes and the two Gondis.
“I’ll go and take my little
Marie by surprise,” said Charles IX. to Tavannes,
“as we pass through the rue de l’Autruche.”
That street being on the way to the rue Saint-Honore,
it would have been strange indeed for the king to
pass the house of his love without stopping.
Looking out for a chance of mischief,—a
belated burgher to frighten, or a watchman to thrash—the
king went along with his nose in the air, watching
all the lighted windows to see what was happening,
and striving to hear the conversations. But alas!
he found his good city of Paris in a state of deplorable
tranquillity. Suddenly, as he passed the house
of a perfumer named Rene, who supplied the court, the
king, noticing a strong light from a window in the
roof, was seized by one of those apparently hasty
inspirations which, to some minds, suggest a previous
intention.
This perfumer was strongly suspected
of curing rich uncles who thought themselves ill.
The court laid at his door the famous “Elixir
of Inheritance,” and even accused him of poisoning
Jeanne d’Albret, mother of Henri of Navarre,
who was buried (in spite of Charles IX.’s positive
order) without her head being opened. For the
last two months the king had sought some way of sending
a spy into Rene’s laboratory, where, as he was
well aware, Cosmo Ruggiero spent much time. The
king intended, if anything suspicious were discovered,
to proceed in the matter alone, without the assistance
of the police or law, with whom, as he well knew,
his mother would counteract him by means of either
corruption or fear.
It is certain that during the sixteenth
century, and the years that preceded and followed
it, poisoning was brought to a perfection unknown
to modern chemistry, as history itself will prove.
Italy, the cradle of modern science, was, at this
period, the inventor and mistress of these secrets,
many of which are now lost. Hence the reputation
for that crime which weighed for the two following
centuries on Italy. Romance-writers have so greatly
abused it that wherever they have introduced Italians
into their tales they have almost always made them
play the part of assassins and poisoners.[] If Italy
then had the traffic in subtle poisons which some historians
attribute to her, we should remember her supremacy
in the art of toxicology, as we do her pre-eminence
in all other human knowledge and art in which she
took the lead in Europe. The crimes of that period
were not her crimes specially. She served the
passions of the age, just as she built magnificent
edifices, commanded armies, painted noble frescos,
sang romances, loved queens, delighted kings, devised
ballets and fetes, and ruled all policies. The
horrible art of poisoning reached to such a pitch
in Florence that a woman, dividing a peach with a
duke, using a golden fruit-knife with one side of its
blade poisoned, ate one half of the peach herself and
killed the duke with the other half. A pair of
perfumed gloves were known to have infiltrated mortal
illness through the pores of the skin. Poison
was instilled into bunches of natural roses, and the
fragrance, when inhaled, gave death. Don John
of Austria was poisoned, it was said, by a pair of
boots.
[] Written sixty-six years ago.—Tr.
Charles IX. had good reason to be
curious in the matter; we know already the dark suspicions
and beliefs which now prompted him to surprise the
perfumer Rene at his work.
The old fountain at the corner of
the rue de l’Arbre-See, which has since been
rebuilt, offered every facility for the royal vagabonds
to climb upon the roof of a house not far from that
of Rene, which the king wished to visit. Charles,
followed by his companions, began to ramble over the
roofs, to the great terror of the burghers awakened
by the tramp of these false thieves, who called to
them in saucy language, listened to their talk, and
even pretended to force an entrance. When the
Italians saw the king and Tavannes threading their
way among the roofs of the house next to that of Rene,
Albert de Gondi sat down, declaring that he was tired,
and his brother followed his example.
“So much the better,”
thought the king, glad to leave his spies behind him.
Tavannes began to laugh at the two
Florentines, left sitting alone in the midst of deep
silence, in a place where they had nought but the
skies above them, and the cats for auditors. But
the brothers made use of their position to exchange
thoughts they would not dare to utter on any other
spot in the world,—thoughts inspired by
the events of the evening.
“Albert,” said the Grand-master
to the marechal, “the king will get the better
of the queen-mother; we are doing a foolish thing for
our own interests to stay by those of Catherine.
If we go over to the king now, when he is searching
everywhere for support against her and for able men
to serve him, we shall not be driven away like wild
beasts when the queen-mother is banished, imprisoned,
or killed.”
“You wouldn’t get far
with such ideas, Charles,” replied the marechal,
gravely. “You’d follow the king into
the grave, and he won’t live long; he is ruined
by excesses. Cosmo Ruggiero predicts his death
within a year.”
“The dying boar has often killed
the huntsman,” said Charles de Gondi. “This
conspiracy of the Duc d’Alencon, the king of
Navarre, and the Prince de Conde, with whom La Mole
and Coconnas are negotiating, is more dangerous than
useful. In the first place, the king of Navarre,
whom the queen-mother hoped to catch in the very act,
distrusts her, and declines to run his head into the
noose. He means to profit by the conspiracy without
taking any of its risks. Besides, the notion now
is to put the crown on the head of the Duc d’Alencon,
who has turned Calvinist.”
“Budelone! but don’t
you see that this conspiracy enables the queen-mother
to find out what the Huguenots can do with the Duc
d’Alencon, and what the king can do with the
Huguenots?—for the king is even now negotiating
with them; but he’ll be finely pilloried to-morrow,
when Catherine reveals to him the counter-conspiracy
which will neutralize all his projects.”
“Ah!” exclaimed Charles
de Gondi, “by dint of profiting by our advice
she’s clever and stronger than we! Well,
that’s all right.”
“All right for the Duc d’Anjou,
who prefers to be king of France rather than king
of Poland; I am going now to explain the matter to
him.”
“When do you start, Albert?”
“To-morrow. I am ordered
to accompany the king of Poland; and I expect to join
him in Venice, where the patricians have taken upon
themselves to amuse and delay him.”
“You are prudence itself!”
“Che bestia! I swear
to you there is not the slightest danger for either
of us in remaining at court. If there were, do
you think I would go away? I should stay by the
side of our kind mistress.”
“Kind!” exclaimed the
Grand-master; “she is a woman to drop all her
instruments the moment she finds them heavy.”
“O coglione! you pretend
to be a soldier, and you fear death! Every business
has its duties, and we have ours in making our fortune.
By attaching ourselves to kings, the source of all
temporal power which protects, elevates, and enriches
families, we are forced to give them as devoted a
love as that which burns in the hearts of martyrs toward
heaven. We must suffer in their cause; when they
sacrifice us to the interests of their throne we may
perish, for we die as much for ourselves as for them,
but our name and our families perish not. Ecco!”
“You are right as to yourself,
Albert; for they have given you the ancient title
and duchy of de Retz.”
“Now listen to me,” replied
his brother. “The queen hopes much from
the cleverness of the Ruggieri; she expects them to
bring the king once more under her control. When
Charles refused to use Rene’s perfumes any longer
the wary woman knew at once on whom his suspicions
really rested. But who can tell the schemes that
are in his mind? Perhaps he is only hesitating
as to what fate he shall give his mother; he hates
her, you know. He said a few words about it to
his wife; she repeated them to Madame de Fiesque,
and Madame de Fiesque told the queen-mother.
Since then the king has kept away from his wife.”
“The time has come,” said Charles de Gondi.
“To do what?” asked the marechal.
“To lay hold of the king’s
mind,” replied the Grand-master, who, if he
was not so much in the queen’s confidence as
his brother, was by no means less clear-sighted.
“Charles, I have opened a great
career to you,” said his brother gravely.
“If you wish to be a duke also, be, as I am,
the accomplice and cat’s-paw of our mistress;
she is the strongest here, and she will continue in
power. Madame de Sauves is on her side, and the
king of Navarre and the Duc d’Alencon are still
for Madame de Sauves. Catherine holds the pair
in a leash under Charles IX., and she will hold them
in future under Henri III. God grant that Henri
may not prove ungrateful.”
“How so?”
“His mother is doing too much for him.”
“Hush! what noise is that I
hear in the rue Saint-Honore?” cried the Grand-master.
“Listen! there is some one at Rene’s door!
Don’t you hear the footsteps of many men.
Can they have arrested the Ruggieri?”
“Ah, diavolo! this is
prudence indeed. The king has not shown his usual
impetuosity. But where will they imprison them?
Let us go down into the street and see.”
The two brothers reached the corner
of the rue de l’Autruche just as the king was
entering the house of his mistress, Marie Touchet.
By the light of the torches which the concierge carried,
they distinguished Tavannes and the two Ruggieri.
“Hey, Tavannes!” cried
the grand-master, running after the king’s companion,
who had turned and was making his way back to the Louvre,
“What happened to you?”
“We fell into a nest of sorcerers
and arrested two, compatriots of yours, who may perhaps
be able to explain to the minds of French gentlemen
how you, who are not Frenchmen, have managed to lay
hands on two of the chief offices of the Crown,”
replied Tavannes, half jesting, half in earnest.
“But the king?” inquired
the Grand-master, who cared little for Tavanne’s
enmity.
“He stays with his mistress.”
“We reached our present distinction
through an absolute devotion to our masters,—a
noble course, my dear Tavannes, which I see that you
also have adopted,” replied Albert de Gondi.
The three courtiers walked on in silence.
At the moment when they parted, on meeting their servants
who then escorted them, two men glided swiftly along
the walls of the rue de l’Autruche. These
men were the king and the Comte de Solern, who soon
reached the banks of the Seine, at a point where a
boat and two rowers, carefully selected by de Solern,
awaited them. In a very few moments they reached
the other shore.
“My mother has not gone to bed,”
cried the king. “She will see us; we chose
a bad place for the interview.”
“She will think it a duel,”
replied Solern; “and she cannot possibly distinguish
who we are at this distance.”
“Well, let her see me!”
exclaimed Charles IX. “I am resolved now!”
The king and his confidant sprang
ashore and walked quickly in the direction of the
Pre-aux-Clercs. When they reached it the Comte
de Solern, preceding the king, met a man who was evidently
on the watch, and with whom he exchanged a few words;
the man then retired to a distance. Presently
two other men, who seemed to be princes by the marks
of respect which the first man paid to them, left the
place where they were evidently hiding behind the
broken fence of a field, and approached the king,
to whom they bent the knee. But Charles IX. raised
them before they touched the ground, saying:—
“No ceremony, we are all gentlemen here.”
A venerable old man, who might have
been taken for the Chancelier de l’Hopital,
had the latter not died in the preceding year, now
joined the three gentlemen, all four walking rapidly
so as to reach a spot where their conference could
not be overheard by their attendants. The Comte
de Solern followed at a slight distance to keep watch
over the king. That faithful servant was filled
with a distrust not shared by Charles IX., a man to
whom life was now a burden. He was the only person
on the king’s side who witnessed this mysterious
conference, which presently became animated.
“Sire,” said one of the
new-comers, “the Connetable de Montmorency,
the closest friend of the king your father, agreed
with the Marechal de Saint-Andre in declaring that
Madame Catherine ought to be sewn up in a sack and
flung into the river. If that had been done then,
many worthy persons would still be alive.”
“I have enough executions on
my conscience, monsieur,” replied the king.
“But, sire,” said the
youngest of the four personages, “if you merely
banish her, from the depths of her exile Queen Catherine
will continue to stir up strife, and to find auxiliaries.
We have everything to fear from the Guises, who, for
the last nine years, have schemed for a vast Catholic
alliance, in the secret of which your Majesty is not
included; and it threatens your throne. This alliance
was invented by Spain, which will never renounce its
project of destroying the boundary of the Pyrenees.
Sire, Calvinism will save France by setting up a moral
barrier between her and a nation which covets the empire
of the world. If the queen-mother is exiled,
she will turn for help to Spain and to the Guises.”
“Gentlemen,” said the
king, “know this, if by your help peace without
distrust is once established, I will take upon myself
the duty of making all subjects tremble. Tete-Dieu!
it is time indeed for royalty to assert itself.
My mother is right in that, at any rate. You
ought to know that it is to your interest was well
as mine, for your hands, your fortunes depend upon
our throne. If religion is overthrown, the hands
you allow to do it will be laid next upon the throne
and then upon you. I no longer care to fight ideas
with weapons that cannot touch them. Let us see
now if Protestantism will make progress when left
to itself; above all, I would like to see with whom
and what the spirit of that faction will wrestle.
The admiral, God rest his soul! was not my enemy;
he swore to me to restrain the revolt within spiritual
limits, and to leave the ruling of the kingdom to the
monarch, his master, with submissive subjects.
Gentlemen, if the matter be still within your power,
set that example now; help your sovereign to put down
a spirit of rebellion which takes tranquillity from
each and all of us. War is depriving us of revenue;
it is ruining the kingdom. I am weary of these
constant troubles; so weary, that if it is absolutely
necessary I will sacrifice my mother. Nay, I will
go farther; I will keep an equal number of Protestants
and Catholics about me, and I will hold the axe of
Louis XI. above their heads to force them to be on
good terms. If the Messieurs de Guise plot a Holy
Alliance to attack our crown, the executioner shall
begin with their heads. I see the miseries of
my people, and I will make short work of the great
lords who care little for consciences,—let
them hold what opinions they like; what I want in
future is submissive subjects, who will work, according
to my will, for the prosperity of the State.
Gentlemen, I give you ten days to negotiate with your
friends, to break off your plots, and to return to
me who will be your father. If you refuse you
will see great changes. I shall use the mass of
the people, who will rise at my voice against the
lords. I will make myself a king who pacificates
his kingdom by striking down those who are more powerful
even than you, and who dare defy him. If the troops
fail me, I have my brother of Spain, on whom I shall
call to defend our menaced thrones, and if I lack
a minister to carry out my will, he can lend me the
Duke of Alba.”
“But in that case, sire, we
should have Germans to oppose to your Spaniards,”
said one of his hearers.
“Cousin,” replied Charles
IX., coldly, “my wife’s name is Elizabeth
of Austria; support might fail you on the German side.
But, for Heaven’s sake, let us fight, if fight
we must, alone, without the help of foreigners.
You are the object of my mother’s hatred, and
you stand near enough to me to be my second in the
duel I am about to fight with her; well then, listen
to what I now say. You seem to me so worthy of
confidence that I offer you the post of connetable;
you will not betray me like the other.”
The prince to whom Charles IX. had
addressed himself, struck his hand into that of the
king, exclaiming:
“Ventre-saint-gris! brother;
this is enough to make me forget many wrongs.
But, sire, the head cannot march without the tail,
and ours is a long tail to drag. Give me more
than ten days; we want at least a month to make our
friends hear reason. At the end of that time we
shall be masters.”
“A month, so be it! My
only negotiator will be Villeroy; trust no one else,
no matter what is said to you.”
“One month,” echoed the
other seigneurs, “that is sufficient.”
“Gentlemen, we are five,”
said the king,—“five men of honor.
If any betrayal takes place, we shall know on whom
to avenge it.”
The three strangers kissed the hand
of Charles IX. and took leave of him with every mark
of the utmost respect. As the king recrossed the
Seine, four o’clock was ringing from the clock-tower
of the Louvre. Lights were on in the queen-mother’s
room; she had not yet gone to bed.
“My mother is still on the watch,”
said Charles to the Comte de Solern.
“She has her forge as you have
yours,” remarked the German.
“Dear count, what do you think
of a king who is reduced to become a conspirator?”
said Charles IX., bitterly, after a pause.
“I think, sire, that if you
would allow me to fling that woman into the river,
as your young cousin said, France would soon be at
peace.”
“What! a parricide in addition
to the Saint-Bartholomew, count?” cried the
king. “No, no! I will exile her.
Once fallen, my mother will no longer have either
servants or partisans.”
“Well, then, sire,” replied
the Comte de Solern, “give me the order to arrest
her at once and take her out of the kingdom; for to-morrow
she will have forced you to change your mind.”
“Come to my forge,” said
the king, “no one can overhear us there; besides,
I don’t want my mother to suspect the capture
of the Ruggieri. If she knows I am in my work-shop
she’ll suppose nothing, and we can consult about
the proper measures for her arrest.”
As the king entered a lower room of
the palace, which he used for a workshop, he called
his companion’s attention to the forge and his
implements with a laugh.
“I don’t believe,”
he said, “among all the kings that France will
ever have, there’ll be another to take pleasure
in such work as that. But when I am really king,
I’ll forge no swords; they shall all go back
into their scabbards.”
“Sire,” said the Comte
de Solern, “the fatigues of tennis and hunting,
your toil at this forge, and—if I may say
it—love, are chariots which the devil is
offering you to get the faster to Saint-Denis.”
“Solern,” said the king,
in a piteous tone, “if you knew the fire they
have put into my soul and body! nothing can quench
it. Are you sure of the men who are guarding
the Ruggieri?”
“As sure as of myself.”
“Very good; then, during this
coming day I shall take my own course. Think
of the proper means of making the arrest, and I will
give you my final orders by five o’clock at
Madame de Belleville’s.”
As the first rays of dawn were struggling
with the lights of the workshop, Charles IX., left
alone by the departure of the Comte de Solern, heard
the door of the apartment turn on its hinges, and saw
his mother standing within it in the dim light like
a phantom. Though very nervous and impressible,
the king did not quiver, albeit, under the circumstances
in which he then stood, this apparition had a certain
air of mystery and horror.
“Monsieur,” she said, “you are killing
yourself.”
“I am fulfilling my horoscope,”
he replied with a bitter smile. “But you,
madame, you appear to be as early as I.”
“We have both been up all night,
monsieur; but with very different intentions.
While you have been conferring with your worst enemies
in the open fields, concealing your acts from your
mother, assisted by Tavannes and the Gondis, with
whom you have been scouring the town, I have been
reading despatches which contained the proofs of a
terrible conspiracy in which your brother, the Duc
d’Alencon, your brother-in-law, the king of
Navarre, the Prince de Conde, and half the nobles
of your kingdom are taking part. Their purpose
is nothing less than to take the crown from your head
and seize your person. Those gentlemen have already
fifty thousand good troops behind them.”
“Bah!” exclaimed the king, incredulously.
“Your brother has turned Huguenot,” she
continued.
“My brother! gone over to the
Huguenots!” cried Charles, brandishing the piece
of iron which he held in his hand.
“Yes; the Duc d’Alencon,
Huguenot at heart, will soon be one before the eyes
of the world. Your sister, the queen of Navarre,
has almost ceased to love you; she cares more for
the Duc d’Alencon; she cares of Bussy; and she
loves that little La Mole.”
“What a heart!” exclaimed the king.
“That little La Mole,”
went on the queen, “wishes to make himself a
great man by giving France a king of his own stripe.
He is promised, they say, the place of connetable.”
“Curse that Margot!” cried
the king. “This is what comes of her marriage
with a heretic.”
“Heretic or not is of no consequence;
the trouble is that, in spite of my advice, you have
brought the head of the younger branch too near the
throne by that marriage, and Henri’s purpose
is now to embroil you with the rest and make you kill
one another. The house of Bourbon is the enemy
of the house of Valois; remember that, monsieur.
All younger branches should be kept in a state of
poverty, for they are born conspirators. It is
sheer folly to give them arms when they have none,
or to leave them in possession of arms when they seize
them. Let every younger son be made incapable
of doing harm; that is the law of Crowns; the Sultans
of Asia follow it. The proofs of this conspiracy
are in my room upstairs, where I asked you to follow
me last evening, when you bade me good-night; but
instead of doing so, it seems you had other plans.
I therefore waited for you. If we do not take
the proper measures immediately you will meet the
fate of Charles the Simple within a month.”
“A month!” exclaimed the
king, thunderstruck at the coincidence of that period
with the delay asked for by the princes themselves.
“’In a month we shall be masters,’”
he added to himself, quoting their words. “Madame,”
he said aloud, “what are your proofs?”
“They are unanswerable, monsieur;
they come from my daughter Marguerite. Alarmed
herself at the possibilities of such a combination,
her love for the throne of the Valois has proved stronger,
this time, than all her other loves. She asks,
as the price of her revelations that nothing shall
be done to La Mole; but the scoundrel seems to me
a dangerous villain whom we had better be rid of,
as well as the Comte de Coconnas, your brother d’Alencon’s
right hand. As for the Prince de Conde, he consents
to everything, provided I am thrown into the sea;
perhaps that is the wedding present he gives me in
return for the pretty wife I gave him! All this
is a serious matter, monsieur. You talk of horoscopes!
I know of the prediction which gives the throne of
the Valois to the Bourbons, and if we do not take
care it will be fulfilled. Do not be angry with
your sister; she has behaved well in this affair.
My son,” continued the queen, after a pause,
giving a tone of tenderness to her words, “evil
persons on the side of the Guises are trying to sow
dissensions between you and me; and yet we are the
only ones in the kingdom whose interests are absolutely
identical. You blame me, I know, for the Saint-Bartholomew;
you accuse me of having forced you into it. Catholicism,
monsieur, must be the bond between France, Spain,
and Italy, three countries which can, by skilful management,
secretly planned, be united in course of time, under
the house of Valois. Do not deprive yourself of
such chances by loosing the cord which binds the three
kingdoms in the bonds of a common faith. Why
should not the Valois and the Medici carry out for
their own glory the scheme of Charles the Fifth, whose
head failed him? Let us fling off that race of
Jeanne la Folle. The Medici, masters of Florence
and of Rome, will force Italy to support your interests;
they will guarantee you advantages by treaties of
commerce and alliance which shall recognize your fiefs
in Piedmont, the Milanais, and Naples, where you have
rights. These, monsieur, are the reasons of the
war to the death which we make against the Huguenots.
Why do you force me to repeat these things? Charlemagne
was wrong in advancing toward the north. France
is a body whose heart is on the Gulf of Lyons, and
its two arms over Spain and Italy. Therefore,
she must rule the Mediterranean, that basket into which
are poured all the riches of the Orient, now turned
to the profit of those seigneurs of Venice, in the
very teeth of Philip II. If the friendship of
the Medici and your rights justify you in hoping for
Italy, force, alliances, or a possible inheritance
may give you Spain. Warn the house of Austria
as to this,—that ambitious house to which
the Guelphs sold Italy, and which is even now hankering
after Spain. Though your wife is of that house,
humble it! Clasp it so closely that you will
smother it! There are the enemies of your kingdom;
thence comes help to the Reformers. Do not listen
to those who find their profit in causing us to disagree,
and who torment your life by making you believe I
am your secret enemy. Have I prevented
you from having heirs? Why has your mistress
given you a son, and your wife a daughter? Why
have you not to-day three legitimate heirs to root
out the hopes of these seditious persons? Is
it I, monsieur, who am responsible for such failures?
If you had an heir, would the Duc d’Alencon
be now conspiring?”
As she ended these words, Catherine
fixed upon her son the magnetic glance of a bird of
prey upon its victim. The daughter of the Medici
became magnificent; her real self shone upon her face,
which, like that of a gambler over the green table,
glittered with vast cupidities. Charles IX. saw
no longer the mother of one man, but (as was said
of her) the mother of armies and of empires,—mater
castrorum. Catherine had now spread wide the
wings of her genius, and boldly flown to the heights
of the Medici and Valois policy, tracing once more
the mighty plans which terrified in earlier days her
husband Henri II., and which, transmitted by the genius
of the Medici to Richelieu, remain in writing among
the papers of the house of Bourbon. But Charles
IX., hearing the unusual persuasions his mother was
using, thought that there must be some necessity for
them, and he began to ask himself what could be her
motive. He dropped his eyes; he hesitated; his
distrust was not lessened by her studied phrases.
Catherine was amazed at the depths of suspicion she
now beheld in her son’s heart.
“Well, monsieur,” she
said, “do you not understand me? What are
we, you and I, in comparison with the eternity of
royal crowns? Do you suppose me to have other
designs than those that ought to actuate all royal
persons who inhabit the sphere where empires are ruled?”
“Madame, I will follow you to
your cabinet; we must act—”
“Act!” cried Catherine;
“let our enemies alone; let them act;
take them red-handed, and law and justice will deliver
you from their assaults. For God’s sake,
monsieur, show them good-will.”
The queen withdrew; the king remained
alone for a few moments, for he was utterly overwhelmed.
“On which side is the trap?”
thought he. “Which of the two—she
or they—deceive me? What is my best
policy? Deus, discerne causam meam!”
he muttered with tears in his eyes. “Life
is a burden to me! I prefer death, natural or
violent, to these perpetual torments!” he cried
presently, bringing down his hammer upon the anvil
with such force that the vaults of the palace trembled.
“My God!” he said, as
he went outside and looked up at the sky, “thou
for whose holy religion I struggle, give me the light
of thy countenance that I may penetrate the secrets
of my mother’s heart while I question the Ruggieri.”