<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2><h3><SPAN name="div1_07">THE GROWTH OF LOVE.</SPAN></h3>
<br/>
<p class="normal">The entertainment was kept up late; many of the guests scarcely
departed before daylight; those who were invited to remain the night
at the governor's house, retired when they thought fit; and every one
acknowledged that this was the most splendid and the most agreeable
fête that had been given in Poitiers for many years. What were the
feelings, however, of the Count de Morseiul as, at an hour certainly
not later than one in the morning, he sought his own apartments? We
must not afford those feelings much space; and we will only record
what he saw before he left the hall, leaving the mind of the reader to
supply the rest.</p>
<p class="normal">On leading back Clémence de Marly to her seat, he had entered into
conversation for a moment with some persons whom he knew; and when he
turned towards her again, he saw not only that she was surrounded by
almost all those who had been about her before, but that a number of
young cavaliers freshly arrived had swelled her train, and that her
demeanour was precisely the same as that which had, at his first
entrance, removed her from the high place in which his imagination had
enthroned her. Every flattery seemed to be received as merely her
due--every attention but as a tribute that she had a right to command.
On some of her slaves she smiled more graciously than on others, but
certainly was not without giving that encouragement to many which may
be afforded by saucy harshness as much as by attention and
condescension. She did not, indeed, dance frequently<SPAN href="#div4_01"><sup>[1]</sup></SPAN>; that was a
favour reserved for few; but the whole of the rest of her conduct
displeased Albert of Morseiul; and he was grieved--very much
grieved--to feel that it had power to give him pain.</p>
<p class="normal">Under these circumstances, then, he resolved to witness it no more,
and retired to his own apartments, determined, as far as possible, to
conquer his own feelings while they were yet to be conquered, and to
rule his heart so long as it was his own to rule.</p>
<p class="normal">It was late on the following morning before any of the guests
assembled at the breakfast-table; but when the whole had met, the
party was so large, that but little pleasant conversation could take
place with any one. The Duke de Rouvré paid the greatest attention to
the Count, and displayed a marked anxiety to distinguish and to please
him. Clémence de Marly was entirely surrounded by her little train;
and her pleasure in the homage she received seemed evident to Albert
of Morseiul. The Chevalier d'Evran was somewhat thoughtful and grave,
and more than once turned his eyes quickly from the face of Clémence
to that of his friend. In the hours that had lately passed, however,
Albert of Morseiul had practised the lesson of commanding himself,
which he had learnt long before, and he was now perfect at the task.
He took no notice whatsoever of the fair girl's demeanour towards
others; and though, as usual, calm and grave, he bore his part in the
conversation with earnestness and attention; and it so happened that
on more than one occasion something was said which called up the deep
poetical fire of his nature, and led him briefly to pour forth in
eloquent words the fine and high-toned feelings of his heart.</p>
<p class="normal">All who were present knew his high character, and all were struck with
his words and with his manner; so that once or twice, even when
speaking casually on things of no very great importance, he was
annoyed at finding a sudden deep silence spread round the table, and
every one listening to what he said. If any thing could have repaid
him for the annoyance, it might have been to see the lustrous eyes of
Clémence de Marly fixed intent upon his countenance till they met his,
and then dropped with a slight heightening of the colour, or turned
sparkling to those round her, while her lips gave utterance to some
gay jest, intended to cover the fit of eager attention in which she
had been detected.</p>
<p class="normal">Alas, however, it must be owned, that to find those eyes so gazing
upon him was no compensation, but rather was painful to Albert of
Morseiul; for it only served to encourage feelings which he was
determined to conquer. He would fain have had it otherwise; he would
have felt nothing but calm indifference towards Clémence de Marly; and
yet he knew, from what he had experienced on the preceding night, that
he did not feel towards her entirely as he did towards other women. He
thought, however, that by dedicating himself altogether to the great
and important subject which had filled his thoughts when he came to
Poitiers, by giving up all his thoughts to that, and by making his
stay as brief as possible, he should be enabled to avoid those things,
both in the society of Clémence herself, and in his own inmost
thoughts, which might become dangerous to his peace.</p>
<p class="normal">During the course of breakfast he revolved these things in his mind,
and before it was over his thoughts were more strongly directed than
ever to the affairs of the Protestants, by the appearance of the Abbés
de St. Helie and Pelisson. He determined then to endeavour, as far as
possible, in the very first instance, to discover from them what was
the nature of the measures about to be pursued by the court of France
towards the Huguenots. In the next place, he purposed to inquire
explicitly of the Duc de Rouvré what course of conduct he intended to
follow towards the Protestants of the province; and, having
ascertained these facts, to consult with all the wisest and the best
of the Huguenot leaders, who might happen to be at Poitiers, to
determine with them the line of action to be followed, according to
circumstances, and then to return at once to Morseiul.</p>
<p class="normal">He took an opportunity then, as soon as breakfast was over, of
conversing with Pelisson and St. Helie, while the Duke and Duchess of
Rouvré were busy in receiving the adieus of some of their departing
guests. With the frank sincerity of his native character he demanded,
straightforwardly, of the two ecclesiastics, what was the course of
conduct that their commission directed them to pursue; and Pelisson
had half replied, saying, that they had better open their commission
at once before the Duke de Rouvré, and see the contents, when his more
cunning and politic friend interrupted him, saying, that he had
express orders not to open the packet till the meeting of the states,
which was to take place in about eight days. This announcement
differing, in some degree, from the account which he had given before,
excited not unjustly the Count's suspicion; and, knowing that he
should have a more candid reply from the Duke himself, he determined,
in the next instance, to apply to him.</p>
<p class="normal">He did so not long after, and the Duke retired with him into his
library.</p>
<p class="normal">"My dear Morseiul," he said, grasping the young Count's hand, "you
know that I myself am an advocate for the utmost toleration, that I am
so far from entertaining any ill will towards my brethren who differ
with me in some respects, that more than one of my relations have
married Huguenots. This is very well known at the court also. The King
is fully aware of it, and I cannot but hope that my late appointment,
as governor of this province, is a sign that, notwithstanding all the
rumours lately afloat, his Majesty intends to deal kindly and well
with all denominations of his subjects. I must not conceal from you,
however, that there are rumours in Paris of a different kind; that
there are not people wanting who declare that the King and his council
are determined no longer to have any more than one religion in France,
and that the most vigorous means are to be employed to carry this
resolution into effect. Nor shall I attempt to deny to you, that the
coming of Pelisson and St. Helie here seems to me a very ominous and
unpleasant occurrence. The presence of the first I should care little
about, as he is frank, and I believe sincere, wishes well, and would
always act kindly; but the other is a shrewd knave, a bigot, I
believe, more by policy than by any great devotion for our holy
church, malevolent, selfish, and cunning. They bear a commission
which, it seems, is not to be owned till the meeting of the states.
This looks like a purpose of controlling me in my own government, of
putting a power over me whereof I am to stand in awe. Now, should I
find that such is the case, I shall undoubtedly beseech his Majesty to
permit me to retire from public life."</p>
<p class="normal">"For Heaven's sake do not do so just at present," said the Count de
Morseiul. "We have need, my dear friend, of every moderate and
enlightened man like yourself to keep the country quiet at a moment
when affairs seem verging towards a terrible convulsion. You must
remember, and I hope the King will remember, that the Protestants are
a great and important body in France; that there are two or three
millions of us in this country; that we demand nothing but the calm
and quiet exercise of our own religious opinions; but that, at the
same time, there are many resolute and determined men amongst us, and
many eager and fiery spirits, who may be urged into acts of resistance
if they be opprest. All wise and sensible Huguenots will endeavour, as
far as may be, to seek peace and tranquillity; but suppose that
resistance be once begun, in consequence of an attempt to debar us of
the free exercise of the rights secured to us by the edict of Nantes,
can the King, or any body else, expect even his most loyal and
best-intentioned Protestant subjects to aid in keeping down and
oppressing their brethren?"</p>
<p class="normal">"Not in oppressing, not in oppressing, my dear Count," said the Duke;
"we must not attribute to our beloved sovereign even the thought of
oppressing his subjects."</p>
<p class="normal">"Nothing but oppression could drive any of us to resistance," replied
the Count; "and it is not from the King at all that we anticipate
oppression, but from those that surround him. Need I point to Louvois,
to whom the King, by his own acknowledgment, yields his own better
judgment?"</p>
<p class="normal">The Duke was silent, and his young friend proceeded: "If we have not
to fear oppression, my lord, there is nothing to be feared throughout
the land but if we have, I would fain know what shape that oppression
is likely to take, both as a sincere member of what we call the
reformed church, and as a loyal and devoted subject of the King. I
would fain know, in order that, in my own neighbourhood, and amongst
my own people, I may do all in my power to maintain peace and
tranquillity; which I cannot at all answer for, if such proclamations
be suddenly made amongst the people when they are unprepared, as were
made five days ago in my town of Morseiul, nearly creating a serious
disturbance therein. The appearance of the military, also, did
infinite harm, and the renewal of such scenes might quickly irritate a
small body of the people into revolt; that small body would be joined
by greater numbers, and the flame of civil war would spread throughout
the country."</p>
<p class="normal">"The proclamation," replied the Duke, "was the King's, and of course
it was necessary to make it instantly. With regard to the military,
the intendant of the province demanded that a force should be sent to
insure that the proclamation was made peacefully; so having no one
else in whom I could at all trust, I sent young Hericourt, with as
small a force as possible, as I could not, of course, refuse the
application."</p>
<p class="normal">"Of the intendant of the province, my dear Duke," replied the Count,
"I shall say nothing, except that he is as opposite as possible in
mind, in character, and manners to the Duc de Rouvré. A man of low
origin, chosen from the <i>Maîtres des requêtes</i>, as all these
intendants are, cannot be supposed to view such questions in a grand
and fine point of view. Individual instances certainly may sometimes
occur, but unfortunately they have not occurred in Poitiers. Our only
safety is in the Duc de Rouvré; but I am most anxious, if possible, to
act in concert with him in keeping tranquillity throughout the
province."</p>
<p class="normal">"I know you are, my dear young friend, I know you are," replied the
Duke; "wait, however, for a few days. I expect several other gentlemen
in Poitiers of your persuasion in religious matters. I will see and
confer with you all as to what may be done, in the best spirit towards
you, believe me. I have sent, or am sending, letters to every eminent
man of the so-called reformed religion throughout this district,
begging him to give me the aid of his advice. When we have others
here, we can take counsel together, and act accordingly."</p>
<p class="normal">The young Count of course submitted, whatever were the private reasons
which induced him to wish to quit Poitiers as soon as possible. He
felt that a long sojourn there might be dangerous to him; he saw that
the feelings of his heart might trample under foot the resolutions of
his judgment. But, obliged as he was to remain, he now took the wisest
course that circumstances permitted him to pursue. He saw Clémence de
Marly as little as possible; and that portion of time which courtesy
compelled him to give up to her, was only yielded to her society upon
those public occasions when he fancied that her demeanour to others
was likely to counteract the effect of her fascinations upon himself.
On these occasions he always appeared attentive, courteous, and
desirous to please her. Perhaps at times even, there shone through his
demeanour those indications of deeper feelings and of a passion which
might have become strong and overpowering, which were not likely to
escape a woman's eye. But his general conduct was by no means that of
a lover. He was never one of the train. He came and went, and spoke
for a few moments in his usual calm and equable manner, but nothing
more; and Clémence de Marly, it must be confessed, was somewhat
piqued.</p>
<p class="normal">It was not that she sought to display the Count de Morseiul to the
world as one of the idle train of adorers that followed her, for she
despised them, and esteemed him too much to wish him amongst them; but
it was that she thought her beauty, and her graces, and her mind; ay!
and the feeling and noble heart which she knew to exist in her own
bosom--forgetting that she took pains to conceal it--might all have
had a greater effect upon the Count than they had apparently produced.</p>
<p class="normal">She thought that she merited more than he seemed to be inclined to
give; and there was something also in the little mysterious link of
connexion between them, which had, in some degree, excited her
imagination, and taught her to believe that the Count would take a
deeper interest in her than he appeared to do. There was a little
disappointment, a little surprise, a good deal of mortification.--Was
there any thing more? We shall see! at present we have to deal with
her conduct more than with her feelings, and that conduct, perhaps,
was not such as was best calculated to win the Count's regard. It is
true, she paid less attention to the train that followed her; she
treated the generality of them with almost undisguised contempt. It
seemed as if her haughtiness towards them in general, increased; but
then she was far more with the Chevalier d'Evran. She was seen walking
in the gardens with him, with a single servant a step behind, and
twice the Count de Morseiul entered the saloon, and found her sitting
alone with him in eager conversation.</p>
<p class="normal">He felt more and more each day that it was time for him to quit the
city of Poitiers, but still he was detained there by circumstances
that he could not alter; and on the fifth day after his arrival,
having passed a somewhat sleepless night, and feeling his brow hot and
aching, he went down into the wide gardens of the house to enjoy the
fresh morning air in comfort. It was an hour when those gardens seldom
possessed a tenant, but at the turn of the first walk he met Clémence
de Marly alone. She seemed to be returning from the farther part of
the grounds, and had her eyes bent upon the earth, with a
thoughtful--nay, with even a melancholy look. If they had not been so
near when he saw her, he might, perhaps, have turned to avoid a
meeting which he feared; but she was within a few steps, and raised
her eyes instantly as she heard the sound of approaching feet. The
colour came into her cheek as she saw him, but only slightly, and she
acknowledged his salutation by a graceful inclination of the head.</p>
<p class="normal">"You are an early riser, Mademoiselle de Marly," said the Count, as
she paused to speak with him.</p>
<p class="normal">"I have always been so," she answered. "I love the soft breath of the
morning air."</p>
<p class="normal">"It is one of the great secrets of health and beauty," rejoined the
Count; But she shook her head with a smile, saying,--</p>
<p class="normal">"Such are not my objects in early rising, Monsieur de Morseiul. Health
I scarcely value as it deserves, as I never knew the want of it; and
beauty I value not at all.--It is true! whatever you may think."</p>
<p class="normal">"Still, beauty has its value," replied the Count. "It is a grand and
noble gift of God; but I acknowledge it ought to be the mint mark of
the gold."</p>
<p class="normal">"It is one of the most dangerous gifts of Heaven," replied Clémence,
vehemently. "It is often one of the most burdensome! It is dangerous
to ourselves, to our own hearts, to our own eternal happiness. It is
burdensome in all its consequences. Too much beauty to a woman is like
overgrown wealth to a man:--with this sad difference, that he can
always do good with his possession, and she can do none with hers. And
now Monsieur de Morseiul thinks me a hypocrite; and, though he
promised ever to be straightforward with me, he will not say so."</p>
<p class="normal">"Nay, indeed," replied the Count, "I am far from thinking that there
is aught of hypocrisy in what you say, lady. I may think such feelings
and thoughts evanescent with you, but I believe you feel them at the
time."</p>
<p class="normal">Clémence shook her head with a melancholy--almost a reproachful look.
"They are not evanescent," she said earnestly. "They are constant,
steadfast; have been for years." Even while she spoke she turned to
leave him; and he thought, as she quickly averted her head, that there
was something like a tear in her bright eye.</p>
<p class="normal">He could not resist; and he followed her rapidly, saying, "I hope I
have not offended."</p>
<p class="normal">"Oh no!" she answered, turning to him, and letting him see without
disguise that the tear was really there; "oh no! Monsieur de Morseiul!
There was nothing said that could offend me. Do you not know that,
like a child putting its hand upon an instrument of music without
knowing he will produce any sound, a mere casual word will often be
spoken unconsciously, which, by some unseen mechanism in the breast of
another, will awaken emotions which we never intended to call up? Our
little conversation roused the thoughts of many years in a moment, but
there was nothing said that could in the least offend. You know we
vain women, Count," she added in a lighter mood, "are only offended
with our lovers. It is on them that we pour forth our caprices. So,
for Heaven's sake, take care how you become my lover, for then I
should certainly be offended with you every five minutes."</p>
<p class="normal">"Would it be so terrible to you, then, to see me your lover?" demanded
the Count in the same tone.</p>
<p class="normal">"To be sure," she answered, half playfully, half seriously; "it would
be a sad exchange, would it not? to give a friend for a slave.
Besides, I doubt not that you have loved a thousand times before. But
tell me, Count, do you think any one can love more than once?"</p>
<p class="normal">"From my own experience I cannot speak," replied the Count, "for I am
a very stony-hearted person, but I should think that a man might."</p>
<p class="normal">"And woman not!" she interrupted eagerly. "Poor women! You hem us in
on all sides!--But after all, perhaps, you are right," she added,
after a moment's pause. "There is, there must be a difference between
the love of man and the love of woman. Hers is the first fresh
brightness of the heart, which never can be known again; hers is the
flower which, once broken off, is succeeded by no other; hers is the
intense--the deep--the all engrossing, which, when once come and gone,
leaves the exhausted heart without the power of feeling such things
again. With man it is different: love has not that sway over him that
it has over a woman. It is not with him the only thing, the end, the
object of his being. It takes possession of him but as a part, and,
therefore, may be known more than once, perhaps. But, with woman, that
fire once kindled must be the funeral pile of her own heart. As the
ancients fabled, flowers may spring up from the ashes, but as far as
real love is concerned, after the first true affection, the heart is
with the dead."</p>
<p class="normal">She paused, and both were silent; for there was something in the words
which she spoke which had a deeper effect upon Albert of Morseiul than
he had imagined any thing could have produced. He struggled against
himself, however, and then replied, "You took me up too quickly, lady.
I was not going to say that it is impossible for woman to love twice.
I do not know, I cannot judge; but I think it very possible that the
ancients, to whom you have just alluded, may have intended to figure
love under the image of the phœnix; and I do fully believe that
many a woman may have fancied herself in love a dozen times before she
was so really."</p>
<p class="normal">"Fancy herself in love!" exclaimed Clémence, in a tone almost
indignant. "Fancy herself in love, Monsieur de Morseiul! I should
think it less difficult to love twice than to fancy one's self in love
at all, if one were not really so. We may perhaps fancy qualities in a
person who does not truly possess them, and thus, adorned by our own
imagination, may love him; but still it is not that we fancy we are in
love, but are really in love with the creature of our fancy. However,
I will talk about it no more. It is a thing that does not do to think
of. I wonder if ever there was a man that was really worth loving."</p>
<p class="normal">The Count replied, but he could not get her to pursue the subject any
farther; she studiously rambled away to other things; and, after
speaking of some matters of minor import, darted back at once to the
point at which the conversation had begun, as if the rest had been but
a temporary dream, interpolated as it were between matters of more
serious moment. The Count had been endeavouring to bring her back to
the subject of the heart's feelings; for though he felt that it was a
dangerous one--a most dangerous one--one that might well lead to words
that could never be recalled, yet he longed to gain some insight into
that heart which he could not but think was filled with finer things
than she suffered to appear. She would not listen, however, nor be
led, and replied as if she had not in the slightest degree attended to
what he had been saying,--</p>
<p class="normal">"No, Monsieur de Morseiul, no, it is neither for health's sake nor for
beauty's that I rise early and seek the morning air. I will tell you
why it is. In those early and solitary hours, and those hours alone, I
can have some communion with my own heart--I can converse with the
being within myself--I can hold conference, too, with what I never
meet alone at other hours,--nature, and nature's God. The soft air of
the morning has a voice only to be heard when crowds are far away. The
leaves of the green trees have tongues, drowned in the idle gabble of
a foolish multitude, but heard in the calm quiet of the early morning.
The fields, the brooks, the birds, the insects, all have their
language, if we will listen to it; but what are fields, and brooks,
and birds, and trees, and the soft air, when I am surrounded by a
tribe of things as empty as the sounding brass or tinkling cymbal? Can
I think of any thing more dignified than a padusoie when one baby man
is whispering softly in my ear, 'The violet, Mademoiselle, suits
better with your complexion than with any other that the earth ever
produced, which shows that complexion's exceeding brightness;' and
another tells me that the blackness of my hair would make a raven
blush, or that my eyes are fit to people the heaven with stars! But it
is time that I should go to my task," she continued; "so adieu,
Monsieur de Morseiul. If you walk on straight to the ramparts you will
find the view beautiful, and the air fresh."</p>
<p class="normal">Thus saying, she turned and left him, and the hint not to follow was
too plain to be misunderstood. He walked on then towards the ramparts
with his arms crossed upon his chest, and his eyes bent upon the
ground. He did not soliloquise, for his nature was not one of those
which frequently give way to such weaknesses. It was his thoughts that
spoke, and spoke plainly, though silently.</p>
<p class="normal">"She is, indeed, lovely," he thought, "and she is, indeed, enchanting.
If she would but give her heart way she is all that I pictured to
myself, all that I dreamed of, though with a sad mixture of faults
from which her original nature was free. But, alas! it is evident that
she either does love or has loved another, and she herself confesses
that she cannot love twice. Perhaps she has spoken thus plainly as a
warning, and if so, how much ought I to thank her for her frankness?
Besides, she is of another creed. I must dream upon this subject no
more.--Yet who can be the man that has won that young heart, and then
perhaps thought it not worth the wearing? Surely, surely it cannot be
D'Evran, and yet she evidently likes his society better than that of
any one. She seeks him rather than otherwise. How can I tell what may
have passed, what may be passing between them even now? Yet she is
evidently not at ease at heart, and he too told me but the other day
that it was his determination never to marry. He--made for loving and
being beloved!--he never marry!--It must be so; some quarrel has taken
place between them, some breach which they think irremediable. How
often is it when such things are the case that lovers will fancy that
they are cool, and calm, and determined, and can live like friends and
acquaintances, forgetting the warmer feelings that have once existed
between them! Yes, it must be so," he continued, as he pondered over
all the different circumstances; "it must be so, and they will soon be
reconciled. I will crush these foolish feelings in my heart; I will
banish all weak remembrances; and to do so effectually, I will quit
this place as soon as possible, leaving Louis here, if he chooses to
stay."</p>
<p class="normal">Thus musing, with a sad heart and bitterer feelings than he would even
admit to himself, Albert de Morseiul walked on in the direction which
Clémence had pointed out, and passing through various long allies,
planted in the taste of that day, arrived at a spot where some steps
led up to the ramparts of the town, which commanded a beautiful view
over the gently undulating country round Poitiers, with more than one
little river meandering through the fields around. Leaning his arms on
the low breastwork, he paused and gazed over a scene on which, at any
other time, he might have looked with feelings of deep interest, and
noted every little mound and tree, marking, as he was wont, each light
and shadow, and following each turn of the Clain or Boivre. Now,
however, there was nothing but a vague vision of green and sunny
things before his eyes, while the sight of the spirit was fixed
intensely upon the deeper and darker things of his own heart.</p>
<p class="normal">Alas, alas, it must be said, he felt that he loved Clémence de Marly.
Notwithstanding all he had seen, notwithstanding all he had condemned,
notwithstanding the fear that she could not make him happy even if he
could obtain her, the belief that it would be impossible to win her,
and the conviction that she loved another--alas, he felt, and felt
bitterly, that at length, indeed, he loved, and loved with the whole
energy of his nature. He reproached himself with weakness; he accused
himself of the follies that he had so often condemned in others. Was
it her mere beauty that he loved? he asked himself. Was it the mere
perfection of form and colour that, in a few short years, would fleet
with fleeting seasons, and give place to irremediable decay? Was he,
who had believed that loveliness could have no effect on him, was he
caught by the painted glittering of a mere beautiful statue? No; he
felt there was something more. He felt that she had given him
sufficient insight into her original nature to show him that, though
spoiled by after circumstances, she had been made by the hand of God
that which he had always believed he could love, that bright being
where the beautiful form, and the beautiful heart, and the beautiful
mind were all attuned together in one grand and comprehensive harmony
of nature. He felt that such was the case, and his sensations were
only the bitterer that it should be so.</p>
<p class="normal">He had thus paused and meditated some little time full of his own
thoughts and nothing else, when a hand was suddenly laid upon his
shoulder, and, turning round, he saw his friend the Chevalier.</p>
<p class="normal">"Why, Albert," he said, "in what melancholy guise are you here
meditating? I met Clémence upon the stairs just now, and she told me
that I should find you here, tasting the morning air upon the
ramparts. I expected to see you with your eye roving enchanted over
this fine scene, looking as usual halfway between a mad poet and a mad
painter; and lo! instead of that, here you are planted upon the
rampart like a dragoon officer in garrison in a dull Dutch town, with
your heel beating melancholy time on the pavement, and your eyes
profoundly cast into the town ditch. In the name of Heaven, why did
you not make Clémence come on to enliven you?"</p>
<p class="normal">The Count smiled with a somewhat bitter smile. "It would have hardly
been necessary, and hardly right to try," he replied; "but you
miscalculate my power, D'Evran. The lady left me with an intelligible
hint, not only that she was not about to follow me, but that I was not
to follow her."</p>
<p class="normal">"What, saucy with you, too!" cried the Chevalier laughing. "I did not
think that she would have had determination enough for that."</p>
<p class="normal">"Nay, nay, you are mistaken, Louis," replied the Count; "not in the
least saucy, as you term it, but quite mistress of herself, of course,
to do as she pleased."</p>
<p class="normal">"And yet, Albert," said the Chevalier, "and yet I do believe that
there is not a man in France with whom she would so willingly have
walked through these gardens as with yourself. Nay, do not be foolish
or blind, Albert. I heard her saying to Marsillac but yesterday, when
he called to take his leave, that she had seen at Poitiers more than
she had ever seen in her life before, a courtier who was not a fool, a
soldier who was not a libertine, and a man of nearly thirty who had
some good feelings left."</p>
<p class="normal">The Count gazed steadfastly into the Chevalier's face for a moment, as
if he would have read into his very soul, and then replied, "Come,
Louis, let us go back. If she meant me, she was pleased to be
complimentary, and had probably quarrelled with her real lover, and
knew that he was in hearing."</p>
<p class="normal">The Chevalier gave himself a turn round upon his heel, without reply,
sang a bar or two of a gay air, at that time fashionable in Paris, and
then walked back to the governor's house with the Count, who, from
every thing he had seen and heard, but the more firmly determined to
hasten his steps from Poitiers as fast as possible.</p>
<p class="normal">The hour of breakfast had not yet arrived when they entered the house,
and the Count turned to his own apartments, seeking to remain in
solitude for a few minutes, not in order to indulge in thoughts and
reflections which he felt to be unnerving, but to make a vigorous
effort to recover all his composure, and pass the rest of the two or
three days which he had to remain as if nothing had given any
disturbance to the usual tranquil course of his feelings. In the
ante-room, however, he found Maître Jerome, sitting watching the door,
like a cat before the hole of a mouse; and the moment he entered
Jerome sprang up, saying,--</p>
<p class="normal">"Oh, Monseigneur, I have something to say to you, which may not be
amiss to hear quickly. I have discovered the exact nature of the
commission of Monsieur de St. Helie, which you wanted to know."</p>
<p class="normal">The Count beckoned him into the inner chamber, and demanded, looking
at him sternly, "Truth or falsehood, Riquet? This is no joking
matter!"</p>
<p class="normal">"Truth, upon my honour, sir," replied the man; "I would deceive you on
no account whatsoever; and now, pray, sir, ask no questions, but let
me tell my tale. It is truth, for once in my life, depend upon it. I
can tell truth upon an occasion, sir, when it suits me."</p>
<p class="normal">"But how am I to be sure of the accuracy of the information, if I ask
you no questions, Riquet?" said the Count.</p>
<p class="normal">"You may be quite sure of it, sir," replied the man, "though I must not
tell you how I came at my tale. Suppose, I say, only suppose that I
had heard Monsieur de St. Helie repeating it word for word to Monsieur
Pelisson, and the Curé de Guadrieul had confirmed it. I say, suppose
it were so, and be sure that my authority is quite as good."</p>
<p class="normal">"Well, well," said his master, "go on."</p>
<p class="normal">"Well, then, sir," continued the servant, "of course, as a good
Catholic, I hope that you and all the other Huguenots of France may be
thoroughly roasted in good time; but, nevertheless, as you happen to
be my master in this world, I am in duty bound to tell you what I
heard. Monsieur de St. Helie, then, and Monsieur Pelisson are
commanded to demand of the states of the province, effectual measures
to be taken for the purpose of bringing into the bosom of the church,
without delay, all the Huguenots within their jurisdiction. In
expressing this demand there are a great many soft words used, and
much talk of gentleness and persuasion; but Huguenots' children are to
be brought over by all means; they are to be received to renounce
their errors at seven years old. No more Huguenots are to be permitted
to keep schools. They are to be excluded from all public offices of
any kind or character whatsoever. They are no longer to be allowed to
call their religion <i>the reformed religion</i>----"</p>
<p class="normal">"Enough, enough," said the Count, stopping him, "and more than enough.
Is this information sure?"</p>
<p class="normal">"Most sure, sir," replied the man, with a solemnity that admitted no
doubt of his sincerity, "and the commission ended with the words, that
these means were to be taken in preparation for those ulterior steps
which the King was determined to employ."</p>
<p class="normal">The Count made no reply, but paced the room for two or three minutes
in considerable agitation. "I wanted something to rouse me," he said,
at length, "and I have it now, indeed! Quick, Riquet, call Claude, and
Beyhours, and Martin; tell them to saddle their horses, for I want
them to carry some notes. When you have done that, come hither
yourself, and say not a word of this affair to any one."</p>
<p class="normal">When the man returned, he found three notes written and addressed to
different protestant noblemen in the neighbourhood of Poitiers, which
his lord directed him to give to the servants named, to carry them to
their several destinations; and then added, "Now, Riquet, I have a
commission for you yourself; I will not give you a note, as that is
useless. You would know the contents of it before you got to the end
of your journey: of that I am well aware."</p>
<p class="normal">"Certainly, sir," replied the man, with his usual effrontery; "I
always make a point of that, for then I can tell the purport on my
arrival if I lose the note by the way."</p>
<p class="normal">"I know it," replied the Count, "but I believe you, notwithstanding,
to be faithful and attached to me, and that you can be silent when it
is necessary."</p>
<p class="normal">"As the grave, sir," replied the man.</p>
<p class="normal">"Well, then," continued his master, "you know the château of the
Maille, at about two leagues' distance. Go thither--ask to speak to
Monsieur de Corvoie--tell him that I will be with him to-morrow about
mid-day--that I have matters of the deepest importance to communicate
to him--and that I have asked three other gentlemen of our own
persuasion to meet me at his house to-morrow. Say nothing more and
nothing less."</p>
<p class="normal">"Sir, I will cut it on all sides exactly as you have commanded,"
replied the man, "and will bear you his message back immediately, if
there should be any."</p>
<p class="normal">These arrangements being made, the Count descended to the breakfast
table, where he found the Chevalier seated by the side of Clémence de
Marly. The Count had resolved that during his stay he would notice the
conduct of Clémence as little as possible; that he would endeavour to
look upon her as a being that could never be his; but, nevertheless,
he could not now help noticing that though she and the Chevalier might
not converse much together, there was from time to time a few words
passed between them in a low voice, evidently referring to things
apart from the general conversation that was going on. He steeled his
heart, though with agony to himself, and pleading the necessity of
visiting some friends in the neighbourhood, mounted his horse
immediately after breakfast, and was absent from Poitiers the greater
part of the day.</p>
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