第 29 节
作者:敏儿不觉      更新:2021-02-24 22:58      字数:9322
  concentrated       on   getting    the   ban   removed。       She    explored     all  possible
  avenues   of   influence   to   this   end;   and;   incidentally   drove   her   old   lover
  nearly  frantic   with   her   complaints   giving   him  no   peace。         Even   a   rebuff
  from   the   Duchesse   de   Berry;   widow   of   the   son   of   that   prince   who   was
  afterwards Charles X; did not put her off。                 She turned up one day at the
  Tuileries; to be informed by an usher that she could not be admitted。
  This desire to be reinstated in royal favour is at the back of all Sophie's
  subsequent actionsthis and her intention of feathering her own nest out
  of the estate of her protector。          It explains why she worked so hard to have
  the Prince de Conde assume friendly relations with a family whose very
  name he hated: that of the Duc d'Orleans。                  It is a clue to the mysterious
  death;   eight   years   later;   of   the   Prince   de   Conde;   last   of   the   Condes;   in
  circumstances         which     were    made     to   pass    as   suicide;    but   which     in
  unhampered inquiry  would   almost   certainly  have   been   found to   indicate
  murder。
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  Louis…Henri…Joseph; Duc de Bourbon and Prince de Conde; seems to
  have been rather a simple old man: a useless old sinner; true enough; but
  relatively harmless in his sinning; relatively venial in his uselessness。                      It
  were futile to seek for the morality of a later age in a man of his day and
  rank   and   country;   just   as   it   were   obtuse   to   look   for   greatness   in   one   so
  much   at   the    mercy   of   circumstance。        As     far   as   bravery   went   he   had
  shown       himself     a  worthy      descendant      of   ‘‘the   Great     Conde。''      But;
  surrounded   by   the   vapid   jealousies   of   the   most   useless   people   who   had
  ever tried to rule a country; he; no more than his father; had the faintest
  chance   to   show   the   Conde   quality   in   war。        Adrift   as   a   comparatively
  young   man;  his   world   about   his   ears;  with   no  occupation;  small   wonder
  that    in  idleness    he   fell  into   the  pursuit    of  satisfactions     for  his   baser
  appetites。      He would have been; there is good reason to believe; a happy
  man   and   a   busy   one   in   a   camp。    There   is   this   to   be   said   for   him:   that
  alone     among      the  spineless     crowd     of  royalists    feebly    waiting    for   the
  miracle   which   would   restore   their privilege   he   attempted   a   blow   for   the
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  lost cause。     But where in all that bed of disintegrating chalk was the flint
  from which he might have evoked a spark?
  The great grief of the Prince's life was the loss of his son; the young
  Duc   d'Enghien;   shamefully   destroyed   by   Bonaparte。         It   is   possible   that
  much of the Prince's inertia was due to this blow。             He had married; at the
  early age of fourteen; Louise…Marie…Therese…Mathilde d'Orleans; daughter
  of Louis…Philippe; Duc d'Orleans and the Duchesse de Chartres; the bride
  being six years older than her husband。            Such a marriage could not last。
  It merely sustained the honeymoon and the birth of that only son。                    The
  couple were apart in eighteen months; and after ten years they never even
  saw each other again。         About the time when Sophie's husband found her
  out   and   departed   the   Princesse   died。   The   Prince   was   advised   to   marry
  again;   on   the   chance   that   an   heir   might   be   born   to   the   large   fortune   he
  possessed。      But Sophie by then had become a habit with the Princea bad
  oneand the old man was content to be left to his continual hunting; and
  not to bother over the fact that he was the last of his ancient line。
  It may be easily believed that the Prince's disinclination to marry again
  contented Sophie very well。          And the fact that he had no direct heir was
  one in which she saw possibilities advantageous to herself。
  The Prince was then sixty…six years old。             In the course of nature he
  was almost bound to predecease her。             His wealth was enormous; and out
  of it Sophie wanted as much by bequest as she could get。                She was much
  too shrewd; however; to imagine that; even if she did contrive to be made
  his   sole  heir;  the  influential   families   who    had   an  eye   upon    the  great
  possessions of the Prince; and who through relationship had some right to
  expect     inheritance;   would    allow   such    a  will  to  go  uncontested。     She
  therefore looked about among the Prince's connexions for some one who
  would accept coheirship with herself; and whose family would be strong
  enough in position to carry through probate on such terms; but at the same
  time would be grateful enough to her and venal enough to further her aim
  of being reinstated at Court。        Her choice in this matter shows at once her
  political   cunning;    which    would    include   knowledge      of  affairs;  and   her
  ability as a judge of character。
  It should be remembered that; in spite of his title of Duc de Bourbon;
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  Sophie's     elderly   protector    was   only   distantly   of   that  family。    He    was
  descended in direct line from the Princes de Conde; whose connexion with
  the royal house of France dated back to the sixteenth century。                  The other
  line of ‘royal' ducs in the country was that of Orleans; offshoot of the royal
  house   through   Philippe; son   of   Louis   XIII;   and   born   in   1640。    Sophie's
  protector;   Louis…Henri…Joseph;   Prince   de   Conde;   having   married   Louise…
  Marie;     daughter    of   the  great…grandson      of  this   Philippe;   was    thus   the
  brother…in…law       of   that   Louis…Philippe;       Duc    d'Orleans;     who     in   the
  Revolution   was   known   as   ‘‘Egalite。''       This   was   a   man   whom;   for   his
  political opinion and for his failure to stand by the King; Louis XVI; the
  Prince de Conde utterly detested in memory。                As much; moreover; as he
  had hated the father did the Prince de Conde detest Egalite's son。                   But it
  was out of this man's family that Sophie selected; though ultimately; her
  coheir。
  Before she arrived at this point; however; Sophie had been at pains to
  do some not very savoury manoeuvring。
  By  a   dancer   at the   Opera;   called   Mimi;   the   Prince   de   Conde   had   an
  illegitimate daughter; whom he had caused to be educated and whom he
  had   married   to   the   Comte   de   Rully。     The   Comtesse   de   Rully   and   her
  husband had a suite at Chantilly。          This was an arrangement which Sophie;
  as   reigning    Queen     of  Chantilly;   did   not  like   at  all。 While     the   Rully
  woman remained at Chantilly Sophie could not think that her sway over
  the Prince was quite as absolute as she wished。                It took her six years of
  badgering her protector; from 1819 to 1825; to bring about the eviction。
  But meantime (for Sophie's machinations must be taken as concurrent
  with events as they transpire) the Baronne de Feucheres had approached
  the son of Philippe…Egalite; suggesting that the last…born of his six children;
  the Duc d'Aumale; should have the Prince de Conde for godfather。                     If she
  could persuade her protector to this the Duc d'Orleans; in return; was to
  use his   influence   for   her   reinstatement   at   Court。    And   persuade   the   old
  man to this Sophie did; albeit after a great deal of badgering on her part
  and a great deal of grumbling on the part of the Prince。
  The influence exerted at Court by the Duc d'Orleans does not seem to
  have   been   very  effective。      The   King   who   had   dismissed   her   the   Court;
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  Louis XVIII; died in 1824。          His brother; the Comte d'Artois; ascended the
  throne     as  Charles    X;   and   continued     by   politically   foolish    recourses;
  comparable       in  history   to  those   of  the  English    Stuarts;   to  alienate   the
  people   by   attempting   to   regain   that   anachronistic   absolute   power   which
  the Revolution had destroyed。           He lasted a mere six years as king。            The
  revolution of 1830 sent him into exile。            But up to the last mont