Upon the green waters of the canal
bordered with marble, upon which time had already
scattered black spots and tufts of mossy grass, there
glided majestically a long, flat bark adorned with
the arms of England, surmounted by a dais, and carpeted
with long damasked stuffs, which trailed their fringes
in the water. Eight rowers, leaning lazily to
their oars, made it move upon the canal with the graceful
slowness of the swans, which, disturbed in their ancient
possessions by the approach of the bark, looked from
a distance at this splendid and noisy pageant.
We say noisy for the bark contained four
guitar and lute players, two singers, and several
courtiers, all sparkling with gold and precious stones,
and showing their white teeth in emulation of each
other, to please the Lady Henrietta Stuart, grand-daughter
of Henry IV., daughter of Charles I., and sister of
Charles II., who occupied the seat of honor under
the dais of the bark. We know this young princess,
we have seen her at the Louvre with her mother, wanting
wood, wanting bread, and fed by the coadjuteur
and the parliament. She had, therefore, like her
brothers, passed through an uneasy youth; then, all
at once, she had just awakened from a long and horrible
dream, seated on the steps of a throne, surrounded
by courtiers and flatterers. Like Mary Stuart
on leaving prison, she aspired not only to life and
liberty, but to power and wealth.
The Lady Henrietta, in growing, had
attained remarkable beauty, which the recent restoration
had rendered celebrated. Misfortune had taken
from her the luster of pride, but prosperity had restored
it to her. She was resplendent, then, in her
joy and her happiness, like those hot-house
flowers which, forgotten during a frosty autumn night,
have hung their heads, but which on the morrow, warmed
once more by the atmosphere in which they were born,
rise again with greater splendor than ever. Villiers,
Duke of Buckingham, son of him who played so conspicuous
a part in the early chapters of this history, Villiers
of Buckingham, a handsome cavalier, melancholy with
women, a jester with men, and Wilmot, Lord
Rochester, a jester with both sexes, were standing
at this moment before the Lady Henrietta, disputing
the privilege of making her smile. As to that
young and beautiful princess, reclining upon a cushion
of velvet bordered with gold, her hands hanging listlessly
so as to dip in the water, she listened carelessly
to the musicians without hearing them, and heard the
two courtiers without appearing to listen to them.
This Lady Henrietta this
charming creature this woman who joined
the graces of France to the beauties of England, not
having yet loved, was cruel in her coquetry.
The smile, then, that innocent favor of
young girls, did not even lighten her countenance;
and if, at times, she did raise her eyes, it was to
fasten them upon one or other of the cavaliers with
such a fixity, that their gallantry, bold as it generally
was, took the alarm, and became timid.
In the meanwhile the boat continued
its course, the musicians made a great noise, and
the courtiers began, like them, to be out of breath.
Besides, the excursion became doubtless monotonous
to the princess, for all at once, shaking her head
with an air of impatience, “Come
gentlemen, enough of this; let
us land.”
“Ah, madam,” said Buckingham,
“we are very unfortunate! We have not succeeded
in making the excursion agreeable to your royal highness.”
“My mother expects me,”
replied the princess; “and I must frankly admit,
gentlemen, I am bored.” And whilst uttering
this cruel word, Henrietta endeavored to console by
a look each of the two young men, who appeared terrified
at such frankness. The look produced its effect the
two faces brightened; but immediately, as if the royal
coquette thought she had done too much for simple
mortals, she made a movement, turned her back on both
her adorers, and appeared plunged in a reverie in which
it was evident they had no part.
Buckingham bit his lips with anger,
for he was truly in love with the Lady Henrietta,
and, in that case, took everything in a serious light.
Rochester bit his lips likewise; but his wit always
dominated over his heart, it was purely and simply
to repress a malicious smile. The princess was
then allowing the eyes she turned from the young nobles
to wander over the green and flowery turf of the park,
when she perceived Parry and D’Artagnan at a
distance.
“Who is coming yonder?” said she.
The two young men turned round with the rapidity of
lightning.
“Parry,” replied Buckingham; “nobody
but Parry.”
“I beg your pardon,” said Rochester, “but
I think he has a companion.”
“Yes,” said the princess,
at first with languor, but then, “What
mean those words, ‘Nobody but Parry;’
say, my lord?”
“Because, madam,” replied
Buckingham, piqued, “because the faithful Parry,
the wandering Parry, the eternal Parry, is not, I believe,
of much consequence.”
“You are mistaken, duke.
Parry the wandering Parry, as you call
him has always wandered in the service of
my family, and the sight of that old man always gives
me satisfaction.”
The Lady Henrietta followed the usual
progress of pretty women, particularly coquettish
women; she passed from caprice to contradiction; the
gallant had undergone the caprice, the courtier must
bend beneath the contradictory humor. Buckingham
bowed, but made no reply.
“It is true, madam,” said
Rochester, bowing in his turn, “that Parry is
the model of servants; but, madam, he is no longer
young, and we laugh only when we see cheerful objects.
Is an old man a gay object?”
“Enough, my lord,” said
the princess, coolly; “the subject of conversation
is unpleasant to me.”
Then, as if speaking to herself, “It
is really unaccountable,” said she, “how
little regard my brother’s friends have for his
servants.”
“Ah, madam,” cried Buckingham,
“your royal highness pierces my heart with a
dagger forged by your own hands.”
“What is the meaning of that
speech, which is turned so like a French madrigal,
duke? I do not understand it.”
“It means, madam, that you yourself,
so good, so charming, so sensible, you have laughed
sometimes smiled, I should say at
the idle prattle of that good Parry, for whom your
royal highness to-day entertains such a marvelous
susceptibility.”
“Well, my lord, if I have forgotten
myself so far,” said Henrietta, “you do
wrong to remind me of it.” And she made
a sign of impatience. “The good Parry wants
to speak to me, I believe: please order them to
row to the shore, my Lord Rochester.”
Rochester hastened to repeat the princess’s
command; and a moment later the boat touched the bank.
“Let us land, gentlemen,”
said Henrietta, taking the arm which Rochester offered
her, although Buckingham was nearer to her, and had
presented his. Then Rochester, with an ill-dissembled
pride, which pierced the heart of the unhappy Buckingham
through and through, led the princess across the little
bridge which the rowers had cast from the royal boat
to the shore.
“Which way will your highness go?” asked
Rochester.
“You see, my lord, towards that
good Parry, who is wandering, as my lord of Buckingham
says, and seeking me with eyes weakened by the tears
he has shed over our misfortunes.”
“Good heavens!” said Rochester,
“how sad your royal highness is to-day; in truth
we seem ridiculous fools to you, madam.”
“Speak for yourself, my lord,”
interrupted Buckingham with vexation; “for my
part, I displease her royal highness to such a degree,
that I appear absolutely nothing to her.”
Neither Rochester nor the princess
made any reply; Henrietta only urged her companion
more quickly on. Buckingham remained behind, and
took advantage of this isolation to give himself up
to his anger; he bit his handkerchief so furiously
that it was soon in shreds.
“Parry, my good Parry,”
said the princess, with her gentle voice, “come
hither. I see you are seeking me, and I am waiting
for you.”
“Ah, madam,” said Rochester,
coming charitably to the help of his companion, who
had remained, as we have said, behind, “if Parry
cannot see your royal highness, the man who follows
him is a sufficient guide, even for a blind man; for
he has eyes of flame. That man is a double-lamped
lantern.”
“Lighting a very handsome martial
countenance,” said the princess, determined
to be as ill-natured as possible. Rochester bowed.
“One of those vigorous soldiers’ heads
seen nowhere but in France,” added the princess,
with the perseverance of a woman sure of impunity.
Rochester and Buckingham looked at
each other, as much as to say, “What
can be the matter with her?”
“See, my lord of Buckingham,
what Parry wants,” said Henrietta. “Go!”
The young man, who considered this
order as a favor, resumed his courage, and hastened
to meet Parry, who, followed by D’Artagnan,
advanced slowly on account of his age. D’Artagnan
walked slowly but nobly, as D’Artagnan, doubled
by the third of a million, ought to walk, that is
to say, without conceit or swagger, but without timidity.
When Buckingham, very eager to comply with the desire
of the princess, who had seated herself on a marble
bench, as if fatigued with the few steps she had gone, when
Buckingham, we say, was at a distance of only a few
paces from Parry, the latter recognized him.
“Ah! my lord!” cried he,
quite out of breath, “will your grace obey the
king?”
“In what, Mr. Parry?”
said the young man, with a kind of coolness tempered
by a desire to make himself agreeable to the princess.
“Well, his majesty begs your
grace to present this gentleman to her royal highness
the Princess Henrietta.”
“In the first place, what is
the gentleman’s name?” said the duke,
haughtily.
D’Artagnan, as we know, was
easily affronted, and the Duke of Buckingham’s
tone displeased him. He surveyed the courtier
from head to foot, and two flashes beamed from beneath
his bent brows. But, after a struggle, “Monsieur
lé Chevalier d’Artagnan, my lord,”
replied he, quietly.
“Pardon me, sir, that teaches
me your name, but nothing more.”
“You mean ”
“I mean I do not know you.”
“I am more fortunate than you,
sir,” replied D’Artagnan, “for I
have had the honor of knowing your family, and particularly
my lord Duke of Buckingham, your illustrious father.”
“My father?” said Buckingham.
“Well, I think I now remember. Monsieur
lé Chevalier d’Artagnan, do you say?”
D’Artagnan bowed. “In person,”
said he.
“Pardon me, but are you one
of those Frenchmen who had secret relations with my
father?”
“Exactly, my lord duke, I am one of those Frenchmen.”
“Then, sir, permit me to say
that it was strange my father never heard of you during
his lifetime.”
“No, monsieur, but he heard
of me at the moment of his death: it was I who
sent to him, through the hands of the valet de chambre
of Anne of Austria, notice of the dangers which threatened
him; unfortunately, it came too late.”
“Never mind, monsieur,”
said Buckingham. “I understand now, that,
having had the intention of rendering a service to
the father, you have come to claim the protection
of the son.”
“In the first place, my lord,”
replied D’Artagnan, phlegmatically, “I
claim the protection of no man. His majesty, Charles
II., to whom I have had the honor of rendering some
services I may tell you, my lord, my life
has been passed in such occupations King
Charles II., then, who wishes to honor me with some
kindness, desires me to be presented to her royal
highness the Princess Henrietta, his sister, to whom
I shall, perhaps, have the good fortune to be of service
hereafter. Now, the king knew that you at this
moment were with her royal highness, and sent me to
you. There is no other mystery, I ask absolutely
nothing of you; and if you will not present me to
her royal highness, I shall be compelled to do without
you, and present myself.”
“At least, sir,” said
Buckingham, determined to have the last word, “you
will not refuse me an explanation provoked by yourself.”
“I never refuse, my lord,” said D’Artagnan.
“As you have had relations with
my father, you must be acquainted with some private
details?”
“These relations are already
far removed from us, my lord for you were
not then born and for some unfortunate diamond
studs, which I received from his hands and carried
back to France, it is really not worth while awakening
so many remembrances.”
“Ah! sir,” said Buckingham,
warmly, going up to D’Artagnan, and holding
out his hand to him, “it is you, then you
whom my father sought everywhere and who had a right
to expect so much from us.”
“To expect, my lord, in truth,
that is my forte; all my life I have expected.”
At this moment, the princess, who
was tired of not seeing the stranger approach her,
arose and came towards them.
“At least, sir,” said
Buckingham, “you shall not wait for the presentation
you claim of me.”
Then turning towards the princess
and bowing: “Madam,” said the young
man, “the king, your brother, desires me to have
the honor of presenting to your royal highness, Monsieur
lé Chevalier d’Artagnan.”
“In order that your royal highness
may have, in case of need, a firm support and a sure
friend,” added Parry. D’Artagnan bowed.
“You have still something to
say, Parry,” replied Henrietta, smiling upon
D’Artagnan, while addressing the old servant.
“Yes, madam, the king desires
you to preserve religiously in your memory the name
and merit of M. d’Artagnan, to whom his majesty
owes, he says, the recovery of his kingdom.”
Buckingham, the princess, and Rochester looked at
each other.
“That,” said D’Artagnan,
“is another little secret, of which, in all
probability, I shall not boast to his majesty’s
son, as I have done to you with respect to the diamond
studs.”
“Madam,” said Buckingham,
“monsieur has just, for the second time, recalled
to my memory an event which excites my curiosity to
such a degree, that I shall venture to ask your permission
to take him to one side for a moment, to converse
in private.”
“Do, my lord,” said the
princess; “but restore to the sister, as quickly
as possible, this friend so devoted to the brother.”
And she took the arm of Rochester, whilst Buckingham
took that of D’Artagnan.
“Oh! tell me, chevalier,”
said Buckingham, “all that affair of the diamonds,
which nobody knows in England, not even the son of
him who was the hero of it.”
“My lord, one person alone had
a right to relate all that affair, as you call it,
and that was your father; he thought it proper to be
silent, I must beg you to allow me to be so likewise.”
And D’Artagnan bowed like a man upon whom it
was evident no entreaties could prevail.
“Since it is so, sir,”
said Buckingham, “pardon my indiscretion, I beg
you; and if, at any time, I should go into France ”
and he turned round to take a last look at the princess,
who took but little notice of him, totally occupied
as she was, or appeared to be, with Rochester.
Buckingham sighed.
“Well?” said D’Artagnan.
“I was saying that if, any day, I were to go
to France ”
“You will go, my lord,” said D’Artagnan,
“I shall answer for that.”
“And how so?”
“Oh, I have strange powers of
prediction; if I do predict anything I am seldom mistaken.
If, then, you do come to France?”
“Well, then, monsieur, you,
of whom kings ask that valuable friendship which restores
crowns to them, I will venture to beg of you a little
of that great interest you took in my father.”
“My lord,” replied D’Artagnan,
“believe me, I shall deem myself highly honored
if, in France, you remember having seen me here.
And now permit ”
Then, turning towards the princess:
“Madam,” said he, “your royal highness
is a daughter of France; and in that quality I hope
to see you again in Paris. One of my happy days
will be on that on which your royal highness shall
give me any command whatever, thus proving to me that
you have not forgotten the recommendations of your
august brother.” And he bowed respectfully
to the young princess, who gave him her hand to kiss
with a right royal grace.
“Ah! madam,” said Buckingham,
in a subdued voice, “what can a man do to obtain
a similar favor from your royal highness?”
“Dame! my lord,”
replied Henrietta, “ask Monsieur d’Artagnan;
he will tell you.”