友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!阅读过程发现任何错误请告诉我们,谢谢!! 报告错误
飞读中文网 返回本书目录 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 进入书吧 加入书签

el dorado-第7章

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



us Frenchmen; and to no one else。〃

〃That is sheer madness; man;〃 retorted Armand。 〃Would you have the
child perish for the sake of your own selfish ideas?〃

〃You may call them selfish if you will; all patriotism is in a
measure selfish。  What does the rest of the world care if we are a
republic or a monarchy; an oligarchy or hopeless anarchy?  We work
for ourselves and to please ourselves; and I for one will not
brook foreign interference。〃

〃Yet you work with foreign money!〃

〃That is another matter。  I cannot get money in France; so I get
it where I can; but I can arrange for the escape of Louis XVII is
King of France; my good St。 Just; he must of France should belong
the honour and glory of having saved our King。〃

For the third time now St。 Just allowed the conversation to drop;
he was gazing wide…eyed; almost appalled at this impudent display
of well…nigh ferocious selfishness and vanity。  De Batz; smiling
and complacent; was leaning back in his chair; looking at his
young friend with perfect contentment expressed in every line of
his pock…marked face and in the very attitude of his well…fed
body。  It was easy enough now to understand the remarkable
immunity which this man was enjoying; despite the many foolhardy
plots which he hatched; and which had up to now invariably come to
naught。

A regular braggart and empty windbag; he had taken but one good
care; and that was of his own skin。  Unlike other less fortunate
Royalists of France; he neither fought in the country nor braved
dangers in town。  He played a safer gamecrossed the frontier and
constituted himself agent of Austria; he succeeded in gaining the
Emperor's money for the good of the Royalist cause; and for his
own most especial benefit。

Even a less astute man of the world than was Armand St。 Just would
easily have guessed that de Batz' desire to be the only instrument
in the rescue of the poor little Dauphin from the Temple was not
actuated by patriotism; but solely by greed。  Obviously there was
a rich reward waiting for him in Vienna the day that he brought
Louis XVII safely into Austrian territory; that reward he would
miss if a meddlesome Englishman interfered in this affair。 Whether
in this wrangle he risked the life of the child…King or not
mattered to him not at all。  It was de Batz who was to get the
reward; and whose welfare and prosperity mattered more than the
most precious life in Europe。



CHAPTER III
THE DEMON CHANCE

St。 Just would have given much to be back in his lonely squalid
lodgings now。  Too late did he realise how wise had been the
dictum which had warned him against making or renewing friendships
in France。

Men had changed with the times。  How terribly they had changed!
Personal safety had become a fetish with mosta goal so difficult
to attain that it had to be fought for and striven for; even at
the expense of humanity and of self…respect。

Selfishnessthe mere; cold…blooded insistence for self…advancement
ruled supreme。  De Batz; surfeited with foreign money; used it
firstly to ensure his own immunity; scattering it to right and left
to still the ambition of the Public Prosecutor or to satisfy the
greed of innumerable spies。

What was left over he used for the purpose of pitting the
bloodthirsty demagogues one against the other; making of the
National Assembly a gigantic bear…den; wherein wild beasts could
rend one another limb from limb。

In the meanwhile; what cared hehe said it himselfwhether
hundreds of innocent martyrs perished miserably and uselessly?
They were the necessary food whereby the Revolution was to be
satiated and de Batz' schemes enabled to mature。  The most
precious life in Europe even was only to be saved if its price
went to swell the pockets of de Batz; or to further his future
ambitions。

Times had indeed changed an entire nation。  St。 Just felt as
sickened with this self…seeking Royalist as he did with the savage
brutes who struck to right or left for their own delectation。  He
was meditating immediate flight back to his lodgings; with a hope
of finding there a word for him from the chiefa word to remind
him that men did live nowadays who had other aims besides their
own advancementother ideals besides the deification of self。

The curtain had descended on the first act; and traditionally; as
the works of M。 de Moliere demanded it; the three knocks were
heard again without any interval。  St。 Just rose ready with a
pretext for parting with his friend。 The curtain was being slowly
drawn up on the second act; and disclosed Alceste in wrathful
conversation with Celimene。

Alceste's opening speech is short。  Whilst the actor spoke it
Armand had his back to the stage; with hand outstretched; he was
murmuring what he hoped would prove a polite excuse for thus
leaving his amiable host while the entertainment had only just
begun。

De Batzvexed and impatienthad not by any means finished with
his friend yet。  He thought that his specious argumentsdelivered
with boundless convictionhad made some impression on the mind of
the young man。 That impression; however; he desired to deepen; and
whilst Armand was worrying his brain to find a plausible excuse
for going away; de Batz was racking his to find one for keeping
him here。

Then it was that the wayward demon Chance intervened。 Had St。 Just
risen but two minutes earlier; had his active mind suggested the
desired excuse more readily; who knows what unspeakable sorrow;
what heartrending misery; what terrible shame might have been
spared both him and those for whom he cared?  Those two minutes
did he but know itdecided the whole course of his future life。
The excuse hovered on his lips; de Batz reluctantly was preparing
to bid him good…bye; when Celimene; speaking common…place words
enough in answer to her quarrelsome lover; caused him to drop the
hand which he was holding out to his friend and to turn back towards
the stage。

It was an exquisite voice that had spokena voice mellow and
tender; with deep tones in it that betrayed latent power。  The
voice had caused Armand to look; the lips that spoke forged the
first tiny link of that chain which riveted him forever after to
the speaker。

It is difficult to say if such a thing really exists as love at
first sight。  Poets and romancists will have us believe that it
does; idealists swear by it as being the only true love worthy of
the name。

I do not know if I am prepared to admit their theory with regard
to Armand St。 Just。  Mlle。 Lange's exquisite voice certainly had
charmed him to the extent of making him forget his mistrust of de
Batz and his desire to get away。  Mechanically almost he sat down
again; and leaning both elbows on the edge of the box; he rested
his chin in his hand; and listened。  The words which the late M。
de Moliere puts into the mouth of Celimene are trite and flippant
enough; yet every time that Mlle。 Lange's lips moved Armand
watched her; entranced。

There; no doubt; the matter would have ended: a young man
fascinated by a pretty woman on the stage'tis a small matter;
and one from which there doth not often spring a weary trail of
tragic circumstances。  Armand; who 
返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0
未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!