登陆注册
15274700000002

第2章 CHAPTER I. THE QUEEN$$$$$S GOOD-BY(2)

The marriage which had set all Ruritania on fire with joy and formed in the people's eyes the visible triumph over Black Michael and his fellow-conspirators was now three years old. For three years the Princess Flavia had been queen. I am come by now to the age when a man should look out on life with an eye undimmed by the mists of passion. My love-****** days are over;

yet there is nothing for which I am more thankful to Almighty God than the gift of my wife's love. In storm it has been my anchor, and in clear skies my star. But we common folk are free to follow our hearts; am I an old fool for saying that he is a fool who follows anything else? Our liberty is not for princes. We need wait for no future world to balance the luck of men; even here there is an equipoise. From the highly placed a price is exacted for their state, their wealth, and their honors, as heavy as these are great; to the poor, what is to us mean and of no sweetness may appear decked in the robes of pleasure and delight.

Well, if it were not so, who could sleep at nights? The burden laid on Queen Flavia I knew, and know, so well as a man can know it. I think it needs a woman to know it fully; for even now my wife's eyes fill with tears when we speak of it. Yet she bore it, and if she failed in anything, I wonder that it was in so little.

For it was not only that she had never loved the king and had loved another with all her heart. The king's health, shattered by the horror and rigors of his imprisonment in the castle of Zenda, soon broke utterly. He lived, indeed; nay, he shot and hunted, and kept in his hand some measure, at least, of government. But always from the day of his release he was a fretful invalid, different utterly from the gay and jovial prince whom Michael's villains had caught in the shooting lodge. There was worse than this. As time went on, the first impulse of gratitude and admiration that he had felt towards Mr. Rassendyll died away. He came to brood more and more on what had passed while he was a prisoner; he was possessed not only by a haunting dread of Rupert of Hentzau, at whose hands he had suffered so greatly, but also by a morbid, half mad jealousy of Mr. Rassendyll. Rudolf had played the hero while he lay helpless. Rudolf's were the exploits for which his own people cheered him in his own capital. Rudolf's were the laurels that crowned his impatient brow. He had enough nobility to resent his borrowed credit, without the fortitude to endure it manfully. And the hateful comparison struck him nearer home. Sapt would tell him bluntly that Rudolf did this or that, set this precedent or that, laid down this or the other policy, and that the king could do no better than follow in Rudolf's steps. Mr. Rassendyll's name seldom passed his wife's lips, but when she spoke of him it was as one speaks of a great man who is dead, belittling all the living by the shadow of his name. I do not believe that the king discerned that truth which his wife spent her days in hiding from him; yet he was uneasy if Rudolf's name were mentioned by Sapt or myself, and from the queen's mouth he could not bear it. I have seen him fall into fits of passion on the mere sound of it; for he lost control of himself on what seemed slight provocation.

Moved by this disquieting jealousy, he sought continually to exact from the queen proofs of love and care beyond what most husbands can boast of, or, in my humble judgment, make good their right to, always asking of her what in his heart he feared was not hers to give. Much she did in pity and in duty; but in some moments, being but human and herself a woman of high temper, she failed; then the slight rebuff or involuntary coldness was magnified by a sick man's fancy into great offence or studied insult, and nothing that she could do would atone for it. Thus they, who had never in truth come together, drifted yet further apart; he was alone in his sickness and suspicion, she in her sorrows and her memories. There was no child to bridge the gulf between them, and although she was his queen and his wife, she grew almost a stranger to him. So he seemed to will that it should be.

Thus, worse than widowed, she lived for three years; and once only in each year she sent three words to the man she loved, and received from him three words in answer. Then her strength failed her. A pitiful scene had occurred in which the king peevishly upbraided her in regard to some trivial matter--the occasion escapes my memory--speaking to her before others words that even alone she could not have listened to with dignity. I was there, and Sapt; the colonel's small eyes had gleamed in anger. "I

should like to shut his mouth for him," I heard him mutter, for the king's waywardness had well-nigh worn out even his devotion.

The thing, of which I will say no more, happened a day or two before I was to set out to meet Mr. Rassendyll. I was to seek him this time at Wintenberg, for I had been recognized the year before at Dresden; and Wintenberg, being a smaller place and less in the way of chance visitors, was deemed safer. I remember well how she was when she called me into her own room, a few hours after she had left the king. She stood by the table; the box was on it, and I knew well that the red rose and the message were within. But there was more to-day. Without preface she broke into the subject of my errand.

"I must write to him," she said. "I can't bear it, I must write.

My dear friend Fritz, you will carry it safely for me, won't you?

And he must write to me. And you'll bring that safely, won't you?

Ah, Fritz, I know I'm wrong, but I'm starved, starved, starved!

And it's for the last time. For I know now that if I send anything, I must send more. So after this time I won't send at all. But I must say good-by to him; I must have his good-by to carry me through my life. This once, then, Fritz, do it for me."

The tears rolled down her cheeks, which to-day were flushed out of their paleness to a stormy red; her eyes defied me even while they pleaded. I bent my head and kissed her hand.

"With God's help I'll carry it safely and bring his safely, my queen," said I.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 探索未知-趣说放射化学

    探索未知-趣说放射化学

    探索未知,追求新知,创造未来。本丛书包括:奇特的地理现象、遗传简介、生活物理现象解读、奥妙无穷的海洋、认识微生物、数学经典题、垃圾与环境、湛蓝浩瀚四大洋、生物的行为、漫谈电化学、数学古堡探险、中国的世界文化遗产、中国古代物理知识、中国三大三角洲、中国的地理风情、多姿的中国地形、认识少数民族医学、悠悠的中国河流等书籍。
  • 斗罗大陆之传说

    斗罗大陆之传说

    世间最强超帝皇进入斗罗大陆,会发生什么,敬请期待。因作者是学生所以只能在每周末更新一片,请多包容。^-^(及:斗罗大陆1就是我现在创作的部分只是前言,不会有太多的情节改编,请多包容)
  • 我是个不朽的罪人

    我是个不朽的罪人

    第三次的世界大战,已经拉开了序幕。当战争结束后,人性得到了进化。战争,源于人性的自私。当某一天自私从人性里剔除,人类就会无比的强大。共荣!成为了那次灾难后,人类的精神所向。最终!人类变成了一个整体,开始去征服宇宙。随着人类社会的发展变化,与各种矛盾利益的冲突!在23世纪中期,人类爆发了战役。那是一次无法挽回的伤痛,战争将人类所创造的文明毁灭。在那次灾难后,星球上的一切资源都被摧毁殆尽!为此,我们只能遗弃家园逃亡它地,寻求新的区域生寄。希望能再驻起一片,新的文明区域!将文明重铸,让种族延续。
  • 农家悍女:妖孽,算你狠

    农家悍女:妖孽,算你狠

    现代社会加班狗李明秀,穿成了贫穷农户家的幺女——拥有先天性招黑体质、外号“男人婆”的假小子。穿成了人厌鬼憎的贫穷农女,明秀表示她也很无奈啊,好在,老天送她一个金手指……等等,这金手指也太不靠谱了,居然是个残次品,好不容易修好了,功能又很鸡肋。不过,这可难不倒李明秀,且看她如何巧用金手指,养天蚕,做生意,发家制富撩……咦,隔壁的盛世美颜小鲜肉,怎么变成霸道世子爷了?明秀头痛,撩,还是不撩?这是一个问题。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 剑啸黄昏

    剑啸黄昏

    一剑荡平阴山,一骑独行万里。以心魔修剑道,以自在法铸金身,唯心唯我大自在。得证心之大道,掌人心七情六欲,控世间喜怒哀乐。人心不死,吾道永恒,人心不灭,吾身长存!
  • 干掉男主做女皇

    干掉男主做女皇

    我本是将门之后怎可卑微到极致而放过尔等?
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 未敢言相思

    未敢言相思

    稚子之龄与顾见初相识八岁与其分别还以为此生不复相见却在十二岁时只剩下他一个依靠那个时候她还称他十一叔那么这么多年的十一叔又是怎么爱上的呢无从得知也无需惊讶毕竟在她的心里故事的开始顾十一就只是顾十一而已
  • 末日我还活着

    末日我还活着

    菜鸟来到部队,在一次任务中药品泄露灾难来临。朋友、死对头,每一位活着的人都变的那么重要,看着他们我才能感觉我还活着。活下去我一定要活下去。
  • 我和我的女神们

    我和我的女神们

    他是如假包换的人族,修炼的却是妖族功法;他本想着报完父仇,老老实实的欺男霸女过完这一辈子,却被迫去征战天下,统一大陆。他自诩可以为兄弟两肋插刀,身边却是女人多过男人;他自诩肯为千金轻一笑,却又不敢招惹身边的任何一位女神。他从东北边陲的一座小城起家,灭妖族,平内乱,纵横沙漠三千里,笑傲海疆五十年。他是两大帝国的摄政王,是一大教派的创始人。他是兄弟眼中的好哥们,他是女人眼中的好男人。有他在,妖族重新焕发了生机;有他在,人族的未来不是梦;有他在,四海升平,海晏河清。他被各族人民尊崇为:大帝天尊!本书讲述的便是他的传奇故事!