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!
burlesques-第11部分
快捷操作: 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! 如果本书没有阅读完,想下次继续接着阅读,可使用上方 "收藏到我的浏览器" 功能 和 "加入书签" 功能!
〃C'est la fortune de la guerre; mon garcon; but calm yourself; and
take this potion which Blanche has prepared for you。〃
I drank the tisane eagerly when I heard whose fair hands had
compounded it; and its effects were speedily beneficial to me; for
I sank into a cool and refreshing slumber。
From that day I began to mend rapidly; with all the elasticity of
youth's happy time。 Blanchethe enchanting Blancheministered
henceforth to me; for I would take no medicine but from her lily
hand。 And what were the effects? 'Faith; ere a month was past;
the patient was over head and ears in love with the doctor; and as
for Baron Larrey; and Broussais; and Esquirol; they were sent to
the right…about。 In a short time I was in a situation to do
justice to the gigot aux navets; the boeuf aux cornichons; and the
other delicious entremets of the Marquis's board; with an appetite
that astonished some of the Frenchmen who frequented it。
〃Wait till he's quite well; Miss;〃 said Lanty; who waited always
behind me。 〃'Faith! when he's in health; I'd back him to ate a
cow; barrin' the horns and teel。〃 I sent a decanter at the rogue's
head; by way of answer to his impertinence。
Although the disgusting Cambaceres did his best to have my parole
withdrawn from me; and to cause me to be sent to the English depot
of prisoners at Verdun; the Marquis's interest with the Emperor
prevailed; and I was allowed to remain at Paris; the happiest of
prisoners; at the Colonel's hotel at the Place Vendome。 I here had
the opportunity (an opportunity not lost; I flatter myself; on a
young fellow with the accomplishments of Philip Fogarty; Esq。) of
mixing with the elite of French society; and meeting with many of
the great; the beautiful; and the brave。 Talleyrand was a frequent
guest of the Marquis's。 His bon…mots used to keep the table in a
roar。 Ney frequently took his chop with us; Murat; when in town;
constantly dropt in for a cup of tea and friendly round game。
Alas! who would have thought those two gallant heads would be so
soon laid low? My wife has a pair of earrings which the latter;
who always wore them; presented to herbut we are advancing
matters。 Anybody could see; 〃avec un demioeil;〃 as the Prince of
Benevento remarked; how affairs went between me and Blanche; but
though she loathed him for his cruelties and the odiousness of his
person; the brutal Cambaceres still pursued his designs upon her。
I recollect it was on St。 Patrick's Day。 My lovely friend had
procured; from the gardens of the Empress Josephine; at Malmaison
(whom we loved a thousand times more than her Austrian successor; a
sandy…haired woman; between ourselves; with an odious squint); a
quantity of shamrock wherewith to garnish the hotel; and all the
Irish in Paris were invited to the national festival。
I and Prince Talleyrand danced a double hornpipe with Pauline
Bonaparte and Madame de Stael; Marshal Soult went down a couple of
sets with Madame Recamier; and Robespierre's widowan excellent;
gentle creature; quite unlike her husbandstood up with the
Austrian ambassador。 Besides; the famous artists Baron Gros; David
and Nicholas Poussin; and Canova; who was in town making a statue
of the Emperor for Leo X。; and; in a word; all the celebrities of
Parisas my gifted countrywoman; the wild Irish girl; calls them
were assembled in the Marquis's elegant receiving…rooms。
At last a great outcry was raised for La Gigue Irlandaise! La
Gigue Irlandaise! a dance which had made a fureur amongst the
Parisians ever since the lovely Blanche Sarsfield had danced it。
She stepped forward and took me for a partner; and amidst the
bravoes of the crowd; in which stood Ney; Murat; Lannes; the Prince
of Wagram; and the Austrian ambassador; we showed to the beau monde
of the French capital; I flatter myself; a not unfavorable specimen
of the dance of our country。
As I was cutting the double…shuffle; and toe…and…heeling it in the
〃rail〃 style; Blanche danced up to me; smiling; and said; 〃Be on
your guard; I see Cambaceres talking to Fouche; the Duke of
Otranto; about us; and when Otranto turns his eyes upon a man; they
bode him no good。〃
〃Cambaceres is jealous;〃 said I。 〃I have it;〃 says she; 〃I'll make
him dance a turn with me。〃 So; presently; as the music was going
like mad all this time; I pretended fatigue from my late wounds;
and sat down。 The lovely Blanche went up smiling; and brought out
Cambaceres as a second partner。
The Marshal is a lusty man; who makes desperate efforts to give
himself a waist; and the effect of the exercise upon him was
speedily visible。 He puffed and snorted like a walrus; drops
trickled down his purple face; while my lovely mischief of a
Blanche went on dancing at treble quick; till she fairly danced him
down。
〃Who'll take the flure with me?〃 said the charming girl; animated
by the sport。
〃Faix; den; 'tis I; Lanty Clancy!〃 cried my rascal; who had been
mad with excitement at the scene; and; stepping in with a whoop and
a hurroo; he began to dance with such rapidity as made all present
stare。
As the couple were footing it; there was a noise as of a rapid
cavalcade traversing the Place Vendome; and stopping at the
Marquis's door。 A crowd appeared to mount the stair; the great
doors of the reception…room were flung open; and two pages
announced their Majesties the Emperor and the Empress。 So engaged
were Lanty and Blanche; that they never heard the tumult occasioned
by the august approach。
It was indeed the Emperor; who; returning from the Theatre
Francais; and seeing the Marquis's windows lighted up; proposed to
the Empress to drop in on the party。 He made signs to the
musicians to continue: and the conqueror of Marengo and Friedland
watched with interest the simple evolutions of two happy Irish
people。 Even the Empress smiled and; seeing this; all the
courtiers; including Naples and Talleyrand; were delighted。
〃Is not this a great day for Ireland?〃 said the Marquis; with a
tear trickling down his noble face。 〃O Ireland! O my country!
But no more of that。 Go up; Phil; you divvle; and offer her
Majesty the choice of punch or negus。〃
Among the young fellows with whom I was most intimate in Paris was
Eugene Beauharnais; the son of the ill…used and unhappy Josephine
by her former marriage with a French gentleman of good family。
Having a smack of the old blood in him; Eugene's manners were much
more refined than those of the new…fangled dignitaries of the
Emperor's Court; where (for my knife and fork were regularly laid
at the Tuileries) I have seen my poor friend Murat repeatedly
mistake a fork for a toothpick; and the gallant Massena devour
pease by means of his knife; in a way more innocent than graceful。
Talleyrand; Eugene; and I used often to laugh at these eccentricities
of our brave friends; who certainly did not shine in the
drawing…room; however brilliant they were in the
快捷操作: 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!
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!