The Adventures of Gil Blas of Santillane - Alain René le Sage (best fiction books of all time .txt) 📗
- Author: Alain René le Sage
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and that he was very glad his nephew had behaved so as to meet my
ideas, because he meant to refresh his memory in my behalf, being
determined, as he was pleased to say, to place it beyond all
manner of doubt how far he himself participated in all my views,
and to make it evident that, instead of one fast friend, I had
two. In terms like these did Don Balthasar, through mere
friendship for Navarro, take the moulding of my fortunes on
himself.
On that same evening did I leave my paltry lodging to take up my
abode at the prime minister’s, where I sat down to supper with
Scipio in my own suite of apartments. There were we both waited
on by the servants belonging to the household, who as they stood
behind our chairs, while we were affecting the pomp and
circumstance of political elevation, were more likely than not to
be laughing in their sleeves at the pantomime they had been
ordered by their manager to play in our presence. When they had
taken away and left us to ourselves, my secretary being no longer
under restraint, gave vent to a thousand wild imaginations which
his sprightly temper and inventive hopes engendered in his fancy.
On my part, though by no means cold or insensible to the
brilliant prospects which were opening on my view, I did not as
yet yield in the least degree to the weakness of being thrust
aside from the right line of my
philosophy by temporal allurements. So much otherwise, that on
going to bed I fell into a sound sleep, without being haunted in
my dreams by those phantoms of flattering delusion which might
have gained admittance with no severe question from a corruptible
door-keeper. The ambitious Scipio, on the contrary, tossed and
tumbled all night in the agitation of restless contrivance.
Whenever he dozed a little imp took possession of his brain, with
a pen behind its ear, working out by all the rules of arithmetic
the bulky sum total of his daughter Seraphina’s marriage portion.
No sooner had I got my clothes on the next morning, than a
message came from his lordship. I flew like lightning at the
summons, when his excellency said: Now then, Santillane, suppose
you give us a specimen of your talents for business. You say that
the Duke of Lerma used to give you state papers to bring into
official form; and I have one, by way of experiment, on which you
shall try your skill. The subject you will easily comprehend: it
turns upon an exposition of public affairs, such as to throw an
artificial light on the first appearance of the new ministry, and
to prejudice the public in its favour. I have already whispered
it about by my emissaries, that every department of the state was
completely disorganized, that the talents which preceded us were
no talents at all; and the object at present is to impress both
court and city by a formal declaration with the idea, that our
aid is absolutely necessary to save the monarchy itself from
sinking. On this theme you may expatiate till the populace become
lock-jawed with astonishment, and the sober part of the public
are gravely argued out of all prepossession in favour of the
discarded party. By way of contrast, you will talk of the dignus
vindice nodus, taking care to translate it into Spanish; and
boast of the measures adopted under the new order of things, to
secure the permanent glory of the king’s reign, to give perpetual
prosperity to his dominions, and to confer perfect, unchangeable
happiness on his good people.
His lordship, having given out the general subject of my thesis,
left me with a paper containing the heads of charges, whether
just or unjust, against the late administration: and I remember
perfectly well, that there were ten articles, whose lightest
word, even of the lightest article, would harrow up the soul of a
true Spaniard, and make his knotted and combined locks to part.
That the current of my fancy might experience no interruption, he
shut me into a little closet near his own, where the spirit of
poetry might possess me in all its freedom and in dependence. My
best faculties were called forth, to compose a statement of
affairs commensurate with my own concern in the sweeping of the
new brooms. My first object was to lay open the nakedness and
abandonment of the kingdom: the finances in a state of
bankruptcy, the civil list and immediate resources of the crown
pawned fifty times over, the navy unpaid, dismantled, and in
mutiny. All this hideous delineation was referred for its justice
and accuracy to the wrong-headedness and stupidity of government
at the close of the last reign, and the doctrine most strongly
enforced, that unexampled wisdom and patriotism only could ward
off the fatal consequences. In short, the monarchy could only be
sustained on the shoulders of our political sufficiency and
reforming prudence. The ex-ministry were so cruelly belaboured,
that the Duke of Lerma’s ruin, according to the terms of my
syllogism, was the salvation of Spain. To own the truth, though
my professions were in the spirit of Christian charity towards
that nobleman, I was not sorry to give him a sly rub in the
exercise of my function. Oh man! man! what a compound of candour-breathing satire and splenetic impartiality art thou!
Towards the conclusion, having finished my frightful portraiture
of overhanging evils, I endeavoured to allay the storm my art had
raised by making futurity as bright as the past had been gloomy.
The Count of Olivarez was
brought in at the close, like the tutelary deity of an ancient
commonwealth in the crisis of its fate. I promised more than
paganism ever feigned or chivalry fancied in the wildest of its
crusading projects. In a word, I so exactly executed what the new
minister meant, that he seemed not to know his own hints again,
when drawn out in my emphatic and appropriate language.
Santillane, said he, do you know that this is more like the
composition one might expect from a secretary of state, than like
that of a private secretary? I can no longer be surprised that
the Duke of Lerma was fond of calling your talents into action.
Your style is concise, and by no means inelegant; but it creeps
rather too much in the level paths of nature. At the same time,
pointing out the passages which did not hit his fancy, he
corrected them; and I gathered from the touches he threw in, that
Navarro was right in saying he affected sententious wit, but
mistook for it quaint and stale conceits. Nevertheless, though he
preferred the stately, or rather the grotesque in writing, he
suffered two thirds of my performance to stand without
alteration; and by way of proving how entirely he was satisfied,
sent me three hundred pistoles by Don Raymond after dinner.
CH. VI. The application of the three hundred pistoles, and
Scipio’s commission connected with them. Success of the state
paper mentioned in the last chapter.
THIS handsome present of the minister furnished Scipio with a new
subject of congratulation, by reason of our second appearance at
court. You may remark, said he, that fortune is preparing a load
of aggrandizement to lay on your lordship’s shoulders. Are you
still sorry for having turned your back on solitude? May the
Count of Olivarez live for ever! he is a very different sort of a
master from his predecessor. The Duke of Lerma, with all your
devotion to his service, left you to live upon suction for months
without a pistole to bless yourself with; and the count has
already made you a present which you could have had no reason to
expect but after a course of long service.
I should very much like, added he, that the lords of Leyva should
be witnesses of your great success, or at least that they should
be informed of it. It is high time indeed, answered I, and I
meant to speak with you on that subject. They must doubtless be
impatient to hear of my proceedings, but I waited till my fate
was fixed, and till I could decide for certain whether I should
stay at court or not. Now that I am sure of my destination, you
have only to set out for Valencia whenever you please, and to
acquaint those noblemen with my present situation, which I
consider as their doing, since it is evident that, but for them,
I should never have resolved on my journey to Madrid. My dear
master, cried the son of Bohemian accident, what joy shall I
communicate by relating what has happened to you! Why am I not
already at the gates of Valencia? But I shall be there forthwith.
Don Alphonso’s two horses are ready in the stable. I shall take
one of my lord’s livery servants with me. Besides that company is
pleasant on the road, you know very well the effect of official
parade, in making impression on the natives of a provincial town.
I could not help laughing at my secretary’s foolish vanity; and
yet, with vanity perhaps more than equal to his own, I left him
to do as he pleased. Go about your business, said I, and make the
best of your way back; for I have an other commission to give
you. I mean to send you to the Asturias with some money for my
mother. Through neglect I have suffered the time to elapse when I
promised to remit her a hundred pistoles, and pledged you to make
the payment in person. Such engagements ought to be held sacred
by a son; and I reproach myself with inaccuracy in the observance
of mine. Sir, answered Scipio, within six weeks I shall bring you
an account of both your commissions; having opened my budget to
the lords of Leyva, looked in at your country-house, and taken a
peep at the town of Oviedo, the recollection of which I cannot
admit into my mind, without turning over three-fourths of the
inhabitants, and one-half of the remaining quarter, to the
corrective discipline of that infernal executioner, who is
supposed to be kept on foot for the purpose of castigating
sinners. I then counted down one hundred pistoles to that same
son of a wandering mother for my honoured parents’ annuity, and
another hundred for himself; meaning that he should perform his
long journey without grumbling on my account by the way.
Some days after his departure his lordship sent our memorial to
press; and it was no sooner published than it became the topic of
conversation in every circle throughout Madrid. The people,
enamoured of novelty, took up this well written statement of
their own wretchedness with fond partiality; the derangement and
exhaustion of the finances, painted with a mixture of truth and
poetry, excited a strong feeling of popular indignation against
the Duke of Lerma; and if these paper bullets of the brain, cast
in the political armoury of a rival, failed to carry victory with
them in the opinions of all mankind, they were at all events
hailed with triumph by the most clamorous of our own partisans.
As for the magnificent promises which the Count of Olivarez threw
in, and among others that of keeping the machine of state in
motion, by a system of economy, without adding to the public
burdens, they were caught at with avidity by the citizens at
large, and considered as pledges of an enlightened and patriotic
policy, so that the whole city resounded with the acclamation of
panegyric and congratulation on the opening of new prospects.
The minister, delighted to have gained his end so easily, which
in that publication had only been to draw popularity upon
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