Twenty Years After eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 926 pages of information about Twenty Years After.

Twenty Years After eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 926 pages of information about Twenty Years After.

“This temporary sepulture is,” he said, “that of a man who was of feeble mind, yet one whose reign was full of great events; because over this king watched the spirit of another man, even as this lamp keeps vigil over this coffin and illumines it.  He whose intellect was thus supreme, Raoul, was the actual sovereign; the other, nothing but a phantom to whom he lent a soul; and yet, so powerful is majesty amongst us, this man has not even the honor of a tomb at the feet of him in whose service his life was worn away.  Remember, Raoul, this!  If Richelieu made the king, by comparison, seem small, he made royalty great.  The Palace of the Louvre contains two things —­ the king, who must die, and royalty, which never dies.  The minister, so feared, so hated by his master, has descended into the tomb, drawing after him the king, whom he would not leave alone on earth, lest his work should be destroyed.  So blind were his contemporaries that they regarded the cardinal’s death as a deliverance; and I, even I, opposed the designs of the great man who held the destinies of France within the hollow of his hand.  Raoul, learn how to distinguish the king from royalty; the king is but a man; royalty is the gift of God.  Whenever you hesitate as to whom you ought to serve, abandon the exterior, the material appearance for the invisible principle, for the invisible principle is everything.  Raoul, I seem to read your future destiny as through a cloud.  It will be happier, I think, than ours has been.  Different in your fate from us, you will have a king without a minister, whom you may serve, love, respect.  Should the king prove a tyrant, for power begets tyranny, serve, love, respect royalty, that Divine right, that celestial spark which makes this dust still powerful and holy, so that we —­ gentlemen, nevertheless, of rank and condition —­ are as nothing in comparison with the cold corpse there extended.”

“I shall adore God, sir,” said Raoul, “respect royalty and ever serve the king.  And if death be my lot, I hope to die for the king, for royalty and for God.  Have I, sir, comprehended your instructions?”

Athos smiled.

“Yours is a noble nature.” he said; “here is your sword.”

Raoul bent his knee to the ground.

“It was worn by my father, a loyal gentleman.  I have worn it in my turn and it has sometimes not been disgraced when the hilt was in my hand and the sheath at my side.  Should your hand still be too weak to use this sword, Raoul, so much the better.  You will have the more time to learn to draw it only when it ought to be used.”

“Sir,” replied Raoul, putting the sword to his lips as he received it from the count, “I owe you everything and yet this sword is the most precious gift you have yet made me.  I will wear it, I swear to you, as a grateful man should do.”

“’Tis well; arise, vicomte, embrace me.”

Raoul arose and threw himself with emotion into the count’s arms.

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Twenty Years After from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.