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- date: 2017-04-11T11:13:32-04:00
- description: "Monsieur the Cardinal"
- featured_image: ""
- tags: []
- title: "Chapter III: Monsieur the Cardinal"
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-
- Poor Gringoire! the din of all the great double petards of the Saint-Jean,
- the discharge of twenty arquebuses on supports, the detonation of that
- famous serpentine of the Tower of Billy, which, during the siege of Paris,
- on Sunday, the twenty-sixth of September, 1465, killed seven Burgundians
- at one blow, the explosion of all the powder stored at the gate of the
- Temple, would have rent his ears less rudely at that solemn and dramatic
- moment, than these few words, which fell from the lips of the usher, “His
- eminence, Monseigneur the Cardinal de Bourbon.”
-
- It is not that Pierre Gringoire either feared or disdained monsieur the
- cardinal. He had neither the weakness nor the audacity for that. A true
- eclectic, as it would be expressed nowadays, Gringoire was one of those
- firm and lofty, moderate and calm spirits, which always know how to bear
- themselves amid all circumstances (_stare in dimidio rerum_), and who
- are full of reason and of liberal philosophy, while still setting store by
- cardinals. A rare, precious, and never interrupted race of philosophers to
- whom wisdom, like another Ariadne, seems to have given a clew of thread
- which they have been walking along unwinding since the beginning of the
- world, through the labyrinth of human affairs. One finds them in all ages,
- ever the same; that is to say, always according to all times. And, without
- reckoning our Pierre Gringoire, who may represent them in the fifteenth
- century if we succeed in bestowing upon him the distinction which he
- deserves, it certainly was their spirit which animated Father du Breul,
- when he wrote, in the sixteenth, these naively sublime words, worthy of
- all centuries: “I am a Parisian by nation, and a Parrhisian in language,
- for _parrhisia_ in Greek signifies liberty of speech; of which I have
- made use even towards messeigneurs the cardinals, uncle and brother to
- Monsieur the Prince de Conty, always with respect to their greatness, and
- without offending any one of their suite, which is much to say.”
-
- There was then neither hatred for the cardinal, nor disdain for his
- presence, in the disagreeable impression produced upon Pierre Gringoire.
- Quite the contrary; our poet had too much good sense and too threadbare a
- coat, not to attach particular importance to having the numerous allusions
- in his prologue, and, in particular, the glorification of the dauphin, son
- of the Lion of France, fall upon the most eminent ear. But it is not
- interest which predominates in the noble nature of poets. I suppose that
- the entity of the poet may be represented by the number ten; it is certain
- that a chemist on analyzing and pharmacopolizing it, as Rabelais says,
- would find it composed of one part interest to nine parts of self-esteem.
-
- Now, at the moment when the door had opened to admit the cardinal, the
- nine parts of self-esteem in Gringoire, swollen and expanded by the breath
- of popular admiration, were in a state of prodigious augmentation, beneath
- which disappeared, as though stifled, that imperceptible molecule of which
- we have just remarked upon in the constitution of poets; a precious
- ingredient, by the way, a ballast of reality and humanity, without which
- they would not touch the earth. Gringoire enjoyed seeing, feeling,
- fingering, so to speak an entire assembly (of knaves, it is true, but what
- matters that?) stupefied, petrified, and as though asphyxiated in the
- presence of the incommensurable tirades which welled up every instant from
- all parts of his bridal song. I affirm that he shared the general
- beatitude, and that, quite the reverse of La Fontaine, who, at the
- presentation of his comedy of the “Florentine,” asked, “Who is the
- ill-bred lout who made that rhapsody?” Gringoire would gladly have
- inquired of his neighbor, “Whose masterpiece is this?”
-
- The reader can now judge of the effect produced upon him by the abrupt and
- unseasonable arrival of the cardinal.
-
- That which he had to fear was only too fully realized. The entrance of his
- eminence upset the audience. All heads turned towards the gallery. It was
- no longer possible to hear one’s self. “The cardinal! The cardinal!”
- repeated all mouths. The unhappy prologue stopped short for the second
- time.
-
- The cardinal halted for a moment on the threshold of the estrade. While he
- was sending a rather indifferent glance around the audience, the tumult
- redoubled. Each person wished to get a better view of him. Each man vied
- with the other in thrusting his head over his neighbor’s shoulder.
-
- He was, in fact, an exalted personage, the sight of whom was well worth
- any other comedy. Charles, Cardinal de Bourbon, Archbishop and Comte of
- Lyon, Primate of the Gauls, was allied both to Louis XI., through his
- brother, Pierre, Seigneur de Beaujeu, who had married the king’s eldest
- daughter, and to Charles the Bold through his mother, Agnes of Burgundy.
- Now, the dominating trait, the peculiar and distinctive trait of the
- character of the Primate of the Gauls, was the spirit of the courtier, and
- devotion to the powers that be. The reader can form an idea of the
- numberless embarrassments which this double relationship had caused him,
- and of all the temporal reefs among which his spiritual bark had been
- forced to tack, in order not to suffer shipwreck on either Louis or
- Charles, that Scylla and that Charybdis which had devoured the Duc de
- Nemours and the Constable de Saint-Pol. Thanks to Heaven’s mercy, he had
- made the voyage successfully, and had reached home without hindrance. But
- although he was in port, and precisely because he was in port, he never
- recalled without disquiet the varied haps of his political career, so long
- uneasy and laborious. Thus, he was in the habit of saying that the year
- 1476 had been “white and black” for him—meaning thereby, that in the
- course of that year he had lost his mother, the Duchesse de la
- Bourbonnais, and his cousin, the Duke of Burgundy, and that one grief had
- consoled him for the other.
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