<h2><SPAN name="Page_226"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
<h2>A DELILAH OF THE COURT OF FRANCE</h2>
<p>It was a cruel fate that snatched Gabrielle d'Estrées
from the arms of Henri IV., King of France and
Navarre, at the moment when her long devotion to
her hero-lover was on the eve of being crowned by
the bridal veil; and for many a week there was no
more stricken man in Europe than the disconsolate
King as he wailed in his black-draped chamber, "The
root of my love is dead, and will never blossom again."</p>
<p>No doubt Henri's grief was as sincere as it was
deep, for he had loved his golden-haired Gabrielle of
the blue eyes and dimpled baby-cheeks as he had
never loved woman before. It was the passion of a
lifetime, the passion of a strong man in his prime,
that fate had thus nipped in the fullness of its bloom;
and its loss plunged him into an abyss of sorrow and
despair such as few men have known.</p>
<p>But with the hero of Ivry no emotion of grief
or pleasure ever endured long. He was a man of
erratic, widely contrasted moods—now on the peaks
of happiness, now in the gulf of dejection; one mood
succeeding another as inevitably and widely as the
pendulum swings. Thus when he had spent three
<SPAN name="Page_227"></SPAN>seemingly endless months of gloom and solitude,
reaction seized him, and he flung aside his grief with
his black raiment. He was still in the prime of his
strength, with many years before him. He would
drink the cup of life, even to its dregs. He had long
been weary of the matrimonial chains that fettered
him to Marguerite of Valois. He would strike them
off, and in another wife and other loves find a new
lease of pleasure.</p>
<p>Thus it was with no heavy heart that he turned
his back on Fontainebleau and his darkened room,
and fared to Paris to find a new vista of pleasure
opening to him at his palace doors, and his ears full
of the praises of a new divinity who had come, during
his absence, to grace his Court—a girl of such beauty,
sprightliness, and wit as his capital had not seen for
many a year.</p>
<p>Henriette d'Entragues—for this was the divinity's
name—was equipped by fate as few women were
ever equipped, for the conquest of a King. Her
mother, Marie Touchet, had been "light-o'-love" to
Charles IX.; her father was the Seigneur d'Entragues,
member of one of the most blue-blooded
families of France, a soldier and statesman of fame;
and their daughter had inherited, with her mother's
beauty and grace, the clever brain and diplomatic skill
of her father. A strange mixture of the bewitching
and bewildering, this daughter of a King's mistress
seems to have been. Tall and dark, voluptuous of
figure, with ripe red lips, and bold and dazzling black
eyes, she was, in her full-blooded, sensuous charms,
the very "antipodes" to the childish, fairy-like
<SPAN name="Page_228"></SPAN>Gabrielle who had so long been enshrined in the
King's heart. And to this physical appeal—irresistible
to a man of such strong passion as Henri, she
added gifts of mind which "baby Gabrielle" could
never claim.</p>
<p>She had a wit as brilliant as the tongue which was
its vehicle; her well-stored brain was more than a
match for the most learned men at Court, and she
would leave an archbishop discomfited in a theological
argument, to cross swords with Sully himself
on some abstruse problem of statesmanship. When
Sully had been brought to his knees, she would rush
away, with mischief in her eyes, to take the lead in
some merry escapade or practical joke, her silvery
laughter echoing in some remote palace corridor.
A bewildering, alluring bundle of inconsistencies—beauty,
savant, wit, and madcap—such was Henriette
d'Entragues when Henri, fresh from his woes, came
under the spell of her magnetism.</p>
<p>Here, indeed, was an escape from his grief such as
the King had never dared to hope for. Before he
had been many hours in his palace, Henri was
caught hopelessly in the toils of the new siren, and
was intoxicated by her smiles and witcheries. Never
was conquest so speedy, so dramatic. Before a
week had flown he was at Henrietta's feet, as lovesick
a swain as ever sighed for a lady, pouring love
into her ears and writing her passionate letters
between the frequent meetings, in which he would
send her a "good night, my dearest heart," with
"a million kisses."</p>
<p>In the days of his lusty youth the idol and hero of
<SPAN name="Page_229"></SPAN>France had never known passion such as this
which
consumed him within sight of his fiftieth birthday,
and which was inspired by a woman of much less
than half his years; for at the time Henri was forty-six,
and Henriette was barely twenty.</p>
<p>He quickly found, however, that his wooing was
not to be all "plain sailing." When Henriette's
parents heard of it, they affected to be horrified at
the danger in which their beloved daughter was
placed. They summoned her home from the perils
of Court and a King's passion; and when Henri sent
an envoy to bring them to reason they sent him back
with a rebuff. Their daughter was to be no man's—not
even a King's—plaything. If Henri's passion
was sincere, he must prove it by a definite promise
of marriage; and only on this condition would their
opposition be removed.</p>
<p>Even to such a stipulation Henri, such was his
infatuation, made no demur. With his own hand
he wrote an agreement pledging himself to make
Demoiselle Henriette his lawful wife in case, within
a certain period, she became the mother of a son; and
undertaking to dissolve his marriage with his wife,
Marguerite of France, for this purpose. And this
agreement, signed with his own hand, he sent to the
Seigneur d'Entragues and his wife, accompanied by
a <i>douceur</i> of a hundred thousand crowns.</p>
<p>But before it was dispatched a more formidable
obstacle than even the lady's natural guardians
remained to be faced—none other than the Duc de
Sully, the man who had shared all the perils of a
hundred fights with Henri and was at once his chief
<SPAN name="Page_230"></SPAN>counsellor and his <i>fidus Achates</i>. When
at last he
summoned up courage to place the document in
Sully's hands, he awaited the verdict as nervously
as any schoolboy in the presence of a dreaded master.
Sully read through the paper, was silent for a few
moments, and then spoke. "Sire," he said, "am I
to give you my candid opinion on this document, without
fear of anger or giving offence?" "Certainly,"
answered the King. "Well then, this is what I think
of it," was Sully's reply, as he tore the document in
two pieces and flung them on the floor. "Sully, you
are mad!" exclaimed Henri, flaring into anger at such
an outrage. "You are right, Sire, I am a weak fool,
and would gladly know myself still more a fool—if
I might be the only one in France!"</p>
<p>It was in vain, however, that Sully pointed out the
follies and dangers of such a step as was proposed.
Henri's mind was made up, and leaving his friend,
in high dudgeon, he went to his study and re-wrote
his promise of marriage. The way was at last clear
to the gratification of his passion. Henriette was
more than willing, her parents' scruples and greed
were appeased, and as for Sully—well, he must be
left to get over his tantrums. Even to please such
an old and trusted friend he could not sacrifice such
an opportunity for pleasure and a new lease of life
as now presented itself!</p>
<p>Halcyon months followed for Henri—months in
which even Gabrielle was forgotten in the intoxication
of a new passion, compared with which the
memory of her gentle charms was but as water
to rich, red wine. That Henriette proved wilful,
<SPAN name="Page_231"></SPAN>capricious, and extravagant—that her vanity
drained
his exchequer of hundreds of thousands of crowns
for costly jewellery and dresses, was a mere bagatelle,
compared with his delight in her manifold
allurements.</p>
<p>But Sully had by no means said his last word.
The decree for annulling Henri's marriage with Marguerite
de Valois was pronounced; and it was of the
highest importance that she should have a worthy
successor as Queen of France—a successor whom he
found in Marie de Medicis.</p>
<p>The marriage-contract was actually sealed before
the King had any suspicion that his hand was being
disposed of, and it was only when Sully one day
entered his study with the startling words, "Sire, we
have been marrying you," that the awakening came.
For a few moments Henri sat as a man stunned, his
head buried in his hands; then, with a deep sigh,
he spoke: "If God orders it so, so let it be. There
seems to be no escape; since you say that it is
necessary for my kingdom and my subjects, why,
marry I must."</p>
<p>It was a strange predicament in which Henri now
found himself. Still more infatuated than ever with
Henriette, he was to be tied for life to a Princess
whom he had never even seen. To add to the
embarrassment of his position, the condition of his
marriage promise to Henriette was already on the
way to fulfilment; and he was thus pledged to wed
her as strongly as any State compact could bind him
to stand at the altar with Marie de Medicis. One
thing was clear, he must at any cost recover that fatal
<SPAN name="Page_232"></SPAN>document; and, while he was giving orders for
the
suitable reception of his new Queen, and arranging
for her triumphal progress to Paris, he was writing
to Henriette and her parents demanding the return
of his promise of marriage agreement—to her, a
pleading letter in which he prays her "to return the
promise you have by you and not to compel me to
have recourse to other means in order to obtain it";
to her father, a more imperious demand to which he
expects instant obedience.</p>
<p>As some consolation to his mistress, whose alternate
tears, rage, and reproaches drove him to distraction,
he creates her Marquise de Verneuil and promises
that, if he should be unable to marry her, he will at
least give her a husband of Royal rank, the Due
de Nevers, who was eager to make her his wife.</p>
<p>But pleadings and threats alike fail to secure the
return of the fatal document, and Henri is reduced
to despair, until Henriette gives birth to a dead child
and his promise thus becomes of as little value as
the paper it was written on. The condition has
failed, and he is a free man to marry his Tuscan
Princess, while Henriette, thus foiled in her great
ambition, is in danger not only of losing her coveted
crown, but her place in the King's favour. The days
of her wilful autocracy are ended; and, though her
heart is full of anger and disappointment, she writes
to him a pitiful letter imploring him still to love her
and not to cast her "from the Heaven to which he has
raised her, down to the earth where he found her."
"Do not let your wedding festivities be the funeral
of my hopes," she writes. "Do not banish me from
<SPAN name="Page_233"></SPAN>your Royal presence and your heart. I speak in
sighs to you, my King, my lover, my all—I, who
have been loved by the earth's greatest monarch, and
am willing to be his mistress and his servant."</p>
<p>To such humility was the proud, arrogant beauty
now reduced. She was an abject suppliant where
she had reigned a Queen. Nor did her pleadings
fall on deaf ears. Her Royal lover's hand was
given, against his will, to his new Queen, but his
heart, he vowed, was all Henriette's—so much so
that he soon installed her in sumptuous rooms in his
palace adjoining those of the Queen herself.</p>
<p>Was ever man placed in a more delicate position
than this King of France, between the rival claims
of his wife and mistress, who were occupying adjacent
apartments, and who, moreover, were both
about to become mothers? It speaks well for Henri's
tactfulness that for a time at least this <i>ménage à
trois</i>
appears to have been quite amiably conducted.
When Queen Marie gave birth to a son it was to
Henriette that the infant's father first confided the
good news, seasoning it with "a million kisses" for
herself. And when Henriette, in turn, became a
mother for the second time, the double Royal event
was celebrated by fêtes and rejoicings in which each
lady took an equally proud and conspicuous part.</p>
<p>It was inevitable, however, that a woman so
favoured by the King, and of so imperious a nature,
should have enemies at Court; and it was not long
before she became the object of a conspiracy of which
the Duchesse de Villars and the Queen were the
arch-leaders. One day a bundle of letters was sent
<SPAN name="Page_234"></SPAN>anonymously to Henri, letters full of tenderness
and passion, addressed by his beloved Marquise,
Henriette, to the Prince de Joinville. The King
was furious at such evidence of his mistress's disloyalty,
and vowed he would never see her again.
But all his storming and reproaches left the Marquise
unmoved. She declared, with scorn in her voice,
that the letters were forgeries; that she had never
written to Joinville in her life, nor spoken a word to
him that His Majesty might not have heard. She
even pointed out the forger, the Duc de Guise's
secretary, and was at last able to convince the King
of her innocence.</p>
<p>The Duchesse de Villars and Joinville were
banished from the Court in disgrace; the Queen had
a severe lecture from her husband; and Henriette
was not only restored to full favour, but was consoled
by a welcome present of six thousand pounds.</p>
<p>But the days of peace in the King's household
were now gone for ever. Queen Marie, thus humiliated
by her rival, became her bitter enemy and also
a thorn in the side of her unfaithful husband. Every
day brought its fierce quarrels which only stopped on
the verge of violence. More than once in fact Henri
had to beat a retreat before his Queen's clenched
fist, while she lost no opportunity of insulting and
humiliating the Marquise.</p>
<p>It is impossible altogether to withhold sympathy
from a man thus distracted between two jealous
women—a shrewish wife, who in her most amiable
mood repelled his advances with coldness and cutting
words, and a mistress who vented on him all the re<SPAN name="Page_235"></SPAN>sentment
which the Queen's insults and snubs roused
in her. Even all Sully's diplomacy was powerless
to pour oil on such vexed waters as these.</p>
<p>The Queen, however, had not long to wait for
her revenge, which came with the disclosure of a conspiracy,
at the head of which were Henriette's father
and her half-brother, the Comte d'Auvergne, and in
which, it was proved, she herself had played no insignificant
part. Punishment came, swift and terrible.
Her father and brother were sentenced to death, herself
to perpetual confinement in a monastery.</p>
<p>But even at this crisis in her life, Henriette's stout
heart did not fail her for a moment. "The King
may take my life, if he pleases," she said. "Everybody
will say that he killed his wife; for I was Queen
before the Tuscan woman came on the scene at all."
None knew better than she that she could afford thus
to put on a bold front. Henri was still her slave, to
whom her little finger was more than his crown; and
she knew that in his hands both her liberty and her
life were safe. And thus it proved; for before she
had spent many weeks in the Monastery of Beaumont-les-Tours,
its doors were flung open for her,
and the first news she heard was that her father was
a free man, while her brother's death-sentence had
been commuted to a few years in the Bastille.</p>
<p>Thus Henriette returned to the turbulent life of
the palace—the daily routine of quarrels and peacemaking
with the King, and undisguised hostility from
the Queen, through all of which Henri's heart still
remained hers. "How I long to have you in my
arms again," he writes, when on a hunting excursion,
<SPAN name="Page_236"></SPAN>which had led him to the scene of their early
romance. "As my letter brings back the memory of
the past, I know you will feel that nothing in the
present is worth anything in comparison. This, at
least, was my feeling as I walked along the roads
I so often traversed in the old days on my journey
to your side. When I sleep I dream of you; when
I wake my thoughts are all of you." He sends her
a million kisses, and vows that all he asks of life
is that she shall always love him entirely and
him alone.</p>
<p>One would have thought that such a conquest of
a King and such triumph over a Queen would have
gratified the ambition of the most exacting of women.
But the Marquise de Verneuil seems to have found
small satisfaction in her victories. When she was
not provoking quarrels with Henri, which roused him
to such a pitch of anger that at times he threatened
to strike her, she received his advances with a coldness
or a sullen acquiescence calculated to chill the
most ardent lover. In other moods she would drive
him to despair by declaring that she had long ceased
to love him, and that all she wanted from him was a
dowry to carry in marriage to one or other of several
suitors who were dying for her hand.</p>
<p>But Madame's day of triumph was drawing much
nearer to an end than she imagined. The end, in
fact, came with dramatic suddenness when Henri
first set eyes on the radiantly lovely Charlotte de
Montmorency. Weary at heart of the tempers and
exactions of Henriette, it needed but such a lure as
this to draw him finally from her side; and from the
<SPAN name="Page_237"></SPAN>first flash of Charlotte's beautiful eyes this
most
susceptible of Kings was undone. Madame de Verneuil's
reign was ended; the next quarrel was made
the occasion for a complete rupture, and the Court
saw her no more.</p>
<p>Already she had lost the bloom of her beauty; she
had grown stout and coarse through her excessive
fondness for the pleasures of the table, and the rest
of her days, which were passed in friendless isolation,
she spent in indulging appetites, which added to her
mountain of flesh while robbing her of the last trace
of good-looks. When the knife of Ravaillac brought
Henri's life and his new romance to a tragic end, the
Marquise was among those who were suspected of
inspiring the assassin's blow; and although her guilt
was never proved, the taint of suspicion clung to her
to her last day.</p>
<p>After fruitless angling for a husband—the Duc de
Guise, the Prince de Joinville, and many another
who, with one consent, fled from her advances, she
resigned herself to a life of obscurity and gluttony,
until death came, one day in the year 1633, to release
her from a world of vanity and disillusionment.</p>
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