Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Cinq-Mars or a Conspiracy Under Louis XIII, Vol. 2 of 2
We shall avail ourselves of the same privilege, though without the same genius. N 0 more than he will we seat ourselves upon the tripod of the unities, but merely cast ing our eyes upon Paris and the old dark palace of the Louvre, we will at once pass over the space of two hun dred leagues and the period of two years.
Two years! What changes may they not have upon men, upon their families, and above all in that great and so troublous family of nations, whose long alliances a single day suffices to destroy, whose wars are ended by a birth, whose peace is broken by a death! We ourselves have beheld kings returning to their dwell ing on a spring day; that same day a vessel sailed for a voyage of two years. The navigator returned. The kings were seated upon their thrones; nothing seemed to have taken place in his absence, and yet God had deprived those kings of a hundred days of their reign.
But nothing was changed for France in 1642, the epoch to which we turn, except her fears and her hopes. The future alone had changed its aspect. Before again beholding our personages, we must contemplate at large the state of the kingdom.
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