登陆注册
25527900001003

第1003章

"This is what Prince Kaunitz asked me to tell you. But you need not be afraid of any violence, and you can go when you like."

"Then I am to be robbed of two hundred ducats with impunity. The empress might at least reimburse me if she does nothing more. Please to ask the prince whether I can ask the sovereign to give me that satisfaction; the least I can demand."

"I will tell him what you say."

"If not, I shall leave; for what can I do in a town where I can only drive, and where the Government keeps assassins in its pay?"

"You are right. We are all sure that Pocchini has calumniated you. The girl who recites Latin verses is well known, but none know her address.

I must advise you not to publish your tale as long as you are in Vienna, as it places Schrotembach in a very bad light, and you see the empress has to support him in the exercise of his authority."

"I see the force of your argument, and I shall have to devour my anger.

I will leave Vienna as soon as the washerwoman sends home my linen, but I

will have the story printed in all its black injustice."

"The empress is prejudiced against you, I don't know by whom."

"I know, though; it is that infernal old hag, Countess Salmor."

The next day I received a letter from Count Vitzthum, in which he said that Prince Kaunitz advised me to forget the two hundred ducats, that the girl and her so-called mother had left Vienna to all appearance, as someone had gone to the address and had failed to find her.

I saw that I could do nothing, and resolved to depart in peace, and afterwards to publish the whole story and to hang Pocchini with my own hands when next I met him. I did neither the one nor the other.

About that time a young lady of the Salis de Coire family arrived at Vienna without any companion. The imperial hangman Schrotembach, ordered her to leave Vienna in two days. She replied that she would leave exactly when she felt inclined. The magistrate consigned her to imprisonment in a convent, and she was there still when I left. The emperor went to see her, and the empress, his mother, asked him what he thought of her. His answer was, "I thought her much more amusing than Schrotembach."

Undoubtedly, every man worthy of the name longs to be free, but who is really free in this world? No one. The philosopher, perchance, may be accounted so, but it is at the cost of too precious sacrifices at the phantom shrine of Liberty.

I left the use of my suite of rooms, for which I had paid a month in advance, to Campioni, promising to wait for him at Augsburg, where the Law alone is supreme. I departed alone carrying with me the bitter regret that I had not been able to kill the monster, whose despotism had crushed me. I stopped at Linz on purpose to write to Schrotembach even a more bitter letter than that which I had written to the Duke of Wurtemburg in 1760. I posted it myself, and had it registered so as to be sure of its reaching the scoundrel to whom it had been addressed. It was absolutely necessary for me to write this letter, for rage that has no vent must kill at last. From Linz I had a three days' journey to Munich, where I called on Count Gaetan Zavoicki, who died at Dresden seven years ago. I had known him at Venice when he was in want, and I

had happily been useful to him. On my relating the story of the robbery that had been committed on me, he no doubt imagined I was in want, and gave me twenty-five louis. To tell the truth it was much less than what I had given him at Venice, and if he had looked upon his action as paying back a debt we should not have been quits; but as I had never wished him to think that I had lent, not given him money, I received the present gratefully. He also gave me a letter for Count Maximilian Lamberg, marshal at the court of the Prince-Bishop of Augsburg, whose acquaintance I had the honour of having.

There was no theatre then in Augsburg, but there were masked balls in which all classes mingled freely. There were also small parties where faro was played for small stakes. I was tired of the pleasure, the misfortune, and the griefs I had had in three capitals, and I resolved to spend four months in the free city of Augsburg, where strangers have the same privileges as the canons. My purse was slender, but with the economical life I led I had nothing to fear on that score. I was not far from Venice, where a hundred ducats were always at my service if I wanted them. I played a little and waged war against the sharpers who have become more numerous of late than the dupes, as there are also more doctors than patients. I also thought of getting a mistress, for what is life without love? I had tried in vain to retrace Gertrude; the engraver was dead, and no one knew what had become of his daughter.

Two or three days before the end of the carnival I went to a hirer of carriages, as I had to go to a ball at some distance from the town.

While the horses were being put in, I entered the room to warm my hands, for the weather was very cold. A girl came up and asked me if I would drink a glass of wine.

"No," said I; and on the question being repeated, repeated the monosyllable somewhat rudely. The girl stood still and began to laugh, and I was about to turn angrily away when she said,--

"I see you do not remember me?"

I looked at her attentively, and at last I discovered beneath her unusually ugly features the lineaments of Anna Midel, the maid in the engraver's house.

"You remind me of Anna Midel," said I.

"Alas, I was Anna Midel once. I am no longer an object fit for love, but that is your fault."

"Mine?"

"Yes; the four hundred florins you gave me made Count Fugger's coachman marry me, and he not only abandoned me but gave me a disgusting disease, which was like to have been my death. I recovered my health, but I never shall recover my good looks."

"I am very sorry to hear all this; but tell me what has become of Gertrude?"

"Then you don't know that you are going to a ball at her house to-night?"

"Her house?"

"Yes. After her father's death she married a well-to-do and respectable man, and I expect you will be pleased with the entertainment"

"Is she pretty still?"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 杀手的重生

    杀手的重生

    蓝雨是国际著名杀手,在一次刺杀任务失败被和自己相处十年的同伴背叛杀害后,穿越到一个修仙大陆附身在叶家二小姐叶雨馨的身上,开始了一段不平凡的一生。。。。。
  • 长安异想:研花

    长安异想:研花

    因为一场约会穿越到了半虚半实的架空版唐朝,闺蜜,同窗,网友秒变豪门纨绔。正准备抱着美男舔,不经意便得知这场意外穿越背后蓄谋已久的真相,尘封十年的秘密被揭开,终迎百口莫辩的信任危机。总受女主太宅腐,分裂男主太心机。嘤嘤嘤不公平,为什么配角的结局都那么好!谁人年少轻狂,叹自风情万种,焚尽满城风云,研尽世间百花,只愿一世长安。嗷嗷嗷~“长安异想”第一弹,入秋八月,研花有你。
  • 喜欢凯源玺是一种说不出来的味道

    喜欢凯源玺是一种说不出来的味道

    全球3富豪,在机场碰见tf就是因为这样子会擦出什么火花呢?到最后女主会受到什么伤害?男主又会受到什么伤害?他们又能否有个圆满的结局?想知道结果那就看文章吧!
  • 穿越之绝色公主人人追

    穿越之绝色公主人人追

    王朝更替,她是其中的操盘手,还是只是一个棋子。一念得失,求仁是否能得仁。心念天下,却被逼迫到无路可逃。一朝穿越,看近天下荣辱,唯余满地断魂。她不是神,亦没有颠覆天下的能力,只能看着亲近她、善待她、爱怜她的人死死伤伤。终于玉碎、割袍、断发,欲与青灯相伴之时,耳边却传来一声悲叹,“无双,你可还记得欠我一条命。”……“休想合离,你与他如何我不管,今生今世,你只能是我慕容随歌的妻。”他怒不可遏,却依旧忍受背叛,也不愿失去。“阿浅,我放不下你,即便背信弃义。”他一袭红杉如同浴火红莲,似是踏着红霞而来,将她所有的视线渲染得绯红。他白衣胜雪,玉颜恍若九天谪仙:“我终究还是输给了你。”……
  • 没有垃圾食品,只有垃圾吃法

    没有垃圾食品,只有垃圾吃法

    本书主要是通过对食品的烹饪方式、加工方式、食用方式、健康食用方式、健康烹调方式等多个方面,介绍健康食材变成垃圾食品的过程,并向读者介绍真正正确健康的烹调方法和吃法,帮助人们把好饮食关,从而使人体更健康。
  • 何处乡

    何处乡

    人妖狐鬼,铁甲风月,万里江山藏的是千年血泪。既是看客,何求因果?你若认出他来,只当未见,莫要问他:“何处故乡?”
  • 阴魂不散Ⅱ

    阴魂不散Ⅱ

    本书是继阴魂不散之后的故事,梨花带来的诅咒还没有停止,死去的人们就是死去了,可是这些事情不是随着死去的人而淹没在这个世间,正所谓人间正道是沧桑,区区一介人生又能奈何。且看阴魂不散II之魔高一丈。
  • 九劫仙戒

    九劫仙戒

    “千万别惹我,否则你们会死得很难看!”作为一个在下界重生了八次,又修炼了八次的仙界小兵,李灵墨在阵法、丹药、符篆、炼器、御兽等方面能力已经达到下界巅峰,无人能及!在我面前布阵,简直是自寻死路,我分分钟就破掉你的低级阵,而后用九阶阵反杀你!六品高级丹药就被你们争得你死我活,我就不拿九品仙丹来打击你们了!九阶符篆一出,什么魔皇、妖帝、人主,都给我乖乖的趴在地上!天地异变有什么好奇怪的,不就是我又炼制出了一件九阶极品法宝吗!忘了告诉你们,那几只称霸妖族的九阶凶兽,是我精心培养出来的灵兽……
  • 天定爱情之缘

    天定爱情之缘

    他们是富家之子,她们是富家之女。天定的缘分,但总会有分差,爱你不需要理由,伤你也不需要理由
  • 缠绵蜜恋:你是我的专属妖精

    缠绵蜜恋:你是我的专属妖精

    一朝渡劫,却被最信任的妹妹刺穿丹田被天雷劈成了灰穿越到了另一个世界。穿越就穿越,为什么穿成了有夫之妇?!“蒋大少,你把我吃也吃了,放过我成吗——”“媒妁之言,父母之命,岂是你说放就能放的。”“可是你也不喜欢我啊。”“不喜欢你,我能夜夜上你七次?”起初,他只不过因为她性格突变从而有了些兴趣。谁知道尝了味道之后,更是沉迷留恋。他本以为只是单纯迷念她的身体,却不知她在什么时候竟牢牢的握住了他的喜怒哀乐。乐正雪,你到底是不是对我用了什么妖术,才让我对你这般的恋恋不忘?我要你发誓,这辈子你只能做我一人的专属妖精!