【英文读物】The Knight of Malta.docx

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1、【英文读物】The Knight of MaltaCHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION.The travellers who now sail along the picturesque coasts within the district of the Bouches-du-Rhonethe peaceable inhabitants of shores perfumed by the orange-trees of Hyres, or the curious tourists, whom steamboats are continually transporting from M

2、arseilles to Nice or to Gnesare perhaps ignorant of the fact that two hundred years ago, under the flourishing administration of Cardinal Richelieu, the seashore of Provence was, almost every day, plundered by Algerian pirates, or other robbers from Barbary, whose audacity knew no bounds. Not only d

3、id they capture all the merchant vessels leaving port,although these ships were armed for war,but they landed under the cannon even of the forts, and carried away with impunity the inhabitant whose dwellings were not adequately armed and fortified.These depredations increased to such a degree that i

4、n 1633 Cardinal Richelieu instructed M. de Sguiran, one of the most eminent men of that time, to visit the coast of Provence, for the purpose of ascertaining the best means of protecting them from the invasion of pirates.We will quote a passage from the memoir of M. de Sguiran in order to give to th

5、e reader an exact idea of the scenes which are to follow.“There is,” says he, “in the town of La Ciotat, a sentry-box which the consuls have had built on one of the points of the rock of Cape lAigle, in which they keep a man, very expert in navigation, on guard night and day, to watch for pirate ves

6、sels.“Every evening, toward nightfall, the guard in the sentry-box of La Ciotat kindles his fire, which is continued by all the other similar sentry-boxes to the lighthouse of Bouc.“This is a certain signal that there is not a corsair in the sea.“If the said guard in the sentry-box has, on the contr

7、ary, recognised one, he makes two fires, as do all the others from Antibes to the lighthouse of Bouc, and this is accomplished in less than a half-hour of time.“The inhabitants of La Ciotat confess that commerce has been better during the last few years. But as far as can be learned, it is ruined.“T

8、he corsairs from Barbary in one year seized eighty vessels and put about fifty of their best sailors in chains.”As we have said, so great was the terror that these Barbary pirates inspired dong the coast that every house was transformed into a fortress.“Continuing our way,” says M. de Sguiran, “we a

9、rrived at the house of the lord of Boyer, gentleman of the kings chamber, which house we found in a state of defence, in case of a descent of the corsairs,having a terrace in front, facing the port, and on it twelve pieces of cast iron, several pieces of less calibre, and two swivel-guns, and in the

10、 said house four hundred pounds of powder, two hundred balls, two pairs of armour, and twelve muskets and short pikes.“At Bormez and at St. Tropez,” says M. de Sguiran, further on, “commerce is so seriously injured that it cannot amount to ten thousand pounds, which is a consequence not only of the

11、poverty of the inhabitants, but also of the invasions made by pirates, who enter their ports almost every day, so that very often vessels are compelled to touch port, in order that the men who man them may escape, or the inhabitants of the place arm themselves.“At Martignes, a community which has su

12、ffered great losses in the persons of its inhabitants,esteemed the best and most courageous seamen on the Mediterranean,many of them have been made slaves by the corsairs of Algiers and Tunis, who practise their piracies more than ever, in the sight of the forts and fortresses of that province.”The

13、reader can imagine the contempt of these Barbary pirates for the forts on the coast, when he knows that the seashore was in such a deplorable state of defence that M. de Sguiran says, in another passage of his report to Cardinal Richelieu:“The next day, January 24th, at seven oclock in the morning,

14、we went to the fortified castle named Cassis, belonging to the Lord Bishop of Marseilles, where we found that the entire garrison consisted of a porter only, a servant of the said bishop, who showed us the place, and where there were only two small pieces of ordnance, one of which had been emptied.”

15、Later, the Archbishop of Bordeaux made the same remark in reference to one of the strongest positions of Toulon.“The first and most important of these forts,” says the warrior prelate in his report, “is an old tower where there are two batteries, in which fifty cannon and two hundred soldiers could

16、be placed; there are good cannon within, but all are dismounted, and no ammunition, except what was sent by order of your Eminence Cardinal Richelieu fifteen days ago. The commandant is a simple, good man, who has for garrison only his wife and her servant, and, according to what he says, he has not

17、 received a farthing in twenty years.”Such was the state of things a few years before Cardinal Richelieu was invested by Louis XIII. with the office of grand master in chief and general superintendent of the navigation and commerce of France.In studying attentively the aim, the progress, the methods

18、, and results of the government of Richelieu,in comparing, in a word, the point of departure of his administration with the imperious conclusion of absolute centralisation toward which it always tended, and which he attained so victoriously,one is especially impressed by the character of the navy, b

19、y the incredible confusion and multiplicity of powers or rival rights which covered the seashore of the kingdom with their inextricable network.When the cardinal was entrusted with the maritime interests of France, he could count but little upon the support of a weak, timid, restless, and capricious

20、 king; besides, he felt that France was secretly agitated by profound political and religious discords. Alone, opposing the exorbitant pretensions represented by the most powerful houses of France,haughty and jealous guardians of the last traditions of feudal independence,it was essential that the w

21、ill of Richelieu should be indomitable, even obstinate, in order to crush beneath the level of administrative unity interests so numerous, so tenacious, and so rebellious! Such was, however, the work of this great minister.There is no doubt that the ardent and sacred love of the general good, the no

22、ble, instinctive perception of the needs and progress of humanity,those pure and serene aspirations of a DeWitt or a Franklin,would not have sufficed the cardinal in undertaking and sustaining so fierce a struggle; perhaps, too, it was essential that he should feel himself animated by an unbridled,

23、insatiable ambition, in order to cope with so many formidable antagonisms, to despise so many outcries, to prevent or punish so many dangerous revolts by prison, exile, or the scaffold, and at last achieve the end of gathering in his dying and sovereign hand all the resources of the state.It was by

24、this meanswe think so, at leastthat the genius of Richelieu, exalted by an unconquerable personality, succeeded in consummating this admirable centralisation of conflicting powers,the constant aim and glorious end of his administration.Unfortunately, he died at the time he was beginning to organise

25、this authority so valiantly conquered.If France, at the time of the cardinals death, presented still upon her surface the distinct evidences of a complete social overthrow, the soil was at least beginning to be freed from the thousand parasitical and devouring forces which had so long exhausted her

26、strength.So, one might say that almost always eminent men, although of diverse genius, are born in time to achieve the great labours of governments.To Richelieu, that resolute and indefatigable clearer of untilled ground, succeeds Mazarin, who levelled the earth so profoundly ploughed,then Colbert,

27、who sowed it, and made it fruitful.The imperial will of Richelieu appeared under one of its most brilliant aspects in the long struggle he was obliged to sustain, when he was entrusted with the organisation of the navy.Up to that time, the governor-generals of Provence had always challenged the orde

28、rs of the admiralty of France, styling themselves the “born admirals” of the Levant.As such, they pretended to the maritime authority of the province; a few of these governors, such as the Counts of Tende and of Sommerives, and, at the period of which we speak, the Duke of Guise, had received from t

29、he king special letters which conferred upon them the title of admiral. These concessions, drawn from the weakness of the monarch, far from supporting the pretentions of the governor-generals, protested, on the contrary, against their usurpation, since these titles proved clearly that the command of

30、 sea and land ought to be separate.Thus we see how divided and antagonistic were these rival powers, that the cardinal, in performing the functions of his office as grand master of navigation, wished imperiously to unite and centralise.It can be seen by this rapid and cursory view, and by the extrac

31、ts which we have borrowed from the report of M. de Sguiran, that a frightful disorder reigned in every department of power.This disorder was the more increased by the perpetually recurring conflicts of jurisdiction, either through the governors of the province, or through the admiralties, or through

32、 the feudal claims of many gentlemen whose estates commanded a forest or a river.In a word, abandonment or disorganisation of fortified places, ruin of commerce, robbery of the treasury, invasion of the seashore, terror of populations retiring into the interior of the country, in the hope of flying

33、from the attacks of these Barbary pirates,such was the grievous picture presented by Provence at the period in which this story opens,a story of incredible facts which seem rather to belong to the barbarity of the middle ages than to the seventeenth century.CHAPTER II. MISTRAONAbout the end of the m

34、onth of June, 1633, three distinguished travellers, arriving at Marseilles, established themselves in the best inn of the city. Their dress and accent were foreign. It was soon known that they were Muscovites, and although their attendants were not numerous, they lived in magnificent style. The elde

35、st of the three travellers had called upon the Marshal of Vitry, Governor of Provence, then residing in Marseilles, and the marshal had returned his visit, a circumstance which greatly enhanced the dignity of the foreigners.They employed their time in visiting the public build-ings, the port, and th

36、e docks. The preceptor of the youngest of these travellers, with the permission of the Marshal of Vitry, made careful inquiry of the consuls concerning the productions and commerce of Provence, the condition of the merchant service, its equipment and destination, evidently anxious, for the benefit o

37、f his pupil, to make a comparison between the growing navy of the North and the navy of one of the most important provinces of France.One day these Muscovites directed their journey toward Toulon.The eldest of the three foreigners appeared to be fifty years old. His countenance presented a singular

38、union of pride and severity. He was attired in black velvet; a long red beard covered his breast, and his hair, of the same colour, mingled with a few silver locks, showed beneath a Tartar cap trimmed with costly fur. His sea-green eyes, his sallow complexion, his hooked nose, his heavy eyebrows, an

39、d his thin lips gave him a hard and ironical expression.He walked at some distance from his companions, and seldom spoke, and when he did it was only to hurl at them some bitter sarcasm.The age and appearance of the two other Muscovites presented a striking contrast.One, who seemed to be the precept

40、or of the younger, was about forty-five years old. He was short and fat, almost to obesity, although he seemed to have a vigorous constitution.He wore a long robe of coarsely woven brown silk, after the manner of the Orientals, and an Asiatic cap; a Persian dagger of rare workmanship ornamented his

41、girdle of orange-coloured silk. His fat, ruddy face, covered with a thick brown beard, and his thick lips breathed sensuality; his small, gray eyes sparkled with malice. Sometimes, in a shrill voice, he gave vent to some jest of audacious cynicism, frequently in Latin, and always borrowed from Petro

42、nius or Martial; so that the other two travellers, with allusion to the taste of their companion for the works of Petronius, had given him the name of one of the heroes of this writer, and called him Trimalcyon.The pupil of this singular preceptor seemed at the most to be only twenty years of age. H

43、is person was of the ordinary size, but most elegant; his dress, like that of the Muscovites of the age, was a happy union of the fashions of the North and the East, arranged with perfect taste. His long brown hair fell in natural curls from a black cap, flat and without brim, set on one side and or

44、namented with a gold and purple band; the two ends of this band, finely embroidered and fringed, fell over the collar of a black woollen jacket, embossed with designs in purple and gold, and fastened to the hips by a cashmere shawl; a second jacket with loose sleeves, made of rich black Venetian fab

45、ric, and lined with scarlet taffeta, reached a little below the knees; large, loose Moorish trousers, hanging over red morocco buskins, completed the picturesque attire.An observer would have been embarrassed in assigning a certain character to the countenance of this young man. His features were of

46、 perfect regularity; a young, silky beard shaded his chin and lips; his large eyes shone like black diamonds, under his straight brown eyebrows; the dazzling enamel of his teeth scarcely equalled the deep carmine of his lips; his complexion was of a soft brown pallor, and his slender figure seemed t

47、o combine strength and elegance.But this physiognomy, as charming as it was expressive and variable, reflected in turn the different impressions which the two companions of this young man made on his mind.If Trimalcyon uttered some gross and licentious jest, the young man, whom we will call Erebus,

48、applauded it with a mocking, sneering smile, or, perhaps, replied in words which surpassed the cynicism of his preceptor.If the nobleman, Pog, a silent and morose man, made a remark of unusual bitterness, suddenly the nostrils of Erebus would dilate, his upper lip curl disdainfully, and his whole fa

49、ce express the most contemptuous sarcasm.On the contrary, if Erebus did not come under these two fatal influences, or an absurd boasting did not make him appear the advocate of vice, his face would become sweet and serene,an attractive dignity beamed from his beautiful features; for cynicism and irony only passed over his soul,noble and pure instincts soon resumed th

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