Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 56, No. 345, July, 1844 by Various
page 98 of 314 (31%)
page 98 of 314 (31%)
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the deadly smoke disperse, and give to view once more the peace of
heaven!--The petty aggravations of daily strife,--the cold-blooded oppressions of conquest,--the contest with the peasant for his morsel of bread, or with his chaste wife for her fidelity,--are so revolting to my conscience of good and evil, that as the Lord liveth there are moments when I am tempted to resign for ever the music I love so well of drum and trumpet, and betake myself, like my royal father, to some drowsy monastery, to listen to the end of my days to the snuffling of Capuchins!" Scarce could Ottavio Gonzaga, so recently emancipated from the Escurial, refrain from making the sign of the cross at this heinous declaration!--But he contained himself.--It was his object to work his way still further into the confidence of his royal companion. "The chief pleasure I derived from the visit of the French princess to Namur," resumed Don John, "was the respite it afforded from the contemplation of such miseries and such aggressions. I was sick at heart of groans and murmurs,--weary of the adjustment of grievances. To behold a woman's face, whereof the eyes were not red with weeping, was _something_!"-- "And the eyes of the fair Queen of Navarre are said to be of the brightest!" observed Gonzaga with a sneer. "As God judgeth my soul, I noted not their hue or brightness!" exclaimed Don John. "Her voice was a woman's--her bearing a woman's--her tastes a woman's. And it brought back the memory of better days to hear the silken robes of her train rustling around me, instead of the customary clang of mail; and merry laughs instead of |
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