The Man in the Iron Mask by Alexandre Dumas (web based ebook reader .TXT) đ
- Author: Alexandre Dumas
Book online «The Man in the Iron Mask by Alexandre Dumas (web based ebook reader .TXT) đ». Author Alexandre Dumas
âOh! I take no heed of these details,â replied the captain. âI am but an indifferent sailor. Like all nervous people, I hate the sea; and yet I have an idea that, with ships, France being a seaport with two hundred exits, we might have sailors.â
Colbert drew from his pocket a little oblong book divided into two columns. On the first were the names of vessels, on the other the figures recapitulating the number of cannon and men requisite to equip these ships. âI have had the same idea as you,â said he to DâArtagnan, âand I have had an account drawn up of the vessels we have altogetherâthirty-five ships.â
âThirty-five ships! impossible!â cried DâArtagnan.
âSomething like two thousand pieces of cannon,â said Colbert. âThat is what the king possesses at this moment. Of five and thirty vessels we can make three squadrons, but I must have five.â
âFive!â cried Aramis.
âThey will be afloat before the end of the year, gentlemen; the king will have fifty ship of the line. We may venture on a contest with them, may we not?â
âTo build vessels,â said DâArtagnan, âis difficult, but possible. As to arming them, how is that to be done? In France there are neither foundries nor military docks.â
âBah!â replied Colbert, in a bantering tone, âI have planned all that this year and a half past, did you not know it? Do you know M. dâImfreville?â
âDâImfreville?â replied DâArtagnan; âno.â
âHe is a man I have discovered; he has a specialty; he is a man of geniusâhe knows how to set men to work. It is he who has cast cannon and cut the woods of Bourgogne. And then, monsieur lâambassadeur, you may not believe what I am going to tell you, but I have a still further idea.â
âOh, monsieur!â said Aramis, civilly, âI always believe you.â
âCalculating upon the character of the Dutch, our allies, I said to myself, âThey are merchants, they are friendly with the king; they will be happy to sell to the king what they fabricate for themselves; then the more we buyââAh! I must add this: I have Forantâdo you know Forant, DâArtagnan?â
Colbert, in his warmth, forgot himself; he called the captain simply DâArtagnan, as the king did. But the captain only smiled at it.
âNo,â replied he, âI do not know him.â
âThat is another man I have discovered, with a genius for buying. This Forant has purchased for me 350,000 pounds of iron in balls, 200,000 pounds of powder, twelve cargoes of Northern timber, matches, grenades, pitch, tarâI know not what! with a saving of seven per cent upon what all those articles would cost me fabricated in France.â
âThat is a capital and quaint idea,â replied DâArtagnan, âto have Dutch cannon-balls cast which will return to the Dutch.â
âIs it not, with loss, too?â And Colbert laughed aloud. He was delighted with his own joke.
âStill further,â added he, âthese same Dutch are building for the king, at this moment, six vessels after the model of the best of their name. DestouchesâAh! perhaps you donât know Destouches?â
âNo, monsieur.â
âHe is a man who has a sure glance to discern, when a ship is launched, what are the defects and qualities of that shipâthat is valuable, observe! Nature is truly whimsical. Well, this Destouches appeared to me to be a man likely to prove useful in marine affairs, and he is superintending the construction of six vessels of seventy-eight guns, which the Provinces are building for his majesty. It results from this, my dear Monsieur dâArtagnan, that the king, if he wished to quarrel with the Provinces, would have a very pretty fleet. Now, you know better than anybody else if the land army is efficient.â
DâArtagnan and Aramis looked at each other, wondering at the mysterious labors this man had undertaken in so short a time. Colbert understood them, and was touched by this best of flatteries.
âIf we, in France, were ignorant of what was going on,â said DâArtagnan, âout of France still less must be known.â
âThat is why I told monsieur lâambassadeur,â said Colbert, âthat, Spain promising its neutrality, England helping usââ
âIf England assists you,â said Aramis, âI promise the neutrality of Spain.â
âI take you at your word,â Colbert hastened to reply with his blunt bonhomie. âAnd, a propos of Spain, you have not the âGolden Fleece,â Monsieur dâAlmeda. I heard the king say the other day that he should like to see you wear the grand cordon of St. Michael.â
Aramis bowed. âOh!â thought DâArtagnan, âand Porthos is no longer here! What ells of ribbons would there be for him in these largesses! Dear Porthos!â
âMonsieur dâArtagnan,â resumed Colbert, âbetween us two, you will have, I wager, an inclination to lead your musketeers into Holland. Can you swim?â And he laughed like a man in high good humor.
âLike an eel,â replied DâArtagnan.
âAh! but there are some bitter passages of canals and marshes yonder, Monsieur dâArtagnan, and the best swimmers are sometimes drowned there.â
âIt is my profession to die for his majesty,â said the musketeer. âOnly, as it is seldom in war that much water is met with without a little fire, I declare to you beforehand, that I will do my best to choose fire. I am getting old; water freezes meâbut fire warms, Monsieur Colbert.â
And DâArtagnan looked so handsome still in quasi-juvenile strength as he pronounced these words, that Colbert, in his turn, could not help admiring him. DâArtagnan perceived the effect he had produced. He remembered that the best tradesman is he who fixes a high price upon his goods, when they are valuable. He prepared his price in advance.
âSo, then,â said Colbert, âwe go into Holland?â
âYes,â replied DâArtagnan; âonlyââ
âOnly?â said M. Colbert.
âOnly,â repeated DâArtagnan, âthere lurks in everything the question of interest, the question of self-love. It is a very fine title, that of captain of the musketeers; but observe this: we have now the kingâs guards and the military household of the king. A captain of musketeers ought to command all that, and then he would absorb a hundred thousand livres a year for expenses.â
âWell! but do you suppose the king would haggle with you?â said Colbert.
âEh! monsieur, you have not understood me,â replied DâArtagnan, sure of carrying his point. âI was telling you that I, an old captain, formerly chief of the kingâs guard, having precedence of the marechaux of FranceâI saw myself one day in the trenches with two other equals, the captain of the guards and the colonel commanding the Swiss. Now, at no
Comments (0)