trenarzh-CNnlitjarufaen



CALDERON, THE COURTIER



BY EDWARD BULWER LYTTON






CONTENTS


CALDERON, THE COURTIER

CHAPTER I.   THE ANTE-CHAMBER

CHAPTER II.   THE LOVER AND THE CONFIDANT

CHAPTER III.   A RIVAL

CHAPTER IV.   CIVIL AMBITION, AND ECCLESIASTICAL

CHAPTER V.   THE TRUE FATA MORGANA

CHAPTER VI.   WEB UPON WEB

CHAPTER VII.   THE OPEN COUNTENANCE, THE CONCEALED THOUGHTS

CHAPTER VIII.   THE ESCAPE

CHAPTER IX.   THE COUNTERPLOT

CHAPTER X.   WE REAP WHAT WE SOW

CHAPTER XI.   HOWSOEVER THE RIVERS WIND, THE OCEAN RECEIVES THEM ALL






CALDERON, THE COURTIER.

A TALE.





CHAPTER I. THE ANTE-CHAMBER.

The Tragi-Comedy of Court Intrigue, which had ever found its principal theatre in Spain since the accession of the House of Austria to the throne, was represented with singular complication of incident and brilliancy of performance during the reign of Philip the Third. That monarch, weak, indolent, and superstitious, left the reins of government in the hands of the Duke of Lerma. The Duke of Lerma, in his turn, mild, easy, ostentatious, and shamefully corrupt, resigned the authority he had thus received to Roderigo Calderon, an able and resolute upstart, whom nature and fortune seemed equally to favour and endow. But, not more to his talents, which were great, than to the policy of religious persecution which he had supported and enforced, Roderigo Calderon owed his promotion. The King and the Inquisition had, some years before our story opens, resolved upon the general expulsion of the Moriscos the wealthiest, the most active, the most industrious portion of the population.

“I would sooner,” said the bigoted king—and his words were hallowed by the enthusiasm of the Church—“depopulate my kingdom than suffer it to harbour a single infidel.” The Duke de Lerma entered into the scheme that lost to Spain many of her most valuable subjects, with the zeal of a pious Catholic expectant of the Cardinal’s hat, which he afterwards obtained. But to this scheme Calderon brought an energy, a decision, a vehemence, and sagacity of hatred, that savoured more of personal vengeance than religious persecution. His perseverance in this good work established him firmly in the king’s favour; and in this he was supported by the friendship not only of Lerma, but of Fray Louis de Aliaga, a renowned Jesuit, and confessor to the king. The disasters and distresses occasioned by this barbarous crusade, which crippled the royal revenues, and seriously injured the estates of the princ

...

BU KİTABI OKUMAK İÇİN ÜYE OLUN VEYA GİRİŞ YAPIN!


Sitemize Üyelik ÜCRETSİZDİR!