and the desire of her heart had led
her artist nature! She had seen only the light, not the shadow, the
darkness, the gloom, which had clouded his course of fame.
To secure splendour and grandeur for him, she had yielded to the most
cruel demand, and what had been the result of this sacrifice? What had
she gained by it?
How had the happiness in which she fancied she saw him revelling been
constituted?
The power of the newly awakened experiences bore him away also, and he
described no less vividly what he had suffered.
Yes, indeed! He had not lacked great successes, far-reaching renown,
high honours, and some degree of glory. But what a tale he--not yet
thirty--now related! He, the son of an Emperor, the brother of a
powerful King, who was adorned by as many crowns as there were fingers
on his hand!
He had been King Philip's servant and useful commander in chief, nothing
more.
And now he described the sovereign's cold nature, unfeeling calculation,
and offensive suspicion. He, Don John, the not all unworthy son of the
great Emperor Charles, was not born to obey all his life, and allow
himself to be turned to account, worn out, and abused for the benefit of
another. He, too, might lay claim to the right of governing a kingdom of
his own as its ruler, benefactor, and Mehrer.
After Lepanto, the crowns of the Morea and Albania had been offered to
him. Then, after he had conquered Tunis for his brother Philip, he had
wished to reign over that country as its king. Had it been ceded to him,
large provinces would have been taken from the infidels. This, it might
have been supposed, was sufficient reason for Philip to intrust it to
his government. But although the Holy Father in Rome and other rulers
had recognised the justice of these wishes, his royal brother could not
be persuaded to grant his just demands, and destroyed these hopes with
cruel coldness. He had not even been induced to recognise him as Infant,
as a lawful member of his family.
With trivial pretexts, and promises which he never intended to fulfil,
the hypocritical, selfish, niggardly man had repulsed, delayed, and put
him off.
So his life had been spoiled by the most cruel disappointments, by a
succession of the bitterest wrongs. Since Lepanto, no pure happiness
had bloomed again for him. He was a miserable, disappointed, ill-treated
man, who could never regain his former happiness until he obtained, on
his own account, what he himself call
|