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aid Sully, "and the rather that I have never hitherto turned my attention to the subject." "And what would you say," asked Henry with ill-concealed anxiety, "were I to tell you that such an one exists in my own kingdom?" "I should say, Sire, that you have greatly the advantage over myself; and also that the lady to whom you allude must necessarily be a widow." "Just as you please," retorted the King; "but if you refuse to guess, I will name her." "Do so," said Sully with increasing surprise; "for I confess that the riddle is beyond my reach." "Rather say that you do not wish to solve it," was the cold reply; "for you cannot deny that all the qualities upon which I insist are to be found combined in the person of the Duchesse de Beaufort." "Your mistress, Sire!" "I do not affirm that I have any intention, in the event of my release from my present marriage, of making the Duchess my wife," pursued Henry with some embarrassment; "but I was anxious to learn what you would say, if, unable to find another woman to my taste, I should one day see fit to do so." "Say, Sire?" echoed the minister, struggling to conceal his consternation under an affected gaiety; "I should probably be of the same opinion as the rest of your subjects." [Illustration: GABRIELLE D'ESTREES. [Paris Richard Bentley and Son 1890]] The King had, however, made so violent an effort over himself, in order to test the amount of forbearance which he might anticipate in his favourite counsellor, and was so desirous to ascertain his real sentiments upon this important subject, that he exclaimed impatiently: "I command you to speak freely; you have acquired the right to utter unpalatable truths; do not, therefore, fear that I shall take offence whenever our conversation is purely confidential, although I should assuredly resent such a liberty in public." The reply of the upright minister, thus authorized, was worthy alike of the monarch who had made such an appeal, and of the man to whom it was addressed. He placed before the eyes of his royal master the opprobrium with which an alliance of the nature at which he had hinted must inevitably cover his own name, and the affront it would entail upon every sovereign in Europe. He reminded him also that the legitimation of the sons of Madame de Beaufort, and the extraordinary and strictly regal ceremonies which he had recently permitted at the baptism of the younger of the two (throughout the wh
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