登陆注册
14720400000040

第40章 LADY BOOK-LOVERS(2)

Marguerite's manuscript copy of the First Book of the Iliad is a small quarto, adorned with daisies, fleurs de-lis, and the crowned M. It is in the Duc d'Aumale's collection at Chantilly. The books of Diane de Poitiers are more numerous and more famous. When first a widow she stamped her volumes with a laurel springing from a tomb, and the motto, "Sola vivit in illo." But when she consoled herself with Henri II. she suppressed the tomb, and made the motto meaningless. Her crescent shone not only on her books, but on the palace walls of France, in the Louvre, Fontainebleau, and Anet, and her initial D. is inextricably interlaced with the H. of her royal lover. Indeed, Henri added the D to his own cypher, and this must have been so embarrassing for his wife Catherine, that people have good-naturedly tried to read the curves of the D's as C's. The D's, and the crescents, and the bows of his Diana are impressed even on the covers of Henri's Book of Hours. Catherine's own cypher is a double C enlaced with an H, or double K's (Katherine) combined in the same manner. These, unlike the D.H., are surmounted with a crown--the one advantage which the wife possessed over the favourite. Among Diane's books are various treatises on medicines and on surgery, and plenty of poetry and Italian novels. Among the books exhibited at the British Museum in glass cases is Diane's copy of Bembo's 'History of Venice.' An American collector, Mr. Barlow, of New York, is happy enough to possess her 'Singularitez de la France Antarctique' (Antwerp, 1558).

Catherine de Medicis got splendid books on the same terms as foreign pirates procure English novels--she stole them. The Marshal Strozzi, dying in the French service, left a noble collection, on which Catherine laid her hands. Brantome says that Strozzi's son often expressed to him a candid opinion about this transaction.

What with her own collection and what with the Marshal's, Catherine possessed about four thousand volumes. On her death they were in peril of being seized by her creditors, but her almoner carried them to his own house, and De Thou had them placed in the royal library.

Unluckily it was thought wiser to strip the books of the coats with Catherine's compromising device, lest her creditors should single them out, and take them away in their pockets. Hence, books with her arms and cypher are exceedingly rare. At the sale of the collections of the Duchesse de Berry, a Book of Hours of Catherine's was sold for 2,400 pounds.

Mary Stuart of Scotland was one of the lady book-lovers whose taste was more than a mere following of the fashion. Some of her books, like one of Marie Antoinette's, were the companions of her captivity, and still bear the sad complaints which she entrusted to these last friends of fallen royalty. Her note-book, in which she wrote her Latin prose exercises when a girl, still survives, bound in red morocco, with the arms of France. In a Book of Hours, now the property of the Czar, may be partly deciphered the quatrains which she composed in her sorrowful years, but many of them are mutilated by the binder's shears. The Queen used the volume as a kind of album: it contains the signatures of the "Countess of Schrewsbury" (as M. Bauchart has it), of Walsingham, of the Earl of Sussex, and of Charles Howard, Earl of Nottingham. There is also the signature, "Your most infortunat, ARBELLA SEYMOUR;" and "Fr.

Bacon."

This remarkable manuscript was purchased in Paris, during the Revolution, by Peter Dubrowsky, who carried it to Russia. Another Book of Hours of the Queen's bears this inscription, in a sixteenth-century hand: "Ce sont les Heures de Marie Setuart Renne.

Marguerite de Blacuod de Rosay." In De Blacuod it is not very easy to recognise "Blackwood." Marguerite was probably the daughter of Adam Blackwood, who wrote a volume on Mary Stuart's sufferings (Edinburgh, 1587).

The famous Marguerite de Valois, the wife of Henri IV., had certainly a noble library, and many beautifully bound books stamped with daisies are attributed to her collections. They bear the motto, "Expectata non eludet," which appears to refer, first to the daisy ("Margarita"), which is punctual in the spring, or rather is "the constellated flower that never sets," and next, to the lady, who will "keep tryst." But is the lady Marguerite de Valois?

Though the books have been sold at very high prices as relics of the leman of La Mole, it seems impossible to demonstrate that they were ever on her shelves, that they were bound by Clovis Eve from her own design. "No mention is made of them in any contemporary document, and the judicious are reduced to conjectures." Yet they form a most important collection, systematically bound, science and philosophy in citron morocco, the poets in green, and history and theology in red. In any case it is absurd to explain "Expectata non eludet" as a reference to the lily of the royal arms, which appears on the centre of the daisy-pied volumes. The motto, in that case, would run, "Expectata (lilia) non eludent." As it stands, the feminine adjective, "expectata," in the singular, must apply either to the lady who owned the volumes, or to the "Margarita," her emblem, or to both. Yet the ungrammatical rendering is that which M. Bauchart suggests. Many of the books, Marguerite's or not, were sold at prices over 100 pounds in London, in 1884 and 1883. The Macrobius, and Theocritus, and Homer are in the Cracherode collection at the British Museum. The daisy crowned Ronsard went for 430 pounds at the Beckford sale. These prices will probably never be reached again.

If Anne of Austria, the mother of Louis XIV., was a bibliophile, she may be suspected of acting on the motive, "Love me, love my books."About her affection for Cardinal Mazarin there seems to be no doubt:

同类推荐
  • 明太祖文集

    明太祖文集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 白石山房逸稿

    白石山房逸稿

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 无门关

    无门关

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 史纠

    史纠

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 送陈嘏登第作尉归觐

    送陈嘏登第作尉归觐

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 星灵魔皇

    星灵魔皇

    简介:无…还真是抱歉啊各位,想不出来,这事情确实要动动脑子…不过我转不起来…
  • 孔子

    孔子

    本书取材于《史记?孔子世家》、《论语》以及战国秦汉时代所流传的孔子传说事迹,大的事件基本上有出处,事件年代根据《孔子年谱》。作者将史料融会贯通,完成了这部接近百万字的巨著,殊为不易。儒家的理想就是要让世界变得和谐。和谐是万物存在的根本,天和则清,地和则宁,人和则安,心和则美。儒家和谐世界的心愿因此成为人类共同的希望之光。拍摄孔子,就是要重燃人类和谐精神的火种,把珍藏在华夏儿女胸中的和谐美德重新唤醒。
  • 枭世界

    枭世界

    这是一个群雄争霸的世界,是正义与非正义的斗争,是一个属于强者的世界!无数强者齐头并进,只为争夺那无上的荣誉,名声,财富,权力,霸绝一方的大人物在这条路上也只不过是冰山一角而已,,,战舰,光炮,充斥着整个世界,觉醒者,武装人,是这个世界的主角!没有对与错,只有强与弱!
  • 天命征战

    天命征战

    据说南美洲的一只蝴蝶煽动一下翅膀就有可能引起北美洲的一场风暴.蓝小飞的生活一向平静如水,没想到从遇到她开始,一切都改变了,戏剧的让人匪夷所思.这是一部弱弱男历练成刚的故事.有笑有泪,有血有汗,有仇有怨,有人的地方,就有江湖,在这个都市中,总会出现一些人影响或者改变我们的生活轨迹!
  • 天明灵觉

    天明灵觉

    平凡少年徐衿川入都求学,无故被陷害,天道大运,天格有命。入灵渊宝塔修九世天功,读大道神文,逆天改命。惶惶大世万道争缨,后知天道明了,灵觉闪耀。
  • 我是另类白娘子

    我是另类白娘子

    英子的人生词典里除了“爱”,还是“爱”,爱之泱泱,泛滥,全给了郭铁这个男人,痴情、苦情升级到自虐......咸鱼都能翻身苦逼的一生,她却注定沉沦没有明天。
  • 混血痕师

    混血痕师

    得到了神种变异基因的野至,成为了大陆的第二代混血痕师。催动灵痕施展出强大的超能灵技!一柄断剑荡四方,叱咤世间一千年!(新人跪求推荐!!收藏!!!打赏!!!)
  • 穿越之冷漠无情小姐请倾心

    穿越之冷漠无情小姐请倾心

    墨梨虽然是T国的最强特工——墨,但她却有一个温暖的家,就在她准备隐姓埋名的时候。却发生了一件令她意想不到的事情
  • 我的逆天神器

    我的逆天神器

    常天,一名普通的宅男,头脑十分灵光!一直想跟校花楚倾城约会,就在一天,这个梦想终于实现了,但是却意外得知了“武器”!从此他的生活就变了样子,成了一个……战斗的生活![我的逆天神器]!【这是一部武器拟人的小说】竟然召唤出了神器?和说好的不一样竟然不是美少女我不服!单身二十载如何与豪门千金脱团,屌丝到底要如何逆袭?还是···?不不不,怪叔叔我们不约。
  • 蕉轩续录

    蕉轩续录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。