登陆注册
40903300000001

第1章 FRANCE IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY.1412-(1)

It is no small effort for the mind,even of the most well-informed,how much more of those whose exact knowledge is not great (which is the case with most readers,and alas!with most writers also),to transport itself out of this nineteenth century which we know so thoroughly,and which has trained us in all our present habits and modes of thought,into the fifteenth,four hundred years back in time,and worlds apart in every custom and action of life.What is there indeed the same in the two ages?Nothing but the man and the woman,the living agents in spheres so different;nothing but love and grief,the affections and the sufferings by which humanity is ruled and of which it is capable.Everything else is changed:the customs of life,and its methods,and even its motives,the ruling principles of its continuance.Peace and mutual consideration,the policy which even in its selfish developments is so far good that it enables men to live together,making existence possible,--scarcely existed in those days.

The highest ideal was that of war,war no doubt sometimes for good ends,to redress wrongs,to avenge injuries,to make crooked things straight--but yet always war,implying a state of affairs in which the last thing that men thought of was the golden rule,and the highest attainment to be looked for was the position of a protector,doer of justice,deliverer of the oppressed.Our aim now that no one should be oppressed,that every man should have justice as by the order of nature,was a thing unthought of.What individual help did feebly for the sufferer then,the laws do for us now,without fear or favour:

which is a much greater thing to say than that the organisation of modern life,the mechanical helps,the comforts,the easements of the modern world,had no existence in those days.We are often told that the poorest peasant in our own time has aids to existence that had not been dreamt of for princes in the Middle Ages.Thirty years ago the world was mostly of opinion that the balance was entirely on our side,and that in everything we were so much better off than our fathers,that comparison was impossible.Since then there have been many revolutions of opinion,and we think it is now the general conclusion of wise men,that one period has little to boast itself of against another,that one form of civilisation replaces another without improving upon it,at least to the extent which appears on the surface.But yet the general prevalence of peace,interrupted only by occasional wars,even when we recognise a certain large and terrible utility in war itself,must always make a difference incalculable between the condition of the nations now,and then.

It is difficult,indeed,to imagine any concatenation of affairs which could reduce a country now to the condition in which France was in the beginning of the fifteenth century.A strong and splendid kingdom,to which in early ages one great man had given the force and supremacy of a united nation,had fallen into a disintegration which seems almost incredible when regarded in the light of that warm flame of nationality which now illumines,almost above all others,the French nation.But Frenchmen were not Frenchmen,they were Burgundians,Armagnacs,Bretons,Proven?aux five hundred years ago.The interests of one part of the kingdom were not those of the other.Unity had no existence.Princes of the same family were more furious enemies to each other,at the head of their respective fiefs and provinces,than the traditional foes of their race;and instead of meeting an invader with a united force of patriotic resistance,one or more of these subordinate rulers was sure to side with the invader and to execute greater atrocities against his own flesh and blood than anything the alien could do.

When Charles VII.of France began,nominally,his reign,his uncles and cousins,his nearest kinsmen,were as determinedly his opponents,as was Henry V.of England,whose frank object was to take the crown from his head.The country was torn in pieces with different causes and cries.The English were but little farther off from the Parisian than was the Burgundian,and the English king was only a trifle less French than were the members of the royal family of France.These circumstances are little taken into consideration in face of the general history,in which a careless reader sees nothing but the two nations pitted against each other as they might be now,the French united in one strong and distinct nationality,the three kingdoms of Great Britain all welded into one.In the beginning of the fifteenth century the Scots fought on the French side,against their intimate enemy of England,and if there had been any unity in Ireland,the Irish would have done the same.The advantages and disadvantages of subdivision were in full play.The Scots fought furiously against the English--and when the latter won,as was usually the case,the Scots contingent,whatever bounty might be shown to the French,was always exterminated.On the other side the Burgundians,the Armagnacs,and Royalists met each other almost more fiercely than the latter encountered the English.Each country was convulsed by struggles of its own,and fiercely sought its kindred foes in the ranks of its more honest and natural enemy.

同类推荐
  • 淇园编

    淇园编

    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。
  • 润卿鲁望寒夜见访

    润卿鲁望寒夜见访

    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。
  • 溪蛮丛笑

    溪蛮丛笑

    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。
  • 诗人主客图

    诗人主客图

    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。
  • 英吉沙尔厅乡土志

    英吉沙尔厅乡土志

    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
  • 带着萌娃重生了

    带着萌娃重生了

    苏婉冷眼看着离去的两人,却不成想林墨儿把所有的佣人都支走了,她捂着肚子,惨白的脸上已经没有任何血色,她的眼睛慢慢开始模糊......顾辰熙,我们的孩子,你都不要了吗?我不甘心,不甘心......等到林管家回来,把苏婉送去医院,已经来不及了,一尸两命。且看我们女主是如何带着萌娃,一路过关斩将的吧!
  • 一场倾心许给你

    一场倾心许给你

    如果人生可以重来,季唯说,她一定不要在两岁那年,见到顾亦楚。爱他,太累,太沉重。如果人生可以重来,顾亦楚说,他一定不会放开她的手,牢牢牵住,从黎明到黄昏,从黑发到白头。爱上她,一眼便可。可忘掉她,他用了十五年都没有做到。他的出生,就是还债。“顾太太,我的债还完了,你可以重新接纳我了吗?”“顾太太,我的债还完了,你的呢?”“顾太太,顾先生的一场倾心许给你,你要不要接受,还你欠我的情债呢?”*季家有女初长成,若得为妻,夫复何求。将季唯娶回家,爱她,宠她,保护她。再陪她,慢慢变老。这是顾亦楚在九岁那年就规划好的人生。他的人生,就是这么简单。
  • 风起南洋1784

    风起南洋1784

    1784年的南洋,正处于风雨激荡的前夜,越南的阮福映正在千方百计寻求复国,泰国的拉玛一世刚刚篡位成功,西方殖民者就要大举到来,穿越客叶开来到了这个时代,他先从控制越南开始,一路上外拒白夷、内斗土著,建立了一个强大的南洋帝国,但他并不满足,因为举目北望,遗民泪尽胡尘里、南望王师又一年!
  • 霹雳之逍遥影帝

    霹雳之逍遥影帝

    一朝穿越成乐寻远,明白命运的他要如何逆转生死呢?在朝不保夕的苦境有自己的一方天地。诸望不过一痴,堪得地葬天垂。便将忧危行着,笑涌风云迭起。
  • 杂货铺手记

    杂货铺手记

    火车驶向那个陌生的小镇,那有一家杂货铺,那里有许多小东西,也有许多的故事,有没有某个故事,是关于你的?
  • 得道归宗

    得道归宗

    就这样不知站了多久,直到有一阵阴风从“大海”深处吹了过来,将雾气刮散了不少,周遭的环境才出现了一些变化。原本寂静无声的耳边开始传来一些类似于哀嚎的声音,而且这声音越来越杂,越来越响,直到充斥了整个空间。同时,面前的黑色海水也不再是波澜不惊,海面上逐渐出现了一些翻腾的水花,颜色也由黑色逐渐变成了土黄色。面对这些变化,邢光依然无动于衷,两眼呆呆地注视着前方,不知在看着什么。而当整个海面最终如沸水般翻腾到极致时,一只高度腐烂的人手从已经完全变成土黄色的海水中突然伸出,紧紧地抓住了呆立在“海边”的邢光脚踝。
  • 焚天迹

    焚天迹

    过去的,不必存在。遗留的,会有人的解密。。。万古匆匆,一个个的时代,人们一直追求的仙,而仙到底是什么。。。时代的更替,世纪的轮回。命运的不测,时光的无情。任你风华绝代还是盖世无双,都逃脱不了寿元干枯的悲哀。这是一种无奈,还是一种可歌可泣的幸运,了解的越多,对过去的认知便有更多的颠覆。焚天迹,告诉我们一段不为人知的历史,一个不为人知的秘密,一个带给我们成仙的启示。脚踏星空,万古永存,时空破碎,我亦不朽!
  • 等我靠近

    等我靠近

    我很努力在向他靠近,幸亏,他也愿意回头看到我……
  • EDA技术

    EDA技术

    根据课堂教学和实验操作的要求,以提高实际工程设计能力为目的,深入浅出地对EDA技术相关知识作了系统和完整的介绍,相关知识作了系统和完整的介绍。
  • 一个海军军官的网络情缘

    一个海军军官的网络情缘

    一位海军军官的真实的网络恋爱经历。龙哥先后在网上结识了可可、姗姗两个可爱的女孩并与她们温暖愉悦地交往。姗姗因种种原因自动退出,龙哥与可可渐渐相知相爱,美好的恋情从网络走向现实,终成眷属。小说以散文化的风格反映了长沙、西安等地城乡的民情风俗,从一个新的视角呈现出时代的风貌。