Понятно
Понятно
Для того чтобы воспользоваться закладками, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
Отмена
On
the
eighth
day
after
the
scene
we
have
described
,
the
cardinal
received
a
letter
with
the
London
stamp
which
only
contained
these
lines
:
"
I
have
them
;
but
I
am
unable
to
leave
London
for
want
of
money
.
Send
me
five
hundred
pistoles
,
and
four
or
five
days
after
I
have
received
them
I
shall
be
in
Paris
.
"
On
the
same
day
the
cardinal
received
this
letter
the
king
put
his
customary
question
to
him
.
Richelieu
counted
on
his
fingers
,
and
said
to
himself
,
"
She
will
arrive
,
she
says
,
four
or
five
days
after
having
received
the
money
.
It
will
require
four
or
five
days
for
the
transmission
of
the
money
,
four
or
five
days
for
her
to
return
;
that
makes
ten
days
.
Now
,
allowing
for
contrary
winds
,
accidents
,
and
a
woman
's
weakness
,
there
are
twelve
days
.
"
Отключить рекламу
"
Well
,
Monsieur
Duke
,
"
said
the
king
,
"
have
you
made
your
calculations
?
"
"
Yes
,
sire
.
Today
is
the
twentieth
of
September
.
The
aldermen
of
the
city
give
a
fete
on
the
third
of
October
.
That
will
fall
in
wonderfully
well
;
you
will
not
appear
to
have
gone
out
of
your
way
to
please
the
queen
.
"
Then
the
cardinal
added
,
"
A
PROPOS
,
sire
,
do
not
forget
to
tell
her
Majesty
the
evening
before
the
fete
that
you
should
like
to
see
how
her
diamond
studs
become
her
.
"
It
was
the
second
time
the
cardinal
had
mentioned
these
diamond
studs
to
the
king
.
Louis
XIII
was
struck
with
this
insistence
,
and
began
to
fancy
that
this
recommendation
concealed
some
mystery
.
Отключить рекламу
More
than
once
the
king
had
been
humiliated
by
the
cardinal
,
whose
police
,
without
having
yet
attained
the
perfection
of
the
modern
police
,
were
excellent
,
being
better
informed
than
himself
,
even
upon
what
was
going
on
in
his
own
household
.
He
hoped
,
then
,
in
a
conversation
with
Anne
of
Austria
,
to
obtain
some
information
from
that
conversation
,
and
afterward
to
come
upon
his
Eminence
with
some
secret
which
the
cardinal
either
knew
or
did
not
know
,
but
which
,
in
either
case
,
would
raise
him
infinitely
in
the
eyes
of
his
minister
.
He
went
then
to
the
queen
,
and
according
to
custom
accosted
her
with
fresh
menaces
against
those
who
surrounded
her
.
Anne
of
Austria
lowered
her
head
,
allowed
the
torrent
to
flow
on
without
replying
,
hoping
that
it
would
cease
of
itself
;
but
this
was
not
what
Louis
XIII
meant
.
Louis
XIII
wanted
a
discussion
from
which
some
light
or
other
might
break
,
convinced
as
he
was
that
the
cardinal
had
some
afterthought
and
was
preparing
for
him
one
of
those
terrible
surprises
which
his
Eminence
was
so
skillful
in
getting
up
.
He
arrived
at
this
end
by
his
persistence
in
accusation
.
"
But
,
"
cried
Anne
of
Austria
,
tired
of
these
vague
attacks
,
"
but
,
sire
,
you
do
not
tell
me
all
that
you
have
in
your
heart
.
What
have
I
done
,
then
?
Let
me
know
what
crime
I
have
committed
.
It
is
impossible
that
your
Majesty
can
make
all
this
ado
about
a
letter
written
to
my
brother
.
"