Women of Modern France by Hugo P. (Hugo Paul) Thieme
page 20 of 390 (05%)
page 20 of 390 (05%)
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The task before the regent was no light one; her kingdom was
divided against itself, the country was overburdened with taxes, and discontent reigned universally. All who surrounded her were full of prejudice and actuated solely by personal aspirationsâshe realized that she could trust no one. Her first act of a political nature was to rescue the house of Valois and solidify the royal authority. Some critics maintain that she began her reign with moderation, gentleness, impartiality, and reconciliation. This view finds support in the fact that during the first years she favored Protestantism; finding, however, that the latter was weakening royal power and that the country at large was opposed to it, she became its most bitter enemy. To the Protestants and their plottings she attributed all the disastrous effects of the civil war, all thefts, murders, incests, and adulteries, as well as the profanation of the sepulchres of the ancestors of the royal family, the burning of the bones of Louis XI. and of the heart of Francis II. The Machiavellian policy was Catherine's guide; bitter experience had robbed her of all faith in humanityâshe had learned to despise it and the judgment of her contemporaries. At first she was amiable and polite, seemingly intent upon pleasing those with whom she talked; in fact, it is said that she was then more often accused of excessive mildness and moderation than of the violence and cruelty which later characterized her. Experience having taught her how to deal with people, she never lost her self-control. Subsequent history shows that any gentle and conciliatory policy of Catherine was merely a method of furthering her own interests, and was |
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