BOOK TENTH.
CHAPTER 5. THE RETREAT IN WHICH MONSIEUR LOUIS OF FRANCE SAYS HIS PRAYERS.
(continued)
Then he rose, leaned on the arm of his interlocutor, made a
sign to the sort of mute who stood before the door to precede
him, to the two Flemings to follow him, and quitted the room.
The royal company was recruited, at the door of the retreat,
by men of arms, all loaded down with iron, and by slender
pages bearing flambeaux. It marched for some time through
the interior of the gloomy donjon, pierced with staircases and
corridors even in the very thickness of the walls. The
captain of the Bastille marched at their head, and caused
the wickets to be opened before the bent and aged king, who
coughed as he walked.
At each wicket, all heads were obliged to stoop, except that
of the old man bent double with age. "Hum," said he between
his gums, for he had no longer any teeth, "we are already
quite prepared for the door of the sepulchre. For a low door,
a bent passer."
At length, after having passed a final wicket, so loaded
with locks that a quarter of an hour was required to open it,
they entered a vast and lofty vaulted hall, in the centre of
which they could distinguish by the light of the torches, a
huge cubic mass of masonry, iron, and wood. The interior
was hollow. It was one of those famous cages of prisoners
of state, which were called "the little daughters of the king."
In its walls there were two or three little windows so closely
trellised with stout iron bars; that the glass was not visible.
The door was a large flat slab of stone, as on tombs; the sort
of door which serves for entrance only. Only here, the occupant
was alive.
The king began to walk slowly round the little edifice,
examining it carefully, while Master Olivier, who followed
him, read aloud the note.
"For having made a great cage of wood of solid beams,
timbers and wall-plates, measuring nine feet in length by
eight in breadth, and of the height of seven feet between
the partitions, smoothed and clamped with great bolts of iron,
which has been placed in a chamber situated in one of the
towers of the Bastille Saint-Antoine, in which cage is placed
and detained, by command of the king our lord, a prisoner
who formerly inhabited an old, decrepit, and ruined cage.
There have been employed in making the said new cage,
ninety-six horizontal beams, and fifty-two upright joists,
ten wall plates three toises long; there have been occupied
nineteen carpenters to hew, work, and fit all the said wood
in the courtyard of the Bastille during twenty days."
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