"THE TAKING OF POWER BY LOUIS XIV" "The sun's already high." "You're late." "I was delayed." "I've had news of our daughter from a can't driver leaving Vincennes with fodder for the Louvre." " When is she coming back?" " Not anytime soon." "The king won't leave Vincennes as long as Mazarin is sick." "They're sending our son-in-law to Bordeaux to buy wine." "They can't go without it at the palace." "That's what it's like to have a son-in-law in favor at court." "His Majesty's best cellarman." "Always traveling, following after the king." "The king!" "In the end, he's just a man like the rest of us." "In England, they beheaded the king." "There weren't any earthquakes or eclipses." "Don't say that." "If there were no king, there'd be no palace." "And if there were no palace, we'd be out of a job." "One king dies and another will come along." "If the king were really powerful, he'd be in charge of his own house." "All right." "Enough talk." "We have work to do." "More doctors going to Mazarin at Vincennes." "When we get sick, we can't even find a barber to bleed us." "You're right." "We've been expecting you." "His Eminence is most ill." "Take them to His Eminence's chamber." "Your Eminence." "I should wish, my dear colleague, to have your opinion." "Let us see the patient." "Your Eminence, here are the two colleagues I spoke of." "They will examine you." "Gentlemen." "What do you feel?" "I have difficulty breathing." "I have shooting pains." "I would like to examine " "Well, gentlemen?" "Short of a miracle " "The withering has spread." "Diseases attack him all over:" "Gout, kidney stones." "Dropsy of the lungs." "He must be bled." "Again?" "He was bled three times yesterday." "The more stagnant water you take out of a well, the better it becomes." "The more a wet nurse suckles a child, the more milk she has." "The same is true of blood and bleeding." "The human body contains 24 liters of blood." "You can lose 20 without dying." "We remain within reasonable bounds as long as we leave a little in the patient." "Shall we bleed him?" "We shall." "We bleed three-year-old children and younger." "Eighty-year-old men tolerate it very well." "Now, His Eminence is not even 60, so we may try it." "Rest assured, Your Eminence." "With the Lord's assistance, we will do everything in our power" "to restore your health." "Thank you." "There's nothing to be done." "Perhaps he has not been sufficiently purged of his ill humors." "Last night I administered rhubarb." "Well?" "These gentlemen have lost all hope." "Then you believe it's time?" "Yes, I believe it is." "Perhaps we could feed His Eminence milk from a wet nurse, as was done for His Catholic Majesty?" "We could also try precious stones." "We could " "Do you think it's worth the trouble?" "I've never tried them myself on a patient." "Then I must leave all of this?" "Your Eminence, my son, do not be afraid." "Place your trust in the infinite mercy of our Lord." "I feel absolutely no fear." "And that's precisely what saddens me." "I know I am going to die." "I should be trembling at the thought of appearing before my creator and judge." "Think of your sins." "I'm thinking of this country, this kingdom of France, this country that I chose myself." "Perhaps that's why you have served it better than many who were born to it." "I believe I have served the peace." "By serving the peace," "I've served my king who is also my godson." "Perhaps it's because I'm Roman." "All nations are children of Rome." "Be calm, Your Eminence." "Think of your sins." "The gold, to whom do you leave your money, your paintings and precious stones, all of the treasures you have accumulated?" "To my poor family." "Have all of these goods been acquired honestly?" "Acquired with the profits from my dioceses, my abbeys." "It's only normal." "Indeed." "Yet I do not wish to speak of ecclesiastical profits - even if there are 23 abbeys - but of civil governments." "Not much." "Brouage, for example, though it's a very active port, it hardly brings in anything." "There's not merely Brouage, but also the Compagnie du Nord of which you are the principal shareholder." "Since when is whaling a dishonest profession?" "And the selling of office titles?" "All office titles are sold." "Have you benefited from it?" "Let's get to the point, Mr. Joly." "What must I do to settle accounts with God?" "You may bequeath to your family all the goods which the king has given you." "But you must return to His Majesty all the goods you have given to yourself." "As for my family, admittedly," "I don't have much to praise them for, in spite of my good deeds, but I won't cheat God." "Don't worry, my son." "Would you like to confess?" "Mr. Colbert, His Eminence would like to see you." "My good Colbert." "I must have given you a great deal of work." "It's difficult for an orderly man as yourself to serve a spendthrift such as myself." "I content myself with managing His Eminence's affairs as well as I'm able." "I'm afraid it's a job which won't keep you busy much longer." "But you have official duties." "Nothing prevents you from hoping." "I'm not hoping for anyone's place." "I've never shown impatience to climb any higher than my post." "Yet Superintendent Fouquet..." "In his time, Mr. Fouquet also served me well." "There's some truth in the report that you submitted on the topic of his management." "Scandalous management." "Exorbitant commissions from the farmers-general, financial expedients, squandering of public funds." "I know, I know." "I've returned your report with the order for you to reconcile with Mr. Fouquet." "The state owes to Mr. Fouquet personally the colossal sum of five million." "He may even feel entitled to set his sights on the succession to Your Eminence." "He already has set his sights on it..." "I've been told." "He has the support of the Queen Mother." "Never, since Your Eminence's illness, has there ever been more intrigue and expectation in the court." "The young courtiers think they're restoring the reign of favorites down to the beautiful women who flatter themselves that they control a 22-year-old prince who's known to be susceptible to love." "And at the heart of these intrigues, the hand of Mr. Fouquet is always seen." "In a few weeks, Your Eminence's life work could be destroyed for I don't believe the spirit of the Fronde has entirely vanished." "It may very well take hold of Mr. Fouquet and his friends, even though he was at your side during those sad events." "At no moment have I seen the superintendent even pretend to have the least concern for the public good." "In his circle, it's only an issue of posts to be taken, influence to be purchased and positions to be conquered." "If the king is not what we believe - and we seem to be the only ones who think he is - and if Mr. Fouquet becomes prime minister " "Well?" "Anything could happen." "What time is it?" "Not yet seven." "Send word to His Majesty to come see me as soon as he rises." "Excuse me." "Excuse me." "What's going on?" "Is the queen calling?" "She's announcing that the king performed his conjugal duties last night." "What news of His Eminence?" "His Eminence has expressed a desire to see Your Majesty." "Alcohol." "Alcohol." " Good morning, brother." " Good morning, Sire." "The king!" "The king!" "I've come to see His Eminence." "Your Eminence, it's the king." "Tell His Majesty I'll receive him in a moment." "His Eminence's makeup." "Sire, His Eminence will receive you in a moment." "Sire." "Sire, I owe everything to Your Majesty." "I leave everything to you." "Everything?" "What do you mean?" "My wealth, my fortune." "Yes, Sire." "I have decided." "I'm perhaps the richest man in Europe, but I've decided to die as if I had nothing." "I've had such pleasure contemplating this thought." "Only, I beg Your Majesty to show benevolence" "towards my unfortunate family." "I refuse." "I refuse, Cardinal." "The offer is touching as a sign of your attachment to my person and to what it represents." "But it's in the name of what it represents, in the name of the state and the crown, that I refuse." "I refuse not as Louis, your godson, but as king." "Think, Sire, of the increased power that the possession of a great fortune will confer upon you." "I also think of what will be said among the people when it's known that this great wealth has been bequeathed to me by one of my subjects." "Sire, you will be a great king." "I die content that you are now fit to rule." "You will understand the counsel of your ministers and make use of it as you see fit." "And what's more, Sire," "I think I'm paying all my debts by leaving you Colbert." "Rest, Cardinal." "Be at peace." "We'll go to my mother." "Well, Mr. Fouquet, have you come for news of our friend's health?" "Yes, Sire." "I learned with sadness that His Eminence was at the point of death." "The Cardinal endures terrible suffering with admirable perseverance." "I shall see you shortly, Mr. Fouquet." " Good morning, madame." " Good morning, Louis." "Good morning, Mr. Le Tellier." "Louis, what's wrong?" "You seem sad." "Yes, madame." "I've just had a conversation with the Cardinal." "It may have been our last." "You're moved?" "I loved him and he loved me." "You detested him." "He was my godfather, my tutor, the savior of the crown." "Without him, the Fronde would have triumphed." "You called him "the great Turk."" "I only knew of him what I'd been told." "I was still young." "Have you no regrets at all on the death of this man?" "You supported him against the whole of France." "Yes." "Even without fear of risking your throne." "But I deplore his ingratitude." "He has kept me far removed from government." "He has often shown a lack of consideration for me and he has enriched himself with a fury that's always startled me." "He's insatiable." "Pardon me, madame." "He was my only friend." "The only one besides you in whom I could confide." "I'm afraid his death will bring back the disorder of the Fronde." "Your throne is secure." "France is united behind its king." "The nobles are appeased." "You think so?" "You think that in such a short time so many absurd hatreds have been forgotten?" "I'm afraid the cardinal's death " "I'm certain you'll be able to find a worthy successor to Mr. Mazarin." "Talent is not lacking among the leaders." "For heavers sake, Mother." "Don't you remember a thing?" "The Fronde made you tremble as well." "I was still a child, but there are some things I'll never forget:" "A prince of my blood at the head of my enemies." "The humiliations suffered in January of '49, the night you and I were forced to flee from the Louvre to Saint-Germain in a cheap coach." "We might have suffered the fate of my uncle in England." "No, the power was divided between too many hands guided by contrary interests." "The cardinal was skillful at maintaining equilibrium between these forces:" "The parliament, the nobility, the financiers, the provincial governments." "I feel that even at court there is little loyalty without ulterior motive and that those who appear the most devoted subjects are just as much to be feared and blamed as the most rebellious." "You'll make yourself sick if you keep brooding on such thoughts." "Let's speak no more of it." "To satisfy their taste for pomp, the powerful sell themselves to France's enemies." "Even the Prince of Condé is begging for help from the Spanish." "The nobles, no longer living in their own lands, need money." "And only the merchants possess this money." "The nobility no longer supports the crown." "They're in other hands, governed by base interests." "During the Fronde, honor became a commodity, like sugar or spices." "Since we've made the mistake of selling office titles during several reigns, today we suffer for it." "The parliament, which should order and define the rights and duties of magistrates, no longer contents itself with this privilege and now claims other powers." "In England, the parliament turns against its master and delivers him to the executioner." "Our parliament would do the same and the divine right would be profaned by those who have no other power than money." "Each must remain in his place." "The state must be made a reality." "Yes." "And?" "Excuse me, madame." "Louis." "Excuse me, madame, for having disturbed you." "He's still a child." "Do you think the memory of Mlle. Mancini will ever cease to occupy his mind?" "His Eminence's niece is engaged." "She'll soon leave France." "The king no longer speaks to her." "He spends all his nights at the side of the queen." "Would to God that he continue to." "Mr. Le Tellier, what are you thinking about?" "The speech His Majesty has just delivered." "I must confess I didn't understand." "These words remind me of comments the king made to me several days ago." "As I was leaving a council presided over by His Eminence," "His Majesty turned towards me and said," ""Mr. Le Tellier, I want to govern, attend the council and not miss a single day."" "He also said that in many circumstances, the choice of what to do was his and his alone, and that this choice, lacking neither sense nor courage, could be better executed by no other than the king." "Govern?" "Have you ever seen a king of France govern?" "Henry the Great, perhaps." "Queen Catherine de Médicis, yes." "But her children?" "At 20, François the First only dreamed of battles." "It was his mother who held the reins of power." "His Majesty was not speaking seriously." "I assure you I've never seen him more serious." "What are we to make of it?" "You know the king as well as I." "Hunting, dancing, balls and card games are his favorite pastimes." "He just wanted to play at being competent." "Pierrette, go to the cardinal's antechamber tonight to learn of his condition." "Yes, Sire." "If his soul is delivered, you must come tell me, no matter the hour." "Madame." "The king is worried about the cardinal's health." "I've come to keep watch with you." "Sit here." " Sit here." " Thank you." "Mr. Fouquet." " How long since he died?" " A few moments." "The king must be informed." "The king!" "Marshal." "We have just lost a good friend." "But rest assured, you have found a good master." "Why is it that His Majesty does not enter the chamber?" "It's custom." "It would be unseemly for the king to be seen in contact with death." "Mr. Le Tellier." "I will return to Paris after dinner." "Have all the ministers at the Louvre tomorrow at seven for the council." "I would also like to see Chancellor Séguier and the archbishop." "Yes, Sire." "Le Tellier." "I order the court to observe mourning in black." "But, Sire, that's an honor reserved for members of the royal family." "Mourning in black." "So the marshal was astonished to see the king come towards him and say," ""We have just lost a good friend." "But rest assured, you have found a good master."" "The king!" "The king!" "The king!" "Gentlemen, I've had you assembled to tell you that up to the present," "I've seen fit to leave the governance of my affairs to the late cardinal." "It's time that I governed myself." "You will aid me with your counsel when I ask for it." "Aside from the royal seal, which I do not intend to change," "I request and order, Mr. Chancellor, that you affix it to nothing without my order." "As for the secretaries of state, I order you to sign nothing, not so much as a safeguard or passport, without my consent." "Superintendent, I ask you to make use of Mr. Colbert whom the late cardinal recommended to me." "As for Lionne, he is assured of my affection." "I am pleased with his service." "Your Majesty had ordered me to address the cardinal concerning affairs of the church." "Whom should I address now?" "Myself, Archbishop." "You know my wishes." "It's now up to you to execute them." "Well, gentlemen, this should make your jobs easier." "Well, what do you think?" "The king is too fond of pleasures." "He'll tire quickly of the job he intends to assume." "A month or two from now, things will be back in order." "Mr. Colbert, I appoint you to the post of finance bursar next to Mr. Fouquet." "Sire, I don't know how to express my gratitude." "I humbly ask you " "I hope you'll be able to show me the same devotion in weighty matters as you have in lesser ones." "Sire." "The cardinal placed 16 million at the Bastille as a precaution." "This money was not mentioned in his will." "He considered it as due to the king." "Sixteen million?" "Then we are delivered from the supervision of the financiers." "Mr. Colbert, you will come every evening before I go to bed to work alone with me." "But not a word to anyone." "Secrecy is the first virtue I demand of my servants." "I believe you understand this already." "If I've placed you next to Mr. Fouquet, it's in order to learn if he has understood as well." "Sire, might I inform you of a report and secret thought that until present I had only revealed to the cardinal?" "Here's the report." "And the secret thought?" "It's this." "I don't think Mr. Fouquet will ever understand what Your Majesty would like him to understand, to know that it's high time to put his accounts in order." "Why would he?" "Disorder and confusion are better conditions for him." "The mars vanity and ambition have no end." "In the castle he's built at Vaux with money stolen from the state, his coat of arms and motto are everywhere - a squirrel with these words:" "Quo non ascendet." ""Where couldn't I climb?"" "In your opinion, what were these thefts?" "Your Majesty will read the details in the report." "But I could cite one case among a thousand other frauds, of old bank notes unpaid from savings then resold at three or four percent of their face value reassigned to good funds and reimbursed in full." "In another case, I know from a good source that he had Belle-Île and Nantes fortified." "Mr. Fouquet's heart is with the Fronde." "We must not act too quickly." "Besides, my mother is very friendly with the superintendent." "Mr. Fouquet often has bags of gold brought to Her Majesty the Queen Mother intended for her good works." "I don't want to jeopardize the returns from this year's taxes by scaring off the farmers-general too soon." "So until further notice, Mr. Fouquet remains part of the council." "And Her Majesty the Queen Mother?" "My mother?" "His Eminence removed her from the council." "Will you bring her back in?" "No." "Your debauched behavior is unworthy of a Christian king." "I'm not against pleasure, but you don't take precautions anymore." "When you stay at Fontainebleau, you bathe naked in the river with your mistress every day." "And you've asked Mignard to paint you both." "You as Apollo and she as a shepherdess at your side, as if the queen didn't exist." "I understand why you don't want me in your council." "You're afraid I'll condemn your behavior." "Have you lost all respect for yourself, all affection for your spouse and for me?" "You cannot imagine the grief you cause me." "Pushed away by Mazarin, a man whose fortune I made, and now by my own son." "Since you're acting as if you had no mother," "I'll withdraw to the convent in Val-de-Grâce." "Val-de-Grâce, you understand?" "Forgive me, Mother." "Forgive me." "Sire, please forgive me, but I must remind Your Majesty that a decision must be taken regarding membership in the high council." "What decision?" "What has Your Majesty decided?" " I believe the Queen Mother " " Nothing has changed." "Neither my brother nor my mother will attend the council." "It's started." "The dogs are calling." "Do you like hunting?" "Yes." "It makes private meetings easier." "The king is quite an enthusiast." "It will be easy to control him as long as he has something to keep him entertained, just as I predicted." "All of your speeches begin or end with "just as I predicted"" "or "wasn't I right?"" "Do you never tire of always being right?" "Besides, you may be letting your imagination run away with you." "As far as I know, the king diligently presides over the council as he'd declared he would." "He takes interest in all matters." "This fine zeal is merely a flash in the pan." "Within a month, I'll be prime minister." "If that's how it is, you should get rid of Colbert." "He's a man to be feared." "You really think I should be worried about that petit bourgeois from Reims?" "It's this young woman, Mlle. De la Vallière, who is going to be important." "Really?" "You don't know her?" "Yes, I know her." "Madame calls her "the little dressmaker from Tours."" "She's the daughter of a poor gentleman." "She was raised at the court of Mr. Gaston, brother of the late king." "Evidently, she's not used to money." "We'll easily win her over." "How beautiful, madame." " Louise, aren't you playing?" " No, Sire." "I'll put in 10 pistoles for you." "Seventeen." "You lose." "How are you faring, madame?" "I don't care about the game." " When will you stop torturing me?" " 102." "What do you mean?" "I don't understand." " You understand very well." " Not so loud." "Aren't you interested in the game?" "No, I always lose." "I have a word for you from Mr. Fouquet." "The superintendent is struck with your beauty and your modesty." "You can count on his support." "While awaiting a pledge of his friendship," "Mr. Fouquet would ask you to accept a gift." " A gift?" " Yes." "Twenty thousand pistoles." "Tell Mr. Fouquet I won't make a false step for 20,000 pistoles." "Why are you shaking?" "I'm shaking with rage." "Madame du Plessis just offered me money." "Money?" "Twenty thousand pistoles from Mr. Fouquet." "I've noticed that my first impressions are usually correct." "And this step forces me not to postpone any further what I both want and fear to do." "You've done very well to advise me, Louise." "Madame, I've decided that the next Council of Ministers will take place in Nantes." "I want the whole court to depart within three days." "I'll see you there." "Good night, madame." "Nantes?" "The king is quite sure of himself." "Why this sudden decision?" "At the last council, the king didn't utter a word of this." "I'm afraid this may conceal some kind of plot." " Your spies haven't said anything?" " About what?" "If I were you, I'd start fearing the worst." "You're dreaming." "I saw the king smile at you as he left the room." "No." "His Majesty is young and the temptation to display his new power is too strong." "You amuse me, always imagining the worst catastrophes." "If the king has decided to visit my estate, it must be to pay homage to the foremost servant of the crown." "Don't lose your head." "I'm happy to see you." "Sire, when I learned that Your Majesty deigned to honor our city of Nantes with your presence," "I could not fail to pay my respects to you." "You must rest to recover your health." "I'd like to take the opportunity while you're alone, Sire, to submit a petition to you." "I'll read it later." "Here comes my mother." "I have to tell you something." "What?" "I wanted you to be informed." "I've decided to have Mr. Fouquet arrested by my captain of the guard." "I've brought the council to Nantes to give this action greater impact." "But Louis... have you lost your mind?" "Why, madame?" "When the treasury is empty, revenue is consumed two years in advance, the harvest is bad and the people are menaced with a new famine, the superintendent is rich enough to spend in one day more money than I possess" "and to corrupt my close associates." "This represents years of plundering, extortion and trafficking at the kingdom's expense." "And Mr. Fouquet is not even afraid to give me proof of it." "Mr. Fouquet is completely devoted to you." "My decision has been made." "Arresting Mr. Fouquet in his own province." "Be careful, my son." "You might reawaken the troubles of the Fronde." "Then I will know who is for me and who is against me." "And I will know where to carry out justice." "You scare me." "I've never seen a more wretched place." "You're always complaining." "It's not bad to be in the field." "Against whom?" "As far as I know, the Spanish aren't in Nantes." "You can ask Mr. D'Artagnan." " Bread, musketeers?" "Fresh bread." " Ask for my cured ham." "Fresh sausage." "Gentlemen." "In Paris, we have barracks at each of the king's castles." " You see the king every day?" " Every day we ride before his carriage." "Mr. D'Artagnan!" "His Majesty would see you right away." "Do you know why?" "His Majesty would like to discuss the role of your musketeers." "I'll follow you." "Water bearer!" "Water bearer!" "Sire, Mr. D'Artagnan is here." "Let him in." "Mr. D'Artagnan, the mission I'm assigning you must be kept secret until you have carried it out." "Following that, I want to call as much attention to it as possible." "I'm greatly honored by the confidence Your Majesty has placed in me." " I can assure you that I'm " " You will arrest Mr. Fouquet when he comes out of the council." "Mr. Colbert will give you the details of my instructions." "Farewell, Mr. D'Artagnan." "Here are written orders signed by His Majesty." "Do not let Mr. Fouquet out of your sight from the moment he's arrested so he's not able to conceal any documents." "The prisoner will be transported to Angers via Oudon and Ingrandes." "At Oudon, you will ask him for a letter with his signature ordering the commander at Belle-Île to return the site to the king's hands." "You will read the rest." "Very well, sir." "You may assure the king that his orders will be carried out diligently." "The next council will take place in Vincennes." "You are excused." "Mr. Fouquet." "I have something to say to you." "No." "It will wait for another time." "I do not know what Mr. Fouquet's fate will be." "It's up to my courts to decide." "In any case, I don't want another superintendent." "The king, Mr. Colbert, should be the unique soul of the state." "To prevent the Fronde from returning to power, it's not enough to rely on those who are more loyal than others." "Everyone in the kingdom must derive all things from the monarch, as nature derives all things from the sun." "The people must be assured work and bread, so that poverty will not drive them into the arms of new rebels." "We'll see to it that taxes are lowered." "As for the nobility, they as well shall derive all things from the king:" "Privileges, honors, money." "Therefore, we will have them continually in our presence, separated from the bourgeoisie." "We'll make sure that being far from us will be worse than exile for them." "Be careful, Sire, that expenses do not become great." "Expenses, Mr. Colbert, will be sources of activity and profit." "The merchants, artisans and the bourgeois will see that it's in their interest to build ties to the king, the animator of all enterprises." "All of our decisions - great works, the establishment of industries, the conquest of new lands - will provide opportunities for immense profit." "This is the outline of my policy." "Are you prepared to serve it?" "With all my heart, Sire." "In your view, what are the means to this end?" "Your Majesty has said it." "France must be endowed with the industries it lacks." "It must produce arms, mirrors, tapestries." "France must be given a fleet and an empire beyond the sea, to liberate us from Holland, which has a monopoly on maritime traffic." "Domestically, charity must be replaced by work, for the idle are easy prey for troublemakers." "We must dig canals, open roads, develop stables for military service, take measures to avoid famine and develop agriculture." "We must reduce the taxes that are crushing the peasants and offset this loss of revenue by raising indirect taxes which will affect all classes - financing, granting, salt, tobacco and stamped paper." "This system will allow, as His Majesty wishes, a reduction in charges on the lower classes." "However, to increase income, it's best to reduce the remittances and profits of tax collectors and have them closely watched, to investigate sharply the traders and to reduce and refinance allowances." "That's all very well." "We will be certain to take these measures." "In addition, Mr. Colbert, upon my return to the Louvre, I want you to summon the master tailor." "Do not neglect this order." "It's of the highest importance." "We have scrupulously followed Your Majesty's commands." "There isn't enough ribbon and lace." "Does Your Majesty prefer it like this?" "That's better." "Mr. Fouquet had adopted those German fashions." "We'll take the most luxurious part from it." "Mr. Fouquet saw in it no more than an instrument of glory." "We'll make political use of it so that the nobles won't be able to think of anything but their doublet." "A suit like this one, Mr. Colbert, should represent a year's income for a gentleman of the court." "Mr. Binet, try the wig on him." "My scissors." "With that dark wig, the mustache needs to match." "Add ribbons to the shoes and lengthen the lace at the heel." "Mr. Fouquet understood that minds are governed more by appearances than by the true nature of things." "Does the suit meet Your Majesty's wishes now?" "No, it's too cheap." "It's better to start over." "You see, Mr. Colbert, I'll be the first to dress this way." "For the nobility must follow the king in every regard." "I've decided to keep them far away from Paris and far away from the parliament who was their ally during the Fronde." "To that end, I'll move into the castle that my father built at Versailles." "Until the present, leaders have paid their own expenses while staying at court." "Henceforth, the crown will pay the expense of furnishing and lodging them year round." "Nevertheless, Sire," "Your Majesty's generosity will not prevent the nobles from going into debt." "Far from their land, solicited by a thousand opportunities to spend, they'll take out loans." "Let them." "I'll cover their worst debts to bind them more closely to me." "As for those nobles who wish to have lodgings built at Versailles," "I will declare their lodgings privileged from seizure and not to be sold by the courts." "That will not fail to attract them to the court." "They will no longer be indebted to the bourgeois for their finances, but to myself alone." "My father's castle will become the temple of the monarchy." "All the artists in the kingdom will work on its embellishment." "Well, Mr. Le Vau, how are things progressing?" "Sire, I had to address the most urgent matters first." "Where do the works stand?" "The masonry of the middle wing is complete, the plumbing and the roofing will soon be done and shortly, Your Majesty will see the woodwork under way." "On the other hand, Your Majesty can already judge the effect produced by the balusters, vases and trophies." "Have you seen, Mr. Le Vau, the paintings which will adorn the seven rooms of the large apartment?" "Yes, Sire." "Nothing signals more clearly a prince's greatness of spirit than his buildings." "Posterity judges him by the measure of the structures he's built." "After me, Versailles will remain the palace of my dynasty." "Keep this in your mind and spare no embellishment that might enrich it." "Mr. Colbert, based on these plans, have you estimated how many people the palace could house?" "Yes, Sire." "13,000 people." "I would like the plans enlarged to 15,000." "When foreign lords and sovereigns come to visit us, the immensity and novelty of the palace's layout will show them the extent of France's power." "Mr. Le Vau, you must continue those open archways that you have erected to support the terrace." "We will plant here, with the good exposure to the sun, the largest and most beautiful orangery in the world." "The king!" "Mr. De Vardes." "I greet you, madame." "I am quite well." "Mr. De Vardes, I've summoned you." "I am pleased to see you." "My Lord, Sire, by summoning me, you've brought me back to life." "This is Mr. De la Motte, who's just returned from the country." "I salute you, sir." "Another foolish remark." "Aren't you aware that you mustn't salute anyone in my presence?" "Sire, I'd completely forgotten." "Your Majesty will have to forgive me 30 foolish remarks." "I will." "Twenty-nine remain." "But tell me, Vardes, what's this doublet you're wearing?" "Have you just returned from China or the Americas?" "Sire, when we're so unfortunate as to be distant from you, we're not only unhappy, but ridiculous as well." "Stand up, Mr. De Vardes, and remain in my friendship." "Are they cooked perfectly?" "Careful." "His Majesty hates hard-boiled eggs that aren't perfectly cooked." "His Majesty has begun the eighth setting." "Garnish the chicken." "Prepare the fruit baskets." "Garnish it with spinach." "Don't forget to stud it with roast bread and to sprinkle the edge of the plate with grated bread." "And the peas." "Peas." "Master of greens." "Did you remember the lettuce?" "Go, go, go." "The suckling pig." "Very good." "Very good." "Garnish the fruit baskets." "The lids." "A little more sauce." "A bit more generous with the garnish." "Did you let the crepe batter rest?" "Prepare 12 marmalade crepes, 24 chocolate and 24 vanilla." "The napkin, please, brother." "The bread." "Music, please, brother." "The king's music." "The king's music." "The king isn't familiar with the use of a fork?" "Yes, but he disapproves of them." "The other day, His Majesty went into a terrible rage when he learned that his highness the Dauphin had used one." "I'm thirsty." "Drink for the king." "Mr. De Lorraine." "I would like you to come with me after I've dined." "We will go to the kennel and feed the dogs." "I will be there, Sire." "I'll be pleased to see you tomorrow for the hunt in the Marly forest." "Go to the kitchen for the other plates." "The king has begun the 14th setting." "The king has begun the 14th setting." "The king has begun the 14th setting." "Form the procession." "Meat for the king." "Meat for the king." "I formally advise Your Majesty against the pork." "Fine." "Bring hard-boiled eggs." "Hard-boiled eggs." "Have a seat, my brother." "Mr. De Gesvres, I wish to remain alone and at rest." ""There is a loftiness that does not come from fortune." "It's a certain air of superiority which seems to destine us for greatness." "It's a prize that we give to ourselves imperceptibly." "It's by virtue of this quality that we usurp the deference of other men, and it is this quality which places us above them more than birth, dignity or even merit."" "More than birth, dignity or even merit." ""Neither the sun nor death can be gazed upon fixedly."" "Neither the sun nor death can be gazed upon fixedly."