Gilbert Parker

The Seats of the Mighty, Complete


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       Gilbert Parker

      The Seats of the Mighty, Complete

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066246389

       INTRODUCTION TO THE IMPERIAL EDITION

       I. AN ESCORT TO THE CITADEL

       II. THE MASTER OF THE KING’S MAGAZINE

       III. THE WAGER AND THE SWORD

       IV. THE RAT IN THE TRAP

       V. THE DEVICE OF THE DORMOUSE

       VI. MORAY TELLS THE STORY OF HIS LIFE

       VII. “QUOTH LITTLE GARAINE”

       VIII. AS VAIN AS ABSALOM

       IX. A LITTLE CONCERNING THE CHEVALIER DE LA DARANTE

       X. AN OFFICER OF MARINES

       XI. THE COMING OF DOLTAIRE

       XII. “THE POINT ENVENOMED TOO!”

       XIII. “A LITTLE BOAST”

       XIV. ARGAND COURNAL.

       XV. IN THE CHAMBER OF TORTURE

       XVI. BE SAINT OR IMP

       XVII. THROUGH THE BARS OF THE CAGE

       XVIII. THE STEEP PATH OF CONQUEST

       XIX. A DANSEUSE AND THE BASTILE

       XX. UPON THE RAMPARTS

       XXI. LA JONGLEUSE

       XXII. THE LORD OF KAMARSKA

       XXIII. WITH WOLFE AT MONTMORENCI.

       XXIV. THE SACRED COUNTERSIGN

       XXV. IN THE CATHEDRAL.

       XXVI. THE SECRET OF THE TAPESTRY

       XXVII. A SIDE-WIND OF REVENGE

       XXVIII. “TO CHEAT THE DEVIL YET.”

       XXIX. “MASTER DEVIL” DOLTAIRE

       XXX. “WHERE ALL THE LOVERS CAN HIDE”

       APPENDIX.

       Table of Contents

      It was in the winter of 1892, when on a visit to French Canada, that I made up my mind I would write the volume which the public knows as ‘The Seats of the Mighty,’ but I did not begin the composition until early in 1894. It was finished by the beginning of February, 1895, and began to appear in ‘The Atlantic Monthly’ in March of that year. It was not my first attempt at historical fiction, because I had written ‘The Trail of the Sword’ in the year 1893, but it was the first effort on an ambitious scale, and the writing of it was attended with as much searching of heart as enthusiasm. I had long been saturated by the early history of French Canada, as perhaps ‘The Trail of the Sword’ bore witness, and particularly of the period of the Conquest, and I longed for a subject which would, in effect, compel me to write; for I have strong views upon this business of compulsion in the mind of the writer. Unless a thing has seized a man, has obsessed him, and he feels that it excludes all other temptations to his talent or his genius, his book will not convince. Before all else he must himself be overpowered by the insistence of his subject, then intoxicated with his idea, and, being still possessed, become master of his material while remaining the slave of his subject. I believe that every book which has taken hold of the public has represented a kind of self-hypnotism on the part of the writer. I am further convinced that the book which absorbs the author, which possesses him as he writes it, has the effect of isolating him into an atmosphere which is not sleep, and which is not absolute wakefulness, but a place between the two, where the working world is indistinct and the mind is swept along a flood submerging the self-conscious but not drowning into unconsciousness.

      Such, at any rate, is my own experience. I am convinced that the books of mine which have had so many friends as this book, ‘The Seats of the Mighty’, has had in the English-speaking world were written in just such conditions of temperamental isolation or absorption. First the subject, which must of itself have driving power, then the main character, which becomes a law working out its own destiny; and the subject in my own work has always been translatable into a phrase. Nearly every one of my books has always been reducible to its title.

      For years I had wished to write an historical novel of the conquest of Canada or the settlement of the United Empire loyalists and the subsequent War of 1812, but the central idea and the central character had not come to me; and without both and the driving power of a big idea and of a big character, a book did not seem to me possible. The human thing with the grip of real life was necessary. At last, as pointed out in the prefatory note of the first edition, published in the spring of 1896 by Messrs. D. Appleton & Co., of New York, and Messrs. Methuen & Co., of London,