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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12309 ***
+
+LOVE AFFAIRS
+OF THE COURTS OF EUROPE
+
+BY
+
+THORNTON HALL, F.S.A.,
+
+Barrister-at-Law,
+
+Author of "Love romancies of the Aristocracy",
+"Love intrigues of Royal Courts", etc., etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO
+
+MY COUSIN,
+
+LENORE
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAP
+
+I. A COMEDY QUEEN
+II. THE "BONNIE PRINCE'S" BRIDE
+III. THE PEASANT AND THE EMPRESS
+IV. A CROWN THAT FAILED
+V. A QUEEN OF HEARTS
+VI. THE REGENT'S DAUGHTER
+VII. A PRINCESS OF MYSTERY
+VIII. THE KING AND THE "LITTLE DOVE"
+IX. THE ROMANCE OF THE BEAUTIFUL SWEDE
+X. THE SISTER OF AN EMPEROR
+XI. A SIREN OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
+XII. THE CORSICAN AND THE CREOLE
+XIII. THE ENSLAVER OF A KING
+XIV. AN EMPRESS AND HER FAVOURITES
+XV. A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY CINDERELLA
+XVI. BIANCA, GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY
+XVII. RICHELIEU, THE ROUÉ
+XVIII. THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS
+XIX. THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS--_continued_
+XX. THE LOVE-AFFAIRS OF A REGENT
+XXI. A DELILAH OF THE COURT OF FRANCE
+XXII. THE "SUN-KING" AND THE WIDOW
+XXIII. A THRONED BARBARIAN
+XXIV. A FRIEND OF MARIE ANTOINETTE
+XXV. THE RIVAL SISTERS
+XXVI. THE RIVAL SISTERS--_continued_
+XXVII. A MISTRESS OF INTRIGUE
+XXVIII. AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE
+XXIX. AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE--_continued_
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+BIANCA CAPELLO BONAVENTURA GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY
+
+CATHERINE THE SECOND OF RUSSIA
+
+COUNT GREGORY ORLOFF
+
+DESIRÉE CLARY
+
+JOSEPHINE DE BEAUHARNAIS, EMPRESS (BY PRUD'HON)
+
+LOLA MONTEZ, COUNTESS OF LANDSFELD
+
+LUDWIG I., KING OF BAVARIA
+
+FRANCESCO I., GRAND DUKE OF TUSCANY
+
+CAROLINE OF BRUNSWICK, WIFE OF GEORGE IV
+
+
+
+
+LOVE AFFAIRS OF THE COURTS OF EUROPE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+A COMEDY QUEEN
+
+
+"It was to a noise like thunder, and close clasped in a soldier's
+embrace, that Catherine I. made her first appearance in Russian
+history."
+
+History, indeed, contains few chapters more strange, more seemingly
+impossible, than this which tells the story of the maid-of-all-work--the
+red-armed, illiterate peasant-girl who, without any dower of beauty or
+charm, won the idolatry of an Emperor and succeeded him on the greatest
+throne of Europe. So obscure was Catherine's origin that no records
+reveal either her true name or the year or place of her birth. All that
+we know is that she was cradled in some Livonian village, either in
+Sweden or Poland, about the year 1685, the reputed daughter of a
+serf-mother and a peasant-father; and that her numerous brothers and
+sisters were known in later years by the name Skovoroshtchenko or
+Skovronski. The very Christian name by which she is known to history
+was not hers until it was given to her by her Imperial lover.
+
+It is not until the year 1702, when the future Empress of the Russias
+was a girl of seventeen, that she makes her first dramatic appearance on
+the stage on which she was to play so remarkable a part. Then we find
+her acting as maid-servant to the Lutheran pastor of Marienburg,
+scrubbing his floors, nursing his children, and waiting on his resident
+pupils, in the midst of all the perils of warfare. The Russian hosts had
+for weeks been laying siege to Marienburg; and the Commandant, unable to
+defend the town any longer against such overwhelming odds, had announced
+his intention to blow up the fortress, and had warned the inhabitants to
+leave the town.
+
+Between the alternatives of death within the walls and the enemy
+without, Pastor Glück chose the latter; and sallying forth with his
+family and maid-servant, threw himself on the mercy of the Russians who
+promptly packed him off to Moscow a prisoner. For Martha (as she seems
+to have been known in those days) a different fate was reserved. Her red
+lips, saucy eyes, and opulent figure were too seductive a spoil to part
+with, General Shérémétief decided, and she was left behind, a by no
+means reluctant hostage.
+
+Peter's soldiers, now that victory was assured, were holding high revel
+of feasting and song and dancing. They received the new prisoner
+literally with open arms, and almost before she had wiped the tears from
+her eyes, at parting from her nurslings, she was capering gaily to the
+music of hautboy and fiddle, with the arm of a stalwart soldier round
+her waist.
+
+"Suddenly," says Waliszewski, "a fearful explosion overthrew the
+dancers, cut the music short, and left the servant-maid, fainting with
+terror, in the arms of a dragoon."
+
+Thus did Martha, the "Siren of the Kitchen," dance her way into Russian
+history, little dreaming, we may be sure, to what dizzy heights her
+nimble feet were to carry her. For a time she found her pleasure in the
+attentions of a non-commissioned officer, sharing the life of camp and
+barracks and making friends by the good-nature which bubbled in her, and
+which was always her chief charm. When her sergeant began to weary of
+her, she found a humble place as laundry-maid in the household of
+Menshikoff, the Tsar's favourite, whose shirts, we are told, it was her
+privilege to wash; and who, it seems, was by no means insensible to the
+buxom charms of this maid of the laundry. At any rate we find
+Menshikoff, when he was spending the Easter of 1706 at Witebsk, writing
+to his sister to send her to him.
+
+But a greater than Menshikoff was soon to appear on the scene--none
+other than the Emperor Peter himself. One day the Tsar, calling on his
+favourite, was astonished to see the cleanliness of his surroundings and
+his person. "How do you contrive," he asked, "to have your house so well
+kept, and to wear such fresh and dainty linen?" Menshikoff's answer was
+"to open a door, through which the sovereign perceived a handsome girl,
+aproned, and sponge in hand, bustling from chair to chair, and going
+from window to window, scrubbing the window-panes"--a vision of industry
+which made such a powerful appeal to His Majesty that he begged an
+introduction on the spot to the lady of the sponge.
+
+The most daring writer of fiction could scarcely devise a more romantic
+meeting than this between the autocrat of Russia and the red-armed,
+bustling cleaner of the window-panes, and he would certainly never have
+ventured to build on it the romance of which it was the prelude. What it
+was in the young peasant-woman that attracted the Emperor it is
+impossible to say. Of beauty she seems to have had none--save perhaps
+such as lies in youth and rude health.
+
+We look at her portraits in vain to discover a trace of any charm that
+might appeal to man. Her pictures in the Romanof Gallery at St
+Petersburg show a singularly plain woman with a large, round
+peasant-face, the most conspicuous feature of which is a hideously
+turned-up nose. Large, protruding eyes and an opulent bust complete a
+presentment of the typical household drudge--"a servant-girl in a German
+inn." But Peter the Great, who was ever abnormal in all his tastes and
+appetites, was always more ready to make love to a woman of the people
+than to the most beautiful and refined of his Court ladies. His standard
+of taste, as of manners, has not inaptly been likened to that of a Dutch
+sailor.
+
+But whatever it was in the low-born laundry-woman that attracted the
+Tsar of Russia, we know that this first unconventional meeting led to
+many others, and that before long Catherine (for we may now call her by
+the name she made so famous) was removed from his favourite's household
+and installed in the Imperial harem where, for a time at least, she
+seems to have shared her favours indiscriminately between her old master
+and her new--"an obscure and complaisant mistress"--until Menshikoff
+finally resigned all rights in her to his sovereign.
+
+When Catherine took up her residence in her new home, Waliszewski tells
+us, "her eye shortly fell on certain magnificent jewels. Forthwith,
+bursting into tears, she addressed her new protector: 'Who put these
+ornaments here? If they come from the other one, I will keep nothing but
+this little ring; but if they come from you, how could you think I
+needed them to make me love you?'"
+
+If Catherine lacked physical graces, this and many another story prove
+that she had a rare gift of diplomacy. She had, moreover, an unfailing
+cheerfulness and goodness of heart which quickly endeared her to the
+moody and capricious Peter. In his frequent fits of nervous irritability
+which verged on madness, she alone had the power to soothe him and
+restore him to sanity. Her very voice had a magic to arrest him in his
+worst rages, and when the fit of madness (for such it undoubtedly was)
+was passing away she would "take his head and caress it tenderly,
+passing her fingers through his hair. Soon he grew drowsy and slept,
+leaning against her breast. For two or three hours she would sit
+motionless, waiting for the cure slumber always brought him, until at
+last he awoke cheerful and refreshed."
+
+Thus each day the Livonian peasant-woman took deeper root in the heart
+of the Emperor, until she became indispensable to him. Wherever he went
+she was his constant companion--in camp or on visits to foreign Courts,
+where she was received with the honours due to a Queen. And not only
+were her presence and her ministrations infinitely pleasant to him; her
+prudent counsel saved him from many a blunder and mad excess, and on at
+least one occasion rescued his army from destruction.
+
+So strong was the hold she soon won on his affection and gratitude that
+he is said to have married her secretly within three years of first
+setting eyes on her. Her future and that of the children she had borne
+to him became his chief concern; and as early as 1708, when he was
+leaving Moscow to join his army, he left behind him a note: "If, by
+God's will, anything should happen to me, let the 3000 roubles which
+will be found in Menshikoff's house be given to Catherine Vassilevska
+and her daughter."
+
+But whatever the truth may be about the alleged secret marriage, we know
+that early in 1712, Peter, in his Admiral's uniform, stood at the altar
+with the Livonian maid-servant, in the presence of his Court officials,
+and with two of her own little daughters as bridesmaids. The wedding, we
+are told, was performed in a little chapel belonging to Prince
+Menshikoff, and was preceded by an interview with the Dowager-Empress
+and his Princess sisters, in which Peter declared his intention to make
+Catherine his wife and commanded them to pay her the respect due to her
+new rank. Then followed, in brilliant sequence, State dinners,
+receptions, and balls, at all of which the laundress-bride sat at her
+husband's right hand and received the homage of his subjects as his
+Queen.
+
+Picture now the woman who but a few years earlier had scrubbed Pastor
+Glück's floors and cleaned Menshikoff's window-panes, in all her new
+splendours as Empress of Russia. The portraits of her, in her
+unaccustomed glories, are far from flattering and by no means
+consistent. "She showed no sign of ever having possessed beauty," says
+Baron von Pöllnitz; "she was tall and strong and very dark, and would
+have seemed darker but for the rouge and whitening with which she
+plastered her face."
+
+The picture drawn by the Margravine of Baireuth is still less
+attractive: "She was short and huddled up, much tanned, and utterly
+devoid of dignity or grace. Muffled up in her clothes, she looked like a
+German comedy-actress. Her old-fashioned gown, heavily embroidered with
+silver, and covered with dirt, had been bought in some old-clothes shop.
+The front of her skirt was adorned with jewels, and she had a dozen
+orders and as many portraits of saints fastened all along the facings of
+her dress, so that when she walked she jingled like a mule."
+
+But in the eyes of one man at least--and he the greatest in all
+Russia--she was beautiful. His allegiance never wavered, nor indeed did
+that of his army, which idolised her to a man. She might have no boudoir
+graces, but at least she was the typical soldier's wife, and cut a brave
+figure, as she reviewed the troops or rode at their head in her uniform
+and grenadier cap. She shared all the hardships and dangers of
+campaigns with a smile on her lips, sleeping on the hard ground, and
+standing in the trenches with the bullets whistling about her ears, and
+men dropping to right and left of her.
+
+Nor was there ever a trace of vanity in her. She was as proud of her
+humble origin as if she had been cradled in a palace. To princes and
+ambassadors she would talk freely of the days when she was a household
+drudge, and loved to remind her husband of the time when his Empress
+used to wash shirts for his favourite. "Though, no doubt, you have other
+laundresses about you," she wrote to him once, "the old one never
+forgets you."
+
+The letters that passed between this oddly assorted couple, if couched
+in terms which could scarcely see print in our more restrained age, are
+eloquent of affection and devotion. To Peter his kitchen-Queen was
+"friend of my Heart," "dearest Heart," and "dear little Mother." He
+complains pathetically, when away with his army, "I am dull without
+you--and there is nobody to take care of my shirts." When Catherine once
+left him on a round of visits, he grew so impatient at her absence that
+he sent a yacht to bring her back, and with it a note: "When I go into
+my rooms and find them deserted, I feel as if I must rush away at once.
+It is all so empty without thee."
+
+And each letter is accompanied by a present--now a watch, now some
+costly lace, and again a lock of his hair, or a simple bunch of dried
+flowers, while she returns some such homely gift as a little fruit or a
+fur-lined waistcoat. On both sides, too, a vein of jocularity runs
+through the letters, as when Catherine addresses him as "Your
+Excellency, the very illustrious and eminent Prince-General and Knight
+of the crowned Compass and Axe"; and when Peter, after the Peace of
+Nystadt, writes: "According to the Treaty I am obliged to return all
+Livonian prisoners to the King of Sweden. What is to become of thee, I
+don't know." To which she answers, with true wifely (if affected)
+humility: "I am your servant; do with me as you will; yet I venture to
+think you won't send _me_ back."
+
+Quite idyllic, this post-nuptial love-making between the great Emperor
+and his low-born Queen, who has so possessed his heart that no other
+woman, however fair, could wrest it from her. And in her exalted
+position of Empress she practised the same diplomatic arts by which she
+had won Peter's devotion. Politics she left severely alone; she turned a
+forbidding back on all attempts to involve her in State intrigues, but
+she was ever ready to protect those who appealed to her for help, and to
+use her influence with her husband to procure pardon or lighter
+punishment for those who had fallen under his displeasure.
+
+Nor did she forget her poor relations in Livonia. One brother, a
+postillion, she openly acknowledged, introduced to her husband, and
+obtained a liberal pension for him; and to her other brothers and
+sisters she sent frequent presents and sums of money. More she could not
+well do during her husband's lifetime, but when she in turn came to the
+throne, she brought the whole family--postillion, shoemaker,
+farm-labourer and serf, their wives and families--to her capital,
+installed them in sumptuous apartments in her palaces, decked them in
+the finest Court feathers, and gave them large fortunes and titles of
+nobility.
+
+When the Tsar's quarrel with his eldest son came to its tragic
+_dénouement_ in Alexis' death, her own son became heir presumptive to
+the throne of Russia. And thus the chain that bound Peter to his Empress
+received its completing link. It only remained now to place the crown
+formally on the head of the mother of the new heir, and this supreme
+honour was hers in the month of May, 1729.
+
+Wonderful tales are told of the splendours of Catherine's coronation. No
+existing crown was good enough for the ex-maid-of-all-work, so one of
+special magnificence was made by the Court jewellers--a miracle of
+diamonds and pearls, crowned by a monster ruby--at a cost of a million
+and a half roubles. The Coronation gown, which cost four thousand
+roubles, was made at Paris; and from Paris, too, came the gorgeous coach
+with its blaze of gold and heraldry, in which the Tsarina made her
+triumphal progress through the streets of the capital from the Winter
+Palace. The culminating point of this remarkable ceremony came when,
+after Peter had placed the crown on his wife's head, she sank weeping at
+his feet and embraced his knees.
+
+Catherine, however, had not worn her crown many months when she found
+herself in considerable danger of losing not only her dignities but even
+her liberty. For some time, it is said, she had been engaged in a
+liaison with William Mons, a handsome, gay young courtier, brother to a
+former mistress of the Tsar. The love affair had been common knowledge
+at the Court--to all but Peter himself, and it was accident that at last
+opened his eyes to his wife's dishonour. One moonlight night, so the
+story is told, he chanced to enter an arbour in the palace gardens, and
+there discovered her in the arms of her lover.
+
+His vengeance was swift and terrible. Mons was arrested the same night
+in his rooms, and dragged fainting into the Tsar's presence, where he
+confessed his disloyalty. A few days later he was beheaded, at the very
+moment when the Empress was dancing a minuet with her ladies, a smile on
+her lips, whatever grief was in her heart. The following day she was
+driven by her husband past the scaffold where her lover's dead body was
+exposed to public view--so close, in fact, that her dress brushed
+against it; but, without turning her head, she kept up a smiling
+conversation with the perpetrator of this outrage on her feelings.
+
+Still not content with his revenge, Peter next placed the dead man's
+head, enclosed in a bottle of spirits of wine, in a prominent place in
+the Empress's apartments; and when she still smilingly ignored its
+horrible proximity, his anger, hitherto repressed, blazed forth
+fiercely. With a blow of his strong fist he shattered a priceless
+Venetian vase, shouting, "Thus will I treat thee and thine"--to which
+she calmly responded, "You have broken one of the chief ornaments of
+your palace; do you think you have increased its charm?"
+
+For a time Peter refused to be propitiated; he would not speak to his
+wife, or share her meals or her room. But she had "tamed the tiger" many
+a time before, and she was able to do it again. Within two months she
+had won her way back into full favour, and was once more the Tsar's
+dearest _Katiérinoushka._
+
+A month later Peter was dead, carrying his love for his peasant-Empress
+to the grave, and Catherine was reigning in his stead, able at last to
+conduct her amours openly--spending her nights in shameless orgies with
+her lovers, and leaving the rascally Menshikoff to do the ruling, until
+death brought her amazing career to an end within sixteen months of
+mounting her throne.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE "BONNIE PRINCE'S" BRIDE
+
+
+In the pageant of our history there are few more attractive figures than
+that of "Bonnie Prince Charlie," the "yellow-haired laddie" whose blue
+eyes made a slave of every woman who came under their magic, and whose
+genial, unaffected manners turned the veriest coward into a hero, ready
+to follow him to the death in that year of ill-fated romance, "the
+forty-five."
+
+The very name of the "Bonnie Prince," the hope of the fallen Stuarts,
+the idol of Scotland--leading a forlorn hope with laughter on his lips,
+now riding proudly at the head of his rabble army, now a fugitive
+Ishmael among the hills and caves of the Highlands, but ever the last to
+lose heart--has a magic still to quicken the pulses. That later years
+proved the idol's feet to be of clay, that he fell from his pedestal to
+end his days an object of contempt and derision, only served to those
+who knew him in the pride of his youth to mingle pity with the glamour
+of romance that still surrounds his name.
+
+In the year 1772, when this story opens, Charles Edward, Count of
+Albany, had already travelled far on the downward road that led from
+the glory of Prestonpans to his drunkard's grave. A pitiful pensioner of
+France, who had known the ignominy of wearing fetters in a French
+prison, a social outcast whose Royal pretensions were at best the
+subject of an amused tolerance, the "laddie of the yellow hair" had
+fallen so low that the brandy bottle, which was his constant companion
+night and day, was his only solace.
+
+Picture him at this period, and mark the pathetic change which less than
+thirty years had wrought in the Stuart "darling" of "the forty-five,"
+when many a proud lady of Scotland would have given her life for a smile
+from his bonnie face. A middle-aged man with dropsy in his limbs, and
+with the bloated face of the drunkard; "dull, thick, silent-looking
+lips, of purplish red scarce redder than the skin; pale blue eyes
+tending to a watery greyness, leaden, vague, sad, but with angry
+streakings of red; something inexpressibly sad, gloomy, helpless,
+vacant, and debased in the whole face."
+
+Such was this "Young Chevalier" when France took it into her head to
+make a pawn of him in the political chess-game with England. As a man he
+was beneath contempt; as a "King"--well, he was a _Roi pour rire_; but
+at least the Royal House he represented might be made a useful weapon
+against the arrogant Hanoverian who sat on his father's throne. That
+rival stock must not be allowed to die out; his claims might weigh
+heavily some day in the scale between France and England. Charles Edward
+must marry, and provide a worthier successor to his empty honours.
+
+And thus it was that France came to the exiled Prince with the
+seductive offer of a pretty bride and a pension of forty thousand crowns
+a year. The besotted Charles jumped at the offer; left his brandy
+bottle, and, with the alacrity of a youthful lover, rushed away to woo
+and win the bride who had been chosen for him.
+
+And never surely was there such a grotesque wooing. Charles was a
+physical wreck of fifty-two; his bride-elect had only seen nineteen
+summers. The daughter of Prince Gustav Adolf of Stolberg and the
+Countess of Horn, Princess Louise was kin to many of the greatest houses
+in Europe, from the Colonnas and Orsinis to the Hohenzollerns and
+Bruces. In blood she was thus at least a match for her Stuart
+bridegroom.
+
+She had spent some years in the seclusion of a monastery, and had
+emerged for her undesired trip to the altar a young woman of rare beauty
+and charm, with glorious brown eyes, the delicate tint of the wild rose
+in her dimpled cheeks, a wealth of golden hair, and a figure every line
+and movement of which was instinct with beauty and grace. She was a
+fresh, unspoilt child, bubbling with gaiety and the joy of life, and her
+dainty little head was full of the romance of sweet nineteen.
+
+Such then was the singularly contrasted couple--"Beauty and the Beast"
+they were dubbed by many--who stood together at the altar at Macerata on
+Good Friday of the year 1772--the bridegroom, "looking hideous in his
+wedding suit of crimson silk," in flaming contrast to the virginal white
+of his pretty victim. It needed no such day of ill-omen as a Friday to
+inaugurate a union which could not have been otherwise than
+disastrous--the union of a beautiful, romantic girl eager to exploit the
+world of freedom and of pleasure, and a drink-sodden man old enough to
+be her father, for whom life had long lost all its illusions.
+
+It is true that for a time Charles Edward was drawn from his bottle by
+the lure of a pretty and winsome wife, who should, if any power on earth
+could, have made a man again of him. She laughed, indeed, at his maudlin
+tales of past heroism and adventure in love and battle; to her he was a
+plaster hero, and she let him know it. She was "mated to a clown," and a
+drunken clown to boot--and, well, she would make the best of a bad
+bargain. If her husband was the sorriest lover who ever poured
+thick-voiced flatteries into a girl-wife's ears, there were others,
+plenty of them, who were eager to pay more acceptable homage to her; and
+these men--poets, courtiers, great men in art and letters--flocked to
+her _salon_ to bask in her beauty and to be charmed by her wit.
+
+After all, she was a Queen, although she wore no crown. She had a Court,
+although no Royalties graced it. From the Pope to the King of France, no
+monarch in Europe would recognise her husband's kingship. But at such
+neglect, the offspring of jealousy, of course, she only smiled. She
+could indeed have been moderately happy in her girlish, light-hearted
+way, if her husband had not been such an impossible person.
+
+As for Charles Edward, he soon wearied of a bride who did nothing but
+laugh at him, and who was so ready to escape from his obnoxious presence
+to the company of more congenial admirers. He returned to his brandy
+bottle, and alternated between a fuddled brain and moods of wild
+jealousy. He would not allow his wife to leave the door without his
+escort; if she refused to accompany him, he turned the key in her
+bedroom door, to which the only access was through his own room.
+
+He took her occasionally to the theatre or opera, his brandy bottle
+always making a third for company. Before the performance was half
+through he was snoring stertorously on the couch which he insisted on
+having in his box; and, more often than not, was borne to his carriage
+for the journey home helplessly drunk. And this within the first year of
+his wedded life.
+
+If any woman had excuse for seeking elsewhere the love she could not
+find in her husband it was Louise of Albany. There were dames in plenty
+in Rome (where they were now living) who, not content with devoted
+husbands, had their _cisibeos_ to play the lover to them; but Louise
+sought no such questionable escape from her unhappiness. Her books and
+the clever men who thronged her _salon_ were all the solace she asked;
+and under temptation such as few women of that country and day would
+have resisted, she carried the shield of a blameless life.
+
+From Rome the Countess and her husband fared to Florence in 1774; and
+here matters went from bad to worse. Charles was now seldom sober day
+or night; and his jealousy often found expression in filthy abuse and
+cowardly assaults. Hitherto he had been simply disgusting; now he was a
+constant menace, even to her life. She lived in hourly fear of his
+brutality; but in her darkest hour sunshine came again into her life
+with the coming of Vittorio Alfieri, whose name was to be linked with
+hers for so many years.
+
+At this time Alfieri was in the very prime of his splendid manhood, one
+of the handsomest and most fascinating men in all Europe. Some four
+years older than herself, he was a tall, stalwart, soldierly man,
+blue-eyed and auburn-haired, an aristocrat to his finger-tips, a daring
+horseman, a poet, and a man of rare culture--just the man to set any
+woman's heart a-flutter, as he had already done in most of the capitals
+of the Continent.
+
+He was a spoilt child of fortune, this Italian poet and soldier, a man
+who had drunk deep of the cup of life, and to whom all conquests came
+with such fatal ease that already he had drained life dry of its
+pleasures.
+
+Such was the man who one autumn day in the year 1777 came into the
+unhappy life of the Countess of Albany, still full of the passions and
+yearnings of youth. It was surely fate that thus brought together these
+two young people of kindred tastes and kindred disillusions; and we
+cannot wonder that, of that first meeting, Alfieri should write, "At
+last I had met the one woman whom I had sought so long, the woman who
+could inspire my ambition and my work. Recognising this, and prizing so
+rare a treasure, I gave myself up wholly to her."
+
+Those were happy days for the Countess that followed this fateful
+meeting--days of sweet communion of twin souls, hours of stolen bliss,
+when they could dwell apart in a region of high and ennobling thoughts,
+while the besotted husband was sleeping off the effects of his drunken
+orgies in the next room. To Alfieri, Louise was indeed "the anchor of
+his life," giving stability to his vacillating nature, and inspiring all
+that was best and noblest in him; while to her the association with this
+"splendid creature," who so thoroughly understood and sympathised with
+her, was the revelation of a new world.
+
+Thus three happy years passed; and then the crisis came. One night the
+Prince, in a mood of drunken madness, inflamed by jealousy, attacked his
+wife, and, after severely beating her, flung her down on her bed and
+attempted to strangle her. This was the crowning outrage of years of
+brutality. She could not, dared not, spend another day with such a
+madman. At any cost she must leave him--and for ever.
+
+When morning came, with Alfieri's assistance, the plan of escape was
+arranged. In the company of a lady friend--and also of her husband, now
+scared and penitent, but fearing to let her out of his sight--she drove
+to a neighbouring convent, ostensibly to inspect the nuns' needlework.
+On reaching her destination she ran up the convent steps, entered the
+building, and the door was slammed and bolted behind her in the very
+face of Charles Edward, who had followed as fast as his dropsical legs
+would carry him up the steps. The Prince, blazing at such an outrage,
+hammered fiercely at the door until at last the Lady Abbess herself
+showed her face at the grating, and told him in no ambiguous words that
+he would not be allowed to enter! His wife had come to her for
+protection; and if he had any grievance he had better appeal to the Duke
+of Tuscany.
+
+Thus ended the tragic union of the "Bonnie Prince" and his Countess.
+Emancipation had come at last; and, while Louise was now free to devote
+her life to her beloved Alfieri, her brutal husband was left for eight
+years to the company of his bottle and the ministrations of his natural
+daughter, until a drunkard's grave at Frascati closed over his mis-spent
+life. The pity and the tragedy of it!
+
+Louise of Albany and her poet-lover were now free to link their lives at
+the altar--but no such thought seems to have entered the head of either.
+They were perfectly happy without the bond of the wedding-ring, of which
+the Countess had such terrible memories; and together they walked
+through life, happy in each other and indifferent to the world's
+opinion.
+
+Now in Florence, now in Rome; living together in Alsace, drifting to
+Paris; and, when the Revolution drove them from the French capital,
+seeking refuge in London, where we find the uncrowned Queen of England
+chatting amicably with the "usurper" George in the Royal box at the
+opera--always inseparable, and Louise always clinging to the shreds of
+her Royal dignity, with a throne in her ante-room, and "Your Majesty"
+on her servants' lips. Thus passed the careless, happy years for
+Countess and poet until, in 1803, Alfieri followed the "Bonnie Prince"
+behind the veil, and left a desolate Louise to moan amid her tears,
+"There is no more happiness for me."
+
+But Louise was not left even now without the solace of a man's love,
+which seemed as indispensable to her nature as the air she breathed.
+Before Alfieri had been many months in his Florence tomb his place by
+the Countess's side had been taken by François Xavier Fabre, a
+good-looking painter of only moderate gifts, whose handsome face,
+plausible tongue, and sunny disposition soon made a captive of her
+middle-aged heart. At the time when Fabre came thus into her life Madame
+la Comtesse had passed her fiftieth birthday--youth and beauty had taken
+wings; and passion (if ever she had any--for her relations with Alfieri
+seem to have been quite platonic) had died down to its embers.
+
+But a man's companionship and homage were always necessary to her, and
+in Fabre she found her ideal cavalier. Her _salon_ now became more
+popular even than in the days of her young wifehood. It drew to it all
+the greatest men in Europe, men of world-wide fame in statesmanship,
+letters, and art, all anxious to do homage to a woman of such culture
+and with such rare gifts of conversation.
+
+That she was now middle-aged, stout and dowdy--"like a cook with pretty
+hands," as Stendhal said of her--mattered nothing to her admirers, many
+of whom remembered her in the days of her lovely youth. She was, in
+their eyes, as much a Queen as if she wore a crown; and, moreover, she
+was a woman of magnetic charm and clever brain.
+
+And thus, with her books and her _salon_ and her cavalier, she spent the
+rest of her chequered life until the end came one day in 1824; and her
+last resting-place was, as she wished it to be, by the side of her
+beloved Alfieri. In the Church of Santa Croce, in Florence, midway
+between the tombs of Michael Angelo and Machiavelli, the two lovers
+sleep together their last sleep, beneath a beautiful monument fashioned
+by Canova's hands--Louise, wife of the "Bonnie Prince" (as we still
+choose to remember him) and Vittorio Alfieri, to whom, to quote his own
+words, "she was beyond all things beloved."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE PEASANT AND THE EMPRESS
+
+
+Many an autocrat of Russia has shown a truly sovereign contempt for
+convention in the choice of his or her favourites, the "playthings of an
+hour"; and at least three of them have carried this contempt to the
+altar itself.
+
+Peter, the first, as we have seen, offered a crown to Martha Skovronski,
+a Livonian scullery-maid, who succeeded him on the throne; the second
+Catherine gave her hand as well as her heart to Patiomkin, the gigantic,
+ill-favoured ex-sergeant of cavalry; and Elizabeth, daughter of Peter
+and his kitchen-Queen, proved herself worthy of her parentage when she
+made Alexis Razoum, a peasant's son, husband of the Empress of Russia.
+You will search history in vain for a story so strange and romantic as
+this of the great Empress and the lowly shepherd's son, whom her love
+raised from a hovel to a palace, and on whom one of the most amorous and
+fickle of sovereign ladies lavished honours and riches and an unwavering
+devotion, until her eyes, speaking their love to the last, were closed
+in death.
+
+It was in the humblest hovel of the village of Lemesh that Alexis
+Razoum drew his first breath one day in 1709. His father, Gregory
+Razoum, was a shepherd, who spent his pitiful earnings in drink--a man
+of violent temper who, in his drunken rages, was the terror not only of
+his home but of the entire village. His wife and children cowered at his
+approach; and on more than one occasion only accident (or Providence)
+saved him from the crime of murder. On one such occasion, we are told,
+the child Alexis, who from his earliest years had a passion for reading,
+was absorbed in a book, when his father, in ungovernable fury, seized a
+hatchet and hurled it at the boy's head. Luckily, the missile missed its
+mark, and Alexis escaped, to find refuge in the house of a friendly
+priest, who not only gave him shelter and protection, but taught him to
+write, and, above all, to sing--little dreaming that he was thus paving
+the way which was to lead the drunken shepherd's lad to the dizziest
+heights in Russia. For the boy had a beautiful voice. When he joined the
+choir of his village church, people flocked from far and near to listen
+to the sweet notes that soared, pure and liquid as a nightingale's song,
+above the rest. "It was," all declared, "the voice of an angel--and the
+face of an angel," for Alexis was as beautiful in those days as any
+child of picture or of dreams.
+
+One day a splendidly dressed stranger chanced to enter the Lemesh church
+during Mass--none other than Colonel Vishnevsky, a great Court official,
+who was on his way back to Moscow from a diplomatic mission; and he
+listened entranced to a voice sweeter than any he had ever heard. The
+service over, he made the acquaintance of the young chorister,
+interviewed his guardian, the "good Samaritan" priest, and persuaded him
+to allow the boy to accompany him to the capital. Thus the shepherd's
+son took weeping farewell of the good priest, of his mother, and of his
+brothers and sisters; and a few weeks later the Empress and her ladies
+were listening enchanted to his voice in the Imperial choir at
+Moscow--but none with more delight than the Princess Elizabeth, daughter
+of Peter the Great, to whom Alexis' beauty appealed even more strongly
+than his sweet singing.
+
+Elizabeth, true daughter of her father, had already, young as she was,
+counted her lovers by the score--lovers chosen indiscriminately, from
+Royal princes to grooms and common soldiers. She was already sated with
+the licence of the most dissolute Court of Europe, and to her the young
+Cossack of the beautiful face and voice, and rustic innocence, opened a
+new and seductive vista of pleasure. She lost her heart to him, had him
+transferred to her own Court as her favourite singer, and, within a few
+years, gave him charge of her purse and her properties.
+
+The shepherd's son was now not only lover-elect, but principal
+"minister" to the daughter of an Emperor, who was herself to wear the
+Imperial crown. And while Alexis was thus luxuriating amid the splendour
+of a Court, he by no means forgot the humble relatives he had left
+behind in his native village. His father was dead; his mother was
+reduced for a time to such a depth of destitution that she had to beg
+her bread from door to door. His sisters had found husbands for
+themselves in their own rank; and the favourite of an Imperial Princess
+had for brothers-in-law a tailor, a weaver, and a shepherd. When news
+came to Alexis of his mother's destitution he had sent her a sum of
+money sufficient to install her in comfort as an innkeeper: the first of
+many kindnesses which were to work a startling transformation in the
+fortunes of the Razoum family.
+
+Events now hurried quickly. The Empress Anna died, and was succeeded on
+the throne by the infant Ivan, her grand-nephew, who had been Emperor
+but a few months when, in 1741, a _coup d'état_ gave the crown to
+Elizabeth, mistress of the Lemesh peasant. Alexis was now husband in all
+but name of the Empress of all the Russias; honours and riches were
+showered on him; he was General, Grandmaster of the Hounds, Chief
+Gentleman of the Bedchamber, and lord of large estates yielding regal
+revenues.
+
+But all his grandeur was powerless to spoil the man, who still remained
+the simple peasant who, so many years earlier, had left his low-born
+mother with streaming eyes. His great ambition now was to share his
+good-fortune with her. She must exchange her village inn for the
+luxuries and splendours of a palace. And thus it was that one day a
+splendid carriage, with gay-liveried postillions, dashed up to the door
+of the Lemesh inn and carried off the simple peasant woman, her youngest
+son, Cyril, and one of her daughters, to the open-mouthed amazement of
+the villagers. At the entrance to the capital she was received by a
+magnificently attired gentleman, in whom she failed to recognise her son
+Alexis, until he showed her a birthmark on his body.
+
+Picture now the peasant-woman sumptuously lodged in the Moscow palace,
+decked in all the finery of silks and laces and jewels, receiving the
+respectful homage of high Court officials, caressed and petted by an
+Empress, while her splendid son looks smilingly on, as proud of his
+cottage-mother as if she were a Princess of the Blood Royal. That the
+innkeeper was not happy in her gilded cage, that her thoughts often
+wandered longingly to her cronies and the simple life of the village, is
+not to be wondered at.
+
+It was all very well for such a fine gentleman as her son, Alexis; but
+for a poor, simple-minded woman like herself--well, she was too old for
+such a transplanting. And we can imagine her relief when, on the removal
+of the Court to St Petersburg, she was allowed to bring her visit to an
+end and to return to her inn with wonderful stories of all she had seen.
+Her son and daughter, however, elected to remain. As for Cyril, a
+handsome youth, almost young enough to be his brother's son, he was
+quick to win his way into the favour of the Empress. Before he had been
+many months at Court he was made a Count and Gentleman of the
+Bedchamber. He was given for bride a grand-niece of Elizabeth; and at
+twenty-two he was Viceroy of the Ukraine, virtual sovereign of a kingdom
+of his own, with his peasant-mother, who declined to share his palace,
+comfortably installed in a modest house near his gates.
+
+Cyril, in fact, was to his last day as unspoiled by his unaccustomed
+grandeur as his brother Alexis. Each was ready at any moment to turn
+from the obsequious homage of nobles to hobnob with a peasant friend or
+relative. How utterly devoid of false pride Alexis was is proved by the
+following anecdote. One day when, in company with the Empress, he was
+paying a visit to Count Löwenwolde, he rushed from Elizabeth's side to
+fling his arms round the neck of one of his host's footmen. "Are you
+mad, Alexis?" exclaimed the Empress, in her astonishment. "What do you
+mean by such senseless behaviour?" "I am not mad at all," answered the
+favourite. "He is an old friend of mine."
+
+But although no man ever deposed the shepherd from the first place in
+Elizabeth's favour, it must not be imagined that he was her only lover.
+The daughter of the hot-blooded Peter and the lusty scullery wench had
+always as great a passion for men as the second Catherine, who had
+almost as many favourites in her boudoir as gowns in her wardrobes. She
+had her lovers before she was emancipated from the schoolroom; and not
+the least favoured of them, it is said, was her own nephew, Peter the
+Second, whom she would no doubt have married if it had been possible.
+
+She turned her back on one great alliance after another, preferring her
+freedom to a wedding-ring that brought no love with it; and she found
+her pleasure alike among the gentlemen of the Court and among her own
+servants. In the long list of her favourites we find a General
+succeeded by a Sergeant; Boutourlin, the handsome courtier, giving place
+to Lialin, the sailor; and Count Shouvalov retiring in favour of
+Voytshinsky, the coachman. Thus one liaison succeeded another from
+girlhood to middle-age--indeed long after she had passed the altar. But
+through all these varying attachments her heart remained constant to her
+shepherd-lover, to whom she was ever the devoted wife, and, when he was
+ill, the tenderest of nurses. To please him, she even accompanied him on
+a visit to his native village, smiling graciously on his humble friends
+of other days, and partaking of the hospitality of the poorest
+cottagers; while on all who had befriended him in the days of his
+obscurity she lavished her favours.
+
+Of one man who had been thus kind she made a General on the spot; the
+friendly priest was given a highly paid post at Court; high rank in the
+army was given to many of his humble relatives; and a husband was found
+for a favourite niece in Count Ryoumin, the Chancellor's son.
+
+As for Alexis himself, nothing was too good for him. Although he had
+probably never handled a gun in his life she made him Field-Marshal and
+head of her army; and, at her request, Charles VII. dubbed him Count of
+the Holy Roman Empire, a distinction which Gregory Orloff in later years
+prized more than all the honours Catherine II. showered on him; while
+the estates of which she made him lord were a small kingdom in
+themselves. Alexis, the shepherd's son, was now, beyond any question,
+the most powerful man in Russia. If he would, he might easily have
+taken the sceptre from the yielding hands of the Empress and played the
+autocrat, as Patiomkin played it under similar circumstances in later
+years. But Alexis cared as little for power as for rank and wealth. He
+smiled at his honours. "Fancy," he said, with his hearty laugh, "a
+peasant's son, a Count; and a man who ought to be tending sheep, a
+Field-Marshal!"
+
+When courtly genealogists spread before him an elaborate family-tree,
+proving that he sprang from the princely stock of Bogdan, with many a
+Grand Duke of Lithuania among his lineal ancestors, he laughed loud and
+long at them for their pains. "Don't be so ridiculous," he said. "You
+know as well as I that my parents were simple peasants, honest enough,
+but people of the soil and nothing else. If I am Count and Field-Marshal
+and Viceroy, I owe it all to the good heart of your Empress and mine,
+whose humble servant I am. Take it away, and let me hear no more of such
+foolery."
+
+Such to the last was the unspoiled, child-like nature of the man who so
+soon was to be not merely the first favourite but husband of an Empress.
+Probably Alexis would have lived and died Elizabeth's unlicensed lover
+had it not been for the cunning of the cleverest of her Chancellors,
+Bestyouzhev, who saw in his mistress's infatuation for her peasant the
+means of making his own position more secure. Elizabeth was still a
+young and attractive woman, who might pick and choose among some of the
+most eligible suitors in Europe for a sharer of her throne; for there
+were many who would gladly have played consort to the good-looking
+autocrat of Russia.
+
+Such a husband, especially if he were a strong man, might seriously
+imperil the Chancellor's position; might even dispense with him
+altogether. On the other hand, he was high in the favour of the
+shepherd's son, who had such a contempt for power, and who thus would be
+a puppet in his hands. Why not make him husband in name as well as in
+fact? It was, after all, an easy task the Chancellor thus set himself.
+Elizabeth was by no means unwilling to wear a wedding-ring for the man
+who had loved her so loyally and so long; and any difficulties she might
+raise were quickly disposed of by her father-confessor, who was
+Bestyouzhev's tool. Thus it came to pass that one day Elizabeth and
+Alexis stood side by side before the village altar of Perovo; and the
+words were spoken which made the shepherd's son husband of the Empress.
+The secrecy with which the ceremony was performed was but a fiction. All
+the world knew that Alexis Gregorovitch was Emperor by right of wedlock,
+and flocked to pay homage to him in his new and exalted character.
+
+He now had sumptuous apartments next to those of his wife; he sat at her
+right hand on all State occasions; he was her shadow everywhere; and
+during his frequent attacks of gout the Empress ministered to him night
+and day in his own rooms with the tender devotion of a mother to a
+child. Two children were born to them, a son and a daughter, the latter
+of whom, after a life of strange romance and vicissitude, ended her
+days in a loathsome dungeon of the fortress of Saints Peter and Paul,
+the victim of Catherine II.'s vengeance--miserably drowned, so one story
+goes, by an inundation of her cell.
+
+On Elizabeth's death, in the year 1762, her husband was glad to retire
+from the Court in which he had for so long played so splendid a part.
+"None but myself," he said, "can know with what pleasure I leave a
+sphere to which I was not born, and to which only my love for my dear
+mistress made me resigned. I should have been happier far with her in
+some small cottage far removed from the gilded slavery of Court life."
+He was happy enough now leading the peaceful life of a country gentleman
+on one of his many estates.
+
+Catherine II. had mounted the throne of Russia--the Empress who,
+according to Masson, had but two passions, which she carried to the
+grave--"her love of man, which degenerated into libertinage; and her
+love of glory, which degenerated into vanity." A woman with the brain of
+a man and the heart of a courtesan, Catherine's fickle affection had
+flitted from one lover to another, until now it had settled on Gregory
+Orloff, the handsomest man in her dominions, whom she was more than half
+disposed to make her husband.
+
+This was a scheme which commended itself strongly to her Chancellor,
+Vorontsov. There was a most useful precedent to lend support to it--the
+alliance of the Empress Elizabeth with a man of immeasurably lower rank
+than Catherine's favourite; but it was important that this precedent
+should be established beyond dispute. Thus it was that one day, when
+Count Alexis was poring over his Bible by his country fireside,
+Chancellor Vorontsov made his appearance with ingratiating words and
+promises. Her Majesty, he informed the Count, was willing to confer
+Imperial rank on him in return for one small favour--the possession of
+the documents which proved his marriage to her predecessor, Elizabeth.
+
+On hearing the request, the ex-shepherd rose, and, with words of quiet
+scorn, refused both the request and the proffered honour. "Am not I," he
+said, "a Count, a Field-Marshal, a man of wealth? all of which I owe to
+the kindness of my dear, dead mistress. Are not such honours enough for
+the peasant's son whom she raised from the mire to sit by her side, that
+I should purchase another bauble by an act of treachery to her memory?
+
+"But wait one moment," he continued; and, leaving the room, he returned
+carrying a small bundle of papers, which he proceeded to examine one by
+one. Then, collecting them, he placed the bundle in the heart of the
+fire, to the horror of the onlooking Chancellor; and, as the flames were
+reducing the precious documents to ashes, he said, "Go now and tell
+those who sent you, that I never was more than the slave of my august
+benefactress, the Empress Elizabeth, who could never so far have
+forgotten her position as to marry a subject."
+
+Thus with a lie on his lips--the last crowning evidence of loyalty to
+his beloved Queen and wife--Alexis Razoum makes his exit from the stage
+on which he played so strangely romantic a part. A few years later his
+days ended in peace at his St Petersburg palace, with the name he loved
+best, "Elizabeth," on his lips.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+A CROWN THAT FAILED
+
+Henri of Navarre, hero of romance and probably the greatest King who
+ever sat on the throne of France, had a heart as weak in love as it was
+stout in war. To his last day he was a veritable coward before the
+battery of bright eyes; and before Ravaillac's dagger brought his career
+to a tragic end one May day in the year 1610 he had counted his
+mistresses to as many as the years he had lived.
+
+But of them all, fifty-seven of them--for the most part lightly coming
+and lightly going--only one ever really reached his heart, and was
+within measurable distance of a seat on his throne--the woman to whom he
+wrote in the hey-day of his passion, "Never has man loved as I love you.
+If any sacrifice of mine could purchase your happiness, how gladly I
+would make it, even to the last drop of my life's blood."
+
+Gabrielle d'Estrées who thus enslaved the heart of the hero, which
+carried him to a throne through a hundred fights and inconceivable
+hardships, was cradled one day in the year 1573 in Touraine. From her
+mother, Françoise Babou, she inherited both beauty and frailness; for
+the Babou women were famous alike for their loveliness and for a virtue
+as facile even as that of Marie Gaudin, the pretty plaything of François
+I., who left François' arms to find a husband in Philip Babou and thus
+to transmit her charms and frailty to Gabrielle.
+
+Her father, Antoine, son of Jean d'Estrées, a valiant soldier under five
+kings, was a man of pleasure, who drank and sang his way through life,
+preferring Cupid to Mars and the _joie de vivre_ to the call of duty. It
+is perhaps little wonder that Antoine's wife, after bearing seven
+children to her husband, left him to find at least more loyalty in the
+Marquess of Tourel-Alégre, a lover twenty years younger than herself.
+
+Thus it was that, deserted by her mother, and with a father too addicted
+to pleasure to spare a thought for his children, Gabrielle grew to
+beautiful girlhood under the care of an aunt--now living in the family
+château in Picardy, now in the great Paris mansion, the Hotel d'Estrées;
+and with so little guidance from precept or example that, in later
+years, she and her six sisters and brothers were known as the "Seven
+Deadly Sins."
+
+In Gabrielle at least there was little that was vicious. She was an
+irresponsible little creature, bubbling over with mischief and gaiety,
+eager to snatch every flower of pleasure that caught her eyes; a dainty
+little fairy with big blue "wonder" eyes, golden hair, the sweetest
+rosebud of a mouth, ready to smile or to pout as the mood of the moment
+suggested, with soft round baby cheeks as delicately flushed as any
+rose.
+
+Such was Gabrielle d'Estrées on the verge of young womanhood when Roger
+de Saint-Larry, Duc de Bellegarde, the King's grand equerry, and one of
+the handsomest young men in France, first set eyes on her in the château
+of Coeuvres; and, as was inevitable, lost his heart to her at first
+sight. When he rode away two days later, such excellent use had he made
+of his opportunities, he left a very happy, if desolate maiden behind;
+for Gabrielle had little power to resist fascinations which had made a
+conquest of many of the fairest ladies at Court.
+
+When Bellegarde returned to Mantes, where Henri was still struggling for
+the crown which was so soon to be his, he foolishly gave the King of
+Navarre such a rapturous account of the young beauty of Picardy and his
+conquest that Henri, already weary of the faded charms of Diane
+d'Audouins, his mistress, promptly left his soldiering and rode away to
+see the lady for himself, and to find that Bellegarde's raptures were
+more than justified.
+
+Gabrielle, however, flattered though she was by such an honour as a
+visit from the King of Navarre, was by no means disposed to smile on the
+wooing of "an ugly man, old enough to be my father." And indeed, Henri,
+with all the glamour of the hero to aid him, was but a sorry rival for
+the handsome and courtly Bellegarde. Now nearing his fortieth year, with
+grizzled beard, and skin battered and lined by long years of hard
+campaigning, the future King of France had little to appeal to the
+romantic eyes of a maid who counted less than half his years; and the
+King in turn rode away from the Coeuvres Castle as hopelessly in love
+as Bellegarde, but with much less encouragement to return.
+
+But the hero of Ivry and a hundred other battles was no man to submit to
+defeat in any lists; and within a few weeks Gabrielle was summoned to
+Mantes, where he told her in decisive words that he loved her, and that
+no one, Bellegarde or any other, should share her with him. "Indeed!"
+she exclaimed, with a defiant toss of the head, "I will be no man's
+slave; I shall give my heart to whom I please, and certainly not to any
+man who demands it as a right." And within an hour she was riding home
+fast as her horse could gallop.
+
+Henri was thunderstruck at such defiance. He must follow her at once and
+bring her to reason; but, in order to do so, he must risk his life by
+passing through the enemy's lines. Such an adventure, however, was after
+his own heart; and disguising himself as a peasant, with a bundle of
+faggots on his shoulder, he made his way safely to Coeuvres, where he
+presented himself, a pitiable spectacle of rags and poverty, to be
+greeted by his lady with shouts of derisive laughter. "Oh dear!" she
+gasped between her paroxysms of mirth, "what a fright you look! For
+goodness' sake go and change your clothes." But though the King obeyed
+humbly, Gabrielle shut herself in her room and declined point-blank to
+see him again.
+
+Such devotion, however, expressed in such fashion, did not fail in its
+appeal to the romantic girl; and when, a little later, Gabrielle visited
+the Royalist army then besieging Chartres, it was a much more pliant
+Gabrielle who listened to the King's wooing and whose eyes brightened at
+his stories of bravery and danger. Henri might be old and ugly, but he
+had at least a charm of manner, a frank, simple manliness, which made
+him the idol of his soldiers and in fact of every woman who once came
+under its spell. And to this charm even Gabrielle, the rebel, had at
+last to submit, until Bellegarde was forgotten, and her hero was all the
+world to her.
+
+The days that followed this slow awaking were crowded with happiness for
+the two lovers; when Gabrielle was not by her King's side, he was
+writing letters to her full of passionate tenderness. "My beautiful
+Love," "My All," "My Trueheart"--such were the sweet terms he lavished
+on her. "I kiss you a million times. You say that you love me a thousand
+times more than I love you. You have lied, and you shall maintain your
+falsehood with the arms which you have chosen. I shall not see you for
+ten days, it is enough to kill me." And again, "They call me King of
+France and Navarre--that of your subject is much more delightful--you
+have much more cause for fearing that I love you too much than too
+little. That fault pleases you, and also me, since you love it. See how
+I yield to your every wish."
+
+Such were the letters--among the most beautiful ever penned by
+lover--which the King addressed to his "Menon" in those golden days,
+when all the world was sunshine for him, black as the sky was still with
+the clouds of war. And she returned love for love; tenderness for
+passion. When he was lying ill at St Denis, she wrote, "I die of fear.
+Tell me, I implore you, how fares the bravest of the brave. Give me
+news, my cavalier; for you know how fatal to me is your least ill. I
+cannot sleep without sending you a thousand good nights; for I am the
+Princess Constancy, sensible to all that concerns you, and careless of
+all else in the world, good or bad."
+
+Through the period of stress and struggle that still separated Henri
+from the crown which for nearly twenty years was his goal, Gabrielle was
+ever by his side, to soothe and comfort him, to chase away the clouds of
+gloom which so often settled on him, to inspire him with new courage and
+hope, and, with her diplomacy checking his impulses, to smooth over
+every obstacle that the cunning of his enemies placed in his path.
+
+And when, at last, one evening in 1594, Henri made his triumphal entry
+into Paris, on a grey horse, wearing a gold-embroidered grey habit, his
+face proud and smiling, saluting with his plume-crowned hat the cheering
+crowds, Gabrielle had the place of honour in front of him, "in a
+gorgeous litter, so bedecked with pearls and gems that she paled the
+light of the escorting torches."
+
+This was, indeed, a proud hour for the lovers which saw Henri acclaimed
+at "long last" King of France, and his loyal lady-love Queen in all but
+name. The years of struggle and hardship were over--years in which Henri
+of Navarre had braved and escaped a hundred deaths; and in which he had
+been reduced to such pitiable straits that he had often not known where
+his next meal was to come from or where to find a shirt to put on his
+back.
+
+Gabrielle was now Marquise de Monceaux, a title to which her Royal lover
+later added that of Duchesse de Beaufort. Her son, César, was known as
+"Monsieur," the title that would have been his if he had been heir to
+the French throne. All that now remained to fill the cup of her ambition
+and her happiness was that she should become the legal wife of the King
+she loved so well; and of this the prospect seemed more than fair.
+
+Charming stories are told of the idyllic family life of the new King;
+how his greatest pleasure was to "play at soldiers" with his children,
+to join in their nursery romps, or to take them, like some bourgeois
+father, to the Saint Germain fair, and return loaded with toys and boxes
+of sweetmeats, to spend delightful homely evenings with the woman he
+adored.
+
+But it was not all sunshine for the lovers. Paris was in the throes of
+famine and plague and flood. Poverty and discontent stalked through her
+streets, and there were scowling and envious eyes to greet the King and
+his lady when they rode laughing by; or when, as on one occasion we read
+of, they returned from a hunting excursion, riding side by side, "she
+sitting astride dressed all in green" and holding the King's hand.
+
+Nor within the palace walls was it all a bed of roses for Gabrielle; for
+she had her enemies there; and chief among them the powerful Duc de
+Sully, her most formidable rival in the King's affection. Sully was not
+only Henri's favourite minister; he was the Jonathan to his David, the
+man who had shared a hundred dangers by his side, and by his devotion
+and affection had found a firm lodging in his heart.
+
+Between the minister and the mistress, each consumed with jealousy of
+the other, Henri had many a bad hour; and the climax came when de Sully
+refused to pass the extravagant charges for the baptism of the
+Marquise's second son, Alexander. Gabrielle was indignant and appealed
+angrily and tearfully to the King, who supported his minister. "I have
+loved you," he said at last, roused to wrath, "because I thought you
+gentle and sweet and yielding; now that I have raised you to high
+position, I find you exacting and domineering. Know this, I could better
+spare a dozen mistresses like you than one minister so devoted to me as
+Sully."
+
+At these harsh words, Gabrielle burst into tears. "If I had a dagger,"
+she exclaimed, "I would plunge it into my heart, and then you would find
+your image there." And when Henri rushed from the room, she ran after
+him, flung herself at his feet, and with heart-breaking sobs, begged for
+forgiveness and a kind word. Such troubles as these, however, were but
+as the clouds that come and go in a summer sky. Gabrielle's sun was now
+nearing its zenith; Henri had long intended to make her his wife at the
+altar; proceedings for divorce from his wife, Marguerite de Valois, were
+running smoothly; and now the crowning day in the two lives thus
+romantically linked was at hand.
+
+In the month of April, 1599, Gabrielle and Henri were spending the last
+ante-nuptial days together at Fontainebleau; the wedding was fixed for
+the first Sunday after Easter, and Gabrielle was ideally happy among her
+wedding finery and the costly presents that had been showered on her
+from all parts of France--from the ring Henri had worn at his Coronation
+and which he was to place on her finger at the altar, to a statue of the
+King in gold from Lyons, and a "giant piece of amber in a silver casket
+from Bordeaux."
+
+Her wedding-dress was a gorgeous robe of Spanish velvet, rich in
+embroideries of gold and silver; the suite of rooms which was to be hers
+as Queen was already ready, with its splendours of crimson and gold
+furnishing. The greatest ladies in France were now proud to act as her
+tire-women; and princes and ambassadors flocked to Fontainebleau to pay
+her homage.
+
+The last days of Holy Week it had been arranged that she should spend in
+devotion at Paris, and Henri was her escort the greater part of the way.
+When they parted on the banks of the Seine they wept in each other's
+arms, while Gabrielle, full of nameless forebodings, clung to her lover
+and begged him to take her back to Fontainebleau. But with a final
+embrace he tore himself away; and with streaming eyes Gabrielle
+continued her journey, full of fears as to its issue; for had not a seer
+of Piedmont told her that the marriage would never take place; and other
+diviners, whom she had consulted, warned her that she would die young,
+and never call Henri husband?
+
+Two days later Gabrielle heard Mass at the Church of St Germain
+l'Auxerrois; and on returning to the Deanery, her aunt's home, became
+seriously ill. She grew rapidly worse; her sufferings were terrible to
+witness; and on Good Friday she was delivered of a dead child. To quote
+an eye-witness, "She lingered until six o'clock in very great pain, the
+like of which doctors and surgeons had never seen before. In her agony
+she tore her face, and injured herself in other parts of her body."
+Before dawn broke on the following day she drew her last breath.
+
+When news of her illness reached the King, he flew to her swift as his
+horse could carry him, only to meet couriers on his way who told him
+that Madame was already dead; and to find, when at last he reached St
+Germain l'Auxerrois, the door of the room in which she lay barred
+against him. He could not take her living once more into his arms; he
+was not allowed to see her dead.
+
+Henri was as a man who is mad with grief; he was inconsolable.. None
+dared even to approach him with words of pity and comfort. For eight
+days he shut himself in a black-draped room, himself clothed in black;
+and he wrote to his sister, "The root of my love is dead; there will be
+no Spring for me any more." Three months later he was making love to
+Gabrielle's successor, Henriette d'Entragues!
+
+Thus perished in tragedy Gabrielle d'Estrées, the creature of sunshine,
+who won the bravest heart in Europe, and carried her conquest to the
+very foot of a throne.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+A QUEEN OF HEARTS
+
+If ever woman was born for love and for empire over the hearts of men it
+was surely Jeanne Bécu, who first opened her eyes one August day in the
+year 1743, at dreary Vaucouleurs, in Joan of Arc's country, and who was
+fated to dance her light-hearted way through the palace of a King to the
+guillotine.
+
+Scarcely ever has woman, born to such beauty and witchery, been cradled
+less auspiciously. Her reputed father was a scullion, her mother a
+sempstress. For grandfather she had Fabien Bécu, who left his
+frying-pans in a Paris kitchen to lead Jeanne Husson, a fellow-servant,
+to the altar. Such was the ignoble strain that flowed in the veins of
+the Vaucouleurs beauty, who five-and-twenty years later was playfully
+pulling the nose of the fifteenth Louis, and queening it in his palaces
+with a splendour which Marie Antoinette herself never surpassed.
+
+From her sordid home Jeanne was transported at the age of six to a
+convent, where she spent nine years in rebellion against rules and
+punishments, until "the golden head emerged at last from black woollen
+veil and coarse unstarched bands, the exquisite form from shapeless,
+hideous robe, the perfect little feet from abominable yellow shoes," to
+play first the rôle of lady's maid to a wealthy widow, and, when she
+wearied (as she quickly did) of coiffing hair, to learn the arts of
+millinery.
+
+"Picture," says de Goncourt, "the glittering shop, where all day long
+charming idlers and handsome great gentlemen lounged and ogled; the
+pretty milliner tripping through the streets, her head covered by a big,
+black _calèche_, whence her golden curls escaped, her round, dainty
+waist defined by a muslin-frilled pinafore, her feet in little
+high-heeled, buckled shoes, and in her hand a tiny fan, which she uses
+as she goes--and then imagine the conversations, proposals, replies!"
+
+Such was Jeanne Bécu in the first bloom of her dainty beauty, the
+prettiest grisette who ever set hearts fluttering in Paris streets; with
+laughter dancing in her eyes, a charming pertness at her red lips, grace
+in every movement, and the springtide of youth racing through her veins.
+
+When Voltaire first saw her portrait, he exclaimed, "The original was
+fashioned for the gods." And we cannot wonder, as we look on the
+ravishing beauty of the face that wrung this eloquent tribute from the
+cold-blooded cynic--the tender, melting violet of the eyes, with their
+sweeping brown lashes, under the exquisite arch of brown eyebrows, the
+dainty little Greek nose, the bent bow of the delicious tiny mouth, the
+perfect oval of the face, the complexion "fair and fresh as an
+infant's," and a glorious halo of golden hair, a dream of fascinating
+curls and tendrils.
+
+It was to this bewitching picture, "with the perfume and light as of a
+goddess of love," that Jean du Barry, self-styled Comte, adventurer and
+roué, succumbed at a glance. But du Barry's tenure of her heart, if
+indeed he ever touched it at all, was brief; for the moment Louis XV.
+set eyes on the ravishing girl he determined to make the prize his own,
+a superior claim to which the Comte perforce yielded gracefully.
+
+Thus, in 1768, we find Jeanne Bécu--or "Mademoiselle Vaubarnier," as she
+now called herself--transported by a bound to the Palace of Versailles
+and to the first place in the favour of the King, having first gone
+through the farce of a wedding ceremony with du Barry's brother,
+Guillaume, a husband whom she first saw on the marriage morning, and on
+whom she looked her last at the church door.
+
+Then followed for the maid of the kitchen a few years of such Queendom
+and splendour as have seldom fallen to the lot of any lady cradled in a
+palace--the idolatrous worship of a King, the intoxication of the power
+that only beauty thus enshrined can wield, the glitter of priceless
+jewels, rarest laces, and richest satins and silks, the flash of gold on
+dinner and toilet-table, an army of servants in sumptuous liveries, the
+fawning of great Court ladies, the courtly flatteries of princes--every
+folly and extravagance that money could purchase or vanity desire.
+
+Six years of such intoxicating life and then--the end. Louis is lying on
+his death-bed and, with fear in his eyes and a tardy penitence on his
+lips, is saying to her, "Madame, it is time that we should part." And,
+indeed, the hour of parting had arrived; for a few days later he drew
+his last wicked breath, and Madame du Barry was under orders to retire
+to a convent. But her grief for the dead King was as brief as her love
+for him had been small; for within a few months, we find her installed
+in her beautiful country home, Lucienne, ready for fresh conquests, and
+eager to drain the cup of pleasure to the last drop. Nor was there any
+lack of ministers to the vanity of the woman who had now reached the
+zenith of her incomparable charms.
+
+Among the many lovers who flocked to the country shrine of the widowed
+"Queen," was Louis, Duc de Cossé, son of the Maréchal de Brissac, who,
+although Madame du Barry's senior by nine years, was still in the prime
+of his manhood--handsome as an Apollo and a model of the courtly graces
+which distinguished the old _noblesse_ in the day of its greatest pride,
+which was then so near its tragic downfall.
+
+De Cassé had long been a mute worshipper of Louis' beautiful "Queen,"
+and now that she was a free woman he was at last able to pay open homage
+to her, a homage which she accepted with indifference, for at the time
+her heart had strayed to Henry Seymour, although in vain. The woman
+whose beauty had conquered all other men was powerless to raise a flame
+in the breast of the cold-blooded Englishman; and, realising this, she
+at last bade him farewell in a letter, pathetic in its tender dignity.
+"It is idle," she wrote, "to speak of my affection for you--you know it.
+But what you do not know is my pain. You have not deigned to reassure
+me about that which most matters to my heart. And so I must believe that
+my ease of mind, my happiness, are of little importance to you. I am
+sorry that I should have to allude to them; it is for the last time."
+
+It was in this hour of disillusion and humiliation that she turned for
+solace to de Cossé, whose touching constancy at last found its reward.
+It was not long before friendship ripened into a love as ardent as his
+own; and for the first time this fickle beauty, whose heart had been a
+pawn in the game of ambition, knew what a beautiful and ennobling thing
+true love is.
+
+Those were halcyon days which followed for de Cossé and the lady his
+loyalty had won; days of sweet meetings and tender partings--of a union
+of souls which even death was powerless to dissolve. When they could not
+meet--and de Cossé's duties often kept him from her side--letters were
+always on the wing between Lucienne and Paris, letters some of which
+have survived to bring their fragrance to our day.
+
+Thus the lover writes, "A thousand thanks, a thousand thanks, dear
+heart! To-day I shall be with you. Yes, I find my happiness is in being
+loved by you. I kiss you a thousand times! Good-bye. I love you for
+ever." In another letter we read, "Yes, dear heart, I desire so ardently
+to be with you--not in spirit, my thoughts are ever with you, but
+bodily--that nothing can calm my impatience. Good-bye, my darling. I
+kiss you many and many times with all my heart." The curious may read at
+the French Record Office many of these letters written in a bold,
+flowing hand by de Cossé in the hey-day of his love. The paper is
+time-stained, the ink is faded; but each sentence still palpitates with
+the passion that inspired it a century and a quarter ago.
+
+And with this great love came new honours for de Cossé. His father's
+death made him Duc de Brissac, head of one of the greatest houses in
+France, owner of vast estates. He was appointed Governor of Paris and
+Colonel of the King's own body-guard. He had, in fact, risen to a
+perilous eminence; for the clouds of the great Revolution were already
+massing in the sky, and the _sans-culotte_ crowds were straining to be
+at the throats of the cursed "aristos," and to hurl Louis from his
+throne. Brissac (as we must now call him) was thus an object of special
+hatred, as of splendour, standing out so prominently as representative
+of the hated _noblesse_.
+
+Other nobles, fearful of the breaking of the storm, were flying in
+droves to seek safety in England and elsewhere. But when the Governor of
+Paris was urged to fly, he answered proudly, "Certainly not. I shall act
+according to my duty to my ancestors and myself." And, heedless of his
+life, he clung to his duty and his honour, presenting a smiling face to
+the scowls of hatred and envy, and spending blissful hours at Lucienne
+with the woman he loved.
+
+Nor was she any less conscious of her danger, or less indifferent to it.
+She also had become a target of hatred and scarcely veiled threats.
+Watchful eyes marked every coming and going of Brissac's messengers
+with their missives of love; it was discovered that Brissac's
+aide-de-camp, whose life they sought, was in hiding in her house; that
+she was supplying the noble emigrants with money. The climax was reached
+when she boldly advertised a reward of two thousand louis for a clue to
+the jewellery of which burglars had robbed her--jewels of which she
+published a long and dazzling list, thus bringing to memory the days
+when the late King had squandered his ill-gotten gold on her.
+
+The Duc, at last alarmed for her--never for himself--begged her either
+to escape, or, as he wrote, to "come quickly, my darling, and take every
+precaution for your valuables, if you have any left. Yes, come, and your
+beauty, your kindness and magnanimity. I am ashamed of it, but I feel
+weaker than you. How should I feel otherwise for the one I love best?"
+
+But already the hour for flight had passed. The passions of the mob were
+breaking down the barriers that were now too weak to hold them in check;
+the Paris streets had their first baptism of blood, prelude to the
+deluge to follow; hideous, fierce-eyed crowds were clamouring at the
+gates of Versailles; and de Brissac was soon on his way, a prisoner, to
+Orleans.
+
+The blow had fallen at last, suddenly, and with crushing force. When
+"Louis Hercule Timoleon de Cossé-Brissac, soldier from his birth," was
+charged before the National High Court with admitting Royalists into the
+Guards, he answered: "I have admitted into the King's Guards no one but
+citizens who fulfilled all the conditions contained in the decree of
+formation": and no other answer or plea would he deign to his accusers.
+
+From his Orleans prison, where he now awaited the inevitable end, he
+wrote daily to his beloved lady; and every day brought him a tender and
+cheering letter from her. On 11th August, 1792, he writes: "I received
+this morning the best letter I have had for a long time past; none have
+rejoiced my heart so much. Thank you for it. I kiss you a thousand
+times. You indeed will have my last thought. Ah, my darling, why am I
+not with you in a wilderness rather than in Orleans?"
+
+A few days later news reached Madame du Barry that her lover, with other
+prisoners, was to be brought from Orleans to Paris. He would thus
+actually pass her own door; she would at least see him once again, under
+however tragic conditions. With what leaden steps the intervening hours
+crawled by! Each sound set her heart beating furiously as if it would
+choke her. Each moment was an agony of anticipation. At last she hears
+the sound of coming feet. She flies to the window, piercing the dark
+night with straining eyes. The sound grows nearer, a tumult of trampling
+feet and hoarse cries. A mob of dark figures surges through her gates,
+pours riotously up the steps and through the open door. In the hall
+there is a pandemonium of cries and oaths; the door of her room is burst
+open, and something is flung at her feet. She glances down; and, with a
+gasp of unspeakable horror, looks down on the severed head of her lover,
+red with his blood.
+
+The _sans-culottes_ had indeed taken a terrible revenge. They had
+fallen in overwhelming numbers on the prisoners and their escort; the
+soldiers had fled; and de Brissac found himself the centre of a mob, the
+helpless target of a hundred murderous blows. With a knife for sole
+weapon he fought valiantly, like the brave soldier he was, until a
+cowardly blow from behind felled him to the ground. "Fire at me with
+your pistols," he shouted, "your work will the sooner be over." A few
+moments later he drew his last gallant breath, almost within sight of
+the house that sheltered his beloved.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+United in life, the lovers were not long to be divided. "Since that
+awful day," Madame du Barry wrote to a friend, "you can easily imagine
+what my grief has been. They have consummated the frightful crime, the
+cause of my misery and my eternal regrets--my grief is complete--a life
+which ought to have been so grand and glorious! Good God, what an end!"
+
+Thus cruelly deprived of all that made life worth living, she cared
+little how soon the end came. "I ask nothing now of life," she wrote,
+"but that it should quickly give me back to him." And her prayer was
+soon to be granted. A few months after that night of horrors she herself
+was awaiting the guillotine in her cell at the conciergerie.
+
+In vain did an Irish priest who visited her offer to secure her escape
+if she would give him money to bribe her jailers. "No," she answered
+with a smile, "I have no wish to escape. I am glad to die; but I will
+give you money willingly on condition that you save the Duchesse de
+Mortemart." And while Madame de Mortemart, daughter of the man she
+loved, was making her way to safety under the priest's escort, Jeanne du
+Barry was being led to the scaffold, breathing the name of the man she
+had loved so well; and, however feeble the flesh, glad to follow where
+he had led the way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE REGENT'S DAUGHTER
+
+
+Many unwomanly women have played their parts in the drama of Royal
+Courts, but scarcely one, not even those Messalinas, Catherine II. of
+Russia and Christina of Sweden, conducted herself with such a shameless
+disregard of conventionality as Marie Louise Elizabeth d'Orléans, known
+to fame as the Duchesse de Berry, who probably crowded within the brief
+space of her years more wickedness than any woman who was ever cradled
+in a palace.
+
+It is said that this libertine Duchesse was mad; and certainly he would
+be a bold champion who would try to prove her sanity. But, apart from
+any question of a disordered brain, there was a taint in her blood
+sufficient to account for almost any lapse from conventional standards
+of pure living. Her father was that Duc d'Orléans who shocked the none
+too strait-laced Europe of two centuries ago by his orgies; her
+grandfather was that other Orleans Duke, brother of Louis XIV., whose
+passion for his minions broke the heart of his English wife, the Stuart
+Princess Henriettta; and she had for mother one of the daughters of
+Madame de Montespan, light-o'-love to _le Roi Soleil_.
+
+The offspring of such parents could scarcely have been normal; and how
+far from normal Marie Louise was, this story of her singular life will
+show. When her father, the Duc de Chartres, took to wife Mademoiselle de
+Blois, Montespan's daughter, there were many who significantly shrugged
+their shoulders and curled their lips at such a union; and one at least,
+the Duc's mother, Elizabeth Charlotte, Princess Palatine, was
+undisguisedly furious. She refused point-blank to be present at the
+nuptials, and when her son, fresh from the altar, approached her to ask
+her blessing, she retorted by giving the bridegroom a resounding slap on
+the face.
+
+Such was the ill-omened opening to a wedded life which brought nothing
+but unhappiness with it and which gave to the world some of the most
+degenerate women (in addition to a son who was almost an idiot) who have
+ever been cradled.
+
+The first of these degenerates was Marie Elizabeth, who was born one
+August day in the year 1695, and who from her earliest infancy was her
+father's pet and favourite. His idolatry of his first-born child,
+indeed, is one of the most inscrutable things in a life full of the
+abnormal, and in later years afforded much material for the tongue of
+scandal. He was inseparable from her; her lightest wish was law to him;
+he nursed her through her childish illnesses with more than the devotion
+of a mother; and, as she grew to girlhood, he worshipped at the shrine
+of her young beauty with the adoration of a lover and put her charms on
+canvas in the guise of a pagan goddess.
+
+The Duc's affection for his daughter, indeed, was so extravagant that
+it was made the subject of scores of scurrilous lampoons to which even
+Voltaire contributed, and was a delicious morsel of ill-natured gossip
+in all the _salons_ and cabarets of Paris. At fifteen the princess was
+already a woman--tall, handsome, well-formed, with brilliant eyes and
+the full lips eloquent of a sensuous nature. Already she had had her
+initiation into the vices that proved her undoing; for in a Court noted
+for its free-living, she was known for her love of the table and the
+wine-bottle.
+
+Such was the Duc's eldest daughter when she was ripe for the altar and
+became the object of an intrigue in which her scheming father, the Royal
+Duchesses, the Duc de Saint-Simon, the King himself, and the Jesuits all
+took a part, and the prize of which was the hand of the young Duc de
+Berry, a younger son of the Dauphin, the grandson of King Louis.
+
+Over the plotting and counterplotting, the rivalries and jealousies
+which followed, we must pass. It must suffice to record that the King's
+consent was at last won by the Orleans faction; Madame de Maintenon was
+persuaded to smile on the alliance; and, one July day, the nuptials of
+the Duc de Berry and the Orleans Princess were celebrated in the
+presence of the Royal family and the Court. A regal supper followed;
+and, the last toast drunk, the young couple were escorted to their room
+with all the stately, if scarcely decent, ceremonial which in those days
+inaugurated the life of the newly-wedded.
+
+Seldom has there been a more singular union than this of the Duc
+d'Orléans' prodigal daughter with the almost imbecile grandson of the
+French King. The Duc de Berry, it is true, was good to look upon. Tall,
+fair-haired, with a good complexion and splendid health, he was
+physically, at twenty-four, no unworthy descendant of the great Louis.
+He had, too, many amiable qualities calculated to win affection; but he
+was mentally little better than a clown. His education had been
+shamefully neglected; he had been suppressed and kept in the background
+until, in spite of his manhood, he had all the shyness, awkwardness and
+dullness of a backward child.
+
+As he himself confessed to Madame de Saint-Simon, "They have done all
+they could to stifle my intelligence. They did not want me to have any
+brains. I was the youngest, and yet ventured to argue with my brother.
+Afraid of the results of my courage, they crushed me; they taught me
+nothing except to hunt and gamble; they succeeded in making a fool of
+me, one incapable of anything and who will yet be the laughing-stock of
+everybody."
+
+Such was the weak-kneed husband to whom was now allied the most
+precocious, headstrong young woman in all France; who, although still
+short of her sixteenth birthday, was a past-mistress of the arts of
+pleasure, and was now determined to have her full fling at any cost. She
+had been thoroughly spoiled by her too indulgent father, who was even
+then the most powerful man in France after the King; and she was in no
+mood to brook restraint from anyone, even from Louis himself.
+
+The pleasures of the table seem now to have absorbed the greater part
+of her life. Read what her grandmother, the Princess Palatine, says of
+her: "Madame de Berry does not eat much at dinner. How, indeed, can she?
+She never leaves her room before noon, and spends her mornings in eating
+all kinds of delicacies. At two o'clock she sits down to an elaborate
+dinner, and does not rise from the table until three. At four she is
+eating again--fruit, salad, cheese, etc. She takes no exercise whatever.
+At ten she has a heavy supper, and retires to bed between one and two in
+the morning. She likes very strong brandy." And in this last sentence we
+have the true secret of her undoing. The Royal Princess was, even tat
+this early age, a confirmed dipsomaniac, with her brandy bottle always
+by her side; and was seldom sober, from rising to retiring.
+
+To such a woman, a slave to the senses, a husband like the Duc de Berry,
+unredeemed by a vestige of manliness, could make no appeal. She wanted
+"men" to pay her homage; and, like Catherine of Russia, she had them in
+abundance--lovers who were only too ready to pay court to a beautiful
+Princess, who might one day be Queen of France. For the Dauphin was now
+dead; his eldest son, the Duc de Bourgogne, had followed him to the
+grave a few months later. Prince Philip had renounced his right to the
+French crown when he accepted that of Spain; and, between her husband
+and the throne there was now but one frail life, that of the
+three-year-old Duc d'Anjou, a child so delicate that he might easily not
+survive his great-grandfather, Louis, whose hand was already relaxing
+its grasp of the sceptre he had held so long.
+
+On the intrigues with which this Queen _in posse_ beguiled her days, it
+is perhaps well not to look too closely. They are unsavoury, as so much
+of her life was. Her lovers succeeded one another with quite bewildering
+rapidity, and with little regard either to rank or good-looks. One
+special favourite of our Sultana was La Haye, a Court equerry, whom she
+made Chamberlain, and who is pictured by Saint-Simon as "tall, bony,
+with an awkward carriage and an ugly face; conceited, stupid,
+dull-witted, and only looking at all passable when on horseback."
+
+So infatuated was the Duchesse with her ill-favoured equerry that
+nothing less would please her than an elopement to Holland--a proposal
+which so scared La Haye that, in his alarm, he went forthwith to the
+lady's father and let the cat out of the bag. "Why on earth does my
+daughter want to run away to Holland?" the Due exclaimed with a laugh.
+"I should have thought she was having quite a good enough time here!"
+And so would anyone else have thought.
+
+And while his Duchesse was thus dallying with her multitude of lovers
+and stupefying herself with her brandy bottle, her husband was driven to
+his wits' end by her exhibitions of temper, as by her infidelities. In
+vain he stormed and threatened to have her shut up in a convent. All her
+retort was to laugh in his face and order him out of her apartment.
+Violent scenes were everyday incidents. "The last one," says
+Saint-Simon, "was at Rambouillet; and, by a regrettable mishap, the
+Duchesse received a kick."
+
+The Duc's laggard courage was spurred to fight more than one duel for
+his wife's tarnished fame. Of one of these sorry combats, Maurepas
+writes, "Her conduct with her father became so notorious that His Grace
+the Duc de Berry, disgusted at the scandal, forced the Duc d'Orléans to
+fight a duel on the terrace at Marly. They were, however, soon
+separated, and the whole affair was hushed up."
+
+But release from such an intolerable life was soon coming to the
+ill-used Duc. One day, when hunting, he was thrown from his horse, and
+ruptured a blood-vessel. Fearful of alarming the King, now near the end
+of his long life, he foolishly made light of his accident, and only
+consented to see a doctor when it was too late. When the doctors were at
+last summoned he was a dying man, his body drained of blood, which was
+later found in bowls concealed in various parts of his bedroom. With his
+last breath, he said to his confessor, "Ah, reverend father, I alone am
+the real cause of my death."
+
+Thus, one May day in 1714, the Duchesse found herself a widow, within
+four years of her wedding-day; and the last frail barrier was removed
+from the path of self-indulgence and low passions to which her life was
+dedicated. When, with the aged King's death in the following year, her
+father became Regent of France, her position as daughter of the virtual
+sovereign was now more splendid than ever; and before she had worn her
+widow's weeds a month, she had plunged again, still deeper, into
+dissipation, with Madame de Mouchy, one of her waiting-women, as chief
+minister to her pleasures.
+
+It was at this time, before her husband had been many weeks in his
+grave, that the Comte de Riom, the last and most ill-favoured of her
+many lovers, came on the scene. Nothing but a perverted taste could
+surely have seen any attraction in such a lover as this grand-nephew of
+the Duc de Lauzun, of whom the austere and disapproving Palatine Duchess
+draws the following picture: "He has neither figure nor good-looks. He
+is more like an ogre than a man, with his face of greenish yellow. He
+has the nose, eyes, and mouth of a Chinaman; he looks, in fact, more
+like a baboon than the Gascon he really is. Conceited and stupid, his
+large head seems to sit on his broad shoulders, owing to the shortness
+of his neck. He is shortsighted and altogether is preternaturally ugly;
+and he appears so ill that he might be suffering from some loathsome
+disease."
+
+To this unflattering description, Saint-Simon adds the fact that his
+"large, pasty face was so covered by pimples that it looked like one
+large abscess.'" Such, then, was the repulsive lover who found favour in
+the eyes of the Regent's daughter, and for whom she was ready to discard
+all her legion of more attractive wooers.
+
+With the coming of de Riom, the Duchesse entered on the last and worst
+stage of her mis-spent life. Strange tales are told of the orgies of
+which the Luxembourg, the splendid palace her father had given her, was
+now the scene--orgies in which Madame de Mouchy and a Jesuit, one Father
+Ringlet, took a part, and over which the evil de Riom ruled as "Lord of
+merry disports." The Duchesse, now sunk to the lowest depths of
+degradation, was the veriest puppet in his strong hands, flattered by
+his coarse attentions and submitting to rudeness and ridicule such as
+any grisette, with a grain of pride, would have resented.
+
+When these scandalous "carryings-on" at the Luxembourg Palace reached
+the Regent's ears and he ventured to read his daughter a severe lecture
+on her conduct, she retaliated by snapping her fingers at him and
+telling him in so many words to mind his own business. And to the tongue
+of scandal that found voice everywhere, she turned a contemptuous ear.
+She even locked and barred her palace gates to keep prying eyes at a
+safe distance.
+
+But, although she thus defied man, she was powerless to stay the steps
+of fate. Her health, robust as it had been, was shattered by her
+excesses; and when a serious illness assailed her, she was horrified to
+find death so uncomfortably near. In her alarm she called for a priest
+to shrive her; and the Abbé Languet came at the summons to bring her the
+consolations of the Church. He refused point-blank, however, to give the
+sinner absolution until the palace was purged of the presence of de Riom
+and Madame de Mouchy, the arch-partners in her vices.
+
+To this suggestion the Duchesse, perilous as her condition was, returned
+an uncompromising "No!" If the Abbé would not absolve her--well, there
+were other priests, less exacting, who would; and one such priest of
+elastic conscience, a Franciscan friar, was summoned to her bedside.
+Then ensued an unseemly struggle around the dying woman's bed, in which
+the Regent, Cardinal Noailles, Madame de Mouchy, and the rival clerics
+all played their parts.
+
+While the obliging friar remained in the room awaiting an opportunity to
+administer the last Sacrament, the Abbé and his curates kept watch at
+the bedroom door to see that he did no such thing; and thus the siege
+lasted for four days and nights until, the patient's crisis over, the
+services of the Church were summarily dispensed with.
+
+With the return of health, the Duchesse's piety quickly evaporated. It
+is true that she had had a fright; and, by way of modified penitence,
+she vowed to dress herself and her household in white for six months and
+also to make a husband of her lover. Within a few weeks, de Riom led the
+Regent's daughter to the altar, thus throwing the cloak of the Church
+over the licence of the past.
+
+Now that our Princess was once more a "respectable" woman, she returned
+gladly to her old life of indulgence; until the Duchess Palatine
+exclaimed in alarm, "I am afraid her excesses in drinking and eating
+will kill her." And never was prediction more sure of early fulfilment.
+When she was not keeping company with her brandy bottle, she was gorging
+herself with delicacies of all kinds, from patties and fricassées to
+peaches and nectarines, washed down with copious draughts of iced beer.
+
+As a last desperate effort to reform her, at the eleventh hour, the
+Regent packed de Riom off to his regiment. A few days later, the
+Duchesse invited her father to a sumptuous banquet on the terrace at
+Meudon, at which, regardless of her delicate health, she ate and drank
+more voraciously than ever. The same evening she was taken ill; and
+when, on the following Sunday, her mother-in-law, the Duchess, visited
+her, she found the patient in a deplorable condition--wasted to a
+"shadow" and burning with fever. "She was suffering such horrible pains
+in her toes and under the feet," says the Duchess, "that tears came to
+her eyes. She looked so very bad that three doctors were called in
+consultation. They resolved to bleed her; but it was difficult to bring
+her to it, for her pains were so great that the least touch of the
+sheets made her shriek."
+
+A few days later, in the early hours of 17th July, 1719, the Duchesse de
+Berry passed away in her sleep. The life which she had wasted with such
+shameless prodigality closed in peace; and at the moment when she was
+being laid to rest in the Church of St Denis, Madame de Mouchy, blazing
+in the dead woman's jewels, was laughing merrily over her
+champagne-glass at a dinner-party to which she had invited all the
+sharers in the orgies which had made the Palace of the Luxembourg
+infamous!
+
+The moral of this pitifully squandered life needs no pointing out. And
+on reviewing it one can only in charity echo the words spoken by Madame
+de Meilleraye of another sinner, the Chevalier de Savoie, "For my part,
+I believe the good God must think twice before sending one born of such
+parents to the nether regions."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+A PRINCESS OF MYSTERY
+
+In the spring of the year 1772 the fashionable world of Paris was full
+of speculation and gossip about a stranger, as mysterious as she was
+beautiful, who had appeared from no one knew where, in its midst, and
+who called herself the Princess Aly Émettée de Vlodimir. That she was a
+woman of rank and distinction admitted of no question. Her queenly
+carriage and the graciousness and dignity of her deportment were in
+keeping with the Royal character she assumed; but more remarkable than
+these evidences of high station was her beauty, which in its brilliance
+eclipsed that of the fairest women of Versailles and the Tuileries.
+
+Tall, with a figure of exquisite modelling and grace, her daintily
+poised head crowned with a coronal of golden-brown hair, with a face of
+perfect oval, dimpled cheeks as delicately tinted as a rose, her chief
+glory lay in her eyes, large and lustrous, which had the singular
+quality of changing colour--"now blue, now black, which gave to their
+dreamy expression a peculiar, mysterious air."
+
+Who was she, this woman of beauty and mystery? It was rumoured that she
+was a Circassian Princess, "the heroine of strange romances." She was
+living luxuriously in a fine house in the most fashionable quarter of
+Paris, in company with two German "Barons"--one, the Baron von Embs, who
+claimed to be her cousin; the other, Baron von Schenk, who appeared to
+play the rôle of guardian. To her _salon_ in the Ile St Louis were
+flocking many of the greatest men in France, infatuated by her beauty,
+and paying homage to her charms. To a man, they adored the mysterious
+lady--from Prince Ojinski and other illustrious refugees from Poland to
+the Comte de Rochefort-Velcourt, the Duke of Limburg's representative at
+the French Court, and the wealthy old _beau_ M. de Marine, who, it was
+said, placed his long purse at her disposal.
+
+But while the men were thus her slaves, the women tossed their heads
+contemptuously at their dangerous rival. She was an adventuress, they
+declared with one voice; and great was their satisfaction when, one day,
+news came that the Baron von Embs had been arrested for debt and that,
+on investigation, he proved to be no Baron at all, but the
+good-for-nothing son of a Ghent tradesman.
+
+The "bubble" had soon burst, and the attentions of the police became so
+embarrassing that the Princess was glad to escape from the scene of her
+brief triumphs with her cavaliers (Von Embs' liberty having been
+purchased by that "credulous old fool," de Marine) to Frankfort, leaving
+a wake of debts behind.
+
+Arrived at Frankfort, the fair Circassian resumed her luxurious mode of
+life, carrying a part of her retinue of admirers with her, and making it
+known that she was daily expecting a large remittance from her good
+friend, the Shah of Persia. And it was not long before, thanks to the
+offices of de Rochefort-Velcourt, she had at her feet no less a
+personage than Philip, Duke of Limburg, and Prince of the Empire, one of
+those petty German potentates who assumed more than the airs and
+arrogance of kings. Though his duchy was no larger than an English
+county, Philip had his ambassadors at the Courts of Vienna and
+Versailles; and though he had neither courtiers, army, nor exchequer, he
+lavished his titles of nobility and surrounded himself with as much
+state and ceremonial as any Tsar or Emperor.
+
+But exalted and serene as was His Highness, he was caught as helplessly
+in the toils of the Princess Aly as any lovesick boy; and within a week
+of making his first bow had her installed in his Castle of Oberstein,
+after satisfying the most clamorous of her creditors with borrowed
+money. That there might be no question of obligation, the Princess
+repaid him with the most lavish promises to redeem his heavily mortgaged
+estate with the millions she was daily expecting from Persia, and to use
+her great influence with Tsar and Sultan to support his claim to the
+Schleswig and Holstein duchies. And that he might be in no doubt as to
+her ability to discharge these promises, she showed him letters,
+addressed to her in the friendliest of terms by these august personages.
+
+Each day in the presence of this most alluring of princesses forged new
+fetters for the susceptible Duke, until one day she announced to him,
+with tears streaming down her pretty cheeks, that she had received a
+letter recalling her to Persia--to be married. The crucial hour had
+arrived. The Duke, reduced to despair, begs her to accept his own
+exalted hand in marriage, vowing that, if she refuses, he will "shut
+himself up in a cloister"; and is only restored to a measure of sanity
+when she promises to consider his offer.
+
+When Hornstein, the Duke's ambassador to Vienna, appears on the scene,
+full of suspicion and doubts, she makes an equally easy conquest of him.
+She announces to his gratified ears her wish to become a Catholic;
+flatters him by begging him to act as her instructor in the creed that
+is so dear to him; and she reveals to him "for the first time" the true
+secret of her identity. She is really, she says, the Princess of Azov,
+heiress to vast estates, which may come to her any day; and the first
+use she intends to make of her millions is to fill the empty coffers of
+the Limburg duchy.
+
+Hornstein is not only converted; he becomes as ardent an admirer as his
+master, the Duke. The Princess takes her place as the coming Duchess of
+Limburg, much to the disgust of his subjects, who show their feelings by
+hissing when she appears in public. Her hour of triumph has
+arrived--when, like a bolt from the blue, an anonymous letter comes to
+Hornstein revealing the story of her past doings in several capitals of
+Europe, and branding her as an "impostor."
+
+For a time the Duke treats these anonymous slanders with scorn. He
+refuses to believe a word against his divinity, the beautiful, high-born
+woman who is to crown his life's happiness and, incidentally, to save
+him from bankruptcy. But gradually the poison begins to work,
+supplemented as it is by the suspicions and discontent of his subjects.
+At last he summons up courage to ask an explanation--to beg her to
+assure him that the charges against her are as false as he believes
+them.
+
+She listens to him with quiet dignity until he has finished, and then
+replies, with tears in her eyes, that she is not unprepared for
+disloyalty from a man who is so obviously the slave of false friends and
+of public opinion, but that she had hoped that he would at least have
+some pity and consideration for a woman who was about to become the
+mother of his child. This unexpected announcement, with its appeal to
+his manhood, proves more eloquent than a world of proofs and
+protestations. The Duke's suspicions vanish in face of the news that the
+woman he loves is to become the mother of his child, and in a moment he
+is at her knees imploring her pardon, and uttering abject apologies. He
+is now more deeply than ever in her toils, ready to defy the world in
+defence of the Princess he adores and can no longer doubt.
+
+It is at this stage that a man who was to play such an important part in
+the Princess's life first crosses her path--one Domanski, a handsome
+young Pole, whose passionate and ill-fated patriotism had driven him
+from his native land to find an asylum, like many another Polish
+refugee, in the Limburg duchy. He had heard much of the romantic story
+of the Princess Aly, and was drawn by sympathy, as by the rumour of her
+remarkable beauty, to seek an interview with her, during her visit to
+Mannheim. Such a meeting could have but one issue for the romantic Pole.
+He lost both head and heart at sight of the lovely and gracious
+Princess, and from that moment became the most devoted of all her
+slaves.
+
+When she returned to Oberstein he was swift to follow her and to install
+himself under her castle walls, where he could catch an occasional
+glimpse of her, or, by good-fortune, have a few blissful moments in her
+company. Indeed, it was not long before stories began to be circulated
+among the good folk of Oberstein of strange meetings between the
+mysterious young stranger who had come to live in their midst and an
+equally mysterious lady. "The postman," it was rumoured, "often sees him
+on the road leading to the castle, talking in a shadow with someone
+enveloped in a long, black, hooded cloak, whom he once thought he
+recognised as the Princess."
+
+No wonder tongues wagged in Oberstein. What could be the meaning of
+these secret assignations between the Princess, who was the destined
+bride of their Duke, and the obscure young refugee? It was a delicious
+bit of scandal to add to the many which had already gathered round the
+"adventuress."
+
+But there was a greater surprise in store for the Obersteiners, as for
+the world outside their walls. Soon it began to be rumoured that the
+Duke's bride-to-be was no obscure Circassian Princess; this was merely
+a convenient cloak to conceal her true identity, which was none less
+than that of daughter of an Empress! She was, in fact, the child of
+Elizabeth, Tsarina of Russia, and her peasant husband, Razoum; and in
+proof of her exalted birth she actually had in her possession the will
+in which the late Empress bequeathed to her the throne of Russia.
+
+How these rumours originated none seemed to know. Was it Domanski who
+set them circulating? We know, at least, that they soon became public
+property, and that, strangely enough, they won credence everywhere. The
+very people who had branded her "adventuress" and hissed her in the
+streets, now raised cheers to the future Empress of Russia; while the
+Duke, delighted at such a wonderful transformation in the woman he
+loved, was more eager than ever to hasten the day when he could call her
+his own. As for the Princess, she accepted her new dignities with the
+complaisance to be expected from the daughter of a Tsarina. There was
+now no need to refer the sceptics to Circassia for proof of her station
+and her potential wealth. As heiress to one of the greatest thrones of
+Europe, she could at last reveal herself in her true character, without
+any need for dissimulation.
+
+The curtain was now ready to rise on the crowning act of her life-drama,
+an act more brilliant than any she had dared to imagine. Russia was
+seething with discontent and rebellion; the throne of Catherine II. was
+trembling; one revolt had followed another, until Pugatchef had led his
+rabble of a hundred thousand serfs to the very gates of Moscow--only,
+when success seemed assured, to meet disaster and death. If the
+ex-bandit could come so near to victory, an uprising headed by
+Elizabeth's own daughter and heiress could scarcely fail to hurl
+Catherine from her throne.
+
+It would have been difficult to find a more powerful ally in this daring
+project than Prince Charles Radziwill, chief of Polish patriots, who was
+then, as luck would have it, living in exile at Mannheim, and who hated
+Russia as only a Pole ever hated her. To Radziwill, then, Domanski went
+to offer the help of his Princess for the liberation of Poland and the
+capture of Catherine's throne.
+
+Here indeed was a valuable pawn to play in Radziwill's game of vengeance
+and ambition. But the Prince was by no means disposed to snatch the bait
+hurriedly. Experience had taught him caution. He must count the cost
+carefully before taking the step, and while writing to the Princess, "I
+consider it a miracle of Providence that it has provided so great a
+heroine for my unhappy country," he took his departure to Venice,
+suggesting that the Princess should meet him there, where matters could
+be more safely and successfully discussed. Thus it was that the Princess
+said her last good-bye to her ducal lover, full of promises for the
+future when she should have won her throne, and as "Countess of
+Pinneberg" set forth with a retinue of followers to Venice, where she
+was regally received at the French embassy.
+
+Here she tasted the first sweets of her coming Queendom--holding her
+Courts, to which distinguished Poles and Frenchmen flocked to pay homage
+to the Empress-to-be, and having daily conferences with Radziwill, who
+treated her as already a Queen. That her purse was empty and the bankers
+declined to honour her drafts was a matter to smile at, since the way
+now seemed clear to a crown, with all it meant of wealth and power. When
+the Venetian Government grew uneasy at the plotting within its borders,
+she went to Ragusa, where she blossomed into the "Princess of all the
+Russias," assumed the sceptre that was soon to be hers, issued
+proclamations as a sovereign, and crowned these regal acts by sending a
+ukase to Alexis Orloff, the Russian Commander-in-Chief, "signed
+Elizabeth II., and instructing him to communicate its contents to the
+army and fleet under his command."
+
+Once more, however, fortune played the Princess a scurvy trick, just
+when her favour seemed most assured. One night a man was seen scaling
+the garden-wall of the palace she was occupying. The guard fired at him,
+and the following morning Domanski was found, lying wounded and
+unconscious in the garden. The tongues of scandal were set wagging
+again, old suspicions were revived, and once again the word
+"adventuress"--and worse--passed from mouth to mouth. The men who had
+fawned on her now avoided her; worse still, Radziwill, his latent
+suspicions thoroughly awakened, and confirmed by a hundred stories and
+rumours that came to his ears, declined to have anything more to do
+with her, and returned in disgust to Germany.
+
+But even this crushing rebuff was powerless to damp the spirits and
+ambition of the "adventuress," who shook the dust of Ragusa off her
+dainty feet, and went off to Rome, where she soon cast her spell over
+Sir William Hamilton, our Ambassador there, who gave her the warmest
+hospitality. "For several days," we learn, "she reigns like a Queen in
+the _salon_ of the Ambassador, out of whose penchant for beautiful women
+she has no difficulty in wiling a passport that enables her to enter the
+most exclusive circles of Roman society."
+
+In Rome she lays aside her regal trappings, and wins the respect of all
+by her unostentatious living and her prodigal charities. She becomes a
+favourite at the Vatican; Cardinals do homage to her goodness, with
+perhaps a pardonable eye to her beauty. But behind the brave and pious
+front she thus shows to the world her heart is growing more heavy day by
+day. Poverty is at her door in the guise of importunate creditors, her
+servants are clamouring for overdue wages, and consumption, which for
+long has threatened her, now shows its presence in hectic cheeks and a
+hacking cough. Fortune seems at last to have abandoned her; and it
+requires all her courage to sustain her in this hour of darkness.
+
+In her extremity she appeals to Sir William Hamilton for a loan, much as
+a Queen might confer a favour on a subject, and Hamilton, pleased to be
+of service to so fair and pious a lady, sends her letter to his Leghorn
+banker, Mr John Dick, with instructions to arrange the matter.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+While the Princess Aly was practising piety and cultivating Cardinals in
+Rome, with an empty purse and a pain-racked body to make a mockery of
+her claim to a crown, away in distant Russia Catherine II. was nursing a
+terrible revenge on the woman who had dared to usurp her position and
+threaten her throne. The succession of revolutions, at which she had at
+first smiled scornfully, had now roused the tigress in her. She would
+show the world that she was no woman to be trifled with, and the first
+victim of her vengeance should be that brazen Princess who dared to
+masquerade as "Elizabeth II."
+
+She sent imperative orders to her trusted and beloved Orloff, fresh from
+his crushing defeat of the Turkish fleet, to seize her at any cost, even
+if he had to raze Ragusa to the ground; and these orders she knew would
+be executed to the letter. For was not Orloff the man whose strong hands
+had strangled her husband and placed the crown on her head; also her
+most devoted slave? He was, it is true, the biggest scoundrel (as he was
+also one of the handsomest men) in Europe, a man ready to stoop to any
+infamy, and thus the best possible tool for such an infamous purpose;
+but he was also her greatest admirer, eager to step into the place of
+"chief favourite" from which his brother Gregory had just been
+dismissed.
+
+When, however, Orloff went to Ragusa, with his soldiers at his back, he
+found that the Princess had already flown, leaving no trace behind her.
+He ransacked Sicily in vain, and it was only when Sir William
+Hamilton's letter to his Leghorn banker came to his hands that he
+discovered that she was in Rome, a much safer asylum than Ragusa. It was
+hopeless now to capture her by force; he must try diplomacy, and, by the
+hands of an aide-de-camp, he sent her a letter in which he informed her
+that he had received her ukase and was anxious to pay due homage to the
+future Empress of Russia.
+
+Such was the "Judas" message Kristenef, Orloff's emissary, carried to
+the Princess, whom he found in a pitiful condition, wasted to a shadow
+by disease and starvation--"in a room cold and bare, whose only
+furniture was a leather sofa, on which she lay in a high fever, coughing
+convulsively." To such pathetic straits was "Elizabeth II." reduced when
+Kristenef came with his fawning airs and lying tongue to tell her that
+Alexis Orloff, the greatest man in Russia, had instructed him to offer
+her the throne of the Tsars, and, as an earnest of his loyalty, to beg
+her acceptance of a loan of eleven thousand ducats.
+
+In vain did Domanski, who was still by her side, warn her against the
+smooth-tongued envoy. She was flattered by such unexpected homage, her
+eyes were dazzled by the near prospect of the coveted crown which was to
+be hers, at last, just when hope seemed dead. She would accept Orloff's
+invitation to go to Pisa to meet him. "As for you," she said, "if you
+are afraid, you can stay behind. I am going where Destiny calls me."
+
+This revolution in her fortunes acted like magic. New life coursed
+through her veins, colour returned to her cheeks, and brightness to her
+eyes, as one February day in 1775 she left Rome, with the devoted
+Domanski for companion and a brilliant escort, for Pisa, where Orloff
+greeted her as an Empress. He gave regal fêtes in her honour and filled
+her ears with honeyed and flattering words.
+
+Affecting to be dazzled by her beauty, he even dared to make passionate
+love to her, which no man of his day could do more effectively than this
+handsomest of the Orloffs; and so infatuated was the poor Princess by
+the adoration of her handsome lover and the assurance of the throne he
+was to give her, that she at last consented to share that throne with
+him, and by his side went through a marriage ceremony, at which two of
+his officers masqueraded as officiating priests.
+
+Nothing remained now between her and the goal of her desires, except to
+make the journey to Russia as speedily as possible, and a few hours
+after the wedding banquet we see her in the Admiral's launch, with
+Orloff and Domanski and a brilliant suite of officers, leaving Leghorn
+for the Russian flagship, where she was received with the blare of bands
+and the booming of artillery. The crowning moment arrived when, as she
+was being hoisted to the deck in a gorgeous chair suspended from the
+yard-arm, her future sailors greeted her with thunders of shouts, "Long
+live the Empress!"
+
+The moment she set foot on deck she was seized, handcuffs were snapped
+on her wrists, and she was carried a helpless captive to a cabin. At the
+same moment Domanski was overpowered before he had time to use his
+sword, and made a prisoner.
+
+The Princess's cries for Orloff, her husband and saviour, are met with
+derision. Orloff she is told is himself a prisoner. He has, in fact,
+vanished, his dastardly mission executed; and she never saw him again.
+Two months later the victim of a man's treachery and a woman's vengeance
+is looking with tear-dimmed eyes on "her capital" through a barred
+window of a cell in the fortress of Saints Peter and Paul.
+
+Over the tragic closing of her days we may not dwell long. The scene is
+too pitiful, too harrowing. In vain she implores an interview with
+Catherine, who blazes into anger at the request. "The impudence of the
+wretch," she exclaims, "is beyond all bounds! She must be mad. Tell her
+if she wishes any improvement in her lot to cease the comedy she is
+playing." Prince Galitzin, Grand Chancellor, exerts all his skill in
+vain to force a confession of imposture from her. To his wiles and
+threats alike she opposes a dignified and calm front. She persists in
+the story of her birth; refuses to admit that she is an impostor.
+
+Even when she is flung into a loathsome cell, with bread and water for
+diet, she does not waver a jot in her demeanour of dignity or in her
+Royal claims. Only when she is charged with being the daughter of a
+Prague innkeeper does she allow indignation to master her, as she
+retorts, "I have never been in Prague in my life, and if I knew who had
+thus slandered me I would scratch his eyes out." Domanski, too, proves
+equally intractable; even the promise of marriage to her will not wring
+from him a word that might discredit his beloved Princess.
+
+But although the Princess keeps such a brave heart under conditions that
+might well have broken it, her spirit is powerless against the insidious
+disease that is working such havoc with her body. In her damp, noisome
+cell consumption makes rapid headway. Her strength ebbs daily; the end
+is coming swiftly near. She makes a last dying appeal to Catherine to
+see her if but for a few moments, but the appeal falls on deaf ears.
+When she sends for a priest to minister to her last hours, and, by
+Catherine's orders, he makes a final attempt to wrest her secret from
+her, she moans with her failing breath, "Say the prayers for the dead.
+That is all there is for you to do here."
+
+Four days later death came to her release. Catherine's throne was safe
+from this danger at least, and she was left to dalliance with her legion
+of lovers, while the woman on whom she had wreaked such terrible
+vengeance lay deeply buried in the courtyard of her prison, the very
+soldiers who dug her grave being sworn to secrecy. Thus in mystery her
+life opened, and in secrecy it closed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+THE KING AND THE "LITTLE DOVE"
+
+A savage murmur ran through the market-place of Bergen, one summer
+morning in the year 1507, as Chancellor Valkendorf made his pompous way
+along the avenues of stalls laden with their country produce, his
+passage followed by scowling eyes and low-spoken maledictions.
+
+There could not have been a more unwelcome visitor than this cold-eyed,
+supercilious Chancellor, unless it were his master, Christian, the
+Danish Prince who had come to rule Norway with the iron hand, and to
+stamp out the fires of rebellion against the alien rule that were always
+smouldering, when not leaping into flame. Bergen itself had been the
+scene of the latest revolt against oppressive and unjust taxes, and the
+insolent Valkendorf, who was now taking his morning stroll in the
+market-place, was fresh from suppressing it with a rough hand which had
+left many a smart and longing for vengeance behind it.
+
+But the Chancellor could afford to smile at such evidences of
+unpopularity. He knew that he was the most hated man in Norway--after
+his master--but he had executed his mission well and was ready to do it
+again. And thus it was with an air, half-amused, half-contemptuous, that
+he made his progress this July morning among the booths and stalls of
+the market, with eyes scornfully blind to frowns, but very wide open for
+any pretty face he might chance to see.
+
+He had not strolled far before his eyes were arrested by as strangely
+contrasted a picture as any he had ever seen. Behind one of the stalls,
+heaped high with luscious, many-coloured fruits and mountains of
+vegetables, were two women, each so remarkable in her different way
+that, almost involuntarily, he stood rooted to the spot, gazing
+open-eyed at them. The elder of the two was of gigantic stature,
+towering head and shoulders over her companion, with harsh, masculine
+face, massive jaw, coarse protruding lips, and black eyes which were
+fixed on him in a magnetic stare, defiant and scornful--for none knew
+better than she who the stranger was, and few hated him more.
+
+But it was not to this grim, hard-visaged Amazon that Valkendorf's eyes
+were drawn, compelling as were her stature and her basilisk stare. They
+quickly turned from her, with a motion of contempt, to feast on the
+vision by her side--that of a girl on the threshold of young womanhood
+and of a beauty that dazzled the eyes of the old voluptuary. How had she
+come there and in such company, this ravishing girl on whom Nature had
+lavished the last touch of virginal loveliness, this maiden with her
+figure of such supple grace, the proud little oval face with its
+complexion of cream and roses, the dainty head from which twin plaits
+of golden hair fell almost to her knees, and the eyes blue as violets,
+now veiled demurely, now opening wide to reveal their glories, enhanced
+by a look of appeal, almost of fear.
+
+The Chancellor, who was the last man to pass by a flower so seductively
+beautiful, approached the stall, undaunted by the forbidding eyes of the
+giantess, Frau Sigbrit, by name, and, after making a small purchase,
+sought to draw her into amiable conversation. "No," she said in answer
+to his inquiries, "we are not Norwegian. We come from Holland, my
+daughter and I, and we are trying to earn a little money before
+returning there. But why do you ask?" she demanded almost fiercely,
+putting a protecting arm around the girl, as if she would shield her
+from an enemy. "You are in such a different world from ours!"
+
+Little by little, however, the grim face began to relax under the adroit
+flatteries and courtly deference of the Chancellor--for none knew better
+than he the arts of charming, when he pleased; and it was not long
+before the Amazon, completely thawed, was confiding to him the most
+intimate details of her history and her hopes.
+
+"Yes, my daughter is beautiful," she said, with a look of pride at the
+girl which transfigured her face. "Many a great man has told me
+so--dukes, princes, and lords. She is as fair a flower as ever grew in
+Holland; and she is as sweet as she is fair. She is Dyveke, my "little
+dove," the pride of my heart, my soul, my life. She is to be a Queen one
+day. It has been revealed to me in my dreams. But when the day dawns it
+will be the saddest in my life." And with further amiable words and a
+final courtly salute, Valkendorf continued his stroll, secretly
+promising himself a further acquaintance with the dragon and her "little
+dove."
+
+This was the first of many morning strolls in the Bergen market, in
+which the Chancellor spent delightful moments at Frau Sigbrit's stall,
+each leaving him more and more a slave to her daughter's charms; for he
+quickly found that to her physical perfections were allied a low, sweet
+voice, every note of which was musical as that of a nightingale, a quiet
+dignity and refinement as far removed from her station as her simple
+print frock with the bunch of roses nestling in the white purity of her
+bosom, and a sprightliness of wit which even her modesty could not
+always repress.
+
+Thus it was that, when Valkendorf at last returned to Upsala and the
+Court of his master, Christian, his tongue was full of the praises of
+the "market-beauty" of Bergen, whose charms he pictured so glowingly
+that the Prince's heart became as inflamed by a sympathetic passion as
+his mind by curiosity to see such a siren. "I shall not rest," he said
+to his Chancellor, "until I have seen your 'little dove' with my own
+eyes; and who knows," he added with a laugh, "perhaps I shall steal her
+from you!"
+
+It was in vain that Valkendorf, now alarmed by his indiscretion, began
+to pour cold water on the flames he had lit. Christian had quite lost
+his susceptible heart to the rustic and unknown beauty, and vowed that
+he could not rest until he had seen her with his own eyes. And within a
+month he was riding into Bergen, with Valkendorf by his side, at the
+head of a brilliant retinue.
+
+As the Prince made his way through the crowded avenues of the Bergen
+streets to an accompaniment of scowls punctuated by feeble, forced
+cheers, he cut a goodly enough figure to win many an admiring, if
+reluctant, glance from bright eyes. With his broad shoulders, his erect,
+well-knit figure clothed in purple velvet, his stern, swarthy face
+crowned by a white-plumed hat, Christian looked every inch a Prince.
+
+To-day, too, he was in his most amiable mood, with a smile ready to leap
+to his lips, and many a gracious wave of the hand and sweep of plumed
+hat to acknowledge the grudged salutes of his subjects. He could be
+charming enough when he pleased, and this was a day of high good-humour;
+for his mind was full of the pleasure that awaited him. Even Frau
+Sigbrit's scowl was chased away when his eyes were drawn to her towering
+figure, and with a swift smile he singled her out for the honour of a
+special salute.
+
+When the Prince at last arrived in the market-square, he was greeted by
+a procession of the prettiest maidens in Bergen who, in white frocks and
+with flower-wreathed hair, advanced to pay him the homage of demure
+eyes. But among them all, the loveliest girls of the city, Christian saw
+but one--a girl younger than almost any other, but so radiantly lovely
+that his eyes fixed themselves on her as if entranced, until her cheeks
+flamed a vivid crimson under the ardour of his gaze. "No need to point
+her out," he whispered delightedly to Valkendorf, "I see your 'little
+dove,' and she is all you have told me and more."
+
+Before many hours had passed, a Court official appeared at Frau
+Sigbrit's cottage door with a command from the Prince to her and her
+daughter to attend a State ball the following evening. If the poor
+market-woman had had a crown laid at her feet, her surprise and
+consternation could scarcely have been greater. But she would make a
+bigger sacrifice of inclination than this for the "little dove" who
+filled her heart, and who, she remembered, was destined to be a Queen;
+and decking her in all the finery her modest purse could command and
+with a taste of which few would have suspected she was capable, the
+market stall-keeper stalked majestically through the avenue of gorgeous
+flunkeys, her little Princess with downcast eyes following demurely in
+her wake.
+
+All the fairest women of Bergen were gathered at this ball, the host of
+which was their coming King, but it was to the fruit-seller's daughter
+that all eyes were turned, in homage to such a rare combination of
+beauty, grace, and modesty. Many a fair lip, it is true, curled in
+mockery, recognising in the belle of the ball the low-born girl of the
+market-place; but it was the mockery of jealousy, the scornful tribute
+to a loveliness greater than their own.
+
+As for Prince Christian, he had no eyes for any but the "little dove"
+who outshone all her rivals as the sun pales the stars. It was the maid
+of the market whom he led out for the first dance, and throughout the
+long night he rarely left her side, whirling round the room with her,
+his arm close-clasped round her slender waist, not seeing or indifferent
+to the glances of envy and hate that followed them; or, during the
+intervals, drinking in her beauty as he poured sweet flatteries into her
+ears. As for Dyveke, she was radiantly happy at finding herself thus
+transported into the favour of a Prince and the Queendom of fair women,
+for whose envy she cared as little as for the danger in which she stood.
+
+If anything had remained to complete Christian's infatuation, this
+intoxicating night of the ball supplied it. The "little dove" had found
+a secure nesting-place in his heart. She must be his at any cost. She
+and her mother alone, of all the guests, were invited to spend the rest
+of the night at the castle as the Prince's guests; and when he parted
+from her the following day, it was with vows on his part of undying love
+and fidelity, and a promise on hers to come to him at Upsala as soon as
+a suitable home could be found for her.
+
+Thus easily was the dove caught in the toils of one of the most amorous
+Princes of Europe; but it must be said for her that her heart went with
+the surrender of her freedom, for the Prince, with his ardent passion,
+his strength and his magnetism, had swept her as quickly off her feet as
+she had made a quick conquest of him.
+
+Thus, before many weeks had passed, we find Dyveke installed with her
+mother in a sumptuous home in the outskirts of Upsala, queening it in
+the Prince's Court, and every day forging new fetters to bind him to
+her. And while Dyveke thus ruled over Christian's heart, her
+strong-minded mother soon established a similar empire over his mind.
+With the clever, masterful brain of a man, the Amazon of the
+market-place developed such a capacity for intrigue, such a grasp of
+statesmanship and such arts of diplomacy that Christian, strong man as
+he thought himself, soon became little more than a puppet in her hands,
+taking her counsel and deferring to her judgment in preference to those
+of his ministers. The fruit-seller thus found herself virtual Prime
+Minister, while her daughter reigned, an uncrowned Queen.
+
+When the Prince was summoned to Copenhagen by his father's failing
+health, Frau Sigbrit and her daughter accompanied him, one in her way as
+indispensable as the other; and when King James died and Christian
+reigned in his stead, the women of the Bergen market were installed in a
+splendid suite of apartments in his palace. So hopeless was his
+subjection to both that his subjects, with an indifferent shrug of the
+shoulders, accepted them as inevitable.
+
+For a time, it is true, their supremacy was in danger. Now that
+Christian was King, it became important to provide him with a Queen, and
+a suitable consort was found for him in the Austrian Princess, Isabella,
+sister of the Emperor Charles V., a well-gilded bride, distinguished
+alike for her beauty and her piety. Isabella, however, was one of the
+last women to tolerate any rivalry in her husband's affection, and
+before the marriage-contract was sealed, she had received a solemn
+pledge from Christian's envoys that his relations with the pretty
+flower-girl should cease.
+
+But even Christian's word of honour was seldom allowed to bar the way to
+his pleasure, and within a few weeks of Isabella's bridal entry into
+Copenhagen, Dyveke and her mother resumed their places at his Court, to
+his Queen's unconcealed disgust and displeasure. More than this, he
+established them in a fine house near his palace gates; and when he was
+not dallying there with Dyveke, he was to be found by her side at the
+Castle of Hvideur, of which he had made her chatelaine.
+
+The remonstrances of Valkendorf and his other ministers were made to
+deaf ears; his wife's reproaches and tears were as futile as the
+strongly worded protestations of his Royal relatives. Pleadings,
+arguments, and threats were alike powerless to break the spell Dyveke
+and her mother had cast over him. But Dyveke's day of empire was now
+drawing to a tragic close. One day, after eating some cherries from the
+palace gardens, she was seized with a violent pain. All the skill of the
+Court doctors could do as little to assuage her agony as to save her
+life; and within a few hours she died, clasped to the breast of her
+distracted lover!
+
+Such was Christian's distress that for a time his reason trembled in the
+balance. He vowed that he would not be separated from her even by death;
+he threatened to put an end to his own life since it had been reft of
+all that made it worth living. And when cooler moments came, he swore a
+terrible vengeance against those who had robbed him of his beloved. She
+had been poisoned beyond a doubt; but who had done the dastardly deed?
+
+The finger of suspicion pointed to the steward of his household, Torbern
+Oxe, who, it was said, had been among the most ardent of Dyveke's
+admirers, and had had the audacity to aspire to her hand. It was even
+rumoured that he had had more intimate relations with her. Such were the
+stories and suspicions that passed from mouth to mouth in Christian's
+clouded Court before Dyveke's beautiful body was cold; and such were the
+tales which Hans Faaborg, the King's Treasurer, poured into his master's
+ears.
+
+Hans Faaborg little dreamt that when he was thus trying to bring about
+the downfall of his rival he was sealing his own fate. Christian lent an
+eager ear to the stories of his steward's iniquities; but, when he found
+there was no shred of proof to support them, his anger and
+disappointment vented themselves on the informer. He had long suspected
+Faaborg of irregularities in his purse-holding, and in these suspicions
+found a weapon to use against him. Faaborg was arrested; an examination
+of his ledgers showed that for years he had been waxing rich at his
+master's expense, and he had to pay with his life the penalty of his
+fraud and his unproved testimony.
+
+But Faaborg, though thus removed from his path, was by no means done
+with. Rumours began to be circulated that a strange light appeared every
+night above the dead man's head as he swung on the gallows. The city was
+full of superstitious awe and of whisperings that Heaven was thus
+bearing witness to the Treasurer's innocence. And even the King
+himself, when he too saw the unearthly light forming a halo round his
+victim's head, was filled with remorse and fear to such an extent that
+he had Faaborg's body cut down and honoured with a State funeral.
+
+He was still, however, as far as ever from solving the mystery of
+Dyveke's death; and the longer his desire for vengeance was baffled, the
+more clamorous it became. Although nothing could be proved against
+Torbern Oxe, Christian was by no means satisfied of his innocence, and
+he decided to discover by guile the secret which all other means had
+failed to reveal. He would, if possible, make his steward his own
+betrayer. One day, at a Court banquet, he turned in jocular mood to the
+minister and said, "Tell me now, my dear Torbern, was there really any
+truth in what Faaborg told me of your relations with my beautiful Lady!
+Don't hesitate to tell the truth, which only you know, for I assure you
+no harm shall come to you from it."
+
+Thus thrown off his guard and reassured, the steward, who, like his
+master, had probably drunk not wisely, confessed that he had loved
+Dyveke, and had asked her to be his wife. "But, sire," he added, "that
+was the extent of my offence. I was never intimate with her." During the
+remainder of the banquet Christian was most affable to the indiscreet
+steward, not only showing no trace of resentment, but treating him with
+marked friendliness.
+
+The following day, however, Torbern was flung into prison, and charged,
+not only with his confession, but with the murder of the woman he had
+so vainly loved; and, in spite of the storm of indignation that swept
+over Denmark, the pleadings of the Papal Legate, Arcimbaldo, and the
+tears of the Queen, was sentenced to death for a crime of which there
+was no scrap of evidence to point to his guilt.
+
+This gross act of injustice proved to be the beginning of Christian's
+downfall. His cruelties and oppressions had long made him odious to his
+subjects, and the climax came when a popular uprising hurled him from
+his throne and drove him an exile to Holland. An attempt to recover his
+crown ended in speedy disaster, and his last years were spent, in
+company with his favourite dwarf, in a cell of the Holstein Castle of
+Sondeborg.
+
+As for Sigbrit, the woman who had played such a conspicuous and baleful
+part in Christian's life, she deserted her benefactor at the first sign
+of his coming ruin and ended her days in her native Holland, bemoaning
+to the last the loss of her "little dove," whom she had seen raised
+almost to a throne and had lost so tragically.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+THE ROMANCE OF THE BEAUTIFUL SWEDE
+
+Augustus the Strong, Elector of Saxony and King of Poland, owes his
+place in the world's memory to his brawny muscles and to his conquest of
+women. Like the third Alexander of Russia of later years, he could, with
+his powerful arms, convert a thick iron bar into a necklace, crush a
+pewter tankard by the pressure of a mighty hand, toss a heavy anvil into
+the air and catch it as another man would catch a ball, or with a wrench
+straighten out the stoutest horse-shoe ever forged.
+
+And his strength of muscle was matched by his skill in the lists of
+love. No Louis of France could boast such an array of conquests as this
+Saxon Hercules, who changed his mistresses as easily as he changed his
+coats; the fairest women in Europe, from Turkey to Poland, succeeded
+each other in bewildering succession as the slaves of his pleasure, and
+before he died he counted his children to as many as the year has days.
+
+Of all these fair and frail women who thus ministered to the pleasure of
+the "Saxon Samson," none was so beautiful, so gifted, so altogether
+alluring as Marie Aurora, Countess of Königsmarck, the younger of the
+two daughters of Conrad of Königsmarck. Born in the year 1668, Aurora
+was one of three children of the Swedish Count Conrad and his wife, the
+daughter of the great Field-Marshal Wrangel. Her elder sister, little
+less fair than herself, found a husband, when little more than a child,
+in Count Axel Löwenhaupt; her brother Philip, the handsomest man of his
+day in Europe, was destined to end his days tragically as the price of
+his infatuation for a Queen.
+
+Betrayed by a jealous woman, the Countess Platen, whose overtures he
+spurned, this too gallant lover of Sophia Dorothea of Celle, wife of the
+first of our Georges, was foully done to death in a corridor of the
+Leine Schloss by La Paten's hired assassins, while she looked smilingly
+on at his futile struggle for life, and gloated over his dying agonies.
+
+On the death of her father, when she was but a child of three, Aurora
+was taken by her mother from her native Sweden to Hamburg, where she
+grew to beautiful young womanhood; and when, in turn, her mother died,
+she found a home with her married sister, the Countess Löwenhaupt. And
+it is at this period of her life that her romantic story opens.
+
+If we are to believe her contemporaries, the world has seldom seen so
+much beauty and so many graces enshrined in the form of woman as in this
+daughter of Sweden. Her description reads like a catalogue of all human
+perfections. Of medium height and a figure as faultless in its exquisite
+modelling as in its grace and suppleness; her hair, black as a raven's
+plumage, and falling, like a veil of night, below her knees, emphasised
+the white purity of face and throat, arms, and hands. Her teeth, twin
+rows of pearls, glistened between smiling crimson lips, curved like
+Cupid's bow. Her face of perfect oval, with its delicately moulded
+features, was illuminated by a pair of large black eyes, now melting,
+now flaming, as mood succeeded mood.
+
+To these graces of body were allied equal graces of mind and character.
+Her conversation sparkled with wit and wisdom; she could hold fluent
+discourse in half a dozen tongues; she played and sang divinely, wrote
+elegant verses, and painted dainty pictures. Her manner was caressing
+and courteous; she was generous to a fault, with a heart as tender as it
+was large. And the supreme touch was added by an entire unconsciousness
+of her charms, and an unaffected modesty which captivated all hearts.
+
+Such was Aurora of Königsmarck who, in company with her sister, set
+forth one day to claim the fortune which her ill-fated brother, Philip,
+was said to have left in the custody of his Hanoverian bankers--a
+journey which was to make such a dramatic revolution in her own life.
+
+Arrived at Hanover the sisters found themselves faced by no easy task.
+The bankers declared that they had nothing of the late Count's effects
+beyond a few diamonds, which they declined to part with, unless evidence
+were forthcoming that the Count had died and had left no will behind
+him--evidence which, owing to the secrecy surrounding his murder, it was
+impossible to furnish. And when a discharged clerk revealed the fact
+that the dishonest bankers had actually all the Count's estate, valued
+at four hundred thousand crowns, in their possession, the sisters were
+unable to make them disgorge a solitary mark.
+
+In their extremity, they decided to appeal to the Elector of Saxony, who
+had known Count Philip well and who would, they hoped, be the champion
+of their rights; and, with this object, they journeyed to Dresden, only
+to find themselves again baffled. Augustus was away on a hunting
+excursion, and would not return for a whole month. His wife and mother,
+however, gave them a gracious reception, as charmed by their beauty and
+sweetness as sympathetic in their trouble.
+
+When at last Augustus made his tardy appearance at his capital, the fair
+petitioners were presented to him by the Dowager Electress with words of
+strong recommendation to his favour. "These ladies, my son," she said,
+"have come to beg for your protection and help, to which they are
+entitled both by birth and their merits. I beg that you will spare no
+effort to ensure that justice is done to them."
+
+His mother's pleading, however, was not necessary to ensure a favourable
+hearing from the Elector, whose eyes were eloquent of the admiration he
+felt for the two fairest women who had ever visited his land. Aurora's
+beauty, enhanced by her attitude of appeal, the mute craving for
+protection, was irresistible. From the moment she entered his presence
+he was her slave, as anxious to do her will as any lovesick boy.
+
+And it was to her that, with his courtliest bow, he answered, "Be
+assured, dear lady, that I shall know no rest until your wrongs are
+repaired. If I fail, I myself will make reparation in full. Meanwhile,
+may I beg you and your sister to be my guests, that I may prove how deep
+is my sympathy, and how profound the respect I feel for you."
+
+Thus it was that by the magic of beauty Aurora and her Countess sister
+found themselves installed at the Dresden Court, feted like Queens,
+receiving the caresses of the Court ladies, and the homage of every man,
+from Augustus himself to the youngest page, of whom a smile from their
+pretty lips made a veritable slave. As for the Elector, sated as he was
+with the easy smiles and favours of fair women, he gave to the Swedish
+beauty, from the first, a homage he had never paid to any of her
+predecessors in his affection.
+
+But Aurora was no woman to be easily won by any man. She listened
+smilingly to the Elector's honeyed words, and received his attentions
+with the gracious complaisance of a Queen. When, however, he ventured to
+tell her that "her charms inspired him with a passion such as he had
+never felt for any woman," she answered coldly, "I came here prepared
+for your generosity, but I did not expect that your kindness would
+assume a form to cause me shame. I beg you not to say anything that can
+lessen the gratitude I owe you, and the respect I feel for you."
+
+Here indeed was a rebuff such as Augustus was little prepared for, or
+accustomed to. The beauty, of whom he had hoped to make an easy
+conquest, was an iceberg whom all his ardour could not thaw. He was in
+despair. "I am sure she hates and despises me, while I love her dearer
+than life itself," he confessed to his favourite Beuchling, who vainly
+tried to console and cheer him. He confided his passion and his pain to
+Aurora's sister, whose hopeful words were alike powerless to dispel his
+gloom.
+
+When Aurora held aloof from him, he sent letter after letter of
+passionate pleading to her by the hand of the trusty Beuchling. "If you
+knew the tortures I am suffering," he wrote, "your kindness of heart
+could not resist pitying me. I was mad to declare my passion so brutally
+to you. Let me expiate my fault, prostrate at your feet; and, if you
+wish for my death, let me at least receive my sentence from your own
+sweet lips."
+
+To such a desperate state was Augustus brought within a few days of
+setting eyes on his new divinity! As for Aurora of the tender heart, her
+lover's distress thawed her more than a year of passionate protestations
+could have done. She replied, assuring him of her gratitude, her esteem
+and respect, and begging him to dismiss such unworthy thoughts of her.
+But she had no word of encouragement to send him in the note which her
+lover kissed so rapturously before placing it next his heart.
+
+So alarmed, indeed, was Aurora, that she announced her intention of
+leaving forthwith a Court in which she was exposed to so much danger--a
+project to which her sister gave a reluctant approval. But the Countess
+Löwenhaupt was little disposed to leave a Court where she at least was
+having such a good time; for she, too, had her lovers, and among them
+the Prince of Fürstenberg, the handsomest man in Saxony, whose devotion
+was more than agreeable to her. She preferred to play the part of
+Cupid's agent--to exercise her diplomacy in bringing together those two
+foolish persons, her sister and the Elector.
+
+And so skilfully did she play her part, appealing to Aurora's pity, and
+assuring Augustus of her sister's love in spite of her seeming coldness,
+that before many weeks had passed Aurora had yielded and was listening
+with no unwilling ear to the vows of her exalted lover, now transported
+to the seventh heaven of happiness. One condition she made, when their
+mutual troth was plighted, that it should, for a time at least, remain a
+secret from the Court, and to this the Elector gratefully assented.
+
+Such was the strange wooing of Augustus and the Countess Aurora, in
+which passion had its response in a pity which, in this case at least,
+was the parent of love.
+
+It was with no very light heart that Aurora set forth to Mauritzburg, a
+few days later, to keep "honeymoon tryst" with Augustus, who had
+preceded her, to make, as she understood, the necessary preparations for
+her reception. With her sister and a mounted escort of the most
+beautiful ladies of the Court, she had ridden as far as the entrance to
+the Mauritzburg forest, when her carriage suddenly came to a halt in
+front of a magnificent palace. From the open door emerged Diana with her
+attendant nymphs to greet her with words of welcome, and to beg her to
+tarry a while to accept the hospitality of the forest gods.
+
+In response to this flattering invitation Aurora left her carriage and
+was escorted in stately procession to a saloon, richly painted with
+sylvan scenes, in which a sumptuous banquet was spread. No sooner were
+she and her ladies seated at the table than, to the strains of beautiful
+music, the god Pan (none other than the Elector himself), with his
+retinue of fawns and other richly and quaintly garbed forest gods, made
+his entry, and took his seat at the right hand of his goddess. Then, to
+the deft ministry of Diana and her satellites, and to the soft
+accompaniment of pipes and hautboys, the feasting began, while Pan
+whispered love to the lady for whom he had prepared such a charming
+hospitality.
+
+The banquet had scarcely come to an end when the jubilant sound of horns
+was heard from the forest. A stag dashed by a window in full flight, and
+Aurora and her ladies, rushing excitedly to the door, saw horses
+awaiting them for the hunt.
+
+In a moment they are mounted, and, gaily laughing, with Pan leading the
+way, they are galloping through the forest glades in the wake of the
+flying stag and the music of the hounds, until the stag, hotly pursued,
+dashes into a lake, in the centre of which is a beautiful wooded island.
+Dismounting, the ladies enter the gondolas which are so opportunely
+awaiting them, and are rowed across the strip of water just in time to
+witness the death of the gallant animal they have been chasing.
+
+The hunt over, Aurora and her ladies are conducted to the leafy heart of
+the island, where, as by the touch of a magician's wand, a gorgeous
+Eastern tent has sprung up, and here another sumptuous entertainment is
+prepared for them. Seated on soft-cushioned divans, in the many-hued
+environment of Oriental luxury, rare fruits and delicacies are brought
+to them in silver baskets by turbaned Turks. The island Sultan now
+appears, ablaze with gems, with his officers little less gorgeous than
+himself, and with deep obeisances craves permission to seat himself by
+Aurora's side, a favour which she was not likely to refuse to a Sultan
+in whom she recognised her lover, the Elector. Troupes of dancing-girls
+follow, and the moments fly swiftly to the twinkling of dainty feet, the
+gliding and posturing of supple bodies, and the strains of sensuous
+music.
+
+Another hour spent in the gondolas, dreamily gliding under the light of
+the moon, and horses are again mounted; and Aurora, with Augustus riding
+proudly by her side, heads the splendid procession which, with laughter,
+and in the gayest of spirits, rides forth to the Mauritzburg Castle at
+the close of a day so full of delights.
+
+"Here," was the Elector's greeting, as he conducted his bride to her
+room with its furnishing of silver and rich damask, and its pictured
+Cupid showering roses on the silk-curtained bed, "you are the Queen, and
+I am your slave."
+
+Such was the beginning of Aurora's reign over the heart of the Elector
+of Saxony--a reign of unclouded splendour and happiness for the woman in
+whom pity for her lover was soon replaced by a passion as ardent as his
+own. Fêtes and banquets and balls succeeded each other in swift
+sequence, at all of which Aurora was Queen, the focus of all eyes, and
+receiving universal homage, won no more by her beauty and her position
+as the Elector's favourite than by her sweetness and graciousness to the
+humblest. No mistress of a King was ever more beloved than this daughter
+of Sweden. Even the Elector's mother, a pattern of the most rigid
+propriety, had ever a kind word and a caress for her; his neglected wife
+made a friend and confidante of the woman of whom she said, "Since I
+must have a rival, I am glad she should be one so sweet and lovable."
+
+We must hasten over the years that followed--years during which Augustus
+had no eyes for any other woman than his "uncrowned Queen," and during
+which she bore him a son who, as Maurice of Saxony, was to win many
+laurels in the years to come. It must suffice to say that never was
+Royal liaison conducted with so much propriety, or was marked by so much
+mutual devotion and loyalty.
+
+But it was not in the nature of Augustus the Strong to remain always
+true to any woman, however charming; and although Aurora's reign lasted
+longer than that of any half-dozen of her rivals, it, too, had its
+ending. Within a month of the birth of her son, Augustus, now King of
+Poland, was caught in the toils of another enslaver, the beautiful
+Countess Esterle. Aurora realised that her sun had set, and
+relinquishing her sceptre without a murmur, she retired to the convent
+of Quedlinburg, of which Augustus had appointed her Abbess.
+
+Thus in an atmosphere of peace and piety, beloved of all for her
+sweetness and charity, Aurora of Königsmarck spent her last years until
+the end came one day in the year 1728; and in the crypt of the convent
+she loved so well she sleeps her last sleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+THE SISTER OF AN EMPEROR
+
+When Napoleon Bonaparte, the shabby, sallow-faced, out-of-work captain
+of artillery, was kicking his heels in morose idleness at Marseilles,
+and whiling away the dull hours in making love to Desirée Clary, the
+pretty daughter of the silk-merchant in the Rue des Phocéens, his
+sisters were living with their mother, the Signora Letizia, in a sordid
+fourth-floor apartment in a slum near the Cannebiere, and running wild
+in the Marseilles streets.
+
+Strange tales are told of those early years of the sisters of an
+Emperor-to-be--Elisa Bonaparte, future Grand Duchess of Tuscany;
+Pauline, embryo Princess Borghese; and Caroline, who was to wear a crown
+as Queen of Naples--high-spirited, beautiful girls, brimful of frolic
+and fun, laughing at their poverty, decking themselves out in cheap,
+home-made finery, and flirting outrageously with every good-looking
+young man who was willing to pay homage to their _beaux yeux_. If
+Marseilles deigned to notice these pretty young madcaps, it was only
+with the cold eyes of disapproval; for such "shameless goings-on" were
+little less than a scandal.
+
+The pity of it was that there was no one to check their escapades.
+Their mother, the imposing Madame Mère of later years, seemed
+indifferent what her daughters did, so long as they left her in peace;
+their brothers, Kings-to-be, were too much occupied with their own
+love-making or their pranks to spare them a thought. And thus the trio
+of tomboys were left, with a loose rein, to indulge every impulse that
+entered their foolish heads. And a right merry time they had, with their
+dancing, their private theatricals, the fun behind the scenes, and their
+promiscuous love affairs, each serious and thrilling until it gave place
+to a successor.
+
+Of the three Bonaparte "graces" the most lovely by far (though each was
+passing fair) was Pauline, who, though still little more than a child,
+gave promise of that rare perfection of face and figure which was to
+make her the most beautiful woman in all France. "It is impossible, with
+either pen or brush," wrote one who knew her, "to do any justice to her
+charms--the brilliance of her eyes, which dazzled and thrilled all on
+whom they fell; the glory of her black hair, rippling in a cascade to
+her knees; the classic purity of her Grecian profile, the wild-rose
+delicacy of her complexion, the proud, dainty poise of her head, and the
+exquisite modelling of the figure which inspired Canova's 'Venus
+Victrix.'"
+
+Such was Pauline Bonaparte, whose charms, although then immature, played
+such havoc with the young men of Marseilles, and who thus early began
+that career of conquest which was to afford so much gossip for the
+tongue of scandal. That the winsome little minx had her legion of
+lovers from the day she set foot in Marseilles, at the age of thirteen,
+we know; but it was not until Frèron came on the scene that her volatile
+little heart was touched--Frèron, the handsome coxcomb and
+arch-revolutionary, who was sent to Marseilles as a Commissioner of the
+Convention.
+
+To Pauline, the gay, gallant Parisian, penniless adventurer though he
+was, was a veritable hero of romance; and at sight of him she completely
+lost her heart. It was a _grande passion_, which he was by no means slow
+to return. Those were delicious hours which Pauline spent in the company
+of her beloved "Stanislas," hours of ecstasy; and when he left
+Marseilles she pursued him with the most passionate protestations.
+
+"Yes," she wrote, "I swear, dear Stanislas, never to love any other than
+thee; my heart knows no divided allegiance. It is thine alone. Who could
+oppose the union of two souls who seek to find no other happiness than
+in a mutual love?" And again, "Thou knowest how I worship thee. It is
+not possible for Paulette to live apart from her adored Stanislas. I
+love thee for ever, most passionately, my beautiful god, my adorable
+one--I love thee, love thee, love thee!"
+
+In such hot words this child of fifteen poured out her soul to the Paris
+dandy. "Neither mamma," she vowed, "nor anyone in the world shall come
+between us." But Pauline had not counted on her brother Napoleon, whose
+foot was now placed on the ladder of ambition, at the top of which was
+an Imperial crown, and who had other designs for his sister than to
+marry her to a penniless nobody. In vain did Pauline rage and weep, and
+declare that "she would die--_voilà tout!_" Napoleon was inexorable; and
+the flower of her first romance was trodden ruthlessly under his feet.
+
+When Junot, his own aide-de-camp, next came awooing Pauline, he was
+equally obdurate. "No," he said to the young soldier; "you have nothing,
+she has nothing. And what is twice nothing?" And thus lover number two
+was sent away disconsolate.
+
+Napoleon's sun was now in the ascendant, and his family were basking in
+its rays. From the Marseilles slums they were transported first to a
+sumptuous villa at Antibes; then to the Castle of Montebello, at Naples.
+The days of poverty were gone like an evil dream; the sisters of the
+famous General and coming Emperor were now young ladies of fashion,
+courted and fawned on. Their lovers were not Marseilles tradesmen or
+obscure soldiers and journalists (like Junot and Frèron), but brilliant
+Generals and men of the great world; and among them Napoleon now sought
+a husband for his prettiest and most irresponsible sister.
+
+This, however, proved no easy task. When he offered her to his favourite
+General, Marmont, he was met with a polite refusal. "She is indeed
+charming and lovely," said Marmont; "but I fear I could not make her
+happy." Then, waxing bolder, he continued: "I have dreams of domestic
+happiness, of fidelity, virtue; and these dreams I can scarcely hope to
+realise in your sister." Albert Permon, Napoleon's old schoolfellow,
+next declined the honour of Pauline's hand, although it held the bait of
+a high office and splendid fortune.
+
+The explanation of these refusals is not far to seek if we believe
+Arnault's description of Pauline--"An extraordinary combination of the
+most faultless physical beauty and the oddest moral laxity. She had no
+more manners than a schoolgirl--she talked incoherently, giggled at
+everything and nothing, mimicked the most serious personages, put out
+her tongue at her sister-in-law.... She was a good child naturally
+rather than voluntarily, for she had no principles."
+
+But Pauline was not to wait long, after all, for a husband. Among the
+many men who fluttered round her, willing to woo if not to wed the
+empty-headed beauty, was General Leclerc, young and rich, but weak in
+body and mind, "a quiet, insignificant-looking man," who at least loved
+her passionately, and would make a pliant husband to the capricious
+little autocrat. And we may be sure Napoleon heaved a sigh of relief
+when his madcap sister was safely tied to her weak-kneed General.
+
+Pauline was at last free to conduct her flirtations secure from the
+frowns of the brother she both feared and adored, and she seems to have
+made excellent use of her opportunities; and, what was even more to her,
+to encourage to the full her passion for finery. Dress and love filled
+her whole life; and while her idolatrous husband lavishly supplied the
+former, he turned a conveniently blind eye to the latter.
+
+Remarkable stories are told of Pauline's extravagant and daring
+costumes at this time. Thus, at a great ball in Madame Permon's Paris
+mansion, she appeared in a dress of classic scantiness of Indian muslin,
+ornamented with gold palm leaves. Beneath her breasts was a cincture of
+gold, with a gorgeous jewelled clasp; and her head was wreathed with
+bands spotted like a leopard's skin, and adorned with bunches of gold
+grapes.
+
+When this bewitching Bacchante made her appearance in the ballroom the
+sensation she created was so great that the dancing stopped instantly;
+women and men alike climbed on chairs to catch a glimpse of the rare and
+radiant vision, and murmurs of admiration and envy ran round the
+_salon_. Her triumph was complete. In the hush that followed, a voice
+was heard: "_Quel dommage!_ How lovely she would be, if it weren't for
+her ears. If I had such ears, I would cut them off, or hide them."
+Pauline heard the cruel words. The flush of mortification and anger
+flamed in her cheeks; she burst into tears and walked out of the room.
+Madame de Coutades, her most jealous rival, had found a rich revenge.
+
+General Leclerc did not live long to play the slave to his little
+autocrat; and when he died at San Domingo, the beautiful widow returned
+to France, accompanied by his embalmed body, with her glorious hair,
+which she had cut off for the purpose, wreathing his head! She had not,
+however, worn her weeds many months before she was once more surrounded
+by her court of lovers--actors, soldiers, singers, on each of whom in
+turn she lavished her smiles; and such time as she could spare from
+their flatteries and ogling she spent at the card-table, with
+fortune-tellers, or, chief joy of all, in decking her beauty with
+wondrous dresses and jewels.
+
+But the charming widow, sister of the great Napoleon, was not long to be
+left unclaimed; and this time the choice fell on Prince Camillo
+Borghese, a handsome, black-haired Italian, who allied to a head as vain
+and empty as her own the physical graces and gifts of an Admirable
+Crichton, and who, moreover, was lord of all the famed Borghese riches.
+
+Pauline had now reached dizzy heights, undreamed of in the days, only
+ten short years earlier, when she was coquetting in home-made finery
+with the young tradesmen of Marseilles. She was a Princess, bearing the
+greatest name in all Italy; and to this dignity her gratified brother
+added that of Princess of Gustalla. All the world-famous Borghese jewels
+were hers to deck her beauty with--a small Golconda of priceless gems;
+there was gold galore to satisfy her most extravagant whims; and she was
+still young--only twenty-five--and in the very zenith of her loveliness.
+
+Picture, then, the pride with which, one early day of her new bridehood,
+she drove to the Palace of St Cloud in the gorgeous Borghese State
+carriage, behind six horses, and with an escort of torch-bearers, to pay
+a formal call on her sister-in-law, Josephine, Empress-to-be. She had
+decked herself in a wonderful creation of green velvet; she was ablaze
+from head to foot with the Borghese diamonds. Such a dazzling vision
+could not fail to fill Josephine with envy--Josephine, who had hitherto
+treated her with such haughty patronage.
+
+As she sailed into the _salon_ in all her Queen of Sheba splendour, it
+was to be greeted by her sister-in-law in a modest dress of muslin,
+without a solitary gem to relieve its simplicity; and--horror!--to find
+that the room had been re-decorated in blue by the artful Josephine--a
+colour absolutely fatal to her green magnificence! It was thus a very
+disgusted Princess who made her early exit from the palace between a
+double line of bowing flunkeys, masking her anger behind an affectation
+of ultra-Royal dignity.
+
+Still, Pauline was now a _grande dame_ indeed, who could really afford
+to patronise even Napoleon's wife. Her Court was more splendid than that
+of Josephine. She had lovers by the score--from Blanguini, who composed
+his most exquisite songs to sing for her ears alone, to Forbin, her
+artist Chamberlain, whose brushes she inspired in a hundred paintings of
+her lovely self in as many unconventional guises. Her caskets of jewels
+were matched by the most wonderful collection of dresses in France, the
+richest and daintiest confections, from pearl embroidered ball-gowns
+which cost twenty thousand francs to the mauve and silver in which she
+went a-hunting in the forest of Fontainebleau. At Petit Trianon and in
+the Faubourg St Honoré, she had palaces that were dreams of beauty and
+luxury. The only thorn in her bed of roses was, in fact, her husband,
+the Prince, the very sight of whom was sufficient to spoil a day for
+her.
+
+When, at Napoleon's bidding, she accompanied Borghese to his
+Governorship beyond the Alps, she took in her train seven wagon-loads of
+finery. At Turin she held the Court of a Queen, to which the Prince was
+only admitted on sufferance. Royal visits, dinners, dances, receptions
+followed one another in dazzling succession; behind her chair, at dinner
+or reception, always stood two gigantic negroes, crowned with ostrich
+plumes. She was now "sister of the Emperor," and all the world should
+know it!
+
+If only she could escape from her detested husband she would be the
+happiest woman on earth. But Napoleon on this point was adamant. In her
+rage and rebellion she tore her hair, rolled on the floor, took drugs to
+make her ill; and at last so succeeded in alarming her Imperial brother
+that he summoned her back to France, where her army of lovers gave her a
+warm welcome, and where she could indulge in any vanity and folly
+unchecked.
+
+Matters were now hastening to a tragic climax for Napoleon and the
+family he had raised from slumdom in Marseilles to crowns and coronets.
+Josephine had been divorced, to Pauline's undisguised joy; and her place
+had been taken by Marie Louise, the proud Austrian, whom she liked at
+least as little. When Napoleon fell from his throne, she alone of all
+his sisters helped to cheer his exile in Elba; for the brother she loved
+and feared was the only man to whom Pauline's fickle heart was ever
+true. She even stripped herself of all her jewels to make the way smooth
+back to his crown. And when at last news came to her at Rome of his
+death at St Helena it was she who shed the bitterest tears and refused
+to be comforted. That an empire was lost, was nothing compared with the
+loss of the brother who had always been so lenient to her failings, so
+responsive to her love.
+
+Two years later her own end came at Florence. When she felt the cold
+hand of death on her, she called feebly for a mirror, that she might
+look for the last time on her beauty. "Thank God," she whispered, as she
+gazed, "I am still lovely! I am ready to die." A few moments later, with
+the mirror still clutched in her hand, and her eyes still feasting on
+the charms which time and death itself were powerless to dim, died
+Pauline Bonaparte, sister of an Emperor and herself an Empress by the
+right of her incomparable beauty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+A SIREN OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
+
+When Wilhelmine Encke first opened her eyes on the world one day in the
+year 1754, he would have been a bold prophet who would have predicted
+that she would one day be the uncrowned Queen of the Court of Russia,
+_plus Reine que la Reine_, and that her children would have in their
+veins the proudest blood in Europe. Such a prophecy might well have been
+laughed to scorn, for little Wilhelmine had as obscure a cradle as
+almost any infant in all Prussia. Her father was an army bugler, who
+wore private's uniform in Frederick the Great's army; and her early
+years were to be spent playing with other soldiers' children in the
+sordid environment of Berlin barracks.
+
+When her father turned his back on the army, while Wilhelmine was still
+nursing her dolls, it was to play the humble rôle of landlord of a small
+tavern, from which he was lured by the bait of a place as French-horn
+player in Frederick's private band; and the goal of his modest ambition
+was reached when he was appointed trumpeter to the King.
+
+This was Herr Encke's position when the curtain rises on our story at
+Potsdam, and shows us Wilhelmine, an unattractive maid of ten, the
+Cinderella of her family, for whom there seemed no better prospect than
+a soldier-husband, if indeed she were lucky enough to capture him. She
+was, in fact, the "ugly duckling" of a good-looking family, removed by a
+whole world from her beautiful eldest sister Charlotte, who counted
+among her many admirers no less exalted a wooer than Prince Frederick
+William, the King's nephew and heir to his throne.
+
+There was, indeed, no more beautiful or haughty damsel in all Potsdam
+than this trumpeter's daughter who had caught the amorous fancy of the
+Prince, then, as to his last day, the slave of every pretty face that
+crossed his path. But Charlotte Encke was much too imperious a young
+lady to hold her Royal lover long in fetters. He quickly wearied of her
+caprices, her petulances, and her exhibitions of temper; and the climax
+came one day when in a fit of anger she struck her little sister, in his
+presence, and he took up the cudgels for Wilhelmine.
+
+This was the last straw for the disillusioned and disgusted Prince, who
+sent Charlotte off to Paris, where as the Countess Matushke she played
+the fine lady at her lover's cost, while the Prince took her Cinderella
+sister under his protection. He took her education into his own hands,
+provided her with masters to teach her a wide range of accomplishments,
+from languages to dancing and deportment, while he himself gave her
+lessons in history and geography. Nor did he lack the reward of his
+benevolent offices; for Wilhelmine, under his ministrations, not only
+developed rare gifts and graces of mind, like many another Cinderella
+before her; she blossomed into a rose of girlhood, more beautiful even
+than her imperious sister, and with a sweetness of character and a
+winsomeness which Charlotte could never have attained.
+
+On her part, gratitude to her benefactor rapidly grew into love for the
+handsome and courtly Prince; on his, sympathy for the ill-used
+Cinderella, into a passion for the lovely maiden hovering on the verge
+of a still more beautiful womanhood. It was a mutual passion, strong and
+deep, which now linked the widely contrasted lives of the King-to-be and
+the trumpeter's daughter--a passion which, with each, was to last as
+long as life itself.
+
+Wilhelmine was now formally installed in the place of the deposed
+Charlotte as favourite of the heir to the throne; and idyllic years
+followed, during which she gave pledges of her love to the man who was
+her husband in all but name. That her purse was often empty was a matter
+to smile at; that she had to act as "breadwinner" to her family, and was
+at times reduced to such straits that she was obliged to pawn some of
+her small stock of jewellery in order to provide her lover with a
+supper, was a bagatelle. She was the happiest young woman in Prussia.
+
+Even what seemed to be a crowning disaster, fortune turned into a boon
+for her. When news of this unlicensed love-making came to the King's
+ears, he was furious. It was intolerable that the destined ruler of a
+great and powerful nation should be governed and duped by a woman of the
+people. He gave his nephew a sound rating--alike for his extravagance
+and his amour; and packed off Wilhelmine to join her sister in Paris.
+
+But, for once, Frederick found that he had made a mistake. The Prince,
+robbed of the woman he loved, took the bit in his teeth, and plunged so
+deeply into extravagant dallying with ballet-dancers and stars of the
+opera that the King was glad to choose the lesser evil, and to summon
+Wilhelmine back to her Prince's arms. One stipulation only he made, that
+she should make her home away from the capital and the dangerous
+allurements which his nephew found there.
+
+Now at last we find Cinderella happily installed, with the King's august
+approval, in a beautiful home which has since blossomed into the
+splendours of Charlottenburg. Here she gave birth to a son, whom
+Frederick dubbed Count de la Marke in his nurse's arms, but who was
+fated never to leave his cradle. This child of love, the idol of his
+parents, sleeps in a splendid mausoleum in the great Protestant Church
+of Berlin.
+
+As a sop to Prussian morality and to make the old King quite easy, a
+complaisant husband was now found for the Prince's favourite in his
+chamberlain, Herr Rietz, son of a palace gardener; and Frederick William
+himself looked on while the woman he loved, the mother of his children,
+was converted by a few priestly words into a "respectable married
+woman"--only to leave the altar on his own arm, his wife in the eyes of
+the world.
+
+The time was now drawing near when Wilhelmine was to reach the zenith of
+her adventurous life. One August day in 1786 Frederick the Great drew
+his last breath in the Potsdam Palace, and his nephew awoke to be
+greeted by his chamberlain as "Your Majesty." The trumpeter's daughter
+was at last a Queen, in fact, if not in name, more secure in her
+husband's love than ever, and with long years of splendour and happiness
+before her. That his fancy, ever wayward, flitted to other women as fair
+as herself, did not trouble her a whit. Like Madame de Pompadour, she
+was prepared even to encourage such rivalry, so long as the first place
+(and this she knew) in her husband's heart was unassailably her own.
+
+Picture our Cinderella now in all her new splendours, moving as a Queen
+among her courtiers, receiving the homage of princes and ambassadors as
+her right, making her voice heard in the Council Chamber, and holding
+her _salon_, to which all the great ones of the earth flocked to pay
+tribute to her beauty and her gifts of mind. It was a strange
+transformation from the barracks-kitchen to the Queendom of one of the
+greatest Courts of Europe; but no Queen cradled in a palace ever wore
+her honours with greater dignity, grace, and simplicity than this
+daughter of an army bandsman.
+
+The days of the empty purse were, of course, at an end. She had now her
+ten thousand francs a month for "pin-money," her luxuriously appointed
+palace at Charlottenburg, and her Berlin mansion, "Unter den Linden,"
+with its private theatre, in which she and her Royal lover, surrounded
+by their brilliant Court, applauded the greatest actors from Paris and
+Vienna. It is said that many of these stage-plays were of questionable
+decency, with more than a suggestion of the garden of Eden in them; but
+this is an aspersion which Madame de Rietz indignantly repudiates in her
+"Memoirs."
+
+While Wilhelmine was thus happy in her Court magnificence, varied by
+days of "delightful repose," at Charlottenburg, France was in the throes
+of her Revolution, drenched with the blood of her greatest men and
+fairest women; her King had lost his crown and his head with it; and
+Europe was in arms against her. When Frederick William joined his army
+camped on the Rhine bank, Wilhelmine was by his side to counsel him as
+he wavered between war and peace. The fate of the coalition against
+France was practically in the hands of the trumpeter's daughter, whose
+voice was all for peace. "What matters it," she said, "how France is
+governed? Let her manage her own affairs, and let Europe be saved from
+the horrors of bloodshed."
+
+In vain did the envoys of Spain and Italy, Austria and England, practise
+all their diplomacy to place her influence in the scale of war. When
+Lord Henry Spencer offered her a hundred thousand guineas if she would
+dissuade her husband from concluding a treaty with France, she turned a
+deaf ear to all his pleading and arguments. Such influence as she
+possessed should be exercised in the interests of peace, and thus it was
+that the vacillating King deserted his allies, and signed the Treaty of
+Bâle, in 1795.
+
+Such was the triumphant issue of Madame Rietz's intervention in the
+affairs of Europe; such the proof she gave to the world of her conquest
+of a King. It was thus with a light heart that she turned her back on
+the Rhine camp; and with her husband's children and a splendid retinue
+set out on her journey to Italy, to see which was the greatest ambition
+of her life. At the Austrian Court she was coldly received, it is true,
+thanks to her part in the Treaty of Bâle; but in Italy she was greeted
+as a Queen. At Naples Queen Caroline received her as a sister; the
+trumpeter's daughter was the brilliant centre of fêtes and banquets and
+receptions such as might have gratified the vanity of an Empress: while
+at Florence she spent days of ideal happiness under the blue sky of
+Italy and among her beauties of Nature and Art.
+
+It was at Venice that she wrote to her King lover, "Your Majesty knows
+well that, for myself, I place no value on the foolish vanities of Court
+etiquette; but I am placed in an awkward position by my daughter being
+raised to the rank of Countess, while I am still in the lowly position
+of a bourgeoise." She had, in fact, always declined the honour of a
+title, which Frederick William had so often begged her to accept; and it
+was only for her daughter's sake, when the question of an alliance
+between the young Countess de la Marke and Lord Bristol's heir arose,
+that she at last stooped to ask for what she had so long refused.
+
+A few weeks later her brother, the King's equerry, placed in her hands
+the patent which made her Countess Lichtenau, with the right to bear on
+her shield of arms the Prussian eagle and the Royal crown.
+
+Wherever the Countess (as we must now call her) went on her Italian
+tour she drew men to her feet by the magnetism of her beauty, who would
+have paid no homage to her as _chère amie_ of a King; for she was now in
+the early thirties, in the full bloom of the loveliness that had its
+obscure budding in the Potsdam barrack-rooms. Young and old were equally
+powerless to resist her fascinations. She had, indeed, no more ardent
+slave and admirer than my Lord Bristol, the octogenarian Bishop of
+Londonderry, whose passion for the Countess, young enough to be his
+granddaughter, was that of a lovesick youth.
+
+From "dear Countess and adorable friend," he quickly leaps in his
+letters to "my dear Wilhelmine." He looks forward with the impatience of
+a boy to seeing her at "that terrestrial paradise which is called
+Naples, where we shall enjoy perpetual spring and spend delightful days
+in listening to the divine _Paesiello_. Do you know," he adds, "I passed
+two hours of real delight this morning in simply contemplating your
+elegant bedroom where only the elegant sleeper was missing."
+
+"It is in _Crocelle_," he writes a little later, "that you will make
+people happy by your presence, and where you will recuperate your
+health, regain your gaiety, and forget an Irishman; and a holy Bishop,
+more worthy of your affection, on account of the deep attachment he has
+for you, will take his place."
+
+In June, 1796, this senile lover writes, "In an hour I depart for
+Germany; and, as the wind is north, with every step I take I shall say:
+'This breeze comes perhaps from her; it has touched her rosy lips and
+mingled its scent with the perfume of her breath which I shall inhale,
+the perfume of the breath of my dear Wilhelmine.'"
+
+But these days of dallying with her legion of lovers, of regal fêtes and
+pleasure-chasing, were brought to an abrupt conclusion when news came to
+her at Venice that her "husband," the King, was dying, with the Royal
+family by his bedside awaiting the end. Such news, with all its import
+of sorrow and tragedy, set the Countess racing across the Continent,
+fast as horses could carry her, to the side of her beloved King, whom
+she found, if not _in extremis_, "very dangerously ill and pitifully
+changed" from the robust man she had left. Her return, however, did more
+for him than all the skill of his doctors. It gave him a new lease of
+life, in which her presence brought happiness into days which, none knew
+better than himself, were numbered.
+
+For more than a year the Countess was his tender nurse and constant
+companion, ministering to his comfort and arranging plays and tableaux
+for his entertainment. She watched over him as jealously as any mother
+over her dying child; but all her devotion could not stay the steps of
+death, which every day brought nearer. As the inevitable end approached,
+her friends warned her to leave Charlottenburg while the opportunity was
+still hers--to escape with her jewels and her money (a fortune of
+£150,000)--but to all such urging she was deaf. She would stay by her
+lover's side to the last, though she well knew the danger of delay.
+
+One November day in 1797 Frederick William made his last public
+appearance at a banquet, with the Countess at his right hand; and seldom
+has festival had such a setting in tragedy. "None of the guests," we are
+told, "uttered a word or ate a mouthful of anything; the plates were
+cleared at the hasty ringing of a bell. A convulsive movement made by
+the sick man showed that he was suffering agonies. Before half-past nine
+every guest had left, greatly troubled. The majority of those who had
+been present never saw the unfortunate monarch again. They all shared
+the same presentiment of disaster, and wept."
+
+From that night the King was dead, even to his own Court. The gates of
+his palace were closed against the world, and none were allowed to
+approach the chamber in which his life was ebbing away, save the
+Countess, his nurse, and his doctors. Even his children were refused
+admittance to his presence. As the Marquis de Saint Mexent said, "The
+King of Prussia ends his days as though he were a rich benefactor. All
+the relations are excluded by the housekeeper."
+
+A few days before the end came the Countess was seen to leave the
+palace, carrying a large red portfolio--a suspicious circumstance which
+the Crown Prince's spies promptly reported to their master. There could
+be only one inference--she had been caught in the act of stealing State
+papers, a crime for which she would have to pay a heavy price as soon
+as her protector was no more! As a matter of fact the portfolio
+contained nothing more secret or valuable than the letters she had
+written to the King during the twenty-seven years of their romance,
+letters which, after reading, she consigned to the flames in her boudoir
+within an hour of the suspected theft of State documents.
+
+A few days later, on the night of the 16th of November (1797), the King
+entered on his "death agony," one fit of suffocation succeeding another,
+until the Countess, unable to bear any longer the sight of such
+suffering, was carried away in violent convulsions. She saw him no more;
+for by seven o'clock in the morning Frederick William had found release
+from his agony in death, and his son had begun to reign in his stead.
+
+At last the long-delayed hour of revenge had come to Frederick William
+III., who had always regarded his father's favourite as an enemy; and
+his vengeance was swift to strike. Before the late King's body was cold,
+his successor's emissaries appeared at the palace door, Unter den
+Linden, with orders to search her papers and to demand the keys of every
+desk and cupboard. Even then she scorned to fly before the storm which
+she knew was breaking. For three days and nights her carriage stood at
+her gates ready to take her away to safety; but she refused to move a
+step.
+
+Then one morning, before she had left her bed, a major of the guards,
+with a posse of soldiers, appeared at her bedroom door armed with a
+warrant for her arrest; and for many weeks she was a closely guarded
+prisoner in her own house, subject to daily insults and indignities from
+men who, a few weeks earlier, had saluted her as a Queen.
+
+At the trial which followed some very grave indictments were preferred
+against her. She was charged with having betrayed State secrets; with
+having robbed the Royal Exchequer; stolen the King's portfolio; and
+removed the priceless solitaire diamond from his crown, and the very
+rings from his fingers as he lay dying. To these and other equally grave
+charges the Countess gave a dignified denial, which the evidence she was
+able to produce supported. The diamond and the rings were, in fact,
+discovered in places indicated by her where they had been put, by the
+King's orders, for safe custody.
+
+The trial had a happier ending than, from the malignity of her enemies,
+especially of the King, might have been expected. After three months of
+durance she was removed to a Silesian fortress. Her houses and lands
+were taken from her; but her furniture and jewels were left untouched,
+and with them she was allowed to enjoy a pension of four thousand
+thalers a year. Such was the judgment of a Court which proved more
+merciful than she had perhaps a right to expect. And two months later,
+the influence and pleading of her friends set her free from her
+fortress-prison to spend her life where and as she would.
+
+The sun of her splendour had indeed set, but many years of peaceful and
+not unhappy life remained for our ex-Queen, who was still in the prime
+of her womanhood and beauty and with the magnetism that, to her last
+day, brought men to her feet. At fifty she was able to inspire such
+passion in the breast of a young artist, Francis Holbein, that he asked
+and won her hand in marriage. But this romance was short-lived, for
+within a year he left her, to spend the remainder of her days in Paris,
+Vienna, and her native Prussia. Here her adventurous career closed in
+such obscurity, at the age of sixty-eight, that even those who
+ministered to her last moments were unaware that the dying woman was the
+Countess who had played so dazzling a part a generation earlier, as
+favourite of the King of Prussia and Queen of her loveliest women.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+THE CORSICAN AND THE CREOLE
+
+Of the many women who succeeded one another with such bewildering
+rapidity in the favour of the first Napoleon, from Desirée Clary,
+daughter of the Marseilles silk-merchant, the "little wife" of his days
+of obscurity, to Madame Walewska, the beautiful Pole, who so fruitlessly
+bartered her charms for her country's salvation, only one really
+captured his fickle heart--Josephine de Beauharnais, the woman whom he
+raised to the splendour of an Imperial crown, only to fling her aside
+when she no longer served the purposes of his ambition.
+
+It was one October day in the year 1795 that Josephine, Vicomtesse de
+Beauharnais, first cast the spell of her beauty on the "ugly little
+Corsican," who had then got his foot well planted on the ladder, at the
+summit of which was his crown of empire. At twenty-six, the man who, but
+a little earlier, was an out-of-work captain, eating his heart out in a
+Marseilles slum, was General-in-Chief of the armies of France, with the
+disarmed rebels of Paris grovelling at his feet.
+
+One day a handsome boy came to him, craving permission to retain the
+sword his father had won, a favour which the General, pleased by the
+boy's frankness and manliness, granted. The next day the young rebel's
+mother presented herself to thank him with gracious words for his
+kindness to her son--a creature of another world than his, with a
+beauty, grace and refinement which were a new revelation to his
+bourgeois eyes.
+
+The fair vision haunted him; the music of her voice lingered in his
+ears. He must see her again. And, before another day had passed, we find
+the pale-faced, grim Corsican, with the burning eyes, sitting awkwardly
+on a horse-hair chair of Madame's dining-room in her small house in the
+Rue Chantereine, nervously awaiting the entry of the Vicomtesse who had
+already played such havoc with his peace of mind. And when at last she
+made her appearance, few would have recognised in the man, who made his
+shy, awkward bow, the famous General with whose name the whole of France
+was ringing.
+
+It was little wonder, perhaps, that the little Corsican's heart went
+pit-a-pat, or that his knees trembled under him, for the lady whose
+smile and the touch of whose hand sent a thrill through him, was indeed,
+to quote his own words, "beautiful as a dream." From the chestnut hair
+which rippled over her small, proudly poised head to the arch of her
+tiny, dainty feet, "made for homage and for kisses," she was, "all
+glorious without." There was witchery in every part of her--in the rich
+colour that mantled in her cheeks; the sweet brown eyes that looked out
+between long-fringed eyelids; the small, delicate nose; "the nostrils
+quivering at the least emotion"; the exquisite lines of the tall, supple
+figure, instinct with grace in every moment; and, above all, in the
+seductive music of a voice, every note of which was a caress.
+
+Sixteen years earlier, Josephine had come from Martinique to Paris as
+bride of the Vicomte de Beauharnais, with whom she had led a more or
+less unhappy life, until the guillotine of the Revolution left her a
+widow, with two children and an empty purse. But even this crowning
+calamity was powerless to crush the sunny-hearted Creole, who merely
+laughed at the load of debts which piled themselves up around her. A
+little of the wreckage of her husband's fortune had been rescued for her
+by influential friends; but this had disappeared long before Napoleon
+crossed her path. And at last the light-hearted widow realised that if
+she had a card left to play, she must play it quickly.
+
+Here then was her opportunity. The little General was obviously a slave
+at her feet; he was already a great man, destined to be still greater;
+and if he was bourgeois to his coarse finger-tips, he could at least
+serve as a stepping-stone to raise her from poverty and obscurity.
+
+As for Napoleon, he was a vanquished man--and he knew it--before ever he
+set foot in Madame's modest dining-room. When he left, he "trod on air,"
+for the Vicomtesse had been more than gracious to him. The next day he
+was drawn as by a magnet to the Rue Chantereine, and the next and the
+next, each interview with his divinity forging fresh links for the
+chain that bound him; and at each visit he met under Madame's roof some
+of the great ones of that other world in which Josephine moved, the old
+_noblesse_ of France--who paid her the homage due to a Queen.
+
+Thus vanity and ambition fed the flames of the passion which was
+consuming him; and within a fortnight he had laid his heart and his
+fortune, which at the time consisted of "his personal wardrobe and his
+military accoutrements" at the feet of the Creole widow; and one March
+day in 1796 Napoleon Bonaparte, General, and Josephine de Beauharnais,
+were made one by a registrar who obligingly described the bride as
+twenty-nine (thus robbing her of three years), and added two to the
+bridegroom's twenty-six years.
+
+After two days of rapturous honeymooning Napoleon was on his way to join
+his army in Italy, as reluctant a bridegroom as ever left Cupid at the
+bidding of Mars. At every change of horses during the long journey he
+dispatched letters to the wife he had left behind--letters full of
+passion and yearning. In one of them he wrote, "When I am tempted to
+curse my fate, I place my hand on my heart and find your portrait there.
+As I gaze at it I am filled with a joy unutterable. Life seems to hold
+no pain, save that of severance from my beloved."
+
+At Nice, amid all the labours and anxieties of organising his rabble
+army for a campaign, his thoughts are always taking wings to her; her
+portrait is ever in his hand. He says his prayers before it; and, when
+once he accidentally broke the glass, he was in an agony of despair and
+superstitious foreboding. His one cry was, "Come to me! Come to my heart
+and to my arms. Oh, that you had wings!"
+
+Even when flushed with the surrender of Piedmont after a fortnight's
+brilliant fighting, in which he had won half a dozen battles and reaped
+twenty-one standards, he would have bartered all his laurels for a sight
+of the woman he loved so passionately. But while he was thus yearning
+for her in distant Italy, Madame was much too happy in her beloved Paris
+to lend an ear to his pleadings. As wife of the great Napoleon she was a
+veritable Queen, fawned on and flattered by all the great ones in the
+capital. Hers was the place of honour at every fête and banquet; the
+banners her husband had captured were presented to her amid a tumult of
+acclamation; when she entered a theatre the entire house rose to greet
+her with cheers. She was thus in no mood to leave her Queendom for the
+arms of her husband, whose unattractive person and clumsy ardour only
+repelled her.
+
+When his letters calling her to him became more and more imperative, she
+could no longer ignore them. But she could, at least, invent an
+excellent excuse for her tarrying. She wrote to tell him that she was
+expecting to become a mother. This at least would put a stop to his
+importunity. And it did. Napoleon was full of delight--and self-reproach
+at the joyful news. "Forgive me, my beloved," he wrote. "How can I ever
+atone? You were ill and I accused you of lingering in Paris. My love
+robs me of my reason, and I shall never regain it.... A child, sweet as
+its mother, is soon to lie in your arms. Oh! that I could be with you,
+even if only for one day!"
+
+To his brother Joseph he writes in a similar strain: "The thought of her
+illness drives me mad. I long to see her, to hold her in my arms. I love
+her so madly, I cannot live without her. If she were to die, I should
+have absolutely nothing left to live for."
+
+When, however, he learns that Madame's illness is not sufficient to
+interfere with her Paris gaieties, a different mood seizes him. Jealousy
+and anger take the place of anxious sympathy. He insists that she shall
+join him--threatens to resign his command if she refuses. Josephine no
+longer dares to keep up her deception. She must obey. And thus, in a
+flood of angry tears, we see her starting on her long journey to Italy,
+in company with her dog, her maid, and a brilliant escort of officers.
+Arrived at Milan, she was welcomed by Napoleon with open arms; but
+"after two days of rapture and caresses," he was face to face with the
+great crisis of Castiglione. His army was in imminent danger of
+annihilation; his own fate and fortune trembled in the balance. Nothing
+short of a miracle could save him; and on the third day of his new
+honeymoon he was back again in the field at grips with fate.
+
+But even at this supreme crisis he found time to write daily letters to
+the dear one who was awaiting the issue in Milan, begging her to share
+his life. "Your tears," he writes, "drive me to distraction; they set my
+blood on fire. Come to me here, that at least we may be able to say
+before we die we had so many days of happiness." Thus he pleads in
+letter after letter until Josephine, for very shame, is forced to yield,
+and to return to her husband, who, as Masson tells us, "was all day at
+her feet as before some divinity."
+
+Such days of bliss were, however, few and far between for the man who
+was now in the throes of a Titanic struggle, on the issue of which his
+fortunes and those of France hung. But when duty took him into danger
+where his lady could not follow, she found ample solace. Monsieur
+Charles, Leclerc's adjutant, was all the cavalier she needed--an Adonis
+for beauty, a Hercules for strength, the handsomest soldier in
+Napoleon's army, a past-master in all the arts of love-making. There was
+no dull moment for Josephine with such a squire at her elbow to pour
+flatteries into her ears and to entertain her with his clever tongue.
+
+But Monsieur Charles had short shrift when Napoleon's jealousy was
+aroused. He was quickly sent packing to Paris; and Josephine was left to
+write to her aunt, "I am bored to extinction." She was weary of her
+husband's love-rhapsodies, disgusted with the crudities of his passion.
+She had, however, a solace in the homage paid to her everywhere. At
+Genoa she was received as a Queen; at Florence the Grand Duke called her
+"cousin"; the entire army, from General to private, was under the spell
+of her beauty and the graciousness that captivated all hearts. She was,
+too, reaping a rich harvest of costly presents and bribes, from all who
+sought to win Napoleon's favour through her.
+
+The Italian campaign at last over, Madame found herself back again in
+her dear Paris, raised to a higher pinnacle of Queendom than ever,
+basking in the splendours of the husband whose glories she so gladly
+shared, though she held his love in such light esteem. But for him, at
+least, there was no time for dallying. Within a few months he was waving
+farewell to her again, from the bridge of the _Océan_ which was carrying
+him off to the conquest of Egypt, buoyed by her promise that she would
+join him when his work was done. And long before he had reached Malta
+she was back again in the vortex of Paris gaiety, setting the tongue of
+scandal wagging by her open flirtation with one lover after another.
+
+It was not long before the news of Madame's "goings-on" reached as far
+as Alexandria. The dormant jealousy in Napoleon, lulled to rest since
+Monsieur Charles had vanished from the scene, was fanned into flame. He
+was furious; disillusion seized him, and thoughts of divorce began to
+enter his brain. Two could play at this game of falseness; and there
+were many beautiful women in Egypt only too eager to console the great
+Napoleon.
+
+When news came to Josephine that her husband had landed at Fréjus, and
+would shortly be with her, she was in a state bordering on panic. She
+shrank from facing his anger; from the revelation of debts and unwifely
+conduct which was inevitable. Her all was at stake and the game was more
+than half lost. In her desperation she took her courage in both hands
+and set forth, as fast as horses could take her, to meet Napoleon, that
+she might at least have the first word with him; but as ill-luck would
+have it, he travelled by a different route and she missed him.
+
+On her return to Paris she found the door of Napoleon's room barred
+against her. "After repeated knocking in vain," says M. Masson, "she
+sank on her knees sobbing aloud. Still the door remained closed. For a
+whole day the scene was prolonged, without any sign from within. Worn
+out at last, Josephine was about to retire in despair, when her maid
+fetched her children. Eugène and Hortense, kneeling beside their mother,
+mingled their supplications with hers. At last the door was opened;
+speechless, tears streaming down his cheeks, his face convulsed with the
+struggle that had rent his heart, Bonaparte appeared, holding out his
+arms to his wife."
+
+Such was the meeting of the unfaithful Josephine and the husband who had
+vowed that he would no longer call her wife. The reconciliation was
+complete; for Napoleon was no man of half-measures. He frankly forgave
+the weeping woman all her sins against him; and with generous hand
+removed the mountain of debt her extravagance had heaped up--debts
+amounting to more than two million francs, one million two hundred
+thousand of which she owed to tradespeople alone.
+
+But Napoleon's passion for his wife, of whose beauty few traces now
+remained, was dead. His loyalty only remained; and this, in turn, was to
+be swept away by the tide of his ambition. A few years later Josephine
+was crowned Empress by her husband, and consecrated by the Pope, after
+a priest had given the sanction of the Church to her incomplete
+nuptials.
+
+She had now reached the dazzling zenith of her career. At the Tuileries,
+at St Cloud, and at Malmaison, she held her splendid Courts as Empress.
+She had the most magnificent crown jewels in the world; and at Malmaison
+she spent her happiest hours in spreading her gems out on the table
+before her, and feasting her eyes on their many-hued fires. Her
+wardrobes were full of the daintiest and costliest gowns of which, we
+are told, more than two hundred were summer-dresses of percale and of
+muslin, costing from one thousand to two thousand francs each.
+
+Less than six years of such splendour and luxury, and the inevitable end
+of it all came. Napoleon's eyes were dazzled by the offer of an alliance
+with the eldest daughter of the Austrian Emperor. His whole ambition now
+was focused on providing a successor to his crown (Josephine had failed
+him in this important matter); and in Marie Louise of Austria he not
+only saw the prospective mother of his heir, but an alliance with one of
+the great reigning houses of Europe, which would lend a much-needed
+glamour to his bourgeois crown.
+
+His mind was at last inevitably made up. Josephine must be divorced. Her
+pleadings and tears and faintings were powerless to melt him. And one
+December day, in the year 1809, Napoleon was free to wed his Austrian
+Princess; and Josephine was left to console herself as best she might,
+with the knowledge that at least she had rescued from her downfall a
+life-income of three million francs a year, on which she could still
+play the rôle of Empress at the Elysée, Malmaison, and Navarre, the
+sumptuous homes with which Napoleon's generosity had dowered the wife
+who failed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+THE ENSLAVER OF A KING
+
+More than fifty years have gone since the penitent soul of Lola Montez
+took flight to its Creator; but there must be some still living whose
+pulses quicken at the very mention of a name which recalls so much
+mystery and romance and bewildering fascination of the days when, for
+them, as for her, "all the world was young."
+
+Who was she, this woman whose beauty dazzled the eyes and whose witchery
+turned the heads of men in the forties and fifties of last century? A
+dozen countries, from Spain to India, were credited with her birth. Some
+said she was the daughter of a noble house, kidnapped by gipsies in her
+infancy; others were equally confident that she had for father the
+coroneted rake, Lord Byron, and for mother a charwoman.
+
+Her early years were wrapped in a mystery which she mischievously helped
+to intensify by declaring that her father was a famous Spanish toreador.
+Her origin, however, was prosaic enough. She was the daughter of an
+obscure army captain, Gilbert, who hailed from Limerick; her mother was
+an Oliver, from whom she received her strain of Spanish blood; and the
+names given to her at a Limerick font, one day in 1818, two months after
+her parents had made their runaway match, were Marie Dolores Eliza
+Rosanna.
+
+When Captain Gilbert returned, after his furlough-romance, to India, he
+took his wife and child with him. Seven years later cholera removed him;
+his widow found speedy solace in the arms of a second husband, one
+Captain Craigie; and Dolores was packed off to Scotland to the care of
+her stepfather's people until her schooldays were ended.
+
+In the next few years she alternated between the Scottish household,
+with its chilly atmosphere of Calvinism, and schools in Paris and
+London, until, her education completed, she escaped the husband, a
+mummified Indian judge, whom her mother had chosen for her, by eloping
+with a young army officer, a Captain James, and with him made the return
+voyage to India.
+
+A few months later her romance came to a tragic end, when her Lothario
+husband fell under the spell of a brother-officer's wife and ran away
+with her to the seclusion of the Neilgherry Hills, leaving his wife
+stranded and desolate. And thus it was that Dolores Gilbert wiped the
+dust of India finally off her feet, and with a cheque for a thousand
+pounds, which her good-hearted stepfather slipped into her hand, started
+once more for England, to commence that career of adventure which has
+scarcely a parallel even in fiction. She had had more than enough of
+wedded life, of Scottish Calvinism, and of a mother's selfish
+indifference. She would be henceforth the mistress of her own fate. She
+had beauty such as few women could boast--she had talents and a stout
+heart; and these should be her fortune.
+
+Her first ambition was to be a great actress; and when she found that
+acting was not her forte she determined to dance her way to fame and
+fortune, and after a year's training in London and Spain she was ready
+to conquer the world with her twinkling feet and supple body.
+
+Of her first appearance as a danseuse, before a private gathering of
+Pressmen, we have the following account by one who was there: "Her
+figure was even more attractive than her face, lovely as the latter was.
+Lithe and graceful as a young fawn, every movement that she made seemed
+instinct with melody. Her dark eyes were blazing and flashing with
+excitement. In her pose grace seemed involuntarily to preside over her
+limbs and dispose their attitude. Her foot and ankle were almost
+faultless."
+
+Such was the enthusiastic description of Lola Montez (as she now chose
+to call herself) on the eve of her bid for fame as a dancer who should
+perhaps rival the glories of a Taglioni. A few days later the world of
+rank and fashion flocked to see the début of the danseuse whose fame had
+been trumpeted abroad; and as Lola pirouetted on to the stage--the focus
+of a thousand pairs of eyes--she felt that the crowning moment of her
+life had come.
+
+Almost before her twinkling feet had carried her to the centre of the
+stage an ominous sound broke the silence of expectation. A hiss came
+from one of the boxes; it was repeated from another, and another. The
+sibilant sound spread round the house; it swelled into a sinister storm
+of hisses and boos. The light faded out of the dancer's eyes, the smile
+from her lips; and as the tumult of disapprobation rose to a deafening
+climax the curtain was rung down, and Lola rushed weeping from the
+stage. Her career as a dancer, in England, had ended at its birth.
+
+But Lola Montez was not the woman to sit down calmly under defeat. A few
+weeks later we find her tripping it on the stage at Dresden, and at
+Berlin, where the King of Prussia himself was among her applauders. But
+such success as the Continent brought her was too small to keep her now
+deplenished purse supplied. She fell on evil days, and for two years led
+a precarious life--now, we are told, singing in Brussels streets to keep
+starvation from her side, now playing the political spy in Russia, and
+again, by a capricious turn of fortune's wheel, being fêted and courted
+in the exalted circles of Vienna and Paris.
+
+From the French capital she made her way to Warsaw, where stirring
+adventures awaited her, for before she had been there many days the
+Polish Viceroy, General Paskevitch, cast his aged but lascivious eyes on
+her young beauty and sent an equerry to desire her presence at the
+palace. "He offered her" (so runs the story as told by her own lips)
+"the gift of a splendid country estate, and would load her with diamonds
+besides. The poor old man was a comic sight to look upon--unusually
+short in stature; and every time he spoke he threw his head back and
+opened his mouth so wide as to expose the artificial gold roof of his
+palate. A death's head making love to a lady could not have been a more
+horrible or disgusting sight. These generous gifts were most
+respectfully and very decidedly declined."
+
+But General Paskevitch was not disposed to be spurned with impunity. The
+contemptuous beauty must be punished for her scorn of his wooing; and,
+when she made her appearance on the stage the same night it was to a
+greeting of hisses by the Viceroy's hirelings. The next night brought
+the same experience; but when on the third night the storm arose, "Lola,
+in a rage, rushed down to the footlights and declared that those hisses
+had been set at her by the director, because she had refused certain
+gifts from the old Prince, his master. Then came a tremendous shower of
+applause from the audience, and the old Princess, who was present, both
+nodded her head and clapped her hands to the enraged and fiery little
+Lola."
+
+A tumultuous crowd of Poles escorted her to her lodgings that night. She
+was the heroine of the hour, who had dared to give open defiance to the
+hated Viceroy. The next morning Warsaw was "bubbling and raging with the
+signs of an incipient revolution. When Lola Montez was apprised of the
+fact that her arrest was ordered she barricaded her door; and when the
+police arrived she sat behind it with a pistol in her hand, declaring
+that she would certainly shoot the first man who should dare to break
+in." Fortunately for Lola, her pistol was not used. The French Consul
+came to her rescue, claiming her as a subject of France, and thus
+protecting her from arrest. But the order that she should quit Warsaw
+was peremptory, and Warsaw saw her no more.
+
+Back again in Paris, Lola found that even her new halo of romance was
+powerless to win favour for her dancing. Again she was to hear the storm
+of hisses; and this time in her rage "she retaliated by making faces at
+her audience," and flinging parts of her clothing in their faces. But if
+Paris was not to be charmed by her dainty feet it was ready to yield an
+unstinted homage to her rare beauty and charm. She found a flattering
+welcome in the most exclusive of _salons_; the cleverest men in the
+capital confessed the charm of her wit and surrounded her with their
+flatteries.
+
+M. Dujarrier, the most brilliant of them all, young, rich, and handsome,
+fell head over ears in love with her and asked her to be his wife. But
+the cup of happiness was scarcely at her lips before it was dashed away.
+Dujarrier was challenged to a duel by Beauvallon, a political enemy; and
+when Lola was on her way to stop the meeting she met a mournful
+procession bringing back her dead lover's body, on which she flung
+herself in an agony of grief and covered it with kisses. At the
+subsequent trial of Beauvallon she electrified the Court by declaring
+with streaming eyes, "If Beauvallon wanted satisfaction I would have
+fought him myself, for I am a better shot than poor Dujarrier ever was."
+And she was probably only speaking the truth, for her courage was as
+great as the love she bore for the victim of the duel.
+
+As a child Lola had shocked her puritanical Scottish hosts by declaring
+that "she meant to marry a Prince," and unkindly as fate had treated
+her, she had by no means relinquished this childish ambition. It may be
+that it was in her mind when, a year and a half after the tragedy that
+had so clouded her life in Paris, she drifted to Munich in search of
+more conquests.
+
+Now in the full bloom of her radiant loveliness--"the most beautiful
+woman in Europe" many declared--mingling the vivacity of an Irish beauty
+with the voluptuous charms of a Spaniard--she was splendidly equipped
+for the conquest of any man, be he King or subject; and Ludwig I., King
+of Bavaria, had as keen an eye for female beauty as for the objects of
+art on which he squandered his millions.
+
+It was this Ludwig who made Munich the fairest city in all Germany, and
+who enriched his palace with the finest private collection of pictures
+and statues that Europe can boast. But among all his treasures of art he
+valued none more than his gallery of portraits of fair women, each of
+whom had, at one time or another, visited his capital.
+
+Such was Ludwig, Bavaria's King, to whom Lola Montez now brought a new
+revelation of female loveliness, to which his gallery could furnish no
+rival. At first sight of her, as she danced in the opera ballet, he was
+undone. The next day and the next his eyes were feasting on her charms
+and her supple grace; and within a week she was installed at the Court
+and was being introduced by His Majesty as "my best friend."
+
+And not only the King, but all Munich was at the feet of the lovely
+"Spaniard"; her drives through the streets were Royal progresses; her
+receptions in the palace which Ludwig presented to her were thronged by
+all the greatest in Bavaria; on Prince and peasant alike she cast the
+spell of her witchery. As for Ludwig, connoisseur of the beautiful, he
+was her shadow and her slave, showering on her gifts an Empress might
+well have envied. Fortune had relented at last and was now smiling her
+sweetest on the adventuress; and if Lola had been content with such
+triumphs as these the story of her later life might have been very
+different. But she craved power to add to her trophies, and aspired to
+take the sceptre from the weak hand of her Royal lover.
+
+Never did woman make a more fatal mistake. On the one hand was arrayed
+the might of Austria and of Rome, whose puppet Ludwig was; on the other
+hand was a nation clamouring for reforms. Revolution was already in the
+air, and it was reserved to this too daring woman to precipitate the
+storm.
+
+Her first ambition was to persuade Ludwig to dismiss his Ministry, to
+shake himself free from foreign influence, and to inaugurate the era of
+reform for which his subjects were clamouring. In vain did Austria try
+to win her to its side by bribes of gold (no less than a million
+florins) and the offer of a noble husband. To all its seductions Lola
+turned as deaf an ear as to the offers of Poland's Viceroy. And so
+strenuous was her championship of the people that the Cabinet was
+compelled to resign in favour of the "Lola Ministry" of reformers.
+
+So far she had succeeded, but the price was still to pay. The
+reactionaries, supported by Austria and the Romish Church, were quick
+to retaliate by waging remorseless war against the King's mistress; and,
+among their most powerful weapons, used the students' clubs of Munich,
+who, from being Lola's most enthusiastic admirers, became her bitterest
+enemies.
+
+To counteract this move Lola enrolled a students' corps of her own--a
+small army of young stalwarts, whose cry was "Lola and Liberty," and who
+were sworn to fight her battles, if need be, to the death. Thus was the
+fire of revolution kindled by a woman's vanity and lust of power.
+Students' fights became everyday incidents in the streets of Munich, and
+on one occasion when Lola, pistol in hand, intervened to prevent
+bloodshed, she was rescued with difficulty by Ludwig himself and a
+detachment of soldiers.
+
+The climax came when she induced the King to close the University for a
+year--an autocratic step which aroused the anger not only of every
+student but of the whole country. The streets were paraded by mobs
+crying, "Down with the concubine!" and "Long live the Republic!"
+Barricades were erected and an influential deputation waited on the King
+to demand the expulsion of the worker of so much mischief.
+
+In vain did Ludwig declare that he would part with his crown rather than
+with the Countess of Landsfeld--for this was one of the titles he had
+conferred on his favourite. The forces arrayed against him were too
+strong, and the order of expulsion was at last conceded. It was only,
+however, when her palace was in flames and surrounded by a howling mob
+that the dauntless woman deigned to seek refuge in flight, and,
+disguised as a boy, suffered herself to be escorted to the frontier. Two
+weeks later Ludwig lost his crown.
+
+The remainder of this strange story may be told in a few words. Thrown
+once more on the world, with a few hastily rescued jewels for all her
+fortune, Lola Montez resumed her stage life, appearing in London in a
+drama entitled "Lola Montez: or a Countess for an Hour." Here she made a
+conquest of a young Life Guardsman, called Heald, who had recently
+succeeded to an estate worth £5000 a year; and with him she spent a few
+years, made wretched by continual quarrels, in one of which she stabbed
+him. When he was "found drowned" at Lisbon she drifted to Paris, and
+later to the United States, which she toured with a drama entitled "Lola
+Montez in Bavaria." There she made her third appearance at the altar,
+with a bridegroom named Hull, whom she divorced as soon as the honeymoon
+had waned.
+
+Thus she carried her restless spirit through a few more years of
+wandering and growing poverty, until a chance visit to Spurgeon's
+Tabernacle revolutionised her life. She decided to abandon the stage and
+to devote the remainder of her days to penitence and good works. But the
+end was already near. In New York, where she had gone to lecture, she
+was struck down by paralysis, and a few weeks before she had seen her
+forty-second birthday she died in a charitable institution, joining
+fervently in the prayers of the clergyman who was summoned to her
+death-bed.
+
+"When she was near the end, and could not speak," the clergyman says,
+"I asked her to let me know by a sign whether she was at peace. She
+fixed her eyes on mine and nodded affirmatively. I do not think I ever
+saw deeper penitence and humility than in this poor woman."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+AN EMPRESS AND HER FAVOURITES
+
+When Sophie Augusta Frederica of Anhalt-Zerbst was romping on the
+ramparts or in the streets of Stettin with burghers' children for
+playmates, he would have been a bold prophet who would have predicted
+that one day she would be the most splendid figure among Europe's
+sovereigns, "the only great man in Europe," according to Voltaire, "an
+angel before whom all men should be silent"; and that, while dazzling
+Europe by her statesmanship and learning, she would afford more material
+for scandal than any woman, except perhaps Christina of Sweden, who ever
+wore a crown.
+
+There is much, it is true, to be said in extenuation of the weakness
+that has left such a stain on the memory of Catherine II. of Russia.
+Equipped far beyond most women with the beauty and charms that fascinate
+men, and craving more than most of her sex the love of man, she was
+mated when little more than a child to the most degenerate Prince in all
+Europe.
+
+The Grand Duke Peter, heir to the Russian throne, who at sixteen took to
+wife the girl-Princess of Anhalt-Zerbst, was already an expert in
+almost every vice. Imbecile in mind, he found his chief pleasure in the
+company of the most degraded. He rarely went to bed sober--in fact, his
+bride's first sight of him was when he was drunk, at the age of ten. He
+was, too, "a liar and a coward, vicious and violent; pale, sickly, and
+uncomely--a crooked soul in a prematurely ravaged body."
+
+Such was the Grand Duke Peter, to whom the high-spirited, beautiful
+Princess Sophie (thenceforth to be known as "Catherine") was tied for
+life one day in the year 1744--a youth the very sight of whom repelled
+her, while his vices filled her with loathing. Add to this revolting
+union the fact that she found herself under the despotic rule of the
+Empress Elizabeth, who made no concealment of her hatred and jealousy of
+the fair young Princess, surrounded her with spies, and treated her as a
+rebellious child, to be checked and bullied at every turn--and it is not
+difficult to understand the spirit of recklessness and defiance that was
+soon roused in Catherine's breast.
+
+There was at the Russian Court no lack of temptation to indulge this
+spirit of revolt to the full. The young German beauty, mated to worse
+than a clown, soon had her Court of admirers to pour flatteries into her
+dainty ears, and she would perhaps have been less than a woman if she
+had not eagerly drunk them in. She had no need of anyone to tell her
+that she was fair. "I know I am beautiful as the day," she once
+exclaimed, as she looked at her mirrored reflection in her first ball
+finery at St Petersburg, with a red rose in her glorious hair; and the
+mirror told no flattering tale.
+
+See the picture Poniatowski, one of her earliest and most ardent slaves,
+paints of the young Grand Duchess. "With her black hair she had a
+dazzling whiteness of skin, a vivid colour, large blue eyes prominent
+and eloquent, black and long eyebrows, a Greek nose, a mouth that looked
+made for kissing, a slight, rather tall figure, a carriage that was
+lively, yet full of nobility, a pleasing voice, and a laugh as merry as
+the humour through which she could pass with ease from the most playful
+and childish amusements to the most fatiguing mathematical
+calculations."
+
+With the brain, even in those early years, of a clever man, she was
+essentially a woman, with all a woman's passion for the admiration and
+love of men; and one cannot wonder, however much one may deplore, that
+while her imbecile husband was guzzling with common soldiers, or playing
+with his toys and tin cannon in bed, vacuous smiles on his face, his
+beautiful bride should find her own pleasures in the homage of a
+Soltykoff, a Poniatowski, an Orloff, or any other of the legion of
+lovers who in quick succession took her fancy.
+
+The first among her admirers to capture her fancy was Sergius Soltykoff,
+her chamberlain, high-born, "beautiful as the day," polished courtier,
+supple-tongued wooer, to whom the Grand Duchess gave the heart her
+husband spurned. But Soltykoff's reign was short; the fickle Princess,
+ever seeking fresh conquests, wearied of him as of all her lovers in
+turn, and his place was taken within a year by Stanislas Poniatowski, a
+fascinating young Pole, who returned to St Petersburg with a reputation
+of gallantry won in almost every Court of Europe.
+
+Poniatowski had not perhaps the physical perfections of his dethroned
+predecessor, but he had the well-stored brain that made an even more
+potent appeal to Catherine. He could talk "like an angel" on every
+subject that appealed to her, from art to philosophy; and he had,
+moreover, a magnetic charm of manner which few women could resist.
+
+Such a lover was, indeed, after her heart, for he brought romance and
+adventure to his wooing; and whether he found his way to her boudoir
+disguised as a ladies' tailor or as one of the Grand Duke's musicians,
+or made open love to her under the very nose of her courtiers, he played
+his rôle of lover to admiration. Once Peter, in jealous mood, threatened
+to run his rival through with his sword, and, in his rage, "went into
+his wife's bedroom and pulled her out of bed without leaving her time to
+dress." An hour later his anger had changed to an amused complaisance,
+and he was supping with the culprits, and with boisterous laughter was
+drinking their healths.
+
+When at last a political storm drove Poniatowski from Russia, Catherine,
+who never forgot a banished lover, secured for him the crown of Poland.
+
+Thus the favourites come and go, each supreme for a time, each
+inevitably packed off to give place to a successor. With Poniatowski
+away in Poland, Catherine cast her eyes round her Court to find a third
+favourite, and her choice was soon made, for of all her army of admirers
+there was one who fully satisfied her ideal of handsome manhood.
+
+Of the five Orloff brothers, each a Goliath in stature and a Hercules in
+strength, the handsomest was Gregory, "the giant with the face of an
+angel." Towering head and shoulders over most of his fellow-courtiers,
+with knotted muscles which could fell an ox or crush a horse-shoe with
+the closing of a hand, Gregory Orloff was reputed the bravest man in
+Russia, as he was the idol of his soldiers. He was also a notorious
+gambler and drinker and the hero of countless love adventures.
+
+No greater contrast could be possible than between this dare-devil son
+of Anak and the cultured, almost feminine Poniatowski; but Catherine
+loved, above all things, variety, and here it was in startling
+abundance. Nor was her new lover any the less desirable because he was
+some years younger than herself, or that his grandfather had been a
+common soldier in the army of Peter the Great.
+
+And Gregory Orloff proved himself as bold in wooing as he was brave in
+war. For him there was no stealing up back stairs, no masquerading in
+disguises. He was the elect favourite of the future Empress of Russia,
+and all the world should know it. He was inseparable from his mistress,
+and paid his court to her under the eyes of her husband; while
+Catherine, thus emboldened, made as little concealment of her
+partiality.
+
+But troublous days were coming to break the idyll of their love. The
+Empress Elizabeth, as was inevitable, at last drank herself to death,
+and her nephew Peter, now a besotted imbecile of thirty-four, put on the
+Imperial robes, and was free to indulge his madness without restraint.
+The first use he made of his freedom was to subject his wife to every
+insult and humiliation his debased brain could suggest. He flaunted his
+amours and vices before her, taunted her in public with her own
+indiscretions, and shouted in his cups that he would divorce her.
+
+Not content with these outrages on his Empress, he lost no opportunity
+of disgusting his subjects and driving his soldiers to the verge of
+mutiny. Such an intolerable state of things could only have one issue.
+The Emperor was undoubtedly mad; the Emperor must go.
+
+Over the _coup d'état_ which followed we must pass hurriedly--the
+conspiracy of Catherine and the Orloffs, the eager response of the army
+which flocked to the Empress, "kissing me, embracing my hands, my feet,
+my dress, and calling me their saviour"; the marching of the insurgent
+troops to Oranienbaum, with Catherine, astride on horseback, at their
+head; and Peter's craven submission, when he crawled on his knees to his
+wife, with whimpering and tears, begging her to allow him to keep "his
+mistress, his dog, his negro, and his violin."
+
+The Emperor was safe behind barred doors at Mopsa; Catherine was now
+Empress in fact as well as name. Three weeks later Peter was dead; was
+he done to death by Catherine's orders? To this day none can say with
+certainty. The story of this tragedy as told by Castèra makes gruesome
+reading.
+
+One day Alexis Orloff and Teplof appeared at Mopsa to announce to the
+deposed sovereign his approaching deliverance and to ask a dinner of
+him. Glasses and brandy were ordered, and while Teplof was amusing the
+Tsar, Orloff filled the glasses, adding poison to one of them.
+
+"The Tsar, suspecting no harm, took the poison and swallowed it. He was
+soon seized with agonising pains. He screamed aloud for milk, but the
+two monsters again presented poison to him and forced him to take it.
+When the Tsar's valet bravely interposed he was hurled from the room. In
+the midst of the tumult there entered Prince Baratinski, who commanded
+the Guard. Orloff, who had already thrown down the Tsar, pressed upon
+his chest with his own knees, holding him fast at the same time by the
+throat. Baratinski and Teplof then passed a table-napkin with a sliding
+knot round his neck, and the murderers accomplished the work of death by
+strangling him."
+
+Such is the story as it has come down to us, and as it was believed in
+Russia at the time. That Gregory Orloff was innocent of a crime in which
+his own brother played a leading part is as little to be credited as
+that Catherine herself was in ignorance of the design on her husband's
+life. But, however this may be, we are told that when the news of her
+husband's death was brought to the Empress at a banquet, she was to all
+appearance overcome with horror and grief. She left the table with
+streaming eyes and spent the next few days in unapproachable solitude
+in her rooms.
+
+Thus at last Catherine was free both from the tyranny of Elizabeth and
+from the brutality of her bestial husband. She was sole sovereign of all
+the Russias, at liberty to indulge any caprice that entered her
+versatile brain. That her subjects, almost to a man, regarded her with
+horror as her husband's murderer, that this detestation was shared by
+the army that had put her on the throne, and by the nobles who had been
+her slaves, troubled her little. She was mistress of her fate, and
+strong enough (as indeed she proved) to hold, with a firm grasp, the
+sceptre she had won.
+
+High as Gregory Orloff had stood in her favour before she came to her
+crown, his position was now more splendid and secure. She showered her
+favours on him with prodigal hand. Lands and jewels and gold were
+squandered on her "First Favourite"--the official designation she
+invented for him; and he wore on his broad chest her miniature in a
+blazing oval of diamonds, the crowning mark of her approval. And to his
+brothers she was almost equally generous, for in a few years of her
+ascendancy the Orloffs were enriched by vast estates on which forty-five
+thousand serfs toiled, by palaces, and by gold to the amount of
+seventeen million roubles. Such it was to be in the good books of
+Catherine II., Empress of Russia.
+
+With riches and power, Gregory's ambition grew until he dreamt of
+sitting on the throne itself by Catherine's side; and in her foolish
+infatuation even this prize might have been his, had not wiser counsels
+come to her rescue. "The Empress," said Panine to her, "can do what she
+likes; but Madame Orloff can never be Empress of Russia." And thus
+Gregory's greatest ambition was happily nipped in the bud.
+
+The man who had played his cards with such skill and discretion in the
+early days of his love-making had now, his head swollen by pride and
+power, grown reckless. If he could not be Emperor in name, he would at
+least wield the sceptre. The woman to whom he owed all was, he thought,
+but a puppet in his hands, as ready to do his bidding as any of his
+minions. But through all her dallying Catherine's smiles masked an iron
+will. In heart she was a woman; in brain and will-power, a man. And
+Orloff, like many another favourite, was to learn the lesson to his
+cost.
+
+The time came when she could no longer tolerate his airs and
+assumptions. There was only one Empress, but lovers were plentiful, and
+she already had an eye on his successor. And thus it was that one day
+the swollen Orloff was sent on a diplomatic mission to arrange peace
+between Russia and Turkey. When she bade him good-bye she called him her
+"angel of peace," but she knew that it was her angel's farewell to his
+paradise.
+
+How the Ambassador, instead of making peace, stirred up the embers of
+war into fresh flame is a matter of history. But he was not long left to
+work such mad mischief. While he was swaggering at a Jassy fête, in a
+costume ablaze with diamonds worth a million roubles, news came to him
+of a good-looking young lieutenant who was not only installed in his
+place by Catherine's side, but was actually occupying his own
+apartments. Within an hour he was racing back to St Petersburg, resting
+neither night nor day until he had covered the thousand leagues that
+separated him from the capital.
+
+Before, however, his sweating horses could enter it, he was stopped by
+Catherine's emissaries and ordered to repair to the Imperial Palace at
+Gatshina. And then he realised that his sun had indeed come to its
+setting. His honours were soon stripped from him, and although he was
+allowed to keep his lands, his gold and jewels, the spoils of Cupid, the
+diamond-framed miniature, was taken away to adorn the breast of his
+successor, the lieutenant.
+
+Under this cloud of disfavour Orloff conducted himself with such
+resignation--none knew better than he how futile it was to fight--that
+Catherine, before many months had passed, not only recalled him to
+Court, but secured for him a Princedom of the Holy Empire. "As for
+Prince Gregory," she said amiably, "he is free to go or stay, to hunt,
+to drink, or to gamble. I intend to live according to my own pleasure,
+and in entire independence."
+
+After a tragically brief wedded life with a beautiful girl-cousin, who
+died of consumption, Orloff returned to St Petersburg to spend the last
+few months of his life, "broken-hearted and mad." And to his last hour
+his clouded brain was tortured with visions of the "avenging shade of
+the murdered Peter."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY CINDERELLA
+
+It was to all seeming a strange whim that caused Cardinal Mazarin, one
+day in the year 1653, to summon his nieces, daughters of his sister,
+Hieronyme Mancini, from their obscurity in Italy to bask in the sunshine
+of his splendours in Paris.
+
+At the time of this odd caprice, Richelieu's crafty successor had
+reached the zenith of his power. His was the most potent and splendid
+figure in all Europe that did not wear a crown. He was the avowed
+favourite and lover of Anne of Austria, Queen of France, to whose vanity
+he had paid such skilful court--indeed it was common rumour that she had
+actually given him her hand in secret marriage. The boy-King, Louis
+XIV., was a puppet in his strong hands. He was, in fact, the dictator of
+France, whose smiles the greatest courtiers tried to win, and before
+whose frowns they trembled.
+
+In contrast to such magnificence, his sister, Madame Mancini, was the
+wife of a petty Italian baron, who was struggling to bring up her five
+daughters on a pathetically scanty purse--as far removed from her
+magnificent brother as a moth from a star. There was, on the face of
+things, every reason why the great and all-powerful Cardinal should
+leave his nieces to their genteel poverty; and we can imagine both the
+astonishment and delight with which Madame Mancini received the summons
+to Paris which meant such a revolution in life for her and her
+daughters.
+
+If the Mancini girls had no heritage of money, they had at least the
+dower of beauty. Each of the five gave promise of a rare
+loveliness--with the solitary exception of Marie, Madame's third
+daughter, who at fourteen was singularly unattractive even for that
+awkward age. Tall, thin, and angular, without a vestige of grace either
+of figure or movement, she had a sallow face out of which two great
+black eyes looked gloomily, and a mouth wide and thin-lipped. She was,
+in addition, shy and slow-witted to the verge of stupidity. Marie, in
+fact, was quite hopeless, the "ugly duckling" of a good-looking family,
+and for this reason an object of dislike and resentment to her mother.
+
+Certainly, said Madame, Marie must be left behind. Her other daughters
+would be a source of pride to their uncle; he could secure great matches
+for them, but Marie--pah! she would bring discredit on the whole family.
+And so it was decided in conclave that the "ugly duckling" should be
+left in a nunnery--the only fit place for her. But Marie happily had a
+spirit of her own. She would not be left behind, she declared; and if
+she must go to a nunnery, why there were nunneries in plenty in France
+to which they could send her. And Marie had her way.
+
+She was not, however, to escape the cloister after all, for to a Paris
+nunnery she was consigned when her Cardinal uncle had set eyes on her.
+"Let her have a year or two there," was his verdict, "and, who knows,
+she may blossom into a beauty yet. At any rate she can put on flesh and
+not be the scarecrow she is." And thus, while her more favoured sisters
+were revelling in the gaieties of Court life, Marie was sent to tell her
+beads and to spend Spartan days among the nuns.
+
+Nearly two years passed before Mazarin expressed a wish to see his ugly
+niece again; and it was indeed a very different Marie who now made her
+curtsy to him. Gone were the angular figure, the awkward movements, the
+sallow face, the slow wits. Time and the healthy life of the cloisters
+had done their work well. What the Cardinal now saw was a girl of
+seventeen, of exquisitely modelled figure, graceful and self-possessed;
+a face piquant and full of animation, illuminated by a pair of glorious
+dark eyes, and with a dazzling smile which revealed the prettiest teeth
+in France. Above all, and what delighted the Cardinal most, she had now
+a sprightly wit, and a quite brilliant gift of conversation. It was thus
+a smiling and gratified Cardinal who gave greeting to his niece, now as
+fair as her sisters and more fascinating than any of them. There was no
+doubt that he could find a high-placed husband for her, and thus--for
+this was, in fact, his motive for rescuing his pretty nieces from their
+obscurity--make his position secure by powerful family alliances.
+
+It was not long before Mazarin fixed on a suitor in the person of
+Armande de la Porte, son of the Marquis de la Meilleraye, one of the
+most powerful nobles in France. But alas for his scheming! Armande's
+heart had already been caught while Marie was reciting her matins and
+vespers: He had lost it utterly to her beautiful sister, Hortense; he
+vowed that he would marry no other, and that if Hortense could not be
+his wife he would prefer to die. Thus Marie was rescued from a union
+which brought her sister so much misery in later years, and for a time
+she was condemned to spend unhappy months with her mother at the Louvre.
+
+To this period of her life Marie Mancini could never look back without a
+shudder. "My mother," she says, "who, I think, had always hated me, was
+more unbearable than ever. She treated me, although I was no longer
+ugly, with the utmost aversion and cruelty. My sisters went to Court and
+were fussed and fêted. I was kept always at home, in our miserable
+lodgings, an unhappy Cinderella."
+
+But Fortune did not long hide his face from Cinderella. Her "Prince
+Charming" was coming--in the guise of the handsome young King, Louis
+XIV. himself. It was one day while visiting Madame Mancini in her
+lodgings at the Louvre that Louis first saw the girl who was to play
+such havoc with his heart; and at the first sight of those melting dark
+eyes and that intoxicating smile he was undone. He came again and
+again--always under the pretext of visiting Madame, and happy beyond
+expression if he could exchange a few words with her daughter, Marie;
+until he soon counted a day worse than lost that did not bring him the
+stolen sweetness of a meeting.
+
+When, a few weeks later, Madame Mancini died, and Marie was recalled to
+Court by her uncle, her life was completely changed for her. Louis had
+now abundant opportunities of seeking her side; and excellent use he
+made of them. The two young people were inseparable, much to the alarm
+of the Cardinal and Madame Mère, the Queen. The young King was never
+happy out of her sight; he danced with her (and none could dance more
+divinely than Marie); he listened as she sang to him with a voice whose
+sweetness thrilled him; they read the same books together in blissful
+solitude; she taught him her native Italian, and entranced him by the
+brilliance of her wit; and when, after a slight illness, he heard of her
+anxious inquiries and her tears of sympathy, his conquest was complete.
+He vowed that she and no other should be his wife and Queen of France.
+
+But these halcyon days were not to last long. It was no part of
+Mazarin's scheming that a niece of his should sit on the throne. The
+prospect was dazzling, it is true, but it would inevitably mean his own
+downfall, so strongly would such an alliance be resented by friends as
+well as enemies; and Anne of Austria was as little in the mood to be
+deposed by such an obscure person as the "Mancini girl." Thus it was
+that Queen and Cardinal joined hands to nip the young romance in the
+bud.
+
+A Royal bride must be found for Louis, and that quickly; and
+negotiations were soon on foot to secure as his wife Margaret, Princess
+of Savoy. In vain did the boy-King storm and protest; equally futile
+were Marie's tearful pleadings to her uncle. The fiat had gone forth.
+Louis must have a Royal bride; and she was already about to leave Italy
+on her bridal progress to France.
+
+It was, we may be sure, with a heavy heart that Marie joined the
+cavalcade which, with its gorgeous procession of equipages, its gaily
+mounted courtiers, and its brave escort of soldiery, swept out of Paris
+on its stately progress to Lyons, to meet the Queen-to-be. But there was
+no escape from the humiliation, for she must accompany Anne of Austria,
+as one of her retinue of maids-of-honour. Arrived too soon at Lyons,
+Louis rides on to give first greeting to his bride, who is now within a
+day's journey; and returns with a smiling face to announce to his mother
+that he finds the Princess pleasing to his eye, and to describe, with
+boyish enthusiasm, her grace and graciousness, her magnificent eyes, her
+beautiful hair, and the delicate olive of her complexion, while Marie's
+heart sinks at the recital. Could this be the lover who, but a few days
+ago, had been at her feet, vowing that she was the only bride in all the
+world for him?
+
+When he seeks her side and shamefacedly makes excuses for his seeming
+recreancy, she bids him marry his "ugly bride" in accents of scorn, and
+then bursts into tears, which she only consents to wipe away when he
+declares that his heart will always be hers and that he will never marry
+the Italian Princess.
+
+But Margaret of Savoy was not after all to be Queen of France. She was,
+as it proved, merely a pawn in the Cardinal's deep game. It was a
+Spanish alliance that he sought for his young King; and when, at the
+eleventh hour, an ambassador came hurriedly to Lyons to offer the
+Infanta's hand, the Savoy Duke and his sister, the Princess, had
+perforce to return to Italy "empty-handed."
+
+There was at least a time of respite now for Louis and Marie, and as
+they rode back to Paris, side by side, chatting gaily and exchanging
+sweet confidences, the sun once more shone on the happiest young people
+in all France. Then followed a period of blissful days, of dances and
+fêtes, in brilliant succession, in which the lovers were inseparable;
+above all, of long rambles together, when, "the world forgetting," they
+could live in the happy present, whatever the future might have in store
+for them.
+
+Meanwhile the negotiations for the Spanish marriage were ripening fast.
+Louis and Marie again appeal, first to the Cardinal, then to the Queen,
+to sanction their union, but to no purpose; both are inflexible. Their
+foolish romance must come to an end. As a last resource Marie flies to
+the King, with tender pleadings and tears, begging him not to desert
+her; to which he answers that no power on earth shall make him wed the
+Infanta. "You alone," he swears, "shall wear the crown of Queen"; and in
+token of his love he buys for her the pearls that were the most
+treasured belongings of the exiled Stuart Queen, Henrietta Maria. The
+lovers part in tears, and the following day Marie receives orders to
+leave Paris and to retire to La Rochelle.
+
+At every stage of her journey she was overtaken by messengers bearing
+letters from Louis, full of love and protestations of unflinching
+loyalty; and when Louis moved with his Court to Bayonne, the lovers met
+once more to mingle their tears. But Louis, ever fickle, was already
+wavering again. "If I must marry the Infanta," he said, "I suppose I
+must. But I shall never love any but you."
+
+Marie now realised that this was to be the end. In face of a lover so
+weak, and a fate so inflexible, what could she do but submit? And it was
+with a proud but breaking heart that she wrote a few days later to tell
+Louis that she wished him not to write to her again and that she would
+not answer his letters. One June day news came to her that her lover was
+married and that "he was very much in love with the Infanta"; and even
+her pride, crushed as it was, could not restrain her from writing to her
+sister, Hortense, "Say everything you can that is horrid about him.
+Point out all his faults to me, that I may find relief for my aching
+heart." When, a few months later, Marie saw the King again, he received
+her almost as a stranger, and had the bad taste to sing the praises of
+his Queen.
+
+But Marie Mancini was the last girl in all France to wed herself long to
+grief or an outraged vanity. There were other lovers by the score among
+whom she could pick and choose. She was more lovely now than when the
+recreant Louis first succumbed to her charms--with a ripened witchery of
+black eyes, red lips, the flash of pearly teeth revealed by every
+dazzling smile, with glorious black hair, the grace of a fawn, and a
+"voluptuous fascination" which no man could resist.
+
+Prince Charles of Lorraine was her veriest slave, but Mazarin would have
+none of him. Prince Colonna, Grand Constable of Naples, was more
+fortunate when he in turn came a-wooing. He bore the proudest name in
+Italy, and he had wealth, good-looks, and high connections to lend a
+glamour to his birth. The Cardinal smiled on his suit, and Marie, since
+she had no heart to give, willingly gave her hand.
+
+Louis himself graced the wedding with his presence; and we are told, as
+the white-faced bride "said the 'yes' which was to bind her to a
+stranger, her eyes, with an indescribable expression, sought those of
+the King, who turned pale as he met them."
+
+Over the rest of Marie Mancini's chequered life we must hasten. After a
+few years of wedded life with her Italian Prince, "Colonna's early
+passion for his beautiful wife was succeeded by a distaste amounting to
+hatred. He disgusted her with his amours; and when she ventured to
+protest against his infidelity, he tried to poison her." This crowning
+outrage determined Marie to fly, and, in company with her sister,
+Hortense, who had fled to her from the brutality of her own husband, she
+made her escape one dark night to Civita Vecchia, where a boat was
+awaiting the runaways.
+
+Hotly pursued on land and sea, narrowly escaping shipwreck, braving
+hardships, hunger, and hourly danger of capture, the fugitives at last
+reached Marseilles where Marie (Hortense now seeking a refuge in Savoy)
+began those years of wandering and adventure, the story of which
+outstrips fiction.
+
+Now we find her seeking asylum at convents from Aix to Madrid; now
+queening it at the Court of Savoy, with Duke Charles Emmanuel for lover;
+now she is dazzling Madrid with the Almirante of Castille and many
+another high-placed worshipper dancing attendance on her; and now she is
+in Rome, turning the heads of grave cardinals with her witcheries.
+Sometimes penniless and friendless, at others lapped in luxury; but
+carrying everywhere in her bosom the English pearls, the last gift of
+her false and frail Louis.
+
+Thus, through the long, troubled years, until old-age crept on her, the
+Cardinal's niece wandered, a fugitive, over the face of Europe,
+alternately caressed and buffeted by fortune, until "at long last" the
+end came and brought peace with it. As she lay dying in the house of a
+good Samaritan at Pisa, with no other hand to minister to her, she
+called for pen and paper, and with failing hand wrote her own epitaph,
+surely the most tragic ever penned--"Marie Mancini Colonna--Dust and
+Ashes."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+BIANCA, GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY
+
+More than three centuries have gone since Florence made merry over the
+death of her Grand Duchess, Bianca. It was an occasion for rejoicing;
+her name was bandied from lips to lips--"La Pessima Bianca"; jeers and
+laughter followed her to her unmarked grave in the Church of San
+Lorenzo. But through the ages her picture has come down to us as she
+strutted on the world's stage in all her pride and beauty, with a
+vividness which few better women of her time retain.
+
+It was in the year 1548, when our boy-King, the sixth Edward, was fresh
+to his crown, that Bianca Capello was cradled in the palace of her
+father, one of the greatest men of Venice, Senator and Privy Councillor.
+As a child she was as beautiful as she was wilful; the pride of her
+father, the despair of his wife, her stepmother--her little head full of
+romance, her heart full of rebellion against any kind of discipline or
+restraint.
+
+Before she had left the schoolroom Capello's daughter was, by common
+consent, the fairest girl in her native city, with a beauty riper than
+her years. Tall, and with a well-developed figure of singular grace,
+she carried her head as proudly as any Queen. Her fair hair fell in a
+rippling cascade far below her waist; her face, hands, and throat, we
+are told, were "white as lilies," save for the delicate rose-colour that
+tinted her cheeks. Her eyes were large and dark, and of an almost
+dazzling brilliance; and her full, pouting lips were red and fragrant as
+a rose.
+
+Such was Bianca Capello on the threshold of womanhood, as you may see
+her pictured to-day in Bronzino's miniature at the British Museum, with
+a loveliness which set the hearts of the Venetian gallants a-flutter
+before our Shakespeare was in his cradle. She might, if she would, have
+mated with almost any noble in Tuscany, had not her foolish, wayward
+fancy fallen on Pietro Bonaventuri, a handsome young clerk in Salviati's
+bank, whose eyes had often strayed from his ledgers to follow her as, in
+the company of her maid, the Senator's daughter took her daily walk past
+his office window.
+
+At sight of so fair a vision Pietro was undone; he fell violently in
+love with her long before he exchanged a word with her, and although no
+one knew better than he the gulf that separated the daughter of a
+nobleman and a Senator from the drudge of the quill, he determined to
+win her. Youth and good-looks such as his, with plenty of assurance to
+support them, had done as much for others, and they should do it for
+him. How they first met we know not, but we know that shortly after this
+momentous meeting Bianca had completely lost her heart to the knight of
+the quill, with the handsome face, the dark, flashing eyes, and the
+courtly manner.
+
+Other meetings followed--secret rendezvous arranged by the duenna
+herself in return for liberal bribes--to keep which Bianca would steal
+out of her father's palace at dead of night, leaving the door open
+behind her to ensure safe return before dawn. On one such occasion, so
+the story runs, Bianca returned to find the door closed against her by a
+too officious hand. She dared not wake the sleepers to gain
+admittance--that would be to expose her secret and to cover herself with
+disgrace--and in her fears and alarm she fled back to her lover.
+
+However this may be, we know that, for some urgent reason or other, the
+young lovers disappeared one night together from Venice and made their
+way to Florence to find a refuge under the roof of Pietro's parents.
+Here a terrible disillusion met Bianca at the threshold. Her
+husband--for, on the runaway journey, Pietro had secured the friendly
+services of a village priest to marry them--had told her that he was the
+son of noble parents, kin to his employers, the Salviatis. The home to
+which he now introduced her was little better than a hovel, with poverty
+looking out of its windows.
+
+Here indeed was a sorry home-coming for the new-made bride, daughter of
+the great Capello! There was not even a drudge to do the housework,
+which Bianca was compelled to share with her bucolic mother-in-law. It
+is even said that she was compelled to do laundry-work in order to keep
+the domestic purse supplied. Her husband had forfeited his meagre
+salary; she had equally sacrificed the fortune left to her by her
+mother. Sordid, grinding poverty stared both in the face.
+
+To return to her own home in Venice was impossible. So furious were her
+father and stepmother at her escapade that a large reward was advertised
+for the capture of her husband, "alive or dead," and a sentence of death
+had been procured from the Council of Ten in the event of his arrest.
+More than this, a sentence of banishment was pronounced against Pietro
+and Bianca; the maid who had connived at their illicit wooing and flight
+paid for her treachery with her life; and Pietro's uncle ended his days
+in a loathsome dungeon.
+
+Such was the vengeance taken by Bartolomeo Capello. As for the runaways,
+they spent a long honeymoon in concealment and hourly dread of the fate
+that hung over them. It was well known, however, in Florence where they
+were in hiding; and curious crowds were drawn to the Bonaventuri hovel
+to catch a glimpse of the heroes of a scandal with which all Italy was
+ringing. Thus it was that Francesco de Medici first set eyes on the
+woman who was to play so great a part in his life.
+
+There could be no greater contrast than that between Francesco de
+Medici, heir to the Tuscan Grand Dukedom, and the beautiful young wife
+of the bank-clerk, now playing the rôle of maid-of-all-work and
+charwoman. It is said that Francesco was a madman; and indeed what we
+know of him makes this description quite plausible. He was a man of
+black brow and violent temper, repelling alike in appearance and
+manner. He was, we are told, "more of a savage than a civilised human
+being." His food was deluged with ginger and pepper; his favourite fare
+was raw eggs filled with red pepper, and raw onions, of which he ate
+enormous quantities. He drank iced water by the gallon, and slept
+between frozen sheets. He was a man, moreover, of evil life, familiar
+with every form of vicious indulgence. His only redeeming feature was a
+love of art, which enriched the galleries of Florence.
+
+Such was the Medici--half-ogre, half-madman, who, riding one day through
+a Florence slum, saw at the window of a mean dwelling the beautiful face
+of Bianca Bonaventuri, and rode on leaving his heart behind. Here indeed
+was a dainty dish to set before his jaded appetite. The owner of that
+fair face, with the crimson lips and the black, flashing eyes, must be
+his. On the following day a great Court lady, the Marchesa Mondragone,
+presents herself at the Bonaventuri door, with smiles and gracious
+words, bearing an invitation to Court for the lady of the window.
+"Impossible," bluntly answers Signora Bonaventuri; her daughter-in-law
+has no clothes fit to be seen at Court. "But," persists the Marchesa,
+"that is a matter that can easily be arranged. It will be a pleasure to
+me to supply the necessary outfit, if the Signora and her
+daughter-in-law will but come to-morrow to the Mondragone Palace." The
+bride, when consulted, is not unwilling; and the following day, in
+company with her mother-in-law, she is effusively received by the
+Marchesa, and is feasting her eyes on exquisite robes and the glitter
+of rare gems, among which she is invited to make her choice. A moment
+later Francesco enters, and with courtly grace is kissing the hand of
+his new divinity....
+
+Then followed secret meetings such as marked Bianca's first unhappy
+wooing in Venice--hours of rapture for the Tuscan Duke, of flattered
+submission by the runaway bride; and within a few weeks we find Bianca
+installed in a palace of her own with Francesco's guards and equipage
+ever at its door, while his newly made bride, Giovanna, Archduchess of
+Austria, kept her lonely vigil in the apartments which so seldom saw her
+husband.
+
+Francesco, indeed, had no eyes or thought for any but the lovely woman
+who had so completely enslaved him. As for her, condemn her as we must,
+much can be pleaded in extenuation of her conduct. She had been basely
+deceived and betrayed. On the one side was a life of sordid poverty and
+drudgery, with a husband for whom she had now nothing but dislike and
+contempt; on the other was the ardent homage of the future ruler of
+Tuscany, with its accompaniment of splendour, luxury, and power. A fig
+for love! ambition should now rule her life. She would drain the cup of
+pleasure, though the dregs might be bitter to the taste.
+
+She was now in the very prime of her beauty, and a Queen in all but the
+name. Between her and her full Queendom were but two obstacles--her
+lover's plain, unattractive wife, and her own worthless husband; and of
+these obstacles one was soon to be removed from her path.
+
+Pietro, who had been made chamberlain to the Tuscan Court, was more
+than content that his wife should go her own way, so long as he was
+allowed to go his. He was kept very agreeably occupied with love affairs
+of his own. The richest widow in Florence, Cassandra Borgianni, was
+eager to lavish her smiles and favours on him; and the knowledge that
+two of his predecessors in her affection had fallen under the assassin's
+knife only lent zest to a love adventure which was after his heart.
+Warnings of the fate that might await him in turn fell on deaf ears.
+When his wife ventured to point out the danger he retorted, "If you say
+another word I will cut your throat." The following night as he was
+returning from a visit to the widow, a dagger was sheathed in his heart,
+and Pietro's amorous race was run.
+
+Such was the end of the bank-clerk and his eleventh-hour glories and
+love adventures. Now only Giovanna remained to block the way to the
+pinnacle of Bianca's ambition; and her health was so frail that the
+waiting might not be long. Giovanna had provided no successor to her
+husband (who had now succeeded to his Grand Dukedom); if Bianca could
+succeed where the Grand Duchess had failed, she could at least ensure
+that a son of hers would one day rule over Tuscany.
+
+Thus one August day in 1576 the news flashed round Florence that a male
+child had been born in the palace on the Via Maggiore. Francesco was in
+the "seventh heaven" of delight. Here at last was the long-looked-for
+inheritor of his honours--the son who was to perpetuate the glories of
+the Medici and to thwart his brother, the Cardinal, who had so
+confidently counted on the succession for himself. And Madame Bianca
+professed herself equally delighted, although her pleasure was qualified
+by fear.
+
+She had played her part with consummate cleverness; but there were two
+women who knew the true story of the birth of the child, which had been
+smuggled into the palace from a Florence slum. One was the changeling's
+mother, a woman of the people, whom a substantial bribe had induced to
+part with her new-born infant; the other was Bianca's waiting woman.
+These witnesses to the imposture must be silenced effectually.
+
+Hired assassins made short work of the mother. The waiting-maid was
+"left for dead" in a mountain-pass, to which she had been lured; but she
+survived long enough at least to communicate her secret to the Grand
+Duke's brother, the Cardinal Ferdinand de Medici.
+
+Bianca was now in a parlous plight. At any moment her enemy, the
+Cardinal, might betray her to her lover, and bring the carefully planned
+edifice of her fortunes tumbling about her ears. But she proved equal
+even to this emergency. Taking her courage in both hands, she herself
+confessed the fraud to the Grand Duke, who not only forgave her (so
+completely was he under the spell of her beauty) but insisted on calling
+the gutter-child his son.
+
+The tables, however, were soon to be turned on her, for Giovanna, who
+had long despaired of providing an heir to her husband, gave birth a
+few months later to a male child. Florence was jubilant, for the Grand
+Duchess was as beloved as her rival was detested; and the christening of
+the heir was made the occasion of festivities and rejoicing. Bianca's
+day of triumph seemed at last to be over. For a time she left Florence
+to hide her humiliation; but within a year she was back again, to be
+received with open arms of welcome by the Duke. During her absence she
+had made peace with her family, and when her father and brother came to
+Florence to visit her, they were received by Francesco with regal
+entertainments, and sent away loaded with presents and honours.
+
+Bianca had now reached the zenith of her power and splendour. Before she
+had been back many months the Grand Duchess died, to the undisguised
+relief of her husband, who hastened from her funeral to the arms of her
+rival. Her position was now secure, unassailable; and before Giovanna
+had been two months in the family vault, Bianca was secretly married to
+her Grand ducal lover.
+
+Florence was furious. But what mattered that? The Venetian Senate had
+recognised Bianca as a true daughter of the Republic. She was the legal
+wife of the ruler of Tuscany. She was Grand Duchess at last, and she
+meant all the world to know it. That she was cordially hated by her
+husband's subjects, that the air was full of stories of her
+extravagance, her intemperance, and her cruelty, gave her no moment's
+unhappiness. For eight years she reigned as Queen, wielding the sceptre
+her husband's hands were too weak or indifferent to hold. Giovanna's
+son had followed his mother to the grave; and the child of the slums,
+who had been so fruitlessly smuggled into her palace, had been
+legitimated.
+
+The only thorn now left in her bed of roses was the enmity of the Grand
+Duke's brother, the Cardinal; and her greatest ambition was to win him
+to her side. In the autumn of 1787 he was invited to Florence, and as
+the culmination of a series of festivities, a grand banquet was given,
+at which he had the place of honour, at her right hand. The feast was
+drawing near to its end. Bianca, with sparkling eyes and flushed face,
+looking lovelier than she had ever looked before, was at her happiest,
+for the Cardinal had at last succumbed to her bright eyes and honeyed
+words. It was the crowning moment of her many triumphs, when life left
+nothing more to desire.
+
+Then it was, at the supreme moment, that tragedy in its most terrible
+form fell on the scene of festivity and mirth. While Bianca was smiling
+her sweetest on the Cardinal she was seized by violent pains, "her mouth
+foams, her face is distorted by agony; she shrieks aloud that she is
+dying. Francesco tries to go to her aid, but his steps are suddenly
+arrested. He too is seized by the same terrible anguish. A few hours
+later both she and he breathe their last breath."
+
+"Poison" was the word which ran through the palace and soon through
+Florence from blanched lips to blanched lips. Some said it was the
+Cardinal who had done the deed; others whispered stories of a poisoned
+tart designed by Bianca for the Cardinal, who refused to be tempted.
+Whereupon the Grand Duke had eaten of it, and Bianca, "seeing that her
+plot had so tragically miscarried, seized the tart from her husband's
+hand and ate what was left of it."
+
+The truth will never be known. What we do know is that within a few
+hours of the last joke and the last drained glass of that fatal banquet
+the bodies of Francesco and Bianca were lying in death side by side in
+an adjacent room, the door of which was locked against the eyes of the
+curious--even against the physicians.
+
+In the solemn lying-in-state that followed Bianca had no place.
+Francesco alone, by his brother's orders, wore his crown in death. As
+for Bianca, her body was hurried away and flung into the common vault of
+San Lorenzo, with the light of two yellow wax torches to bear it
+company, and the jibes and jeers of Florence for its only requiem.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+RICHELIEU, THE ROUÉ
+
+In the drama of the French Court many a fine-feathered villain "struts
+his brief hour" on the stage, dazzling eyes by his splendour, and
+shocking a world none too easily shocked in those days of easy morals by
+his profligacy; but it would be difficult among all these gilded rakes
+to find a match for the Duc de Richelieu, who carried his villainies
+through little less than a century of life.
+
+Born in 1696, when Louis XIV. had still nearly twenty years of his long
+reign before him, Louis François Armand Duplessis, Duc de Richelieu,
+survived to hear the rumblings which heralded the French Revolution
+ninety-two years later; and for three-quarters of a century to be known
+as the most accomplished and heartless roué in all France. Bearer of a
+great name, and inheritor of the splendours and riches of his
+great-uncle, the Cardinal, who was Louis XII.'s right-hand man, and, in
+his day, the most powerful subject in Europe, the Duc was born with the
+football of fortune at his feet; and probably no man who has ever lived
+so shamefully prostituted such magnificent opportunities and gifts.
+
+As a boy, still in his teens, he had begun to play the rôle of Don Juan
+at the Court of the child-King, Louis XV. The most beautiful women at
+the Court, we are told, went crazy over the handsome boy, who bore the
+most splendid name in France; and thus early his head was turned by
+flatteries and attentions which followed him almost to the grave.
+
+The young Duchesse de Bourgogne, the King's mother, made love to him, to
+the scandal of the Court; and from Princesses of the Blood Royal to the
+humblest serving-maid, there was scarcely a woman at Court who would not
+have given her eyes for a smile from the Duc de Fronsac, as he was then
+known.
+
+How he revelled in his conquests he makes abundantly clear in the
+Memoirs he left behind him--surely the most scandalous ever written--in
+which he recounts his love affairs, in long sequence, with a
+cold-blooded heartlessness which shocks the reader to-day, so long after
+lover and victims have been dust. He revels in describing the artifices
+by which he got the most unassailable of women into his power--such as
+the young and beautiful Madame Michelin, whose religious scruples proved
+such a frail barrier against the assaults of the young Lothario. He
+chuckles with a diabolical pride as he tells us how he played off one
+mistress against another; how he made one liaison pave the way to its
+successor; and how he abandoned each in turn when it had served its
+purpose, and betrayed, one after another, the women who had trusted to
+his nebulous sense of honour.
+
+A profligate so tempted as the Duc de Richelieu was from his earliest
+years, one can understand, however much we may condemn; but for the man
+who conducted his love affairs with such heartlessness and dishonour no
+language has words of execration and contempt to describe him.
+
+From his earliest youth there was no "game" too high for our Don Juan to
+fly at. Long before he had reached manhood he counted his lady-loves by
+the score; and among them were at least three Royal Princesses,
+Mademoiselle de Charolais, and two of the Regent's own daughters, the
+Duchesse de Berry and Mademoiselle de Valois, later Duchess of Modena,
+who, in their jealousy, were ready to "tear each other's eyes out" for
+love of the Duc. Quarrels between the rival ladies were of everyday
+occurrence; and even duels were by no means unknown.
+
+When, for instance, the Duc wearied of the lovely Madame de Polignac,
+this lady was so inflamed by hatred of her successor in his affections,
+the Marquise de Nesle, that she challenged her to a duel to the death in
+the Bois de Boulogne. When Madame de Polignac, after a fierce exchange
+of shots, saw her rival stretched at her feet, she turned furiously on
+the wounded woman. "Go!" she shrieked. "I will teach you to walk in the
+footsteps of a woman like me! If I had the traitor here, I would blow
+his brains out!" Whereupon, Madame de Nesle, fainting as she was from
+loss of blood, retorted that her lover was worthy that even more noble
+blood than hers should be shed for him. "He is," she said to the few
+onlookers who had hurried to the scene on hearing the shots, "the most
+amiable _seigneur_ of the Court. I am ready to shed for him the last
+drop of blood in my veins. All these ladies try to catch him, but I hope
+that the proofs I have given of my devotion will win him for myself
+without sharing with anyone. Why should I hide his name? He is the Duc
+de Richelieu--yes, the Duc de Richelieu, the eldest son of Venus and
+Mars!"
+
+Such was the devotion which this heartless profligate won from some of
+the most beautiful and highly placed ladies of France. What was the
+secret of the spell he cast over them it is difficult to say. It is true
+that he was a handsome man, as his portraits show, but there were men
+quite as handsome at the French Court; he was courtly and accomplished,
+but he had many rivals as clever and as skilled in courtly arts as
+himself. His power must, one thinks, have lain in that strange magnetism
+which women seem so powerless to resist in men, and which outweighs all
+graces of mind and physical perfections.
+
+The Duc's career, however, was not one unbroken dallying with love.
+Thrice, at least, he was sent to cool his ardour within the walls of the
+Bastille--on one occasion as the result of a duel with the Comte de
+Gacé. His lady-loves were desolate at the cruel fate which had overtaken
+their idol. They fell on their knees at the Regent's feet, and, with
+tears streaming down their pretty cheeks, pleaded for his freedom. Two
+of the Royal Princesses, both disguised as Sisters of Charity, visited
+the prisoner daily in his dungeon, carrying with them delicacies to
+tempt his appetite, and consolation to cheer his captivity.
+
+In vain did Duc and Comte both declare that they had never fought a
+duel; and when, in the absence of proof, the Regent insisted that their
+bodies should be examined for the convicting wounds, the impish
+Richelieu came triumphantly through the ordeal as the result of having
+his wounds covered with pink taffeta and skilfully painted!
+
+It was a more serious matter that sent him again to the Bastille in
+1718. False to his country as to the victims of his fascinations, he had
+been plotting with Spain, France's bitterest enemy, for the seizure of
+the Regent and the carrying him off across the Pyrenees; and certain
+incriminating letters sent to him by Cardinal Alberoni had been
+intercepted, and were in the Regent's hands. The Regent's daughter,
+Mademoiselle de Valois, warned her lover of his danger, but too late.
+Before he could escape, he was arrested, and with an escort of archers
+was safely lodged in the Bastille.
+
+Our Lothario was now indeed in a parlous plight. Lodged in the deepest
+and most loathsome dungeon of the Bastille--a dungeon so damp that
+within a few hours his clothes were saturated--without even a chair to
+sit on or a bed to lie on, with legions of hungry rats for company, he
+was now face to face with almost certain death. The Regent, whose love
+affairs he had thwarted a score of times, and who thus had no reason to
+love the profligate Duc, vowed that his head should pay the price of his
+treason.
+
+Once more the Court ladies were reduced to hysterics and despair, and
+forgot their jealousies in a common appeal to the Regent for clemency.
+Mademoiselle de Valois was driven to distraction; and when tears and
+pleadings failed to soften her father's heart, she declared in the
+hearing of the Court that she would commit suicide unless her lover was
+restored to liberty. In company with her rival, Mademoiselle de
+Charolais, she visited the dungeon in the dark night hours, taking flint
+and steel, candles and bonbons, to weep with the captive.
+
+She squandered two hundred thousand livres in attempts to bribe his
+guards, but all to no purpose: and it was not until after six months of
+durance that the Regent at last yielded--moved partly by his daughter's
+tears and threats and partly by the pleadings of the Cardinal-Archbishop
+of Paris--and the prisoner was released, on condition that the Cardinal
+and the Duchesse de Richelieu would be responsible for his custody and
+good behaviour.
+
+A few days later we find the irresponsible Richelieu climbing over the
+garden-walls of his new "prison" at Conflans, racing through the
+darkness to Paris behind swift horses, and making love to the Regent's
+own mistresses and his daughter!
+
+But such facilities for dalliance with the Regent's daughter were soon
+to be brought to an end. Mademoiselle de Valois, in order to ensure her
+lover's freedom, had at last consented to accept the hand of the Duke of
+Modena, an alliance which she had long fought against; and before the
+Duc had been a free man again many weeks she paid this part of his
+ransom by going into exile, and to an odious wedded life, in a far
+corner of Italy--much, it may be imagined, to the Regent's relief, for
+his daughters and their love affairs were ever a thorn in his side.
+
+It was not long, however, before the new Duchess of Modena began to sigh
+for her distant lover, and to bombard him with letters begging him to
+come to her. "I cannot live without your love," she wrote. "Come to
+me--only, come in disguise, so that no one can recognise you."
+
+This was indeed an adventure after the Lothario Duc's heart--an
+adventure with love as its reward and danger as its spur. And thus it
+was that, a few weeks after the Duchess had sent her invitation, two
+travel-stained pedlars, with packs on their backs, entered the city of
+Modena to find customers for their books and phamphlets. At the small
+hostelry whose hospitality they sought the hawkers gave their names as
+Gasparini and Romano, names which masked the identities of the
+knight-errant Duc and his friend, La Fosse, respectively.
+
+The following morning behold the itinerant hawkers in the palace
+grounds, their wares spread out to tempt the Court ladies on their way
+to Mass, when the Duchess herself passed their way and deigned to stop
+to converse graciously with the strangers. To her inquiries they
+answered that they came from Piedmont; and their curious jargon of
+French and Italian lent support to the story. After inspecting their
+wares she asked for a certain book. "Alas! Madame," Gasparini answered,
+"I have not a copy here, but I have one at my inn." And bidding him
+bring the volume to her at the palace, the great lady resumed her devout
+journey to Mass.
+
+A few hours later Gasparini presented himself at the palace with the
+required volume, and was ushered into the august presence of the
+Duchess. A moment later, on the closing of the door, the Royal lady was
+in the "hawker's" arms, her own flung around his neck, as with tears of
+joy she welcomed the lover who had come to her in such strange guise and
+at such risk.
+
+A few stolen moments of happiness was all the lovers dared now to allow
+themselves. The Duke of Modena was in the palace, and the situation was
+full of danger. But on the morrow he was going away on a hunting
+expedition, and then--well, then they might meet without fear.
+
+On the following day, the coast now clear, behold our "hawker" once more
+at the palace door, with a bundle of books under his arm for the
+inspection of Her Highness, and being ushered into the Duchess's
+reading-room, full of souvenirs of the happy days they had spent
+together in distant Paris and Versailles. Among them, most prized of
+all, was a lock of his own hair, enshrined on a small altar, and
+surmounted by a crown of interlocked hearts. This lock, the Duchess told
+him, she had kissed and wept over every day since they had parted.
+
+Each day now brought its hours of blissful meeting, so seemingly short
+that the Princess would throw her arms around her "hawker's" neck and
+implore him to stay a little longer. One day, however, he tarried too
+long; the Duke returned unexpectedly from his hunting, and before the
+lovers could part, he had entered the room--just in time to see the
+pedlar bowing humbly in farewell to his Duchess, and to hear him assure
+her that he would call again with the further books she wished to see.
+
+Certainly it was a strange spectacle to greet the eyes of a home-coming
+Duke--that of his lady closeted with a shabby pedlar of books; but at
+least there was nothing suspicious in it, and, getting into conversation
+with the "hawker," the Duke found him quite an entertaining fellow, full
+of news of what was going on in the world outside his small duchy.
+
+In his curious jargon of French and Italian, Gasparini had much to tell
+His Highness apart from book-talk. He entertained him with the latest
+scandals of the French Court; with gossip about well-known personages,
+from the Regent to Dubois. "And what about that rascal, the Duc de
+Richelieu?" asked the great man. "What tricks has he been up to lately?"
+"Oh," answered Gasparini, with a wink at the Duchess, who was crimson
+with suppressed laughter, "he is one of my best customers. Ah, Monsieur
+le Duc, he is a gay dog. I hear that all the women at the Court are
+madly in love with him; that the Princesses adore him, and that he is
+driving all the husbands to distraction."
+
+"Is it as bad as that?" asked the Duke, with a laugh. "He is a more
+dangerous fellow even than I thought. And what is his latest game?"
+
+"Oh," answered the hawker, "I am told that he has made a wager that he
+will come to Modena, in spite of you; and I shouldn't be at all
+surprised if he does!"
+
+"As for that," said the Duke, with a chuckle, "I am not afraid. I defy
+him to do his worst; and I am willing to wager that I shall be a match
+for him. However," he added, "you're an entertaining fellow; so come and
+see me again whenever you please."
+
+And thus, by the wish of the Duchess's husband himself, the ducal
+"hawker" became a daily visitor at the palace, entertaining His Highness
+with his chatter, and, when his back was turned, making love to his
+wife, and joining her in shrieks of laughter at his easy gullibility.
+
+Thus many happy weeks passed, Gasparini, the pedlar, selling few
+volumes, but reaping a rich harvest of stolen pleasure, and revelling in
+an adventure which added such a new zest to a life sated with more
+humdrum love-making. But even the Duchess's charms began to pall; the
+ladies he had left so disconsolate in Paris were inundating him with
+letters, begging him to return to them--letters, all forwarded to him
+from his château at Richelieu, where he was supposed to be in retreat.
+The lure was too strong for him; and, taking leave of the Duchess in
+floods of tears, he returned to his beloved Paris to fresh conquests.
+
+And thus it was with the gay Duc until the century that followed that of
+his birth was drawing to its close; until its sun was beginning to set
+in the blood of that Revolution, which, if he had lived but one year
+longer, would surely have claimed him as one of its first victims.
+Three wives he led to the altar--the last when he had passed into the
+eighties--but no marital duty was allowed to interfere with the amours
+which filled his life; and to the last no pity ever gave a pang to the
+"conscience" which allowed him to pick and fling away his flowers at
+will, and to trample, one after another, on the hearts that yielded to
+his love and trusted to his honour.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS
+
+It was an ill fate that brought Caroline, Princess of
+Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel to England to be the bride of George, Prince of
+Wales, one April day in the year 1795; although probably no woman has
+ever set forth on her bridal journey with a lighter or prouder heart,
+for, as she said, "Am I not going to be the wife of the handsomest
+Prince in the world?" If she had any momentary doubt of this, a glance
+at the miniature she carried in her bosom reassured her; for the
+pictured face that smiled at her was handsome as that of an Apollo.
+
+No wonder the Princess's heart beat high with pride and pleasure during
+that last triumphal stage of her journey to her husband's arms; for he
+was not only the handsomest man, with "the best shaped leg in Europe,"
+he was by common consent the "greatest gentleman" any Court could show.
+Picture him as he made his first appearance at a Court ball. "His coat,"
+we are told, "was of pink silk, with white cuffs; his waistcoat of white
+silk, embroidered with various-coloured foil and adorned with a
+profusion of French paste. And his hat was ornamented with two rows of
+steel beads, five thousand in number, with a button and a loop of the
+same metal, and cocked in a new military style." See young "Florizel" as
+he makes his smiling and gracious progress through the avenues of
+courtiers; note the winsomeness of his smiles, the inimitable grace of
+his bows, his pleasant, courtly words of recognition, and say if ever
+Royalty assumed a form more agreeable to the eye and captivating to the
+senses.
+
+"Florizel" was indeed the most splendid Prince in the world, and the
+most "perfect gentleman." He was also, though his bride-to-be little
+knew it, the most dissolute man in Europe, the greatest gambler and
+voluptuary--a man who was as false to his friends as he was traitor to
+every woman who crossed his path, a man whom no appeal of honour or
+mercy could check in his selfish pursuit of pleasure.
+
+"I look through all his life," Thackeray says, "and recognise but a bow
+and a grin. I try and take him to pieces, and find silk stockings,
+padding, stays, a coat with frogs and a fur collar, a star and blue
+ribbon, a pocket handkerchief prodigiously scented, one of Truefitt's
+best nutty brown wigs reeking with oil, a set of teeth and a huge black
+stock, under-waistcoats, more under-waistcoats, and then--nothing.
+French ballet-dancers, French cooks, horse-jockeys, buffoons,
+procuresses, tailors, boxers, fencing-masters, china, jewel and
+gimcrack-merchants--these were his real companions."
+
+Such was the husband Princess Caroline came so light-heartedly, with
+laughter on her lips, from Brunswick to wed, little dreaming of the
+disillusion and tears that were to await her on the very threshold of
+the life to which she had looked forward with such high hopes.
+
+We get the first glimpse of Caroline some twelve years earlier, when Sir
+John Stanley, who was making the grand tour, spent a few weeks at her
+father's Court. He speaks of her as a "beautiful girl of fourteen," and
+adds, "I did think and dream of her day and night at Brunswick, and for
+a year afterwards I saw her for hours three or fours times a week, but
+as a star out of my reach." Years later he met her again under sadly
+changed conditions. "One day only," he writes, "when dining with her and
+her mother at Blackheath, she smiled at something which had pleased her,
+and for an instant only I could have fancied she had been the Caroline
+of fourteen years old--the lovely, pretty Caroline, the girl my eyes had
+so often rested on, with light and powdered hair hanging in curls on her
+neck, the lips from which only sweet words seemed as if they would flow,
+with looks animated, and always simply and modestly dressed."
+
+Lady Charlotte Campbell, too, gives us a glimpse of her in these early
+and happier years, before sorrow had laid its defacing hand on her. "The
+Princess was in her early youth a pretty girl," Lady Charlotte says,
+"with fine light hair--very delicately formed features, and a fine
+complexion--quick, glancing, penetrating eyes, long cut and rather small
+in the head, which gave them much expression; and a remarkably
+delicately formed mouth."
+
+It was in no happy home that the Princess had been cradled one May day
+in 1768. Her father, Charles William, Duke of Brunswick, was an austere
+soldier, too much absorbed in his military life and his mistress, to
+give much thought to his daughters. Her mother, the Duchess Augusta,
+sister of our own George III., was weak and small-minded, too much
+occupied in self-indulgence and scandal-talking to trouble about the
+training of her children.
+
+Princess Caroline herself draws an unattractive picture of her
+home-life, in answer to Lady Charlotte Campbell's question, "Were you
+sorry to leave Brunswick?" "Not at all," was the answer; "I was sick
+tired of it, though I was sorry to leave my fader. I loved my fader
+dearly, better than any oder person. But dere were some unlucky tings in
+our Court which made my position difficult. My fader was most entirely
+attached to a lady for thirty years, who was in fact his mistress. She
+was the beautifullest creature and the cleverest, but, though my fader
+continued to pay my moder all possible respect, my poor moder could not
+suffer this attachment. And de consequence was, I did not know what to
+do between them; when I was civil to one, I was scolded by the other,
+and was very tired of being shuttlecock between them."
+
+But in spite of these unfortunate home conditions Caroline appears to
+have spent a fairly happy girlhood, thanks to her exuberant spirits; and
+such faults as she developed were largely due to the lack of parental
+care, which left her training to servants. Thus she grew up with quite a
+shocking disregard of conventions, running wild like a young filly, and
+finding her pleasure and her companions in undesirable directions.
+Strange stories are told of her girlish love affairs, which seem to have
+been indiscreet if nothing worse, while her beauty drew to her many a
+high-placed wooer, including the Prince of Orange and Prince George of
+Darmstadt, to all of whom she seems to have turned a cold shoulder.
+
+But the wilful Princess was not to be left mistress of her own destiny.
+One November day, in 1794, Lord Malmesbury arrived at the Brunswick
+Court to demand her hand for the Prince of Wales, whom his burden of
+debts and the necessity of providing an heir to the throne of England
+were at last driving reluctantly to the altar. And thus a new and
+dazzling future opened for her. To her parents nothing could have been
+more welcome than this prospect of a crown for their daughter; while to
+her it offered a release from a life that had become odious.
+
+"The Princess Caroline much embarrassed on my first being presented to
+her," Malmesbury enters in his diary--"pretty face, not expressive of
+softness--her figure not graceful, fine eyes, good hands, tolerable
+teeth, fair hair and light eyebrows, good bust, short, with what the
+French call 'des épaules impertinentes,' vastly happy with her future
+expectations."
+
+Such were Malmesbury's first impressions of the future Queen of England,
+whom it was his duty to prepare for her exalted station--a duty which he
+seems to have taken very seriously, even to the regulating of her
+toilette and her manners. Thus, a few days after setting eyes on her,
+his diary records: "She _will_ call ladies whom she meets for the first
+time 'Mon coeur, ma chère, ma petite,' and I am obliged to rebuke and
+correct her." He lectures her on her undignified habit of whispering and
+giggling, and impresses on her the necessity of greater care in her
+attire, on more constant and thorough ablution, more frequent changes of
+linen, the care of her teeth, and so on--all of which admonitions she
+seems to have taken in excellent part, with demure promises of
+amendment, until he is impelled to write, "Princess Caroline improves
+very much on a closer acquaintance--cheerful and loves laughing. If she
+can get rid of her gossiping habit she will do very well."
+
+Thus a few months passed at the Brunswick Court. The ceremonial of
+betrothal took place in December--"Princess Caroline much affected, but
+replies distinctly and well"; the marriage-contract was signed, and
+finally on 28th March the Princess embarked for England on her journey
+to the unseen husband whose good-looks and splendour have filled her
+with such high expectations. That she had not yet learnt discretion, in
+spite of all Malmesbury's homilies, is proved by the fact that she spent
+the night on board in walking up and down the deck in the company of a
+handsome young naval officer, conduct which naturally gave cause for
+observation and suspicion in the affianced bride of the future King of
+England.
+
+It was well, perhaps, that she had snatched these few hours of innocent
+pleasure: for her first meeting with her future husband was well
+calculated to scatter all her rosy dreams. Arrived at last at St James's
+Palace, "I immediately notified the arrival to the King and Prince of
+Wales," says Malmesbury; "the last came immediately. I accordingly
+introduced the Princess Caroline to him. She very properly attempted to
+kneel to him. He raised her gracefully enough, and embraced her, said
+barely one word, turned round and retired to a distant part of the
+apartment, and calling to me said: 'Harris, I am not well; pray get me a
+glass of brandy.' I said, 'Sir, had you not better have a glass of
+water?' Upon which he, much out of humour, said with an oath: 'No; I
+will go directly to the Queen,' and away he went. The Princess, left
+during this short moment alone, was in a state of astonishment; and, on
+my joining her, said, '_Mon Dieu_, is the Prince always like that? I
+find him very fat, and not at all as handsome as his portrait.'"
+
+Such was the Princess's welcome to the arms of her handsome husband and
+to the Court over which she hoped to reign as Queen; nor did she receive
+much warmer hospitality from the Prince's family. The Queen, who had
+designed a very different bride for her eldest son, received her with
+scarcely disguised enmity, while the King, although, as he afterwards
+proved, kindly disposed towards her, treated her at first with an
+amiable indifference. And certainly her attitude seems to have been
+calculated to create an unfavourable impression on her new relatives and
+on the Court generally.
+
+At the banquet which followed her reception, Malmesbury says, "I was far
+from satisfied with the Princess's behaviour. It was flippant, rattling,
+affecting raillery and wit, and throwing out coarse, vulgar hints about
+Lady----, who was present. The Prince was evidently disgusted, and this
+unfortunate dinner fixed his dislike, which, when left to herself, the
+Princess had not the talent to remove; but by still observing the same
+giddy manners and attempts at cleverness and coarse sarcasm, increased
+it till it became positive hatred."
+
+"What," as Thackeray asks, "could be expected from a wedding which had
+such a beginning--from such a bridegroom and such a bride? Malmesbury
+tells us how the Prince reeled into the Chapel Royal to be married on
+the evening of Wednesday, the 8th of April; and how he hiccuped out his
+vows of fidelity." "My brother," John, Duke of Bedford, records, "was
+one of the two unmarried dukes who supported the Prince at the ceremony,
+and he had need of his support; for my brother told me the Prince was so
+drunk that he could scarcely support himself from falling. He told my
+brother that he had drunk several glasses of brandy to enable him to go
+through the ceremony. There is no doubt that it was a _compulsory_
+marriage."
+
+With such an overture, we are not surprised to learn that the Royal
+bridegroom spent his wedding-night in a state of stupor on the floor of
+his bedroom; or that at dawn, when he had slept off the effects of his
+debauch, "pages heard cries proceeding from the nuptial chamber, and
+shortly afterwards saw the bridegroom rush out violently."
+
+Nor, we may be sure, was the Prince's undisguised hatred of his bride in
+any way mitigated by the stories which Lady Jersey and others of hex
+rivals poured into his willing ears--stories of her attachment to a
+young German Prince whom she was not allowed to marry; of a mysterious
+illness, followed by a few weeks' retreat; of that midnight promenade
+with the young naval officer; of assignations with Major Toebingen, the
+handsomest soldier in Europe, who so proudly wore the amethyst tie-pin
+she had presented to him--these and many another story which reflected
+none too well on her reputation before he had set eyes on her. But it
+needed no such whispered scandal to strengthen his hatred of a bride who
+personally repelled him, and who had been forced on him at a time when
+his heart was fully engaged with his lawful wedded wife, Mrs
+Fitzherbert, when it was not straying to Lady Jersey, to "Perdita" or
+others of his legion of lights-o'-love.
+
+From the first day the ill-fated union was doomed. One violent scene
+succeeded another, until, before she had been two months a wife, the
+Prince declared that he would no longer live with her. He would only
+wait until her child was born; then he would formally and finally leave
+her. Thus, three months after the birth of the Princess Charlotte, the
+deed of separation was signed, and Caroline was at last free to escape
+from a Court which she had grown to detest, with good reason, and from a
+husband whose brutalities and infidelities filled her with loathing.
+
+She carried with her, however, this consolation, that the "great, hearty
+people of England loved and pitied her." "God bless you! we will bring
+your husband back to you," was among the many cries that greeted her as
+she left the palace on her way to exile. But, to quote Thackeray again,
+"they could not bring that husband back; they could not cleanse that
+selfish heart. Was hers the only one he had wounded? Steeped in
+selfishness, impotent for faithful attachment and manly enduring
+love--had it not survived remorse, was it not accustomed to desertion?"
+
+For a time the outcast Princess, with her infant daughter, led a retired
+life amid the peace and beauty of Blackheath, where she lived as simply
+as any bourgeoise, playing the "lady bountiful" to the poor among her
+neighbours. Her chief pleasure seems to have been to surround herself
+with cottage babies, converting Montague House into a "positive nursery,
+littered up with cradles, swaddling-bands, feeding bottles, and other
+things of the kind."
+
+But even to this rustic retirement watchful eyes and slanderous tongues
+followed her; and it was not long before stories were passing from mouth
+to mouth in the Court of strange doings at Blackheath. The Princess, it
+was said, had become very intimate with Sir John Douglas and his lady,
+her near neighbours, and more especially with Sydney Smith, a
+good-looking naval captain, who shared the Douglas home, a man,
+moreover, with whom she had had suspicious relations at her father's
+Court many years earlier. It was rumoured that Captain Smith was a
+frequent and too welcome guest at Montague House, at hours when discreet
+ladies are not in the habit of receiving their male friends. Nor was the
+handsome captain the only friend thus unconventionally entertained.
+There was another good-looking naval officer, a Captain Manby, and also
+Sir Thomas Lawrence, the famous painter, both of whom were admitted to a
+suspicious intimacy with the Princess of Wales.
+
+These rumours, sufficiently disquieting in themselves, were followed by
+stories of the concealed birth of a child, who had come mysteriously to
+swell the numbers of the Princess's protégés of the crèche. Even King
+George, whose sympathy with his heir's ill-used wife was a matter of
+common knowledge, could not overlook a charge so grave as this. It must
+be investigated in the interests of the State, as well as of his
+family's honour; and, by his orders, a Commission of Peers was appointed
+to examine into the matter and ascertain the truth.
+
+The inquiry--the "Delicate Investigation" as it was appropriately
+called--opened in June, 1806, and witness after witness, from the
+Douglases to Robert Bidgood, a groom, gave evidence which more or less
+supported the charges of infidelity and concealment. The result of the
+investigation, however, was a verdict of acquittal, the Commissioners
+reporting that the Princess, although innocent, had been guilty of very
+indiscreet conduct--and this verdict the Privy Council confirmed.
+
+For the Princess it was a triumphant vindication, which was hailed with
+acclamation throughout the country. Even the Royal family showed their
+satisfaction by formal visits of congratulation to the Princess, from
+the King himself to the Duke of Cumberland who conducted his
+sister-in-law on a visit to the Court.
+
+But the days of Blackheath and the amateur nursery were at an end. The
+Princess returned to London, and found a more suitable home in
+Kensington Palace for some years, where she held her Court in rivalry of
+that of her husband at Carlton House. Here she was subjected to every
+affront and slight by the Prince and his set that the ingenuity of
+hatred could devise, and to crown her humiliation and isolation, her
+daughter Charlotte was taken from her and forbidden even to recognise
+her when their carriages passed in the street or park.
+
+Can we wonder that, under such remorseless persecutions, the Princess
+became more and more defiant; that she gave herself up to a life of
+recklessness and extravagance; that, more and more isolated from her own
+world, she sought her pleasure and her companions in undesirable
+quarters, finding her chief intimates in a family of Italian musicians;
+or that finally, heart-broken and despairing, she determined once for
+all to shake off the dust of a land that had treated her so cruelly?
+
+In August, 1814, with the approval of King and Parliament, the Princess
+left England to begin a career of amazing adventures and indiscrétions,
+the story of which is one of the most remarkable in history.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS--_continued_
+
+When Caroline, Princess of Wales, shook the dust of England off her feet
+one August day in the year 1814, it was only natural that her steps
+should first turn towards the Brunswick home which held for her at least
+a few happy memories, and where she hoped to find in sympathy and old
+associations some salve for her wounded heart.
+
+But the fever of restlessness was in her blood--the restlessness which
+was to make her a wanderer over the face of the earth for half a dozen
+years. The peace and solace she had looked for in Brunswick eluded her;
+and before many days had passed she was on her way through Switzerland
+to the sunny skies of Italy, where she could perhaps find in distraction
+and pleasure the anodyne which a life of retirement denied her. She was
+full of rebellion against fate, of hatred against her husband and his
+country which had treated her with such unmerited cruelty. She would
+defy fate; she would put a whole continent between herself and the
+nightmare life she had left behind, she hoped for ever. She would pursue
+and find pleasure at whatever cost.
+
+In September, within five weeks of leaving England, we find her at
+Geneva, installed in a suite of rooms next to those occupied by Marie
+Louise, late Empress of France, a fugitive and exile like herself, and
+animated by the same spirit of reckless revolt against destiny--Marie
+Louise, we read, "making excursions like a lunatic on foot and on
+horseback, never even seeming to dream of making people remember that,
+before she became mixed up with a Corsican adventurer, she was an
+Archduchess"; the Princess of Wales, equally careless of her dignity and
+position, finding her pleasure in questionable company.
+
+"From the inn where she was stopping she heard music, and, quite
+unaccompanied, immediately entered a neighbouring house and disappeared
+in the medley of dancers." A few days later, at Lausanne, "she learned
+that a little ball was in progress at a house opposite the 'Golden
+Lion,' and she asked for an invitation. After dancing with everybody and
+anybody, she finished up by dancing a Savoyard dance, called a
+_fricassée_, with a nobody. Madame de Corsal, who blushed and wept for
+the rest of the company, declares that it has made her ill, and that she
+feels that the honour of England has been compromised." Thus early did
+Caroline begin that career of indiscretion, to call it by no worse name,
+which made of her six years' exile "a long suicide of her reputation."
+
+In October we find the Princess entering Milan, with her retinue of
+ladies-in-waiting, chamberlains, equerry, page, courier, and coachman,
+and with William Austin for companion--a boy, now about thirteen, whom
+she treated as her son, and who was believed by many to be the child of
+her imprudence at Blackheath, although the Commission of the "Delicate
+Investigation" had pronounced that he was son of a poor woman at
+Deptford. At Milan, as indeed wherever she wandered in Italy, the
+"vagabond Princess" was received as a Queen. Count di Bellegarde, the
+Austrian Governor, was the first to pay homage to her; at the Scala
+Theatre, the same evening, her entry was greeted with thunders of
+applause, and whenever she appeared in the Milan streets it was to an
+accompaniment of doffed hats and cheers.
+
+One of her first visits was to the studio of Giuseppe Bossi, the famous
+and handsome artist, whom she requested to paint her portrait. "On
+Thursday," Bossi records, "I sketched her successfully in the character
+of a Muse; then on Friday she came to show me her arms, of which she
+was, not without reason, decidedly vain--she is a gay and whimsical
+woman, she seems to have a good heart; at times she is ennuyée through
+lack of occupation." On one occasion when she met in the studio some
+French ladies, two of whom had been mistresses of the King of
+Westphalia, the poor artist was driven to distraction by the chatter,
+the singing, and dancing, in which the Princess especially displayed her
+agility, until, as he pathetically says, "the house seemed possessed of
+the devil, and you can imagine with what kind of ease it was possible
+for me to work."
+
+Before leaving Milan the Princess gave a grand banquet to Bellegarde
+and a number of the principal men of the city--a feast which was to have
+very important and serious consequences, for it was at this banquet that
+General Pino, one of her guests, introduced to Caroline a new courier, a
+man who, though she little dreamt it at the time, was destined to play a
+very baleful part in her life.
+
+This new courier was a tall and strikingly handsome man, who had seen
+service in the Italian army, until a duel, in which he killed a superior
+officer, compelled him to leave it in disgrace. At the time he entered
+the Princess's service he was a needy adventurer, whose scheming brain
+and utter lack of principle were in the market for the highest bidder.
+"He is," said Baron Ompteda, "a sort of Apollo, of a superb and
+commanding appearance, more than six feet high; his physical beauty
+attracts all eyes. This man is called Pergami; he belongs to Milan, and
+has entered the Princess's service. The Princess," he significantly
+adds, "is shunned by all the English people of rank; her behaviour has
+created the most marked scandal."
+
+Such was the man with whose life that of the Princess of Wales was to be
+so intimately and disastrously linked, and whose relations with her were
+to be displayed to a shocked world but a few years later. It was indeed
+an evil fate that brought this "superb Apollo" of the crafty brain and
+conscienceless ambition into the life of the Princess at the high tide
+of her revolt against the world and its conventions.
+
+When Caroline and her retinue set out from Milan for Tuscany it was in
+the wake of Pergami, who had ridden ahead to discharge his duties as
+_avant courier_; but before Rome was reached his intimacy and
+familiarity with his mistress were already the subject of whispered
+comments and shrugged shoulders. At a ball given in her honour at Rome
+by the banker Tortonia, the Princess shocked even the least prudish by
+the abandon of her dancing and the tenuity of her costume, which, we are
+told, consisted of "a single embroidered garment, fastened beneath the
+bosom, without the shadow of a corset and without sleeves." And at
+Naples, where King Joachim Murat gave her a regal reception, with a
+sequel of fêtes and gala-performances in honour of the wife of the
+Regent of England, she attended a rout, at the Teatro San Carlo, so
+lightly attired "that many who saw her at her first entrance looked her
+up and down, and, not recognising her, or pretending not to recognise
+her, began to mutter disapprobation to such an extent that she was
+compelled to withdraw.... The English residents soon let her understand,
+by ceasing to frequent her palace, that even at Naples there were
+certain laws of dress which could not be trampled underfoot in this
+hoydenish manner."
+
+While Caroline was thus defying convention and even decency, watchful
+eyes were following her everywhere. A body of secret police, whose
+headquarters were at Milan, was noting every indiscretion; and every
+week brought fresh and damaging reports to England, where they were
+eagerly welcomed by the Regent and his satellites. And while the
+Princess was thus playing unconsciously, or recklessly, into the hands
+of the enemy, Pergami was daily making his footing in her favour more
+secure. Before Caroline left Naples he had been promoted from courier to
+equerry, and in this more exalted and privileged rôle was always at her
+side. So marked, in fact, was the intimacy even at this early stage,
+that the Princess's retinue, one after another, and on one flimsy
+pretext or another, deserted her in disgust, each vacancy, as it
+occurred, being filled by one of Pergami's relatives--his brother, his
+daughter, his sister-in-law (the Countess Oidi), and others, until
+Caroline was soon surrounded by members of the ex-courier's family.
+
+From Naples she wandered to Genoa, and from Genoa to Milan and Venice,
+received regally everywhere by the Italians and shunned by the English
+residents. From Venice she drifted to Lake Como, with whose beauties she
+was so charmed that she decided to make her home there, purchasing the
+Villa del Garrovo for one hundred and fifty thousand francs, and setting
+the builders to work to make it a still more splendid home for a future
+Queen of England. But even to the lonely isolation of the Italian lakes
+the eyes of her husband's secret agents pursued her, spying on her every
+movement--"uncertain shadows gliding in the twilight along the paths and
+between the hedges, and even in the cellars and attics of the
+villa"--until the shadowy presences filled her with such terror and
+unrest that she sought to escape them by a long tour in the East.
+
+Thus it was that in November, 1815, the Princess and her Pergami
+household set forth on their journey to Sicily, Tunis, Athens, the
+cities of the East and Jerusalem, the strange story of which was to be
+unfolded to the world five years later. How intimate the Princess and
+her handsome, stalwart courier had by this time become was illustrated
+by the Attorney-General in his opening speech at her memorable trial.
+"One day, after dinner, when the Princess's servants had withdrawn, a
+waiter at the hotel, Gran Brettagna, saw the Princess put a golden
+necklace round Pergami's neck. Pergami took it off again and put it
+jestingly on the neck of the Princess, who in her turn once more removed
+it and put it again round Pergami's neck."
+
+As early as August in this year Pergami had his appointed place at the
+Princess's table, and his room communicating with hers, and on the
+various voyages of the Eastern tour there was abundant evidence to prove
+"the habit which the Princess had of sleeping under one and the same
+awning with Pergami."
+
+But it is as impossible in the limits of space to follow Caroline and
+her handsome cavalier through every stage of these Eastern wanderings,
+as it is unnecessary to describe in detail the evidence of intimacy so
+lavishly provided by the witnesses for the prosecution at the
+trial--evidence much of which was doubtless as false as it was venal.
+That the Princess, however, was infatuated by her cavalier, and that she
+was in the highest degree indiscreet in her relations with him, seems
+abundantly clear, whatever the precise degree of actual guilt may have
+been.
+
+Pergami had now been promoted from equerry to Grand Chamberlain to Her
+Royal Highness, and as further evidence of her favour, she bought for
+him in Sicily an estate which conferred on its owner the title of Baron
+della Francina. At Malta she procured for him a knighthood of that
+island's famous order; at Jerusalem she secured his nomination as Knight
+of the Holy Sepulchre; and, to crown her favours, she herself instituted
+the Order of St Caroline, with Pergami for Grand Master. Behold now our
+ex-courier and adventurer in all his new glory as Grand Chamberlain and
+lover of a future Queen of England, as Baron della Francina, Knight of
+two Orders and Grand Master of a third, while every post of profit in
+that vagrant Court was held by some member of his family!
+
+The Eastern tour ended, which had ranged from Algiers and Egypt to
+Constantinople and Jerusalem, and throughout which she had progressed
+and been received as a Queen, Caroline settled down for a time in her
+now restored villa on Lake Como, celebrating her return by lavish
+charities to her poor neighbours, and by popular fêtes and balls, in one
+of which "she danced as Columbine, wearing her lover's ear-rings, whilst
+Pergami, dressed as harlequin and wearing her ear-rings, supported her."
+
+But even here she was to find no peace from her husband's spies, whose
+evidence, confirmed on oath by a score of witnesses, was being
+accumulated in London against the longed-for day of reckoning. And it
+was not long before Caroline and her Grand Chamberlain were on their
+wanderings again--this time to the Tyrol, to Austria, and through
+Northern Italy, always inseparable and everywhere setting the tongue of
+scandal wagging by their indiscreet intimacy. Even the tragic death in
+childbirth of her only daughter, the Princess Charlotte, which put all
+England in mourning, seemed powerless to check her career of folly. It
+is true that, on hearing of it, she fell into a faint and afterwards
+into a kind of protracted lethargy, but within a few weeks she had flung
+herself again into her life of pleasure-chasing and reckless disregard
+of convention.
+
+But matters were now hurrying fast to their tragic climax. For some time
+the life of George III. had been flickering to its close. Any day might
+bring news that the end had come, and that the Princess was a Queen. And
+for some time Caroline had been bracing herself to face this crisis in
+her life and to pit herself against her enemies in a grim struggle for a
+crown, the title to which her years of folly (for such at the best they
+had been) had so gravely endangered. Over the remainder of her vagrant
+life, with its restless flittings, and its indiscretions, marked by
+spying eyes, we must pass to that February morning in 1820 when, to
+quote a historian, "the Princess had scarcely reached her hotel (at
+Florence) when her faithful major-domo, John Jacob Sicard, appeared
+before her, accompanied by two noblemen, and in a voice full of emotion
+announced, 'You are Queen.'"
+
+The fateful hour had at last arrived when Caroline must either renounce
+her new Queendom or present a bold front to her enemies and claim the
+crown that was hers. After a few indecisive days, spent in Rome, where
+news reached her that the King had given orders that her name should be
+excluded from the Prayer Book, her wavering resolution took a definite
+and determined shape. She would go to London and face the storm which
+she knew her coming would bring on her head.
+
+At Paris she was met by Lord Hutchinson with a promise of an increase of
+her yearly allowance to fifty thousand pounds, on condition that she
+renounced her claim to the title of Queen, and consented never to put
+foot again in England--an offer to which she gave a prompt and scornful
+refusal; and on the afternoon of 5th June she reached Dover, greeted by
+enthusiastic cheers and shouts of "God save Queen Caroline!" by the
+fluttering of flags, and the jubilant clanging of church-bells. The
+wanderer had come back to the land of her sorrow, to find herself
+welcomed with open arms by the subjects of the King whose brutality had
+driven her to exile and to shame.
+
+The story of the trial which so soon followed her arrival has too
+enduring a place in our history to call for a detailed description--the
+trial in which all the weight of the Crown and the testimony of a small
+army of suborned witnesses--"a troupe of comedians in the pay of
+malevolence," to quote Brougham--were arrayed against her; and in which
+she had so doughty a champion in Brougham, and such solace and support
+in the sympathy of all England. We know the fate of that Bill of Pains
+and Penalties, which charged her with having permitted a shameful
+intimacy with one Bartolomeo Pergami, and provided as penalty that she
+should be deprived of the title and privilege of Queen, and that her
+marriage to King George IV. should be for ever dissolved and
+annulled--how it was forced through the House of Lords with a
+diminishing majority, and finally withdrawn. And we know, too, the
+outburst of almost delirious delight that swept from end to end of
+England at the virtual acquittal of the persecuted Caroline. "The
+generous exultation of the people was," to quote a contemporary, "beyond
+all description. It was a conflagration of hearts."
+
+We also recall that pathetic scene when Caroline presented herself at
+the door of Westminster Abbey to demand admission, on the day of her
+husband's coronation, to be received by the frigid words, "We have no
+instructions to allow you to pass"; and we can see her as, "humiliated,
+confounded, and with tears in her eyes," she returned sadly to her
+carriage, the heart crushed within her. Less than three weeks later,
+seized by a grave and mysterious illness, she laid down for ever the
+burden of her sorrows, leaving instructions that her tomb should bear
+the words:
+
+CAROLINE
+THE INJURED QUEEN OF ENGLAND.
+
+As for Pergami, the idol with the feet of clay, who had clouded her last
+years in tragedy, he survived for twenty years more to enjoy his honours
+and his ill-gotten gold; while William Austin, who had masqueraded as a
+Prince and called Caroline "mother," ended his days, while still a young
+man, in a madhouse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+THE LOVE-AFFAIRS OF A REGENT
+
+When Louis XIV. laid down, one September day in the year 1715, the crown
+which he had worn with such splendour for more than seventy years, his
+sceptre fell into the hands of his nephew Philippe, Duc d'Orléans, who
+for eight years ruled France as Regent, and as guardian of the
+child-King, the fifteenth Louis.
+
+Seldom in the world's history has a reign, so splendid as that of the
+Sun-King, closed in such darkness and tragedy. The disastrous war of the
+Spanish Succession had drained France of her strength and her gold. She
+lay crushed under a mountain of debt--ten thousand million francs; she
+was reduced to the lowest depths of wretchedness, ruin, and disorder,
+and it was at this crisis in her life as a nation that fate placed a
+child of four on her throne, and gave the reins of power into the hands
+of the most dissolute man in Europe.
+
+Not that Philippe of Orleans lacked many of the qualities that go to the
+making of a ruler and a man. He had proved himself, in Italy and in
+Spain, one of the bravest of his country's soldiers, and an able,
+far-seeing leader of armies; and he had, as his Regency proved, no mean
+gifts of statesmanship. But his kingly qualities were marred by the
+taint of birth and early environment.
+
+Such good qualities as he had he no doubt drew from his mother, the
+capable, austere, high-minded Elizabeth of Bavaria, who to her last day
+was the one good influence in his life. To his father, Louis XIV.'s
+younger brother, who is said to have been son of Cardinal Mazarin, Anne
+of Austria's lover, and who was the most debased man of his time in all
+France, he just as surely owed the bias of sensuality to which he
+chiefly owes his place in memory.
+
+And not only was he thus handicapped by his birth; he had for tutor that
+arch-scoundrel Dubois--the "grovelling insect" who rarely opened his
+mouth without uttering a blasphemy or indecency, and who initiated his
+charge, while still a boy, into every base form of so-called pleasure.
+
+Such was the man who, amid the ruins of his country, inaugurated in
+France an era of licentiousness such as she had never known--an
+incomprehensible mass of contradictions--a kingly presence with the soul
+of a Caliban, statesman and sinner, high-minded and low-living, spending
+his days as a sovereign, a rôle which he played to perfection, and his
+nights as a sot and a sensualist.
+
+It was doubtless Dubois who was mostly responsible for the baseness in
+the Regent's character--Dubois who had taught him a contempt for
+religion and morality, the cynical view of life which makes the pleasure
+of the moment the only thing worth pursuing, at whatever cost; and who
+had impressed indelibly on his mind that no woman is virtuous and that
+men are knaves. And there was never any lack of men to continue Dubois'
+teaching. He gathered round him the most dissolute gallants in France,
+in whose company he gave the rein to his most vicious appetites. His
+"roués" he dubbed them, a title which aptly described them; although
+they affected to give it a very different interpretation. They were the
+Regent's roués, they said, no doubt with the tongue in the cheek,
+because they were so devoted to him that they were ready, in his
+defence, to be broken on the wheel (_la roue_)!
+
+Each of these boon-comrades was a past-master in the arts of
+dissipation, and each was also among the most brilliant men of his day.
+The Chevalier de Simiane was famous alike for his drinking powers and
+his gift of graceful verse; De Fargy was a polished wit, and the
+handsomest man in France, with an unrivalled reputation for gallantry;
+the Comte de Nocé was the Regent's most intimate friend from
+boyhood--brother-in-law he called him, since they had not only tastes
+but even mistresses in common. Then there were the Marquis de la Fare,
+Captain of Guards and _bon enfant_; the Marquis de Broglio, the biggest
+debauchee in France, the Marquis de Canillac, the Duc de Brancas, and
+many another--all famous (or infamous) for some pet vice, and all the
+best of boon-companions for the pleasure-loving Regent.
+
+Strange tales are told of the orgies of this select band which the
+Regent gathered around him--orgies which shocked even the France of the
+eighteenth century, when she was the acknowledged leader in licence. At
+six o'clock every evening Philippe's kingship ended for the day. He had
+had enough--more than enough--of State and ceremonial, of interviewing
+ambassadors, and of the flatteries of Princes and the obsequious homage
+of courtiers. Pleasure called him away from the boredom of empire; and
+at the stroke of six we find him retiring to the company of his
+mistresses and his roués to feast and drink and gamble until dawn broke
+on the revelry--his laugh the loudest, his wit the most dazzling, his
+stories the most piquant, keeping the table in a roar with his
+infectious gaiety. He was Regent no longer; he was simply a _bon
+camarade_, as ready to exchange familiarities with a "lady of the
+ballet" as to lead the laughter at a joke at his own expense.
+
+At nine o'clock, when the fun had waxed furious and wine had set the
+slowest tongue wagging and every eye a-sparkle, other guests streamed in
+to join the orgy--the most beautiful ladies of the Court, from the
+Duchesse de Gesores and Madame de Mouchy to the Regent's own daughter,
+the Duchesse de Berry, who, young as she was, had little to learn of the
+arts of dissipation. And in the wake of these high-born women would
+follow laughing, bright-eyed troupes of dancing and chorus-girls from
+the theatres with an escort of the cleverest actors of Paris, to join
+the Regent's merry throng.
+
+The champagne now flowed in rivers; the servants were sent away; the
+doors were locked and the fun grew riotous; ceremony had no place there;
+rank and social distinctions were forgotten. Countesses flirted with
+comedians; Princes made love to ballet-girls and duchesses alike. The
+leader of the moment was the man or woman who could sing the most daring
+song, tell the most piquant story, or play the most audacious practical
+joke, even on the Regent himself. Sometimes, we are told, the lights
+would be extinguished, and the orgy continued under the cover of
+darkness, until the Regent suddenly opened a cupboard, in which lights
+were concealed--to an outburst of shrieks of laughter at the scenes
+revealed.
+
+Thus the mad night hours passed until dawn came to bring the revels to a
+close; or until the Regent would sally forth with a few chosen comrades
+on a midnight ramble to other haunts of pleasure in the capital--the
+lower the better. Such was the way in which Philippe of Orleans, Regent
+of France, spent his nights. A few hours after the carouse had ended he
+would resume his sceptre, as austere and dignified a ruler as you would
+find in Europe.
+
+It must not be imagined that Philippe was the only Royal personage who
+thus set a scandalous example to France. There was, in fact, scarcely a
+Prince or Princess of the Blood Royal whose love affairs were not
+conducted flagrantly in the eyes of the world, from the Dowager Duchesse
+de Bourbon, who lavished her favours on the Scotch financier, John Law,
+of Lauriston, to the Princesse de Conte, who mingled her piety with a
+marked partiality for her nephew, Le Kallière.
+
+As for the Regent's own daughters, from the Duchesse de Berry, to
+Louise, Queen of Spain, each has left behind her a record almost as
+scandalous as that of her father. It was, in fact, an era of corruption
+in high places, when, in the reaction that followed the dismal and
+decorous last years of Louis XIV.'s reign, Pleasure rose phoenix-like
+from the ashes of ruin and flaunted herself unashamed in every guise
+with which vice could deck her.
+
+It must be said for the Regent, corrupt as he was, that he never abused
+his position and his power in the pursuit of beauty. His mistresses
+flocked to him from every rank of life, from the stage to the highest
+Court circles, but remained no longer than inclination dictated. And the
+fascination is not far to seek, for Philippe d'Orléans was of the men
+who find easy conquests in the field of love. He was one of the
+handsomest men in all France; and to his good-looks and his reputation
+for bravery he added a manner of rare grace and courtliness, a supple
+tongue, and that strange magnetic power which few women could resist.
+
+No King ever boasted a greater or more varied list of favourites, in
+which actresses and duchesses vied with each other for his smiles, in a
+rivalry which seems to have been singularly free from petty jealousy.
+Among the beauties of the Court we find the Duchesse de Fedari, the
+Duchesse de Gesores, the Comtesse de Sabran at one extreme; and
+actresses like Emilie, Desmarre, and La Souris at the other, pretty
+butterflies of the footlights who appealed to the Regent no more than
+Madame d'Averne, the gifted pet of France's wits and literary men, the
+most charming "blue-stocking" of her day. And all, without
+exception--duchesses, countesses, and actresses--were as ready to give
+their love to Philippe, the man, as to the Duc d'Orléans, Regent of
+France.
+
+Even in his relations with these ministers of pleasure, the Regent's
+better qualities often exhibit themselves agreeably. To the pretty
+actress, Emilie, whose heart was so completely his, he always acted with
+a characteristic generosity and forbearance; and her conduct is by no
+means less pleasing than his. Once, we are told, when he expressed a
+wish to give her a pair of diamond ear-rings at a cost of fifteen
+thousand francs, she demurred at accepting so valuable a present. "If
+you must be so generous," she pleaded, "please don't give me the
+ear-rings, which are much too grand for such as me. Give me, instead,
+ten thousand francs, so that I may buy a small house to which I can
+retire when you no longer love me as you now do."
+
+Emilie had scarcely returned home, however, when a Court official
+appeared with a package containing, not ten thousand, but twenty-five
+thousand francs, which her lover insisted on her keeping; and when she
+returned fifteen thousand francs, he promptly sent them back again,
+declaring that he would be very angry if she refused again to accept
+them.
+
+His love, indeed, for Emilie seems to have been as pure and deep as any
+of which he was capable. It was no fleeting passion, but an affection
+based on a sincere respect for her character and mental gifts. So
+highly, indeed, did he think of her judgment that she became his most
+trusted counsellor. She sat by his side when he received ambassadors;
+he consulted her on difficult problems of State; and it was her advice
+that he often followed in preference to the wisdom of all his ministers;
+for, as he said to Dubois, "Emilie has an excellent brain; she always
+gives me the best counsel."
+
+When at last he had to part from the modest and accomplished actress it
+was under circumstances which speak well for his generosity. A former
+lover, the Marquis de Fimarcon, on his return from fighting in Spain,
+sought Emilie out, and, blazing with jealousy, insisted that she should
+leave the Regent and return to his protection. He vowed that, if she
+refused, he would murder her; and when, in her alarm, she sought refuge
+in a convent at Charenton, he threatened to burn the nuns alive in their
+cells unless they restored her to him. Thus it was that, rather than
+allow Emilie to run any risks from her revengeful and brutal lover, the
+Regent relinquished his claim to her; and only when Fimarcon's continued
+brutality at last made intervention necessary, did he order the bully to
+be arrested and consigned to the prison of Fort l'Évêque.
+
+It is, however, in the story of Mademoiselle Aissé, the Circassian
+slave, that we find the best illustration of the chivalry which underlay
+the Regent's passion for women, and which he never forgot in his wildest
+excesses. This story, one of the most touching in French history, opens
+in the year 1698, when a band of Turkish soldiers returned to
+Constantinople from a raid in the Caucasus, bringing with them, among
+many other captives, a beautiful child of four years, said to be the
+daughter of a King. So lovely was the little Circassian fairy that when
+the Comte de Feriol, France's Ambassador to Turkey, set eyes on her, he
+decided to purchase her; and she became his property in exchange for
+fifteen hundred livres.
+
+That she might have every advantage of training to fit her for his
+seraglio in later years, the child was sent to Paris, to the home of the
+Ambassador's brother, President de Feriol, where she grew to beautiful
+girlhood as a member of the family, as fair a flower as ever was
+transplanted to French soil. Thus she passed the next thirteen years of
+her young life, charming all by her sweetness of disposition, as she won
+the homage of all by her remarkable beauty and grace.
+
+Such was Ayesha, or Aissé, the Circassian maid, when at last her "owner"
+returned to Paris to fall under the spell of her radiant beauty and to
+claim her as his chattel, bought with good gold and trained at his cost
+to adorn his harem. In vain did Aissé weep and plead to be spared a fate
+from which every fibre of her being shrank in horror. Her "master" was
+inexorable. "When I bought you," he said, "it was my intention to make
+you my daughter or my mistress. I now intend that you shall become both
+the one and the other." Friendless and helpless, she was obliged to
+yield; and for six years she had to submit to the endearments of her
+protector, a man more than old enough to be her father, until his death
+brought her release.
+
+At twenty-four, more lovely than ever, combining the beauty of the
+Circassian with the graces of France, Aissé had now every right to look
+forward at least to such happiness as was possible to a stranger in a
+strange land. But no sooner was one danger to her peace removed than
+another sprang up to take its place. The rumour of her beauty and her
+sweetness had come to the ears of the Regent, and strong forces were at
+work to bring her to his arms. Madame de Tencin was the leader in this
+base conspiracy, with the power of the Romish Church at her back; for
+with the fair Circassian high in the Regent's favour and a pliant tool
+in their hands, the Jesuits' influence at Court would be greatly
+strengthened. Dubois was won over to the unholy alliance; and the Due's
+_maîtresse en titre_ was bribed, not only to withdraw all opposition to
+her proposed rival, but to arrange a meeting between the Regent and the
+victim.
+
+Success seemed to be assured. Mademoiselle Aissé was to exchange slavery
+to her late owner for an equally odious place in the harem of the ruler
+of France. Her tears and entreaties were all in vain; when she begged on
+her knees to be allowed to retire to a convent Madame de Feriol turned
+her back on her. Her only hope of rescue now lay in the Regent himself;
+and to him she pleaded her cause with such pathetic eloquence that he
+not only allowed her to depart in peace, but with words of sympathy and
+promises of his protection in the pure and noble sense of the word.
+
+Thus by the chivalry of the most dissolute man of his age the Circassian
+slave-girl was rescued from a life which to her would have been worse
+than death--to spend her remaining years, happy in the love of an honest
+man, the Chevalier d'Aydie, until death claimed her while she still
+possessed the beauty which had been at once her glory and her inevitable
+shame.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The close of the Regent's mis-spent life came with tragic suddenness.
+Worn out with excesses, while still young in years, his doctors had
+warned him that death might come to him any day; but with the
+light-heartedness that was his to the last, he laughed at their gloomy
+forebodings and refused to take the least precautions to safeguard his
+health. Two days before the end came he declined point-blank to be bled
+in order to avert a threatened attack of apoplexy. "Let it come if it
+will," he said, with a laugh. "I do not fear death; and if it comes
+quickly, so much the better!"
+
+On the evening of 2nd December, 1720, he was chatting gaily to the young
+Duchesse de Falari, when he suddenly turned to her and asked: "Do you
+think there is any hell--or Paradise?" "Of course I do," answered the
+Duchesse. "Then are you not afraid to lead the life you do?" "Well,"
+replied Madame, "I think God will have pity on me."
+
+Scarcely had the words left her lips when the Regent's head fell heavily
+on her shoulder, and he began to slip to the floor. A glance showed her
+that he was unconscious; and, rushing out of the room, the terrified
+Duchesse raced through the dark, deserted corridors of the palace
+shrieking for help. When at last help arrived, it came too late. The
+Regent had gone to find for himself an answer to the question his lips
+had framed a few minutes earlier--"is there any hell--or Paradise?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+A DELILAH OF THE COURT OF FRANCE
+
+It was a cruel fate that snatched Gabrielle d'Estrées from the arms of
+Henri IV., King of France and Navarre, at the moment when her long
+devotion to her hero-lover was on the eve of being crowned by the bridal
+veil; and for many a week there was no more stricken man in Europe than
+the disconsolate King as he wailed in his black-draped chamber, "The
+root of my love is dead, and will never blossom again."
+
+No doubt Henri's grief was as sincere as it was deep, for he had loved
+his golden-haired Gabrielle of the blue eyes and dimpled baby-cheeks as
+he had never loved woman before. It was the passion of a lifetime, the
+passion of a strong man in his prime, that fate had thus nipped in the
+fullness of its bloom; and its loss plunged him into an abyss of sorrow
+and despair such as few men have known.
+
+But with the hero of Ivry no emotion of grief or pleasure ever endured
+long. He was a man of erratic, widely contrasted moods--now on the peaks
+of happiness, now in the gulf of dejection; one mood succeeding another
+as inevitably and widely as the pendulum swings. Thus when he had spent
+three seemingly endless months of gloom and solitude, reaction seized
+him, and he flung aside his grief with his black raiment. He was still
+in the prime of his strength, with many years before him. He would drink
+the cup of life, even to its dregs. He had long been weary of the
+matrimonial chains that fettered him to Marguerite of Valois. He would
+strike them off, and in another wife and other loves find a new lease of
+pleasure.
+
+Thus it was with no heavy heart that he turned his back on Fontainebleau
+and his darkened room, and fared to Paris to find a new vista of
+pleasure opening to him at his palace doors, and his ears full of the
+praises of a new divinity who had come, during his absence, to grace his
+Court--a girl of such beauty, sprightliness, and wit as his capital had
+not seen for many a year.
+
+Henriette d'Entragues--for this was the divinity's name--was equipped by
+fate as few women were ever equipped, for the conquest of a King. Her
+mother, Marie Touchet, had been "light-o'-love" to Charles IX.; her
+father was the Seigneur d'Entragues, member of one of the most
+blue-blooded families of France, a soldier and statesman of fame; and
+their daughter had inherited, with her mother's beauty and grace, the
+clever brain and diplomatic skill of her father. A strange mixture of
+the bewitching and bewildering, this daughter of a King's mistress seems
+to have been. Tall and dark, voluptuous of figure, with ripe red lips,
+and bold and dazzling black eyes, she was, in her full-blooded, sensuous
+charms, the very "antipodes" to the childish, fairy-like Gabrielle who
+had so long been enshrined in the King's heart. And to this physical
+appeal--irresistible to a man of such strong passion as Henri, she added
+gifts of mind which "baby Gabrielle" could never claim.
+
+She had a wit as brilliant as the tongue which was its vehicle; her
+well-stored brain was more than a match for the most learned men at
+Court, and she would leave an archbishop discomfited in a theological
+argument, to cross swords with Sully himself on some abstruse problem of
+statesmanship. When Sully had been brought to his knees, she would rush
+away, with mischief in her eyes, to take the lead in some merry escapade
+or practical joke, her silvery laughter echoing in some remote palace
+corridor. A bewildering, alluring bundle of inconsistencies--beauty,
+savant, wit, and madcap--such was Henriette d'Entragues when Henri,
+fresh from his woes, came under the spell of her magnetism.
+
+Here, indeed, was an escape from his grief such as the King had never
+dared to hope for. Before he had been many hours in his palace, Henri
+was caught hopelessly in the toils of the new siren, and was intoxicated
+by her smiles and witcheries. Never was conquest so speedy, so dramatic.
+Before a week had flown he was at Henrietta's feet, as lovesick a swain
+as ever sighed for a lady, pouring love into her ears and writing her
+passionate letters between the frequent meetings, in which he would send
+her a "good night, my dearest heart," with "a million kisses."
+
+In the days of his lusty youth the idol and hero of France had never
+known passion such as this which consumed him within sight of his
+fiftieth birthday, and which was inspired by a woman of much less than
+half his years; for at the time Henri was forty-six, and Henriette was
+barely twenty.
+
+He quickly found, however, that his wooing was not to be all "plain
+sailing." When Henriette's parents heard of it, they affected to be
+horrified at the danger in which their beloved daughter was placed. They
+summoned her home from the perils of Court and a King's passion; and
+when Henri sent an envoy to bring them to reason they sent him back with
+a rebuff. Their daughter was to be no man's--not even a
+King's--plaything. If Henri's passion was sincere, he must prove it by a
+definite promise of marriage; and only on this condition would their
+opposition be removed.
+
+Even to such a stipulation Henri, such was his infatuation, made no
+demur. With his own hand he wrote an agreement pledging himself to make
+Demoiselle Henriette his lawful wife in case, within a certain period,
+she became the mother of a son; and undertaking to dissolve his marriage
+with his wife, Marguerite of France, for this purpose. And this
+agreement, signed with his own hand, he sent to the Seigneur d'Entragues
+and his wife, accompanied by a _douceur_ of a hundred thousand crowns.
+
+But before it was dispatched a more formidable obstacle than even the
+lady's natural guardians remained to be faced--none other than the Duc
+de Sully, the man who had shared all the perils of a hundred fights with
+Henri and was at once his chief counsellor and his _fidus Achates_.
+When at last he summoned up courage to place the document in Sully's
+hands, he awaited the verdict as nervously as any schoolboy in the
+presence of a dreaded master. Sully read through the paper, was silent
+for a few moments, and then spoke. "Sire," he said, "am I to give you my
+candid opinion on this document, without fear of anger or giving
+offence?" "Certainly," answered the King. "Well then, this is what I
+think of it," was Sully's reply, as he tore the document in two pieces
+and flung them on the floor. "Sully, you are mad!" exclaimed Henri,
+flaring into anger at such an outrage. "You are right, Sire, I am a weak
+fool, and would gladly know myself still more a fool--if I might be the
+only one in France!"
+
+It was in vain, however, that Sully pointed out the follies and dangers
+of such a step as was proposed. Henri's mind was made up, and leaving
+his friend, in high dudgeon, he went to his study and re-wrote his
+promise of marriage. The way was at last clear to the gratification of
+his passion. Henriette was more than willing, her parents' scruples and
+greed were appeased, and as for Sully--well, he must be left to get over
+his tantrums. Even to please such an old and trusted friend he could not
+sacrifice such an opportunity for pleasure and a new lease of life as
+now presented itself!
+
+Halcyon months followed for Henri--months in which even Gabrielle was
+forgotten in the intoxication of a new passion, compared with which the
+memory of her gentle charms was but as water to rich, red wine. That
+Henriette proved wilful, capricious, and extravagant--that her vanity
+drained his exchequer of hundreds of thousands of crowns for costly
+jewellery and dresses, was a mere bagatelle, compared with his delight
+in her manifold allurements.
+
+But Sully had by no means said his last word. The decree for annulling
+Henri's marriage with Marguerite de Valois was pronounced; and it was of
+the highest importance that she should have a worthy successor as Queen
+of France--a successor whom he found in Marie de Medicis.
+
+The marriage-contract was actually sealed before the King had any
+suspicion that his hand was being disposed of, and it was only when
+Sully one day entered his study with the startling words, "Sire, we have
+been marrying you," that the awakening came. For a few moments Henri sat
+as a man stunned, his head buried in his hands; then, with a deep sigh,
+he spoke: "If God orders it so, so let it be. There seems to be no
+escape; since you say that it is necessary for my kingdom and my
+subjects, why, marry I must."
+
+It was a strange predicament in which Henri now found himself. Still
+more infatuated than ever with Henriette, he was to be tied for life to
+a Princess whom he had never even seen. To add to the embarrassment of
+his position, the condition of his marriage promise to Henriette was
+already on the way to fulfilment; and he was thus pledged to wed her as
+strongly as any State compact could bind him to stand at the altar with
+Marie de Medicis. One thing was clear, he must at any cost recover that
+fatal document; and, while he was giving orders for the suitable
+reception of his new Queen, and arranging for her triumphal progress to
+Paris, he was writing to Henriette and her parents demanding the return
+of his promise of marriage agreement--to her, a pleading letter in which
+he prays her "to return the promise you have by you and not to compel me
+to have recourse to other means in order to obtain it"; to her father, a
+more imperious demand to which he expects instant obedience.
+
+As some consolation to his mistress, whose alternate tears, rage, and
+reproaches drove him to distraction, he creates her Marquise de Verneuil
+and promises that, if he should be unable to marry her, he will at least
+give her a husband of Royal rank, the Due de Nevers, who was eager to
+make her his wife.
+
+But pleadings and threats alike fail to secure the return of the fatal
+document, and Henri is reduced to despair, until Henriette gives birth
+to a dead child and his promise thus becomes of as little value as the
+paper it was written on. The condition has failed, and he is a free man
+to marry his Tuscan Princess, while Henriette, thus foiled in her great
+ambition, is in danger not only of losing her coveted crown, but her
+place in the King's favour. The days of her wilful autocracy are ended;
+and, though her heart is full of anger and disappointment, she writes to
+him a pitiful letter imploring him still to love her and not to cast her
+"from the Heaven to which he has raised her, down to the earth where he
+found her." "Do not let your wedding festivities be the funeral of my
+hopes," she writes. "Do not banish me from your Royal presence and your
+heart. I speak in sighs to you, my King, my lover, my all--I, who have
+been loved by the earth's greatest monarch, and am willing to be his
+mistress and his servant."
+
+To such humility was the proud, arrogant beauty now reduced. She was an
+abject suppliant where she had reigned a Queen. Nor did her pleadings
+fall on deaf ears. Her Royal lover's hand was given, against his will,
+to his new Queen, but his heart, he vowed, was all Henriette's--so much
+so that he soon installed her in sumptuous rooms in his palace adjoining
+those of the Queen herself.
+
+Was ever man placed in a more delicate position than this King of
+France, between the rival claims of his wife and mistress, who were
+occupying adjacent apartments, and who, moreover, were both about to
+become mothers? It speaks well for Henri's tactfulness that for a time
+at least this _ménage à trois_ appears to have been quite amiably
+conducted. When Queen Marie gave birth to a son it was to Henriette that
+the infant's father first confided the good news, seasoning it with "a
+million kisses" for herself. And when Henriette, in turn, became a
+mother for the second time, the double Royal event was celebrated by
+fêtes and rejoicings in which each lady took an equally proud and
+conspicuous part.
+
+It was inevitable, however, that a woman so favoured by the King, and of
+so imperious a nature, should have enemies at Court; and it was not long
+before she became the object of a conspiracy of which the Duchesse de
+Villars and the Queen were the arch-leaders. One day a bundle of letters
+was sent anonymously to Henri, letters full of tenderness and passion,
+addressed by his beloved Marquise, Henriette, to the Prince de
+Joinville. The King was furious at such evidence of his mistress's
+disloyalty, and vowed he would never see her again. But all his storming
+and reproaches left the Marquise unmoved. She declared, with scorn in
+her voice, that the letters were forgeries; that she had never written
+to Joinville in her life, nor spoken a word to him that His Majesty
+might not have heard. She even pointed out the forger, the Duc de
+Guise's secretary, and was at last able to convince the King of her
+innocence.
+
+The Duchesse de Villars and Joinville were banished from the Court in
+disgrace; the Queen had a severe lecture from her husband; and Henriette
+was not only restored to full favour, but was consoled by a welcome
+present of six thousand pounds.
+
+But the days of peace in the King's household were now gone for ever.
+Queen Marie, thus humiliated by her rival, became her bitter enemy and
+also a thorn in the side of her unfaithful husband. Every day brought
+its fierce quarrels which only stopped on the verge of violence. More
+than once in fact Henri had to beat a retreat before his Queen's
+clenched fist, while she lost no opportunity of insulting and
+humiliating the Marquise.
+
+It is impossible altogether to withhold sympathy from a man thus
+distracted between two jealous women--a shrewish wife, who in her most
+amiable mood repelled his advances with coldness and cutting words, and
+a mistress who vented on him all the resentment which the Queen's
+insults and snubs roused in her. Even all Sully's diplomacy was
+powerless to pour oil on such vexed waters as these.
+
+The Queen, however, had not long to wait for her revenge, which came
+with the disclosure of a conspiracy, at the head of which were
+Henriette's father and her half-brother, the Comte d'Auvergne, and in
+which, it was proved, she herself had played no insignificant part.
+Punishment came, swift and terrible. Her father and brother were
+sentenced to death, herself to perpetual confinement in a monastery.
+
+But even at this crisis in her life, Henriette's stout heart did not
+fail her for a moment. "The King may take my life, if he pleases," she
+said. "Everybody will say that he killed his wife; for I was Queen
+before the Tuscan woman came on the scene at all." None knew better than
+she that she could afford thus to put on a bold front. Henri was still
+her slave, to whom her little finger was more than his crown; and she
+knew that in his hands both her liberty and her life were safe. And thus
+it proved; for before she had spent many weeks in the Monastery of
+Beaumont-les-Tours, its doors were flung open for her, and the first
+news she heard was that her father was a free man, while her brother's
+death-sentence had been commuted to a few years in the Bastille.
+
+Thus Henriette returned to the turbulent life of the palace--the daily
+routine of quarrels and peacemaking with the King, and undisguised
+hostility from the Queen, through all of which Henri's heart still
+remained hers. "How I long to have you in my arms again," he writes,
+when on a hunting excursion, which had led him to the scene of their
+early romance. "As my letter brings back the memory of the past, I know
+you will feel that nothing in the present is worth anything in
+comparison. This, at least, was my feeling as I walked along the roads I
+so often traversed in the old days on my journey to your side. When I
+sleep I dream of you; when I wake my thoughts are all of you." He sends
+her a million kisses, and vows that all he asks of life is that she
+shall always love him entirely and him alone.
+
+One would have thought that such a conquest of a King and such triumph
+over a Queen would have gratified the ambition of the most exacting of
+women. But the Marquise de Verneuil seems to have found small
+satisfaction in her victories. When she was not provoking quarrels with
+Henri, which roused him to such a pitch of anger that at times he
+threatened to strike her, she received his advances with a coldness or a
+sullen acquiescence calculated to chill the most ardent lover. In other
+moods she would drive him to despair by declaring that she had long
+ceased to love him, and that all she wanted from him was a dowry to
+carry in marriage to one or other of several suitors who were dying for
+her hand.
+
+But Madame's day of triumph was drawing much nearer to an end than she
+imagined. The end, in fact, came with dramatic suddenness when Henri
+first set eyes on the radiantly lovely Charlotte de Montmorency. Weary
+at heart of the tempers and exactions of Henriette, it needed but such a
+lure as this to draw him finally from her side; and from the first
+flash of Charlotte's beautiful eyes this most susceptible of Kings was
+undone. Madame de Verneuil's reign was ended; the next quarrel was made
+the occasion for a complete rupture, and the Court saw her no more.
+
+Already she had lost the bloom of her beauty; she had grown stout and
+coarse through her excessive fondness for the pleasures of the table,
+and the rest of her days, which were passed in friendless isolation, she
+spent in indulging appetites, which added to her mountain of flesh while
+robbing her of the last trace of good-looks. When the knife of Ravaillac
+brought Henri's life and his new romance to a tragic end, the Marquise
+was among those who were suspected of inspiring the assassin's blow; and
+although her guilt was never proved, the taint of suspicion clung to her
+to her last day.
+
+After fruitless angling for a husband--the Duc de Guise, the Prince de
+Joinville, and many another who, with one consent, fled from her
+advances, she resigned herself to a life of obscurity and gluttony,
+until death came, one day in the year 1633, to release her from a world
+of vanity and disillusionment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+THE "SUN-KING" AND THE WIDOW
+
+
+Search where you will in the record of Kings, you will find nowhere a
+figure more splendid and more impressive than that of the fourteenth
+Louis, who for more then seventy years ruled over France, and for more
+than fifty eclipsed in glory his fellow-sovereigns as the sun pales the
+stars. Nearly two centuries have gone since he closed his weary and
+disillusioned eyes on the world he had so long dominated; but to-day he
+shines in history in the galaxy of monarchs with a lustre almost as
+great as when he was hailed throughout the world as the "Sun-King," and
+in his pride exclaimed, "_I_ am the State."
+
+Placed, like his successor, on the greatest throne in Europe, a child of
+five, fortune exhausted itself in lavishing gifts on him. The world was
+at his feet almost before he had learned to walk. He grew to manhood
+amid the adulation and flatteries of the greatest men and the fairest of
+women. And that he might lack no great gift, he was dowered with every
+physical perfection that should go to the making of a King.
+
+There was no more goodly youth in France than Louis when he first
+practised the arts of love-making, in which he later became such an
+adept, on Mazarin's lovely niece, Marie Mancini. Tall, with a well-knit,
+supple figure, with dark, beautiful eyes illuminating a singularly
+handsome face, with a bearing of rare grace and distinction, this son of
+Anne of Austria was a lover whom few women could resist.
+
+Such conquests came to him with fatal ease, and for thirty years at
+least, until satiety killed passion, there was no lack of beautiful
+women to minister to his pleasure and to console him for the lack of
+charms in the Spanish wife whom Mazarin thrust into his reluctant arms
+when he was little more than a boy, and when his heart was in Marie
+Mancini's keeping.
+
+Among all the fair and frail women who succeeded one another in his
+affection three stand out from the rest with a prominence which his
+special favour assigned to each in turn. For ten early years it was
+Louise de la Baume-Leblanc (better known to fame as the Duchesse de
+Lavallière) who reigned as his uncrowned Queen, and who gave her life to
+his pleasure and to the care of the children she bore to him. But such
+constancy could not last for ever in a man so constitutionally
+inconstant as Louis. When the Marquise de Montespan, in all her radiant
+and sensuous loveliness, came on the scene, she drew the King to her
+arms as a flame lures the moth. Her voluptuous charms, her abounding
+vitality and witty tongue, made the more refined beauty and the
+gentleness of the Duchesse flavourless in comparison; and Louise,
+realising that her sun had set, retired to spend the rest of her life in
+the prayers and piety of a convent, leaving her brilliant rival in
+undisputed possession of the field.
+
+For many years Madame de Montespan, the most consummate courtesan who
+ever enslaved a King, queened it over Louis in her magnificent
+apartments at Versailles and in the Tuileries. He was never weary of
+showering rich gifts and favours on her; and, in return, she became the
+mother of his children and ministered to his every whim, little dreaming
+of the day when she in turn was to be dethroned by an insignificant
+widow whom she regarded as the creature of her bounty, and who so often
+awaited her pleasure in her ante-room.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When Françoise d'Aubigné was cradled, one November day in the year 1635,
+within the walls of a fortress-prison in Poitou, the prospect of a
+Queendom seemed as remote as a palace in the moon. She had good blood in
+her veins, it is true. Her ancestors had been noblemen of Normandy
+before the Conqueror ever thought of crossing the English Channel, and
+her grandfather, General Theodore d'Aubigné, had won distinction as a
+soldier on many a battlefield. It was to her father, profligate and
+spendthrift, who, after squandering his patrimony, had found himself
+lodged in jail, that Françoise owed the ignominy of her birthplace, for
+her mother had insisted on sharing the captivity of her ne'er-do-well
+husband.
+
+When at last Constant d'Aubigné found his prison doors opened, he shook
+the dust of France off his feet and took his wife and young children
+away to Martinique, where at least, he hoped, his record would not be
+known. On the voyage, we are told, the child was brought so near to
+death's door by an illness that her body was actually on the point of
+being flung overboard when her mother detected signs of life, and
+rescued her from a watery grave. A little later, in Martinique, she had
+an equally narrow escape from death as the result of a snakebite. A
+child thus twice miraculously preserved was evidently destined for
+better things than an early tomb, more than one declared; and so indeed
+it proved.
+
+When the father ended his mis-spent days in the West Indian island, the
+widow took her poverty and her fledgelings back to France, where
+Françoise was placed under the charge of a Madame de Villette, to pick
+up such education as she could in exchange for such menial work as
+looking after Madame's poultry and scrubbing her floors. When her mother
+in turn died, the child (she was only fifteen at the time) was taken to
+Paris by an aunt, whose miserliness or poverty often sent her hungry to
+bed.
+
+Such was Françoise's condition when she was taken one day to the house
+of Paul Scarron, the crippled poet, whose satires and burlesques kept
+Paris in a ripple of merriment, and to whom the child's poverty and
+friendless position made as powerful an appeal as her budding beauty and
+her modesty. It was a very tender heart that beat in the pain-racked,
+paralysed body of the "father of French burlesque"; and within a few
+days of first setting eyes on his "little Indian girl," as he called
+her, he asked her to marry him. "It is a sorry offer to make you, my
+dear child," he said, "but it is either this or a convent." And, to
+escape the convent, Françoise consented to become the wife of the
+"bundle of pains and deformities" old enough to be her father.
+
+In the marriage-contract Scarron, with characteristic buffoonery,
+recognises her as bringing a dower of "four louis, two large and very
+expressive eyes, a fine bosom, a pair of lovely hands, and a good
+intellect"; while to the attorney, when asked what his contribution was,
+he answered, "I give her my name, and that means immortality." For eight
+years Françoise was the dutiful wife of her crippled husband, nursing
+him tenderly, managing his home and his purse, redeeming his writing
+from its coarseness, and generally proving her gratitude by a ceaseless
+devotion. Then came the day when Scarron bade her farewell on his
+death-bed, begging her with his last breath to remember him sometimes,
+and bidding her to be "always virtuous."
+
+Thus Françoise d'Aubigné was thrown once more on a cold world, with
+nothing between her and starvation but Scarron's small pension, which
+the Queen-mother continued to his widow, and compelled to seek a cheap
+refuge within convent walls. She had however good-looks which might
+stand her in good stead. She was tall, with an imposing figure and a
+natural dignity of carriage. She had a wealth of light-brown hair, eyes
+dark and brilliant, full of fire and intelligence, a well-shaped nose,
+and an exquisitely modelled mouth.
+
+Beautiful she was beyond doubt, in these days of her prime; but there
+were thousands of more beautiful women in France. And for ten years
+Madame Scarron was left to languish within the convent walls with never
+a lover to offer her release. When the Queen-mother died, and with her
+the pitiful pension, her plight was indeed pitiful. Her petitions to the
+King fell on deaf ears, until Montespan, moved by her tears and
+entreaties, pleaded for her; and Louis at last gave a reluctant consent
+to continue the allowance.
+
+It was a happy inspiration that led Scarron's widow to the King's
+favourite, for Madame de Montespan's heart, ever better than her life,
+went out to the gentle woman whom fate was treating so scurvily. Not
+content with procuring the pension, she placed her in charge of her
+nursery, an office of great trust and delicacy; and thus Madame Scarron
+found herself comfortably installed in the King's palace with a salary
+of two thousand crowns a year. Her day of poverty and independence was
+at last ended. She had, in fact, though she little knew it, placed her
+foot on the ladder, at the summit of which was the dazzling prize of the
+King's hand.
+
+Those were happy years which followed. High in the favour of the King's
+mistress, loving the little ones given into her charge as if they were
+her own children, especially the eldest born, the delicate and
+warm-hearted Duc de Maine, who was also his father's darling, Madame had
+nothing left to wish for in life. Her days were full of duty, of peace,
+and contentment. Even Louis, as he watched the loving care she lavished
+on his children, began to thaw and to smile on her, and to find pleasure
+in his visits to the nursery, which grew more and more frequent. There
+was a charm in this sweet-eyed, gentle-voiced widow, whose tongue was so
+skilful in wise and pleasant words. Her patient devotion deserved
+recognition. He gave orders that more fitting apartments should be
+assigned to Madame--a suite little less sumptuous than that of Montespan
+herself; and that money should not be lacking, he made her a gift of two
+hundred thousand francs, which the provident widow promptly invested in
+the purchase of the castle and estate of Maintenon.
+
+Such marked favours as these not unnaturally set jealous tongues
+wagging. Even Montespan began to grow uneasy, and to wonder what was
+coming next. When she ventured to refer sarcastically to the use
+"Scarron's widow" had made of his present, Louis silenced her by
+answering, "In my opinion, _Madame de Maintenon_ has acted very wisely";
+thus by a word conferring noble rank on the woman his favourite was
+already beginning to fear as a rival.
+
+And indeed there were soon to be sufficient grounds for Montespan's
+jealously and alarm. Every day saw Louis more and more under the spell
+of his children's governess--the middle-aged woman whose musical voice,
+gentle eyes, and wise words of counsel were opening a new and better
+world to him. She knew, as well as himself, how sated and weary he was
+of the cup of pleasure he had now drained to its last dregs of
+disillusionment; and he listened with eager ears to the words which
+pointed to him a surer path of happiness. Even reproof from her lips
+became more grateful to him than the sweetest flatteries from those of
+the most beautiful woman who counted but half of her years.
+
+The growing influence of the widow Scarron over the "Sun-King" had
+already become the chief gossip of the Court. From the allurements of
+Montespan, of Mademoiselle de Fontanges, and of de Ludre he loved to
+escape to the apartments of the soft-voiced woman who cared so much more
+for his soul than for his smiles. "His Majesty's interviews with Madame
+de Maintenon," Madame de Sevigné writes, "become more and more frequent,
+and they last from six in the morning to ten at night, she sitting in
+one arm-chair, he in another."
+
+In vain Montespan stormed and wept in her fits of jealous rage; in vain
+did the beautiful de Fontanges seek to lure him to her arms, until death
+claimed her so tragically before she had well passed her twentieth
+birthday. The King had had more than enough of such Delilahs. Pleasure
+had palled; peace was what he craved now--salve for his seared
+conscience.
+
+When Madame de Maintenon was appointed principal lady-in-waiting to the
+Dauphine and when, a little later, Louis' unhappy Queen drew her last
+breath in her arms, Montespan at last realised that her day of power was
+over. She wrote letters to the King begging him not to withdraw his
+affection from her, but to these appeals Louis was silent; he handed
+the letters to Madame de Maintenon to answer as she willed.
+
+The Court was quick to realise that a new star had risen; ministers and
+ambassadors now flocked to the new divinity to consult her and to win
+her favour. The governess was hailed as the new Queen of Louis and of
+France. The climax came when the King was thrown one day from his horse
+while hunting, and broke his arm. It was Madame de Maintenon alone who
+was allowed to nurse him, and who was by his side night and day. Before
+the arm was well again she was standing, thickly veiled, before an
+improvised altar in the King's study, with Louis by her side, while the
+words that made them man and wife were pronounced by Archbishop de
+Harlay.
+
+The prison-child had now reached the loftiest pinnacle in the land of
+her birth. Though she wore no crown, she was Queen of France, wielding a
+power which few throned ladies have ever known. Princes and Princesses
+rose to greet her entry with bows and curtsies; the mother of the coming
+King called her "aunt"; her rooms, splendid as the King's, adjoined his;
+she had the place of honour in the King's Council Room; the State's
+secrets were in her keeping; she guided and controlled the destinies of
+the nation. And all this greatness came to her when she had passed her
+fiftieth year, and when all the grace and bloom of youth were but a
+distant memory.
+
+The King himself, two years her junior, and still in the prime of his
+manhood, was her shadow, paying to the plain, middle-aged woman such
+deference and courtesy as he had never shown to the youth and beauty of
+her predecessors in his affection. And she--thus translated to dizzy
+heights--kept a head as cool and a demeanour as modest as when she was
+"Scarron's widow," the convent protégée. For power and splendour she
+cared no whit. Her ambition now, as always, was to be loved for herself,
+to "play a beautiful part in the world," and to deserve the respect of
+all good men.
+
+Her chief pleasure was found away from the pomp and glitter of the
+Court, among "her children" of the Saint Cyr Convent, which she had
+founded for the education of the daughters of poor noblemen, over whom
+she watched with loving and unflagging care. And yet she was not
+happy--not nearly as happy as in the days of her obscure widowhood. "I
+am dying of sorrow in the midst of luxury," she wrote. And again. "I
+cannot bear it. I wish I were dead." Why she was so unhappy, with her
+Queendom and her environment of love and esteem, and her life of good
+works, it is impossible to say. The fact remains, inscrutable, but still
+fact.
+
+Twenty-five years of such life of splendid sadness, and Louis, his last
+days clouded by loss and suffering, died with her prayers in his ears,
+his coverlet moistened by her tears. Two years later--years spent in
+prayers and masses and charitable work--the "Queen Dowager" drew the
+last breath of her long life at St Cyr, shortly after hearing that her
+beloved Due de Maine, her pet nursling of other days, had been arrested
+and flung into prison.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+A THRONED BARBARIAN
+
+
+The dawn of the eighteenth century saw the thrones of France and Russia
+occupied by two of the most remarkable sovereigns who ever wore a
+crown--Louis XIV., the "Sun-King," whose splendours dazzled Europe, and
+whose power held it in awe; and Peter I. of Russia, whose destructive
+sword swept Europe from Sweden to the Dardenelles, and whose clever
+brain laid sure the foundation of his country's greatness. Each of these
+Royal rivals dwarfed all other fellow-monarchs as the sun pales the
+stars; and yet it would scarcely have been possible to find two men more
+widely different in all save their passion for power and their love of
+woman, which alone they had in common.
+
+Of the two, Peter is unquestionably to-day the more arresting,
+dominating figure. Although nearly two centuries have gone since he made
+his exit from the world, we can still picture him in his pride, towering
+a head higher than the tallest of his courtiers, swart of face, "as if
+he had been born in Africa," with his black, close-curling hair, his
+bold, imperious eyes, his powerful, well-knit frame--"the muscles and
+stature of a Goliath"--a kingly figure, with majesty in every movement.
+
+We see him, too, wilfully discarding the kingliness with which nature
+had so liberally dowered him--now receiving ambassadors "in a short
+dressing-gown, below which his bare legs were exposed, a thick nightcap,
+lined with linen, on his head, his stockings dropped down over his
+slippers"--now walking through the Copenhagen streets grotesque in a
+green cap, a brown overcoat with horn buttons, worsted stockings full of
+darns, and dirty, cobbled shoes; and again carousing, red of face and
+loud of voice, with his meanest subjects in some low tavern.
+
+As the mood seizes him he plays the rôle of fireman for hours together;
+goes carol-singing in his sledge, and reaps his harvest of coppers from
+the houses of his subjects; rides a hobby-horse at a village fair, and
+shrieks with laughter until he falls off; or plies saw and plane in a
+shipbuilding yard, sharing the meals and drinking bouts of his
+fellow-workmen.
+
+The French Ambassador, Campredon, wrote of him in 1725:--"It is utterly
+impossible at the present moment to approach the Tsar on serious
+subjects; he is altogether given up to his amusements, which consist in
+going every day to the principal houses in the town with a suite of 200
+persons, musicians and so forth, who sing songs on every sort of
+subject, and amuse themselves by eating and drinking at the expense of
+the persons they visit." "He never passed a single day without being
+the worse for drink," Baron Pöllnitz tells us; and his drinking
+companions were usually chosen from the most degraded of his subjects,
+of both sexes, with whom he consorted on the most familiar terms.
+
+When his muddled brain occasionally awoke to the knowledge that he was a
+King, he would bully and hector his boon-comrades like any drunken
+trooper. On one occasion, when a young Jewess refused to drain a goblet
+of neat brandy which he thrust into her hand, he promptly administered
+two resounding boxes on her ears, shouting, "Vile Hebrew spawn! I'll
+teach thee to obey."
+
+There was in him, too, a vein of savage cruelty which took remarkable
+forms. A favourite pastime was to visit the torture-chamber and gloat
+over the sufferings of the victims of the knout and the strappado; or to
+attend (and frequently to officiate at) public executions. Once, we are
+told, at a banquet, he "amused himself by decapitating twenty Streltsy,
+emptying as many glasses of brandy between successive strokes, and
+challenging the Prussian envoy to repeat the feat."
+
+Mad? There can be little doubt that Peter had madness in his veins. He
+was a degenerate and an epileptic, subject to brain storms which
+terrified all who witnessed them. "A sort of convulsion seized him,
+which often for hours threw him into a most distressing condition. His
+body was violently contorted; his face distorted into horrible grimaces;
+and he was further subject to paroxysms of rage, during which it was
+almost certain death to approach him." Even in his saner moods, as
+Waliszewski tells us, he "joined to the roughness of a Russian _barin_
+all the coarseness of a Dutch sailor." Such in brief suggestion was
+Peter I. of Russia, half-savage, half-sovereign, the strangest jumble of
+contradictions who has ever worn the Imperial purple--"a huge mastodon,
+whose moral perceptions were all colossal and monstrous."
+
+It was, perhaps, inevitable that a man so primitive, so little removed
+from the animal, should find his chief pleasures in low pursuits and
+companionships. During his historic visit to London, after a hard day's
+work with adze and saw in the shipbuilding yard, the Tsar would adjourn
+with his fellow-workmen to a public-house in Great Tower Street, and
+"smoke and drink ale and brandy, almost enough to float the vessel he
+had been helping to construct."
+
+And in his own kingdom the favourite companions of his debauches were
+common soldiers and servants.
+
+"He chose his friends among the common herd; looked after his household
+like any shopkeeper; thrashed his wife like a peasant; and sought his
+pleasure where the lower populace generally finds it." His female
+companions were chosen rather for their coarseness than their charms,
+and pleased him most when they were drunk. It was thus fitting that he
+should make an Empress of a scullery-maid, who, as we have seen in an
+earlier chapter, had no vestige of beauty to commend her to his favour,
+and whose chief attractions in his eyes were that she had a coarse
+tongue and was a "first-rate toper."
+
+It was thus a strange and unhappy caprice of fate that united Peter,
+while still a youth, to his first Empress, the refined and sensitive
+Eudoxia, a woman as remote from her husband as the stars. Never was
+there a more incongruous bride than this delicately nurtured girl
+provided by the Empress Nathalie for her coarse-grained son. From the
+hour at which they stood together at the altar the union was doomed to
+tragic failure; before the honeymoon waned Peter had terrified his bride
+by his brutality and disgusted her by the open attentions he paid to his
+favourites of the hour, the daughters of Botticher, the goldsmith, and
+Mons, the wine-merchant.
+
+For five years husband and wife saw little of each other; and when, in
+1694, Nathalie's death removed the one influence which gave the union at
+least the outward form of substance, Peter lost no time in exhibiting
+his true colours. He dismissed all Eudoxia's relatives from the Court,
+and sent her father into exile. One brother he caused to be whipped in
+public; another was put to the torture, which had its horrible climax
+when Peter himself saturated his victim's clothes with spirits of wine,
+and then set them on fire. For Eudoxia a different fate was reserved.
+Not only had he long grown weary of her insipid beauty and of her
+refinement and gentleness, which were a constant mute reproach to his
+own low tastes and hectoring manners--he had grown to hate the very
+sight of her, and determined that she should no longer stand between him
+and the unbridled indulgence of his pleasure.
+
+During his visit to England he never once wrote to her, and on his
+return to Moscow his first words were a brutal announcement of his
+intention to be rid of her. In vain she pleaded and wept. To her tearful
+inquiries, "What have I done to offend you? What fault have you to find
+with me?" he turned a deaf ear. "I never want to see you again," were
+his last inexorable words. A few days later a hackney coach drove up to
+the palace doors; the unhappy Tsarina was bundled unceremoniously into
+it, and she was carried away to the nunnery of the "Intercession of the
+Blessed Virgin," whose doors were closed on her for a score of years.
+
+Pitiful years they were for the young Empress, consigned by her husband
+to a life that was worse than death--robbed of her rank, her splendours,
+and luxuries, her very name--she was now only Helen, the nun, faring
+worse than the meanest of her sister-nuns; for while they at least had
+plenty to eat, the Tsarina seems many a time to have known the pangs of
+hunger. The letters she wrote to one of her brothers are pathetic
+evidence of the straits to which she was reduced. "For pity's sake," she
+wrote, "give me food and drink. Give clothes to the beggar. There is
+nothing here. I do not need a great deal; still I must eat."
+
+It is not to be wondered at, that, in her misery, she should turn
+anywhere for succour and sympathy; and both came to her at last in the
+guise of Major Glebof, an officer in the district, whose heart was
+touched by the sadness of her fate. He sent her food and wine to restore
+her strength, and warm furs to protect her from the iciness of her cell.
+In response to her letters of thanks, he visited her again and again,
+bringing sunshine into her darkened life with his presence, and soothing
+her with words of sympathy and encouragement, until gratitude to the
+"good Samaritan" grew into love for the man.
+
+When she learned that the man who had so befriended her was himself
+poor, actually in money difficulties, she insisted on giving him every
+rouble she could wring, by any abject appeal, out of her friends and
+relatives. She became his very slave, grovelling at his feet. "Where thy
+heart is, dearest one," she wrote to him, "there is mine also; where thy
+tongue is, there is my head; thy will is also mine." She loved him with
+a passion which broke down all barriers of modesty and prudence,
+reckless of the fact that he had a wife, as she had a husband.
+
+When Major Glebof's visits and letters grew more and more infrequent,
+she suffered tortures of anxiety and despair. "My light, my soul, my
+joy," she wrote in one distracted letter, "has the cruel hour of
+separation come already? O, my light! how can I live apart from thee?
+How can I endure existence? Rather would I see my soul parted from my
+body. God alone knows how dear thou art to me. Why do I love thee so
+much, my adored one, that without thee life is so worthless? Why art
+thou angry with me? Why, my _batioushka_, dost thou not come to see me?
+Have pity on me, O my lord, and come to see me to-morrow. O, my world,
+my dearest and best, answer me; do not let me die of grief."
+
+Thus one distracted, incoherent letter followed another, heart-breaking
+in their grief, pitiful in their appeal. "Come to me," she cried;
+"without thee I shall die. Why dost thou cause me such anguish? Have I
+been guilty without knowing it? Better far to have struck me, to have
+punished me in any way, for this fault I have innocently committed." And
+again: "Why am I not dead? Oh, that thou hadst buried me with thy own
+hands! Forgive me, O my soul! Do not let me die.... Send me but a crust
+of bread thou hast bitten with thy teeth, or the waistcoat thou hast
+often worn, that I may have something to bring thee near to me."
+
+What answers, if any, the Major vouchsafed to these pathetic letters we
+know not. The probability is that they received no answer--that the
+"good Samaritan" had either wearied of or grown alarmed at a passion
+which he could not return, and which was fraught with danger. It was
+accident only that revealed to the world the story of this strange and
+tragic infatuation.
+
+When the Tsarevitch, Alexis, was brought to trial in 1718 on a charge of
+conspiracy against his father, Peter, suspecting that Eudoxia had had a
+hand in the rebellion, ordered a descent on the nunnery and an inquiry.
+Nothing was found to connect her with her son's ill-fated venture; but
+the inquiry revealed the whole story of her relations with the too
+friendly officer. The evidence of the nuns and servants alone--evidence
+of frequent and long meetings by day and night, of embraces
+exchanged--was sufficiently conclusive, without the incriminating
+letters which were discovered in the Major's bureau, labelled "Letters
+from the Tsarina," or Eudoxia's confession which was extorted from her.
+
+This was an opportunity of vengeance such as exceeded all the Tsar's
+hopes. Glebof was arrested and put on his trial. Evidence was forced
+from the nuns by the lashing of the knout, so severe that some of them
+died under it. Glebof, subjected to such frightful tortures that in his
+agony he confessed much more than the truth, was sentenced to death by
+impalement. In order to prolong his suffering to the last possible
+moment, he was warmly wrapped in furs, to protect him from the bitter
+cold, and for twenty-eight hours he suffered indescribable agony, until
+at last death came to his release.
+
+As for Eudoxia, her punishment was a public flogging and consignment to
+a nunnery still more isolated and miserable than that in which she had
+dragged out twenty years of her broken life. Here she remained for seven
+years, until, on the Tsar's death, an even worse fate befell her. She
+was then, by Catherine's orders, taken from the convent, and flung into
+the most loathsome, rat-infested dungeon of the fortress of
+Schlussenberg, where she remained for two years of unspeakable horror.
+
+Then at last, after nearly thirty years of life that was worse than
+death, the sun shone again for her. One day her dungeon door flew open,
+and to the bowing of obsequious courtiers, the prisoner was conducted to
+a sumptuous apartment. "The walls were hung with splendid stuffs; the
+table was covered with gold-plate; ten thousand roubles awaited her in
+a casket. Courtiers stood in her ante-chamber; carriages and horses
+were at her orders."
+
+Catherine, the "scullery-Empress," was dead; Eudoxia's grandson, Peter
+II., now wore the crown of Russia; and Eudoxia found herself
+transported, as by the touch of a magic wand, from her loathsome
+prison-cell to the old-time splendours of palaces--the greatest lady in
+all Russia, to whom Princesses, ambassadors, and courtiers were all
+proud to pay respectful homage. But the transformation had come too
+late; her life was crushed beyond restoration; and after a few months of
+her new glory she was glad to find an asylum once more within convent
+walls, until Death, the great healer of broken hearts, took her to
+where, "beyond these voices, there is peace."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+While Eudoxia was eating her heart out in her convent cell, her husband
+was finding ample compensation for her absence in Bacchanalian orgies
+and the company of his galaxies of favourites, from tradesmen's
+daughters to servant-maids of buxom charms, such as the Livonian
+peasant-girl, in whom he found his second Empress.
+
+Of the almost countless women who thus fell under his baneful influence
+one stands out from the rest by reason of the tragedy which surrounds
+her memory. Mary Hamilton was no low-born maid, such as Peter especially
+chose to honour with his attentions. She had in her veins the blood of
+the ducal Hamiltons of Scotland, and of many a noble family of Russia,
+from which her more immediate ancestors had taken their wives; and it
+was an ill fate that took her, when little more than a child, to the
+most debased Court of Europe to play the part of maid-of-honour, and
+thus to cross the path of the most unprincipled lover in Europe.
+
+Peter's infatuation for the pretty young "Scotswoman," however, was but
+short-lived. She had none of the vulgar attractions that could win him
+to any kind of constancy; and he quickly abandoned her for the more
+agreeable company of his _dienshtchiks_, leaving her to find consolation
+in the affection of more courtly, if less exalted, lovers--notably the
+young Count Orloff, who proved as faithless as his master.
+
+Such was Mary's infatuation for the worthless Count that, under his
+influence, she stooped to various kinds of crime, from stealing the
+Tsarina's jewels to fill her lover's purse, to infanticide. The climax
+came when an important document was missing from the Tsar's cabinet.
+Suspicion pointed to Orloff as the thief; he was arrested, and, when
+brought into Peter's presence, not only confessed to the thefts and to
+his share in making away with the undesirable infants, but betrayed the
+partner of his guilt.
+
+There was short shrift for poor Mary Hamilton when she was put on her
+trial on these grave charges. She made full confession of her crimes;
+but no torture could wring from her the name of the man for love of whom
+she had committed them, and of whose treachery to her she was ignorant.
+She was sentenced to death; and one March day, in the year 1719, she
+was led to the scaffold "in a white silk gown trimmed with black
+ribbons."
+
+Then followed one of the grimmest scenes recorded in history. Peter, the
+man who had been the first to betray her, and who had refused her pardon
+even when her cause was pleaded by his wife, was a keenly interested
+spectator of her execution. At the foot of the scaffold he embraced her,
+and exhorted her to pray, before stepping aside to give place to the
+headsman. When the axe had done its deadly work, he again stepped
+forward, picked up the lifeless and still beautiful head which had
+rolled into the mud, and calmly proceeded to give a lecture on anatomy
+to the assembled crowd, "drawing attention to the number and nature of
+the organs severed by the axe." His lecture concluded, he kissed the
+pale, dead lips, crossed himself, and walked away with a smile of
+satisfaction on his face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+A FRIEND OF MARIE ANTOINETTE
+
+
+There is scarcely a spectacle in the whole drama of history more
+pathetic than that of Marie Antoinette, dancing her light-hearted way
+through life to the guillotine, seemingly unconscious of the eyes of
+jealousy and hate that watched her every step; or, if she noticed at
+all, returning a gay smile for a frown.
+
+Wedded when but a child, full of the joy of youth, with laughter
+bubbling on her pretty lips and gaiety dancing in her eyes, to a
+dull-witted clown to whom her fresh young beauty made no appeal;
+surrounded by Court ladies jealous of her charms; feared for her foreign
+sympathies, and hated by a sullen, starving populace for her
+extravagance and her pursuit of pleasure, the Austrian Princess with all
+her young loveliness and the sweetness of her nature could please no one
+in the land of her exile. Her very amiability was an offence; her
+unaffected simplicity a subject of scorn; and her love of pleasure a
+crime.
+
+Had she realised the danger of her position, and adapted herself to its
+demands, her story might have been written very differently; but her
+tragedy was that she saw or heeded none of the danger-signals that
+marked her path until it was too late to retrace a step; and that her
+most innocent pleasures were made to pave the way to her doom.
+
+Nothing, for instance, could have been more harmless to the seeming than
+Marie Antoinette's friendship for Yolande de Polignac; but this
+friendship had, beyond doubt, a greater part in her undoing than any
+other incident in her life, from the affair of the "diamond necklace" to
+her innocent infatuation for Count Fersen; and it would have been well
+for the Queen of France if Madame de Polignac had been content to remain
+in her rustic obscurity, and had never crossed her path.
+
+When Yolande Gabrielle de Polastron was led to the altar, one day in the
+year 1767, by Comte Jules de Polignac, she never dreamt, we may be sure,
+of the dazzling rôle she was destined to play at the Court of France.
+Like her husband, she was a member of the smaller _noblesse_, as proud
+as they were poor. Her husband, it is true, boasted a long pedigree,
+with its roots in the Dark Ages; but his family had given to France only
+one man of note, that Cardinal de Polignac, accomplished scholar,
+courtier, and man of affairs, who was able to twist Louis XIV. round his
+dexterous thumb; and Comte Jules was the Cardinal's great-nephew, and,
+through his mother, had Mazarin blood in his veins.
+
+But the young couple had a purse as short as their descent was long; and
+the early years of their wedded life were spent in Comte Jules'
+dilapidated château, on an income less than the equivalent of a pound a
+day--in a rustic retirement which was varied by an occasional jaunt to
+Paris to "see the sights," and enjoy a little cheap gaiety.
+
+Comte Jules, however, had a sister, Diane, a clever-tongued, ambitious
+young woman, who had found a footing at Court as lady-in-waiting to the
+Comtesse d'Artois, and whom her brother and his wife were proud to visit
+on their rare journeys to the capital. And it was during one of these
+visits that Marie Antoinette, who had struck up an informal friendship
+with the sprightly, laughter-loving Diane, first met the woman who was
+to play such an important and dangerous part in her life.
+
+It was, perhaps, little wonder that the French Queen, craving for
+friendship and sympathy, fell under the charm of Yolande de Polignac--a
+girl still, but a few years older than herself, with a singular
+sweetness and winsomeness, and "beautiful as a dream." The beauty of the
+young Comtesse was, indeed, a revelation even in a Court of fair women.
+In the extravagant words of chroniclers of the time, "she had the most
+heavenly face that was ever seen. Her glance, her smile, every feature
+was angelic." No picture could, it was said, do any justice to this
+lovely creature of the glorious brown hair and blue eyes, who seemed so
+utterly unconscious of her beauty.
+
+Such was the woman who came into the life of Marie Antoinette, and at
+once took possession of her heart. At last the Queen of France, in her
+isolation, had found the ideal friend she had sought so long in vain; a
+woman young and beautiful like herself, with kindred tastes, eager as
+she was to enjoy life, and with all the qualities to make a charming
+and sympathetic companion. It was a case of love at first sight, on
+Marie Antoinette's part at least; and each subsequent meeting only
+served to strengthen the link that bound these two women so strangely
+brought together.
+
+The Comtesse must come oftener to Court, the Queen pleaded, so that they
+might have more opportunities of meeting and of learning to know each
+other; and when the Comtesse pleaded poverty, Marie Antoinette brushed
+the difficulty aside. That could easily be arranged; the Queen had a
+vacancy in the ranks of her equerries. M. le Comte would accept the
+post, and then Madame would have her apartments at the Court itself.
+
+Thus it was that Comte Jules' wife was transported from her poor country
+château to the splendours of Versailles, installed as _chère amie_ of
+the Queen in place of the Princesse de Lamballe, and with the ball of
+fortune at her pretty feet. And never did woman adapt herself more
+easily to such a change of environment. It was, indeed, a great part of
+the charm of this remarkable woman that, amid success which would have
+turned the head of almost any other of her sex, she remained to her last
+day as simple and unaffected as when she won the Queen's heart in Diane
+de Polignac's apartment.
+
+So absolutely indifferent did she seem to her new splendours, that, when
+jealousy sought to undermine the Queen's friendship, she implored Marie
+Antoinette to allow her to go back to her old, obscure life; and it was
+only when the Queen begged her to stay, with arms around her neck and
+with streaming tears, that she consented to remain by her side.
+
+If the Queen ever had any doubt that she had at last found a friend who
+loved her for herself, the doubt was now finally dissipated. Such an
+unselfish love as this was a treasure to be prized; and from this moment
+Queen and waiting-woman were inseparable. When they were not strolling
+arm-in-arm in the corridors or gardens of Versailles, Her Majesty was
+spending her days in Madame's apartments, where, as she said, "We are no
+longer Queen and subject, but just dear friends."
+
+So unhappy was Marie Antoinette apart from her new friend that, when
+Madame de Polignac gave birth to a child at Passy, the Court itself was
+moved to La Muette, so that the Queen could play the part of nurse by
+her friend's bedside.
+
+Such, now, was the Queen's devotion that there was no favour she would
+not have gladly showered on the Comtesse; but to all such offers Madame
+turned a deaf ear. She wanted nothing but Marie Antoinette's love and
+friendship for herself; but if the Queen, in her goodness, chose to
+extend her favour to Madame's relatives--well, that was another matter.
+
+Thus it was that Comte Jules soon blossomed into a Duke, and Madame
+perforce became a Duchess, with a coveted tabouret at Court. But they
+were still poor, in spite of an equerry's pay, and heavily in debt, a
+matter which must be seen to. The Queen's purse satisfied every
+creditor, to the tune of four hundred thousand livres, and Duc Jules
+found himself lord of an estate which added seventy thousand livres
+yearly to his exchequer, with another annual eighty thousand livres as
+revenue for his office of Director-General of Posts.
+
+Of course, if the Queen _would_ be so foolishly generous, it was not the
+Duchesse's fault, and when Marie Antoinette next proposed to give a
+dowry of eight hundred thousand livres to the Duchesse's daughter on her
+marriage to the Comte de Guiche, and to raise the bridegroom to a
+dukedom--well, it was "very sweet of Her Majesty," and it was not for
+her to oppose such a lavish autocrat.
+
+Thus the shower of Royal favours grew; and it is perhaps little wonder
+that each new evidence of the Queen's prodigality was greeted with
+curses by the mob clamouring for bread outside the palace gates; while
+even her father's minister, Kaunitz, in far Vienna, brutally dubbed the
+Duchesse and her family, "a gang of thieves."
+
+Diane de Polignac, the Duchesse's sister-in-law, had long been made a
+Countess and placed in charge of a Royal household; and the grateful
+shower fell on all who had any connection with the favourite. Her
+father-in-law, Cardinal de Polignac's nephew, was rescued from his
+rustic poverty to play the exalted rôle of ambassador; an uncle was
+raised _per saltum_ from _curé_ to bishop. The Duchesse's widowed aunt
+was made happy by a pension of six thousand livres a year; and her
+son-in-law, de Guiche, in addition to his dukedom, was rewarded further
+for his fortunate nuptials by valuable sinecure offices at Court.
+
+So the tide of benefactions flowed until it was calculated that the
+Polignac family were drawing half a million livres every year as the
+fruits of the Queen's partiality for her favourite. Little wonder that,
+at a time when France was groaning under dire poverty, the volume of
+curses should swell against the "Austrian panther," who could thus
+squander gold while her subjects were starving; or that the Court should
+be inflamed by jealousy at such favours shown to a family so obscure as
+the Polignacs.
+
+To the warnings of her own family Marie Antoinette was deaf. What cared
+she for such exhibitions of spite and jealousy? She was Queen; and if
+she wished to be generous to her favourite's family, none should say her
+nay. And thus, with a smile half-careless, half-defiant, she went to
+meet the doom which, though she little dreamt it, awaited her.
+
+The Duchesse was now promoted to the office of governess of the Queen's
+children, a position which was the prerogative of Royalty itself, or, at
+least, of the very highest nobility. With her usual modesty, she had
+fought long against the promotion; but the Queen's will was law, and she
+had to submit to the inevitable as gracefully as she could. And now we
+see her installed in the most splendid apartments at Versailles, holding
+a _salon_ almost as regal as that of Marie Antoinette herself.
+
+She was surrounded by sycophants and place-seekers, eager to capture the
+Queen's favour through her. And such was her influence that a word from
+her was powerful enough to make or mar a minister. She held, in fact,
+the reins of power and was now more potent than the weak-kneed King
+himself.
+
+It was at this stage in her brilliant career that the Duchesse came
+under the spell of the Comte de Vaudreuil--handsome, courtly, an
+intriguer to his finger-tips, a man of many accomplishments, of a supple
+tongue, and with great wealth to lend a glamour to his gifts. A man of
+rare fascination, and as dangerous as he was fascinating.
+
+The woman who had carried a level head through so much unaccustomed
+splendour and power became the veriest slave of this handsome,
+honey-tongued Comte, who ruled her, as she in turn ruled the Queen. At
+his bidding she made and unmade ministers; she obtained for him pensions
+and high offices, and robbed the treasury of nearly two million livres
+to fill his pockets. When Marie Antoinette at last ventured to thwart
+the Comte in his ambition to become the Dauphin's Governor, he
+retaliated by poisoning the Duchesse's mind against her, and bringing
+about the first estrangement between the friends.
+
+Torn between her infatuation for Vaudreuil and her love of the Queen,
+the Duchesse was in an awkward dilemma. It became necessary to choose
+between the two rivals; and that Vaudreuil's spell proved the stronger,
+her increasing coldness to Marie Antoinette soon proved. It was the
+"rift within the lute" which was to make the music of their friendship
+mute. The Queen gradually withdrew herself from the Duchesse's _salon_,
+where she was sure to meet the insolent Vaudreuil; and thus the gulf
+gradually widened until the severance was complete.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Evil days were now coming for Marie Antoinette. The affair of the
+diamond necklace had made powerful enemies; the Polignac family, taking
+the side of Vaudreuil and their protectress, were arrayed against her;
+France was rising on the tide of hate to sweep the Austrian and her
+husband from the throne. The horrors of the Revolution were being
+loosed, and all who could were flying for safety to other lands.
+
+At this terrible crisis the Queen's thoughts were less for herself than
+for her friend of happier days. She sought the Duchesse and begged her
+to fly while there was still time. Then it was that, touched by such
+unselfish love, the Duchesse's pride broke down, and all her old love
+for her sovereign lady returned in full flood. Bursting into tears, she
+flung herself at Marie Antoinette's feet, and begged forgiveness from
+the woman whose friendship she had spurned, and whose life she had,
+however innocently, done so much to ruin.
+
+A few hours later the Duchesse, disguised as a chambermaid and sitting
+by the coachman's side, was making her escape from France in company
+with her husband and other members of her family, while the Queen who
+had loved her so well was left to take the last tragic steps that had
+the guillotine for goal.
+
+Just before the carriage started on its long and perilous journey, a
+note was thrust into the "chambermaid's" hand--"Adieu, most tender of
+friends. How terrible is this word! But it is necessary. Adieu! I have
+only strength left to embrace you. Your heart-broken Marie."
+
+Then ensued for the Duchesse a time of perilous journeying to safety.
+At Sens her carriage was surrounded by a fierce mob, clamouring for the
+blood of the "aristos." "Are the Polignacs still with the Queen?"
+demanded one man, thrusting his head into the carriage. "The Polignacs?"
+answered the Abbé de Baliviere, with marvellous presence of mind. "Oh!
+they have left Versailles long ago. Those vile persons have been got rid
+of." And with a howl of baffled rage the mob allowed the carriage to
+continue its journey, taking with it the most hated of all the
+Polignacs, the chambermaid, whose heart, we may be sure, was in her
+mouth!
+
+Thus the Duchesse made her way through Switzerland, to Turin, and to
+Rome, and to Venice, where news came to her of the fall ot the monarchy
+and Louis' execution. By the time she reached Vienna on her restless
+wanderings, her health, shattered by hardships and by her anxiety for
+her friend, broke down completely. She was a dying woman; and when, a
+few months later, she learned that Marie Antoinette was also dead--"a
+natural death," they mercifully told her--"Thank God!" she exclaimed;
+"now, at last, she is free from those bloodthirsty monsters! Now I can
+die in peace."
+
+Seven weeks later the Duchesse drew her last breath, with the name she
+still loved best in all the world on her lips. In death she and her
+beloved Queen were not divided.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+THE RIVAL SISTERS
+
+
+It was an unkind fate that linked the lives of the fifteenth Louis of
+France and Marie Leczinska, Princess of Lorraine, and daughter of
+Stanislas, the dethroned King of Poland; for there was probably no
+Princess in Europe less equipped by nature to hold the fickle allegiance
+of the young French King, and no Royal husband less likely to bring
+happiness into the life of such a consort.
+
+When Princess Marie was called to the throne of France, she found
+herself transported from one of the most penurious and obscure to the
+most splendid of the Courts of Europe--"frightened and overwhelmed," as
+de Goncourt tells us, "by the grandeur of the King, bringing to her
+husband nothing but obedience, to marriage only duty; trembling and
+faltering in her queenly rôle like some escaped nun lost in Versailles."
+Although by no means devoid of good-looks, as Nattier's portrait of her
+at this time proves, her attractions were shy ones, as her virtues were
+modest, almost ashamed.
+
+She shrank alike from the embraces of her husband and the gaieties of
+his Court, finding her chief pleasure in music and painting, in long
+talks with the most serious-minded of her ladies, in Masses and
+prayers--spending gloomy hours in her oratory with its death's head,
+which she always carried with her on her journeys. Such was the nun-like
+wife whom Louis XV. led to the altar shortly after he had entered his
+sixteenth year, and had already had his initiation into that career of
+vice which he pursued with few intervals to the end of his life.
+
+Already, at fifteen, the King, who has been mockingly dubbed "_le bien
+aimé_" was breaking away from the austere hands of his boyhood's mentor,
+Cardinal Fleury, and was beginning to snatch a few "fearful joys" in the
+company of his mignons, such as the Duc de La Tremouille, and the Duc de
+Gesvres, and a few gay women of whom the sprightly and beautiful
+Princesse de Charolois was the ringleader. But he was still nothing more
+than "a big and gloomy child," whose ill-balanced nature gravitated
+between fits of profound gloom and the wild abandonment of debauch; one
+hour, torn and shaken by religious terrors, fears of hell and of death;
+the next, the very soul of hysterical gaiety, with words of blasphemy on
+his lips, the gayest member of a band of Bacchanals in some midnight
+orgy.
+
+To such a youth, feverishly seeking distraction from his own black
+moods, the demure, devout Princess, ignorant of the caresses and
+coquetry of her sex, moving like a spectre among the brilliant,
+light-hearted ladies of his Court, was the most unsuitable, the most
+impossible of brides. He quickly wearied of her company, and fled from
+her sighs and her homilies to seek forgetfulness of her and of himself
+in the society of such sirens of the Court as Mademoiselle de
+Beaujolais, Madame de Lauraguais, and Mademoiselle de Charolois, whose
+coquetries and high spirits never failed to charm away his gloomy
+humours.
+
+But although one lady after another, from that most bewitching of
+madcaps, Mademoiselle de Charolois, to the dark-eyed, buxom Comtesse de
+Toulouse, practised on him all their allurements, strove to awake his
+senses "by a thousand coquetries, a thousand assaults, the King's
+timidity eluded these advances, which amused and alarmed, but did not
+tempt his heart; that young monarch's heart was still so full of the
+aged Fleury's terrifying tales of the women of the Regency."
+
+Such coyness, however, was not long to stand in the way of the King's
+appetite for pleasure which every day strengthened. One day it began to
+be whispered that at last Louis had been vanquished--that, at a supper
+at La Muette, he had proposed the health of an "Unknown Fair," which had
+been drunk with acclamation by his boon-companions; and the Court was
+full of excited speculation as to who his mysterious charmer could be.
+That some new and powerful influence had come into the young sovereign's
+life was abundantly clear, from the new light that shone in his eyes,
+the laughter that was now always on his lips. He had said "good-bye" to
+melancholy; he astonished all by his new vivacity, and became the leader
+in one dissipation after another, "whose noisy merriment he led and
+prolonged far into the night."
+
+It was not long before the identity of the worker of this miracle was
+revealed to the world. She had been recognised more than once when
+making her stealthy way to the King's apartments; she was his chosen
+companion on his journey to Compiègne; and it was soon public knowledge
+that Madame de Mailly was the woman who had captured the King's elusive
+heart. And indeed there was little occasion for surprise; for Madame de
+Mailly, although she would never see her thirtieth birthday again, was
+one of the most seductive women in all France.
+
+Black-eyed, crimson-lipped, oval-faced, Madame de Mailly was one of
+those women who "with cheeks on fire, and blood astir, eyes large and
+lustrous as the eyes of Juno, with bold carriage and in free toilettes,
+step forward out of the past with the proud and insolent graces of the
+divinities of some Bacchanalia." With the provocative and sensual charm
+which is so powerful in its appeal, she had a rare skill in displaying
+her beauty to its fullest advantage. Her cult of the toilette, the Duc
+de Luynes tells us, went with her even by night. She never went to bed
+without decking herself with all her diamonds; and her most seductive
+hour was in the morning, when, in her bed, with her glorious dishevelled
+hair veiling her pillow, a-glitter with her jewels, she gave audience to
+her friends.
+
+Such was the ravishing, ardent, passionate woman who was the first of
+many to carry Louis' heart by storm, and to be established in his palace
+as his mistress--to inaugurate for him a new life of pleasure, and to
+estrange him still more from his unhappy Queen, shut up with her
+prayers and her tears in her own room, with her tapestry, her books of
+history, and her music for sole relaxation. "The most innocent
+pleasures," Queen Marie wrote sadly at this time, "are not for me."
+
+Under Madame de Mailly's rule the Court of Versailles awoke to a new
+life. "The little apartments grow animated, gay to the point of licence.
+Noise, merriment, an even gayer and livelier clash of glasses, madder
+nights." Fête succeeded fête in brilliant sequence. Each night saw its
+Royal debauch, with the King and his mistress for arch-spirits of the
+revels. There were nightly banquets, with the rarest wines and the most
+costly viands, supplemented by salads prepared by the dainty hands of
+Mademoiselle de Charolois, and ragouts cooked by Louis himself in silver
+saucepans. And these were followed by orgies which left the celebrants,
+in the last excesses of intoxication, to be gathered up at break of day
+and carried helpless to bed.
+
+Such wild excesses could not fail sooner or later to bring satiety to a
+lover so unstable as Louis; and it was not long before he grew a little
+weary of his mistress, who, too assured of her conquest, began to
+exhibit sudden whims and caprices, and fits of obstinacy. Her jealous
+eyes followed him everywhere, her reproaches, if he so much as smiled on
+a rival beauty, provoked daily quarrels. He was drawn, much against his
+will, into her family disputes, and into the disgraceful affairs of her
+father, the dissolute Marquis de Nesle.
+
+Meanwhile Madame de Mailly's supremacy was being threatened in a most
+unexpected quarter. Among the pupils of the convent school at Port Royal
+was a young girl, in whose ambitious brain the project was forming of
+supplanting the King's favourite, and of ruling France and Louis at the
+same time. The idle dream of a schoolgirl, of course! But to Félicité de
+Nesle it was no vain dream, but the ambition of a lifetime, which
+dominated her more and more as the months passed in her convent
+seclusion. If her sister, Madame de Mailly, had so easily made a
+conquest of the King, why should she, with less beauty, it is true, but
+with a much cleverer brain, despair? And thus it was that every letter
+Madame received from her "little sister" pleaded for an invitation to
+Court, until at last Mademoiselle de Nesle found herself the guest of
+Louis' mistress in his palace.
+
+Thus the first important step was taken. The rest would be easy; for
+Mademoiselle never doubted for a moment her ability to carry out her
+programme to its splendid climax. It was certainly a bold, almost
+impudent design; for the girl of the convent had few attractions to
+appeal to a monarch so surrounded by beauty as the King of France. What
+the courtiers saw, says the Duc de Richelieu, was "a long neck clumsily
+set on the shoulders, a masculine figure and carriage, features not
+unlike those of Madame de Mailly, but thinner and harder, which
+exhibited none of her flashes of kindness, her tenderness of passion."
+
+Even her manners seemed calculated to repel, rather than attract the man
+she meant to conquer; for she treated him, from the first, with a
+familiarity amounting almost to rudeness, and a wilfulness to which he
+was by no means accustomed. There was, at any rate, something novel and
+piquant in an attitude so different from that of all other Court ladies.
+Resentment was soon replaced by interest, and interest by attraction;
+until Louis, before he was aware of it, began to find the society of the
+impish, mocking, defiant maid from the convent more to his taste than
+that of the most fascinating women of his Court.
+
+The more he saw of her, the more effectually he came under her spell.
+Each day found her in some new and tantalising mood; and as she drew him
+more and more into her toils, she kept him there by her ingenuity in
+devising novel pleasures and entertainments for him, until, within a
+month of setting eyes on her, he was telling Madame de Mailly, he "loved
+her sister more than herself." One of the first evidences of his favour
+was to provide her with a husband in the Comte de Vintimille, and a
+dower of two hundred thousand livres. He promised her a post as
+lady-in-waiting to Madame la Dauphine and gave her a sumptuous suite of
+rooms at Versailles. He even conferred on her husband the honour of
+handing him his shirt on the wedding-night, an evidence of high favour
+such as no other bridegroom had enjoyed.
+
+It was thus little surprise to anyone to find the Comtesse-bride not
+only her sister's most formidable rival, but actually usurping her place
+and privileges. Nor was it long before this place, on which she had set
+her heart first within the walls of the Port Royal Convent, was
+unassailably hers; and Madame de Mailly, in tears and sadness, saw an
+unbridgeable gulf widen between her and the man she undoubtedly had
+grown to love.
+
+That Félicité de Nesle had not over-estimated her powers of conquest was
+soon apparent. Louis became her abject slave, humouring her caprices and
+submitting to her will. And this will, let it be said to her credit, she
+exercised largely for his good. She weaned him from his vicious ways;
+she stimulated whatever good remained in him; she tried, and in a
+measure succeeded in making a man of him. Under her influence he began
+to realise that he was a King, and to play his exalted part more
+worthily. He asserted himself in a variety of directions, from looking
+personally after the ordering of his household to taking the reins of
+State into his own hands.
+
+Nor did she curtail his pleasures. She merely gave them a saner
+direction. Orgies and midnight revelry became things of the past, but
+their place was taken by delightful days spent at the Château of Choisy,
+that regal little pleasure-house between the waters of the Seine and the
+Forest of Sénart, with all its marvels of costly and artistic
+furnishing. Here one entertainment succeeded another, from the hunting
+which opened, to the card-games which closed the day. A time of innocent
+delights which came sweet to the jaded palate of the King.
+
+Thus the halcyon months passed, until, one August day in 1741, the
+Comtesse was seized with a slight fever; Louis, consumed by anxiety,
+spending the anxious hours by her bedside or pacing the corridor
+outside. Two days later he was stooping to kiss an infant presented to
+him on a cushion of cramoisi velvet. His happiness was crowned at last,
+and life spread before him a prospect of many such years. But tragedy
+was already brooding over this scene of pleasure, although none, least
+of all the King, seemed to see the shadow of her wings.
+
+One early day in December, Madame de Vintimille was seized with a severe
+illness, as sudden as it was mysterious. Physicians were hastily
+summoned from Paris, only, to Louis' despair, to declare that they could
+do nothing to save the life of the Comtesse. "Tortured by excruciating
+pain," says de Goncourt, "struggling against a death which was full of
+terror, and which seemed to point to the violence of poison, the dying
+woman sent for a confessor. She died almost instantly in his arms before
+the Sacraments could be administered. And as the confessor, charged with
+the dead woman's last penitent message to her sister, entered Madame de
+Mailly's _salon_, he dropped dead."
+
+Here, indeed, was tragedy in its most sudden and terrible form! The King
+was stunned, incredulous. He refused to believe that the woman he had so
+lately clasped in his arms, so warm, so full of life, was dead. And when
+at last the truth broke on him with crushing force, he was as a man
+distraught. "He shut himself up in his room, and listened half-dead to a
+Mass from his bed." He would not allow any but the priest to come near
+him; he repulsed all efforts at consolation.
+
+And whilst Louis was thus alone with his demented grief, "thrust away in
+a stable of the palace, lay the body of the dead woman, which had been
+kept for a cast to be taken; that distorted countenance, that mouth
+which had breathed out its soul in a convulsion, so that the efforts of
+two men were required to close it for moulding, the already decomposing
+remains of Madame de Vintimille served as a plaything and a
+laughing-stock to the children and lackeys."
+
+When the storm of his grief at last began to abate, the King retired to
+his remote country-seat of Saint Leger, carrying his broken heart with
+him--and also Madame de Mailly, as sharer of his sorrow; for it was to
+the woman whom he had so lightly discarded that he first turned for
+solace. At Saint Leger he passed his days in reading and re-reading the
+two thousand letters the dead Comtesse had written to him, sprinkling
+their perfumed pages with his tears. And when he was not thus burying
+himself in the past, he was a prey to the terrors that had obsessed his
+childhood--the fear of death and of hell.
+
+At supper--the only meal which he shared with others, he refused to
+touch meat, "in order that he might not commit sin on every side"; if a
+light word was spoken he would rebuke the speaker by talk of death and
+judgment; and if his eyes met those of Madame de Mailly, he burst into
+tears and was led sobbing from the room.
+
+The communion of grief gradually awoke in him his old affection for
+Madame de Mailly; and for a time it seemed not unlikely that she might
+regain her lost supremacy. But the discarded mistress had many enemies
+at Court, who were by no means willing to see her re-established in
+favour--the chief of them, the Duc de Richelieu, the handsomest man and
+the "hero" of more scandalous amours than any other in France--a man,
+moreover, of crafty brain, who had already acquired an ascendancy over
+the King's mind.
+
+With Madame de Tencin, a woman as scheming and with as evil a reputation
+as himself, for chief ally, the Due determined to find another mistress
+who should finally oust Madame de Mailly from Louis' favour; and her he
+found in a woman, devoted to himself and his interests, and of such
+surpassing loveliness that, when the King first saw her at Petit Bourg,
+he exclaimed, "Heavens! how beautiful she is!"
+
+Such was the involuntary tribute Louis paid at first sight to the charms
+of Madame de la Tournelle, who was now fated to take the place of her
+dead sister, Madame de Vintimille, just as the Comtesse had supplanted
+another sister, Madame de Mailly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+THE RIVAL SISTERS--_continued_
+
+
+Louis XV.'s involuntary exclamation when he first set eyes on the
+loveliness of Madame de la Tournelle, "Heavens! how beautiful she is!"
+becomes intelligible when we look on Nattier's picture of this fairest
+of the de Nesle sisters in his "Allegory of the Daybreak," and read the
+contemporary descriptions of her charms.
+
+"She ravished the eye," we are told, "with her skin of dazzling
+whiteness, her elegant carriage, her free gestures, the enchanting
+glance of her big blue eyes--a gaze of which the cunning was veiled by
+sentiment--by the smile of a child, moist lips, a bosom surging,
+heaving, ever agitated by the flux and reflux of life, by a physiognomy
+at once passionate and mutinous." And to these seductions were added a
+sunny temperament, an infectious gaiety of spirit, and a playful wit
+which made her infinitely attractive to men much less susceptible that
+the amorous Louis.
+
+It is little wonder then that in the reaction which followed his stormy
+grief for his dead love, the Comtesse de Vintimille, he should turn from
+the lachrymose companionship of Madame de Mailly to bask in the
+sunshine of this third of the beautiful sisters, Madame de la Tournelle,
+and that the wish to possess her should fire his blood. But Madame de la
+Tournelle was not to prove such an easy conquest as her two sisters, who
+had come almost unasked to his arms.
+
+At the time when she came thus dramatically into his life she was living
+with Madame de Mazarin, a strong-minded woman who had no cause to love
+Louis, who had thwarted and opposed him more than once, and who was
+determined at any cost to keep her protégée and pet out of his clutches.
+And his desires had also two other stout opponents in Cardinal Fleury,
+his old mentor, and Maurepas, the most subtle and clever of his
+ministers, each of whom for different reasons was strongly averse to
+this new and dangerous liaison, which would make him the tool of
+Richelieu's favourite and Richelieu's party.
+
+Thus, for months, Louis found himself baffled in all his efforts to win
+the prize on which he had set his heart until, in September, 1742, one
+formidable obstacle was removed from his path by the death of Madame de
+Mazarin. To Madame de la Tournelle the loss of her protectress was
+little short of a calamity, for it left her not only homeless, but
+practically penniless; and, in her extremity, she naturally turned
+hopeful eyes to the King, of whose passion she was well aware. At least,
+she hoped, he might give her some position at his Court which would
+rescue her from poverty. When she begged Maurepas, Madame de Mazarin's
+kinsman and heir, to appeal to the King on her behalf, his answer was
+to order her and her sister, Madame de Flavacourt, to leave the Hotel
+Mazarin, thus making her plight still more desperate.
+
+But, fortunately, in this hour of her greatest need she found an
+unexpected friend in Louis' ill-used Queen, who, ignorant of her
+husband's infatuation for the beautiful Madame de la Tournelle, sent for
+her, spoke gracious words of sympathy to her, and announced her
+intention of installing her in Madame de Mazarin's place as a lady of
+the palace. Thus did fortune smile on Madame just when her future seemed
+darkest. But her troubles were by no means at an end. Fleury and
+Maurepas were more determined than ever that the King should not come
+into the power of a woman so alluring and so dangerous; and they
+exhausted every expedient to put obstacles in her path and to discover
+and support rival claimants to the post.
+
+For once, however, Louis was adamant. He had not waited so long and
+feverishly for his prize to be baulked when it seemed almost in his
+grasp. Madame de la Tournelle should have her place at his Court, and it
+would not be his fault if she did not soon fill one more exalted and
+intimate. Thus it was that when Fleury submitted to him the list of
+applicants, with la Tournelle's name at the bottom, he promptly re-wrote
+it at the head of the list, and handed it back to the Cardinal with the
+words, "The Queen is decided, and wishes to give her the place."
+
+We can picture Madame de Mailly's distress and suspense while these
+negotiations were proceeding. She had, as we have seen in the previous
+chapter, been supplanted by one sister in the King's affection; and just
+as she was recovering some of her old position in his favour, she was
+threatened with a second dethronement by another sister. In her alarm
+she flew to Madame de la Tournelle, to set her fears at rest one way or
+the other. "Can it be possible that you are going to take my place?" she
+asked, the tears streaming down her cheeks. "Quite impossible, my
+sister," answered Madame, with a smile; and Madame de Mailly, thus
+reassured, returned to Versailles the happiest woman in France--to
+learn, a few days later, that it was not only possible, it was an
+accomplished fact. For the second time, and now, as she knew well,
+finally, she was ousted from the affection of the King she loved so
+sincerely; and again it was a sister who had done her this grievous
+wrong. She was determined, however, that she would not quit the field
+without a last fight, and she knew she had doughty champions in Fleury
+and Maurepas, who still refused to acknowledge defeat.
+
+Although Madame de la Tournelle was now installed in the palace, the day
+of Louis' conquest had not arrived. The gratification of his passion was
+still thwarted in several directions. Not only was Madame de Mailly's
+presence a difficulty and a reproach to him; his new favourite was by no
+means willing to respond to his advances. Her heart was still engaged to
+the Due d'Agenois, and was not hers to dispose of. Richelieu, however,
+was quick to dispose of this difficulty. He sent the handsome Duc to
+Languedoc, exposed him to the attractions of a pretty woman, and before
+many weeks had passed, was able to show Madame de la Tournelle
+passionate letters addressed to her rival by her lover, as evidence of
+the worthlessness of his vows; thus arming her pride against him and
+disposing her at last to lend a more favourable ear to the King.
+
+As for Madame de Mailly, her shrift was short. In spite of her tears,
+her pleadings, her caresses, Louis made no concealment of his intention
+to be rid of her. "No sorrow, no humiliation was lacking in the
+death-struggle of love. The King spared her nothing. He did not even
+spare her those harsh words which snap the bonds of the most vulgar
+liaisons." And the climax came when he told the heart-broken woman, as
+she cringed pitifully at his feet, "You must go away this very day." "My
+sacrifices are finished," she sobbed, a little later to the "Judas,"
+Richelieu, when, with friendly words, he urged her to humour the King
+and go away at least for a time; "it will be my death, but I will be in
+Paris to-night."
+
+And while Madame de Mailly was carrying her crushed heart through the
+darkness to her exile, the King and Richelieu, disguised in large
+perukes and black coats, were stealing across the great courtyards to
+the rooms of Madame de la Tournelle, where the King's long waiting was
+to have its reward. And, the following day, the usurper was callously
+writing to a friend, "Doubtless Meuse will have informed you of the
+trouble I had in ousting Madame de Mailly; at last I obtained a mandate
+to the effect that she was not to return until she was sent for."
+
+"No portrait," says de Goncourt, referring to this letter, "is to be
+compared with such a confession. It is the woman herself with the
+cynicism of her hardness, her shameless and cold-blooded ingratitude....
+It is as though she drives her sister out by the two shoulders with
+those words which have the coarse energy of the lower orders."
+
+Louis, at last happy in the achievement of his desire, was not long in
+discovering that in the third of the Nesle sisters he had his hands more
+full than with either of her predecessors. Madame de Mailly and the
+Comtesse de Vintimille had been content to play the rôle of mistress,
+and to receive the King's none too lavish largesse with gratitude.
+Madame de la Tournelle was not so complaisant, so easily satisfied. She
+intended--and she lost no time in making the King aware of her
+intention--to have her position recognised by the world at large, to
+reign as Montespan had reigned, to have the Treasury placed at her
+disposal, and her children, if she had any, made legitimate. Her last
+stipulation was that she should be made a Duchess before the end of the
+year. And to all these proposals Louis gave a meek assent.
+
+To show further her independence, she soon began to drive her lover to
+distraction by her caprices and her temper: "She tantalised, at once
+rebuffed and excited the King by the most adroit comedies and those
+coquetries which are the strength of her sex, assuring him that she
+would be delighted if he would transfer his affection to other ladies."
+And while the favourite was thus revelling in the insolence of her
+conquest, her supplanted sister was eating out her heart in Paris. "Her
+despair was terrible; the trouble of her heart refused consolation,
+begged for solitude, found vent every moment in cries for Louis. Those
+who were around her trembled for her reason, for her life.... Again and
+again she made up her mind to start for the Court, to make a final
+appeal to the King, but each time, when the carriage was ready, she
+burst into tears and fell back upon her bed."
+
+As for Louis, chilled by the coldness of his mistress, distracted by her
+whims and rages, his heart often yearned for the woman he had so cruelly
+discarded; and separation did more than all her tears and caresses could
+have done, to awake again the love he fancied was dead.
+
+When Madame de la Tournelle paid her first visit as _Maîtresse en titre_
+to Choisy, nothing would satisfy her but an escort of the noblest ladies
+in France, including a Princess of the Blood. Her progress was that of a
+Queen; and in return for this honour, wrung out of the King's weakness,
+she repaid him with weeks of coldness and ill-humour. She refused to
+play at _cavagnol_ with him; she barricaded herself in her room,
+refusing to open to all her lover's knocking; and vented her vapours on
+him with, or without, provocation, until, as she considered, she had
+reduced him to a becoming submission. Then she used her power and her
+coquetries to wheedle out of him one concession after another,
+including a promise by the King to return unopened any letters Madame de
+Mailly might send to him. Nor was she content until her sister was
+finally disposed of by the grant of a small pension and a modest lodging
+in the Luxembourg.
+
+Before the year closed Madame de la Tournelle was installed in the most
+luxurious apartments at Versailles, and Louis, now completely caught in
+her toils, was the slave of her and his senses, flinging himself into
+all the licence of passion, and reviving the nightly debauches from
+which the dead Comtesse had weaned him. And while her lover was thus
+steeped in sensuality, his mistress was, with infinite tact, pursuing
+her ambition. Affecting an indifference to affairs of State, she was
+gradually, and with seeming reluctance, worming herself into the
+position of chief Counsellor, and while professing to despise money she
+was draining the exchequer to feed her extravagance.
+
+Never was King so hopelessly in the toils of a woman as Louis, the
+well-beloved, in those of Madame de la Tournelle. He accepted as meekly
+as a child all her coldness and caprices, her jealousies and her rages;
+and was ideally happy when, in a gracious mood, she would allow him to
+assist at her toilette as the reward for some regal present of diamonds,
+horses, or gowns.
+
+It was after one such privileged hour that Louis, with childish
+pleasure, handed to his favourite the patent, creating her Duchesse de
+Chateauroux, enclosed in a casket of gold; and with it a rapturous
+letter in which he promised her a pension of eighty-thousand livres,
+the better to maintain her new dignity!
+
+Having thus achieved her greatest ambition, the Duchesse (as we must now
+call her) aspired to play a leading part in the affairs of Europe.
+France and Prussia were leagued in war against the forces of England,
+Austria, and Holland. This was a seductive game in which to take a hand,
+and thus we find her stimulating the sluggard kingliness in her lover,
+urging him to leave his debauches and to lead his armies to victory,
+assuring him of the gratitude and admiration of his subjects. Nothing
+less, she told him, would save his country from disaster.
+
+To this appeal and temptation Louis was not slow to respond; and in May,
+1744, we find him, to the delight of his soldiers and all France, at the
+seat of war, reviewing his troops, speaking words of high courage to
+them, visiting hospitals and canteens, and actually sending back a
+haughty message to the Dutch: "I will give you your answer in Flanders."
+No wonder the army was roused to enthusiasm, or that it exclaimed with
+one voice, "At last we have found a King!"
+
+So strong was Louis in his new martial resolve that he actually refused
+Madame de Chateauroux permission to accompany him. France was delighted
+that at last her King had emancipated himself from petticoat influence,
+but the delight was short-lived, for before he had been many days in
+camp the Duchesse made her stately appearance, and saws and hammers
+were at work making a covered way between the house assigned to her and
+that occupied by the King. A fortnight later Ypres had fallen, and she
+was writing to Richelieu, "This is mighty pleasant news and gives me
+huge pleasure. I am overwhelmed with joy, to take Ypres in nine days.
+You can think of nothing more glorious, more flattering to the King; and
+his great-grandfather, great as he was, never did the like!"
+
+But grief was coming quickly on the heels of joy. The King was seized
+with a sudden and serious illness, after a banquet shared with his ally,
+the King of Prussia; and in a few days a malignant fever had brought him
+face to face with death. Madame de Chateauroux watched his sufferings
+with the eyes of despair. "Leaning over the pillow of the dying man,
+aghast and trembling, she fights for him with sickness and death, terror
+and remorse." With locked door she keeps her jealous watch by his
+bedside, allowing none to enter but Richelieu, the doctors, and nurses,
+whilst outside are gathered the Princes of the Blood and the great
+officers of the Court, clamouring for admittance.
+
+It was a grim environment for the death-bed of a King, this struggle for
+supremacy, in which a frail woman defied the powers of France for the
+monopoly of his last hours. And chief of all the terrors that assailed
+her was the dread of that climax to it all, when her lover would have to
+make his last confession, the price of his absolution being, as she well
+knew, a final severance from herself.
+
+Over this protracted and unseemly duel, in which blows were exchanged,
+entrance was forced, and Princes and ministers crowded indecently around
+the King's bed; over the Duchesse's tearful pleadings with the confessor
+to spare her the disgrace of dismissal, we must hasten to the crowning
+moment when Louis, feeling that he was dying, hastily summoned a
+confessor, who, a few moments later, flung open the door of the closet
+in which the Duchesse was waiting and weeping, and pronounced the fatal
+words, "The King commands you to leave his presence immediately."
+
+Then followed that secret flight to Paris, "amidst a torrent of
+maledictions," the Duchesse hiding herself from view as best she could,
+and at each town and village where horses were changed, slinking back
+and taking refuge in some by-road until she could resume her journey.
+Then it was that in her grief and despair she wrote to Richelieu, "Oh,
+my God! what a thing it all is! I give you my word, it is all over with
+me! One would need to be a poor fool to start it all over again."
+
+But Louis was by no means a dead man. From the day on which he received
+absolution from his manifold sins he made such haste to recover that,
+within a month, he was well again and eager to fly to the arms of the
+woman he had so abruptly abandoned with all other earthly vanities. It
+was one thing, however, to dismiss the Duchesse, and quite another to
+call her back. For a time she refused point-blank to look again on the
+King who had spurned her from fear of hell; and when at last she
+consented to receive the penitent at Versailles she let him know, in no
+vague terms, that "it would cost France too many heads if she were to
+return to his Court."
+
+Vengeance on her enemies was the only price she would accept for
+forgiveness, and this price Louis promised to pay in liberal measure.
+One after the other, those who had brought about her humiliation were
+sent to disgrace or exile--from the Duc de Chatillon to La Rochefoucauld
+and Perusseau. Maurepas, the most virulent of them all, the King
+declined to exile, but he consented to a compromise. He should be made
+to offer Madame an abject apology, to grovel at her feet, a punishment
+with which she was content. And when the great minister presented
+himself by her bedside, in fear and trembling, to express his profound
+penitence and to beg her to return to Court, all she answered was, "Give
+me the King's letters and go!"
+
+The following Saturday she fixed on as the day of her triumphant
+return--"but it was death that was to raise her from the bed on which
+she had received the King's submission at the hands of his Prime
+Minister." Within twenty-four hours she was seized with violent
+convulsions and delirium. In her intervals of consciousness she shrieked
+aloud that she had been poisoned, and called down curses on her
+murderer--Maurepas. For eleven days she passed from one delirious attack
+to another, and as many times she was bled. But all the skill of the
+Court physicians was powerless to save her, and at five o'clock in the
+morning of the 8th December the Duchesse drew her last tortured breath
+in the arms of Madame de Mailly, the sister she had so cruelly wronged.
+
+Two days later, de Goncourt tells us, she was buried at Saint Sulpice,
+an hour before the customary time for interments, her coffin guarded by
+soldiers, to protect it from the fury of the mob.
+
+As for Madame de Mailly, she spent the last years of her troubled life
+in the odour of a tardy sanctity--washing the feet of the poor,
+ministering to the sick, bringing consolation to those in prison; and
+she was laid to rest amongst the poorest in the Cimetière des Innocents,
+wearing the hair-shirt which had been part of her penance during life,
+and with a simple cross of wood for all monument.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+A MISTRESS OF INTRIGUE
+
+
+"On 11th September," Madame de Motteville says, "we saw arrive from
+Italy three nieces of Cardinal Mazarin and a nephew. Two Mancini sisters
+and the nephew were the children of the youngest sister of his Eminence;
+and of the sisters Laure, the elder, was a pleasing brunette with a
+handsome face, about twelve or thirteen years of age; the second
+(Olympe), also a brunette, had a long face and pointed chin. Her eyes
+were small, but lively; and it might be expected that, when fifteen
+years of age, she would have some charm. According to the rules of
+beauty, it was impossible to grant her any, save that of having dimples
+in her cheeks."
+
+Such, at the age of nine or ten, was Olympe Mancini, who, in spite of
+her childish lack of beauty, was destined to enslave the handsomest King
+in Europe; and, after a life of discreditable intrigues, in which she
+incurred the stigma of witchcraft and murder, to end her career in
+obscurity, shunned by all who had known her in her day of splendour.
+
+It was a singular freak of fortune which translated the Mancini girls
+from their modest home in Italy to the magnificence of the French
+Court, as the adopted children of their uncle, Cardinal Mazarin, the
+virtual ruler of France, and the avowed lover (if not, as some say, the
+husband) of Anne of Austria, the Queen-mother. "See those little girls,"
+said the wife of Maréchal de Villeroi to Gaston d'Orléans, pointing to
+the Mancini children, the centre of an admiring crowd of courtiers.
+"They are not rich now; but some day they will have fine châteaux, large
+incomes, splendid jewels, beautiful silver, and perhaps great
+dignities."
+
+And how true this prophecy proved, we know; for, of the Cardinal's five
+Mancini nieces (for three others came, later, as their uncle's
+protégées), Laure found a husband in the Duc de Mercoeur, grandson of
+Henri IV.; two others lived to wear the coronet of Duchess; Olympe, as
+we shall see, became Comtesse de Soissons; and Marie, after narrowly
+missing the Queendom of France, became the wife of the Constable
+Colonna, one of the greatest nobles of Italy.
+
+Nor is there anything in such high alliances to cause surprise; for
+their future was in the hands of the most powerful, ambitious, and
+wealthy man in France. From their first appearance as his guests they
+were received with open arms by Louis' Court. They were speedily
+transferred to the Palais Royal, to be brought up with the boy-King,
+Louis XIV., and his brother, the Prince of Anjou; while the Queen
+herself not only paid them the most flattering attentions and treated
+them as her own children, but herself undertook part of their education.
+
+It was under such enviable conditions that the young daughters of a
+poor Roman baron grew up to girlhood--the pets of the Queen and the
+Court, the playfellows of the King, and the acknowledged heiresses of
+their uncle's millions; and of them all, not one had a keener eye to the
+future than Olympe of the long face, pointed chin, and dimples. It was
+she who entered with the greatest zest into the romps and games of her
+playmate, Louis XIV., who surrounded him with the most delicate
+flatteries and attentions, and practised all her childish arts and
+coquetries to win his favour. And she succeeded to such an extent that
+it was always the company of Olympe, and not of her more beautiful
+sisters, Hortense, Laure, or Marie, that Louis most sought.
+
+Not that Olympe was always to remain the plain, unattractive child
+Madame de Motteville describes in 1647. Each year, as it passed, added
+some touch of beauty, developed some latent charm, until at eighteen she
+was very fair to look upon. "Her eyes now" says Madame de Motteville,
+"were full of fire, her complexion had become beautiful, her face less
+thin, her cheeks took dimples which gave her a fresh charm, and she had
+fine arms and beautiful hands. She certainly seemed charming in the eyes
+of the King, and sufficiently pretty to indifferent spectators."
+
+That she had wooers in plenty, even before she was so far advanced in
+the teens, was inevitable; but her personal preferences counted for
+little in face of the Cardinal's determination to find for her, as for
+all his nieces, a splendid alliance which should shed lustre on himself.
+And thus it was that, without any consultation of her heart, Olympe's
+hand was formally given to Prince Eugene de Savoie, Comte de Soissons, a
+man in whose veins flowed the Royal strains of Savoy and France.
+
+It was a brilliant match indeed for the daughter of a petty Italian
+baron; and Mazarin saw that it was celebrated with becoming
+magnificence. On the 20th February, 1657, we see a brilliant company
+repairing to the Queen's apartments, "the Comte de Soissons escorting
+his betrothed, dressed in a gown of silver cloth, with a bouquet of
+pearls on her head, valued at more than 50,000 livres, and so many
+jewels that their splendour, joined to the natural éclat of her beauty,
+caused her to be admired by everyone. Immediately afterwards, the
+nuptials were celebrated in the Queen's chapel. Then the illustrious
+pair, after dining with the Princesse de Carignan-Savoie, ascended to
+the apartments of his Eminence, the Cardinal, where they were
+entertained to a magnificent supper, at which the King and Monsieur did
+the company the honour of joining them."
+
+Then followed two days of regal receptions; a visit to Notre Dame to
+hear Mass, with the Queen herself as escort; and a stately journey to
+the Hôtel de Soissons, where the Comtesse's mother-in-law "testified to
+her, by her joy and the rich presents which she made her, how great was
+the satisfaction with which she regarded this marriage."
+
+Thus raised to the rank of a Princess of the Blood, Olympe was by no
+means the proud and happy woman she ought to have been. She had, in
+fact, aspired much higher; she had had dreams of sharing the throne of
+France with her handsome young playmate, the King; and to Louis, wife
+though she now was, she had lost none of the attraction she possessed
+when he called her his "little sweetheart" in their childish games
+together. "He continued to visit her with the greatest regularity," to
+quote Mr Noel Williams; "indeed, scarcely a day went by on which His
+Majesty's coach did not stop at the gate of the Hôtel de Soissons; and
+Olympe, basking in the rays of the Royal favour, rapidly took her place
+as the brilliant, intriguing great lady Nature intended her to be."
+
+It is little wonder, perhaps, that Olympe's foolish head was turned by
+such flattering attentions from her sovereign, or that she began to give
+herself airs and to treat members of the Royal family with a haughty
+patronage. Even La Grande Mademoiselle did not escape her insolence;
+for, as she herself records, "when I paid her a thousand compliments and
+told her that her marriage had given me the greatest joy and that I
+hoped we should always be good friends, she answered me not a word."
+
+But Olympe's supremacy was not to remain much longer unchallenged. The
+King's vagrant fancy was already turning to her younger sister, Marie,
+whose childish plainness had now ripened to a beauty more dazzling than
+her own--the witchery of large and brilliant black eyes, a complexion of
+pure olive, luxuriant, jet-black hair, a figure of singular suppleness
+and grace, and a sprightliness of wit and a _gaieté de coeur_ which the
+Comtesse could not hope to rival. It soon began to be rumoured in Court
+that Louis spent hours daily in the company of Mazarin's beautiful
+niece; a rumour which Hortense Mancini supports in her "Memoirs." "The
+presence of the King, who seldom stirred from our lodging, often
+interrupted us," she says; "my sister, Marie, alone was undisturbed; and
+you can easily understand that his assiduity had charms for her, who was
+the cause of it, because it had none for others."
+
+And as Louis' visits to the Mancini lodging became more and more
+frequent, each adding a fresh link to the chain that was binding him to
+her young sister, Madame de Soissons saw less and less of him, until an
+amused tolerance gave place to a genuine alarm. It was nothing less than
+an outrage that she, who had so long held first place in the King's
+favour, should be ousted by a "mere child," the last person in the world
+whom she could have thought of as a rival. But the Comtesse was no woman
+to be easily dethroned. Although at every Court ball, fête, or ballet,
+Louis was now inseparable from her sister, she affected to ignore these
+open slights and lost no opportunity in public of vaunting her intimacy
+with His Majesty, even to the extent on one occasion, as Mademoiselle
+records, of taking Louis' seat at a ball supper and compelling him to
+share it with her.
+
+But such shameless arrogance only served to estrange the King still
+further, and to make him seek still more the company of the young
+sister, who had already captured his heart as the Comtesse had never
+captured it. When Louis made his memorable journey to Lyons to meet the
+Princess Margaret of Savoy, it was to Marie that he paid the most
+courtly and tender attentions. "During the journey," says Mademoiselle,
+"he did not address a word to the Comtesse de Soissons"; and, indeed, on
+more than one occasion he showed a marked aversion to her.
+
+At St Jean d'Angely, Louis not only himself escorted Marie to her
+lodging; he stayed with her until two o'clock in the morning. "Nothing,"
+her sister Hortense records, "could equal the passion which the King
+showed, and the tenderness with which he asked of Marie her pardon for
+all she had suffered for his sake." It was, indeed, no secret at Court
+that he had offered her marriage, and had taken a solemn vow that
+neither Margaret of Savoy nor the Infanta of Spain should be his wife.
+But, as we have seen in a previous chapter, both the Queen and Mazarin
+were determined that the Infanta should be Queen of France; and that his
+foolish romance with the Mancini girl should be nipped in the bud.
+
+There was also another powerful influence at work to thwart his passion
+for Marie. The indifference of the Comtesse de Soissons had given place
+to a fury of resentment; and she needed no instigation of her uncle to
+determine at any cost to recover the place she had lost in Louis'
+favour. She brought all her armoury of coquetry and flatteries to bear
+on him, and so far succeeded that, we read, "the King has resumed his
+relations with the Comtesse; he has recommenced to talk and laugh with
+her; and three days since he entertained M. and Madame de Soissons with
+a ball and a play, and afterwards they partook of _medianoche_ (a
+midnight banquet) together, passing more than three hours in
+conversation with them."
+
+Meanwhile Marie, realising the hopelessness of her passion in face of
+the opposition of her uncle and the Queen, and of Louis' approaching
+marriage to the Spanish Princess, had given him unequivocally to
+understand that their relations must cease, and the rupture was complete
+when the Comtesse told the King of her sister's dallying with Prince
+Charles of Lorraine, of their assignations in the Tuileries, of their
+mutual infatuation, and of the rumours of an arranged marriage. "_Cela
+est bien_" was all Louis remarked, but the dark flush of anger that
+flooded his face was a sweet reward to the Comtesse for her treachery.
+
+A few days later her revenge was complete when, in the King's presence,
+she rallied her sister on her low spirits. "You find the time pass
+slowly when you are away from Paris," she said; "nor am I surprised,
+since you have left your lover there"; to which Marie answered with a
+haughty toss of the head, "That is possible, Madame."
+
+One formidable rival thus removed from her path, Madame de Soissons was
+not long left to enjoy her triumph; for another was quick to take the
+place abandoned by the broken-hearted Marie--the beautiful and gentle La
+Vallière, who was the next to acquire an ascendancy over the King's
+susceptible heart. Once more the Comtesse, to her undisguised chagrin,
+found herself relegated to the background, to look impotently on while
+Louis made love to her successor, and to meditate new schemes of
+vengeance. It was in vain that Louis, by way of amende, found for her a
+lover in the Marquis de Vardes, the most handsome and dissolute of his
+courtiers, for whom she soon developed a veritable passion. Her vanity
+might be appeased, but her bitterness--the _spretoe injuria
+formoe_--remained; and she lost no time in plotting further mischief.
+
+With the help of M. de Vardes and the Comte de Guiche, she sent an
+anonymous letter to the Queen, containing a full and intimate account of
+her husband's amour with La Vallière--the letter enclosed in an envelope
+addressed in the handwriting of the Queen of Spain. Fortunately for
+Maria Theresa's peace of mind the letter fell into the hands of Louis
+himself, who was naturally furious at such treachery and determined to
+make those responsible for it suffer--when he should discover them. As,
+however, the investigation of the matter was entrusted to de Vardes, it
+is needless to say that the culprits escaped detection.
+
+Madame de Soissons' next attempt to bring about a rupture between the
+King and La Vallière, by bringing forward a rival in the person of the
+seductive Mlle de la Motte-Houdancourt, proved equally futile, when
+Louis discovered by accident that she was but a tool in Madame's
+designing hands; and for a time the Comtesse was sent in disgrace from
+the Court to nurse her jealousy and to devise more effectual plans of
+vengeance.
+
+What form these took seems clear from an investigation held at the
+close of 1678 into a supposed plot to poison the King and the Dauphin--a
+plot of which La Voisin, one of the greatest criminals in history, was
+suspected of being the ringleader. During this inquiry La Voisin
+confessed that the Comtesse de Soissons had come to her house one day
+"and demanded the means of getting rid of Mile de la Vallière"; and,
+further, that the Comtesse had avowed her intention to destroy not only
+Louis' mistress, but the King himself.
+
+Such a confession was well calculated to rouse a storm of indignation in
+France, where Madame de Soissons had made many powerful enemies. The
+Chambre unanimously demanded her arrest; but before it could be
+effected, Madame, stoutly declaring her innocence, had shaken the dust
+of Paris off her feet, and was on her way to Brussels.
+
+During her flight to safety, we are told, "the principal inns in the
+towns and villages through which she passed refused to receive her"; and
+more than once she was compelled to sleep on straw and suffer the
+insults of the populace, which reviled her as sorceress and poisoner.
+"We are assured," Madame de Sevigné writes, "that the gates of Namur,
+Antwerp, and other towns have been closed against the Countess, the
+people crying out, 'We want no poisoner here'!" Even at Brussels,
+whenever she ventured into the streets she was assailed by a storm of
+insults; and on one occasion, when she entered a church, "a number of
+people rushed out, collected all the black cats they could find, tied
+their tails together, and brought them howling and spitting into the
+porch, crying out that they were devils who were following the
+Comtesse."
+
+In the face of such chilling hospitality Madame de Soissons was not
+tempted to make a long stay in Brussels; and after a few months of
+restless wandering in Flanders and Germany, she drifted to Spain where
+she succeeded in ingratiating herself with the Queen. She found little
+welcome however from the King, who, as the French Ambassador to Madrid
+wrote, "was warned against her. He accused her of sorcery, and I learn
+that, some days ago, he conceived the idea that, had it not been for a
+spell she had cast over him, he would have had children.... The life of
+the Comtesse de Soissons consists in receiving at her house all persons
+who desire to come there, from four o'clock in the evening up to two or
+three hours after midnight. There is, sire, everything that can convey
+an air of familiarity and contempt for the house of a woman of quality."
+
+That Carlos' suspicions were not without reason was proved when one day
+his Queen, after, it is said, drinking a glass of milk handed to her by
+the Comtesse, was taken suddenly ill and expired after three days of
+terrible suffering. That she died of poison, like her mother, the
+ill-fated sister of our second Charles, seems probable; but that the
+poison was administered by the Comtesse, whose friend and protectress
+she was and who had every reason to wish her well, is less to be
+believed, in spite of Saint-Simon's unequivocal accusation. Certainly
+the crime was not proved against her; for we find her still in Spain in
+the following spring, when Carlos, his patience exhausted, ordered her
+to leave the country.
+
+After a short stay in Portugal and Germany, Madame de Soissons was back
+in Brussels, where she spent the brief remainder of her days--"all the
+French of distinction who visited the City" (to quote Saint-Simon)
+"being strictly forbidden to visit her." Here, on the 9th October, 1690,
+her beauty but a memory, bankrupt in reputation, friendless and poor,
+the curtain fell on the life so full of mis-used gifts and baffled
+ambitions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE
+
+
+Few Kings have come to their thrones under such brilliant auspices as
+Milan I. of Servia; few have abandoned their crowns to the greater
+relief of their subjects, or have been followed to their exile by so
+much hatred. But a fortnight before Milan's accession, his cousin and
+predecessor, Prince Michael, had been foully done to death by hired
+assassins as he was walking in the park of Topfschider, with three
+ladies of his Court; and the murdered man had been placed in a carriage,
+sitting upright as in life, and had been driven back to his palace
+through the respectful greetings of his subjects, who little knew that
+they were saluting a corpse.
+
+There was good reason for this mockery of death, for Prince Alexander
+Karageorgevitch had long set ambitious eyes on the crown of Servia, and
+resolved to wrest it by fair means or foul from the boy-heir to the
+throne; and it was of the highest importance that Michael's death, which
+he had so brutally planned, should be concealed from him until the
+succession had been secured to his young rival, Milan. And thus it was
+that, before Karageorgevitch could bring his plotting to the head of
+achievement, Milan was hailed with acclamation as Servia's new Prince,
+and, on the 23rd June, 1868, made his triumphal entry into Belgrade to
+the jubilant ringing of bells and the thunderous cheers of the people.
+
+Twelve days later, Belgrade was _en fête_ for his crowning, her streets
+ablaze with bunting and floral decorations, as the handsome boy made his
+way through the tumults of cheers and avenues of fluttering
+handkerchiefs to the Metropolitan Church. The men, we are told, "took
+off their cloaks and placed them under his feet, that he might walk on
+them; they clustered round him, kissing his garments, and blessing him
+as their very own; they worshipped his handsome face and loved his
+boyish smile." And when his young voice rang clearly out in the words,
+"I promise you that I shall, to my dying day, preserve faithfully the
+honour and integrity of Servia, and shall be ready to shed the last drop
+of my blood to defend its rights," there was scarcely one of the
+enthusiastic thousands that heard him who would not have been willing to
+lay down his life for the idolised Prince.
+
+It was by strange paths that the fourteen-year-old Milan had thus come
+to his Principality. The son of Jefrenn Obrenovitch, uncle of the
+reigning Michael, he was cradled one August day in 1854, his mother
+being Marie Catargo, of the powerful race of Roumanian "Hospodars," a
+woman of strong passions and dissolute life. When her temper and
+infidelities had driven her husband to the drinking that put a premature
+end to his days, Marie transferred her affection, without the sanction
+of a wedding-ring, to Prince Kusa, a man of as evil repute as herself.
+In such a home and with such guardians her only child, Milan, the future
+ruler of Servia, spent the early years of his life--ill-fed, neglected,
+and supremely wretched.
+
+Thus it was that, when Prince Michael summoned the boy to Belgrade, in
+order to make the acquaintance of his successor, he was horrified to see
+an uncouth lad, as devoid of manners and of education as any in the
+slums of his capital. The heir to the throne could neither read nor
+write; the only language he spoke was a debased Roumanian, picked up
+from the servants who had been his only associates, while of the land
+over which he was to rule one day he knew absolutely nothing. The only
+hope for him was his extreme youth--he was at the time only twelve years
+old--and Michael lost no time in having him trained for the high station
+he was destined to fill.
+
+The progress the boy made was amazing. Within two years he was
+unrecognisable as the half-savage who had so shocked the Court of
+Belgrade. He could speak the Servian tongue with fluency and grace; he
+had acquired elegance of manners and speech, and a winning courtesy of
+manner which to his last day was his most marked characteristic; he had
+mastered many accomplishments, and he excelled in most manly exercises,
+from riding to swimming. And to all this remarkable promise the
+finishing touches were put by a visit to Paris under the tutorship of a
+courtly and learned professor.
+
+Thus when, within two years of his emancipation, he came to his crown,
+the uncouth lad from Roumania had blossomed into a Prince as goodly to
+look on as any Europe could show--a handsome boy of courtly graces and
+accomplishments, able to converse in several languages, and singularly
+equipped in all ways to win the homage of the simple people over whom he
+had been so early called to rule. As Mrs Gerard says, "They idolised
+their boy-Prince. Every day they stood in long, closely packed lines
+watching to see him come out of the castle to ride or drive; as he
+passed along, smiling affectionately on his people, blessings were
+showered on him. There was, however, another side to this picture of
+devotion. There were those who hated the boy because he had thwarted
+their plans." And this hatred, as persistent as it was malignant, was to
+follow him throughout his reign, and through his years of unhappy exile,
+to his grave.
+
+But these days were happily still remote. After four years of minority
+and Regency, when he was able to take the reins of government into his
+own hands, his empire over the hearts of his subjects was more firmly
+based than ever. His youth, his modesty, and his compelling charm of
+manner made friends for him wherever his wanderings took him, from Paris
+to Constantinople. He was the "Prince Charming" of Europe, as popular
+abroad as he was idolised at home; and when the time arrived to find a
+consort for him he might, one would have thought, have been able to pick
+and choose among the fairest Princesses of the Continent.
+
+But handsome and gallant and popular as he was, the overtures of his
+ministers were coldly received by one Royal house after another. Milan
+might be a reigning Prince and a charming one to boot, but it was not
+forgotten that the first of his line had been a common herdsman, and the
+blood of Hapsburgs and Hohenzollerns could not be allowed to mingle with
+so base a strain. Even a mere Hungarian Count, whose fair daughter had
+caught Milan's fancy, frowned on the suit of the swineherd's successor.
+But fate had already chosen a bride for the young Prince, who was more
+than equal in birth to any Count's daughter; who would bring beauty and
+riches as her portion; and who, after many unhappy years, was to crown
+her dower with tragedy.
+
+It was at Nice, where Prince Milan was spending the winter months of
+1875, that he first set eyes on the woman whose life was to be so
+tragically linked with his own. Among the visitors there was the family
+of a Russian colonel, Nathaniel Ketschko, a man of high lineage and
+great wealth. He claimed, in fact, descent from the Royal race of
+Comnenus, which had given many a King to the thrones of Europe, and
+whose sons for long centuries had won fame as generals, statesmen, and
+ambassadors. And to this exalted strain was allied enormous wealth, of
+which the Colonel's share was represented by a regal revenue of four
+hundred thousand roubles a year.
+
+But proud as he was of his birth and his riches, Colonel Nathaniel was
+still prouder of his two lovely daughters, each of whom had inherited in
+liberal measure the beauty of their mother, a daughter of the princely
+house of Stourza; and of the two the more beautiful, by common consent,
+was Natalie, whose charms won this spontaneous tribute from Tsar
+Nicholas, when first he saw her, "I would I were a beggar that I might
+every day ask your alms, and have the happiness of kissing your hand."
+She had, says one who knew her in her radiant youth, "an irresistible
+charm that permeated her whole being with such a harmony of grace,
+sweetness, and overpowering attraction that one felt drawn to her with
+magnetic force; and to adore her seemed the most natural and indeed the
+only position."
+
+Such was the high tribute paid to Servia's future Queen at the first
+dawning of that beauty which was to make her also Queen of all the fair
+women of Europe, and which at its zenith was thus described by one who
+saw her at Wiesbaden ten years or so later: "She walked along the
+promenade with a light, graceful movement; her feet hardly seemed to
+touch the ground, her figure was elegant, her finely cut face was lit up
+by those wonderful eyes, once seen never forgotten--brilliant, tender,
+loving; her luxuriant hair of raven black was loosely coiled round the
+well-set head, or fell in curls on the beautifully arched neck. For each
+one she had a pleasant smile, a gracious bow, or a few words, spoken in
+a musical voice." No wonder the Germans, who looked at this apparition
+of grace and beauty, "simply fell down and adored her."
+
+Such was the vision of beauty of which Prince Milan caught his first
+glimpse on the promenade at Nice in the winter of 1875, and which
+haunted him, day and night, until chance brought their paths together
+again, and he won her consent to share his throne. That such a high
+destiny awaited her, Natalie had already been told by a gipsy whom she
+met one day in the woods of her father's estate near Moscow--a meeting
+of which the following story is told.
+
+At sight of the beautiful young girl the gipsy stooped in homage and
+kissed the hem of her dress. "Why do you do that?" asked Natalie, half
+in alarm and half in pleasure. "Because," the woman answered, "I salute
+you as the chosen bride of a great Prince. Over your head I see a crown
+floating in the air. It descends lower and lower until it rests on your
+head. A dazzling brilliance adorns the crown; it is a Royal diadem."
+
+"What else?" asked Natalie eagerly, her face flushed with excitement and
+delight. "Oh! do tell me more, please!" "What more shall I say,"
+continued the gipsy, "except that you will be a Queen, and the mother of
+a King; but then--"
+
+"But then, what?" exclaimed the eager and impatient girl; "do go on,
+please. What then?" and she held out a gold coin temptingly. "I see a
+large house; you will be there, but--take care; you will be turned out
+by force.... And now give me the coin and let me go. More I must not
+tell you."
+
+Such were the dazzling and mysterious words spoken by the gipsy woman in
+the Russian forest, a year or more before Natalie first saw the Prince
+who was destined to make them true. But it was not at Nice that
+opportunity came to Milan. It was an accidental meeting in Paris, some
+months later, that made his path clear. During a visit to the French
+capital he met a young Servian officer, a distant kinsman, one Alexander
+Konstantinovitch, who confided to him, over their wine and cigarettes,
+the story of his infatuation for the daughter of a Russian colonel, who
+at the time was staying with her aunt, the Princess Murussi. He raved of
+her beauty and her charm, and concluded by asking the Prince to
+accompany him that he might make the acquaintance of the Lieutenant's
+bride-to-be.
+
+Arrived at their destination, the Prince and his companion were
+graciously received by the Princess Murussi, but Milan had no eyes for
+the dignified lady who gave him such a flattering reception; they were
+drawn as by a magnet to the girl by her side--"a child with a woman's
+grace and an angel's soul smiling in her eyes"; the incarnation of his
+dreams, the very girl whose beauty, though he had caught but one passing
+glimpse of it, had so intoxicated his brain a few months earlier at
+Nice.
+
+"Allow me," said the Lieutenant, "to introduce to Your Highness Natalie
+Ketschko, my affianced wife." Milan's face flushed with surprise and
+anger at the words. What was this trick that had been played on him? Had
+Konstantinovitch then brought him here only to humiliate him? But before
+he could recover from his indignation and astonishment, the Princess
+said chillingly, "Pardon me, Monsieur Konstantinovitch, you are not
+speaking the truth. My niece, Colonel Ketschko's daughter, is not your
+affianced wife. You are too premature."
+
+Thus rebuffed, the Lieutenant was not encouraged to prolong his stay;
+and Milan was left, reassured, to bask in the smiles of the Princess and
+her lovely niece, and to pursue his wooing under the most favourable
+auspices. This first visit was quickly followed by others; and before a
+week had passed the Prince had won the prize on which his heart was set,
+and with it a dower of five million roubles. Now followed halcyon days
+for the young lovers--long hours of sweet communion, of anticipation of
+the happy years that stretched in such a golden vista before them. It
+was a love-idyll such as delighted the romantic heart of Paris; and
+congratulations and presents poured on the young couple; "the very
+beggars in the streets," we are told, "blessing them as they drove by."
+
+"Happy is the wooing that is not long a-doing," and Milan's wooing was
+as brief as it was blissful. He was all impatience to possess fully the
+prize he had won; preparations for the nuptials were hastened, but,
+before the crowning day dawned, once more the voice of warning spoke.
+
+A few days before the wedding, as Milan was leaving the Murussi Palace,
+he was accosted by a woman, who craved permission to speak to him, a
+favour which was smilingly accorded. "I know you," said the woman, thus
+permitted to speak, "although you do not know me. You are the Prince of
+Servia; I am a servant in the household of the Princess Murussi. Your
+Highness, listen! I love Natalie. I have known and loved her since she
+was a child; and I beg of you not to marry her. Such a union is doomed
+to unhappiness. You love to rule, to command. So does Natalie; and it is
+_she_ who will be the ruler. You are utterly unsuited for each other,
+and nothing but great unhappiness can possibly come from your union."
+
+To this warning Milan turned a smiling face and a deaf ear, as Natalie
+had done to the voice of the gipsy. A fig for such gloomy prophecy! They
+were ideally happy in the present, and the future should be equally
+bright, however ravens might croak. Thus, one October day in 1875,
+Vienna held high holiday for the nuptials of the handsome Prince and his
+beautiful bride; and it was through avenues densely packed with cheering
+onlookers that Natalie made her triumphal progress to the altar, in her
+flower-garlanded dress of white satin, a tiara of diamonds flashing from
+the blackness of her hair, no brighter than the brilliance of her eyes,
+her face irradiated with happiness.
+
+That no Royalty graced their wedding was a matter of no moment to Milan
+and Natalie, whose happiness was thus crowned; and when at the
+subsequent banquet Milan said, "I wish from my very heart that every one
+of my subjects, as well as everybody I know, could be always as happy as
+I am this moment," none who heard him could doubt the sincerity of his
+words, or see any but a golden future for so ideal a union of hearts.
+
+By Servia her young Princess was received with open arms of welcome.
+"Her reception," we are told, "was beyond description. The festivities
+lasted three days, and during that time the love of the people for
+their Prince, and their admiration of the beauty and charm of his bride,
+were beyond words to describe." Never did Royal wedded life open more
+full of bright promise, and never did consort make more immediate
+conquest of the affections of her husband's subjects. "No one could have
+believed that this marriage, which was contracted from love and love
+alone, would have ended in so tragic a manner, or that hate could so
+quickly have taken the place of love."
+
+But the serpent was quick to show his head in Natalie's new paradise.
+Before she had been many weeks a wife, stories came to her ears of her
+husband's many infidelities. Now the story was of one lady of her Court,
+now of another, until the horrified Princess knew not whom to trust or
+to respect. Strange tales, too, came to her (mostly anonymously) of
+Milan's amours in Paris, in Vienna, and half a dozen of his other haunts
+of pleasure, until her love, poisoned at its very springing, turned to
+suspicion and distrust of the man to whom she had given her heart.
+
+Other disillusions were quick to follow. She discovered that her husband
+was a hopeless gambler and spendthrift, spending long hours daily at the
+card-tables, watching with pale face and trembling lips his pile of gold
+dwindle (as it usually did) to its last coin; and often losing at a
+single sitting a month's revenue from the Civil List. Her own dowry of
+five million roubles, she knew, was safe from his clutches. Her father
+had taken care to make that secure, but Milan's private fortune, large
+as it had been, had already been squandered in this and other forms of
+dissipation; and even the expenses of his wedding, she learned, had been
+met by a loan raised at ruinous interest.
+
+Such discoveries as these were well calculated to shatter the dreams of
+the most infatuated of brides, and less was sufficient to rouse
+Natalie's proud spirit to rebellion. When affectionate pleadings proved
+useless, reproaches took their place. Heated words were exchanged, and
+the records tell of many violent scenes before Natalie had been six
+months Princess of Servia. "You love to rule," the warning voice had
+told Milan--"to command. So does Natalie"; and already the clashing of
+strong wills and imperious tempers, which must end in the yielding of
+one or the other, had begun to be heard.
+
+If more fuel had been needed to feed the flames of dissension, it was
+quickly supplied by two unfortunate incidents. The first was Milan's
+open dallying with Fräulein S----, one of Natalie's maids-of-honour, a
+girl almost as beautiful as herself, but with the _beauté de diable_.
+The second was the appearance in Belgrade of Dimitri Wasseljevitchca,
+who was suspected of plotting to assassinate the Tsar. Russia demanded
+that the fugitive should be given up to justice, and enlisted Natalie's
+co-operation with this object. Milan, however, was resolute not to
+surrender the plotter, and turned a deaf ear to all the Princess's
+pleadings and cajoleries. "The most exciting scene followed. Natalie,
+abandoning entreaties, threatened and even commanded her husband to obey
+her"; and when threats and commands equally failed, she gave way to a
+paroxysm of rage in which she heaped the most unbridled scorn and
+contempt on her husband.
+
+Thus jealousy, a thwarted will, and Milan's low pleasures combined to
+widen the breach between the Royal couple, so recently plighted to each
+other in the sacred name of love, and to prepare the way for the
+troubled and tragic years to come.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE--_continued_
+
+
+If anything could have restored happiness to Milan of Servia and his
+Princess, Natalie, it should surely have been the birth of the
+baby-Prince, Alexander, whom both equally adored and equally spoiled.
+But, instead of linking his parents in a new bond of affection "Sacha"
+was from his cradle the innocent cause of widening the breach that
+severed them.
+
+For a time, fortunately, Milan had little opportunity of continuing the
+feud of recrimination with his high-spirited and hot-tempered spouse.
+More serious matters claimed him. Servia was plunged into war with
+Turkey, and his days were spent in camp and on the battlefield, until
+the intervention of Russia put an end to the long and hopeless struggle,
+and Milan found himself one February day in 1882, thanks to the Berlin
+Conference, hailed the first King of his country, under the title of
+Milan I.
+
+Then followed a disastrous war with Bulgaria into which the headstrong
+King rushed in spite of Natalie's warning--"Draw back, Milan, and have
+no share in what will prove a bloody drama. You have no chance of
+conquering, for Alexander is made of the stuff of the Hohenzollerns."
+And indeed the struggle was doomed to failure from the first; for Milan
+was no man to lead an army to victory. Read his method of conducting a
+campaign, as described by one of his aides-de-camp--
+
+"Our troops continue to retreat--I never imagined a campaign could be so
+jolly. We do nothing but dance and sing and fiddle. Yesterday the King
+had some guests and the champagne literally flowed. We had the Belgrade
+singers, who used to delight us in the theatre-café. They sang and
+danced delightfully. The last two days we have had plenty of fun, and
+yesterday a lot of jolly girls came to enliven us." Such was Milan's
+method of conducting a great war, on which the very existence of his
+kingdom hung. Wine and women and song were more to his taste than forced
+marches, strategy, and hard-fought battles. But once again foreign
+intervention came to his rescue; and his armies were saved from
+annihilation.
+
+When his sword was finally sheathed, if not with honour, he returned to
+Belgrade to resume his gambling, his dallyings with fair women--and his
+daily quarrels with his Queen, whose bitterness absence had done nothing
+to assuage. So far from Natalie's spirit being crushed, it was higher
+and prouder than ever. She would die before she would yield; but she was
+in no mood to die, this autocratic, fiery-tempered, strong-willed
+daughter of Russia. She gave literally a "striking" proof of the spirit
+that was in her at the Easter reception of 1886, when the wife of a
+Greek diplomat--a beautiful woman, to whom her husband had been more
+than kind--presented herself smilingly to receive the "salute courteous"
+from Her Majesty. With a look of scorn Natalie coolly surveyed her rival
+from head to foot; and then, in the presence of the Court, gave her a
+resounding slap on the cheek.
+
+But the Grecian lady was only one of many fair women who basked
+successively (or together) in Milan's favour. A much more formidable
+rival was Artemesia Christich, a woman as designing as she was lovely,
+who was quick to envelop the weak King in the toils of her witchery. Not
+content with his smiles and favours she aspired to take Natalie's place
+as Queen of Servia; and, it is said, had extorted from him a promise
+that he would make her his Queen as soon as his existing marriage tie
+could be dissolved. And to this infamous compact Artemesia's husband, a
+man as crafty and unscrupulous as herself, consented, in return for his
+promotion to certain high and profitable offices in the State.
+
+In vain did the Emperor and the Crown Prince of Austria, with many
+another high-placed friend, plead with Milan not to commit such a folly.
+He was driven to distraction between such powerful appeals and the
+allurement of the siren who had him so effectually under her spell,
+until in his despair he entertained serious thoughts of suicide as
+escape from his dilemma. Meanwhile, we are told, "a perfect hell" raged
+in the castle; each day brought its scandalous scene between his
+outraged Queen and himself. His unpopularity with his subjects became so
+acute that he was hissed whenever he made his appearance in the streets
+of his capital; and Artemesia was obliged to have police protection to
+shield her from the vengeance of the mob.
+
+As for Natalie, this crowning injury decided her to bear her purgatory
+no longer. She would force her husband to abdicate and secure her own
+appointment as Regent for her son; or, failing that, she would leave her
+husband and seek an asylum out of Servia. And with the object of still
+further embittering his subjects against the King she made the full
+story of her injuries public, and enlisted the sympathy, not only of
+Milan's most powerful ministers, but of the entire country.
+
+"The castle is in utter confusion," wrote an officer of the Belgrade
+garrison, in October, 1886. "The King looks ill, and as if he never
+slept. Poor fellow! he flies for refuge to us in the guard-house, and
+plays cards with the officers. Card-playing is his worst enemy. He loves
+it passionately, and plays excitedly and for high points--and he always
+loses."
+
+Matters were now hastening to a crisis. Hopelessly in debt, scorned by
+his subjects, and hated by his wife, Milan's plight was pitiful. The
+scenes between the King and the Queen were becoming more violent and
+disgraceful every day. "There was no peace anywhere, nor did anyone
+belonging to the Court enjoy a moment of tranquillity." So intolerable
+had life become that, early in 1887, Milan decided to dissolve his
+marriage; and it was only at the pleading of the Austrian Emperor that
+he consented to abandon this design, on condition that his wife left
+Servia; and thus it was that one day in April Queen Natalie left
+Belgrade, accompanied by her son "Sacha," ostensibly that he might
+continue his education in Germany.
+
+But, although husband and wife were thus at last separated, Milan's
+resolve to divorce her remained firm. "I have to inform you," he wrote
+shortly after her departure, "that I have this day sent in my
+application to our Holy National Church for permission to dissolve our
+marriage." And that nothing might be lacking to Natalie's suffering and
+humiliation, he sent General Protitsch to Wiesbaden with a peremptory
+demand that his son, "Sacha," should return to Servia.
+
+In vain did Natalie protest against both indignities. Milan might
+divorce her; but at least he should not rob her of her son, the only
+solace left to her in life. And when General Protitsch, seeing that
+milder measures were futile, gave orders for the Prince to be removed by
+force, the distracted mother flung one protecting arm round her boy;
+and, pointing a loaded pistol with the other, threatened to shoot dead
+the man who dared approach her.
+
+Opposition, however, was futile; the following evening the boy-Prince
+was in his father's arms, and the weeping mother was left disconsolate.
+Thus robbed of her darling "Sacha," it was not long before the second
+blow fell. The divorce proceedings were rushed through the Synod. A deaf
+ear was turned to Natalie's petition to be allowed, at least, to defend
+herself in person; and on the 12th October, 1888, the "marriage between
+King Milan I. and Natalie, born Ketschko," was formally dissolved. Well
+might this most unhappy of Queens write, "The position is embittered by
+my conscience assuring me that I have neglected no duty, and that there
+is not a single action of my life which could be cited against me as a
+grave offence, or could put me to shame were it brought before the whole
+world. My fate should draw tears from the very stones; but I do not ask
+for pity; I demand justice."
+
+If anything could have increased Milan's unpopularity it was this brutal
+treatment of his Queen. The very men who, at his coronation, had taken
+off their cloaks that he might walk on them, and the women who had
+kissed his garments, now hissed him in the streets of his capital. In
+his own Court he had no friend except the infamous Christitch; the
+general hatred even took the form of repeated attempts on his life. If
+he would save it, he realised he must abandon his crown; and one March
+morning in 1889, after informing his ministers of his intention to
+abdicate, he awoke his twelve-year-old son with the greeting, "Good
+morning, Your Majesty!" Milan was no longer King of Servia; his son,
+Alexander, reigned in his stead.
+
+Probably no King ever laid down his crown more willingly. He had put
+aside for ever his Royal trappings, with all their unhappy memories, and
+their present discomforts and danger; but in distant Paris he knew a
+life of new pleasure awaited him, remote from the wranglings of Courts
+and the assassin's knife. And within a week of greeting his successor as
+King, he was gaily riding in the Bois, attending the theatres, supping
+hilariously with ladies of the ballet, or dining with his friends at
+Verrey's "where his somewhat rough manner and coarse jokes (the legacy
+of his swineherd ancestry) caused him sometimes to be mistaken for a
+parvenu," until a waiter would correct the impression by a whispered,
+"That gentleman with the dark moustache is Milan, ex-King of Servia."
+
+While her husband was thus drinking the cup of Paris pleasure, his wife
+was still doomed to exile from her kingdom and her son, with permission
+only to pay two brief visits each year. But Natalie, who had so long
+defied a King, was not the woman to be daunted by mere Regents. She
+would return to Belgrade, and at least make her home where she could
+catch an occasional glimpse of her boy. And to Belgrade she went, to
+make her entry over flower-strewn streets, and through a tornado of
+cheers and shouts of "Zivela Rufe!" It was a truly Royal welcome to the
+great warm heart of the Servian people; but no official of the Court was
+there to greet her coming, and as she drove past the castle which held
+all she counted dear in life, not even the flutter of a handkerchief
+marked the passing of Servia's former Queen.
+
+Had she but played her cards now with the least discretion, she might
+have been allowed to remain in Belgrade in peace. But Natalie seems
+fated to have been the harbinger of storm. For a time, it is true, she
+was content to lie _perdue_, entertaining her friends at her house in
+Prince Michael Street, driving through the streets of her capital behind
+her pair of white ponies, or walking with her pet goat for companion,
+greeted everywhere with respect and affection. But her restless,
+vengeful spirit, still burning from the indignities she had suffered,
+would not allow her to remain long in the background. She threw herself
+into political agitation, and thus brought herself into open conflict
+with the Regents; she inaugurated a campaign of abuse against her
+husband, whom she still pursued with a relentless hatred; and generally
+made herself so objectionable to the authorities that the Skupshtina was
+at last compelled to order her banishment.
+
+When the deputies presented themselves before her with the decree of
+expulsion, she laughed in their very faces, declaring that she would
+only submit to force. "I refuse to go," she said defiantly, "unless I am
+expelled by the hands of the police." A few hours later she was forcibly
+removed from her weeping and protesting ladies, hurried into a carriage,
+and driven off, with a strong escort of soldiers, on her journey to
+exile.
+
+But the good people of Belgrade, who had got wind of the proposed
+abduction, were by no means disposed to look on while their beloved
+Queen was thus brutally taken from them. When the cortège reached the
+Cathedral Square, it was stopped by a formidable and menacing mob; the
+escort, furiously assailed with sticks and showers of stones, was beaten
+off; the horses were taken from the carriage, and the Queen was drawn
+back in triumph by scores of willing hands, to her residence.
+
+Natalie's victory, however, was short-lived. At midnight, when her
+stalwart champions were sleeping in their beds, the police, crawling
+over the roofs of the houses in Prince Michael Street, and descending
+into the Queen's courtyard, found it a very simple matter to complete
+their dastardly work. The Queen was again bundled unceremoniously into a
+carriage, and before Belgrade was well awake, she was far on her way to
+her new exile in Hungary. A few days later a formal decree of banishment
+was pronounced against her, forbidding her, under any pretext whatever,
+to enter Servia again without the Regent's permission.
+
+Only once more did Natalie and Milan set eyes on each other--when the
+ex-King presented himself at Biarritz, to bring her news of their son's
+projected _coup d'état_, by which he designed to depose the Regents and
+to take the reins of government into his own hands. Taken by surprise,
+the Queen received Milan, but when she saw him standing before her, an
+aged, broken man, her composure gave way. She could not speak; she
+trembled like a leaf.
+
+With Alexander's dramatic accession to his full Kingship a new, if
+brief, era of happiness opened to Natalie. The Regents were no longer
+able to exclude her from Servia, and by her son's invitation she
+returned to Belgrade to resume her old position of Queen.
+
+Still beautiful, in spite of all her suffering, she played for a time
+the rôle of Queen-mother to perfection, holding her Courts, presiding at
+balls and soirées, taking a prominent part in affairs of State, and
+gradually acquiring more power than her easy-going son himself enjoyed.
+At last, after long years of unrest and unhappiness, she seemed assured
+of peaceful years, secure in the affection of her son and her people,
+and far removed from the husband who had brought so much misery into her
+life.
+
+But Natalie was fated never to be happy long, and once more her evil
+Destiny was to snatch the cup from her lips, assuming this time the form
+of Draga Maschin, one of her own ladies-in-waiting, under the spell of
+whose black eyes and voluptuous charms her son quickly fell, after that
+first dramatic incident at Biarritz, when she plunged into the sea to
+his rescue and saved him from drowning.
+
+Many months earlier a clairvoyante at Paris had told Natalie, "Your
+Majesty is cherishing in your bosom a poisonous snake, which one day
+will give you a mortal wound." She had smiled incredulously at the
+warning, but she was soon to learn what truth it held. Certainly Draga
+Maschin was the last person she would have suspected of being a source
+of danger--a woman many years older than her son, the penniless widow of
+a drunken engineer--a woman, moreover, of whose life, before Natalie had
+taken pity on her poverty, many strange stories were told--how, for
+instance, she had often been seen in low resorts, "with the arm of a
+forester or a tradesman round her, singing the old Servian songs."
+
+But she had not taken into account Draga's sensuous beauty, before which
+her son was powerless. Each meeting left him more and more involved in
+her toils, until, to the consternation of Servia and the horror of his
+mother, he announced his intention of making her his Queen. Even Milan,
+degraded as he was, was horror-struck when the news came to him in
+Paris. "And this," he exclaimed, "is the act of 'Sacha'--my own son. He
+is a monster, a thing of evil in the eyes of all men! The Maschin will
+be Queen of Servia. What a reproach! What an evil! A creature like her!
+A sordid creature! Could he not have put aside his love for this
+low-born woman? But I could never make the fool understand that a King
+has duties; he has something else to think of but love-making."
+
+When taking leave of the friend who had brought him this evil news Milan
+said, "I shall never see Servia again. My experience has been a bitter
+one--everywhere treachery and deceit. And now my own son--_that_ has
+broken my heart." A few months later, worn out by his excesses,
+prematurely old and broken-hearted, the man who had prostituted life's
+best gifts drew his last breath at Vienna at the age of forty-six.
+
+As for Natalie, this crowning calamity of her son's disgrace did more
+than all her past sufferings to crush her proud spirit. But fate had not
+yet dealt the last and most cruel blow of all. That fell on that fatal
+June day of 1902 when her beloved "Sacha's" mutilated body was flung by
+his assassins out of his palace window, to be greeted with shouts of
+derisive laughter and cries of "Long live King Peter," from the dense
+crowds who had come to gloat over this last scene in the tragedy of the
+House of the Obrenvoie.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+Agenois, Duc, d', 284, 285
+Aissé, Mlle, 221-224
+Albany, Count of, 13-20
+ " Countess of, 15-22
+Alberoni, Cardinal, 184
+Alexander, King of Servia, 319-329
+Alexander III., of Russia, 93
+Alexis, Tsarevitch, 10, 255
+Alfieri, Vittorio, 19-22
+Anjou, Duc d', 59
+Anna, Empress, 26
+Anne of Austria, 159, 163, 164
+Arcimbaldo, 92
+Aubigné, Constant d', 240, 241
+ " Françoise d', 240-247
+Audouins, Diane d', 37
+Augustus, of Saxony, 93-102
+Austin, William, 205, 213
+Auvergne, Comte d', 235
+
+Babou, Françoise, 35
+Baireuth, Margravine of, 7
+Baratinski, Prince, 155
+Barry, Guillaume du, 47
+ " Jean du, 47
+ " Madame du, 47-54
+Bavaria, Elizabeth of, 215
+Beaufort, Duchesse de, 41-44
+Beauharnais, Eugène, 135
+ " Hortense, 135
+ " Josephine, 127-137
+Beauvallon, 143
+Bécu, Jeanne, 45-54
+Bellegarde, Count di, 205-206
+" Duc de, 37-39
+Berry, Duc de, 57-61
+ " Duchesse de, 55-65, 182, 217
+Bestyouzhev, 30, 31
+Beuchling, 98
+Blanguini, 111
+Blois, Mlle de, 56
+Bonaparte, Elisa, 104
+ " Letizia, 104, 105
+ " Napoleon, 104-112, 127-137
+Bonaparte, Pauline, 104-113
+Bonaventuri, Pietro, 170-175
+"Bonnie Prince," 13-22
+Borghese, Prince Camillo, 110
+Borghese, Princess Pauline, 110-113
+Bossi, Giuseppe, 205
+Bourgogne, Duc de, 59
+ " Duchesse de, 181
+Brissac, Duc de, 50-53
+Bristol, Lord, 121, 122
+Brougham, 212
+Brunswick, Augusta, Duchess of, 194
+Brunswick, Charles Wm., Duke of, 194
+Byron, Lord, 138
+
+Campbell, Lady Charlotte, 193, 194
+Campredon, 249
+Capello, Bartolomeo, 172
+ " Bianca, 169-179
+Carlos, King of Spain, 304, 305.
+Caroline, Princess of Wales, 191-202
+Caroline, Queen of Naples, 120
+Catargo, Marie, 307
+Catherine I., of Russia, 1-12, 23
+Catherine II., of Russia, 23, 29, 32, 72, 73, 76, 80, 149-158
+Charles V., Emperor, 88
+Charles VII., Emperor, 29
+Charles IX., King of France, 227
+Charles, Monsieur, 133, 134
+Charlotte, Princess, 199, 202, 211
+Charlotte, Queen, 197
+Chartres, Duc de, 56
+Chateauroux, Duchesse de, 288-293
+Christian II, of Denmark, 81-92
+Christich, Artemesia, 321, 322
+Clary, Desirée, 104, 127
+Colonna, Prince, 167, 295
+ " Princess, 167, 168, 295
+Cosse, Louis, Duc de, 48-50
+
+Domanski, 70-72, 74, 77, 79
+Douglas, Lady, 200
+ " Sir John, 200
+Dubois, Cardinal, 215, 216
+Dujarrier, M., 143
+Dyveke, 83-89
+
+Elizabeth I., of Russia, 23-32, 72, 150, 153
+"Elizabeth II." of Russia, 74, 76, 77
+Embs, Baron von, 67
+Emilie, 220, 221
+Encke, Charlotte, 115, 116
+ " Wilhelmine, 114-126
+Entragues, Henriette d', 44, 227-237
+Entragues, Seigneur d', 227, 229
+Esterle, Countess, 102
+Estrées, Antoine d', 36
+ " Gabrielle d', 35-44, 226
+Estrées, Jean d', 36
+Eudoxia, Empress, 252-257
+
+Faaborg, Hans, 90-91
+Fabre, François X., 21
+Falari, Duchesse de, 224
+Feriol, Comte de, 222
+ " Madame de, 223
+Fersen, Count, 261
+Fimarcon, Marquis de, 221
+Fitzherbert, Mrs, 199
+Flavacourt, Madame de, 283
+Fleury, Cardinal, 271, 272, 282, 283, 284
+Fontanges, Mlle de, 245
+Forbin, 111
+François I, 36
+Frederick the Great, 114-118
+Frederick William II, of Prussia, 115-124
+Frederick William III., of Prussia, 124
+Frèron, 106
+
+Gacé, Comte De, 183
+Galitzin, Prince, 79
+George III., 197, 201, 211
+George IV., 191-202
+Giovanna, Grand Duchess of Tuscany, 174-177
+Glebof, Major, 253-256
+Goncourt, de, 46, 270, 286
+Guiche, Comte de, 265, 302
+Guise, Duc de, 237
+Gustav, Adolf, 15
+
+Hamilton, Mary, 257-259
+ " Sir William, 75, 77
+Haye, La, 60
+Henri IV., of France (and Navarre), 35-44, 226-237
+Holbein, Francis, 126
+Hornstein, 69
+Hutchinson, Lord, 212
+
+Isabella, Princess, 88
+Ivan, 26
+
+Jersey, Lady, 198, 199
+Joachim Murat, King, 207
+Joinville, Prince de, 234, 237
+Josephine, Empress, 110-112, 127-137
+Junot, 107
+
+Karageorgevitch, Alex., 306
+Ketschko, Natalie, 311-329
+ " Nathaniel, 310
+Königsmarck, Aurora von, 94-103
+Königsmarck, Conrad von, 94
+ " Philip von, 94-96
+Konstantinovitch, Alex., 313
+Kristenef, 77
+Kusa, Prince, 308
+
+Lamballe, Princesse de, 263
+Landsfeld, Countess of, 146-148
+Languet, Abbé, 63
+Lauzun, Duc de, 62
+Lavallière, Duchesse de, 239
+Lawrence, Sir Thomas, 201
+Leclerc, General, 108, 109
+Lichtenau, Countess, 120-126
+Limburg, Duke of, 67, 68
+Lorraine, Prince Charles of, 167, 301
+Louis XIV., 159, 162-167, 238-247, 248, 295
+Louis XV., 45, 47-49, 270-292
+Louise, Countess of Albany, 15-22
+Löwenhaupt, Count Axel, 94
+ " Countess, 94, 97-99
+Ludwig I., of Bavaria, 144-147
+Luynes, Duc de, 273
+
+Mailly, Madame de, 273-293
+Maine, Duc de, 243, 247
+Maintenon, Madame de, 57, 244-247
+Malmesbury, Lord, 195-198
+Manby, Captain, 201
+Mancini, Hortense, 162, 167, 168
+Mancini, Laure, 294
+ " Madame, 159-163
+ " Marie, 160-168, 239, 298-301
+Mancini, Olympe, 294-305
+Maria Theresa, Queen of Spain, 302, 304
+Marie Antoinette, 260-269
+Marie Leczinska, 270
+Marie Louise, Empress, 112, 136, 204
+Marine, Monsieur de, 67
+Marke, Count de la, 117
+Marmont, General, 107
+Maschin, Draga, 328, 329
+Masson, 32, 135
+Maurepas, 282-284, 292
+Mazarin, Cardinal, 159-163, 239, 295, 297
+Mazarin, Madame de, 282, 283
+Medici, Cardinal de, 176-176
+ " Francesco de, 172-179
+ " Marie de, 231-235
+Menshikoff, 3, 6, 12
+Mercoeur, Duc de, 295
+Mexent, Marquis de Saint, 123
+Michael, Prince, of Servia, 306, 308
+Michelin, Madame, 181
+Milan I., of Servia, 306-329
+Modena, Duke of, 185-189
+ " Duchess of, 182, 186-189
+Monceaux, Marquise de, 41
+Mons, William, 11
+Montespan, Madame de, 55, 56, 239, 240, 243-245
+Montez, Lola, 138-148
+Montmorency, Charlotte de, 236, 237
+Mortemart, Duchesse de, 54
+Motte-Houdancourt, Mlle de la, 302
+Motteville, Madame de, 294, 296
+Mouchy, Madame de, 62-65, 217
+Murussi, Princess, 313, 314
+
+Napoleon I., 104-112, 127-137
+Natalie, Queen of Servia, 311-329
+Nathalie, Empress, 252
+Nesle, Félicité de, 275-279
+ " Marquise de, 182
+Nevers, Duc de, 232
+Noailles, Cardinal, 64
+
+Obrenovitch Jefrenn, 307
+Ompteda, Baron, 206
+Orleans, Philippe, Duc de, 55-57, 60-64, 184, 214-225
+Orloff, Alexis, 74, 76-79, 155
+ " Count, 258
+ " Gregory, 29, 32, 76, 153-158
+
+Palatine, Princess, Elizabeth, 56, 59, 62, 64
+Panine, 157
+Paskevitch, General, 141, 142
+Patiomkin, 23
+Perdita, 199
+Pergami, 206-213
+Permon, Albert, 107
+ " Madame, 109
+Peter the Great, 3-12, 23, 248-259
+Peter II., of Russia, 28, 257
+Peter III., of Russia, 149-155
+Pinneberg, Countess of, 73
+Platen, Countess, 94
+Polignac, Cardinal de, 261
+ " Diane de, 262, 265
+ " Jules, Comte de, 261-264
+Polignac, Madame de, 182
+ " Yolande, de, 261-269
+Pöllnitz, Von, 7
+Poniatowski, 151, 152
+Porte, Armande de la, 162
+Protitsch, General, 323
+Pugatchef, 73
+
+Radziwill, Prince Charles, 73, 74
+Ravaillac, 35
+Razoum, Alexis, 23-34, 72
+ " Cyril, 26-28
+ " Gregory, 24
+Richelieu, Duc de, 180-190, 275, 280, 285, 290, 291
+Richelieu, Duchesse de, 185
+Rietz, Herr, 117
+ " Wilhelmine, 117-120
+Ringlet, Father, 62
+Riom, Comte de, 62-64
+
+Saint-Simon, Duc de, 57, 60, 62, 305
+Saint-Simon, Madame de, 58
+Savoie, Chevalier de, 65
+Savoy, Charles Emmanuel, Duke of, 168
+Savoy, Margaret, Princess of, 164, 165, 299, 300
+Scarron, Paul, 241, 242
+Schenk, Baron von, 67
+Sevigné, Madame de, 245, 303
+Seymour, Henry, 48
+Shouvalov, 29
+Sigbrit, Frau, 83-92
+Skovronski, I, 23
+Smith, Sydney, Captain, 200
+Soissons, Comte de, 297
+ " Comtesse de, 295, 297-305
+Soltykoff, Sergius, 151
+Sophia Dorothea, of Celle, 94
+Spencer, Lord Henry, 119
+Stanley, Sir John, 193
+Stendhal, 21
+Stuart, Charles, 13-20
+Sully, Duc de, 41, 42, 229-231
+
+Tencin, Madame de, 223, 280
+Teplof, 155
+Thackeray, 192, 198, 200
+Toebingen, Major, 199
+Torbern, Oxe, 90-92
+Touchet, Marie, 227
+Tourel-Alégre, Marquess, 36
+Tournelle, Mme de la, 280-293
+Tuscany, Bianca, Grand Duchess of, 169-179
+Tuscany, Francesco, Grand Duke of, 172-179
+
+Valkendorf, Chancellor, 81-85, 89
+Vallière, La, 301-303
+Valois, Marguerite de, Queen of France, 42, 229, 231
+Valois, Mlle de, 182, 184, 185
+Vardes, Marquis de, 302
+Vaudreuil, Comte de, 267, 268
+Verneuil, Marquise de, 231-237
+Villars, Duchesse de, 233, 234
+Vintimille, Comtesse de, 276-279
+Vishnevsky, Colonel, 24
+Vlodimir, Princess Aly de, 66-80
+Voisin, La, 303
+Voltaire, 46, 57, 149
+Vorontsov, 32, 33
+
+Walewska, Madame, 127
+Waliszewski, 3, 5, 251
+Wasseljevitchca, Dimitri, 317
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Love affairs of the Courts of Europe
+by Thornton Hall
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12309 ***
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+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12309 ***</div>
+
+<br>
+<h1>LOVE AFFAIRS OF THE</h1>
+<h1>COURTS OF EUROPE</h1>
+<h3>BY</h3>
+<h2>THORNTON HALL, F.S.A.,</h2>
+<h3>Barrister-at-Law,<br>
+</h3>
+<br>
+<h3>Author of "Love romancies of the Aristocracy", <br>
+</h3>
+<h3>"Love intrigues of Royal Courts", etc., etc.</h3>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<h3>TO</h3>
+<h3>MY COUSIN,</h3>
+<h3>LENORE</h3>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 45%;">
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+<p><br>
+</p>
+I. <a href="#CHAPTER_I">A COMEDY QUEEN</a><br>
+II. <a href="#CHAPTER_II">THE "BONNIE PRINCE'S" BRIDE</a><br>
+III. <a href="#CHAPTER_III">THE PEASANT AND THE EMPRESS</a><br>
+IV. <a href="#CHAPTER_IV">A CROWN THAT FAILED</a><br>
+V. <a href="#CHAPTER_V">A QUEEN OF HEARTS</a><br>
+VI. <a href="#CHAPTER_VI">THE REGENT'S DAUGHTER</a><br>
+VII. <a href="#CHAPTER_VII">A PRINCESS OF MYSTERY</a><br>
+VIII. <a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">THE KING AND THE "LITTLE DOVE"</a><br>
+IX. <a href="#CHAPTER_IX">THE ROMANCE OF THE BEAUTIFUL SWEDE</a><br>
+X. <a href="#CHAPTER_X">THE SISTER OF AN EMPEROR</a><br>
+XI. <a href="#CHAPTER_XI">A SIREN OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY</a><br>
+XII. <a href="#CHAPTER_XII">THE CORSICAN AND THE CREOLE</a><br>
+XIII. <a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">THE ENSLAVER OF A KING</a><br>
+XIV. <a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">AN EMPRESS AND HER FAVOURITES</a><br>
+XV. <a href="#CHAPTER_XV">A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY CINDERELLA</a><br>
+XVI. <a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">BIANCA, GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY</a><br>
+XVII. <a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">RICHELIEU, THE ROU&Eacute;</a><br>
+XVIII. <a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS</a><br>
+XIX. <a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS&#8212;<i>continued</i></a><br>
+XX. <a href="#CHAPTER_XX">THE LOVE-AFFAIRS OF A REGENT</a><br>
+XXI. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">A DELILAH OF THE COURT OF FRANCE</a><br>
+<a name="Page_-1"></a>XXII. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">THE "SUN-KING" AND
+THE WIDOW</a><br>
+XXIII. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">A THRONED BARBARIAN</a><br>
+XXIV. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">A FRIEND OF MARIE ANTOINETTE</a><br>
+XXV. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">THE RIVAL SISTERS</a><br>
+XXVI. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">THE RIVAL SISTERS&#8212;<i>continued</i></a><br>
+XXVII. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">A MISTRESS OF INTRIGUE</a><br>
+XXVIII. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE</a><br>
+XXIX. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE&#8212;<i>continued</i></a><br>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<br>
+<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+<br>
+<p><a href="#img001">BIANCA CAPELLO BONAVENTURA GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY</a></p>
+<p><a href="#img002">CATHERINE THE SECOND OF RUSSIA</a></p>
+<p><a href="#img003">COUNT GREGORY ORLOFF</a></p>
+<p><a href="#img004">DESIR&Eacute;E CLARY</a></p>
+<p><a href="#img005">JOSEPHINE DE BEAUHARNAIS, EMPRESS (BY PRUD'HON)</a></p>
+<p><a href="#img006">LOLA MONTEZ, COUNTESS OF LANDSFELD</a></p>
+<p><a href="#img007">LUDWIG I., KING OF BAVARIA</a></p>
+<p><a href="#img008">FRANCESCO I., GRAND DUKE OF TUSCANY</a></p>
+<p><a href="#img009">CAROLINE OF BRUNSWICK, WIFE OF GEORGE IV</a><br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<br>
+<h2><a name="Page_1"></a>LOVE AFFAIRS OF THE COURTS</h2>
+<h2>OF EUROPE</h2>
+<br>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_I"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+<h2>A COMEDY QUEEN</h2>
+<br>
+<p>"It was to a noise like thunder, and close clasped in
+a soldier's embrace, that Catherine I. made her first
+appearance in Russian history."</p>
+<p>History, indeed, contains few chapters more
+strange, more seemingly impossible, than this which
+tells the story of the maid-of-all-work&#8212;the red-armed,
+illiterate peasant-girl who, without any dower
+of beauty or charm, won the idolatry of an Emperor
+and succeeded him on the greatest throne of Europe.
+So obscure was Catherine's origin that no records
+reveal either her true name or the year or place of
+her birth. All that we know is that she was cradled
+in some Livonian village, either in Sweden or
+Poland, about the year 1685, the reputed daughter of
+a serf-mother and a peasant-father; and that her
+numerous brothers and sisters were known in later
+years by the name Skovoroshtchenko or Skovronski.
+The very Christian name by which she is
+<a name="Page_2"></a>known to history was not hers until it was given
+to
+her by her Imperial lover.</p>
+<p>It is not until the year 1702, when the future
+Empress of the Russias was a girl of seventeen, that
+she makes her first dramatic appearance on the stage
+on which she was to play so remarkable a part.
+Then we find her acting as maid-servant to the
+Lutheran pastor of Marienburg, scrubbing his floors,
+nursing his children, and waiting on his resident
+pupils, in the midst of all the perils of warfare.
+The Russian hosts had for weeks been laying siege
+to Marienburg; and the Commandant, unable to
+defend the town any longer against such overwhelming
+odds, had announced his intention to blow up
+the fortress, and had warned the inhabitants to
+leave the town.</p>
+<p>Between the alternatives of death within the walls
+and the enemy without, Pastor Gl&uuml;ck chose the
+latter; and sallying forth with his family and maid-servant,
+threw himself on the mercy of the Russians
+who promptly packed him off to Moscow a prisoner.
+For Martha (as she seems to have been known in
+those days) a different fate was reserved. Her red
+lips, saucy eyes, and opulent figure were too seductive
+a spoil to part with, General Sh&eacute;r&eacute;m&eacute;tief
+decided, and she was left behind, a by no means
+reluctant hostage.</p>
+<p>Peter's soldiers, now that victory was assured, were
+holding high revel of feasting and song and dancing.
+They received the new prisoner literally with open
+arms, and almost before she had wiped the tears
+from her eyes, at parting from her nurslings, she
+<a name="Page_3"></a>was capering gaily to the music of hautboy and
+fiddle,
+with the arm of a stalwart soldier round her waist.</p>
+<p>"Suddenly," says Waliszewski, "a fearful explosion
+overthrew the dancers, cut the music short, and
+left the servant-maid, fainting with terror, in the arms
+of a dragoon."</p>
+<p>Thus did Martha, the "Siren of the Kitchen,"
+dance her way into Russian history, little dreaming,
+we may be sure, to what dizzy heights her nimble feet
+were to carry her. For a time she found her pleasure
+in the attentions of a non-commissioned officer,
+sharing the life of camp and barracks and making
+friends by the good-nature which bubbled in her,
+and which was always her chief charm. When her
+sergeant began to weary of her, she found a humble
+place as laundry-maid in the household of Menshikoff,
+the Tsar's favourite, whose shirts, we are told,
+it was her privilege to wash; and who, it seems, was
+by no means insensible to the buxom charms of this
+maid of the laundry. At any rate we find Menshikoff,
+when he was spending the Easter of 1706 at
+Witebsk, writing to his sister to send her to him.</p>
+<p>But a greater than Menshikoff was soon to appear
+on the scene&#8212;none other than the Emperor Peter
+himself. One day the Tsar, calling on his favourite,
+was astonished to see the cleanliness of his surroundings
+and his person. "How do you contrive," he
+asked, "to have your house so well kept, and to
+wear such fresh and dainty linen?" Menshikoff's
+answer was "to open a door, through which the
+sovereign perceived a handsome girl, aproned, and
+sponge in hand, bustling from chair to chair, and
+<a name="Page_4"></a>going from window to window, scrubbing the
+window-panes"&#8212;a vision of industry which made
+such a powerful appeal to His Majesty that he
+begged an introduction on the spot to the lady of
+the sponge.</p>
+<p>The most daring writer of fiction could scarcely
+devise a more romantic meeting than this between
+the autocrat of Russia and the red-armed, bustling
+cleaner of the window-panes, and he would certainly
+never have ventured to build on it the romance of
+which it was the prelude. What it was in the young
+peasant-woman that attracted the Emperor it is impossible
+to say. Of beauty she seems to have had none&#8212;save
+perhaps such as lies in youth and rude health.</p>
+<p>We look at her portraits in vain to discover a trace
+of any charm that might appeal to man. Her pictures
+in the Romanof Gallery at St Petersburg show
+a singularly plain woman with a large, round peasant-face,
+the most conspicuous feature of which is a
+hideously turned-up nose. Large, protruding eyes
+and an opulent bust complete a presentment of the
+typical household drudge&#8212;"a servant-girl in a
+German inn." But Peter the Great, who was ever
+abnormal in all his tastes and appetites, was always
+more ready to make love to a woman of the people
+than to the most beautiful and refined of his Court
+ladies. His standard of taste, as of manners, has
+not inaptly been likened to that of a Dutch sailor.</p>
+<p>But whatever it was in the low-born laundry-woman
+that attracted the Tsar of Russia, we know
+that this first unconventional meeting led to many
+others, and that before long Catherine (for we may
+<a name="Page_5"></a>now call her by the name she made so famous) was
+removed from his favourite's household and installed
+in the Imperial harem where, for a time at least, she
+seems to have shared her favours indiscriminately
+between her old master and her new&#8212;"an obscure
+and complaisant mistress"&#8212;until Menshikoff finally
+resigned all rights in her to his sovereign.</p>
+<p>When Catherine took up her residence in her new
+home, Waliszewski tells us, "her eye shortly fell on
+certain magnificent jewels. Forthwith, bursting into
+tears, she addressed her new protector: 'Who put
+these ornaments here? If they come from the other
+one, I will keep nothing but this little ring; but if
+they come from you, how could you think I needed
+them to make me love you?'"</p>
+<p>If Catherine lacked physical graces, this and many
+another story prove that she had a rare gift of diplomacy.
+She had, moreover, an unfailing cheerfulness
+and goodness of heart which quickly endeared
+her to the moody and capricious Peter. In his
+frequent fits of nervous irritability which verged on
+madness, she alone had the power to soothe him and
+restore him to sanity. Her very voice had a magic
+to arrest him in his worst rages, and when the fit of
+madness (for such it undoubtedly was) was passing
+away she would "take his head and caress it tenderly,
+passing her fingers through his hair. Soon
+he grew drowsy and slept, leaning against her breast.
+For two or three hours she would sit motionless,
+waiting for the cure slumber always brought him,
+until at last he awoke cheerful and refreshed."</p>
+<p>Thus each day the Livonian peasant-woman took
+<a name="Page_6"></a>deeper root in the heart of the Emperor, until she
+became indispensable to him. Wherever he went
+she was his constant companion&#8212;in camp or on
+visits to foreign Courts, where she was received with
+the honours due to a Queen. And not only were
+her presence and her ministrations infinitely pleasant
+to him; her prudent counsel saved him from many a
+blunder and mad excess, and on at least one occasion
+rescued his army from destruction.</p>
+<p>So strong was the hold she soon won on his affection
+and gratitude that he is said to have married her
+secretly within three years of first setting eyes on her.
+Her future and that of the children she had borne
+to him became his chief concern; and as early as
+1708, when he was leaving Moscow to join his army,
+he left behind him a note: "If, by God's will, anything
+should happen to me, let the 3000 roubles
+which will be found in Menshikoff's house be given
+to Catherine Vassilevska and her daughter."</p>
+<p>But whatever the truth may be about the alleged
+secret marriage, we know that early in 1712, Peter,
+in his Admiral's uniform, stood at the altar with the
+Livonian maid-servant, in the presence of his Court
+officials, and with two of her own little daughters as
+bridesmaids. The wedding, we are told, was performed
+in a little chapel belonging to Prince Menshikoff,
+and was preceded by an interview with the
+Dowager-Empress and his Princess sisters, in which
+Peter declared his intention to make Catherine his
+wife and commanded them to pay her the respect
+due to her new rank. Then followed, in brilliant
+sequence, State dinners, receptions, and balls, at all
+<a name="Page_7"></a>of which the laundress-bride sat at her husband's
+right hand and received the homage of his subjects
+as his Queen.</p>
+<p>Picture now the woman who but a few years earlier
+had scrubbed Pastor Gl&uuml;ck's floors and cleaned Menshikoff's
+window-panes, in all her new splendours as
+Empress of Russia. The portraits of her, in her
+unaccustomed glories, are far from flattering and by
+no means consistent. "She showed no sign of ever
+having possessed beauty," says Baron von P&ouml;llnitz;
+"she was tall and strong and very dark, and would
+have seemed darker but for the rouge and whitening
+with which she plastered her face."</p>
+<p>The picture drawn by the Margravine of Baireuth
+is still less attractive: "She was short and huddled
+up, much tanned, and utterly devoid of dignity or
+grace. Muffled up in her clothes, she looked like a
+German comedy-actress. Her old-fashioned gown,
+heavily embroidered with silver, and covered with
+dirt, had been bought in some old-clothes shop.
+The front of her skirt was adorned with jewels,
+and she had a dozen orders and as many portraits
+of saints fastened all along the facings of her
+dress, so that when she walked she jingled like
+a mule."</p>
+<p>But in the eyes of one man at least&#8212;and he
+the greatest in all Russia&#8212;she was beautiful. His
+allegiance never wavered, nor indeed did that of his
+army, which idolised her to a man. She might have
+no boudoir graces, but at least she was the typical
+soldier's wife, and cut a brave figure, as she reviewed
+the troops or rode at their head in her uniform and
+<a name="Page_8"></a>grenadier cap. She shared all the hardships and
+dangers of campaigns with a smile on her lips, sleeping
+on the hard ground, and standing in the trenches
+with the bullets whistling about her ears, and men
+dropping to right and left of her.</p>
+<p>Nor was there ever a trace of vanity in her. She
+was as proud of her humble origin as if she had been
+cradled in a palace. To princes and ambassadors
+she would talk freely of the days when she was a
+household drudge, and loved to remind her husband
+of the time when his Empress used to wash shirts for
+his favourite. "Though, no doubt, you have other
+laundresses about you," she wrote to him once, "the
+old one never forgets you."</p>
+<p>The letters that passed between this oddly
+assorted couple, if couched in terms which could
+scarcely see print in our more restrained age, are
+eloquent of affection and devotion. To Peter his
+kitchen-Queen was "friend of my Heart," "dearest
+Heart," and "dear little Mother." He complains
+pathetically, when away with his army, "I am dull
+without you&#8212;and there is nobody to take care of my
+shirts." When Catherine once left him on a round
+of visits, he grew so impatient at her absence that he
+sent a yacht to bring her back, and with it a note:
+"When I go into my rooms and find them deserted,
+I feel as if I must rush away at once. It is all so
+empty without thee."</p>
+<p>And each letter is accompanied by a present&#8212;now
+a watch, now some costly lace, and again a lock of
+his hair, or a simple bunch of dried flowers, while she
+returns some such homely gift as a little fruit or a
+<a name="Page_9"></a>fur-lined waistcoat. On both sides, too, a vein of
+jocularity runs through the letters, as when Catherine
+addresses him as "Your Excellency, the very
+illustrious and eminent Prince-General and Knight
+of the crowned Compass and Axe"; and when
+Peter, after the Peace of Nystadt, writes: "According
+to the Treaty I am obliged to return all Livonian
+prisoners to the King of Sweden. What is to
+become of thee, I don't know." To which she
+answers, with true wifely (if affected) humility: "I
+am your servant; do with me as you will; yet I
+venture to think you won't send <i>me</i> back."</p>
+<p>Quite idyllic, this post-nuptial love-making between
+the great Emperor and his low-born Queen,
+who has so possessed his heart that no other woman,
+however fair, could wrest it from her. And in her
+exalted position of Empress she practised the same
+diplomatic arts by which she had won Peter's devotion.
+Politics she left severely alone; she turned a
+forbidding back on all attempts to involve her in
+State intrigues, but she was ever ready to protect
+those who appealed to her for help, and to use her
+influence with her husband to procure pardon or
+lighter punishment for those who had fallen under
+his displeasure.</p>
+<p>Nor did she forget her poor relations in Livonia.
+One brother, a postillion, she openly acknowledged,
+introduced to her husband, and obtained a liberal
+pension for him; and to her other brothers and
+sisters she sent frequent presents and sums of
+money. More she could not well do during her
+husband's lifetime, but when she in turn came to
+<a name="Page_10"></a>the throne, she brought the whole
+family&#8212;postillion,
+shoemaker, farm-labourer and serf, their wives and
+families&#8212;to her capital, installed them in sumptuous
+apartments in her palaces, decked them in the finest
+Court feathers, and gave them large fortunes and
+titles of nobility.</p>
+<p>When the Tsar's quarrel with his eldest son came
+to its tragic <i>d&eacute;nouement</i> in Alexis' death, her own
+son became heir presumptive to the throne of
+Russia. And thus the chain that bound Peter to
+his Empress received its completing link. It only
+remained now to place the crown formally on the head
+of the mother of the new heir, and this supreme
+honour was hers in the month of May, 1729.</p>
+<p>Wonderful tales are told of the splendours of
+Catherine's coronation. No existing crown was
+good enough for the ex-maid-of-all-work, so one of
+special magnificence was made by the Court jewellers&#8212;a
+miracle of diamonds and pearls, crowned by
+a monster ruby&#8212;at a cost of a million and a half
+roubles. The Coronation gown, which cost four
+thousand roubles, was made at Paris; and from Paris,
+too, came the gorgeous coach with its blaze of gold
+and heraldry, in which the Tsarina made her triumphal
+progress through the streets of the capital from
+the Winter Palace. The culminating point of this
+remarkable ceremony came when, after Peter had
+placed the crown on his wife's head, she sank weeping
+at his feet and embraced his knees.</p>
+<p>Catherine, however, had not worn her crown many
+months when she found herself in considerable
+danger of losing not only her dignities but even her
+<a name="Page_11"></a>liberty. For some time, it is said, she had been
+engaged in a liaison with William Mons, a handsome,
+gay young courtier, brother to a former mistress
+of the Tsar. The love affair had been common
+knowledge at the Court&#8212;to all but Peter himself,
+and it was accident that at last opened his eyes to
+his wife's dishonour. One moonlight night, so the
+story is told, he chanced to enter an arbour in the
+palace gardens, and there discovered her in the arms
+of her lover.</p>
+<p>His vengeance was swift and terrible. Mons
+was arrested the same night in his rooms, and
+dragged fainting into the Tsar's presence, where he
+confessed his disloyalty. A few days later he was
+beheaded, at the very moment when the Empress
+was dancing a minuet with her ladies, a smile on her
+lips, whatever grief was in her heart. The following
+day she was driven by her husband past the scaffold
+where her lover's dead body was exposed to public
+view&#8212;so close, in fact, that her dress brushed against
+it; but, without turning her head, she kept up a
+smiling conversation with the perpetrator of this outrage
+on her feelings.</p>
+<p>Still not content with his revenge, Peter next
+placed the dead man's head, enclosed in a bottle of
+spirits of wine, in a prominent place in the Empress's
+apartments; and when she still smilingly ignored
+its horrible proximity, his anger, hitherto repressed,
+blazed forth fiercely. With a blow of his strong fist
+he shattered a priceless Venetian vase, shouting,
+"Thus will I treat thee and thine"&#8212;to which she
+calmly responded, "You have broken one of the
+<a name="Page_12"></a>chief ornaments of your palace; do you think you
+have increased its charm?"</p>
+<p>For a time Peter refused to be propitiated; he
+would not speak to his wife, or share her meals or
+her room. But she had "tamed the tiger" many a
+time before, and she was able to do it again. Within
+two months she had won her way back into full
+favour, and was once more the Tsar's dearest <i>Kati&eacute;rinoushka.</i></p>
+<p>A month later Peter was dead, carrying his love
+for his peasant-Empress to the grave, and Catherine
+was reigning in his stead, able at last to conduct her
+amours openly&#8212;spending her nights in shameless
+orgies with her lovers, and leaving the rascally
+Menshikoff to do the ruling, until death brought her
+amazing career to an end within sixteen months of
+mounting her throne.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_II"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_13"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+<h2>THE "BONNIE PRINCE'S" BRIDE</h2>
+<br>
+<p>In the pageant of our history there are few more
+attractive figures than that of "Bonnie Prince
+Charlie," the "yellow-haired laddie" whose blue
+eyes made a slave of every woman who came under
+their magic, and whose genial, unaffected manners
+turned the veriest coward into a hero, ready to follow
+him to the death in that year of ill-fated romance,
+"the forty-five."</p>
+<p>The very name of the "Bonnie Prince," the hope
+of the fallen Stuarts, the idol of Scotland&#8212;leading a
+forlorn hope with laughter on his lips, now riding
+proudly at the head of his rabble army, now a fugitive
+Ishmael among the hills and caves of the Highlands,
+but ever the last to lose heart&#8212;has a magic
+still to quicken the pulses. That later years proved
+the idol's feet to be of clay, that he fell from his
+pedestal to end his days an object of contempt and
+derision, only served to those who knew him in the
+pride of his youth to mingle pity with the glamour
+of romance that still surrounds his name.</p>
+<p>In the year 1772, when this story opens, Charles
+Edward, Count of Albany, had already travelled far
+<a name="Page_14"></a>on the downward road that led from the glory of
+Prestonpans to his drunkard's grave. A pitiful pensioner
+of France, who had known the ignominy of
+wearing fetters in a French prison, a social outcast
+whose Royal pretensions were at best the subject of
+an amused tolerance, the "laddie of the yellow hair"
+had fallen so low that the brandy bottle, which was his
+constant companion night and day, was his only solace.</p>
+<p>Picture him at this period, and mark the pathetic
+change which less than thirty years had wrought in
+the Stuart "darling" of "the forty-five," when many
+a proud lady of Scotland would have given her life
+for a smile from his bonnie face. A middle-aged man
+with dropsy in his limbs, and with the bloated face
+of the drunkard; "dull, thick, silent-looking lips, of
+purplish red scarce redder than the skin; pale blue
+eyes tending to a watery greyness, leaden, vague,
+sad, but with angry streakings of red; something
+inexpressibly sad, gloomy, helpless, vacant, and
+debased in the whole face."</p>
+<p>Such was this "Young Chevalier" when France
+took it into her head to make a pawn of him in the
+political chess-game with England. As a man he
+was beneath contempt; as a "King"&#8212;well, he was
+a <i>Roi pour rire</i>; but at least the Royal House he
+represented might be made a useful weapon against
+the arrogant Hanoverian who sat on his father's
+throne. That rival stock must not be allowed to die
+out; his claims might weigh heavily some day in the
+scale between France and England. Charles Edward
+must marry, and provide a worthier successor to his
+empty honours.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_15"></a>And thus it was that France came to the exiled
+Prince with the seductive offer of a pretty bride and
+a pension of forty thousand crowns a year. The
+besotted Charles jumped at the offer; left his brandy
+bottle, and, with the alacrity of a youthful lover,
+rushed away to woo and win the bride who had been
+chosen for him.</p>
+<p>And never surely was there such a grotesque
+wooing. Charles was a physical wreck of fifty-two;
+his bride-elect had only seen nineteen summers.
+The daughter of Prince Gustav Adolf of Stolberg
+and the Countess of Horn, Princess Louise was kin
+to many of the greatest houses in Europe, from the
+Colonnas and Orsinis to the Hohenzollerns and
+Bruces. In blood she was thus at least a match for
+her Stuart bridegroom.</p>
+<p>She had spent some years in the seclusion of a
+monastery, and had emerged for her undesired trip
+to the altar a young woman of rare beauty and
+charm, with glorious brown eyes, the delicate tint
+of the wild rose in her dimpled cheeks, a wealth of
+golden hair, and a figure every line and movement of
+which was instinct with beauty and grace. She was
+a fresh, unspoilt child, bubbling with gaiety and the
+joy of life, and her dainty little head was full of the
+romance of sweet nineteen.</p>
+<p>Such then was the singularly contrasted couple&#8212;"Beauty
+and the Beast" they were dubbed by many&#8212;who
+stood together at the altar at Macerata on
+Good Friday of the year 1772&#8212;the bridegroom,
+"looking hideous in his wedding suit of crimson
+silk," in flaming contrast to the virginal white of his
+<a name="Page_16"></a>pretty victim. It needed no such day of ill-omen
+as
+a Friday to inaugurate a union which could not have
+been otherwise than disastrous&#8212;the union of a beautiful,
+romantic girl eager to exploit the world of freedom
+and of pleasure, and a drink-sodden man old
+enough to be her father, for whom life had long lost
+all its illusions.</p>
+<p>It is true that for a time Charles Edward was
+drawn from his bottle by the lure of a pretty and
+winsome wife, who should, if any power on earth
+could, have made a man again of him. She laughed,
+indeed, at his maudlin tales of past heroism and
+adventure in love and battle; to her he was a plaster
+hero, and she let him know it. She was "mated to
+a clown," and a drunken clown to boot&#8212;and, well,
+she would make the best of a bad bargain. If her
+husband was the sorriest lover who ever poured thick-voiced
+flatteries into a girl-wife's ears, there were
+others, plenty of them, who were eager to pay more
+acceptable homage to her; and these men&#8212;poets,
+courtiers, great men in art and letters&#8212;flocked to
+her <i>salon</i> to bask in her beauty and to be charmed
+by her wit.</p>
+<p>After all, she was a Queen, although she wore no
+crown. She had a Court, although no Royalties
+graced it. From the Pope to the King of France,
+no monarch in Europe would recognise her husband's
+kingship. But at such neglect, the offspring
+of jealousy, of course, she only smiled. She could
+indeed have been moderately happy in her girlish,
+light-hearted way, if her husband had not been such
+an impossible person.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_17"></a>As for Charles Edward, he soon wearied of a
+bride
+who did nothing but laugh at him, and who was so
+ready to escape from his obnoxious presence to the
+company of more congenial admirers. He returned
+to his brandy bottle, and alternated between a
+fuddled brain and moods of wild jealousy. He
+would not allow his wife to leave the door without
+his escort; if she refused to accompany him, he
+turned the key in her bedroom door, to which the
+only access was through his own room.</p>
+<p>He took her occasionally to the theatre or opera,
+his brandy bottle always making a third for company.
+Before the performance was half through he
+was snoring stertorously on the couch which he
+insisted on having in his box; and, more often than
+not, was borne to his carriage for the journey home
+helplessly drunk. And this within the first year of
+his wedded life.</p>
+<p>If any woman had excuse for seeking elsewhere
+the love she could not find in her husband it was
+Louise of Albany. There were dames in plenty in
+Rome (where they were now living) who, not content
+with devoted husbands, had their <i>cisibeos</i> to play
+the lover to them; but Louise sought no such questionable
+escape from her unhappiness. Her books
+and the clever men who thronged her <i>salon</i> were all
+the solace she asked; and under temptation such
+as few women of that country and day would
+have resisted, she carried the shield of a blameless
+life.</p>
+<p>From Rome the Countess and her husband fared
+to Florence in 1774; and here matters went from
+<a name="Page_18"></a>bad to worse. Charles was now seldom sober day
+or night; and his jealousy often found expression
+in filthy abuse and cowardly assaults. Hitherto he
+had been simply disgusting; now he was a constant
+menace, even to her life. She lived in hourly fear of
+his brutality; but in her darkest hour sunshine came
+again into her life with the coming of Vittorio
+Alfieri, whose name was to be linked with hers for
+so many years.</p>
+<p>At this time Alfieri was in the very prime of his
+splendid manhood, one of the handsomest and most
+fascinating men in all Europe. Some four years
+older than herself, he was a tall, stalwart, soldierly
+man, blue-eyed and auburn-haired, an aristocrat to
+his finger-tips, a daring horseman, a poet, and a man
+of rare culture&#8212;just the man to set any woman's
+heart a-flutter, as he had already done in most of the
+capitals of the Continent.</p>
+<p>He was a spoilt child of fortune, this Italian poet
+and soldier, a man who had drunk deep of the cup of
+life, and to whom all conquests came with such fatal
+ease that already he had drained life dry of its
+pleasures.</p>
+<p>Such was the man who one autumn day in the
+year 1777 came into the unhappy life of the Countess
+of Albany, still full of the passions and yearnings of
+youth. It was surely fate that thus brought together
+these two young people of kindred tastes and
+kindred disillusions; and we cannot wonder that,
+of that first meeting, Alfieri should write, "At last
+I had met the one woman whom I had sought so
+long, the woman who could inspire my ambition
+<a name="Page_19"></a>and my work. Recognising this, and prizing so
+rare
+a treasure, I gave myself up wholly to her."</p>
+<p>Those were happy days for the Countess that
+followed this fateful meeting&#8212;days of sweet communion
+of twin souls, hours of stolen bliss, when they
+could dwell apart in a region of high and ennobling
+thoughts, while the besotted husband was sleeping
+off the effects of his drunken orgies in the next room.
+To Alfieri, Louise was indeed "the anchor of his
+life," giving stability to his vacillating nature, and
+inspiring all that was best and noblest in him; while
+to her the association with this "splendid creature,"
+who so thoroughly understood and sympathised with
+her, was the revelation of a new world.</p>
+<p>Thus three happy years passed; and then the crisis
+came. One night the Prince, in a mood of drunken
+madness, inflamed by jealousy, attacked his wife,
+and, after severely beating her, flung her down on
+her bed and attempted to strangle her. This was
+the crowning outrage of years of brutality. She
+could not, dared not, spend another day with such a
+madman. At any cost she must leave him&#8212;and
+for ever.</p>
+<p>When morning came, with Alfieri's assistance, the
+plan of escape was arranged. In the company of a
+lady friend&#8212;and also of her husband, now scared
+and penitent, but fearing to let her out of his sight&#8212;she
+drove to a neighbouring convent, ostensibly to
+inspect the nuns' needlework. On reaching her
+destination she ran up the convent steps, entered the
+building, and the door was slammed and bolted
+behind her in the very face of Charles Edward, who
+<a name="Page_20"></a>had followed as fast as his dropsical legs would
+carry
+him up the steps. The Prince, blazing at such an
+outrage, hammered fiercely at the door until at last
+the Lady Abbess herself showed her face at the
+grating, and told him in no ambiguous words that
+he would not be allowed to enter! His wife had
+come to her for protection; and if he had any grievance
+he had better appeal to the Duke of Tuscany.</p>
+<p>Thus ended the tragic union of the "Bonnie
+Prince" and his Countess. Emancipation had come
+at last; and, while Louise was now free to devote
+her life to her beloved Alfieri, her brutal husband
+was left for eight years to the company of his bottle
+and the ministrations of his natural daughter, until
+a drunkard's grave at Frascati closed over his mis-spent
+life. The pity and the tragedy of it!</p>
+<p>Louise of Albany and her poet-lover were now free
+to link their lives at the altar&#8212;but no such thought
+seems to have entered the head of either. They were
+perfectly happy without the bond of the wedding-ring,
+of which the Countess had such terrible
+memories; and together they walked through life,
+happy in each other and indifferent to the world's
+opinion.</p>
+<p>Now in Florence, now in Rome; living together
+in Alsace, drifting to Paris; and, when the Revolution
+drove them from the French capital, seeking
+refuge in London, where we find the uncrowned
+Queen of England chatting amicably with the
+"usurper" George in the Royal box at the opera&#8212;always
+inseparable, and Louise always clinging to
+the shreds of her Royal dignity, with a throne in her
+<a name="Page_21"></a>ante-room, and "Your Majesty" on her servants'
+lips. Thus passed the careless, happy years for
+Countess and poet until, in 1803, Alfieri followed
+the "Bonnie Prince" behind the veil, and left a
+desolate Louise to moan amid her tears, "There is
+no more happiness for me."</p>
+<p>But Louise was not left even now without the
+solace of a man's love, which seemed as indispensable
+to her nature as the air she breathed. Before Alfieri
+had been many months in his Florence tomb his
+place by the Countess's side had been taken by
+Fran&ccedil;ois Xavier Fabre, a good-looking painter of
+only moderate gifts, whose handsome face, plausible
+tongue, and sunny disposition soon made a captive
+of her middle-aged heart. At the time when Fabre
+came thus into her life Madame la Comtesse had
+passed her fiftieth birthday&#8212;youth and beauty had
+taken wings; and passion (if ever she had any&#8212;for
+her relations with Alfieri seem to have been quite
+platonic) had died down to its embers.</p>
+<p>But a man's companionship and homage were
+always necessary to her, and in Fabre she found her
+ideal cavalier. Her <i>salon</i> now became more popular
+even than in the days of her young wifehood. It
+drew to it all the greatest men in Europe, men of
+world-wide fame in statesmanship, letters, and art,
+all anxious to do homage to a woman of such culture
+and with such rare gifts of conversation.</p>
+<p>That she was now middle-aged, stout and dowdy&#8212;"like
+a cook with pretty hands," as Stendhal said of
+her&#8212;mattered nothing to her admirers, many of
+whom remembered her in the days of her lovely
+<a name="Page_22"></a>youth. She was, in their eyes, as much a Queen
+as if she wore a crown; and, moreover, she was a
+woman of magnetic charm and clever brain.</p>
+<p>And thus, with her books and her <i>salon</i> and her
+cavalier, she spent the rest of her chequered life until
+the end came one day in 1824; and her last resting-place
+was, as she wished it to be, by the side of her
+beloved Alfieri. In the Church of Santa Croce, in
+Florence, midway between the tombs of Michael
+Angelo and Machiavelli, the two lovers sleep
+together their last sleep, beneath a beautiful monument
+fashioned by Canova's hands&#8212;Louise, wife of
+the "Bonnie Prince" (as we still choose to remember
+him) and Vittorio Alfieri, to whom, to quote his own
+words, "she was beyond all things beloved."</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_III"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_23"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+<h2>THE PEASANT AND THE EMPRESS</h2>
+<br>
+Many an autocrat of Russia has shown a truly
+sovereign contempt for convention in the choice of
+his or her favourites, the "playthings of an hour";
+and at least three of them have carried this contempt
+to the altar itself.
+<p>Peter, the first, as we have seen, offered a crown
+to Martha Skovronski, a Livonian scullery-maid,
+who succeeded him on the throne; the second
+Catherine gave her hand as well as her heart to
+Patiomkin, the gigantic, ill-favoured ex-sergeant of
+cavalry; and Elizabeth, daughter of Peter and his
+kitchen-Queen, proved herself worthy of her parentage
+when she made Alexis Razoum, a peasant's son,
+husband of the Empress of Russia. You will search
+history in vain for a story so strange and romantic as
+this of the great Empress and the lowly shepherd's
+son, whom her love raised from a hovel to a palace,
+and on whom one of the most amorous and fickle of
+sovereign ladies lavished honours and riches and an
+unwavering devotion, until her eyes, speaking their
+love to the last, were closed in death.</p>
+<p>It was in the humblest hovel of the village
+<a name="Page_24"></a>of Lemesh that Alexis Razoum drew his first
+breath
+one day in 1709. His father, Gregory Razoum, was
+a shepherd, who spent his pitiful earnings in drink&#8212;a
+man of violent temper who, in his drunken rages,
+was the terror not only of his home but of the entire
+village. His wife and children cowered at his approach;
+and on more than one occasion only accident
+(or Providence) saved him from the crime of murder.
+On one such occasion, we are told, the child Alexis,
+who from his earliest years had a passion for reading,
+was absorbed in a book, when his father, in ungovernable
+fury, seized a hatchet and hurled it at
+the boy's head. Luckily, the missile missed its mark,
+and Alexis escaped, to find refuge in the house of a
+friendly priest, who not only gave him shelter and
+protection, but taught him to write, and, above all,
+to sing&#8212;little dreaming that he was thus paving the
+way which was to lead the drunken shepherd's lad
+to the dizziest heights in Russia. For the boy had
+a beautiful voice. When he joined the choir of his
+village church, people flocked from far and near to
+listen to the sweet notes that soared, pure and liquid
+as a nightingale's song, above the rest. "It was,"
+all declared, "the voice of an angel&#8212;and the face
+of an angel," for Alexis was as beautiful in those days
+as any child of picture or of dreams.</p>
+<p>One day a splendidly dressed stranger chanced to
+enter the Lemesh church during Mass&#8212;none other
+than Colonel Vishnevsky, a great Court official, who
+was on his way back to Moscow from a diplomatic
+mission; and he listened entranced to a voice sweeter
+than any he had ever heard. The service over, he
+<a name="Page_25"></a>made the acquaintance of the young chorister,
+interviewed
+his guardian, the "good Samaritan" priest,
+and persuaded him to allow the boy to accompany
+him to the capital. Thus the shepherd's son took
+weeping farewell of the good priest, of his mother,
+and of his brothers and sisters; and a few weeks
+later the Empress and her ladies were listening enchanted
+to his voice in the Imperial choir at Moscow&#8212;but
+none with more delight than the Princess
+Elizabeth, daughter of Peter the Great, to whom
+Alexis' beauty appealed even more strongly than his
+sweet singing.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth, true daughter of her father, had already,
+young as she was, counted her lovers by the
+score&#8212;lovers chosen indiscriminately, from Royal
+princes to grooms and common soldiers. She was
+already sated with the licence of the most dissolute
+Court of Europe, and to her the young Cossack of
+the beautiful face and voice, and rustic innocence,
+opened a new and seductive vista of pleasure. She
+lost her heart to him, had him transferred to her
+own Court as her favourite singer, and, within a
+few years, gave him charge of her purse and her
+properties.</p>
+<p>The shepherd's son was now not only lover-elect,
+but principal "minister" to the daughter of an
+Emperor, who was herself to wear the Imperial
+crown. And while Alexis was thus luxuriating amid
+the splendour of a Court, he by no means forgot the
+humble relatives he had left behind in his native
+village. His father was dead; his mother was reduced
+for a time to such a depth of destitution that
+<a name="Page_26"></a>she had to beg her bread from door to door. His
+sisters had found husbands for themselves in their
+own rank; and the favourite of an Imperial Princess
+had for brothers-in-law a tailor, a weaver, and
+a shepherd. When news came to Alexis of his
+mother's destitution he had sent her a sum of money
+sufficient to install her in comfort as an innkeeper:
+the first of many kindnesses which were to work
+a startling transformation in the fortunes of the
+Razoum family.</p>
+<p>Events now hurried quickly. The Empress Anna
+died, and was succeeded on the throne by the infant
+Ivan, her grand-nephew, who had been Emperor but
+a few months when, in 1741, a <i>coup d'&eacute;tat</i> gave the
+crown to Elizabeth, mistress of the Lemesh peasant.
+Alexis was now husband in all but name of the
+Empress of all the Russias; honours and riches
+were showered on him; he was General, Grandmaster
+of the Hounds, Chief Gentleman of the Bedchamber,
+and lord of large estates yielding regal
+revenues.</p>
+<p>But all his grandeur was powerless to spoil the
+man, who still remained the simple peasant who, so
+many years earlier, had left his low-born mother
+with streaming eyes. His great ambition now was
+to share his good-fortune with her. She must
+exchange her village inn for the luxuries and splendours
+of a palace. And thus it was that one day
+a splendid carriage, with gay-liveried postillions,
+dashed up to the door of the Lemesh inn and carried
+off the simple peasant woman, her youngest son,
+Cyril, and one of her daughters, to the open-mouthed
+<a name="Page_27"></a>amazement of the villagers. At the entrance to
+the
+capital she was received by a magnificently attired
+gentleman, in whom she failed to recognise her son
+Alexis, until he showed her a birthmark on his body.</p>
+<p>Picture now the peasant-woman sumptuously
+lodged in the Moscow palace, decked in all the finery
+of silks and laces and jewels, receiving the respectful
+homage of high Court officials, caressed and
+petted by an Empress, while her splendid son looks
+smilingly on, as proud of his cottage-mother as if she
+were a Princess of the Blood Royal. That the innkeeper
+was not happy in her gilded cage, that her
+thoughts often wandered longingly to her cronies and
+the simple life of the village, is not to be wondered at.</p>
+<p>It was all very well for such a fine gentleman as
+her son, Alexis; but for a poor, simple-minded
+woman like herself&#8212;well, she was too old for such a
+transplanting. And we can imagine her relief when,
+on the removal of the Court to St Petersburg, she
+was allowed to bring her visit to an end and to return
+to her inn with wonderful stories of all she had seen.
+Her son and daughter, however, elected to remain.
+As for Cyril, a handsome youth, almost young
+enough to be his brother's son, he was quick to win
+his way into the favour of the Empress. Before he
+had been many months at Court he was made
+a Count and Gentleman of the Bedchamber. He
+was given for bride a grand-niece of Elizabeth; and
+at twenty-two he was Viceroy of the Ukraine, virtual
+sovereign of a kingdom of his own, with his peasant-mother,
+who declined to share his palace, comfortably
+installed in a modest house near his gates.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_28"></a>Cyril, in fact, was to his last day as
+unspoiled by
+his unaccustomed grandeur as his brother Alexis.
+Each was ready at any moment to turn from the
+obsequious homage of nobles to hobnob with a
+peasant friend or relative. How utterly devoid of
+false pride Alexis was is proved by the following
+anecdote. One day when, in company with the
+Empress, he was paying a visit to Count L&ouml;wenwolde,
+he rushed from Elizabeth's side to fling his
+arms round the neck of one of his host's footmen.
+"Are you mad, Alexis?" exclaimed the Empress,
+in her astonishment. "What do you mean by such
+senseless behaviour?" "I am not mad at all,"
+answered the favourite. "He is an old friend of
+mine."</p>
+<p>But although no man ever deposed the shepherd
+from the first place in Elizabeth's favour, it must not
+be imagined that he was her only lover. The daughter
+of the hot-blooded Peter and the lusty scullery
+wench had always as great a passion for men as the
+second Catherine, who had almost as many favourites
+in her boudoir as gowns in her wardrobes. She had
+her lovers before she was emancipated from the
+schoolroom; and not the least favoured of them, it is
+said, was her own nephew, Peter the Second, whom
+she would no doubt have married if it had been
+possible.</p>
+<p>She turned her back on one great alliance after
+another, preferring her freedom to a wedding-ring
+that brought no love with it; and she found her
+pleasure alike among the gentlemen of the Court
+and among her own servants. In the long list of her
+<a name="Page_29"></a>favourites we find a General succeeded by a
+Sergeant;
+Boutourlin, the handsome courtier, giving
+place to Lialin, the sailor; and Count Shouvalov
+retiring in favour of Voytshinsky, the coachman.
+Thus one liaison succeeded another from girlhood to
+middle-age&#8212;indeed long after she had passed the
+altar. But through all these varying attachments her
+heart remained constant to her shepherd-lover, to
+whom she was ever the devoted wife, and, when he
+was ill, the tenderest of nurses. To please him, she
+even accompanied him on a visit to his native village,
+smiling graciously on his humble friends of other
+days, and partaking of the hospitality of the
+poorest cottagers; while on all who had befriended
+him in the days of his obscurity she lavished her
+favours.</p>
+<p>Of one man who had been thus kind she made a
+General on the spot; the friendly priest was given a
+highly paid post at Court; high rank in the army
+was given to many of his humble relatives; and a
+husband was found for a favourite niece in Count
+Ryoumin, the Chancellor's son.</p>
+<p>As for Alexis himself, nothing was too good for
+him. Although he had probably never handled a gun
+in his life she made him Field-Marshal and head of
+her army; and, at her request, Charles VII. dubbed
+him Count of the Holy Roman Empire, a distinction
+which Gregory Orloff in later years prized more than
+all the honours Catherine II. showered on him; while
+the estates of which she made him lord were a small
+kingdom in themselves. Alexis, the shepherd's son,
+was now, beyond any question, the most powerful
+<a name="Page_30"></a>man in Russia. If he would, he might easily have
+taken the sceptre from the yielding hands of the
+Empress and played the autocrat, as Patiomkin
+played it under similar circumstances in later years.
+But Alexis cared as little for power as for rank and
+wealth. He smiled at his honours. "Fancy," he
+said, with his hearty laugh, "a peasant's son, a
+Count; and a man who ought to be tending sheep, a
+Field-Marshal!"</p>
+<p>When courtly genealogists spread before him an
+elaborate family-tree, proving that he sprang from
+the princely stock of Bogdan, with many a Grand
+Duke of Lithuania among his lineal ancestors, he
+laughed loud and long at them for their pains.
+"Don't be so ridiculous," he said. "You know as well
+as I that my parents were simple peasants, honest
+enough, but people of the soil and nothing else. If
+I am Count and Field-Marshal and Viceroy, I owe
+it all to the good heart of your Empress and mine,
+whose humble servant I am. Take it away, and let
+me hear no more of such foolery."</p>
+<p>Such to the last was the unspoiled, child-like nature
+of the man who so soon was to be not merely the
+first favourite but husband of an Empress. Probably
+Alexis would have lived and died Elizabeth's
+unlicensed lover had it not been for the cunning of
+the cleverest of her Chancellors, Bestyouzhev, who
+saw in his mistress's infatuation for her peasant the
+means of making his own position more secure.
+Elizabeth was still a young and attractive woman,
+who might pick and choose among some of the most
+eligible suitors in Europe for a sharer of her throne;
+<a name="Page_31"></a>for there were many who would gladly have
+played consort to the good-looking autocrat of
+Russia.</p>
+<p>Such a husband, especially if he were a strong
+man, might seriously imperil the Chancellor's position;
+might even dispense with him altogether. On
+the other hand, he was high in the favour of the
+shepherd's son, who had such a contempt for power,
+and who thus would be a puppet in his hands. Why
+not make him husband in name as well as in fact?
+It was, after all, an easy task the Chancellor thus set
+himself. Elizabeth was by no means unwilling to
+wear a wedding-ring for the man who had loved
+her so loyally and so long; and any difficulties she
+might raise were quickly disposed of by her father-confessor,
+who was Bestyouzhev's tool. Thus it came
+to pass that one day Elizabeth and Alexis stood side
+by side before the village altar of Perovo; and the
+words were spoken which made the shepherd's son
+husband of the Empress. The secrecy with which
+the ceremony was performed was but a fiction.
+All the world knew that Alexis Gregorovitch
+was Emperor by right of wedlock, and flocked to
+pay homage to him in his new and exalted
+character.</p>
+<p>He now had sumptuous apartments next to those
+of his wife; he sat at her right hand on all State occasions;
+he was her shadow everywhere; and during
+his frequent attacks of gout the Empress ministered
+to him night and day in his own rooms with the
+tender devotion of a mother to a child. Two children
+were born to them, a son and a daughter, the latter
+<a name="Page_32"></a>of whom, after a life of strange romance and
+vicissitude,
+ended her days in a loathsome dungeon of
+the fortress of Saints Peter and Paul, the victim of
+Catherine II.'s vengeance&#8212;miserably drowned, so
+one story goes, by an inundation of her cell.</p>
+<p>On Elizabeth's death, in the year 1762, her husband
+was glad to retire from the Court in which he
+had for so long played so splendid a part. "None
+but myself," he said, "can know with what pleasure
+I leave a sphere to which I was not born, and to
+which only my love for my dear mistress made me
+resigned. I should have been happier far with her
+in some small cottage far removed from the gilded
+slavery of Court life." He was happy enough now
+leading the peaceful life of a country gentleman on
+one of his many estates.</p>
+<p>Catherine II. had mounted the throne of Russia&#8212;the
+Empress who, according to Masson, had but two
+passions, which she carried to the grave&#8212;"her love
+of man, which degenerated into libertinage; and her
+love of glory, which degenerated into vanity." A
+woman with the brain of a man and the heart of
+a courtesan, Catherine's fickle affection had flitted
+from one lover to another, until now it had settled
+on Gregory Orloff, the handsomest man in her
+dominions, whom she was more than half disposed
+to make her husband.</p>
+<p>This was a scheme which commended itself
+strongly to her Chancellor, Vorontsov. There was
+a most useful precedent to lend support to it&#8212;the
+alliance of the Empress Elizabeth with a man of
+immeasurably lower rank than Catherine's favourite;
+<a name="Page_33"></a>but it was important that this precedent should
+be
+established beyond dispute. Thus it was that one
+day, when Count Alexis was poring over his Bible
+by his country fireside, Chancellor Vorontsov made
+his appearance with ingratiating words and promises.
+Her Majesty, he informed the Count, was willing to
+confer Imperial rank on him in return for one small
+favour&#8212;the possession of the documents which
+proved his marriage to her predecessor, Elizabeth.</p>
+<p>On hearing the request, the ex-shepherd rose,
+and, with words of quiet scorn, refused both the
+request and the proffered honour. "Am not I," he
+said, "a Count, a Field-Marshal, a man of wealth?
+all of which I owe to the kindness of my dear,
+dead mistress. Are not such honours enough
+for the peasant's son whom she raised from the
+mire to sit by her side, that I should purchase
+another bauble by an act of treachery to her
+memory?</p>
+<p>"But wait one moment," he continued; and, leaving
+the room, he returned carrying a small bundle of
+papers, which he proceeded to examine one by one.
+Then, collecting them, he placed the bundle in the
+heart of the fire, to the horror of the onlooking Chancellor;
+and, as the flames were reducing the precious
+documents to ashes, he said, "Go now and tell those
+who sent you, that I never was more than the slave
+of my august benefactress, the Empress Elizabeth,
+who could never so far have forgotten her position
+as to marry a subject."</p>
+<p>Thus with a lie on his lips&#8212;the last crowning evidence
+of loyalty to his beloved Queen and wife&#8212;Alexis
+<a name="Page_34"></a>Razoum makes his exit from the stage on
+which he played so strangely romantic a part. A
+few years later his days ended in peace at his
+St Petersburg palace, with the name he loved best,
+"Elizabeth," on his lips.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_IV"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_35"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+<h2>A CROWN THAT FAILED</h2>
+<p>Henri of Navarre, hero of romance and probably
+the greatest King who ever sat on the throne of
+France, had a heart as weak in love as it was stout
+in war. To his last day he was a veritable coward
+before the battery of bright eyes; and before Ravaillac's
+dagger brought his career to a tragic end one
+May day in the year 1610 he had counted his mistresses
+to as many as the years he had lived.</p>
+<p>But of them all, fifty-seven of them&#8212;for the most
+part lightly coming and lightly going&#8212;only one ever
+really reached his heart, and was within measurable
+distance of a seat on his throne&#8212;the woman to whom
+he wrote in the hey-day of his passion, "Never has
+man loved as I love you. If any sacrifice of mine
+could purchase your happiness, how gladly I would
+make it, even to the last drop of my life's blood."</p>
+<p>Gabrielle d'Estr&eacute;es who thus enslaved the heart
+of the hero, which carried him to a throne through
+a hundred fights and inconceivable hardships, was
+cradled one day in the year 1573 in Touraine. From
+her mother, Fran&ccedil;oise Babou, she inherited both
+beauty and frailness; for the Babou women were
+<a name="Page_36"></a>famous alike for their loveliness and for a
+virtue as
+facile even as that of Marie Gaudin, the pretty plaything
+of Fran&ccedil;ois I., who left Fran&ccedil;ois' arms to find
+a husband in Philip Babou and thus to transmit her
+charms and frailty to Gabrielle.</p>
+<p>Her father, Antoine, son of Jean d'Estr&eacute;es, a
+valiant soldier under five kings, was a man of
+pleasure, who drank and sang his way through life,
+preferring Cupid to Mars and the <i>joie de vivre</i> to
+the call of duty. It is perhaps little wonder that
+Antoine's wife, after bearing seven children to her
+husband, left him to find at least more loyalty in the
+Marquess of Tourel-Al&eacute;gre, a lover twenty years
+younger than herself.</p>
+<p>Thus it was that, deserted by her mother, and
+with a father too addicted to pleasure to spare a
+thought for his children, Gabrielle grew to beautiful
+girlhood under the care of an aunt&#8212;now living in
+the family ch&acirc;teau in Picardy, now in the great Paris
+mansion, the Hotel d'Estr&eacute;es; and with so little
+guidance from precept or example that, in later years,
+she and her six sisters and brothers were known as
+the "Seven Deadly Sins."</p>
+<p>In Gabrielle at least there was little that was
+vicious. She was an irresponsible little creature,
+bubbling over with mischief and gaiety, eager to
+snatch every flower of pleasure that caught her eyes;
+a dainty little fairy with big blue "wonder" eyes,
+golden hair, the sweetest rosebud of a mouth, ready
+to smile or to pout as the mood of the moment
+suggested, with soft round baby cheeks as delicately
+flushed as any rose.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_37"></a>Such was Gabrielle d'Estr&eacute;es on the
+verge of
+young womanhood when Roger de Saint-Larry, Duc
+de Bellegarde, the King's grand equerry, and one of
+the handsomest young men in France, first set eyes
+on her in the ch&acirc;teau of Coeuvres; and, as was
+inevitable, lost his heart to her at first sight. When
+he rode away two days later, such excellent use had
+he made of his opportunities, he left a very happy,
+if desolate maiden behind; for Gabrielle had little
+power to resist fascinations which had made a conquest
+of many of the fairest ladies at Court.</p>
+<p>When Bellegarde returned to Mantes, where
+Henri was still struggling for the crown which was
+so soon to be his, he foolishly gave the King of
+Navarre such a rapturous account of the young
+beauty of Picardy and his conquest that Henri,
+already weary of the faded charms of Diane
+d'Audouins, his mistress, promptly left his soldiering
+and rode away to see the lady for himself, and to
+find that Bellegarde's raptures were more than
+justified.</p>
+<p>Gabrielle, however, flattered though she was by
+such an honour as a visit from the King of Navarre,
+was by no means disposed to smile on the wooing
+of "an ugly man, old enough to be my father." And
+indeed, Henri, with all the glamour of the hero to
+aid him, was but a sorry rival for the handsome and
+courtly Bellegarde. Now nearing his fortieth year,
+with grizzled beard, and skin battered and lined by
+long years of hard campaigning, the future King of
+France had little to appeal to the romantic eyes of
+a maid who counted less than half his years; and the
+<a name="Page_38"></a>King in turn rode away from the Coeuvres Castle
+as
+hopelessly in love as Bellegarde, but with much less
+encouragement to return.</p>
+<p>But the hero of Ivry and a hundred other battles
+was no man to submit to defeat in any lists; and
+within a few weeks Gabrielle was summoned to
+Mantes, where he told her in decisive words that he
+loved her, and that no one, Bellegarde or any other,
+should share her with him. "Indeed!" she exclaimed,
+with a defiant toss of the head, "I will be
+no man's slave; I shall give my heart to whom I
+please, and certainly not to any man who demands
+it as a right." And within an hour she was riding
+home fast as her horse could gallop.</p>
+<p>Henri was thunderstruck at such defiance. He
+must follow her at once and bring her to reason; but,
+in order to do so, he must risk his life by passing
+through the enemy's lines. Such an adventure,
+however, was after his own heart; and disguising
+himself as a peasant, with a bundle of faggots on his
+shoulder, he made his way safely to Coeuvres, where
+he presented himself, a pitiable spectacle of rags and
+poverty, to be greeted by his lady with shouts of
+derisive laughter. "Oh dear!" she gasped between
+her paroxysms of mirth, "what a fright you look!
+For goodness' sake go and change your clothes."
+But though the King obeyed humbly, Gabrielle shut
+herself in her room and declined point-blank to see
+him again.</p>
+<p>Such devotion, however, expressed in such
+fashion, did not fail in its appeal to the romantic
+girl; and when, a little later, Gabrielle visited the
+<a name="Page_39"></a>Royalist army then besieging Chartres, it was a
+much
+more pliant Gabrielle who listened to the King's
+wooing and whose eyes brightened at his stories of
+bravery and danger. Henri might be old and ugly,
+but he had at least a charm of manner, a frank, simple
+manliness, which made him the idol of his soldiers
+and in fact of every woman who once came under
+its spell. And to this charm even Gabrielle, the
+rebel, had at last to submit, until Bellegarde was forgotten,
+and her hero was all the world to her.</p>
+<p>The days that followed this slow awaking were
+crowded with happiness for the two lovers; when
+Gabrielle was not by her King's side, he was writing
+letters to her full of passionate tenderness. "My
+beautiful Love," "My All," "My Trueheart"&#8212;such
+were the sweet terms he lavished on her. "I kiss
+you a million times. You say that you love me a
+thousand times more than I love you. You have
+lied, and you shall maintain your falsehood with the
+arms which you have chosen. I shall not see you
+for ten days, it is enough to kill me." And again,
+"They call me King of France and Navarre&#8212;that
+of your subject is much more delightful&#8212;you have
+much more cause for fearing that I love you too
+much than too little. That fault pleases you, and
+also me, since you love it. See how I yield to your
+every wish."</p>
+<p>Such were the letters&#8212;among the most beautiful
+ever penned by lover&#8212;which the King addressed to
+his "Menon" in those golden days, when all the
+world was sunshine for him, black as the sky was
+still with the clouds of war. And she returned love
+<a name="Page_40"></a>for love; tenderness for passion. When he was
+lying ill at St Denis, she wrote, "I die of fear. Tell
+me, I implore you, how fares the bravest of the brave.
+Give me news, my cavalier; for you know how fatal
+to me is your least ill. I cannot sleep without sending
+you a thousand good nights; for I am the
+Princess Constancy, sensible to all that concerns you,
+and careless of all else in the world, good or bad."</p>
+<p>Through the period of stress and struggle that still
+separated Henri from the crown which for nearly
+twenty years was his goal, Gabrielle was ever by his
+side, to soothe and comfort him, to chase away the
+clouds of gloom which so often settled on him, to
+inspire him with new courage and hope, and, with
+her diplomacy checking his impulses, to smooth over
+every obstacle that the cunning of his enemies placed
+in his path.</p>
+<p>And when, at last, one evening in 1594, Henri
+made his triumphal entry into Paris, on a grey horse,
+wearing a gold-embroidered grey habit, his face
+proud and smiling, saluting with his plume-crowned
+hat the cheering crowds, Gabrielle had the place of
+honour in front of him, "in a gorgeous litter, so
+bedecked with pearls and gems that she paled the
+light of the escorting torches."</p>
+<p>This was, indeed, a proud hour for the lovers which
+saw Henri acclaimed at "long last" King of France,
+and his loyal lady-love Queen in all but name. The
+years of struggle and hardship were over&#8212;years in
+which Henri of Navarre had braved and escaped a
+hundred deaths; and in which he had been reduced
+to such pitiable straits that he had often not known
+<a name="Page_41"></a>where his next meal was to come from or where to
+find a shirt to put on his back.</p>
+<p>Gabrielle was now Marquise de Monceaux, a title
+to which her Royal lover later added that of Duchesse
+de Beaufort. Her son, C&eacute;sar, was known as
+"Monsieur," the title that would have been his if he
+had been heir to the French throne. All that now
+remained to fill the cup of her ambition and her
+happiness was that she should become the legal wife
+of the King she loved so well; and of this the
+prospect seemed more than fair.</p>
+<p>Charming stories are told of the idyllic family life
+of the new King; how his greatest pleasure was to
+"play at soldiers" with his children, to join in their
+nursery romps, or to take them, like some bourgeois
+father, to the Saint Germain fair, and return loaded
+with toys and boxes of sweetmeats, to spend delightful
+homely evenings with the woman he adored.</p>
+<p>But it was not all sunshine for the lovers. Paris
+was in the throes of famine and plague and flood.
+Poverty and discontent stalked through her streets,
+and there were scowling and envious eyes to greet
+the King and his lady when they rode laughing by;
+or when, as on one occasion we read of, they returned
+from a hunting excursion, riding side by side, "she
+sitting astride dressed all in green" and holding the
+King's hand.</p>
+<p>Nor within the palace walls was it all a bed of
+roses for Gabrielle; for she had her enemies there;
+and chief among them the powerful Duc de Sully,
+her most formidable rival in the King's affection.
+Sully was not only Henri's favourite minister; he
+<a name="Page_42"></a>was the Jonathan to his David, the man who had
+shared a hundred dangers by his side, and by his
+devotion and affection had found a firm lodging in
+his heart.</p>
+<p>Between the minister and the mistress, each consumed
+with jealousy of the other, Henri had many a
+bad hour; and the climax came when de Sully refused
+to pass the extravagant charges for the baptism
+of the Marquise's second son, Alexander. Gabrielle
+was indignant and appealed angrily and tearfully to
+the King, who supported his minister. "I have loved
+you," he said at last, roused to wrath, "because I
+thought you gentle and sweet and yielding; now that
+I have raised you to high position, I find you exacting
+and domineering. Know this, I could better
+spare a dozen mistresses like you than one minister
+so devoted to me as Sully."</p>
+<p>At these harsh words, Gabrielle burst into tears.
+"If I had a dagger," she exclaimed, "I would plunge
+it into my heart, and then you would find your image
+there." And when Henri rushed from the room, she
+ran after him, flung herself at his feet, and with
+heart-breaking sobs, begged for forgiveness and a
+kind word. Such troubles as these, however, were
+but as the clouds that come and go in a summer sky.
+Gabrielle's sun was now nearing its zenith; Henri
+had long intended to make her his wife at the altar;
+proceedings for divorce from his wife, Marguerite
+de Valois, were running smoothly; and now the
+crowning day in the two lives thus romantically
+linked was at hand.</p>
+<p>In the month of April, 1599, Gabrielle and Henri
+<a name="Page_43"></a>were spending the last ante-nuptial days together
+at Fontainebleau; the wedding was fixed for the
+first Sunday after Easter, and Gabrielle was ideally
+happy among her wedding finery and the costly presents
+that had been showered on her from all parts of
+France&#8212;from the ring Henri had worn at his Coronation
+and which he was to place on her finger at
+the altar, to a statue of the King in gold from Lyons,
+and a "giant piece of amber in a silver casket from
+Bordeaux."</p>
+<p>Her wedding-dress was a gorgeous robe of Spanish
+velvet, rich in embroideries of gold and silver;
+the suite of rooms which was to be hers as Queen
+was already ready, with its splendours of crimson
+and gold furnishing. The greatest ladies in France
+were now proud to act as her tire-women; and
+princes and ambassadors flocked to Fontainebleau to
+pay her homage.</p>
+<p>The last days of Holy Week it had been arranged
+that she should spend in devotion at Paris, and Henri
+was her escort the greater part of the way. When
+they parted on the banks of the Seine they wept in
+each other's arms, while Gabrielle, full of nameless
+forebodings, clung to her lover and begged him to
+take her back to Fontainebleau. But with a final
+embrace he tore himself away; and with streaming
+eyes Gabrielle continued her journey, full of fears
+as to its issue; for had not a seer of Piedmont told
+her that the marriage would never take place; and
+other diviners, whom she had consulted, warned her
+that she would die young, and never call Henri
+husband?</p>
+<p><a name="Page_44"></a>Two days later Gabrielle heard Mass at the
+Church of St Germain l'Auxerrois; and on returning
+to the Deanery, her aunt's home, became seriously
+ill. She grew rapidly worse; her sufferings
+were terrible to witness; and on Good Friday she
+was delivered of a dead child. To quote an eye-witness,
+"She lingered until six o'clock in very great
+pain, the like of which doctors and surgeons had
+never seen before. In her agony she tore her face,
+and injured herself in other parts of her body." Before
+dawn broke on the following day she drew her last
+breath.</p>
+<p>When news of her illness reached the King, he
+flew to her swift as his horse could carry him, only
+to meet couriers on his way who told him that
+Madame was already dead; and to find, when at last
+he reached St Germain l'Auxerrois, the door of the
+room in which she lay barred against him. He could
+not take her living once more into his arms; he was
+not allowed to see her dead.</p>
+<p>Henri was as a man who is mad with grief; he
+was inconsolable.. None dared even to approach him
+with words of pity and comfort. For eight days he
+shut himself in a black-draped room, himself clothed
+in black; and he wrote to his sister, "The root of
+my love is dead; there will be no Spring for me any
+more." Three months later he was making love to
+Gabrielle's successor, Henriette d'Entragues!</p>
+<p>Thus perished in tragedy Gabrielle d'Estr&eacute;es, the
+creature of sunshine, who won the bravest heart in
+Europe, and carried her conquest to the very foot of
+a throne.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_V"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_45"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+<h2>A QUEEN OF HEARTS</h2>
+<p>If ever woman was born for love and for empire over
+the hearts of men it was surely Jeanne B&eacute;cu, who
+first opened her eyes one August day in the year
+1743, at dreary Vaucouleurs, in Joan of Arc's country,
+and who was fated to dance her light-hearted
+way through the palace of a King to the guillotine.</p>
+<p>Scarcely ever has woman, born to such beauty and
+witchery, been cradled less auspiciously. Her reputed
+father was a scullion, her mother a sempstress.
+For grandfather she had Fabien B&eacute;cu, who left his
+frying-pans in a Paris kitchen to lead Jeanne Husson,
+a fellow-servant, to the altar. Such was the ignoble
+strain that flowed in the veins of the Vaucouleurs
+beauty, who five-and-twenty years later was playfully
+pulling the nose of the fifteenth Louis, and
+queening it in his palaces with a splendour which
+Marie Antoinette herself never surpassed.</p>
+<p>From her sordid home Jeanne was transported at
+the age of six to a convent, where she spent nine
+years in rebellion against rules and punishments, until
+"the golden head emerged at last from black woollen
+veil and coarse unstarched bands, the exquisite
+<a name="Page_46"></a>form from shapeless, hideous robe, the perfect
+little
+feet from abominable yellow shoes," to play first
+the r&ocirc;le of lady's maid to a wealthy widow, and,
+when she wearied (as she quickly did) of coiffing hair,
+to learn the arts of millinery.</p>
+<p>"Picture," says de Goncourt, "the glittering shop,
+where all day long charming idlers and handsome
+great gentlemen lounged and ogled; the pretty
+milliner tripping through the streets, her head covered
+by a big, black <i>cal&egrave;che</i>, whence her golden curls
+escaped, her round, dainty waist defined by a muslin-frilled
+pinafore, her feet in little high-heeled, buckled
+shoes, and in her hand a tiny fan, which she uses as
+she goes&#8212;and then imagine the conversations, proposals,
+replies!"</p>
+<p>Such was Jeanne B&eacute;cu in the first bloom of her
+dainty beauty, the prettiest grisette who ever set
+hearts fluttering in Paris streets; with laughter
+dancing in her eyes, a charming pertness at her
+red lips, grace in every movement, and the springtide
+of youth racing through her veins.</p>
+<p>When Voltaire first saw her portrait, he exclaimed,
+"The original was fashioned for the gods." And
+we cannot wonder, as we look on the ravishing beauty
+of the face that wrung this eloquent tribute from the
+cold-blooded cynic&#8212;the tender, melting violet of
+the eyes, with their sweeping brown lashes, under the
+exquisite arch of brown eyebrows, the dainty little
+Greek nose, the bent bow of the delicious tiny mouth,
+the perfect oval of the face, the complexion "fair and
+fresh as an infant's," and a glorious halo of golden
+hair, a dream of fascinating curls and tendrils.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_47"></a>It was to this bewitching picture, "with the
+perfume
+and light as of a goddess of love," that Jean du
+Barry, self-styled Comte, adventurer and rou&eacute;, succumbed
+at a glance. But du Barry's tenure of her
+heart, if indeed he ever touched it at all, was brief;
+for the moment Louis XV. set eyes on the ravishing
+girl he determined to make the prize his own, a
+superior claim to which the Comte perforce yielded
+gracefully.</p>
+<p>Thus, in 1768, we find Jeanne B&eacute;cu&#8212;or "Mademoiselle
+Vaubarnier," as she now called herself&#8212;transported
+by a bound to the Palace of Versailles
+and to the first place in the favour of the King, having
+first gone through the farce of a wedding ceremony
+with du Barry's brother, Guillaume, a husband
+whom she first saw on the marriage morning, and
+on whom she looked her last at the church door.</p>
+<p>Then followed for the maid of the kitchen a few
+years of such Queendom and splendour as have seldom
+fallen to the lot of any lady cradled in a palace&#8212;the
+idolatrous worship of a King, the intoxication of
+the power that only beauty thus enshrined can wield,
+the glitter of priceless jewels, rarest laces, and richest
+satins and silks, the flash of gold on dinner and toilet-table,
+an army of servants in sumptuous liveries, the
+fawning of great Court ladies, the courtly flatteries of
+princes&#8212;every folly and extravagance that money
+could purchase or vanity desire.</p>
+<p>Six years of such intoxicating life and then&#8212;the
+end. Louis is lying on his death-bed and, with fear
+in his eyes and a tardy penitence on his lips, is saying
+to her, "Madame, it is time that we should part."
+<a name="Page_48"></a>And, indeed, the hour of parting had arrived; for
+a
+few days later he drew his last wicked breath, and
+Madame du Barry was under orders to retire to a
+convent. But her grief for the dead King was as
+brief as her love for him had been small; for within
+a few months, we find her installed in her beautiful
+country home, Lucienne, ready for fresh conquests,
+and eager to drain the cup of pleasure to the last
+drop. Nor was there any lack of ministers to the
+vanity of the woman who had now reached the zenith
+of her incomparable charms.</p>
+<p>Among the many lovers who flocked to the country
+shrine of the widowed "Queen," was Louis, Duc de
+Coss&eacute;, son of the Mar&eacute;chal de Brissac, who, although
+Madame du Barry's senior by nine years, was still in
+the prime of his manhood&#8212;handsome as an Apollo
+and a model of the courtly graces which distinguished
+the old <i>noblesse</i> in the day of its greatest pride, which
+was then so near its tragic downfall.</p>
+<p>De Cass&eacute; had long been a mute worshipper of
+Louis' beautiful "Queen," and now that she was a
+free woman he was at last able to pay open homage
+to her, a homage which she accepted with indifference,
+for at the time her heart had strayed to
+Henry Seymour, although in vain. The woman
+whose beauty had conquered all other men was
+powerless to raise a flame in the breast of the cold-blooded
+Englishman; and, realising this, she at last
+bade him farewell in a letter, pathetic in its tender
+dignity. "It is idle," she wrote, "to speak of my
+affection for you&#8212;you know it. But what you do
+not know is my pain. You have not deigned to
+<a name="Page_49"></a>reassure me about that which most matters to my
+heart. And so I must believe that my ease of mind,
+my happiness, are of little importance to you. I am
+sorry that I should have to allude to them; it is for
+the last time."</p>
+<p>It was in this hour of disillusion and humiliation
+that she turned for solace to de Coss&eacute;, whose touching
+constancy at last found its reward. It was not
+long before friendship ripened into a love as ardent
+as his own; and for the first time this fickle beauty,
+whose heart had been a pawn in the game of ambition,
+knew what a beautiful and ennobling thing true
+love is.</p>
+<p>Those were halcyon days which followed for de
+Coss&eacute; and the lady his loyalty had won; days of
+sweet meetings and tender partings&#8212;of a union of
+souls which even death was powerless to dissolve.
+When they could not meet&#8212;and de Coss&eacute;'s duties
+often kept him from her side&#8212;letters were always on
+the wing between Lucienne and Paris, letters some
+of which have survived to bring their fragrance to
+our day.</p>
+<p>Thus the lover writes, "A thousand thanks, a
+thousand thanks, dear heart! To-day I shall be
+with you. Yes, I find my happiness is in being loved
+by you. I kiss you a thousand times! Good-bye.
+I love you for ever." In another letter we read,
+"Yes, dear heart, I desire so ardently to be with you&#8212;not
+in spirit, my thoughts are ever with you, but
+bodily&#8212;that nothing can calm my impatience.
+Good-bye, my darling. I kiss you many and many
+times with all my heart." The curious may read at
+<a name="Page_50"></a>the French Record Office many of these letters
+written in a bold, flowing hand by de Coss&eacute; in the
+hey-day of his love. The paper is time-stained,
+the ink is faded; but each sentence still palpitates
+with the passion that inspired it a century and a
+quarter ago.</p>
+<p>And with this great love came new honours for
+de Coss&eacute;. His father's death made him Duc de
+Brissac, head of one of the greatest houses in France,
+owner of vast estates. He was appointed Governor
+of Paris and Colonel of the King's own body-guard.
+He had, in fact, risen to a perilous eminence; for the
+clouds of the great Revolution were already massing
+in the sky, and the <i>sans-culotte</i> crowds were straining
+to be at the throats of the cursed "aristos," and
+to hurl Louis from his throne. Brissac (as we must
+now call him) was thus an object of special hatred,
+as of splendour, standing out so prominently as representative
+of the hated <i>noblesse</i>.</p>
+<p>Other nobles, fearful of the breaking of the storm,
+were flying in droves to seek safety in England and
+elsewhere. But when the Governor of Paris was
+urged to fly, he answered proudly, "Certainly not.
+I shall act according to my duty to my ancestors and
+myself." And, heedless of his life, he clung to his
+duty and his honour, presenting a smiling face to the
+scowls of hatred and envy, and spending blissful
+hours at Lucienne with the woman he loved.</p>
+<p>Nor was she any less conscious of her danger, or
+less indifferent to it. She also had become a target
+of hatred and scarcely veiled threats. Watchful
+eyes marked every coming and going of Brissac's
+<a name="Page_51"></a>messengers with their missives of love; it was
+discovered
+that Brissac's aide-de-camp, whose life they
+sought, was in hiding in her house; that she was
+supplying the noble emigrants with money. The
+climax was reached when she boldly advertised a
+reward of two thousand louis for a clue to the jewellery
+of which burglars had robbed her&#8212;jewels of
+which she published a long and dazzling list, thus
+bringing to memory the days when the late King had
+squandered his ill-gotten gold on her.</p>
+<p>The Duc, at last alarmed for her&#8212;never for himself&#8212;begged
+her either to escape, or, as he wrote,
+to "come quickly, my darling, and take every precaution
+for your valuables, if you have any left. Yes,
+come, and your beauty, your kindness and magnanimity.
+I am ashamed of it, but I feel weaker than
+you. How should I feel otherwise for the one I
+love best?"</p>
+<p>But already the hour for flight had passed. The
+passions of the mob were breaking down the barriers
+that were now too weak to hold them in check; the
+Paris streets had their first baptism of blood, prelude
+to the deluge to follow; hideous, fierce-eyed crowds
+were clamouring at the gates of Versailles; and de
+Brissac was soon on his way, a prisoner, to Orleans.</p>
+<p>The blow had fallen at last, suddenly, and with
+crushing force. When "Louis Hercule Timoleon
+de Coss&eacute;-Brissac, soldier from his birth," was charged
+before the National High Court with admitting
+Royalists into the Guards, he answered: "I have
+admitted into the King's Guards no one but citizens
+who fulfilled all the conditions contained in the decree
+<a name="Page_52"></a>of formation": and no other answer or plea would
+he deign to his accusers.</p>
+<p>From his Orleans prison, where he now awaited
+the inevitable end, he wrote daily to his beloved lady;
+and every day brought him a tender and cheering
+letter from her. On 11th August, 1792, he writes:
+"I received this morning the best letter I have had
+for a long time past; none have rejoiced my heart
+so much. Thank you for it. I kiss you a thousand
+times. You indeed will have my last thought. Ah,
+my darling, why am I not with you in a wilderness
+rather than in Orleans?"</p>
+<p>A few days later news reached Madame du Barry
+that her lover, with other prisoners, was to be brought
+from Orleans to Paris. He would thus actually pass
+her own door; she would at least see him once again,
+under however tragic conditions. With what leaden
+steps the intervening hours crawled by! Each sound
+set her heart beating furiously as if it would choke
+her. Each moment was an agony of anticipation.
+At last she hears the sound of coming feet. She flies
+to the window, piercing the dark night with straining
+eyes. The sound grows nearer, a tumult of trampling
+feet and hoarse cries. A mob of dark figures
+surges through her gates, pours riotously up the steps
+and through the open door. In the hall there is a
+pandemonium of cries and oaths; the door of her
+room is burst open, and something is flung at her
+feet. She glances down; and, with a gasp of
+unspeakable horror, looks down on the severed head
+of her lover, red with his blood.</p>
+<p>The <i>sans-culottes</i> had indeed taken a terrible
+<a name="Page_53"></a>revenge. They had fallen in overwhelming numbers
+on the prisoners and their escort; the soldiers had
+fled; and de Brissac found himself the centre of a
+mob, the helpless target of a hundred murderous
+blows. With a knife for sole weapon he fought valiantly,
+like the brave soldier he was, until a cowardly
+blow from behind felled him to the ground. "Fire
+at me with your pistols," he shouted, "your work
+will the sooner be over." A few moments later he
+drew his last gallant breath, almost within sight of the
+house that sheltered his beloved.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 25%;">
+<p>United in life, the lovers were not long to be
+divided. "Since that awful day," Madame du
+Barry wrote to a friend, "you can easily imagine what
+my grief has been. They have consummated the
+frightful crime, the cause of my misery and my eternal
+regrets&#8212;my grief is complete&#8212;a life which ought
+to have been so grand and glorious! Good God,
+what an end!"</p>
+<p>Thus cruelly deprived of all that made life worth
+living, she cared little how soon the end came. "I
+ask nothing now of life," she wrote, "but that it
+should quickly give me back to him." And her
+prayer was soon to be granted. A few months after
+that night of horrors she herself was awaiting the
+guillotine in her cell at the conciergerie.</p>
+<p>In vain did an Irish priest who visited her offer to
+secure her escape if she would give him money to
+bribe her jailers. "No," she answered with a smile,
+"I have no wish to escape. I am glad to die; but I
+will give you money willingly on condition that you
+<a name="Page_54"></a>save the Duchesse de Mortemart." And while
+Madame de Mortemart, daughter of the man she
+loved, was making her way to safety under the priest's
+escort, Jeanne du Barry was being led to the scaffold,
+breathing the name of the man she had loved
+so well; and, however feeble the flesh, glad to follow
+where he had led the way.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_VI"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_55"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+<h2>THE REGENT'S DAUGHTER</h2>
+<br>
+<p>Many unwomanly women have played their parts in
+the drama of Royal Courts, but scarcely one, not
+even those Messalinas, Catherine II. of Russia and
+Christina of Sweden, conducted herself with such
+a shameless disregard of conventionality as Marie
+Louise Elizabeth d'Orl&eacute;ans, known to fame as the
+Duchesse de Berry, who probably crowded within
+the brief space of her years more wickedness than any
+woman who was ever cradled in a palace.</p>
+<p>It is said that this libertine Duchesse was mad;
+and certainly he would be a bold champion who
+would try to prove her sanity. But, apart from any
+question of a disordered brain, there was a taint in
+her blood sufficient to account for almost any lapse
+from conventional standards of pure living. Her
+father was that Duc d'Orl&eacute;ans who shocked the none
+too strait-laced Europe of two centuries ago by his
+orgies; her grandfather was that other Orleans Duke,
+brother of Louis XIV., whose passion for his minions
+broke the heart of his English wife, the Stuart Princess
+Henriettta; and she had for mother one of the
+daughters of Madame de Montespan, light-o'-love to
+<i>le Roi Soleil</i>.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_56"></a>The offspring of such parents could scarcely
+have
+been normal; and how far from normal Marie Louise
+was, this story of her singular life will show. When
+her father, the Duc de Chartres, took to wife Mademoiselle
+de Blois, Montespan's daughter, there were
+many who significantly shrugged their shoulders and
+curled their lips at such a union; and one at least, the
+Duc's mother, Elizabeth Charlotte, Princess Palatine,
+was undisguisedly furious. She refused point-blank
+to be present at the nuptials, and when her
+son, fresh from the altar, approached her to ask her
+blessing, she retorted by giving the bridegroom a
+resounding slap on the face.</p>
+<p>Such was the ill-omened opening to a wedded life
+which brought nothing but unhappiness with it and
+which gave to the world some of the most degenerate
+women (in addition to a son who was almost an idiot)
+who have ever been cradled.</p>
+<p>The first of these degenerates was Marie Elizabeth,
+who was born one August day in the year 1695,
+and who from her earliest infancy was her father's
+pet and favourite. His idolatry of his first-born
+child, indeed, is one of the most inscrutable things
+in a life full of the abnormal, and in later years
+afforded much material for the tongue of scandal.
+He was inseparable from her; her lightest wish was
+law to him; he nursed her through her childish illnesses
+with more than the devotion of a mother; and,
+as she grew to girlhood, he worshipped at the shrine
+of her young beauty with the adoration of a lover and
+put her charms on canvas in the guise of a pagan
+goddess.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_57"></a>The Duc's affection for his daughter, indeed,
+was
+so extravagant that it was made the subject of scores
+of scurrilous lampoons to which even Voltaire contributed,
+and was a delicious morsel of ill-natured
+gossip in all the <i>salons</i> and cabarets of Paris. At
+fifteen the princess was already a woman&#8212;tall, handsome,
+well-formed, with brilliant eyes and the full
+lips eloquent of a sensuous nature. Already she
+had had her initiation into the vices that proved her
+undoing; for in a Court noted for its free-living, she
+was known for her love of the table and the wine-bottle.</p>
+<p>Such was the Duc's eldest daughter when she was
+ripe for the altar and became the object of an intrigue
+in which her scheming father, the Royal Duchesses,
+the Duc de Saint-Simon, the King himself, and the
+Jesuits all took a part, and the prize of which was
+the hand of the young Duc de Berry, a younger son
+of the Dauphin, the grandson of King Louis.</p>
+<p>Over the plotting and counterplotting, the rivalries
+and jealousies which followed, we must pass. It
+must suffice to record that the King's consent was at
+last won by the Orleans faction; Madame de Maintenon
+was persuaded to smile on the alliance; and,
+one July day, the nuptials of the Duc de Berry and
+the Orleans Princess were celebrated in the presence
+of the Royal family and the Court. A regal supper
+followed; and, the last toast drunk, the young couple
+were escorted to their room with all the stately, if
+scarcely decent, ceremonial which in those days
+inaugurated the life of the newly-wedded.</p>
+<p>Seldom has there been a more singular union than
+<a name="Page_58"></a>this of the Duc d'Orl&eacute;ans' prodigal
+daughter with
+the almost imbecile grandson of the French King.
+The Duc de Berry, it is true, was good to look upon.
+Tall, fair-haired, with a good complexion and splendid
+health, he was physically, at twenty-four, no unworthy
+descendant of the great Louis. He had, too,
+many amiable qualities calculated to win affection;
+but he was mentally little better than a clown. His
+education had been shamefully neglected; he had
+been suppressed and kept in the background until, in
+spite of his manhood, he had all the shyness, awkwardness
+and dullness of a backward child.</p>
+<p>As he himself confessed to Madame de Saint-Simon,
+"They have done all they could to stifle my
+intelligence. They did not want me to have any
+brains. I was the youngest, and yet ventured to
+argue with my brother. Afraid of the results of my
+courage, they crushed me; they taught me nothing
+except to hunt and gamble; they succeeded in
+making a fool of me, one incapable of anything
+and who will yet be the laughing-stock of everybody."</p>
+<p>Such was the weak-kneed husband to whom was
+now allied the most precocious, headstrong young
+woman in all France; who, although still short of
+her sixteenth birthday, was a past-mistress of the arts
+of pleasure, and was now determined to have her full
+fling at any cost. She had been thoroughly spoiled
+by her too indulgent father, who was even then the
+most powerful man in France after the King; and
+she was in no mood to brook restraint from anyone,
+even from Louis himself.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_59"></a>The pleasures of the table seem now to have
+absorbed the greater part of her life. Read what
+her grandmother, the Princess Palatine, says of her:
+"Madame de Berry does not eat much at dinner.
+How, indeed, can she? She never leaves her room
+before noon, and spends her mornings in eating all
+kinds of delicacies. At two o'clock she sits down
+to an elaborate dinner, and does not rise from the
+table until three. At four she is eating again&#8212;fruit,
+salad, cheese, etc. She takes no exercise whatever.
+At ten she has a heavy supper, and retires to bed
+between one and two in the morning. She likes
+very strong brandy." And in this last sentence we
+have the true secret of her undoing. The Royal
+Princess was, even tat this early age, a confirmed
+dipsomaniac, with her brandy bottle always by her
+side; and was seldom sober, from rising to retiring.</p>
+<p>To such a woman, a slave to the senses, a husband
+like the Duc de Berry, unredeemed by a vestige of
+manliness, could make no appeal. She wanted
+"men" to pay her homage; and, like Catherine of
+Russia, she had them in abundance&#8212;lovers who were
+only too ready to pay court to a beautiful Princess,
+who might one day be Queen of France. For the
+Dauphin was now dead; his eldest son, the Duc de
+Bourgogne, had followed him to the grave a few
+months later. Prince Philip had renounced his right
+to the French crown when he accepted that of Spain;
+and, between her husband and the throne there was
+now but one frail life, that of the three-year-old Duc
+d'Anjou, a child so delicate that he might easily not
+survive his great-grandfather, Louis, whose hand was
+<a name="Page_60"></a>already relaxing its grasp of the sceptre he had
+held
+so long.</p>
+<p>On the intrigues with which this Queen <i>in posse</i>
+beguiled her days, it is perhaps well not to look too
+closely. They are unsavoury, as so much of her life
+was. Her lovers succeeded one another with quite
+bewildering rapidity, and with little regard either to
+rank or good-looks. One special favourite of our
+Sultana was La Haye, a Court equerry, whom she
+made Chamberlain, and who is pictured by Saint-Simon
+as "tall, bony, with an awkward carriage and
+an ugly face; conceited, stupid, dull-witted, and only
+looking at all passable when on horseback."</p>
+<p>So infatuated was the Duchesse with her ill-favoured
+equerry that nothing less would please her
+than an elopement to Holland&#8212;a proposal which so
+scared La Haye that, in his alarm, he went forthwith
+to the lady's father and let the cat out of the bag.
+"Why on earth does my daughter want to run away
+to Holland?" the Due exclaimed with a laugh. "I
+should have thought she was having quite a good
+enough time here!" And so would anyone else have
+thought.</p>
+<p>And while his Duchesse was thus dallying with her
+multitude of lovers and stupefying herself with her
+brandy bottle, her husband was driven to his wits'
+end by her exhibitions of temper, as by her infidelities.
+In vain he stormed and threatened to have her
+shut up in a convent. All her retort was to laugh
+in his face and order him out of her apartment.
+Violent scenes were everyday incidents. "The last
+one," says Saint-Simon, "was at Rambouillet; and,
+<a name="Page_61"></a>by a regrettable mishap, the Duchesse received a
+kick."</p>
+<p>The Duc's laggard courage was spurred to fight
+more than one duel for his wife's tarnished fame. Of
+one of these sorry combats, Maurepas writes, "Her
+conduct with her father became so notorious that His
+Grace the Duc de Berry, disgusted at the scandal,
+forced the Duc d'Orl&eacute;ans to fight a duel on the terrace
+at Marly. They were, however, soon separated,
+and the whole affair was hushed up."</p>
+<p>But release from such an intolerable life was soon
+coming to the ill-used Duc. One day, when hunting,
+he was thrown from his horse, and ruptured a
+blood-vessel. Fearful of alarming the King, now
+near the end of his long life, he foolishly made light
+of his accident, and only consented to see a doctor
+when it was too late. When the doctors were at last
+summoned he was a dying man, his body drained of
+blood, which was later found in bowls concealed in
+various parts of his bedroom. With his last breath,
+he said to his confessor, "Ah, reverend father, I
+alone am the real cause of my death."</p>
+<p>Thus, one May day in 1714, the Duchesse found
+herself a widow, within four years of her wedding-day;
+and the last frail barrier was removed from the
+path of self-indulgence and low passions to which
+her life was dedicated. When, with the aged King's
+death in the following year, her father became Regent
+of France, her position as daughter of the virtual
+sovereign was now more splendid than ever; and
+before she had worn her widow's weeds a month, she
+had plunged again, still deeper, into dissipation, with
+<a name="Page_62"></a>Madame de Mouchy, one of her waiting-women, as
+chief minister to her pleasures.</p>
+<p>It was at this time, before her husband had been
+many weeks in his grave, that the Comte de Riom,
+the last and most ill-favoured of her many lovers,
+came on the scene. Nothing but a perverted taste
+could surely have seen any attraction in such a lover
+as this grand-nephew of the Duc de Lauzun, of whom
+the austere and disapproving Palatine Duchess draws
+the following picture: "He has neither figure nor
+good-looks. He is more like an ogre than a man,
+with his face of greenish yellow. He has the nose,
+eyes, and mouth of a Chinaman; he looks, in fact,
+more like a baboon than the Gascon he really is.
+Conceited and stupid, his large head seems to sit on
+his broad shoulders, owing to the shortness of his neck.
+He is shortsighted and altogether is preternaturally
+ugly; and he appears so ill that he might be suffering
+from some loathsome disease."</p>
+<p>To this unflattering description, Saint-Simon adds
+the fact that his "large, pasty face was so covered
+by pimples that it looked like one large abscess.'"
+Such, then, was the repulsive lover who found favour
+in the eyes of the Regent's daughter, and for whom
+she was ready to discard all her legion of more attractive
+wooers.</p>
+<p>With the coming of de Riom, the Duchesse entered
+on the last and worst stage of her mis-spent life.
+Strange tales are told of the orgies of which the
+Luxembourg, the splendid palace her father had given
+her, was now the scene&#8212;orgies in which Madame de
+Mouchy and a Jesuit, one Father Ringlet, took a
+<a name="Page_63"></a>part, and over which the evil de Riom ruled as
+"Lord
+of merry disports." The Duchesse, now sunk to the
+lowest depths of degradation, was the veriest puppet
+in his strong hands, flattered by his coarse attentions
+and submitting to rudeness and ridicule such as any
+grisette, with a grain of pride, would have resented.</p>
+<p>When these scandalous "carryings-on" at the
+Luxembourg Palace reached the Regent's ears and
+he ventured to read his daughter a severe lecture on
+her conduct, she retaliated by snapping her fingers
+at him and telling him in so many words to mind his
+own business. And to the tongue of scandal that
+found voice everywhere, she turned a contemptuous
+ear. She even locked and barred her palace gates
+to keep prying eyes at a safe distance.</p>
+<p>But, although she thus defied man, she was powerless
+to stay the steps of fate. Her health, robust as
+it had been, was shattered by her excesses; and when
+a serious illness assailed her, she was horrified to find
+death so uncomfortably near. In her alarm she called
+for a priest to shrive her; and the Abb&eacute; Languet
+came at the summons to bring her the consolations
+of the Church. He refused point-blank, however,
+to give the sinner absolution until the palace
+was purged of the presence of de Riom and Madame
+de Mouchy, the arch-partners in her vices.</p>
+<p>To this suggestion the Duchesse, perilous as her
+condition was, returned an uncompromising "No!"
+If the Abb&eacute; would not absolve her&#8212;well, there were
+other priests, less exacting, who would; and one
+such priest of elastic conscience, a Franciscan friar,
+was summoned to her bedside. Then ensued an
+<a name="Page_64"></a>unseemly struggle around the dying woman's bed,
+in which the Regent, Cardinal Noailles, Madame de
+Mouchy, and the rival clerics all played their parts.</p>
+<p>While the obliging friar remained in the room
+awaiting an opportunity to administer the last Sacrament,
+the Abb&eacute; and his curates kept watch at the
+bedroom door to see that he did no such thing; and
+thus the siege lasted for four days and nights until,
+the patient's crisis over, the services of the Church
+were summarily dispensed with.</p>
+<p>With the return of health, the Duchesse's piety
+quickly evaporated. It is true that she had had a
+fright; and, by way of modified penitence, she vowed
+to dress herself and her household in white for six
+months and also to make a husband of her lover.
+Within a few weeks, de Riom led the Regent's
+daughter to the altar, thus throwing the cloak of the
+Church over the licence of the past.</p>
+<p>Now that our Princess was once more a "respectable"
+woman, she returned gladly to her old life of
+indulgence; until the Duchess Palatine exclaimed in
+alarm, "I am afraid her excesses in drinking and eating
+will kill her." And never was prediction more
+sure of early fulfilment. When she was not keeping
+company with her brandy bottle, she was gorging
+herself with delicacies of all kinds, from patties and
+fricass&eacute;es to peaches and nectarines, washed down
+with copious draughts of iced beer.</p>
+<p>As a last desperate effort to reform her, at the
+eleventh hour, the Regent packed de Riom off to his
+regiment. A few days later, the Duchesse invited
+her father to a sumptuous banquet on the terrace at
+<a name="Page_65"></a>Meudon, at which, regardless of her delicate
+health,
+she ate and drank more voraciously than ever. The
+same evening she was taken ill; and when, on the
+following Sunday, her mother-in-law, the Duchess,
+visited her, she found the patient in a deplorable
+condition&#8212;wasted to a "shadow" and burning with
+fever. "She was suffering such horrible pains in her
+toes and under the feet," says the Duchess, "that
+tears came to her eyes. She looked so very bad that
+three doctors were called in consultation. They resolved
+to bleed her; but it was difficult to bring her
+to it, for her pains were so great that the least touch
+of the sheets made her shriek."</p>
+<p>A few days later, in the early hours of 17th July,
+1719, the Duchesse de Berry passed away in her
+sleep. The life which she had wasted with such shameless
+prodigality closed in peace; and at the moment
+when she was being laid to rest in the Church of St
+Denis, Madame de Mouchy, blazing in the dead
+woman's jewels, was laughing merrily over her
+champagne-glass at a dinner-party to which she had
+invited all the sharers in the orgies which had made
+the Palace of the Luxembourg infamous!</p>
+<p>The moral of this pitifully squandered life needs
+no pointing out. And on reviewing it one can only
+in charity echo the words spoken by Madame de
+Meilleraye of another sinner, the Chevalier de Savoie,
+"For my part, I believe the good God must think
+twice before sending one born of such parents to the
+nether regions."</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_VII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_66"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+<h2>A PRINCESS OF MYSTERY</h2>
+<p>In the spring of the year 1772 the fashionable world
+of Paris was full of speculation and gossip about a
+stranger, as mysterious as she was beautiful, who had
+appeared from no one knew where, in its midst, and
+who called herself the Princess Aly &Eacute;mett&eacute;e de
+Vlodimir. That she was a woman of rank and
+distinction admitted of no question. Her queenly
+carriage and the graciousness and dignity of her
+deportment were in keeping with the Royal character
+she assumed; but more remarkable than these evidences
+of high station was her beauty, which in
+its brilliance eclipsed that of the fairest women of
+Versailles and the Tuileries.</p>
+<p>Tall, with a figure of exquisite modelling and
+grace, her daintily poised head crowned with a
+coronal of golden-brown hair, with a face of perfect
+oval, dimpled cheeks as delicately tinted as a rose,
+her chief glory lay in her eyes, large and lustrous,
+which had the singular quality of changing colour&#8212;"now
+blue, now black, which gave to their dreamy
+expression a peculiar, mysterious air."</p>
+<p>Who was she, this woman of beauty and mystery?
+<a name="Page_67"></a>It was rumoured that she was a Circassian
+Princess,
+"the heroine of strange romances." She was living
+luxuriously in a fine house in the most fashionable
+quarter of Paris, in company with two German
+"Barons"&#8212;one, the Baron von Embs, who claimed
+to be her cousin; the other, Baron von Schenk, who
+appeared to play the r&ocirc;le of guardian. To her
+<i>salon</i> in the Ile St Louis were flocking many of the
+greatest men in France, infatuated by her beauty,
+and paying homage to her charms. To a man, they
+adored the mysterious lady&#8212;from Prince Ojinski
+and other illustrious refugees from Poland to the
+Comte de Rochefort-Velcourt, the Duke of Limburg's
+representative at the French Court, and the
+wealthy old <i>beau</i> M. de Marine, who, it was said,
+placed his long purse at her disposal.</p>
+<p>But while the men were thus her slaves, the women
+tossed their heads contemptuously at their dangerous
+rival. She was an adventuress, they declared with
+one voice; and great was their satisfaction when, one
+day, news came that the Baron von Embs had been
+arrested for debt and that, on investigation, he proved
+to be no Baron at all, but the good-for-nothing son of
+a Ghent tradesman.</p>
+<p>The "bubble" had soon burst, and the attentions
+of the police became so embarrassing that the Princess
+was glad to escape from the scene of her brief
+triumphs with her cavaliers (Von Embs' liberty
+having been purchased by that "credulous old fool,"
+de Marine) to Frankfort, leaving a wake of debts
+behind.</p>
+<p>Arrived at Frankfort, the fair Circassian resumed
+<a name="Page_68"></a>her luxurious mode of life, carrying a part of
+her
+retinue of admirers with her, and making it known
+that she was daily expecting a large remittance from
+her good friend, the Shah of Persia. And it was not
+long before, thanks to the offices of de Rochefort-Velcourt,
+she had at her feet no less a personage than
+Philip, Duke of Limburg, and Prince of the Empire,
+one of those petty German potentates who assumed
+more than the airs and arrogance of kings. Though
+his duchy was no larger than an English county,
+Philip had his ambassadors at the Courts of Vienna
+and Versailles; and though he had neither courtiers,
+army, nor exchequer, he lavished his titles of nobility
+and surrounded himself with as much state and ceremonial
+as any Tsar or Emperor.</p>
+<p>But exalted and serene as was His Highness, he
+was caught as helplessly in the toils of the Princess
+Aly as any lovesick boy; and within a week of
+making his first bow had her installed in his Castle
+of Oberstein, after satisfying the most clamorous of
+her creditors with borrowed money. That there
+might be no question of obligation, the Princess
+repaid him with the most lavish promises to redeem
+his heavily mortgaged estate with the millions she
+was daily expecting from Persia, and to use her great
+influence with Tsar and Sultan to support his claim
+to the Schleswig and Holstein duchies. And that
+he might be in no doubt as to her ability to discharge
+these promises, she showed him letters, addressed
+to her in the friendliest of terms by these august
+personages.</p>
+<p>Each day in the presence of this most alluring of
+<a name="Page_69"></a>princesses forged new fetters for the susceptible
+Duke, until one day she announced to him, with
+tears streaming down her pretty cheeks, that she
+had received a letter recalling her to Persia&#8212;to
+be married. The crucial hour had arrived. The
+Duke, reduced to despair, begs her to accept his own
+exalted hand in marriage, vowing that, if she refuses,
+he will "shut himself up in a cloister"; and is only
+restored to a measure of sanity when she promises to
+consider his offer.</p>
+<p>When Hornstein, the Duke's ambassador to
+Vienna, appears on the scene, full of suspicion and
+doubts, she makes an equally easy conquest of him.
+She announces to his gratified ears her wish to become
+a Catholic; flatters him by begging him to act as her
+instructor in the creed that is so dear to him; and she
+reveals to him "for the first time" the true secret of
+her identity. She is really, she says, the Princess of
+Azov, heiress to vast estates, which may come to her
+any day; and the first use she intends to make of her
+millions is to fill the empty coffers of the Limburg
+duchy.</p>
+<p>Hornstein is not only converted; he becomes as
+ardent an admirer as his master, the Duke. The
+Princess takes her place as the coming Duchess of
+Limburg, much to the disgust of his subjects, who
+show their feelings by hissing when she appears in
+public. Her hour of triumph has arrived&#8212;when,
+like a bolt from the blue, an anonymous letter comes
+to Hornstein revealing the story of her past doings
+in several capitals of Europe, and branding her as
+an "impostor."</p>
+<p><a name="Page_70"></a>For a time the Duke treats these anonymous
+slanders with scorn. He refuses to believe a word
+against his divinity, the beautiful, high-born woman
+who is to crown his life's happiness and, incidentally,
+to save him from bankruptcy. But gradually the
+poison begins to work, supplemented as it is by the
+suspicions and discontent of his subjects. At last
+he summons up courage to ask an explanation&#8212;to
+beg her to assure him that the charges against her
+are as false as he believes them.</p>
+<p>She listens to him with quiet dignity until he has
+finished, and then replies, with tears in her eyes, that
+she is not unprepared for disloyalty from a man who
+is so obviously the slave of false friends and of public
+opinion, but that she had hoped that he would at
+least have some pity and consideration for a woman
+who was about to become the mother of his child.
+This unexpected announcement, with its appeal to
+his manhood, proves more eloquent than a world of
+proofs and protestations. The Duke's suspicions
+vanish in face of the news that the woman he loves
+is to become the mother of his child, and in a moment
+he is at her knees imploring her pardon, and uttering
+abject apologies. He is now more deeply than
+ever in her toils, ready to defy the world in defence
+of the Princess he adores and can no longer
+doubt.</p>
+<p>It is at this stage that a man who was to play such
+an important part in the Princess's life first crosses
+her path&#8212;one Domanski, a handsome young Pole,
+whose passionate and ill-fated patriotism had driven
+him from his native land to find an asylum, like many
+<a name="Page_71"></a>another Polish refugee, in the Limburg duchy. He
+had heard much of the romantic story of the Princess
+Aly, and was drawn by sympathy, as by the rumour
+of her remarkable beauty, to seek an interview with
+her, during her visit to Mannheim. Such a meeting
+could have but one issue for the romantic Pole. He
+lost both head and heart at sight of the lovely and
+gracious Princess, and from that moment became the
+most devoted of all her slaves.</p>
+<p>When she returned to Oberstein he was swift to
+follow her and to install himself under her castle walls,
+where he could catch an occasional glimpse of her,
+or, by good-fortune, have a few blissful moments in
+her company. Indeed, it was not long before stories
+began to be circulated among the good folk of Oberstein
+of strange meetings between the mysterious
+young stranger who had come to live in their midst
+and an equally mysterious lady. "The postman,"
+it was rumoured, "often sees him on the road leading
+to the castle, talking in a shadow with someone
+enveloped in a long, black, hooded cloak, whom he
+once thought he recognised as the Princess."</p>
+<p>No wonder tongues wagged in Oberstein. What
+could be the meaning of these secret assignations
+between the Princess, who was the destined bride
+of their Duke, and the obscure young refugee?
+It was a delicious bit of scandal to add to the
+many which had already gathered round the
+"adventuress."</p>
+<p>But there was a greater surprise in store for the
+Obersteiners, as for the world outside their walls.
+Soon it began to be rumoured that the Duke's <a name="Page_72"></a>bride-to-be
+was no obscure Circassian
+Princess; this
+was merely a convenient cloak to conceal her true
+identity, which was none less than that of daughter
+of an Empress! She was, in fact, the child of Elizabeth,
+Tsarina of Russia, and her peasant husband,
+Razoum; and in proof of her exalted birth she
+actually had in her possession the will in which
+the late Empress bequeathed to her the throne of
+Russia.</p>
+<p>How these rumours originated none seemed to
+know. Was it Domanski who set them circulating?
+We know, at least, that they soon became public
+property, and that, strangely enough, they won
+credence everywhere. The very people who had
+branded her "adventuress" and hissed her in the
+streets, now raised cheers to the future Empress of
+Russia; while the Duke, delighted at such a wonderful
+transformation in the woman he loved, was more
+eager than ever to hasten the day when he could call
+her his own. As for the Princess, she accepted her
+new dignities with the complaisance to be expected
+from the daughter of a Tsarina. There was now no
+need to refer the sceptics to Circassia for proof of
+her station and her potential wealth. As heiress to
+one of the greatest thrones of Europe, she could at
+last reveal herself in her true character, without any
+need for dissimulation.</p>
+<p>The curtain was now ready to rise on the crowning
+act of her life-drama, an act more brilliant than any
+she had dared to imagine. Russia was seething
+with discontent and rebellion; the throne of Catherine
+II. was trembling; one revolt had followed
+<a name="Page_73"></a>another, until Pugatchef had led his rabble of a
+hundred thousand serfs to the very gates of Moscow&#8212;only,
+when success seemed assured, to meet
+disaster and death. If the ex-bandit could come
+so near to victory, an uprising headed by Elizabeth's
+own daughter and heiress could scarcely fail to hurl
+Catherine from her throne.</p>
+<p>It would have been difficult to find a more powerful
+ally in this daring project than Prince Charles
+Radziwill, chief of Polish patriots, who was then, as
+luck would have it, living in exile at Mannheim, and
+who hated Russia as only a Pole ever hated her.
+To Radziwill, then, Domanski went to offer the help
+of his Princess for the liberation of Poland and the
+capture of Catherine's throne.</p>
+<p>Here indeed was a valuable pawn to play in
+Radziwill's game of vengeance and ambition. But
+the Prince was by no means disposed to snatch the
+bait hurriedly. Experience had taught him caution.
+He must count the cost carefully before taking the
+step, and while writing to the Princess, "I consider it
+a miracle of Providence that it has provided so great
+a heroine for my unhappy country," he took his
+departure to Venice, suggesting that the Princess
+should meet him there, where matters could be more
+safely and successfully discussed. Thus it was that
+the Princess said her last good-bye to her ducal
+lover, full of promises for the future when she should
+have won her throne, and as "Countess of Pinneberg"
+set forth with a retinue of followers to Venice,
+where she was regally received at the French
+embassy.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_74"></a>Here she tasted the first sweets of her coming
+Queendom&#8212;holding her Courts, to which distinguished
+Poles and Frenchmen flocked to pay
+homage to the Empress-to-be, and having daily
+conferences with Radziwill, who treated her as
+already a Queen. That her purse was empty and
+the bankers declined to honour her drafts was a
+matter to smile at, since the way now seemed clear
+to a crown, with all it meant of wealth and power.
+When the Venetian Government grew uneasy at the
+plotting within its borders, she went to Ragusa,
+where she blossomed into the "Princess of all the
+Russias," assumed the sceptre that was soon to
+be hers, issued proclamations as a sovereign, and
+crowned these regal acts by sending a ukase to
+Alexis Orloff, the Russian Commander-in-Chief,
+"signed Elizabeth II., and instructing him to communicate
+its contents to the army and fleet under his
+command."</p>
+<p>Once more, however, fortune played the Princess
+a scurvy trick, just when her favour seemed most
+assured. One night a man was seen scaling the
+garden-wall of the palace she was occupying. The
+guard fired at him, and the following morning
+Domanski was found, lying wounded and unconscious
+in the garden. The tongues of scandal were
+set wagging again, old suspicions were revived, and
+once again the word "adventuress"&#8212;and worse&#8212;passed
+from mouth to mouth. The men who had
+fawned on her now avoided her; worse still, Radziwill,
+his latent suspicions thoroughly awakened, and
+confirmed by a hundred stories and rumours that
+<a name="Page_75"></a>came to his ears, declined to have anything more
+to
+do with her, and returned in disgust to Germany.</p>
+<p>But even this crushing rebuff was powerless to
+damp the spirits and ambition of the "adventuress,"
+who shook the dust of Ragusa off her dainty feet, and
+went off to Rome, where she soon cast her spell over
+Sir William Hamilton, our Ambassador there, who
+gave her the warmest hospitality. "For several
+days," we learn, "she reigns like a Queen in the
+<i>salon</i> of the Ambassador, out of whose penchant
+for beautiful women she has no difficulty in wiling
+a passport that enables her to enter the most exclusive
+circles of Roman society."</p>
+<p>In Rome she lays aside her regal trappings, and
+wins the respect of all by her unostentatious living
+and her prodigal charities. She becomes a favourite
+at the Vatican; Cardinals do homage to her
+goodness, with perhaps a pardonable eye to her
+beauty. But behind the brave and pious front she
+thus shows to the world her heart is growing more
+heavy day by day. Poverty is at her door in the
+guise of importunate creditors, her servants are
+clamouring for overdue wages, and consumption,
+which for long has threatened her, now shows its
+presence in hectic cheeks and a hacking cough.
+Fortune seems at last to have abandoned her; and
+it requires all her courage to sustain her in this hour
+of darkness.</p>
+<p>In her extremity she appeals to Sir William
+Hamilton for a loan, much as a Queen might confer
+a favour on a subject, and Hamilton, pleased to be
+of service to so fair and pious a lady, sends her letter
+<a name="Page_76"></a>to his Leghorn banker, Mr John Dick, with
+instructions
+to arrange the matter</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 25%;">
+<p style="text-align: center;"><br>
+<img style="width: 276px; height: 341px;" alt="Count Gregory Orloff"
+ title="Count Gregory Orloff" src="images/court003.jpg"><a name="img003"></a><br>
+</p>
+<h5>COUNT GREGORY ORLOFF.</h5>
+<p>While the Princess Aly was practising piety and
+cultivating Cardinals in Rome, with an empty purse
+and a pain-racked body to make a mockery of her
+claim to a crown, away in distant Russia Catherine
+II. was nursing a terrible revenge on the woman who
+had dared to usurp her position and threaten her
+throne. The succession of revolutions, at which
+she had at first smiled scornfully, had now roused the
+tigress in her. She would show the world that she
+was no woman to be trifled with, and the first victim
+of her vengeance should be that brazen Princess who
+dared to masquerade as "Elizabeth II."</p>
+<p>She sent imperative orders to her trusted and
+beloved Orloff, fresh from his crushing defeat of the
+Turkish fleet, to seize her at any cost, even if he had
+to raze Ragusa to the ground; and these orders she
+knew would be executed to the letter. For was not
+Orloff the man whose strong hands had strangled her
+husband and placed the crown on her head; also her
+most devoted slave? He was, it is true, the biggest
+scoundrel (as he was also one of the handsomest
+men) in Europe, a man ready to stoop to any infamy,
+and thus the best possible tool for such an infamous
+purpose; but he was also her greatest admirer, eager
+to step into the place of "chief favourite" from which
+his brother Gregory had just been dismissed.</p>
+<p>When, however, Orloff went to Ragusa, with his
+soldiers at his back, he found that the Princess had
+already flown, leaving no trace behind her. He
+<a name="Page_77"></a>ransacked Sicily in vain, and it was only when
+Sir
+William Hamilton's letter to his Leghorn banker
+came to his hands that he discovered that she was
+in Rome, a much safer asylum than Ragusa. It was
+hopeless now to capture her by force; he must try
+diplomacy, and, by the hands of an aide-de-camp, he
+sent her a letter in which he informed her that he
+had received her ukase and was anxious to pay due
+homage to the future Empress of Russia.</p>
+<p>Such was the "Judas" message Kristenef, Orloff's
+emissary, carried to the Princess, whom he found in
+a pitiful condition, wasted to a shadow by disease
+and starvation&#8212;"in a room cold and bare, whose
+only furniture was a leather sofa, on which she lay
+in a high fever, coughing convulsively." To such
+pathetic straits was "Elizabeth II." reduced
+when Kristenef came with his fawning airs and lying
+tongue to tell her that Alexis Orloff, the greatest man
+in Russia, had instructed him to offer her the throne
+of the Tsars, and, as an earnest of his loyalty, to beg
+her acceptance of a loan of eleven thousand ducats.</p>
+<p>In vain did Domanski, who was still by her side,
+warn her against the smooth-tongued envoy. She
+was flattered by such unexpected homage, her eyes
+were dazzled by the near prospect of the coveted
+crown which was to be hers, at last, just when hope
+seemed dead. She would accept Orloff's invitation
+to go to Pisa to meet him. "As for you," she said,
+"if you are afraid, you can stay behind. I am going
+where Destiny calls me."</p>
+<p>This revolution in her fortunes acted like magic.
+New life coursed through her veins, colour returned
+<a name="Page_78"></a>to her cheeks, and brightness to her eyes, as one
+February day in 1775 she left Rome, with the
+devoted Domanski for companion and a brilliant
+escort, for Pisa, where Orloff greeted her as an
+Empress. He gave regal f&ecirc;tes in her honour
+and filled her ears with honeyed and flattering
+words.</p>
+<p>Affecting to be dazzled by her beauty, he even
+dared to make passionate love to her, which no man
+of his day could do more effectively than this handsomest
+of the Orloffs; and so infatuated was the poor
+Princess by the adoration of her handsome lover and
+the assurance of the throne he was to give her, that
+she at last consented to share that throne with him,
+and by his side went through a marriage ceremony,
+at which two of his officers masqueraded as officiating
+priests.</p>
+<p>Nothing remained now between her and the goal
+of her desires, except to make the journey to Russia
+as speedily as possible, and a few hours after the
+wedding banquet we see her in the Admiral's launch,
+with Orloff and Domanski and a brilliant suite of
+officers, leaving Leghorn for the Russian flagship,
+where she was received with the blare of bands and
+the booming of artillery. The crowning moment
+arrived when, as she was being hoisted to the deck in
+a gorgeous chair suspended from the yard-arm, her
+future sailors greeted her with thunders of shouts,
+"Long live the Empress!"</p>
+<p>The moment she set foot on deck she was seized,
+handcuffs were snapped on her wrists, and she was
+carried a helpless captive to a cabin. At the same
+<a name="Page_79"></a>moment Domanski was overpowered before he had
+time to use his sword, and made a prisoner.</p>
+<p>The Princess's cries for Orloff, her husband and
+saviour, are met with derision. Orloff she is told is
+himself a prisoner. He has, in fact, vanished, his
+dastardly mission executed; and she never saw him
+again. Two months later the victim of a man's
+treachery and a woman's vengeance is looking with
+tear-dimmed eyes on "her capital" through a barred
+window of a cell in the fortress of Saints Peter
+and Paul.</p>
+<p>Over the tragic closing of her days we may not
+dwell long. The scene is too pitiful, too harrowing.
+In vain she implores an interview with Catherine, who
+blazes into anger at the request. "The impudence
+of the wretch," she exclaims, "is beyond all bounds!
+She must be mad. Tell her if she wishes any
+improvement in her lot to cease the comedy she is
+playing." Prince Galitzin, Grand Chancellor, exerts
+all his skill in vain to force a confession of imposture
+from her. To his wiles and threats alike she opposes
+a dignified and calm front. She persists in the story
+of her birth; refuses to admit that she is an impostor.</p>
+<p>Even when she is flung into a loathsome cell, with
+bread and water for diet, she does not waver a jot
+in her demeanour of dignity or in her Royal claims.
+Only when she is charged with being the daughter
+of a Prague innkeeper does she allow indignation to
+master her, as she retorts, "I have never been in
+Prague in my life, and if I knew who had thus slandered
+me I would scratch his eyes out." Domanski,
+too, proves equally intractable; even the promise of
+<a name="Page_80"></a>marriage to her will not wring from him a word
+that
+might discredit his beloved Princess.</p>
+<p>But although the Princess keeps such a brave
+heart under conditions that might well have broken
+it, her spirit is powerless against the insidious disease
+that is working such havoc with her body. In her
+damp, noisome cell consumption makes rapid headway.
+Her strength ebbs daily; the end is coming
+swiftly near. She makes a last dying appeal to
+Catherine to see her if but for a few moments, but
+the appeal falls on deaf ears. When she sends for a
+priest to minister to her last hours, and, by Catherine's
+orders, he makes a final attempt to wrest her
+secret from her, she moans with her failing breath,
+"Say the prayers for the dead. That is all there is
+for you to do here."</p>
+<p>Four days later death came to her release.
+Catherine's throne was safe from this danger at
+least, and she was left to dalliance with her legion
+of lovers, while the woman on whom she had wreaked
+such terrible vengeance lay deeply buried in the
+courtyard of her prison, the very soldiers who dug
+her grave being sworn to secrecy. Thus in mystery
+her life opened, and in secrecy it closed.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_81"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+<h2>THE KING AND THE "LITTLE DOVE"</h2>
+<p>A savage murmur ran through the market-place of
+Bergen, one summer morning in the year 1507, as
+Chancellor Valkendorf made his pompous way along
+the avenues of stalls laden with their country produce,
+his passage followed by scowling eyes and
+low-spoken maledictions.</p>
+<p>There could not have been a more unwelcome
+visitor than this cold-eyed, supercilious Chancellor,
+unless it were his master, Christian, the Danish
+Prince who had come to rule Norway with the iron
+hand, and to stamp out the fires of rebellion against
+the alien rule that were always smouldering, when
+not leaping into flame. Bergen itself had been the
+scene of the latest revolt against oppressive and unjust
+taxes, and the insolent Valkendorf, who was now
+taking his morning stroll in the market-place, was
+fresh from suppressing it with a rough hand which
+had left many a smart and longing for vengeance
+behind it.</p>
+<p>But the Chancellor could afford to smile at such
+evidences of unpopularity. He knew that he was the
+most hated man in Norway&#8212;after his master&#8212;but
+<a name="Page_82"></a>he had executed his mission well and was ready to
+do it again. And thus it was with an air, half-amused,
+half-contemptuous, that he made his progress
+this July morning among the booths and stalls
+of the market, with eyes scornfully blind to frowns,
+but very wide open for any pretty face he might
+chance to see.</p>
+<p>He had not strolled far before his eyes were arrested
+by as strangely contrasted a picture as any he
+had ever seen. Behind one of the stalls, heaped high
+with luscious, many-coloured fruits and mountains of
+vegetables, were two women, each so remarkable in
+her different way that, almost involuntarily, he stood
+rooted to the spot, gazing open-eyed at them. The
+elder of the two was of gigantic stature, towering
+head and shoulders over her companion, with harsh,
+masculine face, massive jaw, coarse protruding lips,
+and black eyes which were fixed on him in a magnetic
+stare, defiant and scornful&#8212;for none knew better
+than she who the stranger was, and few hated him
+more.</p>
+<p>But it was not to this grim, hard-visaged Amazon
+that Valkendorf's eyes were drawn, compelling as
+were her stature and her basilisk stare. They quickly
+turned from her, with a motion of contempt, to feast
+on the vision by her side&#8212;that of a girl on the
+threshold of young womanhood and of a beauty that
+dazzled the eyes of the old voluptuary. How had
+she come there and in such company, this ravishing
+girl on whom Nature had lavished the last touch of
+virginal loveliness, this maiden with her figure of
+such supple grace, the proud little oval face with its
+<a name="Page_83"></a>complexion of cream and roses, the dainty head
+from
+which twin plaits of golden hair fell almost to her
+knees, and the eyes blue as violets, now veiled
+demurely, now opening wide to reveal their glories,
+enhanced by a look of appeal, almost of fear.</p>
+<p>The Chancellor, who was the last man to pass by
+a flower so seductively beautiful, approached the
+stall, undaunted by the forbidding eyes of the
+giantess, Frau Sigbrit, by name, and, after making
+a small purchase, sought to draw her into amiable
+conversation. "No," she said in answer to his
+inquiries, "we are not Norwegian. We come from
+Holland, my daughter and I, and we are trying to
+earn a little money before returning there. But why
+do you ask?" she demanded almost fiercely, putting
+a protecting arm around the girl, as if she would
+shield her from an enemy. "You are in such
+a different world from ours!"</p>
+<p>Little by little, however, the grim face began to
+relax under the adroit flatteries and courtly deference
+of the Chancellor&#8212;for none knew better than
+he the arts of charming, when he pleased; and it was
+not long before the Amazon, completely thawed, was
+confiding to him the most intimate details of her
+history and her hopes.</p>
+<p>"Yes, my daughter is beautiful," she said, with a
+look of pride at the girl which transfigured her face.
+"Many a great man has told me so&#8212;dukes, princes,
+and lords. She is as fair a flower as ever grew in
+Holland; and she is as sweet as she is fair. She is
+Dyveke, my "little dove," the pride of my heart, my
+soul, my life. She is to be a Queen one day. It
+<a name="Page_84"></a>has been revealed to me in my dreams. But when
+the day dawns it will be the saddest in my life." And
+with further amiable words and a final courtly salute,
+Valkendorf continued his stroll, secretly promising
+himself a further acquaintance with the dragon and
+her "little dove."</p>
+<p>This was the first of many morning strolls in the
+Bergen market, in which the Chancellor spent delightful
+moments at Frau Sigbrit's stall, each leaving
+him more and more a slave to her daughter's charms;
+for he quickly found that to her physical perfections
+were allied a low, sweet voice, every note of which
+was musical as that of a nightingale, a quiet dignity
+and refinement as far removed from her station as
+her simple print frock with the bunch of roses nestling
+in the white purity of her bosom, and a sprightliness
+of wit which even her modesty could not always
+repress.</p>
+<p>Thus it was that, when Valkendorf at last returned
+to Upsala and the Court of his master, Christian,
+his tongue was full of the praises of the "market-beauty"
+of Bergen, whose charms he pictured so
+glowingly that the Prince's heart became as inflamed
+by a sympathetic passion as his mind by curiosity to
+see such a siren. "I shall not rest," he said to his
+Chancellor, "until I have seen your 'little dove' with
+my own eyes; and who knows," he added with a
+laugh, "perhaps I shall steal her from you!"</p>
+<p>It was in vain that Valkendorf, now alarmed by
+his indiscretion, began to pour cold water on the
+flames he had lit. Christian had quite lost his susceptible
+heart to the rustic and unknown beauty, and
+<a name="Page_85"></a>vowed that he could not rest until he had seen
+her
+with his own eyes. And within a month he was
+riding into Bergen, with Valkendorf by his side, at
+the head of a brilliant retinue.</p>
+<p>As the Prince made his way through the crowded
+avenues of the Bergen streets to an accompaniment
+of scowls punctuated by feeble, forced cheers, he cut
+a goodly enough figure to win many an admiring, if
+reluctant, glance from bright eyes. With his broad
+shoulders, his erect, well-knit figure clothed in purple
+velvet, his stern, swarthy face crowned by a white-plumed
+hat, Christian looked every inch a Prince.</p>
+<p>To-day, too, he was in his most amiable mood,
+with a smile ready to leap to his lips, and many a
+gracious wave of the hand and sweep of plumed hat
+to acknowledge the grudged salutes of his subjects.
+He could be charming enough when he pleased, and
+this was a day of high good-humour; for his mind
+was full of the pleasure that awaited him. Even
+Frau Sigbrit's scowl was chased away when his eyes
+were drawn to her towering figure, and with a swift
+smile he singled her out for the honour of a special
+salute.</p>
+<p>When the Prince at last arrived in the market-square,
+he was greeted by a procession of the
+prettiest maidens in Bergen who, in white frocks and
+with flower-wreathed hair, advanced to pay him the
+homage of demure eyes. But among them all, the
+loveliest girls of the city, Christian saw but one&#8212;a
+girl younger than almost any other, but so radiantly
+lovely that his eyes fixed themselves on her as if
+entranced, until her cheeks flamed a vivid crimson
+<a name="Page_86"></a>under the ardour of his gaze. "No need to point
+her out," he whispered delightedly to Valkendorf, "I
+see your 'little dove,' and she is all you have told me
+and more."</p>
+<p>Before many hours had passed, a Court official
+appeared at Frau Sigbrit's cottage door with a command
+from the Prince to her and her daughter to
+attend a State ball the following evening. If the
+poor market-woman had had a crown laid at her feet,
+her surprise and consternation could scarcely have
+been greater. But she would make a bigger sacrifice
+of inclination than this for the "little dove" who filled
+her heart, and who, she remembered, was destined
+to be a Queen; and decking her in all the finery her
+modest purse could command and with a taste of
+which few would have suspected she was capable, the
+market stall-keeper stalked majestically through the
+avenue of gorgeous flunkeys, her little Princess with
+downcast eyes following demurely in her wake.</p>
+<p>All the fairest women of Bergen were gathered at
+this ball, the host of which was their coming King,
+but it was to the fruit-seller's daughter that all eyes
+were turned, in homage to such a rare combination
+of beauty, grace, and modesty. Many a fair lip, it
+is true, curled in mockery, recognising in the belle of
+the ball the low-born girl of the market-place; but it
+was the mockery of jealousy, the scornful tribute to
+a loveliness greater than their own.</p>
+<p>As for Prince Christian, he had no eyes for any but
+the "little dove" who outshone all her rivals as the
+sun pales the stars. It was the maid of the market
+whom he led out for the first dance, and throughout
+<a name="Page_87"></a>the long night he rarely left her side, whirling
+round
+the room with her, his arm close-clasped round her
+slender waist, not seeing or indifferent to the glances
+of envy and hate that followed them; or, during the
+intervals, drinking in her beauty as he poured sweet
+flatteries into her ears. As for Dyveke, she was
+radiantly happy at finding herself thus transported
+into the favour of a Prince and the Queendom of fair
+women, for whose envy she cared as little as for the
+danger in which she stood.</p>
+<p>If anything had remained to complete Christian's
+infatuation, this intoxicating night of the ball supplied
+it. The "little dove" had found a secure nesting-place
+in his heart. She must be his at any cost.
+She and her mother alone, of all the guests, were
+invited to spend the rest of the night at the castle as
+the Prince's guests; and when he parted from her
+the following day, it was with vows on his part of
+undying love and fidelity, and a promise on hers to
+come to him at Upsala as soon as a suitable home
+could be found for her.</p>
+<p>Thus easily was the dove caught in the toils of one
+of the most amorous Princes of Europe; but it must
+be said for her that her heart went with the surrender
+of her freedom, for the Prince, with his ardent
+passion, his strength and his magnetism, had swept
+her as quickly off her feet as she had made a quick
+conquest of him.</p>
+<p>Thus, before many weeks had passed, we find
+Dyveke installed with her mother in a sumptuous
+home in the outskirts of Upsala, queening it in the
+Prince's Court, and every day forging new fetters to
+<a name="Page_88"></a>bind him to her. And while Dyveke thus ruled over
+Christian's heart, her strong-minded mother soon
+established a similar empire over his mind. With
+the clever, masterful brain of a man, the Amazon
+of the market-place developed such a capacity for
+intrigue, such a grasp of statesmanship and such
+arts of diplomacy that Christian, strong man as he
+thought himself, soon became little more than a
+puppet in her hands, taking her counsel and deferring
+to her judgment in preference to those of his
+ministers. The fruit-seller thus found herself virtual
+Prime Minister, while her daughter reigned, an
+uncrowned Queen.</p>
+<p>When the Prince was summoned to Copenhagen
+by his father's failing health, Frau Sigbrit and her
+daughter accompanied him, one in her way as indispensable
+as the other; and when King James died
+and Christian reigned in his stead, the women of the
+Bergen market were installed in a splendid suite of
+apartments in his palace. So hopeless was his subjection
+to both that his subjects, with an indifferent
+shrug of the shoulders, accepted them as inevitable.</p>
+<p>For a time, it is true, their supremacy was in
+danger. Now that Christian was King, it became
+important to provide him with a Queen, and a suitable
+consort was found for him in the Austrian
+Princess, Isabella, sister of the Emperor Charles V.,
+a well-gilded bride, distinguished alike for her beauty
+and her piety. Isabella, however, was one of the last
+women to tolerate any rivalry in her husband's affection,
+and before the marriage-contract was sealed,
+she had received a solemn pledge from Christian's
+<a name="Page_89"></a>envoys that his relations with the pretty
+flower-girl
+should cease.</p>
+<p>But even Christian's word of honour was seldom
+allowed to bar the way to his pleasure, and within
+a few weeks of Isabella's bridal entry into Copenhagen,
+Dyveke and her mother resumed their places
+at his Court, to his Queen's unconcealed disgust and
+displeasure. More than this, he established them
+in a fine house near his palace gates; and when he
+was not dallying there with Dyveke, he was to be
+found by her side at the Castle of Hvideur, of which
+he had made her chatelaine.</p>
+<p>The remonstrances of Valkendorf and his other
+ministers were made to deaf ears; his wife's reproaches
+and tears were as futile as the strongly
+worded protestations of his Royal relatives. Pleadings,
+arguments, and threats were alike powerless to
+break the spell Dyveke and her mother had cast over
+him. But Dyveke's day of empire was now drawing
+to a tragic close. One day, after eating some
+cherries from the palace gardens, she was seized with
+a violent pain. All the skill of the Court doctors
+could do as little to assuage her agony as to save her
+life; and within a few hours she died, clasped to the
+breast of her distracted lover!</p>
+<p>Such was Christian's distress that for a time his
+reason trembled in the balance. He vowed that he
+would not be separated from her even by death; he
+threatened to put an end to his own life since it had
+been reft of all that made it worth living. And when
+cooler moments came, he swore a terrible vengeance
+against those who had robbed him of his beloved.
+<a name="Page_90"></a>She had been poisoned beyond a doubt; but who
+had done the dastardly deed?</p>
+<p>The finger of suspicion pointed to the steward of
+his household, Torbern Oxe, who, it was said, had
+been among the most ardent of Dyveke's admirers,
+and had had the audacity to aspire to her hand. It
+was even rumoured that he had had more intimate
+relations with her. Such were the stories and
+suspicions that passed from mouth to mouth in
+Christian's clouded Court before Dyveke's beautiful
+body was cold; and such were the tales which Hans
+Faaborg, the King's Treasurer, poured into his
+master's ears.</p>
+<p>Hans Faaborg little dreamt that when he was thus
+trying to bring about the downfall of his rival he was
+sealing his own fate. Christian lent an eager ear to
+the stories of his steward's iniquities; but, when he
+found there was no shred of proof to support them,
+his anger and disappointment vented themselves on
+the informer. He had long suspected Faaborg of
+irregularities in his purse-holding, and in these suspicions
+found a weapon to use against him. Faaborg
+was arrested; an examination of his ledgers showed
+that for years he had been waxing rich at his master's
+expense, and he had to pay with his life the penalty
+of his fraud and his unproved testimony.</p>
+<p>But Faaborg, though thus removed from his path,
+was by no means done with. Rumours began to
+be circulated that a strange light appeared every
+night above the dead man's head as he swung on the
+gallows. The city was full of superstitious awe and
+of whisperings that Heaven was thus bearing witness
+<a name="Page_91"></a>to the Treasurer's innocence. And even the King
+himself, when he too saw the unearthly light forming
+a halo round his victim's head, was filled with
+remorse and fear to such an extent that he had
+Faaborg's body cut down and honoured with a State
+funeral.</p>
+<p>He was still, however, as far as ever from solving
+the mystery of Dyveke's death; and the longer his
+desire for vengeance was baffled, the more clamorous
+it became. Although nothing could be proved
+against Torbern Oxe, Christian was by no means
+satisfied of his innocence, and he decided to discover
+by guile the secret which all other means had failed
+to reveal. He would, if possible, make his steward
+his own betrayer. One day, at a Court banquet, he
+turned in jocular mood to the minister and said,
+"Tell me now, my dear Torbern, was there really
+any truth in what Faaborg told me of your relations
+with my beautiful Lady! Don't hesitate to tell the
+truth, which only you know, for I assure you no harm
+shall come to you from it."</p>
+<p>Thus thrown off his guard and reassured, the
+steward, who, like his master, had probably drunk
+not wisely, confessed that he had loved Dyveke, and
+had asked her to be his wife. "But, sire," he added,
+"that was the extent of my offence. I was never
+intimate with her." During the remainder of the
+banquet Christian was most affable to the indiscreet
+steward, not only showing no trace of resentment,
+but treating him with marked friendliness.</p>
+<p>The following day, however, Torbern was flung
+into prison, and charged, not only with his
+<a name="Page_92"></a>confession, but with the murder of the woman he
+had
+so vainly loved; and, in spite of the storm of indignation
+that swept over Denmark, the pleadings of the
+Papal Legate, Arcimbaldo, and the tears of the
+Queen, was sentenced to death for a crime of which
+there was no scrap of evidence to point to his guilt.</p>
+<p>This gross act of injustice proved to be the
+beginning of Christian's downfall. His cruelties and
+oppressions had long made him odious to his
+subjects, and the climax came when a popular uprising
+hurled him from his throne and drove him an
+exile to Holland. An attempt to recover his crown
+ended in speedy disaster, and his last years were
+spent, in company with his favourite dwarf, in a cell
+of the Holstein Castle of Sondeborg.</p>
+<p>As for Sigbrit, the woman who had played such a
+conspicuous and baleful part in Christian's life, she
+deserted her benefactor at the first sign of his coming
+ruin and ended her days in her native Holland,
+bemoaning to the last the loss of her "little dove,"
+whom she had seen raised almost to a throne and
+had lost so tragically.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_IX"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_93"></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+<h2>THE ROMANCE OF THE BEAUTIFUL SWEDE</h2>
+<p>Augustus the Strong, Elector of Saxony and King
+of Poland, owes his place in the world's memory to
+his brawny muscles and to his conquest of women.
+Like the third Alexander of Russia of later years,
+he could, with his powerful arms, convert a thick
+iron bar into a necklace, crush a pewter tankard by
+the pressure of a mighty hand, toss a heavy anvil into
+the air and catch it as another man would catch a
+ball, or with a wrench straighten out the stoutest
+horse-shoe ever forged.</p>
+<p>And his strength of muscle was matched by his
+skill in the lists of love. No Louis of France could
+boast such an array of conquests as this Saxon
+Hercules, who changed his mistresses as easily as he
+changed his coats; the fairest women in Europe,
+from Turkey to Poland, succeeded each other in
+bewildering succession as the slaves of his pleasure,
+and before he died he counted his children to as
+many as the year has days.</p>
+<p>Of all these fair and frail women who thus ministered
+to the pleasure of the "Saxon Samson," none
+was so beautiful, so gifted, so altogether alluring
+<a name="Page_94"></a>as Marie Aurora, Countess of K&ouml;nigsmarck,
+the
+younger of the two daughters of Conrad of K&ouml;nigsmarck.
+Born in the year 1668, Aurora was one of
+three children of the Swedish Count Conrad and
+his wife, the daughter of the great Field-Marshal
+Wrangel. Her elder sister, little less fair than
+herself, found a husband, when little more than a
+child, in Count Axel L&ouml;wenhaupt; her brother
+Philip, the handsomest man of his day in Europe,
+was destined to end his days tragically as the price
+of his infatuation for a Queen.</p>
+<p>Betrayed by a jealous woman, the Countess
+Platen, whose overtures he spurned, this too gallant
+lover of Sophia Dorothea of Celle, wife of the first
+of our Georges, was foully done to death in a corridor
+of the Leine Schloss by La Paten's hired assassins,
+while she looked smilingly on at his futile struggle
+for life, and gloated over his dying agonies.</p>
+<p>On the death of her father, when she was but a
+child of three, Aurora was taken by her mother from
+her native Sweden to Hamburg, where she grew to
+beautiful young womanhood; and when, in turn, her
+mother died, she found a home with her married
+sister, the Countess L&ouml;wenhaupt. And it is at this
+period of her life that her romantic story opens.</p>
+<p>If we are to believe her contemporaries, the world
+has seldom seen so much beauty and so many graces
+enshrined in the form of woman as in this daughter
+of Sweden. Her description reads like a catalogue
+of all human perfections. Of medium height and a
+figure as faultless in its exquisite modelling as in its
+grace and suppleness; her hair, black as a raven's
+<a name="Page_95"></a>plumage, and falling, like a veil of night, below
+her
+knees, emphasised the white purity of face and
+throat, arms, and hands. Her teeth, twin rows of
+pearls, glistened between smiling crimson lips, curved
+like Cupid's bow. Her face of perfect oval, with its
+delicately moulded features, was illuminated by a pair
+of large black eyes, now melting, now flaming, as
+mood succeeded mood.</p>
+<p>To these graces of body were allied equal graces
+of mind and character. Her conversation sparkled
+with wit and wisdom; she could hold fluent discourse
+in half a dozen tongues; she played and sang
+divinely, wrote elegant verses, and painted dainty
+pictures. Her manner was caressing and courteous;
+she was generous to a fault, with a heart as tender
+as it was large. And the supreme touch was added
+by an entire unconsciousness of her charms, and an
+unaffected modesty which captivated all hearts.</p>
+<p>Such was Aurora of K&ouml;nigsmarck who, in company
+with her sister, set forth one day to claim the
+fortune which her ill-fated brother, Philip, was said
+to have left in the custody of his Hanoverian bankers&#8212;a
+journey which was to make such a dramatic
+revolution in her own life.</p>
+<p>Arrived at Hanover the sisters found themselves
+faced by no easy task. The bankers declared that
+they had nothing of the late Count's effects beyond
+a few diamonds, which they declined to part with,
+unless evidence were forthcoming that the Count
+had died and had left no will behind him&#8212;evidence
+which, owing to the secrecy surrounding his murder,
+it was impossible to furnish. And when a discharged
+<a name="Page_96"></a>clerk revealed the fact that the dishonest
+bankers had
+actually all the Count's estate, valued at four hundred
+thousand crowns, in their possession, the sisters were
+unable to make them disgorge a solitary mark.</p>
+<p>In their extremity, they decided to appeal to the
+Elector of Saxony, who had known Count Philip
+well and who would, they hoped, be the champion
+of their rights; and, with this object, they journeyed
+to Dresden, only to find themselves again baffled.
+Augustus was away on a hunting excursion, and
+would not return for a whole month. His wife and
+mother, however, gave them a gracious reception, as
+charmed by their beauty and sweetness as sympathetic
+in their trouble.</p>
+<p>When at last Augustus made his tardy appearance
+at his capital, the fair petitioners were presented
+to him by the Dowager Electress with words of
+strong recommendation to his favour. "These
+ladies, my son," she said, "have come to beg for
+your protection and help, to which they are entitled
+both by birth and their merits. I beg that you will
+spare no effort to ensure that justice is done to them."</p>
+<p>His mother's pleading, however, was not necessary
+to ensure a favourable hearing from the Elector,
+whose eyes were eloquent of the admiration he felt
+for the two fairest women who had ever visited his
+land. Aurora's beauty, enhanced by her attitude of
+appeal, the mute craving for protection, was irresistible.
+From the moment she entered his presence
+he was her slave, as anxious to do her will as any
+lovesick boy.</p>
+<p>And it was to her that, with his courtliest bow, he
+<a name="Page_97"></a>answered, "Be assured, dear lady, that I shall
+know
+no rest until your wrongs are repaired. If I fail, I
+myself will make reparation in full. Meanwhile, may
+I beg you and your sister to be my guests, that I
+may prove how deep is my sympathy, and how profound
+the respect I feel for you."</p>
+<p>Thus it was that by the magic of beauty Aurora
+and her Countess sister found themselves installed
+at the Dresden Court, feted like Queens, receiving
+the caresses of the Court ladies, and the homage of
+every man, from Augustus himself to the youngest
+page, of whom a smile from their pretty lips made a
+veritable slave. As for the Elector, sated as he was
+with the easy smiles and favours of fair women, he
+gave to the Swedish beauty, from the first, a homage
+he had never paid to any of her predecessors in his
+affection.</p>
+<p>But Aurora was no woman to be easily won by
+any man. She listened smilingly to the Elector's
+honeyed words, and received his attentions with the
+gracious complaisance of a Queen. When, however,
+he ventured to tell her that "her charms inspired him
+with a passion such as he had never felt for any
+woman," she answered coldly, "I came here prepared
+for your generosity, but I did not expect that your
+kindness would assume a form to cause me shame.
+I beg you not to say anything that can lessen the
+gratitude I owe you, and the respect I feel for you."</p>
+<p>Here indeed was a rebuff such as Augustus was
+little prepared for, or accustomed to. The beauty,
+of whom he had hoped to make an easy conquest,
+was an iceberg whom all his ardour could not thaw.
+<a name="Page_98"></a>He was in despair. "I am sure she hates and
+despises me, while I love her dearer than life itself,"
+he confessed to his favourite Beuchling, who vainly
+tried to console and cheer him. He confided his
+passion and his pain to Aurora's sister, whose hopeful
+words were alike powerless to dispel his gloom.</p>
+<p>When Aurora held aloof from him, he sent letter
+after letter of passionate pleading to her by the hand
+of the trusty Beuchling. "If you knew the tortures
+I am suffering," he wrote, "your kindness of heart
+could not resist pitying me. I was mad to declare
+my passion so brutally to you. Let me expiate my
+fault, prostrate at your feet; and, if you wish for my
+death, let me at least receive my sentence from your
+own sweet lips."</p>
+<p>To such a desperate state was Augustus brought
+within a few days of setting eyes on his new divinity!
+As for Aurora of the tender heart, her lover's distress
+thawed her more than a year of passionate protestations
+could have done. She replied, assuring him of
+her gratitude, her esteem and respect, and begging
+him to dismiss such unworthy thoughts of her. But
+she had no word of encouragement to send him in
+the note which her lover kissed so rapturously before
+placing it next his heart.</p>
+<p>So alarmed, indeed, was Aurora, that she announced
+her intention of leaving forthwith a Court in
+which she was exposed to so much danger&#8212;a project
+to which her sister gave a reluctant approval. But
+the Countess L&ouml;wenhaupt was little disposed to leave
+a Court where she at least was having such a good
+time; for she, too, had her lovers, and among them
+<a name="Page_99"></a>the Prince of F&uuml;rstenberg, the handsomest
+man in
+Saxony, whose devotion was more than agreeable to
+her. She preferred to play the part of Cupid's agent&#8212;to
+exercise her diplomacy in bringing together
+those two foolish persons, her sister and the Elector.</p>
+<p>And so skilfully did she play her part, appealing
+to Aurora's pity, and assuring Augustus of her sister's
+love in spite of her seeming coldness, that before
+many weeks had passed Aurora had yielded and was
+listening with no unwilling ear to the vows of her
+exalted lover, now transported to the seventh heaven
+of happiness. One condition she made, when their
+mutual troth was plighted, that it should, for a time
+at least, remain a secret from the Court, and to this
+the Elector gratefully assented.</p>
+<p>Such was the strange wooing of Augustus and the
+Countess Aurora, in which passion had its response
+in a pity which, in this case at least, was the parent
+of love.</p>
+<p>It was with no very light heart that Aurora set forth
+to Mauritzburg, a few days later, to keep "honeymoon
+tryst" with Augustus, who had preceded her,
+to make, as she understood, the necessary preparations
+for her reception. With her sister and a
+mounted escort of the most beautiful ladies of the
+Court, she had ridden as far as the entrance to the
+Mauritzburg forest, when her carriage suddenly came
+to a halt in front of a magnificent palace. From the
+open door emerged Diana with her attendant nymphs
+to greet her with words of welcome, and to beg
+her to tarry a while to accept the hospitality of the
+forest gods.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_100"></a>In response to this flattering invitation
+Aurora left
+her carriage and was escorted in stately procession to
+a saloon, richly painted with sylvan scenes, in which
+a sumptuous banquet was spread. No sooner were
+she and her ladies seated at the table than, to the
+strains of beautiful music, the god Pan (none other
+than the Elector himself), with his retinue of fawns
+and other richly and quaintly garbed forest gods,
+made his entry, and took his seat at the right hand
+of his goddess. Then, to the deft ministry of Diana
+and her satellites, and to the soft accompaniment of
+pipes and hautboys, the feasting began, while Pan
+whispered love to the lady for whom he had prepared
+such a charming hospitality.</p>
+<p>The banquet had scarcely come to an end when
+the jubilant sound of horns was heard from the
+forest. A stag dashed by a window in full flight,
+and Aurora and her ladies, rushing excitedly to the
+door, saw horses awaiting them for the hunt.</p>
+<p>In a moment they are mounted, and, gaily laughing,
+with Pan leading the way, they are galloping
+through the forest glades in the wake of the flying
+stag and the music of the hounds, until the stag,
+hotly pursued, dashes into a lake, in the centre of
+which is a beautiful wooded island. Dismounting,
+the ladies enter the gondolas which are so opportunely
+awaiting them, and are rowed across the strip
+of water just in time to witness the death of the
+gallant animal they have been chasing.</p>
+<p>The hunt over, Aurora and her ladies are conducted
+to the leafy heart of the island, where, as by
+the touch of a magician's wand, a gorgeous Eastern
+<a name="Page_101"></a>tent has sprung up, and here another sumptuous
+entertainment is prepared for them. Seated on
+soft-cushioned divans, in the many-hued environment
+of Oriental luxury, rare fruits and delicacies
+are brought to them in silver baskets by turbaned
+Turks. The island Sultan now appears, ablaze with
+gems, with his officers little less gorgeous than himself,
+and with deep obeisances craves permission to
+seat himself by Aurora's side, a favour which she was
+not likely to refuse to a Sultan in whom she recognised
+her lover, the Elector. Troupes of dancing-girls
+follow, and the moments fly swiftly to the
+twinkling of dainty feet, the gliding and posturing
+of supple bodies, and the strains of sensuous music.</p>
+<p>Another hour spent in the gondolas, dreamily
+gliding under the light of the moon, and horses are
+again mounted; and Aurora, with Augustus riding
+proudly by her side, heads the splendid procession
+which, with laughter, and in the gayest of spirits,
+rides forth to the Mauritzburg Castle at the close of
+a day so full of delights.</p>
+<p>"Here," was the Elector's greeting, as he conducted
+his bride to her room with its furnishing of
+silver and rich damask, and its pictured Cupid
+showering roses on the silk-curtained bed, "you are
+the Queen, and I am your slave."</p>
+<p>Such was the beginning of Aurora's reign over the
+heart of the Elector of Saxony&#8212;a reign of unclouded
+splendour and happiness for the woman in whom
+pity for her lover was soon replaced by a passion as
+ardent as his own. F&ecirc;tes and banquets and balls
+<a name="Page_102"></a>succeeded each other in swift sequence, at all
+of
+which Aurora was Queen, the focus of all eyes, and
+receiving universal homage, won no more by her
+beauty and her position as the Elector's favourite
+than by her sweetness and graciousness to the
+humblest. No mistress of a King was ever more
+beloved than this daughter of Sweden. Even the
+Elector's mother, a pattern of the most rigid propriety,
+had ever a kind word and a caress for her;
+his neglected wife made a friend and confidante of
+the woman of whom she said, "Since I must have
+a rival, I am glad she should be one so sweet and
+lovable."</p>
+<p>We must hasten over the years that followed&#8212;years
+during which Augustus had no eyes for any
+other woman than his "uncrowned Queen," and
+during which she bore him a son who, as Maurice of
+Saxony, was to win many laurels in the years to
+come. It must suffice to say that never was Royal
+liaison conducted with so much propriety, or was
+marked by so much mutual devotion and loyalty.</p>
+<p>But it was not in the nature of Augustus the Strong
+to remain always true to any woman, however charming;
+and although Aurora's reign lasted longer than
+that of any half-dozen of her rivals, it, too, had its
+ending. Within a month of the birth of her son,
+Augustus, now King of Poland, was caught in the
+toils of another enslaver, the beautiful Countess
+Esterle. Aurora realised that her sun had set, and
+relinquishing her sceptre without a murmur, she
+retired to the convent of Quedlinburg, of which
+Augustus had appointed her Abbess.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_103"></a>Thus in an atmosphere of peace and piety,
+beloved
+of all for her sweetness and charity, Aurora of
+K&ouml;nigsmarck spent her last years until the end
+came one day in the year 1728; and in the crypt
+of the convent she loved so well she sleeps her
+last sleep.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_X"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_104"></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+<h2>THE SISTER OF AN EMPEROR</h2>
+<br>
+<a name="img004"></a>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><img
+ style="width: 305px; height: 479px;" alt="DESIREE CLARY."
+ title="DESIREE CLARY." src="images/court004.jpg"><br>
+<h5>DESIREE CLARY.</h5>
+</div>
+<br>
+<p>When Napoleon Bonaparte, the shabby, sallow-faced,
+out-of-work captain of artillery, was kicking
+his heels in morose idleness at Marseilles, and whiling
+away the dull hours in making love to Desir&eacute;e Clary,
+the pretty daughter of the silk-merchant in the Rue
+des Phoc&eacute;ens, his sisters were living with their
+mother, the Signora Letizia, in a sordid fourth-floor
+apartment in a slum near the Cannebiere, and running
+wild in the Marseilles streets.</p>
+<p>Strange tales are told of those early years of the
+sisters of an Emperor-to-be&#8212;Elisa Bonaparte, future
+Grand Duchess of Tuscany; Pauline, embryo Princess
+Borghese; and Caroline, who was to wear a
+crown as Queen of Naples&#8212;high-spirited, beautiful
+girls, brimful of frolic and fun, laughing at their
+poverty, decking themselves out in cheap, home-made
+finery, and flirting outrageously with every
+good-looking young man who was willing to pay
+homage to their <i>beaux yeux</i>. If Marseilles deigned
+to notice these pretty young madcaps, it was only
+with the cold eyes of disapproval; for such "shameless
+goings-on" were little less than a scandal.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_105"></a>The pity of it was that there was no one to
+check their escapades. Their mother, the imposing
+Madame M&egrave;re of later years, seemed indifferent
+what her daughters did, so long as they left her in
+peace; their brothers, Kings-to-be, were too much
+occupied with their own love-making or their pranks
+to spare them a thought. And thus the trio of tomboys
+were left, with a loose rein, to indulge every
+impulse that entered their foolish heads. And a
+right merry time they had, with their dancing, their
+private theatricals, the fun behind the scenes, and
+their promiscuous love affairs, each serious and
+thrilling until it gave place to a successor.</p>
+<p>Of the three Bonaparte "graces" the most lovely
+by far (though each was passing fair) was Pauline,
+who, though still little more than a child, gave
+promise of that rare perfection of face and figure
+which was to make her the most beautiful woman in
+all France. "It is impossible, with either pen or
+brush," wrote one who knew her, "to do any justice
+to her charms&#8212;the brilliance of her eyes, which
+dazzled and thrilled all on whom they fell; the glory
+of her black hair, rippling in a cascade to her knees;
+the classic purity of her Grecian profile, the wild-rose
+delicacy of her complexion, the proud, dainty poise
+of her head, and the exquisite modelling of the figure
+which inspired Canova's 'Venus Victrix.'"</p>
+<p>Such was Pauline Bonaparte, whose charms,
+although then immature, played such havoc with the
+young men of Marseilles, and who thus early began
+that career of conquest which was to afford so much
+gossip for the tongue of scandal. That the winsome
+<a name="Page_106"></a>little minx had her legion of lovers from the
+day she
+set foot in Marseilles, at the age of thirteen, we know;
+but it was not until Fr&egrave;ron came on the scene that
+her volatile little heart was touched&#8212;Fr&egrave;ron, the
+handsome coxcomb and arch-revolutionary, who
+was sent to Marseilles as a Commissioner of the
+Convention.</p>
+<p>To Pauline, the gay, gallant Parisian, penniless
+adventurer though he was, was a veritable hero of
+romance; and at sight of him she completely lost her
+heart. It was a <i>grande passion</i>, which he was by no
+means slow to return. Those were delicious hours
+which Pauline spent in the company of her beloved
+"Stanislas," hours of ecstasy; and when he left
+Marseilles she pursued him with the most passionate
+protestations.</p>
+<p>"Yes," she wrote, "I swear, dear Stanislas, never
+to love any other than thee; my heart knows no
+divided allegiance. It is thine alone. Who could
+oppose the union of two souls who seek to find no
+other happiness than in a mutual love?" And again,
+"Thou knowest how I worship thee. It is not possible
+for Paulette to live apart from her adored Stanislas.
+I love thee for ever, most passionately, my
+beautiful god, my adorable one&#8212;I love thee, love
+thee, love thee!"</p>
+<p>In such hot words this child of fifteen poured out
+her soul to the Paris dandy. "Neither mamma,"
+she vowed, "nor anyone in the world shall come
+between us." But Pauline had not counted on her
+brother Napoleon, whose foot was now placed on the
+ladder of ambition, at the top of which was an Im<a name="Page_107"></a>perial
+crown, and who had other designs for his sister
+than to marry her to a penniless nobody. In vain
+did Pauline rage and weep, and declare that "she
+would die&#8212;<i>voil&agrave; tout!</i>" Napoleon was inexorable;
+and the flower of her first romance was trodden ruthlessly
+under his feet.</p>
+<p>When Junot, his own aide-de-camp, next came
+awooing Pauline, he was equally obdurate. "No,"
+he said to the young soldier; "you have nothing, she
+has nothing. And what is twice nothing?" And
+thus lover number two was sent away disconsolate.</p>
+<p>Napoleon's sun was now in the ascendant, and his
+family were basking in its rays. From the Marseilles
+slums they were transported first to a sumptuous
+villa at Antibes; then to the Castle of Montebello, at
+Naples. The days of poverty were gone like an evil
+dream; the sisters of the famous General and coming
+Emperor were now young ladies of fashion, courted
+and fawned on. Their lovers were not Marseilles
+tradesmen or obscure soldiers and journalists (like
+Junot and Fr&egrave;ron), but brilliant Generals and men
+of the great world; and among them Napoleon now
+sought a husband for his prettiest and most irresponsible
+sister.</p>
+<p>This, however, proved no easy task. When he
+offered her to his favourite General, Marmont, he
+was met with a polite refusal. "She is indeed charming
+and lovely," said Marmont; "but I fear I could
+not make her happy." Then, waxing bolder, he continued:
+"I have dreams of domestic happiness, of
+fidelity, virtue; and these dreams I can scarcely
+hope to realise in your sister." Albert Permon,
+<a name="Page_108"></a>Napoleon's old schoolfellow, next declined the
+honour of Pauline's hand, although it held the
+bait of a high office and splendid fortune.</p>
+<p>The explanation of these refusals is not far to seek
+if we believe Arnault's description of Pauline&#8212;"An
+extraordinary combination of the most faultless
+physical beauty and the oddest moral laxity. She
+had no more manners than a schoolgirl&#8212;she talked
+incoherently, giggled at everything and nothing,
+mimicked the most serious personages, put out her
+tongue at her sister-in-law.... She was a good
+child naturally rather than voluntarily, for she had
+no principles."</p>
+<p>But Pauline was not to wait long, after all, for a
+husband. Among the many men who fluttered round
+her, willing to woo if not to wed the empty-headed
+beauty, was General Leclerc, young and rich, but
+weak in body and mind, "a quiet, insignificant-looking
+man," who at least loved her passionately,
+and would make a pliant husband to the capricious
+little autocrat. And we may be sure Napoleon
+heaved a sigh of relief when his madcap sister was
+safely tied to her weak-kneed General.</p>
+<p>Pauline was at last free to conduct her flirtations
+secure from the frowns of the brother she both feared
+and adored, and she seems to have made excellent
+use of her opportunities; and, what was even more
+to her, to encourage to the full her passion for finery.
+Dress and love filled her whole life; and while her
+idolatrous husband lavishly supplied the former, he
+turned a conveniently blind eye to the latter.</p>
+<p>Remarkable stories are told of Pauline's extrava<a name="Page_109"></a>gant
+and daring costumes at this time. Thus, at a
+great ball in Madame Permon's Paris mansion, she
+appeared in a dress of classic scantiness of Indian
+muslin, ornamented with gold palm leaves. Beneath
+her breasts was a cincture of gold, with a gorgeous
+jewelled clasp; and her head was wreathed with
+bands spotted like a leopard's skin, and adorned with
+bunches of gold grapes.</p>
+<p>When this bewitching Bacchante made her appearance
+in the ballroom the sensation she created was so
+great that the dancing stopped instantly; women and
+men alike climbed on chairs to catch a glimpse of
+the rare and radiant vision, and murmurs of admiration
+and envy ran round the <i>salon</i>. Her triumph
+was complete. In the hush that followed, a voice
+was heard: "<i>Quel dommage!</i> How lovely she would
+be, if it weren't for her ears. If I had such ears, I
+would cut them off, or hide them." Pauline heard
+the cruel words. The flush of mortification and
+anger flamed in her cheeks; she burst into tears and
+walked out of the room. Madame de Coutades, her
+most jealous rival, had found a rich revenge.</p>
+<p>General Leclerc did not live long to play the slave
+to his little autocrat; and when he died at San
+Domingo, the beautiful widow returned to France,
+accompanied by his embalmed body, with her glorious
+hair, which she had cut off for the purpose,
+wreathing his head! She had not, however, worn
+her weeds many months before she was once more
+surrounded by her court of lovers&#8212;actors, soldiers,
+singers, on each of whom in turn she lavished her
+smiles; and such time as she could spare from their
+<a name="Page_110"></a>flatteries and ogling she spent at the
+card-table, with
+fortune-tellers, or, chief joy of all, in decking her
+beauty with wondrous dresses and jewels.</p>
+<p>But the charming widow, sister of the great Napoleon,
+was not long to be left unclaimed; and this
+time the choice fell on Prince Camillo Borghese,
+a handsome, black-haired Italian, who allied to a
+head as vain and empty as her own the physical
+graces and gifts of an Admirable Crichton, and
+who, moreover, was lord of all the famed Borghese
+riches.</p>
+<p>Pauline had now reached dizzy heights, undreamed
+of in the days, only ten short years earlier, when she
+was coquetting in home-made finery with the young
+tradesmen of Marseilles. She was a Princess, bearing
+the greatest name in all Italy; and to this dignity
+her gratified brother added that of Princess of Gustalla.
+All the world-famous Borghese jewels were
+hers to deck her beauty with&#8212;a small Golconda of
+priceless gems; there was gold galore to satisfy her
+most extravagant whims; and she was still young&#8212;only
+twenty-five&#8212;and in the very zenith of her
+loveliness.</p>
+<p>Picture, then, the pride with which, one early day
+of her new bridehood, she drove to the Palace of St
+Cloud in the gorgeous Borghese State carriage,
+behind six horses, and with an escort of torch-bearers,
+to pay a formal call on her sister-in-law, Josephine,
+Empress-to-be. She had decked herself in a wonderful
+creation of green velvet; she was ablaze from
+head to foot with the Borghese diamonds. Such a
+dazzling vision could not fail to fill Josephine with
+<a name="Page_111"></a>envy&#8212;Josephine, who had hitherto treated her
+with
+such haughty patronage.</p>
+<p>As she sailed into the <i>salon</i> in all her Queen of
+Sheba splendour, it was to be greeted by her sister-in-law
+in a modest dress of muslin, without a solitary
+gem to relieve its simplicity; and&#8212;horror!&#8212;to find
+that the room had been re-decorated in blue by the
+artful Josephine&#8212;a colour absolutely fatal to her
+green magnificence! It was thus a very disgusted
+Princess who made her early exit from the palace
+between a double line of bowing flunkeys, masking
+her anger behind an affectation of ultra-Royal
+dignity.</p>
+<p>Still, Pauline was now a <i>grande dame</i> indeed, who
+could really afford to patronise even Napoleon's
+wife. Her Court was more splendid than that of
+Josephine. She had lovers by the score&#8212;from
+Blanguini, who composed his most exquisite songs
+to sing for her ears alone, to Forbin, her artist Chamberlain,
+whose brushes she inspired in a hundred
+paintings of her lovely self in as many unconventional
+guises. Her caskets of jewels were matched
+by the most wonderful collection of dresses in France,
+the richest and daintiest confections, from pearl
+embroidered ball-gowns which cost twenty thousand
+francs to the mauve and silver in which she went
+a-hunting in the forest of Fontainebleau. At Petit
+Trianon and in the Faubourg St Honor&eacute;, she had
+palaces that were dreams of beauty and luxury. The
+only thorn in her bed of roses was, in fact, her husband,
+the Prince, the very sight of whom was sufficient
+to spoil a day for her.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_112"></a>When, at Napoleon's bidding, she accompanied
+Borghese to his Governorship beyond the Alps, she
+took in her train seven wagon-loads of finery. At
+Turin she held the Court of a Queen, to which
+the Prince was only admitted on sufferance. Royal
+visits, dinners, dances, receptions followed one another
+in dazzling succession; behind her chair, at
+dinner or reception, always stood two gigantic
+negroes, crowned with ostrich plumes. She was
+now "sister of the Emperor," and all the world
+should know it!</p>
+<p>If only she could escape from her detested husband
+she would be the happiest woman on earth. But
+Napoleon on this point was adamant. In her rage
+and rebellion she tore her hair, rolled on the floor,
+took drugs to make her ill; and at last so succeeded
+in alarming her Imperial brother that he summoned
+her back to France, where her army of lovers gave
+her a warm welcome, and where she could indulge
+in any vanity and folly unchecked.</p>
+<p>Matters were now hastening to a tragic climax for
+Napoleon and the family he had raised from slumdom
+in Marseilles to crowns and coronets. Josephine
+had been divorced, to Pauline's undisguised joy; and
+her place had been taken by Marie Louise, the proud
+Austrian, whom she liked at least as little. When
+Napoleon fell from his throne, she alone of all his
+sisters helped to cheer his exile in Elba; for the
+brother she loved and feared was the only man to
+whom Pauline's fickle heart was ever true. She
+even stripped herself of all her jewels to make the
+way smooth back to his crown. And when at last
+<a name="Page_113"></a>news came to her at Rome of his death at St
+Helena
+it was she who shed the bitterest tears and refused
+to be comforted. That an empire was lost, was
+nothing compared with the loss of the brother who
+had always been so lenient to her failings, so responsive
+to her love.</p>
+<p>Two years later her own end came at Florence.
+When she felt the cold hand of death on her, she
+called feebly for a mirror, that she might look for the
+last time on her beauty. "Thank God," she whispered,
+as she gazed, "I am still lovely! I am ready
+to die." A few moments later, with the mirror still
+clutched in her hand, and her eyes still feasting on
+the charms which time and death itself were powerless
+to dim, died Pauline Bonaparte, sister of an
+Emperor and herself an Empress by the right of her
+incomparable beauty.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XI"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_114"></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+<h2>A SIREN OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY</h2>
+<p>When Wilhelmine Encke first opened her eyes on
+the world one day in the year 1754, he would have
+been a bold prophet who would have predicted that
+she would one day be the uncrowned Queen of the
+Court of Russia, <i>plus Reine que la Reine</i>, and that
+her children would have in their veins the proudest
+blood in Europe. Such a prophecy might well have
+been laughed to scorn, for little Wilhelmine had as
+obscure a cradle as almost any infant in all Prussia.
+Her father was an army bugler, who wore private's
+uniform in Frederick the Great's army; and her early
+years were to be spent playing with other soldiers'
+children in the sordid environment of Berlin barracks.</p>
+<p>When her father turned his back on the army, while
+Wilhelmine was still nursing her dolls, it was to play
+the humble r&ocirc;le of landlord of a small tavern, from
+which he was lured by the bait of a place as French-horn
+player in Frederick's private band; and the goal
+of his modest ambition was reached when he was
+appointed trumpeter to the King.</p>
+<p>This was Herr Encke's position when the curtain
+rises on our story at Potsdam, and shows us Wilhel<a name="Page_115"></a>mine,
+an unattractive maid of ten, the Cinderella of
+her family, for whom there seemed no better prospect
+than a soldier-husband, if indeed she were
+lucky enough to capture him. She was, in fact, the
+"ugly duckling" of a good-looking family, removed
+by a whole world from her beautiful eldest sister
+Charlotte, who counted among her many admirers
+no less exalted a wooer than Prince Frederick
+William, the King's nephew and heir to his throne.</p>
+<p>There was, indeed, no more beautiful or haughty
+damsel in all Potsdam than this trumpeter's daughter
+who had caught the amorous fancy of the Prince,
+then, as to his last day, the slave of every pretty face
+that crossed his path. But Charlotte Encke was
+much too imperious a young lady to hold her Royal
+lover long in fetters. He quickly wearied of her
+caprices, her petulances, and her exhibitions of temper;
+and the climax came one day when in a fit of
+anger she struck her little sister, in his presence, and
+he took up the cudgels for Wilhelmine.</p>
+<p>This was the last straw for the disillusioned and
+disgusted Prince, who sent Charlotte off to Paris,
+where as the Countess Matushke she played the fine
+lady at her lover's cost, while the Prince took her
+Cinderella sister under his protection. He took her
+education into his own hands, provided her with
+masters to teach her a wide range of accomplishments,
+from languages to dancing and deportment,
+while he himself gave her lessons in history and
+geography. Nor did he lack the reward of his benevolent
+offices; for Wilhelmine, under his ministrations,
+not only developed rare gifts and graces of
+<a name="Page_116"></a>mind, like many another Cinderella before her;
+she
+blossomed into a rose of girlhood, more beautiful
+even than her imperious sister, and with a sweetness
+of character and a winsomeness which Charlotte could
+never have attained.</p>
+<p>On her part, gratitude to her benefactor rapidly
+grew into love for the handsome and courtly Prince;
+on his, sympathy for the ill-used Cinderella, into a
+passion for the lovely maiden hovering on the verge
+of a still more beautiful womanhood. It was a mutual
+passion, strong and deep, which now linked the
+widely contrasted lives of the King-to-be and the
+trumpeter's daughter&#8212;a passion which, with each,
+was to last as long as life itself.</p>
+<p>Wilhelmine was now formally installed in the place
+of the deposed Charlotte as favourite of the heir to
+the throne; and idyllic years followed, during which
+she gave pledges of her love to the man who was her
+husband in all but name. That her purse was often
+empty was a matter to smile at; that she had to act
+as "breadwinner" to her family, and was at times
+reduced to such straits that she was obliged to pawn
+some of her small stock of jewellery in order to provide
+her lover with a supper, was a bagatelle. She
+was the happiest young woman in Prussia.</p>
+<p>Even what seemed to be a crowning disaster, fortune
+turned into a boon for her. When news of this
+unlicensed love-making came to the King's ears, he
+was furious. It was intolerable that the destined
+ruler of a great and powerful nation should be
+governed and duped by a woman of the people. He
+gave his nephew a sound rating&#8212;alike for his extra<a name="Page_117"></a>vagance
+and his amour; and packed off Wilhelmine
+to join her sister in Paris.</p>
+<p>But, for once, Frederick found that he had made
+a mistake. The Prince, robbed of the woman he
+loved, took the bit in his teeth, and plunged so deeply
+into extravagant dallying with ballet-dancers and
+stars of the opera that the King was glad to choose
+the lesser evil, and to summon Wilhelmine back to
+her Prince's arms. One stipulation only he made,
+that she should make her home away from the capital
+and the dangerous allurements which his nephew
+found there.</p>
+<p>Now at last we find Cinderella happily installed,
+with the King's august approval, in a beautiful home
+which has since blossomed into the splendours of
+Charlottenburg. Here she gave birth to a son, whom
+Frederick dubbed Count de la Marke in his nurse's
+arms, but who was fated never to leave his cradle.
+This child of love, the idol of his parents, sleeps in
+a splendid mausoleum in the great Protestant Church
+of Berlin.</p>
+<p>As a sop to Prussian morality and to make the old
+King quite easy, a complaisant husband was now
+found for the Prince's favourite in his chamberlain,
+Herr Rietz, son of a palace gardener; and Frederick
+William himself looked on while the woman he loved,
+the mother of his children, was converted by a few
+priestly words into a "respectable married woman"&#8212;only
+to leave the altar on his own arm, his wife in
+the eyes of the world.</p>
+<p>The time was now drawing near when Wilhelmine
+was to reach the zenith of her adventurous life. One
+<a name="Page_118"></a>August day in 1786 Frederick the Great drew his
+last breath in the Potsdam Palace, and his nephew
+awoke to be greeted by his chamberlain as "Your
+Majesty." The trumpeter's daughter was at last a
+Queen, in fact, if not in name, more secure in
+her husband's love than ever, and with long years of
+splendour and happiness before her. That his fancy,
+ever wayward, flitted to other women as fair as herself,
+did not trouble her a whit. Like Madame de
+Pompadour, she was prepared even to encourage such
+rivalry, so long as the first place (and this she knew)
+in her husband's heart was unassailably her own.</p>
+<p>Picture our Cinderella now in all her new splendours,
+moving as a Queen among her courtiers,
+receiving the homage of princes and ambassadors as
+her right, making her voice heard in the Council
+Chamber, and holding her <i>salon</i>, to which all the
+great ones of the earth flocked to pay tribute to her
+beauty and her gifts of mind. It was a strange transformation
+from the barracks-kitchen to the Queendom
+of one of the greatest Courts of Europe; but no
+Queen cradled in a palace ever wore her honours
+with greater dignity, grace, and simplicity than this
+daughter of an army bandsman.</p>
+<p>The days of the empty purse were, of course, at
+an end. She had now her ten thousand francs a
+month for "pin-money," her luxuriously appointed
+palace at Charlottenburg, and her Berlin mansion,
+"Unter den Linden," with its private theatre, in
+which she and her Royal lover, surrounded by their
+brilliant Court, applauded the greatest actors from
+Paris and Vienna. It is said that many of these
+<a name="Page_119"></a>stage-plays were of questionable decency, with
+more
+than a suggestion of the garden of Eden in them;
+but this is an aspersion which Madame de Rietz
+indignantly repudiates in her "Memoirs."</p>
+<p>While Wilhelmine was thus happy in her Court
+magnificence, varied by days of "delightful repose,"
+at Charlottenburg, France was in the throes of her
+Revolution, drenched with the blood of her greatest
+men and fairest women; her King had lost his crown
+and his head with it; and Europe was in arms against
+her. When Frederick William joined his army
+camped on the Rhine bank, Wilhelmine was by his
+side to counsel him as he wavered between war and
+peace. The fate of the coalition against France was
+practically in the hands of the trumpeter's daughter,
+whose voice was all for peace. "What matters it,"
+she said, "how France is governed? Let her
+manage her own affairs, and let Europe be saved
+from the horrors of bloodshed."</p>
+<p>In vain did the envoys of Spain and Italy, Austria
+and England, practise all their diplomacy to place
+her influence in the scale of war. When Lord Henry
+Spencer offered her a hundred thousand guineas if
+she would dissuade her husband from concluding a
+treaty with France, she turned a deaf ear to all his
+pleading and arguments. Such influence as she possessed
+should be exercised in the interests of peace,
+and thus it was that the vacillating King deserted his
+allies, and signed the Treaty of B&acirc;le, in 1795.</p>
+<p>Such was the triumphant issue of Madame Rietz's
+intervention in the affairs of Europe; such the proof
+she gave to the world of her conquest of a King. It
+<a name="Page_120"></a>was thus with a light heart that she turned her
+back
+on the Rhine camp; and with her husband's children
+and a splendid retinue set out on her journey to
+Italy, to see which was the greatest ambition of her
+life. At the Austrian Court she was coldly received,
+it is true, thanks to her part in the Treaty of B&acirc;le;
+but in Italy she was greeted as a Queen. At
+Naples Queen Caroline received her as a sister; the
+trumpeter's daughter was the brilliant centre of f&ecirc;tes
+and banquets and receptions such as might have
+gratified the vanity of an Empress: while at Florence
+she spent days of ideal happiness under the blue
+sky of Italy and among her beauties of Nature
+and Art.</p>
+<p>It was at Venice that she wrote to her King lover,
+"Your Majesty knows well that, for myself, I place
+no value on the foolish vanities of Court etiquette;
+but I am placed in an awkward position by my daughter
+being raised to the rank of Countess, while I am
+still in the lowly position of a bourgeoise." She had,
+in fact, always declined the honour of a title, which
+Frederick William had so often begged her to accept;
+and it was only for her daughter's sake, when the
+question of an alliance between the young Countess
+de la Marke and Lord Bristol's heir arose, that she
+at last stooped to ask for what she had so long
+refused.</p>
+<p>A few weeks later her brother, the King's equerry,
+placed in her hands the patent which made her
+Countess Lichtenau, with the right to bear on her
+shield of arms the Prussian eagle and the Royal
+crown.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_121"></a>Wherever the Countess (as we must now call
+her)
+went on her Italian tour she drew men to her feet
+by the magnetism of her beauty, who would have
+paid no homage to her as <i>ch&egrave;re amie</i> of a King; for
+she was now in the early thirties, in the full bloom
+of the loveliness that had its obscure budding in the
+Potsdam barrack-rooms. Young and old were
+equally powerless to resist her fascinations. She
+had, indeed, no more ardent slave and admirer than
+my Lord Bristol, the octogenarian Bishop of Londonderry,
+whose passion for the Countess, young
+enough to be his granddaughter, was that of a lovesick
+youth.</p>
+<p>From "dear Countess and adorable friend," he
+quickly leaps in his letters to "my dear Wilhelmine."
+He looks forward with the impatience of a boy to
+seeing her at "that terrestrial paradise which is
+called Naples, where we shall enjoy perpetual spring
+and spend delightful days in listening to the divine
+<i>Paesiello</i>. Do you know," he adds, "I passed two
+hours of real delight this morning in simply contemplating
+your elegant bedroom where only the
+elegant sleeper was missing."</p>
+<p>"It is in <i>Crocelle</i>," he writes a little later, "that
+you will make people happy by your presence, and
+where you will recuperate your health, regain your
+gaiety, and forget an Irishman; and a holy Bishop,
+more worthy of your affection, on account of the
+deep attachment he has for you, will take his
+place."</p>
+<p>In June, 1796, this senile lover writes, "In an
+hour I depart for Germany; and, as the wind is
+<a name="Page_122"></a>north, with every step I take I shall say: 'This
+breeze comes perhaps from her; it has touched her
+rosy lips and mingled its scent with the perfume of
+her breath which I shall inhale, the perfume of the
+breath of my dear Wilhelmine.'"</p>
+<p>But these days of dallying with her legion of
+lovers, of regal f&ecirc;tes and pleasure-chasing, were
+brought to an abrupt conclusion when news came to
+her at Venice that her "husband," the King, was
+dying, with the Royal family by his bedside awaiting
+the end. Such news, with all its import of sorrow
+and tragedy, set the Countess racing across the
+Continent, fast as horses could carry her, to the side
+of her beloved King, whom she found, if not <i>in
+extremis</i>, "very dangerously ill and pitifully
+changed" from the robust man she had left. Her
+return, however, did more for him than all the skill
+of his doctors. It gave him a new lease of life,
+in which her presence brought happiness into
+days which, none knew better than himself, were
+numbered.</p>
+<p>For more than a year the Countess was his tender
+nurse and constant companion, ministering to his
+comfort and arranging plays and tableaux for his
+entertainment. She watched over him as jealously
+as any mother over her dying child; but all her
+devotion could not stay the steps of death, which
+every day brought nearer. As the inevitable end
+approached, her friends warned her to leave Charlottenburg
+while the opportunity was still hers&#8212;to
+escape with her jewels and her money (a fortune of
+&pound;150,000)&#8212;but to all such urging she was deaf.
+<a name="Page_123"></a>She would stay by her lover's side to the last,
+though
+she well knew the danger of delay.</p>
+<p>One November day in 1797 Frederick William
+made his last public appearance at a banquet, with
+the Countess at his right hand; and seldom has
+festival had such a setting in tragedy. "None of
+the guests," we are told, "uttered a word or ate a
+mouthful of anything; the plates were cleared at
+the hasty ringing of a bell. A convulsive movement
+made by the sick man showed that he was suffering
+agonies. Before half-past nine every guest had
+left, greatly troubled. The majority of those who had
+been present never saw the unfortunate monarch
+again. They all shared the same presentiment of
+disaster, and wept."</p>
+<p>From that night the King was dead, even to his
+own Court. The gates of his palace were closed
+against the world, and none were allowed to approach
+the chamber in which his life was ebbing
+away, save the Countess, his nurse, and his doctors.
+Even his children were refused admittance to his
+presence. As the Marquis de Saint Mexent said,
+"The King of Prussia ends his days as though
+he were a rich benefactor. All the relations are
+excluded by the housekeeper."</p>
+<p>A few days before the end came the Countess was
+seen to leave the palace, carrying a large red portfolio&#8212;a
+suspicious circumstance which the Crown
+Prince's spies promptly reported to their master.
+There could be only one inference&#8212;she had been
+caught in the act of stealing State papers, a crime
+for which she would have to pay a heavy price as
+<a name="Page_124"></a>soon as her protector was no more! As a matter
+of fact the portfolio contained nothing more secret
+or valuable than the letters she had written to
+the King during the twenty-seven years of their
+romance, letters which, after reading, she consigned
+to the flames in her boudoir within an hour of the
+suspected theft of State documents.</p>
+<p>A few days later, on the night of the 16th of
+November (1797), the King entered on his "death
+agony," one fit of suffocation succeeding another,
+until the Countess, unable to bear any longer the
+sight of such suffering, was carried away in violent
+convulsions. She saw him no more; for by seven
+o'clock in the morning Frederick William had
+found release from his agony in death, and his son
+had begun to reign in his stead.</p>
+<p>At last the long-delayed hour of revenge had come
+to Frederick William III., who had always regarded
+his father's favourite as an enemy; and his vengeance
+was swift to strike. Before the late King's body
+was cold, his successor's emissaries appeared at the
+palace door, Unter den Linden, with orders to search
+her papers and to demand the keys of every desk
+and cupboard. Even then she scorned to fly before
+the storm which she knew was breaking. For three
+days and nights her carriage stood at her gates ready
+to take her away to safety; but she refused to move
+a step.</p>
+<p>Then one morning, before she had left her bed,
+a major of the guards, with a posse of soldiers,
+appeared at her bedroom door armed with a warrant
+for her arrest; and for many weeks she was a closely
+<a name="Page_125"></a>guarded prisoner in her own house, subject to
+daily
+insults and indignities from men who, a few weeks
+earlier, had saluted her as a Queen.</p>
+<p>At the trial which followed some very grave
+indictments were preferred against her. She was
+charged with having betrayed State secrets; with
+having robbed the Royal Exchequer; stolen the
+King's portfolio; and removed the priceless solitaire
+diamond from his crown, and the very rings from
+his fingers as he lay dying. To these and other
+equally grave charges the Countess gave a dignified
+denial, which the evidence she was able to produce
+supported. The diamond and the rings were, in fact,
+discovered in places indicated by her where they had
+been put, by the King's orders, for safe custody.</p>
+<p>The trial had a happier ending than, from the
+malignity of her enemies, especially of the King,
+might have been expected. After three months of
+durance she was removed to a Silesian fortress. Her
+houses and lands were taken from her; but her furniture
+and jewels were left untouched, and with them
+she was allowed to enjoy a pension of four thousand
+thalers a year. Such was the judgment of a Court
+which proved more merciful than she had perhaps a
+right to expect. And two months later, the influence
+and pleading of her friends set her free from her
+fortress-prison to spend her life where and as she
+would.</p>
+<p>The sun of her splendour had indeed set, but many
+years of peaceful and not unhappy life remained for
+our ex-Queen, who was still in the prime of her
+womanhood and beauty and with the magnetism
+<a name="Page_126"></a>that, to her last day, brought men to her feet.
+At
+fifty she was able to inspire such passion in the breast
+of a young artist, Francis Holbein, that he asked
+and won her hand in marriage. But this romance
+was short-lived, for within a year he left her, to
+spend the remainder of her days in Paris, Vienna,
+and her native Prussia. Here her adventurous
+career closed in such obscurity, at the age of sixty-eight,
+that even those who ministered to her last
+moments were unaware that the dying woman was
+the Countess who had played so dazzling a part a
+generation earlier, as favourite of the King of
+Prussia and Queen of her loveliest women.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_127"></a>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+<h2>THE CORSICAN AND THE CREOLE</h2>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><a name="img005"></a><img
+ style="width: 283px; height: 437px;"
+ alt="Jos&eacute;phine de Beauharnais, par Proud'hon."
+ title="Jos&eacute;phine de Beauharnais, par Proud'hon."
+ src="images/court005.jpg"><br>
+<h5>JOSEPHINE DE BEAUHARNAIS.</h5>
+</div>
+<br>
+<p>Of the many women who succeeded one another
+with such bewildering rapidity in the favour of the
+first Napoleon, from Desir&eacute;e Clary, daughter of the
+Marseilles silk-merchant, the "little wife" of his days
+of obscurity, to Madame Walewska, the beautiful
+Pole, who so fruitlessly bartered her charms for her
+country's salvation, only one really captured his
+fickle heart&#8212;Josephine de Beauharnais, the woman
+whom he raised to the splendour of an Imperial
+crown, only to fling her aside when she no longer
+served the purposes of his ambition.</p>
+<p>It was one October day in the year 1795 that
+Josephine, Vicomtesse de Beauharnais, first cast the
+spell of her beauty on the "ugly little Corsican,"
+who had then got his foot well planted on the ladder,
+at the summit of which was his crown of empire.
+At twenty-six, the man who, but a little earlier, was
+an out-of-work captain, eating his heart out in a
+Marseilles slum, was General-in-Chief of the armies
+of France, with the disarmed rebels of Paris grovelling
+at his feet.</p>
+<p>One day a handsome boy came to him, craving
+<a name="Page_128"></a>permission to retain the sword his father had
+won, a
+favour which the General, pleased by the boy's frankness
+and manliness, granted. The next day the
+young rebel's mother presented herself to thank him
+with gracious words for his kindness to her son&#8212;a
+creature of another world than his, with a beauty,
+grace and refinement which were a new revelation
+to his bourgeois eyes.</p>
+<p>The fair vision haunted him; the music of her
+voice lingered in his ears. He must see her again.
+And, before another day had passed, we find the
+pale-faced, grim Corsican, with the burning eyes,
+sitting awkwardly on a horse-hair chair of Madame's
+dining-room in her small house in the Rue Chantereine,
+nervously awaiting the entry of the Vicomtesse
+who had already played such havoc with his
+peace of mind. And when at last she made her
+appearance, few would have recognised in the man,
+who made his shy, awkward bow, the famous General
+with whose name the whole of France was ringing.</p>
+<p>It was little wonder, perhaps, that the little Corsican's
+heart went pit-a-pat, or that his knees trembled
+under him, for the lady whose smile and the touch
+of whose hand sent a thrill through him, was indeed,
+to quote his own words, "beautiful as a dream."
+From the chestnut hair which rippled over her small,
+proudly poised head to the arch of her tiny, dainty
+feet, "made for homage and for kisses," she was, "all
+glorious without." There was witchery in every
+part of her&#8212;in the rich colour that mantled in her
+cheeks; the sweet brown eyes that looked out between
+long-fringed eyelids; the small, delicate nose;
+"<a name="Page_129"></a>the nostrils quivering at the least emotion";
+the
+exquisite lines of the tall, supple figure, instinct with
+grace in every moment; and, above all, in the seductive
+music of a voice, every note of which was a
+caress.</p>
+<p>Sixteen years earlier, Josephine had come from
+Martinique to Paris as bride of the Vicomte de Beauharnais,
+with whom she had led a more or less unhappy
+life, until the guillotine of the Revolution left
+her a widow, with two children and an empty purse.
+But even this crowning calamity was powerless to
+crush the sunny-hearted Creole, who merely laughed
+at the load of debts which piled themselves up
+around her. A little of the wreckage of her husband's
+fortune had been rescued for her by influential
+friends; but this had disappeared long before
+Napoleon crossed her path. And at last the light-hearted
+widow realised that if she had a card left to
+play, she must play it quickly.</p>
+<p>Here then was her opportunity. The little
+General was obviously a slave at her feet; he was
+already a great man, destined to be still greater; and
+if he was bourgeois to his coarse finger-tips, he could
+at least serve as a stepping-stone to raise her from
+poverty and obscurity.</p>
+<p>As for Napoleon, he was a vanquished man&#8212;and
+he knew it&#8212;before ever he set foot in Madame's
+modest dining-room. When he left, he "trod on
+air," for the Vicomtesse had been more than gracious
+to him. The next day he was drawn as by a magnet
+to the Rue Chantereine, and the next and the next,
+each interview with his divinity forging fresh links
+<a name="Page_130"></a>for the chain that bound him; and at each visit
+he
+met under Madame's roof some of the great ones of
+that other world in which Josephine moved, the old
+<i>noblesse</i> of France&#8212;who paid her the homage due
+to a Queen.</p>
+<p>Thus vanity and ambition fed the flames of the
+passion which was consuming him; and within a
+fortnight he had laid his heart and his fortune, which
+at the time consisted of "his personal wardrobe and
+his military accoutrements" at the feet of the Creole
+widow; and one March day in 1796 Napoleon
+Bonaparte, General, and Josephine de Beauharnais,
+were made one by a registrar who obligingly described
+the bride as twenty-nine (thus robbing her of
+three years), and added two to the bridegroom's
+twenty-six years.</p>
+<p>After two days of rapturous honeymooning Napoleon
+was on his way to join his army in Italy, as
+reluctant a bridegroom as ever left Cupid at the bidding
+of Mars. At every change of horses during the
+long journey he dispatched letters to the wife he had
+left behind&#8212;letters full of passion and yearning. In
+one of them he wrote, "When I am tempted to curse
+my fate, I place my hand on my heart and find your
+portrait there. As I gaze at it I am filled with a joy
+unutterable. Life seems to hold no pain, save that
+of severance from my beloved."</p>
+<p>At Nice, amid all the labours and anxieties of
+organising his rabble army for a campaign, his
+thoughts are always taking wings to her; her portrait
+is ever in his hand. He says his prayers before
+it; and, when once he accidentally broke the glass,
+<a name="Page_131"></a>he was in an agony of despair and superstitious
+foreboding.
+His one cry was, "Come to me! Come to
+my heart and to my arms. Oh, that you had wings!"</p>
+<p>Even when flushed with the surrender of Piedmont
+after a fortnight's brilliant fighting, in which he had
+won half a dozen battles and reaped twenty-one standards,
+he would have bartered all his laurels for a sight
+of the woman he loved so passionately. But while he
+was thus yearning for her in distant Italy, Madame
+was much too happy in her beloved Paris to lend an
+ear to his pleadings. As wife of the great Napoleon
+she was a veritable Queen, fawned on and flattered
+by all the great ones in the capital. Hers was the
+place of honour at every f&ecirc;te and banquet; the banners
+her husband had captured were presented to
+her amid a tumult of acclamation; when she entered
+a theatre the entire house rose to greet her with
+cheers. She was thus in no mood to leave her
+Queendom for the arms of her husband, whose
+unattractive person and clumsy ardour only repelled
+her.</p>
+<p>When his letters calling her to him became more
+and more imperative, she could no longer ignore
+them. But she could, at least, invent an excellent
+excuse for her tarrying. She wrote to tell him that
+she was expecting to become a mother. This at
+least would put a stop to his importunity. And it
+did. Napoleon was full of delight&#8212;and self-reproach
+at the joyful news. "Forgive me, my
+beloved," he wrote. "How can I ever atone? You
+were ill and I accused you of lingering in Paris. My
+love robs me of my reason, and I shall never regain
+<a name="Page_132"></a>it.... A child, sweet as its mother, is soon to
+lie
+in your arms. Oh! that I could be with you, even
+if only for one day!"</p>
+<p>To his brother Joseph he writes in a similar strain:
+"The thought of her illness drives me mad. I long
+to see her, to hold her in my arms. I love her so
+madly, I cannot live without her. If she were to
+die, I should have absolutely nothing left to live for."</p>
+<p>When, however, he learns that Madame's illness
+is not sufficient to interfere with her Paris gaieties,
+a different mood seizes him. Jealousy and anger
+take the place of anxious sympathy. He insists
+that she shall join him&#8212;threatens to resign his command
+if she refuses. Josephine no longer dares to
+keep up her deception. She must obey. And thus,
+in a flood of angry tears, we see her starting on her
+long journey to Italy, in company with her dog, her
+maid, and a brilliant escort of officers. Arrived at
+Milan, she was welcomed by Napoleon with open
+arms; but "after two days of rapture and caresses,"
+he was face to face with the great crisis of Castiglione.
+His army was in imminent danger of annihilation;
+his own fate and fortune trembled in the
+balance. Nothing short of a miracle could save
+him; and on the third day of his new honeymoon
+he was back again in the field at grips with fate.</p>
+<p>But even at this supreme crisis he found time to
+write daily letters to the dear one who was awaiting
+the issue in Milan, begging her to share his life.
+"Your tears," he writes, "drive me to distraction;
+they set my blood on fire. Come to me here, that
+at least we may be able to say before we die we had
+<a name="Page_133"></a>so many days of happiness." Thus he pleads in
+letter after letter until Josephine, for very shame, is
+forced to yield, and to return to her husband, who,
+as Masson tells us, "was all day at her feet as before
+some divinity."</p>
+<p>Such days of bliss were, however, few and far between
+for the man who was now in the throes of a
+Titanic struggle, on the issue of which his fortunes
+and those of France hung. But when duty took him
+into danger where his lady could not follow, she
+found ample solace. Monsieur Charles, Leclerc's
+adjutant, was all the cavalier she needed&#8212;an Adonis
+for beauty, a Hercules for strength, the handsomest
+soldier in Napoleon's army, a past-master in all the
+arts of love-making. There was no dull moment
+for Josephine with such a squire at her elbow to
+pour flatteries into her ears and to entertain her with
+his clever tongue.</p>
+<p>But Monsieur Charles had short shrift when Napoleon's
+jealousy was aroused. He was quickly sent
+packing to Paris; and Josephine was left to write
+to her aunt, "I am bored to extinction." She was
+weary of her husband's love-rhapsodies, disgusted
+with the crudities of his passion. She had, however,
+a solace in the homage paid to her everywhere. At
+Genoa she was received as a Queen; at Florence the
+Grand Duke called her "cousin"; the entire army,
+from General to private, was under the spell of
+her beauty and the graciousness that captivated all
+hearts. She was, too, reaping a rich harvest of costly
+presents and bribes, from all who sought to win
+Napoleon's favour through her.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_134"></a>The Italian campaign at last over, Madame
+found
+herself back again in her dear Paris, raised to a
+higher pinnacle of Queendom than ever, basking in
+the splendours of the husband whose glories she so
+gladly shared, though she held his love in such light
+esteem. But for him, at least, there was no time
+for dallying. Within a few months he was waving
+farewell to her again, from the bridge of the <i>Oc&eacute;an</i>
+which was carrying him off to the conquest of Egypt,
+buoyed by her promise that she would join him when
+his work was done. And long before he had reached
+Malta she was back again in the vortex of Paris
+gaiety, setting the tongue of scandal wagging by her
+open flirtation with one lover after another.</p>
+<p>It was not long before the news of Madame's
+"goings-on" reached as far as Alexandria. The
+dormant jealousy in Napoleon, lulled to rest since
+Monsieur Charles had vanished from the scene, was
+fanned into flame. He was furious; disillusion
+seized him, and thoughts of divorce began to enter
+his brain. Two could play at this game of falseness;
+and there were many beautiful women in
+Egypt only too eager to console the great Napoleon.</p>
+<p>When news came to Josephine that her husband
+had landed at Fr&eacute;jus, and would shortly be with her,
+she was in a state bordering on panic. She shrank
+from facing his anger; from the revelation of debts
+and unwifely conduct which was inevitable. Her
+all was at stake and the game was more than half
+lost. In her desperation she took her courage in
+both hands and set forth, as fast as horses could take
+her, to meet Napoleon, that she might at least have
+<a name="Page_135"></a>the first word with him; but as ill-luck would
+have it, he travelled by a different route and she
+missed him.</p>
+<p>On her return to Paris she found the door of
+Napoleon's room barred against her. "After repeated
+knocking in vain," says M. Masson, "she
+sank on her knees sobbing aloud. Still the door
+remained closed. For a whole day the scene was
+prolonged, without any sign from within. Worn out
+at last, Josephine was about to retire in despair, when
+her maid fetched her children. Eug&egrave;ne and Hortense,
+kneeling beside their mother, mingled their
+supplications with hers. At last the door was opened;
+speechless, tears streaming down his cheeks, his face
+convulsed with the struggle that had rent his heart,
+Bonaparte appeared, holding out his arms to his
+wife."</p>
+<p>Such was the meeting of the unfaithful Josephine
+and the husband who had vowed that he would no
+longer call her wife. The reconciliation was complete;
+for Napoleon was no man of half-measures.
+He frankly forgave the weeping woman all her sins
+against him; and with generous hand removed the
+mountain of debt her extravagance had heaped up&#8212;debts
+amounting to more than two million francs,
+one million two hundred thousand of which she owed
+to tradespeople alone.</p>
+<p>But Napoleon's passion for his wife, of whose
+beauty few traces now remained, was dead. His
+loyalty only remained; and this, in turn, was to
+be swept away by the tide of his ambition. A few
+years later Josephine was crowned Empress by her
+<a name="Page_136"></a>husband, and consecrated by the Pope, after a
+priest
+had given the sanction of the Church to her incomplete
+nuptials.</p>
+<p>She had now reached the dazzling zenith of her
+career. At the Tuileries, at St Cloud, and at Malmaison,
+she held her splendid Courts as Empress.
+She had the most magnificent crown jewels in the
+world; and at Malmaison she spent her happiest
+hours in spreading her gems out on the table before
+her, and feasting her eyes on their many-hued fires.
+Her wardrobes were full of the daintiest and costliest
+gowns of which, we are told, more than two hundred
+were summer-dresses of percale and of muslin, costing
+from one thousand to two thousand francs each.</p>
+<p>Less than six years of such splendour and luxury,
+and the inevitable end of it all came. Napoleon's
+eyes were dazzled by the offer of an alliance with the
+eldest daughter of the Austrian Emperor. His whole
+ambition now was focused on providing a successor
+to his crown (Josephine had failed him in this important
+matter); and in Marie Louise of Austria he not
+only saw the prospective mother of his heir, but an
+alliance with one of the great reigning houses of
+Europe, which would lend a much-needed glamour
+to his bourgeois crown.</p>
+<p>His mind was at last inevitably made up. Josephine
+must be divorced. Her pleadings and tears and
+faintings were powerless to melt him. And one
+December day, in the year 1809, Napoleon was free
+to wed his Austrian Princess; and Josephine was left
+to console herself as best she might, with the knowledge
+that at least she had rescued from her downfall
+<a name="Page_137"></a>a life-income of three million francs a year, on
+which
+she could still play the r&ocirc;le of Empress at the Elys&eacute;e,
+Malmaison, and Navarre, the sumptuous homes with
+which Napoleon's generosity had dowered the wife
+who failed.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_138"></a>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+<h2>THE ENSLAVER OF A KING</h2>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><a name="img006"></a><img
+ style="width: 298px; height: 392px;"
+ alt="Lola Montez, Countess of Landsfeld."
+ title="Lola Montez, Countess of Landsfeld." src="images/court006.jpg"><br>
+<h5>LOLA MONTEZ, COUNTESS OF LANDSFELD.</h5>
+</div>
+<br>
+<p>More than fifty years have gone since the penitent
+soul of Lola Montez took flight to its Creator; but
+there must be some still living whose pulses quicken
+at the very mention of a name which recalls so much
+mystery and romance and bewildering fascination of
+the days when, for them, as for her, "all the world
+was young."</p>
+<p>Who was she, this woman whose beauty dazzled
+the eyes and whose witchery turned the heads of men
+in the forties and fifties of last century? A dozen
+countries, from Spain to India, were credited with
+her birth. Some said she was the daughter of a
+noble house, kidnapped by gipsies in her infancy;
+others were equally confident that she had for father
+the coroneted rake, Lord Byron, and for mother a
+charwoman.</p>
+<p>Her early years were wrapped in a mystery which
+she mischievously helped to intensify by declaring
+that her father was a famous Spanish toreador. Her
+origin, however, was prosaic enough. She was the
+daughter of an obscure army captain, Gilbert, who
+hailed from Limerick; her mother was an Oliver,
+<a name="Page_139"></a>from whom she received her strain of Spanish
+blood;
+and the names given to her at a Limerick font, one
+day in 1818, two months after her parents had made
+their runaway match, were Marie Dolores Eliza
+Rosanna.</p>
+<p>When Captain Gilbert returned, after his furlough-romance,
+to India, he took his wife and child with
+him. Seven years later cholera removed him; his
+widow found speedy solace in the arms of a second
+husband, one Captain Craigie; and Dolores was
+packed off to Scotland to the care of her stepfather's
+people until her schooldays were ended.</p>
+<p>In the next few years she alternated between the
+Scottish household, with its chilly atmosphere of
+Calvinism, and schools in Paris and London, until,
+her education completed, she escaped the husband,
+a mummified Indian judge, whom her mother had
+chosen for her, by eloping with a young army officer,
+a Captain James, and with him made the return
+voyage to India.</p>
+<p>A few months later her romance came to a tragic
+end, when her Lothario husband fell under the spell
+of a brother-officer's wife and ran away with her to
+the seclusion of the Neilgherry Hills, leaving his wife
+stranded and desolate. And thus it was that Dolores
+Gilbert wiped the dust of India finally off her feet,
+and with a cheque for a thousand pounds, which her
+good-hearted stepfather slipped into her hand, started
+once more for England, to commence that career of
+adventure which has scarcely a parallel even in
+fiction. She had had more than enough of wedded
+life, of Scottish Calvinism, and of a mother's selfish
+<a name="Page_140"></a>indifference. She would be henceforth the
+mistress
+of her own fate. She had beauty such as few women
+could boast&#8212;she had talents and a stout heart; and
+these should be her fortune.</p>
+<p>Her first ambition was to be a great actress; and
+when she found that acting was not her forte she
+determined to dance her way to fame and fortune,
+and after a year's training in London and Spain she
+was ready to conquer the world with her twinkling
+feet and supple body.</p>
+<p>Of her first appearance as a danseuse, before a
+private gathering of Pressmen, we have the following
+account by one who was there: "Her figure was
+even more attractive than her face, lovely as the
+latter was. Lithe and graceful as a young fawn,
+every movement that she made seemed instinct with
+melody. Her dark eyes were blazing and flashing
+with excitement. In her pose grace seemed involuntarily
+to preside over her limbs and dispose their
+attitude. Her foot and ankle were almost faultless."</p>
+<p>Such was the enthusiastic description of Lola
+Montez (as she now chose to call herself) on the eve
+of her bid for fame as a dancer who should perhaps
+rival the glories of a Taglioni. A few days later the
+world of rank and fashion flocked to see the d&eacute;but
+of the danseuse whose fame had been trumpeted
+abroad; and as Lola pirouetted on to the stage&#8212;the
+focus of a thousand pairs of eyes&#8212;she felt that the
+crowning moment of her life had come.</p>
+<p>Almost before her twinkling feet had carried her
+to the centre of the stage an ominous sound broke
+the silence of expectation. A hiss came from one of
+<a name="Page_141"></a>the boxes; it was repeated from another, and
+another.
+The sibilant sound spread round the house;
+it swelled into a sinister storm of hisses and boos.
+The light faded out of the dancer's eyes, the smile
+from her lips; and as the tumult of disapprobation
+rose to a deafening climax the curtain was rung
+down, and Lola rushed weeping from the stage. Her
+career as a dancer, in England, had ended at its birth.</p>
+<p>But Lola Montez was not the woman to sit down
+calmly under defeat. A few weeks later we find her
+tripping it on the stage at Dresden, and at Berlin,
+where the King of Prussia himself was among her
+applauders. But such success as the Continent
+brought her was too small to keep her now deplenished
+purse supplied. She fell on evil days, and for
+two years led a precarious life&#8212;now, we are told,
+singing in Brussels streets to keep starvation from
+her side, now playing the political spy in Russia, and
+again, by a capricious turn of fortune's wheel, being
+f&ecirc;ted and courted in the exalted circles of Vienna
+and Paris.</p>
+<p>From the French capital she made her way to
+Warsaw, where stirring adventures awaited her, for
+before she had been there many days the Polish Viceroy,
+General Paskevitch, cast his aged but lascivious
+eyes on her young beauty and sent an equerry to
+desire her presence at the palace. "He offered her"
+(so runs the story as told by her own lips) "the gift
+of a splendid country estate, and would load her with
+diamonds besides. The poor old man was a comic
+sight to look upon&#8212;unusually short in stature; and
+every time he spoke he threw his head back and
+<a name="Page_142"></a>opened his mouth so wide as to expose the
+artificial
+gold roof of his palate. A death's head making love
+to a lady could not have been a more horrible or
+disgusting sight. These generous gifts were most
+respectfully and very decidedly declined."</p>
+<p>But General Paskevitch was not disposed to be
+spurned with impunity. The contemptuous beauty
+must be punished for her scorn of his wooing; and,
+when she made her appearance on the stage the same
+night it was to a greeting of hisses by the Viceroy's
+hirelings. The next night brought the same experience;
+but when on the third night the storm arose,
+"Lola, in a rage, rushed down to the footlights and
+declared that those hisses had been set at her by the
+director, because she had refused certain gifts from
+the old Prince, his master. Then came a tremendous
+shower of applause from the audience, and the old
+Princess, who was present, both nodded her head and
+clapped her hands to the enraged and fiery little Lola."</p>
+<p>A tumultuous crowd of Poles escorted her to her
+lodgings that night. She was the heroine of the
+hour, who had dared to give open defiance to the
+hated Viceroy. The next morning Warsaw was
+"bubbling and raging with the signs of an incipient
+revolution. When Lola Montez was apprised of the
+fact that her arrest was ordered she barricaded her
+door; and when the police arrived she sat behind it
+with a pistol in her hand, declaring that she would
+certainly shoot the first man who should dare to break
+in." Fortunately for Lola, her pistol was not used.
+The French Consul came to her rescue, claiming her
+as a subject of France, and thus protecting her from
+<a name="Page_143"></a>arrest. But the order that she should quit
+Warsaw
+was peremptory, and Warsaw saw her no more.</p>
+<p>Back again in Paris, Lola found that even her new
+halo of romance was powerless to win favour for her
+dancing. Again she was to hear the storm of hisses;
+and this time in her rage "she retaliated by making
+faces at her audience," and flinging parts of her
+clothing in their faces. But if Paris was not to be
+charmed by her dainty feet it was ready to yield an
+unstinted homage to her rare beauty and charm. She
+found a flattering welcome in the most exclusive
+of <i>salons</i>; the cleverest men in the capital confessed
+the charm of her wit and surrounded her with their
+flatteries.</p>
+<p>M. Dujarrier, the most brilliant of them all, young,
+rich, and handsome, fell head over ears in love with
+her and asked her to be his wife. But the cup of
+happiness was scarcely at her lips before it was dashed
+away. Dujarrier was challenged to a duel by Beauvallon,
+a political enemy; and when Lola was on her
+way to stop the meeting she met a mournful procession
+bringing back her dead lover's body, on which
+she flung herself in an agony of grief and covered it
+with kisses. At the subsequent trial of Beauvallon
+she electrified the Court by declaring with streaming
+eyes, "If Beauvallon wanted satisfaction I would have
+fought him myself, for I am a better shot than poor
+Dujarrier ever was." And she was probably only
+speaking the truth, for her courage was as great as
+the love she bore for the victim of the duel.</p>
+<p>As a child Lola had shocked her puritanical Scottish
+hosts by declaring that "she meant to marry a
+<a name="Page_144"></a>Prince," and unkindly as fate had treated her,
+she
+had by no means relinquished this childish ambition.
+It may be that it was in her mind when, a year and
+a half after the tragedy that had so clouded her life
+in Paris, she drifted to Munich in search of more
+conquests.</p>
+<p>Now in the full bloom of her radiant loveliness&#8212;"the
+most beautiful woman in Europe" many declared&#8212;mingling
+the vivacity of an Irish beauty with
+the voluptuous charms of a Spaniard&#8212;she was splendidly
+equipped for the conquest of any man, be he
+King or subject; and Ludwig I., King of Bavaria,
+had as keen an eye for female beauty as for the
+objects of art on which he squandered his millions.</p>
+<p>It was this Ludwig who made Munich the fairest
+city in all Germany, and who enriched his palace
+with the finest private collection of pictures and
+statues that Europe can boast. But among all his
+treasures of art he valued none more than his gallery
+of portraits of fair women, each of whom had, at one
+time or another, visited his capital.</p>
+<p>Such was Ludwig, Bavaria's King, to whom Lola
+Montez now brought a new revelation of female loveliness,
+to which his gallery could furnish no rival.
+At first sight of her, as she danced in the opera
+ballet, he was undone. The next day and the next
+his eyes were feasting on her charms and her supple
+grace; and within a week she was installed at the
+Court and was being introduced by His Majesty as
+"my best friend."</p>
+<p>And not only the King, but all Munich was at the
+feet of the lovely "Spaniard"; her drives through
+<a name="Page_145"></a>the streets were Royal progresses; her
+receptions in
+the palace which Ludwig presented to her were
+thronged by all the greatest in Bavaria; on Prince
+and peasant alike she cast the spell of her witchery.
+As for Ludwig, connoisseur of the beautiful, he was
+her shadow and her slave, showering on her gifts an
+Empress might well have envied. Fortune had relented
+at last and was now smiling her sweetest on
+the adventuress; and if Lola had been content with
+such triumphs as these the story of her later life might
+have been very different. But she craved power to
+add to her trophies, and aspired to take the sceptre
+from the weak hand of her Royal lover.</p>
+<p>Never did woman make a more fatal mistake. On
+the one hand was arrayed the might of Austria and
+of Rome, whose puppet Ludwig was; on the other
+hand was a nation clamouring for reforms. Revolution
+was already in the air, and it was reserved to
+this too daring woman to precipitate the storm.</p>
+<p>Her first ambition was to persuade Ludwig to dismiss
+his Ministry, to shake himself free from foreign
+influence, and to inaugurate the era of reform for
+which his subjects were clamouring. In vain did
+Austria try to win her to its side by bribes of gold (no
+less than a million florins) and the offer of a noble
+husband. To all its seductions Lola turned as deaf
+an ear as to the offers of Poland's Viceroy. And so
+strenuous was her championship of the people that
+the Cabinet was compelled to resign in favour of
+the "Lola Ministry" of reformers.</p>
+<p>So far she had succeeded, but the price was still to
+pay. The reactionaries, supported by Austria and
+<a name="Page_146"></a>the Romish Church, were quick to retaliate by
+waging
+remorseless war against the King's mistress; and,
+among their most powerful weapons, used the students'
+clubs of Munich, who, from being Lola's most
+enthusiastic admirers, became her bitterest enemies.</p>
+<p>To counteract this move Lola enrolled a students'
+corps of her own&#8212;a small army of young stalwarts,
+whose cry was "Lola and Liberty," and who were
+sworn to fight her battles, if need be, to the death.
+Thus was the fire of revolution kindled by a woman's
+vanity and lust of power. Students' fights became
+everyday incidents in the streets of Munich, and on
+one occasion when Lola, pistol in hand, intervened
+to prevent bloodshed, she was rescued with difficulty
+by Ludwig himself and a detachment of soldiers.</p>
+<p>The climax came when she induced the King to
+close the University for a year&#8212;an autocratic step
+which aroused the anger not only of every student
+but of the whole country. The streets were paraded
+by mobs crying, "Down with the concubine!" and
+"Long live the Republic!" Barricades were erected
+and an influential deputation waited on the King to
+demand the expulsion of the worker of so much
+mischief.</p>
+<p>In vain did Ludwig declare that he would part with
+his crown rather than with the Countess of Landsfeld&#8212;for
+this was one of the titles he had conferred
+on his favourite. The forces arrayed against him
+were too strong, and the order of expulsion was at
+last conceded. It was only, however, when her
+palace was in flames and surrounded by a howling
+mob that the dauntless woman deigned to seek refuge
+<a name="Page_147"></a>in flight, and, disguised as a boy, suffered
+herself to
+be escorted to the frontier. Two weeks later Ludwig
+lost his crown.</p>
+<p>The remainder of this strange story may be told
+in a few words. Thrown once more on the world,
+with a few hastily rescued jewels for all her fortune,
+Lola Montez resumed her stage life, appearing in
+London in a drama entitled "Lola Montez: or a
+Countess for an Hour." Here she made a conquest
+of a young Life Guardsman, called Heald, who had
+recently succeeded to an estate worth &pound;5000 a year;
+and with him she spent a few years, made wretched
+by continual quarrels, in one of which she stabbed
+him. When he was "found drowned" at Lisbon
+she drifted to Paris, and later to the United States,
+which she toured with a drama entitled "Lola Montez
+in Bavaria." There she made her third appearance
+at the altar, with a bridegroom named Hull,
+whom she divorced as soon as the honeymoon had
+waned.</p>
+<p>Thus she carried her restless spirit through a few
+more years of wandering and growing poverty, until
+a chance visit to Spurgeon's Tabernacle revolutionised
+her life. She decided to abandon the stage
+and to devote the remainder of her days to penitence
+and good works. But the end was already near. In
+New York, where she had gone to lecture, she was
+struck down by paralysis, and a few weeks before
+she had seen her forty-second birthday she died in
+a charitable institution, joining fervently in the
+prayers of the clergyman who was summoned to her
+death-bed.</p>
+<p>"<a name="Page_148"></a>When she was near the end, and could not
+speak,"
+the clergyman says, "I asked her to let me know by
+a sign whether she was at peace. She fixed her eyes
+on mine and nodded affirmatively. I do not think I
+ever saw deeper penitence and humility than in this
+poor woman."<br>
+</p>
+<p style="text-align: center;"><a name="img007"></a><img
+ style="width: 282px; height: 408px;" alt="Ludwig I., King of Bavaria."
+ title="Ludwig I., King of Bavaria." src="images/court007.jpg"><br>
+</p>
+<h5>LUDWIG I., KING OF BAVARIA.</h5>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_149"></a>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+<h2>AN EMPRESS AND HER FAVOURITES</h2>
+<br>
+<a name="img002"></a>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><img
+ style="width: 243px; height: 350px;"
+ alt="Catherine the Second of Russia."
+ title="Catherine the Second of Russia." src="images/court002.jpg"><br>
+</div>
+<div style="text-align: center;">
+<h5>CATHERINE THE SECOND OF RUSSIA.</h5>
+<br>
+</div>
+<p>When Sophie Augusta Frederica of Anhalt-Zerbst
+was romping on the ramparts or in the streets of
+Stettin with burghers' children for playmates, he
+would have been a bold prophet who would have
+predicted that one day she would be the most splendid
+figure among Europe's sovereigns, "the only
+great man in Europe," according to Voltaire, "an
+angel before whom all men should be silent"; and
+that, while dazzling Europe by her statesmanship
+and learning, she would afford more material for
+scandal than any woman, except perhaps Christina
+of Sweden, who ever wore a crown.</p>
+<p>There is much, it is true, to be said in extenuation
+of the weakness that has left such a stain on the
+memory of Catherine II. of Russia. Equipped far
+beyond most women with the beauty and charms
+that fascinate men, and craving more than most of
+her sex the love of man, she was mated when little
+more than a child to the most degenerate Prince in
+all Europe.</p>
+<p>The Grand Duke Peter, heir to the Russian
+throne, who at sixteen took to wife the girl-Princess
+<a name="Page_150"></a>of Anhalt-Zerbst, was already an expert in
+almost
+every vice. Imbecile in mind, he found his chief
+pleasure in the company of the most degraded. He
+rarely went to bed sober&#8212;in fact, his bride's first
+sight of him was when he was drunk, at the age of
+ten. He was, too, "a liar and a coward, vicious and
+violent; pale, sickly, and uncomely&#8212;a crooked soul
+in a prematurely ravaged body."</p>
+<p>Such was the Grand Duke Peter, to whom the
+high-spirited, beautiful Princess Sophie (thenceforth
+to be known as "Catherine") was tied for life one
+day in the year 1744&#8212;a youth the very sight of
+whom repelled her, while his vices filled her with
+loathing. Add to this revolting union the fact that
+she found herself under the despotic rule of the
+Empress Elizabeth, who made no concealment of
+her hatred and jealousy of the fair young Princess,
+surrounded her with spies, and treated her as a rebellious
+child, to be checked and bullied at every turn&#8212;and
+it is not difficult to understand the spirit of
+recklessness and defiance that was soon roused in
+Catherine's breast.</p>
+<p>There was at the Russian Court no lack of temptation
+to indulge this spirit of revolt to the full. The
+young German beauty, mated to worse than a clown,
+soon had her Court of admirers to pour flatteries into
+her dainty ears, and she would perhaps have been
+less than a woman if she had not eagerly drunk them
+in. She had no need of anyone to tell her that she
+was fair. "I know I am beautiful as the day," she
+once exclaimed, as she looked at her mirrored reflection
+in her first ball finery at St Petersburg, with a
+<a name="Page_151"></a>red rose in her glorious hair; and the mirror
+told no
+flattering tale.</p>
+<p>See the picture Poniatowski, one of her earliest
+and most ardent slaves, paints of the young Grand
+Duchess. "With her black hair she had a dazzling
+whiteness of skin, a vivid colour, large blue eyes
+prominent and eloquent, black and long eyebrows,
+a Greek nose, a mouth that looked made for kissing,
+a slight, rather tall figure, a carriage that was lively,
+yet full of nobility, a pleasing voice, and a laugh as
+merry as the humour through which she could
+pass with ease from the most playful and childish
+amusements to the most fatiguing mathematical
+calculations."</p>
+<p>With the brain, even in those early years, of a
+clever man, she was essentially a woman, with all a
+woman's passion for the admiration and love of men;
+and one cannot wonder, however much one may
+deplore, that while her imbecile husband was guzzling
+with common soldiers, or playing with his toys and
+tin cannon in bed, vacuous smiles on his face, his
+beautiful bride should find her own pleasures in the
+homage of a Soltykoff, a Poniatowski, an Orloff, or
+any other of the legion of lovers who in quick
+succession took her fancy.</p>
+<p>The first among her admirers to capture her fancy
+was Sergius Soltykoff, her chamberlain, high-born,
+"beautiful as the day," polished courtier, supple-tongued
+wooer, to whom the Grand Duchess gave
+the heart her husband spurned. But Soltykoff's
+reign was short; the fickle Princess, ever seeking
+fresh conquests, wearied of him as of all her lovers
+<a name="Page_152"></a>in turn, and his place was taken within a year
+by
+Stanislas Poniatowski, a fascinating young Pole,
+who returned to St Petersburg with a reputation of
+gallantry won in almost every Court of Europe.</p>
+<p>Poniatowski had not perhaps the physical perfections
+of his dethroned predecessor, but he had the
+well-stored brain that made an even more potent
+appeal to Catherine. He could talk "like an angel"
+on every subject that appealed to her, from art to
+philosophy; and he had, moreover, a magnetic
+charm of manner which few women could resist.</p>
+<p>Such a lover was, indeed, after her heart, for he
+brought romance and adventure to his wooing; and
+whether he found his way to her boudoir disguised
+as a ladies' tailor or as one of the Grand Duke's
+musicians, or made open love to her under the very
+nose of her courtiers, he played his r&ocirc;le of lover to
+admiration. Once Peter, in jealous mood, threatened
+to run his rival through with his sword, and, in
+his rage, "went into his wife's bedroom and pulled
+her out of bed without leaving her time to dress."
+An hour later his anger had changed to an amused
+complaisance, and he was supping with the culprits,
+and with boisterous laughter was drinking their
+healths.</p>
+<p>When at last a political storm drove Poniatowski
+from Russia, Catherine, who never forgot a banished
+lover, secured for him the crown of Poland.</p>
+<p>Thus the favourites come and go, each supreme
+for a time, each inevitably packed off to give place
+to a successor. With Poniatowski away in Poland,
+Catherine cast her eyes round her Court to find a
+<a name="Page_153"></a>third favourite, and her choice was soon made,
+for of
+all her army of admirers there was one who fully
+satisfied her ideal of handsome manhood.</p>
+<p>Of the five Orloff brothers, each a Goliath in
+stature and a Hercules in strength, the handsomest
+was Gregory, "the giant with the face of an angel."
+Towering head and shoulders over most of his
+fellow-courtiers, with knotted muscles which could
+fell an ox or crush a horse-shoe with the closing of
+a hand, Gregory Orloff was reputed the bravest man
+in Russia, as he was the idol of his soldiers. He
+was also a notorious gambler and drinker and the
+hero of countless love adventures.</p>
+<p>No greater contrast could be possible than
+between this dare-devil son of Anak and the cultured,
+almost feminine Poniatowski; but Catherine
+loved, above all things, variety, and here it was in
+startling abundance. Nor was her new lover any
+the less desirable because he was some years younger
+than herself, or that his grandfather had been a
+common soldier in the army of Peter the Great.</p>
+<p>And Gregory Orloff proved himself as bold in
+wooing as he was brave in war. For him there was
+no stealing up back stairs, no masquerading in disguises.
+He was the elect favourite of the future
+Empress of Russia, and all the world should know
+it. He was inseparable from his mistress, and paid
+his court to her under the eyes of her husband; while
+Catherine, thus emboldened, made as little concealment
+of her partiality.</p>
+<p>But troublous days were coming to break the idyll
+of their love. The Empress Elizabeth, as was
+<a name="Page_154"></a>inevitable, at last drank herself to death, and
+her
+nephew Peter, now a besotted imbecile of thirty-four,
+put on the Imperial robes, and was free to
+indulge his madness without restraint. The first
+use he made of his freedom was to subject his wife
+to every insult and humiliation his debased brain
+could suggest. He flaunted his amours and vices
+before her, taunted her in public with her own indiscretions,
+and shouted in his cups that he would
+divorce her.</p>
+<p>Not content with these outrages on his Empress,
+he lost no opportunity of disgusting his subjects and
+driving his soldiers to the verge of mutiny. Such
+an intolerable state of things could only have one
+issue. The Emperor was undoubtedly mad; the
+Emperor must go.</p>
+<p>Over the <i>coup d'&eacute;tat</i> which followed we must pass
+hurriedly&#8212;the conspiracy of Catherine and the
+Orloffs, the eager response of the army which
+flocked to the Empress, "kissing me, embracing
+my hands, my feet, my dress, and calling me their
+saviour"; the marching of the insurgent troops to
+Oranienbaum, with Catherine, astride on horseback,
+at their head; and Peter's craven submission,
+when he crawled on his knees to his wife, with
+whimpering and tears, begging her to allow him
+to keep "his mistress, his dog, his negro, and his
+violin."</p>
+<p>The Emperor was safe behind barred doors at
+Mopsa; Catherine was now Empress in fact as well
+as name. Three weeks later Peter was dead; was
+he done to death by Catherine's orders? To this
+<a name="Page_155"></a>day none can say with certainty. The story of
+this
+tragedy as told by Cast&egrave;ra makes gruesome reading.</p>
+<p>One day Alexis Orloff and Teplof appeared at
+Mopsa to announce to the deposed sovereign his
+approaching deliverance and to ask a dinner of him.
+Glasses and brandy were ordered, and while Teplof
+was amusing the Tsar, Orloff filled the glasses,
+adding poison to one of them.</p>
+<p>"The Tsar, suspecting no harm, took the poison
+and swallowed it. He was soon seized with agonising
+pains. He screamed aloud for milk, but the two
+monsters again presented poison to him and forced
+him to take it. When the Tsar's valet bravely interposed
+he was hurled from the room. In the midst of
+the tumult there entered Prince Baratinski, who
+commanded the Guard. Orloff, who had already
+thrown down the Tsar, pressed upon his chest with
+his own knees, holding him fast at the same time by
+the throat. Baratinski and Teplof then passed a
+table-napkin with a sliding knot round his neck, and
+the murderers accomplished the work of death by
+strangling him."</p>
+<p>Such is the story as it has come down to us, and
+as it was believed in Russia at the time. That
+Gregory Orloff was innocent of a crime in which his
+own brother played a leading part is as little to be
+credited as that Catherine herself was in ignorance
+of the design on her husband's life. But, however
+this may be, we are told that when the news of her
+husband's death was brought to the Empress at a
+banquet, she was to all appearance overcome with
+horror and grief. She left the table with streaming
+<a name="Page_156"></a>eyes and spent the next few days in
+unapproachable
+solitude in her rooms.</p>
+<p>Thus at last Catherine was free both from the
+tyranny of Elizabeth and from the brutality of her
+bestial husband. She was sole sovereign of all the
+Russias, at liberty to indulge any caprice that entered
+her versatile brain. That her subjects, almost to a
+man, regarded her with horror as her husband's murderer,
+that this detestation was shared by the army
+that had put her on the throne, and by the nobles who
+had been her slaves, troubled her little. She was
+mistress of her fate, and strong enough (as indeed
+she proved) to hold, with a firm grasp, the sceptre
+she had won.</p>
+<p>High as Gregory Orloff had stood in her favour
+before she came to her crown, his position was
+now more splendid and secure. She showered her
+favours on him with prodigal hand. Lands and
+jewels and gold were squandered on her "First
+Favourite"&#8212;the official designation she invented
+for him; and he wore on his broad chest her miniature
+in a blazing oval of diamonds, the crowning
+mark of her approval. And to his brothers she was
+almost equally generous, for in a few years of her
+ascendancy the Orloffs were enriched by vast estates
+on which forty-five thousand serfs toiled, by palaces,
+and by gold to the amount of seventeen million
+roubles. Such it was to be in the good books of
+Catherine II., Empress of Russia.</p>
+<p>With riches and power, Gregory's ambition grew
+until he dreamt of sitting on the throne itself by
+Catherine's side; and in her foolish infatuation even
+<a name="Page_157"></a>this prize might have been his, had not wiser
+counsels
+come to her rescue. "The Empress," said Panine
+to her, "can do what she likes; but Madame Orloff
+can never be Empress of Russia." And thus
+Gregory's greatest ambition was happily nipped in
+the bud.</p>
+<p>The man who had played his cards with such skill
+and discretion in the early days of his love-making
+had now, his head swollen by pride and power, grown
+reckless. If he could not be Emperor in name, he
+would at least wield the sceptre. The woman to
+whom he owed all was, he thought, but a puppet in
+his hands, as ready to do his bidding as any of his
+minions. But through all her dallying Catherine's
+smiles masked an iron will. In heart she was a
+woman; in brain and will-power, a man. And
+Orloff, like many another favourite, was to learn the
+lesson to his cost.</p>
+<p>The time came when she could no longer tolerate
+his airs and assumptions. There was only one
+Empress, but lovers were plentiful, and she already
+had an eye on his successor. And thus it was that
+one day the swollen Orloff was sent on a diplomatic
+mission to arrange peace between Russia and
+Turkey. When she bade him good-bye she called
+him her "angel of peace," but she knew that it was
+her angel's farewell to his paradise.</p>
+<p>How the Ambassador, instead of making peace,
+stirred up the embers of war into fresh flame is a
+matter of history. But he was not long left to work
+such mad mischief. While he was swaggering at a
+Jassy f&ecirc;te, in a costume ablaze with diamonds worth
+<a name="Page_158"></a>a million roubles, news came to him of a
+good-looking
+young lieutenant who was not only installed
+in his place by Catherine's side, but was actually
+occupying his own apartments. Within an hour he
+was racing back to St Petersburg, resting neither
+night nor day until he had covered the thousand
+leagues that separated him from the capital.</p>
+<p>Before, however, his sweating horses could enter
+it, he was stopped by Catherine's emissaries and
+ordered to repair to the Imperial Palace at Gatshina.
+And then he realised that his sun had indeed come
+to its setting. His honours were soon stripped from
+him, and although he was allowed to keep his lands,
+his gold and jewels, the spoils of Cupid, the diamond-framed
+miniature, was taken away to adorn the breast
+of his successor, the lieutenant.</p>
+<p>Under this cloud of disfavour Orloff conducted
+himself with such resignation&#8212;none knew better
+than he how futile it was to fight&#8212;that Catherine,
+before many months had passed, not only recalled
+him to Court, but secured for him a Princedom of the
+Holy Empire. "As for Prince Gregory," she said
+amiably, "he is free to go or stay, to hunt, to drink,
+or to gamble. I intend to live according to my own
+pleasure, and in entire independence."</p>
+<p>After a tragically brief wedded life with a beautiful
+girl-cousin, who died of consumption, Orloff returned
+to St Petersburg to spend the last few months
+of his life, "broken-hearted and mad." And to his
+last hour his clouded brain was tortured with visions
+of the "avenging shade of the murdered Peter."</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XV"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_159"></a>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+<h2>A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY CINDERELLA</h2>
+<p>It was to all seeming a strange whim that caused
+Cardinal Mazarin, one day in the year 1653, to
+summon his nieces, daughters of his sister, Hieronyme
+Mancini, from their obscurity in Italy to bask
+in the sunshine of his splendours in Paris.</p>
+<p>At the time of this odd caprice, Richelieu's crafty
+successor had reached the zenith of his power. His
+was the most potent and splendid figure in all
+Europe that did not wear a crown. He was the
+avowed favourite and lover of Anne of Austria,
+Queen of France, to whose vanity he had paid such
+skilful court&#8212;indeed it was common rumour that she
+had actually given him her hand in secret marriage.
+The boy-King, Louis XIV., was a puppet in his
+strong hands. He was, in fact, the dictator of
+France, whose smiles the greatest courtiers tried to
+win, and before whose frowns they trembled.</p>
+<p>In contrast to such magnificence, his sister,
+Madame Mancini, was the wife of a petty Italian
+baron, who was struggling to bring up her five
+daughters on a pathetically scanty purse&#8212;as far
+removed from her magnificent brother as a moth from
+a star. There was, on the face of things, every
+<a name="Page_160"></a>reason why the great and all-powerful Cardinal
+should leave his nieces to their genteel poverty;
+and we can imagine both the astonishment and
+delight with which Madame Mancini received the
+summons to Paris which meant such a revolution in
+life for her and her daughters.</p>
+<p>If the Mancini girls had no heritage of money,
+they had at least the dower of beauty. Each of the
+five gave promise of a rare loveliness&#8212;with the
+solitary exception of Marie, Madame's third daughter,
+who at fourteen was singularly unattractive even
+for that awkward age. Tall, thin, and angular,
+without a vestige of grace either of figure or movement,
+she had a sallow face out of which two great
+black eyes looked gloomily, and a mouth wide and
+thin-lipped. She was, in addition, shy and slow-witted
+to the verge of stupidity. Marie, in fact,
+was quite hopeless, the "ugly duckling" of a good-looking
+family, and for this reason an object of
+dislike and resentment to her mother.</p>
+<p>Certainly, said Madame, Marie must be left
+behind. Her other daughters would be a source of
+pride to their uncle; he could secure great matches
+for them, but Marie&#8212;pah! she would bring discredit
+on the whole family. And so it was decided in
+conclave that the "ugly duckling" should be left in
+a nunnery&#8212;the only fit place for her. But Marie
+happily had a spirit of her own. She would not be
+left behind, she declared; and if she must go to a
+nunnery, why there were nunneries in plenty in
+France to which they could send her. And Marie
+had her way.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_161"></a>She was not, however, to escape the cloister
+after
+all, for to a Paris nunnery she was consigned when
+her Cardinal uncle had set eyes on her. "Let her
+have a year or two there," was his verdict, "and, who
+knows, she may blossom into a beauty yet. At any
+rate she can put on flesh and not be the scarecrow
+she is." And thus, while her more favoured sisters
+were revelling in the gaieties of Court life, Marie
+was sent to tell her beads and to spend Spartan days
+among the nuns.</p>
+<p>Nearly two years passed before Mazarin expressed
+a wish to see his ugly niece again; and it was indeed
+a very different Marie who now made her curtsy to
+him. Gone were the angular figure, the awkward
+movements, the sallow face, the slow wits. Time
+and the healthy life of the cloisters had done their
+work well. What the Cardinal now saw was a girl
+of seventeen, of exquisitely modelled figure, graceful
+and self-possessed; a face piquant and full of animation,
+illuminated by a pair of glorious dark eyes, and
+with a dazzling smile which revealed the prettiest
+teeth in France. Above all, and what delighted the
+Cardinal most, she had now a sprightly wit, and a
+quite brilliant gift of conversation. It was thus a
+smiling and gratified Cardinal who gave greeting to
+his niece, now as fair as her sisters and more fascinating
+than any of them. There was no doubt that he
+could find a high-placed husband for her, and thus&#8212;for
+this was, in fact, his motive for rescuing his pretty
+nieces from their obscurity&#8212;make his position
+secure by powerful family alliances.</p>
+<p>It was not long before Mazarin fixed on a suitor
+<a name="Page_162"></a>in the person of Armande de la Porte, son of the
+Marquis de la Meilleraye, one of the most powerful
+nobles in France. But alas for his scheming!
+Armande's heart had already been caught while
+Marie was reciting her matins and vespers: He
+had lost it utterly to her beautiful sister, Hortense;
+he vowed that he would marry no other, and that if
+Hortense could not be his wife he would prefer to
+die. Thus Marie was rescued from a union which
+brought her sister so much misery in later years,
+and for a time she was condemned to spend unhappy
+months with her mother at the Louvre.</p>
+<p>To this period of her life Marie Mancini could
+never look back without a shudder. "My mother,"
+she says, "who, I think, had always hated me, was
+more unbearable than ever. She treated me, although
+I was no longer ugly, with the utmost aversion and
+cruelty. My sisters went to Court and were fussed
+and f&ecirc;ted. I was kept always at home, in our miserable
+lodgings, an unhappy Cinderella."</p>
+<p>But Fortune did not long hide his face from
+Cinderella. Her "Prince Charming" was coming&#8212;in
+the guise of the handsome young King, Louis
+XIV. himself. It was one day while visiting
+Madame Mancini in her lodgings at the Louvre that
+Louis first saw the girl who was to play such havoc
+with his heart; and at the first sight of those melting
+dark eyes and that intoxicating smile he was undone.
+He came again and again&#8212;always under the pretext
+of visiting Madame, and happy beyond expression
+if he could exchange a few words with her daughter,
+Marie; until he soon counted a day worse than lost
+<a name="Page_163"></a>that did not bring him the stolen sweetness of a
+meeting.</p>
+<p>When, a few weeks later, Madame Mancini died,
+and Marie was recalled to Court by her uncle, her
+life was completely changed for her. Louis had
+now abundant opportunities of seeking her side; and
+excellent use he made of them. The two young
+people were inseparable, much to the alarm of the
+Cardinal and Madame M&egrave;re, the Queen. The
+young King was never happy out of her sight; he
+danced with her (and none could dance more divinely
+than Marie); he listened as she sang to him with
+a voice whose sweetness thrilled him; they read the
+same books together in blissful solitude; she taught
+him her native Italian, and entranced him by the
+brilliance of her wit; and when, after a slight
+illness, he heard of her anxious inquiries and her
+tears of sympathy, his conquest was complete. He
+vowed that she and no other should be his wife and
+Queen of France.</p>
+<p>But these halcyon days were not to last long. It
+was no part of Mazarin's scheming that a niece of
+his should sit on the throne. The prospect was
+dazzling, it is true, but it would inevitably mean his
+own downfall, so strongly would such an alliance be
+resented by friends as well as enemies; and Anne of
+Austria was as little in the mood to be deposed by
+such an obscure person as the "Mancini girl."
+Thus it was that Queen and Cardinal joined hands
+to nip the young romance in the bud.</p>
+<p>A Royal bride must be found for Louis, and that
+quickly; and negotiations were soon on foot to
+<a name="Page_164"></a>secure as his wife Margaret, Princess of Savoy.
+In
+vain did the boy-King storm and protest; equally
+futile were Marie's tearful pleadings to her uncle.
+The fiat had gone forth. Louis must have a Royal
+bride; and she was already about to leave Italy on
+her bridal progress to France.</p>
+<p>It was, we may be sure, with a heavy heart that
+Marie joined the cavalcade which, with its gorgeous
+procession of equipages, its gaily mounted courtiers,
+and its brave escort of soldiery, swept out of Paris
+on its stately progress to Lyons, to meet the Queen-to-be.
+But there was no escape from the humiliation,
+for she must accompany Anne of Austria, as
+one of her retinue of maids-of-honour. Arrived too
+soon at Lyons, Louis rides on to give first greeting
+to his bride, who is now within a day's journey; and
+returns with a smiling face to announce to his mother
+that he finds the Princess pleasing to his eye, and to
+describe, with boyish enthusiasm, her grace and
+graciousness, her magnificent eyes, her beautiful
+hair, and the delicate olive of her complexion, while
+Marie's heart sinks at the recital. Could this be the
+lover who, but a few days ago, had been at her feet,
+vowing that she was the only bride in all the world
+for him?</p>
+<p>When he seeks her side and shamefacedly makes
+excuses for his seeming recreancy, she bids him
+marry his "ugly bride" in accents of scorn, and then
+bursts into tears, which she only consents to wipe
+away when he declares that his heart will always
+be hers and that he will never marry the Italian
+Princess.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_165"></a>But Margaret of Savoy was not after all to be
+Queen of France. She was, as it proved, merely a
+pawn in the Cardinal's deep game. It was a Spanish
+alliance that he sought for his young King; and
+when, at the eleventh hour, an ambassador came
+hurriedly to Lyons to offer the Infanta's hand, the
+Savoy Duke and his sister, the Princess, had perforce
+to return to Italy "empty-handed."</p>
+<p>There was at least a time of respite now for Louis
+and Marie, and as they rode back to Paris, side by
+side, chatting gaily and exchanging sweet confidences,
+the sun once more shone on the happiest
+young people in all France. Then followed a period
+of blissful days, of dances and f&ecirc;tes, in brilliant
+succession, in which the lovers were inseparable;
+above all, of long rambles together, when, "the
+world forgetting," they could live in the happy
+present, whatever the future might have in store
+for them.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the negotiations for the Spanish
+marriage were ripening fast. Louis and Marie again
+appeal, first to the Cardinal, then to the Queen, to
+sanction their union, but to no purpose; both are
+inflexible. Their foolish romance must come to an
+end. As a last resource Marie flies to the King,
+with tender pleadings and tears, begging him not to
+desert her; to which he answers that no power on
+earth shall make him wed the Infanta. "You
+alone," he swears, "shall wear the crown of Queen";
+and in token of his love he buys for her the pearls
+that were the most treasured belongings of the exiled
+Stuart Queen, Henrietta Maria. The lovers part
+<a name="Page_166"></a>in tears, and the following day Marie receives
+orders
+to leave Paris and to retire to La Rochelle.</p>
+<p>At every stage of her journey she was overtaken
+by messengers bearing letters from Louis, full of love
+and protestations of unflinching loyalty; and when
+Louis moved with his Court to Bayonne, the lovers
+met once more to mingle their tears. But Louis,
+ever fickle, was already wavering again. "If I must
+marry the Infanta," he said, "I suppose I must.
+But I shall never love any but you."</p>
+<p>Marie now realised that this was to be the end.
+In face of a lover so weak, and a fate so inflexible,
+what could she do but submit? And it was with a
+proud but breaking heart that she wrote a few days
+later to tell Louis that she wished him not to write to
+her again and that she would not answer his letters.
+One June day news came to her that her lover was
+married and that "he was very much in love with the
+Infanta"; and even her pride, crushed as it was,
+could not restrain her from writing to her sister,
+Hortense, "Say everything you can that is horrid
+about him. Point out all his faults to me, that I
+may find relief for my aching heart." When, a few
+months later, Marie saw the King again, he received
+her almost as a stranger, and had the bad taste to
+sing the praises of his Queen.</p>
+<p>But Marie Mancini was the last girl in all France
+to wed herself long to grief or an outraged vanity.
+There were other lovers by the score among whom
+she could pick and choose. She was more lovely
+now than when the recreant Louis first succumbed to
+her charms&#8212;with a ripened witchery of black eyes,
+<a name="Page_167"></a>red lips, the flash of pearly teeth revealed by
+every
+dazzling smile, with glorious black hair, the grace
+of a fawn, and a "voluptuous fascination" which no
+man could resist.</p>
+<p>Prince Charles of Lorraine was her veriest slave,
+but Mazarin would have none of him. Prince
+Colonna, Grand Constable of Naples, was more
+fortunate when he in turn came a-wooing. He bore
+the proudest name in Italy, and he had wealth, good-looks,
+and high connections to lend a glamour to
+his birth. The Cardinal smiled on his suit, and
+Marie, since she had no heart to give, willingly
+gave her hand.</p>
+<p>Louis himself graced the wedding with his
+presence; and we are told, as the white-faced bride
+"said the 'yes' which was to bind her to a stranger,
+her eyes, with an indescribable expression, sought
+those of the King, who turned pale as he met them."</p>
+<p>Over the rest of Marie Mancini's chequered life we
+must hasten. After a few years of wedded life with
+her Italian Prince, "Colonna's early passion for his
+beautiful wife was succeeded by a distaste amounting
+to hatred. He disgusted her with his amours; and
+when she ventured to protest against his infidelity,
+he tried to poison her." This crowning outrage
+determined Marie to fly, and, in company with her
+sister, Hortense, who had fled to her from the
+brutality of her own husband, she made her escape
+one dark night to Civita Vecchia, where a boat was
+awaiting the runaways.</p>
+<p>Hotly pursued on land and sea, narrowly escaping
+shipwreck, braving hardships, hunger, and hourly
+<a name="Page_168"></a>danger of capture, the fugitives at last reached
+Marseilles
+where Marie (Hortense now seeking a refuge
+in Savoy) began those years of wandering and
+adventure, the story of which outstrips fiction.</p>
+<p>Now we find her seeking asylum at convents from
+Aix to Madrid; now queening it at the Court of
+Savoy, with Duke Charles Emmanuel for lover;
+now she is dazzling Madrid with the Almirante of
+Castille and many another high-placed worshipper
+dancing attendance on her; and now she is in
+Rome, turning the heads of grave cardinals with her
+witcheries. Sometimes penniless and friendless, at
+others lapped in luxury; but carrying everywhere in
+her bosom the English pearls, the last gift of her
+false and frail Louis.</p>
+<p>Thus, through the long, troubled years, until old-age
+crept on her, the Cardinal's niece wandered, a
+fugitive, over the face of Europe, alternately caressed
+and buffeted by fortune, until "at long last" the
+end came and brought peace with it. As she lay
+dying in the house of a good Samaritan at Pisa, with
+no other hand to minister to her, she called for pen
+and paper, and with failing hand wrote her own
+epitaph, surely the most tragic ever penned&#8212;"Marie
+Mancini Colonna&#8212;Dust and Ashes."</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_169"></a>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+<h2>BIANCA, GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY</h2>
+<br>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><a name="img001"></a><img
+ style="width: 295px; height: 435px;" alt="Bianco Capello Bonaventuri"
+ title="Bianco Capello Bonaventuri" src="images/court001.jpg"><br>
+</div>
+<div style="text-align: center;">
+<h5>BIANCA CAPELLO BONAVENTURI.</h5>
+</div>
+<p>More than three centuries have gone since Florence
+made merry over the death of her Grand Duchess,
+Bianca. It was an occasion for rejoicing; her name
+was bandied from lips to lips&#8212;"La Pessima
+Bianca"; jeers and laughter followed her to her
+unmarked grave in the Church of San Lorenzo.
+But through the ages her picture has come down to
+us as she strutted on the world's stage in all her
+pride and beauty, with a vividness which few better
+women of her time retain.</p>
+<p>It was in the year 1548, when our boy-King, the
+sixth Edward, was fresh to his crown, that Bianca
+Capello was cradled in the palace of her father, one
+of the greatest men of Venice, Senator and Privy
+Councillor. As a child she was as beautiful as she
+was wilful; the pride of her father, the despair of his
+wife, her stepmother&#8212;her little head full of romance,
+her heart full of rebellion against any kind of discipline
+or restraint.</p>
+<p>Before she had left the schoolroom Capello's
+daughter was, by common consent, the fairest girl
+in her native city, with a beauty riper than her years.
+<a name="Page_170"></a>Tall, and with a well-developed figure of
+singular
+grace, she carried her head as proudly as any
+Queen. Her fair hair fell in a rippling cascade far
+below her waist; her face, hands, and throat, we are
+told, were "white as lilies," save for the delicate
+rose-colour that tinted her cheeks. Her eyes were
+large and dark, and of an almost dazzling brilliance;
+and her full, pouting lips were red and fragrant
+as a rose.</p>
+<p>Such was Bianca Capello on the threshold of
+womanhood, as you may see her pictured to-day in
+Bronzino's miniature at the British Museum, with a
+loveliness which set the hearts of the Venetian
+gallants a-flutter before our Shakespeare was in his
+cradle. She might, if she would, have mated with
+almost any noble in Tuscany, had not her foolish,
+wayward fancy fallen on Pietro Bonaventuri, a handsome
+young clerk in Salviati's bank, whose eyes had
+often strayed from his ledgers to follow her as, in the
+company of her maid, the Senator's daughter took
+her daily walk past his office window.</p>
+<p>At sight of so fair a vision Pietro was undone; he
+fell violently in love with her long before he exchanged
+a word with her, and although no one knew
+better than he the gulf that separated the daughter
+of a nobleman and a Senator from the drudge of the
+quill, he determined to win her. Youth and good-looks
+such as his, with plenty of assurance to support
+them, had done as much for others, and they should
+do it for him. How they first met we know not, but
+we know that shortly after this momentous meeting
+Bianca had completely lost her heart to the knight
+<a name="Page_171"></a>of the quill, with the handsome face, the dark,
+flashing
+eyes, and the courtly manner.</p>
+<p>Other meetings followed&#8212;secret rendezvous
+arranged by the duenna herself in return for liberal
+bribes&#8212;to keep which Bianca would steal out of her
+father's palace at dead of night, leaving the door
+open behind her to ensure safe return before dawn.
+On one such occasion, so the story runs, Bianca
+returned to find the door closed against her by a too
+officious hand. She dared not wake the sleepers to
+gain admittance&#8212;that would be to expose her secret
+and to cover herself with disgrace&#8212;and in her fears
+and alarm she fled back to her lover.</p>
+<p>However this may be, we know that, for some
+urgent reason or other, the young lovers disappeared
+one night together from Venice and made their way
+to Florence to find a refuge under the roof of Pietro's
+parents. Here a terrible disillusion met Bianca at
+the threshold. Her husband&#8212;for, on the runaway
+journey, Pietro had secured the friendly services of
+a village priest to marry them&#8212;had told her that he
+was the son of noble parents, kin to his employers,
+the Salviatis. The home to which he now introduced
+her was little better than a hovel, with poverty
+looking out of its windows.</p>
+<p>Here indeed was a sorry home-coming for the
+new-made bride, daughter of the great Capello!
+There was not even a drudge to do the housework,
+which Bianca was compelled to share with her
+bucolic mother-in-law. It is even said that she was
+compelled to do laundry-work in order to keep the
+domestic purse supplied. Her husband had forfeited
+<a name="Page_172"></a>his meagre salary; she had equally sacrificed
+the
+fortune left to her by her mother. Sordid, grinding
+poverty stared both in the face.</p>
+<p>To return to her own home in Venice was
+impossible. So furious were her father and stepmother
+at her escapade that a large reward was
+advertised for the capture of her husband, "alive or
+dead," and a sentence of death had been procured
+from the Council of Ten in the event of his arrest.
+More than this, a sentence of banishment was pronounced
+against Pietro and Bianca; the maid who
+had connived at their illicit wooing and flight paid
+for her treachery with her life; and Pietro's uncle
+ended his days in a loathsome dungeon.</p>
+<p>Such was the vengeance taken by Bartolomeo
+Capello. As for the runaways, they spent a long
+honeymoon in concealment and hourly dread of the
+fate that hung over them. It was well known, however,
+in Florence where they were in hiding; and
+curious crowds were drawn to the Bonaventuri hovel
+to catch a glimpse of the heroes of a scandal with
+which all Italy was ringing. Thus it was that
+Francesco de Medici first set eyes on the woman
+who was to play so great a part in his life.</p>
+<p>There could be no greater contrast than that
+between Francesco de Medici, heir to the Tuscan
+Grand Dukedom, and the beautiful young wife of
+the bank-clerk, now playing the r&ocirc;le of maid-of-all-work
+and charwoman. It is said that Francesco
+was a madman; and indeed what we know of him
+makes this description quite plausible. He was a
+man of black brow and violent temper, repelling alike
+<a name="Page_173"></a>in appearance and manner. He was, we are told,
+"more of a savage than a civilised human being."
+His food was deluged with ginger and pepper; his
+favourite fare was raw eggs filled with red pepper,
+and raw onions, of which he ate enormous quantities.
+He drank iced water by the gallon, and slept between
+frozen sheets. He was a man, moreover, of evil life,
+familiar with every form of vicious indulgence. His
+only redeeming feature was a love of art, which
+enriched the galleries of Florence.</p>
+<p>Such was the Medici&#8212;half-ogre, half-madman,
+who, riding one day through a Florence slum, saw
+at the window of a mean dwelling the beautiful face
+of Bianca Bonaventuri, and rode on leaving his
+heart behind. Here indeed was a dainty dish to set
+before his jaded appetite. The owner of that fair
+face, with the crimson lips and the black, flashing
+eyes, must be his. On the following day a great
+Court lady, the Marchesa Mondragone, presents
+herself at the Bonaventuri door, with smiles and
+gracious words, bearing an invitation to Court for the
+lady of the window. "Impossible," bluntly answers
+Signora Bonaventuri; her daughter-in-law has no
+clothes fit to be seen at Court. "But," persists the
+Marchesa, "that is a matter that can easily be
+arranged. It will be a pleasure to me to supply
+the necessary outfit, if the Signora and her daughter-in-law
+will but come to-morrow to the Mondragone
+Palace." The bride, when consulted, is not unwilling;
+and the following day, in company with
+her mother-in-law, she is effusively received by the
+Marchesa, and is feasting her eyes on exquisite
+<a name="Page_174"></a>robes and the glitter of rare gems, among which
+she
+is invited to make her choice. A moment later
+Francesco enters, and with courtly grace is kissing
+the hand of his new divinity....</p>
+<p>Then followed secret meetings such as marked
+Bianca's first unhappy wooing in Venice&#8212;hours of
+rapture for the Tuscan Duke, of flattered submission
+by the runaway bride; and within a few weeks we
+find Bianca installed in a palace of her own with
+Francesco's guards and equipage ever at its door,
+while his newly made bride, Giovanna, Archduchess
+of Austria, kept her lonely vigil in the apartments
+which so seldom saw her husband.</p>
+<p>Francesco, indeed, had no eyes or thought for
+any but the lovely woman who had so completely
+enslaved him. As for her, condemn her as we must,
+much can be pleaded in extenuation of her conduct.
+She had been basely deceived and betrayed. On
+the one side was a life of sordid poverty and
+drudgery, with a husband for whom she had now
+nothing but dislike and contempt; on the other was
+the ardent homage of the future ruler of Tuscany,
+with its accompaniment of splendour, luxury, and
+power. A fig for love! ambition should now rule
+her life. She would drain the cup of pleasure,
+though the dregs might be bitter to the taste.</p>
+<p>She was now in the very prime of her beauty, and
+a Queen in all but the name. Between her and her
+full Queendom were but two obstacles&#8212;her lover's
+plain, unattractive wife, and her own worthless
+husband; and of these obstacles one was soon to be
+removed from her path.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_175"></a>Pietro, who had been made chamberlain to the
+Tuscan Court, was more than content that his wife
+should go her own way, so long as he was allowed
+to go his. He was kept very agreeably occupied
+with love affairs of his own. The richest widow in
+Florence, Cassandra Borgianni, was eager to lavish
+her smiles and favours on him; and the knowledge
+that two of his predecessors in her affection had
+fallen under the assassin's knife only lent zest to a
+love adventure which was after his heart. Warnings
+of the fate that might await him in turn fell on deaf
+ears. When his wife ventured to point out the
+danger he retorted, "If you say another word I will
+cut your throat." The following night as he was
+returning from a visit to the widow, a dagger was
+sheathed in his heart, and Pietro's amorous race
+was run.</p>
+<p>Such was the end of the bank-clerk and his
+eleventh-hour glories and love adventures. Now
+only Giovanna remained to block the way to the
+pinnacle of Bianca's ambition; and her health was so
+frail that the waiting might not be long. Giovanna
+had provided no successor to her husband (who had
+now succeeded to his Grand Dukedom); if Bianca
+could succeed where the Grand Duchess had failed,
+she could at least ensure that a son of hers would
+one day rule over Tuscany.</p>
+<p>Thus one August day in 1576 the news flashed
+round Florence that a male child had been born in
+the palace on the Via Maggiore. Francesco was
+in the "seventh heaven" of delight. Here at last
+was the long-looked-for inheritor of his honours&#8212;the
+<a name="Page_176"></a>son who was to perpetuate the glories of the
+Medici and to thwart his brother, the Cardinal, who
+had so confidently counted on the succession for
+himself. And Madame Bianca professed herself
+equally delighted, although her pleasure was qualified
+by fear.</p>
+<p>She had played her part with consummate cleverness;
+but there were two women who knew the true
+story of the birth of the child, which had been
+smuggled into the palace from a Florence slum.
+One was the changeling's mother, a woman of the
+people, whom a substantial bribe had induced to
+part with her new-born infant; the other was
+Bianca's waiting woman. These witnesses to the
+imposture must be silenced effectually.</p>
+<p>Hired assassins made short work of the mother.
+The waiting-maid was "left for dead" in a mountain-pass,
+to which she had been lured; but she survived
+long enough at least to communicate her secret to
+the Grand Duke's brother, the Cardinal Ferdinand
+de Medici.</p>
+<p>Bianca was now in a parlous plight. At any
+moment her enemy, the Cardinal, might betray her
+to her lover, and bring the carefully planned edifice
+of her fortunes tumbling about her ears. But she
+proved equal even to this emergency. Taking her
+courage in both hands, she herself confessed the
+fraud to the Grand Duke, who not only forgave her
+(so completely was he under the spell of her beauty)
+but insisted on calling the gutter-child his son.</p>
+<p>The tables, however, were soon to be turned on
+her, for Giovanna, who had long despaired of provid<a name="Page_177"></a>ing
+an heir to her husband, gave birth a few months
+later to a male child. Florence was jubilant, for the
+Grand Duchess was as beloved as her rival was
+detested; and the christening of the heir was made
+the occasion of festivities and rejoicing. Bianca's
+day of triumph seemed at last to be over. For a
+time she left Florence to hide her humiliation; but
+within a year she was back again, to be received with
+open arms of welcome by the Duke. During her
+absence she had made peace with her family, and
+when her father and brother came to Florence to
+visit her, they were received by Francesco with regal
+entertainments, and sent away loaded with presents
+and honours.</p>
+<p>Bianca had now reached the zenith of her power
+and splendour. Before she had been back many
+months the Grand Duchess died, to the undisguised
+relief of her husband, who hastened from her funeral
+to the arms of her rival. Her position was now
+secure, unassailable; and before Giovanna had been
+two months in the family vault, Bianca was secretly
+married to her Grand ducal lover.</p>
+<p>Florence was furious. But what mattered that?
+The Venetian Senate had recognised Bianca as a
+true daughter of the Republic. She was the legal
+wife of the ruler of Tuscany. She was Grand
+Duchess at last, and she meant all the world to know
+it. That she was cordially hated by her husband's
+subjects, that the air was full of stories of her extravagance,
+her intemperance, and her cruelty, gave
+her no moment's unhappiness. For eight years she
+reigned as Queen, wielding the sceptre her husband's
+<a name="Page_178"></a>hands were too weak or indifferent to hold.
+Giovanna's
+son had followed his mother to the grave;
+and the child of the slums, who had been so
+fruitlessly smuggled into her palace, had been
+legitimated.</p>
+<p>The only thorn now left in her bed of roses was
+the enmity of the Grand Duke's brother, the Cardinal;
+and her greatest ambition was to win him to
+her side. In the autumn of 1787 he was invited to
+Florence, and as the culmination of a series of
+festivities, a grand banquet was given, at which he
+had the place of honour, at her right hand. The
+feast was drawing near to its end. Bianca, with
+sparkling eyes and flushed face, looking lovelier
+than she had ever looked before, was at her happiest,
+for the Cardinal had at last succumbed to her bright
+eyes and honeyed words. It was the crowning
+moment of her many triumphs, when life left nothing
+more to desire.</p>
+<p>Then it was, at the supreme moment, that tragedy
+in its most terrible form fell on the scene of festivity
+and mirth. While Bianca was smiling her sweetest
+on the Cardinal she was seized by violent pains,
+"her mouth foams, her face is distorted by agony;
+she shrieks aloud that she is dying. Francesco tries
+to go to her aid, but his steps are suddenly arrested.
+He too is seized by the same terrible anguish. A
+few hours later both she and he breathe their last
+breath."</p>
+<p>"Poison" was the word which ran through the
+palace and soon through Florence from blanched
+lips to blanched lips. Some said it was the Cardinal
+<a name="Page_179"></a>who had done the deed; others whispered stories
+of
+a poisoned tart designed by Bianca for the Cardinal,
+who refused to be tempted. Whereupon the Grand
+Duke had eaten of it, and Bianca, "seeing that her
+plot had so tragically miscarried, seized the tart from
+her husband's hand and ate what was left of it."</p>
+<p>The truth will never be known. What we do
+know is that within a few hours of the last joke and
+the last drained glass of that fatal banquet the bodies
+of Francesco and Bianca were lying in death side
+by side in an adjacent room, the door of which was
+locked against the eyes of the curious&#8212;even against
+the physicians.</p>
+<p>In the solemn lying-in-state that followed Bianca
+had no place. Francesco alone, by his brother's
+orders, wore his crown in death. As for Bianca, her
+body was hurried away and flung into the common
+vault of San Lorenzo, with the light of two yellow
+wax torches to bear it company, and the jibes and
+jeers of Florence for its only requiem.<br>
+</p>
+<p style="text-align: center;"><a name="img008"></a><img
+ style="width: 270px; height: 394px;"
+ alt="Francesco I., Grand Duke of Tuscany."
+ title="Francesco I., Grand Duke of Tuscany." src="images/court008.jpg"><br>
+</p>
+<h5>FRANCESCO I., GRAND DUKE OF TUSCANY.</h5>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_180"></a>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+<h2>RICHELIEU, THE ROU&Eacute;</h2>
+<p>In the drama of the French Court many a fine-feathered
+villain "struts his brief hour" on the stage,
+dazzling eyes by his splendour, and shocking a world
+none too easily shocked in those days of easy morals
+by his profligacy; but it would be difficult among all
+these gilded rakes to find a match for the Duc de
+Richelieu, who carried his villainies through little
+less than a century of life.</p>
+<p>Born in 1696, when Louis XIV. had still nearly
+twenty years of his long reign before him, Louis
+Fran&ccedil;ois Armand Duplessis, Duc de Richelieu, survived
+to hear the rumblings which heralded the
+French Revolution ninety-two years later; and for
+three-quarters of a century to be known as the most
+accomplished and heartless rou&eacute; in all France.
+Bearer of a great name, and inheritor of the splendours
+and riches of his great-uncle, the Cardinal,
+who was Louis XII.'s right-hand man, and, in his
+day, the most powerful subject in Europe, the Duc
+was born with the football of fortune at his feet;
+and probably no man who has ever lived so shamefully
+prostituted such magnificent opportunities and
+gifts.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_181"></a>As a boy, still in his teens, he had begun to
+play
+the r&ocirc;le of Don Juan at the Court of the child-King,
+Louis XV. The most beautiful women at the
+Court, we are told, went crazy over the handsome
+boy, who bore the most splendid name in France;
+and thus early his head was turned by flatteries and
+attentions which followed him almost to the grave.</p>
+<p>The young Duchesse de Bourgogne, the King's
+mother, made love to him, to the scandal of the
+Court; and from Princesses of the Blood Royal to
+the humblest serving-maid, there was scarcely a
+woman at Court who would not have given her eyes
+for a smile from the Duc de Fronsac, as he was then
+known.</p>
+<p>How he revelled in his conquests he makes
+abundantly clear in the Memoirs he left behind him&#8212;surely
+the most scandalous ever written&#8212;in which
+he recounts his love affairs, in long sequence, with
+a cold-blooded heartlessness which shocks the reader
+to-day, so long after lover and victims have been
+dust. He revels in describing the artifices by which
+he got the most unassailable of women into his power&#8212;such
+as the young and beautiful Madame Michelin,
+whose religious scruples proved such a frail
+barrier against the assaults of the young Lothario.
+He chuckles with a diabolical pride as he tells us how
+he played off one mistress against another; how he
+made one liaison pave the way to its successor; and
+how he abandoned each in turn when it had served
+its purpose, and betrayed, one after another, the
+women who had trusted to his nebulous sense of
+honour.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_182"></a>A profligate so tempted as the Duc de
+Richelieu
+was from his earliest years, one can understand,
+however much we may condemn; but for the man
+who conducted his love affairs with such heartlessness
+and dishonour no language has words of execration
+and contempt to describe him.</p>
+<p>From his earliest youth there was no "game" too
+high for our Don Juan to fly at. Long before he
+had reached manhood he counted his lady-loves by
+the score; and among them were at least three
+Royal Princesses, Mademoiselle de Charolais, and
+two of the Regent's own daughters, the Duchesse de
+Berry and Mademoiselle de Valois, later Duchess
+of Modena, who, in their jealousy, were ready to
+"tear each other's eyes out" for love of the Duc.
+Quarrels between the rival ladies were of everyday
+occurrence; and even duels were by no means
+unknown.</p>
+<p>When, for instance, the Duc wearied of the lovely
+Madame de Polignac, this lady was so inflamed by
+hatred of her successor in his affections, the Marquise
+de Nesle, that she challenged her to a duel to
+the death in the Bois de Boulogne. When Madame
+de Polignac, after a fierce exchange of shots, saw her
+rival stretched at her feet, she turned furiously on
+the wounded woman. "Go!" she shrieked. "I
+will teach you to walk in the footsteps of a woman
+like me! If I had the traitor here, I would blow
+his brains out!" Whereupon, Madame de Nesle,
+fainting as she was from loss of blood, retorted that
+her lover was worthy that even more noble blood
+than hers should be shed for him. "He is," she said
+<a name="Page_183"></a>to the few onlookers who had hurried to the
+scene
+on hearing the shots, "the most amiable <i>seigneur</i> of
+the Court. I am ready to shed for him the last drop
+of blood in my veins. All these ladies try to catch
+him, but I hope that the proofs I have given of my
+devotion will win him for myself without sharing with
+anyone. Why should I hide his name? He is the
+Duc de Richelieu&#8212;yes, the Duc de Richelieu, the
+eldest son of Venus and Mars!"</p>
+<p>Such was the devotion which this heartless profligate
+won from some of the most beautiful and
+highly placed ladies of France. What was the secret
+of the spell he cast over them it is difficult to say.
+It is true that he was a handsome man, as his
+portraits show, but there were men quite as handsome
+at the French Court; he was courtly and
+accomplished, but he had many rivals as clever and
+as skilled in courtly arts as himself. His power
+must, one thinks, have lain in that strange magnetism
+which women seem so powerless to resist in
+men, and which outweighs all graces of mind and
+physical perfections.</p>
+<p>The Duc's career, however, was not one unbroken
+dallying with love. Thrice, at least, he was sent
+to cool his ardour within the walls of the Bastille&#8212;on
+one occasion as the result of a duel with the
+Comte de Gac&eacute;. His lady-loves were desolate at
+the cruel fate which had overtaken their idol. They
+fell on their knees at the Regent's feet, and, with
+tears streaming down their pretty cheeks, pleaded
+for his freedom. Two of the Royal Princesses,
+both disguised as Sisters of Charity, visited the
+<a name="Page_184"></a>prisoner daily in his dungeon, carrying with
+them
+delicacies to tempt his appetite, and consolation to
+cheer his captivity.</p>
+<p>In vain did Duc and Comte both declare that they
+had never fought a duel; and when, in the absence
+of proof, the Regent insisted that their bodies should
+be examined for the convicting wounds, the impish
+Richelieu came triumphantly through the ordeal as
+the result of having his wounds covered with pink
+taffeta and skilfully painted!</p>
+<p>It was a more serious matter that sent him again
+to the Bastille in 1718. False to his country as to
+the victims of his fascinations, he had been plotting
+with Spain, France's bitterest enemy, for the seizure
+of the Regent and the carrying him off across the
+Pyrenees; and certain incriminating letters sent to
+him by Cardinal Alberoni had been intercepted, and
+were in the Regent's hands. The Regent's daughter,
+Mademoiselle de Valois, warned her lover of
+his danger, but too late. Before he could escape,
+he was arrested, and with an escort of archers was
+safely lodged in the Bastille.</p>
+<p>Our Lothario was now indeed in a parlous plight.
+Lodged in the deepest and most loathsome dungeon
+of the Bastille&#8212;a dungeon so damp that within a
+few hours his clothes were saturated&#8212;without even
+a chair to sit on or a bed to lie on, with legions of
+hungry rats for company, he was now face to face
+with almost certain death. The Regent, whose love
+affairs he had thwarted a score of times, and who
+thus had no reason to love the profligate Duc, vowed
+that his head should pay the price of his treason.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_185"></a>Once more the Court ladies were reduced to
+hysterics and despair, and forgot their jealousies
+in a common appeal to the Regent for clemency.
+Mademoiselle de Valois was driven to distraction;
+and when tears and pleadings failed to soften her
+father's heart, she declared in the hearing of the
+Court that she would commit suicide unless her lover
+was restored to liberty. In company with her rival,
+Mademoiselle de Charolais, she visited the dungeon
+in the dark night hours, taking flint and steel, candles
+and bonbons, to weep with the captive.</p>
+<p>She squandered two hundred thousand livres in
+attempts to bribe his guards, but all to no purpose:
+and it was not until after six months of durance that
+the Regent at last yielded&#8212;moved partly by his
+daughter's tears and threats and partly by the pleadings
+of the Cardinal-Archbishop of Paris&#8212;and the
+prisoner was released, on condition that the Cardinal
+and the Duchesse de Richelieu would be responsible
+for his custody and good behaviour.</p>
+<p>A few days later we find the irresponsible
+Richelieu climbing over the garden-walls of his new
+"prison" at Conflans, racing through the darkness
+to Paris behind swift horses, and making love to the
+Regent's own mistresses and his daughter!</p>
+<p>But such facilities for dalliance with the Regent's
+daughter were soon to be brought to an end.
+Mademoiselle de Valois, in order to ensure her
+lover's freedom, had at last consented to accept the
+hand of the Duke of Modena, an alliance which she
+had long fought against; and before the Duc had
+been a free man again many weeks she paid this part
+<a name="Page_186"></a>of his ransom by going into exile, and to an
+odious
+wedded life, in a far corner of Italy&#8212;much, it may
+be imagined, to the Regent's relief, for his daughters
+and their love affairs were ever a thorn in his side.</p>
+<p>It was not long, however, before the new Duchess
+of Modena began to sigh for her distant lover, and to
+bombard him with letters begging him to come to
+her. "I cannot live without your love," she wrote.
+"Come to me&#8212;only, come in disguise, so that no
+one can recognise you."</p>
+<p>This was indeed an adventure after the Lothario
+Duc's heart&#8212;an adventure with love as its reward
+and danger as its spur. And thus it was that, a few
+weeks after the Duchess had sent her invitation, two
+travel-stained pedlars, with packs on their backs,
+entered the city of Modena to find customers for their
+books and phamphlets. At the small hostelry whose
+hospitality they sought the hawkers gave their names
+as Gasparini and Romano, names which masked the
+identities of the knight-errant Duc and his friend,
+La Fosse, respectively.</p>
+<p>The following morning behold the itinerant
+hawkers in the palace grounds, their wares spread
+out to tempt the Court ladies on their way to Mass,
+when the Duchess herself passed their way and
+deigned to stop to converse graciously with the
+strangers. To her inquiries they answered that they
+came from Piedmont; and their curious jargon of
+French and Italian lent support to the story. After
+inspecting their wares she asked for a certain book.
+"Alas! Madame," Gasparini answered, "I have not
+a copy here, but I have one at my inn." And
+<a name="Page_187"></a>bidding him bring the volume to her at the
+palace,
+the great lady resumed her devout journey to Mass.</p>
+<p>A few hours later Gasparini presented himself at
+the palace with the required volume, and was
+ushered into the august presence of the Duchess. A
+moment later, on the closing of the door, the Royal
+lady was in the "hawker's" arms, her own flung
+around his neck, as with tears of joy she welcomed
+the lover who had come to her in such strange guise
+and at such risk.</p>
+<p>A few stolen moments of happiness was all the
+lovers dared now to allow themselves. The Duke
+of Modena was in the palace, and the situation was
+full of danger. But on the morrow he was going
+away on a hunting expedition, and then&#8212;well, then
+they might meet without fear.</p>
+<p>On the following day, the coast now clear, behold
+our "hawker" once more at the palace door, with a
+bundle of books under his arm for the inspection of
+Her Highness, and being ushered into the Duchess's
+reading-room, full of souvenirs of the happy days
+they had spent together in distant Paris and Versailles.
+Among them, most prized of all, was a lock
+of his own hair, enshrined on a small altar, and
+surmounted by a crown of interlocked hearts. This
+lock, the Duchess told him, she had kissed and wept
+over every day since they had parted.</p>
+<p>Each day now brought its hours of blissful meeting,
+so seemingly short that the Princess would
+throw her arms around her "hawker's" neck and
+implore him to stay a little longer. One day,
+however, he tarried too long; the Duke returned
+<a name="Page_188"></a>unexpectedly from his hunting, and before the
+lovers
+could part, he had entered the room&#8212;just in time to
+see the pedlar bowing humbly in farewell to his
+Duchess, and to hear him assure her that he
+would call again with the further books she wished
+to see.</p>
+<p>Certainly it was a strange spectacle to greet the
+eyes of a home-coming Duke&#8212;that of his lady
+closeted with a shabby pedlar of books; but at least
+there was nothing suspicious in it, and, getting into
+conversation with the "hawker," the Duke found
+him quite an entertaining fellow, full of news of what
+was going on in the world outside his small duchy.</p>
+<p>In his curious jargon of French and Italian,
+Gasparini had much to tell His Highness apart from
+book-talk. He entertained him with the latest
+scandals of the French Court; with gossip about
+well-known personages, from the Regent to Dubois.
+"And what about that rascal, the Duc de Richelieu?"
+asked the great man. "What tricks has he
+been up to lately?" "Oh," answered Gasparini,
+with a wink at the Duchess, who was crimson with
+suppressed laughter, "he is one of my best customers.
+Ah, Monsieur le Duc, he is a gay dog. I
+hear that all the women at the Court are madly in
+love with him; that the Princesses adore him, and
+that he is driving all the husbands to distraction."</p>
+<p>"Is it as bad as that?" asked the Duke, with a
+laugh. "He is a more dangerous fellow even than
+I thought. And what is his latest game?"</p>
+<p>"Oh," answered the hawker, "I am told that he
+has made a wager that he will come to Modena, in
+<a name="Page_189"></a>spite of you; and I shouldn't be at all
+surprised if
+he does!"</p>
+<p>"As for that," said the Duke, with a chuckle, "I
+am not afraid. I defy him to do his worst; and I
+am willing to wager that I shall be a match for him.
+However," he added, "you're an entertaining
+fellow; so come and see me again whenever you
+please."</p>
+<p>And thus, by the wish of the Duchess's husband
+himself, the ducal "hawker" became a daily visitor
+at the palace, entertaining His Highness with his
+chatter, and, when his back was turned, making love
+to his wife, and joining her in shrieks of laughter at
+his easy gullibility.</p>
+<p>Thus many happy weeks passed, Gasparini, the
+pedlar, selling few volumes, but reaping a rich harvest
+of stolen pleasure, and revelling in an adventure
+which added such a new zest to a life sated with
+more humdrum love-making. But even the Duchess's
+charms began to pall; the ladies he had left so disconsolate
+in Paris were inundating him with letters,
+begging him to return to them&#8212;letters, all forwarded
+to him from his ch&acirc;teau at Richelieu, where he was
+supposed to be in retreat. The lure was too strong
+for him; and, taking leave of the Duchess in floods
+of tears, he returned to his beloved Paris to fresh
+conquests.</p>
+<p>And thus it was with the gay Duc until the
+century that followed that of his birth was drawing
+to its close; until its sun was beginning to set in the
+blood of that Revolution, which, if he had lived but
+one year longer, would surely have claimed him as
+<a name="Page_190"></a>one of its first victims. Three wives he led to
+the
+altar&#8212;the last when he had passed into the eighties&#8212;but
+no marital duty was allowed to interfere with
+the amours which filled his life; and to the last no
+pity ever gave a pang to the "conscience" which
+allowed him to pick and fling away his flowers at
+will, and to trample, one after another, on the hearts
+that yielded to his love and trusted to his honour.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_191"></a>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+<h2>THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS</h2>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><img
+ style="width: 312px; height: 431px;"
+ alt="Caroline of Brunswick, wife of George IV."
+ title="Caroline of Brunswick, wife of George IV."
+ src="images/court009.jpg"><a name="img009"></a><br>
+<h5>CAROLINE OF BRUNSWICK, WIFE OF GEORGE IV.</h5>
+</div>
+<br>
+<p>It was an ill fate that brought Caroline, Princess of
+Brunswick-Wolfenb&uuml;ttel to England to be the bride
+of George, Prince of Wales, one April day in the
+year 1795; although probably no woman has ever
+set forth on her bridal journey with a lighter or
+prouder heart, for, as she said, "Am I not going to
+be the wife of the handsomest Prince in the world?"
+If she had any momentary doubt of this, a glance
+at the miniature she carried in her bosom reassured
+her; for the pictured face that smiled at her was
+handsome as that of an Apollo.</p>
+<p>No wonder the Princess's heart beat high with pride
+and pleasure during that last triumphal stage of her
+journey to her husband's arms; for he was not only
+the handsomest man, with "the best shaped leg in
+Europe," he was by common consent the "greatest
+gentleman" any Court could show. Picture him as
+he made his first appearance at a Court ball. "His
+coat," we are told, "was of pink silk, with white cuffs;
+his waistcoat of white silk, embroidered with various-coloured
+foil and adorned with a profusion of French
+paste. And his hat was ornamented with two rows
+<a name="Page_192"></a>of steel beads, five thousand in number, with a
+button
+and a loop of the same metal, and cocked in a new
+military style." See young "Florizel" as he makes
+his smiling and gracious progress through the
+avenues of courtiers; note the winsomeness of his
+smiles, the inimitable grace of his bows, his pleasant,
+courtly words of recognition, and say if ever Royalty
+assumed a form more agreeable to the eye and captivating
+to the senses.</p>
+<p>"Florizel" was indeed the most splendid Prince
+in the world, and the most "perfect gentleman." He
+was also, though his bride-to-be little knew it, the
+most dissolute man in Europe, the greatest gambler
+and voluptuary&#8212;a man who was as false to his
+friends as he was traitor to every woman who crossed
+his path, a man whom no appeal of honour or mercy
+could check in his selfish pursuit of pleasure.</p>
+<p>"I look through all his life," Thackeray says,
+"and recognise but a bow and a grin. I try and
+take him to pieces, and find silk stockings, padding,
+stays, a coat with frogs and a fur collar, a star and
+blue ribbon, a pocket handkerchief prodigiously
+scented, one of Truefitt's best nutty brown wigs reeking
+with oil, a set of teeth and a huge black stock,
+under-waistcoats, more under-waistcoats, and then&#8212;nothing.
+French ballet-dancers, French cooks,
+horse-jockeys, buffoons, procuresses, tailors, boxers,
+fencing-masters, china, jewel and gimcrack-merchants&#8212;these
+were his real companions."</p>
+<p>Such was the husband Princess Caroline came so
+light-heartedly, with laughter on her lips, from Brunswick
+to wed, little dreaming of the disillusion and
+<a name="Page_193"></a>tears that were to await her on the very
+threshold of
+the life to which she had looked forward with such
+high hopes.</p>
+<p>We get the first glimpse of Caroline some twelve
+years earlier, when Sir John Stanley, who was making
+the grand tour, spent a few weeks at her father's
+Court. He speaks of her as a "beautiful girl of fourteen,"
+and adds, "I did think and dream of her day
+and night at Brunswick, and for a year afterwards I
+saw her for hours three or fours times a week, but as a
+star out of my reach." Years later he met her again
+under sadly changed conditions. "One day only,"
+he writes, "when dining with her and her mother at
+Blackheath, she smiled at something which had
+pleased her, and for an instant only I could have
+fancied she had been the Caroline of fourteen years
+old&#8212;the lovely, pretty Caroline, the girl my eyes had
+so often rested on, with light and powdered hair
+hanging in curls on her neck, the lips from which only
+sweet words seemed as if they would flow, with looks
+animated, and always simply and modestly dressed."</p>
+<p>Lady Charlotte Campbell, too, gives us a glimpse
+of her in these early and happier years, before sorrow
+had laid its defacing hand on her. "The Princess
+was in her early youth a pretty girl," Lady Charlotte
+says, "with fine light hair&#8212;very delicately formed
+features, and a fine complexion&#8212;quick, glancing,
+penetrating eyes, long cut and rather small in the
+head, which gave them much expression; and a
+remarkably delicately formed mouth."</p>
+<p>It was in no happy home that the Princess had
+been cradled one May day in 1768. Her father,
+<a name="Page_194"></a>Charles William, Duke of Brunswick, was an
+austere
+soldier, too much absorbed in his military life and
+his mistress, to give much thought to his daughters.
+Her mother, the Duchess Augusta, sister of our own
+George III., was weak and small-minded, too much
+occupied in self-indulgence and scandal-talking to
+trouble about the training of her children.</p>
+<p>Princess Caroline herself draws an unattractive
+picture of her home-life, in answer to Lady Charlotte
+Campbell's question, "Were you sorry to leave
+Brunswick?" "Not at all," was the answer; "I was
+sick tired of it, though I was sorry to leave my fader.
+I loved my fader dearly, better than any oder person.
+But dere were some unlucky tings in our Court which
+made my position difficult. My fader was most entirely
+attached to a lady for thirty years, who was in
+fact his mistress. She was the beautifullest creature
+and the cleverest, but, though my fader continued
+to pay my moder all possible respect, my poor moder
+could not suffer this attachment. And de consequence
+was, I did not know what to do between
+them; when I was civil to one, I was scolded by
+the other, and was very tired of being shuttlecock
+between them."</p>
+<p>But in spite of these unfortunate home conditions
+Caroline appears to have spent a fairly happy girlhood,
+thanks to her exuberant spirits; and such faults
+as she developed were largely due to the lack of
+parental care, which left her training to servants.
+Thus she grew up with quite a shocking disregard
+of conventions, running wild like a young filly, and
+finding her pleasure and her companions in undesir<a name="Page_195"></a>able
+directions. Strange stories are told of her
+girlish love affairs, which seem to have been indiscreet
+if nothing worse, while her beauty drew to her
+many a high-placed wooer, including the Prince of
+Orange and Prince George of Darmstadt, to all of
+whom she seems to have turned a cold shoulder.</p>
+<p>But the wilful Princess was not to be left mistress
+of her own destiny. One November day, in 1794,
+Lord Malmesbury arrived at the Brunswick Court
+to demand her hand for the Prince of Wales, whom
+his burden of debts and the necessity of providing
+an heir to the throne of England were at last driving
+reluctantly to the altar. And thus a new and dazzling
+future opened for her. To her parents nothing could
+have been more welcome than this prospect of a
+crown for their daughter; while to her it offered a
+release from a life that had become odious.</p>
+<p>"The Princess Caroline much embarrassed on my
+first being presented to her," Malmesbury enters in
+his diary&#8212;"pretty face, not expressive of softness&#8212;her
+figure not graceful, fine eyes, good hands, tolerable
+teeth, fair hair and light eyebrows, good bust,
+short, with what the French call 'des &eacute;paules impertinentes,'
+vastly happy with her future expectations."</p>
+<p>Such were Malmesbury's first impressions of the
+future Queen of England, whom it was his duty to
+prepare for her exalted station&#8212;a duty which he
+seems to have taken very seriously, even to the regulating
+of her toilette and her manners. Thus, a few
+days after setting eyes on her, his diary records:
+"She <i>will</i> call ladies whom she meets for the first
+time 'Mon coeur, ma ch&egrave;re, ma petite,' and I am
+<a name="Page_196"></a>obliged to rebuke and correct her." He lectures
+her
+on her undignified habit of whispering and giggling,
+and impresses on her the necessity of greater care in
+her attire, on more constant and thorough ablution,
+more frequent changes of linen, the care of her teeth,
+and so on&#8212;all of which admonitions she seems to
+have taken in excellent part, with demure promises
+of amendment, until he is impelled to write, "Princess
+Caroline improves very much on a closer acquaintance&#8212;cheerful
+and loves laughing. If she
+can get rid of her gossiping habit she will do
+very well."</p>
+<p>Thus a few months passed at the Brunswick Court.
+The ceremonial of betrothal took place in December&#8212;"Princess
+Caroline much affected, but replies distinctly
+and well"; the marriage-contract was signed,
+and finally on 28th March the Princess embarked
+for England on her journey to the unseen husband
+whose good-looks and splendour have filled her with
+such high expectations. That she had not yet
+learnt discretion, in spite of all Malmesbury's homilies,
+is proved by the fact that she spent the night
+on board in walking up and down the deck in the
+company of a handsome young naval officer, conduct
+which naturally gave cause for observation and suspicion
+in the affianced bride of the future King of
+England.</p>
+<p>It was well, perhaps, that she had snatched these
+few hours of innocent pleasure: for her first meeting
+with her future husband was well calculated to scatter
+all her rosy dreams. Arrived at last at St James's
+Palace, "I immediately notified the arrival to the
+<a name="Page_197"></a>King and Prince of Wales," says Malmesbury; "the
+last came immediately. I accordingly introduced
+the Princess Caroline to him. She very properly
+attempted to kneel to him. He raised her gracefully
+enough, and embraced her, said barely one word,
+turned round and retired to a distant part of the apartment,
+and calling to me said: 'Harris, I am not well;
+pray get me a glass of brandy.' I said, 'Sir, had
+you not better have a glass of water?' Upon which
+he, much out of humour, said with an oath: 'No; I
+will go directly to the Queen,' and away he went.
+The Princess, left during this short moment alone,
+was in a state of astonishment; and, on my joining
+her, said, '<i>Mon Dieu</i>, is the Prince always like
+that? I find him very fat, and not at all as handsome
+as his portrait.'"</p>
+<p>Such was the Princess's welcome to the arms of
+her handsome husband and to the Court over which
+she hoped to reign as Queen; nor did she receive
+much warmer hospitality from the Prince's family.
+The Queen, who had designed a very different bride
+for her eldest son, received her with scarcely disguised
+enmity, while the King, although, as he afterwards
+proved, kindly disposed towards her, treated
+her at first with an amiable indifference. And certainly
+her attitude seems to have been calculated
+to create an unfavourable impression on her new
+relatives and on the Court generally.</p>
+<p>At the banquet which followed her reception,
+Malmesbury says, "I was far from satisfied with
+the Princess's behaviour. It was flippant, rattling,
+affecting raillery and wit, and throwing out coarse,
+<a name="Page_198"></a>vulgar hints about Lady&#8212;&#8212;, who was present. The
+Prince was evidently disgusted, and this unfortunate
+dinner fixed his dislike, which, when left to herself,
+the Princess had not the talent to remove; but by
+still observing the same giddy manners and attempts
+at cleverness and coarse sarcasm, increased it till it
+became positive hatred."</p>
+<p>"What," as Thackeray asks, "could be expected
+from a wedding which had such a beginning&#8212;from
+such a bridegroom and such a bride? Malmesbury
+tells us how the Prince reeled into the Chapel Royal
+to be married on the evening of Wednesday, the 8th
+of April; and how he hiccuped out his vows of
+fidelity." "My brother," John, Duke of Bedford,
+records, "was one of the two unmarried dukes who
+supported the Prince at the ceremony, and he had
+need of his support; for my brother told me the
+Prince was so drunk that he could scarcely support
+himself from falling. He told my brother that he
+had drunk several glasses of brandy to enable him to
+go through the ceremony. There is no doubt that
+it was a <i>compulsory</i> marriage."</p>
+<p>With such an overture, we are not surprised to
+learn that the Royal bridegroom spent his wedding-night
+in a state of stupor on the floor of his bedroom;
+or that at dawn, when he had slept off the effects of his
+debauch, "pages heard cries proceeding from the
+nuptial chamber, and shortly afterwards saw the
+bridegroom rush out violently."</p>
+<p>Nor, we may be sure, was the Prince's undisguised
+hatred of his bride in any way mitigated by the stories
+which Lady Jersey and others of hex rivals poured into
+<a name="Page_199"></a>his willing ears&#8212;stories of her attachment to a
+young
+German Prince whom she was not allowed to marry;
+of a mysterious illness, followed by a few weeks'
+retreat; of that midnight promenade with the young
+naval officer; of assignations with Major Toebingen,
+the handsomest soldier in Europe, who so proudly
+wore the amethyst tie-pin she had presented to him&#8212;these
+and many another story which reflected none
+too well on her reputation before he had set eyes on
+her. But it needed no such whispered scandal to
+strengthen his hatred of a bride who personally
+repelled him, and who had been forced on him at a
+time when his heart was fully engaged with his lawful
+wedded wife, Mrs Fitzherbert, when it was not
+straying to Lady Jersey, to "Perdita" or others of
+his legion of lights-o'-love.</p>
+<p>From the first day the ill-fated union was doomed.
+One violent scene succeeded another, until, before
+she had been two months a wife, the Prince declared
+that he would no longer live with her. He would
+only wait until her child was born; then he would
+formally and finally leave her. Thus, three months
+after the birth of the Princess Charlotte, the deed of
+separation was signed, and Caroline was at last free
+to escape from a Court which she had grown to detest,
+with good reason, and from a husband whose brutalities
+and infidelities filled her with loathing.</p>
+<p>She carried with her, however, this consolation,
+that the "great, hearty people of England loved
+and pitied her." "God bless you! we will bring your
+husband back to you," was among the many cries
+that greeted her as she left the palace on her way to
+<a name="Page_200"></a>exile. But, to quote Thackeray again, "they
+could
+not bring that husband back; they could not cleanse
+that selfish heart. Was hers the only one he had
+wounded? Steeped in selfishness, impotent for
+faithful attachment and manly enduring love&#8212;had it
+not survived remorse, was it not accustomed to
+desertion?"</p>
+<p>For a time the outcast Princess, with her infant
+daughter, led a retired life amid the peace and beauty
+of Blackheath, where she lived as simply as any
+bourgeoise, playing the "lady bountiful" to the poor
+among her neighbours. Her chief pleasure seems
+to have been to surround herself with cottage babies,
+converting Montague House into a "positive nursery,
+littered up with cradles, swaddling-bands,
+feeding bottles, and other things of the kind."</p>
+<p>But even to this rustic retirement watchful eyes
+and slanderous tongues followed her; and it was not
+long before stories were passing from mouth to mouth
+in the Court of strange doings at Blackheath. The
+Princess, it was said, had become very intimate with
+Sir John Douglas and his lady, her near neighbours,
+and more especially with Sydney Smith, a good-looking
+naval captain, who shared the Douglas home,
+a man, moreover, with whom she had had suspicious
+relations at her father's Court many years earlier. It
+was rumoured that Captain Smith was a frequent
+and too welcome guest at Montague House, at hours
+when discreet ladies are not in the habit of receiving
+their male friends. Nor was the handsome captain
+the only friend thus unconventionally entertained.
+There was another good-looking naval officer, a
+<a name="Page_201"></a>Captain Manby, and also Sir Thomas Lawrence, the
+famous painter, both of whom were admitted to a
+suspicious intimacy with the Princess of Wales.</p>
+<p>These rumours, sufficiently disquieting in themselves,
+were followed by stories of the concealed birth
+of a child, who had come mysteriously to swell the
+numbers of the Princess's prot&eacute;g&eacute;s of the cr&egrave;che.
+Even King George, whose sympathy with his heir's
+ill-used wife was a matter of common knowledge,
+could not overlook a charge so grave as this. It
+must be investigated in the interests of the State, as
+well as of his family's honour; and, by his orders, a
+Commission of Peers was appointed to examine into
+the matter and ascertain the truth.</p>
+<p>The inquiry&#8212;the "Delicate Investigation" as it
+was appropriately called&#8212;opened in June, 1806, and
+witness after witness, from the Douglases to Robert
+Bidgood, a groom, gave evidence which more or less
+supported the charges of infidelity and concealment.
+The result of the investigation, however, was a verdict
+of acquittal, the Commissioners reporting that
+the Princess, although innocent, had been guilty of
+very indiscreet conduct&#8212;and this verdict the Privy
+Council confirmed.</p>
+<p>For the Princess it was a triumphant vindication,
+which was hailed with acclamation throughout the
+country. Even the Royal family showed their
+satisfaction by formal visits of congratulation to the
+Princess, from the King himself to the Duke of
+Cumberland who conducted his sister-in-law on a
+visit to the Court.</p>
+<p>But the days of Blackheath and the amateur
+<a name="Page_202"></a>nursery were at an end. The Princess returned to
+London, and found a more suitable home in Kensington
+Palace for some years, where she held her
+Court in rivalry of that of her husband at Carlton
+House. Here she was subjected to every affront
+and slight by the Prince and his set that the ingenuity
+of hatred could devise, and to crown her humiliation
+and isolation, her daughter Charlotte was taken from
+her and forbidden even to recognise her when their
+carriages passed in the street or park.</p>
+<p>Can we wonder that, under such remorseless persecutions,
+the Princess became more and more defiant;
+that she gave herself up to a life of recklessness and
+extravagance; that, more and more isolated from her
+own world, she sought her pleasure and her companions
+in undesirable quarters, finding her chief
+intimates in a family of Italian musicians; or that
+finally, heart-broken and despairing, she determined
+once for all to shake off the dust of a land that had
+treated her so cruelly?</p>
+<p>In August, 1814, with the approval of King and
+Parliament, the Princess left England to begin a
+career of amazing adventures and indiscr&eacute;tions, the
+story of which is one of the most remarkable in
+history.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_203"></a>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+<h2>THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS&#8212;<i>continued</i></h2>
+<p>When Caroline, Princess of Wales, shook the dust
+of England off her feet one August day in the year
+1814, it was only natural that her steps should first
+turn towards the Brunswick home which held for her
+at least a few happy memories, and where she hoped
+to find in sympathy and old associations some salve
+for her wounded heart.</p>
+<p>But the fever of restlessness was in her blood&#8212;the
+restlessness which was to make her a wanderer
+over the face of the earth for half a dozen years.
+The peace and solace she had looked for in Brunswick
+eluded her; and before many days had passed
+she was on her way through Switzerland to the sunny
+skies of Italy, where she could perhaps find in
+distraction and pleasure the anodyne which a life of
+retirement denied her. She was full of rebellion
+against fate, of hatred against her husband and his
+country which had treated her with such unmerited
+cruelty. She would defy fate; she would put a
+whole continent between herself and the nightmare
+life she had left behind, she hoped for ever. She
+would pursue and find pleasure at whatever cost.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_204"></a>In September, within five weeks of leaving
+England,
+we find her at Geneva, installed in a suite of
+rooms next to those occupied by Marie Louise, late
+Empress of France, a fugitive and exile like herself,
+and animated by the same spirit of reckless revolt
+against destiny&#8212;Marie Louise, we read, "making
+excursions like a lunatic on foot and on horseback,
+never even seeming to dream of making people
+remember that, before she became mixed up with a
+Corsican adventurer, she was an Archduchess"; the
+Princess of Wales, equally careless of her dignity
+and position, finding her pleasure in questionable
+company.</p>
+<p>"From the inn where she was stopping she heard
+music, and, quite unaccompanied, immediately entered
+a neighbouring house and disappeared in the
+medley of dancers." A few days later, at Lausanne,
+"she learned that a little ball was in progress at a
+house opposite the 'Golden Lion,' and she asked for
+an invitation. After dancing with everybody and
+anybody, she finished up by dancing a Savoyard
+dance, called a <i>fricass&eacute;e</i>, with a nobody. Madame
+de Corsal, who blushed and wept for the rest of the
+company, declares that it has made her ill, and that
+she feels that the honour of England has been compromised."
+Thus early did Caroline begin that
+career of indiscretion, to call it by no worse name,
+which made of her six years' exile "a long suicide of
+her reputation."</p>
+<p>In October we find the Princess entering Milan,
+with her retinue of ladies-in-waiting, chamberlains,
+equerry, page, courier, and coachman, and with
+<a name="Page_205"></a>William Austin for companion&#8212;a boy, now about
+thirteen, whom she treated as her son, and who was
+believed by many to be the child of her imprudence
+at Blackheath, although the Commission of the
+"Delicate Investigation" had pronounced that he
+was son of a poor woman at Deptford. At Milan,
+as indeed wherever she wandered in Italy, the
+"vagabond Princess" was received as a Queen.
+Count di Bellegarde, the Austrian Governor, was
+the first to pay homage to her; at the Scala Theatre,
+the same evening, her entry was greeted with
+thunders of applause, and whenever she appeared
+in the Milan streets it was to an accompaniment of
+doffed hats and cheers.</p>
+<p>One of her first visits was to the studio of Giuseppe
+Bossi, the famous and handsome artist, whom she
+requested to paint her portrait. "On Thursday,"
+Bossi records, "I sketched her successfully in the
+character of a Muse; then on Friday she came to
+show me her arms, of which she was, not without
+reason, decidedly vain&#8212;she is a gay and whimsical
+woman, she seems to have a good heart; at times she
+is ennuy&eacute;e through lack of occupation." On one
+occasion when she met in the studio some French
+ladies, two of whom had been mistresses of the King
+of Westphalia, the poor artist was driven to distraction
+by the chatter, the singing, and dancing, in which
+the Princess especially displayed her agility, until,
+as he pathetically says, "the house seemed possessed
+of the devil, and you can imagine with what kind of
+ease it was possible for me to work."</p>
+<p>Before leaving Milan the Princess gave a grand
+<a name="Page_206"></a>banquet to Bellegarde and a number of the
+principal
+men of the city&#8212;a feast which was to have very
+important and serious consequences, for it was at this
+banquet that General Pino, one of her guests, introduced
+to Caroline a new courier, a man who, though
+she little dreamt it at the time, was destined to play
+a very baleful part in her life.</p>
+<p>This new courier was a tall and strikingly handsome
+man, who had seen service in the Italian army,
+until a duel, in which he killed a superior officer,
+compelled him to leave it in disgrace. At the time he
+entered the Princess's service he was a needy adventurer,
+whose scheming brain and utter lack of
+principle were in the market for the highest bidder.
+"He is," said Baron Ompteda, "a sort of Apollo, of
+a superb and commanding appearance, more than
+six feet high; his physical beauty attracts all eyes.
+This man is called Pergami; he belongs to Milan,
+and has entered the Princess's service. The Princess,"
+he significantly adds, "is shunned by all the
+English people of rank; her behaviour has created
+the most marked scandal."</p>
+<p>Such was the man with whose life that of the
+Princess of Wales was to be so intimately and disastrously
+linked, and whose relations with her were to
+be displayed to a shocked world but a few years
+later. It was indeed an evil fate that brought this
+"superb Apollo" of the crafty brain and conscienceless
+ambition into the life of the Princess at the
+high tide of her revolt against the world and its
+conventions.</p>
+<p>When Caroline and her retinue set out from Milan
+<a name="Page_207"></a>for Tuscany it was in the wake of Pergami, who
+had ridden ahead to discharge his duties as <i>avant
+courier</i>; but before Rome was reached his intimacy
+and familiarity with his mistress were already the
+subject of whispered comments and shrugged shoulders.
+At a ball given in her honour at Rome by the
+banker Tortonia, the Princess shocked even the least
+prudish by the abandon of her dancing and the
+tenuity of her costume, which, we are told, consisted
+of "a single embroidered garment, fastened beneath
+the bosom, without the shadow of a corset
+and without sleeves." And at Naples, where King
+Joachim Murat gave her a regal reception, with a
+sequel of f&ecirc;tes and gala-performances in honour of
+the wife of the Regent of England, she attended a
+rout, at the Teatro San Carlo, so lightly attired
+"that many who saw her at her first entrance looked
+her up and down, and, not recognising her, or pretending
+not to recognise her, began to mutter disapprobation
+to such an extent that she was compelled
+to withdraw.... The English residents soon
+let her understand, by ceasing to frequent her palace,
+that even at Naples there were certain laws of dress
+which could not be trampled underfoot in this hoydenish
+manner."</p>
+<p>While Caroline was thus defying convention and
+even decency, watchful eyes were following her
+everywhere. A body of secret police, whose headquarters
+were at Milan, was noting every indiscretion;
+and every week brought fresh and damaging
+reports to England, where they were eagerly welcomed
+by the Regent and his satellites. And while
+<a name="Page_208"></a>the Princess was thus playing unconsciously, or
+recklessly,
+into the hands of the enemy, Pergami was
+daily making his footing in her favour more secure.
+Before Caroline left Naples he had been promoted
+from courier to equerry, and in this more exalted and
+privileged r&ocirc;le was always at her side. So marked,
+in fact, was the intimacy even at this early stage, that
+the Princess's retinue, one after another, and on one
+flimsy pretext or another, deserted her in disgust,
+each vacancy, as it occurred, being filled by one of
+Pergami's relatives&#8212;his brother, his daughter, his
+sister-in-law (the Countess Oidi), and others, until
+Caroline was soon surrounded by members of the
+ex-courier's family.</p>
+<p>From Naples she wandered to Genoa, and from
+Genoa to Milan and Venice, received regally everywhere
+by the Italians and shunned by the English
+residents. From Venice she drifted to Lake Como,
+with whose beauties she was so charmed that she
+decided to make her home there, purchasing the
+Villa del Garrovo for one hundred and fifty thousand
+francs, and setting the builders to work to make it a
+still more splendid home for a future Queen of
+England. But even to the lonely isolation of the
+Italian lakes the eyes of her husband's secret agents
+pursued her, spying on her every movement&#8212;"uncertain
+shadows gliding in the twilight along the
+paths and between the hedges, and even in the cellars
+and attics of the villa"&#8212;until the shadowy presences
+filled her with such terror and unrest that she sought
+to escape them by a long tour in the East.</p>
+<p>Thus it was that in November, 1815, the Princess
+<a name="Page_209"></a>and her Pergami household set forth on their
+journey
+to Sicily, Tunis, Athens, the cities of the East and
+Jerusalem, the strange story of which was to be
+unfolded to the world five years later. How intimate
+the Princess and her handsome, stalwart courier had
+by this time become was illustrated by the Attorney-General
+in his opening speech at her memorable
+trial. "One day, after dinner, when the Princess's
+servants had withdrawn, a waiter at the hotel, Gran
+Brettagna, saw the Princess put a golden necklace
+round Pergami's neck. Pergami took it off again
+and put it jestingly on the neck of the Princess, who
+in her turn once more removed it and put it again
+round Pergami's neck."</p>
+<p>As early as August in this year Pergami had his
+appointed place at the Princess's table, and his room
+communicating with hers, and on the various voyages
+of the Eastern tour there was abundant evidence to
+prove "the habit which the Princess had of sleeping
+under one and the same awning with Pergami."</p>
+<p>But it is as impossible in the limits of space to
+follow Caroline and her handsome cavalier through
+every stage of these Eastern wanderings, as it is
+unnecessary to describe in detail the evidence of
+intimacy so lavishly provided by the witnesses for
+the prosecution at the trial&#8212;evidence much of which
+was doubtless as false as it was venal. That the
+Princess, however, was infatuated by her cavalier,
+and that she was in the highest degree indiscreet in
+her relations with him, seems abundantly clear, whatever
+the precise degree of actual guilt may have been.</p>
+<p>Pergami had now been promoted from equerry to
+<a name="Page_210"></a>Grand Chamberlain to Her Royal Highness, and as
+further evidence of her favour, she bought for him
+in Sicily an estate which conferred on its owner the
+title of Baron della Francina. At Malta she procured
+for him a knighthood of that island's famous
+order; at Jerusalem she secured his nomination as
+Knight of the Holy Sepulchre; and, to crown her
+favours, she herself instituted the Order of St Caroline,
+with Pergami for Grand Master. Behold now
+our ex-courier and adventurer in all his new glory as
+Grand Chamberlain and lover of a future Queen of
+England, as Baron della Francina, Knight of two
+Orders and Grand Master of a third, while every
+post of profit in that vagrant Court was held by some
+member of his family!</p>
+<p>The Eastern tour ended, which had ranged from
+Algiers and Egypt to Constantinople and Jerusalem,
+and throughout which she had progressed and been
+received as a Queen, Caroline settled down for a
+time in her now restored villa on Lake Como, celebrating
+her return by lavish charities to her poor
+neighbours, and by popular f&ecirc;tes and balls, in one
+of which "she danced as Columbine, wearing her
+lover's ear-rings, whilst Pergami, dressed as harlequin
+and wearing her ear-rings, supported her."</p>
+<p>But even here she was to find no peace from her
+husband's spies, whose evidence, confirmed on oath
+by a score of witnesses, was being accumulated in
+London against the longed-for day of reckoning.
+And it was not long before Caroline and her Grand
+Chamberlain were on their wanderings again&#8212;this
+time to the Tyrol, to Austria, and through Northern
+<a name="Page_211"></a>Italy, always inseparable and everywhere setting
+the
+tongue of scandal wagging by their indiscreet intimacy.
+Even the tragic death in childbirth of her
+only daughter, the Princess Charlotte, which put all
+England in mourning, seemed powerless to check
+her career of folly. It is true that, on hearing of it,
+she fell into a faint and afterwards into a kind of
+protracted lethargy, but within a few weeks she had
+flung herself again into her life of pleasure-chasing
+and reckless disregard of convention.</p>
+<p>But matters were now hurrying fast to their tragic
+climax. For some time the life of George III. had
+been flickering to its close. Any day might bring
+news that the end had come, and that the Princess
+was a Queen. And for some time Caroline had been
+bracing herself to face this crisis in her life and to
+pit herself against her enemies in a grim struggle for
+a crown, the title to which her years of folly (for
+such at the best they had been) had so gravely
+endangered. Over the remainder of her vagrant
+life, with its restless flittings, and its indiscretions,
+marked by spying eyes, we must pass to that February
+morning in 1820 when, to quote a historian, "the
+Princess had scarcely reached her hotel (at Florence)
+when her faithful major-domo, John Jacob Sicard,
+appeared before her, accompanied by two noblemen,
+and in a voice full of emotion announced, 'You are
+Queen.'"</p>
+<p>The fateful hour had at last arrived when Caroline
+must either renounce her new Queendom or present
+a bold front to her enemies and claim the crown
+that was hers. After a few indecisive days, spent in
+<a name="Page_212"></a>Rome, where news reached her that the King had
+given orders that her name should be excluded from
+the Prayer Book, her wavering resolution took a
+definite and determined shape. She would go to
+London and face the storm which she knew her
+coming would bring on her head.</p>
+<p>At Paris she was met by Lord Hutchinson with
+a promise of an increase of her yearly allowance
+to fifty thousand pounds, on condition that she
+renounced her claim to the title of Queen, and consented
+never to put foot again in England&#8212;an offer
+to which she gave a prompt and scornful refusal;
+and on the afternoon of 5th June she reached Dover,
+greeted by enthusiastic cheers and shouts of "God
+save Queen Caroline!" by the fluttering of flags,
+and the jubilant clanging of church-bells. The wanderer
+had come back to the land of her sorrow, to
+find herself welcomed with open arms by the subjects
+of the King whose brutality had driven her to exile
+and to shame.</p>
+<p>The story of the trial which so soon followed her
+arrival has too enduring a place in our history to call
+for a detailed description&#8212;the trial in which all the
+weight of the Crown and the testimony of a small
+army of suborned witnesses&#8212;"a troupe of comedians
+in the pay of malevolence," to quote Brougham&#8212;were
+arrayed against her; and in which she had so
+doughty a champion in Brougham, and such solace
+and support in the sympathy of all England. We
+know the fate of that Bill of Pains and Penalties,
+which charged her with having permitted a shameful
+intimacy with one Bartolomeo Pergami, and pro<a name="Page_213"></a>vided
+as penalty that she should be deprived of the
+title and privilege of Queen, and that her marriage
+to King George IV. should be for ever dissolved and
+annulled&#8212;how it was forced through the House of
+Lords with a diminishing majority, and finally withdrawn.
+And we know, too, the outburst of almost
+delirious delight that swept from end to end of
+England at the virtual acquittal of the persecuted
+Caroline. "The generous exultation of the people
+was," to quote a contemporary, "beyond all description.
+It was a conflagration of hearts."</p>
+<p>We also recall that pathetic scene when Caroline
+presented herself at the door of Westminster Abbey
+to demand admission, on the day of her husband's
+coronation, to be received by the frigid words, "We
+have no instructions to allow you to pass"; and we
+can see her as, "humiliated, confounded, and with
+tears in her eyes," she returned sadly to her carriage,
+the heart crushed within her. Less than three weeks
+later, seized by a grave and mysterious illness, she
+laid down for ever the burden of her sorrows, leaving
+instructions that her tomb should bear the words:</p>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">CAROLINE</span><br
+ style="font-weight: bold;">
+<span style="font-weight: bold;">THE INJURED QUEEN OF ENGLAND.</span><br>
+</div>
+<p>As for Pergami, the idol with the feet of clay, who
+had clouded her last years in tragedy, he survived
+for twenty years more to enjoy his honours and his
+ill-gotten gold; while William Austin, who had
+masqueraded as a Prince and called Caroline
+"mother," ended his days, while still a young man,
+in a madhouse.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XX"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_214"></a>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+<h2>THE LOVE-AFFAIRS OF A REGENT</h2>
+<p>When Louis XIV. laid down, one September day in
+the year 1715, the crown which he had worn with
+such splendour for more than seventy years, his
+sceptre fell into the hands of his nephew Philippe,
+Duc d'Orl&eacute;ans, who for eight years ruled France as
+Regent, and as guardian of the child-King, the
+fifteenth Louis.</p>
+<p>Seldom in the world's history has a reign, so splendid
+as that of the Sun-King, closed in such darkness
+and tragedy. The disastrous war of the Spanish
+Succession had drained France of her strength and
+her gold. She lay crushed under a mountain of debt&#8212;ten
+thousand million francs; she was reduced to
+the lowest depths of wretchedness, ruin, and disorder,
+and it was at this crisis in her life as a nation that
+fate placed a child of four on her throne, and gave
+the reins of power into the hands of the most dissolute
+man in Europe.</p>
+<p>Not that Philippe of Orleans lacked many of the
+qualities that go to the making of a ruler and a man.
+He had proved himself, in Italy and in Spain, one
+of the bravest of his country's soldiers, and an able,
+<a name="Page_215"></a>far-seeing leader of armies; and he had, as his
+Regency
+proved, no mean gifts of statesmanship. But
+his kingly qualities were marred by the taint of birth
+and early environment.</p>
+<p>Such good qualities as he had he no doubt drew
+from his mother, the capable, austere, high-minded
+Elizabeth of Bavaria, who to her last day was the
+one good influence in his life. To his father, Louis
+XIV.'s younger brother, who is said to have been
+son of Cardinal Mazarin, Anne of Austria's lover,
+and who was the most debased man of his time in
+all France, he just as surely owed the bias of sensuality
+to which he chiefly owes his place in memory.</p>
+<p>And not only was he thus handicapped by his
+birth; he had for tutor that arch-scoundrel Dubois&#8212;the
+"grovelling insect" who rarely opened his mouth
+without uttering a blasphemy or indecency, and who
+initiated his charge, while still a boy, into every base
+form of so-called pleasure.</p>
+<p>Such was the man who, amid the ruins of his
+country, inaugurated in France an era of licentiousness
+such as she had never known&#8212;an incomprehensible
+mass of contradictions&#8212;a kingly presence with
+the soul of a Caliban, statesman and sinner, high-minded
+and low-living, spending his days as a
+sovereign, a r&ocirc;le which he played to perfection, and
+his nights as a sot and a sensualist.</p>
+<p>It was doubtless Dubois who was mostly responsible
+for the baseness in the Regent's character&#8212;Dubois
+who had taught him a contempt for religion
+and morality, the cynical view of life which makes
+the pleasure of the moment the only thing worth
+<a name="Page_216"></a>pursuing, at whatever cost; and who had
+impressed
+indelibly on his mind that no woman is virtuous and
+that men are knaves. And there was never any lack
+of men to continue Dubois' teaching. He gathered
+round him the most dissolute gallants in France, in
+whose company he gave the rein to his most vicious
+appetites. His "rou&eacute;s" he dubbed them, a title
+which aptly described them; although they affected to
+give it a very different interpretation. They were the
+Regent's rou&eacute;s, they said, no doubt with the tongue
+in the cheek, because they were so devoted to him
+that they were ready, in his defence, to be broken on
+the wheel (<i>la roue</i>)!</p>
+<p>Each of these boon-comrades was a past-master in
+the arts of dissipation, and each was also among the
+most brilliant men of his day. The Chevalier de
+Simiane was famous alike for his drinking powers
+and his gift of graceful verse; De Fargy was a
+polished wit, and the handsomest man in France,
+with an unrivalled reputation for gallantry; the
+Comte de Noc&eacute; was the Regent's most intimate friend
+from boyhood&#8212;brother-in-law he called him, since
+they had not only tastes but even mistresses in common.
+Then there were the Marquis de la Fare,
+Captain of Guards and <i>bon enfant</i>; the Marquis de
+Broglio, the biggest debauchee in France, the Marquis
+de Canillac, the Duc de Brancas, and many
+another&#8212;all famous (or infamous) for some pet
+vice, and all the best of boon-companions for the
+pleasure-loving Regent.</p>
+<p>Strange tales are told of the orgies of this select
+band which the Regent gathered around him&#8212;orgies
+<a name="Page_217"></a>which shocked even the France of the eighteenth
+century, when she was the acknowledged leader in
+licence. At six o'clock every evening Philippe's
+kingship ended for the day. He had had enough&#8212;more
+than enough&#8212;of State and ceremonial, of interviewing
+ambassadors, and of the flatteries of Princes
+and the obsequious homage of courtiers. Pleasure
+called him away from the boredom of empire; and
+at the stroke of six we find him retiring to the company
+of his mistresses and his rou&eacute;s to feast and
+drink and gamble until dawn broke on the revelry&#8212;his
+laugh the loudest, his wit the most dazzling, his
+stories the most piquant, keeping the table in a roar
+with his infectious gaiety. He was Regent no
+longer; he was simply a <i>bon camarade</i>, as ready to
+exchange familiarities with a "lady of the ballet" as
+to lead the laughter at a joke at his own expense.</p>
+<p>At nine o'clock, when the fun had waxed furious
+and wine had set the slowest tongue wagging and
+every eye a-sparkle, other guests streamed in to join
+the orgy&#8212;the most beautiful ladies of the Court,
+from the Duchesse de Gesores and Madame de
+Mouchy to the Regent's own daughter, the Duchesse
+de Berry, who, young as she was, had little to learn
+of the arts of dissipation. And in the wake of these
+high-born women would follow laughing, bright-eyed
+troupes of dancing and chorus-girls from the theatres
+with an escort of the cleverest actors of Paris, to join
+the Regent's merry throng.</p>
+<p>The champagne now flowed in rivers; the servants
+were sent away; the doors were locked and the fun
+grew riotous; ceremony had no place there; rank
+<a name="Page_218"></a>and social distinctions were forgotten.
+Countesses
+flirted with comedians; Princes made love to ballet-girls
+and duchesses alike. The leader of the
+moment was the man or woman who could sing the
+most daring song, tell the most piquant story, or play
+the most audacious practical joke, even on the Regent
+himself. Sometimes, we are told, the lights would
+be extinguished, and the orgy continued under the
+cover of darkness, until the Regent suddenly opened
+a cupboard, in which lights were concealed&#8212;to an
+outburst of shrieks of laughter at the scenes revealed.</p>
+<p>Thus the mad night hours passed until dawn came
+to bring the revels to a close; or until the Regent
+would sally forth with a few chosen comrades on a
+midnight ramble to other haunts of pleasure in the
+capital&#8212;the lower the better. Such was the way
+in which Philippe of Orleans, Regent of France,
+spent his nights. A few hours after the carouse had
+ended he would resume his sceptre, as austere and
+dignified a ruler as you would find in Europe.</p>
+<p>It must not be imagined that Philippe was the only
+Royal personage who thus set a scandalous example
+to France. There was, in fact, scarcely a Prince or
+Princess of the Blood Royal whose love affairs were
+not conducted flagrantly in the eyes of the world,
+from the Dowager Duchesse de Bourbon, who
+lavished her favours on the Scotch financier, John
+Law, of Lauriston, to the Princesse de Conte, who
+mingled her piety with a marked partiality for her
+nephew, Le Kalli&egrave;re.</p>
+<p>As for the Regent's own daughters, from the
+Duchesse de Berry, to Louise, Queen of Spain, each
+<a name="Page_219"></a>has left behind her a record almost as
+scandalous as
+that of her father. It was, in fact, an era of corruption
+in high places, when, in the reaction that followed
+the dismal and decorous last years of Louis XIV.'s
+reign, Pleasure rose phoenix-like from the ashes of
+ruin and flaunted herself unashamed in every guise
+with which vice could deck her.</p>
+<p>It must be said for the Regent, corrupt as he was,
+that he never abused his position and his power in
+the pursuit of beauty. His mistresses flocked to him
+from every rank of life, from the stage to the highest
+Court circles, but remained no longer than inclination
+dictated. And the fascination is not far to seek,
+for Philippe d'Orl&eacute;ans was of the men who find easy
+conquests in the field of love. He was one of the
+handsomest men in all France; and to his good-looks
+and his reputation for bravery he added a manner of
+rare grace and courtliness, a supple tongue, and that
+strange magnetic power which few women could
+resist.</p>
+<p>No King ever boasted a greater or more varied list
+of favourites, in which actresses and duchesses vied
+with each other for his smiles, in a rivalry which
+seems to have been singularly free from petty jealousy.
+Among the beauties of the Court we find the
+Duchesse de Fedari, the Duchesse de Gesores, the
+Comtesse de Sabran at one extreme; and actresses
+like Emilie, Desmarre, and La Souris at the other,
+pretty butterflies of the footlights who appealed to
+the Regent no more than Madame d'Averne, the
+gifted pet of France's wits and literary men, the most
+charming "blue-stocking" of her day. And all,
+<a name="Page_220"></a>without exception&#8212;duchesses, countesses, and
+actresses&#8212;were as ready to give their love to
+Philippe, the man, as to the Duc d'Orl&eacute;ans, Regent
+of France.</p>
+<p>Even in his relations with these ministers of
+pleasure, the Regent's better qualities often exhibit
+themselves agreeably. To the pretty actress, Emilie,
+whose heart was so completely his, he always acted
+with a characteristic generosity and forbearance; and
+her conduct is by no means less pleasing than his.
+Once, we are told, when he expressed a wish to give
+her a pair of diamond ear-rings at a cost of fifteen
+thousand francs, she demurred at accepting so valuable
+a present. "If you must be so generous," she
+pleaded, "please don't give me the ear-rings, which
+are much too grand for such as me. Give me, instead,
+ten thousand francs, so that I may buy a small
+house to which I can retire when you no longer love
+me as you now do."</p>
+<p>Emilie had scarcely returned home, however, when
+a Court official appeared with a package containing,
+not ten thousand, but twenty-five thousand francs,
+which her lover insisted on her keeping; and when
+she returned fifteen thousand francs, he promptly
+sent them back again, declaring that he would be
+very angry if she refused again to accept them.</p>
+<p>His love, indeed, for Emilie seems to have been
+as pure and deep as any of which he was capable.
+It was no fleeting passion, but an affection based on
+a sincere respect for her character and mental gifts.
+So highly, indeed, did he think of her judgment that
+she became his most trusted counsellor. She sat by
+<a name="Page_221"></a>his side when he received ambassadors; he
+consulted
+her on difficult problems of State; and it was her
+advice that he often followed in preference to the
+wisdom of all his ministers; for, as he said to Dubois,
+"Emilie has an excellent brain; she always gives me
+the best counsel."</p>
+<p>When at last he had to part from the modest and
+accomplished actress it was under circumstances
+which speak well for his generosity. A former lover,
+the Marquis de Fimarcon, on his return from fighting
+in Spain, sought Emilie out, and, blazing with
+jealousy, insisted that she should leave the Regent
+and return to his protection. He vowed that, if she
+refused, he would murder her; and when, in her
+alarm, she sought refuge in a convent at Charenton,
+he threatened to burn the nuns alive in their cells
+unless they restored her to him. Thus it was that,
+rather than allow Emilie to run any risks from her
+revengeful and brutal lover, the Regent relinquished
+his claim to her; and only when Fimarcon's continued
+brutality at last made intervention necessary,
+did he order the bully to be arrested and consigned
+to the prison of Fort l'&Eacute;v&ecirc;que.</p>
+<p>It is, however, in the story of Mademoiselle Aiss&eacute;,
+the Circassian slave, that we find the best illustration
+of the chivalry which underlay the Regent's passion
+for women, and which he never forgot in his wildest
+excesses. This story, one of the most touching in
+French history, opens in the year 1698, when a band
+of Turkish soldiers returned to Constantinople from
+a raid in the Caucasus, bringing with them, among
+many other captives, a beautiful child of four years,
+<a name="Page_222"></a>said to be the daughter of a King. So lovely was
+the little Circassian fairy that when the Comte de
+Feriol, France's Ambassador to Turkey, set eyes
+on her, he decided to purchase her; and she
+became his property in exchange for fifteen hundred
+livres.</p>
+<p>That she might have every advantage of training
+to fit her for his seraglio in later years, the child was
+sent to Paris, to the home of the Ambassador's
+brother, President de Feriol, where she grew to
+beautiful girlhood as a member of the family, as fair
+a flower as ever was transplanted to French soil.
+Thus she passed the next thirteen years of her young
+life, charming all by her sweetness of disposition, as
+she won the homage of all by her remarkable beauty
+and grace.</p>
+<p>Such was Ayesha, or Aiss&eacute;, the Circassian maid,
+when at last her "owner" returned to Paris to fall
+under the spell of her radiant beauty and to claim her
+as his chattel, bought with good gold and trained at
+his cost to adorn his harem. In vain did Aiss&eacute; weep
+and plead to be spared a fate from which every fibre
+of her being shrank in horror. Her "master" was
+inexorable. "When I bought you," he said, "it was
+my intention to make you my daughter or my mistress.
+I now intend that you shall become both the
+one and the other." Friendless and helpless, she was
+obliged to yield; and for six years she had to submit
+to the endearments of her protector, a man more than
+old enough to be her father, until his death brought
+her release.</p>
+<p>At twenty-four, more lovely than ever, combining
+<a name="Page_223"></a>the beauty of the Circassian with the graces of
+France, Aiss&eacute; had now every right to look forward
+at least to such happiness as was possible to a stranger
+in a strange land. But no sooner was one danger
+to her peace removed than another sprang up to take
+its place. The rumour of her beauty and her sweetness
+had come to the ears of the Regent, and strong
+forces were at work to bring her to his arms. Madame
+de Tencin was the leader in this base conspiracy,
+with the power of the Romish Church at her back;
+for with the fair Circassian high in the Regent's
+favour and a pliant tool in their hands, the Jesuits'
+influence at Court would be greatly strengthened.
+Dubois was won over to the unholy alliance; and the
+Due's <i>ma&icirc;tresse en titre</i> was bribed, not only to
+withdraw all opposition to her proposed rival, but to
+arrange a meeting between the Regent and the
+victim.</p>
+<p>Success seemed to be assured. Mademoiselle
+Aiss&eacute; was to exchange slavery to her late owner for
+an equally odious place in the harem of the ruler
+of France. Her tears and entreaties were all in
+vain; when she begged on her knees to be allowed
+to retire to a convent Madame de Feriol turned
+her back on her. Her only hope of rescue now lay
+in the Regent himself; and to him she pleaded her
+cause with such pathetic eloquence that he not only
+allowed her to depart in peace, but with words of
+sympathy and promises of his protection in the pure
+and noble sense of the word.</p>
+<p>Thus by the chivalry of the most dissolute man of
+his age the Circassian slave-girl was rescued from a
+<a name="Page_224"></a>life which to her would have been worse than
+death&#8212;to
+spend her remaining years, happy in the love of
+an honest man, the Chevalier d'Aydie, until death
+claimed her while she still possessed the beauty
+which had been at once her glory and her inevitable
+shame.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 25%;">
+<p>The close of the Regent's mis-spent life came with
+tragic suddenness. Worn out with excesses, while still
+young in years, his doctors had warned him that death
+might come to him any day; but with the light-heartedness
+that was his to the last, he laughed at
+their gloomy forebodings and refused to take the
+least precautions to safeguard his health. Two days
+before the end came he declined point-blank to be
+bled in order to avert a threatened attack of apoplexy.
+"Let it come if it will," he said, with a laugh. "I
+do not fear death; and if it comes quickly, so much
+the better!"</p>
+<p>On the evening of 2nd December, 1720, he was
+chatting gaily to the young Duchesse de Falari, when
+he suddenly turned to her and asked: "Do you think
+there is any hell&#8212;or Paradise?" "Of course I do,"
+answered the Duchesse. "Then are you not afraid
+to lead the life you do?" "Well," replied Madame,
+"I think God will have pity on me."</p>
+<p>Scarcely had the words left her lips when the
+Regent's head fell heavily on her shoulder, and he
+began to slip to the floor. A glance showed her
+that he was unconscious; and, rushing out of the
+room, the terrified Duchesse raced through the dark,
+<a name="Page_225"></a>deserted corridors of the palace shrieking for
+help.
+When at last help arrived, it came too late. The
+Regent had gone to find for himself an answer to the
+question his lips had framed a few minutes earlier&#8212;"is
+there any hell&#8212;or Paradise?"</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_226"></a>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+<h2>A DELILAH OF THE COURT OF FRANCE</h2>
+<p>It was a cruel fate that snatched Gabrielle d'Estr&eacute;es
+from the arms of Henri IV., King of France and
+Navarre, at the moment when her long devotion to
+her hero-lover was on the eve of being crowned by
+the bridal veil; and for many a week there was no
+more stricken man in Europe than the disconsolate
+King as he wailed in his black-draped chamber, "The
+root of my love is dead, and will never blossom again."</p>
+<p>No doubt Henri's grief was as sincere as it was
+deep, for he had loved his golden-haired Gabrielle of
+the blue eyes and dimpled baby-cheeks as he had
+never loved woman before. It was the passion of a
+lifetime, the passion of a strong man in his prime,
+that fate had thus nipped in the fullness of its bloom;
+and its loss plunged him into an abyss of sorrow and
+despair such as few men have known.</p>
+<p>But with the hero of Ivry no emotion of grief
+or pleasure ever endured long. He was a man of
+erratic, widely contrasted moods&#8212;now on the peaks
+of happiness, now in the gulf of dejection; one mood
+succeeding another as inevitably and widely as the
+pendulum swings. Thus when he had spent three
+<a name="Page_227"></a>seemingly endless months of gloom and solitude,
+reaction seized him, and he flung aside his grief with
+his black raiment. He was still in the prime of his
+strength, with many years before him. He would
+drink the cup of life, even to its dregs. He had long
+been weary of the matrimonial chains that fettered
+him to Marguerite of Valois. He would strike them
+off, and in another wife and other loves find a new
+lease of pleasure.</p>
+<p>Thus it was with no heavy heart that he turned
+his back on Fontainebleau and his darkened room,
+and fared to Paris to find a new vista of pleasure
+opening to him at his palace doors, and his ears full
+of the praises of a new divinity who had come, during
+his absence, to grace his Court&#8212;a girl of such beauty,
+sprightliness, and wit as his capital had not seen for
+many a year.</p>
+<p>Henriette d'Entragues&#8212;for this was the divinity's
+name&#8212;was equipped by fate as few women were
+ever equipped, for the conquest of a King. Her
+mother, Marie Touchet, had been "light-o'-love" to
+Charles IX.; her father was the Seigneur d'Entragues,
+member of one of the most blue-blooded
+families of France, a soldier and statesman of fame;
+and their daughter had inherited, with her mother's
+beauty and grace, the clever brain and diplomatic skill
+of her father. A strange mixture of the bewitching
+and bewildering, this daughter of a King's mistress
+seems to have been. Tall and dark, voluptuous of
+figure, with ripe red lips, and bold and dazzling black
+eyes, she was, in her full-blooded, sensuous charms,
+the very "antipodes" to the childish, fairy-like
+<a name="Page_228"></a>Gabrielle who had so long been enshrined in the
+King's heart. And to this physical appeal&#8212;irresistible
+to a man of such strong passion as Henri, she
+added gifts of mind which "baby Gabrielle" could
+never claim.</p>
+<p>She had a wit as brilliant as the tongue which was
+its vehicle; her well-stored brain was more than a
+match for the most learned men at Court, and she
+would leave an archbishop discomfited in a theological
+argument, to cross swords with Sully himself
+on some abstruse problem of statesmanship. When
+Sully had been brought to his knees, she would rush
+away, with mischief in her eyes, to take the lead in
+some merry escapade or practical joke, her silvery
+laughter echoing in some remote palace corridor.
+A bewildering, alluring bundle of inconsistencies&#8212;beauty,
+savant, wit, and madcap&#8212;such was Henriette
+d'Entragues when Henri, fresh from his woes, came
+under the spell of her magnetism.</p>
+<p>Here, indeed, was an escape from his grief such as
+the King had never dared to hope for. Before he
+had been many hours in his palace, Henri was
+caught hopelessly in the toils of the new siren, and
+was intoxicated by her smiles and witcheries. Never
+was conquest so speedy, so dramatic. Before a
+week had flown he was at Henrietta's feet, as lovesick
+a swain as ever sighed for a lady, pouring love
+into her ears and writing her passionate letters
+between the frequent meetings, in which he would
+send her a "good night, my dearest heart," with
+"a million kisses."</p>
+<p>In the days of his lusty youth the idol and hero of
+<a name="Page_229"></a>France had never known passion such as this
+which
+consumed him within sight of his fiftieth birthday,
+and which was inspired by a woman of much less
+than half his years; for at the time Henri was forty-six,
+and Henriette was barely twenty.</p>
+<p>He quickly found, however, that his wooing was
+not to be all "plain sailing." When Henriette's
+parents heard of it, they affected to be horrified at
+the danger in which their beloved daughter was
+placed. They summoned her home from the perils
+of Court and a King's passion; and when Henri sent
+an envoy to bring them to reason they sent him back
+with a rebuff. Their daughter was to be no man's&#8212;not
+even a King's&#8212;plaything. If Henri's passion
+was sincere, he must prove it by a definite promise
+of marriage; and only on this condition would their
+opposition be removed.</p>
+<p>Even to such a stipulation Henri, such was his
+infatuation, made no demur. With his own hand
+he wrote an agreement pledging himself to make
+Demoiselle Henriette his lawful wife in case, within
+a certain period, she became the mother of a son; and
+undertaking to dissolve his marriage with his wife,
+Marguerite of France, for this purpose. And this
+agreement, signed with his own hand, he sent to the
+Seigneur d'Entragues and his wife, accompanied by
+a <i>douceur</i> of a hundred thousand crowns.</p>
+<p>But before it was dispatched a more formidable
+obstacle than even the lady's natural guardians
+remained to be faced&#8212;none other than the Duc de
+Sully, the man who had shared all the perils of a
+hundred fights with Henri and was at once his chief
+<a name="Page_230"></a>counsellor and his <i>fidus Achates</i>. When
+at last he
+summoned up courage to place the document in
+Sully's hands, he awaited the verdict as nervously
+as any schoolboy in the presence of a dreaded master.
+Sully read through the paper, was silent for a few
+moments, and then spoke. "Sire," he said, "am I
+to give you my candid opinion on this document, without
+fear of anger or giving offence?" "Certainly,"
+answered the King. "Well then, this is what I think
+of it," was Sully's reply, as he tore the document in
+two pieces and flung them on the floor. "Sully, you
+are mad!" exclaimed Henri, flaring into anger at such
+an outrage. "You are right, Sire, I am a weak fool,
+and would gladly know myself still more a fool&#8212;if
+I might be the only one in France!"</p>
+<p>It was in vain, however, that Sully pointed out the
+follies and dangers of such a step as was proposed.
+Henri's mind was made up, and leaving his friend,
+in high dudgeon, he went to his study and re-wrote
+his promise of marriage. The way was at last clear
+to the gratification of his passion. Henriette was
+more than willing, her parents' scruples and greed
+were appeased, and as for Sully&#8212;well, he must be
+left to get over his tantrums. Even to please such
+an old and trusted friend he could not sacrifice such
+an opportunity for pleasure and a new lease of life
+as now presented itself!</p>
+<p>Halcyon months followed for Henri&#8212;months in
+which even Gabrielle was forgotten in the intoxication
+of a new passion, compared with which the
+memory of her gentle charms was but as water
+to rich, red wine. That Henriette proved wilful,
+<a name="Page_231"></a>capricious, and extravagant&#8212;that her vanity
+drained
+his exchequer of hundreds of thousands of crowns
+for costly jewellery and dresses, was a mere bagatelle,
+compared with his delight in her manifold
+allurements.</p>
+<p>But Sully had by no means said his last word.
+The decree for annulling Henri's marriage with Marguerite
+de Valois was pronounced; and it was of the
+highest importance that she should have a worthy
+successor as Queen of France&#8212;a successor whom he
+found in Marie de Medicis.</p>
+<p>The marriage-contract was actually sealed before
+the King had any suspicion that his hand was being
+disposed of, and it was only when Sully one day
+entered his study with the startling words, "Sire, we
+have been marrying you," that the awakening came.
+For a few moments Henri sat as a man stunned, his
+head buried in his hands; then, with a deep sigh,
+he spoke: "If God orders it so, so let it be. There
+seems to be no escape; since you say that it is
+necessary for my kingdom and my subjects, why,
+marry I must."</p>
+<p>It was a strange predicament in which Henri now
+found himself. Still more infatuated than ever with
+Henriette, he was to be tied for life to a Princess
+whom he had never even seen. To add to the
+embarrassment of his position, the condition of his
+marriage promise to Henriette was already on the
+way to fulfilment; and he was thus pledged to wed
+her as strongly as any State compact could bind him
+to stand at the altar with Marie de Medicis. One
+thing was clear, he must at any cost recover that fatal
+<a name="Page_232"></a>document; and, while he was giving orders for
+the
+suitable reception of his new Queen, and arranging
+for her triumphal progress to Paris, he was writing
+to Henriette and her parents demanding the return
+of his promise of marriage agreement&#8212;to her, a
+pleading letter in which he prays her "to return the
+promise you have by you and not to compel me to
+have recourse to other means in order to obtain it";
+to her father, a more imperious demand to which he
+expects instant obedience.</p>
+<p>As some consolation to his mistress, whose alternate
+tears, rage, and reproaches drove him to distraction,
+he creates her Marquise de Verneuil and promises
+that, if he should be unable to marry her, he will at
+least give her a husband of Royal rank, the Due
+de Nevers, who was eager to make her his wife.</p>
+<p>But pleadings and threats alike fail to secure the
+return of the fatal document, and Henri is reduced
+to despair, until Henriette gives birth to a dead child
+and his promise thus becomes of as little value as
+the paper it was written on. The condition has
+failed, and he is a free man to marry his Tuscan
+Princess, while Henriette, thus foiled in her great
+ambition, is in danger not only of losing her coveted
+crown, but her place in the King's favour. The days
+of her wilful autocracy are ended; and, though her
+heart is full of anger and disappointment, she writes
+to him a pitiful letter imploring him still to love her
+and not to cast her "from the Heaven to which he has
+raised her, down to the earth where he found her."
+"Do not let your wedding festivities be the funeral
+of my hopes," she writes. "Do not banish me from
+<a name="Page_233"></a>your Royal presence and your heart. I speak in
+sighs to you, my King, my lover, my all&#8212;I, who
+have been loved by the earth's greatest monarch, and
+am willing to be his mistress and his servant."</p>
+<p>To such humility was the proud, arrogant beauty
+now reduced. She was an abject suppliant where
+she had reigned a Queen. Nor did her pleadings
+fall on deaf ears. Her Royal lover's hand was
+given, against his will, to his new Queen, but his
+heart, he vowed, was all Henriette's&#8212;so much so
+that he soon installed her in sumptuous rooms in his
+palace adjoining those of the Queen herself.</p>
+<p>Was ever man placed in a more delicate position
+than this King of France, between the rival claims
+of his wife and mistress, who were occupying adjacent
+apartments, and who, moreover, were both
+about to become mothers? It speaks well for Henri's
+tactfulness that for a time at least this <i>m&eacute;nage &agrave;
+trois</i>
+appears to have been quite amiably conducted.
+When Queen Marie gave birth to a son it was to
+Henriette that the infant's father first confided the
+good news, seasoning it with "a million kisses" for
+herself. And when Henriette, in turn, became a
+mother for the second time, the double Royal event
+was celebrated by f&ecirc;tes and rejoicings in which each
+lady took an equally proud and conspicuous part.</p>
+<p>It was inevitable, however, that a woman so
+favoured by the King, and of so imperious a nature,
+should have enemies at Court; and it was not long
+before she became the object of a conspiracy of which
+the Duchesse de Villars and the Queen were the
+arch-leaders. One day a bundle of letters was sent
+<a name="Page_234"></a>anonymously to Henri, letters full of tenderness
+and passion, addressed by his beloved Marquise,
+Henriette, to the Prince de Joinville. The King
+was furious at such evidence of his mistress's disloyalty,
+and vowed he would never see her again.
+But all his storming and reproaches left the Marquise
+unmoved. She declared, with scorn in her voice,
+that the letters were forgeries; that she had never
+written to Joinville in her life, nor spoken a word to
+him that His Majesty might not have heard. She
+even pointed out the forger, the Duc de Guise's
+secretary, and was at last able to convince the King
+of her innocence.</p>
+<p>The Duchesse de Villars and Joinville were
+banished from the Court in disgrace; the Queen had
+a severe lecture from her husband; and Henriette
+was not only restored to full favour, but was consoled
+by a welcome present of six thousand pounds.</p>
+<p>But the days of peace in the King's household
+were now gone for ever. Queen Marie, thus humiliated
+by her rival, became her bitter enemy and also
+a thorn in the side of her unfaithful husband. Every
+day brought its fierce quarrels which only stopped on
+the verge of violence. More than once in fact Henri
+had to beat a retreat before his Queen's clenched
+fist, while she lost no opportunity of insulting and
+humiliating the Marquise.</p>
+<p>It is impossible altogether to withhold sympathy
+from a man thus distracted between two jealous
+women&#8212;a shrewish wife, who in her most amiable
+mood repelled his advances with coldness and cutting
+words, and a mistress who vented on him all the re<a name="Page_235"></a>sentment
+which the Queen's insults and snubs roused
+in her. Even all Sully's diplomacy was powerless
+to pour oil on such vexed waters as these.</p>
+<p>The Queen, however, had not long to wait for
+her revenge, which came with the disclosure of a conspiracy,
+at the head of which were Henriette's father
+and her half-brother, the Comte d'Auvergne, and in
+which, it was proved, she herself had played no insignificant
+part. Punishment came, swift and terrible.
+Her father and brother were sentenced to death, herself
+to perpetual confinement in a monastery.</p>
+<p>But even at this crisis in her life, Henriette's stout
+heart did not fail her for a moment. "The King
+may take my life, if he pleases," she said. "Everybody
+will say that he killed his wife; for I was Queen
+before the Tuscan woman came on the scene at all."
+None knew better than she that she could afford thus
+to put on a bold front. Henri was still her slave, to
+whom her little finger was more than his crown; and
+she knew that in his hands both her liberty and her
+life were safe. And thus it proved; for before she
+had spent many weeks in the Monastery of Beaumont-les-Tours,
+its doors were flung open for her,
+and the first news she heard was that her father was
+a free man, while her brother's death-sentence had
+been commuted to a few years in the Bastille.</p>
+<p>Thus Henriette returned to the turbulent life of
+the palace&#8212;the daily routine of quarrels and peacemaking
+with the King, and undisguised hostility from
+the Queen, through all of which Henri's heart still
+remained hers. "How I long to have you in my
+arms again," he writes, when on a hunting excursion,
+<a name="Page_236"></a>which had led him to the scene of their early
+romance. "As my letter brings back the memory of
+the past, I know you will feel that nothing in the
+present is worth anything in comparison. This, at
+least, was my feeling as I walked along the roads
+I so often traversed in the old days on my journey
+to your side. When I sleep I dream of you; when
+I wake my thoughts are all of you." He sends her
+a million kisses, and vows that all he asks of life
+is that she shall always love him entirely and
+him alone.</p>
+<p>One would have thought that such a conquest of
+a King and such triumph over a Queen would have
+gratified the ambition of the most exacting of women.
+But the Marquise de Verneuil seems to have found
+small satisfaction in her victories. When she was
+not provoking quarrels with Henri, which roused him
+to such a pitch of anger that at times he threatened
+to strike her, she received his advances with a coldness
+or a sullen acquiescence calculated to chill the
+most ardent lover. In other moods she would drive
+him to despair by declaring that she had long ceased
+to love him, and that all she wanted from him was a
+dowry to carry in marriage to one or other of several
+suitors who were dying for her hand.</p>
+<p>But Madame's day of triumph was drawing much
+nearer to an end than she imagined. The end, in
+fact, came with dramatic suddenness when Henri
+first set eyes on the radiantly lovely Charlotte de
+Montmorency. Weary at heart of the tempers and
+exactions of Henriette, it needed but such a lure as
+this to draw him finally from her side; and from the
+<a name="Page_237"></a>first flash of Charlotte's beautiful eyes this
+most
+susceptible of Kings was undone. Madame de Verneuil's
+reign was ended; the next quarrel was made
+the occasion for a complete rupture, and the Court
+saw her no more.</p>
+<p>Already she had lost the bloom of her beauty; she
+had grown stout and coarse through her excessive
+fondness for the pleasures of the table, and the rest
+of her days, which were passed in friendless isolation,
+she spent in indulging appetites, which added to her
+mountain of flesh while robbing her of the last trace
+of good-looks. When the knife of Ravaillac brought
+Henri's life and his new romance to a tragic end, the
+Marquise was among those who were suspected of
+inspiring the assassin's blow; and although her guilt
+was never proved, the taint of suspicion clung to her
+to her last day.</p>
+<p>After fruitless angling for a husband&#8212;the Duc de
+Guise, the Prince de Joinville, and many another
+who, with one consent, fled from her advances, she
+resigned herself to a life of obscurity and gluttony,
+until death came, one day in the year 1633, to release
+her from a world of vanity and disillusionment.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_238"></a>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+<h2>THE "SUN-KING" AND THE WIDOW</h2>
+<br>
+<p>Search where you will in the record of Kings, you
+will find nowhere a figure more splendid and more
+impressive than that of the fourteenth Louis, who for
+more then seventy years ruled over France, and
+for more than fifty eclipsed in glory his fellow-sovereigns
+as the sun pales the stars. Nearly two
+centuries have gone since he closed his weary and
+disillusioned eyes on the world he had so long
+dominated; but to-day he shines in history in the
+galaxy of monarchs with a lustre almost as great as
+when he was hailed throughout the world as the
+"Sun-King," and in his pride exclaimed, "<i>I</i> am the
+State."</p>
+<p>Placed, like his successor, on the greatest throne
+in Europe, a child of five, fortune exhausted itself
+in lavishing gifts on him. The world was at his
+feet almost before he had learned to walk. He grew
+to manhood amid the adulation and flatteries of the
+greatest men and the fairest of women. And that
+he might lack no great gift, he was dowered with
+every physical perfection that should go to the
+making of a King.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_239"></a>There was no more goodly youth in France than
+Louis when he first practised the arts of love-making,
+in which he later became such an adept, on
+Mazarin's lovely niece, Marie Mancini. Tall, with
+a well-knit, supple figure, with dark, beautiful eyes
+illuminating a singularly handsome face, with a bearing
+of rare grace and distinction, this son of Anne of
+Austria was a lover whom few women could resist.</p>
+<p>Such conquests came to him with fatal ease, and
+for thirty years at least, until satiety killed passion,
+there was no lack of beautiful women to minister to
+his pleasure and to console him for the lack of charms
+in the Spanish wife whom Mazarin thrust into his
+reluctant arms when he was little more than a
+boy, and when his heart was in Marie Mancini's
+keeping.</p>
+<p>Among all the fair and frail women who succeeded
+one another in his affection three stand out from the
+rest with a prominence which his special favour
+assigned to each in turn. For ten early years it was
+Louise de la Baume-Leblanc (better known to fame
+as the Duchesse de Lavalli&egrave;re) who reigned as his
+uncrowned Queen, and who gave her life to his
+pleasure and to the care of the children she bore to
+him. But such constancy could not last for ever in a
+man so constitutionally inconstant as Louis. When
+the Marquise de Montespan, in all her radiant and
+sensuous loveliness, came on the scene, she drew the
+King to her arms as a flame lures the moth. Her
+voluptuous charms, her abounding vitality and witty
+tongue, made the more refined beauty and the gentleness
+of the Duchesse flavourless in comparison; and
+<a name="Page_240"></a>Louise, realising that her sun had set, retired
+to spend
+the rest of her life in the prayers and piety of a
+convent, leaving her brilliant rival in undisputed
+possession of the field.</p>
+<p>For many years Madame de Montespan, the most
+consummate courtesan who ever enslaved a King,
+queened it over Louis in her magnificent apartments
+at Versailles and in the Tuileries. He was never
+weary of showering rich gifts and favours on her;
+and, in return, she became the mother of his children
+and ministered to his every whim, little dreaming of
+the day when she in turn was to be dethroned by
+an insignificant widow whom she regarded as the
+creature of her bounty, and who so often awaited her
+pleasure in her ante-room.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 25%;">
+<p>When Fran&ccedil;oise d'Aubign&eacute; was cradled, one
+November day in the year 1635, within the walls of
+a fortress-prison in Poitou, the prospect of a Queendom
+seemed as remote as a palace in the moon.
+She had good blood in her veins, it is true. Her
+ancestors had been noblemen of Normandy before
+the Conqueror ever thought of crossing the English
+Channel, and her grandfather, General Theodore
+d'Aubign&eacute;, had won distinction as a soldier on many
+a battlefield. It was to her father, profligate and
+spendthrift, who, after squandering his patrimony,
+had found himself lodged in jail, that Fran&ccedil;oise
+owed the ignominy of her birthplace, for her mother
+had insisted on sharing the captivity of her ne'er-do-well
+husband.</p>
+<p>When at last Constant d'Aubign&eacute; found his prison
+<a name="Page_241"></a>doors opened, he shook the dust of France off
+his
+feet and took his wife and young children away to
+Martinique, where at least, he hoped, his record
+would not be known. On the voyage, we are told,
+the child was brought so near to death's door by an
+illness that her body was actually on the point of
+being flung overboard when her mother detected
+signs of life, and rescued her from a watery grave.
+A little later, in Martinique, she had an equally
+narrow escape from death as the result of a snakebite.
+A child thus twice miraculously preserved was
+evidently destined for better things than an early
+tomb, more than one declared; and so indeed it
+proved.</p>
+<p>When the father ended his mis-spent days in the
+West Indian island, the widow took her poverty and
+her fledgelings back to France, where Fran&ccedil;oise was
+placed under the charge of a Madame de Villette, to
+pick up such education as she could in exchange for
+such menial work as looking after Madame's poultry
+and scrubbing her floors. When her mother in turn
+died, the child (she was only fifteen at the time) was
+taken to Paris by an aunt, whose miserliness or
+poverty often sent her hungry to bed.</p>
+<p>Such was Fran&ccedil;oise's condition when she was
+taken one day to the house of Paul Scarron, the
+crippled poet, whose satires and burlesques kept
+Paris in a ripple of merriment, and to whom the
+child's poverty and friendless position made as
+powerful an appeal as her budding beauty and her
+modesty. It was a very tender heart that beat in
+the pain-racked, paralysed body of the "father of
+<a name="Page_242"></a>French burlesque"; and within a few days of
+first
+setting eyes on his "little Indian girl," as he called
+her, he asked her to marry him. "It is a sorry offer
+to make you, my dear child," he said, "but it is either
+this or a convent." And, to escape the convent,
+Fran&ccedil;oise consented to become the wife of the
+"bundle of pains and deformities" old enough to be
+her father.</p>
+<p>In the marriage-contract Scarron, with characteristic
+buffoonery, recognises her as bringing a dower
+of "four louis, two large and very expressive eyes, a
+fine bosom, a pair of lovely hands, and a good intellect";
+while to the attorney, when asked what his
+contribution was, he answered, "I give her my
+name, and that means immortality." For eight
+years Fran&ccedil;oise was the dutiful wife of her crippled
+husband, nursing him tenderly, managing his home
+and his purse, redeeming his writing from its
+coarseness, and generally proving her gratitude by
+a ceaseless devotion. Then came the day when
+Scarron bade her farewell on his death-bed, begging
+her with his last breath to remember him sometimes,
+and bidding her to be "always virtuous."</p>
+<p>Thus Fran&ccedil;oise d'Aubign&eacute; was thrown once more
+on a cold world, with nothing between her and
+starvation but Scarron's small pension, which the
+Queen-mother continued to his widow, and compelled
+to seek a cheap refuge within convent walls.
+She had however good-looks which might stand her
+in good stead. She was tall, with an imposing
+figure and a natural dignity of carriage. She had a
+wealth of light-brown hair, eyes dark and brilliant,
+<a name="Page_243"></a>full of fire and intelligence, a well-shaped
+nose, and
+an exquisitely modelled mouth.</p>
+<p>Beautiful she was beyond doubt, in these days of
+her prime; but there were thousands of more beautiful
+women in France. And for ten years Madame
+Scarron was left to languish within the convent
+walls with never a lover to offer her release. When
+the Queen-mother died, and with her the pitiful
+pension, her plight was indeed pitiful. Her petitions
+to the King fell on deaf ears, until Montespan, moved
+by her tears and entreaties, pleaded for her; and
+Louis at last gave a reluctant consent to continue the
+allowance.</p>
+<p>It was a happy inspiration that led Scarron's widow
+to the King's favourite, for Madame de Montespan's
+heart, ever better than her life, went out to the gentle
+woman whom fate was treating so scurvily. Not
+content with procuring the pension, she placed her
+in charge of her nursery, an office of great trust and
+delicacy; and thus Madame Scarron found herself
+comfortably installed in the King's palace with a
+salary of two thousand crowns a year. Her day of
+poverty and independence was at last ended. She
+had, in fact, though she little knew it, placed her foot
+on the ladder, at the summit of which was the dazzling
+prize of the King's hand.</p>
+<p>Those were happy years which followed. High
+in the favour of the King's mistress, loving the little
+ones given into her charge as if they were her own
+children, especially the eldest born, the delicate and
+warm-hearted Duc de Maine, who was also his
+father's darling, Madame had nothing left to wish
+<a name="Page_244"></a>for in life. Her days were full of duty, of
+peace, and
+contentment. Even Louis, as he watched the loving
+care she lavished on his children, began to thaw and
+to smile on her, and to find pleasure in his visits to
+the nursery, which grew more and more frequent.
+There was a charm in this sweet-eyed, gentle-voiced
+widow, whose tongue was so skilful in wise and
+pleasant words. Her patient devotion deserved
+recognition. He gave orders that more fitting
+apartments should be assigned to Madame&#8212;a suite
+little less sumptuous than that of Montespan herself;
+and that money should not be lacking, he made her
+a gift of two hundred thousand francs, which the
+provident widow promptly invested in the purchase
+of the castle and estate of Maintenon.</p>
+<p>Such marked favours as these not unnaturally set
+jealous tongues wagging. Even Montespan began
+to grow uneasy, and to wonder what was coming
+next. When she ventured to refer sarcastically to
+the use "Scarron's widow" had made of his present,
+Louis silenced her by answering, "In my opinion,
+<i>Madame de Maintenon</i> has acted very wisely";
+thus by a word conferring noble rank on the woman
+his favourite was already beginning to fear as a rival.</p>
+<p>And indeed there were soon to be sufficient
+grounds for Montespan's jealously and alarm. Every
+day saw Louis more and more under the spell of
+his children's governess&#8212;the middle-aged woman
+whose musical voice, gentle eyes, and wise words of
+counsel were opening a new and better world to him.
+She knew, as well as himself, how sated and weary
+he was of the cup of pleasure he had now drained to
+<a name="Page_245"></a>its last dregs of disillusionment; and he
+listened with
+eager ears to the words which pointed to him a surer
+path of happiness. Even reproof from her lips
+became more grateful to him than the sweetest
+flatteries from those of the most beautiful woman
+who counted but half of her years.</p>
+<p>The growing influence of the widow Scarron over
+the "Sun-King" had already become the chief
+gossip of the Court. From the allurements of
+Montespan, of Mademoiselle de Fontanges, and of
+de Ludre he loved to escape to the apartments of the
+soft-voiced woman who cared so much more for his
+soul than for his smiles. "His Majesty's interviews
+with Madame de Maintenon," Madame de Sevign&eacute;
+writes, "become more and more frequent, and they
+last from six in the morning to ten at night, she sitting
+in one arm-chair, he in another."</p>
+<p>In vain Montespan stormed and wept in her fits
+of jealous rage; in vain did the beautiful de Fontanges
+seek to lure him to her arms, until death
+claimed her so tragically before she had well passed
+her twentieth birthday. The King had had more
+than enough of such Delilahs. Pleasure had palled;
+peace was what he craved now&#8212;salve for his seared
+conscience.</p>
+<p>When Madame de Maintenon was appointed principal
+lady-in-waiting to the Dauphine and when, a
+little later, Louis' unhappy Queen drew her last
+breath in her arms, Montespan at last realised that
+her day of power was over. She wrote letters to the
+King begging him not to withdraw his affection from
+her, but to these appeals Louis was silent; he
+<a name="Page_246"></a>handed the letters to Madame de Maintenon to
+answer as she willed.</p>
+<p>The Court was quick to realise that a new star
+had risen; ministers and ambassadors now flocked
+to the new divinity to consult her and to win her
+favour. The governess was hailed as the new
+Queen of Louis and of France. The climax came
+when the King was thrown one day from his horse
+while hunting, and broke his arm. It was Madame
+de Maintenon alone who was allowed to nurse him,
+and who was by his side night and day. Before the
+arm was well again she was standing, thickly veiled,
+before an improvised altar in the King's study, with
+Louis by her side, while the words that made them
+man and wife were pronounced by Archbishop de
+Harlay.</p>
+<p>The prison-child had now reached the loftiest
+pinnacle in the land of her birth. Though she wore
+no crown, she was Queen of France, wielding a
+power which few throned ladies have ever known.
+Princes and Princesses rose to greet her entry with
+bows and curtsies; the mother of the coming King
+called her "aunt"; her rooms, splendid as the
+King's, adjoined his; she had the place of honour
+in the King's Council Room; the State's secrets were
+in her keeping; she guided and controlled the
+destinies of the nation. And all this greatness came
+to her when she had passed her fiftieth year, and
+when all the grace and bloom of youth were but a
+distant memory.</p>
+<p>The King himself, two years her junior, and still
+in the prime of his manhood, was her shadow, paying
+<a name="Page_247"></a>to the plain, middle-aged woman such deference
+and
+courtesy as he had never shown to the youth and
+beauty of her predecessors in his affection. And she&#8212;thus
+translated to dizzy heights&#8212;kept a head as
+cool and a demeanour as modest as when she was
+"Scarron's widow," the convent prot&eacute;g&eacute;e. For
+power and splendour she cared no whit. Her
+ambition now, as always, was to be loved for herself,
+to "play a beautiful part in the world," and to deserve
+the respect of all good men.</p>
+<p>Her chief pleasure was found away from the pomp
+and glitter of the Court, among "her children" of
+the Saint Cyr Convent, which she had founded for
+the education of the daughters of poor noblemen,
+over whom she watched with loving and unflagging
+care. And yet she was not happy&#8212;not nearly as
+happy as in the days of her obscure widowhood.
+"I am dying of sorrow in the midst of luxury," she
+wrote. And again. "I cannot bear it. I wish I
+were dead." Why she was so unhappy, with her
+Queendom and her environment of love and esteem,
+and her life of good works, it is impossible to say.
+The fact remains, inscrutable, but still fact.</p>
+<p>Twenty-five years of such life of splendid sadness,
+and Louis, his last days clouded by loss and
+suffering, died with her prayers in his ears, his
+coverlet moistened by her tears. Two years later&#8212;years
+spent in prayers and masses and charitable
+work&#8212;the "Queen Dowager" drew the last breath
+of her long life at St Cyr, shortly after hearing that
+her beloved Due de Maine, her pet nursling of
+other days, had been arrested and flung into prison.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXIII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_248"></a>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+<h2>A THRONED BARBARIAN</h2>
+<br>
+<p>The dawn of the eighteenth century saw the thrones
+of France and Russia occupied by two of the most
+remarkable sovereigns who ever wore a crown&#8212;Louis
+XIV., the "Sun-King," whose splendours
+dazzled Europe, and whose power held it in awe;
+and Peter I. of Russia, whose destructive sword
+swept Europe from Sweden to the Dardenelles, and
+whose clever brain laid sure the foundation of his
+country's greatness. Each of these Royal rivals
+dwarfed all other fellow-monarchs as the sun pales
+the stars; and yet it would scarcely have been
+possible to find two men more widely different in all
+save their passion for power and their love of woman,
+which alone they had in common.</p>
+<p>Of the two, Peter is unquestionably to-day the
+more arresting, dominating figure. Although nearly
+two centuries have gone since he made his exit from
+the world, we can still picture him in his pride,
+towering a head higher than the tallest of his
+courtiers, swart of face, "as if he had been born in
+Africa," with his black, close-curling hair, his bold,
+imperious eyes, his powerful, well-knit frame&#8212;"the
+<a name="Page_249"></a>muscles and stature of a Goliath"&#8212;a kingly
+figure,
+with majesty in every movement.</p>
+<p>We see him, too, wilfully discarding the kingliness
+with which nature had so liberally dowered him&#8212;now
+receiving ambassadors "in a short dressing-gown,
+below which his bare legs were exposed, a
+thick nightcap, lined with linen, on his head, his
+stockings dropped down over his slippers"&#8212;now
+walking through the Copenhagen streets grotesque
+in a green cap, a brown overcoat with horn
+buttons, worsted stockings full of darns, and dirty,
+cobbled shoes; and again carousing, red of face and
+loud of voice, with his meanest subjects in some low
+tavern.</p>
+<p>As the mood seizes him he plays the r&ocirc;le of fireman
+for hours together; goes carol-singing in his
+sledge, and reaps his harvest of coppers from the
+houses of his subjects; rides a hobby-horse at a
+village fair, and shrieks with laughter until he falls
+off; or plies saw and plane in a shipbuilding yard,
+sharing the meals and drinking bouts of his fellow-workmen.</p>
+<p>The French Ambassador, Campredon, wrote of
+him in 1725:&#8212;"It is utterly impossible at the
+present moment to approach the Tsar on serious
+subjects; he is altogether given up to his amusements,
+which consist in going every day to the
+principal houses in the town with a suite of 200
+persons, musicians and so forth, who sing songs on
+every sort of subject, and amuse themselves by
+eating and drinking at the expense of the persons
+they visit." "He never passed a single day without
+<a name="Page_250"></a>being the worse for drink," Baron P&ouml;llnitz
+tells us;
+and his drinking companions were usually chosen
+from the most degraded of his subjects, of both
+sexes, with whom he consorted on the most familiar
+terms.</p>
+<p>When his muddled brain occasionally awoke to
+the knowledge that he was a King, he would bully
+and hector his boon-comrades like any drunken
+trooper. On one occasion, when a young Jewess
+refused to drain a goblet of neat brandy which he
+thrust into her hand, he promptly administered two
+resounding boxes on her ears, shouting, "Vile
+Hebrew spawn! I'll teach thee to obey."</p>
+<p>There was in him, too, a vein of savage cruelty
+which took remarkable forms. A favourite pastime
+was to visit the torture-chamber and gloat over the
+sufferings of the victims of the knout and the
+strappado; or to attend (and frequently to officiate at)
+public executions. Once, we are told, at a banquet,
+he "amused himself by decapitating twenty Streltsy,
+emptying as many glasses of brandy between successive
+strokes, and challenging the Prussian envoy
+to repeat the feat."</p>
+<p>Mad? There can be little doubt that Peter
+had madness in his veins. He was a degenerate
+and an epileptic, subject to brain storms which
+terrified all who witnessed them. "A sort of convulsion
+seized him, which often for hours threw him
+into a most distressing condition. His body was
+violently contorted; his face distorted into horrible
+grimaces; and he was further subject to paroxysms
+of rage, during which it was almost certain death to
+<a name="Page_251"></a>approach him." Even in his saner moods, as
+Waliszewski tells us, he "joined to the roughness of
+a Russian <i>barin</i> all the coarseness of a Dutch sailor."
+Such in brief suggestion was Peter I. of Russia,
+half-savage, half-sovereign, the strangest jumble
+of contradictions who has ever worn the Imperial
+purple&#8212;"a huge mastodon, whose moral perceptions
+were all colossal and monstrous."</p>
+<p>It was, perhaps, inevitable that a man so primitive,
+so little removed from the animal, should find
+his chief pleasures in low pursuits and companionships.
+During his historic visit to London, after a
+hard day's work with adze and saw in the shipbuilding
+yard, the Tsar would adjourn with his fellow-workmen
+to a public-house in Great Tower Street,
+and "smoke and drink ale and brandy, almost
+enough to float the vessel he had been helping to
+construct."</p>
+<p>And in his own kingdom the favourite companions
+of his debauches were common soldiers and servants.</p>
+<p>"He chose his friends among the common herd;
+looked after his household like any shopkeeper;
+thrashed his wife like a peasant; and sought his
+pleasure where the lower populace generally finds
+it." His female companions were chosen rather for
+their coarseness than their charms, and pleased him
+most when they were drunk. It was thus fitting that
+he should make an Empress of a scullery-maid, who,
+as we have seen in an earlier chapter, had no vestige
+of beauty to commend her to his favour, and whose
+chief attractions in his eyes were that she had a coarse
+tongue and was a "first-rate toper."</p>
+<p><a name="Page_252"></a>It was thus a strange and unhappy caprice of
+fate
+that united Peter, while still a youth, to his first
+Empress, the refined and sensitive Eudoxia, a woman
+as remote from her husband as the stars. Never
+was there a more incongruous bride than this
+delicately nurtured girl provided by the Empress
+Nathalie for her coarse-grained son. From the hour
+at which they stood together at the altar the union
+was doomed to tragic failure; before the honeymoon
+waned Peter had terrified his bride by his brutality
+and disgusted her by the open attentions he paid to
+his favourites of the hour, the daughters of Botticher,
+the goldsmith, and Mons, the wine-merchant.</p>
+<p>For five years husband and wife saw little of each
+other; and when, in 1694, Nathalie's death removed
+the one influence which gave the union at least
+the outward form of substance, Peter lost no time
+in exhibiting his true colours. He dismissed all
+Eudoxia's relatives from the Court, and sent her
+father into exile. One brother he caused to be
+whipped in public; another was put to the torture,
+which had its horrible climax when Peter himself
+saturated his victim's clothes with spirits of wine,
+and then set them on fire. For Eudoxia a different
+fate was reserved. Not only had he long grown
+weary of her insipid beauty and of her refinement
+and gentleness, which were a constant mute reproach
+to his own low tastes and hectoring manners&#8212;he had
+grown to hate the very sight of her, and determined
+that she should no longer stand between him and the
+unbridled indulgence of his pleasure.</p>
+<p>During his visit to England he never once wrote
+<a name="Page_253"></a>to her, and on his return to Moscow his first
+words
+were a brutal announcement of his intention to be
+rid of her. In vain she pleaded and wept. To her
+tearful inquiries, "What have I done to offend you?
+What fault have you to find with me?" he turned a
+deaf ear. "I never want to see you again," were his
+last inexorable words. A few days later a hackney
+coach drove up to the palace doors; the unhappy
+Tsarina was bundled unceremoniously into it, and
+she was carried away to the nunnery of the "Intercession
+of the Blessed Virgin," whose doors were
+closed on her for a score of years.</p>
+<p>Pitiful years they were for the young Empress,
+consigned by her husband to a life that was worse
+than death&#8212;robbed of her rank, her splendours, and
+luxuries, her very name&#8212;she was now only Helen,
+the nun, faring worse than the meanest of her
+sister-nuns; for while they at least had plenty to eat,
+the Tsarina seems many a time to have known the
+pangs of hunger. The letters she wrote to one of
+her brothers are pathetic evidence of the straits to
+which she was reduced. "For pity's sake," she
+wrote, "give me food and drink. Give clothes to
+the beggar. There is nothing here. I do not need
+a great deal; still I must eat."</p>
+<p>It is not to be wondered at, that, in her misery,
+she should turn anywhere for succour and sympathy;
+and both came to her at last in the guise of Major
+Glebof, an officer in the district, whose heart was
+touched by the sadness of her fate. He sent her food
+and wine to restore her strength, and warm furs to protect
+her from the iciness of her cell. In response to her
+<a name="Page_254"></a>letters of thanks, he visited her again and
+again,
+bringing sunshine into her darkened life with his
+presence, and soothing her with words of sympathy
+and encouragement, until gratitude to the "good
+Samaritan" grew into love for the man.</p>
+<p>When she learned that the man who had so
+befriended her was himself poor, actually in money
+difficulties, she insisted on giving him every rouble
+she could wring, by any abject appeal, out of her
+friends and relatives. She became his very slave,
+grovelling at his feet. "Where thy heart is, dearest
+one," she wrote to him, "there is mine also;
+where thy tongue is, there is my head; thy will is
+also mine." She loved him with a passion which
+broke down all barriers of modesty and prudence,
+reckless of the fact that he had a wife, as she had a
+husband.</p>
+<p>When Major Glebof's visits and letters grew more
+and more infrequent, she suffered tortures of anxiety
+and despair. "My light, my soul, my joy," she
+wrote in one distracted letter, "has the cruel hour of
+separation come already? O, my light! how can I
+live apart from thee? How can I endure existence?
+Rather would I see my soul parted from my body.
+God alone knows how dear thou art to me. Why
+do I love thee so much, my adored one, that without
+thee life is so worthless? Why art thou angry with
+me? Why, my <i>batioushka</i>, dost thou not come
+to see me? Have pity on me, O my lord, and
+come to see me to-morrow. O, my world, my
+dearest and best, answer me; do not let me die
+of grief."</p>
+<p><a name="Page_255"></a>Thus one distracted, incoherent letter
+followed
+another, heart-breaking in their grief, pitiful in their
+appeal. "Come to me," she cried; "without thee I
+shall die. Why dost thou cause me such anguish?
+Have I been guilty without knowing it? Better far
+to have struck me, to have punished me in any way,
+for this fault I have innocently committed." And
+again: "Why am I not dead? Oh, that thou hadst
+buried me with thy own hands! Forgive me, O my
+soul! Do not let me die.... Send me but a crust
+of bread thou hast bitten with thy teeth, or the
+waistcoat thou hast often worn, that I may have something
+to bring thee near to me."</p>
+<p>What answers, if any, the Major vouchsafed to
+these pathetic letters we know not. The probability
+is that they received no answer&#8212;that the "good
+Samaritan" had either wearied of or grown alarmed
+at a passion which he could not return, and which
+was fraught with danger. It was accident only that
+revealed to the world the story of this strange and
+tragic infatuation.</p>
+<p>When the Tsarevitch, Alexis, was brought to trial
+in 1718 on a charge of conspiracy against his father,
+Peter, suspecting that Eudoxia had had a hand in
+the rebellion, ordered a descent on the nunnery and
+an inquiry. Nothing was found to connect her with
+her son's ill-fated venture; but the inquiry revealed
+the whole story of her relations with the too friendly
+officer. The evidence of the nuns and servants alone&#8212;evidence
+of frequent and long meetings by day and
+night, of embraces exchanged&#8212;was sufficiently conclusive,
+without the incriminating letters which were
+<a name="Page_256"></a>discovered in the Major's bureau, labelled
+"Letters
+from the Tsarina," or Eudoxia's confession which
+was extorted from her.</p>
+<p>This was an opportunity of vengeance such as
+exceeded all the Tsar's hopes. Glebof was arrested
+and put on his trial. Evidence was forced from the
+nuns by the lashing of the knout, so severe that some
+of them died under it. Glebof, subjected to such
+frightful tortures that in his agony he confessed much
+more than the truth, was sentenced to death by
+impalement. In order to prolong his suffering to the
+last possible moment, he was warmly wrapped in furs,
+to protect him from the bitter cold, and for twenty-eight
+hours he suffered indescribable agony, until at
+last death came to his release.</p>
+<p>As for Eudoxia, her punishment was a public
+flogging and consignment to a nunnery still more
+isolated and miserable than that in which she had
+dragged out twenty years of her broken life. Here she
+remained for seven years, until, on the Tsar's death,
+an even worse fate befell her. She was then, by
+Catherine's orders, taken from the convent, and
+flung into the most loathsome, rat-infested dungeon
+of the fortress of Schlussenberg, where she remained
+for two years of unspeakable horror.</p>
+<p>Then at last, after nearly thirty years of life that
+was worse than death, the sun shone again for her.
+One day her dungeon door flew open, and to the
+bowing of obsequious courtiers, the prisoner was
+conducted to a sumptuous apartment. "The walls
+were hung with splendid stuffs; the table was covered
+with gold-plate; ten thousand roubles awaited her in
+<a name="Page_257"></a>a casket. Courtiers stood in her ante-chamber;
+carriages and horses were at her orders."</p>
+<p>Catherine, the "scullery-Empress," was dead;
+Eudoxia's grandson, Peter II., now wore the crown
+of Russia; and Eudoxia found herself transported,
+as by the touch of a magic wand, from her loathsome
+prison-cell to the old-time splendours of palaces&#8212;the
+greatest lady in all Russia, to whom Princesses,
+ambassadors, and courtiers were all proud to pay
+respectful homage. But the transformation had
+come too late; her life was crushed beyond restoration;
+and after a few months of her new glory she
+was glad to find an asylum once more within
+convent walls, until Death, the great healer of broken
+hearts, took her to where, "beyond these voices,
+there is peace."</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 25%;">
+<p>While Eudoxia was eating her heart out in her
+convent cell, her husband was finding ample compensation
+for her absence in Bacchanalian orgies
+and the company of his galaxies of favourites, from
+tradesmen's daughters to servant-maids of buxom
+charms, such as the Livonian peasant-girl, in whom
+he found his second Empress.</p>
+<p>Of the almost countless women who thus fell under
+his baneful influence one stands out from the rest by
+reason of the tragedy which surrounds her memory.
+Mary Hamilton was no low-born maid, such as
+Peter especially chose to honour with his attentions.
+She had in her veins the blood of the ducal
+Hamiltons of Scotland, and of many a noble family
+of Russia, from which her more immediate ancestors
+<a name="Page_258"></a>had taken their wives; and it was an ill fate
+that
+took her, when little more than a child, to the most
+debased Court of Europe to play the part of maid-of-honour,
+and thus to cross the path of the most
+unprincipled lover in Europe.</p>
+<p>Peter's infatuation for the pretty young "Scotswoman,"
+however, was but short-lived. She had
+none of the vulgar attractions that could win him to
+any kind of constancy; and he quickly abandoned
+her for the more agreeable company of his
+<i>dienshtchiks</i>, leaving her to find consolation in the
+affection of more courtly, if less exalted, lovers&#8212;notably
+the young Count Orloff, who proved as
+faithless as his master.</p>
+<p>Such was Mary's infatuation for the worthless
+Count that, under his influence, she stooped to
+various kinds of crime, from stealing the Tsarina's
+jewels to fill her lover's purse, to infanticide. The
+climax came when an important document was
+missing from the Tsar's cabinet. Suspicion pointed
+to Orloff as the thief; he was arrested, and, when
+brought into Peter's presence, not only confessed to
+the thefts and to his share in making away with the
+undesirable infants, but betrayed the partner of
+his guilt.</p>
+<p>There was short shrift for poor Mary Hamilton
+when she was put on her trial on these grave charges.
+She made full confession of her crimes; but no torture
+could wring from her the name of the man for love
+of whom she had committed them, and of whose
+treachery to her she was ignorant. She was sentenced
+to death; and one March day, in the year
+<a name="Page_259"></a>1719, she was led to the scaffold "in a white
+silk
+gown trimmed with black ribbons."</p>
+<p>Then followed one of the grimmest scenes
+recorded in history. Peter, the man who had been
+the first to betray her, and who had refused her
+pardon even when her cause was pleaded by his wife,
+was a keenly interested spectator of her execution.
+At the foot of the scaffold he embraced her, and
+exhorted her to pray, before stepping aside to give
+place to the headsman. When the axe had done its
+deadly work, he again stepped forward, picked up
+the lifeless and still beautiful head which had rolled
+into the mud, and calmly proceeded to give a lecture
+on anatomy to the assembled crowd, "drawing
+attention to the number and nature of the organs
+severed by the axe." His lecture concluded, he
+kissed the pale, dead lips, crossed himself, and
+walked away with a smile of satisfaction on his face.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_260"></a>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+<h2>A FRIEND OF MARIE ANTOINETTE</h2>
+<br>
+<p>There is scarcely a spectacle in the whole drama
+of history more pathetic than that of Marie Antoinette,
+dancing her light-hearted way through life to
+the guillotine, seemingly unconscious of the eyes of
+jealousy and hate that watched her every step; or, if
+she noticed at all, returning a gay smile for a frown.</p>
+<p>Wedded when but a child, full of the joy of youth,
+with laughter bubbling on her pretty lips and gaiety
+dancing in her eyes, to a dull-witted clown to whom
+her fresh young beauty made no appeal; surrounded
+by Court ladies jealous of her charms; feared for her
+foreign sympathies, and hated by a sullen, starving
+populace for her extravagance and her pursuit of
+pleasure, the Austrian Princess with all her young
+loveliness and the sweetness of her nature could
+please no one in the land of her exile. Her very
+amiability was an offence; her unaffected simplicity
+a subject of scorn; and her love of pleasure a crime.</p>
+<p>Had she realised the danger of her position, and
+adapted herself to its demands, her story might have
+been written very differently; but her tragedy was
+that she saw or heeded none of the danger-signals
+<a name="Page_261"></a>that marked her path until it was too late to
+retrace
+a step; and that her most innocent pleasures were
+made to pave the way to her doom.</p>
+<p>Nothing, for instance, could have been more harmless
+to the seeming than Marie Antoinette's friendship
+for Yolande de Polignac; but this friendship
+had, beyond doubt, a greater part in her undoing
+than any other incident in her life, from the affair
+of the "diamond necklace" to her innocent infatuation
+for Count Fersen; and it would have been well
+for the Queen of France if Madame de Polignac had
+been content to remain in her rustic obscurity, and
+had never crossed her path.</p>
+<p>When Yolande Gabrielle de Polastron was led to
+the altar, one day in the year 1767, by Comte Jules
+de Polignac, she never dreamt, we may be sure, of
+the dazzling r&ocirc;le she was destined to play at the
+Court of France. Like her husband, she was a member
+of the smaller <i>noblesse</i>, as proud as they were
+poor. Her husband, it is true, boasted a long pedigree,
+with its roots in the Dark Ages; but his family
+had given to France only one man of note, that
+Cardinal de Polignac, accomplished scholar, courtier,
+and man of affairs, who was able to twist Louis XIV.
+round his dexterous thumb; and Comte Jules was
+the Cardinal's great-nephew, and, through his
+mother, had Mazarin blood in his veins.</p>
+<p>But the young couple had a purse as short as their
+descent was long; and the early years of their wedded
+life were spent in Comte Jules' dilapidated ch&acirc;teau,
+on an income less than the equivalent of a pound a
+day&#8212;in a rustic retirement which was varied by an
+<a name="Page_262"></a>occasional jaunt to Paris to "see the sights,"
+and
+enjoy a little cheap gaiety.</p>
+<p>Comte Jules, however, had a sister, Diane, a
+clever-tongued, ambitious young woman, who had
+found a footing at Court as lady-in-waiting to the
+Comtesse d'Artois, and whom her brother and his
+wife were proud to visit on their rare journeys to the
+capital. And it was during one of these visits that
+Marie Antoinette, who had struck up an informal
+friendship with the sprightly, laughter-loving Diane,
+first met the woman who was to play such an important
+and dangerous part in her life.</p>
+<p>It was, perhaps, little wonder that the French
+Queen, craving for friendship and sympathy, fell
+under the charm of Yolande de Polignac&#8212;a girl
+still, but a few years older than herself, with a singular
+sweetness and winsomeness, and "beautiful as a
+dream." The beauty of the young Comtesse was,
+indeed, a revelation even in a Court of fair women.
+In the extravagant words of chroniclers of the time,
+"she had the most heavenly face that was ever seen.
+Her glance, her smile, every feature was angelic."
+No picture could, it was said, do any justice to this
+lovely creature of the glorious brown hair and blue
+eyes, who seemed so utterly unconscious of her
+beauty.</p>
+<p>Such was the woman who came into the life of
+Marie Antoinette, and at once took possession of her
+heart. At last the Queen of France, in her isolation,
+had found the ideal friend she had sought so long in
+vain; a woman young and beautiful like herself, with
+kindred tastes, eager as she was to enjoy life, and
+<a name="Page_263"></a>with all the qualities to make a charming and
+sympathetic
+companion. It was a case of love at first
+sight, on Marie Antoinette's part at least; and each
+subsequent meeting only served to strengthen the
+link that bound these two women so strangely
+brought together.</p>
+<p>The Comtesse must come oftener to Court, the
+Queen pleaded, so that they might have more opportunities
+of meeting and of learning to know each
+other; and when the Comtesse pleaded poverty,
+Marie Antoinette brushed the difficulty aside. That
+could easily be arranged; the Queen had a vacancy
+in the ranks of her equerries. M. le Comte would
+accept the post, and then Madame would have her
+apartments at the Court itself.</p>
+<p>Thus it was that Comte Jules' wife was transported
+from her poor country ch&acirc;teau to the splendours of
+Versailles, installed as <i>ch&egrave;re amie</i> of the Queen in
+place of the Princesse de Lamballe, and with the ball
+of fortune at her pretty feet. And never did woman
+adapt herself more easily to such a change of environment.
+It was, indeed, a great part of the charm of
+this remarkable woman that, amid success which
+would have turned the head of almost any other of
+her sex, she remained to her last day as simple and
+unaffected as when she won the Queen's heart in
+Diane de Polignac's apartment.</p>
+<p>So absolutely indifferent did she seem to her new
+splendours, that, when jealousy sought to undermine
+the Queen's friendship, she implored Marie Antoinette
+to allow her to go back to her old, obscure life;
+and it was only when the Queen begged her to stay,
+<a name="Page_264"></a>with arms around her neck and with streaming
+tears,
+that she consented to remain by her side.</p>
+<p>If the Queen ever had any doubt that she had at
+last found a friend who loved her for herself, the
+doubt was now finally dissipated. Such an unselfish
+love as this was a treasure to be prized; and from
+this moment Queen and waiting-woman were inseparable.
+When they were not strolling arm-in-arm
+in the corridors or gardens of Versailles, Her Majesty
+was spending her days in Madame's apartments,
+where, as she said, "We are no longer Queen and
+subject, but just dear friends."</p>
+<p>So unhappy was Marie Antoinette apart from her
+new friend that, when Madame de Polignac gave
+birth to a child at Passy, the Court itself was moved
+to La Muette, so that the Queen could play the part
+of nurse by her friend's bedside.</p>
+<p>Such, now, was the Queen's devotion that there
+was no favour she would not have gladly showered
+on the Comtesse; but to all such offers Madame
+turned a deaf ear. She wanted nothing but Marie
+Antoinette's love and friendship for herself; but if the
+Queen, in her goodness, chose to extend her favour
+to Madame's relatives&#8212;well, that was another matter.</p>
+<p>Thus it was that Comte Jules soon blossomed into
+a Duke, and Madame perforce became a Duchess,
+with a coveted tabouret at Court. But they were
+still poor, in spite of an equerry's pay, and heavily
+in debt, a matter which must be seen to. The
+Queen's purse satisfied every creditor, to the tune
+of four hundred thousand livres, and Duc Jules found
+himself lord of an estate which added seventy thousand
+<a name="Page_265"></a>livres yearly to his exchequer, with another
+annual
+eighty thousand livres as revenue for his office of
+Director-General of Posts.</p>
+<p>Of course, if the Queen <i>would</i> be so foolishly
+generous, it was not the Duchesse's fault, and when
+Marie Antoinette next proposed to give a dowry of
+eight hundred thousand livres to the Duchesse's
+daughter on her marriage to the Comte de Guiche,
+and to raise the bridegroom to a dukedom&#8212;well, it
+was "very sweet of Her Majesty," and it was not
+for her to oppose such a lavish autocrat.</p>
+<p>Thus the shower of Royal favours grew; and it is
+perhaps little wonder that each new evidence of the
+Queen's prodigality was greeted with curses by the
+mob clamouring for bread outside the palace gates;
+while even her father's minister, Kaunitz, in far
+Vienna, brutally dubbed the Duchesse and her
+family, "a gang of thieves."</p>
+<p>Diane de Polignac, the Duchesse's sister-in-law,
+had long been made a Countess and placed in charge
+of a Royal household; and the grateful shower fell
+on all who had any connection with the favourite.
+Her father-in-law, Cardinal de Polignac's nephew,
+was rescued from his rustic poverty to play the
+exalted r&ocirc;le of ambassador; an uncle was raised
+<i>per saltum</i> from <i>cur&eacute;</i> to bishop. The Duchesse's
+widowed aunt was made happy by a pension of six
+thousand livres a year; and her son-in-law, de Guiche,
+in addition to his dukedom, was rewarded further for
+his fortunate nuptials by valuable sinecure offices at
+Court.</p>
+<p>So the tide of benefactions flowed until it was
+<a name="Page_266"></a>calculated that the Polignac family were drawing
+half
+a million livres every year as the fruits of the Queen's
+partiality for her favourite. Little wonder that, at
+a time when France was groaning under dire poverty,
+the volume of curses should swell against the
+"Austrian panther," who could thus squander gold
+while her subjects were starving; or that the Court
+should be inflamed by jealousy at such favours shown
+to a family so obscure as the Polignacs.</p>
+<p>To the warnings of her own family Marie Antoinette
+was deaf. What cared she for such exhibitions
+of spite and jealousy? She was Queen; and if she
+wished to be generous to her favourite's family, none
+should say her nay. And thus, with a smile half-careless,
+half-defiant, she went to meet the doom
+which, though she little dreamt it, awaited her.</p>
+<p>The Duchesse was now promoted to the office of
+governess of the Queen's children, a position which
+was the prerogative of Royalty itself, or, at least, of
+the very highest nobility. With her usual modesty,
+she had fought long against the promotion; but the
+Queen's will was law, and she had to submit to the
+inevitable as gracefully as she could. And now we
+see her installed in the most splendid apartments at
+Versailles, holding a <i>salon</i> almost as regal as that
+of Marie Antoinette herself.</p>
+<p>She was surrounded by sycophants and place-seekers,
+eager to capture the Queen's favour through
+her. And such was her influence that a word from
+her was powerful enough to make or mar a minister.
+She held, in fact, the reins of power and was now
+more potent than the weak-kneed King himself.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_267"></a>It was at this stage in her brilliant career
+that the
+Duchesse came under the spell of the Comte de
+Vaudreuil&#8212;handsome, courtly, an intriguer to his
+finger-tips, a man of many accomplishments, of a
+supple tongue, and with great wealth to lend a
+glamour to his gifts. A man of rare fascination, and
+as dangerous as he was fascinating.</p>
+<p>The woman who had carried a level head through
+so much unaccustomed splendour and power became
+the veriest slave of this handsome, honey-tongued
+Comte, who ruled her, as she in turn ruled the Queen.
+At his bidding she made and unmade ministers; she
+obtained for him pensions and high offices, and
+robbed the treasury of nearly two million livres to
+fill his pockets. When Marie Antoinette at last
+ventured to thwart the Comte in his ambition to
+become the Dauphin's Governor, he retaliated by
+poisoning the Duchesse's mind against her, and
+bringing about the first estrangement between the
+friends.</p>
+<p>Torn between her infatuation for Vaudreuil and
+her love of the Queen, the Duchesse was in an
+awkward dilemma. It became necessary to choose
+between the two rivals; and that Vaudreuil's spell
+proved the stronger, her increasing coldness to Marie
+Antoinette soon proved. It was the "rift within the
+lute" which was to make the music of their friendship
+mute. The Queen gradually withdrew herself
+from the Duchesse's <i>salon</i>, where she was sure to
+meet the insolent Vaudreuil; and thus the gulf gradually
+widened until the severance was complete.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 25%;">
+<p><a name="Page_268"></a>Evil days were now coming for Marie
+Antoinette.
+The affair of the diamond necklace had made powerful
+enemies; the Polignac family, taking the side of
+Vaudreuil and their protectress, were arrayed against
+her; France was rising on the tide of hate to sweep
+the Austrian and her husband from the throne. The
+horrors of the Revolution were being loosed, and all
+who could were flying for safety to other lands.</p>
+<p>At this terrible crisis the Queen's thoughts were
+less for herself than for her friend of happier days.
+She sought the Duchesse and begged her to fly while
+there was still time. Then it was that, touched by
+such unselfish love, the Duchesse's pride broke down,
+and all her old love for her sovereign lady returned
+in full flood. Bursting into tears, she flung herself
+at Marie Antoinette's feet, and begged forgiveness
+from the woman whose friendship she had
+spurned, and whose life she had, however innocently,
+done so much to ruin.</p>
+<p>A few hours later the Duchesse, disguised as a
+chambermaid and sitting by the coachman's side,
+was making her escape from France in company with
+her husband and other members of her family, while
+the Queen who had loved her so well was left to take
+the last tragic steps that had the guillotine for goal.</p>
+<p>Just before the carriage started on its long and
+perilous journey, a note was thrust into the "chambermaid's"
+hand&#8212;"Adieu, most tender of friends.
+How terrible is this word! But it is necessary.
+Adieu! I have only strength left to embrace you.
+Your heart-broken Marie."</p>
+<p>Then ensued for the Duchesse a time of perilous
+<a name="Page_269"></a>journeying to safety. At Sens her carriage was
+surrounded
+by a fierce mob, clamouring for the blood
+of the "aristos." "Are the Polignacs still with the
+Queen?" demanded one man, thrusting his head into
+the carriage. "The Polignacs?" answered the Abb&eacute;
+de Baliviere, with marvellous presence of mind.
+"Oh! they have left Versailles long ago. Those
+vile persons have been got rid of." And with a howl
+of baffled rage the mob allowed the carriage to continue
+its journey, taking with it the most hated of all
+the Polignacs, the chambermaid, whose heart, we
+may be sure, was in her mouth!</p>
+<p>Thus the Duchesse made her way through Switzerland,
+to Turin, and to Rome, and to Venice, where
+news came to her of the fall ot the monarchy and
+Louis' execution. By the time she reached Vienna
+on her restless wanderings, her health, shattered by
+hardships and by her anxiety for her friend, broke
+down completely. She was a dying woman; and
+when, a few months later, she learned that Marie
+Antoinette was also dead&#8212;"a natural death," they
+mercifully told her&#8212;"Thank God!" she exclaimed;
+"now, at last, she is free from those bloodthirsty
+monsters! Now I can die in peace."</p>
+<p>Seven weeks later the Duchesse drew her last
+breath, with the name she still loved best in all the
+world on her lips. In death she and her beloved
+Queen were not divided.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_270"></a>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+<h2>THE RIVAL SISTERS</h2>
+<br>
+<p>It was an unkind fate that linked the lives of
+the fifteenth Louis of France and Marie Leczinska,
+Princess of Lorraine, and daughter of Stanislas, the
+dethroned King of Poland; for there was probably
+no Princess in Europe less equipped by nature to
+hold the fickle allegiance of the young French King,
+and no Royal husband less likely to bring happiness
+into the life of such a consort.</p>
+<p>When Princess Marie was called to the throne of
+France, she found herself transported from one of
+the most penurious and obscure to the most splendid
+of the Courts of Europe&#8212;"frightened and overwhelmed,"
+as de Goncourt tells us, "by the grandeur
+of the King, bringing to her husband nothing but
+obedience, to marriage only duty; trembling and
+faltering in her queenly r&ocirc;le like some escaped nun
+lost in Versailles." Although by no means devoid
+of good-looks, as Nattier's portrait of her at this time
+proves, her attractions were shy ones, as her virtues
+were modest, almost ashamed.</p>
+<p>She shrank alike from the embraces of her husband
+and the gaieties of his Court, finding her chief
+pleasure in music and painting, in long talks with
+<a name="Page_271"></a>the most serious-minded of her ladies, in Masses
+and
+prayers&#8212;spending gloomy hours in her oratory with
+its death's head, which she always carried with her
+on her journeys. Such was the nun-like wife whom
+Louis XV. led to the altar shortly after he had entered
+his sixteenth year, and had already had his initiation
+into that career of vice which he pursued with few
+intervals to the end of his life.</p>
+<p>Already, at fifteen, the King, who has been mockingly
+dubbed "<i>le bien aim&eacute;</i>" was breaking away
+from the austere hands of his boyhood's mentor, Cardinal
+Fleury, and was beginning to snatch a few "fearful
+joys" in the company of his mignons, such as the
+Duc de La Tremouille, and the Duc de Gesvres,
+and a few gay women of whom the sprightly and
+beautiful Princesse de Charolois was the ringleader.
+But he was still nothing more than "a big and gloomy
+child," whose ill-balanced nature gravitated between
+fits of profound gloom and the wild abandonment of
+debauch; one hour, torn and shaken by religious
+terrors, fears of hell and of death; the next, the very
+soul of hysterical gaiety, with words of blasphemy on
+his lips, the gayest member of a band of Bacchanals
+in some midnight orgy.</p>
+<p>To such a youth, feverishly seeking distraction
+from his own black moods, the demure, devout
+Princess, ignorant of the caresses and coquetry of her
+sex, moving like a spectre among the brilliant, light-hearted
+ladies of his Court, was the most unsuitable,
+the most impossible of brides. He quickly wearied
+of her company, and fled from her sighs and her
+homilies to seek forgetfulness of her and of himself
+<a name="Page_272"></a>in the society of such sirens of the Court as
+Mademoiselle de Beaujolais, Madame de Lauraguais,
+and Mademoiselle de Charolois, whose coquetries
+and high spirits never failed to charm away his
+gloomy humours.</p>
+<p>But although one lady after another, from that
+most bewitching of madcaps, Mademoiselle de
+Charolois, to the dark-eyed, buxom Comtesse de
+Toulouse, practised on him all their allurements,
+strove to awake his senses "by a thousand coquetries,
+a thousand assaults, the King's timidity eluded these
+advances, which amused and alarmed, but did not
+tempt his heart; that young monarch's heart was still
+so full of the aged Fleury's terrifying tales of the
+women of the Regency."</p>
+<p>Such coyness, however, was not long to stand in
+the way of the King's appetite for pleasure which
+every day strengthened. One day it began to be
+whispered that at last Louis had been vanquished&#8212;that,
+at a supper at La Muette, he had proposed
+the health of an "Unknown Fair," which had been
+drunk with acclamation by his boon-companions; and
+the Court was full of excited speculation as to who
+his mysterious charmer could be. That some new
+and powerful influence had come into the young
+sovereign's life was abundantly clear, from the new
+light that shone in his eyes, the laughter that was now
+always on his lips. He had said "good-bye" to
+melancholy; he astonished all by his new vivacity,
+and became the leader in one dissipation after another,
+"whose noisy merriment he led and prolonged
+far into the night."</p>
+<p><a name="Page_273"></a>It was not long before the identity of the
+worker
+of this miracle was revealed to the world. She had
+been recognised more than once when making her
+stealthy way to the King's apartments; she was his
+chosen companion on his journey to Compi&egrave;gne; and
+it was soon public knowledge that Madame de Mailly
+was the woman who had captured the King's elusive
+heart. And indeed there was little occasion for
+surprise; for Madame de Mailly, although she would
+never see her thirtieth birthday again, was one of
+the most seductive women in all France.</p>
+<p>Black-eyed, crimson-lipped, oval-faced, Madame
+de Mailly was one of those women who "with cheeks
+on fire, and blood astir, eyes large and lustrous as
+the eyes of Juno, with bold carriage and in free
+toilettes, step forward out of the past with the proud
+and insolent graces of the divinities of some
+Bacchanalia." With the provocative and sensual
+charm which is so powerful in its appeal, she had a
+rare skill in displaying her beauty to its fullest
+advantage. Her cult of the toilette, the Duc de
+Luynes tells us, went with her even by night. She
+never went to bed without decking herself with all
+her diamonds; and her most seductive hour was in
+the morning, when, in her bed, with her glorious
+dishevelled hair veiling her pillow, a-glitter with her
+jewels, she gave audience to her friends.</p>
+<p>Such was the ravishing, ardent, passionate woman
+who was the first of many to carry Louis' heart by
+storm, and to be established in his palace as his
+mistress&#8212;to inaugurate for him a new life of
+pleasure, and to estrange him still more from his
+<a name="Page_274"></a>unhappy Queen, shut up with her prayers and her
+tears in her own room, with her tapestry, her books
+of history, and her music for sole relaxation. "The
+most innocent pleasures," Queen Marie wrote sadly
+at this time, "are not for me."</p>
+<p>Under Madame de Mailly's rule the Court of Versailles
+awoke to a new life. "The little apartments
+grow animated, gay to the point of licence. Noise,
+merriment, an even gayer and livelier clash of
+glasses, madder nights." F&ecirc;te succeeded f&ecirc;te in
+brilliant sequence. Each night saw its Royal debauch,
+with the King and his mistress for arch-spirits
+of the revels. There were nightly banquets, with
+the rarest wines and the most costly viands, supplemented
+by salads prepared by the dainty hands of
+Mademoiselle de Charolois, and ragouts cooked by
+Louis himself in silver saucepans. And these were
+followed by orgies which left the celebrants, in the
+last excesses of intoxication, to be gathered up at
+break of day and carried helpless to bed.</p>
+<p>Such wild excesses could not fail sooner or later
+to bring satiety to a lover so unstable as Louis; and
+it was not long before he grew a little weary of
+his mistress, who, too assured of her conquest, began
+to exhibit sudden whims and caprices, and fits of
+obstinacy. Her jealous eyes followed him everywhere,
+her reproaches, if he so much as smiled on
+a rival beauty, provoked daily quarrels. He was
+drawn, much against his will, into her family disputes,
+and into the disgraceful affairs of her father, the dissolute
+Marquis de Nesle.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Madame de Mailly's supremacy was
+<a name="Page_275"></a>being threatened in a most unexpected quarter.
+Among the pupils of the convent school at Port
+Royal was a young girl, in whose ambitious brain
+the project was forming of supplanting the King's
+favourite, and of ruling France and Louis at the same
+time. The idle dream of a schoolgirl, of course!
+But to F&eacute;licit&eacute; de Nesle it was no vain dream, but the
+ambition of a lifetime, which dominated her more and
+more as the months passed in her convent seclusion.
+If her sister, Madame de Mailly, had so easily made
+a conquest of the King, why should she, with less
+beauty, it is true, but with a much cleverer brain,
+despair? And thus it was that every letter Madame
+received from her "little sister" pleaded for an
+invitation to Court, until at last Mademoiselle de
+Nesle found herself the guest of Louis' mistress in
+his palace.</p>
+<p>Thus the first important step was taken. The rest
+would be easy; for Mademoiselle never doubted for
+a moment her ability to carry out her programme to
+its splendid climax. It was certainly a bold, almost
+impudent design; for the girl of the convent had few
+attractions to appeal to a monarch so surrounded by
+beauty as the King of France. What the courtiers
+saw, says the Duc de Richelieu, was "a long neck
+clumsily set on the shoulders, a masculine figure and
+carriage, features not unlike those of Madame de
+Mailly, but thinner and harder, which exhibited none
+of her flashes of kindness, her tenderness of passion."</p>
+<p>Even her manners seemed calculated to repel,
+rather than attract the man she meant to conquer;
+for she treated him, from the first, with a familiarity
+<a name="Page_276"></a>amounting almost to rudeness, and a wilfulness
+to
+which he was by no means accustomed. There was,
+at any rate, something novel and piquant in an
+attitude so different from that of all other Court
+ladies. Resentment was soon replaced by interest,
+and interest by attraction; until Louis, before he was
+aware of it, began to find the society of the impish,
+mocking, defiant maid from the convent more to
+his taste than that of the most fascinating women
+of his Court.</p>
+<p>The more he saw of her, the more effectually he
+came under her spell. Each day found her in some
+new and tantalising mood; and as she drew him more
+and more into her toils, she kept him there by her
+ingenuity in devising novel pleasures and entertainments
+for him, until, within a month of setting eyes on
+her, he was telling Madame de Mailly, he "loved her
+sister more than herself." One of the first evidences
+of his favour was to provide her with a husband in
+the Comte de Vintimille, and a dower of two hundred
+thousand livres. He promised her a post as lady-in-waiting
+to Madame la Dauphine and gave her a
+sumptuous suite of rooms at Versailles. He even
+conferred on her husband the honour of handing him
+his shirt on the wedding-night, an evidence of high
+favour such as no other bridegroom had enjoyed.</p>
+<p>It was thus little surprise to anyone to find the
+Comtesse-bride not only her sister's most formidable
+rival, but actually usurping her place and privileges.
+Nor was it long before this place, on which she had
+set her heart first within the walls of the Port Royal
+Convent, was unassailably hers; and Madame de
+<a name="Page_277"></a>Mailly, in tears and sadness, saw an
+unbridgeable
+gulf widen between her and the man she undoubtedly
+had grown to love.</p>
+<p>That F&eacute;licit&eacute; de Nesle had not over-estimated her
+powers of conquest was soon apparent. Louis became
+her abject slave, humouring her caprices and
+submitting to her will. And this will, let it be said
+to her credit, she exercised largely for his good. She
+weaned him from his vicious ways; she stimulated
+whatever good remained in him; she tried, and in a
+measure succeeded in making a man of him. Under
+her influence he began to realise that he was a King,
+and to play his exalted part more worthily. He
+asserted himself in a variety of directions, from
+looking personally after the ordering of his household
+to taking the reins of State into his own hands.</p>
+<p>Nor did she curtail his pleasures. She merely
+gave them a saner direction. Orgies and midnight
+revelry became things of the past, but their place was
+taken by delightful days spent at the Ch&acirc;teau of
+Choisy, that regal little pleasure-house between
+the waters of the Seine and the Forest of S&eacute;nart,
+with all its marvels of costly and artistic furnishing.
+Here one entertainment succeeded another, from the
+hunting which opened, to the card-games which
+closed the day. A time of innocent delights which
+came sweet to the jaded palate of the King.</p>
+<p>Thus the halcyon months passed, until, one
+August day in 1741, the Comtesse was seized with a
+slight fever; Louis, consumed by anxiety, spending
+the anxious hours by her bedside or pacing the
+corridor outside. Two days later he was stooping
+<a name="Page_278"></a>to kiss an infant presented to him on a cushion
+of
+cramoisi velvet. His happiness was crowned at last,
+and life spread before him a prospect of many such
+years. But tragedy was already brooding over this
+scene of pleasure, although none, least of all the
+King, seemed to see the shadow of her wings.</p>
+<p>One early day in December, Madame de Vintimille
+was seized with a severe illness, as sudden as
+it was mysterious. Physicians were hastily summoned
+from Paris, only, to Louis' despair, to declare that
+they could do nothing to save the life of the Comtesse.
+"Tortured by excruciating pain," says de
+Goncourt, "struggling against a death which was full
+of terror, and which seemed to point to the violence
+of poison, the dying woman sent for a confessor.
+She died almost instantly in his arms before the Sacraments
+could be administered. And as the confessor,
+charged with the dead woman's last penitent message
+to her sister, entered Madame de Mailly's <i>salon</i>, he
+dropped dead."</p>
+<p>Here, indeed, was tragedy in its most sudden
+and terrible form! The King was stunned, incredulous.
+He refused to believe that the woman
+he had so lately clasped in his arms, so warm, so full
+of life, was dead. And when at last the truth broke
+on him with crushing force, he was as a man
+distraught. "He shut himself up in his room, and
+listened half-dead to a Mass from his bed." He
+would not allow any but the priest to come near him;
+he repulsed all efforts at consolation.</p>
+<p>And whilst Louis was thus alone with his demented
+grief, "thrust away in a stable of the palace, lay the
+<a name="Page_279"></a>body of the dead woman, which had been kept for
+a
+cast to be taken; that distorted countenance, that
+mouth which had breathed out its soul in a convulsion,
+so that the efforts of two men were required to close it
+for moulding, the already decomposing remains of
+Madame de Vintimille served as a plaything and a
+laughing-stock to the children and lackeys."</p>
+<p>When the storm of his grief at last began to abate,
+the King retired to his remote country-seat of Saint
+Leger, carrying his broken heart with him&#8212;and also
+Madame de Mailly, as sharer of his sorrow; for it
+was to the woman whom he had so lightly discarded
+that he first turned for solace. At Saint Leger he
+passed his days in reading and re-reading the two
+thousand letters the dead Comtesse had written to
+him, sprinkling their perfumed pages with his tears.
+And when he was not thus burying himself in the
+past, he was a prey to the terrors that had obsessed
+his childhood&#8212;the fear of death and of hell.</p>
+<p>At supper&#8212;the only meal which he shared with
+others, he refused to touch meat, "in order that he
+might not commit sin on every side"; if a light word
+was spoken he would rebuke the speaker by talk of
+death and judgment; and if his eyes met those of
+Madame de Mailly, he burst into tears and was led
+sobbing from the room.</p>
+<p>The communion of grief gradually awoke in him
+his old affection for Madame de Mailly; and for a
+time it seemed not unlikely that she might regain
+her lost supremacy. But the discarded mistress had
+many enemies at Court, who were by no means
+willing to see her re-established in favour&#8212;the chief
+<a name="Page_280"></a>of them, the Duc de Richelieu, the handsomest
+man
+and the "hero" of more scandalous amours than any
+other in France&#8212;a man, moreover, of crafty brain,
+who had already acquired an ascendancy over the
+King's mind.</p>
+<p>With Madame de Tencin, a woman as scheming
+and with as evil a reputation as himself, for chief ally,
+the Due determined to find another mistress who
+should finally oust Madame de Mailly from Louis'
+favour; and her he found in a woman, devoted to
+himself and his interests, and of such surpassing
+loveliness that, when the King first saw her at Petit
+Bourg, he exclaimed, "Heavens! how beautiful
+she is!"</p>
+<p>Such was the involuntary tribute Louis paid at first
+sight to the charms of Madame de la Tournelle, who
+was now fated to take the place of her dead sister,
+Madame de Vintimille, just as the Comtesse had
+supplanted another sister, Madame de Mailly.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXVI"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_281"></a>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
+<h2>THE RIVAL SISTERS&#8212;<i>continued</i></h2>
+<br>
+<p>Louis XV.'s involuntary exclamation when he first
+set eyes on the loveliness of Madame de la Tournelle,
+"Heavens! how beautiful she is!" becomes
+intelligible when we look on Nattier's picture of this
+fairest of the de Nesle sisters in his "Allegory of the
+Daybreak," and read the contemporary descriptions
+of her charms.</p>
+<p>"She ravished the eye," we are told, "with her
+skin of dazzling whiteness, her elegant carriage, her
+free gestures, the enchanting glance of her big blue
+eyes&#8212;a gaze of which the cunning was veiled by
+sentiment&#8212;by the smile of a child, moist lips, a
+bosom surging, heaving, ever agitated by the flux
+and reflux of life, by a physiognomy at once passionate
+and mutinous." And to these seductions were
+added a sunny temperament, an infectious gaiety of
+spirit, and a playful wit which made her infinitely
+attractive to men much less susceptible that the
+amorous Louis.</p>
+<p>It is little wonder then that in the reaction which
+followed his stormy grief for his dead love, the
+Comtesse de Vintimille, he should turn from the
+<a name="Page_282"></a>lachrymose companionship of Madame de Mailly to
+bask in the sunshine of this third of the beautiful
+sisters, Madame de la Tournelle, and that the wish to
+possess her should fire his blood. But Madame de
+la Tournelle was not to prove such an easy conquest
+as her two sisters, who had come almost unasked to
+his arms.</p>
+<p>At the time when she came thus dramatically into
+his life she was living with Madame de Mazarin, a
+strong-minded woman who had no cause to love
+Louis, who had thwarted and opposed him more
+than once, and who was determined at any cost to
+keep her prot&eacute;g&eacute;e and pet out of his clutches. And
+his desires had also two other stout opponents in
+Cardinal Fleury, his old mentor, and Maurepas, the
+most subtle and clever of his ministers, each of whom
+for different reasons was strongly averse to this new
+and dangerous liaison, which would make him the
+tool of Richelieu's favourite and Richelieu's party.</p>
+<p>Thus, for months, Louis found himself baffled in
+all his efforts to win the prize on which he had set
+his heart until, in September, 1742, one formidable
+obstacle was removed from his path by the death
+of Madame de Mazarin. To Madame de la Tournelle
+the loss of her protectress was little short of a
+calamity, for it left her not only homeless, but
+practically penniless; and, in her extremity, she
+naturally turned hopeful eyes to the King, of whose
+passion she was well aware. At least, she hoped, he
+might give her some position at his Court which
+would rescue her from poverty. When she begged
+Maurepas, Madame de Mazarin's kinsman and heir,
+<a name="Page_283"></a>to appeal to the King on her behalf, his answer
+was
+to order her and her sister, Madame de Flavacourt, to
+leave the Hotel Mazarin, thus making her plight still
+more desperate.</p>
+<p>But, fortunately, in this hour of her greatest need
+she found an unexpected friend in Louis' ill-used
+Queen, who, ignorant of her husband's infatuation
+for the beautiful Madame de la Tournelle, sent for
+her, spoke gracious words of sympathy to her, and
+announced her intention of installing her in Madame
+de Mazarin's place as a lady of the palace. Thus
+did fortune smile on Madame just when her future
+seemed darkest. But her troubles were by no
+means at an end. Fleury and Maurepas were more
+determined than ever that the King should not come
+into the power of a woman so alluring and so dangerous;
+and they exhausted every expedient to put
+obstacles in her path and to discover and support
+rival claimants to the post.</p>
+<p>For once, however, Louis was adamant. He
+had not waited so long and feverishly for his prize
+to be baulked when it seemed almost in his grasp.
+Madame de la Tournelle should have her place at
+his Court, and it would not be his fault if she did not
+soon fill one more exalted and intimate. Thus it
+was that when Fleury submitted to him the list of
+applicants, with la Tournelle's name at the bottom,
+he promptly re-wrote it at the head of the list, and
+handed it back to the Cardinal with the words,
+"The Queen is decided, and wishes to give her the
+place."</p>
+<p>We can picture Madame de Mailly's distress and
+<a name="Page_284"></a>suspense while these negotiations were
+proceeding.
+She had, as we have seen in the previous chapter,
+been supplanted by one sister in the King's affection;
+and just as she was recovering some of her old
+position in his favour, she was threatened with a
+second dethronement by another sister. In her
+alarm she flew to Madame de la Tournelle, to set
+her fears at rest one way or the other. "Can it be
+possible that you are going to take my place?" she
+asked, the tears streaming down her cheeks. "Quite
+impossible, my sister," answered Madame, with a
+smile; and Madame de Mailly, thus reassured,
+returned to Versailles the happiest woman in
+France&#8212;to learn, a few days later, that it was not
+only possible, it was an accomplished fact. For the
+second time, and now, as she knew well, finally, she
+was ousted from the affection of the King she loved
+so sincerely; and again it was a sister who had done
+her this grievous wrong. She was determined, however,
+that she would not quit the field without a last
+fight, and she knew she had doughty champions in
+Fleury and Maurepas, who still refused to acknowledge
+defeat.</p>
+<p>Although Madame de la Tournelle was now installed
+in the palace, the day of Louis' conquest had
+not arrived. The gratification of his passion was
+still thwarted in several directions. Not only was
+Madame de Mailly's presence a difficulty and a
+reproach to him; his new favourite was by no means
+willing to respond to his advances. Her heart was
+still engaged to the Due d'Agenois, and was not
+hers to dispose of. Richelieu, however, was quick
+<a name="Page_285"></a>to dispose of this difficulty. He sent the
+handsome
+Duc to Languedoc, exposed him to the attractions
+of a pretty woman, and before many weeks had
+passed, was able to show Madame de la Tournelle
+passionate letters addressed to her rival by her
+lover, as evidence of the worthlessness of his vows;
+thus arming her pride against him and disposing her
+at last to lend a more favourable ear to the King.</p>
+<p>As for Madame de Mailly, her shrift was short.
+In spite of her tears, her pleadings, her caresses,
+Louis made no concealment of his intention to be
+rid of her. "No sorrow, no humiliation was lacking
+in the death-struggle of love. The King spared her
+nothing. He did not even spare her those harsh
+words which snap the bonds of the most vulgar
+liaisons." And the climax came when he told the
+heart-broken woman, as she cringed pitifully at his
+feet, "You must go away this very day." "My
+sacrifices are finished," she sobbed, a little later to the
+"Judas," Richelieu, when, with friendly words, he
+urged her to humour the King and go away at least
+for a time; "it will be my death, but I will be in Paris
+to-night."</p>
+<p>And while Madame de Mailly was carrying her
+crushed heart through the darkness to her exile, the
+King and Richelieu, disguised in large perukes
+and black coats, were stealing across the great courtyards
+to the rooms of Madame de la Tournelle,
+where the King's long waiting was to have its
+reward. And, the following day, the usurper was
+callously writing to a friend, "Doubtless Meuse will
+have informed you of the trouble I had in ousting
+<a name="Page_286"></a>Madame de Mailly; at last I obtained a mandate
+to
+the effect that she was not to return until she was
+sent for."</p>
+<p>"No portrait," says de Goncourt, referring to this
+letter, "is to be compared with such a confession.
+It is the woman herself with the cynicism of her
+hardness, her shameless and cold-blooded ingratitude.... It
+is as though she drives her sister
+out by the two shoulders with those words which
+have the coarse energy of the lower orders."</p>
+<p>Louis, at last happy in the achievement of his
+desire, was not long in discovering that in the third
+of the Nesle sisters he had his hands more full than
+with either of her predecessors. Madame de Mailly
+and the Comtesse de Vintimille had been content to
+play the r&ocirc;le of mistress, and to receive the King's
+none too lavish largesse with gratitude. Madame de
+la Tournelle was not so complaisant, so easily satisfied.
+She intended&#8212;and she lost no time in making
+the King aware of her intention&#8212;to have her position
+recognised by the world at large, to reign as
+Montespan had reigned, to have the Treasury placed
+at her disposal, and her children, if she had any,
+made legitimate. Her last stipulation was that she
+should be made a Duchess before the end of the
+year. And to all these proposals Louis gave a meek
+assent.</p>
+<p>To show further her independence, she soon began
+to drive her lover to distraction by her caprices
+and her temper: "She tantalised, at once rebuffed
+and excited the King by the most adroit comedies and
+those coquetries which are the strength of her sex,
+<a name="Page_287"></a>assuring him that she would be delighted if he
+would transfer his affection to other ladies." And
+while the favourite was thus revelling in the insolence
+of her conquest, her supplanted sister was
+eating out her heart in Paris. "Her despair was
+terrible; the trouble of her heart refused consolation,
+begged for solitude, found vent every moment in
+cries for Louis. Those who were around her trembled
+for her reason, for her life.... Again and again she
+made up her mind to start for the Court, to make a
+final appeal to the King, but each time, when the
+carriage was ready, she burst into tears and fell back
+upon her bed."</p>
+<p>As for Louis, chilled by the coldness of his mistress,
+distracted by her whims and rages, his heart
+often yearned for the woman he had so cruelly
+discarded; and separation did more than all her
+tears and caresses could have done, to awake again
+the love he fancied was dead.</p>
+<p>When Madame de la Tournelle paid her first
+visit as <i>Ma&icirc;tresse en titre</i> to Choisy, nothing would
+satisfy her but an escort of the noblest ladies in
+France, including a Princess of the Blood. Her
+progress was that of a Queen; and in return for this
+honour, wrung out of the King's weakness, she
+repaid him with weeks of coldness and ill-humour.
+She refused to play at <i>cavagnol</i> with him; she barricaded
+herself in her room, refusing to open to all
+her lover's knocking; and vented her vapours on
+him with, or without, provocation, until, as she
+considered, she had reduced him to a becoming
+submission. Then she used her power and her
+<a name="Page_288"></a>coquetries to wheedle out of him one concession
+after
+another, including a promise by the King to return
+unopened any letters Madame de Mailly might send
+to him. Nor was she content until her sister was
+finally disposed of by the grant of a small pension
+and a modest lodging in the Luxembourg.</p>
+<p>Before the year closed Madame de la Tournelle
+was installed in the most luxurious apartments at
+Versailles, and Louis, now completely caught in her
+toils, was the slave of her and his senses, flinging
+himself into all the licence of passion, and reviving
+the nightly debauches from which the dead Comtesse
+had weaned him. And while her lover was thus
+steeped in sensuality, his mistress was, with infinite
+tact, pursuing her ambition. Affecting an indifference
+to affairs of State, she was gradually, and with
+seeming reluctance, worming herself into the position
+of chief Counsellor, and while professing to despise
+money she was draining the exchequer to feed her
+extravagance.</p>
+<p>Never was King so hopelessly in the toils of a
+woman as Louis, the well-beloved, in those of
+Madame de la Tournelle. He accepted as meekly
+as a child all her coldness and caprices, her
+jealousies and her rages; and was ideally happy
+when, in a gracious mood, she would allow him to
+assist at her toilette as the reward for some regal
+present of diamonds, horses, or gowns.</p>
+<p>It was after one such privileged hour that Louis,
+with childish pleasure, handed to his favourite the
+patent, creating her Duchesse de Chateauroux,
+enclosed in a casket of gold; and with it a rapturous
+<a name="Page_289"></a>letter in which he promised her a pension of
+eighty-thousand
+livres, the better to maintain her new
+dignity!</p>
+<p>Having thus achieved her greatest ambition, the
+Duchesse (as we must now call her) aspired to play
+a leading part in the affairs of Europe. France and
+Prussia were leagued in war against the forces of
+England, Austria, and Holland. This was a seductive
+game in which to take a hand, and thus we find
+her stimulating the sluggard kingliness in her lover,
+urging him to leave his debauches and to lead
+his armies to victory, assuring him of the gratitude
+and admiration of his subjects. Nothing less,
+she told him, would save his country from
+disaster.</p>
+<p>To this appeal and temptation Louis was not slow
+to respond; and in May, 1744, we find him, to the
+delight of his soldiers and all France, at the seat of
+war, reviewing his troops, speaking words of high
+courage to them, visiting hospitals and canteens,
+and actually sending back a haughty message to the
+Dutch: "I will give you your answer in Flanders."
+No wonder the army was roused to enthusiasm, or
+that it exclaimed with one voice, "At last we have
+found a King!"</p>
+<p>So strong was Louis in his new martial resolve
+that he actually refused Madame de Chateauroux permission
+to accompany him. France was delighted
+that at last her King had emancipated himself
+from petticoat influence, but the delight was short-lived,
+for before he had been many days in camp
+the Duchesse made her stately appearance, and saws
+<a name="Page_290"></a>and hammers were at work making a covered way
+between the house assigned to her and that occupied
+by the King. A fortnight later Ypres had fallen,
+and she was writing to Richelieu, "This is mighty
+pleasant news and gives me huge pleasure. I am
+overwhelmed with joy, to take Ypres in nine days.
+You can think of nothing more glorious, more flattering
+to the King; and his great-grandfather, great
+as he was, never did the like!"</p>
+<p>But grief was coming quickly on the heels of joy.
+The King was seized with a sudden and serious
+illness, after a banquet shared with his ally, the King
+of Prussia; and in a few days a malignant fever had
+brought him face to face with death. Madame de
+Chateauroux watched his sufferings with the eyes of
+despair. "Leaning over the pillow of the dying
+man, aghast and trembling, she fights for him with
+sickness and death, terror and remorse." With
+locked door she keeps her jealous watch by his
+bedside, allowing none to enter but Richelieu, the
+doctors, and nurses, whilst outside are gathered the
+Princes of the Blood and the great officers of
+the Court, clamouring for admittance.</p>
+<p>It was a grim environment for the death-bed of a
+King, this struggle for supremacy, in which a frail
+woman defied the powers of France for the monopoly
+of his last hours. And chief of all the terrors that
+assailed her was the dread of that climax to it all,
+when her lover would have to make his last confession,
+the price of his absolution being, as she well
+knew, a final severance from herself.</p>
+<p>Over this protracted and unseemly duel, in which
+<a name="Page_291"></a>blows were exchanged, entrance was forced, and
+Princes and ministers crowded indecently around
+the King's bed; over the Duchesse's tearful
+pleadings with the confessor to spare her the disgrace
+of dismissal, we must hasten to the crowning moment
+when Louis, feeling that he was dying, hastily
+summoned a confessor, who, a few moments later,
+flung open the door of the closet in which the
+Duchesse was waiting and weeping, and pronounced
+the fatal words, "The King commands you to leave
+his presence immediately."</p>
+<p>Then followed that secret flight to Paris, "amidst
+a torrent of maledictions," the Duchesse hiding herself
+from view as best she could, and at each town
+and village where horses were changed, slinking
+back and taking refuge in some by-road until she
+could resume her journey. Then it was that in her
+grief and despair she wrote to Richelieu, "Oh, my
+God! what a thing it all is! I give you my word, it
+is all over with me! One would need to be a poor
+fool to start it all over again."</p>
+<p>But Louis was by no means a dead man. From
+the day on which he received absolution from his
+manifold sins he made such haste to recover that,
+within a month, he was well again and eager to fly
+to the arms of the woman he had so abruptly abandoned
+with all other earthly vanities. It was one
+thing, however, to dismiss the Duchesse, and quite
+another to call her back. For a time she refused
+point-blank to look again on the King who had
+spurned her from fear of hell; and when at last she
+consented to receive the penitent at Versailles she
+<a name="Page_292"></a>let him know, in no vague terms, that "it would
+cost
+France too many heads if she were to return to his
+Court."</p>
+<p>Vengeance on her enemies was the only price she
+would accept for forgiveness, and this price Louis
+promised to pay in liberal measure. One after the
+other, those who had brought about her humiliation
+were sent to disgrace or exile&#8212;from the Duc de
+Chatillon to La Rochefoucauld and Perusseau.
+Maurepas, the most virulent of them all, the King
+declined to exile, but he consented to a compromise.
+He should be made to offer Madame an abject
+apology, to grovel at her feet, a punishment with
+which she was content. And when the great minister
+presented himself by her bedside, in fear and
+trembling, to express his profound penitence and to
+beg her to return to Court, all she answered was,
+"Give me the King's letters and go!"</p>
+<p>The following Saturday she fixed on as the day of
+her triumphant return&#8212;"but it was death that was to
+raise her from the bed on which she had received the
+King's submission at the hands of his Prime Minister."
+Within twenty-four hours she was seized with
+violent convulsions and delirium. In her intervals
+of consciousness she shrieked aloud that she had
+been poisoned, and called down curses on her
+murderer&#8212;Maurepas. For eleven days she passed
+from one delirious attack to another, and as many
+times she was bled. But all the skill of the Court
+physicians was powerless to save her, and at five
+o'clock in the morning of the 8th December the
+Duchesse drew her last tortured breath in the arms
+<a name="Page_293"></a>of Madame de Mailly, the sister she had so
+cruelly
+wronged.</p>
+<p>Two days later, de Goncourt tells us, she was
+buried at Saint Sulpice, an hour before the customary
+time for interments, her coffin guarded by
+soldiers, to protect it from the fury of the mob.</p>
+<p>As for Madame de Mailly, she spent the last years
+of her troubled life in the odour of a tardy sanctity&#8212;washing
+the feet of the poor, ministering to the sick,
+bringing consolation to those in prison; and she was
+laid to rest amongst the poorest in the Cimeti&egrave;re des
+Innocents, wearing the hair-shirt which had been
+part of her penance during life, and with a simple
+cross of wood for all monument.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXVII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_294"></a>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
+<h2>A MISTRESS OF INTRIGUE</h2>
+<br>
+<p>"On 11th September," Madame de Motteville says,
+"we saw arrive from Italy three nieces of Cardinal
+Mazarin and a nephew. Two Mancini sisters and
+the nephew were the children of the youngest sister
+of his Eminence; and of the sisters Laure, the elder,
+was a pleasing brunette with a handsome face, about
+twelve or thirteen years of age; the second (Olympe),
+also a brunette, had a long face and pointed chin.
+Her eyes were small, but lively; and it might be expected
+that, when fifteen years of age, she would have
+some charm. According to the rules of beauty, it
+was impossible to grant her any, save that of having
+dimples in her cheeks."</p>
+<p>Such, at the age of nine or ten, was Olympe Mancini,
+who, in spite of her childish lack of beauty, was
+destined to enslave the handsomest King in Europe;
+and, after a life of discreditable intrigues, in which
+she incurred the stigma of witchcraft and murder, to
+end her career in obscurity, shunned by all who had
+known her in her day of splendour.</p>
+<p>It was a singular freak of fortune which translated
+the Mancini girls from their modest home in Italy to
+<a name="Page_295"></a>the magnificence of the French Court, as the
+adopted
+children of their uncle, Cardinal Mazarin, the virtual
+ruler of France, and the avowed lover (if not, as some
+say, the husband) of Anne of Austria, the Queen-mother.
+"See those little girls," said the wife of
+Mar&eacute;chal de Villeroi to Gaston d'Orl&eacute;ans, pointing
+to the Mancini children, the centre of an admiring
+crowd of courtiers. "They are not rich now; but
+some day they will have fine ch&acirc;teaux, large incomes,
+splendid jewels, beautiful silver, and perhaps great
+dignities."</p>
+<p>And how true this prophecy proved, we know; for,
+of the Cardinal's five Mancini nieces (for three others
+came, later, as their uncle's prot&eacute;g&eacute;es), Laure found
+a husband in the Duc de Mercoeur, grandson of
+Henri IV.; two others lived to wear the coronet of
+Duchess; Olympe, as we shall see, became Comtesse
+de Soissons; and Marie, after narrowly missing
+the Queendom of France, became the wife of the
+Constable Colonna, one of the greatest nobles of
+Italy.</p>
+<p>Nor is there anything in such high alliances to
+cause surprise; for their future was in the hands of
+the most powerful, ambitious, and wealthy man in
+France. From their first appearance as his guests
+they were received with open arms by Louis' Court.
+They were speedily transferred to the Palais Royal,
+to be brought up with the boy-King, Louis XIV., and
+his brother, the Prince of Anjou; while the Queen
+herself not only paid them the most flattering attentions
+and treated them as her own children, but herself
+undertook part of their education.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_296"></a>It was under such enviable conditions that
+the
+young daughters of a poor Roman baron grew up
+to girlhood&#8212;the pets of the Queen and the Court,
+the playfellows of the King, and the acknowledged
+heiresses of their uncle's millions; and of them all,
+not one had a keener eye to the future than Olympe
+of the long face, pointed chin, and dimples. It was
+she who entered with the greatest zest into the romps
+and games of her playmate, Louis XIV., who surrounded
+him with the most delicate flatteries and
+attentions, and practised all her childish arts and
+coquetries to win his favour. And she succeeded
+to such an extent that it was always the company of
+Olympe, and not of her more beautiful sisters, Hortense,
+Laure, or Marie, that Louis most sought.</p>
+<p>Not that Olympe was always to remain the plain,
+unattractive child Madame de Motteville describes
+in 1647. Each year, as it passed, added some touch
+of beauty, developed some latent charm, until at
+eighteen she was very fair to look upon. "Her eyes
+now" says Madame de Motteville, "were full of fire,
+her complexion had become beautiful, her face less
+thin, her cheeks took dimples which gave her a fresh
+charm, and she had fine arms and beautiful hands.
+She certainly seemed charming in the eyes of the
+King, and sufficiently pretty to indifferent spectators."</p>
+<p>That she had wooers in plenty, even before she
+was so far advanced in the teens, was inevitable; but
+her personal preferences counted for little in face of
+the Cardinal's determination to find for her, as for all
+his nieces, a splendid alliance which should shed
+lustre on himself. And thus it was that, without any
+<a name="Page_297"></a>consultation of her heart, Olympe's hand was
+formally
+given to Prince Eugene de Savoie, Comte de
+Soissons, a man in whose veins flowed the Royal
+strains of Savoy and France.</p>
+<p>It was a brilliant match indeed for the daughter
+of a petty Italian baron; and Mazarin saw that it was
+celebrated with becoming magnificence. On the 20th
+February, 1657, we see a brilliant company repairing
+to the Queen's apartments, "the Comte de Soissons
+escorting his betrothed, dressed in a gown of silver
+cloth, with a bouquet of pearls on her head, valued at
+more than 50,000 livres, and so many jewels that
+their splendour, joined to the natural &eacute;clat of her
+beauty, caused her to be admired by everyone.
+Immediately afterwards, the nuptials were celebrated
+in the Queen's chapel. Then the illustrious pair,
+after dining with the Princesse de Carignan-Savoie,
+ascended to the apartments of his Eminence, the
+Cardinal, where they were entertained to a magnificent
+supper, at which the King and Monsieur did the
+company the honour of joining them."</p>
+<p>Then followed two days of regal receptions; a
+visit to Notre Dame to hear Mass, with the Queen
+herself as escort; and a stately journey to the H&ocirc;tel
+de Soissons, where the Comtesse's mother-in-law
+"testified to her, by her joy and the rich presents
+which she made her, how great was the satisfaction
+with which she regarded this marriage."</p>
+<p>Thus raised to the rank of a Princess of the Blood,
+Olympe was by no means the proud and happy
+woman she ought to have been. She had, in fact,
+aspired much higher; she had had dreams of sharing
+<a name="Page_298"></a>the throne of France with her handsome young
+playmate, the King; and to Louis, wife though she
+now was, she had lost none of the attraction she
+possessed when he called her his "little sweetheart"
+in their childish games together. "He continued to
+visit her with the greatest regularity," to quote Mr
+Noel Williams; "indeed, scarcely a day went by on
+which His Majesty's coach did not stop at the gate
+of the H&ocirc;tel de Soissons; and Olympe, basking in
+the rays of the Royal favour, rapidly took her place
+as the brilliant, intriguing great lady Nature intended
+her to be."</p>
+<p>It is little wonder, perhaps, that Olympe's foolish
+head was turned by such flattering attentions from
+her sovereign, or that she began to give herself airs
+and to treat members of the Royal family with a
+haughty patronage. Even La Grande Mademoiselle
+did not escape her insolence; for, as she
+herself records, "when I paid her a thousand
+compliments and told her that her marriage had given
+me the greatest joy and that I hoped we should
+always be good friends, she answered me not a
+word."</p>
+<p>But Olympe's supremacy was not to remain much
+longer unchallenged. The King's vagrant fancy was
+already turning to her younger sister, Marie, whose
+childish plainness had now ripened to a beauty more
+dazzling than her own&#8212;the witchery of large and
+brilliant black eyes, a complexion of pure olive,
+luxuriant, jet-black hair, a figure of singular suppleness
+and grace, and a sprightliness of wit and a <i>gaiet&eacute;
+de coeur</i> which the Comtesse could not hope to rival.
+<a name="Page_299"></a>It soon began to be rumoured in Court that Louis
+spent hours daily in the company of Mazarin's beautiful
+niece; a rumour which Hortense Mancini supports
+in her "Memoirs." "The presence of the
+King, who seldom stirred from our lodging, often
+interrupted us," she says; "my sister, Marie, alone
+was undisturbed; and you can easily understand that
+his assiduity had charms for her, who was the cause
+of it, because it had none for others."</p>
+<p>And as Louis' visits to the Mancini lodging became
+more and more frequent, each adding a fresh link to
+the chain that was binding him to her young sister,
+Madame de Soissons saw less and less of him, until
+an amused tolerance gave place to a genuine alarm.
+It was nothing less than an outrage that she, who had
+so long held first place in the King's favour, should
+be ousted by a "mere child," the last person in the
+world whom she could have thought of as a rival.
+But the Comtesse was no woman to be easily
+dethroned. Although at every Court ball, f&ecirc;te, or
+ballet, Louis was now inseparable from her sister, she
+affected to ignore these open slights and lost no
+opportunity in public of vaunting her intimacy with
+His Majesty, even to the extent on one occasion, as
+Mademoiselle records, of taking Louis' seat at a ball
+supper and compelling him to share it with her.</p>
+<p>But such shameless arrogance only served to
+estrange the King still further, and to make him seek
+still more the company of the young sister, who had
+already captured his heart as the Comtesse had never
+captured it. When Louis made his memorable
+journey to Lyons to meet the Princess Margaret of
+<a name="Page_300"></a>Savoy, it was to Marie that he paid the most
+courtly and tender attentions. "During the journey,"
+says Mademoiselle, "he did not address a
+word to the Comtesse de Soissons"; and, indeed,
+on more than one occasion he showed a marked
+aversion to her.</p>
+<p>At St Jean d'Angely, Louis not only himself
+escorted Marie to her lodging; he stayed with her
+until two o'clock in the morning. "Nothing," her
+sister Hortense records, "could equal the passion
+which the King showed, and the tenderness with
+which he asked of Marie her pardon for all she had
+suffered for his sake." It was, indeed, no secret at
+Court that he had offered her marriage, and had taken
+a solemn vow that neither Margaret of Savoy nor
+the Infanta of Spain should be his wife. But, as we
+have seen in a previous chapter, both the Queen
+and Mazarin were determined that the Infanta
+should be Queen of France; and that his foolish
+romance with the Mancini girl should be nipped in
+the bud.</p>
+<p>There was also another powerful influence at work
+to thwart his passion for Marie. The indifference
+of the Comtesse de Soissons had given place to a fury
+of resentment; and she needed no instigation of her
+uncle to determine at any cost to recover the place
+she had lost in Louis' favour. She brought all her
+armoury of coquetry and flatteries to bear on him,
+and so far succeeded that, we read, "the King has
+resumed his relations with the Comtesse; he has
+recommenced to talk and laugh with her; and three
+days since he entertained M. and Madame de
+<a name="Page_301"></a>Soissons with a ball and a play, and afterwards
+they partook of <i>medianoche</i> (a midnight banquet)
+together, passing more than three hours in conversation
+with them."</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Marie, realising the hopelessness of her
+passion in face of the opposition of her uncle and the
+Queen, and of Louis' approaching marriage to the
+Spanish Princess, had given him unequivocally to
+understand that their relations must cease, and the
+rupture was complete when the Comtesse told the
+King of her sister's dallying with Prince Charles of
+Lorraine, of their assignations in the Tuileries, of
+their mutual infatuation, and of the rumours of an
+arranged marriage. "<i>Cela est bien</i>" was all Louis
+remarked, but the dark flush of anger that flooded his
+face was a sweet reward to the Comtesse for her
+treachery.</p>
+<p>A few days later her revenge was complete when,
+in the King's presence, she rallied her sister on her
+low spirits. "You find the time pass slowly when
+you are away from Paris," she said; "nor am I
+surprised, since you have left your lover there"; to
+which Marie answered with a haughty toss of the
+head, "That is possible, Madame."</p>
+<p>One formidable rival thus removed from her path,
+Madame de Soissons was not long left to enjoy her
+triumph; for another was quick to take the place
+abandoned by the broken-hearted Marie&#8212;the beautiful
+and gentle La Valli&egrave;re, who was the next to
+acquire an ascendancy over the King's susceptible
+heart. Once more the Comtesse, to her undisguised
+chagrin, found herself relegated to the background,
+<a name="Page_302"></a>to look impotently on while Louis made love to
+her
+successor, and to meditate new schemes of vengeance.
+It was in vain that Louis, by way of amende,
+found for her a lover in the Marquis de Vardes, the
+most handsome and dissolute of his courtiers, for
+whom she soon developed a veritable passion. Her
+vanity might be appeased, but her bitterness&#8212;the
+<i>spretoe injuria formoe</i>&#8212;remained; and she lost no
+time in plotting further mischief.</p>
+<p>With the help of M. de Vardes and the Comte de
+Guiche, she sent an anonymous letter to the Queen,
+containing a full and intimate account of her husband's
+amour with La Valli&egrave;re&#8212;the letter enclosed
+in an envelope addressed in the handwriting of the
+Queen of Spain. Fortunately for Maria Theresa's
+peace of mind the letter fell into the hands of Louis
+himself, who was naturally furious at such treachery
+and determined to make those responsible for it suffer&#8212;when
+he should discover them. As, however, the
+investigation of the matter was entrusted to de
+Vardes, it is needless to say that the culprits escaped
+detection.</p>
+<p>Madame de Soissons' next attempt to bring about
+a rupture between the King and La Valli&egrave;re, by
+bringing forward a rival in the person of the seductive
+Mlle de la Motte-Houdancourt, proved equally
+futile, when Louis discovered by accident that she
+was but a tool in Madame's designing hands; and
+for a time the Comtesse was sent in disgrace from
+the Court to nurse her jealousy and to devise more
+effectual plans of vengeance.</p>
+<p>What form these took seems clear from an
+<a name="Page_303"></a>investigation held at the close of 1678 into a
+supposed
+plot to poison the King and the Dauphin&#8212;a plot
+of which La Voisin, one of the greatest criminals
+in history, was suspected of being the ringleader.
+During this inquiry La Voisin confessed that the
+Comtesse de Soissons had come to her house one
+day "and demanded the means of getting rid of Mile
+de la Valli&egrave;re"; and, further, that the Comtesse had
+avowed her intention to destroy not only Louis'
+mistress, but the King himself.</p>
+<p>Such a confession was well calculated to rouse a
+storm of indignation in France, where Madame de
+Soissons had made many powerful enemies. The
+Chambre unanimously demanded her arrest; but
+before it could be effected, Madame, stoutly declaring
+her innocence, had shaken the dust of Paris off
+her feet, and was on her way to Brussels.</p>
+<p>During her flight to safety, we are told, "the
+principal inns in the towns and villages through which
+she passed refused to receive her"; and more than
+once she was compelled to sleep on straw and suffer
+the insults of the populace, which reviled her as
+sorceress and poisoner. "We are assured," Madame
+de Sevign&eacute; writes, "that the gates of Namur,
+Antwerp, and other towns have been closed against
+the Countess, the people crying out, 'We want no
+poisoner here'!" Even at Brussels, whenever she
+ventured into the streets she was assailed by a storm
+of insults; and on one occasion, when she entered a
+church, "a number of people rushed out, collected
+all the black cats they could find, tied their tails
+together, and brought them howling and spitting into
+<a name="Page_304"></a>the porch, crying out that they were devils who
+were
+following the Comtesse."</p>
+<p>In the face of such chilling hospitality Madame de
+Soissons was not tempted to make a long stay in
+Brussels; and after a few months of restless wandering
+in Flanders and Germany, she drifted to Spain
+where she succeeded in ingratiating herself with the
+Queen. She found little welcome however from the
+King, who, as the French Ambassador to Madrid
+wrote, "was warned against her. He accused her of
+sorcery, and I learn that, some days ago, he conceived
+the idea that, had it not been for a spell she
+had cast over him, he would have had children....
+The life of the Comtesse de Soissons consists in
+receiving at her house all persons who desire to come
+there, from four o'clock in the evening up to two or
+three hours after midnight. There is, sire, everything
+that can convey an air of familiarity and
+contempt for the house of a woman of quality."</p>
+<p>That Carlos' suspicions were not without reason
+was proved when one day his Queen, after, it is said,
+drinking a glass of milk handed to her by the Comtesse,
+was taken suddenly ill and expired after three
+days of terrible suffering. That she died of poison,
+like her mother, the ill-fated sister of our second
+Charles, seems probable; but that the poison was
+administered by the Comtesse, whose friend and
+protectress she was and who had every reason to wish
+her well, is less to be believed, in spite of Saint-Simon's
+unequivocal accusation. Certainly the
+crime was not proved against her; for we find
+her still in Spain in the following spring, when
+<a name="Page_305"></a>Carlos, his patience exhausted, ordered her to
+leave
+the country.</p>
+<p>After a short stay in Portugal and Germany,
+Madame de Soissons was back in Brussels, where
+she spent the brief remainder of her days&#8212;"all the
+French of distinction who visited the City" (to quote
+Saint-Simon) "being strictly forbidden to visit her."
+Here, on the 9th October, 1690, her beauty but a
+memory, bankrupt in reputation, friendless and poor,
+the curtain fell on the life so full of mis-used gifts and
+baffled ambitions.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_306"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
+<h2>AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE</h2>
+<br>
+<p>Few Kings have come to their thrones under such
+brilliant auspices as Milan I. of Servia; few have
+abandoned their crowns to the greater relief of their
+subjects, or have been followed to their exile by so
+much hatred. But a fortnight before Milan's accession,
+his cousin and predecessor, Prince Michael,
+had been foully done to death by hired assassins as
+he was walking in the park of Topfschider, with three
+ladies of his Court; and the murdered man had been
+placed in a carriage, sitting upright as in life, and
+had been driven back to his palace through the
+respectful greetings of his subjects, who little knew
+that they were saluting a corpse.</p>
+<p>There was good reason for this mockery of death,
+for Prince Alexander Karageorgevitch had long set
+ambitious eyes on the crown of Servia, and resolved
+to wrest it by fair means or foul from the boy-heir to
+the throne; and it was of the highest importance that
+Michael's death, which he had so brutally planned,
+should be concealed from him until the succession
+had been secured to his young rival, Milan. And
+thus it was that, before Karageorgevitch could bring
+<a name="Page_307"></a>his plotting to the head of achievement, Milan
+was
+hailed with acclamation as Servia's new Prince, and,
+on the 23rd June, 1868, made his triumphal entry
+into Belgrade to the jubilant ringing of bells and the
+thunderous cheers of the people.</p>
+<p>Twelve days later, Belgrade was <i>en f&ecirc;te</i> for his
+crowning, her streets ablaze with bunting and floral
+decorations, as the handsome boy made his way
+through the tumults of cheers and avenues of
+fluttering handkerchiefs to the Metropolitan Church.
+The men, we are told, "took off their cloaks and
+placed them under his feet, that he might walk on
+them; they clustered round him, kissing his garments,
+and blessing him as their very own; they
+worshipped his handsome face and loved his boyish
+smile." And when his young voice rang clearly out
+in the words, "I promise you that I shall, to my
+dying day, preserve faithfully the honour and integrity
+of Servia, and shall be ready to shed the last
+drop of my blood to defend its rights," there was
+scarcely one of the enthusiastic thousands that heard
+him who would not have been willing to lay down his
+life for the idolised Prince.</p>
+<p>It was by strange paths that the fourteen-year-old
+Milan had thus come to his Principality. The
+son of Jefrenn Obrenovitch, uncle of the reigning
+Michael, he was cradled one August day in 1854,
+his mother being Marie Catargo, of the powerful
+race of Roumanian "Hospodars," a woman of strong
+passions and dissolute life. When her temper and infidelities
+had driven her husband to the drinking that
+put a premature end to his days, Marie transferred
+<a name="Page_308"></a>her affection, without the sanction of a
+wedding-ring,
+to Prince Kusa, a man of as evil repute as
+herself. In such a home and with such guardians
+her only child, Milan, the future ruler of Servia,
+spent the early years of his life&#8212;ill-fed, neglected,
+and supremely wretched.</p>
+<p>Thus it was that, when Prince Michael summoned
+the boy to Belgrade, in order to make the acquaintance
+of his successor, he was horrified to see an
+uncouth lad, as devoid of manners and of education
+as any in the slums of his capital. The heir to the
+throne could neither read nor write; the only language
+he spoke was a debased Roumanian, picked
+up from the servants who had been his only associates,
+while of the land over which he was to rule one
+day he knew absolutely nothing. The only hope for
+him was his extreme youth&#8212;he was at the time only
+twelve years old&#8212;and Michael lost no time in
+having him trained for the high station he was
+destined to fill.</p>
+<p>The progress the boy made was amazing. Within
+two years he was unrecognisable as the half-savage
+who had so shocked the Court of Belgrade.
+He could speak the Servian tongue with fluency and
+grace; he had acquired elegance of manners and
+speech, and a winning courtesy of manner which to
+his last day was his most marked characteristic; he
+had mastered many accomplishments, and he excelled
+in most manly exercises, from riding to swimming.
+And to all this remarkable promise the
+finishing touches were put by a visit to Paris under
+the tutorship of a courtly and learned professor.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_309"></a>Thus when, within two years of his
+emancipation,
+he came to his crown, the uncouth lad from Roumania
+had blossomed into a Prince as goodly to look
+on as any Europe could show&#8212;a handsome boy of
+courtly graces and accomplishments, able to converse
+in several languages, and singularly equipped in all
+ways to win the homage of the simple people over
+whom he had been so early called to rule. As
+Mrs Gerard says, "They idolised their boy-Prince.
+Every day they stood in long, closely packed lines
+watching to see him come out of the castle to ride or
+drive; as he passed along, smiling affectionately on
+his people, blessings were showered on him. There
+was, however, another side to this picture of devotion.
+There were those who hated the boy because
+he had thwarted their plans." And this hatred, as
+persistent as it was malignant, was to follow him
+throughout his reign, and through his years of
+unhappy exile, to his grave.</p>
+<p>But these days were happily still remote. After
+four years of minority and Regency, when he was
+able to take the reins of government into his own
+hands, his empire over the hearts of his subjects
+was more firmly based than ever. His youth, his
+modesty, and his compelling charm of manner made
+friends for him wherever his wanderings took him,
+from Paris to Constantinople. He was the "Prince
+Charming" of Europe, as popular abroad as he was
+idolised at home; and when the time arrived to find
+a consort for him he might, one would have thought,
+have been able to pick and choose among the fairest
+Princesses of the Continent.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_310"></a>But handsome and gallant and popular as he
+was,
+the overtures of his ministers were coldly received
+by one Royal house after another. Milan might be
+a reigning Prince and a charming one to boot, but it
+was not forgotten that the first of his line had been a
+common herdsman, and the blood of Hapsburgs and
+Hohenzollerns could not be allowed to mingle with
+so base a strain. Even a mere Hungarian Count,
+whose fair daughter had caught Milan's fancy,
+frowned on the suit of the swineherd's successor.
+But fate had already chosen a bride for the young
+Prince, who was more than equal in birth to any
+Count's daughter; who would bring beauty and
+riches as her portion; and who, after many unhappy
+years, was to crown her dower with tragedy.</p>
+<p>It was at Nice, where Prince Milan was spending
+the winter months of 1875, that he first set eyes on
+the woman whose life was to be so tragically linked
+with his own. Among the visitors there was the
+family of a Russian colonel, Nathaniel Ketschko, a
+man of high lineage and great wealth. He claimed,
+in fact, descent from the Royal race of Comnenus,
+which had given many a King to the thrones of
+Europe, and whose sons for long centuries had won
+fame as generals, statesmen, and ambassadors. And
+to this exalted strain was allied enormous wealth, of
+which the Colonel's share was represented by a regal
+revenue of four hundred thousand roubles a year.</p>
+<p>But proud as he was of his birth and his riches,
+Colonel Nathaniel was still prouder of his two lovely
+daughters, each of whom had inherited in liberal
+measure the beauty of their mother, a daughter of
+<a name="Page_311"></a>the princely house of Stourza; and of the two
+the
+more beautiful, by common consent, was Natalie,
+whose charms won this spontaneous tribute from
+Tsar Nicholas, when first he saw her, "I would I
+were a beggar that I might every day ask your alms,
+and have the happiness of kissing your hand." She
+had, says one who knew her in her radiant youth,
+"an irresistible charm that permeated her whole
+being with such a harmony of grace, sweetness, and
+overpowering attraction that one felt drawn to her
+with magnetic force; and to adore her seemed the
+most natural and indeed the only position."</p>
+<p>Such was the high tribute paid to Servia's future
+Queen at the first dawning of that beauty which was
+to make her also Queen of all the fair women of
+Europe, and which at its zenith was thus described
+by one who saw her at Wiesbaden ten years or so
+later: "She walked along the promenade with a
+light, graceful movement; her feet hardly seemed to
+touch the ground, her figure was elegant, her finely
+cut face was lit up by those wonderful eyes, once
+seen never forgotten&#8212;brilliant, tender, loving; her
+luxuriant hair of raven black was loosely coiled
+round the well-set head, or fell in curls on the beautifully
+arched neck. For each one she had a pleasant
+smile, a gracious bow, or a few words, spoken in a
+musical voice." No wonder the Germans, who
+looked at this apparition of grace and beauty,
+"simply fell down and adored her."</p>
+<p>Such was the vision of beauty of which Prince
+Milan caught his first glimpse on the promenade at
+Nice in the winter of 1875, and which haunted him,
+<a name="Page_312"></a>day and night, until chance brought their paths
+together again, and he won her consent to share his
+throne. That such a high destiny awaited her,
+Natalie had already been told by a gipsy whom she
+met one day in the woods of her father's estate near
+Moscow&#8212;a meeting of which the following story
+is told.</p>
+<p>At sight of the beautiful young girl the gipsy
+stooped in homage and kissed the hem of her dress.
+"Why do you do that?" asked Natalie, half in
+alarm and half in pleasure. "Because," the woman
+answered, "I salute you as the chosen bride of a
+great Prince. Over your head I see a crown floating
+in the air. It descends lower and lower until it
+rests on your head. A dazzling brilliance adorns the
+crown; it is a Royal diadem."</p>
+<p>"What else?" asked Natalie eagerly, her face
+flushed with excitement and delight. "Oh! do tell
+me more, please!" "What more shall I say,"
+continued the gipsy, "except that you will be a
+Queen, and the mother of a King; but then&#8212;"</p>
+<p>"But then, what? "exclaimed the eager and impatient
+girl; "do go on, please. What then?" and
+she held out a gold coin temptingly. "I see a large
+house; you will be there, but&#8212;take care; you will
+be turned out by force.... And now give me
+the coin and let me go. More I must not tell you."</p>
+<p>Such were the dazzling and mysterious words
+spoken by the gipsy woman in the Russian forest, a
+year or more before Natalie first saw the Prince who
+was destined to make them true. But it was not at
+Nice that opportunity came to Milan. It was an
+<a name="Page_313"></a>accidental meeting in Paris, some months later,
+that
+made his path clear. During a visit to the French
+capital he met a young Servian officer, a distant
+kinsman, one Alexander Konstantinovitch, who
+confided to him, over their wine and cigarettes, the
+story of his infatuation for the daughter of a Russian
+colonel, who at the time was staying with her aunt,
+the Princess Murussi. He raved of her beauty and
+her charm, and concluded by asking the Prince to
+accompany him that he might make the acquaintance
+of the Lieutenant's bride-to-be.</p>
+<p>Arrived at their destination, the Prince and his
+companion were graciously received by the Princess
+Murussi, but Milan had no eyes for the dignified
+lady who gave him such a flattering reception; they
+were drawn as by a magnet to the girl by her side&#8212;"a
+child with a woman's grace and an angel's soul
+smiling in her eyes"; the incarnation of his dreams,
+the very girl whose beauty, though he had caught
+but one passing glimpse of it, had so intoxicated his
+brain a few months earlier at Nice.</p>
+<p>"Allow me," said the Lieutenant, "to introduce to
+Your Highness Natalie Ketschko, my affianced wife."
+Milan's face flushed with surprise and anger at the
+words. What was this trick that had been played
+on him? Had Konstantinovitch then brought him
+here only to humiliate him? But before he could
+recover from his indignation and astonishment, the
+Princess said chillingly, "Pardon me, Monsieur
+Konstantinovitch, you are not speaking the truth.
+My niece, Colonel Ketschko's daughter, is not your
+affianced wife. You are too premature."</p>
+<p><a name="Page_314"></a>Thus rebuffed, the Lieutenant was not
+encouraged
+to prolong his stay; and Milan was left, reassured,
+to bask in the smiles of the Princess and her lovely
+niece, and to pursue his wooing under the most
+favourable auspices. This first visit was quickly
+followed by others; and before a week had passed the
+Prince had won the prize on which his heart was set,
+and with it a dower of five million roubles. Now
+followed halcyon days for the young lovers&#8212;long
+hours of sweet communion, of anticipation of the
+happy years that stretched in such a golden vista
+before them. It was a love-idyll such as delighted
+the romantic heart of Paris; and congratulations and
+presents poured on the young couple; "the very
+beggars in the streets," we are told, "blessing them
+as they drove by."</p>
+<p>"Happy is the wooing that is not long a-doing,"
+and Milan's wooing was as brief as it was blissful.
+He was all impatience to possess fully the prize he
+had won; preparations for the nuptials were hastened,
+but, before the crowning day dawned, once
+more the voice of warning spoke.</p>
+<p>A few days before the wedding, as Milan was
+leaving the Murussi Palace, he was accosted by a
+woman, who craved permission to speak to him, a
+favour which was smilingly accorded. "I know
+you," said the woman, thus permitted to speak,
+"although you do not know me. You are the Prince
+of Servia; I am a servant in the household of the
+Princess Murussi. Your Highness, listen! I love
+Natalie. I have known and loved her since she was
+a child; and I beg of you not to marry her. Such a
+<a name="Page_315"></a>union is doomed to unhappiness. You love to
+rule,
+to command. So does Natalie; and it is <i>she</i> who
+will be the ruler. You are utterly unsuited for each
+other, and nothing but great unhappiness can possibly
+come from your union."</p>
+<p>To this warning Milan turned a smiling face and
+a deaf ear, as Natalie had done to the voice of the
+gipsy. A fig for such gloomy prophecy! They
+were ideally happy in the present, and the future
+should be equally bright, however ravens might
+croak. Thus, one October day in 1875, Vienna
+held high holiday for the nuptials of the handsome
+Prince and his beautiful bride; and it was through
+avenues densely packed with cheering onlookers that
+Natalie made her triumphal progress to the altar, in
+her flower-garlanded dress of white satin, a tiara of
+diamonds flashing from the blackness of her hair, no
+brighter than the brilliance of her eyes, her face
+irradiated with happiness.</p>
+<p>That no Royalty graced their wedding was a
+matter of no moment to Milan and Natalie, whose
+happiness was thus crowned; and when at the
+subsequent banquet Milan said, "I wish from my
+very heart that every one of my subjects, as well as
+everybody I know, could be always as happy as I am
+this moment," none who heard him could doubt the
+sincerity of his words, or see any but a golden future
+for so ideal a union of hearts.</p>
+<p>By Servia her young Princess was received with
+open arms of welcome. "Her reception," we are
+told, "was beyond description. The festivities
+lasted three days, and during that time the love of
+<a name="Page_316"></a>the people for their Prince, and their
+admiration of
+the beauty and charm of his bride, were beyond
+words to describe." Never did Royal wedded life
+open more full of bright promise, and never did
+consort make more immediate conquest of the affections
+of her husband's subjects. "No one could
+have believed that this marriage, which was contracted
+from love and love alone, would have ended
+in so tragic a manner, or that hate could so quickly
+have taken the place of love."</p>
+<p>But the serpent was quick to show his head in
+Natalie's new paradise. Before she had been many
+weeks a wife, stories came to her ears of her husband's
+many infidelities. Now the story was of one
+lady of her Court, now of another, until the horrified
+Princess knew not whom to trust or to respect.
+Strange tales, too, came to her (mostly anonymously)
+of Milan's amours in Paris, in Vienna, and half a
+dozen of his other haunts of pleasure, until her love,
+poisoned at its very springing, turned to suspicion
+and distrust of the man to whom she had given
+her heart.</p>
+<p>Other disillusions were quick to follow. She discovered
+that her husband was a hopeless gambler
+and spendthrift, spending long hours daily at the
+card-tables, watching with pale face and trembling
+lips his pile of gold dwindle (as it usually did) to
+its last coin; and often losing at a single sitting a
+month's revenue from the Civil List. Her own
+dowry of five million roubles, she knew, was safe
+from his clutches. Her father had taken care to
+make that secure, but Milan's private fortune, large
+<a name="Page_317"></a>as it had been, had already been squandered in
+this and other forms of dissipation; and even the
+expenses of his wedding, she learned, had been
+met by a loan raised at ruinous interest.</p>
+<p>Such discoveries as these were well calculated to
+shatter the dreams of the most infatuated of brides,
+and less was sufficient to rouse Natalie's proud spirit
+to rebellion. When affectionate pleadings proved
+useless, reproaches took their place. Heated words
+were exchanged, and the records tell of many violent
+scenes before Natalie had been six months Princess
+of Servia. "You love to rule," the warning voice
+had told Milan&#8212;"to command. So does Natalie";
+and already the clashing of strong wills and imperious
+tempers, which must end in the yielding of one
+or the other, had begun to be heard.</p>
+<p>If more fuel had been needed to feed the flames of
+dissension, it was quickly supplied by two unfortunate
+incidents. The first was Milan's open dallying
+with Fr&auml;ulein S&#8212;&#8212;, one of Natalie's maids-of-honour,
+a girl almost as beautiful as herself, but with
+the <i>beaut&eacute; de diable</i>. The second was the appearance
+in Belgrade of Dimitri Wasseljevitchca, who
+was suspected of plotting to assassinate the Tsar.
+Russia demanded that the fugitive should be given
+up to justice, and enlisted Natalie's co-operation with
+this object. Milan, however, was resolute not to
+surrender the plotter, and turned a deaf ear to all
+the Princess's pleadings and cajoleries. "The most
+exciting scene followed. Natalie, abandoning entreaties,
+threatened and even commanded her husband
+to obey her"; and when threats and commands
+<a name="Page_318"></a>equally failed, she gave way to a paroxysm of
+rage
+in which she heaped the most unbridled scorn and
+contempt on her husband.</p>
+<p>Thus jealousy, a thwarted will, and Milan's low
+pleasures combined to widen the breach between the
+Royal couple, so recently plighted to each other in
+the sacred name of love, and to prepare the way for
+the troubled and tragic years to come.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXIX"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_319"></a>CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
+<h2>AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE&#8212;<i>continued</i></h2>
+<br>
+<p>If anything could have restored happiness to
+Milan of Servia and his Princess, Natalie, it should
+surely have been the birth of the baby-Prince,
+Alexander, whom both equally adored and equally
+spoiled. But, instead of linking his parents in a new
+bond of affection "Sacha" was from his cradle
+the innocent cause of widening the breach that
+severed them.</p>
+<p>For a time, fortunately, Milan had little opportunity
+of continuing the feud of recrimination with
+his high-spirited and hot-tempered spouse. More
+serious matters claimed him. Servia was plunged
+into war with Turkey, and his days were spent in
+camp and on the battlefield, until the intervention of
+Russia put an end to the long and hopeless struggle,
+and Milan found himself one February day in 1882,
+thanks to the Berlin Conference, hailed the first King
+of his country, under the title of Milan I.</p>
+<p>Then followed a disastrous war with Bulgaria into
+which the headstrong King rushed in spite of
+Natalie's warning&#8212;"Draw back, Milan, and have
+no share in what will prove a bloody drama. You
+have no chance of conquering, for Alexander is made
+<a name="Page_320"></a>of the stuff of the Hohenzollerns." And indeed
+the
+struggle was doomed to failure from the first; for
+Milan was no man to lead an army to victory. Read
+his method of conducting a campaign, as described
+by one of his aides-de-camp&#8212;</p>
+<p>"Our troops continue to retreat&#8212;I never imagined
+a campaign could be so jolly. We do nothing but
+dance and sing and fiddle. Yesterday the King had
+some guests and the champagne literally flowed. We
+had the Belgrade singers, who used to delight us in
+the theatre-caf&eacute;. They sang and danced delightfully.
+The last two days we have had plenty of fun, and
+yesterday a lot of jolly girls came to enliven us."
+Such was Milan's method of conducting a great war,
+on which the very existence of his kingdom hung.
+Wine and women and song were more to his taste
+than forced marches, strategy, and hard-fought
+battles. But once again foreign intervention came
+to his rescue; and his armies were saved from
+annihilation.</p>
+<p>When his sword was finally sheathed, if not with
+honour, he returned to Belgrade to resume his
+gambling, his dallyings with fair women&#8212;and his
+daily quarrels with his Queen, whose bitterness
+absence had done nothing to assuage. So far from
+Natalie's spirit being crushed, it was higher and
+prouder than ever. She would die before she would
+yield; but she was in no mood to die, this autocratic,
+fiery-tempered, strong-willed daughter of Russia.
+She gave literally a "striking" proof of the spirit that
+was in her at the Easter reception of 1886, when the
+wife of a Greek diplomat&#8212;a beautiful woman, to
+<a name="Page_321"></a>whom her husband had been more than
+kind&#8212;presented
+herself smilingly to receive the "salute
+courteous" from Her Majesty. With a look of
+scorn Natalie coolly surveyed her rival from head
+to foot; and then, in the presence of the Court, gave
+her a resounding slap on the cheek.</p>
+<p>But the Grecian lady was only one of many fair
+women who basked successively (or together) in
+Milan's favour. A much more formidable rival was
+Artemesia Christich, a woman as designing as she
+was lovely, who was quick to envelop the weak King
+in the toils of her witchery. Not content with his
+smiles and favours she aspired to take Natalie's place
+as Queen of Servia; and, it is said, had extorted from
+him a promise that he would make her his Queen as
+soon as his existing marriage tie could be dissolved.
+And to this infamous compact Artemesia's husband,
+a man as crafty and unscrupulous as herself, consented,
+in return for his promotion to certain high and
+profitable offices in the State.</p>
+<p>In vain did the Emperor and the Crown Prince of
+Austria, with many another high-placed friend, plead
+with Milan not to commit such a folly. He was
+driven to distraction between such powerful appeals
+and the allurement of the siren who had him so
+effectually under her spell, until in his despair he
+entertained serious thoughts of suicide as escape from
+his dilemma. Meanwhile, we are told, "a perfect
+hell" raged in the castle; each day brought its
+scandalous scene between his outraged Queen and
+himself. His unpopularity with his subjects became
+so acute that he was hissed whenever he made his
+<a name="Page_322"></a>appearance in the streets of his capital; and
+Artemesia
+was obliged to have police protection to shield
+her from the vengeance of the mob.</p>
+<p>As for Natalie, this crowning injury decided her to
+bear her purgatory no longer. She would force her
+husband to abdicate and secure her own appointment
+as Regent for her son; or, failing that, she would
+leave her husband and seek an asylum out of Servia.
+And with the object of still further embittering his
+subjects against the King she made the full story of
+her injuries public, and enlisted the sympathy, not
+only of Milan's most powerful ministers, but of the
+entire country.</p>
+<p>"The castle is in utter confusion," wrote an
+officer of the Belgrade garrison, in October, 1886.
+"The King looks ill, and as if he never slept. Poor
+fellow! he flies for refuge to us in the guard-house,
+and plays cards with the officers. Card-playing is
+his worst enemy. He loves it passionately, and
+plays excitedly and for high points&#8212;and he always
+loses."</p>
+<p>Matters were now hastening to a crisis. Hopelessly
+in debt, scorned by his subjects, and hated by
+his wife, Milan's plight was pitiful. The scenes
+between the King and the Queen were becoming
+more violent and disgraceful every day. "There
+was no peace anywhere, nor did anyone belonging
+to the Court enjoy a moment of tranquillity." So
+intolerable had life become that, early in 1887, Milan
+decided to dissolve his marriage; and it was only at
+the pleading of the Austrian Emperor that he consented
+to abandon this design, on condition that his
+<a name="Page_323"></a>wife left Servia; and thus it was that one day
+in April
+Queen Natalie left Belgrade, accompanied by her
+son "Sacha," ostensibly that he might continue his
+education in Germany.</p>
+<p>But, although husband and wife were thus at last
+separated, Milan's resolve to divorce her remained
+firm. "I have to inform you," he wrote shortly after
+her departure, "that I have this day sent in my
+application to our Holy National Church for permission
+to dissolve our marriage." And that nothing
+might be lacking to Natalie's suffering and humiliation,
+he sent General Protitsch to Wiesbaden with a
+peremptory demand that his son, "Sacha," should
+return to Servia.</p>
+<p>In vain did Natalie protest against both indignities.
+Milan might divorce her; but at least he should not
+rob her of her son, the only solace left to her in life.
+And when General Protitsch, seeing that milder
+measures were futile, gave orders for the Prince to
+be removed by force, the distracted mother flung one
+protecting arm round her boy; and, pointing a loaded
+pistol with the other, threatened to shoot dead the
+man who dared approach her.</p>
+<p>Opposition, however, was futile; the following
+evening the boy-Prince was in his father's arms, and
+the weeping mother was left disconsolate. Thus
+robbed of her darling "Sacha," it was not long before
+the second blow fell. The divorce proceedings were
+rushed through the Synod. A deaf ear was turned
+to Natalie's petition to be allowed, at least, to defend
+herself in person; and on the 12th October, 1888,
+the "marriage between King Milan I. and Natalie,
+<a name="Page_324"></a>born Ketschko," was formally dissolved. Well
+might this most unhappy of Queens write, "The
+position is embittered by my conscience assuring me
+that I have neglected no duty, and that there is not
+a single action of my life which could be cited against
+me as a grave offence, or could put me to shame were
+it brought before the whole world. My fate should
+draw tears from the very stones; but I do not ask for
+pity; I demand justice."</p>
+<p>If anything could have increased Milan's unpopularity
+it was this brutal treatment of his Queen. The
+very men who, at his coronation, had taken off their
+cloaks that he might walk on them, and the women
+who had kissed his garments, now hissed him in the
+streets of his capital. In his own Court he had no
+friend except the infamous Christitch; the general
+hatred even took the form of repeated attempts on his
+life. If he would save it, he realised he must abandon
+his crown; and one March morning in 1889,
+after informing his ministers of his intention to
+abdicate, he awoke his twelve-year-old son with the
+greeting, "Good morning, Your Majesty!" Milan
+was no longer King of Servia; his son, Alexander,
+reigned in his stead.</p>
+<p>Probably no King ever laid down his crown more
+willingly. He had put aside for ever his Royal
+trappings, with all their unhappy memories, and their
+present discomforts and danger; but in distant Paris
+he knew a life of new pleasure awaited him, remote
+from the wranglings of Courts and the assassin's
+knife. And within a week of greeting his successor
+as King, he was gaily riding in the Bois, attending
+<a name="Page_325"></a>the theatres, supping hilariously with ladies of
+the
+ballet, or dining with his friends at Verrey's "where
+his somewhat rough manner and coarse jokes (the
+legacy of his swineherd ancestry) caused him sometimes
+to be mistaken for a parvenu," until a waiter
+would correct the impression by a whispered,
+"That gentleman with the dark moustache is Milan,
+ex-King of Servia."</p>
+<p>While her husband was thus drinking the cup of
+Paris pleasure, his wife was still doomed to exile from
+her kingdom and her son, with permission only to
+pay two brief visits each year. But Natalie, who
+had so long defied a King, was not the woman to be
+daunted by mere Regents. She would return to
+Belgrade, and at least make her home where she
+could catch an occasional glimpse of her boy. And
+to Belgrade she went, to make her entry over flower-strewn
+streets, and through a tornado of cheers and
+shouts of "Zivela Rufe!" It was a truly Royal
+welcome to the great warm heart of the Servian
+people; but no official of the Court was there to greet
+her coming, and as she drove past the castle which
+held all she counted dear in life, not even the flutter
+of a handkerchief marked the passing of Servia's
+former Queen.</p>
+<p>Had she but played her cards now with the least
+discretion, she might have been allowed to remain
+in Belgrade in peace. But Natalie seems fated to
+have been the harbinger of storm. For a time, it is
+true, she was content to lie <i>perdue</i>, entertaining her
+friends at her house in Prince Michael Street, driving
+through the streets of her capital behind her pair of
+<a name="Page_326"></a>white ponies, or walking with her pet goat for
+companion,
+greeted everywhere with respect and affection.
+But her restless, vengeful spirit, still burning
+from the indignities she had suffered, would not
+allow her to remain long in the background. She
+threw herself into political agitation, and thus
+brought herself into open conflict with the Regents;
+she inaugurated a campaign of abuse against her
+husband, whom she still pursued with a relentless
+hatred; and generally made herself so objectionable
+to the authorities that the Skupshtina was at last
+compelled to order her banishment.</p>
+<p>When the deputies presented themselves before
+her with the decree of expulsion, she laughed in their
+very faces, declaring that she would only submit to
+force. "I refuse to go," she said defiantly, "unless
+I am expelled by the hands of the police." A few
+hours later she was forcibly removed from her weeping
+and protesting ladies, hurried into a carriage, and
+driven off, with a strong escort of soldiers, on her
+journey to exile.</p>
+<p>But the good people of Belgrade, who had got
+wind of the proposed abduction, were by no means
+disposed to look on while their beloved Queen was
+thus brutally taken from them. When the cort&egrave;ge
+reached the Cathedral Square, it was stopped by a
+formidable and menacing mob; the escort, furiously
+assailed with sticks and showers of stones, was beaten
+off; the horses were taken from the carriage, and the
+Queen was drawn back in triumph by scores of willing
+hands, to her residence.</p>
+<p>Natalie's victory, however, was short-lived. At
+<a name="Page_327"></a>midnight, when her stalwart champions were
+sleeping
+in their beds, the police, crawling over the roofs of
+the houses in Prince Michael Street, and descending
+into the Queen's courtyard, found it a very simple
+matter to complete their dastardly work. The Queen
+was again bundled unceremoniously into a carriage,
+and before Belgrade was well awake, she was far on
+her way to her new exile in Hungary. A few days
+later a formal decree of banishment was pronounced
+against her, forbidding her, under any pretext whatever,
+to enter Servia again without the Regent's
+permission.</p>
+<p>Only once more did Natalie and Milan set eyes on
+each other&#8212;when the ex-King presented himself at
+Biarritz, to bring her news of their son's projected
+<i>coup d'&eacute;tat</i>, by which he designed to depose the
+Regents and to take the reins of government into his
+own hands. Taken by surprise, the Queen received
+Milan, but when she saw him standing before her, an
+aged, broken man, her composure gave way. She
+could not speak; she trembled like a leaf.</p>
+<p>With Alexander's dramatic accession to his full
+Kingship a new, if brief, era of happiness opened to
+Natalie. The Regents were no longer able to
+exclude her from Servia, and by her son's invitation
+she returned to Belgrade to resume her old position
+of Queen.</p>
+<p>Still beautiful, in spite of all her suffering, she
+played for a time the r&ocirc;le of Queen-mother to perfection,
+holding her Courts, presiding at balls and
+soir&eacute;es, taking a prominent part in affairs of State, and
+gradually acquiring more power than her easy-going
+<a name="Page_328"></a>son himself enjoyed. At last, after long years
+of
+unrest and unhappiness, she seemed assured of
+peaceful years, secure in the affection of her son and
+her people, and far removed from the husband who
+had brought so much misery into her life.</p>
+<p>But Natalie was fated never to be happy long, and
+once more her evil Destiny was to snatch the cup from
+her lips, assuming this time the form of Draga
+Maschin, one of her own ladies-in-waiting, under the
+spell of whose black eyes and voluptuous charms her
+son quickly fell, after that first dramatic incident at
+Biarritz, when she plunged into the sea to his rescue
+and saved him from drowning.</p>
+<p>Many months earlier a clairvoyante at Paris had
+told Natalie, "Your Majesty is cherishing in your
+bosom a poisonous snake, which one day will give
+you a mortal wound." She had smiled incredulously
+at the warning, but she was soon to learn what truth
+it held. Certainly Draga Maschin was the last
+person she would have suspected of being a source
+of danger&#8212;a woman many years older than her son,
+the penniless widow of a drunken engineer&#8212;a
+woman, moreover, of whose life, before Natalie had
+taken pity on her poverty, many strange stories were
+told&#8212;how, for instance, she had often been seen in
+low resorts, "with the arm of a forester or a tradesman
+round her, singing the old Servian songs."</p>
+<p>But she had not taken into account Draga's
+sensuous beauty, before which her son was powerless.
+Each meeting left him more and more involved
+in her toils, until, to the consternation of
+Servia and the horror of his mother, he announced
+<a name="Page_329"></a>his intention of making her his Queen. Even
+Milan, degraded as he was, was horror-struck when
+the news came to him in Paris. "And this," he
+exclaimed, "is the act of 'Sacha'&#8212;my own son. He
+is a monster, a thing of evil in the eyes of all men!
+The Maschin will be Queen of Servia. What a
+reproach! What an evil! A creature like her! A
+sordid creature! Could he not have put aside his
+love for this low-born woman? But I could never
+make the fool understand that a King has duties; he
+has something else to think of but love-making."</p>
+<p>When taking leave of the friend who had brought
+him this evil news Milan said, "I shall never see
+Servia again. My experience has been a bitter one&#8212;everywhere
+treachery and deceit. And now my
+own son&#8212;<i>that</i> has broken my heart." A few
+months later, worn out by his excesses, prematurely
+old and broken-hearted, the man who had prostituted
+life's best gifts drew his last breath at Vienna at the
+age of forty-six.</p>
+<p>As for Natalie, this crowning calamity of her son's
+disgrace did more than all her past sufferings to
+crush her proud spirit. But fate had not yet dealt
+the last and most cruel blow of all. That fell on that
+fatal June day of 1902 when her beloved "Sacha's"
+mutilated body was flung by his assassins out of his
+palace window, to be greeted with shouts of derisive
+laughter and cries of "Long live King Peter," from
+the dense crowds who had come to gloat over this last
+scene in the tragedy of the House of the Obrenvoie.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 45%;">
+<a name="INDEX"></a>
+<h2>INDEX</h2>
+Agenois, Duc, d', <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a><br>
+Aiss&eacute;, Mlle, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>-<a href="#Page_224">224</a><br>
+Albany, Count of, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>-<a href="#Page_20">20</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; "&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Countess
+of, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>-<a href="#Page_22">22</a><br>
+Alberoni, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_184">184</a><br>
+Alexander, King of Servia, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_329">329</a><br>
+Alexander III., of Russia, <a href="#Page_93">93</a><br>
+Alexis, Tsarevitch, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a><br>
+Alfieri, Vittorio, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>-<a href="#Page_22">22</a><br>
+Anjou, Duc d', <a href="#Page_59">59</a><br>
+Anna, Empress, <a href="#Page_26">26</a><br>
+Anne of Austria, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>,
+<a href="#Page_164">164</a><br>
+Arcimbaldo, <a href="#Page_92">92</a><br>
+Aubign&eacute;, Constant d', <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_241">241</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Fran&ccedil;oise d', <a
+ href="#Page_240">240</a>-<a href="#Page_247">247</a><br>
+Audouins, Diane d', <a href="#Page_37">37</a><br>
+Augustus, of Saxony, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>-<a href="#Page_102">102</a><br>
+Austin, William, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a><br>
+Auvergne, Comte d', <a href="#Page_235">235</a><br>
+<br>
+Babou, Fran&ccedil;oise, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br>
+Baireuth, Margravine of, <a href="#Page_7">7</a><br>
+Baratinski, Prince, <a href="#Page_155">155</a><br>
+Barry, Guillaume du, <a href="#Page_47">47</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; "&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Jean du, <a
+ href="#Page_47">47</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; "&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Madame du, <a
+ href="#Page_47">47</a>-<a href="#Page_54">54</a><br>
+Bavaria, Elizabeth of, <a href="#Page_215">215</a><br>
+Beaufort, Duchesse de, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>-<a href="#Page_44">44</a><br>
+Beauharnais, Eug&egrave;ne, <a href="#Page_135">135</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; "&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;
+&nbsp; &nbsp; Hortense, <a href="#Page_135">135</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+Josephine, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>-<a href="#Page_137">137</a><br>
+Beauvallon, <a href="#Page_143">143</a><br>
+B&eacute;cu, Jeanne, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>-<a href="#Page_54">54</a><br>
+Bellegarde, Count di, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>-<a href="#Page_206">206</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Duc de, <a
+ href="#Page_37">37</a>-<a href="#Page_39">39</a><br>
+Berry, Duc de, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>-<a href="#Page_61">61</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; "&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Duchesse de, <a
+ href="#Page_55">55</a>-<a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>,
+<a href="#Page_217">217</a><br>
+Bestyouzhev, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a><br>
+Beuchling, <a href="#Page_98">98</a><br>
+Blanguini, <a href="#Page_111">111</a><br>
+Blois, Mlle de, <a href="#Page_56">56</a><br>
+Bonaparte, Elisa, <a href="#Page_104">104</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Letizia, <a
+ href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Napoleon, <a
+ href="#Page_104">104</a>-<a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_127">127</a>-<a href="#Page_137">137</a><br>
+Bonaparte, Pauline, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>-<a href="#Page_113">113</a><br>
+Bonaventuri, Pietro, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>-<a href="#Page_175">175</a><br>
+"Bonnie Prince," <a href="#Page_13">13</a>-<a href="#Page_22">22</a><br>
+Borghese, Prince Camillo, <a href="#Page_110">110</a><br>
+Borghese, Princess Pauline, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_113">113</a><br>
+Bossi, Giuseppe, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br>
+Bourgogne, Duc de, <a href="#Page_59">59</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Duchesse de, <a
+ href="#Page_181">181</a><br>
+Brissac, Duc de, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>-<a href="#Page_53">53</a><br>
+Bristol, Lord, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a><br>
+Brougham, <a href="#Page_212">212</a><br>
+Brunswick, Augusta, Duchess of, <a href="#Page_194">194</a><br>
+Brunswick, Charles Wm., Duke of, <a href="#Page_194">194</a><br>
+Byron, Lord, <a href="#Page_138">138</a><br>
+<br>
+Campbell, Lady Charlotte, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_194">194</a><br>
+Campredon, <a href="#Page_249">249</a><br>
+Capello, Bartolomeo, <a href="#Page_172">172</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; "&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Bianca, <a
+ href="#Page_169">169</a>-<a href="#Page_179">179</a><br>
+Carlos, King of Spain, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_305">305</a>.<br>
+Caroline, Princess of Wales, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_202">202</a><br>
+Caroline, Queen of Naples, <a href="#Page_120">120</a><br>
+Catargo, Marie, <a href="#Page_307">307</a><br>
+Catherine I., of Russia, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>-<a href="#Page_12">12</a>,
+<a href="#Page_23">23</a><br>
+Catherine II., of Russia, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>,
+<a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_158">158</a><br>
+Charles V., Emperor, <a href="#Page_88">88</a><br>
+Charles VII., Emperor, <a href="#Page_29">29</a><br>
+Charles IX., King of France, <a href="#Page_227">227</a><br>
+Charles, Monsieur, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a><br>
+Charlotte, Princess, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>,
+<a href="#Page_211">211</a><br>
+Charlotte, Queen, <a href="#Page_197">197</a><br>
+Chartres, Duc de, <a href="#Page_56">56</a><br>
+Chateauroux, Duchesse de, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_293">293</a><br>
+Christian II, of Denmark, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>-<a href="#Page_92">92</a><br>
+Christich, Artemesia, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a><br>
+Clary, Desir&eacute;e, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_127">127</a><br>
+Colonna, Prince, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">"&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Princess, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></span><br>
+Cosse, Louis, Duc de, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>-<a href="#Page_50">50</a><br>
+<br>
+Domanski, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>-<a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a><br>
+Douglas, Lady, <a href="#Page_200">200</a><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Sir
+John, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></span><br>
+Dubois, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a><br>
+Dujarrier, M., <a href="#Page_143">143</a><br>
+Dyveke, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>-<a href="#Page_89">89</a><br>
+<br>
+Elizabeth I., of Russia, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>-<a href="#Page_32">32</a>,
+<a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_153">153</a><br>
+"Elizabeth II." of Russia, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a><br>
+Embs, Baron von, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br>
+Emilie, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a><br>
+Encke, Charlotte, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; Wilhelmine, <a
+ href="#Page_114">114</a>-<a href="#Page_126">126</a></span><br>
+Entragues, Henriette d', <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_227">227</a>-<a href="#Page_237">237</a><br>
+Entragues, Seigneur d', <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_229">229</a><br>
+Esterle, Countess, <a href="#Page_102">102</a><br>
+Estr&eacute;es, Antoine d', <a href="#Page_36">36</a><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Gabrielle
+d', <a href="#Page_35">35</a>-<a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_226">226</a></span><br>
+Estr&eacute;es, Jean d', <a href="#Page_36">36</a><br>
+Eudoxia, Empress, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>-<a href="#Page_257">257</a><br>
+<br>
+Faaborg, Hans, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>-<a href="#Page_91">91</a><br>
+Fabre, Fran&ccedil;ois X., <a href="#Page_21">21</a><br>
+Falari, Duchesse de, <a href="#Page_224">224</a><br>
+Feriol, Comte de, <a href="#Page_222">222</a><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Madame de, <a
+ href="#Page_223">223</a></span><br>
+Fersen, Count, <a href="#Page_261">261</a><br>
+Fimarcon, Marquis de, <a href="#Page_221">221</a><br>
+Fitzherbert, Mrs, <a href="#Page_199">199</a><br>
+Flavacourt, Madame de, <a href="#Page_283">283</a><br>
+Fleury, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>,
+<a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_284">284</a><br>
+Fontanges, Mlle de, <a href="#Page_245">245</a><br>
+Forbin, <a href="#Page_111">111</a><br>
+Fran&ccedil;ois I, <a href="#Page_36">36</a><br>
+Frederick the Great, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>-<a href="#Page_118">118</a><br>
+Frederick William II, of Prussia, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_124">124</a><br>
+Frederick William III., of Prussia, <a href="#Page_124">124</a><br>
+Fr&egrave;ron, <a href="#Page_106">106</a><br>
+<br>
+Gac&eacute;, Comte De, <a href="#Page_183">183</a><br>
+Galitzin, Prince, <a href="#Page_79">79</a><br>
+George III., <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>,
+<a href="#Page_211">211</a><br>
+George IV., <a href="#Page_191">191</a>-<a href="#Page_202">202</a><br>
+Giovanna, Grand Duchess of Tuscany, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_177">177</a><br>
+Glebof, Major, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>-<a href="#Page_256">256</a><br>
+Goncourt, de, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>,
+<a href="#Page_286">286</a><br>
+Guiche, Comte de, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a><br>
+Guise, Duc de, <a href="#Page_237">237</a><br>
+Gustav, Adolf, <a href="#Page_15">15</a><br>
+<br>
+Hamilton, Mary, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>-<a href="#Page_259">259</a><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Sir
+William, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></span><br>
+Haye, La, <a href="#Page_60">60</a><br>
+Henri IV., of France (and Navarre), <a href="#Page_35">35</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_237">237</a><br>
+Holbein, Francis, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br>
+Hornstein, <a href="#Page_69">69</a><br>
+Hutchinson, Lord, <a href="#Page_212">212</a><br>
+<br>
+Isabella, Princess, <a href="#Page_88">88</a><br>
+Ivan, <a href="#Page_26">26</a><br>
+<br>
+Jersey, Lady, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a><br>
+Joachim Murat, King, <a href="#Page_207">207</a><br>
+Joinville, Prince de, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a><br>
+Josephine, Empress, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>-<a href="#Page_112">112</a>,
+<a href="#Page_127">127</a>-<a href="#Page_137">137</a><br>
+Junot, <a href="#Page_107">107</a><br>
+<br>
+Karageorgevitch, Alex., <a href="#Page_306">306</a><br>
+Ketschko, Natalie, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>-<a href="#Page_329">329</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Nathaniel, <a
+ href="#Page_310">310</a></span><br>
+K&ouml;nigsmarck, Aurora von, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_103">103</a><br>
+K&ouml;nigsmarck, Conrad von, <a href="#Page_94">94</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+Philip von, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>-<a href="#Page_96">96</a></span><br>
+Konstantinovitch, Alex., <a href="#Page_313">313</a><br>
+Kristenef, <a href="#Page_77">77</a><br>
+Kusa, Prince, <a href="#Page_308">308</a><br>
+<br>
+Lamballe, Princesse de, <a href="#Page_263">263</a><br>
+Landsfeld, Countess of, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>-<a href="#Page_148">148</a><br>
+Languet, Abb&eacute;, <a href="#Page_63">63</a><br>
+Lauzun, Duc de, <a href="#Page_62">62</a><br>
+Lavalli&egrave;re, Duchesse de, <a href="#Page_239">239</a><br>
+Lawrence, Sir Thomas, <a href="#Page_201">201</a><br>
+Leclerc, General, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a><br>
+Lichtenau, Countess, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>-<a href="#Page_126">126</a><br>
+Limburg, Duke of, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a><br>
+Lorraine, Prince Charles of, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_301">301</a><br>
+Louis XIV., <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_295">295</a><br>
+Louis XV., <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_292">292</a><br>
+Louise, Countess of Albany, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_22">22</a><br>
+L&ouml;wenhaupt, Count Axel, <a href="#Page_94">94</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+Countess,&nbsp; <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_99">99</a></span><br>
+Ludwig I., of Bavaria, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>-<a href="#Page_147">147</a><br>
+Luynes, Duc de, <a href="#Page_273">273</a><br>
+<br>
+Mailly, Madame de, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>-<a href="#Page_293">293</a><br>
+Maine, Duc de, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a><br>
+Maintenon, Madame de, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_247">247</a><br>
+Malmesbury, Lord, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>-<a href="#Page_198">198</a><br>
+Manby, Captain, <a href="#Page_201">201</a><br>
+Mancini, Hortense, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>,
+<a href="#Page_168">168</a><br>
+Mancini, Laure, <a href="#Page_294">294</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+Madame, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>-<a href="#Page_163">163</a></span><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Marie, <a
+ href="#Page_160">160</a>-<a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_301">301</a></span><br>
+Mancini, Olympe, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>-<a href="#Page_305">305</a><br>
+Maria Theresa, Queen of Spain, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_304">304</a><br>
+Marie Antoinette, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>-<a href="#Page_269">269</a><br>
+Marie Leczinska, <a href="#Page_270">270</a><br>
+Marie Louise, Empress, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br>
+Marine, Monsieur de, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br>
+Marke, Count de la, <a href="#Page_117">117</a><br>
+Marmont, General, <a href="#Page_107">107</a><br>
+Maschin, Draga, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a><br>
+Masson, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a><br>
+Maurepas, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>-<a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_292">292</a><br>
+Mazarin, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>-<a href="#Page_163">163</a>,
+<a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_297">297</a><br>
+Mazarin, Madame de, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a><br>
+Medici, Cardinal de, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>-<a href="#Page_176">176</a><br>
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+Francesco de, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>-<a href="#Page_179">179</a></span><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Marie
+de, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>-<a href="#Page_235">235</a></span><br>
+Menshikoff, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_12">12</a><br>
+Mercoeur, Duc de, <a href="#Page_295">295</a><br>
+Mexent, Marquis de Saint, <a href="#Page_123">123</a><br>
+Michael, Prince, of Servia, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_308">308</a><br>
+Michelin, Madame, <a href="#Page_181">181</a><br>
+Milan I., of Servia, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>-<a href="#Page_329">329</a><br>
+Modena, Duke of, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>-<a href="#Page_189">189</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+Duchess of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>,
+<a href="#Page_186">186</a>-<a href="#Page_189">189</a></span><br>
+Monceaux, Marquise de, <a href="#Page_41">41</a><br>
+Mons, William, <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br>
+Montespan, Madame de, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>,
+<a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_243">243</a>-<a href="#Page_245">245</a><br>
+Montez, Lola, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>-<a href="#Page_148">148</a><br>
+Montmorency, Charlotte de, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_237">237</a><br>
+Mortemart, Duchesse de, <a href="#Page_54">54</a><br>
+Motte-Houdancourt, Mlle de la, <a href="#Page_302">302</a><br>
+Motteville, Madame de, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_296">296</a><br>
+Mouchy, Madame de, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>-<a href="#Page_65">65</a>,
+<a href="#Page_217">217</a><br>
+Murussi, Princess, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a><br>
+<br>
+Napoleon I., <a href="#Page_104">104</a>-<a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_127">127</a>-<a href="#Page_137">137</a><br>
+Natalie, Queen of Servia, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_329">329</a><br>
+Nathalie, Empress, <a href="#Page_252">252</a><br>
+Nesle, F&eacute;licit&eacute; de, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_279">279</a><br>
+&nbsp;<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Marquise de, <a
+ href="#Page_182">182</a></span><br>
+Nevers, Duc de, <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br>
+Noailles, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_64">64</a><br>
+<br>
+Obrenovitch Jefrenn, <a href="#Page_307">307</a><br>
+Ompteda, Baron, <a href="#Page_206">206</a><br>
+Orleans, Philippe, Duc de, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>-<a href="#Page_57">57</a>,
+<a href="#Page_60">60</a>-<a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_225">225</a><br>
+Orloff, Alexis, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Count, <a
+ href="#Page_258">258</a></span><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Gregory, <a
+ href="#Page_29">29</a>,
+<a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_153">153</a>-<a href="#Page_158">158</a></span><br>
+<br>
+Palatine, Princess, Elizabeth, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a><br>
+Panine, <a href="#Page_157">157</a><br>
+Paskevitch, General, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br>
+Patiomkin, <a href="#Page_23">23</a><br>
+Perdita, <a href="#Page_199">199</a><br>
+Pergami, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>-<a href="#Page_213">213</a><br>
+Permon, Albert, <a href="#Page_107">107</a><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Madame, <a
+ href="#Page_109">109</a></span><br>
+Peter the Great, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>-<a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_259">259</a><br>
+Peter II., of Russia, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a><br>
+Peter III., of Russia, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>-<a href="#Page_155">155</a><br>
+Pinneberg, Countess of, <a href="#Page_73">73</a><br>
+Platen, Countess, <a href="#Page_94">94</a><br>
+Polignac, Cardinal de, <a href="#Page_261">261</a><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Diane
+de, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></span><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+Jules, Comte de, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>-<a href="#Page_264">264</a></span><br>
+Polignac, Madame de, <a href="#Page_182">182</a><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; Yolande,
+de, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>-<a href="#Page_269">269</a></span><br>
+P&ouml;llnitz, Von, <a href="#Page_7">7</a><br>
+Poniatowski, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a><br>
+Porte, Armande de la, <a href="#Page_162">162</a><br>
+Protitsch, General, <a href="#Page_323">323</a><br>
+Pugatchef, <a href="#Page_73">73</a><br>
+<br>
+Radziwill, Prince Charles, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_74">74</a><br>
+Ravaillac, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br>
+Razoum, Alexis, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>-<a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_72">72</a><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Cyril, <a
+ href="#Page_26">26</a>-<a href="#Page_28">28</a></span><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Gregory, <a
+ href="#Page_24">24</a></span><br>
+Richelieu, Duc de, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>-<a href="#Page_190">190</a>,
+<a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_291">291</a><br>
+Richelieu, Duchesse de, <a href="#Page_185">185</a><br>
+Rietz, Herr, <a href="#Page_117">117</a><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; Wilhelmine, <a
+ href="#Page_117">117</a>-<a href="#Page_120">120</a></span><br>
+Ringlet, Father, <a href="#Page_62">62</a><br>
+Riom, Comte de, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>-<a href="#Page_64">64</a><br>
+<br>
+Saint-Simon, Duc de, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>,
+<a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a><br>
+Saint-Simon, Madame de, <a href="#Page_58">58</a><br>
+Savoie, Chevalier de, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br>
+Savoy, Charles Emmanuel, Duke of, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br>
+Savoy, Margaret, Princess of, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_300">300</a><br>
+Scarron, Paul, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a><br>
+Schenk, Baron von, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br>
+Sevign&eacute;, Madame de, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_303">303</a><br>
+Seymour, Henry, <a href="#Page_48">48</a><br>
+Shouvalov, <a href="#Page_29">29</a><br>
+Sigbrit, Frau, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>-<a href="#Page_92">92</a><br>
+Skovronski, I, <a href="#Page_23">23</a><br>
+Smith, Sydney, Captain, <a href="#Page_200">200</a><br>
+Soissons, Comte de, <a href="#Page_297">297</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; Comtesse
+de, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_305">305</a></span><br>
+Soltykoff, Sergius, <a href="#Page_151">151</a><br>
+Sophia Dorothea, of Celle, <a href="#Page_94">94</a><br>
+Spencer, Lord Henry, <a href="#Page_119">119</a><br>
+Stanley, Sir John, <a href="#Page_193">193</a><br>
+Stendhal, <a href="#Page_21">21</a><br>
+Stuart, Charles, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>-<a href="#Page_20">20</a><br>
+Sully, Duc de, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_229">229</a>-<a href="#Page_231">231</a><br>
+<br>
+Tencin, Madame de, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a><br>
+Teplof, <a href="#Page_155">155</a><br>
+Thackeray, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_200">200</a><br>
+Toebingen, Major, <a href="#Page_199">199</a><br>
+Torbern, Oxe, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>-<a href="#Page_92">92</a><br>
+Touchet, Marie, <a href="#Page_227">227</a><br>
+Tourel-Al&eacute;gre, Marquess, <a href="#Page_36">36</a><br>
+Tournelle, Mme de la, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>-<a href="#Page_293">293</a><br>
+Tuscany, Bianca, Grand Duchess of, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_179">179</a><br>
+Tuscany, Francesco, Grand Duke of, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_179">179</a><br>
+<br>
+Valkendorf, Chancellor, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>-<a href="#Page_85">85</a>,
+<a href="#Page_89">89</a><br>
+Valli&egrave;re, La, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>-<a href="#Page_303">303</a><br>
+Valois, Marguerite de, Queen of France, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br>
+Valois, Mlle de, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>,
+<a href="#Page_185">185</a><br>
+Vardes, Marquis de, <a href="#Page_302">302</a><br>
+Vaudreuil, Comte de, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a><br>
+Verneuil, Marquise de, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>-<a href="#Page_237">237</a><br>
+Villars, Duchesse de, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a><br>
+Vintimille, Comtesse de, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_279">279</a><br>
+Vishnevsky, Colonel, <a href="#Page_24">24</a><br>
+Vlodimir, Princess Aly de, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>-<a href="#Page_80">80</a><br>
+Voisin, La, <a href="#Page_303">303</a><br>
+Voltaire, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_149">149</a><br>
+Vorontsov, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a><br>
+<br>
+Walewska, Madame, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br>
+Waliszewski, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_251">251</a><br>
+Wasseljevitchca, Dimitri, <a href="#Page_317">317</a><br>
+<br>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12309 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #12309 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/12309)
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+Project Gutenberg's Love affairs of the Courts of Europe, by Thornton Hall
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Love affairs of the Courts of Europe
+
+Author: Thornton Hall
+
+Release Date: May 9, 2004 [EBook #12309]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOVE AFFAIRS OF THE COURTS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dave Morgan, Wilelmina Mallière and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE AFFAIRS
+OF THE COURTS OF EUROPE
+
+BY
+
+THORNTON HALL, F.S.A.,
+
+Barrister-at-Law,
+
+Author of "Love romancies of the Aristocracy",
+"Love intrigues of Royal Courts", etc., etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO
+
+MY COUSIN,
+
+LENORE
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAP
+
+I. A COMEDY QUEEN
+II. THE "BONNIE PRINCE'S" BRIDE
+III. THE PEASANT AND THE EMPRESS
+IV. A CROWN THAT FAILED
+V. A QUEEN OF HEARTS
+VI. THE REGENT'S DAUGHTER
+VII. A PRINCESS OF MYSTERY
+VIII. THE KING AND THE "LITTLE DOVE"
+IX. THE ROMANCE OF THE BEAUTIFUL SWEDE
+X. THE SISTER OF AN EMPEROR
+XI. A SIREN OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
+XII. THE CORSICAN AND THE CREOLE
+XIII. THE ENSLAVER OF A KING
+XIV. AN EMPRESS AND HER FAVOURITES
+XV. A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY CINDERELLA
+XVI. BIANCA, GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY
+XVII. RICHELIEU, THE ROUÉ
+XVIII. THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS
+XIX. THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS--_continued_
+XX. THE LOVE-AFFAIRS OF A REGENT
+XXI. A DELILAH OF THE COURT OF FRANCE
+XXII. THE "SUN-KING" AND THE WIDOW
+XXIII. A THRONED BARBARIAN
+XXIV. A FRIEND OF MARIE ANTOINETTE
+XXV. THE RIVAL SISTERS
+XXVI. THE RIVAL SISTERS--_continued_
+XXVII. A MISTRESS OF INTRIGUE
+XXVIII. AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE
+XXIX. AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE--_continued_
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+BIANCA CAPELLO BONAVENTURA GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY
+
+CATHERINE THE SECOND OF RUSSIA
+
+COUNT GREGORY ORLOFF
+
+DESIRÉE CLARY
+
+JOSEPHINE DE BEAUHARNAIS, EMPRESS (BY PRUD'HON)
+
+LOLA MONTEZ, COUNTESS OF LANDSFELD
+
+LUDWIG I., KING OF BAVARIA
+
+FRANCESCO I., GRAND DUKE OF TUSCANY
+
+CAROLINE OF BRUNSWICK, WIFE OF GEORGE IV
+
+
+
+
+LOVE AFFAIRS OF THE COURTS OF EUROPE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+A COMEDY QUEEN
+
+
+"It was to a noise like thunder, and close clasped in a soldier's
+embrace, that Catherine I. made her first appearance in Russian
+history."
+
+History, indeed, contains few chapters more strange, more seemingly
+impossible, than this which tells the story of the maid-of-all-work--the
+red-armed, illiterate peasant-girl who, without any dower of beauty or
+charm, won the idolatry of an Emperor and succeeded him on the greatest
+throne of Europe. So obscure was Catherine's origin that no records
+reveal either her true name or the year or place of her birth. All that
+we know is that she was cradled in some Livonian village, either in
+Sweden or Poland, about the year 1685, the reputed daughter of a
+serf-mother and a peasant-father; and that her numerous brothers and
+sisters were known in later years by the name Skovoroshtchenko or
+Skovronski. The very Christian name by which she is known to history
+was not hers until it was given to her by her Imperial lover.
+
+It is not until the year 1702, when the future Empress of the Russias
+was a girl of seventeen, that she makes her first dramatic appearance on
+the stage on which she was to play so remarkable a part. Then we find
+her acting as maid-servant to the Lutheran pastor of Marienburg,
+scrubbing his floors, nursing his children, and waiting on his resident
+pupils, in the midst of all the perils of warfare. The Russian hosts had
+for weeks been laying siege to Marienburg; and the Commandant, unable to
+defend the town any longer against such overwhelming odds, had announced
+his intention to blow up the fortress, and had warned the inhabitants to
+leave the town.
+
+Between the alternatives of death within the walls and the enemy
+without, Pastor Glück chose the latter; and sallying forth with his
+family and maid-servant, threw himself on the mercy of the Russians who
+promptly packed him off to Moscow a prisoner. For Martha (as she seems
+to have been known in those days) a different fate was reserved. Her red
+lips, saucy eyes, and opulent figure were too seductive a spoil to part
+with, General Shérémétief decided, and she was left behind, a by no
+means reluctant hostage.
+
+Peter's soldiers, now that victory was assured, were holding high revel
+of feasting and song and dancing. They received the new prisoner
+literally with open arms, and almost before she had wiped the tears from
+her eyes, at parting from her nurslings, she was capering gaily to the
+music of hautboy and fiddle, with the arm of a stalwart soldier round
+her waist.
+
+"Suddenly," says Waliszewski, "a fearful explosion overthrew the
+dancers, cut the music short, and left the servant-maid, fainting with
+terror, in the arms of a dragoon."
+
+Thus did Martha, the "Siren of the Kitchen," dance her way into Russian
+history, little dreaming, we may be sure, to what dizzy heights her
+nimble feet were to carry her. For a time she found her pleasure in the
+attentions of a non-commissioned officer, sharing the life of camp and
+barracks and making friends by the good-nature which bubbled in her, and
+which was always her chief charm. When her sergeant began to weary of
+her, she found a humble place as laundry-maid in the household of
+Menshikoff, the Tsar's favourite, whose shirts, we are told, it was her
+privilege to wash; and who, it seems, was by no means insensible to the
+buxom charms of this maid of the laundry. At any rate we find
+Menshikoff, when he was spending the Easter of 1706 at Witebsk, writing
+to his sister to send her to him.
+
+But a greater than Menshikoff was soon to appear on the scene--none
+other than the Emperor Peter himself. One day the Tsar, calling on his
+favourite, was astonished to see the cleanliness of his surroundings and
+his person. "How do you contrive," he asked, "to have your house so well
+kept, and to wear such fresh and dainty linen?" Menshikoff's answer was
+"to open a door, through which the sovereign perceived a handsome girl,
+aproned, and sponge in hand, bustling from chair to chair, and going
+from window to window, scrubbing the window-panes"--a vision of industry
+which made such a powerful appeal to His Majesty that he begged an
+introduction on the spot to the lady of the sponge.
+
+The most daring writer of fiction could scarcely devise a more romantic
+meeting than this between the autocrat of Russia and the red-armed,
+bustling cleaner of the window-panes, and he would certainly never have
+ventured to build on it the romance of which it was the prelude. What it
+was in the young peasant-woman that attracted the Emperor it is
+impossible to say. Of beauty she seems to have had none--save perhaps
+such as lies in youth and rude health.
+
+We look at her portraits in vain to discover a trace of any charm that
+might appeal to man. Her pictures in the Romanof Gallery at St
+Petersburg show a singularly plain woman with a large, round
+peasant-face, the most conspicuous feature of which is a hideously
+turned-up nose. Large, protruding eyes and an opulent bust complete a
+presentment of the typical household drudge--"a servant-girl in a German
+inn." But Peter the Great, who was ever abnormal in all his tastes and
+appetites, was always more ready to make love to a woman of the people
+than to the most beautiful and refined of his Court ladies. His standard
+of taste, as of manners, has not inaptly been likened to that of a Dutch
+sailor.
+
+But whatever it was in the low-born laundry-woman that attracted the
+Tsar of Russia, we know that this first unconventional meeting led to
+many others, and that before long Catherine (for we may now call her by
+the name she made so famous) was removed from his favourite's household
+and installed in the Imperial harem where, for a time at least, she
+seems to have shared her favours indiscriminately between her old master
+and her new--"an obscure and complaisant mistress"--until Menshikoff
+finally resigned all rights in her to his sovereign.
+
+When Catherine took up her residence in her new home, Waliszewski tells
+us, "her eye shortly fell on certain magnificent jewels. Forthwith,
+bursting into tears, she addressed her new protector: 'Who put these
+ornaments here? If they come from the other one, I will keep nothing but
+this little ring; but if they come from you, how could you think I
+needed them to make me love you?'"
+
+If Catherine lacked physical graces, this and many another story prove
+that she had a rare gift of diplomacy. She had, moreover, an unfailing
+cheerfulness and goodness of heart which quickly endeared her to the
+moody and capricious Peter. In his frequent fits of nervous irritability
+which verged on madness, she alone had the power to soothe him and
+restore him to sanity. Her very voice had a magic to arrest him in his
+worst rages, and when the fit of madness (for such it undoubtedly was)
+was passing away she would "take his head and caress it tenderly,
+passing her fingers through his hair. Soon he grew drowsy and slept,
+leaning against her breast. For two or three hours she would sit
+motionless, waiting for the cure slumber always brought him, until at
+last he awoke cheerful and refreshed."
+
+Thus each day the Livonian peasant-woman took deeper root in the heart
+of the Emperor, until she became indispensable to him. Wherever he went
+she was his constant companion--in camp or on visits to foreign Courts,
+where she was received with the honours due to a Queen. And not only
+were her presence and her ministrations infinitely pleasant to him; her
+prudent counsel saved him from many a blunder and mad excess, and on at
+least one occasion rescued his army from destruction.
+
+So strong was the hold she soon won on his affection and gratitude that
+he is said to have married her secretly within three years of first
+setting eyes on her. Her future and that of the children she had borne
+to him became his chief concern; and as early as 1708, when he was
+leaving Moscow to join his army, he left behind him a note: "If, by
+God's will, anything should happen to me, let the 3000 roubles which
+will be found in Menshikoff's house be given to Catherine Vassilevska
+and her daughter."
+
+But whatever the truth may be about the alleged secret marriage, we know
+that early in 1712, Peter, in his Admiral's uniform, stood at the altar
+with the Livonian maid-servant, in the presence of his Court officials,
+and with two of her own little daughters as bridesmaids. The wedding, we
+are told, was performed in a little chapel belonging to Prince
+Menshikoff, and was preceded by an interview with the Dowager-Empress
+and his Princess sisters, in which Peter declared his intention to make
+Catherine his wife and commanded them to pay her the respect due to her
+new rank. Then followed, in brilliant sequence, State dinners,
+receptions, and balls, at all of which the laundress-bride sat at her
+husband's right hand and received the homage of his subjects as his
+Queen.
+
+Picture now the woman who but a few years earlier had scrubbed Pastor
+Glück's floors and cleaned Menshikoff's window-panes, in all her new
+splendours as Empress of Russia. The portraits of her, in her
+unaccustomed glories, are far from flattering and by no means
+consistent. "She showed no sign of ever having possessed beauty," says
+Baron von Pöllnitz; "she was tall and strong and very dark, and would
+have seemed darker but for the rouge and whitening with which she
+plastered her face."
+
+The picture drawn by the Margravine of Baireuth is still less
+attractive: "She was short and huddled up, much tanned, and utterly
+devoid of dignity or grace. Muffled up in her clothes, she looked like a
+German comedy-actress. Her old-fashioned gown, heavily embroidered with
+silver, and covered with dirt, had been bought in some old-clothes shop.
+The front of her skirt was adorned with jewels, and she had a dozen
+orders and as many portraits of saints fastened all along the facings of
+her dress, so that when she walked she jingled like a mule."
+
+But in the eyes of one man at least--and he the greatest in all
+Russia--she was beautiful. His allegiance never wavered, nor indeed did
+that of his army, which idolised her to a man. She might have no boudoir
+graces, but at least she was the typical soldier's wife, and cut a brave
+figure, as she reviewed the troops or rode at their head in her uniform
+and grenadier cap. She shared all the hardships and dangers of
+campaigns with a smile on her lips, sleeping on the hard ground, and
+standing in the trenches with the bullets whistling about her ears, and
+men dropping to right and left of her.
+
+Nor was there ever a trace of vanity in her. She was as proud of her
+humble origin as if she had been cradled in a palace. To princes and
+ambassadors she would talk freely of the days when she was a household
+drudge, and loved to remind her husband of the time when his Empress
+used to wash shirts for his favourite. "Though, no doubt, you have other
+laundresses about you," she wrote to him once, "the old one never
+forgets you."
+
+The letters that passed between this oddly assorted couple, if couched
+in terms which could scarcely see print in our more restrained age, are
+eloquent of affection and devotion. To Peter his kitchen-Queen was
+"friend of my Heart," "dearest Heart," and "dear little Mother." He
+complains pathetically, when away with his army, "I am dull without
+you--and there is nobody to take care of my shirts." When Catherine once
+left him on a round of visits, he grew so impatient at her absence that
+he sent a yacht to bring her back, and with it a note: "When I go into
+my rooms and find them deserted, I feel as if I must rush away at once.
+It is all so empty without thee."
+
+And each letter is accompanied by a present--now a watch, now some
+costly lace, and again a lock of his hair, or a simple bunch of dried
+flowers, while she returns some such homely gift as a little fruit or a
+fur-lined waistcoat. On both sides, too, a vein of jocularity runs
+through the letters, as when Catherine addresses him as "Your
+Excellency, the very illustrious and eminent Prince-General and Knight
+of the crowned Compass and Axe"; and when Peter, after the Peace of
+Nystadt, writes: "According to the Treaty I am obliged to return all
+Livonian prisoners to the King of Sweden. What is to become of thee, I
+don't know." To which she answers, with true wifely (if affected)
+humility: "I am your servant; do with me as you will; yet I venture to
+think you won't send _me_ back."
+
+Quite idyllic, this post-nuptial love-making between the great Emperor
+and his low-born Queen, who has so possessed his heart that no other
+woman, however fair, could wrest it from her. And in her exalted
+position of Empress she practised the same diplomatic arts by which she
+had won Peter's devotion. Politics she left severely alone; she turned a
+forbidding back on all attempts to involve her in State intrigues, but
+she was ever ready to protect those who appealed to her for help, and to
+use her influence with her husband to procure pardon or lighter
+punishment for those who had fallen under his displeasure.
+
+Nor did she forget her poor relations in Livonia. One brother, a
+postillion, she openly acknowledged, introduced to her husband, and
+obtained a liberal pension for him; and to her other brothers and
+sisters she sent frequent presents and sums of money. More she could not
+well do during her husband's lifetime, but when she in turn came to the
+throne, she brought the whole family--postillion, shoemaker,
+farm-labourer and serf, their wives and families--to her capital,
+installed them in sumptuous apartments in her palaces, decked them in
+the finest Court feathers, and gave them large fortunes and titles of
+nobility.
+
+When the Tsar's quarrel with his eldest son came to its tragic
+_dénouement_ in Alexis' death, her own son became heir presumptive to
+the throne of Russia. And thus the chain that bound Peter to his Empress
+received its completing link. It only remained now to place the crown
+formally on the head of the mother of the new heir, and this supreme
+honour was hers in the month of May, 1729.
+
+Wonderful tales are told of the splendours of Catherine's coronation. No
+existing crown was good enough for the ex-maid-of-all-work, so one of
+special magnificence was made by the Court jewellers--a miracle of
+diamonds and pearls, crowned by a monster ruby--at a cost of a million
+and a half roubles. The Coronation gown, which cost four thousand
+roubles, was made at Paris; and from Paris, too, came the gorgeous coach
+with its blaze of gold and heraldry, in which the Tsarina made her
+triumphal progress through the streets of the capital from the Winter
+Palace. The culminating point of this remarkable ceremony came when,
+after Peter had placed the crown on his wife's head, she sank weeping at
+his feet and embraced his knees.
+
+Catherine, however, had not worn her crown many months when she found
+herself in considerable danger of losing not only her dignities but even
+her liberty. For some time, it is said, she had been engaged in a
+liaison with William Mons, a handsome, gay young courtier, brother to a
+former mistress of the Tsar. The love affair had been common knowledge
+at the Court--to all but Peter himself, and it was accident that at last
+opened his eyes to his wife's dishonour. One moonlight night, so the
+story is told, he chanced to enter an arbour in the palace gardens, and
+there discovered her in the arms of her lover.
+
+His vengeance was swift and terrible. Mons was arrested the same night
+in his rooms, and dragged fainting into the Tsar's presence, where he
+confessed his disloyalty. A few days later he was beheaded, at the very
+moment when the Empress was dancing a minuet with her ladies, a smile on
+her lips, whatever grief was in her heart. The following day she was
+driven by her husband past the scaffold where her lover's dead body was
+exposed to public view--so close, in fact, that her dress brushed
+against it; but, without turning her head, she kept up a smiling
+conversation with the perpetrator of this outrage on her feelings.
+
+Still not content with his revenge, Peter next placed the dead man's
+head, enclosed in a bottle of spirits of wine, in a prominent place in
+the Empress's apartments; and when she still smilingly ignored its
+horrible proximity, his anger, hitherto repressed, blazed forth
+fiercely. With a blow of his strong fist he shattered a priceless
+Venetian vase, shouting, "Thus will I treat thee and thine"--to which
+she calmly responded, "You have broken one of the chief ornaments of
+your palace; do you think you have increased its charm?"
+
+For a time Peter refused to be propitiated; he would not speak to his
+wife, or share her meals or her room. But she had "tamed the tiger" many
+a time before, and she was able to do it again. Within two months she
+had won her way back into full favour, and was once more the Tsar's
+dearest _Katiérinoushka._
+
+A month later Peter was dead, carrying his love for his peasant-Empress
+to the grave, and Catherine was reigning in his stead, able at last to
+conduct her amours openly--spending her nights in shameless orgies with
+her lovers, and leaving the rascally Menshikoff to do the ruling, until
+death brought her amazing career to an end within sixteen months of
+mounting her throne.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE "BONNIE PRINCE'S" BRIDE
+
+
+In the pageant of our history there are few more attractive figures than
+that of "Bonnie Prince Charlie," the "yellow-haired laddie" whose blue
+eyes made a slave of every woman who came under their magic, and whose
+genial, unaffected manners turned the veriest coward into a hero, ready
+to follow him to the death in that year of ill-fated romance, "the
+forty-five."
+
+The very name of the "Bonnie Prince," the hope of the fallen Stuarts,
+the idol of Scotland--leading a forlorn hope with laughter on his lips,
+now riding proudly at the head of his rabble army, now a fugitive
+Ishmael among the hills and caves of the Highlands, but ever the last to
+lose heart--has a magic still to quicken the pulses. That later years
+proved the idol's feet to be of clay, that he fell from his pedestal to
+end his days an object of contempt and derision, only served to those
+who knew him in the pride of his youth to mingle pity with the glamour
+of romance that still surrounds his name.
+
+In the year 1772, when this story opens, Charles Edward, Count of
+Albany, had already travelled far on the downward road that led from
+the glory of Prestonpans to his drunkard's grave. A pitiful pensioner of
+France, who had known the ignominy of wearing fetters in a French
+prison, a social outcast whose Royal pretensions were at best the
+subject of an amused tolerance, the "laddie of the yellow hair" had
+fallen so low that the brandy bottle, which was his constant companion
+night and day, was his only solace.
+
+Picture him at this period, and mark the pathetic change which less than
+thirty years had wrought in the Stuart "darling" of "the forty-five,"
+when many a proud lady of Scotland would have given her life for a smile
+from his bonnie face. A middle-aged man with dropsy in his limbs, and
+with the bloated face of the drunkard; "dull, thick, silent-looking
+lips, of purplish red scarce redder than the skin; pale blue eyes
+tending to a watery greyness, leaden, vague, sad, but with angry
+streakings of red; something inexpressibly sad, gloomy, helpless,
+vacant, and debased in the whole face."
+
+Such was this "Young Chevalier" when France took it into her head to
+make a pawn of him in the political chess-game with England. As a man he
+was beneath contempt; as a "King"--well, he was a _Roi pour rire_; but
+at least the Royal House he represented might be made a useful weapon
+against the arrogant Hanoverian who sat on his father's throne. That
+rival stock must not be allowed to die out; his claims might weigh
+heavily some day in the scale between France and England. Charles Edward
+must marry, and provide a worthier successor to his empty honours.
+
+And thus it was that France came to the exiled Prince with the
+seductive offer of a pretty bride and a pension of forty thousand crowns
+a year. The besotted Charles jumped at the offer; left his brandy
+bottle, and, with the alacrity of a youthful lover, rushed away to woo
+and win the bride who had been chosen for him.
+
+And never surely was there such a grotesque wooing. Charles was a
+physical wreck of fifty-two; his bride-elect had only seen nineteen
+summers. The daughter of Prince Gustav Adolf of Stolberg and the
+Countess of Horn, Princess Louise was kin to many of the greatest houses
+in Europe, from the Colonnas and Orsinis to the Hohenzollerns and
+Bruces. In blood she was thus at least a match for her Stuart
+bridegroom.
+
+She had spent some years in the seclusion of a monastery, and had
+emerged for her undesired trip to the altar a young woman of rare beauty
+and charm, with glorious brown eyes, the delicate tint of the wild rose
+in her dimpled cheeks, a wealth of golden hair, and a figure every line
+and movement of which was instinct with beauty and grace. She was a
+fresh, unspoilt child, bubbling with gaiety and the joy of life, and her
+dainty little head was full of the romance of sweet nineteen.
+
+Such then was the singularly contrasted couple--"Beauty and the Beast"
+they were dubbed by many--who stood together at the altar at Macerata on
+Good Friday of the year 1772--the bridegroom, "looking hideous in his
+wedding suit of crimson silk," in flaming contrast to the virginal white
+of his pretty victim. It needed no such day of ill-omen as a Friday to
+inaugurate a union which could not have been otherwise than
+disastrous--the union of a beautiful, romantic girl eager to exploit the
+world of freedom and of pleasure, and a drink-sodden man old enough to
+be her father, for whom life had long lost all its illusions.
+
+It is true that for a time Charles Edward was drawn from his bottle by
+the lure of a pretty and winsome wife, who should, if any power on earth
+could, have made a man again of him. She laughed, indeed, at his maudlin
+tales of past heroism and adventure in love and battle; to her he was a
+plaster hero, and she let him know it. She was "mated to a clown," and a
+drunken clown to boot--and, well, she would make the best of a bad
+bargain. If her husband was the sorriest lover who ever poured
+thick-voiced flatteries into a girl-wife's ears, there were others,
+plenty of them, who were eager to pay more acceptable homage to her; and
+these men--poets, courtiers, great men in art and letters--flocked to
+her _salon_ to bask in her beauty and to be charmed by her wit.
+
+After all, she was a Queen, although she wore no crown. She had a Court,
+although no Royalties graced it. From the Pope to the King of France, no
+monarch in Europe would recognise her husband's kingship. But at such
+neglect, the offspring of jealousy, of course, she only smiled. She
+could indeed have been moderately happy in her girlish, light-hearted
+way, if her husband had not been such an impossible person.
+
+As for Charles Edward, he soon wearied of a bride who did nothing but
+laugh at him, and who was so ready to escape from his obnoxious presence
+to the company of more congenial admirers. He returned to his brandy
+bottle, and alternated between a fuddled brain and moods of wild
+jealousy. He would not allow his wife to leave the door without his
+escort; if she refused to accompany him, he turned the key in her
+bedroom door, to which the only access was through his own room.
+
+He took her occasionally to the theatre or opera, his brandy bottle
+always making a third for company. Before the performance was half
+through he was snoring stertorously on the couch which he insisted on
+having in his box; and, more often than not, was borne to his carriage
+for the journey home helplessly drunk. And this within the first year of
+his wedded life.
+
+If any woman had excuse for seeking elsewhere the love she could not
+find in her husband it was Louise of Albany. There were dames in plenty
+in Rome (where they were now living) who, not content with devoted
+husbands, had their _cisibeos_ to play the lover to them; but Louise
+sought no such questionable escape from her unhappiness. Her books and
+the clever men who thronged her _salon_ were all the solace she asked;
+and under temptation such as few women of that country and day would
+have resisted, she carried the shield of a blameless life.
+
+From Rome the Countess and her husband fared to Florence in 1774; and
+here matters went from bad to worse. Charles was now seldom sober day
+or night; and his jealousy often found expression in filthy abuse and
+cowardly assaults. Hitherto he had been simply disgusting; now he was a
+constant menace, even to her life. She lived in hourly fear of his
+brutality; but in her darkest hour sunshine came again into her life
+with the coming of Vittorio Alfieri, whose name was to be linked with
+hers for so many years.
+
+At this time Alfieri was in the very prime of his splendid manhood, one
+of the handsomest and most fascinating men in all Europe. Some four
+years older than herself, he was a tall, stalwart, soldierly man,
+blue-eyed and auburn-haired, an aristocrat to his finger-tips, a daring
+horseman, a poet, and a man of rare culture--just the man to set any
+woman's heart a-flutter, as he had already done in most of the capitals
+of the Continent.
+
+He was a spoilt child of fortune, this Italian poet and soldier, a man
+who had drunk deep of the cup of life, and to whom all conquests came
+with such fatal ease that already he had drained life dry of its
+pleasures.
+
+Such was the man who one autumn day in the year 1777 came into the
+unhappy life of the Countess of Albany, still full of the passions and
+yearnings of youth. It was surely fate that thus brought together these
+two young people of kindred tastes and kindred disillusions; and we
+cannot wonder that, of that first meeting, Alfieri should write, "At
+last I had met the one woman whom I had sought so long, the woman who
+could inspire my ambition and my work. Recognising this, and prizing so
+rare a treasure, I gave myself up wholly to her."
+
+Those were happy days for the Countess that followed this fateful
+meeting--days of sweet communion of twin souls, hours of stolen bliss,
+when they could dwell apart in a region of high and ennobling thoughts,
+while the besotted husband was sleeping off the effects of his drunken
+orgies in the next room. To Alfieri, Louise was indeed "the anchor of
+his life," giving stability to his vacillating nature, and inspiring all
+that was best and noblest in him; while to her the association with this
+"splendid creature," who so thoroughly understood and sympathised with
+her, was the revelation of a new world.
+
+Thus three happy years passed; and then the crisis came. One night the
+Prince, in a mood of drunken madness, inflamed by jealousy, attacked his
+wife, and, after severely beating her, flung her down on her bed and
+attempted to strangle her. This was the crowning outrage of years of
+brutality. She could not, dared not, spend another day with such a
+madman. At any cost she must leave him--and for ever.
+
+When morning came, with Alfieri's assistance, the plan of escape was
+arranged. In the company of a lady friend--and also of her husband, now
+scared and penitent, but fearing to let her out of his sight--she drove
+to a neighbouring convent, ostensibly to inspect the nuns' needlework.
+On reaching her destination she ran up the convent steps, entered the
+building, and the door was slammed and bolted behind her in the very
+face of Charles Edward, who had followed as fast as his dropsical legs
+would carry him up the steps. The Prince, blazing at such an outrage,
+hammered fiercely at the door until at last the Lady Abbess herself
+showed her face at the grating, and told him in no ambiguous words that
+he would not be allowed to enter! His wife had come to her for
+protection; and if he had any grievance he had better appeal to the Duke
+of Tuscany.
+
+Thus ended the tragic union of the "Bonnie Prince" and his Countess.
+Emancipation had come at last; and, while Louise was now free to devote
+her life to her beloved Alfieri, her brutal husband was left for eight
+years to the company of his bottle and the ministrations of his natural
+daughter, until a drunkard's grave at Frascati closed over his mis-spent
+life. The pity and the tragedy of it!
+
+Louise of Albany and her poet-lover were now free to link their lives at
+the altar--but no such thought seems to have entered the head of either.
+They were perfectly happy without the bond of the wedding-ring, of which
+the Countess had such terrible memories; and together they walked
+through life, happy in each other and indifferent to the world's
+opinion.
+
+Now in Florence, now in Rome; living together in Alsace, drifting to
+Paris; and, when the Revolution drove them from the French capital,
+seeking refuge in London, where we find the uncrowned Queen of England
+chatting amicably with the "usurper" George in the Royal box at the
+opera--always inseparable, and Louise always clinging to the shreds of
+her Royal dignity, with a throne in her ante-room, and "Your Majesty"
+on her servants' lips. Thus passed the careless, happy years for
+Countess and poet until, in 1803, Alfieri followed the "Bonnie Prince"
+behind the veil, and left a desolate Louise to moan amid her tears,
+"There is no more happiness for me."
+
+But Louise was not left even now without the solace of a man's love,
+which seemed as indispensable to her nature as the air she breathed.
+Before Alfieri had been many months in his Florence tomb his place by
+the Countess's side had been taken by François Xavier Fabre, a
+good-looking painter of only moderate gifts, whose handsome face,
+plausible tongue, and sunny disposition soon made a captive of her
+middle-aged heart. At the time when Fabre came thus into her life Madame
+la Comtesse had passed her fiftieth birthday--youth and beauty had taken
+wings; and passion (if ever she had any--for her relations with Alfieri
+seem to have been quite platonic) had died down to its embers.
+
+But a man's companionship and homage were always necessary to her, and
+in Fabre she found her ideal cavalier. Her _salon_ now became more
+popular even than in the days of her young wifehood. It drew to it all
+the greatest men in Europe, men of world-wide fame in statesmanship,
+letters, and art, all anxious to do homage to a woman of such culture
+and with such rare gifts of conversation.
+
+That she was now middle-aged, stout and dowdy--"like a cook with pretty
+hands," as Stendhal said of her--mattered nothing to her admirers, many
+of whom remembered her in the days of her lovely youth. She was, in
+their eyes, as much a Queen as if she wore a crown; and, moreover, she
+was a woman of magnetic charm and clever brain.
+
+And thus, with her books and her _salon_ and her cavalier, she spent the
+rest of her chequered life until the end came one day in 1824; and her
+last resting-place was, as she wished it to be, by the side of her
+beloved Alfieri. In the Church of Santa Croce, in Florence, midway
+between the tombs of Michael Angelo and Machiavelli, the two lovers
+sleep together their last sleep, beneath a beautiful monument fashioned
+by Canova's hands--Louise, wife of the "Bonnie Prince" (as we still
+choose to remember him) and Vittorio Alfieri, to whom, to quote his own
+words, "she was beyond all things beloved."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE PEASANT AND THE EMPRESS
+
+
+Many an autocrat of Russia has shown a truly sovereign contempt for
+convention in the choice of his or her favourites, the "playthings of an
+hour"; and at least three of them have carried this contempt to the
+altar itself.
+
+Peter, the first, as we have seen, offered a crown to Martha Skovronski,
+a Livonian scullery-maid, who succeeded him on the throne; the second
+Catherine gave her hand as well as her heart to Patiomkin, the gigantic,
+ill-favoured ex-sergeant of cavalry; and Elizabeth, daughter of Peter
+and his kitchen-Queen, proved herself worthy of her parentage when she
+made Alexis Razoum, a peasant's son, husband of the Empress of Russia.
+You will search history in vain for a story so strange and romantic as
+this of the great Empress and the lowly shepherd's son, whom her love
+raised from a hovel to a palace, and on whom one of the most amorous and
+fickle of sovereign ladies lavished honours and riches and an unwavering
+devotion, until her eyes, speaking their love to the last, were closed
+in death.
+
+It was in the humblest hovel of the village of Lemesh that Alexis
+Razoum drew his first breath one day in 1709. His father, Gregory
+Razoum, was a shepherd, who spent his pitiful earnings in drink--a man
+of violent temper who, in his drunken rages, was the terror not only of
+his home but of the entire village. His wife and children cowered at his
+approach; and on more than one occasion only accident (or Providence)
+saved him from the crime of murder. On one such occasion, we are told,
+the child Alexis, who from his earliest years had a passion for reading,
+was absorbed in a book, when his father, in ungovernable fury, seized a
+hatchet and hurled it at the boy's head. Luckily, the missile missed its
+mark, and Alexis escaped, to find refuge in the house of a friendly
+priest, who not only gave him shelter and protection, but taught him to
+write, and, above all, to sing--little dreaming that he was thus paving
+the way which was to lead the drunken shepherd's lad to the dizziest
+heights in Russia. For the boy had a beautiful voice. When he joined the
+choir of his village church, people flocked from far and near to listen
+to the sweet notes that soared, pure and liquid as a nightingale's song,
+above the rest. "It was," all declared, "the voice of an angel--and the
+face of an angel," for Alexis was as beautiful in those days as any
+child of picture or of dreams.
+
+One day a splendidly dressed stranger chanced to enter the Lemesh church
+during Mass--none other than Colonel Vishnevsky, a great Court official,
+who was on his way back to Moscow from a diplomatic mission; and he
+listened entranced to a voice sweeter than any he had ever heard. The
+service over, he made the acquaintance of the young chorister,
+interviewed his guardian, the "good Samaritan" priest, and persuaded him
+to allow the boy to accompany him to the capital. Thus the shepherd's
+son took weeping farewell of the good priest, of his mother, and of his
+brothers and sisters; and a few weeks later the Empress and her ladies
+were listening enchanted to his voice in the Imperial choir at
+Moscow--but none with more delight than the Princess Elizabeth, daughter
+of Peter the Great, to whom Alexis' beauty appealed even more strongly
+than his sweet singing.
+
+Elizabeth, true daughter of her father, had already, young as she was,
+counted her lovers by the score--lovers chosen indiscriminately, from
+Royal princes to grooms and common soldiers. She was already sated with
+the licence of the most dissolute Court of Europe, and to her the young
+Cossack of the beautiful face and voice, and rustic innocence, opened a
+new and seductive vista of pleasure. She lost her heart to him, had him
+transferred to her own Court as her favourite singer, and, within a few
+years, gave him charge of her purse and her properties.
+
+The shepherd's son was now not only lover-elect, but principal
+"minister" to the daughter of an Emperor, who was herself to wear the
+Imperial crown. And while Alexis was thus luxuriating amid the splendour
+of a Court, he by no means forgot the humble relatives he had left
+behind in his native village. His father was dead; his mother was
+reduced for a time to such a depth of destitution that she had to beg
+her bread from door to door. His sisters had found husbands for
+themselves in their own rank; and the favourite of an Imperial Princess
+had for brothers-in-law a tailor, a weaver, and a shepherd. When news
+came to Alexis of his mother's destitution he had sent her a sum of
+money sufficient to install her in comfort as an innkeeper: the first of
+many kindnesses which were to work a startling transformation in the
+fortunes of the Razoum family.
+
+Events now hurried quickly. The Empress Anna died, and was succeeded on
+the throne by the infant Ivan, her grand-nephew, who had been Emperor
+but a few months when, in 1741, a _coup d'état_ gave the crown to
+Elizabeth, mistress of the Lemesh peasant. Alexis was now husband in all
+but name of the Empress of all the Russias; honours and riches were
+showered on him; he was General, Grandmaster of the Hounds, Chief
+Gentleman of the Bedchamber, and lord of large estates yielding regal
+revenues.
+
+But all his grandeur was powerless to spoil the man, who still remained
+the simple peasant who, so many years earlier, had left his low-born
+mother with streaming eyes. His great ambition now was to share his
+good-fortune with her. She must exchange her village inn for the
+luxuries and splendours of a palace. And thus it was that one day a
+splendid carriage, with gay-liveried postillions, dashed up to the door
+of the Lemesh inn and carried off the simple peasant woman, her youngest
+son, Cyril, and one of her daughters, to the open-mouthed amazement of
+the villagers. At the entrance to the capital she was received by a
+magnificently attired gentleman, in whom she failed to recognise her son
+Alexis, until he showed her a birthmark on his body.
+
+Picture now the peasant-woman sumptuously lodged in the Moscow palace,
+decked in all the finery of silks and laces and jewels, receiving the
+respectful homage of high Court officials, caressed and petted by an
+Empress, while her splendid son looks smilingly on, as proud of his
+cottage-mother as if she were a Princess of the Blood Royal. That the
+innkeeper was not happy in her gilded cage, that her thoughts often
+wandered longingly to her cronies and the simple life of the village, is
+not to be wondered at.
+
+It was all very well for such a fine gentleman as her son, Alexis; but
+for a poor, simple-minded woman like herself--well, she was too old for
+such a transplanting. And we can imagine her relief when, on the removal
+of the Court to St Petersburg, she was allowed to bring her visit to an
+end and to return to her inn with wonderful stories of all she had seen.
+Her son and daughter, however, elected to remain. As for Cyril, a
+handsome youth, almost young enough to be his brother's son, he was
+quick to win his way into the favour of the Empress. Before he had been
+many months at Court he was made a Count and Gentleman of the
+Bedchamber. He was given for bride a grand-niece of Elizabeth; and at
+twenty-two he was Viceroy of the Ukraine, virtual sovereign of a kingdom
+of his own, with his peasant-mother, who declined to share his palace,
+comfortably installed in a modest house near his gates.
+
+Cyril, in fact, was to his last day as unspoiled by his unaccustomed
+grandeur as his brother Alexis. Each was ready at any moment to turn
+from the obsequious homage of nobles to hobnob with a peasant friend or
+relative. How utterly devoid of false pride Alexis was is proved by the
+following anecdote. One day when, in company with the Empress, he was
+paying a visit to Count Löwenwolde, he rushed from Elizabeth's side to
+fling his arms round the neck of one of his host's footmen. "Are you
+mad, Alexis?" exclaimed the Empress, in her astonishment. "What do you
+mean by such senseless behaviour?" "I am not mad at all," answered the
+favourite. "He is an old friend of mine."
+
+But although no man ever deposed the shepherd from the first place in
+Elizabeth's favour, it must not be imagined that he was her only lover.
+The daughter of the hot-blooded Peter and the lusty scullery wench had
+always as great a passion for men as the second Catherine, who had
+almost as many favourites in her boudoir as gowns in her wardrobes. She
+had her lovers before she was emancipated from the schoolroom; and not
+the least favoured of them, it is said, was her own nephew, Peter the
+Second, whom she would no doubt have married if it had been possible.
+
+She turned her back on one great alliance after another, preferring her
+freedom to a wedding-ring that brought no love with it; and she found
+her pleasure alike among the gentlemen of the Court and among her own
+servants. In the long list of her favourites we find a General
+succeeded by a Sergeant; Boutourlin, the handsome courtier, giving place
+to Lialin, the sailor; and Count Shouvalov retiring in favour of
+Voytshinsky, the coachman. Thus one liaison succeeded another from
+girlhood to middle-age--indeed long after she had passed the altar. But
+through all these varying attachments her heart remained constant to her
+shepherd-lover, to whom she was ever the devoted wife, and, when he was
+ill, the tenderest of nurses. To please him, she even accompanied him on
+a visit to his native village, smiling graciously on his humble friends
+of other days, and partaking of the hospitality of the poorest
+cottagers; while on all who had befriended him in the days of his
+obscurity she lavished her favours.
+
+Of one man who had been thus kind she made a General on the spot; the
+friendly priest was given a highly paid post at Court; high rank in the
+army was given to many of his humble relatives; and a husband was found
+for a favourite niece in Count Ryoumin, the Chancellor's son.
+
+As for Alexis himself, nothing was too good for him. Although he had
+probably never handled a gun in his life she made him Field-Marshal and
+head of her army; and, at her request, Charles VII. dubbed him Count of
+the Holy Roman Empire, a distinction which Gregory Orloff in later years
+prized more than all the honours Catherine II. showered on him; while
+the estates of which she made him lord were a small kingdom in
+themselves. Alexis, the shepherd's son, was now, beyond any question,
+the most powerful man in Russia. If he would, he might easily have
+taken the sceptre from the yielding hands of the Empress and played the
+autocrat, as Patiomkin played it under similar circumstances in later
+years. But Alexis cared as little for power as for rank and wealth. He
+smiled at his honours. "Fancy," he said, with his hearty laugh, "a
+peasant's son, a Count; and a man who ought to be tending sheep, a
+Field-Marshal!"
+
+When courtly genealogists spread before him an elaborate family-tree,
+proving that he sprang from the princely stock of Bogdan, with many a
+Grand Duke of Lithuania among his lineal ancestors, he laughed loud and
+long at them for their pains. "Don't be so ridiculous," he said. "You
+know as well as I that my parents were simple peasants, honest enough,
+but people of the soil and nothing else. If I am Count and Field-Marshal
+and Viceroy, I owe it all to the good heart of your Empress and mine,
+whose humble servant I am. Take it away, and let me hear no more of such
+foolery."
+
+Such to the last was the unspoiled, child-like nature of the man who so
+soon was to be not merely the first favourite but husband of an Empress.
+Probably Alexis would have lived and died Elizabeth's unlicensed lover
+had it not been for the cunning of the cleverest of her Chancellors,
+Bestyouzhev, who saw in his mistress's infatuation for her peasant the
+means of making his own position more secure. Elizabeth was still a
+young and attractive woman, who might pick and choose among some of the
+most eligible suitors in Europe for a sharer of her throne; for there
+were many who would gladly have played consort to the good-looking
+autocrat of Russia.
+
+Such a husband, especially if he were a strong man, might seriously
+imperil the Chancellor's position; might even dispense with him
+altogether. On the other hand, he was high in the favour of the
+shepherd's son, who had such a contempt for power, and who thus would be
+a puppet in his hands. Why not make him husband in name as well as in
+fact? It was, after all, an easy task the Chancellor thus set himself.
+Elizabeth was by no means unwilling to wear a wedding-ring for the man
+who had loved her so loyally and so long; and any difficulties she might
+raise were quickly disposed of by her father-confessor, who was
+Bestyouzhev's tool. Thus it came to pass that one day Elizabeth and
+Alexis stood side by side before the village altar of Perovo; and the
+words were spoken which made the shepherd's son husband of the Empress.
+The secrecy with which the ceremony was performed was but a fiction. All
+the world knew that Alexis Gregorovitch was Emperor by right of wedlock,
+and flocked to pay homage to him in his new and exalted character.
+
+He now had sumptuous apartments next to those of his wife; he sat at her
+right hand on all State occasions; he was her shadow everywhere; and
+during his frequent attacks of gout the Empress ministered to him night
+and day in his own rooms with the tender devotion of a mother to a
+child. Two children were born to them, a son and a daughter, the latter
+of whom, after a life of strange romance and vicissitude, ended her
+days in a loathsome dungeon of the fortress of Saints Peter and Paul,
+the victim of Catherine II.'s vengeance--miserably drowned, so one story
+goes, by an inundation of her cell.
+
+On Elizabeth's death, in the year 1762, her husband was glad to retire
+from the Court in which he had for so long played so splendid a part.
+"None but myself," he said, "can know with what pleasure I leave a
+sphere to which I was not born, and to which only my love for my dear
+mistress made me resigned. I should have been happier far with her in
+some small cottage far removed from the gilded slavery of Court life."
+He was happy enough now leading the peaceful life of a country gentleman
+on one of his many estates.
+
+Catherine II. had mounted the throne of Russia--the Empress who,
+according to Masson, had but two passions, which she carried to the
+grave--"her love of man, which degenerated into libertinage; and her
+love of glory, which degenerated into vanity." A woman with the brain of
+a man and the heart of a courtesan, Catherine's fickle affection had
+flitted from one lover to another, until now it had settled on Gregory
+Orloff, the handsomest man in her dominions, whom she was more than half
+disposed to make her husband.
+
+This was a scheme which commended itself strongly to her Chancellor,
+Vorontsov. There was a most useful precedent to lend support to it--the
+alliance of the Empress Elizabeth with a man of immeasurably lower rank
+than Catherine's favourite; but it was important that this precedent
+should be established beyond dispute. Thus it was that one day, when
+Count Alexis was poring over his Bible by his country fireside,
+Chancellor Vorontsov made his appearance with ingratiating words and
+promises. Her Majesty, he informed the Count, was willing to confer
+Imperial rank on him in return for one small favour--the possession of
+the documents which proved his marriage to her predecessor, Elizabeth.
+
+On hearing the request, the ex-shepherd rose, and, with words of quiet
+scorn, refused both the request and the proffered honour. "Am not I," he
+said, "a Count, a Field-Marshal, a man of wealth? all of which I owe to
+the kindness of my dear, dead mistress. Are not such honours enough for
+the peasant's son whom she raised from the mire to sit by her side, that
+I should purchase another bauble by an act of treachery to her memory?
+
+"But wait one moment," he continued; and, leaving the room, he returned
+carrying a small bundle of papers, which he proceeded to examine one by
+one. Then, collecting them, he placed the bundle in the heart of the
+fire, to the horror of the onlooking Chancellor; and, as the flames were
+reducing the precious documents to ashes, he said, "Go now and tell
+those who sent you, that I never was more than the slave of my august
+benefactress, the Empress Elizabeth, who could never so far have
+forgotten her position as to marry a subject."
+
+Thus with a lie on his lips--the last crowning evidence of loyalty to
+his beloved Queen and wife--Alexis Razoum makes his exit from the stage
+on which he played so strangely romantic a part. A few years later his
+days ended in peace at his St Petersburg palace, with the name he loved
+best, "Elizabeth," on his lips.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+A CROWN THAT FAILED
+
+Henri of Navarre, hero of romance and probably the greatest King who
+ever sat on the throne of France, had a heart as weak in love as it was
+stout in war. To his last day he was a veritable coward before the
+battery of bright eyes; and before Ravaillac's dagger brought his career
+to a tragic end one May day in the year 1610 he had counted his
+mistresses to as many as the years he had lived.
+
+But of them all, fifty-seven of them--for the most part lightly coming
+and lightly going--only one ever really reached his heart, and was
+within measurable distance of a seat on his throne--the woman to whom he
+wrote in the hey-day of his passion, "Never has man loved as I love you.
+If any sacrifice of mine could purchase your happiness, how gladly I
+would make it, even to the last drop of my life's blood."
+
+Gabrielle d'Estrées who thus enslaved the heart of the hero, which
+carried him to a throne through a hundred fights and inconceivable
+hardships, was cradled one day in the year 1573 in Touraine. From her
+mother, Françoise Babou, she inherited both beauty and frailness; for
+the Babou women were famous alike for their loveliness and for a virtue
+as facile even as that of Marie Gaudin, the pretty plaything of François
+I., who left François' arms to find a husband in Philip Babou and thus
+to transmit her charms and frailty to Gabrielle.
+
+Her father, Antoine, son of Jean d'Estrées, a valiant soldier under five
+kings, was a man of pleasure, who drank and sang his way through life,
+preferring Cupid to Mars and the _joie de vivre_ to the call of duty. It
+is perhaps little wonder that Antoine's wife, after bearing seven
+children to her husband, left him to find at least more loyalty in the
+Marquess of Tourel-Alégre, a lover twenty years younger than herself.
+
+Thus it was that, deserted by her mother, and with a father too addicted
+to pleasure to spare a thought for his children, Gabrielle grew to
+beautiful girlhood under the care of an aunt--now living in the family
+château in Picardy, now in the great Paris mansion, the Hotel d'Estrées;
+and with so little guidance from precept or example that, in later
+years, she and her six sisters and brothers were known as the "Seven
+Deadly Sins."
+
+In Gabrielle at least there was little that was vicious. She was an
+irresponsible little creature, bubbling over with mischief and gaiety,
+eager to snatch every flower of pleasure that caught her eyes; a dainty
+little fairy with big blue "wonder" eyes, golden hair, the sweetest
+rosebud of a mouth, ready to smile or to pout as the mood of the moment
+suggested, with soft round baby cheeks as delicately flushed as any
+rose.
+
+Such was Gabrielle d'Estrées on the verge of young womanhood when Roger
+de Saint-Larry, Duc de Bellegarde, the King's grand equerry, and one of
+the handsomest young men in France, first set eyes on her in the château
+of Coeuvres; and, as was inevitable, lost his heart to her at first
+sight. When he rode away two days later, such excellent use had he made
+of his opportunities, he left a very happy, if desolate maiden behind;
+for Gabrielle had little power to resist fascinations which had made a
+conquest of many of the fairest ladies at Court.
+
+When Bellegarde returned to Mantes, where Henri was still struggling for
+the crown which was so soon to be his, he foolishly gave the King of
+Navarre such a rapturous account of the young beauty of Picardy and his
+conquest that Henri, already weary of the faded charms of Diane
+d'Audouins, his mistress, promptly left his soldiering and rode away to
+see the lady for himself, and to find that Bellegarde's raptures were
+more than justified.
+
+Gabrielle, however, flattered though she was by such an honour as a
+visit from the King of Navarre, was by no means disposed to smile on the
+wooing of "an ugly man, old enough to be my father." And indeed, Henri,
+with all the glamour of the hero to aid him, was but a sorry rival for
+the handsome and courtly Bellegarde. Now nearing his fortieth year, with
+grizzled beard, and skin battered and lined by long years of hard
+campaigning, the future King of France had little to appeal to the
+romantic eyes of a maid who counted less than half his years; and the
+King in turn rode away from the Coeuvres Castle as hopelessly in love
+as Bellegarde, but with much less encouragement to return.
+
+But the hero of Ivry and a hundred other battles was no man to submit to
+defeat in any lists; and within a few weeks Gabrielle was summoned to
+Mantes, where he told her in decisive words that he loved her, and that
+no one, Bellegarde or any other, should share her with him. "Indeed!"
+she exclaimed, with a defiant toss of the head, "I will be no man's
+slave; I shall give my heart to whom I please, and certainly not to any
+man who demands it as a right." And within an hour she was riding home
+fast as her horse could gallop.
+
+Henri was thunderstruck at such defiance. He must follow her at once and
+bring her to reason; but, in order to do so, he must risk his life by
+passing through the enemy's lines. Such an adventure, however, was after
+his own heart; and disguising himself as a peasant, with a bundle of
+faggots on his shoulder, he made his way safely to Coeuvres, where he
+presented himself, a pitiable spectacle of rags and poverty, to be
+greeted by his lady with shouts of derisive laughter. "Oh dear!" she
+gasped between her paroxysms of mirth, "what a fright you look! For
+goodness' sake go and change your clothes." But though the King obeyed
+humbly, Gabrielle shut herself in her room and declined point-blank to
+see him again.
+
+Such devotion, however, expressed in such fashion, did not fail in its
+appeal to the romantic girl; and when, a little later, Gabrielle visited
+the Royalist army then besieging Chartres, it was a much more pliant
+Gabrielle who listened to the King's wooing and whose eyes brightened at
+his stories of bravery and danger. Henri might be old and ugly, but he
+had at least a charm of manner, a frank, simple manliness, which made
+him the idol of his soldiers and in fact of every woman who once came
+under its spell. And to this charm even Gabrielle, the rebel, had at
+last to submit, until Bellegarde was forgotten, and her hero was all the
+world to her.
+
+The days that followed this slow awaking were crowded with happiness for
+the two lovers; when Gabrielle was not by her King's side, he was
+writing letters to her full of passionate tenderness. "My beautiful
+Love," "My All," "My Trueheart"--such were the sweet terms he lavished
+on her. "I kiss you a million times. You say that you love me a thousand
+times more than I love you. You have lied, and you shall maintain your
+falsehood with the arms which you have chosen. I shall not see you for
+ten days, it is enough to kill me." And again, "They call me King of
+France and Navarre--that of your subject is much more delightful--you
+have much more cause for fearing that I love you too much than too
+little. That fault pleases you, and also me, since you love it. See how
+I yield to your every wish."
+
+Such were the letters--among the most beautiful ever penned by
+lover--which the King addressed to his "Menon" in those golden days,
+when all the world was sunshine for him, black as the sky was still with
+the clouds of war. And she returned love for love; tenderness for
+passion. When he was lying ill at St Denis, she wrote, "I die of fear.
+Tell me, I implore you, how fares the bravest of the brave. Give me
+news, my cavalier; for you know how fatal to me is your least ill. I
+cannot sleep without sending you a thousand good nights; for I am the
+Princess Constancy, sensible to all that concerns you, and careless of
+all else in the world, good or bad."
+
+Through the period of stress and struggle that still separated Henri
+from the crown which for nearly twenty years was his goal, Gabrielle was
+ever by his side, to soothe and comfort him, to chase away the clouds of
+gloom which so often settled on him, to inspire him with new courage and
+hope, and, with her diplomacy checking his impulses, to smooth over
+every obstacle that the cunning of his enemies placed in his path.
+
+And when, at last, one evening in 1594, Henri made his triumphal entry
+into Paris, on a grey horse, wearing a gold-embroidered grey habit, his
+face proud and smiling, saluting with his plume-crowned hat the cheering
+crowds, Gabrielle had the place of honour in front of him, "in a
+gorgeous litter, so bedecked with pearls and gems that she paled the
+light of the escorting torches."
+
+This was, indeed, a proud hour for the lovers which saw Henri acclaimed
+at "long last" King of France, and his loyal lady-love Queen in all but
+name. The years of struggle and hardship were over--years in which Henri
+of Navarre had braved and escaped a hundred deaths; and in which he had
+been reduced to such pitiable straits that he had often not known where
+his next meal was to come from or where to find a shirt to put on his
+back.
+
+Gabrielle was now Marquise de Monceaux, a title to which her Royal lover
+later added that of Duchesse de Beaufort. Her son, César, was known as
+"Monsieur," the title that would have been his if he had been heir to
+the French throne. All that now remained to fill the cup of her ambition
+and her happiness was that she should become the legal wife of the King
+she loved so well; and of this the prospect seemed more than fair.
+
+Charming stories are told of the idyllic family life of the new King;
+how his greatest pleasure was to "play at soldiers" with his children,
+to join in their nursery romps, or to take them, like some bourgeois
+father, to the Saint Germain fair, and return loaded with toys and boxes
+of sweetmeats, to spend delightful homely evenings with the woman he
+adored.
+
+But it was not all sunshine for the lovers. Paris was in the throes of
+famine and plague and flood. Poverty and discontent stalked through her
+streets, and there were scowling and envious eyes to greet the King and
+his lady when they rode laughing by; or when, as on one occasion we read
+of, they returned from a hunting excursion, riding side by side, "she
+sitting astride dressed all in green" and holding the King's hand.
+
+Nor within the palace walls was it all a bed of roses for Gabrielle; for
+she had her enemies there; and chief among them the powerful Duc de
+Sully, her most formidable rival in the King's affection. Sully was not
+only Henri's favourite minister; he was the Jonathan to his David, the
+man who had shared a hundred dangers by his side, and by his devotion
+and affection had found a firm lodging in his heart.
+
+Between the minister and the mistress, each consumed with jealousy of
+the other, Henri had many a bad hour; and the climax came when de Sully
+refused to pass the extravagant charges for the baptism of the
+Marquise's second son, Alexander. Gabrielle was indignant and appealed
+angrily and tearfully to the King, who supported his minister. "I have
+loved you," he said at last, roused to wrath, "because I thought you
+gentle and sweet and yielding; now that I have raised you to high
+position, I find you exacting and domineering. Know this, I could better
+spare a dozen mistresses like you than one minister so devoted to me as
+Sully."
+
+At these harsh words, Gabrielle burst into tears. "If I had a dagger,"
+she exclaimed, "I would plunge it into my heart, and then you would find
+your image there." And when Henri rushed from the room, she ran after
+him, flung herself at his feet, and with heart-breaking sobs, begged for
+forgiveness and a kind word. Such troubles as these, however, were but
+as the clouds that come and go in a summer sky. Gabrielle's sun was now
+nearing its zenith; Henri had long intended to make her his wife at the
+altar; proceedings for divorce from his wife, Marguerite de Valois, were
+running smoothly; and now the crowning day in the two lives thus
+romantically linked was at hand.
+
+In the month of April, 1599, Gabrielle and Henri were spending the last
+ante-nuptial days together at Fontainebleau; the wedding was fixed for
+the first Sunday after Easter, and Gabrielle was ideally happy among her
+wedding finery and the costly presents that had been showered on her
+from all parts of France--from the ring Henri had worn at his Coronation
+and which he was to place on her finger at the altar, to a statue of the
+King in gold from Lyons, and a "giant piece of amber in a silver casket
+from Bordeaux."
+
+Her wedding-dress was a gorgeous robe of Spanish velvet, rich in
+embroideries of gold and silver; the suite of rooms which was to be hers
+as Queen was already ready, with its splendours of crimson and gold
+furnishing. The greatest ladies in France were now proud to act as her
+tire-women; and princes and ambassadors flocked to Fontainebleau to pay
+her homage.
+
+The last days of Holy Week it had been arranged that she should spend in
+devotion at Paris, and Henri was her escort the greater part of the way.
+When they parted on the banks of the Seine they wept in each other's
+arms, while Gabrielle, full of nameless forebodings, clung to her lover
+and begged him to take her back to Fontainebleau. But with a final
+embrace he tore himself away; and with streaming eyes Gabrielle
+continued her journey, full of fears as to its issue; for had not a seer
+of Piedmont told her that the marriage would never take place; and other
+diviners, whom she had consulted, warned her that she would die young,
+and never call Henri husband?
+
+Two days later Gabrielle heard Mass at the Church of St Germain
+l'Auxerrois; and on returning to the Deanery, her aunt's home, became
+seriously ill. She grew rapidly worse; her sufferings were terrible to
+witness; and on Good Friday she was delivered of a dead child. To quote
+an eye-witness, "She lingered until six o'clock in very great pain, the
+like of which doctors and surgeons had never seen before. In her agony
+she tore her face, and injured herself in other parts of her body."
+Before dawn broke on the following day she drew her last breath.
+
+When news of her illness reached the King, he flew to her swift as his
+horse could carry him, only to meet couriers on his way who told him
+that Madame was already dead; and to find, when at last he reached St
+Germain l'Auxerrois, the door of the room in which she lay barred
+against him. He could not take her living once more into his arms; he
+was not allowed to see her dead.
+
+Henri was as a man who is mad with grief; he was inconsolable.. None
+dared even to approach him with words of pity and comfort. For eight
+days he shut himself in a black-draped room, himself clothed in black;
+and he wrote to his sister, "The root of my love is dead; there will be
+no Spring for me any more." Three months later he was making love to
+Gabrielle's successor, Henriette d'Entragues!
+
+Thus perished in tragedy Gabrielle d'Estrées, the creature of sunshine,
+who won the bravest heart in Europe, and carried her conquest to the
+very foot of a throne.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+A QUEEN OF HEARTS
+
+If ever woman was born for love and for empire over the hearts of men it
+was surely Jeanne Bécu, who first opened her eyes one August day in the
+year 1743, at dreary Vaucouleurs, in Joan of Arc's country, and who was
+fated to dance her light-hearted way through the palace of a King to the
+guillotine.
+
+Scarcely ever has woman, born to such beauty and witchery, been cradled
+less auspiciously. Her reputed father was a scullion, her mother a
+sempstress. For grandfather she had Fabien Bécu, who left his
+frying-pans in a Paris kitchen to lead Jeanne Husson, a fellow-servant,
+to the altar. Such was the ignoble strain that flowed in the veins of
+the Vaucouleurs beauty, who five-and-twenty years later was playfully
+pulling the nose of the fifteenth Louis, and queening it in his palaces
+with a splendour which Marie Antoinette herself never surpassed.
+
+From her sordid home Jeanne was transported at the age of six to a
+convent, where she spent nine years in rebellion against rules and
+punishments, until "the golden head emerged at last from black woollen
+veil and coarse unstarched bands, the exquisite form from shapeless,
+hideous robe, the perfect little feet from abominable yellow shoes," to
+play first the rôle of lady's maid to a wealthy widow, and, when she
+wearied (as she quickly did) of coiffing hair, to learn the arts of
+millinery.
+
+"Picture," says de Goncourt, "the glittering shop, where all day long
+charming idlers and handsome great gentlemen lounged and ogled; the
+pretty milliner tripping through the streets, her head covered by a big,
+black _calèche_, whence her golden curls escaped, her round, dainty
+waist defined by a muslin-frilled pinafore, her feet in little
+high-heeled, buckled shoes, and in her hand a tiny fan, which she uses
+as she goes--and then imagine the conversations, proposals, replies!"
+
+Such was Jeanne Bécu in the first bloom of her dainty beauty, the
+prettiest grisette who ever set hearts fluttering in Paris streets; with
+laughter dancing in her eyes, a charming pertness at her red lips, grace
+in every movement, and the springtide of youth racing through her veins.
+
+When Voltaire first saw her portrait, he exclaimed, "The original was
+fashioned for the gods." And we cannot wonder, as we look on the
+ravishing beauty of the face that wrung this eloquent tribute from the
+cold-blooded cynic--the tender, melting violet of the eyes, with their
+sweeping brown lashes, under the exquisite arch of brown eyebrows, the
+dainty little Greek nose, the bent bow of the delicious tiny mouth, the
+perfect oval of the face, the complexion "fair and fresh as an
+infant's," and a glorious halo of golden hair, a dream of fascinating
+curls and tendrils.
+
+It was to this bewitching picture, "with the perfume and light as of a
+goddess of love," that Jean du Barry, self-styled Comte, adventurer and
+roué, succumbed at a glance. But du Barry's tenure of her heart, if
+indeed he ever touched it at all, was brief; for the moment Louis XV.
+set eyes on the ravishing girl he determined to make the prize his own,
+a superior claim to which the Comte perforce yielded gracefully.
+
+Thus, in 1768, we find Jeanne Bécu--or "Mademoiselle Vaubarnier," as she
+now called herself--transported by a bound to the Palace of Versailles
+and to the first place in the favour of the King, having first gone
+through the farce of a wedding ceremony with du Barry's brother,
+Guillaume, a husband whom she first saw on the marriage morning, and on
+whom she looked her last at the church door.
+
+Then followed for the maid of the kitchen a few years of such Queendom
+and splendour as have seldom fallen to the lot of any lady cradled in a
+palace--the idolatrous worship of a King, the intoxication of the power
+that only beauty thus enshrined can wield, the glitter of priceless
+jewels, rarest laces, and richest satins and silks, the flash of gold on
+dinner and toilet-table, an army of servants in sumptuous liveries, the
+fawning of great Court ladies, the courtly flatteries of princes--every
+folly and extravagance that money could purchase or vanity desire.
+
+Six years of such intoxicating life and then--the end. Louis is lying on
+his death-bed and, with fear in his eyes and a tardy penitence on his
+lips, is saying to her, "Madame, it is time that we should part." And,
+indeed, the hour of parting had arrived; for a few days later he drew
+his last wicked breath, and Madame du Barry was under orders to retire
+to a convent. But her grief for the dead King was as brief as her love
+for him had been small; for within a few months, we find her installed
+in her beautiful country home, Lucienne, ready for fresh conquests, and
+eager to drain the cup of pleasure to the last drop. Nor was there any
+lack of ministers to the vanity of the woman who had now reached the
+zenith of her incomparable charms.
+
+Among the many lovers who flocked to the country shrine of the widowed
+"Queen," was Louis, Duc de Cossé, son of the Maréchal de Brissac, who,
+although Madame du Barry's senior by nine years, was still in the prime
+of his manhood--handsome as an Apollo and a model of the courtly graces
+which distinguished the old _noblesse_ in the day of its greatest pride,
+which was then so near its tragic downfall.
+
+De Cassé had long been a mute worshipper of Louis' beautiful "Queen,"
+and now that she was a free woman he was at last able to pay open homage
+to her, a homage which she accepted with indifference, for at the time
+her heart had strayed to Henry Seymour, although in vain. The woman
+whose beauty had conquered all other men was powerless to raise a flame
+in the breast of the cold-blooded Englishman; and, realising this, she
+at last bade him farewell in a letter, pathetic in its tender dignity.
+"It is idle," she wrote, "to speak of my affection for you--you know it.
+But what you do not know is my pain. You have not deigned to reassure
+me about that which most matters to my heart. And so I must believe that
+my ease of mind, my happiness, are of little importance to you. I am
+sorry that I should have to allude to them; it is for the last time."
+
+It was in this hour of disillusion and humiliation that she turned for
+solace to de Cossé, whose touching constancy at last found its reward.
+It was not long before friendship ripened into a love as ardent as his
+own; and for the first time this fickle beauty, whose heart had been a
+pawn in the game of ambition, knew what a beautiful and ennobling thing
+true love is.
+
+Those were halcyon days which followed for de Cossé and the lady his
+loyalty had won; days of sweet meetings and tender partings--of a union
+of souls which even death was powerless to dissolve. When they could not
+meet--and de Cossé's duties often kept him from her side--letters were
+always on the wing between Lucienne and Paris, letters some of which
+have survived to bring their fragrance to our day.
+
+Thus the lover writes, "A thousand thanks, a thousand thanks, dear
+heart! To-day I shall be with you. Yes, I find my happiness is in being
+loved by you. I kiss you a thousand times! Good-bye. I love you for
+ever." In another letter we read, "Yes, dear heart, I desire so ardently
+to be with you--not in spirit, my thoughts are ever with you, but
+bodily--that nothing can calm my impatience. Good-bye, my darling. I
+kiss you many and many times with all my heart." The curious may read at
+the French Record Office many of these letters written in a bold,
+flowing hand by de Cossé in the hey-day of his love. The paper is
+time-stained, the ink is faded; but each sentence still palpitates with
+the passion that inspired it a century and a quarter ago.
+
+And with this great love came new honours for de Cossé. His father's
+death made him Duc de Brissac, head of one of the greatest houses in
+France, owner of vast estates. He was appointed Governor of Paris and
+Colonel of the King's own body-guard. He had, in fact, risen to a
+perilous eminence; for the clouds of the great Revolution were already
+massing in the sky, and the _sans-culotte_ crowds were straining to be
+at the throats of the cursed "aristos," and to hurl Louis from his
+throne. Brissac (as we must now call him) was thus an object of special
+hatred, as of splendour, standing out so prominently as representative
+of the hated _noblesse_.
+
+Other nobles, fearful of the breaking of the storm, were flying in
+droves to seek safety in England and elsewhere. But when the Governor of
+Paris was urged to fly, he answered proudly, "Certainly not. I shall act
+according to my duty to my ancestors and myself." And, heedless of his
+life, he clung to his duty and his honour, presenting a smiling face to
+the scowls of hatred and envy, and spending blissful hours at Lucienne
+with the woman he loved.
+
+Nor was she any less conscious of her danger, or less indifferent to it.
+She also had become a target of hatred and scarcely veiled threats.
+Watchful eyes marked every coming and going of Brissac's messengers
+with their missives of love; it was discovered that Brissac's
+aide-de-camp, whose life they sought, was in hiding in her house; that
+she was supplying the noble emigrants with money. The climax was reached
+when she boldly advertised a reward of two thousand louis for a clue to
+the jewellery of which burglars had robbed her--jewels of which she
+published a long and dazzling list, thus bringing to memory the days
+when the late King had squandered his ill-gotten gold on her.
+
+The Duc, at last alarmed for her--never for himself--begged her either
+to escape, or, as he wrote, to "come quickly, my darling, and take every
+precaution for your valuables, if you have any left. Yes, come, and your
+beauty, your kindness and magnanimity. I am ashamed of it, but I feel
+weaker than you. How should I feel otherwise for the one I love best?"
+
+But already the hour for flight had passed. The passions of the mob were
+breaking down the barriers that were now too weak to hold them in check;
+the Paris streets had their first baptism of blood, prelude to the
+deluge to follow; hideous, fierce-eyed crowds were clamouring at the
+gates of Versailles; and de Brissac was soon on his way, a prisoner, to
+Orleans.
+
+The blow had fallen at last, suddenly, and with crushing force. When
+"Louis Hercule Timoleon de Cossé-Brissac, soldier from his birth," was
+charged before the National High Court with admitting Royalists into the
+Guards, he answered: "I have admitted into the King's Guards no one but
+citizens who fulfilled all the conditions contained in the decree of
+formation": and no other answer or plea would he deign to his accusers.
+
+From his Orleans prison, where he now awaited the inevitable end, he
+wrote daily to his beloved lady; and every day brought him a tender and
+cheering letter from her. On 11th August, 1792, he writes: "I received
+this morning the best letter I have had for a long time past; none have
+rejoiced my heart so much. Thank you for it. I kiss you a thousand
+times. You indeed will have my last thought. Ah, my darling, why am I
+not with you in a wilderness rather than in Orleans?"
+
+A few days later news reached Madame du Barry that her lover, with other
+prisoners, was to be brought from Orleans to Paris. He would thus
+actually pass her own door; she would at least see him once again, under
+however tragic conditions. With what leaden steps the intervening hours
+crawled by! Each sound set her heart beating furiously as if it would
+choke her. Each moment was an agony of anticipation. At last she hears
+the sound of coming feet. She flies to the window, piercing the dark
+night with straining eyes. The sound grows nearer, a tumult of trampling
+feet and hoarse cries. A mob of dark figures surges through her gates,
+pours riotously up the steps and through the open door. In the hall
+there is a pandemonium of cries and oaths; the door of her room is burst
+open, and something is flung at her feet. She glances down; and, with a
+gasp of unspeakable horror, looks down on the severed head of her lover,
+red with his blood.
+
+The _sans-culottes_ had indeed taken a terrible revenge. They had
+fallen in overwhelming numbers on the prisoners and their escort; the
+soldiers had fled; and de Brissac found himself the centre of a mob, the
+helpless target of a hundred murderous blows. With a knife for sole
+weapon he fought valiantly, like the brave soldier he was, until a
+cowardly blow from behind felled him to the ground. "Fire at me with
+your pistols," he shouted, "your work will the sooner be over." A few
+moments later he drew his last gallant breath, almost within sight of
+the house that sheltered his beloved.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+United in life, the lovers were not long to be divided. "Since that
+awful day," Madame du Barry wrote to a friend, "you can easily imagine
+what my grief has been. They have consummated the frightful crime, the
+cause of my misery and my eternal regrets--my grief is complete--a life
+which ought to have been so grand and glorious! Good God, what an end!"
+
+Thus cruelly deprived of all that made life worth living, she cared
+little how soon the end came. "I ask nothing now of life," she wrote,
+"but that it should quickly give me back to him." And her prayer was
+soon to be granted. A few months after that night of horrors she herself
+was awaiting the guillotine in her cell at the conciergerie.
+
+In vain did an Irish priest who visited her offer to secure her escape
+if she would give him money to bribe her jailers. "No," she answered
+with a smile, "I have no wish to escape. I am glad to die; but I will
+give you money willingly on condition that you save the Duchesse de
+Mortemart." And while Madame de Mortemart, daughter of the man she
+loved, was making her way to safety under the priest's escort, Jeanne du
+Barry was being led to the scaffold, breathing the name of the man she
+had loved so well; and, however feeble the flesh, glad to follow where
+he had led the way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE REGENT'S DAUGHTER
+
+
+Many unwomanly women have played their parts in the drama of Royal
+Courts, but scarcely one, not even those Messalinas, Catherine II. of
+Russia and Christina of Sweden, conducted herself with such a shameless
+disregard of conventionality as Marie Louise Elizabeth d'Orléans, known
+to fame as the Duchesse de Berry, who probably crowded within the brief
+space of her years more wickedness than any woman who was ever cradled
+in a palace.
+
+It is said that this libertine Duchesse was mad; and certainly he would
+be a bold champion who would try to prove her sanity. But, apart from
+any question of a disordered brain, there was a taint in her blood
+sufficient to account for almost any lapse from conventional standards
+of pure living. Her father was that Duc d'Orléans who shocked the none
+too strait-laced Europe of two centuries ago by his orgies; her
+grandfather was that other Orleans Duke, brother of Louis XIV., whose
+passion for his minions broke the heart of his English wife, the Stuart
+Princess Henriettta; and she had for mother one of the daughters of
+Madame de Montespan, light-o'-love to _le Roi Soleil_.
+
+The offspring of such parents could scarcely have been normal; and how
+far from normal Marie Louise was, this story of her singular life will
+show. When her father, the Duc de Chartres, took to wife Mademoiselle de
+Blois, Montespan's daughter, there were many who significantly shrugged
+their shoulders and curled their lips at such a union; and one at least,
+the Duc's mother, Elizabeth Charlotte, Princess Palatine, was
+undisguisedly furious. She refused point-blank to be present at the
+nuptials, and when her son, fresh from the altar, approached her to ask
+her blessing, she retorted by giving the bridegroom a resounding slap on
+the face.
+
+Such was the ill-omened opening to a wedded life which brought nothing
+but unhappiness with it and which gave to the world some of the most
+degenerate women (in addition to a son who was almost an idiot) who have
+ever been cradled.
+
+The first of these degenerates was Marie Elizabeth, who was born one
+August day in the year 1695, and who from her earliest infancy was her
+father's pet and favourite. His idolatry of his first-born child,
+indeed, is one of the most inscrutable things in a life full of the
+abnormal, and in later years afforded much material for the tongue of
+scandal. He was inseparable from her; her lightest wish was law to him;
+he nursed her through her childish illnesses with more than the devotion
+of a mother; and, as she grew to girlhood, he worshipped at the shrine
+of her young beauty with the adoration of a lover and put her charms on
+canvas in the guise of a pagan goddess.
+
+The Duc's affection for his daughter, indeed, was so extravagant that
+it was made the subject of scores of scurrilous lampoons to which even
+Voltaire contributed, and was a delicious morsel of ill-natured gossip
+in all the _salons_ and cabarets of Paris. At fifteen the princess was
+already a woman--tall, handsome, well-formed, with brilliant eyes and
+the full lips eloquent of a sensuous nature. Already she had had her
+initiation into the vices that proved her undoing; for in a Court noted
+for its free-living, she was known for her love of the table and the
+wine-bottle.
+
+Such was the Duc's eldest daughter when she was ripe for the altar and
+became the object of an intrigue in which her scheming father, the Royal
+Duchesses, the Duc de Saint-Simon, the King himself, and the Jesuits all
+took a part, and the prize of which was the hand of the young Duc de
+Berry, a younger son of the Dauphin, the grandson of King Louis.
+
+Over the plotting and counterplotting, the rivalries and jealousies
+which followed, we must pass. It must suffice to record that the King's
+consent was at last won by the Orleans faction; Madame de Maintenon was
+persuaded to smile on the alliance; and, one July day, the nuptials of
+the Duc de Berry and the Orleans Princess were celebrated in the
+presence of the Royal family and the Court. A regal supper followed;
+and, the last toast drunk, the young couple were escorted to their room
+with all the stately, if scarcely decent, ceremonial which in those days
+inaugurated the life of the newly-wedded.
+
+Seldom has there been a more singular union than this of the Duc
+d'Orléans' prodigal daughter with the almost imbecile grandson of the
+French King. The Duc de Berry, it is true, was good to look upon. Tall,
+fair-haired, with a good complexion and splendid health, he was
+physically, at twenty-four, no unworthy descendant of the great Louis.
+He had, too, many amiable qualities calculated to win affection; but he
+was mentally little better than a clown. His education had been
+shamefully neglected; he had been suppressed and kept in the background
+until, in spite of his manhood, he had all the shyness, awkwardness and
+dullness of a backward child.
+
+As he himself confessed to Madame de Saint-Simon, "They have done all
+they could to stifle my intelligence. They did not want me to have any
+brains. I was the youngest, and yet ventured to argue with my brother.
+Afraid of the results of my courage, they crushed me; they taught me
+nothing except to hunt and gamble; they succeeded in making a fool of
+me, one incapable of anything and who will yet be the laughing-stock of
+everybody."
+
+Such was the weak-kneed husband to whom was now allied the most
+precocious, headstrong young woman in all France; who, although still
+short of her sixteenth birthday, was a past-mistress of the arts of
+pleasure, and was now determined to have her full fling at any cost. She
+had been thoroughly spoiled by her too indulgent father, who was even
+then the most powerful man in France after the King; and she was in no
+mood to brook restraint from anyone, even from Louis himself.
+
+The pleasures of the table seem now to have absorbed the greater part
+of her life. Read what her grandmother, the Princess Palatine, says of
+her: "Madame de Berry does not eat much at dinner. How, indeed, can she?
+She never leaves her room before noon, and spends her mornings in eating
+all kinds of delicacies. At two o'clock she sits down to an elaborate
+dinner, and does not rise from the table until three. At four she is
+eating again--fruit, salad, cheese, etc. She takes no exercise whatever.
+At ten she has a heavy supper, and retires to bed between one and two in
+the morning. She likes very strong brandy." And in this last sentence we
+have the true secret of her undoing. The Royal Princess was, even tat
+this early age, a confirmed dipsomaniac, with her brandy bottle always
+by her side; and was seldom sober, from rising to retiring.
+
+To such a woman, a slave to the senses, a husband like the Duc de Berry,
+unredeemed by a vestige of manliness, could make no appeal. She wanted
+"men" to pay her homage; and, like Catherine of Russia, she had them in
+abundance--lovers who were only too ready to pay court to a beautiful
+Princess, who might one day be Queen of France. For the Dauphin was now
+dead; his eldest son, the Duc de Bourgogne, had followed him to the
+grave a few months later. Prince Philip had renounced his right to the
+French crown when he accepted that of Spain; and, between her husband
+and the throne there was now but one frail life, that of the
+three-year-old Duc d'Anjou, a child so delicate that he might easily not
+survive his great-grandfather, Louis, whose hand was already relaxing
+its grasp of the sceptre he had held so long.
+
+On the intrigues with which this Queen _in posse_ beguiled her days, it
+is perhaps well not to look too closely. They are unsavoury, as so much
+of her life was. Her lovers succeeded one another with quite bewildering
+rapidity, and with little regard either to rank or good-looks. One
+special favourite of our Sultana was La Haye, a Court equerry, whom she
+made Chamberlain, and who is pictured by Saint-Simon as "tall, bony,
+with an awkward carriage and an ugly face; conceited, stupid,
+dull-witted, and only looking at all passable when on horseback."
+
+So infatuated was the Duchesse with her ill-favoured equerry that
+nothing less would please her than an elopement to Holland--a proposal
+which so scared La Haye that, in his alarm, he went forthwith to the
+lady's father and let the cat out of the bag. "Why on earth does my
+daughter want to run away to Holland?" the Due exclaimed with a laugh.
+"I should have thought she was having quite a good enough time here!"
+And so would anyone else have thought.
+
+And while his Duchesse was thus dallying with her multitude of lovers
+and stupefying herself with her brandy bottle, her husband was driven to
+his wits' end by her exhibitions of temper, as by her infidelities. In
+vain he stormed and threatened to have her shut up in a convent. All her
+retort was to laugh in his face and order him out of her apartment.
+Violent scenes were everyday incidents. "The last one," says
+Saint-Simon, "was at Rambouillet; and, by a regrettable mishap, the
+Duchesse received a kick."
+
+The Duc's laggard courage was spurred to fight more than one duel for
+his wife's tarnished fame. Of one of these sorry combats, Maurepas
+writes, "Her conduct with her father became so notorious that His Grace
+the Duc de Berry, disgusted at the scandal, forced the Duc d'Orléans to
+fight a duel on the terrace at Marly. They were, however, soon
+separated, and the whole affair was hushed up."
+
+But release from such an intolerable life was soon coming to the
+ill-used Duc. One day, when hunting, he was thrown from his horse, and
+ruptured a blood-vessel. Fearful of alarming the King, now near the end
+of his long life, he foolishly made light of his accident, and only
+consented to see a doctor when it was too late. When the doctors were at
+last summoned he was a dying man, his body drained of blood, which was
+later found in bowls concealed in various parts of his bedroom. With his
+last breath, he said to his confessor, "Ah, reverend father, I alone am
+the real cause of my death."
+
+Thus, one May day in 1714, the Duchesse found herself a widow, within
+four years of her wedding-day; and the last frail barrier was removed
+from the path of self-indulgence and low passions to which her life was
+dedicated. When, with the aged King's death in the following year, her
+father became Regent of France, her position as daughter of the virtual
+sovereign was now more splendid than ever; and before she had worn her
+widow's weeds a month, she had plunged again, still deeper, into
+dissipation, with Madame de Mouchy, one of her waiting-women, as chief
+minister to her pleasures.
+
+It was at this time, before her husband had been many weeks in his
+grave, that the Comte de Riom, the last and most ill-favoured of her
+many lovers, came on the scene. Nothing but a perverted taste could
+surely have seen any attraction in such a lover as this grand-nephew of
+the Duc de Lauzun, of whom the austere and disapproving Palatine Duchess
+draws the following picture: "He has neither figure nor good-looks. He
+is more like an ogre than a man, with his face of greenish yellow. He
+has the nose, eyes, and mouth of a Chinaman; he looks, in fact, more
+like a baboon than the Gascon he really is. Conceited and stupid, his
+large head seems to sit on his broad shoulders, owing to the shortness
+of his neck. He is shortsighted and altogether is preternaturally ugly;
+and he appears so ill that he might be suffering from some loathsome
+disease."
+
+To this unflattering description, Saint-Simon adds the fact that his
+"large, pasty face was so covered by pimples that it looked like one
+large abscess.'" Such, then, was the repulsive lover who found favour in
+the eyes of the Regent's daughter, and for whom she was ready to discard
+all her legion of more attractive wooers.
+
+With the coming of de Riom, the Duchesse entered on the last and worst
+stage of her mis-spent life. Strange tales are told of the orgies of
+which the Luxembourg, the splendid palace her father had given her, was
+now the scene--orgies in which Madame de Mouchy and a Jesuit, one Father
+Ringlet, took a part, and over which the evil de Riom ruled as "Lord of
+merry disports." The Duchesse, now sunk to the lowest depths of
+degradation, was the veriest puppet in his strong hands, flattered by
+his coarse attentions and submitting to rudeness and ridicule such as
+any grisette, with a grain of pride, would have resented.
+
+When these scandalous "carryings-on" at the Luxembourg Palace reached
+the Regent's ears and he ventured to read his daughter a severe lecture
+on her conduct, she retaliated by snapping her fingers at him and
+telling him in so many words to mind his own business. And to the tongue
+of scandal that found voice everywhere, she turned a contemptuous ear.
+She even locked and barred her palace gates to keep prying eyes at a
+safe distance.
+
+But, although she thus defied man, she was powerless to stay the steps
+of fate. Her health, robust as it had been, was shattered by her
+excesses; and when a serious illness assailed her, she was horrified to
+find death so uncomfortably near. In her alarm she called for a priest
+to shrive her; and the Abbé Languet came at the summons to bring her the
+consolations of the Church. He refused point-blank, however, to give the
+sinner absolution until the palace was purged of the presence of de Riom
+and Madame de Mouchy, the arch-partners in her vices.
+
+To this suggestion the Duchesse, perilous as her condition was, returned
+an uncompromising "No!" If the Abbé would not absolve her--well, there
+were other priests, less exacting, who would; and one such priest of
+elastic conscience, a Franciscan friar, was summoned to her bedside.
+Then ensued an unseemly struggle around the dying woman's bed, in which
+the Regent, Cardinal Noailles, Madame de Mouchy, and the rival clerics
+all played their parts.
+
+While the obliging friar remained in the room awaiting an opportunity to
+administer the last Sacrament, the Abbé and his curates kept watch at
+the bedroom door to see that he did no such thing; and thus the siege
+lasted for four days and nights until, the patient's crisis over, the
+services of the Church were summarily dispensed with.
+
+With the return of health, the Duchesse's piety quickly evaporated. It
+is true that she had had a fright; and, by way of modified penitence,
+she vowed to dress herself and her household in white for six months and
+also to make a husband of her lover. Within a few weeks, de Riom led the
+Regent's daughter to the altar, thus throwing the cloak of the Church
+over the licence of the past.
+
+Now that our Princess was once more a "respectable" woman, she returned
+gladly to her old life of indulgence; until the Duchess Palatine
+exclaimed in alarm, "I am afraid her excesses in drinking and eating
+will kill her." And never was prediction more sure of early fulfilment.
+When she was not keeping company with her brandy bottle, she was gorging
+herself with delicacies of all kinds, from patties and fricassées to
+peaches and nectarines, washed down with copious draughts of iced beer.
+
+As a last desperate effort to reform her, at the eleventh hour, the
+Regent packed de Riom off to his regiment. A few days later, the
+Duchesse invited her father to a sumptuous banquet on the terrace at
+Meudon, at which, regardless of her delicate health, she ate and drank
+more voraciously than ever. The same evening she was taken ill; and
+when, on the following Sunday, her mother-in-law, the Duchess, visited
+her, she found the patient in a deplorable condition--wasted to a
+"shadow" and burning with fever. "She was suffering such horrible pains
+in her toes and under the feet," says the Duchess, "that tears came to
+her eyes. She looked so very bad that three doctors were called in
+consultation. They resolved to bleed her; but it was difficult to bring
+her to it, for her pains were so great that the least touch of the
+sheets made her shriek."
+
+A few days later, in the early hours of 17th July, 1719, the Duchesse de
+Berry passed away in her sleep. The life which she had wasted with such
+shameless prodigality closed in peace; and at the moment when she was
+being laid to rest in the Church of St Denis, Madame de Mouchy, blazing
+in the dead woman's jewels, was laughing merrily over her
+champagne-glass at a dinner-party to which she had invited all the
+sharers in the orgies which had made the Palace of the Luxembourg
+infamous!
+
+The moral of this pitifully squandered life needs no pointing out. And
+on reviewing it one can only in charity echo the words spoken by Madame
+de Meilleraye of another sinner, the Chevalier de Savoie, "For my part,
+I believe the good God must think twice before sending one born of such
+parents to the nether regions."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+A PRINCESS OF MYSTERY
+
+In the spring of the year 1772 the fashionable world of Paris was full
+of speculation and gossip about a stranger, as mysterious as she was
+beautiful, who had appeared from no one knew where, in its midst, and
+who called herself the Princess Aly Émettée de Vlodimir. That she was a
+woman of rank and distinction admitted of no question. Her queenly
+carriage and the graciousness and dignity of her deportment were in
+keeping with the Royal character she assumed; but more remarkable than
+these evidences of high station was her beauty, which in its brilliance
+eclipsed that of the fairest women of Versailles and the Tuileries.
+
+Tall, with a figure of exquisite modelling and grace, her daintily
+poised head crowned with a coronal of golden-brown hair, with a face of
+perfect oval, dimpled cheeks as delicately tinted as a rose, her chief
+glory lay in her eyes, large and lustrous, which had the singular
+quality of changing colour--"now blue, now black, which gave to their
+dreamy expression a peculiar, mysterious air."
+
+Who was she, this woman of beauty and mystery? It was rumoured that she
+was a Circassian Princess, "the heroine of strange romances." She was
+living luxuriously in a fine house in the most fashionable quarter of
+Paris, in company with two German "Barons"--one, the Baron von Embs, who
+claimed to be her cousin; the other, Baron von Schenk, who appeared to
+play the rôle of guardian. To her _salon_ in the Ile St Louis were
+flocking many of the greatest men in France, infatuated by her beauty,
+and paying homage to her charms. To a man, they adored the mysterious
+lady--from Prince Ojinski and other illustrious refugees from Poland to
+the Comte de Rochefort-Velcourt, the Duke of Limburg's representative at
+the French Court, and the wealthy old _beau_ M. de Marine, who, it was
+said, placed his long purse at her disposal.
+
+But while the men were thus her slaves, the women tossed their heads
+contemptuously at their dangerous rival. She was an adventuress, they
+declared with one voice; and great was their satisfaction when, one day,
+news came that the Baron von Embs had been arrested for debt and that,
+on investigation, he proved to be no Baron at all, but the
+good-for-nothing son of a Ghent tradesman.
+
+The "bubble" had soon burst, and the attentions of the police became so
+embarrassing that the Princess was glad to escape from the scene of her
+brief triumphs with her cavaliers (Von Embs' liberty having been
+purchased by that "credulous old fool," de Marine) to Frankfort, leaving
+a wake of debts behind.
+
+Arrived at Frankfort, the fair Circassian resumed her luxurious mode of
+life, carrying a part of her retinue of admirers with her, and making it
+known that she was daily expecting a large remittance from her good
+friend, the Shah of Persia. And it was not long before, thanks to the
+offices of de Rochefort-Velcourt, she had at her feet no less a
+personage than Philip, Duke of Limburg, and Prince of the Empire, one of
+those petty German potentates who assumed more than the airs and
+arrogance of kings. Though his duchy was no larger than an English
+county, Philip had his ambassadors at the Courts of Vienna and
+Versailles; and though he had neither courtiers, army, nor exchequer, he
+lavished his titles of nobility and surrounded himself with as much
+state and ceremonial as any Tsar or Emperor.
+
+But exalted and serene as was His Highness, he was caught as helplessly
+in the toils of the Princess Aly as any lovesick boy; and within a week
+of making his first bow had her installed in his Castle of Oberstein,
+after satisfying the most clamorous of her creditors with borrowed
+money. That there might be no question of obligation, the Princess
+repaid him with the most lavish promises to redeem his heavily mortgaged
+estate with the millions she was daily expecting from Persia, and to use
+her great influence with Tsar and Sultan to support his claim to the
+Schleswig and Holstein duchies. And that he might be in no doubt as to
+her ability to discharge these promises, she showed him letters,
+addressed to her in the friendliest of terms by these august personages.
+
+Each day in the presence of this most alluring of princesses forged new
+fetters for the susceptible Duke, until one day she announced to him,
+with tears streaming down her pretty cheeks, that she had received a
+letter recalling her to Persia--to be married. The crucial hour had
+arrived. The Duke, reduced to despair, begs her to accept his own
+exalted hand in marriage, vowing that, if she refuses, he will "shut
+himself up in a cloister"; and is only restored to a measure of sanity
+when she promises to consider his offer.
+
+When Hornstein, the Duke's ambassador to Vienna, appears on the scene,
+full of suspicion and doubts, she makes an equally easy conquest of him.
+She announces to his gratified ears her wish to become a Catholic;
+flatters him by begging him to act as her instructor in the creed that
+is so dear to him; and she reveals to him "for the first time" the true
+secret of her identity. She is really, she says, the Princess of Azov,
+heiress to vast estates, which may come to her any day; and the first
+use she intends to make of her millions is to fill the empty coffers of
+the Limburg duchy.
+
+Hornstein is not only converted; he becomes as ardent an admirer as his
+master, the Duke. The Princess takes her place as the coming Duchess of
+Limburg, much to the disgust of his subjects, who show their feelings by
+hissing when she appears in public. Her hour of triumph has
+arrived--when, like a bolt from the blue, an anonymous letter comes to
+Hornstein revealing the story of her past doings in several capitals of
+Europe, and branding her as an "impostor."
+
+For a time the Duke treats these anonymous slanders with scorn. He
+refuses to believe a word against his divinity, the beautiful, high-born
+woman who is to crown his life's happiness and, incidentally, to save
+him from bankruptcy. But gradually the poison begins to work,
+supplemented as it is by the suspicions and discontent of his subjects.
+At last he summons up courage to ask an explanation--to beg her to
+assure him that the charges against her are as false as he believes
+them.
+
+She listens to him with quiet dignity until he has finished, and then
+replies, with tears in her eyes, that she is not unprepared for
+disloyalty from a man who is so obviously the slave of false friends and
+of public opinion, but that she had hoped that he would at least have
+some pity and consideration for a woman who was about to become the
+mother of his child. This unexpected announcement, with its appeal to
+his manhood, proves more eloquent than a world of proofs and
+protestations. The Duke's suspicions vanish in face of the news that the
+woman he loves is to become the mother of his child, and in a moment he
+is at her knees imploring her pardon, and uttering abject apologies. He
+is now more deeply than ever in her toils, ready to defy the world in
+defence of the Princess he adores and can no longer doubt.
+
+It is at this stage that a man who was to play such an important part in
+the Princess's life first crosses her path--one Domanski, a handsome
+young Pole, whose passionate and ill-fated patriotism had driven him
+from his native land to find an asylum, like many another Polish
+refugee, in the Limburg duchy. He had heard much of the romantic story
+of the Princess Aly, and was drawn by sympathy, as by the rumour of her
+remarkable beauty, to seek an interview with her, during her visit to
+Mannheim. Such a meeting could have but one issue for the romantic Pole.
+He lost both head and heart at sight of the lovely and gracious
+Princess, and from that moment became the most devoted of all her
+slaves.
+
+When she returned to Oberstein he was swift to follow her and to install
+himself under her castle walls, where he could catch an occasional
+glimpse of her, or, by good-fortune, have a few blissful moments in her
+company. Indeed, it was not long before stories began to be circulated
+among the good folk of Oberstein of strange meetings between the
+mysterious young stranger who had come to live in their midst and an
+equally mysterious lady. "The postman," it was rumoured, "often sees him
+on the road leading to the castle, talking in a shadow with someone
+enveloped in a long, black, hooded cloak, whom he once thought he
+recognised as the Princess."
+
+No wonder tongues wagged in Oberstein. What could be the meaning of
+these secret assignations between the Princess, who was the destined
+bride of their Duke, and the obscure young refugee? It was a delicious
+bit of scandal to add to the many which had already gathered round the
+"adventuress."
+
+But there was a greater surprise in store for the Obersteiners, as for
+the world outside their walls. Soon it began to be rumoured that the
+Duke's bride-to-be was no obscure Circassian Princess; this was merely
+a convenient cloak to conceal her true identity, which was none less
+than that of daughter of an Empress! She was, in fact, the child of
+Elizabeth, Tsarina of Russia, and her peasant husband, Razoum; and in
+proof of her exalted birth she actually had in her possession the will
+in which the late Empress bequeathed to her the throne of Russia.
+
+How these rumours originated none seemed to know. Was it Domanski who
+set them circulating? We know, at least, that they soon became public
+property, and that, strangely enough, they won credence everywhere. The
+very people who had branded her "adventuress" and hissed her in the
+streets, now raised cheers to the future Empress of Russia; while the
+Duke, delighted at such a wonderful transformation in the woman he
+loved, was more eager than ever to hasten the day when he could call her
+his own. As for the Princess, she accepted her new dignities with the
+complaisance to be expected from the daughter of a Tsarina. There was
+now no need to refer the sceptics to Circassia for proof of her station
+and her potential wealth. As heiress to one of the greatest thrones of
+Europe, she could at last reveal herself in her true character, without
+any need for dissimulation.
+
+The curtain was now ready to rise on the crowning act of her life-drama,
+an act more brilliant than any she had dared to imagine. Russia was
+seething with discontent and rebellion; the throne of Catherine II. was
+trembling; one revolt had followed another, until Pugatchef had led his
+rabble of a hundred thousand serfs to the very gates of Moscow--only,
+when success seemed assured, to meet disaster and death. If the
+ex-bandit could come so near to victory, an uprising headed by
+Elizabeth's own daughter and heiress could scarcely fail to hurl
+Catherine from her throne.
+
+It would have been difficult to find a more powerful ally in this daring
+project than Prince Charles Radziwill, chief of Polish patriots, who was
+then, as luck would have it, living in exile at Mannheim, and who hated
+Russia as only a Pole ever hated her. To Radziwill, then, Domanski went
+to offer the help of his Princess for the liberation of Poland and the
+capture of Catherine's throne.
+
+Here indeed was a valuable pawn to play in Radziwill's game of vengeance
+and ambition. But the Prince was by no means disposed to snatch the bait
+hurriedly. Experience had taught him caution. He must count the cost
+carefully before taking the step, and while writing to the Princess, "I
+consider it a miracle of Providence that it has provided so great a
+heroine for my unhappy country," he took his departure to Venice,
+suggesting that the Princess should meet him there, where matters could
+be more safely and successfully discussed. Thus it was that the Princess
+said her last good-bye to her ducal lover, full of promises for the
+future when she should have won her throne, and as "Countess of
+Pinneberg" set forth with a retinue of followers to Venice, where she
+was regally received at the French embassy.
+
+Here she tasted the first sweets of her coming Queendom--holding her
+Courts, to which distinguished Poles and Frenchmen flocked to pay homage
+to the Empress-to-be, and having daily conferences with Radziwill, who
+treated her as already a Queen. That her purse was empty and the bankers
+declined to honour her drafts was a matter to smile at, since the way
+now seemed clear to a crown, with all it meant of wealth and power. When
+the Venetian Government grew uneasy at the plotting within its borders,
+she went to Ragusa, where she blossomed into the "Princess of all the
+Russias," assumed the sceptre that was soon to be hers, issued
+proclamations as a sovereign, and crowned these regal acts by sending a
+ukase to Alexis Orloff, the Russian Commander-in-Chief, "signed
+Elizabeth II., and instructing him to communicate its contents to the
+army and fleet under his command."
+
+Once more, however, fortune played the Princess a scurvy trick, just
+when her favour seemed most assured. One night a man was seen scaling
+the garden-wall of the palace she was occupying. The guard fired at him,
+and the following morning Domanski was found, lying wounded and
+unconscious in the garden. The tongues of scandal were set wagging
+again, old suspicions were revived, and once again the word
+"adventuress"--and worse--passed from mouth to mouth. The men who had
+fawned on her now avoided her; worse still, Radziwill, his latent
+suspicions thoroughly awakened, and confirmed by a hundred stories and
+rumours that came to his ears, declined to have anything more to do
+with her, and returned in disgust to Germany.
+
+But even this crushing rebuff was powerless to damp the spirits and
+ambition of the "adventuress," who shook the dust of Ragusa off her
+dainty feet, and went off to Rome, where she soon cast her spell over
+Sir William Hamilton, our Ambassador there, who gave her the warmest
+hospitality. "For several days," we learn, "she reigns like a Queen in
+the _salon_ of the Ambassador, out of whose penchant for beautiful women
+she has no difficulty in wiling a passport that enables her to enter the
+most exclusive circles of Roman society."
+
+In Rome she lays aside her regal trappings, and wins the respect of all
+by her unostentatious living and her prodigal charities. She becomes a
+favourite at the Vatican; Cardinals do homage to her goodness, with
+perhaps a pardonable eye to her beauty. But behind the brave and pious
+front she thus shows to the world her heart is growing more heavy day by
+day. Poverty is at her door in the guise of importunate creditors, her
+servants are clamouring for overdue wages, and consumption, which for
+long has threatened her, now shows its presence in hectic cheeks and a
+hacking cough. Fortune seems at last to have abandoned her; and it
+requires all her courage to sustain her in this hour of darkness.
+
+In her extremity she appeals to Sir William Hamilton for a loan, much as
+a Queen might confer a favour on a subject, and Hamilton, pleased to be
+of service to so fair and pious a lady, sends her letter to his Leghorn
+banker, Mr John Dick, with instructions to arrange the matter.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+While the Princess Aly was practising piety and cultivating Cardinals in
+Rome, with an empty purse and a pain-racked body to make a mockery of
+her claim to a crown, away in distant Russia Catherine II. was nursing a
+terrible revenge on the woman who had dared to usurp her position and
+threaten her throne. The succession of revolutions, at which she had at
+first smiled scornfully, had now roused the tigress in her. She would
+show the world that she was no woman to be trifled with, and the first
+victim of her vengeance should be that brazen Princess who dared to
+masquerade as "Elizabeth II."
+
+She sent imperative orders to her trusted and beloved Orloff, fresh from
+his crushing defeat of the Turkish fleet, to seize her at any cost, even
+if he had to raze Ragusa to the ground; and these orders she knew would
+be executed to the letter. For was not Orloff the man whose strong hands
+had strangled her husband and placed the crown on her head; also her
+most devoted slave? He was, it is true, the biggest scoundrel (as he was
+also one of the handsomest men) in Europe, a man ready to stoop to any
+infamy, and thus the best possible tool for such an infamous purpose;
+but he was also her greatest admirer, eager to step into the place of
+"chief favourite" from which his brother Gregory had just been
+dismissed.
+
+When, however, Orloff went to Ragusa, with his soldiers at his back, he
+found that the Princess had already flown, leaving no trace behind her.
+He ransacked Sicily in vain, and it was only when Sir William
+Hamilton's letter to his Leghorn banker came to his hands that he
+discovered that she was in Rome, a much safer asylum than Ragusa. It was
+hopeless now to capture her by force; he must try diplomacy, and, by the
+hands of an aide-de-camp, he sent her a letter in which he informed her
+that he had received her ukase and was anxious to pay due homage to the
+future Empress of Russia.
+
+Such was the "Judas" message Kristenef, Orloff's emissary, carried to
+the Princess, whom he found in a pitiful condition, wasted to a shadow
+by disease and starvation--"in a room cold and bare, whose only
+furniture was a leather sofa, on which she lay in a high fever, coughing
+convulsively." To such pathetic straits was "Elizabeth II." reduced when
+Kristenef came with his fawning airs and lying tongue to tell her that
+Alexis Orloff, the greatest man in Russia, had instructed him to offer
+her the throne of the Tsars, and, as an earnest of his loyalty, to beg
+her acceptance of a loan of eleven thousand ducats.
+
+In vain did Domanski, who was still by her side, warn her against the
+smooth-tongued envoy. She was flattered by such unexpected homage, her
+eyes were dazzled by the near prospect of the coveted crown which was to
+be hers, at last, just when hope seemed dead. She would accept Orloff's
+invitation to go to Pisa to meet him. "As for you," she said, "if you
+are afraid, you can stay behind. I am going where Destiny calls me."
+
+This revolution in her fortunes acted like magic. New life coursed
+through her veins, colour returned to her cheeks, and brightness to her
+eyes, as one February day in 1775 she left Rome, with the devoted
+Domanski for companion and a brilliant escort, for Pisa, where Orloff
+greeted her as an Empress. He gave regal fêtes in her honour and filled
+her ears with honeyed and flattering words.
+
+Affecting to be dazzled by her beauty, he even dared to make passionate
+love to her, which no man of his day could do more effectively than this
+handsomest of the Orloffs; and so infatuated was the poor Princess by
+the adoration of her handsome lover and the assurance of the throne he
+was to give her, that she at last consented to share that throne with
+him, and by his side went through a marriage ceremony, at which two of
+his officers masqueraded as officiating priests.
+
+Nothing remained now between her and the goal of her desires, except to
+make the journey to Russia as speedily as possible, and a few hours
+after the wedding banquet we see her in the Admiral's launch, with
+Orloff and Domanski and a brilliant suite of officers, leaving Leghorn
+for the Russian flagship, where she was received with the blare of bands
+and the booming of artillery. The crowning moment arrived when, as she
+was being hoisted to the deck in a gorgeous chair suspended from the
+yard-arm, her future sailors greeted her with thunders of shouts, "Long
+live the Empress!"
+
+The moment she set foot on deck she was seized, handcuffs were snapped
+on her wrists, and she was carried a helpless captive to a cabin. At the
+same moment Domanski was overpowered before he had time to use his
+sword, and made a prisoner.
+
+The Princess's cries for Orloff, her husband and saviour, are met with
+derision. Orloff she is told is himself a prisoner. He has, in fact,
+vanished, his dastardly mission executed; and she never saw him again.
+Two months later the victim of a man's treachery and a woman's vengeance
+is looking with tear-dimmed eyes on "her capital" through a barred
+window of a cell in the fortress of Saints Peter and Paul.
+
+Over the tragic closing of her days we may not dwell long. The scene is
+too pitiful, too harrowing. In vain she implores an interview with
+Catherine, who blazes into anger at the request. "The impudence of the
+wretch," she exclaims, "is beyond all bounds! She must be mad. Tell her
+if she wishes any improvement in her lot to cease the comedy she is
+playing." Prince Galitzin, Grand Chancellor, exerts all his skill in
+vain to force a confession of imposture from her. To his wiles and
+threats alike she opposes a dignified and calm front. She persists in
+the story of her birth; refuses to admit that she is an impostor.
+
+Even when she is flung into a loathsome cell, with bread and water for
+diet, she does not waver a jot in her demeanour of dignity or in her
+Royal claims. Only when she is charged with being the daughter of a
+Prague innkeeper does she allow indignation to master her, as she
+retorts, "I have never been in Prague in my life, and if I knew who had
+thus slandered me I would scratch his eyes out." Domanski, too, proves
+equally intractable; even the promise of marriage to her will not wring
+from him a word that might discredit his beloved Princess.
+
+But although the Princess keeps such a brave heart under conditions that
+might well have broken it, her spirit is powerless against the insidious
+disease that is working such havoc with her body. In her damp, noisome
+cell consumption makes rapid headway. Her strength ebbs daily; the end
+is coming swiftly near. She makes a last dying appeal to Catherine to
+see her if but for a few moments, but the appeal falls on deaf ears.
+When she sends for a priest to minister to her last hours, and, by
+Catherine's orders, he makes a final attempt to wrest her secret from
+her, she moans with her failing breath, "Say the prayers for the dead.
+That is all there is for you to do here."
+
+Four days later death came to her release. Catherine's throne was safe
+from this danger at least, and she was left to dalliance with her legion
+of lovers, while the woman on whom she had wreaked such terrible
+vengeance lay deeply buried in the courtyard of her prison, the very
+soldiers who dug her grave being sworn to secrecy. Thus in mystery her
+life opened, and in secrecy it closed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+THE KING AND THE "LITTLE DOVE"
+
+A savage murmur ran through the market-place of Bergen, one summer
+morning in the year 1507, as Chancellor Valkendorf made his pompous way
+along the avenues of stalls laden with their country produce, his
+passage followed by scowling eyes and low-spoken maledictions.
+
+There could not have been a more unwelcome visitor than this cold-eyed,
+supercilious Chancellor, unless it were his master, Christian, the
+Danish Prince who had come to rule Norway with the iron hand, and to
+stamp out the fires of rebellion against the alien rule that were always
+smouldering, when not leaping into flame. Bergen itself had been the
+scene of the latest revolt against oppressive and unjust taxes, and the
+insolent Valkendorf, who was now taking his morning stroll in the
+market-place, was fresh from suppressing it with a rough hand which had
+left many a smart and longing for vengeance behind it.
+
+But the Chancellor could afford to smile at such evidences of
+unpopularity. He knew that he was the most hated man in Norway--after
+his master--but he had executed his mission well and was ready to do it
+again. And thus it was with an air, half-amused, half-contemptuous, that
+he made his progress this July morning among the booths and stalls of
+the market, with eyes scornfully blind to frowns, but very wide open for
+any pretty face he might chance to see.
+
+He had not strolled far before his eyes were arrested by as strangely
+contrasted a picture as any he had ever seen. Behind one of the stalls,
+heaped high with luscious, many-coloured fruits and mountains of
+vegetables, were two women, each so remarkable in her different way
+that, almost involuntarily, he stood rooted to the spot, gazing
+open-eyed at them. The elder of the two was of gigantic stature,
+towering head and shoulders over her companion, with harsh, masculine
+face, massive jaw, coarse protruding lips, and black eyes which were
+fixed on him in a magnetic stare, defiant and scornful--for none knew
+better than she who the stranger was, and few hated him more.
+
+But it was not to this grim, hard-visaged Amazon that Valkendorf's eyes
+were drawn, compelling as were her stature and her basilisk stare. They
+quickly turned from her, with a motion of contempt, to feast on the
+vision by her side--that of a girl on the threshold of young womanhood
+and of a beauty that dazzled the eyes of the old voluptuary. How had she
+come there and in such company, this ravishing girl on whom Nature had
+lavished the last touch of virginal loveliness, this maiden with her
+figure of such supple grace, the proud little oval face with its
+complexion of cream and roses, the dainty head from which twin plaits
+of golden hair fell almost to her knees, and the eyes blue as violets,
+now veiled demurely, now opening wide to reveal their glories, enhanced
+by a look of appeal, almost of fear.
+
+The Chancellor, who was the last man to pass by a flower so seductively
+beautiful, approached the stall, undaunted by the forbidding eyes of the
+giantess, Frau Sigbrit, by name, and, after making a small purchase,
+sought to draw her into amiable conversation. "No," she said in answer
+to his inquiries, "we are not Norwegian. We come from Holland, my
+daughter and I, and we are trying to earn a little money before
+returning there. But why do you ask?" she demanded almost fiercely,
+putting a protecting arm around the girl, as if she would shield her
+from an enemy. "You are in such a different world from ours!"
+
+Little by little, however, the grim face began to relax under the adroit
+flatteries and courtly deference of the Chancellor--for none knew better
+than he the arts of charming, when he pleased; and it was not long
+before the Amazon, completely thawed, was confiding to him the most
+intimate details of her history and her hopes.
+
+"Yes, my daughter is beautiful," she said, with a look of pride at the
+girl which transfigured her face. "Many a great man has told me
+so--dukes, princes, and lords. She is as fair a flower as ever grew in
+Holland; and she is as sweet as she is fair. She is Dyveke, my "little
+dove," the pride of my heart, my soul, my life. She is to be a Queen one
+day. It has been revealed to me in my dreams. But when the day dawns it
+will be the saddest in my life." And with further amiable words and a
+final courtly salute, Valkendorf continued his stroll, secretly
+promising himself a further acquaintance with the dragon and her "little
+dove."
+
+This was the first of many morning strolls in the Bergen market, in
+which the Chancellor spent delightful moments at Frau Sigbrit's stall,
+each leaving him more and more a slave to her daughter's charms; for he
+quickly found that to her physical perfections were allied a low, sweet
+voice, every note of which was musical as that of a nightingale, a quiet
+dignity and refinement as far removed from her station as her simple
+print frock with the bunch of roses nestling in the white purity of her
+bosom, and a sprightliness of wit which even her modesty could not
+always repress.
+
+Thus it was that, when Valkendorf at last returned to Upsala and the
+Court of his master, Christian, his tongue was full of the praises of
+the "market-beauty" of Bergen, whose charms he pictured so glowingly
+that the Prince's heart became as inflamed by a sympathetic passion as
+his mind by curiosity to see such a siren. "I shall not rest," he said
+to his Chancellor, "until I have seen your 'little dove' with my own
+eyes; and who knows," he added with a laugh, "perhaps I shall steal her
+from you!"
+
+It was in vain that Valkendorf, now alarmed by his indiscretion, began
+to pour cold water on the flames he had lit. Christian had quite lost
+his susceptible heart to the rustic and unknown beauty, and vowed that
+he could not rest until he had seen her with his own eyes. And within a
+month he was riding into Bergen, with Valkendorf by his side, at the
+head of a brilliant retinue.
+
+As the Prince made his way through the crowded avenues of the Bergen
+streets to an accompaniment of scowls punctuated by feeble, forced
+cheers, he cut a goodly enough figure to win many an admiring, if
+reluctant, glance from bright eyes. With his broad shoulders, his erect,
+well-knit figure clothed in purple velvet, his stern, swarthy face
+crowned by a white-plumed hat, Christian looked every inch a Prince.
+
+To-day, too, he was in his most amiable mood, with a smile ready to leap
+to his lips, and many a gracious wave of the hand and sweep of plumed
+hat to acknowledge the grudged salutes of his subjects. He could be
+charming enough when he pleased, and this was a day of high good-humour;
+for his mind was full of the pleasure that awaited him. Even Frau
+Sigbrit's scowl was chased away when his eyes were drawn to her towering
+figure, and with a swift smile he singled her out for the honour of a
+special salute.
+
+When the Prince at last arrived in the market-square, he was greeted by
+a procession of the prettiest maidens in Bergen who, in white frocks and
+with flower-wreathed hair, advanced to pay him the homage of demure
+eyes. But among them all, the loveliest girls of the city, Christian saw
+but one--a girl younger than almost any other, but so radiantly lovely
+that his eyes fixed themselves on her as if entranced, until her cheeks
+flamed a vivid crimson under the ardour of his gaze. "No need to point
+her out," he whispered delightedly to Valkendorf, "I see your 'little
+dove,' and she is all you have told me and more."
+
+Before many hours had passed, a Court official appeared at Frau
+Sigbrit's cottage door with a command from the Prince to her and her
+daughter to attend a State ball the following evening. If the poor
+market-woman had had a crown laid at her feet, her surprise and
+consternation could scarcely have been greater. But she would make a
+bigger sacrifice of inclination than this for the "little dove" who
+filled her heart, and who, she remembered, was destined to be a Queen;
+and decking her in all the finery her modest purse could command and
+with a taste of which few would have suspected she was capable, the
+market stall-keeper stalked majestically through the avenue of gorgeous
+flunkeys, her little Princess with downcast eyes following demurely in
+her wake.
+
+All the fairest women of Bergen were gathered at this ball, the host of
+which was their coming King, but it was to the fruit-seller's daughter
+that all eyes were turned, in homage to such a rare combination of
+beauty, grace, and modesty. Many a fair lip, it is true, curled in
+mockery, recognising in the belle of the ball the low-born girl of the
+market-place; but it was the mockery of jealousy, the scornful tribute
+to a loveliness greater than their own.
+
+As for Prince Christian, he had no eyes for any but the "little dove"
+who outshone all her rivals as the sun pales the stars. It was the maid
+of the market whom he led out for the first dance, and throughout the
+long night he rarely left her side, whirling round the room with her,
+his arm close-clasped round her slender waist, not seeing or indifferent
+to the glances of envy and hate that followed them; or, during the
+intervals, drinking in her beauty as he poured sweet flatteries into her
+ears. As for Dyveke, she was radiantly happy at finding herself thus
+transported into the favour of a Prince and the Queendom of fair women,
+for whose envy she cared as little as for the danger in which she stood.
+
+If anything had remained to complete Christian's infatuation, this
+intoxicating night of the ball supplied it. The "little dove" had found
+a secure nesting-place in his heart. She must be his at any cost. She
+and her mother alone, of all the guests, were invited to spend the rest
+of the night at the castle as the Prince's guests; and when he parted
+from her the following day, it was with vows on his part of undying love
+and fidelity, and a promise on hers to come to him at Upsala as soon as
+a suitable home could be found for her.
+
+Thus easily was the dove caught in the toils of one of the most amorous
+Princes of Europe; but it must be said for her that her heart went with
+the surrender of her freedom, for the Prince, with his ardent passion,
+his strength and his magnetism, had swept her as quickly off her feet as
+she had made a quick conquest of him.
+
+Thus, before many weeks had passed, we find Dyveke installed with her
+mother in a sumptuous home in the outskirts of Upsala, queening it in
+the Prince's Court, and every day forging new fetters to bind him to
+her. And while Dyveke thus ruled over Christian's heart, her
+strong-minded mother soon established a similar empire over his mind.
+With the clever, masterful brain of a man, the Amazon of the
+market-place developed such a capacity for intrigue, such a grasp of
+statesmanship and such arts of diplomacy that Christian, strong man as
+he thought himself, soon became little more than a puppet in her hands,
+taking her counsel and deferring to her judgment in preference to those
+of his ministers. The fruit-seller thus found herself virtual Prime
+Minister, while her daughter reigned, an uncrowned Queen.
+
+When the Prince was summoned to Copenhagen by his father's failing
+health, Frau Sigbrit and her daughter accompanied him, one in her way as
+indispensable as the other; and when King James died and Christian
+reigned in his stead, the women of the Bergen market were installed in a
+splendid suite of apartments in his palace. So hopeless was his
+subjection to both that his subjects, with an indifferent shrug of the
+shoulders, accepted them as inevitable.
+
+For a time, it is true, their supremacy was in danger. Now that
+Christian was King, it became important to provide him with a Queen, and
+a suitable consort was found for him in the Austrian Princess, Isabella,
+sister of the Emperor Charles V., a well-gilded bride, distinguished
+alike for her beauty and her piety. Isabella, however, was one of the
+last women to tolerate any rivalry in her husband's affection, and
+before the marriage-contract was sealed, she had received a solemn
+pledge from Christian's envoys that his relations with the pretty
+flower-girl should cease.
+
+But even Christian's word of honour was seldom allowed to bar the way to
+his pleasure, and within a few weeks of Isabella's bridal entry into
+Copenhagen, Dyveke and her mother resumed their places at his Court, to
+his Queen's unconcealed disgust and displeasure. More than this, he
+established them in a fine house near his palace gates; and when he was
+not dallying there with Dyveke, he was to be found by her side at the
+Castle of Hvideur, of which he had made her chatelaine.
+
+The remonstrances of Valkendorf and his other ministers were made to
+deaf ears; his wife's reproaches and tears were as futile as the
+strongly worded protestations of his Royal relatives. Pleadings,
+arguments, and threats were alike powerless to break the spell Dyveke
+and her mother had cast over him. But Dyveke's day of empire was now
+drawing to a tragic close. One day, after eating some cherries from the
+palace gardens, she was seized with a violent pain. All the skill of the
+Court doctors could do as little to assuage her agony as to save her
+life; and within a few hours she died, clasped to the breast of her
+distracted lover!
+
+Such was Christian's distress that for a time his reason trembled in the
+balance. He vowed that he would not be separated from her even by death;
+he threatened to put an end to his own life since it had been reft of
+all that made it worth living. And when cooler moments came, he swore a
+terrible vengeance against those who had robbed him of his beloved. She
+had been poisoned beyond a doubt; but who had done the dastardly deed?
+
+The finger of suspicion pointed to the steward of his household, Torbern
+Oxe, who, it was said, had been among the most ardent of Dyveke's
+admirers, and had had the audacity to aspire to her hand. It was even
+rumoured that he had had more intimate relations with her. Such were the
+stories and suspicions that passed from mouth to mouth in Christian's
+clouded Court before Dyveke's beautiful body was cold; and such were the
+tales which Hans Faaborg, the King's Treasurer, poured into his master's
+ears.
+
+Hans Faaborg little dreamt that when he was thus trying to bring about
+the downfall of his rival he was sealing his own fate. Christian lent an
+eager ear to the stories of his steward's iniquities; but, when he found
+there was no shred of proof to support them, his anger and
+disappointment vented themselves on the informer. He had long suspected
+Faaborg of irregularities in his purse-holding, and in these suspicions
+found a weapon to use against him. Faaborg was arrested; an examination
+of his ledgers showed that for years he had been waxing rich at his
+master's expense, and he had to pay with his life the penalty of his
+fraud and his unproved testimony.
+
+But Faaborg, though thus removed from his path, was by no means done
+with. Rumours began to be circulated that a strange light appeared every
+night above the dead man's head as he swung on the gallows. The city was
+full of superstitious awe and of whisperings that Heaven was thus
+bearing witness to the Treasurer's innocence. And even the King
+himself, when he too saw the unearthly light forming a halo round his
+victim's head, was filled with remorse and fear to such an extent that
+he had Faaborg's body cut down and honoured with a State funeral.
+
+He was still, however, as far as ever from solving the mystery of
+Dyveke's death; and the longer his desire for vengeance was baffled, the
+more clamorous it became. Although nothing could be proved against
+Torbern Oxe, Christian was by no means satisfied of his innocence, and
+he decided to discover by guile the secret which all other means had
+failed to reveal. He would, if possible, make his steward his own
+betrayer. One day, at a Court banquet, he turned in jocular mood to the
+minister and said, "Tell me now, my dear Torbern, was there really any
+truth in what Faaborg told me of your relations with my beautiful Lady!
+Don't hesitate to tell the truth, which only you know, for I assure you
+no harm shall come to you from it."
+
+Thus thrown off his guard and reassured, the steward, who, like his
+master, had probably drunk not wisely, confessed that he had loved
+Dyveke, and had asked her to be his wife. "But, sire," he added, "that
+was the extent of my offence. I was never intimate with her." During the
+remainder of the banquet Christian was most affable to the indiscreet
+steward, not only showing no trace of resentment, but treating him with
+marked friendliness.
+
+The following day, however, Torbern was flung into prison, and charged,
+not only with his confession, but with the murder of the woman he had
+so vainly loved; and, in spite of the storm of indignation that swept
+over Denmark, the pleadings of the Papal Legate, Arcimbaldo, and the
+tears of the Queen, was sentenced to death for a crime of which there
+was no scrap of evidence to point to his guilt.
+
+This gross act of injustice proved to be the beginning of Christian's
+downfall. His cruelties and oppressions had long made him odious to his
+subjects, and the climax came when a popular uprising hurled him from
+his throne and drove him an exile to Holland. An attempt to recover his
+crown ended in speedy disaster, and his last years were spent, in
+company with his favourite dwarf, in a cell of the Holstein Castle of
+Sondeborg.
+
+As for Sigbrit, the woman who had played such a conspicuous and baleful
+part in Christian's life, she deserted her benefactor at the first sign
+of his coming ruin and ended her days in her native Holland, bemoaning
+to the last the loss of her "little dove," whom she had seen raised
+almost to a throne and had lost so tragically.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+THE ROMANCE OF THE BEAUTIFUL SWEDE
+
+Augustus the Strong, Elector of Saxony and King of Poland, owes his
+place in the world's memory to his brawny muscles and to his conquest of
+women. Like the third Alexander of Russia of later years, he could, with
+his powerful arms, convert a thick iron bar into a necklace, crush a
+pewter tankard by the pressure of a mighty hand, toss a heavy anvil into
+the air and catch it as another man would catch a ball, or with a wrench
+straighten out the stoutest horse-shoe ever forged.
+
+And his strength of muscle was matched by his skill in the lists of
+love. No Louis of France could boast such an array of conquests as this
+Saxon Hercules, who changed his mistresses as easily as he changed his
+coats; the fairest women in Europe, from Turkey to Poland, succeeded
+each other in bewildering succession as the slaves of his pleasure, and
+before he died he counted his children to as many as the year has days.
+
+Of all these fair and frail women who thus ministered to the pleasure of
+the "Saxon Samson," none was so beautiful, so gifted, so altogether
+alluring as Marie Aurora, Countess of Königsmarck, the younger of the
+two daughters of Conrad of Königsmarck. Born in the year 1668, Aurora
+was one of three children of the Swedish Count Conrad and his wife, the
+daughter of the great Field-Marshal Wrangel. Her elder sister, little
+less fair than herself, found a husband, when little more than a child,
+in Count Axel Löwenhaupt; her brother Philip, the handsomest man of his
+day in Europe, was destined to end his days tragically as the price of
+his infatuation for a Queen.
+
+Betrayed by a jealous woman, the Countess Platen, whose overtures he
+spurned, this too gallant lover of Sophia Dorothea of Celle, wife of the
+first of our Georges, was foully done to death in a corridor of the
+Leine Schloss by La Paten's hired assassins, while she looked smilingly
+on at his futile struggle for life, and gloated over his dying agonies.
+
+On the death of her father, when she was but a child of three, Aurora
+was taken by her mother from her native Sweden to Hamburg, where she
+grew to beautiful young womanhood; and when, in turn, her mother died,
+she found a home with her married sister, the Countess Löwenhaupt. And
+it is at this period of her life that her romantic story opens.
+
+If we are to believe her contemporaries, the world has seldom seen so
+much beauty and so many graces enshrined in the form of woman as in this
+daughter of Sweden. Her description reads like a catalogue of all human
+perfections. Of medium height and a figure as faultless in its exquisite
+modelling as in its grace and suppleness; her hair, black as a raven's
+plumage, and falling, like a veil of night, below her knees, emphasised
+the white purity of face and throat, arms, and hands. Her teeth, twin
+rows of pearls, glistened between smiling crimson lips, curved like
+Cupid's bow. Her face of perfect oval, with its delicately moulded
+features, was illuminated by a pair of large black eyes, now melting,
+now flaming, as mood succeeded mood.
+
+To these graces of body were allied equal graces of mind and character.
+Her conversation sparkled with wit and wisdom; she could hold fluent
+discourse in half a dozen tongues; she played and sang divinely, wrote
+elegant verses, and painted dainty pictures. Her manner was caressing
+and courteous; she was generous to a fault, with a heart as tender as it
+was large. And the supreme touch was added by an entire unconsciousness
+of her charms, and an unaffected modesty which captivated all hearts.
+
+Such was Aurora of Königsmarck who, in company with her sister, set
+forth one day to claim the fortune which her ill-fated brother, Philip,
+was said to have left in the custody of his Hanoverian bankers--a
+journey which was to make such a dramatic revolution in her own life.
+
+Arrived at Hanover the sisters found themselves faced by no easy task.
+The bankers declared that they had nothing of the late Count's effects
+beyond a few diamonds, which they declined to part with, unless evidence
+were forthcoming that the Count had died and had left no will behind
+him--evidence which, owing to the secrecy surrounding his murder, it was
+impossible to furnish. And when a discharged clerk revealed the fact
+that the dishonest bankers had actually all the Count's estate, valued
+at four hundred thousand crowns, in their possession, the sisters were
+unable to make them disgorge a solitary mark.
+
+In their extremity, they decided to appeal to the Elector of Saxony, who
+had known Count Philip well and who would, they hoped, be the champion
+of their rights; and, with this object, they journeyed to Dresden, only
+to find themselves again baffled. Augustus was away on a hunting
+excursion, and would not return for a whole month. His wife and mother,
+however, gave them a gracious reception, as charmed by their beauty and
+sweetness as sympathetic in their trouble.
+
+When at last Augustus made his tardy appearance at his capital, the fair
+petitioners were presented to him by the Dowager Electress with words of
+strong recommendation to his favour. "These ladies, my son," she said,
+"have come to beg for your protection and help, to which they are
+entitled both by birth and their merits. I beg that you will spare no
+effort to ensure that justice is done to them."
+
+His mother's pleading, however, was not necessary to ensure a favourable
+hearing from the Elector, whose eyes were eloquent of the admiration he
+felt for the two fairest women who had ever visited his land. Aurora's
+beauty, enhanced by her attitude of appeal, the mute craving for
+protection, was irresistible. From the moment she entered his presence
+he was her slave, as anxious to do her will as any lovesick boy.
+
+And it was to her that, with his courtliest bow, he answered, "Be
+assured, dear lady, that I shall know no rest until your wrongs are
+repaired. If I fail, I myself will make reparation in full. Meanwhile,
+may I beg you and your sister to be my guests, that I may prove how deep
+is my sympathy, and how profound the respect I feel for you."
+
+Thus it was that by the magic of beauty Aurora and her Countess sister
+found themselves installed at the Dresden Court, feted like Queens,
+receiving the caresses of the Court ladies, and the homage of every man,
+from Augustus himself to the youngest page, of whom a smile from their
+pretty lips made a veritable slave. As for the Elector, sated as he was
+with the easy smiles and favours of fair women, he gave to the Swedish
+beauty, from the first, a homage he had never paid to any of her
+predecessors in his affection.
+
+But Aurora was no woman to be easily won by any man. She listened
+smilingly to the Elector's honeyed words, and received his attentions
+with the gracious complaisance of a Queen. When, however, he ventured to
+tell her that "her charms inspired him with a passion such as he had
+never felt for any woman," she answered coldly, "I came here prepared
+for your generosity, but I did not expect that your kindness would
+assume a form to cause me shame. I beg you not to say anything that can
+lessen the gratitude I owe you, and the respect I feel for you."
+
+Here indeed was a rebuff such as Augustus was little prepared for, or
+accustomed to. The beauty, of whom he had hoped to make an easy
+conquest, was an iceberg whom all his ardour could not thaw. He was in
+despair. "I am sure she hates and despises me, while I love her dearer
+than life itself," he confessed to his favourite Beuchling, who vainly
+tried to console and cheer him. He confided his passion and his pain to
+Aurora's sister, whose hopeful words were alike powerless to dispel his
+gloom.
+
+When Aurora held aloof from him, he sent letter after letter of
+passionate pleading to her by the hand of the trusty Beuchling. "If you
+knew the tortures I am suffering," he wrote, "your kindness of heart
+could not resist pitying me. I was mad to declare my passion so brutally
+to you. Let me expiate my fault, prostrate at your feet; and, if you
+wish for my death, let me at least receive my sentence from your own
+sweet lips."
+
+To such a desperate state was Augustus brought within a few days of
+setting eyes on his new divinity! As for Aurora of the tender heart, her
+lover's distress thawed her more than a year of passionate protestations
+could have done. She replied, assuring him of her gratitude, her esteem
+and respect, and begging him to dismiss such unworthy thoughts of her.
+But she had no word of encouragement to send him in the note which her
+lover kissed so rapturously before placing it next his heart.
+
+So alarmed, indeed, was Aurora, that she announced her intention of
+leaving forthwith a Court in which she was exposed to so much danger--a
+project to which her sister gave a reluctant approval. But the Countess
+Löwenhaupt was little disposed to leave a Court where she at least was
+having such a good time; for she, too, had her lovers, and among them
+the Prince of Fürstenberg, the handsomest man in Saxony, whose devotion
+was more than agreeable to her. She preferred to play the part of
+Cupid's agent--to exercise her diplomacy in bringing together those two
+foolish persons, her sister and the Elector.
+
+And so skilfully did she play her part, appealing to Aurora's pity, and
+assuring Augustus of her sister's love in spite of her seeming coldness,
+that before many weeks had passed Aurora had yielded and was listening
+with no unwilling ear to the vows of her exalted lover, now transported
+to the seventh heaven of happiness. One condition she made, when their
+mutual troth was plighted, that it should, for a time at least, remain a
+secret from the Court, and to this the Elector gratefully assented.
+
+Such was the strange wooing of Augustus and the Countess Aurora, in
+which passion had its response in a pity which, in this case at least,
+was the parent of love.
+
+It was with no very light heart that Aurora set forth to Mauritzburg, a
+few days later, to keep "honeymoon tryst" with Augustus, who had
+preceded her, to make, as she understood, the necessary preparations for
+her reception. With her sister and a mounted escort of the most
+beautiful ladies of the Court, she had ridden as far as the entrance to
+the Mauritzburg forest, when her carriage suddenly came to a halt in
+front of a magnificent palace. From the open door emerged Diana with her
+attendant nymphs to greet her with words of welcome, and to beg her to
+tarry a while to accept the hospitality of the forest gods.
+
+In response to this flattering invitation Aurora left her carriage and
+was escorted in stately procession to a saloon, richly painted with
+sylvan scenes, in which a sumptuous banquet was spread. No sooner were
+she and her ladies seated at the table than, to the strains of beautiful
+music, the god Pan (none other than the Elector himself), with his
+retinue of fawns and other richly and quaintly garbed forest gods, made
+his entry, and took his seat at the right hand of his goddess. Then, to
+the deft ministry of Diana and her satellites, and to the soft
+accompaniment of pipes and hautboys, the feasting began, while Pan
+whispered love to the lady for whom he had prepared such a charming
+hospitality.
+
+The banquet had scarcely come to an end when the jubilant sound of horns
+was heard from the forest. A stag dashed by a window in full flight, and
+Aurora and her ladies, rushing excitedly to the door, saw horses
+awaiting them for the hunt.
+
+In a moment they are mounted, and, gaily laughing, with Pan leading the
+way, they are galloping through the forest glades in the wake of the
+flying stag and the music of the hounds, until the stag, hotly pursued,
+dashes into a lake, in the centre of which is a beautiful wooded island.
+Dismounting, the ladies enter the gondolas which are so opportunely
+awaiting them, and are rowed across the strip of water just in time to
+witness the death of the gallant animal they have been chasing.
+
+The hunt over, Aurora and her ladies are conducted to the leafy heart of
+the island, where, as by the touch of a magician's wand, a gorgeous
+Eastern tent has sprung up, and here another sumptuous entertainment is
+prepared for them. Seated on soft-cushioned divans, in the many-hued
+environment of Oriental luxury, rare fruits and delicacies are brought
+to them in silver baskets by turbaned Turks. The island Sultan now
+appears, ablaze with gems, with his officers little less gorgeous than
+himself, and with deep obeisances craves permission to seat himself by
+Aurora's side, a favour which she was not likely to refuse to a Sultan
+in whom she recognised her lover, the Elector. Troupes of dancing-girls
+follow, and the moments fly swiftly to the twinkling of dainty feet, the
+gliding and posturing of supple bodies, and the strains of sensuous
+music.
+
+Another hour spent in the gondolas, dreamily gliding under the light of
+the moon, and horses are again mounted; and Aurora, with Augustus riding
+proudly by her side, heads the splendid procession which, with laughter,
+and in the gayest of spirits, rides forth to the Mauritzburg Castle at
+the close of a day so full of delights.
+
+"Here," was the Elector's greeting, as he conducted his bride to her
+room with its furnishing of silver and rich damask, and its pictured
+Cupid showering roses on the silk-curtained bed, "you are the Queen, and
+I am your slave."
+
+Such was the beginning of Aurora's reign over the heart of the Elector
+of Saxony--a reign of unclouded splendour and happiness for the woman in
+whom pity for her lover was soon replaced by a passion as ardent as his
+own. Fêtes and banquets and balls succeeded each other in swift
+sequence, at all of which Aurora was Queen, the focus of all eyes, and
+receiving universal homage, won no more by her beauty and her position
+as the Elector's favourite than by her sweetness and graciousness to the
+humblest. No mistress of a King was ever more beloved than this daughter
+of Sweden. Even the Elector's mother, a pattern of the most rigid
+propriety, had ever a kind word and a caress for her; his neglected wife
+made a friend and confidante of the woman of whom she said, "Since I
+must have a rival, I am glad she should be one so sweet and lovable."
+
+We must hasten over the years that followed--years during which Augustus
+had no eyes for any other woman than his "uncrowned Queen," and during
+which she bore him a son who, as Maurice of Saxony, was to win many
+laurels in the years to come. It must suffice to say that never was
+Royal liaison conducted with so much propriety, or was marked by so much
+mutual devotion and loyalty.
+
+But it was not in the nature of Augustus the Strong to remain always
+true to any woman, however charming; and although Aurora's reign lasted
+longer than that of any half-dozen of her rivals, it, too, had its
+ending. Within a month of the birth of her son, Augustus, now King of
+Poland, was caught in the toils of another enslaver, the beautiful
+Countess Esterle. Aurora realised that her sun had set, and
+relinquishing her sceptre without a murmur, she retired to the convent
+of Quedlinburg, of which Augustus had appointed her Abbess.
+
+Thus in an atmosphere of peace and piety, beloved of all for her
+sweetness and charity, Aurora of Königsmarck spent her last years until
+the end came one day in the year 1728; and in the crypt of the convent
+she loved so well she sleeps her last sleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+THE SISTER OF AN EMPEROR
+
+When Napoleon Bonaparte, the shabby, sallow-faced, out-of-work captain
+of artillery, was kicking his heels in morose idleness at Marseilles,
+and whiling away the dull hours in making love to Desirée Clary, the
+pretty daughter of the silk-merchant in the Rue des Phocéens, his
+sisters were living with their mother, the Signora Letizia, in a sordid
+fourth-floor apartment in a slum near the Cannebiere, and running wild
+in the Marseilles streets.
+
+Strange tales are told of those early years of the sisters of an
+Emperor-to-be--Elisa Bonaparte, future Grand Duchess of Tuscany;
+Pauline, embryo Princess Borghese; and Caroline, who was to wear a crown
+as Queen of Naples--high-spirited, beautiful girls, brimful of frolic
+and fun, laughing at their poverty, decking themselves out in cheap,
+home-made finery, and flirting outrageously with every good-looking
+young man who was willing to pay homage to their _beaux yeux_. If
+Marseilles deigned to notice these pretty young madcaps, it was only
+with the cold eyes of disapproval; for such "shameless goings-on" were
+little less than a scandal.
+
+The pity of it was that there was no one to check their escapades.
+Their mother, the imposing Madame Mère of later years, seemed
+indifferent what her daughters did, so long as they left her in peace;
+their brothers, Kings-to-be, were too much occupied with their own
+love-making or their pranks to spare them a thought. And thus the trio
+of tomboys were left, with a loose rein, to indulge every impulse that
+entered their foolish heads. And a right merry time they had, with their
+dancing, their private theatricals, the fun behind the scenes, and their
+promiscuous love affairs, each serious and thrilling until it gave place
+to a successor.
+
+Of the three Bonaparte "graces" the most lovely by far (though each was
+passing fair) was Pauline, who, though still little more than a child,
+gave promise of that rare perfection of face and figure which was to
+make her the most beautiful woman in all France. "It is impossible, with
+either pen or brush," wrote one who knew her, "to do any justice to her
+charms--the brilliance of her eyes, which dazzled and thrilled all on
+whom they fell; the glory of her black hair, rippling in a cascade to
+her knees; the classic purity of her Grecian profile, the wild-rose
+delicacy of her complexion, the proud, dainty poise of her head, and the
+exquisite modelling of the figure which inspired Canova's 'Venus
+Victrix.'"
+
+Such was Pauline Bonaparte, whose charms, although then immature, played
+such havoc with the young men of Marseilles, and who thus early began
+that career of conquest which was to afford so much gossip for the
+tongue of scandal. That the winsome little minx had her legion of
+lovers from the day she set foot in Marseilles, at the age of thirteen,
+we know; but it was not until Frèron came on the scene that her volatile
+little heart was touched--Frèron, the handsome coxcomb and
+arch-revolutionary, who was sent to Marseilles as a Commissioner of the
+Convention.
+
+To Pauline, the gay, gallant Parisian, penniless adventurer though he
+was, was a veritable hero of romance; and at sight of him she completely
+lost her heart. It was a _grande passion_, which he was by no means slow
+to return. Those were delicious hours which Pauline spent in the company
+of her beloved "Stanislas," hours of ecstasy; and when he left
+Marseilles she pursued him with the most passionate protestations.
+
+"Yes," she wrote, "I swear, dear Stanislas, never to love any other than
+thee; my heart knows no divided allegiance. It is thine alone. Who could
+oppose the union of two souls who seek to find no other happiness than
+in a mutual love?" And again, "Thou knowest how I worship thee. It is
+not possible for Paulette to live apart from her adored Stanislas. I
+love thee for ever, most passionately, my beautiful god, my adorable
+one--I love thee, love thee, love thee!"
+
+In such hot words this child of fifteen poured out her soul to the Paris
+dandy. "Neither mamma," she vowed, "nor anyone in the world shall come
+between us." But Pauline had not counted on her brother Napoleon, whose
+foot was now placed on the ladder of ambition, at the top of which was
+an Imperial crown, and who had other designs for his sister than to
+marry her to a penniless nobody. In vain did Pauline rage and weep, and
+declare that "she would die--_voilà tout!_" Napoleon was inexorable; and
+the flower of her first romance was trodden ruthlessly under his feet.
+
+When Junot, his own aide-de-camp, next came awooing Pauline, he was
+equally obdurate. "No," he said to the young soldier; "you have nothing,
+she has nothing. And what is twice nothing?" And thus lover number two
+was sent away disconsolate.
+
+Napoleon's sun was now in the ascendant, and his family were basking in
+its rays. From the Marseilles slums they were transported first to a
+sumptuous villa at Antibes; then to the Castle of Montebello, at Naples.
+The days of poverty were gone like an evil dream; the sisters of the
+famous General and coming Emperor were now young ladies of fashion,
+courted and fawned on. Their lovers were not Marseilles tradesmen or
+obscure soldiers and journalists (like Junot and Frèron), but brilliant
+Generals and men of the great world; and among them Napoleon now sought
+a husband for his prettiest and most irresponsible sister.
+
+This, however, proved no easy task. When he offered her to his favourite
+General, Marmont, he was met with a polite refusal. "She is indeed
+charming and lovely," said Marmont; "but I fear I could not make her
+happy." Then, waxing bolder, he continued: "I have dreams of domestic
+happiness, of fidelity, virtue; and these dreams I can scarcely hope to
+realise in your sister." Albert Permon, Napoleon's old schoolfellow,
+next declined the honour of Pauline's hand, although it held the bait of
+a high office and splendid fortune.
+
+The explanation of these refusals is not far to seek if we believe
+Arnault's description of Pauline--"An extraordinary combination of the
+most faultless physical beauty and the oddest moral laxity. She had no
+more manners than a schoolgirl--she talked incoherently, giggled at
+everything and nothing, mimicked the most serious personages, put out
+her tongue at her sister-in-law.... She was a good child naturally
+rather than voluntarily, for she had no principles."
+
+But Pauline was not to wait long, after all, for a husband. Among the
+many men who fluttered round her, willing to woo if not to wed the
+empty-headed beauty, was General Leclerc, young and rich, but weak in
+body and mind, "a quiet, insignificant-looking man," who at least loved
+her passionately, and would make a pliant husband to the capricious
+little autocrat. And we may be sure Napoleon heaved a sigh of relief
+when his madcap sister was safely tied to her weak-kneed General.
+
+Pauline was at last free to conduct her flirtations secure from the
+frowns of the brother she both feared and adored, and she seems to have
+made excellent use of her opportunities; and, what was even more to her,
+to encourage to the full her passion for finery. Dress and love filled
+her whole life; and while her idolatrous husband lavishly supplied the
+former, he turned a conveniently blind eye to the latter.
+
+Remarkable stories are told of Pauline's extravagant and daring
+costumes at this time. Thus, at a great ball in Madame Permon's Paris
+mansion, she appeared in a dress of classic scantiness of Indian muslin,
+ornamented with gold palm leaves. Beneath her breasts was a cincture of
+gold, with a gorgeous jewelled clasp; and her head was wreathed with
+bands spotted like a leopard's skin, and adorned with bunches of gold
+grapes.
+
+When this bewitching Bacchante made her appearance in the ballroom the
+sensation she created was so great that the dancing stopped instantly;
+women and men alike climbed on chairs to catch a glimpse of the rare and
+radiant vision, and murmurs of admiration and envy ran round the
+_salon_. Her triumph was complete. In the hush that followed, a voice
+was heard: "_Quel dommage!_ How lovely she would be, if it weren't for
+her ears. If I had such ears, I would cut them off, or hide them."
+Pauline heard the cruel words. The flush of mortification and anger
+flamed in her cheeks; she burst into tears and walked out of the room.
+Madame de Coutades, her most jealous rival, had found a rich revenge.
+
+General Leclerc did not live long to play the slave to his little
+autocrat; and when he died at San Domingo, the beautiful widow returned
+to France, accompanied by his embalmed body, with her glorious hair,
+which she had cut off for the purpose, wreathing his head! She had not,
+however, worn her weeds many months before she was once more surrounded
+by her court of lovers--actors, soldiers, singers, on each of whom in
+turn she lavished her smiles; and such time as she could spare from
+their flatteries and ogling she spent at the card-table, with
+fortune-tellers, or, chief joy of all, in decking her beauty with
+wondrous dresses and jewels.
+
+But the charming widow, sister of the great Napoleon, was not long to be
+left unclaimed; and this time the choice fell on Prince Camillo
+Borghese, a handsome, black-haired Italian, who allied to a head as vain
+and empty as her own the physical graces and gifts of an Admirable
+Crichton, and who, moreover, was lord of all the famed Borghese riches.
+
+Pauline had now reached dizzy heights, undreamed of in the days, only
+ten short years earlier, when she was coquetting in home-made finery
+with the young tradesmen of Marseilles. She was a Princess, bearing the
+greatest name in all Italy; and to this dignity her gratified brother
+added that of Princess of Gustalla. All the world-famous Borghese jewels
+were hers to deck her beauty with--a small Golconda of priceless gems;
+there was gold galore to satisfy her most extravagant whims; and she was
+still young--only twenty-five--and in the very zenith of her loveliness.
+
+Picture, then, the pride with which, one early day of her new bridehood,
+she drove to the Palace of St Cloud in the gorgeous Borghese State
+carriage, behind six horses, and with an escort of torch-bearers, to pay
+a formal call on her sister-in-law, Josephine, Empress-to-be. She had
+decked herself in a wonderful creation of green velvet; she was ablaze
+from head to foot with the Borghese diamonds. Such a dazzling vision
+could not fail to fill Josephine with envy--Josephine, who had hitherto
+treated her with such haughty patronage.
+
+As she sailed into the _salon_ in all her Queen of Sheba splendour, it
+was to be greeted by her sister-in-law in a modest dress of muslin,
+without a solitary gem to relieve its simplicity; and--horror!--to find
+that the room had been re-decorated in blue by the artful Josephine--a
+colour absolutely fatal to her green magnificence! It was thus a very
+disgusted Princess who made her early exit from the palace between a
+double line of bowing flunkeys, masking her anger behind an affectation
+of ultra-Royal dignity.
+
+Still, Pauline was now a _grande dame_ indeed, who could really afford
+to patronise even Napoleon's wife. Her Court was more splendid than that
+of Josephine. She had lovers by the score--from Blanguini, who composed
+his most exquisite songs to sing for her ears alone, to Forbin, her
+artist Chamberlain, whose brushes she inspired in a hundred paintings of
+her lovely self in as many unconventional guises. Her caskets of jewels
+were matched by the most wonderful collection of dresses in France, the
+richest and daintiest confections, from pearl embroidered ball-gowns
+which cost twenty thousand francs to the mauve and silver in which she
+went a-hunting in the forest of Fontainebleau. At Petit Trianon and in
+the Faubourg St Honoré, she had palaces that were dreams of beauty and
+luxury. The only thorn in her bed of roses was, in fact, her husband,
+the Prince, the very sight of whom was sufficient to spoil a day for
+her.
+
+When, at Napoleon's bidding, she accompanied Borghese to his
+Governorship beyond the Alps, she took in her train seven wagon-loads of
+finery. At Turin she held the Court of a Queen, to which the Prince was
+only admitted on sufferance. Royal visits, dinners, dances, receptions
+followed one another in dazzling succession; behind her chair, at dinner
+or reception, always stood two gigantic negroes, crowned with ostrich
+plumes. She was now "sister of the Emperor," and all the world should
+know it!
+
+If only she could escape from her detested husband she would be the
+happiest woman on earth. But Napoleon on this point was adamant. In her
+rage and rebellion she tore her hair, rolled on the floor, took drugs to
+make her ill; and at last so succeeded in alarming her Imperial brother
+that he summoned her back to France, where her army of lovers gave her a
+warm welcome, and where she could indulge in any vanity and folly
+unchecked.
+
+Matters were now hastening to a tragic climax for Napoleon and the
+family he had raised from slumdom in Marseilles to crowns and coronets.
+Josephine had been divorced, to Pauline's undisguised joy; and her place
+had been taken by Marie Louise, the proud Austrian, whom she liked at
+least as little. When Napoleon fell from his throne, she alone of all
+his sisters helped to cheer his exile in Elba; for the brother she loved
+and feared was the only man to whom Pauline's fickle heart was ever
+true. She even stripped herself of all her jewels to make the way smooth
+back to his crown. And when at last news came to her at Rome of his
+death at St Helena it was she who shed the bitterest tears and refused
+to be comforted. That an empire was lost, was nothing compared with the
+loss of the brother who had always been so lenient to her failings, so
+responsive to her love.
+
+Two years later her own end came at Florence. When she felt the cold
+hand of death on her, she called feebly for a mirror, that she might
+look for the last time on her beauty. "Thank God," she whispered, as she
+gazed, "I am still lovely! I am ready to die." A few moments later, with
+the mirror still clutched in her hand, and her eyes still feasting on
+the charms which time and death itself were powerless to dim, died
+Pauline Bonaparte, sister of an Emperor and herself an Empress by the
+right of her incomparable beauty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+A SIREN OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
+
+When Wilhelmine Encke first opened her eyes on the world one day in the
+year 1754, he would have been a bold prophet who would have predicted
+that she would one day be the uncrowned Queen of the Court of Russia,
+_plus Reine que la Reine_, and that her children would have in their
+veins the proudest blood in Europe. Such a prophecy might well have been
+laughed to scorn, for little Wilhelmine had as obscure a cradle as
+almost any infant in all Prussia. Her father was an army bugler, who
+wore private's uniform in Frederick the Great's army; and her early
+years were to be spent playing with other soldiers' children in the
+sordid environment of Berlin barracks.
+
+When her father turned his back on the army, while Wilhelmine was still
+nursing her dolls, it was to play the humble rôle of landlord of a small
+tavern, from which he was lured by the bait of a place as French-horn
+player in Frederick's private band; and the goal of his modest ambition
+was reached when he was appointed trumpeter to the King.
+
+This was Herr Encke's position when the curtain rises on our story at
+Potsdam, and shows us Wilhelmine, an unattractive maid of ten, the
+Cinderella of her family, for whom there seemed no better prospect than
+a soldier-husband, if indeed she were lucky enough to capture him. She
+was, in fact, the "ugly duckling" of a good-looking family, removed by a
+whole world from her beautiful eldest sister Charlotte, who counted
+among her many admirers no less exalted a wooer than Prince Frederick
+William, the King's nephew and heir to his throne.
+
+There was, indeed, no more beautiful or haughty damsel in all Potsdam
+than this trumpeter's daughter who had caught the amorous fancy of the
+Prince, then, as to his last day, the slave of every pretty face that
+crossed his path. But Charlotte Encke was much too imperious a young
+lady to hold her Royal lover long in fetters. He quickly wearied of her
+caprices, her petulances, and her exhibitions of temper; and the climax
+came one day when in a fit of anger she struck her little sister, in his
+presence, and he took up the cudgels for Wilhelmine.
+
+This was the last straw for the disillusioned and disgusted Prince, who
+sent Charlotte off to Paris, where as the Countess Matushke she played
+the fine lady at her lover's cost, while the Prince took her Cinderella
+sister under his protection. He took her education into his own hands,
+provided her with masters to teach her a wide range of accomplishments,
+from languages to dancing and deportment, while he himself gave her
+lessons in history and geography. Nor did he lack the reward of his
+benevolent offices; for Wilhelmine, under his ministrations, not only
+developed rare gifts and graces of mind, like many another Cinderella
+before her; she blossomed into a rose of girlhood, more beautiful even
+than her imperious sister, and with a sweetness of character and a
+winsomeness which Charlotte could never have attained.
+
+On her part, gratitude to her benefactor rapidly grew into love for the
+handsome and courtly Prince; on his, sympathy for the ill-used
+Cinderella, into a passion for the lovely maiden hovering on the verge
+of a still more beautiful womanhood. It was a mutual passion, strong and
+deep, which now linked the widely contrasted lives of the King-to-be and
+the trumpeter's daughter--a passion which, with each, was to last as
+long as life itself.
+
+Wilhelmine was now formally installed in the place of the deposed
+Charlotte as favourite of the heir to the throne; and idyllic years
+followed, during which she gave pledges of her love to the man who was
+her husband in all but name. That her purse was often empty was a matter
+to smile at; that she had to act as "breadwinner" to her family, and was
+at times reduced to such straits that she was obliged to pawn some of
+her small stock of jewellery in order to provide her lover with a
+supper, was a bagatelle. She was the happiest young woman in Prussia.
+
+Even what seemed to be a crowning disaster, fortune turned into a boon
+for her. When news of this unlicensed love-making came to the King's
+ears, he was furious. It was intolerable that the destined ruler of a
+great and powerful nation should be governed and duped by a woman of the
+people. He gave his nephew a sound rating--alike for his extravagance
+and his amour; and packed off Wilhelmine to join her sister in Paris.
+
+But, for once, Frederick found that he had made a mistake. The Prince,
+robbed of the woman he loved, took the bit in his teeth, and plunged so
+deeply into extravagant dallying with ballet-dancers and stars of the
+opera that the King was glad to choose the lesser evil, and to summon
+Wilhelmine back to her Prince's arms. One stipulation only he made, that
+she should make her home away from the capital and the dangerous
+allurements which his nephew found there.
+
+Now at last we find Cinderella happily installed, with the King's august
+approval, in a beautiful home which has since blossomed into the
+splendours of Charlottenburg. Here she gave birth to a son, whom
+Frederick dubbed Count de la Marke in his nurse's arms, but who was
+fated never to leave his cradle. This child of love, the idol of his
+parents, sleeps in a splendid mausoleum in the great Protestant Church
+of Berlin.
+
+As a sop to Prussian morality and to make the old King quite easy, a
+complaisant husband was now found for the Prince's favourite in his
+chamberlain, Herr Rietz, son of a palace gardener; and Frederick William
+himself looked on while the woman he loved, the mother of his children,
+was converted by a few priestly words into a "respectable married
+woman"--only to leave the altar on his own arm, his wife in the eyes of
+the world.
+
+The time was now drawing near when Wilhelmine was to reach the zenith of
+her adventurous life. One August day in 1786 Frederick the Great drew
+his last breath in the Potsdam Palace, and his nephew awoke to be
+greeted by his chamberlain as "Your Majesty." The trumpeter's daughter
+was at last a Queen, in fact, if not in name, more secure in her
+husband's love than ever, and with long years of splendour and happiness
+before her. That his fancy, ever wayward, flitted to other women as fair
+as herself, did not trouble her a whit. Like Madame de Pompadour, she
+was prepared even to encourage such rivalry, so long as the first place
+(and this she knew) in her husband's heart was unassailably her own.
+
+Picture our Cinderella now in all her new splendours, moving as a Queen
+among her courtiers, receiving the homage of princes and ambassadors as
+her right, making her voice heard in the Council Chamber, and holding
+her _salon_, to which all the great ones of the earth flocked to pay
+tribute to her beauty and her gifts of mind. It was a strange
+transformation from the barracks-kitchen to the Queendom of one of the
+greatest Courts of Europe; but no Queen cradled in a palace ever wore
+her honours with greater dignity, grace, and simplicity than this
+daughter of an army bandsman.
+
+The days of the empty purse were, of course, at an end. She had now her
+ten thousand francs a month for "pin-money," her luxuriously appointed
+palace at Charlottenburg, and her Berlin mansion, "Unter den Linden,"
+with its private theatre, in which she and her Royal lover, surrounded
+by their brilliant Court, applauded the greatest actors from Paris and
+Vienna. It is said that many of these stage-plays were of questionable
+decency, with more than a suggestion of the garden of Eden in them; but
+this is an aspersion which Madame de Rietz indignantly repudiates in her
+"Memoirs."
+
+While Wilhelmine was thus happy in her Court magnificence, varied by
+days of "delightful repose," at Charlottenburg, France was in the throes
+of her Revolution, drenched with the blood of her greatest men and
+fairest women; her King had lost his crown and his head with it; and
+Europe was in arms against her. When Frederick William joined his army
+camped on the Rhine bank, Wilhelmine was by his side to counsel him as
+he wavered between war and peace. The fate of the coalition against
+France was practically in the hands of the trumpeter's daughter, whose
+voice was all for peace. "What matters it," she said, "how France is
+governed? Let her manage her own affairs, and let Europe be saved from
+the horrors of bloodshed."
+
+In vain did the envoys of Spain and Italy, Austria and England, practise
+all their diplomacy to place her influence in the scale of war. When
+Lord Henry Spencer offered her a hundred thousand guineas if she would
+dissuade her husband from concluding a treaty with France, she turned a
+deaf ear to all his pleading and arguments. Such influence as she
+possessed should be exercised in the interests of peace, and thus it was
+that the vacillating King deserted his allies, and signed the Treaty of
+Bâle, in 1795.
+
+Such was the triumphant issue of Madame Rietz's intervention in the
+affairs of Europe; such the proof she gave to the world of her conquest
+of a King. It was thus with a light heart that she turned her back on
+the Rhine camp; and with her husband's children and a splendid retinue
+set out on her journey to Italy, to see which was the greatest ambition
+of her life. At the Austrian Court she was coldly received, it is true,
+thanks to her part in the Treaty of Bâle; but in Italy she was greeted
+as a Queen. At Naples Queen Caroline received her as a sister; the
+trumpeter's daughter was the brilliant centre of fêtes and banquets and
+receptions such as might have gratified the vanity of an Empress: while
+at Florence she spent days of ideal happiness under the blue sky of
+Italy and among her beauties of Nature and Art.
+
+It was at Venice that she wrote to her King lover, "Your Majesty knows
+well that, for myself, I place no value on the foolish vanities of Court
+etiquette; but I am placed in an awkward position by my daughter being
+raised to the rank of Countess, while I am still in the lowly position
+of a bourgeoise." She had, in fact, always declined the honour of a
+title, which Frederick William had so often begged her to accept; and it
+was only for her daughter's sake, when the question of an alliance
+between the young Countess de la Marke and Lord Bristol's heir arose,
+that she at last stooped to ask for what she had so long refused.
+
+A few weeks later her brother, the King's equerry, placed in her hands
+the patent which made her Countess Lichtenau, with the right to bear on
+her shield of arms the Prussian eagle and the Royal crown.
+
+Wherever the Countess (as we must now call her) went on her Italian
+tour she drew men to her feet by the magnetism of her beauty, who would
+have paid no homage to her as _chère amie_ of a King; for she was now in
+the early thirties, in the full bloom of the loveliness that had its
+obscure budding in the Potsdam barrack-rooms. Young and old were equally
+powerless to resist her fascinations. She had, indeed, no more ardent
+slave and admirer than my Lord Bristol, the octogenarian Bishop of
+Londonderry, whose passion for the Countess, young enough to be his
+granddaughter, was that of a lovesick youth.
+
+From "dear Countess and adorable friend," he quickly leaps in his
+letters to "my dear Wilhelmine." He looks forward with the impatience of
+a boy to seeing her at "that terrestrial paradise which is called
+Naples, where we shall enjoy perpetual spring and spend delightful days
+in listening to the divine _Paesiello_. Do you know," he adds, "I passed
+two hours of real delight this morning in simply contemplating your
+elegant bedroom where only the elegant sleeper was missing."
+
+"It is in _Crocelle_," he writes a little later, "that you will make
+people happy by your presence, and where you will recuperate your
+health, regain your gaiety, and forget an Irishman; and a holy Bishop,
+more worthy of your affection, on account of the deep attachment he has
+for you, will take his place."
+
+In June, 1796, this senile lover writes, "In an hour I depart for
+Germany; and, as the wind is north, with every step I take I shall say:
+'This breeze comes perhaps from her; it has touched her rosy lips and
+mingled its scent with the perfume of her breath which I shall inhale,
+the perfume of the breath of my dear Wilhelmine.'"
+
+But these days of dallying with her legion of lovers, of regal fêtes and
+pleasure-chasing, were brought to an abrupt conclusion when news came to
+her at Venice that her "husband," the King, was dying, with the Royal
+family by his bedside awaiting the end. Such news, with all its import
+of sorrow and tragedy, set the Countess racing across the Continent,
+fast as horses could carry her, to the side of her beloved King, whom
+she found, if not _in extremis_, "very dangerously ill and pitifully
+changed" from the robust man she had left. Her return, however, did more
+for him than all the skill of his doctors. It gave him a new lease of
+life, in which her presence brought happiness into days which, none knew
+better than himself, were numbered.
+
+For more than a year the Countess was his tender nurse and constant
+companion, ministering to his comfort and arranging plays and tableaux
+for his entertainment. She watched over him as jealously as any mother
+over her dying child; but all her devotion could not stay the steps of
+death, which every day brought nearer. As the inevitable end approached,
+her friends warned her to leave Charlottenburg while the opportunity was
+still hers--to escape with her jewels and her money (a fortune of
+£150,000)--but to all such urging she was deaf. She would stay by her
+lover's side to the last, though she well knew the danger of delay.
+
+One November day in 1797 Frederick William made his last public
+appearance at a banquet, with the Countess at his right hand; and seldom
+has festival had such a setting in tragedy. "None of the guests," we are
+told, "uttered a word or ate a mouthful of anything; the plates were
+cleared at the hasty ringing of a bell. A convulsive movement made by
+the sick man showed that he was suffering agonies. Before half-past nine
+every guest had left, greatly troubled. The majority of those who had
+been present never saw the unfortunate monarch again. They all shared
+the same presentiment of disaster, and wept."
+
+From that night the King was dead, even to his own Court. The gates of
+his palace were closed against the world, and none were allowed to
+approach the chamber in which his life was ebbing away, save the
+Countess, his nurse, and his doctors. Even his children were refused
+admittance to his presence. As the Marquis de Saint Mexent said, "The
+King of Prussia ends his days as though he were a rich benefactor. All
+the relations are excluded by the housekeeper."
+
+A few days before the end came the Countess was seen to leave the
+palace, carrying a large red portfolio--a suspicious circumstance which
+the Crown Prince's spies promptly reported to their master. There could
+be only one inference--she had been caught in the act of stealing State
+papers, a crime for which she would have to pay a heavy price as soon
+as her protector was no more! As a matter of fact the portfolio
+contained nothing more secret or valuable than the letters she had
+written to the King during the twenty-seven years of their romance,
+letters which, after reading, she consigned to the flames in her boudoir
+within an hour of the suspected theft of State documents.
+
+A few days later, on the night of the 16th of November (1797), the King
+entered on his "death agony," one fit of suffocation succeeding another,
+until the Countess, unable to bear any longer the sight of such
+suffering, was carried away in violent convulsions. She saw him no more;
+for by seven o'clock in the morning Frederick William had found release
+from his agony in death, and his son had begun to reign in his stead.
+
+At last the long-delayed hour of revenge had come to Frederick William
+III., who had always regarded his father's favourite as an enemy; and
+his vengeance was swift to strike. Before the late King's body was cold,
+his successor's emissaries appeared at the palace door, Unter den
+Linden, with orders to search her papers and to demand the keys of every
+desk and cupboard. Even then she scorned to fly before the storm which
+she knew was breaking. For three days and nights her carriage stood at
+her gates ready to take her away to safety; but she refused to move a
+step.
+
+Then one morning, before she had left her bed, a major of the guards,
+with a posse of soldiers, appeared at her bedroom door armed with a
+warrant for her arrest; and for many weeks she was a closely guarded
+prisoner in her own house, subject to daily insults and indignities from
+men who, a few weeks earlier, had saluted her as a Queen.
+
+At the trial which followed some very grave indictments were preferred
+against her. She was charged with having betrayed State secrets; with
+having robbed the Royal Exchequer; stolen the King's portfolio; and
+removed the priceless solitaire diamond from his crown, and the very
+rings from his fingers as he lay dying. To these and other equally grave
+charges the Countess gave a dignified denial, which the evidence she was
+able to produce supported. The diamond and the rings were, in fact,
+discovered in places indicated by her where they had been put, by the
+King's orders, for safe custody.
+
+The trial had a happier ending than, from the malignity of her enemies,
+especially of the King, might have been expected. After three months of
+durance she was removed to a Silesian fortress. Her houses and lands
+were taken from her; but her furniture and jewels were left untouched,
+and with them she was allowed to enjoy a pension of four thousand
+thalers a year. Such was the judgment of a Court which proved more
+merciful than she had perhaps a right to expect. And two months later,
+the influence and pleading of her friends set her free from her
+fortress-prison to spend her life where and as she would.
+
+The sun of her splendour had indeed set, but many years of peaceful and
+not unhappy life remained for our ex-Queen, who was still in the prime
+of her womanhood and beauty and with the magnetism that, to her last
+day, brought men to her feet. At fifty she was able to inspire such
+passion in the breast of a young artist, Francis Holbein, that he asked
+and won her hand in marriage. But this romance was short-lived, for
+within a year he left her, to spend the remainder of her days in Paris,
+Vienna, and her native Prussia. Here her adventurous career closed in
+such obscurity, at the age of sixty-eight, that even those who
+ministered to her last moments were unaware that the dying woman was the
+Countess who had played so dazzling a part a generation earlier, as
+favourite of the King of Prussia and Queen of her loveliest women.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+THE CORSICAN AND THE CREOLE
+
+Of the many women who succeeded one another with such bewildering
+rapidity in the favour of the first Napoleon, from Desirée Clary,
+daughter of the Marseilles silk-merchant, the "little wife" of his days
+of obscurity, to Madame Walewska, the beautiful Pole, who so fruitlessly
+bartered her charms for her country's salvation, only one really
+captured his fickle heart--Josephine de Beauharnais, the woman whom he
+raised to the splendour of an Imperial crown, only to fling her aside
+when she no longer served the purposes of his ambition.
+
+It was one October day in the year 1795 that Josephine, Vicomtesse de
+Beauharnais, first cast the spell of her beauty on the "ugly little
+Corsican," who had then got his foot well planted on the ladder, at the
+summit of which was his crown of empire. At twenty-six, the man who, but
+a little earlier, was an out-of-work captain, eating his heart out in a
+Marseilles slum, was General-in-Chief of the armies of France, with the
+disarmed rebels of Paris grovelling at his feet.
+
+One day a handsome boy came to him, craving permission to retain the
+sword his father had won, a favour which the General, pleased by the
+boy's frankness and manliness, granted. The next day the young rebel's
+mother presented herself to thank him with gracious words for his
+kindness to her son--a creature of another world than his, with a
+beauty, grace and refinement which were a new revelation to his
+bourgeois eyes.
+
+The fair vision haunted him; the music of her voice lingered in his
+ears. He must see her again. And, before another day had passed, we find
+the pale-faced, grim Corsican, with the burning eyes, sitting awkwardly
+on a horse-hair chair of Madame's dining-room in her small house in the
+Rue Chantereine, nervously awaiting the entry of the Vicomtesse who had
+already played such havoc with his peace of mind. And when at last she
+made her appearance, few would have recognised in the man, who made his
+shy, awkward bow, the famous General with whose name the whole of France
+was ringing.
+
+It was little wonder, perhaps, that the little Corsican's heart went
+pit-a-pat, or that his knees trembled under him, for the lady whose
+smile and the touch of whose hand sent a thrill through him, was indeed,
+to quote his own words, "beautiful as a dream." From the chestnut hair
+which rippled over her small, proudly poised head to the arch of her
+tiny, dainty feet, "made for homage and for kisses," she was, "all
+glorious without." There was witchery in every part of her--in the rich
+colour that mantled in her cheeks; the sweet brown eyes that looked out
+between long-fringed eyelids; the small, delicate nose; "the nostrils
+quivering at the least emotion"; the exquisite lines of the tall, supple
+figure, instinct with grace in every moment; and, above all, in the
+seductive music of a voice, every note of which was a caress.
+
+Sixteen years earlier, Josephine had come from Martinique to Paris as
+bride of the Vicomte de Beauharnais, with whom she had led a more or
+less unhappy life, until the guillotine of the Revolution left her a
+widow, with two children and an empty purse. But even this crowning
+calamity was powerless to crush the sunny-hearted Creole, who merely
+laughed at the load of debts which piled themselves up around her. A
+little of the wreckage of her husband's fortune had been rescued for her
+by influential friends; but this had disappeared long before Napoleon
+crossed her path. And at last the light-hearted widow realised that if
+she had a card left to play, she must play it quickly.
+
+Here then was her opportunity. The little General was obviously a slave
+at her feet; he was already a great man, destined to be still greater;
+and if he was bourgeois to his coarse finger-tips, he could at least
+serve as a stepping-stone to raise her from poverty and obscurity.
+
+As for Napoleon, he was a vanquished man--and he knew it--before ever he
+set foot in Madame's modest dining-room. When he left, he "trod on air,"
+for the Vicomtesse had been more than gracious to him. The next day he
+was drawn as by a magnet to the Rue Chantereine, and the next and the
+next, each interview with his divinity forging fresh links for the
+chain that bound him; and at each visit he met under Madame's roof some
+of the great ones of that other world in which Josephine moved, the old
+_noblesse_ of France--who paid her the homage due to a Queen.
+
+Thus vanity and ambition fed the flames of the passion which was
+consuming him; and within a fortnight he had laid his heart and his
+fortune, which at the time consisted of "his personal wardrobe and his
+military accoutrements" at the feet of the Creole widow; and one March
+day in 1796 Napoleon Bonaparte, General, and Josephine de Beauharnais,
+were made one by a registrar who obligingly described the bride as
+twenty-nine (thus robbing her of three years), and added two to the
+bridegroom's twenty-six years.
+
+After two days of rapturous honeymooning Napoleon was on his way to join
+his army in Italy, as reluctant a bridegroom as ever left Cupid at the
+bidding of Mars. At every change of horses during the long journey he
+dispatched letters to the wife he had left behind--letters full of
+passion and yearning. In one of them he wrote, "When I am tempted to
+curse my fate, I place my hand on my heart and find your portrait there.
+As I gaze at it I am filled with a joy unutterable. Life seems to hold
+no pain, save that of severance from my beloved."
+
+At Nice, amid all the labours and anxieties of organising his rabble
+army for a campaign, his thoughts are always taking wings to her; her
+portrait is ever in his hand. He says his prayers before it; and, when
+once he accidentally broke the glass, he was in an agony of despair and
+superstitious foreboding. His one cry was, "Come to me! Come to my heart
+and to my arms. Oh, that you had wings!"
+
+Even when flushed with the surrender of Piedmont after a fortnight's
+brilliant fighting, in which he had won half a dozen battles and reaped
+twenty-one standards, he would have bartered all his laurels for a sight
+of the woman he loved so passionately. But while he was thus yearning
+for her in distant Italy, Madame was much too happy in her beloved Paris
+to lend an ear to his pleadings. As wife of the great Napoleon she was a
+veritable Queen, fawned on and flattered by all the great ones in the
+capital. Hers was the place of honour at every fête and banquet; the
+banners her husband had captured were presented to her amid a tumult of
+acclamation; when she entered a theatre the entire house rose to greet
+her with cheers. She was thus in no mood to leave her Queendom for the
+arms of her husband, whose unattractive person and clumsy ardour only
+repelled her.
+
+When his letters calling her to him became more and more imperative, she
+could no longer ignore them. But she could, at least, invent an
+excellent excuse for her tarrying. She wrote to tell him that she was
+expecting to become a mother. This at least would put a stop to his
+importunity. And it did. Napoleon was full of delight--and self-reproach
+at the joyful news. "Forgive me, my beloved," he wrote. "How can I ever
+atone? You were ill and I accused you of lingering in Paris. My love
+robs me of my reason, and I shall never regain it.... A child, sweet as
+its mother, is soon to lie in your arms. Oh! that I could be with you,
+even if only for one day!"
+
+To his brother Joseph he writes in a similar strain: "The thought of her
+illness drives me mad. I long to see her, to hold her in my arms. I love
+her so madly, I cannot live without her. If she were to die, I should
+have absolutely nothing left to live for."
+
+When, however, he learns that Madame's illness is not sufficient to
+interfere with her Paris gaieties, a different mood seizes him. Jealousy
+and anger take the place of anxious sympathy. He insists that she shall
+join him--threatens to resign his command if she refuses. Josephine no
+longer dares to keep up her deception. She must obey. And thus, in a
+flood of angry tears, we see her starting on her long journey to Italy,
+in company with her dog, her maid, and a brilliant escort of officers.
+Arrived at Milan, she was welcomed by Napoleon with open arms; but
+"after two days of rapture and caresses," he was face to face with the
+great crisis of Castiglione. His army was in imminent danger of
+annihilation; his own fate and fortune trembled in the balance. Nothing
+short of a miracle could save him; and on the third day of his new
+honeymoon he was back again in the field at grips with fate.
+
+But even at this supreme crisis he found time to write daily letters to
+the dear one who was awaiting the issue in Milan, begging her to share
+his life. "Your tears," he writes, "drive me to distraction; they set my
+blood on fire. Come to me here, that at least we may be able to say
+before we die we had so many days of happiness." Thus he pleads in
+letter after letter until Josephine, for very shame, is forced to yield,
+and to return to her husband, who, as Masson tells us, "was all day at
+her feet as before some divinity."
+
+Such days of bliss were, however, few and far between for the man who
+was now in the throes of a Titanic struggle, on the issue of which his
+fortunes and those of France hung. But when duty took him into danger
+where his lady could not follow, she found ample solace. Monsieur
+Charles, Leclerc's adjutant, was all the cavalier she needed--an Adonis
+for beauty, a Hercules for strength, the handsomest soldier in
+Napoleon's army, a past-master in all the arts of love-making. There was
+no dull moment for Josephine with such a squire at her elbow to pour
+flatteries into her ears and to entertain her with his clever tongue.
+
+But Monsieur Charles had short shrift when Napoleon's jealousy was
+aroused. He was quickly sent packing to Paris; and Josephine was left to
+write to her aunt, "I am bored to extinction." She was weary of her
+husband's love-rhapsodies, disgusted with the crudities of his passion.
+She had, however, a solace in the homage paid to her everywhere. At
+Genoa she was received as a Queen; at Florence the Grand Duke called her
+"cousin"; the entire army, from General to private, was under the spell
+of her beauty and the graciousness that captivated all hearts. She was,
+too, reaping a rich harvest of costly presents and bribes, from all who
+sought to win Napoleon's favour through her.
+
+The Italian campaign at last over, Madame found herself back again in
+her dear Paris, raised to a higher pinnacle of Queendom than ever,
+basking in the splendours of the husband whose glories she so gladly
+shared, though she held his love in such light esteem. But for him, at
+least, there was no time for dallying. Within a few months he was waving
+farewell to her again, from the bridge of the _Océan_ which was carrying
+him off to the conquest of Egypt, buoyed by her promise that she would
+join him when his work was done. And long before he had reached Malta
+she was back again in the vortex of Paris gaiety, setting the tongue of
+scandal wagging by her open flirtation with one lover after another.
+
+It was not long before the news of Madame's "goings-on" reached as far
+as Alexandria. The dormant jealousy in Napoleon, lulled to rest since
+Monsieur Charles had vanished from the scene, was fanned into flame. He
+was furious; disillusion seized him, and thoughts of divorce began to
+enter his brain. Two could play at this game of falseness; and there
+were many beautiful women in Egypt only too eager to console the great
+Napoleon.
+
+When news came to Josephine that her husband had landed at Fréjus, and
+would shortly be with her, she was in a state bordering on panic. She
+shrank from facing his anger; from the revelation of debts and unwifely
+conduct which was inevitable. Her all was at stake and the game was more
+than half lost. In her desperation she took her courage in both hands
+and set forth, as fast as horses could take her, to meet Napoleon, that
+she might at least have the first word with him; but as ill-luck would
+have it, he travelled by a different route and she missed him.
+
+On her return to Paris she found the door of Napoleon's room barred
+against her. "After repeated knocking in vain," says M. Masson, "she
+sank on her knees sobbing aloud. Still the door remained closed. For a
+whole day the scene was prolonged, without any sign from within. Worn
+out at last, Josephine was about to retire in despair, when her maid
+fetched her children. Eugène and Hortense, kneeling beside their mother,
+mingled their supplications with hers. At last the door was opened;
+speechless, tears streaming down his cheeks, his face convulsed with the
+struggle that had rent his heart, Bonaparte appeared, holding out his
+arms to his wife."
+
+Such was the meeting of the unfaithful Josephine and the husband who had
+vowed that he would no longer call her wife. The reconciliation was
+complete; for Napoleon was no man of half-measures. He frankly forgave
+the weeping woman all her sins against him; and with generous hand
+removed the mountain of debt her extravagance had heaped up--debts
+amounting to more than two million francs, one million two hundred
+thousand of which she owed to tradespeople alone.
+
+But Napoleon's passion for his wife, of whose beauty few traces now
+remained, was dead. His loyalty only remained; and this, in turn, was to
+be swept away by the tide of his ambition. A few years later Josephine
+was crowned Empress by her husband, and consecrated by the Pope, after
+a priest had given the sanction of the Church to her incomplete
+nuptials.
+
+She had now reached the dazzling zenith of her career. At the Tuileries,
+at St Cloud, and at Malmaison, she held her splendid Courts as Empress.
+She had the most magnificent crown jewels in the world; and at Malmaison
+she spent her happiest hours in spreading her gems out on the table
+before her, and feasting her eyes on their many-hued fires. Her
+wardrobes were full of the daintiest and costliest gowns of which, we
+are told, more than two hundred were summer-dresses of percale and of
+muslin, costing from one thousand to two thousand francs each.
+
+Less than six years of such splendour and luxury, and the inevitable end
+of it all came. Napoleon's eyes were dazzled by the offer of an alliance
+with the eldest daughter of the Austrian Emperor. His whole ambition now
+was focused on providing a successor to his crown (Josephine had failed
+him in this important matter); and in Marie Louise of Austria he not
+only saw the prospective mother of his heir, but an alliance with one of
+the great reigning houses of Europe, which would lend a much-needed
+glamour to his bourgeois crown.
+
+His mind was at last inevitably made up. Josephine must be divorced. Her
+pleadings and tears and faintings were powerless to melt him. And one
+December day, in the year 1809, Napoleon was free to wed his Austrian
+Princess; and Josephine was left to console herself as best she might,
+with the knowledge that at least she had rescued from her downfall a
+life-income of three million francs a year, on which she could still
+play the rôle of Empress at the Elysée, Malmaison, and Navarre, the
+sumptuous homes with which Napoleon's generosity had dowered the wife
+who failed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+THE ENSLAVER OF A KING
+
+More than fifty years have gone since the penitent soul of Lola Montez
+took flight to its Creator; but there must be some still living whose
+pulses quicken at the very mention of a name which recalls so much
+mystery and romance and bewildering fascination of the days when, for
+them, as for her, "all the world was young."
+
+Who was she, this woman whose beauty dazzled the eyes and whose witchery
+turned the heads of men in the forties and fifties of last century? A
+dozen countries, from Spain to India, were credited with her birth. Some
+said she was the daughter of a noble house, kidnapped by gipsies in her
+infancy; others were equally confident that she had for father the
+coroneted rake, Lord Byron, and for mother a charwoman.
+
+Her early years were wrapped in a mystery which she mischievously helped
+to intensify by declaring that her father was a famous Spanish toreador.
+Her origin, however, was prosaic enough. She was the daughter of an
+obscure army captain, Gilbert, who hailed from Limerick; her mother was
+an Oliver, from whom she received her strain of Spanish blood; and the
+names given to her at a Limerick font, one day in 1818, two months after
+her parents had made their runaway match, were Marie Dolores Eliza
+Rosanna.
+
+When Captain Gilbert returned, after his furlough-romance, to India, he
+took his wife and child with him. Seven years later cholera removed him;
+his widow found speedy solace in the arms of a second husband, one
+Captain Craigie; and Dolores was packed off to Scotland to the care of
+her stepfather's people until her schooldays were ended.
+
+In the next few years she alternated between the Scottish household,
+with its chilly atmosphere of Calvinism, and schools in Paris and
+London, until, her education completed, she escaped the husband, a
+mummified Indian judge, whom her mother had chosen for her, by eloping
+with a young army officer, a Captain James, and with him made the return
+voyage to India.
+
+A few months later her romance came to a tragic end, when her Lothario
+husband fell under the spell of a brother-officer's wife and ran away
+with her to the seclusion of the Neilgherry Hills, leaving his wife
+stranded and desolate. And thus it was that Dolores Gilbert wiped the
+dust of India finally off her feet, and with a cheque for a thousand
+pounds, which her good-hearted stepfather slipped into her hand, started
+once more for England, to commence that career of adventure which has
+scarcely a parallel even in fiction. She had had more than enough of
+wedded life, of Scottish Calvinism, and of a mother's selfish
+indifference. She would be henceforth the mistress of her own fate. She
+had beauty such as few women could boast--she had talents and a stout
+heart; and these should be her fortune.
+
+Her first ambition was to be a great actress; and when she found that
+acting was not her forte she determined to dance her way to fame and
+fortune, and after a year's training in London and Spain she was ready
+to conquer the world with her twinkling feet and supple body.
+
+Of her first appearance as a danseuse, before a private gathering of
+Pressmen, we have the following account by one who was there: "Her
+figure was even more attractive than her face, lovely as the latter was.
+Lithe and graceful as a young fawn, every movement that she made seemed
+instinct with melody. Her dark eyes were blazing and flashing with
+excitement. In her pose grace seemed involuntarily to preside over her
+limbs and dispose their attitude. Her foot and ankle were almost
+faultless."
+
+Such was the enthusiastic description of Lola Montez (as she now chose
+to call herself) on the eve of her bid for fame as a dancer who should
+perhaps rival the glories of a Taglioni. A few days later the world of
+rank and fashion flocked to see the début of the danseuse whose fame had
+been trumpeted abroad; and as Lola pirouetted on to the stage--the focus
+of a thousand pairs of eyes--she felt that the crowning moment of her
+life had come.
+
+Almost before her twinkling feet had carried her to the centre of the
+stage an ominous sound broke the silence of expectation. A hiss came
+from one of the boxes; it was repeated from another, and another. The
+sibilant sound spread round the house; it swelled into a sinister storm
+of hisses and boos. The light faded out of the dancer's eyes, the smile
+from her lips; and as the tumult of disapprobation rose to a deafening
+climax the curtain was rung down, and Lola rushed weeping from the
+stage. Her career as a dancer, in England, had ended at its birth.
+
+But Lola Montez was not the woman to sit down calmly under defeat. A few
+weeks later we find her tripping it on the stage at Dresden, and at
+Berlin, where the King of Prussia himself was among her applauders. But
+such success as the Continent brought her was too small to keep her now
+deplenished purse supplied. She fell on evil days, and for two years led
+a precarious life--now, we are told, singing in Brussels streets to keep
+starvation from her side, now playing the political spy in Russia, and
+again, by a capricious turn of fortune's wheel, being fêted and courted
+in the exalted circles of Vienna and Paris.
+
+From the French capital she made her way to Warsaw, where stirring
+adventures awaited her, for before she had been there many days the
+Polish Viceroy, General Paskevitch, cast his aged but lascivious eyes on
+her young beauty and sent an equerry to desire her presence at the
+palace. "He offered her" (so runs the story as told by her own lips)
+"the gift of a splendid country estate, and would load her with diamonds
+besides. The poor old man was a comic sight to look upon--unusually
+short in stature; and every time he spoke he threw his head back and
+opened his mouth so wide as to expose the artificial gold roof of his
+palate. A death's head making love to a lady could not have been a more
+horrible or disgusting sight. These generous gifts were most
+respectfully and very decidedly declined."
+
+But General Paskevitch was not disposed to be spurned with impunity. The
+contemptuous beauty must be punished for her scorn of his wooing; and,
+when she made her appearance on the stage the same night it was to a
+greeting of hisses by the Viceroy's hirelings. The next night brought
+the same experience; but when on the third night the storm arose, "Lola,
+in a rage, rushed down to the footlights and declared that those hisses
+had been set at her by the director, because she had refused certain
+gifts from the old Prince, his master. Then came a tremendous shower of
+applause from the audience, and the old Princess, who was present, both
+nodded her head and clapped her hands to the enraged and fiery little
+Lola."
+
+A tumultuous crowd of Poles escorted her to her lodgings that night. She
+was the heroine of the hour, who had dared to give open defiance to the
+hated Viceroy. The next morning Warsaw was "bubbling and raging with the
+signs of an incipient revolution. When Lola Montez was apprised of the
+fact that her arrest was ordered she barricaded her door; and when the
+police arrived she sat behind it with a pistol in her hand, declaring
+that she would certainly shoot the first man who should dare to break
+in." Fortunately for Lola, her pistol was not used. The French Consul
+came to her rescue, claiming her as a subject of France, and thus
+protecting her from arrest. But the order that she should quit Warsaw
+was peremptory, and Warsaw saw her no more.
+
+Back again in Paris, Lola found that even her new halo of romance was
+powerless to win favour for her dancing. Again she was to hear the storm
+of hisses; and this time in her rage "she retaliated by making faces at
+her audience," and flinging parts of her clothing in their faces. But if
+Paris was not to be charmed by her dainty feet it was ready to yield an
+unstinted homage to her rare beauty and charm. She found a flattering
+welcome in the most exclusive of _salons_; the cleverest men in the
+capital confessed the charm of her wit and surrounded her with their
+flatteries.
+
+M. Dujarrier, the most brilliant of them all, young, rich, and handsome,
+fell head over ears in love with her and asked her to be his wife. But
+the cup of happiness was scarcely at her lips before it was dashed away.
+Dujarrier was challenged to a duel by Beauvallon, a political enemy; and
+when Lola was on her way to stop the meeting she met a mournful
+procession bringing back her dead lover's body, on which she flung
+herself in an agony of grief and covered it with kisses. At the
+subsequent trial of Beauvallon she electrified the Court by declaring
+with streaming eyes, "If Beauvallon wanted satisfaction I would have
+fought him myself, for I am a better shot than poor Dujarrier ever was."
+And she was probably only speaking the truth, for her courage was as
+great as the love she bore for the victim of the duel.
+
+As a child Lola had shocked her puritanical Scottish hosts by declaring
+that "she meant to marry a Prince," and unkindly as fate had treated
+her, she had by no means relinquished this childish ambition. It may be
+that it was in her mind when, a year and a half after the tragedy that
+had so clouded her life in Paris, she drifted to Munich in search of
+more conquests.
+
+Now in the full bloom of her radiant loveliness--"the most beautiful
+woman in Europe" many declared--mingling the vivacity of an Irish beauty
+with the voluptuous charms of a Spaniard--she was splendidly equipped
+for the conquest of any man, be he King or subject; and Ludwig I., King
+of Bavaria, had as keen an eye for female beauty as for the objects of
+art on which he squandered his millions.
+
+It was this Ludwig who made Munich the fairest city in all Germany, and
+who enriched his palace with the finest private collection of pictures
+and statues that Europe can boast. But among all his treasures of art he
+valued none more than his gallery of portraits of fair women, each of
+whom had, at one time or another, visited his capital.
+
+Such was Ludwig, Bavaria's King, to whom Lola Montez now brought a new
+revelation of female loveliness, to which his gallery could furnish no
+rival. At first sight of her, as she danced in the opera ballet, he was
+undone. The next day and the next his eyes were feasting on her charms
+and her supple grace; and within a week she was installed at the Court
+and was being introduced by His Majesty as "my best friend."
+
+And not only the King, but all Munich was at the feet of the lovely
+"Spaniard"; her drives through the streets were Royal progresses; her
+receptions in the palace which Ludwig presented to her were thronged by
+all the greatest in Bavaria; on Prince and peasant alike she cast the
+spell of her witchery. As for Ludwig, connoisseur of the beautiful, he
+was her shadow and her slave, showering on her gifts an Empress might
+well have envied. Fortune had relented at last and was now smiling her
+sweetest on the adventuress; and if Lola had been content with such
+triumphs as these the story of her later life might have been very
+different. But she craved power to add to her trophies, and aspired to
+take the sceptre from the weak hand of her Royal lover.
+
+Never did woman make a more fatal mistake. On the one hand was arrayed
+the might of Austria and of Rome, whose puppet Ludwig was; on the other
+hand was a nation clamouring for reforms. Revolution was already in the
+air, and it was reserved to this too daring woman to precipitate the
+storm.
+
+Her first ambition was to persuade Ludwig to dismiss his Ministry, to
+shake himself free from foreign influence, and to inaugurate the era of
+reform for which his subjects were clamouring. In vain did Austria try
+to win her to its side by bribes of gold (no less than a million
+florins) and the offer of a noble husband. To all its seductions Lola
+turned as deaf an ear as to the offers of Poland's Viceroy. And so
+strenuous was her championship of the people that the Cabinet was
+compelled to resign in favour of the "Lola Ministry" of reformers.
+
+So far she had succeeded, but the price was still to pay. The
+reactionaries, supported by Austria and the Romish Church, were quick
+to retaliate by waging remorseless war against the King's mistress; and,
+among their most powerful weapons, used the students' clubs of Munich,
+who, from being Lola's most enthusiastic admirers, became her bitterest
+enemies.
+
+To counteract this move Lola enrolled a students' corps of her own--a
+small army of young stalwarts, whose cry was "Lola and Liberty," and who
+were sworn to fight her battles, if need be, to the death. Thus was the
+fire of revolution kindled by a woman's vanity and lust of power.
+Students' fights became everyday incidents in the streets of Munich, and
+on one occasion when Lola, pistol in hand, intervened to prevent
+bloodshed, she was rescued with difficulty by Ludwig himself and a
+detachment of soldiers.
+
+The climax came when she induced the King to close the University for a
+year--an autocratic step which aroused the anger not only of every
+student but of the whole country. The streets were paraded by mobs
+crying, "Down with the concubine!" and "Long live the Republic!"
+Barricades were erected and an influential deputation waited on the King
+to demand the expulsion of the worker of so much mischief.
+
+In vain did Ludwig declare that he would part with his crown rather than
+with the Countess of Landsfeld--for this was one of the titles he had
+conferred on his favourite. The forces arrayed against him were too
+strong, and the order of expulsion was at last conceded. It was only,
+however, when her palace was in flames and surrounded by a howling mob
+that the dauntless woman deigned to seek refuge in flight, and,
+disguised as a boy, suffered herself to be escorted to the frontier. Two
+weeks later Ludwig lost his crown.
+
+The remainder of this strange story may be told in a few words. Thrown
+once more on the world, with a few hastily rescued jewels for all her
+fortune, Lola Montez resumed her stage life, appearing in London in a
+drama entitled "Lola Montez: or a Countess for an Hour." Here she made a
+conquest of a young Life Guardsman, called Heald, who had recently
+succeeded to an estate worth £5000 a year; and with him she spent a few
+years, made wretched by continual quarrels, in one of which she stabbed
+him. When he was "found drowned" at Lisbon she drifted to Paris, and
+later to the United States, which she toured with a drama entitled "Lola
+Montez in Bavaria." There she made her third appearance at the altar,
+with a bridegroom named Hull, whom she divorced as soon as the honeymoon
+had waned.
+
+Thus she carried her restless spirit through a few more years of
+wandering and growing poverty, until a chance visit to Spurgeon's
+Tabernacle revolutionised her life. She decided to abandon the stage and
+to devote the remainder of her days to penitence and good works. But the
+end was already near. In New York, where she had gone to lecture, she
+was struck down by paralysis, and a few weeks before she had seen her
+forty-second birthday she died in a charitable institution, joining
+fervently in the prayers of the clergyman who was summoned to her
+death-bed.
+
+"When she was near the end, and could not speak," the clergyman says,
+"I asked her to let me know by a sign whether she was at peace. She
+fixed her eyes on mine and nodded affirmatively. I do not think I ever
+saw deeper penitence and humility than in this poor woman."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+AN EMPRESS AND HER FAVOURITES
+
+When Sophie Augusta Frederica of Anhalt-Zerbst was romping on the
+ramparts or in the streets of Stettin with burghers' children for
+playmates, he would have been a bold prophet who would have predicted
+that one day she would be the most splendid figure among Europe's
+sovereigns, "the only great man in Europe," according to Voltaire, "an
+angel before whom all men should be silent"; and that, while dazzling
+Europe by her statesmanship and learning, she would afford more material
+for scandal than any woman, except perhaps Christina of Sweden, who ever
+wore a crown.
+
+There is much, it is true, to be said in extenuation of the weakness
+that has left such a stain on the memory of Catherine II. of Russia.
+Equipped far beyond most women with the beauty and charms that fascinate
+men, and craving more than most of her sex the love of man, she was
+mated when little more than a child to the most degenerate Prince in all
+Europe.
+
+The Grand Duke Peter, heir to the Russian throne, who at sixteen took to
+wife the girl-Princess of Anhalt-Zerbst, was already an expert in
+almost every vice. Imbecile in mind, he found his chief pleasure in the
+company of the most degraded. He rarely went to bed sober--in fact, his
+bride's first sight of him was when he was drunk, at the age of ten. He
+was, too, "a liar and a coward, vicious and violent; pale, sickly, and
+uncomely--a crooked soul in a prematurely ravaged body."
+
+Such was the Grand Duke Peter, to whom the high-spirited, beautiful
+Princess Sophie (thenceforth to be known as "Catherine") was tied for
+life one day in the year 1744--a youth the very sight of whom repelled
+her, while his vices filled her with loathing. Add to this revolting
+union the fact that she found herself under the despotic rule of the
+Empress Elizabeth, who made no concealment of her hatred and jealousy of
+the fair young Princess, surrounded her with spies, and treated her as a
+rebellious child, to be checked and bullied at every turn--and it is not
+difficult to understand the spirit of recklessness and defiance that was
+soon roused in Catherine's breast.
+
+There was at the Russian Court no lack of temptation to indulge this
+spirit of revolt to the full. The young German beauty, mated to worse
+than a clown, soon had her Court of admirers to pour flatteries into her
+dainty ears, and she would perhaps have been less than a woman if she
+had not eagerly drunk them in. She had no need of anyone to tell her
+that she was fair. "I know I am beautiful as the day," she once
+exclaimed, as she looked at her mirrored reflection in her first ball
+finery at St Petersburg, with a red rose in her glorious hair; and the
+mirror told no flattering tale.
+
+See the picture Poniatowski, one of her earliest and most ardent slaves,
+paints of the young Grand Duchess. "With her black hair she had a
+dazzling whiteness of skin, a vivid colour, large blue eyes prominent
+and eloquent, black and long eyebrows, a Greek nose, a mouth that looked
+made for kissing, a slight, rather tall figure, a carriage that was
+lively, yet full of nobility, a pleasing voice, and a laugh as merry as
+the humour through which she could pass with ease from the most playful
+and childish amusements to the most fatiguing mathematical
+calculations."
+
+With the brain, even in those early years, of a clever man, she was
+essentially a woman, with all a woman's passion for the admiration and
+love of men; and one cannot wonder, however much one may deplore, that
+while her imbecile husband was guzzling with common soldiers, or playing
+with his toys and tin cannon in bed, vacuous smiles on his face, his
+beautiful bride should find her own pleasures in the homage of a
+Soltykoff, a Poniatowski, an Orloff, or any other of the legion of
+lovers who in quick succession took her fancy.
+
+The first among her admirers to capture her fancy was Sergius Soltykoff,
+her chamberlain, high-born, "beautiful as the day," polished courtier,
+supple-tongued wooer, to whom the Grand Duchess gave the heart her
+husband spurned. But Soltykoff's reign was short; the fickle Princess,
+ever seeking fresh conquests, wearied of him as of all her lovers in
+turn, and his place was taken within a year by Stanislas Poniatowski, a
+fascinating young Pole, who returned to St Petersburg with a reputation
+of gallantry won in almost every Court of Europe.
+
+Poniatowski had not perhaps the physical perfections of his dethroned
+predecessor, but he had the well-stored brain that made an even more
+potent appeal to Catherine. He could talk "like an angel" on every
+subject that appealed to her, from art to philosophy; and he had,
+moreover, a magnetic charm of manner which few women could resist.
+
+Such a lover was, indeed, after her heart, for he brought romance and
+adventure to his wooing; and whether he found his way to her boudoir
+disguised as a ladies' tailor or as one of the Grand Duke's musicians,
+or made open love to her under the very nose of her courtiers, he played
+his rôle of lover to admiration. Once Peter, in jealous mood, threatened
+to run his rival through with his sword, and, in his rage, "went into
+his wife's bedroom and pulled her out of bed without leaving her time to
+dress." An hour later his anger had changed to an amused complaisance,
+and he was supping with the culprits, and with boisterous laughter was
+drinking their healths.
+
+When at last a political storm drove Poniatowski from Russia, Catherine,
+who never forgot a banished lover, secured for him the crown of Poland.
+
+Thus the favourites come and go, each supreme for a time, each
+inevitably packed off to give place to a successor. With Poniatowski
+away in Poland, Catherine cast her eyes round her Court to find a third
+favourite, and her choice was soon made, for of all her army of admirers
+there was one who fully satisfied her ideal of handsome manhood.
+
+Of the five Orloff brothers, each a Goliath in stature and a Hercules in
+strength, the handsomest was Gregory, "the giant with the face of an
+angel." Towering head and shoulders over most of his fellow-courtiers,
+with knotted muscles which could fell an ox or crush a horse-shoe with
+the closing of a hand, Gregory Orloff was reputed the bravest man in
+Russia, as he was the idol of his soldiers. He was also a notorious
+gambler and drinker and the hero of countless love adventures.
+
+No greater contrast could be possible than between this dare-devil son
+of Anak and the cultured, almost feminine Poniatowski; but Catherine
+loved, above all things, variety, and here it was in startling
+abundance. Nor was her new lover any the less desirable because he was
+some years younger than herself, or that his grandfather had been a
+common soldier in the army of Peter the Great.
+
+And Gregory Orloff proved himself as bold in wooing as he was brave in
+war. For him there was no stealing up back stairs, no masquerading in
+disguises. He was the elect favourite of the future Empress of Russia,
+and all the world should know it. He was inseparable from his mistress,
+and paid his court to her under the eyes of her husband; while
+Catherine, thus emboldened, made as little concealment of her
+partiality.
+
+But troublous days were coming to break the idyll of their love. The
+Empress Elizabeth, as was inevitable, at last drank herself to death,
+and her nephew Peter, now a besotted imbecile of thirty-four, put on the
+Imperial robes, and was free to indulge his madness without restraint.
+The first use he made of his freedom was to subject his wife to every
+insult and humiliation his debased brain could suggest. He flaunted his
+amours and vices before her, taunted her in public with her own
+indiscretions, and shouted in his cups that he would divorce her.
+
+Not content with these outrages on his Empress, he lost no opportunity
+of disgusting his subjects and driving his soldiers to the verge of
+mutiny. Such an intolerable state of things could only have one issue.
+The Emperor was undoubtedly mad; the Emperor must go.
+
+Over the _coup d'état_ which followed we must pass hurriedly--the
+conspiracy of Catherine and the Orloffs, the eager response of the army
+which flocked to the Empress, "kissing me, embracing my hands, my feet,
+my dress, and calling me their saviour"; the marching of the insurgent
+troops to Oranienbaum, with Catherine, astride on horseback, at their
+head; and Peter's craven submission, when he crawled on his knees to his
+wife, with whimpering and tears, begging her to allow him to keep "his
+mistress, his dog, his negro, and his violin."
+
+The Emperor was safe behind barred doors at Mopsa; Catherine was now
+Empress in fact as well as name. Three weeks later Peter was dead; was
+he done to death by Catherine's orders? To this day none can say with
+certainty. The story of this tragedy as told by Castèra makes gruesome
+reading.
+
+One day Alexis Orloff and Teplof appeared at Mopsa to announce to the
+deposed sovereign his approaching deliverance and to ask a dinner of
+him. Glasses and brandy were ordered, and while Teplof was amusing the
+Tsar, Orloff filled the glasses, adding poison to one of them.
+
+"The Tsar, suspecting no harm, took the poison and swallowed it. He was
+soon seized with agonising pains. He screamed aloud for milk, but the
+two monsters again presented poison to him and forced him to take it.
+When the Tsar's valet bravely interposed he was hurled from the room. In
+the midst of the tumult there entered Prince Baratinski, who commanded
+the Guard. Orloff, who had already thrown down the Tsar, pressed upon
+his chest with his own knees, holding him fast at the same time by the
+throat. Baratinski and Teplof then passed a table-napkin with a sliding
+knot round his neck, and the murderers accomplished the work of death by
+strangling him."
+
+Such is the story as it has come down to us, and as it was believed in
+Russia at the time. That Gregory Orloff was innocent of a crime in which
+his own brother played a leading part is as little to be credited as
+that Catherine herself was in ignorance of the design on her husband's
+life. But, however this may be, we are told that when the news of her
+husband's death was brought to the Empress at a banquet, she was to all
+appearance overcome with horror and grief. She left the table with
+streaming eyes and spent the next few days in unapproachable solitude
+in her rooms.
+
+Thus at last Catherine was free both from the tyranny of Elizabeth and
+from the brutality of her bestial husband. She was sole sovereign of all
+the Russias, at liberty to indulge any caprice that entered her
+versatile brain. That her subjects, almost to a man, regarded her with
+horror as her husband's murderer, that this detestation was shared by
+the army that had put her on the throne, and by the nobles who had been
+her slaves, troubled her little. She was mistress of her fate, and
+strong enough (as indeed she proved) to hold, with a firm grasp, the
+sceptre she had won.
+
+High as Gregory Orloff had stood in her favour before she came to her
+crown, his position was now more splendid and secure. She showered her
+favours on him with prodigal hand. Lands and jewels and gold were
+squandered on her "First Favourite"--the official designation she
+invented for him; and he wore on his broad chest her miniature in a
+blazing oval of diamonds, the crowning mark of her approval. And to his
+brothers she was almost equally generous, for in a few years of her
+ascendancy the Orloffs were enriched by vast estates on which forty-five
+thousand serfs toiled, by palaces, and by gold to the amount of
+seventeen million roubles. Such it was to be in the good books of
+Catherine II., Empress of Russia.
+
+With riches and power, Gregory's ambition grew until he dreamt of
+sitting on the throne itself by Catherine's side; and in her foolish
+infatuation even this prize might have been his, had not wiser counsels
+come to her rescue. "The Empress," said Panine to her, "can do what she
+likes; but Madame Orloff can never be Empress of Russia." And thus
+Gregory's greatest ambition was happily nipped in the bud.
+
+The man who had played his cards with such skill and discretion in the
+early days of his love-making had now, his head swollen by pride and
+power, grown reckless. If he could not be Emperor in name, he would at
+least wield the sceptre. The woman to whom he owed all was, he thought,
+but a puppet in his hands, as ready to do his bidding as any of his
+minions. But through all her dallying Catherine's smiles masked an iron
+will. In heart she was a woman; in brain and will-power, a man. And
+Orloff, like many another favourite, was to learn the lesson to his
+cost.
+
+The time came when she could no longer tolerate his airs and
+assumptions. There was only one Empress, but lovers were plentiful, and
+she already had an eye on his successor. And thus it was that one day
+the swollen Orloff was sent on a diplomatic mission to arrange peace
+between Russia and Turkey. When she bade him good-bye she called him her
+"angel of peace," but she knew that it was her angel's farewell to his
+paradise.
+
+How the Ambassador, instead of making peace, stirred up the embers of
+war into fresh flame is a matter of history. But he was not long left to
+work such mad mischief. While he was swaggering at a Jassy fête, in a
+costume ablaze with diamonds worth a million roubles, news came to him
+of a good-looking young lieutenant who was not only installed in his
+place by Catherine's side, but was actually occupying his own
+apartments. Within an hour he was racing back to St Petersburg, resting
+neither night nor day until he had covered the thousand leagues that
+separated him from the capital.
+
+Before, however, his sweating horses could enter it, he was stopped by
+Catherine's emissaries and ordered to repair to the Imperial Palace at
+Gatshina. And then he realised that his sun had indeed come to its
+setting. His honours were soon stripped from him, and although he was
+allowed to keep his lands, his gold and jewels, the spoils of Cupid, the
+diamond-framed miniature, was taken away to adorn the breast of his
+successor, the lieutenant.
+
+Under this cloud of disfavour Orloff conducted himself with such
+resignation--none knew better than he how futile it was to fight--that
+Catherine, before many months had passed, not only recalled him to
+Court, but secured for him a Princedom of the Holy Empire. "As for
+Prince Gregory," she said amiably, "he is free to go or stay, to hunt,
+to drink, or to gamble. I intend to live according to my own pleasure,
+and in entire independence."
+
+After a tragically brief wedded life with a beautiful girl-cousin, who
+died of consumption, Orloff returned to St Petersburg to spend the last
+few months of his life, "broken-hearted and mad." And to his last hour
+his clouded brain was tortured with visions of the "avenging shade of
+the murdered Peter."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY CINDERELLA
+
+It was to all seeming a strange whim that caused Cardinal Mazarin, one
+day in the year 1653, to summon his nieces, daughters of his sister,
+Hieronyme Mancini, from their obscurity in Italy to bask in the sunshine
+of his splendours in Paris.
+
+At the time of this odd caprice, Richelieu's crafty successor had
+reached the zenith of his power. His was the most potent and splendid
+figure in all Europe that did not wear a crown. He was the avowed
+favourite and lover of Anne of Austria, Queen of France, to whose vanity
+he had paid such skilful court--indeed it was common rumour that she had
+actually given him her hand in secret marriage. The boy-King, Louis
+XIV., was a puppet in his strong hands. He was, in fact, the dictator of
+France, whose smiles the greatest courtiers tried to win, and before
+whose frowns they trembled.
+
+In contrast to such magnificence, his sister, Madame Mancini, was the
+wife of a petty Italian baron, who was struggling to bring up her five
+daughters on a pathetically scanty purse--as far removed from her
+magnificent brother as a moth from a star. There was, on the face of
+things, every reason why the great and all-powerful Cardinal should
+leave his nieces to their genteel poverty; and we can imagine both the
+astonishment and delight with which Madame Mancini received the summons
+to Paris which meant such a revolution in life for her and her
+daughters.
+
+If the Mancini girls had no heritage of money, they had at least the
+dower of beauty. Each of the five gave promise of a rare
+loveliness--with the solitary exception of Marie, Madame's third
+daughter, who at fourteen was singularly unattractive even for that
+awkward age. Tall, thin, and angular, without a vestige of grace either
+of figure or movement, she had a sallow face out of which two great
+black eyes looked gloomily, and a mouth wide and thin-lipped. She was,
+in addition, shy and slow-witted to the verge of stupidity. Marie, in
+fact, was quite hopeless, the "ugly duckling" of a good-looking family,
+and for this reason an object of dislike and resentment to her mother.
+
+Certainly, said Madame, Marie must be left behind. Her other daughters
+would be a source of pride to their uncle; he could secure great matches
+for them, but Marie--pah! she would bring discredit on the whole family.
+And so it was decided in conclave that the "ugly duckling" should be
+left in a nunnery--the only fit place for her. But Marie happily had a
+spirit of her own. She would not be left behind, she declared; and if
+she must go to a nunnery, why there were nunneries in plenty in France
+to which they could send her. And Marie had her way.
+
+She was not, however, to escape the cloister after all, for to a Paris
+nunnery she was consigned when her Cardinal uncle had set eyes on her.
+"Let her have a year or two there," was his verdict, "and, who knows,
+she may blossom into a beauty yet. At any rate she can put on flesh and
+not be the scarecrow she is." And thus, while her more favoured sisters
+were revelling in the gaieties of Court life, Marie was sent to tell her
+beads and to spend Spartan days among the nuns.
+
+Nearly two years passed before Mazarin expressed a wish to see his ugly
+niece again; and it was indeed a very different Marie who now made her
+curtsy to him. Gone were the angular figure, the awkward movements, the
+sallow face, the slow wits. Time and the healthy life of the cloisters
+had done their work well. What the Cardinal now saw was a girl of
+seventeen, of exquisitely modelled figure, graceful and self-possessed;
+a face piquant and full of animation, illuminated by a pair of glorious
+dark eyes, and with a dazzling smile which revealed the prettiest teeth
+in France. Above all, and what delighted the Cardinal most, she had now
+a sprightly wit, and a quite brilliant gift of conversation. It was thus
+a smiling and gratified Cardinal who gave greeting to his niece, now as
+fair as her sisters and more fascinating than any of them. There was no
+doubt that he could find a high-placed husband for her, and thus--for
+this was, in fact, his motive for rescuing his pretty nieces from their
+obscurity--make his position secure by powerful family alliances.
+
+It was not long before Mazarin fixed on a suitor in the person of
+Armande de la Porte, son of the Marquis de la Meilleraye, one of the
+most powerful nobles in France. But alas for his scheming! Armande's
+heart had already been caught while Marie was reciting her matins and
+vespers: He had lost it utterly to her beautiful sister, Hortense; he
+vowed that he would marry no other, and that if Hortense could not be
+his wife he would prefer to die. Thus Marie was rescued from a union
+which brought her sister so much misery in later years, and for a time
+she was condemned to spend unhappy months with her mother at the Louvre.
+
+To this period of her life Marie Mancini could never look back without a
+shudder. "My mother," she says, "who, I think, had always hated me, was
+more unbearable than ever. She treated me, although I was no longer
+ugly, with the utmost aversion and cruelty. My sisters went to Court and
+were fussed and fêted. I was kept always at home, in our miserable
+lodgings, an unhappy Cinderella."
+
+But Fortune did not long hide his face from Cinderella. Her "Prince
+Charming" was coming--in the guise of the handsome young King, Louis
+XIV. himself. It was one day while visiting Madame Mancini in her
+lodgings at the Louvre that Louis first saw the girl who was to play
+such havoc with his heart; and at the first sight of those melting dark
+eyes and that intoxicating smile he was undone. He came again and
+again--always under the pretext of visiting Madame, and happy beyond
+expression if he could exchange a few words with her daughter, Marie;
+until he soon counted a day worse than lost that did not bring him the
+stolen sweetness of a meeting.
+
+When, a few weeks later, Madame Mancini died, and Marie was recalled to
+Court by her uncle, her life was completely changed for her. Louis had
+now abundant opportunities of seeking her side; and excellent use he
+made of them. The two young people were inseparable, much to the alarm
+of the Cardinal and Madame Mère, the Queen. The young King was never
+happy out of her sight; he danced with her (and none could dance more
+divinely than Marie); he listened as she sang to him with a voice whose
+sweetness thrilled him; they read the same books together in blissful
+solitude; she taught him her native Italian, and entranced him by the
+brilliance of her wit; and when, after a slight illness, he heard of her
+anxious inquiries and her tears of sympathy, his conquest was complete.
+He vowed that she and no other should be his wife and Queen of France.
+
+But these halcyon days were not to last long. It was no part of
+Mazarin's scheming that a niece of his should sit on the throne. The
+prospect was dazzling, it is true, but it would inevitably mean his own
+downfall, so strongly would such an alliance be resented by friends as
+well as enemies; and Anne of Austria was as little in the mood to be
+deposed by such an obscure person as the "Mancini girl." Thus it was
+that Queen and Cardinal joined hands to nip the young romance in the
+bud.
+
+A Royal bride must be found for Louis, and that quickly; and
+negotiations were soon on foot to secure as his wife Margaret, Princess
+of Savoy. In vain did the boy-King storm and protest; equally futile
+were Marie's tearful pleadings to her uncle. The fiat had gone forth.
+Louis must have a Royal bride; and she was already about to leave Italy
+on her bridal progress to France.
+
+It was, we may be sure, with a heavy heart that Marie joined the
+cavalcade which, with its gorgeous procession of equipages, its gaily
+mounted courtiers, and its brave escort of soldiery, swept out of Paris
+on its stately progress to Lyons, to meet the Queen-to-be. But there was
+no escape from the humiliation, for she must accompany Anne of Austria,
+as one of her retinue of maids-of-honour. Arrived too soon at Lyons,
+Louis rides on to give first greeting to his bride, who is now within a
+day's journey; and returns with a smiling face to announce to his mother
+that he finds the Princess pleasing to his eye, and to describe, with
+boyish enthusiasm, her grace and graciousness, her magnificent eyes, her
+beautiful hair, and the delicate olive of her complexion, while Marie's
+heart sinks at the recital. Could this be the lover who, but a few days
+ago, had been at her feet, vowing that she was the only bride in all the
+world for him?
+
+When he seeks her side and shamefacedly makes excuses for his seeming
+recreancy, she bids him marry his "ugly bride" in accents of scorn, and
+then bursts into tears, which she only consents to wipe away when he
+declares that his heart will always be hers and that he will never marry
+the Italian Princess.
+
+But Margaret of Savoy was not after all to be Queen of France. She was,
+as it proved, merely a pawn in the Cardinal's deep game. It was a
+Spanish alliance that he sought for his young King; and when, at the
+eleventh hour, an ambassador came hurriedly to Lyons to offer the
+Infanta's hand, the Savoy Duke and his sister, the Princess, had
+perforce to return to Italy "empty-handed."
+
+There was at least a time of respite now for Louis and Marie, and as
+they rode back to Paris, side by side, chatting gaily and exchanging
+sweet confidences, the sun once more shone on the happiest young people
+in all France. Then followed a period of blissful days, of dances and
+fêtes, in brilliant succession, in which the lovers were inseparable;
+above all, of long rambles together, when, "the world forgetting," they
+could live in the happy present, whatever the future might have in store
+for them.
+
+Meanwhile the negotiations for the Spanish marriage were ripening fast.
+Louis and Marie again appeal, first to the Cardinal, then to the Queen,
+to sanction their union, but to no purpose; both are inflexible. Their
+foolish romance must come to an end. As a last resource Marie flies to
+the King, with tender pleadings and tears, begging him not to desert
+her; to which he answers that no power on earth shall make him wed the
+Infanta. "You alone," he swears, "shall wear the crown of Queen"; and in
+token of his love he buys for her the pearls that were the most
+treasured belongings of the exiled Stuart Queen, Henrietta Maria. The
+lovers part in tears, and the following day Marie receives orders to
+leave Paris and to retire to La Rochelle.
+
+At every stage of her journey she was overtaken by messengers bearing
+letters from Louis, full of love and protestations of unflinching
+loyalty; and when Louis moved with his Court to Bayonne, the lovers met
+once more to mingle their tears. But Louis, ever fickle, was already
+wavering again. "If I must marry the Infanta," he said, "I suppose I
+must. But I shall never love any but you."
+
+Marie now realised that this was to be the end. In face of a lover so
+weak, and a fate so inflexible, what could she do but submit? And it was
+with a proud but breaking heart that she wrote a few days later to tell
+Louis that she wished him not to write to her again and that she would
+not answer his letters. One June day news came to her that her lover was
+married and that "he was very much in love with the Infanta"; and even
+her pride, crushed as it was, could not restrain her from writing to her
+sister, Hortense, "Say everything you can that is horrid about him.
+Point out all his faults to me, that I may find relief for my aching
+heart." When, a few months later, Marie saw the King again, he received
+her almost as a stranger, and had the bad taste to sing the praises of
+his Queen.
+
+But Marie Mancini was the last girl in all France to wed herself long to
+grief or an outraged vanity. There were other lovers by the score among
+whom she could pick and choose. She was more lovely now than when the
+recreant Louis first succumbed to her charms--with a ripened witchery of
+black eyes, red lips, the flash of pearly teeth revealed by every
+dazzling smile, with glorious black hair, the grace of a fawn, and a
+"voluptuous fascination" which no man could resist.
+
+Prince Charles of Lorraine was her veriest slave, but Mazarin would have
+none of him. Prince Colonna, Grand Constable of Naples, was more
+fortunate when he in turn came a-wooing. He bore the proudest name in
+Italy, and he had wealth, good-looks, and high connections to lend a
+glamour to his birth. The Cardinal smiled on his suit, and Marie, since
+she had no heart to give, willingly gave her hand.
+
+Louis himself graced the wedding with his presence; and we are told, as
+the white-faced bride "said the 'yes' which was to bind her to a
+stranger, her eyes, with an indescribable expression, sought those of
+the King, who turned pale as he met them."
+
+Over the rest of Marie Mancini's chequered life we must hasten. After a
+few years of wedded life with her Italian Prince, "Colonna's early
+passion for his beautiful wife was succeeded by a distaste amounting to
+hatred. He disgusted her with his amours; and when she ventured to
+protest against his infidelity, he tried to poison her." This crowning
+outrage determined Marie to fly, and, in company with her sister,
+Hortense, who had fled to her from the brutality of her own husband, she
+made her escape one dark night to Civita Vecchia, where a boat was
+awaiting the runaways.
+
+Hotly pursued on land and sea, narrowly escaping shipwreck, braving
+hardships, hunger, and hourly danger of capture, the fugitives at last
+reached Marseilles where Marie (Hortense now seeking a refuge in Savoy)
+began those years of wandering and adventure, the story of which
+outstrips fiction.
+
+Now we find her seeking asylum at convents from Aix to Madrid; now
+queening it at the Court of Savoy, with Duke Charles Emmanuel for lover;
+now she is dazzling Madrid with the Almirante of Castille and many
+another high-placed worshipper dancing attendance on her; and now she is
+in Rome, turning the heads of grave cardinals with her witcheries.
+Sometimes penniless and friendless, at others lapped in luxury; but
+carrying everywhere in her bosom the English pearls, the last gift of
+her false and frail Louis.
+
+Thus, through the long, troubled years, until old-age crept on her, the
+Cardinal's niece wandered, a fugitive, over the face of Europe,
+alternately caressed and buffeted by fortune, until "at long last" the
+end came and brought peace with it. As she lay dying in the house of a
+good Samaritan at Pisa, with no other hand to minister to her, she
+called for pen and paper, and with failing hand wrote her own epitaph,
+surely the most tragic ever penned--"Marie Mancini Colonna--Dust and
+Ashes."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+BIANCA, GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY
+
+More than three centuries have gone since Florence made merry over the
+death of her Grand Duchess, Bianca. It was an occasion for rejoicing;
+her name was bandied from lips to lips--"La Pessima Bianca"; jeers and
+laughter followed her to her unmarked grave in the Church of San
+Lorenzo. But through the ages her picture has come down to us as she
+strutted on the world's stage in all her pride and beauty, with a
+vividness which few better women of her time retain.
+
+It was in the year 1548, when our boy-King, the sixth Edward, was fresh
+to his crown, that Bianca Capello was cradled in the palace of her
+father, one of the greatest men of Venice, Senator and Privy Councillor.
+As a child she was as beautiful as she was wilful; the pride of her
+father, the despair of his wife, her stepmother--her little head full of
+romance, her heart full of rebellion against any kind of discipline or
+restraint.
+
+Before she had left the schoolroom Capello's daughter was, by common
+consent, the fairest girl in her native city, with a beauty riper than
+her years. Tall, and with a well-developed figure of singular grace,
+she carried her head as proudly as any Queen. Her fair hair fell in a
+rippling cascade far below her waist; her face, hands, and throat, we
+are told, were "white as lilies," save for the delicate rose-colour that
+tinted her cheeks. Her eyes were large and dark, and of an almost
+dazzling brilliance; and her full, pouting lips were red and fragrant as
+a rose.
+
+Such was Bianca Capello on the threshold of womanhood, as you may see
+her pictured to-day in Bronzino's miniature at the British Museum, with
+a loveliness which set the hearts of the Venetian gallants a-flutter
+before our Shakespeare was in his cradle. She might, if she would, have
+mated with almost any noble in Tuscany, had not her foolish, wayward
+fancy fallen on Pietro Bonaventuri, a handsome young clerk in Salviati's
+bank, whose eyes had often strayed from his ledgers to follow her as, in
+the company of her maid, the Senator's daughter took her daily walk past
+his office window.
+
+At sight of so fair a vision Pietro was undone; he fell violently in
+love with her long before he exchanged a word with her, and although no
+one knew better than he the gulf that separated the daughter of a
+nobleman and a Senator from the drudge of the quill, he determined to
+win her. Youth and good-looks such as his, with plenty of assurance to
+support them, had done as much for others, and they should do it for
+him. How they first met we know not, but we know that shortly after this
+momentous meeting Bianca had completely lost her heart to the knight of
+the quill, with the handsome face, the dark, flashing eyes, and the
+courtly manner.
+
+Other meetings followed--secret rendezvous arranged by the duenna
+herself in return for liberal bribes--to keep which Bianca would steal
+out of her father's palace at dead of night, leaving the door open
+behind her to ensure safe return before dawn. On one such occasion, so
+the story runs, Bianca returned to find the door closed against her by a
+too officious hand. She dared not wake the sleepers to gain
+admittance--that would be to expose her secret and to cover herself with
+disgrace--and in her fears and alarm she fled back to her lover.
+
+However this may be, we know that, for some urgent reason or other, the
+young lovers disappeared one night together from Venice and made their
+way to Florence to find a refuge under the roof of Pietro's parents.
+Here a terrible disillusion met Bianca at the threshold. Her
+husband--for, on the runaway journey, Pietro had secured the friendly
+services of a village priest to marry them--had told her that he was the
+son of noble parents, kin to his employers, the Salviatis. The home to
+which he now introduced her was little better than a hovel, with poverty
+looking out of its windows.
+
+Here indeed was a sorry home-coming for the new-made bride, daughter of
+the great Capello! There was not even a drudge to do the housework,
+which Bianca was compelled to share with her bucolic mother-in-law. It
+is even said that she was compelled to do laundry-work in order to keep
+the domestic purse supplied. Her husband had forfeited his meagre
+salary; she had equally sacrificed the fortune left to her by her
+mother. Sordid, grinding poverty stared both in the face.
+
+To return to her own home in Venice was impossible. So furious were her
+father and stepmother at her escapade that a large reward was advertised
+for the capture of her husband, "alive or dead," and a sentence of death
+had been procured from the Council of Ten in the event of his arrest.
+More than this, a sentence of banishment was pronounced against Pietro
+and Bianca; the maid who had connived at their illicit wooing and flight
+paid for her treachery with her life; and Pietro's uncle ended his days
+in a loathsome dungeon.
+
+Such was the vengeance taken by Bartolomeo Capello. As for the runaways,
+they spent a long honeymoon in concealment and hourly dread of the fate
+that hung over them. It was well known, however, in Florence where they
+were in hiding; and curious crowds were drawn to the Bonaventuri hovel
+to catch a glimpse of the heroes of a scandal with which all Italy was
+ringing. Thus it was that Francesco de Medici first set eyes on the
+woman who was to play so great a part in his life.
+
+There could be no greater contrast than that between Francesco de
+Medici, heir to the Tuscan Grand Dukedom, and the beautiful young wife
+of the bank-clerk, now playing the rôle of maid-of-all-work and
+charwoman. It is said that Francesco was a madman; and indeed what we
+know of him makes this description quite plausible. He was a man of
+black brow and violent temper, repelling alike in appearance and
+manner. He was, we are told, "more of a savage than a civilised human
+being." His food was deluged with ginger and pepper; his favourite fare
+was raw eggs filled with red pepper, and raw onions, of which he ate
+enormous quantities. He drank iced water by the gallon, and slept
+between frozen sheets. He was a man, moreover, of evil life, familiar
+with every form of vicious indulgence. His only redeeming feature was a
+love of art, which enriched the galleries of Florence.
+
+Such was the Medici--half-ogre, half-madman, who, riding one day through
+a Florence slum, saw at the window of a mean dwelling the beautiful face
+of Bianca Bonaventuri, and rode on leaving his heart behind. Here indeed
+was a dainty dish to set before his jaded appetite. The owner of that
+fair face, with the crimson lips and the black, flashing eyes, must be
+his. On the following day a great Court lady, the Marchesa Mondragone,
+presents herself at the Bonaventuri door, with smiles and gracious
+words, bearing an invitation to Court for the lady of the window.
+"Impossible," bluntly answers Signora Bonaventuri; her daughter-in-law
+has no clothes fit to be seen at Court. "But," persists the Marchesa,
+"that is a matter that can easily be arranged. It will be a pleasure to
+me to supply the necessary outfit, if the Signora and her
+daughter-in-law will but come to-morrow to the Mondragone Palace." The
+bride, when consulted, is not unwilling; and the following day, in
+company with her mother-in-law, she is effusively received by the
+Marchesa, and is feasting her eyes on exquisite robes and the glitter
+of rare gems, among which she is invited to make her choice. A moment
+later Francesco enters, and with courtly grace is kissing the hand of
+his new divinity....
+
+Then followed secret meetings such as marked Bianca's first unhappy
+wooing in Venice--hours of rapture for the Tuscan Duke, of flattered
+submission by the runaway bride; and within a few weeks we find Bianca
+installed in a palace of her own with Francesco's guards and equipage
+ever at its door, while his newly made bride, Giovanna, Archduchess of
+Austria, kept her lonely vigil in the apartments which so seldom saw her
+husband.
+
+Francesco, indeed, had no eyes or thought for any but the lovely woman
+who had so completely enslaved him. As for her, condemn her as we must,
+much can be pleaded in extenuation of her conduct. She had been basely
+deceived and betrayed. On the one side was a life of sordid poverty and
+drudgery, with a husband for whom she had now nothing but dislike and
+contempt; on the other was the ardent homage of the future ruler of
+Tuscany, with its accompaniment of splendour, luxury, and power. A fig
+for love! ambition should now rule her life. She would drain the cup of
+pleasure, though the dregs might be bitter to the taste.
+
+She was now in the very prime of her beauty, and a Queen in all but the
+name. Between her and her full Queendom were but two obstacles--her
+lover's plain, unattractive wife, and her own worthless husband; and of
+these obstacles one was soon to be removed from her path.
+
+Pietro, who had been made chamberlain to the Tuscan Court, was more
+than content that his wife should go her own way, so long as he was
+allowed to go his. He was kept very agreeably occupied with love affairs
+of his own. The richest widow in Florence, Cassandra Borgianni, was
+eager to lavish her smiles and favours on him; and the knowledge that
+two of his predecessors in her affection had fallen under the assassin's
+knife only lent zest to a love adventure which was after his heart.
+Warnings of the fate that might await him in turn fell on deaf ears.
+When his wife ventured to point out the danger he retorted, "If you say
+another word I will cut your throat." The following night as he was
+returning from a visit to the widow, a dagger was sheathed in his heart,
+and Pietro's amorous race was run.
+
+Such was the end of the bank-clerk and his eleventh-hour glories and
+love adventures. Now only Giovanna remained to block the way to the
+pinnacle of Bianca's ambition; and her health was so frail that the
+waiting might not be long. Giovanna had provided no successor to her
+husband (who had now succeeded to his Grand Dukedom); if Bianca could
+succeed where the Grand Duchess had failed, she could at least ensure
+that a son of hers would one day rule over Tuscany.
+
+Thus one August day in 1576 the news flashed round Florence that a male
+child had been born in the palace on the Via Maggiore. Francesco was in
+the "seventh heaven" of delight. Here at last was the long-looked-for
+inheritor of his honours--the son who was to perpetuate the glories of
+the Medici and to thwart his brother, the Cardinal, who had so
+confidently counted on the succession for himself. And Madame Bianca
+professed herself equally delighted, although her pleasure was qualified
+by fear.
+
+She had played her part with consummate cleverness; but there were two
+women who knew the true story of the birth of the child, which had been
+smuggled into the palace from a Florence slum. One was the changeling's
+mother, a woman of the people, whom a substantial bribe had induced to
+part with her new-born infant; the other was Bianca's waiting woman.
+These witnesses to the imposture must be silenced effectually.
+
+Hired assassins made short work of the mother. The waiting-maid was
+"left for dead" in a mountain-pass, to which she had been lured; but she
+survived long enough at least to communicate her secret to the Grand
+Duke's brother, the Cardinal Ferdinand de Medici.
+
+Bianca was now in a parlous plight. At any moment her enemy, the
+Cardinal, might betray her to her lover, and bring the carefully planned
+edifice of her fortunes tumbling about her ears. But she proved equal
+even to this emergency. Taking her courage in both hands, she herself
+confessed the fraud to the Grand Duke, who not only forgave her (so
+completely was he under the spell of her beauty) but insisted on calling
+the gutter-child his son.
+
+The tables, however, were soon to be turned on her, for Giovanna, who
+had long despaired of providing an heir to her husband, gave birth a
+few months later to a male child. Florence was jubilant, for the Grand
+Duchess was as beloved as her rival was detested; and the christening of
+the heir was made the occasion of festivities and rejoicing. Bianca's
+day of triumph seemed at last to be over. For a time she left Florence
+to hide her humiliation; but within a year she was back again, to be
+received with open arms of welcome by the Duke. During her absence she
+had made peace with her family, and when her father and brother came to
+Florence to visit her, they were received by Francesco with regal
+entertainments, and sent away loaded with presents and honours.
+
+Bianca had now reached the zenith of her power and splendour. Before she
+had been back many months the Grand Duchess died, to the undisguised
+relief of her husband, who hastened from her funeral to the arms of her
+rival. Her position was now secure, unassailable; and before Giovanna
+had been two months in the family vault, Bianca was secretly married to
+her Grand ducal lover.
+
+Florence was furious. But what mattered that? The Venetian Senate had
+recognised Bianca as a true daughter of the Republic. She was the legal
+wife of the ruler of Tuscany. She was Grand Duchess at last, and she
+meant all the world to know it. That she was cordially hated by her
+husband's subjects, that the air was full of stories of her
+extravagance, her intemperance, and her cruelty, gave her no moment's
+unhappiness. For eight years she reigned as Queen, wielding the sceptre
+her husband's hands were too weak or indifferent to hold. Giovanna's
+son had followed his mother to the grave; and the child of the slums,
+who had been so fruitlessly smuggled into her palace, had been
+legitimated.
+
+The only thorn now left in her bed of roses was the enmity of the Grand
+Duke's brother, the Cardinal; and her greatest ambition was to win him
+to her side. In the autumn of 1787 he was invited to Florence, and as
+the culmination of a series of festivities, a grand banquet was given,
+at which he had the place of honour, at her right hand. The feast was
+drawing near to its end. Bianca, with sparkling eyes and flushed face,
+looking lovelier than she had ever looked before, was at her happiest,
+for the Cardinal had at last succumbed to her bright eyes and honeyed
+words. It was the crowning moment of her many triumphs, when life left
+nothing more to desire.
+
+Then it was, at the supreme moment, that tragedy in its most terrible
+form fell on the scene of festivity and mirth. While Bianca was smiling
+her sweetest on the Cardinal she was seized by violent pains, "her mouth
+foams, her face is distorted by agony; she shrieks aloud that she is
+dying. Francesco tries to go to her aid, but his steps are suddenly
+arrested. He too is seized by the same terrible anguish. A few hours
+later both she and he breathe their last breath."
+
+"Poison" was the word which ran through the palace and soon through
+Florence from blanched lips to blanched lips. Some said it was the
+Cardinal who had done the deed; others whispered stories of a poisoned
+tart designed by Bianca for the Cardinal, who refused to be tempted.
+Whereupon the Grand Duke had eaten of it, and Bianca, "seeing that her
+plot had so tragically miscarried, seized the tart from her husband's
+hand and ate what was left of it."
+
+The truth will never be known. What we do know is that within a few
+hours of the last joke and the last drained glass of that fatal banquet
+the bodies of Francesco and Bianca were lying in death side by side in
+an adjacent room, the door of which was locked against the eyes of the
+curious--even against the physicians.
+
+In the solemn lying-in-state that followed Bianca had no place.
+Francesco alone, by his brother's orders, wore his crown in death. As
+for Bianca, her body was hurried away and flung into the common vault of
+San Lorenzo, with the light of two yellow wax torches to bear it
+company, and the jibes and jeers of Florence for its only requiem.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+RICHELIEU, THE ROUÉ
+
+In the drama of the French Court many a fine-feathered villain "struts
+his brief hour" on the stage, dazzling eyes by his splendour, and
+shocking a world none too easily shocked in those days of easy morals by
+his profligacy; but it would be difficult among all these gilded rakes
+to find a match for the Duc de Richelieu, who carried his villainies
+through little less than a century of life.
+
+Born in 1696, when Louis XIV. had still nearly twenty years of his long
+reign before him, Louis François Armand Duplessis, Duc de Richelieu,
+survived to hear the rumblings which heralded the French Revolution
+ninety-two years later; and for three-quarters of a century to be known
+as the most accomplished and heartless roué in all France. Bearer of a
+great name, and inheritor of the splendours and riches of his
+great-uncle, the Cardinal, who was Louis XII.'s right-hand man, and, in
+his day, the most powerful subject in Europe, the Duc was born with the
+football of fortune at his feet; and probably no man who has ever lived
+so shamefully prostituted such magnificent opportunities and gifts.
+
+As a boy, still in his teens, he had begun to play the rôle of Don Juan
+at the Court of the child-King, Louis XV. The most beautiful women at
+the Court, we are told, went crazy over the handsome boy, who bore the
+most splendid name in France; and thus early his head was turned by
+flatteries and attentions which followed him almost to the grave.
+
+The young Duchesse de Bourgogne, the King's mother, made love to him, to
+the scandal of the Court; and from Princesses of the Blood Royal to the
+humblest serving-maid, there was scarcely a woman at Court who would not
+have given her eyes for a smile from the Duc de Fronsac, as he was then
+known.
+
+How he revelled in his conquests he makes abundantly clear in the
+Memoirs he left behind him--surely the most scandalous ever written--in
+which he recounts his love affairs, in long sequence, with a
+cold-blooded heartlessness which shocks the reader to-day, so long after
+lover and victims have been dust. He revels in describing the artifices
+by which he got the most unassailable of women into his power--such as
+the young and beautiful Madame Michelin, whose religious scruples proved
+such a frail barrier against the assaults of the young Lothario. He
+chuckles with a diabolical pride as he tells us how he played off one
+mistress against another; how he made one liaison pave the way to its
+successor; and how he abandoned each in turn when it had served its
+purpose, and betrayed, one after another, the women who had trusted to
+his nebulous sense of honour.
+
+A profligate so tempted as the Duc de Richelieu was from his earliest
+years, one can understand, however much we may condemn; but for the man
+who conducted his love affairs with such heartlessness and dishonour no
+language has words of execration and contempt to describe him.
+
+From his earliest youth there was no "game" too high for our Don Juan to
+fly at. Long before he had reached manhood he counted his lady-loves by
+the score; and among them were at least three Royal Princesses,
+Mademoiselle de Charolais, and two of the Regent's own daughters, the
+Duchesse de Berry and Mademoiselle de Valois, later Duchess of Modena,
+who, in their jealousy, were ready to "tear each other's eyes out" for
+love of the Duc. Quarrels between the rival ladies were of everyday
+occurrence; and even duels were by no means unknown.
+
+When, for instance, the Duc wearied of the lovely Madame de Polignac,
+this lady was so inflamed by hatred of her successor in his affections,
+the Marquise de Nesle, that she challenged her to a duel to the death in
+the Bois de Boulogne. When Madame de Polignac, after a fierce exchange
+of shots, saw her rival stretched at her feet, she turned furiously on
+the wounded woman. "Go!" she shrieked. "I will teach you to walk in the
+footsteps of a woman like me! If I had the traitor here, I would blow
+his brains out!" Whereupon, Madame de Nesle, fainting as she was from
+loss of blood, retorted that her lover was worthy that even more noble
+blood than hers should be shed for him. "He is," she said to the few
+onlookers who had hurried to the scene on hearing the shots, "the most
+amiable _seigneur_ of the Court. I am ready to shed for him the last
+drop of blood in my veins. All these ladies try to catch him, but I hope
+that the proofs I have given of my devotion will win him for myself
+without sharing with anyone. Why should I hide his name? He is the Duc
+de Richelieu--yes, the Duc de Richelieu, the eldest son of Venus and
+Mars!"
+
+Such was the devotion which this heartless profligate won from some of
+the most beautiful and highly placed ladies of France. What was the
+secret of the spell he cast over them it is difficult to say. It is true
+that he was a handsome man, as his portraits show, but there were men
+quite as handsome at the French Court; he was courtly and accomplished,
+but he had many rivals as clever and as skilled in courtly arts as
+himself. His power must, one thinks, have lain in that strange magnetism
+which women seem so powerless to resist in men, and which outweighs all
+graces of mind and physical perfections.
+
+The Duc's career, however, was not one unbroken dallying with love.
+Thrice, at least, he was sent to cool his ardour within the walls of the
+Bastille--on one occasion as the result of a duel with the Comte de
+Gacé. His lady-loves were desolate at the cruel fate which had overtaken
+their idol. They fell on their knees at the Regent's feet, and, with
+tears streaming down their pretty cheeks, pleaded for his freedom. Two
+of the Royal Princesses, both disguised as Sisters of Charity, visited
+the prisoner daily in his dungeon, carrying with them delicacies to
+tempt his appetite, and consolation to cheer his captivity.
+
+In vain did Duc and Comte both declare that they had never fought a
+duel; and when, in the absence of proof, the Regent insisted that their
+bodies should be examined for the convicting wounds, the impish
+Richelieu came triumphantly through the ordeal as the result of having
+his wounds covered with pink taffeta and skilfully painted!
+
+It was a more serious matter that sent him again to the Bastille in
+1718. False to his country as to the victims of his fascinations, he had
+been plotting with Spain, France's bitterest enemy, for the seizure of
+the Regent and the carrying him off across the Pyrenees; and certain
+incriminating letters sent to him by Cardinal Alberoni had been
+intercepted, and were in the Regent's hands. The Regent's daughter,
+Mademoiselle de Valois, warned her lover of his danger, but too late.
+Before he could escape, he was arrested, and with an escort of archers
+was safely lodged in the Bastille.
+
+Our Lothario was now indeed in a parlous plight. Lodged in the deepest
+and most loathsome dungeon of the Bastille--a dungeon so damp that
+within a few hours his clothes were saturated--without even a chair to
+sit on or a bed to lie on, with legions of hungry rats for company, he
+was now face to face with almost certain death. The Regent, whose love
+affairs he had thwarted a score of times, and who thus had no reason to
+love the profligate Duc, vowed that his head should pay the price of his
+treason.
+
+Once more the Court ladies were reduced to hysterics and despair, and
+forgot their jealousies in a common appeal to the Regent for clemency.
+Mademoiselle de Valois was driven to distraction; and when tears and
+pleadings failed to soften her father's heart, she declared in the
+hearing of the Court that she would commit suicide unless her lover was
+restored to liberty. In company with her rival, Mademoiselle de
+Charolais, she visited the dungeon in the dark night hours, taking flint
+and steel, candles and bonbons, to weep with the captive.
+
+She squandered two hundred thousand livres in attempts to bribe his
+guards, but all to no purpose: and it was not until after six months of
+durance that the Regent at last yielded--moved partly by his daughter's
+tears and threats and partly by the pleadings of the Cardinal-Archbishop
+of Paris--and the prisoner was released, on condition that the Cardinal
+and the Duchesse de Richelieu would be responsible for his custody and
+good behaviour.
+
+A few days later we find the irresponsible Richelieu climbing over the
+garden-walls of his new "prison" at Conflans, racing through the
+darkness to Paris behind swift horses, and making love to the Regent's
+own mistresses and his daughter!
+
+But such facilities for dalliance with the Regent's daughter were soon
+to be brought to an end. Mademoiselle de Valois, in order to ensure her
+lover's freedom, had at last consented to accept the hand of the Duke of
+Modena, an alliance which she had long fought against; and before the
+Duc had been a free man again many weeks she paid this part of his
+ransom by going into exile, and to an odious wedded life, in a far
+corner of Italy--much, it may be imagined, to the Regent's relief, for
+his daughters and their love affairs were ever a thorn in his side.
+
+It was not long, however, before the new Duchess of Modena began to sigh
+for her distant lover, and to bombard him with letters begging him to
+come to her. "I cannot live without your love," she wrote. "Come to
+me--only, come in disguise, so that no one can recognise you."
+
+This was indeed an adventure after the Lothario Duc's heart--an
+adventure with love as its reward and danger as its spur. And thus it
+was that, a few weeks after the Duchess had sent her invitation, two
+travel-stained pedlars, with packs on their backs, entered the city of
+Modena to find customers for their books and phamphlets. At the small
+hostelry whose hospitality they sought the hawkers gave their names as
+Gasparini and Romano, names which masked the identities of the
+knight-errant Duc and his friend, La Fosse, respectively.
+
+The following morning behold the itinerant hawkers in the palace
+grounds, their wares spread out to tempt the Court ladies on their way
+to Mass, when the Duchess herself passed their way and deigned to stop
+to converse graciously with the strangers. To her inquiries they
+answered that they came from Piedmont; and their curious jargon of
+French and Italian lent support to the story. After inspecting their
+wares she asked for a certain book. "Alas! Madame," Gasparini answered,
+"I have not a copy here, but I have one at my inn." And bidding him
+bring the volume to her at the palace, the great lady resumed her devout
+journey to Mass.
+
+A few hours later Gasparini presented himself at the palace with the
+required volume, and was ushered into the august presence of the
+Duchess. A moment later, on the closing of the door, the Royal lady was
+in the "hawker's" arms, her own flung around his neck, as with tears of
+joy she welcomed the lover who had come to her in such strange guise and
+at such risk.
+
+A few stolen moments of happiness was all the lovers dared now to allow
+themselves. The Duke of Modena was in the palace, and the situation was
+full of danger. But on the morrow he was going away on a hunting
+expedition, and then--well, then they might meet without fear.
+
+On the following day, the coast now clear, behold our "hawker" once more
+at the palace door, with a bundle of books under his arm for the
+inspection of Her Highness, and being ushered into the Duchess's
+reading-room, full of souvenirs of the happy days they had spent
+together in distant Paris and Versailles. Among them, most prized of
+all, was a lock of his own hair, enshrined on a small altar, and
+surmounted by a crown of interlocked hearts. This lock, the Duchess told
+him, she had kissed and wept over every day since they had parted.
+
+Each day now brought its hours of blissful meeting, so seemingly short
+that the Princess would throw her arms around her "hawker's" neck and
+implore him to stay a little longer. One day, however, he tarried too
+long; the Duke returned unexpectedly from his hunting, and before the
+lovers could part, he had entered the room--just in time to see the
+pedlar bowing humbly in farewell to his Duchess, and to hear him assure
+her that he would call again with the further books she wished to see.
+
+Certainly it was a strange spectacle to greet the eyes of a home-coming
+Duke--that of his lady closeted with a shabby pedlar of books; but at
+least there was nothing suspicious in it, and, getting into conversation
+with the "hawker," the Duke found him quite an entertaining fellow, full
+of news of what was going on in the world outside his small duchy.
+
+In his curious jargon of French and Italian, Gasparini had much to tell
+His Highness apart from book-talk. He entertained him with the latest
+scandals of the French Court; with gossip about well-known personages,
+from the Regent to Dubois. "And what about that rascal, the Duc de
+Richelieu?" asked the great man. "What tricks has he been up to lately?"
+"Oh," answered Gasparini, with a wink at the Duchess, who was crimson
+with suppressed laughter, "he is one of my best customers. Ah, Monsieur
+le Duc, he is a gay dog. I hear that all the women at the Court are
+madly in love with him; that the Princesses adore him, and that he is
+driving all the husbands to distraction."
+
+"Is it as bad as that?" asked the Duke, with a laugh. "He is a more
+dangerous fellow even than I thought. And what is his latest game?"
+
+"Oh," answered the hawker, "I am told that he has made a wager that he
+will come to Modena, in spite of you; and I shouldn't be at all
+surprised if he does!"
+
+"As for that," said the Duke, with a chuckle, "I am not afraid. I defy
+him to do his worst; and I am willing to wager that I shall be a match
+for him. However," he added, "you're an entertaining fellow; so come and
+see me again whenever you please."
+
+And thus, by the wish of the Duchess's husband himself, the ducal
+"hawker" became a daily visitor at the palace, entertaining His Highness
+with his chatter, and, when his back was turned, making love to his
+wife, and joining her in shrieks of laughter at his easy gullibility.
+
+Thus many happy weeks passed, Gasparini, the pedlar, selling few
+volumes, but reaping a rich harvest of stolen pleasure, and revelling in
+an adventure which added such a new zest to a life sated with more
+humdrum love-making. But even the Duchess's charms began to pall; the
+ladies he had left so disconsolate in Paris were inundating him with
+letters, begging him to return to them--letters, all forwarded to him
+from his château at Richelieu, where he was supposed to be in retreat.
+The lure was too strong for him; and, taking leave of the Duchess in
+floods of tears, he returned to his beloved Paris to fresh conquests.
+
+And thus it was with the gay Duc until the century that followed that of
+his birth was drawing to its close; until its sun was beginning to set
+in the blood of that Revolution, which, if he had lived but one year
+longer, would surely have claimed him as one of its first victims.
+Three wives he led to the altar--the last when he had passed into the
+eighties--but no marital duty was allowed to interfere with the amours
+which filled his life; and to the last no pity ever gave a pang to the
+"conscience" which allowed him to pick and fling away his flowers at
+will, and to trample, one after another, on the hearts that yielded to
+his love and trusted to his honour.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS
+
+It was an ill fate that brought Caroline, Princess of
+Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel to England to be the bride of George, Prince of
+Wales, one April day in the year 1795; although probably no woman has
+ever set forth on her bridal journey with a lighter or prouder heart,
+for, as she said, "Am I not going to be the wife of the handsomest
+Prince in the world?" If she had any momentary doubt of this, a glance
+at the miniature she carried in her bosom reassured her; for the
+pictured face that smiled at her was handsome as that of an Apollo.
+
+No wonder the Princess's heart beat high with pride and pleasure during
+that last triumphal stage of her journey to her husband's arms; for he
+was not only the handsomest man, with "the best shaped leg in Europe,"
+he was by common consent the "greatest gentleman" any Court could show.
+Picture him as he made his first appearance at a Court ball. "His coat,"
+we are told, "was of pink silk, with white cuffs; his waistcoat of white
+silk, embroidered with various-coloured foil and adorned with a
+profusion of French paste. And his hat was ornamented with two rows of
+steel beads, five thousand in number, with a button and a loop of the
+same metal, and cocked in a new military style." See young "Florizel" as
+he makes his smiling and gracious progress through the avenues of
+courtiers; note the winsomeness of his smiles, the inimitable grace of
+his bows, his pleasant, courtly words of recognition, and say if ever
+Royalty assumed a form more agreeable to the eye and captivating to the
+senses.
+
+"Florizel" was indeed the most splendid Prince in the world, and the
+most "perfect gentleman." He was also, though his bride-to-be little
+knew it, the most dissolute man in Europe, the greatest gambler and
+voluptuary--a man who was as false to his friends as he was traitor to
+every woman who crossed his path, a man whom no appeal of honour or
+mercy could check in his selfish pursuit of pleasure.
+
+"I look through all his life," Thackeray says, "and recognise but a bow
+and a grin. I try and take him to pieces, and find silk stockings,
+padding, stays, a coat with frogs and a fur collar, a star and blue
+ribbon, a pocket handkerchief prodigiously scented, one of Truefitt's
+best nutty brown wigs reeking with oil, a set of teeth and a huge black
+stock, under-waistcoats, more under-waistcoats, and then--nothing.
+French ballet-dancers, French cooks, horse-jockeys, buffoons,
+procuresses, tailors, boxers, fencing-masters, china, jewel and
+gimcrack-merchants--these were his real companions."
+
+Such was the husband Princess Caroline came so light-heartedly, with
+laughter on her lips, from Brunswick to wed, little dreaming of the
+disillusion and tears that were to await her on the very threshold of
+the life to which she had looked forward with such high hopes.
+
+We get the first glimpse of Caroline some twelve years earlier, when Sir
+John Stanley, who was making the grand tour, spent a few weeks at her
+father's Court. He speaks of her as a "beautiful girl of fourteen," and
+adds, "I did think and dream of her day and night at Brunswick, and for
+a year afterwards I saw her for hours three or fours times a week, but
+as a star out of my reach." Years later he met her again under sadly
+changed conditions. "One day only," he writes, "when dining with her and
+her mother at Blackheath, she smiled at something which had pleased her,
+and for an instant only I could have fancied she had been the Caroline
+of fourteen years old--the lovely, pretty Caroline, the girl my eyes had
+so often rested on, with light and powdered hair hanging in curls on her
+neck, the lips from which only sweet words seemed as if they would flow,
+with looks animated, and always simply and modestly dressed."
+
+Lady Charlotte Campbell, too, gives us a glimpse of her in these early
+and happier years, before sorrow had laid its defacing hand on her. "The
+Princess was in her early youth a pretty girl," Lady Charlotte says,
+"with fine light hair--very delicately formed features, and a fine
+complexion--quick, glancing, penetrating eyes, long cut and rather small
+in the head, which gave them much expression; and a remarkably
+delicately formed mouth."
+
+It was in no happy home that the Princess had been cradled one May day
+in 1768. Her father, Charles William, Duke of Brunswick, was an austere
+soldier, too much absorbed in his military life and his mistress, to
+give much thought to his daughters. Her mother, the Duchess Augusta,
+sister of our own George III., was weak and small-minded, too much
+occupied in self-indulgence and scandal-talking to trouble about the
+training of her children.
+
+Princess Caroline herself draws an unattractive picture of her
+home-life, in answer to Lady Charlotte Campbell's question, "Were you
+sorry to leave Brunswick?" "Not at all," was the answer; "I was sick
+tired of it, though I was sorry to leave my fader. I loved my fader
+dearly, better than any oder person. But dere were some unlucky tings in
+our Court which made my position difficult. My fader was most entirely
+attached to a lady for thirty years, who was in fact his mistress. She
+was the beautifullest creature and the cleverest, but, though my fader
+continued to pay my moder all possible respect, my poor moder could not
+suffer this attachment. And de consequence was, I did not know what to
+do between them; when I was civil to one, I was scolded by the other,
+and was very tired of being shuttlecock between them."
+
+But in spite of these unfortunate home conditions Caroline appears to
+have spent a fairly happy girlhood, thanks to her exuberant spirits; and
+such faults as she developed were largely due to the lack of parental
+care, which left her training to servants. Thus she grew up with quite a
+shocking disregard of conventions, running wild like a young filly, and
+finding her pleasure and her companions in undesirable directions.
+Strange stories are told of her girlish love affairs, which seem to have
+been indiscreet if nothing worse, while her beauty drew to her many a
+high-placed wooer, including the Prince of Orange and Prince George of
+Darmstadt, to all of whom she seems to have turned a cold shoulder.
+
+But the wilful Princess was not to be left mistress of her own destiny.
+One November day, in 1794, Lord Malmesbury arrived at the Brunswick
+Court to demand her hand for the Prince of Wales, whom his burden of
+debts and the necessity of providing an heir to the throne of England
+were at last driving reluctantly to the altar. And thus a new and
+dazzling future opened for her. To her parents nothing could have been
+more welcome than this prospect of a crown for their daughter; while to
+her it offered a release from a life that had become odious.
+
+"The Princess Caroline much embarrassed on my first being presented to
+her," Malmesbury enters in his diary--"pretty face, not expressive of
+softness--her figure not graceful, fine eyes, good hands, tolerable
+teeth, fair hair and light eyebrows, good bust, short, with what the
+French call 'des épaules impertinentes,' vastly happy with her future
+expectations."
+
+Such were Malmesbury's first impressions of the future Queen of England,
+whom it was his duty to prepare for her exalted station--a duty which he
+seems to have taken very seriously, even to the regulating of her
+toilette and her manners. Thus, a few days after setting eyes on her,
+his diary records: "She _will_ call ladies whom she meets for the first
+time 'Mon coeur, ma chère, ma petite,' and I am obliged to rebuke and
+correct her." He lectures her on her undignified habit of whispering and
+giggling, and impresses on her the necessity of greater care in her
+attire, on more constant and thorough ablution, more frequent changes of
+linen, the care of her teeth, and so on--all of which admonitions she
+seems to have taken in excellent part, with demure promises of
+amendment, until he is impelled to write, "Princess Caroline improves
+very much on a closer acquaintance--cheerful and loves laughing. If she
+can get rid of her gossiping habit she will do very well."
+
+Thus a few months passed at the Brunswick Court. The ceremonial of
+betrothal took place in December--"Princess Caroline much affected, but
+replies distinctly and well"; the marriage-contract was signed, and
+finally on 28th March the Princess embarked for England on her journey
+to the unseen husband whose good-looks and splendour have filled her
+with such high expectations. That she had not yet learnt discretion, in
+spite of all Malmesbury's homilies, is proved by the fact that she spent
+the night on board in walking up and down the deck in the company of a
+handsome young naval officer, conduct which naturally gave cause for
+observation and suspicion in the affianced bride of the future King of
+England.
+
+It was well, perhaps, that she had snatched these few hours of innocent
+pleasure: for her first meeting with her future husband was well
+calculated to scatter all her rosy dreams. Arrived at last at St James's
+Palace, "I immediately notified the arrival to the King and Prince of
+Wales," says Malmesbury; "the last came immediately. I accordingly
+introduced the Princess Caroline to him. She very properly attempted to
+kneel to him. He raised her gracefully enough, and embraced her, said
+barely one word, turned round and retired to a distant part of the
+apartment, and calling to me said: 'Harris, I am not well; pray get me a
+glass of brandy.' I said, 'Sir, had you not better have a glass of
+water?' Upon which he, much out of humour, said with an oath: 'No; I
+will go directly to the Queen,' and away he went. The Princess, left
+during this short moment alone, was in a state of astonishment; and, on
+my joining her, said, '_Mon Dieu_, is the Prince always like that? I
+find him very fat, and not at all as handsome as his portrait.'"
+
+Such was the Princess's welcome to the arms of her handsome husband and
+to the Court over which she hoped to reign as Queen; nor did she receive
+much warmer hospitality from the Prince's family. The Queen, who had
+designed a very different bride for her eldest son, received her with
+scarcely disguised enmity, while the King, although, as he afterwards
+proved, kindly disposed towards her, treated her at first with an
+amiable indifference. And certainly her attitude seems to have been
+calculated to create an unfavourable impression on her new relatives and
+on the Court generally.
+
+At the banquet which followed her reception, Malmesbury says, "I was far
+from satisfied with the Princess's behaviour. It was flippant, rattling,
+affecting raillery and wit, and throwing out coarse, vulgar hints about
+Lady----, who was present. The Prince was evidently disgusted, and this
+unfortunate dinner fixed his dislike, which, when left to herself, the
+Princess had not the talent to remove; but by still observing the same
+giddy manners and attempts at cleverness and coarse sarcasm, increased
+it till it became positive hatred."
+
+"What," as Thackeray asks, "could be expected from a wedding which had
+such a beginning--from such a bridegroom and such a bride? Malmesbury
+tells us how the Prince reeled into the Chapel Royal to be married on
+the evening of Wednesday, the 8th of April; and how he hiccuped out his
+vows of fidelity." "My brother," John, Duke of Bedford, records, "was
+one of the two unmarried dukes who supported the Prince at the ceremony,
+and he had need of his support; for my brother told me the Prince was so
+drunk that he could scarcely support himself from falling. He told my
+brother that he had drunk several glasses of brandy to enable him to go
+through the ceremony. There is no doubt that it was a _compulsory_
+marriage."
+
+With such an overture, we are not surprised to learn that the Royal
+bridegroom spent his wedding-night in a state of stupor on the floor of
+his bedroom; or that at dawn, when he had slept off the effects of his
+debauch, "pages heard cries proceeding from the nuptial chamber, and
+shortly afterwards saw the bridegroom rush out violently."
+
+Nor, we may be sure, was the Prince's undisguised hatred of his bride in
+any way mitigated by the stories which Lady Jersey and others of hex
+rivals poured into his willing ears--stories of her attachment to a
+young German Prince whom she was not allowed to marry; of a mysterious
+illness, followed by a few weeks' retreat; of that midnight promenade
+with the young naval officer; of assignations with Major Toebingen, the
+handsomest soldier in Europe, who so proudly wore the amethyst tie-pin
+she had presented to him--these and many another story which reflected
+none too well on her reputation before he had set eyes on her. But it
+needed no such whispered scandal to strengthen his hatred of a bride who
+personally repelled him, and who had been forced on him at a time when
+his heart was fully engaged with his lawful wedded wife, Mrs
+Fitzherbert, when it was not straying to Lady Jersey, to "Perdita" or
+others of his legion of lights-o'-love.
+
+From the first day the ill-fated union was doomed. One violent scene
+succeeded another, until, before she had been two months a wife, the
+Prince declared that he would no longer live with her. He would only
+wait until her child was born; then he would formally and finally leave
+her. Thus, three months after the birth of the Princess Charlotte, the
+deed of separation was signed, and Caroline was at last free to escape
+from a Court which she had grown to detest, with good reason, and from a
+husband whose brutalities and infidelities filled her with loathing.
+
+She carried with her, however, this consolation, that the "great, hearty
+people of England loved and pitied her." "God bless you! we will bring
+your husband back to you," was among the many cries that greeted her as
+she left the palace on her way to exile. But, to quote Thackeray again,
+"they could not bring that husband back; they could not cleanse that
+selfish heart. Was hers the only one he had wounded? Steeped in
+selfishness, impotent for faithful attachment and manly enduring
+love--had it not survived remorse, was it not accustomed to desertion?"
+
+For a time the outcast Princess, with her infant daughter, led a retired
+life amid the peace and beauty of Blackheath, where she lived as simply
+as any bourgeoise, playing the "lady bountiful" to the poor among her
+neighbours. Her chief pleasure seems to have been to surround herself
+with cottage babies, converting Montague House into a "positive nursery,
+littered up with cradles, swaddling-bands, feeding bottles, and other
+things of the kind."
+
+But even to this rustic retirement watchful eyes and slanderous tongues
+followed her; and it was not long before stories were passing from mouth
+to mouth in the Court of strange doings at Blackheath. The Princess, it
+was said, had become very intimate with Sir John Douglas and his lady,
+her near neighbours, and more especially with Sydney Smith, a
+good-looking naval captain, who shared the Douglas home, a man,
+moreover, with whom she had had suspicious relations at her father's
+Court many years earlier. It was rumoured that Captain Smith was a
+frequent and too welcome guest at Montague House, at hours when discreet
+ladies are not in the habit of receiving their male friends. Nor was the
+handsome captain the only friend thus unconventionally entertained.
+There was another good-looking naval officer, a Captain Manby, and also
+Sir Thomas Lawrence, the famous painter, both of whom were admitted to a
+suspicious intimacy with the Princess of Wales.
+
+These rumours, sufficiently disquieting in themselves, were followed by
+stories of the concealed birth of a child, who had come mysteriously to
+swell the numbers of the Princess's protégés of the crèche. Even King
+George, whose sympathy with his heir's ill-used wife was a matter of
+common knowledge, could not overlook a charge so grave as this. It must
+be investigated in the interests of the State, as well as of his
+family's honour; and, by his orders, a Commission of Peers was appointed
+to examine into the matter and ascertain the truth.
+
+The inquiry--the "Delicate Investigation" as it was appropriately
+called--opened in June, 1806, and witness after witness, from the
+Douglases to Robert Bidgood, a groom, gave evidence which more or less
+supported the charges of infidelity and concealment. The result of the
+investigation, however, was a verdict of acquittal, the Commissioners
+reporting that the Princess, although innocent, had been guilty of very
+indiscreet conduct--and this verdict the Privy Council confirmed.
+
+For the Princess it was a triumphant vindication, which was hailed with
+acclamation throughout the country. Even the Royal family showed their
+satisfaction by formal visits of congratulation to the Princess, from
+the King himself to the Duke of Cumberland who conducted his
+sister-in-law on a visit to the Court.
+
+But the days of Blackheath and the amateur nursery were at an end. The
+Princess returned to London, and found a more suitable home in
+Kensington Palace for some years, where she held her Court in rivalry of
+that of her husband at Carlton House. Here she was subjected to every
+affront and slight by the Prince and his set that the ingenuity of
+hatred could devise, and to crown her humiliation and isolation, her
+daughter Charlotte was taken from her and forbidden even to recognise
+her when their carriages passed in the street or park.
+
+Can we wonder that, under such remorseless persecutions, the Princess
+became more and more defiant; that she gave herself up to a life of
+recklessness and extravagance; that, more and more isolated from her own
+world, she sought her pleasure and her companions in undesirable
+quarters, finding her chief intimates in a family of Italian musicians;
+or that finally, heart-broken and despairing, she determined once for
+all to shake off the dust of a land that had treated her so cruelly?
+
+In August, 1814, with the approval of King and Parliament, the Princess
+left England to begin a career of amazing adventures and indiscrétions,
+the story of which is one of the most remarkable in history.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS--_continued_
+
+When Caroline, Princess of Wales, shook the dust of England off her feet
+one August day in the year 1814, it was only natural that her steps
+should first turn towards the Brunswick home which held for her at least
+a few happy memories, and where she hoped to find in sympathy and old
+associations some salve for her wounded heart.
+
+But the fever of restlessness was in her blood--the restlessness which
+was to make her a wanderer over the face of the earth for half a dozen
+years. The peace and solace she had looked for in Brunswick eluded her;
+and before many days had passed she was on her way through Switzerland
+to the sunny skies of Italy, where she could perhaps find in distraction
+and pleasure the anodyne which a life of retirement denied her. She was
+full of rebellion against fate, of hatred against her husband and his
+country which had treated her with such unmerited cruelty. She would
+defy fate; she would put a whole continent between herself and the
+nightmare life she had left behind, she hoped for ever. She would pursue
+and find pleasure at whatever cost.
+
+In September, within five weeks of leaving England, we find her at
+Geneva, installed in a suite of rooms next to those occupied by Marie
+Louise, late Empress of France, a fugitive and exile like herself, and
+animated by the same spirit of reckless revolt against destiny--Marie
+Louise, we read, "making excursions like a lunatic on foot and on
+horseback, never even seeming to dream of making people remember that,
+before she became mixed up with a Corsican adventurer, she was an
+Archduchess"; the Princess of Wales, equally careless of her dignity and
+position, finding her pleasure in questionable company.
+
+"From the inn where she was stopping she heard music, and, quite
+unaccompanied, immediately entered a neighbouring house and disappeared
+in the medley of dancers." A few days later, at Lausanne, "she learned
+that a little ball was in progress at a house opposite the 'Golden
+Lion,' and she asked for an invitation. After dancing with everybody and
+anybody, she finished up by dancing a Savoyard dance, called a
+_fricassée_, with a nobody. Madame de Corsal, who blushed and wept for
+the rest of the company, declares that it has made her ill, and that she
+feels that the honour of England has been compromised." Thus early did
+Caroline begin that career of indiscretion, to call it by no worse name,
+which made of her six years' exile "a long suicide of her reputation."
+
+In October we find the Princess entering Milan, with her retinue of
+ladies-in-waiting, chamberlains, equerry, page, courier, and coachman,
+and with William Austin for companion--a boy, now about thirteen, whom
+she treated as her son, and who was believed by many to be the child of
+her imprudence at Blackheath, although the Commission of the "Delicate
+Investigation" had pronounced that he was son of a poor woman at
+Deptford. At Milan, as indeed wherever she wandered in Italy, the
+"vagabond Princess" was received as a Queen. Count di Bellegarde, the
+Austrian Governor, was the first to pay homage to her; at the Scala
+Theatre, the same evening, her entry was greeted with thunders of
+applause, and whenever she appeared in the Milan streets it was to an
+accompaniment of doffed hats and cheers.
+
+One of her first visits was to the studio of Giuseppe Bossi, the famous
+and handsome artist, whom she requested to paint her portrait. "On
+Thursday," Bossi records, "I sketched her successfully in the character
+of a Muse; then on Friday she came to show me her arms, of which she
+was, not without reason, decidedly vain--she is a gay and whimsical
+woman, she seems to have a good heart; at times she is ennuyée through
+lack of occupation." On one occasion when she met in the studio some
+French ladies, two of whom had been mistresses of the King of
+Westphalia, the poor artist was driven to distraction by the chatter,
+the singing, and dancing, in which the Princess especially displayed her
+agility, until, as he pathetically says, "the house seemed possessed of
+the devil, and you can imagine with what kind of ease it was possible
+for me to work."
+
+Before leaving Milan the Princess gave a grand banquet to Bellegarde
+and a number of the principal men of the city--a feast which was to have
+very important and serious consequences, for it was at this banquet that
+General Pino, one of her guests, introduced to Caroline a new courier, a
+man who, though she little dreamt it at the time, was destined to play a
+very baleful part in her life.
+
+This new courier was a tall and strikingly handsome man, who had seen
+service in the Italian army, until a duel, in which he killed a superior
+officer, compelled him to leave it in disgrace. At the time he entered
+the Princess's service he was a needy adventurer, whose scheming brain
+and utter lack of principle were in the market for the highest bidder.
+"He is," said Baron Ompteda, "a sort of Apollo, of a superb and
+commanding appearance, more than six feet high; his physical beauty
+attracts all eyes. This man is called Pergami; he belongs to Milan, and
+has entered the Princess's service. The Princess," he significantly
+adds, "is shunned by all the English people of rank; her behaviour has
+created the most marked scandal."
+
+Such was the man with whose life that of the Princess of Wales was to be
+so intimately and disastrously linked, and whose relations with her were
+to be displayed to a shocked world but a few years later. It was indeed
+an evil fate that brought this "superb Apollo" of the crafty brain and
+conscienceless ambition into the life of the Princess at the high tide
+of her revolt against the world and its conventions.
+
+When Caroline and her retinue set out from Milan for Tuscany it was in
+the wake of Pergami, who had ridden ahead to discharge his duties as
+_avant courier_; but before Rome was reached his intimacy and
+familiarity with his mistress were already the subject of whispered
+comments and shrugged shoulders. At a ball given in her honour at Rome
+by the banker Tortonia, the Princess shocked even the least prudish by
+the abandon of her dancing and the tenuity of her costume, which, we are
+told, consisted of "a single embroidered garment, fastened beneath the
+bosom, without the shadow of a corset and without sleeves." And at
+Naples, where King Joachim Murat gave her a regal reception, with a
+sequel of fêtes and gala-performances in honour of the wife of the
+Regent of England, she attended a rout, at the Teatro San Carlo, so
+lightly attired "that many who saw her at her first entrance looked her
+up and down, and, not recognising her, or pretending not to recognise
+her, began to mutter disapprobation to such an extent that she was
+compelled to withdraw.... The English residents soon let her understand,
+by ceasing to frequent her palace, that even at Naples there were
+certain laws of dress which could not be trampled underfoot in this
+hoydenish manner."
+
+While Caroline was thus defying convention and even decency, watchful
+eyes were following her everywhere. A body of secret police, whose
+headquarters were at Milan, was noting every indiscretion; and every
+week brought fresh and damaging reports to England, where they were
+eagerly welcomed by the Regent and his satellites. And while the
+Princess was thus playing unconsciously, or recklessly, into the hands
+of the enemy, Pergami was daily making his footing in her favour more
+secure. Before Caroline left Naples he had been promoted from courier to
+equerry, and in this more exalted and privileged rôle was always at her
+side. So marked, in fact, was the intimacy even at this early stage,
+that the Princess's retinue, one after another, and on one flimsy
+pretext or another, deserted her in disgust, each vacancy, as it
+occurred, being filled by one of Pergami's relatives--his brother, his
+daughter, his sister-in-law (the Countess Oidi), and others, until
+Caroline was soon surrounded by members of the ex-courier's family.
+
+From Naples she wandered to Genoa, and from Genoa to Milan and Venice,
+received regally everywhere by the Italians and shunned by the English
+residents. From Venice she drifted to Lake Como, with whose beauties she
+was so charmed that she decided to make her home there, purchasing the
+Villa del Garrovo for one hundred and fifty thousand francs, and setting
+the builders to work to make it a still more splendid home for a future
+Queen of England. But even to the lonely isolation of the Italian lakes
+the eyes of her husband's secret agents pursued her, spying on her every
+movement--"uncertain shadows gliding in the twilight along the paths and
+between the hedges, and even in the cellars and attics of the
+villa"--until the shadowy presences filled her with such terror and
+unrest that she sought to escape them by a long tour in the East.
+
+Thus it was that in November, 1815, the Princess and her Pergami
+household set forth on their journey to Sicily, Tunis, Athens, the
+cities of the East and Jerusalem, the strange story of which was to be
+unfolded to the world five years later. How intimate the Princess and
+her handsome, stalwart courier had by this time become was illustrated
+by the Attorney-General in his opening speech at her memorable trial.
+"One day, after dinner, when the Princess's servants had withdrawn, a
+waiter at the hotel, Gran Brettagna, saw the Princess put a golden
+necklace round Pergami's neck. Pergami took it off again and put it
+jestingly on the neck of the Princess, who in her turn once more removed
+it and put it again round Pergami's neck."
+
+As early as August in this year Pergami had his appointed place at the
+Princess's table, and his room communicating with hers, and on the
+various voyages of the Eastern tour there was abundant evidence to prove
+"the habit which the Princess had of sleeping under one and the same
+awning with Pergami."
+
+But it is as impossible in the limits of space to follow Caroline and
+her handsome cavalier through every stage of these Eastern wanderings,
+as it is unnecessary to describe in detail the evidence of intimacy so
+lavishly provided by the witnesses for the prosecution at the
+trial--evidence much of which was doubtless as false as it was venal.
+That the Princess, however, was infatuated by her cavalier, and that she
+was in the highest degree indiscreet in her relations with him, seems
+abundantly clear, whatever the precise degree of actual guilt may have
+been.
+
+Pergami had now been promoted from equerry to Grand Chamberlain to Her
+Royal Highness, and as further evidence of her favour, she bought for
+him in Sicily an estate which conferred on its owner the title of Baron
+della Francina. At Malta she procured for him a knighthood of that
+island's famous order; at Jerusalem she secured his nomination as Knight
+of the Holy Sepulchre; and, to crown her favours, she herself instituted
+the Order of St Caroline, with Pergami for Grand Master. Behold now our
+ex-courier and adventurer in all his new glory as Grand Chamberlain and
+lover of a future Queen of England, as Baron della Francina, Knight of
+two Orders and Grand Master of a third, while every post of profit in
+that vagrant Court was held by some member of his family!
+
+The Eastern tour ended, which had ranged from Algiers and Egypt to
+Constantinople and Jerusalem, and throughout which she had progressed
+and been received as a Queen, Caroline settled down for a time in her
+now restored villa on Lake Como, celebrating her return by lavish
+charities to her poor neighbours, and by popular fêtes and balls, in one
+of which "she danced as Columbine, wearing her lover's ear-rings, whilst
+Pergami, dressed as harlequin and wearing her ear-rings, supported her."
+
+But even here she was to find no peace from her husband's spies, whose
+evidence, confirmed on oath by a score of witnesses, was being
+accumulated in London against the longed-for day of reckoning. And it
+was not long before Caroline and her Grand Chamberlain were on their
+wanderings again--this time to the Tyrol, to Austria, and through
+Northern Italy, always inseparable and everywhere setting the tongue of
+scandal wagging by their indiscreet intimacy. Even the tragic death in
+childbirth of her only daughter, the Princess Charlotte, which put all
+England in mourning, seemed powerless to check her career of folly. It
+is true that, on hearing of it, she fell into a faint and afterwards
+into a kind of protracted lethargy, but within a few weeks she had flung
+herself again into her life of pleasure-chasing and reckless disregard
+of convention.
+
+But matters were now hurrying fast to their tragic climax. For some time
+the life of George III. had been flickering to its close. Any day might
+bring news that the end had come, and that the Princess was a Queen. And
+for some time Caroline had been bracing herself to face this crisis in
+her life and to pit herself against her enemies in a grim struggle for a
+crown, the title to which her years of folly (for such at the best they
+had been) had so gravely endangered. Over the remainder of her vagrant
+life, with its restless flittings, and its indiscretions, marked by
+spying eyes, we must pass to that February morning in 1820 when, to
+quote a historian, "the Princess had scarcely reached her hotel (at
+Florence) when her faithful major-domo, John Jacob Sicard, appeared
+before her, accompanied by two noblemen, and in a voice full of emotion
+announced, 'You are Queen.'"
+
+The fateful hour had at last arrived when Caroline must either renounce
+her new Queendom or present a bold front to her enemies and claim the
+crown that was hers. After a few indecisive days, spent in Rome, where
+news reached her that the King had given orders that her name should be
+excluded from the Prayer Book, her wavering resolution took a definite
+and determined shape. She would go to London and face the storm which
+she knew her coming would bring on her head.
+
+At Paris she was met by Lord Hutchinson with a promise of an increase of
+her yearly allowance to fifty thousand pounds, on condition that she
+renounced her claim to the title of Queen, and consented never to put
+foot again in England--an offer to which she gave a prompt and scornful
+refusal; and on the afternoon of 5th June she reached Dover, greeted by
+enthusiastic cheers and shouts of "God save Queen Caroline!" by the
+fluttering of flags, and the jubilant clanging of church-bells. The
+wanderer had come back to the land of her sorrow, to find herself
+welcomed with open arms by the subjects of the King whose brutality had
+driven her to exile and to shame.
+
+The story of the trial which so soon followed her arrival has too
+enduring a place in our history to call for a detailed description--the
+trial in which all the weight of the Crown and the testimony of a small
+army of suborned witnesses--"a troupe of comedians in the pay of
+malevolence," to quote Brougham--were arrayed against her; and in which
+she had so doughty a champion in Brougham, and such solace and support
+in the sympathy of all England. We know the fate of that Bill of Pains
+and Penalties, which charged her with having permitted a shameful
+intimacy with one Bartolomeo Pergami, and provided as penalty that she
+should be deprived of the title and privilege of Queen, and that her
+marriage to King George IV. should be for ever dissolved and
+annulled--how it was forced through the House of Lords with a
+diminishing majority, and finally withdrawn. And we know, too, the
+outburst of almost delirious delight that swept from end to end of
+England at the virtual acquittal of the persecuted Caroline. "The
+generous exultation of the people was," to quote a contemporary, "beyond
+all description. It was a conflagration of hearts."
+
+We also recall that pathetic scene when Caroline presented herself at
+the door of Westminster Abbey to demand admission, on the day of her
+husband's coronation, to be received by the frigid words, "We have no
+instructions to allow you to pass"; and we can see her as, "humiliated,
+confounded, and with tears in her eyes," she returned sadly to her
+carriage, the heart crushed within her. Less than three weeks later,
+seized by a grave and mysterious illness, she laid down for ever the
+burden of her sorrows, leaving instructions that her tomb should bear
+the words:
+
+CAROLINE
+THE INJURED QUEEN OF ENGLAND.
+
+As for Pergami, the idol with the feet of clay, who had clouded her last
+years in tragedy, he survived for twenty years more to enjoy his honours
+and his ill-gotten gold; while William Austin, who had masqueraded as a
+Prince and called Caroline "mother," ended his days, while still a young
+man, in a madhouse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+THE LOVE-AFFAIRS OF A REGENT
+
+When Louis XIV. laid down, one September day in the year 1715, the crown
+which he had worn with such splendour for more than seventy years, his
+sceptre fell into the hands of his nephew Philippe, Duc d'Orléans, who
+for eight years ruled France as Regent, and as guardian of the
+child-King, the fifteenth Louis.
+
+Seldom in the world's history has a reign, so splendid as that of the
+Sun-King, closed in such darkness and tragedy. The disastrous war of the
+Spanish Succession had drained France of her strength and her gold. She
+lay crushed under a mountain of debt--ten thousand million francs; she
+was reduced to the lowest depths of wretchedness, ruin, and disorder,
+and it was at this crisis in her life as a nation that fate placed a
+child of four on her throne, and gave the reins of power into the hands
+of the most dissolute man in Europe.
+
+Not that Philippe of Orleans lacked many of the qualities that go to the
+making of a ruler and a man. He had proved himself, in Italy and in
+Spain, one of the bravest of his country's soldiers, and an able,
+far-seeing leader of armies; and he had, as his Regency proved, no mean
+gifts of statesmanship. But his kingly qualities were marred by the
+taint of birth and early environment.
+
+Such good qualities as he had he no doubt drew from his mother, the
+capable, austere, high-minded Elizabeth of Bavaria, who to her last day
+was the one good influence in his life. To his father, Louis XIV.'s
+younger brother, who is said to have been son of Cardinal Mazarin, Anne
+of Austria's lover, and who was the most debased man of his time in all
+France, he just as surely owed the bias of sensuality to which he
+chiefly owes his place in memory.
+
+And not only was he thus handicapped by his birth; he had for tutor that
+arch-scoundrel Dubois--the "grovelling insect" who rarely opened his
+mouth without uttering a blasphemy or indecency, and who initiated his
+charge, while still a boy, into every base form of so-called pleasure.
+
+Such was the man who, amid the ruins of his country, inaugurated in
+France an era of licentiousness such as she had never known--an
+incomprehensible mass of contradictions--a kingly presence with the soul
+of a Caliban, statesman and sinner, high-minded and low-living, spending
+his days as a sovereign, a rôle which he played to perfection, and his
+nights as a sot and a sensualist.
+
+It was doubtless Dubois who was mostly responsible for the baseness in
+the Regent's character--Dubois who had taught him a contempt for
+religion and morality, the cynical view of life which makes the pleasure
+of the moment the only thing worth pursuing, at whatever cost; and who
+had impressed indelibly on his mind that no woman is virtuous and that
+men are knaves. And there was never any lack of men to continue Dubois'
+teaching. He gathered round him the most dissolute gallants in France,
+in whose company he gave the rein to his most vicious appetites. His
+"roués" he dubbed them, a title which aptly described them; although
+they affected to give it a very different interpretation. They were the
+Regent's roués, they said, no doubt with the tongue in the cheek,
+because they were so devoted to him that they were ready, in his
+defence, to be broken on the wheel (_la roue_)!
+
+Each of these boon-comrades was a past-master in the arts of
+dissipation, and each was also among the most brilliant men of his day.
+The Chevalier de Simiane was famous alike for his drinking powers and
+his gift of graceful verse; De Fargy was a polished wit, and the
+handsomest man in France, with an unrivalled reputation for gallantry;
+the Comte de Nocé was the Regent's most intimate friend from
+boyhood--brother-in-law he called him, since they had not only tastes
+but even mistresses in common. Then there were the Marquis de la Fare,
+Captain of Guards and _bon enfant_; the Marquis de Broglio, the biggest
+debauchee in France, the Marquis de Canillac, the Duc de Brancas, and
+many another--all famous (or infamous) for some pet vice, and all the
+best of boon-companions for the pleasure-loving Regent.
+
+Strange tales are told of the orgies of this select band which the
+Regent gathered around him--orgies which shocked even the France of the
+eighteenth century, when she was the acknowledged leader in licence. At
+six o'clock every evening Philippe's kingship ended for the day. He had
+had enough--more than enough--of State and ceremonial, of interviewing
+ambassadors, and of the flatteries of Princes and the obsequious homage
+of courtiers. Pleasure called him away from the boredom of empire; and
+at the stroke of six we find him retiring to the company of his
+mistresses and his roués to feast and drink and gamble until dawn broke
+on the revelry--his laugh the loudest, his wit the most dazzling, his
+stories the most piquant, keeping the table in a roar with his
+infectious gaiety. He was Regent no longer; he was simply a _bon
+camarade_, as ready to exchange familiarities with a "lady of the
+ballet" as to lead the laughter at a joke at his own expense.
+
+At nine o'clock, when the fun had waxed furious and wine had set the
+slowest tongue wagging and every eye a-sparkle, other guests streamed in
+to join the orgy--the most beautiful ladies of the Court, from the
+Duchesse de Gesores and Madame de Mouchy to the Regent's own daughter,
+the Duchesse de Berry, who, young as she was, had little to learn of the
+arts of dissipation. And in the wake of these high-born women would
+follow laughing, bright-eyed troupes of dancing and chorus-girls from
+the theatres with an escort of the cleverest actors of Paris, to join
+the Regent's merry throng.
+
+The champagne now flowed in rivers; the servants were sent away; the
+doors were locked and the fun grew riotous; ceremony had no place there;
+rank and social distinctions were forgotten. Countesses flirted with
+comedians; Princes made love to ballet-girls and duchesses alike. The
+leader of the moment was the man or woman who could sing the most daring
+song, tell the most piquant story, or play the most audacious practical
+joke, even on the Regent himself. Sometimes, we are told, the lights
+would be extinguished, and the orgy continued under the cover of
+darkness, until the Regent suddenly opened a cupboard, in which lights
+were concealed--to an outburst of shrieks of laughter at the scenes
+revealed.
+
+Thus the mad night hours passed until dawn came to bring the revels to a
+close; or until the Regent would sally forth with a few chosen comrades
+on a midnight ramble to other haunts of pleasure in the capital--the
+lower the better. Such was the way in which Philippe of Orleans, Regent
+of France, spent his nights. A few hours after the carouse had ended he
+would resume his sceptre, as austere and dignified a ruler as you would
+find in Europe.
+
+It must not be imagined that Philippe was the only Royal personage who
+thus set a scandalous example to France. There was, in fact, scarcely a
+Prince or Princess of the Blood Royal whose love affairs were not
+conducted flagrantly in the eyes of the world, from the Dowager Duchesse
+de Bourbon, who lavished her favours on the Scotch financier, John Law,
+of Lauriston, to the Princesse de Conte, who mingled her piety with a
+marked partiality for her nephew, Le Kallière.
+
+As for the Regent's own daughters, from the Duchesse de Berry, to
+Louise, Queen of Spain, each has left behind her a record almost as
+scandalous as that of her father. It was, in fact, an era of corruption
+in high places, when, in the reaction that followed the dismal and
+decorous last years of Louis XIV.'s reign, Pleasure rose phoenix-like
+from the ashes of ruin and flaunted herself unashamed in every guise
+with which vice could deck her.
+
+It must be said for the Regent, corrupt as he was, that he never abused
+his position and his power in the pursuit of beauty. His mistresses
+flocked to him from every rank of life, from the stage to the highest
+Court circles, but remained no longer than inclination dictated. And the
+fascination is not far to seek, for Philippe d'Orléans was of the men
+who find easy conquests in the field of love. He was one of the
+handsomest men in all France; and to his good-looks and his reputation
+for bravery he added a manner of rare grace and courtliness, a supple
+tongue, and that strange magnetic power which few women could resist.
+
+No King ever boasted a greater or more varied list of favourites, in
+which actresses and duchesses vied with each other for his smiles, in a
+rivalry which seems to have been singularly free from petty jealousy.
+Among the beauties of the Court we find the Duchesse de Fedari, the
+Duchesse de Gesores, the Comtesse de Sabran at one extreme; and
+actresses like Emilie, Desmarre, and La Souris at the other, pretty
+butterflies of the footlights who appealed to the Regent no more than
+Madame d'Averne, the gifted pet of France's wits and literary men, the
+most charming "blue-stocking" of her day. And all, without
+exception--duchesses, countesses, and actresses--were as ready to give
+their love to Philippe, the man, as to the Duc d'Orléans, Regent of
+France.
+
+Even in his relations with these ministers of pleasure, the Regent's
+better qualities often exhibit themselves agreeably. To the pretty
+actress, Emilie, whose heart was so completely his, he always acted with
+a characteristic generosity and forbearance; and her conduct is by no
+means less pleasing than his. Once, we are told, when he expressed a
+wish to give her a pair of diamond ear-rings at a cost of fifteen
+thousand francs, she demurred at accepting so valuable a present. "If
+you must be so generous," she pleaded, "please don't give me the
+ear-rings, which are much too grand for such as me. Give me, instead,
+ten thousand francs, so that I may buy a small house to which I can
+retire when you no longer love me as you now do."
+
+Emilie had scarcely returned home, however, when a Court official
+appeared with a package containing, not ten thousand, but twenty-five
+thousand francs, which her lover insisted on her keeping; and when she
+returned fifteen thousand francs, he promptly sent them back again,
+declaring that he would be very angry if she refused again to accept
+them.
+
+His love, indeed, for Emilie seems to have been as pure and deep as any
+of which he was capable. It was no fleeting passion, but an affection
+based on a sincere respect for her character and mental gifts. So
+highly, indeed, did he think of her judgment that she became his most
+trusted counsellor. She sat by his side when he received ambassadors;
+he consulted her on difficult problems of State; and it was her advice
+that he often followed in preference to the wisdom of all his ministers;
+for, as he said to Dubois, "Emilie has an excellent brain; she always
+gives me the best counsel."
+
+When at last he had to part from the modest and accomplished actress it
+was under circumstances which speak well for his generosity. A former
+lover, the Marquis de Fimarcon, on his return from fighting in Spain,
+sought Emilie out, and, blazing with jealousy, insisted that she should
+leave the Regent and return to his protection. He vowed that, if she
+refused, he would murder her; and when, in her alarm, she sought refuge
+in a convent at Charenton, he threatened to burn the nuns alive in their
+cells unless they restored her to him. Thus it was that, rather than
+allow Emilie to run any risks from her revengeful and brutal lover, the
+Regent relinquished his claim to her; and only when Fimarcon's continued
+brutality at last made intervention necessary, did he order the bully to
+be arrested and consigned to the prison of Fort l'Évêque.
+
+It is, however, in the story of Mademoiselle Aissé, the Circassian
+slave, that we find the best illustration of the chivalry which underlay
+the Regent's passion for women, and which he never forgot in his wildest
+excesses. This story, one of the most touching in French history, opens
+in the year 1698, when a band of Turkish soldiers returned to
+Constantinople from a raid in the Caucasus, bringing with them, among
+many other captives, a beautiful child of four years, said to be the
+daughter of a King. So lovely was the little Circassian fairy that when
+the Comte de Feriol, France's Ambassador to Turkey, set eyes on her, he
+decided to purchase her; and she became his property in exchange for
+fifteen hundred livres.
+
+That she might have every advantage of training to fit her for his
+seraglio in later years, the child was sent to Paris, to the home of the
+Ambassador's brother, President de Feriol, where she grew to beautiful
+girlhood as a member of the family, as fair a flower as ever was
+transplanted to French soil. Thus she passed the next thirteen years of
+her young life, charming all by her sweetness of disposition, as she won
+the homage of all by her remarkable beauty and grace.
+
+Such was Ayesha, or Aissé, the Circassian maid, when at last her "owner"
+returned to Paris to fall under the spell of her radiant beauty and to
+claim her as his chattel, bought with good gold and trained at his cost
+to adorn his harem. In vain did Aissé weep and plead to be spared a fate
+from which every fibre of her being shrank in horror. Her "master" was
+inexorable. "When I bought you," he said, "it was my intention to make
+you my daughter or my mistress. I now intend that you shall become both
+the one and the other." Friendless and helpless, she was obliged to
+yield; and for six years she had to submit to the endearments of her
+protector, a man more than old enough to be her father, until his death
+brought her release.
+
+At twenty-four, more lovely than ever, combining the beauty of the
+Circassian with the graces of France, Aissé had now every right to look
+forward at least to such happiness as was possible to a stranger in a
+strange land. But no sooner was one danger to her peace removed than
+another sprang up to take its place. The rumour of her beauty and her
+sweetness had come to the ears of the Regent, and strong forces were at
+work to bring her to his arms. Madame de Tencin was the leader in this
+base conspiracy, with the power of the Romish Church at her back; for
+with the fair Circassian high in the Regent's favour and a pliant tool
+in their hands, the Jesuits' influence at Court would be greatly
+strengthened. Dubois was won over to the unholy alliance; and the Due's
+_maîtresse en titre_ was bribed, not only to withdraw all opposition to
+her proposed rival, but to arrange a meeting between the Regent and the
+victim.
+
+Success seemed to be assured. Mademoiselle Aissé was to exchange slavery
+to her late owner for an equally odious place in the harem of the ruler
+of France. Her tears and entreaties were all in vain; when she begged on
+her knees to be allowed to retire to a convent Madame de Feriol turned
+her back on her. Her only hope of rescue now lay in the Regent himself;
+and to him she pleaded her cause with such pathetic eloquence that he
+not only allowed her to depart in peace, but with words of sympathy and
+promises of his protection in the pure and noble sense of the word.
+
+Thus by the chivalry of the most dissolute man of his age the Circassian
+slave-girl was rescued from a life which to her would have been worse
+than death--to spend her remaining years, happy in the love of an honest
+man, the Chevalier d'Aydie, until death claimed her while she still
+possessed the beauty which had been at once her glory and her inevitable
+shame.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The close of the Regent's mis-spent life came with tragic suddenness.
+Worn out with excesses, while still young in years, his doctors had
+warned him that death might come to him any day; but with the
+light-heartedness that was his to the last, he laughed at their gloomy
+forebodings and refused to take the least precautions to safeguard his
+health. Two days before the end came he declined point-blank to be bled
+in order to avert a threatened attack of apoplexy. "Let it come if it
+will," he said, with a laugh. "I do not fear death; and if it comes
+quickly, so much the better!"
+
+On the evening of 2nd December, 1720, he was chatting gaily to the young
+Duchesse de Falari, when he suddenly turned to her and asked: "Do you
+think there is any hell--or Paradise?" "Of course I do," answered the
+Duchesse. "Then are you not afraid to lead the life you do?" "Well,"
+replied Madame, "I think God will have pity on me."
+
+Scarcely had the words left her lips when the Regent's head fell heavily
+on her shoulder, and he began to slip to the floor. A glance showed her
+that he was unconscious; and, rushing out of the room, the terrified
+Duchesse raced through the dark, deserted corridors of the palace
+shrieking for help. When at last help arrived, it came too late. The
+Regent had gone to find for himself an answer to the question his lips
+had framed a few minutes earlier--"is there any hell--or Paradise?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+A DELILAH OF THE COURT OF FRANCE
+
+It was a cruel fate that snatched Gabrielle d'Estrées from the arms of
+Henri IV., King of France and Navarre, at the moment when her long
+devotion to her hero-lover was on the eve of being crowned by the bridal
+veil; and for many a week there was no more stricken man in Europe than
+the disconsolate King as he wailed in his black-draped chamber, "The
+root of my love is dead, and will never blossom again."
+
+No doubt Henri's grief was as sincere as it was deep, for he had loved
+his golden-haired Gabrielle of the blue eyes and dimpled baby-cheeks as
+he had never loved woman before. It was the passion of a lifetime, the
+passion of a strong man in his prime, that fate had thus nipped in the
+fullness of its bloom; and its loss plunged him into an abyss of sorrow
+and despair such as few men have known.
+
+But with the hero of Ivry no emotion of grief or pleasure ever endured
+long. He was a man of erratic, widely contrasted moods--now on the peaks
+of happiness, now in the gulf of dejection; one mood succeeding another
+as inevitably and widely as the pendulum swings. Thus when he had spent
+three seemingly endless months of gloom and solitude, reaction seized
+him, and he flung aside his grief with his black raiment. He was still
+in the prime of his strength, with many years before him. He would drink
+the cup of life, even to its dregs. He had long been weary of the
+matrimonial chains that fettered him to Marguerite of Valois. He would
+strike them off, and in another wife and other loves find a new lease of
+pleasure.
+
+Thus it was with no heavy heart that he turned his back on Fontainebleau
+and his darkened room, and fared to Paris to find a new vista of
+pleasure opening to him at his palace doors, and his ears full of the
+praises of a new divinity who had come, during his absence, to grace his
+Court--a girl of such beauty, sprightliness, and wit as his capital had
+not seen for many a year.
+
+Henriette d'Entragues--for this was the divinity's name--was equipped by
+fate as few women were ever equipped, for the conquest of a King. Her
+mother, Marie Touchet, had been "light-o'-love" to Charles IX.; her
+father was the Seigneur d'Entragues, member of one of the most
+blue-blooded families of France, a soldier and statesman of fame; and
+their daughter had inherited, with her mother's beauty and grace, the
+clever brain and diplomatic skill of her father. A strange mixture of
+the bewitching and bewildering, this daughter of a King's mistress seems
+to have been. Tall and dark, voluptuous of figure, with ripe red lips,
+and bold and dazzling black eyes, she was, in her full-blooded, sensuous
+charms, the very "antipodes" to the childish, fairy-like Gabrielle who
+had so long been enshrined in the King's heart. And to this physical
+appeal--irresistible to a man of such strong passion as Henri, she added
+gifts of mind which "baby Gabrielle" could never claim.
+
+She had a wit as brilliant as the tongue which was its vehicle; her
+well-stored brain was more than a match for the most learned men at
+Court, and she would leave an archbishop discomfited in a theological
+argument, to cross swords with Sully himself on some abstruse problem of
+statesmanship. When Sully had been brought to his knees, she would rush
+away, with mischief in her eyes, to take the lead in some merry escapade
+or practical joke, her silvery laughter echoing in some remote palace
+corridor. A bewildering, alluring bundle of inconsistencies--beauty,
+savant, wit, and madcap--such was Henriette d'Entragues when Henri,
+fresh from his woes, came under the spell of her magnetism.
+
+Here, indeed, was an escape from his grief such as the King had never
+dared to hope for. Before he had been many hours in his palace, Henri
+was caught hopelessly in the toils of the new siren, and was intoxicated
+by her smiles and witcheries. Never was conquest so speedy, so dramatic.
+Before a week had flown he was at Henrietta's feet, as lovesick a swain
+as ever sighed for a lady, pouring love into her ears and writing her
+passionate letters between the frequent meetings, in which he would send
+her a "good night, my dearest heart," with "a million kisses."
+
+In the days of his lusty youth the idol and hero of France had never
+known passion such as this which consumed him within sight of his
+fiftieth birthday, and which was inspired by a woman of much less than
+half his years; for at the time Henri was forty-six, and Henriette was
+barely twenty.
+
+He quickly found, however, that his wooing was not to be all "plain
+sailing." When Henriette's parents heard of it, they affected to be
+horrified at the danger in which their beloved daughter was placed. They
+summoned her home from the perils of Court and a King's passion; and
+when Henri sent an envoy to bring them to reason they sent him back with
+a rebuff. Their daughter was to be no man's--not even a
+King's--plaything. If Henri's passion was sincere, he must prove it by a
+definite promise of marriage; and only on this condition would their
+opposition be removed.
+
+Even to such a stipulation Henri, such was his infatuation, made no
+demur. With his own hand he wrote an agreement pledging himself to make
+Demoiselle Henriette his lawful wife in case, within a certain period,
+she became the mother of a son; and undertaking to dissolve his marriage
+with his wife, Marguerite of France, for this purpose. And this
+agreement, signed with his own hand, he sent to the Seigneur d'Entragues
+and his wife, accompanied by a _douceur_ of a hundred thousand crowns.
+
+But before it was dispatched a more formidable obstacle than even the
+lady's natural guardians remained to be faced--none other than the Duc
+de Sully, the man who had shared all the perils of a hundred fights with
+Henri and was at once his chief counsellor and his _fidus Achates_.
+When at last he summoned up courage to place the document in Sully's
+hands, he awaited the verdict as nervously as any schoolboy in the
+presence of a dreaded master. Sully read through the paper, was silent
+for a few moments, and then spoke. "Sire," he said, "am I to give you my
+candid opinion on this document, without fear of anger or giving
+offence?" "Certainly," answered the King. "Well then, this is what I
+think of it," was Sully's reply, as he tore the document in two pieces
+and flung them on the floor. "Sully, you are mad!" exclaimed Henri,
+flaring into anger at such an outrage. "You are right, Sire, I am a weak
+fool, and would gladly know myself still more a fool--if I might be the
+only one in France!"
+
+It was in vain, however, that Sully pointed out the follies and dangers
+of such a step as was proposed. Henri's mind was made up, and leaving
+his friend, in high dudgeon, he went to his study and re-wrote his
+promise of marriage. The way was at last clear to the gratification of
+his passion. Henriette was more than willing, her parents' scruples and
+greed were appeased, and as for Sully--well, he must be left to get over
+his tantrums. Even to please such an old and trusted friend he could not
+sacrifice such an opportunity for pleasure and a new lease of life as
+now presented itself!
+
+Halcyon months followed for Henri--months in which even Gabrielle was
+forgotten in the intoxication of a new passion, compared with which the
+memory of her gentle charms was but as water to rich, red wine. That
+Henriette proved wilful, capricious, and extravagant--that her vanity
+drained his exchequer of hundreds of thousands of crowns for costly
+jewellery and dresses, was a mere bagatelle, compared with his delight
+in her manifold allurements.
+
+But Sully had by no means said his last word. The decree for annulling
+Henri's marriage with Marguerite de Valois was pronounced; and it was of
+the highest importance that she should have a worthy successor as Queen
+of France--a successor whom he found in Marie de Medicis.
+
+The marriage-contract was actually sealed before the King had any
+suspicion that his hand was being disposed of, and it was only when
+Sully one day entered his study with the startling words, "Sire, we have
+been marrying you," that the awakening came. For a few moments Henri sat
+as a man stunned, his head buried in his hands; then, with a deep sigh,
+he spoke: "If God orders it so, so let it be. There seems to be no
+escape; since you say that it is necessary for my kingdom and my
+subjects, why, marry I must."
+
+It was a strange predicament in which Henri now found himself. Still
+more infatuated than ever with Henriette, he was to be tied for life to
+a Princess whom he had never even seen. To add to the embarrassment of
+his position, the condition of his marriage promise to Henriette was
+already on the way to fulfilment; and he was thus pledged to wed her as
+strongly as any State compact could bind him to stand at the altar with
+Marie de Medicis. One thing was clear, he must at any cost recover that
+fatal document; and, while he was giving orders for the suitable
+reception of his new Queen, and arranging for her triumphal progress to
+Paris, he was writing to Henriette and her parents demanding the return
+of his promise of marriage agreement--to her, a pleading letter in which
+he prays her "to return the promise you have by you and not to compel me
+to have recourse to other means in order to obtain it"; to her father, a
+more imperious demand to which he expects instant obedience.
+
+As some consolation to his mistress, whose alternate tears, rage, and
+reproaches drove him to distraction, he creates her Marquise de Verneuil
+and promises that, if he should be unable to marry her, he will at least
+give her a husband of Royal rank, the Due de Nevers, who was eager to
+make her his wife.
+
+But pleadings and threats alike fail to secure the return of the fatal
+document, and Henri is reduced to despair, until Henriette gives birth
+to a dead child and his promise thus becomes of as little value as the
+paper it was written on. The condition has failed, and he is a free man
+to marry his Tuscan Princess, while Henriette, thus foiled in her great
+ambition, is in danger not only of losing her coveted crown, but her
+place in the King's favour. The days of her wilful autocracy are ended;
+and, though her heart is full of anger and disappointment, she writes to
+him a pitiful letter imploring him still to love her and not to cast her
+"from the Heaven to which he has raised her, down to the earth where he
+found her." "Do not let your wedding festivities be the funeral of my
+hopes," she writes. "Do not banish me from your Royal presence and your
+heart. I speak in sighs to you, my King, my lover, my all--I, who have
+been loved by the earth's greatest monarch, and am willing to be his
+mistress and his servant."
+
+To such humility was the proud, arrogant beauty now reduced. She was an
+abject suppliant where she had reigned a Queen. Nor did her pleadings
+fall on deaf ears. Her Royal lover's hand was given, against his will,
+to his new Queen, but his heart, he vowed, was all Henriette's--so much
+so that he soon installed her in sumptuous rooms in his palace adjoining
+those of the Queen herself.
+
+Was ever man placed in a more delicate position than this King of
+France, between the rival claims of his wife and mistress, who were
+occupying adjacent apartments, and who, moreover, were both about to
+become mothers? It speaks well for Henri's tactfulness that for a time
+at least this _ménage à trois_ appears to have been quite amiably
+conducted. When Queen Marie gave birth to a son it was to Henriette that
+the infant's father first confided the good news, seasoning it with "a
+million kisses" for herself. And when Henriette, in turn, became a
+mother for the second time, the double Royal event was celebrated by
+fêtes and rejoicings in which each lady took an equally proud and
+conspicuous part.
+
+It was inevitable, however, that a woman so favoured by the King, and of
+so imperious a nature, should have enemies at Court; and it was not long
+before she became the object of a conspiracy of which the Duchesse de
+Villars and the Queen were the arch-leaders. One day a bundle of letters
+was sent anonymously to Henri, letters full of tenderness and passion,
+addressed by his beloved Marquise, Henriette, to the Prince de
+Joinville. The King was furious at such evidence of his mistress's
+disloyalty, and vowed he would never see her again. But all his storming
+and reproaches left the Marquise unmoved. She declared, with scorn in
+her voice, that the letters were forgeries; that she had never written
+to Joinville in her life, nor spoken a word to him that His Majesty
+might not have heard. She even pointed out the forger, the Duc de
+Guise's secretary, and was at last able to convince the King of her
+innocence.
+
+The Duchesse de Villars and Joinville were banished from the Court in
+disgrace; the Queen had a severe lecture from her husband; and Henriette
+was not only restored to full favour, but was consoled by a welcome
+present of six thousand pounds.
+
+But the days of peace in the King's household were now gone for ever.
+Queen Marie, thus humiliated by her rival, became her bitter enemy and
+also a thorn in the side of her unfaithful husband. Every day brought
+its fierce quarrels which only stopped on the verge of violence. More
+than once in fact Henri had to beat a retreat before his Queen's
+clenched fist, while she lost no opportunity of insulting and
+humiliating the Marquise.
+
+It is impossible altogether to withhold sympathy from a man thus
+distracted between two jealous women--a shrewish wife, who in her most
+amiable mood repelled his advances with coldness and cutting words, and
+a mistress who vented on him all the resentment which the Queen's
+insults and snubs roused in her. Even all Sully's diplomacy was
+powerless to pour oil on such vexed waters as these.
+
+The Queen, however, had not long to wait for her revenge, which came
+with the disclosure of a conspiracy, at the head of which were
+Henriette's father and her half-brother, the Comte d'Auvergne, and in
+which, it was proved, she herself had played no insignificant part.
+Punishment came, swift and terrible. Her father and brother were
+sentenced to death, herself to perpetual confinement in a monastery.
+
+But even at this crisis in her life, Henriette's stout heart did not
+fail her for a moment. "The King may take my life, if he pleases," she
+said. "Everybody will say that he killed his wife; for I was Queen
+before the Tuscan woman came on the scene at all." None knew better than
+she that she could afford thus to put on a bold front. Henri was still
+her slave, to whom her little finger was more than his crown; and she
+knew that in his hands both her liberty and her life were safe. And thus
+it proved; for before she had spent many weeks in the Monastery of
+Beaumont-les-Tours, its doors were flung open for her, and the first
+news she heard was that her father was a free man, while her brother's
+death-sentence had been commuted to a few years in the Bastille.
+
+Thus Henriette returned to the turbulent life of the palace--the daily
+routine of quarrels and peacemaking with the King, and undisguised
+hostility from the Queen, through all of which Henri's heart still
+remained hers. "How I long to have you in my arms again," he writes,
+when on a hunting excursion, which had led him to the scene of their
+early romance. "As my letter brings back the memory of the past, I know
+you will feel that nothing in the present is worth anything in
+comparison. This, at least, was my feeling as I walked along the roads I
+so often traversed in the old days on my journey to your side. When I
+sleep I dream of you; when I wake my thoughts are all of you." He sends
+her a million kisses, and vows that all he asks of life is that she
+shall always love him entirely and him alone.
+
+One would have thought that such a conquest of a King and such triumph
+over a Queen would have gratified the ambition of the most exacting of
+women. But the Marquise de Verneuil seems to have found small
+satisfaction in her victories. When she was not provoking quarrels with
+Henri, which roused him to such a pitch of anger that at times he
+threatened to strike her, she received his advances with a coldness or a
+sullen acquiescence calculated to chill the most ardent lover. In other
+moods she would drive him to despair by declaring that she had long
+ceased to love him, and that all she wanted from him was a dowry to
+carry in marriage to one or other of several suitors who were dying for
+her hand.
+
+But Madame's day of triumph was drawing much nearer to an end than she
+imagined. The end, in fact, came with dramatic suddenness when Henri
+first set eyes on the radiantly lovely Charlotte de Montmorency. Weary
+at heart of the tempers and exactions of Henriette, it needed but such a
+lure as this to draw him finally from her side; and from the first
+flash of Charlotte's beautiful eyes this most susceptible of Kings was
+undone. Madame de Verneuil's reign was ended; the next quarrel was made
+the occasion for a complete rupture, and the Court saw her no more.
+
+Already she had lost the bloom of her beauty; she had grown stout and
+coarse through her excessive fondness for the pleasures of the table,
+and the rest of her days, which were passed in friendless isolation, she
+spent in indulging appetites, which added to her mountain of flesh while
+robbing her of the last trace of good-looks. When the knife of Ravaillac
+brought Henri's life and his new romance to a tragic end, the Marquise
+was among those who were suspected of inspiring the assassin's blow; and
+although her guilt was never proved, the taint of suspicion clung to her
+to her last day.
+
+After fruitless angling for a husband--the Duc de Guise, the Prince de
+Joinville, and many another who, with one consent, fled from her
+advances, she resigned herself to a life of obscurity and gluttony,
+until death came, one day in the year 1633, to release her from a world
+of vanity and disillusionment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+THE "SUN-KING" AND THE WIDOW
+
+
+Search where you will in the record of Kings, you will find nowhere a
+figure more splendid and more impressive than that of the fourteenth
+Louis, who for more then seventy years ruled over France, and for more
+than fifty eclipsed in glory his fellow-sovereigns as the sun pales the
+stars. Nearly two centuries have gone since he closed his weary and
+disillusioned eyes on the world he had so long dominated; but to-day he
+shines in history in the galaxy of monarchs with a lustre almost as
+great as when he was hailed throughout the world as the "Sun-King," and
+in his pride exclaimed, "_I_ am the State."
+
+Placed, like his successor, on the greatest throne in Europe, a child of
+five, fortune exhausted itself in lavishing gifts on him. The world was
+at his feet almost before he had learned to walk. He grew to manhood
+amid the adulation and flatteries of the greatest men and the fairest of
+women. And that he might lack no great gift, he was dowered with every
+physical perfection that should go to the making of a King.
+
+There was no more goodly youth in France than Louis when he first
+practised the arts of love-making, in which he later became such an
+adept, on Mazarin's lovely niece, Marie Mancini. Tall, with a well-knit,
+supple figure, with dark, beautiful eyes illuminating a singularly
+handsome face, with a bearing of rare grace and distinction, this son of
+Anne of Austria was a lover whom few women could resist.
+
+Such conquests came to him with fatal ease, and for thirty years at
+least, until satiety killed passion, there was no lack of beautiful
+women to minister to his pleasure and to console him for the lack of
+charms in the Spanish wife whom Mazarin thrust into his reluctant arms
+when he was little more than a boy, and when his heart was in Marie
+Mancini's keeping.
+
+Among all the fair and frail women who succeeded one another in his
+affection three stand out from the rest with a prominence which his
+special favour assigned to each in turn. For ten early years it was
+Louise de la Baume-Leblanc (better known to fame as the Duchesse de
+Lavallière) who reigned as his uncrowned Queen, and who gave her life to
+his pleasure and to the care of the children she bore to him. But such
+constancy could not last for ever in a man so constitutionally
+inconstant as Louis. When the Marquise de Montespan, in all her radiant
+and sensuous loveliness, came on the scene, she drew the King to her
+arms as a flame lures the moth. Her voluptuous charms, her abounding
+vitality and witty tongue, made the more refined beauty and the
+gentleness of the Duchesse flavourless in comparison; and Louise,
+realising that her sun had set, retired to spend the rest of her life in
+the prayers and piety of a convent, leaving her brilliant rival in
+undisputed possession of the field.
+
+For many years Madame de Montespan, the most consummate courtesan who
+ever enslaved a King, queened it over Louis in her magnificent
+apartments at Versailles and in the Tuileries. He was never weary of
+showering rich gifts and favours on her; and, in return, she became the
+mother of his children and ministered to his every whim, little dreaming
+of the day when she in turn was to be dethroned by an insignificant
+widow whom she regarded as the creature of her bounty, and who so often
+awaited her pleasure in her ante-room.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When Françoise d'Aubigné was cradled, one November day in the year 1635,
+within the walls of a fortress-prison in Poitou, the prospect of a
+Queendom seemed as remote as a palace in the moon. She had good blood in
+her veins, it is true. Her ancestors had been noblemen of Normandy
+before the Conqueror ever thought of crossing the English Channel, and
+her grandfather, General Theodore d'Aubigné, had won distinction as a
+soldier on many a battlefield. It was to her father, profligate and
+spendthrift, who, after squandering his patrimony, had found himself
+lodged in jail, that Françoise owed the ignominy of her birthplace, for
+her mother had insisted on sharing the captivity of her ne'er-do-well
+husband.
+
+When at last Constant d'Aubigné found his prison doors opened, he shook
+the dust of France off his feet and took his wife and young children
+away to Martinique, where at least, he hoped, his record would not be
+known. On the voyage, we are told, the child was brought so near to
+death's door by an illness that her body was actually on the point of
+being flung overboard when her mother detected signs of life, and
+rescued her from a watery grave. A little later, in Martinique, she had
+an equally narrow escape from death as the result of a snakebite. A
+child thus twice miraculously preserved was evidently destined for
+better things than an early tomb, more than one declared; and so indeed
+it proved.
+
+When the father ended his mis-spent days in the West Indian island, the
+widow took her poverty and her fledgelings back to France, where
+Françoise was placed under the charge of a Madame de Villette, to pick
+up such education as she could in exchange for such menial work as
+looking after Madame's poultry and scrubbing her floors. When her mother
+in turn died, the child (she was only fifteen at the time) was taken to
+Paris by an aunt, whose miserliness or poverty often sent her hungry to
+bed.
+
+Such was Françoise's condition when she was taken one day to the house
+of Paul Scarron, the crippled poet, whose satires and burlesques kept
+Paris in a ripple of merriment, and to whom the child's poverty and
+friendless position made as powerful an appeal as her budding beauty and
+her modesty. It was a very tender heart that beat in the pain-racked,
+paralysed body of the "father of French burlesque"; and within a few
+days of first setting eyes on his "little Indian girl," as he called
+her, he asked her to marry him. "It is a sorry offer to make you, my
+dear child," he said, "but it is either this or a convent." And, to
+escape the convent, Françoise consented to become the wife of the
+"bundle of pains and deformities" old enough to be her father.
+
+In the marriage-contract Scarron, with characteristic buffoonery,
+recognises her as bringing a dower of "four louis, two large and very
+expressive eyes, a fine bosom, a pair of lovely hands, and a good
+intellect"; while to the attorney, when asked what his contribution was,
+he answered, "I give her my name, and that means immortality." For eight
+years Françoise was the dutiful wife of her crippled husband, nursing
+him tenderly, managing his home and his purse, redeeming his writing
+from its coarseness, and generally proving her gratitude by a ceaseless
+devotion. Then came the day when Scarron bade her farewell on his
+death-bed, begging her with his last breath to remember him sometimes,
+and bidding her to be "always virtuous."
+
+Thus Françoise d'Aubigné was thrown once more on a cold world, with
+nothing between her and starvation but Scarron's small pension, which
+the Queen-mother continued to his widow, and compelled to seek a cheap
+refuge within convent walls. She had however good-looks which might
+stand her in good stead. She was tall, with an imposing figure and a
+natural dignity of carriage. She had a wealth of light-brown hair, eyes
+dark and brilliant, full of fire and intelligence, a well-shaped nose,
+and an exquisitely modelled mouth.
+
+Beautiful she was beyond doubt, in these days of her prime; but there
+were thousands of more beautiful women in France. And for ten years
+Madame Scarron was left to languish within the convent walls with never
+a lover to offer her release. When the Queen-mother died, and with her
+the pitiful pension, her plight was indeed pitiful. Her petitions to the
+King fell on deaf ears, until Montespan, moved by her tears and
+entreaties, pleaded for her; and Louis at last gave a reluctant consent
+to continue the allowance.
+
+It was a happy inspiration that led Scarron's widow to the King's
+favourite, for Madame de Montespan's heart, ever better than her life,
+went out to the gentle woman whom fate was treating so scurvily. Not
+content with procuring the pension, she placed her in charge of her
+nursery, an office of great trust and delicacy; and thus Madame Scarron
+found herself comfortably installed in the King's palace with a salary
+of two thousand crowns a year. Her day of poverty and independence was
+at last ended. She had, in fact, though she little knew it, placed her
+foot on the ladder, at the summit of which was the dazzling prize of the
+King's hand.
+
+Those were happy years which followed. High in the favour of the King's
+mistress, loving the little ones given into her charge as if they were
+her own children, especially the eldest born, the delicate and
+warm-hearted Duc de Maine, who was also his father's darling, Madame had
+nothing left to wish for in life. Her days were full of duty, of peace,
+and contentment. Even Louis, as he watched the loving care she lavished
+on his children, began to thaw and to smile on her, and to find pleasure
+in his visits to the nursery, which grew more and more frequent. There
+was a charm in this sweet-eyed, gentle-voiced widow, whose tongue was so
+skilful in wise and pleasant words. Her patient devotion deserved
+recognition. He gave orders that more fitting apartments should be
+assigned to Madame--a suite little less sumptuous than that of Montespan
+herself; and that money should not be lacking, he made her a gift of two
+hundred thousand francs, which the provident widow promptly invested in
+the purchase of the castle and estate of Maintenon.
+
+Such marked favours as these not unnaturally set jealous tongues
+wagging. Even Montespan began to grow uneasy, and to wonder what was
+coming next. When she ventured to refer sarcastically to the use
+"Scarron's widow" had made of his present, Louis silenced her by
+answering, "In my opinion, _Madame de Maintenon_ has acted very wisely";
+thus by a word conferring noble rank on the woman his favourite was
+already beginning to fear as a rival.
+
+And indeed there were soon to be sufficient grounds for Montespan's
+jealously and alarm. Every day saw Louis more and more under the spell
+of his children's governess--the middle-aged woman whose musical voice,
+gentle eyes, and wise words of counsel were opening a new and better
+world to him. She knew, as well as himself, how sated and weary he was
+of the cup of pleasure he had now drained to its last dregs of
+disillusionment; and he listened with eager ears to the words which
+pointed to him a surer path of happiness. Even reproof from her lips
+became more grateful to him than the sweetest flatteries from those of
+the most beautiful woman who counted but half of her years.
+
+The growing influence of the widow Scarron over the "Sun-King" had
+already become the chief gossip of the Court. From the allurements of
+Montespan, of Mademoiselle de Fontanges, and of de Ludre he loved to
+escape to the apartments of the soft-voiced woman who cared so much more
+for his soul than for his smiles. "His Majesty's interviews with Madame
+de Maintenon," Madame de Sevigné writes, "become more and more frequent,
+and they last from six in the morning to ten at night, she sitting in
+one arm-chair, he in another."
+
+In vain Montespan stormed and wept in her fits of jealous rage; in vain
+did the beautiful de Fontanges seek to lure him to her arms, until death
+claimed her so tragically before she had well passed her twentieth
+birthday. The King had had more than enough of such Delilahs. Pleasure
+had palled; peace was what he craved now--salve for his seared
+conscience.
+
+When Madame de Maintenon was appointed principal lady-in-waiting to the
+Dauphine and when, a little later, Louis' unhappy Queen drew her last
+breath in her arms, Montespan at last realised that her day of power was
+over. She wrote letters to the King begging him not to withdraw his
+affection from her, but to these appeals Louis was silent; he handed
+the letters to Madame de Maintenon to answer as she willed.
+
+The Court was quick to realise that a new star had risen; ministers and
+ambassadors now flocked to the new divinity to consult her and to win
+her favour. The governess was hailed as the new Queen of Louis and of
+France. The climax came when the King was thrown one day from his horse
+while hunting, and broke his arm. It was Madame de Maintenon alone who
+was allowed to nurse him, and who was by his side night and day. Before
+the arm was well again she was standing, thickly veiled, before an
+improvised altar in the King's study, with Louis by her side, while the
+words that made them man and wife were pronounced by Archbishop de
+Harlay.
+
+The prison-child had now reached the loftiest pinnacle in the land of
+her birth. Though she wore no crown, she was Queen of France, wielding a
+power which few throned ladies have ever known. Princes and Princesses
+rose to greet her entry with bows and curtsies; the mother of the coming
+King called her "aunt"; her rooms, splendid as the King's, adjoined his;
+she had the place of honour in the King's Council Room; the State's
+secrets were in her keeping; she guided and controlled the destinies of
+the nation. And all this greatness came to her when she had passed her
+fiftieth year, and when all the grace and bloom of youth were but a
+distant memory.
+
+The King himself, two years her junior, and still in the prime of his
+manhood, was her shadow, paying to the plain, middle-aged woman such
+deference and courtesy as he had never shown to the youth and beauty of
+her predecessors in his affection. And she--thus translated to dizzy
+heights--kept a head as cool and a demeanour as modest as when she was
+"Scarron's widow," the convent protégée. For power and splendour she
+cared no whit. Her ambition now, as always, was to be loved for herself,
+to "play a beautiful part in the world," and to deserve the respect of
+all good men.
+
+Her chief pleasure was found away from the pomp and glitter of the
+Court, among "her children" of the Saint Cyr Convent, which she had
+founded for the education of the daughters of poor noblemen, over whom
+she watched with loving and unflagging care. And yet she was not
+happy--not nearly as happy as in the days of her obscure widowhood. "I
+am dying of sorrow in the midst of luxury," she wrote. And again. "I
+cannot bear it. I wish I were dead." Why she was so unhappy, with her
+Queendom and her environment of love and esteem, and her life of good
+works, it is impossible to say. The fact remains, inscrutable, but still
+fact.
+
+Twenty-five years of such life of splendid sadness, and Louis, his last
+days clouded by loss and suffering, died with her prayers in his ears,
+his coverlet moistened by her tears. Two years later--years spent in
+prayers and masses and charitable work--the "Queen Dowager" drew the
+last breath of her long life at St Cyr, shortly after hearing that her
+beloved Due de Maine, her pet nursling of other days, had been arrested
+and flung into prison.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+A THRONED BARBARIAN
+
+
+The dawn of the eighteenth century saw the thrones of France and Russia
+occupied by two of the most remarkable sovereigns who ever wore a
+crown--Louis XIV., the "Sun-King," whose splendours dazzled Europe, and
+whose power held it in awe; and Peter I. of Russia, whose destructive
+sword swept Europe from Sweden to the Dardenelles, and whose clever
+brain laid sure the foundation of his country's greatness. Each of these
+Royal rivals dwarfed all other fellow-monarchs as the sun pales the
+stars; and yet it would scarcely have been possible to find two men more
+widely different in all save their passion for power and their love of
+woman, which alone they had in common.
+
+Of the two, Peter is unquestionably to-day the more arresting,
+dominating figure. Although nearly two centuries have gone since he made
+his exit from the world, we can still picture him in his pride, towering
+a head higher than the tallest of his courtiers, swart of face, "as if
+he had been born in Africa," with his black, close-curling hair, his
+bold, imperious eyes, his powerful, well-knit frame--"the muscles and
+stature of a Goliath"--a kingly figure, with majesty in every movement.
+
+We see him, too, wilfully discarding the kingliness with which nature
+had so liberally dowered him--now receiving ambassadors "in a short
+dressing-gown, below which his bare legs were exposed, a thick nightcap,
+lined with linen, on his head, his stockings dropped down over his
+slippers"--now walking through the Copenhagen streets grotesque in a
+green cap, a brown overcoat with horn buttons, worsted stockings full of
+darns, and dirty, cobbled shoes; and again carousing, red of face and
+loud of voice, with his meanest subjects in some low tavern.
+
+As the mood seizes him he plays the rôle of fireman for hours together;
+goes carol-singing in his sledge, and reaps his harvest of coppers from
+the houses of his subjects; rides a hobby-horse at a village fair, and
+shrieks with laughter until he falls off; or plies saw and plane in a
+shipbuilding yard, sharing the meals and drinking bouts of his
+fellow-workmen.
+
+The French Ambassador, Campredon, wrote of him in 1725:--"It is utterly
+impossible at the present moment to approach the Tsar on serious
+subjects; he is altogether given up to his amusements, which consist in
+going every day to the principal houses in the town with a suite of 200
+persons, musicians and so forth, who sing songs on every sort of
+subject, and amuse themselves by eating and drinking at the expense of
+the persons they visit." "He never passed a single day without being
+the worse for drink," Baron Pöllnitz tells us; and his drinking
+companions were usually chosen from the most degraded of his subjects,
+of both sexes, with whom he consorted on the most familiar terms.
+
+When his muddled brain occasionally awoke to the knowledge that he was a
+King, he would bully and hector his boon-comrades like any drunken
+trooper. On one occasion, when a young Jewess refused to drain a goblet
+of neat brandy which he thrust into her hand, he promptly administered
+two resounding boxes on her ears, shouting, "Vile Hebrew spawn! I'll
+teach thee to obey."
+
+There was in him, too, a vein of savage cruelty which took remarkable
+forms. A favourite pastime was to visit the torture-chamber and gloat
+over the sufferings of the victims of the knout and the strappado; or to
+attend (and frequently to officiate at) public executions. Once, we are
+told, at a banquet, he "amused himself by decapitating twenty Streltsy,
+emptying as many glasses of brandy between successive strokes, and
+challenging the Prussian envoy to repeat the feat."
+
+Mad? There can be little doubt that Peter had madness in his veins. He
+was a degenerate and an epileptic, subject to brain storms which
+terrified all who witnessed them. "A sort of convulsion seized him,
+which often for hours threw him into a most distressing condition. His
+body was violently contorted; his face distorted into horrible grimaces;
+and he was further subject to paroxysms of rage, during which it was
+almost certain death to approach him." Even in his saner moods, as
+Waliszewski tells us, he "joined to the roughness of a Russian _barin_
+all the coarseness of a Dutch sailor." Such in brief suggestion was
+Peter I. of Russia, half-savage, half-sovereign, the strangest jumble of
+contradictions who has ever worn the Imperial purple--"a huge mastodon,
+whose moral perceptions were all colossal and monstrous."
+
+It was, perhaps, inevitable that a man so primitive, so little removed
+from the animal, should find his chief pleasures in low pursuits and
+companionships. During his historic visit to London, after a hard day's
+work with adze and saw in the shipbuilding yard, the Tsar would adjourn
+with his fellow-workmen to a public-house in Great Tower Street, and
+"smoke and drink ale and brandy, almost enough to float the vessel he
+had been helping to construct."
+
+And in his own kingdom the favourite companions of his debauches were
+common soldiers and servants.
+
+"He chose his friends among the common herd; looked after his household
+like any shopkeeper; thrashed his wife like a peasant; and sought his
+pleasure where the lower populace generally finds it." His female
+companions were chosen rather for their coarseness than their charms,
+and pleased him most when they were drunk. It was thus fitting that he
+should make an Empress of a scullery-maid, who, as we have seen in an
+earlier chapter, had no vestige of beauty to commend her to his favour,
+and whose chief attractions in his eyes were that she had a coarse
+tongue and was a "first-rate toper."
+
+It was thus a strange and unhappy caprice of fate that united Peter,
+while still a youth, to his first Empress, the refined and sensitive
+Eudoxia, a woman as remote from her husband as the stars. Never was
+there a more incongruous bride than this delicately nurtured girl
+provided by the Empress Nathalie for her coarse-grained son. From the
+hour at which they stood together at the altar the union was doomed to
+tragic failure; before the honeymoon waned Peter had terrified his bride
+by his brutality and disgusted her by the open attentions he paid to his
+favourites of the hour, the daughters of Botticher, the goldsmith, and
+Mons, the wine-merchant.
+
+For five years husband and wife saw little of each other; and when, in
+1694, Nathalie's death removed the one influence which gave the union at
+least the outward form of substance, Peter lost no time in exhibiting
+his true colours. He dismissed all Eudoxia's relatives from the Court,
+and sent her father into exile. One brother he caused to be whipped in
+public; another was put to the torture, which had its horrible climax
+when Peter himself saturated his victim's clothes with spirits of wine,
+and then set them on fire. For Eudoxia a different fate was reserved.
+Not only had he long grown weary of her insipid beauty and of her
+refinement and gentleness, which were a constant mute reproach to his
+own low tastes and hectoring manners--he had grown to hate the very
+sight of her, and determined that she should no longer stand between him
+and the unbridled indulgence of his pleasure.
+
+During his visit to England he never once wrote to her, and on his
+return to Moscow his first words were a brutal announcement of his
+intention to be rid of her. In vain she pleaded and wept. To her tearful
+inquiries, "What have I done to offend you? What fault have you to find
+with me?" he turned a deaf ear. "I never want to see you again," were
+his last inexorable words. A few days later a hackney coach drove up to
+the palace doors; the unhappy Tsarina was bundled unceremoniously into
+it, and she was carried away to the nunnery of the "Intercession of the
+Blessed Virgin," whose doors were closed on her for a score of years.
+
+Pitiful years they were for the young Empress, consigned by her husband
+to a life that was worse than death--robbed of her rank, her splendours,
+and luxuries, her very name--she was now only Helen, the nun, faring
+worse than the meanest of her sister-nuns; for while they at least had
+plenty to eat, the Tsarina seems many a time to have known the pangs of
+hunger. The letters she wrote to one of her brothers are pathetic
+evidence of the straits to which she was reduced. "For pity's sake," she
+wrote, "give me food and drink. Give clothes to the beggar. There is
+nothing here. I do not need a great deal; still I must eat."
+
+It is not to be wondered at, that, in her misery, she should turn
+anywhere for succour and sympathy; and both came to her at last in the
+guise of Major Glebof, an officer in the district, whose heart was
+touched by the sadness of her fate. He sent her food and wine to restore
+her strength, and warm furs to protect her from the iciness of her cell.
+In response to her letters of thanks, he visited her again and again,
+bringing sunshine into her darkened life with his presence, and soothing
+her with words of sympathy and encouragement, until gratitude to the
+"good Samaritan" grew into love for the man.
+
+When she learned that the man who had so befriended her was himself
+poor, actually in money difficulties, she insisted on giving him every
+rouble she could wring, by any abject appeal, out of her friends and
+relatives. She became his very slave, grovelling at his feet. "Where thy
+heart is, dearest one," she wrote to him, "there is mine also; where thy
+tongue is, there is my head; thy will is also mine." She loved him with
+a passion which broke down all barriers of modesty and prudence,
+reckless of the fact that he had a wife, as she had a husband.
+
+When Major Glebof's visits and letters grew more and more infrequent,
+she suffered tortures of anxiety and despair. "My light, my soul, my
+joy," she wrote in one distracted letter, "has the cruel hour of
+separation come already? O, my light! how can I live apart from thee?
+How can I endure existence? Rather would I see my soul parted from my
+body. God alone knows how dear thou art to me. Why do I love thee so
+much, my adored one, that without thee life is so worthless? Why art
+thou angry with me? Why, my _batioushka_, dost thou not come to see me?
+Have pity on me, O my lord, and come to see me to-morrow. O, my world,
+my dearest and best, answer me; do not let me die of grief."
+
+Thus one distracted, incoherent letter followed another, heart-breaking
+in their grief, pitiful in their appeal. "Come to me," she cried;
+"without thee I shall die. Why dost thou cause me such anguish? Have I
+been guilty without knowing it? Better far to have struck me, to have
+punished me in any way, for this fault I have innocently committed." And
+again: "Why am I not dead? Oh, that thou hadst buried me with thy own
+hands! Forgive me, O my soul! Do not let me die.... Send me but a crust
+of bread thou hast bitten with thy teeth, or the waistcoat thou hast
+often worn, that I may have something to bring thee near to me."
+
+What answers, if any, the Major vouchsafed to these pathetic letters we
+know not. The probability is that they received no answer--that the
+"good Samaritan" had either wearied of or grown alarmed at a passion
+which he could not return, and which was fraught with danger. It was
+accident only that revealed to the world the story of this strange and
+tragic infatuation.
+
+When the Tsarevitch, Alexis, was brought to trial in 1718 on a charge of
+conspiracy against his father, Peter, suspecting that Eudoxia had had a
+hand in the rebellion, ordered a descent on the nunnery and an inquiry.
+Nothing was found to connect her with her son's ill-fated venture; but
+the inquiry revealed the whole story of her relations with the too
+friendly officer. The evidence of the nuns and servants alone--evidence
+of frequent and long meetings by day and night, of embraces
+exchanged--was sufficiently conclusive, without the incriminating
+letters which were discovered in the Major's bureau, labelled "Letters
+from the Tsarina," or Eudoxia's confession which was extorted from her.
+
+This was an opportunity of vengeance such as exceeded all the Tsar's
+hopes. Glebof was arrested and put on his trial. Evidence was forced
+from the nuns by the lashing of the knout, so severe that some of them
+died under it. Glebof, subjected to such frightful tortures that in his
+agony he confessed much more than the truth, was sentenced to death by
+impalement. In order to prolong his suffering to the last possible
+moment, he was warmly wrapped in furs, to protect him from the bitter
+cold, and for twenty-eight hours he suffered indescribable agony, until
+at last death came to his release.
+
+As for Eudoxia, her punishment was a public flogging and consignment to
+a nunnery still more isolated and miserable than that in which she had
+dragged out twenty years of her broken life. Here she remained for seven
+years, until, on the Tsar's death, an even worse fate befell her. She
+was then, by Catherine's orders, taken from the convent, and flung into
+the most loathsome, rat-infested dungeon of the fortress of
+Schlussenberg, where she remained for two years of unspeakable horror.
+
+Then at last, after nearly thirty years of life that was worse than
+death, the sun shone again for her. One day her dungeon door flew open,
+and to the bowing of obsequious courtiers, the prisoner was conducted to
+a sumptuous apartment. "The walls were hung with splendid stuffs; the
+table was covered with gold-plate; ten thousand roubles awaited her in
+a casket. Courtiers stood in her ante-chamber; carriages and horses
+were at her orders."
+
+Catherine, the "scullery-Empress," was dead; Eudoxia's grandson, Peter
+II., now wore the crown of Russia; and Eudoxia found herself
+transported, as by the touch of a magic wand, from her loathsome
+prison-cell to the old-time splendours of palaces--the greatest lady in
+all Russia, to whom Princesses, ambassadors, and courtiers were all
+proud to pay respectful homage. But the transformation had come too
+late; her life was crushed beyond restoration; and after a few months of
+her new glory she was glad to find an asylum once more within convent
+walls, until Death, the great healer of broken hearts, took her to
+where, "beyond these voices, there is peace."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+While Eudoxia was eating her heart out in her convent cell, her husband
+was finding ample compensation for her absence in Bacchanalian orgies
+and the company of his galaxies of favourites, from tradesmen's
+daughters to servant-maids of buxom charms, such as the Livonian
+peasant-girl, in whom he found his second Empress.
+
+Of the almost countless women who thus fell under his baneful influence
+one stands out from the rest by reason of the tragedy which surrounds
+her memory. Mary Hamilton was no low-born maid, such as Peter especially
+chose to honour with his attentions. She had in her veins the blood of
+the ducal Hamiltons of Scotland, and of many a noble family of Russia,
+from which her more immediate ancestors had taken their wives; and it
+was an ill fate that took her, when little more than a child, to the
+most debased Court of Europe to play the part of maid-of-honour, and
+thus to cross the path of the most unprincipled lover in Europe.
+
+Peter's infatuation for the pretty young "Scotswoman," however, was but
+short-lived. She had none of the vulgar attractions that could win him
+to any kind of constancy; and he quickly abandoned her for the more
+agreeable company of his _dienshtchiks_, leaving her to find consolation
+in the affection of more courtly, if less exalted, lovers--notably the
+young Count Orloff, who proved as faithless as his master.
+
+Such was Mary's infatuation for the worthless Count that, under his
+influence, she stooped to various kinds of crime, from stealing the
+Tsarina's jewels to fill her lover's purse, to infanticide. The climax
+came when an important document was missing from the Tsar's cabinet.
+Suspicion pointed to Orloff as the thief; he was arrested, and, when
+brought into Peter's presence, not only confessed to the thefts and to
+his share in making away with the undesirable infants, but betrayed the
+partner of his guilt.
+
+There was short shrift for poor Mary Hamilton when she was put on her
+trial on these grave charges. She made full confession of her crimes;
+but no torture could wring from her the name of the man for love of whom
+she had committed them, and of whose treachery to her she was ignorant.
+She was sentenced to death; and one March day, in the year 1719, she
+was led to the scaffold "in a white silk gown trimmed with black
+ribbons."
+
+Then followed one of the grimmest scenes recorded in history. Peter, the
+man who had been the first to betray her, and who had refused her pardon
+even when her cause was pleaded by his wife, was a keenly interested
+spectator of her execution. At the foot of the scaffold he embraced her,
+and exhorted her to pray, before stepping aside to give place to the
+headsman. When the axe had done its deadly work, he again stepped
+forward, picked up the lifeless and still beautiful head which had
+rolled into the mud, and calmly proceeded to give a lecture on anatomy
+to the assembled crowd, "drawing attention to the number and nature of
+the organs severed by the axe." His lecture concluded, he kissed the
+pale, dead lips, crossed himself, and walked away with a smile of
+satisfaction on his face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+A FRIEND OF MARIE ANTOINETTE
+
+
+There is scarcely a spectacle in the whole drama of history more
+pathetic than that of Marie Antoinette, dancing her light-hearted way
+through life to the guillotine, seemingly unconscious of the eyes of
+jealousy and hate that watched her every step; or, if she noticed at
+all, returning a gay smile for a frown.
+
+Wedded when but a child, full of the joy of youth, with laughter
+bubbling on her pretty lips and gaiety dancing in her eyes, to a
+dull-witted clown to whom her fresh young beauty made no appeal;
+surrounded by Court ladies jealous of her charms; feared for her foreign
+sympathies, and hated by a sullen, starving populace for her
+extravagance and her pursuit of pleasure, the Austrian Princess with all
+her young loveliness and the sweetness of her nature could please no one
+in the land of her exile. Her very amiability was an offence; her
+unaffected simplicity a subject of scorn; and her love of pleasure a
+crime.
+
+Had she realised the danger of her position, and adapted herself to its
+demands, her story might have been written very differently; but her
+tragedy was that she saw or heeded none of the danger-signals that
+marked her path until it was too late to retrace a step; and that her
+most innocent pleasures were made to pave the way to her doom.
+
+Nothing, for instance, could have been more harmless to the seeming than
+Marie Antoinette's friendship for Yolande de Polignac; but this
+friendship had, beyond doubt, a greater part in her undoing than any
+other incident in her life, from the affair of the "diamond necklace" to
+her innocent infatuation for Count Fersen; and it would have been well
+for the Queen of France if Madame de Polignac had been content to remain
+in her rustic obscurity, and had never crossed her path.
+
+When Yolande Gabrielle de Polastron was led to the altar, one day in the
+year 1767, by Comte Jules de Polignac, she never dreamt, we may be sure,
+of the dazzling rôle she was destined to play at the Court of France.
+Like her husband, she was a member of the smaller _noblesse_, as proud
+as they were poor. Her husband, it is true, boasted a long pedigree,
+with its roots in the Dark Ages; but his family had given to France only
+one man of note, that Cardinal de Polignac, accomplished scholar,
+courtier, and man of affairs, who was able to twist Louis XIV. round his
+dexterous thumb; and Comte Jules was the Cardinal's great-nephew, and,
+through his mother, had Mazarin blood in his veins.
+
+But the young couple had a purse as short as their descent was long; and
+the early years of their wedded life were spent in Comte Jules'
+dilapidated château, on an income less than the equivalent of a pound a
+day--in a rustic retirement which was varied by an occasional jaunt to
+Paris to "see the sights," and enjoy a little cheap gaiety.
+
+Comte Jules, however, had a sister, Diane, a clever-tongued, ambitious
+young woman, who had found a footing at Court as lady-in-waiting to the
+Comtesse d'Artois, and whom her brother and his wife were proud to visit
+on their rare journeys to the capital. And it was during one of these
+visits that Marie Antoinette, who had struck up an informal friendship
+with the sprightly, laughter-loving Diane, first met the woman who was
+to play such an important and dangerous part in her life.
+
+It was, perhaps, little wonder that the French Queen, craving for
+friendship and sympathy, fell under the charm of Yolande de Polignac--a
+girl still, but a few years older than herself, with a singular
+sweetness and winsomeness, and "beautiful as a dream." The beauty of the
+young Comtesse was, indeed, a revelation even in a Court of fair women.
+In the extravagant words of chroniclers of the time, "she had the most
+heavenly face that was ever seen. Her glance, her smile, every feature
+was angelic." No picture could, it was said, do any justice to this
+lovely creature of the glorious brown hair and blue eyes, who seemed so
+utterly unconscious of her beauty.
+
+Such was the woman who came into the life of Marie Antoinette, and at
+once took possession of her heart. At last the Queen of France, in her
+isolation, had found the ideal friend she had sought so long in vain; a
+woman young and beautiful like herself, with kindred tastes, eager as
+she was to enjoy life, and with all the qualities to make a charming
+and sympathetic companion. It was a case of love at first sight, on
+Marie Antoinette's part at least; and each subsequent meeting only
+served to strengthen the link that bound these two women so strangely
+brought together.
+
+The Comtesse must come oftener to Court, the Queen pleaded, so that they
+might have more opportunities of meeting and of learning to know each
+other; and when the Comtesse pleaded poverty, Marie Antoinette brushed
+the difficulty aside. That could easily be arranged; the Queen had a
+vacancy in the ranks of her equerries. M. le Comte would accept the
+post, and then Madame would have her apartments at the Court itself.
+
+Thus it was that Comte Jules' wife was transported from her poor country
+château to the splendours of Versailles, installed as _chère amie_ of
+the Queen in place of the Princesse de Lamballe, and with the ball of
+fortune at her pretty feet. And never did woman adapt herself more
+easily to such a change of environment. It was, indeed, a great part of
+the charm of this remarkable woman that, amid success which would have
+turned the head of almost any other of her sex, she remained to her last
+day as simple and unaffected as when she won the Queen's heart in Diane
+de Polignac's apartment.
+
+So absolutely indifferent did she seem to her new splendours, that, when
+jealousy sought to undermine the Queen's friendship, she implored Marie
+Antoinette to allow her to go back to her old, obscure life; and it was
+only when the Queen begged her to stay, with arms around her neck and
+with streaming tears, that she consented to remain by her side.
+
+If the Queen ever had any doubt that she had at last found a friend who
+loved her for herself, the doubt was now finally dissipated. Such an
+unselfish love as this was a treasure to be prized; and from this moment
+Queen and waiting-woman were inseparable. When they were not strolling
+arm-in-arm in the corridors or gardens of Versailles, Her Majesty was
+spending her days in Madame's apartments, where, as she said, "We are no
+longer Queen and subject, but just dear friends."
+
+So unhappy was Marie Antoinette apart from her new friend that, when
+Madame de Polignac gave birth to a child at Passy, the Court itself was
+moved to La Muette, so that the Queen could play the part of nurse by
+her friend's bedside.
+
+Such, now, was the Queen's devotion that there was no favour she would
+not have gladly showered on the Comtesse; but to all such offers Madame
+turned a deaf ear. She wanted nothing but Marie Antoinette's love and
+friendship for herself; but if the Queen, in her goodness, chose to
+extend her favour to Madame's relatives--well, that was another matter.
+
+Thus it was that Comte Jules soon blossomed into a Duke, and Madame
+perforce became a Duchess, with a coveted tabouret at Court. But they
+were still poor, in spite of an equerry's pay, and heavily in debt, a
+matter which must be seen to. The Queen's purse satisfied every
+creditor, to the tune of four hundred thousand livres, and Duc Jules
+found himself lord of an estate which added seventy thousand livres
+yearly to his exchequer, with another annual eighty thousand livres as
+revenue for his office of Director-General of Posts.
+
+Of course, if the Queen _would_ be so foolishly generous, it was not the
+Duchesse's fault, and when Marie Antoinette next proposed to give a
+dowry of eight hundred thousand livres to the Duchesse's daughter on her
+marriage to the Comte de Guiche, and to raise the bridegroom to a
+dukedom--well, it was "very sweet of Her Majesty," and it was not for
+her to oppose such a lavish autocrat.
+
+Thus the shower of Royal favours grew; and it is perhaps little wonder
+that each new evidence of the Queen's prodigality was greeted with
+curses by the mob clamouring for bread outside the palace gates; while
+even her father's minister, Kaunitz, in far Vienna, brutally dubbed the
+Duchesse and her family, "a gang of thieves."
+
+Diane de Polignac, the Duchesse's sister-in-law, had long been made a
+Countess and placed in charge of a Royal household; and the grateful
+shower fell on all who had any connection with the favourite. Her
+father-in-law, Cardinal de Polignac's nephew, was rescued from his
+rustic poverty to play the exalted rôle of ambassador; an uncle was
+raised _per saltum_ from _curé_ to bishop. The Duchesse's widowed aunt
+was made happy by a pension of six thousand livres a year; and her
+son-in-law, de Guiche, in addition to his dukedom, was rewarded further
+for his fortunate nuptials by valuable sinecure offices at Court.
+
+So the tide of benefactions flowed until it was calculated that the
+Polignac family were drawing half a million livres every year as the
+fruits of the Queen's partiality for her favourite. Little wonder that,
+at a time when France was groaning under dire poverty, the volume of
+curses should swell against the "Austrian panther," who could thus
+squander gold while her subjects were starving; or that the Court should
+be inflamed by jealousy at such favours shown to a family so obscure as
+the Polignacs.
+
+To the warnings of her own family Marie Antoinette was deaf. What cared
+she for such exhibitions of spite and jealousy? She was Queen; and if
+she wished to be generous to her favourite's family, none should say her
+nay. And thus, with a smile half-careless, half-defiant, she went to
+meet the doom which, though she little dreamt it, awaited her.
+
+The Duchesse was now promoted to the office of governess of the Queen's
+children, a position which was the prerogative of Royalty itself, or, at
+least, of the very highest nobility. With her usual modesty, she had
+fought long against the promotion; but the Queen's will was law, and she
+had to submit to the inevitable as gracefully as she could. And now we
+see her installed in the most splendid apartments at Versailles, holding
+a _salon_ almost as regal as that of Marie Antoinette herself.
+
+She was surrounded by sycophants and place-seekers, eager to capture the
+Queen's favour through her. And such was her influence that a word from
+her was powerful enough to make or mar a minister. She held, in fact,
+the reins of power and was now more potent than the weak-kneed King
+himself.
+
+It was at this stage in her brilliant career that the Duchesse came
+under the spell of the Comte de Vaudreuil--handsome, courtly, an
+intriguer to his finger-tips, a man of many accomplishments, of a supple
+tongue, and with great wealth to lend a glamour to his gifts. A man of
+rare fascination, and as dangerous as he was fascinating.
+
+The woman who had carried a level head through so much unaccustomed
+splendour and power became the veriest slave of this handsome,
+honey-tongued Comte, who ruled her, as she in turn ruled the Queen. At
+his bidding she made and unmade ministers; she obtained for him pensions
+and high offices, and robbed the treasury of nearly two million livres
+to fill his pockets. When Marie Antoinette at last ventured to thwart
+the Comte in his ambition to become the Dauphin's Governor, he
+retaliated by poisoning the Duchesse's mind against her, and bringing
+about the first estrangement between the friends.
+
+Torn between her infatuation for Vaudreuil and her love of the Queen,
+the Duchesse was in an awkward dilemma. It became necessary to choose
+between the two rivals; and that Vaudreuil's spell proved the stronger,
+her increasing coldness to Marie Antoinette soon proved. It was the
+"rift within the lute" which was to make the music of their friendship
+mute. The Queen gradually withdrew herself from the Duchesse's _salon_,
+where she was sure to meet the insolent Vaudreuil; and thus the gulf
+gradually widened until the severance was complete.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Evil days were now coming for Marie Antoinette. The affair of the
+diamond necklace had made powerful enemies; the Polignac family, taking
+the side of Vaudreuil and their protectress, were arrayed against her;
+France was rising on the tide of hate to sweep the Austrian and her
+husband from the throne. The horrors of the Revolution were being
+loosed, and all who could were flying for safety to other lands.
+
+At this terrible crisis the Queen's thoughts were less for herself than
+for her friend of happier days. She sought the Duchesse and begged her
+to fly while there was still time. Then it was that, touched by such
+unselfish love, the Duchesse's pride broke down, and all her old love
+for her sovereign lady returned in full flood. Bursting into tears, she
+flung herself at Marie Antoinette's feet, and begged forgiveness from
+the woman whose friendship she had spurned, and whose life she had,
+however innocently, done so much to ruin.
+
+A few hours later the Duchesse, disguised as a chambermaid and sitting
+by the coachman's side, was making her escape from France in company
+with her husband and other members of her family, while the Queen who
+had loved her so well was left to take the last tragic steps that had
+the guillotine for goal.
+
+Just before the carriage started on its long and perilous journey, a
+note was thrust into the "chambermaid's" hand--"Adieu, most tender of
+friends. How terrible is this word! But it is necessary. Adieu! I have
+only strength left to embrace you. Your heart-broken Marie."
+
+Then ensued for the Duchesse a time of perilous journeying to safety.
+At Sens her carriage was surrounded by a fierce mob, clamouring for the
+blood of the "aristos." "Are the Polignacs still with the Queen?"
+demanded one man, thrusting his head into the carriage. "The Polignacs?"
+answered the Abbé de Baliviere, with marvellous presence of mind. "Oh!
+they have left Versailles long ago. Those vile persons have been got rid
+of." And with a howl of baffled rage the mob allowed the carriage to
+continue its journey, taking with it the most hated of all the
+Polignacs, the chambermaid, whose heart, we may be sure, was in her
+mouth!
+
+Thus the Duchesse made her way through Switzerland, to Turin, and to
+Rome, and to Venice, where news came to her of the fall ot the monarchy
+and Louis' execution. By the time she reached Vienna on her restless
+wanderings, her health, shattered by hardships and by her anxiety for
+her friend, broke down completely. She was a dying woman; and when, a
+few months later, she learned that Marie Antoinette was also dead--"a
+natural death," they mercifully told her--"Thank God!" she exclaimed;
+"now, at last, she is free from those bloodthirsty monsters! Now I can
+die in peace."
+
+Seven weeks later the Duchesse drew her last breath, with the name she
+still loved best in all the world on her lips. In death she and her
+beloved Queen were not divided.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+THE RIVAL SISTERS
+
+
+It was an unkind fate that linked the lives of the fifteenth Louis of
+France and Marie Leczinska, Princess of Lorraine, and daughter of
+Stanislas, the dethroned King of Poland; for there was probably no
+Princess in Europe less equipped by nature to hold the fickle allegiance
+of the young French King, and no Royal husband less likely to bring
+happiness into the life of such a consort.
+
+When Princess Marie was called to the throne of France, she found
+herself transported from one of the most penurious and obscure to the
+most splendid of the Courts of Europe--"frightened and overwhelmed," as
+de Goncourt tells us, "by the grandeur of the King, bringing to her
+husband nothing but obedience, to marriage only duty; trembling and
+faltering in her queenly rôle like some escaped nun lost in Versailles."
+Although by no means devoid of good-looks, as Nattier's portrait of her
+at this time proves, her attractions were shy ones, as her virtues were
+modest, almost ashamed.
+
+She shrank alike from the embraces of her husband and the gaieties of
+his Court, finding her chief pleasure in music and painting, in long
+talks with the most serious-minded of her ladies, in Masses and
+prayers--spending gloomy hours in her oratory with its death's head,
+which she always carried with her on her journeys. Such was the nun-like
+wife whom Louis XV. led to the altar shortly after he had entered his
+sixteenth year, and had already had his initiation into that career of
+vice which he pursued with few intervals to the end of his life.
+
+Already, at fifteen, the King, who has been mockingly dubbed "_le bien
+aimé_" was breaking away from the austere hands of his boyhood's mentor,
+Cardinal Fleury, and was beginning to snatch a few "fearful joys" in the
+company of his mignons, such as the Duc de La Tremouille, and the Duc de
+Gesvres, and a few gay women of whom the sprightly and beautiful
+Princesse de Charolois was the ringleader. But he was still nothing more
+than "a big and gloomy child," whose ill-balanced nature gravitated
+between fits of profound gloom and the wild abandonment of debauch; one
+hour, torn and shaken by religious terrors, fears of hell and of death;
+the next, the very soul of hysterical gaiety, with words of blasphemy on
+his lips, the gayest member of a band of Bacchanals in some midnight
+orgy.
+
+To such a youth, feverishly seeking distraction from his own black
+moods, the demure, devout Princess, ignorant of the caresses and
+coquetry of her sex, moving like a spectre among the brilliant,
+light-hearted ladies of his Court, was the most unsuitable, the most
+impossible of brides. He quickly wearied of her company, and fled from
+her sighs and her homilies to seek forgetfulness of her and of himself
+in the society of such sirens of the Court as Mademoiselle de
+Beaujolais, Madame de Lauraguais, and Mademoiselle de Charolois, whose
+coquetries and high spirits never failed to charm away his gloomy
+humours.
+
+But although one lady after another, from that most bewitching of
+madcaps, Mademoiselle de Charolois, to the dark-eyed, buxom Comtesse de
+Toulouse, practised on him all their allurements, strove to awake his
+senses "by a thousand coquetries, a thousand assaults, the King's
+timidity eluded these advances, which amused and alarmed, but did not
+tempt his heart; that young monarch's heart was still so full of the
+aged Fleury's terrifying tales of the women of the Regency."
+
+Such coyness, however, was not long to stand in the way of the King's
+appetite for pleasure which every day strengthened. One day it began to
+be whispered that at last Louis had been vanquished--that, at a supper
+at La Muette, he had proposed the health of an "Unknown Fair," which had
+been drunk with acclamation by his boon-companions; and the Court was
+full of excited speculation as to who his mysterious charmer could be.
+That some new and powerful influence had come into the young sovereign's
+life was abundantly clear, from the new light that shone in his eyes,
+the laughter that was now always on his lips. He had said "good-bye" to
+melancholy; he astonished all by his new vivacity, and became the leader
+in one dissipation after another, "whose noisy merriment he led and
+prolonged far into the night."
+
+It was not long before the identity of the worker of this miracle was
+revealed to the world. She had been recognised more than once when
+making her stealthy way to the King's apartments; she was his chosen
+companion on his journey to Compiègne; and it was soon public knowledge
+that Madame de Mailly was the woman who had captured the King's elusive
+heart. And indeed there was little occasion for surprise; for Madame de
+Mailly, although she would never see her thirtieth birthday again, was
+one of the most seductive women in all France.
+
+Black-eyed, crimson-lipped, oval-faced, Madame de Mailly was one of
+those women who "with cheeks on fire, and blood astir, eyes large and
+lustrous as the eyes of Juno, with bold carriage and in free toilettes,
+step forward out of the past with the proud and insolent graces of the
+divinities of some Bacchanalia." With the provocative and sensual charm
+which is so powerful in its appeal, she had a rare skill in displaying
+her beauty to its fullest advantage. Her cult of the toilette, the Duc
+de Luynes tells us, went with her even by night. She never went to bed
+without decking herself with all her diamonds; and her most seductive
+hour was in the morning, when, in her bed, with her glorious dishevelled
+hair veiling her pillow, a-glitter with her jewels, she gave audience to
+her friends.
+
+Such was the ravishing, ardent, passionate woman who was the first of
+many to carry Louis' heart by storm, and to be established in his palace
+as his mistress--to inaugurate for him a new life of pleasure, and to
+estrange him still more from his unhappy Queen, shut up with her
+prayers and her tears in her own room, with her tapestry, her books of
+history, and her music for sole relaxation. "The most innocent
+pleasures," Queen Marie wrote sadly at this time, "are not for me."
+
+Under Madame de Mailly's rule the Court of Versailles awoke to a new
+life. "The little apartments grow animated, gay to the point of licence.
+Noise, merriment, an even gayer and livelier clash of glasses, madder
+nights." Fête succeeded fête in brilliant sequence. Each night saw its
+Royal debauch, with the King and his mistress for arch-spirits of the
+revels. There were nightly banquets, with the rarest wines and the most
+costly viands, supplemented by salads prepared by the dainty hands of
+Mademoiselle de Charolois, and ragouts cooked by Louis himself in silver
+saucepans. And these were followed by orgies which left the celebrants,
+in the last excesses of intoxication, to be gathered up at break of day
+and carried helpless to bed.
+
+Such wild excesses could not fail sooner or later to bring satiety to a
+lover so unstable as Louis; and it was not long before he grew a little
+weary of his mistress, who, too assured of her conquest, began to
+exhibit sudden whims and caprices, and fits of obstinacy. Her jealous
+eyes followed him everywhere, her reproaches, if he so much as smiled on
+a rival beauty, provoked daily quarrels. He was drawn, much against his
+will, into her family disputes, and into the disgraceful affairs of her
+father, the dissolute Marquis de Nesle.
+
+Meanwhile Madame de Mailly's supremacy was being threatened in a most
+unexpected quarter. Among the pupils of the convent school at Port Royal
+was a young girl, in whose ambitious brain the project was forming of
+supplanting the King's favourite, and of ruling France and Louis at the
+same time. The idle dream of a schoolgirl, of course! But to Félicité de
+Nesle it was no vain dream, but the ambition of a lifetime, which
+dominated her more and more as the months passed in her convent
+seclusion. If her sister, Madame de Mailly, had so easily made a
+conquest of the King, why should she, with less beauty, it is true, but
+with a much cleverer brain, despair? And thus it was that every letter
+Madame received from her "little sister" pleaded for an invitation to
+Court, until at last Mademoiselle de Nesle found herself the guest of
+Louis' mistress in his palace.
+
+Thus the first important step was taken. The rest would be easy; for
+Mademoiselle never doubted for a moment her ability to carry out her
+programme to its splendid climax. It was certainly a bold, almost
+impudent design; for the girl of the convent had few attractions to
+appeal to a monarch so surrounded by beauty as the King of France. What
+the courtiers saw, says the Duc de Richelieu, was "a long neck clumsily
+set on the shoulders, a masculine figure and carriage, features not
+unlike those of Madame de Mailly, but thinner and harder, which
+exhibited none of her flashes of kindness, her tenderness of passion."
+
+Even her manners seemed calculated to repel, rather than attract the man
+she meant to conquer; for she treated him, from the first, with a
+familiarity amounting almost to rudeness, and a wilfulness to which he
+was by no means accustomed. There was, at any rate, something novel and
+piquant in an attitude so different from that of all other Court ladies.
+Resentment was soon replaced by interest, and interest by attraction;
+until Louis, before he was aware of it, began to find the society of the
+impish, mocking, defiant maid from the convent more to his taste than
+that of the most fascinating women of his Court.
+
+The more he saw of her, the more effectually he came under her spell.
+Each day found her in some new and tantalising mood; and as she drew him
+more and more into her toils, she kept him there by her ingenuity in
+devising novel pleasures and entertainments for him, until, within a
+month of setting eyes on her, he was telling Madame de Mailly, he "loved
+her sister more than herself." One of the first evidences of his favour
+was to provide her with a husband in the Comte de Vintimille, and a
+dower of two hundred thousand livres. He promised her a post as
+lady-in-waiting to Madame la Dauphine and gave her a sumptuous suite of
+rooms at Versailles. He even conferred on her husband the honour of
+handing him his shirt on the wedding-night, an evidence of high favour
+such as no other bridegroom had enjoyed.
+
+It was thus little surprise to anyone to find the Comtesse-bride not
+only her sister's most formidable rival, but actually usurping her place
+and privileges. Nor was it long before this place, on which she had set
+her heart first within the walls of the Port Royal Convent, was
+unassailably hers; and Madame de Mailly, in tears and sadness, saw an
+unbridgeable gulf widen between her and the man she undoubtedly had
+grown to love.
+
+That Félicité de Nesle had not over-estimated her powers of conquest was
+soon apparent. Louis became her abject slave, humouring her caprices and
+submitting to her will. And this will, let it be said to her credit, she
+exercised largely for his good. She weaned him from his vicious ways;
+she stimulated whatever good remained in him; she tried, and in a
+measure succeeded in making a man of him. Under her influence he began
+to realise that he was a King, and to play his exalted part more
+worthily. He asserted himself in a variety of directions, from looking
+personally after the ordering of his household to taking the reins of
+State into his own hands.
+
+Nor did she curtail his pleasures. She merely gave them a saner
+direction. Orgies and midnight revelry became things of the past, but
+their place was taken by delightful days spent at the Château of Choisy,
+that regal little pleasure-house between the waters of the Seine and the
+Forest of Sénart, with all its marvels of costly and artistic
+furnishing. Here one entertainment succeeded another, from the hunting
+which opened, to the card-games which closed the day. A time of innocent
+delights which came sweet to the jaded palate of the King.
+
+Thus the halcyon months passed, until, one August day in 1741, the
+Comtesse was seized with a slight fever; Louis, consumed by anxiety,
+spending the anxious hours by her bedside or pacing the corridor
+outside. Two days later he was stooping to kiss an infant presented to
+him on a cushion of cramoisi velvet. His happiness was crowned at last,
+and life spread before him a prospect of many such years. But tragedy
+was already brooding over this scene of pleasure, although none, least
+of all the King, seemed to see the shadow of her wings.
+
+One early day in December, Madame de Vintimille was seized with a severe
+illness, as sudden as it was mysterious. Physicians were hastily
+summoned from Paris, only, to Louis' despair, to declare that they could
+do nothing to save the life of the Comtesse. "Tortured by excruciating
+pain," says de Goncourt, "struggling against a death which was full of
+terror, and which seemed to point to the violence of poison, the dying
+woman sent for a confessor. She died almost instantly in his arms before
+the Sacraments could be administered. And as the confessor, charged with
+the dead woman's last penitent message to her sister, entered Madame de
+Mailly's _salon_, he dropped dead."
+
+Here, indeed, was tragedy in its most sudden and terrible form! The King
+was stunned, incredulous. He refused to believe that the woman he had so
+lately clasped in his arms, so warm, so full of life, was dead. And when
+at last the truth broke on him with crushing force, he was as a man
+distraught. "He shut himself up in his room, and listened half-dead to a
+Mass from his bed." He would not allow any but the priest to come near
+him; he repulsed all efforts at consolation.
+
+And whilst Louis was thus alone with his demented grief, "thrust away in
+a stable of the palace, lay the body of the dead woman, which had been
+kept for a cast to be taken; that distorted countenance, that mouth
+which had breathed out its soul in a convulsion, so that the efforts of
+two men were required to close it for moulding, the already decomposing
+remains of Madame de Vintimille served as a plaything and a
+laughing-stock to the children and lackeys."
+
+When the storm of his grief at last began to abate, the King retired to
+his remote country-seat of Saint Leger, carrying his broken heart with
+him--and also Madame de Mailly, as sharer of his sorrow; for it was to
+the woman whom he had so lightly discarded that he first turned for
+solace. At Saint Leger he passed his days in reading and re-reading the
+two thousand letters the dead Comtesse had written to him, sprinkling
+their perfumed pages with his tears. And when he was not thus burying
+himself in the past, he was a prey to the terrors that had obsessed his
+childhood--the fear of death and of hell.
+
+At supper--the only meal which he shared with others, he refused to
+touch meat, "in order that he might not commit sin on every side"; if a
+light word was spoken he would rebuke the speaker by talk of death and
+judgment; and if his eyes met those of Madame de Mailly, he burst into
+tears and was led sobbing from the room.
+
+The communion of grief gradually awoke in him his old affection for
+Madame de Mailly; and for a time it seemed not unlikely that she might
+regain her lost supremacy. But the discarded mistress had many enemies
+at Court, who were by no means willing to see her re-established in
+favour--the chief of them, the Duc de Richelieu, the handsomest man and
+the "hero" of more scandalous amours than any other in France--a man,
+moreover, of crafty brain, who had already acquired an ascendancy over
+the King's mind.
+
+With Madame de Tencin, a woman as scheming and with as evil a reputation
+as himself, for chief ally, the Due determined to find another mistress
+who should finally oust Madame de Mailly from Louis' favour; and her he
+found in a woman, devoted to himself and his interests, and of such
+surpassing loveliness that, when the King first saw her at Petit Bourg,
+he exclaimed, "Heavens! how beautiful she is!"
+
+Such was the involuntary tribute Louis paid at first sight to the charms
+of Madame de la Tournelle, who was now fated to take the place of her
+dead sister, Madame de Vintimille, just as the Comtesse had supplanted
+another sister, Madame de Mailly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+THE RIVAL SISTERS--_continued_
+
+
+Louis XV.'s involuntary exclamation when he first set eyes on the
+loveliness of Madame de la Tournelle, "Heavens! how beautiful she is!"
+becomes intelligible when we look on Nattier's picture of this fairest
+of the de Nesle sisters in his "Allegory of the Daybreak," and read the
+contemporary descriptions of her charms.
+
+"She ravished the eye," we are told, "with her skin of dazzling
+whiteness, her elegant carriage, her free gestures, the enchanting
+glance of her big blue eyes--a gaze of which the cunning was veiled by
+sentiment--by the smile of a child, moist lips, a bosom surging,
+heaving, ever agitated by the flux and reflux of life, by a physiognomy
+at once passionate and mutinous." And to these seductions were added a
+sunny temperament, an infectious gaiety of spirit, and a playful wit
+which made her infinitely attractive to men much less susceptible that
+the amorous Louis.
+
+It is little wonder then that in the reaction which followed his stormy
+grief for his dead love, the Comtesse de Vintimille, he should turn from
+the lachrymose companionship of Madame de Mailly to bask in the
+sunshine of this third of the beautiful sisters, Madame de la Tournelle,
+and that the wish to possess her should fire his blood. But Madame de la
+Tournelle was not to prove such an easy conquest as her two sisters, who
+had come almost unasked to his arms.
+
+At the time when she came thus dramatically into his life she was living
+with Madame de Mazarin, a strong-minded woman who had no cause to love
+Louis, who had thwarted and opposed him more than once, and who was
+determined at any cost to keep her protégée and pet out of his clutches.
+And his desires had also two other stout opponents in Cardinal Fleury,
+his old mentor, and Maurepas, the most subtle and clever of his
+ministers, each of whom for different reasons was strongly averse to
+this new and dangerous liaison, which would make him the tool of
+Richelieu's favourite and Richelieu's party.
+
+Thus, for months, Louis found himself baffled in all his efforts to win
+the prize on which he had set his heart until, in September, 1742, one
+formidable obstacle was removed from his path by the death of Madame de
+Mazarin. To Madame de la Tournelle the loss of her protectress was
+little short of a calamity, for it left her not only homeless, but
+practically penniless; and, in her extremity, she naturally turned
+hopeful eyes to the King, of whose passion she was well aware. At least,
+she hoped, he might give her some position at his Court which would
+rescue her from poverty. When she begged Maurepas, Madame de Mazarin's
+kinsman and heir, to appeal to the King on her behalf, his answer was
+to order her and her sister, Madame de Flavacourt, to leave the Hotel
+Mazarin, thus making her plight still more desperate.
+
+But, fortunately, in this hour of her greatest need she found an
+unexpected friend in Louis' ill-used Queen, who, ignorant of her
+husband's infatuation for the beautiful Madame de la Tournelle, sent for
+her, spoke gracious words of sympathy to her, and announced her
+intention of installing her in Madame de Mazarin's place as a lady of
+the palace. Thus did fortune smile on Madame just when her future seemed
+darkest. But her troubles were by no means at an end. Fleury and
+Maurepas were more determined than ever that the King should not come
+into the power of a woman so alluring and so dangerous; and they
+exhausted every expedient to put obstacles in her path and to discover
+and support rival claimants to the post.
+
+For once, however, Louis was adamant. He had not waited so long and
+feverishly for his prize to be baulked when it seemed almost in his
+grasp. Madame de la Tournelle should have her place at his Court, and it
+would not be his fault if she did not soon fill one more exalted and
+intimate. Thus it was that when Fleury submitted to him the list of
+applicants, with la Tournelle's name at the bottom, he promptly re-wrote
+it at the head of the list, and handed it back to the Cardinal with the
+words, "The Queen is decided, and wishes to give her the place."
+
+We can picture Madame de Mailly's distress and suspense while these
+negotiations were proceeding. She had, as we have seen in the previous
+chapter, been supplanted by one sister in the King's affection; and just
+as she was recovering some of her old position in his favour, she was
+threatened with a second dethronement by another sister. In her alarm
+she flew to Madame de la Tournelle, to set her fears at rest one way or
+the other. "Can it be possible that you are going to take my place?" she
+asked, the tears streaming down her cheeks. "Quite impossible, my
+sister," answered Madame, with a smile; and Madame de Mailly, thus
+reassured, returned to Versailles the happiest woman in France--to
+learn, a few days later, that it was not only possible, it was an
+accomplished fact. For the second time, and now, as she knew well,
+finally, she was ousted from the affection of the King she loved so
+sincerely; and again it was a sister who had done her this grievous
+wrong. She was determined, however, that she would not quit the field
+without a last fight, and she knew she had doughty champions in Fleury
+and Maurepas, who still refused to acknowledge defeat.
+
+Although Madame de la Tournelle was now installed in the palace, the day
+of Louis' conquest had not arrived. The gratification of his passion was
+still thwarted in several directions. Not only was Madame de Mailly's
+presence a difficulty and a reproach to him; his new favourite was by no
+means willing to respond to his advances. Her heart was still engaged to
+the Due d'Agenois, and was not hers to dispose of. Richelieu, however,
+was quick to dispose of this difficulty. He sent the handsome Duc to
+Languedoc, exposed him to the attractions of a pretty woman, and before
+many weeks had passed, was able to show Madame de la Tournelle
+passionate letters addressed to her rival by her lover, as evidence of
+the worthlessness of his vows; thus arming her pride against him and
+disposing her at last to lend a more favourable ear to the King.
+
+As for Madame de Mailly, her shrift was short. In spite of her tears,
+her pleadings, her caresses, Louis made no concealment of his intention
+to be rid of her. "No sorrow, no humiliation was lacking in the
+death-struggle of love. The King spared her nothing. He did not even
+spare her those harsh words which snap the bonds of the most vulgar
+liaisons." And the climax came when he told the heart-broken woman, as
+she cringed pitifully at his feet, "You must go away this very day." "My
+sacrifices are finished," she sobbed, a little later to the "Judas,"
+Richelieu, when, with friendly words, he urged her to humour the King
+and go away at least for a time; "it will be my death, but I will be in
+Paris to-night."
+
+And while Madame de Mailly was carrying her crushed heart through the
+darkness to her exile, the King and Richelieu, disguised in large
+perukes and black coats, were stealing across the great courtyards to
+the rooms of Madame de la Tournelle, where the King's long waiting was
+to have its reward. And, the following day, the usurper was callously
+writing to a friend, "Doubtless Meuse will have informed you of the
+trouble I had in ousting Madame de Mailly; at last I obtained a mandate
+to the effect that she was not to return until she was sent for."
+
+"No portrait," says de Goncourt, referring to this letter, "is to be
+compared with such a confession. It is the woman herself with the
+cynicism of her hardness, her shameless and cold-blooded ingratitude....
+It is as though she drives her sister out by the two shoulders with
+those words which have the coarse energy of the lower orders."
+
+Louis, at last happy in the achievement of his desire, was not long in
+discovering that in the third of the Nesle sisters he had his hands more
+full than with either of her predecessors. Madame de Mailly and the
+Comtesse de Vintimille had been content to play the rôle of mistress,
+and to receive the King's none too lavish largesse with gratitude.
+Madame de la Tournelle was not so complaisant, so easily satisfied. She
+intended--and she lost no time in making the King aware of her
+intention--to have her position recognised by the world at large, to
+reign as Montespan had reigned, to have the Treasury placed at her
+disposal, and her children, if she had any, made legitimate. Her last
+stipulation was that she should be made a Duchess before the end of the
+year. And to all these proposals Louis gave a meek assent.
+
+To show further her independence, she soon began to drive her lover to
+distraction by her caprices and her temper: "She tantalised, at once
+rebuffed and excited the King by the most adroit comedies and those
+coquetries which are the strength of her sex, assuring him that she
+would be delighted if he would transfer his affection to other ladies."
+And while the favourite was thus revelling in the insolence of her
+conquest, her supplanted sister was eating out her heart in Paris. "Her
+despair was terrible; the trouble of her heart refused consolation,
+begged for solitude, found vent every moment in cries for Louis. Those
+who were around her trembled for her reason, for her life.... Again and
+again she made up her mind to start for the Court, to make a final
+appeal to the King, but each time, when the carriage was ready, she
+burst into tears and fell back upon her bed."
+
+As for Louis, chilled by the coldness of his mistress, distracted by her
+whims and rages, his heart often yearned for the woman he had so cruelly
+discarded; and separation did more than all her tears and caresses could
+have done, to awake again the love he fancied was dead.
+
+When Madame de la Tournelle paid her first visit as _Maîtresse en titre_
+to Choisy, nothing would satisfy her but an escort of the noblest ladies
+in France, including a Princess of the Blood. Her progress was that of a
+Queen; and in return for this honour, wrung out of the King's weakness,
+she repaid him with weeks of coldness and ill-humour. She refused to
+play at _cavagnol_ with him; she barricaded herself in her room,
+refusing to open to all her lover's knocking; and vented her vapours on
+him with, or without, provocation, until, as she considered, she had
+reduced him to a becoming submission. Then she used her power and her
+coquetries to wheedle out of him one concession after another,
+including a promise by the King to return unopened any letters Madame de
+Mailly might send to him. Nor was she content until her sister was
+finally disposed of by the grant of a small pension and a modest lodging
+in the Luxembourg.
+
+Before the year closed Madame de la Tournelle was installed in the most
+luxurious apartments at Versailles, and Louis, now completely caught in
+her toils, was the slave of her and his senses, flinging himself into
+all the licence of passion, and reviving the nightly debauches from
+which the dead Comtesse had weaned him. And while her lover was thus
+steeped in sensuality, his mistress was, with infinite tact, pursuing
+her ambition. Affecting an indifference to affairs of State, she was
+gradually, and with seeming reluctance, worming herself into the
+position of chief Counsellor, and while professing to despise money she
+was draining the exchequer to feed her extravagance.
+
+Never was King so hopelessly in the toils of a woman as Louis, the
+well-beloved, in those of Madame de la Tournelle. He accepted as meekly
+as a child all her coldness and caprices, her jealousies and her rages;
+and was ideally happy when, in a gracious mood, she would allow him to
+assist at her toilette as the reward for some regal present of diamonds,
+horses, or gowns.
+
+It was after one such privileged hour that Louis, with childish
+pleasure, handed to his favourite the patent, creating her Duchesse de
+Chateauroux, enclosed in a casket of gold; and with it a rapturous
+letter in which he promised her a pension of eighty-thousand livres,
+the better to maintain her new dignity!
+
+Having thus achieved her greatest ambition, the Duchesse (as we must now
+call her) aspired to play a leading part in the affairs of Europe.
+France and Prussia were leagued in war against the forces of England,
+Austria, and Holland. This was a seductive game in which to take a hand,
+and thus we find her stimulating the sluggard kingliness in her lover,
+urging him to leave his debauches and to lead his armies to victory,
+assuring him of the gratitude and admiration of his subjects. Nothing
+less, she told him, would save his country from disaster.
+
+To this appeal and temptation Louis was not slow to respond; and in May,
+1744, we find him, to the delight of his soldiers and all France, at the
+seat of war, reviewing his troops, speaking words of high courage to
+them, visiting hospitals and canteens, and actually sending back a
+haughty message to the Dutch: "I will give you your answer in Flanders."
+No wonder the army was roused to enthusiasm, or that it exclaimed with
+one voice, "At last we have found a King!"
+
+So strong was Louis in his new martial resolve that he actually refused
+Madame de Chateauroux permission to accompany him. France was delighted
+that at last her King had emancipated himself from petticoat influence,
+but the delight was short-lived, for before he had been many days in
+camp the Duchesse made her stately appearance, and saws and hammers
+were at work making a covered way between the house assigned to her and
+that occupied by the King. A fortnight later Ypres had fallen, and she
+was writing to Richelieu, "This is mighty pleasant news and gives me
+huge pleasure. I am overwhelmed with joy, to take Ypres in nine days.
+You can think of nothing more glorious, more flattering to the King; and
+his great-grandfather, great as he was, never did the like!"
+
+But grief was coming quickly on the heels of joy. The King was seized
+with a sudden and serious illness, after a banquet shared with his ally,
+the King of Prussia; and in a few days a malignant fever had brought him
+face to face with death. Madame de Chateauroux watched his sufferings
+with the eyes of despair. "Leaning over the pillow of the dying man,
+aghast and trembling, she fights for him with sickness and death, terror
+and remorse." With locked door she keeps her jealous watch by his
+bedside, allowing none to enter but Richelieu, the doctors, and nurses,
+whilst outside are gathered the Princes of the Blood and the great
+officers of the Court, clamouring for admittance.
+
+It was a grim environment for the death-bed of a King, this struggle for
+supremacy, in which a frail woman defied the powers of France for the
+monopoly of his last hours. And chief of all the terrors that assailed
+her was the dread of that climax to it all, when her lover would have to
+make his last confession, the price of his absolution being, as she well
+knew, a final severance from herself.
+
+Over this protracted and unseemly duel, in which blows were exchanged,
+entrance was forced, and Princes and ministers crowded indecently around
+the King's bed; over the Duchesse's tearful pleadings with the confessor
+to spare her the disgrace of dismissal, we must hasten to the crowning
+moment when Louis, feeling that he was dying, hastily summoned a
+confessor, who, a few moments later, flung open the door of the closet
+in which the Duchesse was waiting and weeping, and pronounced the fatal
+words, "The King commands you to leave his presence immediately."
+
+Then followed that secret flight to Paris, "amidst a torrent of
+maledictions," the Duchesse hiding herself from view as best she could,
+and at each town and village where horses were changed, slinking back
+and taking refuge in some by-road until she could resume her journey.
+Then it was that in her grief and despair she wrote to Richelieu, "Oh,
+my God! what a thing it all is! I give you my word, it is all over with
+me! One would need to be a poor fool to start it all over again."
+
+But Louis was by no means a dead man. From the day on which he received
+absolution from his manifold sins he made such haste to recover that,
+within a month, he was well again and eager to fly to the arms of the
+woman he had so abruptly abandoned with all other earthly vanities. It
+was one thing, however, to dismiss the Duchesse, and quite another to
+call her back. For a time she refused point-blank to look again on the
+King who had spurned her from fear of hell; and when at last she
+consented to receive the penitent at Versailles she let him know, in no
+vague terms, that "it would cost France too many heads if she were to
+return to his Court."
+
+Vengeance on her enemies was the only price she would accept for
+forgiveness, and this price Louis promised to pay in liberal measure.
+One after the other, those who had brought about her humiliation were
+sent to disgrace or exile--from the Duc de Chatillon to La Rochefoucauld
+and Perusseau. Maurepas, the most virulent of them all, the King
+declined to exile, but he consented to a compromise. He should be made
+to offer Madame an abject apology, to grovel at her feet, a punishment
+with which she was content. And when the great minister presented
+himself by her bedside, in fear and trembling, to express his profound
+penitence and to beg her to return to Court, all she answered was, "Give
+me the King's letters and go!"
+
+The following Saturday she fixed on as the day of her triumphant
+return--"but it was death that was to raise her from the bed on which
+she had received the King's submission at the hands of his Prime
+Minister." Within twenty-four hours she was seized with violent
+convulsions and delirium. In her intervals of consciousness she shrieked
+aloud that she had been poisoned, and called down curses on her
+murderer--Maurepas. For eleven days she passed from one delirious attack
+to another, and as many times she was bled. But all the skill of the
+Court physicians was powerless to save her, and at five o'clock in the
+morning of the 8th December the Duchesse drew her last tortured breath
+in the arms of Madame de Mailly, the sister she had so cruelly wronged.
+
+Two days later, de Goncourt tells us, she was buried at Saint Sulpice,
+an hour before the customary time for interments, her coffin guarded by
+soldiers, to protect it from the fury of the mob.
+
+As for Madame de Mailly, she spent the last years of her troubled life
+in the odour of a tardy sanctity--washing the feet of the poor,
+ministering to the sick, bringing consolation to those in prison; and
+she was laid to rest amongst the poorest in the Cimetière des Innocents,
+wearing the hair-shirt which had been part of her penance during life,
+and with a simple cross of wood for all monument.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+A MISTRESS OF INTRIGUE
+
+
+"On 11th September," Madame de Motteville says, "we saw arrive from
+Italy three nieces of Cardinal Mazarin and a nephew. Two Mancini sisters
+and the nephew were the children of the youngest sister of his Eminence;
+and of the sisters Laure, the elder, was a pleasing brunette with a
+handsome face, about twelve or thirteen years of age; the second
+(Olympe), also a brunette, had a long face and pointed chin. Her eyes
+were small, but lively; and it might be expected that, when fifteen
+years of age, she would have some charm. According to the rules of
+beauty, it was impossible to grant her any, save that of having dimples
+in her cheeks."
+
+Such, at the age of nine or ten, was Olympe Mancini, who, in spite of
+her childish lack of beauty, was destined to enslave the handsomest King
+in Europe; and, after a life of discreditable intrigues, in which she
+incurred the stigma of witchcraft and murder, to end her career in
+obscurity, shunned by all who had known her in her day of splendour.
+
+It was a singular freak of fortune which translated the Mancini girls
+from their modest home in Italy to the magnificence of the French
+Court, as the adopted children of their uncle, Cardinal Mazarin, the
+virtual ruler of France, and the avowed lover (if not, as some say, the
+husband) of Anne of Austria, the Queen-mother. "See those little girls,"
+said the wife of Maréchal de Villeroi to Gaston d'Orléans, pointing to
+the Mancini children, the centre of an admiring crowd of courtiers.
+"They are not rich now; but some day they will have fine châteaux, large
+incomes, splendid jewels, beautiful silver, and perhaps great
+dignities."
+
+And how true this prophecy proved, we know; for, of the Cardinal's five
+Mancini nieces (for three others came, later, as their uncle's
+protégées), Laure found a husband in the Duc de Mercoeur, grandson of
+Henri IV.; two others lived to wear the coronet of Duchess; Olympe, as
+we shall see, became Comtesse de Soissons; and Marie, after narrowly
+missing the Queendom of France, became the wife of the Constable
+Colonna, one of the greatest nobles of Italy.
+
+Nor is there anything in such high alliances to cause surprise; for
+their future was in the hands of the most powerful, ambitious, and
+wealthy man in France. From their first appearance as his guests they
+were received with open arms by Louis' Court. They were speedily
+transferred to the Palais Royal, to be brought up with the boy-King,
+Louis XIV., and his brother, the Prince of Anjou; while the Queen
+herself not only paid them the most flattering attentions and treated
+them as her own children, but herself undertook part of their education.
+
+It was under such enviable conditions that the young daughters of a
+poor Roman baron grew up to girlhood--the pets of the Queen and the
+Court, the playfellows of the King, and the acknowledged heiresses of
+their uncle's millions; and of them all, not one had a keener eye to the
+future than Olympe of the long face, pointed chin, and dimples. It was
+she who entered with the greatest zest into the romps and games of her
+playmate, Louis XIV., who surrounded him with the most delicate
+flatteries and attentions, and practised all her childish arts and
+coquetries to win his favour. And she succeeded to such an extent that
+it was always the company of Olympe, and not of her more beautiful
+sisters, Hortense, Laure, or Marie, that Louis most sought.
+
+Not that Olympe was always to remain the plain, unattractive child
+Madame de Motteville describes in 1647. Each year, as it passed, added
+some touch of beauty, developed some latent charm, until at eighteen she
+was very fair to look upon. "Her eyes now" says Madame de Motteville,
+"were full of fire, her complexion had become beautiful, her face less
+thin, her cheeks took dimples which gave her a fresh charm, and she had
+fine arms and beautiful hands. She certainly seemed charming in the eyes
+of the King, and sufficiently pretty to indifferent spectators."
+
+That she had wooers in plenty, even before she was so far advanced in
+the teens, was inevitable; but her personal preferences counted for
+little in face of the Cardinal's determination to find for her, as for
+all his nieces, a splendid alliance which should shed lustre on himself.
+And thus it was that, without any consultation of her heart, Olympe's
+hand was formally given to Prince Eugene de Savoie, Comte de Soissons, a
+man in whose veins flowed the Royal strains of Savoy and France.
+
+It was a brilliant match indeed for the daughter of a petty Italian
+baron; and Mazarin saw that it was celebrated with becoming
+magnificence. On the 20th February, 1657, we see a brilliant company
+repairing to the Queen's apartments, "the Comte de Soissons escorting
+his betrothed, dressed in a gown of silver cloth, with a bouquet of
+pearls on her head, valued at more than 50,000 livres, and so many
+jewels that their splendour, joined to the natural éclat of her beauty,
+caused her to be admired by everyone. Immediately afterwards, the
+nuptials were celebrated in the Queen's chapel. Then the illustrious
+pair, after dining with the Princesse de Carignan-Savoie, ascended to
+the apartments of his Eminence, the Cardinal, where they were
+entertained to a magnificent supper, at which the King and Monsieur did
+the company the honour of joining them."
+
+Then followed two days of regal receptions; a visit to Notre Dame to
+hear Mass, with the Queen herself as escort; and a stately journey to
+the Hôtel de Soissons, where the Comtesse's mother-in-law "testified to
+her, by her joy and the rich presents which she made her, how great was
+the satisfaction with which she regarded this marriage."
+
+Thus raised to the rank of a Princess of the Blood, Olympe was by no
+means the proud and happy woman she ought to have been. She had, in
+fact, aspired much higher; she had had dreams of sharing the throne of
+France with her handsome young playmate, the King; and to Louis, wife
+though she now was, she had lost none of the attraction she possessed
+when he called her his "little sweetheart" in their childish games
+together. "He continued to visit her with the greatest regularity," to
+quote Mr Noel Williams; "indeed, scarcely a day went by on which His
+Majesty's coach did not stop at the gate of the Hôtel de Soissons; and
+Olympe, basking in the rays of the Royal favour, rapidly took her place
+as the brilliant, intriguing great lady Nature intended her to be."
+
+It is little wonder, perhaps, that Olympe's foolish head was turned by
+such flattering attentions from her sovereign, or that she began to give
+herself airs and to treat members of the Royal family with a haughty
+patronage. Even La Grande Mademoiselle did not escape her insolence;
+for, as she herself records, "when I paid her a thousand compliments and
+told her that her marriage had given me the greatest joy and that I
+hoped we should always be good friends, she answered me not a word."
+
+But Olympe's supremacy was not to remain much longer unchallenged. The
+King's vagrant fancy was already turning to her younger sister, Marie,
+whose childish plainness had now ripened to a beauty more dazzling than
+her own--the witchery of large and brilliant black eyes, a complexion of
+pure olive, luxuriant, jet-black hair, a figure of singular suppleness
+and grace, and a sprightliness of wit and a _gaieté de coeur_ which the
+Comtesse could not hope to rival. It soon began to be rumoured in Court
+that Louis spent hours daily in the company of Mazarin's beautiful
+niece; a rumour which Hortense Mancini supports in her "Memoirs." "The
+presence of the King, who seldom stirred from our lodging, often
+interrupted us," she says; "my sister, Marie, alone was undisturbed; and
+you can easily understand that his assiduity had charms for her, who was
+the cause of it, because it had none for others."
+
+And as Louis' visits to the Mancini lodging became more and more
+frequent, each adding a fresh link to the chain that was binding him to
+her young sister, Madame de Soissons saw less and less of him, until an
+amused tolerance gave place to a genuine alarm. It was nothing less than
+an outrage that she, who had so long held first place in the King's
+favour, should be ousted by a "mere child," the last person in the world
+whom she could have thought of as a rival. But the Comtesse was no woman
+to be easily dethroned. Although at every Court ball, fête, or ballet,
+Louis was now inseparable from her sister, she affected to ignore these
+open slights and lost no opportunity in public of vaunting her intimacy
+with His Majesty, even to the extent on one occasion, as Mademoiselle
+records, of taking Louis' seat at a ball supper and compelling him to
+share it with her.
+
+But such shameless arrogance only served to estrange the King still
+further, and to make him seek still more the company of the young
+sister, who had already captured his heart as the Comtesse had never
+captured it. When Louis made his memorable journey to Lyons to meet the
+Princess Margaret of Savoy, it was to Marie that he paid the most
+courtly and tender attentions. "During the journey," says Mademoiselle,
+"he did not address a word to the Comtesse de Soissons"; and, indeed, on
+more than one occasion he showed a marked aversion to her.
+
+At St Jean d'Angely, Louis not only himself escorted Marie to her
+lodging; he stayed with her until two o'clock in the morning. "Nothing,"
+her sister Hortense records, "could equal the passion which the King
+showed, and the tenderness with which he asked of Marie her pardon for
+all she had suffered for his sake." It was, indeed, no secret at Court
+that he had offered her marriage, and had taken a solemn vow that
+neither Margaret of Savoy nor the Infanta of Spain should be his wife.
+But, as we have seen in a previous chapter, both the Queen and Mazarin
+were determined that the Infanta should be Queen of France; and that his
+foolish romance with the Mancini girl should be nipped in the bud.
+
+There was also another powerful influence at work to thwart his passion
+for Marie. The indifference of the Comtesse de Soissons had given place
+to a fury of resentment; and she needed no instigation of her uncle to
+determine at any cost to recover the place she had lost in Louis'
+favour. She brought all her armoury of coquetry and flatteries to bear
+on him, and so far succeeded that, we read, "the King has resumed his
+relations with the Comtesse; he has recommenced to talk and laugh with
+her; and three days since he entertained M. and Madame de Soissons with
+a ball and a play, and afterwards they partook of _medianoche_ (a
+midnight banquet) together, passing more than three hours in
+conversation with them."
+
+Meanwhile Marie, realising the hopelessness of her passion in face of
+the opposition of her uncle and the Queen, and of Louis' approaching
+marriage to the Spanish Princess, had given him unequivocally to
+understand that their relations must cease, and the rupture was complete
+when the Comtesse told the King of her sister's dallying with Prince
+Charles of Lorraine, of their assignations in the Tuileries, of their
+mutual infatuation, and of the rumours of an arranged marriage. "_Cela
+est bien_" was all Louis remarked, but the dark flush of anger that
+flooded his face was a sweet reward to the Comtesse for her treachery.
+
+A few days later her revenge was complete when, in the King's presence,
+she rallied her sister on her low spirits. "You find the time pass
+slowly when you are away from Paris," she said; "nor am I surprised,
+since you have left your lover there"; to which Marie answered with a
+haughty toss of the head, "That is possible, Madame."
+
+One formidable rival thus removed from her path, Madame de Soissons was
+not long left to enjoy her triumph; for another was quick to take the
+place abandoned by the broken-hearted Marie--the beautiful and gentle La
+Vallière, who was the next to acquire an ascendancy over the King's
+susceptible heart. Once more the Comtesse, to her undisguised chagrin,
+found herself relegated to the background, to look impotently on while
+Louis made love to her successor, and to meditate new schemes of
+vengeance. It was in vain that Louis, by way of amende, found for her a
+lover in the Marquis de Vardes, the most handsome and dissolute of his
+courtiers, for whom she soon developed a veritable passion. Her vanity
+might be appeased, but her bitterness--the _spretoe injuria
+formoe_--remained; and she lost no time in plotting further mischief.
+
+With the help of M. de Vardes and the Comte de Guiche, she sent an
+anonymous letter to the Queen, containing a full and intimate account of
+her husband's amour with La Vallière--the letter enclosed in an envelope
+addressed in the handwriting of the Queen of Spain. Fortunately for
+Maria Theresa's peace of mind the letter fell into the hands of Louis
+himself, who was naturally furious at such treachery and determined to
+make those responsible for it suffer--when he should discover them. As,
+however, the investigation of the matter was entrusted to de Vardes, it
+is needless to say that the culprits escaped detection.
+
+Madame de Soissons' next attempt to bring about a rupture between the
+King and La Vallière, by bringing forward a rival in the person of the
+seductive Mlle de la Motte-Houdancourt, proved equally futile, when
+Louis discovered by accident that she was but a tool in Madame's
+designing hands; and for a time the Comtesse was sent in disgrace from
+the Court to nurse her jealousy and to devise more effectual plans of
+vengeance.
+
+What form these took seems clear from an investigation held at the
+close of 1678 into a supposed plot to poison the King and the Dauphin--a
+plot of which La Voisin, one of the greatest criminals in history, was
+suspected of being the ringleader. During this inquiry La Voisin
+confessed that the Comtesse de Soissons had come to her house one day
+"and demanded the means of getting rid of Mile de la Vallière"; and,
+further, that the Comtesse had avowed her intention to destroy not only
+Louis' mistress, but the King himself.
+
+Such a confession was well calculated to rouse a storm of indignation in
+France, where Madame de Soissons had made many powerful enemies. The
+Chambre unanimously demanded her arrest; but before it could be
+effected, Madame, stoutly declaring her innocence, had shaken the dust
+of Paris off her feet, and was on her way to Brussels.
+
+During her flight to safety, we are told, "the principal inns in the
+towns and villages through which she passed refused to receive her"; and
+more than once she was compelled to sleep on straw and suffer the
+insults of the populace, which reviled her as sorceress and poisoner.
+"We are assured," Madame de Sevigné writes, "that the gates of Namur,
+Antwerp, and other towns have been closed against the Countess, the
+people crying out, 'We want no poisoner here'!" Even at Brussels,
+whenever she ventured into the streets she was assailed by a storm of
+insults; and on one occasion, when she entered a church, "a number of
+people rushed out, collected all the black cats they could find, tied
+their tails together, and brought them howling and spitting into the
+porch, crying out that they were devils who were following the
+Comtesse."
+
+In the face of such chilling hospitality Madame de Soissons was not
+tempted to make a long stay in Brussels; and after a few months of
+restless wandering in Flanders and Germany, she drifted to Spain where
+she succeeded in ingratiating herself with the Queen. She found little
+welcome however from the King, who, as the French Ambassador to Madrid
+wrote, "was warned against her. He accused her of sorcery, and I learn
+that, some days ago, he conceived the idea that, had it not been for a
+spell she had cast over him, he would have had children.... The life of
+the Comtesse de Soissons consists in receiving at her house all persons
+who desire to come there, from four o'clock in the evening up to two or
+three hours after midnight. There is, sire, everything that can convey
+an air of familiarity and contempt for the house of a woman of quality."
+
+That Carlos' suspicions were not without reason was proved when one day
+his Queen, after, it is said, drinking a glass of milk handed to her by
+the Comtesse, was taken suddenly ill and expired after three days of
+terrible suffering. That she died of poison, like her mother, the
+ill-fated sister of our second Charles, seems probable; but that the
+poison was administered by the Comtesse, whose friend and protectress
+she was and who had every reason to wish her well, is less to be
+believed, in spite of Saint-Simon's unequivocal accusation. Certainly
+the crime was not proved against her; for we find her still in Spain in
+the following spring, when Carlos, his patience exhausted, ordered her
+to leave the country.
+
+After a short stay in Portugal and Germany, Madame de Soissons was back
+in Brussels, where she spent the brief remainder of her days--"all the
+French of distinction who visited the City" (to quote Saint-Simon)
+"being strictly forbidden to visit her." Here, on the 9th October, 1690,
+her beauty but a memory, bankrupt in reputation, friendless and poor,
+the curtain fell on the life so full of mis-used gifts and baffled
+ambitions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE
+
+
+Few Kings have come to their thrones under such brilliant auspices as
+Milan I. of Servia; few have abandoned their crowns to the greater
+relief of their subjects, or have been followed to their exile by so
+much hatred. But a fortnight before Milan's accession, his cousin and
+predecessor, Prince Michael, had been foully done to death by hired
+assassins as he was walking in the park of Topfschider, with three
+ladies of his Court; and the murdered man had been placed in a carriage,
+sitting upright as in life, and had been driven back to his palace
+through the respectful greetings of his subjects, who little knew that
+they were saluting a corpse.
+
+There was good reason for this mockery of death, for Prince Alexander
+Karageorgevitch had long set ambitious eyes on the crown of Servia, and
+resolved to wrest it by fair means or foul from the boy-heir to the
+throne; and it was of the highest importance that Michael's death, which
+he had so brutally planned, should be concealed from him until the
+succession had been secured to his young rival, Milan. And thus it was
+that, before Karageorgevitch could bring his plotting to the head of
+achievement, Milan was hailed with acclamation as Servia's new Prince,
+and, on the 23rd June, 1868, made his triumphal entry into Belgrade to
+the jubilant ringing of bells and the thunderous cheers of the people.
+
+Twelve days later, Belgrade was _en fête_ for his crowning, her streets
+ablaze with bunting and floral decorations, as the handsome boy made his
+way through the tumults of cheers and avenues of fluttering
+handkerchiefs to the Metropolitan Church. The men, we are told, "took
+off their cloaks and placed them under his feet, that he might walk on
+them; they clustered round him, kissing his garments, and blessing him
+as their very own; they worshipped his handsome face and loved his
+boyish smile." And when his young voice rang clearly out in the words,
+"I promise you that I shall, to my dying day, preserve faithfully the
+honour and integrity of Servia, and shall be ready to shed the last drop
+of my blood to defend its rights," there was scarcely one of the
+enthusiastic thousands that heard him who would not have been willing to
+lay down his life for the idolised Prince.
+
+It was by strange paths that the fourteen-year-old Milan had thus come
+to his Principality. The son of Jefrenn Obrenovitch, uncle of the
+reigning Michael, he was cradled one August day in 1854, his mother
+being Marie Catargo, of the powerful race of Roumanian "Hospodars," a
+woman of strong passions and dissolute life. When her temper and
+infidelities had driven her husband to the drinking that put a premature
+end to his days, Marie transferred her affection, without the sanction
+of a wedding-ring, to Prince Kusa, a man of as evil repute as herself.
+In such a home and with such guardians her only child, Milan, the future
+ruler of Servia, spent the early years of his life--ill-fed, neglected,
+and supremely wretched.
+
+Thus it was that, when Prince Michael summoned the boy to Belgrade, in
+order to make the acquaintance of his successor, he was horrified to see
+an uncouth lad, as devoid of manners and of education as any in the
+slums of his capital. The heir to the throne could neither read nor
+write; the only language he spoke was a debased Roumanian, picked up
+from the servants who had been his only associates, while of the land
+over which he was to rule one day he knew absolutely nothing. The only
+hope for him was his extreme youth--he was at the time only twelve years
+old--and Michael lost no time in having him trained for the high station
+he was destined to fill.
+
+The progress the boy made was amazing. Within two years he was
+unrecognisable as the half-savage who had so shocked the Court of
+Belgrade. He could speak the Servian tongue with fluency and grace; he
+had acquired elegance of manners and speech, and a winning courtesy of
+manner which to his last day was his most marked characteristic; he had
+mastered many accomplishments, and he excelled in most manly exercises,
+from riding to swimming. And to all this remarkable promise the
+finishing touches were put by a visit to Paris under the tutorship of a
+courtly and learned professor.
+
+Thus when, within two years of his emancipation, he came to his crown,
+the uncouth lad from Roumania had blossomed into a Prince as goodly to
+look on as any Europe could show--a handsome boy of courtly graces and
+accomplishments, able to converse in several languages, and singularly
+equipped in all ways to win the homage of the simple people over whom he
+had been so early called to rule. As Mrs Gerard says, "They idolised
+their boy-Prince. Every day they stood in long, closely packed lines
+watching to see him come out of the castle to ride or drive; as he
+passed along, smiling affectionately on his people, blessings were
+showered on him. There was, however, another side to this picture of
+devotion. There were those who hated the boy because he had thwarted
+their plans." And this hatred, as persistent as it was malignant, was to
+follow him throughout his reign, and through his years of unhappy exile,
+to his grave.
+
+But these days were happily still remote. After four years of minority
+and Regency, when he was able to take the reins of government into his
+own hands, his empire over the hearts of his subjects was more firmly
+based than ever. His youth, his modesty, and his compelling charm of
+manner made friends for him wherever his wanderings took him, from Paris
+to Constantinople. He was the "Prince Charming" of Europe, as popular
+abroad as he was idolised at home; and when the time arrived to find a
+consort for him he might, one would have thought, have been able to pick
+and choose among the fairest Princesses of the Continent.
+
+But handsome and gallant and popular as he was, the overtures of his
+ministers were coldly received by one Royal house after another. Milan
+might be a reigning Prince and a charming one to boot, but it was not
+forgotten that the first of his line had been a common herdsman, and the
+blood of Hapsburgs and Hohenzollerns could not be allowed to mingle with
+so base a strain. Even a mere Hungarian Count, whose fair daughter had
+caught Milan's fancy, frowned on the suit of the swineherd's successor.
+But fate had already chosen a bride for the young Prince, who was more
+than equal in birth to any Count's daughter; who would bring beauty and
+riches as her portion; and who, after many unhappy years, was to crown
+her dower with tragedy.
+
+It was at Nice, where Prince Milan was spending the winter months of
+1875, that he first set eyes on the woman whose life was to be so
+tragically linked with his own. Among the visitors there was the family
+of a Russian colonel, Nathaniel Ketschko, a man of high lineage and
+great wealth. He claimed, in fact, descent from the Royal race of
+Comnenus, which had given many a King to the thrones of Europe, and
+whose sons for long centuries had won fame as generals, statesmen, and
+ambassadors. And to this exalted strain was allied enormous wealth, of
+which the Colonel's share was represented by a regal revenue of four
+hundred thousand roubles a year.
+
+But proud as he was of his birth and his riches, Colonel Nathaniel was
+still prouder of his two lovely daughters, each of whom had inherited in
+liberal measure the beauty of their mother, a daughter of the princely
+house of Stourza; and of the two the more beautiful, by common consent,
+was Natalie, whose charms won this spontaneous tribute from Tsar
+Nicholas, when first he saw her, "I would I were a beggar that I might
+every day ask your alms, and have the happiness of kissing your hand."
+She had, says one who knew her in her radiant youth, "an irresistible
+charm that permeated her whole being with such a harmony of grace,
+sweetness, and overpowering attraction that one felt drawn to her with
+magnetic force; and to adore her seemed the most natural and indeed the
+only position."
+
+Such was the high tribute paid to Servia's future Queen at the first
+dawning of that beauty which was to make her also Queen of all the fair
+women of Europe, and which at its zenith was thus described by one who
+saw her at Wiesbaden ten years or so later: "She walked along the
+promenade with a light, graceful movement; her feet hardly seemed to
+touch the ground, her figure was elegant, her finely cut face was lit up
+by those wonderful eyes, once seen never forgotten--brilliant, tender,
+loving; her luxuriant hair of raven black was loosely coiled round the
+well-set head, or fell in curls on the beautifully arched neck. For each
+one she had a pleasant smile, a gracious bow, or a few words, spoken in
+a musical voice." No wonder the Germans, who looked at this apparition
+of grace and beauty, "simply fell down and adored her."
+
+Such was the vision of beauty of which Prince Milan caught his first
+glimpse on the promenade at Nice in the winter of 1875, and which
+haunted him, day and night, until chance brought their paths together
+again, and he won her consent to share his throne. That such a high
+destiny awaited her, Natalie had already been told by a gipsy whom she
+met one day in the woods of her father's estate near Moscow--a meeting
+of which the following story is told.
+
+At sight of the beautiful young girl the gipsy stooped in homage and
+kissed the hem of her dress. "Why do you do that?" asked Natalie, half
+in alarm and half in pleasure. "Because," the woman answered, "I salute
+you as the chosen bride of a great Prince. Over your head I see a crown
+floating in the air. It descends lower and lower until it rests on your
+head. A dazzling brilliance adorns the crown; it is a Royal diadem."
+
+"What else?" asked Natalie eagerly, her face flushed with excitement and
+delight. "Oh! do tell me more, please!" "What more shall I say,"
+continued the gipsy, "except that you will be a Queen, and the mother of
+a King; but then--"
+
+"But then, what?" exclaimed the eager and impatient girl; "do go on,
+please. What then?" and she held out a gold coin temptingly. "I see a
+large house; you will be there, but--take care; you will be turned out
+by force.... And now give me the coin and let me go. More I must not
+tell you."
+
+Such were the dazzling and mysterious words spoken by the gipsy woman in
+the Russian forest, a year or more before Natalie first saw the Prince
+who was destined to make them true. But it was not at Nice that
+opportunity came to Milan. It was an accidental meeting in Paris, some
+months later, that made his path clear. During a visit to the French
+capital he met a young Servian officer, a distant kinsman, one Alexander
+Konstantinovitch, who confided to him, over their wine and cigarettes,
+the story of his infatuation for the daughter of a Russian colonel, who
+at the time was staying with her aunt, the Princess Murussi. He raved of
+her beauty and her charm, and concluded by asking the Prince to
+accompany him that he might make the acquaintance of the Lieutenant's
+bride-to-be.
+
+Arrived at their destination, the Prince and his companion were
+graciously received by the Princess Murussi, but Milan had no eyes for
+the dignified lady who gave him such a flattering reception; they were
+drawn as by a magnet to the girl by her side--"a child with a woman's
+grace and an angel's soul smiling in her eyes"; the incarnation of his
+dreams, the very girl whose beauty, though he had caught but one passing
+glimpse of it, had so intoxicated his brain a few months earlier at
+Nice.
+
+"Allow me," said the Lieutenant, "to introduce to Your Highness Natalie
+Ketschko, my affianced wife." Milan's face flushed with surprise and
+anger at the words. What was this trick that had been played on him? Had
+Konstantinovitch then brought him here only to humiliate him? But before
+he could recover from his indignation and astonishment, the Princess
+said chillingly, "Pardon me, Monsieur Konstantinovitch, you are not
+speaking the truth. My niece, Colonel Ketschko's daughter, is not your
+affianced wife. You are too premature."
+
+Thus rebuffed, the Lieutenant was not encouraged to prolong his stay;
+and Milan was left, reassured, to bask in the smiles of the Princess and
+her lovely niece, and to pursue his wooing under the most favourable
+auspices. This first visit was quickly followed by others; and before a
+week had passed the Prince had won the prize on which his heart was set,
+and with it a dower of five million roubles. Now followed halcyon days
+for the young lovers--long hours of sweet communion, of anticipation of
+the happy years that stretched in such a golden vista before them. It
+was a love-idyll such as delighted the romantic heart of Paris; and
+congratulations and presents poured on the young couple; "the very
+beggars in the streets," we are told, "blessing them as they drove by."
+
+"Happy is the wooing that is not long a-doing," and Milan's wooing was
+as brief as it was blissful. He was all impatience to possess fully the
+prize he had won; preparations for the nuptials were hastened, but,
+before the crowning day dawned, once more the voice of warning spoke.
+
+A few days before the wedding, as Milan was leaving the Murussi Palace,
+he was accosted by a woman, who craved permission to speak to him, a
+favour which was smilingly accorded. "I know you," said the woman, thus
+permitted to speak, "although you do not know me. You are the Prince of
+Servia; I am a servant in the household of the Princess Murussi. Your
+Highness, listen! I love Natalie. I have known and loved her since she
+was a child; and I beg of you not to marry her. Such a union is doomed
+to unhappiness. You love to rule, to command. So does Natalie; and it is
+_she_ who will be the ruler. You are utterly unsuited for each other,
+and nothing but great unhappiness can possibly come from your union."
+
+To this warning Milan turned a smiling face and a deaf ear, as Natalie
+had done to the voice of the gipsy. A fig for such gloomy prophecy! They
+were ideally happy in the present, and the future should be equally
+bright, however ravens might croak. Thus, one October day in 1875,
+Vienna held high holiday for the nuptials of the handsome Prince and his
+beautiful bride; and it was through avenues densely packed with cheering
+onlookers that Natalie made her triumphal progress to the altar, in her
+flower-garlanded dress of white satin, a tiara of diamonds flashing from
+the blackness of her hair, no brighter than the brilliance of her eyes,
+her face irradiated with happiness.
+
+That no Royalty graced their wedding was a matter of no moment to Milan
+and Natalie, whose happiness was thus crowned; and when at the
+subsequent banquet Milan said, "I wish from my very heart that every one
+of my subjects, as well as everybody I know, could be always as happy as
+I am this moment," none who heard him could doubt the sincerity of his
+words, or see any but a golden future for so ideal a union of hearts.
+
+By Servia her young Princess was received with open arms of welcome.
+"Her reception," we are told, "was beyond description. The festivities
+lasted three days, and during that time the love of the people for
+their Prince, and their admiration of the beauty and charm of his bride,
+were beyond words to describe." Never did Royal wedded life open more
+full of bright promise, and never did consort make more immediate
+conquest of the affections of her husband's subjects. "No one could have
+believed that this marriage, which was contracted from love and love
+alone, would have ended in so tragic a manner, or that hate could so
+quickly have taken the place of love."
+
+But the serpent was quick to show his head in Natalie's new paradise.
+Before she had been many weeks a wife, stories came to her ears of her
+husband's many infidelities. Now the story was of one lady of her Court,
+now of another, until the horrified Princess knew not whom to trust or
+to respect. Strange tales, too, came to her (mostly anonymously) of
+Milan's amours in Paris, in Vienna, and half a dozen of his other haunts
+of pleasure, until her love, poisoned at its very springing, turned to
+suspicion and distrust of the man to whom she had given her heart.
+
+Other disillusions were quick to follow. She discovered that her husband
+was a hopeless gambler and spendthrift, spending long hours daily at the
+card-tables, watching with pale face and trembling lips his pile of gold
+dwindle (as it usually did) to its last coin; and often losing at a
+single sitting a month's revenue from the Civil List. Her own dowry of
+five million roubles, she knew, was safe from his clutches. Her father
+had taken care to make that secure, but Milan's private fortune, large
+as it had been, had already been squandered in this and other forms of
+dissipation; and even the expenses of his wedding, she learned, had been
+met by a loan raised at ruinous interest.
+
+Such discoveries as these were well calculated to shatter the dreams of
+the most infatuated of brides, and less was sufficient to rouse
+Natalie's proud spirit to rebellion. When affectionate pleadings proved
+useless, reproaches took their place. Heated words were exchanged, and
+the records tell of many violent scenes before Natalie had been six
+months Princess of Servia. "You love to rule," the warning voice had
+told Milan--"to command. So does Natalie"; and already the clashing of
+strong wills and imperious tempers, which must end in the yielding of
+one or the other, had begun to be heard.
+
+If more fuel had been needed to feed the flames of dissension, it was
+quickly supplied by two unfortunate incidents. The first was Milan's
+open dallying with Fräulein S----, one of Natalie's maids-of-honour, a
+girl almost as beautiful as herself, but with the _beauté de diable_.
+The second was the appearance in Belgrade of Dimitri Wasseljevitchca,
+who was suspected of plotting to assassinate the Tsar. Russia demanded
+that the fugitive should be given up to justice, and enlisted Natalie's
+co-operation with this object. Milan, however, was resolute not to
+surrender the plotter, and turned a deaf ear to all the Princess's
+pleadings and cajoleries. "The most exciting scene followed. Natalie,
+abandoning entreaties, threatened and even commanded her husband to obey
+her"; and when threats and commands equally failed, she gave way to a
+paroxysm of rage in which she heaped the most unbridled scorn and
+contempt on her husband.
+
+Thus jealousy, a thwarted will, and Milan's low pleasures combined to
+widen the breach between the Royal couple, so recently plighted to each
+other in the sacred name of love, and to prepare the way for the
+troubled and tragic years to come.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE--_continued_
+
+
+If anything could have restored happiness to Milan of Servia and his
+Princess, Natalie, it should surely have been the birth of the
+baby-Prince, Alexander, whom both equally adored and equally spoiled.
+But, instead of linking his parents in a new bond of affection "Sacha"
+was from his cradle the innocent cause of widening the breach that
+severed them.
+
+For a time, fortunately, Milan had little opportunity of continuing the
+feud of recrimination with his high-spirited and hot-tempered spouse.
+More serious matters claimed him. Servia was plunged into war with
+Turkey, and his days were spent in camp and on the battlefield, until
+the intervention of Russia put an end to the long and hopeless struggle,
+and Milan found himself one February day in 1882, thanks to the Berlin
+Conference, hailed the first King of his country, under the title of
+Milan I.
+
+Then followed a disastrous war with Bulgaria into which the headstrong
+King rushed in spite of Natalie's warning--"Draw back, Milan, and have
+no share in what will prove a bloody drama. You have no chance of
+conquering, for Alexander is made of the stuff of the Hohenzollerns."
+And indeed the struggle was doomed to failure from the first; for Milan
+was no man to lead an army to victory. Read his method of conducting a
+campaign, as described by one of his aides-de-camp--
+
+"Our troops continue to retreat--I never imagined a campaign could be so
+jolly. We do nothing but dance and sing and fiddle. Yesterday the King
+had some guests and the champagne literally flowed. We had the Belgrade
+singers, who used to delight us in the theatre-café. They sang and
+danced delightfully. The last two days we have had plenty of fun, and
+yesterday a lot of jolly girls came to enliven us." Such was Milan's
+method of conducting a great war, on which the very existence of his
+kingdom hung. Wine and women and song were more to his taste than forced
+marches, strategy, and hard-fought battles. But once again foreign
+intervention came to his rescue; and his armies were saved from
+annihilation.
+
+When his sword was finally sheathed, if not with honour, he returned to
+Belgrade to resume his gambling, his dallyings with fair women--and his
+daily quarrels with his Queen, whose bitterness absence had done nothing
+to assuage. So far from Natalie's spirit being crushed, it was higher
+and prouder than ever. She would die before she would yield; but she was
+in no mood to die, this autocratic, fiery-tempered, strong-willed
+daughter of Russia. She gave literally a "striking" proof of the spirit
+that was in her at the Easter reception of 1886, when the wife of a
+Greek diplomat--a beautiful woman, to whom her husband had been more
+than kind--presented herself smilingly to receive the "salute courteous"
+from Her Majesty. With a look of scorn Natalie coolly surveyed her rival
+from head to foot; and then, in the presence of the Court, gave her a
+resounding slap on the cheek.
+
+But the Grecian lady was only one of many fair women who basked
+successively (or together) in Milan's favour. A much more formidable
+rival was Artemesia Christich, a woman as designing as she was lovely,
+who was quick to envelop the weak King in the toils of her witchery. Not
+content with his smiles and favours she aspired to take Natalie's place
+as Queen of Servia; and, it is said, had extorted from him a promise
+that he would make her his Queen as soon as his existing marriage tie
+could be dissolved. And to this infamous compact Artemesia's husband, a
+man as crafty and unscrupulous as herself, consented, in return for his
+promotion to certain high and profitable offices in the State.
+
+In vain did the Emperor and the Crown Prince of Austria, with many
+another high-placed friend, plead with Milan not to commit such a folly.
+He was driven to distraction between such powerful appeals and the
+allurement of the siren who had him so effectually under her spell,
+until in his despair he entertained serious thoughts of suicide as
+escape from his dilemma. Meanwhile, we are told, "a perfect hell" raged
+in the castle; each day brought its scandalous scene between his
+outraged Queen and himself. His unpopularity with his subjects became so
+acute that he was hissed whenever he made his appearance in the streets
+of his capital; and Artemesia was obliged to have police protection to
+shield her from the vengeance of the mob.
+
+As for Natalie, this crowning injury decided her to bear her purgatory
+no longer. She would force her husband to abdicate and secure her own
+appointment as Regent for her son; or, failing that, she would leave her
+husband and seek an asylum out of Servia. And with the object of still
+further embittering his subjects against the King she made the full
+story of her injuries public, and enlisted the sympathy, not only of
+Milan's most powerful ministers, but of the entire country.
+
+"The castle is in utter confusion," wrote an officer of the Belgrade
+garrison, in October, 1886. "The King looks ill, and as if he never
+slept. Poor fellow! he flies for refuge to us in the guard-house, and
+plays cards with the officers. Card-playing is his worst enemy. He loves
+it passionately, and plays excitedly and for high points--and he always
+loses."
+
+Matters were now hastening to a crisis. Hopelessly in debt, scorned by
+his subjects, and hated by his wife, Milan's plight was pitiful. The
+scenes between the King and the Queen were becoming more violent and
+disgraceful every day. "There was no peace anywhere, nor did anyone
+belonging to the Court enjoy a moment of tranquillity." So intolerable
+had life become that, early in 1887, Milan decided to dissolve his
+marriage; and it was only at the pleading of the Austrian Emperor that
+he consented to abandon this design, on condition that his wife left
+Servia; and thus it was that one day in April Queen Natalie left
+Belgrade, accompanied by her son "Sacha," ostensibly that he might
+continue his education in Germany.
+
+But, although husband and wife were thus at last separated, Milan's
+resolve to divorce her remained firm. "I have to inform you," he wrote
+shortly after her departure, "that I have this day sent in my
+application to our Holy National Church for permission to dissolve our
+marriage." And that nothing might be lacking to Natalie's suffering and
+humiliation, he sent General Protitsch to Wiesbaden with a peremptory
+demand that his son, "Sacha," should return to Servia.
+
+In vain did Natalie protest against both indignities. Milan might
+divorce her; but at least he should not rob her of her son, the only
+solace left to her in life. And when General Protitsch, seeing that
+milder measures were futile, gave orders for the Prince to be removed by
+force, the distracted mother flung one protecting arm round her boy;
+and, pointing a loaded pistol with the other, threatened to shoot dead
+the man who dared approach her.
+
+Opposition, however, was futile; the following evening the boy-Prince
+was in his father's arms, and the weeping mother was left disconsolate.
+Thus robbed of her darling "Sacha," it was not long before the second
+blow fell. The divorce proceedings were rushed through the Synod. A deaf
+ear was turned to Natalie's petition to be allowed, at least, to defend
+herself in person; and on the 12th October, 1888, the "marriage between
+King Milan I. and Natalie, born Ketschko," was formally dissolved. Well
+might this most unhappy of Queens write, "The position is embittered by
+my conscience assuring me that I have neglected no duty, and that there
+is not a single action of my life which could be cited against me as a
+grave offence, or could put me to shame were it brought before the whole
+world. My fate should draw tears from the very stones; but I do not ask
+for pity; I demand justice."
+
+If anything could have increased Milan's unpopularity it was this brutal
+treatment of his Queen. The very men who, at his coronation, had taken
+off their cloaks that he might walk on them, and the women who had
+kissed his garments, now hissed him in the streets of his capital. In
+his own Court he had no friend except the infamous Christitch; the
+general hatred even took the form of repeated attempts on his life. If
+he would save it, he realised he must abandon his crown; and one March
+morning in 1889, after informing his ministers of his intention to
+abdicate, he awoke his twelve-year-old son with the greeting, "Good
+morning, Your Majesty!" Milan was no longer King of Servia; his son,
+Alexander, reigned in his stead.
+
+Probably no King ever laid down his crown more willingly. He had put
+aside for ever his Royal trappings, with all their unhappy memories, and
+their present discomforts and danger; but in distant Paris he knew a
+life of new pleasure awaited him, remote from the wranglings of Courts
+and the assassin's knife. And within a week of greeting his successor as
+King, he was gaily riding in the Bois, attending the theatres, supping
+hilariously with ladies of the ballet, or dining with his friends at
+Verrey's "where his somewhat rough manner and coarse jokes (the legacy
+of his swineherd ancestry) caused him sometimes to be mistaken for a
+parvenu," until a waiter would correct the impression by a whispered,
+"That gentleman with the dark moustache is Milan, ex-King of Servia."
+
+While her husband was thus drinking the cup of Paris pleasure, his wife
+was still doomed to exile from her kingdom and her son, with permission
+only to pay two brief visits each year. But Natalie, who had so long
+defied a King, was not the woman to be daunted by mere Regents. She
+would return to Belgrade, and at least make her home where she could
+catch an occasional glimpse of her boy. And to Belgrade she went, to
+make her entry over flower-strewn streets, and through a tornado of
+cheers and shouts of "Zivela Rufe!" It was a truly Royal welcome to the
+great warm heart of the Servian people; but no official of the Court was
+there to greet her coming, and as she drove past the castle which held
+all she counted dear in life, not even the flutter of a handkerchief
+marked the passing of Servia's former Queen.
+
+Had she but played her cards now with the least discretion, she might
+have been allowed to remain in Belgrade in peace. But Natalie seems
+fated to have been the harbinger of storm. For a time, it is true, she
+was content to lie _perdue_, entertaining her friends at her house in
+Prince Michael Street, driving through the streets of her capital behind
+her pair of white ponies, or walking with her pet goat for companion,
+greeted everywhere with respect and affection. But her restless,
+vengeful spirit, still burning from the indignities she had suffered,
+would not allow her to remain long in the background. She threw herself
+into political agitation, and thus brought herself into open conflict
+with the Regents; she inaugurated a campaign of abuse against her
+husband, whom she still pursued with a relentless hatred; and generally
+made herself so objectionable to the authorities that the Skupshtina was
+at last compelled to order her banishment.
+
+When the deputies presented themselves before her with the decree of
+expulsion, she laughed in their very faces, declaring that she would
+only submit to force. "I refuse to go," she said defiantly, "unless I am
+expelled by the hands of the police." A few hours later she was forcibly
+removed from her weeping and protesting ladies, hurried into a carriage,
+and driven off, with a strong escort of soldiers, on her journey to
+exile.
+
+But the good people of Belgrade, who had got wind of the proposed
+abduction, were by no means disposed to look on while their beloved
+Queen was thus brutally taken from them. When the cortège reached the
+Cathedral Square, it was stopped by a formidable and menacing mob; the
+escort, furiously assailed with sticks and showers of stones, was beaten
+off; the horses were taken from the carriage, and the Queen was drawn
+back in triumph by scores of willing hands, to her residence.
+
+Natalie's victory, however, was short-lived. At midnight, when her
+stalwart champions were sleeping in their beds, the police, crawling
+over the roofs of the houses in Prince Michael Street, and descending
+into the Queen's courtyard, found it a very simple matter to complete
+their dastardly work. The Queen was again bundled unceremoniously into a
+carriage, and before Belgrade was well awake, she was far on her way to
+her new exile in Hungary. A few days later a formal decree of banishment
+was pronounced against her, forbidding her, under any pretext whatever,
+to enter Servia again without the Regent's permission.
+
+Only once more did Natalie and Milan set eyes on each other--when the
+ex-King presented himself at Biarritz, to bring her news of their son's
+projected _coup d'état_, by which he designed to depose the Regents and
+to take the reins of government into his own hands. Taken by surprise,
+the Queen received Milan, but when she saw him standing before her, an
+aged, broken man, her composure gave way. She could not speak; she
+trembled like a leaf.
+
+With Alexander's dramatic accession to his full Kingship a new, if
+brief, era of happiness opened to Natalie. The Regents were no longer
+able to exclude her from Servia, and by her son's invitation she
+returned to Belgrade to resume her old position of Queen.
+
+Still beautiful, in spite of all her suffering, she played for a time
+the rôle of Queen-mother to perfection, holding her Courts, presiding at
+balls and soirées, taking a prominent part in affairs of State, and
+gradually acquiring more power than her easy-going son himself enjoyed.
+At last, after long years of unrest and unhappiness, she seemed assured
+of peaceful years, secure in the affection of her son and her people,
+and far removed from the husband who had brought so much misery into her
+life.
+
+But Natalie was fated never to be happy long, and once more her evil
+Destiny was to snatch the cup from her lips, assuming this time the form
+of Draga Maschin, one of her own ladies-in-waiting, under the spell of
+whose black eyes and voluptuous charms her son quickly fell, after that
+first dramatic incident at Biarritz, when she plunged into the sea to
+his rescue and saved him from drowning.
+
+Many months earlier a clairvoyante at Paris had told Natalie, "Your
+Majesty is cherishing in your bosom a poisonous snake, which one day
+will give you a mortal wound." She had smiled incredulously at the
+warning, but she was soon to learn what truth it held. Certainly Draga
+Maschin was the last person she would have suspected of being a source
+of danger--a woman many years older than her son, the penniless widow of
+a drunken engineer--a woman, moreover, of whose life, before Natalie had
+taken pity on her poverty, many strange stories were told--how, for
+instance, she had often been seen in low resorts, "with the arm of a
+forester or a tradesman round her, singing the old Servian songs."
+
+But she had not taken into account Draga's sensuous beauty, before which
+her son was powerless. Each meeting left him more and more involved in
+her toils, until, to the consternation of Servia and the horror of his
+mother, he announced his intention of making her his Queen. Even Milan,
+degraded as he was, was horror-struck when the news came to him in
+Paris. "And this," he exclaimed, "is the act of 'Sacha'--my own son. He
+is a monster, a thing of evil in the eyes of all men! The Maschin will
+be Queen of Servia. What a reproach! What an evil! A creature like her!
+A sordid creature! Could he not have put aside his love for this
+low-born woman? But I could never make the fool understand that a King
+has duties; he has something else to think of but love-making."
+
+When taking leave of the friend who had brought him this evil news Milan
+said, "I shall never see Servia again. My experience has been a bitter
+one--everywhere treachery and deceit. And now my own son--_that_ has
+broken my heart." A few months later, worn out by his excesses,
+prematurely old and broken-hearted, the man who had prostituted life's
+best gifts drew his last breath at Vienna at the age of forty-six.
+
+As for Natalie, this crowning calamity of her son's disgrace did more
+than all her past sufferings to crush her proud spirit. But fate had not
+yet dealt the last and most cruel blow of all. That fell on that fatal
+June day of 1902 when her beloved "Sacha's" mutilated body was flung by
+his assassins out of his palace window, to be greeted with shouts of
+derisive laughter and cries of "Long live King Peter," from the dense
+crowds who had come to gloat over this last scene in the tragedy of the
+House of the Obrenvoie.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+Agenois, Duc, d', 284, 285
+Aissé, Mlle, 221-224
+Albany, Count of, 13-20
+ " Countess of, 15-22
+Alberoni, Cardinal, 184
+Alexander, King of Servia, 319-329
+Alexander III., of Russia, 93
+Alexis, Tsarevitch, 10, 255
+Alfieri, Vittorio, 19-22
+Anjou, Duc d', 59
+Anna, Empress, 26
+Anne of Austria, 159, 163, 164
+Arcimbaldo, 92
+Aubigné, Constant d', 240, 241
+ " Françoise d', 240-247
+Audouins, Diane d', 37
+Augustus, of Saxony, 93-102
+Austin, William, 205, 213
+Auvergne, Comte d', 235
+
+Babou, Françoise, 35
+Baireuth, Margravine of, 7
+Baratinski, Prince, 155
+Barry, Guillaume du, 47
+ " Jean du, 47
+ " Madame du, 47-54
+Bavaria, Elizabeth of, 215
+Beaufort, Duchesse de, 41-44
+Beauharnais, Eugène, 135
+ " Hortense, 135
+ " Josephine, 127-137
+Beauvallon, 143
+Bécu, Jeanne, 45-54
+Bellegarde, Count di, 205-206
+" Duc de, 37-39
+Berry, Duc de, 57-61
+ " Duchesse de, 55-65, 182, 217
+Bestyouzhev, 30, 31
+Beuchling, 98
+Blanguini, 111
+Blois, Mlle de, 56
+Bonaparte, Elisa, 104
+ " Letizia, 104, 105
+ " Napoleon, 104-112, 127-137
+Bonaparte, Pauline, 104-113
+Bonaventuri, Pietro, 170-175
+"Bonnie Prince," 13-22
+Borghese, Prince Camillo, 110
+Borghese, Princess Pauline, 110-113
+Bossi, Giuseppe, 205
+Bourgogne, Duc de, 59
+ " Duchesse de, 181
+Brissac, Duc de, 50-53
+Bristol, Lord, 121, 122
+Brougham, 212
+Brunswick, Augusta, Duchess of, 194
+Brunswick, Charles Wm., Duke of, 194
+Byron, Lord, 138
+
+Campbell, Lady Charlotte, 193, 194
+Campredon, 249
+Capello, Bartolomeo, 172
+ " Bianca, 169-179
+Carlos, King of Spain, 304, 305.
+Caroline, Princess of Wales, 191-202
+Caroline, Queen of Naples, 120
+Catargo, Marie, 307
+Catherine I., of Russia, 1-12, 23
+Catherine II., of Russia, 23, 29, 32, 72, 73, 76, 80, 149-158
+Charles V., Emperor, 88
+Charles VII., Emperor, 29
+Charles IX., King of France, 227
+Charles, Monsieur, 133, 134
+Charlotte, Princess, 199, 202, 211
+Charlotte, Queen, 197
+Chartres, Duc de, 56
+Chateauroux, Duchesse de, 288-293
+Christian II, of Denmark, 81-92
+Christich, Artemesia, 321, 322
+Clary, Desirée, 104, 127
+Colonna, Prince, 167, 295
+ " Princess, 167, 168, 295
+Cosse, Louis, Duc de, 48-50
+
+Domanski, 70-72, 74, 77, 79
+Douglas, Lady, 200
+ " Sir John, 200
+Dubois, Cardinal, 215, 216
+Dujarrier, M., 143
+Dyveke, 83-89
+
+Elizabeth I., of Russia, 23-32, 72, 150, 153
+"Elizabeth II." of Russia, 74, 76, 77
+Embs, Baron von, 67
+Emilie, 220, 221
+Encke, Charlotte, 115, 116
+ " Wilhelmine, 114-126
+Entragues, Henriette d', 44, 227-237
+Entragues, Seigneur d', 227, 229
+Esterle, Countess, 102
+Estrées, Antoine d', 36
+ " Gabrielle d', 35-44, 226
+Estrées, Jean d', 36
+Eudoxia, Empress, 252-257
+
+Faaborg, Hans, 90-91
+Fabre, François X., 21
+Falari, Duchesse de, 224
+Feriol, Comte de, 222
+ " Madame de, 223
+Fersen, Count, 261
+Fimarcon, Marquis de, 221
+Fitzherbert, Mrs, 199
+Flavacourt, Madame de, 283
+Fleury, Cardinal, 271, 272, 282, 283, 284
+Fontanges, Mlle de, 245
+Forbin, 111
+François I, 36
+Frederick the Great, 114-118
+Frederick William II, of Prussia, 115-124
+Frederick William III., of Prussia, 124
+Frèron, 106
+
+Gacé, Comte De, 183
+Galitzin, Prince, 79
+George III., 197, 201, 211
+George IV., 191-202
+Giovanna, Grand Duchess of Tuscany, 174-177
+Glebof, Major, 253-256
+Goncourt, de, 46, 270, 286
+Guiche, Comte de, 265, 302
+Guise, Duc de, 237
+Gustav, Adolf, 15
+
+Hamilton, Mary, 257-259
+ " Sir William, 75, 77
+Haye, La, 60
+Henri IV., of France (and Navarre), 35-44, 226-237
+Holbein, Francis, 126
+Hornstein, 69
+Hutchinson, Lord, 212
+
+Isabella, Princess, 88
+Ivan, 26
+
+Jersey, Lady, 198, 199
+Joachim Murat, King, 207
+Joinville, Prince de, 234, 237
+Josephine, Empress, 110-112, 127-137
+Junot, 107
+
+Karageorgevitch, Alex., 306
+Ketschko, Natalie, 311-329
+ " Nathaniel, 310
+Königsmarck, Aurora von, 94-103
+Königsmarck, Conrad von, 94
+ " Philip von, 94-96
+Konstantinovitch, Alex., 313
+Kristenef, 77
+Kusa, Prince, 308
+
+Lamballe, Princesse de, 263
+Landsfeld, Countess of, 146-148
+Languet, Abbé, 63
+Lauzun, Duc de, 62
+Lavallière, Duchesse de, 239
+Lawrence, Sir Thomas, 201
+Leclerc, General, 108, 109
+Lichtenau, Countess, 120-126
+Limburg, Duke of, 67, 68
+Lorraine, Prince Charles of, 167, 301
+Louis XIV., 159, 162-167, 238-247, 248, 295
+Louis XV., 45, 47-49, 270-292
+Louise, Countess of Albany, 15-22
+Löwenhaupt, Count Axel, 94
+ " Countess, 94, 97-99
+Ludwig I., of Bavaria, 144-147
+Luynes, Duc de, 273
+
+Mailly, Madame de, 273-293
+Maine, Duc de, 243, 247
+Maintenon, Madame de, 57, 244-247
+Malmesbury, Lord, 195-198
+Manby, Captain, 201
+Mancini, Hortense, 162, 167, 168
+Mancini, Laure, 294
+ " Madame, 159-163
+ " Marie, 160-168, 239, 298-301
+Mancini, Olympe, 294-305
+Maria Theresa, Queen of Spain, 302, 304
+Marie Antoinette, 260-269
+Marie Leczinska, 270
+Marie Louise, Empress, 112, 136, 204
+Marine, Monsieur de, 67
+Marke, Count de la, 117
+Marmont, General, 107
+Maschin, Draga, 328, 329
+Masson, 32, 135
+Maurepas, 282-284, 292
+Mazarin, Cardinal, 159-163, 239, 295, 297
+Mazarin, Madame de, 282, 283
+Medici, Cardinal de, 176-176
+ " Francesco de, 172-179
+ " Marie de, 231-235
+Menshikoff, 3, 6, 12
+Mercoeur, Duc de, 295
+Mexent, Marquis de Saint, 123
+Michael, Prince, of Servia, 306, 308
+Michelin, Madame, 181
+Milan I., of Servia, 306-329
+Modena, Duke of, 185-189
+ " Duchess of, 182, 186-189
+Monceaux, Marquise de, 41
+Mons, William, 11
+Montespan, Madame de, 55, 56, 239, 240, 243-245
+Montez, Lola, 138-148
+Montmorency, Charlotte de, 236, 237
+Mortemart, Duchesse de, 54
+Motte-Houdancourt, Mlle de la, 302
+Motteville, Madame de, 294, 296
+Mouchy, Madame de, 62-65, 217
+Murussi, Princess, 313, 314
+
+Napoleon I., 104-112, 127-137
+Natalie, Queen of Servia, 311-329
+Nathalie, Empress, 252
+Nesle, Félicité de, 275-279
+ " Marquise de, 182
+Nevers, Duc de, 232
+Noailles, Cardinal, 64
+
+Obrenovitch Jefrenn, 307
+Ompteda, Baron, 206
+Orleans, Philippe, Duc de, 55-57, 60-64, 184, 214-225
+Orloff, Alexis, 74, 76-79, 155
+ " Count, 258
+ " Gregory, 29, 32, 76, 153-158
+
+Palatine, Princess, Elizabeth, 56, 59, 62, 64
+Panine, 157
+Paskevitch, General, 141, 142
+Patiomkin, 23
+Perdita, 199
+Pergami, 206-213
+Permon, Albert, 107
+ " Madame, 109
+Peter the Great, 3-12, 23, 248-259
+Peter II., of Russia, 28, 257
+Peter III., of Russia, 149-155
+Pinneberg, Countess of, 73
+Platen, Countess, 94
+Polignac, Cardinal de, 261
+ " Diane de, 262, 265
+ " Jules, Comte de, 261-264
+Polignac, Madame de, 182
+ " Yolande, de, 261-269
+Pöllnitz, Von, 7
+Poniatowski, 151, 152
+Porte, Armande de la, 162
+Protitsch, General, 323
+Pugatchef, 73
+
+Radziwill, Prince Charles, 73, 74
+Ravaillac, 35
+Razoum, Alexis, 23-34, 72
+ " Cyril, 26-28
+ " Gregory, 24
+Richelieu, Duc de, 180-190, 275, 280, 285, 290, 291
+Richelieu, Duchesse de, 185
+Rietz, Herr, 117
+ " Wilhelmine, 117-120
+Ringlet, Father, 62
+Riom, Comte de, 62-64
+
+Saint-Simon, Duc de, 57, 60, 62, 305
+Saint-Simon, Madame de, 58
+Savoie, Chevalier de, 65
+Savoy, Charles Emmanuel, Duke of, 168
+Savoy, Margaret, Princess of, 164, 165, 299, 300
+Scarron, Paul, 241, 242
+Schenk, Baron von, 67
+Sevigné, Madame de, 245, 303
+Seymour, Henry, 48
+Shouvalov, 29
+Sigbrit, Frau, 83-92
+Skovronski, I, 23
+Smith, Sydney, Captain, 200
+Soissons, Comte de, 297
+ " Comtesse de, 295, 297-305
+Soltykoff, Sergius, 151
+Sophia Dorothea, of Celle, 94
+Spencer, Lord Henry, 119
+Stanley, Sir John, 193
+Stendhal, 21
+Stuart, Charles, 13-20
+Sully, Duc de, 41, 42, 229-231
+
+Tencin, Madame de, 223, 280
+Teplof, 155
+Thackeray, 192, 198, 200
+Toebingen, Major, 199
+Torbern, Oxe, 90-92
+Touchet, Marie, 227
+Tourel-Alégre, Marquess, 36
+Tournelle, Mme de la, 280-293
+Tuscany, Bianca, Grand Duchess of, 169-179
+Tuscany, Francesco, Grand Duke of, 172-179
+
+Valkendorf, Chancellor, 81-85, 89
+Vallière, La, 301-303
+Valois, Marguerite de, Queen of France, 42, 229, 231
+Valois, Mlle de, 182, 184, 185
+Vardes, Marquis de, 302
+Vaudreuil, Comte de, 267, 268
+Verneuil, Marquise de, 231-237
+Villars, Duchesse de, 233, 234
+Vintimille, Comtesse de, 276-279
+Vishnevsky, Colonel, 24
+Vlodimir, Princess Aly de, 66-80
+Voisin, La, 303
+Voltaire, 46, 57, 149
+Vorontsov, 32, 33
+
+Walewska, Madame, 127
+Waliszewski, 3, 5, 251
+Wasseljevitchca, Dimitri, 317
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Love affairs of the Courts of Europe
+by Thornton Hall
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+Title: Love affairs of the Courts of Europe
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+Author: Thornton Hall
+
+Release Date: May 9, 2004 [EBook #12309]
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+Language: English
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+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOVE AFFAIRS OF THE COURTS ***
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+Produced by Dave Morgan, Wilelmina Mallière and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
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+</pre>
+
+<br>
+<h1>LOVE AFFAIRS OF THE</h1>
+<h1>COURTS OF EUROPE</h1>
+<h3>BY</h3>
+<h2>THORNTON HALL, F.S.A.,</h2>
+<h3>Barrister-at-Law,<br>
+</h3>
+<br>
+<h3>Author of "Love romancies of the Aristocracy", <br>
+</h3>
+<h3>"Love intrigues of Royal Courts", etc., etc.</h3>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<h3>TO</h3>
+<h3>MY COUSIN,</h3>
+<h3>LENORE</h3>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 45%;">
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+<p><br>
+</p>
+I. <a href="#CHAPTER_I">A COMEDY QUEEN</a><br>
+II. <a href="#CHAPTER_II">THE "BONNIE PRINCE'S" BRIDE</a><br>
+III. <a href="#CHAPTER_III">THE PEASANT AND THE EMPRESS</a><br>
+IV. <a href="#CHAPTER_IV">A CROWN THAT FAILED</a><br>
+V. <a href="#CHAPTER_V">A QUEEN OF HEARTS</a><br>
+VI. <a href="#CHAPTER_VI">THE REGENT'S DAUGHTER</a><br>
+VII. <a href="#CHAPTER_VII">A PRINCESS OF MYSTERY</a><br>
+VIII. <a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">THE KING AND THE "LITTLE DOVE"</a><br>
+IX. <a href="#CHAPTER_IX">THE ROMANCE OF THE BEAUTIFUL SWEDE</a><br>
+X. <a href="#CHAPTER_X">THE SISTER OF AN EMPEROR</a><br>
+XI. <a href="#CHAPTER_XI">A SIREN OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY</a><br>
+XII. <a href="#CHAPTER_XII">THE CORSICAN AND THE CREOLE</a><br>
+XIII. <a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">THE ENSLAVER OF A KING</a><br>
+XIV. <a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">AN EMPRESS AND HER FAVOURITES</a><br>
+XV. <a href="#CHAPTER_XV">A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY CINDERELLA</a><br>
+XVI. <a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">BIANCA, GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY</a><br>
+XVII. <a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">RICHELIEU, THE ROU&Eacute;</a><br>
+XVIII. <a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS</a><br>
+XIX. <a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS&#8212;<i>continued</i></a><br>
+XX. <a href="#CHAPTER_XX">THE LOVE-AFFAIRS OF A REGENT</a><br>
+XXI. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">A DELILAH OF THE COURT OF FRANCE</a><br>
+<a name="Page_-1"></a>XXII. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">THE "SUN-KING" AND
+THE WIDOW</a><br>
+XXIII. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">A THRONED BARBARIAN</a><br>
+XXIV. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">A FRIEND OF MARIE ANTOINETTE</a><br>
+XXV. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">THE RIVAL SISTERS</a><br>
+XXVI. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">THE RIVAL SISTERS&#8212;<i>continued</i></a><br>
+XXVII. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">A MISTRESS OF INTRIGUE</a><br>
+XXVIII. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE</a><br>
+XXIX. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE&#8212;<i>continued</i></a><br>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<br>
+<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+<br>
+<p><a href="#img001">BIANCA CAPELLO BONAVENTURA GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY</a></p>
+<p><a href="#img002">CATHERINE THE SECOND OF RUSSIA</a></p>
+<p><a href="#img003">COUNT GREGORY ORLOFF</a></p>
+<p><a href="#img004">DESIR&Eacute;E CLARY</a></p>
+<p><a href="#img005">JOSEPHINE DE BEAUHARNAIS, EMPRESS (BY PRUD'HON)</a></p>
+<p><a href="#img006">LOLA MONTEZ, COUNTESS OF LANDSFELD</a></p>
+<p><a href="#img007">LUDWIG I., KING OF BAVARIA</a></p>
+<p><a href="#img008">FRANCESCO I., GRAND DUKE OF TUSCANY</a></p>
+<p><a href="#img009">CAROLINE OF BRUNSWICK, WIFE OF GEORGE IV</a><br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<br>
+<h2><a name="Page_1"></a>LOVE AFFAIRS OF THE COURTS</h2>
+<h2>OF EUROPE</h2>
+<br>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_I"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+<h2>A COMEDY QUEEN</h2>
+<br>
+<p>"It was to a noise like thunder, and close clasped in
+a soldier's embrace, that Catherine I. made her first
+appearance in Russian history."</p>
+<p>History, indeed, contains few chapters more
+strange, more seemingly impossible, than this which
+tells the story of the maid-of-all-work&#8212;the red-armed,
+illiterate peasant-girl who, without any dower
+of beauty or charm, won the idolatry of an Emperor
+and succeeded him on the greatest throne of Europe.
+So obscure was Catherine's origin that no records
+reveal either her true name or the year or place of
+her birth. All that we know is that she was cradled
+in some Livonian village, either in Sweden or
+Poland, about the year 1685, the reputed daughter of
+a serf-mother and a peasant-father; and that her
+numerous brothers and sisters were known in later
+years by the name Skovoroshtchenko or Skovronski.
+The very Christian name by which she is
+<a name="Page_2"></a>known to history was not hers until it was given
+to
+her by her Imperial lover.</p>
+<p>It is not until the year 1702, when the future
+Empress of the Russias was a girl of seventeen, that
+she makes her first dramatic appearance on the stage
+on which she was to play so remarkable a part.
+Then we find her acting as maid-servant to the
+Lutheran pastor of Marienburg, scrubbing his floors,
+nursing his children, and waiting on his resident
+pupils, in the midst of all the perils of warfare.
+The Russian hosts had for weeks been laying siege
+to Marienburg; and the Commandant, unable to
+defend the town any longer against such overwhelming
+odds, had announced his intention to blow up
+the fortress, and had warned the inhabitants to
+leave the town.</p>
+<p>Between the alternatives of death within the walls
+and the enemy without, Pastor Gl&uuml;ck chose the
+latter; and sallying forth with his family and maid-servant,
+threw himself on the mercy of the Russians
+who promptly packed him off to Moscow a prisoner.
+For Martha (as she seems to have been known in
+those days) a different fate was reserved. Her red
+lips, saucy eyes, and opulent figure were too seductive
+a spoil to part with, General Sh&eacute;r&eacute;m&eacute;tief
+decided, and she was left behind, a by no means
+reluctant hostage.</p>
+<p>Peter's soldiers, now that victory was assured, were
+holding high revel of feasting and song and dancing.
+They received the new prisoner literally with open
+arms, and almost before she had wiped the tears
+from her eyes, at parting from her nurslings, she
+<a name="Page_3"></a>was capering gaily to the music of hautboy and
+fiddle,
+with the arm of a stalwart soldier round her waist.</p>
+<p>"Suddenly," says Waliszewski, "a fearful explosion
+overthrew the dancers, cut the music short, and
+left the servant-maid, fainting with terror, in the arms
+of a dragoon."</p>
+<p>Thus did Martha, the "Siren of the Kitchen,"
+dance her way into Russian history, little dreaming,
+we may be sure, to what dizzy heights her nimble feet
+were to carry her. For a time she found her pleasure
+in the attentions of a non-commissioned officer,
+sharing the life of camp and barracks and making
+friends by the good-nature which bubbled in her,
+and which was always her chief charm. When her
+sergeant began to weary of her, she found a humble
+place as laundry-maid in the household of Menshikoff,
+the Tsar's favourite, whose shirts, we are told,
+it was her privilege to wash; and who, it seems, was
+by no means insensible to the buxom charms of this
+maid of the laundry. At any rate we find Menshikoff,
+when he was spending the Easter of 1706 at
+Witebsk, writing to his sister to send her to him.</p>
+<p>But a greater than Menshikoff was soon to appear
+on the scene&#8212;none other than the Emperor Peter
+himself. One day the Tsar, calling on his favourite,
+was astonished to see the cleanliness of his surroundings
+and his person. "How do you contrive," he
+asked, "to have your house so well kept, and to
+wear such fresh and dainty linen?" Menshikoff's
+answer was "to open a door, through which the
+sovereign perceived a handsome girl, aproned, and
+sponge in hand, bustling from chair to chair, and
+<a name="Page_4"></a>going from window to window, scrubbing the
+window-panes"&#8212;a vision of industry which made
+such a powerful appeal to His Majesty that he
+begged an introduction on the spot to the lady of
+the sponge.</p>
+<p>The most daring writer of fiction could scarcely
+devise a more romantic meeting than this between
+the autocrat of Russia and the red-armed, bustling
+cleaner of the window-panes, and he would certainly
+never have ventured to build on it the romance of
+which it was the prelude. What it was in the young
+peasant-woman that attracted the Emperor it is impossible
+to say. Of beauty she seems to have had none&#8212;save
+perhaps such as lies in youth and rude health.</p>
+<p>We look at her portraits in vain to discover a trace
+of any charm that might appeal to man. Her pictures
+in the Romanof Gallery at St Petersburg show
+a singularly plain woman with a large, round peasant-face,
+the most conspicuous feature of which is a
+hideously turned-up nose. Large, protruding eyes
+and an opulent bust complete a presentment of the
+typical household drudge&#8212;"a servant-girl in a
+German inn." But Peter the Great, who was ever
+abnormal in all his tastes and appetites, was always
+more ready to make love to a woman of the people
+than to the most beautiful and refined of his Court
+ladies. His standard of taste, as of manners, has
+not inaptly been likened to that of a Dutch sailor.</p>
+<p>But whatever it was in the low-born laundry-woman
+that attracted the Tsar of Russia, we know
+that this first unconventional meeting led to many
+others, and that before long Catherine (for we may
+<a name="Page_5"></a>now call her by the name she made so famous) was
+removed from his favourite's household and installed
+in the Imperial harem where, for a time at least, she
+seems to have shared her favours indiscriminately
+between her old master and her new&#8212;"an obscure
+and complaisant mistress"&#8212;until Menshikoff finally
+resigned all rights in her to his sovereign.</p>
+<p>When Catherine took up her residence in her new
+home, Waliszewski tells us, "her eye shortly fell on
+certain magnificent jewels. Forthwith, bursting into
+tears, she addressed her new protector: 'Who put
+these ornaments here? If they come from the other
+one, I will keep nothing but this little ring; but if
+they come from you, how could you think I needed
+them to make me love you?'"</p>
+<p>If Catherine lacked physical graces, this and many
+another story prove that she had a rare gift of diplomacy.
+She had, moreover, an unfailing cheerfulness
+and goodness of heart which quickly endeared
+her to the moody and capricious Peter. In his
+frequent fits of nervous irritability which verged on
+madness, she alone had the power to soothe him and
+restore him to sanity. Her very voice had a magic
+to arrest him in his worst rages, and when the fit of
+madness (for such it undoubtedly was) was passing
+away she would "take his head and caress it tenderly,
+passing her fingers through his hair. Soon
+he grew drowsy and slept, leaning against her breast.
+For two or three hours she would sit motionless,
+waiting for the cure slumber always brought him,
+until at last he awoke cheerful and refreshed."</p>
+<p>Thus each day the Livonian peasant-woman took
+<a name="Page_6"></a>deeper root in the heart of the Emperor, until she
+became indispensable to him. Wherever he went
+she was his constant companion&#8212;in camp or on
+visits to foreign Courts, where she was received with
+the honours due to a Queen. And not only were
+her presence and her ministrations infinitely pleasant
+to him; her prudent counsel saved him from many a
+blunder and mad excess, and on at least one occasion
+rescued his army from destruction.</p>
+<p>So strong was the hold she soon won on his affection
+and gratitude that he is said to have married her
+secretly within three years of first setting eyes on her.
+Her future and that of the children she had borne
+to him became his chief concern; and as early as
+1708, when he was leaving Moscow to join his army,
+he left behind him a note: "If, by God's will, anything
+should happen to me, let the 3000 roubles
+which will be found in Menshikoff's house be given
+to Catherine Vassilevska and her daughter."</p>
+<p>But whatever the truth may be about the alleged
+secret marriage, we know that early in 1712, Peter,
+in his Admiral's uniform, stood at the altar with the
+Livonian maid-servant, in the presence of his Court
+officials, and with two of her own little daughters as
+bridesmaids. The wedding, we are told, was performed
+in a little chapel belonging to Prince Menshikoff,
+and was preceded by an interview with the
+Dowager-Empress and his Princess sisters, in which
+Peter declared his intention to make Catherine his
+wife and commanded them to pay her the respect
+due to her new rank. Then followed, in brilliant
+sequence, State dinners, receptions, and balls, at all
+<a name="Page_7"></a>of which the laundress-bride sat at her husband's
+right hand and received the homage of his subjects
+as his Queen.</p>
+<p>Picture now the woman who but a few years earlier
+had scrubbed Pastor Gl&uuml;ck's floors and cleaned Menshikoff's
+window-panes, in all her new splendours as
+Empress of Russia. The portraits of her, in her
+unaccustomed glories, are far from flattering and by
+no means consistent. "She showed no sign of ever
+having possessed beauty," says Baron von P&ouml;llnitz;
+"she was tall and strong and very dark, and would
+have seemed darker but for the rouge and whitening
+with which she plastered her face."</p>
+<p>The picture drawn by the Margravine of Baireuth
+is still less attractive: "She was short and huddled
+up, much tanned, and utterly devoid of dignity or
+grace. Muffled up in her clothes, she looked like a
+German comedy-actress. Her old-fashioned gown,
+heavily embroidered with silver, and covered with
+dirt, had been bought in some old-clothes shop.
+The front of her skirt was adorned with jewels,
+and she had a dozen orders and as many portraits
+of saints fastened all along the facings of her
+dress, so that when she walked she jingled like
+a mule."</p>
+<p>But in the eyes of one man at least&#8212;and he
+the greatest in all Russia&#8212;she was beautiful. His
+allegiance never wavered, nor indeed did that of his
+army, which idolised her to a man. She might have
+no boudoir graces, but at least she was the typical
+soldier's wife, and cut a brave figure, as she reviewed
+the troops or rode at their head in her uniform and
+<a name="Page_8"></a>grenadier cap. She shared all the hardships and
+dangers of campaigns with a smile on her lips, sleeping
+on the hard ground, and standing in the trenches
+with the bullets whistling about her ears, and men
+dropping to right and left of her.</p>
+<p>Nor was there ever a trace of vanity in her. She
+was as proud of her humble origin as if she had been
+cradled in a palace. To princes and ambassadors
+she would talk freely of the days when she was a
+household drudge, and loved to remind her husband
+of the time when his Empress used to wash shirts for
+his favourite. "Though, no doubt, you have other
+laundresses about you," she wrote to him once, "the
+old one never forgets you."</p>
+<p>The letters that passed between this oddly
+assorted couple, if couched in terms which could
+scarcely see print in our more restrained age, are
+eloquent of affection and devotion. To Peter his
+kitchen-Queen was "friend of my Heart," "dearest
+Heart," and "dear little Mother." He complains
+pathetically, when away with his army, "I am dull
+without you&#8212;and there is nobody to take care of my
+shirts." When Catherine once left him on a round
+of visits, he grew so impatient at her absence that he
+sent a yacht to bring her back, and with it a note:
+"When I go into my rooms and find them deserted,
+I feel as if I must rush away at once. It is all so
+empty without thee."</p>
+<p>And each letter is accompanied by a present&#8212;now
+a watch, now some costly lace, and again a lock of
+his hair, or a simple bunch of dried flowers, while she
+returns some such homely gift as a little fruit or a
+<a name="Page_9"></a>fur-lined waistcoat. On both sides, too, a vein of
+jocularity runs through the letters, as when Catherine
+addresses him as "Your Excellency, the very
+illustrious and eminent Prince-General and Knight
+of the crowned Compass and Axe"; and when
+Peter, after the Peace of Nystadt, writes: "According
+to the Treaty I am obliged to return all Livonian
+prisoners to the King of Sweden. What is to
+become of thee, I don't know." To which she
+answers, with true wifely (if affected) humility: "I
+am your servant; do with me as you will; yet I
+venture to think you won't send <i>me</i> back."</p>
+<p>Quite idyllic, this post-nuptial love-making between
+the great Emperor and his low-born Queen,
+who has so possessed his heart that no other woman,
+however fair, could wrest it from her. And in her
+exalted position of Empress she practised the same
+diplomatic arts by which she had won Peter's devotion.
+Politics she left severely alone; she turned a
+forbidding back on all attempts to involve her in
+State intrigues, but she was ever ready to protect
+those who appealed to her for help, and to use her
+influence with her husband to procure pardon or
+lighter punishment for those who had fallen under
+his displeasure.</p>
+<p>Nor did she forget her poor relations in Livonia.
+One brother, a postillion, she openly acknowledged,
+introduced to her husband, and obtained a liberal
+pension for him; and to her other brothers and
+sisters she sent frequent presents and sums of
+money. More she could not well do during her
+husband's lifetime, but when she in turn came to
+<a name="Page_10"></a>the throne, she brought the whole
+family&#8212;postillion,
+shoemaker, farm-labourer and serf, their wives and
+families&#8212;to her capital, installed them in sumptuous
+apartments in her palaces, decked them in the finest
+Court feathers, and gave them large fortunes and
+titles of nobility.</p>
+<p>When the Tsar's quarrel with his eldest son came
+to its tragic <i>d&eacute;nouement</i> in Alexis' death, her own
+son became heir presumptive to the throne of
+Russia. And thus the chain that bound Peter to
+his Empress received its completing link. It only
+remained now to place the crown formally on the head
+of the mother of the new heir, and this supreme
+honour was hers in the month of May, 1729.</p>
+<p>Wonderful tales are told of the splendours of
+Catherine's coronation. No existing crown was
+good enough for the ex-maid-of-all-work, so one of
+special magnificence was made by the Court jewellers&#8212;a
+miracle of diamonds and pearls, crowned by
+a monster ruby&#8212;at a cost of a million and a half
+roubles. The Coronation gown, which cost four
+thousand roubles, was made at Paris; and from Paris,
+too, came the gorgeous coach with its blaze of gold
+and heraldry, in which the Tsarina made her triumphal
+progress through the streets of the capital from
+the Winter Palace. The culminating point of this
+remarkable ceremony came when, after Peter had
+placed the crown on his wife's head, she sank weeping
+at his feet and embraced his knees.</p>
+<p>Catherine, however, had not worn her crown many
+months when she found herself in considerable
+danger of losing not only her dignities but even her
+<a name="Page_11"></a>liberty. For some time, it is said, she had been
+engaged in a liaison with William Mons, a handsome,
+gay young courtier, brother to a former mistress
+of the Tsar. The love affair had been common
+knowledge at the Court&#8212;to all but Peter himself,
+and it was accident that at last opened his eyes to
+his wife's dishonour. One moonlight night, so the
+story is told, he chanced to enter an arbour in the
+palace gardens, and there discovered her in the arms
+of her lover.</p>
+<p>His vengeance was swift and terrible. Mons
+was arrested the same night in his rooms, and
+dragged fainting into the Tsar's presence, where he
+confessed his disloyalty. A few days later he was
+beheaded, at the very moment when the Empress
+was dancing a minuet with her ladies, a smile on her
+lips, whatever grief was in her heart. The following
+day she was driven by her husband past the scaffold
+where her lover's dead body was exposed to public
+view&#8212;so close, in fact, that her dress brushed against
+it; but, without turning her head, she kept up a
+smiling conversation with the perpetrator of this outrage
+on her feelings.</p>
+<p>Still not content with his revenge, Peter next
+placed the dead man's head, enclosed in a bottle of
+spirits of wine, in a prominent place in the Empress's
+apartments; and when she still smilingly ignored
+its horrible proximity, his anger, hitherto repressed,
+blazed forth fiercely. With a blow of his strong fist
+he shattered a priceless Venetian vase, shouting,
+"Thus will I treat thee and thine"&#8212;to which she
+calmly responded, "You have broken one of the
+<a name="Page_12"></a>chief ornaments of your palace; do you think you
+have increased its charm?"</p>
+<p>For a time Peter refused to be propitiated; he
+would not speak to his wife, or share her meals or
+her room. But she had "tamed the tiger" many a
+time before, and she was able to do it again. Within
+two months she had won her way back into full
+favour, and was once more the Tsar's dearest <i>Kati&eacute;rinoushka.</i></p>
+<p>A month later Peter was dead, carrying his love
+for his peasant-Empress to the grave, and Catherine
+was reigning in his stead, able at last to conduct her
+amours openly&#8212;spending her nights in shameless
+orgies with her lovers, and leaving the rascally
+Menshikoff to do the ruling, until death brought her
+amazing career to an end within sixteen months of
+mounting her throne.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_II"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_13"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+<h2>THE "BONNIE PRINCE'S" BRIDE</h2>
+<br>
+<p>In the pageant of our history there are few more
+attractive figures than that of "Bonnie Prince
+Charlie," the "yellow-haired laddie" whose blue
+eyes made a slave of every woman who came under
+their magic, and whose genial, unaffected manners
+turned the veriest coward into a hero, ready to follow
+him to the death in that year of ill-fated romance,
+"the forty-five."</p>
+<p>The very name of the "Bonnie Prince," the hope
+of the fallen Stuarts, the idol of Scotland&#8212;leading a
+forlorn hope with laughter on his lips, now riding
+proudly at the head of his rabble army, now a fugitive
+Ishmael among the hills and caves of the Highlands,
+but ever the last to lose heart&#8212;has a magic
+still to quicken the pulses. That later years proved
+the idol's feet to be of clay, that he fell from his
+pedestal to end his days an object of contempt and
+derision, only served to those who knew him in the
+pride of his youth to mingle pity with the glamour
+of romance that still surrounds his name.</p>
+<p>In the year 1772, when this story opens, Charles
+Edward, Count of Albany, had already travelled far
+<a name="Page_14"></a>on the downward road that led from the glory of
+Prestonpans to his drunkard's grave. A pitiful pensioner
+of France, who had known the ignominy of
+wearing fetters in a French prison, a social outcast
+whose Royal pretensions were at best the subject of
+an amused tolerance, the "laddie of the yellow hair"
+had fallen so low that the brandy bottle, which was his
+constant companion night and day, was his only solace.</p>
+<p>Picture him at this period, and mark the pathetic
+change which less than thirty years had wrought in
+the Stuart "darling" of "the forty-five," when many
+a proud lady of Scotland would have given her life
+for a smile from his bonnie face. A middle-aged man
+with dropsy in his limbs, and with the bloated face
+of the drunkard; "dull, thick, silent-looking lips, of
+purplish red scarce redder than the skin; pale blue
+eyes tending to a watery greyness, leaden, vague,
+sad, but with angry streakings of red; something
+inexpressibly sad, gloomy, helpless, vacant, and
+debased in the whole face."</p>
+<p>Such was this "Young Chevalier" when France
+took it into her head to make a pawn of him in the
+political chess-game with England. As a man he
+was beneath contempt; as a "King"&#8212;well, he was
+a <i>Roi pour rire</i>; but at least the Royal House he
+represented might be made a useful weapon against
+the arrogant Hanoverian who sat on his father's
+throne. That rival stock must not be allowed to die
+out; his claims might weigh heavily some day in the
+scale between France and England. Charles Edward
+must marry, and provide a worthier successor to his
+empty honours.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_15"></a>And thus it was that France came to the exiled
+Prince with the seductive offer of a pretty bride and
+a pension of forty thousand crowns a year. The
+besotted Charles jumped at the offer; left his brandy
+bottle, and, with the alacrity of a youthful lover,
+rushed away to woo and win the bride who had been
+chosen for him.</p>
+<p>And never surely was there such a grotesque
+wooing. Charles was a physical wreck of fifty-two;
+his bride-elect had only seen nineteen summers.
+The daughter of Prince Gustav Adolf of Stolberg
+and the Countess of Horn, Princess Louise was kin
+to many of the greatest houses in Europe, from the
+Colonnas and Orsinis to the Hohenzollerns and
+Bruces. In blood she was thus at least a match for
+her Stuart bridegroom.</p>
+<p>She had spent some years in the seclusion of a
+monastery, and had emerged for her undesired trip
+to the altar a young woman of rare beauty and
+charm, with glorious brown eyes, the delicate tint
+of the wild rose in her dimpled cheeks, a wealth of
+golden hair, and a figure every line and movement of
+which was instinct with beauty and grace. She was
+a fresh, unspoilt child, bubbling with gaiety and the
+joy of life, and her dainty little head was full of the
+romance of sweet nineteen.</p>
+<p>Such then was the singularly contrasted couple&#8212;"Beauty
+and the Beast" they were dubbed by many&#8212;who
+stood together at the altar at Macerata on
+Good Friday of the year 1772&#8212;the bridegroom,
+"looking hideous in his wedding suit of crimson
+silk," in flaming contrast to the virginal white of his
+<a name="Page_16"></a>pretty victim. It needed no such day of ill-omen
+as
+a Friday to inaugurate a union which could not have
+been otherwise than disastrous&#8212;the union of a beautiful,
+romantic girl eager to exploit the world of freedom
+and of pleasure, and a drink-sodden man old
+enough to be her father, for whom life had long lost
+all its illusions.</p>
+<p>It is true that for a time Charles Edward was
+drawn from his bottle by the lure of a pretty and
+winsome wife, who should, if any power on earth
+could, have made a man again of him. She laughed,
+indeed, at his maudlin tales of past heroism and
+adventure in love and battle; to her he was a plaster
+hero, and she let him know it. She was "mated to
+a clown," and a drunken clown to boot&#8212;and, well,
+she would make the best of a bad bargain. If her
+husband was the sorriest lover who ever poured thick-voiced
+flatteries into a girl-wife's ears, there were
+others, plenty of them, who were eager to pay more
+acceptable homage to her; and these men&#8212;poets,
+courtiers, great men in art and letters&#8212;flocked to
+her <i>salon</i> to bask in her beauty and to be charmed
+by her wit.</p>
+<p>After all, she was a Queen, although she wore no
+crown. She had a Court, although no Royalties
+graced it. From the Pope to the King of France,
+no monarch in Europe would recognise her husband's
+kingship. But at such neglect, the offspring
+of jealousy, of course, she only smiled. She could
+indeed have been moderately happy in her girlish,
+light-hearted way, if her husband had not been such
+an impossible person.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_17"></a>As for Charles Edward, he soon wearied of a
+bride
+who did nothing but laugh at him, and who was so
+ready to escape from his obnoxious presence to the
+company of more congenial admirers. He returned
+to his brandy bottle, and alternated between a
+fuddled brain and moods of wild jealousy. He
+would not allow his wife to leave the door without
+his escort; if she refused to accompany him, he
+turned the key in her bedroom door, to which the
+only access was through his own room.</p>
+<p>He took her occasionally to the theatre or opera,
+his brandy bottle always making a third for company.
+Before the performance was half through he
+was snoring stertorously on the couch which he
+insisted on having in his box; and, more often than
+not, was borne to his carriage for the journey home
+helplessly drunk. And this within the first year of
+his wedded life.</p>
+<p>If any woman had excuse for seeking elsewhere
+the love she could not find in her husband it was
+Louise of Albany. There were dames in plenty in
+Rome (where they were now living) who, not content
+with devoted husbands, had their <i>cisibeos</i> to play
+the lover to them; but Louise sought no such questionable
+escape from her unhappiness. Her books
+and the clever men who thronged her <i>salon</i> were all
+the solace she asked; and under temptation such
+as few women of that country and day would
+have resisted, she carried the shield of a blameless
+life.</p>
+<p>From Rome the Countess and her husband fared
+to Florence in 1774; and here matters went from
+<a name="Page_18"></a>bad to worse. Charles was now seldom sober day
+or night; and his jealousy often found expression
+in filthy abuse and cowardly assaults. Hitherto he
+had been simply disgusting; now he was a constant
+menace, even to her life. She lived in hourly fear of
+his brutality; but in her darkest hour sunshine came
+again into her life with the coming of Vittorio
+Alfieri, whose name was to be linked with hers for
+so many years.</p>
+<p>At this time Alfieri was in the very prime of his
+splendid manhood, one of the handsomest and most
+fascinating men in all Europe. Some four years
+older than herself, he was a tall, stalwart, soldierly
+man, blue-eyed and auburn-haired, an aristocrat to
+his finger-tips, a daring horseman, a poet, and a man
+of rare culture&#8212;just the man to set any woman's
+heart a-flutter, as he had already done in most of the
+capitals of the Continent.</p>
+<p>He was a spoilt child of fortune, this Italian poet
+and soldier, a man who had drunk deep of the cup of
+life, and to whom all conquests came with such fatal
+ease that already he had drained life dry of its
+pleasures.</p>
+<p>Such was the man who one autumn day in the
+year 1777 came into the unhappy life of the Countess
+of Albany, still full of the passions and yearnings of
+youth. It was surely fate that thus brought together
+these two young people of kindred tastes and
+kindred disillusions; and we cannot wonder that,
+of that first meeting, Alfieri should write, "At last
+I had met the one woman whom I had sought so
+long, the woman who could inspire my ambition
+<a name="Page_19"></a>and my work. Recognising this, and prizing so
+rare
+a treasure, I gave myself up wholly to her."</p>
+<p>Those were happy days for the Countess that
+followed this fateful meeting&#8212;days of sweet communion
+of twin souls, hours of stolen bliss, when they
+could dwell apart in a region of high and ennobling
+thoughts, while the besotted husband was sleeping
+off the effects of his drunken orgies in the next room.
+To Alfieri, Louise was indeed "the anchor of his
+life," giving stability to his vacillating nature, and
+inspiring all that was best and noblest in him; while
+to her the association with this "splendid creature,"
+who so thoroughly understood and sympathised with
+her, was the revelation of a new world.</p>
+<p>Thus three happy years passed; and then the crisis
+came. One night the Prince, in a mood of drunken
+madness, inflamed by jealousy, attacked his wife,
+and, after severely beating her, flung her down on
+her bed and attempted to strangle her. This was
+the crowning outrage of years of brutality. She
+could not, dared not, spend another day with such a
+madman. At any cost she must leave him&#8212;and
+for ever.</p>
+<p>When morning came, with Alfieri's assistance, the
+plan of escape was arranged. In the company of a
+lady friend&#8212;and also of her husband, now scared
+and penitent, but fearing to let her out of his sight&#8212;she
+drove to a neighbouring convent, ostensibly to
+inspect the nuns' needlework. On reaching her
+destination she ran up the convent steps, entered the
+building, and the door was slammed and bolted
+behind her in the very face of Charles Edward, who
+<a name="Page_20"></a>had followed as fast as his dropsical legs would
+carry
+him up the steps. The Prince, blazing at such an
+outrage, hammered fiercely at the door until at last
+the Lady Abbess herself showed her face at the
+grating, and told him in no ambiguous words that
+he would not be allowed to enter! His wife had
+come to her for protection; and if he had any grievance
+he had better appeal to the Duke of Tuscany.</p>
+<p>Thus ended the tragic union of the "Bonnie
+Prince" and his Countess. Emancipation had come
+at last; and, while Louise was now free to devote
+her life to her beloved Alfieri, her brutal husband
+was left for eight years to the company of his bottle
+and the ministrations of his natural daughter, until
+a drunkard's grave at Frascati closed over his mis-spent
+life. The pity and the tragedy of it!</p>
+<p>Louise of Albany and her poet-lover were now free
+to link their lives at the altar&#8212;but no such thought
+seems to have entered the head of either. They were
+perfectly happy without the bond of the wedding-ring,
+of which the Countess had such terrible
+memories; and together they walked through life,
+happy in each other and indifferent to the world's
+opinion.</p>
+<p>Now in Florence, now in Rome; living together
+in Alsace, drifting to Paris; and, when the Revolution
+drove them from the French capital, seeking
+refuge in London, where we find the uncrowned
+Queen of England chatting amicably with the
+"usurper" George in the Royal box at the opera&#8212;always
+inseparable, and Louise always clinging to
+the shreds of her Royal dignity, with a throne in her
+<a name="Page_21"></a>ante-room, and "Your Majesty" on her servants'
+lips. Thus passed the careless, happy years for
+Countess and poet until, in 1803, Alfieri followed
+the "Bonnie Prince" behind the veil, and left a
+desolate Louise to moan amid her tears, "There is
+no more happiness for me."</p>
+<p>But Louise was not left even now without the
+solace of a man's love, which seemed as indispensable
+to her nature as the air she breathed. Before Alfieri
+had been many months in his Florence tomb his
+place by the Countess's side had been taken by
+Fran&ccedil;ois Xavier Fabre, a good-looking painter of
+only moderate gifts, whose handsome face, plausible
+tongue, and sunny disposition soon made a captive
+of her middle-aged heart. At the time when Fabre
+came thus into her life Madame la Comtesse had
+passed her fiftieth birthday&#8212;youth and beauty had
+taken wings; and passion (if ever she had any&#8212;for
+her relations with Alfieri seem to have been quite
+platonic) had died down to its embers.</p>
+<p>But a man's companionship and homage were
+always necessary to her, and in Fabre she found her
+ideal cavalier. Her <i>salon</i> now became more popular
+even than in the days of her young wifehood. It
+drew to it all the greatest men in Europe, men of
+world-wide fame in statesmanship, letters, and art,
+all anxious to do homage to a woman of such culture
+and with such rare gifts of conversation.</p>
+<p>That she was now middle-aged, stout and dowdy&#8212;"like
+a cook with pretty hands," as Stendhal said of
+her&#8212;mattered nothing to her admirers, many of
+whom remembered her in the days of her lovely
+<a name="Page_22"></a>youth. She was, in their eyes, as much a Queen
+as if she wore a crown; and, moreover, she was a
+woman of magnetic charm and clever brain.</p>
+<p>And thus, with her books and her <i>salon</i> and her
+cavalier, she spent the rest of her chequered life until
+the end came one day in 1824; and her last resting-place
+was, as she wished it to be, by the side of her
+beloved Alfieri. In the Church of Santa Croce, in
+Florence, midway between the tombs of Michael
+Angelo and Machiavelli, the two lovers sleep
+together their last sleep, beneath a beautiful monument
+fashioned by Canova's hands&#8212;Louise, wife of
+the "Bonnie Prince" (as we still choose to remember
+him) and Vittorio Alfieri, to whom, to quote his own
+words, "she was beyond all things beloved."</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_III"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_23"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+<h2>THE PEASANT AND THE EMPRESS</h2>
+<br>
+Many an autocrat of Russia has shown a truly
+sovereign contempt for convention in the choice of
+his or her favourites, the "playthings of an hour";
+and at least three of them have carried this contempt
+to the altar itself.
+<p>Peter, the first, as we have seen, offered a crown
+to Martha Skovronski, a Livonian scullery-maid,
+who succeeded him on the throne; the second
+Catherine gave her hand as well as her heart to
+Patiomkin, the gigantic, ill-favoured ex-sergeant of
+cavalry; and Elizabeth, daughter of Peter and his
+kitchen-Queen, proved herself worthy of her parentage
+when she made Alexis Razoum, a peasant's son,
+husband of the Empress of Russia. You will search
+history in vain for a story so strange and romantic as
+this of the great Empress and the lowly shepherd's
+son, whom her love raised from a hovel to a palace,
+and on whom one of the most amorous and fickle of
+sovereign ladies lavished honours and riches and an
+unwavering devotion, until her eyes, speaking their
+love to the last, were closed in death.</p>
+<p>It was in the humblest hovel of the village
+<a name="Page_24"></a>of Lemesh that Alexis Razoum drew his first
+breath
+one day in 1709. His father, Gregory Razoum, was
+a shepherd, who spent his pitiful earnings in drink&#8212;a
+man of violent temper who, in his drunken rages,
+was the terror not only of his home but of the entire
+village. His wife and children cowered at his approach;
+and on more than one occasion only accident
+(or Providence) saved him from the crime of murder.
+On one such occasion, we are told, the child Alexis,
+who from his earliest years had a passion for reading,
+was absorbed in a book, when his father, in ungovernable
+fury, seized a hatchet and hurled it at
+the boy's head. Luckily, the missile missed its mark,
+and Alexis escaped, to find refuge in the house of a
+friendly priest, who not only gave him shelter and
+protection, but taught him to write, and, above all,
+to sing&#8212;little dreaming that he was thus paving the
+way which was to lead the drunken shepherd's lad
+to the dizziest heights in Russia. For the boy had
+a beautiful voice. When he joined the choir of his
+village church, people flocked from far and near to
+listen to the sweet notes that soared, pure and liquid
+as a nightingale's song, above the rest. "It was,"
+all declared, "the voice of an angel&#8212;and the face
+of an angel," for Alexis was as beautiful in those days
+as any child of picture or of dreams.</p>
+<p>One day a splendidly dressed stranger chanced to
+enter the Lemesh church during Mass&#8212;none other
+than Colonel Vishnevsky, a great Court official, who
+was on his way back to Moscow from a diplomatic
+mission; and he listened entranced to a voice sweeter
+than any he had ever heard. The service over, he
+<a name="Page_25"></a>made the acquaintance of the young chorister,
+interviewed
+his guardian, the "good Samaritan" priest,
+and persuaded him to allow the boy to accompany
+him to the capital. Thus the shepherd's son took
+weeping farewell of the good priest, of his mother,
+and of his brothers and sisters; and a few weeks
+later the Empress and her ladies were listening enchanted
+to his voice in the Imperial choir at Moscow&#8212;but
+none with more delight than the Princess
+Elizabeth, daughter of Peter the Great, to whom
+Alexis' beauty appealed even more strongly than his
+sweet singing.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth, true daughter of her father, had already,
+young as she was, counted her lovers by the
+score&#8212;lovers chosen indiscriminately, from Royal
+princes to grooms and common soldiers. She was
+already sated with the licence of the most dissolute
+Court of Europe, and to her the young Cossack of
+the beautiful face and voice, and rustic innocence,
+opened a new and seductive vista of pleasure. She
+lost her heart to him, had him transferred to her
+own Court as her favourite singer, and, within a
+few years, gave him charge of her purse and her
+properties.</p>
+<p>The shepherd's son was now not only lover-elect,
+but principal "minister" to the daughter of an
+Emperor, who was herself to wear the Imperial
+crown. And while Alexis was thus luxuriating amid
+the splendour of a Court, he by no means forgot the
+humble relatives he had left behind in his native
+village. His father was dead; his mother was reduced
+for a time to such a depth of destitution that
+<a name="Page_26"></a>she had to beg her bread from door to door. His
+sisters had found husbands for themselves in their
+own rank; and the favourite of an Imperial Princess
+had for brothers-in-law a tailor, a weaver, and
+a shepherd. When news came to Alexis of his
+mother's destitution he had sent her a sum of money
+sufficient to install her in comfort as an innkeeper:
+the first of many kindnesses which were to work
+a startling transformation in the fortunes of the
+Razoum family.</p>
+<p>Events now hurried quickly. The Empress Anna
+died, and was succeeded on the throne by the infant
+Ivan, her grand-nephew, who had been Emperor but
+a few months when, in 1741, a <i>coup d'&eacute;tat</i> gave the
+crown to Elizabeth, mistress of the Lemesh peasant.
+Alexis was now husband in all but name of the
+Empress of all the Russias; honours and riches
+were showered on him; he was General, Grandmaster
+of the Hounds, Chief Gentleman of the Bedchamber,
+and lord of large estates yielding regal
+revenues.</p>
+<p>But all his grandeur was powerless to spoil the
+man, who still remained the simple peasant who, so
+many years earlier, had left his low-born mother
+with streaming eyes. His great ambition now was
+to share his good-fortune with her. She must
+exchange her village inn for the luxuries and splendours
+of a palace. And thus it was that one day
+a splendid carriage, with gay-liveried postillions,
+dashed up to the door of the Lemesh inn and carried
+off the simple peasant woman, her youngest son,
+Cyril, and one of her daughters, to the open-mouthed
+<a name="Page_27"></a>amazement of the villagers. At the entrance to
+the
+capital she was received by a magnificently attired
+gentleman, in whom she failed to recognise her son
+Alexis, until he showed her a birthmark on his body.</p>
+<p>Picture now the peasant-woman sumptuously
+lodged in the Moscow palace, decked in all the finery
+of silks and laces and jewels, receiving the respectful
+homage of high Court officials, caressed and
+petted by an Empress, while her splendid son looks
+smilingly on, as proud of his cottage-mother as if she
+were a Princess of the Blood Royal. That the innkeeper
+was not happy in her gilded cage, that her
+thoughts often wandered longingly to her cronies and
+the simple life of the village, is not to be wondered at.</p>
+<p>It was all very well for such a fine gentleman as
+her son, Alexis; but for a poor, simple-minded
+woman like herself&#8212;well, she was too old for such a
+transplanting. And we can imagine her relief when,
+on the removal of the Court to St Petersburg, she
+was allowed to bring her visit to an end and to return
+to her inn with wonderful stories of all she had seen.
+Her son and daughter, however, elected to remain.
+As for Cyril, a handsome youth, almost young
+enough to be his brother's son, he was quick to win
+his way into the favour of the Empress. Before he
+had been many months at Court he was made
+a Count and Gentleman of the Bedchamber. He
+was given for bride a grand-niece of Elizabeth; and
+at twenty-two he was Viceroy of the Ukraine, virtual
+sovereign of a kingdom of his own, with his peasant-mother,
+who declined to share his palace, comfortably
+installed in a modest house near his gates.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_28"></a>Cyril, in fact, was to his last day as
+unspoiled by
+his unaccustomed grandeur as his brother Alexis.
+Each was ready at any moment to turn from the
+obsequious homage of nobles to hobnob with a
+peasant friend or relative. How utterly devoid of
+false pride Alexis was is proved by the following
+anecdote. One day when, in company with the
+Empress, he was paying a visit to Count L&ouml;wenwolde,
+he rushed from Elizabeth's side to fling his
+arms round the neck of one of his host's footmen.
+"Are you mad, Alexis?" exclaimed the Empress,
+in her astonishment. "What do you mean by such
+senseless behaviour?" "I am not mad at all,"
+answered the favourite. "He is an old friend of
+mine."</p>
+<p>But although no man ever deposed the shepherd
+from the first place in Elizabeth's favour, it must not
+be imagined that he was her only lover. The daughter
+of the hot-blooded Peter and the lusty scullery
+wench had always as great a passion for men as the
+second Catherine, who had almost as many favourites
+in her boudoir as gowns in her wardrobes. She had
+her lovers before she was emancipated from the
+schoolroom; and not the least favoured of them, it is
+said, was her own nephew, Peter the Second, whom
+she would no doubt have married if it had been
+possible.</p>
+<p>She turned her back on one great alliance after
+another, preferring her freedom to a wedding-ring
+that brought no love with it; and she found her
+pleasure alike among the gentlemen of the Court
+and among her own servants. In the long list of her
+<a name="Page_29"></a>favourites we find a General succeeded by a
+Sergeant;
+Boutourlin, the handsome courtier, giving
+place to Lialin, the sailor; and Count Shouvalov
+retiring in favour of Voytshinsky, the coachman.
+Thus one liaison succeeded another from girlhood to
+middle-age&#8212;indeed long after she had passed the
+altar. But through all these varying attachments her
+heart remained constant to her shepherd-lover, to
+whom she was ever the devoted wife, and, when he
+was ill, the tenderest of nurses. To please him, she
+even accompanied him on a visit to his native village,
+smiling graciously on his humble friends of other
+days, and partaking of the hospitality of the
+poorest cottagers; while on all who had befriended
+him in the days of his obscurity she lavished her
+favours.</p>
+<p>Of one man who had been thus kind she made a
+General on the spot; the friendly priest was given a
+highly paid post at Court; high rank in the army
+was given to many of his humble relatives; and a
+husband was found for a favourite niece in Count
+Ryoumin, the Chancellor's son.</p>
+<p>As for Alexis himself, nothing was too good for
+him. Although he had probably never handled a gun
+in his life she made him Field-Marshal and head of
+her army; and, at her request, Charles VII. dubbed
+him Count of the Holy Roman Empire, a distinction
+which Gregory Orloff in later years prized more than
+all the honours Catherine II. showered on him; while
+the estates of which she made him lord were a small
+kingdom in themselves. Alexis, the shepherd's son,
+was now, beyond any question, the most powerful
+<a name="Page_30"></a>man in Russia. If he would, he might easily have
+taken the sceptre from the yielding hands of the
+Empress and played the autocrat, as Patiomkin
+played it under similar circumstances in later years.
+But Alexis cared as little for power as for rank and
+wealth. He smiled at his honours. "Fancy," he
+said, with his hearty laugh, "a peasant's son, a
+Count; and a man who ought to be tending sheep, a
+Field-Marshal!"</p>
+<p>When courtly genealogists spread before him an
+elaborate family-tree, proving that he sprang from
+the princely stock of Bogdan, with many a Grand
+Duke of Lithuania among his lineal ancestors, he
+laughed loud and long at them for their pains.
+"Don't be so ridiculous," he said. "You know as well
+as I that my parents were simple peasants, honest
+enough, but people of the soil and nothing else. If
+I am Count and Field-Marshal and Viceroy, I owe
+it all to the good heart of your Empress and mine,
+whose humble servant I am. Take it away, and let
+me hear no more of such foolery."</p>
+<p>Such to the last was the unspoiled, child-like nature
+of the man who so soon was to be not merely the
+first favourite but husband of an Empress. Probably
+Alexis would have lived and died Elizabeth's
+unlicensed lover had it not been for the cunning of
+the cleverest of her Chancellors, Bestyouzhev, who
+saw in his mistress's infatuation for her peasant the
+means of making his own position more secure.
+Elizabeth was still a young and attractive woman,
+who might pick and choose among some of the most
+eligible suitors in Europe for a sharer of her throne;
+<a name="Page_31"></a>for there were many who would gladly have
+played consort to the good-looking autocrat of
+Russia.</p>
+<p>Such a husband, especially if he were a strong
+man, might seriously imperil the Chancellor's position;
+might even dispense with him altogether. On
+the other hand, he was high in the favour of the
+shepherd's son, who had such a contempt for power,
+and who thus would be a puppet in his hands. Why
+not make him husband in name as well as in fact?
+It was, after all, an easy task the Chancellor thus set
+himself. Elizabeth was by no means unwilling to
+wear a wedding-ring for the man who had loved
+her so loyally and so long; and any difficulties she
+might raise were quickly disposed of by her father-confessor,
+who was Bestyouzhev's tool. Thus it came
+to pass that one day Elizabeth and Alexis stood side
+by side before the village altar of Perovo; and the
+words were spoken which made the shepherd's son
+husband of the Empress. The secrecy with which
+the ceremony was performed was but a fiction.
+All the world knew that Alexis Gregorovitch
+was Emperor by right of wedlock, and flocked to
+pay homage to him in his new and exalted
+character.</p>
+<p>He now had sumptuous apartments next to those
+of his wife; he sat at her right hand on all State occasions;
+he was her shadow everywhere; and during
+his frequent attacks of gout the Empress ministered
+to him night and day in his own rooms with the
+tender devotion of a mother to a child. Two children
+were born to them, a son and a daughter, the latter
+<a name="Page_32"></a>of whom, after a life of strange romance and
+vicissitude,
+ended her days in a loathsome dungeon of
+the fortress of Saints Peter and Paul, the victim of
+Catherine II.'s vengeance&#8212;miserably drowned, so
+one story goes, by an inundation of her cell.</p>
+<p>On Elizabeth's death, in the year 1762, her husband
+was glad to retire from the Court in which he
+had for so long played so splendid a part. "None
+but myself," he said, "can know with what pleasure
+I leave a sphere to which I was not born, and to
+which only my love for my dear mistress made me
+resigned. I should have been happier far with her
+in some small cottage far removed from the gilded
+slavery of Court life." He was happy enough now
+leading the peaceful life of a country gentleman on
+one of his many estates.</p>
+<p>Catherine II. had mounted the throne of Russia&#8212;the
+Empress who, according to Masson, had but two
+passions, which she carried to the grave&#8212;"her love
+of man, which degenerated into libertinage; and her
+love of glory, which degenerated into vanity." A
+woman with the brain of a man and the heart of
+a courtesan, Catherine's fickle affection had flitted
+from one lover to another, until now it had settled
+on Gregory Orloff, the handsomest man in her
+dominions, whom she was more than half disposed
+to make her husband.</p>
+<p>This was a scheme which commended itself
+strongly to her Chancellor, Vorontsov. There was
+a most useful precedent to lend support to it&#8212;the
+alliance of the Empress Elizabeth with a man of
+immeasurably lower rank than Catherine's favourite;
+<a name="Page_33"></a>but it was important that this precedent should
+be
+established beyond dispute. Thus it was that one
+day, when Count Alexis was poring over his Bible
+by his country fireside, Chancellor Vorontsov made
+his appearance with ingratiating words and promises.
+Her Majesty, he informed the Count, was willing to
+confer Imperial rank on him in return for one small
+favour&#8212;the possession of the documents which
+proved his marriage to her predecessor, Elizabeth.</p>
+<p>On hearing the request, the ex-shepherd rose,
+and, with words of quiet scorn, refused both the
+request and the proffered honour. "Am not I," he
+said, "a Count, a Field-Marshal, a man of wealth?
+all of which I owe to the kindness of my dear,
+dead mistress. Are not such honours enough
+for the peasant's son whom she raised from the
+mire to sit by her side, that I should purchase
+another bauble by an act of treachery to her
+memory?</p>
+<p>"But wait one moment," he continued; and, leaving
+the room, he returned carrying a small bundle of
+papers, which he proceeded to examine one by one.
+Then, collecting them, he placed the bundle in the
+heart of the fire, to the horror of the onlooking Chancellor;
+and, as the flames were reducing the precious
+documents to ashes, he said, "Go now and tell those
+who sent you, that I never was more than the slave
+of my august benefactress, the Empress Elizabeth,
+who could never so far have forgotten her position
+as to marry a subject."</p>
+<p>Thus with a lie on his lips&#8212;the last crowning evidence
+of loyalty to his beloved Queen and wife&#8212;Alexis
+<a name="Page_34"></a>Razoum makes his exit from the stage on
+which he played so strangely romantic a part. A
+few years later his days ended in peace at his
+St Petersburg palace, with the name he loved best,
+"Elizabeth," on his lips.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_IV"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_35"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+<h2>A CROWN THAT FAILED</h2>
+<p>Henri of Navarre, hero of romance and probably
+the greatest King who ever sat on the throne of
+France, had a heart as weak in love as it was stout
+in war. To his last day he was a veritable coward
+before the battery of bright eyes; and before Ravaillac's
+dagger brought his career to a tragic end one
+May day in the year 1610 he had counted his mistresses
+to as many as the years he had lived.</p>
+<p>But of them all, fifty-seven of them&#8212;for the most
+part lightly coming and lightly going&#8212;only one ever
+really reached his heart, and was within measurable
+distance of a seat on his throne&#8212;the woman to whom
+he wrote in the hey-day of his passion, "Never has
+man loved as I love you. If any sacrifice of mine
+could purchase your happiness, how gladly I would
+make it, even to the last drop of my life's blood."</p>
+<p>Gabrielle d'Estr&eacute;es who thus enslaved the heart
+of the hero, which carried him to a throne through
+a hundred fights and inconceivable hardships, was
+cradled one day in the year 1573 in Touraine. From
+her mother, Fran&ccedil;oise Babou, she inherited both
+beauty and frailness; for the Babou women were
+<a name="Page_36"></a>famous alike for their loveliness and for a
+virtue as
+facile even as that of Marie Gaudin, the pretty plaything
+of Fran&ccedil;ois I., who left Fran&ccedil;ois' arms to find
+a husband in Philip Babou and thus to transmit her
+charms and frailty to Gabrielle.</p>
+<p>Her father, Antoine, son of Jean d'Estr&eacute;es, a
+valiant soldier under five kings, was a man of
+pleasure, who drank and sang his way through life,
+preferring Cupid to Mars and the <i>joie de vivre</i> to
+the call of duty. It is perhaps little wonder that
+Antoine's wife, after bearing seven children to her
+husband, left him to find at least more loyalty in the
+Marquess of Tourel-Al&eacute;gre, a lover twenty years
+younger than herself.</p>
+<p>Thus it was that, deserted by her mother, and
+with a father too addicted to pleasure to spare a
+thought for his children, Gabrielle grew to beautiful
+girlhood under the care of an aunt&#8212;now living in
+the family ch&acirc;teau in Picardy, now in the great Paris
+mansion, the Hotel d'Estr&eacute;es; and with so little
+guidance from precept or example that, in later years,
+she and her six sisters and brothers were known as
+the "Seven Deadly Sins."</p>
+<p>In Gabrielle at least there was little that was
+vicious. She was an irresponsible little creature,
+bubbling over with mischief and gaiety, eager to
+snatch every flower of pleasure that caught her eyes;
+a dainty little fairy with big blue "wonder" eyes,
+golden hair, the sweetest rosebud of a mouth, ready
+to smile or to pout as the mood of the moment
+suggested, with soft round baby cheeks as delicately
+flushed as any rose.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_37"></a>Such was Gabrielle d'Estr&eacute;es on the
+verge of
+young womanhood when Roger de Saint-Larry, Duc
+de Bellegarde, the King's grand equerry, and one of
+the handsomest young men in France, first set eyes
+on her in the ch&acirc;teau of Coeuvres; and, as was
+inevitable, lost his heart to her at first sight. When
+he rode away two days later, such excellent use had
+he made of his opportunities, he left a very happy,
+if desolate maiden behind; for Gabrielle had little
+power to resist fascinations which had made a conquest
+of many of the fairest ladies at Court.</p>
+<p>When Bellegarde returned to Mantes, where
+Henri was still struggling for the crown which was
+so soon to be his, he foolishly gave the King of
+Navarre such a rapturous account of the young
+beauty of Picardy and his conquest that Henri,
+already weary of the faded charms of Diane
+d'Audouins, his mistress, promptly left his soldiering
+and rode away to see the lady for himself, and to
+find that Bellegarde's raptures were more than
+justified.</p>
+<p>Gabrielle, however, flattered though she was by
+such an honour as a visit from the King of Navarre,
+was by no means disposed to smile on the wooing
+of "an ugly man, old enough to be my father." And
+indeed, Henri, with all the glamour of the hero to
+aid him, was but a sorry rival for the handsome and
+courtly Bellegarde. Now nearing his fortieth year,
+with grizzled beard, and skin battered and lined by
+long years of hard campaigning, the future King of
+France had little to appeal to the romantic eyes of
+a maid who counted less than half his years; and the
+<a name="Page_38"></a>King in turn rode away from the Coeuvres Castle
+as
+hopelessly in love as Bellegarde, but with much less
+encouragement to return.</p>
+<p>But the hero of Ivry and a hundred other battles
+was no man to submit to defeat in any lists; and
+within a few weeks Gabrielle was summoned to
+Mantes, where he told her in decisive words that he
+loved her, and that no one, Bellegarde or any other,
+should share her with him. "Indeed!" she exclaimed,
+with a defiant toss of the head, "I will be
+no man's slave; I shall give my heart to whom I
+please, and certainly not to any man who demands
+it as a right." And within an hour she was riding
+home fast as her horse could gallop.</p>
+<p>Henri was thunderstruck at such defiance. He
+must follow her at once and bring her to reason; but,
+in order to do so, he must risk his life by passing
+through the enemy's lines. Such an adventure,
+however, was after his own heart; and disguising
+himself as a peasant, with a bundle of faggots on his
+shoulder, he made his way safely to Coeuvres, where
+he presented himself, a pitiable spectacle of rags and
+poverty, to be greeted by his lady with shouts of
+derisive laughter. "Oh dear!" she gasped between
+her paroxysms of mirth, "what a fright you look!
+For goodness' sake go and change your clothes."
+But though the King obeyed humbly, Gabrielle shut
+herself in her room and declined point-blank to see
+him again.</p>
+<p>Such devotion, however, expressed in such
+fashion, did not fail in its appeal to the romantic
+girl; and when, a little later, Gabrielle visited the
+<a name="Page_39"></a>Royalist army then besieging Chartres, it was a
+much
+more pliant Gabrielle who listened to the King's
+wooing and whose eyes brightened at his stories of
+bravery and danger. Henri might be old and ugly,
+but he had at least a charm of manner, a frank, simple
+manliness, which made him the idol of his soldiers
+and in fact of every woman who once came under
+its spell. And to this charm even Gabrielle, the
+rebel, had at last to submit, until Bellegarde was forgotten,
+and her hero was all the world to her.</p>
+<p>The days that followed this slow awaking were
+crowded with happiness for the two lovers; when
+Gabrielle was not by her King's side, he was writing
+letters to her full of passionate tenderness. "My
+beautiful Love," "My All," "My Trueheart"&#8212;such
+were the sweet terms he lavished on her. "I kiss
+you a million times. You say that you love me a
+thousand times more than I love you. You have
+lied, and you shall maintain your falsehood with the
+arms which you have chosen. I shall not see you
+for ten days, it is enough to kill me." And again,
+"They call me King of France and Navarre&#8212;that
+of your subject is much more delightful&#8212;you have
+much more cause for fearing that I love you too
+much than too little. That fault pleases you, and
+also me, since you love it. See how I yield to your
+every wish."</p>
+<p>Such were the letters&#8212;among the most beautiful
+ever penned by lover&#8212;which the King addressed to
+his "Menon" in those golden days, when all the
+world was sunshine for him, black as the sky was
+still with the clouds of war. And she returned love
+<a name="Page_40"></a>for love; tenderness for passion. When he was
+lying ill at St Denis, she wrote, "I die of fear. Tell
+me, I implore you, how fares the bravest of the brave.
+Give me news, my cavalier; for you know how fatal
+to me is your least ill. I cannot sleep without sending
+you a thousand good nights; for I am the
+Princess Constancy, sensible to all that concerns you,
+and careless of all else in the world, good or bad."</p>
+<p>Through the period of stress and struggle that still
+separated Henri from the crown which for nearly
+twenty years was his goal, Gabrielle was ever by his
+side, to soothe and comfort him, to chase away the
+clouds of gloom which so often settled on him, to
+inspire him with new courage and hope, and, with
+her diplomacy checking his impulses, to smooth over
+every obstacle that the cunning of his enemies placed
+in his path.</p>
+<p>And when, at last, one evening in 1594, Henri
+made his triumphal entry into Paris, on a grey horse,
+wearing a gold-embroidered grey habit, his face
+proud and smiling, saluting with his plume-crowned
+hat the cheering crowds, Gabrielle had the place of
+honour in front of him, "in a gorgeous litter, so
+bedecked with pearls and gems that she paled the
+light of the escorting torches."</p>
+<p>This was, indeed, a proud hour for the lovers which
+saw Henri acclaimed at "long last" King of France,
+and his loyal lady-love Queen in all but name. The
+years of struggle and hardship were over&#8212;years in
+which Henri of Navarre had braved and escaped a
+hundred deaths; and in which he had been reduced
+to such pitiable straits that he had often not known
+<a name="Page_41"></a>where his next meal was to come from or where to
+find a shirt to put on his back.</p>
+<p>Gabrielle was now Marquise de Monceaux, a title
+to which her Royal lover later added that of Duchesse
+de Beaufort. Her son, C&eacute;sar, was known as
+"Monsieur," the title that would have been his if he
+had been heir to the French throne. All that now
+remained to fill the cup of her ambition and her
+happiness was that she should become the legal wife
+of the King she loved so well; and of this the
+prospect seemed more than fair.</p>
+<p>Charming stories are told of the idyllic family life
+of the new King; how his greatest pleasure was to
+"play at soldiers" with his children, to join in their
+nursery romps, or to take them, like some bourgeois
+father, to the Saint Germain fair, and return loaded
+with toys and boxes of sweetmeats, to spend delightful
+homely evenings with the woman he adored.</p>
+<p>But it was not all sunshine for the lovers. Paris
+was in the throes of famine and plague and flood.
+Poverty and discontent stalked through her streets,
+and there were scowling and envious eyes to greet
+the King and his lady when they rode laughing by;
+or when, as on one occasion we read of, they returned
+from a hunting excursion, riding side by side, "she
+sitting astride dressed all in green" and holding the
+King's hand.</p>
+<p>Nor within the palace walls was it all a bed of
+roses for Gabrielle; for she had her enemies there;
+and chief among them the powerful Duc de Sully,
+her most formidable rival in the King's affection.
+Sully was not only Henri's favourite minister; he
+<a name="Page_42"></a>was the Jonathan to his David, the man who had
+shared a hundred dangers by his side, and by his
+devotion and affection had found a firm lodging in
+his heart.</p>
+<p>Between the minister and the mistress, each consumed
+with jealousy of the other, Henri had many a
+bad hour; and the climax came when de Sully refused
+to pass the extravagant charges for the baptism
+of the Marquise's second son, Alexander. Gabrielle
+was indignant and appealed angrily and tearfully to
+the King, who supported his minister. "I have loved
+you," he said at last, roused to wrath, "because I
+thought you gentle and sweet and yielding; now that
+I have raised you to high position, I find you exacting
+and domineering. Know this, I could better
+spare a dozen mistresses like you than one minister
+so devoted to me as Sully."</p>
+<p>At these harsh words, Gabrielle burst into tears.
+"If I had a dagger," she exclaimed, "I would plunge
+it into my heart, and then you would find your image
+there." And when Henri rushed from the room, she
+ran after him, flung herself at his feet, and with
+heart-breaking sobs, begged for forgiveness and a
+kind word. Such troubles as these, however, were
+but as the clouds that come and go in a summer sky.
+Gabrielle's sun was now nearing its zenith; Henri
+had long intended to make her his wife at the altar;
+proceedings for divorce from his wife, Marguerite
+de Valois, were running smoothly; and now the
+crowning day in the two lives thus romantically
+linked was at hand.</p>
+<p>In the month of April, 1599, Gabrielle and Henri
+<a name="Page_43"></a>were spending the last ante-nuptial days together
+at Fontainebleau; the wedding was fixed for the
+first Sunday after Easter, and Gabrielle was ideally
+happy among her wedding finery and the costly presents
+that had been showered on her from all parts of
+France&#8212;from the ring Henri had worn at his Coronation
+and which he was to place on her finger at
+the altar, to a statue of the King in gold from Lyons,
+and a "giant piece of amber in a silver casket from
+Bordeaux."</p>
+<p>Her wedding-dress was a gorgeous robe of Spanish
+velvet, rich in embroideries of gold and silver;
+the suite of rooms which was to be hers as Queen
+was already ready, with its splendours of crimson
+and gold furnishing. The greatest ladies in France
+were now proud to act as her tire-women; and
+princes and ambassadors flocked to Fontainebleau to
+pay her homage.</p>
+<p>The last days of Holy Week it had been arranged
+that she should spend in devotion at Paris, and Henri
+was her escort the greater part of the way. When
+they parted on the banks of the Seine they wept in
+each other's arms, while Gabrielle, full of nameless
+forebodings, clung to her lover and begged him to
+take her back to Fontainebleau. But with a final
+embrace he tore himself away; and with streaming
+eyes Gabrielle continued her journey, full of fears
+as to its issue; for had not a seer of Piedmont told
+her that the marriage would never take place; and
+other diviners, whom she had consulted, warned her
+that she would die young, and never call Henri
+husband?</p>
+<p><a name="Page_44"></a>Two days later Gabrielle heard Mass at the
+Church of St Germain l'Auxerrois; and on returning
+to the Deanery, her aunt's home, became seriously
+ill. She grew rapidly worse; her sufferings
+were terrible to witness; and on Good Friday she
+was delivered of a dead child. To quote an eye-witness,
+"She lingered until six o'clock in very great
+pain, the like of which doctors and surgeons had
+never seen before. In her agony she tore her face,
+and injured herself in other parts of her body." Before
+dawn broke on the following day she drew her last
+breath.</p>
+<p>When news of her illness reached the King, he
+flew to her swift as his horse could carry him, only
+to meet couriers on his way who told him that
+Madame was already dead; and to find, when at last
+he reached St Germain l'Auxerrois, the door of the
+room in which she lay barred against him. He could
+not take her living once more into his arms; he was
+not allowed to see her dead.</p>
+<p>Henri was as a man who is mad with grief; he
+was inconsolable.. None dared even to approach him
+with words of pity and comfort. For eight days he
+shut himself in a black-draped room, himself clothed
+in black; and he wrote to his sister, "The root of
+my love is dead; there will be no Spring for me any
+more." Three months later he was making love to
+Gabrielle's successor, Henriette d'Entragues!</p>
+<p>Thus perished in tragedy Gabrielle d'Estr&eacute;es, the
+creature of sunshine, who won the bravest heart in
+Europe, and carried her conquest to the very foot of
+a throne.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_V"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_45"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+<h2>A QUEEN OF HEARTS</h2>
+<p>If ever woman was born for love and for empire over
+the hearts of men it was surely Jeanne B&eacute;cu, who
+first opened her eyes one August day in the year
+1743, at dreary Vaucouleurs, in Joan of Arc's country,
+and who was fated to dance her light-hearted
+way through the palace of a King to the guillotine.</p>
+<p>Scarcely ever has woman, born to such beauty and
+witchery, been cradled less auspiciously. Her reputed
+father was a scullion, her mother a sempstress.
+For grandfather she had Fabien B&eacute;cu, who left his
+frying-pans in a Paris kitchen to lead Jeanne Husson,
+a fellow-servant, to the altar. Such was the ignoble
+strain that flowed in the veins of the Vaucouleurs
+beauty, who five-and-twenty years later was playfully
+pulling the nose of the fifteenth Louis, and
+queening it in his palaces with a splendour which
+Marie Antoinette herself never surpassed.</p>
+<p>From her sordid home Jeanne was transported at
+the age of six to a convent, where she spent nine
+years in rebellion against rules and punishments, until
+"the golden head emerged at last from black woollen
+veil and coarse unstarched bands, the exquisite
+<a name="Page_46"></a>form from shapeless, hideous robe, the perfect
+little
+feet from abominable yellow shoes," to play first
+the r&ocirc;le of lady's maid to a wealthy widow, and,
+when she wearied (as she quickly did) of coiffing hair,
+to learn the arts of millinery.</p>
+<p>"Picture," says de Goncourt, "the glittering shop,
+where all day long charming idlers and handsome
+great gentlemen lounged and ogled; the pretty
+milliner tripping through the streets, her head covered
+by a big, black <i>cal&egrave;che</i>, whence her golden curls
+escaped, her round, dainty waist defined by a muslin-frilled
+pinafore, her feet in little high-heeled, buckled
+shoes, and in her hand a tiny fan, which she uses as
+she goes&#8212;and then imagine the conversations, proposals,
+replies!"</p>
+<p>Such was Jeanne B&eacute;cu in the first bloom of her
+dainty beauty, the prettiest grisette who ever set
+hearts fluttering in Paris streets; with laughter
+dancing in her eyes, a charming pertness at her
+red lips, grace in every movement, and the springtide
+of youth racing through her veins.</p>
+<p>When Voltaire first saw her portrait, he exclaimed,
+"The original was fashioned for the gods." And
+we cannot wonder, as we look on the ravishing beauty
+of the face that wrung this eloquent tribute from the
+cold-blooded cynic&#8212;the tender, melting violet of
+the eyes, with their sweeping brown lashes, under the
+exquisite arch of brown eyebrows, the dainty little
+Greek nose, the bent bow of the delicious tiny mouth,
+the perfect oval of the face, the complexion "fair and
+fresh as an infant's," and a glorious halo of golden
+hair, a dream of fascinating curls and tendrils.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_47"></a>It was to this bewitching picture, "with the
+perfume
+and light as of a goddess of love," that Jean du
+Barry, self-styled Comte, adventurer and rou&eacute;, succumbed
+at a glance. But du Barry's tenure of her
+heart, if indeed he ever touched it at all, was brief;
+for the moment Louis XV. set eyes on the ravishing
+girl he determined to make the prize his own, a
+superior claim to which the Comte perforce yielded
+gracefully.</p>
+<p>Thus, in 1768, we find Jeanne B&eacute;cu&#8212;or "Mademoiselle
+Vaubarnier," as she now called herself&#8212;transported
+by a bound to the Palace of Versailles
+and to the first place in the favour of the King, having
+first gone through the farce of a wedding ceremony
+with du Barry's brother, Guillaume, a husband
+whom she first saw on the marriage morning, and
+on whom she looked her last at the church door.</p>
+<p>Then followed for the maid of the kitchen a few
+years of such Queendom and splendour as have seldom
+fallen to the lot of any lady cradled in a palace&#8212;the
+idolatrous worship of a King, the intoxication of
+the power that only beauty thus enshrined can wield,
+the glitter of priceless jewels, rarest laces, and richest
+satins and silks, the flash of gold on dinner and toilet-table,
+an army of servants in sumptuous liveries, the
+fawning of great Court ladies, the courtly flatteries of
+princes&#8212;every folly and extravagance that money
+could purchase or vanity desire.</p>
+<p>Six years of such intoxicating life and then&#8212;the
+end. Louis is lying on his death-bed and, with fear
+in his eyes and a tardy penitence on his lips, is saying
+to her, "Madame, it is time that we should part."
+<a name="Page_48"></a>And, indeed, the hour of parting had arrived; for
+a
+few days later he drew his last wicked breath, and
+Madame du Barry was under orders to retire to a
+convent. But her grief for the dead King was as
+brief as her love for him had been small; for within
+a few months, we find her installed in her beautiful
+country home, Lucienne, ready for fresh conquests,
+and eager to drain the cup of pleasure to the last
+drop. Nor was there any lack of ministers to the
+vanity of the woman who had now reached the zenith
+of her incomparable charms.</p>
+<p>Among the many lovers who flocked to the country
+shrine of the widowed "Queen," was Louis, Duc de
+Coss&eacute;, son of the Mar&eacute;chal de Brissac, who, although
+Madame du Barry's senior by nine years, was still in
+the prime of his manhood&#8212;handsome as an Apollo
+and a model of the courtly graces which distinguished
+the old <i>noblesse</i> in the day of its greatest pride, which
+was then so near its tragic downfall.</p>
+<p>De Cass&eacute; had long been a mute worshipper of
+Louis' beautiful "Queen," and now that she was a
+free woman he was at last able to pay open homage
+to her, a homage which she accepted with indifference,
+for at the time her heart had strayed to
+Henry Seymour, although in vain. The woman
+whose beauty had conquered all other men was
+powerless to raise a flame in the breast of the cold-blooded
+Englishman; and, realising this, she at last
+bade him farewell in a letter, pathetic in its tender
+dignity. "It is idle," she wrote, "to speak of my
+affection for you&#8212;you know it. But what you do
+not know is my pain. You have not deigned to
+<a name="Page_49"></a>reassure me about that which most matters to my
+heart. And so I must believe that my ease of mind,
+my happiness, are of little importance to you. I am
+sorry that I should have to allude to them; it is for
+the last time."</p>
+<p>It was in this hour of disillusion and humiliation
+that she turned for solace to de Coss&eacute;, whose touching
+constancy at last found its reward. It was not
+long before friendship ripened into a love as ardent
+as his own; and for the first time this fickle beauty,
+whose heart had been a pawn in the game of ambition,
+knew what a beautiful and ennobling thing true
+love is.</p>
+<p>Those were halcyon days which followed for de
+Coss&eacute; and the lady his loyalty had won; days of
+sweet meetings and tender partings&#8212;of a union of
+souls which even death was powerless to dissolve.
+When they could not meet&#8212;and de Coss&eacute;'s duties
+often kept him from her side&#8212;letters were always on
+the wing between Lucienne and Paris, letters some
+of which have survived to bring their fragrance to
+our day.</p>
+<p>Thus the lover writes, "A thousand thanks, a
+thousand thanks, dear heart! To-day I shall be
+with you. Yes, I find my happiness is in being loved
+by you. I kiss you a thousand times! Good-bye.
+I love you for ever." In another letter we read,
+"Yes, dear heart, I desire so ardently to be with you&#8212;not
+in spirit, my thoughts are ever with you, but
+bodily&#8212;that nothing can calm my impatience.
+Good-bye, my darling. I kiss you many and many
+times with all my heart." The curious may read at
+<a name="Page_50"></a>the French Record Office many of these letters
+written in a bold, flowing hand by de Coss&eacute; in the
+hey-day of his love. The paper is time-stained,
+the ink is faded; but each sentence still palpitates
+with the passion that inspired it a century and a
+quarter ago.</p>
+<p>And with this great love came new honours for
+de Coss&eacute;. His father's death made him Duc de
+Brissac, head of one of the greatest houses in France,
+owner of vast estates. He was appointed Governor
+of Paris and Colonel of the King's own body-guard.
+He had, in fact, risen to a perilous eminence; for the
+clouds of the great Revolution were already massing
+in the sky, and the <i>sans-culotte</i> crowds were straining
+to be at the throats of the cursed "aristos," and
+to hurl Louis from his throne. Brissac (as we must
+now call him) was thus an object of special hatred,
+as of splendour, standing out so prominently as representative
+of the hated <i>noblesse</i>.</p>
+<p>Other nobles, fearful of the breaking of the storm,
+were flying in droves to seek safety in England and
+elsewhere. But when the Governor of Paris was
+urged to fly, he answered proudly, "Certainly not.
+I shall act according to my duty to my ancestors and
+myself." And, heedless of his life, he clung to his
+duty and his honour, presenting a smiling face to the
+scowls of hatred and envy, and spending blissful
+hours at Lucienne with the woman he loved.</p>
+<p>Nor was she any less conscious of her danger, or
+less indifferent to it. She also had become a target
+of hatred and scarcely veiled threats. Watchful
+eyes marked every coming and going of Brissac's
+<a name="Page_51"></a>messengers with their missives of love; it was
+discovered
+that Brissac's aide-de-camp, whose life they
+sought, was in hiding in her house; that she was
+supplying the noble emigrants with money. The
+climax was reached when she boldly advertised a
+reward of two thousand louis for a clue to the jewellery
+of which burglars had robbed her&#8212;jewels of
+which she published a long and dazzling list, thus
+bringing to memory the days when the late King had
+squandered his ill-gotten gold on her.</p>
+<p>The Duc, at last alarmed for her&#8212;never for himself&#8212;begged
+her either to escape, or, as he wrote,
+to "come quickly, my darling, and take every precaution
+for your valuables, if you have any left. Yes,
+come, and your beauty, your kindness and magnanimity.
+I am ashamed of it, but I feel weaker than
+you. How should I feel otherwise for the one I
+love best?"</p>
+<p>But already the hour for flight had passed. The
+passions of the mob were breaking down the barriers
+that were now too weak to hold them in check; the
+Paris streets had their first baptism of blood, prelude
+to the deluge to follow; hideous, fierce-eyed crowds
+were clamouring at the gates of Versailles; and de
+Brissac was soon on his way, a prisoner, to Orleans.</p>
+<p>The blow had fallen at last, suddenly, and with
+crushing force. When "Louis Hercule Timoleon
+de Coss&eacute;-Brissac, soldier from his birth," was charged
+before the National High Court with admitting
+Royalists into the Guards, he answered: "I have
+admitted into the King's Guards no one but citizens
+who fulfilled all the conditions contained in the decree
+<a name="Page_52"></a>of formation": and no other answer or plea would
+he deign to his accusers.</p>
+<p>From his Orleans prison, where he now awaited
+the inevitable end, he wrote daily to his beloved lady;
+and every day brought him a tender and cheering
+letter from her. On 11th August, 1792, he writes:
+"I received this morning the best letter I have had
+for a long time past; none have rejoiced my heart
+so much. Thank you for it. I kiss you a thousand
+times. You indeed will have my last thought. Ah,
+my darling, why am I not with you in a wilderness
+rather than in Orleans?"</p>
+<p>A few days later news reached Madame du Barry
+that her lover, with other prisoners, was to be brought
+from Orleans to Paris. He would thus actually pass
+her own door; she would at least see him once again,
+under however tragic conditions. With what leaden
+steps the intervening hours crawled by! Each sound
+set her heart beating furiously as if it would choke
+her. Each moment was an agony of anticipation.
+At last she hears the sound of coming feet. She flies
+to the window, piercing the dark night with straining
+eyes. The sound grows nearer, a tumult of trampling
+feet and hoarse cries. A mob of dark figures
+surges through her gates, pours riotously up the steps
+and through the open door. In the hall there is a
+pandemonium of cries and oaths; the door of her
+room is burst open, and something is flung at her
+feet. She glances down; and, with a gasp of
+unspeakable horror, looks down on the severed head
+of her lover, red with his blood.</p>
+<p>The <i>sans-culottes</i> had indeed taken a terrible
+<a name="Page_53"></a>revenge. They had fallen in overwhelming numbers
+on the prisoners and their escort; the soldiers had
+fled; and de Brissac found himself the centre of a
+mob, the helpless target of a hundred murderous
+blows. With a knife for sole weapon he fought valiantly,
+like the brave soldier he was, until a cowardly
+blow from behind felled him to the ground. "Fire
+at me with your pistols," he shouted, "your work
+will the sooner be over." A few moments later he
+drew his last gallant breath, almost within sight of the
+house that sheltered his beloved.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 25%;">
+<p>United in life, the lovers were not long to be
+divided. "Since that awful day," Madame du
+Barry wrote to a friend, "you can easily imagine what
+my grief has been. They have consummated the
+frightful crime, the cause of my misery and my eternal
+regrets&#8212;my grief is complete&#8212;a life which ought
+to have been so grand and glorious! Good God,
+what an end!"</p>
+<p>Thus cruelly deprived of all that made life worth
+living, she cared little how soon the end came. "I
+ask nothing now of life," she wrote, "but that it
+should quickly give me back to him." And her
+prayer was soon to be granted. A few months after
+that night of horrors she herself was awaiting the
+guillotine in her cell at the conciergerie.</p>
+<p>In vain did an Irish priest who visited her offer to
+secure her escape if she would give him money to
+bribe her jailers. "No," she answered with a smile,
+"I have no wish to escape. I am glad to die; but I
+will give you money willingly on condition that you
+<a name="Page_54"></a>save the Duchesse de Mortemart." And while
+Madame de Mortemart, daughter of the man she
+loved, was making her way to safety under the priest's
+escort, Jeanne du Barry was being led to the scaffold,
+breathing the name of the man she had loved
+so well; and, however feeble the flesh, glad to follow
+where he had led the way.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_VI"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_55"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+<h2>THE REGENT'S DAUGHTER</h2>
+<br>
+<p>Many unwomanly women have played their parts in
+the drama of Royal Courts, but scarcely one, not
+even those Messalinas, Catherine II. of Russia and
+Christina of Sweden, conducted herself with such
+a shameless disregard of conventionality as Marie
+Louise Elizabeth d'Orl&eacute;ans, known to fame as the
+Duchesse de Berry, who probably crowded within
+the brief space of her years more wickedness than any
+woman who was ever cradled in a palace.</p>
+<p>It is said that this libertine Duchesse was mad;
+and certainly he would be a bold champion who
+would try to prove her sanity. But, apart from any
+question of a disordered brain, there was a taint in
+her blood sufficient to account for almost any lapse
+from conventional standards of pure living. Her
+father was that Duc d'Orl&eacute;ans who shocked the none
+too strait-laced Europe of two centuries ago by his
+orgies; her grandfather was that other Orleans Duke,
+brother of Louis XIV., whose passion for his minions
+broke the heart of his English wife, the Stuart Princess
+Henriettta; and she had for mother one of the
+daughters of Madame de Montespan, light-o'-love to
+<i>le Roi Soleil</i>.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_56"></a>The offspring of such parents could scarcely
+have
+been normal; and how far from normal Marie Louise
+was, this story of her singular life will show. When
+her father, the Duc de Chartres, took to wife Mademoiselle
+de Blois, Montespan's daughter, there were
+many who significantly shrugged their shoulders and
+curled their lips at such a union; and one at least, the
+Duc's mother, Elizabeth Charlotte, Princess Palatine,
+was undisguisedly furious. She refused point-blank
+to be present at the nuptials, and when her
+son, fresh from the altar, approached her to ask her
+blessing, she retorted by giving the bridegroom a
+resounding slap on the face.</p>
+<p>Such was the ill-omened opening to a wedded life
+which brought nothing but unhappiness with it and
+which gave to the world some of the most degenerate
+women (in addition to a son who was almost an idiot)
+who have ever been cradled.</p>
+<p>The first of these degenerates was Marie Elizabeth,
+who was born one August day in the year 1695,
+and who from her earliest infancy was her father's
+pet and favourite. His idolatry of his first-born
+child, indeed, is one of the most inscrutable things
+in a life full of the abnormal, and in later years
+afforded much material for the tongue of scandal.
+He was inseparable from her; her lightest wish was
+law to him; he nursed her through her childish illnesses
+with more than the devotion of a mother; and,
+as she grew to girlhood, he worshipped at the shrine
+of her young beauty with the adoration of a lover and
+put her charms on canvas in the guise of a pagan
+goddess.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_57"></a>The Duc's affection for his daughter, indeed,
+was
+so extravagant that it was made the subject of scores
+of scurrilous lampoons to which even Voltaire contributed,
+and was a delicious morsel of ill-natured
+gossip in all the <i>salons</i> and cabarets of Paris. At
+fifteen the princess was already a woman&#8212;tall, handsome,
+well-formed, with brilliant eyes and the full
+lips eloquent of a sensuous nature. Already she
+had had her initiation into the vices that proved her
+undoing; for in a Court noted for its free-living, she
+was known for her love of the table and the wine-bottle.</p>
+<p>Such was the Duc's eldest daughter when she was
+ripe for the altar and became the object of an intrigue
+in which her scheming father, the Royal Duchesses,
+the Duc de Saint-Simon, the King himself, and the
+Jesuits all took a part, and the prize of which was
+the hand of the young Duc de Berry, a younger son
+of the Dauphin, the grandson of King Louis.</p>
+<p>Over the plotting and counterplotting, the rivalries
+and jealousies which followed, we must pass. It
+must suffice to record that the King's consent was at
+last won by the Orleans faction; Madame de Maintenon
+was persuaded to smile on the alliance; and,
+one July day, the nuptials of the Duc de Berry and
+the Orleans Princess were celebrated in the presence
+of the Royal family and the Court. A regal supper
+followed; and, the last toast drunk, the young couple
+were escorted to their room with all the stately, if
+scarcely decent, ceremonial which in those days
+inaugurated the life of the newly-wedded.</p>
+<p>Seldom has there been a more singular union than
+<a name="Page_58"></a>this of the Duc d'Orl&eacute;ans' prodigal
+daughter with
+the almost imbecile grandson of the French King.
+The Duc de Berry, it is true, was good to look upon.
+Tall, fair-haired, with a good complexion and splendid
+health, he was physically, at twenty-four, no unworthy
+descendant of the great Louis. He had, too,
+many amiable qualities calculated to win affection;
+but he was mentally little better than a clown. His
+education had been shamefully neglected; he had
+been suppressed and kept in the background until, in
+spite of his manhood, he had all the shyness, awkwardness
+and dullness of a backward child.</p>
+<p>As he himself confessed to Madame de Saint-Simon,
+"They have done all they could to stifle my
+intelligence. They did not want me to have any
+brains. I was the youngest, and yet ventured to
+argue with my brother. Afraid of the results of my
+courage, they crushed me; they taught me nothing
+except to hunt and gamble; they succeeded in
+making a fool of me, one incapable of anything
+and who will yet be the laughing-stock of everybody."</p>
+<p>Such was the weak-kneed husband to whom was
+now allied the most precocious, headstrong young
+woman in all France; who, although still short of
+her sixteenth birthday, was a past-mistress of the arts
+of pleasure, and was now determined to have her full
+fling at any cost. She had been thoroughly spoiled
+by her too indulgent father, who was even then the
+most powerful man in France after the King; and
+she was in no mood to brook restraint from anyone,
+even from Louis himself.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_59"></a>The pleasures of the table seem now to have
+absorbed the greater part of her life. Read what
+her grandmother, the Princess Palatine, says of her:
+"Madame de Berry does not eat much at dinner.
+How, indeed, can she? She never leaves her room
+before noon, and spends her mornings in eating all
+kinds of delicacies. At two o'clock she sits down
+to an elaborate dinner, and does not rise from the
+table until three. At four she is eating again&#8212;fruit,
+salad, cheese, etc. She takes no exercise whatever.
+At ten she has a heavy supper, and retires to bed
+between one and two in the morning. She likes
+very strong brandy." And in this last sentence we
+have the true secret of her undoing. The Royal
+Princess was, even tat this early age, a confirmed
+dipsomaniac, with her brandy bottle always by her
+side; and was seldom sober, from rising to retiring.</p>
+<p>To such a woman, a slave to the senses, a husband
+like the Duc de Berry, unredeemed by a vestige of
+manliness, could make no appeal. She wanted
+"men" to pay her homage; and, like Catherine of
+Russia, she had them in abundance&#8212;lovers who were
+only too ready to pay court to a beautiful Princess,
+who might one day be Queen of France. For the
+Dauphin was now dead; his eldest son, the Duc de
+Bourgogne, had followed him to the grave a few
+months later. Prince Philip had renounced his right
+to the French crown when he accepted that of Spain;
+and, between her husband and the throne there was
+now but one frail life, that of the three-year-old Duc
+d'Anjou, a child so delicate that he might easily not
+survive his great-grandfather, Louis, whose hand was
+<a name="Page_60"></a>already relaxing its grasp of the sceptre he had
+held
+so long.</p>
+<p>On the intrigues with which this Queen <i>in posse</i>
+beguiled her days, it is perhaps well not to look too
+closely. They are unsavoury, as so much of her life
+was. Her lovers succeeded one another with quite
+bewildering rapidity, and with little regard either to
+rank or good-looks. One special favourite of our
+Sultana was La Haye, a Court equerry, whom she
+made Chamberlain, and who is pictured by Saint-Simon
+as "tall, bony, with an awkward carriage and
+an ugly face; conceited, stupid, dull-witted, and only
+looking at all passable when on horseback."</p>
+<p>So infatuated was the Duchesse with her ill-favoured
+equerry that nothing less would please her
+than an elopement to Holland&#8212;a proposal which so
+scared La Haye that, in his alarm, he went forthwith
+to the lady's father and let the cat out of the bag.
+"Why on earth does my daughter want to run away
+to Holland?" the Due exclaimed with a laugh. "I
+should have thought she was having quite a good
+enough time here!" And so would anyone else have
+thought.</p>
+<p>And while his Duchesse was thus dallying with her
+multitude of lovers and stupefying herself with her
+brandy bottle, her husband was driven to his wits'
+end by her exhibitions of temper, as by her infidelities.
+In vain he stormed and threatened to have her
+shut up in a convent. All her retort was to laugh
+in his face and order him out of her apartment.
+Violent scenes were everyday incidents. "The last
+one," says Saint-Simon, "was at Rambouillet; and,
+<a name="Page_61"></a>by a regrettable mishap, the Duchesse received a
+kick."</p>
+<p>The Duc's laggard courage was spurred to fight
+more than one duel for his wife's tarnished fame. Of
+one of these sorry combats, Maurepas writes, "Her
+conduct with her father became so notorious that His
+Grace the Duc de Berry, disgusted at the scandal,
+forced the Duc d'Orl&eacute;ans to fight a duel on the terrace
+at Marly. They were, however, soon separated,
+and the whole affair was hushed up."</p>
+<p>But release from such an intolerable life was soon
+coming to the ill-used Duc. One day, when hunting,
+he was thrown from his horse, and ruptured a
+blood-vessel. Fearful of alarming the King, now
+near the end of his long life, he foolishly made light
+of his accident, and only consented to see a doctor
+when it was too late. When the doctors were at last
+summoned he was a dying man, his body drained of
+blood, which was later found in bowls concealed in
+various parts of his bedroom. With his last breath,
+he said to his confessor, "Ah, reverend father, I
+alone am the real cause of my death."</p>
+<p>Thus, one May day in 1714, the Duchesse found
+herself a widow, within four years of her wedding-day;
+and the last frail barrier was removed from the
+path of self-indulgence and low passions to which
+her life was dedicated. When, with the aged King's
+death in the following year, her father became Regent
+of France, her position as daughter of the virtual
+sovereign was now more splendid than ever; and
+before she had worn her widow's weeds a month, she
+had plunged again, still deeper, into dissipation, with
+<a name="Page_62"></a>Madame de Mouchy, one of her waiting-women, as
+chief minister to her pleasures.</p>
+<p>It was at this time, before her husband had been
+many weeks in his grave, that the Comte de Riom,
+the last and most ill-favoured of her many lovers,
+came on the scene. Nothing but a perverted taste
+could surely have seen any attraction in such a lover
+as this grand-nephew of the Duc de Lauzun, of whom
+the austere and disapproving Palatine Duchess draws
+the following picture: "He has neither figure nor
+good-looks. He is more like an ogre than a man,
+with his face of greenish yellow. He has the nose,
+eyes, and mouth of a Chinaman; he looks, in fact,
+more like a baboon than the Gascon he really is.
+Conceited and stupid, his large head seems to sit on
+his broad shoulders, owing to the shortness of his neck.
+He is shortsighted and altogether is preternaturally
+ugly; and he appears so ill that he might be suffering
+from some loathsome disease."</p>
+<p>To this unflattering description, Saint-Simon adds
+the fact that his "large, pasty face was so covered
+by pimples that it looked like one large abscess.'"
+Such, then, was the repulsive lover who found favour
+in the eyes of the Regent's daughter, and for whom
+she was ready to discard all her legion of more attractive
+wooers.</p>
+<p>With the coming of de Riom, the Duchesse entered
+on the last and worst stage of her mis-spent life.
+Strange tales are told of the orgies of which the
+Luxembourg, the splendid palace her father had given
+her, was now the scene&#8212;orgies in which Madame de
+Mouchy and a Jesuit, one Father Ringlet, took a
+<a name="Page_63"></a>part, and over which the evil de Riom ruled as
+"Lord
+of merry disports." The Duchesse, now sunk to the
+lowest depths of degradation, was the veriest puppet
+in his strong hands, flattered by his coarse attentions
+and submitting to rudeness and ridicule such as any
+grisette, with a grain of pride, would have resented.</p>
+<p>When these scandalous "carryings-on" at the
+Luxembourg Palace reached the Regent's ears and
+he ventured to read his daughter a severe lecture on
+her conduct, she retaliated by snapping her fingers
+at him and telling him in so many words to mind his
+own business. And to the tongue of scandal that
+found voice everywhere, she turned a contemptuous
+ear. She even locked and barred her palace gates
+to keep prying eyes at a safe distance.</p>
+<p>But, although she thus defied man, she was powerless
+to stay the steps of fate. Her health, robust as
+it had been, was shattered by her excesses; and when
+a serious illness assailed her, she was horrified to find
+death so uncomfortably near. In her alarm she called
+for a priest to shrive her; and the Abb&eacute; Languet
+came at the summons to bring her the consolations
+of the Church. He refused point-blank, however,
+to give the sinner absolution until the palace
+was purged of the presence of de Riom and Madame
+de Mouchy, the arch-partners in her vices.</p>
+<p>To this suggestion the Duchesse, perilous as her
+condition was, returned an uncompromising "No!"
+If the Abb&eacute; would not absolve her&#8212;well, there were
+other priests, less exacting, who would; and one
+such priest of elastic conscience, a Franciscan friar,
+was summoned to her bedside. Then ensued an
+<a name="Page_64"></a>unseemly struggle around the dying woman's bed,
+in which the Regent, Cardinal Noailles, Madame de
+Mouchy, and the rival clerics all played their parts.</p>
+<p>While the obliging friar remained in the room
+awaiting an opportunity to administer the last Sacrament,
+the Abb&eacute; and his curates kept watch at the
+bedroom door to see that he did no such thing; and
+thus the siege lasted for four days and nights until,
+the patient's crisis over, the services of the Church
+were summarily dispensed with.</p>
+<p>With the return of health, the Duchesse's piety
+quickly evaporated. It is true that she had had a
+fright; and, by way of modified penitence, she vowed
+to dress herself and her household in white for six
+months and also to make a husband of her lover.
+Within a few weeks, de Riom led the Regent's
+daughter to the altar, thus throwing the cloak of the
+Church over the licence of the past.</p>
+<p>Now that our Princess was once more a "respectable"
+woman, she returned gladly to her old life of
+indulgence; until the Duchess Palatine exclaimed in
+alarm, "I am afraid her excesses in drinking and eating
+will kill her." And never was prediction more
+sure of early fulfilment. When she was not keeping
+company with her brandy bottle, she was gorging
+herself with delicacies of all kinds, from patties and
+fricass&eacute;es to peaches and nectarines, washed down
+with copious draughts of iced beer.</p>
+<p>As a last desperate effort to reform her, at the
+eleventh hour, the Regent packed de Riom off to his
+regiment. A few days later, the Duchesse invited
+her father to a sumptuous banquet on the terrace at
+<a name="Page_65"></a>Meudon, at which, regardless of her delicate
+health,
+she ate and drank more voraciously than ever. The
+same evening she was taken ill; and when, on the
+following Sunday, her mother-in-law, the Duchess,
+visited her, she found the patient in a deplorable
+condition&#8212;wasted to a "shadow" and burning with
+fever. "She was suffering such horrible pains in her
+toes and under the feet," says the Duchess, "that
+tears came to her eyes. She looked so very bad that
+three doctors were called in consultation. They resolved
+to bleed her; but it was difficult to bring her
+to it, for her pains were so great that the least touch
+of the sheets made her shriek."</p>
+<p>A few days later, in the early hours of 17th July,
+1719, the Duchesse de Berry passed away in her
+sleep. The life which she had wasted with such shameless
+prodigality closed in peace; and at the moment
+when she was being laid to rest in the Church of St
+Denis, Madame de Mouchy, blazing in the dead
+woman's jewels, was laughing merrily over her
+champagne-glass at a dinner-party to which she had
+invited all the sharers in the orgies which had made
+the Palace of the Luxembourg infamous!</p>
+<p>The moral of this pitifully squandered life needs
+no pointing out. And on reviewing it one can only
+in charity echo the words spoken by Madame de
+Meilleraye of another sinner, the Chevalier de Savoie,
+"For my part, I believe the good God must think
+twice before sending one born of such parents to the
+nether regions."</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_VII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_66"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+<h2>A PRINCESS OF MYSTERY</h2>
+<p>In the spring of the year 1772 the fashionable world
+of Paris was full of speculation and gossip about a
+stranger, as mysterious as she was beautiful, who had
+appeared from no one knew where, in its midst, and
+who called herself the Princess Aly &Eacute;mett&eacute;e de
+Vlodimir. That she was a woman of rank and
+distinction admitted of no question. Her queenly
+carriage and the graciousness and dignity of her
+deportment were in keeping with the Royal character
+she assumed; but more remarkable than these evidences
+of high station was her beauty, which in
+its brilliance eclipsed that of the fairest women of
+Versailles and the Tuileries.</p>
+<p>Tall, with a figure of exquisite modelling and
+grace, her daintily poised head crowned with a
+coronal of golden-brown hair, with a face of perfect
+oval, dimpled cheeks as delicately tinted as a rose,
+her chief glory lay in her eyes, large and lustrous,
+which had the singular quality of changing colour&#8212;"now
+blue, now black, which gave to their dreamy
+expression a peculiar, mysterious air."</p>
+<p>Who was she, this woman of beauty and mystery?
+<a name="Page_67"></a>It was rumoured that she was a Circassian
+Princess,
+"the heroine of strange romances." She was living
+luxuriously in a fine house in the most fashionable
+quarter of Paris, in company with two German
+"Barons"&#8212;one, the Baron von Embs, who claimed
+to be her cousin; the other, Baron von Schenk, who
+appeared to play the r&ocirc;le of guardian. To her
+<i>salon</i> in the Ile St Louis were flocking many of the
+greatest men in France, infatuated by her beauty,
+and paying homage to her charms. To a man, they
+adored the mysterious lady&#8212;from Prince Ojinski
+and other illustrious refugees from Poland to the
+Comte de Rochefort-Velcourt, the Duke of Limburg's
+representative at the French Court, and the
+wealthy old <i>beau</i> M. de Marine, who, it was said,
+placed his long purse at her disposal.</p>
+<p>But while the men were thus her slaves, the women
+tossed their heads contemptuously at their dangerous
+rival. She was an adventuress, they declared with
+one voice; and great was their satisfaction when, one
+day, news came that the Baron von Embs had been
+arrested for debt and that, on investigation, he proved
+to be no Baron at all, but the good-for-nothing son of
+a Ghent tradesman.</p>
+<p>The "bubble" had soon burst, and the attentions
+of the police became so embarrassing that the Princess
+was glad to escape from the scene of her brief
+triumphs with her cavaliers (Von Embs' liberty
+having been purchased by that "credulous old fool,"
+de Marine) to Frankfort, leaving a wake of debts
+behind.</p>
+<p>Arrived at Frankfort, the fair Circassian resumed
+<a name="Page_68"></a>her luxurious mode of life, carrying a part of
+her
+retinue of admirers with her, and making it known
+that she was daily expecting a large remittance from
+her good friend, the Shah of Persia. And it was not
+long before, thanks to the offices of de Rochefort-Velcourt,
+she had at her feet no less a personage than
+Philip, Duke of Limburg, and Prince of the Empire,
+one of those petty German potentates who assumed
+more than the airs and arrogance of kings. Though
+his duchy was no larger than an English county,
+Philip had his ambassadors at the Courts of Vienna
+and Versailles; and though he had neither courtiers,
+army, nor exchequer, he lavished his titles of nobility
+and surrounded himself with as much state and ceremonial
+as any Tsar or Emperor.</p>
+<p>But exalted and serene as was His Highness, he
+was caught as helplessly in the toils of the Princess
+Aly as any lovesick boy; and within a week of
+making his first bow had her installed in his Castle
+of Oberstein, after satisfying the most clamorous of
+her creditors with borrowed money. That there
+might be no question of obligation, the Princess
+repaid him with the most lavish promises to redeem
+his heavily mortgaged estate with the millions she
+was daily expecting from Persia, and to use her great
+influence with Tsar and Sultan to support his claim
+to the Schleswig and Holstein duchies. And that
+he might be in no doubt as to her ability to discharge
+these promises, she showed him letters, addressed
+to her in the friendliest of terms by these august
+personages.</p>
+<p>Each day in the presence of this most alluring of
+<a name="Page_69"></a>princesses forged new fetters for the susceptible
+Duke, until one day she announced to him, with
+tears streaming down her pretty cheeks, that she
+had received a letter recalling her to Persia&#8212;to
+be married. The crucial hour had arrived. The
+Duke, reduced to despair, begs her to accept his own
+exalted hand in marriage, vowing that, if she refuses,
+he will "shut himself up in a cloister"; and is only
+restored to a measure of sanity when she promises to
+consider his offer.</p>
+<p>When Hornstein, the Duke's ambassador to
+Vienna, appears on the scene, full of suspicion and
+doubts, she makes an equally easy conquest of him.
+She announces to his gratified ears her wish to become
+a Catholic; flatters him by begging him to act as her
+instructor in the creed that is so dear to him; and she
+reveals to him "for the first time" the true secret of
+her identity. She is really, she says, the Princess of
+Azov, heiress to vast estates, which may come to her
+any day; and the first use she intends to make of her
+millions is to fill the empty coffers of the Limburg
+duchy.</p>
+<p>Hornstein is not only converted; he becomes as
+ardent an admirer as his master, the Duke. The
+Princess takes her place as the coming Duchess of
+Limburg, much to the disgust of his subjects, who
+show their feelings by hissing when she appears in
+public. Her hour of triumph has arrived&#8212;when,
+like a bolt from the blue, an anonymous letter comes
+to Hornstein revealing the story of her past doings
+in several capitals of Europe, and branding her as
+an "impostor."</p>
+<p><a name="Page_70"></a>For a time the Duke treats these anonymous
+slanders with scorn. He refuses to believe a word
+against his divinity, the beautiful, high-born woman
+who is to crown his life's happiness and, incidentally,
+to save him from bankruptcy. But gradually the
+poison begins to work, supplemented as it is by the
+suspicions and discontent of his subjects. At last
+he summons up courage to ask an explanation&#8212;to
+beg her to assure him that the charges against her
+are as false as he believes them.</p>
+<p>She listens to him with quiet dignity until he has
+finished, and then replies, with tears in her eyes, that
+she is not unprepared for disloyalty from a man who
+is so obviously the slave of false friends and of public
+opinion, but that she had hoped that he would at
+least have some pity and consideration for a woman
+who was about to become the mother of his child.
+This unexpected announcement, with its appeal to
+his manhood, proves more eloquent than a world of
+proofs and protestations. The Duke's suspicions
+vanish in face of the news that the woman he loves
+is to become the mother of his child, and in a moment
+he is at her knees imploring her pardon, and uttering
+abject apologies. He is now more deeply than
+ever in her toils, ready to defy the world in defence
+of the Princess he adores and can no longer
+doubt.</p>
+<p>It is at this stage that a man who was to play such
+an important part in the Princess's life first crosses
+her path&#8212;one Domanski, a handsome young Pole,
+whose passionate and ill-fated patriotism had driven
+him from his native land to find an asylum, like many
+<a name="Page_71"></a>another Polish refugee, in the Limburg duchy. He
+had heard much of the romantic story of the Princess
+Aly, and was drawn by sympathy, as by the rumour
+of her remarkable beauty, to seek an interview with
+her, during her visit to Mannheim. Such a meeting
+could have but one issue for the romantic Pole. He
+lost both head and heart at sight of the lovely and
+gracious Princess, and from that moment became the
+most devoted of all her slaves.</p>
+<p>When she returned to Oberstein he was swift to
+follow her and to install himself under her castle walls,
+where he could catch an occasional glimpse of her,
+or, by good-fortune, have a few blissful moments in
+her company. Indeed, it was not long before stories
+began to be circulated among the good folk of Oberstein
+of strange meetings between the mysterious
+young stranger who had come to live in their midst
+and an equally mysterious lady. "The postman,"
+it was rumoured, "often sees him on the road leading
+to the castle, talking in a shadow with someone
+enveloped in a long, black, hooded cloak, whom he
+once thought he recognised as the Princess."</p>
+<p>No wonder tongues wagged in Oberstein. What
+could be the meaning of these secret assignations
+between the Princess, who was the destined bride
+of their Duke, and the obscure young refugee?
+It was a delicious bit of scandal to add to the
+many which had already gathered round the
+"adventuress."</p>
+<p>But there was a greater surprise in store for the
+Obersteiners, as for the world outside their walls.
+Soon it began to be rumoured that the Duke's <a name="Page_72"></a>bride-to-be
+was no obscure Circassian
+Princess; this
+was merely a convenient cloak to conceal her true
+identity, which was none less than that of daughter
+of an Empress! She was, in fact, the child of Elizabeth,
+Tsarina of Russia, and her peasant husband,
+Razoum; and in proof of her exalted birth she
+actually had in her possession the will in which
+the late Empress bequeathed to her the throne of
+Russia.</p>
+<p>How these rumours originated none seemed to
+know. Was it Domanski who set them circulating?
+We know, at least, that they soon became public
+property, and that, strangely enough, they won
+credence everywhere. The very people who had
+branded her "adventuress" and hissed her in the
+streets, now raised cheers to the future Empress of
+Russia; while the Duke, delighted at such a wonderful
+transformation in the woman he loved, was more
+eager than ever to hasten the day when he could call
+her his own. As for the Princess, she accepted her
+new dignities with the complaisance to be expected
+from the daughter of a Tsarina. There was now no
+need to refer the sceptics to Circassia for proof of
+her station and her potential wealth. As heiress to
+one of the greatest thrones of Europe, she could at
+last reveal herself in her true character, without any
+need for dissimulation.</p>
+<p>The curtain was now ready to rise on the crowning
+act of her life-drama, an act more brilliant than any
+she had dared to imagine. Russia was seething
+with discontent and rebellion; the throne of Catherine
+II. was trembling; one revolt had followed
+<a name="Page_73"></a>another, until Pugatchef had led his rabble of a
+hundred thousand serfs to the very gates of Moscow&#8212;only,
+when success seemed assured, to meet
+disaster and death. If the ex-bandit could come
+so near to victory, an uprising headed by Elizabeth's
+own daughter and heiress could scarcely fail to hurl
+Catherine from her throne.</p>
+<p>It would have been difficult to find a more powerful
+ally in this daring project than Prince Charles
+Radziwill, chief of Polish patriots, who was then, as
+luck would have it, living in exile at Mannheim, and
+who hated Russia as only a Pole ever hated her.
+To Radziwill, then, Domanski went to offer the help
+of his Princess for the liberation of Poland and the
+capture of Catherine's throne.</p>
+<p>Here indeed was a valuable pawn to play in
+Radziwill's game of vengeance and ambition. But
+the Prince was by no means disposed to snatch the
+bait hurriedly. Experience had taught him caution.
+He must count the cost carefully before taking the
+step, and while writing to the Princess, "I consider it
+a miracle of Providence that it has provided so great
+a heroine for my unhappy country," he took his
+departure to Venice, suggesting that the Princess
+should meet him there, where matters could be more
+safely and successfully discussed. Thus it was that
+the Princess said her last good-bye to her ducal
+lover, full of promises for the future when she should
+have won her throne, and as "Countess of Pinneberg"
+set forth with a retinue of followers to Venice,
+where she was regally received at the French
+embassy.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_74"></a>Here she tasted the first sweets of her coming
+Queendom&#8212;holding her Courts, to which distinguished
+Poles and Frenchmen flocked to pay
+homage to the Empress-to-be, and having daily
+conferences with Radziwill, who treated her as
+already a Queen. That her purse was empty and
+the bankers declined to honour her drafts was a
+matter to smile at, since the way now seemed clear
+to a crown, with all it meant of wealth and power.
+When the Venetian Government grew uneasy at the
+plotting within its borders, she went to Ragusa,
+where she blossomed into the "Princess of all the
+Russias," assumed the sceptre that was soon to
+be hers, issued proclamations as a sovereign, and
+crowned these regal acts by sending a ukase to
+Alexis Orloff, the Russian Commander-in-Chief,
+"signed Elizabeth II., and instructing him to communicate
+its contents to the army and fleet under his
+command."</p>
+<p>Once more, however, fortune played the Princess
+a scurvy trick, just when her favour seemed most
+assured. One night a man was seen scaling the
+garden-wall of the palace she was occupying. The
+guard fired at him, and the following morning
+Domanski was found, lying wounded and unconscious
+in the garden. The tongues of scandal were
+set wagging again, old suspicions were revived, and
+once again the word "adventuress"&#8212;and worse&#8212;passed
+from mouth to mouth. The men who had
+fawned on her now avoided her; worse still, Radziwill,
+his latent suspicions thoroughly awakened, and
+confirmed by a hundred stories and rumours that
+<a name="Page_75"></a>came to his ears, declined to have anything more
+to
+do with her, and returned in disgust to Germany.</p>
+<p>But even this crushing rebuff was powerless to
+damp the spirits and ambition of the "adventuress,"
+who shook the dust of Ragusa off her dainty feet, and
+went off to Rome, where she soon cast her spell over
+Sir William Hamilton, our Ambassador there, who
+gave her the warmest hospitality. "For several
+days," we learn, "she reigns like a Queen in the
+<i>salon</i> of the Ambassador, out of whose penchant
+for beautiful women she has no difficulty in wiling
+a passport that enables her to enter the most exclusive
+circles of Roman society."</p>
+<p>In Rome she lays aside her regal trappings, and
+wins the respect of all by her unostentatious living
+and her prodigal charities. She becomes a favourite
+at the Vatican; Cardinals do homage to her
+goodness, with perhaps a pardonable eye to her
+beauty. But behind the brave and pious front she
+thus shows to the world her heart is growing more
+heavy day by day. Poverty is at her door in the
+guise of importunate creditors, her servants are
+clamouring for overdue wages, and consumption,
+which for long has threatened her, now shows its
+presence in hectic cheeks and a hacking cough.
+Fortune seems at last to have abandoned her; and
+it requires all her courage to sustain her in this hour
+of darkness.</p>
+<p>In her extremity she appeals to Sir William
+Hamilton for a loan, much as a Queen might confer
+a favour on a subject, and Hamilton, pleased to be
+of service to so fair and pious a lady, sends her letter
+<a name="Page_76"></a>to his Leghorn banker, Mr John Dick, with
+instructions
+to arrange the matter</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 25%;">
+<p style="text-align: center;"><br>
+<img style="width: 276px; height: 341px;" alt="Count Gregory Orloff"
+ title="Count Gregory Orloff" src="images/court003.jpg"><a name="img003"></a><br>
+</p>
+<h5>COUNT GREGORY ORLOFF.</h5>
+<p>While the Princess Aly was practising piety and
+cultivating Cardinals in Rome, with an empty purse
+and a pain-racked body to make a mockery of her
+claim to a crown, away in distant Russia Catherine
+II. was nursing a terrible revenge on the woman who
+had dared to usurp her position and threaten her
+throne. The succession of revolutions, at which
+she had at first smiled scornfully, had now roused the
+tigress in her. She would show the world that she
+was no woman to be trifled with, and the first victim
+of her vengeance should be that brazen Princess who
+dared to masquerade as "Elizabeth II."</p>
+<p>She sent imperative orders to her trusted and
+beloved Orloff, fresh from his crushing defeat of the
+Turkish fleet, to seize her at any cost, even if he had
+to raze Ragusa to the ground; and these orders she
+knew would be executed to the letter. For was not
+Orloff the man whose strong hands had strangled her
+husband and placed the crown on her head; also her
+most devoted slave? He was, it is true, the biggest
+scoundrel (as he was also one of the handsomest
+men) in Europe, a man ready to stoop to any infamy,
+and thus the best possible tool for such an infamous
+purpose; but he was also her greatest admirer, eager
+to step into the place of "chief favourite" from which
+his brother Gregory had just been dismissed.</p>
+<p>When, however, Orloff went to Ragusa, with his
+soldiers at his back, he found that the Princess had
+already flown, leaving no trace behind her. He
+<a name="Page_77"></a>ransacked Sicily in vain, and it was only when
+Sir
+William Hamilton's letter to his Leghorn banker
+came to his hands that he discovered that she was
+in Rome, a much safer asylum than Ragusa. It was
+hopeless now to capture her by force; he must try
+diplomacy, and, by the hands of an aide-de-camp, he
+sent her a letter in which he informed her that he
+had received her ukase and was anxious to pay due
+homage to the future Empress of Russia.</p>
+<p>Such was the "Judas" message Kristenef, Orloff's
+emissary, carried to the Princess, whom he found in
+a pitiful condition, wasted to a shadow by disease
+and starvation&#8212;"in a room cold and bare, whose
+only furniture was a leather sofa, on which she lay
+in a high fever, coughing convulsively." To such
+pathetic straits was "Elizabeth II." reduced
+when Kristenef came with his fawning airs and lying
+tongue to tell her that Alexis Orloff, the greatest man
+in Russia, had instructed him to offer her the throne
+of the Tsars, and, as an earnest of his loyalty, to beg
+her acceptance of a loan of eleven thousand ducats.</p>
+<p>In vain did Domanski, who was still by her side,
+warn her against the smooth-tongued envoy. She
+was flattered by such unexpected homage, her eyes
+were dazzled by the near prospect of the coveted
+crown which was to be hers, at last, just when hope
+seemed dead. She would accept Orloff's invitation
+to go to Pisa to meet him. "As for you," she said,
+"if you are afraid, you can stay behind. I am going
+where Destiny calls me."</p>
+<p>This revolution in her fortunes acted like magic.
+New life coursed through her veins, colour returned
+<a name="Page_78"></a>to her cheeks, and brightness to her eyes, as one
+February day in 1775 she left Rome, with the
+devoted Domanski for companion and a brilliant
+escort, for Pisa, where Orloff greeted her as an
+Empress. He gave regal f&ecirc;tes in her honour
+and filled her ears with honeyed and flattering
+words.</p>
+<p>Affecting to be dazzled by her beauty, he even
+dared to make passionate love to her, which no man
+of his day could do more effectively than this handsomest
+of the Orloffs; and so infatuated was the poor
+Princess by the adoration of her handsome lover and
+the assurance of the throne he was to give her, that
+she at last consented to share that throne with him,
+and by his side went through a marriage ceremony,
+at which two of his officers masqueraded as officiating
+priests.</p>
+<p>Nothing remained now between her and the goal
+of her desires, except to make the journey to Russia
+as speedily as possible, and a few hours after the
+wedding banquet we see her in the Admiral's launch,
+with Orloff and Domanski and a brilliant suite of
+officers, leaving Leghorn for the Russian flagship,
+where she was received with the blare of bands and
+the booming of artillery. The crowning moment
+arrived when, as she was being hoisted to the deck in
+a gorgeous chair suspended from the yard-arm, her
+future sailors greeted her with thunders of shouts,
+"Long live the Empress!"</p>
+<p>The moment she set foot on deck she was seized,
+handcuffs were snapped on her wrists, and she was
+carried a helpless captive to a cabin. At the same
+<a name="Page_79"></a>moment Domanski was overpowered before he had
+time to use his sword, and made a prisoner.</p>
+<p>The Princess's cries for Orloff, her husband and
+saviour, are met with derision. Orloff she is told is
+himself a prisoner. He has, in fact, vanished, his
+dastardly mission executed; and she never saw him
+again. Two months later the victim of a man's
+treachery and a woman's vengeance is looking with
+tear-dimmed eyes on "her capital" through a barred
+window of a cell in the fortress of Saints Peter
+and Paul.</p>
+<p>Over the tragic closing of her days we may not
+dwell long. The scene is too pitiful, too harrowing.
+In vain she implores an interview with Catherine, who
+blazes into anger at the request. "The impudence
+of the wretch," she exclaims, "is beyond all bounds!
+She must be mad. Tell her if she wishes any
+improvement in her lot to cease the comedy she is
+playing." Prince Galitzin, Grand Chancellor, exerts
+all his skill in vain to force a confession of imposture
+from her. To his wiles and threats alike she opposes
+a dignified and calm front. She persists in the story
+of her birth; refuses to admit that she is an impostor.</p>
+<p>Even when she is flung into a loathsome cell, with
+bread and water for diet, she does not waver a jot
+in her demeanour of dignity or in her Royal claims.
+Only when she is charged with being the daughter
+of a Prague innkeeper does she allow indignation to
+master her, as she retorts, "I have never been in
+Prague in my life, and if I knew who had thus slandered
+me I would scratch his eyes out." Domanski,
+too, proves equally intractable; even the promise of
+<a name="Page_80"></a>marriage to her will not wring from him a word
+that
+might discredit his beloved Princess.</p>
+<p>But although the Princess keeps such a brave
+heart under conditions that might well have broken
+it, her spirit is powerless against the insidious disease
+that is working such havoc with her body. In her
+damp, noisome cell consumption makes rapid headway.
+Her strength ebbs daily; the end is coming
+swiftly near. She makes a last dying appeal to
+Catherine to see her if but for a few moments, but
+the appeal falls on deaf ears. When she sends for a
+priest to minister to her last hours, and, by Catherine's
+orders, he makes a final attempt to wrest her
+secret from her, she moans with her failing breath,
+"Say the prayers for the dead. That is all there is
+for you to do here."</p>
+<p>Four days later death came to her release.
+Catherine's throne was safe from this danger at
+least, and she was left to dalliance with her legion
+of lovers, while the woman on whom she had wreaked
+such terrible vengeance lay deeply buried in the
+courtyard of her prison, the very soldiers who dug
+her grave being sworn to secrecy. Thus in mystery
+her life opened, and in secrecy it closed.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_81"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+<h2>THE KING AND THE "LITTLE DOVE"</h2>
+<p>A savage murmur ran through the market-place of
+Bergen, one summer morning in the year 1507, as
+Chancellor Valkendorf made his pompous way along
+the avenues of stalls laden with their country produce,
+his passage followed by scowling eyes and
+low-spoken maledictions.</p>
+<p>There could not have been a more unwelcome
+visitor than this cold-eyed, supercilious Chancellor,
+unless it were his master, Christian, the Danish
+Prince who had come to rule Norway with the iron
+hand, and to stamp out the fires of rebellion against
+the alien rule that were always smouldering, when
+not leaping into flame. Bergen itself had been the
+scene of the latest revolt against oppressive and unjust
+taxes, and the insolent Valkendorf, who was now
+taking his morning stroll in the market-place, was
+fresh from suppressing it with a rough hand which
+had left many a smart and longing for vengeance
+behind it.</p>
+<p>But the Chancellor could afford to smile at such
+evidences of unpopularity. He knew that he was the
+most hated man in Norway&#8212;after his master&#8212;but
+<a name="Page_82"></a>he had executed his mission well and was ready to
+do it again. And thus it was with an air, half-amused,
+half-contemptuous, that he made his progress
+this July morning among the booths and stalls
+of the market, with eyes scornfully blind to frowns,
+but very wide open for any pretty face he might
+chance to see.</p>
+<p>He had not strolled far before his eyes were arrested
+by as strangely contrasted a picture as any he
+had ever seen. Behind one of the stalls, heaped high
+with luscious, many-coloured fruits and mountains of
+vegetables, were two women, each so remarkable in
+her different way that, almost involuntarily, he stood
+rooted to the spot, gazing open-eyed at them. The
+elder of the two was of gigantic stature, towering
+head and shoulders over her companion, with harsh,
+masculine face, massive jaw, coarse protruding lips,
+and black eyes which were fixed on him in a magnetic
+stare, defiant and scornful&#8212;for none knew better
+than she who the stranger was, and few hated him
+more.</p>
+<p>But it was not to this grim, hard-visaged Amazon
+that Valkendorf's eyes were drawn, compelling as
+were her stature and her basilisk stare. They quickly
+turned from her, with a motion of contempt, to feast
+on the vision by her side&#8212;that of a girl on the
+threshold of young womanhood and of a beauty that
+dazzled the eyes of the old voluptuary. How had
+she come there and in such company, this ravishing
+girl on whom Nature had lavished the last touch of
+virginal loveliness, this maiden with her figure of
+such supple grace, the proud little oval face with its
+<a name="Page_83"></a>complexion of cream and roses, the dainty head
+from
+which twin plaits of golden hair fell almost to her
+knees, and the eyes blue as violets, now veiled
+demurely, now opening wide to reveal their glories,
+enhanced by a look of appeal, almost of fear.</p>
+<p>The Chancellor, who was the last man to pass by
+a flower so seductively beautiful, approached the
+stall, undaunted by the forbidding eyes of the
+giantess, Frau Sigbrit, by name, and, after making
+a small purchase, sought to draw her into amiable
+conversation. "No," she said in answer to his
+inquiries, "we are not Norwegian. We come from
+Holland, my daughter and I, and we are trying to
+earn a little money before returning there. But why
+do you ask?" she demanded almost fiercely, putting
+a protecting arm around the girl, as if she would
+shield her from an enemy. "You are in such
+a different world from ours!"</p>
+<p>Little by little, however, the grim face began to
+relax under the adroit flatteries and courtly deference
+of the Chancellor&#8212;for none knew better than
+he the arts of charming, when he pleased; and it was
+not long before the Amazon, completely thawed, was
+confiding to him the most intimate details of her
+history and her hopes.</p>
+<p>"Yes, my daughter is beautiful," she said, with a
+look of pride at the girl which transfigured her face.
+"Many a great man has told me so&#8212;dukes, princes,
+and lords. She is as fair a flower as ever grew in
+Holland; and she is as sweet as she is fair. She is
+Dyveke, my "little dove," the pride of my heart, my
+soul, my life. She is to be a Queen one day. It
+<a name="Page_84"></a>has been revealed to me in my dreams. But when
+the day dawns it will be the saddest in my life." And
+with further amiable words and a final courtly salute,
+Valkendorf continued his stroll, secretly promising
+himself a further acquaintance with the dragon and
+her "little dove."</p>
+<p>This was the first of many morning strolls in the
+Bergen market, in which the Chancellor spent delightful
+moments at Frau Sigbrit's stall, each leaving
+him more and more a slave to her daughter's charms;
+for he quickly found that to her physical perfections
+were allied a low, sweet voice, every note of which
+was musical as that of a nightingale, a quiet dignity
+and refinement as far removed from her station as
+her simple print frock with the bunch of roses nestling
+in the white purity of her bosom, and a sprightliness
+of wit which even her modesty could not always
+repress.</p>
+<p>Thus it was that, when Valkendorf at last returned
+to Upsala and the Court of his master, Christian,
+his tongue was full of the praises of the "market-beauty"
+of Bergen, whose charms he pictured so
+glowingly that the Prince's heart became as inflamed
+by a sympathetic passion as his mind by curiosity to
+see such a siren. "I shall not rest," he said to his
+Chancellor, "until I have seen your 'little dove' with
+my own eyes; and who knows," he added with a
+laugh, "perhaps I shall steal her from you!"</p>
+<p>It was in vain that Valkendorf, now alarmed by
+his indiscretion, began to pour cold water on the
+flames he had lit. Christian had quite lost his susceptible
+heart to the rustic and unknown beauty, and
+<a name="Page_85"></a>vowed that he could not rest until he had seen
+her
+with his own eyes. And within a month he was
+riding into Bergen, with Valkendorf by his side, at
+the head of a brilliant retinue.</p>
+<p>As the Prince made his way through the crowded
+avenues of the Bergen streets to an accompaniment
+of scowls punctuated by feeble, forced cheers, he cut
+a goodly enough figure to win many an admiring, if
+reluctant, glance from bright eyes. With his broad
+shoulders, his erect, well-knit figure clothed in purple
+velvet, his stern, swarthy face crowned by a white-plumed
+hat, Christian looked every inch a Prince.</p>
+<p>To-day, too, he was in his most amiable mood,
+with a smile ready to leap to his lips, and many a
+gracious wave of the hand and sweep of plumed hat
+to acknowledge the grudged salutes of his subjects.
+He could be charming enough when he pleased, and
+this was a day of high good-humour; for his mind
+was full of the pleasure that awaited him. Even
+Frau Sigbrit's scowl was chased away when his eyes
+were drawn to her towering figure, and with a swift
+smile he singled her out for the honour of a special
+salute.</p>
+<p>When the Prince at last arrived in the market-square,
+he was greeted by a procession of the
+prettiest maidens in Bergen who, in white frocks and
+with flower-wreathed hair, advanced to pay him the
+homage of demure eyes. But among them all, the
+loveliest girls of the city, Christian saw but one&#8212;a
+girl younger than almost any other, but so radiantly
+lovely that his eyes fixed themselves on her as if
+entranced, until her cheeks flamed a vivid crimson
+<a name="Page_86"></a>under the ardour of his gaze. "No need to point
+her out," he whispered delightedly to Valkendorf, "I
+see your 'little dove,' and she is all you have told me
+and more."</p>
+<p>Before many hours had passed, a Court official
+appeared at Frau Sigbrit's cottage door with a command
+from the Prince to her and her daughter to
+attend a State ball the following evening. If the
+poor market-woman had had a crown laid at her feet,
+her surprise and consternation could scarcely have
+been greater. But she would make a bigger sacrifice
+of inclination than this for the "little dove" who filled
+her heart, and who, she remembered, was destined
+to be a Queen; and decking her in all the finery her
+modest purse could command and with a taste of
+which few would have suspected she was capable, the
+market stall-keeper stalked majestically through the
+avenue of gorgeous flunkeys, her little Princess with
+downcast eyes following demurely in her wake.</p>
+<p>All the fairest women of Bergen were gathered at
+this ball, the host of which was their coming King,
+but it was to the fruit-seller's daughter that all eyes
+were turned, in homage to such a rare combination
+of beauty, grace, and modesty. Many a fair lip, it
+is true, curled in mockery, recognising in the belle of
+the ball the low-born girl of the market-place; but it
+was the mockery of jealousy, the scornful tribute to
+a loveliness greater than their own.</p>
+<p>As for Prince Christian, he had no eyes for any but
+the "little dove" who outshone all her rivals as the
+sun pales the stars. It was the maid of the market
+whom he led out for the first dance, and throughout
+<a name="Page_87"></a>the long night he rarely left her side, whirling
+round
+the room with her, his arm close-clasped round her
+slender waist, not seeing or indifferent to the glances
+of envy and hate that followed them; or, during the
+intervals, drinking in her beauty as he poured sweet
+flatteries into her ears. As for Dyveke, she was
+radiantly happy at finding herself thus transported
+into the favour of a Prince and the Queendom of fair
+women, for whose envy she cared as little as for the
+danger in which she stood.</p>
+<p>If anything had remained to complete Christian's
+infatuation, this intoxicating night of the ball supplied
+it. The "little dove" had found a secure nesting-place
+in his heart. She must be his at any cost.
+She and her mother alone, of all the guests, were
+invited to spend the rest of the night at the castle as
+the Prince's guests; and when he parted from her
+the following day, it was with vows on his part of
+undying love and fidelity, and a promise on hers to
+come to him at Upsala as soon as a suitable home
+could be found for her.</p>
+<p>Thus easily was the dove caught in the toils of one
+of the most amorous Princes of Europe; but it must
+be said for her that her heart went with the surrender
+of her freedom, for the Prince, with his ardent
+passion, his strength and his magnetism, had swept
+her as quickly off her feet as she had made a quick
+conquest of him.</p>
+<p>Thus, before many weeks had passed, we find
+Dyveke installed with her mother in a sumptuous
+home in the outskirts of Upsala, queening it in the
+Prince's Court, and every day forging new fetters to
+<a name="Page_88"></a>bind him to her. And while Dyveke thus ruled over
+Christian's heart, her strong-minded mother soon
+established a similar empire over his mind. With
+the clever, masterful brain of a man, the Amazon
+of the market-place developed such a capacity for
+intrigue, such a grasp of statesmanship and such
+arts of diplomacy that Christian, strong man as he
+thought himself, soon became little more than a
+puppet in her hands, taking her counsel and deferring
+to her judgment in preference to those of his
+ministers. The fruit-seller thus found herself virtual
+Prime Minister, while her daughter reigned, an
+uncrowned Queen.</p>
+<p>When the Prince was summoned to Copenhagen
+by his father's failing health, Frau Sigbrit and her
+daughter accompanied him, one in her way as indispensable
+as the other; and when King James died
+and Christian reigned in his stead, the women of the
+Bergen market were installed in a splendid suite of
+apartments in his palace. So hopeless was his subjection
+to both that his subjects, with an indifferent
+shrug of the shoulders, accepted them as inevitable.</p>
+<p>For a time, it is true, their supremacy was in
+danger. Now that Christian was King, it became
+important to provide him with a Queen, and a suitable
+consort was found for him in the Austrian
+Princess, Isabella, sister of the Emperor Charles V.,
+a well-gilded bride, distinguished alike for her beauty
+and her piety. Isabella, however, was one of the last
+women to tolerate any rivalry in her husband's affection,
+and before the marriage-contract was sealed,
+she had received a solemn pledge from Christian's
+<a name="Page_89"></a>envoys that his relations with the pretty
+flower-girl
+should cease.</p>
+<p>But even Christian's word of honour was seldom
+allowed to bar the way to his pleasure, and within
+a few weeks of Isabella's bridal entry into Copenhagen,
+Dyveke and her mother resumed their places
+at his Court, to his Queen's unconcealed disgust and
+displeasure. More than this, he established them
+in a fine house near his palace gates; and when he
+was not dallying there with Dyveke, he was to be
+found by her side at the Castle of Hvideur, of which
+he had made her chatelaine.</p>
+<p>The remonstrances of Valkendorf and his other
+ministers were made to deaf ears; his wife's reproaches
+and tears were as futile as the strongly
+worded protestations of his Royal relatives. Pleadings,
+arguments, and threats were alike powerless to
+break the spell Dyveke and her mother had cast over
+him. But Dyveke's day of empire was now drawing
+to a tragic close. One day, after eating some
+cherries from the palace gardens, she was seized with
+a violent pain. All the skill of the Court doctors
+could do as little to assuage her agony as to save her
+life; and within a few hours she died, clasped to the
+breast of her distracted lover!</p>
+<p>Such was Christian's distress that for a time his
+reason trembled in the balance. He vowed that he
+would not be separated from her even by death; he
+threatened to put an end to his own life since it had
+been reft of all that made it worth living. And when
+cooler moments came, he swore a terrible vengeance
+against those who had robbed him of his beloved.
+<a name="Page_90"></a>She had been poisoned beyond a doubt; but who
+had done the dastardly deed?</p>
+<p>The finger of suspicion pointed to the steward of
+his household, Torbern Oxe, who, it was said, had
+been among the most ardent of Dyveke's admirers,
+and had had the audacity to aspire to her hand. It
+was even rumoured that he had had more intimate
+relations with her. Such were the stories and
+suspicions that passed from mouth to mouth in
+Christian's clouded Court before Dyveke's beautiful
+body was cold; and such were the tales which Hans
+Faaborg, the King's Treasurer, poured into his
+master's ears.</p>
+<p>Hans Faaborg little dreamt that when he was thus
+trying to bring about the downfall of his rival he was
+sealing his own fate. Christian lent an eager ear to
+the stories of his steward's iniquities; but, when he
+found there was no shred of proof to support them,
+his anger and disappointment vented themselves on
+the informer. He had long suspected Faaborg of
+irregularities in his purse-holding, and in these suspicions
+found a weapon to use against him. Faaborg
+was arrested; an examination of his ledgers showed
+that for years he had been waxing rich at his master's
+expense, and he had to pay with his life the penalty
+of his fraud and his unproved testimony.</p>
+<p>But Faaborg, though thus removed from his path,
+was by no means done with. Rumours began to
+be circulated that a strange light appeared every
+night above the dead man's head as he swung on the
+gallows. The city was full of superstitious awe and
+of whisperings that Heaven was thus bearing witness
+<a name="Page_91"></a>to the Treasurer's innocence. And even the King
+himself, when he too saw the unearthly light forming
+a halo round his victim's head, was filled with
+remorse and fear to such an extent that he had
+Faaborg's body cut down and honoured with a State
+funeral.</p>
+<p>He was still, however, as far as ever from solving
+the mystery of Dyveke's death; and the longer his
+desire for vengeance was baffled, the more clamorous
+it became. Although nothing could be proved
+against Torbern Oxe, Christian was by no means
+satisfied of his innocence, and he decided to discover
+by guile the secret which all other means had failed
+to reveal. He would, if possible, make his steward
+his own betrayer. One day, at a Court banquet, he
+turned in jocular mood to the minister and said,
+"Tell me now, my dear Torbern, was there really
+any truth in what Faaborg told me of your relations
+with my beautiful Lady! Don't hesitate to tell the
+truth, which only you know, for I assure you no harm
+shall come to you from it."</p>
+<p>Thus thrown off his guard and reassured, the
+steward, who, like his master, had probably drunk
+not wisely, confessed that he had loved Dyveke, and
+had asked her to be his wife. "But, sire," he added,
+"that was the extent of my offence. I was never
+intimate with her." During the remainder of the
+banquet Christian was most affable to the indiscreet
+steward, not only showing no trace of resentment,
+but treating him with marked friendliness.</p>
+<p>The following day, however, Torbern was flung
+into prison, and charged, not only with his
+<a name="Page_92"></a>confession, but with the murder of the woman he
+had
+so vainly loved; and, in spite of the storm of indignation
+that swept over Denmark, the pleadings of the
+Papal Legate, Arcimbaldo, and the tears of the
+Queen, was sentenced to death for a crime of which
+there was no scrap of evidence to point to his guilt.</p>
+<p>This gross act of injustice proved to be the
+beginning of Christian's downfall. His cruelties and
+oppressions had long made him odious to his
+subjects, and the climax came when a popular uprising
+hurled him from his throne and drove him an
+exile to Holland. An attempt to recover his crown
+ended in speedy disaster, and his last years were
+spent, in company with his favourite dwarf, in a cell
+of the Holstein Castle of Sondeborg.</p>
+<p>As for Sigbrit, the woman who had played such a
+conspicuous and baleful part in Christian's life, she
+deserted her benefactor at the first sign of his coming
+ruin and ended her days in her native Holland,
+bemoaning to the last the loss of her "little dove,"
+whom she had seen raised almost to a throne and
+had lost so tragically.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_IX"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_93"></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+<h2>THE ROMANCE OF THE BEAUTIFUL SWEDE</h2>
+<p>Augustus the Strong, Elector of Saxony and King
+of Poland, owes his place in the world's memory to
+his brawny muscles and to his conquest of women.
+Like the third Alexander of Russia of later years,
+he could, with his powerful arms, convert a thick
+iron bar into a necklace, crush a pewter tankard by
+the pressure of a mighty hand, toss a heavy anvil into
+the air and catch it as another man would catch a
+ball, or with a wrench straighten out the stoutest
+horse-shoe ever forged.</p>
+<p>And his strength of muscle was matched by his
+skill in the lists of love. No Louis of France could
+boast such an array of conquests as this Saxon
+Hercules, who changed his mistresses as easily as he
+changed his coats; the fairest women in Europe,
+from Turkey to Poland, succeeded each other in
+bewildering succession as the slaves of his pleasure,
+and before he died he counted his children to as
+many as the year has days.</p>
+<p>Of all these fair and frail women who thus ministered
+to the pleasure of the "Saxon Samson," none
+was so beautiful, so gifted, so altogether alluring
+<a name="Page_94"></a>as Marie Aurora, Countess of K&ouml;nigsmarck,
+the
+younger of the two daughters of Conrad of K&ouml;nigsmarck.
+Born in the year 1668, Aurora was one of
+three children of the Swedish Count Conrad and
+his wife, the daughter of the great Field-Marshal
+Wrangel. Her elder sister, little less fair than
+herself, found a husband, when little more than a
+child, in Count Axel L&ouml;wenhaupt; her brother
+Philip, the handsomest man of his day in Europe,
+was destined to end his days tragically as the price
+of his infatuation for a Queen.</p>
+<p>Betrayed by a jealous woman, the Countess
+Platen, whose overtures he spurned, this too gallant
+lover of Sophia Dorothea of Celle, wife of the first
+of our Georges, was foully done to death in a corridor
+of the Leine Schloss by La Paten's hired assassins,
+while she looked smilingly on at his futile struggle
+for life, and gloated over his dying agonies.</p>
+<p>On the death of her father, when she was but a
+child of three, Aurora was taken by her mother from
+her native Sweden to Hamburg, where she grew to
+beautiful young womanhood; and when, in turn, her
+mother died, she found a home with her married
+sister, the Countess L&ouml;wenhaupt. And it is at this
+period of her life that her romantic story opens.</p>
+<p>If we are to believe her contemporaries, the world
+has seldom seen so much beauty and so many graces
+enshrined in the form of woman as in this daughter
+of Sweden. Her description reads like a catalogue
+of all human perfections. Of medium height and a
+figure as faultless in its exquisite modelling as in its
+grace and suppleness; her hair, black as a raven's
+<a name="Page_95"></a>plumage, and falling, like a veil of night, below
+her
+knees, emphasised the white purity of face and
+throat, arms, and hands. Her teeth, twin rows of
+pearls, glistened between smiling crimson lips, curved
+like Cupid's bow. Her face of perfect oval, with its
+delicately moulded features, was illuminated by a pair
+of large black eyes, now melting, now flaming, as
+mood succeeded mood.</p>
+<p>To these graces of body were allied equal graces
+of mind and character. Her conversation sparkled
+with wit and wisdom; she could hold fluent discourse
+in half a dozen tongues; she played and sang
+divinely, wrote elegant verses, and painted dainty
+pictures. Her manner was caressing and courteous;
+she was generous to a fault, with a heart as tender
+as it was large. And the supreme touch was added
+by an entire unconsciousness of her charms, and an
+unaffected modesty which captivated all hearts.</p>
+<p>Such was Aurora of K&ouml;nigsmarck who, in company
+with her sister, set forth one day to claim the
+fortune which her ill-fated brother, Philip, was said
+to have left in the custody of his Hanoverian bankers&#8212;a
+journey which was to make such a dramatic
+revolution in her own life.</p>
+<p>Arrived at Hanover the sisters found themselves
+faced by no easy task. The bankers declared that
+they had nothing of the late Count's effects beyond
+a few diamonds, which they declined to part with,
+unless evidence were forthcoming that the Count
+had died and had left no will behind him&#8212;evidence
+which, owing to the secrecy surrounding his murder,
+it was impossible to furnish. And when a discharged
+<a name="Page_96"></a>clerk revealed the fact that the dishonest
+bankers had
+actually all the Count's estate, valued at four hundred
+thousand crowns, in their possession, the sisters were
+unable to make them disgorge a solitary mark.</p>
+<p>In their extremity, they decided to appeal to the
+Elector of Saxony, who had known Count Philip
+well and who would, they hoped, be the champion
+of their rights; and, with this object, they journeyed
+to Dresden, only to find themselves again baffled.
+Augustus was away on a hunting excursion, and
+would not return for a whole month. His wife and
+mother, however, gave them a gracious reception, as
+charmed by their beauty and sweetness as sympathetic
+in their trouble.</p>
+<p>When at last Augustus made his tardy appearance
+at his capital, the fair petitioners were presented
+to him by the Dowager Electress with words of
+strong recommendation to his favour. "These
+ladies, my son," she said, "have come to beg for
+your protection and help, to which they are entitled
+both by birth and their merits. I beg that you will
+spare no effort to ensure that justice is done to them."</p>
+<p>His mother's pleading, however, was not necessary
+to ensure a favourable hearing from the Elector,
+whose eyes were eloquent of the admiration he felt
+for the two fairest women who had ever visited his
+land. Aurora's beauty, enhanced by her attitude of
+appeal, the mute craving for protection, was irresistible.
+From the moment she entered his presence
+he was her slave, as anxious to do her will as any
+lovesick boy.</p>
+<p>And it was to her that, with his courtliest bow, he
+<a name="Page_97"></a>answered, "Be assured, dear lady, that I shall
+know
+no rest until your wrongs are repaired. If I fail, I
+myself will make reparation in full. Meanwhile, may
+I beg you and your sister to be my guests, that I
+may prove how deep is my sympathy, and how profound
+the respect I feel for you."</p>
+<p>Thus it was that by the magic of beauty Aurora
+and her Countess sister found themselves installed
+at the Dresden Court, feted like Queens, receiving
+the caresses of the Court ladies, and the homage of
+every man, from Augustus himself to the youngest
+page, of whom a smile from their pretty lips made a
+veritable slave. As for the Elector, sated as he was
+with the easy smiles and favours of fair women, he
+gave to the Swedish beauty, from the first, a homage
+he had never paid to any of her predecessors in his
+affection.</p>
+<p>But Aurora was no woman to be easily won by
+any man. She listened smilingly to the Elector's
+honeyed words, and received his attentions with the
+gracious complaisance of a Queen. When, however,
+he ventured to tell her that "her charms inspired him
+with a passion such as he had never felt for any
+woman," she answered coldly, "I came here prepared
+for your generosity, but I did not expect that your
+kindness would assume a form to cause me shame.
+I beg you not to say anything that can lessen the
+gratitude I owe you, and the respect I feel for you."</p>
+<p>Here indeed was a rebuff such as Augustus was
+little prepared for, or accustomed to. The beauty,
+of whom he had hoped to make an easy conquest,
+was an iceberg whom all his ardour could not thaw.
+<a name="Page_98"></a>He was in despair. "I am sure she hates and
+despises me, while I love her dearer than life itself,"
+he confessed to his favourite Beuchling, who vainly
+tried to console and cheer him. He confided his
+passion and his pain to Aurora's sister, whose hopeful
+words were alike powerless to dispel his gloom.</p>
+<p>When Aurora held aloof from him, he sent letter
+after letter of passionate pleading to her by the hand
+of the trusty Beuchling. "If you knew the tortures
+I am suffering," he wrote, "your kindness of heart
+could not resist pitying me. I was mad to declare
+my passion so brutally to you. Let me expiate my
+fault, prostrate at your feet; and, if you wish for my
+death, let me at least receive my sentence from your
+own sweet lips."</p>
+<p>To such a desperate state was Augustus brought
+within a few days of setting eyes on his new divinity!
+As for Aurora of the tender heart, her lover's distress
+thawed her more than a year of passionate protestations
+could have done. She replied, assuring him of
+her gratitude, her esteem and respect, and begging
+him to dismiss such unworthy thoughts of her. But
+she had no word of encouragement to send him in
+the note which her lover kissed so rapturously before
+placing it next his heart.</p>
+<p>So alarmed, indeed, was Aurora, that she announced
+her intention of leaving forthwith a Court in
+which she was exposed to so much danger&#8212;a project
+to which her sister gave a reluctant approval. But
+the Countess L&ouml;wenhaupt was little disposed to leave
+a Court where she at least was having such a good
+time; for she, too, had her lovers, and among them
+<a name="Page_99"></a>the Prince of F&uuml;rstenberg, the handsomest
+man in
+Saxony, whose devotion was more than agreeable to
+her. She preferred to play the part of Cupid's agent&#8212;to
+exercise her diplomacy in bringing together
+those two foolish persons, her sister and the Elector.</p>
+<p>And so skilfully did she play her part, appealing
+to Aurora's pity, and assuring Augustus of her sister's
+love in spite of her seeming coldness, that before
+many weeks had passed Aurora had yielded and was
+listening with no unwilling ear to the vows of her
+exalted lover, now transported to the seventh heaven
+of happiness. One condition she made, when their
+mutual troth was plighted, that it should, for a time
+at least, remain a secret from the Court, and to this
+the Elector gratefully assented.</p>
+<p>Such was the strange wooing of Augustus and the
+Countess Aurora, in which passion had its response
+in a pity which, in this case at least, was the parent
+of love.</p>
+<p>It was with no very light heart that Aurora set forth
+to Mauritzburg, a few days later, to keep "honeymoon
+tryst" with Augustus, who had preceded her,
+to make, as she understood, the necessary preparations
+for her reception. With her sister and a
+mounted escort of the most beautiful ladies of the
+Court, she had ridden as far as the entrance to the
+Mauritzburg forest, when her carriage suddenly came
+to a halt in front of a magnificent palace. From the
+open door emerged Diana with her attendant nymphs
+to greet her with words of welcome, and to beg
+her to tarry a while to accept the hospitality of the
+forest gods.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_100"></a>In response to this flattering invitation
+Aurora left
+her carriage and was escorted in stately procession to
+a saloon, richly painted with sylvan scenes, in which
+a sumptuous banquet was spread. No sooner were
+she and her ladies seated at the table than, to the
+strains of beautiful music, the god Pan (none other
+than the Elector himself), with his retinue of fawns
+and other richly and quaintly garbed forest gods,
+made his entry, and took his seat at the right hand
+of his goddess. Then, to the deft ministry of Diana
+and her satellites, and to the soft accompaniment of
+pipes and hautboys, the feasting began, while Pan
+whispered love to the lady for whom he had prepared
+such a charming hospitality.</p>
+<p>The banquet had scarcely come to an end when
+the jubilant sound of horns was heard from the
+forest. A stag dashed by a window in full flight,
+and Aurora and her ladies, rushing excitedly to the
+door, saw horses awaiting them for the hunt.</p>
+<p>In a moment they are mounted, and, gaily laughing,
+with Pan leading the way, they are galloping
+through the forest glades in the wake of the flying
+stag and the music of the hounds, until the stag,
+hotly pursued, dashes into a lake, in the centre of
+which is a beautiful wooded island. Dismounting,
+the ladies enter the gondolas which are so opportunely
+awaiting them, and are rowed across the strip
+of water just in time to witness the death of the
+gallant animal they have been chasing.</p>
+<p>The hunt over, Aurora and her ladies are conducted
+to the leafy heart of the island, where, as by
+the touch of a magician's wand, a gorgeous Eastern
+<a name="Page_101"></a>tent has sprung up, and here another sumptuous
+entertainment is prepared for them. Seated on
+soft-cushioned divans, in the many-hued environment
+of Oriental luxury, rare fruits and delicacies
+are brought to them in silver baskets by turbaned
+Turks. The island Sultan now appears, ablaze with
+gems, with his officers little less gorgeous than himself,
+and with deep obeisances craves permission to
+seat himself by Aurora's side, a favour which she was
+not likely to refuse to a Sultan in whom she recognised
+her lover, the Elector. Troupes of dancing-girls
+follow, and the moments fly swiftly to the
+twinkling of dainty feet, the gliding and posturing
+of supple bodies, and the strains of sensuous music.</p>
+<p>Another hour spent in the gondolas, dreamily
+gliding under the light of the moon, and horses are
+again mounted; and Aurora, with Augustus riding
+proudly by her side, heads the splendid procession
+which, with laughter, and in the gayest of spirits,
+rides forth to the Mauritzburg Castle at the close of
+a day so full of delights.</p>
+<p>"Here," was the Elector's greeting, as he conducted
+his bride to her room with its furnishing of
+silver and rich damask, and its pictured Cupid
+showering roses on the silk-curtained bed, "you are
+the Queen, and I am your slave."</p>
+<p>Such was the beginning of Aurora's reign over the
+heart of the Elector of Saxony&#8212;a reign of unclouded
+splendour and happiness for the woman in whom
+pity for her lover was soon replaced by a passion as
+ardent as his own. F&ecirc;tes and banquets and balls
+<a name="Page_102"></a>succeeded each other in swift sequence, at all
+of
+which Aurora was Queen, the focus of all eyes, and
+receiving universal homage, won no more by her
+beauty and her position as the Elector's favourite
+than by her sweetness and graciousness to the
+humblest. No mistress of a King was ever more
+beloved than this daughter of Sweden. Even the
+Elector's mother, a pattern of the most rigid propriety,
+had ever a kind word and a caress for her;
+his neglected wife made a friend and confidante of
+the woman of whom she said, "Since I must have
+a rival, I am glad she should be one so sweet and
+lovable."</p>
+<p>We must hasten over the years that followed&#8212;years
+during which Augustus had no eyes for any
+other woman than his "uncrowned Queen," and
+during which she bore him a son who, as Maurice of
+Saxony, was to win many laurels in the years to
+come. It must suffice to say that never was Royal
+liaison conducted with so much propriety, or was
+marked by so much mutual devotion and loyalty.</p>
+<p>But it was not in the nature of Augustus the Strong
+to remain always true to any woman, however charming;
+and although Aurora's reign lasted longer than
+that of any half-dozen of her rivals, it, too, had its
+ending. Within a month of the birth of her son,
+Augustus, now King of Poland, was caught in the
+toils of another enslaver, the beautiful Countess
+Esterle. Aurora realised that her sun had set, and
+relinquishing her sceptre without a murmur, she
+retired to the convent of Quedlinburg, of which
+Augustus had appointed her Abbess.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_103"></a>Thus in an atmosphere of peace and piety,
+beloved
+of all for her sweetness and charity, Aurora of
+K&ouml;nigsmarck spent her last years until the end
+came one day in the year 1728; and in the crypt
+of the convent she loved so well she sleeps her
+last sleep.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_X"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_104"></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+<h2>THE SISTER OF AN EMPEROR</h2>
+<br>
+<a name="img004"></a>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><img
+ style="width: 305px; height: 479px;" alt="DESIREE CLARY."
+ title="DESIREE CLARY." src="images/court004.jpg"><br>
+<h5>DESIREE CLARY.</h5>
+</div>
+<br>
+<p>When Napoleon Bonaparte, the shabby, sallow-faced,
+out-of-work captain of artillery, was kicking
+his heels in morose idleness at Marseilles, and whiling
+away the dull hours in making love to Desir&eacute;e Clary,
+the pretty daughter of the silk-merchant in the Rue
+des Phoc&eacute;ens, his sisters were living with their
+mother, the Signora Letizia, in a sordid fourth-floor
+apartment in a slum near the Cannebiere, and running
+wild in the Marseilles streets.</p>
+<p>Strange tales are told of those early years of the
+sisters of an Emperor-to-be&#8212;Elisa Bonaparte, future
+Grand Duchess of Tuscany; Pauline, embryo Princess
+Borghese; and Caroline, who was to wear a
+crown as Queen of Naples&#8212;high-spirited, beautiful
+girls, brimful of frolic and fun, laughing at their
+poverty, decking themselves out in cheap, home-made
+finery, and flirting outrageously with every
+good-looking young man who was willing to pay
+homage to their <i>beaux yeux</i>. If Marseilles deigned
+to notice these pretty young madcaps, it was only
+with the cold eyes of disapproval; for such "shameless
+goings-on" were little less than a scandal.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_105"></a>The pity of it was that there was no one to
+check their escapades. Their mother, the imposing
+Madame M&egrave;re of later years, seemed indifferent
+what her daughters did, so long as they left her in
+peace; their brothers, Kings-to-be, were too much
+occupied with their own love-making or their pranks
+to spare them a thought. And thus the trio of tomboys
+were left, with a loose rein, to indulge every
+impulse that entered their foolish heads. And a
+right merry time they had, with their dancing, their
+private theatricals, the fun behind the scenes, and
+their promiscuous love affairs, each serious and
+thrilling until it gave place to a successor.</p>
+<p>Of the three Bonaparte "graces" the most lovely
+by far (though each was passing fair) was Pauline,
+who, though still little more than a child, gave
+promise of that rare perfection of face and figure
+which was to make her the most beautiful woman in
+all France. "It is impossible, with either pen or
+brush," wrote one who knew her, "to do any justice
+to her charms&#8212;the brilliance of her eyes, which
+dazzled and thrilled all on whom they fell; the glory
+of her black hair, rippling in a cascade to her knees;
+the classic purity of her Grecian profile, the wild-rose
+delicacy of her complexion, the proud, dainty poise
+of her head, and the exquisite modelling of the figure
+which inspired Canova's 'Venus Victrix.'"</p>
+<p>Such was Pauline Bonaparte, whose charms,
+although then immature, played such havoc with the
+young men of Marseilles, and who thus early began
+that career of conquest which was to afford so much
+gossip for the tongue of scandal. That the winsome
+<a name="Page_106"></a>little minx had her legion of lovers from the
+day she
+set foot in Marseilles, at the age of thirteen, we know;
+but it was not until Fr&egrave;ron came on the scene that
+her volatile little heart was touched&#8212;Fr&egrave;ron, the
+handsome coxcomb and arch-revolutionary, who
+was sent to Marseilles as a Commissioner of the
+Convention.</p>
+<p>To Pauline, the gay, gallant Parisian, penniless
+adventurer though he was, was a veritable hero of
+romance; and at sight of him she completely lost her
+heart. It was a <i>grande passion</i>, which he was by no
+means slow to return. Those were delicious hours
+which Pauline spent in the company of her beloved
+"Stanislas," hours of ecstasy; and when he left
+Marseilles she pursued him with the most passionate
+protestations.</p>
+<p>"Yes," she wrote, "I swear, dear Stanislas, never
+to love any other than thee; my heart knows no
+divided allegiance. It is thine alone. Who could
+oppose the union of two souls who seek to find no
+other happiness than in a mutual love?" And again,
+"Thou knowest how I worship thee. It is not possible
+for Paulette to live apart from her adored Stanislas.
+I love thee for ever, most passionately, my
+beautiful god, my adorable one&#8212;I love thee, love
+thee, love thee!"</p>
+<p>In such hot words this child of fifteen poured out
+her soul to the Paris dandy. "Neither mamma,"
+she vowed, "nor anyone in the world shall come
+between us." But Pauline had not counted on her
+brother Napoleon, whose foot was now placed on the
+ladder of ambition, at the top of which was an Im<a name="Page_107"></a>perial
+crown, and who had other designs for his sister
+than to marry her to a penniless nobody. In vain
+did Pauline rage and weep, and declare that "she
+would die&#8212;<i>voil&agrave; tout!</i>" Napoleon was inexorable;
+and the flower of her first romance was trodden ruthlessly
+under his feet.</p>
+<p>When Junot, his own aide-de-camp, next came
+awooing Pauline, he was equally obdurate. "No,"
+he said to the young soldier; "you have nothing, she
+has nothing. And what is twice nothing?" And
+thus lover number two was sent away disconsolate.</p>
+<p>Napoleon's sun was now in the ascendant, and his
+family were basking in its rays. From the Marseilles
+slums they were transported first to a sumptuous
+villa at Antibes; then to the Castle of Montebello, at
+Naples. The days of poverty were gone like an evil
+dream; the sisters of the famous General and coming
+Emperor were now young ladies of fashion, courted
+and fawned on. Their lovers were not Marseilles
+tradesmen or obscure soldiers and journalists (like
+Junot and Fr&egrave;ron), but brilliant Generals and men
+of the great world; and among them Napoleon now
+sought a husband for his prettiest and most irresponsible
+sister.</p>
+<p>This, however, proved no easy task. When he
+offered her to his favourite General, Marmont, he
+was met with a polite refusal. "She is indeed charming
+and lovely," said Marmont; "but I fear I could
+not make her happy." Then, waxing bolder, he continued:
+"I have dreams of domestic happiness, of
+fidelity, virtue; and these dreams I can scarcely
+hope to realise in your sister." Albert Permon,
+<a name="Page_108"></a>Napoleon's old schoolfellow, next declined the
+honour of Pauline's hand, although it held the
+bait of a high office and splendid fortune.</p>
+<p>The explanation of these refusals is not far to seek
+if we believe Arnault's description of Pauline&#8212;"An
+extraordinary combination of the most faultless
+physical beauty and the oddest moral laxity. She
+had no more manners than a schoolgirl&#8212;she talked
+incoherently, giggled at everything and nothing,
+mimicked the most serious personages, put out her
+tongue at her sister-in-law.... She was a good
+child naturally rather than voluntarily, for she had
+no principles."</p>
+<p>But Pauline was not to wait long, after all, for a
+husband. Among the many men who fluttered round
+her, willing to woo if not to wed the empty-headed
+beauty, was General Leclerc, young and rich, but
+weak in body and mind, "a quiet, insignificant-looking
+man," who at least loved her passionately,
+and would make a pliant husband to the capricious
+little autocrat. And we may be sure Napoleon
+heaved a sigh of relief when his madcap sister was
+safely tied to her weak-kneed General.</p>
+<p>Pauline was at last free to conduct her flirtations
+secure from the frowns of the brother she both feared
+and adored, and she seems to have made excellent
+use of her opportunities; and, what was even more
+to her, to encourage to the full her passion for finery.
+Dress and love filled her whole life; and while her
+idolatrous husband lavishly supplied the former, he
+turned a conveniently blind eye to the latter.</p>
+<p>Remarkable stories are told of Pauline's extrava<a name="Page_109"></a>gant
+and daring costumes at this time. Thus, at a
+great ball in Madame Permon's Paris mansion, she
+appeared in a dress of classic scantiness of Indian
+muslin, ornamented with gold palm leaves. Beneath
+her breasts was a cincture of gold, with a gorgeous
+jewelled clasp; and her head was wreathed with
+bands spotted like a leopard's skin, and adorned with
+bunches of gold grapes.</p>
+<p>When this bewitching Bacchante made her appearance
+in the ballroom the sensation she created was so
+great that the dancing stopped instantly; women and
+men alike climbed on chairs to catch a glimpse of
+the rare and radiant vision, and murmurs of admiration
+and envy ran round the <i>salon</i>. Her triumph
+was complete. In the hush that followed, a voice
+was heard: "<i>Quel dommage!</i> How lovely she would
+be, if it weren't for her ears. If I had such ears, I
+would cut them off, or hide them." Pauline heard
+the cruel words. The flush of mortification and
+anger flamed in her cheeks; she burst into tears and
+walked out of the room. Madame de Coutades, her
+most jealous rival, had found a rich revenge.</p>
+<p>General Leclerc did not live long to play the slave
+to his little autocrat; and when he died at San
+Domingo, the beautiful widow returned to France,
+accompanied by his embalmed body, with her glorious
+hair, which she had cut off for the purpose,
+wreathing his head! She had not, however, worn
+her weeds many months before she was once more
+surrounded by her court of lovers&#8212;actors, soldiers,
+singers, on each of whom in turn she lavished her
+smiles; and such time as she could spare from their
+<a name="Page_110"></a>flatteries and ogling she spent at the
+card-table, with
+fortune-tellers, or, chief joy of all, in decking her
+beauty with wondrous dresses and jewels.</p>
+<p>But the charming widow, sister of the great Napoleon,
+was not long to be left unclaimed; and this
+time the choice fell on Prince Camillo Borghese,
+a handsome, black-haired Italian, who allied to a
+head as vain and empty as her own the physical
+graces and gifts of an Admirable Crichton, and
+who, moreover, was lord of all the famed Borghese
+riches.</p>
+<p>Pauline had now reached dizzy heights, undreamed
+of in the days, only ten short years earlier, when she
+was coquetting in home-made finery with the young
+tradesmen of Marseilles. She was a Princess, bearing
+the greatest name in all Italy; and to this dignity
+her gratified brother added that of Princess of Gustalla.
+All the world-famous Borghese jewels were
+hers to deck her beauty with&#8212;a small Golconda of
+priceless gems; there was gold galore to satisfy her
+most extravagant whims; and she was still young&#8212;only
+twenty-five&#8212;and in the very zenith of her
+loveliness.</p>
+<p>Picture, then, the pride with which, one early day
+of her new bridehood, she drove to the Palace of St
+Cloud in the gorgeous Borghese State carriage,
+behind six horses, and with an escort of torch-bearers,
+to pay a formal call on her sister-in-law, Josephine,
+Empress-to-be. She had decked herself in a wonderful
+creation of green velvet; she was ablaze from
+head to foot with the Borghese diamonds. Such a
+dazzling vision could not fail to fill Josephine with
+<a name="Page_111"></a>envy&#8212;Josephine, who had hitherto treated her
+with
+such haughty patronage.</p>
+<p>As she sailed into the <i>salon</i> in all her Queen of
+Sheba splendour, it was to be greeted by her sister-in-law
+in a modest dress of muslin, without a solitary
+gem to relieve its simplicity; and&#8212;horror!&#8212;to find
+that the room had been re-decorated in blue by the
+artful Josephine&#8212;a colour absolutely fatal to her
+green magnificence! It was thus a very disgusted
+Princess who made her early exit from the palace
+between a double line of bowing flunkeys, masking
+her anger behind an affectation of ultra-Royal
+dignity.</p>
+<p>Still, Pauline was now a <i>grande dame</i> indeed, who
+could really afford to patronise even Napoleon's
+wife. Her Court was more splendid than that of
+Josephine. She had lovers by the score&#8212;from
+Blanguini, who composed his most exquisite songs
+to sing for her ears alone, to Forbin, her artist Chamberlain,
+whose brushes she inspired in a hundred
+paintings of her lovely self in as many unconventional
+guises. Her caskets of jewels were matched
+by the most wonderful collection of dresses in France,
+the richest and daintiest confections, from pearl
+embroidered ball-gowns which cost twenty thousand
+francs to the mauve and silver in which she went
+a-hunting in the forest of Fontainebleau. At Petit
+Trianon and in the Faubourg St Honor&eacute;, she had
+palaces that were dreams of beauty and luxury. The
+only thorn in her bed of roses was, in fact, her husband,
+the Prince, the very sight of whom was sufficient
+to spoil a day for her.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_112"></a>When, at Napoleon's bidding, she accompanied
+Borghese to his Governorship beyond the Alps, she
+took in her train seven wagon-loads of finery. At
+Turin she held the Court of a Queen, to which
+the Prince was only admitted on sufferance. Royal
+visits, dinners, dances, receptions followed one another
+in dazzling succession; behind her chair, at
+dinner or reception, always stood two gigantic
+negroes, crowned with ostrich plumes. She was
+now "sister of the Emperor," and all the world
+should know it!</p>
+<p>If only she could escape from her detested husband
+she would be the happiest woman on earth. But
+Napoleon on this point was adamant. In her rage
+and rebellion she tore her hair, rolled on the floor,
+took drugs to make her ill; and at last so succeeded
+in alarming her Imperial brother that he summoned
+her back to France, where her army of lovers gave
+her a warm welcome, and where she could indulge
+in any vanity and folly unchecked.</p>
+<p>Matters were now hastening to a tragic climax for
+Napoleon and the family he had raised from slumdom
+in Marseilles to crowns and coronets. Josephine
+had been divorced, to Pauline's undisguised joy; and
+her place had been taken by Marie Louise, the proud
+Austrian, whom she liked at least as little. When
+Napoleon fell from his throne, she alone of all his
+sisters helped to cheer his exile in Elba; for the
+brother she loved and feared was the only man to
+whom Pauline's fickle heart was ever true. She
+even stripped herself of all her jewels to make the
+way smooth back to his crown. And when at last
+<a name="Page_113"></a>news came to her at Rome of his death at St
+Helena
+it was she who shed the bitterest tears and refused
+to be comforted. That an empire was lost, was
+nothing compared with the loss of the brother who
+had always been so lenient to her failings, so responsive
+to her love.</p>
+<p>Two years later her own end came at Florence.
+When she felt the cold hand of death on her, she
+called feebly for a mirror, that she might look for the
+last time on her beauty. "Thank God," she whispered,
+as she gazed, "I am still lovely! I am ready
+to die." A few moments later, with the mirror still
+clutched in her hand, and her eyes still feasting on
+the charms which time and death itself were powerless
+to dim, died Pauline Bonaparte, sister of an
+Emperor and herself an Empress by the right of her
+incomparable beauty.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XI"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_114"></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+<h2>A SIREN OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY</h2>
+<p>When Wilhelmine Encke first opened her eyes on
+the world one day in the year 1754, he would have
+been a bold prophet who would have predicted that
+she would one day be the uncrowned Queen of the
+Court of Russia, <i>plus Reine que la Reine</i>, and that
+her children would have in their veins the proudest
+blood in Europe. Such a prophecy might well have
+been laughed to scorn, for little Wilhelmine had as
+obscure a cradle as almost any infant in all Prussia.
+Her father was an army bugler, who wore private's
+uniform in Frederick the Great's army; and her early
+years were to be spent playing with other soldiers'
+children in the sordid environment of Berlin barracks.</p>
+<p>When her father turned his back on the army, while
+Wilhelmine was still nursing her dolls, it was to play
+the humble r&ocirc;le of landlord of a small tavern, from
+which he was lured by the bait of a place as French-horn
+player in Frederick's private band; and the goal
+of his modest ambition was reached when he was
+appointed trumpeter to the King.</p>
+<p>This was Herr Encke's position when the curtain
+rises on our story at Potsdam, and shows us Wilhel<a name="Page_115"></a>mine,
+an unattractive maid of ten, the Cinderella of
+her family, for whom there seemed no better prospect
+than a soldier-husband, if indeed she were
+lucky enough to capture him. She was, in fact, the
+"ugly duckling" of a good-looking family, removed
+by a whole world from her beautiful eldest sister
+Charlotte, who counted among her many admirers
+no less exalted a wooer than Prince Frederick
+William, the King's nephew and heir to his throne.</p>
+<p>There was, indeed, no more beautiful or haughty
+damsel in all Potsdam than this trumpeter's daughter
+who had caught the amorous fancy of the Prince,
+then, as to his last day, the slave of every pretty face
+that crossed his path. But Charlotte Encke was
+much too imperious a young lady to hold her Royal
+lover long in fetters. He quickly wearied of her
+caprices, her petulances, and her exhibitions of temper;
+and the climax came one day when in a fit of
+anger she struck her little sister, in his presence, and
+he took up the cudgels for Wilhelmine.</p>
+<p>This was the last straw for the disillusioned and
+disgusted Prince, who sent Charlotte off to Paris,
+where as the Countess Matushke she played the fine
+lady at her lover's cost, while the Prince took her
+Cinderella sister under his protection. He took her
+education into his own hands, provided her with
+masters to teach her a wide range of accomplishments,
+from languages to dancing and deportment,
+while he himself gave her lessons in history and
+geography. Nor did he lack the reward of his benevolent
+offices; for Wilhelmine, under his ministrations,
+not only developed rare gifts and graces of
+<a name="Page_116"></a>mind, like many another Cinderella before her;
+she
+blossomed into a rose of girlhood, more beautiful
+even than her imperious sister, and with a sweetness
+of character and a winsomeness which Charlotte could
+never have attained.</p>
+<p>On her part, gratitude to her benefactor rapidly
+grew into love for the handsome and courtly Prince;
+on his, sympathy for the ill-used Cinderella, into a
+passion for the lovely maiden hovering on the verge
+of a still more beautiful womanhood. It was a mutual
+passion, strong and deep, which now linked the
+widely contrasted lives of the King-to-be and the
+trumpeter's daughter&#8212;a passion which, with each,
+was to last as long as life itself.</p>
+<p>Wilhelmine was now formally installed in the place
+of the deposed Charlotte as favourite of the heir to
+the throne; and idyllic years followed, during which
+she gave pledges of her love to the man who was her
+husband in all but name. That her purse was often
+empty was a matter to smile at; that she had to act
+as "breadwinner" to her family, and was at times
+reduced to such straits that she was obliged to pawn
+some of her small stock of jewellery in order to provide
+her lover with a supper, was a bagatelle. She
+was the happiest young woman in Prussia.</p>
+<p>Even what seemed to be a crowning disaster, fortune
+turned into a boon for her. When news of this
+unlicensed love-making came to the King's ears, he
+was furious. It was intolerable that the destined
+ruler of a great and powerful nation should be
+governed and duped by a woman of the people. He
+gave his nephew a sound rating&#8212;alike for his extra<a name="Page_117"></a>vagance
+and his amour; and packed off Wilhelmine
+to join her sister in Paris.</p>
+<p>But, for once, Frederick found that he had made
+a mistake. The Prince, robbed of the woman he
+loved, took the bit in his teeth, and plunged so deeply
+into extravagant dallying with ballet-dancers and
+stars of the opera that the King was glad to choose
+the lesser evil, and to summon Wilhelmine back to
+her Prince's arms. One stipulation only he made,
+that she should make her home away from the capital
+and the dangerous allurements which his nephew
+found there.</p>
+<p>Now at last we find Cinderella happily installed,
+with the King's august approval, in a beautiful home
+which has since blossomed into the splendours of
+Charlottenburg. Here she gave birth to a son, whom
+Frederick dubbed Count de la Marke in his nurse's
+arms, but who was fated never to leave his cradle.
+This child of love, the idol of his parents, sleeps in
+a splendid mausoleum in the great Protestant Church
+of Berlin.</p>
+<p>As a sop to Prussian morality and to make the old
+King quite easy, a complaisant husband was now
+found for the Prince's favourite in his chamberlain,
+Herr Rietz, son of a palace gardener; and Frederick
+William himself looked on while the woman he loved,
+the mother of his children, was converted by a few
+priestly words into a "respectable married woman"&#8212;only
+to leave the altar on his own arm, his wife in
+the eyes of the world.</p>
+<p>The time was now drawing near when Wilhelmine
+was to reach the zenith of her adventurous life. One
+<a name="Page_118"></a>August day in 1786 Frederick the Great drew his
+last breath in the Potsdam Palace, and his nephew
+awoke to be greeted by his chamberlain as "Your
+Majesty." The trumpeter's daughter was at last a
+Queen, in fact, if not in name, more secure in
+her husband's love than ever, and with long years of
+splendour and happiness before her. That his fancy,
+ever wayward, flitted to other women as fair as herself,
+did not trouble her a whit. Like Madame de
+Pompadour, she was prepared even to encourage such
+rivalry, so long as the first place (and this she knew)
+in her husband's heart was unassailably her own.</p>
+<p>Picture our Cinderella now in all her new splendours,
+moving as a Queen among her courtiers,
+receiving the homage of princes and ambassadors as
+her right, making her voice heard in the Council
+Chamber, and holding her <i>salon</i>, to which all the
+great ones of the earth flocked to pay tribute to her
+beauty and her gifts of mind. It was a strange transformation
+from the barracks-kitchen to the Queendom
+of one of the greatest Courts of Europe; but no
+Queen cradled in a palace ever wore her honours
+with greater dignity, grace, and simplicity than this
+daughter of an army bandsman.</p>
+<p>The days of the empty purse were, of course, at
+an end. She had now her ten thousand francs a
+month for "pin-money," her luxuriously appointed
+palace at Charlottenburg, and her Berlin mansion,
+"Unter den Linden," with its private theatre, in
+which she and her Royal lover, surrounded by their
+brilliant Court, applauded the greatest actors from
+Paris and Vienna. It is said that many of these
+<a name="Page_119"></a>stage-plays were of questionable decency, with
+more
+than a suggestion of the garden of Eden in them;
+but this is an aspersion which Madame de Rietz
+indignantly repudiates in her "Memoirs."</p>
+<p>While Wilhelmine was thus happy in her Court
+magnificence, varied by days of "delightful repose,"
+at Charlottenburg, France was in the throes of her
+Revolution, drenched with the blood of her greatest
+men and fairest women; her King had lost his crown
+and his head with it; and Europe was in arms against
+her. When Frederick William joined his army
+camped on the Rhine bank, Wilhelmine was by his
+side to counsel him as he wavered between war and
+peace. The fate of the coalition against France was
+practically in the hands of the trumpeter's daughter,
+whose voice was all for peace. "What matters it,"
+she said, "how France is governed? Let her
+manage her own affairs, and let Europe be saved
+from the horrors of bloodshed."</p>
+<p>In vain did the envoys of Spain and Italy, Austria
+and England, practise all their diplomacy to place
+her influence in the scale of war. When Lord Henry
+Spencer offered her a hundred thousand guineas if
+she would dissuade her husband from concluding a
+treaty with France, she turned a deaf ear to all his
+pleading and arguments. Such influence as she possessed
+should be exercised in the interests of peace,
+and thus it was that the vacillating King deserted his
+allies, and signed the Treaty of B&acirc;le, in 1795.</p>
+<p>Such was the triumphant issue of Madame Rietz's
+intervention in the affairs of Europe; such the proof
+she gave to the world of her conquest of a King. It
+<a name="Page_120"></a>was thus with a light heart that she turned her
+back
+on the Rhine camp; and with her husband's children
+and a splendid retinue set out on her journey to
+Italy, to see which was the greatest ambition of her
+life. At the Austrian Court she was coldly received,
+it is true, thanks to her part in the Treaty of B&acirc;le;
+but in Italy she was greeted as a Queen. At
+Naples Queen Caroline received her as a sister; the
+trumpeter's daughter was the brilliant centre of f&ecirc;tes
+and banquets and receptions such as might have
+gratified the vanity of an Empress: while at Florence
+she spent days of ideal happiness under the blue
+sky of Italy and among her beauties of Nature
+and Art.</p>
+<p>It was at Venice that she wrote to her King lover,
+"Your Majesty knows well that, for myself, I place
+no value on the foolish vanities of Court etiquette;
+but I am placed in an awkward position by my daughter
+being raised to the rank of Countess, while I am
+still in the lowly position of a bourgeoise." She had,
+in fact, always declined the honour of a title, which
+Frederick William had so often begged her to accept;
+and it was only for her daughter's sake, when the
+question of an alliance between the young Countess
+de la Marke and Lord Bristol's heir arose, that she
+at last stooped to ask for what she had so long
+refused.</p>
+<p>A few weeks later her brother, the King's equerry,
+placed in her hands the patent which made her
+Countess Lichtenau, with the right to bear on her
+shield of arms the Prussian eagle and the Royal
+crown.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_121"></a>Wherever the Countess (as we must now call
+her)
+went on her Italian tour she drew men to her feet
+by the magnetism of her beauty, who would have
+paid no homage to her as <i>ch&egrave;re amie</i> of a King; for
+she was now in the early thirties, in the full bloom
+of the loveliness that had its obscure budding in the
+Potsdam barrack-rooms. Young and old were
+equally powerless to resist her fascinations. She
+had, indeed, no more ardent slave and admirer than
+my Lord Bristol, the octogenarian Bishop of Londonderry,
+whose passion for the Countess, young
+enough to be his granddaughter, was that of a lovesick
+youth.</p>
+<p>From "dear Countess and adorable friend," he
+quickly leaps in his letters to "my dear Wilhelmine."
+He looks forward with the impatience of a boy to
+seeing her at "that terrestrial paradise which is
+called Naples, where we shall enjoy perpetual spring
+and spend delightful days in listening to the divine
+<i>Paesiello</i>. Do you know," he adds, "I passed two
+hours of real delight this morning in simply contemplating
+your elegant bedroom where only the
+elegant sleeper was missing."</p>
+<p>"It is in <i>Crocelle</i>," he writes a little later, "that
+you will make people happy by your presence, and
+where you will recuperate your health, regain your
+gaiety, and forget an Irishman; and a holy Bishop,
+more worthy of your affection, on account of the
+deep attachment he has for you, will take his
+place."</p>
+<p>In June, 1796, this senile lover writes, "In an
+hour I depart for Germany; and, as the wind is
+<a name="Page_122"></a>north, with every step I take I shall say: 'This
+breeze comes perhaps from her; it has touched her
+rosy lips and mingled its scent with the perfume of
+her breath which I shall inhale, the perfume of the
+breath of my dear Wilhelmine.'"</p>
+<p>But these days of dallying with her legion of
+lovers, of regal f&ecirc;tes and pleasure-chasing, were
+brought to an abrupt conclusion when news came to
+her at Venice that her "husband," the King, was
+dying, with the Royal family by his bedside awaiting
+the end. Such news, with all its import of sorrow
+and tragedy, set the Countess racing across the
+Continent, fast as horses could carry her, to the side
+of her beloved King, whom she found, if not <i>in
+extremis</i>, "very dangerously ill and pitifully
+changed" from the robust man she had left. Her
+return, however, did more for him than all the skill
+of his doctors. It gave him a new lease of life,
+in which her presence brought happiness into
+days which, none knew better than himself, were
+numbered.</p>
+<p>For more than a year the Countess was his tender
+nurse and constant companion, ministering to his
+comfort and arranging plays and tableaux for his
+entertainment. She watched over him as jealously
+as any mother over her dying child; but all her
+devotion could not stay the steps of death, which
+every day brought nearer. As the inevitable end
+approached, her friends warned her to leave Charlottenburg
+while the opportunity was still hers&#8212;to
+escape with her jewels and her money (a fortune of
+&pound;150,000)&#8212;but to all such urging she was deaf.
+<a name="Page_123"></a>She would stay by her lover's side to the last,
+though
+she well knew the danger of delay.</p>
+<p>One November day in 1797 Frederick William
+made his last public appearance at a banquet, with
+the Countess at his right hand; and seldom has
+festival had such a setting in tragedy. "None of
+the guests," we are told, "uttered a word or ate a
+mouthful of anything; the plates were cleared at
+the hasty ringing of a bell. A convulsive movement
+made by the sick man showed that he was suffering
+agonies. Before half-past nine every guest had
+left, greatly troubled. The majority of those who had
+been present never saw the unfortunate monarch
+again. They all shared the same presentiment of
+disaster, and wept."</p>
+<p>From that night the King was dead, even to his
+own Court. The gates of his palace were closed
+against the world, and none were allowed to approach
+the chamber in which his life was ebbing
+away, save the Countess, his nurse, and his doctors.
+Even his children were refused admittance to his
+presence. As the Marquis de Saint Mexent said,
+"The King of Prussia ends his days as though
+he were a rich benefactor. All the relations are
+excluded by the housekeeper."</p>
+<p>A few days before the end came the Countess was
+seen to leave the palace, carrying a large red portfolio&#8212;a
+suspicious circumstance which the Crown
+Prince's spies promptly reported to their master.
+There could be only one inference&#8212;she had been
+caught in the act of stealing State papers, a crime
+for which she would have to pay a heavy price as
+<a name="Page_124"></a>soon as her protector was no more! As a matter
+of fact the portfolio contained nothing more secret
+or valuable than the letters she had written to
+the King during the twenty-seven years of their
+romance, letters which, after reading, she consigned
+to the flames in her boudoir within an hour of the
+suspected theft of State documents.</p>
+<p>A few days later, on the night of the 16th of
+November (1797), the King entered on his "death
+agony," one fit of suffocation succeeding another,
+until the Countess, unable to bear any longer the
+sight of such suffering, was carried away in violent
+convulsions. She saw him no more; for by seven
+o'clock in the morning Frederick William had
+found release from his agony in death, and his son
+had begun to reign in his stead.</p>
+<p>At last the long-delayed hour of revenge had come
+to Frederick William III., who had always regarded
+his father's favourite as an enemy; and his vengeance
+was swift to strike. Before the late King's body
+was cold, his successor's emissaries appeared at the
+palace door, Unter den Linden, with orders to search
+her papers and to demand the keys of every desk
+and cupboard. Even then she scorned to fly before
+the storm which she knew was breaking. For three
+days and nights her carriage stood at her gates ready
+to take her away to safety; but she refused to move
+a step.</p>
+<p>Then one morning, before she had left her bed,
+a major of the guards, with a posse of soldiers,
+appeared at her bedroom door armed with a warrant
+for her arrest; and for many weeks she was a closely
+<a name="Page_125"></a>guarded prisoner in her own house, subject to
+daily
+insults and indignities from men who, a few weeks
+earlier, had saluted her as a Queen.</p>
+<p>At the trial which followed some very grave
+indictments were preferred against her. She was
+charged with having betrayed State secrets; with
+having robbed the Royal Exchequer; stolen the
+King's portfolio; and removed the priceless solitaire
+diamond from his crown, and the very rings from
+his fingers as he lay dying. To these and other
+equally grave charges the Countess gave a dignified
+denial, which the evidence she was able to produce
+supported. The diamond and the rings were, in fact,
+discovered in places indicated by her where they had
+been put, by the King's orders, for safe custody.</p>
+<p>The trial had a happier ending than, from the
+malignity of her enemies, especially of the King,
+might have been expected. After three months of
+durance she was removed to a Silesian fortress. Her
+houses and lands were taken from her; but her furniture
+and jewels were left untouched, and with them
+she was allowed to enjoy a pension of four thousand
+thalers a year. Such was the judgment of a Court
+which proved more merciful than she had perhaps a
+right to expect. And two months later, the influence
+and pleading of her friends set her free from her
+fortress-prison to spend her life where and as she
+would.</p>
+<p>The sun of her splendour had indeed set, but many
+years of peaceful and not unhappy life remained for
+our ex-Queen, who was still in the prime of her
+womanhood and beauty and with the magnetism
+<a name="Page_126"></a>that, to her last day, brought men to her feet.
+At
+fifty she was able to inspire such passion in the breast
+of a young artist, Francis Holbein, that he asked
+and won her hand in marriage. But this romance
+was short-lived, for within a year he left her, to
+spend the remainder of her days in Paris, Vienna,
+and her native Prussia. Here her adventurous
+career closed in such obscurity, at the age of sixty-eight,
+that even those who ministered to her last
+moments were unaware that the dying woman was
+the Countess who had played so dazzling a part a
+generation earlier, as favourite of the King of
+Prussia and Queen of her loveliest women.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_127"></a>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+<h2>THE CORSICAN AND THE CREOLE</h2>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><a name="img005"></a><img
+ style="width: 283px; height: 437px;"
+ alt="Jos&eacute;phine de Beauharnais, par Proud'hon."
+ title="Jos&eacute;phine de Beauharnais, par Proud'hon."
+ src="images/court005.jpg"><br>
+<h5>JOSEPHINE DE BEAUHARNAIS.</h5>
+</div>
+<br>
+<p>Of the many women who succeeded one another
+with such bewildering rapidity in the favour of the
+first Napoleon, from Desir&eacute;e Clary, daughter of the
+Marseilles silk-merchant, the "little wife" of his days
+of obscurity, to Madame Walewska, the beautiful
+Pole, who so fruitlessly bartered her charms for her
+country's salvation, only one really captured his
+fickle heart&#8212;Josephine de Beauharnais, the woman
+whom he raised to the splendour of an Imperial
+crown, only to fling her aside when she no longer
+served the purposes of his ambition.</p>
+<p>It was one October day in the year 1795 that
+Josephine, Vicomtesse de Beauharnais, first cast the
+spell of her beauty on the "ugly little Corsican,"
+who had then got his foot well planted on the ladder,
+at the summit of which was his crown of empire.
+At twenty-six, the man who, but a little earlier, was
+an out-of-work captain, eating his heart out in a
+Marseilles slum, was General-in-Chief of the armies
+of France, with the disarmed rebels of Paris grovelling
+at his feet.</p>
+<p>One day a handsome boy came to him, craving
+<a name="Page_128"></a>permission to retain the sword his father had
+won, a
+favour which the General, pleased by the boy's frankness
+and manliness, granted. The next day the
+young rebel's mother presented herself to thank him
+with gracious words for his kindness to her son&#8212;a
+creature of another world than his, with a beauty,
+grace and refinement which were a new revelation
+to his bourgeois eyes.</p>
+<p>The fair vision haunted him; the music of her
+voice lingered in his ears. He must see her again.
+And, before another day had passed, we find the
+pale-faced, grim Corsican, with the burning eyes,
+sitting awkwardly on a horse-hair chair of Madame's
+dining-room in her small house in the Rue Chantereine,
+nervously awaiting the entry of the Vicomtesse
+who had already played such havoc with his
+peace of mind. And when at last she made her
+appearance, few would have recognised in the man,
+who made his shy, awkward bow, the famous General
+with whose name the whole of France was ringing.</p>
+<p>It was little wonder, perhaps, that the little Corsican's
+heart went pit-a-pat, or that his knees trembled
+under him, for the lady whose smile and the touch
+of whose hand sent a thrill through him, was indeed,
+to quote his own words, "beautiful as a dream."
+From the chestnut hair which rippled over her small,
+proudly poised head to the arch of her tiny, dainty
+feet, "made for homage and for kisses," she was, "all
+glorious without." There was witchery in every
+part of her&#8212;in the rich colour that mantled in her
+cheeks; the sweet brown eyes that looked out between
+long-fringed eyelids; the small, delicate nose;
+"<a name="Page_129"></a>the nostrils quivering at the least emotion";
+the
+exquisite lines of the tall, supple figure, instinct with
+grace in every moment; and, above all, in the seductive
+music of a voice, every note of which was a
+caress.</p>
+<p>Sixteen years earlier, Josephine had come from
+Martinique to Paris as bride of the Vicomte de Beauharnais,
+with whom she had led a more or less unhappy
+life, until the guillotine of the Revolution left
+her a widow, with two children and an empty purse.
+But even this crowning calamity was powerless to
+crush the sunny-hearted Creole, who merely laughed
+at the load of debts which piled themselves up
+around her. A little of the wreckage of her husband's
+fortune had been rescued for her by influential
+friends; but this had disappeared long before
+Napoleon crossed her path. And at last the light-hearted
+widow realised that if she had a card left to
+play, she must play it quickly.</p>
+<p>Here then was her opportunity. The little
+General was obviously a slave at her feet; he was
+already a great man, destined to be still greater; and
+if he was bourgeois to his coarse finger-tips, he could
+at least serve as a stepping-stone to raise her from
+poverty and obscurity.</p>
+<p>As for Napoleon, he was a vanquished man&#8212;and
+he knew it&#8212;before ever he set foot in Madame's
+modest dining-room. When he left, he "trod on
+air," for the Vicomtesse had been more than gracious
+to him. The next day he was drawn as by a magnet
+to the Rue Chantereine, and the next and the next,
+each interview with his divinity forging fresh links
+<a name="Page_130"></a>for the chain that bound him; and at each visit
+he
+met under Madame's roof some of the great ones of
+that other world in which Josephine moved, the old
+<i>noblesse</i> of France&#8212;who paid her the homage due
+to a Queen.</p>
+<p>Thus vanity and ambition fed the flames of the
+passion which was consuming him; and within a
+fortnight he had laid his heart and his fortune, which
+at the time consisted of "his personal wardrobe and
+his military accoutrements" at the feet of the Creole
+widow; and one March day in 1796 Napoleon
+Bonaparte, General, and Josephine de Beauharnais,
+were made one by a registrar who obligingly described
+the bride as twenty-nine (thus robbing her of
+three years), and added two to the bridegroom's
+twenty-six years.</p>
+<p>After two days of rapturous honeymooning Napoleon
+was on his way to join his army in Italy, as
+reluctant a bridegroom as ever left Cupid at the bidding
+of Mars. At every change of horses during the
+long journey he dispatched letters to the wife he had
+left behind&#8212;letters full of passion and yearning. In
+one of them he wrote, "When I am tempted to curse
+my fate, I place my hand on my heart and find your
+portrait there. As I gaze at it I am filled with a joy
+unutterable. Life seems to hold no pain, save that
+of severance from my beloved."</p>
+<p>At Nice, amid all the labours and anxieties of
+organising his rabble army for a campaign, his
+thoughts are always taking wings to her; her portrait
+is ever in his hand. He says his prayers before
+it; and, when once he accidentally broke the glass,
+<a name="Page_131"></a>he was in an agony of despair and superstitious
+foreboding.
+His one cry was, "Come to me! Come to
+my heart and to my arms. Oh, that you had wings!"</p>
+<p>Even when flushed with the surrender of Piedmont
+after a fortnight's brilliant fighting, in which he had
+won half a dozen battles and reaped twenty-one standards,
+he would have bartered all his laurels for a sight
+of the woman he loved so passionately. But while he
+was thus yearning for her in distant Italy, Madame
+was much too happy in her beloved Paris to lend an
+ear to his pleadings. As wife of the great Napoleon
+she was a veritable Queen, fawned on and flattered
+by all the great ones in the capital. Hers was the
+place of honour at every f&ecirc;te and banquet; the banners
+her husband had captured were presented to
+her amid a tumult of acclamation; when she entered
+a theatre the entire house rose to greet her with
+cheers. She was thus in no mood to leave her
+Queendom for the arms of her husband, whose
+unattractive person and clumsy ardour only repelled
+her.</p>
+<p>When his letters calling her to him became more
+and more imperative, she could no longer ignore
+them. But she could, at least, invent an excellent
+excuse for her tarrying. She wrote to tell him that
+she was expecting to become a mother. This at
+least would put a stop to his importunity. And it
+did. Napoleon was full of delight&#8212;and self-reproach
+at the joyful news. "Forgive me, my
+beloved," he wrote. "How can I ever atone? You
+were ill and I accused you of lingering in Paris. My
+love robs me of my reason, and I shall never regain
+<a name="Page_132"></a>it.... A child, sweet as its mother, is soon to
+lie
+in your arms. Oh! that I could be with you, even
+if only for one day!"</p>
+<p>To his brother Joseph he writes in a similar strain:
+"The thought of her illness drives me mad. I long
+to see her, to hold her in my arms. I love her so
+madly, I cannot live without her. If she were to
+die, I should have absolutely nothing left to live for."</p>
+<p>When, however, he learns that Madame's illness
+is not sufficient to interfere with her Paris gaieties,
+a different mood seizes him. Jealousy and anger
+take the place of anxious sympathy. He insists
+that she shall join him&#8212;threatens to resign his command
+if she refuses. Josephine no longer dares to
+keep up her deception. She must obey. And thus,
+in a flood of angry tears, we see her starting on her
+long journey to Italy, in company with her dog, her
+maid, and a brilliant escort of officers. Arrived at
+Milan, she was welcomed by Napoleon with open
+arms; but "after two days of rapture and caresses,"
+he was face to face with the great crisis of Castiglione.
+His army was in imminent danger of annihilation;
+his own fate and fortune trembled in the
+balance. Nothing short of a miracle could save
+him; and on the third day of his new honeymoon
+he was back again in the field at grips with fate.</p>
+<p>But even at this supreme crisis he found time to
+write daily letters to the dear one who was awaiting
+the issue in Milan, begging her to share his life.
+"Your tears," he writes, "drive me to distraction;
+they set my blood on fire. Come to me here, that
+at least we may be able to say before we die we had
+<a name="Page_133"></a>so many days of happiness." Thus he pleads in
+letter after letter until Josephine, for very shame, is
+forced to yield, and to return to her husband, who,
+as Masson tells us, "was all day at her feet as before
+some divinity."</p>
+<p>Such days of bliss were, however, few and far between
+for the man who was now in the throes of a
+Titanic struggle, on the issue of which his fortunes
+and those of France hung. But when duty took him
+into danger where his lady could not follow, she
+found ample solace. Monsieur Charles, Leclerc's
+adjutant, was all the cavalier she needed&#8212;an Adonis
+for beauty, a Hercules for strength, the handsomest
+soldier in Napoleon's army, a past-master in all the
+arts of love-making. There was no dull moment
+for Josephine with such a squire at her elbow to
+pour flatteries into her ears and to entertain her with
+his clever tongue.</p>
+<p>But Monsieur Charles had short shrift when Napoleon's
+jealousy was aroused. He was quickly sent
+packing to Paris; and Josephine was left to write
+to her aunt, "I am bored to extinction." She was
+weary of her husband's love-rhapsodies, disgusted
+with the crudities of his passion. She had, however,
+a solace in the homage paid to her everywhere. At
+Genoa she was received as a Queen; at Florence the
+Grand Duke called her "cousin"; the entire army,
+from General to private, was under the spell of
+her beauty and the graciousness that captivated all
+hearts. She was, too, reaping a rich harvest of costly
+presents and bribes, from all who sought to win
+Napoleon's favour through her.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_134"></a>The Italian campaign at last over, Madame
+found
+herself back again in her dear Paris, raised to a
+higher pinnacle of Queendom than ever, basking in
+the splendours of the husband whose glories she so
+gladly shared, though she held his love in such light
+esteem. But for him, at least, there was no time
+for dallying. Within a few months he was waving
+farewell to her again, from the bridge of the <i>Oc&eacute;an</i>
+which was carrying him off to the conquest of Egypt,
+buoyed by her promise that she would join him when
+his work was done. And long before he had reached
+Malta she was back again in the vortex of Paris
+gaiety, setting the tongue of scandal wagging by her
+open flirtation with one lover after another.</p>
+<p>It was not long before the news of Madame's
+"goings-on" reached as far as Alexandria. The
+dormant jealousy in Napoleon, lulled to rest since
+Monsieur Charles had vanished from the scene, was
+fanned into flame. He was furious; disillusion
+seized him, and thoughts of divorce began to enter
+his brain. Two could play at this game of falseness;
+and there were many beautiful women in
+Egypt only too eager to console the great Napoleon.</p>
+<p>When news came to Josephine that her husband
+had landed at Fr&eacute;jus, and would shortly be with her,
+she was in a state bordering on panic. She shrank
+from facing his anger; from the revelation of debts
+and unwifely conduct which was inevitable. Her
+all was at stake and the game was more than half
+lost. In her desperation she took her courage in
+both hands and set forth, as fast as horses could take
+her, to meet Napoleon, that she might at least have
+<a name="Page_135"></a>the first word with him; but as ill-luck would
+have it, he travelled by a different route and she
+missed him.</p>
+<p>On her return to Paris she found the door of
+Napoleon's room barred against her. "After repeated
+knocking in vain," says M. Masson, "she
+sank on her knees sobbing aloud. Still the door
+remained closed. For a whole day the scene was
+prolonged, without any sign from within. Worn out
+at last, Josephine was about to retire in despair, when
+her maid fetched her children. Eug&egrave;ne and Hortense,
+kneeling beside their mother, mingled their
+supplications with hers. At last the door was opened;
+speechless, tears streaming down his cheeks, his face
+convulsed with the struggle that had rent his heart,
+Bonaparte appeared, holding out his arms to his
+wife."</p>
+<p>Such was the meeting of the unfaithful Josephine
+and the husband who had vowed that he would no
+longer call her wife. The reconciliation was complete;
+for Napoleon was no man of half-measures.
+He frankly forgave the weeping woman all her sins
+against him; and with generous hand removed the
+mountain of debt her extravagance had heaped up&#8212;debts
+amounting to more than two million francs,
+one million two hundred thousand of which she owed
+to tradespeople alone.</p>
+<p>But Napoleon's passion for his wife, of whose
+beauty few traces now remained, was dead. His
+loyalty only remained; and this, in turn, was to
+be swept away by the tide of his ambition. A few
+years later Josephine was crowned Empress by her
+<a name="Page_136"></a>husband, and consecrated by the Pope, after a
+priest
+had given the sanction of the Church to her incomplete
+nuptials.</p>
+<p>She had now reached the dazzling zenith of her
+career. At the Tuileries, at St Cloud, and at Malmaison,
+she held her splendid Courts as Empress.
+She had the most magnificent crown jewels in the
+world; and at Malmaison she spent her happiest
+hours in spreading her gems out on the table before
+her, and feasting her eyes on their many-hued fires.
+Her wardrobes were full of the daintiest and costliest
+gowns of which, we are told, more than two hundred
+were summer-dresses of percale and of muslin, costing
+from one thousand to two thousand francs each.</p>
+<p>Less than six years of such splendour and luxury,
+and the inevitable end of it all came. Napoleon's
+eyes were dazzled by the offer of an alliance with the
+eldest daughter of the Austrian Emperor. His whole
+ambition now was focused on providing a successor
+to his crown (Josephine had failed him in this important
+matter); and in Marie Louise of Austria he not
+only saw the prospective mother of his heir, but an
+alliance with one of the great reigning houses of
+Europe, which would lend a much-needed glamour
+to his bourgeois crown.</p>
+<p>His mind was at last inevitably made up. Josephine
+must be divorced. Her pleadings and tears and
+faintings were powerless to melt him. And one
+December day, in the year 1809, Napoleon was free
+to wed his Austrian Princess; and Josephine was left
+to console herself as best she might, with the knowledge
+that at least she had rescued from her downfall
+<a name="Page_137"></a>a life-income of three million francs a year, on
+which
+she could still play the r&ocirc;le of Empress at the Elys&eacute;e,
+Malmaison, and Navarre, the sumptuous homes with
+which Napoleon's generosity had dowered the wife
+who failed.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_138"></a>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+<h2>THE ENSLAVER OF A KING</h2>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><a name="img006"></a><img
+ style="width: 298px; height: 392px;"
+ alt="Lola Montez, Countess of Landsfeld."
+ title="Lola Montez, Countess of Landsfeld." src="images/court006.jpg"><br>
+<h5>LOLA MONTEZ, COUNTESS OF LANDSFELD.</h5>
+</div>
+<br>
+<p>More than fifty years have gone since the penitent
+soul of Lola Montez took flight to its Creator; but
+there must be some still living whose pulses quicken
+at the very mention of a name which recalls so much
+mystery and romance and bewildering fascination of
+the days when, for them, as for her, "all the world
+was young."</p>
+<p>Who was she, this woman whose beauty dazzled
+the eyes and whose witchery turned the heads of men
+in the forties and fifties of last century? A dozen
+countries, from Spain to India, were credited with
+her birth. Some said she was the daughter of a
+noble house, kidnapped by gipsies in her infancy;
+others were equally confident that she had for father
+the coroneted rake, Lord Byron, and for mother a
+charwoman.</p>
+<p>Her early years were wrapped in a mystery which
+she mischievously helped to intensify by declaring
+that her father was a famous Spanish toreador. Her
+origin, however, was prosaic enough. She was the
+daughter of an obscure army captain, Gilbert, who
+hailed from Limerick; her mother was an Oliver,
+<a name="Page_139"></a>from whom she received her strain of Spanish
+blood;
+and the names given to her at a Limerick font, one
+day in 1818, two months after her parents had made
+their runaway match, were Marie Dolores Eliza
+Rosanna.</p>
+<p>When Captain Gilbert returned, after his furlough-romance,
+to India, he took his wife and child with
+him. Seven years later cholera removed him; his
+widow found speedy solace in the arms of a second
+husband, one Captain Craigie; and Dolores was
+packed off to Scotland to the care of her stepfather's
+people until her schooldays were ended.</p>
+<p>In the next few years she alternated between the
+Scottish household, with its chilly atmosphere of
+Calvinism, and schools in Paris and London, until,
+her education completed, she escaped the husband,
+a mummified Indian judge, whom her mother had
+chosen for her, by eloping with a young army officer,
+a Captain James, and with him made the return
+voyage to India.</p>
+<p>A few months later her romance came to a tragic
+end, when her Lothario husband fell under the spell
+of a brother-officer's wife and ran away with her to
+the seclusion of the Neilgherry Hills, leaving his wife
+stranded and desolate. And thus it was that Dolores
+Gilbert wiped the dust of India finally off her feet,
+and with a cheque for a thousand pounds, which her
+good-hearted stepfather slipped into her hand, started
+once more for England, to commence that career of
+adventure which has scarcely a parallel even in
+fiction. She had had more than enough of wedded
+life, of Scottish Calvinism, and of a mother's selfish
+<a name="Page_140"></a>indifference. She would be henceforth the
+mistress
+of her own fate. She had beauty such as few women
+could boast&#8212;she had talents and a stout heart; and
+these should be her fortune.</p>
+<p>Her first ambition was to be a great actress; and
+when she found that acting was not her forte she
+determined to dance her way to fame and fortune,
+and after a year's training in London and Spain she
+was ready to conquer the world with her twinkling
+feet and supple body.</p>
+<p>Of her first appearance as a danseuse, before a
+private gathering of Pressmen, we have the following
+account by one who was there: "Her figure was
+even more attractive than her face, lovely as the
+latter was. Lithe and graceful as a young fawn,
+every movement that she made seemed instinct with
+melody. Her dark eyes were blazing and flashing
+with excitement. In her pose grace seemed involuntarily
+to preside over her limbs and dispose their
+attitude. Her foot and ankle were almost faultless."</p>
+<p>Such was the enthusiastic description of Lola
+Montez (as she now chose to call herself) on the eve
+of her bid for fame as a dancer who should perhaps
+rival the glories of a Taglioni. A few days later the
+world of rank and fashion flocked to see the d&eacute;but
+of the danseuse whose fame had been trumpeted
+abroad; and as Lola pirouetted on to the stage&#8212;the
+focus of a thousand pairs of eyes&#8212;she felt that the
+crowning moment of her life had come.</p>
+<p>Almost before her twinkling feet had carried her
+to the centre of the stage an ominous sound broke
+the silence of expectation. A hiss came from one of
+<a name="Page_141"></a>the boxes; it was repeated from another, and
+another.
+The sibilant sound spread round the house;
+it swelled into a sinister storm of hisses and boos.
+The light faded out of the dancer's eyes, the smile
+from her lips; and as the tumult of disapprobation
+rose to a deafening climax the curtain was rung
+down, and Lola rushed weeping from the stage. Her
+career as a dancer, in England, had ended at its birth.</p>
+<p>But Lola Montez was not the woman to sit down
+calmly under defeat. A few weeks later we find her
+tripping it on the stage at Dresden, and at Berlin,
+where the King of Prussia himself was among her
+applauders. But such success as the Continent
+brought her was too small to keep her now deplenished
+purse supplied. She fell on evil days, and for
+two years led a precarious life&#8212;now, we are told,
+singing in Brussels streets to keep starvation from
+her side, now playing the political spy in Russia, and
+again, by a capricious turn of fortune's wheel, being
+f&ecirc;ted and courted in the exalted circles of Vienna
+and Paris.</p>
+<p>From the French capital she made her way to
+Warsaw, where stirring adventures awaited her, for
+before she had been there many days the Polish Viceroy,
+General Paskevitch, cast his aged but lascivious
+eyes on her young beauty and sent an equerry to
+desire her presence at the palace. "He offered her"
+(so runs the story as told by her own lips) "the gift
+of a splendid country estate, and would load her with
+diamonds besides. The poor old man was a comic
+sight to look upon&#8212;unusually short in stature; and
+every time he spoke he threw his head back and
+<a name="Page_142"></a>opened his mouth so wide as to expose the
+artificial
+gold roof of his palate. A death's head making love
+to a lady could not have been a more horrible or
+disgusting sight. These generous gifts were most
+respectfully and very decidedly declined."</p>
+<p>But General Paskevitch was not disposed to be
+spurned with impunity. The contemptuous beauty
+must be punished for her scorn of his wooing; and,
+when she made her appearance on the stage the same
+night it was to a greeting of hisses by the Viceroy's
+hirelings. The next night brought the same experience;
+but when on the third night the storm arose,
+"Lola, in a rage, rushed down to the footlights and
+declared that those hisses had been set at her by the
+director, because she had refused certain gifts from
+the old Prince, his master. Then came a tremendous
+shower of applause from the audience, and the old
+Princess, who was present, both nodded her head and
+clapped her hands to the enraged and fiery little Lola."</p>
+<p>A tumultuous crowd of Poles escorted her to her
+lodgings that night. She was the heroine of the
+hour, who had dared to give open defiance to the
+hated Viceroy. The next morning Warsaw was
+"bubbling and raging with the signs of an incipient
+revolution. When Lola Montez was apprised of the
+fact that her arrest was ordered she barricaded her
+door; and when the police arrived she sat behind it
+with a pistol in her hand, declaring that she would
+certainly shoot the first man who should dare to break
+in." Fortunately for Lola, her pistol was not used.
+The French Consul came to her rescue, claiming her
+as a subject of France, and thus protecting her from
+<a name="Page_143"></a>arrest. But the order that she should quit
+Warsaw
+was peremptory, and Warsaw saw her no more.</p>
+<p>Back again in Paris, Lola found that even her new
+halo of romance was powerless to win favour for her
+dancing. Again she was to hear the storm of hisses;
+and this time in her rage "she retaliated by making
+faces at her audience," and flinging parts of her
+clothing in their faces. But if Paris was not to be
+charmed by her dainty feet it was ready to yield an
+unstinted homage to her rare beauty and charm. She
+found a flattering welcome in the most exclusive
+of <i>salons</i>; the cleverest men in the capital confessed
+the charm of her wit and surrounded her with their
+flatteries.</p>
+<p>M. Dujarrier, the most brilliant of them all, young,
+rich, and handsome, fell head over ears in love with
+her and asked her to be his wife. But the cup of
+happiness was scarcely at her lips before it was dashed
+away. Dujarrier was challenged to a duel by Beauvallon,
+a political enemy; and when Lola was on her
+way to stop the meeting she met a mournful procession
+bringing back her dead lover's body, on which
+she flung herself in an agony of grief and covered it
+with kisses. At the subsequent trial of Beauvallon
+she electrified the Court by declaring with streaming
+eyes, "If Beauvallon wanted satisfaction I would have
+fought him myself, for I am a better shot than poor
+Dujarrier ever was." And she was probably only
+speaking the truth, for her courage was as great as
+the love she bore for the victim of the duel.</p>
+<p>As a child Lola had shocked her puritanical Scottish
+hosts by declaring that "she meant to marry a
+<a name="Page_144"></a>Prince," and unkindly as fate had treated her,
+she
+had by no means relinquished this childish ambition.
+It may be that it was in her mind when, a year and
+a half after the tragedy that had so clouded her life
+in Paris, she drifted to Munich in search of more
+conquests.</p>
+<p>Now in the full bloom of her radiant loveliness&#8212;"the
+most beautiful woman in Europe" many declared&#8212;mingling
+the vivacity of an Irish beauty with
+the voluptuous charms of a Spaniard&#8212;she was splendidly
+equipped for the conquest of any man, be he
+King or subject; and Ludwig I., King of Bavaria,
+had as keen an eye for female beauty as for the
+objects of art on which he squandered his millions.</p>
+<p>It was this Ludwig who made Munich the fairest
+city in all Germany, and who enriched his palace
+with the finest private collection of pictures and
+statues that Europe can boast. But among all his
+treasures of art he valued none more than his gallery
+of portraits of fair women, each of whom had, at one
+time or another, visited his capital.</p>
+<p>Such was Ludwig, Bavaria's King, to whom Lola
+Montez now brought a new revelation of female loveliness,
+to which his gallery could furnish no rival.
+At first sight of her, as she danced in the opera
+ballet, he was undone. The next day and the next
+his eyes were feasting on her charms and her supple
+grace; and within a week she was installed at the
+Court and was being introduced by His Majesty as
+"my best friend."</p>
+<p>And not only the King, but all Munich was at the
+feet of the lovely "Spaniard"; her drives through
+<a name="Page_145"></a>the streets were Royal progresses; her
+receptions in
+the palace which Ludwig presented to her were
+thronged by all the greatest in Bavaria; on Prince
+and peasant alike she cast the spell of her witchery.
+As for Ludwig, connoisseur of the beautiful, he was
+her shadow and her slave, showering on her gifts an
+Empress might well have envied. Fortune had relented
+at last and was now smiling her sweetest on
+the adventuress; and if Lola had been content with
+such triumphs as these the story of her later life might
+have been very different. But she craved power to
+add to her trophies, and aspired to take the sceptre
+from the weak hand of her Royal lover.</p>
+<p>Never did woman make a more fatal mistake. On
+the one hand was arrayed the might of Austria and
+of Rome, whose puppet Ludwig was; on the other
+hand was a nation clamouring for reforms. Revolution
+was already in the air, and it was reserved to
+this too daring woman to precipitate the storm.</p>
+<p>Her first ambition was to persuade Ludwig to dismiss
+his Ministry, to shake himself free from foreign
+influence, and to inaugurate the era of reform for
+which his subjects were clamouring. In vain did
+Austria try to win her to its side by bribes of gold (no
+less than a million florins) and the offer of a noble
+husband. To all its seductions Lola turned as deaf
+an ear as to the offers of Poland's Viceroy. And so
+strenuous was her championship of the people that
+the Cabinet was compelled to resign in favour of
+the "Lola Ministry" of reformers.</p>
+<p>So far she had succeeded, but the price was still to
+pay. The reactionaries, supported by Austria and
+<a name="Page_146"></a>the Romish Church, were quick to retaliate by
+waging
+remorseless war against the King's mistress; and,
+among their most powerful weapons, used the students'
+clubs of Munich, who, from being Lola's most
+enthusiastic admirers, became her bitterest enemies.</p>
+<p>To counteract this move Lola enrolled a students'
+corps of her own&#8212;a small army of young stalwarts,
+whose cry was "Lola and Liberty," and who were
+sworn to fight her battles, if need be, to the death.
+Thus was the fire of revolution kindled by a woman's
+vanity and lust of power. Students' fights became
+everyday incidents in the streets of Munich, and on
+one occasion when Lola, pistol in hand, intervened
+to prevent bloodshed, she was rescued with difficulty
+by Ludwig himself and a detachment of soldiers.</p>
+<p>The climax came when she induced the King to
+close the University for a year&#8212;an autocratic step
+which aroused the anger not only of every student
+but of the whole country. The streets were paraded
+by mobs crying, "Down with the concubine!" and
+"Long live the Republic!" Barricades were erected
+and an influential deputation waited on the King to
+demand the expulsion of the worker of so much
+mischief.</p>
+<p>In vain did Ludwig declare that he would part with
+his crown rather than with the Countess of Landsfeld&#8212;for
+this was one of the titles he had conferred
+on his favourite. The forces arrayed against him
+were too strong, and the order of expulsion was at
+last conceded. It was only, however, when her
+palace was in flames and surrounded by a howling
+mob that the dauntless woman deigned to seek refuge
+<a name="Page_147"></a>in flight, and, disguised as a boy, suffered
+herself to
+be escorted to the frontier. Two weeks later Ludwig
+lost his crown.</p>
+<p>The remainder of this strange story may be told
+in a few words. Thrown once more on the world,
+with a few hastily rescued jewels for all her fortune,
+Lola Montez resumed her stage life, appearing in
+London in a drama entitled "Lola Montez: or a
+Countess for an Hour." Here she made a conquest
+of a young Life Guardsman, called Heald, who had
+recently succeeded to an estate worth &pound;5000 a year;
+and with him she spent a few years, made wretched
+by continual quarrels, in one of which she stabbed
+him. When he was "found drowned" at Lisbon
+she drifted to Paris, and later to the United States,
+which she toured with a drama entitled "Lola Montez
+in Bavaria." There she made her third appearance
+at the altar, with a bridegroom named Hull,
+whom she divorced as soon as the honeymoon had
+waned.</p>
+<p>Thus she carried her restless spirit through a few
+more years of wandering and growing poverty, until
+a chance visit to Spurgeon's Tabernacle revolutionised
+her life. She decided to abandon the stage
+and to devote the remainder of her days to penitence
+and good works. But the end was already near. In
+New York, where she had gone to lecture, she was
+struck down by paralysis, and a few weeks before
+she had seen her forty-second birthday she died in
+a charitable institution, joining fervently in the
+prayers of the clergyman who was summoned to her
+death-bed.</p>
+<p>"<a name="Page_148"></a>When she was near the end, and could not
+speak,"
+the clergyman says, "I asked her to let me know by
+a sign whether she was at peace. She fixed her eyes
+on mine and nodded affirmatively. I do not think I
+ever saw deeper penitence and humility than in this
+poor woman."<br>
+</p>
+<p style="text-align: center;"><a name="img007"></a><img
+ style="width: 282px; height: 408px;" alt="Ludwig I., King of Bavaria."
+ title="Ludwig I., King of Bavaria." src="images/court007.jpg"><br>
+</p>
+<h5>LUDWIG I., KING OF BAVARIA.</h5>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_149"></a>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+<h2>AN EMPRESS AND HER FAVOURITES</h2>
+<br>
+<a name="img002"></a>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><img
+ style="width: 243px; height: 350px;"
+ alt="Catherine the Second of Russia."
+ title="Catherine the Second of Russia." src="images/court002.jpg"><br>
+</div>
+<div style="text-align: center;">
+<h5>CATHERINE THE SECOND OF RUSSIA.</h5>
+<br>
+</div>
+<p>When Sophie Augusta Frederica of Anhalt-Zerbst
+was romping on the ramparts or in the streets of
+Stettin with burghers' children for playmates, he
+would have been a bold prophet who would have
+predicted that one day she would be the most splendid
+figure among Europe's sovereigns, "the only
+great man in Europe," according to Voltaire, "an
+angel before whom all men should be silent"; and
+that, while dazzling Europe by her statesmanship
+and learning, she would afford more material for
+scandal than any woman, except perhaps Christina
+of Sweden, who ever wore a crown.</p>
+<p>There is much, it is true, to be said in extenuation
+of the weakness that has left such a stain on the
+memory of Catherine II. of Russia. Equipped far
+beyond most women with the beauty and charms
+that fascinate men, and craving more than most of
+her sex the love of man, she was mated when little
+more than a child to the most degenerate Prince in
+all Europe.</p>
+<p>The Grand Duke Peter, heir to the Russian
+throne, who at sixteen took to wife the girl-Princess
+<a name="Page_150"></a>of Anhalt-Zerbst, was already an expert in
+almost
+every vice. Imbecile in mind, he found his chief
+pleasure in the company of the most degraded. He
+rarely went to bed sober&#8212;in fact, his bride's first
+sight of him was when he was drunk, at the age of
+ten. He was, too, "a liar and a coward, vicious and
+violent; pale, sickly, and uncomely&#8212;a crooked soul
+in a prematurely ravaged body."</p>
+<p>Such was the Grand Duke Peter, to whom the
+high-spirited, beautiful Princess Sophie (thenceforth
+to be known as "Catherine") was tied for life one
+day in the year 1744&#8212;a youth the very sight of
+whom repelled her, while his vices filled her with
+loathing. Add to this revolting union the fact that
+she found herself under the despotic rule of the
+Empress Elizabeth, who made no concealment of
+her hatred and jealousy of the fair young Princess,
+surrounded her with spies, and treated her as a rebellious
+child, to be checked and bullied at every turn&#8212;and
+it is not difficult to understand the spirit of
+recklessness and defiance that was soon roused in
+Catherine's breast.</p>
+<p>There was at the Russian Court no lack of temptation
+to indulge this spirit of revolt to the full. The
+young German beauty, mated to worse than a clown,
+soon had her Court of admirers to pour flatteries into
+her dainty ears, and she would perhaps have been
+less than a woman if she had not eagerly drunk them
+in. She had no need of anyone to tell her that she
+was fair. "I know I am beautiful as the day," she
+once exclaimed, as she looked at her mirrored reflection
+in her first ball finery at St Petersburg, with a
+<a name="Page_151"></a>red rose in her glorious hair; and the mirror
+told no
+flattering tale.</p>
+<p>See the picture Poniatowski, one of her earliest
+and most ardent slaves, paints of the young Grand
+Duchess. "With her black hair she had a dazzling
+whiteness of skin, a vivid colour, large blue eyes
+prominent and eloquent, black and long eyebrows,
+a Greek nose, a mouth that looked made for kissing,
+a slight, rather tall figure, a carriage that was lively,
+yet full of nobility, a pleasing voice, and a laugh as
+merry as the humour through which she could
+pass with ease from the most playful and childish
+amusements to the most fatiguing mathematical
+calculations."</p>
+<p>With the brain, even in those early years, of a
+clever man, she was essentially a woman, with all a
+woman's passion for the admiration and love of men;
+and one cannot wonder, however much one may
+deplore, that while her imbecile husband was guzzling
+with common soldiers, or playing with his toys and
+tin cannon in bed, vacuous smiles on his face, his
+beautiful bride should find her own pleasures in the
+homage of a Soltykoff, a Poniatowski, an Orloff, or
+any other of the legion of lovers who in quick
+succession took her fancy.</p>
+<p>The first among her admirers to capture her fancy
+was Sergius Soltykoff, her chamberlain, high-born,
+"beautiful as the day," polished courtier, supple-tongued
+wooer, to whom the Grand Duchess gave
+the heart her husband spurned. But Soltykoff's
+reign was short; the fickle Princess, ever seeking
+fresh conquests, wearied of him as of all her lovers
+<a name="Page_152"></a>in turn, and his place was taken within a year
+by
+Stanislas Poniatowski, a fascinating young Pole,
+who returned to St Petersburg with a reputation of
+gallantry won in almost every Court of Europe.</p>
+<p>Poniatowski had not perhaps the physical perfections
+of his dethroned predecessor, but he had the
+well-stored brain that made an even more potent
+appeal to Catherine. He could talk "like an angel"
+on every subject that appealed to her, from art to
+philosophy; and he had, moreover, a magnetic
+charm of manner which few women could resist.</p>
+<p>Such a lover was, indeed, after her heart, for he
+brought romance and adventure to his wooing; and
+whether he found his way to her boudoir disguised
+as a ladies' tailor or as one of the Grand Duke's
+musicians, or made open love to her under the very
+nose of her courtiers, he played his r&ocirc;le of lover to
+admiration. Once Peter, in jealous mood, threatened
+to run his rival through with his sword, and, in
+his rage, "went into his wife's bedroom and pulled
+her out of bed without leaving her time to dress."
+An hour later his anger had changed to an amused
+complaisance, and he was supping with the culprits,
+and with boisterous laughter was drinking their
+healths.</p>
+<p>When at last a political storm drove Poniatowski
+from Russia, Catherine, who never forgot a banished
+lover, secured for him the crown of Poland.</p>
+<p>Thus the favourites come and go, each supreme
+for a time, each inevitably packed off to give place
+to a successor. With Poniatowski away in Poland,
+Catherine cast her eyes round her Court to find a
+<a name="Page_153"></a>third favourite, and her choice was soon made,
+for of
+all her army of admirers there was one who fully
+satisfied her ideal of handsome manhood.</p>
+<p>Of the five Orloff brothers, each a Goliath in
+stature and a Hercules in strength, the handsomest
+was Gregory, "the giant with the face of an angel."
+Towering head and shoulders over most of his
+fellow-courtiers, with knotted muscles which could
+fell an ox or crush a horse-shoe with the closing of
+a hand, Gregory Orloff was reputed the bravest man
+in Russia, as he was the idol of his soldiers. He
+was also a notorious gambler and drinker and the
+hero of countless love adventures.</p>
+<p>No greater contrast could be possible than
+between this dare-devil son of Anak and the cultured,
+almost feminine Poniatowski; but Catherine
+loved, above all things, variety, and here it was in
+startling abundance. Nor was her new lover any
+the less desirable because he was some years younger
+than herself, or that his grandfather had been a
+common soldier in the army of Peter the Great.</p>
+<p>And Gregory Orloff proved himself as bold in
+wooing as he was brave in war. For him there was
+no stealing up back stairs, no masquerading in disguises.
+He was the elect favourite of the future
+Empress of Russia, and all the world should know
+it. He was inseparable from his mistress, and paid
+his court to her under the eyes of her husband; while
+Catherine, thus emboldened, made as little concealment
+of her partiality.</p>
+<p>But troublous days were coming to break the idyll
+of their love. The Empress Elizabeth, as was
+<a name="Page_154"></a>inevitable, at last drank herself to death, and
+her
+nephew Peter, now a besotted imbecile of thirty-four,
+put on the Imperial robes, and was free to
+indulge his madness without restraint. The first
+use he made of his freedom was to subject his wife
+to every insult and humiliation his debased brain
+could suggest. He flaunted his amours and vices
+before her, taunted her in public with her own indiscretions,
+and shouted in his cups that he would
+divorce her.</p>
+<p>Not content with these outrages on his Empress,
+he lost no opportunity of disgusting his subjects and
+driving his soldiers to the verge of mutiny. Such
+an intolerable state of things could only have one
+issue. The Emperor was undoubtedly mad; the
+Emperor must go.</p>
+<p>Over the <i>coup d'&eacute;tat</i> which followed we must pass
+hurriedly&#8212;the conspiracy of Catherine and the
+Orloffs, the eager response of the army which
+flocked to the Empress, "kissing me, embracing
+my hands, my feet, my dress, and calling me their
+saviour"; the marching of the insurgent troops to
+Oranienbaum, with Catherine, astride on horseback,
+at their head; and Peter's craven submission,
+when he crawled on his knees to his wife, with
+whimpering and tears, begging her to allow him
+to keep "his mistress, his dog, his negro, and his
+violin."</p>
+<p>The Emperor was safe behind barred doors at
+Mopsa; Catherine was now Empress in fact as well
+as name. Three weeks later Peter was dead; was
+he done to death by Catherine's orders? To this
+<a name="Page_155"></a>day none can say with certainty. The story of
+this
+tragedy as told by Cast&egrave;ra makes gruesome reading.</p>
+<p>One day Alexis Orloff and Teplof appeared at
+Mopsa to announce to the deposed sovereign his
+approaching deliverance and to ask a dinner of him.
+Glasses and brandy were ordered, and while Teplof
+was amusing the Tsar, Orloff filled the glasses,
+adding poison to one of them.</p>
+<p>"The Tsar, suspecting no harm, took the poison
+and swallowed it. He was soon seized with agonising
+pains. He screamed aloud for milk, but the two
+monsters again presented poison to him and forced
+him to take it. When the Tsar's valet bravely interposed
+he was hurled from the room. In the midst of
+the tumult there entered Prince Baratinski, who
+commanded the Guard. Orloff, who had already
+thrown down the Tsar, pressed upon his chest with
+his own knees, holding him fast at the same time by
+the throat. Baratinski and Teplof then passed a
+table-napkin with a sliding knot round his neck, and
+the murderers accomplished the work of death by
+strangling him."</p>
+<p>Such is the story as it has come down to us, and
+as it was believed in Russia at the time. That
+Gregory Orloff was innocent of a crime in which his
+own brother played a leading part is as little to be
+credited as that Catherine herself was in ignorance
+of the design on her husband's life. But, however
+this may be, we are told that when the news of her
+husband's death was brought to the Empress at a
+banquet, she was to all appearance overcome with
+horror and grief. She left the table with streaming
+<a name="Page_156"></a>eyes and spent the next few days in
+unapproachable
+solitude in her rooms.</p>
+<p>Thus at last Catherine was free both from the
+tyranny of Elizabeth and from the brutality of her
+bestial husband. She was sole sovereign of all the
+Russias, at liberty to indulge any caprice that entered
+her versatile brain. That her subjects, almost to a
+man, regarded her with horror as her husband's murderer,
+that this detestation was shared by the army
+that had put her on the throne, and by the nobles who
+had been her slaves, troubled her little. She was
+mistress of her fate, and strong enough (as indeed
+she proved) to hold, with a firm grasp, the sceptre
+she had won.</p>
+<p>High as Gregory Orloff had stood in her favour
+before she came to her crown, his position was
+now more splendid and secure. She showered her
+favours on him with prodigal hand. Lands and
+jewels and gold were squandered on her "First
+Favourite"&#8212;the official designation she invented
+for him; and he wore on his broad chest her miniature
+in a blazing oval of diamonds, the crowning
+mark of her approval. And to his brothers she was
+almost equally generous, for in a few years of her
+ascendancy the Orloffs were enriched by vast estates
+on which forty-five thousand serfs toiled, by palaces,
+and by gold to the amount of seventeen million
+roubles. Such it was to be in the good books of
+Catherine II., Empress of Russia.</p>
+<p>With riches and power, Gregory's ambition grew
+until he dreamt of sitting on the throne itself by
+Catherine's side; and in her foolish infatuation even
+<a name="Page_157"></a>this prize might have been his, had not wiser
+counsels
+come to her rescue. "The Empress," said Panine
+to her, "can do what she likes; but Madame Orloff
+can never be Empress of Russia." And thus
+Gregory's greatest ambition was happily nipped in
+the bud.</p>
+<p>The man who had played his cards with such skill
+and discretion in the early days of his love-making
+had now, his head swollen by pride and power, grown
+reckless. If he could not be Emperor in name, he
+would at least wield the sceptre. The woman to
+whom he owed all was, he thought, but a puppet in
+his hands, as ready to do his bidding as any of his
+minions. But through all her dallying Catherine's
+smiles masked an iron will. In heart she was a
+woman; in brain and will-power, a man. And
+Orloff, like many another favourite, was to learn the
+lesson to his cost.</p>
+<p>The time came when she could no longer tolerate
+his airs and assumptions. There was only one
+Empress, but lovers were plentiful, and she already
+had an eye on his successor. And thus it was that
+one day the swollen Orloff was sent on a diplomatic
+mission to arrange peace between Russia and
+Turkey. When she bade him good-bye she called
+him her "angel of peace," but she knew that it was
+her angel's farewell to his paradise.</p>
+<p>How the Ambassador, instead of making peace,
+stirred up the embers of war into fresh flame is a
+matter of history. But he was not long left to work
+such mad mischief. While he was swaggering at a
+Jassy f&ecirc;te, in a costume ablaze with diamonds worth
+<a name="Page_158"></a>a million roubles, news came to him of a
+good-looking
+young lieutenant who was not only installed
+in his place by Catherine's side, but was actually
+occupying his own apartments. Within an hour he
+was racing back to St Petersburg, resting neither
+night nor day until he had covered the thousand
+leagues that separated him from the capital.</p>
+<p>Before, however, his sweating horses could enter
+it, he was stopped by Catherine's emissaries and
+ordered to repair to the Imperial Palace at Gatshina.
+And then he realised that his sun had indeed come
+to its setting. His honours were soon stripped from
+him, and although he was allowed to keep his lands,
+his gold and jewels, the spoils of Cupid, the diamond-framed
+miniature, was taken away to adorn the breast
+of his successor, the lieutenant.</p>
+<p>Under this cloud of disfavour Orloff conducted
+himself with such resignation&#8212;none knew better
+than he how futile it was to fight&#8212;that Catherine,
+before many months had passed, not only recalled
+him to Court, but secured for him a Princedom of the
+Holy Empire. "As for Prince Gregory," she said
+amiably, "he is free to go or stay, to hunt, to drink,
+or to gamble. I intend to live according to my own
+pleasure, and in entire independence."</p>
+<p>After a tragically brief wedded life with a beautiful
+girl-cousin, who died of consumption, Orloff returned
+to St Petersburg to spend the last few months
+of his life, "broken-hearted and mad." And to his
+last hour his clouded brain was tortured with visions
+of the "avenging shade of the murdered Peter."</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XV"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_159"></a>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+<h2>A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY CINDERELLA</h2>
+<p>It was to all seeming a strange whim that caused
+Cardinal Mazarin, one day in the year 1653, to
+summon his nieces, daughters of his sister, Hieronyme
+Mancini, from their obscurity in Italy to bask
+in the sunshine of his splendours in Paris.</p>
+<p>At the time of this odd caprice, Richelieu's crafty
+successor had reached the zenith of his power. His
+was the most potent and splendid figure in all
+Europe that did not wear a crown. He was the
+avowed favourite and lover of Anne of Austria,
+Queen of France, to whose vanity he had paid such
+skilful court&#8212;indeed it was common rumour that she
+had actually given him her hand in secret marriage.
+The boy-King, Louis XIV., was a puppet in his
+strong hands. He was, in fact, the dictator of
+France, whose smiles the greatest courtiers tried to
+win, and before whose frowns they trembled.</p>
+<p>In contrast to such magnificence, his sister,
+Madame Mancini, was the wife of a petty Italian
+baron, who was struggling to bring up her five
+daughters on a pathetically scanty purse&#8212;as far
+removed from her magnificent brother as a moth from
+a star. There was, on the face of things, every
+<a name="Page_160"></a>reason why the great and all-powerful Cardinal
+should leave his nieces to their genteel poverty;
+and we can imagine both the astonishment and
+delight with which Madame Mancini received the
+summons to Paris which meant such a revolution in
+life for her and her daughters.</p>
+<p>If the Mancini girls had no heritage of money,
+they had at least the dower of beauty. Each of the
+five gave promise of a rare loveliness&#8212;with the
+solitary exception of Marie, Madame's third daughter,
+who at fourteen was singularly unattractive even
+for that awkward age. Tall, thin, and angular,
+without a vestige of grace either of figure or movement,
+she had a sallow face out of which two great
+black eyes looked gloomily, and a mouth wide and
+thin-lipped. She was, in addition, shy and slow-witted
+to the verge of stupidity. Marie, in fact,
+was quite hopeless, the "ugly duckling" of a good-looking
+family, and for this reason an object of
+dislike and resentment to her mother.</p>
+<p>Certainly, said Madame, Marie must be left
+behind. Her other daughters would be a source of
+pride to their uncle; he could secure great matches
+for them, but Marie&#8212;pah! she would bring discredit
+on the whole family. And so it was decided in
+conclave that the "ugly duckling" should be left in
+a nunnery&#8212;the only fit place for her. But Marie
+happily had a spirit of her own. She would not be
+left behind, she declared; and if she must go to a
+nunnery, why there were nunneries in plenty in
+France to which they could send her. And Marie
+had her way.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_161"></a>She was not, however, to escape the cloister
+after
+all, for to a Paris nunnery she was consigned when
+her Cardinal uncle had set eyes on her. "Let her
+have a year or two there," was his verdict, "and, who
+knows, she may blossom into a beauty yet. At any
+rate she can put on flesh and not be the scarecrow
+she is." And thus, while her more favoured sisters
+were revelling in the gaieties of Court life, Marie
+was sent to tell her beads and to spend Spartan days
+among the nuns.</p>
+<p>Nearly two years passed before Mazarin expressed
+a wish to see his ugly niece again; and it was indeed
+a very different Marie who now made her curtsy to
+him. Gone were the angular figure, the awkward
+movements, the sallow face, the slow wits. Time
+and the healthy life of the cloisters had done their
+work well. What the Cardinal now saw was a girl
+of seventeen, of exquisitely modelled figure, graceful
+and self-possessed; a face piquant and full of animation,
+illuminated by a pair of glorious dark eyes, and
+with a dazzling smile which revealed the prettiest
+teeth in France. Above all, and what delighted the
+Cardinal most, she had now a sprightly wit, and a
+quite brilliant gift of conversation. It was thus a
+smiling and gratified Cardinal who gave greeting to
+his niece, now as fair as her sisters and more fascinating
+than any of them. There was no doubt that he
+could find a high-placed husband for her, and thus&#8212;for
+this was, in fact, his motive for rescuing his pretty
+nieces from their obscurity&#8212;make his position
+secure by powerful family alliances.</p>
+<p>It was not long before Mazarin fixed on a suitor
+<a name="Page_162"></a>in the person of Armande de la Porte, son of the
+Marquis de la Meilleraye, one of the most powerful
+nobles in France. But alas for his scheming!
+Armande's heart had already been caught while
+Marie was reciting her matins and vespers: He
+had lost it utterly to her beautiful sister, Hortense;
+he vowed that he would marry no other, and that if
+Hortense could not be his wife he would prefer to
+die. Thus Marie was rescued from a union which
+brought her sister so much misery in later years,
+and for a time she was condemned to spend unhappy
+months with her mother at the Louvre.</p>
+<p>To this period of her life Marie Mancini could
+never look back without a shudder. "My mother,"
+she says, "who, I think, had always hated me, was
+more unbearable than ever. She treated me, although
+I was no longer ugly, with the utmost aversion and
+cruelty. My sisters went to Court and were fussed
+and f&ecirc;ted. I was kept always at home, in our miserable
+lodgings, an unhappy Cinderella."</p>
+<p>But Fortune did not long hide his face from
+Cinderella. Her "Prince Charming" was coming&#8212;in
+the guise of the handsome young King, Louis
+XIV. himself. It was one day while visiting
+Madame Mancini in her lodgings at the Louvre that
+Louis first saw the girl who was to play such havoc
+with his heart; and at the first sight of those melting
+dark eyes and that intoxicating smile he was undone.
+He came again and again&#8212;always under the pretext
+of visiting Madame, and happy beyond expression
+if he could exchange a few words with her daughter,
+Marie; until he soon counted a day worse than lost
+<a name="Page_163"></a>that did not bring him the stolen sweetness of a
+meeting.</p>
+<p>When, a few weeks later, Madame Mancini died,
+and Marie was recalled to Court by her uncle, her
+life was completely changed for her. Louis had
+now abundant opportunities of seeking her side; and
+excellent use he made of them. The two young
+people were inseparable, much to the alarm of the
+Cardinal and Madame M&egrave;re, the Queen. The
+young King was never happy out of her sight; he
+danced with her (and none could dance more divinely
+than Marie); he listened as she sang to him with
+a voice whose sweetness thrilled him; they read the
+same books together in blissful solitude; she taught
+him her native Italian, and entranced him by the
+brilliance of her wit; and when, after a slight
+illness, he heard of her anxious inquiries and her
+tears of sympathy, his conquest was complete. He
+vowed that she and no other should be his wife and
+Queen of France.</p>
+<p>But these halcyon days were not to last long. It
+was no part of Mazarin's scheming that a niece of
+his should sit on the throne. The prospect was
+dazzling, it is true, but it would inevitably mean his
+own downfall, so strongly would such an alliance be
+resented by friends as well as enemies; and Anne of
+Austria was as little in the mood to be deposed by
+such an obscure person as the "Mancini girl."
+Thus it was that Queen and Cardinal joined hands
+to nip the young romance in the bud.</p>
+<p>A Royal bride must be found for Louis, and that
+quickly; and negotiations were soon on foot to
+<a name="Page_164"></a>secure as his wife Margaret, Princess of Savoy.
+In
+vain did the boy-King storm and protest; equally
+futile were Marie's tearful pleadings to her uncle.
+The fiat had gone forth. Louis must have a Royal
+bride; and she was already about to leave Italy on
+her bridal progress to France.</p>
+<p>It was, we may be sure, with a heavy heart that
+Marie joined the cavalcade which, with its gorgeous
+procession of equipages, its gaily mounted courtiers,
+and its brave escort of soldiery, swept out of Paris
+on its stately progress to Lyons, to meet the Queen-to-be.
+But there was no escape from the humiliation,
+for she must accompany Anne of Austria, as
+one of her retinue of maids-of-honour. Arrived too
+soon at Lyons, Louis rides on to give first greeting
+to his bride, who is now within a day's journey; and
+returns with a smiling face to announce to his mother
+that he finds the Princess pleasing to his eye, and to
+describe, with boyish enthusiasm, her grace and
+graciousness, her magnificent eyes, her beautiful
+hair, and the delicate olive of her complexion, while
+Marie's heart sinks at the recital. Could this be the
+lover who, but a few days ago, had been at her feet,
+vowing that she was the only bride in all the world
+for him?</p>
+<p>When he seeks her side and shamefacedly makes
+excuses for his seeming recreancy, she bids him
+marry his "ugly bride" in accents of scorn, and then
+bursts into tears, which she only consents to wipe
+away when he declares that his heart will always
+be hers and that he will never marry the Italian
+Princess.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_165"></a>But Margaret of Savoy was not after all to be
+Queen of France. She was, as it proved, merely a
+pawn in the Cardinal's deep game. It was a Spanish
+alliance that he sought for his young King; and
+when, at the eleventh hour, an ambassador came
+hurriedly to Lyons to offer the Infanta's hand, the
+Savoy Duke and his sister, the Princess, had perforce
+to return to Italy "empty-handed."</p>
+<p>There was at least a time of respite now for Louis
+and Marie, and as they rode back to Paris, side by
+side, chatting gaily and exchanging sweet confidences,
+the sun once more shone on the happiest
+young people in all France. Then followed a period
+of blissful days, of dances and f&ecirc;tes, in brilliant
+succession, in which the lovers were inseparable;
+above all, of long rambles together, when, "the
+world forgetting," they could live in the happy
+present, whatever the future might have in store
+for them.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the negotiations for the Spanish
+marriage were ripening fast. Louis and Marie again
+appeal, first to the Cardinal, then to the Queen, to
+sanction their union, but to no purpose; both are
+inflexible. Their foolish romance must come to an
+end. As a last resource Marie flies to the King,
+with tender pleadings and tears, begging him not to
+desert her; to which he answers that no power on
+earth shall make him wed the Infanta. "You
+alone," he swears, "shall wear the crown of Queen";
+and in token of his love he buys for her the pearls
+that were the most treasured belongings of the exiled
+Stuart Queen, Henrietta Maria. The lovers part
+<a name="Page_166"></a>in tears, and the following day Marie receives
+orders
+to leave Paris and to retire to La Rochelle.</p>
+<p>At every stage of her journey she was overtaken
+by messengers bearing letters from Louis, full of love
+and protestations of unflinching loyalty; and when
+Louis moved with his Court to Bayonne, the lovers
+met once more to mingle their tears. But Louis,
+ever fickle, was already wavering again. "If I must
+marry the Infanta," he said, "I suppose I must.
+But I shall never love any but you."</p>
+<p>Marie now realised that this was to be the end.
+In face of a lover so weak, and a fate so inflexible,
+what could she do but submit? And it was with a
+proud but breaking heart that she wrote a few days
+later to tell Louis that she wished him not to write to
+her again and that she would not answer his letters.
+One June day news came to her that her lover was
+married and that "he was very much in love with the
+Infanta"; and even her pride, crushed as it was,
+could not restrain her from writing to her sister,
+Hortense, "Say everything you can that is horrid
+about him. Point out all his faults to me, that I
+may find relief for my aching heart." When, a few
+months later, Marie saw the King again, he received
+her almost as a stranger, and had the bad taste to
+sing the praises of his Queen.</p>
+<p>But Marie Mancini was the last girl in all France
+to wed herself long to grief or an outraged vanity.
+There were other lovers by the score among whom
+she could pick and choose. She was more lovely
+now than when the recreant Louis first succumbed to
+her charms&#8212;with a ripened witchery of black eyes,
+<a name="Page_167"></a>red lips, the flash of pearly teeth revealed by
+every
+dazzling smile, with glorious black hair, the grace
+of a fawn, and a "voluptuous fascination" which no
+man could resist.</p>
+<p>Prince Charles of Lorraine was her veriest slave,
+but Mazarin would have none of him. Prince
+Colonna, Grand Constable of Naples, was more
+fortunate when he in turn came a-wooing. He bore
+the proudest name in Italy, and he had wealth, good-looks,
+and high connections to lend a glamour to
+his birth. The Cardinal smiled on his suit, and
+Marie, since she had no heart to give, willingly
+gave her hand.</p>
+<p>Louis himself graced the wedding with his
+presence; and we are told, as the white-faced bride
+"said the 'yes' which was to bind her to a stranger,
+her eyes, with an indescribable expression, sought
+those of the King, who turned pale as he met them."</p>
+<p>Over the rest of Marie Mancini's chequered life we
+must hasten. After a few years of wedded life with
+her Italian Prince, "Colonna's early passion for his
+beautiful wife was succeeded by a distaste amounting
+to hatred. He disgusted her with his amours; and
+when she ventured to protest against his infidelity,
+he tried to poison her." This crowning outrage
+determined Marie to fly, and, in company with her
+sister, Hortense, who had fled to her from the
+brutality of her own husband, she made her escape
+one dark night to Civita Vecchia, where a boat was
+awaiting the runaways.</p>
+<p>Hotly pursued on land and sea, narrowly escaping
+shipwreck, braving hardships, hunger, and hourly
+<a name="Page_168"></a>danger of capture, the fugitives at last reached
+Marseilles
+where Marie (Hortense now seeking a refuge
+in Savoy) began those years of wandering and
+adventure, the story of which outstrips fiction.</p>
+<p>Now we find her seeking asylum at convents from
+Aix to Madrid; now queening it at the Court of
+Savoy, with Duke Charles Emmanuel for lover;
+now she is dazzling Madrid with the Almirante of
+Castille and many another high-placed worshipper
+dancing attendance on her; and now she is in
+Rome, turning the heads of grave cardinals with her
+witcheries. Sometimes penniless and friendless, at
+others lapped in luxury; but carrying everywhere in
+her bosom the English pearls, the last gift of her
+false and frail Louis.</p>
+<p>Thus, through the long, troubled years, until old-age
+crept on her, the Cardinal's niece wandered, a
+fugitive, over the face of Europe, alternately caressed
+and buffeted by fortune, until "at long last" the
+end came and brought peace with it. As she lay
+dying in the house of a good Samaritan at Pisa, with
+no other hand to minister to her, she called for pen
+and paper, and with failing hand wrote her own
+epitaph, surely the most tragic ever penned&#8212;"Marie
+Mancini Colonna&#8212;Dust and Ashes."</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_169"></a>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+<h2>BIANCA, GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY</h2>
+<br>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><a name="img001"></a><img
+ style="width: 295px; height: 435px;" alt="Bianco Capello Bonaventuri"
+ title="Bianco Capello Bonaventuri" src="images/court001.jpg"><br>
+</div>
+<div style="text-align: center;">
+<h5>BIANCA CAPELLO BONAVENTURI.</h5>
+</div>
+<p>More than three centuries have gone since Florence
+made merry over the death of her Grand Duchess,
+Bianca. It was an occasion for rejoicing; her name
+was bandied from lips to lips&#8212;"La Pessima
+Bianca"; jeers and laughter followed her to her
+unmarked grave in the Church of San Lorenzo.
+But through the ages her picture has come down to
+us as she strutted on the world's stage in all her
+pride and beauty, with a vividness which few better
+women of her time retain.</p>
+<p>It was in the year 1548, when our boy-King, the
+sixth Edward, was fresh to his crown, that Bianca
+Capello was cradled in the palace of her father, one
+of the greatest men of Venice, Senator and Privy
+Councillor. As a child she was as beautiful as she
+was wilful; the pride of her father, the despair of his
+wife, her stepmother&#8212;her little head full of romance,
+her heart full of rebellion against any kind of discipline
+or restraint.</p>
+<p>Before she had left the schoolroom Capello's
+daughter was, by common consent, the fairest girl
+in her native city, with a beauty riper than her years.
+<a name="Page_170"></a>Tall, and with a well-developed figure of
+singular
+grace, she carried her head as proudly as any
+Queen. Her fair hair fell in a rippling cascade far
+below her waist; her face, hands, and throat, we are
+told, were "white as lilies," save for the delicate
+rose-colour that tinted her cheeks. Her eyes were
+large and dark, and of an almost dazzling brilliance;
+and her full, pouting lips were red and fragrant
+as a rose.</p>
+<p>Such was Bianca Capello on the threshold of
+womanhood, as you may see her pictured to-day in
+Bronzino's miniature at the British Museum, with a
+loveliness which set the hearts of the Venetian
+gallants a-flutter before our Shakespeare was in his
+cradle. She might, if she would, have mated with
+almost any noble in Tuscany, had not her foolish,
+wayward fancy fallen on Pietro Bonaventuri, a handsome
+young clerk in Salviati's bank, whose eyes had
+often strayed from his ledgers to follow her as, in the
+company of her maid, the Senator's daughter took
+her daily walk past his office window.</p>
+<p>At sight of so fair a vision Pietro was undone; he
+fell violently in love with her long before he exchanged
+a word with her, and although no one knew
+better than he the gulf that separated the daughter
+of a nobleman and a Senator from the drudge of the
+quill, he determined to win her. Youth and good-looks
+such as his, with plenty of assurance to support
+them, had done as much for others, and they should
+do it for him. How they first met we know not, but
+we know that shortly after this momentous meeting
+Bianca had completely lost her heart to the knight
+<a name="Page_171"></a>of the quill, with the handsome face, the dark,
+flashing
+eyes, and the courtly manner.</p>
+<p>Other meetings followed&#8212;secret rendezvous
+arranged by the duenna herself in return for liberal
+bribes&#8212;to keep which Bianca would steal out of her
+father's palace at dead of night, leaving the door
+open behind her to ensure safe return before dawn.
+On one such occasion, so the story runs, Bianca
+returned to find the door closed against her by a too
+officious hand. She dared not wake the sleepers to
+gain admittance&#8212;that would be to expose her secret
+and to cover herself with disgrace&#8212;and in her fears
+and alarm she fled back to her lover.</p>
+<p>However this may be, we know that, for some
+urgent reason or other, the young lovers disappeared
+one night together from Venice and made their way
+to Florence to find a refuge under the roof of Pietro's
+parents. Here a terrible disillusion met Bianca at
+the threshold. Her husband&#8212;for, on the runaway
+journey, Pietro had secured the friendly services of
+a village priest to marry them&#8212;had told her that he
+was the son of noble parents, kin to his employers,
+the Salviatis. The home to which he now introduced
+her was little better than a hovel, with poverty
+looking out of its windows.</p>
+<p>Here indeed was a sorry home-coming for the
+new-made bride, daughter of the great Capello!
+There was not even a drudge to do the housework,
+which Bianca was compelled to share with her
+bucolic mother-in-law. It is even said that she was
+compelled to do laundry-work in order to keep the
+domestic purse supplied. Her husband had forfeited
+<a name="Page_172"></a>his meagre salary; she had equally sacrificed
+the
+fortune left to her by her mother. Sordid, grinding
+poverty stared both in the face.</p>
+<p>To return to her own home in Venice was
+impossible. So furious were her father and stepmother
+at her escapade that a large reward was
+advertised for the capture of her husband, "alive or
+dead," and a sentence of death had been procured
+from the Council of Ten in the event of his arrest.
+More than this, a sentence of banishment was pronounced
+against Pietro and Bianca; the maid who
+had connived at their illicit wooing and flight paid
+for her treachery with her life; and Pietro's uncle
+ended his days in a loathsome dungeon.</p>
+<p>Such was the vengeance taken by Bartolomeo
+Capello. As for the runaways, they spent a long
+honeymoon in concealment and hourly dread of the
+fate that hung over them. It was well known, however,
+in Florence where they were in hiding; and
+curious crowds were drawn to the Bonaventuri hovel
+to catch a glimpse of the heroes of a scandal with
+which all Italy was ringing. Thus it was that
+Francesco de Medici first set eyes on the woman
+who was to play so great a part in his life.</p>
+<p>There could be no greater contrast than that
+between Francesco de Medici, heir to the Tuscan
+Grand Dukedom, and the beautiful young wife of
+the bank-clerk, now playing the r&ocirc;le of maid-of-all-work
+and charwoman. It is said that Francesco
+was a madman; and indeed what we know of him
+makes this description quite plausible. He was a
+man of black brow and violent temper, repelling alike
+<a name="Page_173"></a>in appearance and manner. He was, we are told,
+"more of a savage than a civilised human being."
+His food was deluged with ginger and pepper; his
+favourite fare was raw eggs filled with red pepper,
+and raw onions, of which he ate enormous quantities.
+He drank iced water by the gallon, and slept between
+frozen sheets. He was a man, moreover, of evil life,
+familiar with every form of vicious indulgence. His
+only redeeming feature was a love of art, which
+enriched the galleries of Florence.</p>
+<p>Such was the Medici&#8212;half-ogre, half-madman,
+who, riding one day through a Florence slum, saw
+at the window of a mean dwelling the beautiful face
+of Bianca Bonaventuri, and rode on leaving his
+heart behind. Here indeed was a dainty dish to set
+before his jaded appetite. The owner of that fair
+face, with the crimson lips and the black, flashing
+eyes, must be his. On the following day a great
+Court lady, the Marchesa Mondragone, presents
+herself at the Bonaventuri door, with smiles and
+gracious words, bearing an invitation to Court for the
+lady of the window. "Impossible," bluntly answers
+Signora Bonaventuri; her daughter-in-law has no
+clothes fit to be seen at Court. "But," persists the
+Marchesa, "that is a matter that can easily be
+arranged. It will be a pleasure to me to supply
+the necessary outfit, if the Signora and her daughter-in-law
+will but come to-morrow to the Mondragone
+Palace." The bride, when consulted, is not unwilling;
+and the following day, in company with
+her mother-in-law, she is effusively received by the
+Marchesa, and is feasting her eyes on exquisite
+<a name="Page_174"></a>robes and the glitter of rare gems, among which
+she
+is invited to make her choice. A moment later
+Francesco enters, and with courtly grace is kissing
+the hand of his new divinity....</p>
+<p>Then followed secret meetings such as marked
+Bianca's first unhappy wooing in Venice&#8212;hours of
+rapture for the Tuscan Duke, of flattered submission
+by the runaway bride; and within a few weeks we
+find Bianca installed in a palace of her own with
+Francesco's guards and equipage ever at its door,
+while his newly made bride, Giovanna, Archduchess
+of Austria, kept her lonely vigil in the apartments
+which so seldom saw her husband.</p>
+<p>Francesco, indeed, had no eyes or thought for
+any but the lovely woman who had so completely
+enslaved him. As for her, condemn her as we must,
+much can be pleaded in extenuation of her conduct.
+She had been basely deceived and betrayed. On
+the one side was a life of sordid poverty and
+drudgery, with a husband for whom she had now
+nothing but dislike and contempt; on the other was
+the ardent homage of the future ruler of Tuscany,
+with its accompaniment of splendour, luxury, and
+power. A fig for love! ambition should now rule
+her life. She would drain the cup of pleasure,
+though the dregs might be bitter to the taste.</p>
+<p>She was now in the very prime of her beauty, and
+a Queen in all but the name. Between her and her
+full Queendom were but two obstacles&#8212;her lover's
+plain, unattractive wife, and her own worthless
+husband; and of these obstacles one was soon to be
+removed from her path.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_175"></a>Pietro, who had been made chamberlain to the
+Tuscan Court, was more than content that his wife
+should go her own way, so long as he was allowed
+to go his. He was kept very agreeably occupied
+with love affairs of his own. The richest widow in
+Florence, Cassandra Borgianni, was eager to lavish
+her smiles and favours on him; and the knowledge
+that two of his predecessors in her affection had
+fallen under the assassin's knife only lent zest to a
+love adventure which was after his heart. Warnings
+of the fate that might await him in turn fell on deaf
+ears. When his wife ventured to point out the
+danger he retorted, "If you say another word I will
+cut your throat." The following night as he was
+returning from a visit to the widow, a dagger was
+sheathed in his heart, and Pietro's amorous race
+was run.</p>
+<p>Such was the end of the bank-clerk and his
+eleventh-hour glories and love adventures. Now
+only Giovanna remained to block the way to the
+pinnacle of Bianca's ambition; and her health was so
+frail that the waiting might not be long. Giovanna
+had provided no successor to her husband (who had
+now succeeded to his Grand Dukedom); if Bianca
+could succeed where the Grand Duchess had failed,
+she could at least ensure that a son of hers would
+one day rule over Tuscany.</p>
+<p>Thus one August day in 1576 the news flashed
+round Florence that a male child had been born in
+the palace on the Via Maggiore. Francesco was
+in the "seventh heaven" of delight. Here at last
+was the long-looked-for inheritor of his honours&#8212;the
+<a name="Page_176"></a>son who was to perpetuate the glories of the
+Medici and to thwart his brother, the Cardinal, who
+had so confidently counted on the succession for
+himself. And Madame Bianca professed herself
+equally delighted, although her pleasure was qualified
+by fear.</p>
+<p>She had played her part with consummate cleverness;
+but there were two women who knew the true
+story of the birth of the child, which had been
+smuggled into the palace from a Florence slum.
+One was the changeling's mother, a woman of the
+people, whom a substantial bribe had induced to
+part with her new-born infant; the other was
+Bianca's waiting woman. These witnesses to the
+imposture must be silenced effectually.</p>
+<p>Hired assassins made short work of the mother.
+The waiting-maid was "left for dead" in a mountain-pass,
+to which she had been lured; but she survived
+long enough at least to communicate her secret to
+the Grand Duke's brother, the Cardinal Ferdinand
+de Medici.</p>
+<p>Bianca was now in a parlous plight. At any
+moment her enemy, the Cardinal, might betray her
+to her lover, and bring the carefully planned edifice
+of her fortunes tumbling about her ears. But she
+proved equal even to this emergency. Taking her
+courage in both hands, she herself confessed the
+fraud to the Grand Duke, who not only forgave her
+(so completely was he under the spell of her beauty)
+but insisted on calling the gutter-child his son.</p>
+<p>The tables, however, were soon to be turned on
+her, for Giovanna, who had long despaired of provid<a name="Page_177"></a>ing
+an heir to her husband, gave birth a few months
+later to a male child. Florence was jubilant, for the
+Grand Duchess was as beloved as her rival was
+detested; and the christening of the heir was made
+the occasion of festivities and rejoicing. Bianca's
+day of triumph seemed at last to be over. For a
+time she left Florence to hide her humiliation; but
+within a year she was back again, to be received with
+open arms of welcome by the Duke. During her
+absence she had made peace with her family, and
+when her father and brother came to Florence to
+visit her, they were received by Francesco with regal
+entertainments, and sent away loaded with presents
+and honours.</p>
+<p>Bianca had now reached the zenith of her power
+and splendour. Before she had been back many
+months the Grand Duchess died, to the undisguised
+relief of her husband, who hastened from her funeral
+to the arms of her rival. Her position was now
+secure, unassailable; and before Giovanna had been
+two months in the family vault, Bianca was secretly
+married to her Grand ducal lover.</p>
+<p>Florence was furious. But what mattered that?
+The Venetian Senate had recognised Bianca as a
+true daughter of the Republic. She was the legal
+wife of the ruler of Tuscany. She was Grand
+Duchess at last, and she meant all the world to know
+it. That she was cordially hated by her husband's
+subjects, that the air was full of stories of her extravagance,
+her intemperance, and her cruelty, gave
+her no moment's unhappiness. For eight years she
+reigned as Queen, wielding the sceptre her husband's
+<a name="Page_178"></a>hands were too weak or indifferent to hold.
+Giovanna's
+son had followed his mother to the grave;
+and the child of the slums, who had been so
+fruitlessly smuggled into her palace, had been
+legitimated.</p>
+<p>The only thorn now left in her bed of roses was
+the enmity of the Grand Duke's brother, the Cardinal;
+and her greatest ambition was to win him to
+her side. In the autumn of 1787 he was invited to
+Florence, and as the culmination of a series of
+festivities, a grand banquet was given, at which he
+had the place of honour, at her right hand. The
+feast was drawing near to its end. Bianca, with
+sparkling eyes and flushed face, looking lovelier
+than she had ever looked before, was at her happiest,
+for the Cardinal had at last succumbed to her bright
+eyes and honeyed words. It was the crowning
+moment of her many triumphs, when life left nothing
+more to desire.</p>
+<p>Then it was, at the supreme moment, that tragedy
+in its most terrible form fell on the scene of festivity
+and mirth. While Bianca was smiling her sweetest
+on the Cardinal she was seized by violent pains,
+"her mouth foams, her face is distorted by agony;
+she shrieks aloud that she is dying. Francesco tries
+to go to her aid, but his steps are suddenly arrested.
+He too is seized by the same terrible anguish. A
+few hours later both she and he breathe their last
+breath."</p>
+<p>"Poison" was the word which ran through the
+palace and soon through Florence from blanched
+lips to blanched lips. Some said it was the Cardinal
+<a name="Page_179"></a>who had done the deed; others whispered stories
+of
+a poisoned tart designed by Bianca for the Cardinal,
+who refused to be tempted. Whereupon the Grand
+Duke had eaten of it, and Bianca, "seeing that her
+plot had so tragically miscarried, seized the tart from
+her husband's hand and ate what was left of it."</p>
+<p>The truth will never be known. What we do
+know is that within a few hours of the last joke and
+the last drained glass of that fatal banquet the bodies
+of Francesco and Bianca were lying in death side
+by side in an adjacent room, the door of which was
+locked against the eyes of the curious&#8212;even against
+the physicians.</p>
+<p>In the solemn lying-in-state that followed Bianca
+had no place. Francesco alone, by his brother's
+orders, wore his crown in death. As for Bianca, her
+body was hurried away and flung into the common
+vault of San Lorenzo, with the light of two yellow
+wax torches to bear it company, and the jibes and
+jeers of Florence for its only requiem.<br>
+</p>
+<p style="text-align: center;"><a name="img008"></a><img
+ style="width: 270px; height: 394px;"
+ alt="Francesco I., Grand Duke of Tuscany."
+ title="Francesco I., Grand Duke of Tuscany." src="images/court008.jpg"><br>
+</p>
+<h5>FRANCESCO I., GRAND DUKE OF TUSCANY.</h5>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_180"></a>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+<h2>RICHELIEU, THE ROU&Eacute;</h2>
+<p>In the drama of the French Court many a fine-feathered
+villain "struts his brief hour" on the stage,
+dazzling eyes by his splendour, and shocking a world
+none too easily shocked in those days of easy morals
+by his profligacy; but it would be difficult among all
+these gilded rakes to find a match for the Duc de
+Richelieu, who carried his villainies through little
+less than a century of life.</p>
+<p>Born in 1696, when Louis XIV. had still nearly
+twenty years of his long reign before him, Louis
+Fran&ccedil;ois Armand Duplessis, Duc de Richelieu, survived
+to hear the rumblings which heralded the
+French Revolution ninety-two years later; and for
+three-quarters of a century to be known as the most
+accomplished and heartless rou&eacute; in all France.
+Bearer of a great name, and inheritor of the splendours
+and riches of his great-uncle, the Cardinal,
+who was Louis XII.'s right-hand man, and, in his
+day, the most powerful subject in Europe, the Duc
+was born with the football of fortune at his feet;
+and probably no man who has ever lived so shamefully
+prostituted such magnificent opportunities and
+gifts.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_181"></a>As a boy, still in his teens, he had begun to
+play
+the r&ocirc;le of Don Juan at the Court of the child-King,
+Louis XV. The most beautiful women at the
+Court, we are told, went crazy over the handsome
+boy, who bore the most splendid name in France;
+and thus early his head was turned by flatteries and
+attentions which followed him almost to the grave.</p>
+<p>The young Duchesse de Bourgogne, the King's
+mother, made love to him, to the scandal of the
+Court; and from Princesses of the Blood Royal to
+the humblest serving-maid, there was scarcely a
+woman at Court who would not have given her eyes
+for a smile from the Duc de Fronsac, as he was then
+known.</p>
+<p>How he revelled in his conquests he makes
+abundantly clear in the Memoirs he left behind him&#8212;surely
+the most scandalous ever written&#8212;in which
+he recounts his love affairs, in long sequence, with
+a cold-blooded heartlessness which shocks the reader
+to-day, so long after lover and victims have been
+dust. He revels in describing the artifices by which
+he got the most unassailable of women into his power&#8212;such
+as the young and beautiful Madame Michelin,
+whose religious scruples proved such a frail
+barrier against the assaults of the young Lothario.
+He chuckles with a diabolical pride as he tells us how
+he played off one mistress against another; how he
+made one liaison pave the way to its successor; and
+how he abandoned each in turn when it had served
+its purpose, and betrayed, one after another, the
+women who had trusted to his nebulous sense of
+honour.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_182"></a>A profligate so tempted as the Duc de
+Richelieu
+was from his earliest years, one can understand,
+however much we may condemn; but for the man
+who conducted his love affairs with such heartlessness
+and dishonour no language has words of execration
+and contempt to describe him.</p>
+<p>From his earliest youth there was no "game" too
+high for our Don Juan to fly at. Long before he
+had reached manhood he counted his lady-loves by
+the score; and among them were at least three
+Royal Princesses, Mademoiselle de Charolais, and
+two of the Regent's own daughters, the Duchesse de
+Berry and Mademoiselle de Valois, later Duchess
+of Modena, who, in their jealousy, were ready to
+"tear each other's eyes out" for love of the Duc.
+Quarrels between the rival ladies were of everyday
+occurrence; and even duels were by no means
+unknown.</p>
+<p>When, for instance, the Duc wearied of the lovely
+Madame de Polignac, this lady was so inflamed by
+hatred of her successor in his affections, the Marquise
+de Nesle, that she challenged her to a duel to
+the death in the Bois de Boulogne. When Madame
+de Polignac, after a fierce exchange of shots, saw her
+rival stretched at her feet, she turned furiously on
+the wounded woman. "Go!" she shrieked. "I
+will teach you to walk in the footsteps of a woman
+like me! If I had the traitor here, I would blow
+his brains out!" Whereupon, Madame de Nesle,
+fainting as she was from loss of blood, retorted that
+her lover was worthy that even more noble blood
+than hers should be shed for him. "He is," she said
+<a name="Page_183"></a>to the few onlookers who had hurried to the
+scene
+on hearing the shots, "the most amiable <i>seigneur</i> of
+the Court. I am ready to shed for him the last drop
+of blood in my veins. All these ladies try to catch
+him, but I hope that the proofs I have given of my
+devotion will win him for myself without sharing with
+anyone. Why should I hide his name? He is the
+Duc de Richelieu&#8212;yes, the Duc de Richelieu, the
+eldest son of Venus and Mars!"</p>
+<p>Such was the devotion which this heartless profligate
+won from some of the most beautiful and
+highly placed ladies of France. What was the secret
+of the spell he cast over them it is difficult to say.
+It is true that he was a handsome man, as his
+portraits show, but there were men quite as handsome
+at the French Court; he was courtly and
+accomplished, but he had many rivals as clever and
+as skilled in courtly arts as himself. His power
+must, one thinks, have lain in that strange magnetism
+which women seem so powerless to resist in
+men, and which outweighs all graces of mind and
+physical perfections.</p>
+<p>The Duc's career, however, was not one unbroken
+dallying with love. Thrice, at least, he was sent
+to cool his ardour within the walls of the Bastille&#8212;on
+one occasion as the result of a duel with the
+Comte de Gac&eacute;. His lady-loves were desolate at
+the cruel fate which had overtaken their idol. They
+fell on their knees at the Regent's feet, and, with
+tears streaming down their pretty cheeks, pleaded
+for his freedom. Two of the Royal Princesses,
+both disguised as Sisters of Charity, visited the
+<a name="Page_184"></a>prisoner daily in his dungeon, carrying with
+them
+delicacies to tempt his appetite, and consolation to
+cheer his captivity.</p>
+<p>In vain did Duc and Comte both declare that they
+had never fought a duel; and when, in the absence
+of proof, the Regent insisted that their bodies should
+be examined for the convicting wounds, the impish
+Richelieu came triumphantly through the ordeal as
+the result of having his wounds covered with pink
+taffeta and skilfully painted!</p>
+<p>It was a more serious matter that sent him again
+to the Bastille in 1718. False to his country as to
+the victims of his fascinations, he had been plotting
+with Spain, France's bitterest enemy, for the seizure
+of the Regent and the carrying him off across the
+Pyrenees; and certain incriminating letters sent to
+him by Cardinal Alberoni had been intercepted, and
+were in the Regent's hands. The Regent's daughter,
+Mademoiselle de Valois, warned her lover of
+his danger, but too late. Before he could escape,
+he was arrested, and with an escort of archers was
+safely lodged in the Bastille.</p>
+<p>Our Lothario was now indeed in a parlous plight.
+Lodged in the deepest and most loathsome dungeon
+of the Bastille&#8212;a dungeon so damp that within a
+few hours his clothes were saturated&#8212;without even
+a chair to sit on or a bed to lie on, with legions of
+hungry rats for company, he was now face to face
+with almost certain death. The Regent, whose love
+affairs he had thwarted a score of times, and who
+thus had no reason to love the profligate Duc, vowed
+that his head should pay the price of his treason.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_185"></a>Once more the Court ladies were reduced to
+hysterics and despair, and forgot their jealousies
+in a common appeal to the Regent for clemency.
+Mademoiselle de Valois was driven to distraction;
+and when tears and pleadings failed to soften her
+father's heart, she declared in the hearing of the
+Court that she would commit suicide unless her lover
+was restored to liberty. In company with her rival,
+Mademoiselle de Charolais, she visited the dungeon
+in the dark night hours, taking flint and steel, candles
+and bonbons, to weep with the captive.</p>
+<p>She squandered two hundred thousand livres in
+attempts to bribe his guards, but all to no purpose:
+and it was not until after six months of durance that
+the Regent at last yielded&#8212;moved partly by his
+daughter's tears and threats and partly by the pleadings
+of the Cardinal-Archbishop of Paris&#8212;and the
+prisoner was released, on condition that the Cardinal
+and the Duchesse de Richelieu would be responsible
+for his custody and good behaviour.</p>
+<p>A few days later we find the irresponsible
+Richelieu climbing over the garden-walls of his new
+"prison" at Conflans, racing through the darkness
+to Paris behind swift horses, and making love to the
+Regent's own mistresses and his daughter!</p>
+<p>But such facilities for dalliance with the Regent's
+daughter were soon to be brought to an end.
+Mademoiselle de Valois, in order to ensure her
+lover's freedom, had at last consented to accept the
+hand of the Duke of Modena, an alliance which she
+had long fought against; and before the Duc had
+been a free man again many weeks she paid this part
+<a name="Page_186"></a>of his ransom by going into exile, and to an
+odious
+wedded life, in a far corner of Italy&#8212;much, it may
+be imagined, to the Regent's relief, for his daughters
+and their love affairs were ever a thorn in his side.</p>
+<p>It was not long, however, before the new Duchess
+of Modena began to sigh for her distant lover, and to
+bombard him with letters begging him to come to
+her. "I cannot live without your love," she wrote.
+"Come to me&#8212;only, come in disguise, so that no
+one can recognise you."</p>
+<p>This was indeed an adventure after the Lothario
+Duc's heart&#8212;an adventure with love as its reward
+and danger as its spur. And thus it was that, a few
+weeks after the Duchess had sent her invitation, two
+travel-stained pedlars, with packs on their backs,
+entered the city of Modena to find customers for their
+books and phamphlets. At the small hostelry whose
+hospitality they sought the hawkers gave their names
+as Gasparini and Romano, names which masked the
+identities of the knight-errant Duc and his friend,
+La Fosse, respectively.</p>
+<p>The following morning behold the itinerant
+hawkers in the palace grounds, their wares spread
+out to tempt the Court ladies on their way to Mass,
+when the Duchess herself passed their way and
+deigned to stop to converse graciously with the
+strangers. To her inquiries they answered that they
+came from Piedmont; and their curious jargon of
+French and Italian lent support to the story. After
+inspecting their wares she asked for a certain book.
+"Alas! Madame," Gasparini answered, "I have not
+a copy here, but I have one at my inn." And
+<a name="Page_187"></a>bidding him bring the volume to her at the
+palace,
+the great lady resumed her devout journey to Mass.</p>
+<p>A few hours later Gasparini presented himself at
+the palace with the required volume, and was
+ushered into the august presence of the Duchess. A
+moment later, on the closing of the door, the Royal
+lady was in the "hawker's" arms, her own flung
+around his neck, as with tears of joy she welcomed
+the lover who had come to her in such strange guise
+and at such risk.</p>
+<p>A few stolen moments of happiness was all the
+lovers dared now to allow themselves. The Duke
+of Modena was in the palace, and the situation was
+full of danger. But on the morrow he was going
+away on a hunting expedition, and then&#8212;well, then
+they might meet without fear.</p>
+<p>On the following day, the coast now clear, behold
+our "hawker" once more at the palace door, with a
+bundle of books under his arm for the inspection of
+Her Highness, and being ushered into the Duchess's
+reading-room, full of souvenirs of the happy days
+they had spent together in distant Paris and Versailles.
+Among them, most prized of all, was a lock
+of his own hair, enshrined on a small altar, and
+surmounted by a crown of interlocked hearts. This
+lock, the Duchess told him, she had kissed and wept
+over every day since they had parted.</p>
+<p>Each day now brought its hours of blissful meeting,
+so seemingly short that the Princess would
+throw her arms around her "hawker's" neck and
+implore him to stay a little longer. One day,
+however, he tarried too long; the Duke returned
+<a name="Page_188"></a>unexpectedly from his hunting, and before the
+lovers
+could part, he had entered the room&#8212;just in time to
+see the pedlar bowing humbly in farewell to his
+Duchess, and to hear him assure her that he
+would call again with the further books she wished
+to see.</p>
+<p>Certainly it was a strange spectacle to greet the
+eyes of a home-coming Duke&#8212;that of his lady
+closeted with a shabby pedlar of books; but at least
+there was nothing suspicious in it, and, getting into
+conversation with the "hawker," the Duke found
+him quite an entertaining fellow, full of news of what
+was going on in the world outside his small duchy.</p>
+<p>In his curious jargon of French and Italian,
+Gasparini had much to tell His Highness apart from
+book-talk. He entertained him with the latest
+scandals of the French Court; with gossip about
+well-known personages, from the Regent to Dubois.
+"And what about that rascal, the Duc de Richelieu?"
+asked the great man. "What tricks has he
+been up to lately?" "Oh," answered Gasparini,
+with a wink at the Duchess, who was crimson with
+suppressed laughter, "he is one of my best customers.
+Ah, Monsieur le Duc, he is a gay dog. I
+hear that all the women at the Court are madly in
+love with him; that the Princesses adore him, and
+that he is driving all the husbands to distraction."</p>
+<p>"Is it as bad as that?" asked the Duke, with a
+laugh. "He is a more dangerous fellow even than
+I thought. And what is his latest game?"</p>
+<p>"Oh," answered the hawker, "I am told that he
+has made a wager that he will come to Modena, in
+<a name="Page_189"></a>spite of you; and I shouldn't be at all
+surprised if
+he does!"</p>
+<p>"As for that," said the Duke, with a chuckle, "I
+am not afraid. I defy him to do his worst; and I
+am willing to wager that I shall be a match for him.
+However," he added, "you're an entertaining
+fellow; so come and see me again whenever you
+please."</p>
+<p>And thus, by the wish of the Duchess's husband
+himself, the ducal "hawker" became a daily visitor
+at the palace, entertaining His Highness with his
+chatter, and, when his back was turned, making love
+to his wife, and joining her in shrieks of laughter at
+his easy gullibility.</p>
+<p>Thus many happy weeks passed, Gasparini, the
+pedlar, selling few volumes, but reaping a rich harvest
+of stolen pleasure, and revelling in an adventure
+which added such a new zest to a life sated with
+more humdrum love-making. But even the Duchess's
+charms began to pall; the ladies he had left so disconsolate
+in Paris were inundating him with letters,
+begging him to return to them&#8212;letters, all forwarded
+to him from his ch&acirc;teau at Richelieu, where he was
+supposed to be in retreat. The lure was too strong
+for him; and, taking leave of the Duchess in floods
+of tears, he returned to his beloved Paris to fresh
+conquests.</p>
+<p>And thus it was with the gay Duc until the
+century that followed that of his birth was drawing
+to its close; until its sun was beginning to set in the
+blood of that Revolution, which, if he had lived but
+one year longer, would surely have claimed him as
+<a name="Page_190"></a>one of its first victims. Three wives he led to
+the
+altar&#8212;the last when he had passed into the eighties&#8212;but
+no marital duty was allowed to interfere with
+the amours which filled his life; and to the last no
+pity ever gave a pang to the "conscience" which
+allowed him to pick and fling away his flowers at
+will, and to trample, one after another, on the hearts
+that yielded to his love and trusted to his honour.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_191"></a>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+<h2>THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS</h2>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><img
+ style="width: 312px; height: 431px;"
+ alt="Caroline of Brunswick, wife of George IV."
+ title="Caroline of Brunswick, wife of George IV."
+ src="images/court009.jpg"><a name="img009"></a><br>
+<h5>CAROLINE OF BRUNSWICK, WIFE OF GEORGE IV.</h5>
+</div>
+<br>
+<p>It was an ill fate that brought Caroline, Princess of
+Brunswick-Wolfenb&uuml;ttel to England to be the bride
+of George, Prince of Wales, one April day in the
+year 1795; although probably no woman has ever
+set forth on her bridal journey with a lighter or
+prouder heart, for, as she said, "Am I not going to
+be the wife of the handsomest Prince in the world?"
+If she had any momentary doubt of this, a glance
+at the miniature she carried in her bosom reassured
+her; for the pictured face that smiled at her was
+handsome as that of an Apollo.</p>
+<p>No wonder the Princess's heart beat high with pride
+and pleasure during that last triumphal stage of her
+journey to her husband's arms; for he was not only
+the handsomest man, with "the best shaped leg in
+Europe," he was by common consent the "greatest
+gentleman" any Court could show. Picture him as
+he made his first appearance at a Court ball. "His
+coat," we are told, "was of pink silk, with white cuffs;
+his waistcoat of white silk, embroidered with various-coloured
+foil and adorned with a profusion of French
+paste. And his hat was ornamented with two rows
+<a name="Page_192"></a>of steel beads, five thousand in number, with a
+button
+and a loop of the same metal, and cocked in a new
+military style." See young "Florizel" as he makes
+his smiling and gracious progress through the
+avenues of courtiers; note the winsomeness of his
+smiles, the inimitable grace of his bows, his pleasant,
+courtly words of recognition, and say if ever Royalty
+assumed a form more agreeable to the eye and captivating
+to the senses.</p>
+<p>"Florizel" was indeed the most splendid Prince
+in the world, and the most "perfect gentleman." He
+was also, though his bride-to-be little knew it, the
+most dissolute man in Europe, the greatest gambler
+and voluptuary&#8212;a man who was as false to his
+friends as he was traitor to every woman who crossed
+his path, a man whom no appeal of honour or mercy
+could check in his selfish pursuit of pleasure.</p>
+<p>"I look through all his life," Thackeray says,
+"and recognise but a bow and a grin. I try and
+take him to pieces, and find silk stockings, padding,
+stays, a coat with frogs and a fur collar, a star and
+blue ribbon, a pocket handkerchief prodigiously
+scented, one of Truefitt's best nutty brown wigs reeking
+with oil, a set of teeth and a huge black stock,
+under-waistcoats, more under-waistcoats, and then&#8212;nothing.
+French ballet-dancers, French cooks,
+horse-jockeys, buffoons, procuresses, tailors, boxers,
+fencing-masters, china, jewel and gimcrack-merchants&#8212;these
+were his real companions."</p>
+<p>Such was the husband Princess Caroline came so
+light-heartedly, with laughter on her lips, from Brunswick
+to wed, little dreaming of the disillusion and
+<a name="Page_193"></a>tears that were to await her on the very
+threshold of
+the life to which she had looked forward with such
+high hopes.</p>
+<p>We get the first glimpse of Caroline some twelve
+years earlier, when Sir John Stanley, who was making
+the grand tour, spent a few weeks at her father's
+Court. He speaks of her as a "beautiful girl of fourteen,"
+and adds, "I did think and dream of her day
+and night at Brunswick, and for a year afterwards I
+saw her for hours three or fours times a week, but as a
+star out of my reach." Years later he met her again
+under sadly changed conditions. "One day only,"
+he writes, "when dining with her and her mother at
+Blackheath, she smiled at something which had
+pleased her, and for an instant only I could have
+fancied she had been the Caroline of fourteen years
+old&#8212;the lovely, pretty Caroline, the girl my eyes had
+so often rested on, with light and powdered hair
+hanging in curls on her neck, the lips from which only
+sweet words seemed as if they would flow, with looks
+animated, and always simply and modestly dressed."</p>
+<p>Lady Charlotte Campbell, too, gives us a glimpse
+of her in these early and happier years, before sorrow
+had laid its defacing hand on her. "The Princess
+was in her early youth a pretty girl," Lady Charlotte
+says, "with fine light hair&#8212;very delicately formed
+features, and a fine complexion&#8212;quick, glancing,
+penetrating eyes, long cut and rather small in the
+head, which gave them much expression; and a
+remarkably delicately formed mouth."</p>
+<p>It was in no happy home that the Princess had
+been cradled one May day in 1768. Her father,
+<a name="Page_194"></a>Charles William, Duke of Brunswick, was an
+austere
+soldier, too much absorbed in his military life and
+his mistress, to give much thought to his daughters.
+Her mother, the Duchess Augusta, sister of our own
+George III., was weak and small-minded, too much
+occupied in self-indulgence and scandal-talking to
+trouble about the training of her children.</p>
+<p>Princess Caroline herself draws an unattractive
+picture of her home-life, in answer to Lady Charlotte
+Campbell's question, "Were you sorry to leave
+Brunswick?" "Not at all," was the answer; "I was
+sick tired of it, though I was sorry to leave my fader.
+I loved my fader dearly, better than any oder person.
+But dere were some unlucky tings in our Court which
+made my position difficult. My fader was most entirely
+attached to a lady for thirty years, who was in
+fact his mistress. She was the beautifullest creature
+and the cleverest, but, though my fader continued
+to pay my moder all possible respect, my poor moder
+could not suffer this attachment. And de consequence
+was, I did not know what to do between
+them; when I was civil to one, I was scolded by
+the other, and was very tired of being shuttlecock
+between them."</p>
+<p>But in spite of these unfortunate home conditions
+Caroline appears to have spent a fairly happy girlhood,
+thanks to her exuberant spirits; and such faults
+as she developed were largely due to the lack of
+parental care, which left her training to servants.
+Thus she grew up with quite a shocking disregard
+of conventions, running wild like a young filly, and
+finding her pleasure and her companions in undesir<a name="Page_195"></a>able
+directions. Strange stories are told of her
+girlish love affairs, which seem to have been indiscreet
+if nothing worse, while her beauty drew to her
+many a high-placed wooer, including the Prince of
+Orange and Prince George of Darmstadt, to all of
+whom she seems to have turned a cold shoulder.</p>
+<p>But the wilful Princess was not to be left mistress
+of her own destiny. One November day, in 1794,
+Lord Malmesbury arrived at the Brunswick Court
+to demand her hand for the Prince of Wales, whom
+his burden of debts and the necessity of providing
+an heir to the throne of England were at last driving
+reluctantly to the altar. And thus a new and dazzling
+future opened for her. To her parents nothing could
+have been more welcome than this prospect of a
+crown for their daughter; while to her it offered a
+release from a life that had become odious.</p>
+<p>"The Princess Caroline much embarrassed on my
+first being presented to her," Malmesbury enters in
+his diary&#8212;"pretty face, not expressive of softness&#8212;her
+figure not graceful, fine eyes, good hands, tolerable
+teeth, fair hair and light eyebrows, good bust,
+short, with what the French call 'des &eacute;paules impertinentes,'
+vastly happy with her future expectations."</p>
+<p>Such were Malmesbury's first impressions of the
+future Queen of England, whom it was his duty to
+prepare for her exalted station&#8212;a duty which he
+seems to have taken very seriously, even to the regulating
+of her toilette and her manners. Thus, a few
+days after setting eyes on her, his diary records:
+"She <i>will</i> call ladies whom she meets for the first
+time 'Mon coeur, ma ch&egrave;re, ma petite,' and I am
+<a name="Page_196"></a>obliged to rebuke and correct her." He lectures
+her
+on her undignified habit of whispering and giggling,
+and impresses on her the necessity of greater care in
+her attire, on more constant and thorough ablution,
+more frequent changes of linen, the care of her teeth,
+and so on&#8212;all of which admonitions she seems to
+have taken in excellent part, with demure promises
+of amendment, until he is impelled to write, "Princess
+Caroline improves very much on a closer acquaintance&#8212;cheerful
+and loves laughing. If she
+can get rid of her gossiping habit she will do
+very well."</p>
+<p>Thus a few months passed at the Brunswick Court.
+The ceremonial of betrothal took place in December&#8212;"Princess
+Caroline much affected, but replies distinctly
+and well"; the marriage-contract was signed,
+and finally on 28th March the Princess embarked
+for England on her journey to the unseen husband
+whose good-looks and splendour have filled her with
+such high expectations. That she had not yet
+learnt discretion, in spite of all Malmesbury's homilies,
+is proved by the fact that she spent the night
+on board in walking up and down the deck in the
+company of a handsome young naval officer, conduct
+which naturally gave cause for observation and suspicion
+in the affianced bride of the future King of
+England.</p>
+<p>It was well, perhaps, that she had snatched these
+few hours of innocent pleasure: for her first meeting
+with her future husband was well calculated to scatter
+all her rosy dreams. Arrived at last at St James's
+Palace, "I immediately notified the arrival to the
+<a name="Page_197"></a>King and Prince of Wales," says Malmesbury; "the
+last came immediately. I accordingly introduced
+the Princess Caroline to him. She very properly
+attempted to kneel to him. He raised her gracefully
+enough, and embraced her, said barely one word,
+turned round and retired to a distant part of the apartment,
+and calling to me said: 'Harris, I am not well;
+pray get me a glass of brandy.' I said, 'Sir, had
+you not better have a glass of water?' Upon which
+he, much out of humour, said with an oath: 'No; I
+will go directly to the Queen,' and away he went.
+The Princess, left during this short moment alone,
+was in a state of astonishment; and, on my joining
+her, said, '<i>Mon Dieu</i>, is the Prince always like
+that? I find him very fat, and not at all as handsome
+as his portrait.'"</p>
+<p>Such was the Princess's welcome to the arms of
+her handsome husband and to the Court over which
+she hoped to reign as Queen; nor did she receive
+much warmer hospitality from the Prince's family.
+The Queen, who had designed a very different bride
+for her eldest son, received her with scarcely disguised
+enmity, while the King, although, as he afterwards
+proved, kindly disposed towards her, treated
+her at first with an amiable indifference. And certainly
+her attitude seems to have been calculated
+to create an unfavourable impression on her new
+relatives and on the Court generally.</p>
+<p>At the banquet which followed her reception,
+Malmesbury says, "I was far from satisfied with
+the Princess's behaviour. It was flippant, rattling,
+affecting raillery and wit, and throwing out coarse,
+<a name="Page_198"></a>vulgar hints about Lady&#8212;&#8212;, who was present. The
+Prince was evidently disgusted, and this unfortunate
+dinner fixed his dislike, which, when left to herself,
+the Princess had not the talent to remove; but by
+still observing the same giddy manners and attempts
+at cleverness and coarse sarcasm, increased it till it
+became positive hatred."</p>
+<p>"What," as Thackeray asks, "could be expected
+from a wedding which had such a beginning&#8212;from
+such a bridegroom and such a bride? Malmesbury
+tells us how the Prince reeled into the Chapel Royal
+to be married on the evening of Wednesday, the 8th
+of April; and how he hiccuped out his vows of
+fidelity." "My brother," John, Duke of Bedford,
+records, "was one of the two unmarried dukes who
+supported the Prince at the ceremony, and he had
+need of his support; for my brother told me the
+Prince was so drunk that he could scarcely support
+himself from falling. He told my brother that he
+had drunk several glasses of brandy to enable him to
+go through the ceremony. There is no doubt that
+it was a <i>compulsory</i> marriage."</p>
+<p>With such an overture, we are not surprised to
+learn that the Royal bridegroom spent his wedding-night
+in a state of stupor on the floor of his bedroom;
+or that at dawn, when he had slept off the effects of his
+debauch, "pages heard cries proceeding from the
+nuptial chamber, and shortly afterwards saw the
+bridegroom rush out violently."</p>
+<p>Nor, we may be sure, was the Prince's undisguised
+hatred of his bride in any way mitigated by the stories
+which Lady Jersey and others of hex rivals poured into
+<a name="Page_199"></a>his willing ears&#8212;stories of her attachment to a
+young
+German Prince whom she was not allowed to marry;
+of a mysterious illness, followed by a few weeks'
+retreat; of that midnight promenade with the young
+naval officer; of assignations with Major Toebingen,
+the handsomest soldier in Europe, who so proudly
+wore the amethyst tie-pin she had presented to him&#8212;these
+and many another story which reflected none
+too well on her reputation before he had set eyes on
+her. But it needed no such whispered scandal to
+strengthen his hatred of a bride who personally
+repelled him, and who had been forced on him at a
+time when his heart was fully engaged with his lawful
+wedded wife, Mrs Fitzherbert, when it was not
+straying to Lady Jersey, to "Perdita" or others of
+his legion of lights-o'-love.</p>
+<p>From the first day the ill-fated union was doomed.
+One violent scene succeeded another, until, before
+she had been two months a wife, the Prince declared
+that he would no longer live with her. He would
+only wait until her child was born; then he would
+formally and finally leave her. Thus, three months
+after the birth of the Princess Charlotte, the deed of
+separation was signed, and Caroline was at last free
+to escape from a Court which she had grown to detest,
+with good reason, and from a husband whose brutalities
+and infidelities filled her with loathing.</p>
+<p>She carried with her, however, this consolation,
+that the "great, hearty people of England loved
+and pitied her." "God bless you! we will bring your
+husband back to you," was among the many cries
+that greeted her as she left the palace on her way to
+<a name="Page_200"></a>exile. But, to quote Thackeray again, "they
+could
+not bring that husband back; they could not cleanse
+that selfish heart. Was hers the only one he had
+wounded? Steeped in selfishness, impotent for
+faithful attachment and manly enduring love&#8212;had it
+not survived remorse, was it not accustomed to
+desertion?"</p>
+<p>For a time the outcast Princess, with her infant
+daughter, led a retired life amid the peace and beauty
+of Blackheath, where she lived as simply as any
+bourgeoise, playing the "lady bountiful" to the poor
+among her neighbours. Her chief pleasure seems
+to have been to surround herself with cottage babies,
+converting Montague House into a "positive nursery,
+littered up with cradles, swaddling-bands,
+feeding bottles, and other things of the kind."</p>
+<p>But even to this rustic retirement watchful eyes
+and slanderous tongues followed her; and it was not
+long before stories were passing from mouth to mouth
+in the Court of strange doings at Blackheath. The
+Princess, it was said, had become very intimate with
+Sir John Douglas and his lady, her near neighbours,
+and more especially with Sydney Smith, a good-looking
+naval captain, who shared the Douglas home,
+a man, moreover, with whom she had had suspicious
+relations at her father's Court many years earlier. It
+was rumoured that Captain Smith was a frequent
+and too welcome guest at Montague House, at hours
+when discreet ladies are not in the habit of receiving
+their male friends. Nor was the handsome captain
+the only friend thus unconventionally entertained.
+There was another good-looking naval officer, a
+<a name="Page_201"></a>Captain Manby, and also Sir Thomas Lawrence, the
+famous painter, both of whom were admitted to a
+suspicious intimacy with the Princess of Wales.</p>
+<p>These rumours, sufficiently disquieting in themselves,
+were followed by stories of the concealed birth
+of a child, who had come mysteriously to swell the
+numbers of the Princess's prot&eacute;g&eacute;s of the cr&egrave;che.
+Even King George, whose sympathy with his heir's
+ill-used wife was a matter of common knowledge,
+could not overlook a charge so grave as this. It
+must be investigated in the interests of the State, as
+well as of his family's honour; and, by his orders, a
+Commission of Peers was appointed to examine into
+the matter and ascertain the truth.</p>
+<p>The inquiry&#8212;the "Delicate Investigation" as it
+was appropriately called&#8212;opened in June, 1806, and
+witness after witness, from the Douglases to Robert
+Bidgood, a groom, gave evidence which more or less
+supported the charges of infidelity and concealment.
+The result of the investigation, however, was a verdict
+of acquittal, the Commissioners reporting that
+the Princess, although innocent, had been guilty of
+very indiscreet conduct&#8212;and this verdict the Privy
+Council confirmed.</p>
+<p>For the Princess it was a triumphant vindication,
+which was hailed with acclamation throughout the
+country. Even the Royal family showed their
+satisfaction by formal visits of congratulation to the
+Princess, from the King himself to the Duke of
+Cumberland who conducted his sister-in-law on a
+visit to the Court.</p>
+<p>But the days of Blackheath and the amateur
+<a name="Page_202"></a>nursery were at an end. The Princess returned to
+London, and found a more suitable home in Kensington
+Palace for some years, where she held her
+Court in rivalry of that of her husband at Carlton
+House. Here she was subjected to every affront
+and slight by the Prince and his set that the ingenuity
+of hatred could devise, and to crown her humiliation
+and isolation, her daughter Charlotte was taken from
+her and forbidden even to recognise her when their
+carriages passed in the street or park.</p>
+<p>Can we wonder that, under such remorseless persecutions,
+the Princess became more and more defiant;
+that she gave herself up to a life of recklessness and
+extravagance; that, more and more isolated from her
+own world, she sought her pleasure and her companions
+in undesirable quarters, finding her chief
+intimates in a family of Italian musicians; or that
+finally, heart-broken and despairing, she determined
+once for all to shake off the dust of a land that had
+treated her so cruelly?</p>
+<p>In August, 1814, with the approval of King and
+Parliament, the Princess left England to begin a
+career of amazing adventures and indiscr&eacute;tions, the
+story of which is one of the most remarkable in
+history.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_203"></a>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+<h2>THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS&#8212;<i>continued</i></h2>
+<p>When Caroline, Princess of Wales, shook the dust
+of England off her feet one August day in the year
+1814, it was only natural that her steps should first
+turn towards the Brunswick home which held for her
+at least a few happy memories, and where she hoped
+to find in sympathy and old associations some salve
+for her wounded heart.</p>
+<p>But the fever of restlessness was in her blood&#8212;the
+restlessness which was to make her a wanderer
+over the face of the earth for half a dozen years.
+The peace and solace she had looked for in Brunswick
+eluded her; and before many days had passed
+she was on her way through Switzerland to the sunny
+skies of Italy, where she could perhaps find in
+distraction and pleasure the anodyne which a life of
+retirement denied her. She was full of rebellion
+against fate, of hatred against her husband and his
+country which had treated her with such unmerited
+cruelty. She would defy fate; she would put a
+whole continent between herself and the nightmare
+life she had left behind, she hoped for ever. She
+would pursue and find pleasure at whatever cost.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_204"></a>In September, within five weeks of leaving
+England,
+we find her at Geneva, installed in a suite of
+rooms next to those occupied by Marie Louise, late
+Empress of France, a fugitive and exile like herself,
+and animated by the same spirit of reckless revolt
+against destiny&#8212;Marie Louise, we read, "making
+excursions like a lunatic on foot and on horseback,
+never even seeming to dream of making people
+remember that, before she became mixed up with a
+Corsican adventurer, she was an Archduchess"; the
+Princess of Wales, equally careless of her dignity
+and position, finding her pleasure in questionable
+company.</p>
+<p>"From the inn where she was stopping she heard
+music, and, quite unaccompanied, immediately entered
+a neighbouring house and disappeared in the
+medley of dancers." A few days later, at Lausanne,
+"she learned that a little ball was in progress at a
+house opposite the 'Golden Lion,' and she asked for
+an invitation. After dancing with everybody and
+anybody, she finished up by dancing a Savoyard
+dance, called a <i>fricass&eacute;e</i>, with a nobody. Madame
+de Corsal, who blushed and wept for the rest of the
+company, declares that it has made her ill, and that
+she feels that the honour of England has been compromised."
+Thus early did Caroline begin that
+career of indiscretion, to call it by no worse name,
+which made of her six years' exile "a long suicide of
+her reputation."</p>
+<p>In October we find the Princess entering Milan,
+with her retinue of ladies-in-waiting, chamberlains,
+equerry, page, courier, and coachman, and with
+<a name="Page_205"></a>William Austin for companion&#8212;a boy, now about
+thirteen, whom she treated as her son, and who was
+believed by many to be the child of her imprudence
+at Blackheath, although the Commission of the
+"Delicate Investigation" had pronounced that he
+was son of a poor woman at Deptford. At Milan,
+as indeed wherever she wandered in Italy, the
+"vagabond Princess" was received as a Queen.
+Count di Bellegarde, the Austrian Governor, was
+the first to pay homage to her; at the Scala Theatre,
+the same evening, her entry was greeted with
+thunders of applause, and whenever she appeared
+in the Milan streets it was to an accompaniment of
+doffed hats and cheers.</p>
+<p>One of her first visits was to the studio of Giuseppe
+Bossi, the famous and handsome artist, whom she
+requested to paint her portrait. "On Thursday,"
+Bossi records, "I sketched her successfully in the
+character of a Muse; then on Friday she came to
+show me her arms, of which she was, not without
+reason, decidedly vain&#8212;she is a gay and whimsical
+woman, she seems to have a good heart; at times she
+is ennuy&eacute;e through lack of occupation." On one
+occasion when she met in the studio some French
+ladies, two of whom had been mistresses of the King
+of Westphalia, the poor artist was driven to distraction
+by the chatter, the singing, and dancing, in which
+the Princess especially displayed her agility, until,
+as he pathetically says, "the house seemed possessed
+of the devil, and you can imagine with what kind of
+ease it was possible for me to work."</p>
+<p>Before leaving Milan the Princess gave a grand
+<a name="Page_206"></a>banquet to Bellegarde and a number of the
+principal
+men of the city&#8212;a feast which was to have very
+important and serious consequences, for it was at this
+banquet that General Pino, one of her guests, introduced
+to Caroline a new courier, a man who, though
+she little dreamt it at the time, was destined to play
+a very baleful part in her life.</p>
+<p>This new courier was a tall and strikingly handsome
+man, who had seen service in the Italian army,
+until a duel, in which he killed a superior officer,
+compelled him to leave it in disgrace. At the time he
+entered the Princess's service he was a needy adventurer,
+whose scheming brain and utter lack of
+principle were in the market for the highest bidder.
+"He is," said Baron Ompteda, "a sort of Apollo, of
+a superb and commanding appearance, more than
+six feet high; his physical beauty attracts all eyes.
+This man is called Pergami; he belongs to Milan,
+and has entered the Princess's service. The Princess,"
+he significantly adds, "is shunned by all the
+English people of rank; her behaviour has created
+the most marked scandal."</p>
+<p>Such was the man with whose life that of the
+Princess of Wales was to be so intimately and disastrously
+linked, and whose relations with her were to
+be displayed to a shocked world but a few years
+later. It was indeed an evil fate that brought this
+"superb Apollo" of the crafty brain and conscienceless
+ambition into the life of the Princess at the
+high tide of her revolt against the world and its
+conventions.</p>
+<p>When Caroline and her retinue set out from Milan
+<a name="Page_207"></a>for Tuscany it was in the wake of Pergami, who
+had ridden ahead to discharge his duties as <i>avant
+courier</i>; but before Rome was reached his intimacy
+and familiarity with his mistress were already the
+subject of whispered comments and shrugged shoulders.
+At a ball given in her honour at Rome by the
+banker Tortonia, the Princess shocked even the least
+prudish by the abandon of her dancing and the
+tenuity of her costume, which, we are told, consisted
+of "a single embroidered garment, fastened beneath
+the bosom, without the shadow of a corset
+and without sleeves." And at Naples, where King
+Joachim Murat gave her a regal reception, with a
+sequel of f&ecirc;tes and gala-performances in honour of
+the wife of the Regent of England, she attended a
+rout, at the Teatro San Carlo, so lightly attired
+"that many who saw her at her first entrance looked
+her up and down, and, not recognising her, or pretending
+not to recognise her, began to mutter disapprobation
+to such an extent that she was compelled
+to withdraw.... The English residents soon
+let her understand, by ceasing to frequent her palace,
+that even at Naples there were certain laws of dress
+which could not be trampled underfoot in this hoydenish
+manner."</p>
+<p>While Caroline was thus defying convention and
+even decency, watchful eyes were following her
+everywhere. A body of secret police, whose headquarters
+were at Milan, was noting every indiscretion;
+and every week brought fresh and damaging
+reports to England, where they were eagerly welcomed
+by the Regent and his satellites. And while
+<a name="Page_208"></a>the Princess was thus playing unconsciously, or
+recklessly,
+into the hands of the enemy, Pergami was
+daily making his footing in her favour more secure.
+Before Caroline left Naples he had been promoted
+from courier to equerry, and in this more exalted and
+privileged r&ocirc;le was always at her side. So marked,
+in fact, was the intimacy even at this early stage, that
+the Princess's retinue, one after another, and on one
+flimsy pretext or another, deserted her in disgust,
+each vacancy, as it occurred, being filled by one of
+Pergami's relatives&#8212;his brother, his daughter, his
+sister-in-law (the Countess Oidi), and others, until
+Caroline was soon surrounded by members of the
+ex-courier's family.</p>
+<p>From Naples she wandered to Genoa, and from
+Genoa to Milan and Venice, received regally everywhere
+by the Italians and shunned by the English
+residents. From Venice she drifted to Lake Como,
+with whose beauties she was so charmed that she
+decided to make her home there, purchasing the
+Villa del Garrovo for one hundred and fifty thousand
+francs, and setting the builders to work to make it a
+still more splendid home for a future Queen of
+England. But even to the lonely isolation of the
+Italian lakes the eyes of her husband's secret agents
+pursued her, spying on her every movement&#8212;"uncertain
+shadows gliding in the twilight along the
+paths and between the hedges, and even in the cellars
+and attics of the villa"&#8212;until the shadowy presences
+filled her with such terror and unrest that she sought
+to escape them by a long tour in the East.</p>
+<p>Thus it was that in November, 1815, the Princess
+<a name="Page_209"></a>and her Pergami household set forth on their
+journey
+to Sicily, Tunis, Athens, the cities of the East and
+Jerusalem, the strange story of which was to be
+unfolded to the world five years later. How intimate
+the Princess and her handsome, stalwart courier had
+by this time become was illustrated by the Attorney-General
+in his opening speech at her memorable
+trial. "One day, after dinner, when the Princess's
+servants had withdrawn, a waiter at the hotel, Gran
+Brettagna, saw the Princess put a golden necklace
+round Pergami's neck. Pergami took it off again
+and put it jestingly on the neck of the Princess, who
+in her turn once more removed it and put it again
+round Pergami's neck."</p>
+<p>As early as August in this year Pergami had his
+appointed place at the Princess's table, and his room
+communicating with hers, and on the various voyages
+of the Eastern tour there was abundant evidence to
+prove "the habit which the Princess had of sleeping
+under one and the same awning with Pergami."</p>
+<p>But it is as impossible in the limits of space to
+follow Caroline and her handsome cavalier through
+every stage of these Eastern wanderings, as it is
+unnecessary to describe in detail the evidence of
+intimacy so lavishly provided by the witnesses for
+the prosecution at the trial&#8212;evidence much of which
+was doubtless as false as it was venal. That the
+Princess, however, was infatuated by her cavalier,
+and that she was in the highest degree indiscreet in
+her relations with him, seems abundantly clear, whatever
+the precise degree of actual guilt may have been.</p>
+<p>Pergami had now been promoted from equerry to
+<a name="Page_210"></a>Grand Chamberlain to Her Royal Highness, and as
+further evidence of her favour, she bought for him
+in Sicily an estate which conferred on its owner the
+title of Baron della Francina. At Malta she procured
+for him a knighthood of that island's famous
+order; at Jerusalem she secured his nomination as
+Knight of the Holy Sepulchre; and, to crown her
+favours, she herself instituted the Order of St Caroline,
+with Pergami for Grand Master. Behold now
+our ex-courier and adventurer in all his new glory as
+Grand Chamberlain and lover of a future Queen of
+England, as Baron della Francina, Knight of two
+Orders and Grand Master of a third, while every
+post of profit in that vagrant Court was held by some
+member of his family!</p>
+<p>The Eastern tour ended, which had ranged from
+Algiers and Egypt to Constantinople and Jerusalem,
+and throughout which she had progressed and been
+received as a Queen, Caroline settled down for a
+time in her now restored villa on Lake Como, celebrating
+her return by lavish charities to her poor
+neighbours, and by popular f&ecirc;tes and balls, in one
+of which "she danced as Columbine, wearing her
+lover's ear-rings, whilst Pergami, dressed as harlequin
+and wearing her ear-rings, supported her."</p>
+<p>But even here she was to find no peace from her
+husband's spies, whose evidence, confirmed on oath
+by a score of witnesses, was being accumulated in
+London against the longed-for day of reckoning.
+And it was not long before Caroline and her Grand
+Chamberlain were on their wanderings again&#8212;this
+time to the Tyrol, to Austria, and through Northern
+<a name="Page_211"></a>Italy, always inseparable and everywhere setting
+the
+tongue of scandal wagging by their indiscreet intimacy.
+Even the tragic death in childbirth of her
+only daughter, the Princess Charlotte, which put all
+England in mourning, seemed powerless to check
+her career of folly. It is true that, on hearing of it,
+she fell into a faint and afterwards into a kind of
+protracted lethargy, but within a few weeks she had
+flung herself again into her life of pleasure-chasing
+and reckless disregard of convention.</p>
+<p>But matters were now hurrying fast to their tragic
+climax. For some time the life of George III. had
+been flickering to its close. Any day might bring
+news that the end had come, and that the Princess
+was a Queen. And for some time Caroline had been
+bracing herself to face this crisis in her life and to
+pit herself against her enemies in a grim struggle for
+a crown, the title to which her years of folly (for
+such at the best they had been) had so gravely
+endangered. Over the remainder of her vagrant
+life, with its restless flittings, and its indiscretions,
+marked by spying eyes, we must pass to that February
+morning in 1820 when, to quote a historian, "the
+Princess had scarcely reached her hotel (at Florence)
+when her faithful major-domo, John Jacob Sicard,
+appeared before her, accompanied by two noblemen,
+and in a voice full of emotion announced, 'You are
+Queen.'"</p>
+<p>The fateful hour had at last arrived when Caroline
+must either renounce her new Queendom or present
+a bold front to her enemies and claim the crown
+that was hers. After a few indecisive days, spent in
+<a name="Page_212"></a>Rome, where news reached her that the King had
+given orders that her name should be excluded from
+the Prayer Book, her wavering resolution took a
+definite and determined shape. She would go to
+London and face the storm which she knew her
+coming would bring on her head.</p>
+<p>At Paris she was met by Lord Hutchinson with
+a promise of an increase of her yearly allowance
+to fifty thousand pounds, on condition that she
+renounced her claim to the title of Queen, and consented
+never to put foot again in England&#8212;an offer
+to which she gave a prompt and scornful refusal;
+and on the afternoon of 5th June she reached Dover,
+greeted by enthusiastic cheers and shouts of "God
+save Queen Caroline!" by the fluttering of flags,
+and the jubilant clanging of church-bells. The wanderer
+had come back to the land of her sorrow, to
+find herself welcomed with open arms by the subjects
+of the King whose brutality had driven her to exile
+and to shame.</p>
+<p>The story of the trial which so soon followed her
+arrival has too enduring a place in our history to call
+for a detailed description&#8212;the trial in which all the
+weight of the Crown and the testimony of a small
+army of suborned witnesses&#8212;"a troupe of comedians
+in the pay of malevolence," to quote Brougham&#8212;were
+arrayed against her; and in which she had so
+doughty a champion in Brougham, and such solace
+and support in the sympathy of all England. We
+know the fate of that Bill of Pains and Penalties,
+which charged her with having permitted a shameful
+intimacy with one Bartolomeo Pergami, and pro<a name="Page_213"></a>vided
+as penalty that she should be deprived of the
+title and privilege of Queen, and that her marriage
+to King George IV. should be for ever dissolved and
+annulled&#8212;how it was forced through the House of
+Lords with a diminishing majority, and finally withdrawn.
+And we know, too, the outburst of almost
+delirious delight that swept from end to end of
+England at the virtual acquittal of the persecuted
+Caroline. "The generous exultation of the people
+was," to quote a contemporary, "beyond all description.
+It was a conflagration of hearts."</p>
+<p>We also recall that pathetic scene when Caroline
+presented herself at the door of Westminster Abbey
+to demand admission, on the day of her husband's
+coronation, to be received by the frigid words, "We
+have no instructions to allow you to pass"; and we
+can see her as, "humiliated, confounded, and with
+tears in her eyes," she returned sadly to her carriage,
+the heart crushed within her. Less than three weeks
+later, seized by a grave and mysterious illness, she
+laid down for ever the burden of her sorrows, leaving
+instructions that her tomb should bear the words:</p>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">CAROLINE</span><br
+ style="font-weight: bold;">
+<span style="font-weight: bold;">THE INJURED QUEEN OF ENGLAND.</span><br>
+</div>
+<p>As for Pergami, the idol with the feet of clay, who
+had clouded her last years in tragedy, he survived
+for twenty years more to enjoy his honours and his
+ill-gotten gold; while William Austin, who had
+masqueraded as a Prince and called Caroline
+"mother," ended his days, while still a young man,
+in a madhouse.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XX"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_214"></a>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+<h2>THE LOVE-AFFAIRS OF A REGENT</h2>
+<p>When Louis XIV. laid down, one September day in
+the year 1715, the crown which he had worn with
+such splendour for more than seventy years, his
+sceptre fell into the hands of his nephew Philippe,
+Duc d'Orl&eacute;ans, who for eight years ruled France as
+Regent, and as guardian of the child-King, the
+fifteenth Louis.</p>
+<p>Seldom in the world's history has a reign, so splendid
+as that of the Sun-King, closed in such darkness
+and tragedy. The disastrous war of the Spanish
+Succession had drained France of her strength and
+her gold. She lay crushed under a mountain of debt&#8212;ten
+thousand million francs; she was reduced to
+the lowest depths of wretchedness, ruin, and disorder,
+and it was at this crisis in her life as a nation that
+fate placed a child of four on her throne, and gave
+the reins of power into the hands of the most dissolute
+man in Europe.</p>
+<p>Not that Philippe of Orleans lacked many of the
+qualities that go to the making of a ruler and a man.
+He had proved himself, in Italy and in Spain, one
+of the bravest of his country's soldiers, and an able,
+<a name="Page_215"></a>far-seeing leader of armies; and he had, as his
+Regency
+proved, no mean gifts of statesmanship. But
+his kingly qualities were marred by the taint of birth
+and early environment.</p>
+<p>Such good qualities as he had he no doubt drew
+from his mother, the capable, austere, high-minded
+Elizabeth of Bavaria, who to her last day was the
+one good influence in his life. To his father, Louis
+XIV.'s younger brother, who is said to have been
+son of Cardinal Mazarin, Anne of Austria's lover,
+and who was the most debased man of his time in
+all France, he just as surely owed the bias of sensuality
+to which he chiefly owes his place in memory.</p>
+<p>And not only was he thus handicapped by his
+birth; he had for tutor that arch-scoundrel Dubois&#8212;the
+"grovelling insect" who rarely opened his mouth
+without uttering a blasphemy or indecency, and who
+initiated his charge, while still a boy, into every base
+form of so-called pleasure.</p>
+<p>Such was the man who, amid the ruins of his
+country, inaugurated in France an era of licentiousness
+such as she had never known&#8212;an incomprehensible
+mass of contradictions&#8212;a kingly presence with
+the soul of a Caliban, statesman and sinner, high-minded
+and low-living, spending his days as a
+sovereign, a r&ocirc;le which he played to perfection, and
+his nights as a sot and a sensualist.</p>
+<p>It was doubtless Dubois who was mostly responsible
+for the baseness in the Regent's character&#8212;Dubois
+who had taught him a contempt for religion
+and morality, the cynical view of life which makes
+the pleasure of the moment the only thing worth
+<a name="Page_216"></a>pursuing, at whatever cost; and who had
+impressed
+indelibly on his mind that no woman is virtuous and
+that men are knaves. And there was never any lack
+of men to continue Dubois' teaching. He gathered
+round him the most dissolute gallants in France, in
+whose company he gave the rein to his most vicious
+appetites. His "rou&eacute;s" he dubbed them, a title
+which aptly described them; although they affected to
+give it a very different interpretation. They were the
+Regent's rou&eacute;s, they said, no doubt with the tongue
+in the cheek, because they were so devoted to him
+that they were ready, in his defence, to be broken on
+the wheel (<i>la roue</i>)!</p>
+<p>Each of these boon-comrades was a past-master in
+the arts of dissipation, and each was also among the
+most brilliant men of his day. The Chevalier de
+Simiane was famous alike for his drinking powers
+and his gift of graceful verse; De Fargy was a
+polished wit, and the handsomest man in France,
+with an unrivalled reputation for gallantry; the
+Comte de Noc&eacute; was the Regent's most intimate friend
+from boyhood&#8212;brother-in-law he called him, since
+they had not only tastes but even mistresses in common.
+Then there were the Marquis de la Fare,
+Captain of Guards and <i>bon enfant</i>; the Marquis de
+Broglio, the biggest debauchee in France, the Marquis
+de Canillac, the Duc de Brancas, and many
+another&#8212;all famous (or infamous) for some pet
+vice, and all the best of boon-companions for the
+pleasure-loving Regent.</p>
+<p>Strange tales are told of the orgies of this select
+band which the Regent gathered around him&#8212;orgies
+<a name="Page_217"></a>which shocked even the France of the eighteenth
+century, when she was the acknowledged leader in
+licence. At six o'clock every evening Philippe's
+kingship ended for the day. He had had enough&#8212;more
+than enough&#8212;of State and ceremonial, of interviewing
+ambassadors, and of the flatteries of Princes
+and the obsequious homage of courtiers. Pleasure
+called him away from the boredom of empire; and
+at the stroke of six we find him retiring to the company
+of his mistresses and his rou&eacute;s to feast and
+drink and gamble until dawn broke on the revelry&#8212;his
+laugh the loudest, his wit the most dazzling, his
+stories the most piquant, keeping the table in a roar
+with his infectious gaiety. He was Regent no
+longer; he was simply a <i>bon camarade</i>, as ready to
+exchange familiarities with a "lady of the ballet" as
+to lead the laughter at a joke at his own expense.</p>
+<p>At nine o'clock, when the fun had waxed furious
+and wine had set the slowest tongue wagging and
+every eye a-sparkle, other guests streamed in to join
+the orgy&#8212;the most beautiful ladies of the Court,
+from the Duchesse de Gesores and Madame de
+Mouchy to the Regent's own daughter, the Duchesse
+de Berry, who, young as she was, had little to learn
+of the arts of dissipation. And in the wake of these
+high-born women would follow laughing, bright-eyed
+troupes of dancing and chorus-girls from the theatres
+with an escort of the cleverest actors of Paris, to join
+the Regent's merry throng.</p>
+<p>The champagne now flowed in rivers; the servants
+were sent away; the doors were locked and the fun
+grew riotous; ceremony had no place there; rank
+<a name="Page_218"></a>and social distinctions were forgotten.
+Countesses
+flirted with comedians; Princes made love to ballet-girls
+and duchesses alike. The leader of the
+moment was the man or woman who could sing the
+most daring song, tell the most piquant story, or play
+the most audacious practical joke, even on the Regent
+himself. Sometimes, we are told, the lights would
+be extinguished, and the orgy continued under the
+cover of darkness, until the Regent suddenly opened
+a cupboard, in which lights were concealed&#8212;to an
+outburst of shrieks of laughter at the scenes revealed.</p>
+<p>Thus the mad night hours passed until dawn came
+to bring the revels to a close; or until the Regent
+would sally forth with a few chosen comrades on a
+midnight ramble to other haunts of pleasure in the
+capital&#8212;the lower the better. Such was the way
+in which Philippe of Orleans, Regent of France,
+spent his nights. A few hours after the carouse had
+ended he would resume his sceptre, as austere and
+dignified a ruler as you would find in Europe.</p>
+<p>It must not be imagined that Philippe was the only
+Royal personage who thus set a scandalous example
+to France. There was, in fact, scarcely a Prince or
+Princess of the Blood Royal whose love affairs were
+not conducted flagrantly in the eyes of the world,
+from the Dowager Duchesse de Bourbon, who
+lavished her favours on the Scotch financier, John
+Law, of Lauriston, to the Princesse de Conte, who
+mingled her piety with a marked partiality for her
+nephew, Le Kalli&egrave;re.</p>
+<p>As for the Regent's own daughters, from the
+Duchesse de Berry, to Louise, Queen of Spain, each
+<a name="Page_219"></a>has left behind her a record almost as
+scandalous as
+that of her father. It was, in fact, an era of corruption
+in high places, when, in the reaction that followed
+the dismal and decorous last years of Louis XIV.'s
+reign, Pleasure rose phoenix-like from the ashes of
+ruin and flaunted herself unashamed in every guise
+with which vice could deck her.</p>
+<p>It must be said for the Regent, corrupt as he was,
+that he never abused his position and his power in
+the pursuit of beauty. His mistresses flocked to him
+from every rank of life, from the stage to the highest
+Court circles, but remained no longer than inclination
+dictated. And the fascination is not far to seek,
+for Philippe d'Orl&eacute;ans was of the men who find easy
+conquests in the field of love. He was one of the
+handsomest men in all France; and to his good-looks
+and his reputation for bravery he added a manner of
+rare grace and courtliness, a supple tongue, and that
+strange magnetic power which few women could
+resist.</p>
+<p>No King ever boasted a greater or more varied list
+of favourites, in which actresses and duchesses vied
+with each other for his smiles, in a rivalry which
+seems to have been singularly free from petty jealousy.
+Among the beauties of the Court we find the
+Duchesse de Fedari, the Duchesse de Gesores, the
+Comtesse de Sabran at one extreme; and actresses
+like Emilie, Desmarre, and La Souris at the other,
+pretty butterflies of the footlights who appealed to
+the Regent no more than Madame d'Averne, the
+gifted pet of France's wits and literary men, the most
+charming "blue-stocking" of her day. And all,
+<a name="Page_220"></a>without exception&#8212;duchesses, countesses, and
+actresses&#8212;were as ready to give their love to
+Philippe, the man, as to the Duc d'Orl&eacute;ans, Regent
+of France.</p>
+<p>Even in his relations with these ministers of
+pleasure, the Regent's better qualities often exhibit
+themselves agreeably. To the pretty actress, Emilie,
+whose heart was so completely his, he always acted
+with a characteristic generosity and forbearance; and
+her conduct is by no means less pleasing than his.
+Once, we are told, when he expressed a wish to give
+her a pair of diamond ear-rings at a cost of fifteen
+thousand francs, she demurred at accepting so valuable
+a present. "If you must be so generous," she
+pleaded, "please don't give me the ear-rings, which
+are much too grand for such as me. Give me, instead,
+ten thousand francs, so that I may buy a small
+house to which I can retire when you no longer love
+me as you now do."</p>
+<p>Emilie had scarcely returned home, however, when
+a Court official appeared with a package containing,
+not ten thousand, but twenty-five thousand francs,
+which her lover insisted on her keeping; and when
+she returned fifteen thousand francs, he promptly
+sent them back again, declaring that he would be
+very angry if she refused again to accept them.</p>
+<p>His love, indeed, for Emilie seems to have been
+as pure and deep as any of which he was capable.
+It was no fleeting passion, but an affection based on
+a sincere respect for her character and mental gifts.
+So highly, indeed, did he think of her judgment that
+she became his most trusted counsellor. She sat by
+<a name="Page_221"></a>his side when he received ambassadors; he
+consulted
+her on difficult problems of State; and it was her
+advice that he often followed in preference to the
+wisdom of all his ministers; for, as he said to Dubois,
+"Emilie has an excellent brain; she always gives me
+the best counsel."</p>
+<p>When at last he had to part from the modest and
+accomplished actress it was under circumstances
+which speak well for his generosity. A former lover,
+the Marquis de Fimarcon, on his return from fighting
+in Spain, sought Emilie out, and, blazing with
+jealousy, insisted that she should leave the Regent
+and return to his protection. He vowed that, if she
+refused, he would murder her; and when, in her
+alarm, she sought refuge in a convent at Charenton,
+he threatened to burn the nuns alive in their cells
+unless they restored her to him. Thus it was that,
+rather than allow Emilie to run any risks from her
+revengeful and brutal lover, the Regent relinquished
+his claim to her; and only when Fimarcon's continued
+brutality at last made intervention necessary,
+did he order the bully to be arrested and consigned
+to the prison of Fort l'&Eacute;v&ecirc;que.</p>
+<p>It is, however, in the story of Mademoiselle Aiss&eacute;,
+the Circassian slave, that we find the best illustration
+of the chivalry which underlay the Regent's passion
+for women, and which he never forgot in his wildest
+excesses. This story, one of the most touching in
+French history, opens in the year 1698, when a band
+of Turkish soldiers returned to Constantinople from
+a raid in the Caucasus, bringing with them, among
+many other captives, a beautiful child of four years,
+<a name="Page_222"></a>said to be the daughter of a King. So lovely was
+the little Circassian fairy that when the Comte de
+Feriol, France's Ambassador to Turkey, set eyes
+on her, he decided to purchase her; and she
+became his property in exchange for fifteen hundred
+livres.</p>
+<p>That she might have every advantage of training
+to fit her for his seraglio in later years, the child was
+sent to Paris, to the home of the Ambassador's
+brother, President de Feriol, where she grew to
+beautiful girlhood as a member of the family, as fair
+a flower as ever was transplanted to French soil.
+Thus she passed the next thirteen years of her young
+life, charming all by her sweetness of disposition, as
+she won the homage of all by her remarkable beauty
+and grace.</p>
+<p>Such was Ayesha, or Aiss&eacute;, the Circassian maid,
+when at last her "owner" returned to Paris to fall
+under the spell of her radiant beauty and to claim her
+as his chattel, bought with good gold and trained at
+his cost to adorn his harem. In vain did Aiss&eacute; weep
+and plead to be spared a fate from which every fibre
+of her being shrank in horror. Her "master" was
+inexorable. "When I bought you," he said, "it was
+my intention to make you my daughter or my mistress.
+I now intend that you shall become both the
+one and the other." Friendless and helpless, she was
+obliged to yield; and for six years she had to submit
+to the endearments of her protector, a man more than
+old enough to be her father, until his death brought
+her release.</p>
+<p>At twenty-four, more lovely than ever, combining
+<a name="Page_223"></a>the beauty of the Circassian with the graces of
+France, Aiss&eacute; had now every right to look forward
+at least to such happiness as was possible to a stranger
+in a strange land. But no sooner was one danger
+to her peace removed than another sprang up to take
+its place. The rumour of her beauty and her sweetness
+had come to the ears of the Regent, and strong
+forces were at work to bring her to his arms. Madame
+de Tencin was the leader in this base conspiracy,
+with the power of the Romish Church at her back;
+for with the fair Circassian high in the Regent's
+favour and a pliant tool in their hands, the Jesuits'
+influence at Court would be greatly strengthened.
+Dubois was won over to the unholy alliance; and the
+Due's <i>ma&icirc;tresse en titre</i> was bribed, not only to
+withdraw all opposition to her proposed rival, but to
+arrange a meeting between the Regent and the
+victim.</p>
+<p>Success seemed to be assured. Mademoiselle
+Aiss&eacute; was to exchange slavery to her late owner for
+an equally odious place in the harem of the ruler
+of France. Her tears and entreaties were all in
+vain; when she begged on her knees to be allowed
+to retire to a convent Madame de Feriol turned
+her back on her. Her only hope of rescue now lay
+in the Regent himself; and to him she pleaded her
+cause with such pathetic eloquence that he not only
+allowed her to depart in peace, but with words of
+sympathy and promises of his protection in the pure
+and noble sense of the word.</p>
+<p>Thus by the chivalry of the most dissolute man of
+his age the Circassian slave-girl was rescued from a
+<a name="Page_224"></a>life which to her would have been worse than
+death&#8212;to
+spend her remaining years, happy in the love of
+an honest man, the Chevalier d'Aydie, until death
+claimed her while she still possessed the beauty
+which had been at once her glory and her inevitable
+shame.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 25%;">
+<p>The close of the Regent's mis-spent life came with
+tragic suddenness. Worn out with excesses, while still
+young in years, his doctors had warned him that death
+might come to him any day; but with the light-heartedness
+that was his to the last, he laughed at
+their gloomy forebodings and refused to take the
+least precautions to safeguard his health. Two days
+before the end came he declined point-blank to be
+bled in order to avert a threatened attack of apoplexy.
+"Let it come if it will," he said, with a laugh. "I
+do not fear death; and if it comes quickly, so much
+the better!"</p>
+<p>On the evening of 2nd December, 1720, he was
+chatting gaily to the young Duchesse de Falari, when
+he suddenly turned to her and asked: "Do you think
+there is any hell&#8212;or Paradise?" "Of course I do,"
+answered the Duchesse. "Then are you not afraid
+to lead the life you do?" "Well," replied Madame,
+"I think God will have pity on me."</p>
+<p>Scarcely had the words left her lips when the
+Regent's head fell heavily on her shoulder, and he
+began to slip to the floor. A glance showed her
+that he was unconscious; and, rushing out of the
+room, the terrified Duchesse raced through the dark,
+<a name="Page_225"></a>deserted corridors of the palace shrieking for
+help.
+When at last help arrived, it came too late. The
+Regent had gone to find for himself an answer to the
+question his lips had framed a few minutes earlier&#8212;"is
+there any hell&#8212;or Paradise?"</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_226"></a>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+<h2>A DELILAH OF THE COURT OF FRANCE</h2>
+<p>It was a cruel fate that snatched Gabrielle d'Estr&eacute;es
+from the arms of Henri IV., King of France and
+Navarre, at the moment when her long devotion to
+her hero-lover was on the eve of being crowned by
+the bridal veil; and for many a week there was no
+more stricken man in Europe than the disconsolate
+King as he wailed in his black-draped chamber, "The
+root of my love is dead, and will never blossom again."</p>
+<p>No doubt Henri's grief was as sincere as it was
+deep, for he had loved his golden-haired Gabrielle of
+the blue eyes and dimpled baby-cheeks as he had
+never loved woman before. It was the passion of a
+lifetime, the passion of a strong man in his prime,
+that fate had thus nipped in the fullness of its bloom;
+and its loss plunged him into an abyss of sorrow and
+despair such as few men have known.</p>
+<p>But with the hero of Ivry no emotion of grief
+or pleasure ever endured long. He was a man of
+erratic, widely contrasted moods&#8212;now on the peaks
+of happiness, now in the gulf of dejection; one mood
+succeeding another as inevitably and widely as the
+pendulum swings. Thus when he had spent three
+<a name="Page_227"></a>seemingly endless months of gloom and solitude,
+reaction seized him, and he flung aside his grief with
+his black raiment. He was still in the prime of his
+strength, with many years before him. He would
+drink the cup of life, even to its dregs. He had long
+been weary of the matrimonial chains that fettered
+him to Marguerite of Valois. He would strike them
+off, and in another wife and other loves find a new
+lease of pleasure.</p>
+<p>Thus it was with no heavy heart that he turned
+his back on Fontainebleau and his darkened room,
+and fared to Paris to find a new vista of pleasure
+opening to him at his palace doors, and his ears full
+of the praises of a new divinity who had come, during
+his absence, to grace his Court&#8212;a girl of such beauty,
+sprightliness, and wit as his capital had not seen for
+many a year.</p>
+<p>Henriette d'Entragues&#8212;for this was the divinity's
+name&#8212;was equipped by fate as few women were
+ever equipped, for the conquest of a King. Her
+mother, Marie Touchet, had been "light-o'-love" to
+Charles IX.; her father was the Seigneur d'Entragues,
+member of one of the most blue-blooded
+families of France, a soldier and statesman of fame;
+and their daughter had inherited, with her mother's
+beauty and grace, the clever brain and diplomatic skill
+of her father. A strange mixture of the bewitching
+and bewildering, this daughter of a King's mistress
+seems to have been. Tall and dark, voluptuous of
+figure, with ripe red lips, and bold and dazzling black
+eyes, she was, in her full-blooded, sensuous charms,
+the very "antipodes" to the childish, fairy-like
+<a name="Page_228"></a>Gabrielle who had so long been enshrined in the
+King's heart. And to this physical appeal&#8212;irresistible
+to a man of such strong passion as Henri, she
+added gifts of mind which "baby Gabrielle" could
+never claim.</p>
+<p>She had a wit as brilliant as the tongue which was
+its vehicle; her well-stored brain was more than a
+match for the most learned men at Court, and she
+would leave an archbishop discomfited in a theological
+argument, to cross swords with Sully himself
+on some abstruse problem of statesmanship. When
+Sully had been brought to his knees, she would rush
+away, with mischief in her eyes, to take the lead in
+some merry escapade or practical joke, her silvery
+laughter echoing in some remote palace corridor.
+A bewildering, alluring bundle of inconsistencies&#8212;beauty,
+savant, wit, and madcap&#8212;such was Henriette
+d'Entragues when Henri, fresh from his woes, came
+under the spell of her magnetism.</p>
+<p>Here, indeed, was an escape from his grief such as
+the King had never dared to hope for. Before he
+had been many hours in his palace, Henri was
+caught hopelessly in the toils of the new siren, and
+was intoxicated by her smiles and witcheries. Never
+was conquest so speedy, so dramatic. Before a
+week had flown he was at Henrietta's feet, as lovesick
+a swain as ever sighed for a lady, pouring love
+into her ears and writing her passionate letters
+between the frequent meetings, in which he would
+send her a "good night, my dearest heart," with
+"a million kisses."</p>
+<p>In the days of his lusty youth the idol and hero of
+<a name="Page_229"></a>France had never known passion such as this
+which
+consumed him within sight of his fiftieth birthday,
+and which was inspired by a woman of much less
+than half his years; for at the time Henri was forty-six,
+and Henriette was barely twenty.</p>
+<p>He quickly found, however, that his wooing was
+not to be all "plain sailing." When Henriette's
+parents heard of it, they affected to be horrified at
+the danger in which their beloved daughter was
+placed. They summoned her home from the perils
+of Court and a King's passion; and when Henri sent
+an envoy to bring them to reason they sent him back
+with a rebuff. Their daughter was to be no man's&#8212;not
+even a King's&#8212;plaything. If Henri's passion
+was sincere, he must prove it by a definite promise
+of marriage; and only on this condition would their
+opposition be removed.</p>
+<p>Even to such a stipulation Henri, such was his
+infatuation, made no demur. With his own hand
+he wrote an agreement pledging himself to make
+Demoiselle Henriette his lawful wife in case, within
+a certain period, she became the mother of a son; and
+undertaking to dissolve his marriage with his wife,
+Marguerite of France, for this purpose. And this
+agreement, signed with his own hand, he sent to the
+Seigneur d'Entragues and his wife, accompanied by
+a <i>douceur</i> of a hundred thousand crowns.</p>
+<p>But before it was dispatched a more formidable
+obstacle than even the lady's natural guardians
+remained to be faced&#8212;none other than the Duc de
+Sully, the man who had shared all the perils of a
+hundred fights with Henri and was at once his chief
+<a name="Page_230"></a>counsellor and his <i>fidus Achates</i>. When
+at last he
+summoned up courage to place the document in
+Sully's hands, he awaited the verdict as nervously
+as any schoolboy in the presence of a dreaded master.
+Sully read through the paper, was silent for a few
+moments, and then spoke. "Sire," he said, "am I
+to give you my candid opinion on this document, without
+fear of anger or giving offence?" "Certainly,"
+answered the King. "Well then, this is what I think
+of it," was Sully's reply, as he tore the document in
+two pieces and flung them on the floor. "Sully, you
+are mad!" exclaimed Henri, flaring into anger at such
+an outrage. "You are right, Sire, I am a weak fool,
+and would gladly know myself still more a fool&#8212;if
+I might be the only one in France!"</p>
+<p>It was in vain, however, that Sully pointed out the
+follies and dangers of such a step as was proposed.
+Henri's mind was made up, and leaving his friend,
+in high dudgeon, he went to his study and re-wrote
+his promise of marriage. The way was at last clear
+to the gratification of his passion. Henriette was
+more than willing, her parents' scruples and greed
+were appeased, and as for Sully&#8212;well, he must be
+left to get over his tantrums. Even to please such
+an old and trusted friend he could not sacrifice such
+an opportunity for pleasure and a new lease of life
+as now presented itself!</p>
+<p>Halcyon months followed for Henri&#8212;months in
+which even Gabrielle was forgotten in the intoxication
+of a new passion, compared with which the
+memory of her gentle charms was but as water
+to rich, red wine. That Henriette proved wilful,
+<a name="Page_231"></a>capricious, and extravagant&#8212;that her vanity
+drained
+his exchequer of hundreds of thousands of crowns
+for costly jewellery and dresses, was a mere bagatelle,
+compared with his delight in her manifold
+allurements.</p>
+<p>But Sully had by no means said his last word.
+The decree for annulling Henri's marriage with Marguerite
+de Valois was pronounced; and it was of the
+highest importance that she should have a worthy
+successor as Queen of France&#8212;a successor whom he
+found in Marie de Medicis.</p>
+<p>The marriage-contract was actually sealed before
+the King had any suspicion that his hand was being
+disposed of, and it was only when Sully one day
+entered his study with the startling words, "Sire, we
+have been marrying you," that the awakening came.
+For a few moments Henri sat as a man stunned, his
+head buried in his hands; then, with a deep sigh,
+he spoke: "If God orders it so, so let it be. There
+seems to be no escape; since you say that it is
+necessary for my kingdom and my subjects, why,
+marry I must."</p>
+<p>It was a strange predicament in which Henri now
+found himself. Still more infatuated than ever with
+Henriette, he was to be tied for life to a Princess
+whom he had never even seen. To add to the
+embarrassment of his position, the condition of his
+marriage promise to Henriette was already on the
+way to fulfilment; and he was thus pledged to wed
+her as strongly as any State compact could bind him
+to stand at the altar with Marie de Medicis. One
+thing was clear, he must at any cost recover that fatal
+<a name="Page_232"></a>document; and, while he was giving orders for
+the
+suitable reception of his new Queen, and arranging
+for her triumphal progress to Paris, he was writing
+to Henriette and her parents demanding the return
+of his promise of marriage agreement&#8212;to her, a
+pleading letter in which he prays her "to return the
+promise you have by you and not to compel me to
+have recourse to other means in order to obtain it";
+to her father, a more imperious demand to which he
+expects instant obedience.</p>
+<p>As some consolation to his mistress, whose alternate
+tears, rage, and reproaches drove him to distraction,
+he creates her Marquise de Verneuil and promises
+that, if he should be unable to marry her, he will at
+least give her a husband of Royal rank, the Due
+de Nevers, who was eager to make her his wife.</p>
+<p>But pleadings and threats alike fail to secure the
+return of the fatal document, and Henri is reduced
+to despair, until Henriette gives birth to a dead child
+and his promise thus becomes of as little value as
+the paper it was written on. The condition has
+failed, and he is a free man to marry his Tuscan
+Princess, while Henriette, thus foiled in her great
+ambition, is in danger not only of losing her coveted
+crown, but her place in the King's favour. The days
+of her wilful autocracy are ended; and, though her
+heart is full of anger and disappointment, she writes
+to him a pitiful letter imploring him still to love her
+and not to cast her "from the Heaven to which he has
+raised her, down to the earth where he found her."
+"Do not let your wedding festivities be the funeral
+of my hopes," she writes. "Do not banish me from
+<a name="Page_233"></a>your Royal presence and your heart. I speak in
+sighs to you, my King, my lover, my all&#8212;I, who
+have been loved by the earth's greatest monarch, and
+am willing to be his mistress and his servant."</p>
+<p>To such humility was the proud, arrogant beauty
+now reduced. She was an abject suppliant where
+she had reigned a Queen. Nor did her pleadings
+fall on deaf ears. Her Royal lover's hand was
+given, against his will, to his new Queen, but his
+heart, he vowed, was all Henriette's&#8212;so much so
+that he soon installed her in sumptuous rooms in his
+palace adjoining those of the Queen herself.</p>
+<p>Was ever man placed in a more delicate position
+than this King of France, between the rival claims
+of his wife and mistress, who were occupying adjacent
+apartments, and who, moreover, were both
+about to become mothers? It speaks well for Henri's
+tactfulness that for a time at least this <i>m&eacute;nage &agrave;
+trois</i>
+appears to have been quite amiably conducted.
+When Queen Marie gave birth to a son it was to
+Henriette that the infant's father first confided the
+good news, seasoning it with "a million kisses" for
+herself. And when Henriette, in turn, became a
+mother for the second time, the double Royal event
+was celebrated by f&ecirc;tes and rejoicings in which each
+lady took an equally proud and conspicuous part.</p>
+<p>It was inevitable, however, that a woman so
+favoured by the King, and of so imperious a nature,
+should have enemies at Court; and it was not long
+before she became the object of a conspiracy of which
+the Duchesse de Villars and the Queen were the
+arch-leaders. One day a bundle of letters was sent
+<a name="Page_234"></a>anonymously to Henri, letters full of tenderness
+and passion, addressed by his beloved Marquise,
+Henriette, to the Prince de Joinville. The King
+was furious at such evidence of his mistress's disloyalty,
+and vowed he would never see her again.
+But all his storming and reproaches left the Marquise
+unmoved. She declared, with scorn in her voice,
+that the letters were forgeries; that she had never
+written to Joinville in her life, nor spoken a word to
+him that His Majesty might not have heard. She
+even pointed out the forger, the Duc de Guise's
+secretary, and was at last able to convince the King
+of her innocence.</p>
+<p>The Duchesse de Villars and Joinville were
+banished from the Court in disgrace; the Queen had
+a severe lecture from her husband; and Henriette
+was not only restored to full favour, but was consoled
+by a welcome present of six thousand pounds.</p>
+<p>But the days of peace in the King's household
+were now gone for ever. Queen Marie, thus humiliated
+by her rival, became her bitter enemy and also
+a thorn in the side of her unfaithful husband. Every
+day brought its fierce quarrels which only stopped on
+the verge of violence. More than once in fact Henri
+had to beat a retreat before his Queen's clenched
+fist, while she lost no opportunity of insulting and
+humiliating the Marquise.</p>
+<p>It is impossible altogether to withhold sympathy
+from a man thus distracted between two jealous
+women&#8212;a shrewish wife, who in her most amiable
+mood repelled his advances with coldness and cutting
+words, and a mistress who vented on him all the re<a name="Page_235"></a>sentment
+which the Queen's insults and snubs roused
+in her. Even all Sully's diplomacy was powerless
+to pour oil on such vexed waters as these.</p>
+<p>The Queen, however, had not long to wait for
+her revenge, which came with the disclosure of a conspiracy,
+at the head of which were Henriette's father
+and her half-brother, the Comte d'Auvergne, and in
+which, it was proved, she herself had played no insignificant
+part. Punishment came, swift and terrible.
+Her father and brother were sentenced to death, herself
+to perpetual confinement in a monastery.</p>
+<p>But even at this crisis in her life, Henriette's stout
+heart did not fail her for a moment. "The King
+may take my life, if he pleases," she said. "Everybody
+will say that he killed his wife; for I was Queen
+before the Tuscan woman came on the scene at all."
+None knew better than she that she could afford thus
+to put on a bold front. Henri was still her slave, to
+whom her little finger was more than his crown; and
+she knew that in his hands both her liberty and her
+life were safe. And thus it proved; for before she
+had spent many weeks in the Monastery of Beaumont-les-Tours,
+its doors were flung open for her,
+and the first news she heard was that her father was
+a free man, while her brother's death-sentence had
+been commuted to a few years in the Bastille.</p>
+<p>Thus Henriette returned to the turbulent life of
+the palace&#8212;the daily routine of quarrels and peacemaking
+with the King, and undisguised hostility from
+the Queen, through all of which Henri's heart still
+remained hers. "How I long to have you in my
+arms again," he writes, when on a hunting excursion,
+<a name="Page_236"></a>which had led him to the scene of their early
+romance. "As my letter brings back the memory of
+the past, I know you will feel that nothing in the
+present is worth anything in comparison. This, at
+least, was my feeling as I walked along the roads
+I so often traversed in the old days on my journey
+to your side. When I sleep I dream of you; when
+I wake my thoughts are all of you." He sends her
+a million kisses, and vows that all he asks of life
+is that she shall always love him entirely and
+him alone.</p>
+<p>One would have thought that such a conquest of
+a King and such triumph over a Queen would have
+gratified the ambition of the most exacting of women.
+But the Marquise de Verneuil seems to have found
+small satisfaction in her victories. When she was
+not provoking quarrels with Henri, which roused him
+to such a pitch of anger that at times he threatened
+to strike her, she received his advances with a coldness
+or a sullen acquiescence calculated to chill the
+most ardent lover. In other moods she would drive
+him to despair by declaring that she had long ceased
+to love him, and that all she wanted from him was a
+dowry to carry in marriage to one or other of several
+suitors who were dying for her hand.</p>
+<p>But Madame's day of triumph was drawing much
+nearer to an end than she imagined. The end, in
+fact, came with dramatic suddenness when Henri
+first set eyes on the radiantly lovely Charlotte de
+Montmorency. Weary at heart of the tempers and
+exactions of Henriette, it needed but such a lure as
+this to draw him finally from her side; and from the
+<a name="Page_237"></a>first flash of Charlotte's beautiful eyes this
+most
+susceptible of Kings was undone. Madame de Verneuil's
+reign was ended; the next quarrel was made
+the occasion for a complete rupture, and the Court
+saw her no more.</p>
+<p>Already she had lost the bloom of her beauty; she
+had grown stout and coarse through her excessive
+fondness for the pleasures of the table, and the rest
+of her days, which were passed in friendless isolation,
+she spent in indulging appetites, which added to her
+mountain of flesh while robbing her of the last trace
+of good-looks. When the knife of Ravaillac brought
+Henri's life and his new romance to a tragic end, the
+Marquise was among those who were suspected of
+inspiring the assassin's blow; and although her guilt
+was never proved, the taint of suspicion clung to her
+to her last day.</p>
+<p>After fruitless angling for a husband&#8212;the Duc de
+Guise, the Prince de Joinville, and many another
+who, with one consent, fled from her advances, she
+resigned herself to a life of obscurity and gluttony,
+until death came, one day in the year 1633, to release
+her from a world of vanity and disillusionment.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_238"></a>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+<h2>THE "SUN-KING" AND THE WIDOW</h2>
+<br>
+<p>Search where you will in the record of Kings, you
+will find nowhere a figure more splendid and more
+impressive than that of the fourteenth Louis, who for
+more then seventy years ruled over France, and
+for more than fifty eclipsed in glory his fellow-sovereigns
+as the sun pales the stars. Nearly two
+centuries have gone since he closed his weary and
+disillusioned eyes on the world he had so long
+dominated; but to-day he shines in history in the
+galaxy of monarchs with a lustre almost as great as
+when he was hailed throughout the world as the
+"Sun-King," and in his pride exclaimed, "<i>I</i> am the
+State."</p>
+<p>Placed, like his successor, on the greatest throne
+in Europe, a child of five, fortune exhausted itself
+in lavishing gifts on him. The world was at his
+feet almost before he had learned to walk. He grew
+to manhood amid the adulation and flatteries of the
+greatest men and the fairest of women. And that
+he might lack no great gift, he was dowered with
+every physical perfection that should go to the
+making of a King.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_239"></a>There was no more goodly youth in France than
+Louis when he first practised the arts of love-making,
+in which he later became such an adept, on
+Mazarin's lovely niece, Marie Mancini. Tall, with
+a well-knit, supple figure, with dark, beautiful eyes
+illuminating a singularly handsome face, with a bearing
+of rare grace and distinction, this son of Anne of
+Austria was a lover whom few women could resist.</p>
+<p>Such conquests came to him with fatal ease, and
+for thirty years at least, until satiety killed passion,
+there was no lack of beautiful women to minister to
+his pleasure and to console him for the lack of charms
+in the Spanish wife whom Mazarin thrust into his
+reluctant arms when he was little more than a
+boy, and when his heart was in Marie Mancini's
+keeping.</p>
+<p>Among all the fair and frail women who succeeded
+one another in his affection three stand out from the
+rest with a prominence which his special favour
+assigned to each in turn. For ten early years it was
+Louise de la Baume-Leblanc (better known to fame
+as the Duchesse de Lavalli&egrave;re) who reigned as his
+uncrowned Queen, and who gave her life to his
+pleasure and to the care of the children she bore to
+him. But such constancy could not last for ever in a
+man so constitutionally inconstant as Louis. When
+the Marquise de Montespan, in all her radiant and
+sensuous loveliness, came on the scene, she drew the
+King to her arms as a flame lures the moth. Her
+voluptuous charms, her abounding vitality and witty
+tongue, made the more refined beauty and the gentleness
+of the Duchesse flavourless in comparison; and
+<a name="Page_240"></a>Louise, realising that her sun had set, retired
+to spend
+the rest of her life in the prayers and piety of a
+convent, leaving her brilliant rival in undisputed
+possession of the field.</p>
+<p>For many years Madame de Montespan, the most
+consummate courtesan who ever enslaved a King,
+queened it over Louis in her magnificent apartments
+at Versailles and in the Tuileries. He was never
+weary of showering rich gifts and favours on her;
+and, in return, she became the mother of his children
+and ministered to his every whim, little dreaming of
+the day when she in turn was to be dethroned by
+an insignificant widow whom she regarded as the
+creature of her bounty, and who so often awaited her
+pleasure in her ante-room.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 25%;">
+<p>When Fran&ccedil;oise d'Aubign&eacute; was cradled, one
+November day in the year 1635, within the walls of
+a fortress-prison in Poitou, the prospect of a Queendom
+seemed as remote as a palace in the moon.
+She had good blood in her veins, it is true. Her
+ancestors had been noblemen of Normandy before
+the Conqueror ever thought of crossing the English
+Channel, and her grandfather, General Theodore
+d'Aubign&eacute;, had won distinction as a soldier on many
+a battlefield. It was to her father, profligate and
+spendthrift, who, after squandering his patrimony,
+had found himself lodged in jail, that Fran&ccedil;oise
+owed the ignominy of her birthplace, for her mother
+had insisted on sharing the captivity of her ne'er-do-well
+husband.</p>
+<p>When at last Constant d'Aubign&eacute; found his prison
+<a name="Page_241"></a>doors opened, he shook the dust of France off
+his
+feet and took his wife and young children away to
+Martinique, where at least, he hoped, his record
+would not be known. On the voyage, we are told,
+the child was brought so near to death's door by an
+illness that her body was actually on the point of
+being flung overboard when her mother detected
+signs of life, and rescued her from a watery grave.
+A little later, in Martinique, she had an equally
+narrow escape from death as the result of a snakebite.
+A child thus twice miraculously preserved was
+evidently destined for better things than an early
+tomb, more than one declared; and so indeed it
+proved.</p>
+<p>When the father ended his mis-spent days in the
+West Indian island, the widow took her poverty and
+her fledgelings back to France, where Fran&ccedil;oise was
+placed under the charge of a Madame de Villette, to
+pick up such education as she could in exchange for
+such menial work as looking after Madame's poultry
+and scrubbing her floors. When her mother in turn
+died, the child (she was only fifteen at the time) was
+taken to Paris by an aunt, whose miserliness or
+poverty often sent her hungry to bed.</p>
+<p>Such was Fran&ccedil;oise's condition when she was
+taken one day to the house of Paul Scarron, the
+crippled poet, whose satires and burlesques kept
+Paris in a ripple of merriment, and to whom the
+child's poverty and friendless position made as
+powerful an appeal as her budding beauty and her
+modesty. It was a very tender heart that beat in
+the pain-racked, paralysed body of the "father of
+<a name="Page_242"></a>French burlesque"; and within a few days of
+first
+setting eyes on his "little Indian girl," as he called
+her, he asked her to marry him. "It is a sorry offer
+to make you, my dear child," he said, "but it is either
+this or a convent." And, to escape the convent,
+Fran&ccedil;oise consented to become the wife of the
+"bundle of pains and deformities" old enough to be
+her father.</p>
+<p>In the marriage-contract Scarron, with characteristic
+buffoonery, recognises her as bringing a dower
+of "four louis, two large and very expressive eyes, a
+fine bosom, a pair of lovely hands, and a good intellect";
+while to the attorney, when asked what his
+contribution was, he answered, "I give her my
+name, and that means immortality." For eight
+years Fran&ccedil;oise was the dutiful wife of her crippled
+husband, nursing him tenderly, managing his home
+and his purse, redeeming his writing from its
+coarseness, and generally proving her gratitude by
+a ceaseless devotion. Then came the day when
+Scarron bade her farewell on his death-bed, begging
+her with his last breath to remember him sometimes,
+and bidding her to be "always virtuous."</p>
+<p>Thus Fran&ccedil;oise d'Aubign&eacute; was thrown once more
+on a cold world, with nothing between her and
+starvation but Scarron's small pension, which the
+Queen-mother continued to his widow, and compelled
+to seek a cheap refuge within convent walls.
+She had however good-looks which might stand her
+in good stead. She was tall, with an imposing
+figure and a natural dignity of carriage. She had a
+wealth of light-brown hair, eyes dark and brilliant,
+<a name="Page_243"></a>full of fire and intelligence, a well-shaped
+nose, and
+an exquisitely modelled mouth.</p>
+<p>Beautiful she was beyond doubt, in these days of
+her prime; but there were thousands of more beautiful
+women in France. And for ten years Madame
+Scarron was left to languish within the convent
+walls with never a lover to offer her release. When
+the Queen-mother died, and with her the pitiful
+pension, her plight was indeed pitiful. Her petitions
+to the King fell on deaf ears, until Montespan, moved
+by her tears and entreaties, pleaded for her; and
+Louis at last gave a reluctant consent to continue the
+allowance.</p>
+<p>It was a happy inspiration that led Scarron's widow
+to the King's favourite, for Madame de Montespan's
+heart, ever better than her life, went out to the gentle
+woman whom fate was treating so scurvily. Not
+content with procuring the pension, she placed her
+in charge of her nursery, an office of great trust and
+delicacy; and thus Madame Scarron found herself
+comfortably installed in the King's palace with a
+salary of two thousand crowns a year. Her day of
+poverty and independence was at last ended. She
+had, in fact, though she little knew it, placed her foot
+on the ladder, at the summit of which was the dazzling
+prize of the King's hand.</p>
+<p>Those were happy years which followed. High
+in the favour of the King's mistress, loving the little
+ones given into her charge as if they were her own
+children, especially the eldest born, the delicate and
+warm-hearted Duc de Maine, who was also his
+father's darling, Madame had nothing left to wish
+<a name="Page_244"></a>for in life. Her days were full of duty, of
+peace, and
+contentment. Even Louis, as he watched the loving
+care she lavished on his children, began to thaw and
+to smile on her, and to find pleasure in his visits to
+the nursery, which grew more and more frequent.
+There was a charm in this sweet-eyed, gentle-voiced
+widow, whose tongue was so skilful in wise and
+pleasant words. Her patient devotion deserved
+recognition. He gave orders that more fitting
+apartments should be assigned to Madame&#8212;a suite
+little less sumptuous than that of Montespan herself;
+and that money should not be lacking, he made her
+a gift of two hundred thousand francs, which the
+provident widow promptly invested in the purchase
+of the castle and estate of Maintenon.</p>
+<p>Such marked favours as these not unnaturally set
+jealous tongues wagging. Even Montespan began
+to grow uneasy, and to wonder what was coming
+next. When she ventured to refer sarcastically to
+the use "Scarron's widow" had made of his present,
+Louis silenced her by answering, "In my opinion,
+<i>Madame de Maintenon</i> has acted very wisely";
+thus by a word conferring noble rank on the woman
+his favourite was already beginning to fear as a rival.</p>
+<p>And indeed there were soon to be sufficient
+grounds for Montespan's jealously and alarm. Every
+day saw Louis more and more under the spell of
+his children's governess&#8212;the middle-aged woman
+whose musical voice, gentle eyes, and wise words of
+counsel were opening a new and better world to him.
+She knew, as well as himself, how sated and weary
+he was of the cup of pleasure he had now drained to
+<a name="Page_245"></a>its last dregs of disillusionment; and he
+listened with
+eager ears to the words which pointed to him a surer
+path of happiness. Even reproof from her lips
+became more grateful to him than the sweetest
+flatteries from those of the most beautiful woman
+who counted but half of her years.</p>
+<p>The growing influence of the widow Scarron over
+the "Sun-King" had already become the chief
+gossip of the Court. From the allurements of
+Montespan, of Mademoiselle de Fontanges, and of
+de Ludre he loved to escape to the apartments of the
+soft-voiced woman who cared so much more for his
+soul than for his smiles. "His Majesty's interviews
+with Madame de Maintenon," Madame de Sevign&eacute;
+writes, "become more and more frequent, and they
+last from six in the morning to ten at night, she sitting
+in one arm-chair, he in another."</p>
+<p>In vain Montespan stormed and wept in her fits
+of jealous rage; in vain did the beautiful de Fontanges
+seek to lure him to her arms, until death
+claimed her so tragically before she had well passed
+her twentieth birthday. The King had had more
+than enough of such Delilahs. Pleasure had palled;
+peace was what he craved now&#8212;salve for his seared
+conscience.</p>
+<p>When Madame de Maintenon was appointed principal
+lady-in-waiting to the Dauphine and when, a
+little later, Louis' unhappy Queen drew her last
+breath in her arms, Montespan at last realised that
+her day of power was over. She wrote letters to the
+King begging him not to withdraw his affection from
+her, but to these appeals Louis was silent; he
+<a name="Page_246"></a>handed the letters to Madame de Maintenon to
+answer as she willed.</p>
+<p>The Court was quick to realise that a new star
+had risen; ministers and ambassadors now flocked
+to the new divinity to consult her and to win her
+favour. The governess was hailed as the new
+Queen of Louis and of France. The climax came
+when the King was thrown one day from his horse
+while hunting, and broke his arm. It was Madame
+de Maintenon alone who was allowed to nurse him,
+and who was by his side night and day. Before the
+arm was well again she was standing, thickly veiled,
+before an improvised altar in the King's study, with
+Louis by her side, while the words that made them
+man and wife were pronounced by Archbishop de
+Harlay.</p>
+<p>The prison-child had now reached the loftiest
+pinnacle in the land of her birth. Though she wore
+no crown, she was Queen of France, wielding a
+power which few throned ladies have ever known.
+Princes and Princesses rose to greet her entry with
+bows and curtsies; the mother of the coming King
+called her "aunt"; her rooms, splendid as the
+King's, adjoined his; she had the place of honour
+in the King's Council Room; the State's secrets were
+in her keeping; she guided and controlled the
+destinies of the nation. And all this greatness came
+to her when she had passed her fiftieth year, and
+when all the grace and bloom of youth were but a
+distant memory.</p>
+<p>The King himself, two years her junior, and still
+in the prime of his manhood, was her shadow, paying
+<a name="Page_247"></a>to the plain, middle-aged woman such deference
+and
+courtesy as he had never shown to the youth and
+beauty of her predecessors in his affection. And she&#8212;thus
+translated to dizzy heights&#8212;kept a head as
+cool and a demeanour as modest as when she was
+"Scarron's widow," the convent prot&eacute;g&eacute;e. For
+power and splendour she cared no whit. Her
+ambition now, as always, was to be loved for herself,
+to "play a beautiful part in the world," and to deserve
+the respect of all good men.</p>
+<p>Her chief pleasure was found away from the pomp
+and glitter of the Court, among "her children" of
+the Saint Cyr Convent, which she had founded for
+the education of the daughters of poor noblemen,
+over whom she watched with loving and unflagging
+care. And yet she was not happy&#8212;not nearly as
+happy as in the days of her obscure widowhood.
+"I am dying of sorrow in the midst of luxury," she
+wrote. And again. "I cannot bear it. I wish I
+were dead." Why she was so unhappy, with her
+Queendom and her environment of love and esteem,
+and her life of good works, it is impossible to say.
+The fact remains, inscrutable, but still fact.</p>
+<p>Twenty-five years of such life of splendid sadness,
+and Louis, his last days clouded by loss and
+suffering, died with her prayers in his ears, his
+coverlet moistened by her tears. Two years later&#8212;years
+spent in prayers and masses and charitable
+work&#8212;the "Queen Dowager" drew the last breath
+of her long life at St Cyr, shortly after hearing that
+her beloved Due de Maine, her pet nursling of
+other days, had been arrested and flung into prison.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXIII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_248"></a>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+<h2>A THRONED BARBARIAN</h2>
+<br>
+<p>The dawn of the eighteenth century saw the thrones
+of France and Russia occupied by two of the most
+remarkable sovereigns who ever wore a crown&#8212;Louis
+XIV., the "Sun-King," whose splendours
+dazzled Europe, and whose power held it in awe;
+and Peter I. of Russia, whose destructive sword
+swept Europe from Sweden to the Dardenelles, and
+whose clever brain laid sure the foundation of his
+country's greatness. Each of these Royal rivals
+dwarfed all other fellow-monarchs as the sun pales
+the stars; and yet it would scarcely have been
+possible to find two men more widely different in all
+save their passion for power and their love of woman,
+which alone they had in common.</p>
+<p>Of the two, Peter is unquestionably to-day the
+more arresting, dominating figure. Although nearly
+two centuries have gone since he made his exit from
+the world, we can still picture him in his pride,
+towering a head higher than the tallest of his
+courtiers, swart of face, "as if he had been born in
+Africa," with his black, close-curling hair, his bold,
+imperious eyes, his powerful, well-knit frame&#8212;"the
+<a name="Page_249"></a>muscles and stature of a Goliath"&#8212;a kingly
+figure,
+with majesty in every movement.</p>
+<p>We see him, too, wilfully discarding the kingliness
+with which nature had so liberally dowered him&#8212;now
+receiving ambassadors "in a short dressing-gown,
+below which his bare legs were exposed, a
+thick nightcap, lined with linen, on his head, his
+stockings dropped down over his slippers"&#8212;now
+walking through the Copenhagen streets grotesque
+in a green cap, a brown overcoat with horn
+buttons, worsted stockings full of darns, and dirty,
+cobbled shoes; and again carousing, red of face and
+loud of voice, with his meanest subjects in some low
+tavern.</p>
+<p>As the mood seizes him he plays the r&ocirc;le of fireman
+for hours together; goes carol-singing in his
+sledge, and reaps his harvest of coppers from the
+houses of his subjects; rides a hobby-horse at a
+village fair, and shrieks with laughter until he falls
+off; or plies saw and plane in a shipbuilding yard,
+sharing the meals and drinking bouts of his fellow-workmen.</p>
+<p>The French Ambassador, Campredon, wrote of
+him in 1725:&#8212;"It is utterly impossible at the
+present moment to approach the Tsar on serious
+subjects; he is altogether given up to his amusements,
+which consist in going every day to the
+principal houses in the town with a suite of 200
+persons, musicians and so forth, who sing songs on
+every sort of subject, and amuse themselves by
+eating and drinking at the expense of the persons
+they visit." "He never passed a single day without
+<a name="Page_250"></a>being the worse for drink," Baron P&ouml;llnitz
+tells us;
+and his drinking companions were usually chosen
+from the most degraded of his subjects, of both
+sexes, with whom he consorted on the most familiar
+terms.</p>
+<p>When his muddled brain occasionally awoke to
+the knowledge that he was a King, he would bully
+and hector his boon-comrades like any drunken
+trooper. On one occasion, when a young Jewess
+refused to drain a goblet of neat brandy which he
+thrust into her hand, he promptly administered two
+resounding boxes on her ears, shouting, "Vile
+Hebrew spawn! I'll teach thee to obey."</p>
+<p>There was in him, too, a vein of savage cruelty
+which took remarkable forms. A favourite pastime
+was to visit the torture-chamber and gloat over the
+sufferings of the victims of the knout and the
+strappado; or to attend (and frequently to officiate at)
+public executions. Once, we are told, at a banquet,
+he "amused himself by decapitating twenty Streltsy,
+emptying as many glasses of brandy between successive
+strokes, and challenging the Prussian envoy
+to repeat the feat."</p>
+<p>Mad? There can be little doubt that Peter
+had madness in his veins. He was a degenerate
+and an epileptic, subject to brain storms which
+terrified all who witnessed them. "A sort of convulsion
+seized him, which often for hours threw him
+into a most distressing condition. His body was
+violently contorted; his face distorted into horrible
+grimaces; and he was further subject to paroxysms
+of rage, during which it was almost certain death to
+<a name="Page_251"></a>approach him." Even in his saner moods, as
+Waliszewski tells us, he "joined to the roughness of
+a Russian <i>barin</i> all the coarseness of a Dutch sailor."
+Such in brief suggestion was Peter I. of Russia,
+half-savage, half-sovereign, the strangest jumble
+of contradictions who has ever worn the Imperial
+purple&#8212;"a huge mastodon, whose moral perceptions
+were all colossal and monstrous."</p>
+<p>It was, perhaps, inevitable that a man so primitive,
+so little removed from the animal, should find
+his chief pleasures in low pursuits and companionships.
+During his historic visit to London, after a
+hard day's work with adze and saw in the shipbuilding
+yard, the Tsar would adjourn with his fellow-workmen
+to a public-house in Great Tower Street,
+and "smoke and drink ale and brandy, almost
+enough to float the vessel he had been helping to
+construct."</p>
+<p>And in his own kingdom the favourite companions
+of his debauches were common soldiers and servants.</p>
+<p>"He chose his friends among the common herd;
+looked after his household like any shopkeeper;
+thrashed his wife like a peasant; and sought his
+pleasure where the lower populace generally finds
+it." His female companions were chosen rather for
+their coarseness than their charms, and pleased him
+most when they were drunk. It was thus fitting that
+he should make an Empress of a scullery-maid, who,
+as we have seen in an earlier chapter, had no vestige
+of beauty to commend her to his favour, and whose
+chief attractions in his eyes were that she had a coarse
+tongue and was a "first-rate toper."</p>
+<p><a name="Page_252"></a>It was thus a strange and unhappy caprice of
+fate
+that united Peter, while still a youth, to his first
+Empress, the refined and sensitive Eudoxia, a woman
+as remote from her husband as the stars. Never
+was there a more incongruous bride than this
+delicately nurtured girl provided by the Empress
+Nathalie for her coarse-grained son. From the hour
+at which they stood together at the altar the union
+was doomed to tragic failure; before the honeymoon
+waned Peter had terrified his bride by his brutality
+and disgusted her by the open attentions he paid to
+his favourites of the hour, the daughters of Botticher,
+the goldsmith, and Mons, the wine-merchant.</p>
+<p>For five years husband and wife saw little of each
+other; and when, in 1694, Nathalie's death removed
+the one influence which gave the union at least
+the outward form of substance, Peter lost no time
+in exhibiting his true colours. He dismissed all
+Eudoxia's relatives from the Court, and sent her
+father into exile. One brother he caused to be
+whipped in public; another was put to the torture,
+which had its horrible climax when Peter himself
+saturated his victim's clothes with spirits of wine,
+and then set them on fire. For Eudoxia a different
+fate was reserved. Not only had he long grown
+weary of her insipid beauty and of her refinement
+and gentleness, which were a constant mute reproach
+to his own low tastes and hectoring manners&#8212;he had
+grown to hate the very sight of her, and determined
+that she should no longer stand between him and the
+unbridled indulgence of his pleasure.</p>
+<p>During his visit to England he never once wrote
+<a name="Page_253"></a>to her, and on his return to Moscow his first
+words
+were a brutal announcement of his intention to be
+rid of her. In vain she pleaded and wept. To her
+tearful inquiries, "What have I done to offend you?
+What fault have you to find with me?" he turned a
+deaf ear. "I never want to see you again," were his
+last inexorable words. A few days later a hackney
+coach drove up to the palace doors; the unhappy
+Tsarina was bundled unceremoniously into it, and
+she was carried away to the nunnery of the "Intercession
+of the Blessed Virgin," whose doors were
+closed on her for a score of years.</p>
+<p>Pitiful years they were for the young Empress,
+consigned by her husband to a life that was worse
+than death&#8212;robbed of her rank, her splendours, and
+luxuries, her very name&#8212;she was now only Helen,
+the nun, faring worse than the meanest of her
+sister-nuns; for while they at least had plenty to eat,
+the Tsarina seems many a time to have known the
+pangs of hunger. The letters she wrote to one of
+her brothers are pathetic evidence of the straits to
+which she was reduced. "For pity's sake," she
+wrote, "give me food and drink. Give clothes to
+the beggar. There is nothing here. I do not need
+a great deal; still I must eat."</p>
+<p>It is not to be wondered at, that, in her misery,
+she should turn anywhere for succour and sympathy;
+and both came to her at last in the guise of Major
+Glebof, an officer in the district, whose heart was
+touched by the sadness of her fate. He sent her food
+and wine to restore her strength, and warm furs to protect
+her from the iciness of her cell. In response to her
+<a name="Page_254"></a>letters of thanks, he visited her again and
+again,
+bringing sunshine into her darkened life with his
+presence, and soothing her with words of sympathy
+and encouragement, until gratitude to the "good
+Samaritan" grew into love for the man.</p>
+<p>When she learned that the man who had so
+befriended her was himself poor, actually in money
+difficulties, she insisted on giving him every rouble
+she could wring, by any abject appeal, out of her
+friends and relatives. She became his very slave,
+grovelling at his feet. "Where thy heart is, dearest
+one," she wrote to him, "there is mine also;
+where thy tongue is, there is my head; thy will is
+also mine." She loved him with a passion which
+broke down all barriers of modesty and prudence,
+reckless of the fact that he had a wife, as she had a
+husband.</p>
+<p>When Major Glebof's visits and letters grew more
+and more infrequent, she suffered tortures of anxiety
+and despair. "My light, my soul, my joy," she
+wrote in one distracted letter, "has the cruel hour of
+separation come already? O, my light! how can I
+live apart from thee? How can I endure existence?
+Rather would I see my soul parted from my body.
+God alone knows how dear thou art to me. Why
+do I love thee so much, my adored one, that without
+thee life is so worthless? Why art thou angry with
+me? Why, my <i>batioushka</i>, dost thou not come
+to see me? Have pity on me, O my lord, and
+come to see me to-morrow. O, my world, my
+dearest and best, answer me; do not let me die
+of grief."</p>
+<p><a name="Page_255"></a>Thus one distracted, incoherent letter
+followed
+another, heart-breaking in their grief, pitiful in their
+appeal. "Come to me," she cried; "without thee I
+shall die. Why dost thou cause me such anguish?
+Have I been guilty without knowing it? Better far
+to have struck me, to have punished me in any way,
+for this fault I have innocently committed." And
+again: "Why am I not dead? Oh, that thou hadst
+buried me with thy own hands! Forgive me, O my
+soul! Do not let me die.... Send me but a crust
+of bread thou hast bitten with thy teeth, or the
+waistcoat thou hast often worn, that I may have something
+to bring thee near to me."</p>
+<p>What answers, if any, the Major vouchsafed to
+these pathetic letters we know not. The probability
+is that they received no answer&#8212;that the "good
+Samaritan" had either wearied of or grown alarmed
+at a passion which he could not return, and which
+was fraught with danger. It was accident only that
+revealed to the world the story of this strange and
+tragic infatuation.</p>
+<p>When the Tsarevitch, Alexis, was brought to trial
+in 1718 on a charge of conspiracy against his father,
+Peter, suspecting that Eudoxia had had a hand in
+the rebellion, ordered a descent on the nunnery and
+an inquiry. Nothing was found to connect her with
+her son's ill-fated venture; but the inquiry revealed
+the whole story of her relations with the too friendly
+officer. The evidence of the nuns and servants alone&#8212;evidence
+of frequent and long meetings by day and
+night, of embraces exchanged&#8212;was sufficiently conclusive,
+without the incriminating letters which were
+<a name="Page_256"></a>discovered in the Major's bureau, labelled
+"Letters
+from the Tsarina," or Eudoxia's confession which
+was extorted from her.</p>
+<p>This was an opportunity of vengeance such as
+exceeded all the Tsar's hopes. Glebof was arrested
+and put on his trial. Evidence was forced from the
+nuns by the lashing of the knout, so severe that some
+of them died under it. Glebof, subjected to such
+frightful tortures that in his agony he confessed much
+more than the truth, was sentenced to death by
+impalement. In order to prolong his suffering to the
+last possible moment, he was warmly wrapped in furs,
+to protect him from the bitter cold, and for twenty-eight
+hours he suffered indescribable agony, until at
+last death came to his release.</p>
+<p>As for Eudoxia, her punishment was a public
+flogging and consignment to a nunnery still more
+isolated and miserable than that in which she had
+dragged out twenty years of her broken life. Here she
+remained for seven years, until, on the Tsar's death,
+an even worse fate befell her. She was then, by
+Catherine's orders, taken from the convent, and
+flung into the most loathsome, rat-infested dungeon
+of the fortress of Schlussenberg, where she remained
+for two years of unspeakable horror.</p>
+<p>Then at last, after nearly thirty years of life that
+was worse than death, the sun shone again for her.
+One day her dungeon door flew open, and to the
+bowing of obsequious courtiers, the prisoner was
+conducted to a sumptuous apartment. "The walls
+were hung with splendid stuffs; the table was covered
+with gold-plate; ten thousand roubles awaited her in
+<a name="Page_257"></a>a casket. Courtiers stood in her ante-chamber;
+carriages and horses were at her orders."</p>
+<p>Catherine, the "scullery-Empress," was dead;
+Eudoxia's grandson, Peter II., now wore the crown
+of Russia; and Eudoxia found herself transported,
+as by the touch of a magic wand, from her loathsome
+prison-cell to the old-time splendours of palaces&#8212;the
+greatest lady in all Russia, to whom Princesses,
+ambassadors, and courtiers were all proud to pay
+respectful homage. But the transformation had
+come too late; her life was crushed beyond restoration;
+and after a few months of her new glory she
+was glad to find an asylum once more within
+convent walls, until Death, the great healer of broken
+hearts, took her to where, "beyond these voices,
+there is peace."</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 25%;">
+<p>While Eudoxia was eating her heart out in her
+convent cell, her husband was finding ample compensation
+for her absence in Bacchanalian orgies
+and the company of his galaxies of favourites, from
+tradesmen's daughters to servant-maids of buxom
+charms, such as the Livonian peasant-girl, in whom
+he found his second Empress.</p>
+<p>Of the almost countless women who thus fell under
+his baneful influence one stands out from the rest by
+reason of the tragedy which surrounds her memory.
+Mary Hamilton was no low-born maid, such as
+Peter especially chose to honour with his attentions.
+She had in her veins the blood of the ducal
+Hamiltons of Scotland, and of many a noble family
+of Russia, from which her more immediate ancestors
+<a name="Page_258"></a>had taken their wives; and it was an ill fate
+that
+took her, when little more than a child, to the most
+debased Court of Europe to play the part of maid-of-honour,
+and thus to cross the path of the most
+unprincipled lover in Europe.</p>
+<p>Peter's infatuation for the pretty young "Scotswoman,"
+however, was but short-lived. She had
+none of the vulgar attractions that could win him to
+any kind of constancy; and he quickly abandoned
+her for the more agreeable company of his
+<i>dienshtchiks</i>, leaving her to find consolation in the
+affection of more courtly, if less exalted, lovers&#8212;notably
+the young Count Orloff, who proved as
+faithless as his master.</p>
+<p>Such was Mary's infatuation for the worthless
+Count that, under his influence, she stooped to
+various kinds of crime, from stealing the Tsarina's
+jewels to fill her lover's purse, to infanticide. The
+climax came when an important document was
+missing from the Tsar's cabinet. Suspicion pointed
+to Orloff as the thief; he was arrested, and, when
+brought into Peter's presence, not only confessed to
+the thefts and to his share in making away with the
+undesirable infants, but betrayed the partner of
+his guilt.</p>
+<p>There was short shrift for poor Mary Hamilton
+when she was put on her trial on these grave charges.
+She made full confession of her crimes; but no torture
+could wring from her the name of the man for love
+of whom she had committed them, and of whose
+treachery to her she was ignorant. She was sentenced
+to death; and one March day, in the year
+<a name="Page_259"></a>1719, she was led to the scaffold "in a white
+silk
+gown trimmed with black ribbons."</p>
+<p>Then followed one of the grimmest scenes
+recorded in history. Peter, the man who had been
+the first to betray her, and who had refused her
+pardon even when her cause was pleaded by his wife,
+was a keenly interested spectator of her execution.
+At the foot of the scaffold he embraced her, and
+exhorted her to pray, before stepping aside to give
+place to the headsman. When the axe had done its
+deadly work, he again stepped forward, picked up
+the lifeless and still beautiful head which had rolled
+into the mud, and calmly proceeded to give a lecture
+on anatomy to the assembled crowd, "drawing
+attention to the number and nature of the organs
+severed by the axe." His lecture concluded, he
+kissed the pale, dead lips, crossed himself, and
+walked away with a smile of satisfaction on his face.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_260"></a>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+<h2>A FRIEND OF MARIE ANTOINETTE</h2>
+<br>
+<p>There is scarcely a spectacle in the whole drama
+of history more pathetic than that of Marie Antoinette,
+dancing her light-hearted way through life to
+the guillotine, seemingly unconscious of the eyes of
+jealousy and hate that watched her every step; or, if
+she noticed at all, returning a gay smile for a frown.</p>
+<p>Wedded when but a child, full of the joy of youth,
+with laughter bubbling on her pretty lips and gaiety
+dancing in her eyes, to a dull-witted clown to whom
+her fresh young beauty made no appeal; surrounded
+by Court ladies jealous of her charms; feared for her
+foreign sympathies, and hated by a sullen, starving
+populace for her extravagance and her pursuit of
+pleasure, the Austrian Princess with all her young
+loveliness and the sweetness of her nature could
+please no one in the land of her exile. Her very
+amiability was an offence; her unaffected simplicity
+a subject of scorn; and her love of pleasure a crime.</p>
+<p>Had she realised the danger of her position, and
+adapted herself to its demands, her story might have
+been written very differently; but her tragedy was
+that she saw or heeded none of the danger-signals
+<a name="Page_261"></a>that marked her path until it was too late to
+retrace
+a step; and that her most innocent pleasures were
+made to pave the way to her doom.</p>
+<p>Nothing, for instance, could have been more harmless
+to the seeming than Marie Antoinette's friendship
+for Yolande de Polignac; but this friendship
+had, beyond doubt, a greater part in her undoing
+than any other incident in her life, from the affair
+of the "diamond necklace" to her innocent infatuation
+for Count Fersen; and it would have been well
+for the Queen of France if Madame de Polignac had
+been content to remain in her rustic obscurity, and
+had never crossed her path.</p>
+<p>When Yolande Gabrielle de Polastron was led to
+the altar, one day in the year 1767, by Comte Jules
+de Polignac, she never dreamt, we may be sure, of
+the dazzling r&ocirc;le she was destined to play at the
+Court of France. Like her husband, she was a member
+of the smaller <i>noblesse</i>, as proud as they were
+poor. Her husband, it is true, boasted a long pedigree,
+with its roots in the Dark Ages; but his family
+had given to France only one man of note, that
+Cardinal de Polignac, accomplished scholar, courtier,
+and man of affairs, who was able to twist Louis XIV.
+round his dexterous thumb; and Comte Jules was
+the Cardinal's great-nephew, and, through his
+mother, had Mazarin blood in his veins.</p>
+<p>But the young couple had a purse as short as their
+descent was long; and the early years of their wedded
+life were spent in Comte Jules' dilapidated ch&acirc;teau,
+on an income less than the equivalent of a pound a
+day&#8212;in a rustic retirement which was varied by an
+<a name="Page_262"></a>occasional jaunt to Paris to "see the sights,"
+and
+enjoy a little cheap gaiety.</p>
+<p>Comte Jules, however, had a sister, Diane, a
+clever-tongued, ambitious young woman, who had
+found a footing at Court as lady-in-waiting to the
+Comtesse d'Artois, and whom her brother and his
+wife were proud to visit on their rare journeys to the
+capital. And it was during one of these visits that
+Marie Antoinette, who had struck up an informal
+friendship with the sprightly, laughter-loving Diane,
+first met the woman who was to play such an important
+and dangerous part in her life.</p>
+<p>It was, perhaps, little wonder that the French
+Queen, craving for friendship and sympathy, fell
+under the charm of Yolande de Polignac&#8212;a girl
+still, but a few years older than herself, with a singular
+sweetness and winsomeness, and "beautiful as a
+dream." The beauty of the young Comtesse was,
+indeed, a revelation even in a Court of fair women.
+In the extravagant words of chroniclers of the time,
+"she had the most heavenly face that was ever seen.
+Her glance, her smile, every feature was angelic."
+No picture could, it was said, do any justice to this
+lovely creature of the glorious brown hair and blue
+eyes, who seemed so utterly unconscious of her
+beauty.</p>
+<p>Such was the woman who came into the life of
+Marie Antoinette, and at once took possession of her
+heart. At last the Queen of France, in her isolation,
+had found the ideal friend she had sought so long in
+vain; a woman young and beautiful like herself, with
+kindred tastes, eager as she was to enjoy life, and
+<a name="Page_263"></a>with all the qualities to make a charming and
+sympathetic
+companion. It was a case of love at first
+sight, on Marie Antoinette's part at least; and each
+subsequent meeting only served to strengthen the
+link that bound these two women so strangely
+brought together.</p>
+<p>The Comtesse must come oftener to Court, the
+Queen pleaded, so that they might have more opportunities
+of meeting and of learning to know each
+other; and when the Comtesse pleaded poverty,
+Marie Antoinette brushed the difficulty aside. That
+could easily be arranged; the Queen had a vacancy
+in the ranks of her equerries. M. le Comte would
+accept the post, and then Madame would have her
+apartments at the Court itself.</p>
+<p>Thus it was that Comte Jules' wife was transported
+from her poor country ch&acirc;teau to the splendours of
+Versailles, installed as <i>ch&egrave;re amie</i> of the Queen in
+place of the Princesse de Lamballe, and with the ball
+of fortune at her pretty feet. And never did woman
+adapt herself more easily to such a change of environment.
+It was, indeed, a great part of the charm of
+this remarkable woman that, amid success which
+would have turned the head of almost any other of
+her sex, she remained to her last day as simple and
+unaffected as when she won the Queen's heart in
+Diane de Polignac's apartment.</p>
+<p>So absolutely indifferent did she seem to her new
+splendours, that, when jealousy sought to undermine
+the Queen's friendship, she implored Marie Antoinette
+to allow her to go back to her old, obscure life;
+and it was only when the Queen begged her to stay,
+<a name="Page_264"></a>with arms around her neck and with streaming
+tears,
+that she consented to remain by her side.</p>
+<p>If the Queen ever had any doubt that she had at
+last found a friend who loved her for herself, the
+doubt was now finally dissipated. Such an unselfish
+love as this was a treasure to be prized; and from
+this moment Queen and waiting-woman were inseparable.
+When they were not strolling arm-in-arm
+in the corridors or gardens of Versailles, Her Majesty
+was spending her days in Madame's apartments,
+where, as she said, "We are no longer Queen and
+subject, but just dear friends."</p>
+<p>So unhappy was Marie Antoinette apart from her
+new friend that, when Madame de Polignac gave
+birth to a child at Passy, the Court itself was moved
+to La Muette, so that the Queen could play the part
+of nurse by her friend's bedside.</p>
+<p>Such, now, was the Queen's devotion that there
+was no favour she would not have gladly showered
+on the Comtesse; but to all such offers Madame
+turned a deaf ear. She wanted nothing but Marie
+Antoinette's love and friendship for herself; but if the
+Queen, in her goodness, chose to extend her favour
+to Madame's relatives&#8212;well, that was another matter.</p>
+<p>Thus it was that Comte Jules soon blossomed into
+a Duke, and Madame perforce became a Duchess,
+with a coveted tabouret at Court. But they were
+still poor, in spite of an equerry's pay, and heavily
+in debt, a matter which must be seen to. The
+Queen's purse satisfied every creditor, to the tune
+of four hundred thousand livres, and Duc Jules found
+himself lord of an estate which added seventy thousand
+<a name="Page_265"></a>livres yearly to his exchequer, with another
+annual
+eighty thousand livres as revenue for his office of
+Director-General of Posts.</p>
+<p>Of course, if the Queen <i>would</i> be so foolishly
+generous, it was not the Duchesse's fault, and when
+Marie Antoinette next proposed to give a dowry of
+eight hundred thousand livres to the Duchesse's
+daughter on her marriage to the Comte de Guiche,
+and to raise the bridegroom to a dukedom&#8212;well, it
+was "very sweet of Her Majesty," and it was not
+for her to oppose such a lavish autocrat.</p>
+<p>Thus the shower of Royal favours grew; and it is
+perhaps little wonder that each new evidence of the
+Queen's prodigality was greeted with curses by the
+mob clamouring for bread outside the palace gates;
+while even her father's minister, Kaunitz, in far
+Vienna, brutally dubbed the Duchesse and her
+family, "a gang of thieves."</p>
+<p>Diane de Polignac, the Duchesse's sister-in-law,
+had long been made a Countess and placed in charge
+of a Royal household; and the grateful shower fell
+on all who had any connection with the favourite.
+Her father-in-law, Cardinal de Polignac's nephew,
+was rescued from his rustic poverty to play the
+exalted r&ocirc;le of ambassador; an uncle was raised
+<i>per saltum</i> from <i>cur&eacute;</i> to bishop. The Duchesse's
+widowed aunt was made happy by a pension of six
+thousand livres a year; and her son-in-law, de Guiche,
+in addition to his dukedom, was rewarded further for
+his fortunate nuptials by valuable sinecure offices at
+Court.</p>
+<p>So the tide of benefactions flowed until it was
+<a name="Page_266"></a>calculated that the Polignac family were drawing
+half
+a million livres every year as the fruits of the Queen's
+partiality for her favourite. Little wonder that, at
+a time when France was groaning under dire poverty,
+the volume of curses should swell against the
+"Austrian panther," who could thus squander gold
+while her subjects were starving; or that the Court
+should be inflamed by jealousy at such favours shown
+to a family so obscure as the Polignacs.</p>
+<p>To the warnings of her own family Marie Antoinette
+was deaf. What cared she for such exhibitions
+of spite and jealousy? She was Queen; and if she
+wished to be generous to her favourite's family, none
+should say her nay. And thus, with a smile half-careless,
+half-defiant, she went to meet the doom
+which, though she little dreamt it, awaited her.</p>
+<p>The Duchesse was now promoted to the office of
+governess of the Queen's children, a position which
+was the prerogative of Royalty itself, or, at least, of
+the very highest nobility. With her usual modesty,
+she had fought long against the promotion; but the
+Queen's will was law, and she had to submit to the
+inevitable as gracefully as she could. And now we
+see her installed in the most splendid apartments at
+Versailles, holding a <i>salon</i> almost as regal as that
+of Marie Antoinette herself.</p>
+<p>She was surrounded by sycophants and place-seekers,
+eager to capture the Queen's favour through
+her. And such was her influence that a word from
+her was powerful enough to make or mar a minister.
+She held, in fact, the reins of power and was now
+more potent than the weak-kneed King himself.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_267"></a>It was at this stage in her brilliant career
+that the
+Duchesse came under the spell of the Comte de
+Vaudreuil&#8212;handsome, courtly, an intriguer to his
+finger-tips, a man of many accomplishments, of a
+supple tongue, and with great wealth to lend a
+glamour to his gifts. A man of rare fascination, and
+as dangerous as he was fascinating.</p>
+<p>The woman who had carried a level head through
+so much unaccustomed splendour and power became
+the veriest slave of this handsome, honey-tongued
+Comte, who ruled her, as she in turn ruled the Queen.
+At his bidding she made and unmade ministers; she
+obtained for him pensions and high offices, and
+robbed the treasury of nearly two million livres to
+fill his pockets. When Marie Antoinette at last
+ventured to thwart the Comte in his ambition to
+become the Dauphin's Governor, he retaliated by
+poisoning the Duchesse's mind against her, and
+bringing about the first estrangement between the
+friends.</p>
+<p>Torn between her infatuation for Vaudreuil and
+her love of the Queen, the Duchesse was in an
+awkward dilemma. It became necessary to choose
+between the two rivals; and that Vaudreuil's spell
+proved the stronger, her increasing coldness to Marie
+Antoinette soon proved. It was the "rift within the
+lute" which was to make the music of their friendship
+mute. The Queen gradually withdrew herself
+from the Duchesse's <i>salon</i>, where she was sure to
+meet the insolent Vaudreuil; and thus the gulf gradually
+widened until the severance was complete.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 25%;">
+<p><a name="Page_268"></a>Evil days were now coming for Marie
+Antoinette.
+The affair of the diamond necklace had made powerful
+enemies; the Polignac family, taking the side of
+Vaudreuil and their protectress, were arrayed against
+her; France was rising on the tide of hate to sweep
+the Austrian and her husband from the throne. The
+horrors of the Revolution were being loosed, and all
+who could were flying for safety to other lands.</p>
+<p>At this terrible crisis the Queen's thoughts were
+less for herself than for her friend of happier days.
+She sought the Duchesse and begged her to fly while
+there was still time. Then it was that, touched by
+such unselfish love, the Duchesse's pride broke down,
+and all her old love for her sovereign lady returned
+in full flood. Bursting into tears, she flung herself
+at Marie Antoinette's feet, and begged forgiveness
+from the woman whose friendship she had
+spurned, and whose life she had, however innocently,
+done so much to ruin.</p>
+<p>A few hours later the Duchesse, disguised as a
+chambermaid and sitting by the coachman's side,
+was making her escape from France in company with
+her husband and other members of her family, while
+the Queen who had loved her so well was left to take
+the last tragic steps that had the guillotine for goal.</p>
+<p>Just before the carriage started on its long and
+perilous journey, a note was thrust into the "chambermaid's"
+hand&#8212;"Adieu, most tender of friends.
+How terrible is this word! But it is necessary.
+Adieu! I have only strength left to embrace you.
+Your heart-broken Marie."</p>
+<p>Then ensued for the Duchesse a time of perilous
+<a name="Page_269"></a>journeying to safety. At Sens her carriage was
+surrounded
+by a fierce mob, clamouring for the blood
+of the "aristos." "Are the Polignacs still with the
+Queen?" demanded one man, thrusting his head into
+the carriage. "The Polignacs?" answered the Abb&eacute;
+de Baliviere, with marvellous presence of mind.
+"Oh! they have left Versailles long ago. Those
+vile persons have been got rid of." And with a howl
+of baffled rage the mob allowed the carriage to continue
+its journey, taking with it the most hated of all
+the Polignacs, the chambermaid, whose heart, we
+may be sure, was in her mouth!</p>
+<p>Thus the Duchesse made her way through Switzerland,
+to Turin, and to Rome, and to Venice, where
+news came to her of the fall ot the monarchy and
+Louis' execution. By the time she reached Vienna
+on her restless wanderings, her health, shattered by
+hardships and by her anxiety for her friend, broke
+down completely. She was a dying woman; and
+when, a few months later, she learned that Marie
+Antoinette was also dead&#8212;"a natural death," they
+mercifully told her&#8212;"Thank God!" she exclaimed;
+"now, at last, she is free from those bloodthirsty
+monsters! Now I can die in peace."</p>
+<p>Seven weeks later the Duchesse drew her last
+breath, with the name she still loved best in all the
+world on her lips. In death she and her beloved
+Queen were not divided.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_270"></a>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+<h2>THE RIVAL SISTERS</h2>
+<br>
+<p>It was an unkind fate that linked the lives of
+the fifteenth Louis of France and Marie Leczinska,
+Princess of Lorraine, and daughter of Stanislas, the
+dethroned King of Poland; for there was probably
+no Princess in Europe less equipped by nature to
+hold the fickle allegiance of the young French King,
+and no Royal husband less likely to bring happiness
+into the life of such a consort.</p>
+<p>When Princess Marie was called to the throne of
+France, she found herself transported from one of
+the most penurious and obscure to the most splendid
+of the Courts of Europe&#8212;"frightened and overwhelmed,"
+as de Goncourt tells us, "by the grandeur
+of the King, bringing to her husband nothing but
+obedience, to marriage only duty; trembling and
+faltering in her queenly r&ocirc;le like some escaped nun
+lost in Versailles." Although by no means devoid
+of good-looks, as Nattier's portrait of her at this time
+proves, her attractions were shy ones, as her virtues
+were modest, almost ashamed.</p>
+<p>She shrank alike from the embraces of her husband
+and the gaieties of his Court, finding her chief
+pleasure in music and painting, in long talks with
+<a name="Page_271"></a>the most serious-minded of her ladies, in Masses
+and
+prayers&#8212;spending gloomy hours in her oratory with
+its death's head, which she always carried with her
+on her journeys. Such was the nun-like wife whom
+Louis XV. led to the altar shortly after he had entered
+his sixteenth year, and had already had his initiation
+into that career of vice which he pursued with few
+intervals to the end of his life.</p>
+<p>Already, at fifteen, the King, who has been mockingly
+dubbed "<i>le bien aim&eacute;</i>" was breaking away
+from the austere hands of his boyhood's mentor, Cardinal
+Fleury, and was beginning to snatch a few "fearful
+joys" in the company of his mignons, such as the
+Duc de La Tremouille, and the Duc de Gesvres,
+and a few gay women of whom the sprightly and
+beautiful Princesse de Charolois was the ringleader.
+But he was still nothing more than "a big and gloomy
+child," whose ill-balanced nature gravitated between
+fits of profound gloom and the wild abandonment of
+debauch; one hour, torn and shaken by religious
+terrors, fears of hell and of death; the next, the very
+soul of hysterical gaiety, with words of blasphemy on
+his lips, the gayest member of a band of Bacchanals
+in some midnight orgy.</p>
+<p>To such a youth, feverishly seeking distraction
+from his own black moods, the demure, devout
+Princess, ignorant of the caresses and coquetry of her
+sex, moving like a spectre among the brilliant, light-hearted
+ladies of his Court, was the most unsuitable,
+the most impossible of brides. He quickly wearied
+of her company, and fled from her sighs and her
+homilies to seek forgetfulness of her and of himself
+<a name="Page_272"></a>in the society of such sirens of the Court as
+Mademoiselle de Beaujolais, Madame de Lauraguais,
+and Mademoiselle de Charolois, whose coquetries
+and high spirits never failed to charm away his
+gloomy humours.</p>
+<p>But although one lady after another, from that
+most bewitching of madcaps, Mademoiselle de
+Charolois, to the dark-eyed, buxom Comtesse de
+Toulouse, practised on him all their allurements,
+strove to awake his senses "by a thousand coquetries,
+a thousand assaults, the King's timidity eluded these
+advances, which amused and alarmed, but did not
+tempt his heart; that young monarch's heart was still
+so full of the aged Fleury's terrifying tales of the
+women of the Regency."</p>
+<p>Such coyness, however, was not long to stand in
+the way of the King's appetite for pleasure which
+every day strengthened. One day it began to be
+whispered that at last Louis had been vanquished&#8212;that,
+at a supper at La Muette, he had proposed
+the health of an "Unknown Fair," which had been
+drunk with acclamation by his boon-companions; and
+the Court was full of excited speculation as to who
+his mysterious charmer could be. That some new
+and powerful influence had come into the young
+sovereign's life was abundantly clear, from the new
+light that shone in his eyes, the laughter that was now
+always on his lips. He had said "good-bye" to
+melancholy; he astonished all by his new vivacity,
+and became the leader in one dissipation after another,
+"whose noisy merriment he led and prolonged
+far into the night."</p>
+<p><a name="Page_273"></a>It was not long before the identity of the
+worker
+of this miracle was revealed to the world. She had
+been recognised more than once when making her
+stealthy way to the King's apartments; she was his
+chosen companion on his journey to Compi&egrave;gne; and
+it was soon public knowledge that Madame de Mailly
+was the woman who had captured the King's elusive
+heart. And indeed there was little occasion for
+surprise; for Madame de Mailly, although she would
+never see her thirtieth birthday again, was one of
+the most seductive women in all France.</p>
+<p>Black-eyed, crimson-lipped, oval-faced, Madame
+de Mailly was one of those women who "with cheeks
+on fire, and blood astir, eyes large and lustrous as
+the eyes of Juno, with bold carriage and in free
+toilettes, step forward out of the past with the proud
+and insolent graces of the divinities of some
+Bacchanalia." With the provocative and sensual
+charm which is so powerful in its appeal, she had a
+rare skill in displaying her beauty to its fullest
+advantage. Her cult of the toilette, the Duc de
+Luynes tells us, went with her even by night. She
+never went to bed without decking herself with all
+her diamonds; and her most seductive hour was in
+the morning, when, in her bed, with her glorious
+dishevelled hair veiling her pillow, a-glitter with her
+jewels, she gave audience to her friends.</p>
+<p>Such was the ravishing, ardent, passionate woman
+who was the first of many to carry Louis' heart by
+storm, and to be established in his palace as his
+mistress&#8212;to inaugurate for him a new life of
+pleasure, and to estrange him still more from his
+<a name="Page_274"></a>unhappy Queen, shut up with her prayers and her
+tears in her own room, with her tapestry, her books
+of history, and her music for sole relaxation. "The
+most innocent pleasures," Queen Marie wrote sadly
+at this time, "are not for me."</p>
+<p>Under Madame de Mailly's rule the Court of Versailles
+awoke to a new life. "The little apartments
+grow animated, gay to the point of licence. Noise,
+merriment, an even gayer and livelier clash of
+glasses, madder nights." F&ecirc;te succeeded f&ecirc;te in
+brilliant sequence. Each night saw its Royal debauch,
+with the King and his mistress for arch-spirits
+of the revels. There were nightly banquets, with
+the rarest wines and the most costly viands, supplemented
+by salads prepared by the dainty hands of
+Mademoiselle de Charolois, and ragouts cooked by
+Louis himself in silver saucepans. And these were
+followed by orgies which left the celebrants, in the
+last excesses of intoxication, to be gathered up at
+break of day and carried helpless to bed.</p>
+<p>Such wild excesses could not fail sooner or later
+to bring satiety to a lover so unstable as Louis; and
+it was not long before he grew a little weary of
+his mistress, who, too assured of her conquest, began
+to exhibit sudden whims and caprices, and fits of
+obstinacy. Her jealous eyes followed him everywhere,
+her reproaches, if he so much as smiled on
+a rival beauty, provoked daily quarrels. He was
+drawn, much against his will, into her family disputes,
+and into the disgraceful affairs of her father, the dissolute
+Marquis de Nesle.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Madame de Mailly's supremacy was
+<a name="Page_275"></a>being threatened in a most unexpected quarter.
+Among the pupils of the convent school at Port
+Royal was a young girl, in whose ambitious brain
+the project was forming of supplanting the King's
+favourite, and of ruling France and Louis at the same
+time. The idle dream of a schoolgirl, of course!
+But to F&eacute;licit&eacute; de Nesle it was no vain dream, but the
+ambition of a lifetime, which dominated her more and
+more as the months passed in her convent seclusion.
+If her sister, Madame de Mailly, had so easily made
+a conquest of the King, why should she, with less
+beauty, it is true, but with a much cleverer brain,
+despair? And thus it was that every letter Madame
+received from her "little sister" pleaded for an
+invitation to Court, until at last Mademoiselle de
+Nesle found herself the guest of Louis' mistress in
+his palace.</p>
+<p>Thus the first important step was taken. The rest
+would be easy; for Mademoiselle never doubted for
+a moment her ability to carry out her programme to
+its splendid climax. It was certainly a bold, almost
+impudent design; for the girl of the convent had few
+attractions to appeal to a monarch so surrounded by
+beauty as the King of France. What the courtiers
+saw, says the Duc de Richelieu, was "a long neck
+clumsily set on the shoulders, a masculine figure and
+carriage, features not unlike those of Madame de
+Mailly, but thinner and harder, which exhibited none
+of her flashes of kindness, her tenderness of passion."</p>
+<p>Even her manners seemed calculated to repel,
+rather than attract the man she meant to conquer;
+for she treated him, from the first, with a familiarity
+<a name="Page_276"></a>amounting almost to rudeness, and a wilfulness
+to
+which he was by no means accustomed. There was,
+at any rate, something novel and piquant in an
+attitude so different from that of all other Court
+ladies. Resentment was soon replaced by interest,
+and interest by attraction; until Louis, before he was
+aware of it, began to find the society of the impish,
+mocking, defiant maid from the convent more to
+his taste than that of the most fascinating women
+of his Court.</p>
+<p>The more he saw of her, the more effectually he
+came under her spell. Each day found her in some
+new and tantalising mood; and as she drew him more
+and more into her toils, she kept him there by her
+ingenuity in devising novel pleasures and entertainments
+for him, until, within a month of setting eyes on
+her, he was telling Madame de Mailly, he "loved her
+sister more than herself." One of the first evidences
+of his favour was to provide her with a husband in
+the Comte de Vintimille, and a dower of two hundred
+thousand livres. He promised her a post as lady-in-waiting
+to Madame la Dauphine and gave her a
+sumptuous suite of rooms at Versailles. He even
+conferred on her husband the honour of handing him
+his shirt on the wedding-night, an evidence of high
+favour such as no other bridegroom had enjoyed.</p>
+<p>It was thus little surprise to anyone to find the
+Comtesse-bride not only her sister's most formidable
+rival, but actually usurping her place and privileges.
+Nor was it long before this place, on which she had
+set her heart first within the walls of the Port Royal
+Convent, was unassailably hers; and Madame de
+<a name="Page_277"></a>Mailly, in tears and sadness, saw an
+unbridgeable
+gulf widen between her and the man she undoubtedly
+had grown to love.</p>
+<p>That F&eacute;licit&eacute; de Nesle had not over-estimated her
+powers of conquest was soon apparent. Louis became
+her abject slave, humouring her caprices and
+submitting to her will. And this will, let it be said
+to her credit, she exercised largely for his good. She
+weaned him from his vicious ways; she stimulated
+whatever good remained in him; she tried, and in a
+measure succeeded in making a man of him. Under
+her influence he began to realise that he was a King,
+and to play his exalted part more worthily. He
+asserted himself in a variety of directions, from
+looking personally after the ordering of his household
+to taking the reins of State into his own hands.</p>
+<p>Nor did she curtail his pleasures. She merely
+gave them a saner direction. Orgies and midnight
+revelry became things of the past, but their place was
+taken by delightful days spent at the Ch&acirc;teau of
+Choisy, that regal little pleasure-house between
+the waters of the Seine and the Forest of S&eacute;nart,
+with all its marvels of costly and artistic furnishing.
+Here one entertainment succeeded another, from the
+hunting which opened, to the card-games which
+closed the day. A time of innocent delights which
+came sweet to the jaded palate of the King.</p>
+<p>Thus the halcyon months passed, until, one
+August day in 1741, the Comtesse was seized with a
+slight fever; Louis, consumed by anxiety, spending
+the anxious hours by her bedside or pacing the
+corridor outside. Two days later he was stooping
+<a name="Page_278"></a>to kiss an infant presented to him on a cushion
+of
+cramoisi velvet. His happiness was crowned at last,
+and life spread before him a prospect of many such
+years. But tragedy was already brooding over this
+scene of pleasure, although none, least of all the
+King, seemed to see the shadow of her wings.</p>
+<p>One early day in December, Madame de Vintimille
+was seized with a severe illness, as sudden as
+it was mysterious. Physicians were hastily summoned
+from Paris, only, to Louis' despair, to declare that
+they could do nothing to save the life of the Comtesse.
+"Tortured by excruciating pain," says de
+Goncourt, "struggling against a death which was full
+of terror, and which seemed to point to the violence
+of poison, the dying woman sent for a confessor.
+She died almost instantly in his arms before the Sacraments
+could be administered. And as the confessor,
+charged with the dead woman's last penitent message
+to her sister, entered Madame de Mailly's <i>salon</i>, he
+dropped dead."</p>
+<p>Here, indeed, was tragedy in its most sudden
+and terrible form! The King was stunned, incredulous.
+He refused to believe that the woman
+he had so lately clasped in his arms, so warm, so full
+of life, was dead. And when at last the truth broke
+on him with crushing force, he was as a man
+distraught. "He shut himself up in his room, and
+listened half-dead to a Mass from his bed." He
+would not allow any but the priest to come near him;
+he repulsed all efforts at consolation.</p>
+<p>And whilst Louis was thus alone with his demented
+grief, "thrust away in a stable of the palace, lay the
+<a name="Page_279"></a>body of the dead woman, which had been kept for
+a
+cast to be taken; that distorted countenance, that
+mouth which had breathed out its soul in a convulsion,
+so that the efforts of two men were required to close it
+for moulding, the already decomposing remains of
+Madame de Vintimille served as a plaything and a
+laughing-stock to the children and lackeys."</p>
+<p>When the storm of his grief at last began to abate,
+the King retired to his remote country-seat of Saint
+Leger, carrying his broken heart with him&#8212;and also
+Madame de Mailly, as sharer of his sorrow; for it
+was to the woman whom he had so lightly discarded
+that he first turned for solace. At Saint Leger he
+passed his days in reading and re-reading the two
+thousand letters the dead Comtesse had written to
+him, sprinkling their perfumed pages with his tears.
+And when he was not thus burying himself in the
+past, he was a prey to the terrors that had obsessed
+his childhood&#8212;the fear of death and of hell.</p>
+<p>At supper&#8212;the only meal which he shared with
+others, he refused to touch meat, "in order that he
+might not commit sin on every side"; if a light word
+was spoken he would rebuke the speaker by talk of
+death and judgment; and if his eyes met those of
+Madame de Mailly, he burst into tears and was led
+sobbing from the room.</p>
+<p>The communion of grief gradually awoke in him
+his old affection for Madame de Mailly; and for a
+time it seemed not unlikely that she might regain
+her lost supremacy. But the discarded mistress had
+many enemies at Court, who were by no means
+willing to see her re-established in favour&#8212;the chief
+<a name="Page_280"></a>of them, the Duc de Richelieu, the handsomest
+man
+and the "hero" of more scandalous amours than any
+other in France&#8212;a man, moreover, of crafty brain,
+who had already acquired an ascendancy over the
+King's mind.</p>
+<p>With Madame de Tencin, a woman as scheming
+and with as evil a reputation as himself, for chief ally,
+the Due determined to find another mistress who
+should finally oust Madame de Mailly from Louis'
+favour; and her he found in a woman, devoted to
+himself and his interests, and of such surpassing
+loveliness that, when the King first saw her at Petit
+Bourg, he exclaimed, "Heavens! how beautiful
+she is!"</p>
+<p>Such was the involuntary tribute Louis paid at first
+sight to the charms of Madame de la Tournelle, who
+was now fated to take the place of her dead sister,
+Madame de Vintimille, just as the Comtesse had
+supplanted another sister, Madame de Mailly.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXVI"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_281"></a>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
+<h2>THE RIVAL SISTERS&#8212;<i>continued</i></h2>
+<br>
+<p>Louis XV.'s involuntary exclamation when he first
+set eyes on the loveliness of Madame de la Tournelle,
+"Heavens! how beautiful she is!" becomes
+intelligible when we look on Nattier's picture of this
+fairest of the de Nesle sisters in his "Allegory of the
+Daybreak," and read the contemporary descriptions
+of her charms.</p>
+<p>"She ravished the eye," we are told, "with her
+skin of dazzling whiteness, her elegant carriage, her
+free gestures, the enchanting glance of her big blue
+eyes&#8212;a gaze of which the cunning was veiled by
+sentiment&#8212;by the smile of a child, moist lips, a
+bosom surging, heaving, ever agitated by the flux
+and reflux of life, by a physiognomy at once passionate
+and mutinous." And to these seductions were
+added a sunny temperament, an infectious gaiety of
+spirit, and a playful wit which made her infinitely
+attractive to men much less susceptible that the
+amorous Louis.</p>
+<p>It is little wonder then that in the reaction which
+followed his stormy grief for his dead love, the
+Comtesse de Vintimille, he should turn from the
+<a name="Page_282"></a>lachrymose companionship of Madame de Mailly to
+bask in the sunshine of this third of the beautiful
+sisters, Madame de la Tournelle, and that the wish to
+possess her should fire his blood. But Madame de
+la Tournelle was not to prove such an easy conquest
+as her two sisters, who had come almost unasked to
+his arms.</p>
+<p>At the time when she came thus dramatically into
+his life she was living with Madame de Mazarin, a
+strong-minded woman who had no cause to love
+Louis, who had thwarted and opposed him more
+than once, and who was determined at any cost to
+keep her prot&eacute;g&eacute;e and pet out of his clutches. And
+his desires had also two other stout opponents in
+Cardinal Fleury, his old mentor, and Maurepas, the
+most subtle and clever of his ministers, each of whom
+for different reasons was strongly averse to this new
+and dangerous liaison, which would make him the
+tool of Richelieu's favourite and Richelieu's party.</p>
+<p>Thus, for months, Louis found himself baffled in
+all his efforts to win the prize on which he had set
+his heart until, in September, 1742, one formidable
+obstacle was removed from his path by the death
+of Madame de Mazarin. To Madame de la Tournelle
+the loss of her protectress was little short of a
+calamity, for it left her not only homeless, but
+practically penniless; and, in her extremity, she
+naturally turned hopeful eyes to the King, of whose
+passion she was well aware. At least, she hoped, he
+might give her some position at his Court which
+would rescue her from poverty. When she begged
+Maurepas, Madame de Mazarin's kinsman and heir,
+<a name="Page_283"></a>to appeal to the King on her behalf, his answer
+was
+to order her and her sister, Madame de Flavacourt, to
+leave the Hotel Mazarin, thus making her plight still
+more desperate.</p>
+<p>But, fortunately, in this hour of her greatest need
+she found an unexpected friend in Louis' ill-used
+Queen, who, ignorant of her husband's infatuation
+for the beautiful Madame de la Tournelle, sent for
+her, spoke gracious words of sympathy to her, and
+announced her intention of installing her in Madame
+de Mazarin's place as a lady of the palace. Thus
+did fortune smile on Madame just when her future
+seemed darkest. But her troubles were by no
+means at an end. Fleury and Maurepas were more
+determined than ever that the King should not come
+into the power of a woman so alluring and so dangerous;
+and they exhausted every expedient to put
+obstacles in her path and to discover and support
+rival claimants to the post.</p>
+<p>For once, however, Louis was adamant. He
+had not waited so long and feverishly for his prize
+to be baulked when it seemed almost in his grasp.
+Madame de la Tournelle should have her place at
+his Court, and it would not be his fault if she did not
+soon fill one more exalted and intimate. Thus it
+was that when Fleury submitted to him the list of
+applicants, with la Tournelle's name at the bottom,
+he promptly re-wrote it at the head of the list, and
+handed it back to the Cardinal with the words,
+"The Queen is decided, and wishes to give her the
+place."</p>
+<p>We can picture Madame de Mailly's distress and
+<a name="Page_284"></a>suspense while these negotiations were
+proceeding.
+She had, as we have seen in the previous chapter,
+been supplanted by one sister in the King's affection;
+and just as she was recovering some of her old
+position in his favour, she was threatened with a
+second dethronement by another sister. In her
+alarm she flew to Madame de la Tournelle, to set
+her fears at rest one way or the other. "Can it be
+possible that you are going to take my place?" she
+asked, the tears streaming down her cheeks. "Quite
+impossible, my sister," answered Madame, with a
+smile; and Madame de Mailly, thus reassured,
+returned to Versailles the happiest woman in
+France&#8212;to learn, a few days later, that it was not
+only possible, it was an accomplished fact. For the
+second time, and now, as she knew well, finally, she
+was ousted from the affection of the King she loved
+so sincerely; and again it was a sister who had done
+her this grievous wrong. She was determined, however,
+that she would not quit the field without a last
+fight, and she knew she had doughty champions in
+Fleury and Maurepas, who still refused to acknowledge
+defeat.</p>
+<p>Although Madame de la Tournelle was now installed
+in the palace, the day of Louis' conquest had
+not arrived. The gratification of his passion was
+still thwarted in several directions. Not only was
+Madame de Mailly's presence a difficulty and a
+reproach to him; his new favourite was by no means
+willing to respond to his advances. Her heart was
+still engaged to the Due d'Agenois, and was not
+hers to dispose of. Richelieu, however, was quick
+<a name="Page_285"></a>to dispose of this difficulty. He sent the
+handsome
+Duc to Languedoc, exposed him to the attractions
+of a pretty woman, and before many weeks had
+passed, was able to show Madame de la Tournelle
+passionate letters addressed to her rival by her
+lover, as evidence of the worthlessness of his vows;
+thus arming her pride against him and disposing her
+at last to lend a more favourable ear to the King.</p>
+<p>As for Madame de Mailly, her shrift was short.
+In spite of her tears, her pleadings, her caresses,
+Louis made no concealment of his intention to be
+rid of her. "No sorrow, no humiliation was lacking
+in the death-struggle of love. The King spared her
+nothing. He did not even spare her those harsh
+words which snap the bonds of the most vulgar
+liaisons." And the climax came when he told the
+heart-broken woman, as she cringed pitifully at his
+feet, "You must go away this very day." "My
+sacrifices are finished," she sobbed, a little later to the
+"Judas," Richelieu, when, with friendly words, he
+urged her to humour the King and go away at least
+for a time; "it will be my death, but I will be in Paris
+to-night."</p>
+<p>And while Madame de Mailly was carrying her
+crushed heart through the darkness to her exile, the
+King and Richelieu, disguised in large perukes
+and black coats, were stealing across the great courtyards
+to the rooms of Madame de la Tournelle,
+where the King's long waiting was to have its
+reward. And, the following day, the usurper was
+callously writing to a friend, "Doubtless Meuse will
+have informed you of the trouble I had in ousting
+<a name="Page_286"></a>Madame de Mailly; at last I obtained a mandate
+to
+the effect that she was not to return until she was
+sent for."</p>
+<p>"No portrait," says de Goncourt, referring to this
+letter, "is to be compared with such a confession.
+It is the woman herself with the cynicism of her
+hardness, her shameless and cold-blooded ingratitude.... It
+is as though she drives her sister
+out by the two shoulders with those words which
+have the coarse energy of the lower orders."</p>
+<p>Louis, at last happy in the achievement of his
+desire, was not long in discovering that in the third
+of the Nesle sisters he had his hands more full than
+with either of her predecessors. Madame de Mailly
+and the Comtesse de Vintimille had been content to
+play the r&ocirc;le of mistress, and to receive the King's
+none too lavish largesse with gratitude. Madame de
+la Tournelle was not so complaisant, so easily satisfied.
+She intended&#8212;and she lost no time in making
+the King aware of her intention&#8212;to have her position
+recognised by the world at large, to reign as
+Montespan had reigned, to have the Treasury placed
+at her disposal, and her children, if she had any,
+made legitimate. Her last stipulation was that she
+should be made a Duchess before the end of the
+year. And to all these proposals Louis gave a meek
+assent.</p>
+<p>To show further her independence, she soon began
+to drive her lover to distraction by her caprices
+and her temper: "She tantalised, at once rebuffed
+and excited the King by the most adroit comedies and
+those coquetries which are the strength of her sex,
+<a name="Page_287"></a>assuring him that she would be delighted if he
+would transfer his affection to other ladies." And
+while the favourite was thus revelling in the insolence
+of her conquest, her supplanted sister was
+eating out her heart in Paris. "Her despair was
+terrible; the trouble of her heart refused consolation,
+begged for solitude, found vent every moment in
+cries for Louis. Those who were around her trembled
+for her reason, for her life.... Again and again she
+made up her mind to start for the Court, to make a
+final appeal to the King, but each time, when the
+carriage was ready, she burst into tears and fell back
+upon her bed."</p>
+<p>As for Louis, chilled by the coldness of his mistress,
+distracted by her whims and rages, his heart
+often yearned for the woman he had so cruelly
+discarded; and separation did more than all her
+tears and caresses could have done, to awake again
+the love he fancied was dead.</p>
+<p>When Madame de la Tournelle paid her first
+visit as <i>Ma&icirc;tresse en titre</i> to Choisy, nothing would
+satisfy her but an escort of the noblest ladies in
+France, including a Princess of the Blood. Her
+progress was that of a Queen; and in return for this
+honour, wrung out of the King's weakness, she
+repaid him with weeks of coldness and ill-humour.
+She refused to play at <i>cavagnol</i> with him; she barricaded
+herself in her room, refusing to open to all
+her lover's knocking; and vented her vapours on
+him with, or without, provocation, until, as she
+considered, she had reduced him to a becoming
+submission. Then she used her power and her
+<a name="Page_288"></a>coquetries to wheedle out of him one concession
+after
+another, including a promise by the King to return
+unopened any letters Madame de Mailly might send
+to him. Nor was she content until her sister was
+finally disposed of by the grant of a small pension
+and a modest lodging in the Luxembourg.</p>
+<p>Before the year closed Madame de la Tournelle
+was installed in the most luxurious apartments at
+Versailles, and Louis, now completely caught in her
+toils, was the slave of her and his senses, flinging
+himself into all the licence of passion, and reviving
+the nightly debauches from which the dead Comtesse
+had weaned him. And while her lover was thus
+steeped in sensuality, his mistress was, with infinite
+tact, pursuing her ambition. Affecting an indifference
+to affairs of State, she was gradually, and with
+seeming reluctance, worming herself into the position
+of chief Counsellor, and while professing to despise
+money she was draining the exchequer to feed her
+extravagance.</p>
+<p>Never was King so hopelessly in the toils of a
+woman as Louis, the well-beloved, in those of
+Madame de la Tournelle. He accepted as meekly
+as a child all her coldness and caprices, her
+jealousies and her rages; and was ideally happy
+when, in a gracious mood, she would allow him to
+assist at her toilette as the reward for some regal
+present of diamonds, horses, or gowns.</p>
+<p>It was after one such privileged hour that Louis,
+with childish pleasure, handed to his favourite the
+patent, creating her Duchesse de Chateauroux,
+enclosed in a casket of gold; and with it a rapturous
+<a name="Page_289"></a>letter in which he promised her a pension of
+eighty-thousand
+livres, the better to maintain her new
+dignity!</p>
+<p>Having thus achieved her greatest ambition, the
+Duchesse (as we must now call her) aspired to play
+a leading part in the affairs of Europe. France and
+Prussia were leagued in war against the forces of
+England, Austria, and Holland. This was a seductive
+game in which to take a hand, and thus we find
+her stimulating the sluggard kingliness in her lover,
+urging him to leave his debauches and to lead
+his armies to victory, assuring him of the gratitude
+and admiration of his subjects. Nothing less,
+she told him, would save his country from
+disaster.</p>
+<p>To this appeal and temptation Louis was not slow
+to respond; and in May, 1744, we find him, to the
+delight of his soldiers and all France, at the seat of
+war, reviewing his troops, speaking words of high
+courage to them, visiting hospitals and canteens,
+and actually sending back a haughty message to the
+Dutch: "I will give you your answer in Flanders."
+No wonder the army was roused to enthusiasm, or
+that it exclaimed with one voice, "At last we have
+found a King!"</p>
+<p>So strong was Louis in his new martial resolve
+that he actually refused Madame de Chateauroux permission
+to accompany him. France was delighted
+that at last her King had emancipated himself
+from petticoat influence, but the delight was short-lived,
+for before he had been many days in camp
+the Duchesse made her stately appearance, and saws
+<a name="Page_290"></a>and hammers were at work making a covered way
+between the house assigned to her and that occupied
+by the King. A fortnight later Ypres had fallen,
+and she was writing to Richelieu, "This is mighty
+pleasant news and gives me huge pleasure. I am
+overwhelmed with joy, to take Ypres in nine days.
+You can think of nothing more glorious, more flattering
+to the King; and his great-grandfather, great
+as he was, never did the like!"</p>
+<p>But grief was coming quickly on the heels of joy.
+The King was seized with a sudden and serious
+illness, after a banquet shared with his ally, the King
+of Prussia; and in a few days a malignant fever had
+brought him face to face with death. Madame de
+Chateauroux watched his sufferings with the eyes of
+despair. "Leaning over the pillow of the dying
+man, aghast and trembling, she fights for him with
+sickness and death, terror and remorse." With
+locked door she keeps her jealous watch by his
+bedside, allowing none to enter but Richelieu, the
+doctors, and nurses, whilst outside are gathered the
+Princes of the Blood and the great officers of
+the Court, clamouring for admittance.</p>
+<p>It was a grim environment for the death-bed of a
+King, this struggle for supremacy, in which a frail
+woman defied the powers of France for the monopoly
+of his last hours. And chief of all the terrors that
+assailed her was the dread of that climax to it all,
+when her lover would have to make his last confession,
+the price of his absolution being, as she well
+knew, a final severance from herself.</p>
+<p>Over this protracted and unseemly duel, in which
+<a name="Page_291"></a>blows were exchanged, entrance was forced, and
+Princes and ministers crowded indecently around
+the King's bed; over the Duchesse's tearful
+pleadings with the confessor to spare her the disgrace
+of dismissal, we must hasten to the crowning moment
+when Louis, feeling that he was dying, hastily
+summoned a confessor, who, a few moments later,
+flung open the door of the closet in which the
+Duchesse was waiting and weeping, and pronounced
+the fatal words, "The King commands you to leave
+his presence immediately."</p>
+<p>Then followed that secret flight to Paris, "amidst
+a torrent of maledictions," the Duchesse hiding herself
+from view as best she could, and at each town
+and village where horses were changed, slinking
+back and taking refuge in some by-road until she
+could resume her journey. Then it was that in her
+grief and despair she wrote to Richelieu, "Oh, my
+God! what a thing it all is! I give you my word, it
+is all over with me! One would need to be a poor
+fool to start it all over again."</p>
+<p>But Louis was by no means a dead man. From
+the day on which he received absolution from his
+manifold sins he made such haste to recover that,
+within a month, he was well again and eager to fly
+to the arms of the woman he had so abruptly abandoned
+with all other earthly vanities. It was one
+thing, however, to dismiss the Duchesse, and quite
+another to call her back. For a time she refused
+point-blank to look again on the King who had
+spurned her from fear of hell; and when at last she
+consented to receive the penitent at Versailles she
+<a name="Page_292"></a>let him know, in no vague terms, that "it would
+cost
+France too many heads if she were to return to his
+Court."</p>
+<p>Vengeance on her enemies was the only price she
+would accept for forgiveness, and this price Louis
+promised to pay in liberal measure. One after the
+other, those who had brought about her humiliation
+were sent to disgrace or exile&#8212;from the Duc de
+Chatillon to La Rochefoucauld and Perusseau.
+Maurepas, the most virulent of them all, the King
+declined to exile, but he consented to a compromise.
+He should be made to offer Madame an abject
+apology, to grovel at her feet, a punishment with
+which she was content. And when the great minister
+presented himself by her bedside, in fear and
+trembling, to express his profound penitence and to
+beg her to return to Court, all she answered was,
+"Give me the King's letters and go!"</p>
+<p>The following Saturday she fixed on as the day of
+her triumphant return&#8212;"but it was death that was to
+raise her from the bed on which she had received the
+King's submission at the hands of his Prime Minister."
+Within twenty-four hours she was seized with
+violent convulsions and delirium. In her intervals
+of consciousness she shrieked aloud that she had
+been poisoned, and called down curses on her
+murderer&#8212;Maurepas. For eleven days she passed
+from one delirious attack to another, and as many
+times she was bled. But all the skill of the Court
+physicians was powerless to save her, and at five
+o'clock in the morning of the 8th December the
+Duchesse drew her last tortured breath in the arms
+<a name="Page_293"></a>of Madame de Mailly, the sister she had so
+cruelly
+wronged.</p>
+<p>Two days later, de Goncourt tells us, she was
+buried at Saint Sulpice, an hour before the customary
+time for interments, her coffin guarded by
+soldiers, to protect it from the fury of the mob.</p>
+<p>As for Madame de Mailly, she spent the last years
+of her troubled life in the odour of a tardy sanctity&#8212;washing
+the feet of the poor, ministering to the sick,
+bringing consolation to those in prison; and she was
+laid to rest amongst the poorest in the Cimeti&egrave;re des
+Innocents, wearing the hair-shirt which had been
+part of her penance during life, and with a simple
+cross of wood for all monument.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXVII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_294"></a>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
+<h2>A MISTRESS OF INTRIGUE</h2>
+<br>
+<p>"On 11th September," Madame de Motteville says,
+"we saw arrive from Italy three nieces of Cardinal
+Mazarin and a nephew. Two Mancini sisters and
+the nephew were the children of the youngest sister
+of his Eminence; and of the sisters Laure, the elder,
+was a pleasing brunette with a handsome face, about
+twelve or thirteen years of age; the second (Olympe),
+also a brunette, had a long face and pointed chin.
+Her eyes were small, but lively; and it might be expected
+that, when fifteen years of age, she would have
+some charm. According to the rules of beauty, it
+was impossible to grant her any, save that of having
+dimples in her cheeks."</p>
+<p>Such, at the age of nine or ten, was Olympe Mancini,
+who, in spite of her childish lack of beauty, was
+destined to enslave the handsomest King in Europe;
+and, after a life of discreditable intrigues, in which
+she incurred the stigma of witchcraft and murder, to
+end her career in obscurity, shunned by all who had
+known her in her day of splendour.</p>
+<p>It was a singular freak of fortune which translated
+the Mancini girls from their modest home in Italy to
+<a name="Page_295"></a>the magnificence of the French Court, as the
+adopted
+children of their uncle, Cardinal Mazarin, the virtual
+ruler of France, and the avowed lover (if not, as some
+say, the husband) of Anne of Austria, the Queen-mother.
+"See those little girls," said the wife of
+Mar&eacute;chal de Villeroi to Gaston d'Orl&eacute;ans, pointing
+to the Mancini children, the centre of an admiring
+crowd of courtiers. "They are not rich now; but
+some day they will have fine ch&acirc;teaux, large incomes,
+splendid jewels, beautiful silver, and perhaps great
+dignities."</p>
+<p>And how true this prophecy proved, we know; for,
+of the Cardinal's five Mancini nieces (for three others
+came, later, as their uncle's prot&eacute;g&eacute;es), Laure found
+a husband in the Duc de Mercoeur, grandson of
+Henri IV.; two others lived to wear the coronet of
+Duchess; Olympe, as we shall see, became Comtesse
+de Soissons; and Marie, after narrowly missing
+the Queendom of France, became the wife of the
+Constable Colonna, one of the greatest nobles of
+Italy.</p>
+<p>Nor is there anything in such high alliances to
+cause surprise; for their future was in the hands of
+the most powerful, ambitious, and wealthy man in
+France. From their first appearance as his guests
+they were received with open arms by Louis' Court.
+They were speedily transferred to the Palais Royal,
+to be brought up with the boy-King, Louis XIV., and
+his brother, the Prince of Anjou; while the Queen
+herself not only paid them the most flattering attentions
+and treated them as her own children, but herself
+undertook part of their education.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_296"></a>It was under such enviable conditions that
+the
+young daughters of a poor Roman baron grew up
+to girlhood&#8212;the pets of the Queen and the Court,
+the playfellows of the King, and the acknowledged
+heiresses of their uncle's millions; and of them all,
+not one had a keener eye to the future than Olympe
+of the long face, pointed chin, and dimples. It was
+she who entered with the greatest zest into the romps
+and games of her playmate, Louis XIV., who surrounded
+him with the most delicate flatteries and
+attentions, and practised all her childish arts and
+coquetries to win his favour. And she succeeded
+to such an extent that it was always the company of
+Olympe, and not of her more beautiful sisters, Hortense,
+Laure, or Marie, that Louis most sought.</p>
+<p>Not that Olympe was always to remain the plain,
+unattractive child Madame de Motteville describes
+in 1647. Each year, as it passed, added some touch
+of beauty, developed some latent charm, until at
+eighteen she was very fair to look upon. "Her eyes
+now" says Madame de Motteville, "were full of fire,
+her complexion had become beautiful, her face less
+thin, her cheeks took dimples which gave her a fresh
+charm, and she had fine arms and beautiful hands.
+She certainly seemed charming in the eyes of the
+King, and sufficiently pretty to indifferent spectators."</p>
+<p>That she had wooers in plenty, even before she
+was so far advanced in the teens, was inevitable; but
+her personal preferences counted for little in face of
+the Cardinal's determination to find for her, as for all
+his nieces, a splendid alliance which should shed
+lustre on himself. And thus it was that, without any
+<a name="Page_297"></a>consultation of her heart, Olympe's hand was
+formally
+given to Prince Eugene de Savoie, Comte de
+Soissons, a man in whose veins flowed the Royal
+strains of Savoy and France.</p>
+<p>It was a brilliant match indeed for the daughter
+of a petty Italian baron; and Mazarin saw that it was
+celebrated with becoming magnificence. On the 20th
+February, 1657, we see a brilliant company repairing
+to the Queen's apartments, "the Comte de Soissons
+escorting his betrothed, dressed in a gown of silver
+cloth, with a bouquet of pearls on her head, valued at
+more than 50,000 livres, and so many jewels that
+their splendour, joined to the natural &eacute;clat of her
+beauty, caused her to be admired by everyone.
+Immediately afterwards, the nuptials were celebrated
+in the Queen's chapel. Then the illustrious pair,
+after dining with the Princesse de Carignan-Savoie,
+ascended to the apartments of his Eminence, the
+Cardinal, where they were entertained to a magnificent
+supper, at which the King and Monsieur did the
+company the honour of joining them."</p>
+<p>Then followed two days of regal receptions; a
+visit to Notre Dame to hear Mass, with the Queen
+herself as escort; and a stately journey to the H&ocirc;tel
+de Soissons, where the Comtesse's mother-in-law
+"testified to her, by her joy and the rich presents
+which she made her, how great was the satisfaction
+with which she regarded this marriage."</p>
+<p>Thus raised to the rank of a Princess of the Blood,
+Olympe was by no means the proud and happy
+woman she ought to have been. She had, in fact,
+aspired much higher; she had had dreams of sharing
+<a name="Page_298"></a>the throne of France with her handsome young
+playmate, the King; and to Louis, wife though she
+now was, she had lost none of the attraction she
+possessed when he called her his "little sweetheart"
+in their childish games together. "He continued to
+visit her with the greatest regularity," to quote Mr
+Noel Williams; "indeed, scarcely a day went by on
+which His Majesty's coach did not stop at the gate
+of the H&ocirc;tel de Soissons; and Olympe, basking in
+the rays of the Royal favour, rapidly took her place
+as the brilliant, intriguing great lady Nature intended
+her to be."</p>
+<p>It is little wonder, perhaps, that Olympe's foolish
+head was turned by such flattering attentions from
+her sovereign, or that she began to give herself airs
+and to treat members of the Royal family with a
+haughty patronage. Even La Grande Mademoiselle
+did not escape her insolence; for, as she
+herself records, "when I paid her a thousand
+compliments and told her that her marriage had given
+me the greatest joy and that I hoped we should
+always be good friends, she answered me not a
+word."</p>
+<p>But Olympe's supremacy was not to remain much
+longer unchallenged. The King's vagrant fancy was
+already turning to her younger sister, Marie, whose
+childish plainness had now ripened to a beauty more
+dazzling than her own&#8212;the witchery of large and
+brilliant black eyes, a complexion of pure olive,
+luxuriant, jet-black hair, a figure of singular suppleness
+and grace, and a sprightliness of wit and a <i>gaiet&eacute;
+de coeur</i> which the Comtesse could not hope to rival.
+<a name="Page_299"></a>It soon began to be rumoured in Court that Louis
+spent hours daily in the company of Mazarin's beautiful
+niece; a rumour which Hortense Mancini supports
+in her "Memoirs." "The presence of the
+King, who seldom stirred from our lodging, often
+interrupted us," she says; "my sister, Marie, alone
+was undisturbed; and you can easily understand that
+his assiduity had charms for her, who was the cause
+of it, because it had none for others."</p>
+<p>And as Louis' visits to the Mancini lodging became
+more and more frequent, each adding a fresh link to
+the chain that was binding him to her young sister,
+Madame de Soissons saw less and less of him, until
+an amused tolerance gave place to a genuine alarm.
+It was nothing less than an outrage that she, who had
+so long held first place in the King's favour, should
+be ousted by a "mere child," the last person in the
+world whom she could have thought of as a rival.
+But the Comtesse was no woman to be easily
+dethroned. Although at every Court ball, f&ecirc;te, or
+ballet, Louis was now inseparable from her sister, she
+affected to ignore these open slights and lost no
+opportunity in public of vaunting her intimacy with
+His Majesty, even to the extent on one occasion, as
+Mademoiselle records, of taking Louis' seat at a ball
+supper and compelling him to share it with her.</p>
+<p>But such shameless arrogance only served to
+estrange the King still further, and to make him seek
+still more the company of the young sister, who had
+already captured his heart as the Comtesse had never
+captured it. When Louis made his memorable
+journey to Lyons to meet the Princess Margaret of
+<a name="Page_300"></a>Savoy, it was to Marie that he paid the most
+courtly and tender attentions. "During the journey,"
+says Mademoiselle, "he did not address a
+word to the Comtesse de Soissons"; and, indeed,
+on more than one occasion he showed a marked
+aversion to her.</p>
+<p>At St Jean d'Angely, Louis not only himself
+escorted Marie to her lodging; he stayed with her
+until two o'clock in the morning. "Nothing," her
+sister Hortense records, "could equal the passion
+which the King showed, and the tenderness with
+which he asked of Marie her pardon for all she had
+suffered for his sake." It was, indeed, no secret at
+Court that he had offered her marriage, and had taken
+a solemn vow that neither Margaret of Savoy nor
+the Infanta of Spain should be his wife. But, as we
+have seen in a previous chapter, both the Queen
+and Mazarin were determined that the Infanta
+should be Queen of France; and that his foolish
+romance with the Mancini girl should be nipped in
+the bud.</p>
+<p>There was also another powerful influence at work
+to thwart his passion for Marie. The indifference
+of the Comtesse de Soissons had given place to a fury
+of resentment; and she needed no instigation of her
+uncle to determine at any cost to recover the place
+she had lost in Louis' favour. She brought all her
+armoury of coquetry and flatteries to bear on him,
+and so far succeeded that, we read, "the King has
+resumed his relations with the Comtesse; he has
+recommenced to talk and laugh with her; and three
+days since he entertained M. and Madame de
+<a name="Page_301"></a>Soissons with a ball and a play, and afterwards
+they partook of <i>medianoche</i> (a midnight banquet)
+together, passing more than three hours in conversation
+with them."</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Marie, realising the hopelessness of her
+passion in face of the opposition of her uncle and the
+Queen, and of Louis' approaching marriage to the
+Spanish Princess, had given him unequivocally to
+understand that their relations must cease, and the
+rupture was complete when the Comtesse told the
+King of her sister's dallying with Prince Charles of
+Lorraine, of their assignations in the Tuileries, of
+their mutual infatuation, and of the rumours of an
+arranged marriage. "<i>Cela est bien</i>" was all Louis
+remarked, but the dark flush of anger that flooded his
+face was a sweet reward to the Comtesse for her
+treachery.</p>
+<p>A few days later her revenge was complete when,
+in the King's presence, she rallied her sister on her
+low spirits. "You find the time pass slowly when
+you are away from Paris," she said; "nor am I
+surprised, since you have left your lover there"; to
+which Marie answered with a haughty toss of the
+head, "That is possible, Madame."</p>
+<p>One formidable rival thus removed from her path,
+Madame de Soissons was not long left to enjoy her
+triumph; for another was quick to take the place
+abandoned by the broken-hearted Marie&#8212;the beautiful
+and gentle La Valli&egrave;re, who was the next to
+acquire an ascendancy over the King's susceptible
+heart. Once more the Comtesse, to her undisguised
+chagrin, found herself relegated to the background,
+<a name="Page_302"></a>to look impotently on while Louis made love to
+her
+successor, and to meditate new schemes of vengeance.
+It was in vain that Louis, by way of amende,
+found for her a lover in the Marquis de Vardes, the
+most handsome and dissolute of his courtiers, for
+whom she soon developed a veritable passion. Her
+vanity might be appeased, but her bitterness&#8212;the
+<i>spretoe injuria formoe</i>&#8212;remained; and she lost no
+time in plotting further mischief.</p>
+<p>With the help of M. de Vardes and the Comte de
+Guiche, she sent an anonymous letter to the Queen,
+containing a full and intimate account of her husband's
+amour with La Valli&egrave;re&#8212;the letter enclosed
+in an envelope addressed in the handwriting of the
+Queen of Spain. Fortunately for Maria Theresa's
+peace of mind the letter fell into the hands of Louis
+himself, who was naturally furious at such treachery
+and determined to make those responsible for it suffer&#8212;when
+he should discover them. As, however, the
+investigation of the matter was entrusted to de
+Vardes, it is needless to say that the culprits escaped
+detection.</p>
+<p>Madame de Soissons' next attempt to bring about
+a rupture between the King and La Valli&egrave;re, by
+bringing forward a rival in the person of the seductive
+Mlle de la Motte-Houdancourt, proved equally
+futile, when Louis discovered by accident that she
+was but a tool in Madame's designing hands; and
+for a time the Comtesse was sent in disgrace from
+the Court to nurse her jealousy and to devise more
+effectual plans of vengeance.</p>
+<p>What form these took seems clear from an
+<a name="Page_303"></a>investigation held at the close of 1678 into a
+supposed
+plot to poison the King and the Dauphin&#8212;a plot
+of which La Voisin, one of the greatest criminals
+in history, was suspected of being the ringleader.
+During this inquiry La Voisin confessed that the
+Comtesse de Soissons had come to her house one
+day "and demanded the means of getting rid of Mile
+de la Valli&egrave;re"; and, further, that the Comtesse had
+avowed her intention to destroy not only Louis'
+mistress, but the King himself.</p>
+<p>Such a confession was well calculated to rouse a
+storm of indignation in France, where Madame de
+Soissons had made many powerful enemies. The
+Chambre unanimously demanded her arrest; but
+before it could be effected, Madame, stoutly declaring
+her innocence, had shaken the dust of Paris off
+her feet, and was on her way to Brussels.</p>
+<p>During her flight to safety, we are told, "the
+principal inns in the towns and villages through which
+she passed refused to receive her"; and more than
+once she was compelled to sleep on straw and suffer
+the insults of the populace, which reviled her as
+sorceress and poisoner. "We are assured," Madame
+de Sevign&eacute; writes, "that the gates of Namur,
+Antwerp, and other towns have been closed against
+the Countess, the people crying out, 'We want no
+poisoner here'!" Even at Brussels, whenever she
+ventured into the streets she was assailed by a storm
+of insults; and on one occasion, when she entered a
+church, "a number of people rushed out, collected
+all the black cats they could find, tied their tails
+together, and brought them howling and spitting into
+<a name="Page_304"></a>the porch, crying out that they were devils who
+were
+following the Comtesse."</p>
+<p>In the face of such chilling hospitality Madame de
+Soissons was not tempted to make a long stay in
+Brussels; and after a few months of restless wandering
+in Flanders and Germany, she drifted to Spain
+where she succeeded in ingratiating herself with the
+Queen. She found little welcome however from the
+King, who, as the French Ambassador to Madrid
+wrote, "was warned against her. He accused her of
+sorcery, and I learn that, some days ago, he conceived
+the idea that, had it not been for a spell she
+had cast over him, he would have had children....
+The life of the Comtesse de Soissons consists in
+receiving at her house all persons who desire to come
+there, from four o'clock in the evening up to two or
+three hours after midnight. There is, sire, everything
+that can convey an air of familiarity and
+contempt for the house of a woman of quality."</p>
+<p>That Carlos' suspicions were not without reason
+was proved when one day his Queen, after, it is said,
+drinking a glass of milk handed to her by the Comtesse,
+was taken suddenly ill and expired after three
+days of terrible suffering. That she died of poison,
+like her mother, the ill-fated sister of our second
+Charles, seems probable; but that the poison was
+administered by the Comtesse, whose friend and
+protectress she was and who had every reason to wish
+her well, is less to be believed, in spite of Saint-Simon's
+unequivocal accusation. Certainly the
+crime was not proved against her; for we find
+her still in Spain in the following spring, when
+<a name="Page_305"></a>Carlos, his patience exhausted, ordered her to
+leave
+the country.</p>
+<p>After a short stay in Portugal and Germany,
+Madame de Soissons was back in Brussels, where
+she spent the brief remainder of her days&#8212;"all the
+French of distinction who visited the City" (to quote
+Saint-Simon) "being strictly forbidden to visit her."
+Here, on the 9th October, 1690, her beauty but a
+memory, bankrupt in reputation, friendless and poor,
+the curtain fell on the life so full of mis-used gifts and
+baffled ambitions.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_306"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
+<h2>AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE</h2>
+<br>
+<p>Few Kings have come to their thrones under such
+brilliant auspices as Milan I. of Servia; few have
+abandoned their crowns to the greater relief of their
+subjects, or have been followed to their exile by so
+much hatred. But a fortnight before Milan's accession,
+his cousin and predecessor, Prince Michael,
+had been foully done to death by hired assassins as
+he was walking in the park of Topfschider, with three
+ladies of his Court; and the murdered man had been
+placed in a carriage, sitting upright as in life, and
+had been driven back to his palace through the
+respectful greetings of his subjects, who little knew
+that they were saluting a corpse.</p>
+<p>There was good reason for this mockery of death,
+for Prince Alexander Karageorgevitch had long set
+ambitious eyes on the crown of Servia, and resolved
+to wrest it by fair means or foul from the boy-heir to
+the throne; and it was of the highest importance that
+Michael's death, which he had so brutally planned,
+should be concealed from him until the succession
+had been secured to his young rival, Milan. And
+thus it was that, before Karageorgevitch could bring
+<a name="Page_307"></a>his plotting to the head of achievement, Milan
+was
+hailed with acclamation as Servia's new Prince, and,
+on the 23rd June, 1868, made his triumphal entry
+into Belgrade to the jubilant ringing of bells and the
+thunderous cheers of the people.</p>
+<p>Twelve days later, Belgrade was <i>en f&ecirc;te</i> for his
+crowning, her streets ablaze with bunting and floral
+decorations, as the handsome boy made his way
+through the tumults of cheers and avenues of
+fluttering handkerchiefs to the Metropolitan Church.
+The men, we are told, "took off their cloaks and
+placed them under his feet, that he might walk on
+them; they clustered round him, kissing his garments,
+and blessing him as their very own; they
+worshipped his handsome face and loved his boyish
+smile." And when his young voice rang clearly out
+in the words, "I promise you that I shall, to my
+dying day, preserve faithfully the honour and integrity
+of Servia, and shall be ready to shed the last
+drop of my blood to defend its rights," there was
+scarcely one of the enthusiastic thousands that heard
+him who would not have been willing to lay down his
+life for the idolised Prince.</p>
+<p>It was by strange paths that the fourteen-year-old
+Milan had thus come to his Principality. The
+son of Jefrenn Obrenovitch, uncle of the reigning
+Michael, he was cradled one August day in 1854,
+his mother being Marie Catargo, of the powerful
+race of Roumanian "Hospodars," a woman of strong
+passions and dissolute life. When her temper and infidelities
+had driven her husband to the drinking that
+put a premature end to his days, Marie transferred
+<a name="Page_308"></a>her affection, without the sanction of a
+wedding-ring,
+to Prince Kusa, a man of as evil repute as
+herself. In such a home and with such guardians
+her only child, Milan, the future ruler of Servia,
+spent the early years of his life&#8212;ill-fed, neglected,
+and supremely wretched.</p>
+<p>Thus it was that, when Prince Michael summoned
+the boy to Belgrade, in order to make the acquaintance
+of his successor, he was horrified to see an
+uncouth lad, as devoid of manners and of education
+as any in the slums of his capital. The heir to the
+throne could neither read nor write; the only language
+he spoke was a debased Roumanian, picked
+up from the servants who had been his only associates,
+while of the land over which he was to rule one
+day he knew absolutely nothing. The only hope for
+him was his extreme youth&#8212;he was at the time only
+twelve years old&#8212;and Michael lost no time in
+having him trained for the high station he was
+destined to fill.</p>
+<p>The progress the boy made was amazing. Within
+two years he was unrecognisable as the half-savage
+who had so shocked the Court of Belgrade.
+He could speak the Servian tongue with fluency and
+grace; he had acquired elegance of manners and
+speech, and a winning courtesy of manner which to
+his last day was his most marked characteristic; he
+had mastered many accomplishments, and he excelled
+in most manly exercises, from riding to swimming.
+And to all this remarkable promise the
+finishing touches were put by a visit to Paris under
+the tutorship of a courtly and learned professor.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_309"></a>Thus when, within two years of his
+emancipation,
+he came to his crown, the uncouth lad from Roumania
+had blossomed into a Prince as goodly to look
+on as any Europe could show&#8212;a handsome boy of
+courtly graces and accomplishments, able to converse
+in several languages, and singularly equipped in all
+ways to win the homage of the simple people over
+whom he had been so early called to rule. As
+Mrs Gerard says, "They idolised their boy-Prince.
+Every day they stood in long, closely packed lines
+watching to see him come out of the castle to ride or
+drive; as he passed along, smiling affectionately on
+his people, blessings were showered on him. There
+was, however, another side to this picture of devotion.
+There were those who hated the boy because
+he had thwarted their plans." And this hatred, as
+persistent as it was malignant, was to follow him
+throughout his reign, and through his years of
+unhappy exile, to his grave.</p>
+<p>But these days were happily still remote. After
+four years of minority and Regency, when he was
+able to take the reins of government into his own
+hands, his empire over the hearts of his subjects
+was more firmly based than ever. His youth, his
+modesty, and his compelling charm of manner made
+friends for him wherever his wanderings took him,
+from Paris to Constantinople. He was the "Prince
+Charming" of Europe, as popular abroad as he was
+idolised at home; and when the time arrived to find
+a consort for him he might, one would have thought,
+have been able to pick and choose among the fairest
+Princesses of the Continent.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_310"></a>But handsome and gallant and popular as he
+was,
+the overtures of his ministers were coldly received
+by one Royal house after another. Milan might be
+a reigning Prince and a charming one to boot, but it
+was not forgotten that the first of his line had been a
+common herdsman, and the blood of Hapsburgs and
+Hohenzollerns could not be allowed to mingle with
+so base a strain. Even a mere Hungarian Count,
+whose fair daughter had caught Milan's fancy,
+frowned on the suit of the swineherd's successor.
+But fate had already chosen a bride for the young
+Prince, who was more than equal in birth to any
+Count's daughter; who would bring beauty and
+riches as her portion; and who, after many unhappy
+years, was to crown her dower with tragedy.</p>
+<p>It was at Nice, where Prince Milan was spending
+the winter months of 1875, that he first set eyes on
+the woman whose life was to be so tragically linked
+with his own. Among the visitors there was the
+family of a Russian colonel, Nathaniel Ketschko, a
+man of high lineage and great wealth. He claimed,
+in fact, descent from the Royal race of Comnenus,
+which had given many a King to the thrones of
+Europe, and whose sons for long centuries had won
+fame as generals, statesmen, and ambassadors. And
+to this exalted strain was allied enormous wealth, of
+which the Colonel's share was represented by a regal
+revenue of four hundred thousand roubles a year.</p>
+<p>But proud as he was of his birth and his riches,
+Colonel Nathaniel was still prouder of his two lovely
+daughters, each of whom had inherited in liberal
+measure the beauty of their mother, a daughter of
+<a name="Page_311"></a>the princely house of Stourza; and of the two
+the
+more beautiful, by common consent, was Natalie,
+whose charms won this spontaneous tribute from
+Tsar Nicholas, when first he saw her, "I would I
+were a beggar that I might every day ask your alms,
+and have the happiness of kissing your hand." She
+had, says one who knew her in her radiant youth,
+"an irresistible charm that permeated her whole
+being with such a harmony of grace, sweetness, and
+overpowering attraction that one felt drawn to her
+with magnetic force; and to adore her seemed the
+most natural and indeed the only position."</p>
+<p>Such was the high tribute paid to Servia's future
+Queen at the first dawning of that beauty which was
+to make her also Queen of all the fair women of
+Europe, and which at its zenith was thus described
+by one who saw her at Wiesbaden ten years or so
+later: "She walked along the promenade with a
+light, graceful movement; her feet hardly seemed to
+touch the ground, her figure was elegant, her finely
+cut face was lit up by those wonderful eyes, once
+seen never forgotten&#8212;brilliant, tender, loving; her
+luxuriant hair of raven black was loosely coiled
+round the well-set head, or fell in curls on the beautifully
+arched neck. For each one she had a pleasant
+smile, a gracious bow, or a few words, spoken in a
+musical voice." No wonder the Germans, who
+looked at this apparition of grace and beauty,
+"simply fell down and adored her."</p>
+<p>Such was the vision of beauty of which Prince
+Milan caught his first glimpse on the promenade at
+Nice in the winter of 1875, and which haunted him,
+<a name="Page_312"></a>day and night, until chance brought their paths
+together again, and he won her consent to share his
+throne. That such a high destiny awaited her,
+Natalie had already been told by a gipsy whom she
+met one day in the woods of her father's estate near
+Moscow&#8212;a meeting of which the following story
+is told.</p>
+<p>At sight of the beautiful young girl the gipsy
+stooped in homage and kissed the hem of her dress.
+"Why do you do that?" asked Natalie, half in
+alarm and half in pleasure. "Because," the woman
+answered, "I salute you as the chosen bride of a
+great Prince. Over your head I see a crown floating
+in the air. It descends lower and lower until it
+rests on your head. A dazzling brilliance adorns the
+crown; it is a Royal diadem."</p>
+<p>"What else?" asked Natalie eagerly, her face
+flushed with excitement and delight. "Oh! do tell
+me more, please!" "What more shall I say,"
+continued the gipsy, "except that you will be a
+Queen, and the mother of a King; but then&#8212;"</p>
+<p>"But then, what? "exclaimed the eager and impatient
+girl; "do go on, please. What then?" and
+she held out a gold coin temptingly. "I see a large
+house; you will be there, but&#8212;take care; you will
+be turned out by force.... And now give me
+the coin and let me go. More I must not tell you."</p>
+<p>Such were the dazzling and mysterious words
+spoken by the gipsy woman in the Russian forest, a
+year or more before Natalie first saw the Prince who
+was destined to make them true. But it was not at
+Nice that opportunity came to Milan. It was an
+<a name="Page_313"></a>accidental meeting in Paris, some months later,
+that
+made his path clear. During a visit to the French
+capital he met a young Servian officer, a distant
+kinsman, one Alexander Konstantinovitch, who
+confided to him, over their wine and cigarettes, the
+story of his infatuation for the daughter of a Russian
+colonel, who at the time was staying with her aunt,
+the Princess Murussi. He raved of her beauty and
+her charm, and concluded by asking the Prince to
+accompany him that he might make the acquaintance
+of the Lieutenant's bride-to-be.</p>
+<p>Arrived at their destination, the Prince and his
+companion were graciously received by the Princess
+Murussi, but Milan had no eyes for the dignified
+lady who gave him such a flattering reception; they
+were drawn as by a magnet to the girl by her side&#8212;"a
+child with a woman's grace and an angel's soul
+smiling in her eyes"; the incarnation of his dreams,
+the very girl whose beauty, though he had caught
+but one passing glimpse of it, had so intoxicated his
+brain a few months earlier at Nice.</p>
+<p>"Allow me," said the Lieutenant, "to introduce to
+Your Highness Natalie Ketschko, my affianced wife."
+Milan's face flushed with surprise and anger at the
+words. What was this trick that had been played
+on him? Had Konstantinovitch then brought him
+here only to humiliate him? But before he could
+recover from his indignation and astonishment, the
+Princess said chillingly, "Pardon me, Monsieur
+Konstantinovitch, you are not speaking the truth.
+My niece, Colonel Ketschko's daughter, is not your
+affianced wife. You are too premature."</p>
+<p><a name="Page_314"></a>Thus rebuffed, the Lieutenant was not
+encouraged
+to prolong his stay; and Milan was left, reassured,
+to bask in the smiles of the Princess and her lovely
+niece, and to pursue his wooing under the most
+favourable auspices. This first visit was quickly
+followed by others; and before a week had passed the
+Prince had won the prize on which his heart was set,
+and with it a dower of five million roubles. Now
+followed halcyon days for the young lovers&#8212;long
+hours of sweet communion, of anticipation of the
+happy years that stretched in such a golden vista
+before them. It was a love-idyll such as delighted
+the romantic heart of Paris; and congratulations and
+presents poured on the young couple; "the very
+beggars in the streets," we are told, "blessing them
+as they drove by."</p>
+<p>"Happy is the wooing that is not long a-doing,"
+and Milan's wooing was as brief as it was blissful.
+He was all impatience to possess fully the prize he
+had won; preparations for the nuptials were hastened,
+but, before the crowning day dawned, once
+more the voice of warning spoke.</p>
+<p>A few days before the wedding, as Milan was
+leaving the Murussi Palace, he was accosted by a
+woman, who craved permission to speak to him, a
+favour which was smilingly accorded. "I know
+you," said the woman, thus permitted to speak,
+"although you do not know me. You are the Prince
+of Servia; I am a servant in the household of the
+Princess Murussi. Your Highness, listen! I love
+Natalie. I have known and loved her since she was
+a child; and I beg of you not to marry her. Such a
+<a name="Page_315"></a>union is doomed to unhappiness. You love to
+rule,
+to command. So does Natalie; and it is <i>she</i> who
+will be the ruler. You are utterly unsuited for each
+other, and nothing but great unhappiness can possibly
+come from your union."</p>
+<p>To this warning Milan turned a smiling face and
+a deaf ear, as Natalie had done to the voice of the
+gipsy. A fig for such gloomy prophecy! They
+were ideally happy in the present, and the future
+should be equally bright, however ravens might
+croak. Thus, one October day in 1875, Vienna
+held high holiday for the nuptials of the handsome
+Prince and his beautiful bride; and it was through
+avenues densely packed with cheering onlookers that
+Natalie made her triumphal progress to the altar, in
+her flower-garlanded dress of white satin, a tiara of
+diamonds flashing from the blackness of her hair, no
+brighter than the brilliance of her eyes, her face
+irradiated with happiness.</p>
+<p>That no Royalty graced their wedding was a
+matter of no moment to Milan and Natalie, whose
+happiness was thus crowned; and when at the
+subsequent banquet Milan said, "I wish from my
+very heart that every one of my subjects, as well as
+everybody I know, could be always as happy as I am
+this moment," none who heard him could doubt the
+sincerity of his words, or see any but a golden future
+for so ideal a union of hearts.</p>
+<p>By Servia her young Princess was received with
+open arms of welcome. "Her reception," we are
+told, "was beyond description. The festivities
+lasted three days, and during that time the love of
+<a name="Page_316"></a>the people for their Prince, and their
+admiration of
+the beauty and charm of his bride, were beyond
+words to describe." Never did Royal wedded life
+open more full of bright promise, and never did
+consort make more immediate conquest of the affections
+of her husband's subjects. "No one could
+have believed that this marriage, which was contracted
+from love and love alone, would have ended
+in so tragic a manner, or that hate could so quickly
+have taken the place of love."</p>
+<p>But the serpent was quick to show his head in
+Natalie's new paradise. Before she had been many
+weeks a wife, stories came to her ears of her husband's
+many infidelities. Now the story was of one
+lady of her Court, now of another, until the horrified
+Princess knew not whom to trust or to respect.
+Strange tales, too, came to her (mostly anonymously)
+of Milan's amours in Paris, in Vienna, and half a
+dozen of his other haunts of pleasure, until her love,
+poisoned at its very springing, turned to suspicion
+and distrust of the man to whom she had given
+her heart.</p>
+<p>Other disillusions were quick to follow. She discovered
+that her husband was a hopeless gambler
+and spendthrift, spending long hours daily at the
+card-tables, watching with pale face and trembling
+lips his pile of gold dwindle (as it usually did) to
+its last coin; and often losing at a single sitting a
+month's revenue from the Civil List. Her own
+dowry of five million roubles, she knew, was safe
+from his clutches. Her father had taken care to
+make that secure, but Milan's private fortune, large
+<a name="Page_317"></a>as it had been, had already been squandered in
+this and other forms of dissipation; and even the
+expenses of his wedding, she learned, had been
+met by a loan raised at ruinous interest.</p>
+<p>Such discoveries as these were well calculated to
+shatter the dreams of the most infatuated of brides,
+and less was sufficient to rouse Natalie's proud spirit
+to rebellion. When affectionate pleadings proved
+useless, reproaches took their place. Heated words
+were exchanged, and the records tell of many violent
+scenes before Natalie had been six months Princess
+of Servia. "You love to rule," the warning voice
+had told Milan&#8212;"to command. So does Natalie";
+and already the clashing of strong wills and imperious
+tempers, which must end in the yielding of one
+or the other, had begun to be heard.</p>
+<p>If more fuel had been needed to feed the flames of
+dissension, it was quickly supplied by two unfortunate
+incidents. The first was Milan's open dallying
+with Fr&auml;ulein S&#8212;&#8212;, one of Natalie's maids-of-honour,
+a girl almost as beautiful as herself, but with
+the <i>beaut&eacute; de diable</i>. The second was the appearance
+in Belgrade of Dimitri Wasseljevitchca, who
+was suspected of plotting to assassinate the Tsar.
+Russia demanded that the fugitive should be given
+up to justice, and enlisted Natalie's co-operation with
+this object. Milan, however, was resolute not to
+surrender the plotter, and turned a deaf ear to all
+the Princess's pleadings and cajoleries. "The most
+exciting scene followed. Natalie, abandoning entreaties,
+threatened and even commanded her husband
+to obey her"; and when threats and commands
+<a name="Page_318"></a>equally failed, she gave way to a paroxysm of
+rage
+in which she heaped the most unbridled scorn and
+contempt on her husband.</p>
+<p>Thus jealousy, a thwarted will, and Milan's low
+pleasures combined to widen the breach between the
+Royal couple, so recently plighted to each other in
+the sacred name of love, and to prepare the way for
+the troubled and tragic years to come.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
+<a name="CHAPTER_XXIX"></a>
+<h2><a name="Page_319"></a>CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
+<h2>AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE&#8212;<i>continued</i></h2>
+<br>
+<p>If anything could have restored happiness to
+Milan of Servia and his Princess, Natalie, it should
+surely have been the birth of the baby-Prince,
+Alexander, whom both equally adored and equally
+spoiled. But, instead of linking his parents in a new
+bond of affection "Sacha" was from his cradle
+the innocent cause of widening the breach that
+severed them.</p>
+<p>For a time, fortunately, Milan had little opportunity
+of continuing the feud of recrimination with
+his high-spirited and hot-tempered spouse. More
+serious matters claimed him. Servia was plunged
+into war with Turkey, and his days were spent in
+camp and on the battlefield, until the intervention of
+Russia put an end to the long and hopeless struggle,
+and Milan found himself one February day in 1882,
+thanks to the Berlin Conference, hailed the first King
+of his country, under the title of Milan I.</p>
+<p>Then followed a disastrous war with Bulgaria into
+which the headstrong King rushed in spite of
+Natalie's warning&#8212;"Draw back, Milan, and have
+no share in what will prove a bloody drama. You
+have no chance of conquering, for Alexander is made
+<a name="Page_320"></a>of the stuff of the Hohenzollerns." And indeed
+the
+struggle was doomed to failure from the first; for
+Milan was no man to lead an army to victory. Read
+his method of conducting a campaign, as described
+by one of his aides-de-camp&#8212;</p>
+<p>"Our troops continue to retreat&#8212;I never imagined
+a campaign could be so jolly. We do nothing but
+dance and sing and fiddle. Yesterday the King had
+some guests and the champagne literally flowed. We
+had the Belgrade singers, who used to delight us in
+the theatre-caf&eacute;. They sang and danced delightfully.
+The last two days we have had plenty of fun, and
+yesterday a lot of jolly girls came to enliven us."
+Such was Milan's method of conducting a great war,
+on which the very existence of his kingdom hung.
+Wine and women and song were more to his taste
+than forced marches, strategy, and hard-fought
+battles. But once again foreign intervention came
+to his rescue; and his armies were saved from
+annihilation.</p>
+<p>When his sword was finally sheathed, if not with
+honour, he returned to Belgrade to resume his
+gambling, his dallyings with fair women&#8212;and his
+daily quarrels with his Queen, whose bitterness
+absence had done nothing to assuage. So far from
+Natalie's spirit being crushed, it was higher and
+prouder than ever. She would die before she would
+yield; but she was in no mood to die, this autocratic,
+fiery-tempered, strong-willed daughter of Russia.
+She gave literally a "striking" proof of the spirit that
+was in her at the Easter reception of 1886, when the
+wife of a Greek diplomat&#8212;a beautiful woman, to
+<a name="Page_321"></a>whom her husband had been more than
+kind&#8212;presented
+herself smilingly to receive the "salute
+courteous" from Her Majesty. With a look of
+scorn Natalie coolly surveyed her rival from head
+to foot; and then, in the presence of the Court, gave
+her a resounding slap on the cheek.</p>
+<p>But the Grecian lady was only one of many fair
+women who basked successively (or together) in
+Milan's favour. A much more formidable rival was
+Artemesia Christich, a woman as designing as she
+was lovely, who was quick to envelop the weak King
+in the toils of her witchery. Not content with his
+smiles and favours she aspired to take Natalie's place
+as Queen of Servia; and, it is said, had extorted from
+him a promise that he would make her his Queen as
+soon as his existing marriage tie could be dissolved.
+And to this infamous compact Artemesia's husband,
+a man as crafty and unscrupulous as herself, consented,
+in return for his promotion to certain high and
+profitable offices in the State.</p>
+<p>In vain did the Emperor and the Crown Prince of
+Austria, with many another high-placed friend, plead
+with Milan not to commit such a folly. He was
+driven to distraction between such powerful appeals
+and the allurement of the siren who had him so
+effectually under her spell, until in his despair he
+entertained serious thoughts of suicide as escape from
+his dilemma. Meanwhile, we are told, "a perfect
+hell" raged in the castle; each day brought its
+scandalous scene between his outraged Queen and
+himself. His unpopularity with his subjects became
+so acute that he was hissed whenever he made his
+<a name="Page_322"></a>appearance in the streets of his capital; and
+Artemesia
+was obliged to have police protection to shield
+her from the vengeance of the mob.</p>
+<p>As for Natalie, this crowning injury decided her to
+bear her purgatory no longer. She would force her
+husband to abdicate and secure her own appointment
+as Regent for her son; or, failing that, she would
+leave her husband and seek an asylum out of Servia.
+And with the object of still further embittering his
+subjects against the King she made the full story of
+her injuries public, and enlisted the sympathy, not
+only of Milan's most powerful ministers, but of the
+entire country.</p>
+<p>"The castle is in utter confusion," wrote an
+officer of the Belgrade garrison, in October, 1886.
+"The King looks ill, and as if he never slept. Poor
+fellow! he flies for refuge to us in the guard-house,
+and plays cards with the officers. Card-playing is
+his worst enemy. He loves it passionately, and
+plays excitedly and for high points&#8212;and he always
+loses."</p>
+<p>Matters were now hastening to a crisis. Hopelessly
+in debt, scorned by his subjects, and hated by
+his wife, Milan's plight was pitiful. The scenes
+between the King and the Queen were becoming
+more violent and disgraceful every day. "There
+was no peace anywhere, nor did anyone belonging
+to the Court enjoy a moment of tranquillity." So
+intolerable had life become that, early in 1887, Milan
+decided to dissolve his marriage; and it was only at
+the pleading of the Austrian Emperor that he consented
+to abandon this design, on condition that his
+<a name="Page_323"></a>wife left Servia; and thus it was that one day
+in April
+Queen Natalie left Belgrade, accompanied by her
+son "Sacha," ostensibly that he might continue his
+education in Germany.</p>
+<p>But, although husband and wife were thus at last
+separated, Milan's resolve to divorce her remained
+firm. "I have to inform you," he wrote shortly after
+her departure, "that I have this day sent in my
+application to our Holy National Church for permission
+to dissolve our marriage." And that nothing
+might be lacking to Natalie's suffering and humiliation,
+he sent General Protitsch to Wiesbaden with a
+peremptory demand that his son, "Sacha," should
+return to Servia.</p>
+<p>In vain did Natalie protest against both indignities.
+Milan might divorce her; but at least he should not
+rob her of her son, the only solace left to her in life.
+And when General Protitsch, seeing that milder
+measures were futile, gave orders for the Prince to
+be removed by force, the distracted mother flung one
+protecting arm round her boy; and, pointing a loaded
+pistol with the other, threatened to shoot dead the
+man who dared approach her.</p>
+<p>Opposition, however, was futile; the following
+evening the boy-Prince was in his father's arms, and
+the weeping mother was left disconsolate. Thus
+robbed of her darling "Sacha," it was not long before
+the second blow fell. The divorce proceedings were
+rushed through the Synod. A deaf ear was turned
+to Natalie's petition to be allowed, at least, to defend
+herself in person; and on the 12th October, 1888,
+the "marriage between King Milan I. and Natalie,
+<a name="Page_324"></a>born Ketschko," was formally dissolved. Well
+might this most unhappy of Queens write, "The
+position is embittered by my conscience assuring me
+that I have neglected no duty, and that there is not
+a single action of my life which could be cited against
+me as a grave offence, or could put me to shame were
+it brought before the whole world. My fate should
+draw tears from the very stones; but I do not ask for
+pity; I demand justice."</p>
+<p>If anything could have increased Milan's unpopularity
+it was this brutal treatment of his Queen. The
+very men who, at his coronation, had taken off their
+cloaks that he might walk on them, and the women
+who had kissed his garments, now hissed him in the
+streets of his capital. In his own Court he had no
+friend except the infamous Christitch; the general
+hatred even took the form of repeated attempts on his
+life. If he would save it, he realised he must abandon
+his crown; and one March morning in 1889,
+after informing his ministers of his intention to
+abdicate, he awoke his twelve-year-old son with the
+greeting, "Good morning, Your Majesty!" Milan
+was no longer King of Servia; his son, Alexander,
+reigned in his stead.</p>
+<p>Probably no King ever laid down his crown more
+willingly. He had put aside for ever his Royal
+trappings, with all their unhappy memories, and their
+present discomforts and danger; but in distant Paris
+he knew a life of new pleasure awaited him, remote
+from the wranglings of Courts and the assassin's
+knife. And within a week of greeting his successor
+as King, he was gaily riding in the Bois, attending
+<a name="Page_325"></a>the theatres, supping hilariously with ladies of
+the
+ballet, or dining with his friends at Verrey's "where
+his somewhat rough manner and coarse jokes (the
+legacy of his swineherd ancestry) caused him sometimes
+to be mistaken for a parvenu," until a waiter
+would correct the impression by a whispered,
+"That gentleman with the dark moustache is Milan,
+ex-King of Servia."</p>
+<p>While her husband was thus drinking the cup of
+Paris pleasure, his wife was still doomed to exile from
+her kingdom and her son, with permission only to
+pay two brief visits each year. But Natalie, who
+had so long defied a King, was not the woman to be
+daunted by mere Regents. She would return to
+Belgrade, and at least make her home where she
+could catch an occasional glimpse of her boy. And
+to Belgrade she went, to make her entry over flower-strewn
+streets, and through a tornado of cheers and
+shouts of "Zivela Rufe!" It was a truly Royal
+welcome to the great warm heart of the Servian
+people; but no official of the Court was there to greet
+her coming, and as she drove past the castle which
+held all she counted dear in life, not even the flutter
+of a handkerchief marked the passing of Servia's
+former Queen.</p>
+<p>Had she but played her cards now with the least
+discretion, she might have been allowed to remain
+in Belgrade in peace. But Natalie seems fated to
+have been the harbinger of storm. For a time, it is
+true, she was content to lie <i>perdue</i>, entertaining her
+friends at her house in Prince Michael Street, driving
+through the streets of her capital behind her pair of
+<a name="Page_326"></a>white ponies, or walking with her pet goat for
+companion,
+greeted everywhere with respect and affection.
+But her restless, vengeful spirit, still burning
+from the indignities she had suffered, would not
+allow her to remain long in the background. She
+threw herself into political agitation, and thus
+brought herself into open conflict with the Regents;
+she inaugurated a campaign of abuse against her
+husband, whom she still pursued with a relentless
+hatred; and generally made herself so objectionable
+to the authorities that the Skupshtina was at last
+compelled to order her banishment.</p>
+<p>When the deputies presented themselves before
+her with the decree of expulsion, she laughed in their
+very faces, declaring that she would only submit to
+force. "I refuse to go," she said defiantly, "unless
+I am expelled by the hands of the police." A few
+hours later she was forcibly removed from her weeping
+and protesting ladies, hurried into a carriage, and
+driven off, with a strong escort of soldiers, on her
+journey to exile.</p>
+<p>But the good people of Belgrade, who had got
+wind of the proposed abduction, were by no means
+disposed to look on while their beloved Queen was
+thus brutally taken from them. When the cort&egrave;ge
+reached the Cathedral Square, it was stopped by a
+formidable and menacing mob; the escort, furiously
+assailed with sticks and showers of stones, was beaten
+off; the horses were taken from the carriage, and the
+Queen was drawn back in triumph by scores of willing
+hands, to her residence.</p>
+<p>Natalie's victory, however, was short-lived. At
+<a name="Page_327"></a>midnight, when her stalwart champions were
+sleeping
+in their beds, the police, crawling over the roofs of
+the houses in Prince Michael Street, and descending
+into the Queen's courtyard, found it a very simple
+matter to complete their dastardly work. The Queen
+was again bundled unceremoniously into a carriage,
+and before Belgrade was well awake, she was far on
+her way to her new exile in Hungary. A few days
+later a formal decree of banishment was pronounced
+against her, forbidding her, under any pretext whatever,
+to enter Servia again without the Regent's
+permission.</p>
+<p>Only once more did Natalie and Milan set eyes on
+each other&#8212;when the ex-King presented himself at
+Biarritz, to bring her news of their son's projected
+<i>coup d'&eacute;tat</i>, by which he designed to depose the
+Regents and to take the reins of government into his
+own hands. Taken by surprise, the Queen received
+Milan, but when she saw him standing before her, an
+aged, broken man, her composure gave way. She
+could not speak; she trembled like a leaf.</p>
+<p>With Alexander's dramatic accession to his full
+Kingship a new, if brief, era of happiness opened to
+Natalie. The Regents were no longer able to
+exclude her from Servia, and by her son's invitation
+she returned to Belgrade to resume her old position
+of Queen.</p>
+<p>Still beautiful, in spite of all her suffering, she
+played for a time the r&ocirc;le of Queen-mother to perfection,
+holding her Courts, presiding at balls and
+soir&eacute;es, taking a prominent part in affairs of State, and
+gradually acquiring more power than her easy-going
+<a name="Page_328"></a>son himself enjoyed. At last, after long years
+of
+unrest and unhappiness, she seemed assured of
+peaceful years, secure in the affection of her son and
+her people, and far removed from the husband who
+had brought so much misery into her life.</p>
+<p>But Natalie was fated never to be happy long, and
+once more her evil Destiny was to snatch the cup from
+her lips, assuming this time the form of Draga
+Maschin, one of her own ladies-in-waiting, under the
+spell of whose black eyes and voluptuous charms her
+son quickly fell, after that first dramatic incident at
+Biarritz, when she plunged into the sea to his rescue
+and saved him from drowning.</p>
+<p>Many months earlier a clairvoyante at Paris had
+told Natalie, "Your Majesty is cherishing in your
+bosom a poisonous snake, which one day will give
+you a mortal wound." She had smiled incredulously
+at the warning, but she was soon to learn what truth
+it held. Certainly Draga Maschin was the last
+person she would have suspected of being a source
+of danger&#8212;a woman many years older than her son,
+the penniless widow of a drunken engineer&#8212;a
+woman, moreover, of whose life, before Natalie had
+taken pity on her poverty, many strange stories were
+told&#8212;how, for instance, she had often been seen in
+low resorts, "with the arm of a forester or a tradesman
+round her, singing the old Servian songs."</p>
+<p>But she had not taken into account Draga's
+sensuous beauty, before which her son was powerless.
+Each meeting left him more and more involved
+in her toils, until, to the consternation of
+Servia and the horror of his mother, he announced
+<a name="Page_329"></a>his intention of making her his Queen. Even
+Milan, degraded as he was, was horror-struck when
+the news came to him in Paris. "And this," he
+exclaimed, "is the act of 'Sacha'&#8212;my own son. He
+is a monster, a thing of evil in the eyes of all men!
+The Maschin will be Queen of Servia. What a
+reproach! What an evil! A creature like her! A
+sordid creature! Could he not have put aside his
+love for this low-born woman? But I could never
+make the fool understand that a King has duties; he
+has something else to think of but love-making."</p>
+<p>When taking leave of the friend who had brought
+him this evil news Milan said, "I shall never see
+Servia again. My experience has been a bitter one&#8212;everywhere
+treachery and deceit. And now my
+own son&#8212;<i>that</i> has broken my heart." A few
+months later, worn out by his excesses, prematurely
+old and broken-hearted, the man who had prostituted
+life's best gifts drew his last breath at Vienna at the
+age of forty-six.</p>
+<p>As for Natalie, this crowning calamity of her son's
+disgrace did more than all her past sufferings to
+crush her proud spirit. But fate had not yet dealt
+the last and most cruel blow of all. That fell on that
+fatal June day of 1902 when her beloved "Sacha's"
+mutilated body was flung by his assassins out of his
+palace window, to be greeted with shouts of derisive
+laughter and cries of "Long live King Peter," from
+the dense crowds who had come to gloat over this last
+scene in the tragedy of the House of the Obrenvoie.</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 45%;">
+<a name="INDEX"></a>
+<h2>INDEX</h2>
+Agenois, Duc, d', <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a><br>
+Aiss&eacute;, Mlle, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>-<a href="#Page_224">224</a><br>
+Albany, Count of, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>-<a href="#Page_20">20</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; "&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Countess
+of, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>-<a href="#Page_22">22</a><br>
+Alberoni, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_184">184</a><br>
+Alexander, King of Servia, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_329">329</a><br>
+Alexander III., of Russia, <a href="#Page_93">93</a><br>
+Alexis, Tsarevitch, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a><br>
+Alfieri, Vittorio, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>-<a href="#Page_22">22</a><br>
+Anjou, Duc d', <a href="#Page_59">59</a><br>
+Anna, Empress, <a href="#Page_26">26</a><br>
+Anne of Austria, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>,
+<a href="#Page_164">164</a><br>
+Arcimbaldo, <a href="#Page_92">92</a><br>
+Aubign&eacute;, Constant d', <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_241">241</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Fran&ccedil;oise d', <a
+ href="#Page_240">240</a>-<a href="#Page_247">247</a><br>
+Audouins, Diane d', <a href="#Page_37">37</a><br>
+Augustus, of Saxony, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>-<a href="#Page_102">102</a><br>
+Austin, William, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a><br>
+Auvergne, Comte d', <a href="#Page_235">235</a><br>
+<br>
+Babou, Fran&ccedil;oise, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br>
+Baireuth, Margravine of, <a href="#Page_7">7</a><br>
+Baratinski, Prince, <a href="#Page_155">155</a><br>
+Barry, Guillaume du, <a href="#Page_47">47</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; "&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Jean du, <a
+ href="#Page_47">47</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; "&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Madame du, <a
+ href="#Page_47">47</a>-<a href="#Page_54">54</a><br>
+Bavaria, Elizabeth of, <a href="#Page_215">215</a><br>
+Beaufort, Duchesse de, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>-<a href="#Page_44">44</a><br>
+Beauharnais, Eug&egrave;ne, <a href="#Page_135">135</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; "&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;
+&nbsp; &nbsp; Hortense, <a href="#Page_135">135</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+Josephine, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>-<a href="#Page_137">137</a><br>
+Beauvallon, <a href="#Page_143">143</a><br>
+B&eacute;cu, Jeanne, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>-<a href="#Page_54">54</a><br>
+Bellegarde, Count di, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>-<a href="#Page_206">206</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Duc de, <a
+ href="#Page_37">37</a>-<a href="#Page_39">39</a><br>
+Berry, Duc de, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>-<a href="#Page_61">61</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; "&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Duchesse de, <a
+ href="#Page_55">55</a>-<a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>,
+<a href="#Page_217">217</a><br>
+Bestyouzhev, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a><br>
+Beuchling, <a href="#Page_98">98</a><br>
+Blanguini, <a href="#Page_111">111</a><br>
+Blois, Mlle de, <a href="#Page_56">56</a><br>
+Bonaparte, Elisa, <a href="#Page_104">104</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Letizia, <a
+ href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Napoleon, <a
+ href="#Page_104">104</a>-<a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_127">127</a>-<a href="#Page_137">137</a><br>
+Bonaparte, Pauline, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>-<a href="#Page_113">113</a><br>
+Bonaventuri, Pietro, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>-<a href="#Page_175">175</a><br>
+"Bonnie Prince," <a href="#Page_13">13</a>-<a href="#Page_22">22</a><br>
+Borghese, Prince Camillo, <a href="#Page_110">110</a><br>
+Borghese, Princess Pauline, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_113">113</a><br>
+Bossi, Giuseppe, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br>
+Bourgogne, Duc de, <a href="#Page_59">59</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Duchesse de, <a
+ href="#Page_181">181</a><br>
+Brissac, Duc de, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>-<a href="#Page_53">53</a><br>
+Bristol, Lord, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a><br>
+Brougham, <a href="#Page_212">212</a><br>
+Brunswick, Augusta, Duchess of, <a href="#Page_194">194</a><br>
+Brunswick, Charles Wm., Duke of, <a href="#Page_194">194</a><br>
+Byron, Lord, <a href="#Page_138">138</a><br>
+<br>
+Campbell, Lady Charlotte, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_194">194</a><br>
+Campredon, <a href="#Page_249">249</a><br>
+Capello, Bartolomeo, <a href="#Page_172">172</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; "&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Bianca, <a
+ href="#Page_169">169</a>-<a href="#Page_179">179</a><br>
+Carlos, King of Spain, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_305">305</a>.<br>
+Caroline, Princess of Wales, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_202">202</a><br>
+Caroline, Queen of Naples, <a href="#Page_120">120</a><br>
+Catargo, Marie, <a href="#Page_307">307</a><br>
+Catherine I., of Russia, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>-<a href="#Page_12">12</a>,
+<a href="#Page_23">23</a><br>
+Catherine II., of Russia, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>,
+<a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_158">158</a><br>
+Charles V., Emperor, <a href="#Page_88">88</a><br>
+Charles VII., Emperor, <a href="#Page_29">29</a><br>
+Charles IX., King of France, <a href="#Page_227">227</a><br>
+Charles, Monsieur, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a><br>
+Charlotte, Princess, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>,
+<a href="#Page_211">211</a><br>
+Charlotte, Queen, <a href="#Page_197">197</a><br>
+Chartres, Duc de, <a href="#Page_56">56</a><br>
+Chateauroux, Duchesse de, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_293">293</a><br>
+Christian II, of Denmark, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>-<a href="#Page_92">92</a><br>
+Christich, Artemesia, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a><br>
+Clary, Desir&eacute;e, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_127">127</a><br>
+Colonna, Prince, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">"&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Princess, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></span><br>
+Cosse, Louis, Duc de, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>-<a href="#Page_50">50</a><br>
+<br>
+Domanski, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>-<a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a><br>
+Douglas, Lady, <a href="#Page_200">200</a><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Sir
+John, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></span><br>
+Dubois, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a><br>
+Dujarrier, M., <a href="#Page_143">143</a><br>
+Dyveke, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>-<a href="#Page_89">89</a><br>
+<br>
+Elizabeth I., of Russia, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>-<a href="#Page_32">32</a>,
+<a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_153">153</a><br>
+"Elizabeth II." of Russia, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a><br>
+Embs, Baron von, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br>
+Emilie, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a><br>
+Encke, Charlotte, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; Wilhelmine, <a
+ href="#Page_114">114</a>-<a href="#Page_126">126</a></span><br>
+Entragues, Henriette d', <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_227">227</a>-<a href="#Page_237">237</a><br>
+Entragues, Seigneur d', <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_229">229</a><br>
+Esterle, Countess, <a href="#Page_102">102</a><br>
+Estr&eacute;es, Antoine d', <a href="#Page_36">36</a><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Gabrielle
+d', <a href="#Page_35">35</a>-<a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_226">226</a></span><br>
+Estr&eacute;es, Jean d', <a href="#Page_36">36</a><br>
+Eudoxia, Empress, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>-<a href="#Page_257">257</a><br>
+<br>
+Faaborg, Hans, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>-<a href="#Page_91">91</a><br>
+Fabre, Fran&ccedil;ois X., <a href="#Page_21">21</a><br>
+Falari, Duchesse de, <a href="#Page_224">224</a><br>
+Feriol, Comte de, <a href="#Page_222">222</a><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Madame de, <a
+ href="#Page_223">223</a></span><br>
+Fersen, Count, <a href="#Page_261">261</a><br>
+Fimarcon, Marquis de, <a href="#Page_221">221</a><br>
+Fitzherbert, Mrs, <a href="#Page_199">199</a><br>
+Flavacourt, Madame de, <a href="#Page_283">283</a><br>
+Fleury, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>,
+<a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_284">284</a><br>
+Fontanges, Mlle de, <a href="#Page_245">245</a><br>
+Forbin, <a href="#Page_111">111</a><br>
+Fran&ccedil;ois I, <a href="#Page_36">36</a><br>
+Frederick the Great, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>-<a href="#Page_118">118</a><br>
+Frederick William II, of Prussia, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_124">124</a><br>
+Frederick William III., of Prussia, <a href="#Page_124">124</a><br>
+Fr&egrave;ron, <a href="#Page_106">106</a><br>
+<br>
+Gac&eacute;, Comte De, <a href="#Page_183">183</a><br>
+Galitzin, Prince, <a href="#Page_79">79</a><br>
+George III., <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>,
+<a href="#Page_211">211</a><br>
+George IV., <a href="#Page_191">191</a>-<a href="#Page_202">202</a><br>
+Giovanna, Grand Duchess of Tuscany, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_177">177</a><br>
+Glebof, Major, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>-<a href="#Page_256">256</a><br>
+Goncourt, de, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>,
+<a href="#Page_286">286</a><br>
+Guiche, Comte de, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a><br>
+Guise, Duc de, <a href="#Page_237">237</a><br>
+Gustav, Adolf, <a href="#Page_15">15</a><br>
+<br>
+Hamilton, Mary, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>-<a href="#Page_259">259</a><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Sir
+William, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></span><br>
+Haye, La, <a href="#Page_60">60</a><br>
+Henri IV., of France (and Navarre), <a href="#Page_35">35</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_237">237</a><br>
+Holbein, Francis, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br>
+Hornstein, <a href="#Page_69">69</a><br>
+Hutchinson, Lord, <a href="#Page_212">212</a><br>
+<br>
+Isabella, Princess, <a href="#Page_88">88</a><br>
+Ivan, <a href="#Page_26">26</a><br>
+<br>
+Jersey, Lady, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a><br>
+Joachim Murat, King, <a href="#Page_207">207</a><br>
+Joinville, Prince de, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a><br>
+Josephine, Empress, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>-<a href="#Page_112">112</a>,
+<a href="#Page_127">127</a>-<a href="#Page_137">137</a><br>
+Junot, <a href="#Page_107">107</a><br>
+<br>
+Karageorgevitch, Alex., <a href="#Page_306">306</a><br>
+Ketschko, Natalie, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>-<a href="#Page_329">329</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Nathaniel, <a
+ href="#Page_310">310</a></span><br>
+K&ouml;nigsmarck, Aurora von, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_103">103</a><br>
+K&ouml;nigsmarck, Conrad von, <a href="#Page_94">94</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+Philip von, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>-<a href="#Page_96">96</a></span><br>
+Konstantinovitch, Alex., <a href="#Page_313">313</a><br>
+Kristenef, <a href="#Page_77">77</a><br>
+Kusa, Prince, <a href="#Page_308">308</a><br>
+<br>
+Lamballe, Princesse de, <a href="#Page_263">263</a><br>
+Landsfeld, Countess of, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>-<a href="#Page_148">148</a><br>
+Languet, Abb&eacute;, <a href="#Page_63">63</a><br>
+Lauzun, Duc de, <a href="#Page_62">62</a><br>
+Lavalli&egrave;re, Duchesse de, <a href="#Page_239">239</a><br>
+Lawrence, Sir Thomas, <a href="#Page_201">201</a><br>
+Leclerc, General, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a><br>
+Lichtenau, Countess, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>-<a href="#Page_126">126</a><br>
+Limburg, Duke of, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a><br>
+Lorraine, Prince Charles of, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_301">301</a><br>
+Louis XIV., <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_295">295</a><br>
+Louis XV., <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_292">292</a><br>
+Louise, Countess of Albany, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_22">22</a><br>
+L&ouml;wenhaupt, Count Axel, <a href="#Page_94">94</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+Countess,&nbsp; <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_99">99</a></span><br>
+Ludwig I., of Bavaria, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>-<a href="#Page_147">147</a><br>
+Luynes, Duc de, <a href="#Page_273">273</a><br>
+<br>
+Mailly, Madame de, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>-<a href="#Page_293">293</a><br>
+Maine, Duc de, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a><br>
+Maintenon, Madame de, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_247">247</a><br>
+Malmesbury, Lord, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>-<a href="#Page_198">198</a><br>
+Manby, Captain, <a href="#Page_201">201</a><br>
+Mancini, Hortense, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>,
+<a href="#Page_168">168</a><br>
+Mancini, Laure, <a href="#Page_294">294</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+Madame, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>-<a href="#Page_163">163</a></span><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Marie, <a
+ href="#Page_160">160</a>-<a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_301">301</a></span><br>
+Mancini, Olympe, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>-<a href="#Page_305">305</a><br>
+Maria Theresa, Queen of Spain, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_304">304</a><br>
+Marie Antoinette, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>-<a href="#Page_269">269</a><br>
+Marie Leczinska, <a href="#Page_270">270</a><br>
+Marie Louise, Empress, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br>
+Marine, Monsieur de, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br>
+Marke, Count de la, <a href="#Page_117">117</a><br>
+Marmont, General, <a href="#Page_107">107</a><br>
+Maschin, Draga, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a><br>
+Masson, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a><br>
+Maurepas, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>-<a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_292">292</a><br>
+Mazarin, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>-<a href="#Page_163">163</a>,
+<a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_297">297</a><br>
+Mazarin, Madame de, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a><br>
+Medici, Cardinal de, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>-<a href="#Page_176">176</a><br>
+&nbsp; <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+Francesco de, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>-<a href="#Page_179">179</a></span><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Marie
+de, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>-<a href="#Page_235">235</a></span><br>
+Menshikoff, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_12">12</a><br>
+Mercoeur, Duc de, <a href="#Page_295">295</a><br>
+Mexent, Marquis de Saint, <a href="#Page_123">123</a><br>
+Michael, Prince, of Servia, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_308">308</a><br>
+Michelin, Madame, <a href="#Page_181">181</a><br>
+Milan I., of Servia, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>-<a href="#Page_329">329</a><br>
+Modena, Duke of, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>-<a href="#Page_189">189</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+Duchess of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>,
+<a href="#Page_186">186</a>-<a href="#Page_189">189</a></span><br>
+Monceaux, Marquise de, <a href="#Page_41">41</a><br>
+Mons, William, <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br>
+Montespan, Madame de, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>,
+<a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_243">243</a>-<a href="#Page_245">245</a><br>
+Montez, Lola, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>-<a href="#Page_148">148</a><br>
+Montmorency, Charlotte de, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_237">237</a><br>
+Mortemart, Duchesse de, <a href="#Page_54">54</a><br>
+Motte-Houdancourt, Mlle de la, <a href="#Page_302">302</a><br>
+Motteville, Madame de, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_296">296</a><br>
+Mouchy, Madame de, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>-<a href="#Page_65">65</a>,
+<a href="#Page_217">217</a><br>
+Murussi, Princess, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a><br>
+<br>
+Napoleon I., <a href="#Page_104">104</a>-<a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_127">127</a>-<a href="#Page_137">137</a><br>
+Natalie, Queen of Servia, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_329">329</a><br>
+Nathalie, Empress, <a href="#Page_252">252</a><br>
+Nesle, F&eacute;licit&eacute; de, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_279">279</a><br>
+&nbsp;<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Marquise de, <a
+ href="#Page_182">182</a></span><br>
+Nevers, Duc de, <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br>
+Noailles, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_64">64</a><br>
+<br>
+Obrenovitch Jefrenn, <a href="#Page_307">307</a><br>
+Ompteda, Baron, <a href="#Page_206">206</a><br>
+Orleans, Philippe, Duc de, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>-<a href="#Page_57">57</a>,
+<a href="#Page_60">60</a>-<a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_225">225</a><br>
+Orloff, Alexis, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Count, <a
+ href="#Page_258">258</a></span><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Gregory, <a
+ href="#Page_29">29</a>,
+<a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_153">153</a>-<a href="#Page_158">158</a></span><br>
+<br>
+Palatine, Princess, Elizabeth, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a><br>
+Panine, <a href="#Page_157">157</a><br>
+Paskevitch, General, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br>
+Patiomkin, <a href="#Page_23">23</a><br>
+Perdita, <a href="#Page_199">199</a><br>
+Pergami, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>-<a href="#Page_213">213</a><br>
+Permon, Albert, <a href="#Page_107">107</a><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Madame, <a
+ href="#Page_109">109</a></span><br>
+Peter the Great, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>-<a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_259">259</a><br>
+Peter II., of Russia, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a><br>
+Peter III., of Russia, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>-<a href="#Page_155">155</a><br>
+Pinneberg, Countess of, <a href="#Page_73">73</a><br>
+Platen, Countess, <a href="#Page_94">94</a><br>
+Polignac, Cardinal de, <a href="#Page_261">261</a><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Diane
+de, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></span><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+Jules, Comte de, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>-<a href="#Page_264">264</a></span><br>
+Polignac, Madame de, <a href="#Page_182">182</a><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; Yolande,
+de, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>-<a href="#Page_269">269</a></span><br>
+P&ouml;llnitz, Von, <a href="#Page_7">7</a><br>
+Poniatowski, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a><br>
+Porte, Armande de la, <a href="#Page_162">162</a><br>
+Protitsch, General, <a href="#Page_323">323</a><br>
+Pugatchef, <a href="#Page_73">73</a><br>
+<br>
+Radziwill, Prince Charles, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_74">74</a><br>
+Ravaillac, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br>
+Razoum, Alexis, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>-<a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_72">72</a><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Cyril, <a
+ href="#Page_26">26</a>-<a href="#Page_28">28</a></span><br>
+&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Gregory, <a
+ href="#Page_24">24</a></span><br>
+Richelieu, Duc de, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>-<a href="#Page_190">190</a>,
+<a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_291">291</a><br>
+Richelieu, Duchesse de, <a href="#Page_185">185</a><br>
+Rietz, Herr, <a href="#Page_117">117</a><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; Wilhelmine, <a
+ href="#Page_117">117</a>-<a href="#Page_120">120</a></span><br>
+Ringlet, Father, <a href="#Page_62">62</a><br>
+Riom, Comte de, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>-<a href="#Page_64">64</a><br>
+<br>
+Saint-Simon, Duc de, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>,
+<a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a><br>
+Saint-Simon, Madame de, <a href="#Page_58">58</a><br>
+Savoie, Chevalier de, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br>
+Savoy, Charles Emmanuel, Duke of, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br>
+Savoy, Margaret, Princess of, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_300">300</a><br>
+Scarron, Paul, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a><br>
+Schenk, Baron von, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br>
+Sevign&eacute;, Madame de, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_303">303</a><br>
+Seymour, Henry, <a href="#Page_48">48</a><br>
+Shouvalov, <a href="#Page_29">29</a><br>
+Sigbrit, Frau, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>-<a href="#Page_92">92</a><br>
+Skovronski, I, <a href="#Page_23">23</a><br>
+Smith, Sydney, Captain, <a href="#Page_200">200</a><br>
+Soissons, Comte de, <a href="#Page_297">297</a><br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; Comtesse
+de, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_305">305</a></span><br>
+Soltykoff, Sergius, <a href="#Page_151">151</a><br>
+Sophia Dorothea, of Celle, <a href="#Page_94">94</a><br>
+Spencer, Lord Henry, <a href="#Page_119">119</a><br>
+Stanley, Sir John, <a href="#Page_193">193</a><br>
+Stendhal, <a href="#Page_21">21</a><br>
+Stuart, Charles, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>-<a href="#Page_20">20</a><br>
+Sully, Duc de, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_229">229</a>-<a href="#Page_231">231</a><br>
+<br>
+Tencin, Madame de, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a><br>
+Teplof, <a href="#Page_155">155</a><br>
+Thackeray, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_200">200</a><br>
+Toebingen, Major, <a href="#Page_199">199</a><br>
+Torbern, Oxe, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>-<a href="#Page_92">92</a><br>
+Touchet, Marie, <a href="#Page_227">227</a><br>
+Tourel-Al&eacute;gre, Marquess, <a href="#Page_36">36</a><br>
+Tournelle, Mme de la, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>-<a href="#Page_293">293</a><br>
+Tuscany, Bianca, Grand Duchess of, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_179">179</a><br>
+Tuscany, Francesco, Grand Duke of, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_179">179</a><br>
+<br>
+Valkendorf, Chancellor, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>-<a href="#Page_85">85</a>,
+<a href="#Page_89">89</a><br>
+Valli&egrave;re, La, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>-<a href="#Page_303">303</a><br>
+Valois, Marguerite de, Queen of France, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br>
+Valois, Mlle de, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>,
+<a href="#Page_185">185</a><br>
+Vardes, Marquis de, <a href="#Page_302">302</a><br>
+Vaudreuil, Comte de, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a><br>
+Verneuil, Marquise de, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>-<a href="#Page_237">237</a><br>
+Villars, Duchesse de, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a><br>
+Vintimille, Comtesse de, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>-<a
+ href="#Page_279">279</a><br>
+Vishnevsky, Colonel, <a href="#Page_24">24</a><br>
+Vlodimir, Princess Aly de, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>-<a href="#Page_80">80</a><br>
+Voisin, La, <a href="#Page_303">303</a><br>
+Voltaire, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_149">149</a><br>
+Vorontsov, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a><br>
+<br>
+Walewska, Madame, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br>
+Waliszewski, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a
+ href="#Page_251">251</a><br>
+Wasseljevitchca, Dimitri, <a href="#Page_317">317</a><br>
+<br>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Love affairs of the Courts of Europe
+by Thornton Hall
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+Project Gutenberg's Love affairs of the Courts of Europe, by Thornton Hall
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Love affairs of the Courts of Europe
+
+Author: Thornton Hall
+
+Release Date: May 9, 2004 [EBook #12309]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOVE AFFAIRS OF THE COURTS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dave Morgan, Wilelmina Malliere and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE AFFAIRS
+OF THE COURTS OF EUROPE
+
+BY
+
+THORNTON HALL, F.S.A.,
+
+Barrister-at-Law,
+
+Author of "Love romancies of the Aristocracy",
+"Love intrigues of Royal Courts", etc., etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO
+
+MY COUSIN,
+
+LENORE
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAP
+
+I. A COMEDY QUEEN
+II. THE "BONNIE PRINCE'S" BRIDE
+III. THE PEASANT AND THE EMPRESS
+IV. A CROWN THAT FAILED
+V. A QUEEN OF HEARTS
+VI. THE REGENT'S DAUGHTER
+VII. A PRINCESS OF MYSTERY
+VIII. THE KING AND THE "LITTLE DOVE"
+IX. THE ROMANCE OF THE BEAUTIFUL SWEDE
+X. THE SISTER OF AN EMPEROR
+XI. A SIREN OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
+XII. THE CORSICAN AND THE CREOLE
+XIII. THE ENSLAVER OF A KING
+XIV. AN EMPRESS AND HER FAVOURITES
+XV. A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY CINDERELLA
+XVI. BIANCA, GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY
+XVII. RICHELIEU, THE ROUE
+XVIII. THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS
+XIX. THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS--_continued_
+XX. THE LOVE-AFFAIRS OF A REGENT
+XXI. A DELILAH OF THE COURT OF FRANCE
+XXII. THE "SUN-KING" AND THE WIDOW
+XXIII. A THRONED BARBARIAN
+XXIV. A FRIEND OF MARIE ANTOINETTE
+XXV. THE RIVAL SISTERS
+XXVI. THE RIVAL SISTERS--_continued_
+XXVII. A MISTRESS OF INTRIGUE
+XXVIII. AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE
+XXIX. AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE--_continued_
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+BIANCA CAPELLO BONAVENTURA GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY
+
+CATHERINE THE SECOND OF RUSSIA
+
+COUNT GREGORY ORLOFF
+
+DESIREE CLARY
+
+JOSEPHINE DE BEAUHARNAIS, EMPRESS (BY PRUD'HON)
+
+LOLA MONTEZ, COUNTESS OF LANDSFELD
+
+LUDWIG I., KING OF BAVARIA
+
+FRANCESCO I., GRAND DUKE OF TUSCANY
+
+CAROLINE OF BRUNSWICK, WIFE OF GEORGE IV
+
+
+
+
+LOVE AFFAIRS OF THE COURTS OF EUROPE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+A COMEDY QUEEN
+
+
+"It was to a noise like thunder, and close clasped in a soldier's
+embrace, that Catherine I. made her first appearance in Russian
+history."
+
+History, indeed, contains few chapters more strange, more seemingly
+impossible, than this which tells the story of the maid-of-all-work--the
+red-armed, illiterate peasant-girl who, without any dower of beauty or
+charm, won the idolatry of an Emperor and succeeded him on the greatest
+throne of Europe. So obscure was Catherine's origin that no records
+reveal either her true name or the year or place of her birth. All that
+we know is that she was cradled in some Livonian village, either in
+Sweden or Poland, about the year 1685, the reputed daughter of a
+serf-mother and a peasant-father; and that her numerous brothers and
+sisters were known in later years by the name Skovoroshtchenko or
+Skovronski. The very Christian name by which she is known to history
+was not hers until it was given to her by her Imperial lover.
+
+It is not until the year 1702, when the future Empress of the Russias
+was a girl of seventeen, that she makes her first dramatic appearance on
+the stage on which she was to play so remarkable a part. Then we find
+her acting as maid-servant to the Lutheran pastor of Marienburg,
+scrubbing his floors, nursing his children, and waiting on his resident
+pupils, in the midst of all the perils of warfare. The Russian hosts had
+for weeks been laying siege to Marienburg; and the Commandant, unable to
+defend the town any longer against such overwhelming odds, had announced
+his intention to blow up the fortress, and had warned the inhabitants to
+leave the town.
+
+Between the alternatives of death within the walls and the enemy
+without, Pastor Glueck chose the latter; and sallying forth with his
+family and maid-servant, threw himself on the mercy of the Russians who
+promptly packed him off to Moscow a prisoner. For Martha (as she seems
+to have been known in those days) a different fate was reserved. Her red
+lips, saucy eyes, and opulent figure were too seductive a spoil to part
+with, General Sheremetief decided, and she was left behind, a by no
+means reluctant hostage.
+
+Peter's soldiers, now that victory was assured, were holding high revel
+of feasting and song and dancing. They received the new prisoner
+literally with open arms, and almost before she had wiped the tears from
+her eyes, at parting from her nurslings, she was capering gaily to the
+music of hautboy and fiddle, with the arm of a stalwart soldier round
+her waist.
+
+"Suddenly," says Waliszewski, "a fearful explosion overthrew the
+dancers, cut the music short, and left the servant-maid, fainting with
+terror, in the arms of a dragoon."
+
+Thus did Martha, the "Siren of the Kitchen," dance her way into Russian
+history, little dreaming, we may be sure, to what dizzy heights her
+nimble feet were to carry her. For a time she found her pleasure in the
+attentions of a non-commissioned officer, sharing the life of camp and
+barracks and making friends by the good-nature which bubbled in her, and
+which was always her chief charm. When her sergeant began to weary of
+her, she found a humble place as laundry-maid in the household of
+Menshikoff, the Tsar's favourite, whose shirts, we are told, it was her
+privilege to wash; and who, it seems, was by no means insensible to the
+buxom charms of this maid of the laundry. At any rate we find
+Menshikoff, when he was spending the Easter of 1706 at Witebsk, writing
+to his sister to send her to him.
+
+But a greater than Menshikoff was soon to appear on the scene--none
+other than the Emperor Peter himself. One day the Tsar, calling on his
+favourite, was astonished to see the cleanliness of his surroundings and
+his person. "How do you contrive," he asked, "to have your house so well
+kept, and to wear such fresh and dainty linen?" Menshikoff's answer was
+"to open a door, through which the sovereign perceived a handsome girl,
+aproned, and sponge in hand, bustling from chair to chair, and going
+from window to window, scrubbing the window-panes"--a vision of industry
+which made such a powerful appeal to His Majesty that he begged an
+introduction on the spot to the lady of the sponge.
+
+The most daring writer of fiction could scarcely devise a more romantic
+meeting than this between the autocrat of Russia and the red-armed,
+bustling cleaner of the window-panes, and he would certainly never have
+ventured to build on it the romance of which it was the prelude. What it
+was in the young peasant-woman that attracted the Emperor it is
+impossible to say. Of beauty she seems to have had none--save perhaps
+such as lies in youth and rude health.
+
+We look at her portraits in vain to discover a trace of any charm that
+might appeal to man. Her pictures in the Romanof Gallery at St
+Petersburg show a singularly plain woman with a large, round
+peasant-face, the most conspicuous feature of which is a hideously
+turned-up nose. Large, protruding eyes and an opulent bust complete a
+presentment of the typical household drudge--"a servant-girl in a German
+inn." But Peter the Great, who was ever abnormal in all his tastes and
+appetites, was always more ready to make love to a woman of the people
+than to the most beautiful and refined of his Court ladies. His standard
+of taste, as of manners, has not inaptly been likened to that of a Dutch
+sailor.
+
+But whatever it was in the low-born laundry-woman that attracted the
+Tsar of Russia, we know that this first unconventional meeting led to
+many others, and that before long Catherine (for we may now call her by
+the name she made so famous) was removed from his favourite's household
+and installed in the Imperial harem where, for a time at least, she
+seems to have shared her favours indiscriminately between her old master
+and her new--"an obscure and complaisant mistress"--until Menshikoff
+finally resigned all rights in her to his sovereign.
+
+When Catherine took up her residence in her new home, Waliszewski tells
+us, "her eye shortly fell on certain magnificent jewels. Forthwith,
+bursting into tears, she addressed her new protector: 'Who put these
+ornaments here? If they come from the other one, I will keep nothing but
+this little ring; but if they come from you, how could you think I
+needed them to make me love you?'"
+
+If Catherine lacked physical graces, this and many another story prove
+that she had a rare gift of diplomacy. She had, moreover, an unfailing
+cheerfulness and goodness of heart which quickly endeared her to the
+moody and capricious Peter. In his frequent fits of nervous irritability
+which verged on madness, she alone had the power to soothe him and
+restore him to sanity. Her very voice had a magic to arrest him in his
+worst rages, and when the fit of madness (for such it undoubtedly was)
+was passing away she would "take his head and caress it tenderly,
+passing her fingers through his hair. Soon he grew drowsy and slept,
+leaning against her breast. For two or three hours she would sit
+motionless, waiting for the cure slumber always brought him, until at
+last he awoke cheerful and refreshed."
+
+Thus each day the Livonian peasant-woman took deeper root in the heart
+of the Emperor, until she became indispensable to him. Wherever he went
+she was his constant companion--in camp or on visits to foreign Courts,
+where she was received with the honours due to a Queen. And not only
+were her presence and her ministrations infinitely pleasant to him; her
+prudent counsel saved him from many a blunder and mad excess, and on at
+least one occasion rescued his army from destruction.
+
+So strong was the hold she soon won on his affection and gratitude that
+he is said to have married her secretly within three years of first
+setting eyes on her. Her future and that of the children she had borne
+to him became his chief concern; and as early as 1708, when he was
+leaving Moscow to join his army, he left behind him a note: "If, by
+God's will, anything should happen to me, let the 3000 roubles which
+will be found in Menshikoff's house be given to Catherine Vassilevska
+and her daughter."
+
+But whatever the truth may be about the alleged secret marriage, we know
+that early in 1712, Peter, in his Admiral's uniform, stood at the altar
+with the Livonian maid-servant, in the presence of his Court officials,
+and with two of her own little daughters as bridesmaids. The wedding, we
+are told, was performed in a little chapel belonging to Prince
+Menshikoff, and was preceded by an interview with the Dowager-Empress
+and his Princess sisters, in which Peter declared his intention to make
+Catherine his wife and commanded them to pay her the respect due to her
+new rank. Then followed, in brilliant sequence, State dinners,
+receptions, and balls, at all of which the laundress-bride sat at her
+husband's right hand and received the homage of his subjects as his
+Queen.
+
+Picture now the woman who but a few years earlier had scrubbed Pastor
+Glueck's floors and cleaned Menshikoff's window-panes, in all her new
+splendours as Empress of Russia. The portraits of her, in her
+unaccustomed glories, are far from flattering and by no means
+consistent. "She showed no sign of ever having possessed beauty," says
+Baron von Poellnitz; "she was tall and strong and very dark, and would
+have seemed darker but for the rouge and whitening with which she
+plastered her face."
+
+The picture drawn by the Margravine of Baireuth is still less
+attractive: "She was short and huddled up, much tanned, and utterly
+devoid of dignity or grace. Muffled up in her clothes, she looked like a
+German comedy-actress. Her old-fashioned gown, heavily embroidered with
+silver, and covered with dirt, had been bought in some old-clothes shop.
+The front of her skirt was adorned with jewels, and she had a dozen
+orders and as many portraits of saints fastened all along the facings of
+her dress, so that when she walked she jingled like a mule."
+
+But in the eyes of one man at least--and he the greatest in all
+Russia--she was beautiful. His allegiance never wavered, nor indeed did
+that of his army, which idolised her to a man. She might have no boudoir
+graces, but at least she was the typical soldier's wife, and cut a brave
+figure, as she reviewed the troops or rode at their head in her uniform
+and grenadier cap. She shared all the hardships and dangers of
+campaigns with a smile on her lips, sleeping on the hard ground, and
+standing in the trenches with the bullets whistling about her ears, and
+men dropping to right and left of her.
+
+Nor was there ever a trace of vanity in her. She was as proud of her
+humble origin as if she had been cradled in a palace. To princes and
+ambassadors she would talk freely of the days when she was a household
+drudge, and loved to remind her husband of the time when his Empress
+used to wash shirts for his favourite. "Though, no doubt, you have other
+laundresses about you," she wrote to him once, "the old one never
+forgets you."
+
+The letters that passed between this oddly assorted couple, if couched
+in terms which could scarcely see print in our more restrained age, are
+eloquent of affection and devotion. To Peter his kitchen-Queen was
+"friend of my Heart," "dearest Heart," and "dear little Mother." He
+complains pathetically, when away with his army, "I am dull without
+you--and there is nobody to take care of my shirts." When Catherine once
+left him on a round of visits, he grew so impatient at her absence that
+he sent a yacht to bring her back, and with it a note: "When I go into
+my rooms and find them deserted, I feel as if I must rush away at once.
+It is all so empty without thee."
+
+And each letter is accompanied by a present--now a watch, now some
+costly lace, and again a lock of his hair, or a simple bunch of dried
+flowers, while she returns some such homely gift as a little fruit or a
+fur-lined waistcoat. On both sides, too, a vein of jocularity runs
+through the letters, as when Catherine addresses him as "Your
+Excellency, the very illustrious and eminent Prince-General and Knight
+of the crowned Compass and Axe"; and when Peter, after the Peace of
+Nystadt, writes: "According to the Treaty I am obliged to return all
+Livonian prisoners to the King of Sweden. What is to become of thee, I
+don't know." To which she answers, with true wifely (if affected)
+humility: "I am your servant; do with me as you will; yet I venture to
+think you won't send _me_ back."
+
+Quite idyllic, this post-nuptial love-making between the great Emperor
+and his low-born Queen, who has so possessed his heart that no other
+woman, however fair, could wrest it from her. And in her exalted
+position of Empress she practised the same diplomatic arts by which she
+had won Peter's devotion. Politics she left severely alone; she turned a
+forbidding back on all attempts to involve her in State intrigues, but
+she was ever ready to protect those who appealed to her for help, and to
+use her influence with her husband to procure pardon or lighter
+punishment for those who had fallen under his displeasure.
+
+Nor did she forget her poor relations in Livonia. One brother, a
+postillion, she openly acknowledged, introduced to her husband, and
+obtained a liberal pension for him; and to her other brothers and
+sisters she sent frequent presents and sums of money. More she could not
+well do during her husband's lifetime, but when she in turn came to the
+throne, she brought the whole family--postillion, shoemaker,
+farm-labourer and serf, their wives and families--to her capital,
+installed them in sumptuous apartments in her palaces, decked them in
+the finest Court feathers, and gave them large fortunes and titles of
+nobility.
+
+When the Tsar's quarrel with his eldest son came to its tragic
+_denouement_ in Alexis' death, her own son became heir presumptive to
+the throne of Russia. And thus the chain that bound Peter to his Empress
+received its completing link. It only remained now to place the crown
+formally on the head of the mother of the new heir, and this supreme
+honour was hers in the month of May, 1729.
+
+Wonderful tales are told of the splendours of Catherine's coronation. No
+existing crown was good enough for the ex-maid-of-all-work, so one of
+special magnificence was made by the Court jewellers--a miracle of
+diamonds and pearls, crowned by a monster ruby--at a cost of a million
+and a half roubles. The Coronation gown, which cost four thousand
+roubles, was made at Paris; and from Paris, too, came the gorgeous coach
+with its blaze of gold and heraldry, in which the Tsarina made her
+triumphal progress through the streets of the capital from the Winter
+Palace. The culminating point of this remarkable ceremony came when,
+after Peter had placed the crown on his wife's head, she sank weeping at
+his feet and embraced his knees.
+
+Catherine, however, had not worn her crown many months when she found
+herself in considerable danger of losing not only her dignities but even
+her liberty. For some time, it is said, she had been engaged in a
+liaison with William Mons, a handsome, gay young courtier, brother to a
+former mistress of the Tsar. The love affair had been common knowledge
+at the Court--to all but Peter himself, and it was accident that at last
+opened his eyes to his wife's dishonour. One moonlight night, so the
+story is told, he chanced to enter an arbour in the palace gardens, and
+there discovered her in the arms of her lover.
+
+His vengeance was swift and terrible. Mons was arrested the same night
+in his rooms, and dragged fainting into the Tsar's presence, where he
+confessed his disloyalty. A few days later he was beheaded, at the very
+moment when the Empress was dancing a minuet with her ladies, a smile on
+her lips, whatever grief was in her heart. The following day she was
+driven by her husband past the scaffold where her lover's dead body was
+exposed to public view--so close, in fact, that her dress brushed
+against it; but, without turning her head, she kept up a smiling
+conversation with the perpetrator of this outrage on her feelings.
+
+Still not content with his revenge, Peter next placed the dead man's
+head, enclosed in a bottle of spirits of wine, in a prominent place in
+the Empress's apartments; and when she still smilingly ignored its
+horrible proximity, his anger, hitherto repressed, blazed forth
+fiercely. With a blow of his strong fist he shattered a priceless
+Venetian vase, shouting, "Thus will I treat thee and thine"--to which
+she calmly responded, "You have broken one of the chief ornaments of
+your palace; do you think you have increased its charm?"
+
+For a time Peter refused to be propitiated; he would not speak to his
+wife, or share her meals or her room. But she had "tamed the tiger" many
+a time before, and she was able to do it again. Within two months she
+had won her way back into full favour, and was once more the Tsar's
+dearest _Katierinoushka._
+
+A month later Peter was dead, carrying his love for his peasant-Empress
+to the grave, and Catherine was reigning in his stead, able at last to
+conduct her amours openly--spending her nights in shameless orgies with
+her lovers, and leaving the rascally Menshikoff to do the ruling, until
+death brought her amazing career to an end within sixteen months of
+mounting her throne.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE "BONNIE PRINCE'S" BRIDE
+
+
+In the pageant of our history there are few more attractive figures than
+that of "Bonnie Prince Charlie," the "yellow-haired laddie" whose blue
+eyes made a slave of every woman who came under their magic, and whose
+genial, unaffected manners turned the veriest coward into a hero, ready
+to follow him to the death in that year of ill-fated romance, "the
+forty-five."
+
+The very name of the "Bonnie Prince," the hope of the fallen Stuarts,
+the idol of Scotland--leading a forlorn hope with laughter on his lips,
+now riding proudly at the head of his rabble army, now a fugitive
+Ishmael among the hills and caves of the Highlands, but ever the last to
+lose heart--has a magic still to quicken the pulses. That later years
+proved the idol's feet to be of clay, that he fell from his pedestal to
+end his days an object of contempt and derision, only served to those
+who knew him in the pride of his youth to mingle pity with the glamour
+of romance that still surrounds his name.
+
+In the year 1772, when this story opens, Charles Edward, Count of
+Albany, had already travelled far on the downward road that led from
+the glory of Prestonpans to his drunkard's grave. A pitiful pensioner of
+France, who had known the ignominy of wearing fetters in a French
+prison, a social outcast whose Royal pretensions were at best the
+subject of an amused tolerance, the "laddie of the yellow hair" had
+fallen so low that the brandy bottle, which was his constant companion
+night and day, was his only solace.
+
+Picture him at this period, and mark the pathetic change which less than
+thirty years had wrought in the Stuart "darling" of "the forty-five,"
+when many a proud lady of Scotland would have given her life for a smile
+from his bonnie face. A middle-aged man with dropsy in his limbs, and
+with the bloated face of the drunkard; "dull, thick, silent-looking
+lips, of purplish red scarce redder than the skin; pale blue eyes
+tending to a watery greyness, leaden, vague, sad, but with angry
+streakings of red; something inexpressibly sad, gloomy, helpless,
+vacant, and debased in the whole face."
+
+Such was this "Young Chevalier" when France took it into her head to
+make a pawn of him in the political chess-game with England. As a man he
+was beneath contempt; as a "King"--well, he was a _Roi pour rire_; but
+at least the Royal House he represented might be made a useful weapon
+against the arrogant Hanoverian who sat on his father's throne. That
+rival stock must not be allowed to die out; his claims might weigh
+heavily some day in the scale between France and England. Charles Edward
+must marry, and provide a worthier successor to his empty honours.
+
+And thus it was that France came to the exiled Prince with the
+seductive offer of a pretty bride and a pension of forty thousand crowns
+a year. The besotted Charles jumped at the offer; left his brandy
+bottle, and, with the alacrity of a youthful lover, rushed away to woo
+and win the bride who had been chosen for him.
+
+And never surely was there such a grotesque wooing. Charles was a
+physical wreck of fifty-two; his bride-elect had only seen nineteen
+summers. The daughter of Prince Gustav Adolf of Stolberg and the
+Countess of Horn, Princess Louise was kin to many of the greatest houses
+in Europe, from the Colonnas and Orsinis to the Hohenzollerns and
+Bruces. In blood she was thus at least a match for her Stuart
+bridegroom.
+
+She had spent some years in the seclusion of a monastery, and had
+emerged for her undesired trip to the altar a young woman of rare beauty
+and charm, with glorious brown eyes, the delicate tint of the wild rose
+in her dimpled cheeks, a wealth of golden hair, and a figure every line
+and movement of which was instinct with beauty and grace. She was a
+fresh, unspoilt child, bubbling with gaiety and the joy of life, and her
+dainty little head was full of the romance of sweet nineteen.
+
+Such then was the singularly contrasted couple--"Beauty and the Beast"
+they were dubbed by many--who stood together at the altar at Macerata on
+Good Friday of the year 1772--the bridegroom, "looking hideous in his
+wedding suit of crimson silk," in flaming contrast to the virginal white
+of his pretty victim. It needed no such day of ill-omen as a Friday to
+inaugurate a union which could not have been otherwise than
+disastrous--the union of a beautiful, romantic girl eager to exploit the
+world of freedom and of pleasure, and a drink-sodden man old enough to
+be her father, for whom life had long lost all its illusions.
+
+It is true that for a time Charles Edward was drawn from his bottle by
+the lure of a pretty and winsome wife, who should, if any power on earth
+could, have made a man again of him. She laughed, indeed, at his maudlin
+tales of past heroism and adventure in love and battle; to her he was a
+plaster hero, and she let him know it. She was "mated to a clown," and a
+drunken clown to boot--and, well, she would make the best of a bad
+bargain. If her husband was the sorriest lover who ever poured
+thick-voiced flatteries into a girl-wife's ears, there were others,
+plenty of them, who were eager to pay more acceptable homage to her; and
+these men--poets, courtiers, great men in art and letters--flocked to
+her _salon_ to bask in her beauty and to be charmed by her wit.
+
+After all, she was a Queen, although she wore no crown. She had a Court,
+although no Royalties graced it. From the Pope to the King of France, no
+monarch in Europe would recognise her husband's kingship. But at such
+neglect, the offspring of jealousy, of course, she only smiled. She
+could indeed have been moderately happy in her girlish, light-hearted
+way, if her husband had not been such an impossible person.
+
+As for Charles Edward, he soon wearied of a bride who did nothing but
+laugh at him, and who was so ready to escape from his obnoxious presence
+to the company of more congenial admirers. He returned to his brandy
+bottle, and alternated between a fuddled brain and moods of wild
+jealousy. He would not allow his wife to leave the door without his
+escort; if she refused to accompany him, he turned the key in her
+bedroom door, to which the only access was through his own room.
+
+He took her occasionally to the theatre or opera, his brandy bottle
+always making a third for company. Before the performance was half
+through he was snoring stertorously on the couch which he insisted on
+having in his box; and, more often than not, was borne to his carriage
+for the journey home helplessly drunk. And this within the first year of
+his wedded life.
+
+If any woman had excuse for seeking elsewhere the love she could not
+find in her husband it was Louise of Albany. There were dames in plenty
+in Rome (where they were now living) who, not content with devoted
+husbands, had their _cisibeos_ to play the lover to them; but Louise
+sought no such questionable escape from her unhappiness. Her books and
+the clever men who thronged her _salon_ were all the solace she asked;
+and under temptation such as few women of that country and day would
+have resisted, she carried the shield of a blameless life.
+
+From Rome the Countess and her husband fared to Florence in 1774; and
+here matters went from bad to worse. Charles was now seldom sober day
+or night; and his jealousy often found expression in filthy abuse and
+cowardly assaults. Hitherto he had been simply disgusting; now he was a
+constant menace, even to her life. She lived in hourly fear of his
+brutality; but in her darkest hour sunshine came again into her life
+with the coming of Vittorio Alfieri, whose name was to be linked with
+hers for so many years.
+
+At this time Alfieri was in the very prime of his splendid manhood, one
+of the handsomest and most fascinating men in all Europe. Some four
+years older than herself, he was a tall, stalwart, soldierly man,
+blue-eyed and auburn-haired, an aristocrat to his finger-tips, a daring
+horseman, a poet, and a man of rare culture--just the man to set any
+woman's heart a-flutter, as he had already done in most of the capitals
+of the Continent.
+
+He was a spoilt child of fortune, this Italian poet and soldier, a man
+who had drunk deep of the cup of life, and to whom all conquests came
+with such fatal ease that already he had drained life dry of its
+pleasures.
+
+Such was the man who one autumn day in the year 1777 came into the
+unhappy life of the Countess of Albany, still full of the passions and
+yearnings of youth. It was surely fate that thus brought together these
+two young people of kindred tastes and kindred disillusions; and we
+cannot wonder that, of that first meeting, Alfieri should write, "At
+last I had met the one woman whom I had sought so long, the woman who
+could inspire my ambition and my work. Recognising this, and prizing so
+rare a treasure, I gave myself up wholly to her."
+
+Those were happy days for the Countess that followed this fateful
+meeting--days of sweet communion of twin souls, hours of stolen bliss,
+when they could dwell apart in a region of high and ennobling thoughts,
+while the besotted husband was sleeping off the effects of his drunken
+orgies in the next room. To Alfieri, Louise was indeed "the anchor of
+his life," giving stability to his vacillating nature, and inspiring all
+that was best and noblest in him; while to her the association with this
+"splendid creature," who so thoroughly understood and sympathised with
+her, was the revelation of a new world.
+
+Thus three happy years passed; and then the crisis came. One night the
+Prince, in a mood of drunken madness, inflamed by jealousy, attacked his
+wife, and, after severely beating her, flung her down on her bed and
+attempted to strangle her. This was the crowning outrage of years of
+brutality. She could not, dared not, spend another day with such a
+madman. At any cost she must leave him--and for ever.
+
+When morning came, with Alfieri's assistance, the plan of escape was
+arranged. In the company of a lady friend--and also of her husband, now
+scared and penitent, but fearing to let her out of his sight--she drove
+to a neighbouring convent, ostensibly to inspect the nuns' needlework.
+On reaching her destination she ran up the convent steps, entered the
+building, and the door was slammed and bolted behind her in the very
+face of Charles Edward, who had followed as fast as his dropsical legs
+would carry him up the steps. The Prince, blazing at such an outrage,
+hammered fiercely at the door until at last the Lady Abbess herself
+showed her face at the grating, and told him in no ambiguous words that
+he would not be allowed to enter! His wife had come to her for
+protection; and if he had any grievance he had better appeal to the Duke
+of Tuscany.
+
+Thus ended the tragic union of the "Bonnie Prince" and his Countess.
+Emancipation had come at last; and, while Louise was now free to devote
+her life to her beloved Alfieri, her brutal husband was left for eight
+years to the company of his bottle and the ministrations of his natural
+daughter, until a drunkard's grave at Frascati closed over his mis-spent
+life. The pity and the tragedy of it!
+
+Louise of Albany and her poet-lover were now free to link their lives at
+the altar--but no such thought seems to have entered the head of either.
+They were perfectly happy without the bond of the wedding-ring, of which
+the Countess had such terrible memories; and together they walked
+through life, happy in each other and indifferent to the world's
+opinion.
+
+Now in Florence, now in Rome; living together in Alsace, drifting to
+Paris; and, when the Revolution drove them from the French capital,
+seeking refuge in London, where we find the uncrowned Queen of England
+chatting amicably with the "usurper" George in the Royal box at the
+opera--always inseparable, and Louise always clinging to the shreds of
+her Royal dignity, with a throne in her ante-room, and "Your Majesty"
+on her servants' lips. Thus passed the careless, happy years for
+Countess and poet until, in 1803, Alfieri followed the "Bonnie Prince"
+behind the veil, and left a desolate Louise to moan amid her tears,
+"There is no more happiness for me."
+
+But Louise was not left even now without the solace of a man's love,
+which seemed as indispensable to her nature as the air she breathed.
+Before Alfieri had been many months in his Florence tomb his place by
+the Countess's side had been taken by Francois Xavier Fabre, a
+good-looking painter of only moderate gifts, whose handsome face,
+plausible tongue, and sunny disposition soon made a captive of her
+middle-aged heart. At the time when Fabre came thus into her life Madame
+la Comtesse had passed her fiftieth birthday--youth and beauty had taken
+wings; and passion (if ever she had any--for her relations with Alfieri
+seem to have been quite platonic) had died down to its embers.
+
+But a man's companionship and homage were always necessary to her, and
+in Fabre she found her ideal cavalier. Her _salon_ now became more
+popular even than in the days of her young wifehood. It drew to it all
+the greatest men in Europe, men of world-wide fame in statesmanship,
+letters, and art, all anxious to do homage to a woman of such culture
+and with such rare gifts of conversation.
+
+That she was now middle-aged, stout and dowdy--"like a cook with pretty
+hands," as Stendhal said of her--mattered nothing to her admirers, many
+of whom remembered her in the days of her lovely youth. She was, in
+their eyes, as much a Queen as if she wore a crown; and, moreover, she
+was a woman of magnetic charm and clever brain.
+
+And thus, with her books and her _salon_ and her cavalier, she spent the
+rest of her chequered life until the end came one day in 1824; and her
+last resting-place was, as she wished it to be, by the side of her
+beloved Alfieri. In the Church of Santa Croce, in Florence, midway
+between the tombs of Michael Angelo and Machiavelli, the two lovers
+sleep together their last sleep, beneath a beautiful monument fashioned
+by Canova's hands--Louise, wife of the "Bonnie Prince" (as we still
+choose to remember him) and Vittorio Alfieri, to whom, to quote his own
+words, "she was beyond all things beloved."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE PEASANT AND THE EMPRESS
+
+
+Many an autocrat of Russia has shown a truly sovereign contempt for
+convention in the choice of his or her favourites, the "playthings of an
+hour"; and at least three of them have carried this contempt to the
+altar itself.
+
+Peter, the first, as we have seen, offered a crown to Martha Skovronski,
+a Livonian scullery-maid, who succeeded him on the throne; the second
+Catherine gave her hand as well as her heart to Patiomkin, the gigantic,
+ill-favoured ex-sergeant of cavalry; and Elizabeth, daughter of Peter
+and his kitchen-Queen, proved herself worthy of her parentage when she
+made Alexis Razoum, a peasant's son, husband of the Empress of Russia.
+You will search history in vain for a story so strange and romantic as
+this of the great Empress and the lowly shepherd's son, whom her love
+raised from a hovel to a palace, and on whom one of the most amorous and
+fickle of sovereign ladies lavished honours and riches and an unwavering
+devotion, until her eyes, speaking their love to the last, were closed
+in death.
+
+It was in the humblest hovel of the village of Lemesh that Alexis
+Razoum drew his first breath one day in 1709. His father, Gregory
+Razoum, was a shepherd, who spent his pitiful earnings in drink--a man
+of violent temper who, in his drunken rages, was the terror not only of
+his home but of the entire village. His wife and children cowered at his
+approach; and on more than one occasion only accident (or Providence)
+saved him from the crime of murder. On one such occasion, we are told,
+the child Alexis, who from his earliest years had a passion for reading,
+was absorbed in a book, when his father, in ungovernable fury, seized a
+hatchet and hurled it at the boy's head. Luckily, the missile missed its
+mark, and Alexis escaped, to find refuge in the house of a friendly
+priest, who not only gave him shelter and protection, but taught him to
+write, and, above all, to sing--little dreaming that he was thus paving
+the way which was to lead the drunken shepherd's lad to the dizziest
+heights in Russia. For the boy had a beautiful voice. When he joined the
+choir of his village church, people flocked from far and near to listen
+to the sweet notes that soared, pure and liquid as a nightingale's song,
+above the rest. "It was," all declared, "the voice of an angel--and the
+face of an angel," for Alexis was as beautiful in those days as any
+child of picture or of dreams.
+
+One day a splendidly dressed stranger chanced to enter the Lemesh church
+during Mass--none other than Colonel Vishnevsky, a great Court official,
+who was on his way back to Moscow from a diplomatic mission; and he
+listened entranced to a voice sweeter than any he had ever heard. The
+service over, he made the acquaintance of the young chorister,
+interviewed his guardian, the "good Samaritan" priest, and persuaded him
+to allow the boy to accompany him to the capital. Thus the shepherd's
+son took weeping farewell of the good priest, of his mother, and of his
+brothers and sisters; and a few weeks later the Empress and her ladies
+were listening enchanted to his voice in the Imperial choir at
+Moscow--but none with more delight than the Princess Elizabeth, daughter
+of Peter the Great, to whom Alexis' beauty appealed even more strongly
+than his sweet singing.
+
+Elizabeth, true daughter of her father, had already, young as she was,
+counted her lovers by the score--lovers chosen indiscriminately, from
+Royal princes to grooms and common soldiers. She was already sated with
+the licence of the most dissolute Court of Europe, and to her the young
+Cossack of the beautiful face and voice, and rustic innocence, opened a
+new and seductive vista of pleasure. She lost her heart to him, had him
+transferred to her own Court as her favourite singer, and, within a few
+years, gave him charge of her purse and her properties.
+
+The shepherd's son was now not only lover-elect, but principal
+"minister" to the daughter of an Emperor, who was herself to wear the
+Imperial crown. And while Alexis was thus luxuriating amid the splendour
+of a Court, he by no means forgot the humble relatives he had left
+behind in his native village. His father was dead; his mother was
+reduced for a time to such a depth of destitution that she had to beg
+her bread from door to door. His sisters had found husbands for
+themselves in their own rank; and the favourite of an Imperial Princess
+had for brothers-in-law a tailor, a weaver, and a shepherd. When news
+came to Alexis of his mother's destitution he had sent her a sum of
+money sufficient to install her in comfort as an innkeeper: the first of
+many kindnesses which were to work a startling transformation in the
+fortunes of the Razoum family.
+
+Events now hurried quickly. The Empress Anna died, and was succeeded on
+the throne by the infant Ivan, her grand-nephew, who had been Emperor
+but a few months when, in 1741, a _coup d'etat_ gave the crown to
+Elizabeth, mistress of the Lemesh peasant. Alexis was now husband in all
+but name of the Empress of all the Russias; honours and riches were
+showered on him; he was General, Grandmaster of the Hounds, Chief
+Gentleman of the Bedchamber, and lord of large estates yielding regal
+revenues.
+
+But all his grandeur was powerless to spoil the man, who still remained
+the simple peasant who, so many years earlier, had left his low-born
+mother with streaming eyes. His great ambition now was to share his
+good-fortune with her. She must exchange her village inn for the
+luxuries and splendours of a palace. And thus it was that one day a
+splendid carriage, with gay-liveried postillions, dashed up to the door
+of the Lemesh inn and carried off the simple peasant woman, her youngest
+son, Cyril, and one of her daughters, to the open-mouthed amazement of
+the villagers. At the entrance to the capital she was received by a
+magnificently attired gentleman, in whom she failed to recognise her son
+Alexis, until he showed her a birthmark on his body.
+
+Picture now the peasant-woman sumptuously lodged in the Moscow palace,
+decked in all the finery of silks and laces and jewels, receiving the
+respectful homage of high Court officials, caressed and petted by an
+Empress, while her splendid son looks smilingly on, as proud of his
+cottage-mother as if she were a Princess of the Blood Royal. That the
+innkeeper was not happy in her gilded cage, that her thoughts often
+wandered longingly to her cronies and the simple life of the village, is
+not to be wondered at.
+
+It was all very well for such a fine gentleman as her son, Alexis; but
+for a poor, simple-minded woman like herself--well, she was too old for
+such a transplanting. And we can imagine her relief when, on the removal
+of the Court to St Petersburg, she was allowed to bring her visit to an
+end and to return to her inn with wonderful stories of all she had seen.
+Her son and daughter, however, elected to remain. As for Cyril, a
+handsome youth, almost young enough to be his brother's son, he was
+quick to win his way into the favour of the Empress. Before he had been
+many months at Court he was made a Count and Gentleman of the
+Bedchamber. He was given for bride a grand-niece of Elizabeth; and at
+twenty-two he was Viceroy of the Ukraine, virtual sovereign of a kingdom
+of his own, with his peasant-mother, who declined to share his palace,
+comfortably installed in a modest house near his gates.
+
+Cyril, in fact, was to his last day as unspoiled by his unaccustomed
+grandeur as his brother Alexis. Each was ready at any moment to turn
+from the obsequious homage of nobles to hobnob with a peasant friend or
+relative. How utterly devoid of false pride Alexis was is proved by the
+following anecdote. One day when, in company with the Empress, he was
+paying a visit to Count Loewenwolde, he rushed from Elizabeth's side to
+fling his arms round the neck of one of his host's footmen. "Are you
+mad, Alexis?" exclaimed the Empress, in her astonishment. "What do you
+mean by such senseless behaviour?" "I am not mad at all," answered the
+favourite. "He is an old friend of mine."
+
+But although no man ever deposed the shepherd from the first place in
+Elizabeth's favour, it must not be imagined that he was her only lover.
+The daughter of the hot-blooded Peter and the lusty scullery wench had
+always as great a passion for men as the second Catherine, who had
+almost as many favourites in her boudoir as gowns in her wardrobes. She
+had her lovers before she was emancipated from the schoolroom; and not
+the least favoured of them, it is said, was her own nephew, Peter the
+Second, whom she would no doubt have married if it had been possible.
+
+She turned her back on one great alliance after another, preferring her
+freedom to a wedding-ring that brought no love with it; and she found
+her pleasure alike among the gentlemen of the Court and among her own
+servants. In the long list of her favourites we find a General
+succeeded by a Sergeant; Boutourlin, the handsome courtier, giving place
+to Lialin, the sailor; and Count Shouvalov retiring in favour of
+Voytshinsky, the coachman. Thus one liaison succeeded another from
+girlhood to middle-age--indeed long after she had passed the altar. But
+through all these varying attachments her heart remained constant to her
+shepherd-lover, to whom she was ever the devoted wife, and, when he was
+ill, the tenderest of nurses. To please him, she even accompanied him on
+a visit to his native village, smiling graciously on his humble friends
+of other days, and partaking of the hospitality of the poorest
+cottagers; while on all who had befriended him in the days of his
+obscurity she lavished her favours.
+
+Of one man who had been thus kind she made a General on the spot; the
+friendly priest was given a highly paid post at Court; high rank in the
+army was given to many of his humble relatives; and a husband was found
+for a favourite niece in Count Ryoumin, the Chancellor's son.
+
+As for Alexis himself, nothing was too good for him. Although he had
+probably never handled a gun in his life she made him Field-Marshal and
+head of her army; and, at her request, Charles VII. dubbed him Count of
+the Holy Roman Empire, a distinction which Gregory Orloff in later years
+prized more than all the honours Catherine II. showered on him; while
+the estates of which she made him lord were a small kingdom in
+themselves. Alexis, the shepherd's son, was now, beyond any question,
+the most powerful man in Russia. If he would, he might easily have
+taken the sceptre from the yielding hands of the Empress and played the
+autocrat, as Patiomkin played it under similar circumstances in later
+years. But Alexis cared as little for power as for rank and wealth. He
+smiled at his honours. "Fancy," he said, with his hearty laugh, "a
+peasant's son, a Count; and a man who ought to be tending sheep, a
+Field-Marshal!"
+
+When courtly genealogists spread before him an elaborate family-tree,
+proving that he sprang from the princely stock of Bogdan, with many a
+Grand Duke of Lithuania among his lineal ancestors, he laughed loud and
+long at them for their pains. "Don't be so ridiculous," he said. "You
+know as well as I that my parents were simple peasants, honest enough,
+but people of the soil and nothing else. If I am Count and Field-Marshal
+and Viceroy, I owe it all to the good heart of your Empress and mine,
+whose humble servant I am. Take it away, and let me hear no more of such
+foolery."
+
+Such to the last was the unspoiled, child-like nature of the man who so
+soon was to be not merely the first favourite but husband of an Empress.
+Probably Alexis would have lived and died Elizabeth's unlicensed lover
+had it not been for the cunning of the cleverest of her Chancellors,
+Bestyouzhev, who saw in his mistress's infatuation for her peasant the
+means of making his own position more secure. Elizabeth was still a
+young and attractive woman, who might pick and choose among some of the
+most eligible suitors in Europe for a sharer of her throne; for there
+were many who would gladly have played consort to the good-looking
+autocrat of Russia.
+
+Such a husband, especially if he were a strong man, might seriously
+imperil the Chancellor's position; might even dispense with him
+altogether. On the other hand, he was high in the favour of the
+shepherd's son, who had such a contempt for power, and who thus would be
+a puppet in his hands. Why not make him husband in name as well as in
+fact? It was, after all, an easy task the Chancellor thus set himself.
+Elizabeth was by no means unwilling to wear a wedding-ring for the man
+who had loved her so loyally and so long; and any difficulties she might
+raise were quickly disposed of by her father-confessor, who was
+Bestyouzhev's tool. Thus it came to pass that one day Elizabeth and
+Alexis stood side by side before the village altar of Perovo; and the
+words were spoken which made the shepherd's son husband of the Empress.
+The secrecy with which the ceremony was performed was but a fiction. All
+the world knew that Alexis Gregorovitch was Emperor by right of wedlock,
+and flocked to pay homage to him in his new and exalted character.
+
+He now had sumptuous apartments next to those of his wife; he sat at her
+right hand on all State occasions; he was her shadow everywhere; and
+during his frequent attacks of gout the Empress ministered to him night
+and day in his own rooms with the tender devotion of a mother to a
+child. Two children were born to them, a son and a daughter, the latter
+of whom, after a life of strange romance and vicissitude, ended her
+days in a loathsome dungeon of the fortress of Saints Peter and Paul,
+the victim of Catherine II.'s vengeance--miserably drowned, so one story
+goes, by an inundation of her cell.
+
+On Elizabeth's death, in the year 1762, her husband was glad to retire
+from the Court in which he had for so long played so splendid a part.
+"None but myself," he said, "can know with what pleasure I leave a
+sphere to which I was not born, and to which only my love for my dear
+mistress made me resigned. I should have been happier far with her in
+some small cottage far removed from the gilded slavery of Court life."
+He was happy enough now leading the peaceful life of a country gentleman
+on one of his many estates.
+
+Catherine II. had mounted the throne of Russia--the Empress who,
+according to Masson, had but two passions, which she carried to the
+grave--"her love of man, which degenerated into libertinage; and her
+love of glory, which degenerated into vanity." A woman with the brain of
+a man and the heart of a courtesan, Catherine's fickle affection had
+flitted from one lover to another, until now it had settled on Gregory
+Orloff, the handsomest man in her dominions, whom she was more than half
+disposed to make her husband.
+
+This was a scheme which commended itself strongly to her Chancellor,
+Vorontsov. There was a most useful precedent to lend support to it--the
+alliance of the Empress Elizabeth with a man of immeasurably lower rank
+than Catherine's favourite; but it was important that this precedent
+should be established beyond dispute. Thus it was that one day, when
+Count Alexis was poring over his Bible by his country fireside,
+Chancellor Vorontsov made his appearance with ingratiating words and
+promises. Her Majesty, he informed the Count, was willing to confer
+Imperial rank on him in return for one small favour--the possession of
+the documents which proved his marriage to her predecessor, Elizabeth.
+
+On hearing the request, the ex-shepherd rose, and, with words of quiet
+scorn, refused both the request and the proffered honour. "Am not I," he
+said, "a Count, a Field-Marshal, a man of wealth? all of which I owe to
+the kindness of my dear, dead mistress. Are not such honours enough for
+the peasant's son whom she raised from the mire to sit by her side, that
+I should purchase another bauble by an act of treachery to her memory?
+
+"But wait one moment," he continued; and, leaving the room, he returned
+carrying a small bundle of papers, which he proceeded to examine one by
+one. Then, collecting them, he placed the bundle in the heart of the
+fire, to the horror of the onlooking Chancellor; and, as the flames were
+reducing the precious documents to ashes, he said, "Go now and tell
+those who sent you, that I never was more than the slave of my august
+benefactress, the Empress Elizabeth, who could never so far have
+forgotten her position as to marry a subject."
+
+Thus with a lie on his lips--the last crowning evidence of loyalty to
+his beloved Queen and wife--Alexis Razoum makes his exit from the stage
+on which he played so strangely romantic a part. A few years later his
+days ended in peace at his St Petersburg palace, with the name he loved
+best, "Elizabeth," on his lips.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+A CROWN THAT FAILED
+
+Henri of Navarre, hero of romance and probably the greatest King who
+ever sat on the throne of France, had a heart as weak in love as it was
+stout in war. To his last day he was a veritable coward before the
+battery of bright eyes; and before Ravaillac's dagger brought his career
+to a tragic end one May day in the year 1610 he had counted his
+mistresses to as many as the years he had lived.
+
+But of them all, fifty-seven of them--for the most part lightly coming
+and lightly going--only one ever really reached his heart, and was
+within measurable distance of a seat on his throne--the woman to whom he
+wrote in the hey-day of his passion, "Never has man loved as I love you.
+If any sacrifice of mine could purchase your happiness, how gladly I
+would make it, even to the last drop of my life's blood."
+
+Gabrielle d'Estrees who thus enslaved the heart of the hero, which
+carried him to a throne through a hundred fights and inconceivable
+hardships, was cradled one day in the year 1573 in Touraine. From her
+mother, Francoise Babou, she inherited both beauty and frailness; for
+the Babou women were famous alike for their loveliness and for a virtue
+as facile even as that of Marie Gaudin, the pretty plaything of Francois
+I., who left Francois' arms to find a husband in Philip Babou and thus
+to transmit her charms and frailty to Gabrielle.
+
+Her father, Antoine, son of Jean d'Estrees, a valiant soldier under five
+kings, was a man of pleasure, who drank and sang his way through life,
+preferring Cupid to Mars and the _joie de vivre_ to the call of duty. It
+is perhaps little wonder that Antoine's wife, after bearing seven
+children to her husband, left him to find at least more loyalty in the
+Marquess of Tourel-Alegre, a lover twenty years younger than herself.
+
+Thus it was that, deserted by her mother, and with a father too addicted
+to pleasure to spare a thought for his children, Gabrielle grew to
+beautiful girlhood under the care of an aunt--now living in the family
+chateau in Picardy, now in the great Paris mansion, the Hotel d'Estrees;
+and with so little guidance from precept or example that, in later
+years, she and her six sisters and brothers were known as the "Seven
+Deadly Sins."
+
+In Gabrielle at least there was little that was vicious. She was an
+irresponsible little creature, bubbling over with mischief and gaiety,
+eager to snatch every flower of pleasure that caught her eyes; a dainty
+little fairy with big blue "wonder" eyes, golden hair, the sweetest
+rosebud of a mouth, ready to smile or to pout as the mood of the moment
+suggested, with soft round baby cheeks as delicately flushed as any
+rose.
+
+Such was Gabrielle d'Estrees on the verge of young womanhood when Roger
+de Saint-Larry, Duc de Bellegarde, the King's grand equerry, and one of
+the handsomest young men in France, first set eyes on her in the chateau
+of Coeuvres; and, as was inevitable, lost his heart to her at first
+sight. When he rode away two days later, such excellent use had he made
+of his opportunities, he left a very happy, if desolate maiden behind;
+for Gabrielle had little power to resist fascinations which had made a
+conquest of many of the fairest ladies at Court.
+
+When Bellegarde returned to Mantes, where Henri was still struggling for
+the crown which was so soon to be his, he foolishly gave the King of
+Navarre such a rapturous account of the young beauty of Picardy and his
+conquest that Henri, already weary of the faded charms of Diane
+d'Audouins, his mistress, promptly left his soldiering and rode away to
+see the lady for himself, and to find that Bellegarde's raptures were
+more than justified.
+
+Gabrielle, however, flattered though she was by such an honour as a
+visit from the King of Navarre, was by no means disposed to smile on the
+wooing of "an ugly man, old enough to be my father." And indeed, Henri,
+with all the glamour of the hero to aid him, was but a sorry rival for
+the handsome and courtly Bellegarde. Now nearing his fortieth year, with
+grizzled beard, and skin battered and lined by long years of hard
+campaigning, the future King of France had little to appeal to the
+romantic eyes of a maid who counted less than half his years; and the
+King in turn rode away from the Coeuvres Castle as hopelessly in love
+as Bellegarde, but with much less encouragement to return.
+
+But the hero of Ivry and a hundred other battles was no man to submit to
+defeat in any lists; and within a few weeks Gabrielle was summoned to
+Mantes, where he told her in decisive words that he loved her, and that
+no one, Bellegarde or any other, should share her with him. "Indeed!"
+she exclaimed, with a defiant toss of the head, "I will be no man's
+slave; I shall give my heart to whom I please, and certainly not to any
+man who demands it as a right." And within an hour she was riding home
+fast as her horse could gallop.
+
+Henri was thunderstruck at such defiance. He must follow her at once and
+bring her to reason; but, in order to do so, he must risk his life by
+passing through the enemy's lines. Such an adventure, however, was after
+his own heart; and disguising himself as a peasant, with a bundle of
+faggots on his shoulder, he made his way safely to Coeuvres, where he
+presented himself, a pitiable spectacle of rags and poverty, to be
+greeted by his lady with shouts of derisive laughter. "Oh dear!" she
+gasped between her paroxysms of mirth, "what a fright you look! For
+goodness' sake go and change your clothes." But though the King obeyed
+humbly, Gabrielle shut herself in her room and declined point-blank to
+see him again.
+
+Such devotion, however, expressed in such fashion, did not fail in its
+appeal to the romantic girl; and when, a little later, Gabrielle visited
+the Royalist army then besieging Chartres, it was a much more pliant
+Gabrielle who listened to the King's wooing and whose eyes brightened at
+his stories of bravery and danger. Henri might be old and ugly, but he
+had at least a charm of manner, a frank, simple manliness, which made
+him the idol of his soldiers and in fact of every woman who once came
+under its spell. And to this charm even Gabrielle, the rebel, had at
+last to submit, until Bellegarde was forgotten, and her hero was all the
+world to her.
+
+The days that followed this slow awaking were crowded with happiness for
+the two lovers; when Gabrielle was not by her King's side, he was
+writing letters to her full of passionate tenderness. "My beautiful
+Love," "My All," "My Trueheart"--such were the sweet terms he lavished
+on her. "I kiss you a million times. You say that you love me a thousand
+times more than I love you. You have lied, and you shall maintain your
+falsehood with the arms which you have chosen. I shall not see you for
+ten days, it is enough to kill me." And again, "They call me King of
+France and Navarre--that of your subject is much more delightful--you
+have much more cause for fearing that I love you too much than too
+little. That fault pleases you, and also me, since you love it. See how
+I yield to your every wish."
+
+Such were the letters--among the most beautiful ever penned by
+lover--which the King addressed to his "Menon" in those golden days,
+when all the world was sunshine for him, black as the sky was still with
+the clouds of war. And she returned love for love; tenderness for
+passion. When he was lying ill at St Denis, she wrote, "I die of fear.
+Tell me, I implore you, how fares the bravest of the brave. Give me
+news, my cavalier; for you know how fatal to me is your least ill. I
+cannot sleep without sending you a thousand good nights; for I am the
+Princess Constancy, sensible to all that concerns you, and careless of
+all else in the world, good or bad."
+
+Through the period of stress and struggle that still separated Henri
+from the crown which for nearly twenty years was his goal, Gabrielle was
+ever by his side, to soothe and comfort him, to chase away the clouds of
+gloom which so often settled on him, to inspire him with new courage and
+hope, and, with her diplomacy checking his impulses, to smooth over
+every obstacle that the cunning of his enemies placed in his path.
+
+And when, at last, one evening in 1594, Henri made his triumphal entry
+into Paris, on a grey horse, wearing a gold-embroidered grey habit, his
+face proud and smiling, saluting with his plume-crowned hat the cheering
+crowds, Gabrielle had the place of honour in front of him, "in a
+gorgeous litter, so bedecked with pearls and gems that she paled the
+light of the escorting torches."
+
+This was, indeed, a proud hour for the lovers which saw Henri acclaimed
+at "long last" King of France, and his loyal lady-love Queen in all but
+name. The years of struggle and hardship were over--years in which Henri
+of Navarre had braved and escaped a hundred deaths; and in which he had
+been reduced to such pitiable straits that he had often not known where
+his next meal was to come from or where to find a shirt to put on his
+back.
+
+Gabrielle was now Marquise de Monceaux, a title to which her Royal lover
+later added that of Duchesse de Beaufort. Her son, Cesar, was known as
+"Monsieur," the title that would have been his if he had been heir to
+the French throne. All that now remained to fill the cup of her ambition
+and her happiness was that she should become the legal wife of the King
+she loved so well; and of this the prospect seemed more than fair.
+
+Charming stories are told of the idyllic family life of the new King;
+how his greatest pleasure was to "play at soldiers" with his children,
+to join in their nursery romps, or to take them, like some bourgeois
+father, to the Saint Germain fair, and return loaded with toys and boxes
+of sweetmeats, to spend delightful homely evenings with the woman he
+adored.
+
+But it was not all sunshine for the lovers. Paris was in the throes of
+famine and plague and flood. Poverty and discontent stalked through her
+streets, and there were scowling and envious eyes to greet the King and
+his lady when they rode laughing by; or when, as on one occasion we read
+of, they returned from a hunting excursion, riding side by side, "she
+sitting astride dressed all in green" and holding the King's hand.
+
+Nor within the palace walls was it all a bed of roses for Gabrielle; for
+she had her enemies there; and chief among them the powerful Duc de
+Sully, her most formidable rival in the King's affection. Sully was not
+only Henri's favourite minister; he was the Jonathan to his David, the
+man who had shared a hundred dangers by his side, and by his devotion
+and affection had found a firm lodging in his heart.
+
+Between the minister and the mistress, each consumed with jealousy of
+the other, Henri had many a bad hour; and the climax came when de Sully
+refused to pass the extravagant charges for the baptism of the
+Marquise's second son, Alexander. Gabrielle was indignant and appealed
+angrily and tearfully to the King, who supported his minister. "I have
+loved you," he said at last, roused to wrath, "because I thought you
+gentle and sweet and yielding; now that I have raised you to high
+position, I find you exacting and domineering. Know this, I could better
+spare a dozen mistresses like you than one minister so devoted to me as
+Sully."
+
+At these harsh words, Gabrielle burst into tears. "If I had a dagger,"
+she exclaimed, "I would plunge it into my heart, and then you would find
+your image there." And when Henri rushed from the room, she ran after
+him, flung herself at his feet, and with heart-breaking sobs, begged for
+forgiveness and a kind word. Such troubles as these, however, were but
+as the clouds that come and go in a summer sky. Gabrielle's sun was now
+nearing its zenith; Henri had long intended to make her his wife at the
+altar; proceedings for divorce from his wife, Marguerite de Valois, were
+running smoothly; and now the crowning day in the two lives thus
+romantically linked was at hand.
+
+In the month of April, 1599, Gabrielle and Henri were spending the last
+ante-nuptial days together at Fontainebleau; the wedding was fixed for
+the first Sunday after Easter, and Gabrielle was ideally happy among her
+wedding finery and the costly presents that had been showered on her
+from all parts of France--from the ring Henri had worn at his Coronation
+and which he was to place on her finger at the altar, to a statue of the
+King in gold from Lyons, and a "giant piece of amber in a silver casket
+from Bordeaux."
+
+Her wedding-dress was a gorgeous robe of Spanish velvet, rich in
+embroideries of gold and silver; the suite of rooms which was to be hers
+as Queen was already ready, with its splendours of crimson and gold
+furnishing. The greatest ladies in France were now proud to act as her
+tire-women; and princes and ambassadors flocked to Fontainebleau to pay
+her homage.
+
+The last days of Holy Week it had been arranged that she should spend in
+devotion at Paris, and Henri was her escort the greater part of the way.
+When they parted on the banks of the Seine they wept in each other's
+arms, while Gabrielle, full of nameless forebodings, clung to her lover
+and begged him to take her back to Fontainebleau. But with a final
+embrace he tore himself away; and with streaming eyes Gabrielle
+continued her journey, full of fears as to its issue; for had not a seer
+of Piedmont told her that the marriage would never take place; and other
+diviners, whom she had consulted, warned her that she would die young,
+and never call Henri husband?
+
+Two days later Gabrielle heard Mass at the Church of St Germain
+l'Auxerrois; and on returning to the Deanery, her aunt's home, became
+seriously ill. She grew rapidly worse; her sufferings were terrible to
+witness; and on Good Friday she was delivered of a dead child. To quote
+an eye-witness, "She lingered until six o'clock in very great pain, the
+like of which doctors and surgeons had never seen before. In her agony
+she tore her face, and injured herself in other parts of her body."
+Before dawn broke on the following day she drew her last breath.
+
+When news of her illness reached the King, he flew to her swift as his
+horse could carry him, only to meet couriers on his way who told him
+that Madame was already dead; and to find, when at last he reached St
+Germain l'Auxerrois, the door of the room in which she lay barred
+against him. He could not take her living once more into his arms; he
+was not allowed to see her dead.
+
+Henri was as a man who is mad with grief; he was inconsolable.. None
+dared even to approach him with words of pity and comfort. For eight
+days he shut himself in a black-draped room, himself clothed in black;
+and he wrote to his sister, "The root of my love is dead; there will be
+no Spring for me any more." Three months later he was making love to
+Gabrielle's successor, Henriette d'Entragues!
+
+Thus perished in tragedy Gabrielle d'Estrees, the creature of sunshine,
+who won the bravest heart in Europe, and carried her conquest to the
+very foot of a throne.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+A QUEEN OF HEARTS
+
+If ever woman was born for love and for empire over the hearts of men it
+was surely Jeanne Becu, who first opened her eyes one August day in the
+year 1743, at dreary Vaucouleurs, in Joan of Arc's country, and who was
+fated to dance her light-hearted way through the palace of a King to the
+guillotine.
+
+Scarcely ever has woman, born to such beauty and witchery, been cradled
+less auspiciously. Her reputed father was a scullion, her mother a
+sempstress. For grandfather she had Fabien Becu, who left his
+frying-pans in a Paris kitchen to lead Jeanne Husson, a fellow-servant,
+to the altar. Such was the ignoble strain that flowed in the veins of
+the Vaucouleurs beauty, who five-and-twenty years later was playfully
+pulling the nose of the fifteenth Louis, and queening it in his palaces
+with a splendour which Marie Antoinette herself never surpassed.
+
+From her sordid home Jeanne was transported at the age of six to a
+convent, where she spent nine years in rebellion against rules and
+punishments, until "the golden head emerged at last from black woollen
+veil and coarse unstarched bands, the exquisite form from shapeless,
+hideous robe, the perfect little feet from abominable yellow shoes," to
+play first the role of lady's maid to a wealthy widow, and, when she
+wearied (as she quickly did) of coiffing hair, to learn the arts of
+millinery.
+
+"Picture," says de Goncourt, "the glittering shop, where all day long
+charming idlers and handsome great gentlemen lounged and ogled; the
+pretty milliner tripping through the streets, her head covered by a big,
+black _caleche_, whence her golden curls escaped, her round, dainty
+waist defined by a muslin-frilled pinafore, her feet in little
+high-heeled, buckled shoes, and in her hand a tiny fan, which she uses
+as she goes--and then imagine the conversations, proposals, replies!"
+
+Such was Jeanne Becu in the first bloom of her dainty beauty, the
+prettiest grisette who ever set hearts fluttering in Paris streets; with
+laughter dancing in her eyes, a charming pertness at her red lips, grace
+in every movement, and the springtide of youth racing through her veins.
+
+When Voltaire first saw her portrait, he exclaimed, "The original was
+fashioned for the gods." And we cannot wonder, as we look on the
+ravishing beauty of the face that wrung this eloquent tribute from the
+cold-blooded cynic--the tender, melting violet of the eyes, with their
+sweeping brown lashes, under the exquisite arch of brown eyebrows, the
+dainty little Greek nose, the bent bow of the delicious tiny mouth, the
+perfect oval of the face, the complexion "fair and fresh as an
+infant's," and a glorious halo of golden hair, a dream of fascinating
+curls and tendrils.
+
+It was to this bewitching picture, "with the perfume and light as of a
+goddess of love," that Jean du Barry, self-styled Comte, adventurer and
+roue, succumbed at a glance. But du Barry's tenure of her heart, if
+indeed he ever touched it at all, was brief; for the moment Louis XV.
+set eyes on the ravishing girl he determined to make the prize his own,
+a superior claim to which the Comte perforce yielded gracefully.
+
+Thus, in 1768, we find Jeanne Becu--or "Mademoiselle Vaubarnier," as she
+now called herself--transported by a bound to the Palace of Versailles
+and to the first place in the favour of the King, having first gone
+through the farce of a wedding ceremony with du Barry's brother,
+Guillaume, a husband whom she first saw on the marriage morning, and on
+whom she looked her last at the church door.
+
+Then followed for the maid of the kitchen a few years of such Queendom
+and splendour as have seldom fallen to the lot of any lady cradled in a
+palace--the idolatrous worship of a King, the intoxication of the power
+that only beauty thus enshrined can wield, the glitter of priceless
+jewels, rarest laces, and richest satins and silks, the flash of gold on
+dinner and toilet-table, an army of servants in sumptuous liveries, the
+fawning of great Court ladies, the courtly flatteries of princes--every
+folly and extravagance that money could purchase or vanity desire.
+
+Six years of such intoxicating life and then--the end. Louis is lying on
+his death-bed and, with fear in his eyes and a tardy penitence on his
+lips, is saying to her, "Madame, it is time that we should part." And,
+indeed, the hour of parting had arrived; for a few days later he drew
+his last wicked breath, and Madame du Barry was under orders to retire
+to a convent. But her grief for the dead King was as brief as her love
+for him had been small; for within a few months, we find her installed
+in her beautiful country home, Lucienne, ready for fresh conquests, and
+eager to drain the cup of pleasure to the last drop. Nor was there any
+lack of ministers to the vanity of the woman who had now reached the
+zenith of her incomparable charms.
+
+Among the many lovers who flocked to the country shrine of the widowed
+"Queen," was Louis, Duc de Cosse, son of the Marechal de Brissac, who,
+although Madame du Barry's senior by nine years, was still in the prime
+of his manhood--handsome as an Apollo and a model of the courtly graces
+which distinguished the old _noblesse_ in the day of its greatest pride,
+which was then so near its tragic downfall.
+
+De Casse had long been a mute worshipper of Louis' beautiful "Queen,"
+and now that she was a free woman he was at last able to pay open homage
+to her, a homage which she accepted with indifference, for at the time
+her heart had strayed to Henry Seymour, although in vain. The woman
+whose beauty had conquered all other men was powerless to raise a flame
+in the breast of the cold-blooded Englishman; and, realising this, she
+at last bade him farewell in a letter, pathetic in its tender dignity.
+"It is idle," she wrote, "to speak of my affection for you--you know it.
+But what you do not know is my pain. You have not deigned to reassure
+me about that which most matters to my heart. And so I must believe that
+my ease of mind, my happiness, are of little importance to you. I am
+sorry that I should have to allude to them; it is for the last time."
+
+It was in this hour of disillusion and humiliation that she turned for
+solace to de Cosse, whose touching constancy at last found its reward.
+It was not long before friendship ripened into a love as ardent as his
+own; and for the first time this fickle beauty, whose heart had been a
+pawn in the game of ambition, knew what a beautiful and ennobling thing
+true love is.
+
+Those were halcyon days which followed for de Cosse and the lady his
+loyalty had won; days of sweet meetings and tender partings--of a union
+of souls which even death was powerless to dissolve. When they could not
+meet--and de Cosse's duties often kept him from her side--letters were
+always on the wing between Lucienne and Paris, letters some of which
+have survived to bring their fragrance to our day.
+
+Thus the lover writes, "A thousand thanks, a thousand thanks, dear
+heart! To-day I shall be with you. Yes, I find my happiness is in being
+loved by you. I kiss you a thousand times! Good-bye. I love you for
+ever." In another letter we read, "Yes, dear heart, I desire so ardently
+to be with you--not in spirit, my thoughts are ever with you, but
+bodily--that nothing can calm my impatience. Good-bye, my darling. I
+kiss you many and many times with all my heart." The curious may read at
+the French Record Office many of these letters written in a bold,
+flowing hand by de Cosse in the hey-day of his love. The paper is
+time-stained, the ink is faded; but each sentence still palpitates with
+the passion that inspired it a century and a quarter ago.
+
+And with this great love came new honours for de Cosse. His father's
+death made him Duc de Brissac, head of one of the greatest houses in
+France, owner of vast estates. He was appointed Governor of Paris and
+Colonel of the King's own body-guard. He had, in fact, risen to a
+perilous eminence; for the clouds of the great Revolution were already
+massing in the sky, and the _sans-culotte_ crowds were straining to be
+at the throats of the cursed "aristos," and to hurl Louis from his
+throne. Brissac (as we must now call him) was thus an object of special
+hatred, as of splendour, standing out so prominently as representative
+of the hated _noblesse_.
+
+Other nobles, fearful of the breaking of the storm, were flying in
+droves to seek safety in England and elsewhere. But when the Governor of
+Paris was urged to fly, he answered proudly, "Certainly not. I shall act
+according to my duty to my ancestors and myself." And, heedless of his
+life, he clung to his duty and his honour, presenting a smiling face to
+the scowls of hatred and envy, and spending blissful hours at Lucienne
+with the woman he loved.
+
+Nor was she any less conscious of her danger, or less indifferent to it.
+She also had become a target of hatred and scarcely veiled threats.
+Watchful eyes marked every coming and going of Brissac's messengers
+with their missives of love; it was discovered that Brissac's
+aide-de-camp, whose life they sought, was in hiding in her house; that
+she was supplying the noble emigrants with money. The climax was reached
+when she boldly advertised a reward of two thousand louis for a clue to
+the jewellery of which burglars had robbed her--jewels of which she
+published a long and dazzling list, thus bringing to memory the days
+when the late King had squandered his ill-gotten gold on her.
+
+The Duc, at last alarmed for her--never for himself--begged her either
+to escape, or, as he wrote, to "come quickly, my darling, and take every
+precaution for your valuables, if you have any left. Yes, come, and your
+beauty, your kindness and magnanimity. I am ashamed of it, but I feel
+weaker than you. How should I feel otherwise for the one I love best?"
+
+But already the hour for flight had passed. The passions of the mob were
+breaking down the barriers that were now too weak to hold them in check;
+the Paris streets had their first baptism of blood, prelude to the
+deluge to follow; hideous, fierce-eyed crowds were clamouring at the
+gates of Versailles; and de Brissac was soon on his way, a prisoner, to
+Orleans.
+
+The blow had fallen at last, suddenly, and with crushing force. When
+"Louis Hercule Timoleon de Cosse-Brissac, soldier from his birth," was
+charged before the National High Court with admitting Royalists into the
+Guards, he answered: "I have admitted into the King's Guards no one but
+citizens who fulfilled all the conditions contained in the decree of
+formation": and no other answer or plea would he deign to his accusers.
+
+From his Orleans prison, where he now awaited the inevitable end, he
+wrote daily to his beloved lady; and every day brought him a tender and
+cheering letter from her. On 11th August, 1792, he writes: "I received
+this morning the best letter I have had for a long time past; none have
+rejoiced my heart so much. Thank you for it. I kiss you a thousand
+times. You indeed will have my last thought. Ah, my darling, why am I
+not with you in a wilderness rather than in Orleans?"
+
+A few days later news reached Madame du Barry that her lover, with other
+prisoners, was to be brought from Orleans to Paris. He would thus
+actually pass her own door; she would at least see him once again, under
+however tragic conditions. With what leaden steps the intervening hours
+crawled by! Each sound set her heart beating furiously as if it would
+choke her. Each moment was an agony of anticipation. At last she hears
+the sound of coming feet. She flies to the window, piercing the dark
+night with straining eyes. The sound grows nearer, a tumult of trampling
+feet and hoarse cries. A mob of dark figures surges through her gates,
+pours riotously up the steps and through the open door. In the hall
+there is a pandemonium of cries and oaths; the door of her room is burst
+open, and something is flung at her feet. She glances down; and, with a
+gasp of unspeakable horror, looks down on the severed head of her lover,
+red with his blood.
+
+The _sans-culottes_ had indeed taken a terrible revenge. They had
+fallen in overwhelming numbers on the prisoners and their escort; the
+soldiers had fled; and de Brissac found himself the centre of a mob, the
+helpless target of a hundred murderous blows. With a knife for sole
+weapon he fought valiantly, like the brave soldier he was, until a
+cowardly blow from behind felled him to the ground. "Fire at me with
+your pistols," he shouted, "your work will the sooner be over." A few
+moments later he drew his last gallant breath, almost within sight of
+the house that sheltered his beloved.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+United in life, the lovers were not long to be divided. "Since that
+awful day," Madame du Barry wrote to a friend, "you can easily imagine
+what my grief has been. They have consummated the frightful crime, the
+cause of my misery and my eternal regrets--my grief is complete--a life
+which ought to have been so grand and glorious! Good God, what an end!"
+
+Thus cruelly deprived of all that made life worth living, she cared
+little how soon the end came. "I ask nothing now of life," she wrote,
+"but that it should quickly give me back to him." And her prayer was
+soon to be granted. A few months after that night of horrors she herself
+was awaiting the guillotine in her cell at the conciergerie.
+
+In vain did an Irish priest who visited her offer to secure her escape
+if she would give him money to bribe her jailers. "No," she answered
+with a smile, "I have no wish to escape. I am glad to die; but I will
+give you money willingly on condition that you save the Duchesse de
+Mortemart." And while Madame de Mortemart, daughter of the man she
+loved, was making her way to safety under the priest's escort, Jeanne du
+Barry was being led to the scaffold, breathing the name of the man she
+had loved so well; and, however feeble the flesh, glad to follow where
+he had led the way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE REGENT'S DAUGHTER
+
+
+Many unwomanly women have played their parts in the drama of Royal
+Courts, but scarcely one, not even those Messalinas, Catherine II. of
+Russia and Christina of Sweden, conducted herself with such a shameless
+disregard of conventionality as Marie Louise Elizabeth d'Orleans, known
+to fame as the Duchesse de Berry, who probably crowded within the brief
+space of her years more wickedness than any woman who was ever cradled
+in a palace.
+
+It is said that this libertine Duchesse was mad; and certainly he would
+be a bold champion who would try to prove her sanity. But, apart from
+any question of a disordered brain, there was a taint in her blood
+sufficient to account for almost any lapse from conventional standards
+of pure living. Her father was that Duc d'Orleans who shocked the none
+too strait-laced Europe of two centuries ago by his orgies; her
+grandfather was that other Orleans Duke, brother of Louis XIV., whose
+passion for his minions broke the heart of his English wife, the Stuart
+Princess Henriettta; and she had for mother one of the daughters of
+Madame de Montespan, light-o'-love to _le Roi Soleil_.
+
+The offspring of such parents could scarcely have been normal; and how
+far from normal Marie Louise was, this story of her singular life will
+show. When her father, the Duc de Chartres, took to wife Mademoiselle de
+Blois, Montespan's daughter, there were many who significantly shrugged
+their shoulders and curled their lips at such a union; and one at least,
+the Duc's mother, Elizabeth Charlotte, Princess Palatine, was
+undisguisedly furious. She refused point-blank to be present at the
+nuptials, and when her son, fresh from the altar, approached her to ask
+her blessing, she retorted by giving the bridegroom a resounding slap on
+the face.
+
+Such was the ill-omened opening to a wedded life which brought nothing
+but unhappiness with it and which gave to the world some of the most
+degenerate women (in addition to a son who was almost an idiot) who have
+ever been cradled.
+
+The first of these degenerates was Marie Elizabeth, who was born one
+August day in the year 1695, and who from her earliest infancy was her
+father's pet and favourite. His idolatry of his first-born child,
+indeed, is one of the most inscrutable things in a life full of the
+abnormal, and in later years afforded much material for the tongue of
+scandal. He was inseparable from her; her lightest wish was law to him;
+he nursed her through her childish illnesses with more than the devotion
+of a mother; and, as she grew to girlhood, he worshipped at the shrine
+of her young beauty with the adoration of a lover and put her charms on
+canvas in the guise of a pagan goddess.
+
+The Duc's affection for his daughter, indeed, was so extravagant that
+it was made the subject of scores of scurrilous lampoons to which even
+Voltaire contributed, and was a delicious morsel of ill-natured gossip
+in all the _salons_ and cabarets of Paris. At fifteen the princess was
+already a woman--tall, handsome, well-formed, with brilliant eyes and
+the full lips eloquent of a sensuous nature. Already she had had her
+initiation into the vices that proved her undoing; for in a Court noted
+for its free-living, she was known for her love of the table and the
+wine-bottle.
+
+Such was the Duc's eldest daughter when she was ripe for the altar and
+became the object of an intrigue in which her scheming father, the Royal
+Duchesses, the Duc de Saint-Simon, the King himself, and the Jesuits all
+took a part, and the prize of which was the hand of the young Duc de
+Berry, a younger son of the Dauphin, the grandson of King Louis.
+
+Over the plotting and counterplotting, the rivalries and jealousies
+which followed, we must pass. It must suffice to record that the King's
+consent was at last won by the Orleans faction; Madame de Maintenon was
+persuaded to smile on the alliance; and, one July day, the nuptials of
+the Duc de Berry and the Orleans Princess were celebrated in the
+presence of the Royal family and the Court. A regal supper followed;
+and, the last toast drunk, the young couple were escorted to their room
+with all the stately, if scarcely decent, ceremonial which in those days
+inaugurated the life of the newly-wedded.
+
+Seldom has there been a more singular union than this of the Duc
+d'Orleans' prodigal daughter with the almost imbecile grandson of the
+French King. The Duc de Berry, it is true, was good to look upon. Tall,
+fair-haired, with a good complexion and splendid health, he was
+physically, at twenty-four, no unworthy descendant of the great Louis.
+He had, too, many amiable qualities calculated to win affection; but he
+was mentally little better than a clown. His education had been
+shamefully neglected; he had been suppressed and kept in the background
+until, in spite of his manhood, he had all the shyness, awkwardness and
+dullness of a backward child.
+
+As he himself confessed to Madame de Saint-Simon, "They have done all
+they could to stifle my intelligence. They did not want me to have any
+brains. I was the youngest, and yet ventured to argue with my brother.
+Afraid of the results of my courage, they crushed me; they taught me
+nothing except to hunt and gamble; they succeeded in making a fool of
+me, one incapable of anything and who will yet be the laughing-stock of
+everybody."
+
+Such was the weak-kneed husband to whom was now allied the most
+precocious, headstrong young woman in all France; who, although still
+short of her sixteenth birthday, was a past-mistress of the arts of
+pleasure, and was now determined to have her full fling at any cost. She
+had been thoroughly spoiled by her too indulgent father, who was even
+then the most powerful man in France after the King; and she was in no
+mood to brook restraint from anyone, even from Louis himself.
+
+The pleasures of the table seem now to have absorbed the greater part
+of her life. Read what her grandmother, the Princess Palatine, says of
+her: "Madame de Berry does not eat much at dinner. How, indeed, can she?
+She never leaves her room before noon, and spends her mornings in eating
+all kinds of delicacies. At two o'clock she sits down to an elaborate
+dinner, and does not rise from the table until three. At four she is
+eating again--fruit, salad, cheese, etc. She takes no exercise whatever.
+At ten she has a heavy supper, and retires to bed between one and two in
+the morning. She likes very strong brandy." And in this last sentence we
+have the true secret of her undoing. The Royal Princess was, even tat
+this early age, a confirmed dipsomaniac, with her brandy bottle always
+by her side; and was seldom sober, from rising to retiring.
+
+To such a woman, a slave to the senses, a husband like the Duc de Berry,
+unredeemed by a vestige of manliness, could make no appeal. She wanted
+"men" to pay her homage; and, like Catherine of Russia, she had them in
+abundance--lovers who were only too ready to pay court to a beautiful
+Princess, who might one day be Queen of France. For the Dauphin was now
+dead; his eldest son, the Duc de Bourgogne, had followed him to the
+grave a few months later. Prince Philip had renounced his right to the
+French crown when he accepted that of Spain; and, between her husband
+and the throne there was now but one frail life, that of the
+three-year-old Duc d'Anjou, a child so delicate that he might easily not
+survive his great-grandfather, Louis, whose hand was already relaxing
+its grasp of the sceptre he had held so long.
+
+On the intrigues with which this Queen _in posse_ beguiled her days, it
+is perhaps well not to look too closely. They are unsavoury, as so much
+of her life was. Her lovers succeeded one another with quite bewildering
+rapidity, and with little regard either to rank or good-looks. One
+special favourite of our Sultana was La Haye, a Court equerry, whom she
+made Chamberlain, and who is pictured by Saint-Simon as "tall, bony,
+with an awkward carriage and an ugly face; conceited, stupid,
+dull-witted, and only looking at all passable when on horseback."
+
+So infatuated was the Duchesse with her ill-favoured equerry that
+nothing less would please her than an elopement to Holland--a proposal
+which so scared La Haye that, in his alarm, he went forthwith to the
+lady's father and let the cat out of the bag. "Why on earth does my
+daughter want to run away to Holland?" the Due exclaimed with a laugh.
+"I should have thought she was having quite a good enough time here!"
+And so would anyone else have thought.
+
+And while his Duchesse was thus dallying with her multitude of lovers
+and stupefying herself with her brandy bottle, her husband was driven to
+his wits' end by her exhibitions of temper, as by her infidelities. In
+vain he stormed and threatened to have her shut up in a convent. All her
+retort was to laugh in his face and order him out of her apartment.
+Violent scenes were everyday incidents. "The last one," says
+Saint-Simon, "was at Rambouillet; and, by a regrettable mishap, the
+Duchesse received a kick."
+
+The Duc's laggard courage was spurred to fight more than one duel for
+his wife's tarnished fame. Of one of these sorry combats, Maurepas
+writes, "Her conduct with her father became so notorious that His Grace
+the Duc de Berry, disgusted at the scandal, forced the Duc d'Orleans to
+fight a duel on the terrace at Marly. They were, however, soon
+separated, and the whole affair was hushed up."
+
+But release from such an intolerable life was soon coming to the
+ill-used Duc. One day, when hunting, he was thrown from his horse, and
+ruptured a blood-vessel. Fearful of alarming the King, now near the end
+of his long life, he foolishly made light of his accident, and only
+consented to see a doctor when it was too late. When the doctors were at
+last summoned he was a dying man, his body drained of blood, which was
+later found in bowls concealed in various parts of his bedroom. With his
+last breath, he said to his confessor, "Ah, reverend father, I alone am
+the real cause of my death."
+
+Thus, one May day in 1714, the Duchesse found herself a widow, within
+four years of her wedding-day; and the last frail barrier was removed
+from the path of self-indulgence and low passions to which her life was
+dedicated. When, with the aged King's death in the following year, her
+father became Regent of France, her position as daughter of the virtual
+sovereign was now more splendid than ever; and before she had worn her
+widow's weeds a month, she had plunged again, still deeper, into
+dissipation, with Madame de Mouchy, one of her waiting-women, as chief
+minister to her pleasures.
+
+It was at this time, before her husband had been many weeks in his
+grave, that the Comte de Riom, the last and most ill-favoured of her
+many lovers, came on the scene. Nothing but a perverted taste could
+surely have seen any attraction in such a lover as this grand-nephew of
+the Duc de Lauzun, of whom the austere and disapproving Palatine Duchess
+draws the following picture: "He has neither figure nor good-looks. He
+is more like an ogre than a man, with his face of greenish yellow. He
+has the nose, eyes, and mouth of a Chinaman; he looks, in fact, more
+like a baboon than the Gascon he really is. Conceited and stupid, his
+large head seems to sit on his broad shoulders, owing to the shortness
+of his neck. He is shortsighted and altogether is preternaturally ugly;
+and he appears so ill that he might be suffering from some loathsome
+disease."
+
+To this unflattering description, Saint-Simon adds the fact that his
+"large, pasty face was so covered by pimples that it looked like one
+large abscess.'" Such, then, was the repulsive lover who found favour in
+the eyes of the Regent's daughter, and for whom she was ready to discard
+all her legion of more attractive wooers.
+
+With the coming of de Riom, the Duchesse entered on the last and worst
+stage of her mis-spent life. Strange tales are told of the orgies of
+which the Luxembourg, the splendid palace her father had given her, was
+now the scene--orgies in which Madame de Mouchy and a Jesuit, one Father
+Ringlet, took a part, and over which the evil de Riom ruled as "Lord of
+merry disports." The Duchesse, now sunk to the lowest depths of
+degradation, was the veriest puppet in his strong hands, flattered by
+his coarse attentions and submitting to rudeness and ridicule such as
+any grisette, with a grain of pride, would have resented.
+
+When these scandalous "carryings-on" at the Luxembourg Palace reached
+the Regent's ears and he ventured to read his daughter a severe lecture
+on her conduct, she retaliated by snapping her fingers at him and
+telling him in so many words to mind his own business. And to the tongue
+of scandal that found voice everywhere, she turned a contemptuous ear.
+She even locked and barred her palace gates to keep prying eyes at a
+safe distance.
+
+But, although she thus defied man, she was powerless to stay the steps
+of fate. Her health, robust as it had been, was shattered by her
+excesses; and when a serious illness assailed her, she was horrified to
+find death so uncomfortably near. In her alarm she called for a priest
+to shrive her; and the Abbe Languet came at the summons to bring her the
+consolations of the Church. He refused point-blank, however, to give the
+sinner absolution until the palace was purged of the presence of de Riom
+and Madame de Mouchy, the arch-partners in her vices.
+
+To this suggestion the Duchesse, perilous as her condition was, returned
+an uncompromising "No!" If the Abbe would not absolve her--well, there
+were other priests, less exacting, who would; and one such priest of
+elastic conscience, a Franciscan friar, was summoned to her bedside.
+Then ensued an unseemly struggle around the dying woman's bed, in which
+the Regent, Cardinal Noailles, Madame de Mouchy, and the rival clerics
+all played their parts.
+
+While the obliging friar remained in the room awaiting an opportunity to
+administer the last Sacrament, the Abbe and his curates kept watch at
+the bedroom door to see that he did no such thing; and thus the siege
+lasted for four days and nights until, the patient's crisis over, the
+services of the Church were summarily dispensed with.
+
+With the return of health, the Duchesse's piety quickly evaporated. It
+is true that she had had a fright; and, by way of modified penitence,
+she vowed to dress herself and her household in white for six months and
+also to make a husband of her lover. Within a few weeks, de Riom led the
+Regent's daughter to the altar, thus throwing the cloak of the Church
+over the licence of the past.
+
+Now that our Princess was once more a "respectable" woman, she returned
+gladly to her old life of indulgence; until the Duchess Palatine
+exclaimed in alarm, "I am afraid her excesses in drinking and eating
+will kill her." And never was prediction more sure of early fulfilment.
+When she was not keeping company with her brandy bottle, she was gorging
+herself with delicacies of all kinds, from patties and fricassees to
+peaches and nectarines, washed down with copious draughts of iced beer.
+
+As a last desperate effort to reform her, at the eleventh hour, the
+Regent packed de Riom off to his regiment. A few days later, the
+Duchesse invited her father to a sumptuous banquet on the terrace at
+Meudon, at which, regardless of her delicate health, she ate and drank
+more voraciously than ever. The same evening she was taken ill; and
+when, on the following Sunday, her mother-in-law, the Duchess, visited
+her, she found the patient in a deplorable condition--wasted to a
+"shadow" and burning with fever. "She was suffering such horrible pains
+in her toes and under the feet," says the Duchess, "that tears came to
+her eyes. She looked so very bad that three doctors were called in
+consultation. They resolved to bleed her; but it was difficult to bring
+her to it, for her pains were so great that the least touch of the
+sheets made her shriek."
+
+A few days later, in the early hours of 17th July, 1719, the Duchesse de
+Berry passed away in her sleep. The life which she had wasted with such
+shameless prodigality closed in peace; and at the moment when she was
+being laid to rest in the Church of St Denis, Madame de Mouchy, blazing
+in the dead woman's jewels, was laughing merrily over her
+champagne-glass at a dinner-party to which she had invited all the
+sharers in the orgies which had made the Palace of the Luxembourg
+infamous!
+
+The moral of this pitifully squandered life needs no pointing out. And
+on reviewing it one can only in charity echo the words spoken by Madame
+de Meilleraye of another sinner, the Chevalier de Savoie, "For my part,
+I believe the good God must think twice before sending one born of such
+parents to the nether regions."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+A PRINCESS OF MYSTERY
+
+In the spring of the year 1772 the fashionable world of Paris was full
+of speculation and gossip about a stranger, as mysterious as she was
+beautiful, who had appeared from no one knew where, in its midst, and
+who called herself the Princess Aly Emettee de Vlodimir. That she was a
+woman of rank and distinction admitted of no question. Her queenly
+carriage and the graciousness and dignity of her deportment were in
+keeping with the Royal character she assumed; but more remarkable than
+these evidences of high station was her beauty, which in its brilliance
+eclipsed that of the fairest women of Versailles and the Tuileries.
+
+Tall, with a figure of exquisite modelling and grace, her daintily
+poised head crowned with a coronal of golden-brown hair, with a face of
+perfect oval, dimpled cheeks as delicately tinted as a rose, her chief
+glory lay in her eyes, large and lustrous, which had the singular
+quality of changing colour--"now blue, now black, which gave to their
+dreamy expression a peculiar, mysterious air."
+
+Who was she, this woman of beauty and mystery? It was rumoured that she
+was a Circassian Princess, "the heroine of strange romances." She was
+living luxuriously in a fine house in the most fashionable quarter of
+Paris, in company with two German "Barons"--one, the Baron von Embs, who
+claimed to be her cousin; the other, Baron von Schenk, who appeared to
+play the role of guardian. To her _salon_ in the Ile St Louis were
+flocking many of the greatest men in France, infatuated by her beauty,
+and paying homage to her charms. To a man, they adored the mysterious
+lady--from Prince Ojinski and other illustrious refugees from Poland to
+the Comte de Rochefort-Velcourt, the Duke of Limburg's representative at
+the French Court, and the wealthy old _beau_ M. de Marine, who, it was
+said, placed his long purse at her disposal.
+
+But while the men were thus her slaves, the women tossed their heads
+contemptuously at their dangerous rival. She was an adventuress, they
+declared with one voice; and great was their satisfaction when, one day,
+news came that the Baron von Embs had been arrested for debt and that,
+on investigation, he proved to be no Baron at all, but the
+good-for-nothing son of a Ghent tradesman.
+
+The "bubble" had soon burst, and the attentions of the police became so
+embarrassing that the Princess was glad to escape from the scene of her
+brief triumphs with her cavaliers (Von Embs' liberty having been
+purchased by that "credulous old fool," de Marine) to Frankfort, leaving
+a wake of debts behind.
+
+Arrived at Frankfort, the fair Circassian resumed her luxurious mode of
+life, carrying a part of her retinue of admirers with her, and making it
+known that she was daily expecting a large remittance from her good
+friend, the Shah of Persia. And it was not long before, thanks to the
+offices of de Rochefort-Velcourt, she had at her feet no less a
+personage than Philip, Duke of Limburg, and Prince of the Empire, one of
+those petty German potentates who assumed more than the airs and
+arrogance of kings. Though his duchy was no larger than an English
+county, Philip had his ambassadors at the Courts of Vienna and
+Versailles; and though he had neither courtiers, army, nor exchequer, he
+lavished his titles of nobility and surrounded himself with as much
+state and ceremonial as any Tsar or Emperor.
+
+But exalted and serene as was His Highness, he was caught as helplessly
+in the toils of the Princess Aly as any lovesick boy; and within a week
+of making his first bow had her installed in his Castle of Oberstein,
+after satisfying the most clamorous of her creditors with borrowed
+money. That there might be no question of obligation, the Princess
+repaid him with the most lavish promises to redeem his heavily mortgaged
+estate with the millions she was daily expecting from Persia, and to use
+her great influence with Tsar and Sultan to support his claim to the
+Schleswig and Holstein duchies. And that he might be in no doubt as to
+her ability to discharge these promises, she showed him letters,
+addressed to her in the friendliest of terms by these august personages.
+
+Each day in the presence of this most alluring of princesses forged new
+fetters for the susceptible Duke, until one day she announced to him,
+with tears streaming down her pretty cheeks, that she had received a
+letter recalling her to Persia--to be married. The crucial hour had
+arrived. The Duke, reduced to despair, begs her to accept his own
+exalted hand in marriage, vowing that, if she refuses, he will "shut
+himself up in a cloister"; and is only restored to a measure of sanity
+when she promises to consider his offer.
+
+When Hornstein, the Duke's ambassador to Vienna, appears on the scene,
+full of suspicion and doubts, she makes an equally easy conquest of him.
+She announces to his gratified ears her wish to become a Catholic;
+flatters him by begging him to act as her instructor in the creed that
+is so dear to him; and she reveals to him "for the first time" the true
+secret of her identity. She is really, she says, the Princess of Azov,
+heiress to vast estates, which may come to her any day; and the first
+use she intends to make of her millions is to fill the empty coffers of
+the Limburg duchy.
+
+Hornstein is not only converted; he becomes as ardent an admirer as his
+master, the Duke. The Princess takes her place as the coming Duchess of
+Limburg, much to the disgust of his subjects, who show their feelings by
+hissing when she appears in public. Her hour of triumph has
+arrived--when, like a bolt from the blue, an anonymous letter comes to
+Hornstein revealing the story of her past doings in several capitals of
+Europe, and branding her as an "impostor."
+
+For a time the Duke treats these anonymous slanders with scorn. He
+refuses to believe a word against his divinity, the beautiful, high-born
+woman who is to crown his life's happiness and, incidentally, to save
+him from bankruptcy. But gradually the poison begins to work,
+supplemented as it is by the suspicions and discontent of his subjects.
+At last he summons up courage to ask an explanation--to beg her to
+assure him that the charges against her are as false as he believes
+them.
+
+She listens to him with quiet dignity until he has finished, and then
+replies, with tears in her eyes, that she is not unprepared for
+disloyalty from a man who is so obviously the slave of false friends and
+of public opinion, but that she had hoped that he would at least have
+some pity and consideration for a woman who was about to become the
+mother of his child. This unexpected announcement, with its appeal to
+his manhood, proves more eloquent than a world of proofs and
+protestations. The Duke's suspicions vanish in face of the news that the
+woman he loves is to become the mother of his child, and in a moment he
+is at her knees imploring her pardon, and uttering abject apologies. He
+is now more deeply than ever in her toils, ready to defy the world in
+defence of the Princess he adores and can no longer doubt.
+
+It is at this stage that a man who was to play such an important part in
+the Princess's life first crosses her path--one Domanski, a handsome
+young Pole, whose passionate and ill-fated patriotism had driven him
+from his native land to find an asylum, like many another Polish
+refugee, in the Limburg duchy. He had heard much of the romantic story
+of the Princess Aly, and was drawn by sympathy, as by the rumour of her
+remarkable beauty, to seek an interview with her, during her visit to
+Mannheim. Such a meeting could have but one issue for the romantic Pole.
+He lost both head and heart at sight of the lovely and gracious
+Princess, and from that moment became the most devoted of all her
+slaves.
+
+When she returned to Oberstein he was swift to follow her and to install
+himself under her castle walls, where he could catch an occasional
+glimpse of her, or, by good-fortune, have a few blissful moments in her
+company. Indeed, it was not long before stories began to be circulated
+among the good folk of Oberstein of strange meetings between the
+mysterious young stranger who had come to live in their midst and an
+equally mysterious lady. "The postman," it was rumoured, "often sees him
+on the road leading to the castle, talking in a shadow with someone
+enveloped in a long, black, hooded cloak, whom he once thought he
+recognised as the Princess."
+
+No wonder tongues wagged in Oberstein. What could be the meaning of
+these secret assignations between the Princess, who was the destined
+bride of their Duke, and the obscure young refugee? It was a delicious
+bit of scandal to add to the many which had already gathered round the
+"adventuress."
+
+But there was a greater surprise in store for the Obersteiners, as for
+the world outside their walls. Soon it began to be rumoured that the
+Duke's bride-to-be was no obscure Circassian Princess; this was merely
+a convenient cloak to conceal her true identity, which was none less
+than that of daughter of an Empress! She was, in fact, the child of
+Elizabeth, Tsarina of Russia, and her peasant husband, Razoum; and in
+proof of her exalted birth she actually had in her possession the will
+in which the late Empress bequeathed to her the throne of Russia.
+
+How these rumours originated none seemed to know. Was it Domanski who
+set them circulating? We know, at least, that they soon became public
+property, and that, strangely enough, they won credence everywhere. The
+very people who had branded her "adventuress" and hissed her in the
+streets, now raised cheers to the future Empress of Russia; while the
+Duke, delighted at such a wonderful transformation in the woman he
+loved, was more eager than ever to hasten the day when he could call her
+his own. As for the Princess, she accepted her new dignities with the
+complaisance to be expected from the daughter of a Tsarina. There was
+now no need to refer the sceptics to Circassia for proof of her station
+and her potential wealth. As heiress to one of the greatest thrones of
+Europe, she could at last reveal herself in her true character, without
+any need for dissimulation.
+
+The curtain was now ready to rise on the crowning act of her life-drama,
+an act more brilliant than any she had dared to imagine. Russia was
+seething with discontent and rebellion; the throne of Catherine II. was
+trembling; one revolt had followed another, until Pugatchef had led his
+rabble of a hundred thousand serfs to the very gates of Moscow--only,
+when success seemed assured, to meet disaster and death. If the
+ex-bandit could come so near to victory, an uprising headed by
+Elizabeth's own daughter and heiress could scarcely fail to hurl
+Catherine from her throne.
+
+It would have been difficult to find a more powerful ally in this daring
+project than Prince Charles Radziwill, chief of Polish patriots, who was
+then, as luck would have it, living in exile at Mannheim, and who hated
+Russia as only a Pole ever hated her. To Radziwill, then, Domanski went
+to offer the help of his Princess for the liberation of Poland and the
+capture of Catherine's throne.
+
+Here indeed was a valuable pawn to play in Radziwill's game of vengeance
+and ambition. But the Prince was by no means disposed to snatch the bait
+hurriedly. Experience had taught him caution. He must count the cost
+carefully before taking the step, and while writing to the Princess, "I
+consider it a miracle of Providence that it has provided so great a
+heroine for my unhappy country," he took his departure to Venice,
+suggesting that the Princess should meet him there, where matters could
+be more safely and successfully discussed. Thus it was that the Princess
+said her last good-bye to her ducal lover, full of promises for the
+future when she should have won her throne, and as "Countess of
+Pinneberg" set forth with a retinue of followers to Venice, where she
+was regally received at the French embassy.
+
+Here she tasted the first sweets of her coming Queendom--holding her
+Courts, to which distinguished Poles and Frenchmen flocked to pay homage
+to the Empress-to-be, and having daily conferences with Radziwill, who
+treated her as already a Queen. That her purse was empty and the bankers
+declined to honour her drafts was a matter to smile at, since the way
+now seemed clear to a crown, with all it meant of wealth and power. When
+the Venetian Government grew uneasy at the plotting within its borders,
+she went to Ragusa, where she blossomed into the "Princess of all the
+Russias," assumed the sceptre that was soon to be hers, issued
+proclamations as a sovereign, and crowned these regal acts by sending a
+ukase to Alexis Orloff, the Russian Commander-in-Chief, "signed
+Elizabeth II., and instructing him to communicate its contents to the
+army and fleet under his command."
+
+Once more, however, fortune played the Princess a scurvy trick, just
+when her favour seemed most assured. One night a man was seen scaling
+the garden-wall of the palace she was occupying. The guard fired at him,
+and the following morning Domanski was found, lying wounded and
+unconscious in the garden. The tongues of scandal were set wagging
+again, old suspicions were revived, and once again the word
+"adventuress"--and worse--passed from mouth to mouth. The men who had
+fawned on her now avoided her; worse still, Radziwill, his latent
+suspicions thoroughly awakened, and confirmed by a hundred stories and
+rumours that came to his ears, declined to have anything more to do
+with her, and returned in disgust to Germany.
+
+But even this crushing rebuff was powerless to damp the spirits and
+ambition of the "adventuress," who shook the dust of Ragusa off her
+dainty feet, and went off to Rome, where she soon cast her spell over
+Sir William Hamilton, our Ambassador there, who gave her the warmest
+hospitality. "For several days," we learn, "she reigns like a Queen in
+the _salon_ of the Ambassador, out of whose penchant for beautiful women
+she has no difficulty in wiling a passport that enables her to enter the
+most exclusive circles of Roman society."
+
+In Rome she lays aside her regal trappings, and wins the respect of all
+by her unostentatious living and her prodigal charities. She becomes a
+favourite at the Vatican; Cardinals do homage to her goodness, with
+perhaps a pardonable eye to her beauty. But behind the brave and pious
+front she thus shows to the world her heart is growing more heavy day by
+day. Poverty is at her door in the guise of importunate creditors, her
+servants are clamouring for overdue wages, and consumption, which for
+long has threatened her, now shows its presence in hectic cheeks and a
+hacking cough. Fortune seems at last to have abandoned her; and it
+requires all her courage to sustain her in this hour of darkness.
+
+In her extremity she appeals to Sir William Hamilton for a loan, much as
+a Queen might confer a favour on a subject, and Hamilton, pleased to be
+of service to so fair and pious a lady, sends her letter to his Leghorn
+banker, Mr John Dick, with instructions to arrange the matter.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+While the Princess Aly was practising piety and cultivating Cardinals in
+Rome, with an empty purse and a pain-racked body to make a mockery of
+her claim to a crown, away in distant Russia Catherine II. was nursing a
+terrible revenge on the woman who had dared to usurp her position and
+threaten her throne. The succession of revolutions, at which she had at
+first smiled scornfully, had now roused the tigress in her. She would
+show the world that she was no woman to be trifled with, and the first
+victim of her vengeance should be that brazen Princess who dared to
+masquerade as "Elizabeth II."
+
+She sent imperative orders to her trusted and beloved Orloff, fresh from
+his crushing defeat of the Turkish fleet, to seize her at any cost, even
+if he had to raze Ragusa to the ground; and these orders she knew would
+be executed to the letter. For was not Orloff the man whose strong hands
+had strangled her husband and placed the crown on her head; also her
+most devoted slave? He was, it is true, the biggest scoundrel (as he was
+also one of the handsomest men) in Europe, a man ready to stoop to any
+infamy, and thus the best possible tool for such an infamous purpose;
+but he was also her greatest admirer, eager to step into the place of
+"chief favourite" from which his brother Gregory had just been
+dismissed.
+
+When, however, Orloff went to Ragusa, with his soldiers at his back, he
+found that the Princess had already flown, leaving no trace behind her.
+He ransacked Sicily in vain, and it was only when Sir William
+Hamilton's letter to his Leghorn banker came to his hands that he
+discovered that she was in Rome, a much safer asylum than Ragusa. It was
+hopeless now to capture her by force; he must try diplomacy, and, by the
+hands of an aide-de-camp, he sent her a letter in which he informed her
+that he had received her ukase and was anxious to pay due homage to the
+future Empress of Russia.
+
+Such was the "Judas" message Kristenef, Orloff's emissary, carried to
+the Princess, whom he found in a pitiful condition, wasted to a shadow
+by disease and starvation--"in a room cold and bare, whose only
+furniture was a leather sofa, on which she lay in a high fever, coughing
+convulsively." To such pathetic straits was "Elizabeth II." reduced when
+Kristenef came with his fawning airs and lying tongue to tell her that
+Alexis Orloff, the greatest man in Russia, had instructed him to offer
+her the throne of the Tsars, and, as an earnest of his loyalty, to beg
+her acceptance of a loan of eleven thousand ducats.
+
+In vain did Domanski, who was still by her side, warn her against the
+smooth-tongued envoy. She was flattered by such unexpected homage, her
+eyes were dazzled by the near prospect of the coveted crown which was to
+be hers, at last, just when hope seemed dead. She would accept Orloff's
+invitation to go to Pisa to meet him. "As for you," she said, "if you
+are afraid, you can stay behind. I am going where Destiny calls me."
+
+This revolution in her fortunes acted like magic. New life coursed
+through her veins, colour returned to her cheeks, and brightness to her
+eyes, as one February day in 1775 she left Rome, with the devoted
+Domanski for companion and a brilliant escort, for Pisa, where Orloff
+greeted her as an Empress. He gave regal fetes in her honour and filled
+her ears with honeyed and flattering words.
+
+Affecting to be dazzled by her beauty, he even dared to make passionate
+love to her, which no man of his day could do more effectively than this
+handsomest of the Orloffs; and so infatuated was the poor Princess by
+the adoration of her handsome lover and the assurance of the throne he
+was to give her, that she at last consented to share that throne with
+him, and by his side went through a marriage ceremony, at which two of
+his officers masqueraded as officiating priests.
+
+Nothing remained now between her and the goal of her desires, except to
+make the journey to Russia as speedily as possible, and a few hours
+after the wedding banquet we see her in the Admiral's launch, with
+Orloff and Domanski and a brilliant suite of officers, leaving Leghorn
+for the Russian flagship, where she was received with the blare of bands
+and the booming of artillery. The crowning moment arrived when, as she
+was being hoisted to the deck in a gorgeous chair suspended from the
+yard-arm, her future sailors greeted her with thunders of shouts, "Long
+live the Empress!"
+
+The moment she set foot on deck she was seized, handcuffs were snapped
+on her wrists, and she was carried a helpless captive to a cabin. At the
+same moment Domanski was overpowered before he had time to use his
+sword, and made a prisoner.
+
+The Princess's cries for Orloff, her husband and saviour, are met with
+derision. Orloff she is told is himself a prisoner. He has, in fact,
+vanished, his dastardly mission executed; and she never saw him again.
+Two months later the victim of a man's treachery and a woman's vengeance
+is looking with tear-dimmed eyes on "her capital" through a barred
+window of a cell in the fortress of Saints Peter and Paul.
+
+Over the tragic closing of her days we may not dwell long. The scene is
+too pitiful, too harrowing. In vain she implores an interview with
+Catherine, who blazes into anger at the request. "The impudence of the
+wretch," she exclaims, "is beyond all bounds! She must be mad. Tell her
+if she wishes any improvement in her lot to cease the comedy she is
+playing." Prince Galitzin, Grand Chancellor, exerts all his skill in
+vain to force a confession of imposture from her. To his wiles and
+threats alike she opposes a dignified and calm front. She persists in
+the story of her birth; refuses to admit that she is an impostor.
+
+Even when she is flung into a loathsome cell, with bread and water for
+diet, she does not waver a jot in her demeanour of dignity or in her
+Royal claims. Only when she is charged with being the daughter of a
+Prague innkeeper does she allow indignation to master her, as she
+retorts, "I have never been in Prague in my life, and if I knew who had
+thus slandered me I would scratch his eyes out." Domanski, too, proves
+equally intractable; even the promise of marriage to her will not wring
+from him a word that might discredit his beloved Princess.
+
+But although the Princess keeps such a brave heart under conditions that
+might well have broken it, her spirit is powerless against the insidious
+disease that is working such havoc with her body. In her damp, noisome
+cell consumption makes rapid headway. Her strength ebbs daily; the end
+is coming swiftly near. She makes a last dying appeal to Catherine to
+see her if but for a few moments, but the appeal falls on deaf ears.
+When she sends for a priest to minister to her last hours, and, by
+Catherine's orders, he makes a final attempt to wrest her secret from
+her, she moans with her failing breath, "Say the prayers for the dead.
+That is all there is for you to do here."
+
+Four days later death came to her release. Catherine's throne was safe
+from this danger at least, and she was left to dalliance with her legion
+of lovers, while the woman on whom she had wreaked such terrible
+vengeance lay deeply buried in the courtyard of her prison, the very
+soldiers who dug her grave being sworn to secrecy. Thus in mystery her
+life opened, and in secrecy it closed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+THE KING AND THE "LITTLE DOVE"
+
+A savage murmur ran through the market-place of Bergen, one summer
+morning in the year 1507, as Chancellor Valkendorf made his pompous way
+along the avenues of stalls laden with their country produce, his
+passage followed by scowling eyes and low-spoken maledictions.
+
+There could not have been a more unwelcome visitor than this cold-eyed,
+supercilious Chancellor, unless it were his master, Christian, the
+Danish Prince who had come to rule Norway with the iron hand, and to
+stamp out the fires of rebellion against the alien rule that were always
+smouldering, when not leaping into flame. Bergen itself had been the
+scene of the latest revolt against oppressive and unjust taxes, and the
+insolent Valkendorf, who was now taking his morning stroll in the
+market-place, was fresh from suppressing it with a rough hand which had
+left many a smart and longing for vengeance behind it.
+
+But the Chancellor could afford to smile at such evidences of
+unpopularity. He knew that he was the most hated man in Norway--after
+his master--but he had executed his mission well and was ready to do it
+again. And thus it was with an air, half-amused, half-contemptuous, that
+he made his progress this July morning among the booths and stalls of
+the market, with eyes scornfully blind to frowns, but very wide open for
+any pretty face he might chance to see.
+
+He had not strolled far before his eyes were arrested by as strangely
+contrasted a picture as any he had ever seen. Behind one of the stalls,
+heaped high with luscious, many-coloured fruits and mountains of
+vegetables, were two women, each so remarkable in her different way
+that, almost involuntarily, he stood rooted to the spot, gazing
+open-eyed at them. The elder of the two was of gigantic stature,
+towering head and shoulders over her companion, with harsh, masculine
+face, massive jaw, coarse protruding lips, and black eyes which were
+fixed on him in a magnetic stare, defiant and scornful--for none knew
+better than she who the stranger was, and few hated him more.
+
+But it was not to this grim, hard-visaged Amazon that Valkendorf's eyes
+were drawn, compelling as were her stature and her basilisk stare. They
+quickly turned from her, with a motion of contempt, to feast on the
+vision by her side--that of a girl on the threshold of young womanhood
+and of a beauty that dazzled the eyes of the old voluptuary. How had she
+come there and in such company, this ravishing girl on whom Nature had
+lavished the last touch of virginal loveliness, this maiden with her
+figure of such supple grace, the proud little oval face with its
+complexion of cream and roses, the dainty head from which twin plaits
+of golden hair fell almost to her knees, and the eyes blue as violets,
+now veiled demurely, now opening wide to reveal their glories, enhanced
+by a look of appeal, almost of fear.
+
+The Chancellor, who was the last man to pass by a flower so seductively
+beautiful, approached the stall, undaunted by the forbidding eyes of the
+giantess, Frau Sigbrit, by name, and, after making a small purchase,
+sought to draw her into amiable conversation. "No," she said in answer
+to his inquiries, "we are not Norwegian. We come from Holland, my
+daughter and I, and we are trying to earn a little money before
+returning there. But why do you ask?" she demanded almost fiercely,
+putting a protecting arm around the girl, as if she would shield her
+from an enemy. "You are in such a different world from ours!"
+
+Little by little, however, the grim face began to relax under the adroit
+flatteries and courtly deference of the Chancellor--for none knew better
+than he the arts of charming, when he pleased; and it was not long
+before the Amazon, completely thawed, was confiding to him the most
+intimate details of her history and her hopes.
+
+"Yes, my daughter is beautiful," she said, with a look of pride at the
+girl which transfigured her face. "Many a great man has told me
+so--dukes, princes, and lords. She is as fair a flower as ever grew in
+Holland; and she is as sweet as she is fair. She is Dyveke, my "little
+dove," the pride of my heart, my soul, my life. She is to be a Queen one
+day. It has been revealed to me in my dreams. But when the day dawns it
+will be the saddest in my life." And with further amiable words and a
+final courtly salute, Valkendorf continued his stroll, secretly
+promising himself a further acquaintance with the dragon and her "little
+dove."
+
+This was the first of many morning strolls in the Bergen market, in
+which the Chancellor spent delightful moments at Frau Sigbrit's stall,
+each leaving him more and more a slave to her daughter's charms; for he
+quickly found that to her physical perfections were allied a low, sweet
+voice, every note of which was musical as that of a nightingale, a quiet
+dignity and refinement as far removed from her station as her simple
+print frock with the bunch of roses nestling in the white purity of her
+bosom, and a sprightliness of wit which even her modesty could not
+always repress.
+
+Thus it was that, when Valkendorf at last returned to Upsala and the
+Court of his master, Christian, his tongue was full of the praises of
+the "market-beauty" of Bergen, whose charms he pictured so glowingly
+that the Prince's heart became as inflamed by a sympathetic passion as
+his mind by curiosity to see such a siren. "I shall not rest," he said
+to his Chancellor, "until I have seen your 'little dove' with my own
+eyes; and who knows," he added with a laugh, "perhaps I shall steal her
+from you!"
+
+It was in vain that Valkendorf, now alarmed by his indiscretion, began
+to pour cold water on the flames he had lit. Christian had quite lost
+his susceptible heart to the rustic and unknown beauty, and vowed that
+he could not rest until he had seen her with his own eyes. And within a
+month he was riding into Bergen, with Valkendorf by his side, at the
+head of a brilliant retinue.
+
+As the Prince made his way through the crowded avenues of the Bergen
+streets to an accompaniment of scowls punctuated by feeble, forced
+cheers, he cut a goodly enough figure to win many an admiring, if
+reluctant, glance from bright eyes. With his broad shoulders, his erect,
+well-knit figure clothed in purple velvet, his stern, swarthy face
+crowned by a white-plumed hat, Christian looked every inch a Prince.
+
+To-day, too, he was in his most amiable mood, with a smile ready to leap
+to his lips, and many a gracious wave of the hand and sweep of plumed
+hat to acknowledge the grudged salutes of his subjects. He could be
+charming enough when he pleased, and this was a day of high good-humour;
+for his mind was full of the pleasure that awaited him. Even Frau
+Sigbrit's scowl was chased away when his eyes were drawn to her towering
+figure, and with a swift smile he singled her out for the honour of a
+special salute.
+
+When the Prince at last arrived in the market-square, he was greeted by
+a procession of the prettiest maidens in Bergen who, in white frocks and
+with flower-wreathed hair, advanced to pay him the homage of demure
+eyes. But among them all, the loveliest girls of the city, Christian saw
+but one--a girl younger than almost any other, but so radiantly lovely
+that his eyes fixed themselves on her as if entranced, until her cheeks
+flamed a vivid crimson under the ardour of his gaze. "No need to point
+her out," he whispered delightedly to Valkendorf, "I see your 'little
+dove,' and she is all you have told me and more."
+
+Before many hours had passed, a Court official appeared at Frau
+Sigbrit's cottage door with a command from the Prince to her and her
+daughter to attend a State ball the following evening. If the poor
+market-woman had had a crown laid at her feet, her surprise and
+consternation could scarcely have been greater. But she would make a
+bigger sacrifice of inclination than this for the "little dove" who
+filled her heart, and who, she remembered, was destined to be a Queen;
+and decking her in all the finery her modest purse could command and
+with a taste of which few would have suspected she was capable, the
+market stall-keeper stalked majestically through the avenue of gorgeous
+flunkeys, her little Princess with downcast eyes following demurely in
+her wake.
+
+All the fairest women of Bergen were gathered at this ball, the host of
+which was their coming King, but it was to the fruit-seller's daughter
+that all eyes were turned, in homage to such a rare combination of
+beauty, grace, and modesty. Many a fair lip, it is true, curled in
+mockery, recognising in the belle of the ball the low-born girl of the
+market-place; but it was the mockery of jealousy, the scornful tribute
+to a loveliness greater than their own.
+
+As for Prince Christian, he had no eyes for any but the "little dove"
+who outshone all her rivals as the sun pales the stars. It was the maid
+of the market whom he led out for the first dance, and throughout the
+long night he rarely left her side, whirling round the room with her,
+his arm close-clasped round her slender waist, not seeing or indifferent
+to the glances of envy and hate that followed them; or, during the
+intervals, drinking in her beauty as he poured sweet flatteries into her
+ears. As for Dyveke, she was radiantly happy at finding herself thus
+transported into the favour of a Prince and the Queendom of fair women,
+for whose envy she cared as little as for the danger in which she stood.
+
+If anything had remained to complete Christian's infatuation, this
+intoxicating night of the ball supplied it. The "little dove" had found
+a secure nesting-place in his heart. She must be his at any cost. She
+and her mother alone, of all the guests, were invited to spend the rest
+of the night at the castle as the Prince's guests; and when he parted
+from her the following day, it was with vows on his part of undying love
+and fidelity, and a promise on hers to come to him at Upsala as soon as
+a suitable home could be found for her.
+
+Thus easily was the dove caught in the toils of one of the most amorous
+Princes of Europe; but it must be said for her that her heart went with
+the surrender of her freedom, for the Prince, with his ardent passion,
+his strength and his magnetism, had swept her as quickly off her feet as
+she had made a quick conquest of him.
+
+Thus, before many weeks had passed, we find Dyveke installed with her
+mother in a sumptuous home in the outskirts of Upsala, queening it in
+the Prince's Court, and every day forging new fetters to bind him to
+her. And while Dyveke thus ruled over Christian's heart, her
+strong-minded mother soon established a similar empire over his mind.
+With the clever, masterful brain of a man, the Amazon of the
+market-place developed such a capacity for intrigue, such a grasp of
+statesmanship and such arts of diplomacy that Christian, strong man as
+he thought himself, soon became little more than a puppet in her hands,
+taking her counsel and deferring to her judgment in preference to those
+of his ministers. The fruit-seller thus found herself virtual Prime
+Minister, while her daughter reigned, an uncrowned Queen.
+
+When the Prince was summoned to Copenhagen by his father's failing
+health, Frau Sigbrit and her daughter accompanied him, one in her way as
+indispensable as the other; and when King James died and Christian
+reigned in his stead, the women of the Bergen market were installed in a
+splendid suite of apartments in his palace. So hopeless was his
+subjection to both that his subjects, with an indifferent shrug of the
+shoulders, accepted them as inevitable.
+
+For a time, it is true, their supremacy was in danger. Now that
+Christian was King, it became important to provide him with a Queen, and
+a suitable consort was found for him in the Austrian Princess, Isabella,
+sister of the Emperor Charles V., a well-gilded bride, distinguished
+alike for her beauty and her piety. Isabella, however, was one of the
+last women to tolerate any rivalry in her husband's affection, and
+before the marriage-contract was sealed, she had received a solemn
+pledge from Christian's envoys that his relations with the pretty
+flower-girl should cease.
+
+But even Christian's word of honour was seldom allowed to bar the way to
+his pleasure, and within a few weeks of Isabella's bridal entry into
+Copenhagen, Dyveke and her mother resumed their places at his Court, to
+his Queen's unconcealed disgust and displeasure. More than this, he
+established them in a fine house near his palace gates; and when he was
+not dallying there with Dyveke, he was to be found by her side at the
+Castle of Hvideur, of which he had made her chatelaine.
+
+The remonstrances of Valkendorf and his other ministers were made to
+deaf ears; his wife's reproaches and tears were as futile as the
+strongly worded protestations of his Royal relatives. Pleadings,
+arguments, and threats were alike powerless to break the spell Dyveke
+and her mother had cast over him. But Dyveke's day of empire was now
+drawing to a tragic close. One day, after eating some cherries from the
+palace gardens, she was seized with a violent pain. All the skill of the
+Court doctors could do as little to assuage her agony as to save her
+life; and within a few hours she died, clasped to the breast of her
+distracted lover!
+
+Such was Christian's distress that for a time his reason trembled in the
+balance. He vowed that he would not be separated from her even by death;
+he threatened to put an end to his own life since it had been reft of
+all that made it worth living. And when cooler moments came, he swore a
+terrible vengeance against those who had robbed him of his beloved. She
+had been poisoned beyond a doubt; but who had done the dastardly deed?
+
+The finger of suspicion pointed to the steward of his household, Torbern
+Oxe, who, it was said, had been among the most ardent of Dyveke's
+admirers, and had had the audacity to aspire to her hand. It was even
+rumoured that he had had more intimate relations with her. Such were the
+stories and suspicions that passed from mouth to mouth in Christian's
+clouded Court before Dyveke's beautiful body was cold; and such were the
+tales which Hans Faaborg, the King's Treasurer, poured into his master's
+ears.
+
+Hans Faaborg little dreamt that when he was thus trying to bring about
+the downfall of his rival he was sealing his own fate. Christian lent an
+eager ear to the stories of his steward's iniquities; but, when he found
+there was no shred of proof to support them, his anger and
+disappointment vented themselves on the informer. He had long suspected
+Faaborg of irregularities in his purse-holding, and in these suspicions
+found a weapon to use against him. Faaborg was arrested; an examination
+of his ledgers showed that for years he had been waxing rich at his
+master's expense, and he had to pay with his life the penalty of his
+fraud and his unproved testimony.
+
+But Faaborg, though thus removed from his path, was by no means done
+with. Rumours began to be circulated that a strange light appeared every
+night above the dead man's head as he swung on the gallows. The city was
+full of superstitious awe and of whisperings that Heaven was thus
+bearing witness to the Treasurer's innocence. And even the King
+himself, when he too saw the unearthly light forming a halo round his
+victim's head, was filled with remorse and fear to such an extent that
+he had Faaborg's body cut down and honoured with a State funeral.
+
+He was still, however, as far as ever from solving the mystery of
+Dyveke's death; and the longer his desire for vengeance was baffled, the
+more clamorous it became. Although nothing could be proved against
+Torbern Oxe, Christian was by no means satisfied of his innocence, and
+he decided to discover by guile the secret which all other means had
+failed to reveal. He would, if possible, make his steward his own
+betrayer. One day, at a Court banquet, he turned in jocular mood to the
+minister and said, "Tell me now, my dear Torbern, was there really any
+truth in what Faaborg told me of your relations with my beautiful Lady!
+Don't hesitate to tell the truth, which only you know, for I assure you
+no harm shall come to you from it."
+
+Thus thrown off his guard and reassured, the steward, who, like his
+master, had probably drunk not wisely, confessed that he had loved
+Dyveke, and had asked her to be his wife. "But, sire," he added, "that
+was the extent of my offence. I was never intimate with her." During the
+remainder of the banquet Christian was most affable to the indiscreet
+steward, not only showing no trace of resentment, but treating him with
+marked friendliness.
+
+The following day, however, Torbern was flung into prison, and charged,
+not only with his confession, but with the murder of the woman he had
+so vainly loved; and, in spite of the storm of indignation that swept
+over Denmark, the pleadings of the Papal Legate, Arcimbaldo, and the
+tears of the Queen, was sentenced to death for a crime of which there
+was no scrap of evidence to point to his guilt.
+
+This gross act of injustice proved to be the beginning of Christian's
+downfall. His cruelties and oppressions had long made him odious to his
+subjects, and the climax came when a popular uprising hurled him from
+his throne and drove him an exile to Holland. An attempt to recover his
+crown ended in speedy disaster, and his last years were spent, in
+company with his favourite dwarf, in a cell of the Holstein Castle of
+Sondeborg.
+
+As for Sigbrit, the woman who had played such a conspicuous and baleful
+part in Christian's life, she deserted her benefactor at the first sign
+of his coming ruin and ended her days in her native Holland, bemoaning
+to the last the loss of her "little dove," whom she had seen raised
+almost to a throne and had lost so tragically.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+THE ROMANCE OF THE BEAUTIFUL SWEDE
+
+Augustus the Strong, Elector of Saxony and King of Poland, owes his
+place in the world's memory to his brawny muscles and to his conquest of
+women. Like the third Alexander of Russia of later years, he could, with
+his powerful arms, convert a thick iron bar into a necklace, crush a
+pewter tankard by the pressure of a mighty hand, toss a heavy anvil into
+the air and catch it as another man would catch a ball, or with a wrench
+straighten out the stoutest horse-shoe ever forged.
+
+And his strength of muscle was matched by his skill in the lists of
+love. No Louis of France could boast such an array of conquests as this
+Saxon Hercules, who changed his mistresses as easily as he changed his
+coats; the fairest women in Europe, from Turkey to Poland, succeeded
+each other in bewildering succession as the slaves of his pleasure, and
+before he died he counted his children to as many as the year has days.
+
+Of all these fair and frail women who thus ministered to the pleasure of
+the "Saxon Samson," none was so beautiful, so gifted, so altogether
+alluring as Marie Aurora, Countess of Koenigsmarck, the younger of the
+two daughters of Conrad of Koenigsmarck. Born in the year 1668, Aurora
+was one of three children of the Swedish Count Conrad and his wife, the
+daughter of the great Field-Marshal Wrangel. Her elder sister, little
+less fair than herself, found a husband, when little more than a child,
+in Count Axel Loewenhaupt; her brother Philip, the handsomest man of his
+day in Europe, was destined to end his days tragically as the price of
+his infatuation for a Queen.
+
+Betrayed by a jealous woman, the Countess Platen, whose overtures he
+spurned, this too gallant lover of Sophia Dorothea of Celle, wife of the
+first of our Georges, was foully done to death in a corridor of the
+Leine Schloss by La Paten's hired assassins, while she looked smilingly
+on at his futile struggle for life, and gloated over his dying agonies.
+
+On the death of her father, when she was but a child of three, Aurora
+was taken by her mother from her native Sweden to Hamburg, where she
+grew to beautiful young womanhood; and when, in turn, her mother died,
+she found a home with her married sister, the Countess Loewenhaupt. And
+it is at this period of her life that her romantic story opens.
+
+If we are to believe her contemporaries, the world has seldom seen so
+much beauty and so many graces enshrined in the form of woman as in this
+daughter of Sweden. Her description reads like a catalogue of all human
+perfections. Of medium height and a figure as faultless in its exquisite
+modelling as in its grace and suppleness; her hair, black as a raven's
+plumage, and falling, like a veil of night, below her knees, emphasised
+the white purity of face and throat, arms, and hands. Her teeth, twin
+rows of pearls, glistened between smiling crimson lips, curved like
+Cupid's bow. Her face of perfect oval, with its delicately moulded
+features, was illuminated by a pair of large black eyes, now melting,
+now flaming, as mood succeeded mood.
+
+To these graces of body were allied equal graces of mind and character.
+Her conversation sparkled with wit and wisdom; she could hold fluent
+discourse in half a dozen tongues; she played and sang divinely, wrote
+elegant verses, and painted dainty pictures. Her manner was caressing
+and courteous; she was generous to a fault, with a heart as tender as it
+was large. And the supreme touch was added by an entire unconsciousness
+of her charms, and an unaffected modesty which captivated all hearts.
+
+Such was Aurora of Koenigsmarck who, in company with her sister, set
+forth one day to claim the fortune which her ill-fated brother, Philip,
+was said to have left in the custody of his Hanoverian bankers--a
+journey which was to make such a dramatic revolution in her own life.
+
+Arrived at Hanover the sisters found themselves faced by no easy task.
+The bankers declared that they had nothing of the late Count's effects
+beyond a few diamonds, which they declined to part with, unless evidence
+were forthcoming that the Count had died and had left no will behind
+him--evidence which, owing to the secrecy surrounding his murder, it was
+impossible to furnish. And when a discharged clerk revealed the fact
+that the dishonest bankers had actually all the Count's estate, valued
+at four hundred thousand crowns, in their possession, the sisters were
+unable to make them disgorge a solitary mark.
+
+In their extremity, they decided to appeal to the Elector of Saxony, who
+had known Count Philip well and who would, they hoped, be the champion
+of their rights; and, with this object, they journeyed to Dresden, only
+to find themselves again baffled. Augustus was away on a hunting
+excursion, and would not return for a whole month. His wife and mother,
+however, gave them a gracious reception, as charmed by their beauty and
+sweetness as sympathetic in their trouble.
+
+When at last Augustus made his tardy appearance at his capital, the fair
+petitioners were presented to him by the Dowager Electress with words of
+strong recommendation to his favour. "These ladies, my son," she said,
+"have come to beg for your protection and help, to which they are
+entitled both by birth and their merits. I beg that you will spare no
+effort to ensure that justice is done to them."
+
+His mother's pleading, however, was not necessary to ensure a favourable
+hearing from the Elector, whose eyes were eloquent of the admiration he
+felt for the two fairest women who had ever visited his land. Aurora's
+beauty, enhanced by her attitude of appeal, the mute craving for
+protection, was irresistible. From the moment she entered his presence
+he was her slave, as anxious to do her will as any lovesick boy.
+
+And it was to her that, with his courtliest bow, he answered, "Be
+assured, dear lady, that I shall know no rest until your wrongs are
+repaired. If I fail, I myself will make reparation in full. Meanwhile,
+may I beg you and your sister to be my guests, that I may prove how deep
+is my sympathy, and how profound the respect I feel for you."
+
+Thus it was that by the magic of beauty Aurora and her Countess sister
+found themselves installed at the Dresden Court, feted like Queens,
+receiving the caresses of the Court ladies, and the homage of every man,
+from Augustus himself to the youngest page, of whom a smile from their
+pretty lips made a veritable slave. As for the Elector, sated as he was
+with the easy smiles and favours of fair women, he gave to the Swedish
+beauty, from the first, a homage he had never paid to any of her
+predecessors in his affection.
+
+But Aurora was no woman to be easily won by any man. She listened
+smilingly to the Elector's honeyed words, and received his attentions
+with the gracious complaisance of a Queen. When, however, he ventured to
+tell her that "her charms inspired him with a passion such as he had
+never felt for any woman," she answered coldly, "I came here prepared
+for your generosity, but I did not expect that your kindness would
+assume a form to cause me shame. I beg you not to say anything that can
+lessen the gratitude I owe you, and the respect I feel for you."
+
+Here indeed was a rebuff such as Augustus was little prepared for, or
+accustomed to. The beauty, of whom he had hoped to make an easy
+conquest, was an iceberg whom all his ardour could not thaw. He was in
+despair. "I am sure she hates and despises me, while I love her dearer
+than life itself," he confessed to his favourite Beuchling, who vainly
+tried to console and cheer him. He confided his passion and his pain to
+Aurora's sister, whose hopeful words were alike powerless to dispel his
+gloom.
+
+When Aurora held aloof from him, he sent letter after letter of
+passionate pleading to her by the hand of the trusty Beuchling. "If you
+knew the tortures I am suffering," he wrote, "your kindness of heart
+could not resist pitying me. I was mad to declare my passion so brutally
+to you. Let me expiate my fault, prostrate at your feet; and, if you
+wish for my death, let me at least receive my sentence from your own
+sweet lips."
+
+To such a desperate state was Augustus brought within a few days of
+setting eyes on his new divinity! As for Aurora of the tender heart, her
+lover's distress thawed her more than a year of passionate protestations
+could have done. She replied, assuring him of her gratitude, her esteem
+and respect, and begging him to dismiss such unworthy thoughts of her.
+But she had no word of encouragement to send him in the note which her
+lover kissed so rapturously before placing it next his heart.
+
+So alarmed, indeed, was Aurora, that she announced her intention of
+leaving forthwith a Court in which she was exposed to so much danger--a
+project to which her sister gave a reluctant approval. But the Countess
+Loewenhaupt was little disposed to leave a Court where she at least was
+having such a good time; for she, too, had her lovers, and among them
+the Prince of Fuerstenberg, the handsomest man in Saxony, whose devotion
+was more than agreeable to her. She preferred to play the part of
+Cupid's agent--to exercise her diplomacy in bringing together those two
+foolish persons, her sister and the Elector.
+
+And so skilfully did she play her part, appealing to Aurora's pity, and
+assuring Augustus of her sister's love in spite of her seeming coldness,
+that before many weeks had passed Aurora had yielded and was listening
+with no unwilling ear to the vows of her exalted lover, now transported
+to the seventh heaven of happiness. One condition she made, when their
+mutual troth was plighted, that it should, for a time at least, remain a
+secret from the Court, and to this the Elector gratefully assented.
+
+Such was the strange wooing of Augustus and the Countess Aurora, in
+which passion had its response in a pity which, in this case at least,
+was the parent of love.
+
+It was with no very light heart that Aurora set forth to Mauritzburg, a
+few days later, to keep "honeymoon tryst" with Augustus, who had
+preceded her, to make, as she understood, the necessary preparations for
+her reception. With her sister and a mounted escort of the most
+beautiful ladies of the Court, she had ridden as far as the entrance to
+the Mauritzburg forest, when her carriage suddenly came to a halt in
+front of a magnificent palace. From the open door emerged Diana with her
+attendant nymphs to greet her with words of welcome, and to beg her to
+tarry a while to accept the hospitality of the forest gods.
+
+In response to this flattering invitation Aurora left her carriage and
+was escorted in stately procession to a saloon, richly painted with
+sylvan scenes, in which a sumptuous banquet was spread. No sooner were
+she and her ladies seated at the table than, to the strains of beautiful
+music, the god Pan (none other than the Elector himself), with his
+retinue of fawns and other richly and quaintly garbed forest gods, made
+his entry, and took his seat at the right hand of his goddess. Then, to
+the deft ministry of Diana and her satellites, and to the soft
+accompaniment of pipes and hautboys, the feasting began, while Pan
+whispered love to the lady for whom he had prepared such a charming
+hospitality.
+
+The banquet had scarcely come to an end when the jubilant sound of horns
+was heard from the forest. A stag dashed by a window in full flight, and
+Aurora and her ladies, rushing excitedly to the door, saw horses
+awaiting them for the hunt.
+
+In a moment they are mounted, and, gaily laughing, with Pan leading the
+way, they are galloping through the forest glades in the wake of the
+flying stag and the music of the hounds, until the stag, hotly pursued,
+dashes into a lake, in the centre of which is a beautiful wooded island.
+Dismounting, the ladies enter the gondolas which are so opportunely
+awaiting them, and are rowed across the strip of water just in time to
+witness the death of the gallant animal they have been chasing.
+
+The hunt over, Aurora and her ladies are conducted to the leafy heart of
+the island, where, as by the touch of a magician's wand, a gorgeous
+Eastern tent has sprung up, and here another sumptuous entertainment is
+prepared for them. Seated on soft-cushioned divans, in the many-hued
+environment of Oriental luxury, rare fruits and delicacies are brought
+to them in silver baskets by turbaned Turks. The island Sultan now
+appears, ablaze with gems, with his officers little less gorgeous than
+himself, and with deep obeisances craves permission to seat himself by
+Aurora's side, a favour which she was not likely to refuse to a Sultan
+in whom she recognised her lover, the Elector. Troupes of dancing-girls
+follow, and the moments fly swiftly to the twinkling of dainty feet, the
+gliding and posturing of supple bodies, and the strains of sensuous
+music.
+
+Another hour spent in the gondolas, dreamily gliding under the light of
+the moon, and horses are again mounted; and Aurora, with Augustus riding
+proudly by her side, heads the splendid procession which, with laughter,
+and in the gayest of spirits, rides forth to the Mauritzburg Castle at
+the close of a day so full of delights.
+
+"Here," was the Elector's greeting, as he conducted his bride to her
+room with its furnishing of silver and rich damask, and its pictured
+Cupid showering roses on the silk-curtained bed, "you are the Queen, and
+I am your slave."
+
+Such was the beginning of Aurora's reign over the heart of the Elector
+of Saxony--a reign of unclouded splendour and happiness for the woman in
+whom pity for her lover was soon replaced by a passion as ardent as his
+own. Fetes and banquets and balls succeeded each other in swift
+sequence, at all of which Aurora was Queen, the focus of all eyes, and
+receiving universal homage, won no more by her beauty and her position
+as the Elector's favourite than by her sweetness and graciousness to the
+humblest. No mistress of a King was ever more beloved than this daughter
+of Sweden. Even the Elector's mother, a pattern of the most rigid
+propriety, had ever a kind word and a caress for her; his neglected wife
+made a friend and confidante of the woman of whom she said, "Since I
+must have a rival, I am glad she should be one so sweet and lovable."
+
+We must hasten over the years that followed--years during which Augustus
+had no eyes for any other woman than his "uncrowned Queen," and during
+which she bore him a son who, as Maurice of Saxony, was to win many
+laurels in the years to come. It must suffice to say that never was
+Royal liaison conducted with so much propriety, or was marked by so much
+mutual devotion and loyalty.
+
+But it was not in the nature of Augustus the Strong to remain always
+true to any woman, however charming; and although Aurora's reign lasted
+longer than that of any half-dozen of her rivals, it, too, had its
+ending. Within a month of the birth of her son, Augustus, now King of
+Poland, was caught in the toils of another enslaver, the beautiful
+Countess Esterle. Aurora realised that her sun had set, and
+relinquishing her sceptre without a murmur, she retired to the convent
+of Quedlinburg, of which Augustus had appointed her Abbess.
+
+Thus in an atmosphere of peace and piety, beloved of all for her
+sweetness and charity, Aurora of Koenigsmarck spent her last years until
+the end came one day in the year 1728; and in the crypt of the convent
+she loved so well she sleeps her last sleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+THE SISTER OF AN EMPEROR
+
+When Napoleon Bonaparte, the shabby, sallow-faced, out-of-work captain
+of artillery, was kicking his heels in morose idleness at Marseilles,
+and whiling away the dull hours in making love to Desiree Clary, the
+pretty daughter of the silk-merchant in the Rue des Phoceens, his
+sisters were living with their mother, the Signora Letizia, in a sordid
+fourth-floor apartment in a slum near the Cannebiere, and running wild
+in the Marseilles streets.
+
+Strange tales are told of those early years of the sisters of an
+Emperor-to-be--Elisa Bonaparte, future Grand Duchess of Tuscany;
+Pauline, embryo Princess Borghese; and Caroline, who was to wear a crown
+as Queen of Naples--high-spirited, beautiful girls, brimful of frolic
+and fun, laughing at their poverty, decking themselves out in cheap,
+home-made finery, and flirting outrageously with every good-looking
+young man who was willing to pay homage to their _beaux yeux_. If
+Marseilles deigned to notice these pretty young madcaps, it was only
+with the cold eyes of disapproval; for such "shameless goings-on" were
+little less than a scandal.
+
+The pity of it was that there was no one to check their escapades.
+Their mother, the imposing Madame Mere of later years, seemed
+indifferent what her daughters did, so long as they left her in peace;
+their brothers, Kings-to-be, were too much occupied with their own
+love-making or their pranks to spare them a thought. And thus the trio
+of tomboys were left, with a loose rein, to indulge every impulse that
+entered their foolish heads. And a right merry time they had, with their
+dancing, their private theatricals, the fun behind the scenes, and their
+promiscuous love affairs, each serious and thrilling until it gave place
+to a successor.
+
+Of the three Bonaparte "graces" the most lovely by far (though each was
+passing fair) was Pauline, who, though still little more than a child,
+gave promise of that rare perfection of face and figure which was to
+make her the most beautiful woman in all France. "It is impossible, with
+either pen or brush," wrote one who knew her, "to do any justice to her
+charms--the brilliance of her eyes, which dazzled and thrilled all on
+whom they fell; the glory of her black hair, rippling in a cascade to
+her knees; the classic purity of her Grecian profile, the wild-rose
+delicacy of her complexion, the proud, dainty poise of her head, and the
+exquisite modelling of the figure which inspired Canova's 'Venus
+Victrix.'"
+
+Such was Pauline Bonaparte, whose charms, although then immature, played
+such havoc with the young men of Marseilles, and who thus early began
+that career of conquest which was to afford so much gossip for the
+tongue of scandal. That the winsome little minx had her legion of
+lovers from the day she set foot in Marseilles, at the age of thirteen,
+we know; but it was not until Freron came on the scene that her volatile
+little heart was touched--Freron, the handsome coxcomb and
+arch-revolutionary, who was sent to Marseilles as a Commissioner of the
+Convention.
+
+To Pauline, the gay, gallant Parisian, penniless adventurer though he
+was, was a veritable hero of romance; and at sight of him she completely
+lost her heart. It was a _grande passion_, which he was by no means slow
+to return. Those were delicious hours which Pauline spent in the company
+of her beloved "Stanislas," hours of ecstasy; and when he left
+Marseilles she pursued him with the most passionate protestations.
+
+"Yes," she wrote, "I swear, dear Stanislas, never to love any other than
+thee; my heart knows no divided allegiance. It is thine alone. Who could
+oppose the union of two souls who seek to find no other happiness than
+in a mutual love?" And again, "Thou knowest how I worship thee. It is
+not possible for Paulette to live apart from her adored Stanislas. I
+love thee for ever, most passionately, my beautiful god, my adorable
+one--I love thee, love thee, love thee!"
+
+In such hot words this child of fifteen poured out her soul to the Paris
+dandy. "Neither mamma," she vowed, "nor anyone in the world shall come
+between us." But Pauline had not counted on her brother Napoleon, whose
+foot was now placed on the ladder of ambition, at the top of which was
+an Imperial crown, and who had other designs for his sister than to
+marry her to a penniless nobody. In vain did Pauline rage and weep, and
+declare that "she would die--_voila tout!_" Napoleon was inexorable; and
+the flower of her first romance was trodden ruthlessly under his feet.
+
+When Junot, his own aide-de-camp, next came awooing Pauline, he was
+equally obdurate. "No," he said to the young soldier; "you have nothing,
+she has nothing. And what is twice nothing?" And thus lover number two
+was sent away disconsolate.
+
+Napoleon's sun was now in the ascendant, and his family were basking in
+its rays. From the Marseilles slums they were transported first to a
+sumptuous villa at Antibes; then to the Castle of Montebello, at Naples.
+The days of poverty were gone like an evil dream; the sisters of the
+famous General and coming Emperor were now young ladies of fashion,
+courted and fawned on. Their lovers were not Marseilles tradesmen or
+obscure soldiers and journalists (like Junot and Freron), but brilliant
+Generals and men of the great world; and among them Napoleon now sought
+a husband for his prettiest and most irresponsible sister.
+
+This, however, proved no easy task. When he offered her to his favourite
+General, Marmont, he was met with a polite refusal. "She is indeed
+charming and lovely," said Marmont; "but I fear I could not make her
+happy." Then, waxing bolder, he continued: "I have dreams of domestic
+happiness, of fidelity, virtue; and these dreams I can scarcely hope to
+realise in your sister." Albert Permon, Napoleon's old schoolfellow,
+next declined the honour of Pauline's hand, although it held the bait of
+a high office and splendid fortune.
+
+The explanation of these refusals is not far to seek if we believe
+Arnault's description of Pauline--"An extraordinary combination of the
+most faultless physical beauty and the oddest moral laxity. She had no
+more manners than a schoolgirl--she talked incoherently, giggled at
+everything and nothing, mimicked the most serious personages, put out
+her tongue at her sister-in-law.... She was a good child naturally
+rather than voluntarily, for she had no principles."
+
+But Pauline was not to wait long, after all, for a husband. Among the
+many men who fluttered round her, willing to woo if not to wed the
+empty-headed beauty, was General Leclerc, young and rich, but weak in
+body and mind, "a quiet, insignificant-looking man," who at least loved
+her passionately, and would make a pliant husband to the capricious
+little autocrat. And we may be sure Napoleon heaved a sigh of relief
+when his madcap sister was safely tied to her weak-kneed General.
+
+Pauline was at last free to conduct her flirtations secure from the
+frowns of the brother she both feared and adored, and she seems to have
+made excellent use of her opportunities; and, what was even more to her,
+to encourage to the full her passion for finery. Dress and love filled
+her whole life; and while her idolatrous husband lavishly supplied the
+former, he turned a conveniently blind eye to the latter.
+
+Remarkable stories are told of Pauline's extravagant and daring
+costumes at this time. Thus, at a great ball in Madame Permon's Paris
+mansion, she appeared in a dress of classic scantiness of Indian muslin,
+ornamented with gold palm leaves. Beneath her breasts was a cincture of
+gold, with a gorgeous jewelled clasp; and her head was wreathed with
+bands spotted like a leopard's skin, and adorned with bunches of gold
+grapes.
+
+When this bewitching Bacchante made her appearance in the ballroom the
+sensation she created was so great that the dancing stopped instantly;
+women and men alike climbed on chairs to catch a glimpse of the rare and
+radiant vision, and murmurs of admiration and envy ran round the
+_salon_. Her triumph was complete. In the hush that followed, a voice
+was heard: "_Quel dommage!_ How lovely she would be, if it weren't for
+her ears. If I had such ears, I would cut them off, or hide them."
+Pauline heard the cruel words. The flush of mortification and anger
+flamed in her cheeks; she burst into tears and walked out of the room.
+Madame de Coutades, her most jealous rival, had found a rich revenge.
+
+General Leclerc did not live long to play the slave to his little
+autocrat; and when he died at San Domingo, the beautiful widow returned
+to France, accompanied by his embalmed body, with her glorious hair,
+which she had cut off for the purpose, wreathing his head! She had not,
+however, worn her weeds many months before she was once more surrounded
+by her court of lovers--actors, soldiers, singers, on each of whom in
+turn she lavished her smiles; and such time as she could spare from
+their flatteries and ogling she spent at the card-table, with
+fortune-tellers, or, chief joy of all, in decking her beauty with
+wondrous dresses and jewels.
+
+But the charming widow, sister of the great Napoleon, was not long to be
+left unclaimed; and this time the choice fell on Prince Camillo
+Borghese, a handsome, black-haired Italian, who allied to a head as vain
+and empty as her own the physical graces and gifts of an Admirable
+Crichton, and who, moreover, was lord of all the famed Borghese riches.
+
+Pauline had now reached dizzy heights, undreamed of in the days, only
+ten short years earlier, when she was coquetting in home-made finery
+with the young tradesmen of Marseilles. She was a Princess, bearing the
+greatest name in all Italy; and to this dignity her gratified brother
+added that of Princess of Gustalla. All the world-famous Borghese jewels
+were hers to deck her beauty with--a small Golconda of priceless gems;
+there was gold galore to satisfy her most extravagant whims; and she was
+still young--only twenty-five--and in the very zenith of her loveliness.
+
+Picture, then, the pride with which, one early day of her new bridehood,
+she drove to the Palace of St Cloud in the gorgeous Borghese State
+carriage, behind six horses, and with an escort of torch-bearers, to pay
+a formal call on her sister-in-law, Josephine, Empress-to-be. She had
+decked herself in a wonderful creation of green velvet; she was ablaze
+from head to foot with the Borghese diamonds. Such a dazzling vision
+could not fail to fill Josephine with envy--Josephine, who had hitherto
+treated her with such haughty patronage.
+
+As she sailed into the _salon_ in all her Queen of Sheba splendour, it
+was to be greeted by her sister-in-law in a modest dress of muslin,
+without a solitary gem to relieve its simplicity; and--horror!--to find
+that the room had been re-decorated in blue by the artful Josephine--a
+colour absolutely fatal to her green magnificence! It was thus a very
+disgusted Princess who made her early exit from the palace between a
+double line of bowing flunkeys, masking her anger behind an affectation
+of ultra-Royal dignity.
+
+Still, Pauline was now a _grande dame_ indeed, who could really afford
+to patronise even Napoleon's wife. Her Court was more splendid than that
+of Josephine. She had lovers by the score--from Blanguini, who composed
+his most exquisite songs to sing for her ears alone, to Forbin, her
+artist Chamberlain, whose brushes she inspired in a hundred paintings of
+her lovely self in as many unconventional guises. Her caskets of jewels
+were matched by the most wonderful collection of dresses in France, the
+richest and daintiest confections, from pearl embroidered ball-gowns
+which cost twenty thousand francs to the mauve and silver in which she
+went a-hunting in the forest of Fontainebleau. At Petit Trianon and in
+the Faubourg St Honore, she had palaces that were dreams of beauty and
+luxury. The only thorn in her bed of roses was, in fact, her husband,
+the Prince, the very sight of whom was sufficient to spoil a day for
+her.
+
+When, at Napoleon's bidding, she accompanied Borghese to his
+Governorship beyond the Alps, she took in her train seven wagon-loads of
+finery. At Turin she held the Court of a Queen, to which the Prince was
+only admitted on sufferance. Royal visits, dinners, dances, receptions
+followed one another in dazzling succession; behind her chair, at dinner
+or reception, always stood two gigantic negroes, crowned with ostrich
+plumes. She was now "sister of the Emperor," and all the world should
+know it!
+
+If only she could escape from her detested husband she would be the
+happiest woman on earth. But Napoleon on this point was adamant. In her
+rage and rebellion she tore her hair, rolled on the floor, took drugs to
+make her ill; and at last so succeeded in alarming her Imperial brother
+that he summoned her back to France, where her army of lovers gave her a
+warm welcome, and where she could indulge in any vanity and folly
+unchecked.
+
+Matters were now hastening to a tragic climax for Napoleon and the
+family he had raised from slumdom in Marseilles to crowns and coronets.
+Josephine had been divorced, to Pauline's undisguised joy; and her place
+had been taken by Marie Louise, the proud Austrian, whom she liked at
+least as little. When Napoleon fell from his throne, she alone of all
+his sisters helped to cheer his exile in Elba; for the brother she loved
+and feared was the only man to whom Pauline's fickle heart was ever
+true. She even stripped herself of all her jewels to make the way smooth
+back to his crown. And when at last news came to her at Rome of his
+death at St Helena it was she who shed the bitterest tears and refused
+to be comforted. That an empire was lost, was nothing compared with the
+loss of the brother who had always been so lenient to her failings, so
+responsive to her love.
+
+Two years later her own end came at Florence. When she felt the cold
+hand of death on her, she called feebly for a mirror, that she might
+look for the last time on her beauty. "Thank God," she whispered, as she
+gazed, "I am still lovely! I am ready to die." A few moments later, with
+the mirror still clutched in her hand, and her eyes still feasting on
+the charms which time and death itself were powerless to dim, died
+Pauline Bonaparte, sister of an Emperor and herself an Empress by the
+right of her incomparable beauty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+A SIREN OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
+
+When Wilhelmine Encke first opened her eyes on the world one day in the
+year 1754, he would have been a bold prophet who would have predicted
+that she would one day be the uncrowned Queen of the Court of Russia,
+_plus Reine que la Reine_, and that her children would have in their
+veins the proudest blood in Europe. Such a prophecy might well have been
+laughed to scorn, for little Wilhelmine had as obscure a cradle as
+almost any infant in all Prussia. Her father was an army bugler, who
+wore private's uniform in Frederick the Great's army; and her early
+years were to be spent playing with other soldiers' children in the
+sordid environment of Berlin barracks.
+
+When her father turned his back on the army, while Wilhelmine was still
+nursing her dolls, it was to play the humble role of landlord of a small
+tavern, from which he was lured by the bait of a place as French-horn
+player in Frederick's private band; and the goal of his modest ambition
+was reached when he was appointed trumpeter to the King.
+
+This was Herr Encke's position when the curtain rises on our story at
+Potsdam, and shows us Wilhelmine, an unattractive maid of ten, the
+Cinderella of her family, for whom there seemed no better prospect than
+a soldier-husband, if indeed she were lucky enough to capture him. She
+was, in fact, the "ugly duckling" of a good-looking family, removed by a
+whole world from her beautiful eldest sister Charlotte, who counted
+among her many admirers no less exalted a wooer than Prince Frederick
+William, the King's nephew and heir to his throne.
+
+There was, indeed, no more beautiful or haughty damsel in all Potsdam
+than this trumpeter's daughter who had caught the amorous fancy of the
+Prince, then, as to his last day, the slave of every pretty face that
+crossed his path. But Charlotte Encke was much too imperious a young
+lady to hold her Royal lover long in fetters. He quickly wearied of her
+caprices, her petulances, and her exhibitions of temper; and the climax
+came one day when in a fit of anger she struck her little sister, in his
+presence, and he took up the cudgels for Wilhelmine.
+
+This was the last straw for the disillusioned and disgusted Prince, who
+sent Charlotte off to Paris, where as the Countess Matushke she played
+the fine lady at her lover's cost, while the Prince took her Cinderella
+sister under his protection. He took her education into his own hands,
+provided her with masters to teach her a wide range of accomplishments,
+from languages to dancing and deportment, while he himself gave her
+lessons in history and geography. Nor did he lack the reward of his
+benevolent offices; for Wilhelmine, under his ministrations, not only
+developed rare gifts and graces of mind, like many another Cinderella
+before her; she blossomed into a rose of girlhood, more beautiful even
+than her imperious sister, and with a sweetness of character and a
+winsomeness which Charlotte could never have attained.
+
+On her part, gratitude to her benefactor rapidly grew into love for the
+handsome and courtly Prince; on his, sympathy for the ill-used
+Cinderella, into a passion for the lovely maiden hovering on the verge
+of a still more beautiful womanhood. It was a mutual passion, strong and
+deep, which now linked the widely contrasted lives of the King-to-be and
+the trumpeter's daughter--a passion which, with each, was to last as
+long as life itself.
+
+Wilhelmine was now formally installed in the place of the deposed
+Charlotte as favourite of the heir to the throne; and idyllic years
+followed, during which she gave pledges of her love to the man who was
+her husband in all but name. That her purse was often empty was a matter
+to smile at; that she had to act as "breadwinner" to her family, and was
+at times reduced to such straits that she was obliged to pawn some of
+her small stock of jewellery in order to provide her lover with a
+supper, was a bagatelle. She was the happiest young woman in Prussia.
+
+Even what seemed to be a crowning disaster, fortune turned into a boon
+for her. When news of this unlicensed love-making came to the King's
+ears, he was furious. It was intolerable that the destined ruler of a
+great and powerful nation should be governed and duped by a woman of the
+people. He gave his nephew a sound rating--alike for his extravagance
+and his amour; and packed off Wilhelmine to join her sister in Paris.
+
+But, for once, Frederick found that he had made a mistake. The Prince,
+robbed of the woman he loved, took the bit in his teeth, and plunged so
+deeply into extravagant dallying with ballet-dancers and stars of the
+opera that the King was glad to choose the lesser evil, and to summon
+Wilhelmine back to her Prince's arms. One stipulation only he made, that
+she should make her home away from the capital and the dangerous
+allurements which his nephew found there.
+
+Now at last we find Cinderella happily installed, with the King's august
+approval, in a beautiful home which has since blossomed into the
+splendours of Charlottenburg. Here she gave birth to a son, whom
+Frederick dubbed Count de la Marke in his nurse's arms, but who was
+fated never to leave his cradle. This child of love, the idol of his
+parents, sleeps in a splendid mausoleum in the great Protestant Church
+of Berlin.
+
+As a sop to Prussian morality and to make the old King quite easy, a
+complaisant husband was now found for the Prince's favourite in his
+chamberlain, Herr Rietz, son of a palace gardener; and Frederick William
+himself looked on while the woman he loved, the mother of his children,
+was converted by a few priestly words into a "respectable married
+woman"--only to leave the altar on his own arm, his wife in the eyes of
+the world.
+
+The time was now drawing near when Wilhelmine was to reach the zenith of
+her adventurous life. One August day in 1786 Frederick the Great drew
+his last breath in the Potsdam Palace, and his nephew awoke to be
+greeted by his chamberlain as "Your Majesty." The trumpeter's daughter
+was at last a Queen, in fact, if not in name, more secure in her
+husband's love than ever, and with long years of splendour and happiness
+before her. That his fancy, ever wayward, flitted to other women as fair
+as herself, did not trouble her a whit. Like Madame de Pompadour, she
+was prepared even to encourage such rivalry, so long as the first place
+(and this she knew) in her husband's heart was unassailably her own.
+
+Picture our Cinderella now in all her new splendours, moving as a Queen
+among her courtiers, receiving the homage of princes and ambassadors as
+her right, making her voice heard in the Council Chamber, and holding
+her _salon_, to which all the great ones of the earth flocked to pay
+tribute to her beauty and her gifts of mind. It was a strange
+transformation from the barracks-kitchen to the Queendom of one of the
+greatest Courts of Europe; but no Queen cradled in a palace ever wore
+her honours with greater dignity, grace, and simplicity than this
+daughter of an army bandsman.
+
+The days of the empty purse were, of course, at an end. She had now her
+ten thousand francs a month for "pin-money," her luxuriously appointed
+palace at Charlottenburg, and her Berlin mansion, "Unter den Linden,"
+with its private theatre, in which she and her Royal lover, surrounded
+by their brilliant Court, applauded the greatest actors from Paris and
+Vienna. It is said that many of these stage-plays were of questionable
+decency, with more than a suggestion of the garden of Eden in them; but
+this is an aspersion which Madame de Rietz indignantly repudiates in her
+"Memoirs."
+
+While Wilhelmine was thus happy in her Court magnificence, varied by
+days of "delightful repose," at Charlottenburg, France was in the throes
+of her Revolution, drenched with the blood of her greatest men and
+fairest women; her King had lost his crown and his head with it; and
+Europe was in arms against her. When Frederick William joined his army
+camped on the Rhine bank, Wilhelmine was by his side to counsel him as
+he wavered between war and peace. The fate of the coalition against
+France was practically in the hands of the trumpeter's daughter, whose
+voice was all for peace. "What matters it," she said, "how France is
+governed? Let her manage her own affairs, and let Europe be saved from
+the horrors of bloodshed."
+
+In vain did the envoys of Spain and Italy, Austria and England, practise
+all their diplomacy to place her influence in the scale of war. When
+Lord Henry Spencer offered her a hundred thousand guineas if she would
+dissuade her husband from concluding a treaty with France, she turned a
+deaf ear to all his pleading and arguments. Such influence as she
+possessed should be exercised in the interests of peace, and thus it was
+that the vacillating King deserted his allies, and signed the Treaty of
+Bale, in 1795.
+
+Such was the triumphant issue of Madame Rietz's intervention in the
+affairs of Europe; such the proof she gave to the world of her conquest
+of a King. It was thus with a light heart that she turned her back on
+the Rhine camp; and with her husband's children and a splendid retinue
+set out on her journey to Italy, to see which was the greatest ambition
+of her life. At the Austrian Court she was coldly received, it is true,
+thanks to her part in the Treaty of Bale; but in Italy she was greeted
+as a Queen. At Naples Queen Caroline received her as a sister; the
+trumpeter's daughter was the brilliant centre of fetes and banquets and
+receptions such as might have gratified the vanity of an Empress: while
+at Florence she spent days of ideal happiness under the blue sky of
+Italy and among her beauties of Nature and Art.
+
+It was at Venice that she wrote to her King lover, "Your Majesty knows
+well that, for myself, I place no value on the foolish vanities of Court
+etiquette; but I am placed in an awkward position by my daughter being
+raised to the rank of Countess, while I am still in the lowly position
+of a bourgeoise." She had, in fact, always declined the honour of a
+title, which Frederick William had so often begged her to accept; and it
+was only for her daughter's sake, when the question of an alliance
+between the young Countess de la Marke and Lord Bristol's heir arose,
+that she at last stooped to ask for what she had so long refused.
+
+A few weeks later her brother, the King's equerry, placed in her hands
+the patent which made her Countess Lichtenau, with the right to bear on
+her shield of arms the Prussian eagle and the Royal crown.
+
+Wherever the Countess (as we must now call her) went on her Italian
+tour she drew men to her feet by the magnetism of her beauty, who would
+have paid no homage to her as _chere amie_ of a King; for she was now in
+the early thirties, in the full bloom of the loveliness that had its
+obscure budding in the Potsdam barrack-rooms. Young and old were equally
+powerless to resist her fascinations. She had, indeed, no more ardent
+slave and admirer than my Lord Bristol, the octogenarian Bishop of
+Londonderry, whose passion for the Countess, young enough to be his
+granddaughter, was that of a lovesick youth.
+
+From "dear Countess and adorable friend," he quickly leaps in his
+letters to "my dear Wilhelmine." He looks forward with the impatience of
+a boy to seeing her at "that terrestrial paradise which is called
+Naples, where we shall enjoy perpetual spring and spend delightful days
+in listening to the divine _Paesiello_. Do you know," he adds, "I passed
+two hours of real delight this morning in simply contemplating your
+elegant bedroom where only the elegant sleeper was missing."
+
+"It is in _Crocelle_," he writes a little later, "that you will make
+people happy by your presence, and where you will recuperate your
+health, regain your gaiety, and forget an Irishman; and a holy Bishop,
+more worthy of your affection, on account of the deep attachment he has
+for you, will take his place."
+
+In June, 1796, this senile lover writes, "In an hour I depart for
+Germany; and, as the wind is north, with every step I take I shall say:
+'This breeze comes perhaps from her; it has touched her rosy lips and
+mingled its scent with the perfume of her breath which I shall inhale,
+the perfume of the breath of my dear Wilhelmine.'"
+
+But these days of dallying with her legion of lovers, of regal fetes and
+pleasure-chasing, were brought to an abrupt conclusion when news came to
+her at Venice that her "husband," the King, was dying, with the Royal
+family by his bedside awaiting the end. Such news, with all its import
+of sorrow and tragedy, set the Countess racing across the Continent,
+fast as horses could carry her, to the side of her beloved King, whom
+she found, if not _in extremis_, "very dangerously ill and pitifully
+changed" from the robust man she had left. Her return, however, did more
+for him than all the skill of his doctors. It gave him a new lease of
+life, in which her presence brought happiness into days which, none knew
+better than himself, were numbered.
+
+For more than a year the Countess was his tender nurse and constant
+companion, ministering to his comfort and arranging plays and tableaux
+for his entertainment. She watched over him as jealously as any mother
+over her dying child; but all her devotion could not stay the steps of
+death, which every day brought nearer. As the inevitable end approached,
+her friends warned her to leave Charlottenburg while the opportunity was
+still hers--to escape with her jewels and her money (a fortune of
+L150,000)--but to all such urging she was deaf. She would stay by her
+lover's side to the last, though she well knew the danger of delay.
+
+One November day in 1797 Frederick William made his last public
+appearance at a banquet, with the Countess at his right hand; and seldom
+has festival had such a setting in tragedy. "None of the guests," we are
+told, "uttered a word or ate a mouthful of anything; the plates were
+cleared at the hasty ringing of a bell. A convulsive movement made by
+the sick man showed that he was suffering agonies. Before half-past nine
+every guest had left, greatly troubled. The majority of those who had
+been present never saw the unfortunate monarch again. They all shared
+the same presentiment of disaster, and wept."
+
+From that night the King was dead, even to his own Court. The gates of
+his palace were closed against the world, and none were allowed to
+approach the chamber in which his life was ebbing away, save the
+Countess, his nurse, and his doctors. Even his children were refused
+admittance to his presence. As the Marquis de Saint Mexent said, "The
+King of Prussia ends his days as though he were a rich benefactor. All
+the relations are excluded by the housekeeper."
+
+A few days before the end came the Countess was seen to leave the
+palace, carrying a large red portfolio--a suspicious circumstance which
+the Crown Prince's spies promptly reported to their master. There could
+be only one inference--she had been caught in the act of stealing State
+papers, a crime for which she would have to pay a heavy price as soon
+as her protector was no more! As a matter of fact the portfolio
+contained nothing more secret or valuable than the letters she had
+written to the King during the twenty-seven years of their romance,
+letters which, after reading, she consigned to the flames in her boudoir
+within an hour of the suspected theft of State documents.
+
+A few days later, on the night of the 16th of November (1797), the King
+entered on his "death agony," one fit of suffocation succeeding another,
+until the Countess, unable to bear any longer the sight of such
+suffering, was carried away in violent convulsions. She saw him no more;
+for by seven o'clock in the morning Frederick William had found release
+from his agony in death, and his son had begun to reign in his stead.
+
+At last the long-delayed hour of revenge had come to Frederick William
+III., who had always regarded his father's favourite as an enemy; and
+his vengeance was swift to strike. Before the late King's body was cold,
+his successor's emissaries appeared at the palace door, Unter den
+Linden, with orders to search her papers and to demand the keys of every
+desk and cupboard. Even then she scorned to fly before the storm which
+she knew was breaking. For three days and nights her carriage stood at
+her gates ready to take her away to safety; but she refused to move a
+step.
+
+Then one morning, before she had left her bed, a major of the guards,
+with a posse of soldiers, appeared at her bedroom door armed with a
+warrant for her arrest; and for many weeks she was a closely guarded
+prisoner in her own house, subject to daily insults and indignities from
+men who, a few weeks earlier, had saluted her as a Queen.
+
+At the trial which followed some very grave indictments were preferred
+against her. She was charged with having betrayed State secrets; with
+having robbed the Royal Exchequer; stolen the King's portfolio; and
+removed the priceless solitaire diamond from his crown, and the very
+rings from his fingers as he lay dying. To these and other equally grave
+charges the Countess gave a dignified denial, which the evidence she was
+able to produce supported. The diamond and the rings were, in fact,
+discovered in places indicated by her where they had been put, by the
+King's orders, for safe custody.
+
+The trial had a happier ending than, from the malignity of her enemies,
+especially of the King, might have been expected. After three months of
+durance she was removed to a Silesian fortress. Her houses and lands
+were taken from her; but her furniture and jewels were left untouched,
+and with them she was allowed to enjoy a pension of four thousand
+thalers a year. Such was the judgment of a Court which proved more
+merciful than she had perhaps a right to expect. And two months later,
+the influence and pleading of her friends set her free from her
+fortress-prison to spend her life where and as she would.
+
+The sun of her splendour had indeed set, but many years of peaceful and
+not unhappy life remained for our ex-Queen, who was still in the prime
+of her womanhood and beauty and with the magnetism that, to her last
+day, brought men to her feet. At fifty she was able to inspire such
+passion in the breast of a young artist, Francis Holbein, that he asked
+and won her hand in marriage. But this romance was short-lived, for
+within a year he left her, to spend the remainder of her days in Paris,
+Vienna, and her native Prussia. Here her adventurous career closed in
+such obscurity, at the age of sixty-eight, that even those who
+ministered to her last moments were unaware that the dying woman was the
+Countess who had played so dazzling a part a generation earlier, as
+favourite of the King of Prussia and Queen of her loveliest women.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+THE CORSICAN AND THE CREOLE
+
+Of the many women who succeeded one another with such bewildering
+rapidity in the favour of the first Napoleon, from Desiree Clary,
+daughter of the Marseilles silk-merchant, the "little wife" of his days
+of obscurity, to Madame Walewska, the beautiful Pole, who so fruitlessly
+bartered her charms for her country's salvation, only one really
+captured his fickle heart--Josephine de Beauharnais, the woman whom he
+raised to the splendour of an Imperial crown, only to fling her aside
+when she no longer served the purposes of his ambition.
+
+It was one October day in the year 1795 that Josephine, Vicomtesse de
+Beauharnais, first cast the spell of her beauty on the "ugly little
+Corsican," who had then got his foot well planted on the ladder, at the
+summit of which was his crown of empire. At twenty-six, the man who, but
+a little earlier, was an out-of-work captain, eating his heart out in a
+Marseilles slum, was General-in-Chief of the armies of France, with the
+disarmed rebels of Paris grovelling at his feet.
+
+One day a handsome boy came to him, craving permission to retain the
+sword his father had won, a favour which the General, pleased by the
+boy's frankness and manliness, granted. The next day the young rebel's
+mother presented herself to thank him with gracious words for his
+kindness to her son--a creature of another world than his, with a
+beauty, grace and refinement which were a new revelation to his
+bourgeois eyes.
+
+The fair vision haunted him; the music of her voice lingered in his
+ears. He must see her again. And, before another day had passed, we find
+the pale-faced, grim Corsican, with the burning eyes, sitting awkwardly
+on a horse-hair chair of Madame's dining-room in her small house in the
+Rue Chantereine, nervously awaiting the entry of the Vicomtesse who had
+already played such havoc with his peace of mind. And when at last she
+made her appearance, few would have recognised in the man, who made his
+shy, awkward bow, the famous General with whose name the whole of France
+was ringing.
+
+It was little wonder, perhaps, that the little Corsican's heart went
+pit-a-pat, or that his knees trembled under him, for the lady whose
+smile and the touch of whose hand sent a thrill through him, was indeed,
+to quote his own words, "beautiful as a dream." From the chestnut hair
+which rippled over her small, proudly poised head to the arch of her
+tiny, dainty feet, "made for homage and for kisses," she was, "all
+glorious without." There was witchery in every part of her--in the rich
+colour that mantled in her cheeks; the sweet brown eyes that looked out
+between long-fringed eyelids; the small, delicate nose; "the nostrils
+quivering at the least emotion"; the exquisite lines of the tall, supple
+figure, instinct with grace in every moment; and, above all, in the
+seductive music of a voice, every note of which was a caress.
+
+Sixteen years earlier, Josephine had come from Martinique to Paris as
+bride of the Vicomte de Beauharnais, with whom she had led a more or
+less unhappy life, until the guillotine of the Revolution left her a
+widow, with two children and an empty purse. But even this crowning
+calamity was powerless to crush the sunny-hearted Creole, who merely
+laughed at the load of debts which piled themselves up around her. A
+little of the wreckage of her husband's fortune had been rescued for her
+by influential friends; but this had disappeared long before Napoleon
+crossed her path. And at last the light-hearted widow realised that if
+she had a card left to play, she must play it quickly.
+
+Here then was her opportunity. The little General was obviously a slave
+at her feet; he was already a great man, destined to be still greater;
+and if he was bourgeois to his coarse finger-tips, he could at least
+serve as a stepping-stone to raise her from poverty and obscurity.
+
+As for Napoleon, he was a vanquished man--and he knew it--before ever he
+set foot in Madame's modest dining-room. When he left, he "trod on air,"
+for the Vicomtesse had been more than gracious to him. The next day he
+was drawn as by a magnet to the Rue Chantereine, and the next and the
+next, each interview with his divinity forging fresh links for the
+chain that bound him; and at each visit he met under Madame's roof some
+of the great ones of that other world in which Josephine moved, the old
+_noblesse_ of France--who paid her the homage due to a Queen.
+
+Thus vanity and ambition fed the flames of the passion which was
+consuming him; and within a fortnight he had laid his heart and his
+fortune, which at the time consisted of "his personal wardrobe and his
+military accoutrements" at the feet of the Creole widow; and one March
+day in 1796 Napoleon Bonaparte, General, and Josephine de Beauharnais,
+were made one by a registrar who obligingly described the bride as
+twenty-nine (thus robbing her of three years), and added two to the
+bridegroom's twenty-six years.
+
+After two days of rapturous honeymooning Napoleon was on his way to join
+his army in Italy, as reluctant a bridegroom as ever left Cupid at the
+bidding of Mars. At every change of horses during the long journey he
+dispatched letters to the wife he had left behind--letters full of
+passion and yearning. In one of them he wrote, "When I am tempted to
+curse my fate, I place my hand on my heart and find your portrait there.
+As I gaze at it I am filled with a joy unutterable. Life seems to hold
+no pain, save that of severance from my beloved."
+
+At Nice, amid all the labours and anxieties of organising his rabble
+army for a campaign, his thoughts are always taking wings to her; her
+portrait is ever in his hand. He says his prayers before it; and, when
+once he accidentally broke the glass, he was in an agony of despair and
+superstitious foreboding. His one cry was, "Come to me! Come to my heart
+and to my arms. Oh, that you had wings!"
+
+Even when flushed with the surrender of Piedmont after a fortnight's
+brilliant fighting, in which he had won half a dozen battles and reaped
+twenty-one standards, he would have bartered all his laurels for a sight
+of the woman he loved so passionately. But while he was thus yearning
+for her in distant Italy, Madame was much too happy in her beloved Paris
+to lend an ear to his pleadings. As wife of the great Napoleon she was a
+veritable Queen, fawned on and flattered by all the great ones in the
+capital. Hers was the place of honour at every fete and banquet; the
+banners her husband had captured were presented to her amid a tumult of
+acclamation; when she entered a theatre the entire house rose to greet
+her with cheers. She was thus in no mood to leave her Queendom for the
+arms of her husband, whose unattractive person and clumsy ardour only
+repelled her.
+
+When his letters calling her to him became more and more imperative, she
+could no longer ignore them. But she could, at least, invent an
+excellent excuse for her tarrying. She wrote to tell him that she was
+expecting to become a mother. This at least would put a stop to his
+importunity. And it did. Napoleon was full of delight--and self-reproach
+at the joyful news. "Forgive me, my beloved," he wrote. "How can I ever
+atone? You were ill and I accused you of lingering in Paris. My love
+robs me of my reason, and I shall never regain it.... A child, sweet as
+its mother, is soon to lie in your arms. Oh! that I could be with you,
+even if only for one day!"
+
+To his brother Joseph he writes in a similar strain: "The thought of her
+illness drives me mad. I long to see her, to hold her in my arms. I love
+her so madly, I cannot live without her. If she were to die, I should
+have absolutely nothing left to live for."
+
+When, however, he learns that Madame's illness is not sufficient to
+interfere with her Paris gaieties, a different mood seizes him. Jealousy
+and anger take the place of anxious sympathy. He insists that she shall
+join him--threatens to resign his command if she refuses. Josephine no
+longer dares to keep up her deception. She must obey. And thus, in a
+flood of angry tears, we see her starting on her long journey to Italy,
+in company with her dog, her maid, and a brilliant escort of officers.
+Arrived at Milan, she was welcomed by Napoleon with open arms; but
+"after two days of rapture and caresses," he was face to face with the
+great crisis of Castiglione. His army was in imminent danger of
+annihilation; his own fate and fortune trembled in the balance. Nothing
+short of a miracle could save him; and on the third day of his new
+honeymoon he was back again in the field at grips with fate.
+
+But even at this supreme crisis he found time to write daily letters to
+the dear one who was awaiting the issue in Milan, begging her to share
+his life. "Your tears," he writes, "drive me to distraction; they set my
+blood on fire. Come to me here, that at least we may be able to say
+before we die we had so many days of happiness." Thus he pleads in
+letter after letter until Josephine, for very shame, is forced to yield,
+and to return to her husband, who, as Masson tells us, "was all day at
+her feet as before some divinity."
+
+Such days of bliss were, however, few and far between for the man who
+was now in the throes of a Titanic struggle, on the issue of which his
+fortunes and those of France hung. But when duty took him into danger
+where his lady could not follow, she found ample solace. Monsieur
+Charles, Leclerc's adjutant, was all the cavalier she needed--an Adonis
+for beauty, a Hercules for strength, the handsomest soldier in
+Napoleon's army, a past-master in all the arts of love-making. There was
+no dull moment for Josephine with such a squire at her elbow to pour
+flatteries into her ears and to entertain her with his clever tongue.
+
+But Monsieur Charles had short shrift when Napoleon's jealousy was
+aroused. He was quickly sent packing to Paris; and Josephine was left to
+write to her aunt, "I am bored to extinction." She was weary of her
+husband's love-rhapsodies, disgusted with the crudities of his passion.
+She had, however, a solace in the homage paid to her everywhere. At
+Genoa she was received as a Queen; at Florence the Grand Duke called her
+"cousin"; the entire army, from General to private, was under the spell
+of her beauty and the graciousness that captivated all hearts. She was,
+too, reaping a rich harvest of costly presents and bribes, from all who
+sought to win Napoleon's favour through her.
+
+The Italian campaign at last over, Madame found herself back again in
+her dear Paris, raised to a higher pinnacle of Queendom than ever,
+basking in the splendours of the husband whose glories she so gladly
+shared, though she held his love in such light esteem. But for him, at
+least, there was no time for dallying. Within a few months he was waving
+farewell to her again, from the bridge of the _Ocean_ which was carrying
+him off to the conquest of Egypt, buoyed by her promise that she would
+join him when his work was done. And long before he had reached Malta
+she was back again in the vortex of Paris gaiety, setting the tongue of
+scandal wagging by her open flirtation with one lover after another.
+
+It was not long before the news of Madame's "goings-on" reached as far
+as Alexandria. The dormant jealousy in Napoleon, lulled to rest since
+Monsieur Charles had vanished from the scene, was fanned into flame. He
+was furious; disillusion seized him, and thoughts of divorce began to
+enter his brain. Two could play at this game of falseness; and there
+were many beautiful women in Egypt only too eager to console the great
+Napoleon.
+
+When news came to Josephine that her husband had landed at Frejus, and
+would shortly be with her, she was in a state bordering on panic. She
+shrank from facing his anger; from the revelation of debts and unwifely
+conduct which was inevitable. Her all was at stake and the game was more
+than half lost. In her desperation she took her courage in both hands
+and set forth, as fast as horses could take her, to meet Napoleon, that
+she might at least have the first word with him; but as ill-luck would
+have it, he travelled by a different route and she missed him.
+
+On her return to Paris she found the door of Napoleon's room barred
+against her. "After repeated knocking in vain," says M. Masson, "she
+sank on her knees sobbing aloud. Still the door remained closed. For a
+whole day the scene was prolonged, without any sign from within. Worn
+out at last, Josephine was about to retire in despair, when her maid
+fetched her children. Eugene and Hortense, kneeling beside their mother,
+mingled their supplications with hers. At last the door was opened;
+speechless, tears streaming down his cheeks, his face convulsed with the
+struggle that had rent his heart, Bonaparte appeared, holding out his
+arms to his wife."
+
+Such was the meeting of the unfaithful Josephine and the husband who had
+vowed that he would no longer call her wife. The reconciliation was
+complete; for Napoleon was no man of half-measures. He frankly forgave
+the weeping woman all her sins against him; and with generous hand
+removed the mountain of debt her extravagance had heaped up--debts
+amounting to more than two million francs, one million two hundred
+thousand of which she owed to tradespeople alone.
+
+But Napoleon's passion for his wife, of whose beauty few traces now
+remained, was dead. His loyalty only remained; and this, in turn, was to
+be swept away by the tide of his ambition. A few years later Josephine
+was crowned Empress by her husband, and consecrated by the Pope, after
+a priest had given the sanction of the Church to her incomplete
+nuptials.
+
+She had now reached the dazzling zenith of her career. At the Tuileries,
+at St Cloud, and at Malmaison, she held her splendid Courts as Empress.
+She had the most magnificent crown jewels in the world; and at Malmaison
+she spent her happiest hours in spreading her gems out on the table
+before her, and feasting her eyes on their many-hued fires. Her
+wardrobes were full of the daintiest and costliest gowns of which, we
+are told, more than two hundred were summer-dresses of percale and of
+muslin, costing from one thousand to two thousand francs each.
+
+Less than six years of such splendour and luxury, and the inevitable end
+of it all came. Napoleon's eyes were dazzled by the offer of an alliance
+with the eldest daughter of the Austrian Emperor. His whole ambition now
+was focused on providing a successor to his crown (Josephine had failed
+him in this important matter); and in Marie Louise of Austria he not
+only saw the prospective mother of his heir, but an alliance with one of
+the great reigning houses of Europe, which would lend a much-needed
+glamour to his bourgeois crown.
+
+His mind was at last inevitably made up. Josephine must be divorced. Her
+pleadings and tears and faintings were powerless to melt him. And one
+December day, in the year 1809, Napoleon was free to wed his Austrian
+Princess; and Josephine was left to console herself as best she might,
+with the knowledge that at least she had rescued from her downfall a
+life-income of three million francs a year, on which she could still
+play the role of Empress at the Elysee, Malmaison, and Navarre, the
+sumptuous homes with which Napoleon's generosity had dowered the wife
+who failed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+THE ENSLAVER OF A KING
+
+More than fifty years have gone since the penitent soul of Lola Montez
+took flight to its Creator; but there must be some still living whose
+pulses quicken at the very mention of a name which recalls so much
+mystery and romance and bewildering fascination of the days when, for
+them, as for her, "all the world was young."
+
+Who was she, this woman whose beauty dazzled the eyes and whose witchery
+turned the heads of men in the forties and fifties of last century? A
+dozen countries, from Spain to India, were credited with her birth. Some
+said she was the daughter of a noble house, kidnapped by gipsies in her
+infancy; others were equally confident that she had for father the
+coroneted rake, Lord Byron, and for mother a charwoman.
+
+Her early years were wrapped in a mystery which she mischievously helped
+to intensify by declaring that her father was a famous Spanish toreador.
+Her origin, however, was prosaic enough. She was the daughter of an
+obscure army captain, Gilbert, who hailed from Limerick; her mother was
+an Oliver, from whom she received her strain of Spanish blood; and the
+names given to her at a Limerick font, one day in 1818, two months after
+her parents had made their runaway match, were Marie Dolores Eliza
+Rosanna.
+
+When Captain Gilbert returned, after his furlough-romance, to India, he
+took his wife and child with him. Seven years later cholera removed him;
+his widow found speedy solace in the arms of a second husband, one
+Captain Craigie; and Dolores was packed off to Scotland to the care of
+her stepfather's people until her schooldays were ended.
+
+In the next few years she alternated between the Scottish household,
+with its chilly atmosphere of Calvinism, and schools in Paris and
+London, until, her education completed, she escaped the husband, a
+mummified Indian judge, whom her mother had chosen for her, by eloping
+with a young army officer, a Captain James, and with him made the return
+voyage to India.
+
+A few months later her romance came to a tragic end, when her Lothario
+husband fell under the spell of a brother-officer's wife and ran away
+with her to the seclusion of the Neilgherry Hills, leaving his wife
+stranded and desolate. And thus it was that Dolores Gilbert wiped the
+dust of India finally off her feet, and with a cheque for a thousand
+pounds, which her good-hearted stepfather slipped into her hand, started
+once more for England, to commence that career of adventure which has
+scarcely a parallel even in fiction. She had had more than enough of
+wedded life, of Scottish Calvinism, and of a mother's selfish
+indifference. She would be henceforth the mistress of her own fate. She
+had beauty such as few women could boast--she had talents and a stout
+heart; and these should be her fortune.
+
+Her first ambition was to be a great actress; and when she found that
+acting was not her forte she determined to dance her way to fame and
+fortune, and after a year's training in London and Spain she was ready
+to conquer the world with her twinkling feet and supple body.
+
+Of her first appearance as a danseuse, before a private gathering of
+Pressmen, we have the following account by one who was there: "Her
+figure was even more attractive than her face, lovely as the latter was.
+Lithe and graceful as a young fawn, every movement that she made seemed
+instinct with melody. Her dark eyes were blazing and flashing with
+excitement. In her pose grace seemed involuntarily to preside over her
+limbs and dispose their attitude. Her foot and ankle were almost
+faultless."
+
+Such was the enthusiastic description of Lola Montez (as she now chose
+to call herself) on the eve of her bid for fame as a dancer who should
+perhaps rival the glories of a Taglioni. A few days later the world of
+rank and fashion flocked to see the debut of the danseuse whose fame had
+been trumpeted abroad; and as Lola pirouetted on to the stage--the focus
+of a thousand pairs of eyes--she felt that the crowning moment of her
+life had come.
+
+Almost before her twinkling feet had carried her to the centre of the
+stage an ominous sound broke the silence of expectation. A hiss came
+from one of the boxes; it was repeated from another, and another. The
+sibilant sound spread round the house; it swelled into a sinister storm
+of hisses and boos. The light faded out of the dancer's eyes, the smile
+from her lips; and as the tumult of disapprobation rose to a deafening
+climax the curtain was rung down, and Lola rushed weeping from the
+stage. Her career as a dancer, in England, had ended at its birth.
+
+But Lola Montez was not the woman to sit down calmly under defeat. A few
+weeks later we find her tripping it on the stage at Dresden, and at
+Berlin, where the King of Prussia himself was among her applauders. But
+such success as the Continent brought her was too small to keep her now
+deplenished purse supplied. She fell on evil days, and for two years led
+a precarious life--now, we are told, singing in Brussels streets to keep
+starvation from her side, now playing the political spy in Russia, and
+again, by a capricious turn of fortune's wheel, being feted and courted
+in the exalted circles of Vienna and Paris.
+
+From the French capital she made her way to Warsaw, where stirring
+adventures awaited her, for before she had been there many days the
+Polish Viceroy, General Paskevitch, cast his aged but lascivious eyes on
+her young beauty and sent an equerry to desire her presence at the
+palace. "He offered her" (so runs the story as told by her own lips)
+"the gift of a splendid country estate, and would load her with diamonds
+besides. The poor old man was a comic sight to look upon--unusually
+short in stature; and every time he spoke he threw his head back and
+opened his mouth so wide as to expose the artificial gold roof of his
+palate. A death's head making love to a lady could not have been a more
+horrible or disgusting sight. These generous gifts were most
+respectfully and very decidedly declined."
+
+But General Paskevitch was not disposed to be spurned with impunity. The
+contemptuous beauty must be punished for her scorn of his wooing; and,
+when she made her appearance on the stage the same night it was to a
+greeting of hisses by the Viceroy's hirelings. The next night brought
+the same experience; but when on the third night the storm arose, "Lola,
+in a rage, rushed down to the footlights and declared that those hisses
+had been set at her by the director, because she had refused certain
+gifts from the old Prince, his master. Then came a tremendous shower of
+applause from the audience, and the old Princess, who was present, both
+nodded her head and clapped her hands to the enraged and fiery little
+Lola."
+
+A tumultuous crowd of Poles escorted her to her lodgings that night. She
+was the heroine of the hour, who had dared to give open defiance to the
+hated Viceroy. The next morning Warsaw was "bubbling and raging with the
+signs of an incipient revolution. When Lola Montez was apprised of the
+fact that her arrest was ordered she barricaded her door; and when the
+police arrived she sat behind it with a pistol in her hand, declaring
+that she would certainly shoot the first man who should dare to break
+in." Fortunately for Lola, her pistol was not used. The French Consul
+came to her rescue, claiming her as a subject of France, and thus
+protecting her from arrest. But the order that she should quit Warsaw
+was peremptory, and Warsaw saw her no more.
+
+Back again in Paris, Lola found that even her new halo of romance was
+powerless to win favour for her dancing. Again she was to hear the storm
+of hisses; and this time in her rage "she retaliated by making faces at
+her audience," and flinging parts of her clothing in their faces. But if
+Paris was not to be charmed by her dainty feet it was ready to yield an
+unstinted homage to her rare beauty and charm. She found a flattering
+welcome in the most exclusive of _salons_; the cleverest men in the
+capital confessed the charm of her wit and surrounded her with their
+flatteries.
+
+M. Dujarrier, the most brilliant of them all, young, rich, and handsome,
+fell head over ears in love with her and asked her to be his wife. But
+the cup of happiness was scarcely at her lips before it was dashed away.
+Dujarrier was challenged to a duel by Beauvallon, a political enemy; and
+when Lola was on her way to stop the meeting she met a mournful
+procession bringing back her dead lover's body, on which she flung
+herself in an agony of grief and covered it with kisses. At the
+subsequent trial of Beauvallon she electrified the Court by declaring
+with streaming eyes, "If Beauvallon wanted satisfaction I would have
+fought him myself, for I am a better shot than poor Dujarrier ever was."
+And she was probably only speaking the truth, for her courage was as
+great as the love she bore for the victim of the duel.
+
+As a child Lola had shocked her puritanical Scottish hosts by declaring
+that "she meant to marry a Prince," and unkindly as fate had treated
+her, she had by no means relinquished this childish ambition. It may be
+that it was in her mind when, a year and a half after the tragedy that
+had so clouded her life in Paris, she drifted to Munich in search of
+more conquests.
+
+Now in the full bloom of her radiant loveliness--"the most beautiful
+woman in Europe" many declared--mingling the vivacity of an Irish beauty
+with the voluptuous charms of a Spaniard--she was splendidly equipped
+for the conquest of any man, be he King or subject; and Ludwig I., King
+of Bavaria, had as keen an eye for female beauty as for the objects of
+art on which he squandered his millions.
+
+It was this Ludwig who made Munich the fairest city in all Germany, and
+who enriched his palace with the finest private collection of pictures
+and statues that Europe can boast. But among all his treasures of art he
+valued none more than his gallery of portraits of fair women, each of
+whom had, at one time or another, visited his capital.
+
+Such was Ludwig, Bavaria's King, to whom Lola Montez now brought a new
+revelation of female loveliness, to which his gallery could furnish no
+rival. At first sight of her, as she danced in the opera ballet, he was
+undone. The next day and the next his eyes were feasting on her charms
+and her supple grace; and within a week she was installed at the Court
+and was being introduced by His Majesty as "my best friend."
+
+And not only the King, but all Munich was at the feet of the lovely
+"Spaniard"; her drives through the streets were Royal progresses; her
+receptions in the palace which Ludwig presented to her were thronged by
+all the greatest in Bavaria; on Prince and peasant alike she cast the
+spell of her witchery. As for Ludwig, connoisseur of the beautiful, he
+was her shadow and her slave, showering on her gifts an Empress might
+well have envied. Fortune had relented at last and was now smiling her
+sweetest on the adventuress; and if Lola had been content with such
+triumphs as these the story of her later life might have been very
+different. But she craved power to add to her trophies, and aspired to
+take the sceptre from the weak hand of her Royal lover.
+
+Never did woman make a more fatal mistake. On the one hand was arrayed
+the might of Austria and of Rome, whose puppet Ludwig was; on the other
+hand was a nation clamouring for reforms. Revolution was already in the
+air, and it was reserved to this too daring woman to precipitate the
+storm.
+
+Her first ambition was to persuade Ludwig to dismiss his Ministry, to
+shake himself free from foreign influence, and to inaugurate the era of
+reform for which his subjects were clamouring. In vain did Austria try
+to win her to its side by bribes of gold (no less than a million
+florins) and the offer of a noble husband. To all its seductions Lola
+turned as deaf an ear as to the offers of Poland's Viceroy. And so
+strenuous was her championship of the people that the Cabinet was
+compelled to resign in favour of the "Lola Ministry" of reformers.
+
+So far she had succeeded, but the price was still to pay. The
+reactionaries, supported by Austria and the Romish Church, were quick
+to retaliate by waging remorseless war against the King's mistress; and,
+among their most powerful weapons, used the students' clubs of Munich,
+who, from being Lola's most enthusiastic admirers, became her bitterest
+enemies.
+
+To counteract this move Lola enrolled a students' corps of her own--a
+small army of young stalwarts, whose cry was "Lola and Liberty," and who
+were sworn to fight her battles, if need be, to the death. Thus was the
+fire of revolution kindled by a woman's vanity and lust of power.
+Students' fights became everyday incidents in the streets of Munich, and
+on one occasion when Lola, pistol in hand, intervened to prevent
+bloodshed, she was rescued with difficulty by Ludwig himself and a
+detachment of soldiers.
+
+The climax came when she induced the King to close the University for a
+year--an autocratic step which aroused the anger not only of every
+student but of the whole country. The streets were paraded by mobs
+crying, "Down with the concubine!" and "Long live the Republic!"
+Barricades were erected and an influential deputation waited on the King
+to demand the expulsion of the worker of so much mischief.
+
+In vain did Ludwig declare that he would part with his crown rather than
+with the Countess of Landsfeld--for this was one of the titles he had
+conferred on his favourite. The forces arrayed against him were too
+strong, and the order of expulsion was at last conceded. It was only,
+however, when her palace was in flames and surrounded by a howling mob
+that the dauntless woman deigned to seek refuge in flight, and,
+disguised as a boy, suffered herself to be escorted to the frontier. Two
+weeks later Ludwig lost his crown.
+
+The remainder of this strange story may be told in a few words. Thrown
+once more on the world, with a few hastily rescued jewels for all her
+fortune, Lola Montez resumed her stage life, appearing in London in a
+drama entitled "Lola Montez: or a Countess for an Hour." Here she made a
+conquest of a young Life Guardsman, called Heald, who had recently
+succeeded to an estate worth L5000 a year; and with him she spent a few
+years, made wretched by continual quarrels, in one of which she stabbed
+him. When he was "found drowned" at Lisbon she drifted to Paris, and
+later to the United States, which she toured with a drama entitled "Lola
+Montez in Bavaria." There she made her third appearance at the altar,
+with a bridegroom named Hull, whom she divorced as soon as the honeymoon
+had waned.
+
+Thus she carried her restless spirit through a few more years of
+wandering and growing poverty, until a chance visit to Spurgeon's
+Tabernacle revolutionised her life. She decided to abandon the stage and
+to devote the remainder of her days to penitence and good works. But the
+end was already near. In New York, where she had gone to lecture, she
+was struck down by paralysis, and a few weeks before she had seen her
+forty-second birthday she died in a charitable institution, joining
+fervently in the prayers of the clergyman who was summoned to her
+death-bed.
+
+"When she was near the end, and could not speak," the clergyman says,
+"I asked her to let me know by a sign whether she was at peace. She
+fixed her eyes on mine and nodded affirmatively. I do not think I ever
+saw deeper penitence and humility than in this poor woman."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+AN EMPRESS AND HER FAVOURITES
+
+When Sophie Augusta Frederica of Anhalt-Zerbst was romping on the
+ramparts or in the streets of Stettin with burghers' children for
+playmates, he would have been a bold prophet who would have predicted
+that one day she would be the most splendid figure among Europe's
+sovereigns, "the only great man in Europe," according to Voltaire, "an
+angel before whom all men should be silent"; and that, while dazzling
+Europe by her statesmanship and learning, she would afford more material
+for scandal than any woman, except perhaps Christina of Sweden, who ever
+wore a crown.
+
+There is much, it is true, to be said in extenuation of the weakness
+that has left such a stain on the memory of Catherine II. of Russia.
+Equipped far beyond most women with the beauty and charms that fascinate
+men, and craving more than most of her sex the love of man, she was
+mated when little more than a child to the most degenerate Prince in all
+Europe.
+
+The Grand Duke Peter, heir to the Russian throne, who at sixteen took to
+wife the girl-Princess of Anhalt-Zerbst, was already an expert in
+almost every vice. Imbecile in mind, he found his chief pleasure in the
+company of the most degraded. He rarely went to bed sober--in fact, his
+bride's first sight of him was when he was drunk, at the age of ten. He
+was, too, "a liar and a coward, vicious and violent; pale, sickly, and
+uncomely--a crooked soul in a prematurely ravaged body."
+
+Such was the Grand Duke Peter, to whom the high-spirited, beautiful
+Princess Sophie (thenceforth to be known as "Catherine") was tied for
+life one day in the year 1744--a youth the very sight of whom repelled
+her, while his vices filled her with loathing. Add to this revolting
+union the fact that she found herself under the despotic rule of the
+Empress Elizabeth, who made no concealment of her hatred and jealousy of
+the fair young Princess, surrounded her with spies, and treated her as a
+rebellious child, to be checked and bullied at every turn--and it is not
+difficult to understand the spirit of recklessness and defiance that was
+soon roused in Catherine's breast.
+
+There was at the Russian Court no lack of temptation to indulge this
+spirit of revolt to the full. The young German beauty, mated to worse
+than a clown, soon had her Court of admirers to pour flatteries into her
+dainty ears, and she would perhaps have been less than a woman if she
+had not eagerly drunk them in. She had no need of anyone to tell her
+that she was fair. "I know I am beautiful as the day," she once
+exclaimed, as she looked at her mirrored reflection in her first ball
+finery at St Petersburg, with a red rose in her glorious hair; and the
+mirror told no flattering tale.
+
+See the picture Poniatowski, one of her earliest and most ardent slaves,
+paints of the young Grand Duchess. "With her black hair she had a
+dazzling whiteness of skin, a vivid colour, large blue eyes prominent
+and eloquent, black and long eyebrows, a Greek nose, a mouth that looked
+made for kissing, a slight, rather tall figure, a carriage that was
+lively, yet full of nobility, a pleasing voice, and a laugh as merry as
+the humour through which she could pass with ease from the most playful
+and childish amusements to the most fatiguing mathematical
+calculations."
+
+With the brain, even in those early years, of a clever man, she was
+essentially a woman, with all a woman's passion for the admiration and
+love of men; and one cannot wonder, however much one may deplore, that
+while her imbecile husband was guzzling with common soldiers, or playing
+with his toys and tin cannon in bed, vacuous smiles on his face, his
+beautiful bride should find her own pleasures in the homage of a
+Soltykoff, a Poniatowski, an Orloff, or any other of the legion of
+lovers who in quick succession took her fancy.
+
+The first among her admirers to capture her fancy was Sergius Soltykoff,
+her chamberlain, high-born, "beautiful as the day," polished courtier,
+supple-tongued wooer, to whom the Grand Duchess gave the heart her
+husband spurned. But Soltykoff's reign was short; the fickle Princess,
+ever seeking fresh conquests, wearied of him as of all her lovers in
+turn, and his place was taken within a year by Stanislas Poniatowski, a
+fascinating young Pole, who returned to St Petersburg with a reputation
+of gallantry won in almost every Court of Europe.
+
+Poniatowski had not perhaps the physical perfections of his dethroned
+predecessor, but he had the well-stored brain that made an even more
+potent appeal to Catherine. He could talk "like an angel" on every
+subject that appealed to her, from art to philosophy; and he had,
+moreover, a magnetic charm of manner which few women could resist.
+
+Such a lover was, indeed, after her heart, for he brought romance and
+adventure to his wooing; and whether he found his way to her boudoir
+disguised as a ladies' tailor or as one of the Grand Duke's musicians,
+or made open love to her under the very nose of her courtiers, he played
+his role of lover to admiration. Once Peter, in jealous mood, threatened
+to run his rival through with his sword, and, in his rage, "went into
+his wife's bedroom and pulled her out of bed without leaving her time to
+dress." An hour later his anger had changed to an amused complaisance,
+and he was supping with the culprits, and with boisterous laughter was
+drinking their healths.
+
+When at last a political storm drove Poniatowski from Russia, Catherine,
+who never forgot a banished lover, secured for him the crown of Poland.
+
+Thus the favourites come and go, each supreme for a time, each
+inevitably packed off to give place to a successor. With Poniatowski
+away in Poland, Catherine cast her eyes round her Court to find a third
+favourite, and her choice was soon made, for of all her army of admirers
+there was one who fully satisfied her ideal of handsome manhood.
+
+Of the five Orloff brothers, each a Goliath in stature and a Hercules in
+strength, the handsomest was Gregory, "the giant with the face of an
+angel." Towering head and shoulders over most of his fellow-courtiers,
+with knotted muscles which could fell an ox or crush a horse-shoe with
+the closing of a hand, Gregory Orloff was reputed the bravest man in
+Russia, as he was the idol of his soldiers. He was also a notorious
+gambler and drinker and the hero of countless love adventures.
+
+No greater contrast could be possible than between this dare-devil son
+of Anak and the cultured, almost feminine Poniatowski; but Catherine
+loved, above all things, variety, and here it was in startling
+abundance. Nor was her new lover any the less desirable because he was
+some years younger than herself, or that his grandfather had been a
+common soldier in the army of Peter the Great.
+
+And Gregory Orloff proved himself as bold in wooing as he was brave in
+war. For him there was no stealing up back stairs, no masquerading in
+disguises. He was the elect favourite of the future Empress of Russia,
+and all the world should know it. He was inseparable from his mistress,
+and paid his court to her under the eyes of her husband; while
+Catherine, thus emboldened, made as little concealment of her
+partiality.
+
+But troublous days were coming to break the idyll of their love. The
+Empress Elizabeth, as was inevitable, at last drank herself to death,
+and her nephew Peter, now a besotted imbecile of thirty-four, put on the
+Imperial robes, and was free to indulge his madness without restraint.
+The first use he made of his freedom was to subject his wife to every
+insult and humiliation his debased brain could suggest. He flaunted his
+amours and vices before her, taunted her in public with her own
+indiscretions, and shouted in his cups that he would divorce her.
+
+Not content with these outrages on his Empress, he lost no opportunity
+of disgusting his subjects and driving his soldiers to the verge of
+mutiny. Such an intolerable state of things could only have one issue.
+The Emperor was undoubtedly mad; the Emperor must go.
+
+Over the _coup d'etat_ which followed we must pass hurriedly--the
+conspiracy of Catherine and the Orloffs, the eager response of the army
+which flocked to the Empress, "kissing me, embracing my hands, my feet,
+my dress, and calling me their saviour"; the marching of the insurgent
+troops to Oranienbaum, with Catherine, astride on horseback, at their
+head; and Peter's craven submission, when he crawled on his knees to his
+wife, with whimpering and tears, begging her to allow him to keep "his
+mistress, his dog, his negro, and his violin."
+
+The Emperor was safe behind barred doors at Mopsa; Catherine was now
+Empress in fact as well as name. Three weeks later Peter was dead; was
+he done to death by Catherine's orders? To this day none can say with
+certainty. The story of this tragedy as told by Castera makes gruesome
+reading.
+
+One day Alexis Orloff and Teplof appeared at Mopsa to announce to the
+deposed sovereign his approaching deliverance and to ask a dinner of
+him. Glasses and brandy were ordered, and while Teplof was amusing the
+Tsar, Orloff filled the glasses, adding poison to one of them.
+
+"The Tsar, suspecting no harm, took the poison and swallowed it. He was
+soon seized with agonising pains. He screamed aloud for milk, but the
+two monsters again presented poison to him and forced him to take it.
+When the Tsar's valet bravely interposed he was hurled from the room. In
+the midst of the tumult there entered Prince Baratinski, who commanded
+the Guard. Orloff, who had already thrown down the Tsar, pressed upon
+his chest with his own knees, holding him fast at the same time by the
+throat. Baratinski and Teplof then passed a table-napkin with a sliding
+knot round his neck, and the murderers accomplished the work of death by
+strangling him."
+
+Such is the story as it has come down to us, and as it was believed in
+Russia at the time. That Gregory Orloff was innocent of a crime in which
+his own brother played a leading part is as little to be credited as
+that Catherine herself was in ignorance of the design on her husband's
+life. But, however this may be, we are told that when the news of her
+husband's death was brought to the Empress at a banquet, she was to all
+appearance overcome with horror and grief. She left the table with
+streaming eyes and spent the next few days in unapproachable solitude
+in her rooms.
+
+Thus at last Catherine was free both from the tyranny of Elizabeth and
+from the brutality of her bestial husband. She was sole sovereign of all
+the Russias, at liberty to indulge any caprice that entered her
+versatile brain. That her subjects, almost to a man, regarded her with
+horror as her husband's murderer, that this detestation was shared by
+the army that had put her on the throne, and by the nobles who had been
+her slaves, troubled her little. She was mistress of her fate, and
+strong enough (as indeed she proved) to hold, with a firm grasp, the
+sceptre she had won.
+
+High as Gregory Orloff had stood in her favour before she came to her
+crown, his position was now more splendid and secure. She showered her
+favours on him with prodigal hand. Lands and jewels and gold were
+squandered on her "First Favourite"--the official designation she
+invented for him; and he wore on his broad chest her miniature in a
+blazing oval of diamonds, the crowning mark of her approval. And to his
+brothers she was almost equally generous, for in a few years of her
+ascendancy the Orloffs were enriched by vast estates on which forty-five
+thousand serfs toiled, by palaces, and by gold to the amount of
+seventeen million roubles. Such it was to be in the good books of
+Catherine II., Empress of Russia.
+
+With riches and power, Gregory's ambition grew until he dreamt of
+sitting on the throne itself by Catherine's side; and in her foolish
+infatuation even this prize might have been his, had not wiser counsels
+come to her rescue. "The Empress," said Panine to her, "can do what she
+likes; but Madame Orloff can never be Empress of Russia." And thus
+Gregory's greatest ambition was happily nipped in the bud.
+
+The man who had played his cards with such skill and discretion in the
+early days of his love-making had now, his head swollen by pride and
+power, grown reckless. If he could not be Emperor in name, he would at
+least wield the sceptre. The woman to whom he owed all was, he thought,
+but a puppet in his hands, as ready to do his bidding as any of his
+minions. But through all her dallying Catherine's smiles masked an iron
+will. In heart she was a woman; in brain and will-power, a man. And
+Orloff, like many another favourite, was to learn the lesson to his
+cost.
+
+The time came when she could no longer tolerate his airs and
+assumptions. There was only one Empress, but lovers were plentiful, and
+she already had an eye on his successor. And thus it was that one day
+the swollen Orloff was sent on a diplomatic mission to arrange peace
+between Russia and Turkey. When she bade him good-bye she called him her
+"angel of peace," but she knew that it was her angel's farewell to his
+paradise.
+
+How the Ambassador, instead of making peace, stirred up the embers of
+war into fresh flame is a matter of history. But he was not long left to
+work such mad mischief. While he was swaggering at a Jassy fete, in a
+costume ablaze with diamonds worth a million roubles, news came to him
+of a good-looking young lieutenant who was not only installed in his
+place by Catherine's side, but was actually occupying his own
+apartments. Within an hour he was racing back to St Petersburg, resting
+neither night nor day until he had covered the thousand leagues that
+separated him from the capital.
+
+Before, however, his sweating horses could enter it, he was stopped by
+Catherine's emissaries and ordered to repair to the Imperial Palace at
+Gatshina. And then he realised that his sun had indeed come to its
+setting. His honours were soon stripped from him, and although he was
+allowed to keep his lands, his gold and jewels, the spoils of Cupid, the
+diamond-framed miniature, was taken away to adorn the breast of his
+successor, the lieutenant.
+
+Under this cloud of disfavour Orloff conducted himself with such
+resignation--none knew better than he how futile it was to fight--that
+Catherine, before many months had passed, not only recalled him to
+Court, but secured for him a Princedom of the Holy Empire. "As for
+Prince Gregory," she said amiably, "he is free to go or stay, to hunt,
+to drink, or to gamble. I intend to live according to my own pleasure,
+and in entire independence."
+
+After a tragically brief wedded life with a beautiful girl-cousin, who
+died of consumption, Orloff returned to St Petersburg to spend the last
+few months of his life, "broken-hearted and mad." And to his last hour
+his clouded brain was tortured with visions of the "avenging shade of
+the murdered Peter."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY CINDERELLA
+
+It was to all seeming a strange whim that caused Cardinal Mazarin, one
+day in the year 1653, to summon his nieces, daughters of his sister,
+Hieronyme Mancini, from their obscurity in Italy to bask in the sunshine
+of his splendours in Paris.
+
+At the time of this odd caprice, Richelieu's crafty successor had
+reached the zenith of his power. His was the most potent and splendid
+figure in all Europe that did not wear a crown. He was the avowed
+favourite and lover of Anne of Austria, Queen of France, to whose vanity
+he had paid such skilful court--indeed it was common rumour that she had
+actually given him her hand in secret marriage. The boy-King, Louis
+XIV., was a puppet in his strong hands. He was, in fact, the dictator of
+France, whose smiles the greatest courtiers tried to win, and before
+whose frowns they trembled.
+
+In contrast to such magnificence, his sister, Madame Mancini, was the
+wife of a petty Italian baron, who was struggling to bring up her five
+daughters on a pathetically scanty purse--as far removed from her
+magnificent brother as a moth from a star. There was, on the face of
+things, every reason why the great and all-powerful Cardinal should
+leave his nieces to their genteel poverty; and we can imagine both the
+astonishment and delight with which Madame Mancini received the summons
+to Paris which meant such a revolution in life for her and her
+daughters.
+
+If the Mancini girls had no heritage of money, they had at least the
+dower of beauty. Each of the five gave promise of a rare
+loveliness--with the solitary exception of Marie, Madame's third
+daughter, who at fourteen was singularly unattractive even for that
+awkward age. Tall, thin, and angular, without a vestige of grace either
+of figure or movement, she had a sallow face out of which two great
+black eyes looked gloomily, and a mouth wide and thin-lipped. She was,
+in addition, shy and slow-witted to the verge of stupidity. Marie, in
+fact, was quite hopeless, the "ugly duckling" of a good-looking family,
+and for this reason an object of dislike and resentment to her mother.
+
+Certainly, said Madame, Marie must be left behind. Her other daughters
+would be a source of pride to their uncle; he could secure great matches
+for them, but Marie--pah! she would bring discredit on the whole family.
+And so it was decided in conclave that the "ugly duckling" should be
+left in a nunnery--the only fit place for her. But Marie happily had a
+spirit of her own. She would not be left behind, she declared; and if
+she must go to a nunnery, why there were nunneries in plenty in France
+to which they could send her. And Marie had her way.
+
+She was not, however, to escape the cloister after all, for to a Paris
+nunnery she was consigned when her Cardinal uncle had set eyes on her.
+"Let her have a year or two there," was his verdict, "and, who knows,
+she may blossom into a beauty yet. At any rate she can put on flesh and
+not be the scarecrow she is." And thus, while her more favoured sisters
+were revelling in the gaieties of Court life, Marie was sent to tell her
+beads and to spend Spartan days among the nuns.
+
+Nearly two years passed before Mazarin expressed a wish to see his ugly
+niece again; and it was indeed a very different Marie who now made her
+curtsy to him. Gone were the angular figure, the awkward movements, the
+sallow face, the slow wits. Time and the healthy life of the cloisters
+had done their work well. What the Cardinal now saw was a girl of
+seventeen, of exquisitely modelled figure, graceful and self-possessed;
+a face piquant and full of animation, illuminated by a pair of glorious
+dark eyes, and with a dazzling smile which revealed the prettiest teeth
+in France. Above all, and what delighted the Cardinal most, she had now
+a sprightly wit, and a quite brilliant gift of conversation. It was thus
+a smiling and gratified Cardinal who gave greeting to his niece, now as
+fair as her sisters and more fascinating than any of them. There was no
+doubt that he could find a high-placed husband for her, and thus--for
+this was, in fact, his motive for rescuing his pretty nieces from their
+obscurity--make his position secure by powerful family alliances.
+
+It was not long before Mazarin fixed on a suitor in the person of
+Armande de la Porte, son of the Marquis de la Meilleraye, one of the
+most powerful nobles in France. But alas for his scheming! Armande's
+heart had already been caught while Marie was reciting her matins and
+vespers: He had lost it utterly to her beautiful sister, Hortense; he
+vowed that he would marry no other, and that if Hortense could not be
+his wife he would prefer to die. Thus Marie was rescued from a union
+which brought her sister so much misery in later years, and for a time
+she was condemned to spend unhappy months with her mother at the Louvre.
+
+To this period of her life Marie Mancini could never look back without a
+shudder. "My mother," she says, "who, I think, had always hated me, was
+more unbearable than ever. She treated me, although I was no longer
+ugly, with the utmost aversion and cruelty. My sisters went to Court and
+were fussed and feted. I was kept always at home, in our miserable
+lodgings, an unhappy Cinderella."
+
+But Fortune did not long hide his face from Cinderella. Her "Prince
+Charming" was coming--in the guise of the handsome young King, Louis
+XIV. himself. It was one day while visiting Madame Mancini in her
+lodgings at the Louvre that Louis first saw the girl who was to play
+such havoc with his heart; and at the first sight of those melting dark
+eyes and that intoxicating smile he was undone. He came again and
+again--always under the pretext of visiting Madame, and happy beyond
+expression if he could exchange a few words with her daughter, Marie;
+until he soon counted a day worse than lost that did not bring him the
+stolen sweetness of a meeting.
+
+When, a few weeks later, Madame Mancini died, and Marie was recalled to
+Court by her uncle, her life was completely changed for her. Louis had
+now abundant opportunities of seeking her side; and excellent use he
+made of them. The two young people were inseparable, much to the alarm
+of the Cardinal and Madame Mere, the Queen. The young King was never
+happy out of her sight; he danced with her (and none could dance more
+divinely than Marie); he listened as she sang to him with a voice whose
+sweetness thrilled him; they read the same books together in blissful
+solitude; she taught him her native Italian, and entranced him by the
+brilliance of her wit; and when, after a slight illness, he heard of her
+anxious inquiries and her tears of sympathy, his conquest was complete.
+He vowed that she and no other should be his wife and Queen of France.
+
+But these halcyon days were not to last long. It was no part of
+Mazarin's scheming that a niece of his should sit on the throne. The
+prospect was dazzling, it is true, but it would inevitably mean his own
+downfall, so strongly would such an alliance be resented by friends as
+well as enemies; and Anne of Austria was as little in the mood to be
+deposed by such an obscure person as the "Mancini girl." Thus it was
+that Queen and Cardinal joined hands to nip the young romance in the
+bud.
+
+A Royal bride must be found for Louis, and that quickly; and
+negotiations were soon on foot to secure as his wife Margaret, Princess
+of Savoy. In vain did the boy-King storm and protest; equally futile
+were Marie's tearful pleadings to her uncle. The fiat had gone forth.
+Louis must have a Royal bride; and she was already about to leave Italy
+on her bridal progress to France.
+
+It was, we may be sure, with a heavy heart that Marie joined the
+cavalcade which, with its gorgeous procession of equipages, its gaily
+mounted courtiers, and its brave escort of soldiery, swept out of Paris
+on its stately progress to Lyons, to meet the Queen-to-be. But there was
+no escape from the humiliation, for she must accompany Anne of Austria,
+as one of her retinue of maids-of-honour. Arrived too soon at Lyons,
+Louis rides on to give first greeting to his bride, who is now within a
+day's journey; and returns with a smiling face to announce to his mother
+that he finds the Princess pleasing to his eye, and to describe, with
+boyish enthusiasm, her grace and graciousness, her magnificent eyes, her
+beautiful hair, and the delicate olive of her complexion, while Marie's
+heart sinks at the recital. Could this be the lover who, but a few days
+ago, had been at her feet, vowing that she was the only bride in all the
+world for him?
+
+When he seeks her side and shamefacedly makes excuses for his seeming
+recreancy, she bids him marry his "ugly bride" in accents of scorn, and
+then bursts into tears, which she only consents to wipe away when he
+declares that his heart will always be hers and that he will never marry
+the Italian Princess.
+
+But Margaret of Savoy was not after all to be Queen of France. She was,
+as it proved, merely a pawn in the Cardinal's deep game. It was a
+Spanish alliance that he sought for his young King; and when, at the
+eleventh hour, an ambassador came hurriedly to Lyons to offer the
+Infanta's hand, the Savoy Duke and his sister, the Princess, had
+perforce to return to Italy "empty-handed."
+
+There was at least a time of respite now for Louis and Marie, and as
+they rode back to Paris, side by side, chatting gaily and exchanging
+sweet confidences, the sun once more shone on the happiest young people
+in all France. Then followed a period of blissful days, of dances and
+fetes, in brilliant succession, in which the lovers were inseparable;
+above all, of long rambles together, when, "the world forgetting," they
+could live in the happy present, whatever the future might have in store
+for them.
+
+Meanwhile the negotiations for the Spanish marriage were ripening fast.
+Louis and Marie again appeal, first to the Cardinal, then to the Queen,
+to sanction their union, but to no purpose; both are inflexible. Their
+foolish romance must come to an end. As a last resource Marie flies to
+the King, with tender pleadings and tears, begging him not to desert
+her; to which he answers that no power on earth shall make him wed the
+Infanta. "You alone," he swears, "shall wear the crown of Queen"; and in
+token of his love he buys for her the pearls that were the most
+treasured belongings of the exiled Stuart Queen, Henrietta Maria. The
+lovers part in tears, and the following day Marie receives orders to
+leave Paris and to retire to La Rochelle.
+
+At every stage of her journey she was overtaken by messengers bearing
+letters from Louis, full of love and protestations of unflinching
+loyalty; and when Louis moved with his Court to Bayonne, the lovers met
+once more to mingle their tears. But Louis, ever fickle, was already
+wavering again. "If I must marry the Infanta," he said, "I suppose I
+must. But I shall never love any but you."
+
+Marie now realised that this was to be the end. In face of a lover so
+weak, and a fate so inflexible, what could she do but submit? And it was
+with a proud but breaking heart that she wrote a few days later to tell
+Louis that she wished him not to write to her again and that she would
+not answer his letters. One June day news came to her that her lover was
+married and that "he was very much in love with the Infanta"; and even
+her pride, crushed as it was, could not restrain her from writing to her
+sister, Hortense, "Say everything you can that is horrid about him.
+Point out all his faults to me, that I may find relief for my aching
+heart." When, a few months later, Marie saw the King again, he received
+her almost as a stranger, and had the bad taste to sing the praises of
+his Queen.
+
+But Marie Mancini was the last girl in all France to wed herself long to
+grief or an outraged vanity. There were other lovers by the score among
+whom she could pick and choose. She was more lovely now than when the
+recreant Louis first succumbed to her charms--with a ripened witchery of
+black eyes, red lips, the flash of pearly teeth revealed by every
+dazzling smile, with glorious black hair, the grace of a fawn, and a
+"voluptuous fascination" which no man could resist.
+
+Prince Charles of Lorraine was her veriest slave, but Mazarin would have
+none of him. Prince Colonna, Grand Constable of Naples, was more
+fortunate when he in turn came a-wooing. He bore the proudest name in
+Italy, and he had wealth, good-looks, and high connections to lend a
+glamour to his birth. The Cardinal smiled on his suit, and Marie, since
+she had no heart to give, willingly gave her hand.
+
+Louis himself graced the wedding with his presence; and we are told, as
+the white-faced bride "said the 'yes' which was to bind her to a
+stranger, her eyes, with an indescribable expression, sought those of
+the King, who turned pale as he met them."
+
+Over the rest of Marie Mancini's chequered life we must hasten. After a
+few years of wedded life with her Italian Prince, "Colonna's early
+passion for his beautiful wife was succeeded by a distaste amounting to
+hatred. He disgusted her with his amours; and when she ventured to
+protest against his infidelity, he tried to poison her." This crowning
+outrage determined Marie to fly, and, in company with her sister,
+Hortense, who had fled to her from the brutality of her own husband, she
+made her escape one dark night to Civita Vecchia, where a boat was
+awaiting the runaways.
+
+Hotly pursued on land and sea, narrowly escaping shipwreck, braving
+hardships, hunger, and hourly danger of capture, the fugitives at last
+reached Marseilles where Marie (Hortense now seeking a refuge in Savoy)
+began those years of wandering and adventure, the story of which
+outstrips fiction.
+
+Now we find her seeking asylum at convents from Aix to Madrid; now
+queening it at the Court of Savoy, with Duke Charles Emmanuel for lover;
+now she is dazzling Madrid with the Almirante of Castille and many
+another high-placed worshipper dancing attendance on her; and now she is
+in Rome, turning the heads of grave cardinals with her witcheries.
+Sometimes penniless and friendless, at others lapped in luxury; but
+carrying everywhere in her bosom the English pearls, the last gift of
+her false and frail Louis.
+
+Thus, through the long, troubled years, until old-age crept on her, the
+Cardinal's niece wandered, a fugitive, over the face of Europe,
+alternately caressed and buffeted by fortune, until "at long last" the
+end came and brought peace with it. As she lay dying in the house of a
+good Samaritan at Pisa, with no other hand to minister to her, she
+called for pen and paper, and with failing hand wrote her own epitaph,
+surely the most tragic ever penned--"Marie Mancini Colonna--Dust and
+Ashes."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+BIANCA, GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY
+
+More than three centuries have gone since Florence made merry over the
+death of her Grand Duchess, Bianca. It was an occasion for rejoicing;
+her name was bandied from lips to lips--"La Pessima Bianca"; jeers and
+laughter followed her to her unmarked grave in the Church of San
+Lorenzo. But through the ages her picture has come down to us as she
+strutted on the world's stage in all her pride and beauty, with a
+vividness which few better women of her time retain.
+
+It was in the year 1548, when our boy-King, the sixth Edward, was fresh
+to his crown, that Bianca Capello was cradled in the palace of her
+father, one of the greatest men of Venice, Senator and Privy Councillor.
+As a child she was as beautiful as she was wilful; the pride of her
+father, the despair of his wife, her stepmother--her little head full of
+romance, her heart full of rebellion against any kind of discipline or
+restraint.
+
+Before she had left the schoolroom Capello's daughter was, by common
+consent, the fairest girl in her native city, with a beauty riper than
+her years. Tall, and with a well-developed figure of singular grace,
+she carried her head as proudly as any Queen. Her fair hair fell in a
+rippling cascade far below her waist; her face, hands, and throat, we
+are told, were "white as lilies," save for the delicate rose-colour that
+tinted her cheeks. Her eyes were large and dark, and of an almost
+dazzling brilliance; and her full, pouting lips were red and fragrant as
+a rose.
+
+Such was Bianca Capello on the threshold of womanhood, as you may see
+her pictured to-day in Bronzino's miniature at the British Museum, with
+a loveliness which set the hearts of the Venetian gallants a-flutter
+before our Shakespeare was in his cradle. She might, if she would, have
+mated with almost any noble in Tuscany, had not her foolish, wayward
+fancy fallen on Pietro Bonaventuri, a handsome young clerk in Salviati's
+bank, whose eyes had often strayed from his ledgers to follow her as, in
+the company of her maid, the Senator's daughter took her daily walk past
+his office window.
+
+At sight of so fair a vision Pietro was undone; he fell violently in
+love with her long before he exchanged a word with her, and although no
+one knew better than he the gulf that separated the daughter of a
+nobleman and a Senator from the drudge of the quill, he determined to
+win her. Youth and good-looks such as his, with plenty of assurance to
+support them, had done as much for others, and they should do it for
+him. How they first met we know not, but we know that shortly after this
+momentous meeting Bianca had completely lost her heart to the knight of
+the quill, with the handsome face, the dark, flashing eyes, and the
+courtly manner.
+
+Other meetings followed--secret rendezvous arranged by the duenna
+herself in return for liberal bribes--to keep which Bianca would steal
+out of her father's palace at dead of night, leaving the door open
+behind her to ensure safe return before dawn. On one such occasion, so
+the story runs, Bianca returned to find the door closed against her by a
+too officious hand. She dared not wake the sleepers to gain
+admittance--that would be to expose her secret and to cover herself with
+disgrace--and in her fears and alarm she fled back to her lover.
+
+However this may be, we know that, for some urgent reason or other, the
+young lovers disappeared one night together from Venice and made their
+way to Florence to find a refuge under the roof of Pietro's parents.
+Here a terrible disillusion met Bianca at the threshold. Her
+husband--for, on the runaway journey, Pietro had secured the friendly
+services of a village priest to marry them--had told her that he was the
+son of noble parents, kin to his employers, the Salviatis. The home to
+which he now introduced her was little better than a hovel, with poverty
+looking out of its windows.
+
+Here indeed was a sorry home-coming for the new-made bride, daughter of
+the great Capello! There was not even a drudge to do the housework,
+which Bianca was compelled to share with her bucolic mother-in-law. It
+is even said that she was compelled to do laundry-work in order to keep
+the domestic purse supplied. Her husband had forfeited his meagre
+salary; she had equally sacrificed the fortune left to her by her
+mother. Sordid, grinding poverty stared both in the face.
+
+To return to her own home in Venice was impossible. So furious were her
+father and stepmother at her escapade that a large reward was advertised
+for the capture of her husband, "alive or dead," and a sentence of death
+had been procured from the Council of Ten in the event of his arrest.
+More than this, a sentence of banishment was pronounced against Pietro
+and Bianca; the maid who had connived at their illicit wooing and flight
+paid for her treachery with her life; and Pietro's uncle ended his days
+in a loathsome dungeon.
+
+Such was the vengeance taken by Bartolomeo Capello. As for the runaways,
+they spent a long honeymoon in concealment and hourly dread of the fate
+that hung over them. It was well known, however, in Florence where they
+were in hiding; and curious crowds were drawn to the Bonaventuri hovel
+to catch a glimpse of the heroes of a scandal with which all Italy was
+ringing. Thus it was that Francesco de Medici first set eyes on the
+woman who was to play so great a part in his life.
+
+There could be no greater contrast than that between Francesco de
+Medici, heir to the Tuscan Grand Dukedom, and the beautiful young wife
+of the bank-clerk, now playing the role of maid-of-all-work and
+charwoman. It is said that Francesco was a madman; and indeed what we
+know of him makes this description quite plausible. He was a man of
+black brow and violent temper, repelling alike in appearance and
+manner. He was, we are told, "more of a savage than a civilised human
+being." His food was deluged with ginger and pepper; his favourite fare
+was raw eggs filled with red pepper, and raw onions, of which he ate
+enormous quantities. He drank iced water by the gallon, and slept
+between frozen sheets. He was a man, moreover, of evil life, familiar
+with every form of vicious indulgence. His only redeeming feature was a
+love of art, which enriched the galleries of Florence.
+
+Such was the Medici--half-ogre, half-madman, who, riding one day through
+a Florence slum, saw at the window of a mean dwelling the beautiful face
+of Bianca Bonaventuri, and rode on leaving his heart behind. Here indeed
+was a dainty dish to set before his jaded appetite. The owner of that
+fair face, with the crimson lips and the black, flashing eyes, must be
+his. On the following day a great Court lady, the Marchesa Mondragone,
+presents herself at the Bonaventuri door, with smiles and gracious
+words, bearing an invitation to Court for the lady of the window.
+"Impossible," bluntly answers Signora Bonaventuri; her daughter-in-law
+has no clothes fit to be seen at Court. "But," persists the Marchesa,
+"that is a matter that can easily be arranged. It will be a pleasure to
+me to supply the necessary outfit, if the Signora and her
+daughter-in-law will but come to-morrow to the Mondragone Palace." The
+bride, when consulted, is not unwilling; and the following day, in
+company with her mother-in-law, she is effusively received by the
+Marchesa, and is feasting her eyes on exquisite robes and the glitter
+of rare gems, among which she is invited to make her choice. A moment
+later Francesco enters, and with courtly grace is kissing the hand of
+his new divinity....
+
+Then followed secret meetings such as marked Bianca's first unhappy
+wooing in Venice--hours of rapture for the Tuscan Duke, of flattered
+submission by the runaway bride; and within a few weeks we find Bianca
+installed in a palace of her own with Francesco's guards and equipage
+ever at its door, while his newly made bride, Giovanna, Archduchess of
+Austria, kept her lonely vigil in the apartments which so seldom saw her
+husband.
+
+Francesco, indeed, had no eyes or thought for any but the lovely woman
+who had so completely enslaved him. As for her, condemn her as we must,
+much can be pleaded in extenuation of her conduct. She had been basely
+deceived and betrayed. On the one side was a life of sordid poverty and
+drudgery, with a husband for whom she had now nothing but dislike and
+contempt; on the other was the ardent homage of the future ruler of
+Tuscany, with its accompaniment of splendour, luxury, and power. A fig
+for love! ambition should now rule her life. She would drain the cup of
+pleasure, though the dregs might be bitter to the taste.
+
+She was now in the very prime of her beauty, and a Queen in all but the
+name. Between her and her full Queendom were but two obstacles--her
+lover's plain, unattractive wife, and her own worthless husband; and of
+these obstacles one was soon to be removed from her path.
+
+Pietro, who had been made chamberlain to the Tuscan Court, was more
+than content that his wife should go her own way, so long as he was
+allowed to go his. He was kept very agreeably occupied with love affairs
+of his own. The richest widow in Florence, Cassandra Borgianni, was
+eager to lavish her smiles and favours on him; and the knowledge that
+two of his predecessors in her affection had fallen under the assassin's
+knife only lent zest to a love adventure which was after his heart.
+Warnings of the fate that might await him in turn fell on deaf ears.
+When his wife ventured to point out the danger he retorted, "If you say
+another word I will cut your throat." The following night as he was
+returning from a visit to the widow, a dagger was sheathed in his heart,
+and Pietro's amorous race was run.
+
+Such was the end of the bank-clerk and his eleventh-hour glories and
+love adventures. Now only Giovanna remained to block the way to the
+pinnacle of Bianca's ambition; and her health was so frail that the
+waiting might not be long. Giovanna had provided no successor to her
+husband (who had now succeeded to his Grand Dukedom); if Bianca could
+succeed where the Grand Duchess had failed, she could at least ensure
+that a son of hers would one day rule over Tuscany.
+
+Thus one August day in 1576 the news flashed round Florence that a male
+child had been born in the palace on the Via Maggiore. Francesco was in
+the "seventh heaven" of delight. Here at last was the long-looked-for
+inheritor of his honours--the son who was to perpetuate the glories of
+the Medici and to thwart his brother, the Cardinal, who had so
+confidently counted on the succession for himself. And Madame Bianca
+professed herself equally delighted, although her pleasure was qualified
+by fear.
+
+She had played her part with consummate cleverness; but there were two
+women who knew the true story of the birth of the child, which had been
+smuggled into the palace from a Florence slum. One was the changeling's
+mother, a woman of the people, whom a substantial bribe had induced to
+part with her new-born infant; the other was Bianca's waiting woman.
+These witnesses to the imposture must be silenced effectually.
+
+Hired assassins made short work of the mother. The waiting-maid was
+"left for dead" in a mountain-pass, to which she had been lured; but she
+survived long enough at least to communicate her secret to the Grand
+Duke's brother, the Cardinal Ferdinand de Medici.
+
+Bianca was now in a parlous plight. At any moment her enemy, the
+Cardinal, might betray her to her lover, and bring the carefully planned
+edifice of her fortunes tumbling about her ears. But she proved equal
+even to this emergency. Taking her courage in both hands, she herself
+confessed the fraud to the Grand Duke, who not only forgave her (so
+completely was he under the spell of her beauty) but insisted on calling
+the gutter-child his son.
+
+The tables, however, were soon to be turned on her, for Giovanna, who
+had long despaired of providing an heir to her husband, gave birth a
+few months later to a male child. Florence was jubilant, for the Grand
+Duchess was as beloved as her rival was detested; and the christening of
+the heir was made the occasion of festivities and rejoicing. Bianca's
+day of triumph seemed at last to be over. For a time she left Florence
+to hide her humiliation; but within a year she was back again, to be
+received with open arms of welcome by the Duke. During her absence she
+had made peace with her family, and when her father and brother came to
+Florence to visit her, they were received by Francesco with regal
+entertainments, and sent away loaded with presents and honours.
+
+Bianca had now reached the zenith of her power and splendour. Before she
+had been back many months the Grand Duchess died, to the undisguised
+relief of her husband, who hastened from her funeral to the arms of her
+rival. Her position was now secure, unassailable; and before Giovanna
+had been two months in the family vault, Bianca was secretly married to
+her Grand ducal lover.
+
+Florence was furious. But what mattered that? The Venetian Senate had
+recognised Bianca as a true daughter of the Republic. She was the legal
+wife of the ruler of Tuscany. She was Grand Duchess at last, and she
+meant all the world to know it. That she was cordially hated by her
+husband's subjects, that the air was full of stories of her
+extravagance, her intemperance, and her cruelty, gave her no moment's
+unhappiness. For eight years she reigned as Queen, wielding the sceptre
+her husband's hands were too weak or indifferent to hold. Giovanna's
+son had followed his mother to the grave; and the child of the slums,
+who had been so fruitlessly smuggled into her palace, had been
+legitimated.
+
+The only thorn now left in her bed of roses was the enmity of the Grand
+Duke's brother, the Cardinal; and her greatest ambition was to win him
+to her side. In the autumn of 1787 he was invited to Florence, and as
+the culmination of a series of festivities, a grand banquet was given,
+at which he had the place of honour, at her right hand. The feast was
+drawing near to its end. Bianca, with sparkling eyes and flushed face,
+looking lovelier than she had ever looked before, was at her happiest,
+for the Cardinal had at last succumbed to her bright eyes and honeyed
+words. It was the crowning moment of her many triumphs, when life left
+nothing more to desire.
+
+Then it was, at the supreme moment, that tragedy in its most terrible
+form fell on the scene of festivity and mirth. While Bianca was smiling
+her sweetest on the Cardinal she was seized by violent pains, "her mouth
+foams, her face is distorted by agony; she shrieks aloud that she is
+dying. Francesco tries to go to her aid, but his steps are suddenly
+arrested. He too is seized by the same terrible anguish. A few hours
+later both she and he breathe their last breath."
+
+"Poison" was the word which ran through the palace and soon through
+Florence from blanched lips to blanched lips. Some said it was the
+Cardinal who had done the deed; others whispered stories of a poisoned
+tart designed by Bianca for the Cardinal, who refused to be tempted.
+Whereupon the Grand Duke had eaten of it, and Bianca, "seeing that her
+plot had so tragically miscarried, seized the tart from her husband's
+hand and ate what was left of it."
+
+The truth will never be known. What we do know is that within a few
+hours of the last joke and the last drained glass of that fatal banquet
+the bodies of Francesco and Bianca were lying in death side by side in
+an adjacent room, the door of which was locked against the eyes of the
+curious--even against the physicians.
+
+In the solemn lying-in-state that followed Bianca had no place.
+Francesco alone, by his brother's orders, wore his crown in death. As
+for Bianca, her body was hurried away and flung into the common vault of
+San Lorenzo, with the light of two yellow wax torches to bear it
+company, and the jibes and jeers of Florence for its only requiem.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+RICHELIEU, THE ROUE
+
+In the drama of the French Court many a fine-feathered villain "struts
+his brief hour" on the stage, dazzling eyes by his splendour, and
+shocking a world none too easily shocked in those days of easy morals by
+his profligacy; but it would be difficult among all these gilded rakes
+to find a match for the Duc de Richelieu, who carried his villainies
+through little less than a century of life.
+
+Born in 1696, when Louis XIV. had still nearly twenty years of his long
+reign before him, Louis Francois Armand Duplessis, Duc de Richelieu,
+survived to hear the rumblings which heralded the French Revolution
+ninety-two years later; and for three-quarters of a century to be known
+as the most accomplished and heartless roue in all France. Bearer of a
+great name, and inheritor of the splendours and riches of his
+great-uncle, the Cardinal, who was Louis XII.'s right-hand man, and, in
+his day, the most powerful subject in Europe, the Duc was born with the
+football of fortune at his feet; and probably no man who has ever lived
+so shamefully prostituted such magnificent opportunities and gifts.
+
+As a boy, still in his teens, he had begun to play the role of Don Juan
+at the Court of the child-King, Louis XV. The most beautiful women at
+the Court, we are told, went crazy over the handsome boy, who bore the
+most splendid name in France; and thus early his head was turned by
+flatteries and attentions which followed him almost to the grave.
+
+The young Duchesse de Bourgogne, the King's mother, made love to him, to
+the scandal of the Court; and from Princesses of the Blood Royal to the
+humblest serving-maid, there was scarcely a woman at Court who would not
+have given her eyes for a smile from the Duc de Fronsac, as he was then
+known.
+
+How he revelled in his conquests he makes abundantly clear in the
+Memoirs he left behind him--surely the most scandalous ever written--in
+which he recounts his love affairs, in long sequence, with a
+cold-blooded heartlessness which shocks the reader to-day, so long after
+lover and victims have been dust. He revels in describing the artifices
+by which he got the most unassailable of women into his power--such as
+the young and beautiful Madame Michelin, whose religious scruples proved
+such a frail barrier against the assaults of the young Lothario. He
+chuckles with a diabolical pride as he tells us how he played off one
+mistress against another; how he made one liaison pave the way to its
+successor; and how he abandoned each in turn when it had served its
+purpose, and betrayed, one after another, the women who had trusted to
+his nebulous sense of honour.
+
+A profligate so tempted as the Duc de Richelieu was from his earliest
+years, one can understand, however much we may condemn; but for the man
+who conducted his love affairs with such heartlessness and dishonour no
+language has words of execration and contempt to describe him.
+
+From his earliest youth there was no "game" too high for our Don Juan to
+fly at. Long before he had reached manhood he counted his lady-loves by
+the score; and among them were at least three Royal Princesses,
+Mademoiselle de Charolais, and two of the Regent's own daughters, the
+Duchesse de Berry and Mademoiselle de Valois, later Duchess of Modena,
+who, in their jealousy, were ready to "tear each other's eyes out" for
+love of the Duc. Quarrels between the rival ladies were of everyday
+occurrence; and even duels were by no means unknown.
+
+When, for instance, the Duc wearied of the lovely Madame de Polignac,
+this lady was so inflamed by hatred of her successor in his affections,
+the Marquise de Nesle, that she challenged her to a duel to the death in
+the Bois de Boulogne. When Madame de Polignac, after a fierce exchange
+of shots, saw her rival stretched at her feet, she turned furiously on
+the wounded woman. "Go!" she shrieked. "I will teach you to walk in the
+footsteps of a woman like me! If I had the traitor here, I would blow
+his brains out!" Whereupon, Madame de Nesle, fainting as she was from
+loss of blood, retorted that her lover was worthy that even more noble
+blood than hers should be shed for him. "He is," she said to the few
+onlookers who had hurried to the scene on hearing the shots, "the most
+amiable _seigneur_ of the Court. I am ready to shed for him the last
+drop of blood in my veins. All these ladies try to catch him, but I hope
+that the proofs I have given of my devotion will win him for myself
+without sharing with anyone. Why should I hide his name? He is the Duc
+de Richelieu--yes, the Duc de Richelieu, the eldest son of Venus and
+Mars!"
+
+Such was the devotion which this heartless profligate won from some of
+the most beautiful and highly placed ladies of France. What was the
+secret of the spell he cast over them it is difficult to say. It is true
+that he was a handsome man, as his portraits show, but there were men
+quite as handsome at the French Court; he was courtly and accomplished,
+but he had many rivals as clever and as skilled in courtly arts as
+himself. His power must, one thinks, have lain in that strange magnetism
+which women seem so powerless to resist in men, and which outweighs all
+graces of mind and physical perfections.
+
+The Duc's career, however, was not one unbroken dallying with love.
+Thrice, at least, he was sent to cool his ardour within the walls of the
+Bastille--on one occasion as the result of a duel with the Comte de
+Gace. His lady-loves were desolate at the cruel fate which had overtaken
+their idol. They fell on their knees at the Regent's feet, and, with
+tears streaming down their pretty cheeks, pleaded for his freedom. Two
+of the Royal Princesses, both disguised as Sisters of Charity, visited
+the prisoner daily in his dungeon, carrying with them delicacies to
+tempt his appetite, and consolation to cheer his captivity.
+
+In vain did Duc and Comte both declare that they had never fought a
+duel; and when, in the absence of proof, the Regent insisted that their
+bodies should be examined for the convicting wounds, the impish
+Richelieu came triumphantly through the ordeal as the result of having
+his wounds covered with pink taffeta and skilfully painted!
+
+It was a more serious matter that sent him again to the Bastille in
+1718. False to his country as to the victims of his fascinations, he had
+been plotting with Spain, France's bitterest enemy, for the seizure of
+the Regent and the carrying him off across the Pyrenees; and certain
+incriminating letters sent to him by Cardinal Alberoni had been
+intercepted, and were in the Regent's hands. The Regent's daughter,
+Mademoiselle de Valois, warned her lover of his danger, but too late.
+Before he could escape, he was arrested, and with an escort of archers
+was safely lodged in the Bastille.
+
+Our Lothario was now indeed in a parlous plight. Lodged in the deepest
+and most loathsome dungeon of the Bastille--a dungeon so damp that
+within a few hours his clothes were saturated--without even a chair to
+sit on or a bed to lie on, with legions of hungry rats for company, he
+was now face to face with almost certain death. The Regent, whose love
+affairs he had thwarted a score of times, and who thus had no reason to
+love the profligate Duc, vowed that his head should pay the price of his
+treason.
+
+Once more the Court ladies were reduced to hysterics and despair, and
+forgot their jealousies in a common appeal to the Regent for clemency.
+Mademoiselle de Valois was driven to distraction; and when tears and
+pleadings failed to soften her father's heart, she declared in the
+hearing of the Court that she would commit suicide unless her lover was
+restored to liberty. In company with her rival, Mademoiselle de
+Charolais, she visited the dungeon in the dark night hours, taking flint
+and steel, candles and bonbons, to weep with the captive.
+
+She squandered two hundred thousand livres in attempts to bribe his
+guards, but all to no purpose: and it was not until after six months of
+durance that the Regent at last yielded--moved partly by his daughter's
+tears and threats and partly by the pleadings of the Cardinal-Archbishop
+of Paris--and the prisoner was released, on condition that the Cardinal
+and the Duchesse de Richelieu would be responsible for his custody and
+good behaviour.
+
+A few days later we find the irresponsible Richelieu climbing over the
+garden-walls of his new "prison" at Conflans, racing through the
+darkness to Paris behind swift horses, and making love to the Regent's
+own mistresses and his daughter!
+
+But such facilities for dalliance with the Regent's daughter were soon
+to be brought to an end. Mademoiselle de Valois, in order to ensure her
+lover's freedom, had at last consented to accept the hand of the Duke of
+Modena, an alliance which she had long fought against; and before the
+Duc had been a free man again many weeks she paid this part of his
+ransom by going into exile, and to an odious wedded life, in a far
+corner of Italy--much, it may be imagined, to the Regent's relief, for
+his daughters and their love affairs were ever a thorn in his side.
+
+It was not long, however, before the new Duchess of Modena began to sigh
+for her distant lover, and to bombard him with letters begging him to
+come to her. "I cannot live without your love," she wrote. "Come to
+me--only, come in disguise, so that no one can recognise you."
+
+This was indeed an adventure after the Lothario Duc's heart--an
+adventure with love as its reward and danger as its spur. And thus it
+was that, a few weeks after the Duchess had sent her invitation, two
+travel-stained pedlars, with packs on their backs, entered the city of
+Modena to find customers for their books and phamphlets. At the small
+hostelry whose hospitality they sought the hawkers gave their names as
+Gasparini and Romano, names which masked the identities of the
+knight-errant Duc and his friend, La Fosse, respectively.
+
+The following morning behold the itinerant hawkers in the palace
+grounds, their wares spread out to tempt the Court ladies on their way
+to Mass, when the Duchess herself passed their way and deigned to stop
+to converse graciously with the strangers. To her inquiries they
+answered that they came from Piedmont; and their curious jargon of
+French and Italian lent support to the story. After inspecting their
+wares she asked for a certain book. "Alas! Madame," Gasparini answered,
+"I have not a copy here, but I have one at my inn." And bidding him
+bring the volume to her at the palace, the great lady resumed her devout
+journey to Mass.
+
+A few hours later Gasparini presented himself at the palace with the
+required volume, and was ushered into the august presence of the
+Duchess. A moment later, on the closing of the door, the Royal lady was
+in the "hawker's" arms, her own flung around his neck, as with tears of
+joy she welcomed the lover who had come to her in such strange guise and
+at such risk.
+
+A few stolen moments of happiness was all the lovers dared now to allow
+themselves. The Duke of Modena was in the palace, and the situation was
+full of danger. But on the morrow he was going away on a hunting
+expedition, and then--well, then they might meet without fear.
+
+On the following day, the coast now clear, behold our "hawker" once more
+at the palace door, with a bundle of books under his arm for the
+inspection of Her Highness, and being ushered into the Duchess's
+reading-room, full of souvenirs of the happy days they had spent
+together in distant Paris and Versailles. Among them, most prized of
+all, was a lock of his own hair, enshrined on a small altar, and
+surmounted by a crown of interlocked hearts. This lock, the Duchess told
+him, she had kissed and wept over every day since they had parted.
+
+Each day now brought its hours of blissful meeting, so seemingly short
+that the Princess would throw her arms around her "hawker's" neck and
+implore him to stay a little longer. One day, however, he tarried too
+long; the Duke returned unexpectedly from his hunting, and before the
+lovers could part, he had entered the room--just in time to see the
+pedlar bowing humbly in farewell to his Duchess, and to hear him assure
+her that he would call again with the further books she wished to see.
+
+Certainly it was a strange spectacle to greet the eyes of a home-coming
+Duke--that of his lady closeted with a shabby pedlar of books; but at
+least there was nothing suspicious in it, and, getting into conversation
+with the "hawker," the Duke found him quite an entertaining fellow, full
+of news of what was going on in the world outside his small duchy.
+
+In his curious jargon of French and Italian, Gasparini had much to tell
+His Highness apart from book-talk. He entertained him with the latest
+scandals of the French Court; with gossip about well-known personages,
+from the Regent to Dubois. "And what about that rascal, the Duc de
+Richelieu?" asked the great man. "What tricks has he been up to lately?"
+"Oh," answered Gasparini, with a wink at the Duchess, who was crimson
+with suppressed laughter, "he is one of my best customers. Ah, Monsieur
+le Duc, he is a gay dog. I hear that all the women at the Court are
+madly in love with him; that the Princesses adore him, and that he is
+driving all the husbands to distraction."
+
+"Is it as bad as that?" asked the Duke, with a laugh. "He is a more
+dangerous fellow even than I thought. And what is his latest game?"
+
+"Oh," answered the hawker, "I am told that he has made a wager that he
+will come to Modena, in spite of you; and I shouldn't be at all
+surprised if he does!"
+
+"As for that," said the Duke, with a chuckle, "I am not afraid. I defy
+him to do his worst; and I am willing to wager that I shall be a match
+for him. However," he added, "you're an entertaining fellow; so come and
+see me again whenever you please."
+
+And thus, by the wish of the Duchess's husband himself, the ducal
+"hawker" became a daily visitor at the palace, entertaining His Highness
+with his chatter, and, when his back was turned, making love to his
+wife, and joining her in shrieks of laughter at his easy gullibility.
+
+Thus many happy weeks passed, Gasparini, the pedlar, selling few
+volumes, but reaping a rich harvest of stolen pleasure, and revelling in
+an adventure which added such a new zest to a life sated with more
+humdrum love-making. But even the Duchess's charms began to pall; the
+ladies he had left so disconsolate in Paris were inundating him with
+letters, begging him to return to them--letters, all forwarded to him
+from his chateau at Richelieu, where he was supposed to be in retreat.
+The lure was too strong for him; and, taking leave of the Duchess in
+floods of tears, he returned to his beloved Paris to fresh conquests.
+
+And thus it was with the gay Duc until the century that followed that of
+his birth was drawing to its close; until its sun was beginning to set
+in the blood of that Revolution, which, if he had lived but one year
+longer, would surely have claimed him as one of its first victims.
+Three wives he led to the altar--the last when he had passed into the
+eighties--but no marital duty was allowed to interfere with the amours
+which filled his life; and to the last no pity ever gave a pang to the
+"conscience" which allowed him to pick and fling away his flowers at
+will, and to trample, one after another, on the hearts that yielded to
+his love and trusted to his honour.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS
+
+It was an ill fate that brought Caroline, Princess of
+Brunswick-Wolfenbuettel to England to be the bride of George, Prince of
+Wales, one April day in the year 1795; although probably no woman has
+ever set forth on her bridal journey with a lighter or prouder heart,
+for, as she said, "Am I not going to be the wife of the handsomest
+Prince in the world?" If she had any momentary doubt of this, a glance
+at the miniature she carried in her bosom reassured her; for the
+pictured face that smiled at her was handsome as that of an Apollo.
+
+No wonder the Princess's heart beat high with pride and pleasure during
+that last triumphal stage of her journey to her husband's arms; for he
+was not only the handsomest man, with "the best shaped leg in Europe,"
+he was by common consent the "greatest gentleman" any Court could show.
+Picture him as he made his first appearance at a Court ball. "His coat,"
+we are told, "was of pink silk, with white cuffs; his waistcoat of white
+silk, embroidered with various-coloured foil and adorned with a
+profusion of French paste. And his hat was ornamented with two rows of
+steel beads, five thousand in number, with a button and a loop of the
+same metal, and cocked in a new military style." See young "Florizel" as
+he makes his smiling and gracious progress through the avenues of
+courtiers; note the winsomeness of his smiles, the inimitable grace of
+his bows, his pleasant, courtly words of recognition, and say if ever
+Royalty assumed a form more agreeable to the eye and captivating to the
+senses.
+
+"Florizel" was indeed the most splendid Prince in the world, and the
+most "perfect gentleman." He was also, though his bride-to-be little
+knew it, the most dissolute man in Europe, the greatest gambler and
+voluptuary--a man who was as false to his friends as he was traitor to
+every woman who crossed his path, a man whom no appeal of honour or
+mercy could check in his selfish pursuit of pleasure.
+
+"I look through all his life," Thackeray says, "and recognise but a bow
+and a grin. I try and take him to pieces, and find silk stockings,
+padding, stays, a coat with frogs and a fur collar, a star and blue
+ribbon, a pocket handkerchief prodigiously scented, one of Truefitt's
+best nutty brown wigs reeking with oil, a set of teeth and a huge black
+stock, under-waistcoats, more under-waistcoats, and then--nothing.
+French ballet-dancers, French cooks, horse-jockeys, buffoons,
+procuresses, tailors, boxers, fencing-masters, china, jewel and
+gimcrack-merchants--these were his real companions."
+
+Such was the husband Princess Caroline came so light-heartedly, with
+laughter on her lips, from Brunswick to wed, little dreaming of the
+disillusion and tears that were to await her on the very threshold of
+the life to which she had looked forward with such high hopes.
+
+We get the first glimpse of Caroline some twelve years earlier, when Sir
+John Stanley, who was making the grand tour, spent a few weeks at her
+father's Court. He speaks of her as a "beautiful girl of fourteen," and
+adds, "I did think and dream of her day and night at Brunswick, and for
+a year afterwards I saw her for hours three or fours times a week, but
+as a star out of my reach." Years later he met her again under sadly
+changed conditions. "One day only," he writes, "when dining with her and
+her mother at Blackheath, she smiled at something which had pleased her,
+and for an instant only I could have fancied she had been the Caroline
+of fourteen years old--the lovely, pretty Caroline, the girl my eyes had
+so often rested on, with light and powdered hair hanging in curls on her
+neck, the lips from which only sweet words seemed as if they would flow,
+with looks animated, and always simply and modestly dressed."
+
+Lady Charlotte Campbell, too, gives us a glimpse of her in these early
+and happier years, before sorrow had laid its defacing hand on her. "The
+Princess was in her early youth a pretty girl," Lady Charlotte says,
+"with fine light hair--very delicately formed features, and a fine
+complexion--quick, glancing, penetrating eyes, long cut and rather small
+in the head, which gave them much expression; and a remarkably
+delicately formed mouth."
+
+It was in no happy home that the Princess had been cradled one May day
+in 1768. Her father, Charles William, Duke of Brunswick, was an austere
+soldier, too much absorbed in his military life and his mistress, to
+give much thought to his daughters. Her mother, the Duchess Augusta,
+sister of our own George III., was weak and small-minded, too much
+occupied in self-indulgence and scandal-talking to trouble about the
+training of her children.
+
+Princess Caroline herself draws an unattractive picture of her
+home-life, in answer to Lady Charlotte Campbell's question, "Were you
+sorry to leave Brunswick?" "Not at all," was the answer; "I was sick
+tired of it, though I was sorry to leave my fader. I loved my fader
+dearly, better than any oder person. But dere were some unlucky tings in
+our Court which made my position difficult. My fader was most entirely
+attached to a lady for thirty years, who was in fact his mistress. She
+was the beautifullest creature and the cleverest, but, though my fader
+continued to pay my moder all possible respect, my poor moder could not
+suffer this attachment. And de consequence was, I did not know what to
+do between them; when I was civil to one, I was scolded by the other,
+and was very tired of being shuttlecock between them."
+
+But in spite of these unfortunate home conditions Caroline appears to
+have spent a fairly happy girlhood, thanks to her exuberant spirits; and
+such faults as she developed were largely due to the lack of parental
+care, which left her training to servants. Thus she grew up with quite a
+shocking disregard of conventions, running wild like a young filly, and
+finding her pleasure and her companions in undesirable directions.
+Strange stories are told of her girlish love affairs, which seem to have
+been indiscreet if nothing worse, while her beauty drew to her many a
+high-placed wooer, including the Prince of Orange and Prince George of
+Darmstadt, to all of whom she seems to have turned a cold shoulder.
+
+But the wilful Princess was not to be left mistress of her own destiny.
+One November day, in 1794, Lord Malmesbury arrived at the Brunswick
+Court to demand her hand for the Prince of Wales, whom his burden of
+debts and the necessity of providing an heir to the throne of England
+were at last driving reluctantly to the altar. And thus a new and
+dazzling future opened for her. To her parents nothing could have been
+more welcome than this prospect of a crown for their daughter; while to
+her it offered a release from a life that had become odious.
+
+"The Princess Caroline much embarrassed on my first being presented to
+her," Malmesbury enters in his diary--"pretty face, not expressive of
+softness--her figure not graceful, fine eyes, good hands, tolerable
+teeth, fair hair and light eyebrows, good bust, short, with what the
+French call 'des epaules impertinentes,' vastly happy with her future
+expectations."
+
+Such were Malmesbury's first impressions of the future Queen of England,
+whom it was his duty to prepare for her exalted station--a duty which he
+seems to have taken very seriously, even to the regulating of her
+toilette and her manners. Thus, a few days after setting eyes on her,
+his diary records: "She _will_ call ladies whom she meets for the first
+time 'Mon coeur, ma chere, ma petite,' and I am obliged to rebuke and
+correct her." He lectures her on her undignified habit of whispering and
+giggling, and impresses on her the necessity of greater care in her
+attire, on more constant and thorough ablution, more frequent changes of
+linen, the care of her teeth, and so on--all of which admonitions she
+seems to have taken in excellent part, with demure promises of
+amendment, until he is impelled to write, "Princess Caroline improves
+very much on a closer acquaintance--cheerful and loves laughing. If she
+can get rid of her gossiping habit she will do very well."
+
+Thus a few months passed at the Brunswick Court. The ceremonial of
+betrothal took place in December--"Princess Caroline much affected, but
+replies distinctly and well"; the marriage-contract was signed, and
+finally on 28th March the Princess embarked for England on her journey
+to the unseen husband whose good-looks and splendour have filled her
+with such high expectations. That she had not yet learnt discretion, in
+spite of all Malmesbury's homilies, is proved by the fact that she spent
+the night on board in walking up and down the deck in the company of a
+handsome young naval officer, conduct which naturally gave cause for
+observation and suspicion in the affianced bride of the future King of
+England.
+
+It was well, perhaps, that she had snatched these few hours of innocent
+pleasure: for her first meeting with her future husband was well
+calculated to scatter all her rosy dreams. Arrived at last at St James's
+Palace, "I immediately notified the arrival to the King and Prince of
+Wales," says Malmesbury; "the last came immediately. I accordingly
+introduced the Princess Caroline to him. She very properly attempted to
+kneel to him. He raised her gracefully enough, and embraced her, said
+barely one word, turned round and retired to a distant part of the
+apartment, and calling to me said: 'Harris, I am not well; pray get me a
+glass of brandy.' I said, 'Sir, had you not better have a glass of
+water?' Upon which he, much out of humour, said with an oath: 'No; I
+will go directly to the Queen,' and away he went. The Princess, left
+during this short moment alone, was in a state of astonishment; and, on
+my joining her, said, '_Mon Dieu_, is the Prince always like that? I
+find him very fat, and not at all as handsome as his portrait.'"
+
+Such was the Princess's welcome to the arms of her handsome husband and
+to the Court over which she hoped to reign as Queen; nor did she receive
+much warmer hospitality from the Prince's family. The Queen, who had
+designed a very different bride for her eldest son, received her with
+scarcely disguised enmity, while the King, although, as he afterwards
+proved, kindly disposed towards her, treated her at first with an
+amiable indifference. And certainly her attitude seems to have been
+calculated to create an unfavourable impression on her new relatives and
+on the Court generally.
+
+At the banquet which followed her reception, Malmesbury says, "I was far
+from satisfied with the Princess's behaviour. It was flippant, rattling,
+affecting raillery and wit, and throwing out coarse, vulgar hints about
+Lady----, who was present. The Prince was evidently disgusted, and this
+unfortunate dinner fixed his dislike, which, when left to herself, the
+Princess had not the talent to remove; but by still observing the same
+giddy manners and attempts at cleverness and coarse sarcasm, increased
+it till it became positive hatred."
+
+"What," as Thackeray asks, "could be expected from a wedding which had
+such a beginning--from such a bridegroom and such a bride? Malmesbury
+tells us how the Prince reeled into the Chapel Royal to be married on
+the evening of Wednesday, the 8th of April; and how he hiccuped out his
+vows of fidelity." "My brother," John, Duke of Bedford, records, "was
+one of the two unmarried dukes who supported the Prince at the ceremony,
+and he had need of his support; for my brother told me the Prince was so
+drunk that he could scarcely support himself from falling. He told my
+brother that he had drunk several glasses of brandy to enable him to go
+through the ceremony. There is no doubt that it was a _compulsory_
+marriage."
+
+With such an overture, we are not surprised to learn that the Royal
+bridegroom spent his wedding-night in a state of stupor on the floor of
+his bedroom; or that at dawn, when he had slept off the effects of his
+debauch, "pages heard cries proceeding from the nuptial chamber, and
+shortly afterwards saw the bridegroom rush out violently."
+
+Nor, we may be sure, was the Prince's undisguised hatred of his bride in
+any way mitigated by the stories which Lady Jersey and others of hex
+rivals poured into his willing ears--stories of her attachment to a
+young German Prince whom she was not allowed to marry; of a mysterious
+illness, followed by a few weeks' retreat; of that midnight promenade
+with the young naval officer; of assignations with Major Toebingen, the
+handsomest soldier in Europe, who so proudly wore the amethyst tie-pin
+she had presented to him--these and many another story which reflected
+none too well on her reputation before he had set eyes on her. But it
+needed no such whispered scandal to strengthen his hatred of a bride who
+personally repelled him, and who had been forced on him at a time when
+his heart was fully engaged with his lawful wedded wife, Mrs
+Fitzherbert, when it was not straying to Lady Jersey, to "Perdita" or
+others of his legion of lights-o'-love.
+
+From the first day the ill-fated union was doomed. One violent scene
+succeeded another, until, before she had been two months a wife, the
+Prince declared that he would no longer live with her. He would only
+wait until her child was born; then he would formally and finally leave
+her. Thus, three months after the birth of the Princess Charlotte, the
+deed of separation was signed, and Caroline was at last free to escape
+from a Court which she had grown to detest, with good reason, and from a
+husband whose brutalities and infidelities filled her with loathing.
+
+She carried with her, however, this consolation, that the "great, hearty
+people of England loved and pitied her." "God bless you! we will bring
+your husband back to you," was among the many cries that greeted her as
+she left the palace on her way to exile. But, to quote Thackeray again,
+"they could not bring that husband back; they could not cleanse that
+selfish heart. Was hers the only one he had wounded? Steeped in
+selfishness, impotent for faithful attachment and manly enduring
+love--had it not survived remorse, was it not accustomed to desertion?"
+
+For a time the outcast Princess, with her infant daughter, led a retired
+life amid the peace and beauty of Blackheath, where she lived as simply
+as any bourgeoise, playing the "lady bountiful" to the poor among her
+neighbours. Her chief pleasure seems to have been to surround herself
+with cottage babies, converting Montague House into a "positive nursery,
+littered up with cradles, swaddling-bands, feeding bottles, and other
+things of the kind."
+
+But even to this rustic retirement watchful eyes and slanderous tongues
+followed her; and it was not long before stories were passing from mouth
+to mouth in the Court of strange doings at Blackheath. The Princess, it
+was said, had become very intimate with Sir John Douglas and his lady,
+her near neighbours, and more especially with Sydney Smith, a
+good-looking naval captain, who shared the Douglas home, a man,
+moreover, with whom she had had suspicious relations at her father's
+Court many years earlier. It was rumoured that Captain Smith was a
+frequent and too welcome guest at Montague House, at hours when discreet
+ladies are not in the habit of receiving their male friends. Nor was the
+handsome captain the only friend thus unconventionally entertained.
+There was another good-looking naval officer, a Captain Manby, and also
+Sir Thomas Lawrence, the famous painter, both of whom were admitted to a
+suspicious intimacy with the Princess of Wales.
+
+These rumours, sufficiently disquieting in themselves, were followed by
+stories of the concealed birth of a child, who had come mysteriously to
+swell the numbers of the Princess's proteges of the creche. Even King
+George, whose sympathy with his heir's ill-used wife was a matter of
+common knowledge, could not overlook a charge so grave as this. It must
+be investigated in the interests of the State, as well as of his
+family's honour; and, by his orders, a Commission of Peers was appointed
+to examine into the matter and ascertain the truth.
+
+The inquiry--the "Delicate Investigation" as it was appropriately
+called--opened in June, 1806, and witness after witness, from the
+Douglases to Robert Bidgood, a groom, gave evidence which more or less
+supported the charges of infidelity and concealment. The result of the
+investigation, however, was a verdict of acquittal, the Commissioners
+reporting that the Princess, although innocent, had been guilty of very
+indiscreet conduct--and this verdict the Privy Council confirmed.
+
+For the Princess it was a triumphant vindication, which was hailed with
+acclamation throughout the country. Even the Royal family showed their
+satisfaction by formal visits of congratulation to the Princess, from
+the King himself to the Duke of Cumberland who conducted his
+sister-in-law on a visit to the Court.
+
+But the days of Blackheath and the amateur nursery were at an end. The
+Princess returned to London, and found a more suitable home in
+Kensington Palace for some years, where she held her Court in rivalry of
+that of her husband at Carlton House. Here she was subjected to every
+affront and slight by the Prince and his set that the ingenuity of
+hatred could devise, and to crown her humiliation and isolation, her
+daughter Charlotte was taken from her and forbidden even to recognise
+her when their carriages passed in the street or park.
+
+Can we wonder that, under such remorseless persecutions, the Princess
+became more and more defiant; that she gave herself up to a life of
+recklessness and extravagance; that, more and more isolated from her own
+world, she sought her pleasure and her companions in undesirable
+quarters, finding her chief intimates in a family of Italian musicians;
+or that finally, heart-broken and despairing, she determined once for
+all to shake off the dust of a land that had treated her so cruelly?
+
+In August, 1814, with the approval of King and Parliament, the Princess
+left England to begin a career of amazing adventures and indiscretions,
+the story of which is one of the most remarkable in history.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS--_continued_
+
+When Caroline, Princess of Wales, shook the dust of England off her feet
+one August day in the year 1814, it was only natural that her steps
+should first turn towards the Brunswick home which held for her at least
+a few happy memories, and where she hoped to find in sympathy and old
+associations some salve for her wounded heart.
+
+But the fever of restlessness was in her blood--the restlessness which
+was to make her a wanderer over the face of the earth for half a dozen
+years. The peace and solace she had looked for in Brunswick eluded her;
+and before many days had passed she was on her way through Switzerland
+to the sunny skies of Italy, where she could perhaps find in distraction
+and pleasure the anodyne which a life of retirement denied her. She was
+full of rebellion against fate, of hatred against her husband and his
+country which had treated her with such unmerited cruelty. She would
+defy fate; she would put a whole continent between herself and the
+nightmare life she had left behind, she hoped for ever. She would pursue
+and find pleasure at whatever cost.
+
+In September, within five weeks of leaving England, we find her at
+Geneva, installed in a suite of rooms next to those occupied by Marie
+Louise, late Empress of France, a fugitive and exile like herself, and
+animated by the same spirit of reckless revolt against destiny--Marie
+Louise, we read, "making excursions like a lunatic on foot and on
+horseback, never even seeming to dream of making people remember that,
+before she became mixed up with a Corsican adventurer, she was an
+Archduchess"; the Princess of Wales, equally careless of her dignity and
+position, finding her pleasure in questionable company.
+
+"From the inn where she was stopping she heard music, and, quite
+unaccompanied, immediately entered a neighbouring house and disappeared
+in the medley of dancers." A few days later, at Lausanne, "she learned
+that a little ball was in progress at a house opposite the 'Golden
+Lion,' and she asked for an invitation. After dancing with everybody and
+anybody, she finished up by dancing a Savoyard dance, called a
+_fricassee_, with a nobody. Madame de Corsal, who blushed and wept for
+the rest of the company, declares that it has made her ill, and that she
+feels that the honour of England has been compromised." Thus early did
+Caroline begin that career of indiscretion, to call it by no worse name,
+which made of her six years' exile "a long suicide of her reputation."
+
+In October we find the Princess entering Milan, with her retinue of
+ladies-in-waiting, chamberlains, equerry, page, courier, and coachman,
+and with William Austin for companion--a boy, now about thirteen, whom
+she treated as her son, and who was believed by many to be the child of
+her imprudence at Blackheath, although the Commission of the "Delicate
+Investigation" had pronounced that he was son of a poor woman at
+Deptford. At Milan, as indeed wherever she wandered in Italy, the
+"vagabond Princess" was received as a Queen. Count di Bellegarde, the
+Austrian Governor, was the first to pay homage to her; at the Scala
+Theatre, the same evening, her entry was greeted with thunders of
+applause, and whenever she appeared in the Milan streets it was to an
+accompaniment of doffed hats and cheers.
+
+One of her first visits was to the studio of Giuseppe Bossi, the famous
+and handsome artist, whom she requested to paint her portrait. "On
+Thursday," Bossi records, "I sketched her successfully in the character
+of a Muse; then on Friday she came to show me her arms, of which she
+was, not without reason, decidedly vain--she is a gay and whimsical
+woman, she seems to have a good heart; at times she is ennuyee through
+lack of occupation." On one occasion when she met in the studio some
+French ladies, two of whom had been mistresses of the King of
+Westphalia, the poor artist was driven to distraction by the chatter,
+the singing, and dancing, in which the Princess especially displayed her
+agility, until, as he pathetically says, "the house seemed possessed of
+the devil, and you can imagine with what kind of ease it was possible
+for me to work."
+
+Before leaving Milan the Princess gave a grand banquet to Bellegarde
+and a number of the principal men of the city--a feast which was to have
+very important and serious consequences, for it was at this banquet that
+General Pino, one of her guests, introduced to Caroline a new courier, a
+man who, though she little dreamt it at the time, was destined to play a
+very baleful part in her life.
+
+This new courier was a tall and strikingly handsome man, who had seen
+service in the Italian army, until a duel, in which he killed a superior
+officer, compelled him to leave it in disgrace. At the time he entered
+the Princess's service he was a needy adventurer, whose scheming brain
+and utter lack of principle were in the market for the highest bidder.
+"He is," said Baron Ompteda, "a sort of Apollo, of a superb and
+commanding appearance, more than six feet high; his physical beauty
+attracts all eyes. This man is called Pergami; he belongs to Milan, and
+has entered the Princess's service. The Princess," he significantly
+adds, "is shunned by all the English people of rank; her behaviour has
+created the most marked scandal."
+
+Such was the man with whose life that of the Princess of Wales was to be
+so intimately and disastrously linked, and whose relations with her were
+to be displayed to a shocked world but a few years later. It was indeed
+an evil fate that brought this "superb Apollo" of the crafty brain and
+conscienceless ambition into the life of the Princess at the high tide
+of her revolt against the world and its conventions.
+
+When Caroline and her retinue set out from Milan for Tuscany it was in
+the wake of Pergami, who had ridden ahead to discharge his duties as
+_avant courier_; but before Rome was reached his intimacy and
+familiarity with his mistress were already the subject of whispered
+comments and shrugged shoulders. At a ball given in her honour at Rome
+by the banker Tortonia, the Princess shocked even the least prudish by
+the abandon of her dancing and the tenuity of her costume, which, we are
+told, consisted of "a single embroidered garment, fastened beneath the
+bosom, without the shadow of a corset and without sleeves." And at
+Naples, where King Joachim Murat gave her a regal reception, with a
+sequel of fetes and gala-performances in honour of the wife of the
+Regent of England, she attended a rout, at the Teatro San Carlo, so
+lightly attired "that many who saw her at her first entrance looked her
+up and down, and, not recognising her, or pretending not to recognise
+her, began to mutter disapprobation to such an extent that she was
+compelled to withdraw.... The English residents soon let her understand,
+by ceasing to frequent her palace, that even at Naples there were
+certain laws of dress which could not be trampled underfoot in this
+hoydenish manner."
+
+While Caroline was thus defying convention and even decency, watchful
+eyes were following her everywhere. A body of secret police, whose
+headquarters were at Milan, was noting every indiscretion; and every
+week brought fresh and damaging reports to England, where they were
+eagerly welcomed by the Regent and his satellites. And while the
+Princess was thus playing unconsciously, or recklessly, into the hands
+of the enemy, Pergami was daily making his footing in her favour more
+secure. Before Caroline left Naples he had been promoted from courier to
+equerry, and in this more exalted and privileged role was always at her
+side. So marked, in fact, was the intimacy even at this early stage,
+that the Princess's retinue, one after another, and on one flimsy
+pretext or another, deserted her in disgust, each vacancy, as it
+occurred, being filled by one of Pergami's relatives--his brother, his
+daughter, his sister-in-law (the Countess Oidi), and others, until
+Caroline was soon surrounded by members of the ex-courier's family.
+
+From Naples she wandered to Genoa, and from Genoa to Milan and Venice,
+received regally everywhere by the Italians and shunned by the English
+residents. From Venice she drifted to Lake Como, with whose beauties she
+was so charmed that she decided to make her home there, purchasing the
+Villa del Garrovo for one hundred and fifty thousand francs, and setting
+the builders to work to make it a still more splendid home for a future
+Queen of England. But even to the lonely isolation of the Italian lakes
+the eyes of her husband's secret agents pursued her, spying on her every
+movement--"uncertain shadows gliding in the twilight along the paths and
+between the hedges, and even in the cellars and attics of the
+villa"--until the shadowy presences filled her with such terror and
+unrest that she sought to escape them by a long tour in the East.
+
+Thus it was that in November, 1815, the Princess and her Pergami
+household set forth on their journey to Sicily, Tunis, Athens, the
+cities of the East and Jerusalem, the strange story of which was to be
+unfolded to the world five years later. How intimate the Princess and
+her handsome, stalwart courier had by this time become was illustrated
+by the Attorney-General in his opening speech at her memorable trial.
+"One day, after dinner, when the Princess's servants had withdrawn, a
+waiter at the hotel, Gran Brettagna, saw the Princess put a golden
+necklace round Pergami's neck. Pergami took it off again and put it
+jestingly on the neck of the Princess, who in her turn once more removed
+it and put it again round Pergami's neck."
+
+As early as August in this year Pergami had his appointed place at the
+Princess's table, and his room communicating with hers, and on the
+various voyages of the Eastern tour there was abundant evidence to prove
+"the habit which the Princess had of sleeping under one and the same
+awning with Pergami."
+
+But it is as impossible in the limits of space to follow Caroline and
+her handsome cavalier through every stage of these Eastern wanderings,
+as it is unnecessary to describe in detail the evidence of intimacy so
+lavishly provided by the witnesses for the prosecution at the
+trial--evidence much of which was doubtless as false as it was venal.
+That the Princess, however, was infatuated by her cavalier, and that she
+was in the highest degree indiscreet in her relations with him, seems
+abundantly clear, whatever the precise degree of actual guilt may have
+been.
+
+Pergami had now been promoted from equerry to Grand Chamberlain to Her
+Royal Highness, and as further evidence of her favour, she bought for
+him in Sicily an estate which conferred on its owner the title of Baron
+della Francina. At Malta she procured for him a knighthood of that
+island's famous order; at Jerusalem she secured his nomination as Knight
+of the Holy Sepulchre; and, to crown her favours, she herself instituted
+the Order of St Caroline, with Pergami for Grand Master. Behold now our
+ex-courier and adventurer in all his new glory as Grand Chamberlain and
+lover of a future Queen of England, as Baron della Francina, Knight of
+two Orders and Grand Master of a third, while every post of profit in
+that vagrant Court was held by some member of his family!
+
+The Eastern tour ended, which had ranged from Algiers and Egypt to
+Constantinople and Jerusalem, and throughout which she had progressed
+and been received as a Queen, Caroline settled down for a time in her
+now restored villa on Lake Como, celebrating her return by lavish
+charities to her poor neighbours, and by popular fetes and balls, in one
+of which "she danced as Columbine, wearing her lover's ear-rings, whilst
+Pergami, dressed as harlequin and wearing her ear-rings, supported her."
+
+But even here she was to find no peace from her husband's spies, whose
+evidence, confirmed on oath by a score of witnesses, was being
+accumulated in London against the longed-for day of reckoning. And it
+was not long before Caroline and her Grand Chamberlain were on their
+wanderings again--this time to the Tyrol, to Austria, and through
+Northern Italy, always inseparable and everywhere setting the tongue of
+scandal wagging by their indiscreet intimacy. Even the tragic death in
+childbirth of her only daughter, the Princess Charlotte, which put all
+England in mourning, seemed powerless to check her career of folly. It
+is true that, on hearing of it, she fell into a faint and afterwards
+into a kind of protracted lethargy, but within a few weeks she had flung
+herself again into her life of pleasure-chasing and reckless disregard
+of convention.
+
+But matters were now hurrying fast to their tragic climax. For some time
+the life of George III. had been flickering to its close. Any day might
+bring news that the end had come, and that the Princess was a Queen. And
+for some time Caroline had been bracing herself to face this crisis in
+her life and to pit herself against her enemies in a grim struggle for a
+crown, the title to which her years of folly (for such at the best they
+had been) had so gravely endangered. Over the remainder of her vagrant
+life, with its restless flittings, and its indiscretions, marked by
+spying eyes, we must pass to that February morning in 1820 when, to
+quote a historian, "the Princess had scarcely reached her hotel (at
+Florence) when her faithful major-domo, John Jacob Sicard, appeared
+before her, accompanied by two noblemen, and in a voice full of emotion
+announced, 'You are Queen.'"
+
+The fateful hour had at last arrived when Caroline must either renounce
+her new Queendom or present a bold front to her enemies and claim the
+crown that was hers. After a few indecisive days, spent in Rome, where
+news reached her that the King had given orders that her name should be
+excluded from the Prayer Book, her wavering resolution took a definite
+and determined shape. She would go to London and face the storm which
+she knew her coming would bring on her head.
+
+At Paris she was met by Lord Hutchinson with a promise of an increase of
+her yearly allowance to fifty thousand pounds, on condition that she
+renounced her claim to the title of Queen, and consented never to put
+foot again in England--an offer to which she gave a prompt and scornful
+refusal; and on the afternoon of 5th June she reached Dover, greeted by
+enthusiastic cheers and shouts of "God save Queen Caroline!" by the
+fluttering of flags, and the jubilant clanging of church-bells. The
+wanderer had come back to the land of her sorrow, to find herself
+welcomed with open arms by the subjects of the King whose brutality had
+driven her to exile and to shame.
+
+The story of the trial which so soon followed her arrival has too
+enduring a place in our history to call for a detailed description--the
+trial in which all the weight of the Crown and the testimony of a small
+army of suborned witnesses--"a troupe of comedians in the pay of
+malevolence," to quote Brougham--were arrayed against her; and in which
+she had so doughty a champion in Brougham, and such solace and support
+in the sympathy of all England. We know the fate of that Bill of Pains
+and Penalties, which charged her with having permitted a shameful
+intimacy with one Bartolomeo Pergami, and provided as penalty that she
+should be deprived of the title and privilege of Queen, and that her
+marriage to King George IV. should be for ever dissolved and
+annulled--how it was forced through the House of Lords with a
+diminishing majority, and finally withdrawn. And we know, too, the
+outburst of almost delirious delight that swept from end to end of
+England at the virtual acquittal of the persecuted Caroline. "The
+generous exultation of the people was," to quote a contemporary, "beyond
+all description. It was a conflagration of hearts."
+
+We also recall that pathetic scene when Caroline presented herself at
+the door of Westminster Abbey to demand admission, on the day of her
+husband's coronation, to be received by the frigid words, "We have no
+instructions to allow you to pass"; and we can see her as, "humiliated,
+confounded, and with tears in her eyes," she returned sadly to her
+carriage, the heart crushed within her. Less than three weeks later,
+seized by a grave and mysterious illness, she laid down for ever the
+burden of her sorrows, leaving instructions that her tomb should bear
+the words:
+
+CAROLINE
+THE INJURED QUEEN OF ENGLAND.
+
+As for Pergami, the idol with the feet of clay, who had clouded her last
+years in tragedy, he survived for twenty years more to enjoy his honours
+and his ill-gotten gold; while William Austin, who had masqueraded as a
+Prince and called Caroline "mother," ended his days, while still a young
+man, in a madhouse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+THE LOVE-AFFAIRS OF A REGENT
+
+When Louis XIV. laid down, one September day in the year 1715, the crown
+which he had worn with such splendour for more than seventy years, his
+sceptre fell into the hands of his nephew Philippe, Duc d'Orleans, who
+for eight years ruled France as Regent, and as guardian of the
+child-King, the fifteenth Louis.
+
+Seldom in the world's history has a reign, so splendid as that of the
+Sun-King, closed in such darkness and tragedy. The disastrous war of the
+Spanish Succession had drained France of her strength and her gold. She
+lay crushed under a mountain of debt--ten thousand million francs; she
+was reduced to the lowest depths of wretchedness, ruin, and disorder,
+and it was at this crisis in her life as a nation that fate placed a
+child of four on her throne, and gave the reins of power into the hands
+of the most dissolute man in Europe.
+
+Not that Philippe of Orleans lacked many of the qualities that go to the
+making of a ruler and a man. He had proved himself, in Italy and in
+Spain, one of the bravest of his country's soldiers, and an able,
+far-seeing leader of armies; and he had, as his Regency proved, no mean
+gifts of statesmanship. But his kingly qualities were marred by the
+taint of birth and early environment.
+
+Such good qualities as he had he no doubt drew from his mother, the
+capable, austere, high-minded Elizabeth of Bavaria, who to her last day
+was the one good influence in his life. To his father, Louis XIV.'s
+younger brother, who is said to have been son of Cardinal Mazarin, Anne
+of Austria's lover, and who was the most debased man of his time in all
+France, he just as surely owed the bias of sensuality to which he
+chiefly owes his place in memory.
+
+And not only was he thus handicapped by his birth; he had for tutor that
+arch-scoundrel Dubois--the "grovelling insect" who rarely opened his
+mouth without uttering a blasphemy or indecency, and who initiated his
+charge, while still a boy, into every base form of so-called pleasure.
+
+Such was the man who, amid the ruins of his country, inaugurated in
+France an era of licentiousness such as she had never known--an
+incomprehensible mass of contradictions--a kingly presence with the soul
+of a Caliban, statesman and sinner, high-minded and low-living, spending
+his days as a sovereign, a role which he played to perfection, and his
+nights as a sot and a sensualist.
+
+It was doubtless Dubois who was mostly responsible for the baseness in
+the Regent's character--Dubois who had taught him a contempt for
+religion and morality, the cynical view of life which makes the pleasure
+of the moment the only thing worth pursuing, at whatever cost; and who
+had impressed indelibly on his mind that no woman is virtuous and that
+men are knaves. And there was never any lack of men to continue Dubois'
+teaching. He gathered round him the most dissolute gallants in France,
+in whose company he gave the rein to his most vicious appetites. His
+"roues" he dubbed them, a title which aptly described them; although
+they affected to give it a very different interpretation. They were the
+Regent's roues, they said, no doubt with the tongue in the cheek,
+because they were so devoted to him that they were ready, in his
+defence, to be broken on the wheel (_la roue_)!
+
+Each of these boon-comrades was a past-master in the arts of
+dissipation, and each was also among the most brilliant men of his day.
+The Chevalier de Simiane was famous alike for his drinking powers and
+his gift of graceful verse; De Fargy was a polished wit, and the
+handsomest man in France, with an unrivalled reputation for gallantry;
+the Comte de Noce was the Regent's most intimate friend from
+boyhood--brother-in-law he called him, since they had not only tastes
+but even mistresses in common. Then there were the Marquis de la Fare,
+Captain of Guards and _bon enfant_; the Marquis de Broglio, the biggest
+debauchee in France, the Marquis de Canillac, the Duc de Brancas, and
+many another--all famous (or infamous) for some pet vice, and all the
+best of boon-companions for the pleasure-loving Regent.
+
+Strange tales are told of the orgies of this select band which the
+Regent gathered around him--orgies which shocked even the France of the
+eighteenth century, when she was the acknowledged leader in licence. At
+six o'clock every evening Philippe's kingship ended for the day. He had
+had enough--more than enough--of State and ceremonial, of interviewing
+ambassadors, and of the flatteries of Princes and the obsequious homage
+of courtiers. Pleasure called him away from the boredom of empire; and
+at the stroke of six we find him retiring to the company of his
+mistresses and his roues to feast and drink and gamble until dawn broke
+on the revelry--his laugh the loudest, his wit the most dazzling, his
+stories the most piquant, keeping the table in a roar with his
+infectious gaiety. He was Regent no longer; he was simply a _bon
+camarade_, as ready to exchange familiarities with a "lady of the
+ballet" as to lead the laughter at a joke at his own expense.
+
+At nine o'clock, when the fun had waxed furious and wine had set the
+slowest tongue wagging and every eye a-sparkle, other guests streamed in
+to join the orgy--the most beautiful ladies of the Court, from the
+Duchesse de Gesores and Madame de Mouchy to the Regent's own daughter,
+the Duchesse de Berry, who, young as she was, had little to learn of the
+arts of dissipation. And in the wake of these high-born women would
+follow laughing, bright-eyed troupes of dancing and chorus-girls from
+the theatres with an escort of the cleverest actors of Paris, to join
+the Regent's merry throng.
+
+The champagne now flowed in rivers; the servants were sent away; the
+doors were locked and the fun grew riotous; ceremony had no place there;
+rank and social distinctions were forgotten. Countesses flirted with
+comedians; Princes made love to ballet-girls and duchesses alike. The
+leader of the moment was the man or woman who could sing the most daring
+song, tell the most piquant story, or play the most audacious practical
+joke, even on the Regent himself. Sometimes, we are told, the lights
+would be extinguished, and the orgy continued under the cover of
+darkness, until the Regent suddenly opened a cupboard, in which lights
+were concealed--to an outburst of shrieks of laughter at the scenes
+revealed.
+
+Thus the mad night hours passed until dawn came to bring the revels to a
+close; or until the Regent would sally forth with a few chosen comrades
+on a midnight ramble to other haunts of pleasure in the capital--the
+lower the better. Such was the way in which Philippe of Orleans, Regent
+of France, spent his nights. A few hours after the carouse had ended he
+would resume his sceptre, as austere and dignified a ruler as you would
+find in Europe.
+
+It must not be imagined that Philippe was the only Royal personage who
+thus set a scandalous example to France. There was, in fact, scarcely a
+Prince or Princess of the Blood Royal whose love affairs were not
+conducted flagrantly in the eyes of the world, from the Dowager Duchesse
+de Bourbon, who lavished her favours on the Scotch financier, John Law,
+of Lauriston, to the Princesse de Conte, who mingled her piety with a
+marked partiality for her nephew, Le Kalliere.
+
+As for the Regent's own daughters, from the Duchesse de Berry, to
+Louise, Queen of Spain, each has left behind her a record almost as
+scandalous as that of her father. It was, in fact, an era of corruption
+in high places, when, in the reaction that followed the dismal and
+decorous last years of Louis XIV.'s reign, Pleasure rose phoenix-like
+from the ashes of ruin and flaunted herself unashamed in every guise
+with which vice could deck her.
+
+It must be said for the Regent, corrupt as he was, that he never abused
+his position and his power in the pursuit of beauty. His mistresses
+flocked to him from every rank of life, from the stage to the highest
+Court circles, but remained no longer than inclination dictated. And the
+fascination is not far to seek, for Philippe d'Orleans was of the men
+who find easy conquests in the field of love. He was one of the
+handsomest men in all France; and to his good-looks and his reputation
+for bravery he added a manner of rare grace and courtliness, a supple
+tongue, and that strange magnetic power which few women could resist.
+
+No King ever boasted a greater or more varied list of favourites, in
+which actresses and duchesses vied with each other for his smiles, in a
+rivalry which seems to have been singularly free from petty jealousy.
+Among the beauties of the Court we find the Duchesse de Fedari, the
+Duchesse de Gesores, the Comtesse de Sabran at one extreme; and
+actresses like Emilie, Desmarre, and La Souris at the other, pretty
+butterflies of the footlights who appealed to the Regent no more than
+Madame d'Averne, the gifted pet of France's wits and literary men, the
+most charming "blue-stocking" of her day. And all, without
+exception--duchesses, countesses, and actresses--were as ready to give
+their love to Philippe, the man, as to the Duc d'Orleans, Regent of
+France.
+
+Even in his relations with these ministers of pleasure, the Regent's
+better qualities often exhibit themselves agreeably. To the pretty
+actress, Emilie, whose heart was so completely his, he always acted with
+a characteristic generosity and forbearance; and her conduct is by no
+means less pleasing than his. Once, we are told, when he expressed a
+wish to give her a pair of diamond ear-rings at a cost of fifteen
+thousand francs, she demurred at accepting so valuable a present. "If
+you must be so generous," she pleaded, "please don't give me the
+ear-rings, which are much too grand for such as me. Give me, instead,
+ten thousand francs, so that I may buy a small house to which I can
+retire when you no longer love me as you now do."
+
+Emilie had scarcely returned home, however, when a Court official
+appeared with a package containing, not ten thousand, but twenty-five
+thousand francs, which her lover insisted on her keeping; and when she
+returned fifteen thousand francs, he promptly sent them back again,
+declaring that he would be very angry if she refused again to accept
+them.
+
+His love, indeed, for Emilie seems to have been as pure and deep as any
+of which he was capable. It was no fleeting passion, but an affection
+based on a sincere respect for her character and mental gifts. So
+highly, indeed, did he think of her judgment that she became his most
+trusted counsellor. She sat by his side when he received ambassadors;
+he consulted her on difficult problems of State; and it was her advice
+that he often followed in preference to the wisdom of all his ministers;
+for, as he said to Dubois, "Emilie has an excellent brain; she always
+gives me the best counsel."
+
+When at last he had to part from the modest and accomplished actress it
+was under circumstances which speak well for his generosity. A former
+lover, the Marquis de Fimarcon, on his return from fighting in Spain,
+sought Emilie out, and, blazing with jealousy, insisted that she should
+leave the Regent and return to his protection. He vowed that, if she
+refused, he would murder her; and when, in her alarm, she sought refuge
+in a convent at Charenton, he threatened to burn the nuns alive in their
+cells unless they restored her to him. Thus it was that, rather than
+allow Emilie to run any risks from her revengeful and brutal lover, the
+Regent relinquished his claim to her; and only when Fimarcon's continued
+brutality at last made intervention necessary, did he order the bully to
+be arrested and consigned to the prison of Fort l'Eveque.
+
+It is, however, in the story of Mademoiselle Aisse, the Circassian
+slave, that we find the best illustration of the chivalry which underlay
+the Regent's passion for women, and which he never forgot in his wildest
+excesses. This story, one of the most touching in French history, opens
+in the year 1698, when a band of Turkish soldiers returned to
+Constantinople from a raid in the Caucasus, bringing with them, among
+many other captives, a beautiful child of four years, said to be the
+daughter of a King. So lovely was the little Circassian fairy that when
+the Comte de Feriol, France's Ambassador to Turkey, set eyes on her, he
+decided to purchase her; and she became his property in exchange for
+fifteen hundred livres.
+
+That she might have every advantage of training to fit her for his
+seraglio in later years, the child was sent to Paris, to the home of the
+Ambassador's brother, President de Feriol, where she grew to beautiful
+girlhood as a member of the family, as fair a flower as ever was
+transplanted to French soil. Thus she passed the next thirteen years of
+her young life, charming all by her sweetness of disposition, as she won
+the homage of all by her remarkable beauty and grace.
+
+Such was Ayesha, or Aisse, the Circassian maid, when at last her "owner"
+returned to Paris to fall under the spell of her radiant beauty and to
+claim her as his chattel, bought with good gold and trained at his cost
+to adorn his harem. In vain did Aisse weep and plead to be spared a fate
+from which every fibre of her being shrank in horror. Her "master" was
+inexorable. "When I bought you," he said, "it was my intention to make
+you my daughter or my mistress. I now intend that you shall become both
+the one and the other." Friendless and helpless, she was obliged to
+yield; and for six years she had to submit to the endearments of her
+protector, a man more than old enough to be her father, until his death
+brought her release.
+
+At twenty-four, more lovely than ever, combining the beauty of the
+Circassian with the graces of France, Aisse had now every right to look
+forward at least to such happiness as was possible to a stranger in a
+strange land. But no sooner was one danger to her peace removed than
+another sprang up to take its place. The rumour of her beauty and her
+sweetness had come to the ears of the Regent, and strong forces were at
+work to bring her to his arms. Madame de Tencin was the leader in this
+base conspiracy, with the power of the Romish Church at her back; for
+with the fair Circassian high in the Regent's favour and a pliant tool
+in their hands, the Jesuits' influence at Court would be greatly
+strengthened. Dubois was won over to the unholy alliance; and the Due's
+_maitresse en titre_ was bribed, not only to withdraw all opposition to
+her proposed rival, but to arrange a meeting between the Regent and the
+victim.
+
+Success seemed to be assured. Mademoiselle Aisse was to exchange slavery
+to her late owner for an equally odious place in the harem of the ruler
+of France. Her tears and entreaties were all in vain; when she begged on
+her knees to be allowed to retire to a convent Madame de Feriol turned
+her back on her. Her only hope of rescue now lay in the Regent himself;
+and to him she pleaded her cause with such pathetic eloquence that he
+not only allowed her to depart in peace, but with words of sympathy and
+promises of his protection in the pure and noble sense of the word.
+
+Thus by the chivalry of the most dissolute man of his age the Circassian
+slave-girl was rescued from a life which to her would have been worse
+than death--to spend her remaining years, happy in the love of an honest
+man, the Chevalier d'Aydie, until death claimed her while she still
+possessed the beauty which had been at once her glory and her inevitable
+shame.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The close of the Regent's mis-spent life came with tragic suddenness.
+Worn out with excesses, while still young in years, his doctors had
+warned him that death might come to him any day; but with the
+light-heartedness that was his to the last, he laughed at their gloomy
+forebodings and refused to take the least precautions to safeguard his
+health. Two days before the end came he declined point-blank to be bled
+in order to avert a threatened attack of apoplexy. "Let it come if it
+will," he said, with a laugh. "I do not fear death; and if it comes
+quickly, so much the better!"
+
+On the evening of 2nd December, 1720, he was chatting gaily to the young
+Duchesse de Falari, when he suddenly turned to her and asked: "Do you
+think there is any hell--or Paradise?" "Of course I do," answered the
+Duchesse. "Then are you not afraid to lead the life you do?" "Well,"
+replied Madame, "I think God will have pity on me."
+
+Scarcely had the words left her lips when the Regent's head fell heavily
+on her shoulder, and he began to slip to the floor. A glance showed her
+that he was unconscious; and, rushing out of the room, the terrified
+Duchesse raced through the dark, deserted corridors of the palace
+shrieking for help. When at last help arrived, it came too late. The
+Regent had gone to find for himself an answer to the question his lips
+had framed a few minutes earlier--"is there any hell--or Paradise?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+A DELILAH OF THE COURT OF FRANCE
+
+It was a cruel fate that snatched Gabrielle d'Estrees from the arms of
+Henri IV., King of France and Navarre, at the moment when her long
+devotion to her hero-lover was on the eve of being crowned by the bridal
+veil; and for many a week there was no more stricken man in Europe than
+the disconsolate King as he wailed in his black-draped chamber, "The
+root of my love is dead, and will never blossom again."
+
+No doubt Henri's grief was as sincere as it was deep, for he had loved
+his golden-haired Gabrielle of the blue eyes and dimpled baby-cheeks as
+he had never loved woman before. It was the passion of a lifetime, the
+passion of a strong man in his prime, that fate had thus nipped in the
+fullness of its bloom; and its loss plunged him into an abyss of sorrow
+and despair such as few men have known.
+
+But with the hero of Ivry no emotion of grief or pleasure ever endured
+long. He was a man of erratic, widely contrasted moods--now on the peaks
+of happiness, now in the gulf of dejection; one mood succeeding another
+as inevitably and widely as the pendulum swings. Thus when he had spent
+three seemingly endless months of gloom and solitude, reaction seized
+him, and he flung aside his grief with his black raiment. He was still
+in the prime of his strength, with many years before him. He would drink
+the cup of life, even to its dregs. He had long been weary of the
+matrimonial chains that fettered him to Marguerite of Valois. He would
+strike them off, and in another wife and other loves find a new lease of
+pleasure.
+
+Thus it was with no heavy heart that he turned his back on Fontainebleau
+and his darkened room, and fared to Paris to find a new vista of
+pleasure opening to him at his palace doors, and his ears full of the
+praises of a new divinity who had come, during his absence, to grace his
+Court--a girl of such beauty, sprightliness, and wit as his capital had
+not seen for many a year.
+
+Henriette d'Entragues--for this was the divinity's name--was equipped by
+fate as few women were ever equipped, for the conquest of a King. Her
+mother, Marie Touchet, had been "light-o'-love" to Charles IX.; her
+father was the Seigneur d'Entragues, member of one of the most
+blue-blooded families of France, a soldier and statesman of fame; and
+their daughter had inherited, with her mother's beauty and grace, the
+clever brain and diplomatic skill of her father. A strange mixture of
+the bewitching and bewildering, this daughter of a King's mistress seems
+to have been. Tall and dark, voluptuous of figure, with ripe red lips,
+and bold and dazzling black eyes, she was, in her full-blooded, sensuous
+charms, the very "antipodes" to the childish, fairy-like Gabrielle who
+had so long been enshrined in the King's heart. And to this physical
+appeal--irresistible to a man of such strong passion as Henri, she added
+gifts of mind which "baby Gabrielle" could never claim.
+
+She had a wit as brilliant as the tongue which was its vehicle; her
+well-stored brain was more than a match for the most learned men at
+Court, and she would leave an archbishop discomfited in a theological
+argument, to cross swords with Sully himself on some abstruse problem of
+statesmanship. When Sully had been brought to his knees, she would rush
+away, with mischief in her eyes, to take the lead in some merry escapade
+or practical joke, her silvery laughter echoing in some remote palace
+corridor. A bewildering, alluring bundle of inconsistencies--beauty,
+savant, wit, and madcap--such was Henriette d'Entragues when Henri,
+fresh from his woes, came under the spell of her magnetism.
+
+Here, indeed, was an escape from his grief such as the King had never
+dared to hope for. Before he had been many hours in his palace, Henri
+was caught hopelessly in the toils of the new siren, and was intoxicated
+by her smiles and witcheries. Never was conquest so speedy, so dramatic.
+Before a week had flown he was at Henrietta's feet, as lovesick a swain
+as ever sighed for a lady, pouring love into her ears and writing her
+passionate letters between the frequent meetings, in which he would send
+her a "good night, my dearest heart," with "a million kisses."
+
+In the days of his lusty youth the idol and hero of France had never
+known passion such as this which consumed him within sight of his
+fiftieth birthday, and which was inspired by a woman of much less than
+half his years; for at the time Henri was forty-six, and Henriette was
+barely twenty.
+
+He quickly found, however, that his wooing was not to be all "plain
+sailing." When Henriette's parents heard of it, they affected to be
+horrified at the danger in which their beloved daughter was placed. They
+summoned her home from the perils of Court and a King's passion; and
+when Henri sent an envoy to bring them to reason they sent him back with
+a rebuff. Their daughter was to be no man's--not even a
+King's--plaything. If Henri's passion was sincere, he must prove it by a
+definite promise of marriage; and only on this condition would their
+opposition be removed.
+
+Even to such a stipulation Henri, such was his infatuation, made no
+demur. With his own hand he wrote an agreement pledging himself to make
+Demoiselle Henriette his lawful wife in case, within a certain period,
+she became the mother of a son; and undertaking to dissolve his marriage
+with his wife, Marguerite of France, for this purpose. And this
+agreement, signed with his own hand, he sent to the Seigneur d'Entragues
+and his wife, accompanied by a _douceur_ of a hundred thousand crowns.
+
+But before it was dispatched a more formidable obstacle than even the
+lady's natural guardians remained to be faced--none other than the Duc
+de Sully, the man who had shared all the perils of a hundred fights with
+Henri and was at once his chief counsellor and his _fidus Achates_.
+When at last he summoned up courage to place the document in Sully's
+hands, he awaited the verdict as nervously as any schoolboy in the
+presence of a dreaded master. Sully read through the paper, was silent
+for a few moments, and then spoke. "Sire," he said, "am I to give you my
+candid opinion on this document, without fear of anger or giving
+offence?" "Certainly," answered the King. "Well then, this is what I
+think of it," was Sully's reply, as he tore the document in two pieces
+and flung them on the floor. "Sully, you are mad!" exclaimed Henri,
+flaring into anger at such an outrage. "You are right, Sire, I am a weak
+fool, and would gladly know myself still more a fool--if I might be the
+only one in France!"
+
+It was in vain, however, that Sully pointed out the follies and dangers
+of such a step as was proposed. Henri's mind was made up, and leaving
+his friend, in high dudgeon, he went to his study and re-wrote his
+promise of marriage. The way was at last clear to the gratification of
+his passion. Henriette was more than willing, her parents' scruples and
+greed were appeased, and as for Sully--well, he must be left to get over
+his tantrums. Even to please such an old and trusted friend he could not
+sacrifice such an opportunity for pleasure and a new lease of life as
+now presented itself!
+
+Halcyon months followed for Henri--months in which even Gabrielle was
+forgotten in the intoxication of a new passion, compared with which the
+memory of her gentle charms was but as water to rich, red wine. That
+Henriette proved wilful, capricious, and extravagant--that her vanity
+drained his exchequer of hundreds of thousands of crowns for costly
+jewellery and dresses, was a mere bagatelle, compared with his delight
+in her manifold allurements.
+
+But Sully had by no means said his last word. The decree for annulling
+Henri's marriage with Marguerite de Valois was pronounced; and it was of
+the highest importance that she should have a worthy successor as Queen
+of France--a successor whom he found in Marie de Medicis.
+
+The marriage-contract was actually sealed before the King had any
+suspicion that his hand was being disposed of, and it was only when
+Sully one day entered his study with the startling words, "Sire, we have
+been marrying you," that the awakening came. For a few moments Henri sat
+as a man stunned, his head buried in his hands; then, with a deep sigh,
+he spoke: "If God orders it so, so let it be. There seems to be no
+escape; since you say that it is necessary for my kingdom and my
+subjects, why, marry I must."
+
+It was a strange predicament in which Henri now found himself. Still
+more infatuated than ever with Henriette, he was to be tied for life to
+a Princess whom he had never even seen. To add to the embarrassment of
+his position, the condition of his marriage promise to Henriette was
+already on the way to fulfilment; and he was thus pledged to wed her as
+strongly as any State compact could bind him to stand at the altar with
+Marie de Medicis. One thing was clear, he must at any cost recover that
+fatal document; and, while he was giving orders for the suitable
+reception of his new Queen, and arranging for her triumphal progress to
+Paris, he was writing to Henriette and her parents demanding the return
+of his promise of marriage agreement--to her, a pleading letter in which
+he prays her "to return the promise you have by you and not to compel me
+to have recourse to other means in order to obtain it"; to her father, a
+more imperious demand to which he expects instant obedience.
+
+As some consolation to his mistress, whose alternate tears, rage, and
+reproaches drove him to distraction, he creates her Marquise de Verneuil
+and promises that, if he should be unable to marry her, he will at least
+give her a husband of Royal rank, the Due de Nevers, who was eager to
+make her his wife.
+
+But pleadings and threats alike fail to secure the return of the fatal
+document, and Henri is reduced to despair, until Henriette gives birth
+to a dead child and his promise thus becomes of as little value as the
+paper it was written on. The condition has failed, and he is a free man
+to marry his Tuscan Princess, while Henriette, thus foiled in her great
+ambition, is in danger not only of losing her coveted crown, but her
+place in the King's favour. The days of her wilful autocracy are ended;
+and, though her heart is full of anger and disappointment, she writes to
+him a pitiful letter imploring him still to love her and not to cast her
+"from the Heaven to which he has raised her, down to the earth where he
+found her." "Do not let your wedding festivities be the funeral of my
+hopes," she writes. "Do not banish me from your Royal presence and your
+heart. I speak in sighs to you, my King, my lover, my all--I, who have
+been loved by the earth's greatest monarch, and am willing to be his
+mistress and his servant."
+
+To such humility was the proud, arrogant beauty now reduced. She was an
+abject suppliant where she had reigned a Queen. Nor did her pleadings
+fall on deaf ears. Her Royal lover's hand was given, against his will,
+to his new Queen, but his heart, he vowed, was all Henriette's--so much
+so that he soon installed her in sumptuous rooms in his palace adjoining
+those of the Queen herself.
+
+Was ever man placed in a more delicate position than this King of
+France, between the rival claims of his wife and mistress, who were
+occupying adjacent apartments, and who, moreover, were both about to
+become mothers? It speaks well for Henri's tactfulness that for a time
+at least this _menage a trois_ appears to have been quite amiably
+conducted. When Queen Marie gave birth to a son it was to Henriette that
+the infant's father first confided the good news, seasoning it with "a
+million kisses" for herself. And when Henriette, in turn, became a
+mother for the second time, the double Royal event was celebrated by
+fetes and rejoicings in which each lady took an equally proud and
+conspicuous part.
+
+It was inevitable, however, that a woman so favoured by the King, and of
+so imperious a nature, should have enemies at Court; and it was not long
+before she became the object of a conspiracy of which the Duchesse de
+Villars and the Queen were the arch-leaders. One day a bundle of letters
+was sent anonymously to Henri, letters full of tenderness and passion,
+addressed by his beloved Marquise, Henriette, to the Prince de
+Joinville. The King was furious at such evidence of his mistress's
+disloyalty, and vowed he would never see her again. But all his storming
+and reproaches left the Marquise unmoved. She declared, with scorn in
+her voice, that the letters were forgeries; that she had never written
+to Joinville in her life, nor spoken a word to him that His Majesty
+might not have heard. She even pointed out the forger, the Duc de
+Guise's secretary, and was at last able to convince the King of her
+innocence.
+
+The Duchesse de Villars and Joinville were banished from the Court in
+disgrace; the Queen had a severe lecture from her husband; and Henriette
+was not only restored to full favour, but was consoled by a welcome
+present of six thousand pounds.
+
+But the days of peace in the King's household were now gone for ever.
+Queen Marie, thus humiliated by her rival, became her bitter enemy and
+also a thorn in the side of her unfaithful husband. Every day brought
+its fierce quarrels which only stopped on the verge of violence. More
+than once in fact Henri had to beat a retreat before his Queen's
+clenched fist, while she lost no opportunity of insulting and
+humiliating the Marquise.
+
+It is impossible altogether to withhold sympathy from a man thus
+distracted between two jealous women--a shrewish wife, who in her most
+amiable mood repelled his advances with coldness and cutting words, and
+a mistress who vented on him all the resentment which the Queen's
+insults and snubs roused in her. Even all Sully's diplomacy was
+powerless to pour oil on such vexed waters as these.
+
+The Queen, however, had not long to wait for her revenge, which came
+with the disclosure of a conspiracy, at the head of which were
+Henriette's father and her half-brother, the Comte d'Auvergne, and in
+which, it was proved, she herself had played no insignificant part.
+Punishment came, swift and terrible. Her father and brother were
+sentenced to death, herself to perpetual confinement in a monastery.
+
+But even at this crisis in her life, Henriette's stout heart did not
+fail her for a moment. "The King may take my life, if he pleases," she
+said. "Everybody will say that he killed his wife; for I was Queen
+before the Tuscan woman came on the scene at all." None knew better than
+she that she could afford thus to put on a bold front. Henri was still
+her slave, to whom her little finger was more than his crown; and she
+knew that in his hands both her liberty and her life were safe. And thus
+it proved; for before she had spent many weeks in the Monastery of
+Beaumont-les-Tours, its doors were flung open for her, and the first
+news she heard was that her father was a free man, while her brother's
+death-sentence had been commuted to a few years in the Bastille.
+
+Thus Henriette returned to the turbulent life of the palace--the daily
+routine of quarrels and peacemaking with the King, and undisguised
+hostility from the Queen, through all of which Henri's heart still
+remained hers. "How I long to have you in my arms again," he writes,
+when on a hunting excursion, which had led him to the scene of their
+early romance. "As my letter brings back the memory of the past, I know
+you will feel that nothing in the present is worth anything in
+comparison. This, at least, was my feeling as I walked along the roads I
+so often traversed in the old days on my journey to your side. When I
+sleep I dream of you; when I wake my thoughts are all of you." He sends
+her a million kisses, and vows that all he asks of life is that she
+shall always love him entirely and him alone.
+
+One would have thought that such a conquest of a King and such triumph
+over a Queen would have gratified the ambition of the most exacting of
+women. But the Marquise de Verneuil seems to have found small
+satisfaction in her victories. When she was not provoking quarrels with
+Henri, which roused him to such a pitch of anger that at times he
+threatened to strike her, she received his advances with a coldness or a
+sullen acquiescence calculated to chill the most ardent lover. In other
+moods she would drive him to despair by declaring that she had long
+ceased to love him, and that all she wanted from him was a dowry to
+carry in marriage to one or other of several suitors who were dying for
+her hand.
+
+But Madame's day of triumph was drawing much nearer to an end than she
+imagined. The end, in fact, came with dramatic suddenness when Henri
+first set eyes on the radiantly lovely Charlotte de Montmorency. Weary
+at heart of the tempers and exactions of Henriette, it needed but such a
+lure as this to draw him finally from her side; and from the first
+flash of Charlotte's beautiful eyes this most susceptible of Kings was
+undone. Madame de Verneuil's reign was ended; the next quarrel was made
+the occasion for a complete rupture, and the Court saw her no more.
+
+Already she had lost the bloom of her beauty; she had grown stout and
+coarse through her excessive fondness for the pleasures of the table,
+and the rest of her days, which were passed in friendless isolation, she
+spent in indulging appetites, which added to her mountain of flesh while
+robbing her of the last trace of good-looks. When the knife of Ravaillac
+brought Henri's life and his new romance to a tragic end, the Marquise
+was among those who were suspected of inspiring the assassin's blow; and
+although her guilt was never proved, the taint of suspicion clung to her
+to her last day.
+
+After fruitless angling for a husband--the Duc de Guise, the Prince de
+Joinville, and many another who, with one consent, fled from her
+advances, she resigned herself to a life of obscurity and gluttony,
+until death came, one day in the year 1633, to release her from a world
+of vanity and disillusionment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+THE "SUN-KING" AND THE WIDOW
+
+
+Search where you will in the record of Kings, you will find nowhere a
+figure more splendid and more impressive than that of the fourteenth
+Louis, who for more then seventy years ruled over France, and for more
+than fifty eclipsed in glory his fellow-sovereigns as the sun pales the
+stars. Nearly two centuries have gone since he closed his weary and
+disillusioned eyes on the world he had so long dominated; but to-day he
+shines in history in the galaxy of monarchs with a lustre almost as
+great as when he was hailed throughout the world as the "Sun-King," and
+in his pride exclaimed, "_I_ am the State."
+
+Placed, like his successor, on the greatest throne in Europe, a child of
+five, fortune exhausted itself in lavishing gifts on him. The world was
+at his feet almost before he had learned to walk. He grew to manhood
+amid the adulation and flatteries of the greatest men and the fairest of
+women. And that he might lack no great gift, he was dowered with every
+physical perfection that should go to the making of a King.
+
+There was no more goodly youth in France than Louis when he first
+practised the arts of love-making, in which he later became such an
+adept, on Mazarin's lovely niece, Marie Mancini. Tall, with a well-knit,
+supple figure, with dark, beautiful eyes illuminating a singularly
+handsome face, with a bearing of rare grace and distinction, this son of
+Anne of Austria was a lover whom few women could resist.
+
+Such conquests came to him with fatal ease, and for thirty years at
+least, until satiety killed passion, there was no lack of beautiful
+women to minister to his pleasure and to console him for the lack of
+charms in the Spanish wife whom Mazarin thrust into his reluctant arms
+when he was little more than a boy, and when his heart was in Marie
+Mancini's keeping.
+
+Among all the fair and frail women who succeeded one another in his
+affection three stand out from the rest with a prominence which his
+special favour assigned to each in turn. For ten early years it was
+Louise de la Baume-Leblanc (better known to fame as the Duchesse de
+Lavalliere) who reigned as his uncrowned Queen, and who gave her life to
+his pleasure and to the care of the children she bore to him. But such
+constancy could not last for ever in a man so constitutionally
+inconstant as Louis. When the Marquise de Montespan, in all her radiant
+and sensuous loveliness, came on the scene, she drew the King to her
+arms as a flame lures the moth. Her voluptuous charms, her abounding
+vitality and witty tongue, made the more refined beauty and the
+gentleness of the Duchesse flavourless in comparison; and Louise,
+realising that her sun had set, retired to spend the rest of her life in
+the prayers and piety of a convent, leaving her brilliant rival in
+undisputed possession of the field.
+
+For many years Madame de Montespan, the most consummate courtesan who
+ever enslaved a King, queened it over Louis in her magnificent
+apartments at Versailles and in the Tuileries. He was never weary of
+showering rich gifts and favours on her; and, in return, she became the
+mother of his children and ministered to his every whim, little dreaming
+of the day when she in turn was to be dethroned by an insignificant
+widow whom she regarded as the creature of her bounty, and who so often
+awaited her pleasure in her ante-room.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When Francoise d'Aubigne was cradled, one November day in the year 1635,
+within the walls of a fortress-prison in Poitou, the prospect of a
+Queendom seemed as remote as a palace in the moon. She had good blood in
+her veins, it is true. Her ancestors had been noblemen of Normandy
+before the Conqueror ever thought of crossing the English Channel, and
+her grandfather, General Theodore d'Aubigne, had won distinction as a
+soldier on many a battlefield. It was to her father, profligate and
+spendthrift, who, after squandering his patrimony, had found himself
+lodged in jail, that Francoise owed the ignominy of her birthplace, for
+her mother had insisted on sharing the captivity of her ne'er-do-well
+husband.
+
+When at last Constant d'Aubigne found his prison doors opened, he shook
+the dust of France off his feet and took his wife and young children
+away to Martinique, where at least, he hoped, his record would not be
+known. On the voyage, we are told, the child was brought so near to
+death's door by an illness that her body was actually on the point of
+being flung overboard when her mother detected signs of life, and
+rescued her from a watery grave. A little later, in Martinique, she had
+an equally narrow escape from death as the result of a snakebite. A
+child thus twice miraculously preserved was evidently destined for
+better things than an early tomb, more than one declared; and so indeed
+it proved.
+
+When the father ended his mis-spent days in the West Indian island, the
+widow took her poverty and her fledgelings back to France, where
+Francoise was placed under the charge of a Madame de Villette, to pick
+up such education as she could in exchange for such menial work as
+looking after Madame's poultry and scrubbing her floors. When her mother
+in turn died, the child (she was only fifteen at the time) was taken to
+Paris by an aunt, whose miserliness or poverty often sent her hungry to
+bed.
+
+Such was Francoise's condition when she was taken one day to the house
+of Paul Scarron, the crippled poet, whose satires and burlesques kept
+Paris in a ripple of merriment, and to whom the child's poverty and
+friendless position made as powerful an appeal as her budding beauty and
+her modesty. It was a very tender heart that beat in the pain-racked,
+paralysed body of the "father of French burlesque"; and within a few
+days of first setting eyes on his "little Indian girl," as he called
+her, he asked her to marry him. "It is a sorry offer to make you, my
+dear child," he said, "but it is either this or a convent." And, to
+escape the convent, Francoise consented to become the wife of the
+"bundle of pains and deformities" old enough to be her father.
+
+In the marriage-contract Scarron, with characteristic buffoonery,
+recognises her as bringing a dower of "four louis, two large and very
+expressive eyes, a fine bosom, a pair of lovely hands, and a good
+intellect"; while to the attorney, when asked what his contribution was,
+he answered, "I give her my name, and that means immortality." For eight
+years Francoise was the dutiful wife of her crippled husband, nursing
+him tenderly, managing his home and his purse, redeeming his writing
+from its coarseness, and generally proving her gratitude by a ceaseless
+devotion. Then came the day when Scarron bade her farewell on his
+death-bed, begging her with his last breath to remember him sometimes,
+and bidding her to be "always virtuous."
+
+Thus Francoise d'Aubigne was thrown once more on a cold world, with
+nothing between her and starvation but Scarron's small pension, which
+the Queen-mother continued to his widow, and compelled to seek a cheap
+refuge within convent walls. She had however good-looks which might
+stand her in good stead. She was tall, with an imposing figure and a
+natural dignity of carriage. She had a wealth of light-brown hair, eyes
+dark and brilliant, full of fire and intelligence, a well-shaped nose,
+and an exquisitely modelled mouth.
+
+Beautiful she was beyond doubt, in these days of her prime; but there
+were thousands of more beautiful women in France. And for ten years
+Madame Scarron was left to languish within the convent walls with never
+a lover to offer her release. When the Queen-mother died, and with her
+the pitiful pension, her plight was indeed pitiful. Her petitions to the
+King fell on deaf ears, until Montespan, moved by her tears and
+entreaties, pleaded for her; and Louis at last gave a reluctant consent
+to continue the allowance.
+
+It was a happy inspiration that led Scarron's widow to the King's
+favourite, for Madame de Montespan's heart, ever better than her life,
+went out to the gentle woman whom fate was treating so scurvily. Not
+content with procuring the pension, she placed her in charge of her
+nursery, an office of great trust and delicacy; and thus Madame Scarron
+found herself comfortably installed in the King's palace with a salary
+of two thousand crowns a year. Her day of poverty and independence was
+at last ended. She had, in fact, though she little knew it, placed her
+foot on the ladder, at the summit of which was the dazzling prize of the
+King's hand.
+
+Those were happy years which followed. High in the favour of the King's
+mistress, loving the little ones given into her charge as if they were
+her own children, especially the eldest born, the delicate and
+warm-hearted Duc de Maine, who was also his father's darling, Madame had
+nothing left to wish for in life. Her days were full of duty, of peace,
+and contentment. Even Louis, as he watched the loving care she lavished
+on his children, began to thaw and to smile on her, and to find pleasure
+in his visits to the nursery, which grew more and more frequent. There
+was a charm in this sweet-eyed, gentle-voiced widow, whose tongue was so
+skilful in wise and pleasant words. Her patient devotion deserved
+recognition. He gave orders that more fitting apartments should be
+assigned to Madame--a suite little less sumptuous than that of Montespan
+herself; and that money should not be lacking, he made her a gift of two
+hundred thousand francs, which the provident widow promptly invested in
+the purchase of the castle and estate of Maintenon.
+
+Such marked favours as these not unnaturally set jealous tongues
+wagging. Even Montespan began to grow uneasy, and to wonder what was
+coming next. When she ventured to refer sarcastically to the use
+"Scarron's widow" had made of his present, Louis silenced her by
+answering, "In my opinion, _Madame de Maintenon_ has acted very wisely";
+thus by a word conferring noble rank on the woman his favourite was
+already beginning to fear as a rival.
+
+And indeed there were soon to be sufficient grounds for Montespan's
+jealously and alarm. Every day saw Louis more and more under the spell
+of his children's governess--the middle-aged woman whose musical voice,
+gentle eyes, and wise words of counsel were opening a new and better
+world to him. She knew, as well as himself, how sated and weary he was
+of the cup of pleasure he had now drained to its last dregs of
+disillusionment; and he listened with eager ears to the words which
+pointed to him a surer path of happiness. Even reproof from her lips
+became more grateful to him than the sweetest flatteries from those of
+the most beautiful woman who counted but half of her years.
+
+The growing influence of the widow Scarron over the "Sun-King" had
+already become the chief gossip of the Court. From the allurements of
+Montespan, of Mademoiselle de Fontanges, and of de Ludre he loved to
+escape to the apartments of the soft-voiced woman who cared so much more
+for his soul than for his smiles. "His Majesty's interviews with Madame
+de Maintenon," Madame de Sevigne writes, "become more and more frequent,
+and they last from six in the morning to ten at night, she sitting in
+one arm-chair, he in another."
+
+In vain Montespan stormed and wept in her fits of jealous rage; in vain
+did the beautiful de Fontanges seek to lure him to her arms, until death
+claimed her so tragically before she had well passed her twentieth
+birthday. The King had had more than enough of such Delilahs. Pleasure
+had palled; peace was what he craved now--salve for his seared
+conscience.
+
+When Madame de Maintenon was appointed principal lady-in-waiting to the
+Dauphine and when, a little later, Louis' unhappy Queen drew her last
+breath in her arms, Montespan at last realised that her day of power was
+over. She wrote letters to the King begging him not to withdraw his
+affection from her, but to these appeals Louis was silent; he handed
+the letters to Madame de Maintenon to answer as she willed.
+
+The Court was quick to realise that a new star had risen; ministers and
+ambassadors now flocked to the new divinity to consult her and to win
+her favour. The governess was hailed as the new Queen of Louis and of
+France. The climax came when the King was thrown one day from his horse
+while hunting, and broke his arm. It was Madame de Maintenon alone who
+was allowed to nurse him, and who was by his side night and day. Before
+the arm was well again she was standing, thickly veiled, before an
+improvised altar in the King's study, with Louis by her side, while the
+words that made them man and wife were pronounced by Archbishop de
+Harlay.
+
+The prison-child had now reached the loftiest pinnacle in the land of
+her birth. Though she wore no crown, she was Queen of France, wielding a
+power which few throned ladies have ever known. Princes and Princesses
+rose to greet her entry with bows and curtsies; the mother of the coming
+King called her "aunt"; her rooms, splendid as the King's, adjoined his;
+she had the place of honour in the King's Council Room; the State's
+secrets were in her keeping; she guided and controlled the destinies of
+the nation. And all this greatness came to her when she had passed her
+fiftieth year, and when all the grace and bloom of youth were but a
+distant memory.
+
+The King himself, two years her junior, and still in the prime of his
+manhood, was her shadow, paying to the plain, middle-aged woman such
+deference and courtesy as he had never shown to the youth and beauty of
+her predecessors in his affection. And she--thus translated to dizzy
+heights--kept a head as cool and a demeanour as modest as when she was
+"Scarron's widow," the convent protegee. For power and splendour she
+cared no whit. Her ambition now, as always, was to be loved for herself,
+to "play a beautiful part in the world," and to deserve the respect of
+all good men.
+
+Her chief pleasure was found away from the pomp and glitter of the
+Court, among "her children" of the Saint Cyr Convent, which she had
+founded for the education of the daughters of poor noblemen, over whom
+she watched with loving and unflagging care. And yet she was not
+happy--not nearly as happy as in the days of her obscure widowhood. "I
+am dying of sorrow in the midst of luxury," she wrote. And again. "I
+cannot bear it. I wish I were dead." Why she was so unhappy, with her
+Queendom and her environment of love and esteem, and her life of good
+works, it is impossible to say. The fact remains, inscrutable, but still
+fact.
+
+Twenty-five years of such life of splendid sadness, and Louis, his last
+days clouded by loss and suffering, died with her prayers in his ears,
+his coverlet moistened by her tears. Two years later--years spent in
+prayers and masses and charitable work--the "Queen Dowager" drew the
+last breath of her long life at St Cyr, shortly after hearing that her
+beloved Due de Maine, her pet nursling of other days, had been arrested
+and flung into prison.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+A THRONED BARBARIAN
+
+
+The dawn of the eighteenth century saw the thrones of France and Russia
+occupied by two of the most remarkable sovereigns who ever wore a
+crown--Louis XIV., the "Sun-King," whose splendours dazzled Europe, and
+whose power held it in awe; and Peter I. of Russia, whose destructive
+sword swept Europe from Sweden to the Dardenelles, and whose clever
+brain laid sure the foundation of his country's greatness. Each of these
+Royal rivals dwarfed all other fellow-monarchs as the sun pales the
+stars; and yet it would scarcely have been possible to find two men more
+widely different in all save their passion for power and their love of
+woman, which alone they had in common.
+
+Of the two, Peter is unquestionably to-day the more arresting,
+dominating figure. Although nearly two centuries have gone since he made
+his exit from the world, we can still picture him in his pride, towering
+a head higher than the tallest of his courtiers, swart of face, "as if
+he had been born in Africa," with his black, close-curling hair, his
+bold, imperious eyes, his powerful, well-knit frame--"the muscles and
+stature of a Goliath"--a kingly figure, with majesty in every movement.
+
+We see him, too, wilfully discarding the kingliness with which nature
+had so liberally dowered him--now receiving ambassadors "in a short
+dressing-gown, below which his bare legs were exposed, a thick nightcap,
+lined with linen, on his head, his stockings dropped down over his
+slippers"--now walking through the Copenhagen streets grotesque in a
+green cap, a brown overcoat with horn buttons, worsted stockings full of
+darns, and dirty, cobbled shoes; and again carousing, red of face and
+loud of voice, with his meanest subjects in some low tavern.
+
+As the mood seizes him he plays the role of fireman for hours together;
+goes carol-singing in his sledge, and reaps his harvest of coppers from
+the houses of his subjects; rides a hobby-horse at a village fair, and
+shrieks with laughter until he falls off; or plies saw and plane in a
+shipbuilding yard, sharing the meals and drinking bouts of his
+fellow-workmen.
+
+The French Ambassador, Campredon, wrote of him in 1725:--"It is utterly
+impossible at the present moment to approach the Tsar on serious
+subjects; he is altogether given up to his amusements, which consist in
+going every day to the principal houses in the town with a suite of 200
+persons, musicians and so forth, who sing songs on every sort of
+subject, and amuse themselves by eating and drinking at the expense of
+the persons they visit." "He never passed a single day without being
+the worse for drink," Baron Poellnitz tells us; and his drinking
+companions were usually chosen from the most degraded of his subjects,
+of both sexes, with whom he consorted on the most familiar terms.
+
+When his muddled brain occasionally awoke to the knowledge that he was a
+King, he would bully and hector his boon-comrades like any drunken
+trooper. On one occasion, when a young Jewess refused to drain a goblet
+of neat brandy which he thrust into her hand, he promptly administered
+two resounding boxes on her ears, shouting, "Vile Hebrew spawn! I'll
+teach thee to obey."
+
+There was in him, too, a vein of savage cruelty which took remarkable
+forms. A favourite pastime was to visit the torture-chamber and gloat
+over the sufferings of the victims of the knout and the strappado; or to
+attend (and frequently to officiate at) public executions. Once, we are
+told, at a banquet, he "amused himself by decapitating twenty Streltsy,
+emptying as many glasses of brandy between successive strokes, and
+challenging the Prussian envoy to repeat the feat."
+
+Mad? There can be little doubt that Peter had madness in his veins. He
+was a degenerate and an epileptic, subject to brain storms which
+terrified all who witnessed them. "A sort of convulsion seized him,
+which often for hours threw him into a most distressing condition. His
+body was violently contorted; his face distorted into horrible grimaces;
+and he was further subject to paroxysms of rage, during which it was
+almost certain death to approach him." Even in his saner moods, as
+Waliszewski tells us, he "joined to the roughness of a Russian _barin_
+all the coarseness of a Dutch sailor." Such in brief suggestion was
+Peter I. of Russia, half-savage, half-sovereign, the strangest jumble of
+contradictions who has ever worn the Imperial purple--"a huge mastodon,
+whose moral perceptions were all colossal and monstrous."
+
+It was, perhaps, inevitable that a man so primitive, so little removed
+from the animal, should find his chief pleasures in low pursuits and
+companionships. During his historic visit to London, after a hard day's
+work with adze and saw in the shipbuilding yard, the Tsar would adjourn
+with his fellow-workmen to a public-house in Great Tower Street, and
+"smoke and drink ale and brandy, almost enough to float the vessel he
+had been helping to construct."
+
+And in his own kingdom the favourite companions of his debauches were
+common soldiers and servants.
+
+"He chose his friends among the common herd; looked after his household
+like any shopkeeper; thrashed his wife like a peasant; and sought his
+pleasure where the lower populace generally finds it." His female
+companions were chosen rather for their coarseness than their charms,
+and pleased him most when they were drunk. It was thus fitting that he
+should make an Empress of a scullery-maid, who, as we have seen in an
+earlier chapter, had no vestige of beauty to commend her to his favour,
+and whose chief attractions in his eyes were that she had a coarse
+tongue and was a "first-rate toper."
+
+It was thus a strange and unhappy caprice of fate that united Peter,
+while still a youth, to his first Empress, the refined and sensitive
+Eudoxia, a woman as remote from her husband as the stars. Never was
+there a more incongruous bride than this delicately nurtured girl
+provided by the Empress Nathalie for her coarse-grained son. From the
+hour at which they stood together at the altar the union was doomed to
+tragic failure; before the honeymoon waned Peter had terrified his bride
+by his brutality and disgusted her by the open attentions he paid to his
+favourites of the hour, the daughters of Botticher, the goldsmith, and
+Mons, the wine-merchant.
+
+For five years husband and wife saw little of each other; and when, in
+1694, Nathalie's death removed the one influence which gave the union at
+least the outward form of substance, Peter lost no time in exhibiting
+his true colours. He dismissed all Eudoxia's relatives from the Court,
+and sent her father into exile. One brother he caused to be whipped in
+public; another was put to the torture, which had its horrible climax
+when Peter himself saturated his victim's clothes with spirits of wine,
+and then set them on fire. For Eudoxia a different fate was reserved.
+Not only had he long grown weary of her insipid beauty and of her
+refinement and gentleness, which were a constant mute reproach to his
+own low tastes and hectoring manners--he had grown to hate the very
+sight of her, and determined that she should no longer stand between him
+and the unbridled indulgence of his pleasure.
+
+During his visit to England he never once wrote to her, and on his
+return to Moscow his first words were a brutal announcement of his
+intention to be rid of her. In vain she pleaded and wept. To her tearful
+inquiries, "What have I done to offend you? What fault have you to find
+with me?" he turned a deaf ear. "I never want to see you again," were
+his last inexorable words. A few days later a hackney coach drove up to
+the palace doors; the unhappy Tsarina was bundled unceremoniously into
+it, and she was carried away to the nunnery of the "Intercession of the
+Blessed Virgin," whose doors were closed on her for a score of years.
+
+Pitiful years they were for the young Empress, consigned by her husband
+to a life that was worse than death--robbed of her rank, her splendours,
+and luxuries, her very name--she was now only Helen, the nun, faring
+worse than the meanest of her sister-nuns; for while they at least had
+plenty to eat, the Tsarina seems many a time to have known the pangs of
+hunger. The letters she wrote to one of her brothers are pathetic
+evidence of the straits to which she was reduced. "For pity's sake," she
+wrote, "give me food and drink. Give clothes to the beggar. There is
+nothing here. I do not need a great deal; still I must eat."
+
+It is not to be wondered at, that, in her misery, she should turn
+anywhere for succour and sympathy; and both came to her at last in the
+guise of Major Glebof, an officer in the district, whose heart was
+touched by the sadness of her fate. He sent her food and wine to restore
+her strength, and warm furs to protect her from the iciness of her cell.
+In response to her letters of thanks, he visited her again and again,
+bringing sunshine into her darkened life with his presence, and soothing
+her with words of sympathy and encouragement, until gratitude to the
+"good Samaritan" grew into love for the man.
+
+When she learned that the man who had so befriended her was himself
+poor, actually in money difficulties, she insisted on giving him every
+rouble she could wring, by any abject appeal, out of her friends and
+relatives. She became his very slave, grovelling at his feet. "Where thy
+heart is, dearest one," she wrote to him, "there is mine also; where thy
+tongue is, there is my head; thy will is also mine." She loved him with
+a passion which broke down all barriers of modesty and prudence,
+reckless of the fact that he had a wife, as she had a husband.
+
+When Major Glebof's visits and letters grew more and more infrequent,
+she suffered tortures of anxiety and despair. "My light, my soul, my
+joy," she wrote in one distracted letter, "has the cruel hour of
+separation come already? O, my light! how can I live apart from thee?
+How can I endure existence? Rather would I see my soul parted from my
+body. God alone knows how dear thou art to me. Why do I love thee so
+much, my adored one, that without thee life is so worthless? Why art
+thou angry with me? Why, my _batioushka_, dost thou not come to see me?
+Have pity on me, O my lord, and come to see me to-morrow. O, my world,
+my dearest and best, answer me; do not let me die of grief."
+
+Thus one distracted, incoherent letter followed another, heart-breaking
+in their grief, pitiful in their appeal. "Come to me," she cried;
+"without thee I shall die. Why dost thou cause me such anguish? Have I
+been guilty without knowing it? Better far to have struck me, to have
+punished me in any way, for this fault I have innocently committed." And
+again: "Why am I not dead? Oh, that thou hadst buried me with thy own
+hands! Forgive me, O my soul! Do not let me die.... Send me but a crust
+of bread thou hast bitten with thy teeth, or the waistcoat thou hast
+often worn, that I may have something to bring thee near to me."
+
+What answers, if any, the Major vouchsafed to these pathetic letters we
+know not. The probability is that they received no answer--that the
+"good Samaritan" had either wearied of or grown alarmed at a passion
+which he could not return, and which was fraught with danger. It was
+accident only that revealed to the world the story of this strange and
+tragic infatuation.
+
+When the Tsarevitch, Alexis, was brought to trial in 1718 on a charge of
+conspiracy against his father, Peter, suspecting that Eudoxia had had a
+hand in the rebellion, ordered a descent on the nunnery and an inquiry.
+Nothing was found to connect her with her son's ill-fated venture; but
+the inquiry revealed the whole story of her relations with the too
+friendly officer. The evidence of the nuns and servants alone--evidence
+of frequent and long meetings by day and night, of embraces
+exchanged--was sufficiently conclusive, without the incriminating
+letters which were discovered in the Major's bureau, labelled "Letters
+from the Tsarina," or Eudoxia's confession which was extorted from her.
+
+This was an opportunity of vengeance such as exceeded all the Tsar's
+hopes. Glebof was arrested and put on his trial. Evidence was forced
+from the nuns by the lashing of the knout, so severe that some of them
+died under it. Glebof, subjected to such frightful tortures that in his
+agony he confessed much more than the truth, was sentenced to death by
+impalement. In order to prolong his suffering to the last possible
+moment, he was warmly wrapped in furs, to protect him from the bitter
+cold, and for twenty-eight hours he suffered indescribable agony, until
+at last death came to his release.
+
+As for Eudoxia, her punishment was a public flogging and consignment to
+a nunnery still more isolated and miserable than that in which she had
+dragged out twenty years of her broken life. Here she remained for seven
+years, until, on the Tsar's death, an even worse fate befell her. She
+was then, by Catherine's orders, taken from the convent, and flung into
+the most loathsome, rat-infested dungeon of the fortress of
+Schlussenberg, where she remained for two years of unspeakable horror.
+
+Then at last, after nearly thirty years of life that was worse than
+death, the sun shone again for her. One day her dungeon door flew open,
+and to the bowing of obsequious courtiers, the prisoner was conducted to
+a sumptuous apartment. "The walls were hung with splendid stuffs; the
+table was covered with gold-plate; ten thousand roubles awaited her in
+a casket. Courtiers stood in her ante-chamber; carriages and horses
+were at her orders."
+
+Catherine, the "scullery-Empress," was dead; Eudoxia's grandson, Peter
+II., now wore the crown of Russia; and Eudoxia found herself
+transported, as by the touch of a magic wand, from her loathsome
+prison-cell to the old-time splendours of palaces--the greatest lady in
+all Russia, to whom Princesses, ambassadors, and courtiers were all
+proud to pay respectful homage. But the transformation had come too
+late; her life was crushed beyond restoration; and after a few months of
+her new glory she was glad to find an asylum once more within convent
+walls, until Death, the great healer of broken hearts, took her to
+where, "beyond these voices, there is peace."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+While Eudoxia was eating her heart out in her convent cell, her husband
+was finding ample compensation for her absence in Bacchanalian orgies
+and the company of his galaxies of favourites, from tradesmen's
+daughters to servant-maids of buxom charms, such as the Livonian
+peasant-girl, in whom he found his second Empress.
+
+Of the almost countless women who thus fell under his baneful influence
+one stands out from the rest by reason of the tragedy which surrounds
+her memory. Mary Hamilton was no low-born maid, such as Peter especially
+chose to honour with his attentions. She had in her veins the blood of
+the ducal Hamiltons of Scotland, and of many a noble family of Russia,
+from which her more immediate ancestors had taken their wives; and it
+was an ill fate that took her, when little more than a child, to the
+most debased Court of Europe to play the part of maid-of-honour, and
+thus to cross the path of the most unprincipled lover in Europe.
+
+Peter's infatuation for the pretty young "Scotswoman," however, was but
+short-lived. She had none of the vulgar attractions that could win him
+to any kind of constancy; and he quickly abandoned her for the more
+agreeable company of his _dienshtchiks_, leaving her to find consolation
+in the affection of more courtly, if less exalted, lovers--notably the
+young Count Orloff, who proved as faithless as his master.
+
+Such was Mary's infatuation for the worthless Count that, under his
+influence, she stooped to various kinds of crime, from stealing the
+Tsarina's jewels to fill her lover's purse, to infanticide. The climax
+came when an important document was missing from the Tsar's cabinet.
+Suspicion pointed to Orloff as the thief; he was arrested, and, when
+brought into Peter's presence, not only confessed to the thefts and to
+his share in making away with the undesirable infants, but betrayed the
+partner of his guilt.
+
+There was short shrift for poor Mary Hamilton when she was put on her
+trial on these grave charges. She made full confession of her crimes;
+but no torture could wring from her the name of the man for love of whom
+she had committed them, and of whose treachery to her she was ignorant.
+She was sentenced to death; and one March day, in the year 1719, she
+was led to the scaffold "in a white silk gown trimmed with black
+ribbons."
+
+Then followed one of the grimmest scenes recorded in history. Peter, the
+man who had been the first to betray her, and who had refused her pardon
+even when her cause was pleaded by his wife, was a keenly interested
+spectator of her execution. At the foot of the scaffold he embraced her,
+and exhorted her to pray, before stepping aside to give place to the
+headsman. When the axe had done its deadly work, he again stepped
+forward, picked up the lifeless and still beautiful head which had
+rolled into the mud, and calmly proceeded to give a lecture on anatomy
+to the assembled crowd, "drawing attention to the number and nature of
+the organs severed by the axe." His lecture concluded, he kissed the
+pale, dead lips, crossed himself, and walked away with a smile of
+satisfaction on his face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+A FRIEND OF MARIE ANTOINETTE
+
+
+There is scarcely a spectacle in the whole drama of history more
+pathetic than that of Marie Antoinette, dancing her light-hearted way
+through life to the guillotine, seemingly unconscious of the eyes of
+jealousy and hate that watched her every step; or, if she noticed at
+all, returning a gay smile for a frown.
+
+Wedded when but a child, full of the joy of youth, with laughter
+bubbling on her pretty lips and gaiety dancing in her eyes, to a
+dull-witted clown to whom her fresh young beauty made no appeal;
+surrounded by Court ladies jealous of her charms; feared for her foreign
+sympathies, and hated by a sullen, starving populace for her
+extravagance and her pursuit of pleasure, the Austrian Princess with all
+her young loveliness and the sweetness of her nature could please no one
+in the land of her exile. Her very amiability was an offence; her
+unaffected simplicity a subject of scorn; and her love of pleasure a
+crime.
+
+Had she realised the danger of her position, and adapted herself to its
+demands, her story might have been written very differently; but her
+tragedy was that she saw or heeded none of the danger-signals that
+marked her path until it was too late to retrace a step; and that her
+most innocent pleasures were made to pave the way to her doom.
+
+Nothing, for instance, could have been more harmless to the seeming than
+Marie Antoinette's friendship for Yolande de Polignac; but this
+friendship had, beyond doubt, a greater part in her undoing than any
+other incident in her life, from the affair of the "diamond necklace" to
+her innocent infatuation for Count Fersen; and it would have been well
+for the Queen of France if Madame de Polignac had been content to remain
+in her rustic obscurity, and had never crossed her path.
+
+When Yolande Gabrielle de Polastron was led to the altar, one day in the
+year 1767, by Comte Jules de Polignac, she never dreamt, we may be sure,
+of the dazzling role she was destined to play at the Court of France.
+Like her husband, she was a member of the smaller _noblesse_, as proud
+as they were poor. Her husband, it is true, boasted a long pedigree,
+with its roots in the Dark Ages; but his family had given to France only
+one man of note, that Cardinal de Polignac, accomplished scholar,
+courtier, and man of affairs, who was able to twist Louis XIV. round his
+dexterous thumb; and Comte Jules was the Cardinal's great-nephew, and,
+through his mother, had Mazarin blood in his veins.
+
+But the young couple had a purse as short as their descent was long; and
+the early years of their wedded life were spent in Comte Jules'
+dilapidated chateau, on an income less than the equivalent of a pound a
+day--in a rustic retirement which was varied by an occasional jaunt to
+Paris to "see the sights," and enjoy a little cheap gaiety.
+
+Comte Jules, however, had a sister, Diane, a clever-tongued, ambitious
+young woman, who had found a footing at Court as lady-in-waiting to the
+Comtesse d'Artois, and whom her brother and his wife were proud to visit
+on their rare journeys to the capital. And it was during one of these
+visits that Marie Antoinette, who had struck up an informal friendship
+with the sprightly, laughter-loving Diane, first met the woman who was
+to play such an important and dangerous part in her life.
+
+It was, perhaps, little wonder that the French Queen, craving for
+friendship and sympathy, fell under the charm of Yolande de Polignac--a
+girl still, but a few years older than herself, with a singular
+sweetness and winsomeness, and "beautiful as a dream." The beauty of the
+young Comtesse was, indeed, a revelation even in a Court of fair women.
+In the extravagant words of chroniclers of the time, "she had the most
+heavenly face that was ever seen. Her glance, her smile, every feature
+was angelic." No picture could, it was said, do any justice to this
+lovely creature of the glorious brown hair and blue eyes, who seemed so
+utterly unconscious of her beauty.
+
+Such was the woman who came into the life of Marie Antoinette, and at
+once took possession of her heart. At last the Queen of France, in her
+isolation, had found the ideal friend she had sought so long in vain; a
+woman young and beautiful like herself, with kindred tastes, eager as
+she was to enjoy life, and with all the qualities to make a charming
+and sympathetic companion. It was a case of love at first sight, on
+Marie Antoinette's part at least; and each subsequent meeting only
+served to strengthen the link that bound these two women so strangely
+brought together.
+
+The Comtesse must come oftener to Court, the Queen pleaded, so that they
+might have more opportunities of meeting and of learning to know each
+other; and when the Comtesse pleaded poverty, Marie Antoinette brushed
+the difficulty aside. That could easily be arranged; the Queen had a
+vacancy in the ranks of her equerries. M. le Comte would accept the
+post, and then Madame would have her apartments at the Court itself.
+
+Thus it was that Comte Jules' wife was transported from her poor country
+chateau to the splendours of Versailles, installed as _chere amie_ of
+the Queen in place of the Princesse de Lamballe, and with the ball of
+fortune at her pretty feet. And never did woman adapt herself more
+easily to such a change of environment. It was, indeed, a great part of
+the charm of this remarkable woman that, amid success which would have
+turned the head of almost any other of her sex, she remained to her last
+day as simple and unaffected as when she won the Queen's heart in Diane
+de Polignac's apartment.
+
+So absolutely indifferent did she seem to her new splendours, that, when
+jealousy sought to undermine the Queen's friendship, she implored Marie
+Antoinette to allow her to go back to her old, obscure life; and it was
+only when the Queen begged her to stay, with arms around her neck and
+with streaming tears, that she consented to remain by her side.
+
+If the Queen ever had any doubt that she had at last found a friend who
+loved her for herself, the doubt was now finally dissipated. Such an
+unselfish love as this was a treasure to be prized; and from this moment
+Queen and waiting-woman were inseparable. When they were not strolling
+arm-in-arm in the corridors or gardens of Versailles, Her Majesty was
+spending her days in Madame's apartments, where, as she said, "We are no
+longer Queen and subject, but just dear friends."
+
+So unhappy was Marie Antoinette apart from her new friend that, when
+Madame de Polignac gave birth to a child at Passy, the Court itself was
+moved to La Muette, so that the Queen could play the part of nurse by
+her friend's bedside.
+
+Such, now, was the Queen's devotion that there was no favour she would
+not have gladly showered on the Comtesse; but to all such offers Madame
+turned a deaf ear. She wanted nothing but Marie Antoinette's love and
+friendship for herself; but if the Queen, in her goodness, chose to
+extend her favour to Madame's relatives--well, that was another matter.
+
+Thus it was that Comte Jules soon blossomed into a Duke, and Madame
+perforce became a Duchess, with a coveted tabouret at Court. But they
+were still poor, in spite of an equerry's pay, and heavily in debt, a
+matter which must be seen to. The Queen's purse satisfied every
+creditor, to the tune of four hundred thousand livres, and Duc Jules
+found himself lord of an estate which added seventy thousand livres
+yearly to his exchequer, with another annual eighty thousand livres as
+revenue for his office of Director-General of Posts.
+
+Of course, if the Queen _would_ be so foolishly generous, it was not the
+Duchesse's fault, and when Marie Antoinette next proposed to give a
+dowry of eight hundred thousand livres to the Duchesse's daughter on her
+marriage to the Comte de Guiche, and to raise the bridegroom to a
+dukedom--well, it was "very sweet of Her Majesty," and it was not for
+her to oppose such a lavish autocrat.
+
+Thus the shower of Royal favours grew; and it is perhaps little wonder
+that each new evidence of the Queen's prodigality was greeted with
+curses by the mob clamouring for bread outside the palace gates; while
+even her father's minister, Kaunitz, in far Vienna, brutally dubbed the
+Duchesse and her family, "a gang of thieves."
+
+Diane de Polignac, the Duchesse's sister-in-law, had long been made a
+Countess and placed in charge of a Royal household; and the grateful
+shower fell on all who had any connection with the favourite. Her
+father-in-law, Cardinal de Polignac's nephew, was rescued from his
+rustic poverty to play the exalted role of ambassador; an uncle was
+raised _per saltum_ from _cure_ to bishop. The Duchesse's widowed aunt
+was made happy by a pension of six thousand livres a year; and her
+son-in-law, de Guiche, in addition to his dukedom, was rewarded further
+for his fortunate nuptials by valuable sinecure offices at Court.
+
+So the tide of benefactions flowed until it was calculated that the
+Polignac family were drawing half a million livres every year as the
+fruits of the Queen's partiality for her favourite. Little wonder that,
+at a time when France was groaning under dire poverty, the volume of
+curses should swell against the "Austrian panther," who could thus
+squander gold while her subjects were starving; or that the Court should
+be inflamed by jealousy at such favours shown to a family so obscure as
+the Polignacs.
+
+To the warnings of her own family Marie Antoinette was deaf. What cared
+she for such exhibitions of spite and jealousy? She was Queen; and if
+she wished to be generous to her favourite's family, none should say her
+nay. And thus, with a smile half-careless, half-defiant, she went to
+meet the doom which, though she little dreamt it, awaited her.
+
+The Duchesse was now promoted to the office of governess of the Queen's
+children, a position which was the prerogative of Royalty itself, or, at
+least, of the very highest nobility. With her usual modesty, she had
+fought long against the promotion; but the Queen's will was law, and she
+had to submit to the inevitable as gracefully as she could. And now we
+see her installed in the most splendid apartments at Versailles, holding
+a _salon_ almost as regal as that of Marie Antoinette herself.
+
+She was surrounded by sycophants and place-seekers, eager to capture the
+Queen's favour through her. And such was her influence that a word from
+her was powerful enough to make or mar a minister. She held, in fact,
+the reins of power and was now more potent than the weak-kneed King
+himself.
+
+It was at this stage in her brilliant career that the Duchesse came
+under the spell of the Comte de Vaudreuil--handsome, courtly, an
+intriguer to his finger-tips, a man of many accomplishments, of a supple
+tongue, and with great wealth to lend a glamour to his gifts. A man of
+rare fascination, and as dangerous as he was fascinating.
+
+The woman who had carried a level head through so much unaccustomed
+splendour and power became the veriest slave of this handsome,
+honey-tongued Comte, who ruled her, as she in turn ruled the Queen. At
+his bidding she made and unmade ministers; she obtained for him pensions
+and high offices, and robbed the treasury of nearly two million livres
+to fill his pockets. When Marie Antoinette at last ventured to thwart
+the Comte in his ambition to become the Dauphin's Governor, he
+retaliated by poisoning the Duchesse's mind against her, and bringing
+about the first estrangement between the friends.
+
+Torn between her infatuation for Vaudreuil and her love of the Queen,
+the Duchesse was in an awkward dilemma. It became necessary to choose
+between the two rivals; and that Vaudreuil's spell proved the stronger,
+her increasing coldness to Marie Antoinette soon proved. It was the
+"rift within the lute" which was to make the music of their friendship
+mute. The Queen gradually withdrew herself from the Duchesse's _salon_,
+where she was sure to meet the insolent Vaudreuil; and thus the gulf
+gradually widened until the severance was complete.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Evil days were now coming for Marie Antoinette. The affair of the
+diamond necklace had made powerful enemies; the Polignac family, taking
+the side of Vaudreuil and their protectress, were arrayed against her;
+France was rising on the tide of hate to sweep the Austrian and her
+husband from the throne. The horrors of the Revolution were being
+loosed, and all who could were flying for safety to other lands.
+
+At this terrible crisis the Queen's thoughts were less for herself than
+for her friend of happier days. She sought the Duchesse and begged her
+to fly while there was still time. Then it was that, touched by such
+unselfish love, the Duchesse's pride broke down, and all her old love
+for her sovereign lady returned in full flood. Bursting into tears, she
+flung herself at Marie Antoinette's feet, and begged forgiveness from
+the woman whose friendship she had spurned, and whose life she had,
+however innocently, done so much to ruin.
+
+A few hours later the Duchesse, disguised as a chambermaid and sitting
+by the coachman's side, was making her escape from France in company
+with her husband and other members of her family, while the Queen who
+had loved her so well was left to take the last tragic steps that had
+the guillotine for goal.
+
+Just before the carriage started on its long and perilous journey, a
+note was thrust into the "chambermaid's" hand--"Adieu, most tender of
+friends. How terrible is this word! But it is necessary. Adieu! I have
+only strength left to embrace you. Your heart-broken Marie."
+
+Then ensued for the Duchesse a time of perilous journeying to safety.
+At Sens her carriage was surrounded by a fierce mob, clamouring for the
+blood of the "aristos." "Are the Polignacs still with the Queen?"
+demanded one man, thrusting his head into the carriage. "The Polignacs?"
+answered the Abbe de Baliviere, with marvellous presence of mind. "Oh!
+they have left Versailles long ago. Those vile persons have been got rid
+of." And with a howl of baffled rage the mob allowed the carriage to
+continue its journey, taking with it the most hated of all the
+Polignacs, the chambermaid, whose heart, we may be sure, was in her
+mouth!
+
+Thus the Duchesse made her way through Switzerland, to Turin, and to
+Rome, and to Venice, where news came to her of the fall ot the monarchy
+and Louis' execution. By the time she reached Vienna on her restless
+wanderings, her health, shattered by hardships and by her anxiety for
+her friend, broke down completely. She was a dying woman; and when, a
+few months later, she learned that Marie Antoinette was also dead--"a
+natural death," they mercifully told her--"Thank God!" she exclaimed;
+"now, at last, she is free from those bloodthirsty monsters! Now I can
+die in peace."
+
+Seven weeks later the Duchesse drew her last breath, with the name she
+still loved best in all the world on her lips. In death she and her
+beloved Queen were not divided.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+THE RIVAL SISTERS
+
+
+It was an unkind fate that linked the lives of the fifteenth Louis of
+France and Marie Leczinska, Princess of Lorraine, and daughter of
+Stanislas, the dethroned King of Poland; for there was probably no
+Princess in Europe less equipped by nature to hold the fickle allegiance
+of the young French King, and no Royal husband less likely to bring
+happiness into the life of such a consort.
+
+When Princess Marie was called to the throne of France, she found
+herself transported from one of the most penurious and obscure to the
+most splendid of the Courts of Europe--"frightened and overwhelmed," as
+de Goncourt tells us, "by the grandeur of the King, bringing to her
+husband nothing but obedience, to marriage only duty; trembling and
+faltering in her queenly role like some escaped nun lost in Versailles."
+Although by no means devoid of good-looks, as Nattier's portrait of her
+at this time proves, her attractions were shy ones, as her virtues were
+modest, almost ashamed.
+
+She shrank alike from the embraces of her husband and the gaieties of
+his Court, finding her chief pleasure in music and painting, in long
+talks with the most serious-minded of her ladies, in Masses and
+prayers--spending gloomy hours in her oratory with its death's head,
+which she always carried with her on her journeys. Such was the nun-like
+wife whom Louis XV. led to the altar shortly after he had entered his
+sixteenth year, and had already had his initiation into that career of
+vice which he pursued with few intervals to the end of his life.
+
+Already, at fifteen, the King, who has been mockingly dubbed "_le bien
+aime_" was breaking away from the austere hands of his boyhood's mentor,
+Cardinal Fleury, and was beginning to snatch a few "fearful joys" in the
+company of his mignons, such as the Duc de La Tremouille, and the Duc de
+Gesvres, and a few gay women of whom the sprightly and beautiful
+Princesse de Charolois was the ringleader. But he was still nothing more
+than "a big and gloomy child," whose ill-balanced nature gravitated
+between fits of profound gloom and the wild abandonment of debauch; one
+hour, torn and shaken by religious terrors, fears of hell and of death;
+the next, the very soul of hysterical gaiety, with words of blasphemy on
+his lips, the gayest member of a band of Bacchanals in some midnight
+orgy.
+
+To such a youth, feverishly seeking distraction from his own black
+moods, the demure, devout Princess, ignorant of the caresses and
+coquetry of her sex, moving like a spectre among the brilliant,
+light-hearted ladies of his Court, was the most unsuitable, the most
+impossible of brides. He quickly wearied of her company, and fled from
+her sighs and her homilies to seek forgetfulness of her and of himself
+in the society of such sirens of the Court as Mademoiselle de
+Beaujolais, Madame de Lauraguais, and Mademoiselle de Charolois, whose
+coquetries and high spirits never failed to charm away his gloomy
+humours.
+
+But although one lady after another, from that most bewitching of
+madcaps, Mademoiselle de Charolois, to the dark-eyed, buxom Comtesse de
+Toulouse, practised on him all their allurements, strove to awake his
+senses "by a thousand coquetries, a thousand assaults, the King's
+timidity eluded these advances, which amused and alarmed, but did not
+tempt his heart; that young monarch's heart was still so full of the
+aged Fleury's terrifying tales of the women of the Regency."
+
+Such coyness, however, was not long to stand in the way of the King's
+appetite for pleasure which every day strengthened. One day it began to
+be whispered that at last Louis had been vanquished--that, at a supper
+at La Muette, he had proposed the health of an "Unknown Fair," which had
+been drunk with acclamation by his boon-companions; and the Court was
+full of excited speculation as to who his mysterious charmer could be.
+That some new and powerful influence had come into the young sovereign's
+life was abundantly clear, from the new light that shone in his eyes,
+the laughter that was now always on his lips. He had said "good-bye" to
+melancholy; he astonished all by his new vivacity, and became the leader
+in one dissipation after another, "whose noisy merriment he led and
+prolonged far into the night."
+
+It was not long before the identity of the worker of this miracle was
+revealed to the world. She had been recognised more than once when
+making her stealthy way to the King's apartments; she was his chosen
+companion on his journey to Compiegne; and it was soon public knowledge
+that Madame de Mailly was the woman who had captured the King's elusive
+heart. And indeed there was little occasion for surprise; for Madame de
+Mailly, although she would never see her thirtieth birthday again, was
+one of the most seductive women in all France.
+
+Black-eyed, crimson-lipped, oval-faced, Madame de Mailly was one of
+those women who "with cheeks on fire, and blood astir, eyes large and
+lustrous as the eyes of Juno, with bold carriage and in free toilettes,
+step forward out of the past with the proud and insolent graces of the
+divinities of some Bacchanalia." With the provocative and sensual charm
+which is so powerful in its appeal, she had a rare skill in displaying
+her beauty to its fullest advantage. Her cult of the toilette, the Duc
+de Luynes tells us, went with her even by night. She never went to bed
+without decking herself with all her diamonds; and her most seductive
+hour was in the morning, when, in her bed, with her glorious dishevelled
+hair veiling her pillow, a-glitter with her jewels, she gave audience to
+her friends.
+
+Such was the ravishing, ardent, passionate woman who was the first of
+many to carry Louis' heart by storm, and to be established in his palace
+as his mistress--to inaugurate for him a new life of pleasure, and to
+estrange him still more from his unhappy Queen, shut up with her
+prayers and her tears in her own room, with her tapestry, her books of
+history, and her music for sole relaxation. "The most innocent
+pleasures," Queen Marie wrote sadly at this time, "are not for me."
+
+Under Madame de Mailly's rule the Court of Versailles awoke to a new
+life. "The little apartments grow animated, gay to the point of licence.
+Noise, merriment, an even gayer and livelier clash of glasses, madder
+nights." Fete succeeded fete in brilliant sequence. Each night saw its
+Royal debauch, with the King and his mistress for arch-spirits of the
+revels. There were nightly banquets, with the rarest wines and the most
+costly viands, supplemented by salads prepared by the dainty hands of
+Mademoiselle de Charolois, and ragouts cooked by Louis himself in silver
+saucepans. And these were followed by orgies which left the celebrants,
+in the last excesses of intoxication, to be gathered up at break of day
+and carried helpless to bed.
+
+Such wild excesses could not fail sooner or later to bring satiety to a
+lover so unstable as Louis; and it was not long before he grew a little
+weary of his mistress, who, too assured of her conquest, began to
+exhibit sudden whims and caprices, and fits of obstinacy. Her jealous
+eyes followed him everywhere, her reproaches, if he so much as smiled on
+a rival beauty, provoked daily quarrels. He was drawn, much against his
+will, into her family disputes, and into the disgraceful affairs of her
+father, the dissolute Marquis de Nesle.
+
+Meanwhile Madame de Mailly's supremacy was being threatened in a most
+unexpected quarter. Among the pupils of the convent school at Port Royal
+was a young girl, in whose ambitious brain the project was forming of
+supplanting the King's favourite, and of ruling France and Louis at the
+same time. The idle dream of a schoolgirl, of course! But to Felicite de
+Nesle it was no vain dream, but the ambition of a lifetime, which
+dominated her more and more as the months passed in her convent
+seclusion. If her sister, Madame de Mailly, had so easily made a
+conquest of the King, why should she, with less beauty, it is true, but
+with a much cleverer brain, despair? And thus it was that every letter
+Madame received from her "little sister" pleaded for an invitation to
+Court, until at last Mademoiselle de Nesle found herself the guest of
+Louis' mistress in his palace.
+
+Thus the first important step was taken. The rest would be easy; for
+Mademoiselle never doubted for a moment her ability to carry out her
+programme to its splendid climax. It was certainly a bold, almost
+impudent design; for the girl of the convent had few attractions to
+appeal to a monarch so surrounded by beauty as the King of France. What
+the courtiers saw, says the Duc de Richelieu, was "a long neck clumsily
+set on the shoulders, a masculine figure and carriage, features not
+unlike those of Madame de Mailly, but thinner and harder, which
+exhibited none of her flashes of kindness, her tenderness of passion."
+
+Even her manners seemed calculated to repel, rather than attract the man
+she meant to conquer; for she treated him, from the first, with a
+familiarity amounting almost to rudeness, and a wilfulness to which he
+was by no means accustomed. There was, at any rate, something novel and
+piquant in an attitude so different from that of all other Court ladies.
+Resentment was soon replaced by interest, and interest by attraction;
+until Louis, before he was aware of it, began to find the society of the
+impish, mocking, defiant maid from the convent more to his taste than
+that of the most fascinating women of his Court.
+
+The more he saw of her, the more effectually he came under her spell.
+Each day found her in some new and tantalising mood; and as she drew him
+more and more into her toils, she kept him there by her ingenuity in
+devising novel pleasures and entertainments for him, until, within a
+month of setting eyes on her, he was telling Madame de Mailly, he "loved
+her sister more than herself." One of the first evidences of his favour
+was to provide her with a husband in the Comte de Vintimille, and a
+dower of two hundred thousand livres. He promised her a post as
+lady-in-waiting to Madame la Dauphine and gave her a sumptuous suite of
+rooms at Versailles. He even conferred on her husband the honour of
+handing him his shirt on the wedding-night, an evidence of high favour
+such as no other bridegroom had enjoyed.
+
+It was thus little surprise to anyone to find the Comtesse-bride not
+only her sister's most formidable rival, but actually usurping her place
+and privileges. Nor was it long before this place, on which she had set
+her heart first within the walls of the Port Royal Convent, was
+unassailably hers; and Madame de Mailly, in tears and sadness, saw an
+unbridgeable gulf widen between her and the man she undoubtedly had
+grown to love.
+
+That Felicite de Nesle had not over-estimated her powers of conquest was
+soon apparent. Louis became her abject slave, humouring her caprices and
+submitting to her will. And this will, let it be said to her credit, she
+exercised largely for his good. She weaned him from his vicious ways;
+she stimulated whatever good remained in him; she tried, and in a
+measure succeeded in making a man of him. Under her influence he began
+to realise that he was a King, and to play his exalted part more
+worthily. He asserted himself in a variety of directions, from looking
+personally after the ordering of his household to taking the reins of
+State into his own hands.
+
+Nor did she curtail his pleasures. She merely gave them a saner
+direction. Orgies and midnight revelry became things of the past, but
+their place was taken by delightful days spent at the Chateau of Choisy,
+that regal little pleasure-house between the waters of the Seine and the
+Forest of Senart, with all its marvels of costly and artistic
+furnishing. Here one entertainment succeeded another, from the hunting
+which opened, to the card-games which closed the day. A time of innocent
+delights which came sweet to the jaded palate of the King.
+
+Thus the halcyon months passed, until, one August day in 1741, the
+Comtesse was seized with a slight fever; Louis, consumed by anxiety,
+spending the anxious hours by her bedside or pacing the corridor
+outside. Two days later he was stooping to kiss an infant presented to
+him on a cushion of cramoisi velvet. His happiness was crowned at last,
+and life spread before him a prospect of many such years. But tragedy
+was already brooding over this scene of pleasure, although none, least
+of all the King, seemed to see the shadow of her wings.
+
+One early day in December, Madame de Vintimille was seized with a severe
+illness, as sudden as it was mysterious. Physicians were hastily
+summoned from Paris, only, to Louis' despair, to declare that they could
+do nothing to save the life of the Comtesse. "Tortured by excruciating
+pain," says de Goncourt, "struggling against a death which was full of
+terror, and which seemed to point to the violence of poison, the dying
+woman sent for a confessor. She died almost instantly in his arms before
+the Sacraments could be administered. And as the confessor, charged with
+the dead woman's last penitent message to her sister, entered Madame de
+Mailly's _salon_, he dropped dead."
+
+Here, indeed, was tragedy in its most sudden and terrible form! The King
+was stunned, incredulous. He refused to believe that the woman he had so
+lately clasped in his arms, so warm, so full of life, was dead. And when
+at last the truth broke on him with crushing force, he was as a man
+distraught. "He shut himself up in his room, and listened half-dead to a
+Mass from his bed." He would not allow any but the priest to come near
+him; he repulsed all efforts at consolation.
+
+And whilst Louis was thus alone with his demented grief, "thrust away in
+a stable of the palace, lay the body of the dead woman, which had been
+kept for a cast to be taken; that distorted countenance, that mouth
+which had breathed out its soul in a convulsion, so that the efforts of
+two men were required to close it for moulding, the already decomposing
+remains of Madame de Vintimille served as a plaything and a
+laughing-stock to the children and lackeys."
+
+When the storm of his grief at last began to abate, the King retired to
+his remote country-seat of Saint Leger, carrying his broken heart with
+him--and also Madame de Mailly, as sharer of his sorrow; for it was to
+the woman whom he had so lightly discarded that he first turned for
+solace. At Saint Leger he passed his days in reading and re-reading the
+two thousand letters the dead Comtesse had written to him, sprinkling
+their perfumed pages with his tears. And when he was not thus burying
+himself in the past, he was a prey to the terrors that had obsessed his
+childhood--the fear of death and of hell.
+
+At supper--the only meal which he shared with others, he refused to
+touch meat, "in order that he might not commit sin on every side"; if a
+light word was spoken he would rebuke the speaker by talk of death and
+judgment; and if his eyes met those of Madame de Mailly, he burst into
+tears and was led sobbing from the room.
+
+The communion of grief gradually awoke in him his old affection for
+Madame de Mailly; and for a time it seemed not unlikely that she might
+regain her lost supremacy. But the discarded mistress had many enemies
+at Court, who were by no means willing to see her re-established in
+favour--the chief of them, the Duc de Richelieu, the handsomest man and
+the "hero" of more scandalous amours than any other in France--a man,
+moreover, of crafty brain, who had already acquired an ascendancy over
+the King's mind.
+
+With Madame de Tencin, a woman as scheming and with as evil a reputation
+as himself, for chief ally, the Due determined to find another mistress
+who should finally oust Madame de Mailly from Louis' favour; and her he
+found in a woman, devoted to himself and his interests, and of such
+surpassing loveliness that, when the King first saw her at Petit Bourg,
+he exclaimed, "Heavens! how beautiful she is!"
+
+Such was the involuntary tribute Louis paid at first sight to the charms
+of Madame de la Tournelle, who was now fated to take the place of her
+dead sister, Madame de Vintimille, just as the Comtesse had supplanted
+another sister, Madame de Mailly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+THE RIVAL SISTERS--_continued_
+
+
+Louis XV.'s involuntary exclamation when he first set eyes on the
+loveliness of Madame de la Tournelle, "Heavens! how beautiful she is!"
+becomes intelligible when we look on Nattier's picture of this fairest
+of the de Nesle sisters in his "Allegory of the Daybreak," and read the
+contemporary descriptions of her charms.
+
+"She ravished the eye," we are told, "with her skin of dazzling
+whiteness, her elegant carriage, her free gestures, the enchanting
+glance of her big blue eyes--a gaze of which the cunning was veiled by
+sentiment--by the smile of a child, moist lips, a bosom surging,
+heaving, ever agitated by the flux and reflux of life, by a physiognomy
+at once passionate and mutinous." And to these seductions were added a
+sunny temperament, an infectious gaiety of spirit, and a playful wit
+which made her infinitely attractive to men much less susceptible that
+the amorous Louis.
+
+It is little wonder then that in the reaction which followed his stormy
+grief for his dead love, the Comtesse de Vintimille, he should turn from
+the lachrymose companionship of Madame de Mailly to bask in the
+sunshine of this third of the beautiful sisters, Madame de la Tournelle,
+and that the wish to possess her should fire his blood. But Madame de la
+Tournelle was not to prove such an easy conquest as her two sisters, who
+had come almost unasked to his arms.
+
+At the time when she came thus dramatically into his life she was living
+with Madame de Mazarin, a strong-minded woman who had no cause to love
+Louis, who had thwarted and opposed him more than once, and who was
+determined at any cost to keep her protegee and pet out of his clutches.
+And his desires had also two other stout opponents in Cardinal Fleury,
+his old mentor, and Maurepas, the most subtle and clever of his
+ministers, each of whom for different reasons was strongly averse to
+this new and dangerous liaison, which would make him the tool of
+Richelieu's favourite and Richelieu's party.
+
+Thus, for months, Louis found himself baffled in all his efforts to win
+the prize on which he had set his heart until, in September, 1742, one
+formidable obstacle was removed from his path by the death of Madame de
+Mazarin. To Madame de la Tournelle the loss of her protectress was
+little short of a calamity, for it left her not only homeless, but
+practically penniless; and, in her extremity, she naturally turned
+hopeful eyes to the King, of whose passion she was well aware. At least,
+she hoped, he might give her some position at his Court which would
+rescue her from poverty. When she begged Maurepas, Madame de Mazarin's
+kinsman and heir, to appeal to the King on her behalf, his answer was
+to order her and her sister, Madame de Flavacourt, to leave the Hotel
+Mazarin, thus making her plight still more desperate.
+
+But, fortunately, in this hour of her greatest need she found an
+unexpected friend in Louis' ill-used Queen, who, ignorant of her
+husband's infatuation for the beautiful Madame de la Tournelle, sent for
+her, spoke gracious words of sympathy to her, and announced her
+intention of installing her in Madame de Mazarin's place as a lady of
+the palace. Thus did fortune smile on Madame just when her future seemed
+darkest. But her troubles were by no means at an end. Fleury and
+Maurepas were more determined than ever that the King should not come
+into the power of a woman so alluring and so dangerous; and they
+exhausted every expedient to put obstacles in her path and to discover
+and support rival claimants to the post.
+
+For once, however, Louis was adamant. He had not waited so long and
+feverishly for his prize to be baulked when it seemed almost in his
+grasp. Madame de la Tournelle should have her place at his Court, and it
+would not be his fault if she did not soon fill one more exalted and
+intimate. Thus it was that when Fleury submitted to him the list of
+applicants, with la Tournelle's name at the bottom, he promptly re-wrote
+it at the head of the list, and handed it back to the Cardinal with the
+words, "The Queen is decided, and wishes to give her the place."
+
+We can picture Madame de Mailly's distress and suspense while these
+negotiations were proceeding. She had, as we have seen in the previous
+chapter, been supplanted by one sister in the King's affection; and just
+as she was recovering some of her old position in his favour, she was
+threatened with a second dethronement by another sister. In her alarm
+she flew to Madame de la Tournelle, to set her fears at rest one way or
+the other. "Can it be possible that you are going to take my place?" she
+asked, the tears streaming down her cheeks. "Quite impossible, my
+sister," answered Madame, with a smile; and Madame de Mailly, thus
+reassured, returned to Versailles the happiest woman in France--to
+learn, a few days later, that it was not only possible, it was an
+accomplished fact. For the second time, and now, as she knew well,
+finally, she was ousted from the affection of the King she loved so
+sincerely; and again it was a sister who had done her this grievous
+wrong. She was determined, however, that she would not quit the field
+without a last fight, and she knew she had doughty champions in Fleury
+and Maurepas, who still refused to acknowledge defeat.
+
+Although Madame de la Tournelle was now installed in the palace, the day
+of Louis' conquest had not arrived. The gratification of his passion was
+still thwarted in several directions. Not only was Madame de Mailly's
+presence a difficulty and a reproach to him; his new favourite was by no
+means willing to respond to his advances. Her heart was still engaged to
+the Due d'Agenois, and was not hers to dispose of. Richelieu, however,
+was quick to dispose of this difficulty. He sent the handsome Duc to
+Languedoc, exposed him to the attractions of a pretty woman, and before
+many weeks had passed, was able to show Madame de la Tournelle
+passionate letters addressed to her rival by her lover, as evidence of
+the worthlessness of his vows; thus arming her pride against him and
+disposing her at last to lend a more favourable ear to the King.
+
+As for Madame de Mailly, her shrift was short. In spite of her tears,
+her pleadings, her caresses, Louis made no concealment of his intention
+to be rid of her. "No sorrow, no humiliation was lacking in the
+death-struggle of love. The King spared her nothing. He did not even
+spare her those harsh words which snap the bonds of the most vulgar
+liaisons." And the climax came when he told the heart-broken woman, as
+she cringed pitifully at his feet, "You must go away this very day." "My
+sacrifices are finished," she sobbed, a little later to the "Judas,"
+Richelieu, when, with friendly words, he urged her to humour the King
+and go away at least for a time; "it will be my death, but I will be in
+Paris to-night."
+
+And while Madame de Mailly was carrying her crushed heart through the
+darkness to her exile, the King and Richelieu, disguised in large
+perukes and black coats, were stealing across the great courtyards to
+the rooms of Madame de la Tournelle, where the King's long waiting was
+to have its reward. And, the following day, the usurper was callously
+writing to a friend, "Doubtless Meuse will have informed you of the
+trouble I had in ousting Madame de Mailly; at last I obtained a mandate
+to the effect that she was not to return until she was sent for."
+
+"No portrait," says de Goncourt, referring to this letter, "is to be
+compared with such a confession. It is the woman herself with the
+cynicism of her hardness, her shameless and cold-blooded ingratitude....
+It is as though she drives her sister out by the two shoulders with
+those words which have the coarse energy of the lower orders."
+
+Louis, at last happy in the achievement of his desire, was not long in
+discovering that in the third of the Nesle sisters he had his hands more
+full than with either of her predecessors. Madame de Mailly and the
+Comtesse de Vintimille had been content to play the role of mistress,
+and to receive the King's none too lavish largesse with gratitude.
+Madame de la Tournelle was not so complaisant, so easily satisfied. She
+intended--and she lost no time in making the King aware of her
+intention--to have her position recognised by the world at large, to
+reign as Montespan had reigned, to have the Treasury placed at her
+disposal, and her children, if she had any, made legitimate. Her last
+stipulation was that she should be made a Duchess before the end of the
+year. And to all these proposals Louis gave a meek assent.
+
+To show further her independence, she soon began to drive her lover to
+distraction by her caprices and her temper: "She tantalised, at once
+rebuffed and excited the King by the most adroit comedies and those
+coquetries which are the strength of her sex, assuring him that she
+would be delighted if he would transfer his affection to other ladies."
+And while the favourite was thus revelling in the insolence of her
+conquest, her supplanted sister was eating out her heart in Paris. "Her
+despair was terrible; the trouble of her heart refused consolation,
+begged for solitude, found vent every moment in cries for Louis. Those
+who were around her trembled for her reason, for her life.... Again and
+again she made up her mind to start for the Court, to make a final
+appeal to the King, but each time, when the carriage was ready, she
+burst into tears and fell back upon her bed."
+
+As for Louis, chilled by the coldness of his mistress, distracted by her
+whims and rages, his heart often yearned for the woman he had so cruelly
+discarded; and separation did more than all her tears and caresses could
+have done, to awake again the love he fancied was dead.
+
+When Madame de la Tournelle paid her first visit as _Maitresse en titre_
+to Choisy, nothing would satisfy her but an escort of the noblest ladies
+in France, including a Princess of the Blood. Her progress was that of a
+Queen; and in return for this honour, wrung out of the King's weakness,
+she repaid him with weeks of coldness and ill-humour. She refused to
+play at _cavagnol_ with him; she barricaded herself in her room,
+refusing to open to all her lover's knocking; and vented her vapours on
+him with, or without, provocation, until, as she considered, she had
+reduced him to a becoming submission. Then she used her power and her
+coquetries to wheedle out of him one concession after another,
+including a promise by the King to return unopened any letters Madame de
+Mailly might send to him. Nor was she content until her sister was
+finally disposed of by the grant of a small pension and a modest lodging
+in the Luxembourg.
+
+Before the year closed Madame de la Tournelle was installed in the most
+luxurious apartments at Versailles, and Louis, now completely caught in
+her toils, was the slave of her and his senses, flinging himself into
+all the licence of passion, and reviving the nightly debauches from
+which the dead Comtesse had weaned him. And while her lover was thus
+steeped in sensuality, his mistress was, with infinite tact, pursuing
+her ambition. Affecting an indifference to affairs of State, she was
+gradually, and with seeming reluctance, worming herself into the
+position of chief Counsellor, and while professing to despise money she
+was draining the exchequer to feed her extravagance.
+
+Never was King so hopelessly in the toils of a woman as Louis, the
+well-beloved, in those of Madame de la Tournelle. He accepted as meekly
+as a child all her coldness and caprices, her jealousies and her rages;
+and was ideally happy when, in a gracious mood, she would allow him to
+assist at her toilette as the reward for some regal present of diamonds,
+horses, or gowns.
+
+It was after one such privileged hour that Louis, with childish
+pleasure, handed to his favourite the patent, creating her Duchesse de
+Chateauroux, enclosed in a casket of gold; and with it a rapturous
+letter in which he promised her a pension of eighty-thousand livres,
+the better to maintain her new dignity!
+
+Having thus achieved her greatest ambition, the Duchesse (as we must now
+call her) aspired to play a leading part in the affairs of Europe.
+France and Prussia were leagued in war against the forces of England,
+Austria, and Holland. This was a seductive game in which to take a hand,
+and thus we find her stimulating the sluggard kingliness in her lover,
+urging him to leave his debauches and to lead his armies to victory,
+assuring him of the gratitude and admiration of his subjects. Nothing
+less, she told him, would save his country from disaster.
+
+To this appeal and temptation Louis was not slow to respond; and in May,
+1744, we find him, to the delight of his soldiers and all France, at the
+seat of war, reviewing his troops, speaking words of high courage to
+them, visiting hospitals and canteens, and actually sending back a
+haughty message to the Dutch: "I will give you your answer in Flanders."
+No wonder the army was roused to enthusiasm, or that it exclaimed with
+one voice, "At last we have found a King!"
+
+So strong was Louis in his new martial resolve that he actually refused
+Madame de Chateauroux permission to accompany him. France was delighted
+that at last her King had emancipated himself from petticoat influence,
+but the delight was short-lived, for before he had been many days in
+camp the Duchesse made her stately appearance, and saws and hammers
+were at work making a covered way between the house assigned to her and
+that occupied by the King. A fortnight later Ypres had fallen, and she
+was writing to Richelieu, "This is mighty pleasant news and gives me
+huge pleasure. I am overwhelmed with joy, to take Ypres in nine days.
+You can think of nothing more glorious, more flattering to the King; and
+his great-grandfather, great as he was, never did the like!"
+
+But grief was coming quickly on the heels of joy. The King was seized
+with a sudden and serious illness, after a banquet shared with his ally,
+the King of Prussia; and in a few days a malignant fever had brought him
+face to face with death. Madame de Chateauroux watched his sufferings
+with the eyes of despair. "Leaning over the pillow of the dying man,
+aghast and trembling, she fights for him with sickness and death, terror
+and remorse." With locked door she keeps her jealous watch by his
+bedside, allowing none to enter but Richelieu, the doctors, and nurses,
+whilst outside are gathered the Princes of the Blood and the great
+officers of the Court, clamouring for admittance.
+
+It was a grim environment for the death-bed of a King, this struggle for
+supremacy, in which a frail woman defied the powers of France for the
+monopoly of his last hours. And chief of all the terrors that assailed
+her was the dread of that climax to it all, when her lover would have to
+make his last confession, the price of his absolution being, as she well
+knew, a final severance from herself.
+
+Over this protracted and unseemly duel, in which blows were exchanged,
+entrance was forced, and Princes and ministers crowded indecently around
+the King's bed; over the Duchesse's tearful pleadings with the confessor
+to spare her the disgrace of dismissal, we must hasten to the crowning
+moment when Louis, feeling that he was dying, hastily summoned a
+confessor, who, a few moments later, flung open the door of the closet
+in which the Duchesse was waiting and weeping, and pronounced the fatal
+words, "The King commands you to leave his presence immediately."
+
+Then followed that secret flight to Paris, "amidst a torrent of
+maledictions," the Duchesse hiding herself from view as best she could,
+and at each town and village where horses were changed, slinking back
+and taking refuge in some by-road until she could resume her journey.
+Then it was that in her grief and despair she wrote to Richelieu, "Oh,
+my God! what a thing it all is! I give you my word, it is all over with
+me! One would need to be a poor fool to start it all over again."
+
+But Louis was by no means a dead man. From the day on which he received
+absolution from his manifold sins he made such haste to recover that,
+within a month, he was well again and eager to fly to the arms of the
+woman he had so abruptly abandoned with all other earthly vanities. It
+was one thing, however, to dismiss the Duchesse, and quite another to
+call her back. For a time she refused point-blank to look again on the
+King who had spurned her from fear of hell; and when at last she
+consented to receive the penitent at Versailles she let him know, in no
+vague terms, that "it would cost France too many heads if she were to
+return to his Court."
+
+Vengeance on her enemies was the only price she would accept for
+forgiveness, and this price Louis promised to pay in liberal measure.
+One after the other, those who had brought about her humiliation were
+sent to disgrace or exile--from the Duc de Chatillon to La Rochefoucauld
+and Perusseau. Maurepas, the most virulent of them all, the King
+declined to exile, but he consented to a compromise. He should be made
+to offer Madame an abject apology, to grovel at her feet, a punishment
+with which she was content. And when the great minister presented
+himself by her bedside, in fear and trembling, to express his profound
+penitence and to beg her to return to Court, all she answered was, "Give
+me the King's letters and go!"
+
+The following Saturday she fixed on as the day of her triumphant
+return--"but it was death that was to raise her from the bed on which
+she had received the King's submission at the hands of his Prime
+Minister." Within twenty-four hours she was seized with violent
+convulsions and delirium. In her intervals of consciousness she shrieked
+aloud that she had been poisoned, and called down curses on her
+murderer--Maurepas. For eleven days she passed from one delirious attack
+to another, and as many times she was bled. But all the skill of the
+Court physicians was powerless to save her, and at five o'clock in the
+morning of the 8th December the Duchesse drew her last tortured breath
+in the arms of Madame de Mailly, the sister she had so cruelly wronged.
+
+Two days later, de Goncourt tells us, she was buried at Saint Sulpice,
+an hour before the customary time for interments, her coffin guarded by
+soldiers, to protect it from the fury of the mob.
+
+As for Madame de Mailly, she spent the last years of her troubled life
+in the odour of a tardy sanctity--washing the feet of the poor,
+ministering to the sick, bringing consolation to those in prison; and
+she was laid to rest amongst the poorest in the Cimetiere des Innocents,
+wearing the hair-shirt which had been part of her penance during life,
+and with a simple cross of wood for all monument.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+A MISTRESS OF INTRIGUE
+
+
+"On 11th September," Madame de Motteville says, "we saw arrive from
+Italy three nieces of Cardinal Mazarin and a nephew. Two Mancini sisters
+and the nephew were the children of the youngest sister of his Eminence;
+and of the sisters Laure, the elder, was a pleasing brunette with a
+handsome face, about twelve or thirteen years of age; the second
+(Olympe), also a brunette, had a long face and pointed chin. Her eyes
+were small, but lively; and it might be expected that, when fifteen
+years of age, she would have some charm. According to the rules of
+beauty, it was impossible to grant her any, save that of having dimples
+in her cheeks."
+
+Such, at the age of nine or ten, was Olympe Mancini, who, in spite of
+her childish lack of beauty, was destined to enslave the handsomest King
+in Europe; and, after a life of discreditable intrigues, in which she
+incurred the stigma of witchcraft and murder, to end her career in
+obscurity, shunned by all who had known her in her day of splendour.
+
+It was a singular freak of fortune which translated the Mancini girls
+from their modest home in Italy to the magnificence of the French
+Court, as the adopted children of their uncle, Cardinal Mazarin, the
+virtual ruler of France, and the avowed lover (if not, as some say, the
+husband) of Anne of Austria, the Queen-mother. "See those little girls,"
+said the wife of Marechal de Villeroi to Gaston d'Orleans, pointing to
+the Mancini children, the centre of an admiring crowd of courtiers.
+"They are not rich now; but some day they will have fine chateaux, large
+incomes, splendid jewels, beautiful silver, and perhaps great
+dignities."
+
+And how true this prophecy proved, we know; for, of the Cardinal's five
+Mancini nieces (for three others came, later, as their uncle's
+protegees), Laure found a husband in the Duc de Mercoeur, grandson of
+Henri IV.; two others lived to wear the coronet of Duchess; Olympe, as
+we shall see, became Comtesse de Soissons; and Marie, after narrowly
+missing the Queendom of France, became the wife of the Constable
+Colonna, one of the greatest nobles of Italy.
+
+Nor is there anything in such high alliances to cause surprise; for
+their future was in the hands of the most powerful, ambitious, and
+wealthy man in France. From their first appearance as his guests they
+were received with open arms by Louis' Court. They were speedily
+transferred to the Palais Royal, to be brought up with the boy-King,
+Louis XIV., and his brother, the Prince of Anjou; while the Queen
+herself not only paid them the most flattering attentions and treated
+them as her own children, but herself undertook part of their education.
+
+It was under such enviable conditions that the young daughters of a
+poor Roman baron grew up to girlhood--the pets of the Queen and the
+Court, the playfellows of the King, and the acknowledged heiresses of
+their uncle's millions; and of them all, not one had a keener eye to the
+future than Olympe of the long face, pointed chin, and dimples. It was
+she who entered with the greatest zest into the romps and games of her
+playmate, Louis XIV., who surrounded him with the most delicate
+flatteries and attentions, and practised all her childish arts and
+coquetries to win his favour. And she succeeded to such an extent that
+it was always the company of Olympe, and not of her more beautiful
+sisters, Hortense, Laure, or Marie, that Louis most sought.
+
+Not that Olympe was always to remain the plain, unattractive child
+Madame de Motteville describes in 1647. Each year, as it passed, added
+some touch of beauty, developed some latent charm, until at eighteen she
+was very fair to look upon. "Her eyes now" says Madame de Motteville,
+"were full of fire, her complexion had become beautiful, her face less
+thin, her cheeks took dimples which gave her a fresh charm, and she had
+fine arms and beautiful hands. She certainly seemed charming in the eyes
+of the King, and sufficiently pretty to indifferent spectators."
+
+That she had wooers in plenty, even before she was so far advanced in
+the teens, was inevitable; but her personal preferences counted for
+little in face of the Cardinal's determination to find for her, as for
+all his nieces, a splendid alliance which should shed lustre on himself.
+And thus it was that, without any consultation of her heart, Olympe's
+hand was formally given to Prince Eugene de Savoie, Comte de Soissons, a
+man in whose veins flowed the Royal strains of Savoy and France.
+
+It was a brilliant match indeed for the daughter of a petty Italian
+baron; and Mazarin saw that it was celebrated with becoming
+magnificence. On the 20th February, 1657, we see a brilliant company
+repairing to the Queen's apartments, "the Comte de Soissons escorting
+his betrothed, dressed in a gown of silver cloth, with a bouquet of
+pearls on her head, valued at more than 50,000 livres, and so many
+jewels that their splendour, joined to the natural eclat of her beauty,
+caused her to be admired by everyone. Immediately afterwards, the
+nuptials were celebrated in the Queen's chapel. Then the illustrious
+pair, after dining with the Princesse de Carignan-Savoie, ascended to
+the apartments of his Eminence, the Cardinal, where they were
+entertained to a magnificent supper, at which the King and Monsieur did
+the company the honour of joining them."
+
+Then followed two days of regal receptions; a visit to Notre Dame to
+hear Mass, with the Queen herself as escort; and a stately journey to
+the Hotel de Soissons, where the Comtesse's mother-in-law "testified to
+her, by her joy and the rich presents which she made her, how great was
+the satisfaction with which she regarded this marriage."
+
+Thus raised to the rank of a Princess of the Blood, Olympe was by no
+means the proud and happy woman she ought to have been. She had, in
+fact, aspired much higher; she had had dreams of sharing the throne of
+France with her handsome young playmate, the King; and to Louis, wife
+though she now was, she had lost none of the attraction she possessed
+when he called her his "little sweetheart" in their childish games
+together. "He continued to visit her with the greatest regularity," to
+quote Mr Noel Williams; "indeed, scarcely a day went by on which His
+Majesty's coach did not stop at the gate of the Hotel de Soissons; and
+Olympe, basking in the rays of the Royal favour, rapidly took her place
+as the brilliant, intriguing great lady Nature intended her to be."
+
+It is little wonder, perhaps, that Olympe's foolish head was turned by
+such flattering attentions from her sovereign, or that she began to give
+herself airs and to treat members of the Royal family with a haughty
+patronage. Even La Grande Mademoiselle did not escape her insolence;
+for, as she herself records, "when I paid her a thousand compliments and
+told her that her marriage had given me the greatest joy and that I
+hoped we should always be good friends, she answered me not a word."
+
+But Olympe's supremacy was not to remain much longer unchallenged. The
+King's vagrant fancy was already turning to her younger sister, Marie,
+whose childish plainness had now ripened to a beauty more dazzling than
+her own--the witchery of large and brilliant black eyes, a complexion of
+pure olive, luxuriant, jet-black hair, a figure of singular suppleness
+and grace, and a sprightliness of wit and a _gaiete de coeur_ which the
+Comtesse could not hope to rival. It soon began to be rumoured in Court
+that Louis spent hours daily in the company of Mazarin's beautiful
+niece; a rumour which Hortense Mancini supports in her "Memoirs." "The
+presence of the King, who seldom stirred from our lodging, often
+interrupted us," she says; "my sister, Marie, alone was undisturbed; and
+you can easily understand that his assiduity had charms for her, who was
+the cause of it, because it had none for others."
+
+And as Louis' visits to the Mancini lodging became more and more
+frequent, each adding a fresh link to the chain that was binding him to
+her young sister, Madame de Soissons saw less and less of him, until an
+amused tolerance gave place to a genuine alarm. It was nothing less than
+an outrage that she, who had so long held first place in the King's
+favour, should be ousted by a "mere child," the last person in the world
+whom she could have thought of as a rival. But the Comtesse was no woman
+to be easily dethroned. Although at every Court ball, fete, or ballet,
+Louis was now inseparable from her sister, she affected to ignore these
+open slights and lost no opportunity in public of vaunting her intimacy
+with His Majesty, even to the extent on one occasion, as Mademoiselle
+records, of taking Louis' seat at a ball supper and compelling him to
+share it with her.
+
+But such shameless arrogance only served to estrange the King still
+further, and to make him seek still more the company of the young
+sister, who had already captured his heart as the Comtesse had never
+captured it. When Louis made his memorable journey to Lyons to meet the
+Princess Margaret of Savoy, it was to Marie that he paid the most
+courtly and tender attentions. "During the journey," says Mademoiselle,
+"he did not address a word to the Comtesse de Soissons"; and, indeed, on
+more than one occasion he showed a marked aversion to her.
+
+At St Jean d'Angely, Louis not only himself escorted Marie to her
+lodging; he stayed with her until two o'clock in the morning. "Nothing,"
+her sister Hortense records, "could equal the passion which the King
+showed, and the tenderness with which he asked of Marie her pardon for
+all she had suffered for his sake." It was, indeed, no secret at Court
+that he had offered her marriage, and had taken a solemn vow that
+neither Margaret of Savoy nor the Infanta of Spain should be his wife.
+But, as we have seen in a previous chapter, both the Queen and Mazarin
+were determined that the Infanta should be Queen of France; and that his
+foolish romance with the Mancini girl should be nipped in the bud.
+
+There was also another powerful influence at work to thwart his passion
+for Marie. The indifference of the Comtesse de Soissons had given place
+to a fury of resentment; and she needed no instigation of her uncle to
+determine at any cost to recover the place she had lost in Louis'
+favour. She brought all her armoury of coquetry and flatteries to bear
+on him, and so far succeeded that, we read, "the King has resumed his
+relations with the Comtesse; he has recommenced to talk and laugh with
+her; and three days since he entertained M. and Madame de Soissons with
+a ball and a play, and afterwards they partook of _medianoche_ (a
+midnight banquet) together, passing more than three hours in
+conversation with them."
+
+Meanwhile Marie, realising the hopelessness of her passion in face of
+the opposition of her uncle and the Queen, and of Louis' approaching
+marriage to the Spanish Princess, had given him unequivocally to
+understand that their relations must cease, and the rupture was complete
+when the Comtesse told the King of her sister's dallying with Prince
+Charles of Lorraine, of their assignations in the Tuileries, of their
+mutual infatuation, and of the rumours of an arranged marriage. "_Cela
+est bien_" was all Louis remarked, but the dark flush of anger that
+flooded his face was a sweet reward to the Comtesse for her treachery.
+
+A few days later her revenge was complete when, in the King's presence,
+she rallied her sister on her low spirits. "You find the time pass
+slowly when you are away from Paris," she said; "nor am I surprised,
+since you have left your lover there"; to which Marie answered with a
+haughty toss of the head, "That is possible, Madame."
+
+One formidable rival thus removed from her path, Madame de Soissons was
+not long left to enjoy her triumph; for another was quick to take the
+place abandoned by the broken-hearted Marie--the beautiful and gentle La
+Valliere, who was the next to acquire an ascendancy over the King's
+susceptible heart. Once more the Comtesse, to her undisguised chagrin,
+found herself relegated to the background, to look impotently on while
+Louis made love to her successor, and to meditate new schemes of
+vengeance. It was in vain that Louis, by way of amende, found for her a
+lover in the Marquis de Vardes, the most handsome and dissolute of his
+courtiers, for whom she soon developed a veritable passion. Her vanity
+might be appeased, but her bitterness--the _spretoe injuria
+formoe_--remained; and she lost no time in plotting further mischief.
+
+With the help of M. de Vardes and the Comte de Guiche, she sent an
+anonymous letter to the Queen, containing a full and intimate account of
+her husband's amour with La Valliere--the letter enclosed in an envelope
+addressed in the handwriting of the Queen of Spain. Fortunately for
+Maria Theresa's peace of mind the letter fell into the hands of Louis
+himself, who was naturally furious at such treachery and determined to
+make those responsible for it suffer--when he should discover them. As,
+however, the investigation of the matter was entrusted to de Vardes, it
+is needless to say that the culprits escaped detection.
+
+Madame de Soissons' next attempt to bring about a rupture between the
+King and La Valliere, by bringing forward a rival in the person of the
+seductive Mlle de la Motte-Houdancourt, proved equally futile, when
+Louis discovered by accident that she was but a tool in Madame's
+designing hands; and for a time the Comtesse was sent in disgrace from
+the Court to nurse her jealousy and to devise more effectual plans of
+vengeance.
+
+What form these took seems clear from an investigation held at the
+close of 1678 into a supposed plot to poison the King and the Dauphin--a
+plot of which La Voisin, one of the greatest criminals in history, was
+suspected of being the ringleader. During this inquiry La Voisin
+confessed that the Comtesse de Soissons had come to her house one day
+"and demanded the means of getting rid of Mile de la Valliere"; and,
+further, that the Comtesse had avowed her intention to destroy not only
+Louis' mistress, but the King himself.
+
+Such a confession was well calculated to rouse a storm of indignation in
+France, where Madame de Soissons had made many powerful enemies. The
+Chambre unanimously demanded her arrest; but before it could be
+effected, Madame, stoutly declaring her innocence, had shaken the dust
+of Paris off her feet, and was on her way to Brussels.
+
+During her flight to safety, we are told, "the principal inns in the
+towns and villages through which she passed refused to receive her"; and
+more than once she was compelled to sleep on straw and suffer the
+insults of the populace, which reviled her as sorceress and poisoner.
+"We are assured," Madame de Sevigne writes, "that the gates of Namur,
+Antwerp, and other towns have been closed against the Countess, the
+people crying out, 'We want no poisoner here'!" Even at Brussels,
+whenever she ventured into the streets she was assailed by a storm of
+insults; and on one occasion, when she entered a church, "a number of
+people rushed out, collected all the black cats they could find, tied
+their tails together, and brought them howling and spitting into the
+porch, crying out that they were devils who were following the
+Comtesse."
+
+In the face of such chilling hospitality Madame de Soissons was not
+tempted to make a long stay in Brussels; and after a few months of
+restless wandering in Flanders and Germany, she drifted to Spain where
+she succeeded in ingratiating herself with the Queen. She found little
+welcome however from the King, who, as the French Ambassador to Madrid
+wrote, "was warned against her. He accused her of sorcery, and I learn
+that, some days ago, he conceived the idea that, had it not been for a
+spell she had cast over him, he would have had children.... The life of
+the Comtesse de Soissons consists in receiving at her house all persons
+who desire to come there, from four o'clock in the evening up to two or
+three hours after midnight. There is, sire, everything that can convey
+an air of familiarity and contempt for the house of a woman of quality."
+
+That Carlos' suspicions were not without reason was proved when one day
+his Queen, after, it is said, drinking a glass of milk handed to her by
+the Comtesse, was taken suddenly ill and expired after three days of
+terrible suffering. That she died of poison, like her mother, the
+ill-fated sister of our second Charles, seems probable; but that the
+poison was administered by the Comtesse, whose friend and protectress
+she was and who had every reason to wish her well, is less to be
+believed, in spite of Saint-Simon's unequivocal accusation. Certainly
+the crime was not proved against her; for we find her still in Spain in
+the following spring, when Carlos, his patience exhausted, ordered her
+to leave the country.
+
+After a short stay in Portugal and Germany, Madame de Soissons was back
+in Brussels, where she spent the brief remainder of her days--"all the
+French of distinction who visited the City" (to quote Saint-Simon)
+"being strictly forbidden to visit her." Here, on the 9th October, 1690,
+her beauty but a memory, bankrupt in reputation, friendless and poor,
+the curtain fell on the life so full of mis-used gifts and baffled
+ambitions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE
+
+
+Few Kings have come to their thrones under such brilliant auspices as
+Milan I. of Servia; few have abandoned their crowns to the greater
+relief of their subjects, or have been followed to their exile by so
+much hatred. But a fortnight before Milan's accession, his cousin and
+predecessor, Prince Michael, had been foully done to death by hired
+assassins as he was walking in the park of Topfschider, with three
+ladies of his Court; and the murdered man had been placed in a carriage,
+sitting upright as in life, and had been driven back to his palace
+through the respectful greetings of his subjects, who little knew that
+they were saluting a corpse.
+
+There was good reason for this mockery of death, for Prince Alexander
+Karageorgevitch had long set ambitious eyes on the crown of Servia, and
+resolved to wrest it by fair means or foul from the boy-heir to the
+throne; and it was of the highest importance that Michael's death, which
+he had so brutally planned, should be concealed from him until the
+succession had been secured to his young rival, Milan. And thus it was
+that, before Karageorgevitch could bring his plotting to the head of
+achievement, Milan was hailed with acclamation as Servia's new Prince,
+and, on the 23rd June, 1868, made his triumphal entry into Belgrade to
+the jubilant ringing of bells and the thunderous cheers of the people.
+
+Twelve days later, Belgrade was _en fete_ for his crowning, her streets
+ablaze with bunting and floral decorations, as the handsome boy made his
+way through the tumults of cheers and avenues of fluttering
+handkerchiefs to the Metropolitan Church. The men, we are told, "took
+off their cloaks and placed them under his feet, that he might walk on
+them; they clustered round him, kissing his garments, and blessing him
+as their very own; they worshipped his handsome face and loved his
+boyish smile." And when his young voice rang clearly out in the words,
+"I promise you that I shall, to my dying day, preserve faithfully the
+honour and integrity of Servia, and shall be ready to shed the last drop
+of my blood to defend its rights," there was scarcely one of the
+enthusiastic thousands that heard him who would not have been willing to
+lay down his life for the idolised Prince.
+
+It was by strange paths that the fourteen-year-old Milan had thus come
+to his Principality. The son of Jefrenn Obrenovitch, uncle of the
+reigning Michael, he was cradled one August day in 1854, his mother
+being Marie Catargo, of the powerful race of Roumanian "Hospodars," a
+woman of strong passions and dissolute life. When her temper and
+infidelities had driven her husband to the drinking that put a premature
+end to his days, Marie transferred her affection, without the sanction
+of a wedding-ring, to Prince Kusa, a man of as evil repute as herself.
+In such a home and with such guardians her only child, Milan, the future
+ruler of Servia, spent the early years of his life--ill-fed, neglected,
+and supremely wretched.
+
+Thus it was that, when Prince Michael summoned the boy to Belgrade, in
+order to make the acquaintance of his successor, he was horrified to see
+an uncouth lad, as devoid of manners and of education as any in the
+slums of his capital. The heir to the throne could neither read nor
+write; the only language he spoke was a debased Roumanian, picked up
+from the servants who had been his only associates, while of the land
+over which he was to rule one day he knew absolutely nothing. The only
+hope for him was his extreme youth--he was at the time only twelve years
+old--and Michael lost no time in having him trained for the high station
+he was destined to fill.
+
+The progress the boy made was amazing. Within two years he was
+unrecognisable as the half-savage who had so shocked the Court of
+Belgrade. He could speak the Servian tongue with fluency and grace; he
+had acquired elegance of manners and speech, and a winning courtesy of
+manner which to his last day was his most marked characteristic; he had
+mastered many accomplishments, and he excelled in most manly exercises,
+from riding to swimming. And to all this remarkable promise the
+finishing touches were put by a visit to Paris under the tutorship of a
+courtly and learned professor.
+
+Thus when, within two years of his emancipation, he came to his crown,
+the uncouth lad from Roumania had blossomed into a Prince as goodly to
+look on as any Europe could show--a handsome boy of courtly graces and
+accomplishments, able to converse in several languages, and singularly
+equipped in all ways to win the homage of the simple people over whom he
+had been so early called to rule. As Mrs Gerard says, "They idolised
+their boy-Prince. Every day they stood in long, closely packed lines
+watching to see him come out of the castle to ride or drive; as he
+passed along, smiling affectionately on his people, blessings were
+showered on him. There was, however, another side to this picture of
+devotion. There were those who hated the boy because he had thwarted
+their plans." And this hatred, as persistent as it was malignant, was to
+follow him throughout his reign, and through his years of unhappy exile,
+to his grave.
+
+But these days were happily still remote. After four years of minority
+and Regency, when he was able to take the reins of government into his
+own hands, his empire over the hearts of his subjects was more firmly
+based than ever. His youth, his modesty, and his compelling charm of
+manner made friends for him wherever his wanderings took him, from Paris
+to Constantinople. He was the "Prince Charming" of Europe, as popular
+abroad as he was idolised at home; and when the time arrived to find a
+consort for him he might, one would have thought, have been able to pick
+and choose among the fairest Princesses of the Continent.
+
+But handsome and gallant and popular as he was, the overtures of his
+ministers were coldly received by one Royal house after another. Milan
+might be a reigning Prince and a charming one to boot, but it was not
+forgotten that the first of his line had been a common herdsman, and the
+blood of Hapsburgs and Hohenzollerns could not be allowed to mingle with
+so base a strain. Even a mere Hungarian Count, whose fair daughter had
+caught Milan's fancy, frowned on the suit of the swineherd's successor.
+But fate had already chosen a bride for the young Prince, who was more
+than equal in birth to any Count's daughter; who would bring beauty and
+riches as her portion; and who, after many unhappy years, was to crown
+her dower with tragedy.
+
+It was at Nice, where Prince Milan was spending the winter months of
+1875, that he first set eyes on the woman whose life was to be so
+tragically linked with his own. Among the visitors there was the family
+of a Russian colonel, Nathaniel Ketschko, a man of high lineage and
+great wealth. He claimed, in fact, descent from the Royal race of
+Comnenus, which had given many a King to the thrones of Europe, and
+whose sons for long centuries had won fame as generals, statesmen, and
+ambassadors. And to this exalted strain was allied enormous wealth, of
+which the Colonel's share was represented by a regal revenue of four
+hundred thousand roubles a year.
+
+But proud as he was of his birth and his riches, Colonel Nathaniel was
+still prouder of his two lovely daughters, each of whom had inherited in
+liberal measure the beauty of their mother, a daughter of the princely
+house of Stourza; and of the two the more beautiful, by common consent,
+was Natalie, whose charms won this spontaneous tribute from Tsar
+Nicholas, when first he saw her, "I would I were a beggar that I might
+every day ask your alms, and have the happiness of kissing your hand."
+She had, says one who knew her in her radiant youth, "an irresistible
+charm that permeated her whole being with such a harmony of grace,
+sweetness, and overpowering attraction that one felt drawn to her with
+magnetic force; and to adore her seemed the most natural and indeed the
+only position."
+
+Such was the high tribute paid to Servia's future Queen at the first
+dawning of that beauty which was to make her also Queen of all the fair
+women of Europe, and which at its zenith was thus described by one who
+saw her at Wiesbaden ten years or so later: "She walked along the
+promenade with a light, graceful movement; her feet hardly seemed to
+touch the ground, her figure was elegant, her finely cut face was lit up
+by those wonderful eyes, once seen never forgotten--brilliant, tender,
+loving; her luxuriant hair of raven black was loosely coiled round the
+well-set head, or fell in curls on the beautifully arched neck. For each
+one she had a pleasant smile, a gracious bow, or a few words, spoken in
+a musical voice." No wonder the Germans, who looked at this apparition
+of grace and beauty, "simply fell down and adored her."
+
+Such was the vision of beauty of which Prince Milan caught his first
+glimpse on the promenade at Nice in the winter of 1875, and which
+haunted him, day and night, until chance brought their paths together
+again, and he won her consent to share his throne. That such a high
+destiny awaited her, Natalie had already been told by a gipsy whom she
+met one day in the woods of her father's estate near Moscow--a meeting
+of which the following story is told.
+
+At sight of the beautiful young girl the gipsy stooped in homage and
+kissed the hem of her dress. "Why do you do that?" asked Natalie, half
+in alarm and half in pleasure. "Because," the woman answered, "I salute
+you as the chosen bride of a great Prince. Over your head I see a crown
+floating in the air. It descends lower and lower until it rests on your
+head. A dazzling brilliance adorns the crown; it is a Royal diadem."
+
+"What else?" asked Natalie eagerly, her face flushed with excitement and
+delight. "Oh! do tell me more, please!" "What more shall I say,"
+continued the gipsy, "except that you will be a Queen, and the mother of
+a King; but then--"
+
+"But then, what?" exclaimed the eager and impatient girl; "do go on,
+please. What then?" and she held out a gold coin temptingly. "I see a
+large house; you will be there, but--take care; you will be turned out
+by force.... And now give me the coin and let me go. More I must not
+tell you."
+
+Such were the dazzling and mysterious words spoken by the gipsy woman in
+the Russian forest, a year or more before Natalie first saw the Prince
+who was destined to make them true. But it was not at Nice that
+opportunity came to Milan. It was an accidental meeting in Paris, some
+months later, that made his path clear. During a visit to the French
+capital he met a young Servian officer, a distant kinsman, one Alexander
+Konstantinovitch, who confided to him, over their wine and cigarettes,
+the story of his infatuation for the daughter of a Russian colonel, who
+at the time was staying with her aunt, the Princess Murussi. He raved of
+her beauty and her charm, and concluded by asking the Prince to
+accompany him that he might make the acquaintance of the Lieutenant's
+bride-to-be.
+
+Arrived at their destination, the Prince and his companion were
+graciously received by the Princess Murussi, but Milan had no eyes for
+the dignified lady who gave him such a flattering reception; they were
+drawn as by a magnet to the girl by her side--"a child with a woman's
+grace and an angel's soul smiling in her eyes"; the incarnation of his
+dreams, the very girl whose beauty, though he had caught but one passing
+glimpse of it, had so intoxicated his brain a few months earlier at
+Nice.
+
+"Allow me," said the Lieutenant, "to introduce to Your Highness Natalie
+Ketschko, my affianced wife." Milan's face flushed with surprise and
+anger at the words. What was this trick that had been played on him? Had
+Konstantinovitch then brought him here only to humiliate him? But before
+he could recover from his indignation and astonishment, the Princess
+said chillingly, "Pardon me, Monsieur Konstantinovitch, you are not
+speaking the truth. My niece, Colonel Ketschko's daughter, is not your
+affianced wife. You are too premature."
+
+Thus rebuffed, the Lieutenant was not encouraged to prolong his stay;
+and Milan was left, reassured, to bask in the smiles of the Princess and
+her lovely niece, and to pursue his wooing under the most favourable
+auspices. This first visit was quickly followed by others; and before a
+week had passed the Prince had won the prize on which his heart was set,
+and with it a dower of five million roubles. Now followed halcyon days
+for the young lovers--long hours of sweet communion, of anticipation of
+the happy years that stretched in such a golden vista before them. It
+was a love-idyll such as delighted the romantic heart of Paris; and
+congratulations and presents poured on the young couple; "the very
+beggars in the streets," we are told, "blessing them as they drove by."
+
+"Happy is the wooing that is not long a-doing," and Milan's wooing was
+as brief as it was blissful. He was all impatience to possess fully the
+prize he had won; preparations for the nuptials were hastened, but,
+before the crowning day dawned, once more the voice of warning spoke.
+
+A few days before the wedding, as Milan was leaving the Murussi Palace,
+he was accosted by a woman, who craved permission to speak to him, a
+favour which was smilingly accorded. "I know you," said the woman, thus
+permitted to speak, "although you do not know me. You are the Prince of
+Servia; I am a servant in the household of the Princess Murussi. Your
+Highness, listen! I love Natalie. I have known and loved her since she
+was a child; and I beg of you not to marry her. Such a union is doomed
+to unhappiness. You love to rule, to command. So does Natalie; and it is
+_she_ who will be the ruler. You are utterly unsuited for each other,
+and nothing but great unhappiness can possibly come from your union."
+
+To this warning Milan turned a smiling face and a deaf ear, as Natalie
+had done to the voice of the gipsy. A fig for such gloomy prophecy! They
+were ideally happy in the present, and the future should be equally
+bright, however ravens might croak. Thus, one October day in 1875,
+Vienna held high holiday for the nuptials of the handsome Prince and his
+beautiful bride; and it was through avenues densely packed with cheering
+onlookers that Natalie made her triumphal progress to the altar, in her
+flower-garlanded dress of white satin, a tiara of diamonds flashing from
+the blackness of her hair, no brighter than the brilliance of her eyes,
+her face irradiated with happiness.
+
+That no Royalty graced their wedding was a matter of no moment to Milan
+and Natalie, whose happiness was thus crowned; and when at the
+subsequent banquet Milan said, "I wish from my very heart that every one
+of my subjects, as well as everybody I know, could be always as happy as
+I am this moment," none who heard him could doubt the sincerity of his
+words, or see any but a golden future for so ideal a union of hearts.
+
+By Servia her young Princess was received with open arms of welcome.
+"Her reception," we are told, "was beyond description. The festivities
+lasted three days, and during that time the love of the people for
+their Prince, and their admiration of the beauty and charm of his bride,
+were beyond words to describe." Never did Royal wedded life open more
+full of bright promise, and never did consort make more immediate
+conquest of the affections of her husband's subjects. "No one could have
+believed that this marriage, which was contracted from love and love
+alone, would have ended in so tragic a manner, or that hate could so
+quickly have taken the place of love."
+
+But the serpent was quick to show his head in Natalie's new paradise.
+Before she had been many weeks a wife, stories came to her ears of her
+husband's many infidelities. Now the story was of one lady of her Court,
+now of another, until the horrified Princess knew not whom to trust or
+to respect. Strange tales, too, came to her (mostly anonymously) of
+Milan's amours in Paris, in Vienna, and half a dozen of his other haunts
+of pleasure, until her love, poisoned at its very springing, turned to
+suspicion and distrust of the man to whom she had given her heart.
+
+Other disillusions were quick to follow. She discovered that her husband
+was a hopeless gambler and spendthrift, spending long hours daily at the
+card-tables, watching with pale face and trembling lips his pile of gold
+dwindle (as it usually did) to its last coin; and often losing at a
+single sitting a month's revenue from the Civil List. Her own dowry of
+five million roubles, she knew, was safe from his clutches. Her father
+had taken care to make that secure, but Milan's private fortune, large
+as it had been, had already been squandered in this and other forms of
+dissipation; and even the expenses of his wedding, she learned, had been
+met by a loan raised at ruinous interest.
+
+Such discoveries as these were well calculated to shatter the dreams of
+the most infatuated of brides, and less was sufficient to rouse
+Natalie's proud spirit to rebellion. When affectionate pleadings proved
+useless, reproaches took their place. Heated words were exchanged, and
+the records tell of many violent scenes before Natalie had been six
+months Princess of Servia. "You love to rule," the warning voice had
+told Milan--"to command. So does Natalie"; and already the clashing of
+strong wills and imperious tempers, which must end in the yielding of
+one or the other, had begun to be heard.
+
+If more fuel had been needed to feed the flames of dissension, it was
+quickly supplied by two unfortunate incidents. The first was Milan's
+open dallying with Fraeulein S----, one of Natalie's maids-of-honour, a
+girl almost as beautiful as herself, but with the _beaute de diable_.
+The second was the appearance in Belgrade of Dimitri Wasseljevitchca,
+who was suspected of plotting to assassinate the Tsar. Russia demanded
+that the fugitive should be given up to justice, and enlisted Natalie's
+co-operation with this object. Milan, however, was resolute not to
+surrender the plotter, and turned a deaf ear to all the Princess's
+pleadings and cajoleries. "The most exciting scene followed. Natalie,
+abandoning entreaties, threatened and even commanded her husband to obey
+her"; and when threats and commands equally failed, she gave way to a
+paroxysm of rage in which she heaped the most unbridled scorn and
+contempt on her husband.
+
+Thus jealousy, a thwarted will, and Milan's low pleasures combined to
+widen the breach between the Royal couple, so recently plighted to each
+other in the sacred name of love, and to prepare the way for the
+troubled and tragic years to come.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE--_continued_
+
+
+If anything could have restored happiness to Milan of Servia and his
+Princess, Natalie, it should surely have been the birth of the
+baby-Prince, Alexander, whom both equally adored and equally spoiled.
+But, instead of linking his parents in a new bond of affection "Sacha"
+was from his cradle the innocent cause of widening the breach that
+severed them.
+
+For a time, fortunately, Milan had little opportunity of continuing the
+feud of recrimination with his high-spirited and hot-tempered spouse.
+More serious matters claimed him. Servia was plunged into war with
+Turkey, and his days were spent in camp and on the battlefield, until
+the intervention of Russia put an end to the long and hopeless struggle,
+and Milan found himself one February day in 1882, thanks to the Berlin
+Conference, hailed the first King of his country, under the title of
+Milan I.
+
+Then followed a disastrous war with Bulgaria into which the headstrong
+King rushed in spite of Natalie's warning--"Draw back, Milan, and have
+no share in what will prove a bloody drama. You have no chance of
+conquering, for Alexander is made of the stuff of the Hohenzollerns."
+And indeed the struggle was doomed to failure from the first; for Milan
+was no man to lead an army to victory. Read his method of conducting a
+campaign, as described by one of his aides-de-camp--
+
+"Our troops continue to retreat--I never imagined a campaign could be so
+jolly. We do nothing but dance and sing and fiddle. Yesterday the King
+had some guests and the champagne literally flowed. We had the Belgrade
+singers, who used to delight us in the theatre-cafe. They sang and
+danced delightfully. The last two days we have had plenty of fun, and
+yesterday a lot of jolly girls came to enliven us." Such was Milan's
+method of conducting a great war, on which the very existence of his
+kingdom hung. Wine and women and song were more to his taste than forced
+marches, strategy, and hard-fought battles. But once again foreign
+intervention came to his rescue; and his armies were saved from
+annihilation.
+
+When his sword was finally sheathed, if not with honour, he returned to
+Belgrade to resume his gambling, his dallyings with fair women--and his
+daily quarrels with his Queen, whose bitterness absence had done nothing
+to assuage. So far from Natalie's spirit being crushed, it was higher
+and prouder than ever. She would die before she would yield; but she was
+in no mood to die, this autocratic, fiery-tempered, strong-willed
+daughter of Russia. She gave literally a "striking" proof of the spirit
+that was in her at the Easter reception of 1886, when the wife of a
+Greek diplomat--a beautiful woman, to whom her husband had been more
+than kind--presented herself smilingly to receive the "salute courteous"
+from Her Majesty. With a look of scorn Natalie coolly surveyed her rival
+from head to foot; and then, in the presence of the Court, gave her a
+resounding slap on the cheek.
+
+But the Grecian lady was only one of many fair women who basked
+successively (or together) in Milan's favour. A much more formidable
+rival was Artemesia Christich, a woman as designing as she was lovely,
+who was quick to envelop the weak King in the toils of her witchery. Not
+content with his smiles and favours she aspired to take Natalie's place
+as Queen of Servia; and, it is said, had extorted from him a promise
+that he would make her his Queen as soon as his existing marriage tie
+could be dissolved. And to this infamous compact Artemesia's husband, a
+man as crafty and unscrupulous as herself, consented, in return for his
+promotion to certain high and profitable offices in the State.
+
+In vain did the Emperor and the Crown Prince of Austria, with many
+another high-placed friend, plead with Milan not to commit such a folly.
+He was driven to distraction between such powerful appeals and the
+allurement of the siren who had him so effectually under her spell,
+until in his despair he entertained serious thoughts of suicide as
+escape from his dilemma. Meanwhile, we are told, "a perfect hell" raged
+in the castle; each day brought its scandalous scene between his
+outraged Queen and himself. His unpopularity with his subjects became so
+acute that he was hissed whenever he made his appearance in the streets
+of his capital; and Artemesia was obliged to have police protection to
+shield her from the vengeance of the mob.
+
+As for Natalie, this crowning injury decided her to bear her purgatory
+no longer. She would force her husband to abdicate and secure her own
+appointment as Regent for her son; or, failing that, she would leave her
+husband and seek an asylum out of Servia. And with the object of still
+further embittering his subjects against the King she made the full
+story of her injuries public, and enlisted the sympathy, not only of
+Milan's most powerful ministers, but of the entire country.
+
+"The castle is in utter confusion," wrote an officer of the Belgrade
+garrison, in October, 1886. "The King looks ill, and as if he never
+slept. Poor fellow! he flies for refuge to us in the guard-house, and
+plays cards with the officers. Card-playing is his worst enemy. He loves
+it passionately, and plays excitedly and for high points--and he always
+loses."
+
+Matters were now hastening to a crisis. Hopelessly in debt, scorned by
+his subjects, and hated by his wife, Milan's plight was pitiful. The
+scenes between the King and the Queen were becoming more violent and
+disgraceful every day. "There was no peace anywhere, nor did anyone
+belonging to the Court enjoy a moment of tranquillity." So intolerable
+had life become that, early in 1887, Milan decided to dissolve his
+marriage; and it was only at the pleading of the Austrian Emperor that
+he consented to abandon this design, on condition that his wife left
+Servia; and thus it was that one day in April Queen Natalie left
+Belgrade, accompanied by her son "Sacha," ostensibly that he might
+continue his education in Germany.
+
+But, although husband and wife were thus at last separated, Milan's
+resolve to divorce her remained firm. "I have to inform you," he wrote
+shortly after her departure, "that I have this day sent in my
+application to our Holy National Church for permission to dissolve our
+marriage." And that nothing might be lacking to Natalie's suffering and
+humiliation, he sent General Protitsch to Wiesbaden with a peremptory
+demand that his son, "Sacha," should return to Servia.
+
+In vain did Natalie protest against both indignities. Milan might
+divorce her; but at least he should not rob her of her son, the only
+solace left to her in life. And when General Protitsch, seeing that
+milder measures were futile, gave orders for the Prince to be removed by
+force, the distracted mother flung one protecting arm round her boy;
+and, pointing a loaded pistol with the other, threatened to shoot dead
+the man who dared approach her.
+
+Opposition, however, was futile; the following evening the boy-Prince
+was in his father's arms, and the weeping mother was left disconsolate.
+Thus robbed of her darling "Sacha," it was not long before the second
+blow fell. The divorce proceedings were rushed through the Synod. A deaf
+ear was turned to Natalie's petition to be allowed, at least, to defend
+herself in person; and on the 12th October, 1888, the "marriage between
+King Milan I. and Natalie, born Ketschko," was formally dissolved. Well
+might this most unhappy of Queens write, "The position is embittered by
+my conscience assuring me that I have neglected no duty, and that there
+is not a single action of my life which could be cited against me as a
+grave offence, or could put me to shame were it brought before the whole
+world. My fate should draw tears from the very stones; but I do not ask
+for pity; I demand justice."
+
+If anything could have increased Milan's unpopularity it was this brutal
+treatment of his Queen. The very men who, at his coronation, had taken
+off their cloaks that he might walk on them, and the women who had
+kissed his garments, now hissed him in the streets of his capital. In
+his own Court he had no friend except the infamous Christitch; the
+general hatred even took the form of repeated attempts on his life. If
+he would save it, he realised he must abandon his crown; and one March
+morning in 1889, after informing his ministers of his intention to
+abdicate, he awoke his twelve-year-old son with the greeting, "Good
+morning, Your Majesty!" Milan was no longer King of Servia; his son,
+Alexander, reigned in his stead.
+
+Probably no King ever laid down his crown more willingly. He had put
+aside for ever his Royal trappings, with all their unhappy memories, and
+their present discomforts and danger; but in distant Paris he knew a
+life of new pleasure awaited him, remote from the wranglings of Courts
+and the assassin's knife. And within a week of greeting his successor as
+King, he was gaily riding in the Bois, attending the theatres, supping
+hilariously with ladies of the ballet, or dining with his friends at
+Verrey's "where his somewhat rough manner and coarse jokes (the legacy
+of his swineherd ancestry) caused him sometimes to be mistaken for a
+parvenu," until a waiter would correct the impression by a whispered,
+"That gentleman with the dark moustache is Milan, ex-King of Servia."
+
+While her husband was thus drinking the cup of Paris pleasure, his wife
+was still doomed to exile from her kingdom and her son, with permission
+only to pay two brief visits each year. But Natalie, who had so long
+defied a King, was not the woman to be daunted by mere Regents. She
+would return to Belgrade, and at least make her home where she could
+catch an occasional glimpse of her boy. And to Belgrade she went, to
+make her entry over flower-strewn streets, and through a tornado of
+cheers and shouts of "Zivela Rufe!" It was a truly Royal welcome to the
+great warm heart of the Servian people; but no official of the Court was
+there to greet her coming, and as she drove past the castle which held
+all she counted dear in life, not even the flutter of a handkerchief
+marked the passing of Servia's former Queen.
+
+Had she but played her cards now with the least discretion, she might
+have been allowed to remain in Belgrade in peace. But Natalie seems
+fated to have been the harbinger of storm. For a time, it is true, she
+was content to lie _perdue_, entertaining her friends at her house in
+Prince Michael Street, driving through the streets of her capital behind
+her pair of white ponies, or walking with her pet goat for companion,
+greeted everywhere with respect and affection. But her restless,
+vengeful spirit, still burning from the indignities she had suffered,
+would not allow her to remain long in the background. She threw herself
+into political agitation, and thus brought herself into open conflict
+with the Regents; she inaugurated a campaign of abuse against her
+husband, whom she still pursued with a relentless hatred; and generally
+made herself so objectionable to the authorities that the Skupshtina was
+at last compelled to order her banishment.
+
+When the deputies presented themselves before her with the decree of
+expulsion, she laughed in their very faces, declaring that she would
+only submit to force. "I refuse to go," she said defiantly, "unless I am
+expelled by the hands of the police." A few hours later she was forcibly
+removed from her weeping and protesting ladies, hurried into a carriage,
+and driven off, with a strong escort of soldiers, on her journey to
+exile.
+
+But the good people of Belgrade, who had got wind of the proposed
+abduction, were by no means disposed to look on while their beloved
+Queen was thus brutally taken from them. When the cortege reached the
+Cathedral Square, it was stopped by a formidable and menacing mob; the
+escort, furiously assailed with sticks and showers of stones, was beaten
+off; the horses were taken from the carriage, and the Queen was drawn
+back in triumph by scores of willing hands, to her residence.
+
+Natalie's victory, however, was short-lived. At midnight, when her
+stalwart champions were sleeping in their beds, the police, crawling
+over the roofs of the houses in Prince Michael Street, and descending
+into the Queen's courtyard, found it a very simple matter to complete
+their dastardly work. The Queen was again bundled unceremoniously into a
+carriage, and before Belgrade was well awake, she was far on her way to
+her new exile in Hungary. A few days later a formal decree of banishment
+was pronounced against her, forbidding her, under any pretext whatever,
+to enter Servia again without the Regent's permission.
+
+Only once more did Natalie and Milan set eyes on each other--when the
+ex-King presented himself at Biarritz, to bring her news of their son's
+projected _coup d'etat_, by which he designed to depose the Regents and
+to take the reins of government into his own hands. Taken by surprise,
+the Queen received Milan, but when she saw him standing before her, an
+aged, broken man, her composure gave way. She could not speak; she
+trembled like a leaf.
+
+With Alexander's dramatic accession to his full Kingship a new, if
+brief, era of happiness opened to Natalie. The Regents were no longer
+able to exclude her from Servia, and by her son's invitation she
+returned to Belgrade to resume her old position of Queen.
+
+Still beautiful, in spite of all her suffering, she played for a time
+the role of Queen-mother to perfection, holding her Courts, presiding at
+balls and soirees, taking a prominent part in affairs of State, and
+gradually acquiring more power than her easy-going son himself enjoyed.
+At last, after long years of unrest and unhappiness, she seemed assured
+of peaceful years, secure in the affection of her son and her people,
+and far removed from the husband who had brought so much misery into her
+life.
+
+But Natalie was fated never to be happy long, and once more her evil
+Destiny was to snatch the cup from her lips, assuming this time the form
+of Draga Maschin, one of her own ladies-in-waiting, under the spell of
+whose black eyes and voluptuous charms her son quickly fell, after that
+first dramatic incident at Biarritz, when she plunged into the sea to
+his rescue and saved him from drowning.
+
+Many months earlier a clairvoyante at Paris had told Natalie, "Your
+Majesty is cherishing in your bosom a poisonous snake, which one day
+will give you a mortal wound." She had smiled incredulously at the
+warning, but she was soon to learn what truth it held. Certainly Draga
+Maschin was the last person she would have suspected of being a source
+of danger--a woman many years older than her son, the penniless widow of
+a drunken engineer--a woman, moreover, of whose life, before Natalie had
+taken pity on her poverty, many strange stories were told--how, for
+instance, she had often been seen in low resorts, "with the arm of a
+forester or a tradesman round her, singing the old Servian songs."
+
+But she had not taken into account Draga's sensuous beauty, before which
+her son was powerless. Each meeting left him more and more involved in
+her toils, until, to the consternation of Servia and the horror of his
+mother, he announced his intention of making her his Queen. Even Milan,
+degraded as he was, was horror-struck when the news came to him in
+Paris. "And this," he exclaimed, "is the act of 'Sacha'--my own son. He
+is a monster, a thing of evil in the eyes of all men! The Maschin will
+be Queen of Servia. What a reproach! What an evil! A creature like her!
+A sordid creature! Could he not have put aside his love for this
+low-born woman? But I could never make the fool understand that a King
+has duties; he has something else to think of but love-making."
+
+When taking leave of the friend who had brought him this evil news Milan
+said, "I shall never see Servia again. My experience has been a bitter
+one--everywhere treachery and deceit. And now my own son--_that_ has
+broken my heart." A few months later, worn out by his excesses,
+prematurely old and broken-hearted, the man who had prostituted life's
+best gifts drew his last breath at Vienna at the age of forty-six.
+
+As for Natalie, this crowning calamity of her son's disgrace did more
+than all her past sufferings to crush her proud spirit. But fate had not
+yet dealt the last and most cruel blow of all. That fell on that fatal
+June day of 1902 when her beloved "Sacha's" mutilated body was flung by
+his assassins out of his palace window, to be greeted with shouts of
+derisive laughter and cries of "Long live King Peter," from the dense
+crowds who had come to gloat over this last scene in the tragedy of the
+House of the Obrenvoie.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+Agenois, Duc, d', 284, 285
+Aisse, Mlle, 221-224
+Albany, Count of, 13-20
+ " Countess of, 15-22
+Alberoni, Cardinal, 184
+Alexander, King of Servia, 319-329
+Alexander III., of Russia, 93
+Alexis, Tsarevitch, 10, 255
+Alfieri, Vittorio, 19-22
+Anjou, Duc d', 59
+Anna, Empress, 26
+Anne of Austria, 159, 163, 164
+Arcimbaldo, 92
+Aubigne, Constant d', 240, 241
+ " Francoise d', 240-247
+Audouins, Diane d', 37
+Augustus, of Saxony, 93-102
+Austin, William, 205, 213
+Auvergne, Comte d', 235
+
+Babou, Francoise, 35
+Baireuth, Margravine of, 7
+Baratinski, Prince, 155
+Barry, Guillaume du, 47
+ " Jean du, 47
+ " Madame du, 47-54
+Bavaria, Elizabeth of, 215
+Beaufort, Duchesse de, 41-44
+Beauharnais, Eugene, 135
+ " Hortense, 135
+ " Josephine, 127-137
+Beauvallon, 143
+Becu, Jeanne, 45-54
+Bellegarde, Count di, 205-206
+" Duc de, 37-39
+Berry, Duc de, 57-61
+ " Duchesse de, 55-65, 182, 217
+Bestyouzhev, 30, 31
+Beuchling, 98
+Blanguini, 111
+Blois, Mlle de, 56
+Bonaparte, Elisa, 104
+ " Letizia, 104, 105
+ " Napoleon, 104-112, 127-137
+Bonaparte, Pauline, 104-113
+Bonaventuri, Pietro, 170-175
+"Bonnie Prince," 13-22
+Borghese, Prince Camillo, 110
+Borghese, Princess Pauline, 110-113
+Bossi, Giuseppe, 205
+Bourgogne, Duc de, 59
+ " Duchesse de, 181
+Brissac, Duc de, 50-53
+Bristol, Lord, 121, 122
+Brougham, 212
+Brunswick, Augusta, Duchess of, 194
+Brunswick, Charles Wm., Duke of, 194
+Byron, Lord, 138
+
+Campbell, Lady Charlotte, 193, 194
+Campredon, 249
+Capello, Bartolomeo, 172
+ " Bianca, 169-179
+Carlos, King of Spain, 304, 305.
+Caroline, Princess of Wales, 191-202
+Caroline, Queen of Naples, 120
+Catargo, Marie, 307
+Catherine I., of Russia, 1-12, 23
+Catherine II., of Russia, 23, 29, 32, 72, 73, 76, 80, 149-158
+Charles V., Emperor, 88
+Charles VII., Emperor, 29
+Charles IX., King of France, 227
+Charles, Monsieur, 133, 134
+Charlotte, Princess, 199, 202, 211
+Charlotte, Queen, 197
+Chartres, Duc de, 56
+Chateauroux, Duchesse de, 288-293
+Christian II, of Denmark, 81-92
+Christich, Artemesia, 321, 322
+Clary, Desiree, 104, 127
+Colonna, Prince, 167, 295
+ " Princess, 167, 168, 295
+Cosse, Louis, Duc de, 48-50
+
+Domanski, 70-72, 74, 77, 79
+Douglas, Lady, 200
+ " Sir John, 200
+Dubois, Cardinal, 215, 216
+Dujarrier, M., 143
+Dyveke, 83-89
+
+Elizabeth I., of Russia, 23-32, 72, 150, 153
+"Elizabeth II." of Russia, 74, 76, 77
+Embs, Baron von, 67
+Emilie, 220, 221
+Encke, Charlotte, 115, 116
+ " Wilhelmine, 114-126
+Entragues, Henriette d', 44, 227-237
+Entragues, Seigneur d', 227, 229
+Esterle, Countess, 102
+Estrees, Antoine d', 36
+ " Gabrielle d', 35-44, 226
+Estrees, Jean d', 36
+Eudoxia, Empress, 252-257
+
+Faaborg, Hans, 90-91
+Fabre, Francois X., 21
+Falari, Duchesse de, 224
+Feriol, Comte de, 222
+ " Madame de, 223
+Fersen, Count, 261
+Fimarcon, Marquis de, 221
+Fitzherbert, Mrs, 199
+Flavacourt, Madame de, 283
+Fleury, Cardinal, 271, 272, 282, 283, 284
+Fontanges, Mlle de, 245
+Forbin, 111
+Francois I, 36
+Frederick the Great, 114-118
+Frederick William II, of Prussia, 115-124
+Frederick William III., of Prussia, 124
+Freron, 106
+
+Gace, Comte De, 183
+Galitzin, Prince, 79
+George III., 197, 201, 211
+George IV., 191-202
+Giovanna, Grand Duchess of Tuscany, 174-177
+Glebof, Major, 253-256
+Goncourt, de, 46, 270, 286
+Guiche, Comte de, 265, 302
+Guise, Duc de, 237
+Gustav, Adolf, 15
+
+Hamilton, Mary, 257-259
+ " Sir William, 75, 77
+Haye, La, 60
+Henri IV., of France (and Navarre), 35-44, 226-237
+Holbein, Francis, 126
+Hornstein, 69
+Hutchinson, Lord, 212
+
+Isabella, Princess, 88
+Ivan, 26
+
+Jersey, Lady, 198, 199
+Joachim Murat, King, 207
+Joinville, Prince de, 234, 237
+Josephine, Empress, 110-112, 127-137
+Junot, 107
+
+Karageorgevitch, Alex., 306
+Ketschko, Natalie, 311-329
+ " Nathaniel, 310
+Koenigsmarck, Aurora von, 94-103
+Koenigsmarck, Conrad von, 94
+ " Philip von, 94-96
+Konstantinovitch, Alex., 313
+Kristenef, 77
+Kusa, Prince, 308
+
+Lamballe, Princesse de, 263
+Landsfeld, Countess of, 146-148
+Languet, Abbe, 63
+Lauzun, Duc de, 62
+Lavalliere, Duchesse de, 239
+Lawrence, Sir Thomas, 201
+Leclerc, General, 108, 109
+Lichtenau, Countess, 120-126
+Limburg, Duke of, 67, 68
+Lorraine, Prince Charles of, 167, 301
+Louis XIV., 159, 162-167, 238-247, 248, 295
+Louis XV., 45, 47-49, 270-292
+Louise, Countess of Albany, 15-22
+Loewenhaupt, Count Axel, 94
+ " Countess, 94, 97-99
+Ludwig I., of Bavaria, 144-147
+Luynes, Duc de, 273
+
+Mailly, Madame de, 273-293
+Maine, Duc de, 243, 247
+Maintenon, Madame de, 57, 244-247
+Malmesbury, Lord, 195-198
+Manby, Captain, 201
+Mancini, Hortense, 162, 167, 168
+Mancini, Laure, 294
+ " Madame, 159-163
+ " Marie, 160-168, 239, 298-301
+Mancini, Olympe, 294-305
+Maria Theresa, Queen of Spain, 302, 304
+Marie Antoinette, 260-269
+Marie Leczinska, 270
+Marie Louise, Empress, 112, 136, 204
+Marine, Monsieur de, 67
+Marke, Count de la, 117
+Marmont, General, 107
+Maschin, Draga, 328, 329
+Masson, 32, 135
+Maurepas, 282-284, 292
+Mazarin, Cardinal, 159-163, 239, 295, 297
+Mazarin, Madame de, 282, 283
+Medici, Cardinal de, 176-176
+ " Francesco de, 172-179
+ " Marie de, 231-235
+Menshikoff, 3, 6, 12
+Mercoeur, Duc de, 295
+Mexent, Marquis de Saint, 123
+Michael, Prince, of Servia, 306, 308
+Michelin, Madame, 181
+Milan I., of Servia, 306-329
+Modena, Duke of, 185-189
+ " Duchess of, 182, 186-189
+Monceaux, Marquise de, 41
+Mons, William, 11
+Montespan, Madame de, 55, 56, 239, 240, 243-245
+Montez, Lola, 138-148
+Montmorency, Charlotte de, 236, 237
+Mortemart, Duchesse de, 54
+Motte-Houdancourt, Mlle de la, 302
+Motteville, Madame de, 294, 296
+Mouchy, Madame de, 62-65, 217
+Murussi, Princess, 313, 314
+
+Napoleon I., 104-112, 127-137
+Natalie, Queen of Servia, 311-329
+Nathalie, Empress, 252
+Nesle, Felicite de, 275-279
+ " Marquise de, 182
+Nevers, Duc de, 232
+Noailles, Cardinal, 64
+
+Obrenovitch Jefrenn, 307
+Ompteda, Baron, 206
+Orleans, Philippe, Duc de, 55-57, 60-64, 184, 214-225
+Orloff, Alexis, 74, 76-79, 155
+ " Count, 258
+ " Gregory, 29, 32, 76, 153-158
+
+Palatine, Princess, Elizabeth, 56, 59, 62, 64
+Panine, 157
+Paskevitch, General, 141, 142
+Patiomkin, 23
+Perdita, 199
+Pergami, 206-213
+Permon, Albert, 107
+ " Madame, 109
+Peter the Great, 3-12, 23, 248-259
+Peter II., of Russia, 28, 257
+Peter III., of Russia, 149-155
+Pinneberg, Countess of, 73
+Platen, Countess, 94
+Polignac, Cardinal de, 261
+ " Diane de, 262, 265
+ " Jules, Comte de, 261-264
+Polignac, Madame de, 182
+ " Yolande, de, 261-269
+Poellnitz, Von, 7
+Poniatowski, 151, 152
+Porte, Armande de la, 162
+Protitsch, General, 323
+Pugatchef, 73
+
+Radziwill, Prince Charles, 73, 74
+Ravaillac, 35
+Razoum, Alexis, 23-34, 72
+ " Cyril, 26-28
+ " Gregory, 24
+Richelieu, Duc de, 180-190, 275, 280, 285, 290, 291
+Richelieu, Duchesse de, 185
+Rietz, Herr, 117
+ " Wilhelmine, 117-120
+Ringlet, Father, 62
+Riom, Comte de, 62-64
+
+Saint-Simon, Duc de, 57, 60, 62, 305
+Saint-Simon, Madame de, 58
+Savoie, Chevalier de, 65
+Savoy, Charles Emmanuel, Duke of, 168
+Savoy, Margaret, Princess of, 164, 165, 299, 300
+Scarron, Paul, 241, 242
+Schenk, Baron von, 67
+Sevigne, Madame de, 245, 303
+Seymour, Henry, 48
+Shouvalov, 29
+Sigbrit, Frau, 83-92
+Skovronski, I, 23
+Smith, Sydney, Captain, 200
+Soissons, Comte de, 297
+ " Comtesse de, 295, 297-305
+Soltykoff, Sergius, 151
+Sophia Dorothea, of Celle, 94
+Spencer, Lord Henry, 119
+Stanley, Sir John, 193
+Stendhal, 21
+Stuart, Charles, 13-20
+Sully, Duc de, 41, 42, 229-231
+
+Tencin, Madame de, 223, 280
+Teplof, 155
+Thackeray, 192, 198, 200
+Toebingen, Major, 199
+Torbern, Oxe, 90-92
+Touchet, Marie, 227
+Tourel-Alegre, Marquess, 36
+Tournelle, Mme de la, 280-293
+Tuscany, Bianca, Grand Duchess of, 169-179
+Tuscany, Francesco, Grand Duke of, 172-179
+
+Valkendorf, Chancellor, 81-85, 89
+Valliere, La, 301-303
+Valois, Marguerite de, Queen of France, 42, 229, 231
+Valois, Mlle de, 182, 184, 185
+Vardes, Marquis de, 302
+Vaudreuil, Comte de, 267, 268
+Verneuil, Marquise de, 231-237
+Villars, Duchesse de, 233, 234
+Vintimille, Comtesse de, 276-279
+Vishnevsky, Colonel, 24
+Vlodimir, Princess Aly de, 66-80
+Voisin, La, 303
+Voltaire, 46, 57, 149
+Vorontsov, 32, 33
+
+Walewska, Madame, 127
+Waliszewski, 3, 5, 251
+Wasseljevitchca, Dimitri, 317
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Love affairs of the Courts of Europe
+by Thornton Hall
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOVE AFFAIRS OF THE COURTS ***
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