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+The Project Gutenberg Memoirs of Louis XV./XVI, by Hausset, entire
+#8 in our series by Hausset, Lamballe and an unknown English Girl
+#46 in our series Historic Court Memoirs
+
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+Title: The Memoirs of Louis XV./XVI, entire
+
+Author: Madame du Hausset, and of an unknown English Girl and the
+Princess Lamballe
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+Official Release Date: March, 2003 [Etext #3883]
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+
+
+BOOK 1.
+
+
+MEMOIRS OF LOUIS XV. AND XVI.
+
+Being Secret Memoirs of Madame du Hausset, Lady's Maid to Madame
+de Pompadour, and of an unknown English Girl and the Princess Lamballe
+
+
+
+
+ ADVERTISEMENT.
+
+[FROM THE LONDON MAGAZINE, NO. III. NEW SERIES P. 439.]
+
+We were obliged by circumstances, at one time, to read all the published
+memoirs relative to the reign of Louis XV., and had the opportunity of
+reading many others which may not see the light for a long time yet to
+come, as their publication at present would materially militate against
+the interest of the descendants of the writers; and we have no hesitation
+in saying that the Memoirs of Madame du Hausset are the only perfectly
+sincere ones amongst all those we know. Sometimes, Madame du Hausset
+mistakes, through ignorance, but never does she wilfully mislead, like
+Madame Campan, nor keep back a secret, like Madame Roland, and MM.
+Bezenval and Ferreires; nor is she ever betrayed by her vanity to invent,
+like the Due de Lauzun, MM. Talleyrand, Bertrand de Moleville, Marmontel,
+Madame d'Epinay, etc. When Madame du Hausset is found in contradiction
+with other memoirs of the same period, we should never hesitate to give
+her account the preference. Whoever is desirous of accurately knowing
+the reign of Louis XV. should run over the very wretched history of
+Lacretelle, merely for the, dates, and afterwards read the two hundred
+pages of the naive du Hausset, who, in every half page, overturns half a
+dozen misstatements of this hollow rhetorician. Madame du Hausset was
+often separated from the little and obscure chamber in the Palace of
+Versailles, where resided the supreme power, only by a slight door or
+curtain, which permitted her to hear all that was said there. She had
+for a 'cher ami' the greatest practical philosopher of that period, Dr.
+Quesnay, the founder of political economy. He was physician to Madame de
+Pompadour, and one of the sincerest and most single-hearted of men
+probably in Paris at the time. He explained to Madame du Hausset many
+things that, but for his assistance, she would have witnessed without
+understanding.
+
+
+
+
+
+ INTRODUCTION.
+
+A friend of M. de Marigny (the brother of Madame de Pompadour) called on
+him one day and found him burning papers. Taking up a large packet which
+he was going to throw into the fire "This," said he, "is the journal of a
+waiting-woman of my sister's. She was a very estimable person, but it is
+all gossip; to the fire with it!" He stopped, and added, "Don't you
+think I am a little like the curate and the barber burning Don Quixote's
+romances?"--"I beg for mercy on this," said his friend. "I am fond of
+anecdotes, and I shall be sure to find some here which will interest me."
+"Take it, then," said M. de Marigny, and gave it him.
+
+The handwriting and the spelling of this journal are very bad. It
+abounds in tautology and repetitions. Facts are sometimes inverted in
+the order of time; but to remedy all these defects it would have been
+necessary to recast the whole, which would have completely changed the
+character of the work. The spelling and punctuation were, however,
+corrected in the original, and some explanatory notes added.
+
+Madame de Pompadour had two waiting-women of good family. The one,
+Madame du Hausset, who did not change her name; and another, who assumed
+a name, and did not publicly announce her quality. This journal is
+evidently the production of the former.
+
+The amours of Louis XV. were, for a long time, covered with the veil of
+mystery. The public talked of the Parc-aux-Cerfs, but were acquainted
+with none of its details. Louis XIV., who, in the early part of his
+reign, had endeavoured to conceal his attachments, towards the close of
+it gave them a publicity which in one way increased the scandal; but his
+mistresses were all women of quality, entitled by their birth to be
+received at Court. Nothing can better describe the spirit of the time
+and the character of the Monarch than these words of Madame de Montespan:
+
+"He does not love me," said she, "but he thinks he owes it to his
+subjects and to his own greatness to have the most beautiful woman in his
+kingdom as his mistress."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK 1.
+
+
+SECRET MEMOIRS OF LOUIS XV., AND MEMOIRS OF MADAME DU HAUSSET.
+
+An early friend of mine, who married well at Paris, and who has the
+reputation of being a very clever woman, has often asked me to write down
+what daily passed under my notice; to please her, I made little notes,
+of three or four lines each, to recall to my memory the most singular or
+interesting facts; as, for instance--attempt to assassinate the King; he
+orders Madame de Pompadour to leave the Court; M. de Machaudt's
+ingratitude, etc.--I always promised my friend that I would, some time
+or other, reduce all these materials into the form of a regular
+narrative. She mentioned the "Recollections of Madame de Caylus," which
+were, however, not then printed; and pressed me so much to produce a
+similar work, that I have taken advantage of a few leisure moments to
+write this, which I intend to give her, in order that she may arrange it
+and correct the style. I was for a long time about the person of Madame
+de Pompadour, and my birth procured for me respectful treatment from
+herself, and from some distinguished persons who conceived a regard for
+me. I soon became the intimate friend of Doctor Quesnay, who frequently
+came to pass two or three hours with me.
+
+His house was frequented by people of all parties, but the number was
+small, and restricted to those who were on terms of greatest intimacy
+with him. All subjects were handled with the utmost freedom, and it is
+infinitely to his honour and theirs that nothing was ever repeated.
+
+The Countess D----- also visited me. She was a frank and lively woman,
+and much liked by Madame de Pompadour. The Baschi family paid me great
+attention. M. de Marigny had received some little services from me, in
+the course of the frequent quarrels between him and his sister, and he
+had a great friendship for me. The King was in the constant habit of
+seeing me; and an accident, which I shall have occasion to relate,
+rendered him very familiar with me. He talked without any constraint
+when I was in the room. During Madame de Pompadour's illness I scarcely
+ever left her chamber, and passed the night there. Sometimes, though
+rarely, I accompanied her in her carriage with Doctor Quesnay, to whom
+she scarcely spoke a word, though he was--a man of great talents. When I
+was alone with her, she talked of many affairs which nearly concerned
+her, and she once said to me, "The King and I have such implicit
+confidence in you, that we look upon you as a cat, or a dog, and go on
+talking as if you were not there." There was a little nook, adjoining
+her chamber, which has since been altered, where she knew I usually sat
+when I was alone, and where I heard everything that was said in the room,
+unless it was spoken in a low voice. But when the King wanted to speak
+to her in private, or in the presence of any of his Ministers, he went
+with her into a closet, by the side of the chamber, whither she also
+retired when she had secret business with the Ministers, or with other
+important persons; as, for instance, the Lieutenant of Police, the
+Postmaster-General, etc. All these circumstances brought to my knowledge
+a great many things which probity will neither allow me to tell or to
+record. I generally wrote without order of time, so that a fact may be
+related before others which preceded it. Madame de Pompadour had a great
+friendship for three Ministers; the first was M. de Machault, to whom she
+was indebted for the regulation of her income, and the payment of her
+debts. She gave him the seals, and he retained the first place in her
+regard till the attempt to assassinate the King. Many people said that
+his conduct on that occasion was not attributable to bad intentions; that
+he thought it his duty to obey the King without making himself in any way
+a party to the affair, and that his cold manners gave him the appearance
+of an indifference which he did not feel. Madame de Pompadour regarded
+him in the light of a faithless friend; and, perhaps, there was some
+justice on both sides. But for the Abbe de Bernis; M. de Machault might,
+probably, have retained his place.
+
+The second Minister, whom Madame de Pompadour liked, was the Abbe de
+Bernis. She was soon disgusted with him when she saw the absurdity of
+his conduct. He gave a singular specimen of this on the very day of his
+dismissal. He had invited a great many people of distinction to a
+splendid entertainment, which was to have taken place on the very day
+when he received his order of banishment, and had written in the notes of
+invitation--M. Le Comte de Lusace will be there. This Count was the
+brother of the Dauphine, and this mention of him was deservedly thought
+impertinent. The King said, wittily enough, "Lambert and Moliere will be
+there." She scarcely ever spoke of the Cardinal de Bernis after his
+dismissal from the Court.
+
+He was extremely ridiculous, but he was a good sort of man. Madame,
+the Infanta, died a little time before, and, by the way, of such a
+complication of putrid and malignant diseases, that the Capuchins
+who bore the body, and the men who committed it to the grave, were
+overcome by the effluvia. Her papers appeared no less impure in the eyes
+of the King. He discovered that the Abbe de Bernis had been intriguing
+with her, and that they had deceived him, and had obtained the Cardinal's
+hat by making use of his name. The King was so indignant that he was
+very near refusing him the barrette. He did grant it--but just as he
+would have thrown a bone to a dog. The Abbe had always the air of a
+protege when he was in the company of Madame de Pompadour. She had known
+him in positive distress. The Due de Choiseul was very differently
+situated; his birth, his air, his manners, gave him claims to
+consideration, and he far exceeded every other man in the art of
+ingratiating himself with Madame de Pompadour. She looked upon him as
+one of the most illustrious nobles of the Court, as the most able
+Minister, and the most agreeable man. M. de Choiseul had a sister and a
+wife, whom he had introduced to her, and who sedulously cultivated her
+favourable sentiments towards him. From the time he was Minister, she
+saw only with his eyes; he had the talent of amusing her, and his manners
+to women, generally, were extremely agreeable.
+
+Two persons--the Lieutenant of Police and the Postmaster-General--were
+very much in Madame de Pompadour's confidence; the latter, however,
+became less necessary to her from the time that the King communicated to
+M. de Choiseul the secret of the post-office, that is to say, the system
+of opening letters and extracting matter from them: this had never been
+imparted to M. d'Argenson, in spite of the high favour he enjoyed.
+I have heard that M. de Choiseul abused the confidence reposed in him,
+and related to his friends the ludicrous stories, and the love affairs,
+contained in the letters which were broken open. The plan they pursued,
+as I have heard, was very simple. Six or seven clerks of the post-office
+picked out the letters they were ordered to break open, and took the
+impression of the seals with a ball of quicksilver. Then they put each
+letter, with the seal downwards, over a glass of hot water, which melted
+the wax without injuring the paper. It was then opened, the desired
+matter extracted, and it was sealed again, by means of the impression.
+This is the account of the matter I have heard. The Postmaster-General
+carried the extracts to the King on Sundays. He was seen coming and
+going on this noble errand as openly as the Ministers. Doctor Quesnay
+often, in my presence, flew in such a rage about that infamous Minister,
+as he called him, that he foamed at the mouth. "I would as soon dine
+with the hangman as with the Postmaster-General," said the Doctor. It
+must be acknowledged that this was astonishing language to be uttered in
+the apartments of the King's mistress; yet it went on for twenty years
+without being talked of. "It was probity speaking with earnestness,"
+said M. de Marigny, "and not a mere burst of spite or malignity."
+
+The Duc de Gontaut was the brother-in-law and friend of M. de Choiseul,
+and was assiduous in his attendance on Madame de Pompadour. The sister
+of M. de Choiseul, Madame de Grammont, and his wife were equally constant
+in their attentions. This will sufficiently account for the ascendency
+of M. de Choiseul, whom nobody would have ventured to attack. Chance,
+however, discovered to me a secret correspondence of the King, with a man
+in a very obscure station. This man, who had a place in the Farmers
+General, of from two to three hundred a year, was related to one of the
+young ladies of the Parc-aux-cerfs, by whom he was recommended to the
+King. He was also connected in some way with M. de Broglie, in whom the
+King placed great confidence. Wearied with finding that this
+correspondence procured him no advancement, he took the resolution of
+writing to me, and requesting an interview, which I granted, after
+acquainting Madame de Pompadour with the circumstance. After a great
+deal of preamble and of flattery, he said to me, "Can you give me your
+word of honour, and that of Madame de Pompadour, that no mention whatever
+of what I am going to tell you will be made to the King?"--"I think I can
+assure you that, if you require such a promise from Madame de Pompadour,
+and if it can produce no ill consequence to the King's service, she will
+give it you." He gave me his word that what he requested would have no
+bad effect; upon which I listened to what he had to say. He shewed me
+several memorials, containing accusations of M. de Choiseul, and revealed
+some curious circumstances relative to the secret functions of the Comte
+de Broglie. These, however, led rather to conjectures than to certainty,
+as to the nature of the services he rendered to the King. Lastly, he
+shewed me several letters in the King's handwriting. "I request," said
+he, "that the Marquise de Pompadour will procure for me the place of
+Receiver-General of Finances; I will give her information of whatever I
+send the King; I will write according to her instructions, and I will
+send her his answers." As I did not choose to take liberties with the
+King's papers, I only undertook to deliver the memorials. Madame de
+Pompadour having given me her word according to the conditions on which I
+had received the communication, I revealed to her everything I had heard.
+She sent the memorials to M. de Choiseul, who thought them very
+maliciously and very cleverly written. Madame de Pompadour and he had a
+long conference as to the reply that was to be given to the person by
+whom those disclosures were made. What I was commissioned to say was
+this: that the place of Receiver-General was at present too important,
+and would occasion too much surprise and speculation; that it would not
+do to go beyond a place worth fifteen thousand to twenty thousand francs
+a year; that they had no desire to pry into the King's secrets; and that
+his correspondence ought not to be communicated to any one; that this did
+not apply to papers like those of which I was the bearer, which might
+fall into his hands; that he would confer an obligation by communicating
+them, in order that blows aimed in the dark, and directed by malignity
+and imposture, might be parried. The answer was respectful and proper,
+in what related to the King; it was, however, calculated to counteract
+the schemes of the Comte de Broglie, by making M. de Choiseul acquainted
+with his attacks, and with the nature of the weapons he employed. It was
+from the Count that he received statements relating to the war and to the
+navy; but he had no communication with him concerning foreign affairs,
+which the Count, as it was said, transacted immediately with the King.
+The Duc de Choiseul got the man who spoke to me recommended to the
+Controller-General, without his appearing in the business; he had the
+place which was agreed upon, and the hope of a still better, and he
+entrusted to me the King's correspondence, which I told him I should not
+mention to Madame de Pompadour, according to her injunctions. He sent
+several memorials to M. de Choiseul, containing accusations of him,
+addressed to the King. This timely information enabled him to refute
+them triumphantly.
+
+The King was very fond of having little private correspondences, very
+often unknown to Madame de Pompadour: she knew, however, of the existence
+of some, for he passed part of his mornings in writing to his family, to
+the King of Spain, to Cardinal Tencin, to the Abbe de Broglie, and also
+to some obscure persons. "It is, doubtless, from such people as these,"
+said she to me, one day, "that the King learns expressions which
+perfectly surprise me. For instance, he said to me yesterday, when he
+saw a man pass with an old coat on, 'il y a la un habit bien examine.'
+He once said to me, when he meant to express that a thing was probable,
+'il y a gros'; I am told this is a saying of the common people, meaning,
+'il y a gros a parier'." I took the liberty to say, "But is it not more
+likely from his young ladies at the Parc, that he learns these elegant
+expressions? "She laughed, and said, "You are right; 'il y a gros'."
+The King, however, used these expressions designedly, and with a laugh.
+
+The King knew a great many anecdotes, and there were people enough who
+furnished him with such as were likely to mortify the self-love of
+others. One day, at Choisy, he went into a room where some people were
+employed about embroidered furniture, to see how they were going on; and
+looking out of the window, he saw at the end of a long avenue two men in
+the Choisy uniform. "Who are those two noblemen?" said he. Madame de
+Pompadour took up her glass, and said, "They are the Duc d'Aumont, and
+------" "Ah!" said the King; "the Duc d'Aumont's grandfather would be
+greatly astonished if he could see his grandson arm in arm with the
+grandson of his valet de chambre, L------, in a dress which may be called
+a patent of nobility!" He went on to tell Madame de Pompadour a long
+history, to prove the truth of what he said. The King went out to
+accompany her into the garden; and, soon after, Quesnay and M. de Marigny
+came in. I spoke with contempt of some one who was very fond of money.
+At this the Doctor laughed, and said, "I had a curious dream last night:
+I was in the country of the ancient Germans; I had a large house, stacks
+of corn, herds of cattle, a great number of horses, and huge barrels of
+ale; but I suffered dreadfully from rheumatism, and knew not how to
+manage to go to a fountain, at fifty leagues' distance, the waters of
+which would cure me. I was to go among a strange people. An enchanter
+appeared before me, and said to me, 'I pity your distress; here, I will
+give you a little packet of the powder of "prelinpinpin"; whoever
+receives a little of this from you will lodge you, feed you, and pay you
+all sorts of civilities.' I took the powder, and thanked him."
+"Ah!" said I, "how I should like to have some powder of prelinpinpin! I
+wish I had a chest full."--"Well," said the Doctor, "that powder is
+money, for which you have so great a contempt. Tell me who, of all the
+men who come hither, receives the greatest attentions?"--"I do not know,"
+said I. "Why," said he, "it is M. de Monmartel, who comes four or five
+times a year."--"Why does he enjoy so much consideration?"--"Because his
+coffers are full of the powder of prelinpinpin. Everything in
+existence," said he, taking a handful of Louis from his pocket, "is
+contained in these little pieces of metal, which will convey you
+commodiously from one end of the world to the other. All men obey those
+who possess this powder, and eagerly tender them their services. To
+despise money, is to despise happiness, liberty, in short, enjoyments of
+every kind." A cordon bleu passed under the window. "That nobleman,"
+said I, "is much more delighted with his cordon bleu than he would be
+with ten thousand of your pieces of metal."--"When I ask the King for a
+pension," replied Quesnay, "I say to him, 'Give me the means of having a
+better dinner, a warmer coat, a carriage to shelter me from the weather,
+and to transport me from place to place without fatigue.' But the man
+who asks him for that fine blue ribbon would say, if he had the courage
+and the honesty to speak as he feels, 'I am vain, and it will give me
+great satisfaction to see people look at me, as I pass, with an eye of
+stupid admiration, and make way, for me; I wish, when I enter a room, to
+produce an effect, and to excite the attention of those who may, perhaps,
+laugh at me when I am gone; I wish to be called Monseigneur by the
+multitude.' Is not all this mere empty air? In scarcely any country
+will this ribbon be of the slightest use to him; it will give him no
+power. My pieces of metal will give me the power of assisting the
+unfortunate everywhere. Long live the omnipotent powder of
+prelinpinpin!" At these last words, we heard a burst of laughter from
+the adjoining room, which was only separated by a door from the one we
+were in. The door opened, and in came the King, Madame de Pompadour, and
+M. de Gontaut. "Long live the powder of prelinpinpin!" said the King.
+"Doctor, can you get me any of it?" It happened that, when the King
+returned from his walk, he was struck with a fancy to listen to our
+conversation. Madame de Pompadour was extremely kind to the Doctor, and
+the King went out laughing, and talking with great admiration of the
+powder. I went away, and so did the Doctor. I immediately sat down to
+commit this conversation to writing. I was afterwards told that M.
+Quesnay was very learned in certain matters relating to finance, and that
+he was a great 'economiste'. But I do not know very well what that
+means. What I do know for certain is, that he was very clever, very gay
+and witty, and a very able physician.
+
+The illness of the little Duke of Burgundy, whose intelligence was much
+talked of, for a long time occupied the attention of the Court. Great
+endeavours were made to find out the cause of his malady, and ill-nature
+went so far as to assert that his nurse, who had an excellent situation
+at Versailles, had communicated to him a nasty disease. The King shewed
+Madame de Pompadour the information he had procured from the province she
+came from, as to her conduct. A silly Bishop thought proper to say she
+had been very licentious in her youth. The poor nurse was told of this,
+and begged that he might be made to explain himself. The Bishop replied,
+that she had been at several balls in the town in which she lived, and
+that she had gone with her neck uncovered. The poor man actually thought
+this the height of licentiousness. The King, who had been at first
+uneasy, when he came to this, called out, "What a fool!" After having
+long been a source of anxiety to the Court, the Duke died. Nothing
+produces a stronger impression upon Princes, than the spectacle of their
+equals dying. Everybody is occupied about them while ill--but as soon as
+they are dead, nobody mentions them. The King frequently talked about
+death--and about funerals, and places of burial. Nobody could be of a
+more melancholy temperament. Madame de Pompadour once told me that he
+experienced a painful sensation whenever he was forced to laugh, and that
+he had often begged her to break off a droll story. He smiled, and that
+was all. In general, he had the most gloomy ideas concerning almost all
+events. When there was a new Minister, he used to say, "He displays his
+wares like all the rest, and promises the finest things in the world, not
+one of which will be fulfilled. He does not know this country--he will
+see." When new projects for reinforcing the navy were laid before him,
+he said, "This is the twentieth time I have heard this talked of--France
+never will have a navy, I think." This I heard from M. de Marigny.
+
+I never saw Madame de Pompadour so rejoiced as at the taking of Mahon.
+The King was very glad, too, but he had no belief in the merit of his
+courtiers--he looked upon their success as the effect of chance.
+Marechal Saxe was, as I have been told, the only man who inspired him
+with great esteem. But he had scarcely ever seen him in his closet, or
+playing the courtier.
+
+M. d'Argenson picked a quarrel with M. de Richelieu, after his victory,
+about his return to Paris. This was intended to prevent his coming to
+enjoy his triumph. He tried to throw the thing upon Madame de Pompadour,
+who was enthusiastic about him, and called him by no other name than the
+"Minorcan." The Chevalier de Montaign was the favourite of the Dauphin,
+and much beloved by him for his great devotion. He fell ill, and
+underwent an operation called 'l'empieme', which is performed by making
+an incision between the ribs, in order to let out the pus; it had, to all
+appearance, a favourable result, but the patient grew worse, and could
+not breathe. His medical attendants could not conceive what occasioned
+this accident and retarded his cure. He died almost in the arms of the
+Dauphin, who went every day to see him. The singularity of his disease
+determined the surgeons to open the body, and they found, in his chest,
+part of the leaden syringe with which decoctions had, as was usual, been
+injected into the part in a state of suppuration. The surgeon, who
+committed this act of negligence, took care not to boast of his feat,
+and his patient was the victim. This incident was much talked of by the
+King, who related it, I believe, not less than thirty times, according to
+his custom; but what occasioned still more conversation about the
+Chevalier de Montaign, was a box, found by his bed's side, containing
+haircloths, and shirts, and whips, stained with blood. This circumstance
+was spoken of one evening at supper, at Madame de Pompadour's, and not
+one of the guests seemed at all tempted to imitate the Chevalier. Eight
+or ten days afterwards, the following tale was sent to the King, to
+Madame de Pompadour, to the Baschi, and to the Duc d'Ayen. At first
+nobody could understand to what it referred: at last, the Duc d'Ayen
+exclaimed, "How stupid we are; this is a joke on the austerities of the
+Chevalier de Montaign!" This appeared clear enough--so much the more so,
+as the copies were sent to the Dauphin, the Dauphine, the Abbe de St.
+Cyr, and to the Duc de V---. The latter had the character of a pretender
+to devotion, and, in his copy, there was this addition, "You would not be
+such a fool, my dear Duke, as to be a 'faquir'--confess that you would be
+very glad to be one of those good monks who lead such a jolly life."
+The Duc de Richelieu was suspected of having employed one of his wits to
+write the story. The King was scandalised at it, and ordered the
+Lieutenant of Police to endeavour to find out the author, but either he
+could not succeed or he would not betray him.
+
+
+ Japanese Tale.
+
+At a distance of three leagues from the capital of Japan, there is a
+temple celebrated for the concourse of persons, of both sexes, and of all
+ranks, who crowd thither to worship an idol believed to work miracles.
+Three hundred men consecrated to the service of religion, and who can
+give proofs of ancient and illustrious descent, serve this temple, and
+present to the idol the offerings which are brought from all the
+provinces of the empire. They inhabit a vast and magnificent edifice,
+belonging to the temple, and surrounded with gardens where art has
+combined with nature to produce enchantment. I obtained permission to
+see the temple, and to walk in the gardens. A monk advanced in years,
+but still full of vigour and vivacity, accompanied me. I saw several
+others, of different ages, who were walking there. But what surprised me
+was to see a great many of them amusing themselves by various agreeable
+and sportive games with young girls elegantly dressed, listening to their
+songs, and joining in their dances. The monk, who accompanied me,
+listened with great civility and kindness to the questions I put to him
+concerning his order. The following is the sum of his answers to my
+numerous interrogations. The God Faraki, whom we worship, is so called
+from a word which signifies the fabricator. He made all that we behold--
+the earth, the stars, the sun, etc. He has endowed men with senses,
+which are so many sources of pleasure, and we think the only way of
+shewing our gratitude is to use them. This opinion will, doubtless,
+appear to you much more rational than that of the faquirs of India,
+who pass their lives in thwarting nature, and who inflict upon themselves
+the most melancholy privations and the most severe sufferings.
+
+As soon as the sun rises, we repair to the mountain you see before us, at
+the foot of which flows a stream of the most limpid water, which meanders
+in graceful windings through that meadow-enamelled with the loveliest
+flowers. We gather the most fragrant of them, which we carry and lay
+upon the altar, together with various fruits, which we receive from the
+bounty of Faraki. We then sing his praises, and execute dances
+expressive of our thankfulness, and of all the enjoyments we owe to this
+beneficent deity. The highest of these is that which love produces, and
+we testify our ardent gratitude by the manner in which we avail ourselves
+of this inestimable gift of Faraki. Having left the temple, we go into
+several shady thickets, where we take a light repast; after which, each
+of us employs himself in some unoppressive labour. Some embroider,
+others apply themselves to painting, others cultivate flowers or fruits,
+others turn little implements for our use. Many of these little works
+are sold to the people, who purchase them with eagerness. The money
+arising from this sale forms a considerable part of our revenue. Our
+morning is thus devoted to the worship of God and to the exercise of the
+sense of Sight, which begins with the first rays of the sun. The sense
+of Taste is gratified by our dinner, and we add to it the pleasure of
+Smell. The most delicious viands are spread for us in apartments strewed
+with flowers. The table is adorned with them, and the most exquisite
+wines are handed to us in crystal goblets. When we have glorified God,
+by the agreeable use of the palate, and the olfactory nerve, we enjoy a
+delightful sleep of two hours, in bowers of orange trees, roses, and
+myrtles. Having acquired a fresh store of strength and spirits, we
+return to our occupations, that we may thus mingle labour with pleasure,
+which would lose its zest by long continuance. After our work, we return
+to the temple, to thank God, and to offer him incense. From thence we go
+to the most delightful part of the garden, where we find three hundred
+young girls, some of whom form lively dances with the younger of our
+monks; the others execute serious dances, which require neither strength
+nor agility, and which only keep time to the sound of musical
+instruments.
+
+We talk and laugh with our companions, who are dressed in a light gauze,
+and whose tresses are adorned with flowers; we press them to partake of
+exquisite sherbets, differently prepared. The hour of supper being
+arrived, we repair to rooms illuminated with the lustre of a thousand
+tapers fragrant with amber. The supper-room is surrounded by three vast
+galleries, in which are placed musicians, whose various instruments fill
+the mind with the most pleasurable and the softest emotions. The young
+girls are seated at table with us, and, towards the conclusion of the
+repast, they sing songs, which are hymns in honour of the God who has
+endowed us with senses which shed such a charm over existence, and which
+promise us new pleasure from every fresh exercise of them. After the
+repast is ended, we return to the dance, and, when the hour of repose
+arrives, we draw from a kind of lottery, in which every one is sure of a
+prize; that is, a young girl as his companion for the night. They are
+allotted thus by chance, in order to avoid jealousy, and to prevent
+exclusive attachments. Thus ends the day, and gives place to a night of
+delights, which we sanctify by enjoying with due relish that sweetest of
+all pleasures, which Faraki has so wisely attached to the reproduction of
+our species. We reverently admire the wisdom and the goodness of Faraki,
+who, desiring to secure to the world a continued population, has
+implanted in the sexes an invincible mutual attraction, which constantly
+draws them towards each other. Fecundity is the end he proposes, and he
+rewards with intoxicating delights those who contribute to the fulfilment
+of his designs. What should we say to the favourite of a King from whom
+he had received a beautiful house, and fine estates, and who chose to
+spoil the house, to let it fall in ruins, to abandon the cultivation of
+the land, and let it become sterile, and covered with thorns? Such is
+the conduct of the faquirs of India, who condemn themselves to the most
+melancholy privations, and to the most severe sufferings. Is not this
+insulting Faraki? Is it not saying to him, I despise your gifts? Is it
+not misrepresenting him and saying, You are malevolent and cruel, and
+I know that I can no otherwise please you than by offering you the
+spectacle of my miseries? "I am told," added he, "that you have, in your
+country, faquirs not less insane, not less cruel to themselves."
+I thought, with some reason, that he meant the fathers of La Trappe.
+The recital of the matter afforded me much matter for reflection, and
+I admired how strange are the systems to which perverted reason gives
+birth.
+
+
+The Duc de V----- was a nobleman of high rank and great wealth. He said
+to the King one evening at supper, "Your Majesty does me the favour to
+treat me with great kindness: I should be inconsolable if I had the
+misfortune to fall under your displeasure. If such a calamity were to
+befall me, I should endeavour to divert my grief by improving some
+beautiful estates of mine in such and such a province;" and he thereupon
+gave a description of three or four fine seats. About a month after,
+talking of the disgrace of a Minister, he said, "I hope your Majesty will
+not withdraw your favour from me; but if I had the misfortune to lose it,
+I should be more to be pitied than anybody, for I have no asylum in which
+to hide my head." All those present, who had heard the description of
+the beautiful country houses, looked at each other and laughed. The King
+said to Madame de Pompadour, who sat next to him at table, "People are
+very right in saying that a liar ought to have a good memory."
+
+An event, which made me tremble, as well as Madame, procured me the
+familiarity of the King. In the middle of the night, Madame came into my
+chamber, en chemise, and in a state of distraction. "Here! Here!" said
+she, "the King is dying." My alarm may be easily imagined. I put on a
+petticoat, and found the King in her bed, panting. What was to be done?
+--it was an indigestion. We threw water upon him, and he came to
+himself. I made him swallow some Hoffman's drops, and he said to me,
+"Do not make any noise, but go to Quesnay; say that your mistress is ill;
+and tell the Doctor's servants to say nothing about it." Quesnay, who
+lodged close by, came immediately, and was much astonished to see the
+King in that state. He felt his pulse, and said, "The crisis is over;
+but, if the King were sixty years old, this might have been serious."
+He went to seek some drug, and, on his return, set about inundating the
+King with perfumed water. I forget the name of the medicine he made him
+take, but the effect was wonderful. I believe it was the drops of
+General Lamotte. I called up one of the girls of the wardrobe to make
+tea, as if for myself. The King took three cups, put on his robe de
+chambre and his stockings, and went to his own room, leaning upon the
+Doctor. What a sight it was to see us all three half naked! Madame put
+on a robe as soon as possible, and I did the same, and the King changed
+his clothes behind the curtains, which were very decently closed. He
+afterwards spoke of this short attack, and expressed his sense of the
+attentions shown him. An hour after, I felt the greatest possible terror
+in thinking that the King might have died in our hands. Happily, he
+quickly recovered himself, and none of the domestics perceived what had
+taken place. I merely told the girl of the wardrobe to put everything to
+rights, and she thought it was Madame who had been indisposed. The King,
+the next morning, gave secretly to Quesnay a little note for Madame, in
+which he said, 'Ma chere amie' must have had a great fright, but let her
+reassure herself--I am now well, which the Doctor will certify to you.
+From that moment the King became accustomed to me, and, touched by the
+interest I had shown for him, he often gave me one of his peculiarly
+gracious glances, and made me little presents, and, on every New Year's
+Day, sent me porcelain to the amount of twenty louis d'or. He told
+Madame that he looked upon me in the apartment as a picture or statue,
+and never put any constraint upon himself on account of my presence.
+Doctor Quesnay received a pension of a thousand crowns for his attention
+and silence, and the promise of a place for his son. The King gave me an
+order upon the Treasury for four thousand francs, and Madame had
+presented to her a very handsome chiming-clock and the King's portrait in
+a snuffbox.
+
+The King was habitually melancholy, and liked everything which recalled
+the idea of death, in spite of the strongest fears of it. Of this, the
+following is an instance: Madame de Pompadour was on her way to Crecy,
+when one of the King's grooms made a sign to her coachman to stop, and
+told him that the King's carriage had broken down, and that, knowing her
+to be at no great distance, His Majesty had sent him forward to beg her
+to wait for him. He soon overtook us, and seated himself in Madame de
+Pompadour's carriage, in which were, I think, Madame de Chateau-Renaud,
+and Madame de Mirepoix. The lords in attendance placed themselves in
+some other carriages. I was behind, in a chaise, with Gourbillon, Madame
+de Pompadour's valet de chambre. We were surprised in a short time by
+the King stopping his carriage. Those which followed, of course stopped
+also. The King called a groom, and said to him, "You see that little
+eminence; there are crosses; it must certainly be a burying-ground; go
+and see whether there are any graves newly dug." The groom galloped up
+to it, returned, and said to the King, "There are three quite freshly
+made." Madame de Pompadour, as she told me, turned away her head with
+horror; and the little Marechale
+
+ [The Marechale de Mirepois died at Brussels in 1791, at a very
+ advanced age, but preserving her wit and gaiety to the last. The
+ day of her death, after she had received the Sacrament, the
+ physician told her that he thought her a good deal better. She
+ replied, "You tell me bad news: having packed up, I had rather go."
+ She was sister of the Prince de Beauveau. The Prince de Ligne says,
+ in one of his printed letters: "She had that enchanting talent which
+ supplies the means of pleasing everybody. You would have sworn that
+ she had thought of nothing but you all her life."--En.]
+
+gaily said, "This is indeed enough to make one's mouth water." Madame de
+Pompadour spoke of it when I was undressing her in the evening. "What a
+strange pleasure," said she, "to endeavour to fill one's mind with images
+which one ought to endeavour to banish, especially when one is surrounded
+by so many sources of happiness! But that is the King's way; he loves to
+talk about death. He said, some days ago, to M. de Fontanieu, who was,
+seized with a bleeding at the nose, at the levee: 'Take care of yourself;
+at your age it is a forerunner of apoplexy.' The poor man went home
+frightened, and absolutely ill."
+
+I never saw the King so agitated as during the illness of the Dauphin.
+The physicians came incessantly to the apartments of Madame de Pompadour,
+where the King interrogated them. There was one from Paris, a very odd
+man, called Pousse, who once said to him, "You are a good papa; I like
+you for that. But you know we are all your children, and share your
+distress. Take courage, however; your son will recover." Everybody's
+eyes were upon the Duc d'Orleans, who knew not how to look. He would
+have become heir to the crown, the Queen being past the age to have
+children. Madame de ----- said to me, one day, when I was expressing my
+surprise at the King's grief, "It would annoy him beyond measure to have
+a Prince of the blood heir apparent. He does not like them, and looks
+upon their relationship to him as so remote, that he would feel
+humiliated by it." And, in fact, when his son recovered, he said, "The
+King of Spain would have had a fine chance." It was thought that he was
+right in this, and that it would have been agreeable to justice; but
+that, if the Duc d'Orleans had been supported by a party, he might have
+supported his pretensions to the crown. It was, doubtless, to remove
+this impression that he gave a magnificent fete at St. Cloud on the
+occasion of the Dauphin's recovery. Madame de Pompadour said to Madame
+de Brancas, speaking of this fete, "He wishes to make us forget the
+chateau en Espagne he has been dreaming of; in Spain, however, they build
+them of solider materials." The people did not shew so much joy at the
+Dauphin's recovery. They looked upon him as a devotee, who did nothing
+but sing psalms. They loved the Duc d'Orleans, who lived in the capital,
+and had acquired the name of the King of Paris. These sentiments were
+not just; the Dauphin only sang psalms when imitating the tones of one of
+the choristers of the chapel. The people afterwards acknowledged their
+error, and did justice to his virtues. The Duc d'Orleans paid the most
+assiduous court to Madame de Pompadour: the Duchess, on the contrary,
+detested her. It is possible that words were put into the Duchess's
+mouth which she never uttered; but she, certainly, often said most
+cutting things. The King would have sent her into exile, had he listened
+only to his resentment; but he feared the eclat of such a proceeding, and
+he knew that she would only be the more malicious. The Duc d'Orleans
+was, just then, extremely jealous of the Comte de Melfort; and the
+Lieutenant of Police told the King he had strong reasons for believing
+that the Duke would stick at nothing to rid himself of this gallant, and
+that he thought it his duty to give the Count notice, that he ought to be
+upon his guard. The King said, "He would not dare to attempt any such
+violence as you seem to apprehend; but there is a better way: let him try
+to surprise them, and he will find me very well inclined to have his
+cursed wife shut up; but if he got rid of this lover, she would have
+another to-morrow.
+
+"Nay, she has others at this moment; for instance, the Chevalier de
+Colbert, and the Comte de l'Aigle." Madame de Pompadour, however, told
+me these two last affairs were not certain.
+
+An adventure happened about the same time, which the Lieutenant of Police
+reported to the King. The Duchesse d'Orleans had amused herself one
+evening, about eight o'clock, with ogling a handsome young Dutchman, whom
+she took a fancy to, from a window of the Palais Royal. The young man,
+taking her for a woman of the town, wanted to make short work, at which
+she was very much shocked. She called a Swiss, and made herself known.
+The stranger was arrested; but he defended himself by affirming that she
+had talked very loosely to him. He was dismissed, and the Duc d'Orleans
+gave his wife a severe reprimand.
+
+The King (who hated her so much that he spoke of her without the
+slightest restraint) one day said to Madame de Pompadour, in my presence,
+"Her mother knew what she was, for, before her marriage, she never
+suffered her to say more than yes and no. Do you know her joke on the
+nomination of Moras? She sent to congratulate him upon it: two minutes
+after, she called back the messenger she had sent, and said, before
+everybody present, 'Before you speak to him, ask the Swiss if he still
+has the place.'" Madame de Pompadour was not vindictive, and, in spite
+of the malicious speeches of the Duchesse d'Orleans, she tried to excuse
+her conduct. "Almost all women," she said, "have lovers; she has not all
+that are imputed to her: but her free manners, and her conversation,
+which is beyond all bounds, have brought her into general disrepute."
+
+My companion came into my room the other day, quite delighted. She had
+been with M. de Chenevieres, first Clerk in the War-office, and a
+constant correspondent of Voltaire, whom she looks upon as a god. She
+was, by the bye, put into a great rage one day, lately, by a print-seller
+in the street, who was crying, "Here is Voltaire, the famous Prussian;
+here you see him, with a great bear-skin cap, to keep him from the cold!
+Here is the famous Prussian, for six sous!"--"What a profanation!" said
+she. To return to my story: M. de Chenevieres had shewn her some letters
+from Voltaire, and M. Marmontel had read an 'Epistle to his Library'.
+
+M. Quesnay came in for a moment; she told him all this: and, as he did
+not appear to take any great interest in it, she asked him if he did not
+admire great poets. "Oh, yes; just as I admire great bilboquet players,"
+said he, in that tone of his, which rendered everything he said
+diverting. "I have written some verses, however," said he, "and I will
+repeat them to you; they are upon a certain M. Rodot, an Intendant of the
+Marine, who was very fond of abusing medicine and medical men. I made
+these verses to revenge AEsculapius and Hippocrates.
+
+"What do you say to them?" said the Doctor. My companion thought them
+very pretty, and the Doctor gave me them in his handwriting, begging me,
+at the same time, not to give any copies.
+
+Madame de Pompadour joked my companion about her 'bel-esprit', but
+sometimes she reposed confidence in her. Knowing that she was often
+writing, she said to her, "You are writing a novel, which will appear
+some day or other; or, perhaps, the age of Louis XV.: I beg you to treat
+me well." I have no reason to complain of her. It signifies very little
+to me that she can talk more learnedly than I can about prose and verse.
+
+She never told me her real name; but one day I was malicious enough to
+say to her, "Some one was maintaining, yesterday, that the family of
+Madame de Mar---- was of more importance than many of good extraction.
+They say it is the first in Cadiz. She had very honourable alliances,
+and yet she has thought it no degradation to be governess to Madame de
+Pompadour's daughter. One day you will see her sons or her nephews
+Farmers General, and her granddaughters married to Dukes." I had
+remarked that Madame de Pompadour for some days had taken chocolate,
+'a triple vanille et ambre', at her breakfast; and that she ate truffles
+and celery soup: finding her in a very heated state, I one day
+remonstrated with her about her diet, to which she paid no attention.
+I then thought it right to speak to her friend, the Duchesse de Brancas.
+"I had remarked the same thing," said she, "and I will speak to her about
+it before you." After she was dressed, Madame de Brancas, accordingly,
+told her she was uneasy about her health. "I have just been talking to
+her about it," said the Duchess, pointing to me, "and she is of my
+opinion." Madame de Pompadour seemed a little displeased; at last, she
+burst into tears. I immediately went out, shut the door, and returned to
+my place to listen. "My dear friend," she said to Madame de Brancas,
+"I am agitated by the fear of losing the King's heart by ceasing to be
+attractive to him. Men, you know, set great value on certain things, and
+I have the misfortune to be of a very cold temperament. I, therefore,
+determined to adopt a heating diet, in order to remedy this defect, and
+for two days this elixir has been of great service to me, or, at least, I
+have thought I felt its good effects."
+
+The Duchesse de Brancas took the phial which was upon the toilet, and
+after having smelt at it, "Fie!" said she, and threw it into the fire.
+Madame de Pompadour scolded her, and said, "I don't like to be treated
+like a child." She wept again, and said, "You don't know what happened
+to me a week ago. The King, under pretext of the heat of the weather,
+lay down upon my sofa, and passed half the night there. He will take a
+disgust to me and have another mistress."--"You will not avoid that,"
+replied the Duchess, "by following your new diet, and that diet will kill
+you; render your company more and more precious to the King by your
+gentleness: do not repulse him in his fond moments, and let time do the
+rest; the chains of habit will bind him to you for ever." They then
+embraced; Madame de Pompadour recommended secrecy to Madame de Brancas,
+and the diet was abandoned.
+
+A little while after, she said to me, "Our master is better pleased with
+me. This is since I spoke to Quesnay, without, however, telling him all.
+He told me, that to accomplish my end, I must try to be in good health,
+to digest well, and, for that purpose, take exercise. I think the Doctor
+is right. I feel quite a different creature. I adore that man (the
+King), I wish so earnestly to be agreeable to him! But, alas! sometimes
+he says I am a macreuse (a cold-blooded aquatic bird). I would give my
+life to please him."
+
+One day, the King came in very much heated. I withdrew to my post, where
+I listened. "What is the matter?" said Madame de Pompadour. "The long
+robes and the clergy," replied he, "are always at drawn daggers, they
+distract me by their quarrels. But I detest the long robes the most.
+My clergy, on the whole, is attached and faithful to me; the others want
+to keep me in a state of tutelage."--"Firmness," said Madame de
+Pompadour, "is the only thing that can subdue them."--"Robert Saint
+Vincent is an incendiary, whom I wish I could banish, but that would make
+a terrible tumult. On the other hand, the Archbishop is an iron-hearted
+fellow, who tries to pick quarrels. Happily, there are some in the
+Parliament upon whom I can rely, and who affect to be very violent,
+but can be softened upon occasion. It costs me a few abbeys, and a few
+secret pensions, to accomplish this. There is a certain V--- who serves
+me very well, while he appears to be furious on the other side."--"I can
+tell you some news of him, Sire," said Madame de Pompadour. "He wrote to
+me yesterday, pretending that he is related to me, and begging for an
+interview."--"Well," said the King, "let him come. See him; and if he
+behaves well, we shall have a pretext for giving him something." M. de
+Gontaut came in, and seeing that they were talking seriously, said
+nothing. The King walked about in an agitated manner, and suddenly
+exclaimed, "The Regent was very wrong in restoring to them the right of
+remonstrating; they will end in ruining the State."--"All, Sire," said M.
+de Gontaut, "it is too strong to be shaken by a set of petty justices."
+"You don't know what they do, nor what they think. They are an assembly
+of republicans; however, here is enough of the subject. Things will last
+as they are as long as I shall. Talk about this on Sunday, Madame, with
+M. Berrien." Madame d'Amblimont and Madame d'Esparbes came in.
+"Ah! here come my kittens," said Madame de Pompadour; "all that we are
+about is Greek to them; but their gaiety restores my tranquility, and
+enables me to attend again to serious affairs. You, Sire, have the chase
+to divert you--they answer the same purpose to me." The King then began
+to talk about his morning's sport, and Lansmatte.
+
+ [See the "Memoirs of Madame Campan," vol. iii., p. 24. Many
+ traits of original and amusing bluntness are related of Lansmatte,
+ one of the King's grooms.]
+
+It was necessary to let the King go on upon these subjects, and even,
+sometimes, to hear the same story three or four times over, if new
+persons came into the room. Madame de Pompadour never betrayed the least
+ennui. She even sometimes persuaded him to begin his story anew.
+
+I one day said to her, "It appears to me, Madame, that you are fonder
+than ever of the Comtesse d'Amblimont."--"I have reason to be so," said
+she. "She is unique, I think, for her fidelity to her friends, and for
+her honour. Listen, but tell nobody--four days ago, the King, passing
+her to go to supper, approached her, under the pretence of tickling her,
+and tried to slip a note into her hand. D'Amblimont, in her madcap way,
+put her hands behind her back, and the King was obliged to pick up the
+note, which had fallen on the ground. Gontaut was the only person who
+saw all this, and, after supper, he went up to the little lady, and said,
+'You are an excellent friend.'--'I did my duty,' said she, and
+immediately put her finger on her lips to enjoin him to be silent.
+He, however, informed me of this act of friendship of the little heroine,
+who had not told me of it herself." I admired the Countess's virtue, and
+Madame de Pompadour said, "She is giddy and headlong; but she has more
+sense and more feeling than a thousand prudes and devotees. D'Esparbes
+would not do as much most likely she would meet him more than half-way.
+The King appeared disconcerted, but he still pays her great attentions."
+--"You will, doubtless, Madame," said I, "show your sense of such
+admirable conduct."--"You need not doubt it," said she, "but I don't wish
+her to think that I am informed of it." The King, prompted either by the
+remains of his liking, or from the suggestions of Madame de Pompadour,
+one morning went to call on Madame d'Amblimont, at Choisy, and threw
+round her neck a collar of diamonds and emeralds, worth between fifty
+thousand and seventy-five thousand francs. This happened a long time
+after the circumstance I have just related.
+
+There was a large sofa in a little room adjoining Madame de Pompadour's,
+upon which I often reposed.
+
+One evening, towards midnight, a bat flew into the apartment where the
+Court was; the King immediately cried out, "Where is General Crillon?"
+(He had just left the room.) "He is the General to command against the
+bats." This set everybody calling out, "Ou etais tu, Crillon?" M. de
+Crillon soon after came in, and was told where the enemy was. He
+immediately threw off his coat, drew his sword, and commenced an attack
+upon the bat, which flew into the closet where I was fast asleep. I
+started out of sleep at the noise, and saw the King and all the company
+around me. This furnished amusement for the rest of the evening. M. de
+Crillon was a very excellent and agreeable man, but he had the fault of
+indulging in buffooneries of this kind, which, however, were the result
+of his natural gaiety, and not of any subserviency of character. Such,
+however, was not the case with another exalted nobleman, a Knight of the
+Golden Fleece, whom Madame saw one day shaking hands with her valet de
+chambre. As he was one of the vainest men at Court, Madame could not
+refrain from telling the circumstance to the King; and, as he had no
+employment at Court, the King scarcely ever after named him on the Supper
+List.
+
+I had a cousin at Saint Cyr, who was married. She was greatly distressed
+at having a relation waiting woman to Madame de Pompadour, and often
+treated me in the most mortifying manner. Madame knew this from Colin,
+her steward, and spoke of it to the King. "I am not surprised at it,"
+said he; "this is a specimen of the silly women of Saint Cyr. Madame de
+Maintenon had excellent intentions, but she made a great mistake. These
+girls are brought up in such a manner, that, unless they are all made
+ladies of the palace, they are unhappy and impertinent."
+
+Some time after, this relation of mine was at my house. Colin, who knew
+her, though she did not know him, came in. He said to me, "Do you know
+that the Prince de Chimay has made a violent attack upon the Chevalier
+d'Henin for being equerry to the Marquise." At these words, my cousin
+looked very much astonished, and said, "Was he not right?"--"I don't mean
+to enter into that question," said Colin--"but only to repeat his words,
+which were these: 'If you were only a man of moderately good family and
+poor, I should not blame you, knowing, as I do, that there are hundreds
+such, who would quarrel for your place, as young ladies of family would,
+to be about your mistress. But, recollect, that your relations are
+princes of the Empire, and that you bear their name."--"What, sir," said
+my relation, "the Marquise's equerry of a princely house?"--"Of the house
+of Chimay," said he; "they take the name of Alsace "--witness the
+Cardinal of that name. Colin went out delighted at what he had said.
+
+"I cannot get over my surprise at what I have heard," said my relation.
+"It is, nevertheless, very true," replied I; "you may see the Chevalier
+d'Henin (that is the family name of the Princes de Chimay), with the
+cloak of Madame upon his arm, and walking alongside her sedan-chair, in
+order that he may be ready, on her getting in, to cover her shoulders
+with her cloak, and then remain in the antechamber, if there is no other
+room, till her return."
+
+From that time, my cousin let me alone; nay, she even applied to me to
+get a company of horse for her husband, who was very loath to come and
+thank me. His wife wished him to thank Madame de Pompadour; but the fear
+he had lest she should tell him, that it was in consideration of his
+relationship to her waiting-woman that he commanded fifty horse,
+prevented him. It was, however, a most surprising thing that a man
+belonging to the house of Chimay should be in the service of any lady
+whatever; and, the commander of Alsace returned from Malta on purpose to
+get him out of Madame de Pompadour's household. He got him a pension of
+a hundred louis from his family, and the Marquise gave him a company of
+horse. The Chevalier d'Henin had been page to the Marechal de
+Luxembourg, and one can hardly imagine how he could have put his relation
+in such a situation; for, generally speaking, all great houses keep up
+the consequence of their members. M. de Machault, the Keeper of the
+Seals, had, at the same time, as equerry, a Knight of St. Louis, and a
+man of family--the Chevalier de Peribuse--who carried his portfolio, and
+walked by the side of the chair.
+
+Whether it was from ambition, or from tenderness, Madame de Pompadour had
+a regard for her daughter,--[The daughter of Madame de Pompadour and her
+husband, M. d'Atioles. She was called Alexandrine.]--which seemed to
+proceed from the bottom of her heart. She was brought up like a
+Princess, and, like persons of that rank, was called by her Christian
+name alone. The first persons at Court had an eye to this alliance, but
+her mother had, perhaps, a better project. The King had a son by Madame
+de Vintimille, who resembled him in face, gesture, and manners. He was
+called the Comte du -----. Madame de Pompadour had him brought: to
+Bellevue. Colin, her steward, was employed to find means to persuade his
+tutor to bring him thither. They took some refreshment at the house of
+the Swiss, and the Marquise, in the course of her walk, appeared to meet
+them by accident. She asked the name of the child, and admired his
+beauty. Her daughter came up at the same moment, and Madame de Pompadour
+led them into a part of the garden where she knew the King would come.
+He did come, and asked the child's name. He was told, and looked
+embarrassed when Madame, pointing to them, said they would be a beautiful
+couple. The King played with the girl, without appearing to take any
+notice of the boy, who, while he was eating some figs and cakes which
+were brought, his attitudes and gestures were so like those of the King,
+that Madame de Pompadour was in the utmost astonishment. "Ah!" said she,
+"Sire, look at --------." --"At what?" said he. "Nothing," replied
+Madame, "except that one would think one saw his father."
+
+"I did not know," said the King, smiling, "that you were so intimately
+acquainted with the Comte du L------ ."--"You ought to embrace him," said
+she, "he is very handsome."--"I will begin, then, with the young lady,"
+said the King, and embraced them in a cold, constrained manner. I was
+present, having joined Mademoiselle's governess. I remarked to Madame,
+in the evening, that the King had not appeared very cordial in his
+caresses. "That is his way," said she; "but do not those children appear
+made for each other? If it was Louis XIV., he would make a Duc du Maine
+of the little boy; I do not ask so much; but a place and a dukedom for
+his son is very little; and it is because he is his son that I prefer him
+to all the little Dukes of the Court. My grandchildren would blend the
+resemblance of their grandfather and grandmother; and this combination,
+which I hope to live to see, would, one day, be my greatest delight."
+The tears came into her eyes as she spoke. Alas! alas! only six months
+elapsed, when her darling daughter, the hope of her advanced years, the
+object of her fondest wishes, died suddenly. Madame de Pompadour was
+inconsolable, and I must do M. de Marigny the justice to say that he was
+deeply afflicted. His niece was beautiful as an angel, and destined to
+the highest fortunes, and I always thought that he had formed the design
+of marrying her. A dukedom would have given him rank; and that, joined
+to his place, and to the wealth which she would have had from her mother,
+would have made him a man of great importance. The difference of age was
+not sufficient to be a great obstacle. People, as usual, said the young
+lady was poisoned; for the unexpected death of persons who command a
+large portion of public attention always gives birth to these rumours.
+The King shewed great regret, but more for the grief of Madame than on
+account of the loss itself, though he had often caressed the child, and
+loaded her with presents. I owe it, also, to justice, to say that M. de
+Marigny, the heir of all Madame de Pompadour's fortune, after the death
+of her daughter, evinced the sincerest and deepest regret every time she
+was seriously ill. She, soon after, began to lay plans for his
+establishment. Several young ladies of the highest birth were thought
+of; and, perhaps, he would have been made a Duke, but his turn of mind
+indisposed him for schemes either of marriage or ambition. Ten times he
+might have been made Prime Minister, yet he never aspired to it. "That
+is a man," said Quesnay to me, one day, "who is very little known; nobody
+talks of his talents or acquirements, nor of his zealous and efficient
+patronage of the arts: no man, since Colbert, has done so much in his
+situation: he is, moreover, an extremely honourable man, but people will
+not see in him anything but the brother of the favourite; and, because he
+is fat, he is thought dull and heavy." This was all perfectly true.
+M. de Marigny had travelled in Italy with very able artists, and had
+acquired taste, and much more information than any of his predecessors
+had possessed. As for the heaviness of his air, it only came upon him
+when he grew fat; before that, he had a delightful face. He was then as
+handsome as his sister. He paid court to nobody, had no vanity, and
+confined himself to the society of persons with whom he was at his ease.
+He went rather more into company at Court after the King had taken him to
+ride with him in his carriage, thinking it then his duty to shew himself
+among the courtiers.
+
+Madame called me, one day, into her closet, where the King was walking up
+and down in a very serious mood. "You must," said she, "pass some days
+in a house in the Avenue de St. Cloud, whither I shall send you. You
+will there find a young lady about to lie in." The King said nothing,
+and I was mute from astonishment. "You will be mistress of the house,
+and preside, like one of the fabulous goddesses, at the accouchement.
+Your presence is necessary, in order that everything may pass secretly,
+and according to the King's wish. You will be present at the baptism,
+and name the father and mother." The King began to laugh, and said, "The
+father is a very honest man;" Madame added, "beloved by every one, and
+adored by those who know him." Madame then took from a little cupboard a
+small box, and drew from it an aigrette of diamonds, at the same time
+saying to the King, "I have my reasons for it not being handsomer."--
+"It is but too much so," said the King; "how kind you are;" and he then
+embraced Madame, who wept with emotion, and, putting her hand upon the
+King's heart, said, "This is what I wish to secure." The King's eyes
+then filled with tears, and I also began weeping, without knowing why.
+Afterwards, the King said, "Guimard will call upon you every day, to
+assist you with his advice, and at the critical moment you will send for
+him. You will say that you expect the sponsors, and a moment after you
+will pretend to have received a letter, stating that they cannot come.
+You will, of course, affect to be very much embarrassed; and Guimard will
+then say that there is nothing for it but to take the first comers. You
+will then appoint as godfather and godmother some beggar, or chairman,
+and the servant girl of the house, and to whom you will give but twelve
+francs, in order not to attract attention."--"A louis," added Madame,
+"to obviate anything singular, on the other hand."--"It is you who make
+me economical, under certain circumstances," said the King. "Do you
+remember the driver of the fiacre? I wanted to give him a LOUIS, and Duc
+d'Ayen said, 'You will be known;' so that I gave him a crown." He was
+going to tell the whole story. Madame made a sign to him to be silent,
+which he obeyed, not without considerable reluctance. She afterwards
+told me that at the time of the fetes given on occasion of the Dauphin's
+marriage, the King came to see her at her mother's house in a hackney-
+coach. The coachman would not go on, and the King would have given him a
+LOUIS. "The police will hear of it, if you do," said the Duc d'Ayen,
+"and its spies will make inquiries, which will, perhaps, lead to a
+discovery."
+
+"Guimard," continued the King, "will tell you the names of the father and
+mother; he will be present at the ceremony, and make the usual presents.
+It is but fair that you also should receive yours;" and, as he said this,
+he gave me fifty LOUIS, with that gracious air that he could so well
+assume upon certain occasions, and which no person in the kingdom had but
+himself. I kissed his hand and wept. "You will take care of the
+accouchee, will you not? She is a good creature, who has not invented
+gunpowder, and I confide her entirely to your direction; my chancellor
+will tell you the rest," he said, turning to Madame, and then quitted the
+room. "Well, what think you of the part I am playing?" asked Madame.
+"It is that of a superior woman, and an excellent friend," I replied.
+"It is his heart I wish to secure," said she; "and all those young girls
+who have no education will not run away with it from me. I should not be
+equally confident were I to see some fine woman belonging to the Court,
+or the city, attempt his conquest."
+
+I asked Madame, if the young lady knew that the King was the father of
+her child? "I do not think she does," replied she; "but, as he appeared
+fond of her, there is some reason to fear that those about her might be
+too ready to tell her; otherwise," said she, shrugging her shoulders,
+"she, and all the others, are told that he is a Polish nobleman, a
+relation of the Queen, who has apartments in the castle." This story was
+contrived on account of the cordon bleu, which the King has not always
+time to lay aside, because, to do that, he must change his coat, and in
+order to account for his having a lodging in the castle so near the King.
+There were two little rooms by the side of the chapel, whither the King
+retired from his apartment, without being seen by anybody but a sentinel,
+who had his orders, and who did not know who passed through those rooms.
+The King sometimes went to the Parc-aux-cerfs, or received those young
+ladies in the apartments I have mentioned.
+
+I must here interrupt my narrative, to relate a singular adventure, which
+is only known to six or seven persons, masters or valets. At the time of
+the attempt to assassinate the King, a young girl, whom he had seen
+several times, and for whom he had manifested more tenderness than for
+most, was distracted at this horrible event. The Mother-Abbess of the
+Parc-aux-cerfs perceived her extraordinary grief, and managed so as to
+make her confess that she knew the Polish Count was the King of France.
+She confessed that she had taken from his pocket two letters, one of
+which was from the King of Spain, the other from the Abbe de Brogue.
+This was discovered afterwards, for neither she nor the Mother-Abbess
+knew the names of the writers. The girl was scolded, and M. Lebel,
+first valet de chambre, who had the management of all these affairs,
+was called; he took the letters, and carried them to the King, who was
+very much embarrassed in what manner to meet a person so well informed of
+his condition. The girl in question, having perceived that the King came
+secretly to see her companion, while she was neglected, watched his
+arrival, and, at the moment he entered with the Abbess, who was about
+to withdraw, she rushed distractedly into the room where her rival was.
+She immediately threw herself at the King's feet. "Yes," said she, "you
+are King of all France; but that would be nothing to me if you were not
+also monarch of my heart: do not forsake me, my beloved sovereign; I was
+nearly mad when your life was attempted!" The Mother-Abbess cried out,
+"You are mad now." The King embraced her, which appeared to restore her
+to tranquility. They succeeded in getting her out of the room, and a few
+days afterwards the unhappy girl was taken to a madhouse, where she was
+treated as if she had been insane, for some days. But she knew well
+enough that she was not so, and that the King had really been her lover.
+This lamentable affair was related to me by the Mother-Abbess, when I had
+some acquaintance with her at the time of the accouchement I have spoken
+of, which I never had before, nor since.
+
+To return to my history: Madame de Pompadour said to me, "Be constantly
+with the 'accouchee', to prevent any stranger, or even the people of the
+house, from speaking to her. You will always say that he is a very rich
+Polish nobleman, who is obliged to conceal himself on account of his
+relationship to the Queen, who is very devout. You will find a wet-nurse
+in the house, to whom you will deliver the child. Guimard will manage
+all the rest. You will go to church as a witness; everything must be
+conducted as if for a substantial citizen. The young lady expects to lie
+in in five or six days; you will dine with her, and will not leave her
+till she is in a state of health to return to the Parc-aux-cerfs, which
+she may do in a fortnight, as I imagine, without running any risk." I
+went, that same evening, to the Avenue de Saint Cloud, where I found the
+Abbess and Guimard, an attendant belonging to the castle, but without his
+blue coat. There were, besides, a nurse, a wet-nurse, two old men-
+servants, and a girl, who was something between a servant and a waiting-
+woman. The young lady was extremely pretty, and dressed very elegantly,
+though not too remarkably. I supped with her and the Mother-Abbess, who
+was called Madame Bertrand. I had presented the aigrette Madame de
+Pompadour gave me before supper, which had greatly delighted the young
+lady, and she was in high spirits.
+
+Madame Bertrand had been housekeeper to M. Lebel, first valet de chambre
+to the King. He called her Dominique, and she was entirely in his
+confidence. The young lady chatted with us after supper; she appeared to
+be very naive. The next day, I talked to her in private. She said to
+me, "How is the Count?" (It was the King whom she called by this title.)
+"He will be very sorry not to be with me now; but he was obliged to set
+off on a long journey." I assented to what she said. "He is very
+handsome," said she, "and loves me with all his heart. He promised me an
+allowance; but I love him disinterestedly; and, if he would let me, I
+would follow him to Poland." She afterwards talked to me about her
+parents, and about M. Lebel, whom she knew by the name of Durand. "My
+mother," said she, "kept a large grocer's shop, and my father was a man
+of some consequence; he belonged to the Six Corps, and that, as everybody
+knows, is an excellent thing. He was twice very near being head-
+bailiff." Her mother had become bankrupt at her father's death, but the
+Count had come to her assistance, and settled upon her fifteen hundred
+francs a year, besides giving her six thousand francs down. On the sixth
+day, she was brought to bed, and, according to my instructions, she was
+told the child was a girl, though in reality it was a boy; she was soon
+to be told that it was dead, in order that no trace of its existence
+might remain for a certain time. It was eventually to be restored to its
+mother. The King gave each of his children about ten thousand francs a
+year. They inherited after each other as they died off, and seven or
+eight were already dead. I returned to Madame de Pompadour, to whom I
+had written every day by Guimard. The next day, the King sent for me
+into the room; he did not say a word as to the business I had been
+employed upon; but he gave me a large gold snuff-box, containing two
+rouleaux of twenty-five louis each. I curtsied to him, and retired.
+Madame asked me a great many questions of the young lady, and laughed
+heartily at her simplicity, and at all she had said about the Polish
+nobleman. "He is disgusted with the Princess, and, I think, will return
+to Poland for ever, in two months."--"And the young lady?" said I.
+"She will be married in the country," said she, "with a portion of forty
+thousand crowns at the most and a few diamonds." This little adventure,
+which initiated me into the King's secrets, far from procuring for me
+increased marks of kindness from him, seemed to produce a coldness
+towards me; probably because he was ashamed of my knowing his obscure
+amours. He was also embarrassed by the services Madame de Pompadour had
+rendered him on this occasion.
+
+Besides the little mistresses of the Parc-aux-cerfs, the King had
+sometimes intrigues with ladies of the Court, or from Paris, who wrote to
+him. There was a Madame de L-----, who, though married to a young and
+amiable man, with two hundred thousand francs a year, wished absolutely
+to become his mistress. She contrived to have a meeting with him: and
+the King, who knew who she was, was persuaded that she was really madly
+in love with him. There is no knowing what might have happened, had she
+not died. Madame was very much alarmed, and was only relieved by her
+death from inquietude. A circumstance took place at this time which
+doubled Madame's friendship for me. A rich man, who had a situation in
+the Revenue Department, called on me one day very secretly, and told me
+that he had something of importance to communicate to Madame la Marquise,
+but that he should find himself very much embarrassed in communicating it
+to her personally, and that he should prefer acquainting me with it.
+He then told me, what I already knew, that he had a very beautiful wife,
+of whom he was passionately fond; that having on one occasion perceived
+her kissing a little 'porte feuille', he endeavoured to get possession of
+it, supposing there was some mystery attached to it. One day that she
+suddenly left the room to go upstairs to see her sister, who had been
+brought to bed, he took the, opportunity of opening the porte feuille,
+and was very much surprised to find in it a portrait of the King, and a
+very tender letter written by His Majesty. Of the latter he took a copy,
+as also of an unfinished letter of his wife, in which she vehemently
+entreated the King to allow her to have the pleasure of an interview--
+the means she pointed out. She was to go masked to the public ball at
+Versailles, where His Majesty could meet her under favour of a mask.
+I assured M. de ------ that I should acquaint Madame with the affair,
+who would, no doubt, feel very grateful for the communication. He then
+added, "Tell Madame la Marquise that my wife is very clever and very
+intriguing. I adore her, and should run distracted were she to be taken
+from me." I lost not a moment in acquainting Madame with the affair,
+and gave her the letter. She became serious and pensive, and I since
+learned that she consulted M. Berrier, Lieutenant of Police, who, by a
+very simple but ingeniously conceived plan, put an end to the designs of
+this lady. He demanded an audience of the King, and told him that there
+was a lady in Paris who was making free with His Majesty's name; that he
+had been given the copy of a letter, supposed to have been written by His
+Majesty to the lady in question. The copy he put into the King's hands,
+who read it in great confusion, and then tore it furiously to pieces.
+M. Berrier added, that it was rumoured that this lady was to meet His
+Majesty at the public ball, and, at this very moment, it so happened that
+a letter was put into the King's hand, which proved to be from the lady,
+appointing the meeting; at least, M. Berrier judged so, as the King
+appeared very much surprised on reading it, and said, "It must be
+allowed, M. le Lieutenant of Police, that you are well informed."
+M. Berrier added, "I think it my duty to tell Your Majesty that this lady
+passes for a very intriguing person." "I believe," replied the King,
+"that it is not without deserving it that she has got that character."
+
+Madame de Pompadour had many vexations in the midst of all her grandeur.
+She often received anonymous letters, threatening her with poison or
+assassination: her greatest fear, however, was that of being supplanted
+by a rival. I never saw her in a greater agitation than, one evening, on
+her return from the drawing-room at Marly. She threw down her cloak and
+muff, the instant she came in, with an air of ill-humour, and undressed
+herself in a hurried manner. Having dismissed her other women, she said
+to me, "I think I never saw anybody so insolent as Madame de Coaslin.
+I was seated at the same table with her this evening, at a game of
+'brelan', and you cannot imagine what I suffered. The men and women
+seemed to come in relays to watch us. Madame de Coaslin said two or
+three times, looking at me, 'Va tout', in the most insulting manner. I
+thought I should have fainted, when she said, in a triumphant tone, I
+have the 'brelan' of kings. I wish you had seen her courtesy to me on
+parting."--"Did the King," said I, "show her particular attention?"
+"You don't know him," said she; "if he were going to lodge her this very
+night in my apartment, he would behave coldly to her before people, and
+would treat me with the utmost kindness. This is the effect of his
+education, for he is, by nature, kind-hearted and frank." Madame de
+Pompadour's alarms lasted for some months, when she, one day, said to me,
+"That haughty Marquise has missed her aim; she frightened the King by her
+grand airs, and was incessantly teasing him for money. Now you, perhaps,
+may not know that the King would sign an order for forty thousand LOUIS
+without a thought, and would give a hundred out of his little private
+treasury with the greatest reluctance. Lebel, who likes me better than
+he would a new mistress in my place, either by chance or design had
+brought a charming little sultana to the Parc-aux-cerfs, who has cooled
+the King a little towards the haughty Vashti, by giving him occupation,
+has received a hundred thousand francs, some jewels, and an estate.
+Jannette--[The Intendant of Police.]--has rendered me great service, by
+showing the King extracts from the letters broken open at the post-
+office, concerning the report that Madame de Coaslin was coming into
+favour: The King was much impressed by a letter from an old counsellor of
+the Parliament, who wrote to one of his friends as follows: 'It is quite
+as reasonable that the King should have a female friend and confidante--
+as that we, in our several degrees, should so indulge ourselves; but it
+is desirable that he should keep the one he has; she is gentle, injures
+nobody, and her fortune is made. The one who is now talked of will be as
+haughty as high birth can make her. She must have an allowance of a
+million francs a year, since she is said to be excessively extravagant;
+her relations must be made Dukes, Governors of provinces, and Marshals,
+and, in the end, will surround the King, and overawe the Ministers.'"
+
+Madame de Pompadour had this passage, which had been sent to her by M.
+Jannette, the Intendant of the Police, who enjoyed the King's entire
+confidence. He had carefully watched the King's look, while he read the
+letter, and he saw that the arguments of this counsellor, who was not a
+disaffected person, made a great impression upon him. Some time
+afterwards, Madame de Pompadour said to me, "The haughty Marquise behaved
+like Mademoiselle Deschamps,
+
+ [A courtesan, distinguished for her charms, and still more so for an
+ extraordinary proof of patriotism. At a time when the public
+ Treasury was exhausted, Mademoiselle Deschamps sent all her plate to
+ the Mint. Louis XIV. boasted of this act of generous devotion to
+ her country. The Duc d'Ayen made it the subject of a pleasantry,
+ which detracted nothing from the merit of the sacrifice--but which
+ is rather too gai for us to venture upon.]
+
+and she is turned off." This was not Madame's only subject of alarm. A
+relation of Madame d'Estrades,
+
+ [The Comtesse d'Estrades, a relative of M. Normand, and a flatterer
+ of Madame de Pompadour, who brought her to Court, was secretly in
+ the pay of the Comte d'Argenson. That Minister, who did not disdain
+ la Fillon, from whom he extracted useful information, knew all that
+ passed at the Court of the favourite, by means of Madame d'Estrades,
+ whose ingratitude and perfidiousness he liberally paid.]
+
+wife to the Marquis de C----, had made the most pointed advances to the
+King, much more than were necessary for a man who justly thought himself
+the handsomest man in France, and who was, moreover, a King. He was
+perfectly persuaded that every woman would yield to the slightest desire
+he might deign to manifest. He, therefore, thought it a mere matter of
+course that women fell in love with him. M. de Stainville had a hand in
+marring the success of that intrigue; and, soon afterwards, the Marquise
+de C-----, who was confined to her apartments at Marly, by her relations,
+escaped through a closet to a rendezvous, and was caught with a young man
+in a corridor. The Spanish Ambassador, coming out of his apartments with
+flambeaux, was the person who witnessed this scene. Madame d'Estrades
+affected to know nothing of her cousin's intrigues, and kept up an
+appearance of the tenderest attachment to Madame de Pompadour, whom she
+was habitually betraying. She acted as spy for M. d'Argenson, in the
+cabinets, and in Madame de Pompadour's apartments; and, when she could
+discover nothing, she had recourse to her invention, in order that she
+might not lose her importance with her lover. This Madame d'Estrades
+owed her whole existence to the bounties of Madame, and yet, ugly as she
+was, she had tried to get the King away from her. One day, when he, had
+got rather drunk at Choisy (I think, the only time that, ever happened to
+him), he went on board a beautiful barge, whither Madame, being ill of an
+indigestion, could not accompany him. Madame d'Estrades seized this
+opportunity. She got into the barge, and, on their return, as it was
+dark, she followed the King into a private closet, where he was believed
+to be sleeping on a couch, and there went somewhat beyond any ordinary
+advances to him. Her account of the matter to Madame was, that she had
+gone into the closet upon her own affairs, and that the King, had
+followed her, and had tried to ravish her. She was at full liberty to
+make what story she pleased, for the King knew neither what he had said,
+nor what he had done. I shall finish this subject by a short history
+concerning a young lady. I had been, one day, to the theatre at
+Compiegne. When I returned, Madame asked me several questions about the
+play; whether there was much company, and whether I did not see a very
+beautiful girl. I replied, "That there was, indeed, a girl in a box near
+mine, who was surrounded by all the young men about the Court." She
+smiled, and said, "That is Mademoiselle Dorothee; she went, this evening,
+to see the King sup in public, and to-morrow she is to be taken to the
+hunt. You are surprised to find me so well informed, but I know a great
+deal more about her. She was brought here by a Gascon, named Dubarre or
+Dubarri, who is the greatest scoundrel in France. He founds all his
+hopes of advancement on Mademoiselle Dorothee's charms, which he thinks
+the King cannot resist. She is, really, very beautiful.. She was
+pointed out to me in my little garden, whither she was taken to walk on
+purpose. She is the daughter of a water-carrier, at Strasbourg, and her
+charming lover demands to be sent Minister to Cologne, as a beginning."--
+"Is it possible, Madame, that you can have been rendered uneasy by such a
+creature as that?"--"Nothing is impossible," replied she; "though I think
+the King would scarcely dare to give such a scandal. Besides, happily,
+Lebel, to quiet his conscience, told the King that the beautiful
+Dorothee's lover is infected with a horrid disease;" and, added he, "Your
+Majesty would not get rid of that as you have done of the scrofula."
+This was quite enough to keep the young lady at a distance.
+
+"I pity you sincerely, Madame," said I, "while everybody else envies
+you." "Ah!" replied she, "my life is that of the Christian, a perpetual
+warfare. This was not the case with the woman who enjoyed the favour of
+Louis XIV. Madame de La Valliere suffered herself to be deceived by
+Madame de Montespan, but it was her own fault, or, rather, the effect of
+her extreme good nature. She was entirely devoid of suspicion at first,
+because she could not believe her friend perfidious. Madame de
+Montespan's empire was shaken by Madame de Fontanges, and overthrown by
+Madame de Maintenon; but her haughtiness, her caprices, had already
+alienated the King. He had not, however, such rivals as mine; it is
+true, their baseness is my security. I have, in general, little to fear
+but casual infidelities, and the chance that they may not all be
+sufficiently transitory for my safety. The King likes variety, but he is
+also bound by habit; he fears eclats, and detests manoeuvring women. The
+little Marechale (de Mirepoig) one day said to me, 'It is your staircase
+that the King loves; he is accustomed to go up and down it. But, if he
+found another woman to whom he could talk of hunting and business as he
+does to you, it would be just the same to him in three days.'"
+
+I write without plan, order, or date, just as things come into my mind;
+and I shall now go to the Abbe de Bernis, whom I liked very much, because
+he was good-natured, and treated me kindly. One day, just as Madame de
+Pompadour had finished dressing, M. de Noailles asked to speak to her in
+private. I, accordingly, retired. The Count looked full of important
+business. I heard their conversation, as there was only the door between
+us.
+
+"A circumstance has taken place," said he, "which I think it my duty to
+communicate to the King; but I would not do so without first informing
+you of it, since it concerns one of your friends for whom I have the
+utmost regard and respect. The Abbe de Bernis had a mind to shoot, this
+morning, and went, with two or three of his people, armed with guns, into
+the little park, where the Dauphin would not venture to shoot without
+asking the King's permission. The guards, surprised at hearing the
+report of guns, ran to the spot, and were greatly astonished at the sight
+of M. de Bernis. They very respectfully asked to see his permission,
+when they found, to their astonishment, that he had none. They begged of
+him to desist, telling him that, if they did their duty, they should
+arrest him; but they must, at all events, instantly acquaint me with the
+circumstance, as Ranger of the Park of Versailles. They added, that the
+King must have heard the firing, and that they begged of him to retire.
+The Abbe apologized, on the score of ignorance, and assured them that he
+had my permission. 'The Comte de Noailles,' said they, 'could only grant
+permission to shoot in the more remote parts, and in the great park.'"
+The Count made a great merit of his eagerness to give the earliest
+information to Madame. She told him to leave the task of communicating
+it to the King to her, and begged of him to say nothing about the matter.
+M. de Marigny, who did not like the Abbe, came to see me in the evening;
+and I affected to know nothing of the story, and to hear it for the first
+time from him. "He must have been out of his senses," said he, "to shoot
+under the King's windows,"--and enlarged much on the airs he gave
+himself. Madame de Pompadour gave this affair the best colouring she
+could the King was, nevertheless, greatly disgusted at it, and twenty
+times, since the Abbe's disgrace, when he passed over that part of the
+park, he said, "This is where the Abbe took his pleasure." The King
+never liked him; and Madame de Pompadour told me one night, after his
+disgrace, when I was sitting up with her in her illness, that she saw,
+before he had been Minister a week, that he was not fit for his office.
+"If that hypocritical Bishop," said she, speaking of the Bishop of
+Mirepoix, "had not prevented the King from granting him a pension of four
+hundred louis a year, which he had promised me, he would never have been
+appointed Ambassador. I should, afterwards, have been able to give him
+an income of eight hundred louis a year, perhaps the place of master of
+the chapel. Thus he would have been happier, and I should have had
+nothing to regret." I took the liberty of saying that I did not agree
+with her. That he had yet remaining advantages, of which he could not be
+deprived; that his exile would terminate; and that he would then be a
+Cardinal, with an income of eight thousand louis a year. "That is true,"
+she replied; "but I think of the mortifications he has undergone, and of
+the ambition which devours him; and, lastly, I think of myself. I should
+have still enjoyed his society, and should have had, in my declining
+years, an old and amiable friend, if he had not been Minister." The King
+sent him away in anger, and was strongly inclined to refuse him the hat.
+M. Quesnay told me, some months afterwards, that the Abbe wanted to be
+Prime Minister; that he had drawn up a memorial, setting forth that in
+difficult crises the public good required that there should be a central
+point (that was his expression), towards which everything should be
+directed. Madame de Pompadour would not present the memorial; he
+insisted, though she said to him, "You will rain yourself." The King
+cast his eyes over it, and said "'central point,'--that is to say
+himself, he wants to be Prime Minister." Madame tried to apologize for
+him, and said, "That expression might refer to the Marechal de Belle-
+Isle."--"Is he not just about to be made Cardinal?" said the King. "This
+is a fine manoeuvre; he knows well enough that, by means of that dignity,
+he would compel the Ministers to assemble at his house, and then M.
+l'Abbe would be the central point. Wherever there is a Cardinal in the
+council, he is sure, in the end, to take the lead. Louis XIV., for this
+reason, did not choose to admit the Cardinal de Janson into the council,
+in spite of his great esteem for him. The Cardinal de Fleury told me the
+same thing. He had some desire that the Cardinal de Tencin should
+succeed him; but his sister was such an intrigante that Cardinal de
+Fleury advised me to have nothing to do with the matter, and I behaved so
+as to destroy all his hopes, and to undeceive others. M. d'Argenson has
+strongly impressed me with the same opinion, and has succeeded in
+destroying all my respect for him." This is what the King said,
+according to my friend Quesnay, who, by the bye, was a great genius, as
+everybody said, and a very lively, agreeable man. He liked to chat with
+me about the country. I had been bred up there, and he used to set me a
+talking about the meadows of Normandy and Poitou, the wealth of the
+farmers, and the modes of culture. He was the best-natured man in the
+world, and the farthest removed from petty intrigue. While he lived at
+Court, he was much more occupied with the best manner of cultivating land
+than with anything that passed around him. The man whom he esteemed the
+most was M. de la Riviere, a Counsellor of Parliament, who was also
+Intendant of Martinique; he looked upon him as a man of the greatest
+genius, and thought him the only person fit for the financial department
+of administration.
+
+The Comtesse d'Estrades, who owed everything to Madame de Pompadour, was
+incessantly intriguing against her. She was clever enough to destroy all
+proofs of her manoeuvres, but she could not so easily prevent suspicion.
+Her intimate connection with M. d'Argenson gave offence to Madame, and,
+for some time, she was more reserved with her. She, afterwards, did a
+thing which justly irritated the King and Madame. The King, who wrote a
+great deal, had written to Madame de Pompadour a long letter concerning
+an assembly of the Chambers of Parliament, and had enclosed a letter of
+M. Berrien. Madame was ill, and laid those letters on a little table by
+her bedside. M. de Gontaut came in, and gossipped about trifles, as
+usual. Madame d'Amblimont also came, and stayed but very little time.
+Just as I was going to resume a book which I had been reading to Madame,
+the Comtesse d'Estrades entered, placed herself near Madame's bed, and
+talked to her for some time. As soon as she was gone, Madame called me,
+asked what was o'clock, and said, "Order my door to be shut, the King
+will soon be here." I gave the order, and returned; and Madame told me
+to give her the King's letter, which was on the table with some other
+papers. I gave her the papers, and told her there was nothing else. She
+was very uneasy at not finding the letter, and, after enumerating the
+persons who had been in the room, she said, "It cannot be the little
+Countess, nor Gontaut, who has taken this letter. It can only be the
+Comtesse d'Estrades;--and that is too bad." The King came, and was
+extremely angry, as Madame told me. Two days afterwards, he sent Madame
+d'Estrades into exile. There was no doubt that she took the letter; the
+King's handwriting had probably awakened her curiosity. This occurrence
+gave great pain to M. d'Argenson, who was bound to her, as Madame de
+Pompadour said, by his love of intrigue. This redoubled his hatred of
+Madame, and she accused him of favouring the publication of a libel, in
+which she was represented as a worn-out mistress, reduced to the vile
+occupation of providing new objects to please her lover's appetite. She
+was characterised as superintendent of the Parc-aux-cerfs, which was said
+to cost hundreds of thousands of louis a year. Madame de Pompadour did,
+indeed, try to conceal some of the King's weaknesses, but she never knew
+one of the sultanas of that seraglio. There were, however, scarcely ever
+more than two at once, and often only one. When they married, they
+received some jewels, and four thousand louis. The Parc-aux-cerfs was
+sometimes vacant for five or six months. I was surprised, some time
+after, at seeing the Duchesse de Luynes, Lady of Honour to the Queen,
+come privately to see Madame de Pompadour. She afterwards came openly.
+One evening, after Madame was in bed, she called me, and said, "My dear,
+you will be delighted; the Queen has given me the place of Lady of the
+Palace; tomorrow I am to be presented to her: you must make me look
+well." I knew that the King was not so well pleased at this as she was;
+he was afraid that it would give rise to scandal, and that it might be
+thought he had forced this nomination upon the Queen. He had, however,
+done no such thing. It had been represented to the Queen that it was an
+act of heroism on her part to forget the past; that all scandal would be
+obliterated when Madame de Pompadour was seen to belong to the Court in
+an honourable manner; and that it would be the best proof that nothing
+more than friendship now subsisted between the King and the favourite.
+The Queen received her very graciously. The devotees flattered
+themselves they should be protected by Madame, and, for some time, were
+full of her praises. Several of the Dauphin's friends came in private to
+see her, and some obtained promotion. The Chevalier du Muy, however,
+refused to come. The King had the greatest possible contempt for them,
+and granted them nothing with a good grace. He, one day, said of a man
+of great family, who wished to be made Captain of the Guards, "He is a
+double spy, who wants to be paid on both sides." This was the moment at
+which Madame de Pompadour seemed to me to enjoy the most complete
+satisfaction. The devotees came to visit her without scruple, and did
+not forget to make use of every opportunity of serving themselves.
+Madame de Lu----- had set them the example. The Doctor laughed at this
+change in affairs, and was very merry at the expense of the saints.
+"You must allow, however, that they are consistent," said I, "and may be
+sincere." "Yes," said he; "but then they should not ask for anything."
+
+One day, I was at Doctor Quesnay's, whilst Madame de Pompadour was at the
+theatre. The Marquis de Mirabeau
+
+ [The author of "L'Ami des Hommes," one of the leaders of the sect of
+ Economistes, and father of the celebrated Mirabeau. After the death
+ of Quesnay, the Grand Master of the Order, the Marquis de Mirabeau
+ was unanimously elected his successor. Mirabeau was not deficient
+ in a certain enlargement of mind, nor in acquirements, nor even in
+ patriotism; but his writings are enthusiastical, and show that he
+ had little more than glimpses of the truth. The Friend of Man was
+ the enemy of all his family. He beat his servants, and did not pay
+ them. The reports of the lawsuit with his wife, in 1775, prove that
+ this philosopher possessed, in the highest possible degree, all the
+ anti-conjugal qualities. It is said that his eldest son wrote two
+ contradictory depositions, and was paid by both sides.]
+
+came in, and the conversation was, for some time, extremely tedious to
+me, running entirely on 'net produce'; at length, they talked of other
+things.
+
+Mirabeau said, "I think the King looks ill, he grows old."--"So much the
+worse, a thousand times so much the worse," said Quesnay; "it would be
+the greatest possible loss to France if he died;" and he raised his
+hands, and sighed deeply. "I do not doubt that you are attached to the
+King, and with reason," said Mirabeau: "I am attached to him too; but I
+never saw you so much moved."--"Ah!" said Quesnay, "I think of what would
+follow."--"Well, the Dauphin is virtuous."--"Yes; and full of good
+intentions; nor is he deficient in understanding; but canting hypocrites
+would possess an absolute empire over a Prince who regards them as
+oracles. The Jesuits would govern the kingdom, as they did at the end of
+Louis XIV.'s reign: and you would see the fanatical Bishop of Verdun
+Prime Minister, and La Vauguyon all-powerful under some other title.
+The Parliaments must then mind how they behave; they will not be better
+treated than my friends the philosophers."--"But they go too far," said
+Mirabeau; "why openly attack religion?"--"I allow that," replied the
+Doctor; "but how is it possible not to be rendered indignant by the
+fanaticism of others, and by recollecting all the blood that has flowed
+during the last two hundred years? You must not then again irritate
+them, and revive in France the time of Mary in England. But what is done
+is done, and I often exhort them to be moderate; I wish they would follow
+the example of our friend Duclos."--"You are right," replied Mirabeau;
+"he said to me a few days ago, 'These philosophers are going on at such a
+rate that they will force me to go to vespers and high mass;' but, in
+fine, the Dauphin is virtuous, well-informed, and intellectual."--"It is
+the commencement of his reign, I fear," said Quesnay, "when the imprudent
+proceedings of our friends will be represented to him in the most
+unfavourable point of view; when the Jansenists and Molinists will make
+common cause, and be strongly supported by the Dauphine. I thought that
+M. de Muy was moderate, and that he would temper the headlong fury of the
+others; but I heard him say that Voltaire merited condign punishment.
+Be assured, sir, that the times of John Huss and Jerome of Prague will
+return; but I hope not to live to see it. I approve of Voltaire having
+hunted down the Pompignans: were it not for the ridicule with which he
+covered them, that bourgeois Marquis would have been preceptor to the
+young Princes, and, aided by his brother, would have succeeded in again
+lighting the faggots of persecution."--"What ought to give you confidence
+in the Dauphin," said Mirabeau, "is, that, notwithstanding the devotion
+of Pompignan, he turns him into ridicule. A short time back, seeing him
+strutting about with an air of inflated pride, he said to a person, who
+told it to me, 'Our friend Pompignan thinks that he is something.'"
+On returning home, I wrote down this conversation.
+
+I, one day, found Quesnay in great distress. "Mirabeau," said he, "is
+sent to Vincennes, for his work on taxation. The Farmers General have
+denounced him, and procured his arrest; his wife is going to throw
+herself at the feet of Madame de Pompadour to-day." A few minutes
+afterwards, I went into Madame's apartment, to assist at her toilet,
+and the Doctor came in. Madame said to him, "You must be much concerned
+at the disgrace of your friend Mirabeau. I am sorry for it too, for I
+like his brother." Quesnay replied, "I am very far from believing him to
+be actuated by bad intentions, Madame; he loves the King and the people."
+"Yes," said she; "his 'Ami des Hommes' did him great honour." At this
+moment the Lieutenant of Police entered, and Madame said to him, "Have
+you seen M. de Mirabeau's book?"--"Yes, Madame; but it was not I who
+denounced it?"--"What do you think of it?"--"I think he might have said
+almost all it contains with impunity, if he had been more circumspect as
+to the manner; there is, among other objectionable passages, this, which
+occurs at the beginning: Your Majesty has about twenty millions of
+subjects; it is only by means of money that you can obtain their
+services, and there is no money."--"What, is there really that, Doctor?"
+said Madame. "It is true, they are the first lines in the book, and I
+confess that they are imprudent; but, in reading the work, it is clear
+that he laments that patriotism is extinct in the hearts of his fellow-
+citizens, and that he desires to rekindle it." The King entered: we went
+out, and I wrote down on Quesnay's table what I had just heard. I them
+returned to finish dressing Madame de Pompadour: she said to me, "The
+King is extremely angry with Mirabeau; but I tried to soften him, and so
+did the Lieutenant of Police. This will increase Quesnay's fears. Do
+you know what he said to me to-day? The King had been talking to him in
+my room, and the Doctor appeared timid and agitated. After the King was
+gone, I said to him, 'You always seem so embarrassed in the King's
+presence, and yet he is so good-natured.'--'I Madame,' said he, 'I left
+my native village at the age of forty, and I have very little experience
+of the world, nor can I accustom myself to its usages without great
+difficulty. When I am in a room with the King, I say to myself, This is
+a man who can order my head to be cut off; and that idea embarrasses me.'
+--'But do not the King's justice and kindness set you at ease?'--'That is
+very true in reasoning,' said he; 'but the sentiment is more prompt, and
+inspires me with fear before I have time to say to myself all that is
+calculated to allay it.'"
+
+I got her to repeat this conversation, and wrote it down immediately,
+that I might not forget it.
+
+An anonymous letter was addressed to the King and Madame de Pompadour;
+and, as the author was very anxious that it should not miscarry, he sent
+copies to the Lieutenant of Police, sealed and directed to the King, to
+Madame de Pompadour, and to M. de Marigny. This letter produced a strong
+impression on Madame, and on the King, and still more, I believe, on the
+Duc de Choiseul, who had received a similar one. I went on my knees to
+M. de Marigny, to prevail on him to allow me to copy it, that I might
+show it to the Doctor. It is as follows:
+
+ "Sire--It is a zealous servant who writes to Your Majesty. Truth is
+ always better, particularly to Kings; habituated to flattery, they
+ see objects only under those colours most likely to please them. I
+ have reflected, and read much; and here is what my meditations have
+ suggested to me to lay before Your Majesty. They have accustomed
+ you to be invisible, and inspired you with a timidity which prevents
+ you from speaking; thus all direct communication is cut off between
+ the master and his subjects. Shut up in the interior of your
+ palace, you are becoming every day like the Emperors of the East;
+ but see, Sire, their fate! 'I have troops,' Your Majesty will say;
+ such, also, is their support: but, when the only security of a King
+ rests upon his troops; when he is only, as one may say, a King of
+ the soldiers, these latter feel their own strength, and abuse it.
+ Your finances are in the greatest disorder, and the great majority
+ of states have perished through this cause. A patriotic spirit
+ sustained the ancient states, and united all classes for the safety
+ of their country. In the present times, money has taken the place
+ of this spirit; it has become the universal lever, and you are in
+ want of it. A spirit of finance affects every department of the
+ state; it reigns triumphant at Court; all have become venal; and all
+ distinction of rank is broken up. Your Ministers are without genius
+ and capacity since the dismissal of MM. d'Argenson and de Machault.
+ You alone cannot judge of their incapacity, because they lay before
+ you what has been prepared by skilful clerks, but which they pass as
+ their own. They provide only for the necessity of the day, but
+ there is no spirit of government in their acts. The military
+ changes that have taken place disgust the troops, and cause the most
+ deserving officers to resign; a seditious flame has sprung up in the
+ very bosom of the Parliaments; you seek to corrupt them, and the
+ remedy is worse than the disease. It is introducing vice into the
+ sanctuary of justice, and gangrene into the vital parts of the
+ commonwealth. Would a corrupted Parliament have braved the fury of
+ the League, in order to preserve the crown for the legitimate
+ sovereign? Forgetting the maxims of Louis XIV., who well understood
+ the danger of confiding the administration to noblemen, you have
+ chosen M. de Choiseul, and even given him three departments; which
+ is a much heavier burden than that which he would have to support as
+ Prime Minister, because the latter has only to oversee the details
+ executed by the Secretaries of State. The public fully appreciate
+ this dazzling Minister. He is nothing more than a 'petit-maitre',
+ without talents or information, who has a little phosphorus in his
+ mind. There is a thing well worthy of remark, Sire; that is, the
+ open war carried on against religion. Henceforward there can spring
+ up no new sects, because the general belief has been shaken, that no
+ one feels inclined to occupy himself with difference of sentiment
+ upon some of the articles. The Encyclopedists, under pretence of
+ enlightening mankind, are sapping the foundations of religion.
+ All the different kinds of liberty are connected; the Philosophers
+ and the Protestants tend towards republicanism, as well as the
+ Jansenists. The Philosophers strike at the root, the others lop the
+ branches; and their efforts, without being concerted, will one day
+ lay the tree low. Add to these the Economists; whose object is
+ political liberty, as that of the others is liberty of worship,
+ and the Government may find itself, in twenty or thirty years,
+ undermined in every direction, and will then fall with a crash.
+ If Your Majesty, struck by this picture, but too true, should ask me
+ for a remedy, I should say, that it is necessary to bring back the
+ Government to its principles, and, above all, to lose no time in
+ restoring order to the state of the finances, because the
+ embarrassments incident to a country in a state of debt necessitate
+ fresh taxes, which, after grinding the people, induce them towards
+ revolt. It is my opinion that Your Majesty would do well to appear
+ more among your people; to shew your approbation of useful services,
+ and your displeasure of errors and prevarications, and neglect of
+ duty: in a word, to let it be seen that rewards and punishments,
+ appointments and dismissals, proceed from yourself. You will then
+ inspire gratitude by your favours, and fear by your reproaches;
+ you will then be the object of immediate and personal attachment,
+ instead of which, everything is now referred to your Ministers.
+ The confidence in the King, which is habitual to your people,
+ is shewn by the exclamation, so common among them, 'Ah! if the King
+ knew it' They love to believe that the King would remedy all their
+ evils, if he knew of them. But, on the other hand, what sort of
+ ideas must they form of kings, whose duty it is to be informed of
+ everything, and to superintend everything, that concerns the public,
+ but who are, nevertheless, ignorant of everything which the
+ discharge of their functions requires them to know? 'Rex, roi,
+ regere, regar, conduire'--to rule, to conduct--these words
+ sufficiently denote their duties. What would be said of a father
+ who got rid of the charge of his children as of a burthen?
+
+ "A time will come, Sire, when the people shall be enlightened--and
+ that time is probably approaching. Resume the reins of government,
+ hold them with a firm hand, and act, so that it cannot be said of
+ you, 'Faeminas et scorta volvit ammo et haec principatus praemia
+ putat':--Sire, if I see that my sincere advice should have produced
+ any change, I shall continue it, and enter into more details; if
+ not, I shall remain silent."
+
+
+Now that I am upon the subject of anonymous letters to the King, I must
+just mention that it is impossible to conceive how frequent they were.
+People were extremely assiduous in telling either unpleasant truths, or
+alarming lies, with a view to injure others. As an instance, I shall
+transcribe one concerning Voltaire, who paid great court to Madame de
+Pompadour when he was in France. This letter was written long after the
+former.
+
+ "Madame--M. de Voltaire has just dedicated his tragedy of Tancred to
+ you; this ought to be an offering of respect and gratitude; but it
+ is, in fact, an insult, and you will form the same opinion of it as
+ the public has done if you read it with attention. You will see
+ that this distinguished writer appears to betray a consciousness
+ that the subject of his encomiums is not worthy of them, and to
+ endeavour to excuse himself for them to the public. These are his
+ words: 'I have seen your graces and talents unfold themselves from
+ your infancy. At all periods of your life I have received proofs of
+ your uniform and unchanging kindness. If any critic be found to
+ censure the homage I pay you, he must have a heart formed for
+ ingratitude. I am under great obligations to you, Madame, and these
+ obligations it is my duty to proclaim.'
+
+ "What do these words really signify, unless that Voltaire feels it
+ may be thought extraordinary that he should dedicate his work to a
+ woman who possesses but a small share of the public esteem, and that
+ the sentiment of gratitude must plead his excuse? Why should he
+ suppose that the homage he pays you will be censured, whilst we
+ daily see dedications addressed to silly gossips who have neither
+ rank nor celebrity, or to women of exceptional conduct, without any
+ censure being attracted by it?"
+
+M. de Marigny, and Colin, Madame de Pompadour's steward, were of the same
+opinion as Quesnay, that the author of this letter was extremely
+malicious; that he insulted Madame, and tried to injure Voltaire; but
+that he was, in fact, right. Voltaire, from that moment, was entirely
+out of favour with Madame, and with the King, and he certainly never
+discovered the cause.`
+
+The King, who admired everything of the age of Louis XIV., and
+recollected that the Boileaus and Racines had been protected by that
+monarch, who was indebted to them, in part, for the lustre of his reign,
+was flattered at having such a man as Voltaire among his subjects.
+But still he feared him, and had but little esteem for him. He could not
+help saying, "Moreover, I have treated him as well as Louis XIV. treated
+Racine and Boileau. I have given him, as Louis XIV. gave to Racine,
+some pensions, and a place of gentleman in ordinary. It is not my fault
+if he has committed absurdities, and has had the pretension to become a
+chamberlain, to wear an order, and sup with a King. It is not the
+fashion in France; and, as there are here a few more men of wit and
+noblemen than in Prussia, it would require that I should have a very
+large table to assemble them all at it." And then he reckoned upon his
+fingers, Maupertuis, Fontenelle, La Mothe, Voltaire, Piron, Destouches,
+Montesquieu, the Cardinal Polignac. "Your Majesty forgets," said some
+one, "D'Alembert and Clairaut."--"And Crebillon," said he. "And la
+Chaussee, and the younger Crebillon," said some one. "He ought to be
+more agreeable than his father."--"And there are also the Abbes Prevot
+and d'Olivet."--"Pretty well," said the King; "and for the last twenty
+years all that (tout cela) would have dined and supped at my table."
+
+Madame de Pompadour repeated to me this conversation, which I wrote down
+the same evening. M. de Marigny, also, talked to me about it.
+"Voltaire," said he, "has always had a fancy for being Ambassador, and he
+did all he could to make the people believe that he was charged with some
+political mission, the first time he visited Prussia."
+
+The people heard of the attempt on the King's life with transports of
+fury, and with the greatest distress. Their cries were heard under the
+windows of Madame de Pompadour's apartment. Mobs were collected, and
+Madame feared the fate of Madame de Chateauroux. Her friends came in,
+every minute, to give her intelligence. Her room was, at all times, like
+a church; everybody seemed to claim a right to go in and out when he
+chose. Some came, under pretence of sympathising, to observe her
+countenance and manner. She did nothing but weep and faint away. Doctor
+Quesnay never left her, nor did I. M. de St. Florentin came to see her
+several times, so did the Comptroller-General, and M. Rouilld; but M. de
+Machault did not come. The Duchesse de Brancas came very frequently.
+The Abbe de Bernis never left us, except to go to enquire for the King.
+The tears came in his eyes whenever he looked at Madame. Doctor Quesnay
+saw the King five or six times a day. "There is nothing to fear," said
+he to Madame. "If it were anybody else, he might go to a ball." My son
+went the next day, as he had done the day the event occurred, to see what
+was going on at the Castle. He told us, on his return, that the Keeper
+of the Seals was with the King. I sent him back, to see what course he
+took on leaving the King. He came running back in half an hour, to tell
+me that the Keeper of the Seals had gone to his own house, followed by a
+crowd of people. When I told this to Madame, she burst into tears, and
+said, "Is that a friend?" The Abbe de Bernis said, "You must not judge
+him hastily, in such a moment as this." I returned into the drawing-room
+about an hour after, when the Keeper of the Seals entered. He passed me,
+with his usual cold and severe look. "How is Madame de Pompadour?" said
+he. "Alas!" replied I, "as you may imagine!" He passed on to her
+closet. Everybody retired, and he remained for half an hour. The Abbe
+returned and Madame rang. I went into her room, the Abbe following me.
+She was in tears. "I must go, my dear Abbe," said she. I made her take
+some orange-flower water, in a silver goblet, for her teeth chattered.
+She then told me to call her equerry. He came in, and she calmly gave
+him her orders, to have everything prepared at her hotel, in Paris; to
+tell all her people to get ready to go; and to desire her coachman not to
+be out of the way. She then shut herself up, to confer with the Abbe de
+Bernis, who left her, to go to the Council. Her door was then shut,
+except to the ladies with whom she was particularly intimate, M. de
+Soubise, M. de Gontaut, the Ministers, and some others. Several ladies,
+in the greatest distress, came to talk to me in my room: they compared
+the conduct of M. de Machault with that of M. de Richelieu, at Metz.
+Madame had related to them the circumstances extremely to the honour of
+the Duke, and, by contrast, the severest satire on the Keeper of the
+Seals. "He thinks, or pretends to think," said she, "that the priests
+will be clamorous for my dismissal; but Quesnay and all the physicians
+declare that there is not the slightest danger." Madame having sent for
+me, I saw the Marechale de Mirepoix coming in. While she was at the
+door, she cried out, "What are all those trunks, Madame? Your people
+tell me you are going."--"Alas! my dear friend, such is our Master's
+desire, as M. de Machault tells me."--"And what does he advise?" said
+the Marechale. "That I should go without delay." During this
+conversation, I was undressing Madame, who wished to be at her ease on
+her chaise-longue. "Your Beeper of the Seals wants to get the power into
+his own hands, and betrays you; he who quits the field loses it." I went
+out. M. de Soubise entered, then the Abbe and M. de Marigny. The
+latter, who was very kind to me, came into my room an hour afterwards.
+I was alone. "She will remain," said he; "but, hush!--she will make an
+appearance of going, in order not to set her enemies at work. It is the
+little Marechale who prevailed upon her to stay: her keeper (so she
+called M. de Machault) will pay for it." Quesnay came in, and, having
+heard what was said, with his monkey airs, began to relate a fable of a
+fox, who, being at dinner with other beasts, persuaded one of them that
+his enemies were seeking him, in order that he might get possession of
+his share in his absence. I did not see Madame again till very late, at
+her going to bed. She was more calm. Things improved, from day to day,
+and de Machault, the faithless friend, was dismissed. The King returned
+to Madame de Pompadour, as usual. I learnt, by M. de Marigny, that the
+Abbe had been, one day, with M. d'Argenson, to endeavour to persuade him
+to live on friendly terms with Madame, and that he had been very coldly
+received. "He is the more arrogant," said he, "on account of Machault's
+dismissal, which leaves the field clear for him, who has more experience,
+and more talent; and I fear that he will, therefore, be disposed to
+declare war till death." The next day, Madame having ordered her chaise,
+I was curious to know where she was going, for she went out but little,
+except to church, and to the houses of the Ministers. I was told that
+she was gone to visit M. d'Argenson. She returned in an hour, at
+farthest, and seemed very much out of spirits. She leaned on the
+chimneypiece, with her eyes fixed on the border of it. M. de Bernis
+entered. I waited for her to take off her cloak and gloves. She had her
+hands in her muff. The Abbe stood looking at her for some minutes; at
+last he said, "You look like a sheep in a reflecting mood." She awoke
+from her reverie, and, throwing her muff on the easy-chair, replied,
+"It is a wolf who makes the sheep reflect." I went out: the King entered
+shortly after, and I heard Madame de Pompadour sobbing. The Abbe came
+into my room, and told me to bring some Hoffman's drops: the King himself
+mixed the draught with sugar, and presented it to her in the kindest
+manner possible. She smiled, and kissed the King's hands. I left the
+room. Two days after, very early in the morning, I heard of M.
+d'Argenson's exile. It was her doing, and was, indeed, the strongest
+proof of her influence that could be given. The King was much attached
+to M. d'Argenson, and the war, then carrying on, both by sea and land,
+rendered the dismissal of two such Ministers extremely imprudent. This
+was the universal opinion at the time.
+
+Many people talk of the letter of the Comte d'Argenson to Madame
+d'Esparbes. I give it, according to the most correct version:
+
+ "The doubtful is, at length, decided. The Keeper of the Seals is
+ dismissed. You will be recalled, my dear Countess, and we shall be
+ masters of the field."
+
+It is much less generally known that Arboulin, whom Madame calls Bou-bou,
+was supposed to be the person who, on the very day of the dismissal of
+the Keeper of the Seals, bribed the Count's confidential courier, who
+gave him this letter. Is this report founded on truth? I cannot swear
+that it is; but it is asserted that the letter is written in the Count's
+style. Besides, who could so immediately have invented it? It, however,
+appeared certain, from the extreme displeasure of the King, that he had
+some other subject of complaint against M. d'Argenson, besides his
+refusing to be reconciled with Madame. Nobody dares to show the
+slightest attachment to the disgraced Minister. I asked the ladies who
+were most intimate with Madame de Pompadour, as well as my own friends,
+what they knew of the matter; but they knew nothing. I can understand
+why Madame did not let them into her confidence at that moment. She will
+be less reserved in time. I care very little about it, since I see that
+she is well, and appears happy.
+
+The King said a thing, which did him honour, to a person whose name
+Madame withheld from me. A nobleman, who had been a most assiduous
+courtier of the Count, said, rubbing his hands with an air of great joy,
+"I have just seen the Comte d'Argenson's baggage set out." When the King
+heard him, he went up to Madame, shrugged his shoulders, and said, "And
+immediately the cock crew."
+
+"I believe this is taken from Scripture, where Peter denies Our Lord. I
+confess, this circumstance gave me great pleasure. It showed that the
+King is not the dupe of those around him, and that he hates treachery and
+ingratitude."
+
+
+
+
+ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+A liar ought to have a good memory
+Because he is fat, he is thought dull and heavy
+Danger of confiding the administration to noblemen
+Do not repulse him in his fond moments
+He who quits the field loses it
+Money the universal lever, and you are in want of it
+Offering you the spectacle of my miseries
+Sentiment is more prompt, and inspires me with fear
+Sworn that she had thought of nothing but you all her life
+To despise money, is to despise happiness, liberty...
+We look upon you as a cat, or a dog, and go on talking
+When the only security of a King rests upon his troops
+You tell me bad news: having packed up, I had rather go
+
+
+
+
+End of this Project Gutenberg Etext Memoirs of Louis XV., and XVI., v1
+by Madame du Hausset, and an unknown English girl and Princess Lamballe
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MEMOIRS OF LOUIS XV. AND XVI.
+
+Being Secret Memoirs of Madame du Hausset, Lady's Maid to Madame
+de Pompadour, and of an unknown English Girl and the Princess Lamballe
+
+
+
+BOOK 2.
+
+
+Madame sent for me yesterday evening, at seven o'clock, to read something
+to her; the ladies who were intimate with her were at Paris, and M. de
+Gontaut ill. "The King," said she, "will stay late at the Council this
+evening; they are occupied with the affairs of the Parliament again."
+She bade me leave off reading, and I was going to quit the room, but she
+called out, "Stop." She rose; a letter was brought in for her, and she
+took it with an air of impatience and ill-humour. After a considerable
+time she began to talk openly, which only happened when she was extremely
+vexed; and, as none of her confidential friends were at hand, she said to
+me, "This is from my brother. It is what he would not have dared to say
+to me, so he writes. I had arranged a marriage for him with the daughter
+of a man of title; he appeared to be well inclined to it, and I,
+therefore, pledged my word. He now tells me that he has made inquiries;
+that the parents are people of insupportable hauteur; that the daughter
+is very badly educated; and that he knows, from authority not to be
+doubted, that when she heard this marriage discussed, she spoke of the
+connection with the most supreme contempt; that he is certain of this
+fact; and that I was still more contemptuously spoken of than himself.
+In a word, he begs me to break off the treaty. But he has let me go too
+far; and now he will make these people my irreconcilable enemies. This
+has been put in his head by some of his flatterers; they do not wish him
+to change his way of living; and very few of them would be received by
+his wife." I tried to soften Madame, and, though I did not venture to
+tell her so, I thought her brother right. She persisted in saying these
+were lies, and, on the following Sunday, treated her brother very coldly.
+He said nothing to me at that time; if he had, he would have embarrassed
+me greatly. Madame atoned for everything by procuring favours, which
+were the means of facilitating the young lady's marriage with a gentleman
+of the Court. Her conduct, two months after marriage, compelled Madame
+to confess that her brother had been perfectly right.
+
+I saw my friend, Madame du Chiron. "Why," said she, "is the Marquise so
+violent an enemy to the Jesuits? I assure you she is wrong. All
+powerful as she is, she may find herself the worse for their enmity."
+I replied that I knew nothing about the matter. "It is, however,
+unquestionably a fact; and she does not feel that a word more or less
+might decide her fate."--"How do you mean?" said I. "Well, I will
+explain myself fully," said she. "You know what took place at the time
+the King was stabbed: an attempt was made to get her out of the Castle
+instantly. The Jesuits have no other object than the salvation of their
+penitents; but they are men, and hatred may, without their being aware of
+it, influence their minds, and inspire them with a greater degree of
+severity than circumstances absolutely demand. Favour and partiality
+may, on the other hand, induce the confessor to make great concessions;
+and the shortest interval may suffice to save a favourite, especially if
+any decent pretext can be found for prolonging her stay at Court." I
+agreed with her in all she said, but I told her that I dared not touch
+that string. On reflecting on this conversation afterwards, I was
+forcibly struck with this fresh proof of the intrigues of the Jesuits,
+which, indeed, I knew well already. I thought that, in spite of what I
+had replied to Madame du Chiron, I ought to communicate this to Madame de
+Pompadour, for the ease of my conscience; but that I would abstain from
+making any reflection upon it. "Your friend, Madame du Chiron," said
+she, "is, I perceive, affiliated to the Jesuits, and what she says does
+not originate with herself. She is commissioned by some reverend father,
+and I will know by whom." Spies were, accordingly, set to watch her
+movements, and they discovered that one Father de Saci, and, still more
+particularly, one Father Frey, guided this lady's conduct. "What a
+pity," said Madame to me, "that the Abbe Chauvelin cannot know this."
+He was the most formidable enemy of the reverend fathers. Madame du
+Chiron always looked upon me as a Jansenist, because I would not espouse
+the interests of the good fathers with as much warmth as she did.
+
+Madame is completely absorbed in the Abbe de Bernis, whom she thinks
+capable of anything; she talks of him incessantly. Apropos, of this
+Abbe, I must relate an anecdote, which almost makes one believe in
+conjurors. A year, or fifteen months, before her disgrace, Madame de
+Pompadour, being at Fontainebleau, sat down to write at a desk, over
+which hung a portrait of the King. While she was, shutting the desk,
+after she had finished writing, the picture fell, and struck her
+violently on the head.. The persons who saw the accident were alarmed,
+and sent for Dr. Quesnay. He asked the circumstances of the case, and
+ordered bleeding and anodynes. Just, as she had been bled, Madame de
+Brancas entered,, and saw us all in confusion and agitation, and Madame
+lying on her chaise-longue. She asked what was the matter, and was told.
+After having expressed her regret, and having consoled her, she said,
+"I ask it as a favour of Madame, and of the King (who had just come in),
+that they will instantly send a courier to the Abbe de Bernis, and that
+the Marquise will have the goodness to write a letter, merely requesting
+him to inform her what his fortune-tellers told him, and to withhold
+nothing from the fear of making her uneasy." The thing was, done as she
+desired, and she then told us that La Bontemps had predicted, from the
+dregs in the, coffee-cup, in which she read everything, that the, head of
+her best friend was in danger, but that no fatal consequences would
+ensue.
+
+The next day, the Abbe wrote word that Madame Bontemps also said to him,
+"You came into the world almost black," and that this was the fact. This
+colour, which lasted for some time, was attributed to a picture which
+hung at the foot of his, mother's bed, and which she often looked at. It
+represented a Moor bringing to Cleopatra a basket of flowers, containing
+the asp by whose bite she destroyed herself. He said that she also told
+him, "You have a great deal of money about you, but it does not belong to
+you;" and that he had actually in his pocket two hundred Louis for the
+Duc de La Valliere. Lastly, he informed us that she said, looking in the
+cup, "I see one of your friends--the best--a distinguished lady,
+threatened with an accident;" that he confessed that, in spite of all his
+philosophy, he turned pale; that she remarked this, looked again into the
+cup, and continued, "Her head will be slightly in danger, but of this no
+appearance will remain half an hour afterwards." It was impossible to
+doubt the facts. They appeared so surprising to the King, that he
+desired some inquiry to be made concerning the fortune-teller. Madame,
+however, protected her from the pursuit of the Police.
+
+A man, who was quite as astonishing as this fortune-teller, often visited
+Madame de Pompadour. This was the Comte de St. Germain, who wished to
+have it believed that he had lived several centuries.
+
+
+ [St. Germain was an adept--a worthy predecessor of Cagliostro, who
+ expected to live five hundred years. The Count de St. Germain
+ pretended to have already lived two thousand, and, according to him,
+ the account was still running. He went so far as to claim the power
+ of transmitting the gift of long life. One day, calling upon his
+ servant to, bear witness to a fact that went pretty far back, the
+ man replied, "I have no recollection of it, sir; you forget that I
+ have only had the honour of serving you for five hundred years."
+
+ St. Germain, like all other charlatans of this sort, assumed a
+ theatrical magnificence, and an air of science calculated to deceive
+ the vulgar. His best instrument of deception was the
+ phantasmagoria; and as, by means of this abuse of the science of
+ optics, he called up shades which were asked for, and almost always
+ recognised, his correspondence with the other world was a thing
+ proved by the concurrent testimony of numerous witnesses.
+
+ He played the same game in London, Venice, and Holland, but he
+ constantly regretted Paris, where his miracles were never
+ questioned.
+
+ St. Germain passed his latter days at the Court of the Prince of
+ Hesse Cassel, and died at Plewig, in 1784, in the midst of his
+ enthusiastic disciples, and to their infinite astonishment at his
+ sharing the common destiny.]
+
+One day, at her toilet, Madame said to him, in my presence, "What was the
+personal appearance of Francis I.? He was a King I should have liked."
+--"He was, indeed, very captivating," said St. Germain; and he proceeded
+to describe his face and person as one does that of a man one has
+accurately observed. "It is a pity he was too ardent. I could have
+given him some good advice, which would have saved him from all his
+misfortunes; but he would not have followed it; for it seems as if a
+fatality attended Princes, forcing them to shut their ears, those of the
+mind, at least, to the best advice, and especially in the most critical
+moments."--"And the Constable," said Madame, "what do you say of him?"--
+"I cannot say much good or much harm of him," replied he. "Was the Court
+of Francis I. very brilliant?"--"Very brilliant; but those of his
+grandsons infinitely surpassed it. In the time of Mary Stuart and
+Margaret of Valois it was a land of enchantment--a temple, sacred to
+pleasures of every kind; those of the mind were not neglected. The two
+Queens were learned, wrote verses, and spoke with captivating grace and
+eloquence." Madame said, laughing, "You seem to have seen all this."--
+"I have an excellent memory," said he, "and have read the history of
+France with great care. I sometimes amuse myself, not by making, but by
+letting it be believed that I lived in old times."--"You do not tell me
+your age, however, and you give yourself out for very old. The Comtesse
+de Gergy, who was Ambassadress to Venice, I think, fifty years ago, says
+she knew you there exactly what you are now."--"It is true, Madame, that
+I have known Madame de Gergy a long time."--"But, according to what she
+says, you would be more than a hundred"--"That is not impossible," said
+he, laughing; "but it is, I allow, still more possible that Madame de
+Gergy, for whom I have the greatest respect, may be in her dotage."--
+"You have given her an elixir, the effect of which is surprising.
+She declares that for a long time she has felt as if she was only four-
+and-twenty years of age; why don't you give some to the King?"--
+"Ah! Madame," said he, with a sort of terror, "I must be mad to think of
+giving the King an unknown drug." I went into my room to write down this
+conversation. Some days afterwards, the King, Madame de Pompadour, some
+Lords of the Court, and the Comte de St. Germain, were talking about his
+secret for causing the spots in diamonds to disappear. The King ordered
+a diamond of middling size, which had a spot, to be brought. It was
+weighed; and the King said to the Count, "It is valued at two hundred and
+forty louis; but it would be worth four hundred if it had no spot. Will
+you try to put a hundred and sixty louis into my pocket?" He examined it
+carefully, and said, "It may be done; and I will bring it you again in a
+month." At the time appointed, the Count brought back the diamond
+without a spot, and gave it to the King. It was wrapped in a cloth of
+amianthus, which he took off. The King had it weighed, and found it but
+very little diminished. The King sent it to his jeweller by M. de
+Gontaut, without telling him anything of what had passed. The jeweller
+gave three hundred and eighty louis for it. The King, however, sent for
+it back again, and kept it as a curiosity. He could not overcome his
+surprise, and said that M. de St. Germain must be worth millions,
+especially if he had also the secret of making large diamonds out of a
+number of small ones. He neither said that he had, nor that he had not;
+but he positively asserted that he could make pearls grow, and give them
+the finest water. The King, paid him great attention, and so did Madame
+de Pompadour. It was from her I learnt what I have just related.
+M. Queanay said, talking of the pearls, "They are produced by a disease
+in the oyster. It is possible to know the cause of it; but, be that as
+it may, he is not the less a quack, since he pretends to have the elixir
+vitae, and to have lived several centuries. Our master is, however,
+infatuated by him, and sometimes talks of him as if his descent were
+illustrious."
+
+I have seen him frequently: he appeared to be about fifty; he was neither
+fat nor thin; he had an acute, intelligent look, dressed very simply, but
+in good taste; he wore very fine diamonds in his rings, watch, and snuff-
+bog. He came, one day, to visit Madame de Pompadour, at a time when the
+Court was in full splendour, with knee and shoe-buckles of diamonds so
+fine and brilliant that Madame said she did not believe the King had any
+equal to them. He went into the antechamber to take them off, and
+brought them to be examined; they were compared with others in the room,
+and the Duc de Gontaut, who was present, said they were worth at least
+eight thousand louis. He wore, at the same time, a snuff-box of
+inestimable value, and ruby sleeve-buttons, which were perfectly
+dazzling. Nobody could find out by what means this man became so rich
+and so remarkable; but the King would not suffer him to be spoken of with
+ridicule or contempt. He was said to be a bastard son of the King of
+Portugal.
+
+I learnt, from M. de Marigny, that the relations of the good little
+Marechale (de Mirepoix) had been extremely severe upon her, for what they
+called the baseness of her conduct, with regard to Madame de Pompadour.
+They said she held the stones of the cherries which Madame ate in her
+carriage, in her beautiful little hands, and that she sate in the front
+of the carriage, while Madame occupied the whole seat in the inside. The
+truth was, that, in going to Crecy, on an insupportably hot day, they
+both wished to sit alone, that they might be cooler; and as to the matter
+of the cherries, the villagers having brought them some, they ate them to
+refresh themselves, while the horses were changed; and the Marechal
+emptied her pocket-handkerchief, into which they had both thrown the
+cherry-stones, out of the carriage window. The people who were changing
+the horses had given their own version of the affair.
+
+I had, as you know, a very pretty room at Madame's hotel, whither I
+generally went privately. I had, one day, had visits from two or three
+Paris representatives, who told me news; and Madame, having sent for me,
+I went to her, and found her with M. de Gontaut. I could not help
+instantly saying to her, "You must be much pleased, Madame, at the noble
+action of the Marquis de ------." Madame replied, drily, "Hold your
+tongue, and listen to what I have to say to you." I returned to my
+little room, where I found the Comtesse d'Amblimont, to whom I mentioned
+Madame's reception of me. "I know what is the matter," said she; "it has
+no relation to you. I will explain it to you. The Marquis de -------
+has told all Paris, that, some days ago, going home at night, alone, and
+on foot, he heard cries in a street called Ferou, which is dark, and, in
+great part, arched over; that he drew his sword, and went down the
+street, in which he saw, by the light of a lamp, a very handsome woman,
+to whom some ruffians were offering violence; that he approached, and
+that the woman cried out, 'Save me! save me!' that he rushed upon the
+wretches, two of whom fought him, sword in hand, whilst a third held the
+woman, and tried to stop her mouth; that he wounded one in the arm; and
+that the ruffians, hearing people pass at the end of the street, and
+fearing they might come to his assistance, fled; that he went up to the
+lady, who told him that they were not robbers, but villains, one of whom
+was desperately in love with her; and that the lady knew not how to
+express her gratitude; that she had begged him not to follow her, after
+he had conducted her to a fiacre; that she would not tell him her name,
+but that she insisted on his accepting a little ring, as a token of
+remembrance; and that she promised to see him again, and to tell him her
+whole history, if he gave her his address; that he complied with this
+request of the lady, whom he represented as a charming person, and who,
+in the overflowing of her gratitude, embraced him several times. This is
+all very fine, so far," said Madame d'Amblimont, "but hear the rest. The
+Marquis de exhibited himself everywhere the next day, with a black ribbon
+bound round his arm, near the wrist, in which part he said he had
+received a wound. He related his story to everybody, and everybody
+commented upon it after his own fashion. He went to dine with the
+Dauphin, who spoke to him of his bravery, and of his fair unknown, and
+told him that he had already complimented the Duc de C---- on the affair.
+I forgot to tell you," continued Madame d'Amblimont, "that, on the very
+night of the adventure, he called on Madame d'Estillac, an old gambler,
+whose house is open till four in the morning; that everybody there was
+surprised at the disordered state in which he appeared; that his bagwig
+had fallen off, one skirt of his coat was cut, and his right hand
+bleeding. That they instantly bound it up, and gave him some Rota wine.
+Four days ago, the Duc de C---- supped with the King, and sat near M. de
+St. Florentin. He talked to him of his relation's adventure, and asked
+him if he had made any inquiries concerning the lady. M. de St.
+Florentin coldly answered, 'No!' and M. de C---- remarked, on asking him
+some further questions, that he kept his eyes firmed on his plate,
+looking embarrassed, and answered in monosyllables. He asked him the
+reason of this, upon which M. de Florentin told him that it was extremely
+distressing to him to see him under such a mistake. 'How can you know
+that, supposing it to be the fact?' said M. de ------, 'Nothing is more
+easy to prove,' replied M. de St. Florentin. 'You may imagine that, as
+soon as I was informed of the Marquis de ------'s adventure, I set on
+foot inquiries, the result of which was, that, on the night when this
+affair was said to have taken place, a party of the watch was set in
+ambuscade in this very street, for the purpose of catching a thief who
+was coming out of the gaming house; that this party was there four hours,
+and heard not the slightest noise.' M. de C was greatly incensed at this
+recital, which M. de St. Florentin ought, indeed, to have communicated to
+the King. He has ordered, or will order, his relation to retire to his
+province.
+
+"After this, you will judge, my dear, whether you were very likely to be
+graciously received when you went open-mouthed with your compliment to
+the Marquise. This adventure," continued she, "reminded the King of one
+which occurred about fifteen years ago. The Comte d'E----, who was what
+is called 'enfant d'honneur' to the Dauphin, and about fourteen years of
+age, came into the Dauphin's apartments, one evening, with his bag-wig
+snatched off, and his ruffles torn, and said that, having walked rather
+late near the piece of water des Suisses, he had been attacked by two
+robbers; that he had refused to give them anything, drawn his sword, and
+put himself in an attitude of defence; that one of the robbers was armed
+with a sword, the other with a large stick, from which he had received
+several blows, but that he had wounded one in the arm, and that, hearing
+a noise at that moment, they had fled. But unluckily for the little
+Count, it was known that people were on the spot at the precise time he
+mentioned, and had heard nothing. The Count was pardoned, on account of
+his youth. The Dauphin made him confess the truth, and it was looked
+upon as a childish freak to set people talking about him."
+
+The King disliked the King of Prussia because he knew that the latter was
+in the habit of jesting upon his mistress, and the kind of life he led.
+It was Frederick's fault, as I have heard it said, that the King was not
+his most steadfast ally and friend, as much as sovereigns can be towards
+each other; but the jestings of Frederick had stung him, and made him
+conclude the treaty of Versailles. One day, he entered Madame's
+apartment with a paper in his hand, and said, "The King of Prussia is
+certainly a great man; he loves men of talent, and, like Louis XIV., he
+wishes to make Europe ring with his favours towards foreign savans.
+There is a letter from him, addressed to Milord Marshal,
+
+ [George Keith, better known under the name of Milord Marshal, was
+ the eldest son of William Keith, Earl Marshal of Scotland. He was
+ an avowed partisan of the Stuarts, and did not lay down the arms he
+ had taken up in their cause until it became utterly desperate, and
+ drew upon its defenders useless dangers. When they were driven from
+ their country, he renounced it, and took up his residence
+ successively in France, Prussia, Spain, and Italy. The delicious
+ country and climate of Valencia he preferred above any other.
+
+ Milord Marshal died in the month of May, 1778. It was he who said
+ to Madame Geoffrin, speaking of his brother, who was field-marshal
+ in the Prussian service, and died on the field of honour, "My
+ brother leaves me the most glorious inheritance" (he had just laid
+ the whole of Bohemia under contribution); "his property does not
+ amount to seventy ducats." A eulogium on Milord Marshal, by
+ D'Alembert, is extant. It is the most cruelly mangled of all his
+ works, by Linguet]
+
+ordering him to acquaint a 'superieur' man of my kingdom (D'Alembert)
+that he has granted him a pension;" and, looking at the letter, he read
+the following words: "You must know that there is in Paris a man of the
+greatest merit, whose fortune is not proportionate to his talents and
+character. I may serve as eyes to the blind goddess, and repair in some
+measure the injustice, and I beg you to offer on that account. I flatter
+myself that he will accept this pension because of the pleasure I shall
+feel in obliging a man who joins beauty of character to the most sublime
+intellectual talents." The King here stopped, on seeing MM. de Ayen and
+de Gontaut enter, and then recommenced reading the letter to them, and
+added, "It was given me by the Minister for Foreign Affairs, to whom it
+was confided by Milord Marshal, for the purpose of obtaining my
+permission for this sublime genius to accept the favour. But," said the
+King, "what do you think is the amount?" Some said six, eight, ten
+thousand livres. "You have not guessed," said the King; "it is twelve
+hundred livres."--"For sublime talents," said the Duc d'Ayen, "it is not
+much. But the philosophers will make Europe resound with this letter,
+and the King of Prussia will have the pleasure of making a great noise at
+little expense."
+
+The Chevalier de Courten,--[The Chevalier de Courten was a Swiss, and a
+man of talent.]--who had been in Prussia, came in, and, hearing this
+story told, said, "I have seen what is much better than that: passing
+through a village in Prussia, I got out at the posthouse, while I was
+waiting for horses; and the postmaster, who was a captain in the Prussian
+service, showed me several letters in Frederick's handwriting, addressed
+to his uncle, who was a man of rank, promising him to provide for his
+nephews; the provision he made for this, the eldest of these nephews, who
+was dreadfully wounded, was the postmastership which he then held." M.
+de Marigny related this story at Quesnay's, and added, that the man of
+genius above mentioned was D'Alembert, and that the King had permitted
+him to accept the pension. He added, that his sister had suggested to
+the King that he had better give D'Alembert a pension of twice the value,
+and forbid him to take the King of Prussia's. This advice he would not
+take, because he looked upon D'Alembert as an infidel. M. de Marigny
+took a copy of the letter, which he lent me.
+
+A certain nobleman, at one time, affected to cast tender glances on
+Madame Adelaide. She was wholly unconscious of it; but, as there are
+Arguses at Court, the King was, of course, told of it, and, indeed, he
+thought he had perceived it himself. I know that he came into Madame de
+Pompadour's room one day, in a great passion, and said, "Would you
+believe that there is a man in my Court insolent enough to dare to raise
+his eyes to one of my daughters?" Madame had never seen him so
+exasperated, and this illustrious nobleman was advised to feign a
+necessity for visiting his estates. He remained there two months.
+Madame told me, long after, that she thought that there were no tortures
+to which the King would not have condemned any man who had seduced one of
+his daughters. Madame Adelaide, at the time in question, was a charming
+person, and united infinite grace, and much talent, to a most agreeable
+face.
+
+A courier brought Madame de Pompadour a letter, on reading which she
+burst into tears. It contained the intelligence of the battle of
+Rosbach, which M. de Soubise sent her, with all the details. I heard her
+say to the Marechal de Belle-Isle, wiping her eyes, "M. de Soubise is
+inconsolable; he does not try to excuse his conduct, he sees nothing but
+the disastrous fortune which pursues him."--"M. de Soubise must, however,
+have many things to urge in his own behalf," said M. de Belle-Isle, "and
+so I told the King."--"It is very noble in you, Marshal, not to suffer an
+unfortunate man to be overwhelmed; the public are furious against him,
+and what has he done to deserve it?"--"There is not a more honourable nor
+a kinder man in the world. I only fulfil my duty in doing justice to the
+truth, and to a man for whom I have the most profound esteem. The King
+will explain to you, Madame, how M. de Soubise was forced to give battle
+by the Prince of Sage-Hildbourgshausen, whose troops fled first, and
+carried along the French troops." Madame would have embraced the old
+Marshal if she had dared, she was so delighted with him.
+
+M. de Soubise, having gained a battle, was made Marshal of France: Madame
+was enchanted with her friend's success. But, either it was unimportant,
+or the public were offended at his promotion; nobody talked of it but
+Madame's friends. This unpopularity was concealed from her, and she said
+to Colin, her steward, at her toilet, "Are you not delighted at the
+victory M. de Soubise has gained? What does the public say of it? He
+has taken his revenge well." Colin was embarrassed, and knew not what to
+answer. As she pressed him further, he replied that he had been ill, and
+had seen nobody for a week.
+
+M. de Marigny came to see me one day, very much out of humour. I asked
+him the cause. "I have," said he, "just been intreating my sister not to
+make M. le Normand-de-Mezi Minister of the Marine. I told her that she
+was heaping coals of fire upon her own head. A favourite ought not to
+multiply the points of attack upon herself." The Doctor entered. "You,"
+said the Doctor, "are worth your weight in gold, for the good sense and
+capacity you have shewn in your office, and for your moderation, but you
+will never be appreciated as you deserve; your advice is excellent; there
+will never be a ship taken but Madame will be held responsible for it to
+the public, and you are very wise not to think of being in the Ministry
+yourself."
+
+One day, when I was at Paris, I went to dine with the Doctor, who
+happened to be there at the same time; there were, contrary to his usual
+custom, a good many people, and, among others, a handsome young Master of
+the Requests, who took a title from some place, the name of which I have
+forgotten, but who was a son of M. Turgot, the 'prevot des marchands'.
+They talked a great deal about administration, which was not very amusing
+to me; they then fell upon the subject of the love Frenchmen bear to
+their Kings. M. Turgot here joined in the conversation, and said, "This
+is not a blind attachment; it is a deeply rooted sentiment, arising from
+an indistinct recollection of great benefits. The French nation--I may
+go farther--Europe, and all mankind, owe to a King of France" (I have
+forgotten his name)--[Phillip the Long]-- "whatever liberty they enjoy.
+He established communes, and conferred on an immense number of men a
+civil existence. I am aware that it may be said, with justice, that he
+served his own interests by granting these franchises; that the cities
+paid him taxes, and that his design was to use them as instruments of
+weakening the power of great nobles; but what does that prove, but that
+this measure was at once useful, politic, and humane?" From Kings in
+general the conversation turned upon Louis XV., and M. Turgot remarked
+that his reign would be always celebrated for the advancement of the
+sciences, the progress of knowledge, and of philosophy. He added that
+Louis XV. was deficient in the quality which Louis XIV. possessed to
+excess; that is to say, in a good opinion of himself; that he was well-
+informed; that nobody was more perfectly master of the topography of
+France; that his opinion in the Council was always the most judicious;
+and that it was much to be lamented that he had not more confidence in
+himself, or that he did not rely upon some Minister who enjoyed the
+confidence of the nation. Everybody agreed with him. I begged M.
+Quesnay to write down what young Turgot had said, and showed it to
+Madame. She praised this Master of the Requests greatly, and spoke of
+him to the King. "It is a good breed," said he.
+
+One day, I went out to walk, and saw, on my return, a great many people
+going and coming, and speaking to each other privately: it was evident
+that something extraordinary had happened. I asked a person of my
+acquaintance what was the matter. "Alas!" said he, with tears in his
+eyes, "some assassins, who had formed the project of murdering the King,
+have inflicted several wounds on a garde-du-corps, who overheard them in
+a dark corridor; he is carried to the hospital: and as he has described
+the colour of these men's coats, the Police are in quest of them in all
+directions, and some people, dressed in clothes of that colour, are
+already arrested." I saw Madame with M. de Gontaut, and I hastened home.
+She found her door besieged by a multitude of people, and was alarmed:
+when she got in, she found the Comte de Noailles. "What is all this,
+Count?" said she. He said he was come expressly to speak to her, and
+they retired to her closet together. The conference was not long. I had
+remained in the drawing-room, with Madame's equerry, the Chevalier de
+Solent, Gourbillon, her valet de chambre, and some strangers. A great
+many details were related; but, the wounds being little more than
+scratches, and the garde-du-corps having let fall some contradictions, it
+was thought that he was an impostor, who had invented all this story to
+bring himself into favour. Before the night was over, this was proved to
+be the fact, and, I believe, from his own confession. The King came,
+that evening, to see Madame de Pompadour; he spoke of this occurrence
+with great sang froid, and said, "The gentleman who wanted to kill me was
+a wicked madman; this is a low scoundrel."
+
+When he spoke of Damiens, which was only while his trial lasted, he never
+called him anything but that gentleman.
+
+I have heard it said that he proposed having him shut up in a dungeon for
+life; but that the horrible nature of the crime made the judges insist
+upon his suffering all the tortures inflicted upon like occasions. Great
+numbers, many of them women, had a barbarous curiosity to witness the
+execution; amongst others, Madame de P------, a very beautiful woman,
+and the wife of a Farmer General. She hired two places at a window for
+twelve Louis, and played a game of cards in the room whilst waiting for
+the execution to begin. On this being told to the King, he covered his
+eyes with his hands and exclaimed, "Fi, la Vilaine!" I have been told
+that she, and others, thought to pay their court in this way, and
+signalise their attachment to the King's person.
+
+Two things were related to me by M. Duclos at the time of the attempt on
+the King's life.
+
+The first, relative to the Comte de Sponheim, who was the Duc de Deux-
+Ponts, and next in succession to the Palatinate and Electorate of
+Bavaria. He was thought to be a great friend to the King, and had made
+several long sojourns in France. He came frequently to see Madame.
+M. Duclos told us that the Duc de Deux-Ponts, having learned, at Deux-
+Ponts, the attempt on the King's life, immediately set out in a carriage
+for Versailles: "But remark," said he, "the spirit of 'courtisanerie' of
+a Prince, who may be Elector of Bavaria and the Palatinate tomorrow.
+This was not enough. When he arrived within ten leagues of Paris, he put
+on an enormous pair of jack-boots, mounted a post-horse, and arrived in
+the court of the palace cracking his whip. If this had been real
+impatience, and not charlatanism, he would have taken horse twenty
+leagues from Paris."--"I don't agree with you," said a gentleman whom I
+did not know; "impatience sometimes seizes one towards the end of an
+undertaking, and one employs the readiest means then in one's power.
+Besides, the Duc de Deux-Ponts might wish, by showing himself thus on
+horseback, to serve the King, to whom he is attached, by proving to
+Frenchmen how greatly he is beloved and honoured in other countries."
+Duclos resumed: "Well," said he, "do you know the story of M. de C-----?
+The first day the King saw company, after the attempt of Damiens, M. de
+C----- pushed so vigorously through the crowd that he was one of the
+first to come into the King's presence, but he had on so shabby a black
+coat that it caught the King's attention, who burst out laughing, and
+said, 'Look at C-----, he has had the skirt of his coat torn off.' M. de
+C----- looked as if he was only then first conscious of his loss, and
+said, 'Sire, there is such a multitude hurrying to see Your Majesty, that
+I was obliged to fight my way through them, and, in the effort, my coat
+has been torn.'--'Fortunately it was not worth much,' said the Marquis de
+Souvre, 'and you could not have chosen a worse one to sacrifice on the
+occasion.'"
+
+Madame de Pompadour had been very judiciously advised to get her husband,
+M. le Normand, sent to Constantinople, as Ambassador. This would have a
+little diminished the scandal caused by seeing Madame de Pompadour, with
+the title of Marquise, at Court, and her husband Farmer General at Paris.
+But he was so attached to a Paris life, and to his opera habits, that he
+could not be prevailed upon to go. Madame employed a certain
+M. d'Arboulin, with whom she had been acquainted before she was at Court,
+to negotiate this affair. He applied to a Mademoiselle Rem, who had been
+an opera-dancer, and who was M. le Normand's mistress. She made him very
+fine promises; but she was like him, and preferred a Paris life. She
+would do nothing in it.
+
+At the time that plays were acted in the little apartments, I obtained a
+lieutenancy for one of my relations, by a singular means, which proves
+the value the greatest people set upon the slightest access to the Court.
+Madame did not like to ask anything of M. d'Argenson, and, being pressed
+by my family, who could not imagine that, situated as I was, it could be
+difficult for me to obtain a command for a good soldier, I determined to
+go and ask the Comte d'Argenson. I made my request, and presented my
+memorial. He received me coldly, and gave me vague answers. I went out,
+and the Marquis de V-----, who was in his closet, followed me. "You wish
+to obtain a command," said he; "there is one vacant, which is promised me
+for one of my proteges; but if you will do me a favour in return, or
+obtain one for me, I will give it to you. I want to be a police officer,
+and you have it in your power to get me a place." I told him I did not
+understand the purport of his jest. "I will tell you," said he;
+"Tartuffe is going to be acted in the cabinets, and there is the part of
+a police officer, which only consists of a few lines. Prevail upon
+Madame de Pompadour to assign me that part, and the command is yours."
+I promised nothing, but I related the history to Madame, who said she
+would arrange it for me. The thing was done, and I obtained the command,
+and the Marquis de V----- thanked Madame as if she had made him a Duke.
+
+The King was often annoyed by the Parliaments, and said a very remarkable
+thing concerning them, which M. de Gontaut repeated to Doctor Quesnay in
+my presence. "Yesterday," said he, "the King walked up and down the room
+with an anxious air. Madame de Pompadour asked him if he was uneasy
+about his health, as he had been, for some time, rather unwell. 'No,'
+replied he; I but I am greatly annoyed by all these remonstrances.'--
+'What can come of them,' said she, 'that need seriously disquiet Your
+Majesty? Are you not master of the Parliaments, as well as of all the
+rest of the kingdom?'--'That is true,' said the King; 'but, if it had not
+been for these counsellors and presidents, I should never have been
+stabbed by that gentleman' (he always called Damiens so). 'Ah! Sire,'
+cried Madame de Pompadour. 'Read the trial,' said he. 'It was the
+language of those gentlemen he names which turned his head.'--'But,' said
+Madame, 'I have often thought that, if the Archbishop--[M. de Beaumont]--
+could be sent to Rome--'--'Find anybody who will accomplish that
+business, and I will give him whatever he pleases.'" Quesnay said the
+King was right in all he had uttered. The Archbishop was exiled shortly
+after, and the King was seriously afflicted at being driven to take such
+a step. "What a pity," he often said, "that so excellent a man should be
+so obstinate."--"And so shallow," said somebody, one day. "Hold your
+tongue," replied the King, somewhat sternly. The Archbishop was very
+charitable, and liberal to excess, but he often granted pensions without
+discernment.
+
+ [The following is a specimen of the advantages taken of his natural
+ kindness. Madame la Caille, who acted the Duennas at the Opera
+ Comique, was recommended to him as the mother of a family, who
+ deserved his protection, The worthy prelate asked what he could do
+ for her. Monseigneur," said the actress, "two words from your hand
+ to the Duc de Richelieu would induce him to grant me a demi-part."
+ M. de Beaumont, who was very little acquainted with the language of
+ the theatre, thought that a demi-part meant a more liberal portion
+ of the Marshal's alms, and the note was written in the most pressing
+ manner. The Marshal answered, that he thanked the Archbishop for
+ the interest he took in the Theatre Italien, and in Madame la
+ Caille, who was a very useful person at that theatre; that,
+ nevertheless, she had a bad voice; but that the recommendation of
+ the Archbishop was to be preferred to the greatest talents, and that
+ the demi-part was granted."]
+
+He granted one of an hundred louis to a pretty woman, who was very poor,
+and who assumed an illustrious name, to which she had no right. The fear
+lest she should be plunged into vice led him to bestow such excessive
+bounty upon her; and the woman was an admirable dissembler. She went to
+the Archbishop's, covered with a great hood, and, when she left him, she
+amused herself with a variety of lovers.
+
+Great people have the bad habit of talking very indiscreetly before their
+servants. M. de Gontaut once said these words, covertly, as he thought,
+to the Duc de ------, "That measures had been taken which would,
+probably, have the effect of determining the Archbishop to go to Rome,
+with a Cardinal's hat; and that, if he desired it, he was to have a
+coadjutor."
+
+A very plausible pretext had been found for making this proposition, and
+for rendering it flattering to the Archbishop, and agreeable to his
+sentiments. The affair had been very adroitly begun, and success
+appeared certain. The King had the air, towards the Archbishop, of
+entire unconsciousness of what was going on. The negotiator acted as if
+he were only following the suggestions of his own mind, for the general
+good. He was a friend of the Archbishop, and was very sure of a liberal
+reward. A valet of the Duc de Gontaut, a very handsome young fellow, had
+perfectly caught the sense of what was spoken in a mysterious manner.
+He was one of the lovers of the lady of the hundred Louis a year, and had
+heard her talk of the Archbishop, whose relation she pretended to be. He
+thought he should secure her good graces by informing her that great
+efforts were being made to induce her patron to reside at Rome, with a
+view to get him away from Paris. The lady instantly told the Archbishop,
+as she was afraid of losing her pension if he went. The information
+squared so well with the negotiation then on foot, that the Archbishop
+had no doubt of its truth. He cooled, by degrees, in his conversations
+with the negotiator, whom he regarded as a traitor, and ended by breaking
+with him. These details were not known till long afterwards. The lover
+of the lady having been sent to the Bicetre, some letters were found
+among his papers, which gave a scent of the affair, and he was made to
+confess the rest.
+
+In order not to compromise the Duc de Gontaut, the King was told that the
+valet had come to a knowledge of the business from a letter which he had
+found in his master's clothes. The King took his revenge by humiliating
+the Archbishop, which he was enabled to do by means of the information he
+had obtained concerning the conduct of the lady, his protege. She was
+found guilty of swindling, in concert with her beloved valet; but, before
+her punishment was inflicted, the Lieutenant of Police was ordered to lay
+before Monseigneur a full account of the conduct of his relation and
+pensioner. The Archbishop had nothing to object to in the proofs which
+were submitted to him; he said, with perfect calmness, that she was not
+his relation; and, raising his hands to heaven, "She is an unhappy
+wretch," said he, "who has robbed me of the money which was destined for
+the poor. But God knows that, in giving her so large a pension, I did
+not act lightly. I had, at that time, before my eyes the example of a
+young woman who once asked me to grant her seventy louis a year,
+promising me that she would always live very virtuously, as she had
+hitherto done. I refused her, and she said, on leaving me, 'I must turn
+to the left, Monseigneur, since the way on the right is closed against
+me: The unhappy creature has kept her word but too well. She found means
+of establishing a faro-table at her house, which is tolerated; and she
+joins to the most profligate conduct in her own person the infamous trade
+of a corrupter of youth; her house is the abode of every vice. Think,
+sir, after that, whether it was not an act of prudence, on my part, to
+grant the woman in question a pension, suitable to the rank in which I
+thought her born, to prevent her abusing the gifts of youth, beauty, and
+talents, which she possessed, to her own perdition, and the destruction
+of others." The Lieutenant of Police told the King that he was touched
+with the candour and the noble simplicity of the prelate. "I never
+doubted his virtues," replied the King, "but I wish he would be quiet."
+This same Archbishop gave a pension of fifty louis a year to the greatest
+scoundrel in Paris. He is a poet, who writes abominable verses; this
+pension is granted on condition that his poems are never printed. I
+learned this fact from M. de Marigny, to whom he recited some of his
+horrible verses one evening, when he supped with him, in company with
+some people of quality. He chinked the money in his pocket. "This is my
+good Archbishop's," said he, laughing; "I keep my word with him: my poem
+will not be printed during my life, but I read it. What would the good
+prelate say if he knew that I shared my last quarter's allowance with a
+charming little opera-dancer? 'It is the Archbishop, then, who keeps
+me,' said she to me; 'Oh, la! how droll that is!'" The King heard this,
+and was much scandalised at it. "How difficult it is to do good!" said
+he.
+
+The King came into Madame de Pompadour's room, one day, as she was
+finishing dressing. "I have just had a strange adventure," said he:
+"would you believe that, in going out of my wardroom into my bedroom, I
+met a gentleman face to face?"--"My God! Sire," cried Madame, terrified.
+"It was nothing," replied he; "but I confess I was greatly surprised: the
+man appeared speechless with consternation. 'What do you do here?' said
+I, civilly. He threw himself on his knees, saying, 'Pardon me, Sire;
+and, above all, have me searched: He instantly emptied his pockets
+himself; he pulled off his coat in the greatest agitation and terror: at
+last he told me that he was cook to -----, and a friend of Beccari, whom
+he came to visit; that he had mistaken the staircase, and, finding all
+the doors open, he had wandered into the room in which I found him, and
+which he would have instantly left: I rang; Guimard came, and was
+astonished enough at finding me tete-a-tete with a man in his shirt. He
+begged Guimard to go with him into another room, and to search his whole
+person. After this, the poor devil returned, and put on his coat.
+Guimard said to me, 'He is certainly an honest man, and tells the truth;
+this may, besides, be easily ascertained.' Another of the servants of
+the palace came in, and happened to know him. 'I will answer for this
+good man,' said, he, 'who, moreover, makes the best 'boeuf a carlate' in
+the world.' As I saw the man was so agitated that he could not stand
+steady, I took fifty louis out of my bureau, and said, Here, sir, are
+fifty Louis, to quiet your alarms: He went out, after throwing himself at
+my feet." Madame exclaimed on the impropriety of having the King's
+bedroom thus accessible to everybody. He talked with great calmness of
+this strange apparition, but it was evident that he controlled himself,
+and that he had, in fact, been much frightened, as, indeed, he had reason
+to be. Madame highly approved of the gift; and she was the more right in
+applauding it, as it was by no means in the King's usual manner. M. de
+Marigny said, when I told him of this adventure, that he would have
+wagered a thousand louis against the King's making a present of fifty,
+if anybody but I had told him of the circumstance. "It is a singular
+fact," continued he, "that all of the race of Valois have been liberal to
+excess; this is not precisely the case with the Bourbons, who are rather
+reproached with avarice. Henri IV. was said to be avaricious. He gave
+to his mistresses, because he could refuse them nothing; but he played
+with the eagerness of a man whose whole fortune depends on the game.
+Louis XIV. gave through ostentation. It is most astonishing," added he,
+"to reflect on what might have happened. The King might actually have
+been assassinated in his chamber, without anybody knowing anything of the
+matter and without a possibility of discovering the murderer." For more
+than a fortnight Madame could not get over this incident.
+
+About that time she had a quarrel with her brother, and both were in the
+right. Proposals were made to him to marry the daughter of one of the
+greatest noblemen of the Court, and the King consented to create him a
+Duke, and even to make the title hereditary. Madame was right in wishing
+to aggrandise her brother, but he declared that he valued his liberty
+above all things, and that he would not sacrifice it except for a person
+he really loved. He was a true Epicurean philosopher, and a man of great
+capacity, according to the report of those who knew him well, and judged
+him impartially. It was entirely at his option to have had the reversion
+of M. de St. Florentin's place, and the place of Minister of Marine, when
+M. de Machault retired; he said to his sister, at the time, "I spare you
+many vexations, by depriving you of a slight satisfaction. The people
+would be unjust to me, however well I might fulfil the duties of my
+office. As to M. de St. Florentin's place, he may live five-and-twenty
+years, so that I should not be the better for it. Kings' mistresses are
+hated enough on their own account; they need not also draw upon,
+themselves the hatred which is directed against Ministers." M. Quesnay
+repeated this conversation to me.
+
+The King had another mistress, who gave Madame de Pompadour some
+uneasiness. She was a woman of quality, and the wife of one of the most
+assiduous courtiers.
+
+A man in immediate attendance on the King's person, and who had the care
+of his clothes, came to me one day, and told me that, as he was very much
+attached to Madame, because she was good and useful to the King, he
+wished to inform me that, a letter having fallen out of the pocket of a
+coat which His Majesty had taken off, he had had the curiosity to read
+it, and found it to be from the Comtesse de ----- who had already yielded
+to the King's desires. In this letter, she required the King to give her
+fifty thousand crowns in money, a regiment for one of her relations, and
+a bishopric for another, and to dismiss Madame in the space of fifteen
+days, etc. I acquainted Madame with what this man told me, and she acted
+with singular greatness of mind. She said to me, "I ought to inform the
+King of this breach of trust of his servant, who may, by the same means,
+come to the knowledge of, and make a bad use of, important secrets; but I
+feel a repugnance to ruin the man: however, I cannot permit him to remain
+near the King's person, and here is what I shall do: Tell him that there
+is a place of ten thousand francs a year vacant in one of the provinces;
+let him solicit the Minister of Finance for it, and it shall be granted
+to him; but, if he should ever disclose through what interest he has
+obtained it, the King shall be made acquainted with his conduct. By this
+means, I think I shall have done all that my attachment and duty
+prescribe. I rid the King of a faithless domestic, without ruining the
+individual." I did as Madame ordered me: her delicacy and address
+inspired me with admiration. She was not alarmed on account of the lady,
+seeing what her pretentions were. "She drives too quick," remarked
+Madame, "and will certainly be overturned on the road." The lady died.
+
+"See what the Court is; all is corruption there, from the highest to the
+lowest," said I to Madame, one day, when she was speaking to me of some
+facts, that had come to my knowledge. "I could tell you many others,"
+replied Madame; "but the little chamber, where you often remain, must
+furnish you with a sufficient number." This was a little nook, from,
+whence I could hear a great part of what passed in Madame's apartment.
+The Lieutenant of Police sometimes came secretly to this apartment, and
+waited there. Three or four persons, of high consideration, also found
+their way in, in a mysterious, manner, and several devotees, who were, in
+their hearts, enemies of Madame de Pompadour. But these men had not
+petty objects in view: one: required the government of a province;
+another, a seat in the Council; a third, a Captaincy of the, Guards; and
+this man would have obtained it if the Marechale de Mirepoix had not
+requested it for her brother, the Prince de Beauvan. The Chevalier du
+Muy was not among these apostates; not even the promise of being High
+Constable would have tempted him to make up to Madame, still less to
+betray his master, the Dauphin. This Prince was, to the last degree,
+weary of the station he held. Sometimes, when teased to death by
+ambitious people, who pretended to be Catos, or wonderfully devout, he
+took part against a Minister against whom he was prepossessed; then
+relapsed into his accustomed state of inactivity and ennui.
+
+The King used to say, "My son is lazy; his temper is Polonese--hasty and
+changeable; he has no tastes; he cares nothing for hunting, for women, or
+for good living; perhaps he imagines that if he were in my place he would
+be happy; at first, he would make great changes, create everything anew,
+as it were. In a short time he would be as tired of the rank of King as
+he now is of his own; he is only fit to live 'en philosophe', with clever
+people about him." The King added, "He loves what is right; he is truly
+virtuous, and does not want under standing." `
+
+M. de St. Germain said, one day, to the King, "To think well of mankind,
+one must be neither a Confessor, nor a Minister, nor a Lieutenant of
+Police."--"Nor a King," said His Majesty. "Ah! Sire," replied he, "you
+remember the fog we had a few days ago, when we could not see four steps
+before us. Kings are commonly surrounded by still thicker fogs,
+collected around them by men of intriguing character, and faithless
+Ministers--all, of every class, unite in endeavouring to make things
+appear to Kings in any, light but the true one." I heard this from the
+mouth of the famous Comte de St. Germain, as I was attending upon Madame,
+who was ill in bed. The King was there; and the Count, who was a welcome
+visitor, had been admitted. There were also present, M. de Gontaut,
+Madame de Brancas, and the Abbe de Bernis. I remember that the very same
+day, after the Count was gone out, the King talked in a style which gave
+Madame great pain. Speaking of the King of Prussia, he said, "That is a
+madman, who will risk all to gain all, and may, perhaps, win the game,
+though he has neither religion, morals, nor principles. He wants to make
+a noise in the world, and he will succeed. Julian, the Apostate, did the
+same."--"I never saw the King so animated before," observed Madame, when
+he was gone out; "and really the comparison with Julian, the Apostate, is
+not amiss, considering the irreligion of the King of Prussia. If he gets
+out of his perplexities, surrounded as he is by his enemies, he will be
+one of the greatest men in history."
+
+M. de Bernis remarked, "Madame is correct in her judgment, for she has no
+reason to pronounce his praises; nor have I, though I agree with what she
+says." Madame de Pompadour never enjoyed so much influence as at the
+time when M. de Choiseul became one of the Ministry. From the time of
+the Abbe de Bernis she had afforded him her constant support, and he had
+been employed in foreign affairs, of which he was said to know but
+little. Madame made the Treaty of Sienna, though the first idea of it
+was certainly furnished her by the Abbe. I have been informed by several
+persons that the King often talked to Madame upon this subject; for my
+own part, I never heard any conversation relative to it, except the high
+praises bestowed by her on the Empress and the Prince de Kaunitz,
+whom she had known a good deal of. She said that he had a clear head,
+the head of a statesman. One day, when she was talking in this strain,
+some one tried to cast ridicule upon the Prince on account of the style
+in which he wore his hair, and the four valets de chambre, who made the
+hair-powder fly in all directions, while Kaunitz ran about that he might
+only catch the superfine part of it. "Aye," said Madame, "just as
+Alcibiades cut off his dog's tail in order to give the Athenians
+something to talk about, and to turn their attention from those things he
+wished to conceal."
+
+Never was the public mind so inflamed against Madame de Pompadour as when
+news arrived of the battle of Rosbach. Every day she received anonymous
+letters, full of the grossest abuse; atrocious verses, threats of poison
+and assassination. She continued long a prey to the most acute sorrow,
+and could get no sleep but from opiates. All this discontent was excited
+by her protecting the Prince of Soubise; and the Lieutenant of Police had
+great difficulty in allaying the ferment of the people. The King
+affirmed that it was not his fault. M. du Verney was the confidant of
+Madame in everything relating to war; a subject which he well understood,
+though not a military man by, profession. The old Marechal de Noailles
+called him, in derision, the General of the flour, but Marechal Saxe,
+one day, told Madame that Du Verney knew more of military matters than
+the old Marshal. Du Verney once paid a visit to Madame de Pompadour,
+and found her in company with the King, the Minister of War, and two
+Marshals; he submitted to them the plan of a campaign, which was
+generally applauded. It was through his influence that M. de Richelieu
+was appointed to the command of the army, instead of the Marechal
+d'Estrdes. He came to Quesnay two days after, when I was with him.
+The Doctor began talking about the art of war, and I remember he said,
+"Military men make a great mystery of their art; but what is the reason
+that young Princes have always the most brilliant success? Why, because
+they are active and daring. When Sovereigns command their troops in
+person what exploits they perform! Clearly, because they are at liberty
+to run all risks." These observations made a lasting impression on my
+mind.
+
+The first physician came, one day, to see Madame he was talking of madmen
+and madness. The King was present, and everything relating to disease of
+any kind interested him. The first physician said that he could
+distinguish the symptoms of approaching madness six months beforehand.
+"Are there any persons about the Court likely to become mad?" said the
+King.--"I know one who will be imbecile in less than three months,"
+replied he. The King pressed him to tell the name. He excused himself
+for some time. At last he said, "It is M. de Sechelles, the Controller-
+General."--"You have a spite against him," said Madame, "because he would
+not grant what you asked"--"That is true," said he, "but though that
+might possibly incline me to tell a disagreeable truth, it would not make
+me invent one. He is losing his intellects from debility. He affects
+gallantry at his age, and I perceive the connection in his ideas is
+becoming feeble and irregular."--The King laughed; but three months
+afterwards he came to Madame, saying, "Sechelles gives evident proofs of
+dotage in the Council. We must appoint a successor to him." Madame de
+Pompadour told me of this on the way to Choisy. Some time afterwards,
+the first physician came to see Madame, and spoke to her in private.
+"You are attached to M. Berryer, Madame," said he, "and I am sorry to
+have to warn you that he will be attacked by madness, or by catalepsy,
+before long. I saw him this morning at chapel, sitting on one of those
+very low little chairs, which are only, meant to kneel upon. His knees
+touched his chin. I went to his house after Mass; his eyes were wild,
+and when his secretary spoke to him, he said, 'Hold your tongue, pen. A
+pen's business is to write, and not to speak.'" Madame, who liked the
+Keeper of the Seals, was very much concerned, and begged the first
+physician not to mention what he had perceived. Four days after this,
+M. Berryer was seized with catalepsy, after having talked incoherently.
+This is a disease which I did not know even by name, and got it written
+down for me. The patient remains in precisely the same position in which
+the fit seizes him; one leg or arm elevated, the eyes wide open, or just
+as it may happen. This latter affair was known to all the Court at the
+death of the Keeper of the Seals.
+
+When the Marechal de Belle-Isle's son was killed in battle, Madame
+persuaded the King to pay his father a visit. He was rather reluctant,
+and Madame said to him, with an air half angry, half playful:
+
+ --------"Barbare! don't l'orgueil
+ Croit le sang d'un sujet trop pays d'un coup d'oeil."
+
+The King laughed, and said, "Whose fine verses are those?"--"Voltaire's,"
+said Madame ------.
+
+"As barbarous as I am, I gave him the place of gentleman in ordinary, and
+a pension," said the King.
+
+The King went in state to call on the Marshal, followed by all the Court;
+and it certainly appeared that this solemn visit consoled the Marshal for
+the loss of his son, the sole heir to his name.
+
+When the Marshal died, he was carried to his house on a common hand-
+barrow, covered with a shabby cloth. I met the body. The bearers were
+laughing and singing. I thought it was some servant, and asked who it
+was. How great was my surprise at learning that these were the remains
+of a man abounding in honours and in riches. Such is the Court; the dead
+are always in fault, and cannot be put out of sight too soon.
+
+The King said, "M. Fouquet is dead, I hear."--"He was no longer Fouquet,"
+replied the Duc d'Ayen; "Your Majesty had permitted him to change that
+name, under which, however, he acquired all his reputation." The King
+shrugged his shoulders. His Majesty had, in fact, granted him letters
+patent, permitting him not to sign Fouquet during his Ministry. I heard
+this on the occasion in question. M. de Choiseul had the war department
+at his death. He was every day more and more in favour.
+
+Madame treated him with greater distinction than any previous Minister,
+and his manners towards her were the most agreeable it is possible to
+conceive, at once respectful and gallant. He never passed a day without
+seeing her. M. de Marigny could not endure M. de Choiseul, but he never
+spoke of him, except to his intimate friends. Calling, one day, at
+Quesnay's, I found him there. They were talking of M. de Choiseul. "He
+is a mere 'petit maitre'," said the Doctor, "and, if he were handsome
+just fit to be one of Henri the Third's favourites." The Marquis de
+Mirabeau and M. de La Riviere came in. "This kingdom," said Mirabeau,
+"is in a deplorable state. There is neither national energy, nor the
+only substitute for it--money."--"It can only be regenerated," said La
+Riviere, "by a conquest, like that of China, or by some great internal
+convulsion; but woe to those who live to see that! The French people do
+not do things by halves." These words made me tremble, and I hastened
+out of the room. M. de Marigny did the same, though without appearing at
+all affected by what had been said. "You heard De La Riviere," said he,
+--"but don't be alarmed, the conversations that pass at the Doctor's are
+never repeated; these are honourable men, though rather chimerical.
+They know not where to stop. I think, however, they are in the right
+way; only, unfortunately, they go too far." I wrote this down
+immediately.
+
+The Comte de St. Germain came to see Madame de Pompadour, who was ill,
+and lay on the sofa. He shewed her a little box, containing topazes,
+rubies, and emeralds. He appeared to have enough to furnish a treasury.
+Madame sent for me to see all these beautiful things. I looked at them
+with an air of the utmost astonishment, but I made signs to Madame that I
+thought them all false. The Count felt for something in his pocketbook,
+about twice as large as a spectacle-case, and, at length, drew out two or
+three little paper packets, which he unfolded, and exhibited a superb
+ruby. He threw on the table, with a contemptuous air, a little cross of
+green and white stones. I looked at it and said, "That is not to be
+despised." I put it on, and admired it greatly. The Count begged me to
+accept it. I refused--he urged me to take it. Madame then refused it
+for me. At length, he pressed it upon me so warmly that Madame, seeing
+that it could not be worth above forty Louis, made me a sign to accept
+it. I took the cross, much pleased at the Count's politeness; and, some
+days after, Madame presented him with an enamelled box, upon which was
+the portrait of some Grecian sage (whose name I don't recollect), to whom
+she compared him. I skewed the cross to a jeweller, who valued it at
+sixty-five Louis. The Count offered to bring Madame some enamel
+portraits, by Petitot, to look at, and she told him to bring them after
+dinner, while the King was hunting. He shewed his portraits, after which
+Madame said to him, "I have heard a great deal of a charming story you
+told two days ago, at supper, at M. le Premier's, of an occurrence you
+witnessed fifty or sixty years ago." He smiled and said, "It is rather
+long."--"So much the better," said she, with an air of delight. Madame
+de Gontaut and the ladies came in, and the door was shut; Madame made a
+sign to me to sit down behind the screen. The Count made many apologies
+for the ennui which his story would, perhaps, occasion. He said,
+"Sometimes one can tell a story pretty well; at other times it is quite a
+different thing."
+
+"At the beginning of this century, the Marquis de St. Gilles was
+Ambassador from Spain to the Hague. In his youth he had been
+particularly intimate with the Count of Moncade, a grandee of Spain,
+and one of the richest nobles of that country. Some months after the
+Marquis's arrival at the Hague, he received a letter from the Count,
+entreating him, in the name of their former friendship, to render him the
+greatest possible service. 'You know,' said he, 'my dear Marquis, the
+mortification I felt that the name of Moncade was likely to expire with
+me. At length, it pleased heaven to hear my prayers, and to grant me a
+son: he gave early promise of dispositions worthy of his birth, but he,
+some time since, formed an unfortunate and disgraceful attachment to the
+most celebrated actress of the company of Toledo. I shut my eyes to this
+imprudence on the part of a young man whose conduct had, till then,
+caused me unmingled satisfaction. But, having learnt that he was so
+blinded by passion as to intend to marry this girl, and that he had even
+bound himself by a written promise to that effect, I solicited the King
+to have her placed in confinement. My son, having got information of the
+steps I had taken, defeated my intentions by escaping with the object of
+his passion. For more than six months I have vainly endeavoured to
+discover where he has concealed himself, but I have now some reason to
+think he is at the Hague. The Count earnestly conjured the Marquis to
+make the most rigid search, in order to discover his son's retreat, and
+to endeavour to prevail upon him to return to his home. 'It is an act of
+justice,' continued he, 'to provide for the, girl, if she consents to
+give up the written promise of marriage which she has received, and I
+leave it to your discretion to do what is right for her, as well as to
+determine the sum necessary to bring my son to Madrid in a manner
+suitable to his condition. I know not,' concluded he, 'whether you are a
+father; if you are, you will be able to sympathise in my anxieties.'
+The Count subjoined to this letter an exact description of his son, and
+the young woman by whom he was accompanied.
+
+"On the receipt of this letter, the Marquis lost not a moment in sending
+to all the inns in Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and the Hague, but in vain--he
+could find no trace of them. He began to despair of success, when the
+idea struck him that a young French page of his, remarkable for his
+quickness and intelligence, might be employed with advantage. He
+promised to reward him handsomely if he succeeded in finding the young
+woman, who was the cause of so much anxiety, and gave him the description
+of her person. The page visited all the public places for many days,
+without success; at length, one evening, at the play, he saw a young man
+and woman, in a box, who attracted his attention. When he saw that they,
+perceived he was looking at them, and withdrew to the back of the box to
+avoid his observation, he felt confident that they were the objects of
+his search. He did not take his eyes from the bog, and watched every
+movement in it. The instant the performance ended, he was in the passage
+leading from the boxes to the door, and he remarked that the young man,
+who, doubtless, observed the dress he wore, tried to conceal himself, as
+he passed him, by putting his handkerchief before his face. He followed
+him, at a distance, to the inn called the Vicomte de Turenne, which he
+saw him and the woman enter; and, being now certain of success, he ran to
+inform the Ambassador. The Marquis de St. Gilles immediately repaired to
+the inn, wrapped in a cloak, and followed by his page and two servants.
+He desired the landlord to show him to the room of a young man and woman,
+who had lodged for some time in his house. The landlord, for some time,
+refused to do so, unless the Marquis would give their name. The page
+told him to take notice that he was speaking to the Spanish Ambassador,
+who had strong reasons for wishing to see the persons in question. The
+innkeeper said they wished not to be known, and that they had absolutely
+forbidden him to admit anybody into their apartment who did not ask for
+them by name; but that, since the Ambassador desired it, he would show
+him their room. He then conducted them up to a dirty, miserable garret.
+He knocked at the door, and waited for some time; he then knocked again
+pretty, loudly, upon which the door was half-opened. At the sight of the
+Ambassador and his suite, the person who opened it immediately closed it
+again, exclaiming that they, had made a mistake. The Ambassador pushed
+hard against him, forced his way, in, made a sign to his people to wait
+outside, and remained in the room. He saw before him a very handsome
+young man, whose appearance perfectly, corresponded with the description,
+and a young woman, of great beauty, and remarkably fine person, whose
+countenance, form, colour of the hair, etc., were also precisely those
+described by the Count of Moncade. The young man spoke first. He
+complained of the violence used in breaking into the apartment of a
+stranger, living in a free country, and under the protection of its laws.
+The Ambassador stepped forward to embrace him, and said, 'It is useless
+to feign, my dear Count; I know you, and I do not come here--to give pain
+to you or to this lady, whose appearance interests me extremely.' The
+young man replied that he was totally mistaken; that he was not a Count,
+but the son of a merchant of Cadiz; that the lady was his wife; and, that
+they were travelling for pleasure. The Ambassador, casting his eyes
+round the miserably furnished room, which contained but one bed, and some
+packages of the shabbiest kind, lying in disorder about the room, 'Is
+this, my dear child (allow me to address you by a title which is
+warranted by my tender regard for your father), is this a fit residence
+for the son of the Count of Moncade?' The young man still protested
+against the use of any such language, as addressed to him. At length,
+overcome by the entreaties of the Ambassador, he confessed, weeping, that
+he was the son of the Count of Moncade, but declared that nothing should
+induce him to return to his father, if he must abandon a woman he adored.
+The young woman burst into tears, and threw herself at the feet of the
+Ambassador, telling him that she would not be the cause of the ruin of
+the young Count; and that generosity, or rather, love, would enable her
+to disregard her own happiness, and, for his sake, to separate herself
+from him. The Ambassador admired her noble disinterestedness. The young
+man, on the contrary, received her declaration with the most desperate
+grief. He reproached his mistress, and declared that he would never
+abandon so estimable a creature, nor suffer the sublime generosity of her
+heart to be turned against herself. The Ambassador told him that the
+Count of Moncade was far from wishing to render her miserable, and that
+he was commissioned to provide her with a sum sufficient to enable her to
+return into Spain, or to live where she liked. Her noble sentiments, and
+genuine tenderness, he said, inspired him with the greatest interest for
+her, and would induce him to go to the utmost limits of his powers, in
+the sum he was to give her; that he, therefore, promised her ten thousand
+florins, that is to say, about twelve hundred Louis, which would be given
+her the moment she surrendered the promise of marriage she had received,
+and the Count of Moncade took up his abode in the Ambassador's house,
+and promised to return to Spain. The young woman seemed perfectly
+indifferent to the sum proposed, and wholly absorbed in her lover, and in
+the grief of leaving him. She seemed insensible to everything but the
+cruel sacrifice which her reason, and her love itself, demanded. At
+length, drawing from a little portfolio the promise of marriage, signed
+by the Count, 'I know his heart too well,' said she, 'to need it.' Then
+she kissed it again and again, with a sort of transport, and delivered it
+to the Ambassador, who stood by, astonished at the grandeur of soul he
+witnessed. He promised her that he would never cease to take the
+liveliest interest in her fate, and assured the Count of his father's
+forgiveness. 'He will receive with open arms,' said he, 'the prodigal
+son, returning to the bosom of his distressed family; the heart of a
+father is an exhaustless mine of tenderness. How great will be the
+felicity of my friend on the receipt of these tidings, after his long
+anxiety and affliction; how happy do I esteem myself, at being the
+instrument of that felicity?' Such was, in part, the language of the
+Ambassador, which appeared to produce a strong impression on the young
+man. But, fearing lest, during the night, love should regain all his
+power, and should triumph over the generous resolution of the lady, the
+Marquis pressed the young Count to accompany him to his hotel. The
+tears, the cries of anguish, which marked this cruel separation, cannot
+be described; they deeply touched the heart of the Ambassador, who
+promised to watch over the young lady. The Count's little baggage was
+not difficult to remove, and, that very evening, he was installed in the
+finest apartment of the Ambassador's house. The Marquis was overjoyed at
+having restored to the illustrious house of Moncade the heir of its
+greatness, and of its magnificent domains. On the following morning, as
+soon as the young Count was up, he found tailors, dealers in cloth, lace,
+stuffs, etc., out of which he had only to choose. Two valets de chambre,
+and three laquais, chosen by the Ambassador for their intelligence and
+good conduct, were in waiting in his antechamber, and presented
+themselves, to receive his orders. The Ambassador shewed the young Count
+the letter he had just written to his father, in which he congratulated
+him on possessing a son whose noble sentiments and striking qualities
+were worthy of his illustrious blood, and announced his speedy return.
+The young lady was not forgotten; he confessed that to her generosity he
+was partly indebted for the submission of her lover, and expressed his
+conviction that the Count would not disapprove the gift he had made her,
+of ten thousand florins. That sum was remitted, on the same day, to this
+noble and interesting girl, who left the Hague without delay. The
+preparations for the Count's journey were made; a splendid wardrobe and
+an excellent carriage were embarked at Rotterdam, in a ship bound for
+France, on board which a passage was secured for the Count, who was to
+proceed from that country to Spain. A considerable sum of money, and
+letters of credit on Paris, were given him at his departure; and the
+parting between the Ambassador and the young Count was most touching.
+The Marquis de St. Gilles awaited with impatience the Count's answer, and
+enjoyed his friend's delight by anticipation. At the expiration of four
+months, he received this long-expected letter. It would be utterly
+impossible to describe his surprise on reading the following words,
+'Heaven, my dear Marquis, never granted me the happiness of becoming a
+father, and, in the midst of abundant wealth and honours, the grief of
+having no heirs, and seeing an illustrious race end in my person, has
+shed the greatest bitterness over my whole existence. I see, with
+extreme regret, that you have been imposed upon by a young adventurer,
+who has taken advantage of the knowledge he had, by some means, obtained,
+of our old friendship. But your Excellency must not be the sufferer.
+The Count of Moncade is, most assuredly, the person whom you wished to
+serve; he is bound to repay what your generous friendship hastened to
+advance, in order to procure him a happiness which he would have felt
+most deeply. I hope, therefore, Marquis, that your Excellency will have
+no hesitation in accepting the remittance contained in this letter, of
+three thousand Louis of France, of the disbursal of which you sent me an
+account.'"
+
+The manner in which the Comte de St. Germain spoke, in the characters of
+the young adventurer, his mistress, and the Ambassador, made his audience
+weep and laugh by turns. The story is true in every particular, and the
+adventurer surpasses Gusman d'Alfarache in address, according to the
+report of some persons present. Madame de Pompadour thought of having a
+play written, founded on this story; and the Count sent it to her in
+writing, from which I transcribed it.
+
+M. Duclos came to the Doctor's, and harangued with his usual warmth. I
+heard him saying to two or three persons, "People are unjust to great
+men, Ministers and Princes; nothing, for instance, is more common than to
+undervalue their intellect. I astonished one of these little gentlemen
+of the corps of the infallibles, by telling him that I could prove that
+there had been more men of ability in the house of Bourbon, for the last
+hundred years, than in any other family."--"You prove that?" said
+somebody, sneeringly. "Yes," said Duclos; "and I will tell you how. The
+great Conde, you will allow, was no fool; and the Duchesse de Longueville
+is cited as one of the wittiest women that ever lived. The Regent was a
+man who had few equals, in every kind of talent and acquirement. The
+Prince de Conti, who was elected King of Poland, was celebrated for his
+intelligence, and, in poetry, was the successful rival of La Fare and St.
+Aulaire. The Duke of Burgundy was learned and enlightened. His Duchess,
+the daughter of Louis XIV., was remarkably clever, and wrote epigrams and
+couplets. The Duc du Maine is generally spoken of only for his weakness,
+but nobody had a more agreeable wit. His wife was mad, but she had an
+extensive acquaintance with letters, good taste in poetry, and a
+brilliant and inexhaustible imagination. Here are instances enough, I
+think," said he; "and, as I am no flatterer, and hate to appear one, I
+will not speak of the living." His hearers were astonished at this
+enumeration, and all of them agreed in the truth of what he had said. He
+added, "Don't we daily hear of silly D'Argenson,
+
+ [Rene LOUIS d'Argenson, who was Minister for Foreign Affairs. He
+ was the author of 'Considerations sur le Gouvernement', and of
+ several other works, from which succeeding political writers have
+ drawn, and still draw ideas, which they give to the world as new.
+ This man, remarkable not only for profound and original thinking,
+ but for clear and forcible expression, was, nevertheless, D'Argenson
+ la bete. It is said, however, that he affected the simplicity, and
+ even silliness of manner, which procured him that appellation. If,
+ as we hope, the unedited memoirs left by Rene d'Argenson will be
+ given to the world, they will be found fully to justify the opinion
+ of Duclos, with regard to this Minister, and the inappropriateness
+ of his nickname.]
+
+because he has a good-natured air, and a bourgeois tone? and yet, I
+believe, there have not been many Ministers comparable to him in
+knowledge and in enlightened views." I took a pen, which lay on the
+Doctor's table, and begged M. Duclos to repeat to me all the names he had
+mentioned, and the eulogium he had bestowed on each. "If," said he, "you
+show that to the Marquise, tell her how the conversation arose, and that
+I did not say it in order that it might come to her ears, and eventually,
+perhaps, to those of another person. I am an historiographer, and I will
+render justice, but I shall, also, often inflict it."--"I will answer for
+that," said the Doctor, "and our master will be represented as he really
+is. Louis XIV. liked verses, and patronised poets; that was very well,
+perhaps, in his time, because one must begin with something; but this age
+will be very superior to the last. It must be acknowledged that Louis
+XV., in sending astronomers to Mexico and Peru, to measure the earth, has
+a higher claim to our respect than if he directed an opera. He has
+thrown down the barriers which opposed the progress of philosophy, in
+spite of the clamour of the devotees: the Encyclopaedia will do honour to
+his reign." Duclos, during this speech, shook his head. I went away,
+and tried to write down all I had heard, while it was fresh. I had the
+part which related to the Princes of the Bourbon race copied by a valet,
+who wrote a beautiful hand, and I gave it to Madame de Pompadour. But
+she said to me, "What! is Duclos an acquaintance of yours? Do you want
+to play the 'bel esprit', my dear good woman? That will not sit well
+upon you." The truth is, that nothing can be further from my
+inclination. I told her that I met him accidentally at the Doctor's,
+where he generally spent an hour when he came to Versailles. "The King
+knows him to be a worthy man," said she.
+
+Madame de Pompadour was ill, and the King came to see her several times a
+day. I generally left the room when he entered, but, having stayed a few
+minutes, on one occasion, to give her a glass of chicory water, I heard
+the King mention Madame d'Egmont. Madame raised her eyes to heaven, and
+said, "That name always recalls to me a most melancholy and barbarous
+affair; but it was not my fault." These words dwelt in my mind, and,
+particularly, the tone in which they were uttered. As I stayed with
+Madame till three o'clock in the morning, reading to her a part of the
+time, it was easy for me to try to satisfy my curiosity. I seized a
+moment, when the reading was interrupted, to say, "You looked dreadfully
+shocked, Madame, when the King pronounced the name of D'Egmont." At
+these words, she again raised her eyes, and said, "You would feel as I
+do, if you knew the affair."--"It must, then, be deeply affecting, for I
+do not think that it personally concerns you, Madame."--"No," said she,
+"it does not; as, however, I am not the only person acquainted with this
+history, and as I know you to be discreet, I will tell it you. The last
+Comte d'Egmont married a reputed daughter of the Duc de Villars; but the
+Duchess had never lived with her husband, and the Comtesse d'Egmont is,
+in fact, a daughter of the Chevalier d'Orleans.--[Legitimate son of the
+Regent, Grand Prior of France.]--At the death of her husband, young,
+beautiful, agreeable, and heiress to an immense fortune, she attracted
+the suit and homage of all the most distinguished men at Court. Her
+mother's director, one day, came into her room and requested a private
+interview; he then revealed to her that she was the offspring of an
+adulterous intercourse, for which her mother had been doing penance for
+five-and-twenty years. 'She could not,' said he, 'oppose your former
+marriage, although it caused her extreme distress. Heaven did not grant
+you children; but, if you marry again, you run the risk, Madame, of
+transmitting to another family the immense wealth, which does not, in
+fact, belong to you, and which is the price of crime.'
+
+"The Comtesse d'Egmont heard this recital with horror. At the same
+instant, her mother entered, and, on her knees, besought her daughter to
+avert her eternal damnation. Madame d'Egmont tried to calm her own and
+her mother's mind. 'What can I do?' said she, to her. 'Consecrate
+yourself wholly to God,' replied the director, 'and thus expiate your
+mother's crime.' The Countess, in her terror, promised whatever they
+asked, and proposed to enter the Carmelites. I was informed of it, and
+spoke to the King about the barbarous tyranny the Duchesse de Villars and
+the director were about to exercise over this unhappy young woman; but we
+knew not how to prevent it. The King, with the utmost kindness,
+prevailed on the Queen to offer her the situation of Lady of the Palace,
+and desired the Duchess's friends to persuade her to endeavour to deter
+her daughter from becoming a Carmelite. It was all in vain; the wretched
+victim was sacrificed."
+
+Madame took it into her head to consult a fortuneteller, called Madame
+Bontemps, who had told M. de Bernis's fortune, as I have already related,
+and had surprised him by her predictions. M. de Choiseul, to whom she
+mentioned the matter, said that the woman had also foretold fine things
+that were to happen to him. "I know it," said she, "and, in return, you
+promised her a carriage, but the poor woman goes on foot still." Madame
+told me this, and asked me how she could disguise herself, so as to see
+the woman without being known. I dared not propose any scheme then, for
+fear it should not succeed; but, two days after, I talked to her surgeon
+about the art, which some beggars practise, of counterfeiting sores, and
+altering their features. He said that was easy enough. I let the thing
+drop, and, after an interval of some minutes, I said, "If one could
+change one's features, one might have great diversion at the opera,
+or at balls. What alterations would it be necessary to make in me, now,
+to render it impossible to recognise me?"--"In the first place," said he,
+"you must alter the colour of your hair, then you must have a false nose,
+and put a spot on some part of your face, or a wart, or a few hairs."
+I laughed, and said, "Help me to contrive this for the next ball; I have
+not been to one for twenty years; but I am dying to puzzle somebody, and
+to tell him things which no one but I can tell him. I shall come home,
+and go to bed, in a quarter of an hour."--"I must take the measure of
+your nose," said he; "or do you take it with wax, and I will have a nose
+made: you can get a flaxen or brown wig." I repeated to Madame what the
+surgeon had told me: she was delighted at it. I took the measure of her
+nose, and of my own, and carried them to the surgeon, who, in two days,
+gave me the two noses, and a wart, which Madame stuck under her left eye,
+and some paint for the eyebrows. The noses were most delicately made, of
+a bladder, I think, and these, with the ether disguises, rendered it
+impossible to recognize the face, and yet did not produce any shocking
+appearance. All this being accomplished, nothing remained but to give
+notice to the fortuneteller; we waited for a little excursion to Paris,
+which Madame was to take, to look at her house. I then got a person,
+with whom I had no connection, to speak to a waiting-woman of the
+Duchesse de Ruffec, to obtain an interview with the woman. She made some
+difficulty, on account of the Police; but we promised secrecy, and
+appointed the place of meeting. Nothing could be more contrary to Madame
+de Pompadour's character, which was one of extreme timidity, than to
+engage in such an adventure. But her curiosity was raised to the highest
+pitch, and, moreover, everything was so well arranged that there was not
+the slightest risk. Madame had let M. de Gontaut, and her valet de
+chambre, into the secret. The latter had hired two rooms for his niece,
+who was then ill, at Versailles, near Madame's hotel. We went out in the
+evening, followed by the valet de chambre, who was a safe man, and by the
+Duke, all on foot. We had not, at farthest, above two hundred steps to
+go. We were shown into two small rooms, in which were fires. The two
+men remained in one, and we in the other. Madame had thrown herself on a
+sofa. She had on a night-cap, which concealed half her face, in an
+unstudied manner. I was near the fire, leaning on a table, on which were
+two candles. There were lying on the chairs, near us, some clothes, of
+small value. The fortune-teller rang--a little servant-girl let her in,
+and then went to wait in the room where the gentlemen were. Coffee-cups,
+and a coffee-pot, were set; and I had taken care to place, upon a little
+buffet, some cakes, and a bottle of Malaga wine, having heard that Madame
+Bontemps assisted her inspiration with that liquor. Her face, indeed,
+sufficiently proclaimed it. "Is that lady ill?" said she, seeing Madame
+de Pompadour stretched languidly on the sofa. I told her that she would
+soon be better, but that she had kept her room for a week. She heated
+the coffee, and prepared the two cups, which she carefully wiped,
+observing that nothing impure must enter into this operation. I affected
+to be very anxious for a glass of wine, in order to give our oracle a
+pretext for assuaging her thirst, which she did, without much entreaty.
+When she had drunk two or three small glasses (for I had taken care not
+to have large ones), she poured the coffee into one of the two large
+cups. "This is yours," said she; "and this is your friends's; let them
+stand a little." She then observed our hands and our faces; after which
+she drew a looking-glass from her pocket, into which she told us to look,
+while she looked at the reflections of our faces. She next took a glass
+of wine, and immediately threw herself into a fit of enthusiasm, while
+she inspected my cup, and considered all the lines formed by the dregs of
+the coffee she had poured out. She began by saying, "That is well--
+prosperity--but there is a black mark--distresses. A man becomes a
+comforter. Here, in this corner, are friends, who support you. Ah! who
+is he that persecutes them? But justice triumphs--after rain, sunshine--
+a long journey successful. There, do you see these little bags? That is
+money which has been paid--to you, of course, I mean. That is well. Do
+you see that arm?"--"Yes."--"That is an arm supporting something: a woman
+veiled; I see her; it is you. All this is clear to me. I hear, as it
+were, a voice speaking to me. You are no longer attacked. I see it,
+because the clouds in that direction are passed off (pointing to a
+clearer spot). But, stay--I see small lines which branch out from the
+main spot. These are sons, daughters, nephews--that is pretty well."
+She appeared overpowered with the effort she was making. At length, she
+added, "That is all. You have had good luck first--misfortune afterward.
+You have had a friend, who has exerted himself with success to extricate
+you from it. You have had lawsuits--at length fortune has been
+reconciled to you, and will change no more." She drank another glass of
+wine. "Your health, Madame," said she to the Marquise, and went through
+the same ceremonies with the cup. At length, she broke out, "Neither
+fair nor foul. I see there, in the distance, a serene sky; and then all
+these things that appear to ascend all these things are applauses. Here
+is a grave man, who stretches out his arms. Do you see?--look
+attentively."--"That is true," said Madame de Pompadour, with surprise
+(there was, indeed, some appearance of the kind). "He points to
+something square that is an open coffer. Fine weather. But, look!
+there are clouds of azure and gold, which surround you. Do you see that
+ship on the high sea? How favourable the wind is! You are on board; you
+land in a beautiful country, of which you become the Queen. Ah! what do
+I see? Look there--look at that hideous, crooked, lame man, who is
+pursuing you--but he is going on a fool's errand. I see a very great
+man, who supports you in his arms. Here, look! he is a kind of giant.
+There is a great deal of gold and silver--a few clouds here and there.
+But you have nothing to fear. The vessel will be sometimes tossed about,
+but it will not be lost. Dixi." Madame said, "When shall I die, and of
+what disease?"--"I never speak of that," said she; "see here, rather but
+fate will not permit it. I will shew you how fate confounds everything"
+--shewing her several confused lumps of the coffee-dregs. "Well, never
+mind as to the time, then, only tell me the kind of death." The fortune-
+teller looked in the cup, and said, "You will have time to prepare
+yourself." I gave her only two Louis, to avoid doing anything
+remarkable. She left us, after begging us to keep her secret, and we
+rejoined the Duc de Gontaut, to whom we related everything that had
+passed. He laughed heartily, and said, "Her coffee-dregs are like the
+clouds--you may see what you please in them."
+
+There was one thing in my horoscope which struck me, that was the
+comforter; because one of my uncles had taken great care of me, and had
+rendered me the most essential services. It is also true that I
+afterwards had an important lawsuit; and, lastly, there was the money
+which had come into my hands through Madame de Pompadour's patronage and
+bounty. As for Madame, her husband was represented accurately enough by
+the man with the coffer; then the country of which she became Queen
+seemed to relate to her present situation at Court; but the most
+remarkable thing was the crooked and lame man, in whom Madame thought she
+recognized the Duc de V-----, who was very much deformed. Madame was
+delighted with her adventure and her horoscope, which she thought
+corresponded very remarkably with the truth. Two days after, she sent
+for M. de St. Florentin, and begged him not to molest the fortuneteller.
+He laughed, and replied that he knew why she interceded for this woman.
+Madame asked him why he laughed. He related every circumstance of her
+expedition with astonishing exactness;--[M. de St. Florentin was
+Minister for Paris, to whom the Lieutenant of Police was accountable.]--
+but he knew nothing of what had been said, or, at least, so he pretended.
+He promised Madame that, provided Bontemps did nothing which called for
+notice, she should not be obstructed in the exercise of her profession,
+especially if she followed it in secret. "I know her," added he, "and I,
+like other people, have had the curiosity to consult her. She is the
+wife of a soldier in the guards. She is a clever woman in her way, but
+she drinks. Four or five years ago, she got such hold on the mind of
+Madame de Ruffec, that she made her believe she could procure her an
+elixir of beauty, which would restore her to what she was at twenty-five.
+The Duchess pays high for the drugs of which this elixir is compounded;
+and sometimes they are bad: sometimes, the sun, to which they were
+exposed, was not powerful enough; sometimes, the influence of a certain
+constellation was wanting. Sometimes, she has the courage to assure the
+Duchess that she really is grown handsomer, and actually succeeds in
+making her believe it." But the history of this woman's daughter is
+still more curious. She was exquisitely beautiful, and the Duchess
+brought her up in her own house. Bontemps predicted to the girl, in the
+Duchess's presence, that she would marry a man of two thousand Louis a
+year. This was not very likely to happen to the daughter of a soldier in
+the guards. It did happen, nevertheless. The little Bontemps married
+the President Beaudouin, who was mad. But, the tragical part of the
+story is, that her mother had also foretold that she would die in
+childbirth of her first child, and that she did actually die in child-
+birth, at the age of eighteen, doubtless under a strong impression of her
+mother's prophecy, to which the improbable event of her marriage had
+given such extraordinary weight. Madame told the King of the adventure
+her curiosity had led her into, at which he laughed, and said he wished
+the Police had arrested her. He added a very sensible remark. "In order
+to judge," said he, "of the truth or falsehood of such predictions, one
+ought to collect fifty of them. It would be found that they are almost
+always made up of the same phrases, which are sometimes inapplicable, and
+some times hit the mark. But the first are rarely-mentioned, while the
+others are always insisted on."
+
+I have heard, and, indeed, it is certainly true, that M. de Bridge lived
+on terms of intimacy with Madame, when she was Madame d'Aioles. He used
+to ride on horseback with her, and, as he is so handsome a man, that he
+has retained the name of the handsome man, it was natural enough that he
+should be thought the lover of a very handsome woman. I have heard
+something more than this. I was told that the King said to M. de Bridge,
+"Confess, now, that you were her lover. She has acknowledged it to me,
+and I exact from you this proof of sincerity." M. de. Bridge replied,
+that Madame de Pompadour was at liberty to say what she pleased for her
+own amusement, or for any other reason; but that he, for his part, could
+not assert a falsehood; that he had been, her friend; that she was a
+charming companion, and had great talents; that he delighted in her
+society; but that his intercourse with her had never gone beyond the
+bounds of friendship. He added, that her husband was present in all
+their parties, that he watched her with a jealous eye, and that he would
+not have suffered him to be so much with her if he had conceived the
+least suspicion of the kind. The King persisted, and told him he was
+wrong to endeavour to conceal a fact which was unquestionable. It was
+rumoured, also, that the Abbe de Bernis had been a favoured lover of
+hers. The said Abbe was rather a coxcomb; he had a handsome face, and
+wrote poetry. Madame de Pompadour was the theme of his gallant verses.
+He sometimes received the compliments of his friends upon his success
+with a smile which left some room for conjecture, although he denied the
+thing in words. It was, for some time, reported at Court that she was in
+love with the Prince de Beauvau: he is a man distinguished for his
+gallantries, his air of rank and fashion, and his high play; he is
+brother to the little Marechale: for all these reasons, Madame is very
+civil to him, but there is nothing marked in her behaviour. She knows,
+besides, that he is in love with a very agreeable woman.
+
+Now that I am on the subject of lovers, I cannot avoid speaking of M. de
+Choiseul. Madame likes him better than any of those I have just
+mentioned, but he is not her lover. A lady, whom I know perfectly well,
+but whom I do not chose to denounce to Madame, invented a story about
+them, which was utterly false. She said, as I have good reason to
+believe, that one day, hearing the King coming, I ran to Madame's closet
+door; that I coughed in a particular manner; and that the King having,
+happily, stopped a moment to talk to some ladies, there was time to
+adjust matters, so that Madame came out of the closet with me and M. de
+Choiseul, as if we had been all three sitting together. It is very true
+that I went in to carry something to Madame, without knowing that the
+King was come, and that she came out of the closet with M. de Choiseul,
+who had a paper in his hand, and that I followed her a few minutes after.
+The King asked M. de Choiseul what that paper was which he had in his
+hand. He replied that it contained the remonstrance from the Parliament.
+
+Three or four ladies witnessed what I now relate, and as, with the
+exception of one, they were all excellent women, and greatly attached to
+Madame, my suspicions could fall on none but the one in question, whom I
+will not name, because her brother has always treated me with great
+kindness. Madame de Pompadour had a lively imagination and great
+sensibility, but nothing could exceed the coldness of her temperament.
+It would, besides, have been extremely difficult for her, surrounded as
+she was, to keep up an intercourse of that kind with any man. It is true
+that this difficulty would have been diminished in the case of an all-
+powerful Minister, who had constant pretexts for seeing her in private.
+But there was a much more decisive fact--M. de Choiseul had a charming
+mistress--the Princess de R------, and Madame knew it, and often spoke of
+her. He had, besides, some remains of liking for the Princess de Kinski,
+who followed him from Vienna. It is true that he soon after discovered
+how ridiculous she was. All these circumstances combined were, surely,
+sufficient to deter Madame from engaging in a love affair with the Duke;
+but his talents and agreeable qualities captivated her. He was not
+handsome, but he had manners peculiar to himself, an agreeable vivacity,
+a delightful gaiety; this was the general opinion of his character. He
+was much attached to Madame, and though this might, at first, be inspired
+by a consciousness of the importance of her friendship to his interest,
+yet, after he had acquired sufficient political strength to stand alone,
+he was not the less devoted to her, nor less assiduous in his attentions.
+He knew her friendship for me, and he one day said to me, with great
+feeling, "I am afraid, my dear Madame du Hausset, that she will sink into
+a state of complete dejection, and die of melancholy. Try to divert
+her." What a fate for the favourite of the greatest monarch in
+existence! thought I.
+
+One day, Madame de Pompadour had retired to her closet with M. Berryer.
+Madame d'Amblimont stayed with Madame de Gontaut, who called me to talk
+about my son. A moment after, M. de Gontaut came in and said,
+"D'Amblimont, who shall have the Swiss guards?"--"Stop a moment," said
+she; "let me call my council----, M. de Choiseul."--"That is not so very
+bad a thought," said M. de Gontaut, "but I assure you, you are the first
+person who has suggested it." He immediately left us, and Madame
+d'Amblimont said, "I'll lay a wager he is going to communicate my idea to
+M. de Choiseul." He returned very shortly, and, M. Berrier having left
+the room, he said to Madame de Pompadour, "A singular thought has entered
+d'Amblimont's head."--"What absurdity now?" said Madame. "Not so great
+an absurdity neither," said he. "She says the Swiss guards ought to be
+given to M. de Choiseul, and, really, if the King has not positively
+promised M. de Soubise, I don't see what he can do better."--"The King
+has promised nothing," said Madame, "and the hopes I gave him were of the
+vaguest kind. I only told him it was possible. But though I have a
+great regard for M. de Soubise, I do not think his merits comparable to
+those of M. de Choiseul." When the King came in, Madame, doubtless, told
+him of this suggestion. A quarter of an hour afterwards, I went into the
+room to speak to her, and I heard the King say, "You will see that,
+because the Duc du Maine, and his children, had that place, he will think
+he ought to have it, on account of his rank as Prince (Soubise); but the
+Marechal de Bassompierre was not a Prince; and, by the bye, the Duc de
+Choiseul is his grandnephew; do you know that?"--"Your Majesty is better
+acquainted with the history of France than anybody," replied Madame. Two
+days after this, Madame de said to me, "I have two great delights; M. de
+Soubise will not have the Swiss guards, and Madame de Marsan will be
+ready to burst with rage at it; this is the first: and M. de Choiseul
+will have them; this is the greatest."
+
+ ...........................
+
+[The whole of this passage is in a different handwriting.]
+
+There was a universal talk of a young lady with whom the King was as much
+in love as it was possible for him to be. Her name was Romans. She was
+said to be a charming girl. Madame de Pompadour knew of the King's
+visits, and her confidantes brought her most alarming reports of the
+affair. The Marechale de Mirepoix, who had the best head in Madame's
+council, was the only one who encouraged her. "I do not tell you," said
+she, "that he loves you better than her; and if she could be transported
+hither by the stroke of a fairy's wand; if she could entertain him this
+evening at supper; if she were familiar with all his tastes, there would,
+perhaps, be sufficient reason for you to tremble for your power. But
+Princes are, above all, pre-eminently the slaves of habit. The King's
+attachment to you is like that he bears to your apartment, your
+furniture. You have formed yourself to his manners and habits; you know
+how to listen and reply to his stories; he is under no constraint with
+you; he has no fear of boring you. How do you think he could have
+resolution to uproot all this in a day, to form a new establishment, and
+to make a public exhibition of himself by so striking a change in his
+arrangements?" The young lady became pregnant; the reports current among
+the people, and even those at Court, alarmed Madame dreadfully. It was
+said that the King meant to legitimate the child, and to give the mother
+a title. "All that," said Madame de Mirepoix, "is in the style of Louis
+XIV.--such dignified proceedings are very unlike those of our master."
+Mademoiselle Romans lost all her influence over the King by her
+indiscreet boasting. She was even treated with harshness and violence,
+which were in no degree instigated by Madame. Her house was searched,
+and her papers seized; but the most important, those which substantiated
+the fact of the King's paternity, had been withdrawn. At length she gave
+birth to a son, who was christened under the name of Bourbon, son of
+Charles de Bourbon, Captain of Horse. The mother thought the eyes of all
+France were fixed upon her, and beheld in her son a future Duc du Maine.
+She suckled him herself, and she used to carry him in a sort of basket to
+the Bois de Boulogne. Both mother and child were covered with the finest
+laces. She sat down upon the grass in a solitary spot, which, however,
+was soon well known, and there gave suck to her royal babe. Madame had
+great curiosity to see her, and took me, one day, to the manufactory at
+Sevres, without telling me what she projected. After she had bought some
+cups, she said, "I want to go and walk in the Bois de Boulogne," and gave
+orders to the coachman to stop at a certain spot where she wished to
+alight. She had got the most accurate directions, and when she drew near
+the young lady's haunt she gave me her arm, drew her bonnet over her
+eyes, and held her pocket-handkerchief before the lower part of her face.
+We walked, for some minutes, in a path, from whence we could see the lady
+suckling her child. Her jet black hair was turned up, and confined by a
+diamond comb. She looked earnestly at us. Madame bowed to her, and
+whispered to me, pushing me by the elbow, "Speak to her." I stepped
+forward, and exclaimed, "What a lovely child!"--"Yes, Madame," replied
+she, "I must confess that he is, though I am his mother." Madame, who
+had hold of my arm, trembled, and I was not very firm. Mademoiselle
+Romans said to me, "Do you live in this neighbourhood?"--"Yes, Madame,"
+replied I, "I live at Auteuil with this lady, who is just now suffering
+from a most dreadful toothache."--"I pity her sincerely, for I know that
+tormenting pain well." I looked all around, for fear any one should come
+up who might recognise us. I took courage to ask her whether the child's
+father was a handsome man. "Very handsome, and, if I told you his name,
+you would agree with me."--"I have the honour of knowing him, then,
+Madame?"--"Most probably you do." Madame, fearing, as I did, some
+rencontre, said a few words in a low tone, apologizing for having
+intruded upon her, and we took our leave. We looked behind us,
+repeatedly, to see if we were followed, and got into the carriage without
+being perceived. "It must be confessed that both mother and child are
+beautiful creatures," said Madame--"not to mention the father; the infant
+has his eyes. If the King had come up while we were there, do you think
+he would have recognised us?"--"I don't doubt that he would, Madame, and
+then what an agitation I should have been in, and what a scene it would
+have been for the bystanders! and, above all, what a surprise to her!"
+In the evening, Madame made the King a present of the cups she had
+bought, but she did not mention her walk, for fear Mademoiselle Romans
+should tell him that two ladies, who knew him, had met her there such a
+day. Madame de Mirepoix said to Madame, "Be assured, the King cares very
+little about children; he has enough of them, and he will not be troubled
+with the mother or the son. See what sort of notice he takes of the
+Comte de I-----, who is strikingly like him. He never speaks of him, and
+I am convinced that he will never do anything for him. Again and again I
+tell you, we do not live under Louis XIV." Madame de Mirepoix had been
+Ambassadress to London, and had often heard the English make this remark.
+
+Some alterations had been made in Madame de Pompadour's rooms, and I had
+no longer, as heretofore, the niche in which I had been permitted to sit,
+to hear Caffarelli, and, in later times, Mademoiselle Fel and Jeliotte.
+I, therefore, went more frequently to my lodgings in town, where I
+usually received my friends: more particularly when Madame visited her
+little hermitage, whither M. de Gontaut commonly accompanied her. Madame
+du Chiron, the wife of the Head Clerk in the War-Office, came to see me.
+"I feel," said she, "greatly embarrassed, in speaking to you about an
+affair, which will, perhaps, embarrass you also. This is the state of
+the case. A very poor woman, to whom I have sometimes given a little
+assistance, pretends to be a relation of the Marquise de Pompadour. Here
+is her petition." I read it, and said that the woman had better write
+directly to Madame, and that I was sure, if what she asserted was true,
+her application would be successful. Madame du Chiron followed my
+advice. The woman wrote she was in the lowest depth of poverty, and I
+learnt that Madame sent her six Louis until she could gain more accurate
+information as to the truth of her story. Colin, who was commissioned to
+take the money, made inquiries of M. de Malvoiain, a relation of Madame,
+and a very respectable officer. The fact was found to be as she had
+stated it. Madame then sent her a hundred louis, and promised her a
+pension of sixty louis a year. All this was done with great expedition,
+and Madame had a visit of thanks from her poor relation, as soon as she
+had procured decent clothes to come in. That day the King happened to
+come in at an unusual hour, and saw this person going out. He asked who
+it was. "It is a very poor relation of mine," replied Madame. "She
+came, then, to beg for some assistance?"--"No," said she. "What did she
+come for, then?"--"To thank me for a little service I have rendered her,"
+said she, blushing from the fear of seeming to boast of her liberality.
+"Well," said the King; "since she is your relation, allow me to have the
+pleasure of serving her too. I will give her fifty louis a year out of
+my private purse, and, you know, she may send for the first year's
+allowance to-morrow." Madame burst into tears, and kissed the King's
+hand several times. She told me this three days afterwards, when I was
+nursing her in a slight attack of fever. I could not refrain from
+weeping myself at this instance of the King's kindness. The next day,
+I called on Madame du Chiron to tell her of the good fortune of her
+protege; I forgot to say that, after Madame had related the affair to me,
+I told her what part I had taken in it. She approved my conduct, and
+allowed me to inform my friend of the King's goodness. This action,
+which showed no less delicate politeness towards her than sensibility to
+the sufferings of the poor woman, made a deeper impression on Madame's
+heart than a pension of two thousand a year given to herself.
+
+Madame had terrible palpitations of the heart. Her heart actually seemed
+to leap. She consulted several physicians. I recollect that one of them
+made her walk up and down the room, lift a weight, and move quickly. On
+her expressing some surprise, he said, "I do this to ascertain whether
+the organ is diseased; in that case motion quickens the pulsation; if
+that effect is not produced, the complaint proceeds from the nerves."
+I repeated this to my oracle, Quesnay. He knew very little of this
+physician, but he said his treatment was that of a clever man. His name
+was Renard; he was scarcely known beyond the Marais. Madame often
+appeared suffocated, and sighed continually. One day, under pretence of
+presenting a petition to M. de Choiseul, as he was going out, I said, in
+a low voice, that I wished to see him a few minutes on an affair of
+importance to my mistress. He told me to come as soon as I pleased, and
+that I should be admitted. I told him that Madame was extremely
+depressed; that she gave way to distressing thoughts, which she would not
+communicate; that she, one day, said to me, "The fortune-teller told me I
+should have time to prepare myself; I believe it, for I shall be worn to
+death by melancholy." M. de Choiseul appeared much affected; he praised
+my zeal, and said that he had already perceived some indications of what
+I told him; that he would not mention my name, but would try to draw from
+her an explanation. I don't know what he said to her; but, from that
+time, she was much more calm. One day, but long afterwards, Madame said
+to M. de Gontaut, "I am generally thought to have great influence, but if
+it were not for M. de Choiseul, I should not be able to obtain a Cross of
+St. Louis."
+
+The King and Madame de Pompadour had a very high opinion of Madame de
+Choiseul. Madame said, "She always says the right thing in the right
+place." Madame de Grammont was not so agreeable to them; and I think
+that this was to be attributed, in part, to the sound of her voice, and
+to her blunt manner of speaking; for she was said to be a woman of great
+sense, and devotedly attached to the King and Madame de Pompadour. Some
+people pretended that she tried to captivate the King, and to supplant
+Madame: nothing could be more false, or more ridiculously improbable.
+Madame saw a great deal of these two ladies, who were extremely attentive
+to her. She one day remarked to the Duc d'Ayen,--[Afterwards Marechal de
+Noaines.] that M. de Choiseul was very fond of his sisters. "I know it,
+Madame," said he, "and many sisters are the better for that."--"What do
+you mean?" said she. "Why," said he, "as the Duc de Choiseul loves his
+sister, it is thought fashionable to do the same; and I know silly girls,
+whose brothers formerly cared nothing about them, who are now most
+tenderly beloved. No sooner does their little finger ache, than their
+brothers are running about to fetch physicians from all corners of Paris.
+They flatter themselves that somebody will say, in M. de Choiseul's
+drawing-room, "How passionately M. de ------ loves his sister; he would
+certainly die if he had the misfortune to lose her." Madame related this
+to her brother, in my presence, adding, that she could not give it in the
+Duke's comic manner. M. de Marigny said, "I have had the start of them
+all, without making so much noise; and my dear little sister knows that I
+loved her tenderly before Madame de Grammont left her convent. The Duc
+d'Ayen, however, is not very wrong; he has made the most of it in his
+lively manner, but it is partly true."--"I forgot," replied Madame, "that
+the Duke said, 'I want extremely to be in the fashion, but which sister
+shall I take up? Madame de Caumont is a devil incarnate, Madame de
+Villars drinks, Madame d'Armagnac is a bore, Madame de la Marck is half
+mad.'"--"These are fine family portraits, Duke," said Madame. The Duc de
+Gontaut laughed, during the whole of this conversation, immoderately.
+Madame repeated it, one day, when she kept her bed. M. de G----- also
+began to talk of his sister, Madame du Roure. I think, at least, that is
+the name he mentioned. He was very gay, and had the art of creating
+gaiety. Somebody said, he is an excellent piece of furniture for a
+favourite. He makes her laugh, and asks for nothing either for himself
+or for others; he cannot excite jealousy, and he meddles in nothing.
+He was called the White Eunuch. Madame's illness increased so rapidly
+that we were alarmed about her; but bleeding in the foot cured her as if
+by a miracle. The King watched her with the greatest solicitude; and I
+don't know whether his attentions did not contribute as much to the cure
+as the bleeding. M. de Choiseul remarked, some days after, that she
+appeared in better spirits. I told him that I thought this improvement
+might be attributed to the same cause.
+
+
+
+
+
+ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+Air of science calculated to deceive the vulgar
+Bad habit of talking very indiscreetly before others
+Clouds--you may see what you please in them
+Dared to say to me, so he writes
+Dead always in fault, and cannot be put out of sight too soon
+French people do not do things by halves
+Fresh proof of the intrigues of the Jesuits
+How difficult it is to do good
+I dared not touch that string
+Infinite astonishment at his sharing the common destiny
+Madame made the Treaty of Sienna
+Pension is granted on condition that his poems are never printed
+Pleasure of making a great noise at little expense
+Sending astronomers to Mexico and Peru, to measure the earth
+She always says the right thing in the right place
+She drives quick and will certainly be overturned on the road
+
+
+
+
+End of this Project Gutenberg Etext Memoirs of Louis XV., and XVI., v2
+by Madame du Hausset, and an unknown English girl and Princess Lamballe
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MEMOIRS OF LOUIS XV. AND XVI.
+
+Being Secret Memoirs of Madame du Hausset, Lady's Maid to Madame
+de Pompadour, and of an unknown English Girl and the Princess Lamballe
+
+
+
+BOOK 3.
+
+
+SECRET COURT MEMOIRS OF LOUIS XVI. AND THE ROYAL FAMILY OF FRANCE
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+I should consider it great presumption to intrude upon the public
+anything respecting myself, were there any other way of establishing the
+authenticity of the facts and papers I am about to present. To the
+history of my own peculiar situation, amid the great events I record,
+which made me the depositary of information and documents so important, I
+proceed, therefore, though reluctantly, without further preamble.
+
+I was for many years in the confidential service of the Princesse de
+Lamballe, and the most important materials which form my history have
+been derived not only from the conversations, but the private papers of
+my lamented patroness. It remains for me to show how I became acquainted
+with Her Highness, and by what means the papers I allude to came into my
+possession.
+
+Though, from my birth, and the rank of those who were the cause of it
+(had it not been from political motives kept from my knowledge), in point
+of interest I ought to have been very independent, I was indebted for my
+resources in early life to His Grace the late Duke of Norfolk and Lady
+Mary Duncan. By them I was placed for education in the Irish Convent,
+Rue du Bacq, Faubourg St. Germain, at Paris, where the immortal Sacchini,
+the instructor of the Queen, gave me lessons in music. Pleased with my
+progress, the celebrated composer, when one day teaching Marie
+Antoinette, so highly overrated to that illustrious lady my infant
+natural talents and acquired science in his art, in the presence of her
+very shadow, the Princesse de Lamballe, as to excite in Her Majesty an
+eager desire for the opportunity of hearing me, which the Princess
+volunteered to obtain by going herself to the convent next morning with
+Sacchini. It was enjoined upon the composer, as I afterwards learned,
+that he was neither to apprise me who Her Highness was, nor to what
+motive I was indebted for her visit. To this Sacchini readily agreed,
+adding, after disclosing to them my connections and situation, "Your
+Majesty will be, perhaps, still more surprised, when I, as an Italian,
+and her German master, who is a German, declare that she speaks both
+these languages like a native, though born in England; and is as well
+disposed to the Catholic faith, and as well versed in it, as if she had
+been a member of that Church all her life."
+
+This last observation decided my future good fortune: there was no
+interest in the minds of the Queen and Princess paramount to that of
+making proselytes to their creed.
+
+The Princess, faithful to her promise, accompanied Sacchini. Whether it
+was chance, ability, or good fortune, let me not attempt to conjecture;
+but from that moment I became the protege of this ever-regretted angel.
+Political circumstances presently facilitated her introduction of me to
+the Queen. My combining a readiness in the Italian and German languages,
+with my knowledge of English and French, greatly promoted my power of
+being useful at that crisis, which, with some claims to their confidence
+of a higher order, made this august, lamented, injured pair more like
+mothers to me than mistresses, till we were parted by their murder.
+
+The circumstances I have just mentioned show that to mere curiosity, the
+characteristic passion of our sex and so often its ruin, I am to ascribe
+the introduction, which was only prevented by events unparalleled in
+history from proving the most fortunate in my life as it is the most
+cherished in my recollection.
+
+It will be seen, in the course of the following pages, how often I was
+employed on confidential missions, frequently by myself, and, in some
+instances, as the attendant of the Princess. The nature of my situation,
+the trust reposed in me, the commissions with which I was honoured, and
+the affecting charges of which I was the bearer, flattered my pride and
+determined me to make myself an exception to the rule that "no woman can
+keep a secret." Few ever knew exactly where I was, what I was doing, and
+much less the importance of my occupation. I had passed from England to
+France, made two journeys to Italy and Germany, three to the Archduchess
+Maria Christiana, Governess of the Low Countries, and returned back to
+France, before any of my friends in England were aware of my retreat, or
+of my ever having accompanied the Princess. Though my letters were
+written and dated at Paris, they were all forwarded to England by way of
+Holland or Germany, that no clue should be given for annoyances from idle
+curiosity. It is to this discreetness, to this inviolable secrecy,
+firmness, and fidelity, which I so early in life displayed to the august
+personages who stood in need of such a person, that I owe the unlimited
+confidence of my illustrious benefactress, through which I was furnished
+with the valuable materials I am now submitting to the public.
+
+I was repeatedly a witness, by the side of the Princesse de Lamballe, of
+the appalling scenes of the bonnet rouge, of murders a la lanterne, and
+of numberless insults to the unfortunate Royal Family of Louis XVI., when
+the Queen was generally selected as the most marked victim of malicious
+indignity. Having had the honour of so often beholding this much injured
+Queen, and never without remarking how amiable in her manners, how
+condescendingly kind in her deportment towards every one about her, how
+charitably generous, and withal, how beautiful she was,--I looked upon
+her as a model of perfection. But when I found the public feeling so
+much at variance with my own, the difference became utterly
+unaccountable. I longed for some explanation of the mystery. One day I
+was insulted in the Tuileries, because I had alighted from my horse to
+walk there without wearing the national ribbon. On this I met the
+Princess: the conversation which grew out of my adventure emboldened me
+to question her on a theme to me inexplicable.
+
+"What," asked I, "can it be which makes the people so outrageous against
+the Queen?"
+
+Her Highness condescended to reply in the complimentary terms which I am
+about to relate, but without answering my question.
+
+"My dear friend!" exclaimed she, "for from this moment I beg you will
+consider me in that light, never having been blessed with children of my
+own, I feel there is no way of acquitting myself of the obligations you
+have heaped upon me, by the fidelity with which you have executed the
+various commissions entrusted to your charge, but by adopting you as one
+of my own family. I am satisfied with you, yes, highly satisfied with
+you, on the score of your religious principles; and as soon as the
+troubles subside, and we have a little calm after them, my father-in-law
+and myself will be present at the ceremony of your confirmation."
+
+The goodness of my benefactress silenced me gratitude would not allow me
+to persevere for the moment. But from what I had already seen of Her
+Majesty the Queen, I was too much interested to lose sight of my object,
+--not, let me be believed, from idle womanish curiosity, but from that
+real, strong, personal interest which I, in common with all who ever had
+the honour of being in her presence, felt for that much-injured, most
+engaging sovereign.
+
+A propitious circumstance unexpectedly occurred, which gave me an
+opportunity, without any appearance of officious earnestness, to renew
+the attempt to gain the end I had in view.
+
+I was riding in the carriage with the Princesse de Lamballe, when a lady
+drove by, who saluted my benefactress with marked attention and respect.
+There was something in the manner of the Princess, after receiving the
+salute, which impelled me, spite of myself, to ask who the lady was.
+
+"Madame de Genlis," exclaimed Her Highness, with a shudder of disgust,
+"that lamb's face with a wolf's heart, and a fog's cunning." Or, to
+quote her own Italian phrase which I have here translated, "colla faccia
+d'agnello, il cuore dun lupo, a la dritura della volpe."
+
+In the course of these pages the cause of this strong feeling against
+Madame de Genlis will be explained. To dwell on it now would only turn
+me aside from my narrative. To pursue my story, therefore:
+
+When we arrived at my lodgings (which were then, for private reasons, at
+the Irish Convent, where Sacchini and other masters attended to further
+me in the accomplishments of the fine arts), "Sing me something," said
+the Princess, "'Cantate mi qualche cosa', for I never see that woman "
+(meaning Madame de Genlis) "but I feel ill and out of humour. I wish it
+may not be the foreboding of some great evil!"
+
+I sang a little rondo, in which Her Highness and the Queen always
+delighted, and which they would never set me free without making me sing,
+though I had given them twenty before it.
+
+ [The rondo I allude to was written by Sarti for the celebrated
+ Marches!, Lungi da to ben mio, and is the same in which he was so
+ successful in England, when he introduced it in London in the opera
+ of Giulo Sabino.]
+
+Her Highness honoured me with even more than usual praise. I kissed the
+hand which had so generously applauded my infant talents, and said, "Now,
+my dearest Princess, as you are so kind and good-humoured, tell me
+something about the Queen!"
+
+She looked at me with her eyes full of tears. For an instant they stood
+in their sockets as if petrified: and then, after a pause, "I cannot,"
+answered she in Italian, as she usually did, "I cannot refuse you
+anything. 'Non posso neyarti niente'. It would take me an age to tell
+you the many causes which have conspired against this much-injured Queen!
+I fear none who are near her person will escape the threatening storm
+that hovers over our heads. The leading causes of the clamour against
+her have been, if you must know, Nature; her beauty; her power of
+pleasing; her birth; her rank; her marriage; the King himself; her
+mother; her imperfect education; and, above all, her unfortunate
+partialities for the Abbe Vermond; for the Duchesse de Polignac; for
+myself, perhaps; and last, but not least, the thorough, unsuspecting
+goodness of her heart!
+
+"But, since you seem to be so much concerned for her exalted, persecuted
+Majesty, you shall have a Journal I myself began on my first coming to
+France, and which I have continued ever since I have been honoured with
+the confidence of Her Majesty, in graciously giving me that unlooked-for
+situation at the head of her household, which honour and justice prevent
+my renouncing under any difficulties, and which I never will quit but
+with my life!"
+
+She wept as she spoke, and her last words were almost choked with sobs.
+
+Seeing her so much affected, I humbly begged pardon for having
+unintentionally caused her tears, and begged permission to accompany her
+to the Tuileries.
+
+"No," said she, "you have hitherto conducted yourself with a profound
+prudence, which has insured you my confidence. Do not let your curiosity
+change your system. You shall have the Journal. But be careful. Read
+it only by yourself, and do not show it to any one. On these conditions
+you shall have it."
+
+I was in the act of promising, when Her Highness stopped me.
+
+"I want no particular promises. I have sufficient proofs of your
+adherence to truth. Only answer me simply in the affirmative."
+
+I said I would certainly obey her injunctions most religiously.
+
+She then left me, and directed that I should walk in a particular part of
+the private alleys of the Tuileries, between three and four o'clock in
+the afternoon. I did so; and from her own hand I there received her
+private Journal.
+
+In the following September of this same year (1792) she was murdered!
+
+Journalising copiously, for the purpose of amassing authentic materials
+for the future historian, was always a favourite practice of the French,
+and seems to have been particularly in vogue in the age I mention. The
+press has sent forth whole libraries of these records since the
+Revolution, and it is notorious that Louis XV. left Secret Memoirs,
+written by his own hand, of what passed before this convulsion; and had
+not the papers of the Tuileries shared in the wreck of royalty, it would
+have been seen that Louis XVI. had made some progress in the memoirs of
+his time; and even his beautiful and unfortunate Queen had herself made
+extensive notes and collections for the record of her own disastrous
+career. Hence it must be obvious how one so nearly connected in
+situation and suffering with her much-injured mistress, as the Princesse
+de Lamballe, would naturally fall into a similar habit had she even no
+stronger temptation than fashion and example. But self-communion, by
+means of the pen, is invariably the consolation of strong feeling, and
+reflecting minds under great calamities, especially when their
+intercourse with the world has been checked or poisoned by its malice.
+
+The editor of these pages herself fell into the habit of which she
+speaks; and it being usual with her benefactress to converse with all the
+unreserve which every honest mind shows when it feels it can confide, her
+humble attendant, not to lose facts of such importance, commonly made
+notes of what she heard. In any other person's hands the Journal of the
+Princess would have been incomplete; especially as it was written in a
+rambling manner, and was never intended for publication. But connected
+by her confidential conversations with me, and the recital of the events
+to which I personally bear testimony, I trust it will be found the basis
+of a satisfactory record, which I pledge myself to be a true one.
+
+I do not know, however, that, at my time of life, and after a lapse of
+thirty years, I should have been roused to the arrangement of the papers
+which I have combined to form this narrative, had I not met with the work
+of Madame Campan upon the same subject.
+
+This lady has said much that is true respecting the Queen; but she has
+omitted much, and much she has misrepresented: not, I dare say,
+purposely, but from ignorance, and being wrongly informed. She was often
+absent from the service, and on such occasions must have been compelled
+to obtain her knowledge at second-hand. She herself told me, in 1803, at
+Rouen, that at a very important epoch the peril of her life forced her
+from the seat of action. With the Princesse de Lamballe, who was so much
+about the Queen, she never had any particular connexion. The Princess
+certainly esteemed her for her devotedness to the Queen; but there was a
+natural reserve in the Princess's character, and a mistrust resulting
+from circumstances of all those who saw much company, as Madame Campan
+did. Hence no intimacy was encouraged. Madame Campan never came to the
+Princess without being sent for.
+
+An attempt has been made since the Revolution utterly to destroy faith in
+the alleged attachment of Madame Campan to the Queen, by the fact of her
+having received the daughters of many of the regicides for education into
+her establishment at Rouen. Far be it from me to sanction so unjust a
+censure. Although what I mention hurt her character very much in the
+estimation of her former friends, and constituted one of the grounds of
+the dissolution of her establishment at Rouen, on the restoration of the
+Bourbons, and may possibly in some degree have deprived her of such aids
+from their adherents as might have made her work unquestionable, yet what
+else, let me ask, could have been done by one dependent upon her
+exertions for support, and in the power of Napoleon's family and his
+emissaries? On the contrary, I would give my public testimony in favour
+of the fidelity of her feelings, though in many instances I must withhold
+it from the fidelity of her narrative. Her being utterly isolated from
+the illustrious individual nearest to the Queen must necessarily leave
+much to be desired in her record. During the whole term of the Princesse
+de Lamballe's superintendence of the Queen's household, Madame Campan
+never had any special communication with my benefactress, excepting once,
+about the things which were to go to Brussels, before the journey to
+Varennes; and once again, relative to a person of the Queen's household,
+who had received the visits of Petion, the Mayor of Paris, at her private
+lodgings. This last communication I myself particularly remember,
+because on that occasion the Princess, addressing me in her own native
+language, Madame Campan, observing it, considered me as an Italian, till,
+by a circumstance I shall presently relate, she was undeceived.
+
+I should anticipate the order of events, and incur the necessity of
+speaking twice of the same things, were I here to specify the express
+errors in the work of Madame Campan. Suffice it now that I observe
+generally her want of knowledge of the Princesse de Lamballe; her
+omission of many of the most interesting circumstances of the Revolution;
+her silence upon important anecdotes of the King, the Queen, and several
+members of the first assembly; her mistakes concerning the Princesse de
+Lamballe's relations with the Duchesse de Polignac, Comte de Fersan,
+Mirabeau, the Cardinal de Rohan, and others; her great miscalculation of
+the time when the Queen's confidence in Barnave began, and when that of
+the Empress-mother in Rohan ended; her misrepresentation of particulars
+relating to Joseph II.; and her blunders concerning the affair of the
+necklace, and regarding the libel Madame Lamotte published in England,
+with the connivance of Calonne:--all these will be considered, with
+numberless other statements equally requiring correction in their turn.
+What she has omitted I trust I shall supply; and where she has gone
+astray I hope to set her right; that, between the two, the future
+biographer of my august benefactresses may be in no want of authentic
+materials to do full justice to their honoured memories.
+
+I said in a preceding paragraph that I should relate a circumstance about
+Madame Campan, which happened after she had taken me for an Italian and
+before she was aware of my being in the service of the Princess.
+
+Madame Campan, though she had seen me not only at the time I mention but
+before and after, had always passed me without notice. One Sunday, when
+in the gallery of the Tuileries with Madame de Stael, the Queen, with her
+usual suite, of which Madame Campan formed one, was going, according to
+custom, to hear Mass, Her Majesty perceived me and most graciously
+addressed me in German. Madame Campan appeared greatly surprised at
+this, but walked on and said nothing. Ever afterwards, however, she
+treated me whenever we met with marked civility.
+
+Another edition of Boswell to those who got a nod from Dr. Johnson!
+
+The reader will find in the course of this work that on the 2nd of
+August, 1792, from the kindness and humanity of my, august
+benefactresses, I was compelled to accept a mission to Italy, devised
+merely to send me from the sanguinary scenes of which they foresaw they
+and theirs must presently become victims. Early in the following month
+the Princesse de Lamballe was murdered. As my history extends beyond the
+period I have mentioned, it is fitting I should explain the indisputable
+authorities whence I derived such particulars as I did not see.
+
+A person, high in the confidence of the Princess, through the means of
+the honest coachman of whom I shall have occasion to speak, supplied me
+with regular details of whatever took place, till she herself, with the
+rest of the ladies and other attendants, being separated from the Royal
+Family, was immured in the prison of La Force. When I returned to Paris
+after this dire tempest, Madame Clery and her friend, Madame de Beaumont,
+a natural daughter of Louis XV., with Monsieur Chambon of Rheims, who
+never left Paris during the time, confirmed the correctness of my papers.
+The Madame Clery I mention is the same who assisted her husband in his
+faithful attendance upon the Royal Family in the Temple; and this
+exemplary man added his testimony to the rest, in the presence of the
+Duchesse de Guiche Grammont, at Pyrmont in Germany, when I there met him
+in the suite of the late sovereign of France, Louis XVIII., at a concert.
+After the 10th of August, I had also a continued correspondence: with
+many persons at Paris, who supplied me with thorough accounts of the
+succeeding horrors, in letters directed to Sir William Hamilton, at
+Naples, and by him forwarded to me. And in addition to all these high
+sources, many particular circumstances: have been disclosed to me by
+individuals, whose authority, when I have used it, I have generally
+affixed to the facts they have enabled me to communicate.
+
+It now only remains for me to mention that I have endeavoured to arrange
+everything, derived either from the papers of the Princesse de Lamballe,
+or from her remarks, my own observation, or the intelligence of others,
+in chronological order. It will readily be seen by the reader where the
+Princess herself speaks, as I have invariably set apart my own
+recollections and remarks in paragraphs and notes, which are not only
+indicated by the heading of each chapter, but by the context of the
+passages themselves. I have also begun and ended what the Princess says
+with inverted commas. All the earlier part, of the work preceding her
+personal introduction proceeds principally from her pen or her lips: I
+have done little more than change it from Italian into English, and
+embody thoughts and sentiments that were often disjointed and detached.
+And throughout, whether she or others speak, I may safely say this work
+will be found the most circumstantial, and assuredly the most authentic,
+upon the subject of which it treats, of all that have yet been presented
+to the public of Great Britain. The press has been prolific in fabulous
+writings upon these times, which have been devoured with avidity. I hope
+John Bull is not so devoted to gilded foreign fictions as to spurn the
+unadorned truth from one of his downright countrywomen: and let me advise
+him en passant, not to treat us beauties of native growth with
+indifference at home; for we readily find compensation in the regard,
+patronage, and admiration of every nation in Europe. I am old now, and
+may speak freely.
+
+I have no interest whatever in the work I submit but that of endeavouring
+to redeem the character of so many injured victims. Would to Heaven my
+memory were less acute, and that I could obliterate from the knowledge of
+the world and posterity the names of their infamous destroyers; I mean,
+not the executioners who terminated their mortal existence for in their
+miserable situation that early martyrdom was an act of grace--but I mean
+some, perhaps still living, who with foul cowardice, stabbing like
+assassins in the dark, undermined their fair fame, and morally murdered
+them, long before their deaths, by daily traducing virtues the slanderers
+never possessed, from mere jealousy of the glory they knew themselves
+incapable of deserving.
+
+Montesquieu says, "If there be a God, He must be just!" That divine
+justice, after centuries, has been fully established on the descendants
+of the cruel, sanguinary conquerers of South America and its butchered
+harmless Emperor Montezuma and his innocent offspring, who are now
+teaching Spain a moral lesson in freeing themselves from its insatiable
+thirst for blood and wealth, while God Himself has refused that blessing
+to the Spaniards which they denied to the Americans! Oh, France! what
+hast thou not already suffered, and what hast thou not yet to suffer,
+when to thee, like Spain, it shall visit their descendants even unto the
+fourth generation?
+
+To my insignificant losses in so mighty a ruin perhaps I ought not to
+allude. I should not presume even to mention that fatal convulsion which
+shook all Europe and has since left the nations in that state of agitated
+undulation which succeeds a tempest upon the ocean, were it not for the
+opportunity it gives me to declare the bounty of my benefactresses. All
+my own property went down in the wreck; and the mariner who escapes only
+with his life can never recur to the scene of his escape without a
+shudder. Many persons are still living, of the first respectability, who
+well remember my quitting this country, though very young, on the budding
+of a brilliant career. Had those prospects been followed up they would
+have placed me beyond the caprice of fickle fortune. But the dazzling
+lustre of crown favours and princely patronage outweighed the slow,
+though more solid hopes of self-achieved independence. I certainly was
+then almost a child, and my vanity, perhaps, of the honour of being
+useful to two such illustrious personages got the better of every other
+sentiment. But now when I reflect, I look back with consternation on the
+many risks I ran, on the many times I stared death in the face with no
+fear but that of being obstructed in my efforts to serve, even with my
+life, the interests dearest to my heart--that of implicit obedience to
+these truly benevolent and generous Princesses, who only wanted the means
+to render me as happy and independent as their cruel destiny has since
+made me wretched and miserable! Had not death deprived me of their
+patronage I should have had no reason to regret any sacrifice I could
+have made for them, for through the Princess, Her Majesty, unasked, had
+done me the honour to promise me the reversion of a most lucrative as
+well as highly respectable post in her employ. In these august
+personages I lost my best friends; I lost everything--except the tears,
+which bathe the paper as I write tears of gratitude, which will never
+cease to flow to the memory of their martyrdom.
+
+
+
+
+SECTION II.
+
+JOURNAL COMMNENCED:
+
+"The character of Maria Theresa, the Empress-mother of Marie Antoinette,
+is sufficiently known. The same spirit of ambition and enterprise which
+had already animated her contentions with France in the latter part of
+her career impelled her to wish for its alliance. In addition to other
+hopes she had been encouraged to imagine that LOUIS XV. might one day aid
+her in recovering the provinces which the King of Prussia had violently
+wrested from her ancient dominions. She felt the many advantages to be
+derived from a union with her ancient enemy, and she looked for its
+accomplishment by the marriage of her daughter.
+
+"Policy, in sovereigns, is paramount to every other consideration. They
+regard beauty as a source of profit, like managers of theatres, who, when
+a female candidate is offered, ask whether she is young and handsome,--
+not whether she has talent. Maria Theresa believed that her daughter's
+beauty would prove more powerful over France than her own armies. Like
+Catharine II., her envied contemporary, she consulted no ties of nature
+in the disposal of her children,--a system more in character where the
+knout is the logician than among nations boasting higher civilization:
+indeed her rivalry with Catharine even made her grossly neglect their
+education. Jealous of the rising power of the North, she saw that it was
+the purpose of Russia to counteract her views in Poland and Turkey
+through France, and so totally forgot her domestic duties in the desire
+to thwart the ascendency of Catharine that she often suffered eight or
+ten days to go by without even seeing her children, allowing even the
+essential sources of instruction to remain unprovided. Her very caresses
+were scarcely given but for display, when the children were admitted to
+be shown to some great personage; and if they were overwhelmed with
+kindness, it was merely to excite a belief that they were the constant
+care and companions of her leisure hours. When they grew up they became
+the mere instruments of her ambition. The fate of one of them will show
+how their mother's worldliness was rewarded.
+
+"A leading object of Maria Theresa's policy was the attainment of
+influence over Italy. For this purpose she first married one of the
+Archduchesses to the imbecile Duke of Parma. Her second manoeuvre was to
+contrive that Charles III. should seek the Archduchess Josepha for his
+younger son, the King of Naples. When everything had been settled, and
+the ceremony by proxy had taken place, it was thought proper to sound the
+Princess as to how far she felt inclined to aid her mother's designs in
+the Court of Naples. 'Scripture says,' was her reply, 'that when a woman
+is married she belongs to the country of her husband.'
+
+"'But the policy of State?' exclaimed Maria Theresa.
+
+"'Is that above religion?' cried the Princess.
+
+"This unexpected answer of the Archduchess was so totally opposite to the
+views of the Empress that she was for a considerable time undecided
+whether she would allow her daughter to depart, till, worn out by
+perplexities, she at last consented, but bade the Archduchess, previous
+to setting off for this much desired country of her new husband, to go
+down to the tombs, and in the vaults of her ancestors offer up to Heaven
+a fervent prayer for the departed souls of those she was about to leave.
+
+"Only a few days before that a Princess had been buried in the vaults--I
+think Joseph the Second's second wife, who had died of the small-pox.
+
+"The Archduchess Josepha obeyed her Imperial mother's cruel commands,
+took leave of all her friends and relatives, as if conscious of the
+result, caught the same disease, and in a few days died!
+
+"The Archduchess Carolina was now tutored to become her sister's
+substitute, and when deemed adequately qualified was sent to Naples,
+where she certainly never forgot she was an Austrian nor the interest of
+the Court of Vienna. One circumstance concerning her and her mother
+fully illustrates the character of both. On the marriage, the
+Archduchess found that Spanish etiquette did not allow the Queen to have
+the honour of dining at the same table as the King. She apprised her
+mother. Maria Theresa instantly wrote to the Marchese Tenucei, then
+Prime Minister at the Court of Naples, to say that, if her daughter, now
+Queen of Naples, was to be considered less than the King her husband, she
+would send an army to fetch her back to Vienna, and the King might
+purchase a Georgian slave, for an Austrian Princess should not be thus
+humbled. Maria Theresa need not have given herself all this trouble, for
+before, the letter arrived the Queen of Naples had dismissed all the
+Ministry, upset the Cabinet of Naples, and turned out even the King
+himself from her bedchamber! So much for the overthrow of Spanish
+etiquette by Austrian policy. The King of Spain became outrageous at the
+influence of Maria Theresa, but there was no alternative.
+
+"The other daughter of the Empress was married, as I have observed
+already, to the Duke of Parma for the purpose of promoting the Austrian
+strength in Italy against that of France, to which the Court of, Parma,
+as well as that of Modena, had been long attached.
+
+"The fourth Archduchess, Marie Antoinette, being the youngest and most
+beautiful of the family, was destined for France. There were three older
+than Marie Antoinette; but she, being much lovelier than her sisters, was
+selected on account of her charms. Her husband was never considered by
+the contrivers of the scheme: he was known to have no sway whatever, not
+even in the choice of his own wife! But the character of Louis XV. was
+recollected, and calculations drawn from it, upon the probable power
+which youth and beauty might obtain over such a King and Court.
+
+"It was during the time when Madame de Pompadour directed, not only the
+King, but all France with most despotic sway, that the union of the
+Archduchess Marie Antoinette with the grandson of Louis XV. was
+proposed. The plan received the warmest support of Choiseul, then
+Minister, and the ardent co-operation of Pompadour. Indeed it was to
+her, the Duc de Choiseul, and the Comte de Mercy, the whole affair may be
+ascribed. So highly was she flattered by the attention with which Maria
+Theresa distinguished her, in consequence of her zeal, by presents and by
+the title 'dear cousin,' which she used in writing to her, that she left
+no stone unturned till the proxy of the Dauphin was sent to Vienna, to
+marry Marie Antoinette in his name.
+
+"All the interest by which this union was supported could not, however,
+subdue a prejudice against it, not only among many of the Court, the
+Cabinet, and the nation, but in the Royal Family itself. France has
+never looked with complacency upon alliances with the House of Austria:
+enemies to this one avowed themselves as soon as it was declared. The
+daughters of Louis XV. openly expressed their aversion; but the stronger
+influence prevailed, and Marie Antoinette became the Dauphine.
+
+"Brienne, Archbishop of Toulouse, and afterwards of Sens, suggested the
+appointment of the Librarian of the College des Quatre Nations, the Abbe
+Vermond, as instructor to the Dauphine in French. The Abbe Vermond was
+accordingly despatched by Louis XV. to Vienna. The consequences of this
+appointment will be seen in the sequel. Perhaps not the least fatal of
+them arose from his gratitude to the Archbishop, who recommended him.
+Some years afterwards, in influencing his pupil, when Queen, to help
+Brienne to the Ministry, he did her and her kingdom more injury than
+their worst foes. Of the Abbe's power over Marie Antoinette there are
+various opinions; of his capacity there is but one--he was superficial
+and cunning. On his arrival at Vienna he became the tool of Maria
+Theresa. While there, he received a salary as the daughter's tutor,
+and when he returned to France, a much larger one as the mother's spy.
+He was more ambitious to be thought a great man, in his power over his
+pupil, than a rich one. He was too Jesuitical to wish to be deemed rich.
+He knew that superfluous emoluments would soon have overthrown the
+authority he derived from conferring, rather than receiving favours; and
+hence he never soared to any higher post. He was generally considered to
+be disinterested. How far his private fortunes benefited by his station
+has never appeared; nor is it known whether, by the elevation of his
+friend and patron to the Ministry in the time of Louis XVI., he gained
+anything beyond the gratification of vanity, from having been the cause:
+it is probable he did not, for if he had, from the general odium against
+that promotion, no doubt it would have been exposed, unless the influence
+of the Queen was his protection, as it proved in so many cases where he
+grossly erred. From the first he was an evil to Marie Antoinette; and
+ultimately habit rendered him a necessary evil.
+
+"The education of the Dauphine was circumscribed; though very free in her
+manners, she was very deficient in other respects; and hence it was she
+so much avoided all society of females who were better informed than
+herself, courting in preference the lively tittle-tattle of the other
+sex, who were, in turn, better pleased with the gaieties of youth and
+beauty than the more substantial logical witticisms of antiquated Court-
+dowagers. To this may be ascribed her ungovernable passion for great
+societies, balls, masquerades, and all kinds of public and private
+amusements, as well as her subsequent attachment to the Duchesse de
+Polignac, who so much encouraged them for the pastime of her friend and
+sovereign. Though naturally averse to everything requiring study or
+application, Marie Antoinette was very assiduous in preparing herself for
+the parts she performed in the various comedies, farces, and cantatas
+given at her private theatre; and their acquirement seemed to cost her no
+trouble. These innocent diversions became a source of calumny against
+her; yet they formed almost the only part of her German education, about
+which Maria Theresa had been particular: the Empress-mother deemed them
+so valuable to her children that she ordered the celebrated Metastasio to
+write some of his most sublime cantatas for the evening recreations of
+her sisters and herself. And what can more conduce to elegant literary
+knowledge, or be less dangerous to the morals of the young, than domestic
+recitation of the finest flights of the intellect? Certain it is that
+Marie Antoinette never forgot her idolatry of her master Metastasio; and
+it would have been well for her had all concerned in her education done
+her equal justice. The Abbe Vermond encouraged these studies; and the
+King himself afterwards sanctioned the translation of the works of his
+Queen's revered instructor, and their publication at her own expense, in
+a superb edition, that she might gratify her fondness the more
+conveniently by reciting them in French. When Marie Antoinette herself
+became a mother, and oppressed from the change of circumstances, she
+regretted much that she had not in early life cultivated her mind more
+extensively. 'What a resource,' would she exclaim, is a mind well stored
+against human casualties!' She determined to avoid in her own offspring
+the error, of which she felt herself the victim, committed by her
+Imperial mother, for whose fault, though she suffered, she would invent
+excuses. 'The Empress,' she would say, was left a young widow with ten
+or twelve children; she had been accustomed, even during the Emperor's
+life, to head her vast empire, and she thought it would be unjust to
+sacrifice to her own children the welfare of the numerous family which
+afterwards devolved upon her exclusive government and protection.'
+
+"Most unfortunately for Marie Antoinette, her great supporter, Madame de
+Pompadour, died before the Archduchess came to France. The pilot who was
+to steer the young mariner safe into port was no more, when she arrived
+at it. The Austrian interest had sunk with its patroness. The
+intriguers of the Court no sooner saw the King without an avowed
+favourite than they sought to give him one who should further their own
+views and crush the Choiseul party, which had been sustained by
+Pompadour. The licentious Duc de Richelieu was the pander on this
+occasion. The low, vulgar Du Barry was by him introduced to the King,
+and Richelieu had the honour of enthroning a successor to Pompadour, and
+supplying Louis XV. with the last of his mistresses. Madame de Grammont,
+who had been the royal confidante during the interregnum, gave up to the
+rising star. The effect of a new power was presently seen in new events.
+All the Ministers known to be attached to the Austrian interest were
+dismissed; and the time for the arrival of the young bride, the
+Archduchess of Austria, who was about to be installed Dauphine of France,
+was at hand, and she came to meet scarcely a friend, and many foes--of
+whom even her beauty, her gentleness, and her simplicity, were doomed to
+swell the phalanx."
+
+
+
+
+SECTION III.
+
+"On the marriage night, Louis XV. said gaily to the Dauphin, who was
+supping with his usual heartiness, 'Don't overcharge your stomach to-
+night'
+
+"'Why, I always sleep best after a hearty supper,' replied the Dauphin,
+with the greatest coolness.
+
+"The supper being ended, he accompanied his Dauphine to her chamber, and
+at the door, with the greatest politeness, wished her a good night. Next
+morning, upon his saying, when he met her at breakfast, that he hoped she
+had slept well, Marie Antoinette replied, 'Excellently well, for I had no
+one to disturb me!'
+
+"The Princesse de Guemenee, who was then at the head of the household,
+on hearing the Dauphine moving very early in her apartment, ventured to
+enter it, and, not seeing the Dauphin, exclaimed, 'Bless me! he is risen
+as usual!'--'Whom do you mean?' asked Marie Antoinette. The Princess
+misconstruing the interrogation, was going to retire, when the Dauphine
+said, 'I have heard a great deal of French politeness, but I think I am
+married to the most polite of the nation!'--'What, then, he is risen?'--
+'No, no, no!' exclaimed the Dauphine, 'there has been no rising; he has
+never lain down here. He left me at the door of my apartment with his
+hat in his hand, and hastened from me as if embarrassed with my person!'
+
+"After Marie Antoinette became a mother she would often laugh and tell
+Louis XVI. of his bridal politeness, and ask him if in the interim
+between that and the consummation he had studied his maiden aunts or his
+tutor on the subject. On this he would laugh most excessively.
+
+"Scarcely was Marie Antoinette seated in her new country before the
+virulence of Court intrigue against her became active. She was beset on
+all sides by enemies open and concealed, who never slackened their
+persecutions. All the family of Louis XV., consisting of those maiden
+aunts of the Dauphin just adverted to (among whom Madame Adelaide was
+specially implacable), were incensed at the marriage, not only from their
+hatred to Austria, but because it had accomplished the ambition of an
+obnoxious favourite to give a wife to the Dauphin of their kingdom. On
+the credulous and timid mind of the Prince, then in the leading strings
+of this pious sisterhood, they impressed the misfortunes to his country
+and to the interest of the Bourbon family, which must spring from the
+Austrian influence through the medium of his bride. No means were left
+unessayed to steel him against her sway. I remember once to have heard
+Her Majesty remark to Louis XVI., in answer to some particular
+observations he made, 'These, Sire, are the sentiments of our aunts, I am
+sure.' And, indeed, great must have been their ascendency over him in
+youth, for up to a late date he entertained a very high respect for their
+capacity and judgment. Great indeed must it have been to have prevailed
+against all the seducing allurements of a beautiful and fascinating young
+bride, whose amiableness, vivacity, and wit became the universal
+admiration, and whose graceful manner of address few ever equalled and
+none ever surpassed; nay, even so to have prevailed as to form one of the
+great sources of his aversion to consummate the marriage! Since the
+death of the late Queen, their mother, these four Princesses (who, it was
+said, if old maids, were not so from choice) had received and performed
+the exclusive honours of the Court. It could not have diminished their
+dislike for the young and lovely new-comer to see themselves under the
+necessity of abandoning their dignities and giving up their station. So
+eager were they to contrive themes of complaint against her, that when
+she visited them in the simple attire in which she so much delighted,
+'sans ceremonie', unaccompanied by a troop of horse and a squadron of
+footguards, they complained to their father, who hinted to Marie
+Antoinette that such a relaxation of the royal dignity would be attended
+with considerable injury to French manufactures, to trade, and to the
+respect due to her rank. 'My State and Court dresses,' replied she,
+'shall not be less brilliant than those of any former Dauphine or Queen
+of France, if such be the pleasure of the King,--but to my grandpapa I
+appeal for some indulgence with respect to my undress private costume of
+the morning.
+
+"It was dangerous for one in whose conduct so many prying eyes were
+seeking for sources of accusation to gratify herself even by the
+overthrow of an absurdity, when that overthrow might incur the stigma of
+innovation. The Court of Versailles was jealous of its Spanish
+inquisitorial etiquette. It had been strictly wedded to its pageantries
+since the time of the great Anne of Austria. The sagacious and prudent
+provisions of this illustrious contriver were deemed the ne plus ultra of
+royal female policy. A cargo of whalebone was yearly obtained by her to
+construct such stays for the Maids of Honour as might adequately conceal
+the Court accidents which generally--poor ladies! --befell them in
+rotation every nine months.
+
+"But Marie Antoinette could not sacrifice her predilection for a
+simplicity quite English, to prudential considerations. Indeed, she was
+too young to conceive it even desirable. So much did she delight in
+being unshackled by finery that she would hurry from Court to fling off
+her royal robes and ornaments, exclaiming, when freed from them, 'Thank
+Heaven, I am out of harness!'
+
+"But she had natural advantages, which gave her enemies a pretext for
+ascribing this antipathy to the established fashion to mere vanity. It
+is not impossible that she might have derived some pleasure from
+displaying a figure so beautiful, with no adornment except its native
+gracefulness; but how great must have been the chagrin of the Princesses,
+of many of the Court ladies, indeed, of all in any way ungainly or
+deformed, when called to exhibit themselves by the side of a bewitching
+person like hers, unaided by the whalebone and horse-hair paddings with
+which they had hitherto been made up, and which placed the best form on a
+level with the worst? The prudes who practised illicitly, and felt the
+convenience of a guise which so well concealed the effect of their
+frailties, were neither the least formidable nor the least numerous of
+the enemies created by this revolution of costume; and the Dauphine was
+voted by common consent--for what greater crime could there be in France?
+--the heretic Martin Luther of female fashions! The four Princesses, her
+aunts, were as bitter against the disrespect with which the Dauphine
+treated the armour, which they called dress, as if they themselves had
+benefited by the immunities it could, confer.
+
+"Indeed, most of the old Court ladies embattled themselves against Marie
+Antoinette's encroachments upon their habits. The leader of them was a
+real medallion, whose costume, character, and notions spoke a genealogy
+perfectly antediluvian; who even to the latter days of Louis XV., amid a
+Court so irregular, persisted in her precision. So systematic a
+supporter of the antique could be no other than the declared foe of any
+change, and, of course, deemed the desertion of large sack gowns,
+monstrous Court hoops, and the old notions of appendages attached to
+them, for tight waists and short petticoats, an awful demonstration of
+the depravity of the time!--[The editor needs scarcely add, that the
+allusion of the Princess is to Madame de Noailles.]
+
+"This lady had been first lady to the sole Queen of Louis XV. She was
+retained in the same station for Marie Antoinette. Her motions were
+regulated like clock-work. So methodical was she in all her operations
+of mind and body, that, from the beginning of the year to its end, she
+never deviated a moment. Every hour had its peculiar occupation. Her
+element was etiquette, but the etiquette of ages before the flood. She
+had her rules even for the width of petticoats, that the Queens and
+Princesses might have no temptation to straddle over a rivulet, or
+crossing, of unroyal size.
+
+"The Queen of Louis XV. having been totally subservient in her movements
+night and day to the wishes of the Comtesse de Noailles, it will be
+readily conceived how great a shock this lady must have sustained on
+being informed one morning that the Dauphine had actually risen in the
+night, and her ladyship not by to witness a ceremony from which most
+ladies would have felt no little pleasure in being spared, but which, on
+this occasion, admitted of no delay! Notwithstanding the Dauphine
+excused herself by the assurance of the urgency allowing no time to call
+the Countess, she nearly fainted at not having been present at that,
+which others sometimes faint at, if too near! This unaccustomed
+watchfulness so annoyed Marie Antoinette, that, determined to laugh her
+out of it, she ordered an immense bottle of hartshorn to be placed upon
+her toilet. Being asked what use was to be made of the hartshorn, she
+said it was to prevent her first Lady of Honour from falling into
+hysterics when the calls of nature were uncivil enough to exclude her
+from being of the party. This, as may be presumed, had its desired
+effect, and Marie Antoinette was ever afterwards allowed free access at
+least to one of her apartments, and leave to perform that in private
+which few individuals except Princesses do with parade and publicity.
+
+"These things, however, planted the seeds of rancour against Marie
+Antoinette, which Madame de Noailles carried with her to the grave.
+It will be seen that she declared against her at a crisis of great
+importance. The laughable title of Madame Etiquette, which the Dauphine
+gave her, clung to her through life; though conferred only in merriment,
+it never was forgiven.
+
+"The Dauphine seemed to be under a sort of fatality with regard to all
+those who had any power of doing her mischief either with her husband or
+the Court. The Duc de Vauguyon, the Dauphin's tutor, who both from
+principle and interest hated everything Austrian, and anything whatever
+which threatened to lessen his despotic influence so long exercised over
+the mind of his pupil, which he foresaw would be endangered were the
+Prince once out of his leading-strings and swayed by a young wife, made
+use of all the influence which old courtiers can command over the minds
+they have formed (more generally for their own ends than those of
+uprightness) to poison that of the young Prince against his bride.
+
+"Never were there more intrigues among the female slaves in the Seraglio
+of Constantinople for the Grand Signior's handkerchief than were
+continually harassing one party against the other at the Court of
+Versailles. The Dauphine was even attacked through her own tutor, the
+Abbe Vermond. A cabal was got up between the Abbe and Madame Marsan,
+instructress of the sisters of Louis XVI. (the Princesses Clotilde and
+Elizabeth) upon the subject of education. Nothing grew out of this
+affair excepting a new stimulus to the party spirit against the Austrian
+influence, or, in other words, the Austrian Princess; and such was
+probably its purpose. Of course every trifle becomes Court tattle. This
+was made a mighty business of, for want of a worse. The royal aunts
+naturally took the part of Madame Marsan. They maintained that their
+royal nieces, the French Princesses, were much better educated than the
+German Archduchesses had been by the Austrian Empress. They attempted to
+found their assertion upon the embonpoint of the French Princesses. They
+said that their nieces, by the exercise of religious principles, obtained
+the advantage of solid flesh, while the Austrian Archduchesses, by
+wasting themselves in idleness and profane pursuits, grew thin and
+meagre, and were equally exhausted in their minds and bodies! At this
+the Abbe Vermond, as the tutor of Marie Antoinette, felt himself highly
+offended, and called on Comte de Mercy, then the Imperial Ambassador, to
+apprise him of the insult the Empire had received over the shoulders of
+the Dauphine's tutor. The Ambassador gravely replied that he should
+certainly send off a courier immediately to Vienna to inform the Empress
+that the only fault the French Court could find with Marie Antoinette was
+her being not so unwieldy as their own Princesses, and bringing charms
+with her to a bridegroom, on whom even charms so transcendent could make
+no impression! Thus the matter was laughed off, but it left, ridiculous
+as it was, new bitter enemies to the cause of the illustrious stranger.
+
+"The new favourite, Madame du Barry, whose sway was now supreme, was of
+course joined by the whole vitiated intriguing Court of Versailles. The
+King's favourite is always that of his parasites, however degraded. The
+politics of the De Pompadour party were still feared, though De Pompadour
+herself was no more, for Choiseul had friends who were still active in
+his behalf. The power which had been raised to crush the power that was
+still struggling formed a rallying point for those who hated Austria,
+which the deposed Ministry had supported; and even the King's daughters,
+much as they abhorred the vulgarity of Du Barry, were led, by dislike for
+the Dauphine, to pay their devotions to their father's mistress. The
+influence of the rising sun, Marie Antoinette, whose beauteous rays of
+blooming youth warmed every heart in her favour, was feared by the new
+favourite as well as by the old maidens. Louis XV. had already expressed
+a sufficient interest for the friendless royal stranger to awaken the
+jealousy of Du Barry, and she was as little disposed to share the King's
+affections with another, as his daughters were to welcome a future Queen
+from Austria in their palace. Mortified at the attachment the King daily
+evinced, she strained every nerve to raise a party to destroy his
+predilections. She called to her aid the strength of ridicule, than
+which no weapon is more false or deadly. She laughed at qualities she
+could not comprehend, and underrated what she could not imitate. The Duc
+de Richelieu, who had been instrumental to her good fortune, and for whom
+(remembering the old adage: when one hand washes the other both are made
+clean) she procured the command of the army--this Duke, the triumphant
+general of Mahon and one of the most distinguished noblemen of France,
+did not blush to become the secret agent of a depraved meretrix in the
+conspiracy to blacken the character of her victim! The Princesses, of
+course, joined the jealous Phryne against their niece, the daughter of
+the Caesars, whose only faults were those of nature, for at that time she
+could have no other excepting those personal perfections which were the
+main source of all their malice. By one considered as an usurper, by the
+others as an intruder, both were in consequence industrious in the quiet
+work of ruin by whispers and detraction.
+
+"To an impolitic act of the Dauphine herself may be in part ascribed the
+unwonted virulence of the jealousy and resentment of Du Barry. The old
+dotard, Louis XV., was so indelicate as to have her present at the first
+supper of the Dauphine at Versailles. Madame la Marechale de Beaumont,
+the Duchesse de Choiseul, and the Duchesse de Grammont were there also;
+but upon the favourite taking her seat at table they expressed themselves
+very freely to Louis XV. respecting the insult they conceived offered to
+the young Dauphine, left the royal party, and never appeared again at
+Court till after the King's death. In consequence of this scene, Marie
+Antoinette, at the instigation of the Abbe Vermond, wrote to her mother,
+the Empress, complaining of the slight put upon her rank, birth, and
+dignity, and requesting the Empress would signify her displeasure to the
+Court of France, as she had done to that of Spain on a similar occasion
+in favour of her sister, the Queen of Naples.
+
+"This letter, which was intercepted, got to the knowledge of the Court
+and excited some clamour. To say the worst, it could only be looked upon
+as an ebullition of the folly of youth. But insignificant as such
+matters were in fact, malignity converted them into the locust, which
+destroyed the fruit she was sent to cultivate.
+
+"Maria Theresa, old fox that she was, too true to her system to retract
+the policy, which formerly, laid her open to the criticism of all the
+civilised Courts of Europe for opening the correspondence with De
+Pompadour, to whose influence she owed her daughter's footing in France--
+a correspondence whereby she degraded the dignity of her sex and the
+honour of her crown--and at the same time suspecting that it was not her
+daughter, but Vermond, from private motives, who complained, wrote the
+following laconic reply to the remonstrance:
+
+"'Where the sovereign himself presides, no guest can be exceptionable.'
+
+"Such sentiments are very much in contradiction with the character of
+Maria Theresa. She was always solicitous to impress the world with her
+high notion of moral rectitude. Certainly, such advice, however politic,
+ought not to have proceeded from a mother so religious as Maria Theresa
+wished herself to be thought; especially to a young Princess who, though
+enthusiastically fond of admiration, at least had discretion to see and
+feel the impropriety of her being degraded to the level of a female like
+Du Barry, and, withal, courage to avow it. This, of itself, was quite
+enough to shake the virtue of Marie Antoinette; or, at least, Maria
+Theresa's letter was of a cast to make her callous to the observance of
+all its scruples. And in that vitiated, depraved Court, she too soon,
+unfortunately, took the hint of her maternal counsellor in not only
+tolerating, but imitating, the object she despised. Being one day told
+that Du Barry was the person who most contributed to amuse Louis XV.,
+'Then,' said she, innocently, 'I declare myself her rival; for I will try
+who can best amuse my grandpapa for the future. I will exert all my
+powers to please and divert him, and then we shall see who can best
+succeed.'
+
+"Du Barry was by when this was said, and she never forgave it. To this,
+and to the letter, her rancour may principally be ascribed. To all those
+of the Court party who owed their places and preferments to her exclusive
+influence, and who held them subject to her caprice, she, of course,
+communicated the venom.
+
+"Meanwhile, the Dauphin saw Marie Antoinette mimicking the monkey tricks
+with which this low Sultana amused her dotard, without being aware of the
+cause. He was not pleased; and this circumstance, coupled with his
+natural coolness and indifference for a union he had been taught to deem
+impolitic and dangerous to the interests of France, created in his
+virtuous mind that sort of disgust which remained so long an enigma to
+the Court and all the kingdom, excepting his royal aunts, who did the
+best they could to confirm it into so decided an aversion as might induce
+him to impel his grandfather to annul the marriage and send the Dauphine
+back to Vienna."
+
+"After the Dauphin's marriage, the Comte d'Artois and his brother
+Monsieur--[Afterwards Louis XVIII., and the former the present Charles
+X.]--returned from their travels to Versailles. The former was
+delighted with the young Dauphine, and, seeing her so decidedly neglected
+by her husband, endeavoured to console her by a marked attention, but for
+which she would have been totally isolated, for, excepting the old King,
+who became more and more enraptured with the grace, beauty, and vivacity
+of his young granddaughter, not another individual in the Royal Family
+was really interested in her favour. The kindness of a personage so
+important was of too much weight not to awaken calumny. It was, of
+course, endeavoured to be turned against her. Possibilities, and even
+probabilities, conspired to give a pretext for the scandal which already
+began to be whispered about the Dauphine and D'Artois. It would have
+been no wonder had a reciprocal attachment arisen between a virgin wife,
+so long neglected by her husband, and one whose congeniality of character
+pointed him out as a more desirable partner than the Dauphin. But there
+is abundant evidence of the perfect innocence of their intercourse. Du
+Barry was most earnest in endeavouring, from first to last, to establish
+its impurity, because the Dauphine induced the gay young Prince to join
+in all her girlish schemes to tease and circumvent the favourite. But
+when this young Prince and his brother were married to the two Princesses
+of Piedmont, the intimacy between their brides and the Dauphine proved
+there could have been no doubt that Du Barry had invented a calumny, and
+that no feeling existed but one altogether sisterly. The three stranger
+Princesses were indeed inseparable; and these marriages, with that of the
+French Princess, Clotilde, to the Prince of Piedmont, created
+considerable changes in the coteries of Court.
+
+"The machinations against Marie Antoinette could not be concealed from
+the Empress-mother. An extraordinary Ambassador was consequently sent
+from Vienna to complain of them to the Court of Versailles, with
+directions that the remonstrance should be supported and backed by the
+Comte de Mercy, then Austrian Ambassador at the Court of France. Louis
+XV. was the only person to whom the communication was news. This old
+dilettanti of the sex was so much engaged between his seraglio of the
+Parc-aux-cerfs and Du Barry that he knew less of what was passing in his
+palace than those at Constantinople. On being informed by the Austrian
+Ambassador, he sent an Ambassador of his own to Vienna to assure the
+Empress that he was perfectly satisfied of the innocent conduct of his
+newly acquired granddaughter.
+
+"Among the intrigues within intrigues of the time I mention, there was
+one which shows that perhaps Du Barry's distrust of the constancy of her
+paramour, and apprehension from the effect on him of the charms of the
+Dauphine, in whom he became daily more interested, were not utterly
+without foundation. In this instance even her friend, the Duc de
+Richelieu, that notorious seducer, by lending himself to the secret
+purposes of the King, became a traitor to the cause of the King's
+favourite, to which he had sworn allegiance, and which he had supported
+by defaming her whom he now became anxious to make his Queen.
+
+"It has already been said, that the famous Duchesse de Grammont was one
+of the confidential friends of Louis XV. before he took Du Barry under
+his especial protection. Of course, there can be no difficulty in
+conceiving how likely a person she would be, to aid any purpose of the
+King which should displace the favourite, by whom she herself had been
+obliged to retire, by ties of a higher order, to which she might prove
+instrumental.
+
+"Louis XV. actually flattered himself with the hope of obtaining
+advantages from the Dauphin's coolness towards the Dauphine. He
+encouraged it, and even threw many obstacles in the way of the
+consummation of the marriage. The apartments of the young couple were
+placed at opposite ends of the palace, so that the Dauphin could not
+approach that of his Dauphine without a publicity which his bashfulness
+could not brook.
+
+"Louis XV. now began to act upon his secret passion to supplant his
+grandson, and make the Dauphine his own Queen, by endeavouring to secure
+her affections to himself. His attentions were backed by gifts of
+diamonds, pearls, and other valuables, and it was at this period that
+Boehmer, the jeweller, first received the order for that famous necklace,
+which subsequently produced such dreadful consequences, and which was
+originally meant as a kingly present to the intended Queen, though
+afterwards destined for Du Barry, had not the King died before the
+completion of the bargain for it.
+
+"The Queen herself one day told me, 'Heaven knows if ever I should have
+had the blessing of being a mother had I not one evening surprised the
+Dauphin, when the subject was adverted to, in the expression of a sort of
+regret at our being placed so far asunder from each other. Indeed, he
+never honoured me with any proof of his affection so explicit as that you
+have just witnessed'--for the King had that moment kissed her, as he left
+the apartment--'from the time of our marriage till the consummation.
+The most I ever received from him was a squeeze of the hand in secret.
+His extreme modesty, and perhaps his utter ignorance of the intercourse
+with woman, dreaded the exposure of crossing the palace to my bedchamber;
+and no doubt the accomplishment would have occurred sooner, could it have
+been effectuated in privacy. The hint he gave emboldened me with
+courage, when he next left me, as usual, at the door of my apartment,
+to mention it to the Duchesse de Grammont, then the confidential friend
+of Louis XV., who laughed me almost out of countenance; saying, in her
+gay manner of expressing herself, "If I were as young and as beautiful a
+wife as you are I should certainly not trouble myself to remove the
+obstacle by going to him while there were others of superior rank ready
+to supply his place." Before she quitted me, however, she said: "Well,
+child, make yourself easy: you shall no longer be separated from the
+object of your wishes: I will mention it to the King, your grandpapa, and
+he will soon order your husband's apartment to be changed for one nearer
+your own." And the change shortly afterwards took place.
+
+"'Here,' continued the Queen, 'I accuse myself of a want of that courage
+which every virtuous wife ought to exercise in not having complained of
+the visible neglect shown me long, long before I did; for this, perhaps,
+would have spared both of us the many bitter pangs originating in the
+seeming coldness, whence have arisen all the scandalous stories against
+my character--which have often interrupted the full enjoyment I should
+have felt had they not made me tremble for the security of that
+attachment, of which I had so many proofs, and which formed my only
+consolation amid all the malice that for yearn had been endeavouring to
+deprive me of it! So far as regards my husband's estimation, thank fate,
+I have defied their wickedness! Would to Heaven I could have been
+equally secure in the estimation of my people--the object nearest to my
+heart, after the King and my dear children!'"
+
+ [The Dauphine could not understand the first allusion of the
+ Duchess; but it is evident that the vile intriguer took this
+ opportunity of sounding her upon what she was commissioned to carry
+ on in favour of Louis XV., and it is equally apparent that when she
+ heard Marie Antoinette express herself decidedly in favour of her
+ young husband, and distinctly saw how utterly groundless were the
+ hopes of his secret rival, she was led thereby to abandon her wicked
+ project; and perhaps the change of apartments was the best mask that
+ could have been devised to hide the villany.]
+
+"The present period appears to have been one of the happiest in the life
+of Marie Antoinette. Her intimate society consisted of the King's
+brothers, and their Princesses, with the King's saint-like sister
+Elizabeth; and they lived entirely together, excepting when the Dauphine
+dined in public. These ties seemed to be drawn daily closer for some
+time, till the subsequent intimacy with the Polignacs. Even when the
+Comtesse d'Artois lay-in, the Dauphine, then become Queen, transferred
+her parties to the apartments of that Princess, rather than lose the
+gratification of her society.
+
+"During all this time, however, Du Barry, the Duc d'Aiguillon, and the
+aunts-Princesses, took special care to keep themselves between her and
+any tenderness on the part of the husband Dauphin, and, from different
+motives uniting in one end, tried every means to get the object of their
+hatred sent back to Vienna."
+
+
+
+
+SECTION IV.
+
+"The Empress-mother was thoroughly aware of all that was going on. Her
+anxiety, not only about her daughter, but her State policy, which it may
+be apprehended was in her mind the stronger motive of the two, encouraged
+the machinations of an individual who must now appear upon the stage of
+action, and to whose arts may be ascribed the worst of the sufferings of
+Marie Antoinette.
+
+"I allude to the Cardinal Prince de Rohan.
+
+"At this time he was Ambassador at the Court of Vienna. The reliance the
+Empress placed on him favoured his criminal machinations against her
+daughter's reputation. He was the cause of her sending spies to watch
+the conduct of the Dauphine, besides a list of persons proper for her to
+cultivate, as well as of those it was deemed desirable for her to exclude
+from her confidence.
+
+"As the Empress knew all those who, though high in office in Versailles,
+secretly received pensions from Vienna, she could, of course, tell,
+without much expense of sagacity, who were in the Austrian interest. The
+Dauphine was warned that she was surrounded by persons who were not her
+friends.
+
+"The conduct of Maria Theresa towards her daughter, the Queen of Naples,
+will sufficiently explain how much the Empress must have been chagrined
+at the absolute indifference of Marie Antoinette to the State policy
+which was intended to have been served in sending her to France. A less
+fitting instrument for the purpose could not have been selected by the
+mother. Marie Antoinette had much less of the politician about her than
+either of her surviving sisters; and so much was she addicted to
+amusement, that she never even thought of entering into State affairs
+till forced by the King's neglect of his most essential prerogatives,
+and called upon by the Ministers themselves to screen them from
+responsibility. Indeed, the latter cause prevailed upon her to take her
+seat in the Cabinet Council (though she took it with great reluctance)
+long before she was impelled thither by events and her consciousness of
+its necessity. She would often exclaim to me: 'How happy I was during
+the lifetime of Louis XV.! No cares to disturb my peaceful slumbers! No
+responsibility to agitate my mind! No fears of erring, of partiality, of
+injustice, to break in upon my enjoyments! All, all happiness, my dear
+Princess, vanishes from the bosom of a woman if she once deviate from the
+prescribed domestic character of her sex! Nothing was ever framed more
+wise than the Salique Laws, which in France and many parts of Germany
+exclude women from reigning, for few of us have that masculine capacity
+so necessary to conduct with impartiality and justice the affairs of
+State!'
+
+"To this feeling of the impropriety of feminine interference in masculine
+duties, coupled with her attachment to France, both from principle and
+feeling, may be ascribed the neglect of her German connexions, which led
+to many mortifying reproaches, and the still more galling espionage to
+which she was subjected in her own palace by her mother. These are,
+however, so many proofs of the falsehood of the allegations by which she
+suffered so deeply afterwards, of having sacrificed the interests of her
+husband's kingdom to her predilection for her mother's empire.
+
+"The subtle Rohan designed to turn the anxiety of Maria Theresa about the
+Dauphine to account, and he was also aware that the ambition of the
+Empress was paramount in Maria Theresa's bosom to the love for her child.
+He was about to play a deep and more than double game. By increasing the
+mother's jealousy of the daughter, and at the same time enhancing the
+importance of the advantages afforded by her situation, to forward the
+interests of the mother, he, no doubt, hoped to get both within his
+power: for who can tell what wild expectation might not have animated
+such a mind as Rohan's at the prospect of governing not only the Court of
+France but that of Austria?--the Court of France, through a secret
+influence of his own dictation thrown around the Dauphine by the mother's
+alarm; and that of Austria, through a way he pointed out, in which the
+object that was most longed for by the mother's ambition seemed most
+likely to be achieved! While he endeavoured to make Maria Theresa beset
+her daughter with the spies I have mentioned, and which were generally of
+his own selection, he at the same time endeavoured to strengthen her
+impression of how important it was to her schemes to insure the
+daughter's co-operation. Conscious of the eagerness of Maria Theresa for
+the recovery of the rich province which Frederick the Great of Prussia
+had wrested from her ancient dominions, he pressed upon her credulity the
+assurance that the influence of which the Dauphine was capable over Louis
+XV., by the youthful beauty's charms acting upon the dotard's admiration,
+would readily induce that monarch to give such aid to Austria as must
+insure the restoration of what it lost. Silesia, it has been before
+observed, was always a topic by means of which the weak side of Maria
+Theresa could be attacked with success. There is generally some peculiar
+frailty in the ambitious, through which the artful can throw them off
+their guard. The weak and tyrannical Philip II., whenever the recovery
+of Holland and the Low Countries was proposed to him, was always ready to
+rush headlong into any scheme for its accomplishment; the bloody Queen
+Mary, his wife, declared that at her death the loss of Calais would be
+found engraven on her heart; and to Maria Theresa, Silesia was the
+Holland and the Calais for which her wounded pride was thirsting.
+
+"But Maria Theresa was wary, even in the midst of the credulity of her
+ambition. The Baron de Neni was sent by her privately to Versailles to
+examine, personally, whether there was anything in Marie Antoinette's
+conduct requiring the extreme vigilance which had been represented as
+indispensable. The report of the Baron de Neni to his royal mistress was
+such as to convince her she had been misled and her daughter
+misrepresented by Rohan. The Empress instantly forbade him her presence.
+
+"The Cardinal upon this, unknown to the Court of Vienna, and indeed, to
+every one, except his factotum, principal agent, and secretary, the Abbe
+Georgel, left the Austrian capital, and came to Versailles, covering his
+disgrace by pretended leave of absence. On seeing Marie Antoinette he
+fell enthusiastically in love with her. To gain her confidence he
+disclosed the conduct which had been observed towards her by the Empress,
+and, in confirmation of the correctness of his disclosure, admitted that
+he had himself chosen the spies which had been set on her. Indignant at
+such meanness in her mother, and despising the prelate, who could be base
+enough to commit a deed equally corrupt and uncalled for, and even thus
+wantonly betrayed when committed, the Dauphine suddenly withdrew from his
+presence, and gave orders that he should never be admitted to any of her
+parties.
+
+"But his imagination was too much heated by a guilty passion of the
+blackest hue to recede; and his nature too presumptuous and fertile in
+expedients to be disconcerted. He soon found means to conciliate both
+mother and daughter; and both by pretending to manage with the one the
+self-same plot which, with the other, he was recommending himself by
+pretending to overthrow. To elude detection he interrupted the regular
+correspondence between the Empress and the Dauphine, and created a
+coolness by preventing the communications which would have unmasked him,
+that gave additional security to the success of his deception.
+
+"By the most diabolical arts he obtained an interview with the Dauphine,
+in which he regained her confidence. He made her believe that he had
+been commissioned by her mother, as she had shown so little interest for
+the house of Austria, to settle a marriage for her sister, the
+Archduchess Elizabeth, with Louis XV. The Dauphine was deeply affected
+at the statement. She could not conceal her agitation. She
+involuntarily confessed how much she should deplore such an alliance.
+The Cardinal instantly perceived his advantage, and was too subtle to let
+it pass. He declared that, as it was to him the negotiation had been
+confided, if the Dauphine would keep her own counsel, never communicate
+their conversation to the Empress, but leave the whole matter to his
+management and only assure him that he was forgiven, he would pledge
+himself to arrange things to her satisfaction. The Dauphine, not wishing
+to see another raised to the throne over her head and to her scorn, under
+the assurance that no one knew of the intention or could prevent it but
+the Cardinal, promised him her faith and favour; and thus rashly fell
+into the springs of this wily intriguer.
+
+"Exulting to find Marie Antoinette in his power, the Cardinal left
+Versailles as privately as he arrived there, for Vienna. His next object
+was to ensnare the Empress, as he had done her daughter; and by a
+singular caprice, fortune, during his absence, had been preparing for him
+the means.
+
+"The Abbe Georgel, his secretary, by underhand manoeuvres, to which he
+was accustomed, had obtained access to all the secret State
+correspondence, in which the Empress had expressed herself fully to the
+Comte de Mercy relative to the views of Russia and Prussia upon Poland,
+whereby her own plans were much thwarted. The acquirement of copies of
+these documents naturally gave the Cardinal free access to the Court and
+a ready introduction once more to the Empress. She was too much
+committed by his possession of such weapons not to be most happy to make
+her peace with him; and he was too sagacious not to make the best use of
+his opportunity. To regain her confidence, he betrayed some of the
+subaltern agents, through whose treachery he had procured his evidences,
+and, in farther confirmation of his resources, showed the Empress several
+dispatches from her own Ministers to the Courts of Russia and Prussia.
+He had long, he said, been in possession of similar views of
+aggrandisement, upon which these Courts were about to act; and had, for a
+while, even incurred Her Imperial Majesty's displeasure, merely because
+he was not in a situation fully to explain; but that he had now thought
+of the means to crush their schemes before they could be put in practice.
+He apprised her of his being aware that Her Imperial Majesty's Ministers
+were actively carrying on a correspondence with Russia, with a view of
+joining her in checking the French co-operation with the Grand Signior;
+and warned her that if this design were secretly pursued, it would defeat
+the very views she had in sharing in the spoliation of Poland; and if
+openly, it would be deemed an avowal of hostilities against the Court of
+France, whose political system would certainly impel it to resist any
+attack upon the divan of Constantinople, that the balance of power in
+Europe might be maintained against the formidable ambition of Catherine,
+whose gigantic hopes had been already too much realised.
+
+"Maria Theresa was no less astonished at these disclosures of the
+Cardinal than the Dauphine had been at his communication concerning her.
+She plainly saw that all her plans were known, and might be defeated from
+their detection.
+
+"The Cardinal, having succeeded in alarming the Empress, took from his
+pocket a fabulous correspondence, hatched by his secretary, the Abbe
+Georgel. 'There, Madame,' said he, 'this will convince Your Majesty that
+the warm interest I have taken in your Imperial house has carried me
+farther than I was justified in having gone; but seeing the sterility of
+the Dauphine, or, as it is reported by some of the Court, the total
+disgust the Dauphin has to consummate the marriage, the coldness of your
+daughter towards the interest of your Court, and the prospect of a race
+from the Comtesse d'Artois, for the consequences of which there is no
+answering, I have, unknown to Your Imperial Majesty, taken upon myself to
+propose to LOUIS XV. a marriage with the Archduchess Elizabeth, who, on
+becoming Queen of France, will immediately have it in her power to
+forward the Austrian interest; for LOUIS XV., as the first proof of his
+affection to his young bride, will at once secure to your Empire the aid
+you stand so much in need of against the ambition of these two rising
+States. The recovery of Your Imperial Majesty's ancient dominions may
+then be looked upon as accomplished from the influence of the French
+Cabinet.
+
+"The bait was swallowed. Maria Theresa was so overjoyed at this scheme
+that she totally forgot all former animosity against the Cardinal. She
+was encouraged to ascribe the silence of Marie Antoinette (whose letters
+had been intercepted by the Cardinal himself) to her resentment of this
+project concerning her sister; and the deluded Empress, availing herself
+of the pretended zeal of the Cardinal for the interest of her family,
+gave him full powers to return to France and secretly negotiate the
+alliance for her daughter Elizabeth, which was by no means to be
+disclosed to the Dauphine till the King's proxy should be appointed to
+perform the ceremony at Vienna. This was all the Cardinal wished for.
+
+"Meanwhile, in order to obtain a still greater ascendency over the Court
+of France, he had expended immense sums to bribe secretaries and
+Ministers; and couriers were even stopped to have copies taken of all the
+correspondence to and from Austria.
+
+"At the same crisis the Empress was informed by Prince Kaunitz that the
+Cardinal and his suite at the palace of the French Ambassador carried on
+such an immense and barefaced traffic of French manufactures of every
+description that Maria Theresa thought proper, in order to prevent future
+abuse, to abolish the privilege which gave to Ministers and Ambassadors
+an opportunity of defrauding the revenue. Though this law was levelled
+exclusively at the Cardinal, it was thought convenient under the
+circumstances to avoid irritating him, and it was consequently made
+general. But, the Comte de Mercy now obtaining some clue to his
+duplicity, an intimation was given to the Court at Versailles, to which
+the King replied, 'If the Empress be dissatisfied with the French
+Ambassador, he shall be recalled.' But though completely unmasked, none
+dared publicly to accuse him, each party fearing a discovery of its own
+intrigue. His official recall did not in consequence take place for some
+time; and the Cardinal, not thinking it prudent to go back till Louis XV.
+should be no more, lest some unforeseen discovery of his project for
+supplying her royal paramour with a Queen should rouse Du Barry to get
+his Cardinalship sent to the Bastille for life, remained fixed in his
+post, waiting for events.
+
+"At length Louis XV. expired, and the Cardinal returned to Versailles.
+He contrived to obtain a private audience of the young Queen. He
+presumed upon her former facility in listening to him, and was about to
+betray the last confidence of Maria Theresa; but the Queen, shocked at
+the knowledge which she had obtained of his having been equally
+treacherous to her and to her mother, in disgust and alarm left the room
+without receiving a letter he had brought her from Maria Theresa, and
+without deigning to address a single word to him. In the heat of her
+passion and resentment, she was nearly exposing all she knew of his
+infamies to the King, when the coolheaded Princesse Elizabeth opposed
+her, from the seeming imprudence of such an abrupt discovery; alleging
+that it might cause an open rupture between the two Courts, as it had
+already been the source of a reserve and coolness, which had not yet been
+explained. The Queen was determined never more to commit herself by
+seeing the Cardinal. She accordingly sent for her mother's letter, which
+he himself delivered into the hands of her confidential messenger, who
+advised the Queen not to betray the Cardinal to the King, lest, in so
+doing, she should never be able to guard herself against the domestic
+spies, by whom, perhaps, she was even yet surrounded! The Cardinal,
+conceiving, from the impunity of his conduct, that he still held the
+Queen in check, through the influence of her fears of his disclosing her
+weakness upon the subject of the obstruction she threw in the way of her
+sister's marriage, did not resign the hope of converting that ascendency
+to his future profit.
+
+"The fatal silence to which Her Majesty was thus unfortunately advised I
+regret from the bottom of my soul! All the successive vile plots of the
+Cardinal against the peace and reputation of the Queen may be attributed
+to this ill-judged prudence! Though it resulted from an honest desire of
+screening Her Majesty from the resentment or revenge to which she might
+have subjected herself from this villain, who had already injured her in
+her own estimation for having been credulous enough to have listened to
+him, yet from this circumstance it is that the Prince de Rohan built the
+foundation of all the after frauds and machinations with which he
+blackened the character and destroyed the comfort of his illustrious
+victim. It is obvious that a mere exclusion from Court was too mild a
+punishment for such offences, and it was but too natural that such a mind
+as his, driven from the royal presence, and, of course, from all the
+noble societies to which it led (the anti-Court party excepted), should
+brood over the means of inveigling the Queen into a consent for his
+reappearance before her and the gay world, which was his only element,
+and if her favour should prove unattainable to revenge himself by her
+ruin.
+
+"On the Cardinal's return to France, all his numerous and powerful
+friends beset the King and Queen to allow of his restoration to his
+embassy; but though on his arrival at Versailles, finding the Court had
+removed to Compiegne, he had a short audience there of the King, all
+efforts in his favour were thrown away. Equally unsuccessful was every
+intercession with the Empress-mother. She had become thoroughly awakened
+to his worthlessness, and she declared she would never more even receive
+him in her dominions as a visitor. The Cardinal, being apprised of this
+by some of his intimates, was at last persuaded to give up the idea of
+further importunity; and, pocketing his disgrace, retired with his hey
+dukes and his secretary, the Abbe Georgel, to whom may be attributed all
+the artful intrigues of his disgraceful diplomacy.
+
+"It is evident that Rohan had no idea, during all his schemes to supplant
+the Dauphine by marrying her sister to the King, that the secret hope of
+Louis XV. had been to divorce the Dauphin and marry the slighted bride
+himself. Perhaps it is fortunate that Rohan did not know this. A brain
+so fertile in mischief as his might have converted such a circumstance to
+baneful uses. But the death of Louis XV. put an end to all the then
+existing schemes for a change in her position. It was to her a real,
+though but a momentary triumph. From the hour of her arrival she had a
+powerful party to cope with; and the fact of her being an Austrian,
+independent of the jealousy created by her charms, was, in itself, a
+spell to conjure up armies, against which she stood alone, isolated in
+the face of embattled myriads! But she now reared her head, and her foes
+trembled in her presence. Yet she could not guard against the moles busy
+in the earth secretly to undermine her. Nay, had not Louis XV. died at
+the moment he did, there is scarcely a doubt, from the number and the
+quality of the hostile influences working on the credulity of the young
+Dauphin, that Marie Antoinette would have been very harshly dealt with,
+--even the more so from the partiality of the dotard who believed himself
+to be reigning. But she has been preserved from her enemies to become
+their sovereign; and if her crowned brow has erewhile been stung by
+thorns in its coronal, let me not despair of their being hereafter
+smothered in yet unblown roses."
+
+
+
+
+ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+Embonpoint of the French Princesses
+Few individuals except Princesses do with parade and publicity
+Frailty in the ambitious, through which the artful can act
+Laughed at qualities she could not comprehend
+Mind well stored against human casualties
+Policy, in sovereigns, is paramount to every other
+Quiet work of ruin by whispers and detraction
+Ridicule, than which no weapon is more false or deadly
+Salique Laws
+Thank Heaven, I am out of harness
+Traducing virtues the slanderers never possessed
+Underrated what she could not imitate
+Where the knout is the logician
+
+
+
+
+End of this Project Gutenberg Etext Memoirs of Louis XV., and XVI., v3
+by Madame du Hausset, and an unknown English girl and Princess Lamballe
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MEMOIRS OF LOUIS XV. AND XVI.
+
+Being Secret Memoirs of Madame du Hausset, Lady's Maid to Madame
+de Pompadour, and of an unknown English Girl and the Princess Lamballe
+
+
+
+BOOK 4.
+
+
+SECTION V.
+
+"The accession of Louis XVI. and Marie Antoinette to the crown of France
+took place (May 10, 1774) under the most propitious auspices!
+
+"After the long, corrupt reign of an old debauched Prince, whose vices
+were degrading to himself and to a nation groaning under the lash of
+prostitution and caprice, the most cheering changes were expected from
+the known exemplariness of his successor and the amiableness of his
+consort. Both were looked up to as models of goodness. The virtues of
+Louis XVI. were so generally known that all France hastened to
+acknowledge them, while the Queen's fascinations acted like a charm on
+all who had not been invincibly prejudiced against the many excellent
+qualities which entitled her to love and admiration. Indeed, I never
+heard an insinuation against either the King or Queen but from those
+depraved minds which never possessed virtue enough to imitate theirs, or
+were jealous of the wonderful powers of pleasing that so eminently
+distinguished Marie Antoinette from the rest of her sex.
+
+"On the death of Louis XV. the entire Court removed from Versailles to
+the palace of La Muette, situate in the Bois de Boulogne, very near
+Paris. The confluence of Parisians, who came in crowds joyfully to hail
+the death of the old vitiated Sovereign, and the accession of his adored
+successors, became quite annoying to the whole Royal Family. The
+enthusiasm with which the Parisians hailed their young King, and in
+particular his amiable young partner, lasted for many days. These
+spontaneous evidences of attachment were regarded as prognostics of a
+long reign of happiness. If any inference can be drawn from public
+opinion, could there be a stronger assurance than this one of
+uninterrupted future tranquility to its objects?
+
+"To the Queen herself it was a double triumph. The conspirators, whose
+depravity had been labouring to make her their victim, departed from the
+scene of power. The husband, who for four years had been callous to her
+attractions, became awakened to them. A complete change in the domestic
+system of the palace was wrought suddenly. The young King, during the
+interval which elapsed between the death and the interment of his
+grandfather, from Court etiquette was confined to his apartments. The
+youthful couple therefore saw each other with less restraint. The
+marriage was consummated. Marie Antoinette from this moment may date
+that influence over the heart (would I might add over the head and
+policy!) of the King, which never slackened during the remainder of their
+lives.
+
+"Madame du Barry was much better dealt with by the young King, whom she
+had always treated with the greatest levity, than she, or her numerous
+courtiers, expected. She was allowed her pension, and the entire
+enjoyment of all her ill-gotten and accumulated wealth; but, of course,
+excluded from ever appearing at Court, and politically exiled from Paris
+to the Chateau aux Dames.
+
+"This implacable foe and her infamous coadjutors being removed from
+further interference in matters of State by the expulsion of all their
+own Ministers, their rivals, the Duc de Choiseul and his party, by whom
+Marie Antoinette had been brought to France, were now in high expectation
+of finding the direction of the Government, by the Queen's influence,
+restored to that nobleman. But the King's choice was already made. He
+had been ruled by his aunts, and appointed Ministers suggested by them
+and his late grandfather's friends, who feared the preponderance of the
+Austrian influence. The three ladies, Madame la Marechale de Beauveau,
+the Duchesse de Choiseul,, and the Duchesse de Grammont, who were all
+well-known to Louis XVI. and stood high in his opinion for many excellent
+qualities, and especially for their independent assertion of their own
+and the Dauphine's dignity by retiring from Court in consequence of the
+supper at which Du Barry was introduced these ladies, though received on
+their return thither with peculiar welcome, in vain united their efforts
+with those of the Queen and the Abbe Vermond, to overcome the prejudice
+which opposed Choiseul's reinstatement. It was all in vain. The royal
+aunts, Adelaide especially, hated Choiseul for the sake of Austria, and
+his agency in bringing Marie Antoinette to France; and so did the King's
+tutor and governor, the Duc de Vauguyon, who had ever been hostile to any
+sort of friendship with Vienna; and these formed a host impenetrable even
+to the influence of the Queen, which was opposed by all the leaders of
+the prevailing party, who, though they were beginning externally to
+court, admire, and idolize her, secretly surrounded her by their noxious
+and viperous intrigues, and, while they lived in her bosom, fattened on
+the destruction of her fame!
+
+"One of the earliest of the paltry insinuations against Marie Antoinette
+emanated from her not counterfeiting deep affliction at the decease of
+the old King. A few days after that event, the Court received the
+regular visits of condolence and congratulation of the nobility, whose
+duty prescribes their attendance upon such occasions; and some of them,
+among whom were the daughters of Louis XV., not finding a young Queen of
+nineteen hypocritically bathed in tears, on returning to their abodes
+declared her the most indecorous of Princesses, and diffused a strong
+impression of her want of feeling. At the head of these detractors were
+Mesdames de Guemenee and Marsan, rival pretenders to the favours of the
+Cardinal de Rohan, who, having by the death of Louis XV. lost their
+influence and their unlimited power to appoint and dismiss Ministers,
+themselves became ministers to their own evil geniuses, in calumniating
+her whose legitimate elevation annihilated their monstrous pretensions!
+
+"The Abbe Vermond, seeing the defeat of the party of the Duc de Choiseul,
+by whom he had been sent to the Court of Vienna on the recommendation of
+Brienne, began to tremble for his own security. As soon as the Court had
+arrived at Choisy, and he was assured of the marriage having been
+consummated, he obtained, with the Queen's consent, an audience of the
+King, for the purpose of soliciting his sanction to his continuing in his
+situation. On submitting his suit to the King, His Majesty merely gave a
+shrug of the shoulders, and turned to converse with the Duc d'Aiguillon,
+who at that moment entered the room. The Abbe stood stupefied, and the
+Queen, seeing the crestfallen humour of her tutor, laughed and cheered
+him by remarking, 'There is more meaning in the shrug of a King than in
+the embrace of a Minister. The one always promises, but is seldom
+sincere; the other is generally sincere, but never promises.' The Abbe,
+not knowing how to interpret the dumb answer, finding the King's back
+turned and his conversation with D'Aiguillon continuing, was retiring
+with a shrug of his own shoulders to the Queen, when she exclaimed, good-
+humouredly, to Louis, laughing and pointing to the Abbe, 'Look! look!
+see how readily a Church dignitary can imitate the good Christian King,
+who is at the head of the Church.' The King, seeing the Abbe still
+waiting, said, dryly, 'Monsieur, you are confirmed in your situation,'
+and then resumed his conversation with the Duke.
+
+"This anecdote is a sufficient proof that LOUIS XVI. had no
+prepossession in favour of the Abbe Vermond, and that it was merely not
+to wound the feelings of the Queen that he was tolerated. The Queen
+herself was conscious of this, and used frequently to say to me how much
+she was indebted to the King for such deference to her private choice, in
+allowing Vermond to be her secretary, as she did not remember the King's
+ever having held any communication with the Abbe during the whole time he
+was attached to the service, though the Abbe always expressed himself
+with the greatest respect towards the King.
+
+"The decorum of Marie Antoinette would not allow her to endure those
+public exhibitions of the ceremony, of dressing herself which had been
+customary at Court. This reserve was highly approved by His Majesty; and
+one of the first reforms she introduced, after the accession, was in the
+internal discipline of her own apartment.
+
+"It was during one of the visits, apart from Court etiquette, to the
+toilet of the Queen, that the Duchesse de Chartres, afterwards Duchesse
+d'Orleans, introduced the famous Mademoiselle Bertin, who afterwards
+became so celebrated as the Queen's milliner--the first that was ever
+allowed to approach a royal palace; and it was months before Marie
+Antoinette had courage to receive her milliner in any other than the
+private apartment which, by the alteration Her Majesty had made in the
+arrangements of the household, she set apart for the purpose of dressing
+in comfort by herself and free from all intruders.
+
+"Till then the Queen was not only very plain in her attire, but very,
+economical--a circumstance which, I have often heard her say, gave great
+umbrage to the other Princesses of the Court of Versailles, who never
+showed themselves, from the moment they rose till they returned to bed,
+except in full dress; while she herself made all her morning visits in a
+simple white cambric gown and straw hat. This simplicity, unfortunately,
+like many other trifles, whose consequences no foresight would have
+predicted, tended much to injure Marie Antoinette, not only with the
+Court dandies, but the nation; by whom, though she was always censured,
+she was as suddenly imitated in all she wore or did.
+
+"From the private closet, which Marie Antoinette reserved to herself, and
+had now opened to her milliner, she would retire, after the great points
+of habiliment were accomplished, to those who were waiting with memorials
+at her public toilet, where the hairdresser would finish putting the
+ornaments in Her Majesty's hair.
+
+"The King made Marie Antoinette a present of Le Petit Trianon. Much has
+been said of the extravagant expense lavished by her upon this spot. I
+can only declare that the greater part of the articles of furniture which
+had not been worn out by time or were not worm or moth-eaten, and her own
+bed among them, were taken from the apartments of former Queens, and some
+of them had actually belonged to Anne of Austria, who, like Marie
+Antoinette, had purchased them out of her private savings. Hence it is
+clear that neither of the two Queens were chargeable to the State even
+for those little indulgences which every private lady of property is
+permitted from her husband, without coming under the lash of censure.
+
+"Her allowance as Queen of France was no more than 300,000 francs. It is
+well known that she was generous, liberal, and very charitable; that she
+paid all her expenses regularly respecting her household, Trianon, her
+dresses, diamonds, millinery, and everything else; her Court
+establishment excepted, and some few articles, which were paid by the
+civil list. She was one of the first Queens in Europe, had the first
+establishment in Europe, and was obliged to keep up the most refined and
+luxurious Court in Europe; and all upon means no greater than had been
+assigned to many of the former bigoted Queens, who led a cloistered life,
+retired from the world without circulating their wealth among the nation
+which supplied them with so large a revenue; and yet who lived and died
+uncensured for hoarding from the nation what ought at least to have been
+in part expended for its advantage.
+
+"And yet of all the extra expenditure which the dignity and circumstances
+of Marie Antoinette exacted, not a franc came from the public Treasury;
+but everything out of Her Majesty's private purse and savings from the
+above three hundred thousand francs, which was an infinitely less sum
+than Louis XIV. had lavished yearly on the Duchesse de Montespan, and
+less than half what Louis XV. had expended on the last two favourites,
+De Pompadour and Du Barry. These two women, as clearly appeared from the
+private registers, found among the papers of Louis XV. after his death,
+by Louis XVI. (but which, out of respect for the memory of his
+grandfather, he destroyed), these two women had amassed more property in
+diamonds and other valuables than all the Queens of France from the ,
+days of Catherine de Medicis up to those of Marie Antoinette.
+
+"Such was the goodness of heart of the excellent Queen of Louis XVI.,
+such the benevolence of her character, that not only did she pay all the
+pensions of the invalids left by her predecessors, but she distributed in
+public and private charities greater sums than any of the former Queens,
+thus increasing her expenses without any proportionate augmentation of
+her resources."
+
+ [Indeed, could Louis XVI. have foreseen--when, in order not to
+ expose the character of his predecessor and to honour the dignity of
+ the throne and monarchy of France, he destroyed the papers of his
+ grandfather--what an arm of strength he would have possessed in
+ preserving them, against the accusers of his unfortunate Queen and
+ himself, he never could have thrown away such means of establishing
+ a most honourable contrast between his own and former reigns. His
+ career exhibits no superfluous expenditure. Its economy was most
+ rigid. No sovereign was ever more scrupulous with the public money.
+ He never had any public or private predilection; no dilapidated
+ Minister for a favourite: no courtesan intrigue. For gaming he had
+ no fondness; and, if his abilities were not splendid, he certainly
+ had no predominating vices.]
+
+
+ NOTE:
+
+ [I must once more quit the journal of the Princess. Her Highness
+ here ceases to record particulars of the early part of the reign of
+ Louis XVI., and everything essential upon those times is too well
+ known to render it desirable to detain the reader by an attempt to
+ supply the deficiency. It is enough to state that the secret
+ unhappiness of the Queen at not yet having the assurance of an heir
+ was by no means weakened by the impatience of the people, nor by the
+ accouchement of the Comtesse d'Artois of the Duc d'Angouleme. While
+ the Queen continued the intimacy, and even held her parties at the
+ apartments of the Duchess that she might watch over her friend, even
+ in this triumph over herself, the poissardes grossly insulted her in
+ her misfortune, and coarsely called on her to give heirs to the
+ throne!
+
+ A consolation, however, for the unkind feeling of the populace was
+ about to arise in the delights of one of her strongest friendships.
+ I am come to the epoch when Her Majesty first formed an acquaintance
+ with the Princesse de Lamballe.
+
+ After a few words of my own on the family of Her Highness, I shall
+ leave her to pursue her beautiful and artless narrative of her
+ parentage, early sorrows, and introduction to Her Majesty, unbroken.
+
+ The journal of the history of Marie Antoinette, after this slight
+ interruption for the private history of her friend, will become
+ blended with the journal of the Princesse de Lamballe, and both
+ thenceforward will proceed in their course together, like their
+ destinies, which from that moment never became disunited.]
+
+
+
+
+SECTION VI.
+
+ [MARIA THERESA LOUISA CARIGNAN, Princess of Savoy, was born at Turin
+ on the 8th September, 1749. She had three sisters; two of them were
+ married at Rome, one to the Prince Doria Pamfili, the other to the
+ Prince Colonna; and the third at Vienna, to the Prince Lobkowitz,
+ whose son was the great patron of the immortal Haydn, the celebrated
+ composer.
+
+ The celebrated Haydn was, even at the age of 74, when I last
+ saw him at Vienna, till the most good-humoured bon vivant of
+ his age. He delighted in telling the origin of his good
+ fortune, which he said he entirely owed to a bad wife.
+
+ When he was first married, he said, finding no remedy against
+ domestic squabbles, he used to quit his bad half and go and
+ enjoy himself with his good friends, who were Hungarians and
+ Germans, for weeks together. Once, having returned home after
+ a considerable absence, his wife, while he was in bed next
+ morning, followed her husband's example: she did even more, for
+ she took all his clothes, even to his shoes, stockings, and
+ small clothes, nay, everything he had, along with her! Thus
+ situated, he was under the necessity of doing something to
+ cover his nakedness; and this, he himself acknowledged, was the
+ first cause of his seriously applying himself to the profession
+ which has since made his name immortal.
+
+ He used to laugh, saying, "I was from that time so habituated
+ to study that my wife, often fearing it would injure me, would
+ threaten me with the same operation if I did not go out and
+ amuse myself; but then," added he, "I was grown old, and she
+ was sick and no longer jealous." He spoke remarkably good
+ Italian, though he had never been in Italy, and on my going to
+ Vienna to hear his "Creation," he promised to accompany me back
+ to Italy; but he unfortunately died before I returned to Vienna
+ from Carlsbad.
+
+ She had a brother also, the Prince Carignan, who, marrying against
+ the consent of his family, was no longer received by them; but the
+ unremitting and affectionate attention which the Princesse de
+ Lamballe paid to him and his new connexions was an ample
+ compensation for the loss he sustained in the severity of his other
+ sisters.
+
+ With regard to the early life of the Princesse de Lamballe, the
+ arranger of these pages must now leave her to pursue her own
+ beautiful and artless narrative unbroken, up to the epoch of her
+ appointment to the household of the Queen. It will be recollected
+ that the papers of which the reception has been already described in
+ the introduction formed the private journal of this most amiable
+ Princess; and those passages relating to her own early life being
+ the most connected part of them, it has been thought that to disturb
+ them would be a kind of sacrilege. After the appointment of Her
+ Highness to the superintendence of the Queen's household, her
+ manuscripts again become confused, and fall into scraps and
+ fragments, which will require to be once more rendered clear by the
+ recollections of events and conversations by which the preceding
+ chapters have been assisted.]
+
+"I was the favourite child of a numerous family, and intended, almost at
+my birth--as is generally the case among Princes who are nearly allied to
+crowned heads--to be united to one of the Princes, my near relation, of
+the royal house of Sardinia.
+
+"A few years after this, the Duc and Duchesse de Penthievre arrived at
+Turin, on their way to Italy, for the purpose of visiting the different
+Courts, to make suitable marriage contracts for both their infant
+children.
+
+"These two children were Mademoiselle de Penthievre, afterwards the
+unhappy Duchesse d'Orleans, and their idolised son, the Prince de
+Lamballe.
+
+ [The father of Louis Alexander Joseph Stanislaus de Bourbon
+ Penthievre, Prince de Lamballe, was the son of Comte de Toulouse,
+ himself a natural son of Louis XIV. and Madame de Montespan, who was
+ considered as the most wealthy of all the natural children, in
+ consequence of Madame de Montespan having artfully entrapped the
+ famous Mademoiselle de Moutpensier to make over her immense fortune
+ to him as her heir after her death, as the price of liberating her
+ husband from imprisonment in the Bastille, and herself from a
+ ruinous prosecution, for having contracted this marriage contrary to
+ the express commands of her royal cousin, Louis XIV.--Vide Histoire
+ de Louis XIV. par Voltaire.]
+
+"Happy would it have been both for the Prince who was destined to the
+former and the Princess who was given to the latter, had these
+unfortunate alliances never taken place.
+
+"The Duc and Duchesse de Penthievre became so singularly attached to my
+beloved parents, and, in particular, to myself, that the very day they
+first dined at the Court of Turin, they mentioned the wish they had
+formed of uniting me to their young son, the Prince de Lamballe.
+
+"The King of Sardinia, as the head of the house of Savoy and Carignan,
+said there had been some conversation as to my becoming a member of his
+royal family; but as I was so very young at the time, many political
+reasons might arise to create motives for a change in the projected
+alliance. 'If, therefore, the Prince de Carignan,' said the King,
+'be anxious to settle his daughter's marriage, by any immediate
+matrimonial alliance, I certainly shall not avail myself of any prior
+engagement, nor oppose any obstacle in the way of its solemnisation.'
+
+"The consent of the King being thus unexpectedly obtained by the Prince,
+so desirable did the arrangement seem to the Duke and Duchess that the
+next day the contract was concluded with my parents for my becoming the
+wife of their only son, the Prince de Lamballe.
+
+"I was too young to be consulted. Perhaps had I been older the result
+would have been the same, for it generally happens in these great family
+alliances that the parties most interested, and whose happiness is most
+concerned, are the least thought of. The Prince was, I believe, at
+Paris, under the tuition of his governess, and I was in the nursery,
+heedless, and totally ignorant of my future good or evil destination!
+
+"So truly happy and domestic a life as that led by the Duc and Duchesse
+de Penthievre seemed to my family to offer an example too propitious not
+to secure to me a degree of felicity with a private Prince, very rarely
+the result of royal unions! Of course, their consent was given with
+alacrity. When I was called upon to do homage to my future parents, I
+had so little idea, from my extreme youthfulness, of what was going on
+that I set them all laughing, when, on being asked if I should like to
+become the consort of the Prince de Lamballe, I said, 'Yes, I am very
+fond of music!' No, my dear,' resumed the good and tender-hearted Duc de
+Penthievre, 'I mean, would you have any objection to become his wife?'--
+'No, nor any other person's!' was the innocent reply, which increased the
+mirth of all the guests at my expense.
+
+"Happy, happy days of youthful, thoughtless innocence, luxuriously felt
+and appreciated under the thatched roof of the cottage, but unknown and
+unattainable beneath the massive pile of a royal palace and a gemmed
+crown! Scarcely had I entered my teens when my adopted parents strewed
+flowers of the sweetest fragrance to lead me to the sacred altar, that
+promised the bliss of busses, but which, too soon, from the foul
+machinations of envy, jealousy, avarice, and a still more criminal
+passion, proved to me the altar of my sacrifice!
+
+"My misery and my uninterrupted grief may be dated from the day my
+beloved sister-in-law, Mademoiselle de Penthievre, sullied her hand by
+its union with the Duc de Chartres.--[Afterwards Duc d'Orleans, and the
+celebrated revolutionary Philippe Egalite.]--From that moment all
+comfort, all prospect of connubial happiness, left my young and
+affectionate heart, plucked thence by the very roots, never more again to
+bloom there. Religion and philosophy were the only remedies remaining.
+
+"I was a bride when an infant, a wife before I was a woman, a widow
+before I was a mother, or had the prospect of becoming one! Our union
+was, perhaps, an exception to the general rule. We became insensibly the
+more attached to each other the more we were acquainted, which rendered
+the more severe the separation, when we were torn asunder never to meet
+again in this world!
+
+"After I left Turin, though everything for my reception at the palaces of
+Toulouse and Rambouillet had been prepared in the most sumptuous style of
+magnificence, yet such was my agitation that I remained convulsively
+speechless for many hours, and all the affectionate attention of the
+family of the Duc de Penthievre could not calm my feelings.
+
+"Among those who came about me was the bridegroom himself, whom I had
+never yet seen. So anxious was he to have his first acquaintance
+incognito that he set off from Paris the moment he was apprised of my
+arrival in France and presented himself as the Prince's page. As he had
+outgrown the figure of his portrait, I received him as such; but the
+Prince, being better pleased with me than he had apprehended he should
+be, could scarcely avoid discovering himself. During our journey to
+Paris I myself disclosed the interest with which the supposed page had
+inspired me. 'I hope,' exclaimed I, 'my Prince will allow his page to
+attend me, for I like him much.'
+
+"What was my surprise when the Duc de Penthievre presented me to the
+Prince and I found in him the page for whom I had already felt such an
+interest! We both laughed and wanted words to express our mutual
+sentiments. This was really love at first sight.
+
+ [The young Prince was enraptured at finding his lovely bride so
+ superior in personal charms to the description which had been given
+ of her, and even to the portrait sent to him from Turin. Indeed,
+ she must have been a most beautiful creature, for when I left her in
+ the year 1792, though then five-and-forty years of age, from the
+ freshness of her complexion, the elegance of her figure, and the
+ dignity of her deportment, she certainly did not appear to be more
+ than thirty. She had a fine head of hair, and she took great
+ pleasure in showing it unornamented. I remember one day, on her
+ coming hastily from the bath, as she was putting on her dress, her
+ cap falling off, her hair completely covered her!
+
+ The circumstances of her death always make me shudder at the
+ recollection of this incident! I have been assured by Mesdames
+ Mackau, de Soucle, the Comtesse de Noailles (not Duchesse, as
+ Mademoiselle Bertin has created her in her Memoirs of that name),
+ and others, that the Princesse de Lamballe was considered the most
+ beautiful and accomplished Princess at the Court of Louis XV.,
+ adorned with all the grace, virtue, and elegance of manner which so
+ eminently distinguished her through life.]
+
+"The Duc de Chartres, then possessing a very handsome person and most
+insinuating address, soon gained the affections of the amiable
+Mademoiselle Penthievre. Becoming thus a member of the same family, he
+paid me the most assiduous attention. From my being his sister-in-law,
+and knowing he was aware of my great attachment to his young wife, I
+could have no idea that his views were criminally levelled at my honour,
+my happiness, and my future peace of mind. How, therefore, was I
+astonished and shocked when he discovered to me his desire to supplant
+the legitimate object of my affections, whose love for me equalled mine
+for him! I did not expose this baseness of the Duc de Chartres, out of
+filial affection for my adopted father, the Duc de Penthievre; out of the
+love I bore his amiable daughter, she being pregnant; and, above all, in
+consequence of the fear I was under of compromising the life of the
+Prince, my husband, who I apprehended might be lost to me if I did not
+suffer in silence. But still, through my silence he was lost--and oh,
+how dreadfully! The Prince was totally in the dark as to the real
+character of his brother-in-law. He blindly became every day more and
+more attached to the man, who was then endeavouring by the foulest means
+to blast the fairest prospects of his future happiness in life! But my
+guardian angel protected me from becoming a victim to seduction,
+defeating every attack by that prudence which has hitherto been my
+invincible shield.
+
+"Guilt, unpunished in its first crime, rushes onward, and hurrying from
+one misdeed to another, like the flood-tide, drives all before it! My
+silence, and his being defeated without reproach, armed him with courage
+for fresh daring, and he too well succeeded in embittering the future
+days of my life, as well as those of his own affectionate wife, and his
+illustrious father-in-law, the virtuous Duc de Penthievre, who was to all
+a father.
+
+"To revenge himself upon me for the repulse he met with, this man
+inveigled my young, inexperienced husband from his bridal bed to those
+infected with the nauseous poison of every vice! Poor youth! he soon
+became the prey of every refinement upon dissipation and studied
+debauchery, till at length his sufferings made his life a burthen, and he
+died in the most excruciating agonies both of mind and body, in the arms
+of a disconsolate wife and a distracted father--and thus, in a few short
+months, at the age of eighteen, was I left a widow to lament my having
+become a wife!
+
+"I was in this situation, retired from the world and absorbed in grief,
+with the ever beloved and revered illustrious father of my murdered lord,
+endeavouring to sooth his pangs for the loss of those comforts in a child
+with which my cruel disappointment forbade my ever being blest--though,
+in the endeavour to soothe, I often only aggravated both his and my own
+misery at our irretrievable loss--when a ray of unexpected light burst
+upon my dreariness. It was amid this gloom of human agony, these
+heartrending scenes of real mourning, that the brilliant star shone to
+disperse the clouds which hovered over our drooping heads,--to dry the
+hot briny tears which were parching up our miserable vegetating
+existence--it was in this crisis that Marie Antoinette came, like a
+messenger sent down from Heaven, graciously to offer the balm of comfort
+in the sweetest language of human compassion. The pure emotions of her
+generous soul made her unceasing, unremitting, in her visits to two
+mortals who must else have perished under the weight of their
+misfortunes. But for the consolation of her warm friendship we must have
+sunk into utter despair!
+
+"From that moment I became seriously attached to the Queen of France.
+She dedicated a great portion of her time to calm the anguish of my poor
+heart, though I had not yet accepted the honour of becoming a member of
+Her Majesty's household. Indeed, I was a considerable time before I
+could think of undertaking a charge I felt myself so completely incapable
+of fulfilling. I endeavoured to check the tears that were pouring down
+my cheeks, to conceal in the Queen's presence the real feelings of my
+heart, but the effort only served to increase my anguish when she had
+departed. Her attachment to me, and the cordiality with which she
+distinguished herself towards the Duc de Penthievre, gave her a place in
+that heart, which had been chilled by the fatal vacuum left by its first
+inhabitant; and Marie Antoinette was the only rival through life that
+usurped his pretensions, though she could never wean me completely from
+his memory.
+
+"My health, from the melancholy life I led, had so much declined that my
+affectionate father, the Duc de Penthievre, with whom I continued to
+reside, was anxious that I should emerge from my retirement for the
+benefit of my health. Sensible of his affection, and having always
+honoured his counsels, I took his advice in this instance. It being in
+the hard winter, when so many persons were out of bread, the Queen, the
+Duchesse d'Orleans, the Duc de Penthievre, and myself, introduced the
+German sledges, in which we were followed by most of the nobility and the
+rich citizens. This afforded considerable employment to different
+artificers. The first use I made of my own new vehicle was to visit, in
+company with the Duc de Penthievre, the necessitous poor families and our
+pensioners. In the course of our rounds we met the Queen.
+
+"'I suppose,' exclaimed Her Majesty, 'you also are laying a good
+foundation for my work! Heavens! what must the poor feel! I am wrapped
+up like a diamond in a box, covered with furs, and yet I am chilled with
+cold!'
+
+"'That feeling sentiment,' said the Duke, 'will soon warm many a cold
+family's heart with gratitude to bless Your Majesty!'
+
+"'Why, yes,' replied Her Majesty, showing a long piece of paper
+containing the names of those to whom she intended to afford relief,
+'I have only collected two hundred yet on my list, but the cure will do
+the rest and help me to draw the strings of my privy purse! But I have
+not half done my rounds. I daresay before I return to Versailles I shall
+have as many more, and, since we are engaged in the same business, pray
+come into my sledge and do not take my work out of my hands! Let me have
+for once the merit of doing something good!'
+
+"On the coming up of a number of other vehicles belonging to the sledge
+party, the Queen added, 'Do not say anything about what I have been
+telling you!' for Her Majesty never wished what she did in the way of
+charity or donations should be publicly known, the old pensioners
+excepted, who, being on the list, could not be concealed; especially as
+she continued to pay all those she found of the late Queen of Louis XV.
+She was remarkably delicate and timid with respect to hurting the
+feelings of any one; and, fearing the Duc de Penthievre might not be
+pleased at her pressing me to leave him in order to join her, she said,
+'Well, I will let you off, Princess, on your both promising to dine with
+me at Trianon; for the King is hunting, not deer, but wood for the poor,
+and he will see his game off to Paris before he comes back:
+
+"The Duke begged to be excused, but wished me to accept the invitation,
+which I did, and we parted, each to pursue our different sledge
+excursions.
+
+"At the hour appointed, I made my appearance at Trianon, and had the
+honour to dine tete-a-tete with Her Majesty, which was much more
+congenial to my feelings than if there had been a party, as I was still
+very low-spirited and unhappy.
+
+"After dinner, 'My dear Princess,' said the Queen to me, 'at your time of
+life you must not give yourself up entirely to the dead. You wrong the
+living. We have not been sent into the world for ourselves. I have felt
+much for your situation, and still do so, and therefore hope, as long as
+the weather permits, that you will favour me with your company to enlarge
+our sledge excursions. The King and my dear sister Elizabeth are also
+much interested about your coming on a visit to Versailles. What think
+you of our plan.
+
+"I thanked Her Majesty, the King, and the Princess, for their kindness,
+but I observed that my state of health and mind could so little
+correspond in any way with the gratitude I should owe them for their
+royal favours that I trusted a refusal would be attributed to the fact of
+my consciousness how much rather my society must prove an annoyance and a
+burthen than a source of pleasure.
+
+"My tears flowing down my cheeks rapidly while I was speaking, the Queen,
+with that kindness for which she was so eminently distinguished, took me
+by the hand, and with her handkerchief dried my face.
+
+"'I am,' said the Queen, I about to renew a situation which has for some
+time past lain dormant; and I hope, my dear Princess, therewith to
+establish my own private views, in forming the happiness of a worthy
+individual.'
+
+"I replied that such a plan must insure Her Majesty the desired object
+she had in view, as no individual could be otherwise than happy under the
+immediate auspices of so benevolent and generous a Sovereign.
+
+"The Queen, with great affability, as if pleased with my observation,
+only said, 'If you really think as you speak, my views are accomplished.'
+
+"My carriage was announced, and I then left Her Majesty, highly pleased
+at her gracious condescension, which evidently emanated from the kind
+wish to raise my drooping spirits from their melancholy.
+
+"Gratitude would not permit me to continue long without demonstrating to
+Her Majesty the sentiments her kindness had awakened in my heart.
+
+"I returned next day with my sister-in-law, the Duchesse d'Orleans, who
+was much esteemed by the Queen, and we joined the sledge parties with Her
+Majesty.
+
+"On the third or fourth day of these excursions I again had the honour to
+dine with Her Majesty, when, in the presence of the Princesse Elizabeth,
+she asked me if I were still of the same opinion with respect to the
+person it was her intention to add to her household?
+
+"I myself had totally forgotten the topic and entreated Her Majesty's
+pardon for my want of memory, and begged she would signify to what
+subject she alluded.
+
+"The Princesse Elizabeth laughed. 'I thought,' cried she, 'that you had
+known it long ago! The Queen, with His Majesty's consent, has nominated
+you, my dear Princess (embracing me), superintendent of her household.'
+
+"The Queen, also embracing me, said, 'Yes; it is very true. You said the
+individual destined to such a situation could not be otherwise than
+happy; and I am myself thoroughly happy in being able thus to contribute
+towards rendering you so.'
+
+"I was perfectly at a loss for a moment or two, but, recovering myself
+from the effect of this unexpected and unlooked for preferment, I thanked
+Her Majesty with the best grace I was able for such an unmerited mark of
+distinction.
+
+"The Queen, perceiving my embarrassment, observed, 'I knew I should
+surprise you; but I thought your being established at Versailles much
+more desirable for one of your rank and youth than to be, as you were,
+with the Duc de Penthievre; who, much as I esteem his amiable character
+and numerous great virtues, is by no means the most cheering companion
+for my charming Princess. From this moment let our friendships be united
+in the common interest of each other's happiness.'
+
+"The Queen took me by the hand. The Princesse Elizabeth, joining hers,
+exclaimed to the Queen, 'Oh, my dear sister! let me make the trio in
+this happy union of friends!'
+
+"In the society of her adored Majesty and of her saint-like sister
+Elizabeth I have found my only balm of consolation! Their graciously
+condescending to sympathise in the grief with which I was overwhelmed
+from the cruel disappointment of my first love, filled up in some degree
+the vacuum left by his loss, who was so prematurely ravished from me in
+the flower of youth, leaving me a widow at eighteen; and though that loss
+is one I never can replace or forget, the poignancy of its effect has
+been in a great degree softened by the kindnesses of my excellent father-
+in-law, the Duc de Penthievre, and the relations resulting from my
+situation with, and the never-ceasing attachment of my beloved royal
+mistress."
+
+
+
+
+SECTION VII.
+
+
+ [The connexion of the Princesse de Lamballe with the Queen, of which
+ she has herself described the origin in the preceding chapter,
+ proved so important in its influence upon the reputation and fate of
+ both these illustrious victims, that I must once more withdraw the
+ attention of the reader, to explain, from personal observation and
+ confidential disclosures, the leading causes of the violent dislike
+ which was kindled in the public against an intimacy that it would
+ have been most fortunate had Her Majesty preferred through life to
+ every other.
+
+ The selection of a friend by the Queen, and the sudden elevation of
+ that friend to the highest station in the royal household, could not
+ fail to alarm the selfishness of courtiers, who always feel
+ themselves injured by the favour shown to others. An obsolete
+ office was revived in favour of the Princesse de Lamballe. In the
+ time of Maria Leckzinska, wife of Louis XV., the office of
+ superintendent, then held by Mademoiselle de Clermont, was
+ suppressed when its holder died. The office gave a control over the
+ inclinations of Queens, by which Maria Leckzinska was sometimes
+ inconvenienced; and it had lain dormant ever since. Its restoration
+ by a Queen who it was believed could be guided by no motive but the
+ desire to seek pretexts for showing undue favour, was of course eyed
+ askance, and ere long openly calumniated.
+
+ The Comtesse de Noailles, who never could forget the title the Queen
+ gave her of Madame Etiquette, nor forgive the frequent jokes which
+ Her Majesty passed upon her antiquated formality, availed herself of
+ the opportunity offered by her husband's being raised to the dignity
+ of Marshal of France, to resign her situation on the appointment of
+ the Princesse de Lamballe as superintendent. The Countess retired
+ with feelings embittered against her royal mistress, and her
+ annoyance in the sequel ripened into enmity. The Countess was
+ attached to a very powerful party, not only at Court but scattered
+ throughout the kingdom. Her discontent arose from the circumstance
+ of no longer having to take her orders from the Queen direct, but
+ from her superintendent. Ridiculous as this may seem to an
+ impartial observer, it created one of the most powerful hostilities
+ against which Her Majesty had afterwards to contend.
+
+ Though the Queen esteemed the Comtesse de Noailles for her many good
+ qualities, yet she was so much put out of her way by the rigour with
+ which the Countess enforced forms which to Her Majesty appeared
+ puerile and absurd, that she felt relieved, and secretly gratified,
+ by her retirement. It will be shown hereafter to what an excess the
+ Countess was eventually carried by her malice.
+
+ One of the popular objections to the revival of the office of
+ superintendent in favour of the Princesse de Lamballe arose from its
+ reputed extravagance. This was as groundless as the other charges
+ against the Queen. The etiquettes of dress, and the requisite
+ increase of every other expense, from the augmentation of every
+ article of the necessaries as well as the luxuries of life, made a
+ treble difference between the expenditure of the circumscribed Court
+ of Maria Leckzinska and that of Louis XVI.; yet the Princesse de
+ Lamballe received no more salary than had been allotted to
+ Mademoiselle de Clermont in the selfsame situation half a century
+ before.
+
+ (And even that salary she never appropriated to any private use
+ of her own, being amply supplied through the generous bounty of
+ her father-in-law, the Duc de Penthievre; and latterly, to my
+ knowledge, so far from receiving any pay, she often paid the
+ Queen's and Princesse Elizabeth's bills out of her own purse.)
+
+ So far from possessing the slightest propensity either to
+ extravagance in herself or to the encouragement of extravagance in
+ others, the Princesse de Lamballe was a model of prudence, and upon
+ those subjects, as indeed upon all others, the Queen could not have
+ had a more discreet counsellor. She eminently contributed to the
+ charities of the Queen, who was the mother of the fatherless, the
+ support of the widow, and the general protectress and refuge of
+ suffering humanity. Previously to the purchase of any article of
+ luxury, the Princess would call for the list of the pensioners: if
+ anything was due on that account, it was instantly paid, and the
+ luxury dispensed with.
+
+ She never made her appearance in the Queen's apartments except at
+ established hours. This was scrupulously observed till the
+ Revolution. Circumstances then obliged her to break through forms.
+ The Queen would only receive communications, either written or
+ verbal, upon the subjects growing out of that wretched crisis, in
+ the presence of the Princess; and hence her apartments were open to
+ all who had occasion to see Her Majesty. This made their
+ intercourse more constant and unceremonious. But before this, the
+ Princess only went to the royal presence at fixed hours, unless she
+ had memorials to present to the King, Queen, or Ministers, in favour
+ of such as asked for justice or mercy. Hence, whenever the Princess
+ entered before the stated times, the Queen would run and embrace
+ her, and exclaim: "Well, my dear Princesse de Lamballe! what widow,
+ what orphan, what suffering or oppressed petitioner am I to thank
+ for this visit? for I know you never come to me empty-handed when
+ you come unexpectedly!" The Princess, on these occasions, often had
+ the petitioners waiting in an adjoining apartment, that they might
+ instantly avail themselves of any inclination the Queen might show
+ to see them.
+
+ Once the Princess was deceived by a female painter of doubtful
+ character, who supplicated her to present a work she had executed to
+ the Queen. I myself afterwards returned that work to its owner.
+ Thenceforward, the Princess became very rigid in her inquiries,
+ previous to taking the least interest in any application, or
+ consenting to present any one personally to the King or Queen. She
+ required thoroughly to be informed of the nature of the request, and
+ of the merit and character of the applicant, before she would attend
+ to either. Owing to this caution Her Highness scarcely ever after
+ met with a negative. In cases of great importance, though the
+ Queen's compassionate and good heart needed no stimulus to impel her
+ to forward the means of justice, the Princess would call the
+ influence of the Princesse Elizabeth to her aid; and Elizabeth never
+ sued in vain.
+
+ Marie Antoinette paid the greatest attention to all memorials. They
+ were regularly collected every week by Her Majesty's private
+ secretary, the Abbe Vermond. I have myself seen many of them, when
+ returned from the Princesse de Lamballe, with the Queen's marginal
+ notes in her own handwriting, and the answers dictated by Her
+ Majesty to the different, officers of the departments relative to
+ the nature of the respective demands. She always recommended the
+ greatest attention to all public documents, and annexed notes to
+ such as passed through her hands to prevent their being thrown aside
+ or lost.
+
+ One of those who were least satisfied with the appointment of the
+ Princesse de Lamballe to the office of superintendent was her
+ brother-in-law, the Duc d'Orleans, who, having attempted her virtue
+ on various occasions and been repulsed, became mortified and alarmed
+ at her situation as a check to his future enterprise.
+
+ At one time the Duc and Duchesse d'Orleans were most constant and
+ assiduous in their attendance on Marie Antoinette. They were at all
+ her parties. The Queen was very fond of the Duchess. It is
+ supposed that the interest Her Majesty took in that lady, and the
+ steps to which some time afterwards that interest led, planted the
+ first seeds of the unrelenting and misguided hostility which, in the
+ deadliest times of the Revolution, animated the Orleanists against
+ the throne.
+
+ The Duc d'Orleans, then Duc de Chartres, was never a favourite of
+ the Queen. He was only tolerated at Court on account of his wife
+ and of the great intimacy which subsisted between him and the Comte
+ d'Artois. Louis XVI. had often expressed his disapprobation of the
+ Duke's character, which his conduct daily justified.
+
+ The Princesse de Lamballe could have no cause to think of her
+ brother-in-law but with horror. He had insulted her, and, in
+ revenge at his defeat, had, it was said, deprived her, by the most
+ awful means, of her husband. The Princess was tenderly attached to
+ her sister-in-law, the Duchess. Her attachment could not but make
+ her look very unfavourably upon the circumstance of the Duke's
+ subjecting his wife to the humiliation of residing in the palace
+ with Madame de Genlis, and being forced to receive a person of
+ morals so incorrect as the guardian of her children. The Duchess
+ had complained to her father, the Duc de Penthievre, in the presence
+ of the Princesse de Lamballe, of the very great ascendency Madame de
+ Genlis exercised over her husband; and had even requested the Queen
+ to use her influence in detaching the Duke from this connexion.
+
+ (It was generally understood that the Duke had a daughter by
+ Madame de Genlis. This daughter, when grown up, was married to
+ the late Irish Lord Robert Fitzgerald.)
+
+ But she had too much gentleness of nature not presently to forget
+ her resentment. Being much devoted to her husband, rather than
+ irritate him to further neglect by personal remonstrance, she
+ determined to make the best of a bad business, and tolerated Madame
+ de Genlis, although she made no secret among her friends and
+ relations of the reason why she did so. Nay, so far did her wish
+ not to disoblige her husband prevail over her own feelings as to
+ induce her to yield at last to his importunities by frequently
+ proposing to present Madame de Genlis to the Queen. But Madame de
+ Genilis never could obtain either a public or a private audience.
+ Though the Queen was a great admirer of merit and was fond of
+ encouraging talents, of which Madame de Genlis was by no means
+ deficient, yet even the account the Duchess herself had given, had
+ Her Majesty possessed no other means of knowledge, would have sealed
+ that lady's exclusion from the opportunities of display at Court
+ which she sought so earnestly.
+
+ There was another source of exasperation against the Duc d'Orleans;
+ and the great cause of a new and, though less obtrusive, yet perhaps
+ an equally dangerous foe under all the circumstances, in Madame de
+ Genlis. The anonymous slander of the one was circulated through all
+ France by the other; and spleen and disappointment feathered the
+ venomed arrows shot at the heart of power by malice and ambition.
+ Be the charge true or false, these anonymous libels were generally
+ considered as the offspring of this lady: they were industriously
+ scattered by the Duc d'Orleans; and their frequent refutation by the
+ Queen's friends only increased the malignant industry of their
+ inventor.
+
+ An event which proved the most serious of all that ever happened to
+ the Queen, and the consequences of which were distinctly foreseen by
+ the Princesse de Lamballe and others of her true friends, was now
+ growing to maturity.
+
+ The deposed Court oracle, the Comtesse de Noailles, had been
+ succeeded as literary leader by the Comtesse Diane de Polignac.
+ She was a favourite of the Comte d'Artois, and was the first lady
+ in attendance upon the Countess, his wife.
+
+ (The Comtesse Diane de Polignac had a much better education,
+ and considerably more natural capacity, than her sister-in-law,
+ the Duchess, and the Queen merely disliked her for her prudish
+ affectation. The Comtesse d'Artois grew jealous of the Count's
+ intimacy with the Comtesse Diane. While she considered herself
+ as the only one of the Royal Family likely to be mother of a
+ future sovereign, she was silent, or perhaps too much engrossed
+ by her castles in the air to think of anything but diadems; but
+ when she saw the Queen producing heirs, she grew out of humour
+ at her lost popularity, and began to turn her attention to her
+ husband's Endymionship to this now Diana! When she had made up
+ her mind to get her rival out of her house, she consulted one
+ of the family; but being told that the best means for a wife to
+ keep her husband out of harm's way was to provide him with a
+ domestic occupation for his leisure hours at home, than which
+ nothing could be better than a handmaid under the same roof,
+ she made a merit of necessity and submitted ever after to
+ retain the Comtesse Diane, as she had been prudently advised.
+ The Comtesse Diane, in consequence, remained in the family even
+ up to the 17th October, 1789, when she left Versailles in
+ company with the De Polignacs and the D'Artois, who all
+ emigrated together from France to Italy and lived at Stria on
+ the Brenta, near Venice, for some time, till the Comtesse
+ d'Artois went to Turin.)
+
+ The Queen's conduct had always been very cool to her. She deemed
+ her a self-sufficient coquette. However, the Comtesse Diane was a
+ constant attendant at the gay parties which were then the fashion of
+ the Court, though not greatly admired.
+
+ The reader will scarcely need to be informed that the event to which
+ I have just alluded is the introduction by the Comtesse Diane of her
+ sister-in-law, the Comtesse Julie de Polignac, to the Queen; and
+ having brought the record up to this point I here once more dismiss
+ my own pen for that of the Princesse de Lamballe.
+
+ It will be obvious to every one that I must have been indebted to
+ the conversations of my beloved patroness for most of the sentiments
+ and nearly all the facts I have just been stating; and had the
+ period on which she has written so little as to drive me to the
+ necessity of writing for her been less pregnant with circumstances
+ almost entirely personal to herself, no doubt I should have found
+ more upon that period in her manuscript. But the year of which Her
+ Highness says so little was the year of happiness and exclusive
+ favour; and the Princess was above the vanity of boasting, even
+ privately in the self-confessional of her diary. She resumes her
+ records with her apprehensions; and thus proceeds, describing the
+ introduction of the Comtesse Julie de Polignac, regretting her
+ ascendency over the Queen, and foreseeing its fatal effects.]
+
+
+"I had been only a twelvemonth in Her Majesty's service, which I believe
+was the happiest period of both our lives, when, at one of the Court
+assemblies, the Comtesse Julie de Polignac was first introduced by her
+sister-in-law, the Comtesse Diane de Polignac, to the Queen.
+
+"She had lived in the country, quite a retired life, and appeared to be
+more the motherly woman, and the domestic wife, than the ambitious Court
+lady, or royal sycophant. She was easy of access, and elegantly plain in
+her dress and deportment.
+
+"Her appearance at Court was as fatal to the Queen as it was propitious
+to herself!
+
+"She seemed formed by nature to become a royal favourite, unassuming,
+remarkably complaisant, possessing a refined taste, with a good-natured
+disposition, not handsome, but well formed, and untainted by haughtiness
+or pomposity.
+
+"It would appear, from the effect her introduction had on the Queen, that
+her domestic virtues were written in her countenance; for she became a
+royal favourite before she had time to become a candidate for royal
+favour.
+
+"The Queen's sudden attachment to the Comtesse Julie produced no
+alteration in my conduct, while I saw nothing extraordinary to alarm me
+for the consequences of any particular marked partiality, by which the
+character and popularity of Her Majesty might be endangered.
+
+"But, seeing the progress this lady made in the feelings of the Queen's
+enemies, it became my duty, from the situation I held, to caution Her
+Majesty against the risks she ran in making her favourites friends; for
+it was very soon apparent how highly the Court disapproved of this
+intimacy and partiality: and the same feeling soon found its way to the
+many-headed monster, the people, who only saw the favourite without
+considering the charge she held. Scarcely had she felt the warm rays of
+royal favour, when the chilling blasts of envy and malice began to nip it
+in the bud of all its promised bliss. Even long before she touched the
+pinnacle of her grandeur as governess of the royal children the blackest
+calumny began to show itself in prints, caricatures, songs, and pamphlets
+of every description.
+
+"A reciprocity of friendship between a Queen and a subject, by those who
+never felt the existence of such a feeling as friendship, could only be
+considered in a criminal point of view. But by what perversion could
+suspicion frown upon the ties between two married women, both living in
+the greatest harmony with their respective husbands, especially when both
+became mothers and were so devoted to their offspring? This boundless
+friendship did glow between this calumniated pair calumniated because the
+sacredness and peculiarity of the sentiment which united them was too
+pure to be understood by the grovelling minds who made themselves their
+sentencers. The friend is the friend's shadow. The real sentiment of
+friendship, of which disinterested sympathy is the sign, cannot exist
+unless between two of the same sex, because a physical difference
+involuntarily modifies the complexion of the intimacy where the sexes are
+opposite, even though there be no physical relations. The Queen of
+France had love in her eyes and Heaven in her soul. The Duchesse de
+Polignac, whose person beamed with every charm, could never have been
+condemned, like the Friars of La Trappe, to the mere memento mori.
+
+"When I had made the representations to Her Majesty which duty exacted
+from me on perceiving her ungovernable partiality for her new favourite,
+that I might not importune her by the awkwardness naturally arising from
+my constant exposure to the necessity of witnessing an intimacy she knew
+I did not sanction, I obtained permission from my royal mistress to visit
+my father-in-law, the Duc de Penthievre, at Rambouillet, his country-
+seat.
+
+"Soon after I arrived there, I was taken suddenly ill after dinner with
+the most excruciating pains in my stomach. I thought myself dying.
+Indeed, I should have been so but for the fortunate and timely discovery
+that I was poisoned certainly, not intentionally, by any one belonging to
+my dear father's household; but by some execrable hand which had an
+interest in my death.
+
+"The affair was hushed up with a vague report that some of the made
+dishes had been prepared in a stew-pan long out of use, which the clerk
+of the Duke's kitchen had forgotten to get properly tinned.
+
+"This was a doubtful story for many reasons. Indeed, I firmly believe
+that the poison given me had been prepared in the salt, for every one at
+table had eaten of the same dish without suffering the smallest
+inconvenience.
+
+"The news of this accident had scarcely arrived at Versailles, when the
+Queen, astounded, and, in excessive anxiety, instantly sent off her
+physician, and her private secretary, the Abbe Vermond, to bring me back
+to my apartments at Versailles, with strict orders not to leave me a
+moment at the Duke's, for fear of a second attempt of the same nature.
+Her Majesty had imputed the first to the earnestness I had always shown
+in support of her interests, and she seemed now more ardent in her
+kindness towards me from the idea of my being exposed through her means
+to the treachery of assassins in the dark. The Queen awaited our coming
+impatiently, and, not seeing the carriages return so quickly as she
+fancied they ought to arrive, she herself set off for Rambouillet, and
+did not leave me till she had prevailed on me to quit my father-in-law's,
+and we both returned together the same night to Versailles, where the
+Queen in person dedicated all her attention to the restoration of my
+health.
+
+"As yet, however, nothing in particular had discovered that splendour for
+which the De Polignacs were afterwards so conspicuous.
+
+"Indeed, so little were their circumstances calculated for a Court life,
+that when the friends of Madame de Polignac perceived the growing
+attachment of the young Queen to the palladium of their hopes, in order
+to impel Her Majesty's friendship to repair the deficiencies of fortune,
+they advised the magnet to quit the Court abruptly, assigning the want of
+means as the motive of her retreat. The story got wind, and proved
+propitious.
+
+"The Queen, to secure the society of her friend, soon supplied the
+resources she required and took away the necessity for her retirement.
+But the die was cast. In gaining one friend she sacrificed a host. By
+this act of imprudent preference she lost forever the affections of the
+old nobility. This was the gale which drove her back among the breakers.
+
+"I saw the coming storm, and endeavoured to make my Sovereign feel its
+danger. Presuming that my example would be followed, I withdrew from the
+De Polignac society, and vainly flattered myself that prudence would
+impel others not to encourage Her Majesty's amiable infatuation till the
+consequences should be irretrievable. But Sovereigns are always
+surrounded by those who make it a point to reconcile them to their
+follies, however flagrant, and keep them on good terms with themselves,
+however severely they may be censured by the world.
+
+"If I had read the book of fate I could not have seen more distinctly the
+fatal results which actually took place from this unfortunate connexion.
+The Duchess and myself always lived in the greatest harmony, and equally
+shared the confidence of the Queen; but it was my duty not to sanction
+Her Majesty's marked favouritism by my presence. The Queen often
+expressed her discontent to me upon the subject. She used to tell me how
+much it grieved her to be denied success in her darling desire of uniting
+her friends with each other, as they were already united in her own
+heart. Finding my resolution unalterable, she was mortified, but gave up
+her pursuit. When she became assured that all importunity was useless,
+she ever after avoided wounding my feelings by remonstrance, and allowed
+me to pursue the system I had adopted, rather than deprive herself of my
+society, which would have been the consequence had I not been left at
+liberty to follow the dictates of my own sense of propriety in a course
+from which I was resolved that even Her Majesty's displeasure should not
+make me swerve.
+
+"Once in particular, at an entertainment given to the Emperor Joseph at
+Trianon, I remember the Queen took the opportunity to repeat how much she
+felt herself mortified at the course in which I persisted of never making
+my appearance at the Duchesse de Polignac's parties.
+
+"I replied, 'I believe, Madame, we are both of us disappointed; but Your
+Majesty has your remedy, by replacing me by a lady less scrupulous.'
+
+"'I was too sanguine,' said the Queen, 'in having flattered myself that I
+had chosen two friends who would form, from their sympathising and
+uniting their sentiments with each other, a society which would embellish
+my private life as much as they adorn their public stations.'
+
+"I said it was by my unalterable friendship and my loyal and dutiful
+attachment to the sacred person of Her Majesty that I had been prompted
+to a line of conduct in which the motives whence it arose would impel me
+to persist while I had the honour to hold a situation under Her Majesty's
+roof.
+
+"The Queen, embracing me, exclaimed, 'That will be for life, for death
+alone can separate us!'
+
+"This is the last conversation I recollect to have had with the Queen
+upon this distressing subject.
+
+"The Abbe Vermond, who had been Her Majesty's tutor, but who was now her
+private secretary, began to dread that his influence over her, from
+having been her confidential adviser from her youth upwards, would suffer
+from the rising authority of the all-predominant new favourite.
+Consequently, he thought proper to remonstrate, not with Her Majesty,
+but with those about her royal person. The Queen took no notice of these
+side-wind complaints, not wishing to enter into any explanation of her
+conduct. On this the Abbe withdrew from Court. But he only retired for
+a short time, and that to make better terms for the future. Here was a
+new spring for those who were supplying the army of calumniators with
+poison. Happy had it been, perhaps, for France and the Queen if Vermond
+had never returned. But the Abbe was something like a distant country
+cousin of an English Minister, a man of no talents, but who hoped for
+employment through the power of his kinsman. 'There is nothing on hand
+now,' answered the Minister, 'but a Bishop's mitre or a Field-marshal's
+staff.'--'Oh, very well,' replied the countryman; 'either will do for me
+till something better turns up.' The Abbe, in his retirement finding
+leisure to reflect that there was no probability of anything 'better
+turning up' than his post of private secretary, tutor, confidant, and
+counsellor (and that not always the most correct) of a young and amiable
+Queen of France, soon made his reappearance and kept his jealousy of the
+De Polignacs ever after to himself.
+
+"The Abbe Vermond enjoyed much influence with regard to ecclesiastical
+preferments. He was too fond of his situation ever to contradict or
+thwart Her Majesty in any of her plans; too much of a courtier to assail
+her ears with the language of truth; and by far too much a clergyman to
+interest himself but for Mother Church.
+
+"In short, he was more culpable in not doing his duty than in the
+mischief he occasioned, for he certainly oftener misled the Queen by his
+silence than by his advice."
+
+
+
+
+SECTION VIII.
+
+"I have already mentioned that Marie Antoinette had no decided taste for
+literature. Her mind rather sought its amusements in the ball-room, the
+promenade, the theatre, especially when she herself was a performer, and
+the concert-room, than in her library and among her books. Her coldness
+towards literary men may in, some degree be accounted for by the disgust
+which she took at the calumnies and caricatures resulting from her
+mother's partiality for her own revered teacher, the great Metastasio.
+The resemblance of most of Maria Theresa's children to that poet was
+coupled with the great patronage he received from the Empress; and much
+less than these circumstances would have been quite enough to furnish a
+tale for the slanderer, injurious to the reputation of any exalted
+personage.
+
+"The taste of Marie Antoinette for private theatricals was kept up till
+the clouds of the Revolution darkened over all her enjoyments.
+
+"These innocent amusements were made subjects of censure against her by
+the many courtiers who were denied access to them; while some, who were
+permitted to be present, were too well pleased with the opportunity of
+sneering at her mediocrity in the art, which those, who could not see
+her, were ready to criticise with the utmost severity. It is believed
+that Madame de Genlis found this too favourable an opportunity to be
+slighted. Anonymous satires upon the Queen's performances, which were
+attributed to the malice of that authoress, were frequently shown to Her
+Majesty by good-natured friends. The Duc de Fronsac also, from some
+situation he held at Court, though not included in the private household
+of Her Majesty at Trianon, conceiving himself highly injured by not being
+suffered to interfere, was much exasperated, and took no pains to prevent
+others from receiving the infection of his resentment.
+
+"Of all the arts, music was the only one which Her Majesty ever warmly
+patronised. For music she was an enthusiast. Had her talents in this
+art been cultivated, it is certain from her judgment in it that she would
+have made very considerable progress. She sang little French airs with
+great taste and feeling. She improved much under the tuition of the
+great composer, her master, the celebrated Sacchini. After his death,
+Sapio was named his successor; but, between the death of one master and
+the appointment of another, the revolutionary horrors so increased that
+her mind was no longer in a state to listen to anything but the howlings
+of the tempest.
+
+"In her happier days of power, the great Gluck was brought at her request
+from Germany to Paris. He cost nothing to the public Treasury, for Her
+Majesty paid all his expenses out of her own purse, leaving him the
+profits of his operas, which attracted immense sums to the theatre.
+
+"Marie Antoinette paid for the musical education of the French singer,
+Garat, and pensioned him for her private concerts.
+
+"Her Majesty was the great patroness of the celebrated Viotti, who was
+also attached to her private musical parties. Before Viotti began to
+perform his concertos, Her Majesty, with the most amiable condescension,
+would go round the music saloon, and say, 'Ladies and gentlemen, I
+request you will be silent, and very attentive, and not enter into
+conversation, while Mr. Viotti is playing, for it interrupts him in the
+execution of his fine performance.
+
+"Gluck composed his Armida in compliment to the personal charms of Marie
+Antoinette. I never saw Her Majesty more interested about anything than
+she was for its success. She became a perfect slave to it. She had the
+gracious condescension to hear all the pieces through, at Gluck's
+request, before they were submitted to the stage for rehearsal. Gluck
+said he always improved his music after he saw the effect it had upon Her
+Majesty.
+
+"He was coming out of the Queen's apartment one day, after he had been
+performing one of these pieces for Her Majesty's approbation, when I
+followed and congratulated him on the increased success he had met with
+from the whole band of the opera at every rehearsal. 'O my dear
+Princess!' cried he, 'it wants nothing to make it be applauded up to the
+seven skies but two such delightful heads as Her Majesty's and your own.'
+--'Oh, if that be all,' answered I, 'we'll have them painted for you, Mr.
+Gluck!'--'No, no, no! you do not understand me,' replied Gluck, 'I mean
+real, real heads. My actresses are very ugly, and Armida and her
+confidential lady ought to be very handsome:
+
+"However great the success of the opera of Armida, and certainly it was
+one of the best productions ever exhibited on the French stage, no one
+had a better opinion of its composition than Gluck himself. He was quite
+mad about it. He told the Queen that the air of France had invigorated
+his musical genius, and that, after having had the honour of seeing Her
+Majesty, his ideas were so much inspired that his compositions resembled
+her, and became alike angelic and sublime!
+
+"The first artist who undertook the part of Armida was Madame Saint
+Huberti. The Queen was very partial to her. She was principal female
+singer at the French opera, was a German by birth, and strongly
+recommended by Gluck for her good natural voice. At Her Majesty's
+request, Gluck himself taught Madame Saint Huberti the part of Armida.
+Sacchini, also, at the command of Marie Antoinette, instructed her in the
+style and sublimity of the Italian school, and Mdlle. Benin, the Queen's
+dressmaker and milliner, was ordered to furnish the complete dress for
+the character.
+
+"The Queen, perhaps, was more liberal to this lady than to any other
+actress upon the stage. She had frequently paid her debts, which were
+very considerable, for she dressed like a Queen whenever she represented
+one.
+
+"Gluck's consciousness of the merit of his own works, and of their
+dignity, excited no small jealousy, during the getting up of Armida, in
+his rival with the public, the great Vestris, to whom he scarcely left
+space to exhibit the graces of his art; and many severe disputes took
+place between the two rival sharers of the Parisian enthusiasm. Indeed,
+it was at one time feared that the success of Armida would be endangered,
+unless an equal share of the performance were conceded to the dancers.
+But Gluck, whose German obstinacy would not give up a note, told Vestris
+he might compose a ballet in which he would leave him his own way
+entirely; but that an artist whose profession only taught him to reason
+with his heels should not kick about works like Armida at his pleasure.
+'My subject,' added Gluck, 'is taken from the immortal Tasso. My music
+has been logically composed, and with the ideas of my head; and, of
+course, there is very little room left for capering. If Tasso had
+thought proper to make Rinaldo a dancer he never would have designated
+him a warrior.'
+
+"Rinaldo was the part Vestris wished to be allotted to his son. However,
+through the interference of the Queen, Vestris prudently took the part as
+it had been originally finished by Gluck.
+
+"The Queen was a great admirer and patroness of Augustus Vestris, the god
+of dance, as he was styled. Augustus Vestris never lost Her Majesty's
+favour, though he very often lost his sense of the respect he owed to the
+public, and showed airs and refused to dance. Once he did so when Her
+Majesty was at the opera. Upon some frivolous pretext he refused to
+appear. He was, in consequence, immediately arrested. His father,
+alarmed at his son's temerity, flew to me, and with the most earnest
+supplications implored I would condescend to endeavour to obtain the
+pardon of Her Majesty. 'My son,' cried he, 'did not know that Her
+Majesty had honoured the theatre with her presence. Had he been aware of
+it, could he have refused to dance for his most bounteous benefactress?
+I, too, am grieved beyond the power of language to describe, by this mal
+apropos contretemps between the two houses of Vestris and Bourbon, as we
+have always lived in the greatest harmony ever since we came from
+Florence to Paris. My son is very sorry and will dance most bewitchingly
+if Her Majesty will graciously condescend to order his release!'
+
+"I repeated the conversation verbatim, to Her Majesty, who enjoyed the
+arrogance of the Florentine, and sent her page to order young Vestris to
+be set immediately at liberty.
+
+"Having exerted all the wonderful powers of his art, the Queen applauded
+him very much. When Her Majesty was about leaving her box, old Vestris
+appeared at the entrance, leading his son to thank the Queen.
+
+"'Ah, Monsieur Vestris,' said the Queen to the father, you never danced
+as your son has done this evening.'
+
+"'That's very natural, Madame,' answered old Vestris, 'I never had a
+Vestris, please Your Majesty, for a master.'
+
+"'Then you have the greater merit,' replied the Queen, turning round to
+old Vestris--'Ah, I shall never forget you and Mademoiselle Guimard
+dancing the minuet de la cour.'
+
+"On this old Vestris held up his head with that peculiar grace for which
+he was so much distinguished. The old man, though ridiculously vain, was
+very much of a gentleman in his manners. The father of Vestris was a
+painter of some celebrity at Florence, and originally from Tuscany."
+
+
+
+
+SECTION IX.
+
+"The visit of the favourite brother of Marie Antoinette, the Emperor
+Joseph the Second, to France, had been long and anxiously expected, and
+was welcomed by her with delight. The pleasure Her Majesty discovered at
+having him with her is scarcely credible; and the affectionate tenderness
+with which the Emperor frequently expressed himself on seeing his
+favourite sister evinced that their joys were mutual.
+
+"Like everything else, however, which gratified and obliged the Queen,
+her evil star converted even this into a misfortune. It was said that
+the French Treasury, which was not overflowing, was still more reduced by
+the Queen's partiality for her brother. She was accused of having given
+him immense sums of money; which was utterly false.
+
+"The finances of Joseph were at that time in a situation too superior to
+those of France to admit of such extravagance, or even to render it
+desirable. The circumstance which gave a colour to the charge was this:
+
+"The Emperor, in order to facilitate the trade of his Brabant subjects,
+had it in contemplation to open the navigation of the Scheldt. This
+measure would have been ruinous to many of the skippers, as well as to
+the internal commerce of France. It was considered equally dangerous to
+the trade and navigation of the North Hollanders. To prevent it,
+negotiations were carried on by the French Minister, though professedly
+for the mutual interest of both countries, yet entirely at the
+instigation and on account of the Dutch. The weighty argument of the
+Dutch to prevent the Emperor from accomplishing a purpose they so much
+dreaded was a sum of many millions, which passed by means of some monied
+speculation in the Exchange through France to its destination at Vienna.
+It was to see this affair settled that the Emperor declared in Vienna his
+intention of taking France in his way from Italy, before he should go
+back to Austria.
+
+"The certainty of a transmission of money from France to Austria was
+quite enough to awaken the malevolent, who would have taken care, even
+had they inquired into the source whence the money came, never to have
+made it public. The opportunity was too favourable not to be made the
+pretext to raise a clamour against the Queen for robbing France to favour
+and enrich Austria.
+
+"The Emperor, who had never seen me, though he had often heard me spoken
+of at the Court of Turin, expressed a wish, soon after his arrival, that
+I should be presented to him. The immediate cause of this let me
+explain.
+
+"I was very much attached to the Princesse Clotilde, whom I had caused to
+be united to Prince Charles Emanuel of Piedmont. Our family had, indeed,
+been principally instrumental in the alliances of the two brothers of the
+King of France with the two Piedmontese Princesses, as I had been in the
+marriage of the Piedmontese Prince with the Princess of France. When the
+Emperor Joseph visited the Court of Turin he was requested when he saw me
+in Paris to signify the King of Sardinia's satisfaction at my good
+offices. Consequently, the Emperor lost no time in delivering his
+message.
+
+"When I was just entering the Queen's apartment to be presented, 'Here,'
+said Her Majesty, leading me to the Emperor, 'is the Princess,' and, then
+turning to me, exclaimed, 'Mercy, how cold you are!' The Emperor answered
+Her Majesty in German, 'What heat can you expect from the hand of one
+whose heart resides with the dead?' and subjoined, in the same language,
+'What a pity that so charming a head should be fixed on a dead body.'
+
+"I affected to understand the Emperor literally, and set him and the
+Queen laughing by thanking His Imperial Majesty for the compliment.
+
+"The Emperor was exceedingly affable and full of anecdote. Marie
+Antoinette resembled him in her general manners. The similitude in their
+easy openness of address towards persons of merit was very striking.
+Both always endeavoured to encourage persons of every class to speak
+their minds freely, with this difference, that Her Majesty in so doing
+never forgot her dignity or her rank at Court. Sometimes, however, I
+have seen her, though so perfect in her deportment with inferiors, much
+intimidated and sometimes embarrassed in the presence of the Princes and
+Princesses, her equals, who for the first time visited Versailles:
+indeed, so much as to give them a very incorrect idea of her capacity.
+It was by no means an easy matter to cause Her Majesty to unfold her real
+sentiments or character on a first acquaintance.
+
+"I remember the Emperor one evening at supper when he was exceedingly
+good-humoured, talkative, and amusing. He had visited all his Italian
+relations, and had a word for each, man, woman, or child--not a soul was
+spared. The King scarcely once opened his mouth, except to laugh at some
+of the Emperor's jokes upon his Italian relations.
+
+"He began by asking the Queen if she punished her husband by making him
+keep as many Lents in the same year as her sister did the King of Naples.
+The Queen not knowing what the Emperor meant, he explained himself, and
+said, 'When the King of Naples offends his Queen she keeps him on short
+commons and 'soupe maigre' till he has expiated the offence by the
+penance of humbling himself; and then, and not till then, permits him to
+return and share the nuptial rights of her bed.'
+
+"'This sister of mine,' said the Emperor, 'is a proficient Queen in the
+art of man training. My other sister, the Duchess of Parma, is equally
+scientific in breaking-in horses; for she is constantly in the stables
+with her grooms, by which she 'grooms' a pretty sum yearly in buying,
+selling, and breaking-in; while the simpleton, her husband, is ringing
+the bells with the Friars of Colorno to call his good subjects to Mass.
+
+"'My brother Leopold, Grand Duke of Tuscany, feeds his subjects with
+plans of economy, a dish that costs nothing, and not only saves him a
+multitude of troubles in public buildings and public institutions, but
+keeps the public money in his private coffers; which is one of the
+greatest and most classical discoveries a Sovereign can possibly
+accomplish, and I give Leopold much credit for his ingenuity.
+
+"'My dear brother Ferdinand, Archduke of Milan, considering he is only
+Governor of Lombardy, is not without industry; and I am told, when out of
+the glimpse of his dragon the holy Beatrice, his Archduchess, sells his
+corn in the time of war to my enemies, as he does to my friends in the
+time of peace. So he loses nothing by his speculations!'
+
+"The Queen checked the Emperor repeatedly, though she could not help
+smiling at his caricatures.
+
+"'As to you, my dear Marie Antoinette,' continued the Emperor, not
+heeding her, 'I see you have made great progress in the art of painting.
+You have lavished more colour on one cheek than Rubens would have
+required for all the figures in his cartoons.' Observing one of the
+Ladies of Honour still more highly rouged than the Queen, he said,
+'I suppose I look like a death's head upon a tombstone, among all these
+high-coloured furies.'
+
+"The Queen again tried to interrupt the Emperor, but he was not to be put
+out of countenance.
+
+"He said he had no doubt, when he arrived at Brussels, that he should
+hear of the progress of his sister, the Archduchess Maria Christina, in
+her money negotiations with the banker Valkeers, who made a good stock
+for her husband's jobs.
+
+"'If Maria Christina's gardens and palace at Lakin could speak,' observed
+he, 'what a spectacle of events would they not produce! What a number of
+fine sights my own family would afford!
+
+"'When I get to Cologne,' pursued the Emperor, there I shall see my great
+fat brother Maximilian, in his little electorate, spending his yearly
+revenue upon an ecclesiastical procession; for priests, like opposition,
+never bark but to get into the manger; never walk empty-handed; rosaries
+and good cheer always wind up their holy work; and my good Maximilian, as
+head of his Church, has scarcely feet to waddle into it. Feasting and
+fasting produce the same effect. In wind and food he is quite an adept--
+puffing, from one cause or the other, like a smith's bellows!'
+
+"Indeed, the Elector of Cologne was really grown so very fat, that,
+like his Imperial mother, he could scarcely walk. He would so over-eat
+himself at these ecclesiastical dinners, to make his guests welcome,
+that, from indigestion, he would be puffing and blowing, an hour
+afterwards, for breath.
+
+"'As I have begun the family visits,' continued the Emperor, 'I must not
+pass by the Archduchess Mariana and the Lady Abbess at Clagenfurt; or,
+the Lord knows, I shall never hear the end of their klagens.--[A German
+word which signifies complaining.]--The first, I am told, is grown so
+ugly, and, of course, so neglected by mankind, that she is become an
+utter stranger to any attachment, excepting the fleshy embraces of the
+disgusting wen that encircles her neck and bosom, and makes her head .
+appear like a black spot upon a large sheet of white paper. Therefore
+klagen is all I can expect from that quarter of female flesh, and I dare
+say it will be levelled against the whole race of mankind for their want
+of taste in not admiring her exuberance of human craw!
+
+"'As to the Lady Abbess, she is one of my best recruiting sergeants.
+She is so fond of training cadets for the benefit of the army that they
+learn more from her system in one month than at the military academy at
+Neustadt in a whole year. She is her mother's own daughter. She
+understands military tactics thoroughly. She and I never quarrel,
+except when I garrison her citadel with invalids. She and the canoness,
+Mariana, would rather see a few young ensigns than all the staffs of the
+oldest Field-marshals!'
+
+"The Queen often made signs to the Emperor to desist from thus exposing
+every member of his family, and seemed to feel mortified; but the more
+Her Majesty endeavoured to check his freedom, and make him silent, the
+more he enlarged upon the subject. He did not even omit Maria Theresa,
+who, he said, in consequence of some papers found on persons arrested as
+spies from the Prussian camp, during the seven years' war, was reported
+to have been greatly surprised to have discovered that her husband, the
+Emperor Francis I., supplied the enemy's army with all kinds of provision
+from her stores.
+
+"The King scarcely ever answered excepting when the Emperor told the
+Queen that her staircase and antechamber at Versailles resembled more the
+Turkish bazars of Constantinople
+
+ [It was an old custom, in the passages and staircase of all the
+ royal palaces, for tradespeople to sell their merchandise for the
+ accommodation of the Court.]
+
+than a royal palace. 'But,' added he, laughing, 'I suppose you would not
+allow the nuisance of hawkers and pedlars almost under your nose, if the
+sweet perfumes of a handsome present did not compensate for the
+disagreeable effluvia exhaling from their filthy traffic.'
+
+"On this, Louis XVI., in a tone of voice somewhat varying from his usual
+mildness, assured the Emperor that neither himself nor the Queen derived
+any advantage from the custom, beyond the convenience of purchasing
+articles inside the palace at any moment they were wanted, without being
+forced to send for them elsewhere.
+
+"'That is the very reason, my dear brother,' replied Joseph, 'why I would
+not allow these shops to be where they are. The temptation to lavish
+money to little purpose is too strong; and women have not philosophy
+enough to resist having things they like, when they can be obtained
+easily, though they may not be wanted.'
+
+"'Custom,' answered the King--
+
+"'True,' exclaimed the Queen, interrupting him; custom, my dear brother,
+obliges us to tolerate in France many things which you, in Austria, have.
+long since abolished; but the French are not to be: treated like the
+Germans. A Frenchman is a slave to habit. His very caprice in the
+change of fashion proceeds more from habit than genius or invention.
+His very restlessness of character is systematic; and old customs and
+national habits in a nation virtually spirituelle must not be trifled
+with. The tree torn up by the roots dies for want of nourishment; but,
+on the contrary, when lopped carefully only of its branches the pruning
+makes it more valuable to the cultivator and more pleasing to the
+beholder. So it is with national prejudices, which are often but the
+excrescences of national virtues. Root them out and you root out virtue
+and all. They must only be: pruned and turned to profit. A Frenchman is
+more easily killed than subdued. Even his follies generally spring from
+a high sense of national dignity and honour, which foreigners cannot but
+respect.'
+
+"The Emperor Joseph while in France mixed in all sorts of society, to
+gain information with respect, to the popular feeling towards his sister,
+and instruction as to the manners and modes of life and thinking of the
+French. To this end he would often associate with the lowest of the
+common people, and generally gave them a louis for their loss of time in
+attending to him.
+
+"One day, when he was walking with the young Princesse Elizabeth and
+myself in the public gardens at Versailles and in deep conversation with
+us, two or three of these louis ladies came up to my side and, not
+knowing who I was, whispered, 'There's no use in paying such attention to
+the stranger: after all, when he has got what he wants, he'll only give
+you a louis apiece and then send you about your business.'"
+
+
+
+
+SECTION X.
+
+"I remember an old lady who could not bear to be told of deaths. 'Psha!
+Pshaw!' she would exclaim. 'Bring me no tales of funerals! Talk of
+births and of those who are likely to be blest with them! These are the
+joys which gladden old hearts and fill youthful ones with ecstasy! It is
+our own reproduction in children which makes us quit the world happy and
+contented; because then we only retire to make room for another race,
+bringing with them all those faculties which are in us decayed; and
+capable, which we ourselves have ceased to be, of taking our parts and
+figuring on the stage of life so long as it may please the Supreme
+Manager to busy them in earthly scenes! Then talk no more to me of weeds
+and mourning, but show me christenings and all those who give employ to
+the baptismal font!'
+
+"Such also was the exulting feeling of Marie Antoinette when she no
+longer doubted of her wished-for pregnancy. The idea of becoming a
+mother filled her soul with an exuberant delight, which made the very
+pavement on which she trod vibrate with the words, 'I shall be a mother!
+I shall be a mother!' She was so overjoyed that she not only made it
+public throughout France but despatches were sent off to all her royal
+relatives. And was not her rapture natural? so long as she had waited
+for the result of every youthful union, and so coarsely as she had been
+reproached with her misfortune! Now came her triumph. She could now
+prove to the world, like all the descendants of the house of Austria,
+that there was no defect with her. The satirists and the malevolent were
+silenced. Louis XVI., from the cold, insensible bridegroom, became the
+infatuated admirer of his long-neglected wife. The enthusiasm with which
+the event was hailed by all France atoned for the partial insults she had
+received before it. The splendid fetes, balls, and entertainments,
+indiscriminately lavished by all ranks throughout the kingdom on this
+occasion, augmented those of the Queen and the Court to a pitch of
+magnificence surpassing the most luxurious and voluptuous times of the
+great and brilliant Louis XIV. Entertainments were given even to the
+domestics of every description belonging to the royal establishments.
+Indeed, so general was the joy that, among those who could do no more,
+there could scarcely be found a father or mother in France who, before
+they took their wine, did not first offer up a prayer for the prosperous
+pregnancy of their beloved Queen.
+
+"And yet, though the situation of Marie Antoinette was now become the
+theme of a whole nation's exultation, she herself, the owner of the
+precious burthen, selected by Heaven as its special depositary, was the
+only one censured for expressing all her happiness!
+
+"Those models of decorum, the virtuous Princesses, her aunts, deemed it
+highly indelicate in Her Majesty to have given public marks of her
+satisfaction to those deputed to compliment her on her prosperous
+situation. To avow the joy she felt was in their eyes indecent and
+unqueenly. Where was the shrinking bashfulness of that one of these
+Princesses who had herself been so clamorous to Louis XV. against her
+husband, the Duke of Modena, for not having consummated her own marriage?
+
+"The party of the dismissed favourite Du Barry were still working
+underground. Their pestiferous vapours issued from the recesses of the
+earth, to obscure the brightness of the rising sun, which was now rapidly
+towering to its climax, to obliterate the little planets which had once
+endeavoured to eclipse its beautiful rays, but were now incapable of
+competition, and unable to endure its lustre. This malignant nest of
+serpents began to poison the minds of the courtiers, as soon as the
+pregnancy was obvious, by innuendoes on the partiality of the Comte
+d'Artois for the Queen; and at length, infamously, and openly, dared to
+point him out as the cause?
+
+"Thus, in the heart of the Court itself, originated this most atrocious
+slander, long before it reached the nation, and so much assisted to
+destroy Her Majesty's popularity with a people, who now adored her
+amiableness, her general kind-heartedness, and her unbounded charity.
+
+"I have repeatedly seen the Queen and the Comte d'Artois together under
+circumstances in which there could have been no concealment of her real
+feelings; and I can firmly and boldly assert the falsehood of this
+allegation against my royal mistress. The only attentions Marie
+Antoinette received in the earlier part of her residence in France were
+from her grandfather and her brothers-in-law. Of these, the Comte
+d'Artois was the only one who, from youth and liveliness of character,
+thoroughly sympathised with his sister. But, beyond the little freedoms
+of two young and innocent playmates, nothing can be charged upon their
+intimacy,--no familiarity whatever farther than was warranted by their
+relationship. I can bear witness that Her Majesty's attachment for the
+Comte d'Artois never differed in its nature from what she felt for her
+brother the Emperor Joseph.
+
+ [When the King thought proper to be reconciled to the Queen after
+ the death of his grandfather, Louis XV., and when she became a
+ mother, she really was very much attached to Louis XVI., as may be
+ proved from her never quitting him, and suffering all the horrid
+ sacrifices she endured, through the whole period of the Revolution,
+ rather than leave her husband, her children, or her sister. Marie
+ Antoinette might have saved her life twenty times, had not the
+ King's safety, united with her own and that of her family, impelled
+ her to reject every proposition of self-preservation.]
+
+"It is very likely that the slander of which I speak derived some colour
+of probability afterwards with the million, from the Queen's
+thoughtlessness, relative to the challenge which passed between the Comte
+d'Artois and the Duc de Bourbon. In right of my station, I was one of
+Her Majesty's confidential counsellors, and it became my duty to put
+restraint upon her inclinations, whenever I conceived they led her wrong.
+In this instance, I exercised my prerogative decidedly, and even so much
+so as to create displeasure; but I anticipated the consequences, which
+actually ensued, and preferred to risk my royal mistress's displeasure
+rather than her reputation. The dispute, which led to the duel, was on
+some point of etiquette; and the Baron de Besenval was to attend as
+second to one of the parties. From the Queen's attachment for her royal
+brother, she wished the affair to be amicably arranged, without the
+knowledge either of the King, who was ignorant of what had taken place,
+or of the parties; which could only be effected by her seeing the Baron
+in the most private manner. I opposed Her Majesty's allowing any
+interview with the Baron upon any terms, unless sanctioned by the King.
+This unexpected and peremptory refusal obliged the Queen to transfer her
+confidence to the librarian, who introduced the Baron into one of the
+private apartments of Her Majesty's women, communicating with that of the
+Queen, where Her Majesty could see the Baron without the exposure of
+passing any of the other attendants. The Baron was quite gray, and
+upwards of sixty years of age! But the self-conceited dotard soon caused
+the Queen to repent her misplaced confidence, and from his unwarrantable
+impudence on that occasion, when he found himself alone with the Queen,
+Her Majesty, though he was a constant member of the societies of the De
+Polignacs, ever after treated him with sovereign contempt.
+
+"The Queen herself afterwards described to me the Baron's presumptuous
+attack upon her credulity. From this circumstance I thenceforward totally
+excluded him from my parties, where Her Majesty was always a regular
+visitor.
+
+"The coolness to which my determination not to allow the interview gave
+rise between Her Majesty and myself was but momentary. The Queen had too
+much discernment not to appreciate the basis upon which my denial was
+grounded, even before she was convinced by the result how correct had
+been my reflection. She felt her error, and, by the mediation of the
+Duke of Dorset, we were reunited more closely than ever, and so, I trust,
+we shall remain till death!
+
+"There was much more attempted to be made of another instance, in which I
+exercised the duty of my office, than the truth justified--the nightly
+promenades on the terrace at Versailles, or at Trianon. Though no
+amusement could have been more harmless or innocent for a private
+individual, yet I certainly, disapproved it for a Queen, and therefore
+withheld the sanction of my attendance. My sole objection was on the
+score of dignity. I well knew that Du Barry and her infamous party were
+constant spies upon the Queen on every occasion of such a nature; and
+that they would not fail to exaggerate her every movement to her
+prejudice. Though Du Barry could not form one of the party, which was a
+great source of heartburning, it was easy for her, under the
+circumstances, to mingle with the throng. When I suggested these
+objections to the Queen, Her Majesty, feeling no inward cause of
+reproach, and being sanctioned in what she did by the King himself,
+laughed at the idea of these little excursions affording food for
+scandal. I assured Her Majesty that I had every reason to be convinced
+that Du Barry was often in disguise, not far from the seat where Her
+Majesty and the Princesse Elizabeth could be overheard in their most
+secret conversations with each other. 'Listeners,' replied the Queen,
+'never hear any good of themselves.'
+
+"'My dear Lamballe,' she continued, 'you have taken such a dislike to
+this woman that you cannot conceive she can be occupied but in mischief.
+This is uncharitable. She certainly has no reason to be dissatisfied
+with either the King or myself. We have both left her in the full
+enjoyment of all she possessed, except the right of appearing at Court or
+continuing in the society her conduct had too long disgraced.'
+
+"I said it was very true, but that I should be happier to find Her
+Majesty so scrupulous as never to give an opportunity even for the
+falsehoods of her enemies.
+
+"Her Majesty turned the matter off, as usual, by saying she had no idea
+of injuring others, and could not believe that any one would wantonly
+injure her, adding, 'The Duchess and the Princesse Elizabeth, my two
+sisters, and all the other ladies, are coming to hear the concert this
+evening, and you will be delighted.'
+
+"I excused myself under the plea of the night air disagreeing with my
+health, and returned to Versailles without ever making myself one of the
+nocturnal members of Her Majesty's society, well knowing she could
+dispense with my presence, there being more than enough ever ready to
+hurry her by their own imprudence into the folly of despising criticisms,
+which I always endeavoured to avoid, though I did not fear them. Of
+these I cannot but consider her secretary as one. The following
+circumstance connected with the promenades is a proof:
+
+"The Abbe Vermond was present one day when Marie Antoinette observed that
+she felt rather indisposed. I attributed it to Her Majesty's having
+lightened her dress and exposed herself too much to the night air.
+'Heavens, madame!' cried the Abbe, 'would you always have Her Majesty
+cased up in steel armour, and not take the fresh air, without being
+surrounded by a troop of horse and foot, as a Field-marshal is when going
+to storm a fortress? Pray, Princess, now that Her Majesty, has freed
+herself from the annoying shackles of Madame Etiquette (the Comtesse de
+Noailles), let her enjoy the pleasure of a simple robe and breathe freely
+the fresh morning dew, as has been her custom all her life (and as her
+mother before her, the Empress Maria Theresa, has done and continues to
+do, even to this day), unfettered by antiquated absurdities! Let me be
+anything rather than a Queen of France, if I must be doomed to the
+slavery of such tyrannical rules!'
+
+"'True; but, sir,' replied I, 'you should reflect that if you were a
+Queen of France, France, in making you mistress of her destinies, and
+placing you at the head of her nation, would in return look for respect
+from you to her customs and manners. I am born an Italian, but I
+renounced all national peculiarities of thinking and acting the moment I
+set my foot on French ground.'
+
+"'And so did I,' said Marie Antoinette.
+
+"'I know you did, Madame,' I answered; but I am replying to your
+preceptor; and I only wish he saw things in the same light I do. When
+we are at Rome, we should do as Rome does. You have never had a regicide
+Bertrand de Gurdon, a Ravillac or a Damiens in Germany; but they have
+been common in France, and the Sovereigns of France cannot be too
+circumspect in their maintenance of ancient etiquette to command the
+dignified respect of a frivolous and versatile people.'
+
+"The Queen, though she did not strictly adhere to my counsels or the
+Abbe's advice, had too much good sense to allow herself to be prejudiced
+against me by her preceptor; but the Abbe never entered on the propriety
+or impropriety of the Queen's conduct before me, and from the moment I
+have mentioned studiously avoided, in my presence, anything which could
+lead to discussion on the change of dress and amusements introduced by
+Her Majesty.
+
+"Although I disapproved of Her Majesty's deviations from established
+forms in this, or, indeed, any respect, yet I never, before or after,
+expressed my opinion before a third person.
+
+"Never should I have been so firmly and so long attached to Marie
+Antoinette, had I not known that her native thorough goodness of heart
+had been warped and misguided, though acting at the same time with the
+best intentions, by a false notion of her real innocence being a
+sufficient shield against the public censure of such innovations upon
+national prejudices, as she thought prayer to introduce,--the fatal error
+of conscious rectitude, encouraged in its regardlessness of appearances
+by those very persons who well knew that it is only by appearances a
+nation can judge of its rulers.
+
+"I remember a ludicrous circumstance arising from the Queen's innocent
+curiosity, in which, if there were anything to blame, I myself am to be
+censured for lending myself to it so heartily to satisfy Her Majesty.
+
+"When the Chevalier d'Eon was allowed to return to France, Her Majesty
+expressed a particular inclination to see this extraordinary character.
+From prudential as well as political motives, she was at first easily
+persuaded to repress her desire. However, by a most ludicrous
+occurrence, it was revived, and nothing would do but she must have a
+sight of the being who had for some time been the talk of every society,
+and at the period to which I allude was become the mirth of all Paris.
+
+"The Chevalier being one day in a very large party of both sexes, in
+which, though his appearance had more of the old soldier in it than of
+the character he was compelled 'malgre lui',
+
+ [It may be necessary to observe here that the Chevalier, having for
+ some particular motives been banished from France, was afterwards
+ permitted to return only on condition of never appearing but in the
+ disguised dress of a female, though he was always habited in the
+ male costume underneath it.]
+
+to adopt, many of the guests having no idea to what sex this nondescript
+animal really belonged, the conversation after dinner happened to turn on
+the manly exercise of fencing. Heated by a subject to him so
+interesting, the Chevalier, forgetful of the respect due to his assumed
+garb, started from his seat, and, pulling up his petticoats, threw
+himself on guard. Though dressed in male attire underneath, this sudden
+freak sent all the ladies--and many of the gentlemen out of the room in
+double--quick time. The Chevalier, however, instantly recovering from
+the first impulse, quietly pat down his, upper garment, and begged pardon
+in, a gentlemanly manner for having for a moment deviated from the forma
+of his imposed situation. All, the gossips of Paris were presently
+amused with the story, which, of coarse, reached the Court, with every
+droll particular of the pulling up and clapping down the cumbrous
+paraphernalia of a hoop petticoat.
+
+"The King and Queen, from the manner in which they enjoyed the tale when
+told them (and certainly it lost nothing in the report), would not have
+been the least amused of the party had they been present. His Majesty
+shook the room with laughing, and the Queen, the Princesse Elizabeth, and
+the other ladies were convulsed at the description.
+
+"When we were alone, 'How I should like,' said the Queen, 'to see this
+curious man-woman!'--'Indeed,' replied I, 'I have not less curiosity than
+yourself, and I think we may contrive to let Your Majesty have a peep at
+him--her, I mean!--without compromising your dignity, or offending the
+Minister who interdicted the Chevalier from appearing in your presence.
+I know he has expressed the greatest mortification, and that his wish to
+see Your Majesty is almost irrepressible.'
+
+"'But how will you be able to contrive this without its being known to
+the King, or to the Comte de Vergennes, who would never forgive me?'
+exclaimed Her Majesty.
+
+"'Why, on Sunday, when you go to chapel, I will cause him, by some means
+or other, to make his appearance, en grande costume, among the group of
+ladies who are generally waiting there to be presented to Your Majesty.'
+
+"'Oh, you charming creature !' said the Queen. 'But won't the Minister
+banish or exile him for it?'
+
+"'No, no! He has only been forbidden an audience of Your Majesty at
+Court,' I replied.
+
+"In good earnest, on the Sunday following, the Chevalier was dressed en
+costume, with a large hoop, very long train, sack, five rows of ruffles,
+an immensely high powdered female wig, very beautiful lappets, white
+gloves, an elegant fan in his hand, his beard closely shaved, his neck
+and ears adorned with diamond rings and necklaces, and assuming all the
+airs and graces of a fine lady!
+
+"But, unluckily, his anxiety was so great, the, moment the Queen made her
+appearance, to get a sight of Her Majesty, that, on rushing before the
+other ladies, his wig and head-dress fell off his head;, and, before they
+could be well replaced, he made so, ridiculous a figure, by clapping
+them, in his confusion, hind part before, that the King, the Queen, and
+the whole suite, could scarcely refrain from laughing; aloud in the
+church.
+
+"Thus ended the long longed for sight of this famous man-woman!
+
+"As to me, it was a great while before I could recover myself. Even now,
+I laugh whenever I think of this great lady deprived of her head
+ornaments, with her bald pate laid bare, to the derision of such a
+multitude of Parisians, always prompt to divert themselves at the expense
+of others. However, the affair passed off unheeded, and no one but the
+Queen and myself ever knew that we ourselves had been innocently the
+cause of this comical adventure. When we met after Mass, we were so
+overpowered, that neither of us could speak for laughing. The Bishop who
+officiated said it was lucky he had no sermon to preach that day, for it
+would have been difficult for him to have recollected himself, or to have
+maintained his gravity. The ridiculous appearance of the Chevalier, he
+added, was so continually presenting itself before him during the service
+that it was as much as he could do to restrain himself from laughing, by
+keeping his eyes constantly riveted on the book. Indeed, the oddity of
+the affair was greatly heightened when, in the middle of the Mass, some
+charitable hand having adjusted the wig of the Chevalier, he re-entered
+the chapel as if nothing had happened, and, placing himself exactly
+opposite the altar, with his train upon his arm, stood fanning himself,
+a la coquette, with an inflexible self-possession which only rendered it
+the more difficult for those around him to maintain their composure.
+
+"Thus ended the Queen's curiosity. The result only made the Chevalier's
+company in greater request, for every one became more anxious than ever
+to know the masculine lady who had lost her wig!"
+
+
+
+
+ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+Fatal error of conscious rectitude
+Feel themselves injured by the favour shown to others
+Listeners never hear any good of themselves
+Only retire to make room for another race
+Regardlessness of appearances
+
+
+
+
+End of this Project Gutenberg Etext Memoirs of Louis XV., and XVI., v4,
+by Madame du Hausset, and an unknown English girl and Princess Lamballe
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MEMOIRS OF LOUIS XV. AND XVI.
+
+Being Secret Memoirs of Madame du Hausset, Lady's Maid to Madame
+de Pompadour, and of an unknown English Girl and the Princess Lamballe
+
+
+
+BOOK 5.
+
+
+SECTION I.
+
+
+ [From the time that the Princesse de Lamballe saw the ties between
+ the Queen and her favourite De Polignac drawing closer she became
+ less assiduous in her attendance at Court, being reluctant to
+ importune the friends by her presence at an intimacy which she did
+ not approve. She could not, however, withhold her accustomed
+ attentions, as the period of Her Majesty's accouchement approached;
+ and she has thus noted the circumstance of the birth of the Duchesse
+ d'Angouleme, on the 19th of December, 1778.]
+
+"The moment for the accomplishment of the Queen's darling hope was now at
+hand: she was about to become a mother.
+
+"It had been agreed between Her Majesty and myself, that I was to place
+myself so near the accoucheur, Vermond,
+
+ [Brother to the Abbe, whose pride was so great at this honour
+ conferred on his relative, that he never spoke of him without
+ denominating him Monsieur mon frere, d'accoucher de sa Majeste,
+ Vermond.]
+
+as to be the first to distinguish the sex of the new-born infant, and if
+she should be delivered of a Dauphin to say, in Italian, 'Il figlio e
+nato.'
+
+"Her Majesty was, however, foiled even in this the most blissful of her
+desires. She was delivered of a daughter instead of a Dauphin.
+
+"From the immense crowd that burst into the apartment the instant Vermond
+said, The Queen is happily delivered, Her Majesty was nearly suffocated.
+I had hold of her hand, and as I said 'La regina e andato', mistaking
+'andato' for 'nato', between the joy of giving birth to a son and the
+pressure of the crowd, Her Majesty fainted. Overcome by the dangerous
+situation in which I saw my royal mistress, I myself was carried out of
+the room in a lifeless state. The situation of Her Majesty was for some
+time very doubtful, till the people were dragged with violence from about
+her, that she might have air. On her recovering, the King was the first
+person who told her that she was the mother of a very fine Princess.
+
+"'Well, then,' said the Queen, 'I am like my mother, for at my birth she
+also wished for a son instead of a daughter; and you have lost your
+wager:' for the King had betted with Maria Theresa that it would be a
+son.
+
+"The King answered her by repeating the lines Metastasio had written on
+that occasion.
+
+ "'Io perdei: l'augusta figlia
+ A pagar, m'a condemnato;
+ Ma s'e ver the a voi somiglia
+ Tutto il moudo ha guadagnato.'"
+
+
+ [The Princesse de Lamballe again ceased to be constantly about the
+ Queen. Her danger was over, she was a mother, and the attentions of
+ disinterested friendship were no longer indispensable. She herself
+ about this time met with a deep affliction. She lost both of her
+ own parents; and to her sorrows may, in a great degree, be ascribed
+ her silence upon the events which intervened between the birth of
+ Madame and that of the Dauphin. She was as assiduous as ever in her
+ attentions to Her Majesty on her second lying-in. The circumstances
+ of the death of Maria Theresa, the Queen's mother, in the interval
+ which divided the two accouchements, and Her Majesty's anguish, and
+ refusal to see any but De Lamballe and De Polignac, are too well
+ known to detain us longer from the notes of the Princess. It is
+ enough for the reader to know that the friendship of Her Majesty for
+ her superintendent seemed to be gradually reviving in all its early
+ enthusiasm, by her unremitting kindness during the confinements of
+ the Queen, till, at length, they became more attached than ever.
+ But, not to anticipate, let me return to the narrative.]
+
+"The public feeling had undergone a great change with respect to Her
+Majesty from the time of her first accouchement. Still, she was not the
+mother of a future King. The people looked upon her as belonging to them
+more than she had done before, and faction was silenced by the general
+delight. But she had not yet attained the climax of her felicity. A
+second pregnancy gave a new excitement to the nation; and, at length, on
+the 22nd October, 1781, dawned the day of hope.
+
+"In consequence of what happened on the first accouchement, measures were
+taken to prevent similar disasters on the second. The number admitted
+into the apartment was circumscribed. The silence observed left the
+Queen in uncertainty of the sex to which she had given birth, till, with
+tears of joy, the King said to her: 'Madame, the hopes of the nation, and
+mine, are fulfilled. You are the mother of a Dauphin.'
+
+"The Princesse Elizabeth and myself were so overjoyed that we embraced
+every one in the room.
+
+"At this time Their Majesties were adored. Marie Antoinette, with all
+her beauty and amiableness, was a mere cipher in the eyes of France
+previous to her becoming the mother of an heir to the Crown; but her
+popularity now arose to a pitch of unequalled enthusiasm.
+
+"I have heard of but one expression to Her Majesty upon this occasion in
+any way savouring of discontent. This came from the royal aunts. On
+Marie Antoinette's expressing to them her joy in having brought a Dauphin
+to the nation, they replied, 'We will only repeat our father's
+observation on a similar subject. When one of our sisters complained to
+his late Majesty that, as her Italian husband had copied the Dauphin's
+whim, she could not, though long a bride, boast of being a wife, or hope
+to become a mother--"a prudent Princess," replied Louis XV., "never wants
+heirs!"' But the feeling of the royal aunts was an exception to the
+general sentiment, which really seemed like madness.
+
+"I remember a proof of this which happened at the time. Chancing to
+cross the King's path as he was going to Marly and I coming from
+Rambouillet, my two postillions jumped from their horses, threw
+themselves on the high road upon their knees, though it was very dirty,
+and remained there, offering up their benedictions, till he was out of
+sight.
+
+"The felicity of the Queen was too great not to be soon overcast. The
+unbounded influence of the De Polignacs was now at its zenith. It could
+not fail of being attacked. Every engine of malice, envy, and detraction
+was let loose; and, in the vilest calumnies against the character of the
+Duchess, her royal mistress was included.
+
+"It was, in truth, a most singular fatality, in the life of Marie
+Antoinette that she could do nothing, however beneficial or
+disinterested, for which she was not either criticised or censured.
+She had a tenacity, of character which made her cling more closely to
+attachments from which she saw others desirous of estranging her; and
+this firmness, however excellent in principle, was, in her case, fatal in
+its effects. The Abbe Vermond, Her Majesty's confessor and tutor, and,
+unfortunately, in many respects, her ambitious guide, was really alarmed
+at the rising favour of the Duchess; and, though he knew the very
+obstacles thrown in her way only strengthened her resolution as to any
+favourite object, yet he ventured to head an intrigue to destroy the
+great influence of the De Polignacs, which, as he might have foreseen,
+only served to hasten their aggrandisement.
+
+"At this crisis the dissipation of the Duc de Guemenee caused him to
+become a bankrupt. I know not whether it can be said in principle, but
+certainly it may in property, 'It is an ill wind that blows no one any
+good.' The Princess, his wife, having been obliged to leave her
+residence at Versailles, in consequence of the Duke's dismissal from the
+King's service on account of the disordered state of his pecuniary
+circumstances, the situation of governess to the royal children became
+necessarily vacant, and was immediately transferred to the Duchesse de
+Polignac. The Queen, to enable her friend to support her station with
+all the eclat suitable to its dignity, took care to supply ample means
+from her own private purse. A most magnificent suite of apartments was
+ordered to be arranged, under the immediate inspection of the Queen's
+maitre d'hotel, at Her Majesty's expense.
+
+"Is there anything on earth more natural than the lively interest which
+inspires a mother towards those who have the care of her offspring?
+What, then, must have been the feelings of a Queen of France who had been
+deprived of that blessing for which connubial attachments are formed, and
+which, vice versa, constitutes the only real happiness of every young
+female, what must have been, I say, the ecstasy of Marie Antoinette when
+she not only found herself a mother, but the dear pledges of all her
+future bliss in the hands of one whose friendship allowed her the
+unrestrained exercise of maternal affection,--a climax of felicity
+combining not only the pleasures of an ordinary mother, but the
+greatness, the dignity, and the flattering popularity of a Queen of
+France.
+
+"Though the pension of the Duchesse de Polignac was no more than that
+usually allotted to all former governesses of the royal children of
+France, yet circumstances tempted her to a display not a little injurious
+to her popularity as well as to that of her royal mistress. She gave too
+many pretexts to imputations of extravagance. Yet she had neither
+patronage, nor sinecures, nor immunities beyond the few inseparable from
+the office she held, and which had been the same for centuries under the
+Monarchy of France. But it must be remembered, as an excuse for the
+splendour of her establishment, that she entered her office upon a
+footing very different from that of any of her predecessors. Her mansion
+was not the quiet, retired, simple household of the governess of the
+royal children, as formerly: it had become the magnificent resort of the
+first Queen in Europe; the daily haunt of Her Majesty. The Queen
+certainly visited the former governess, as she had done the Duchesse de
+Duras and many other frequenters of her Court parties; but she made the
+Duchesse de Polignac's her Court; and all the courtiers of that Court,
+and, I may say, the great personages of all France, as well as the
+Ministers and all foreigners of distinction, held there their usual
+rendezvous; consequently, there was nothing wanting but the guards in
+attendance in the Queen's apartments to have made it a royal residence
+suitable for the reception of the illustrious personages that were in the
+constant habit of visiting these levees, assemblies, balls, routs,
+picnics, dinner, supper, and card parties.
+
+ [I have seen ladies at the Princesse de Lamballe's come from these
+ card parties with their laps so blackened by the quantities of gold
+ received in them, that they have been obliged to change their
+ dresses to go to supper. Many a chevalier d'industree and young
+ military spendthrift has made his harvest here. Thousands were won
+ and lost, and the ladies were generally the dupes of all those who
+ were the constant speculative attendants. The Princease de Lamballe
+ did not like play, but when it was necessary she did play, and won
+ or lost to a limited extent; but the prescribed sum once exhausted
+ or gained she left off. In set parties, such as those of whist, she
+ never played except when one was wanted, often excusing herself on
+ the score of its requiring more attention than it was in her power
+ to give to it and her reluctance to sacrifice her partner; though I
+ have heard Beau Dillon, the Duke of Dorset, Lord Edward Dillon, and
+ many others say that she understood and played the game much better
+ than many who had a higher opinion of their skill in it. Lord
+ Edward Fitzgerald was admitted to the parties at the Duchesse de
+ Polignac's on his first coming to Paris; but when his connection
+ with the Duc d'Orleans and Madame de Genlis became known he was
+ informed that his society would be dispensed with. The famous, or
+ rather the infamous, Beckford was also excluded.]
+
+"Much as some of the higher classes of the nobility felt aggrieved at the
+preference given by the Queen to the Duchesse de Polignac, that which
+raised against Her Majesty the most implacable resentment was her
+frequenting the parties of her favourite more than those of any other of
+the 'haut ton'. These assemblies, from the situation held by the
+Duchess, could not always be the most select. Many of the guests who
+chanced to get access to them from a mere glimpse of the Queen--whose
+general good-humour, vivacity, and constant wish to please all around her
+would often make her commit herself unconsciously and unintentionally--
+would fabricate anecdotes of things they had neither seen nor heard; and
+which never had existence, except in their own wicked imaginations. The
+scene of the inventions, circulated against Her Majesty through France,
+was, in consequence, generally placed at the Duchess's; but they were
+usually so distinctly and obviously false that no notice was taken of
+them, nor was any attempt made to check their promulgation.
+
+"Exemplary as was the friendship between this enthusiastic pair,
+how much more fortunate for both would it have been had it never
+happened! I foresaw the results long, long before they took place;
+but the Queen was not to be thwarted. Fearful she might attribute my
+anxiety for her general safety to unworthy personal views, I was often
+silent, even when duty bade me speak. I was, perhaps, too scrupulous
+about seeming officious or jealous of the predilection shown to the
+Duchess. Experience had taught me the inutility of representing
+consequences, and I had no wish to quarrel with the Queen. Indeed,
+there was a degree of coldness towards me on the part of Her Majesty for
+having gone so far as I had done. It was not until after the birth of
+the Duc de Normandie, her third child, in March, 1785, that her
+friendship resumed its primitive warmth.
+
+"As the children grew, Her Majesty's attachment for their governess grew
+with them. All that has been said of Tasso's Armida was nothing to this
+luxurious temple of maternal affection. Never was female friendship more
+strongly cemented, or less disturbed by the nauseous poison of envy,
+malice, or mean jealousy. The Queen was in the plenitude of every
+earthly enjoyment, from being able to see and contribute to the education
+of the children she tenderly loved, unrestrained by the gothic etiquette
+with which all former royal mothers had been fettered, but which the kind
+indulgence of the Duchesse de Polignac broke through, as unnatural and
+unworthy of the enlightened and affectionate. The Duchess was herself an
+attentive, careful mother. She felt for the Queen, and encouraged her
+maternal sympathies, so doubly endeared by the long, long disappointment
+which had preceded their gratification. The sacrifice of all the cold
+forms of state policy by the new governess, and the free access she gave
+the royal mother to her children, so unprecedented in the Court of
+France, rendered Marie Antoinette so grateful that it may justly be said
+she divided her heart between the governess and the governed. Habit soon
+made it necessary for her existence that she should dedicate the whole of
+her time, not taken up in public ceremonies or parties, to the
+cultivation of the minds of her children. Conscious of her own
+deficiency in this respect, she determined to redeem this error in her
+offspring. The love of the frivolous amusements of society, for which
+the want of higher cultivation left room in her mind, was humoured by the
+gaieties of the Duchesse de Polignac's assemblies; while her nobler
+dispositions were encouraged by the privileges of the favourite's
+station. Thus, all her inclinations harmonising with the habits and
+position of her friend, Marie Antoinette literally passed the greatest
+part of some years in company with the Duchesse de Polignac,--either
+amidst the glare and bustle of public recreation, or in the private
+apartment of the governess and her children, increasing as much as
+possible the kindness of the one for the benefit and comfort of the
+others. The attachment of the Duchess to the royal children was returned
+by the Queen's affection for the offspring of the Duchess. So much was
+Her Majesty interested in favour of the daughter of the Duchess, that,
+before that young lady was fifteen years of age, she herself contrived
+and accomplished her marriage with the Duc de Guiche, then 'maitre de
+ceremonie' to Her Majesty, and whose interests were essentially, promoted
+by this alliance.
+
+ [The Duc de Guiche, since Duc de Grammont, has proved how much he
+ merited the distinction he received, in consequence of the
+ attachment between the Queen and his mother-in-law, by the
+ devotedness with which he followed the fallen fortunes of the
+ Bourbons till their restoration, since which he has not been
+ forgotten. The Duchess, his wife, who at her marriage was beaming
+ with all the beauties of her age, and adorned by art and nature with
+ every accomplishment, though she came into notice at a time when the
+ Court had scarcely recovered itself from the debauched morals by
+ which it had been so long degraded by a De Pompadour and a Du Barry,
+ has yet preserved her character, by the strictness of her conduct,
+ free from the censorious criticisms of an epoch in which some of the
+ purest could not escape unassailed. I saw her at Pyrmont in 1803;
+ and even then, though the mother of many children, she looked as
+ young and beautiful as ever. She was remarkably well educated and
+ accomplished, a profound musician on the harp and pianoforte,
+ graceful in her conversation, and a most charming dancer. She
+ seemed to bear the vicissitudes of fortune with a philosophical
+ courage and resignation not often to be met with in light-headed
+ French women. She was amiable in her manners, easy of access,
+ always lively and cheerful, and enthusiastically attached to the
+ country whence she was then excluded. She constantly accompanied
+ the wife of the late Louis XVIII. during her travels in Germany, as
+ her husband the Duke did His Majesty during his residence at Mittau,
+ in Courland, etc. I have had the honour of seeing the Duke twice
+ since the Revolution; once, on my coming from Russia, at General
+ Binkingdroff's, Governor of Mittau, and since, in Portland Place, at
+ the French Ambassador's, on his coming to England in the name of his
+ Sovereign, to congratulate the King of England on his accession to
+ the throne.]
+
+"The great cabals, which agitated the Court in consequence of the favour
+shown to the De Polignacs, were not slow in declaring themselves. The
+Comtesse de Noailles was one of the foremost among the discontented. Her
+resignation, upon the appointment of a superintendent, was a sufficient
+evidence of her real feeling; but when she now saw a place filled, to
+which she conceived her family had a claim, her displeasure could not be
+silent, and her dislike to the Queen began to express itself without
+reserve.
+
+"Another source of dissatisfaction against the Queen was her extreme
+partiality for the English. After the peace of Versailles, in 1783, the
+English flocked into France, and I believe if a poodle dog had come from
+England it would have met with a good reception from Her Majesty. This
+was natural enough. The American war had been carried on entirely
+against her wish; though, from the influence she was supposed to exercise
+in the Cabinet, it was presumed to have been managed entirely by herself.
+This odious opinion she wished personally to destroy; and it could only
+be done by the distinction with which, after the peace, she treated the
+whole English nation.'
+
+ [The daughter of the Duchesse de Polignac (of my meeting with whom I
+ have already spoken in a note), entering with me upon the subject of
+ France and of old times, observed that had the Queen limited her
+ attachment to the person of her mother, she would not have given all
+ the annoyance which she did to the nobility. It was to these
+ partialities to the English, the Duchesse de Guiche Grammont
+ alluded. I do not know the lady's name distinctly, but I am certain
+ I have heard the beautiful Lady Sarah Bunbury mentioned by the
+ Princesse de Lamballe as having received particular attention from
+ the Queen; for the Princess had heard much about this lady and "a
+ certain great personage" in England; but, on discovering her
+ acquaintance with the Duc de Lauzun, Her Majesty withdrew from the
+ intimacy, though not soon enough to prevent its having given food
+ for scandal. "You must remember," added the Duchesse de Guiche
+ Grammont, "how much the Queen was censured for her enthusiasm about
+ Lady Spencer." I replied that I did remember the much-ado about
+ nothing there was regarding some English lady, to whom the Queen
+ took a liking, whose name I could not exactly recall; but I knew
+ well she studied to please the English in general. Of this Lady
+ Spencer it is that the Princess speaks in one of the following pages
+ of this chapter.]
+
+"Several of the English nobility were on a familiar footing at the
+parties of the Duchesse de Polignac. This was quite enough for the
+slanderers. They were all ranked, and that publicly, as lovers of Her
+Majesty. I recollect when there were no less than five different private
+commissioners out, to suppress the libels that were in circulation over
+all France, against the Queen and Lord Edward Dillon, the Duke of Dorset,
+Lord George Conway, Arthur Dillon, as well as Count Fersen, the Duc de
+Lauzun, and the Comte d'Artois, who were all not only constant
+frequenters of Polignac's but visitors of Marie Antoinette.
+
+"By the false policy of Her Majesty's advisers, these enemies and
+libellers, instead of being brought to the condign punishment their
+infamy deserved, were privately hushed into silence, out of delicacy to
+the Queen's feelings, by large sums of money and pensions, which
+encouraged numbers to commit the same enormity in the hope of obtaining
+the same recompense.
+
+"But these were mercenary wretches, from whom no better could have been
+expected. A legitimate mode of robbery had been pressed upon their
+notice by the Government itself, and they thought it only a matter of
+fair speculation to make the best of it. There were some libellers,
+however, of a higher order, in comparison with whose motives for slander,
+those of the mere scandal-jobbers were white as the driven snow. Of
+these, one of the worst was the Duc de Lauzun.
+
+"The first motive of the Queen's strong dislike to the Duc de Lauzun
+sprang from Her Majesty's attachment to the Duchesse d'Orleans, whom she
+really loved. She was greatly displeased at the injury inflicted upon
+her valued friend by De Lauzun, in estranging the affection of the Duc
+d'Orleans from his wife by introducing him to depraved society. Among
+the associates to which this connection led the Duc d'Orleans were a
+certain Madame Duthee and Madame Buffon.
+
+"When De Lauzun, after having been expelled from the drawing-room of the
+Queen for his insolent presumption,--[The allusion here is to the affair
+of the heron plume.]--meeting with coolness at the King's levee, sought
+to cover his disgrace by appearing at the assemblies of the Duchesse de
+Polignac, Her Grace was too sincerely the friend of her Sovereign and
+benefactress not to perceive the drift of his conduct. She consequently
+signified to the self-sufficient coxcomb that her assemblies were not
+open to the public. Being thus shut out from Their Majesties, and, as a
+natural result, excluded from the most brilliant societies of Paris, De
+Lauzun, from a most diabolical spirit of revenge, joined the nefarious
+party which had succeeded in poisoning the mind of the Duc d'Orleans,
+and from the hordes of which, like the burning lava from Etna, issued
+calumnies which swept the most virtuous and innocent victims that ever
+breathed to their destruction!
+
+"Among the Queen's favourites, and those most in request at the De
+Polignac parties, was the good Lady Spencer, with whom I became most
+intimately acquainted when I first went to England; and from whom, as
+well as from her two charming daughters, the Duchess of Devonshire and
+Lady Duncannon, since Lady Besborough, I received the greatest marks of
+cordial hospitality. In consequence, when her ladyship came to France,
+I hastened to present her to the Queen. Her Majesty, taking a great
+liking to the amiable Englishwoman, and wishing to profit by her private
+conversations and society, gave orders that Lady Spencer should pass to
+her private closet whenever she came to Versailles, without the formal
+ceremony of waiting in the antechamber to be announced.
+
+"One day, Her Majesty, Lady Spencer, and myself were observing the
+difficulty there was in acquiring a correct pronunciation of the English
+language, when Lady Spencer remarked that it only required a little
+attention.
+
+"'I beg your pardon,' said the Queen, 'that's not all, because there are
+many things you do not call by their proper names, as they are in the
+dictionary.'
+
+"'Pray what are they, please Your Majesty?'
+
+"'Well, I will give you an instance. For example, 'les culottes'--what
+do you call them?'
+
+"'Small clothes,' replied her ladyship.
+
+"'Ma foi! how can they be called small clothes for one large man? Now I
+do look in the dictionary, and I find, for the word culottes--breeches.'
+
+"'Oh, please Your Majesty, we never call them by that name in England.'
+
+"'Voila done, j'ai raison!'
+
+"'We say "inexpressibles"!'
+
+"'Ah, c'est mieux! Dat do please me ver much better. Il y a du bon sens
+la dedans. C'est une autre chose!'
+
+"In the midst of this curious dialogue, in came the Duke of Dorset, Lord
+Edward Dillon, Count Fersen, and several English gentlemen, who, as they
+were going to the King's hunt, were all dressed in new buckskin breeches.
+
+"'I do not like,' exclaimed the Queen to them, dem yellow irresistibles!'
+
+"Lady Spencer nearly fainted. 'Vat make you so frightful, my dear lady?'
+said the Queen to her ladyship, who was covering her face with her hands.
+'I am terrified at Your Majesty's mistake'--'Comment? did you no tell me
+just now, dat in England de lady call les culottes "irresistibles"?'--
+'Oh, mercy! I never could have made such a mistake, as to have applied
+to that part of the male dress such a word. I said, please Your Majesty,
+inexpressibles.'
+
+"On this the gentlemen all laughed most heartily.
+
+"'Vell, vell,' replied the Queen, 'do, my dear lady, discompose yourself.
+I vill no more call de breeches irresistibles, but say small clothes, if
+even elles sont upon a giant!'
+
+"At the repetition of the naughty word breeches, poor Lady Spencer's
+English delicacy quite overcame her. Forgetting where she was, and also
+the company she was in, she ran from the room with her cross stick in her
+hand, ready to lay it on the shoulders of any one who should attempt to
+obstruct her passage, flew into her carriage, and drove off full speed,
+as if fearful of being contaminated,--all to the no small amusement of
+the male guests.
+
+"Her Majesty and I laughed till the very tears ran down our cheeks. The
+Duke of Dorset, to keep up the joke, said there really were some counties
+in England where they called 'culottes irresistibles.
+
+"Now that I am upon the subject of England, and the peace of 1783, which
+brought such throngs of English over to France, there occurs to me a
+circumstance, relating to the treaty of commerce signed at that time,
+which exhibits the Comte de Vergennes to some advantage; and with that
+let me dismiss the topic.
+
+"The Comte de Vergennes, was one of the most distinguished Ministers of
+France. I was intimately acquainted with him. His general character for
+uprightness prompted his Sovereign to govern in a manner congenial to his
+own goodness of heart, which was certainly most for the advantage of his
+subjects. Vergennes cautioned Louis against the hypocritical adulations
+of his privileged courtiers. The Count had been schooled in State policy
+by the great Venetian senator, Francis Foscari, the subtlest politician
+of his age, whom he consulted during his life on every important matter;
+and he was not very easily to be deceived.
+
+"When the treaty of commerce took place, at the period I mention, the
+experienced Vergennes foresaw--what afterwards really happened--that
+France would be inundated with British manufactures; but Calonne
+obstinately maintained the contrary, till he was severely reminded of the
+consequence of his misguided policy, in the insults inflicted on him by
+enraged mobs of thousands of French artificers, whenever he appeared in
+public. But though the mania for British goods had literally caused an
+entire stagnation of business in the French manufacturing towns, and
+thrown throngs upon the 'pave' for want of employment, yet M. de Calonne
+either did not see, or pretended not to see, the errors he had committed.
+Being informed that the Comte de Vergennes had attributed the public
+disorders to his fallacious policy, M. de Calonne sent a friend to the
+Count demanding satisfaction for the charge of having caused the riots.
+The Count calmly replied that he was too much of a man of honour to take
+so great an advantage, as to avail himself of the opportunity offered, by
+killing a man who had only one life to dispose of, when there were so
+many with a prior claim, who were anxious to destroy him 'en societe'.
+I Bid M. de Calonne,' continued the Count, 'first get out of that scrape,
+as the English boxers do when their eyes are closed up after a pitched
+battle. He has been playing at blind man's buff, but the poverty to
+which he has reduced so many of our tradespeople has torn the English
+bandage from his eyes!' For three or four days the Comte de Vergennes
+visited publicly, and showed himself everywhere in and about Paris; but
+M. de Calonne was so well convinced of the truth of the old fox's satire
+that he pocketed his annoyance, and no more was said about fighting.
+Indeed, the Comte de Vergennes gave hints of being able to show that M.
+de Calonne had been bribed into the treaty."
+
+
+ [The Princesse de Lamballe has alluded in a former page to the
+ happiness which the Queen enjoyed during the visits of the foreign
+ Princes to the Court of France. Her papers contain a few passages
+ upon the opinions Her Majesty entertained of the royal travellers;
+ which, although in the order of time they should have been mentioned
+ before the peace with England, yet, not to disturb the chain of the
+ narrative, respecting the connection with the Princesse de Lamballe,
+ of the prevailing libels, and the partiality shown towards the
+ English, I have reserved them for the conclusion of the present
+ chapter. The timidity of the Queen in the presence of the
+ illustrious strangers, and her agitation when about to receive them,
+ have, I think, been already spoken of. Upon the subject of the
+ royal travellers themselves, and other personages, the Princess
+ expresses herself thus:]
+
+"The Queen had never been an admirer of Catharine II. Notwithstanding
+her studied policy for the advancement of civilization in her internal
+empire, the means which, aided by the Princess Dashkoff, she made use of
+to seat herself on the imperial throne of her weak husband, Peter the
+Third, had made her more understood than esteemed. Yet when her son, the
+Grand Duke of the North,--[Afterwards the unhappy Emperor Paul.]--
+and the Grand Duchess, his wife, came to France, their description of
+Catharine's real character so shocked the maternal sensibility of Marie
+Antoinette that she could scarcely hear the name of the Empress without
+shuddering. The Grand Duke spoke of Catharine without the least
+disguise. He said he travelled merely for the security of his life from
+his mother, who had surrounded him with creatures that were his sworn
+enemies, her own spies and infamous favourites, to whose caprices they
+were utterly subordinate. He was aware that the dangerous credulity of
+the Empress might be every hour excited by these wretches to the
+destruction of himself and his Duchess, and, therefore, he had in absence
+sought the only refuge. He had no wish, he said, ever to return to his
+native country, till Heaven should check his mother's doubts respecting
+his dutiful filial affection towards her, or till God should be pleased
+to take her into His sacred keeping.
+
+"The King was petrified at the Duke's description of his situation, and
+the Queen could not refrain from tears when the Duchess, his wife,
+confirmed all her husband had uttered on the subject. The Duchess said
+she had been warned by the untimely fate of the Princess d'Armstadt, her
+predecessor, the first wife of the Grand Duke, to elude similar jealousy
+and suspicion on the part of her mother-in-law, by seclusion from the
+Court, in a country residence with her husband; indeed, that she had made
+it a point never to visit Petersburg, except on the express invitation of
+the Empress, as if she had been a foreigner.
+
+"In this system the Grand Duchess persevered, even after her return from
+her travels. When she became pregnant, and drew near her accouchement,
+the Empress-mother permitted her to come to Petersburg for that purpose;
+but, as soon as the ceremony required by the etiquette of the Imperial
+Court on those occasions ended, the Duchess immediately returned to her
+hermitage.
+
+"This Princess was remarkably well-educated; she possessed a great deal
+of good, sound sense, and had profited by the instructions of some of the
+best German tutors during her very early years. It was the policy of her
+father, the Duke of Wirtemberg, who had a large family, to educate his
+children as 'quietists' in matters of religion. He foresaw that the
+natural charms and acquired abilities of his daughters would one day call
+them to be the ornaments of the most distinguished Courts in Europe, and
+he thought it prudent not to instil early prejudices in favour of
+peculiar forms of religion which might afterwards present an obstacle to
+their aggrandisement.
+
+ [The first daughter of the Duke of Wirtemberg was the first wife of
+ the present Emperor of Austria. She embraced the Catholic faith and
+ died very young, two days before the Emperor Joseph the Second, at
+ Vienna. The present Empress Dowager, late wife to Paul, became a
+ proselyte to the Greek religion on her arrival at Petersburg. The
+ son of the Duke of Wirtemburg, who succeeded him in the Dukedom, was
+ a Protestant, it being his interest to profess that religion for the
+ security of his inheritance. Prince Ferdinand, who was in the
+ Austrian service, and a long time Governor of Vienna, was a
+ Catholic, as he could not otherwise have enjoyed that office. He
+ was of a very superior character to the Duke, his brother. Prince
+ Louis, who held a commission under the Prussian Monarch, followed
+ the religion of the country where he served, and the other Princes,
+ who were in the employment of Sweden and other countries, found no
+ difficulty in conforming themselves to the religion of the
+ Sovereigns under whom they served. None of them having any
+ established forms of worship, they naturally embraced that which
+ conduced most to their aggrandisement, emolument, or dignity.]
+
+"The notorious vices of the King of Denmark, and his total neglect both
+of his young Queen, Carolina Matilda, and of the interest of his distant
+dominions, while in Paris, created a feeling in the Queen's mind towards
+that house which was not a little heightened by her disgust at the King
+of Sweden, when he visited the Court of Versailles. This King, though
+much more crafty than his brother-in-law, the King of Denmark, who
+revelled openly in his depravities, was not less vicious. The deception
+he made use of in usurping part of the rights of his people, combined
+with the worthlessness and duplicity, of his private conduct, excited a
+strong indignation in the mind of Marie Antoinette, of which she was
+scarcely capable of withholding the expression in his presence.
+
+"It was during the visit of the Duke and Duchess of the North, that the
+Cardinal de Rohan again appeared upon the scene. For eight or ten years
+he had never been allowed to show himself at Court, and had been totally
+shut out of every society where the Queen visited. On the arrival of the
+illustrious, travellers at Versailles, the Queen, at her own expense,
+gave them a grand fete at her private palace, in the gardens of Trianon,
+similar to the one given by the Comte de Provence--[Afterwards Louis
+XVIII.]--to Her Majesty, in the gardens of Brunoi.
+
+"On the eve of the fete, the Cardinal waited upon, me to know if he would
+be permitted to appear there in the character he had the honour to hold
+at Court, I replied that I had made it a rule never to interfere in the
+private or public amusements of the Court, and that His Eminence must be
+the best judge how far he, could obtrude himself upon the Queen's private
+parties, to which only a select number had been invited, in consequence
+of the confined spot where the fete was to be given.
+
+"The Cardinal left me, not much satisfied at his reception. Determined
+to follow, as usual, his own misguided passion, he immediately went too
+Trianon, disguised with a large cloak. He saw the porter, and bribed
+him. He only wished, he said, to be placed in a situation whence he
+might see the Duke and Duchess of the North without being seen; but no
+sooner did he perceive the porter engaged at some distance than he left
+his cloak at the lodge, and went forward in his Cardinal's dress, as if
+he had been one of the invited guests, placing himself purposely in the
+Queen's path to attract her attention as she rode by in the carriage with
+the Duke and Duchess.
+
+"The Queen was shocked and thunderstruck at seeing him. But, great as
+was her annoyance, knowing the Cardinal had not been invited and ought
+not to have been there, she only discharged the porter who had been
+seduced to let him in; and, though the King, on being made acquainted
+with his treachery, would have banished His Eminence a hundred leagues
+from the capital, yet the Queen, the royal aunts, the Princesse
+Elizabeth, and myself, not to make the affair public, and thereby
+disgrace the high order of his ecclesiastical dignity, prevented the King
+from exercising his authority by commanding instant exile.
+
+"Indeed, the Queen could never get the better of her fears of being some
+day, or in some way or other, betrayed by the Cardinal, for having made
+him the confidant of the mortification she would have suffered if the
+projected marriage of Louis XV. and her sister had been solemnized. On
+this account she uniformly opposed whatever harshness the King at any
+time intended against the Cardinal.
+
+"Thus was this wicked prelate left at leisure to premeditate the horrid
+plot of the famous necklace, the ever memorable fraud, which so fatally
+verified the presentiments of the Queen."
+
+
+
+
+SECTION II.
+
+ [The production of 'Le Mariage de Figaro', by Beaumarchais, upon the
+ stage at Paris, so replete with indecorous and slanderous allusions
+ to the Royal Family, had spread the prejudices against the Queen
+ through the whole kingdom and every rank of France, just in time to
+ prepare all minds for the deadly blow which Her Majesty received
+ from the infamous plot of the diamond necklace. From this year,
+ crimes and misfortunes trod closely on each others' heels in the
+ history of the ill-starred Queen; and one calamity only disappeared
+ to make way for a greater.
+
+ The destruction of the papers which would have thoroughly explained
+ the transaction has still left all its essential particulars in some
+ degree of mystery; and the interest of the clergy, who supported one
+ of their own body, coupled with the arts and bribes of the high
+ houses connected with the plotting prelate, must, of course, have
+ discoloured greatly even what was well known.
+
+ It will be recollected that before the accession of Louis XVI. the
+ Cardinal de Rohan was disgraced in consequence of his intrigues;
+ that all his ingenuity was afterwards unremittingly exerted to
+ obtain renewed favour; that he once obtruded himself upon the notice
+ of the Queen in the gardens of Trianon, and that his conduct in so
+ doing excited the indignation it deserved, but was left unpunished
+ owing to the entreaties of the best friends of the Queen, and her
+ own secret horror of a man who had already caused her so much
+ anguish.
+
+ With the histories of the fraud every one is acquainted. That of
+ Madame Campan, as far as it goes, is sufficiently detailed and
+ correct to spare me the necessity of expatiating upon this theme of
+ villany. Yet, to assist the reader's memory, before returning to
+ the Journal of the Princesse de Lamballe, I shall recapitulate the
+ leading particulars.
+
+ The Cardinal had become connected with a young, but artful and
+ necessitous, woman, of the name of Lamotte. It was known that the
+ darling ambition of the Cardinal was to regain the favour of the
+ Queen.
+
+ The necklace, which has been already spoken of, and which was
+ originally destined by Louis XV. for Marie Antoinette--had her hand,
+ by divorce, been transferred to him--but which, though afterwards
+ intended by Louis XV. for his mistress, Du Barry, never came to her
+ in consequence of his death--this fatal necklace was still in
+ existence, and in the possession of the crown jewellers, Boehmer and
+ Bassange. It was valued at eighteen hundred thousand livres. The
+ jewellers had often pressed it upon the Queen, and even the King
+ himself had enforced its acceptance. But the Queen dreaded the
+ expense, especially at an epoch of pecuniary difficulty in the
+ State, much more than she coveted the jewels, and uniformly and
+ resolutely declined them, although they had been proposed to her on
+ very easy terms of payment, as she really did not like ornaments.
+
+ It was made to appear at the parliamentary investigation that the
+ artful Lamotte had impelled the Cardinal to believe that she herself
+ was in communication with the Queen; that she had interested Her
+ Majesty in favour of the long slighted Cardinal; that she had
+ fabricated a correspondence, in which professions of penitence on
+ the part of De Rohan were answered by assurances of forgiveness from
+ the Queen. The result of this correspondence was represented to be
+ the engagement of the Cardinal to negotiate the purchase of the
+ necklace secretly, by a contract for periodical payments. To the
+ forgery of papers was added, it was declared, the substitution of
+ the Queen's person, by dressing up a girl of the Palais Royal to
+ represent Her Majesty, whom she in some degree resembled, in a
+ secret and rapid interview with Rohan in a dark grove of the gardens
+ of Versailles, where she was to give the Cardinal a rose,
+ in token of her royal approbation, and then hastily disappear.
+ The importunity of the jewellers, on the failure of the stipulated
+ payment, disclosed the plot. A direct appeal of theirs to the
+ Queen, to save them from ruin, was the immediate source of
+ detection. The Cardinal was arrested, and all the parties tried.
+ But the Cardinal was acquitted, and Lamotte and a subordinate agent
+ alone punished. The quack Cagliostro was also in the plot, but he,
+ too, escaped, like his confederate, the Cardinal, who was made to
+ appear as the dupe of Lamotte.
+
+ The Queen never got over the effect of this affair. Her friends
+ well knew the danger of severe measures towards one capable of
+ collecting around him strong support against a power already so much
+ weakened by faction and discord. But the indignation of conscious
+ innocence insulted, prevailed, though to its ruin!
+
+ But it is time to let the Princesse de Lamballe give her own
+ impressions upon this fatal subject, and in her own words.]
+
+
+"How could Messieurs Boehmer and Bassange presume that the Queen would
+have employed any third person to obtain an article of such value,
+without enabling them to produce an unequivocal document signed by her
+own hand and countersigned by mine, as had ever been the rule during my
+superintendence of the household, whenever anything was ordered from the
+jewellers by Her Majesty? Why did not Messieurs Boehmer and Bassange
+wait on me, when they saw a document unauthorised by me, and so widely
+departing from the established forms? I must still think, as I have
+often said to the King, that Boehmer and Bassange wished to get rid of
+this dead weight of diamonds in any way; and the Queen having
+unfortunately been led by me to hush up many foul libels against her
+reputation, as I then thought it prudent she should do, rather than
+compromise her character with wretches capable of doing anything to
+injure her, these jewellers, judging from this erroneous policy of the
+past, imagined that in this instance, also, rather than hazard exposure,
+Her Majesty would pay them for the necklace. This was a compromise which
+I myself resisted, though so decidedly adverse to bringing the affair
+before the nation by a public trial. Of such an explosion, I foresaw the
+consequences, and I ardently entreated the King and Queen to take other
+measures. But, though till now so hostile to severity with the Cardinal,
+the Queen felt herself so insulted by the proceeding that she gave up
+every other consideration to make manifest her innocence.
+
+"The wary Comte de Vergennes did all he could to prevent the affair from
+getting before the public. Against the opinion of the King and the whole
+council of Ministers, he opposed judicial proceedings. Not that he
+conceived the Cardinal altogether guiltless; but he foresaw the fatal
+consequences that must result to Her Majesty, from bringing to trial an
+ecclesiastic of such rank; for he well knew that the host of the higher
+orders of the nobility, to whom the prelate was allied, would naturally
+strain every point to blacken the character of the King and Queen, as the
+only means of exonerating their kinsman in the eyes of the world from the
+criminal mystery attached to that most diabolical intrigue against the
+fair fame of Marie Antoinette. The Count could not bear the idea of the
+Queen's name being coupled with those of the vile wretches, Lamotte and
+the mountebank Cagliostro, and therefore wished the King to chastise the
+Cardinal by a partial exile, which might have been removed at pleasure.
+But the Queen's party too fatally seconded her feelings, and prevailed.
+
+"I sat by Her Majesty's bedside the whole of the night, after I heard
+what had been determined against the Cardinal by the council of
+Ministers, to beg her to use all her interest with the King to persuade
+him to revoke the order of the warrant for the prelate's arrest. To this
+the Queen replied, 'Then the King, the Ministers, and the people, will
+all deem me guilty.'
+
+"Her Majesty's remark stopped all farther argument upon the subject, and
+I had the inconsolable grief to see my royal mistress rushing upon
+dangers which I had no power of preventing her from bringing upon
+herself.
+
+"The slanderers who had imputed such unbounded influence to the Queen
+over the mind of Louis XVI. should have been consistent enough to
+consider that, with but a twentieth part of the tithe of her imputed
+power, uncontrolled as she then was by national authority, she might,
+without any exposure to third persons, have at once sent one of her pages
+to the garde-meuble and other royal depositaries, replete with hidden
+treasures of precious stones which never saw the light, and thence have
+supplied herself with more than enough to form ten necklaces, or to have
+fully satisfied, in any way she liked, the most unbounded passion for
+diamonds, for the use of which she would never have been called to
+account.
+
+"But the truth is, the Queen had no love of ornaments. A proof occurred
+very soon after I had the honour to be nominated Her Majesty's
+superintendent. On the day of the great fete of the Cordon Bleu, when it
+was the etiquette to wear diamonds and pearls, the Queen had omitted
+putting them on. As there had been a greater affluence of visitors than
+usual that morning, and Her Majesty's toilet was overthronged by Princes
+and Princesses, I fancied in the bustle that the omission proceeded from
+forgetfulness. Consequently, I sent the tirewoman, in the Queen's
+hearing, to order the jewels to be brought in. Smilingly, Her Majesty
+replied, 'No, no! I have not forgotten these gaudy things; but I do not
+intend that the lustre of my eyes should be outshone by the one, or the
+whiteness of my teeth by the other; however, as you wish art to eclipse
+nature, I'll wear them to satisfy you, ma belle dame!'
+
+"The King was always so thoroughly indulgent to Her Majesty, with regard
+both to her public and private conduct, that she never had any pretext
+for those reserves which sometimes tempt Queens as well as the wives of
+private individuals to commit themselves to third persons for articles of
+high value, which their caprice indiscreetly impels them to procure
+unknown to their natural guardians. Marie Antoinette had no reproach or
+censure for plunging into excesses beyond her means to apprehend from her
+royal husband. On the contrary, the King himself had spontaneously
+offered to purchase the necklace from the jewellers, who had urged it on
+him without limiting any time for payment. It was the intention of His
+Majesty to have liquidated it out of his private purse. But Marie
+Antoinette declined the gift. Twice in my presence was the refusal
+repeated before Messieurs Boehmer and Bassange. Who, then, can for a
+moment presume, after all these circumstances, that the Queen of France,
+with a nation's wealth at her feet and thousands of individuals offering
+her millions, which she never accepted, would have so far degraded
+herself and the honour of the nation, of which she was born to be the
+ornament, as to place herself gratuitously in the power of a knot of
+wretches, headed by a man whose general bad character for years had
+excluded him from Court and every respectable society, and had made the
+Queen herself mark him as an object of the utmost aversion.
+
+"If these circumstances be not sufficient adequately to open the eyes of
+those whom prejudice has blinded, and whose ears have been deafened
+against truth, by the clamours of sinister conspirators against the
+monarchy instead of the monarchs; if all these circumstances, I repeat,
+do not completely acquit the Queen, argument, or even ocular
+demonstration itself, would be thrown away. Posterity will judge
+impartially, and with impartial judges the integrity of Marie Antoinette
+needs no defender.
+
+"When the natural tendency of the character of De Rohan to romantic and
+extraordinary intrigue is considered in connection with the associates he
+had gathered around him, the plot of the necklace ceases to be a source
+of wonder. At the time the Cardinal was most at a loss for means to meet
+the necessities of his extravagance, and to obtain some means of access
+to the Queen, the mountebank quack, Cagliostro, made his appearance in
+France. His fame had soon flown from Strasburg to Paris, the magnet of
+vices and the seat of criminals. The Prince-Cardinal, known of old as a
+seeker after everything of notoriety, soon became the intimate of one who
+flattered him with the accomplishment of all his dreams in the
+realization of the philosopher's stone; converting puffs and French paste
+into brilliants; Roman pearls into Oriental ones; and turning earth to
+gold. The Cardinal, always in want of means to supply the insatiable
+exigencies of his ungovernable vices, had been the dupe through life of
+his own credulity--a drowning man catching at a straw! But instead of
+making gold of base materials, Cagliostro's brass soon relieved his blind
+adherent of all his sterling metal. As many needy persons enlisted under
+the banners of this nostrum speculator, it is not to be wondered at that
+the infamous name of the Comtesse de Lamotte, and others of the same
+stamp, should have thus fallen into an association of the Prince-Cardinal
+or that her libellous stories of the Queen of France should have found
+eager promulgators, where the real diamonds of the famous necklace being
+taken apart were divided piecemeal among a horde of the most depraved
+sharpers that ever existed to make human nature blush at its own
+degradation!
+
+ [Cagliostro, when he came to Rome, for I know not whether there had
+ been any previous intimacy, got acquainted with a certain Marchese
+ Vivaldi, a Roman, whose wife had been for years the chere amie of
+ the last Venetian Ambassador, Peter Pesaro, a noble patrician, and
+ who has ever since his embassy at Rome been his constant companion
+ and now resides with him in England. No men in Europe are more
+ constant in their attachments than the Venetians. Pesaro is the
+ sole proprietor of one of the moat beautiful and magnificent palaces
+ on the Grand Canal at Venice, though he now lives in the outskirts
+ of London, in a small house, not so large as one of the offices of
+ his immense noble palace, where his agent transacts his business.
+ The husband of Pesaro's chere amie, the Marchese Vivaldi, when
+ Cagliostro was arrested and sent to the Castello Santo Angelo at
+ Rome, was obliged to fly his country, and went to Venice, where he
+ was kept secreted and maintained by the Marquis Solari, and it was
+ only through his means and those of the Cardinal Consalvi, then
+ known only as the musical Abbe Consalvi, from his great attachment
+ to the immortal Cimarosa, that Vivaldi was ever allowed to return to
+ his native country; but Consalvi, who was the friend of Vivaldi,
+ feeling with the Marquis Solari much interested for his situation,
+ they together contrived to convince Pius VI. that he was more to be
+ pitied than blamed, and thus obtained his recall. I have merely
+ given this note as a further warning to be drawn from the
+ connections of the Cardinal de Rohan, to deter hunters after novelty
+ from forming ties with innovators and impostors. Cagliostro was
+ ultimately condemned, by the Roman laws under Pope Pius VI.,
+ for life, to the galleys, where he died.
+
+ Proverbs ought to be respected; for it is said that no phrase
+ becomes a proverb until after a century's experience of its truth.
+ In England it is proverbial to judge of men by the company they
+ keep. Judge of the Cardinal de Rohan from his most intimate friend,
+ the galley-slave.]
+
+"Eight or ten years had elapsed from the time Her Majesty had last seen
+the Cardinal to speak to him, with the exception of the casual glance as
+she drove by when he furtively introduced himself into the garden at the
+fete at Trianon, till he was brought to the King's cabinet when arrested,
+and interrogated, and confronted with her face to face. The Prince
+started when he saw her. The comparison of her features with those of
+the guilty wretch who had dared to personate her in the garden at
+Versailles completely destroyed his self-possession. Her Majesty's
+person was become fuller, and her face was much longer than that of the
+infamous D'Oliva. He could neither speak nor write an intelligible reply
+to the questions put to him. All he could utter, and that only in broken
+accents, was, 'I'll pay! I'll pay Messieurs Bassange.'
+
+"Had he not speedily recovered himself, all the mystery in which this
+affair has been left, so injuriously to the Queen, might have been
+prevented. His papers would have declared the history of every
+particular, and distinctly established the extent of his crime and the
+thorough innocence of Marie Antoinette of any connivance at the fraud, or
+any knowledge of the necklace. But when the Cardinal was ordered by the
+King's Council to be put under arrest, his self-possession returned. He
+was given in charge to an officer totally unacquainted with the nature of
+the accusation. Considering only the character of his prisoner as one of
+the highest dignitaries of the Church, from ignorance and inexperience,
+he left the Cardinal an opportunity to write a German note to his
+factotum, the Abbe Georgel. In this note the trusty secretary was
+ordered to destroy all the letters of Cagliostro, Madame de Lamotte, and
+the other wretched associates of the infamous conspiracy; and the traitor
+was scarcely in custody when every evidence of his treason had
+disappeared. The note to Georgel saved his master from expiating his
+offence at the Place de Grave.
+
+"The consequences of the affair would have been less injurious, however,
+had it been managed, even as it stood, with better judgment and temper.
+But it was improperly entrusted to the Baron de Breteuil and the Abbe
+Vermond, both sworn enemies of the Cardinal. Their main object was the
+ruin of him they hated, and they listened only to their resentments.
+They never weighed the danger of publicly prosecuting an individual whose
+condemnation would involve the first families in France, for he was
+allied even to many of the Princes of the blood. They should have
+considered that exalted personages, naturally feeling as if any crime
+proved against their kinsman would be a stain upon themselves, would of
+course resort to every artifice to exonerate the accused. To criminate
+the Queen was the only and the obvious method. Few are those nearest the
+Crown who are not most jealous of its wearers! Look at the long civil
+wars of York and Lancaster, and the short reign of Richard. The downfall
+of Kings meets less resistance than that of their inferiors.
+
+"Still, notwithstanding all the deplorable blunders committed in this
+business of De Rohan, justice was not smothered without great difficulty.
+His acquittal cost the families of De Rohan and De Conde more than a
+million of livres, distributed among all ranks of the clergy; besides
+immense sums sent to the Court of Rome to make it invalidate the judgment
+of the civil authority of France upon so high a member of the Church,
+and to induce it to order the Cardinal's being sent to Rome by way of
+screening him from the prosecution, under the plausible pretext of more
+rigid justice.
+
+"Considerable sums in money and jewels were also lavished on all the
+female relatives of the peers of France, who were destined to sit on the
+trial. The Abbe Georgel bribed the press, and extravagantly paid all the
+literary pens in France to produce the most Jesuitical and sophisticated
+arguments in his patron's justification. Though these writers dared not
+accuse or in any way criminate the Queen, yet the respectful doubts, with
+which their defence of her were seasoned, did indefinitely more mischief
+than any direct attack, which could have been directly answered.
+
+"The long cherished, but till now smothered, resentment of the Comtesse
+de Noailles, the scrupulous Madame Etiquette, burst forth on this
+occasion. Openly joining the Cardinal's party against her former
+mistress and Sovereign, she recruited and armed all in favour of her
+protege; for it was by her intrigues De Rohan had been nominated
+Ambassador to Vienna. Mesdames de Guemenee and Marsan, rival pretenders
+to favours of His Eminence, were equally earnest to support him against
+the Queen. In short, there was scarcely a family of distinction in
+France that, from the libels which then inundated the kingdom, did not
+consider the King as having infringed on their prerogatives and
+privileges in accusing the Cardinal.
+
+"Shortly after the acquittal of this most artful, and, in the present
+instance, certainly too fortunate prelate, the Princesse de Conde came to
+congratulate me on the Queen's innocence, and her kinsman's liberation
+from the Bastille.
+
+"Without the slightest observation, I produced to the Princess documents
+in proof of the immense sums she alone had expended in bribing the judges
+and other persons, to save her relation, the Cardinal, by criminating Her
+Majesty.
+
+"The Princesse de Conde instantly fell into violent hysterics, and was
+carried home apparently, lifeless.
+
+"I have often reproached myself for having given that sudden shock and
+poignant anguish to Her Highness, but I could not have supposed that one
+who came so barefacedly to impress me with the Cardinal's innocence,
+could have been less firm in refuting her own guilt.
+
+"I never mentioned the circumstance to the Queen. Had I done so, Her
+Highness would have been forever excluded from the Court and the royal
+presence. This was no time to increase the enemies of Her Majesty, and,
+the affair of the trial being ended, I thought it best to prevent any
+further breach from a discord between the Court and the house of Conde.
+However, from a coldness subsisting ever after between the Princess and
+myself, I doubt not that the Queen had her suspicions that all was not as
+it should be in that quarter. Indeed, though Her Majesty never confessed
+it, I think she herself had discovered something at that very time not
+altogether to the credit of the Princesse de Conde, for she ceased going,
+from that period, to any of the fetes given at Chantilly.
+
+"These were but a small portion of the various instruments successfully
+levelled by parties, even the least suspected, to blacken and destroy the
+fair fame of Marie Antoinette.
+
+"The document which so justly alarmed the Princesse de Conde, when I
+showed it to her came into my hands in the following manner:
+
+"Whenever a distressed family, or any particular individual, applied to
+me for relief, or was otherwise recommended for charitable purposes, I
+generally sent my little English protegee--whose veracity, well knowing
+the goodness of her heart, I could rely--to ascertain whether their
+claims were really well grounded.
+
+ [Indeed, I never deceived the Princess on these occasions. She was
+ so generously charitable that I should have conceived it a crime.
+ When I could get no satisfactory information, I said I could not
+ trace anything undeserving her charity, and left Her Highness to
+ exercise her own discretion.]
+
+"One day I received an earnest memorial from a family, desiring to make
+some private communications of peculiar delicacy. I sent my usual
+ambassadress to inquire into its import. On making her mission known,
+she found no difficulty in ascertaining the object of the application.
+It proceeded from conscientious distress of mind. A relation of this
+family had been the regular confessor of a convent. With the Lady Abbess
+of this convent and her trusty nuns, the Princesse de Conde had deposited
+considerable sums of money, to be bestowed in creating influence in
+favour of the Cardinal de Rohan. The confessor, being a man of some
+consideration among the clergy, was applied to, to use his influence with
+the needier members of the Church more immediately about him, as well as
+those of higher station, to whom he had access, in furthering the
+purposes of the Princesse de Conde. The bribes were applied as intended.
+But, at the near approach of death, the confessor was struck with
+remorse. He begged his family, without mentioning his name, to send the
+accounts and vouchers of the sums he had so distributed, to me, as a
+proof of his contrition, that I might make what use of them I should
+think proper. The papers were handed to my messenger, who pledged her
+word of honour that I would certainly adhere to the dying man's last
+injunctions. She desired they might be sealed up by the family, and by
+them directed to me.--[To this day, I neither know the name of the
+convent or the confessor.]--She then hastened back to our place of
+rendezvous, where I waited for her, and where she consigned the packet
+into my own hands.
+
+"That part of the papers which compromised only the Princesse de Conde
+was shown by me to the Princess on the occasion I have mentioned. It was
+natural enough that she should have been shocked at the detection of
+having suborned the clergy and others with heavy bribes to avert the
+deserved fate of the Cardinal. I kept this part of the packet secret
+till the King's two aunts, who had also been warm advocates in favour of
+the prelate, left Paris for Rome. Then, as Pius VI. had interested
+himself as head of the Church for the honour of one of its members, I
+gave them these very papers to deliver to His Holiness for his private
+perusal. I was desirous of enabling this truly charitable and Christian
+head of our sacred religion to judge how far his interference was
+justified by facts. I am thoroughly convinced that, had he been sooner
+furnished with these evidences, instead of blaming the royal proceeding,
+he would have urged it on, nay, would himself have been the first to
+advise that the foul conspiracy should be dragged into open day.
+
+"The Comte de Vergennes told me that the King displayed the greatest
+impartiality throughout the whole investigation for the exculpation of
+the Queen, and made good his title on this, as he did on every occasion
+where his own unbiassed feelings and opinions were called into action,
+to great esteem for much higher qualities than the world has usually
+given him credit for.
+
+"I have been accused of having opened the prison doors of the culprit
+Lamotte for her escape; but the charge is false. I interested myself,
+as was my duty, to shield the Queen from public reproach by having
+Lamotte sent to a place of penitence; but I never interfered, except to
+lessen her punishment, after the judicial proceedings. The diamonds, in
+the hands of her vile associates at Paris, procured her ample means to
+escape. I should have been the Queen's greatest enemy had I been the
+cause of giving liberty to one who acted, and might naturally have been
+expected to act, as this depraved woman did.
+
+"Through the private correspondence which was carried on between this
+country and England, after I had left it, I was informed that M. de
+Calonne, whom the Queen never liked, and who was called to the
+administration against her will--which he knew, and consequently became
+one of her secret enemies in the affair of the necklace--was discovered
+to have been actively employed against Her Majesty in the work published
+in London by Lamotte.
+
+"Mr. Sheridan was the gentleman who first gave me this information.
+
+"I immediately sent a trusty person by the Queen's orders to London, to
+buy up the whole work. It was too late. It had been already so widely
+circulated that its consequences could no longer be prevented. I was
+lucky enough, however, for a considerable sum, to get a copy from a
+person intimate with the author, the margin of which, in the handwriting
+of M. de Calonne, actually contained numerous additional circumstances
+which were to have been published in a second edition! This publication
+my agent, aided by some English gentlemen, arrived in time to suppress.
+
+"The copy I allude to was brought to Paris and shown to the Queen. She
+instantly flew with it in her hands to the King's cabinet.
+
+"'Now, Sire,' exclaimed she, 'I hope you will be convinced that my
+enemies are those whom I have long considered as the most pernicious of
+Your Majesty's Councillors--your own Cabinet Ministers--your M. de
+Calonne!--respecting whom I have often given you my opinion, which,
+unfortunately, has always been attributed to mere female caprice, or as
+having been biassed by the intrigues of Court favourites! This, I hope,
+Your Majesty will now be able to contradict!'
+
+"The King all this time was looking over the different pages containing
+M. de Calonne's additions on their margins. On recognising the hand-
+writing, His Majesty was so affected by this discovered treachery of his
+Minister and the agitation of his calumniated Queen that he could
+scarcely articulate.
+
+"'Where,' said he, I did you procure this?'
+
+"'Through the means, Sire, of some of the worthy members of that nation
+your treacherous Ministers made our enemy--from England! where your
+unfortunate Queen, your injured wife, is compassionated!'
+
+"'Who got it for you?'
+
+"'My dearest, my real, and my only sincere friend, the Princesse de
+Lamballe!'
+
+"The King requested I should be sent for. I came. As may be imagined, I
+was received with the warmest sentiments of affection by both Their
+Majesties. I then laid before the King the letter of Mr. Sheridan, which
+was, in substance, as follows:
+
+ "'MADAME,
+
+ "'A work of mine, which I did not choose should be printed, was
+ published in Dublin and transmitted to be sold in London. As soon
+ as I was informed of it, and had procured a spurious copy, I went to
+ the bookseller to put a stop to its circulation. I there met with a
+ copy of the work of Madame de Lamotte, which has been corrected by
+ some one at Paris and sent back to the bookseller for a second
+ edition. Though not in time to suppress the first edition, owing to
+ its rapid circulation, I have had interest enough, through the means
+ of the bookseller of whom I speak, to remit you the copy which has
+ been sent as the basis of a new one. The corrections, I am told,
+ are by one of the King's Ministers. If true, I should imagine the
+ writer will be easily traced.
+
+ "'I am happy that it has been in my power to make this discovery,
+ and I hope it will be the means of putting a stop to this most
+ scandalous publication. I feel myself honoured in having
+ contributed thus far to the wishes of Her Majesty, which I hope I
+ have fulfilled to the entire satisfaction of Your Highness.
+
+ "'Should anything further transpire on this subject, I will give you
+ the earliest information.
+
+ "'I remain, madame, with profound respect, Your Highness' most
+ devoted,
+
+ "'very humble servant,
+
+ "'RICHARD BRINSLEY SHERIDAN.'
+
+
+ [Madame Campan mentions in her work that the Queen had informed her
+ of the treachery of the Minister, but did not enter into
+ particulars, nor explain the mode or source of its detection.
+ Notwithstanding the parties had bound themselves for the sums they
+ received not to reprint the work, a second edition appeared a short
+ time afterwards in London. This, which was again bought up by the
+ French Ambassador, was the same which was to have been burned by the
+ King's command at the china manufactory at Sevres.]
+
+"M. de Calonne immediately received the King's mandate to resign the
+portfolio. The Minister desired that he might be allowed to give his
+resignation to the King himself. His request was granted. The Queen was
+present at the interview. The work in question was produced. On
+beholding it, the Minister nearly fainted. The King got up and left the
+room. The Queen, who remained, told M. de Calonne that His Majesty had
+no further occasion for his services. He fell on his knees. He was not
+allowed to speak, but was desired to leave Paris.
+
+"The dismissal and disgrace of M. de Calonne were scarcely known before
+all Paris vociferated that they were owing to the intrigues of the
+favourite De Polignac, in consequence of his having refused to administer
+to her own superfluous extravagance and the Queen's repeated demands on
+the Treasury to satisfy the numerous dependants of the Duchess.
+
+"This, however, was soon officially disproved by the exhibition of a
+written proposition of Calonne's to the Queen, to supply an additional
+hundred thousand francs that year to her annual revenue, which Her
+Majesty refused. As for the Duchesse de Polignac, so far from having
+caused the disgrace, she was not even aware of the circumstance from
+which it arose; nor did the Minister himself ever know how, or by what
+agency, his falsehood was so thoroughly unmasked."
+
+
+NOTE:
+
+ [The work which is here spoken of, the Queen kept, as a proof of the
+ treachery of Calonne towards her and his Sovereign, till the
+ storming of the Tuileries on the 10th of August, 1792, when, with
+ the rest of the papers and property plundered on that memorable
+ occasion, it fell into the hands of the ferocious mob.
+
+ M. de Calonne soon after left France for Italy. There he lived for
+ some time in the palace of a particular friend of mine and the
+ Marquis, my husband, the Countess Francese Tressino, at Vicenza.
+
+ In consequence of our going every season to take the mineral waters
+ and use the baths at Valdagno, we had often occasion to be in
+ company with M. de Calonne, both at Vicenza and Valdagno, where I
+ must do him the justice to say he conducted himself with the
+ greatest circumspection in speaking of the Revolution.
+
+ Though he evidently avoided the topic which terminates this chapter,
+ yet one day, being closely pressed upon the subject, he said
+ forgeries were daily committed on Ministers, and were most
+ particularly so in France at the period in question; that he had
+ borne the blame of various imprudencies neither authorized nor
+ executed by him; that much had been done and supposed to have been
+ done with his sanction, of which he had not the slightest knowledge.
+ This he observed generally, without specifying any express instance.
+
+ He was then asked whether he did not consider himself responsible
+ for the mischief he occasioned by declaring the nation in a state of
+ bankruptcy. He said, "No, not in the least. There was no other way
+ of preventing enormous sums from being daily lavished, as they then
+ were, on herds of worthless beings; that the Queen had sought to
+ cultivate a state of private domestic society, but that, in the
+ attempt, she only warmed in her bosom domestic vipers, who fed on
+ the vital spirit of her generosity." He mentioned no names.
+
+ I then took the liberty of asking him his opinion of the Princesse
+ de Lamballe.
+
+ "Oh, madame! had the rest of Her Majesty's numerous attendants
+ possessed the tenth part of that unfortunate Victim's virtues, Her
+ Majesty would never have been led into the errors which all France
+ must deplore!
+
+ "I shall never forget her," continued he, "the day I went to take
+ leave of her. She was sitting on a sofa when I entered. On seeing
+ me, she rose immediately. Before I could utter a syllable,
+ 'Monsieur,' said the Princess, 'you are accused of being the Queen's
+ enemy. Acquit yourself of the foul deed imputed to you, and I shall
+ be happy to serve you as far as lies in my power. Till then, I must
+ decline holding any communication with an individual thus situated.
+ I am her friend, and cannot receive any one known to be otherwise.'
+
+ "There was something," added he, "so sublime, so dignified, and
+ altogether so firm, though mild in her manner, that she appeared not
+ to belong to a race of earthly beings!"
+
+ Seeing the tears fall from his eyes, while he was thus eulogising
+ her whose memory I shall ever venerate, I almost forgave him the
+ mischief of his imprudence, which led to her untimely end. I
+ therefore carefully avoided wounding his few gray hairs and latter
+ days, and left him still untold that it was by her, of whom he
+ thought so highly, that his uncontradicted treachery had been
+ discovered.
+
+
+
+
+SECTION III.
+
+"Of the many instances in which the Queen's exertions to serve those whom
+she conceived likely to benefit and relieve the nation, turned to the
+injury, not only of herself, but those whom she patronised and the cause
+she would strengthen, one of the most unpopular was that of the promotion
+of Brienne, Archbishop of Sens, to the Ministry. Her interest in his
+favour was entirely created by the Abbe Vermond, himself too superficial
+to pronounce upon any qualities, and especially such as were requisite
+for so high a station. By many, the partiality which prompted Vermond to
+espouse the interests of the Archbishop was ascribed to the amiable
+sentiment of gratitude for the recommendation of that dignitary, by which
+Vermond himself first obtained his situation at Court; but there were
+others, who have been deemed deeper in the secret, who impute it to the
+less honourable source of self-interest, to the mere spirit of
+ostentation, to the hope of its enabling him to bring about the
+destruction of the De Polignacs. Be this as it may, the Abbe well knew
+that a Minister indebted for his elevation solely to the Queen would be
+supported by her to the last.
+
+"This, unluckily, proved the case. Marie Antoinette persisted in
+upholding every act of Brienne, till his ignorance and unpardonable
+blunders drew down the general indignation of the people against Her
+Majesty and her protege, with whom she was identified. The King had
+assented to the appointment with no other view than that of not being
+utterly isolated and to show a respect for his consort's choice. But the
+incapable Minister was presently compelled to retire not only from
+office, but from Paris. Never was a Minister more detested while in
+power, or a people more enthusiastically satisfied at his going out. His
+effigy was burnt in every town of France, and the general illuminations
+and bonfires in the capital were accompanied by hooting and hissing the
+deposed statesman to the barriers.
+
+"The Queen, prompted by the Abbe Vermond, even after Brienne's
+dismission, gave him tokens of her royal munificence. Her Majesty feared
+that her acting otherwise to a Minister, who had been honoured by her
+confidence, would operate as a check to prevent all men of celebrity from
+exposing their fortunes to so ungracious a return for lending their best
+services to the State, which now stood in need of the most skilful
+pilots. Such were the motives assigned by Her Majesty herself to me,
+when I took the liberty, of expostulating with her respecting the dangers
+which threatened herself and family, from this continued devotedness to a
+Minister against whom the nation had pronounced so strongly. I could not
+but applaud the delicacy of the feeling upon which her conduct had been
+grounded; nor could I blame her, in my heart, for the uprightness of her
+principle, in showing that what she had once undertaken should not be
+abandoned through female caprice. I told Her Majesty that the system
+upon which she acted was praiseworthy; and that its application in the
+present instance would have been so had the Archbishop possessed as much
+talent as he lacked; but, that now it was quite requisite for her to stop
+the public clamour by renouncing her protection of a man who had so
+seriously endangered the public tranquillity and her own reputation.
+
+"As a proof how far my caution was well founded, there was an immense
+riotous mob raised about this time against the Queen, in consequence of
+her having, appointed the dismissed Minister's niece, Madame de Canisy,
+to a place at Court, and having given her picture, set in diamonds, to
+the Archbishop himself.
+
+"The Queen, in many cases, was by far too communicative to some of her
+household, who immediately divulged all they gathered from her unreserve.
+How could these circumstances have transpired to the people but from
+those nearest the person of Her Majesty, who, knowing the public feeling
+better than their royal mistress could be supposed to know it, did their
+own feeling little credit by the mischievous exposure? The people were
+exasperated beyond all conception. The Abbe Vermond placed before Her
+Majesty the consequences of her communicativeness, and from this time
+forward she never repeated the error. After the lesson she had received,
+none of her female attendants, not even the Duchesse de Polignac, to whom
+she would have confided her very existence, could, had they been ever so
+much disposed, have drawn anything upon public matters from her. With
+me, as her superintendent and entitled by my situation to interrogate and
+give her counsel, she was not, of course, under the same restriction.
+To his other representations of the consequences of the Queen's
+indiscreet openness, the Abbe Vermond added that, being obliged to write
+all the letters, private and public, he often found himself greatly
+embarrassed by affairs having gone forth to the world beforehand. One
+misfortune of putting this seal upon the lips of Her Majesty was that it
+placed her more thoroughly in the Abbe's power. She was, of course,
+obliged to rely implicitly upon him concerning many points, which, had
+they undergone the discussion necessarily resulting from free
+conversation, would have been shown to her under very different aspects.
+A man with a better heart, less Jesuitical, and not so much interested as
+Vermond was to keep his place, would have been a safer monitor.
+
+"Though the Archbishop of Sens was so much hated and despised, much may
+be said in apology for his disasters. His unpopularity, and the Queen's
+support of him against the people, was certainly a vital blow to the
+monarchy. There is no doubt of his having been a poor substitute for the
+great men who had so gloriously beaten the political paths of
+administration, particularly the Comte de Vergennes and Necker.
+But at that time, when France was threatened by its great convulsion,
+where is the genius which might not have committed itself? And here is a
+man coming to rule amidst revolutionary feelings, with no knowledge
+whatever of revolutionary principles--a pilot steering into one harbour
+by the chart of another. I am by no means a vindicator of the
+Archbishop's obstinacy in offering himself a candidate for a situation
+entirely foreign to the occupations, habits, and studies of his whole
+life; but his intentions may have been good enough, and we must not
+charge the physician with murder who has only mistaken the disease, and,
+though wrong in his judgment, has been zealous and conscientious; nor
+must we blame the comedians for the faults of the comedy. The errors
+were not so much in the men who did not succeed as in the manners of the
+times.
+
+"The part which the Queen was now openly compelled to bear, in the
+management of public affairs, increased the public feeling against her
+from dislike to hatred. Her Majesty was unhappy, not only from the
+necessity which called her out of the sphere to which she thought her sex
+ought to be confined, but from the divisions which existed in the Royal
+Family upon points in which their common safety required a common scheme
+of action. Her favourite brother-in-law, D'Artois, had espoused the side
+of D'ORLEANS, and the popular party seemed to prevail against her, even
+with the King.
+
+"The various parliamentary assemblies, which had swept on their course,
+under various denominations, in rapid and stormy succession, were now
+followed by one which, like Aaron's rod, was to swallow up the rest.
+Its approach was regarded by the Queen with ominous reluctance.
+At length, however, the moment for the meeting of the States General
+at Versailles arrived. Necker was once more in favour, and a sort of
+forlorn hope of better times dawned upon the perplexed monarch, in his
+anticipations from this assembly.
+
+"The night before the procession of the instalment of the States General
+was to take place, it being my duty to attend Her Majesty, I received an
+anonymous letter, cautioning me not to be seen that day by her side.
+I immediately went to the King's apartments and showed him the letter.
+His Majesty humanely enjoined me to abide by its counsels. I told him
+I hoped he would for once permit me to exercise my own discretion; for if
+my royal Sovereign were in danger, it was then that her attendants should
+be most eager to rally round her, in order to watch over her safety and
+encourage her fortitude.
+
+"While we were thus occupied, the Queen and my sister-in-law, the
+Duchesse d'Orleans, entered the King's apartment, to settle some part of
+the etiquette respecting the procession.
+
+"'I wish,' exclaimed the Duchess, 'that this procession were over; or
+that it were never to take place; or that none of us had to be there; or
+else, being obliged, that we had all passed, and were comfortably at home
+again.'
+
+"'Its taking place,' answered the Queen, 'never had my sanction,
+especially at Versailles. M. Necker appears to be in its favour, and
+answers for its success. I wish he may not be deceived; but I much fear
+that he is guided more by the mistaken hope of maintaining his own
+popularity by this impolitic meeting, than by any conscientious
+confidence in its advantage to the King's authority.'
+
+"The King, having in his hand the letter which I had just brought him,
+presented it to the Queen.
+
+"'This, my dear Duchess,' cried the Queen, I comes from the Palais Royal
+manufactory, [Palais d' Orleans. D.W.] to poison the very first
+sentiments of delight at the union expected between the King and his
+subjects, by innuendoes of the danger which must result from my being
+present at it. Look at the insidiousness of the thing! Under a pretext
+of kindness, cautions against the effect of their attachment are given to
+my most sincere and affectionate attendants, whose fidelity none dare
+attack openly. I am, however, rejoiced that Lamballe has been
+cautioned.'
+
+"'Against what?' replied I.
+
+"'Against appearing in the procession,' answered the Queen.
+
+"'It is only,' I exclaimed, 'by putting me in the grave they can ever
+withdraw me from Your Majesty. While I have life and Your Majesty's
+sanction, force only will prevent me from doing my duty. Fifty thousand
+daggers, Madame, were they all raised against me, would have no power to
+shake the firmness of my character or the earnestness of my attachment.
+I pity the wretches who have so little penetration. Victim or no victim,
+nothing shall ever induce me to quit Your Majesty.'
+
+"The Queen and Duchess, both in tears, embraced me. After the Duchess
+had taken her leave, the King and Queen hinted their suspicions that she
+had been apprised of the letter, and had made this visit expressly to
+observe what effect it had produced, well knowing at the time that some
+attempt was meditated by the hired mob and purchased deputies already
+brought over to the D'ORLEANS faction. Not that the slightest suspicion
+of collusion could ever be attached to the good Duchesse d'Orleans
+against the Queen. The intentions of the Duchess were known to be as
+virtuous and pure as those of her husband's party were criminal and
+mischievous. But, no doubt, she had intimations of the result intended;
+and, unable to avert the storm or prevent its cause, had been instigated
+by her strong attachment to me, as well as the paternal affection her
+father, the Duc de Penthievre, bore me, to attempt to lessen the
+exasperation of the Palais Royal party and the Duke, her husband, against
+me, by dissuading me from running any risk upon the occasion.
+
+"The next day, May 5, 1789, at the very moment when all the resources of
+nature and art seemed exhausted to render the Queen a paragon of
+loveliness beyond anything I had ever before witnessed, even in her;
+when every impartial eye was eager to behold and feast on that form whose
+beauty warmed every heart in her favour; at that moment a horde of
+miscreants, just as she came within sight of the Assembly, thundered in
+her ears, 'Orleans forever!' three or four times, while she and the King
+were left to pass unheeded. Even the warning of the letter, from which
+she had reason to expect some commotions, suggested to her imagination
+nothing like this, and she was dreadfully shaken. I sprang forward to
+support her. The King's party, prepared for the attack, shouted 'Vive le
+roi! Vive la reine!' As I turned, I saw some of the members lividly
+pale, as if fearing their machinations had been discovered; but, as they
+passed, they said in the hearing of Her Majesty, 'Remember, you are the
+daughter of Maria Theresa.'--'True,' answered the Queen. The Duc de
+Biron, Orleans, La Fayette, Mirabeau, and the Mayor of Paris, seeing Her
+Majesty's emotion, came up, and were going to stop the procession. All,
+in apparent agitation, cried out 'Halt!' The Queen, sternly looking at
+them, made a sign with her head to proceed, recovered herself, and moved
+forward in the train, with all the dignity and self-possession for which
+she was so eminently distinguished.
+
+"But this self-command in public proved nearly fatal to Her Majesty on
+her return to her apartment. There her real feelings broke forth, and
+their violence was so great as to cause the bracelets on her wrists and
+the pearls in her necklace to burst from the threads and settings, before
+her women and the ladies in attendance could have time to take them off.
+She remained many hours in a most alarming state of strong convulsions.
+Her clothes were obliged to be cut from her body, to give her ease; but
+as soon as she was undressed, and tears came to her relief, she flew
+alternately to the Princesse Elizabeth and to myself; but we were both
+too much overwhelmed to give her the consolation of which she stood so
+much in need.
+
+"Barnave that very evening came to my private apartment, and tendered his
+services to the Queen. He told me he wished Her Majesty to be convinced
+that he was a Frenchman; that he only desired his country might be
+governed by salutary laws, and not by the caprice of weak sovereigns,
+or a vitiated, corrupt Ministry; that the clergy and nobility ought to
+contribute to the wants of the State equally with every other class of
+the King's subjects; that when this was accomplished, and abuses were
+removed, by such a national representation as would enable the Minister,
+Necker, to accomplish his plans for the liquidation of the national debt,
+I might assure Her Majesty that both the King and herself would find
+themselves happier in a constitutional government than they had ever yet
+been; for such a government would set them free from all dependence on
+the caprice of Ministers, and lessen a responsibility of which they now
+experienced the misery; that if the King sincerely entered into the
+spirit of regenerating the French nation, he would find among the present
+representatives many members of probity, loyal and honourable in their
+intentions, who would never become the destroyers of a limited legitimate
+monarchy, or the corrupt regicides of a rump Parliament, such as brought
+the wayward Charles the First, of England, to the fatal block.
+
+"I attempted to relate the conversation to the Queen. She listened with
+the greatest attention till I came to the part concerning the
+constitutional King, when Her Majesty lost her patience, and prevented me
+from proceeding.
+
+ [This and other conversations, which will be found in subsequent
+ pages, will prove that Barnave's sentiments in favour of the Royal
+ Family long preceded the affair at Varennes, the beginning of which
+ Madame Campan assigns to it. Indeed it must by this time be evident
+ to the reader that Madame Campan, though very correct in relating
+ all she knew, with respect to the history of Marie Antoinette, was
+ not in possession of matters foreign to her occupation about the
+ person of the Queen, and, in particular, that she could communicate
+ little concerning those important intrigues carried on respecting
+ the different deputies of the first Assembly, till in the latter
+ days of the Revolution, when it became necessary, from the pressure
+ of events, that she should be made a sort of confidante, in order to
+ prevent her from compromising the persons of the Queen and the
+ Princesse de Lamballe: a trust, of her claim to which her undoubted
+ fidelity was an ample pledge. Still, however, she was often absent
+ from Court at moments of great importance, and was obliged to take
+ her information, upon much which she has recorded, from hearsay,
+ which has led her, as I have before stated, into frequent mistakes.]
+
+"The expense of the insulting scene, which had so overcome Her Majesty,
+was five hundred thousand francs! This sum was paid by the agents of the
+Palais Royal, and its execution entrusted principally to Mirabeau,
+Bailly, the Mayor of Paris, and another individual, who was afterwards
+brought over to the Court party.
+
+"The history of the Assembly itself on the day following, the 6th of May,
+is too well known. The sudden perturbation of a guilty conscience, which
+overcame the Duc d'Orleans, seemed like an awful warning. He had
+scarcely commenced his inflammatory address to the Assembly, when some
+one, who felt incommoded by the stifling heat of the hall, exclaimed,
+'Throw open the windows!' The conspirator fancied he heard in this his
+death sentence. He fainted, and was conducted home in the greatest
+agitation. Madame de Bouffon was at the Palais Royal when the Duke was
+taken thither. The Duchesse d'Orleans was at the palace of the Duc de
+Penthievre, her father, while the Duke himself was at the Hotel Thoulouse
+with me, where he was to dine, and where we were waiting for the Duchess
+to come and join us, by appointment. But Madame de Bouffon was so
+alarmed by the state in which she saw the Duc d'Orleans that she
+instantly left the Palais Royal, and despatched his valet express to
+bring her thither. My sister-in-law sent an excuse to me for not coming
+to dinner, and an explanation to her father for so abruptly leaving his
+palace, and hastened home to her husband. It was some days before he
+recovered; and his father-in-law, his wife, and myself were not without
+hopes that he would see in this an omen to prevent him from persisting
+any longer in his opposition to the Royal Family.
+
+"The effects of the recall of the popular Minister, Necker, did not
+satisfy the King. Necker soon became an object of suspicion to the Court
+party, and especially to His Majesty and the Queen. He was known to have
+maintained an understanding with D'ORLEANS. The miscarriage of many
+plans and the misfortunes which succeeded were the result of this
+connection, though it was openly disavowed. The first suspicion of the
+coalition arose thus:
+
+"When the Duke had his bust carried about Paris, after his unworthy
+schemes against the King had been discovered, it was thrown into the
+mire. Necker passing, perhaps by mere accident, stopped his carriage,
+and expressing himself with some resentment for such treatment to a
+Prince of the blood and a friend of the people, ordered the bust to be
+taken to the Palais Royal, where it was washed, crowned with laurel, and
+thence, with Necker's own bust, carried to Versailles. The King's aunts,
+coming from Bellevue as the procession was upon the road, ordered the
+guards to send the men away who bore the busts, that the King and Queen
+might not be insulted with the sight. This circumstance caused another
+riot, which was attributed to Their Majesties. The dismission of the
+Minister was the obvious result. It is certain, however, that, in
+obeying the mandate of exile, Necker had no wish to exercise the
+advantage he possessed from his great popularity. His retirement was
+sudden and secret; and, although it was mentioned that very evening by
+the Baroness de Stael to the Comte de Chinon, so little bustle was made
+about his withdrawing from France, that it was even stated at the time to
+have been utterly unknown, even to his daughter.
+
+"Necker himself ascribed his dismission to the influence of the De
+Polignacs; but he was totally mistaken, for the Duchesse de Polignac was
+the last person to have had any influence in matters of State, whatever
+might have been the case with those who surrounded her. She was devoid
+of ambition or capacity to give her weight; and the Queen was not so
+pliant in points of high import as to allow herself to be governed or
+overruled, unless her mind was thoroughly convinced. In that respect,
+she was something like Catharine II., who always distinguished her
+favourites from her Minister; but in the present case she had no choice,
+and was under the necessity of yielding to the boisterous voice of a
+faction.
+
+"From this epoch, I saw all the persons who had any wish to communicate
+with the Queen on matters relative to the public business, and Her
+Majesty was generally present when they came, and received them in my
+apartments. The Duchesse de Polignac never, to my knowledge, entered
+into any of these State questions; yet there was no promotion in the
+civil, military, or ministerial department, which she has not been
+charged with having influenced the Queen to make, though there were few
+of them who were not nominated by the King and his Ministers, even
+unknown to the Queen herself.
+
+"The prevailing dissatisfaction against Her Majesty and the favourite
+De Polignac now began to take so many forms, and produce effects so
+dreadful, as to wring her own feelings, as well as those of her royal
+mistress, with the most intense anguish. Let me mention one gross and
+barbarous instance in proof of what I say.
+
+"After the birth of the Queen's second son, the Duc de Normandie, who was
+afterwards Dauphin, the Duke and Duchess of Harcourt, outrageously
+jealous of the ascendency of the governess of the Dauphin, excited the
+young Prince's hatred toward Madame de Polignac to such a pitch that he
+would take nothing from her hands, but often, young as he was at the
+time, order her out of the apartment, and treat her remonstrances with
+the utmost contempt. The Duchess bitterly complained of the Harcourts to
+the Queen; for she really sacrificed the whole of her time to the care
+and attention required by this young Prince, and she did so from sincere
+attachment, and that he might not be irritated in his declining state of
+health. The Queen was deeply hurt at these dissensions between the
+governor and governess. Her Majesty endeavoured to pacify the mind of
+the young Prince, by literally making herself a slave to his childish
+caprices, which in all probability would have created the confidence so
+desired, when a most cruel, unnatural, I may say diabolical, report
+prevailed to alienate the child's affections even from his mother,
+in making him believe that, owing to his deformity and growing ugliness,
+she had transferred all her tenderness to his younger brother, who
+certainly was very superior in health and beauty to the puny Dauphin.
+Making a pretext of this calumny, the governor of the heir-apparent was
+malicious enough to prohibit him from eating or drinking anything but
+what first passed through the hands of his physicians; and so strong was
+the impression made by this interdict on the mind of the young Dauphin
+that he never after saw the Queen but with the greatest terror. The
+feelings of his disconsolate parent may be more readily conceived than
+described. So may the mortification of his governess, the Duchesse de
+Polignac, herself so tender, so affectionate a mother. Fortunately for
+himself, and happily for his wretched parents, this royal youth, whose
+life, though short, had been so full of suffering, died at Versailles on
+the 4th of June, 1789, and, though only between seven and eight years of
+age at the time of his decease, he had given proofs of intellectual
+precocity, which would probably have made continued life, amidst the
+scenes of wretchedness, which succeeded, anything to him but a blessing.
+
+"The cabals of the Duke of Harcourt, to which I have just adverted,
+against the Duchesse de Polignac, were the mere result of foul malice
+and ambition. Harcourt wished to get his wife, who was the sworn enemy
+of De Polignac, created governess to the Dauphin, instead of the Queen's
+favourite. Most of the criminal stories against the Duchesse de
+Polignac, and which did equal injury to the Queen, were fabricated by the
+Harcourts, for the purpose of excluding their rival from her situation.
+
+"Barnave, meanwhile, continued faithful to his liberal principles, but
+equally faithful to his desire of bringing Their Majesties over to those
+principles, and making them republican Sovereigns. He lost no
+opportunity of availing himself of my permission for him to call whenever
+he chose on public business; and he continued to urge the same points,
+upon which he had before been so much in earnest, although with no better
+effect. Both the King and the Queen looked with suspicion upon Barnave,
+and with still more suspicion upon his politics.
+
+"The next time I received him, 'Madame,' exclaimed the deputy to me,
+'since our last interview I have pondered well on the situation of the
+King; and, as an honest Frenchman, attached to my lawful Sovereign, and
+anxious for his future prosperous reign, I am decidedly of opinion that
+his own safety, as well as the dignity of the crown of France, and the
+happiness of his subjects, can only be secured by his giving his country
+a Constitution, which will at once place his establishment beyond the
+caprice and the tyranny of corrupt administrations, and secure hereafter
+the first monarchy in Europe from the possibility of sinking under weak
+Princes, by whom the royal splendour of France has too often been debased
+into the mere tool of vicious and mercenary noblesse, and sycophantic
+courtiers. A King, protected by a Constitution, can do no wrong. He is
+unshackled with responsibility. He is empowered with the comfort of
+exercising the executive authority for the benefit of the nation, while
+all the harsher duties, and all the censures they create, devolve on
+others. It is, therefore, madame, through your means, and the well-known
+friendship you have ever evinced for the Royal Family, and the general
+welfare of the French nation, that I wish to obtain a private audience of
+Her Majesty, the Queen, in order to induce her to exert the never-failing
+ascendency she has ever possessed over the mind of our good King,
+in persuading him to the sacrifice of a small proportion of his power,
+for the sake of preserving the monarchy to his heirs; and posterity will
+record the virtues of a Prince who has been magnanimous enough, of his
+own free will, to resign the unlawful part of his prerogatives, usurped
+by his predecessors, for the blessing and pleasure of giving liberty to
+a beloved people, among whom both the King and Queen will find many
+Hampdens and Sidneys, but very few Cromwells. Besides, madame, we must
+make a merit of necessity. The times are pregnant with events, and it is
+more prudent to support the palladium of the ancient monarchy than risk
+its total overthrow; and fall it must, if the diseased excrescences,
+of which the people complain, and which threaten to carry death into
+the very heart of the tree, be not lopped away in time by the Sovereign
+himself.'
+
+"I heard the deputy with the greatest attention. I promised to fulfil
+his commission. The better to execute my task, I retired the moment he
+left me, and wrote down all I could recollect of his discourse, that it
+might be thoroughly placed before the Queen the first opportunity.
+
+"When I communicated the conversation to Her Majesty, she listened with
+the most gracious condescension, till I came to the part wherein Barnave
+so forcibly impressed the necessity of adopting a constitutional
+monarchy. Here, as she had done once before, when I repeated some former
+observations of Barnave to her, Marie Antoinette somewhat lost her
+equanimity. She rose from her seat, and exclaimed:
+
+"'What! is an absolute Prince, and the hereditary Sovereign of the
+ancient monarchy of France, to become the tool of a plebeian faction,
+who will, their point once gained, dethrone him for his imbecile
+complaisance? Do they wish to imitate the English Revolution of 1648,
+and reproduce the sanguinary times of the unfortunate and weak Charles
+the First? To make France a commonwealth! Well! be it so! But before
+I advise the King to such a step, or give my consent to it, they shall
+bury me under the ruins of the monarchy.'
+
+"'But what answer,' said I, 'does Your Majesty wish me to return to the
+deputy's request for a private audience?'
+
+"'What answer?' exclaimed the Queen. No answer at all is the best answer
+to such a presumptuous proposition! I tremble for the consequences of
+the impression their disloyal manoeuvres have made upon the minds of the
+people, and I have no faith whatever in their proffered services to the
+King. However, on reflection, it may be expedient to temporise.
+Continue to see him. Learn, if possible, how far he may be trusted;
+but do not fix any time, as yet, for the desired audience. I wish to
+apprise the King, first, of his interview with you, Princess. This
+conversation does not agree with what he and Mirabeau proposed about the
+King's recovering his prerogatives. Are these the prerogatives with
+which he flattered the King? Binding him hand and foot, and excluding
+him from every privilege, and then casting him a helpless dependant on
+the caprice of a volatile plebeian faction! The French nation is very
+different from the English. The first rules of the established ancient
+order of the government broken through, they will violate twenty others,
+and the King will be sacrificed, before this frivolous people again
+organise themselves with any sort of regular government.'
+
+"Agreeably to Her Majesty's commands, I continued to see Barnave. I
+communicated with him by letter,' at his private lodgings at Passy, and
+at Vitry; but it was long before the Queen could be brought to consent to
+the audience he solicited.
+
+ [Of these letters I was generally the bearer. I recollect that day
+ perfectly. I was copying some letters for the Princesse de
+ Lamballe, when the Prince de Conti came in. The Prince lived not
+ only to see, but to feel the errors of his system. He attained a
+ great age. He outlived the glory of his country. Like many others,
+ the first gleam of political regeneration led him into a system,
+ which drove him out of France, to implore the shelter of a foreign
+ asylum, that he might not fall a victim to his own credulity. I had
+ an opportunity of witnessing in his latter days his sincere
+ repentance; and to this it is fit that I should bear testimony.
+ There were no bounds to the execration with which he expressed
+ himself towards the murderers of those victims, whose death he
+ lamented with a bitterness in which some remorse was mingled, from
+ the impression that his own early errors in favour of the Revolution
+ had unintentionally accelerated their untimely end. This was a
+ source to him of deep and perpetual self-reproach.
+
+ There was an eccentricity in the appearance, dress, and manners of
+ the Prince de Conti, which well deserves recording.
+
+ He wore to the very last--and it was in Barcelona, so late as 1803,
+ that I last had the honour of conversing with him--a white rich
+ stuff dress frock coat, of the cut and fashion of Louis XIV., which,
+ being without any collar, had buttons and button-holes from the neck
+ to the bottom of the skirt, and was padded and stiffened with
+ buckram. The cuffs were very large, of a different colour, and
+ turned up to the elbows. The whole was lined with white satin,
+ which, from its being very much moth-eaten, appeared as if it had
+ been dotted on purpose to show the buckram between the satin lining.
+ His waistcoat was of rich green striped silk, bound with gold lace;
+ the buttons and buttonholes of gold; the flaps very large, and
+ completely covering his small clothes; which happened very apropos,
+ for they scarcely reached his knees, over which he wore large
+ striped silk stockings, that came half-way up his thighs. His shoes
+ had high heels, and reached half up his legs; the buckles were
+ small, and set round with paste. A very narrow stiff stock
+ decorated his neck. He carried a hat, with a white feather on the
+ inside, under his arm. His ruffles were of very handsome point
+ lace. His few gray hairs were gathered in a little round bag. The
+ wig alone was wanting to make him a thorough picture of the polished
+ age of the founder of Versailles and Marly.
+
+ He had all that princely politeness of manner which so eminently
+ distinguished the old school of French nobility, previous to the
+ Revolution. He was the thorough gentleman, a character by no means
+ so readily to be met with in these days of refinement as one would
+ imagine. He never addressed the softer sex but with ease and
+ elegance, and admiration of their persons.
+
+ Could Louis XIV. have believed, had it been told to him when he
+ placed this branch of the Bourbons on the throne of Iberia, that it
+ would one day refuse to give shelter at the Court of Madrid to one
+ of his family, for fear of offending a Corsican usurper!]
+
+"Indeed, Her Majesty had such an aversion to all who had declared
+themselves for any innovation upon the existing power of the monarchy,
+that she was very reluctant to give audience upon the subject to any
+person, not even excepting the Princes of the blood. The Comte d'Artois
+himself, leaning as he did to the popular side, had ceased to be welcome.
+Expressions he had made use of, concerning the necessity for some change,
+had occasioned the coolness, which was already of considerable standing.
+
+"One day the Prince de Conti came to me, to complain of the Queen's
+refusing to receive him, because he had expressed himself to the same
+effect as had the Comte d'Artois on the subject of the Tiers Etat.
+
+"'And does Your Highness,' replied I, 'imagine that the Queen is less
+displeased with the conduct of the Comte d'Artois on that head than she
+is with you, Prince? I can assure Your Highness, that at this moment
+there subsists a very great degree of coolness between Her Majesty and
+her royal brother-in-law, whom she loves as if he were her own brother.
+Though she makes every allowance for his political inexperience, and well
+knows the goodness of his heart and the rectitude of his intentions, yet
+policy will not permit her to change her sentiments.'
+
+"'That may be,' said the Prince, 'but while Her Majesty continues to
+honour with her royal presence the Duchesse de Polignac, whose friends,
+as well as herself, are all enthusiastically mad in favour of the
+constitutional system, she shows an undue partiality, by countenancing
+one branch of the party and not the other; particularly so, as the great
+and notorious leader of the opposition, which the Queen frowns upon,
+is the sister-in-law of this very Duchesse de Polignac, and the avowed
+favourite of the Comte d'Artois, by whom, and the councils of the Palais
+Royal, he is supposed to be totally governed in his political career.'
+
+"'The Queen,' replied I, 'is certainly her own mistress. She sees, I
+believe, many persons more from habit than any other motive; to which,
+Your Highness is aware, many Princes often make sacrifices. Your
+Highness cannot suppose I can have the temerity to control Her Majesty,
+in the selection of her friends, or in her sentiments respecting them.'
+
+"'No,' exclaimed the Prince, 'I imagine not. But she might just as well
+see any of us; for we are no more enemies of the Crown than the party she
+is cherishing by constantly appearing among them; which, according to her
+avowed maxims concerning the not sanctioning any but supporters of the
+absolute monarchy, is in direct opposition to her own sentiments.
+
+"'Who,' continued His Highness, 'caused that infernal comedy, 'Le Mariage
+de Figaro', to be brought out, but the party of the Duchesse de Polignac?
+
+ [Note of the Princesse de Lamballe:--The Prince de Conti never could
+ speak of Beaumarchais but with the greatest contempt. There was
+ something personal in this exasperation. Beaumarchais had satirized
+ the Prince. 'The Spanish Barber' was founded on a circumstance
+ which happened at a country house between Conti and a young lady,
+ during the reign of Louis XV., when intrigues of every kind were
+ practised and almost sanctioned. The poet has exposed the Prince by
+ making him the Doctor Bartolo of his play. The affair which
+ supplied the story was hushed up at Court, and the Prince was
+ punished only by the loss of his mistress, who became the wife of
+ another.]
+
+The play is a critique on the whole Royal Family, from the drawing up of
+the curtain to its fall. It burlesques the ways and manners of every
+individual connected with the Court of Versailles. Not a scene but
+touches some of their characters. Are not the Queen herself and the
+Comte d'Artois lampooned and caricatured in the garden scenes, and the
+most slanderous ridicule cast upon their innocent evening walks on the
+terrace? Does not Beaumarchais plainly show in it, to every impartial
+eye, the means which the Comtesse Diane has taken publicly to demonstrate
+her jealousy of the Queen's ascendency over the Comte d'Artois? Is it
+not from the same sentiment that she roused the jealousy of the Comtesse
+d'Artois against Her Majesty?'
+
+"'All these circumstances,' observed I, 'the King prudently foresaw when
+he read the manuscript, and caused it to be read to the Queen, to
+convince her of the nature of its characters and the dangerous tendency
+likely to arise from its performance. Of this Your Highness is aware.
+It is not for me to apprise you that, to avert the excitement inevitable
+from its being brought upon the stage, and under a thorough conviction of
+the mischief it would produce in turning the minds of the people against
+the Queen, His Majesty solemnly declared that the comedy should not be
+performed in Paris; and that he would never sanction its being brought
+before the public on any stage in France.'
+
+"'Bah! bah! madame!' exclaimed De Conti. The Queen has acted like a
+child in this affair, as in many others. In defiance of His Majesty's
+determination, did not the Queen herself, through the fatal influence of
+her favourite, whose party wearied her out by continued importunities,
+cause the King to revoke his express mandate? And what has been the
+consequence of Her Majesty's ungovernable partiality for these De
+Polignacs?'
+
+"'You know, Prince,' said I, 'better than I do.'
+
+"'The proofs of its bad consequences,' pursued His Highness, 'are more
+strongly verified than ever by your own withdrawing from the Queen's
+parties since her unreserved acknowledgment of her partiality (fatal
+partiality!) for those who will be her ruin; for they are her worst
+enemies.'
+
+"'Pardon me, Prince,' answered I, 'I have not withdrawn myself from the
+Queen, but from the new parties, with whose politics I cannot identify
+myself, besides some exceptions I have taken against those who frequent
+them.'
+
+"'Bah! bah!' exclaimed De Conti, 'your sagacity has got the better of
+your curiosity. All the wit and humour of that traitor Beaumarchais
+never seduced you to cultivate his society, as all the rest of the
+Queen's party have done.'
+
+"'I never knew him to be accused of treason.'
+
+"'Why, what do you call a fellow who sent arms to the Americans before
+the war was declared, without his Sovereign's consent?'
+
+"'In that affair, I consider the Ministers as criminal as himself; for
+the Queen, to this day, believes that Beaumarchais was sanctioned by them
+and, you know, Her Majesty has ever since had an insuperable dislike to
+both De Maurepas and De Vergennes. But I have nothing to do with these
+things.'
+
+"'Yes, yes, I understand you, Princess. Let her romp and play with the
+'compate vous',--[A kind of game of forfeits, introduced for the
+diversion of the royal children and those of the Duchesse de Polignac.]--
+but who will 'compatire' (make allowance for) her folly? Bah! bah! bah!
+She is inconsistent, Princess. Not that I mean by this to insinuate that
+the Duchess is not the sincere friend and well-wisher of the Queen. Her
+immediate existence, her interest, and that of her family, are all
+dependent on the royal bounty. But can the Duchess answer for the same
+sincerity towards the Queen, with respect to her innumerable guests?
+No! Are not the sentiments of the Duchesses sister-in-law, the Comtesse
+Diane, in direct opposition to the absolute monarchy? Has she not always
+been an enthusiastic advocate for all those that have supported the
+American war? Who was it that crowned, at a public assembly, the
+democratical straight hairs of Dr. Franklin? Why the same Madame
+Comtesse Diane! Who was 'capa turpa' in applauding the men who were
+framing the American Constitution at Paris? Madame Comtesse Diane! Who
+was it, in like manner, that opposed all the Queen's arguments against
+the political conduct of France and Spain, relative to the war with
+England, in favour of the American Independence? The Comtesse Diane!
+Not for the love of that rising nation, or for the sacred cause of
+liberty; but from a taste for notoriety, a spirit of envy and jealousy,
+an apprehension lest the personal charms of the Queen might rob her of a
+part of those affections, which she herself exclusively hoped to alienate
+from that abortion, the Comtesse d'Artois, in whose service she is Maid
+of Honour, and handmaid to the Count. My dear Princess, these are facts
+proved. Beaumarchais has delineated them all. Why, then, refuse to see
+me? Why withdraw her former confidence from the Comte d'Artois, when she
+lives in the society which promulgates antimonarchical principles? These
+are sad evidences of Her Majesty's inconsistency. She might as well see
+the Duc d'Orleans'
+
+"Here my feelings overwhelmed me. I could contain myself no longer. The
+tears gushed from my eyes.
+
+"'Oh, Prince!' exclaimed I, in a bitter agony of grief--'Oh, Prince!
+touch not that fatal string. For how many years has he not caused these
+briny tears of mine to flow from my burning eyes! The scalding drops
+have nearly parched up the spring of life!'"
+
+
+
+
+ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+Beaumarchais sent arms to the Americans
+Educate his children as quietists in matters of religion
+It is an ill wind that blows no one any good
+Judge of men by the company they keep
+Les culottes--what do you call them?' 'Small clothes'
+My little English protegee
+No phrase becomes a proverb until after a century's experience
+We say "inexpressibles"
+Wish art to eclipse nature
+
+
+
+
+End of this Project Gutenberg Etext Memoirs of Louis XV., and XVI., v5
+by Madame du Hausset, and an unknown English girl and Princess Lamballe
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MEMOIRS OF LOUIS XV. AND XVI.
+
+Being Secret Memoirs of Madame du Hausset, Lady's Maid to Madame
+de Pompadour, and of an unknown English Girl and the Princess Lamballe
+
+
+
+BOOK 6.
+
+
+SECTION IV.
+
+"The dismissal of M. Necker irritated the people beyond description.
+They looked upon themselves as insulted in their favourite. Mob
+succeeded mob, each more mischievous and daring than the former. The Duc
+d'Orleans continued busy in his work of secret destruction. In one of
+the popular risings, a sabre struck his bust, and its head fell, severed
+from its body. Many of the rioters (for the ignorant are always
+superstitious) shrunk back at this omen of evil to their idol. His real
+friends endeavoured to deduce a salutary warning to him from the
+circumstance. I was by when the Duc de Penthievre told him, in the
+presence of his daughter, that he might look upon this accident as
+prophetic of the fate of his own head, as well as the ruin of his family,
+if he persisted. He made no answer, but left the room.
+
+"On the 14th of July, and two or three days preceding, the commotions
+took a definite object. The destruction of the Bastille was the point
+proposed, and it was achieved. Arms were obtained from the old
+pensioners at the Hotel des Invalides. Fifty thousand livres were
+distributed among the chiefs of those who influenced the Invalides to
+give up the arms.
+
+"The massacre of the Marquis de Launay, commandant of the place, and of
+M. de Flesselles, and the fall of the citadel itself, were the
+consequence.
+
+"Her Majesty was greatly affected when she heard of the murder of these
+officers and the taking of the Bastille. She frequently told me that the
+horrid circumstance originated in a diabolical Court intrigue, but never
+explained the particulars of the intrigue. She declared that both the
+officers and the citadel might have been saved had not the King's orders
+for the march of the troops from Versailles, and the environs of Paris,
+been disobeyed. She blamed the precipitation of De Launay in ordering up
+the drawbridge and directing the few troops on it to fire upon the
+people. 'There,' she added, 'the Marquis committed himself; as, in case
+of not succeeding, he could have no retreat, which every commander should
+take care to secure, before he allows the commencement of a general
+attack.
+
+ [Certainly, the French Revolution may date its epoch as far back as
+ the taking of the Bastille; from that moment the troubles
+ progressively continued, till the final extirpation of its
+ illustrious victims. I was just returning from a mission to England
+ when the storms began to threaten not only the most violent effects
+ to France itself, but to all the land which was not divided from it
+ by the watery element. The spirit of liberty, as the vine, which
+ produces the most luxurious fruit, when abused becomes the most
+ pernicious poison, was stalking abroad and revelling in blood and
+ massacre. I myself was a witness to the enthusiastic national ball
+ given on the ruins of the Bastille, while it was still stained and
+ reeking with the hot blood of its late keeper, whose head I saw
+ carried in triumph. Such was the effect on me that the Princesse de
+ Lamballe asked me if I had known the Marquis de Launay. I answered
+ in the negative; but told her from the knowledge I had of the
+ English Revolution, I was fearful of a result similar to what
+ followed the fall of the heads of Buckingham and Stafford. The
+ Princess mentioning my observation to the Duc de Penthievre, they
+ both burst into tears.]
+
+ The death of the Dauphin, the horrible Revolution of the 14th of
+ July, the troubles about Necker, the insults and threats offered to
+ the Comte d'Artois and herself,--overwhelmed the Queen with the most
+ poignant grief.]
+
+"She was most desirous of some understanding being established between
+the government and the representatives of the people, which she urged
+upon the King the expediency of personally attempting.
+
+"The King, therefore, at her reiterated remonstrances and requests,
+presented himself, on the following day, with his brothers, to the
+National Assembly, to assure them of his firm determination to support
+the measures of the deputies, in everything conducive to the general good
+of his subjects. As a proof of his intentions, he said he had commanded
+the troops to leave Paris and Versailles.
+
+"The King left the Assembly, as he had gone thither, on foot, amid the
+vociferations of 'Vive le roi!' and it was only through the enthusiasm of
+the deputies, who thus hailed His Majesty, and followed him in crowds to
+the palace, that the Comte d'Artois escaped the fury of an outrageous
+mob.
+
+"The people filled every avenue of the palace, which vibrated with cries
+for the King, the Queen, and the Dauphin to show themselves at the
+balcony.
+
+"'Send for the Duchesse de Polignac to bring the royal children,' cried I
+to Her Majesty.
+
+"'Not for the world!' exclaimed the Queen. 'She will be assassinated,
+and my children too, if she make her appearance before this infuriate
+mob. Let Madame and the Dauphin be brought unaccompanied.'
+
+"The Queen, on this occasion, imitated her Imperial mother, Maria
+Theresa. She took the Dauphin in her arms, and Madame by her side, as
+that Empress had done when she presented herself to the Hungarian
+magnates; but the reception here was very different. It was not
+'moriamur pro nostra regina'. Not that they were ill received; but the
+furious party of the Duc d'Orleans often interrupted the cries of 'Vive
+le roi! Vive la reine!' etc., with those of 'Vive la nation! Vive d'
+Orleans!' and many severe remarks on the family of the De Polignacs,
+which proved that the Queen's caution on this occasion was exceedingly
+well-judged.
+
+"Not to wound the feelings of the Duchesse de Polignac, I kept myself at
+a distance behind the Queen; but I was loudly called for by the mobility,
+and, 'malgre moi', was obliged, at the King and Queen's request, to come
+forward.
+
+"As I approached the balcony, I perceived one of the well-known agents of
+the Duc d'Orleans, whom I had noticed some time before in the throng,
+menacing me, the moment I made my appearance, with his upreared hand in
+fury. I was greatly terrified, but suppressed my agitation, and saluted
+the populace; but, fearful of exhibiting my weakness in sight of the
+wretch who had alarmed me, withdrew instantly, and had no sooner re-
+entered than I sunk motionless in the arms of one of the attendants.
+Luckily, this did not take place till I left the balcony. Had it been
+otherwise, the triumph to my declared enemies would have been too great.
+
+"Recovering, I found myself surrounded by the Royal Family, who were all
+kindness and concern for my situation; but I could not subdue my tremor
+and affright. The horrid image of that monster seemed, still to threaten
+me.
+
+"'Come, come!' said the King, 'be not alarmed, I shall order a council of
+all the Ministers and deputies to-morrow, who will soon put an end to
+these riots!'
+
+"We were ere long joined by the Prince de Conde, the Duc de Bourbon, and
+others, who implored the King not to part with the army, but to place
+himself, with all the Princes of the blood, at its head, as the only
+means to restore tranquillity to the country, and secure his own safety.
+
+"The Queen was decidedly of the same opinion; and added, that, if the
+army were to depart, the King and his family ought to go with it; but the
+King, on the contrary, said he would not decide upon any measures
+whatever till he had heard the opinion of the Council.
+
+"The Queen, notwithstanding the King's indecision, was occupied, during
+the rest of the day and the whole of the night, in preparing for her
+intended; journey, as she hoped to persuade the King to follow the advice
+of the Princes, and not wait the result of the next day's deliberation.
+Nay, so desirous was she of this, that she threw herself on her knees to
+the King, imploring him to leave Versailles and head the army, and
+offering to accompany him herself, on horseback, in uniform; but it was
+like speaking to a corpse he never answered.
+
+"The Duchesse de Polignac came to Her Majesty in a state of the greatest
+agitation, in consequence of M. de Chinon having just apprised her that a
+most malicious report had been secretly spread among the deputies at
+Versailles that they were all to be blown up at their next meeting.
+
+"The Queen was as much surprised as the Duchess, and scarcely less
+agitated. These wretched friends could only, in silence, compare notes
+of their mutual cruel misfortunes. Both for a time remained speechless
+at this new calamity. Surely this was not wanting to be added to those
+by which the Queen was already so bitterly oppressed.
+
+"I was sent for by Her Majesty. Count Fersen accompanied me. He had
+just communicated to me what the Duchess had already repeated from M.
+Chinon to the Queen.
+
+"The rumour had been set afloat merely as a new pretext for the
+continuation of the riots.
+
+"The communication of the report, so likely to produce a disastrous
+effect, took place while the King was with his Ministers deliberating
+whether he should go to Paris, or save himself and family by joining the
+army.
+
+"His Majesty was called from the council to the Queen's apartment, and
+was there made acquainted with the circumstance which had so awakened the
+terror of the royal party. He calmly replied, 'It is some days since
+this invention has been spread among the deputies; I was aware of it from
+the first; but from its being utterly impossible to be listened to for a
+moment by any one, I did not wish to afflict you by the mention of an
+impotent fabrication, which I myself treated with the contempt it justly
+merited. Nevertheless, I did not forget, yesterday, in the presence of
+both my brothers, who accompanied me to the National Assembly, there to
+exculpate myself from an imputation at which my nature revolts; and, from
+the manner in which it was received, I flatter myself that every honest
+Frenchman was fully satisfied that my religion will ever be an
+insurmountable barrier against my harbouring sentiments allied in the
+slightest degree to such actions.
+
+"The King embraced the Queen, begged she would tranquilise herself,
+calmed the fears of the two ladies, thanked the gentlemen for the
+interest they took in his favour, and returned to the council, who, in
+his absence, had determined on his going to the Hotel de Ville at Paris,
+suggesting at the same time the names of several persons likely to be
+well received, if His Majesty thought proper to allow their accompanying
+him.
+
+"During this interval, the Queen, still flattering herself that she
+should pursue her wished-for journey, ordered the carriages to be
+prepared and sent off to Rambouillet, where she said she should sleep;
+but this Her Majesty only stated for the purpose of distracting the
+attention of her pages and others about her from her real purpose. As it
+was well known that M. de St. Priest had pointed out Rambouillet as a fit
+asylum for the mob, she fancied that an understanding on the part of her
+suite that they were to halt there, and prepare for her reception, would
+protect her project of proceeding much farther.
+
+"When the council had broken up and the King returned, he said to the
+Queen, 'It is decided.'
+
+"'To go, I hope?' said Her Majesty.
+
+"'No'--(though in appearance calm, the words remained on the lips of the
+King, and he stood for some moments incapable of utterance; but,
+recovering, added)--'To Paris!'
+
+"The Queen, at the word Paris, became frantic. She flung herself wildly
+into the arms of her friends.
+
+"'Nous sommes perdus! nous sommes perdus !' cried she, in a passion of
+tears. But her dread was not for herself. She felt only for the danger
+to which the King was now going to expose himself; and she flew to him,
+and hung on his neck.
+
+"'And what,' exclaimed she, 'is to become of all our faithful friends and
+attendants!'
+
+"'I advise them all,' answered His Majesty, 'to make the best of their
+way out of France; and that as soon as possible.'
+
+"By this time, the apartments of the Queen were filled with the
+attendants and the royal children, anxiously expecting every moment to
+receive the Queen's command to proceed on their journey, but they were
+all ordered to retire to whence they came.
+
+"The scene was that of a real tragedy. Nothing broke the silence but
+groans of the deepest affliction. Our consternation at the counter order
+cast all into a state of stupefied insensibility.
+
+"The Queen was the only one whose fortitude bore her up proudly under
+this weight of misfortunes. Recovering from the frenzy of the first
+impression, she adjured her friends, by the love and obedience they had
+ever shown her and the King, to prepare immediately to fulfil his mandate
+and make themselves ready for the cruel separation!
+
+"The Duchesse de Polignac and myself were, for some hours, in a state of
+agony and delirium.
+
+"When the Queen saw the body-guards drawn up to accompany the King's
+departure, she ran to the window, threw apart the sash, and was going to
+speak to them, to recommend the King to their care; but the Count Fersen
+prevented it.
+
+"'For God's sake, Madame,'--exclaimed he, 'do not commit yourself to the
+suspicion of having any doubts of the people!'
+
+"When the King entered to take leave of her, and of all his most faithful
+attendants, he could only articulate, 'Adieu!' But when the Queen saw him
+accompanied by the Comte d'Estaing and others, whom, from their new
+principles, she knew to be popular favourites, she had command enough of
+herself not to shed a tear in their presence.
+
+"No sooner, however, had the King left the room than it was as much as
+the Count Fersen, Princesse Elizabeth, and all of us could do to recover
+her from the most violent convulsions. At last, coming to herself, she
+retired with the Princess, the Duchess, and myself to await the King's
+return; at the same time requesting the Count Fersen to follow His
+Majesty to the Hotel de Ville. Again and again she implored the Count,
+as she went, in case the King should be detained, to interest himself
+with all the foreign Ministers to interpose for his liberation.
+
+"Versailles, when the King was gone, seemed like a city deserted in
+consequence of the plague. The palace was completely abandoned. All the
+attendants were dispersed. No one was seen in the streets. Terror
+prevailed. It was universally believed that the King would be detained
+in Paris. The high road from Versailles to Paris was crowded with all
+ranks of people, as if to catch a last look of their Sovereign.
+
+"The Count Fersen set off instantly, pursuant to the Queen's desire. He
+saw all that passed, and on his return related to me the history of that
+horrid day.
+
+"He arrived at Paris just in time to see His Majesty take the national
+cockade from M. Bailly and place it in his hat. He, felt the Hotel de
+Ville shake with the long-continued cries of 'Vive le roi!' in
+consequence, which so affected the King that, for some moments, he was
+unable to express himself. "I myself,' added the Count, I was so moved
+at the effect on His Majesty, in being thus warmly received by his
+Parisian subjects, which portrayed the paternal emotions of his long-
+lacerated heart, that every other feeling was paralysed for a moment, in
+exultation at the apparent unanimity between the Sovereign and his
+people. But it did not,' continued the Ambassador, 'paralyse the artful
+tongue of Bailly, the Mayor of Paris. I could have kicked the fellow for
+his malignant impudence; for, even in the cunning compliment he framed,
+he studied to humble the afflicted Monarch by telling the people it was
+to them he owed the sovereign authority.
+
+"'But,' pursued the Count, 'considering the situation of Louis XVI. and
+that of his family, agonised as they must have been during his absence,
+from the Queen's impression that the Parisians would never again allow
+him to see Versailles, how great was our rapture when we saw him safely
+replaced in his carriage, and returning to those who were still lamenting
+him as lost!
+
+"'When I left Her Majesty in the morning, she was nearly in a state of
+mental aberration. When I saw her again in the evening, the King by her
+side, surrounded by her family, the Princesse Eizabeth, and yourself,
+madame' said the kind Count, 'she appeared to me like a person risen from
+the dead and restored to life. Her excess of joy at the first moment was
+beyond description!'
+
+"Count Fersen might well say the first moment, for the pleasure of the
+Queen was of short duration. Her heart was doomed to bleed afresh, when
+the thrill of delight, at what she considered the escape of her husband,
+was past, for she had already seen her chosen friend, the Duchesse de
+Polignac, for the last time.
+
+"Her Majesty was but just recovered from the effects of the morning's
+agitation, when the Duchess, the Duke, his sister, and all his family set
+off. It was impossible for her to take leave of her friend. The hour
+was late--about midnight. At the same time departed the Comte d'Artois
+and his family, the Prince de Conde and his, the Prince of Hesse
+d'Armstadt, and all those who were likely to be suspected by the people.
+
+"Her Majesty desired the Count Fersen to see the Duchess in her name.
+When the King heard the request, he exclaimed:
+
+"'What a cruel state for Sovereigns, my dear Count! To be compelled to
+separate ourselves from our most faithful attendants, and not be allowed,
+for fear of compromising others or our own lives, to take a last
+farewell!'
+
+"'Ah!' said the Queen, 'I fear so too. I fear it is a last farewell to
+all our friends!'
+
+"The Count saw the Duchess a few moments before she left Versailles.
+Pisani, the Venetian Ambassador, and Count Fersen, helped her on the
+coachbox, where she rode disguised.
+
+"What must have been most poignantly mortifying to the fallen favourite
+was, that, in the course of her journey, she met with her greatest enemy,
+(Necker) who was returning, triumphant, to Paris, called by the voice of
+that very nation by whom she and her family were now forced from its
+territory,--Necker, who himself conceived that she, who now went by him
+into exile, while he himself returned to the greatest of victories, had
+thwarted all his former plans of operation, and, from her influence over
+the Queen, had caused his dismission and temporary banishment.
+
+"For my own part, I cannot but consider this sudden desertion of France
+by those nearest the throne as ill-judged. Had all the Royal Family,
+remained, is it likely that the King and Queen would have been watched
+with such despotic vigilance? Would not confidence have created
+confidence, and the breach have been less wide between the King and his
+people?
+
+"When the father and his family will now be thoroughly reconciled, Heaven
+alone can tell!"
+
+
+
+
+SECTION V.
+
+"Barnave often lamented his having been betrayed, by a love of notoriety,
+into many schemes, of which his impetuosity blinded him to the
+consequences. With tears in his eyes, he implored me to impress the
+Queen's mind with the sad truths he inculcated. He said his motives had
+been uniformly the same, however he might have erred in carrying them
+into action; but now he relied on my friendship for my royal mistress to
+give efficacy to his earnest desire to atone for those faults, of which
+he had become convinced by dear-bought experience. He gave me a list of
+names for Her Majesty, in which were specified all the Jacobins who had
+emissaries throughout France, for the purpose of creating on the same
+day, and at the same hour, an alarm of something like the 'Vesparo
+Siciliano' (a general insurrection to murder all the nobility and burn
+their palaces, which, in fact, took place in many parts of France), the
+object of which was to give the Assembly, by whom all the regular troops
+were disbanded, a pretext for arming the people as a national guard, thus
+creating a perpetual national faction.
+
+"The hordes of every faubourg now paraded in this new democratic livery.
+Even some of them, who were in the actual service of the Court, made no
+scruple of decorating themselves thus, in the very face of their
+Sovereign. The King complained, but the answer made to him was that the
+nation commanded.
+
+"The very first time Their Majesties went to the royal chapel, after the
+embodying of the troops with the national guards, all the persons
+belonging to it were accoutred in the national uniform. The Queen was
+highly incensed, and deeply affected at this insult offered to the King's
+authority by the persons employed in the sacred occupations of the
+Church. 'Such persons,' said Her Majesty, 'would, I had hoped, have been
+the last to interfere with politics.' She was about to order all those
+who preferred their uniforms to their employments to be discharged from
+the King's service; but my advice, coupled with that of Barnave,
+dissuaded her from executing so dangerous a threat. On being assured
+that those, perhaps, who might be selected to replace the offenders might
+refuse the service, if not allowed the same ridiculous prerogatives,
+and thus expose Their Royal Majesties to double mortification, the Queen
+seemed satisfied, and no more was said upon the subject, except to an
+Italian soprano, to whom the King signified his displeasure at his
+singing a 'salva regina' in the dress of a grenadier of the new faction.
+
+"The singer took the hint and never again intruded his uniform into the
+chapel.
+
+"Necker, notwithstanding the enthusiasm his return produced upon the
+people, felt mortified in having lost the confidence of the King. He
+came to me, exclaiming that, unless Their Majesties distinguished him by
+some mark of their royal favour, his influence must be lost with the
+National Assembly. He perceived, he said, that the councils of the King
+were more governed by the advice of the Queen's favourite, the Abbe
+Vermond, than by his (Necker's). He begged I would assure Her Majesty
+that Vermond was quite as obnoxious to the people as the Duchesse de
+Polignac had ever been; for it was generally known that Her Majesty was
+completely guided by him, and, therefore, for her own safety and the
+tranquillity of national affairs, he humbly suggested the prudence of
+sending him from the Court, at least for a time.
+
+"I was petrified at hearing a Minister dare presume thus to dictate the
+line of conduct which the Queen of France, his Sovereign, should pursue
+with respect to her most private servants. Such was my indignation at
+this cruel wish to dismiss every object of her choice, especially one
+from whom, owing to long habits of intimacy since her childhood, a
+separation would be rendered, by her present situation, peculiarly cruel,
+that nothing but the circumstances in which the Court then stood could
+have given me patience to listen to him.
+
+"I made no answer. Upon my silence, Necker subjoined, 'You must
+perceive, Princess, that I am actuated for the general good of the
+nation.'
+
+"'And I hope, monsieur, for the prerogatives of the monarchy also,'
+replied I.
+
+"'Certainly,' said Necker. 'But if Their Majesties continue to be guided
+by others, and will not follow my advice, I cannot answer for the
+consequences.'
+
+"I assured the Minister that I would be the faithful bearer of his
+commission, however unpleasant.
+
+"Knowing the character of the Queen, in not much relishing being dictated
+to with respect to her conduct in relation to the persons of her
+household, especially the Abbe Vermond, and aware, at the same time,
+of her dislike to Necker, who thus undertook to be her director, I felt
+rather awkward in being the medium of the Minister's suggestions. But
+what was my surprise, on finding her prepared, and totally indifferent as
+to the privation.
+
+"'I foresaw,' replied Her Majesty, 'that Vermond would become odious to
+the present order of things, merely because he had been a faithful
+servant, and long attached to my interest; but you may tell M. Necker
+that the Abbe leaves Versailles this very night, by my express order, for
+Vienna.'
+
+"If the proposal of Necker astonished me, the Queen's reception of it
+astonished me still more. What a lesson is this for royal favourites!
+The man who had been her tutor, and who, almost from her childhood, never
+left her, the constant confidant for fifteen or sixteen years, was now
+sent off without a seeming regret.
+
+"I doubt not, however, that the Queen had some very powerful secret
+motive for the sudden change in her conduct towards the Abbe, for she was
+ever just in all her concerns, even to her avowed enemies; but I was
+happy that she seemed to express no particular regret at the Minister's
+suggested policy. I presume, from the result, that I myself had
+overrated the influence of the Abbe over the mind of his royal pupil;
+that he had by no means the sway imputed to him; and that Marie
+Antoinette merely considered him as the necessary instrument of her
+private correspondence, which he had wholly managed.
+
+ [The truth is, Her Majesty had already taken leave of the Abbe, in
+ the presence of the King, unknown to the Princess; or, more
+ properly, the Abbe had taken an affectionate leave of them.]
+
+"But a circumstance presently occurred which aroused Her Majesty from
+this calmness and indifference. The King came in to inform her that
+La Fayette, during the night, had caused the guards to desert from the
+palace of Versailles.
+
+"The effect on her of this intelligence was like the lightning which
+precedes a loud clap of thunder.
+
+"Everything that followed was perfectly in character, and shook every
+nerve of the royal authority.
+
+"'Thus,' exclaimed Marie Antoinette, 'thus, Sire, have you humiliated
+yourself, in condescending to go to Paris, without having accomplished
+the object. You have not regained the confidence of your subjects. Oh,
+how bitterly do I deplore the loss of that confidence! It exists no
+longer. Alas! when will it be restored!'
+
+"The French guards, indeed, had been in open insurrection through the
+months of June and July, and all that could be done was to preserve one
+single company of grenadiers, by means of their commander, the Baron de
+Leval, faithful to their colours. This company had now been influenced
+by General La Fayette to desert and join their companions, who had
+enrolled themselves in the Paris national guard.
+
+"Messieurs de Bouille and de Luxembourg being interrogated by the Queen
+respecting the spirit of the troops under their immediate command, M. de
+Bouille answered, Madame, I should be very sorry to be compelled to
+undertake any internal operation with men who have been seduced from
+their allegiance, and are daily paid by a faction which aims at the
+overthrow of its legitimate Sovereign. I would not answer for a man that
+has been in the neighbourhood of the seditious national troops, or that
+has read the inflammatory discussions of the National Assembly. If Your
+Majesty and the King wish well to the nation--I am sorry to say it--its
+happiness depends on your quitting immediately the scenes of riot and
+placing yourselves in a situation to treat with the National Assembly on
+equal terms, whereby the King may be unbiassed and unfettered by a
+compulsive, overbearing mob; and this can only be achieved by your flying
+to a place of safety. That you may find such a place, I will answer with
+my life!'
+
+"'Yes,' said M. de Luxembourg, 'I think we may both safely answer that,
+in such a case, you will find a few Frenchmen ready to risk a little to
+save all!' And both concurred that there was no hope of salvation for
+the King or country but through the resolution they advised.
+
+"'This,' said the Queen, 'will be a very difficult task. His Majesty, I
+fear, will never consent to leave France.'
+
+"'Then, Madame,' replied they, 'we can only regret that we have nothing
+to offer but our own perseverance in the love and service of our King and
+his oppressed family, to whom we deplore we can now be useful only with
+our feeble wishes.'
+
+"'Well, gentlemen,' answered Her Majesty, 'you must not despair of better
+prospects. I will take an early opportunity of communicating your loyal
+sentiments to the King, and will hear his opinion on the subject before I
+give you a definite answer. I thank you, in the name of His Majesty, as
+well as on my own account, for your good intentions towards us.'
+
+"Scarcely had these gentlemen left the palace, when a report prevailed
+that the King, his family, and Ministers, were about to withdraw to some
+fortified situation. It was also industriously rumoured that, as soon as
+they were in safety, the National Assembly would be forcibly dismissed,
+as the Parliament had been by Louis XIV. The reports gained universal
+belief when it became known that the King had ordered the Flanders
+regiment to Versailles.
+
+"The National Assembly now daily watched the royal power more and more
+assiduously. New sacrifices of the prerogatives of the nobles were
+incessantly proposed by them to the King.
+
+"When His Majesty told the Queen that he had been advised by Necker to
+sanction the abolition of the privileged nobility, and that all
+distinctions, except the order of the Holy Ghost to himself and the
+Dauphin, were also annihilated by the Assembly, even to the order of
+Maria Theresa, which she could no longer wear, 'These, Sire,' answered
+she, in extreme anguish, 'are trifles, so far as they regard myself.
+I do not think I have twice worn the order of Maria Theresa since my
+arrival in this once happy country. I need it not. The immortal memory
+of her who gave me being is engraven on my heart; that I shall wear
+forever, none can wrest it from me. But what grieves me to the soul is
+your having sanctioned these decrees of the National Assembly upon the
+mere 'ipse dixit' of M. Necker.'
+
+"'I have only, given my sanction to such as I thought most necessary to
+tranquilise the minds of those who doubted my sincerity; but I have
+withheld it from others, which, for the good of my, people, require
+maturer consideration. On these, in a full Council, and in your
+presence, I shall again deliberate.'
+
+"'Oh, said the Queen, with tears in her eyes, could but the people hear
+you, and know, once for all, how to appreciate the goodness of your
+heart, as I do now, they would cast themselves at your feet, and
+supplicate your forgiveness for having shown such ingratitude to your
+paternal interest for their welfare!'
+
+"But this unfortunate refusal to sanction all the decrees sent by the
+National Assembly, though it proceeded from the best motives, produced
+the worst effects. Duport, De Lameth, and Barnave well knew the troubles
+such a course must create. Of this they forewarned His Majesty, before
+any measure was laid before him for approval. They cautioned him not to
+trifle with the deputies. They assured him that half measures would only
+rouse suspicion. They enforced the necessity of uniform assentation, in
+order to lull the Mirabeau party, who were canvassing for a majority to
+set up D'ORLEANS, to whose interest Mirabeau and his myrmidons were then
+devoted. The scheme of Duport, De Lameth, and Barnave was to thwart and
+weaken the Mirabeau and Orleans faction, by gradually persuading them, in
+consequence of the King's compliance with whatever the Assembly exacted,
+that they could do no better than to let him into a share of the
+executive power; for now nothing was left to His Majesty but
+responsibility, while the privileges of grace and justice had become
+merely nominal, with the one dangerous exception of the veto, to which he
+could never have recourse without imminent peril to his cause and to
+himself.
+
+"Unfortunately for His Majesty's interest, he was too scrupulous to act,
+even through momentary policy, distinctly against his conscience. When
+he gave way, it was with reluctance, and often with an avowal, more or
+less express, that he only complied with necessity against conviction.
+His very sincerity made him appear the reverse. His adherents
+consequently dwindled, while the Orleans faction became immeasurably
+augmented.
+
+"In the midst of these perplexities, an Austrian courier was stopped with
+despatches from Prince Kaunitz. These, though unsought for on the part
+of Her Majesty, though they contained a friendly advice to her to submit
+to the circumstances of the times, and though, luckily, they were couched
+in terms favourable to the Constitution, showed the mob that there was a
+correspondence with Vienna, carried on by the Queen, and neither Austria
+nor the Queen were deemed the friends either of the people or of the
+Constitution. To have received the letters was enough for the faction.
+
+"Affairs were now ripening gradually into something like a crisis, when
+the Flanders regiment arrived. The note of preparation had been sounded.
+'Let us go to Versailles, and bring the King away from his evil
+counsellors,' was already in the mouths of the Parisians.
+
+"In the meantime, Dumourier, who had been leagued with the Orleans
+faction, became disgusted with it. He knew the deep schemes of treason
+which were in train against the Royal Family, and, in disguise, sought
+the Queen at Versailles, and had an interview with Her Majesty in my
+presence. He assured her that an abominable insurrection was ripe for
+explosion among the mobs of the faubourgs; gave her the names of the
+leaders, who had received money to promote its organisation; and warned
+her that the massacre of the Royal Family was the object of the
+manoeuvre, for the purpose of declaring the Duke of Orleans the
+constitutional King; that he was to be proclaimed by Mirabeau, who had
+already received a considerable sum in advance, for distribution among
+the populace, to ensure their support; and that Mirabeau, in return for
+his co-operation, was to be created a Duke, with the office of Prime
+Minister and Secretary of State, and to have the framing of the
+Constitution, which was to be modelled from that of Great Britain. It
+was farther concerted that D'ORLEANS was to show himself in the midst of
+the confusion, and the crown to be conferred upon him by public
+acclamation.
+
+"On his knees Dumourier implored Her Majesty to regard his voluntary
+discovery of this infamous and diabolical plot as a proof of his sincere
+repentance. He declared he came disinterestedly to offer himself as a
+sacrifice to save her, the King, and her family from the horrors then
+threatening their lives, from the violence of an outrageous mob of
+regicides; he called God to witness that he was actuated by no other wish
+than to atone for his error, and die in their defence; he looked for no
+reward beyond the King's forgiveness of his having joined the Orleans
+faction; he never had any view in joining that faction but that of aiding
+the Duke, for the good of his country, in the reform of ministerial
+abuses, and strengthening the royal authority by the salutary laws of the
+National Assembly; but he no sooner discovered that impure schemes of
+personal aggrandisement gave the real impulse to these pretended
+reformers than he forsook their unholy course. He supplicated Her
+Majesty to lose no time, but to allow him to save her from the
+destruction to which she would inevitably be exposed; that he was ready
+to throw himself at the King's feet, to implore his forgiveness also, and
+to assure him of his profound penitence, and his determination to
+renounce forever the factious Orleans party.
+
+"As Her Majesty would not see any of those who offered themselves, except
+in my presence, I availed myself, in this instance, of the opportunity it
+gave me by enforcing the arguments of Dumourier. But all I could say,
+all the earnest representations to be deduced from this critical crisis,
+could not prevail with her, even so far as to persuade her to temporise
+with Dumourier, as she had done with many others on similar occasions.
+She was deaf and inexorable. She treated all he had said as the effusion
+of an overheated imagination, and told him she had no faith in traitors.
+Dumourier remained upon his knees while she was replying, as if
+stupefied; but at the word traitor he started and roused himself; and
+then, in a state almost of madness, seized the Queen's dress, exclaiming,
+'Allow yourself to be persuaded before it is too late! Let not your
+misguided prejudice against me hurry you to your own and your children's
+destruction; let it not get the better, Madame, of your good sense and
+reason; the fatal moment is near; it is at hand!' Upon this, turning, he
+addressed himself to me.
+
+"'Oh, Princess,' he cried, 'be her guardian angel, as you have hitherto
+been her only friend, and use your never-failing influence. I take God
+once more to witness, that I am sincere in all I have said; that all I
+have disclosed is true. This will be the last time I shall have it in my
+power to be of any essential service to you, Madame, and my Sovereign.
+The National Assembly will put it out of my power for the future, without
+becoming a traitor to my country.'
+
+"'Rise, monsieur,' said the Queen, 'and serve your country better than
+you have served your King!'
+
+"'Madame, I obey.'
+
+"When he was about to leave the room, I again, with tears, besought Her
+Majesty not to let him depart thus, but to give him some hope, that,
+after reflection, she might perhaps endeavour to soothe the King's anger.
+But in vain. He withdrew very much affected. I even ventured, after his
+departure, to intercede for his recall.
+
+"'He has pledged himself,' said I, 'to save you, Madame !'
+
+"'My dear Princess,' replied the Queen, 'the goodness of your own heart
+will not allow you to have sinister ideas of others. This man is like
+all of the same stamp. They are all traitors; and will only hurry us the
+sooner, if we suffer ourselves to be deceived by them, to an ignominious
+death! I seek no safety for myself.'
+
+"'But he offered to serve the King also, Madame.'
+
+"'I am not,' answered Her Majesty, 'Henrietta of France. I will never
+stoop to ask a pension of the murderers of my husband; nor will I leave
+the King, my son, or my adopted country, or even meanly owe my existence
+to wretches who have destroyed the dignity of the Crown and trampled
+under foot the most ancient monarchy in Europe! Under its ruins they
+will bury their King and myself. To owe our safety to them would be more
+hateful than any death they can prepare for us'
+
+"While the Queen was in this state of agitation, a note was presented to
+me with a list of the names of the officers of the Flanders regiment,
+requesting the honour of an audience of the Queen.
+
+"The very idea of seeing the Flanders officers flushed Her Majesty's
+countenance with an ecstasy of joy. She said she would retire to compose
+herself, and receive them in two hours.
+
+"The Queen saw the officers in her private cabinet, and in my presence.
+They were presented to her by me. They told Her Majesty that, though
+they had changed their paymaster, they had not changed their allegiance
+to their Sovereign or herself, but were ready to defend both with their
+lives. They placed one hand on the hilt of their swords, and, solemnly
+lifting the other up to Heaven, swore that the weapons should never be
+wielded but for the defence of the King and Queen, against all foes,
+whether foreign or domestic.
+
+"This unexpected loyalty burst on us like the beauteous rainbow, after a
+tempest, by the dawn of which we are taught to believe the world is saved
+from a second deluge.
+
+"The countenance of Her Majesty brightened over the gloom which had
+oppressed her, like the heavenly sun dispersing threatening clouds, and
+making the heart of the poor mariner bound with joy. Her eyes spoke her
+secret rapture. It was evident she felt even unusual dignity in the
+presence of these noble-hearted warriors, when comparing them with him
+whom she had just dismissed. She graciously condescended to speak to
+every one of them, and one and all were enchanted with her affability.
+
+"She said she was no longer the Queen who could compensate loyalty and
+valour; but the brave soldier found his reward in the fidelity of his
+service, which formed the glory of his immortality. She assured them she
+had ever been attached to the army, and would make it her study to
+recommend every individual, meriting attention, to the King.
+
+"Loud bursts of repeated acclamations and shouts of 'Vive la reine!'
+instantly followed her remarks. She thanked the officers most
+graciously; and, fearing to commit herself, by saying more, took her
+leave, attended by me; but immediately sent me back, to thank them again
+in her name.
+
+"They departed, shouting as they went, 'Vive la reine! Vive la Princesse!
+Vive le roi, le Dauphin, et toute la famille royale!'
+
+"When the National Assembly saw the officers going to and coming from the
+King's palace with such demonstrations of enthusiasm, they took alarm,
+and the regicide faction hastened on the crisis for which it had been
+longing. It was by no means unusual for the chiefs of regiments,
+destined to form part of the garrison of a royal residence, to be
+received by the Sovereign on their arrival, and certainly only natural
+that they should be so; but in times of excitement trifling events have
+powerful effects.
+
+"But if the National Assembly began to tremble for their own safety, and
+had already taken secret, measures to secure it, by conspiring to put an
+instantaneous end to the King's power, against which they had so long
+been plotting, when the Flanders regiment arrived, it may be readily
+conceived what must have been their emotions on the fraternisation of
+this regiment with the body-guard, and on the scene to which the dinner,
+given to the former troops by the latter, so unpremeditatedly led.
+
+"On the day of this fatal dinner I remarked to the Queen, 'What a
+beautiful sight it must be to behold, in these troublesome times, the
+happy union of such a meeting!'
+
+"'It must indeed!' replied the King; 'and the pleasure I feel in knowing
+it would be redoubled had I the privilege of entertaining the Flanders
+regiment, as the body-guards are doing.'
+
+"'Heaven forbid!' cried Her Majesty; 'Heaven forbid that you should think
+of such a thing! The Assembly would never forgive us!'
+
+"After we had dined, the Queen sent to the Marquise de Tourzel for the
+Dauphin. When he came, the Queen told him about her having seen the
+brave officers on their arrival; and how gaily those good officers had
+left the palace, declaring they would die rather than suffer any harm to
+come to him, or his papa and mamma; and that at that very time they were
+all dining at the theatre.
+
+"'Dining in the theatre, mamma?' said the young, Prince. 'I never heard
+of people dining in a theatre!'
+
+"'No, my dear child,' replied Her Majesty, 'it is not generally allowed;
+but they are doing so, because the body-guards are giving a dinner to
+this good Flanders regiment; and the Flanders regiment are so brave that
+the guards chose the finest place they could think of to entertain them
+in, to show how much they like them; that is the reason why they are
+dining in the gay, painted theatre.'
+
+"'Oh, mamma!' exclaimed the Dauphin, whom the Queen adored, 'Oh, papa!'
+cried he, looking at the King, 'how I should like to see them!'
+
+"'Let us go and satisfy the child!' said the King, instantly starting up
+from his seat.
+
+"The Queen took the Dauphin by the hand, and they proceeded to the
+theatre. It was all done in a moment. There was no premeditation on the
+part of the King or Queen; no invitation on the part of the officers.
+Had I been asked, I should certainly have followed the Queen; but just as
+the King rose, I left the room. The Prince being eager to see the
+festival, they set off immediately, and when I returned to the apartment
+they were gone. Not being very well, I remained where I was; but most of
+the household had already followed Their Majesties.
+
+"On the Royal Family making their appearance, they were received with the
+most unequivocal shouts of general enthusiasm by the troops. Intoxicated
+with the pleasure of seeing Their Majesties among them, and overheated
+with the juice of the grape, they gave themselves up to every excess of
+joy, which the circumstances and the situation of Their Majesties were so
+well calculated to inspire. 'Oh! Richard! oh, mon roi!' was sung, as
+well as many other loyal songs. The healths of the King, Queen, and
+Dauphin were drunk, till the regiments were really inebriated with the
+mingled influence of wine and shouting vivas!
+
+"When the royal party retired, they were followed by all the military to
+the very palace doors, where they sung, danced, embraced each other, and
+gave way to all the frantic demonstrations of devotedness to the royal
+cause which the excitement of the scene and the table could produce.
+Throngs, of course, collected to get near the Royal Family. Many persons
+in the rush were trampled on, and one or two men, it was said, crushed to
+death. The Dauphin and King were delighted; but the Queen, in giving the
+Princesse Elizabeth and myself an account of the festival, foresaw the
+fatal result which would ensue; and deeply deplored the marked enthusiasm
+with which they had been greeted and followed by the military.
+
+"There was one more military spectacle, a public breakfast which took
+place on the second of October. Though none of the Royal Family appeared
+at it, it was no less injurious to their interests than the former. The
+enemies of the Crown spread reports all over Paris, that the King and
+Queen had manoeuvred to pervert the minds of the troops so far as to make
+them declare against the measures of the National Assembly. It is not
+likely that the Assembly, or politics, were even spoken of at the
+breakfast; but the report did as much mischief as the reality would have
+done. This was quite sufficient to encourage the D'ORLEANS and Mirabeau
+faction in the Assembly to the immediate execution of their long-
+meditated scheme, of overthrowing the monarchy.
+
+"On the very day following, Duport, De Lameth, and Barnave sent their
+confidential agent to apprise the Queen that certain deputies had already
+fully matured a plot to remove the King, nay, to confine Her Majesty from
+him in a distant part of France, that her influence over his mind might
+no farther thwart their premeditated establishment of a Constitution.
+
+"But others of this body, and the more powerful and subtle portion, had a
+deeper object, so depraved, that, even when forewarned, the Queen could
+not deem it possible; but of which she was soon convinced by their
+infernal acts.
+
+"The riotous faction, for the purpose of accelerating this denouement,
+had contrived, by buying up all the corn and sending it out of the
+country, to reduce the populace to famine, and then to make it appear
+that the King and Queen had been the monopolisers, and the extravagance
+of Marie Antoinette and her largesses to Austria and her favourites, the
+cause. The plot was so deeply laid that the wretches who, undertook to
+effect the diabolical scheme were metamorphosed in the Queen's livery, so
+that all the odium might fall on her unfortunate Majesty. At the head of
+the commission of monopolisers was Luckner, who had taken a violent
+dislike to the Queen, in consequence of his having been refused some
+preferment, which he attributed to her influence. Mirabeau, who was
+still in the background, and longing to take a more prominent part,
+helped it on as much as possible. Pinet, who had been a confidential
+agent of the Duc d'Orleans, himself told the Duc de Penthievre that
+D'ORLEANS had monopolised all the corn. This communication, and the
+activity of the Count Fersen, saved France, and Paris in particular, from
+perishing for the want of bread. Even at the moment of the abominable
+masquerade, in which Her Majesty's agents were made to appear the enemies
+who were starving the French people, out of revenge for the checks
+imposed by them on the royal authority, it was well known to all the
+Court that both Her Majesty and the King were grieved to the soul at
+their piteous want, and distributed immense sums for the relief of the
+poor sufferers, as did the Duc de Penthievre, the Duchesse d'Orleans, the
+Prince de Conde, the Duc and Duchesse de Bourbon, and others; but these
+acts were done privately, while he who had created the necessity took to
+himself the exclusive credit of the relief, and employed thousands daily
+to propagate reports of his generosity. Mirabeau, then the factotum
+agent of the operations of the Palais Royal and its demagogues, greatly
+added to the support of this impression. Indeed, till undeceived
+afterwards, he believed it to be really the Duc d'Orleans who had
+succoured the people.
+
+"I dispensed two hundred and twenty thousand livres merely to discover
+the names of the agents who had been employed to carry on this nefarious
+plot to exasperate the people against the throne by starvation imputed to
+the Sovereign. Though money achieved the discovery in time to clear the
+characters of my royal mistress and the King, the detection only followed
+the mischief of the crime. But even the rage thus wickedly excited was
+not enough to carry through the plot. In the faubourgs of Paris, where
+the women became furies, two hundred thousand livres were distributed ere
+the horror could be completely exposed.
+
+"But it is time for me to enter upon the scenes to which all the
+intrigues I have detailed were intended to lead--the removal of the Royal
+Family from Versailles.
+
+"My heart sickens when I retrace these moments of anguish. The point to
+which they are to conduct us yet remains one of the mysteries of fate."
+
+
+
+
+SECTION VI.
+
+"Her Majesty had been so thoroughly lulled into security by the
+enthusiasm of the regiments at Versailles that she treated all the
+reports from Paris with contempt. Nothing was apprehended from that
+quarter, and no preparations were consequently made for resistance or
+protection. She was at Little Trianon when the news of the approach of
+the desolating torrent arrived. The King was hunting. I presented
+to her the commandant of the troops at Versailles, who assured Her
+Majesty that a murderous faction, too powerful, perhaps, for resistance,
+was marching principally against her royal person, with La Fayette at
+their head, and implored her to put herself and valuables in immediate
+safety; particularly all her correspondence with the Princes, emigrants,
+and foreign Courts, if she had no means of destroying them.
+
+"Though the Queen was somewhat awakened to the truth by this earnest
+appeal, yet she still considered the extent of the danger as exaggerated,
+and looked upon the representation as partaking, in a considerable
+degree, of the nature of all reports in times of popular commotion.
+
+"Presently, however, a more startling omen appeared, in a much milder but
+ambiguous communication from General La Fayette. He stated that he was
+on his march from Paris with the national guard, and part of the people,
+coming to make remonstrances; but he begged Her Majesty to rest assured
+that no disorder would take place, and that he himself would vouch that
+there should be none.
+
+"The King was instantly sent for to the heights of Meudon, while the
+Queen set off from Little Trianon, with me, for Versailles.
+
+"The first movements were commenced by a few women, or men in women's
+clothes, at the palace gates of Versailles. The guards refused them
+entrance, from an order they had received to that effect from La Fayette.
+The consternation produced by their resentment was a mere prelude to the
+horrid tragedy that succeeded.
+
+"The information now pouring in from different quarters increased Her
+Majesty's alarm every moment. The order of La Fayette, not to let the
+women be admitted, convinced her that there was something in agitation,
+which his unexplained letter made her sensible was more to be feared than
+if he had signified the real situation and danger to which she was
+exposed.
+
+"A messenger was forthwith despatched for M. La Fayette, and another, by
+order of the Queen, for M. de St. Priest, to prepare a retreat for the
+Royal Family, as the Parisian mob's advance could no longer be doubted.
+Everything necessary was accordingly got ready.
+
+"La Fayette now arrived at Versailles in obedience to the message, and,
+in the presence of all the Court and Ministers, assured the King that he
+could answer for the Paris army, at the head of which he intended to
+march, to prevent disorders; and advised the admission of the women into
+the palace, who, he said, had nothing to propose but a simple memorial
+relative to the scarcity of bread.
+
+"The Queen said to him, 'Remember, monsieur, you have pledged your honour
+for the King's safety.'
+
+"'And I hope, Madame, to be able to redeem it.'
+
+"He then left Versailles to return to his post with the army.
+
+"A limited number of the women were at length admitted; and so completely
+did they seem satisfied with the reception they met with from the King,
+as, in all appearance, to have quieted their riotous companions. The
+language of menace and remonstrance had changed into shouts of 'Vive le
+roi!' The apprehensions of Their Majesties were subdued; and the whole
+system of operation, which had been previously adopted for the Royal
+Family's quitting Versailles, was, in consequence, unfortunately changed.
+
+"But the troops, that had been hitherto under arms for the preservation
+of order, in going back to their hotel, were assailed and fired at by the
+mob.
+
+"The return of the body-guards, thus insulted in going to and coming from
+the palace, caused the Queen and the Court to resume the resolution of
+instantly retiring from Versailles; but it was now too late. They were
+stopped by the municipality and the mob of the city, who were animated to
+excess against the Queen by one of the bass singers of the French opera.
+--[La Haise]
+
+"Every hope of tranquillity was now shaken by the hideous howlings which
+arose from all quarters. Intended flight had become impracticable.
+Atrocious expressions were levelled against the Queen, too shocking for
+repetition. I shudder when I reflect to what a degree of outrage the
+'poissardes' of Paris were excited, to express their abominable designs
+on the life of that most adored of Sovereigns.
+
+"Early in the evening Her Majesty came to my apartment, in company with
+one of her female attendants. She was greatly agitated. She brought all
+her jewels and a considerable quantity of papers, which she had begun to
+collect together immediately on her arrival from Trianon, as the
+commandant had recommended.
+
+ [Neither Her Majesty nor the Princess ever returned to Versailles
+ after the sixth of that fatal October! Part of the papers, brought
+ by the Queen to the apartment of the Princess, were tacked by me on
+ two of my petticoats; the under one three fold, one on the other,
+ and outside; and the upper one, three or four fold double on the
+ inside; and thus I left the room with this paper undergarment, which
+ put me to no inconvenience. Returning to the Princess, I was
+ ordered to go to Lisle, there take the papers from their hiding-
+ place, and deliver them, with others, to the same person who
+ received the box, of which mention will be found in another part of
+ this work. I was not to take any letters, and was to come back
+ immediately.
+
+ As I was leaving the apartment Her Majesty said something to Her
+ Highness which I did not hear. The Princess turned round very
+ quickly, and kissing me on the forehead, said in Italian, "My dear
+ little Englishwoman, for Heaven's sake be careful of yourself, for I
+ should never forgive myself if any misfortune were to befall you."
+ "Nor I," said Her Majesty.]
+
+"Notwithstanding the fatigue and agitation which the Queen must have
+suffered during the day, and the continued threats, horrible howlings,
+and discharge of firearms during the night, she had courage enough to
+visit the bedchambers of her children and then to retire to rest in her
+own.
+
+"But her rest was soon fearfully interrupted. Horrid cries at her
+chamber door of 'Save the Queen! Save the Queen! or she will be
+assassinated!' aroused her. The faithful guardian who gave the alarm was
+never heard more. He was murdered in her defence! Her Majesty herself
+only escaped the poignards of immediate death by flying to the King's
+apartment, almost in the same state as she lay in bed, not having had
+time to screen herself with any covering but what was casually thrown
+over her by the women who assisted her in her flight; while one well
+acquainted with the palace is said to have been seen busily engaged in
+encouraging the regicides who thus sought her for midnight murder. The
+faithful guards who defended the entrance to the room of the intended
+victim of these desperadoes took shelter in the room itself upon her
+leaving it, and were alike threatened with instant death by the grenadier
+assassins for having defeated them in their fiend-like purpose; they
+were, however, saved by the generous interposition and courage of two
+gentlemen, who, offering themselves as victims in their place, thus
+brought about a temporary accommodation between the regular troops and
+the national guard.
+
+"All this time General La Fayette never once appeared. It is presumed
+that he himself had been deceived as to the horrid designs of the mob,
+and did not choose to show himself, finding it impossible to check the
+impetuosity of the horde he had himself brought to action, in concurring
+to countenance their first movements from Paris. Posterity will decide
+how far he was justified in pledging himself for the safety of the Royal
+Family, while he was heading a riotous mob, whose atrocities were
+guaranteed from punishment or check by the sanction of his presence and
+the faith reposed in his assurance. Was he ignorant, or did he only
+pretend to be so, of the incalculable mischief inevitable from giving
+power and a reliance on impunity to such an unreasoning mass? By any
+military operation, as commander-in-chief, he might have turned the tide.
+And why did he not avail himself of that authority with which he had been
+invested by the National Assembly, as the delegates of the nation, for
+the general safety and guardianship of the people? for the people, of
+whom he was the avowed protector, were themselves in peril: it was only
+the humanity (or rather, in such a crisis, the imbecility) of Louis XVI.
+that prevented them from being fired on; and they would inevitably have
+been sacrificed, and that through the want of policy in their leader, had
+not this mistaken mercy of the King prevented his guards from offering
+resistance to the murderers of his brave defenders!
+
+"The cry of 'Queen! Queen!' now resounded from the lips of the cannibals
+stained with the blood of her faithful guards. She appeared, shielded by
+filial affection, between her two innocent children, the threatened
+orphans! But the sight of so much innocence and heroic courage paralysed
+the hands uplifted for their massacre!
+
+"A tiger voice cried out, 'No children!' The infants were hurried away
+from the maternal side, only to witness the author of their being
+offering up herself, eagerly and instantly, to the sacrifice, an ardent
+and delighted victim to the hoped-for preservation of those, perhaps,
+orphans, dearer to her far than life! Her resignation and firm step in
+facing the savage cry that was thundering against her, disarmed the
+ferocious beasts that were hungering and roaring for their prey!
+
+"Mirabeau, whose immense head and gross figure could not be mistaken, is
+said to have been the first among the mob to have sonorously chanted,
+'To Paris!' His myrmidons echoed and re-echoed the cry upon the signal.
+He then hastened to the Assembly to contravene any measures the King
+might ask in opposition. The riots increasing, the Queen said to His
+Majesty:
+
+"'Oh, Sire! why am I not animated with the courage of Maria Theresa?
+Let me go with my children to the National Assembly, as she did to the
+Hungarian Senate, with my Imperial brother, Joseph, in her arms and
+Leopold in her womb, when Charles the Seventh of Bavaria had deprived her
+of all her German dominions, and she had already written to the Duchesse
+de Lorraine to prepare her an asylum, not knowing where she should be
+delivered of the precious charge she was then bearing; but I, like the
+mother of the Gracchi, like Cornelia, more esteemed for my birth than for
+my marriage, am the wife of the King of France, and I see we shall be
+murdered in our beds for the want of our own exertions!'
+
+"The King remained as if paralysed and stupefied, and made no answer.
+The Princesse Elizabeth then threw herself at the Queen's feet, imploring
+her to consent to go to Paris.
+
+"'To Paris!' exclaimed Her Majesty.
+
+"'Yes, Madame,' said the King. 'I will put an end to these horrors; and
+tell the people so.'
+
+"On this, without waiting for the Queen's answer, he opened the balcony,
+and told the populace he was ready to depart with his family.
+
+"This sudden change caused a change equally sudden in the rabble mob.
+All shouted, 'Vive le roi! Vive la nation!'
+
+"Re-entering the room from the window, the King said, 'It is done. This
+affair will soon be terminated.'
+
+"'And with it,' said the Queen, 'the monarchy!'
+
+"'Better that, Madame, than running the risk, as I did some hours since,
+of seeing you and my children sacrificed!'
+
+"'That, Sire, will be the consequence of our not having left Versailles.
+Whatever you determine, it is my duty to obey. As to myself, I am
+resigned to my fate.' On this she burst into a flood of tears. 'I only
+feel for your humiliated state, and for the safety of our children.'
+
+"The Royal Family departed without having consulted any of the Ministers,
+military or civil, or the National Assembly, by whom they were followed.
+
+"Scarcely had they arrived at Paris when the Queen recollected that she
+had taken with her no change of dress, either for herself or her
+children, and they were obliged to ask permission of the National
+Assembly to allow them to send for their different wardrobes.
+
+"What a situation for an absolute King and Queen, which, but a few hours
+previous, they had been!
+
+"I now took up my residence with Their Majesties at the Tuileries,--that
+odious Tuileries, which I can not name but with horror, where the
+malignant spirit of rebellion has, perhaps, dragged us to an untimely
+death!
+
+"Monsieur and Madame had another residence. Bailly, the Mayor of Paris,
+and La Fayette became the royal jailers.
+
+"The Princesse Elizabeth and myself could not but deeply deplore, when we
+saw the predictions of Dumourier so dreadfully confirmed by the result,
+that Her Majesty should have so slighted his timely information, and
+scorned his penitence. But delicacy bade us lament in silence; and,
+while we grieved over her present sufferings, we could not but mourn the
+loss of a barrier against future aggression, in the rejection of this
+general's proffered services.
+
+"It will be remembered, that Dumourier in his disclosure declared that
+the object of this commotion was to place the Duc d'Orleans upon the
+throne, and that Mirabeau, who was a prime mover, was to share in the
+profits of the usurpation.
+
+ [But the heart of the traitor Duke failed him at the important
+ crisis. Though he was said to have been recognised through a vulgar
+ disguise, stimulating the assassins to the attempted murder of Her
+ Majesty, yet, when the moment to show himself had arrived, he was
+ nowhere to be found. The most propitious moment for the execution
+ of the foul crime was lost, and with it the confidence of his party.
+ Mirabeau was disgusted. So far from wishing longer to offer him the
+ crown, he struck it forever from his head, and turned against him.
+ He openly protested he would no longer set up traitors who were
+ cowards.]
+
+"Soon after this event, Her Majesty, in tears, came to tell me that the
+King, having had positive proof of the agency of the Duc d'Orleans in the
+riots of Versailles, had commenced some proceedings, which had given the
+Duke the alarm, and exiled him to Villers-Cotterets. The Queen added
+that the King's only object had been to assure the general tranquillity,
+and especially her own security, against whose life the conspiracy seemed
+most distinctly levelled.
+
+"'Oh, Princess!' continued Her Majesty, in a flood of tears, 'the King's
+love for me, and his wish to restore order to his people, have been our
+ruin! He should have struck off the head of D'ORLEANS, or overlooked his
+crime! Why did he not consult me before he took a step so important? I
+have lost a friend also in his wife! For, however criminal he may be,
+she loves him.'
+
+"I assured Her Majesty that I could not think the Duchesse d'Orleans
+would be so inconsiderate as to withdraw her affection on that account.
+
+"'She certainly will,' replied Marie Antoinette. 'She is the
+affectionate mother of his children, and cannot but hate those who have
+been the cause of his exile. I know it will be laid to my charge, and
+added to the hatred the husband has so long borne me; I shall now become
+the object of the wife's resentment'
+
+"In the midst of one of the paroxysms of Her Majesty's agonising
+agitation after leaving Versailles, for the past, the present, and the
+future state of the Royal Family, when the Princesse Elizabeth and myself
+were in vain endeavouring to calm her, a deputation was announced from
+the National Assembly and the City of Paris, requesting the honour of the
+appearance of the King and herself at the theatre.
+
+"'Is it possible, my dear Princess,' cried she, on the announcement,
+'that I can enjoy any public amusement while I am still chilled with
+horror at the blood these people have spilled, the blood of the faithful
+defenders of our lives? I can forgive them, but I cannot so easily
+forget it.'
+
+"Count Fersen and the Austrian Ambassador now entered, both anxious to
+know Her Majesty's intentions with regard to visiting the theatre, in
+order to make a party to ensure her a good reception; but all their
+persuasions were unavailing. She thanked the deputation for their
+friendship; but at the same time told them that her mind was still too
+much agitated from recent scenes to receive any pleasure but in the
+domestic cares of her family, and that, for a time, she must decline
+every other amusement.
+
+"At this moment the Spanish and English Ambassadors came to pay their
+respects to Her Majesty on the same subject as the others. As they
+entered, Count Fersen observed to the Queen, looking around:
+
+"'Courage, Madame! We are as many nations as persons in this room-
+English, German, Spanish, Italian, Swedish, and French; and all equally
+ready to form a rampart around you against aggression. All these nations
+will, I believe, admit that the French (bowing to the Princesse
+Elizabeth) are the most volatile of the six; and Your Majesty may rely on
+it that they will love you, now that you are more closely among them,
+more tenderly than ever.'
+
+"'Let me live to be convinced of that, monsieur, and my happiness will be
+concentrated in its demonstration.'
+
+"'Indeed, gentlemen,' said the Princesse Elizabeth, the Queen has yet had
+but little reason to love the French.'
+
+"'Where is our Ambassador,' said I, 'and the Neapolitan?'
+
+"'I have had the pleasure of seeing them early this morning,' replied the
+Queen; 'but I told them, also, that indisposition prevented my going into
+public. They will be at our card-party in your apartment this evening,
+where I hope to see these gentlemen. The only parties,' continued Her
+Majesty, addressing herself to the Princesse Elizabeth and the
+Ambassadors, 'the only parties I shall visit in future will be those of
+the Princesse de Lamballe, my superintendent; as, in so doing, I shall
+have no occasion to go out of the palace, which, from what has happened,
+seems to me the only prudent course.'
+
+"'Come, come, Madame,' exclaimed the Ambassadors; I do not give way to
+gloomy ideas. All will yet be well.'
+
+"'I hope so,' answered Her Majesty; 'but till that hope is realized, the
+wounds I have suffered will make existence a burden to me!'
+
+"The Duchesse de Luynes, like many others, had been a zealous partisan of
+the new order of things, and had expressed herself with great
+indiscretion in the presence of the Queen. But the Duchess was brought
+to her senses when she saw herself, and all the mad, democratical
+nobility, under the overpowering weight of Jacobinism, deprived of every
+privileged prerogative and levelled and stripped of hereditary
+distinction.
+
+"She came to me one day, weeping, to beg I would make use of my good
+offices in her favour with the Queen, whom she was grieved that she had
+so grossly offended by an unguarded speech.
+
+"'On my knees,' continued the Duchess, I am I ready to supplicate the
+pardon of Her Majesty. I cannot live without her forgiveness. One of my
+servants has opened my eyes, by telling me that the Revolution can make a
+Duchess a beggar, but cannot make a beggar a Duchess.'
+
+"'Unfortunately,' said I, 'if some of these faithful servants had been
+listened to, they would still be such, and not now our masters; but I can
+assure you, Duchess, that the Queen has long since forgiven you. See!
+Her Majesty comes to tell you so herself.'
+
+"The Duchess fell upon her knees. The Queen, with her usual goodness of
+heart, clasped her in her arms, and, with tears in her eyes, said:
+
+"'We have all of us need of forgiveness. Our errors and misfortunes are
+general. Think no more of the past; but let us unite in not sinning for
+the future:
+
+"'Heaven knows how many sins I have to atone for,' replied the Duchess,
+'from the follies of youth; but now, at an age of discretion and in
+adversity, oh, how bitterly do I reproach myself for my past levities!
+But,' continued she, 'has Your Majesty really forgiven me?'
+
+"'As I hope to be forgiven!' exclaimed Marie Antoinette. 'No penitent in
+the sight of God is more acceptable than the one who makes a voluntary
+sacrifice by confessing error. Forget and forgive is the language of our
+Blessed Redeemer. I have adopted it in regard to my enemies, and surely
+my friends have a right to claim it. Come, Duchess, I will conduct you
+to the King and Elizabeth, who will rejoice in the recovery of one of our
+lost sheep; for we sorely feel the diminution of the flock that once
+surrounded us!'
+
+"At this token of kindness, the Duchess was so much overcome that she
+fell at the Queen's feet motionless, and it was some time before she
+recovered.
+
+"From the moment of Her Majesty's arrival at Paris from Versailles, she
+solely occupied herself with the education of her children,-excepting
+when she resorted to my parties, the only ones, as she had at first
+determined, which she ever honoured with her attendance. In order to
+discover, as far as possible, the sentiments of certain persons, I gave
+almost general invitations, whereby, from her amiable manners and
+gracious condescension, she became very popular. By these means I hoped
+to replace Her Majesty in the good estimation of her numerous visitors;
+but, notwithstanding every exertion, she could not succeed in dispelling
+the gloom with which the Revolution had overcast all her former gaiety.
+Though treated with ceremonious respect, she missed the cordiality to
+which she had been so long accustomed, and which she so much prized.
+From the great emigration of the higher classes of the nobility, the
+societies themselves were no longer what they had been. Madame Necker
+and Madame de Stael were pretty regular visitors. But the most agreeable
+company had lost its zest for Marie Antoinette; and she was really become
+afraid of large assemblies, and scarcely ever saw a group of persons
+collected together without fearing some plot against the King.
+
+"Indeed, it is a peculiarity which has from the first marked, and still
+continues to distinguish, the whole conduct and distrust of my royal
+mistress, that it never operates to create any fears for herself, but
+invariably refers to the safety of His Majesty.
+
+"I had enlarged my circle and made my parties extensive, solely to
+relieve the oppressed spirits of the Queen; but the very circumstance
+which induced me to make them so general soon rendered them intolerable
+to her; for the conversations at last became solely confined to the
+topics of the Revolution, a subject frequently the more distressing from
+the presence of the sons of the Duc d'Orleans. Though I loved my sister-
+in-law and my nephews, I could not see them without fear, nor could my
+royal mistress be at ease with them, or in the midst of such distressing
+indications as perpetually intruded upon her, even beneath my roof,
+of the spirit which animated the great body of the people for the
+propagation of anti-monarchical principles.
+
+"My parties were, consequently, broken up; and the Queen ceased to be
+seen in society. Then commenced the unconquerable power over her of
+those forebodings which have clung to her with such pertinacity ever
+since.
+
+"I observed that Her Majesty would often indulge in the most melancholy
+predictions long before the fatal discussion took place in the Assembly
+respecting the King's abdication. The daily insolence with which she saw
+His Majesty's authority deprived forever of the power of accomplishing
+what he had most at heart for the good of his people gave her more
+anguish than the outrages so frequently heaped upon herself; but her
+misery was wrought up to a pitch altogether unutterable, whenever she saw
+those around her suffer for their attachment to her in her misfortunes.
+
+"The Princesse Elizabeth has been from the beginning an unwavering
+comforter. She still flatters Marie Antoinette that Heaven will spare
+her for better times to reward our fidelity and her own agonies. The
+pious consolations of Her Highness have never failed to make the most
+serious impression on our wretched situation. Indeed, each of us strives
+to pour the balm of comfort into the wounded hearts of the others, while
+not one of us, in reality, dares to flatter herself with what we all so
+ardently wish for in regard to our fellow-sufferers. Delusions, even
+sustained by facts, have long since been exhausted. Our only hope on
+this side of the grave is in our all-merciful Redeemer!"
+
+
+
+
+SECTION VII.
+
+Editors Commentary:
+
+The reader will not, I trust, be dissatisfied at reposing for a moment
+from the sad story of the Princesse de Lamballe to hear some ridiculous
+circumstances which occurred to me individually; and which, though they
+form no part of the history, are sufficiently illustrative of the temper
+of the times.
+
+I had been sent to England to put some letters into the postoffice for
+the Prince de Conde, and had just returned. The fashion then in England
+was a black dress, Spanish hat, and yellow satin lining, with three
+ostrich feathers forming the Prince of Wales's crest, and bearing his
+inscription, 'Ich dien,' ("I serve.") I also brought with me a white
+satin cloak, trimmed with white fur. This crest and motto date as far
+back, I believe, as the time of Edward, the Black Prince.
+
+In this dress, I went to the French opera. Scarcely was I seated in the
+bog, when I heard shouts of, "En bas les couleurs de d'empereur! En
+bas!"
+
+I was very busy talking to a person in the box, and, having been
+accustomed to hear and see partial riots in the pit, I paid no attention;
+never dreaming that my poor hat and feathers, and cloak, were the cause
+of the commotion, till an officer in the national guard very politely
+knocked at the door of the box, and told me I must either take them off
+or leave the theatre.
+
+There is nothing I more dislike than the being thought particular, or
+disposed to attract attention by dress. The moment, therefore, I found
+myself thus unintentionally the object of a whole theatre's disturbance,
+in the first impulse of indignation, I impetuously caught off the cloak
+and hat, and flung them into the pit, at the very faces of the rioters.
+
+The theatre instantly rang with applause. The obnoxious articles were
+carefully folded up and taken to the officer of the guard, who, when I
+left the box, at the end of the opera, brought them to me and offered to
+assist me in putting them on; but I refused them with true cavalier-like
+loftiness, and entered my carriage without either hat or cloak.
+
+There were many of the audience collected round the carriage at the time,
+who, witnessing my rejection of the insulted colours, again loudly
+cheered me; but insisted on the officer's placing the hat and cloak in
+the carriage, which drove off amidst the most violent acclamations.
+
+Another day, as I was going to walk in the Tuileries (which I generally
+did after riding on horseback), the guards crossed their bayonets at the
+gate and forbade my entering. I asked them why. They told me no one was
+allowed to walk there without the national ribbon.
+
+Now, I always had one of these national ribbons about me, from the time
+they were first worn; but I kept it in the inside of my riding-habit; and
+on that day, in particular, my supply was unusually ample, for I had on a
+new riding-habit, the petticoat of which was so very long and heavy that
+I bought a large quantity to tie round my waist, and fasten up the dress,
+to prevent it from falling about my feet.
+
+However, I was determined to plague the guards for their impudence. My
+English beau, who was as pale as death, and knew I had the ribbon, kept
+pinching my arm, and whispering, "Show it, show it; zounds, madame, show
+it! We shall be sent to prison! show it! show it! "But I took care to
+keep my interrupters in parley till a sufficient mob was collected, and
+then I produced my colours.
+
+The soldiers were consequently most gloriously hissed, and would have
+been maltreated by the mob, and sent to the guard-house by their officer,
+but for my intercession; on which I was again applauded all through the
+gardens as La Brave Anglaise. But my, beau declared he would never go
+out with me again: unless I wore the ribbon on the outside of my hat,
+which I never did and never would do.
+
+At that time the Queen used to occupy herself much in fancy needle-works.
+Knowing, from arrangements, that I was every day in a certain part of the
+Tuileries, Her Majesty, when she heard the shout of La Brave Anglaise!
+immediately called the Princesse de Lamballe to know if she had sent me
+on any message. Being answered in the negative, one of the pages was
+despatched to ascertain the meaning of the cry. The Royal Family lived
+in so continual a state of alarm that it was apprehended I had got into
+some scrape; but I had left the Tuileries before the messenger arrived,
+and was already with the Princesse de Lamballe, relating the
+circumstances. The Princess told Her Majesty, who graciously observed,
+"I am very happy that she got off so well; but caution her to be more
+prudent for the future. A cause, however bad, is rather aided than
+weakened by unreasonable displays of contempt for it. These unnecessary
+excitements of the popular jealousy do us no good."
+
+I was, of course, severely reprimanded by the Princess for my frolic,
+though she enjoyed it of all things, and afterwards laughed most
+heartily.
+
+The Princess told me, a few days after these circumstances of the
+national ribbon and the Austrian colours had taken place at the theatre,
+that some one belonging to the private correspondence at the palace had
+been at the French opera on the night the disturbance took place there,
+and, without knowing the person to whom it related, had told the whole
+story to the King.
+
+The Queen and the Princesses Elizabeth and de Lamballe being present,
+laughed very heartily. The two latter knew it already from myself, the
+fountain head, but the Princesse Elizabeth said:
+
+"Poor lady! what a fright she must have been in, to have had her things
+taken away from her at the theatre"
+
+"No fright at all," said the King; "for a young woman who could act thus
+firmly under such an insolent outrage will always triumph over cowards,
+unmanly enough to abuse their advantages by insulting her. She was not a
+Frenchwoman, I'll answer for it."
+
+"Oh, no, Sire. She is an Englishwoman," said the Princesse de Lamballe.
+
+"I am glad of it," exclaimed the King; "for when she returns to England
+this will be a good personal specimen for the information of some of her
+countrymen, who have rejoiced at what they call the regeneration of the
+French nation; a nation once considered the most polished in Europe, but
+now become the most uncivil, and I wish I may never have occasion to add,
+the most barbarous! An insult offered, wantonly, to either sex, at any
+time, is the result of insubordination; but when offered to a woman, it
+is a direct violation of civilised hospitality, and an abuse of power
+which never before tarnished that government now so much the topic of
+abuse by the enemies of order and legitimate authority. The French
+Princes, it is true, have been absolute; still I never governed
+despotically, but always by the advice of my counsellors and Cabinet
+Ministers. If they have erred, my conscience is void of reproach. I
+wish the National Assembly may govern for the future with equal prudence,
+equity, and justice; but they have given a poor earnest in pulling down
+one fabric before they have laid the solid foundation of another. I am
+very happy that their agents, who, though they call themselves the
+guardians of public order have hitherto destroyed its course, have, in
+the courage of this English lady, met with some resistance to their
+insolence, in foolishly occupying themselves with petty matters, while
+those of vital import are totally neglected."
+
+It is almost superfluous to mention that, at the epoch of which I am
+speaking in the Revolution, the Royal Family were in so much distrust of
+every one about them, and very necessarily and justly so, that none were
+ever confided in for affairs, however trifling, without first having
+their fidelity repeatedly put to the test. I was myself under this
+probation long before I knew that such had ever been imposed.
+
+With the private correspondence I had already been for some time
+entrusted; and it was only previous to employing me on secret missions of
+any consequence that I was subject to the severer scrutiny. Even before
+I was sent abroad, great art was necessary to elude the vigilance of
+prying eyes in the royal circle; and, in order to render my activity
+available to important purposes, my connection with the Court was long
+kept secret. Many stratagems were devised to mislead the Arguses of the
+police. To this end, after the disorders of the Revolution began, I
+never entered the palaces but on an understood signal, for which I have
+been often obliged to attend many hours in the gardens of Versailles, as
+I had subsequently done in that of the Tuileries.
+
+To pass the time unnoticed, I used generally to take a book, and seat
+myself, occupied in reading, sometimes in one spot, sometimes in another;
+but with my man and maid servant always within call, though never where
+they could be seen.
+
+On one of these occasions, a person, though not totally masked yet
+sufficiently disguised to prevent my recognising his features, came
+behind my seat, and said he wished to speak to me. I turned round and
+asked his business.
+
+"That's coming to the point!" he answered. "Walk a little way with me,
+and I will tell you."
+
+Not to excite suspicion, I walked into a more retired part of the garden,
+after a secret signal to my man servant, who followed me unperceived by
+the stranger.
+
+"I am commissioned," said my mysterious companion, "to make you a very
+handsome present, if you will tell me what you are waiting for."
+
+I laughed, and was turning from him, saying, "Is this all your business?"
+
+"No," he replied.
+
+"Then keep it to yourself. I am not waiting here for any one or
+anything; but am merely occupied in reading and killing time to the best
+advantage."
+
+"Are you a poetess?"
+
+"No."
+
+"And scarcely a woman; for your answers are very short."
+
+"Very likely."
+
+"But I have something of importance to communicate-----"
+
+"That is impossible."
+
+"But listen to me-----"
+
+"You are mistaken in your person."
+
+"But surely you will not be so unreasonable as not to hear what I have to
+say?"
+
+"I am a stranger in this country, and can have nothing of importance with
+one I do not know."
+
+"You have quarrelled with your lover and are in an ill-humour.
+
+"Perhaps so. Well! come! I believe you have guessed the cause."
+
+"Ah! it is the fate of us all to get into scrapes! But you will soon
+make it up; and now let me entreat your attention to what I have to
+offer."
+
+I became impatient, and called my servant.
+
+"Madame," resumed the stranger, "I am a gentleman, and mean no harm. But
+I assure you, you stand in your own light. I know more about you than
+you think I do."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+"Yes, madame, you are waiting here for an august personage."
+
+At this last sentence, my lips laughed, while my heart trembled.
+
+"I wish to caution you," continued he, "how you embark in plans of this
+sort."
+
+"Monsieur, I repeat, you have taken me for some other person. I will no
+longer listen to one who is either a maniac or an officious intruder."
+
+Upon this, the stranger bowed and left me; but I could perceive that he
+was not displeased with my answers, though I was not a little agitated,
+and longed to see Her Highness to relate to her this curious adventure.
+
+In a few hours I did so. The Princess was perfectly satisfied with my
+manner of proceeding, only she thought it singular, she said, that the
+stranger should suspect I was there in attendance for some person of
+rank; and she repeated, three or four times, "I am heartily glad that you
+did not commit yourself by any decided answer. What sort of a man was
+he?"
+
+"Very much of the gentleman; above the middle stature; and, from what I
+could see of his countenance, rather handsome than otherwise."
+
+"Was he a Frenchman?"
+
+"No. I think he spoke good French and English, with an Irish accent."
+
+"Then I know who it is," exclaimed she. "It is Dillon: I know it from
+some doubts which arose between Her Majesty, Dillon, and myself,
+respecting sending you upon a confidential mission. Oh, come hither!
+come hither!" continued Her Highness, overwhelming me with kisses. "How
+glad, how very glad I am, that the Queen will be convinced I was not
+deceived in what I told Her Majesty respecting you. Take no notice of
+what I am telling you; but he was sent from the Queen, to tempt you into
+some imprudence, or to be convinced, by your not falling into the snare,
+that she might rely on your fidelity."
+
+"What! doubt my fidelity?" said I.
+
+"Oh, my dear, you must excuse Her Majesty. We live in critical times.
+You will be the more rewarded, and much more esteemed, for this proof of
+your firmness. Do you think you should know him, if you were to see him
+again?"
+
+"Certainly, I should, if he were in the same disguise.
+
+"That, I fear, will be rather difficult to accomplish. However, you
+shall go in your carriage and wait at the door of his sister, the
+Marquise of Desmond; where I will send for him to come to me at four
+o'clock to-morrow. In this way, you will have an opportunity of seeing
+him on horseback, as he always pays his morning visits riding."
+
+I would willingly have taken a sleeping draught, and never did I wait
+more anxiously than for the hour of four.
+
+I left the Princess, and, in crossing from the Carrousel to go to the
+Place Vendome, it rained very fast, and there glanced by me, on
+horseback, the same military cloak in which the stranger had been
+wrapped. My carriage was driving so fast that I still remained in doubt
+as to the wearer's person.
+
+Next day, however, as appointed, I repaired to the place of rendezvous;
+and I could almost have sworn, from the height of the person who alighted
+from his horse, that he was my mysterious questioner.
+
+Still, I was not thoroughly certain. I watched the Princess coming out,
+and followed her carriage to the Champs Elysees and told her what I
+thought.
+
+"Well," replied she, "we must think no more about it; nor must it ever be
+mentioned to him, should you by any chance meet him."
+
+I said I should certainly obey Her Highness.
+
+A guilty conscience needs no accuser. A few days after I was riding on
+horseback in the Bois de Boulogne, when Lord Edward Fitzgerald came up to
+speak to me. Dillon was passing at the time, and, seeing Lord Edward,
+stopped, took off his hat, and observed, "A very pleasant day for riding,
+madame!" Then, looking me full in the face, he added, "I beg your
+pardon, madame, I mistook you for another lady with whom Lord Edward is
+often in company."
+
+I said there was no offence; but the moment I heard him speak I was no
+longer in doubt of his being the identical person.
+
+When I had learnt the ciphering and deciphering, and was to be sent to
+Italy, the Queen acknowledged to the Princesse de Lamballe that she was
+fully persuaded I might be trusted, as she had good reason to know that
+my fidelity was not to be doubted or shaken.
+
+Dear, hapless Princess! She said to me, in one of her confidential
+conversations on these matters, "The Queen has been so cruelly deceived
+and so much watched that she almost fears her own shadow; but it gives me
+great pleasure that Her Majesty had been herself confirmed by one of her
+own emissaries in what I never for a moment doubted.
+
+"But do not fancy," continued the Princess, laughing, "that you have had
+only this spy to encounter. Many others have watched your motions and
+your conversations, and all concur in saying you are the devil, and they
+could make nothing of you. But that, 'mia cara piccola diavolina', is
+just what we want!"
+
+
+
+SECTION VIII.
+
+Editor in continuation.
+
+I am compelled, with reluctance, to continue personally upon the stage,
+and must do so for the three ensuing chapters, in order to put my readers
+in possession of circumstances explanatory of the next portion of the
+Journal of the Princesse de Lamballe.
+
+Even the particulars I am about to mention can give but a very faint idea
+of the state of alarm in which the Royal Family lived, and the perpetual
+watchfulness and strange and involved expedients that were found
+necessary for their protection. Their most trifling communications were
+scrutinized with so much jealousy that when any of importance were to be
+made it required a dexterity almost miraculous to screen them from the
+ever-watchful eye of espionage.
+
+I was often made instrumental in evading the curiosity of others, without
+ever receiving any clue to the gratification of my own, even had I been
+troubled with such impertinence. The anecdote I am about to mention will
+show how cautious a game it was thought necessary to play; and the result
+of my half-information will evince that over-caution may produce evils
+almost equal to total carelessness.
+
+Some time previous to the flight of the Royal Family from Paris, the
+Princesse de Lamballe told me she wanted some repairs made to the locks
+of certain dressing and writing-desks; but she would prefer having them
+done at my apartments, and by a locksmith who lived at a distance from
+the palace.
+
+When the boxes were repaired, I was sent with one of them to Lisle, where
+another person took charge of it for the Archduchess at Brussels.
+
+There was something which strongly marked the kind-heartedness of the
+Princesse de Lamballe in a part of this transaction. I had left Paris
+without a passport, and Her Highness, fearing it might expose me to
+inconvenience, sent an express after me. The express arrived three hours
+before I did, and the person to whom I have alluded came out of Brussels
+in his carriage to meet me and receive the box. At the same time, he
+gave me a sealed letter, without any address. I asked him from whom he
+received it, and to whom it was to be delivered. He said he was only
+instructed to deliver it to the lady with the box, and he showed me the
+Queen's cipher. I took the letter, and, after partaking of some
+refreshments, returned with it, according to my orders.
+
+On my arrival at Paris, the Princesse de Lamballe told me her motive for
+sending the express, who, she said, informed her, on his return, that I
+had a letter for the Queen. I said it was more than I knew. "Oh, I
+suppose that is because the letter bears no address," replied she; "but
+you were shown the cipher, and that is all which is necessary."
+
+She did not take the letter, and I could not help remarking how far, in
+this instance, the rigour of etiquette was kept up, even between these
+close friends. The Princess, not having herself received the letter,
+could not take it from my hands to deliver without Her Majesty's express
+command. This being obtained, she asked me for it, and gave it to Her
+Majesty. The circumstance convinced me that the Princess exercised much
+less influence over the Queen, and was much more directed by Her
+Majesty's authority, than has been imagined.
+
+Two or three days after my arrival at Paris, my servant lost the key of
+my writing-desk, and, to remedy the evil, he brought me the same
+locksmith I had employed on the repairs just mentioned. As it was
+necessary I should be present to remove my papers when the lock was taken
+off, of course I saw the man. While I was busy clearing the desk, with
+an air of great familiarity he said, "I have had jobs to do here before
+now, my girl, as your sweetheart there well knows."
+
+I humoured his mistake in taking me for my own maid and my servant's
+sweetheart, and I pertly answered, "Very likely."
+
+"Oh, yes, I have," said he; "it was I who repaired the Queen's boxes in
+this very room."
+
+Knowing I had never received anything of the sort from Her Majesty, and
+utterly unaware that the boxes the Princess sent to my apartments had
+been the Queen's, I was greatly surprised. Seeing my confusion, he said,
+"I know the boxes as well as I know myself. I am the King's locksmith,
+my dear, and I and the King worked together many years. Why, I know
+every creek and corner of the palace, aye, and I know everything that's
+going on in them, too--queer doings! Lord, my pretty damsel, I made a
+secret place in the palace to hide the King's papers, where the devil
+himself would never find them out, if I or the King didn't tell!"
+
+Though I wished him at the devil every moment he detained me from
+disclosing his information at the palace, yet I played off the soubrette
+upon him till he became so interested I thought he never would have gone.
+At last, however, he took his departure, and the moment he disappeared,
+out of the house I flew.
+
+The agitation and surprise of the Princess at what I related were
+extreme. "Wait," cried she; "I must go and inform the Queen instantly."
+In going out of the room, "Great God, what a discovery!" exclaimed Her
+Highness.
+
+It was not long before she returned. Luckily, I was dressed for dinner.
+She took me by the hand and, unable to speak, led me to the private
+closet of the Queen.
+
+Her Majesty graciously condescended to thank me for the letter I had
+taken charge of. She told me that for the future all letters to her
+would be without any superscription; and desired me, if any should be
+given to me by persons I had not before seen, and the cipher were shown
+at the same time, to receive and deliver them myself into her hands, as
+the production of the cipher would be a sufficient pledge of their
+authenticity.
+
+Being desired to repeat the conversation with Gamin, "There, Princess!"
+exclaimed Her Majesty, "Am I not the crow of evil forebodings? I trust
+the King will never again be credulous enough to employ this man. I have
+long had an extreme aversion to His Majesty's familiarity with him; but
+he shall hear his impudence himself from your own lips, my good little
+Englishwoman; and then he will not think it is prepossession or
+prejudice."
+
+A few evenings elapsed, and I thought no more of the subject, till one
+night I was ordered to the palace by the Princess, which never happened
+but on very particular occasions, as she was fearful of exciting
+suspicion by any appearance of close intimacy with one so much about
+Paris upon the secret embassies of the Court.
+
+When I entered the apartment, the King, the Queen, and the Princesse
+Elizabeth were, as if by accident, in an adjoining room; but, from what
+followed, I am certain they all came purposely to hear my deposition.
+I was presently commanded to present myself to the august party.
+
+The King was in deep conversation with the Princesse Elizabeth. I must
+confess I felt rather embarrassed. I could not form an idea why I was
+thus honoured. The Princesse de Lamballe graciously took me by the hand.
+
+"Now tell His Majesty, yourself, what Gamin said to you."
+
+I began to revive, perceiving now wherefore I was summoned. I accordingly
+related, in the presence of the royal guests assembled, as I had done
+before Her Majesty and the Princesse de Lamballe, the scene as it
+occurred.
+
+When I came to that part where he said, "where the devil himself could
+never find them out," His Majesty approached from the balcony, at which
+he had been talking with the Princesse Elizabeth, and said, "Well! he is
+very right--but neither he nor the devil shall find them out, for they
+shall be removed this very night."
+
+ [Which was done; and these are, therefore, no doubt, the papers and
+ portfolio of which Madame Campan speaks, vol. ii., p. 142, as
+ having been entrusted to her care after being taken from their
+ hiding-place by the King himself.]
+
+The King, the Queen, and the Princesse Elizabeth most graciously said,
+"Nous sommes bien obligis, ma petite anglaise!" and Her Majesty added,
+"Now, my dear, tell me all the rest about this man, whom I have long
+suspected for his wickedness."
+
+I said he had been guilty of no hostile indications, and that the chief
+fault I had to find with him was his exceeding familiarity in mentioning
+himself before the King, saying, "I and the King."
+
+"Go on," said Her Majesty; "give us the whole as it occurred, and let us
+form our own conclusions."
+
+"Yes," cried the Princess, "parlate sciolto."--"Si Si," rejoined the
+Queen, "parlate tutto--yes, yes, speak out and tell us all."
+
+I then related the remainder of the conversation, which very much alarmed
+the royal party, and it was agreed that, to avoid suspicion, I should
+next day send for the locksmith and desire him, as an excuse, to look at
+the locks of my trunks and travelling carriage, and set off in his
+presence to take up my pretended mistress on the road to Calais, that he
+might not suspect I had any connection with any one about the Court.
+I was strictly enjoined by Her Majesty to tell him that the man servant
+had had the boxes from some one to get them repaired, without either my
+knowledge or that of my mistress, and, by her pretended orders, to give
+him a discharge upon the spot for having dared to use her apartments as a
+workshop for the business of other people.
+
+"Now," said the Princesse de Lamballe, "now play the comic part you acted
+between your servant and Gamin:" which I did, as well as I could
+recollect it, and the royal audience were so much amused, that I had the
+honour to remain in the room and see them play at cards. At length,
+however, there came three gentle taps at the outer door. "Ora a tempo
+perche vene andata," exclaimed Her Highness at the sound, having ordered
+a person to call with this signal to see me out of the palace to the Rue
+Nicaise, where my carriage was in waiting to conduct me home.
+
+It is not possible for me to describe the gracious condescension of the
+Queen and the Princesse Elizabeth, in expressing their sentiments for the
+accidental discovery I had made. Amid their assurances of tender
+interest and concern, they both reproved me mildly for my imprudence in
+having, when I went to Brussels, hurried from Paris without my passport.
+They gave me prudential cautions with regard to my future conduct and
+residence at Paris; and it was principally owing to the united
+persuasions and remonstrances of these three angels in human form that I
+took six or seven different lodgings, where the Princesse de Lamballe
+used to meet me by turns; because had I gone often to the palace, as many
+others did, or waited for Her Highness regularly in any one spot,
+I should, infallibly, have been discovered.
+
+"Gracious God!" exclaimed Her Majesty in the course of this
+conversation, "am I born to be the misfortune of every one who shows an
+interest in serving me? Tell my sister, when you return to Brussels
+again--and do not forget to say I desired you to tell her--our cruel
+situation! She does not believe that we are surrounded by enemies, even
+in our most private seclusions! in our prison! that we are even thrown
+exclusively upon foreigners in our most confidential affairs; that in
+France there is scarcely an individual to whom we can look! They betray
+us for their own safety, which is endangered by any exertions in our
+favour. Tell her this," repeated the Queen three or four times.
+
+The next day I punctually obeyed my orders. Gamin was sent for to look
+at the locks, and received six francs for his opinion. The man servant
+was reproved by me on behalf of my supposed mistress, and, in the
+presence of Gamin, discharged for having brought suspicious things into
+the house.
+
+The man being tutored in his part, begged Gamin to plead for my
+intercession with our mistress. I remained inexorable, as he knew I
+should. While Gamin was still by I discharged the bill at the house, got
+into my carriage, and took the road towards Calais.
+
+At Saint Denis, however, I feigned to be taken ill, and in two days
+returned to Paris.
+
+Even this simple act required management. I contrived it in the
+following manner. I walked out on the high road leading to the capital
+for the purpose of meeting my servant at a place which had been fixed for
+the meeting before I left Paris. I found him on horseback at his post,
+with a carriage prepared for my return. As soon as I was out of sight he
+made the best of his way forward, went to the inn with a note from me,
+and returned with my carriage and baggage I had to lodgings at Passy.
+
+The joy of the Princess on seeing me safe again brought tears into her
+eyes; and, when I related the scene I played off before Gamin against my
+servant, she laughed most heavily. "But surely," said she, "you have not
+really discharged the poor man?"--"Oh, no," replied I; "he acted his part
+so well before the locksmith, that I should be very sorry to lose such an
+apt scholar."
+
+"You must perform this 'buffa scena'," observed Her Highness, "to the
+Queen. She has been very anxious to know the result; but her spirits are
+so depressed that I fear she will not come to my party this evening.
+However, if she do not, I will see her to-morrow, and you shall make her
+laugh. It would be a charity, for she has not done so from the heart for
+many a day!"
+
+
+
+
+SECTION IX.
+
+Editor in continuation:
+
+Every one who has read at all is familiar with the immortal panegyric of
+the great Edmund Burke upon Marie Antoinette. It is known that this
+illustrious man was not mean enough to flatter; yet his eloquent praises
+of her as a Princess, a woman, and a beauty, inspiring something beyond
+what any other woman could excite, have been called flattery by those who
+never knew her; those who did, must feel them to be, if possible, even
+below the truth. But the admiration of Mr. Burke was set down even to a
+baser motive, and, like everything else, converted into a source of
+slander for political purposes, long before that worthy palladium of
+British liberty had even thought of interesting himself for the welfare
+of France, which his prophetic eye saw plainly was the common cause of
+all Europe.
+
+But, keenly as that great statesman looked into futurity, little did he
+think, when he visited the Queen in all her splendour at Trianon, and
+spoke so warmly of the cordial reception he had met with at Versailles
+from the Duc and Duchesse de Polignac, that he should have so soon to
+deplore their tragic fate!
+
+Could his suggestions to Her Majesty, when he was in France, have been
+put in force, there is scarcely a doubt that the Revolution might have
+been averted, or crushed. But he did not limit his friendship to
+personal advice. It is not generally known that the Queen carried on,
+through the medium of the Princesse de Lamballe, a very extensive
+correspondence with Mr. Burke. He recommended wise and vast plans; and
+these, if possible, would have been adopted. The substance of some of
+the leading ones I can recall from the journal of Her Highness and
+letters which I have myself frequently deciphered. I shall endeavour,
+succinctly, to detail such of them as I remember.
+
+Mr. Burke recommended the suppression of all superfluous religious
+institutions, which had not public seminaries to support. Their lands,
+he advised, should be divided, without regard to any distinction but that
+of merit, among such members of the army and other useful classes of
+society, as, after having served the specified time, should have risen,
+through their good conduct, to either civil or military preferment. By
+calculations upon the landed interest, it appeared that every individual
+under the operation of this bounty would, in the course of twenty years,
+possess a yearly income of from five to seven hundred francs.
+
+Another of the schemes suggested by Mr. Burke was to purge the kingdom of
+all the troops which had been corrupted from their allegiance by the
+intrigues growing out of the first meeting of the Notables. He proposed
+that they should sail at the same time, or nearly so, to be colonized in
+the different French islands and Madagascar; and, in their place, a new
+national guard created, who should be bound to the interest of the
+legitimate Government by receiving the waste crown lands to be shared
+among them, from the common soldier to its generals and Field-marshals.
+Thus would the whole mass of rebellious blood have been reformed. To
+ensure an effectual change, Mr. Burke advised the enrolment, in rotation,
+of sixty thousand Irish troops, twenty thousand always to remain in
+France, and forty thousand in reversion for the same service. The lynx-
+eyed statesman saw clearly, from the murders of the Marquis de Launay and
+M. Flesselles, and from the destruction of the Bastille, and of the
+ramparts of Paris, that party had not armed itself against Louis, but
+against the throne. It was therefore necessary to produce a permanent
+revolution in the army.
+
+ [Mr. Burke was too great a statesman not to be the friend of his
+ country's interest. He also saw that, from the destruction of the
+ monarchy in France, England had more to fear than to gain. He well
+ knew that the French Revolution was not, like that of the Americans,
+ founded on grievances and urged in support of a great and
+ disinterested principle. He was aware that so restless a people,
+ when they had overthrown the monarchy, would not limit the overthrow
+ to their own country. After Mr. Burke's death, Mr. Fox was applied
+ to, and was decidedly of the same opinion. Mr. Sheridan was
+ interrogated, and, at the request of the Princesse de Lamballe, he
+ presented, for the Queen's inspection, plans nearly equal to those
+ of the above two great statesmen; and what is most singular and
+ scarcely credible is that one and all of the opposition party in
+ England strenuously exerted themselves for the upholding of the
+ monarchy in France. Many circumstances which came to my knowledge
+ before and after the death of Louis XVI. prove that Mr. Pitt himself
+ was averse to the republican principles being organized so near a
+ constitutional monarchy as France was to Great Britain. Though the
+ conduct of the Duc d'Orleans was generally reprobated, I firmly
+ believe that if he had possessed sufficient courage to have usurped
+ the crown and re-established the monarchy, he would have been
+ treated with in preference to the republicans. I am the more
+ confirmed in this opinion by a conversation between the Princesse de
+ Lamballe and Mirabeau, in which he said a republic in France would
+ never thrive.]
+
+There was another suggestion to secure troops around the throne of a more
+loyal temper. It was planned to incorporate all the French soldiers, who
+had not voluntarily deserted the royal standard, with two-thirds of
+Swiss, German, and Low Country forces, among whom were to be divided,
+after ten years' service, certain portions of the crown lands, which were
+to be held by presenting every year a flag of acknowledgment to the King
+and Queen; with the preference of serving in the civil or military
+departments, according to the merit or capacity of the respective
+individuals. Messieurs de Broglie, de Bouille, de Luxembourg, and
+others, were to have been commanders. But this plan, like many others,
+was foiled in its birth, and, it is said, through the intrigues of
+Mirabeau.
+
+However, all concurred in the necessity of ridding France, upon the most
+plausible pretexts, of the fomenters of its ruin. Now arose a fresh
+difficulty. Transports were wanted, and in considerable numbers.
+
+A navy agent in England was applied to for the supply of these
+transports. So great was the number required, and so peculiar the
+circumstances, that the agent declined interfering without the sanction
+of his Government.
+
+A new dilemma succeeded. Might not the King of England place improper
+constructions on this extensive shipment of troops from the different
+ports of France for her West India possessions? Might it not be fancied
+that it involved secret designs on the British settlements in that
+quarter?
+
+All these circumstances required that some communication should be opened
+with the Court of St. James; and the critical posture of affairs exacted
+that such communication should be less diplomatic than confidential.
+
+It will be recollected that, at the very commencement of the reign of
+Louis XVI., there were troubles in Britanny, which the severe
+governorship of the Duc d'Aiguillon augmented. The Bretons took
+privileges with them, when they became blended with the kingdom of
+France, by the marriage of Anne of Brittany with Charles VIII., beyond
+those of any other of its provinces. These privileges they seemed rather
+disposed to extend than relinquish, and were by no means reserved in the
+expression of their resolution. It was considered expedient to place a
+firm, but conciliatory, Governor over them, and the Duc de Penthievre was
+appointed to this difficult trust. The Duke was accompanied to his vice-
+royalty by his daughter-in-law, the Princesse de Lamballe, who, by her
+extremely judicious management of the female part of the province, did
+more for the restoration of order than could have been achieved by
+armies. The remembrance of this circumstance induced the Queen to regard
+Her Highness as a fit person to send secretly to England at this very
+important crisis; and the purpose was greatly encouraged by a wish to
+remove her from a scene of such daily increasing peril.
+
+For privacy, it was deemed expedient that Her Highness should withdraw to
+Aumale, under the plea of ill-health, and thence proceed to England; and
+it was also by way of Aumale that she as secretly returned, after the
+fatal disaster of the stoppage, to discourage the impression of her ever
+having been out of France.
+
+The mission was even unknown to the French Minister at the Court of St.
+James.
+
+The Princess was ordered by Her Majesty to cultivate the acquaintance of
+the late Duchess of Gordon, who was supposed to possess more influence
+than any woman in England--in order to learn the sentiments of Mr. Pitt
+relative to the revolutionary troubles. The Duchess, however, was too
+much of an Englishwoman, and Mr. Pitt too much interested in the ruin of
+France, to give her the least clue to the truth.
+
+In order to fathom the sentiments of the opposition party, the Princess
+cultivated the society also of the late Duchess of Devonshire, but with
+as little success. The opposition party foresaw too much risk in
+bringing anything before the house to alarm the prejudices of the nation.
+
+The French Ambassador, too, jealous of the unexplained purpose of the
+Princess, did all he could to render her expedition fruitless.
+
+Nevertheless, though disappointed in some of her main objects with regard
+to influence and information, she became so great a favourite at the
+British Court that she obtained full permission of the King and Queen of
+England to signify to her royal mistress and friend that the specific
+request she came to make would be complied with.
+
+ [The Princess visited Bath, Windsor, Brighton, and many other parts
+ of England, and associated with all parties. She managed her
+ conduct so judiciously that the real object of her visit was never
+ suspected. In all these excursions I had the honour to attend her
+ confidentially. I was the only person entrusted with papers from
+ Her Highness to Her Majesty. I had many things to copy, of which
+ the originals went to France. Twice during the term of Her
+ Highness's residence in England I was sent by Her Majesty with
+ papers communicating the result of the secret mission to the Queen
+ of Naples. On the second of these two trips, being obliged to
+ travel night and day, I could only keep my eyes open by means of the
+ strongest coffee. When I reached my destination I was immediately
+ compelled to decipher the despatches with the Queen of Naples in the
+ office of the Secretary of State. That done, General Acton ordered
+ some one, I know not whom, to conduct me, I know not where, but it
+ was to a place where, after a sound sleep of twenty-four hours, I
+ awoke thoroughly refreshed, and without a vestige of fatigue either
+ of mind or body. On waking, lest anything should transpire, I was
+ desired to quit Naples instantly, without seeing the British
+ Minister. To make assurance doubly sure, General Acton sent a
+ person from his office to accompany me out of the city on horseback;
+ and, to screen me from the attack of robbers, this person went on
+ with me as far as the Roman frontier.]
+
+
+In the meantime, however, the troubles in France were so rapidly
+increasing from hour to hour, that it became impossible for the
+Government to carry any of their plans into effect. This particular one,
+on the very eve of its accomplishment, was marred, as it was imagined,
+by the secret intervention of the friends of Mirabeau. The Government
+became more and more infirm and wavering in its purposes; the Princess
+was left without instructions, and under such circumstances as to expose
+her to the supposition of having trifled with the good-will of Their
+Majesties of England.
+
+In this dilemma I was sent off from England to the Queen of France.
+I left Her Highness at Bath, but when I returned she had quitted Bath for
+Brighton. I am unacquainted with the nature of all the papers she
+received, but I well remember the agony they seemed to inflict on her.
+She sent off a packet by express that very night to Windsor.
+
+The Princess immediately began the preparations for her return. Her own
+journal is explicit on this point of her history, and therefore I shall
+leave her to speak for herself. I must not, however, omit to mention the
+remark she made to me upon the subject of her reception in Great Britain.
+With these, let me dismiss the present chapter.
+
+"The general cordiality with which I have been received in your country,"
+said Her Highness, "has made a lasting impression upon my heart.
+In particular, never shall I forget the kindness of the Queen of England,
+the Duchess of Devonshire, and her truly virtuous mother, Lady Spencer.
+It gave me a cruel pang to be obliged to undervalue the obligations with
+which they overwhelmed me by leaving England as I did, without giving
+them an opportunity of carrying their good intentions, which, I had
+myself solicited, into effect. But we cannot command fate. Now that the
+King has determined to accept the Constitution (and you know my
+sentiments upon the article respecting ecclesiastics), I conceive it my
+duty to follow Their Majesties' example in submitting to the laws of the
+nation. Be assured, 'Inglesina', it will be my ambition to bring about
+one of the happiest ages of French history. I shall endeavour to create
+that confidence so necessary for the restoration to their native land of
+the Princes of the blood, and all the emigrants who abandoned the King,
+their families, and their country, while doubtful whether His Majesty
+would or would not concede this new charter; but now that the doubt
+exists no longer, I trust we shall all meet again, the happier for the
+privation to which we have been doomed from absence. As the limitation
+of the monarchy removes every kind of responsibility from the monarch,
+the Queen will again taste the blissful sweets she once enjoyed during
+the reign of Louis XV. in the domestic tranquillity of her home at
+Trianon. Often has she wept those times in which she will again rejoice.
+Oh, how I long for their return! I fly to greet the coming period of
+future happiness to us all!"
+
+
+POSTSCRIPT:
+
+Although I am not making myself the historian of France, yet it may not
+be amiss to mention that it was during this absence of Her Highness that
+Necker finally retired from power and from France.
+
+The return of this Minister had been very much against the consent of Her
+Majesty and the King. They both feared what actually happened soon
+afterwards. They foresaw that he would be swept away by the current of
+popularity from his deference to the royal authority. It was to preserve
+the favour of the mob that he allowed them to commit the shocking murders
+of M. de Foulon (who had succeeded him on his first dismission as
+Minister of Louis XVI.) and of Berthier, his son-in-law. The union of
+Necker with D'ORLEANS, on this occasion, added to the cold indifference
+with which Barnave in one of his speeches expressed himself concerning
+the shedding of human blood, certainly animated the factious assassins to
+methodical murder, and frustrated all the efforts of La Fayette to save
+these victims from the enraged populace, to whom both unfortunately fell
+a sacrifice.
+
+Necker, like La Fayette, when too late, felt the absurdity of relying
+upon the idolatry of the populace. The one fancied he could command the
+Parisian 'poissardes' as easily as his own battalions; and the other
+persuaded himself that the mob, which had been hired to carry about his
+bust, would as readily promulgate his theories.
+
+But he forgot that the people in their greatest independence are only the
+puppets of demagogues; and he lost himself by not gaining over that class
+which, of all others, possesses most power over the million, I mean the
+men of the bar, who, arguing more logically than the rest of the world,
+felt that from the new Constitution the long robe was playing a losing
+game, and therefore discouraged a system which offered nothing to their
+personal ambition or private emolument. Lawyers, like priests, are never
+over-ripe for any changes or innovations, except such as tend to their
+personal interest. The more perplexed the, state of public and private
+affairs, the better for them. Therefore, in revolutions, as a body, they
+remain neuter, unless it is made for their benefit to act. Individually,
+they are a set of necessary evils; and, for the sake of the bar, the
+bench, and the gibbet, require to be humoured. But any legislator who
+attempts to render laws clear, concise, and explanatory, and to divest
+them of the quibbles whereby these expounders--or confounders--of codes
+fatten on the credulity of States and the miseries of unfortunate
+millions, will necessarily encounter opposition, direct or indirect, in
+every measure at all likely to reduce the influence of this most
+abominable horde of human depredators. It was Necker's error to have
+gone so directly to the point with the lawyers that they at once saw his
+scope; and thus he himself defeated his hopes of their support, the want
+of which utterly baffled all his speculations.
+
+ [The great Frederick of Prussia, on being told of the numbers of
+ lawyers there were in England, said he wished he had them in his
+ country. "Why?" some one enquired. "To do the greatest benefit in
+ my power to society."--"How so?"--"Why to hang one-half as an
+ example to the other!"]
+
+When Necker undertook to re-establish the finances, and to reform
+generally the abuses in the Government, he was the most popular Minister
+(Lord Chatham, when the great Pitt, excepted) in Europe. Yet his errors
+were innumerable, though possessing such sound knowledge and judgment,
+such a superabundance of political contrivance, diplomatic coolness, and
+mathematical calculation, the result of deep thought aided by great
+practical experience.
+
+But how futile he made all these appear when he declared the national
+bankruptcy. Could anything be more absurd than the assumption, by the
+individual, of a personal instead of a national guarantee of part of a
+national debt?--an undertaking too hazardous and by far too ambiguous,
+even for a monarch who is not backed by his kingdom--flow doubly frantic,
+then, for a subject! Necker imagined that the above declaration and his
+own Quixotic generosity would have opened the coffers of the great body
+of rich proprietors, and brought them forward to aid the national crisis.
+But he was mistaken. The nation then had no interest in his financial
+system. The effect it produced was the very reverse of what was
+expected. Every proprietor began to fear the ambition of the Minister,
+who undertook impossibilities. The being bound for the debts of an
+individual, and justifying bail in a court of law in commercial matters,
+affords no criterion for judging of, or regulating, the pecuniary
+difficulties of a nation. Necker's conduct in this case was, in my
+humble opinion, as impolitic as that of a man who, after telling his
+friends that he is ruined past redemption, asks for a loan of money.
+The conclusion is, if he obtains the loan, that "the fool and his money
+are soon parted."
+
+It was during the same interval of Her Highness's stay in England, that
+the discontent ran so high between the people and the clergy.
+
+I have frequently heard the Princesse de Lamballe ascribe the King's not
+sanctioning the decrees against the clergy to the influence of his aunt,
+the Carmelite nun, Madame Louise. During the life of her father, Louis
+XV., she nearly engrossed all the Church benefices by her intrigues. She
+had her regular conclaves of all orders of the Church. From the Bishop
+to the sexton, all depended on her for preferment; and, till the
+Revolution, she maintained equal power over the mind of Louis XVI. upon
+similar matters. The Queen would often express her disapprobation; but
+the King was so scrupulous, whenever the discussion fell on the topic of
+religion, that she made it a point not to contrast her opinion with his,
+from a conviction that she was unequal to cope with him on that head,
+upon which he was generally very animated.
+
+It is perfectly certain that the French clergy, by refusing to contribute
+to the exigencies of the State, created some of the primary horrors of
+the Revolution. They enjoyed one-third the national revenues, yet they
+were the first to withhold their assistance from the national wants.
+I have heard the Princesse de Lamballe say, "The Princesse Elizabeth and
+myself used our utmost exertion to induce some of the higher orders of
+the clergy to set the example and obtain for themselves the credit of
+offering up a part of the revenues, the whole of which we knew must be
+forfeited if they continued obstinate; but it was impossible to move
+them."
+
+The characters of some of the leading dignitaries of the time
+sufficiently explain their selfish and pernicious conduct; when churchmen
+trifle with the altar, be their motives what they may, they destroy the
+faith they possess, and give examples to the flock entrusted to their
+care, of which no foresight can measure the baleful consequences. Who
+that is false to his God can be expected to remain faithful to his
+Sovereign? When a man, as a Catholic Bishop, marries, and, under the
+mask of patriotism, becomes the declared tool of all work to every
+faction, and is the weathercock, shifting to any quarter according to the
+wind,--such a man can be of no real service to any party: and yet has a
+man of this kind been by turns the primum mobile of them all, even to the
+present times, and was one of those great Church fomenters of the
+troubles of which we speak, who disgraced the virtuous reign of Louis
+XVI.
+
+
+
+
+SECTION X.
+
+Amidst the perplexities of the Royal Family it was perfectly unavoidable
+that repeated proposals should have been made at various times for them
+to escape these dangers by flight. The Queen had been frequently and
+most earnestly entreated to withdraw alone; and the King, the Princesse
+Elizabeth, the Princesse de Lamballe, the royal children, with their
+little hands uplifted, and all those attached to Marie Antoinette, after
+the horrid business at Versailles, united to supplicate her to quit
+France and shelter herself from the peril hanging over her existence.
+Often and often have I heard the Princesse de Lamballe repeat the words
+in which Her Majesty uniformly rejected the proposition. "I have no
+wish," cried the Queen, "for myself. My life or death must be encircled
+by the arms of my husband and my family. With them, and with them only,
+will I live or die."
+
+It would have been impossible to have persuaded her to leave France
+without her children. If any woman on earth could have been justified in
+so doing, it would have been Marie Antoinette. But she was above such
+unnatural selfishness, though she had so many examples to encourage her;
+for, even amongst the members of her own family, self-preservation had
+been considered paramount to every other consideration.
+
+I have heard the Princess say that Pope Pius VI. was the only one of all
+the Sovereigns who offered the slightest condolence or assistance to
+Louis XVI. and his family. "The Pope's letter," added she, "when shown
+to me by the Queen, drew tears from my eyes. It really was in a style of
+such Christian tenderness and princely feeling as could only be dictated
+by a pious and illuminated head of the Christian Church. He implored not
+only all the family of Louis XVI., but even extended his entreaties to me
+[the Princesse de Lamballe] to leave Paris, and save themselves, by
+taking refuge in his dominions, from the horrors which so cruelly
+overwhelmed them. The King's aunts were the only ones who profited by
+the invitation. Madame Elizabeth was to have been of the party, but
+could not be persuaded to leave the King and Queen."
+
+As the clouds grew more threatening, it is scarcely to be credited how
+many persons interested themselves for the same purpose, and what
+numberless schemes were devised to break the fetters which had been
+imposed on the Royal Family, by their jailers, the Assembly.
+
+A party, unknown to the King and Queen, was even forming under the
+direction of the Princesse Elizabeth; but as soon as Their Majesties were
+apprised of it, it was given up as dangerous to the interests of the
+Royal Family, because it thwarted the plans of the Marquis de Bouille.
+Indeed, Her Majesty could never be brought to determine on any plan for
+her own or the King's safety until their royal aunts, the Princesses
+Victoria and Adelaide, had left Paris.
+
+The first attempt to fly was made early in the year 1791, at St. Cloud,
+where the horses had been in preparation nearly a fortnight; but the
+scheme was abandoned in consequence of having been entrusted to too many
+persons. This the Queen acknowledged. She had it often in her power to
+escape alone with her son, but would not consent.
+
+The second attempt was made in the spring of the same year at Paris. The
+guards shut the gates of the Tuileries, and would not allow the King's
+carriage to pass. Even though a large sum of money had been expended to
+form a party to overpower the mutineers, the treacherous mercenaries did
+not appear. The expedition was, of course, obliged to be relinquished.
+
+Many of the royal household were very ill-treated, and some lives
+unfortunately lost.
+
+At last, the deplorable journey did take place. The intention had been
+communicated by Her Majesty to the Princesse de Lamballe before she went
+abroad, and it was agreed that, whenever it was carried into effect, the
+Queen should write to Her Highness from Montmedi, where the two friends
+were once more to have been reunited.
+
+Soon after the departure of the Princess, the arrangements for the fatal
+journey to Varennes were commenced, but with blamable and fatal
+carelessness.
+
+Mirabeau was the first person who advised the King to withdraw; but he
+recommended that it should be alone, or, at most, with the Dauphin only.
+He was of opinion that the overthrow of the Constitution could not be
+achieved while the Royal Family remained in Paris. His first idea was
+that the King should go to the sea-coast, where he would have it in his
+power instantly to escape to England, if the Assembly, through his
+(Mirabeau's), means, did not comply with the royal propositions. Though
+many of the King's advisers were for a distinct and open rejection of the
+Constitution, it was the decided impression of Mirabeau that he ought to
+stoop to conquer, and temporize by an instantaneous acceptance, through
+which he might gain time to put himself in an attitude to make such terms
+as would at once neutralize the act and the faction by which it was
+forced upon him. Others imagined that His Majesty was too conscientious
+to avail himself of any such subterfuge, and that, having once given his
+sanction, he would adhere to it rigidly. This third party of the royal
+counsellors were therefore for a cautious consideration of the document,
+clause by clause, dreading the consequences of an 'ex abrupto' signature
+in binding the Sovereign, not only against his policy, but his will.
+
+In the midst of all these distracting doubts, however, the departure was
+resolved upon. Mirabeau had many interviews with the Count Fersen upon
+the subject. It was his great object to prevent the flight from being
+encumbered. But the King would not be persuaded to separate himself from
+the Queen and the rest of the family, and entrusted the project to too
+many advisers. Had he been guided by Fersen only, he would have
+succeeded.
+
+The natural consequence of a secret being in so many hands was felt in
+the result. Those whom it was most important to keep in ignorance were
+the first on the alert. The weakness of the Queen in insisting upon
+taking a remarkable dressing-case with her, and, to get it away
+unobserved, ordering a facsimile to be made under the pretext of
+intending it as a present to her sister at Brussels, awakened the
+suspicion of a favourite, but false female attendant, then intriguing
+with the aide-de-camp of La Fayette. The rest is easily to be conceived.
+The Assembly were apprised of all the preparations for the departure a
+week or more before it occurred. La Fayette, himself, it is believed,
+knew and encouraged it, that he might have the glory of stopping the
+fugitive himself; but he was overruled by the Assembly.
+
+When the secretary of the Austrian Ambassador came publicly, by
+arrangement, to ask permission of the Queen to take the model of the
+dressing-case in question, the very woman to whom I have alluded was in
+attendance at Her Majesty's toilet. The paramour of the woman was with
+her, watching the motions of the Royal Family on the night they passed
+from their own apartments to those of the Duc de Villequier in order to
+get into the carriage; and by this paramour was La Fayette instantly
+informed of the departure. The traitress discovered that Her Majesty was
+on the eve of setting off by seeing her diamonds packed up. All these
+things were fully known to the Assembly, of which the Queen herself was
+afterwards apprised by the Mayor of Paris.
+
+In the suite of the Count Fersen
+
+ [Alvise de Pisani, the last venetian Ambassador to the King, who was
+ my husband's particular friend, and with whom I was myself long
+ acquainted, and have been ever since to this day, as well as with
+ all his noble family, during my many years' residence at Venice,
+ told me this circumstance while walking with him at his country-seat
+ at Stra, which was subsequently taken from him by Napoleon, and made
+ the Imperial palace of the viceroy, and is now that of the German
+ reigning Prince.]
+
+there was a young Swede who had an intrigue purposely with one of the
+Queen's women, from whom he obtained many important disclosures relative
+to the times. The Swede mentioned this to his patron, who advised Her
+Majesty to discharge a certain number of these women, among whom was the
+one who afterwards proved her betrayer. It was suggested to dismiss a
+number at once, that the guilty person might not suspect the exclusion to
+be levelled against her in particular. Had the Queen allowed herself to
+be directed in this affair by Fersen, the chain of communication would
+have been broken, and the Royal Family would not have been stopped at
+Varennes, but have got clear out of France, many hours before they could
+have been perceived by the Assembly; but Her Majesty never could believe
+that she had anything to fear from the quarter against which she was
+warned.
+
+It is not generally known that a very considerable sum had been given to
+the head recruiting sergeant, Mirabeau, to enlist such of the
+constituents as could be won with gold to be ready with a majority in
+favour of the royal fugitives. But the death of Mirabeau, previous to
+this event, leaves it doubtful how far he distributed the bribes
+conscientiously; indeed, it is rather to be questioned whether he did not
+retain the money, or much of it, in his own hands, since the strongly
+hoped for and dearly paid majority never gave proof of existence, either
+before or after the journey to Varennes. Immense bribes were also given
+to the Mayor of Paris, which proved equally ineffective.
+
+Had Mirabeau lived till the affair of Varennes, it is not impossible that
+his genius might have given a different complexion to the result. He had
+already treated with the Queen and the Princess for a reconciliation; and
+in the apartments of Her Highness had frequent evening, and early
+morning, audiences of the Queen.
+
+It is pretty certain, however, that the recantation of Mirabeau, from
+avowed democracy to aristocracy and royalty, through the medium of
+enriching himself by a 'salva regina', made his friends prepare for him
+that just retribution, which ended in a 'de profundis'. At a period when
+all his vices were called to aid one virtuous action, his thread of
+vicious life was shortened, and he; no doubt, became the victim of his
+insatiable avarice. That he was poisoned is not to be disproved; though
+it was thought necessary to keep it from the knowledge of the people.
+
+I have often heard Her Highness say, "When I reflect on the precautions
+which were taken to keep the interviews with Mirabeau profoundly secret
+that he never conversed but with the King, the Queen, and myself--his
+untimely death must be attributed to his own indiscreet enthusiasm, in
+having confidentially entrusted the success with which he flattered
+himself, from the ascendency he had gained over the Court, to some one
+who betrayed him. His death, so very unexpectedly, and at that crisis,
+made a deep impression on the mind of the Queen. She really believed him
+capable of redressing the monarchy, and he certainly was the only one of
+the turncoat constitutionalists in whom she placed any confidence. Would
+to Heaven that she had had more in Barnave, and that she had listened to
+Dumourier! These I would have trusted more, far more readily than the
+mercenary Mirabeau!"
+
+I now return, once more, to the journal of the Princess.
+
+
+
+
+SECTION XI.
+
+"In the midst of the perplexing debates upon the course most advisable
+with regard to the Constitution after the unfortunate return from
+Varennes, I sent off my little English amanuensis to Paris to bring me,
+through the means of another trusty person I had placed about the Queen,
+the earliest information concerning the situation of affairs. On her
+return she brought me a ring, which Her Majesty had graciously,
+condescended to send me, set with her own hair, which had whitened like
+that of a person of eighty, from the anguish the Varennes affair had
+wrought upon her mind; and bearing the inscription, 'Bleached by sorrow.'
+This ring was accompanied by the following letter:
+
+ "'MY DEAREST FRIEND,--
+
+ "'The King has made up his mind to the acceptance of the
+ Constitution, and it will ere long be proclaimed publicly. A few
+ days ago I was secretly waited upon and closeted in your apartment
+ with many of our faithful friends,--in particular, Alexandre de
+ Lameth, Duport, Barnave, Montmorin, Bertrand de Moleville, et
+ cetera. The two latter opposed the King's Council, the Ministers,
+ and the numerous other advisers of an immediate and unscrutinizing
+ acceptance. They were a small minority, and could not prevail with
+ me to exercise my influence with His Majesty in support of their
+ opinion, when all the rest seemed so confident that a contrary
+ course must re-establish the tranquillity of the nation and our own
+ happiness, weaken the party of the Jacobins against us, and greatly
+ increase that of the nation in our favor.
+
+ "'Your absence obliged me to call Elizabeth to my aid in managing
+ the coming and going of the deputies to and from the Pavilion of
+ Flora, unperceived by the spies of our enemies. She executed her
+ charge so adroitly, that the visitors were not seen by any of the
+ household. Poor Elizabeth! little did I look for such
+ circumspection in one so unacquainted with the intrigues of Court,
+ or the dangers surrounding us, which they would now fain persuade us
+ no longer exist. God grant it may be so! and that I may once more
+ freely embrace and open my heart to the only friend I have nearest
+ to it. But though this is my most ardent wish, yet, my dear,
+ dearest Lamballe, I leave it to yourself to act as your feelings
+ dictate. Many about us profess to see the future as clear as the
+ sun at noon-day. But, I confess, my vision is still dim. I cannot
+ look into events with the security of others--who confound logic
+ with their wishes. The King, Elizabeth, and all of us, are anxious
+ for your return. But it would grieve us sorely for you to come back
+ to such scenes as you have already witnessed. Judge and act from
+ your own impressions. If we do not see you, send me the result of
+ your interview at the precipice.--[The name the Queen gave to Mr.
+ Pitt]--'Vostra cara picciolca Inglesina' will deliver you many
+ letters. After looking over the envelopes, you will either send her
+ with them as soon as possible or forward them as addressed, as you
+ may think most advisable at the time you receive them.
+
+ "'Ever, ever, and forever,
+
+ "'Your affectionate,
+
+ "'MARIE ANTOINETTE!
+
+"There was another hurried and abrupt note from Her Majesty among these
+papers, obviously written later than the first. It lamented the cruel
+privations to which she was doomed at the Tuileries, in consequence of
+the impeded flight, and declared that what the Royal Family were forced
+to suffer, from being totally deprived of every individual of their
+former friends and attendants to condole with, excepting the equally
+oppressed and unhappy Princesse Elizabeth, was utterly insupportable.
+
+"On the receipt of these much esteemed epistles, I returned, as my duty
+directed, to the best of Queens, and most sincere of friends. My arrival
+at Paris, though so much wished for, was totally unexpected.
+
+"At our first meeting, the Queen was so agitated that she was utterly at
+a loss to explain the satisfaction she felt in beholding me once more
+near her royal person. Seeing the ring on my finger, which she had done
+me the honour of sending me, she pointed to her hair, once so beautiful,
+but now, like that of an old woman, not only gray, but deprived of all
+its softness, quite stiff and dried up.
+
+"Madame Elizabeth, the King, and the rest of our little circle, lavished
+on me the most endearing caresses. The dear Dauphin said to me, 'You
+will not go away again, I hope, Princess? Oh, mamma has cried so since
+you left us!'
+
+"I had wept enough before, but this dear little angel brought tears into
+the eyes of us all."
+
+"When I mentioned to Her Majesty the affectionate sympathy expressed by
+the King and Queen of England in her sufferings, and their regret at the
+state of public affairs in France, 'It is most noble and praiseworthy in
+them to feel thus,' exclaimed Marie Antoinette; 'and the more so
+considering the illiberal part imputed to us against those Sovereigns in
+the rebellion of their ultramarine subjects, to which, Heaven knows,
+I never gave my approbation. Had I done so, how poignant would be my
+remorse at the retribution of our own sufferings, and the pity of those I
+had so injured! No. I was, perhaps, the only silent individual amongst
+millions of infatuated enthusiasts at General La Fayette's return to
+Paris, nor did I sanction any of the fetes given to Dr. Franklin, or the
+American Ambassadors at the time. I could not conceive it prudent for
+the Queen of an absolute monarchy to countenance any of their newfangled
+philosophical experiments with my presence. Now, I feel the reward in my
+own conscience. I exult in my freedom from a self-reproach, which would
+have been altogether insupportable under the kindness of which you
+speak.'
+
+"As soon as I was settled in my apartment, which was on the same floor
+with that of the Queen, she condescended to relate to me every particular
+of her unfortunate journey. I saw the pain it gave her to retrace the
+scenes, and begged her to desist till time should have, in some degree,
+assuaged the poignancy of her feelings. 'That,' cried she, embracing me,
+I can never be! Never, never will that horrid circumstance of my life
+lose its vividness in my recollection. What agony, to have seen those
+faithful servants tied before us on the carriage, like common criminals!
+All, all may be attributed to the King's goodness of heart, which
+produces want of courage, nay, even timidity, in the most trying scenes.
+As poor King Charles the First, when he was betrayed in the Isle of
+Wight, would have saved himself, and perhaps thousands, had he permitted
+the sacrifice of one traitor, so might Louis XVI. have averted calamities
+so fearful that I dare not name, though I distinctly foresee them, had he
+exerted his authority where he only called up his compassion.'
+
+"'For Heaven's sake,' replied I, 'do not torment yourself by these cruel
+recollections!'
+
+"'These are gone by,' continued Her Majesty, and greater still than even
+these. How can I describe my grief at what I endured in the Assembly,
+from the studied humiliation to which the King and the royal authority
+were there reduced in the face of the national representatives! from
+seeing the King on his return choked with anguish at the mortifications
+to which I was doomed to behold the majesty of a French Sovereign
+humbled! These events bespeak clouds, which, like the horrid waterspout
+at sea, nothing can dispel but cannon! The dignity of the Crown, the
+sovereignty itself, is threatened; and this I shall write this very night
+to the Emperor. I see no hope of internal tranquillity without the
+powerful aid of foreign force.
+
+ [The only difference of any moment which ever existed between the
+ Queen and the Princesse de Lamballe as to their sentiments on the
+ Revolution was on this subject. Her Highness wished Marie
+ Antoinette to rely on the many persons who had offered and promised
+ to serve the cause of the monarchy with their internal resources,
+ and not depend on the Princes and foreign armies. This salutary
+ advice she never could enforce on the Queen's mind, though she had
+ to that effect been importuned by upwards of two hundred persona,
+ all zealous to show their penitence for former errors by their
+ present devotedness.
+
+ "Whenever," observed Her Highness, "we came to that point, the Queen
+ (upon seriously reflecting that these persons had been active
+ instruments in promoting the first changes in the monarchy, for
+ which she never forgave them from her heart) would hesitate and
+ doubt; and never could I bring Her Majesty definitely to believe the
+ profferers to be sincere. Hence, they were trifled with, till one
+ by one she either lost them, or saw them sacrificed to an
+ attachment, which her own distrust and indecision rendered
+ fruitless."]
+
+The King has allowed himself to be too much led to attempt to recover his
+power through any sort of mediation. Still, the very idea of owing our
+liberty to any foreign army distracts me for the consequences.'
+
+"My reinstatement in my apartments at the Pavilion of Flora seemed not
+only to give universal satisfaction to every individual of the Royal
+Family, but it was hailed with much enthusiasm by many deputies of the
+constituent Assembly. I was honoured with the respective visits of all
+who were in any degree well disposed to the royal cause.
+
+"One day, when Barnave and others were present with the Queen, 'Now,'
+exclaimed one of the deputies, 'now that this good Princess is returned
+to her adopted country, the active zeal of Her Highness, coupled with
+Your Majesty's powerful influence over the mind of the King for the
+welfare of his subjects, will give fresh vigour to the full execution of
+the Constitution.'
+
+"My visitors were earnest in their invitations for me to go to the
+Assembly to hear an interesting discussion, which was to be brought
+forward upon the King's spontaneous acceptance of the Constitution.
+
+"I went; and amidst the plaudits for the good King's condescension, how
+was my heart lacerated to hear Robespierre denounce three of the most
+distinguished of the members, who had requested my attendance, as
+traitors to their country!
+
+"This was the first and only Assembly discussion I ever attended;
+and how dearly did I pay for my curiosity! I was accompanied by my 'cara
+Inglesina', who, always on the alert, exclaimed, 'Let me entreat Your
+Highness not to remain any longer in this place. You are too deeply
+moved to dissemble.'
+
+"I took her judicious advice, and the moment I could leave the Assembly
+unperceived, I hastened back to the Queen to beg her, for God's sake,
+to be upon her guard; for, from what I had just heard at the Assembly,
+I feared the Jacobins had discovered her plans with Barnave, De Lameth,
+Duport, and others of the royal party. Her countenance, for some
+minutes, seemed to be the only sensitive part of her. It was perpetually
+shifting from a high florid colour to the paleness of death. When her
+first emotions gave way to nature, she threw herself into my arms, and,
+for some time, her feelings were so overcome by the dangers which
+threatened these worthy men, that she could only in the bitterness of her
+anguish exclaim, 'Oh! this is all on my account!' And I think she was
+almost as much alarmed for the safety of these faithful men, as she had
+been for that of the King on the 17th of July, when the Jacobins in the
+Champ de Mars called out to have the King brought to trial--a day of
+which the horrors were never effaced from her memory!
+
+"The King and Princesse Elizabeth fortunately came in at the moment; but
+even our united efforts were unavailable. The grief of Her Majesty at
+feeling herself the cause of the misfortunes of these faithful adherents,
+now devoted victims of their earnestness in foiling the machinations
+against the liberty and life of the King and herself, made her nearly
+frantic. She too well knew that to be accused was to incur instant
+death. That she retained her senses under the convulsion of her feelings
+can only be ascribed to that wonderful strength of mind, which triumphed
+over every bodily weakness, and still sustains her under every emergency.
+
+"The King and the Princesse Elizabeth, by whom Barnave had been much
+esteemed ever since the journey from Varennes, were both inconsolable.
+I really believe the Queen entirely owed her instantaneous recovery from
+that deadly lethargic state, in which she had been thrown by her grief
+for the destined sacrifice, to the exuberant goodness of the King's
+heart, who instantly resolved to compromise his own existence, to save
+those who had forfeited theirs for him and his family.
+
+"Seeing the emotion of the Queen, 'I will go myself to the Assembly,'
+said Louis XVI., 'and declare their innocence.'
+
+"The Queen sprang forward, as if on the wings of an angel, and grasping
+the King in her arms, cried, 'Will you hasten their deaths by confirming
+the impression of your keeping up an understanding with them? Gracious
+Heaven! Oh, that I could recall the acts of attachment they have shown
+us, since to these they are now falling victims! I would save them,'
+continued Her Majesty, 'with my own blood; but, Sire, it is useless. We
+should only expose ourselves to the vindictive spirit of the Jacobins
+without aiding the cause of our devoted friends.'
+
+"'Who,' asked she, I was the guilty wretch that accused our unfortunate
+Barnave?'
+
+"'Robespierre.'
+
+"'Robespierre!' echoed Her Majesty. 'Oh, God! then he is numbered with
+the dead! This fellow is too fond of blood to be tempted with money.
+But you, Sire, must not interfere!'
+
+"Notwithstanding these doubts, however, I undertook, at the King's and
+Queen's most earnest desire, to get some one to feel the pulse of
+Robespierre, for the salvation of these our only palladium to the
+constitutional monarchy. To the first application, though made through
+the medium of one of his earliest college intimates, Carrier, the wretch
+was utterly deaf and insensible. Of this failure I hastened to apprise
+Her Majesty. 'Was any, sum,' asked she, 'named as a compensation for
+suspending this trial?'--'None,' replied I. 'I had no commands to that
+effect.'--'Then let the attempt be renewed, and back it with the argument
+of a cheque for a hundred thousand livres on M. Laborde. He has saved my
+life and the King's, and, as far as is in my power, I am determined to
+save his. Barnave has exposed his life more than any of our unfortunate
+friends, and if we can but succeed in saving him, he will speedily be
+enabled to save his colleagues. Should the sum I name be insufficient,
+my jewels shall be disposed of to make up a larger one. Fly to your
+agent, dear Princess! Lose not a moment to intercede in behalf of these
+our only true friends!'
+
+"I did so, and was fortunate enough to gain over to my personal
+entreaties one who had the courage to propose the business; and a
+hundred and fifty thousand livres procured them a suspension of
+accusation. All, however, are still watched with such severity of
+scrutiny that I tremble, even now, for the result.
+
+ [And with reason; for all, eventually, were sacrificed upon the
+ scaffold. Carrier was the factotum in all the cool, deliberate,
+ sanguinary operations of Robespierre; when he saw the cheque, he
+ said to the Princesse de Lamballe: "Madame, though your personal
+ charms and mental virtues had completely influenced all the
+ authority I could exercise in favour of your protege, without this
+ interesting argument I should not have had courage to have renewed
+ the business with the principal agent of life and death."]
+
+"It was in the midst of such apprehensions, which struck terror into the
+hearts of the King and Queen, that the Tuileries resounded with cries of
+multitudes hired to renew those shouts of 'Vive le roi! vive la famille
+royale!' which were once spontaneous.
+
+"In one of the moments of our deepest affliction, multitudes were
+thronging the gardens and enjoying the celebration of the acceptance of
+the Constitution. What a contrast to the feelings of the unhappy inmates
+of the palace! We may well say, that many an aching heart rides in a
+carriage, while the pedestrian is happy!
+
+"The fetes on this occasion were very brilliant. The King, the Queen,
+and the Royal Family were invited to take part in this first national
+festival. They did so, by appearing in their carriage through the
+streets of Paris, and the Champs Elysees, escorted only by the Parisian
+guard, there being no other at the time. The mob was so great that the
+royal carriage could only keep pace with the foot-passengers.
+
+"Their Majesties were in general well received. The only exceptions were
+a few of the Jacobin members of the Assembly, who, even on this occasion,
+sought every means to afflict the hearts, and shock the ears, of Their
+Majesties, by causing republican principles to be vociferated at the very
+doors of their carriage.
+
+"The good sense of the King and Queen prevented them from taking any
+notice of these insults while in public; but no sooner had they returned
+to the castle, than the Queen gave way to her grief at the premeditated
+humiliation she was continually witnessing to the majesty of the
+constitutional monarchy,--an insult less to the King himself than to the
+nation, which had acknowledged him their Sovereign.
+
+"When the royal party entered the apartment, they found M. de Montmorin
+with me, who had come to talk over these matters, secure that at such a
+moment we should not be surprised.
+
+"On hearing the Queen's observation, M. de Montmorin made no secret of
+the necessity there was of Their Majesties dissembling their feelings;
+the avowal of which, he said, would only tend to forward the triumph of
+Jacobinism, 'which,' added he, 'I am sorry to see predominates in the
+Assembly, and keeps in subordination all the public and private clubs.'
+
+"'What!' exclaimed the Princesse Elizabeth, can that be possible, after
+the King has accepted the Constitution?'
+
+"'Yes,' said the Queen; these people, my dear Elizabeth, wish for a
+Constitution which sanctions the overthrow of him by whom it has been
+granted.'
+
+"'In this,' observed M. de Montmorin, 'as on some other points, I
+perfectly agree with Your Majesty and the King, notwithstanding I have
+been opposed by the whole Council and many other honest constituent
+members, as well as the Cabinet of Vienna. And it is still, as it has
+ever been, my firm opinion, that the King ought, previous to the
+acceptance of the Constitution, to have been allowed, for the security of
+its future organization, to have examined it maturely; which, not having
+been the case, I foresee the dangerous situation in which His Majesty
+stands, and I foresee, too, the non-promulgation of this charter.
+Malouet, who is an honest man, is of my opinion. Duport, De Lameth,
+Barnave, and even La Fayette are intimidated at the prevailing spirit of
+the Jacobins. They were all with the best intentions for Your Majesty's
+present safety, for the acceptance in toto, but without reflecting on the
+consequences which must follow should the nation be deceived. But I, who
+am, and ever shall be, attached to royalty, regret the step, though I am
+clear in my impression as to the only course which ought to succeed it.
+The throne can now only be made secure by the most unequivocal frankness
+of proceeding on the part of the Crown. It is not enough to have
+conceded, it is necessary also to show that the concession has some more
+solid origin than mere expediency. It should be made with a good grace.
+Every motive of prudence, as well as of necessity, requires that the
+monarch himself, and all those most interested for his safety, should,
+neither in looks, manners, or conversation, seem as if they felt a regret
+for what has been lost, but rather appear satisfied with what has been
+bestowed.'
+
+"'In that case,' said the Queen, 'we should lose all the support of the
+royalists.'
+
+"'Every royalist, Madame,' replied he, 'who, at this critical crisis,
+does not avow the sentiments of a constitutionalist, is a nail in the
+King's untimely coffin.'
+
+"'Gracious God !' cried the Queen; 'that would destroy the only hope
+which still flatters our drooping existence. Symptoms of moderation, or
+any conciliatory measures we might be inclined to show, of our free will,
+to the constitutionalists, would be immediately considered as a desertion
+of our supporters, and treachery to ourselves, by the royalists.'
+
+"'It would be placed entirely out of my power, Madame,' replied M. de
+Montmorin, 'to make my attachment to the persons of Your Majesties
+available for the maintenance of your rights, did I permit the factious,
+overbearing party which prevails to see into my real zeal for the
+restoration of the royal authority, so necessary for their own future
+honour, security, and happiness. Could they see this, I should be
+accused as a national traitor, or even worse, and sent out of the world
+by a sudden death of ignominy, merely to glut their hatred of monarchy;
+and it is therefore I dissemble.'
+
+"'I perfectly agree with you,' answered the Queen. That cruel moment
+when I witnessed the humiliating state to which royalty had been reduced
+by the constituents, when they placed the President of their Assembly
+upon a level with the King; gave a plebeian, exercising his functions pro
+tempore, prerogatives in the face of the nation to trample down
+hereditary monarchy and legislative authority--that cruel moment
+discovered the fatal truth. In the anguish of my heart, I told His
+Majesty that he had outlived his kingly authority: Here she burst into
+tears, hiding her face in her handkerchief.
+
+"With the mildness of a saint, the angelic Princesse Elizabeth exclaimed,
+turning to the King, 'Say something to the Queen, to calm her anguish!'
+
+"'It will be of no avail,' said the King; 'her grief adds to my
+affliction. I have been the innocent cause of her participating in this
+total ruin, and as it is only her fortitude which has hitherto supported
+me, with the same philosophical and religious resignation we must await
+what fate destines!'
+
+"'Yes,' observed M. de Montmorin; 'but Providence has also given us the
+rational faculty of opposing imminent danger, and by activity and
+exertion obviating its consequences.'
+
+"'In what manner, sir?' cried the Queen; 'tell me how this is to be
+effected, and, with the King's sanction, I am ready to do anything to
+avert the storm, which so loudly threatens the august head of the French
+nation.'
+
+"'Vienna, Madame,' replied he; 'Vienna! Your Majesty's presence at
+Vienna would do more for the King's safety, and the nation's future
+tranquillity, than the most powerful army.'
+
+"'We have long since suggested,' said the Princesse Elizabeth, 'that Her
+Majesty should fly from France and take refuge----'
+
+"'Pardon me, Princess,' interrupted M. de Montmorin, 'it is not for
+refuge solely I would have Her Majesty go thither. It is to give
+efficacy to the love she bears the King and his family, in being there
+the powerful advocate to check the fallacious march of a foreign army to
+invade us for the subjection of the French nation. All these external
+attempts will prove abortive, and only tend to exasperate the French to
+crime and madness. Here I coincide with my coadjutors, Barnave, Duport,
+De Lameth, etc. The principle on which the re-establishment of the order
+and tranquillity of France depends, can be effected only by the non-
+interference of foreign powers. Let them leave the rational resources of
+our own internal force to re-establish our real interests, which every
+honest Frenchman will strive to secure, if not thwarted by the threats
+and menaces of those who have no right to interfere. Besides, Madame,
+they are too far from us to afford immediate relief from the present
+dangers internally surrounding us. These are the points of fearful
+import. It is not the threats and menaces of a foreign army which can
+subdue a nation's internal factions. These only rouse them to prolong
+disorders. National commotions can be quelled only by national spirit,
+whose fury, once exhausted on those who have aroused it, leave it free to
+look within, and work a reform upon itself.'
+
+"M. de Montmorin, after many other prudent exhortations and remarks, and
+some advice with regard to the King and Queen's household, took his.
+leave. He was no sooner gone than it was decided by the King that Marie
+Antoinette, accompanied by myself and some other ladies, and the
+gentlemen of the bedchamber, couriers, etc., should set out forthwith for
+Vienna.
+
+ [The Princease de Lamballe sent me directions that very evening,
+ some time after midnight, to be at our place of rendezvous early in
+ the morning. I was overjoyed at the style of the note. It was the
+ least mysterious I had ever received from Her Highness. I inferred
+ that some fortunate event had occurred, with which, knowing how
+ deeply I was interested in the fate of her on whom my own so much
+ depended, she was, eager to make me acquainted.
+
+ But what was my surprise, on entering the church fixed on for the
+ meeting, to see the Queen's unknown confessor beckoning me to come
+ to him. I approached. He bade me wait till after Mass, when he had
+ something to communicate from the Princess.
+
+ This confessor officiated in the place of the one whom Mirabeau had
+ seduced to take the constitutional oath. The Queen and Princess
+ confessed to him in the private apartment of Her Highness on the
+ ground floor; though it was never known where, or to whom they
+ confessed, after the treachery of the royal confessor. This
+ faithful and worthy successor was only known as "the known." I
+ never heard who he was, or what was his name.
+
+ The Mass being over, I followed him into the sacristy. He told me
+ that the Princess, by Her Majesty's command, wished me to set off
+ immediately for Strasburg, and there await the arrival of Her
+ Highness, to be in readiness to follow her and Her Majesty for the
+ copying of the cipher, as they were going to Vienna.
+
+ When everything, however, had been settled for their departure,
+ which it was agreed was to take place from the house of Count
+ Fersen, the resolution was suddenly changed; but I was desired to
+ hold myself in readiness for another journey.]
+
+"To say why this purpose was abandoned is unnecessary. The same
+fatality, which renders every project unattainable, threw insuperable
+impediments, in the way of this."
+
+
+
+
+SECTION XII.
+
+"The news of the death of the Emperor Leopold, in the midst of the other
+distresses of Her Majesty, afflicted her very deeply; the more so because
+she had every reason to think he fell a victim to the active part he took
+in her favour. Externally, this monarch certainly demonstrated no very
+great inclination to become a member of the coalition of Pilnitz. He
+judged, very justly, that his brother Joseph had not only defeated his
+own purposes by too openly and violently asserting the cause of their
+unfortunate sister, but had destroyed himself, and, therefore, selected
+what he deemed the safer and surer course of secret support. But all his
+caution proved abortive. The Assembly knew his manoeuvres as well as he
+himself did. He died an untimely death; and the Queen was assured, from
+undoubted authority, that both Joseph and Leopold were poisoned in their
+medicines.
+
+"During my short absence in England, the King's household had undergone a
+complete change. When the emigration first commenced, a revolution in
+the officers of the Court took place, but it was of a nature different
+from this last; and, by destroying itself, left the field open to those
+who now made the palace so intolerable. The first change to which I
+refer arose as follows:
+
+"The greater part of the high offices being vacated by the secession of
+the most distinguished nobility, many places fell to persons who had all
+their lives occupied very subordinate situations. These, to retain their
+offices, were indiscreet enough publicly to declare their dissent from
+all the measures of the Assembly; an absurdity, which, at the
+commencement, was encouraged by the Court, till the extreme danger of
+encouraging it was discovered too late; and when once the error had been
+tolerated, and rewarded, it was found impossible to check it, and stop
+these fatal tongues. The Queen, who disliked the character of
+capriciousness, for a long time allowed the injury to go on, by
+continuing about her those who inflicted it. The error, which arose from
+delicacy, was imputed to a very different and less honourable feeling,
+till the clamour became so great, that she was obliged to yield to it,
+and dismiss those who had acted with so much indiscretion.
+
+"The King and Queen did not dare now to express themselves on the subject
+of the substitutes who were to succeed. Consequently they became
+surrounded by persons placed by the Assembly as spies. The most
+conspicuous situations were filled by the meanest persons--not, as in the
+former case, by such as had risen, though by accident, still regularly to
+their places--but by myrmidons of the prevailing power, to whom Their
+Majesties were compelled to submit, because their rulers willed it. All
+orders of nobility were abolished. All the Court ladies, not attached to
+the King and Queen personally, abandoned the Court. No one would be seen
+at the Queen's card-parties, once so crowded, and so much sought after.
+We were entirely reduced to the family circle. The King, when weary of
+playing with the Princesse Elizabeth and the Queen, would retire to his
+apartments without uttering a word, not from sullenness, but overcome by
+silent grief.
+
+"The Queen was occupied continually by the extensive correspondence she
+had to carry on with the foreign Sovereigns, the Princes, and the
+different parties. Her Majesty once gave me nearly thirty letters she
+had written in the course of two days, which were forwarded by my cara
+Inglesina--cara indeed! for she was of the greatest service.
+
+"Her Majesty slept very little. But her courage never slackened; and
+neither her health, nor her general amiableness, was in the least
+affected. Though few persons could be more sensible than herself to
+poignant mortification at seeing her former splendour hourly decrease,
+yet she never once complained. She was, in this respect, a real stoic.
+
+"The palace was now become, what it still remains, like a police office.
+It was filled with spies and runners. Every member of the Assembly, by
+some means or other, had his respective emissary. All the antechambers
+were peopled by inveterate Jacobins, by those whose greatest pleasure was
+to insult the ears and minds of all whom they considered above themselves
+in birth, or rank, or virtue. So completely were the decencies of life
+abolished, that common respect was withheld even from the Royal Family.
+
+"I was determined to persevere in my usual line of conduct, of which the
+King and Queen very much approved. Without setting up for a person of
+importance, I saw all who wished for public or private audiences of Their
+Majesties. I carried on no intrigues, and only discharged the humble
+duties of my situation to the best of my ability for the general good,
+and to secure, as far as possible, the comfort of Their Majesties, who
+really were to be pitied, utterly friendless and forsaken as they were.
+
+"M. Laporte, the head of the King's private police, came to me one day in
+great consternation. He had discovered that schemes were on foot to
+poison all the Royal Family, and that, in a private committee of the
+Assembly, considerable pensions had been offered for the perpetration of
+the crime. Its facility was increased, as far as regarded the Queen, by
+the habit to which Her Majesty had accustomed herself of always keeping
+powdered sugar at hand, which, without referring to her attendants,
+she would herself mix with water and drink as a beverage whenever she
+was thirsty.
+
+"I entreated M. Laporte not to disclose the conspiracy to the Queen till
+I had myself had an opportunity of apprising her of his praiseworthy
+zeal. He agreed, on condition that precautions should be immediately
+adopted with respect to the persons who attended the kitchen. This,
+I assured him, should be done on the instant.
+
+"At the period I mention, all sorts of etiquette had been abolished.
+The custom which prevented my appearing before the Queen, except at
+stated hours, had long since been discontinued; and, as all the other
+individuals who came before or after the hours of service were eyed with
+distrust, and I remained the only one whose access to Their Majesties was
+free and unsuspected, though it was very early when M. Laporte called,
+I thought it my duty to hasten immediately to my royal mistress.
+
+"I found her in bed. 'Has Your Majesty breakfasted?' said I.
+
+"'No,' replied she; 'will you breakfast with me?'
+
+"'Most certainly,' said I, 'if Your Majesty will insure me against being
+poisoned.'
+
+"At the word poison Her Majesty started up and looked at me very
+earnestly, and with a considerable degree of alarm.
+
+"'I am only joking,' continued I; 'I will breakfast with Your Majesty if
+you will give me tea.'
+
+"Tea was presently brought. 'In this,' said I, 'there is no danger.'
+
+"'What do you mean?' asked Her Majesty.
+
+"'I am ordered,' replied I, taking up a lump of sugar, 'not to drink
+chocolate, or coffee, or anything with powdered sugar. These are times
+when caution alone can prevent our being sent out of the world with all
+our sins upon our heads.'
+
+"'I am very glad to hear you say so; for you have reason to be
+particular, after what you once so cruelly suffered from poison. But
+what has brought that again into your mind just now?'
+
+"'Well, then, since Your Majesty approves of my circumspection, allow me
+to say I think it advisable that we should, at a moment like this
+especially, abstain from all sorts of food by which our existence may be
+endangered. For my own part, I mean to give up all made dishes, and
+confine myself to the simplest diet.'
+
+"'Come, come, Princess,' interrupted Her Majesty; 'there is more in this
+than you wish me to understand. Fear not. I am prepared for anything
+that may be perpetrated against my own life, but let me preserve from
+peril my King, my husband, and my children!'
+
+"My feelings prevented me from continuing to dissemble. I candidly
+repeated all I had heard from M. Laporte.
+
+"Her Majesty instantly rang for one of her confidential women. 'Go to
+the King,' said Her Majesty to the attendant, 'and if you find him alone,
+beg him to come to me at once; but, if there are any of the guards or
+other persons within hearing, merely say that the Princesse de Lamballe
+is with me and is desirous of the loan of a newspaper.'
+
+"The King's guard, and indeed most of those about him, were no better
+than spies, and this caution in the Queen was necessary to prevent any
+jealousy from being excited by the sudden message.
+
+"When the messenger left us by ourselves, I observed to Her Majesty that
+it would be imprudent to give the least publicity to the circumstance,
+for were it really mere suspicion in the head of the police, its
+disclosure might only put this scheme into some miscreant's head, and
+tempt him to realize it. The Queen said I was perfectly right, and it
+should be kept secret.
+
+"Our ambassadress was fortunate enough to reach the King's apartment
+unobserved, and to find him unattended, so he received the message
+forthwith. On leaving the apartment, however, she was noticed and
+watched. She immediately went out of the Tuileries as if sent to make
+purchases, and some time afterwards returned with some trifling articles
+in her hand.
+
+ [This incident will give the reader an idea of the cruel situation
+ in which the first Sovereigns of Europe then stood; and how much
+ they appreciated the few subjects who devoted themselves to thwart
+ and mitigate the tyranny practised by the Assembly over these
+ illustrious victims. I can speak from my own experience on these
+ matters. From the time I last accompanied the Princesse de Lamballe
+ to Paris till I left it in 1792, what between milliners,
+ dressmakers, flower girls, fancy toy sellers, perfumers, hawkers of
+ jewellery, purse and gaiter makers, etc., I had myself assumed
+ twenty different characters, besides that of a drummer boy,
+ sometimes blackening my face to enter the palace unnoticed, and
+ often holding conversations analogous to the sentiments of the
+ wretches who were piercing my heart with the remarks circumstances
+ compelled me to encourage. Indeed, I can safely say I was known,
+ in some shape or other, to almost everybody, but to no one in my
+ real character, except the Princess by whom I was so graciously
+ employed.]
+
+"The moment the King appeared, 'Sire,' exclaimed Her Majesty, 'the
+Assembly, tired of endeavouring to wear us to death by slow torment,
+have devised an expedient to relieve their own anxiety and prevent us
+from putting them to further inconvenience.'
+
+"'What do you mean?' said the King. I repeated my conversation with M.
+Laporte. 'Bah! bah!' resumed His Majesty, 'They never will attempt it.
+They have fixed on other methods of getting rid of us. They have not
+policy enough to allow our deaths to be ascribed to accident. They are
+too much initiated in great crimes already.'
+
+"'But,' asked the Queen, 'do you not think it highly necessary to make
+use of every precaution, when we are morally sure of the probability of
+such a plot?'
+
+"'Most certainly! otherwise we should be, in the eyes of God, almost
+guilty of suicide. But how prevent it? surrounded as we are by persons
+who, being seduced to believe that we are plotting against them, feel
+justified in the commission of any crime under the false idea of self-
+defence!'
+
+"'We may prevent it,' replied Her Majesty, 'by abstaining from everything
+in our diet wherein poison can be introduced; and that we can manage
+without making any stir by the least change either in the kitchen
+arrangements or in our own, except, indeed, this one. Luckily, as we are
+restricted in our attendants, we have a fair excuse for dumb waiters,
+whereby it will be perfectly easy to choose or discard without exciting
+suspicion.'
+
+"This, consequently, was the course agreed upon; and every possible
+means, direct and indirect, was put into action to secure the future
+safety of the Royal Family and prevent the accomplishment of the threat
+of poison."
+
+ [On my seeing the Princess next morning, Her Highness condescended
+ to inform me of the danger to which herself and the Royal Family
+ were exposed. She requested I would send my man servant to the
+ persons who served me, to fill a moderate-sized hamper with wine,
+ salt, chocolate, biscuits, and liquors, and take it to her
+ apartment, at the Pavilion of Flora, to be used as occasion
+ required. All the fresh bread and butter which was necessary I got
+ made for nearly a fortnight by persons whom I knew at a distance
+ from the palace, whither I always conveyed it myself.]
+
+
+
+
+ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+And scarcely a woman; for your answers are very short
+Can make a Duchess a beggar, but cannot make a beggar a Duchess
+Canvassing for a majority to set up D'Orleans
+Clergy enjoyed one-third the national revenues
+Declaring the Duke of Orleans the constitutional King
+Foolishly occupying themselves with petty matters
+Many an aching heart rides in a carriage
+Over-caution may produce evils almost equal to carelessness
+Panegyric of the great Edmund Burke upon Marie Antoinette
+People in independence are only the puppets of demagogues
+Revolution not as the Americans, founded on grievances
+Suppression of all superfluous religious institutions
+The King remained as if paralysed and stupefied
+These expounders--or confounders--of codes
+To be accused was to incur instant death
+Who confound logic with their wishes
+
+
+
+
+End of this Project Gutenberg Etext Memoirs of Louis XV., and XVI., v6
+by Madame du Hausset, and an unknown English girl and Princess Lamballe
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MEMOIRS OF LOUIS XV. AND XVI.
+
+Being Secret Memoirs of Madame du Hausset, Lady's Maid to Madame
+de Pompadour, and of an unknown English Girl and the Princess Lamballe
+
+
+
+BOOK 7
+
+
+SECTION XIII.
+
+Editor in continuation:
+
+I am again, for this and the following chapter, compelled to resume the
+pen in my own person, and quit the more agreeable office of a transcriber
+for my illustrious patroness.
+
+I have already mentioned that the Princesse de Lamballe, on first
+returning from England to France, anticipated great advantages from the
+recall of the emigrants. The desertion of France by so many of the
+powerful could not but be a deathblow to the prosperity of the monarchy.
+There was no reason for these flights at the time they began. The
+fugitives only set fire to the four quarters of the globe against their
+country. It was natural enough that the servants whom they had left
+behind to keep their places should take advantage of their masters'
+pusillanimity, and make laws to exclude those who had, uncalled for,
+resigned the sway into bolder and more active hands.
+
+I do not mean to impeach the living for the dead; but, when we see those
+bearing the lofty titles of Kings and Princesses, escaping with their
+wives and families, from an only brother and sister with helpless infant
+children, at the hour of danger, we cannot help wishing for a little
+plebeian disinterestedness in exalted minds.
+
+I have travelled Europe twice, and I have never seen any woman with that
+indescribable charm of person, manner, and character, which distinguished
+Marie Antoinette. This is in itself a distinction quite sufficient to
+detach friends from its possessor through envy. Besides, she was Queen
+of France, the woman of highest rank in a most capricious, restless and
+libertine nation. The two Princesses placed nearest to her, and who were
+the first to desert her, though both very much inferior in personal and
+mental qualifications, no doubt, though not directly, may have
+entertained some anticipations of her place. Such feelings are not
+likely to decrease the distaste, which results from comparisons to our
+own disadvantage. It is, therefore, scarcely to be wondered at, that
+those nearest to the throne should be least attached to those who fill
+it. How little do such persons think that the grave they are thus
+insensibly digging may prove their own! In this case it only did not by
+a miracle. What the effect of the royal brothers' and the nobility's
+remaining in France would have been we can only conjecture. That their
+departure caused, great and irreparable evils we know; and we have good
+reason to think they caused the greatest. Those who abandon their houses
+on fire, silently give up their claims to the devouring element. Thus
+the first emigration kindled the French flame, which, though for a while
+it was got under by a foreign stream, was never completely, extinguished
+till subdued by its native current.
+
+The unfortunate Louis XVI. and Marie Antoinette ceased to be Sovereigns
+from the period they were ignominiously dragged to their jail at the
+Tuileries. From this moment they were abandoned to the vengeance of
+miscreants, who were disgracing the nation with unprovoked and useless
+murders. But from this moment also the zeal of the Princesses Elizabeth
+and de Lamballe became redoubled. Out of one hundred individuals and
+more, male and female, who had been exclusively occupied about the person
+of Marie Antoinette, few, excepting this illustrious pair, and the
+inestimable Clery, remained devoted to the last. The saint-like virtues
+of these Princesses, malice itself has not been able to tarnish. Their
+love and unalterable friendship became the shield of their unfortunate
+Sovereigns, and their much injured relatives, till the dart struck their
+own faithful bosoms. Princes of the earth! here is a lesson of
+greatness from the great.
+
+Scarcely had the Princesse de Lamballe been reinstated in the Pavilion of
+Flora at the Tuileries, when, by the special royal command, and in Her
+Majesty's presence, she wrote to most of the nobility, entreating their
+return to France. She urged them, by every argument, that there was no
+other means of saving them and their country from the horrors impending
+over them and France, should they persevere in their pernicious absence.
+In some of these letters, which I copied, there was written on the
+margin, in the Queen's hand, "I am at her elbow, and repeat the necessity
+of your returning, if you love your King, your religion, your Government,
+and your country. Marie Antoinette. Return! Return! Return!"
+
+Among these letters, I remember a large envelope directed to the Duchesse
+de Brisac, then residing alternately at the baths of Albano and the
+mineral waters at Valdagno, near Vicenza, in the Venetian States. Her
+Grace was charged to deliver letters addressed to Her Majesty's royal
+brothers, the Comte de Provence, and the Comte d'Artois, who were then
+residing, I think, at Stra, on the Brenta, in company with Madame de
+Polcatre, Diane de Polignac, and others.
+
+A few days after, I took another envelope, addressed to the Count Dufour,
+who was at Turin. It contained letters for M. and Madame de Polignac, M.
+and Madame de Guiche Grammont, the King's aunts at Rome, and the two
+Princesses of Piedmont, wives of His Majesty's brothers.
+
+If, therefore, a judgment can be formed from the impressions of the Royal
+Family, who certainly must have had ample information with respect to the
+spirit which predominated at Paris at that period, could the nobility
+have been prevailed on to have obeyed the mandates of the Queen and
+prayers and invocations of the Princess, there can be no doubt that much
+bloodshed would have been spared, and the page of history never have been
+sullied by the atrocious names which now stand there as beacons of human
+infamy.
+
+The storms were now so fearfully increasing that the King and Queen, the
+Duc de Penthievre, the Count Fersen, the Princesse Elizabeth, the
+Duchesse d'Orleans, and all the friends of the Princesse de Lamballe,
+once more united in anxious wishes for her to quit France. Even the Pope
+himself endeavoured to prevail upon Her Highness to join the royal aunts
+at Rome. To all these applications she replied, "I have nothing to
+reproach myself with. If my inviolable duty and unalterable attachment
+to my Sovereigns, who are my relations and my friends; if love for my
+dear father and for my adopted country are crimes, in the face of God and
+the world I confess my guilt, and shall die happy if in such a cause!"
+
+The Duc de Penthievre, who loved her as well as his own child, the
+Duchesse d'Orleans, was too good a man, and too conscientious a Prince,
+not to applaud the disinterested firmness of his beloved daughter-in-law;
+yet, foreseeing and dreading the fatal consequence which must result from
+so much virtue at a time when vice alone predominated, unknown to the
+Princesse de Lamballe, he interested the Court of France to write to the
+Court of Sardinia to entreat that the King, as head of her family, would
+use his good offices in persuading the Princess to leave the scenes of
+commotion, in which she was so much exposed, and return to her native
+country. The King of Sardinia, her family, and her particular friend,
+the Princess of Piedmont, supplicated ineffectually. The answer of Her
+Highness to the King, at Turin, was as follows
+
+ "SIRE, AND MOST AUGUST COUSIN,--
+
+ "I do not recollect that any of our illustrious ancestors of the
+ house of Savoy, before or since the great hero Charles Emmanuel, of
+ immortal memory, ever dishonoured or tarnished their illustrious
+ names with cowardice. In leaving the Court of France at this awful
+ crisis, I should be the first. Can Your Majesty pardon my
+ presumption in differing from your royal counsel? The King, Queen,
+ and every member of the Royal Family of France, both from the ties
+ of blood and policy of States, demand our united efforts in their
+ defence. I cannot swerve from my determination of never quitting
+ them, especially at a moment when they are abandoned by every one of
+ their former attendants, except myself. In happier days Your
+ Majesty may command my obedience; but, in the present instance,
+ and given up as is the Court of France to their most atrocious
+ persecutors, I must humbly insist on being guided by my own
+ decision. During the most brilliant period of the reign of Marie
+ Antoinette, I was distinguished by the royal favour and bounty. To
+ abandon her in adversity, Sire, would stain my character, and that
+ of my illustrious family, for ages to come, with infamy and
+ cowardice, much more to be dreaded than the most cruel death."
+
+Similar answers were returned to all those of her numerous friends and
+relatives, who were so eager to shelter her from the dangers threatening
+Her Highness and the Royal Family.
+
+Her Highness was persuaded, however, to return once more to England,
+under the pretext of completing the mission she had so successfully
+began; but it is very clear that neither the King or Queen had any
+serious idea of her succeeding, and that their only object was to get her
+away from the theatre of disaster. Circumstances had so completely
+changed for the worst, that, though Her Highness was received with great
+kindness, her mission was no longer listened to. The policy of England
+shrunk from encouraging twenty thousand French troops to be sent in a
+body to the West Indies, and France was left to its fate. A conversation
+with Mr. Burke, in which the disinclination of England to interfere was
+distinctly owned, created that deep-rooted grief and apprehension in the
+mind of the Queen from which Her Majesty never recovered. The Princesse
+de Lamballe was the only one in her confidence. It is well known that
+the King of England greatly respected the personal virtues of Their
+French Majesties; but upon the point of business, both King and Ministers
+were now become ambiguous and evasive. Her Highness, therefore, resolved
+to return. It had already been whispered that she had left France, only
+to save herself, like the rest; and she would no longer remain under so
+slanderous an imputation. She felt, too, the necessity of her friendship
+to her royal mistress. Though the Queen of England, by whom Her Highness
+was very much esteemed, and many other persons of the first consequence
+in the British nation, foreseeing the inevitable fate of the Royal
+Family, and of all their faithful adherents, anxiously entreated her not
+to quit England, yet she became insensible to every consideration as to
+her own situation and only felt the isolated one of her august Sovereign,
+her friend, and benefactress.
+
+
+
+
+SECTION XIV.
+
+Editor in continuation:
+
+Events seemed molded expressly to produce the state of feeling which
+marked that disastrous day, the 20th of June, 1792. It frequently
+happens that nations, like individuals, rush wildly upon the very dangers
+they apprehend, and select such courses as invite what they are most
+solicitous to avoid. So it was with everything preceding this dreadful
+day. By a series of singular occurrences I did not witness its horrors,
+though in some degree their victim. Not to detain my readers
+unnecessarily, I will proceed directly to the accident which withdrew
+me from the scene.
+
+The apartment of the Princesse de Lamballe, in the Pavilion of Flora,
+looked from one side upon the Pont Royal. On the day of which I speak,
+a considerable quantity of combustibles had been thrown from the bridge
+into one of her rooms. The Princess, in great alarm, sent instantly for
+me. She desired to have my English man servant, if he were not afraid,
+secreted in her room, while she herself withdrew to another part of the
+palace, till the extent of the intended mischief could be ascertained.
+I assured Her Highness that I was not only ready to answer for my
+servant, but would myself remain with him, as he always went armed, and I
+was so certain of his courage and fidelity that I could not hesitate even
+to trust my life in his hands.
+
+"For God's sake, 'mia cara'," exclaimed the Princess, "do not risk your
+own safety, if you have any value for my friendship. I desire you not to
+go near the Pavilion of Flora. Your servant's going is quite sufficient.
+Never again let me hear such a proposition. What! after having hitherto
+conducted yourself so punctually, would you, by one rash act, devote
+yourself to ruin, and deprive us of your valuable services?"
+
+I begged Her Highness would pardon the ardour of the dutiful zeal I felt
+for her in the moment of danger.
+
+"Yes, yes," continued she; "that is all very well; but this is not the
+first time I have been alarmed at your too great intrepidity; and if ever
+I hear of your again attempting to commit yourself so wantonly, I will
+have you sent to Turin immediately, there to remain till you have
+recovered your senses. I always thought English heads cool; but I
+suppose your residence in France has changed the national character of
+yours."
+
+Once more, with tears in my eyes, I begged her forgiveness, and, on my
+knees, implored that she would not send me away in the hour of danger.
+After having so long enjoyed the honour of her confidence, I trusted she
+would overlook my fault, particularly as it was the pure emanation of my
+resentment at any conspiracy against one I so dearly loved; and to whom I
+had been under so many obligations, that the very idea of being deprived
+of such a benefactress drove me frantic.
+
+Her Highness burst into tears. "I know your heart," exclaimed she; "but
+I also know too well our situation, and it is that which makes me tremble
+for the consequences which must follow your overstepping the bounds so
+necessary to be observed by all of us at this horrid period." And then
+she called me again her cars 'Inglesina', and graciously condescended to
+embrace me, and bathed my face with her tears, in token of her
+forgiveness, and bade me sit down and compose myself, and weep no more.
+
+Scarcely was I seated, when we were both startled by deafening shouts for
+the head of Madame Veto, the name they gave the poor unfortunate Queen.
+An immense crowd of cannibals and hired ruffians were already in the
+Tuileries, brandishing all sorts of murderous weapons, and howling for
+blood! My recollections from this moment are very indistinct. I know
+that in an instant the apartment was filled; that the Queen, the
+Princesse Elizabeth, all the attendants, even the King, I believe,
+appeared there. I myself received a wound upon my hand in warding a blow
+from my face; and in the turmoil of the scene, and of the blow, I
+fainted, and was conveyed by some humane person to a place of safety, in
+the upper part of the palace.
+
+Thus deprived of my senses for several hours, I was spared the agony of
+witnessing the scenes of horror that succeeded. For two or three days I
+remained in a state of so much exhaustion and alarm, that when the
+Princess came to me I did not know her, nor even where I was.
+
+As soon as I was sufficiently recovered, places were taken for me and
+another person in one of the common diligences, by which I was conveyed
+to Passy, where the Princess came to me in the greatest confusion.
+
+My companion in the palace was the widow of one of the Swiss guards, who
+had been murdered on the 6th of October, in defending the Queen's
+apartment at Versailles. The poor woman had been herself protected by
+Her Majesty, and accompanied me by the express order of the Princesse de
+Lamballe. What the Princess said to her on departing, I know not, for I
+only caught the words "general insurrection," on hearing which the
+afflicted woman fell into a fit. To me, Her Highness merely exclaimed,
+"Do not come to Paris till you hear from me;" and immediately set off to
+return to the Tuileries.
+
+However, as usual, my courage soon got the better of my strength, and of
+every consideration of personal safety. On the third day, I proposed to
+the person who took care of me that we should both walk out together,
+and, if there appeared no symptoms of immediate danger, it was agreed
+that we might as well get into one of the common conveyances, and proceed
+forthwith to Paris; for I could no longer repress my anxiety to learn
+what was going on there, and the good creature who was with me was no
+less impatient.
+
+When we got into a diligence, I felt the dread of another severe lecture
+like the last, and thought it best not to incur fresh blame by new
+imprudence. I therefore told the driver to set us down on the high road
+near Paris leading to the Bois de Boulogne. But before we got so far,
+the woods resounded with the howling of mobs, and we heard, "Vive le roi"
+vociferated, mingled with "Down with the King,"--"Down with the Queen;"
+and, what was still more horrible, the two parties were in actual bloody
+strife, and the ground was strewn with the bodies of dead men, lying like
+slaughtered sheep.
+
+It was fortunate that we were the only persons in the vehicle. The
+driver, observing our extreme agitation, turned round to us. "Nay, nay,"
+cried he; "do not alarm yourselves. It is only the constitutionalists
+and the Jacobins fighting against each other. I wish the devil had them
+both."
+
+It was evident, however, that, though the man was desirous of quieting
+our apprehensions, he was considerably disturbed by his own; for though
+he acknowledged he had a wife and children in Paris, who he hoped were
+safe, still he dared not venture to proceed, but said, if we wished to be
+driven back, he would take us to any place we liked, out of Paris.
+
+Our anxiety to know what was going forward at the Tuileries was now
+become intolerable; and the more so, from the necessity we felt of
+restraining our feelings. At last, however, we were in some degree
+relieved from this agony of reserve.
+
+"God knows," exclaimed the driver, "what will be the consequence of all
+this bloodshed! The poor King and Queen are greatly to be pitied!"
+
+This ejaculation restored our courage, and we said he might drive us
+wherever he chose out of the sight of those horrors; and it was at length
+settled that he should take us to Passy. "Oh," cried he, "if you will
+allow me, I will take you to my father's house there; for you seem more
+dead than alive, both of you, and ought to go where you can rest in quiet
+and safety."
+
+My companion, who was a German, now addressed me in that language.
+
+"German!" exclaimed the driver on hearing her. "German! Why, I am a
+German myself, and served the good King, who is much to be pitied, for
+many years; and when I was wounded, the Queen, God bless her! set me up
+in the world, as I was made an invalid; and I have ever since been
+enabled to support my family respectably. D---- the Assembly! I shall
+never be a farthing the better for them!"
+
+"Oh," replied I, "then I suppose you are not a Jacobin?"
+
+The driver, with a torrent of curses, then began execrating the very name
+of Jacobin. This emboldened me to ask him when he had left Paris. He
+replied, "Only this very morning," and added that the Assembly had shut
+the gates of the Tuileries under the pretence of preventing the King and
+Queen from being assassinated. "But that is all a confounded lie,"
+continued he, "invented to keep out the friends of the Royal Family.
+But, God knows, they are now so fallen, they have few such left to be
+turned away!"
+
+"I am more enraged," pursued he, "at the ingratitude of the nobility than
+I am at these hordes of bloodthirsty plunderers, for we all know that the
+nobility owe everything to the King. Why do they not rise en masse to
+shield the Royal Family from these bloodhounds? Can they imagine they
+will be spared if the King should be murdered? I have no patience with
+them!"
+
+I then asked him our fare. "Two livres is the fare, but you shall not
+pay anything. I see plainly, ladies, that you are not what you assume to
+be."
+
+"My good man," replied I, "we are not; and therefore take this louis d'or
+for your trouble."
+
+He caught my hand and pressed it to his lips, exclaiming, "I never in my
+life knew a man who was faithful to his King, that God did not provide
+for."
+
+He then took us to Passy, but advised us not to remain at the place where
+we had been staying; and fortunate enough it was for us that we did not,
+for the house was set on fire and plundered by a rebel mob very soon
+after.
+
+I told the driver how much I was obliged to him for his services, and he
+seemed delighted when I promised to give him proofs of my confidence in
+his fidelity.
+
+"If," said I, "you can find out my servant whom I left in Paris, I will
+give you another louis d'or." I was afraid, at first, to mention where
+he was to look for him.
+
+"If he be not dead," replied the driver, "I will find him out."
+
+"What!" cried I, "even though he should be at the Tuileries?"
+
+"Why, madame, I am one of the national guard. I have only to put on my
+uniform to be enabled to go to any part of the palace I please. Tell me
+his name, and where you think it likely he may be found, and depend upon
+it I will bring him to you."
+
+"Perhaps," continued he, "it is your husband disguised as a servant; but
+no matter. Give me a clue, and I'll warrant you he shall tell you the
+rest himself by this time to-morrow."
+
+"Well, then," replied I, "he is in the Pavilion of Flora."
+
+"What, with the Princesse de Lamballe? Oh, I would go through fire and
+water for that good Princess! She has done me the honour to stand
+godmother to one of my children, and allows her a pension."
+
+I took him at his word. We changed our quarters to his father's house,
+a very neat little cottage, about a quarter of a mile from the town.
+He afterwards rendered me many services in going to and fro from
+Passy to Paris; and, as he promised, brought me my servant.
+
+When the poor fellow arrived, his arm was in a sling. He had been
+wounded by a musket shot, received in defence of the Princess. The
+history of his disaster was this:
+
+On the night of the riot, as he was going from the Pont Royal to the
+apartment of Her Highness, he detected a group of villains under her
+windows. Six of them were attempting to enter by a ladder. He fired,
+and two fell. While he was reloading, the others shot at him. Had he
+not, in the flurry of the moment, fired both his pistols at the same
+time, he thinks he should not have been wounded, but might have punished
+the assailant. One of the men, he said, could have been easily taken by
+the national guard, who so glaringly encouraged the escape that he could
+almost swear the guard was a party concerned. The loss of blood had so
+exhausted him that he could not pursue the offender himself, whom
+otherwise he could have taken without any difficulty.
+
+As the employing of my servant had only been proposed, and the sudden
+interruption of my conversation with Her Highness by the riot had
+prevented my ever communicating the project to him, I wondered how he got
+into the business, or ascertained so soon that the apartment of the
+Princess was in danger. He explained that he never had heard of its
+being so; but my own coachman having left me at the palace that day,
+and not hearing of me for some time, had driven home, and, fearing that
+my not returning arose from something which had happened, advised him to
+go to the Pont Royal and hear what he could learn, as there was a report
+of many persons having been murdered and thrown over the bridge.
+
+My man took the advice, and armed himself to be ready in case of attack.
+It was between one and two o'clock after midnight when he went. The
+first objects he perceived were these miscreants attempting to scale the
+palace.
+
+He told me that the Queen had been most grossly insulted; that the gates
+of the Tuileries had been shut in consequence; that a small part alone
+remained open to the public, who were kept at their distance by a
+national ribbon, which none could pass without being instantly arrested.
+This had prevented his apprising the Princess of the attempt which he had
+accidentally defeated, and which he wished me to communicate to her
+immediately. I did so by letter, which my good driver carried to Paris,
+and delivered safe into the hands of our benefactress.
+
+The surprise of the Princess on hearing from me, and her pleasure at my
+good fortune in finding by accident such means, baffles all description.
+Though she was at the time overwhelmed with the imminent dangers which
+threatened her, yet she still found leisure to show her kindness to those
+who were doing their best, though in vain, to serve her. The following
+letter, which she sent me in reply, written amidst all the uneasiness it
+describes, will speak for her more eloquently than my praises:
+
+"I can understand your anxiety. It was well for you that you were
+unconscious of the dreadful scenes which were passing around you on that
+horrid day. The Princesse de Tarente, Madame de Tourzel, Madame de
+Mockau, and all the other ladies of the household owed the safety of
+their lives to one of the national guards having given his national
+cockade to the Queen. Her Majesty placed it on her head, unperceived by
+the mob. One of the gentlemen of the King's wardrobe provided the King
+and the Princesse Elizabeth with the same impenetrable shield. Though
+the cannibals came for murder, I could not but admire the enthusiastic
+deference that was shown to this symbol of authority, which instantly
+paralyzed, the daggers uplifted for our extermination.
+
+"Merlin de Thionville was the stoic head of this party. The Princesse
+Elizabeth having pointed him out to me, I ventured to address him
+respecting the dangerous situation to which the Royal Family were daily
+exposed. I flattered him upon his influence over the majority of the
+faubourgs, to which only we could look for the extinction of these
+disorders. He replied that the despotism of the Court had set a bad
+example to the people; that he felt for the situation of the royal party
+as individuals, but he felt much more for the safety of the French
+nation, who were in still greater danger than Their Majesties had to
+dread, from the Austrian faction, by which a foreign army had been
+encouraged to invade the territory of France, where they were now waiting
+the opportunity of annihilating French liberty forever!
+
+"To this Her Majesty replied, 'When the deputies of the Assembly have
+permitted, nay, I may say, encouraged this open violation of the King's
+asylum, and, by their indifference to the safety of all those who
+surround us, have sanctioned the daily insults to which we have been,
+and still are, exposed, it is not to be wondered, at that all Sovereigns
+should consider it their interest to make common cause with us, to crush
+internal commotions, levelled, not only against the throne, and the
+persons of the Sovereign and his family, but against the very principle
+of monarchy itself.'
+
+"Here the King, though much intimidated for the situation of the Queen
+and his family, for whose heads the wretches were at that very moment
+howling in their ears, took up the conversation.
+
+"'These cruel facts,' said he, 'and the menacing situation you even now
+witness, fully justify our not rejecting foreign aid, though God knows
+how deeply I deplore the necessity of such a cruel resource! But, when
+all internal measures of conciliation have been trodden under foot, and
+the authorities, who ought to check it and protect us from these cruel
+outrages, are only occupied in daily fomenting the discord between us and
+our subjects; though a forlorn hope, what other hope is there of safety?
+I foresee the drift of all these commotions, and am resigned; but what
+will become of this misguided nation, when the head of it shall be
+destroyed?'
+
+"Here the King, nearly choked by his feelings, was compelled to pause for
+a moment, and he then proceeded.
+
+"'I should not feel it any sacrifice to give up the guardianship of the
+nation, could I, in so doing, insure its future tranquillity; but I
+foresee that my blood, like that of one of my unhappy brother
+Sovereigns,--[Charles the First, of England.]-- will only open the flood-
+gates of human misery, the torrent of which, swelled with the best blood
+of France, will deluge this once peaceful realm.'
+
+"This, as well as I can recollect, is the substance of what passed at the
+castle on this momentous day. Our situation was extremely doubtful, and
+the noise and horrid riots were at times so boisterous, that frequently
+we could not, though so near them, distinguish a word the King and Queen
+said; and yet, whenever the leaders of these organized ruffians spoke or
+threatened, the most respectful stillness instantly prevailed.
+
+"I weep in silence for misfortunes, which I fear are inevitable! The
+King, the Queen, the Princesse Elizabeth and myself, with many others
+under this unhappy roof, have never ventured to undress or sleep in bed,
+till last night. None of us any longer reside on the ground floor.
+
+"By the very manly exertions of some of the old officers incorporated in
+the national army, the awful riot I have described was overpowered, and
+the mob, with difficulty, dispersed. Among these, I should particularize
+Generals de Vomenil, de Mandat, and de Roederer. Principally by their
+means the interior of the Tuileries was at last cleared, though partial
+mobs, such as you have often witnessed, still subsist.
+
+"I am thus particular in giving you a full account of this last
+revolutionary commotion, that your prudence may still keep you at a
+distance from the vortex. Continue where you are, and tell your man
+servant how much I am obliged to him, and, at the same time, how much I
+am grieved at his being wounded! I knew nothing of the affair but from
+your letter and your faithful messenger. He is an old pensioner of mine,
+and a good honest fellow. You may depend on him. Serve yourself,
+through him, in communicating with me. Though he has had a limited
+education, he is not wanting in intellect. Remember that honesty, in
+matters of such vital import, is to be trusted before genius.
+
+"My apartment appears like a barrack, like a bear garden, like anything
+but what it was! Numbers of valuable things have been destroyed, numbers
+carried off. Still, notwithstanding all the horrors of these last days,
+it delights me to be able to tell you that no one in the service of the
+Royal Family failed in duty at this dreadful crisis. I think we may
+firmly rely on the inviolable attachment of all around us. No jealousy,
+no considerations of etiquette, stood in the way of their exertions to
+show themselves worthy of the situations they hold. The Queen showed the
+greatest intrepidity during the whole of these trying scenes.
+
+"At present, I can say no more. Petion, the Mayor of Paris, has just
+been announced; and, I believe, he wishes for an audience of Her Majesty,
+though he never made his appearance during the whole time of the riots in
+the palace. Adieu, mia cara Inglesina!"
+
+The receipt of this letter, however it might have affected me to hear
+what Her Highness suffered, in common with the rest of the unfortunate
+royal inmates of the Tuileries, gave me extreme pleasure from the
+assurance it contained of the firmness of those nearest to the sufferers.
+I was also sincerely gratified in reflecting on the probity and
+disinterested fidelity of this worthy man, which contrasted him, so
+strikingly and so advantageously to himself, with many persons of birth
+and education, whose attachment could not stand the test of the trying
+scenes of the Revolution, which made them abandon and betray, where they
+had sworn an allegiance to which they were doubly bound by gratitude.
+
+My man servant was attended, and taken the greatest care of. The
+Princess never missed a day in sending to inquire after his health; and,
+on his recovery, the Queen herself not only graciously condescended to
+see him, but, besides making him a valuable present, said many flattering
+and obliging things of his bravery and disinterestedness.
+
+I should scarcely have deemed these particulars honourable as they are to
+the feelings of the illustrious personages from whom they proceeded--
+worth mentioning in a work of this kind, did they not give indications of
+character rarely to be met with (and, in their case, how shamefully
+rewarded!), from having occurred at a crisis when their minds were
+occupied in affairs of such deep importance, and amidst the appalling
+dangers which hourly threatened their own existence.
+
+Her Majesty's correspondence with foreign Courts had been so much
+increased by these scenes of horror, especially her correspondence with
+her relations in Italy, that, ere long, I was sent for back to Paris.
+
+
+
+
+SECTION XV.
+
+Journal of the Princess resumed and concluded:
+
+"The insurrection of the 20th of June, and the uncertain state of the
+safety of the Royal Family, menaced as it was by almost daily riots,
+induced a number of well-disposed persons to prevail on General
+La Fayette to leave his army and come to Paris, and there personally
+remonstrate against these outrages. Had he been sincere he would have
+backed the measure by appearing at the head of his army, then well-
+disposed, as Cromwell did when he turned out the rogues who were seeking
+the Lord through the blood of their King, and put the keys in his pocket.
+Violent disorders require violent remedies. With an army and a few
+pieces of cannon at the door of the Assembly, whose members were seeking
+the aid of the devil, for the accomplishment of their horrors, he might,
+as was done when the same scene occurred in England in 1668, by good
+management; have averted the deluge of blood. But, by appearing before
+the Assembly isolated, without 'voila mon droit,' which the King of
+Prussia had had engraven on his cannon, he lost the opinion of all
+parties.
+
+ [In this instance the general grossly committed himself, in the
+ opinion of every impartial observer of his conduct. He should never
+ have shown himself in the capital, but at the head of his army.
+ France, circumstanced as it was, torn by intestine commotion, was
+ only to be intimidated by the sight of a popular leader at the head
+ of his forces. Usurped authority can only be quashed by the force
+ of legitimate authority. La Fayette being the only individual in
+ France that in reality possessed such an authority, not having
+ availed himself at a crisis like the one in which he was called upon
+ to act, rendered his conduct doubtful, and all his intended
+ operations suspicious to both parties, whether his feelings were
+ really inclined to prop up the fallen kingly authority, or his
+ newly-acquired republican principles prompted him to become the head
+ of the democratical party, for no one can see into the hearts of
+ men; his popularity from that moment ceased to exist.]
+
+"La Fayette came to the palace frequently, but the King would never see
+him. He was obliged to return, with the additional mortification of
+having been deceived in his expected support from the national guard of
+Paris, whose pay had been secretly trebled by the National Assembly, in
+order to secure them to itself. His own safety, therefore, required that
+he should join the troops under his command. He left many persons in
+whom he thought he could confide; among whom were some who came to me one
+day requesting I would present them to the Queen without loss of time, as
+a man condemned to be shot had confessed to his captain that there was a
+plot laid to murder Her Majesty that very night.
+
+"I hastened to the royal apartment, without mentioning the motive; but
+some such catastrophe was no more than what we incessantly expected, from
+the almost hourly changes of the national guard, for the real purpose of
+giving easy access to all sorts of wretches to the very rooms of the
+unfortunate Queen, in order to furnish opportunities for committing the
+crime with impunity.
+
+"After I had seen the Queen, the applicants were introduced, and, in my
+presence, a paper was handed by them to Her Majesty. At the moment she
+received it, I was obliged to leave her for the purpose of watching an
+opportunity for their departure unobserved. These precautions were
+necessary with regard to every person who came to us in the palace,
+otherwise the jealousy of the Assembly and its emissaries and the
+national guard of the interior might have been alarmed, and we should
+have been placed under express and open surveillance. The confusion
+created by the constant change of guard, however, stood us in good stead
+in this emergency. Much passing and repassing took place unheeded in the
+bustle.
+
+"When the visitors had departed, and Her Majesty at one window of the
+palace, and I at another, had seen them safe over the Pont Royal, I
+returned to Her Majesty. She then graciously handed me the paper which
+they had presented.
+
+"It contained an earnest supplication, signed by many thousand good
+citizens, that the King and Queen would sanction the plan of sending the
+Dauphin to the army of La Fayette. They pledged themselves, with the
+assistance of the royalists, to rescue the Royal Family. They, urged
+that if once the King could be persuaded to show himself at the head of
+his army, without taking any active part, but merely for his own safety
+and that of his family, everything might be accomplished with the
+greatest tranquillity.
+
+"The Queen exclaimed, 'What! send my child! No! never while I breathe!
+
+ [Little did this unfortunate mother think that they, who thus
+ pretended to interest themselves for this beautiful, angelic Prince
+ only a few months before, would, when she was in her horrid prison
+ after the butchery of her husband, have required this only comfort
+ to be violently torn from her maternal arms!
+
+ Little, indeed, did she think, when her maternal devotedness thus
+ repelled the very thought of his being trusted to myriads of sworn
+ defenders, how soon he would be barbarously consigned by the
+ infamous Assembly as the foot-stool of the inhuman savage cobbler,
+ Simon, to be the night-boy of the excrements of the vilest of the
+ works of human nature!]
+
+Yet were I an independent Queen, or the regent of a minority, I feel that
+I should be inclined to accept the offer, to place myself at the head of
+the army, as my immortal mother did, who, by that step, transmitted the
+crown of our ancestors to its legitimate descendants. It is the monarchy
+itself which now requires to be asserted. Though D'ORLEANS is actively
+engaged in attempting the dethronement of His Majesty, I do not think the
+nation will submit to such a Prince, or to any other monarchical
+government, if the present be decidedly destroyed.
+
+"'All these plans, my dear Princess,' continued she, 'are mere castles in
+the air. The mischief is too deeply rooted. As they have already
+frantically declared for the King's abdication, any strong measure now,
+incompetent as we are to assure its success, would at once arm the
+advocates of republicanism to proclaim the King's dethronement.
+
+"'The cruel observations of Petion to His Majesty, on our ever memorable
+return from Varennes, have made a deeper impression than you are aware
+of. When the King observed to him, "What do the French nation want?"--
+"A republic," replied he. And though he has been the means of already
+costing us some thousands, to crush this unnatural propensity, yet I
+firmly believe that he himself is at the head of all the civil disorders
+fomented for its attainment. I am the more confirmed in this opinion
+from a conversation I had with the good old man, M. De Malesherbes, who
+assured me the great sums we were lavishing on this man were thrown away,
+for he would be certain, eventually, to betray us: and such an inference
+could only have been drawn from the lips of the traitor himself. Petion
+must have given Malesherbes reason to believe this. I am daily more and
+more convinced it will be the case. Yet, were I to show the least energy
+or activity in support of the King's authority, I should then be accused
+of undermining it. All France would be up in arms against the danger of
+female influence. The King would only be lessened in the general opinion
+of the nation, and the kingly authority still more weakened. Calm
+submission to His Majesty is, therefore, the only safe, course for both
+of us, and we must wait events.'
+
+"While Her Majesty was thus opening her heart to me, the King and
+Princesse Elizabeth entered, to inform her that M. Laporte, the head of
+the private police, had discovered, and caused to be arrested, some of
+the wretches who had maliciously attempted to fire the palace of the
+Tuileries.
+
+"'Set them at liberty!' exclaimed Her Majesty; 'or, to clear themselves
+and their party, they will accuse us of something worse.'
+
+"'Such, too, is my opinion, Sire,' observed I; 'for however I abhor their
+intentions, I have here a letter from one of these miscreants which was
+found among the combustibles. It cautions us not to inhabit the upper
+part of the Pavilion. My not having paid the attention which was
+expected to the letter, has aroused the malice of the writer, and caused
+a second attempt to be made from the Pont Royal upon my own apartment; in
+preventing which, a worthy man has been cruelly wounded in the arm.'
+
+"'Merciful Heaven!' exclaimed the poor Queen and the Princesse Elizabeth,
+I not dangerously, I hope!
+
+"'I hope not,' added I; 'but the attempt, and its escaping unpunished,
+though there were guards all around, is a proof how perilous it will be,
+while we are so weak, to kindle their rancour by any show of impotent
+resentment; for I have reason to believe it was to that, the want of
+attention to the letter of which I speak was imputed.'
+
+"The Queen took this opportunity, of laying before the King the above-
+mentioned plan. His Majesty, seeing it in the name of La Fayette, took
+up the paper, and, after he had attentively perused it, tore it in
+pieces, exclaiming, 'What! has not M. La Fayette done mischief enough
+yet, but must he even expose the names of so many worthy men by
+committing them to paper at a critical period like this, when he is fully
+aware that we are in immediate danger of being assailed by a banditti of
+inhuman cannibals, who would sacrifice every individual attached to us,
+if, unfortunately, such a paper should be found? I am determined to have
+nothing to do with his ruinous plans. Popularity and ambition made him
+the principal promoter of republicanism. Having failed of becoming a
+Washington, he is mad to become a Cromwell. I have no faith in these
+turncoat constitutionalists.'
+
+"I know that the Queen heartily concurred in this sentiment concerning
+General La Fayette, as soon as she ascertained his real character,
+and discovered that he considered nothing paramount to public notoriety.
+To this he had sacrificed the interest of his country, and trampled under
+foot the throne; but finding he could not succeed in forming a Republican
+Government in France as he had in America, he, like many others, lost his
+popularity with the demagogues, and, when too late, came to offer his
+services, through me, to the Queen, to recruit a monarchy which his
+vanity had undermined to gratify, his chimerical ambition. Her Majesty
+certainly saw him frequently, but never again would she put herself in
+the way of being betrayed by one whom she considered faithless to all."
+
+ [Thus ended the proffered services of General La Fayette, who then
+ took the command of the national army, served against that of the
+ Prince de Conde, and the Princes of his native country, and was
+ given up with General Bournonville, De Lameth, and others, by
+ General Dumourier, on the first defeat of the French, to the
+ Austrians, by whom they were sent to the fortress of Olmutz in
+ Hungary, where they remained till after the death of the wretch
+ Robespierre, when they were exchanged for the Duchesse d'Angouleme,
+ now Dauphine of France.
+
+ From the retired life led by General La Fayette on his return to
+ France, there can be but little doubt that he spent a great part of
+ his time in reflecting on the fatal errors of his former conduct, as
+ he did not coincide with any of the revolutionary principles which
+ preceded the short-lived reign of imperialism. But though Napoleon
+ too well knew him to be attached from principle to republicanism--
+ every vestige of which he had long before destroyed--to employ him
+ in any military capacity, still he recalled him from his hiding-
+ place, in order to prevent his doing mischief, as he politically
+ did--every other royalist whom he could bring under the banners of
+ his imperialism.
+
+ Had Napoleon made use of his general knowledge of mankind in other
+ respects, as he politically did in France over his conquered
+ subjects, in respecting ancient habits, and gradually weaned them
+ from their natural prejudices instead of violently forcing all men
+ to become Frenchmen, all men would have fought for him, and not
+ against him. These were the weapons by which his power became
+ annihilated, and which, in the end, will be the destruction of all
+ potentates who presume to follow his fallacious plan of forming
+ individuals to a system instead of accommodating systems to
+ individuals. The fruits from Southern climes have been reared in
+ the North, but without their native virtue or vigour. It is more
+ dangerous to attack the habits of men than their religion.
+
+ The British Constitution, though a blessing to Englishmen, is very
+ ill-suited to nations not accustomed to the climate and its
+ variations. Every country has peculiarities of thought and manners
+ resulting from the physical influence of its sky and soil. Whenever
+ we lose sight of this truth, we naturally lose the affections of
+ those whose habits we counteract.]
+
+
+Here ends the Journal of my lamented benefactress. I have continued the
+history to the close of her career, and that of the Royal Family,
+especially as Her Highness herself acted so important a part in many of
+the scenes, which are so strongly illustrated by her conversation and
+letters. It is only necessary to add that the papers which I have
+arranged were received from Her Highness amidst the disasters which were
+now thickening around her and her royal friends.
+
+
+
+
+SECTION XVI.
+
+From the time I left Passy till my final departure from Paris for Italy,
+which took place on the 2nd of August, 1792, my residence was almost
+exclusively at the capital. The faithful driver, who had given such
+proofs of probity, continued to be of great service, and was put in
+perpetual requisition. I was daily about on the business of the Queen
+and the Princess, always disguised, and most frequently as a drummerboy;
+on which occasions the driver and my man servant were my companions.
+My principal occupation was to hear and take down the debates of the
+Assembly, and convey and receive letters from the Queen to the Princesse
+de Lamballe, to and from Barnave, Bertrand de Moleville, Alexandre de
+Lameth, Deport de Fertre, Duportail, Montmorin, Turbo, De Mandat, the
+Duc de Brissac, etc., with whom my illustrious patronesses kept up a
+continued correspondence, to which I believe all of them fell a
+sacrifice; for, owing to the imprudence of the King in not removing their
+communications when he removed the rest of his papers from the Tuileries,
+the exposure of their connections with the Court was necessarily
+consequent upon the plunder of the palace on the 10th of August, 1792.
+
+In my masquerade visits to the Assembly, I got acquainted with an editor
+of one of the papers; I think he told me his name was Duplessie. Being
+pleased with the liveliness of my remarks on some of the organized
+disorders, as I termed them, and with some comments I made upon the
+meanness of certain disgusting speeches on the patriotic gifts, my new
+acquaintance suffered me to take copies of his own shorthand remarks and
+reports. By this means the Queen and the Princess had them before they
+appeared in print. M. Duplessie was on other occasions of great service
+to me, especially as a protector in the mobs, for my man servant and the
+honest driver were so much occupied in watching the movements of the
+various faubourg factions, that I was often left entirely unattended.
+
+The horrors of the Tuileries, both by night and day, were now grown
+appallingly beyond description. Almost unendurable as they had been
+before, they were aggravated by the insults of the national guard to
+every passenger to and from the palace. I was myself in so much peril,
+that the Princess thought it necessary to procure a trusty person, of
+tried courage, to see me through the throngs, with a large bandbox of all
+sorts of fashionable millinery, as the mode of ingress and egress least
+liable to excite suspicion.
+
+Thus equipped, and guarded by my cicisbeo, I one day found myself, on
+entering the Tuileries, in the midst of an immense mob of regular trained
+rioters, who, seeing me go towards the palace, directed their attention
+entirely to me. They took me for some one belonging to the Queen's
+milliner, Madame Bertin, who, they said, was fattening upon the public
+misery, through the Queen's extravagance. The poor Queen herself they
+called by names so opprobious that decency will not suffer me to repeat
+them.
+
+With a volley of oaths, pressing upon us, they bore us to another part
+of the garden, for the purpose of compelling us to behold six or eight of
+the most infamous outcasts, amusing themselves, in a state of exposure,
+with their accursed hands and arms tinged with blood up to the elbows.
+The spot they had chosen for this exhibition of their filthy persons was
+immediately before the windows of the apartments of the Queen and the
+ladies of the Court. Here they paraded up and down, to the great
+entertainment of a throng of savage rebels, by whom they were applauded
+and encouraged with shouts of "Bis! bis!" signifying in English," Again!
+again!"
+
+The demoniac interest excited by this scene withdrew the attention of
+those who were enjoying it from me, and gave me the opportunity of
+escaping unperceived, merely with the loss of my bandbox. Of that the
+infuriated mob made themselves masters; and the hats, caps, bonnets, and
+other articles of female attire, were placed on the parts of their
+degraded carcases, which, for the honour of human nature, should have
+been shot.
+
+Overcome with agony at these insults, I burst from the garden in a flood
+of tears. On passing the gate, I was accosted by a person who exclaimed
+in a tone of great kindness, "Qu'as tu, ma bonne? qu'est ce qui vous
+afflige?" Knowing the risk I should run in representing the real cause of
+my concern, I immediately thought of ascribing it to the loss of the
+property of which I had been plundered. I told him I was a poor
+milliner, and had been robbed of everything I possessed in the world by
+the mob. "Come back with me," said he, "and I will have it restored to
+you." I knew it was of no avail, but policy stimulated me to comply; and
+I returned with him into the garden toward the palace.
+
+What should I have felt, had I been aware, when this man came up, that I
+was accosted by the villain Danton! The person who was with me knew him,
+but dared not speak, and watched a chance of escaping in the crowd for
+fear of being discovered. When I looked round and found myself alone,
+I said I had lost my brother in the confusion, which added to my grief.
+
+"Oh, never mind," said Danton; "take hold of my arm; no one shall molest
+you. We will look for your brother, and try to recover your things;" and
+on we went together: I, weeping, I may truly say, for my life, stopped at
+every step, while he related my doleful story to all whose curiosity was
+excited by my grief.
+
+On my appearing arm in arm with Danton before the windows of the Queen's
+apartments, we were observed by Her Majesty and the Princesses. Their
+consternation and perplexity, as well as alarm for my safety, may readily
+be conceived. A signal from the window instantly apprised me that I
+might enter the palace, to which my return had been for some time
+impatiently expected.
+
+Finding it could no longer be of any service to carry on the farce of
+seeking my pretended brother, I begged to be escorted out of the mob to
+the apartments of the Princesse de Lamballe.
+
+"Oh," said Danton, "certainly! and if you had only told the people that
+you were going to that good Princess, I am sure your things would not
+have been taken from you. But," added he, "are you perfectly certain
+they were not for that detestable Marie Antoinette?"
+
+"Oh!" I replied, "quite, quite certain!" All this while the mob was at
+my heels.
+
+"Then," said he, "I will not leave you till you are safe in the
+apartments of the Princesse de Lamballe, and I will myself make known to
+her your loss: she is so good," continued he, "that I am convinced she
+will make you just compensation."
+
+I then told him how much I should be obliged by his doing so, as I had
+been commissioned to deliver the things, and if I was made to pay for
+them, the loss would be more serious than I could bear.
+
+"Bah! bah!" exclaimed he. "Laissez moi faire! Laissez moi faire!"
+
+When he came to the inner door, which I pretended to know nothing about,
+he told the gentleman of the chamber his name, and said he wished to see
+his mistress.
+
+Her Highness came in a few minutes, and from her looks and visible
+agitation at the sight of Danton, I feared she would have betrayed both
+herself and me. However, while he was making a long preamble, I made
+signs, from which she inferred that all was safe.
+
+When Danton had finished telling her the story, she calmly said to me,
+"Do you recollect, child, the things you have been robbed of?"
+
+I replied that, if I had pen and ink, I could even set down the prices.
+
+"Oh, well, then, child, come in," said Her Highness, "and we will see
+what is to be done!"
+
+"There!" exclaimed Danton; "Did I not tell you this before?" Then,
+giving me a hearty squeeze of the hand, he departed, and thus terminated
+the millinery speculation, which, I have no doubt, cost Her Highness a
+tolerable sum.
+
+As soon as he was gone, the Princess said, "For Heaven's sake, tell me
+the whole of this affair candidly; for the Queen has been in the greatest
+agitation at the bare idea of your knowing Danton, ever since we first
+saw you walking with him! He is one of our moat inveterate enemies."
+
+I said that if they had but witnessed one half of the scenes that I saw,
+I was sure their feelings would have been shocked beyond description.
+"We did not see all, but we heard too much for the ears of our sex."
+
+I then related the particulars of our meeting to Her Highness, who
+observed, "This accident, however unpleasant, may still turn out to our
+advantage. This fellow believes you to be a marchande de modes, and the
+circumstance of his having accompanied you to my apartment will enable
+you, in future, to pass to and from the Pavilion unmolested by the
+national guard."
+
+With tears of joy in her eyes for my safety, she could not, however, help
+laughing when I told her the farce I kept up respecting the loss of my
+brother, and my bandbox with the millinery, for which I was also soon
+congratulated most graciously by Her Majesty, who much applauded my
+spirit and presence of mind, and condescended, immediately, to entrust me
+with letters of the greatest importance, for some of the most
+distinguished members of the Assembly, with which I left the palace in
+triumph, but taking care to be ready with a proper story of my losses.
+
+When I passed the guard-room, I was pitied by the very wretches, who,
+perhaps, had already shared in the spoils; and who would have butchered
+me, no doubt, into the bargain, could they have penetrated the real
+object of my mission. They asked me if I had been paid for the loss I
+sustained. I told them I had not, but I was promised that it should be
+settled.
+
+"Settled!" said one of the wretches. "Get the money as soon as you can.
+Do not trust to promises of its being settled. They will all be settled
+themselves soon!"
+
+The next day, on going to the palace, I found the Princesse de Lamballe
+in the greatest agitation, from the accounts the Court had just received
+of the murder of a man belonging to Arthur Dillon, and of the massacres
+at Nantes.
+
+"The horrid prints, pamphlets, and caricatures," cried she, "daily
+exhibited under the very windows of the Tuileries, against His Majesty,
+the Queen, the Austrian party, and the Coblentz party, the constant
+thwarting of every plan, and these last horrors at Nantes, have so
+overwhelmed the King that he is nearly become a mere automaton. Daily
+and nightly execrations are howled in his ears. Look at our boasted
+deliverers! The poor Queen, her children, and all of us belonging to the
+palace, are in danger of our lives at merely being seen; while they by
+whom we have been so long buoyed up with hope are quarrelling amongst
+themselves for the honour and etiquette of precedency, leaving us to the
+fury of a race of cannibals, who know no mercy, and will have destroyed
+us long before their disputes of etiquette can be settled."
+
+The utterance of Her Highness while saying this was rendered almost
+inarticulate by her tears.
+
+"What support against internal disorganization," continued she, "is to be
+expected from so disorganized a body as the present army of different
+nations, having all different interests?"
+
+I said there was no doubt that the Prussian army was on its march, and
+would soon be joined by that of the Princes and of Austria.
+
+"You speak as you wish, mia cara Inglesina, but it is all to no purpose.
+Would to God they had never been applied to, never been called upon to
+interfere. Oh, that Her Majesty could have been persuaded to listen to
+Dumourier and some other of the members, instead of relying on succours
+which, I fear, will never enter Paris in our lifetime! No army can
+subdue a nation; especially a nation frenzied by the recent recovery of
+its freedom and independence from the shackles of a corrupt and weak
+administration. The King is too good; the Queen has no equal as to
+heart; but they have both been most grossly betrayed. The royalists on
+one side, the constitutionalists on the other, will be the victims of the
+Jacobins, for they are the most powerful, they are the most united, they
+possess the most talent, and they act in a body, and not merely for the
+time being. Believe me, my dear, their plans are too well grounded to be
+defeated, as every one framed by the fallacious constitutionalists and
+mad-headed royalists has been; and so they will ever be while they
+continue to form two separate interests. From the very first moment when
+these two bodies were worked upon separately, I told the Queen that, till
+they were united for the same object, the monarchy would be unsafe, and
+at the mercy of the Jacobins, who, from hatred to both parties, would
+overthrow it themselves to rule despotically over those whom they no
+longer respected or feared, but whom they hated, as considering them both
+equally their former oppressors.
+
+"May the All-seeing Power," continued Her Highness, "grant, for the good
+of this shattered State, that I may be mistaken, and that my predictions
+may prove different in the result; but of this I see no hope, unless in
+the strength of our own internal resources. God knows how powerful they
+might prove could they be united at this moment! But from the anarchy
+and division kept up between them, I see no prospect of their being
+brought to bear, except in a general overthrow of this, as you have
+justly observed, organized system of disorders, from which at some future
+period we may obtain a solid, systematic order of government. Would
+Charles the Second ever have reigned after the murder of his father had
+England been torn to pieces by different factions? No! It was the union
+of the body of the nation for its internal tranquillity, the amalgamation
+of parties against domestic faction, which gave vigour to the arm of
+power, and enabled the nation to check foreign interference abroad, while
+it annihilated anarchy at home. By that means the Protector himself laid
+the first stone of the Restoration. The division of a nation is the
+surest harbinger of success to its invaders, the death-blow to its
+Sovereign's authority, and the total destruction of that innate energy by
+which alone a country can obtain the dignity of its own independence."
+
+
+
+
+SECTION XVII.
+
+While Her Highness was thus pondering on the dreadful situation of
+France, strengthening her arguments by those historical illustrations,
+which, from the past, enabled her to look into the future, a message came
+to her from Her Majesty. She left me, and, in a few minutes, returned to
+her apartment, accompanied by the Queen and Her Royal Highness the
+Princesse Elizabeth. I was greatly surprised at seeing these two
+illustrious and august personages bathed in tears. Of course, I could
+not be aware of any new motive to create any new or extraordinary
+emotion; yet there was in the countenances of all of the party an
+appearance different from anything I had ever witnessed in them, or any
+other person before; a something which seemed to say, they no longer had
+any affinity with the rest of earthly beings.
+
+They had all been just writing to their distant friends and relations.
+A fatal presentiment, alas! too soon verified, told them it was for the
+last time.
+
+Her Highness the Princesse de Lamballe now approached me.
+
+"Her Majesty," observed the Princess, "wishes to give you a mark of her
+esteem, in delivering to you, with her own hands, letters to her family,
+which it is her intention to entrust to your especial care.
+
+"On this step Her Majesty has resolved, as much to send you out of the
+way of danger, as from the conviction occasioned by the firm reliance
+your conduct has created in us, that you will faithfully obey the orders
+you may receive, and execute our intentions with that peculiar
+intelligence which the emergency of the case requires.
+
+"But even the desirable opportunity which offers, through you, for the
+accomplishment of her mission, might not have prevailed with Her Majesty
+to hasten your departure, had not the wretch Danton twice inquired at the
+palace for the 'little milliner,' whom he rescued and conducted safe to
+the apartments of the Pavilion of Flora. This, probably, may be a matter
+of no real consequence whatever; but it is our duty to avoid danger, and
+it has been decided that you should, at least for a time, absent Paris.
+
+"Per cio, mia cara Inglesina, speak now, freely and candidly: is it your
+wish to return to England, or go elsewhere? For though we are all sorry
+to lose you, yet it would be a source of still greater sorrow to us,
+prizing your services and fidelity as we do, should any plans and
+purposes of ours lead you into difficulty or embarrassment."
+
+"Oh, mon Dieu! c'est vrai!" interrupted Her Majesty, her eyes at the
+same time filled with tears.
+
+"I should never forgive myself," continued the Princess, "if I should
+prove the cause of any misfortune to you."
+
+"Nor I!" most graciously subjoined the Queen.
+
+"Therefore," pursued the Princess, "speak your mind without reserve."
+
+Here my own feelings, and the sobs of the illustrious party, completely
+overcame me, and I could not proceed. The Princesse de Lamballe clasped
+me in her arms. "Not only letters," exclaimed she, "but my life I would
+trust to the fidelity of my vera, verissima, cara Inglesina! And now,"
+continued Her Highness, turning round to the Queen, "will it please Your
+Majesty to give Inglesina your commands."
+
+"Here, then," said the Queen, "is a letter for my dear sister, the Queen
+of Naples, which you must deliver into her own hands. Here is another
+for my sister, the Duchess of Parma. If she should not be at Parma, you
+will find her at Colorno. This is for my brother, the Archduke of Milan;
+this for my sister-in-law, the Princesse Clotilde Piedmont, at Turin; and
+here are four others. You will take off the envelope when you get to
+Turin, and then put them into the post yourself. Do not give them to, or
+send them by, any person whatsoever.
+
+"Tell my sisters the state of Paris. Inform them of our cruel situation.
+Describe the riots and convulsions you have seen. Above all, assure them
+how dear they are to me, and how much I love them."
+
+At the word love, Her Majesty threw herself on a sofa and wept bitterly.
+
+The Princesse Elizabeth gave me a letter for her sister, and two for her
+aunts, to be delivered to them, if at Rome; but if not, to be put under
+cover and sent through the post at Rome to whatever place they might have
+made their residence.
+
+I had also a packet of letters to deliver for the Princesse de Lamballe
+at Turin; and another for the Duc de Serbelloni at Milan.
+
+Her Majesty and the Princesse Elizabeth not only allowed me the honour to
+kiss their hands, but they, both gave me their blessing, and good wishes
+for my safe return, and then left me with the Princesse de Lamballe.
+
+Her Majesty had scarcely left the apartment of the Princess, when I
+recollected she had forgotten to give me the cipher and the key for the
+letters. The Princess immediately went to the Queen's apartment, and
+returned with them shortly after.
+
+"Now that we are alone," said Her Highness, "I will tell you what Her
+Majesty has graciously commanded me to signify to you in her royal name.
+The Queen commands me to say that you are provided for for life; and
+that, on the first vacancy which may occur, she intends fixing you at
+Court.
+
+"Therefore mia cara Inglesina, take especial care what you are about, and
+obey Her Majesty's wishes when you are absent, as implicitly as you have
+hitherto done all her commands during your abode near her. You are not
+to write to any one. No one is to be made acquainted with your route.
+You are not to leave Paris in your own carriage. It will be sent after
+you by your man servant, who is to join you at Chalon sur Saone.
+
+"I have further to inform you that Her Majesty the Queen, on sending you
+the cipher, has at the same time graciously condescended to add these
+presents as further marks of her esteem."
+
+Her Highness then showed me a most beautiful gold watch, chain and seals.
+
+"These," said she, placing them with her own hands, "Her Majesty desired
+me to put round your neck in testimony of her regard."
+
+At the same time Her Highness presented me, on her own part, with a
+beautiful pocketbook, the covers of which were of gold enamelled, with
+the word "SOUVENIR" in diamonds on one side, and a large cipher of her
+own initials on the other. The first page contained the names of the
+Queen and Her Royal Highness the Princesse Elizabeth, in their own
+handwriting. There was a cheque in it on a Swiss banker, at Milan, of
+the name of Bonny.
+
+Having given me these invaluable tokens, Her Highness proceeded with her
+instructions.
+
+"At Chalon," continued she, "mia cara, your man servant will perhaps
+bring you other letters. Take two places in the stage for yourself and
+your femme de chambre, in her name, and give me the memorandum, that our
+old friend, the driver, may procure the passports. You must not be seen;
+for there is no doubt that Danton has given the police a full description
+of your person. Now go and prepare: we shall see each other again before
+your departure."
+
+Only a few minutes afterwards my man servant came to me to say that it
+would be some hours before the stage would set off, and that there was a
+lady in her carriage waiting for me in the Bois de Boulogne. I hastened
+thither. What was my surprise on finding it was the Princess. I now saw
+her for the last time!
+
+Let me pass lightly over this sad moment. I must not, however, dismiss
+the subject, without noticing the visible changes which had taken place
+in the short space of a month, in the appearance of all these illustrious
+Princesses. Their very complexions were no longer the same, as if grief
+had changed the whole mass of their blood. The Queen, in particular,
+from the month of July to the 2d of August, looked ten years older. The
+other two Princesses were really worn out with fatigue, anxiety, and the
+want of rest, as, during the whole month of July, they scarcely ever
+slept, for fear of being murdered in their beds, and only threw
+themselves on them, now and then, without undressing. The King, three or
+four times in the night, would go round to their different apartments,
+fearful they might be destroyed in their sleep, and ask, "Etes vous la?"
+when they would answer him from within, "Nous sommes encore ici."
+Indeed, if, when nature was exhausted, sleep by chance came to the relief
+of their worn-out and languid frames, it was only to awaken them to fresh
+horrors, which constantly threatened the convulsion by which they were
+finally annihilated.
+
+It would be uncandid in me to be silent concerning the marked difference
+I found in the feelings of the two royal sisters of Her Majesty.
+
+I had never had the honour before to execute any commissions for her
+Royal Highness the Duchess of Parma, and, of course, took that city in my
+way to Naples.
+
+I did not reach Parma till after the horrors which had taken place at the
+Tuileries on the 10th of August, 1792. The whole of the unfortunate
+Royal Family of France were then lodged in the Temple. There was not a
+feeling heart in Europe unmoved at their afflicting situation.
+
+I arrived at Colorno, the country residence of the Duchess of Parma, just
+as Her Royal Highness was going out on horseback.
+
+I ordered my servant to inform one of the pages that I came by express
+from Paris, and requested the honour to know when it would be convenient
+for Her Royal Highness to allow me a private audience, as I was going,
+post-haste, to Rome and Naples. Of course, I did not choose to tell my
+business either to my own or Her Royal Highness's servant, being in
+honour and duty bound to deliver the letter and the verbal message of her
+then truly unfortunate sister in person and in privacy.
+
+The mention of Paris I saw somewhat startled and confused her. Meantime,
+she came near enough to my carriage for me to say to her in German, in
+order that none of the servants, French or Italian, might understand,
+that I had a letter to deliver into her own hands, without saying from
+whom.
+
+She then desired I would alight, and she soon followed me; and, after
+having very graciously ordered me some refreshments, asked me from whom I
+had been sent.
+
+I delivered Her Majesty's letter. Before she opened it, she exclaimed,
+"'O Dio! tutto e perduto e troppo tardi'! Oh, God! all is lost, it is
+too late!" I then gave her the cipher and the key. In a few minutes I
+enabled her to decipher the letter. On getting through it, she again
+exclaimed, "'E tutto inutile'! it is entirely useless! I am afraid they
+are all lost. I am sorry you are so situated as not to allow of your
+remaining here to rest from your fatigue. Whenever you come to Parma, I
+shall be glad to see you."
+
+She then took out her pocket handkerchief, shed a few tears, and said
+that, as circumstances were now so totally changed, to answer the letter
+might only commit her, her sister, and myself; but that if affairs took
+the turn she wished, no doubt, her sister would write again. She then
+mounted her horse, and wished me a good journey; and I took leave, and
+set off for Rome.
+
+I must confess that the conduct of the Duchess of Parma appeared to me
+rather cold, if not unfeeling. Perhaps she was afraid of showing too
+much emotion, and wished to encourage the idea that Princesses ought not
+to give way to sensibility, like common mortals.
+
+But how different was the conduct of the Queen of Naples! She kissed the
+letter: she bathed it with her tears! Scarcely could she allow herself
+time to decipher it. At every sentence she exclaimed, "Oh, my dear, oh,
+my adored sister! What will become of her! My brothers are now both no
+more! Surely, she will soon be liberated!" Then, turning suddenly to
+me, she asked with eagerness, "Do you not think she will? Oh, Marie,
+Marie! why did she not fly to Vienna? Why did she not come to me
+instead of writing? Tell me, for God's sake, all you know!"
+
+I said I knew nothing further of what had taken place at Paris, having
+travelled night and day, except what I had heard from the different
+couriers, which I had met and stopped on my route; but I hoped to be
+better informed by Sir William Hamilton, as all my letters were to be
+sent from France to Turin, and thence on to Sir William at Naples; and if
+I found no letters with him, I should immediately set off and return to
+Turin or Milan, to be as near France as possible for my speedy return if
+necessary. I ventured to add that it was my earnest prayer that all the
+European Sovereigns would feel the necessity of interesting themselves
+for the Royal Family of France, with whose fate the fate of monarchy
+throughout Europe might be interwoven.
+
+"Oh, God of Heaven!" cried the Queen, "all that dear family may ere now
+have been murdered! Perhaps they are already numbered among the dead!
+Oh, my poor, dear, beloved Marie! Oh, I shall go frantic! I must send
+for General Acton."
+
+Wringing her hands, she pulled the bell, and in a few minutes the general
+came. On his entering the apartment, she flew to him like one deprived
+of reason.
+
+"There!" exclaimed she. "There! Behold the fatal consequences!" showing
+him the letter. "Louis XVI. is in the state of Charles the First of
+England, and my sister will certainly be murdered."
+
+"No, no, no!" exclaimed the general. "Something will be done. Calm
+yourself, madame." Then turning to me, "When," said he, "did you leave
+Paris?"
+
+"When all was lost!" interrupted the Queen.
+
+"Nay," cried the general; "pray let me speak. All is not lost, you will
+find; have but a little patience."
+
+"Patience!" said the Queen. "For two years I have heard of nothing else.
+Nothing has been done for these unfortunate beings." She then threw
+herself into a chair. "Tell him!" cried she to me, "tell him! tell him!"
+
+I then informed the general that I had left Paris on the 2d of August,
+but did not believe at the time, though the daily riots were horrible,
+that such a catastrophe could have occurred so soon as eight days after.
+
+The Queen was now quite exhausted, and General Acton rang the bell for
+the lady-in-waiting, who entered accompanied by the Duchesse Curigliano
+Marini, and they assisted Her Majesty to bed.
+
+When she had retired, "Do not," said the general to me, "do not go to Sir
+William's to-night. He is at Caserte. You seem too much fatigued."
+
+"More from grief," replied I, "and reflection on the fatal consequences
+that might result to the great personages I have so lately left, than
+from the journey."
+
+"Take my advice," resumed he. "You had much better go to bed and rest
+yourself. You look very ill."
+
+I did as he recommended, and went to the nearest hotel I could find. I
+felt no fatigue of mind or body till I had got into bed, where I was
+confined for several days with a most violent fever. During my illness I
+received every attention both from the Court, and our Ambassador and Lady
+Hamilton, who kindly visited me every day. The Queen of Naples I never
+again saw till my return in 1793, after the murder of the Queen of
+France; and I am glad I did not, for her agony would have acted anew upon
+my disordered frame, and might have proved fatal.
+
+I was certainly somewhat prepared for a difference of feeling between the
+two Princesses, as the unfortunate Marie Antoinette, in the letters to
+the Queen of Naples, always wrote, "To my much beloved sister, the Queen
+of the two Sicilies, etc.," and to the other, merely, "To the Duchess of
+Parma, etc." But I could never have dreamt of a difference so little
+flattering, under such circumstances, to the Duchess of Parma.
+
+
+
+
+SECTION XVIII.
+
+From the moment of my departure from Paris on the 2d of August, 1792, the
+tragedy hastened to its denouement. On the night of the 9th, the tocsin
+was sounded, and the King and the Royal Family looked upon their fate as
+sealed. Notwithstanding the personal firmness of His Majesty, he was a
+coward for others. He dreaded the responsibility of ordering blood to be
+shed, even in defence of his nearest and dearest interests. Petion,
+however, had given the order to repel force by force to De Mandat, who
+was murdered upon the steps of the Hotel de Ville. It has been generally
+supposed that Petion had received a bribe for not ordering the cannon
+against the Tuileries on the night of the 9th, and that De Mandat was
+massacred by the agents of Petion for the purpose of extinguishing all
+proof that he was only acting under the instructions of the Mayor.
+
+I shall not undertake to judge of the propriety of the King's impression
+that there was no safety from the insurgents but in the hall, and under
+the protection of the Assembly. Had the members been well disposed
+towards him, the event might have proved very different. But there is
+one thing certain. The Queen would never have consented to this step but
+to save the King and her innocent children. She would have preferred
+death to the humiliation of being under obligations to her sworn enemies;
+but she was overcome by the King declaring, with tears in his eyes, that
+he would not quit the palace without her. The Princesses Elizabeth and
+de Lamballe fell at her feet, implored Her Majesty to obey the King, and
+assured her there was no alternative between instant death and refuge
+from it in the Assembly. "Well," said the Queen, "if our lot be death,
+let us away to receive it with the national sanction."
+
+I need not expatiate on the succession of horrors which now overwhelmed
+the royal sufferers. Their confinement at the Feuillans, and their
+subsequent transfer to the Temple, are all topics sufficiently enlarged
+upon by many who were actors in the scenes to which they led. The
+Princesse de Lamballe was, while it was permitted, the companion of their
+captivity. But the consolation of her society was considered too great
+to be continued. Her fate had no doubt been predetermined; and,
+unwilling to await the slow proceedings of a trial, which it was thought
+politic should precede the murder of her royal mistress, it was found
+necessary to detach her from the wretched inmates of the Temple, in order
+to have her more completely within the control of the miscreants, who
+hated her for her virtues. The expedient was resorted to of casting
+suspicion upon the correspondence which Her Highness kept up with the
+exterior of the prison, for the purpose of obtaining such necessaries as
+were required, in consequence of the utter destitution in which the Royal
+Family retired from the Tuileries. Two men, of the names of Devine and
+Priquet, were bribed to create a suspicion, by their informations against
+the Queen's female attendant. The first declared that on the 18th of
+August, while he was on duty near the cell of the King, he saw a woman
+about eleven o'clock in the day come from a room in the centre, holding
+in one hand three letters, and with the other cautiously opening the door
+of the right-hand chamber, whence she presently came back without the
+letters and returned into the centre chamber. He further asserted that
+twice, when this woman opened the door, he distinctly saw a letter half-
+written, and every evidence of an eagerness to hide it from observation.
+The second informant, Priquet, swore that, while on duty as morning
+sentinel on the gallery between the two towers, he saw, through the
+window of the central chamber, a woman writing with great earnestness and
+alarm during the whole time he was on guard.
+
+All the ladies were immediately summoned before the authorities. The
+hour of the separation between the Princess and her royal friend accorded
+with the solemnity of the circumstance. It was nearly midnight when they
+were torn asunder, and they never met again.
+
+The examinations were all separate. That of the Princesse de Lamballe
+was as follows
+
+Q. Your name?
+
+A. Marie-Therese-Louise de Savoy, Bourbon Lamballe.
+
+Q. What do you know of the events which occurred on the 10th of August?
+
+A. Nothing.
+
+Q. Where did you pass that day?
+
+A. As a relative I followed the King to the National Assembly.
+
+Q. Were you in bed on the nights of the 9th and 10th?
+
+A. No.
+
+Q. Where were you then?
+
+A. In my apartments, at the chateau.
+
+Q. Did you not go to the apartments of the King in the course of that
+night?
+
+A. Finding there was a likelihood of a commotion, went thither towards
+one in the morning.
+
+Q. You were aware, then, that the people had arisen?
+
+A. I learnt it from hearing the tocsin.
+
+Q. Did you see the Swiss and National Guards, who passed the night on
+the terrace?
+
+A. I was at the window, but saw neither.
+
+Q. Was the King in his apartment when you went thither?
+
+A. There were a great number of persons in the room, but not the King.
+
+Q. Did you know of the Mayor of Paris being at the Tuileries?
+
+A. I heard he was there.
+
+Q. At what hour did the King go to the National Assembly?
+
+A. Seven.
+
+Q. Did he not, before he went, review the troops? Do you know the oath
+he made them swear?
+
+A. I never heard of any oath.
+
+Q. Have you any knowledge of cannon being mounted and pointed in the
+apartments?
+
+A. No.
+
+Q. Have you ever seen Messrs. Mandat and d'Affry in the chateau?
+
+A. No.
+
+Q. Do you know the secret doors of the Tuileries?
+
+A. I know of no such doors.
+
+Q. Have you not, since you have been in the Temple, received and written
+letters, which you sought to send away secretly?
+
+A. I have never received or written any letters, excepting such as have
+been delivered to the municipal officer.
+
+Q. Do you know anything of an article of furniture which is making for
+Madame Elizabeth?
+
+A. No.
+
+Q. Have you not recently received some devotional books?
+
+A. No.
+
+Q. What are the books which you have at the Temple?
+
+A. I have none.
+
+Q. Do you know anything of a barred staircase?
+
+A. No.
+
+Q. What general officers did you see at the Tuileries, on the nights of
+the 9th and 10th?
+
+A. I saw no general officers, I only saw M. Roederer.
+
+For thirteen hours was Her Highness, with her female companions in
+misfortune, exposed to these absurd forms, and to the gaze of insulting
+and malignant curiosity. At length, about the middle of the day, they
+were told that it was decreed that they should be detained till further
+orders, leaving them the choice of prisons, between that of la Force and
+of la Salpetriere.
+
+Her Highness immediately decided on the former. It was at first
+determined that she should be separated from Madame de Tourzel, but
+humanity so far prevailed as to permit the consolation of her society,
+with that of others of her friends and fellow-sufferers, and for a moment
+the Princess enjoyed the only comfort left to her, that of exchanging
+sympathy with her partners in affliction. But the cell to which she was
+doomed proved her last habitation upon earth.
+
+On the 1st of September the Marseillois began their murderous operations.
+Three hundred persons in two days massacred upwards of a thousand defence
+less prisoners, confined under the pretext of malpractices against the
+State, or rather devotedness to the royal cause. The spirit which
+produced the massacres of the prisons at Paris extended them through the
+principal towns and cities all over France.
+
+Even the universal interest felt for the Princesse de Lamballe was of no
+avail against this frenzy. I remember once (as if it were from a
+presentiment of what was to occur) the King observing to her, "I never
+knew any but fools and sycophants who could keep themselves clear from
+the lash of public censure. How is it, then, that you, my dear Princess,
+who are neither, contrive to steer your bark on this dangerous coast
+without running against the rocks on which so many good vessels like your
+own have been dashed to pieces?" "Oh, Sire," replied Her Highness, "my
+time is not yet come--I am not dead yet!" Too soon, and too horribly, her
+hour did come!
+
+The butchery of the prisons was now commenced. The Duc de Penthievre set
+every engine in operation to save his beloved daughter-in-law. He sent
+for Manuel, who was then Procureur of Paris. The Duke declared that half
+his fortune should be Manuel's if he could but save the Princesse de
+Lamballe and the ladies who were in the same prison with her from the
+general massacre. Manuel promised the Duke that he would instantly set
+about removing them all from the reach of the blood-hunters. He began
+with those whose removal was least likely to attract attention, leaving
+the Princesse de Lamballe, from motives of policy, to the last.
+
+Meanwhile, other messengers had been dispatched to different quarters for
+fear of failure with Manuel. It was discovered by one of these that the
+atrocious tribunal,--[Thibaudeau, Hebert, Simonier, etc.]-- who sat in
+mock judgment upon the tenants of these gloomy abodes, after satiating
+themselves with every studied insult they could devise, were to pronounce
+the word "libre!" It was naturally presumed that the predestined
+victims, on hearing this tempting sound, and seeing the doors at the same
+moment set open by the clerks of the infamous court, would dart off in
+exultation, and, fancying themselves liberated, rush upon the knives of
+the barbarians, who were outside, in waiting for their blood! Hundreds
+were thus slaughtered.
+
+To save the Princess from such a sacrifice, it was projected to prevent
+her from appearing before the tribunal, and a belief was encouraged that
+means would be devised to elude the necessity. The person who interested
+himself for her safety contrived to convey a letter containing these
+words: "Let what will happen, for God's sake do not quit your cell. You
+will be spared. Adieu."
+
+Manuel, however, who knew not of this cross arrangement, was better
+informed than its projector.
+
+He was aware it would be impossible for Her Highness to escape from
+appearing before the tribunal. He had already removed her companions.
+The Princesse de Tarente, the Marquise de Tourzel, her daughter, and
+others, were in safety. But when, true to his promise, he went to the
+Princesse de Lamballe, she would not be prevailed upon to quit her cell.
+There was no time for parley. The letter prevailed, and her fate was
+inevitable.
+
+The massacre had begun at daybreak. The fiends had been some hours busy
+in the work of death. The piercing shrieks of the dying victims brought
+the Princess and her remaining companion upon their knees, in fervent
+prayer for the souls of the departed. The messengers of the tribunal now
+appeared. The Princess was compelled to attend the summons. She went,
+accompanied by her faithful female attendant.
+
+A glance at the seas of blood, of which she caught a glimpse upon her way
+to the Court, had nearly shocked her even to sudden death. Would it had!
+She staggered, but was sustained by her companion. Her courage
+triumphed. She appeared before the gore-stained tribunes.
+
+After some questions of mere form, Her Highness was commanded to swear to
+be faithful to the new order of government, and to hate the King, the
+Queen, and royalty.
+
+"To the first," replied Her Highness, "I willingly submit. To the
+second, how can I accede? There is nothing of which I can accuse the
+Royal Family. To hate them is against my nature. They are my
+Sovereigns. They are my friends and relations. I have served them for
+many years, and never have I found reason for the slightest complaint."
+
+The Princess could no longer articulate. She fell into the arms of her
+attendant. The fatal signal was pronounced. She recovered, and,
+crossing the court of the prison, which was bathed with the blood of
+mutilated victims, involuntarily exclaimed, "Gracious Heaven! What a
+sight is this!" and fell into a fit.
+
+Nearest to her in the mob stood a mulatto, whom she had caused to be
+baptized, educated, and maintained; but whom, for ill-conduct, she had
+latterly excluded from her presence. This miscreant struck at her with
+his halbert. The blow removed her cap. Her luxuriant hair (as if to
+hide her angelic beauty from the sight of the murderers, pressing tiger-
+like around to pollute that form, the virtues of which equalled its
+physical perfection)--her luxuriant hair fell around and veiled her a
+moment from view. An individual, to whom I was nearly allied, seeing the
+miscreants somewhat staggered, sprang forward to the rescue; but the
+mulatto wounded him. The Princess was lost to all feeling from the
+moment the monster first struck at her. But the demons would not quit
+their prey. She expired gashed with wounds.
+
+Scarcely was the breath out of her body, when the murderers cut off her
+head. One party of them fixed it, like that of the vilest traitor, on an
+immense pole, and bore it in triumph all over Paris; while another
+division of the outrageous cannibals were occupied in tearing her clothes
+piecemeal from her mangled corpse. The beauty of that form, though
+headless, mutilated and reeking with the hot blood of their foul crime--
+how shall I describe it?--excited that atrocious excess of lust, which
+impelled these hordes of assassins to satiate their demoniac passions
+upon the remains of this virtuous angel.
+
+This incredible crime being perpetrated, the wretches fastened ropes
+round the body, arms, and legs, and dragged it naked through the streets
+of Paris, till no vestige remained by which it could be distinguished as
+belonging to the human species; and then left it among the hundreds of
+innocent victims of that awful day, who were heaped up to putrefy in one
+confused and disgusting mass.
+
+The head was reserved for other purposes of cruelty and horror. It was
+first borne to the Temple, beneath the windows of the royal prisoners.
+The wretches who were hired daily to insult them in their dens of misery,
+by proclaiming all the horrors vomited from the national Vesuvius, were
+commissioned to redouble their howls of what had befallen the Princesse
+de Lamballe.
+
+ [These horrid circumstances I had from the Chevalier Clery, who was
+ the only attendant allowed to assist Louis XVI. and his unhappy
+ family, during their last captivity; but who was banished from the
+ Temple as soon as his royal master was beheaded, and never permitted
+ to return. Clery told me all this when I met him at Pyrmont, in
+ Germany. He was then in attendance upon the late Comtesse de Lisle,
+ wife of Louie XVIII., at whose musical parties I had often the
+ honour of assisting, when on a visit to the beautiful Duchesse de
+ Guiche. On returning to Paris from Germany, on my way back into
+ Italy, I met the wife of Clery, and her friend M. Beaumont, both old
+ friends of mine, who confirmed Clery's statement, and assured me
+ they were all for two years in hourly expectation of being sent to
+ the Place de Greve for execution. The death of Robespierre saved
+ their lives.
+
+ Madame Clery taught Marie Antoinette to play upon the harp. Madame
+ Beaumont was a natural daughter of Louis XV. I had often occasion
+ to be in their agreeable society; and, as might be expected, their
+ minds were stored with the most authentic anecdotes and information
+ upon the topics of the day.]
+
+The Queen sprang up at the name of her friend. She heard subjoined to,
+it, "la voila en triomphe," and then came shouts and laughter. She
+looked out. At a distance she perceived something like a Bacchanalian
+procession, and thought, as she hoped, that the Princess was coming to
+her in triumph from her prison, and her heart rejoiced in the
+anticipation of once more being, blessed with her society. But the King,
+who had seen and heard more distinctly from his apartment, flew to that
+of the Queen. That the horrid object might not escape observation, the
+monsters had mounted upon each other's shoulders so as to lift the
+bleeding head quite up to the prison bars. The King came just in time to
+snatch Her Majesty from the, spot, and thus she was prevented from seeing
+it. He took her up in his arms and carried her to a distant part of the
+Temple, but the mob pursued her in her retreat, and howled the fatal
+truth even at her, very door, adding that her head would be the next, the
+nation would require. Her Majesty fell into violent hysterics. The
+butchers of human flesh continued in the interior of the Temple, parading
+the triumph of their assassination, until the shrieks of the Princesse
+Elizabeth at the state in which she saw the Queen, and serious fears for
+the safety of the royal prisoners, aroused the commandant to treble the
+national guards and chase the barbarians to the outside, where they
+remained for hours.
+
+
+
+SECTION XIX.
+
+It now remains for me to complete my record by a few facts and
+observations relating to the illustrious victims who a short time
+survived the Princesse de Lamballe. I shall add to this painful
+narrative some details which have been mentioned to me concerning their
+remorseless persecutors, who were not long left unpursued by just and
+awful retribution. Having done this, I shall dismiss the subject.
+
+The execrable and sacrilegious modern French Pharisees, who butchered, on
+the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd of September, 1792, all the prisoners at Paris, by
+these massacres only gave the signal for the more diabolical machinations
+which led to the destruction of the still more sacred victims of the 21st
+of January, and the 16th of October, 1793, and the myriads who followed.
+
+The King himself never had a doubt with regard to his ultimate fate.
+His only wish was to make it the means of emancipation for the Queen and
+Royal Family. It was his intention to appeal to the National Assembly
+upon the subject, after his trial. Such also was the particular wish of
+his saint-like sister, the Princesse Elizabeth, who imagined that an
+appeal under such circumstances could not be resisted. But the Queen
+strongly opposed the measure; and His Majesty said he should be loath,
+in the last moments of his painful existence, in anything to thwart one
+whom he loved so tenderly.
+
+He had long accustomed himself, when he spoke of the Queen and royal
+infants, in deference to the temper of the times, only to say, "my wife
+and children." They, as he told Clery, formed a tie, and the only one
+remaining, which still bound him to earth. Their last embraces, he said,
+went so to his aching heart, that he could even yet feel their little
+hands clinging about him, and see their streaming eyes, and hear their
+agonized and broken voices. The day previous to the fatal catastrophe,
+when permitted for the last time to see his family, the Princesse
+Elizabeth whispered him, not for herself, but for the Queen and his
+helpless innocents, to remember his intentions. He said he should not
+feel himself happy if, in his last hour, he did not give them a proof of
+his paternal affection, in obtaining an assurance that the sacrifice of
+his life should be the guarantee of theirs. So intent was his mind upon
+this purpose, said Clery to me, that when his assassins came to take him
+to the slaughtering-place, he said, "I hope my death will appease the
+nation, and that my innocent family, who have suffered on my account,
+will now be released."
+
+The ruffians answered, "The nation, always magnanimous, only seeks to
+punish the guilty. You may be assured your family will be respected."
+Events have proved how well they kept their word.
+
+It was to fulfil the intention of recommending his family to the people
+with his dying breath that he commenced his address upon the scaffold,
+when Santerre ordered the drums to drown his last accents, and the axe
+to fall!
+
+The Princesse Elizabeth, and perhaps others of the royal prisoners, hoped
+he would have been reprieved, till Herbert, that real 'Pere du chene',
+with a smile upon his countenance, came triumphantly to announce to the
+disconsolate family that Louis was no more!
+
+Perhaps there never was a King more misrepresented and less understood,
+especially by the immediate age in which he lived, than Louis XVI. He
+was the victim of natural timidity, increased by the horror of bloodshed,
+which the exigencies of the times rendered indispensable to his safety.
+He appeared weak in intellect, when he was only so from circumstances.
+An overwrought anxiety to be just made him hesitate about the mode of
+overcoming the abuses, until its procrastination had destroyed the object
+of his wishes. He had courage sufficient, as well as decision, where
+others were not menaced and the danger was confined to himself; but,
+where his family or his people were involved, he was utterly unfit to
+give direction. The want of self-sufficiency in his own faculties have
+been his, and his throne's, ruin. He consulted those who caused him to
+swerve from the path his own better reason had dictated, and, in seeking
+the best course, he often chose the worst.
+
+The same fatal timidity which pervaded his character extended to his
+manners. From being merely awkward, he at last became uncouth; but from
+the natural goodness of his heart, the nearest to him soon lost sight of
+his ungentleness from the rectitude of his intentions, and, to parody the
+poet, saw his deportment in his feelings.
+
+Previous to the Revolution, Louis XVI. was generally considered gentle
+and affable, though never polished. But the numberless outrages suffered
+by his Queen, his family, his friends, and himself, especially towards
+the close of his career, soured him to an air of rudeness, utterly
+foreign to his nature and to his intention.
+
+It must not be forgotten that he lived in a time of unprecedented
+difficulty. He was a lamb governing tigers. So far as his own personal
+bearing is concerned, who is there among his predecessors, that, replaced
+upon the throne, would have resisted the vicissitudes brought about by
+internal discord, rebellion, and riot, like himself? What said he when
+one of the heterogeneous, plebeian, revolutionary assemblies not only
+insulted him, but added to the insult a laugh? "If you think you can
+govern better, I am ready to resign," was the mild but firm reply of
+Louis.
+
+How glorious would have been the triumph for the most civilized nation in
+the centre of Europe had the insulter taken him at his word. When the
+experimentalists did attempt to govern, we all know, and have too
+severely felt, the consequences. Yet this unfortunate monarch has been
+represented to the world as imbecile, and taxed with wanting character,
+firmness, and fortitude, because he has been vanquished! The despot-
+conqueror has been vanquished since!
+
+His acquirements were considerable. His memory was remarkably retentive
+and well-stored,--a quality, I should infer from all I have observed,
+common to most Sovereigns. By the multiplicity of persons they are in
+the habit of seeing, and the vast variety of objects continually passing
+through their minds, this faculty is kept in perpetual exercise.
+
+But the circumstance which probably injured Louis XVI. more than any
+other was his familiarity with the locksmith, Gamin. Innocent as was the
+motive whence it arose, this low connection lessened him more with the
+whole nation than if he had been the most vicious of Princes. How
+careful Sovereigns ought to be, with respect to the attention they bestow
+on men in humble life; especially those whose principles may have been
+demoralized by the meanness of the associations consequent upon their
+occupation, and whose low origin may have denied them opportunities of
+intellectual cultivation.
+
+This observation map even be extended to the liberal arts. It does not
+follow because a monarch is fond of these that he should so far forget
+himself as to make their professors his boon companions. He loses ground
+whenever he places his inferiors on a level with himself. Men are
+estimated from the deference they pay to their own stations in society.
+The great Frederic of Prussia used to sap, "I must show myself a King,
+because my trade is royalty."
+
+It was only in destitution and anguish that the real character of Louis
+developed itself. He was firm and patient, utterly regardless of
+himself, but wrung to the heart for others, not even excepting his
+deluded murderers. Nothing could swerve him from his trust in Heaven,
+and he left a glorious example of how far religion can triumph over every
+calamity and every insult this world has power to inflict.
+
+There was a national guard, who, at the time of the imprisonment of the
+Royal Family, was looked upon as the most violent of Jacobins, and the
+sworn enemy of royalty. On that account the sanguinary agents of the
+self-created Assembly employed him to frequent the Temple. His special
+commission was to stimulate the King and Royal Family by every possible
+argument to self-destruction.
+
+But this man was a friend in disguise. He undertook the hateful office
+merely to render every service in his power, and convey regular
+information of the plots of the Assembly against those whom he was
+deputed to persecute. The better to deceive his companions, he would
+read aloud to the Royal Family all the debates of the regicides, which
+those who were with him encouraged, believing it meant to torture and
+insult, when the real motive was to prepare them to meet every
+accusation, by communicating to them each charge as it occurred. So
+thoroughly were the Assembly deceived, that the friendly guard was
+allowed free access to the apartments, in order to facilitate, as was
+imagined, his wish to agonize and annoy. By this means, he was enabled
+to caution the illustrious prisoners never to betray any emotion at what
+he read, and to rely upon his doing his best to soften the rigour of
+their fate.
+
+The individual of whom I speak communicated these circumstances to me
+himself. He declared, also, that the Duc d'Orleans came frequently to
+the Temple during the imprisonment of Louis XVI., but, always in
+disguise; and never, till within a few days after the murder of the poor
+King, did he disclose himself. On that occasion he had bribed the men
+who were accustomed to light the fires, to admit him in their stead to
+the apartment of the Princesse Elizabeth. He found her on her knees, in
+fervent prayer for the departed soul of her beloved brother. He
+performed this office, totally unperceived by this predestined victim;
+but his courage was subdued by her piety. He dared not extend the
+stratagem to the apartment of the Queen. On leaving the angelic
+Princess, he was so overcome by remorse that he: requested my informant
+to give him a glass of water, saying, "that woman has unmanned me." It
+was by this circumstance he was discovered.
+
+The Queen was immediately apprised by the good man of the occurrence.
+
+"Gracious God!" exclaimed Her Majesty, "I thought once or twice that I
+had seen him at our miserable dinner hours, occupied with the other
+jailers at the outside door. I even mentioned the circumstance to
+Elizabeth, and she replied, "I also have observed a man resembling
+D'ORLEANS, but it cannot be he, for the man I noticed had a wooden leg."
+
+"That was the very disguise he was discovered in this morning, when
+preparing, or pretending to prepare, the fire in the Princesse
+Elizabeth's apartment," replied the national guard.
+
+"Merciful Heaven!" said the Queen, "is he not yet satisfied? Must he
+even satiate his barbarous brutality with being an eye-witness of the
+horrid state into which he has thrown us? Save me," continued Her
+Majesty, "oh, save me from contaminating my feeble sight, which is almost
+exhausted, nearly parched up for the loss of my dear husband, by looking
+on him!--Oh, death! come, come and release me from such a sight!"
+
+"Luckily," observed the guard to me, "it was the hour of the general jail
+dinner, and we were alone; otherwise, I should infallibly have been
+discovered, as my tears fell faster than those of the Queen, for really
+hers seemed to be nearly exhausted: However," pursued he, "that D'ORLEANS
+did see the Queen, and that the Queen saw him, I am very sure. From what
+passed between them in the month of July, 1793, she was hurried off from
+the Temple to the common prison, to take her trial." This circumstance
+combined, with other motives, to make the Assembly hasten the Duke's
+trial soon after, who had been sent with his young son to Marseilles,
+there being no doubt that he wished to rescue the Queen, so as to have
+her in his own power.
+
+On the 16th of October, Her Majesty was beheaded. Her death was
+consistent with her life. She met her fate like a Christian, but still
+like a Queen.
+
+Perhaps, had Marie Antoinette been uncontrolled in the exercise of her
+judgment, she would have shown a spirit in emergency better adapted to
+wrestle with the times than had been discovered by His Majesty. Certain
+it is she was generally esteemed the most proper to be consulted of the
+two. From the imperfect idea which many of the persons in office
+entertained of the King's capacity, few of them ever made any
+communication of importance but to the Queen. Her Majesty never kept a
+single circumstance from her husband's knowledge, and scarcely decided on
+the smallest trifle without his consent; but so thorough was his
+confidence in the correctness of her judgment that he seldom, if ever,
+opposed her decisions. The Princesse de Lamballe used to say, "Though
+Marie Antoinette is not a woman of great or uncommon talents, yet her
+long practical knowledge gave her an insight into matters of moment which
+she turned to advantage with so much coolness and address amid
+difficulties, that I am convinced she only wanted free scope to have
+shone in the history of Princes as a great Queen. Her natural tendencies
+were perfectly domestic. Had she been kept in countenance by the manners
+of the times, or favoured earlier by circumstances, she would have sought
+her only pleasures in the family circle, and, far from Court intrigue,
+have become the model of her sex and age."
+
+It is by no means to be wondered at that, in her peculiar situation,
+surrounded by a thoughtless and dissipated Court, long denied the natural
+ties so necessary to such a heart, in the heyday of youth and beauty, and
+possessing an animated and lively spirit, she should have given way in
+the earlier part of her career to gaiety, and been pleased with a round
+of amusement. The sincere friendship which she afterwards formed for the
+Duchesse de Polignac encouraged this predilection. The plot to destroy
+her had already been formed, and her enemies were too sharp-sighted and
+adroit not to profit and take advantage of the opportunities afforded by
+this weakness. The miscreant had murdered her character long, long
+before they assailed her person.
+
+The charge against her of extravagance has been already refuted. Her
+private palace was furnished from the State lumber rooms, and what was
+purchased, paid for out of her savings. As for her favourites, she never
+had but two, and these were no supernumerary expense or encumbrance to
+the State.
+
+Perhaps it would have been better had she been more thoroughly directed
+by the Princesse de Lamballe. She was perfectly conscious of her good
+qualities, but De Polignac dazzled and humoured her love of amusement and
+display of splendour. Though this favourite was the image of her royal
+mistress in her amiable characteristics, the resemblance unfortunately
+extended to her weaknesses. This was not the case with the Princesse de
+Lamballe; she possessed steadiness, and was governed by the cool
+foresight of her father-in-law, the Duc de Penthievre, which both the
+other friends wanted.
+
+The unshaken attachment of the Princesse de Lamballe to the Queen,
+notwithstanding the slight at which she at one time had reason to feel
+piqued, is one of the strongest evidences against the slanderers of Her
+Majesty. The moral conduct of the Princess has never been called in
+question. Amid the millions of infamous falsehoods invented to vilify
+and degrade every other individual connected with the Court, no
+imputation, from the moment of her arrival in France, up to the fatal one
+of her massacre, ever tarnished her character. To her opinion, then, the
+most prejudiced might look with confidence. Certainly no one had a
+greater opportunity of knowing the real character of Marie Antoinette.
+She was an eye-witness to her conduct during the most brilliant and
+luxurious portion of her reign; she saw her from the meridian of her
+magnificence down to her dejection to the depths of unparalleled misery.
+If the unfortunate Queen had ever been guilty of the slightest of those
+glaring vices of which she was so generally accused, the Princess must
+have been aware of them; and it was not in her nature to have remained
+the friend and advocate, even unto death, of one capable of depravity.
+Yet not a breath of discord ever arose between them on that score.
+Virtue and vice can never harmonize; and even had policy kept Her
+Highness from avowing a change of sentiments, it never could have
+continued her enthusiasm, which was augmented, and not diminished, by the
+fall of her royal friend. An attachment which holds through every
+vicissitude must be deeply rooted from conviction of the integrity of its
+object.
+
+The friendship that subsisted between this illustrious pair is an
+everlasting monument that honours their sex. The Queen used to say of
+her, that she was the only woman she had ever known without gall.
+"Like the blessed land of Ireland," observed Her Majesty, "exempt from
+the reptiles elsewhere so dangerous to mankind, so was she freed by
+Providence from the venom by which the finest form in others is
+empoisoned. No envy, no ambition, no desire, but to contribute to the
+welfare and happiness of her fellow creatures--and yet, with all these
+estimable virtues, these angelic qualities, she is doomed, from her
+virtuous attachment to our persons, to sink under the weight of that
+affliction, which, sooner or later, must bury us all in one common ruin--
+a ruin which is threatening hourly."
+
+These presentiments of the awful result of impending storms were mutual.
+From frequent conversations with the Princesse de Lamballe, from the
+evidence of her letters and her private papers, and from many remarks
+which have been repeated to me personally by Her Highness, and from
+persons in her confidence, there is abundant evidence of the forebodings
+she constantly had of her own and the Queen's untimely end.
+
+ [A very remarkable circumstance was related to me when I was at
+ Vienna, after this horrid murder. The Princess of Lobkowitz, sister
+ to the Princesse de Lamballe, received a box, with an anonymous
+ letter, telling her to conceal the box carefully till further
+ notice. After the riots had subsided a little in France, she was
+ apprised that the box contained all, or the greater part, of the
+ jewels belonging to the Princess, and had been taken from the
+ Tuileries on the 10th of August.
+
+ It is supposed that the jewels had been packed by the Princess in
+ anticipation of her doom, and forwarded to her sister through her
+ agency or desire.]
+
+There was no friend of the Queen to whom the King showed any deference,
+or rather anything like the deference he paid to the Princesse de
+Lamballe. When the Duchesse de Polignac, the Comtesse Diane de Polignac,
+the Comte d'Artois, the Duchesse de Guiche, her husband, the present Duc
+de Grammont, the Prince of Hesse-Darmstadt, etc., fled from Paris, he and
+the Queen, as if they had foreseen the awful catastrophe which was to
+destroy her so horribly, entreated her to leave the Court, and take
+refuge in Italy. So also did her father-in-law, the Duc de Penthievre;
+but all in vain. She saw her friend deprived of De Polignac, and all
+those near and dear to her heart, and became deaf to every solicitation.
+Could such constancy, which looked death in its worst form in the face
+unshrinking, have existed without great and estimable qualities in its
+possessor?
+
+The brother-in-law of the Princesse de Lamballe, the Duc d'Orleans, was
+her declared enemy merely from her attachment to the Queen. These three
+great victims have been persecuted to the tomb, which had no sooner
+closed over the last than the hand of Heaven fell upon their destroyer.
+That Louis XVI. was not the friend of this member of his family can
+excite no surprise, but must rather challenge admiration. He had been
+seduced by his artful and designing regicide companions to expend
+millions to undermine the throne, and shake it to pieces under the feet
+of his relative, his Sovereign, the friend of his earliest youth, who was
+aware of the treason, and who held the thunderbolt, but would not crush
+him. But they have been foiled in their hope of building a throne for
+him upon the ruin they had made, and placed an age where they flattered
+him he would find a diadem.
+
+The Prince de Conti told me at Barcelona that the Duchesse d'Orleans had
+assured him that, even had the Duc d'Orleans survived, he never could
+have attained, his object. The immense sums he had lavished upon the
+horde of his revolutionary satellites had, previous to his death, thrown
+him into embarrassment. The avarice of his party increased as his
+resources diminished. The evil, as evil generally does, would have
+wrought its own punishment in either way. He must have lived suspected
+and miserable, had he not died. But his reckless character did not
+desert him at the scaffold. It is said that before he arrived at the
+Place de Greve he ate a very rich ragout, and drank a bottle of
+champagne, and left the world as he had gone through it.
+
+The supernumerary, the uncalled-for martyr, the last of the four devoted
+royal sufferers, was beheaded the following spring. For this murder
+there could not have been the shadow of a pretext. The virtues of this
+victim were sufficient to redeem the name of Elizabeth
+
+ [The eighteen years' imprisonment and final murder of Mary, Queen of
+ Scots, by Elizabeth of England, is enough to stigmatize her forever,
+ independently of the many other acts of tyranny which stain her
+ memory. The dethronement by Elizabeth of Russia of the innocent
+ Prince Ivan, her near relation, while yet in the cradle, gives the
+ Northern Empress a claim to a similar character to the British
+ Queen.]
+
+from the stain with which the two of England and Russia, who had already
+borne it, had clouded its immortality. She had never, in any way,
+interfered in political events. Malice itself had never whispered a
+circumstance to her dispraise. After this wanton assassination, it is
+scarcely to be expected that the innocent and candid looks and streaming
+azure eyes of that angelic infant, the Dauphin, though raised in humble
+supplication to his brutal assassins, with an eloquence which would have
+disarmed the savage tiger, could have won wretches so much more pitiless
+than the most ferocious beasts of the wilderness, or saved him from their
+slow but sure poison, whose breath was worse than the upas tree to all
+who came within its influence.
+
+The Duchesse d'Angouleme, the only survivor of these wretched captives,
+is a living proof of the baleful influence of that contaminated prison,
+the infectious tomb of the royal martyrs. That once lovely countenance,
+which, with the goodness and amiableness of her royal father, whose
+mildness hung on her lips like the milk and honey of human kindness,
+blended the dignity, grace, elegance, and innocent vivacity, which were
+the acknowledged characteristics of her beautiful mother, lost for some
+time all traces of its original attractions. The lines of deep-seated
+sorrow are not easily obliterated. If the sanguinary republic had not
+wished to obtain by exchange the Generals La Fayette, Bournonville,
+Lameth, etc., whom Dumourier had treacherously consigned into the hands
+of Austria, there is little: doubt but that, from the prison in which she
+was so long doomed to vegetate only to make life a burthen, she would
+have been sent to share the fate of her murdered family.
+
+How can the Parisians complain that they found her Royal Highness, on her
+return to France, by no means what they required in a Princess? Can it
+be wondered at that her marked grief should be visible when amidst the
+murderers of her family? It should rather be a wonder that she can at
+all bear the scenes in which she moves, and not abhor the very name of
+Paris, when every step must remind her of some out rage to herself, or
+those most dear to her, or of some beloved relative or friend destroyed!
+Her return can only be accounted for by the spell of that all-powerful
+'amor patriae', which sometimes prevails over every other influence.
+
+Before I dismiss this subject, it may not be uninteresting to my readers
+to receive some desultory anecdotes that I have heard concerning one or
+two of the leading monsters, by whom the horrors upon which I have
+expatiated were occasioned.
+
+David, the famous painter, was a member of the sanguinary tribunal which
+condemned the King. On this account he has been banished from France
+since the restoration.
+
+If any one deserved this severity, it was David. It was at the expense
+of the Court of Louis XVI. that this ungrateful being was sent to Rome,
+to perfect himself in his sublime art. His studies finished, he was
+pensioned from the same patrons, and upheld as an artist by the special
+protection of every member of the Royal Family.
+
+And yet this man, if he may be dignified by the name, had the baseness to
+say in the hearing of the unfortunate Louis XVI., when on trial, "Well!
+when are we to have his head dressed, a la guillotine."
+
+At another time, being deputed to visit the Temple, as one of the
+committee of public safety, as he held out his snuff-box before the
+Princesse Elizabeth, she, conceiving he meant to offer it, took a pinch.
+The monster, observing what she had done, darting a look of contempt at
+her, instantly threw away the snuff, and dashed the box to pieces on the
+floor.
+
+Robespierre had a confidential physician, who attended him almost to the
+period when he ascended the scaffold, and who was very often obliged,
+'malgre-lui', to dine tete-a-tete with this monopolizer of human flesh
+and blood. One day he happened to be with him, after a very
+extraordinary number had been executed, and amongst the rest, some of the
+physician's most intimate acquaintances.
+
+The unwilling guest was naturally very downcast, and ill at ease, and
+could not dissemble his anguish. He tried to stammer out excuses and get
+away from the table.
+
+Robespierre, perceiving his distress, interrogated him as to the cause.
+
+The physician, putting his hand to his head, discovered his reluctance to
+explain.
+
+Robespierre took him by the hand, assured him he had nothing to fear, and
+added, "Come, doctor, you, as a professional man, must be well informed
+as to the sentiments of the major part of the Parisians respecting me.
+I entreat you, my dear friend, frankly to avow their opinion. It may
+perhaps serve me for the future, as a guide for governing them."
+
+The physician answered, "I can no longer resist the impulse of nature.
+I know I shall thereby oppose myself to your power, but I must tell you,
+you are generally abhorred,--considered the Attila, the Sylla, of the
+age,--the two-footed plague, that, walks about to fill peaceful abodes
+with miseries and family mournings. The myriads you are daily sending to
+the slaughter at the Place de Greve, who have, committed no crime, the
+carts of a certain description, you have ordered daily to bear a stated
+number to be sacrificed, directing they should be taken from the prisons,
+and, if enough are not in the prisons, seized, indiscriminately in the
+streets, that no place in the deadly vehicle may be left unoccupied, and
+all this without a trial, without even an accusation, and without any
+sanction but your own mandate--these things call the public curse upon
+you, which is not the less bitter for not being audible."
+
+"Ah!" said Robespierre, laughing. "This puts me in mind of a story told
+of the cruelty and tyranny, of Pope Sixtus the Fifth, who, having one
+night, after he had enjoyed himself at a Bacchanalian supper, when heated
+with wine, by way of a 'bonne bouche', ordered the first man that should
+come through the gate of the 'Strada del popolo' at Rome to be
+immediately hanged. Every person at this drunken conclave--nay, all
+Rome--considered the Pope a tyrant, the most cruel of tyrants, till it
+was made known and proved, after his death, that the wretch so executed
+had murdered his father and mother ten years previously. I know whom I
+send to the Place de Greve. All who go there are guilty, though they may
+not seem so. Go on, what else have you heard?"
+
+"Why, that you have so terrified all descriptions of persons, that they
+fear even your very breath, and look upon you as worse than the plague;
+and I should not be surprised, if you persist in this course of conduct,
+if something serious to yourself should be the consequence, and that ere
+long."
+
+Not the least extraordinary part of the story is that this dialogue
+between the devil and the doctor took place but a very, few hours
+previous to Robespierre's being denounced by Tallien and Carriere to
+the national convention, as a conspirator against the republican cause.
+In defending himself from being arrested by the guard, he attempted to
+shoot himself, but the ball missed, broke the monster's jaw-bone only,
+and nearly impeded his speaking.
+
+Singularly enough, it was this physician who was sent for to assist and
+dress his wounds. Robespierre replied to the doctor's observations,
+laughing, and in the following language:
+
+"Oh, poor devils! they do not know their own interest. But my plan of
+exterminating the evil will soon teach them. This is the only thing for
+the good of the nation; for, before you can reform a thousand Frenchmen,
+you must first lop off half a million of these vagabonds, and, if God
+spare my life, in a few months there will be so many the less to breed
+internal commotions, and disturb the general peace of Europe.
+
+ [When Bonaparte was contriving the Consulship for life, and, in the
+ Irish way, forced the Italian Republic to volunteer an offer of the
+ Consulship of Italy, by a deputation to him at Paris, I happened to
+ be there. Many Italians, besides the deputies, went on the
+ occasion, and, among them, we had the good fortune to meet the Abbe
+ Fortis, the celebrated naturalist, a gentleman of first-rate
+ abilities, who had travelled three-fourths of the globe in
+ mineralogical research. The Abbe chanced one day to be in company
+ with my husband, who was an old acquaintance of his, where many of
+ the chopfallen deputies, like themselves, true lovers of their
+ country, could not help declaring their indignation at its degraded
+ state, and reprobating Bonaparte for rendering it so ridiculous in
+ the face of Europe and the world. The Abbe Fords, with the voice of
+ a Stentor, and spreading his gigantic form, which exceeded six feet
+ in height, exclaimed: "This would not have been the case had that
+ just and wise man Robespierre lived but a little longer."
+
+ Every one present was struck with horror at the observation.
+ Noticing the effect of his words, the Abbe resumed:
+
+ "I knew well I should frighten you in showing any partiality for
+ that bloody monopoliser of human heads. But you do not know the
+ perfidy of the French nation so well as I do. I have lived among
+ them many years. France is the sink of human deception. A Frenchman
+ will deceive his father, wife, and child; for deception is his
+ element. Robespierre knew this, and acted upon it, as you shall
+ hear."
+
+ The Abbe then related to us the story I have detailed above,
+ verbatim, as he had it from the son of Esculapius, who himself
+ confirmed it afterwards in a conversation with the Abbe in our
+ presence.
+
+ Having completed his anecdote, "Well," said the Abbe, "was I not
+ right in my opinion of this great philosopher and foreseer of evils,
+ when I observed that had be but lived a few months longer, there
+ would have been so many less in the world to disturb its
+ tranquillity?"]
+
+The same physician observed that from the immense number of executions
+during the sanguinary reign of that monster, the Place de Greve became so
+complete a swamp of human blood that it would scarcely hold the
+scaffolding of the instrument of death, which, in consequence, was
+obliged to be continually moved from one side of the square to the other.
+Many of the soldiers and officers, who were obliged to attend these
+horrible executions, had constantly their half-boots and stockings filled
+with the blood of the poor sufferers; and as, whenever there was any
+national festival to be given, it generally followed one of the most
+sanguinary of these massacres, the public places, the theatres
+especially, all bore the tracks of blood throughout the saloons and
+lobbies.
+
+The infamous Carrier, who was the execrable agent of his still more
+execrable employer, Robespierre, was left afterwards to join Tallien in a
+conspiracy against him, merely to save himself; but did not long survive
+his atrocious crimes or his perfidy.
+
+It is impossible to calculate the vast number of private assassinations
+committed in the dead of the night, by order of this cannibal, on persons
+of every rank and description.
+
+My task is now ended. Nothing remains for me but the reflections which
+these sad and shocking remembrances cannot fail to awaken in all minds,
+and especially in mine. Is it not astonishing that, in an age so
+refined, so free from the enormous and flagitious crimes which were the
+common stains of barbarous centuries, and at an epoch peculiarly
+enlightened by liberal views, the French nation, by all deemed the most
+polished since the Christian era, should have given an example of such
+wanton, brutal, and coarse depravity to the world, under pretences
+altogether chimerical, and, after unprecedented bloodshed and horror,
+ended at the point where it began!
+
+The organized system of plunder and anarchy, exercised under different
+forms more or less sanguinary, produced no permanent result beyond an
+incontestible proof that the versatility of the French nation, and its
+puny suppleness of character, utterly incapacitate it for that energetic
+enterprise without which there can be no hope of permanent emancipation
+from national slavery. It is my unalterable conviction that the French
+will never know how to enjoy an independent and free Constitution.
+
+The tree of liberty unavoidably in all nations has been sprinkled with
+human blood; but, when bathed by innocent victims, like the foul weed,
+though it spring up, it rots in its infancy, and becomes loathsome and
+infectious. Such has been the case in France; and the result justifies
+the Italian satire:
+
+ "Un albero senza fruta
+ Baretta senza testa
+ Governo che non resta."
+
+
+
+
+ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+Honesty is to be trusted before genius
+More dangerous to attack the habits of men than their religion
+
+
+
+
+End of this Project Gutenberg Etext Memoirs of Louis XV., and XVI., v7
+by Madame du Hausset, and an unknown English girl and Princess Lamballe
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS FOR THE ENTIRE SET:
+
+A liar ought to have a good memory
+Air of science calculated to deceive the vulgar
+And scarcely a woman; for your answers are very short
+Bad habit of talking very indiscreetly before others
+Beaumarchais sent arms to the Americans
+Because he is fat, he is thought dull and heavy
+Can make a Duchess a beggar, but cannot make a beggar a Duchess
+Canvassing for a majority to set up D'Orleans
+Clergy enjoyed one-third the national revenues
+Clouds--you may see what you please in them
+Danger of confiding the administration to noblemen
+Dared to say to me, so he writes
+Dead always in fault, and cannot be put out of sight too soon
+Declaring the Duke of Orleans the constitutional King
+Do not repulse him in his fond moments
+Educate his children as quietists in matters of religion
+Embonpoint of the French Princesses
+Fatal error of conscious rectitude
+Feel themselves injured by the favour shown to others
+Few individuals except Princesses do with parade and publicity
+Foolishly occupying themselves with petty matters
+Frailty in the ambitious, through which the artful can act
+French people do not do things by halves
+Fresh proof of the intrigues of the Jesuits
+He who quits the field loses it
+Honesty is to be trusted before genius
+How difficult it is to do good
+I dared not touch that string
+Infinite astonishment at his sharing the common destiny
+It is an ill wind that blows no one any good
+Judge of men by the company they keep
+Laughed at qualities she could not comprehend
+Les culottes--what do you call them?' 'Small clothes'
+Listeners never hear any good of themselves
+Madame made the Treaty of Sienna
+Many an aching heart rides in a carriage
+Mind well stored against human casualties
+Money the universal lever, and you are in want of it
+More dangerous to attack the habits of men than their religion
+My little English protegee
+No phrase becomes a proverb until after a century's experience
+Offering you the spectacle of my miseries
+Only retire to make room for another race
+Over-caution may produce evils almost equal to carelessness
+Panegyric of the great Edmund Burke upon Marie Antoinette
+Pension is granted on condition that his poems are never printed
+People in independence are only the puppets of demagogues
+Pleasure of making a great noise at little expense
+Policy, in sovereigns, is paramount to every other
+Quiet work of ruin by whispers and detraction
+Regardlessness of appearances
+Revolution not as the Americans, founded on grievances
+Ridicule, than which no weapon is more false or deadly
+Salique Laws
+Sending astronomers to Mexico and Peru, to measure the earth
+Sentiment is more prompt, and inspires me with fear
+She always says the right thing in the right place
+She drives quick and will certainly be overturned on the road
+Suppression of all superfluous religious institutions
+Sworn that she had thought of nothing but you all her life
+Thank Heaven, I am out of harness
+The King remained as if paralysed and stupefied
+These expounders--or confounders--of codes
+To be accused was to incur instant death
+To despise money, is to despise happiness, liberty...
+Traducing virtues the slanderers never possessed
+Underrated what she could not imitate
+We look upon you as a cat, or a dog, and go on talking
+We say "inexpressibles"
+When the only security of a King rests upon his troops
+Where the knout is the logician
+Who confound logic with their wishes
+Wish art to eclipse nature
+You tell me bad news: having packed up, I had rather go
+
+
+
+
+End of this Project Gutenberg Etext Memoirs of Louis XV., and XVI., entire
+by Madame du Hausset, and an unknown English girl and Princess Lamballe
+
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+ <title>
+ MEMOIRS OF LOUIS XV./XVI., By Madame du Hausset
+ </title>
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+ <h2>
+ MEMOIRS OF LOUIS XV./XVI., By Madame du Hausset
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Secret Memoirs of Louis XV./XVI,
+Complete, by Madame du Hausset, an "Unknown English Girl" and the Princess Lamballe
+
+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.net
+
+
+Title: The Secret Memoirs of Louis XV./XVI, Complete
+
+Author: Madame du Hausset, an "Unknown English Girl" and the Princess Lamballe
+
+Release Date: September 29, 2006 [EBook #3883]
+Last Updated: April 3, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOUIS XV. AND XVI. ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ MEMOIRS OF LOUIS XV. AND XVI.
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Being Secret Memoirs of Madame du Hausset,<br /> Lady's Maid to Madame de
+ Pompadour,<br /> and of an unknown English Girl <br />and the Princess
+ Lamballe.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="cover.jpg (140K)" src="images/cover.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="titlepage.jpg (53K)" src="images/titlepage.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+ </h2>
+ <table summary="">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#louis15">Louis the Fifteenth</a><br /><br /> <a href="#p035">"It
+ Was an Indigestion</a><br /><br /> <a href="#p044">Madame du Hausset</a><br /><br />
+ <a href="#p110">Madame de Pompadour</a><br /><br /> <a href="#p224">Madame
+ Adelaide</a><br /><br /> <a href="#p334">Madame Sophie</a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#pb138">Madame Elizabeth</a><br /><br /> <a href="#pb210">Mirabeau
+ and the Queen</a><br /><br /> <a href="#pb280">Princess de Lamballe</a><br /><br />
+ <a href="#pb306">Marie Antoinette in the Temple</a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#pb350">Interviewing Little Louis</a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#guillotine">Marie Antoinette to the Guillotine</a><br /><br />
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ ADVERTISEMENT.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ [FROM THE LONDON MAGAZINE, NO. III. NEW SERIES P. 439.]
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were obliged by circumstances, at one time, to read all the published
+ memoirs relative to the reign of Louis XV., and had the opportunity of
+ reading many others which may not see the light for a long time yet to
+ come, as their publication at present would materially militate against
+ the interest of the descendants of the writers; and we have no hesitation
+ in saying that the Memoirs of Madame du Hausset are the only perfectly
+ sincere ones amongst all those we know. Sometimes, Madame du Hausset
+ mistakes, through ignorance, but never does she wilfully mislead, like
+ Madame Campan, nor keep back a secret, like Madame Roland, and MM.
+ Bezenval and Ferreires; nor is she ever betrayed by her vanity to invent,
+ like the Due de Lauzun, MM. Talleyrand, Bertrand de Moleville, Marmontel,
+ Madame d'Epinay, etc. When Madame du Hausset is found in contradiction
+ with other memoirs of the same period, we should never hesitate to give
+ her account the preference. Whoever is desirous of accurately knowing the
+ reign of Louis XV. should run over the very wretched history of
+ Lacretelle, merely for the dates, and afterwards read the two hundred
+ pages of the naive du Hausset, who, in every half page, overturns half a
+ dozen misstatements of this hollow rhetorician. Madame du Hausset was
+ often separated from the little and obscure chamber in the Palace of
+ Versailles, where resided the supreme power, only by a slight door or
+ curtain, which permitted her to hear all that was said there. She had for
+ a 'cher ami' the greatest practical philosopher of that period, Dr.
+ Quesnay, the founder of political economy. He was physician to Madame de
+ Pompadour, and one of the sincerest and most single-hearted of men
+ probably in Paris at the time. He explained to Madame du Hausset many
+ things that, but for his assistance, she would have witnessed without
+ understanding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /> <a name="louis15" id="louis15"></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="louis15.jpg (133K)" src="images/louis15.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A friend of M. de Marigny (the brother of Madame de Pompadour) called on
+ him one day and found him burning papers. Taking up a large packet which
+ he was going to throw into the fire "This," said he, "is the journal of a
+ waiting-woman of my sister's. She was a very estimable person, but it is
+ all gossip; to the fire with it!" He stopped, and added, "Don't you think
+ I am a little like the curate and the barber burning Don Quixote's
+ romances?"&mdash;"I beg for mercy on this," said his friend. "I am fond of
+ anecdotes, and I shall be sure to find some here which will interest me."
+ "Take it, then," said M. de Marigny, and gave it him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The handwriting and the spelling of this journal are very bad. It abounds
+ in tautology and repetitions. Facts are sometimes inverted in the order of
+ time; but to remedy all these defects it would have been necessary to
+ recast the whole, which would have completely changed the character of the
+ work. The spelling and punctuation were, however, corrected in the
+ original, and some explanatory notes added.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame de Pompadour had two waiting-women of good family. The one, Madame
+ du Hausset, who did not change her name; and another, who assumed a name,
+ and did not publicly announce her quality. This journal is evidently the
+ production of the former.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The amours of Louis XV. were, for a long time, covered with the veil of
+ mystery. The public talked of the Parc-aux-Cerfs, but were acquainted with
+ none of its details. Louis XIV., who, in the early part of his reign, had
+ endeavoured to conceal his attachments, towards the close of it gave them
+ a publicity which in one way increased the scandal; but his mistresses
+ were all women of quality, entitled by their birth to be received at
+ Court. Nothing can better describe the spirit of the time and the
+ character of the Monarch than these words of Madame de Montespan:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He does not love me," said she, "but he thinks he owes it to his subjects
+ and to his own greatness to have the most beautiful woman in his kingdom
+ as his mistress."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /> <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECRET MEMOIRS OF LOUIS XV., <br />AND MEMOIRS OF MADAME DU HAUSSET.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An early friend of mine, who married well at Paris, and who has the
+ reputation of being a very clever woman, has often asked me to write down
+ what daily passed under my notice; to please her, I made little notes, of
+ three or four lines each, to recall to my memory the most singular or
+ interesting facts; as, for instance&mdash;attempt to assassinate the King;
+ he orders Madame de Pompadour to leave the Court; M. de Machaudt's
+ ingratitude, etc.&mdash;I always promised my friend that I would, some
+ time or other, reduce all these materials into the form of a regular
+ narrative. She mentioned the "Recollections of Madame de Caylus," which
+ were, however, not then printed; and pressed me so much to produce a
+ similar work, that I have taken advantage of a few leisure moments to
+ write this, which I intend to give her, in order that she may arrange it
+ and correct the style. I was for a long time about the person of Madame de
+ Pompadour, and my birth procured for me respectful treatment from herself,
+ and from some distinguished persons who conceived a regard for me. I soon
+ became the intimate friend of Doctor Quesnay, who frequently came to pass
+ two or three hours with me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His house was frequented by people of all parties, but the number was
+ small, and restricted to those who were on terms of greatest intimacy with
+ him. All subjects were handled with the utmost freedom, and it is
+ infinitely to his honour and theirs that nothing was ever repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess D&mdash;&mdash;- also visited me. She was a frank and lively
+ woman, and much liked by Madame de Pompadour. The Baschi family paid me
+ great attention. M. de Marigny had received some little services from me,
+ in the course of the frequent quarrels between him and his sister, and he
+ had a great friendship for me. The King was in the constant habit of
+ seeing me; and an accident, which I shall have occasion to relate,
+ rendered him very familiar with me. He talked without any constraint when
+ I was in the room. During Madame de Pompadour's illness I scarcely ever
+ left her chamber, and passed the night there. Sometimes, though rarely, I
+ accompanied her in her carriage with Doctor Quesnay, to whom she scarcely
+ spoke a word, though he was&mdash;a man of great talents. When I was alone
+ with her, she talked of many affairs which nearly concerned her, and she
+ once said to me, "The King and I have such implicit confidence in you,
+ that we look upon you as a cat, or a dog, and go on talking as if you were
+ not there." There was a little nook, adjoining her chamber, which has
+ since been altered, where she knew I usually sat when I was alone, and
+ where I heard everything that was said in the room, unless it was spoken
+ in a low voice. But when the King wanted to speak to her in private, or in
+ the presence of any of his Ministers, he went with her into a closet, by
+ the side of the chamber, whither she also retired when she had secret
+ business with the Ministers, or with other important persons; as, for
+ instance, the Lieutenant of Police, the Postmaster-General, etc. All these
+ circumstances brought to my knowledge a great many things which probity
+ will neither allow me to tell or to record. I generally wrote without
+ order of time, so that a fact may be related before others which preceded
+ it. Madame de Pompadour had a great friendship for three Ministers; the
+ first was M. de Machault, to whom she was indebted for the regulation of
+ her income, and the payment of her debts. She gave him the seals, and he
+ retained the first place in her regard till the attempt to assassinate the
+ King. Many people said that his conduct on that occasion was not
+ attributable to bad intentions; that he thought it his duty to obey the
+ King without making himself in any way a party to the affair, and that his
+ cold manners gave him the appearance of an indifference which he did not
+ feel. Madame de Pompadour regarded him in the light of a faithless friend;
+ and, perhaps, there was some justice on both sides. But for the Abbe de
+ Bernis; M. de Machault might, probably, have retained his place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second Minister, whom Madame de Pompadour liked, was the Abbe de
+ Bernis. She was soon disgusted with him when she saw the absurdity of his
+ conduct. He gave a singular specimen of this on the very day of his
+ dismissal. He had invited a great many people of distinction to a splendid
+ entertainment, which was to have taken place on the very day when he
+ received his order of banishment, and had written in the notes of
+ invitation&mdash;M. Le Comte de Lusace will be there. This Count was the
+ brother of the Dauphine, and this mention of him was deservedly thought
+ impertinent. The King said, wittily enough, "Lambert and Moliere will be
+ there." She scarcely ever spoke of the Cardinal de Bernis after his
+ dismissal from the Court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was extremely ridiculous, but he was a good sort of man. Madame, the
+ Infanta, died a little time before, and, by the way, of such a
+ complication of putrid and malignant diseases, that the Capuchins who bore
+ the body, and the men who committed it to the grave, were overcome by the
+ effluvia. Her papers appeared no less impure in the eyes of the King. He
+ discovered that the Abbe de Bernis had been intriguing with her, and that
+ they had deceived him, and had obtained the Cardinal's hat by making use
+ of his name. The King was so indignant that he was very near refusing him
+ the barrette. He did grant it&mdash;but just as he would have thrown a
+ bone to a dog. The Abbe had always the air of a protege when he was in the
+ company of Madame de Pompadour. She had known him in positive distress.
+ The Due de Choiseul was very differently situated; his birth, his air, his
+ manners, gave him claims to consideration, and he far exceeded every other
+ man in the art of ingratiating himself with Madame de Pompadour. She
+ looked upon him as one of the most illustrious nobles of the Court, as the
+ most able Minister, and the most agreeable man. M. de Choiseul had a
+ sister and a wife, whom he had introduced to her, and who sedulously
+ cultivated her favourable sentiments towards him. From the time he was
+ Minister, she saw only with his eyes; he had the talent of amusing her,
+ and his manners to women, generally, were extremely agreeable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two persons&mdash;the Lieutenant of Police and the Postmaster-General&mdash;were
+ very much in Madame de Pompadour's confidence; the latter, however, became
+ less necessary to her from the time that the King communicated to M. de
+ Choiseul the secret of the post-office, that is to say, the system of
+ opening letters and extracting matter from them: this had never been
+ imparted to M. d'Argenson, in spite of the high favour he enjoyed. I have
+ heard that M. de Choiseul abused the confidence reposed in him, and
+ related to his friends the ludicrous stories, and the love affairs,
+ contained in the letters which were broken open. The plan they pursued, as
+ I have heard, was very simple. Six or seven clerks of the post-office
+ picked out the letters they were ordered to break open, and took the
+ impression of the seals with a ball of quicksilver. Then they put each
+ letter, with the seal downwards, over a glass of hot water, which melted
+ the wax without injuring the paper. It was then opened, the desired matter
+ extracted, and it was sealed again, by means of the impression. This is
+ the account of the matter I have heard. The Postmaster-General carried the
+ extracts to the King on Sundays. He was seen coming and going on this
+ noble errand as openly as the Ministers. Doctor Quesnay often, in my
+ presence, flew in such a rage about that infamous Minister, as he called
+ him, that he foamed at the mouth. "I would as soon dine with the hangman
+ as with the Postmaster-General," said the Doctor. It must be acknowledged
+ that this was astonishing language to be uttered in the apartments of the
+ King's mistress; yet it went on for twenty years without being talked of.
+ "It was probity speaking with earnestness," said M. de Marigny, "and not a
+ mere burst of spite or malignity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duc de Gontaut was the brother-in-law and friend of M. de Choiseul,
+ and was assiduous in his attendance on Madame de Pompadour. The sister of
+ M. de Choiseul, Madame de Grammont, and his wife were equally constant in
+ their attentions. This will sufficiently account for the ascendency of M.
+ de Choiseul, whom nobody would have ventured to attack. Chance, however,
+ discovered to me a secret correspondence of the King, with a man in a very
+ obscure station. This man, who had a place in the Farmers General, of from
+ two to three hundred a year, was related to one of the young ladies of the
+ Parc-aux-cerfs, by whom he was recommended to the King. He was also
+ connected in some way with M. de Broglie, in whom the King placed great
+ confidence. Wearied with finding that this correspondence procured him no
+ advancement, he took the resolution of writing to me, and requesting an
+ interview, which I granted, after acquainting Madame de Pompadour with the
+ circumstance. After a great deal of preamble and of flattery, he said to
+ me, "Can you give me your word of honour, and that of Madame de Pompadour,
+ that no mention whatever of what I am going to tell you will be made to
+ the King?"&mdash;"I think I can assure you that, if you require such a
+ promise from Madame de Pompadour, and if it can produce no ill consequence
+ to the King's service, she will give it you." He gave me his word that
+ what he requested would have no bad effect; upon which I listened to what
+ he had to say. He shewed me several memorials, containing accusations of
+ M. de Choiseul, and revealed some curious circumstances relative to the
+ secret functions of the Comte de Broglie. These, however, led rather to
+ conjectures than to certainty, as to the nature of the services he
+ rendered to the King. Lastly, he shewed me several letters in the King's
+ handwriting. "I request," said he, "that the Marquise de Pompadour will
+ procure for me the place of Receiver-General of Finances; I will give her
+ information of whatever I send the King; I will write according to her
+ instructions, and I will send her his answers." As I did not choose to
+ take liberties with the King's papers, I only undertook to deliver the
+ memorials. Madame de Pompadour having given me her word according to the
+ conditions on which I had received the communication, I revealed to her
+ everything I had heard. She sent the memorials to M. de Choiseul, who
+ thought them very maliciously and very cleverly written. Madame de
+ Pompadour and he had a long conference as to the reply that was to be
+ given to the person by whom those disclosures were made. What I was
+ commissioned to say was this: that the place of Receiver-General was at
+ present too important, and would occasion too much surprise and
+ speculation; that it would not do to go beyond a place worth fifteen
+ thousand to twenty thousand francs a year; that they had no desire to pry
+ into the King's secrets; and that his correspondence ought not to be
+ communicated to any one; that this did not apply to papers like those of
+ which I was the bearer, which might fall into his hands; that he would
+ confer an obligation by communicating them, in order that blows aimed in
+ the dark, and directed by malignity and imposture, might be parried. The
+ answer was respectful and proper, in what related to the King; it was,
+ however, calculated to counteract the schemes of the Comte de Broglie, by
+ making M. de Choiseul acquainted with his attacks, and with the nature of
+ the weapons he employed. It was from the Count that he received statements
+ relating to the war and to the navy; but he had no communication with him
+ concerning foreign affairs, which the Count, as it was said, transacted
+ immediately with the King. The Duc de Choiseul got the man who spoke to me
+ recommended to the Controller-General, without his appearing in the
+ business; he had the place which was agreed upon, and the hope of a still
+ better, and he entrusted to me the King's correspondence, which I told him
+ I should not mention to Madame de Pompadour, according to her injunctions.
+ He sent several memorials to M. de Choiseul, containing accusations of
+ him, addressed to the King. This timely information enabled him to refute
+ them triumphantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King was very fond of having little private correspondences, very
+ often unknown to Madame de Pompadour: she knew, however, of the existence
+ of some, for he passed part of his mornings in writing to his family, to
+ the King of Spain, to Cardinal Tencin, to the Abbe de Broglie, and also to
+ some obscure persons. "It is, doubtless, from such people as these," said
+ she to me, one day, "that the King learns expressions which perfectly
+ surprise me. For instance, he said to me yesterday, when he saw a man pass
+ with an old coat on, 'il y a la un habit bien examine.' He once said to
+ me, when he meant to express that a thing was probable, 'il y a gros'; I
+ am told this is a saying of the common people, meaning, 'il y a gros a
+ parier'." I took the liberty to say, "But is it not more likely from his
+ young ladies at the Parc, that he learns these elegant expressions?" She
+ laughed, and said, "You are right; 'il y a gros'." The King, however, used
+ these expressions designedly, and with a laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King knew a great many anecdotes, and there were people enough who
+ furnished him with such as were likely to mortify the self-love of others.
+ One day, at Choisy, he went into a room where some people were employed
+ about embroidered furniture, to see how they were going on; and looking
+ out of the window, he saw at the end of a long avenue two men in the
+ Choisy uniform. "Who are those two noblemen?" said he. Madame de Pompadour
+ took up her glass, and said, "They are the Duc d'Aumont, and &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;"
+ "Ah!" said the King; "the Duc d'Aumont's grandfather would be greatly
+ astonished if he could see his grandson arm in arm with the grandson of
+ his valet de chambre, L&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, in a dress which may be
+ called a patent of nobility!" He went on to tell Madame de Pompadour a
+ long history, to prove the truth of what he said. The King went out to
+ accompany her into the garden; and, soon after, Quesnay and M. de Marigny
+ came in. I spoke with contempt of some one who was very fond of money. At
+ this the Doctor laughed, and said, "I had a curious dream last night: I
+ was in the country of the ancient Germans; I had a large house, stacks of
+ corn, herds of cattle, a great number of horses, and huge barrels of ale;
+ but I suffered dreadfully from rheumatism, and knew not how to manage to
+ go to a fountain, at fifty leagues' distance, the waters of which would
+ cure me. I was to go among a strange people. An enchanter appeared before
+ me, and said to me, 'I pity your distress; here, I will give you a little
+ packet of the powder of "prelinpinpin"; whoever receives a little of this
+ from you will lodge you, feed you, and pay you all sorts of civilities.' I
+ took the powder, and thanked him." "Ah!" said I, "how I should like to
+ have some powder of prelinpinpin! I wish I had a chest full."&mdash;"Well,"
+ said the Doctor, "that powder is money, for which you have so great a
+ contempt. Tell me who, of all the men who come hither, receives the
+ greatest attentions?"&mdash;"I do not know," said I. "Why," said he, "it
+ is M. de Monmartel, who comes four or five times a year."&mdash;"Why does
+ he enjoy so much consideration?"&mdash;"Because his coffers are full of
+ the powder of prelinpinpin. Everything in existence," said he, taking a
+ handful of Louis from his pocket, "is contained in these little pieces of
+ metal, which will convey you commodiously from one end of the world to the
+ other. All men obey those who possess this powder, and eagerly tender them
+ their services. To despise money, is to despise happiness, liberty, in
+ short, enjoyments of every kind." A cordon bleu passed under the window.
+ "That nobleman," said I, "is much more delighted with his cordon bleu than
+ he would be with ten thousand of your pieces of metal."&mdash;"When I ask
+ the King for a pension," replied Quesnay, "I say to him, 'Give me the
+ means of having a better dinner, a warmer coat, a carriage to shelter me
+ from the weather, and to transport me from place to place without
+ fatigue.' But the man who asks him for that fine blue ribbon would say, if
+ he had the courage and the honesty to speak as he feels, 'I am vain, and
+ it will give me great satisfaction to see people look at me, as I pass,
+ with an eye of stupid admiration, and make way, for me; I wish, when I
+ enter a room, to produce an effect, and to excite the attention of those
+ who may, perhaps, laugh at me when I am gone; I wish to be called
+ Monseigneur by the multitude.' Is not all this mere empty air? In scarcely
+ any country will this ribbon be of the slightest use to him; it will give
+ him no power. My pieces of metal will give me the power of assisting the
+ unfortunate everywhere. Long live the omnipotent powder of prelinpinpin!"
+ At these last words, we heard a burst of laughter from the adjoining room,
+ which was only separated by a door from the one we were in. The door
+ opened, and in came the King, Madame de Pompadour, and M. de Gontaut.
+ "Long live the powder of prelinpinpin!" said the King. "Doctor, can you
+ get me any of it?" It happened that, when the King returned from his walk,
+ he was struck with a fancy to listen to our conversation. Madame de
+ Pompadour was extremely kind to the Doctor, and the King went out
+ laughing, and talking with great admiration of the powder. I went away,
+ and so did the Doctor. I immediately sat down to commit this conversation
+ to writing. I was afterwards told that M. Quesnay was very learned in
+ certain matters relating to finance, and that he was a great 'economiste'.
+ But I do not know very well what that means. What I do know for certain
+ is, that he was very clever, very gay and witty, and a very able
+ physician.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The illness of the little Duke of Burgundy, whose intelligence was much
+ talked of, for a long time occupied the attention of the Court. Great
+ endeavours were made to find out the cause of his malady, and ill-nature
+ went so far as to assert that his nurse, who had an excellent situation at
+ Versailles, had communicated to him a nasty disease. The King shewed
+ Madame de Pompadour the information he had procured from the province she
+ came from, as to her conduct. A silly Bishop thought proper to say she had
+ been very licentious in her youth. The poor nurse was told of this, and
+ begged that he might be made to explain himself. The Bishop replied, that
+ she had been at several balls in the town in which she lived, and that she
+ had gone with her neck uncovered. The poor man actually thought this the
+ height of licentiousness. The King, who had been at first uneasy, when he
+ came to this, called out, "What a fool!" After having long been a source
+ of anxiety to the Court, the Duke died. Nothing produces a stronger
+ impression upon Princes, than the spectacle of their equals dying.
+ Everybody is occupied about them while ill&mdash;but as soon as they are
+ dead, nobody mentions them. The King frequently talked about death&mdash;and
+ about funerals, and places of burial. Nobody could be of a more melancholy
+ temperament. Madame de Pompadour once told me that he experienced a
+ painful sensation whenever he was forced to laugh, and that he had often
+ begged her to break off a droll story. He smiled, and that was all. In
+ general, he had the most gloomy ideas concerning almost all events. When
+ there was a new Minister, he used to say, "He displays his wares like all
+ the rest, and promises the finest things in the world, not one of which
+ will be fulfilled. He does not know this country&mdash;he will see." When
+ new projects for reinforcing the navy were laid before him, he said, "This
+ is the twentieth time I have heard this talked of&mdash;France never will
+ have a navy, I think." This I heard from M. de Marigny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I never saw Madame de Pompadour so rejoiced as at the taking of Mahon. The
+ King was very glad, too, but he had no belief in the merit of his
+ courtiers&mdash;he looked upon their success as the effect of chance.
+ Marechal Saxe was, as I have been told, the only man who inspired him with
+ great esteem. But he had scarcely ever seen him in his closet, or playing
+ the courtier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. d'Argenson picked a quarrel with M. de Richelieu, after his victory,
+ about his return to Paris. This was intended to prevent his coming to
+ enjoy his triumph. He tried to throw the thing upon Madame de Pompadour,
+ who was enthusiastic about him, and called him by no other name than the
+ "Minorcan." The Chevalier de Montaign was the favourite of the Dauphin,
+ and much beloved by him for his great devotion. He fell ill, and underwent
+ an operation called 'l'empieme', which is performed by making an incision
+ between the ribs, in order to let out the pus; it had, to all appearance,
+ a favourable result, but the patient grew worse, and could not breathe.
+ His medical attendants could not conceive what occasioned this accident
+ and retarded his cure. He died almost in the arms of the Dauphin, who went
+ every day to see him. The singularity of his disease determined the
+ surgeons to open the body, and they found, in his chest, part of the
+ leaden syringe with which decoctions had, as was usual, been injected into
+ the part in a state of suppuration. The surgeon, who committed this act of
+ negligence, took care not to boast of his feat, and his patient was the
+ victim. This incident was much talked of by the King, who related it, I
+ believe, not less than thirty times, according to his custom; but what
+ occasioned still more conversation about the Chevalier de Montaign, was a
+ box, found by his bed's side, containing haircloths, and shirts, and
+ whips, stained with blood. This circumstance was spoken of one evening at
+ supper, at Madame de Pompadour's, and not one of the guests seemed at all
+ tempted to imitate the Chevalier. Eight or ten days afterwards, the
+ following tale was sent to the King, to Madame de Pompadour, to the
+ Baschi, and to the Duc d'Ayen. At first nobody could understand to what it
+ referred: at last, the Duc d'Ayen exclaimed, "How stupid we are; this is a
+ joke on the austerities of the Chevalier de Montaign!" This appeared clear
+ enough&mdash;so much the more so, as the copies were sent to the Dauphin,
+ the Dauphine, the Abbe de St. Cyr, and to the Duc de V&mdash;-. The latter
+ had the character of a pretender to devotion, and, in his copy, there was
+ this addition, "You would not be such a fool, my dear Duke, as to be a
+ 'faquir'&mdash;confess that you would be very glad to be one of those good
+ monks who lead such a jolly life." The Duc de Richelieu was suspected of
+ having employed one of his wits to write the story. The King was
+ scandalised at it, and ordered the Lieutenant of Police to endeavour to
+ find out the author, but either he could not succeed or he would not
+ betray him.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Japanese Tale.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ At a distance of three leagues from the capital of Japan, there is a
+ temple celebrated for the concourse of persons, of both sexes, and of all
+ ranks, who crowd thither to worship an idol believed to work miracles.
+ Three hundred men consecrated to the service of religion, and who can give
+ proofs of ancient and illustrious descent, serve this temple, and present
+ to the idol the offerings which are brought from all the provinces of the
+ empire. They inhabit a vast and magnificent edifice, belonging to the
+ temple, and surrounded with gardens where art has combined with nature to
+ produce enchantment. I obtained permission to see the temple, and to walk
+ in the gardens. A monk advanced in years, but still full of vigour and
+ vivacity, accompanied me. I saw several others, of different ages, who
+ were walking there. But what surprised me was to see a great many of them
+ amusing themselves by various agreeable and sportive games with young
+ girls elegantly dressed, listening to their songs, and joining in their
+ dances. The monk, who accompanied me, listened with great civility and
+ kindness to the questions I put to him concerning his order. The following
+ is the sum of his answers to my numerous interrogations. The God Faraki,
+ whom we worship, is so called from a word which signifies the fabricator.
+ He made all that we behold&mdash;the earth, the stars, the sun, etc. He
+ has endowed men with senses, which are so many sources of pleasure, and we
+ think the only way of shewing our gratitude is to use them. This opinion
+ will, doubtless, appear to you much more rational than that of the faquirs
+ of India, who pass their lives in thwarting nature, and who inflict upon
+ themselves the most melancholy privations and the most severe sufferings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the sun rises, we repair to the mountain you see before us, at
+ the foot of which flows a stream of the most limpid water, which meanders
+ in graceful windings through that meadow-enamelled with the loveliest
+ flowers. We gather the most fragrant of them, which we carry and lay upon
+ the altar, together with various fruits, which we receive from the bounty
+ of Faraki. We then sing his praises, and execute dances expressive of our
+ thankfulness, and of all the enjoyments we owe to this beneficent deity.
+ The highest of these is that which love produces, and we testify our
+ ardent gratitude by the manner in which we avail ourselves of this
+ inestimable gift of Faraki. Having left the temple, we go into several
+ shady thickets, where we take a light repast; after which, each of us
+ employs himself in some unoppressive labour. Some embroider, others apply
+ themselves to painting, others cultivate flowers or fruits, others turn
+ little implements for our use. Many of these little works are sold to the
+ people, who purchase them with eagerness. The money arising from this sale
+ forms a considerable part of our revenue. Our morning is thus devoted to
+ the worship of God and to the exercise of the sense of Sight, which begins
+ with the first rays of the sun. The sense of Taste is gratified by our
+ dinner, and we add to it the pleasure of Smell. The most delicious viands
+ are spread for us in apartments strewed with flowers. The table is adorned
+ with them, and the most exquisite wines are handed to us in crystal
+ goblets. When we have glorified God, by the agreeable use of the palate,
+ and the olfactory nerve, we enjoy a delightful sleep of two hours, in
+ bowers of orange trees, roses, and myrtles. Having acquired a fresh store
+ of strength and spirits, we return to our occupations, that we may thus
+ mingle labour with pleasure, which would lose its zest by long
+ continuance. After our work, we return to the temple, to thank God, and to
+ offer him incense. From thence we go to the most delightful part of the
+ garden, where we find three hundred young girls, some of whom form lively
+ dances with the younger of our monks; the others execute serious dances,
+ which require neither strength nor agility, and which only keep time to
+ the sound of musical instruments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We talk and laugh with our companions, who are dressed in a light gauze,
+ and whose tresses are adorned with flowers; we press them to partake of
+ exquisite sherbets, differently prepared. The hour of supper being
+ arrived, we repair to rooms illuminated with the lustre of a thousand
+ tapers fragrant with amber. The supper-room is surrounded by three vast
+ galleries, in which are placed musicians, whose various instruments fill
+ the mind with the most pleasurable and the softest emotions. The young
+ girls are seated at table with us, and, towards the conclusion of the
+ repast, they sing songs, which are hymns in honour of the God who has
+ endowed us with senses which shed such a charm over existence, and which
+ promise us new pleasure from every fresh exercise of them. After the
+ repast is ended, we return to the dance, and, when the hour of repose
+ arrives, we draw from a kind of lottery, in which every one is sure of a
+ prize; that is, a young girl as his companion for the night. They are
+ allotted thus by chance, in order to avoid jealousy, and to prevent
+ exclusive attachments. Thus ends the day, and gives place to a night of
+ delights, which we sanctify by enjoying with due relish that sweetest of
+ all pleasures, which Faraki has so wisely attached to the reproduction of
+ our species. We reverently admire the wisdom and the goodness of Faraki,
+ who, desiring to secure to the world a continued population, has implanted
+ in the sexes an invincible mutual attraction, which constantly draws them
+ towards each other. Fecundity is the end he proposes, and he rewards with
+ intoxicating delights those who contribute to the fulfilment of his
+ designs. What should we say to the favourite of a King from whom he had
+ received a beautiful house, and fine estates, and who chose to spoil the
+ house, to let it fall in ruins, to abandon the cultivation of the land,
+ and let it become sterile, and covered with thorns? Such is the conduct of
+ the faquirs of India, who condemn themselves to the most melancholy
+ privations, and to the most severe sufferings. Is not this insulting
+ Faraki? Is it not saying to him, I despise your gifts? Is it not
+ misrepresenting him and saying, You are malevolent and cruel, and I know
+ that I can no otherwise please you than by offering you the spectacle of
+ my miseries? "I am told," added he, "that you have, in your country,
+ faquirs not less insane, not less cruel to themselves." I thought, with
+ some reason, that he meant the fathers of La Trappe. The recital of the
+ matter afforded me much matter for reflection, and I admired how strange
+ are the systems to which perverted reason gives birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duc de V&mdash;&mdash;- was a nobleman of high rank and great wealth.
+ He said to the King one evening at supper, "Your Majesty does me the
+ favour to treat me with great kindness: I should be inconsolable if I had
+ the misfortune to fall under your displeasure. If such a calamity were to
+ befall me, I should endeavour to divert my grief by improving some
+ beautiful estates of mine in such and such a province;" and he thereupon
+ gave a description of three or four fine seats. About a month after,
+ talking of the disgrace of a Minister, he said, "I hope your Majesty will
+ not withdraw your favour from me; but if I had the misfortune to lose it,
+ I should be more to be pitied than anybody, for I have no asylum in which
+ to hide my head." All those present, who had heard the description of the
+ beautiful country houses, looked at each other and laughed. The King said
+ to Madame de Pompadour, who sat next to him at table, "People are very
+ right in saying that a liar ought to have a good memory."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /> <a name="p035" id="p035"></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="p035.jpg (121K)" src="images/p035.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a href="images/p035.jpg"> <img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg" />
+ </a> <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An event, which made me tremble, as well as Madame, procured me the
+ familiarity of the King. In the middle of the night, Madame came into my
+ chamber, en chemise, and in a state of distraction. "Here! Here!" said
+ she, "the King is dying." My alarm may be easily imagined. I put on a
+ petticoat, and found the King in her bed, panting. What was to be done?&mdash;it
+ was an indigestion. We threw water upon him, and he came to himself. I
+ made him swallow some Hoffman's drops, and he said to me, "Do not make any
+ noise, but go to Quesnay; say that your mistress is ill; and tell the
+ Doctor's servants to say nothing about it." Quesnay, who lodged close by,
+ came immediately, and was much astonished to see the King in that state.
+ He felt his pulse, and said, "The crisis is over; but, if the King were
+ sixty years old, this might have been serious." He went to seek some drug,
+ and, on his return, set about inundating the King with perfumed water. I
+ forget the name of the medicine he made him take, but the effect was
+ wonderful. I believe it was the drops of General Lamotte. I called up one
+ of the girls of the wardrobe to make tea, as if for myself. The King took
+ three cups, put on his robe de chambre and his stockings, and went to his
+ own room, leaning upon the Doctor. What a sight it was to see us all three
+ half naked! Madame put on a robe as soon as possible, and I did the same,
+ and the King changed his clothes behind the curtains, which were very
+ decently closed. He afterwards spoke of this short attack, and expressed
+ his sense of the attentions shown him. An hour after, I felt the greatest
+ possible terror in thinking that the King might have died in our hands.
+ Happily, he quickly recovered himself, and none of the domestics perceived
+ what had taken place. I merely told the girl of the wardrobe to put
+ everything to rights, and she thought it was Madame who had been
+ indisposed. The King, the next morning, gave secretly to Quesnay a little
+ note for Madame, in which he said, 'Ma chere amie' must have had a great
+ fright, but let her reassure herself&mdash;I am now well, which the Doctor
+ will certify to you. From that moment the King became accustomed to me,
+ and, touched by the interest I had shown for him, he often gave me one of
+ his peculiarly gracious glances, and made me little presents, and, on
+ every New Year's Day, sent me porcelain to the amount of twenty louis
+ d'or. He told Madame that he looked upon me in the apartment as a picture
+ or statue, and never put any constraint upon himself on account of my
+ presence. Doctor Quesnay received a pension of a thousand crowns for his
+ attention and silence, and the promise of a place for his son. The King
+ gave me an order upon the Treasury for four thousand francs, and Madame
+ had presented to her a very handsome chiming-clock and the King's portrait
+ in a snuffbox.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King was habitually melancholy, and liked everything which recalled
+ the idea of death, in spite of the strongest fears of it. Of this, the
+ following is an instance: Madame de Pompadour was on her way to Crecy,
+ when one of the King's grooms made a sign to her coachman to stop, and
+ told him that the King's carriage had broken down, and that, knowing her
+ to be at no great distance, His Majesty had sent him forward to beg her to
+ wait for him. He soon overtook us, and seated himself in Madame de
+ Pompadour's carriage, in which were, I think, Madame de Chateau-Renaud,
+ and Madame de Mirepoix. The lords in attendance placed themselves in some
+ other carriages. I was behind, in a chaise, with Gourbillon, Madame de
+ Pompadour's valet de chambre. We were surprised in a short time by the
+ King stopping his carriage. Those which followed, of course stopped also.
+ The King called a groom, and said to him, "You see that little eminence;
+ there are crosses; it must certainly be a burying-ground; go and see
+ whether there are any graves newly dug." The groom galloped up to it,
+ returned, and said to the King, "There are three quite freshly made."
+ Madame de Pompadour, as she told me, turned away her head with horror; and
+ the little Marechale gaily said, "This is indeed enough to make one's
+ mouth water."
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The Marechale de Mirepois died at Brussels in 1791, at a very advanced
+ age, but preserving her wit and gaiety to the last. The day of her
+ death, after she had received the Sacrament, the physician told her that
+ he thought her a good deal better. She replied, "You tell me bad news:
+ having packed up, I had rather go." She was sister of the Prince de
+ Beauveau. The Prince de Ligne says, in one of his printed letters: "She
+ had that enchanting talent which supplies the means of pleasing
+ everybody. You would have sworn that she had thought of nothing but you
+ all her life."&mdash;En.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ Madame de Pompadour spoke of it when I was undressing her in the evening.
+ "What a strange pleasure," said she, "to endeavour to fill one's mind with
+ images which one ought to endeavour to banish, especially when one is
+ surrounded by so many sources of happiness! But that is the King's way; he
+ loves to talk about death. He said, some days ago, to M. de Fontanieu, who
+ was, seized with a bleeding at the nose, at the levee: 'Take care of
+ yourself; at your age it is a forerunner of apoplexy.' The poor man went
+ home frightened, and absolutely ill."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I never saw the King so agitated as during the illness of the Dauphin. The
+ physicians came incessantly to the apartments of Madame de Pompadour,
+ where the King interrogated them. There was one from Paris, a very odd
+ man, called Pousse, who once said to him, "You are a good papa; I like you
+ for that. But you know we are all your children, and share your distress.
+ Take courage, however; your son will recover." Everybody's eyes were upon
+ the Duc d'Orleans, who knew not how to look. He would have become heir to
+ the crown, the Queen being past the age to have children. Madame de
+ &mdash;&mdash;- said to me, one day, when I was expressing my surprise at
+ the King's grief, "It would annoy him beyond measure to have a Prince of
+ the blood heir apparent. He does not like them, and looks upon their
+ relationship to him as so remote, that he would feel humiliated by it."
+ And, in fact, when his son recovered, he said, "The King of Spain would
+ have had a fine chance." It was thought that he was right in this, and
+ that it would have been agreeable to justice; but that, if the Duc
+ d'Orleans had been supported by a party, he might have supported his
+ pretensions to the crown. It was, doubtless, to remove this impression
+ that he gave a magnificent fete at St. Cloud on the occasion of the
+ Dauphin's recovery. Madame de Pompadour said to Madame de Brancas,
+ speaking of this fete, "He wishes to make us forget the chateau en Espagne
+ he has been dreaming of; in Spain, however, they build them of solider
+ materials." The people did not shew so much joy at the Dauphin's recovery.
+ They looked upon him as a devotee, who did nothing but sing psalms. They
+ loved the Duc d'Orleans, who lived in the capital, and had acquired the
+ name of the King of Paris. These sentiments were not just; the Dauphin
+ only sang psalms when imitating the tones of one of the choristers of the
+ chapel. The people afterwards acknowledged their error, and did justice to
+ his virtues. The Duc d'Orleans paid the most assiduous court to Madame de
+ Pompadour: the Duchess, on the contrary, detested her. It is possible that
+ words were put into the Duchess's mouth which she never uttered; but she,
+ certainly, often said most cutting things. The King would have sent her
+ into exile, had he listened only to his resentment; but he feared the
+ eclat of such a proceeding, and he knew that she would only be the more
+ malicious. The Duc d'Orleans was, just then, extremely jealous of the
+ Comte de Melfort; and the Lieutenant of Police told the King he had strong
+ reasons for believing that the Duke would stick at nothing to rid himself
+ of this gallant, and that he thought it his duty to give the Count notice,
+ that he ought to be upon his guard. The King said, "He would not dare to
+ attempt any such violence as you seem to apprehend; but there is a better
+ way: let him try to surprise them, and he will find me very well inclined
+ to have his cursed wife shut up; but if he got rid of this lover, she
+ would have another to-morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, she has others at this moment; for instance, the Chevalier de
+ Colbert, and the Comte de l'Aigle." Madame de Pompadour, however, told me
+ these two last affairs were not certain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An adventure happened about the same time, which the Lieutenant of Police
+ reported to the King. The Duchesse d'Orleans had amused herself one
+ evening, about eight o'clock, with ogling a handsome young Dutchman, whom
+ she took a fancy to, from a window of the Palais Royal. The young man,
+ taking her for a woman of the town, wanted to make short work, at which
+ she was very much shocked. She called a Swiss, and made herself known. The
+ stranger was arrested; but he defended himself by affirming that she had
+ talked very loosely to him. He was dismissed, and the Duc d'Orleans gave
+ his wife a severe reprimand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King (who hated her so much that he spoke of her without the slightest
+ restraint) one day said to Madame de Pompadour, in my presence, "Her
+ mother knew what she was, for, before her marriage, she never suffered her
+ to say more than yes and no. Do you know her joke on the nomination of
+ Moras? She sent to congratulate him upon it: two minutes after, she called
+ back the messenger she had sent, and said, before everybody present,
+ 'Before you speak to him, ask the Swiss if he still has the place.'"
+ Madame de Pompadour was not vindictive, and, in spite of the malicious
+ speeches of the Duchesse d'Orleans, she tried to excuse her conduct.
+ "Almost all women," she said, "have lovers; she has not all that are
+ imputed to her: but her free manners, and her conversation, which is
+ beyond all bounds, have brought her into general disrepute."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My companion came into my room the other day, quite delighted. She had
+ been with M. de Chenevieres, first Clerk in the War-office, and a constant
+ correspondent of Voltaire, whom she looks upon as a god. She was, by the
+ bye, put into a great rage one day, lately, by a print-seller in the
+ street, who was crying, "Here is Voltaire, the famous Prussian; here you
+ see him, with a great bear-skin cap, to keep him from the cold! Here is
+ the famous Prussian, for six sous!"&mdash;"What a profanation!" said she.
+ To return to my story: M. de Chenevieres had shewn her some letters from
+ Voltaire, and M. Marmontel had read an 'Epistle to his Library'.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. Quesnay came in for a moment; she told him all this: and, as he did not
+ appear to take any great interest in it, she asked him if he did not
+ admire great poets. "Oh, yes; just as I admire great bilboquet players,"
+ said he, in that tone of his, which rendered everything he said diverting.
+ "I have written some verses, however," said he, "and I will repeat them to
+ you; they are upon a certain M. Rodot, an Intendant of the Marine, who was
+ very fond of abusing medicine and medical men. I made these verses to
+ revenge AEsculapius and Hippocrates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do you say to them?" said the Doctor. My companion thought them very
+ pretty, and the Doctor gave me them in his handwriting, begging me, at the
+ same time, not to give any copies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame de Pompadour joked my companion about her 'bel-esprit', but
+ sometimes she reposed confidence in her. Knowing that she was often
+ writing, she said to her, "You are writing a novel, which will appear some
+ day or other; or, perhaps, the age of Louis XV.: I beg you to treat me
+ well." I have no reason to complain of her. It signifies very little to me
+ that she can talk more learnedly than I can about prose and verse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She never told me her real name; but one day I was malicious enough to say
+ to her, "Some one was maintaining, yesterday, that the family of Madame de
+ Mar&mdash;&mdash; was of more importance than many of good extraction.
+ They say it is the first in Cadiz. She had very honourable alliances, and
+ yet she has thought it no degradation to be governess to Madame de
+ Pompadour's daughter. One day you will see her sons or her nephews Farmers
+ General, and her granddaughters married to Dukes." I had remarked that
+ Madame de Pompadour for some days had taken chocolate, 'a triple vanille
+ et ambre', at her breakfast; and that she ate truffles and celery soup:
+ finding her in a very heated state, I one day remonstrated with her about
+ her diet, to which she paid no attention. I then thought it right to speak
+ to her friend, the Duchesse de Brancas. "I had remarked the same thing,"
+ said she, "and I will speak to her about it before you." After she was
+ dressed, Madame de Brancas, accordingly, told her she was uneasy about her
+ health. "I have just been talking to her about it," said the Duchess,
+ pointing to me, "and she is of my opinion." Madame de Pompadour seemed a
+ little displeased; at last, she burst into tears. I immediately went out,
+ shut the door, and returned to my place to listen. "My dear friend," she
+ said to Madame de Brancas, "I am agitated by the fear of losing the King's
+ heart by ceasing to be attractive to him. Men, you know, set great value
+ on certain things, and I have the misfortune to be of a very cold
+ temperament. I, therefore, determined to adopt a heating diet, in order to
+ remedy this defect, and for two days this elixir has been of great service
+ to me, or, at least, I have thought I felt its good effects."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duchesse de Brancas took the phial which was upon the toilet, and
+ after having smelt at it, "Fie!" said she, and threw it into the fire.
+ Madame de Pompadour scolded her, and said, "I don't like to be treated
+ like a child." She wept again, and said, "You don't know what happened to
+ me a week ago. The King, under pretext of the heat of the weather, lay
+ down upon my sofa, and passed half the night there. He will take a disgust
+ to me and have another mistress."&mdash;"You will not avoid that," replied
+ the Duchess, "by following your new diet, and that diet will kill you;
+ render your company more and more precious to the King by your gentleness:
+ do not repulse him in his fond moments, and let time do the rest; the
+ chains of habit will bind him to you for ever." They then embraced; Madame
+ de Pompadour recommended secrecy to Madame de Brancas, and the diet was
+ abandoned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little while after, she said to me, "Our master is better pleased with
+ me. This is since I spoke to Quesnay, without, however, telling him all.
+ He told me, that to accomplish my end, I must try to be in good health, to
+ digest well, and, for that purpose, take exercise. I think the Doctor is
+ right. I feel quite a different creature. I adore that man (the King), I
+ wish so earnestly to be agreeable to him! But, alas! sometimes he says I
+ am a macreuse (a cold-blooded aquatic bird). I would give my life to
+ please him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /> <a name="p044" id="p044"></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="p044.jpg (66K)" src="images/p044.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, the King came in very much heated. I withdrew to my post, where I
+ listened. "What is the matter?" said Madame de Pompadour. "The long robes
+ and the clergy," replied he, "are always at drawn daggers, they distract
+ me by their quarrels. But I detest the long robes the most. My clergy, on
+ the whole, is attached and faithful to me; the others want to keep me in a
+ state of tutelage."&mdash;"Firmness," said Madame de Pompadour, "is the
+ only thing that can subdue them."&mdash;"Robert Saint Vincent is an
+ incendiary, whom I wish I could banish, but that would make a terrible
+ tumult. On the other hand, the Archbishop is an iron-hearted fellow, who
+ tries to pick quarrels. Happily, there are some in the Parliament upon
+ whom I can rely, and who affect to be very violent, but can be softened
+ upon occasion. It costs me a few abbeys, and a few secret pensions, to
+ accomplish this. There is a certain V&mdash;- who serves me very well,
+ while he appears to be furious on the other side."&mdash;"I can tell you
+ some news of him, Sire," said Madame de Pompadour. "He wrote to me
+ yesterday, pretending that he is related to me, and begging for an
+ interview."&mdash;"Well," said the King, "let him come. See him; and if he
+ behaves well, we shall have a pretext for giving him something." M. de
+ Gontaut came in, and seeing that they were talking seriously, said
+ nothing. The King walked about in an agitated manner, and suddenly
+ exclaimed, "The Regent was very wrong in restoring to them the right of
+ remonstrating; they will end in ruining the State."&mdash;"All, Sire,"
+ said M. de Gontaut, "it is too strong to be shaken by a set of petty
+ justices." "You don't know what they do, nor what they think. They are an
+ assembly of republicans; however, here is enough of the subject. Things
+ will last as they are as long as I shall. Talk about this on Sunday,
+ Madame, with M. Berrien." Madame d'Amblimont and Madame d'Esparbes came
+ in. "Ah! here come my kittens," said Madame de Pompadour; "all that we are
+ about is Greek to them; but their gaiety restores my tranquility, and
+ enables me to attend again to serious affairs. You, Sire, have the chase
+ to divert you&mdash;they answer the same purpose to me." The King then
+ began to talk about his morning's sport, and Lansmatte.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [See the "Memoirs of Madame Campan," vol. iii., p. 24. Many traits of
+ original and amusing bluntness are related of Lansmatte, one of the
+ King's grooms.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ It was necessary to let the King go on upon these subjects, and even,
+ sometimes, to hear the same story three or four times over, if new persons
+ came into the room. Madame de Pompadour never betrayed the least ennui.
+ She even sometimes persuaded him to begin his story anew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I one day said to her, "It appears to me, Madame, that you are fonder than
+ ever of the Comtesse d'Amblimont."&mdash;"I have reason to be so," said
+ she. "She is unique, I think, for her fidelity to her friends, and for her
+ honour. Listen, but tell nobody&mdash;four days ago, the King, passing her
+ to go to supper, approached her, under the pretence of tickling her, and
+ tried to slip a note into her hand. D'Amblimont, in her madcap way, put
+ her hands behind her back, and the King was obliged to pick up the note,
+ which had fallen on the ground. Gontaut was the only person who saw all
+ this, and, after supper, he went up to the little lady, and said, 'You are
+ an excellent friend.'&mdash;'I did my duty,' said she, and immediately put
+ her finger on her lips to enjoin him to be silent. He, however, informed
+ me of this act of friendship of the little heroine, who had not told me of
+ it herself." I admired the Countess's virtue, and Madame de Pompadour
+ said, "She is giddy and headlong; but she has more sense and more feeling
+ than a thousand prudes and devotees. D'Esparbes would not do as much most
+ likely she would meet him more than half-way. The King appeared
+ disconcerted, but he still pays her great attentions."&mdash;"You will,
+ doubtless, Madame," said I, "show your sense of such admirable conduct."&mdash;"You
+ need not doubt it," said she, "but I don't wish her to think that I am
+ informed of it." The King, prompted either by the remains of his liking,
+ or from the suggestions of Madame de Pompadour, one morning went to call
+ on Madame d'Amblimont, at Choisy, and threw round her neck a collar of
+ diamonds and emeralds, worth between fifty thousand and seventy-five
+ thousand francs. This happened a long time after the circumstance I have
+ just related.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a large sofa in a little room adjoining Madame de Pompadour's,
+ upon which I often reposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One evening, towards midnight, a bat flew into the apartment where the
+ Court was; the King immediately cried out, "Where is General Crillon?" (He
+ had just left the room.) "He is the General to command against the bats."
+ This set everybody calling out, "Ou etais tu, Crillon?" M. de Crillon soon
+ after came in, and was told where the enemy was. He immediately threw off
+ his coat, drew his sword, and commenced an attack upon the bat, which flew
+ into the closet where I was fast asleep. I started out of sleep at the
+ noise, and saw the King and all the company around me. This furnished
+ amusement for the rest of the evening. M. de Crillon was a very excellent
+ and agreeable man, but he had the fault of indulging in buffooneries of
+ this kind, which, however, were the result of his natural gaiety, and not
+ of any subserviency of character. Such, however, was not the case with
+ another exalted nobleman, a Knight of the Golden Fleece, whom Madame saw
+ one day shaking hands with her valet de chambre. As he was one of the
+ vainest men at Court, Madame could not refrain from telling the
+ circumstance to the King; and, as he had no employment at Court, the King
+ scarcely ever after named him on the Supper List.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had a cousin at Saint Cyr, who was married. She was greatly distressed
+ at having a relation waiting woman to Madame de Pompadour, and often
+ treated me in the most mortifying manner. Madame knew this from Colin, her
+ steward, and spoke of it to the King. "I am not surprised at it," said he;
+ "this is a specimen of the silly women of Saint Cyr. Madame de Maintenon
+ had excellent intentions, but she made a great mistake. These girls are
+ brought up in such a manner, that, unless they are all made ladies of the
+ palace, they are unhappy and impertinent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some time after, this relation of mine was at my house. Colin, who knew
+ her, though she did not know him, came in. He said to me, "Do you know
+ that the Prince de Chimay has made a violent attack upon the Chevalier
+ d'Henin for being equerry to the Marquise." At these words, my cousin
+ looked very much astonished, and said, "Was he not right?"&mdash;"I don't
+ mean to enter into that question," said Colin&mdash;"but only to repeat
+ his words, which were these: 'If you were only a man of moderately good
+ family and poor, I should not blame you, knowing, as I do, that there are
+ hundreds such, who would quarrel for your place, as young ladies of family
+ would, to be about your mistress. But, recollect, that your relations are
+ princes of the Empire, and that you bear their name."&mdash;"What, sir,"
+ said my relation, "the Marquise's equerry of a princely house?"&mdash;"Of
+ the house of Chimay," said he; "they take the name of Alsace "&mdash;witness
+ the Cardinal of that name. Colin went out delighted at what he had said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot get over my surprise at what I have heard," said my relation.
+ "It is, nevertheless, very true," replied I; "you may see the Chevalier
+ d'Henin (that is the family name of the Princes de Chimay), with the cloak
+ of Madame upon his arm, and walking alongside her sedan-chair, in order
+ that he may be ready, on her getting in, to cover her shoulders with her
+ cloak, and then remain in the antechamber, if there is no other room, till
+ her return."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that time, my cousin let me alone; nay, she even applied to me to get
+ a company of horse for her husband, who was very loath to come and thank
+ me. His wife wished him to thank Madame de Pompadour; but the fear he had
+ lest she should tell him, that it was in consideration of his relationship
+ to her waiting-woman that he commanded fifty horse, prevented him. It was,
+ however, a most surprising thing that a man belonging to the house of
+ Chimay should be in the service of any lady whatever; and, the commander
+ of Alsace returned from Malta on purpose to get him out of Madame de
+ Pompadour's household. He got him a pension of a hundred louis from his
+ family, and the Marquise gave him a company of horse. The Chevalier
+ d'Henin had been page to the Marechal de Luxembourg, and one can hardly
+ imagine how he could have put his relation in such a situation; for,
+ generally speaking, all great houses keep up the consequence of their
+ members. M. de Machault, the Keeper of the Seals, had, at the same time,
+ as equerry, a Knight of St. Louis, and a man of family&mdash;the Chevalier
+ de Peribuse&mdash;who carried his portfolio, and walked by the side of the
+ chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether it was from ambition, or from tenderness, Madame de Pompadour had
+ a regard for her daughter,&mdash;[The daughter of Madame de Pompadour and
+ her husband, M. d'Atioles. She was called Alexandrine.]&mdash;which seemed
+ to proceed from the bottom of her heart. She was brought up like a
+ Princess, and, like persons of that rank, was called by her Christian name
+ alone. The first persons at Court had an eye to this alliance, but her
+ mother had, perhaps, a better project. The King had a son by Madame de
+ Vintimille, who resembled him in face, gesture, and manners. He was called
+ the Comte du &mdash;&mdash;-. Madame de Pompadour had him brought: to
+ Bellevue. Colin, her steward, was employed to find means to persuade his
+ tutor to bring him thither. They took some refreshment at the house of the
+ Swiss, and the Marquise, in the course of her walk, appeared to meet them
+ by accident. She asked the name of the child, and admired his beauty. Her
+ daughter came up at the same moment, and Madame de Pompadour led them into
+ a part of the garden where she knew the King would come. He did come, and
+ asked the child's name. He was told, and looked embarrassed when Madame,
+ pointing to them, said they would be a beautiful couple. The King played
+ with the girl, without appearing to take any notice of the boy, who, while
+ he was eating some figs and cakes which were brought, his attitudes and
+ gestures were so like those of the King, that Madame de Pompadour was in
+ the utmost astonishment. "Ah!" said she, "Sire, look at &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;."
+ &mdash;"At what?" said he. "Nothing," replied Madame, "except that one
+ would think one saw his father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did not know," said the King, smiling, "that you were so intimately
+ acquainted with the Comte du L&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; ."&mdash;"You ought to
+ embrace him," said she, "he is very handsome."&mdash;"I will begin, then,
+ with the young lady," said the King, and embraced them in a cold,
+ constrained manner. I was present, having joined Mademoiselle's governess.
+ I remarked to Madame, in the evening, that the King had not appeared very
+ cordial in his caresses. "That is his way," said she; "but do not those
+ children appear made for each other? If it was Louis XIV., he would make a
+ Duc du Maine of the little boy; I do not ask so much; but a place and a
+ dukedom for his son is very little; and it is because he is his son that I
+ prefer him to all the little Dukes of the Court. My grandchildren would
+ blend the resemblance of their grandfather and grandmother; and this
+ combination, which I hope to live to see, would, one day, be my greatest
+ delight." The tears came into her eyes as she spoke. Alas! alas! only six
+ months elapsed, when her darling daughter, the hope of her advanced years,
+ the object of her fondest wishes, died suddenly. Madame de Pompadour was
+ inconsolable, and I must do M. de Marigny the justice to say that he was
+ deeply afflicted. His niece was beautiful as an angel, and destined to the
+ highest fortunes, and I always thought that he had formed the design of
+ marrying her. A dukedom would have given him rank; and that, joined to his
+ place, and to the wealth which she would have had from her mother, would
+ have made him a man of great importance. The difference of age was not
+ sufficient to be a great obstacle. People, as usual, said the young lady
+ was poisoned; for the unexpected death of persons who command a large
+ portion of public attention always gives birth to these rumours. The King
+ shewed great regret, but more for the grief of Madame than on account of
+ the loss itself, though he had often caressed the child, and loaded her
+ with presents. I owe it, also, to justice, to say that M. de Marigny, the
+ heir of all Madame de Pompadour's fortune, after the death of her
+ daughter, evinced the sincerest and deepest regret every time she was
+ seriously ill. She, soon after, began to lay plans for his establishment.
+ Several young ladies of the highest birth were thought of; and, perhaps,
+ he would have been made a Duke, but his turn of mind indisposed him for
+ schemes either of marriage or ambition. Ten times he might have been made
+ Prime Minister, yet he never aspired to it. "That is a man," said Quesnay
+ to me, one day, "who is very little known; nobody talks of his talents or
+ acquirements, nor of his zealous and efficient patronage of the arts: no
+ man, since Colbert, has done so much in his situation: he is, moreover, an
+ extremely honourable man, but people will not see in him anything but the
+ brother of the favourite; and, because he is fat, he is thought dull and
+ heavy." This was all perfectly true. M. de Marigny had travelled in Italy
+ with very able artists, and had acquired taste, and much more information
+ than any of his predecessors had possessed. As for the heaviness of his
+ air, it only came upon him when he grew fat; before that, he had a
+ delightful face. He was then as handsome as his sister. He paid court to
+ nobody, had no vanity, and confined himself to the society of persons with
+ whom he was at his ease. He went rather more into company at Court after
+ the King had taken him to ride with him in his carriage, thinking it then
+ his duty to shew himself among the courtiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame called me, one day, into her closet, where the King was walking up
+ and down in a very serious mood. "You must," said she, "pass some days in
+ a house in the Avenue de St. Cloud, whither I shall send you. You will
+ there find a young lady about to lie in." The King said nothing, and I was
+ mute from astonishment. "You will be mistress of the house, and preside,
+ like one of the fabulous goddesses, at the accouchement. Your presence is
+ necessary, in order that everything may pass secretly, and according to
+ the King's wish. You will be present at the baptism, and name the father
+ and mother." The King began to laugh, and said, "The father is a very
+ honest man;" Madame added, "beloved by every one, and adored by those who
+ know him." Madame then took from a little cupboard a small box, and drew
+ from it an aigrette of diamonds, at the same time saying to the King, "I
+ have my reasons for it not being handsomer."&mdash;"It is but too much
+ so," said the King; "how kind you are;" and he then embraced Madame, who
+ wept with emotion, and, putting her hand upon the King's heart, said,
+ "This is what I wish to secure." The King's eyes then filled with tears,
+ and I also began weeping, without knowing why. Afterwards, the King said,
+ "Guimard will call upon you every day, to assist you with his advice, and
+ at the critical moment you will send for him. You will say that you expect
+ the sponsors, and a moment after you will pretend to have received a
+ letter, stating that they cannot come. You will, of course, affect to be
+ very much embarrassed; and Guimard will then say that there is nothing for
+ it but to take the first comers. You will then appoint as godfather and
+ godmother some beggar, or chairman, and the servant girl of the house, and
+ to whom you will give but twelve francs, in order not to attract
+ attention."&mdash;"A louis," added Madame, "to obviate anything singular,
+ on the other hand."&mdash;"It is you who make me economical, under certain
+ circumstances," said the King. "Do you remember the driver of the fiacre?
+ I wanted to give him a LOUIS, and Duc d'Ayen said, 'You will be known;' so
+ that I gave him a crown." He was going to tell the whole story. Madame
+ made a sign to him to be silent, which he obeyed, not without considerable
+ reluctance. She afterwards told me that at the time of the fetes given on
+ occasion of the Dauphin's marriage, the King came to see her at her
+ mother's house in a hackney-coach. The coachman would not go on, and the
+ King would have given him a LOUIS. "The police will hear of it, if you
+ do," said the Duc d'Ayen, "and its spies will make inquiries, which will,
+ perhaps, lead to a discovery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Guimard," continued the King, "will tell you the names of the father and
+ mother; he will be present at the ceremony, and make the usual presents.
+ It is but fair that you also should receive yours;" and, as he said this,
+ he gave me fifty LOUIS, with that gracious air that he could so well
+ assume upon certain occasions, and which no person in the kingdom had but
+ himself. I kissed his hand and wept. "You will take care of the accouchee,
+ will you not? She is a good creature, who has not invented gunpowder, and
+ I confide her entirely to your direction; my chancellor will tell you the
+ rest," he said, turning to Madame, and then quitted the room. "Well, what
+ think you of the part I am playing?" asked Madame. "It is that of a
+ superior woman, and an excellent friend," I replied. "It is his heart I
+ wish to secure," said she; "and all those young girls who have no
+ education will not run away with it from me. I should not be equally
+ confident were I to see some fine woman belonging to the Court, or the
+ city, attempt his conquest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I asked Madame, if the young lady knew that the King was the father of her
+ child? "I do not think she does," replied she; "but, as he appeared fond
+ of her, there is some reason to fear that those about her might be too
+ ready to tell her; otherwise," said she, shrugging her shoulders, "she,
+ and all the others, are told that he is a Polish nobleman, a relation of
+ the Queen, who has apartments in the castle." This story was contrived on
+ account of the cordon bleu, which the King has not always time to lay
+ aside, because, to do that, he must change his coat, and in order to
+ account for his having a lodging in the castle so near the King. There
+ were two little rooms by the side of the chapel, whither the King retired
+ from his apartment, without being seen by anybody but a sentinel, who had
+ his orders, and who did not know who passed through those rooms. The King
+ sometimes went to the Parc-aux-cerfs, or received those young ladies in
+ the apartments I have mentioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I must here interrupt my narrative, to relate a singular adventure, which
+ is only known to six or seven persons, masters or valets. At the time of
+ the attempt to assassinate the King, a young girl, whom he had seen
+ several times, and for whom he had manifested more tenderness than for
+ most, was distracted at this horrible event. The Mother-Abbess of the
+ Parc-aux-cerfs perceived her extraordinary grief, and managed so as to
+ make her confess that she knew the Polish Count was the King of France.
+ She confessed that she had taken from his pocket two letters, one of which
+ was from the King of Spain, the other from the Abbe de Brogue. This was
+ discovered afterwards, for neither she nor the Mother-Abbess knew the
+ names of the writers. The girl was scolded, and M. Lebel, first valet de
+ chambre, who had the management of all these affairs, was called; he took
+ the letters, and carried them to the King, who was very much embarrassed
+ in what manner to meet a person so well informed of his condition. The
+ girl in question, having perceived that the King came secretly to see her
+ companion, while she was neglected, watched his arrival, and, at the
+ moment he entered with the Abbess, who was about to withdraw, she rushed
+ distractedly into the room where her rival was. She immediately threw
+ herself at the King's feet. "Yes," said she, "you are King of all France;
+ but that would be nothing to me if you were not also monarch of my heart:
+ do not forsake me, my beloved sovereign; I was nearly mad when your life
+ was attempted!" The Mother-Abbess cried out, "You are mad now." The King
+ embraced her, which appeared to restore her to tranquility. They succeeded
+ in getting her out of the room, and a few days afterwards the unhappy girl
+ was taken to a madhouse, where she was treated as if she had been insane,
+ for some days. But she knew well enough that she was not so, and that the
+ King had really been her lover. This lamentable affair was related to me
+ by the Mother-Abbess, when I had some acquaintance with her at the time of
+ the accouchement I have spoken of, which I never had before, nor since.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To return to my history: Madame de Pompadour said to me, "Be constantly
+ with the 'accouchee', to prevent any stranger, or even the people of the
+ house, from speaking to her. You will always say that he is a very rich
+ Polish nobleman, who is obliged to conceal himself on account of his
+ relationship to the Queen, who is very devout. You will find a wet-nurse
+ in the house, to whom you will deliver the child. Guimard will manage all
+ the rest. You will go to church as a witness; everything must be conducted
+ as if for a substantial citizen. The young lady expects to lie in in five
+ or six days; you will dine with her, and will not leave her till she is in
+ a state of health to return to the Parc-aux-cerfs, which she may do in a
+ fortnight, as I imagine, without running any risk." I went, that same
+ evening, to the Avenue de Saint Cloud, where I found the Abbess and
+ Guimard, an attendant belonging to the castle, but without his blue coat.
+ There were, besides, a nurse, a wet-nurse, two old men-servants, and a
+ girl, who was something between a servant and a waiting-woman. The young
+ lady was extremely pretty, and dressed very elegantly, though not too
+ remarkably. I supped with her and the Mother-Abbess, who was called Madame
+ Bertrand. I had presented the aigrette Madame de Pompadour gave me before
+ supper, which had greatly delighted the young lady, and she was in high
+ spirits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Bertrand had been housekeeper to M. Lebel, first valet de chambre
+ to the King. He called her Dominique, and she was entirely in his
+ confidence. The young lady chatted with us after supper; she appeared to
+ be very naive. The next day, I talked to her in private. She said to me,
+ "How is the Count?" (It was the King whom she called by this title.) "He
+ will be very sorry not to be with me now; but he was obliged to set off on
+ a long journey." I assented to what she said. "He is very handsome," said
+ she, "and loves me with all his heart. He promised me an allowance; but I
+ love him disinterestedly; and, if he would let me, I would follow him to
+ Poland." She afterwards talked to me about her parents, and about M.
+ Lebel, whom she knew by the name of Durand. "My mother," said she, "kept a
+ large grocer's shop, and my father was a man of some consequence; he
+ belonged to the Six Corps, and that, as everybody knows, is an excellent
+ thing. He was twice very near being head-bailiff." Her mother had become
+ bankrupt at her father's death, but the Count had come to her assistance,
+ and settled upon her fifteen hundred francs a year, besides giving her six
+ thousand francs down. On the sixth day, she was brought to bed, and,
+ according to my instructions, she was told the child was a girl, though in
+ reality it was a boy; she was soon to be told that it was dead, in order
+ that no trace of its existence might remain for a certain time. It was
+ eventually to be restored to its mother. The King gave each of his
+ children about ten thousand francs a year. They inherited after each other
+ as they died off, and seven or eight were already dead. I returned to
+ Madame de Pompadour, to whom I had written every day by Guimard. The next
+ day, the King sent for me into the room; he did not say a word as to the
+ business I had been employed upon; but he gave me a large gold snuff-box,
+ containing two rouleaux of twenty-five louis each. I curtsied to him, and
+ retired. Madame asked me a great many questions of the young lady, and
+ laughed heartily at her simplicity, and at all she had said about the
+ Polish nobleman. "He is disgusted with the Princess, and, I think, will
+ return to Poland for ever, in two months."&mdash;"And the young lady?"
+ said I. "She will be married in the country," said she, "with a portion of
+ forty thousand crowns at the most and a few diamonds." This little
+ adventure, which initiated me into the King's secrets, far from procuring
+ for me increased marks of kindness from him, seemed to produce a coldness
+ towards me; probably because he was ashamed of my knowing his obscure
+ amours. He was also embarrassed by the services Madame de Pompadour had
+ rendered him on this occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the little mistresses of the Parc-aux-cerfs, the King had
+ sometimes intrigues with ladies of the Court, or from Paris, who wrote to
+ him. There was a Madame de L&mdash;&mdash;-, who, though married to a
+ young and amiable man, with two hundred thousand francs a year, wished
+ absolutely to become his mistress. She contrived to have a meeting with
+ him: and the King, who knew who she was, was persuaded that she was really
+ madly in love with him. There is no knowing what might have happened, had
+ she not died. Madame was very much alarmed, and was only relieved by her
+ death from inquietude. A circumstance took place at this time which
+ doubled Madame's friendship for me. A rich man, who had a situation in the
+ Revenue Department, called on me one day very secretly, and told me that
+ he had something of importance to communicate to Madame la Marquise, but
+ that he should find himself very much embarrassed in communicating it to
+ her personally, and that he should prefer acquainting me with it. He then
+ told me, what I already knew, that he had a very beautiful wife, of whom
+ he was passionately fond; that having on one occasion perceived her
+ kissing a little 'porte feuille', he endeavoured to get possession of it,
+ supposing there was some mystery attached to it. One day that she suddenly
+ left the room to go upstairs to see her sister, who had been brought to
+ bed, he took the opportunity of opening the porte feuille, and was very
+ much surprised to find in it a portrait of the King, and a very tender
+ letter written by His Majesty. Of the latter he took a copy, as also of an
+ unfinished letter of his wife, in which she vehemently entreated the King
+ to allow her to have the pleasure of an interview&mdash;the means she
+ pointed out. She was to go masked to the public ball at Versailles, where
+ His Majesty could meet her under favour of a mask. I assured M. de &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ that I should acquaint Madame with the affair, who would, no doubt, feel
+ very grateful for the communication. He then added, "Tell Madame la
+ Marquise that my wife is very clever and very intriguing. I adore her, and
+ should run distracted were she to be taken from me." I lost not a moment
+ in acquainting Madame with the affair, and gave her the letter. She became
+ serious and pensive, and I since learned that she consulted M. Berrier,
+ Lieutenant of Police, who, by a very simple but ingeniously conceived
+ plan, put an end to the designs of this lady. He demanded an audience of
+ the King, and told him that there was a lady in Paris who was making free
+ with His Majesty's name; that he had been given the copy of a letter,
+ supposed to have been written by His Majesty to the lady in question. The
+ copy he put into the King's hands, who read it in great confusion, and
+ then tore it furiously to pieces. M. Berrier added, that it was rumoured
+ that this lady was to meet His Majesty at the public ball, and, at this
+ very moment, it so happened that a letter was put into the King's hand,
+ which proved to be from the lady, appointing the meeting; at least, M.
+ Berrier judged so, as the King appeared very much surprised on reading it,
+ and said, "It must be allowed, M. le Lieutenant of Police, that you are
+ well informed." M. Berrier added, "I think it my duty to tell Your Majesty
+ that this lady passes for a very intriguing person." "I believe," replied
+ the King, "that it is not without deserving it that she has got that
+ character."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame de Pompadour had many vexations in the midst of all her grandeur.
+ She often received anonymous letters, threatening her with poison or
+ assassination: her greatest fear, however, was that of being supplanted by
+ a rival. I never saw her in a greater agitation than, one evening, on her
+ return from the drawing-room at Marly. She threw down her cloak and muff,
+ the instant she came in, with an air of ill-humour, and undressed herself
+ in a hurried manner. Having dismissed her other women, she said to me, "I
+ think I never saw anybody so insolent as Madame de Coaslin. I was seated
+ at the same table with her this evening, at a game of 'brelan', and you
+ cannot imagine what I suffered. The men and women seemed to come in relays
+ to watch us. Madame de Coaslin said two or three times, looking at me, 'Va
+ tout', in the most insulting manner. I thought I should have fainted, when
+ she said, in a triumphant tone, I have the 'brelan' of kings. I wish you
+ had seen her courtesy to me on parting."&mdash;"Did the King," said I,
+ "show her particular attention?" "You don't know him," said she; "if he
+ were going to lodge her this very night in my apartment, he would behave
+ coldly to her before people, and would treat me with the utmost kindness.
+ This is the effect of his education, for he is, by nature, kind-hearted
+ and frank." Madame de Pompadour's alarms lasted for some months, when she,
+ one day, said to me, "That haughty Marquise has missed her aim; she
+ frightened the King by her grand airs, and was incessantly teasing him for
+ money. Now you, perhaps, may not know that the King would sign an order
+ for forty thousand LOUIS without a thought, and would give a hundred out
+ of his little private treasury with the greatest reluctance. Lebel, who
+ likes me better than he would a new mistress in my place, either by chance
+ or design had brought a charming little sultana to the Parc-aux-cerfs, who
+ has cooled the King a little towards the haughty Vashti, by giving him
+ occupation, has received a hundred thousand francs, some jewels, and an
+ estate. Jannette&mdash;[The Intendant of Police.]&mdash;has rendered me
+ great service, by showing the King extracts from the letters broken open
+ at the post-office, concerning the report that Madame de Coaslin was
+ coming into favour: The King was much impressed by a letter from an old
+ counsellor of the Parliament, who wrote to one of his friends as follows:
+ 'It is quite as reasonable that the King should have a female friend and
+ confidante&mdash;as that we, in our several degrees, should so indulge
+ ourselves; but it is desirable that he should keep the one he has; she is
+ gentle, injures nobody, and her fortune is made. The one who is now talked
+ of will be as haughty as high birth can make her. She must have an
+ allowance of a million francs a year, since she is said to be excessively
+ extravagant; her relations must be made Dukes, Governors of provinces, and
+ Marshals, and, in the end, will surround the King, and overawe the
+ Ministers.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame de Pompadour had this passage, which had been sent to her by M.
+ Jannette, the Intendant of the Police, who enjoyed the King's entire
+ confidence. He had carefully watched the King's look, while he read the
+ letter, and he saw that the arguments of this counsellor, who was not a
+ disaffected person, made a great impression upon him. Some time
+ afterwards, Madame de Pompadour said to me, "The haughty Marquise behaved
+ like Mademoiselle Deschamps, and she is turned off." This was not Madame's
+ only subject of alarm. A relation of Madame d'Estrades,
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [A courtesan, distinguished for her charms, and still more so for an
+ extraordinary proof of patriotism. At a time when the public Treasury
+ was exhausted, Mademoiselle Deschamps sent all her plate to the Mint.
+ Louis XIV. boasted of this act of generous devotion to her country. The
+ Duc d'Ayen made it the subject of a pleasantry, which detracted nothing
+ from the merit of the sacrifice&mdash;but which is rather too gay for us
+ to venture upon.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The Comtesse d'Estrades, a relative of M. Normand, and a flatterer of
+ Madame de Pompadour, who brought her to Court, was secretly in the pay
+ of the Comte d'Argenson. That Minister, who did not disdain la Fillon,
+ from whom he extracted useful information, knew all that passed at the
+ Court of the favourite, by means of Madame d'Estrades, whose ingratitude
+ and perfidiousness he liberally paid.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ wife to the Marquis de C&mdash;&mdash;, had made the most pointed advances
+ to the King, much more than were necessary for a man who justly thought
+ himself the handsomest man in France, and who was, moreover, a King. He
+ was perfectly persuaded that every woman would yield to the slightest
+ desire he might deign to manifest. He, therefore, thought it a mere matter
+ of course that women fell in love with him. M. de Stainville had a hand in
+ marring the success of that intrigue; and, soon afterwards, the Marquise
+ de C&mdash;&mdash;-, who was confined to her apartments at Marly, by her
+ relations, escaped through a closet to a rendezvous, and was caught with a
+ young man in a corridor. The Spanish Ambassador, coming out of his
+ apartments with flambeaux, was the person who witnessed this scene. Madame
+ d'Estrades affected to know nothing of her cousin's intrigues, and kept up
+ an appearance of the tenderest attachment to Madame de Pompadour, whom she
+ was habitually betraying. She acted as spy for M. d'Argenson, in the
+ cabinets, and in Madame de Pompadour's apartments; and, when she could
+ discover nothing, she had recourse to her invention, in order that she
+ might not lose her importance with her lover. This Madame d'Estrades owed
+ her whole existence to the bounties of Madame, and yet, ugly as she was,
+ she had tried to get the King away from her. One day, when he, had got
+ rather drunk at Choisy (I think, the only time that, ever happened to
+ him), he went on board a beautiful barge, whither Madame, being ill of an
+ indigestion, could not accompany him. Madame d'Estrades seized this
+ opportunity. She got into the barge, and, on their return, as it was dark,
+ she followed the King into a private closet, where he was believed to be
+ sleeping on a couch, and there went somewhat beyond any ordinary advances
+ to him. Her account of the matter to Madame was, that she had gone into
+ the closet upon her own affairs, and that the King, had followed her, and
+ had tried to ravish her. She was at full liberty to make what story she
+ pleased, for the King knew neither what he had said, nor what he had done.
+ I shall finish this subject by a short history concerning a young lady. I
+ had been, one day, to the theatre at Compiegne. When I returned, Madame
+ asked me several questions about the play; whether there was much company,
+ and whether I did not see a very beautiful girl. I replied, "That there
+ was, indeed, a girl in a box near mine, who was surrounded by all the
+ young men about the Court." She smiled, and said, "That is Mademoiselle
+ Dorothee; she went, this evening, to see the King sup in public, and
+ to-morrow she is to be taken to the hunt. You are surprised to find me so
+ well informed, but I know a great deal more about her. She was brought
+ here by a Gascon, named Dubarre or Dubarri, who is the greatest scoundrel
+ in France. He founds all his hopes of advancement on Mademoiselle
+ Dorothee's charms, which he thinks the King cannot resist. She is, really,
+ very beautiful.. She was pointed out to me in my little garden, whither
+ she was taken to walk on purpose. She is the daughter of a water-carrier,
+ at Strasbourg, and her charming lover demands to be sent Minister to
+ Cologne, as a beginning."&mdash;"Is it possible, Madame, that you can have
+ been rendered uneasy by such a creature as that?"&mdash;"Nothing is
+ impossible," replied she; "though I think the King would scarcely dare to
+ give such a scandal. Besides, happily, Lebel, to quiet his conscience,
+ told the King that the beautiful Dorothee's lover is infected with a
+ horrid disease;" and, added he, "Your Majesty would not get rid of that as
+ you have done of the scrofula." This was quite enough to keep the young
+ lady at a distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I pity you sincerely, Madame," said I, "while everybody else envies you."
+ "Ah!" replied she, "my life is that of the Christian, a perpetual warfare.
+ This was not the case with the woman who enjoyed the favour of Louis XIV.
+ Madame de La Valliere suffered herself to be deceived by Madame de
+ Montespan, but it was her own fault, or, rather, the effect of her extreme
+ good nature. She was entirely devoid of suspicion at first, because she
+ could not believe her friend perfidious. Madame de Montespan's empire was
+ shaken by Madame de Fontanges, and overthrown by Madame de Maintenon; but
+ her haughtiness, her caprices, had already alienated the King. He had not,
+ however, such rivals as mine; it is true, their baseness is my security. I
+ have, in general, little to fear but casual infidelities, and the chance
+ that they may not all be sufficiently transitory for my safety. The King
+ likes variety, but he is also bound by habit; he fears eclats, and detests
+ manoeuvring women. The little Marechale (de Mirepoig) one day said to me,
+ 'It is your staircase that the King loves; he is accustomed to go up and
+ down it. But, if he found another woman to whom he could talk of hunting
+ and business as he does to you, it would be just the same to him in three
+ days.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I write without plan, order, or date, just as things come into my mind;
+ and I shall now go to the Abbe de Bernis, whom I liked very much, because
+ he was good-natured, and treated me kindly. One day, just as Madame de
+ Pompadour had finished dressing, M. de Noailles asked to speak to her in
+ private. I, accordingly, retired. The Count looked full of important
+ business. I heard their conversation, as there was only the door between
+ us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A circumstance has taken place," said he, "which I think it my duty to
+ communicate to the King; but I would not do so without first informing you
+ of it, since it concerns one of your friends for whom I have the utmost
+ regard and respect. The Abbe de Bernis had a mind to shoot, this morning,
+ and went, with two or three of his people, armed with guns, into the
+ little park, where the Dauphin would not venture to shoot without asking
+ the King's permission. The guards, surprised at hearing the report of
+ guns, ran to the spot, and were greatly astonished at the sight of M. de
+ Bernis. They very respectfully asked to see his permission, when they
+ found, to their astonishment, that he had none. They begged of him to
+ desist, telling him that, if they did their duty, they should arrest him;
+ but they must, at all events, instantly acquaint me with the circumstance,
+ as Ranger of the Park of Versailles. They added, that the King must have
+ heard the firing, and that they begged of him to retire. The Abbe
+ apologized, on the score of ignorance, and assured them that he had my
+ permission. 'The Comte de Noailles,' said they, 'could only grant
+ permission to shoot in the more remote parts, and in the great park.'" The
+ Count made a great merit of his eagerness to give the earliest information
+ to Madame. She told him to leave the task of communicating it to the King
+ to her, and begged of him to say nothing about the matter. M. de Marigny,
+ who did not like the Abbe, came to see me in the evening; and I affected
+ to know nothing of the story, and to hear it for the first time from him.
+ "He must have been out of his senses," said he, "to shoot under the King's
+ windows,"&mdash;and enlarged much on the airs he gave himself. Madame de
+ Pompadour gave this affair the best colouring she could the King was,
+ nevertheless, greatly disgusted at it, and twenty times, since the Abbe's
+ disgrace, when he passed over that part of the park, he said, "This is
+ where the Abbe took his pleasure." The King never liked him; and Madame de
+ Pompadour told me one night, after his disgrace, when I was sitting up
+ with her in her illness, that she saw, before he had been Minister a week,
+ that he was not fit for his office. "If that hypocritical Bishop," said
+ she, speaking of the Bishop of Mirepoix, "had not prevented the King from
+ granting him a pension of four hundred louis a year, which he had promised
+ me, he would never have been appointed Ambassador. I should, afterwards,
+ have been able to give him an income of eight hundred louis a year,
+ perhaps the place of master of the chapel. Thus he would have been
+ happier, and I should have had nothing to regret." I took the liberty of
+ saying that I did not agree with her. That he had yet remaining
+ advantages, of which he could not be deprived; that his exile would
+ terminate; and that he would then be a Cardinal, with an income of eight
+ thousand louis a year. "That is true," she replied; "but I think of the
+ mortifications he has undergone, and of the ambition which devours him;
+ and, lastly, I think of myself. I should have still enjoyed his society,
+ and should have had, in my declining years, an old and amiable friend, if
+ he had not been Minister." The King sent him away in anger, and was
+ strongly inclined to refuse him the hat. M. Quesnay told me, some months
+ afterwards, that the Abbe wanted to be Prime Minister; that he had drawn
+ up a memorial, setting forth that in difficult crises the public good
+ required that there should be a central point (that was his expression),
+ towards which everything should be directed. Madame de Pompadour would not
+ present the memorial; he insisted, though she said to him, "You will rain
+ yourself." The King cast his eyes over it, and said "'central point,'&mdash;that
+ is to say himself, he wants to be Prime Minister." Madame tried to
+ apologize for him, and said, "That expression might refer to the Marechal
+ de Belle-Isle."&mdash;"Is he not just about to be made Cardinal?" said the
+ King. "This is a fine manoeuvre; he knows well enough that, by means of
+ that dignity, he would compel the Ministers to assemble at his house, and
+ then M. l'Abbe would be the central point. Wherever there is a Cardinal in
+ the council, he is sure, in the end, to take the lead. Louis XIV., for
+ this reason, did not choose to admit the Cardinal de Janson into the
+ council, in spite of his great esteem for him. The Cardinal de Fleury told
+ me the same thing. He had some desire that the Cardinal de Tencin should
+ succeed him; but his sister was such an intrigante that Cardinal de Fleury
+ advised me to have nothing to do with the matter, and I behaved so as to
+ destroy all his hopes, and to undeceive others. M. d'Argenson has strongly
+ impressed me with the same opinion, and has succeeded in destroying all my
+ respect for him." This is what the King said, according to my friend
+ Quesnay, who, by the bye, was a great genius, as everybody said, and a
+ very lively, agreeable man. He liked to chat with me about the country. I
+ had been bred up there, and he used to set me a talking about the meadows
+ of Normandy and Poitou, the wealth of the farmers, and the modes of
+ culture. He was the best-natured man in the world, and the farthest
+ removed from petty intrigue. While he lived at Court, he was much more
+ occupied with the best manner of cultivating land than with anything that
+ passed around him. The man whom he esteemed the most was M. de la Riviere,
+ a Counsellor of Parliament, who was also Intendant of Martinique; he
+ looked upon him as a man of the greatest genius, and thought him the only
+ person fit for the financial department of administration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Comtesse d'Estrades, who owed everything to Madame de Pompadour, was
+ incessantly intriguing against her. She was clever enough to destroy all
+ proofs of her manoeuvres, but she could not so easily prevent suspicion.
+ Her intimate connection with M. d'Argenson gave offence to Madame, and,
+ for some time, she was more reserved with her. She, afterwards, did a
+ thing which justly irritated the King and Madame. The King, who wrote a
+ great deal, had written to Madame de Pompadour a long letter concerning an
+ assembly of the Chambers of Parliament, and had enclosed a letter of M.
+ Berrien. Madame was ill, and laid those letters on a little table by her
+ bedside. M. de Gontaut came in, and gossipped about trifles, as usual.
+ Madame d'Amblimont also came, and stayed but very little time. Just as I
+ was going to resume a book which I had been reading to Madame, the
+ Comtesse d'Estrades entered, placed herself near Madame's bed, and talked
+ to her for some time. As soon as she was gone, Madame called me, asked
+ what was o'clock, and said, "Order my door to be shut, the King will soon
+ be here." I gave the order, and returned; and Madame told me to give her
+ the King's letter, which was on the table with some other papers. I gave
+ her the papers, and told her there was nothing else. She was very uneasy
+ at not finding the letter, and, after enumerating the persons who had been
+ in the room, she said, "It cannot be the little Countess, nor Gontaut, who
+ has taken this letter. It can only be the Comtesse d'Estrades;&mdash;and
+ that is too bad." The King came, and was extremely angry, as Madame told
+ me. Two days afterwards, he sent Madame d'Estrades into exile. There was
+ no doubt that she took the letter; the King's handwriting had probably
+ awakened her curiosity. This occurrence gave great pain to M. d'Argenson,
+ who was bound to her, as Madame de Pompadour said, by his love of
+ intrigue. This redoubled his hatred of Madame, and she accused him of
+ favouring the publication of a libel, in which she was represented as a
+ worn-out mistress, reduced to the vile occupation of providing new objects
+ to please her lover's appetite. She was characterised as superintendent of
+ the Parc-aux-cerfs, which was said to cost hundreds of thousands of louis
+ a year. Madame de Pompadour did, indeed, try to conceal some of the King's
+ weaknesses, but she never knew one of the sultanas of that seraglio. There
+ were, however, scarcely ever more than two at once, and often only one.
+ When they married, they received some jewels, and four thousand louis. The
+ Parc-aux-cerfs was sometimes vacant for five or six months. I was
+ surprised, some time after, at seeing the Duchesse de Luynes, Lady of
+ Honour to the Queen, come privately to see Madame de Pompadour. She
+ afterwards came openly. One evening, after Madame was in bed, she called
+ me, and said, "My dear, you will be delighted; the Queen has given me the
+ place of Lady of the Palace; tomorrow I am to be presented to her: you
+ must make me look well." I knew that the King was not so well pleased at
+ this as she was; he was afraid that it would give rise to scandal, and
+ that it might be thought he had forced this nomination upon the Queen. He
+ had, however, done no such thing. It had been represented to the Queen
+ that it was an act of heroism on her part to forget the past; that all
+ scandal would be obliterated when Madame de Pompadour was seen to belong
+ to the Court in an honourable manner; and that it would be the best proof
+ that nothing more than friendship now subsisted between the King and the
+ favourite. The Queen received her very graciously. The devotees flattered
+ themselves they should be protected by Madame, and, for some time, were
+ full of her praises. Several of the Dauphin's friends came in private to
+ see her, and some obtained promotion. The Chevalier du Muy, however,
+ refused to come. The King had the greatest possible contempt for them, and
+ granted them nothing with a good grace. He, one day, said of a man of
+ great family, who wished to be made Captain of the Guards, "He is a double
+ spy, who wants to be paid on both sides." This was the moment at which
+ Madame de Pompadour seemed to me to enjoy the most complete satisfaction.
+ The devotees came to visit her without scruple, and did not forget to make
+ use of every opportunity of serving themselves. Madame de Lu&mdash;&mdash;-
+ had set them the example. The Doctor laughed at this change in affairs,
+ and was very merry at the expense of the saints. "You must allow, however,
+ that they are consistent," said I, "and may be sincere." "Yes," said he;
+ "but then they should not ask for anything."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, I was at Doctor Quesnay's, whilst Madame de Pompadour was at the
+ theatre. The Marquis de Mirabeau came in, and the conversation was, for
+ some time, extremely tedious to me, running entirely on 'net produce'; at
+ length, they talked of other things.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The author of "L'Ami des Hommes," one of the leaders of the sect of
+ Economistes, and father of the celebrated Mirabeau. After the death of
+ Quesnay, the Grand Master of the Order, the Marquis de Mirabeau was
+ unanimously elected his successor. Mirabeau was not deficient in a
+ certain enlargement of mind, nor in acquirements, nor even in
+ patriotism; but his writings are enthusiastical, and show that he had
+ little more than glimpses of the truth. The Friend of Man was the enemy
+ of all his family. He beat his servants, and did not pay them. The
+ reports of the lawsuit with his wife, in 1775, prove that this
+ philosopher possessed, in the highest possible degree, all the
+ anti-conjugal qualities. It is said that his eldest son wrote two
+ contradictory depositions, and was paid by both sides.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ Mirabeau said, "I think the King looks ill, he grows old."&mdash;"So much
+ the worse, a thousand times so much the worse," said Quesnay; "it would be
+ the greatest possible loss to France if he died;" and he raised his hands,
+ and sighed deeply. "I do not doubt that you are attached to the King, and
+ with reason," said Mirabeau: "I am attached to him too; but I never saw
+ you so much moved."&mdash;"Ah!" said Quesnay, "I think of what would
+ follow."&mdash;"Well, the Dauphin is virtuous."&mdash;"Yes; and full of
+ good intentions; nor is he deficient in understanding; but canting
+ hypocrites would possess an absolute empire over a Prince who regards them
+ as oracles. The Jesuits would govern the kingdom, as they did at the end
+ of Louis XIV.'s reign: and you would see the fanatical Bishop of Verdun
+ Prime Minister, and La Vauguyon all-powerful under some other title. The
+ Parliaments must then mind how they behave; they will not be better
+ treated than my friends the philosophers."&mdash;"But they go too far,"
+ said Mirabeau; "why openly attack religion?"&mdash;"I allow that," replied
+ the Doctor; "but how is it possible not to be rendered indignant by the
+ fanaticism of others, and by recollecting all the blood that has flowed
+ during the last two hundred years? You must not then again irritate them,
+ and revive in France the time of Mary in England. But what is done is
+ done, and I often exhort them to be moderate; I wish they would follow the
+ example of our friend Duclos."&mdash;"You are right," replied Mirabeau;
+ "he said to me a few days ago, 'These philosophers are going on at such a
+ rate that they will force me to go to vespers and high mass;' but, in
+ fine, the Dauphin is virtuous, well-informed, and intellectual."&mdash;"It
+ is the commencement of his reign, I fear," said Quesnay, "when the
+ imprudent proceedings of our friends will be represented to him in the
+ most unfavourable point of view; when the Jansenists and Molinists will
+ make common cause, and be strongly supported by the Dauphine. I thought
+ that M. de Muy was moderate, and that he would temper the headlong fury of
+ the others; but I heard him say that Voltaire merited condign punishment.
+ Be assured, sir, that the times of John Huss and Jerome of Prague will
+ return; but I hope not to live to see it. I approve of Voltaire having
+ hunted down the Pompignans: were it not for the ridicule with which he
+ covered them, that bourgeois Marquis would have been preceptor to the
+ young Princes, and, aided by his brother, would have succeeded in again
+ lighting the faggots of persecution."&mdash;"What ought to give you
+ confidence in the Dauphin," said Mirabeau, "is, that, notwithstanding the
+ devotion of Pompignan, he turns him into ridicule. A short time back,
+ seeing him strutting about with an air of inflated pride, he said to a
+ person, who told it to me, 'Our friend Pompignan thinks that he is
+ something.'" On returning home, I wrote down this conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I, one day, found Quesnay in great distress. "Mirabeau," said he, "is sent
+ to Vincennes, for his work on taxation. The Farmers General have denounced
+ him, and procured his arrest; his wife is going to throw herself at the
+ feet of Madame de Pompadour to-day." A few minutes afterwards, I went into
+ Madame's apartment, to assist at her toilet, and the Doctor came in.
+ Madame said to him, "You must be much concerned at the disgrace of your
+ friend Mirabeau. I am sorry for it too, for I like his brother." Quesnay
+ replied, "I am very far from believing him to be actuated by bad
+ intentions, Madame; he loves the King and the people." "Yes," said she;
+ "his 'Ami des Hommes' did him great honour." At this moment the Lieutenant
+ of Police entered, and Madame said to him, "Have you seen M. de Mirabeau's
+ book?"&mdash;"Yes, Madame; but it was not I who denounced it?"&mdash;"What
+ do you think of it?"&mdash;"I think he might have said almost all it
+ contains with impunity, if he had been more circumspect as to the manner;
+ there is, among other objectionable passages, this, which occurs at the
+ beginning: Your Majesty has about twenty millions of subjects; it is only
+ by means of money that you can obtain their services, and there is no
+ money."&mdash;"What, is there really that, Doctor?" said Madame. "It is
+ true, they are the first lines in the book, and I confess that they are
+ imprudent; but, in reading the work, it is clear that he laments that
+ patriotism is extinct in the hearts of his fellow-citizens, and that he
+ desires to rekindle it." The King entered: we went out, and I wrote down
+ on Quesnay's table what I had just heard. I them returned to finish
+ dressing Madame de Pompadour: she said to me, "The King is extremely angry
+ with Mirabeau; but I tried to soften him, and so did the Lieutenant of
+ Police. This will increase Quesnay's fears. Do you know what he said to me
+ to-day? The King had been talking to him in my room, and the Doctor
+ appeared timid and agitated. After the King was gone, I said to him, 'You
+ always seem so embarrassed in the King's presence, and yet he is so
+ good-natured.'&mdash;'I Madame,' said he, 'I left my native village at the
+ age of forty, and I have very little experience of the world, nor can I
+ accustom myself to its usages without great difficulty. When I am in a
+ room with the King, I say to myself, This is a man who can order my head
+ to be cut off; and that idea embarrasses me.'&mdash;'But do not the King's
+ justice and kindness set you at ease?'&mdash;'That is very true in
+ reasoning,' said he; 'but the sentiment is more prompt, and inspires me
+ with fear before I have time to say to myself all that is calculated to
+ allay it.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I got her to repeat this conversation, and wrote it down immediately, that
+ I might not forget it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An anonymous letter was addressed to the King and Madame de Pompadour;
+ and, as the author was very anxious that it should not miscarry, he sent
+ copies to the Lieutenant of Police, sealed and directed to the King, to
+ Madame de Pompadour, and to M. de Marigny. This letter produced a strong
+ impression on Madame, and on the King, and still more, I believe, on the
+ Duc de Choiseul, who had received a similar one. I went on my knees to M.
+ de Marigny, to prevail on him to allow me to copy it, that I might show it
+ to the Doctor. It is as follows:
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "Sire&mdash;It is a zealous servant who writes to Your Majesty. Truth is
+ always better, particularly to Kings; habituated to flattery, they see
+ objects only under those colours most likely to please them. I have
+ reflected, and read much; and here is what my meditations have suggested
+ to me to lay before Your Majesty. They have accustomed you to be
+ invisible, and inspired you with a timidity which prevents you from
+ speaking; thus all direct communication is cut off between the master
+ and his subjects. Shut up in the interior of your palace, you are
+ becoming every day like the Emperors of the East; but see, Sire, their
+ fate! 'I have troops,' Your Majesty will say; such, also, is their
+ support: but, when the only security of a King rests upon his troops;
+ when he is only, as one may say, a King of the soldiers, these latter
+ feel their own strength, and abuse it. Your finances are in the greatest
+ disorder, and the great majority of states have perished through this
+ cause. A patriotic spirit sustained the ancient states, and united all
+ classes for the safety of their country. In the present times, money has
+ taken the place of this spirit; it has become the universal lever, and
+ you are in want of it. A spirit of finance affects every department of
+ the state; it reigns triumphant at Court; all have become venal; and all
+ distinction of rank is broken up. Your Ministers are without genius and
+ capacity since the dismissal of MM. d'Argenson and de Machault. You
+ alone cannot judge of their incapacity, because they lay before you what
+ has been prepared by skilful clerks, but which they pass as their own.
+ They provide only for the necessity of the day, but there is no spirit
+ of government in their acts. The military changes that have taken place
+ disgust the troops, and cause the most deserving officers to resign; a
+ seditious flame has sprung up in the very bosom of the Parliaments; you
+ seek to corrupt them, and the remedy is worse than the disease. It is
+ introducing vice into the sanctuary of justice, and gangrene into the
+ vital parts of the commonwealth. Would a corrupted Parliament have
+ braved the fury of the League, in order to preserve the crown for the
+ legitimate sovereign? Forgetting the maxims of Louis XIV., who well
+ understood the danger of confiding the administration to noblemen, you
+ have chosen M. de Choiseul, and even given him three departments; which
+ is a much heavier burden than that which he would have to support as
+ Prime Minister, because the latter has only to oversee the details
+ executed by the Secretaries of State. The public fully appreciate this
+ dazzling Minister. He is nothing more than a 'petit-maitre', without
+ talents or information, who has a little phosphorus in his mind. There
+ is a thing well worthy of remark, Sire; that is, the open war carried on
+ against religion. Henceforward there can spring up no new sects, because
+ the general belief has been shaken, that no one feels inclined to occupy
+ himself with difference of sentiment upon some of the articles. The
+ Encyclopedists, under pretence of enlightening mankind, are sapping the
+ foundations of religion. All the different kinds of liberty are
+ connected; the Philosophers and the Protestants tend towards
+ republicanism, as well as the Jansenists. The Philosophers strike at the
+ root, the others lop the branches; and their efforts, without being
+ concerted, will one day lay the tree low. Add to these the Economists;
+ whose object is political liberty, as that of the others is liberty of
+ worship, and the Government may find itself, in twenty or thirty years,
+ undermined in every direction, and will then fall with a crash. If Your
+ Majesty, struck by this picture, but too true, should ask me for a
+ remedy, I should say, that it is necessary to bring back the Government
+ to its principles, and, above all, to lose no time in restoring order to
+ the state of the finances, because the embarrassments incident to a
+ country in a state of debt necessitate fresh taxes, which, after
+ grinding the people, induce them towards revolt. It is my opinion that
+ Your Majesty would do well to appear more among your people; to shew
+ your approbation of useful services, and your displeasure of errors and
+ prevarications, and neglect of duty: in a word, to let it be seen that
+ rewards and punishments, appointments and dismissals, proceed from
+ yourself. You will then inspire gratitude by your favours, and fear by
+ your reproaches; you will then be the object of immediate and personal
+ attachment, instead of which, everything is now referred to your
+ Ministers. The confidence in the King, which is habitual to your people,
+ is shewn by the exclamation, so common among them, 'Ah! if the King knew
+ it' They love to believe that the King would remedy all their evils, if
+ he knew of them. But, on the other hand, what sort of ideas must they
+ form of kings, whose duty it is to be informed of everything, and to
+ superintend everything, that concerns the public, but who are,
+ nevertheless, ignorant of everything which the discharge of their
+ functions requires them to know? 'Rex, roi, regere, regar, conduire'&mdash;to
+ rule, to conduct&mdash;these words sufficiently denote their duties.
+ What would be said of a father who got rid of the charge of his children
+ as of a burthen?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A time will come, Sire, when the people shall be enlightened&mdash;and
+ that time is probably approaching. Resume the reins of government, hold
+ them with a firm hand, and act, so that it cannot be said of you,
+ 'Faeminas et scorta volvit ammo et haec principatus praemia putat':&mdash;Sire,
+ if I see that my sincere advice should have produced any change, I shall
+ continue it, and enter into more details; if not, I shall remain
+ silent."
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ Now that I am upon the subject of anonymous letters to the King, I must
+ just mention that it is impossible to conceive how frequent they were.
+ People were extremely assiduous in telling either unpleasant truths, or
+ alarming lies, with a view to injure others. As an instance, I shall
+ transcribe one concerning Voltaire, who paid great court to Madame de
+ Pompadour when he was in France. This letter was written long after the
+ former.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "Madame&mdash;M. de Voltaire has just dedicated his tragedy of Tancred
+ to you; this ought to be an offering of respect and gratitude; but it
+ is, in fact, an insult, and you will form the same opinion of it as the
+ public has done if you read it with attention. You will see that this
+ distinguished writer appears to betray a consciousness that the subject
+ of his encomiums is not worthy of them, and to endeavour to excuse
+ himself for them to the public. These are his words: 'I have seen your
+ graces and talents unfold themselves from your infancy. At all periods
+ of your life I have received proofs of your uniform and unchanging
+ kindness. If any critic be found to censure the homage I pay you, he
+ must have a heart formed for ingratitude. I am under great obligations
+ to you, Madame, and these obligations it is my duty to proclaim.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do these words really signify, unless that Voltaire feels it may
+ be thought extraordinary that he should dedicate his work to a woman who
+ possesses but a small share of the public esteem, and that the sentiment
+ of gratitude must plead his excuse? Why should he suppose that the
+ homage he pays you will be censured, whilst we daily see dedications
+ addressed to silly gossips who have neither rank nor celebrity, or to
+ women of exceptional conduct, without any censure being attracted by
+ it?"
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ M. de Marigny, and Colin, Madame de Pompadour's steward, were of the same
+ opinion as Quesnay, that the author of this letter was extremely
+ malicious; that he insulted Madame, and tried to injure Voltaire; but that
+ he was, in fact, right. Voltaire, from that moment, was entirely out of
+ favour with Madame, and with the King, and he certainly never discovered
+ the cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King, who admired everything of the age of Louis XIV., and recollected
+ that the Boileaus and Racines had been protected by that monarch, who was
+ indebted to them, in part, for the lustre of his reign, was flattered at
+ having such a man as Voltaire among his subjects. But still he feared him,
+ and had but little esteem for him. He could not help saying, "Moreover, I
+ have treated him as well as Louis XIV. treated Racine and Boileau. I have
+ given him, as Louis XIV. gave to Racine, some pensions, and a place of
+ gentleman in ordinary. It is not my fault if he has committed absurdities,
+ and has had the pretension to become a chamberlain, to wear an order, and
+ sup with a King. It is not the fashion in France; and, as there are here a
+ few more men of wit and noblemen than in Prussia, it would require that I
+ should have a very large table to assemble them all at it." And then he
+ reckoned upon his fingers, Maupertuis, Fontenelle, La Mothe, Voltaire,
+ Piron, Destouches, Montesquieu, the Cardinal Polignac. "Your Majesty
+ forgets," said some one, "D'Alembert and Clairaut."&mdash;"And Crebillon,"
+ said he. "And la Chaussee, and the younger Crebillon," said some one. "He
+ ought to be more agreeable than his father."&mdash;"And there are also the
+ Abbes Prevot and d'Olivet."&mdash;"Pretty well," said the King; "and for
+ the last twenty years all that (tout cela) would have dined and supped at
+ my table."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame de Pompadour repeated to me this conversation, which I wrote down
+ the same evening. M. de Marigny, also, talked to me about it. "Voltaire,"
+ said he, "has always had a fancy for being Ambassador, and he did all he
+ could to make the people believe that he was charged with some political
+ mission, the first time he visited Prussia."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The people heard of the attempt on the King's life with transports of
+ fury, and with the greatest distress. Their cries were heard under the
+ windows of Madame de Pompadour's apartment. Mobs were collected, and
+ Madame feared the fate of Madame de Chateauroux. Her friends came in,
+ every minute, to give her intelligence. Her room was, at all times, like a
+ church; everybody seemed to claim a right to go in and out when he chose.
+ Some came, under pretence of sympathising, to observe her countenance and
+ manner. She did nothing but weep and faint away. Doctor Quesnay never left
+ her, nor did I. M. de St. Florentin came to see her several times, so did
+ the Comptroller-General, and M. Rouilld; but M. de Machault did not come.
+ The Duchesse de Brancas came very frequently. The Abbe de Bernis never
+ left us, except to go to enquire for the King. The tears came in his eyes
+ whenever he looked at Madame. Doctor Quesnay saw the King five or six
+ times a day. "There is nothing to fear," said he to Madame. "If it were
+ anybody else, he might go to a ball." My son went the next day, as he had
+ done the day the event occurred, to see what was going on at the Castle.
+ He told us, on his return, that the Keeper of the Seals was with the King.
+ I sent him back, to see what course he took on leaving the King. He came
+ running back in half an hour, to tell me that the Keeper of the Seals had
+ gone to his own house, followed by a crowd of people. When I told this to
+ Madame, she burst into tears, and said, "Is that a friend?" The Abbe de
+ Bernis said, "You must not judge him hastily, in such a moment as this." I
+ returned into the drawing-room about an hour after, when the Keeper of the
+ Seals entered. He passed me, with his usual cold and severe look. "How is
+ Madame de Pompadour?" said he. "Alas!" replied I, "as you may imagine!" He
+ passed on to her closet. Everybody retired, and he remained for half an
+ hour. The Abbe returned and Madame rang. I went into her room, the Abbe
+ following me. She was in tears. "I must go, my dear Abbe," said she. I
+ made her take some orange-flower water, in a silver goblet, for her teeth
+ chattered. She then told me to call her equerry. He came in, and she
+ calmly gave him her orders, to have everything prepared at her hotel, in
+ Paris; to tell all her people to get ready to go; and to desire her
+ coachman not to be out of the way. She then shut herself up, to confer
+ with the Abbe de Bernis, who left her, to go to the Council. Her door was
+ then shut, except to the ladies with whom she was particularly intimate,
+ M. de Soubise, M. de Gontaut, the Ministers, and some others. Several
+ ladies, in the greatest distress, came to talk to me in my room: they
+ compared the conduct of M. de Machault with that of M. de Richelieu, at
+ Metz. Madame had related to them the circumstances extremely to the honour
+ of the Duke, and, by contrast, the severest satire on the Keeper of the
+ Seals. "He thinks, or pretends to think," said she, "that the priests will
+ be clamorous for my dismissal; but Quesnay and all the physicians declare
+ that there is not the slightest danger." Madame having sent for me, I saw
+ the Marechale de Mirepoix coming in. While she was at the door, she cried
+ out, "What are all those trunks, Madame? Your people tell me you are
+ going."&mdash;"Alas! my dear friend, such is our Master's desire, as M. de
+ Machault tells me."&mdash;"And what does he advise?" said the Marechale.
+ "That I should go without delay." During this conversation, I was
+ undressing Madame, who wished to be at her ease on her chaise-longue.
+ "Your Beeper of the Seals wants to get the power into his own hands, and
+ betrays you; he who quits the field loses it." I went out. M. de Soubise
+ entered, then the Abbe and M. de Marigny. The latter, who was very kind to
+ me, came into my room an hour afterwards. I was alone. "She will remain,"
+ said he; "but, hush!&mdash;she will make an appearance of going, in order
+ not to set her enemies at work. It is the little Marechale who prevailed
+ upon her to stay: her keeper (so she called M. de Machault) will pay for
+ it." Quesnay came in, and, having heard what was said, with his monkey
+ airs, began to relate a fable of a fox, who, being at dinner with other
+ beasts, persuaded one of them that his enemies were seeking him, in order
+ that he might get possession of his share in his absence. I did not see
+ Madame again till very late, at her going to bed. She was more calm.
+ Things improved, from day to day, and de Machault, the faithless friend,
+ was dismissed. The King returned to Madame de Pompadour, as usual. I
+ learnt, by M. de Marigny, that the Abbe had been, one day, with M.
+ d'Argenson, to endeavour to persuade him to live on friendly terms with
+ Madame, and that he had been very coldly received. "He is the more
+ arrogant," said he, "on account of Machault's dismissal, which leaves the
+ field clear for him, who has more experience, and more talent; and I fear
+ that he will, therefore, be disposed to declare war till death." The next
+ day, Madame having ordered her chaise, I was curious to know where she was
+ going, for she went out but little, except to church, and to the houses of
+ the Ministers. I was told that she was gone to visit M. d'Argenson. She
+ returned in an hour, at farthest, and seemed very much out of spirits. She
+ leaned on the chimneypiece, with her eyes fixed on the border of it. M. de
+ Bernis entered. I waited for her to take off her cloak and gloves. She had
+ her hands in her muff. The Abbe stood looking at her for some minutes; at
+ last he said, "You look like a sheep in a reflecting mood." She awoke from
+ her reverie, and, throwing her muff on the easy-chair, replied, "It is a
+ wolf who makes the sheep reflect." I went out: the King entered shortly
+ after, and I heard Madame de Pompadour sobbing. The Abbe came into my
+ room, and told me to bring some Hoffman's drops: the King himself mixed
+ the draught with sugar, and presented it to her in the kindest manner
+ possible. She smiled, and kissed the King's hands. I left the room. Two
+ days after, very early in the morning, I heard of M. d'Argenson's exile.
+ It was her doing, and was, indeed, the strongest proof of her influence
+ that could be given. The King was much attached to M. d'Argenson, and the
+ war, then carrying on, both by sea and land, rendered the dismissal of two
+ such Ministers extremely imprudent. This was the universal opinion at the
+ time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many people talk of the letter of the Comte d'Argenson to Madame
+ d'Esparbes. I give it, according to the most correct version:
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "The doubtful is, at length, decided. The Keeper of the Seals is
+ dismissed. You will be recalled, my dear Countess, and we shall be
+ masters of the field."
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ It is much less generally known that Arboulin, whom Madame calls Bou-bou,
+ was supposed to be the person who, on the very day of the dismissal of the
+ Keeper of the Seals, bribed the Count's confidential courier, who gave him
+ this letter. Is this report founded on truth? I cannot swear that it is;
+ but it is asserted that the letter is written in the Count's style.
+ Besides, who could so immediately have invented it? It, however, appeared
+ certain, from the extreme displeasure of the King, that he had some other
+ subject of complaint against M. d'Argenson, besides his refusing to be
+ reconciled with Madame. Nobody dares to show the slightest attachment to
+ the disgraced Minister. I asked the ladies who were most intimate with
+ Madame de Pompadour, as well as my own friends, what they knew of the
+ matter; but they knew nothing. I can understand why Madame did not let
+ them into her confidence at that moment. She will be less reserved in
+ time. I care very little about it, since I see that she is well, and
+ appears happy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King said a thing, which did him honour, to a person whose name Madame
+ withheld from me. A nobleman, who had been a most assiduous courtier of
+ the Count, said, rubbing his hands with an air of great joy, "I have just
+ seen the Comte d'Argenson's baggage set out." When the King heard him, he
+ went up to Madame, shrugged his shoulders, and said, "And immediately the
+ cock crew."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe this is taken from Scripture, where Peter denies Our Lord. I
+ confess, this circumstance gave me great pleasure. It showed that the King
+ is not the dupe of those around him, and that he hates treachery and
+ ingratitude."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame sent for me yesterday evening, at seven o'clock, to read something
+ to her; the ladies who were intimate with her were at Paris, and M. de
+ Gontaut ill. "The King," said she, "will stay late at the Council this
+ evening; they are occupied with the affairs of the Parliament again." She
+ bade me leave off reading, and I was going to quit the room, but she
+ called out, "Stop." She rose; a letter was brought in for her, and she
+ took it with an air of impatience and ill-humour. After a considerable
+ time she began to talk openly, which only happened when she was extremely
+ vexed; and, as none of her confidential friends were at hand, she said to
+ me, "This is from my brother. It is what he would not have dared to say to
+ me, so he writes. I had arranged a marriage for him with the daughter of a
+ man of title; he appeared to be well inclined to it, and I, therefore,
+ pledged my word. He now tells me that he has made inquiries; that the
+ parents are people of insupportable hauteur; that the daughter is very
+ badly educated; and that he knows, from authority not to be doubted, that
+ when she heard this marriage discussed, she spoke of the connection with
+ the most supreme contempt; that he is certain of this fact; and that I was
+ still more contemptuously spoken of than himself. In a word, he begs me to
+ break off the treaty. But he has let me go too far; and now he will make
+ these people my irreconcilable enemies. This has been put in his head by
+ some of his flatterers; they do not wish him to change his way of living;
+ and very few of them would be received by his wife." I tried to soften
+ Madame, and, though I did not venture to tell her so, I thought her
+ brother right. She persisted in saying these were lies, and, on the
+ following Sunday, treated her brother very coldly. He said nothing to me
+ at that time; if he had, he would have embarrassed me greatly. Madame
+ atoned for everything by procuring favours, which were the means of
+ facilitating the young lady's marriage with a gentleman of the Court. Her
+ conduct, two months after marriage, compelled Madame to confess that her
+ brother had been perfectly right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I saw my friend, Madame du Chiron. "Why," said she, "is the Marquise so
+ violent an enemy to the Jesuits? I assure you she is wrong. All powerful
+ as she is, she may find herself the worse for their enmity." I replied
+ that I knew nothing about the matter. "It is, however, unquestionably a
+ fact; and she does not feel that a word more or less might decide her
+ fate."&mdash;"How do you mean?" said I. "Well, I will explain myself
+ fully," said she. "You know what took place at the time the King was
+ stabbed: an attempt was made to get her out of the Castle instantly. The
+ Jesuits have no other object than the salvation of their penitents; but
+ they are men, and hatred may, without their being aware of it, influence
+ their minds, and inspire them with a greater degree of severity than
+ circumstances absolutely demand. Favour and partiality may, on the other
+ hand, induce the confessor to make great concessions; and the shortest
+ interval may suffice to save a favourite, especially if any decent pretext
+ can be found for prolonging her stay at Court." I agreed with her in all
+ she said, but I told her that I dared not touch that string. On reflecting
+ on this conversation afterwards, I was forcibly struck with this fresh
+ proof of the intrigues of the Jesuits, which, indeed, I knew well already.
+ I thought that, in spite of what I had replied to Madame du Chiron, I
+ ought to communicate this to Madame de Pompadour, for the ease of my
+ conscience; but that I would abstain from making any reflection upon it.
+ "Your friend, Madame du Chiron," said she, "is, I perceive, affiliated to
+ the Jesuits, and what she says does not originate with herself. She is
+ commissioned by some reverend father, and I will know by whom." Spies
+ were, accordingly, set to watch her movements, and they discovered that
+ one Father de Saci, and, still more particularly, one Father Frey, guided
+ this lady's conduct. "What a pity," said Madame to me, "that the Abbe
+ Chauvelin cannot know this." He was the most formidable enemy of the
+ reverend fathers. Madame du Chiron always looked upon me as a Jansenist,
+ because I would not espouse the interests of the good fathers with as much
+ warmth as she did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame is completely absorbed in the Abbe de Bernis, whom she thinks
+ capable of anything; she talks of him incessantly. Apropos, of this Abbe,
+ I must relate an anecdote, which almost makes one believe in conjurors. A
+ year, or fifteen months, before her disgrace, Madame de Pompadour, being
+ at Fontainebleau, sat down to write at a desk, over which hung a portrait
+ of the King. While she was, shutting the desk, after she had finished
+ writing, the picture fell, and struck her violently on the head.. The
+ persons who saw the accident were alarmed, and sent for Dr. Quesnay. He
+ asked the circumstances of the case, and ordered bleeding and anodynes.
+ Just, as she had been bled, Madame de Brancas entered, and saw us all in
+ confusion and agitation, and Madame lying on her <i>chaise-longue</i>. She
+ asked what was the matter, and was told. After having expressed her
+ regret, and having consoled her, she said, "I ask it as a favour of
+ Madame, and of the King (who had just come in), that they will instantly
+ send a courier to the Abbe de Bernis, and that the Marquise will have the
+ goodness to write a letter, merely requesting him to inform her what his
+ fortune-tellers told him, and to withhold nothing from the fear of making
+ her uneasy." The thing was, done as she desired, and she then told us that
+ La Bontemps had predicted, from the dregs in the coffee-cup, in which she
+ read everything, that the head of her best friend was in danger, but that
+ no fatal consequences would ensue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day, the Abbe wrote word that Madame Bontemps also said to him,
+ "You came into the world almost black," and that this was the fact. This
+ colour, which lasted for some time, was attributed to a picture which hung
+ at the foot of his, mother's bed, and which she often looked at. It
+ represented a Moor bringing to Cleopatra a basket of flowers, containing
+ the asp by whose bite she destroyed herself. He said that she also told
+ him, "You have a great deal of money about you, but it does not belong to
+ you;" and that he had actually in his pocket two hundred Louis for the Duc
+ de La Valliere. Lastly, he informed us that she said, looking in the cup,
+ "I see one of your friends&mdash;the best&mdash;a distinguished lady,
+ threatened with an accident;" that he confessed that, in spite of all his
+ philosophy, he turned pale; that she remarked this, looked again into the
+ cup, and continued, "Her head will be slightly in danger, but of this no
+ appearance will remain half an hour afterwards." It was impossible to
+ doubt the facts. They appeared so surprising to the King, that he desired
+ some inquiry to be made concerning the fortune-teller. Madame, however,
+ protected her from the pursuit of the Police.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man, who was quite as astonishing as this fortune-teller, often visited
+ Madame de Pompadour. This was the Comte de St. Germain, who wished to have
+ it believed that he had lived several centuries.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [St. Germain was an adept&mdash;a worthy predecessor of Cagliostro, who
+ expected to live five hundred years. The Count de St. Germain pretended
+ to have already lived two thousand, and, according to him, the account
+ was still running. He went so far as to claim the power of transmitting
+ the gift of long life. One day, calling upon his servant to, bear
+ witness to a fact that went pretty far back, the man replied, "I have no
+ recollection of it, sir; you forget that I have only had the honour of
+ serving you for five hundred years."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ St. Germain, like all other charlatans of this sort, assumed a
+ theatrical magnificence, and an air of science calculated to deceive the
+ vulgar. His best instrument of deception was the phantasmagoria; and as,
+ by means of this abuse of the science of optics, he called up shades
+ which were asked for, and almost always recognised, his correspondence
+ with the other world was a thing proved by the concurrent testimony of
+ numerous witnesses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He played the same game in London, Venice, and Holland, but he
+ constantly regretted Paris, where his miracles were never questioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ St. Germain passed his latter days at the Court of the Prince of Hesse
+ Cassel, and died at Plewig, in 1784, in the midst of his enthusiastic
+ disciples, and to their infinite astonishment at his sharing the common
+ destiny.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ One day, at her toilet, Madame said to him, in my presence, "What was the
+ personal appearance of Francis I.? He was a King I should have liked."&mdash;"He
+ was, indeed, very captivating," said St. Germain; and he proceeded to
+ describe his face and person as one does that of a man one has accurately
+ observed. "It is a pity he was too ardent. I could have given him some
+ good advice, which would have saved him from all his misfortunes; but he
+ would not have followed it; for it seems as if a fatality attended
+ Princes, forcing them to shut their ears, those of the mind, at least, to
+ the best advice, and especially in the most critical moments."&mdash;"And
+ the Constable," said Madame, "what do you say of him?"&mdash;"I cannot say
+ much good or much harm of him," replied he. "Was the Court of Francis I.
+ very brilliant?"&mdash;"Very brilliant; but those of his grandsons
+ infinitely surpassed it. In the time of Mary Stuart and Margaret of Valois
+ it was a land of enchantment&mdash;a temple, sacred to pleasures of every
+ kind; those of the mind were not neglected. The two Queens were learned,
+ wrote verses, and spoke with captivating grace and eloquence." Madame
+ said, laughing, "You seem to have seen all this."&mdash;"I have an
+ excellent memory," said he, "and have read the history of France with
+ great care. I sometimes amuse myself, not by making, but by letting it be
+ believed that I lived in old times."&mdash;"You do not tell me your age,
+ however, and you give yourself out for very old. The Comtesse de Gergy,
+ who was Ambassadress to Venice, I think, fifty years ago, says she knew
+ you there exactly what you are now."&mdash;"It is true, Madame, that I
+ have known Madame de Gergy a long time."&mdash;"But, according to what she
+ says, you would be more than a hundred"&mdash;"That is not impossible,"
+ said he, laughing; "but it is, I allow, still more possible that Madame de
+ Gergy, for whom I have the greatest respect, may be in her dotage."&mdash;"You
+ have given her an elixir, the effect of which is surprising. She declares
+ that for a long time she has felt as if she was only four-and-twenty years
+ of age; why don't you give some to the King?"&mdash;"Ah! Madame," said he,
+ with a sort of terror, "I must be mad to think of giving the King an
+ unknown drug." I went into my room to write down this conversation. Some
+ days afterwards, the King, Madame de Pompadour, some Lords of the Court,
+ and the Comte de St. Germain, were talking about his secret for causing
+ the spots in diamonds to disappear. The King ordered a diamond of middling
+ size, which had a spot, to be brought. It was weighed; and the King said
+ to the Count, "It is valued at two hundred and forty louis; but it would
+ be worth four hundred if it had no spot. Will you try to put a hundred and
+ sixty louis into my pocket?" He examined it carefully, and said, "It may
+ be done; and I will bring it you again in a month." At the time appointed,
+ the Count brought back the diamond without a spot, and gave it to the
+ King. It was wrapped in a cloth of amianthus, which he took off. The King
+ had it weighed, and found it but very little diminished. The King sent it
+ to his jeweller by M. de Gontaut, without telling him anything of what had
+ passed. The jeweller gave three hundred and eighty louis for it. The King,
+ however, sent for it back again, and kept it as a curiosity. He could not
+ overcome his surprise, and said that M. de St. Germain must be worth
+ millions, especially if he had also the secret of making large diamonds
+ out of a number of small ones. He neither said that he had, nor that he
+ had not; but he positively asserted that he could make pearls grow, and
+ give them the finest water. The King, paid him great attention, and so did
+ Madame de Pompadour. It was from her I learnt what I have just related. M.
+ Queanay said, talking of the pearls, "They are produced by a disease in
+ the oyster. It is possible to know the cause of it; but, be that as it
+ may, he is not the less a quack, since he pretends to have the elixir
+ vitae, and to have lived several centuries. Our master is, however,
+ infatuated by him, and sometimes talks of him as if his descent were
+ illustrious."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have seen him frequently: he appeared to be about fifty; he was neither
+ fat nor thin; he had an acute, intelligent look, dressed very simply, but
+ in good taste; he wore very fine diamonds in his rings, watch, and
+ snuff-box. He came, one day, to visit Madame de Pompadour, at a time when
+ the Court was in full splendour, with knee and shoe-buckles of diamonds so
+ fine and brilliant that Madame said she did not believe the King had any
+ equal to them. He went into the antechamber to take them off, and brought
+ them to be examined; they were compared with others in the room, and the
+ Duc de Gontaut, who was present, said they were worth at least eight
+ thousand louis. He wore, at the same time, a snuff-box of inestimable
+ value, and ruby sleeve-buttons, which were perfectly dazzling. Nobody
+ could find out by what means this man became so rich and so remarkable;
+ but the King would not suffer him to be spoken of with ridicule or
+ contempt. He was said to be a bastard son of the King of Portugal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I learnt, from M. de Marigny, that the relations of the good little
+ Marechale (de Mirepoix) had been extremely severe upon her, for what they
+ called the baseness of her conduct, with regard to Madame de Pompadour.
+ They said she held the stones of the cherries which Madame ate in her
+ carriage, in her beautiful little hands, and that she sate in the front of
+ the carriage, while Madame occupied the whole seat in the inside. The
+ truth was, that, in going to Crecy, on an insupportably hot day, they both
+ wished to sit alone, that they might be cooler; and as to the matter of
+ the cherries, the villagers having brought them some, they ate them to
+ refresh themselves, while the horses were changed; and the Marechal
+ emptied her pocket-handkerchief, into which they had both thrown the
+ cherry-stones, out of the carriage window. The people who were changing
+ the horses had given their own version of the affair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /> <a name="p110" id="p110"></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="p110.jpg (140K)" src="images/p110.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had, as you know, a very pretty room at Madame's hotel, whither I
+ generally went privately. I had, one day, had visits from two or three
+ Paris representatives, who told me news; and Madame, having sent for me, I
+ went to her, and found her with M. de Gontaut. I could not help instantly
+ saying to her, "You must be much pleased, Madame, at the noble action of
+ the Marquis de &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;." Madame replied, drily, "Hold your
+ tongue, and listen to what I have to say to you." I returned to my little
+ room, where I found the Comtesse d'Amblimont, to whom I mentioned Madame's
+ reception of me. "I know what is the matter," said she; "it has no
+ relation to you. I will explain it to you. The Marquis de &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
+ has told all Paris, that, some days ago, going home at night, alone, and
+ on foot, he heard cries in a street called Ferou, which is dark, and, in
+ great part, arched over; that he drew his sword, and went down the street,
+ in which he saw, by the light of a lamp, a very handsome woman, to whom
+ some ruffians were offering violence; that he approached, and that the
+ woman cried out, 'Save me! save me!' that he rushed upon the wretches, two
+ of whom fought him, sword in hand, whilst a third held the woman, and
+ tried to stop her mouth; that he wounded one in the arm; and that the
+ ruffians, hearing people pass at the end of the street, and fearing they
+ might come to his assistance, fled; that he went up to the lady, who told
+ him that they were not robbers, but villains, one of whom was desperately
+ in love with her; and that the lady knew not how to express her gratitude;
+ that she had begged him not to follow her, after he had conducted her to a
+ fiacre; that she would not tell him her name, but that she insisted on his
+ accepting a little ring, as a token of remembrance; and that she promised
+ to see him again, and to tell him her whole history, if he gave her his
+ address; that he complied with this request of the lady, whom he
+ represented as a charming person, and who, in the overflowing of her
+ gratitude, embraced him several times. This is all very fine, so far,"
+ said Madame d'Amblimont, "but hear the rest. The Marquis de exhibited
+ himself everywhere the next day, with a black ribbon bound round his arm,
+ near the wrist, in which part he said he had received a wound. He related
+ his story to everybody, and everybody commented upon it after his own
+ fashion. He went to dine with the Dauphin, who spoke to him of his
+ bravery, and of his fair unknown, and told him that he had already
+ complimented the Duc de C&mdash;&mdash; on the affair. I forgot to tell
+ you," continued Madame d'Amblimont, "that, on the very night of the
+ adventure, he called on Madame d'Estillac, an old gambler, whose house is
+ open till four in the morning; that everybody there was surprised at the
+ disordered state in which he appeared; that his bagwig had fallen off, one
+ skirt of his coat was cut, and his right hand bleeding. That they
+ instantly bound it up, and gave him some Rota wine. Four days ago, the Duc
+ de C&mdash;&mdash; supped with the King, and sat near M. de St. Florentin.
+ He talked to him of his relation's adventure, and asked him if he had made
+ any inquiries concerning the lady. M. de St. Florentin coldly answered,
+ 'No!' and M. de C&mdash;&mdash; remarked, on asking him some further
+ questions, that he kept his eyes firmed on his plate, looking embarrassed,
+ and answered in monosyllables. He asked him the reason of this, upon which
+ M. de Florentin told him that it was extremely distressing to him to see
+ him under such a mistake. 'How can you know that, supposing it to be the
+ fact?' said M. de &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, 'Nothing is more easy to prove,'
+ replied M. de St. Florentin. 'You may imagine that, as soon as I was
+ informed of the Marquis de &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;'s adventure, I set on
+ foot inquiries, the result of which was, that, on the night when this
+ affair was said to have taken place, a party of the watch was set in
+ ambuscade in this very street, for the purpose of catching a thief who was
+ coming out of the gaming house; that this party was there four hours, and
+ heard not the slightest noise.' M. de C was greatly incensed at this
+ recital, which M. de St. Florentin ought, indeed, to have communicated to
+ the King. He has ordered, or will order, his relation to retire to his
+ province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After this, you will judge, my dear, whether you were very likely to be
+ graciously received when you went open-mouthed with your compliment to the
+ Marquise. This adventure," continued she, "reminded the King of one which
+ occurred about fifteen years ago. The Comte d'E&mdash;&mdash;, who was
+ what is called 'enfant d'honneur' to the Dauphin, and about fourteen years
+ of age, came into the Dauphin's apartments, one evening, with his bag-wig
+ snatched off, and his ruffles torn, and said that, having walked rather
+ late near the piece of water des Suisses, he had been attacked by two
+ robbers; that he had refused to give them anything, drawn his sword, and
+ put himself in an attitude of defence; that one of the robbers was armed
+ with a sword, the other with a large stick, from which he had received
+ several blows, but that he had wounded one in the arm, and that, hearing a
+ noise at that moment, they had fled. But unluckily for the little Count,
+ it was known that people were on the spot at the precise time he
+ mentioned, and had heard nothing. The Count was pardoned, on account of
+ his youth. The Dauphin made him confess the truth, and it was looked upon
+ as a childish freak to set people talking about him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King disliked the King of Prussia because he knew that the latter was
+ in the habit of jesting upon his mistress, and the kind of life he led. It
+ was Frederick's fault, as I have heard it said, that the King was not his
+ most steadfast ally and friend, as much as sovereigns can be towards each
+ other; but the jestings of Frederick had stung him, and made him conclude
+ the treaty of Versailles. One day, he entered Madame's apartment with a
+ paper in his hand, and said, "The King of Prussia is certainly a great
+ man; he loves men of talent, and, like Louis XIV., he wishes to make
+ Europe ring with his favours towards foreign savans. There is a letter
+ from him, addressed to Milord Marshal, ordering him to acquaint a
+ 'superieur' man of my kingdom (D'Alembert) that he has granted him a
+ pension;" and, looking at the letter, he read the following words: "You
+ must know that there is in Paris a man of the greatest merit, whose
+ fortune is not proportionate to his talents and character. I may serve as
+ eyes to the blind goddess, and repair in some measure the injustice, and I
+ beg you to offer on that account. I flatter myself that he will accept
+ this pension because of the pleasure I shall feel in obliging a man who
+ joins beauty of character to the most sublime intellectual talents."
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [George Keith, better known under the name of Milord Marshal, was the
+ eldest son of William Keith, Earl Marshal of Scotland. He was an avowed
+ partisan of the Stuarts, and did not lay down the arms he had taken up
+ in their cause until it became utterly desperate, and drew upon its
+ defenders useless dangers. When they were driven from their country, he
+ renounced it, and took up his residence successively in France, Prussia,
+ Spain, and Italy. The delicious country and climate of Valencia he
+ preferred above any other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Milord Marshal died in the month of May, 1778. It was he who said to
+ Madame Geoffrin, speaking of his brother, who was field-marshal in the
+ Prussian service, and died on the field of honour, "My brother leaves me
+ the most glorious inheritance" (he had just laid the whole of Bohemia
+ under contribution); "his property does not amount to seventy ducats." A
+ eulogium on Milord Marshal, by D'Alembert, is extant. It is the most
+ cruelly mangled of all his works, by Linguet]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ The King here stopped, on seeing MM. de Ayen and de Gontaut enter, and
+ then recommenced reading the letter to them, and added, "It was given me
+ by the Minister for Foreign Affairs, to whom it was confided by Milord
+ Marshal, for the purpose of obtaining my permission for this sublime
+ genius to accept the favour. But," said the King, "what do you think is
+ the amount?" Some said six, eight, ten thousand livres. "You have not
+ guessed," said the King; "it is twelve hundred livres."&mdash;"For sublime
+ talents," said the Duc d'Ayen, "it is not much. But the philosophers will
+ make Europe resound with this letter, and the King of Prussia will have
+ the pleasure of making a great noise at little expense."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chevalier de Courten,&mdash;[The Chevalier de Courten was a Swiss, and
+ a man of talent.]&mdash;who had been in Prussia, came in, and, hearing
+ this story told, said, "I have seen what is much better than that: passing
+ through a village in Prussia, I got out at the posthouse, while I was
+ waiting for horses; and the postmaster, who was a captain in the Prussian
+ service, showed me several letters in Frederick's handwriting, addressed
+ to his uncle, who was a man of rank, promising him to provide for his
+ nephews; the provision he made for this, the eldest of these nephews, who
+ was dreadfully wounded, was the postmastership which he then held." M. de
+ Marigny related this story at Quesnay's, and added, that the man of genius
+ above mentioned was D'Alembert, and that the King had permitted him to
+ accept the pension. He added, that his sister had suggested to the King
+ that he had better give D'Alembert a pension of twice the value, and
+ forbid him to take the King of Prussia's. This advice he would not take,
+ because he looked upon D'Alembert as an infidel. M. de Marigny took a copy
+ of the letter, which he lent me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A certain nobleman, at one time, affected to cast tender glances on Madame
+ Adelaide. She was wholly unconscious of it; but, as there are Arguses at
+ Court, the King was, of course, told of it, and, indeed, he thought he had
+ perceived it himself. I know that he came into Madame de Pompadour's room
+ one day, in a great passion, and said, "Would you believe that there is a
+ man in my Court insolent enough to dare to raise his eyes to one of my
+ daughters?" Madame had never seen him so exasperated, and this illustrious
+ nobleman was advised to feign a necessity for visiting his estates. He
+ remained there two months. Madame told me, long after, that she thought
+ that there were no tortures to which the King would not have condemned any
+ man who had seduced one of his daughters. Madame Adelaide, at the time in
+ question, was a charming person, and united infinite grace, and much
+ talent, to a most agreeable face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /> <a name="p224" id="p224"></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="p224.jpg (135K)" src="images/p224.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A courier brought Madame de Pompadour a letter, on reading which she burst
+ into tears. It contained the intelligence of the battle of Rosbach, which
+ M. de Soubise sent her, with all the details. I heard her say to the
+ Marechal de Belle-Isle, wiping her eyes, "M. de Soubise is inconsolable;
+ he does not try to excuse his conduct, he sees nothing but the disastrous
+ fortune which pursues him."&mdash;"M. de Soubise must, however, have many
+ things to urge in his own behalf," said M. de Belle-Isle, "and so I told
+ the King."&mdash;"It is very noble in you, Marshal, not to suffer an
+ unfortunate man to be overwhelmed; the public are furious against him, and
+ what has he done to deserve it?"&mdash;"There is not a more honourable nor
+ a kinder man in the world. I only fulfil my duty in doing justice to the
+ truth, and to a man for whom I have the most profound esteem. The King
+ will explain to you, Madame, how M. de Soubise was forced to give battle
+ by the Prince of Sage-Hildbourgshausen, whose troops fled first, and
+ carried along the French troops." Madame would have embraced the old
+ Marshal if she had dared, she was so delighted with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. de Soubise, having gained a battle, was made Marshal of France: Madame
+ was enchanted with her friend's success. But, either it was unimportant,
+ or the public were offended at his promotion; nobody talked of it but
+ Madame's friends. This unpopularity was concealed from her, and she said
+ to Colin, her steward, at her toilet, "Are you not delighted at the
+ victory M. de Soubise has gained? What does the public say of it? He has
+ taken his revenge well." Colin was embarrassed, and knew not what to
+ answer. As she pressed him further, he replied that he had been ill, and
+ had seen nobody for a week.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. de Marigny came to see me one day, very much out of humour. I asked him
+ the cause. "I have," said he, "just been intreating my sister not to make
+ M. le Normand-de-Mezi Minister of the Marine. I told her that she was
+ heaping coals of fire upon her own head. A favourite ought not to multiply
+ the points of attack upon herself." The Doctor entered. "You," said the
+ Doctor, "are worth your weight in gold, for the good sense and capacity
+ you have shewn in your office, and for your moderation, but you will never
+ be appreciated as you deserve; your advice is excellent; there will never
+ be a ship taken but Madame will be held responsible for it to the public,
+ and you are very wise not to think of being in the Ministry yourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, when I was at Paris, I went to dine with the Doctor, who happened
+ to be there at the same time; there were, contrary to his usual custom, a
+ good many people, and, among others, a handsome young Master of the
+ Requests, who took a title from some place, the name of which I have
+ forgotten, but who was a son of M. Turgot, the 'prevot des marchands'.
+ They talked a great deal about administration, which was not very amusing
+ to me; they then fell upon the subject of the love Frenchmen bear to their
+ Kings. M. Turgot here joined in the conversation, and said, "This is not a
+ blind attachment; it is a deeply rooted sentiment, arising from an
+ indistinct recollection of great benefits. The French nation&mdash;I may
+ go farther&mdash;Europe, and all mankind, owe to a King of France" (I have
+ forgotten his name)&mdash;[Phillip the Long]&mdash;"whatever liberty they
+ enjoy. He established communes, and conferred on an immense number of men
+ a civil existence. I am aware that it may be said, with justice, that he
+ served his own interests by granting these franchises; that the cities
+ paid him taxes, and that his design was to use them as instruments of
+ weakening the power of great nobles; but what does that prove, but that
+ this measure was at once useful, politic, and humane?" From Kings in
+ general the conversation turned upon Louis XV., and M. Turgot remarked
+ that his reign would be always celebrated for the advancement of the
+ sciences, the progress of knowledge, and of philosophy. He added that
+ Louis XV. was deficient in the quality which Louis XIV. possessed to
+ excess; that is to say, in a good opinion of himself; that he was
+ well-informed; that nobody was more perfectly master of the topography of
+ France; that his opinion in the Council was always the most judicious; and
+ that it was much to be lamented that he had not more confidence in
+ himself, or that he did not rely upon some Minister who enjoyed the
+ confidence of the nation. Everybody agreed with him. I begged M. Quesnay
+ to write down what young Turgot had said, and showed it to Madame. She
+ praised this Master of the Requests greatly, and spoke of him to the King.
+ "It is a good breed," said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, I went out to walk, and saw, on my return, a great many people
+ going and coming, and speaking to each other privately: it was evident
+ that something extraordinary had happened. I asked a person of my
+ acquaintance what was the matter. "Alas!" said he, with tears in his eyes,
+ "some assassins, who had formed the project of murdering the King, have
+ inflicted several wounds on a garde-du-corps, who overheard them in a dark
+ corridor; he is carried to the hospital: and as he has described the
+ colour of these men's coats, the Police are in quest of them in all
+ directions, and some people, dressed in clothes of that colour, are
+ already arrested." I saw Madame with M. de Gontaut, and I hastened home.
+ She found her door besieged by a multitude of people, and was alarmed:
+ when she got in, she found the Comte de Noailles. "What is all this,
+ Count?" said she. He said he was come expressly to speak to her, and they
+ retired to her closet together. The conference was not long. I had
+ remained in the drawing-room, with Madame's equerry, the Chevalier de
+ Solent, Gourbillon, her valet de chambre, and some strangers. A great many
+ details were related; but, the wounds being little more than scratches,
+ and the garde-du-corps having let fall some contradictions, it was thought
+ that he was an impostor, who had invented all this story to bring himself
+ into favour. Before the night was over, this was proved to be the fact,
+ and, I believe, from his own confession. The King came, that evening, to
+ see Madame de Pompadour; he spoke of this occurrence with great sang
+ froid, and said, "The gentleman who wanted to kill me was a wicked madman;
+ this is a low scoundrel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he spoke of Damiens, which was only while his trial lasted, he never
+ called him anything but that gentleman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have heard it said that he proposed having him shut up in a dungeon for
+ life; but that the horrible nature of the crime made the judges insist
+ upon his suffering all the tortures inflicted upon like occasions. Great
+ numbers, many of them women, had a barbarous curiosity to witness the
+ execution; amongst others, Madame de P&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, a very
+ beautiful woman, and the wife of a Farmer General. She hired two places at
+ a window for twelve Louis, and played a game of cards in the room whilst
+ waiting for the execution to begin. On this being told to the King, he
+ covered his eyes with his hands and exclaimed, "Fi, la Vilaine!" I have
+ been told that she, and others, thought to pay their court in this way,
+ and signalise their attachment to the King's person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two things were related to me by M. Duclos at the time of the attempt on
+ the King's life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first, relative to the Comte de Sponheim, who was the Duc de
+ Deux-Ponts, and next in succession to the Palatinate and Electorate of
+ Bavaria. He was thought to be a great friend to the King, and had made
+ several long sojourns in France. He came frequently to see Madame. M.
+ Duclos told us that the Duc de Deux-Ponts, having learned, at Deux-Ponts,
+ the attempt on the King's life, immediately set out in a carriage for
+ Versailles: "But remark," said he, "the spirit of 'courtisanerie' of a
+ Prince, who may be Elector of Bavaria and the Palatinate tomorrow. This
+ was not enough. When he arrived within ten leagues of Paris, he put on an
+ enormous pair of jack-boots, mounted a post-horse, and arrived in the
+ court of the palace cracking his whip. If this had been real impatience,
+ and not charlatanism, he would have taken horse twenty leagues from
+ Paris."&mdash;"I don't agree with you," said a gentleman whom I did not
+ know; "impatience sometimes seizes one towards the end of an undertaking,
+ and one employs the readiest means then in one's power. Besides, the Duc
+ de Deux-Ponts might wish, by showing himself thus on horseback, to serve
+ the King, to whom he is attached, by proving to Frenchmen how greatly he
+ is beloved and honoured in other countries." Duclos resumed: "Well," said
+ he, "do you know the story of M. de C&mdash;&mdash;-? The first day the
+ King saw company, after the attempt of Damiens, M. de C&mdash;&mdash;-
+ pushed so vigorously through the crowd that he was one of the first to
+ come into the King's presence, but he had on so shabby a black coat that
+ it caught the King's attention, who burst out laughing, and said, 'Look at
+ C&mdash;&mdash;-, he has had the skirt of his coat torn off.' M. de C&mdash;&mdash;-
+ looked as if he was only then first conscious of his loss, and said,
+ 'Sire, there is such a multitude hurrying to see Your Majesty, that I was
+ obliged to fight my way through them, and, in the effort, my coat has been
+ torn.'&mdash;'Fortunately it was not worth much,' said the Marquis de
+ Souvre, 'and you could not have chosen a worse one to sacrifice on the
+ occasion.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame de Pompadour had been very judiciously advised to get her husband,
+ M. le Normand, sent to Constantinople, as Ambassador. This would have a
+ little diminished the scandal caused by seeing Madame de Pompadour, with
+ the title of Marquise, at Court, and her husband Farmer General at Paris.
+ But he was so attached to a Paris life, and to his opera habits, that he
+ could not be prevailed upon to go. Madame employed a certain M.
+ d'Arboulin, with whom she had been acquainted before she was at Court, to
+ negotiate this affair. He applied to a Mademoiselle Rem, who had been an
+ opera-dancer, and who was M. le Normand's mistress. She made him very fine
+ promises; but she was like him, and preferred a Paris life. She would do
+ nothing in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the time that plays were acted in the little apartments, I obtained a
+ lieutenancy for one of my relations, by a singular means, which proves the
+ value the greatest people set upon the slightest access to the Court.
+ Madame did not like to ask anything of M. d'Argenson, and, being pressed
+ by my family, who could not imagine that, situated as I was, it could be
+ difficult for me to obtain a command for a good soldier, I determined to
+ go and ask the Comte d'Argenson. I made my request, and presented my
+ memorial. He received me coldly, and gave me vague answers. I went out,
+ and the Marquis de V&mdash;&mdash;-, who was in his closet, followed me.
+ "You wish to obtain a command," said he; "there is one vacant, which is
+ promised me for one of my proteges; but if you will do me a favour in
+ return, or obtain one for me, I will give it to you. I want to be a police
+ officer, and you have it in your power to get me a place." I told him I
+ did not understand the purport of his jest. "I will tell you," said he;
+ "Tartuffe is going to be acted in the cabinets, and there is the part of a
+ police officer, which only consists of a few lines. Prevail upon Madame de
+ Pompadour to assign me that part, and the command is yours." I promised
+ nothing, but I related the history to Madame, who said she would arrange
+ it for me. The thing was done, and I obtained the command, and the Marquis
+ de V&mdash;&mdash;- thanked Madame as if she had made him a Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King was often annoyed by the Parliaments, and said a very remarkable
+ thing concerning them, which M. de Gontaut repeated to Doctor Quesnay in
+ my presence. "Yesterday," said he, "the King walked up and down the room
+ with an anxious air. Madame de Pompadour asked him if he was uneasy about
+ his health, as he had been, for some time, rather unwell. 'No,' replied
+ he; 'but I am greatly annoyed by all these remonstrances.'&mdash;'What can
+ come of them,' said she, 'that need seriously disquiet Your Majesty? Are
+ you not master of the Parliaments, as well as of all the rest of the
+ kingdom?'&mdash;'That is true,' said the King; 'but, if it had not been
+ for these counsellors and presidents, I should never have been stabbed by
+ that gentleman' (he always called Damiens so). 'Ah! Sire,' cried Madame de
+ Pompadour. 'Read the trial,' said he. 'It was the language of those
+ gentlemen he names which turned his head.'&mdash;'But,' said Madame, 'I
+ have often thought that, if the Archbishop&mdash;[M. de Beaumont]&mdash;could
+ be sent to Rome&mdash;'&mdash;'Find anybody who will accomplish that
+ business, and I will give him whatever he pleases.'" Quesnay said the King
+ was right in all he had uttered. The Archbishop was exiled shortly after,
+ and the King was seriously afflicted at being driven to take such a step.
+ "What a pity," he often said, "that so excellent a man should be so
+ obstinate."&mdash;"And so shallow," said somebody, one day. "Hold your
+ tongue," replied the King, somewhat sternly. The Archbishop was very
+ charitable, and liberal to excess, but he often granted pensions without
+ discernment.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The following is a specimen of the advantages taken of his natural
+ kindness. Madame la Caille, who acted the Duennas at the Opera Comique,
+ was recommended to him as the mother of a family, who deserved his
+ protection, The worthy prelate asked what he could do for her.
+ "Monseigneur," said the actress, "two words from your hand to the Duc de
+ Richelieu would induce him to grant me a demi-part." M. de Beaumont, who
+ was very little acquainted with the language of the theatre, thought
+ that a demi-part meant a more liberal portion of the Marshal's alms, and
+ the note was written in the most pressing manner. The Marshal answered,
+ that he thanked the Archbishop for the interest he took in the Theatre
+ Italien, and in Madame la Caille, who was a very useful person at that
+ theatre; that, nevertheless, she had a bad voice; but that the
+ recommendation of the Archbishop was to be preferred to the greatest
+ talents, and that the demi-part was granted.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ He granted one of an hundred louis to a pretty woman, who was very poor,
+ and who assumed an illustrious name, to which she had no right. The fear
+ lest she should be plunged into vice led him to bestow such excessive
+ bounty upon her; and the woman was an admirable dissembler. She went to
+ the Archbishop's, covered with a great hood, and, when she left him, she
+ amused herself with a variety of lovers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great people have the bad habit of talking very indiscreetly before their
+ servants. M. de Gontaut once said these words, covertly, as he thought, to
+ the Duc de &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, "That measures had been taken which
+ would, probably, have the effect of determining the Archbishop to go to
+ Rome, with a Cardinal's hat; and that, if he desired it, he was to have a
+ coadjutor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A very plausible pretext had been found for making this proposition, and
+ for rendering it flattering to the Archbishop, and agreeable to his
+ sentiments. The affair had been very adroitly begun, and success appeared
+ certain. The King had the air, towards the Archbishop, of entire
+ unconsciousness of what was going on. The negotiator acted as if he were
+ only following the suggestions of his own mind, for the general good. He
+ was a friend of the Archbishop, and was very sure of a liberal reward. A
+ valet of the Duc de Gontaut, a very handsome young fellow, had perfectly
+ caught the sense of what was spoken in a mysterious manner. He was one of
+ the lovers of the lady of the hundred Louis a year, and had heard her talk
+ of the Archbishop, whose relation she pretended to be. He thought he
+ should secure her good graces by informing her that great efforts were
+ being made to induce her patron to reside at Rome, with a view to get him
+ away from Paris. The lady instantly told the Archbishop, as she was afraid
+ of losing her pension if he went. The information squared so well with the
+ negotiation then on foot, that the Archbishop had no doubt of its truth.
+ He cooled, by degrees, in his conversations with the negotiator, whom he
+ regarded as a traitor, and ended by breaking with him. These details were
+ not known till long afterwards. The lover of the lady having been sent to
+ the Bicetre, some letters were found among his papers, which gave a scent
+ of the affair, and he was made to confess the rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order not to compromise the Duc de Gontaut, the King was told that the
+ valet had come to a knowledge of the business from a letter which he had
+ found in his master's clothes. The King took his revenge by humiliating
+ the Archbishop, which he was enabled to do by means of the information he
+ had obtained concerning the conduct of the lady, his protege. She was
+ found guilty of swindling, in concert with her beloved valet; but, before
+ her punishment was inflicted, the Lieutenant of Police was ordered to lay
+ before Monseigneur a full account of the conduct of his relation and
+ pensioner. The Archbishop had nothing to object to in the proofs which
+ were submitted to him; he said, with perfect calmness, that she was not
+ his relation; and, raising his hands to heaven, "She is an unhappy
+ wretch," said he, "who has robbed me of the money which was destined for
+ the poor. But God knows that, in giving her so large a pension, I did not
+ act lightly. I had, at that time, before my eyes the example of a young
+ woman who once asked me to grant her seventy louis a year, promising me
+ that she would always live very virtuously, as she had hitherto done. I
+ refused her, and she said, on leaving me, 'I must turn to the left,
+ Monseigneur, since the way on the right is closed against me: The unhappy
+ creature has kept her word but too well. She found means of establishing a
+ faro-table at her house, which is tolerated; and she joins to the most
+ profligate conduct in her own person the infamous trade of a corrupter of
+ youth; her house is the abode of every vice. Think, sir, after that,
+ whether it was not an act of prudence, on my part, to grant the woman in
+ question a pension, suitable to the rank in which I thought her born, to
+ prevent her abusing the gifts of youth, beauty, and talents, which she
+ possessed, to her own perdition, and the destruction of others." The
+ Lieutenant of Police told the King that he was touched with the candour
+ and the noble simplicity of the prelate. "I never doubted his virtues,"
+ replied the King, "but I wish he would be quiet." This same Archbishop
+ gave a pension of fifty louis a year to the greatest scoundrel in Paris.
+ He is a poet, who writes abominable verses; this pension is granted on
+ condition that his poems are never printed. I learned this fact from M. de
+ Marigny, to whom he recited some of his horrible verses one evening, when
+ he supped with him, in company with some people of quality. He chinked the
+ money in his pocket. "This is my good Archbishop's," said he, laughing; "I
+ keep my word with him: my poem will not be printed during my life, but I
+ read it. What would the good prelate say if he knew that I shared my last
+ quarter's allowance with a charming little opera-dancer? 'It is the
+ Archbishop, then, who keeps me,' said she to me; 'Oh, la! how droll that
+ is!'" The King heard this, and was much scandalised at it. "How difficult
+ it is to do good!" said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King came into Madame de Pompadour's room, one day, as she was
+ finishing dressing. "I have just had a strange adventure," said he: "would
+ you believe that, in going out of my wardroom into my bedroom, I met a
+ gentleman face to face?"&mdash;"My God! Sire," cried Madame, terrified.
+ "It was nothing," replied he; "but I confess I was greatly surprised: the
+ man appeared speechless with consternation. 'What do you do here?' said I,
+ civilly. He threw himself on his knees, saying, 'Pardon me, Sire; and,
+ above all, have me searched: He instantly emptied his pockets himself; he
+ pulled off his coat in the greatest agitation and terror: at last he told
+ me that he was cook to &mdash;&mdash;-, and a friend of Beccari, whom he
+ came to visit; that he had mistaken the staircase, and, finding all the
+ doors open, he had wandered into the room in which I found him, and which
+ he would have instantly left: I rang; Guimard came, and was astonished
+ enough at finding me tete-a-tete with a man in his shirt. He begged
+ Guimard to go with him into another room, and to search his whole person.
+ After this, the poor devil returned, and put on his coat. Guimard said to
+ me, 'He is certainly an honest man, and tells the truth; this may,
+ besides, be easily ascertained.' Another of the servants of the palace
+ came in, and happened to know him. 'I will answer for this good man,'
+ said, he, 'who, moreover, makes the best 'boeuf a carlate' in the world.'
+ As I saw the man was so agitated that he could not stand steady, I took
+ fifty louis out of my bureau, and said, Here, sir, are fifty Louis, to
+ quiet your alarms: He went out, after throwing himself at my feet." Madame
+ exclaimed on the impropriety of having the King's bedroom thus accessible
+ to everybody. He talked with great calmness of this strange apparition,
+ but it was evident that he controlled himself, and that he had, in fact,
+ been much frightened, as, indeed, he had reason to be. Madame highly
+ approved of the gift; and she was the more right in applauding it, as it
+ was by no means in the King's usual manner. M. de Marigny said, when I
+ told him of this adventure, that he would have wagered a thousand louis
+ against the King's making a present of fifty, if anybody but I had told
+ him of the circumstance. "It is a singular fact," continued he, "that all
+ of the race of Valois have been liberal to excess; this is not precisely
+ the case with the Bourbons, who are rather reproached with avarice. Henri
+ IV. was said to be avaricious. He gave to his mistresses, because he could
+ refuse them nothing; but he played with the eagerness of a man whose whole
+ fortune depends on the game. Louis XIV. gave through ostentation. It is
+ most astonishing," added he, "to reflect on what might have happened. The
+ King might actually have been assassinated in his chamber, without anybody
+ knowing anything of the matter and without a possibility of discovering
+ the murderer." For more than a fortnight Madame could not get over this
+ incident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About that time she had a quarrel with her brother, and both were in the
+ right. Proposals were made to him to marry the daughter of one of the
+ greatest noblemen of the Court, and the King consented to create him a
+ Duke, and even to make the title hereditary. Madame was right in wishing
+ to aggrandise her brother, but he declared that he valued his liberty
+ above all things, and that he would not sacrifice it except for a person
+ he really loved. He was a true Epicurean philosopher, and a man of great
+ capacity, according to the report of those who knew him well, and judged
+ him impartially. It was entirely at his option to have had the reversion
+ of M. de St. Florentin's place, and the place of Minister of Marine, when
+ M. de Machault retired; he said to his sister, at the time, "I spare you
+ many vexations, by depriving you of a slight satisfaction. The people
+ would be unjust to me, however well I might fulfil the duties of my
+ office. As to M. de St. Florentin's place, he may live five-and-twenty
+ years, so that I should not be the better for it. Kings' mistresses are
+ hated enough on their own account; they need not also draw upon,
+ themselves the hatred which is directed against Ministers." M. Quesnay
+ repeated this conversation to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King had another mistress, who gave Madame de Pompadour some
+ uneasiness. She was a woman of quality, and the wife of one of the most
+ assiduous courtiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man in immediate attendance on the King's person, and who had the care
+ of his clothes, came to me one day, and told me that, as he was very much
+ attached to Madame, because she was good and useful to the King, he wished
+ to inform me that, a letter having fallen out of the pocket of a coat
+ which His Majesty had taken off, he had had the curiosity to read it, and
+ found it to be from the Comtesse de &mdash;&mdash;- who had already
+ yielded to the King's desires. In this letter, she required the King to
+ give her fifty thousand crowns in money, a regiment for one of her
+ relations, and a bishopric for another, and to dismiss Madame in the space
+ of fifteen days, etc. I acquainted Madame with what this man told me, and
+ she acted with singular greatness of mind. She said to me, "I ought to
+ inform the King of this breach of trust of his servant, who may, by the
+ same means, come to the knowledge of, and make a bad use of, important
+ secrets; but I feel a repugnance to ruin the man: however, I cannot permit
+ him to remain near the King's person, and here is what I shall do: Tell
+ him that there is a place of ten thousand francs a year vacant in one of
+ the provinces; let him solicit the Minister of Finance for it, and it
+ shall be granted to him; but, if he should ever disclose through what
+ interest he has obtained it, the King shall be made acquainted with his
+ conduct. By this means, I think I shall have done all that my attachment
+ and duty prescribe. I rid the King of a faithless domestic, without
+ ruining the individual." I did as Madame ordered me: her delicacy and
+ address inspired me with admiration. She was not alarmed on account of the
+ lady, seeing what her pretentions were. "She drives too quick," remarked
+ Madame, "and will certainly be overturned on the road." The lady died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "See what the Court is; all is corruption there, from the highest to the
+ lowest," said I to Madame, one day, when she was speaking to me of some
+ facts, that had come to my knowledge. "I could tell you many others,"
+ replied Madame; "but the little chamber, where you often remain, must
+ furnish you with a sufficient number." This was a little nook, from,
+ whence I could hear a great part of what passed in Madame's apartment. The
+ Lieutenant of Police sometimes came secretly to this apartment, and waited
+ there. Three or four persons, of high consideration, also found their way
+ in, in a mysterious, manner, and several devotees, who were, in their
+ hearts, enemies of Madame de Pompadour. But these men had not petty
+ objects in view: one: required the government of a province; another, a
+ seat in the Council; a third, a Captaincy of the Guards; and this man
+ would have obtained it if the Marechale de Mirepoix had not requested it
+ for her brother, the Prince de Beauvan. The Chevalier du Muy was not among
+ these apostates; not even the promise of being High Constable would have
+ tempted him to make up to Madame, still less to betray his master, the
+ Dauphin. This Prince was, to the last degree, weary of the station he
+ held. Sometimes, when teased to death by ambitious people, who pretended
+ to be Catos, or wonderfully devout, he took part against a Minister
+ against whom he was prepossessed; then relapsed into his accustomed state
+ of inactivity and ennui.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King used to say, "My son is lazy; his temper is Polonese&mdash;hasty
+ and changeable; he has no tastes; he cares nothing for hunting, for women,
+ or for good living; perhaps he imagines that if he were in my place he
+ would be happy; at first, he would make great changes, create everything
+ anew, as it were. In a short time he would be as tired of the rank of King
+ as he now is of his own; he is only fit to live 'en philosophe', with
+ clever people about him." The King added, "He loves what is right; he is
+ truly virtuous, and does not want under standing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. de St. Germain said, one day, to the King, "To think well of mankind,
+ one must be neither a Confessor, nor a Minister, nor a Lieutenant of
+ Police."&mdash;"Nor a King," said His Majesty. "Ah! Sire," replied he,
+ "you remember the fog we had a few days ago, when we could not see four
+ steps before us. Kings are commonly surrounded by still thicker fogs,
+ collected around them by men of intriguing character, and faithless
+ Ministers&mdash;all, of every class, unite in endeavouring to make things
+ appear to Kings in any, light but the true one." I heard this from the
+ mouth of the famous Comte de St. Germain, as I was attending upon Madame,
+ who was ill in bed. The King was there; and the Count, who was a welcome
+ visitor, had been admitted. There were also present, M. de Gontaut, Madame
+ de Brancas, and the Abbe de Bernis. I remember that the very same day,
+ after the Count was gone out, the King talked in a style which gave Madame
+ great pain. Speaking of the King of Prussia, he said, "That is a madman,
+ who will risk all to gain all, and may, perhaps, win the game, though he
+ has neither religion, morals, nor principles. He wants to make a noise in
+ the world, and he will succeed. Julian, the Apostate, did the same."&mdash;"I
+ never saw the King so animated before," observed Madame, when he was gone
+ out; "and really the comparison with Julian, the Apostate, is not amiss,
+ considering the irreligion of the King of Prussia. If he gets out of his
+ perplexities, surrounded as he is by his enemies, he will be one of the
+ greatest men in history."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. de Bernis remarked, "Madame is correct in her judgment, for she has no
+ reason to pronounce his praises; nor have I, though I agree with what she
+ says." Madame de Pompadour never enjoyed so much influence as at the time
+ when M. de Choiseul became one of the Ministry. From the time of the Abbe
+ de Bernis she had afforded him her constant support, and he had been
+ employed in foreign affairs, of which he was said to know but little.
+ Madame made the Treaty of Sienna, though the first idea of it was
+ certainly furnished her by the Abbe. I have been informed by several
+ persons that the King often talked to Madame upon this subject; for my own
+ part, I never heard any conversation relative to it, except the high
+ praises bestowed by her on the Empress and the Prince de Kaunitz, whom she
+ had known a good deal of. She said that he had a clear head, the head of a
+ statesman. One day, when she was talking in this strain, some one tried to
+ cast ridicule upon the Prince on account of the style in which he wore his
+ hair, and the four valets de chambre, who made the hair-powder fly in all
+ directions, while Kaunitz ran about that he might only catch the superfine
+ part of it. "Aye," said Madame, "just as Alcibiades cut off his dog's tail
+ in order to give the Athenians something to talk about, and to turn their
+ attention from those things he wished to conceal."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never was the public mind so inflamed against Madame de Pompadour as when
+ news arrived of the battle of Rosbach. Every day she received anonymous
+ letters, full of the grossest abuse; atrocious verses, threats of poison
+ and assassination. She continued long a prey to the most acute sorrow, and
+ could get no sleep but from opiates. All this discontent was excited by
+ her protecting the Prince of Soubise; and the Lieutenant of Police had
+ great difficulty in allaying the ferment of the people. The King affirmed
+ that it was not his fault. M. du Verney was the confidant of Madame in
+ everything relating to war; a subject which he well understood, though not
+ a military man by, profession. The old Marechal de Noailles called him, in
+ derision, the General of the flour, but Marechal Saxe, one day, told
+ Madame that Du Verney knew more of military matters than the old Marshal.
+ Du Verney once paid a visit to Madame de Pompadour, and found her in
+ company with the King, the Minister of War, and two Marshals; he submitted
+ to them the plan of a campaign, which was generally applauded. It was
+ through his influence that M. de Richelieu was appointed to the command of
+ the army, instead of the Marechal d'Estrdes. He came to Quesnay two days
+ after, when I was with him. The Doctor began talking about the art of war,
+ and I remember he said, "Military men make a great mystery of their art;
+ but what is the reason that young Princes have always the most brilliant
+ success? Why, because they are active and daring. When Sovereigns command
+ their troops in person what exploits they perform! Clearly, because they
+ are at liberty to run all risks." These observations made a lasting
+ impression on my mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first physician came, one day, to see Madame he was talking of madmen
+ and madness. The King was present, and everything relating to disease of
+ any kind interested him. The first physician said that he could
+ distinguish the symptoms of approaching madness six months beforehand.
+ "Are there any persons about the Court likely to become mad?" said the
+ King.&mdash;"I know one who will be imbecile in less than three months,"
+ replied he. The King pressed him to tell the name. He excused himself for
+ some time. At last he said, "It is M. de Sechelles, the
+ Controller-General."&mdash;"You have a spite against him," said Madame,
+ "because he would not grant what you asked"&mdash;"That is true," said he,
+ "but though that might possibly incline me to tell a disagreeable truth,
+ it would not make me invent one. He is losing his intellects from
+ debility. He affects gallantry at his age, and I perceive the connection
+ in his ideas is becoming feeble and irregular."&mdash;The King laughed;
+ but three months afterwards he came to Madame, saying, "Sechelles gives
+ evident proofs of dotage in the Council. We must appoint a successor to
+ him." Madame de Pompadour told me of this on the way to Choisy. Some time
+ afterwards, the first physician came to see Madame, and spoke to her in
+ private. "You are attached to M. Berryer, Madame," said he, "and I am
+ sorry to have to warn you that he will be attacked by madness, or by
+ catalepsy, before long. I saw him this morning at chapel, sitting on one
+ of those very low little chairs, which are only, meant to kneel upon. His
+ knees touched his chin. I went to his house after Mass; his eyes were
+ wild, and when his secretary spoke to him, he said, 'Hold your tongue,
+ pen. A pen's business is to write, and not to speak.'" Madame, who liked
+ the Keeper of the Seals, was very much concerned, and begged the first
+ physician not to mention what he had perceived. Four days after this, M.
+ Berryer was seized with catalepsy, after having talked incoherently. This
+ is a disease which I did not know even by name, and got it written down
+ for me. The patient remains in precisely the same position in which the
+ fit seizes him; one leg or arm elevated, the eyes wide open, or just as it
+ may happen. This latter affair was known to all the Court at the death of
+ the Keeper of the Seals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Marechal de Belle-Isle's son was killed in battle, Madame
+ persuaded the King to pay his father a visit. He was rather reluctant, and
+ Madame said to him, with an air half angry, half playful:
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;"Barbare! don't l'orgueil <br />Croit le sang
+ d'un sujet trop pays d'un coup d'oeil."
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ The King laughed, and said, "Whose fine verses are those?"&mdash;"Voltaire's,"
+ said Madame &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As barbarous as I am, I gave him the place of gentleman in ordinary, and
+ a pension," said the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King went in state to call on the Marshal, followed by all the Court;
+ and it certainly appeared that this solemn visit consoled the Marshal for
+ the loss of his son, the sole heir to his name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Marshal died, he was carried to his house on a common
+ hand-barrow, covered with a shabby cloth. I met the body. The bearers were
+ laughing and singing. I thought it was some servant, and asked who it was.
+ How great was my surprise at learning that these were the remains of a man
+ abounding in honours and in riches. Such is the Court; the dead are always
+ in fault, and cannot be put out of sight too soon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King said, "M. Fouquet is dead, I hear."&mdash;"He was no longer
+ Fouquet," replied the Duc d'Ayen; "Your Majesty had permitted him to
+ change that name, under which, however, he acquired all his reputation."
+ The King shrugged his shoulders. His Majesty had, in fact, granted him
+ letters patent, permitting him not to sign Fouquet during his Ministry. I
+ heard this on the occasion in question. M. de Choiseul had the war
+ department at his death. He was every day more and more in favour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame treated him with greater distinction than any previous Minister,
+ and his manners towards her were the most agreeable it is possible to
+ conceive, at once respectful and gallant. He never passed a day without
+ seeing her. M. de Marigny could not endure M. de Choiseul, but he never
+ spoke of him, except to his intimate friends. Calling, one day, at
+ Quesnay's, I found him there. They were talking of M. de Choiseul. "He is
+ a mere 'petit maitre'," said the Doctor, "and, if he were handsome just
+ fit to be one of Henri the Third's favourites." The Marquis de Mirabeau
+ and M. de La Riviere came in. "This kingdom," said Mirabeau, "is in a
+ deplorable state. There is neither national energy, nor the only
+ substitute for it&mdash;money."&mdash;"It can only be regenerated," said
+ La Riviere, "by a conquest, like that of China, or by some great internal
+ convulsion; but woe to those who live to see that! The French people do
+ not do things by halves." These words made me tremble, and I hastened out
+ of the room. M. de Marigny did the same, though without appearing at all
+ affected by what had been said. "You heard De La Riviere," said he,&mdash;"but
+ don't be alarmed, the conversations that pass at the Doctor's are never
+ repeated; these are honourable men, though rather chimerical. They know
+ not where to stop. I think, however, they are in the right way; only,
+ unfortunately, they go too far." I wrote this down immediately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Comte de St. Germain came to see Madame de Pompadour, who was ill, and
+ lay on the sofa. He shewed her a little box, containing topazes, rubies,
+ and emeralds. He appeared to have enough to furnish a treasury. Madame
+ sent for me to see all these beautiful things. I looked at them with an
+ air of the utmost astonishment, but I made signs to Madame that I thought
+ them all false. The Count felt for something in his pocketbook, about
+ twice as large as a spectacle-case, and, at length, drew out two or three
+ little paper packets, which he unfolded, and exhibited a superb ruby. He
+ threw on the table, with a contemptuous air, a little cross of green and
+ white stones. I looked at it and said, "That is not to be despised." I put
+ it on, and admired it greatly. The Count begged me to accept it. I refused&mdash;he
+ urged me to take it. Madame then refused it for me. At length, he pressed
+ it upon me so warmly that Madame, seeing that it could not be worth above
+ forty Louis, made me a sign to accept it. I took the cross, much pleased
+ at the Count's politeness; and, some days after, Madame presented him with
+ an enamelled box, upon which was the portrait of some Grecian sage (whose
+ name I don't recollect), to whom she compared him. I skewed the cross to a
+ jeweller, who valued it at sixty-five Louis. The Count offered to bring
+ Madame some enamel portraits, by Petitot, to look at, and she told him to
+ bring them after dinner, while the King was hunting. He shewed his
+ portraits, after which Madame said to him, "I have heard a great deal of a
+ charming story you told two days ago, at supper, at M. le Premier's, of an
+ occurrence you witnessed fifty or sixty years ago." He smiled and said,
+ "It is rather long."&mdash;"So much the better," said she, with an air of
+ delight. Madame de Gontaut and the ladies came in, and the door was shut;
+ Madame made a sign to me to sit down behind the screen. The Count made
+ many apologies for the ennui which his story would, perhaps, occasion. He
+ said, "Sometimes one can tell a story pretty well; at other times it is
+ quite a different thing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At the beginning of this century, the Marquis de St. Gilles was
+ Ambassador from Spain to the Hague. In his youth he had been particularly
+ intimate with the Count of Moncade, a grandee of Spain, and one of the
+ richest nobles of that country. Some months after the Marquis's arrival at
+ the Hague, he received a letter from the Count, entreating him, in the
+ name of their former friendship, to render him the greatest possible
+ service. 'You know,' said he, 'my dear Marquis, the mortification I felt
+ that the name of Moncade was likely to expire with me. At length, it
+ pleased heaven to hear my prayers, and to grant me a son: he gave early
+ promise of dispositions worthy of his birth, but he, some time since,
+ formed an unfortunate and disgraceful attachment to the most celebrated
+ actress of the company of Toledo. I shut my eyes to this imprudence on the
+ part of a young man whose conduct had, till then, caused me unmingled
+ satisfaction. But, having learnt that he was so blinded by passion as to
+ intend to marry this girl, and that he had even bound himself by a written
+ promise to that effect, I solicited the King to have her placed in
+ confinement. My son, having got information of the steps I had taken,
+ defeated my intentions by escaping with the object of his passion. For
+ more than six months I have vainly endeavoured to discover where he has
+ concealed himself, but I have now some reason to think he is at the Hague.
+ The Count earnestly conjured the Marquis to make the most rigid search, in
+ order to discover his son's retreat, and to endeavour to prevail upon him
+ to return to his home. 'It is an act of justice,' continued he, 'to
+ provide for the girl, if she consents to give up the written promise of
+ marriage which she has received, and I leave it to your discretion to do
+ what is right for her, as well as to determine the sum necessary to bring
+ my son to Madrid in a manner suitable to his condition. I know not,'
+ concluded he, 'whether you are a father; if you are, you will be able to
+ sympathise in my anxieties.' The Count subjoined to this letter an exact
+ description of his son, and the young woman by whom he was accompanied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the receipt of this letter, the Marquis lost not a moment in sending
+ to all the inns in Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and the Hague, but in vain&mdash;he
+ could find no trace of them. He began to despair of success, when the idea
+ struck him that a young French page of his, remarkable for his quickness
+ and intelligence, might be employed with advantage. He promised to reward
+ him handsomely if he succeeded in finding the young woman, who was the
+ cause of so much anxiety, and gave him the description of her person. The
+ page visited all the public places for many days, without success; at
+ length, one evening, at the play, he saw a young man and woman, in a box,
+ who attracted his attention. When he saw that they, perceived he was
+ looking at them, and withdrew to the back of the box to avoid his
+ observation, he felt confident that they were the objects of his search.
+ He did not take his eyes from the bog, and watched every movement in it.
+ The instant the performance ended, he was in the passage leading from the
+ boxes to the door, and he remarked that the young man, who, doubtless,
+ observed the dress he wore, tried to conceal himself, as he passed him, by
+ putting his handkerchief before his face. He followed him, at a distance,
+ to the inn called the Vicomte de Turenne, which he saw him and the woman
+ enter; and, being now certain of success, he ran to inform the Ambassador.
+ The Marquis de St. Gilles immediately repaired to the inn, wrapped in a
+ cloak, and followed by his page and two servants. He desired the landlord
+ to show him to the room of a young man and woman, who had lodged for some
+ time in his house. The landlord, for some time, refused to do so, unless
+ the Marquis would give their name. The page told him to take notice that
+ he was speaking to the Spanish Ambassador, who had strong reasons for
+ wishing to see the persons in question. The innkeeper said they wished not
+ to be known, and that they had absolutely forbidden him to admit anybody
+ into their apartment who did not ask for them by name; but that, since the
+ Ambassador desired it, he would show him their room. He then conducted
+ them up to a dirty, miserable garret. He knocked at the door, and waited
+ for some time; he then knocked again pretty, loudly, upon which the door
+ was half-opened. At the sight of the Ambassador and his suite, the person
+ who opened it immediately closed it again, exclaiming that they, had made
+ a mistake. The Ambassador pushed hard against him, forced his way, in,
+ made a sign to his people to wait outside, and remained in the room. He
+ saw before him a very handsome young man, whose appearance perfectly,
+ corresponded with the description, and a young woman, of great beauty, and
+ remarkably fine person, whose countenance, form, colour of the hair, etc.,
+ were also precisely those described by the Count of Moncade. The young man
+ spoke first. He complained of the violence used in breaking into the
+ apartment of a stranger, living in a free country, and under the
+ protection of its laws. The Ambassador stepped forward to embrace him, and
+ said, 'It is useless to feign, my dear Count; I know you, and I do not
+ come here&mdash;to give pain to you or to this lady, whose appearance
+ interests me extremely.' The young man replied that he was totally
+ mistaken; that he was not a Count, but the son of a merchant of Cadiz;
+ that the lady was his wife; and, that they were travelling for pleasure.
+ The Ambassador, casting his eyes round the miserably furnished room, which
+ contained but one bed, and some packages of the shabbiest kind, lying in
+ disorder about the room, 'Is this, my dear child (allow me to address you
+ by a title which is warranted by my tender regard for your father), is
+ this a fit residence for the son of the Count of Moncade?' The young man
+ still protested against the use of any such language, as addressed to him.
+ At length, overcome by the entreaties of the Ambassador, he confessed,
+ weeping, that he was the son of the Count of Moncade, but declared that
+ nothing should induce him to return to his father, if he must abandon a
+ woman he adored. The young woman burst into tears, and threw herself at
+ the feet of the Ambassador, telling him that she would not be the cause of
+ the ruin of the young Count; and that generosity, or rather, love, would
+ enable her to disregard her own happiness, and, for his sake, to separate
+ herself from him. The Ambassador admired her noble disinterestedness. The
+ young man, on the contrary, received her declaration with the most
+ desperate grief. He reproached his mistress, and declared that he would
+ never abandon so estimable a creature, nor suffer the sublime generosity
+ of her heart to be turned against herself. The Ambassador told him that
+ the Count of Moncade was far from wishing to render her miserable, and
+ that he was commissioned to provide her with a sum sufficient to enable
+ her to return into Spain, or to live where she liked. Her noble
+ sentiments, and genuine tenderness, he said, inspired him with the
+ greatest interest for her, and would induce him to go to the utmost limits
+ of his powers, in the sum he was to give her; that he, therefore, promised
+ her ten thousand florins, that is to say, about twelve hundred Louis,
+ which would be given her the moment she surrendered the promise of
+ marriage she had received, and the Count of Moncade took up his abode in
+ the Ambassador's house, and promised to return to Spain. The young woman
+ seemed perfectly indifferent to the sum proposed, and wholly absorbed in
+ her lover, and in the grief of leaving him. She seemed insensible to
+ everything but the cruel sacrifice which her reason, and her love itself,
+ demanded. At length, drawing from a little portfolio the promise of
+ marriage, signed by the Count, 'I know his heart too well,' said she, 'to
+ need it.' Then she kissed it again and again, with a sort of transport,
+ and delivered it to the Ambassador, who stood by, astonished at the
+ grandeur of soul he witnessed. He promised her that he would never cease
+ to take the liveliest interest in her fate, and assured the Count of his
+ father's forgiveness. 'He will receive with open arms,' said he, 'the
+ prodigal son, returning to the bosom of his distressed family; the heart
+ of a father is an exhaustless mine of tenderness. How great will be the
+ felicity of my friend on the receipt of these tidings, after his long
+ anxiety and affliction; how happy do I esteem myself, at being the
+ instrument of that felicity?' Such was, in part, the language of the
+ Ambassador, which appeared to produce a strong impression on the young
+ man. But, fearing lest, during the night, love should regain all his
+ power, and should triumph over the generous resolution of the lady, the
+ Marquis pressed the young Count to accompany him to his hotel. The tears,
+ the cries of anguish, which marked this cruel separation, cannot be
+ described; they deeply touched the heart of the Ambassador, who promised
+ to watch over the young lady. The Count's little baggage was not difficult
+ to remove, and, that very evening, he was installed in the finest
+ apartment of the Ambassador's house. The Marquis was overjoyed at having
+ restored to the illustrious house of Moncade the heir of its greatness,
+ and of its magnificent domains. On the following morning, as soon as the
+ young Count was up, he found tailors, dealers in cloth, lace, stuffs,
+ etc., out of which he had only to choose. Two valets de chambre, and three
+ laquais, chosen by the Ambassador for their intelligence and good conduct,
+ were in waiting in his antechamber, and presented themselves, to receive
+ his orders. The Ambassador shewed the young Count the letter he had just
+ written to his father, in which he congratulated him on possessing a son
+ whose noble sentiments and striking qualities were worthy of his
+ illustrious blood, and announced his speedy return. The young lady was not
+ forgotten; he confessed that to her generosity he was partly indebted for
+ the submission of her lover, and expressed his conviction that the Count
+ would not disapprove the gift he had made her, of ten thousand florins.
+ That sum was remitted, on the same day, to this noble and interesting
+ girl, who left the Hague without delay. The preparations for the Count's
+ journey were made; a splendid wardrobe and an excellent carriage were
+ embarked at Rotterdam, in a ship bound for France, on board which a
+ passage was secured for the Count, who was to proceed from that country to
+ Spain. A considerable sum of money, and letters of credit on Paris, were
+ given him at his departure; and the parting between the Ambassador and the
+ young Count was most touching. The Marquis de St. Gilles awaited with
+ impatience the Count's answer, and enjoyed his friend's delight by
+ anticipation. At the expiration of four months, he received this
+ long-expected letter. It would be utterly impossible to describe his
+ surprise on reading the following words, 'Heaven, my dear Marquis, never
+ granted me the happiness of becoming a father, and, in the midst of
+ abundant wealth and honours, the grief of having no heirs, and seeing an
+ illustrious race end in my person, has shed the greatest bitterness over
+ my whole existence. I see, with extreme regret, that you have been imposed
+ upon by a young adventurer, who has taken advantage of the knowledge he
+ had, by some means, obtained, of our old friendship. But your Excellency
+ must not be the sufferer. The Count of Moncade is, most assuredly, the
+ person whom you wished to serve; he is bound to repay what your generous
+ friendship hastened to advance, in order to procure him a happiness which
+ he would have felt most deeply. I hope, therefore, Marquis, that your
+ Excellency will have no hesitation in accepting the remittance contained
+ in this letter, of three thousand Louis of France, of the disbursal of
+ which you sent me an account.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The manner in which the Comte de St. Germain spoke, in the characters of
+ the young adventurer, his mistress, and the Ambassador, made his audience
+ weep and laugh by turns. The story is true in every particular, and the
+ adventurer surpasses Gusman d'Alfarache in address, according to the
+ report of some persons present. Madame de Pompadour thought of having a
+ play written, founded on this story; and the Count sent it to her in
+ writing, from which I transcribed it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. Duclos came to the Doctor's, and harangued with his usual warmth. I
+ heard him saying to two or three persons, "People are unjust to great men,
+ Ministers and Princes; nothing, for instance, is more common than to
+ undervalue their intellect. I astonished one of these little gentlemen of
+ the corps of the infallibles, by telling him that I could prove that there
+ had been more men of ability in the house of Bourbon, for the last hundred
+ years, than in any other family."&mdash;"You prove that?" said somebody,
+ sneeringly. "Yes," said Duclos; "and I will tell you how. The great Conde,
+ you will allow, was no fool; and the Duchesse de Longueville is cited as
+ one of the wittiest women that ever lived. The Regent was a man who had
+ few equals, in every kind of talent and acquirement. The Prince de Conti,
+ who was elected King of Poland, was celebrated for his intelligence, and,
+ in poetry, was the successful rival of La Fare and St. Aulaire. The Duke
+ of Burgundy was learned and enlightened. His Duchess, the daughter of
+ Louis XIV., was remarkably clever, and wrote epigrams and couplets. The
+ Duc du Maine is generally spoken of only for his weakness, but nobody had
+ a more agreeable wit. His wife was mad, but she had an extensive
+ acquaintance with letters, good taste in poetry, and a brilliant and
+ inexhaustible imagination. Here are instances enough, I think," said he;
+ "and, as I am no flatterer, and hate to appear one, I will not speak of
+ the living." His hearers were astonished at this enumeration, and all of
+ them agreed in the truth of what he had said. He added, "Don't we daily
+ hear of silly D'Argenson, because he has a good-natured air, and a
+ bourgeois tone? and yet, I believe, there have not been many Ministers
+ comparable to him in knowledge and in enlightened views."
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [Rene LOUIS d'Argenson, who was Minister for Foreign Affairs. He was the
+ author of 'Considerations sur le Gouvernement', and of several other
+ works, from which succeeding political writers have drawn, and still
+ draw ideas, which they give to the world as new. This man, remarkable
+ not only for profound and original thinking, but for clear and forcible
+ expression, was, nevertheless, D'Argenson la bete. It is said, however,
+ that he affected the simplicity, and even silliness of manner, which
+ procured him that appellation. If, as we hope, the unedited memoirs left
+ by Rene d'Argenson will be given to the world, they will be found fully
+ to justify the opinion of Duclos, with regard to this Minister, and the
+ inappropriateness of his nickname.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ I took a pen, which lay on the Doctor's table, and begged M. Duclos to
+ repeat to me all the names he had mentioned, and the eulogium he had
+ bestowed on each. "If," said he, "you show that to the Marquise, tell her
+ how the conversation arose, and that I did not say it in order that it
+ might come to her ears, and eventually, perhaps, to those of another
+ person. I am an historiographer, and I will render justice, but I shall,
+ also, often inflict it."&mdash;"I will answer for that," said the Doctor,
+ "and our master will be represented as he really is. Louis XIV. liked
+ verses, and patronised poets; that was very well, perhaps, in his time,
+ because one must begin with something; but this age will be very superior
+ to the last. It must be acknowledged that Louis XV., in sending
+ astronomers to Mexico and Peru, to measure the earth, has a higher claim
+ to our respect than if he directed an opera. He has thrown down the
+ barriers which opposed the progress of philosophy, in spite of the clamour
+ of the devotees: the Encyclopaedia will do honour to his reign." Duclos,
+ during this speech, shook his head. I went away, and tried to write down
+ all I had heard, while it was fresh. I had the part which related to the
+ Princes of the Bourbon race copied by a valet, who wrote a beautiful hand,
+ and I gave it to Madame de Pompadour. But she said to me, "What! is Duclos
+ an acquaintance of yours? Do you want to play the 'bel esprit', my dear
+ good woman? That will not sit well upon you." The truth is, that nothing
+ can be further from my inclination. I told her that I met him accidentally
+ at the Doctor's, where he generally spent an hour when he came to
+ Versailles. "The King knows him to be a worthy man," said she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame de Pompadour was ill, and the King came to see her several times a
+ day. I generally left the room when he entered, but, having stayed a few
+ minutes, on one occasion, to give her a glass of chicory water, I heard
+ the King mention Madame d'Egmont. Madame raised her eyes to heaven, and
+ said, "That name always recalls to me a most melancholy and barbarous
+ affair; but it was not my fault." These words dwelt in my mind, and,
+ particularly, the tone in which they were uttered. As I stayed with Madame
+ till three o'clock in the morning, reading to her a part of the time, it
+ was easy for me to try to satisfy my curiosity. I seized a moment, when
+ the reading was interrupted, to say, "You looked dreadfully shocked,
+ Madame, when the King pronounced the name of D'Egmont." At these words,
+ she again raised her eyes, and said, "You would feel as I do, if you knew
+ the affair."&mdash;"It must, then, be deeply affecting, for I do not think
+ that it personally concerns you, Madame."&mdash;"No," said she, "it does
+ not; as, however, I am not the only person acquainted with this history,
+ and as I know you to be discreet, I will tell it you. The last Comte
+ d'Egmont married a reputed daughter of the Duc de Villars; but the Duchess
+ had never lived with her husband, and the Comtesse d'Egmont is, in fact, a
+ daughter of the Chevalier d'Orleans.&mdash;[Legitimate son of the Regent,
+ Grand Prior of France.]&mdash;At the death of her husband, young,
+ beautiful, agreeable, and heiress to an immense fortune, she attracted the
+ suit and homage of all the most distinguished men at Court. Her mother's
+ director, one day, came into her room and requested a private interview;
+ he then revealed to her that she was the offspring of an adulterous
+ intercourse, for which her mother had been doing penance for
+ five-and-twenty years. 'She could not,' said he, 'oppose your former
+ marriage, although it caused her extreme distress. Heaven did not grant
+ you children; but, if you marry again, you run the risk, Madame, of
+ transmitting to another family the immense wealth, which does not, in
+ fact, belong to you, and which is the price of crime.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Comtesse d'Egmont heard this recital with horror. At the same
+ instant, her mother entered, and, on her knees, besought her daughter to
+ avert her eternal damnation. Madame d'Egmont tried to calm her own and her
+ mother's mind. 'What can I do?' said she, to her. 'Consecrate yourself
+ wholly to God,' replied the director, 'and thus expiate your mother's
+ crime.' The Countess, in her terror, promised whatever they asked, and
+ proposed to enter the Carmelites. I was informed of it, and spoke to the
+ King about the barbarous tyranny the Duchesse de Villars and the director
+ were about to exercise over this unhappy young woman; but we knew not how
+ to prevent it. The King, with the utmost kindness, prevailed on the Queen
+ to offer her the situation of Lady of the Palace, and desired the
+ Duchess's friends to persuade her to endeavour to deter her daughter from
+ becoming a Carmelite. It was all in vain; the wretched victim was
+ sacrificed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame took it into her head to consult a fortuneteller, called Madame
+ Bontemps, who had told M. de Bernis's fortune, as I have already related,
+ and had surprised him by her predictions. M. de Choiseul, to whom she
+ mentioned the matter, said that the woman had also foretold fine things
+ that were to happen to him. "I know it," said she, "and, in return, you
+ promised her a carriage, but the poor woman goes on foot still." Madame
+ told me this, and asked me how she could disguise herself, so as to see
+ the woman without being known. I dared not propose any scheme then, for
+ fear it should not succeed; but, two days after, I talked to her surgeon
+ about the art, which some beggars practise, of counterfeiting sores, and
+ altering their features. He said that was easy enough. I let the thing
+ drop, and, after an interval of some minutes, I said, "If one could change
+ one's features, one might have great diversion at the opera, or at balls.
+ What alterations would it be necessary to make in me, now, to render it
+ impossible to recognise me?"&mdash;"In the first place," said he, "you
+ must alter the colour of your hair, then you must have a false nose, and
+ put a spot on some part of your face, or a wart, or a few hairs." I
+ laughed, and said, "Help me to contrive this for the next ball; I have not
+ been to one for twenty years; but I am dying to puzzle somebody, and to
+ tell him things which no one but I can tell him. I shall come home, and go
+ to bed, in a quarter of an hour."&mdash;"I must take the measure of your
+ nose," said he; "or do you take it with wax, and I will have a nose made:
+ you can get a flaxen or brown wig." I repeated to Madame what the surgeon
+ had told me: she was delighted at it. I took the measure of her nose, and
+ of my own, and carried them to the surgeon, who, in two days, gave me the
+ two noses, and a wart, which Madame stuck under her left eye, and some
+ paint for the eyebrows. The noses were most delicately made, of a bladder,
+ I think, and these, with the ether disguises, rendered it impossible to
+ recognize the face, and yet did not produce any shocking appearance. All
+ this being accomplished, nothing remained but to give notice to the
+ fortuneteller; we waited for a little excursion to Paris, which Madame was
+ to take, to look at her house. I then got a person, with whom I had no
+ connection, to speak to a waiting-woman of the Duchesse de Ruffec, to
+ obtain an interview with the woman. She made some difficulty, on account
+ of the Police; but we promised secrecy, and appointed the place of
+ meeting. Nothing could be more contrary to Madame de Pompadour's
+ character, which was one of extreme timidity, than to engage in such an
+ adventure. But her curiosity was raised to the highest pitch, and,
+ moreover, everything was so well arranged that there was not the slightest
+ risk. Madame had let M. de Gontaut, and her valet de chambre, into the
+ secret. The latter had hired two rooms for his niece, who was then ill, at
+ Versailles, near Madame's hotel. We went out in the evening, followed by
+ the valet de chambre, who was a safe man, and by the Duke, all on foot. We
+ had not, at farthest, above two hundred steps to go. We were shown into
+ two small rooms, in which were fires. The two men remained in one, and we
+ in the other. Madame had thrown herself on a sofa. She had on a night-cap,
+ which concealed half her face, in an unstudied manner. I was near the
+ fire, leaning on a table, on which were two candles. There were lying on
+ the chairs, near us, some clothes, of small value. The fortune-teller rang&mdash;a
+ little servant-girl let her in, and then went to wait in the room where
+ the gentlemen were. Coffee-cups, and a coffee-pot, were set; and I had
+ taken care to place, upon a little buffet, some cakes, and a bottle of
+ Malaga wine, having heard that Madame Bontemps assisted her inspiration
+ with that liquor. Her face, indeed, sufficiently proclaimed it. "Is that
+ lady ill?" said she, seeing Madame de Pompadour stretched languidly on the
+ sofa. I told her that she would soon be better, but that she had kept her
+ room for a week. She heated the coffee, and prepared the two cups, which
+ she carefully wiped, observing that nothing impure must enter into this
+ operation. I affected to be very anxious for a glass of wine, in order to
+ give our oracle a pretext for assuaging her thirst, which she did, without
+ much entreaty. When she had drunk two or three small glasses (for I had
+ taken care not to have large ones), she poured the coffee into one of the
+ two large cups. "This is yours," said she; "and this is your friends's;
+ let them stand a little." She then observed our hands and our faces; after
+ which she drew a looking-glass from her pocket, into which she told us to
+ look, while she looked at the reflections of our faces. She next took a
+ glass of wine, and immediately threw herself into a fit of enthusiasm,
+ while she inspected my cup, and considered all the lines formed by the
+ dregs of the coffee she had poured out. She began by saying, "That is well&mdash;prosperity&mdash;but
+ there is a black mark&mdash;distresses. A man becomes a comforter. Here,
+ in this corner, are friends, who support you. Ah! who is he that
+ persecutes them? But justice triumphs&mdash;after rain, sunshine&mdash;a
+ long journey successful. There, do you see these little bags? That is
+ money which has been paid&mdash;to you, of course, I mean. That is well.
+ Do you see that arm?"&mdash;"Yes."&mdash;"That is an arm supporting
+ something: a woman veiled; I see her; it is you. All this is clear to me.
+ I hear, as it were, a voice speaking to me. You are no longer attacked. I
+ see it, because the clouds in that direction are passed off (pointing to a
+ clearer spot). But, stay&mdash;I see small lines which branch out from the
+ main spot. These are sons, daughters, nephews&mdash;that is pretty well."
+ She appeared overpowered with the effort she was making. At length, she
+ added, "That is all. You have had good luck first&mdash;misfortune
+ afterward. You have had a friend, who has exerted himself with success to
+ extricate you from it. You have had lawsuits&mdash;at length fortune has
+ been reconciled to you, and will change no more." She drank another glass
+ of wine. "Your health, Madame," said she to the Marquise, and went through
+ the same ceremonies with the cup. At length, she broke out, "Neither fair
+ nor foul. I see there, in the distance, a serene sky; and then all these
+ things that appear to ascend all these things are applauses. Here is a
+ grave man, who stretches out his arms. Do you see?&mdash;look
+ attentively."&mdash;"That is true," said Madame de Pompadour, with
+ surprise (there was, indeed, some appearance of the kind). "He points to
+ something square that is an open coffer. Fine weather. But, look! there
+ are clouds of azure and gold, which surround you. Do you see that ship on
+ the high sea? How favourable the wind is! You are on board; you land in a
+ beautiful country, of which you become the Queen. Ah! what do I see? Look
+ there&mdash;look at that hideous, crooked, lame man, who is pursuing you&mdash;but
+ he is going on a fool's errand. I see a very great man, who supports you
+ in his arms. Here, look! he is a kind of giant. There is a great deal of
+ gold and silver&mdash;a few clouds here and there. But you have nothing to
+ fear. The vessel will be sometimes tossed about, but it will not be lost.
+ Dixi." Madame said, "When shall I die, and of what disease?"&mdash;"I
+ never speak of that," said she; "see here, rather but fate will not permit
+ it. I will shew you how fate confounds everything"&mdash;shewing her
+ several confused lumps of the coffee-dregs. "Well, never mind as to the
+ time, then, only tell me the kind of death." The fortune-teller looked in
+ the cup, and said, "You will have time to prepare yourself." I gave her
+ only two Louis, to avoid doing anything remarkable. She left us, after
+ begging us to keep her secret, and we rejoined the Duc de Gontaut, to whom
+ we related everything that had passed. He laughed heartily, and said, "Her
+ coffee-dregs are like the clouds&mdash;you may see what you please in
+ them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was one thing in my horoscope which struck me, that was the
+ comforter; because one of my uncles had taken great care of me, and had
+ rendered me the most essential services. It is also true that I afterwards
+ had an important lawsuit; and, lastly, there was the money which had come
+ into my hands through Madame de Pompadour's patronage and bounty. As for
+ Madame, her husband was represented accurately enough by the man with the
+ coffer; then the country of which she became Queen seemed to relate to her
+ present situation at Court; but the most remarkable thing was the crooked
+ and lame man, in whom Madame thought she recognized the Duc de V&mdash;&mdash;-,
+ who was very much deformed. Madame was delighted with her adventure and
+ her horoscope, which she thought corresponded very remarkably with the
+ truth. Two days after, she sent for M. de St. Florentin, and begged him
+ not to molest the fortuneteller. He laughed, and replied that he knew why
+ she interceded for this woman. Madame asked him why he laughed. He related
+ every circumstance of her expedition with astonishing exactness;&mdash;[M.
+ de St. Florentin was Minister for Paris, to whom the Lieutenant of Police
+ was accountable.]&mdash;but he knew nothing of what had been said, or, at
+ least, so he pretended. He promised Madame that, provided Bontemps did
+ nothing which called for notice, she should not be obstructed in the
+ exercise of her profession, especially if she followed it in secret. "I
+ know her," added he, "and I, like other people, have had the curiosity to
+ consult her. She is the wife of a soldier in the guards. She is a clever
+ woman in her way, but she drinks. Four or five years ago, she got such
+ hold on the mind of Madame de Ruffec, that she made her believe she could
+ procure her an elixir of beauty, which would restore her to what she was
+ at twenty-five. The Duchess pays high for the drugs of which this elixir
+ is compounded; and sometimes they are bad: sometimes, the sun, to which
+ they were exposed, was not powerful enough; sometimes, the influence of a
+ certain constellation was wanting. Sometimes, she has the courage to
+ assure the Duchess that she really is grown handsomer, and actually
+ succeeds in making her believe it." But the history of this woman's
+ daughter is still more curious. She was exquisitely beautiful, and the
+ Duchess brought her up in her own house. Bontemps predicted to the girl,
+ in the Duchess's presence, that she would marry a man of two thousand
+ Louis a year. This was not very likely to happen to the daughter of a
+ soldier in the guards. It did happen, nevertheless. The little Bontemps
+ married the President Beaudouin, who was mad. But, the tragical part of
+ the story is, that her mother had also foretold that she would die in
+ childbirth of her first child, and that she did actually die in
+ child-birth, at the age of eighteen, doubtless under a strong impression
+ of her mother's prophecy, to which the improbable event of her marriage
+ had given such extraordinary weight. Madame told the King of the adventure
+ her curiosity had led her into, at which he laughed, and said he wished
+ the Police had arrested her. He added a very sensible remark. "In order to
+ judge," said he, "of the truth or falsehood of such predictions, one ought
+ to collect fifty of them. It would be found that they are almost always
+ made up of the same phrases, which are sometimes inapplicable, and some
+ times hit the mark. But the first are rarely-mentioned, while the others
+ are always insisted on."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have heard, and, indeed, it is certainly true, that M. de Bridge lived
+ on terms of intimacy with Madame, when she was Madame d'Aioles. He used to
+ ride on horseback with her, and, as he is so handsome a man, that he has
+ retained the name of the handsome man, it was natural enough that he
+ should be thought the lover of a very handsome woman. I have heard
+ something more than this. I was told that the King said to M. de Bridge,
+ "Confess, now, that you were her lover. She has acknowledged it to me, and
+ I exact from you this proof of sincerity." M. de. Bridge replied, that
+ Madame de Pompadour was at liberty to say what she pleased for her own
+ amusement, or for any other reason; but that he, for his part, could not
+ assert a falsehood; that he had been, her friend; that she was a charming
+ companion, and had great talents; that he delighted in her society; but
+ that his intercourse with her had never gone beyond the bounds of
+ friendship. He added, that her husband was present in all their parties,
+ that he watched her with a jealous eye, and that he would not have
+ suffered him to be so much with her if he had conceived the least
+ suspicion of the kind. The King persisted, and told him he was wrong to
+ endeavour to conceal a fact which was unquestionable. It was rumoured,
+ also, that the Abbe de Bernis had been a favoured lover of hers. The said
+ Abbe was rather a coxcomb; he had a handsome face, and wrote poetry.
+ Madame de Pompadour was the theme of his gallant verses. He sometimes
+ received the compliments of his friends upon his success with a smile
+ which left some room for conjecture, although he denied the thing in
+ words. It was, for some time, reported at Court that she was in love with
+ the Prince de Beauvau: he is a man distinguished for his gallantries, his
+ air of rank and fashion, and his high play; he is brother to the little
+ Marechale: for all these reasons, Madame is very civil to him, but there
+ is nothing marked in her behaviour. She knows, besides, that he is in love
+ with a very agreeable woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now that I am on the subject of lovers, I cannot avoid speaking of M. de
+ Choiseul. Madame likes him better than any of those I have just mentioned,
+ but he is not her lover. A lady, whom I know perfectly well, but whom I do
+ not chose to denounce to Madame, invented a story about them, which was
+ utterly false. She said, as I have good reason to believe, that one day,
+ hearing the King coming, I ran to Madame's closet door; that I coughed in
+ a particular manner; and that the King having, happily, stopped a moment
+ to talk to some ladies, there was time to adjust matters, so that Madame
+ came out of the closet with me and M. de Choiseul, as if we had been all
+ three sitting together. It is very true that I went in to carry something
+ to Madame, without knowing that the King was come, and that she came out
+ of the closet with M. de Choiseul, who had a paper in his hand, and that I
+ followed her a few minutes after. The King asked M. de Choiseul what that
+ paper was which he had in his hand. He replied that it contained the
+ remonstrance from the Parliament.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three or four ladies witnessed what I now relate, and as, with the
+ exception of one, they were all excellent women, and greatly attached to
+ Madame, my suspicions could fall on none but the one in question, whom I
+ will not name, because her brother has always treated me with great
+ kindness. Madame de Pompadour had a lively imagination and great
+ sensibility, but nothing could exceed the coldness of her temperament. It
+ would, besides, have been extremely difficult for her, surrounded as she
+ was, to keep up an intercourse of that kind with any man. It is true that
+ this difficulty would have been diminished in the case of an all-powerful
+ Minister, who had constant pretexts for seeing her in private. But there
+ was a much more decisive fact&mdash;M. de Choiseul had a charming mistress&mdash;the
+ Princess de R&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, and Madame knew it, and often spoke of
+ her. He had, besides, some remains of liking for the Princess de Kinski,
+ who followed him from Vienna. It is true that he soon after discovered how
+ ridiculous she was. All these circumstances combined were, surely,
+ sufficient to deter Madame from engaging in a love affair with the Duke;
+ but his talents and agreeable qualities captivated her. He was not
+ handsome, but he had manners peculiar to himself, an agreeable vivacity, a
+ delightful gaiety; this was the general opinion of his character. He was
+ much attached to Madame, and though this might, at first, be inspired by a
+ consciousness of the importance of her friendship to his interest, yet,
+ after he had acquired sufficient political strength to stand alone, he was
+ not the less devoted to her, nor less assiduous in his attentions. He knew
+ her friendship for me, and he one day said to me, with great feeling, "I
+ am afraid, my dear Madame du Hausset, that she will sink into a state of
+ complete dejection, and die of melancholy. Try to divert her." What a fate
+ for the favourite of the greatest monarch in existence! thought I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, Madame de Pompadour had retired to her closet with M. Berryer.
+ Madame d'Amblimont stayed with Madame de Gontaut, who called me to talk
+ about my son. A moment after, M. de Gontaut came in and said,
+ "D'Amblimont, who shall have the Swiss guards?"&mdash;"Stop a moment,"
+ said she; "let me call my council&mdash;&mdash;, M. de Choiseul."&mdash;"That
+ is not so very bad a thought," said M. de Gontaut, "but I assure you, you
+ are the first person who has suggested it." He immediately left us, and
+ Madame d'Amblimont said, "I'll lay a wager he is going to communicate my
+ idea to M. de Choiseul." He returned very shortly, and, M. Berrier having
+ left the room, he said to Madame de Pompadour, "A singular thought has
+ entered d'Amblimont's head."&mdash;"What absurdity now?" said Madame. "Not
+ so great an absurdity neither," said he. "She says the Swiss guards ought
+ to be given to M. de Choiseul, and, really, if the King has not positively
+ promised M. de Soubise, I don't see what he can do better."&mdash;"The
+ King has promised nothing," said Madame, "and the hopes I gave him were of
+ the vaguest kind. I only told him it was possible. But though I have a
+ great regard for M. de Soubise, I do not think his merits comparable to
+ those of M. de Choiseul." When the King came in, Madame, doubtless, told
+ him of this suggestion. A quarter of an hour afterwards, I went into the
+ room to speak to her, and I heard the King say, "You will see that,
+ because the Duc du Maine, and his children, had that place, he will think
+ he ought to have it, on account of his rank as Prince (Soubise); but the
+ Marechal de Bassompierre was not a Prince; and, by the bye, the Duc de
+ Choiseul is his grandnephew; do you know that?"&mdash;"Your Majesty is
+ better acquainted with the history of France than anybody," replied
+ Madame. Two days after this, Madame de said to me, "I have two great
+ delights; M. de Soubise will not have the Swiss guards, and Madame de
+ Marsan will be ready to burst with rage at it; this is the first: and M.
+ de Choiseul will have them; this is the greatest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ...........................
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [The whole of this passage is in a different handwriting.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a universal talk of a young lady with whom the King was as much
+ in love as it was possible for him to be. Her name was Romans. She was
+ said to be a charming girl. Madame de Pompadour knew of the King's visits,
+ and her confidantes brought her most alarming reports of the affair. The
+ Marechale de Mirepoix, who had the best head in Madame's council, was the
+ only one who encouraged her. "I do not tell you," said she, "that he loves
+ you better than her; and if she could be transported hither by the stroke
+ of a fairy's wand; if she could entertain him this evening at supper; if
+ she were familiar with all his tastes, there would, perhaps, be sufficient
+ reason for you to tremble for your power. But Princes are, above all,
+ pre-eminently the slaves of habit. The King's attachment to you is like
+ that he bears to your apartment, your furniture. You have formed yourself
+ to his manners and habits; you know how to listen and reply to his
+ stories; he is under no constraint with you; he has no fear of boring you.
+ How do you think he could have resolution to uproot all this in a day, to
+ form a new establishment, and to make a public exhibition of himself by so
+ striking a change in his arrangements?" The young lady became pregnant;
+ the reports current among the people, and even those at Court, alarmed
+ Madame dreadfully. It was said that the King meant to legitimate the
+ child, and to give the mother a title. "All that," said Madame de
+ Mirepoix, "is in the style of Louis XIV.&mdash;such dignified proceedings
+ are very unlike those of our master." Mademoiselle Romans lost all her
+ influence over the King by her indiscreet boasting. She was even treated
+ with harshness and violence, which were in no degree instigated by Madame.
+ Her house was searched, and her papers seized; but the most important,
+ those which substantiated the fact of the King's paternity, had been
+ withdrawn. At length she gave birth to a son, who was christened under the
+ name of Bourbon, son of Charles de Bourbon, Captain of Horse. The mother
+ thought the eyes of all France were fixed upon her, and beheld in her son
+ a future Duc du Maine. She suckled him herself, and she used to carry him
+ in a sort of basket to the Bois de Boulogne. Both mother and child were
+ covered with the finest laces. She sat down upon the grass in a solitary
+ spot, which, however, was soon well known, and there gave suck to her
+ royal babe. Madame had great curiosity to see her, and took me, one day,
+ to the manufactory at Sevres, without telling me what she projected. After
+ she had bought some cups, she said, "I want to go and walk in the Bois de
+ Boulogne," and gave orders to the coachman to stop at a certain spot where
+ she wished to alight. She had got the most accurate directions, and when
+ she drew near the young lady's haunt she gave me her arm, drew her bonnet
+ over her eyes, and held her pocket-handkerchief before the lower part of
+ her face. We walked, for some minutes, in a path, from whence we could see
+ the lady suckling her child. Her jet black hair was turned up, and
+ confined by a diamond comb. She looked earnestly at us. Madame bowed to
+ her, and whispered to me, pushing me by the elbow, "Speak to her." I
+ stepped forward, and exclaimed, "What a lovely child!"&mdash;"Yes,
+ Madame," replied she, "I must confess that he is, though I am his mother."
+ Madame, who had hold of my arm, trembled, and I was not very firm.
+ Mademoiselle Romans said to me, "Do you live in this neighbourhood?"&mdash;"Yes,
+ Madame," replied I, "I live at Auteuil with this lady, who is just now
+ suffering from a most dreadful toothache."&mdash;"I pity her sincerely,
+ for I know that tormenting pain well." I looked all around, for fear any
+ one should come up who might recognise us. I took courage to ask her
+ whether the child's father was a handsome man. "Very handsome, and, if I
+ told you his name, you would agree with me."&mdash;"I have the honour of
+ knowing him, then, Madame?"&mdash;"Most probably you do." Madame, fearing,
+ as I did, some rencontre, said a few words in a low tone, apologizing for
+ having intruded upon her, and we took our leave. We looked behind us,
+ repeatedly, to see if we were followed, and got into the carriage without
+ being perceived. "It must be confessed that both mother and child are
+ beautiful creatures," said Madame&mdash;"not to mention the father; the
+ infant has his eyes. If the King had come up while we were there, do you
+ think he would have recognised us?"&mdash;"I don't doubt that he would,
+ Madame, and then what an agitation I should have been in, and what a scene
+ it would have been for the bystanders! and, above all, what a surprise to
+ her!" In the evening, Madame made the King a present of the cups she had
+ bought, but she did not mention her walk, for fear Mademoiselle Romans
+ should tell him that two ladies, who knew him, had met her there such a
+ day. Madame de Mirepoix said to Madame, "Be assured, the King cares very
+ little about children; he has enough of them, and he will not be troubled
+ with the mother or the son. See what sort of notice he takes of the Comte
+ de I&mdash;&mdash;-, who is strikingly like him. He never speaks of him,
+ and I am convinced that he will never do anything for him. Again and again
+ I tell you, we do not live under Louis XIV." Madame de Mirepoix had been
+ Ambassadress to London, and had often heard the English make this remark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some alterations had been made in Madame de Pompadour's rooms, and I had
+ no longer, as heretofore, the niche in which I had been permitted to sit,
+ to hear Caffarelli, and, in later times, Mademoiselle Fel and Jeliotte. I,
+ therefore, went more frequently to my lodgings in town, where I usually
+ received my friends: more particularly when Madame visited her little
+ hermitage, whither M. de Gontaut commonly accompanied her. Madame du
+ Chiron, the wife of the Head Clerk in the War-Office, came to see me. "I
+ feel," said she, "greatly embarrassed, in speaking to you about an affair,
+ which will, perhaps, embarrass you also. This is the state of the case. A
+ very poor woman, to whom I have sometimes given a little assistance,
+ pretends to be a relation of the Marquise de Pompadour. Here is her
+ petition." I read it, and said that the woman had better write directly to
+ Madame, and that I was sure, if what she asserted was true, her
+ application would be successful. Madame du Chiron followed my advice. The
+ woman wrote she was in the lowest depth of poverty, and I learnt that
+ Madame sent her six Louis until she could gain more accurate information
+ as to the truth of her story. Colin, who was commissioned to take the
+ money, made inquiries of M. de Malvoiain, a relation of Madame, and a very
+ respectable officer. The fact was found to be as she had stated it. Madame
+ then sent her a hundred louis, and promised her a pension of sixty louis a
+ year. All this was done with great expedition, and Madame had a visit of
+ thanks from her poor relation, as soon as she had procured decent clothes
+ to come in. That day the King happened to come in at an unusual hour, and
+ saw this person going out. He asked who it was. "It is a very poor
+ relation of mine," replied Madame. "She came, then, to beg for some
+ assistance?"&mdash;"No," said she. "What did she come for, then?"&mdash;"To
+ thank me for a little service I have rendered her," said she, blushing
+ from the fear of seeming to boast of her liberality. "Well," said the
+ King; "since she is your relation, allow me to have the pleasure of
+ serving her too. I will give her fifty louis a year out of my private
+ purse, and, you know, she may send for the first year's allowance
+ to-morrow." Madame burst into tears, and kissed the King's hand several
+ times. She told me this three days afterwards, when I was nursing her in a
+ slight attack of fever. I could not refrain from weeping myself at this
+ instance of the King's kindness. The next day, I called on Madame du
+ Chiron to tell her of the good fortune of her protege; I forgot to say
+ that, after Madame had related the affair to me, I told her what part I
+ had taken in it. She approved my conduct, and allowed me to inform my
+ friend of the King's goodness. This action, which showed no less delicate
+ politeness towards her than sensibility to the sufferings of the poor
+ woman, made a deeper impression on Madame's heart than a pension of two
+ thousand a year given to herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame had terrible palpitations of the heart. Her heart actually seemed
+ to leap. She consulted several physicians. I recollect that one of them
+ made her walk up and down the room, lift a weight, and move quickly. On
+ her expressing some surprise, he said, "I do this to ascertain whether the
+ organ is diseased; in that case motion quickens the pulsation; if that
+ effect is not produced, the complaint proceeds from the nerves." I
+ repeated this to my oracle, Quesnay. He knew very little of this
+ physician, but he said his treatment was that of a clever man. His name
+ was Renard; he was scarcely known beyond the Marais. Madame often appeared
+ suffocated, and sighed continually. One day, under pretence of presenting
+ a petition to M. de Choiseul, as he was going out, I said, in a low voice,
+ that I wished to see him a few minutes on an affair of importance to my
+ mistress. He told me to come as soon as I pleased, and that I should be
+ admitted. I told him that Madame was extremely depressed; that she gave
+ way to distressing thoughts, which she would not communicate; that she,
+ one day, said to me, "The fortune-teller told me I should have time to
+ prepare myself; I believe it, for I shall be worn to death by melancholy."
+ M. de Choiseul appeared much affected; he praised my zeal, and said that
+ he had already perceived some indications of what I told him; that he
+ would not mention my name, but would try to draw from her an explanation.
+ I don't know what he said to her; but, from that time, she was much more
+ calm. One day, but long afterwards, Madame said to M. de Gontaut, "I am
+ generally thought to have great influence, but if it were not for M. de
+ Choiseul, I should not be able to obtain a Cross of St. Louis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King and Madame de Pompadour had a very high opinion of Madame de
+ Choiseul. Madame said, "She always says the right thing in the right
+ place." Madame de Grammont was not so agreeable to them; and I think that
+ this was to be attributed, in part, to the sound of her voice, and to her
+ blunt manner of speaking; for she was said to be a woman of great sense,
+ and devotedly attached to the King and Madame de Pompadour. Some people
+ pretended that she tried to captivate the King, and to supplant Madame:
+ nothing could be more false, or more ridiculously improbable. Madame saw a
+ great deal of these two ladies, who were extremely attentive to her. She
+ one day remarked to the Duc d'Ayen,&mdash;[Afterwards Marechal de
+ Noaines.] that M. de Choiseul was very fond of his sisters. "I know it,
+ Madame," said he, "and many sisters are the better for that."&mdash;"What
+ do you mean?" said she. "Why," said he, "as the Duc de Choiseul loves his
+ sister, it is thought fashionable to do the same; and I know silly girls,
+ whose brothers formerly cared nothing about them, who are now most
+ tenderly beloved. No sooner does their little finger ache, than their
+ brothers are running about to fetch physicians from all corners of Paris.
+ They flatter themselves that somebody will say, in M. de Choiseul's
+ drawing-room, 'How passionately M. de &mdash;&mdash;&mdash; loves his
+ sister; he would certainly die if he had the misfortune to lose her.'"
+ Madame related this to her brother, in my presence, adding, that she could
+ not give it in the Duke's comic manner. M. de Marigny said, "I have had
+ the start of them all, without making so much noise; and my dear little
+ sister knows that I loved her tenderly before Madame de Grammont left her
+ convent. The Duc d'Ayen, however, is not very wrong; he has made the most
+ of it in his lively manner, but it is partly true."&mdash;"I forgot,"
+ replied Madame, "that the Duke said, 'I want extremely to be in the
+ fashion, but which sister shall I take up? Madame de Caumont is a devil
+ incarnate, Madame de Villars drinks, Madame d'Armagnac is a bore, Madame
+ de la Marck is half mad.'"&mdash;"These are fine family portraits, Duke,"
+ said Madame. The Duc de Gontaut laughed, during the whole of this
+ conversation, immoderately. Madame repeated it, one day, when she kept her
+ bed. M. de G&mdash;&mdash;- also began to talk of his sister, Madame du
+ Roure. I think, at least, that is the name he mentioned. He was very gay,
+ and had the art of creating gaiety. Somebody said, he is an excellent
+ piece of furniture for a favourite. He makes her laugh, and asks for
+ nothing either for himself or for others; he cannot excite jealousy, and
+ he meddles in nothing. He was called the White Eunuch. Madame's illness
+ increased so rapidly that we were alarmed about her; but bleeding in the
+ foot cured her as if by a miracle. The King watched her with the greatest
+ solicitude; and I don't know whether his attentions did not contribute as
+ much to the cure as the bleeding. M. de Choiseul remarked, some days
+ after, that she appeared in better spirits. I told him that I thought this
+ improvement might be attributed to the same cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /> <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECRET COURT MEMOIRS OF LOUIS XVI. AND THE ROYAL FAMILY OF FRANCE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I should consider it great presumption to intrude upon the public anything
+ respecting myself, were there any other way of establishing the
+ authenticity of the facts and papers I am about to present. To the history
+ of my own peculiar situation, amid the great events I record, which made
+ me the depositary of information and documents so important, I proceed,
+ therefore, though reluctantly, without further preamble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was for many years in the confidential service of the Princesse de
+ Lamballe, and the most important materials which form my history have been
+ derived not only from the conversations, but the private papers of my
+ lamented patroness. It remains for me to show how I became acquainted with
+ Her Highness, and by what means the papers I allude to came into my
+ possession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though, from my birth, and the rank of those who were the cause of it (had
+ it not been from political motives kept from my knowledge), in point of
+ interest I ought to have been very independent, I was indebted for my
+ resources in early life to His Grace the late Duke of Norfolk and Lady
+ Mary Duncan. By them I was placed for education in the Irish Convent, Rue
+ du Bacq, Faubourg St. Germain, at Paris, where the immortal Sacchini, the
+ instructor of the Queen, gave me lessons in music. Pleased with my
+ progress, the celebrated composer, when one day teaching Marie Antoinette,
+ so highly overrated to that illustrious lady my infant natural talents and
+ acquired science in his art, in the presence of her very shadow, the
+ Princesse de Lamballe, as to excite in Her Majesty an eager desire for the
+ opportunity of hearing me, which the Princess volunteered to obtain by
+ going herself to the convent next morning with Sacchini. It was enjoined
+ upon the composer, as I afterwards learned, that he was neither to apprise
+ me who Her Highness was, nor to what motive I was indebted for her visit.
+ To this Sacchini readily agreed, adding, after disclosing to them my
+ connections and situation, "Your Majesty will be, perhaps, still more
+ surprised, when I, as an Italian, and her German master, who is a German,
+ declare that she speaks both these languages like a native, though born in
+ England; and is as well disposed to the Catholic faith, and as well versed
+ in it, as if she had been a member of that Church all her life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This last observation decided my future good fortune: there was no
+ interest in the minds of the Queen and Princess paramount to that of
+ making proselytes to their creed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Princess, faithful to her promise, accompanied Sacchini. Whether it
+ was chance, ability, or good fortune, let me not attempt to conjecture;
+ but from that moment I became the protege of this ever-regretted angel.
+ Political circumstances presently facilitated her introduction of me to
+ the Queen. My combining a readiness in the Italian and German languages,
+ with my knowledge of English and French, greatly promoted my power of
+ being useful at that crisis, which, with some claims to their confidence
+ of a higher order, made this august, lamented, injured pair more like
+ mothers to me than mistresses, till we were parted by their murder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The circumstances I have just mentioned show that to mere curiosity, the
+ characteristic passion of our sex and so often its ruin, I am to ascribe
+ the introduction, which was only prevented by events unparalleled in
+ history from proving the most fortunate in my life as it is the most
+ cherished in my recollection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be seen, in the course of the following pages, how often I was
+ employed on confidential missions, frequently by myself, and, in some
+ instances, as the attendant of the Princess. The nature of my situation,
+ the trust reposed in me, the commissions with which I was honoured, and
+ the affecting charges of which I was the bearer, flattered my pride and
+ determined me to make myself an exception to the rule that "no woman can
+ keep a secret." Few ever knew exactly where I was, what I was doing, and
+ much less the importance of my occupation. I had passed from England to
+ France, made two journeys to Italy and Germany, three to the Archduchess
+ Maria Christiana, Governess of the Low Countries, and returned back to
+ France, before any of my friends in England were aware of my retreat, or
+ of my ever having accompanied the Princess. Though my letters were written
+ and dated at Paris, they were all forwarded to England by way of Holland
+ or Germany, that no clue should be given for annoyances from idle
+ curiosity. It is to this discreetness, to this inviolable secrecy,
+ firmness, and fidelity, which I so early in life displayed to the august
+ personages who stood in need of such a person, that I owe the unlimited
+ confidence of my illustrious benefactress, through which I was furnished
+ with the valuable materials I am now submitting to the public.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was repeatedly a witness, by the side of the Princesse de Lamballe, of
+ the appalling scenes of the bonnet rouge, of murders a la lanterne, and of
+ numberless insults to the unfortunate Royal Family of Louis XVI., when the
+ Queen was generally selected as the most marked victim of malicious
+ indignity. Having had the honour of so often beholding this much injured
+ Queen, and never without remarking how amiable in her manners, how
+ condescendingly kind in her deportment towards every one about her, how
+ charitably generous, and withal, how beautiful she was,&mdash;I looked
+ upon her as a model of perfection. But when I found the public feeling so
+ much at variance with my own, the difference became utterly unaccountable.
+ I longed for some explanation of the mystery. One day I was insulted in
+ the Tuileries, because I had alighted from my horse to walk there without
+ wearing the national ribbon. On this I met the Princess: the conversation
+ which grew out of my adventure emboldened me to question her on a theme to
+ me inexplicable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What," asked I, "can it be which makes the people so outrageous against
+ the Queen?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Highness condescended to reply in the complimentary terms which I am
+ about to relate, but without answering my question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My dear friend!" exclaimed she, "for from this moment I beg you will
+ consider me in that light, never having been blessed with children of my
+ own, I feel there is no way of acquitting myself of the obligations you
+ have heaped upon me, by the fidelity with which you have executed the
+ various commissions entrusted to your charge, but by adopting you as one
+ of my own family. I am satisfied with you, yes, highly satisfied with you,
+ on the score of your religious principles; and as soon as the troubles
+ subside, and we have a little calm after them, my father-in-law and myself
+ will be present at the ceremony of your confirmation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The goodness of my benefactress silenced me gratitude would not allow me
+ to persevere for the moment. But from what I had already seen of Her
+ Majesty the Queen, I was too much interested to lose sight of my object,&mdash;not,
+ let me be believed, from idle womanish curiosity, but from that real,
+ strong, personal interest which I, in common with all who ever had the
+ honour of being in her presence, felt for that much-injured, most engaging
+ sovereign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A propitious circumstance unexpectedly occurred, which gave me an
+ opportunity, without any appearance of officious earnestness, to renew the
+ attempt to gain the end I had in view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was riding in the carriage with the Princesse de Lamballe, when a lady
+ drove by, who saluted my benefactress with marked attention and respect.
+ There was something in the manner of the Princess, after receiving the
+ salute, which impelled me, spite of myself, to ask who the lady was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madame de Genlis," exclaimed Her Highness, with a shudder of disgust,
+ "that lamb's face with a wolf's heart, and a fog's cunning." Or, to quote
+ her own Italian phrase which I have here translated, "colla faccia
+ d'agnello, il cuore dun lupo, a la dritura della volpe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the course of these pages the cause of this strong feeling against
+ Madame de Genlis will be explained. To dwell on it now would only turn me
+ aside from my narrative. To pursue my story, therefore:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we arrived at my lodgings (which were then, for private reasons, at
+ the Irish Convent, where Sacchini and other masters attended to further me
+ in the accomplishments of the fine arts), "Sing me something," said the
+ Princess, "'Cantate mi qualche cosa', for I never see that woman" (meaning
+ Madame de Genlis) "but I feel ill and out of humour. I wish it may not be
+ the foreboding of some great evil!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sang a little rondo, in which Her Highness and the Queen always
+ delighted, and which they would never set me free without making me sing,
+ though I had given them twenty before it.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The rondo I allude to was written by Sarti for the celebrated Marches!
+ Lungi da to ben mio, and is the same in which he was so successful in
+ England, when he introduced it in London in the opera of Giulo Sabino.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ Her Highness honoured me with even more than usual praise. I kissed the
+ hand which had so generously applauded my infant talents, and said, "Now,
+ my dearest Princess, as you are so kind and good-humoured, tell me
+ something about the Queen!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at me with her eyes full of tears. For an instant they stood in
+ their sockets as if petrified: and then, after a pause, "I cannot,"
+ answered she in Italian, as she usually did, "I cannot refuse you
+ anything. 'Non posso neyarti niente'. It would take me an age to tell you
+ the many causes which have conspired against this much-injured Queen! I
+ fear none who are near her person will escape the threatening storm that
+ hovers over our heads. The leading causes of the clamour against her have
+ been, if you must know, Nature; her beauty; her power of pleasing; her
+ birth; her rank; her marriage; the King himself; her mother; her imperfect
+ education; and, above all, her unfortunate partialities for the Abbe
+ Vermond; for the Duchesse de Polignac; for myself, perhaps; and last, but
+ not least, the thorough, unsuspecting goodness of her heart!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, since you seem to be so much concerned for her exalted, persecuted
+ Majesty, you shall have a Journal I myself began on my first coming to
+ France, and which I have continued ever since I have been honoured with
+ the confidence of Her Majesty, in graciously giving me that unlooked-for
+ situation at the head of her household, which honour and justice prevent
+ my renouncing under any difficulties, and which I never will quit but with
+ my life!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She wept as she spoke, and her last words were almost choked with sobs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeing her so much affected, I humbly begged pardon for having
+ unintentionally caused her tears, and begged permission to accompany her
+ to the Tuileries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," said she, "you have hitherto conducted yourself with a profound
+ prudence, which has insured you my confidence. Do not let your curiosity
+ change your system. You shall have the Journal. But be careful. Read it
+ only by yourself, and do not show it to any one. On these conditions you
+ shall have it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was in the act of promising, when Her Highness stopped me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I want no particular promises. I have sufficient proofs of your adherence
+ to truth. Only answer me simply in the affirmative."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I said I would certainly obey her injunctions most religiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She then left me, and directed that I should walk in a particular part of
+ the private alleys of the Tuileries, between three and four o'clock in the
+ afternoon. I did so; and from her own hand I there received her private
+ Journal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the following September of this same year (1792) she was murdered!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Journalising copiously, for the purpose of amassing authentic materials
+ for the future historian, was always a favourite practice of the French,
+ and seems to have been particularly in vogue in the age I mention. The
+ press has sent forth whole libraries of these records since the
+ Revolution, and it is notorious that Louis XV. left Secret Memoirs,
+ written by his own hand, of what passed before this convulsion; and had
+ not the papers of the Tuileries shared in the wreck of royalty, it would
+ have been seen that Louis XVI. had made some progress in the memoirs of
+ his time; and even his beautiful and unfortunate Queen had herself made
+ extensive notes and collections for the record of her own disastrous
+ career. Hence it must be obvious how one so nearly connected in situation
+ and suffering with her much-injured mistress, as the Princesse de
+ Lamballe, would naturally fall into a similar habit had she even no
+ stronger temptation than fashion and example. But self-communion, by means
+ of the pen, is invariably the consolation of strong feeling, and
+ reflecting minds under great calamities, especially when their intercourse
+ with the world has been checked or poisoned by its malice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor of these pages herself fell into the habit of which she speaks;
+ and it being usual with her benefactress to converse with all the
+ unreserve which every honest mind shows when it feels it can confide, her
+ humble attendant, not to lose facts of such importance, commonly made
+ notes of what she heard. In any other person's hands the Journal of the
+ Princess would have been incomplete; especially as it was written in a
+ rambling manner, and was never intended for publication. But connected by
+ her confidential conversations with me, and the recital of the events to
+ which I personally bear testimony, I trust it will be found the basis of a
+ satisfactory record, which I pledge myself to be a true one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not know, however, that, at my time of life, and after a lapse of
+ thirty years, I should have been roused to the arrangement of the papers
+ which I have combined to form this narrative, had I not met with the work
+ of Madame Campan upon the same subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This lady has said much that is true respecting the Queen; but she has
+ omitted much, and much she has misrepresented: not, I dare say, purposely,
+ but from ignorance, and being wrongly informed. She was often absent from
+ the service, and on such occasions must have been compelled to obtain her
+ knowledge at second-hand. She herself told me, in 1803, at Rouen, that at
+ a very important epoch the peril of her life forced her from the seat of
+ action. With the Princesse de Lamballe, who was so much about the Queen,
+ she never had any particular connexion. The Princess certainly esteemed
+ her for her devotedness to the Queen; but there was a natural reserve in
+ the Princess's character, and a mistrust resulting from circumstances of
+ all those who saw much company, as Madame Campan did. Hence no intimacy
+ was encouraged. Madame Campan never came to the Princess without being
+ sent for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An attempt has been made since the Revolution utterly to destroy faith in
+ the alleged attachment of Madame Campan to the Queen, by the fact of her
+ having received the daughters of many of the regicides for education into
+ her establishment at Rouen. Far be it from me to sanction so unjust a
+ censure. Although what I mention hurt her character very much in the
+ estimation of her former friends, and constituted one of the grounds of
+ the dissolution of her establishment at Rouen, on the restoration of the
+ Bourbons, and may possibly in some degree have deprived her of such aids
+ from their adherents as might have made her work unquestionable, yet what
+ else, let me ask, could have been done by one dependent upon her exertions
+ for support, and in the power of Napoleon's family and his emissaries? On
+ the contrary, I would give my public testimony in favour of the fidelity
+ of her feelings, though in many instances I must withhold it from the
+ fidelity of her narrative. Her being utterly isolated from the illustrious
+ individual nearest to the Queen must necessarily leave much to be desired
+ in her record. During the whole term of the Princesse de Lamballe's
+ superintendence of the Queen's household, Madame Campan never had any
+ special communication with my benefactress, excepting once, about the
+ things which were to go to Brussels, before the journey to Varennes; and
+ once again, relative to a person of the Queen's household, who had
+ received the visits of Petion, the Mayor of Paris, at her private
+ lodgings. This last communication I myself particularly remember, because
+ on that occasion the Princess, addressing me in her own native language,
+ Madame Campan, observing it, considered me as an Italian, till, by a
+ circumstance I shall presently relate, she was undeceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I should anticipate the order of events, and incur the necessity of
+ speaking twice of the same things, were I here to specify the express
+ errors in the work of Madame Campan. Suffice it now that I observe
+ generally her want of knowledge of the Princesse de Lamballe; her omission
+ of many of the most interesting circumstances of the Revolution; her
+ silence upon important anecdotes of the King, the Queen, and several
+ members of the first assembly; her mistakes concerning the Princesse de
+ Lamballe's relations with the Duchesse de Polignac, Comte de Fersan,
+ Mirabeau, the Cardinal de Rohan, and others; her great miscalculation of
+ the time when the Queen's confidence in Barnave began, and when that of
+ the Empress-mother in Rohan ended; her misrepresentation of particulars
+ relating to Joseph II.; and her blunders concerning the affair of the
+ necklace, and regarding the libel Madame Lamotte published in England,
+ with the connivance of Calonne:&mdash;all these will be considered, with
+ numberless other statements equally requiring correction in their turn.
+ What she has omitted I trust I shall supply; and where she has gone astray
+ I hope to set her right; that, between the two, the future biographer of
+ my august benefactresses may be in no want of authentic materials to do
+ full justice to their honoured memories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I said in a preceding paragraph that I should relate a circumstance about
+ Madame Campan, which happened after she had taken me for an Italian and
+ before she was aware of my being in the service of the Princess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Campan, though she had seen me not only at the time I mention but
+ before and after, had always passed me without notice. One Sunday, when in
+ the gallery of the Tuileries with Madame de Stael, the Queen, with her
+ usual suite, of which Madame Campan formed one, was going, according to
+ custom, to hear Mass, Her Majesty perceived me and most graciously
+ addressed me in German. Madame Campan appeared greatly surprised at this,
+ but walked on and said nothing. Ever afterwards, however, she treated me
+ whenever we met with marked civility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another edition of Boswell to those who got a nod from Dr. Johnson!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader will find in the course of this work that on the 2nd of August,
+ 1792, from the kindness and humanity of my august benefactresses, I was
+ compelled to accept a mission to Italy, devised merely to send me from the
+ sanguinary scenes of which they foresaw they and theirs must presently
+ become victims. Early in the following month the Princesse de Lamballe was
+ murdered. As my history extends beyond the period I have mentioned, it is
+ fitting I should explain the indisputable authorities whence I derived
+ such particulars as I did not see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A person, high in the confidence of the Princess, through the means of the
+ honest coachman of whom I shall have occasion to speak, supplied me with
+ regular details of whatever took place, till she herself, with the rest of
+ the ladies and other attendants, being separated from the Royal Family,
+ was immured in the prison of La Force. When I returned to Paris after this
+ dire tempest, Madame Clery and her friend, Madame de Beaumont, a natural
+ daughter of Louis XV., with Monsieur Chambon of Rheims, who never left
+ Paris during the time, confirmed the correctness of my papers. The Madame
+ Clery I mention is the same who assisted her husband in his faithful
+ attendance upon the Royal Family in the Temple; and this exemplary man
+ added his testimony to the rest, in the presence of the Duchesse de Guiche
+ Grammont, at Pyrmont in Germany, when I there met him in the suite of the
+ late sovereign of France, Louis XVIII., at a concert. After the 10th of
+ August, I had also a continued correspondence: with many persons at Paris,
+ who supplied me with thorough accounts of the succeeding horrors, in
+ letters directed to Sir William Hamilton, at Naples, and by him forwarded
+ to me. And in addition to all these high sources, many particular
+ circumstances: have been disclosed to me by individuals, whose authority,
+ when I have used it, I have generally affixed to the facts they have
+ enabled me to communicate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It now only remains for me to mention that I have endeavoured to arrange
+ everything, derived either from the papers of the Princesse de Lamballe,
+ or from her remarks, my own observation, or the intelligence of others, in
+ chronological order. It will readily be seen by the reader where the
+ Princess herself speaks, as I have invariably set apart my own
+ recollections and remarks in paragraphs and notes, which are not only
+ indicated by the heading of each chapter, but by the context of the
+ passages themselves. I have also begun and ended what the Princess says
+ with inverted commas. All the earlier part, of the work preceding her
+ personal introduction proceeds principally from her pen or her lips: I
+ have done little more than change it from Italian into English, and embody
+ thoughts and sentiments that were often disjointed and detached. And
+ throughout, whether she or others speak, I may safely say this work will
+ be found the most circumstantial, and assuredly the most authentic, upon
+ the subject of which it treats, of all that have yet been presented to the
+ public of Great Britain. The press has been prolific in fabulous writings
+ upon these times, which have been devoured with avidity. I hope John Bull
+ is not so devoted to gilded foreign fictions as to spurn the unadorned
+ truth from one of his downright countrywomen: and let me advise him en
+ passant, not to treat us beauties of native growth with indifference at
+ home; for we readily find compensation in the regard, patronage, and
+ admiration of every nation in Europe. I am old now, and may speak freely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have no interest whatever in the work I submit but that of endeavouring
+ to redeem the character of so many injured victims. Would to Heaven my
+ memory were less acute, and that I could obliterate from the knowledge of
+ the world and posterity the names of their infamous destroyers; I mean,
+ not the executioners who terminated their mortal existence for in their
+ miserable situation that early martyrdom was an act of grace&mdash;but I
+ mean some, perhaps still living, who with foul cowardice, stabbing like
+ assassins in the dark, undermined their fair fame, and morally murdered
+ them, long before their deaths, by daily traducing virtues the slanderers
+ never possessed, from mere jealousy of the glory they knew themselves
+ incapable of deserving.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Montesquieu says, "If there be a God, He must be just!" That divine
+ justice, after centuries, has been fully established on the descendants of
+ the cruel, sanguinary conquerers of South America and its butchered
+ harmless Emperor Montezuma and his innocent offspring, who are now
+ teaching Spain a moral lesson in freeing themselves from its insatiable
+ thirst for blood and wealth, while God Himself has refused that blessing
+ to the Spaniards which they denied to the Americans! Oh, France! what hast
+ thou not already suffered, and what hast thou not yet to suffer, when to
+ thee, like Spain, it shall visit their descendants even unto the fourth
+ generation?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To my insignificant losses in so mighty a ruin perhaps I ought not to
+ allude. I should not presume even to mention that fatal convulsion which
+ shook all Europe and has since left the nations in that state of agitated
+ undulation which succeeds a tempest upon the ocean, were it not for the
+ opportunity it gives me to declare the bounty of my benefactresses. All my
+ own property went down in the wreck; and the mariner who escapes only with
+ his life can never recur to the scene of his escape without a shudder.
+ Many persons are still living, of the first respectability, who well
+ remember my quitting this country, though very young, on the budding of a
+ brilliant career. Had those prospects been followed up they would have
+ placed me beyond the caprice of fickle fortune. But the dazzling lustre of
+ crown favours and princely patronage outweighed the slow, though more
+ solid hopes of self-achieved independence. I certainly was then almost a
+ child, and my vanity, perhaps, of the honour of being useful to two such
+ illustrious personages got the better of every other sentiment. But now
+ when I reflect, I look back with consternation on the many risks I ran, on
+ the many times I stared death in the face with no fear but that of being
+ obstructed in my efforts to serve, even with my life, the interests
+ dearest to my heart&mdash;that of implicit obedience to these truly
+ benevolent and generous Princesses, who only wanted the means to render me
+ as happy and independent as their cruel destiny has since made me wretched
+ and miserable! Had not death deprived me of their patronage I should have
+ had no reason to regret any sacrifice I could have made for them, for
+ through the Princess, Her Majesty, unasked, had done me the honour to
+ promise me the reversion of a most lucrative as well as highly respectable
+ post in her employ. In these august personages I lost my best friends; I
+ lost everything&mdash;except the tears, which bathe the paper as I write
+ tears of gratitude, which will never cease to flow to the memory of their
+ martyrdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /> <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION II.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ JOURNAL COMMNENCED:
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ "The character of Maria Theresa, the Empress-mother of Marie Antoinette,
+ is sufficiently known. The same spirit of ambition and enterprise which
+ had already animated her contentions with France in the latter part of her
+ career impelled her to wish for its alliance. In addition to other hopes
+ she had been encouraged to imagine that LOUIS XV. might one day aid her in
+ recovering the provinces which the King of Prussia had violently wrested
+ from her ancient dominions. She felt the many advantages to be derived
+ from a union with her ancient enemy, and she looked for its accomplishment
+ by the marriage of her daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Policy, in sovereigns, is paramount to every other consideration. They
+ regard beauty as a source of profit, like managers of theatres, who, when
+ a female candidate is offered, ask whether she is young and handsome,&mdash;not
+ whether she has talent. Maria Theresa believed that her daughter's beauty
+ would prove more powerful over France than her own armies. Like Catharine
+ II., her envied contemporary, she consulted no ties of nature in the
+ disposal of her children,&mdash;a system more in character where the knout
+ is the logician than among nations boasting higher civilization: indeed
+ her rivalry with Catharine even made her grossly neglect their education.
+ Jealous of the rising power of the North, she saw that it was the purpose
+ of Russia to counteract her views in Poland and Turkey through France, and
+ so totally forgot her domestic duties in the desire to thwart the
+ ascendency of Catharine that she often suffered eight or ten days to go by
+ without even seeing her children, allowing even the essential sources of
+ instruction to remain unprovided. Her very caresses were scarcely given
+ but for display, when the children were admitted to be shown to some great
+ personage; and if they were overwhelmed with kindness, it was merely to
+ excite a belief that they were the constant care and companions of her
+ leisure hours. When they grew up they became the mere instruments of her
+ ambition. The fate of one of them will show how their mother's worldliness
+ was rewarded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A leading object of Maria Theresa's policy was the attainment of
+ influence over Italy. For this purpose she first married one of the
+ Archduchesses to the imbecile Duke of Parma. Her second manoeuvre was to
+ contrive that Charles III. should seek the Archduchess Josepha for his
+ younger son, the King of Naples. When everything had been settled, and the
+ ceremony by proxy had taken place, it was thought proper to sound the
+ Princess as to how far she felt inclined to aid her mother's designs in
+ the Court of Naples. 'Scripture says,' was her reply, 'that when a woman
+ is married she belongs to the country of her husband.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'But the policy of State?' exclaimed Maria Theresa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Is that above religion?' cried the Princess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This unexpected answer of the Archduchess was so totally opposite to the
+ views of the Empress that she was for a considerable time undecided
+ whether she would allow her daughter to depart, till, worn out by
+ perplexities, she at last consented, but bade the Archduchess, previous to
+ setting off for this much desired country of her new husband, to go down
+ to the tombs, and in the vaults of her ancestors offer up to Heaven a
+ fervent prayer for the departed souls of those she was about to leave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Only a few days before that a Princess had been buried in the vaults&mdash;I
+ think Joseph the Second's second wife, who had died of the small-pox.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Archduchess Josepha obeyed her Imperial mother's cruel commands, took
+ leave of all her friends and relatives, as if conscious of the result,
+ caught the same disease, and in a few days died!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Archduchess Carolina was now tutored to become her sister's
+ substitute, and when deemed adequately qualified was sent to Naples, where
+ she certainly never forgot she was an Austrian nor the interest of the
+ Court of Vienna. One circumstance concerning her and her mother fully
+ illustrates the character of both. On the marriage, the Archduchess found
+ that Spanish etiquette did not allow the Queen to have the honour of
+ dining at the same table as the King. She apprised her mother. Maria
+ Theresa instantly wrote to the Marchese Tenucei, then Prime Minister at
+ the Court of Naples, to say that, if her daughter, now Queen of Naples,
+ was to be considered less than the King her husband, she would send an
+ army to fetch her back to Vienna, and the King might purchase a Georgian
+ slave, for an Austrian Princess should not be thus humbled. Maria Theresa
+ need not have given herself all this trouble, for before, the letter
+ arrived the Queen of Naples had dismissed all the Ministry, upset the
+ Cabinet of Naples, and turned out even the King himself from her
+ bedchamber! So much for the overthrow of Spanish etiquette by Austrian
+ policy. The King of Spain became outrageous at the influence of Maria
+ Theresa, but there was no alternative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The other daughter of the Empress was married, as I have observed
+ already, to the Duke of Parma for the purpose of promoting the Austrian
+ strength in Italy against that of France, to which the Court of, Parma, as
+ well as that of Modena, had been long attached.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The fourth Archduchess, Marie Antoinette, being the youngest and most
+ beautiful of the family, was destined for France. There were three older
+ than Marie Antoinette; but she, being much lovelier than her sisters, was
+ selected on account of her charms. Her husband was never considered by the
+ contrivers of the scheme: he was known to have no sway whatever, not even
+ in the choice of his own wife! But the character of Louis XV. was
+ recollected, and calculations drawn from it, upon the probable power which
+ youth and beauty might obtain over such a King and Court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was during the time when Madame de Pompadour directed, not only the
+ King, but all France with most despotic sway, that the union of the
+ Archduchess Marie Antoinette with the grandson of Louis XV. was proposed.
+ The plan received the warmest support of Choiseul, then Minister, and the
+ ardent co-operation of Pompadour. Indeed it was to her, the Duc de
+ Choiseul, and the Comte de Mercy, the whole affair may be ascribed. So
+ highly was she flattered by the attention with which Maria Theresa
+ distinguished her, in consequence of her zeal, by presents and by the
+ title 'dear cousin,' which she used in writing to her, that she left no
+ stone unturned till the proxy of the Dauphin was sent to Vienna, to marry
+ Marie Antoinette in his name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All the interest by which this union was supported could not, however,
+ subdue a prejudice against it, not only among many of the Court, the
+ Cabinet, and the nation, but in the Royal Family itself. France has never
+ looked with complacency upon alliances with the House of Austria: enemies
+ to this one avowed themselves as soon as it was declared. The daughters of
+ Louis XV. openly expressed their aversion; but the stronger influence
+ prevailed, and Marie Antoinette became the Dauphine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Brienne, Archbishop of Toulouse, and afterwards of Sens, suggested the
+ appointment of the Librarian of the College des Quatre Nations, the Abbe
+ Vermond, as instructor to the Dauphine in French. The Abbe Vermond was
+ accordingly despatched by Louis XV. to Vienna. The consequences of this
+ appointment will be seen in the sequel. Perhaps not the least fatal of
+ them arose from his gratitude to the Archbishop, who recommended him. Some
+ years afterwards, in influencing his pupil, when Queen, to help Brienne to
+ the Ministry, he did her and her kingdom more injury than their worst
+ foes. Of the Abbe's power over Marie Antoinette there are various
+ opinions; of his capacity there is but one&mdash;he was superficial and
+ cunning. On his arrival at Vienna he became the tool of Maria Theresa.
+ While there, he received a salary as the daughter's tutor, and when he
+ returned to France, a much larger one as the mother's spy. He was more
+ ambitious to be thought a great man, in his power over his pupil, than a
+ rich one. He was too Jesuitical to wish to be deemed rich. He knew that
+ superfluous emoluments would soon have overthrown the authority he derived
+ from conferring, rather than receiving favours; and hence he never soared
+ to any higher post. He was generally considered to be disinterested. How
+ far his private fortunes benefited by his station has never appeared; nor
+ is it known whether, by the elevation of his friend and patron to the
+ Ministry in the time of Louis XVI., he gained anything beyond the
+ gratification of vanity, from having been the cause: it is probable he did
+ not, for if he had, from the general odium against that promotion, no
+ doubt it would have been exposed, unless the influence of the Queen was
+ his protection, as it proved in so many cases where he grossly erred. From
+ the first he was an evil to Marie Antoinette; and ultimately habit
+ rendered him a necessary evil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The education of the Dauphine was circumscribed; though very free in her
+ manners, she was very deficient in other respects; and hence it was she so
+ much avoided all society of females who were better informed than herself,
+ courting in preference the lively tittle-tattle of the other sex, who
+ were, in turn, better pleased with the gaieties of youth and beauty than
+ the more substantial logical witticisms of antiquated Court-dowagers. To
+ this may be ascribed her ungovernable passion for great societies, balls,
+ masquerades, and all kinds of public and private amusements, as well as
+ her subsequent attachment to the Duchesse de Polignac, who so much
+ encouraged them for the pastime of her friend and sovereign. Though
+ naturally averse to everything requiring study or application, Marie
+ Antoinette was very assiduous in preparing herself for the parts she
+ performed in the various comedies, farces, and cantatas given at her
+ private theatre; and their acquirement seemed to cost her no trouble.
+ These innocent diversions became a source of calumny against her; yet they
+ formed almost the only part of her German education, about which Maria
+ Theresa had been particular: the Empress-mother deemed them so valuable to
+ her children that she ordered the celebrated Metastasio to write some of
+ his most sublime cantatas for the evening recreations of her sisters and
+ herself. And what can more conduce to elegant literary knowledge, or be
+ less dangerous to the morals of the young, than domestic recitation of the
+ finest flights of the intellect? Certain it is that Marie Antoinette never
+ forgot her idolatry of her master Metastasio; and it would have been well
+ for her had all concerned in her education done her equal justice. The
+ Abbe Vermond encouraged these studies; and the King himself afterwards
+ sanctioned the translation of the works of his Queen's revered instructor,
+ and their publication at her own expense, in a superb edition, that she
+ might gratify her fondness the more conveniently by reciting them in
+ French. When Marie Antoinette herself became a mother, and oppressed from
+ the change of circumstances, she regretted much that she had not in early
+ life cultivated her mind more extensively. 'What a resource,' would she
+ exclaim, is a mind well stored against human casualties!' She determined
+ to avoid in her own offspring the error, of which she felt herself the
+ victim, committed by her Imperial mother, for whose fault, though she
+ suffered, she would invent excuses. 'The Empress,' she would say, was left
+ a young widow with ten or twelve children; she had been accustomed, even
+ during the Emperor's life, to head her vast empire, and she thought it
+ would be unjust to sacrifice to her own children the welfare of the
+ numerous family which afterwards devolved upon her exclusive government
+ and protection.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Most unfortunately for Marie Antoinette, her great supporter, Madame de
+ Pompadour, died before the Archduchess came to France. The pilot who was
+ to steer the young mariner safe into port was no more, when she arrived at
+ it. The Austrian interest had sunk with its patroness. The intriguers of
+ the Court no sooner saw the King without an avowed favourite than they
+ sought to give him one who should further their own views and crush the
+ Choiseul party, which had been sustained by Pompadour. The licentious Duc
+ de Richelieu was the pander on this occasion. The low, vulgar Du Barry was
+ by him introduced to the King, and Richelieu had the honour of enthroning
+ a successor to Pompadour, and supplying Louis XV. with the last of his
+ mistresses. Madame de Grammont, who had been the royal confidante during
+ the interregnum, gave up to the rising star. The effect of a new power was
+ presently seen in new events. All the Ministers known to be attached to
+ the Austrian interest were dismissed; and the time for the arrival of the
+ young bride, the Archduchess of Austria, who was about to be installed
+ Dauphine of France, was at hand, and she came to meet scarcely a friend,
+ and many foes&mdash;of whom even her beauty, her gentleness, and her
+ simplicity, were doomed to swell the phalanx."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the marriage night, Louis XV. said gaily to the Dauphin, who was
+ supping with his usual heartiness, 'Don't overcharge your stomach
+ to-night.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Why, I always sleep best after a hearty supper,' replied the Dauphin,
+ with the greatest coolness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The supper being ended, he accompanied his Dauphine to her chamber, and
+ at the door, with the greatest politeness, wished her a good night. Next
+ morning, upon his saying, when he met her at breakfast, that he hoped she
+ had slept well, Marie Antoinette replied, 'Excellently well, for I had no
+ one to disturb me!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Princesse de Guemenee, who was then at the head of the household, on
+ hearing the Dauphine moving very early in her apartment, ventured to enter
+ it, and, not seeing the Dauphin, exclaimed, 'Bless me! he is risen as
+ usual!'&mdash;'Whom do you mean?' asked Marie Antoinette. The Princess
+ misconstruing the interrogation, was going to retire, when the Dauphine
+ said, 'I have heard a great deal of French politeness, but I think I am
+ married to the most polite of the nation!'&mdash;'What, then, he is
+ risen?'&mdash;'No, no, no!' exclaimed the Dauphine, 'there has been no
+ rising; he has never lain down here. He left me at the door of my
+ apartment with his hat in his hand, and hastened from me as if embarrassed
+ with my person!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After Marie Antoinette became a mother she would often laugh and tell
+ Louis XVI. of his bridal politeness, and ask him if in the interim between
+ that and the consummation he had studied his maiden aunts or his tutor on
+ the subject. On this he would laugh most excessively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Scarcely was Marie Antoinette seated in her new country before the
+ virulence of Court intrigue against her became active. She was beset on
+ all sides by enemies open and concealed, who never slackened their
+ persecutions. All the family of Louis XV., consisting of those maiden
+ aunts of the Dauphin just adverted to (among whom Madame Adelaide was
+ specially implacable), were incensed at the marriage, not only from their
+ hatred to Austria, but because it had accomplished the ambition of an
+ obnoxious favourite to give a wife to the Dauphin of their kingdom. On the
+ credulous and timid mind of the Prince, then in the leading strings of
+ this pious sisterhood, they impressed the misfortunes to his country and
+ to the interest of the Bourbon family, which must spring from the Austrian
+ influence through the medium of his bride. No means were left unessayed to
+ steel him against her sway. I remember once to have heard Her Majesty
+ remark to Louis XVI., in answer to some particular observations he made,
+ 'These, Sire, are the sentiments of our aunts, I am sure.' And, indeed,
+ great must have been their ascendency over him in youth, for up to a late
+ date he entertained a very high respect for their capacity and judgment.
+ Great indeed must it have been to have prevailed against all the seducing
+ allurements of a beautiful and fascinating young bride, whose amiableness,
+ vivacity, and wit became the universal admiration, and whose graceful
+ manner of address few ever equalled and none ever surpassed; nay, even so
+ to have prevailed as to form one of the great sources of his aversion to
+ consummate the marriage! Since the death of the late Queen, their mother,
+ these four Princesses (who, it was said, if old maids, were not so from
+ choice) had received and performed the exclusive honours of the Court. It
+ could not have diminished their dislike for the young and lovely new-comer
+ to see themselves under the necessity of abandoning their dignities and
+ giving up their station. So eager were they to contrive themes of
+ complaint against her, that when she visited them in the simple attire in
+ which she so much delighted, 'sans ceremonie', unaccompanied by a troop of
+ horse and a squadron of footguards, they complained to their father, who
+ hinted to Marie Antoinette that such a relaxation of the royal dignity
+ would be attended with considerable injury to French manufactures, to
+ trade, and to the respect due to her rank. 'My State and Court dresses,'
+ replied she, 'shall not be less brilliant than those of any former
+ Dauphine or Queen of France, if such be the pleasure of the King,&mdash;but
+ to my grandpapa I appeal for some indulgence with respect to my undress
+ private costume of the morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was dangerous for one in whose conduct so many prying eyes were
+ seeking for sources of accusation to gratify herself even by the overthrow
+ of an absurdity, when that overthrow might incur the stigma of innovation.
+ The Court of Versailles was jealous of its Spanish inquisitorial
+ etiquette. It had been strictly wedded to its pageantries since the time
+ of the great Anne of Austria. The sagacious and prudent provisions of this
+ illustrious contriver were deemed the ne plus ultra of royal female
+ policy. A cargo of whalebone was yearly obtained by her to construct such
+ stays for the Maids of Honour as might adequately conceal the Court
+ accidents which generally&mdash;poor ladies!&mdash;befell them in rotation
+ every nine months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But Marie Antoinette could not sacrifice her predilection for a
+ simplicity quite English, to prudential considerations. Indeed, she was
+ too young to conceive it even desirable. So much did she delight in being
+ unshackled by finery that she would hurry from Court to fling off her
+ royal robes and ornaments, exclaiming, when freed from them, 'Thank
+ Heaven, I am out of harness!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But she had natural advantages, which gave her enemies a pretext for
+ ascribing this antipathy to the established fashion to mere vanity. It is
+ not impossible that she might have derived some pleasure from displaying a
+ figure so beautiful, with no adornment except its native gracefulness; but
+ how great must have been the chagrin of the Princesses, of many of the
+ Court ladies, indeed, of all in any way ungainly or deformed, when called
+ to exhibit themselves by the side of a bewitching person like hers,
+ unaided by the whalebone and horse-hair paddings with which they had
+ hitherto been made up, and which placed the best form on a level with the
+ worst? The prudes who practised illicitly, and felt the convenience of a
+ guise which so well concealed the effect of their frailties, were neither
+ the least formidable nor the least numerous of the enemies created by this
+ revolution of costume; and the Dauphine was voted by common consent&mdash;for
+ what greater crime could there be in France?&mdash;the heretic Martin
+ Luther of female fashions! The four Princesses, her aunts, were as bitter
+ against the disrespect with which the Dauphine treated the armour, which
+ they called dress, as if they themselves had benefited by the immunities
+ it could, confer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed, most of the old Court ladies embattled themselves against Marie
+ Antoinette's encroachments upon their habits. The leader of them was a
+ real medallion, whose costume, character, and notions spoke a genealogy
+ perfectly antediluvian; who even to the latter days of Louis XV., amid a
+ Court so irregular, persisted in her precision. So systematic a supporter
+ of the antique could be no other than the declared foe of any change, and,
+ of course, deemed the desertion of large sack gowns, monstrous Court
+ hoops, and the old notions of appendages attached to them, for tight
+ waists and short petticoats, an awful demonstration of the depravity of
+ the time!&mdash;[The editor needs scarcely add, that the allusion of the
+ Princess is to Madame de Noailles.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This lady had been first lady to the sole Queen of Louis XV. She was
+ retained in the same station for Marie Antoinette. Her motions were
+ regulated like clock-work. So methodical was she in all her operations of
+ mind and body, that, from the beginning of the year to its end, she never
+ deviated a moment. Every hour had its peculiar occupation. Her element was
+ etiquette, but the etiquette of ages before the flood. She had her rules
+ even for the width of petticoats, that the Queens and Princesses might
+ have no temptation to straddle over a rivulet, or crossing, of unroyal
+ size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen of Louis XV. having been totally subservient in her movements
+ night and day to the wishes of the Comtesse de Noailles, it will be
+ readily conceived how great a shock this lady must have sustained on being
+ informed one morning that the Dauphine had actually risen in the night,
+ and her ladyship not by to witness a ceremony from which most ladies would
+ have felt no little pleasure in being spared, but which, on this occasion,
+ admitted of no delay! Notwithstanding the Dauphine excused herself by the
+ assurance of the urgency allowing no time to call the Countess, she nearly
+ fainted at not having been present at that, which others sometimes faint
+ at, if too near! This unaccustomed watchfulness so annoyed Marie
+ Antoinette, that, determined to laugh her out of it, she ordered an
+ immense bottle of hartshorn to be placed upon her toilet. Being asked what
+ use was to be made of the hartshorn, she said it was to prevent her first
+ Lady of Honour from falling into hysterics when the calls of nature were
+ uncivil enough to exclude her from being of the party. This, as may be
+ presumed, had its desired effect, and Marie Antoinette was ever afterwards
+ allowed free access at least to one of her apartments, and leave to
+ perform that in private which few individuals except Princesses do with
+ parade and publicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These things, however, planted the seeds of rancour against Marie
+ Antoinette, which Madame de Noailles carried with her to the grave. It
+ will be seen that she declared against her at a crisis of great
+ importance. The laughable title of Madame Etiquette, which the Dauphine
+ gave her, clung to her through life; though conferred only in merriment,
+ it never was forgiven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Dauphine seemed to be under a sort of fatality with regard to all
+ those who had any power of doing her mischief either with her husband or
+ the Court. The Duc de Vauguyon, the Dauphin's tutor, who both from
+ principle and interest hated everything Austrian, and anything whatever
+ which threatened to lessen his despotic influence so long exercised over
+ the mind of his pupil, which he foresaw would be endangered were the
+ Prince once out of his leading-strings and swayed by a young wife, made
+ use of all the influence which old courtiers can command over the minds
+ they have formed (more generally for their own ends than those of
+ uprightness) to poison that of the young Prince against his bride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never were there more intrigues among the female slaves in the Seraglio
+ of Constantinople for the Grand Signior's handkerchief than were
+ continually harassing one party against the other at the Court of
+ Versailles. The Dauphine was even attacked through her own tutor, the Abbe
+ Vermond. A cabal was got up between the Abbe and Madame Marsan,
+ instructress of the sisters of Louis XVI. (the Princesses Clotilde and
+ Elizabeth) upon the subject of education. Nothing grew out of this affair
+ excepting a new stimulus to the party spirit against the Austrian
+ influence, or, in other words, the Austrian Princess; and such was
+ probably its purpose. Of course every trifle becomes Court tattle. This
+ was made a mighty business of, for want of a worse. The royal aunts
+ naturally took the part of Madame Marsan. They maintained that their royal
+ nieces, the French Princesses, were much better educated than the German
+ Archduchesses had been by the Austrian Empress. They attempted to found
+ their assertion upon the embonpoint of the French Princesses. They said
+ that their nieces, by the exercise of religious principles, obtained the
+ advantage of solid flesh, while the Austrian Archduchesses, by wasting
+ themselves in idleness and profane pursuits, grew thin and meagre, and
+ were equally exhausted in their minds and bodies! At this the Abbe
+ Vermond, as the tutor of Marie Antoinette, felt himself highly offended,
+ and called on Comte de Mercy, then the Imperial Ambassador, to apprise him
+ of the insult the Empire had received over the shoulders of the Dauphine's
+ tutor. The Ambassador gravely replied that he should certainly send off a
+ courier immediately to Vienna to inform the Empress that the only fault
+ the French Court could find with Marie Antoinette was her being not so
+ unwieldy as their own Princesses, and bringing charms with her to a
+ bridegroom, on whom even charms so transcendent could make no impression!
+ Thus the matter was laughed off, but it left, ridiculous as it was, new
+ bitter enemies to the cause of the illustrious stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The new favourite, Madame du Barry, whose sway was now supreme, was of
+ course joined by the whole vitiated intriguing Court of Versailles. The
+ King's favourite is always that of his parasites, however degraded. The
+ politics of the De Pompadour party were still feared, though De Pompadour
+ herself was no more, for Choiseul had friends who were still active in his
+ behalf. The power which had been raised to crush the power that was still
+ struggling formed a rallying point for those who hated Austria, which the
+ deposed Ministry had supported; and even the King's daughters, much as
+ they abhorred the vulgarity of Du Barry, were led, by dislike for the
+ Dauphine, to pay their devotions to their father's mistress. The influence
+ of the rising sun, Marie Antoinette, whose beauteous rays of blooming
+ youth warmed every heart in her favour, was feared by the new favourite as
+ well as by the old maidens. Louis XV. had already expressed a sufficient
+ interest for the friendless royal stranger to awaken the jealousy of Du
+ Barry, and she was as little disposed to share the King's affections with
+ another, as his daughters were to welcome a future Queen from Austria in
+ their palace. Mortified at the attachment the King daily evinced, she
+ strained every nerve to raise a party to destroy his predilections. She
+ called to her aid the strength of ridicule, than which no weapon is more
+ false or deadly. She laughed at qualities she could not comprehend, and
+ underrated what she could not imitate. The Duc de Richelieu, who had been
+ instrumental to her good fortune, and for whom (remembering the old adage:
+ when one hand washes the other both are made clean) she procured the
+ command of the army&mdash;this Duke, the triumphant general of Mahon and
+ one of the most distinguished noblemen of France, did not blush to become
+ the secret agent of a depraved meretrix in the conspiracy to blacken the
+ character of her victim! The Princesses, of course, joined the jealous
+ Phryne against their niece, the daughter of the Caesars, whose only faults
+ were those of nature, for at that time she could have no other excepting
+ those personal perfections which were the main source of all their malice.
+ By one considered as an usurper, by the others as an intruder, both were
+ in consequence industrious in the quiet work of ruin by whispers and
+ detraction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To an impolitic act of the Dauphine herself may be in part ascribed the
+ unwonted virulence of the jealousy and resentment of Du Barry. The old
+ dotard, Louis XV., was so indelicate as to have her present at the first
+ supper of the Dauphine at Versailles. Madame la Marechale de Beaumont, the
+ Duchesse de Choiseul, and the Duchesse de Grammont were there also; but
+ upon the favourite taking her seat at table they expressed themselves very
+ freely to Louis XV. respecting the insult they conceived offered to the
+ young Dauphine, left the royal party, and never appeared again at Court
+ till after the King's death. In consequence of this scene, Marie
+ Antoinette, at the instigation of the Abbe Vermond, wrote to her mother,
+ the Empress, complaining of the slight put upon her rank, birth, and
+ dignity, and requesting the Empress would signify her displeasure to the
+ Court of France, as she had done to that of Spain on a similar occasion in
+ favour of her sister, the Queen of Naples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This letter, which was intercepted, got to the knowledge of the Court and
+ excited some clamour. To say the worst, it could only be looked upon as an
+ ebullition of the folly of youth. But insignificant as such matters were
+ in fact, malignity converted them into the locust, which destroyed the
+ fruit she was sent to cultivate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Maria Theresa, old fox that she was, too true to her system to retract
+ the policy, which formerly, laid her open to the criticism of all the
+ civilised Courts of Europe for opening the correspondence with De
+ Pompadour, to whose influence she owed her daughter's footing in France&mdash;a
+ correspondence whereby she degraded the dignity of her sex and the honour
+ of her crown&mdash;and at the same time suspecting that it was not her
+ daughter, but Vermond, from private motives, who complained, wrote the
+ following laconic reply to the remonstrance:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Where the sovereign himself presides, no guest can be exceptionable.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such sentiments are very much in contradiction with the character of
+ Maria Theresa. She was always solicitous to impress the world with her
+ high notion of moral rectitude. Certainly, such advice, however politic,
+ ought not to have proceeded from a mother so religious as Maria Theresa
+ wished herself to be thought; especially to a young Princess who, though
+ enthusiastically fond of admiration, at least had discretion to see and
+ feel the impropriety of her being degraded to the level of a female like
+ Du Barry, and, withal, courage to avow it. This, of itself, was quite
+ enough to shake the virtue of Marie Antoinette; or, at least, Maria
+ Theresa's letter was of a cast to make her callous to the observance of
+ all its scruples. And in that vitiated, depraved Court, she too soon,
+ unfortunately, took the hint of her maternal counsellor in not only
+ tolerating, but imitating, the object she despised. Being one day told
+ that Du Barry was the person who most contributed to amuse Louis XV.,
+ 'Then,' said she, innocently, 'I declare myself her rival; for I will try
+ who can best amuse my grandpapa for the future. I will exert all my powers
+ to please and divert him, and then we shall see who can best succeed.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Du Barry was by when this was said, and she never forgave it. To this,
+ and to the letter, her rancour may principally be ascribed. To all those
+ of the Court party who owed their places and preferments to her exclusive
+ influence, and who held them subject to her caprice, she, of course,
+ communicated the venom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Meanwhile, the Dauphin saw Marie Antoinette mimicking the monkey tricks
+ with which this low Sultana amused her dotard, without being aware of the
+ cause. He was not pleased; and this circumstance, coupled with his natural
+ coolness and indifference for a union he had been taught to deem impolitic
+ and dangerous to the interests of France, created in his virtuous mind
+ that sort of disgust which remained so long an enigma to the Court and all
+ the kingdom, excepting his royal aunts, who did the best they could to
+ confirm it into so decided an aversion as might induce him to impel his
+ grandfather to annul the marriage and send the Dauphine back to Vienna."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After the Dauphin's marriage, the Comte d'Artois and his brother Monsieur&mdash;[Afterwards
+ Louis XVIII., and the former the present Charles X.]&mdash;returned from
+ their travels to Versailles. The former was delighted with the young
+ Dauphine, and, seeing her so decidedly neglected by her husband,
+ endeavoured to console her by a marked attention, but for which she would
+ have been totally isolated, for, excepting the old King, who became more
+ and more enraptured with the grace, beauty, and vivacity of his young
+ granddaughter, not another individual in the Royal Family was really
+ interested in her favour. The kindness of a personage so important was of
+ too much weight not to awaken calumny. It was, of course, endeavoured to
+ be turned against her. Possibilities, and even probabilities, conspired to
+ give a pretext for the scandal which already began to be whispered about
+ the Dauphine and D'Artois. It would have been no wonder had a reciprocal
+ attachment arisen between a virgin wife, so long neglected by her husband,
+ and one whose congeniality of character pointed him out as a more
+ desirable partner than the Dauphin. But there is abundant evidence of the
+ perfect innocence of their intercourse. Du Barry was most earnest in
+ endeavouring, from first to last, to establish its impurity, because the
+ Dauphine induced the gay young Prince to join in all her girlish schemes
+ to tease and circumvent the favourite. But when this young Prince and his
+ brother were married to the two Princesses of Piedmont, the intimacy
+ between their brides and the Dauphine proved there could have been no
+ doubt that Du Barry had invented a calumny, and that no feeling existed
+ but one altogether sisterly. The three stranger Princesses were indeed
+ inseparable; and these marriages, with that of the French Princess,
+ Clotilde, to the Prince of Piedmont, created considerable changes in the
+ coteries of Court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The machinations against Marie Antoinette could not be concealed from the
+ Empress-mother. An extraordinary Ambassador was consequently sent from
+ Vienna to complain of them to the Court of Versailles, with directions
+ that the remonstrance should be supported and backed by the Comte de
+ Mercy, then Austrian Ambassador at the Court of France. Louis XV. was the
+ only person to whom the communication was news. This old dilettanti of the
+ sex was so much engaged between his seraglio of the Parc-aux-cerfs and Du
+ Barry that he knew less of what was passing in his palace than those at
+ Constantinople. On being informed by the Austrian Ambassador, he sent an
+ Ambassador of his own to Vienna to assure the Empress that he was
+ perfectly satisfied of the innocent conduct of his newly acquired
+ granddaughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Among the intrigues within intrigues of the time I mention, there was one
+ which shows that perhaps Du Barry's distrust of the constancy of her
+ paramour, and apprehension from the effect on him of the charms of the
+ Dauphine, in whom he became daily more interested, were not utterly
+ without foundation. In this instance even her friend, the Duc de
+ Richelieu, that notorious seducer, by lending himself to the secret
+ purposes of the King, became a traitor to the cause of the King's
+ favourite, to which he had sworn allegiance, and which he had supported by
+ defaming her whom he now became anxious to make his Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It has already been said, that the famous Duchesse de Grammont was one of
+ the confidential friends of Louis XV. before he took Du Barry under his
+ especial protection. Of course, there can be no difficulty in conceiving
+ how likely a person she would be, to aid any purpose of the King which
+ should displace the favourite, by whom she herself had been obliged to
+ retire, by ties of a higher order, to which she might prove instrumental.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Louis XV. actually flattered himself with the hope of obtaining
+ advantages from the Dauphin's coolness towards the Dauphine. He encouraged
+ it, and even threw many obstacles in the way of the consummation of the
+ marriage. The apartments of the young couple were placed at opposite ends
+ of the palace, so that the Dauphin could not approach that of his Dauphine
+ without a publicity which his bashfulness could not brook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Louis XV. now began to act upon his secret passion to supplant his
+ grandson, and make the Dauphine his own Queen, by endeavouring to secure
+ her affections to himself. His attentions were backed by gifts of
+ diamonds, pearls, and other valuables, and it was at this period that
+ Boehmer, the jeweller, first received the order for that famous necklace,
+ which subsequently produced such dreadful consequences, and which was
+ originally meant as a kingly present to the intended Queen, though
+ afterwards destined for Du Barry, had not the King died before the
+ completion of the bargain for it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen herself one day told me, 'Heaven knows if ever I should have
+ had the blessing of being a mother had I not one evening surprised the
+ Dauphin, when the subject was adverted to, in the expression of a sort of
+ regret at our being placed so far asunder from each other. Indeed, he
+ never honoured me with any proof of his affection so explicit as that you
+ have just witnessed'&mdash;for the King had that moment kissed her, as he
+ left the apartment&mdash;'from the time of our marriage till the
+ consummation. The most I ever received from him was a squeeze of the hand
+ in secret. His extreme modesty, and perhaps his utter ignorance of the
+ intercourse with woman, dreaded the exposure of crossing the palace to my
+ bedchamber; and no doubt the accomplishment would have occurred sooner,
+ could it have been effectuated in privacy. The hint he gave emboldened me
+ with courage, when he next left me, as usual, at the door of my apartment,
+ to mention it to the Duchesse de Grammont, then the confidential friend of
+ Louis XV., who laughed me almost out of countenance; saying, in her gay
+ manner of expressing herself, "If I were as young and as beautiful a wife
+ as you are I should certainly not trouble myself to remove the obstacle by
+ going to him while there were others of superior rank ready to supply his
+ place." Before she quitted me, however, she said: "Well, child, make
+ yourself easy: you shall no longer be separated from the object of your
+ wishes: I will mention it to the King, your grandpapa, and he will soon
+ order your husband's apartment to be changed for one nearer your own." And
+ the change shortly afterwards took place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Here,' continued the Queen, 'I accuse myself of a want of that courage
+ which every virtuous wife ought to exercise in not having complained of
+ the visible neglect shown me long, long before I did; for this, perhaps,
+ would have spared both of us the many bitter pangs originating in the
+ seeming coldness, whence have arisen all the scandalous stories against my
+ character&mdash;which have often interrupted the full enjoyment I should
+ have felt had they not made me tremble for the security of that
+ attachment, of which I had so many proofs, and which formed my only
+ consolation amid all the malice that for yearn had been endeavouring to
+ deprive me of it! So far as regards my husband's estimation, thank fate, I
+ have defied their wickedness! Would to Heaven I could have been equally
+ secure in the estimation of my people&mdash;the object nearest to my
+ heart, after the King and my dear children!'"
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The Dauphine could not understand the first allusion of the Duchess;
+ but it is evident that the vile intriguer took this opportunity of
+ sounding her upon what she was commissioned to carry on in favour of
+ Louis XV., and it is equally apparent that when she heard Marie
+ Antoinette express herself decidedly in favour of her young husband, and
+ distinctly saw how utterly groundless were the hopes of his secret
+ rival, she was led thereby to abandon her wicked project; and perhaps
+ the change of apartments was the best mask that could have been devised
+ to hide the villany.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "The present period appears to have been one of the happiest in the life
+ of Marie Antoinette. Her intimate society consisted of the King's
+ brothers, and their Princesses, with the King's saint-like sister
+ Elizabeth; and they lived entirely together, excepting when the Dauphine
+ dined in public. These ties seemed to be drawn daily closer for some time,
+ till the subsequent intimacy with the Polignacs. Even when the Comtesse
+ d'Artois lay-in, the Dauphine, then become Queen, transferred her parties
+ to the apartments of that Princess, rather than lose the gratification of
+ her society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "During all this time, however, Du Barry, the Duc d'Aiguillon, and the
+ aunts-Princesses, took special care to keep themselves between her and any
+ tenderness on the part of the husband Dauphin, and, from different motives
+ uniting in one end, tried every means to get the object of their hatred
+ sent back to Vienna."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION IV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Empress-mother was thoroughly aware of all that was going on. Her
+ anxiety, not only about her daughter, but her State policy, which it may
+ be apprehended was in her mind the stronger motive of the two, encouraged
+ the machinations of an individual who must now appear upon the stage of
+ action, and to whose arts may be ascribed the worst of the sufferings of
+ Marie Antoinette.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I allude to the Cardinal Prince de Rohan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At this time he was Ambassador at the Court of Vienna. The reliance the
+ Empress placed on him favoured his criminal machinations against her
+ daughter's reputation. He was the cause of her sending spies to watch the
+ conduct of the Dauphine, besides a list of persons proper for her to
+ cultivate, as well as of those it was deemed desirable for her to exclude
+ from her confidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As the Empress knew all those who, though high in office in Versailles,
+ secretly received pensions from Vienna, she could, of course, tell,
+ without much expense of sagacity, who were in the Austrian interest. The
+ Dauphine was warned that she was surrounded by persons who were not her
+ friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The conduct of Maria Theresa towards her daughter, the Queen of Naples,
+ will sufficiently explain how much the Empress must have been chagrined at
+ the absolute indifference of Marie Antoinette to the State policy which
+ was intended to have been served in sending her to France. A less fitting
+ instrument for the purpose could not have been selected by the mother.
+ Marie Antoinette had much less of the politician about her than either of
+ her surviving sisters; and so much was she addicted to amusement, that she
+ never even thought of entering into State affairs till forced by the
+ King's neglect of his most essential prerogatives, and called upon by the
+ Ministers themselves to screen them from responsibility. Indeed, the
+ latter cause prevailed upon her to take her seat in the Cabinet Council
+ (though she took it with great reluctance) long before she was impelled
+ thither by events and her consciousness of its necessity. She would often
+ exclaim to me: 'How happy I was during the lifetime of Louis XV.! No cares
+ to disturb my peaceful slumbers! No responsibility to agitate my mind! No
+ fears of erring, of partiality, of injustice, to break in upon my
+ enjoyments! All, all happiness, my dear Princess, vanishes from the bosom
+ of a woman if she once deviate from the prescribed domestic character of
+ her sex! Nothing was ever framed more wise than the Salique Laws, which in
+ France and many parts of Germany exclude women from reigning, for few of
+ us have that masculine capacity so necessary to conduct with impartiality
+ and justice the affairs of State!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To this feeling of the impropriety of feminine interference in masculine
+ duties, coupled with her attachment to France, both from principle and
+ feeling, may be ascribed the neglect of her German connexions, which led
+ to many mortifying reproaches, and the still more galling espionage to
+ which she was subjected in her own palace by her mother. These are,
+ however, so many proofs of the falsehood of the allegations by which she
+ suffered so deeply afterwards, of having sacrificed the interests of her
+ husband's kingdom to her predilection for her mother's empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The subtle Rohan designed to turn the anxiety of Maria Theresa about the
+ Dauphine to account, and he was also aware that the ambition of the
+ Empress was paramount in Maria Theresa's bosom to the love for her child.
+ He was about to play a deep and more than double game. By increasing the
+ mother's jealousy of the daughter, and at the same time enhancing the
+ importance of the advantages afforded by her situation, to forward the
+ interests of the mother, he, no doubt, hoped to get both within his power:
+ for who can tell what wild expectation might not have animated such a mind
+ as Rohan's at the prospect of governing not only the Court of France but
+ that of Austria?&mdash;the Court of France, through a secret influence of
+ his own dictation thrown around the Dauphine by the mother's alarm; and
+ that of Austria, through a way he pointed out, in which the object that
+ was most longed for by the mother's ambition seemed most likely to be
+ achieved! While he endeavoured to make Maria Theresa beset her daughter
+ with the spies I have mentioned, and which were generally of his own
+ selection, he at the same time endeavoured to strengthen her impression of
+ how important it was to her schemes to insure the daughter's co-operation.
+ Conscious of the eagerness of Maria Theresa for the recovery of the rich
+ province which Frederick the Great of Prussia had wrested from her ancient
+ dominions, he pressed upon her credulity the assurance that the influence
+ of which the Dauphine was capable over Louis XV., by the youthful beauty's
+ charms acting upon the dotard's admiration, would readily induce that
+ monarch to give such aid to Austria as must insure the restoration of what
+ it lost. Silesia, it has been before observed, was always a topic by means
+ of which the weak side of Maria Theresa could be attacked with success.
+ There is generally some peculiar frailty in the ambitious, through which
+ the artful can throw them off their guard. The weak and tyrannical Philip
+ II., whenever the recovery of Holland and the Low Countries was proposed
+ to him, was always ready to rush headlong into any scheme for its
+ accomplishment; the bloody Queen Mary, his wife, declared that at her
+ death the loss of Calais would be found engraven on her heart; and to
+ Maria Theresa, Silesia was the Holland and the Calais for which her
+ wounded pride was thirsting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But Maria Theresa was wary, even in the midst of the credulity of her
+ ambition. The Baron de Neni was sent by her privately to Versailles to
+ examine, personally, whether there was anything in Marie Antoinette's
+ conduct requiring the extreme vigilance which had been represented as
+ indispensable. The report of the Baron de Neni to his royal mistress was
+ such as to convince her she had been misled and her daughter
+ misrepresented by Rohan. The Empress instantly forbade him her presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Cardinal upon this, unknown to the Court of Vienna, and indeed, to
+ every one, except his factotum, principal agent, and secretary, the Abbe
+ Georgel, left the Austrian capital, and came to Versailles, covering his
+ disgrace by pretended leave of absence. On seeing Marie Antoinette he fell
+ enthusiastically in love with her. To gain her confidence he disclosed the
+ conduct which had been observed towards her by the Empress, and, in
+ confirmation of the correctness of his disclosure, admitted that he had
+ himself chosen the spies which had been set on her. Indignant at such
+ meanness in her mother, and despising the prelate, who could be base
+ enough to commit a deed equally corrupt and uncalled for, and even thus
+ wantonly betrayed when committed, the Dauphine suddenly withdrew from his
+ presence, and gave orders that he should never be admitted to any of her
+ parties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But his imagination was too much heated by a guilty passion of the
+ blackest hue to recede; and his nature too presumptuous and fertile in
+ expedients to be disconcerted. He soon found means to conciliate both
+ mother and daughter; and both by pretending to manage with the one the
+ self-same plot which, with the other, he was recommending himself by
+ pretending to overthrow. To elude detection he interrupted the regular
+ correspondence between the Empress and the Dauphine, and created a
+ coolness by preventing the communications which would have unmasked him,
+ that gave additional security to the success of his deception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By the most diabolical arts he obtained an interview with the Dauphine,
+ in which he regained her confidence. He made her believe that he had been
+ commissioned by her mother, as she had shown so little interest for the
+ house of Austria, to settle a marriage for her sister, the Archduchess
+ Elizabeth, with Louis XV. The Dauphine was deeply affected at the
+ statement. She could not conceal her agitation. She involuntarily
+ confessed how much she should deplore such an alliance. The Cardinal
+ instantly perceived his advantage, and was too subtle to let it pass. He
+ declared that, as it was to him the negotiation had been confided, if the
+ Dauphine would keep her own counsel, never communicate their conversation
+ to the Empress, but leave the whole matter to his management and only
+ assure him that he was forgiven, he would pledge himself to arrange things
+ to her satisfaction. The Dauphine, not wishing to see another raised to
+ the throne over her head and to her scorn, under the assurance that no one
+ knew of the intention or could prevent it but the Cardinal, promised him
+ her faith and favour; and thus rashly fell into the springs of this wily
+ intriguer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Exulting to find Marie Antoinette in his power, the Cardinal left
+ Versailles as privately as he arrived there, for Vienna. His next object
+ was to ensnare the Empress, as he had done her daughter; and by a singular
+ caprice, fortune, during his absence, had been preparing for him the
+ means.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Abbe Georgel, his secretary, by underhand manoeuvres, to which he was
+ accustomed, had obtained access to all the secret State correspondence, in
+ which the Empress had expressed herself fully to the Comte de Mercy
+ relative to the views of Russia and Prussia upon Poland, whereby her own
+ plans were much thwarted. The acquirement of copies of these documents
+ naturally gave the Cardinal free access to the Court and a ready
+ introduction once more to the Empress. She was too much committed by his
+ possession of such weapons not to be most happy to make her peace with
+ him; and he was too sagacious not to make the best use of his opportunity.
+ To regain her confidence, he betrayed some of the subaltern agents,
+ through whose treachery he had procured his evidences, and, in farther
+ confirmation of his resources, showed the Empress several dispatches from
+ her own Ministers to the Courts of Russia and Prussia. He had long, he
+ said, been in possession of similar views of aggrandisement, upon which
+ these Courts were about to act; and had, for a while, even incurred Her
+ Imperial Majesty's displeasure, merely because he was not in a situation
+ fully to explain; but that he had now thought of the means to crush their
+ schemes before they could be put in practice. He apprised her of his being
+ aware that Her Imperial Majesty's Ministers were actively carrying on a
+ correspondence with Russia, with a view of joining her in checking the
+ French co-operation with the Grand Signior; and warned her that if this
+ design were secretly pursued, it would defeat the very views she had in
+ sharing in the spoliation of Poland; and if openly, it would be deemed an
+ avowal of hostilities against the Court of France, whose political system
+ would certainly impel it to resist any attack upon the divan of
+ Constantinople, that the balance of power in Europe might be maintained
+ against the formidable ambition of Catherine, whose gigantic hopes had
+ been already too much realised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Maria Theresa was no less astonished at these disclosures of the Cardinal
+ than the Dauphine had been at his communication concerning her. She
+ plainly saw that all her plans were known, and might be defeated from
+ their detection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Cardinal, having succeeded in alarming the Empress, took from his
+ pocket a fabulous correspondence, hatched by his secretary, the Abbe
+ Georgel. 'There, Madame,' said he, 'this will convince Your Majesty that
+ the warm interest I have taken in your Imperial house has carried me
+ farther than I was justified in having gone; but seeing the sterility of
+ the Dauphine, or, as it is reported by some of the Court, the total
+ disgust the Dauphin has to consummate the marriage, the coldness of your
+ daughter towards the interest of your Court, and the prospect of a race
+ from the Comtesse d'Artois, for the consequences of which there is no
+ answering, I have, unknown to Your Imperial Majesty, taken upon myself to
+ propose to LOUIS XV. a marriage with the Archduchess Elizabeth, who, on
+ becoming Queen of France, will immediately have it in her power to forward
+ the Austrian interest; for LOUIS XV., as the first proof of his affection
+ to his young bride, will at once secure to your Empire the aid you stand
+ so much in need of against the ambition of these two rising States. The
+ recovery of Your Imperial Majesty's ancient dominions may then be looked
+ upon as accomplished from the influence of the French Cabinet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The bait was swallowed. Maria Theresa was so overjoyed at this scheme
+ that she totally forgot all former animosity against the Cardinal. She was
+ encouraged to ascribe the silence of Marie Antoinette (whose letters had
+ been intercepted by the Cardinal himself) to her resentment of this
+ project concerning her sister; and the deluded Empress, availing herself
+ of the pretended zeal of the Cardinal for the interest of her family, gave
+ him full powers to return to France and secretly negotiate the alliance
+ for her daughter Elizabeth, which was by no means to be disclosed to the
+ Dauphine till the King's proxy should be appointed to perform the ceremony
+ at Vienna. This was all the Cardinal wished for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Meanwhile, in order to obtain a still greater ascendency over the Court
+ of France, he had expended immense sums to bribe secretaries and
+ Ministers; and couriers were even stopped to have copies taken of all the
+ correspondence to and from Austria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At the same crisis the Empress was informed by Prince Kaunitz that the
+ Cardinal and his suite at the palace of the French Ambassador carried on
+ such an immense and barefaced traffic of French manufactures of every
+ description that Maria Theresa thought proper, in order to prevent future
+ abuse, to abolish the privilege which gave to Ministers and Ambassadors an
+ opportunity of defrauding the revenue. Though this law was levelled
+ exclusively at the Cardinal, it was thought convenient under the
+ circumstances to avoid irritating him, and it was consequently made
+ general. But, the Comte de Mercy now obtaining some clue to his duplicity,
+ an intimation was given to the Court at Versailles, to which the King
+ replied, 'If the Empress be dissatisfied with the French Ambassador, he
+ shall be recalled.' But though completely unmasked, none dared publicly to
+ accuse him, each party fearing a discovery of its own intrigue. His
+ official recall did not in consequence take place for some time; and the
+ Cardinal, not thinking it prudent to go back till Louis XV. should be no
+ more, lest some unforeseen discovery of his project for supplying her
+ royal paramour with a Queen should rouse Du Barry to get his Cardinalship
+ sent to the Bastille for life, remained fixed in his post, waiting for
+ events.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At length Louis XV. expired, and the Cardinal returned to Versailles. He
+ contrived to obtain a private audience of the young Queen. He presumed
+ upon her former facility in listening to him, and was about to betray the
+ last confidence of Maria Theresa; but the Queen, shocked at the knowledge
+ which she had obtained of his having been equally treacherous to her and
+ to her mother, in disgust and alarm left the room without receiving a
+ letter he had brought her from Maria Theresa, and without deigning to
+ address a single word to him. In the heat of her passion and resentment,
+ she was nearly exposing all she knew of his infamies to the King, when the
+ coolheaded Princesse Elizabeth opposed her, from the seeming imprudence of
+ such an abrupt discovery; alleging that it might cause an open rupture
+ between the two Courts, as it had already been the source of a reserve and
+ coolness, which had not yet been explained. The Queen was determined never
+ more to commit herself by seeing the Cardinal. She accordingly sent for
+ her mother's letter, which he himself delivered into the hands of her
+ confidential messenger, who advised the Queen not to betray the Cardinal
+ to the King, lest, in so doing, she should never be able to guard herself
+ against the domestic spies, by whom, perhaps, she was even yet surrounded!
+ The Cardinal, conceiving, from the impunity of his conduct, that he still
+ held the Queen in check, through the influence of her fears of his
+ disclosing her weakness upon the subject of the obstruction she threw in
+ the way of her sister's marriage, did not resign the hope of converting
+ that ascendency to his future profit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The fatal silence to which Her Majesty was thus unfortunately advised I
+ regret from the bottom of my soul! All the successive vile plots of the
+ Cardinal against the peace and reputation of the Queen may be attributed
+ to this ill-judged prudence! Though it resulted from an honest desire of
+ screening Her Majesty from the resentment or revenge to which she might
+ have subjected herself from this villain, who had already injured her in
+ her own estimation for having been credulous enough to have listened to
+ him, yet from this circumstance it is that the Prince de Rohan built the
+ foundation of all the after frauds and machinations with which he
+ blackened the character and destroyed the comfort of his illustrious
+ victim. It is obvious that a mere exclusion from Court was too mild a
+ punishment for such offences, and it was but too natural that such a mind
+ as his, driven from the royal presence, and, of course, from all the noble
+ societies to which it led (the anti-Court party excepted), should brood
+ over the means of inveigling the Queen into a consent for his reappearance
+ before her and the gay world, which was his only element, and if her
+ favour should prove unattainable to revenge himself by her ruin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the Cardinal's return to France, all his numerous and powerful friends
+ beset the King and Queen to allow of his restoration to his embassy; but
+ though on his arrival at Versailles, finding the Court had removed to
+ Compiegne, he had a short audience there of the King, all efforts in his
+ favour were thrown away. Equally unsuccessful was every intercession with
+ the Empress-mother. She had become thoroughly awakened to his
+ worthlessness, and she declared she would never more even receive him in
+ her dominions as a visitor. The Cardinal, being apprised of this by some
+ of his intimates, was at last persuaded to give up the idea of further
+ importunity; and, pocketing his disgrace, retired with his hey dukes and
+ his secretary, the Abbe Georgel, to whom may be attributed all the artful
+ intrigues of his disgraceful diplomacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is evident that Rohan had no idea, during all his schemes to supplant
+ the Dauphine by marrying her sister to the King, that the secret hope of
+ Louis XV. had been to divorce the Dauphin and marry the slighted bride
+ himself. Perhaps it is fortunate that Rohan did not know this. A brain so
+ fertile in mischief as his might have converted such a circumstance to
+ baneful uses. But the death of Louis XV. put an end to all the then
+ existing schemes for a change in her position. It was to her a real,
+ though but a momentary triumph. From the hour of her arrival she had a
+ powerful party to cope with; and the fact of her being an Austrian,
+ independent of the jealousy created by her charms, was, in itself, a spell
+ to conjure up armies, against which she stood alone, isolated in the face
+ of embattled myriads! But she now reared her head, and her foes trembled
+ in her presence. Yet she could not guard against the moles busy in the
+ earth secretly to undermine her. Nay, had not Louis XV. died at the moment
+ he did, there is scarcely a doubt, from the number and the quality of the
+ hostile influences working on the credulity of the young Dauphin, that
+ Marie Antoinette would have been very harshly dealt with,&mdash;even the
+ more so from the partiality of the dotard who believed himself to be
+ reigning. But she has been preserved from her enemies to become their
+ sovereign; and if her crowned brow has erewhile been stung by thorns in
+ its coronal, let me not despair of their being hereafter smothered in yet
+ unblown roses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION V.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The accession of Louis XVI. and Marie Antoinette to the crown of France
+ took place (May 10, 1774) under the most propitious auspices!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After the long, corrupt reign of an old debauched Prince, whose vices
+ were degrading to himself and to a nation groaning under the lash of
+ prostitution and caprice, the most cheering changes were expected from the
+ known exemplariness of his successor and the amiableness of his consort.
+ Both were looked up to as models of goodness. The virtues of Louis XVI.
+ were so generally known that all France hastened to acknowledge them,
+ while the Queen's fascinations acted like a charm on all who had not been
+ invincibly prejudiced against the many excellent qualities which entitled
+ her to love and admiration. Indeed, I never heard an insinuation against
+ either the King or Queen but from those depraved minds which never
+ possessed virtue enough to imitate theirs, or were jealous of the
+ wonderful powers of pleasing that so eminently distinguished Marie
+ Antoinette from the rest of her sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the death of Louis XV. the entire Court removed from Versailles to the
+ palace of La Muette, situate in the Bois de Boulogne, very near Paris. The
+ confluence of Parisians, who came in crowds joyfully to hail the death of
+ the old vitiated Sovereign, and the accession of his adored successors,
+ became quite annoying to the whole Royal Family. The enthusiasm with which
+ the Parisians hailed their young King, and in particular his amiable young
+ partner, lasted for many days. These spontaneous evidences of attachment
+ were regarded as prognostics of a long reign of happiness. If any
+ inference can be drawn from public opinion, could there be a stronger
+ assurance than this one of uninterrupted future tranquility to its
+ objects?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To the Queen herself it was a double triumph. The conspirators, whose
+ depravity had been labouring to make her their victim, departed from the
+ scene of power. The husband, who for four years had been callous to her
+ attractions, became awakened to them. A complete change in the domestic
+ system of the palace was wrought suddenly. The young King, during the
+ interval which elapsed between the death and the interment of his
+ grandfather, from Court etiquette was confined to his apartments. The
+ youthful couple therefore saw each other with less restraint. The marriage
+ was consummated. Marie Antoinette from this moment may date that influence
+ over the heart (would I might add over the head and policy!) of the King,
+ which never slackened during the remainder of their lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madame du Barry was much better dealt with by the young King, whom she
+ had always treated with the greatest levity, than she, or her numerous
+ courtiers, expected. She was allowed her pension, and the entire enjoyment
+ of all her ill-gotten and accumulated wealth; but, of course, excluded
+ from ever appearing at Court, and politically exiled from Paris to the
+ Chateau aux Dames.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This implacable foe and her infamous coadjutors being removed from
+ further interference in matters of State by the expulsion of all their own
+ Ministers, their rivals, the Duc de Choiseul and his party, by whom Marie
+ Antoinette had been brought to France, were now in high expectation of
+ finding the direction of the Government, by the Queen's influence,
+ restored to that nobleman. But the King's choice was already made. He had
+ been ruled by his aunts, and appointed Ministers suggested by them and his
+ late grandfather's friends, who feared the preponderance of the Austrian
+ influence. The three ladies, Madame la Marechale de Beauveau, the Duchesse
+ de Choiseul, and the Duchesse de Grammont, who were all well-known to
+ Louis XVI. and stood high in his opinion for many excellent qualities, and
+ especially for their independent assertion of their own and the Dauphine's
+ dignity by retiring from Court in consequence of the supper at which Du
+ Barry was introduced these ladies, though received on their return thither
+ with peculiar welcome, in vain united their efforts with those of the
+ Queen and the Abbe Vermond, to overcome the prejudice which opposed
+ Choiseul's reinstatement. It was all in vain. The royal aunts, Adelaide
+ especially, hated Choiseul for the sake of Austria, and his agency in
+ bringing Marie Antoinette to France; and so did the King's tutor and
+ governor, the Duc de Vauguyon, who had ever been hostile to any sort of
+ friendship with Vienna; and these formed a host impenetrable even to the
+ influence of the Queen, which was opposed by all the leaders of the
+ prevailing party, who, though they were beginning externally to court,
+ admire, and idolize her, secretly surrounded her by their noxious and
+ viperous intrigues, and, while they lived in her bosom, fattened on the
+ destruction of her fame!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One of the earliest of the paltry insinuations against Marie Antoinette
+ emanated from her not counterfeiting deep affliction at the decease of the
+ old King. A few days after that event, the Court received the regular
+ visits of condolence and congratulation of the nobility, whose duty
+ prescribes their attendance upon such occasions; and some of them, among
+ whom were the daughters of Louis XV., not finding a young Queen of
+ nineteen hypocritically bathed in tears, on returning to their abodes
+ declared her the most indecorous of Princesses, and diffused a strong
+ impression of her want of feeling. At the head of these detractors were
+ Mesdames de Guemenee and Marsan, rival pretenders to the favours of the
+ Cardinal de Rohan, who, having by the death of Louis XV. lost their
+ influence and their unlimited power to appoint and dismiss Ministers,
+ themselves became ministers to their own evil geniuses, in calumniating
+ her whose legitimate elevation annihilated their monstrous pretensions!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Abbe Vermond, seeing the defeat of the party of the Duc de Choiseul,
+ by whom he had been sent to the Court of Vienna on the recommendation of
+ Brienne, began to tremble for his own security. As soon as the Court had
+ arrived at Choisy, and he was assured of the marriage having been
+ consummated, he obtained, with the Queen's consent, an audience of the
+ King, for the purpose of soliciting his sanction to his continuing in his
+ situation. On submitting his suit to the King, His Majesty merely gave a
+ shrug of the shoulders, and turned to converse with the Duc d'Aiguillon,
+ who at that moment entered the room. The Abbe stood stupefied, and the
+ Queen, seeing the crestfallen humour of her tutor, laughed and cheered him
+ by remarking, 'There is more meaning in the shrug of a King than in the
+ embrace of a Minister. The one always promises, but is seldom sincere; the
+ other is generally sincere, but never promises.' The Abbe, not knowing how
+ to interpret the dumb answer, finding the King's back turned and his
+ conversation with D'Aiguillon continuing, was retiring with a shrug of his
+ own shoulders to the Queen, when she exclaimed, good-humouredly, to Louis,
+ laughing and pointing to the Abbe, 'Look! look! see how readily a Church
+ dignitary can imitate the good Christian King, who is at the head of the
+ Church.' The King, seeing the Abbe still waiting, said, dryly, 'Monsieur,
+ you are confirmed in your situation,' and then resumed his conversation
+ with the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This anecdote is a sufficient proof that LOUIS XVI. had no prepossession
+ in favour of the Abbe Vermond, and that it was merely not to wound the
+ feelings of the Queen that he was tolerated. The Queen herself was
+ conscious of this, and used frequently to say to me how much she was
+ indebted to the King for such deference to her private choice, in allowing
+ Vermond to be her secretary, as she did not remember the King's ever
+ having held any communication with the Abbe during the whole time he was
+ attached to the service, though the Abbe always expressed himself with the
+ greatest respect towards the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The decorum of Marie Antoinette would not allow her to endure those
+ public exhibitions of the ceremony, of dressing herself which had been
+ customary at Court. This reserve was highly approved by His Majesty; and
+ one of the first reforms she introduced, after the accession, was in the
+ internal discipline of her own apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was during one of the visits, apart from Court etiquette, to the
+ toilet of the Queen, that the Duchesse de Chartres, afterwards Duchesse
+ d'Orleans, introduced the famous Mademoiselle Bertin, who afterwards
+ became so celebrated as the Queen's milliner&mdash;the first that was ever
+ allowed to approach a royal palace; and it was months before Marie
+ Antoinette had courage to receive her milliner in any other than the
+ private apartment which, by the alteration Her Majesty had made in the
+ arrangements of the household, she set apart for the purpose of dressing
+ in comfort by herself and free from all intruders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Till then the Queen was not only very plain in her attire, but very,
+ economical&mdash;a circumstance which, I have often heard her say, gave
+ great umbrage to the other Princesses of the Court of Versailles, who
+ never showed themselves, from the moment they rose till they returned to
+ bed, except in full dress; while she herself made all her morning visits
+ in a simple white cambric gown and straw hat. This simplicity,
+ unfortunately, like many other trifles, whose consequences no foresight
+ would have predicted, tended much to injure Marie Antoinette, not only
+ with the Court dandies, but the nation; by whom, though she was always
+ censured, she was as suddenly imitated in all she wore or did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From the private closet, which Marie Antoinette reserved to herself, and
+ had now opened to her milliner, she would retire, after the great points
+ of habiliment were accomplished, to those who were waiting with memorials
+ at her public toilet, where the hairdresser would finish putting the
+ ornaments in Her Majesty's hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King made Marie Antoinette a present of Le Petit Trianon. Much has
+ been said of the extravagant expense lavished by her upon this spot. I can
+ only declare that the greater part of the articles of furniture which had
+ not been worn out by time or were not worm or moth-eaten, and her own bed
+ among them, were taken from the apartments of former Queens, and some of
+ them had actually belonged to Anne of Austria, who, like Marie Antoinette,
+ had purchased them out of her private savings. Hence it is clear that
+ neither of the two Queens were chargeable to the State even for those
+ little indulgences which every private lady of property is permitted from
+ her husband, without coming under the lash of censure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her allowance as Queen of France was no more than 300,000 francs. It is
+ well known that she was generous, liberal, and very charitable; that she
+ paid all her expenses regularly respecting her household, Trianon, her
+ dresses, diamonds, millinery, and everything else; her Court establishment
+ excepted, and some few articles, which were paid by the civil list. She
+ was one of the first Queens in Europe, had the first establishment in
+ Europe, and was obliged to keep up the most refined and luxurious Court in
+ Europe; and all upon means no greater than had been assigned to many of
+ the former bigoted Queens, who led a cloistered life, retired from the
+ world without circulating their wealth among the nation which supplied
+ them with so large a revenue; and yet who lived and died uncensured for
+ hoarding from the nation what ought at least to have been in part expended
+ for its advantage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And yet of all the extra expenditure which the dignity and circumstances
+ of Marie Antoinette exacted, not a franc came from the public Treasury;
+ but everything out of Her Majesty's private purse and savings from the
+ above three hundred thousand francs, which was an infinitely less sum than
+ Louis XIV. had lavished yearly on the Duchesse de Montespan, and less than
+ half what Louis XV. had expended on the last two favourites, De Pompadour
+ and Du Barry. These two women, as clearly appeared from the private
+ registers, found among the papers of Louis XV. after his death, by Louis
+ XVI. (but which, out of respect for the memory of his grandfather, he
+ destroyed), these two women had amassed more property in diamonds and
+ other valuables than all the Queens of France from the days of Catherine
+ de Medicis up to those of Marie Antoinette.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such was the goodness of heart of the excellent Queen of Louis XVI., such
+ the benevolence of her character, that not only did she pay all the
+ pensions of the invalids left by her predecessors, but she distributed in
+ public and private charities greater sums than any of the former Queens,
+ thus increasing her expenses without any proportionate augmentation of her
+ resources."
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [Indeed, could Louis XVI. have foreseen&mdash;when, in order not to
+ expose the character of his predecessor and to honour the dignity of the
+ throne and monarchy of France, he destroyed the papers of his
+ grandfather&mdash;what an arm of strength he would have possessed in
+ preserving them, against the accusers of his unfortunate Queen and
+ himself, he never could have thrown away such means of establishing a
+ most honourable contrast between his own and former reigns. His career
+ exhibits no superfluous expenditure. Its economy was most rigid. No
+ sovereign was ever more scrupulous with the public money. He never had
+ any public or private predilection; no dilapidated Minister for a
+ favourite: no courtesan intrigue. For gaming he had no fondness; and, if
+ his abilities were not splendid, he certainly had no predominating
+ vices.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NOTE:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [I must once more quit the journal of the Princess. Her Highness here
+ ceases to record particulars of the early part of the reign of Louis
+ XVI., and everything essential upon those times is too well known to
+ render it desirable to detain the reader by an attempt to supply the
+ deficiency. It is enough to state that the secret unhappiness of the
+ Queen at not yet having the assurance of an heir was by no means
+ weakened by the impatience of the people, nor by the accouchement of the
+ Comtesse d'Artois of the Duc d'Angouleme. While the Queen continued the
+ intimacy, and even held her parties at the apartments of the Duchess
+ that she might watch over her friend, even in this triumph over herself,
+ the poissardes grossly insulted her in her misfortune, and coarsely
+ called on her to give heirs to the throne!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A consolation, however, for the unkind feeling of the populace was about
+ to arise in the delights of one of her strongest friendships. I am come
+ to the epoch when Her Majesty first formed an acquaintance with the
+ Princesse de Lamballe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a few words of my own on the family of Her Highness, I shall leave
+ her to pursue her beautiful and artless narrative of her parentage,
+ early sorrows, and introduction to Her Majesty, unbroken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The journal of the history of Marie Antoinette, after this slight
+ interruption for the private history of her friend, will become blended
+ with the journal of the Princesse de Lamballe, and both thenceforward
+ will proceed in their course together, like their destinies, which from
+ that moment never became disunited.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION VI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [MARIA THERESA LOUISA CARIGNAN, Princess of Savoy, was born at Turin on
+ the 8th September, 1749. She had three sisters; two of them were married
+ at Rome, one to the Prince Doria Pamfili, the other to the Prince
+ Colonna; and the third at Vienna, to the Prince Lobkowitz, whose son was
+ the great patron of the immortal Haydn, the celebrated composer.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ The celebrated Haydn was, even at the age of 74, when I last saw him
+ at Vienna, till the most good-humoured bon vivant of his age. He
+ delighted in telling the origin of his good fortune, which he said he
+ entirely owed to a bad wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he was first married, he said, finding no remedy against domestic
+ squabbles, he used to quit his bad half and go and enjoy himself with
+ his good friends, who were Hungarians and Germans, for weeks together.
+ Once, having returned home after a considerable absence, his wife,
+ while he was in bed next morning, followed her husband's example: she
+ did even more, for she took all his clothes, even to his shoes,
+ stockings, and small clothes, nay, everything he had, along with her!
+ Thus situated, he was under the necessity of doing something to cover
+ his nakedness; and this, he himself acknowledged, was the first cause
+ of his seriously applying himself to the profession which has since
+ made his name immortal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He used to laugh, saying, "I was from that time so habituated to study
+ that my wife, often fearing it would injure me, would threaten me with
+ the same operation if I did not go out and amuse myself; but then,"
+ added he, "I was grown old, and she was sick and no longer jealous."
+ He spoke remarkably good Italian, though he had never been in Italy,
+ and on my going to Vienna to hear his "Creation," he promised to
+ accompany me back to Italy; but he unfortunately died before I
+ returned to Vienna from Carlsbad.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ She had a brother also, the Prince Carignan, who, marrying against the
+ consent of his family, was no longer received by them; but the
+ unremitting and affectionate attention which the Princesse de Lamballe
+ paid to him and his new connexions was an ample compensation for the
+ loss he sustained in the severity of his other sisters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the early life of the Princesse de Lamballe, the arranger
+ of these pages must now leave her to pursue her own beautiful and
+ artless narrative unbroken, up to the epoch of her appointment to the
+ household of the Queen. It will be recollected that the papers of which
+ the reception has been already described in the introduction formed the
+ private journal of this most amiable Princess; and those passages
+ relating to her own early life being the most connected part of them, it
+ has been thought that to disturb them would be a kind of sacrilege.
+ After the appointment of Her Highness to the superintendence of the
+ Queen's household, her manuscripts again become confused, and fall into
+ scraps and fragments, which will require to be once more rendered clear
+ by the recollections of events and conversations by which the preceding
+ chapters have been assisted.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "I was the favourite child of a numerous family, and intended, almost at
+ my birth&mdash;as is generally the case among Princes who are nearly
+ allied to crowned heads&mdash;to be united to one of the Princes, my near
+ relation, of the royal house of Sardinia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A few years after this, the Duc and Duchesse de Penthievre arrived at
+ Turin, on their way to Italy, for the purpose of visiting the different
+ Courts, to make suitable marriage contracts for both their infant
+ children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These two children were Mademoiselle de Penthievre, afterwards the
+ unhappy Duchesse d'Orleans, and their idolised son, the Prince de
+ Lamballe.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The father of Louis Alexander Joseph Stanislaus de Bourbon Penthievre,
+ Prince de Lamballe, was the son of Comte de Toulouse, himself a natural
+ son of Louis XIV. and Madame de Montespan, who was considered as the
+ most wealthy of all the natural children, in consequence of Madame de
+ Montespan having artfully entrapped the famous Mademoiselle de
+ Moutpensier to make over her immense fortune to him as her heir after
+ her death, as the price of liberating her husband from imprisonment in
+ the Bastille, and herself from a ruinous prosecution, for having
+ contracted this marriage contrary to the express commands of her royal
+ cousin, Louis XIV.&mdash;Vide Histoire de Louis XIV. par Voltaire.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "Happy would it have been both for the Prince who was destined to the
+ former and the Princess who was given to the latter, had these unfortunate
+ alliances never taken place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Duc and Duchesse de Penthievre became so singularly attached to my
+ beloved parents, and, in particular, to myself, that the very day they
+ first dined at the Court of Turin, they mentioned the wish they had formed
+ of uniting me to their young son, the Prince de Lamballe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King of Sardinia, as the head of the house of Savoy and Carignan,
+ said there had been some conversation as to my becoming a member of his
+ royal family; but as I was so very young at the time, many political
+ reasons might arise to create motives for a change in the projected
+ alliance. 'If, therefore, the Prince de Carignan,' said the King, 'be
+ anxious to settle his daughter's marriage, by any immediate matrimonial
+ alliance, I certainly shall not avail myself of any prior engagement, nor
+ oppose any obstacle in the way of its solemnisation.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The consent of the King being thus unexpectedly obtained by the Prince,
+ so desirable did the arrangement seem to the Duke and Duchess that the
+ next day the contract was concluded with my parents for my becoming the
+ wife of their only son, the Prince de Lamballe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was too young to be consulted. Perhaps had I been older the result
+ would have been the same, for it generally happens in these great family
+ alliances that the parties most interested, and whose happiness is most
+ concerned, are the least thought of. The Prince was, I believe, at Paris,
+ under the tuition of his governess, and I was in the nursery, heedless,
+ and totally ignorant of my future good or evil destination!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So truly happy and domestic a life as that led by the Duc and Duchesse de
+ Penthievre seemed to my family to offer an example too propitious not to
+ secure to me a degree of felicity with a private Prince, very rarely the
+ result of royal unions! Of course, their consent was given with alacrity.
+ When I was called upon to do homage to my future parents, I had so little
+ idea, from my extreme youthfulness, of what was going on that I set them
+ all laughing, when, on being asked if I should like to become the consort
+ of the Prince de Lamballe, I said, 'Yes, I am very fond of music!' No, my
+ dear,' resumed the good and tender-hearted Duc de Penthievre, 'I mean,
+ would you have any objection to become his wife?'&mdash;'No, nor any other
+ person's!' was the innocent reply, which increased the mirth of all the
+ guests at my expense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Happy, happy days of youthful, thoughtless innocence, luxuriously felt
+ and appreciated under the thatched roof of the cottage, but unknown and
+ unattainable beneath the massive pile of a royal palace and a gemmed
+ crown! Scarcely had I entered my teens when my adopted parents strewed
+ flowers of the sweetest fragrance to lead me to the sacred altar, that
+ promised the bliss of busses, but which, too soon, from the foul
+ machinations of envy, jealousy, avarice, and a still more criminal
+ passion, proved to me the altar of my sacrifice!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My misery and my uninterrupted grief may be dated from the day my beloved
+ sister-in-law, Mademoiselle de Penthievre, sullied her hand by its union
+ with the Duc de Chartres.&mdash;[Afterwards Duc d'Orleans, and the
+ celebrated revolutionary Philippe Egalite.]&mdash;From that moment all
+ comfort, all prospect of connubial happiness, left my young and
+ affectionate heart, plucked thence by the very roots, never more again to
+ bloom there. Religion and philosophy were the only remedies remaining.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was a bride when an infant, a wife before I was a woman, a widow before
+ I was a mother, or had the prospect of becoming one! Our union was,
+ perhaps, an exception to the general rule. We became insensibly the more
+ attached to each other the more we were acquainted, which rendered the
+ more severe the separation, when we were torn asunder never to meet again
+ in this world!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After I left Turin, though everything for my reception at the palaces of
+ Toulouse and Rambouillet had been prepared in the most sumptuous style of
+ magnificence, yet such was my agitation that I remained convulsively
+ speechless for many hours, and all the affectionate attention of the
+ family of the Duc de Penthievre could not calm my feelings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Among those who came about me was the bridegroom himself, whom I had
+ never yet seen. So anxious was he to have his first acquaintance incognito
+ that he set off from Paris the moment he was apprised of my arrival in
+ France and presented himself as the Prince's page. As he had outgrown the
+ figure of his portrait, I received him as such; but the Prince, being
+ better pleased with me than he had apprehended he should be, could
+ scarcely avoid discovering himself. During our journey to Paris I myself
+ disclosed the interest with which the supposed page had inspired me. 'I
+ hope,' exclaimed I, 'my Prince will allow his page to attend me, for I
+ like him much.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What was my surprise when the Duc de Penthievre presented me to the
+ Prince and I found in him the page for whom I had already felt such an
+ interest! We both laughed and wanted words to express our mutual
+ sentiments. This was really love at first sight.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The young Prince was enraptured at finding his lovely bride so superior
+ in personal charms to the description which had been given of her, and
+ even to the portrait sent to him from Turin. Indeed, she must have been
+ a most beautiful creature, for when I left her in the year 1792, though
+ then five-and-forty years of age, from the freshness of her complexion,
+ the elegance of her figure, and the dignity of her deportment, she
+ certainly did not appear to be more than thirty. She had a fine head of
+ hair, and she took great pleasure in showing it unornamented. I remember
+ one day, on her coming hastily from the bath, as she was putting on her
+ dress, her cap falling off, her hair completely covered her!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The circumstances of her death always make me shudder at the
+ recollection of this incident! I have been assured by Mesdames Mackau,
+ de Soucle, the Comtesse de Noailles (not Duchesse, as Mademoiselle
+ Bertin has created her in her Memoirs of that name), and others, that
+ the Princesse de Lamballe was considered the most beautiful and
+ accomplished Princess at the Court of Louis XV., adorned with all the
+ grace, virtue, and elegance of manner which so eminently distinguished
+ her through life.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "The Duc de Chartres, then possessing a very handsome person and most
+ insinuating address, soon gained the affections of the amiable
+ Mademoiselle Penthievre. Becoming thus a member of the same family, he
+ paid me the most assiduous attention. From my being his sister-in-law, and
+ knowing he was aware of my great attachment to his young wife, I could
+ have no idea that his views were criminally levelled at my honour, my
+ happiness, and my future peace of mind. How, therefore, was I astonished
+ and shocked when he discovered to me his desire to supplant the legitimate
+ object of my affections, whose love for me equalled mine for him! I did
+ not expose this baseness of the Duc de Chartres, out of filial affection
+ for my adopted father, the Duc de Penthievre; out of the love I bore his
+ amiable daughter, she being pregnant; and, above all, in consequence of
+ the fear I was under of compromising the life of the Prince, my husband,
+ who I apprehended might be lost to me if I did not suffer in silence. But
+ still, through my silence he was lost&mdash;and oh, how dreadfully! The
+ Prince was totally in the dark as to the real character of his
+ brother-in-law. He blindly became every day more and more attached to the
+ man, who was then endeavouring by the foulest means to blast the fairest
+ prospects of his future happiness in life! But my guardian angel protected
+ me from becoming a victim to seduction, defeating every attack by that
+ prudence which has hitherto been my invincible shield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Guilt, unpunished in its first crime, rushes onward, and hurrying from
+ one misdeed to another, like the flood-tide, drives all before it! My
+ silence, and his being defeated without reproach, armed him with courage
+ for fresh daring, and he too well succeeded in embittering the future days
+ of my life, as well as those of his own affectionate wife, and his
+ illustrious father-in-law, the virtuous Duc de Penthievre, who was to all
+ a father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To revenge himself upon me for the repulse he met with, this man
+ inveigled my young, inexperienced husband from his bridal bed to those
+ infected with the nauseous poison of every vice! Poor youth! he soon
+ became the prey of every refinement upon dissipation and studied
+ debauchery, till at length his sufferings made his life a burthen, and he
+ died in the most excruciating agonies both of mind and body, in the arms
+ of a disconsolate wife and a distracted father&mdash;and thus, in a few
+ short months, at the age of eighteen, was I left a widow to lament my
+ having become a wife!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was in this situation, retired from the world and absorbed in grief,
+ with the ever beloved and revered illustrious father of my murdered lord,
+ endeavouring to sooth his pangs for the loss of those comforts in a child
+ with which my cruel disappointment forbade my ever being blest&mdash;though,
+ in the endeavour to soothe, I often only aggravated both his and my own
+ misery at our irretrievable loss&mdash;when a ray of unexpected light
+ burst upon my dreariness. It was amid this gloom of human agony, these
+ heartrending scenes of real mourning, that the brilliant star shone to
+ disperse the clouds which hovered over our drooping heads,&mdash;to dry
+ the hot briny tears which were parching up our miserable vegetating
+ existence&mdash;it was in this crisis that Marie Antoinette came, like a
+ messenger sent down from Heaven, graciously to offer the balm of comfort
+ in the sweetest language of human compassion. The pure emotions of her
+ generous soul made her unceasing, unremitting, in her visits to two
+ mortals who must else have perished under the weight of their misfortunes.
+ But for the consolation of her warm friendship we must have sunk into
+ utter despair!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From that moment I became seriously attached to the Queen of France. She
+ dedicated a great portion of her time to calm the anguish of my poor
+ heart, though I had not yet accepted the honour of becoming a member of
+ Her Majesty's household. Indeed, I was a considerable time before I could
+ think of undertaking a charge I felt myself so completely incapable of
+ fulfilling. I endeavoured to check the tears that were pouring down my
+ cheeks, to conceal in the Queen's presence the real feelings of my heart,
+ but the effort only served to increase my anguish when she had departed.
+ Her attachment to me, and the cordiality with which she distinguished
+ herself towards the Duc de Penthievre, gave her a place in that heart,
+ which had been chilled by the fatal vacuum left by its first inhabitant;
+ and Marie Antoinette was the only rival through life that usurped his
+ pretensions, though she could never wean me completely from his memory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My health, from the melancholy life I led, had so much declined that my
+ affectionate father, the Duc de Penthievre, with whom I continued to
+ reside, was anxious that I should emerge from my retirement for the
+ benefit of my health. Sensible of his affection, and having always
+ honoured his counsels, I took his advice in this instance. It being in the
+ hard winter, when so many persons were out of bread, the Queen, the
+ Duchesse d'Orleans, the Duc de Penthievre, and myself, introduced the
+ German sledges, in which we were followed by most of the nobility and the
+ rich citizens. This afforded considerable employment to different
+ artificers. The first use I made of my own new vehicle was to visit, in
+ company with the Duc de Penthievre, the necessitous poor families and our
+ pensioners. In the course of our rounds we met the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I suppose,' exclaimed Her Majesty, 'you also are laying a good
+ foundation for my work! Heavens! what must the poor feel! I am wrapped up
+ like a diamond in a box, covered with furs, and yet I am chilled with
+ cold!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'That feeling sentiment,' said the Duke, 'will soon warm many a cold
+ family's heart with gratitude to bless Your Majesty!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Why, yes,' replied Her Majesty, showing a long piece of paper containing
+ the names of those to whom she intended to afford relief, 'I have only
+ collected two hundred yet on my list, but the cure will do the rest and
+ help me to draw the strings of my privy purse! But I have not half done my
+ rounds. I daresay before I return to Versailles I shall have as many more,
+ and, since we are engaged in the same business, pray come into my sledge
+ and do not take my work out of my hands! Let me have for once the merit of
+ doing something good!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the coming up of a number of other vehicles belonging to the sledge
+ party, the Queen added, 'Do not say anything about what I have been
+ telling you!' for Her Majesty never wished what she did in the way of
+ charity or donations should be publicly known, the old pensioners
+ excepted, who, being on the list, could not be concealed; especially as
+ she continued to pay all those she found of the late Queen of Louis XV.
+ She was remarkably delicate and timid with respect to hurting the feelings
+ of any one; and, fearing the Duc de Penthievre might not be pleased at her
+ pressing me to leave him in order to join her, she said, 'Well, I will let
+ you off, Princess, on your both promising to dine with me at Trianon; for
+ the King is hunting, not deer, but wood for the poor, and he will see his
+ game off to Paris before he comes back:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Duke begged to be excused, but wished me to accept the invitation,
+ which I did, and we parted, each to pursue our different sledge
+ excursions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At the hour appointed, I made my appearance at Trianon, and had the
+ honour to dine tete-a-tete with Her Majesty, which was much more congenial
+ to my feelings than if there had been a party, as I was still very
+ low-spirited and unhappy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After dinner, 'My dear Princess,' said the Queen to me, 'at your time of
+ life you must not give yourself up entirely to the dead. You wrong the
+ living. We have not been sent into the world for ourselves. I have felt
+ much for your situation, and still do so, and therefore hope, as long as
+ the weather permits, that you will favour me with your company to enlarge
+ our sledge excursions. The King and my dear sister Elizabeth are also much
+ interested about your coming on a visit to Versailles. What think you of
+ our plan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thanked Her Majesty, the King, and the Princess, for their kindness,
+ but I observed that my state of health and mind could so little correspond
+ in any way with the gratitude I should owe them for their royal favours
+ that I trusted a refusal would be attributed to the fact of my
+ consciousness how much rather my society must prove an annoyance and a
+ burthen than a source of pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My tears flowing down my cheeks rapidly while I was speaking, the Queen,
+ with that kindness for which she was so eminently distinguished, took me
+ by the hand, and with her handkerchief dried my face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I am,' said the Queen, I about to renew a situation which has for some
+ time past lain dormant; and I hope, my dear Princess, therewith to
+ establish my own private views, in forming the happiness of a worthy
+ individual.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I replied that such a plan must insure Her Majesty the desired object she
+ had in view, as no individual could be otherwise than happy under the
+ immediate auspices of so benevolent and generous a Sovereign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen, with great affability, as if pleased with my observation, only
+ said, 'If you really think as you speak, my views are accomplished.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My carriage was announced, and I then left Her Majesty, highly pleased at
+ her gracious condescension, which evidently emanated from the kind wish to
+ raise my drooping spirits from their melancholy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gratitude would not permit me to continue long without demonstrating to
+ Her Majesty the sentiments her kindness had awakened in my heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I returned next day with my sister-in-law, the Duchesse d'Orleans, who
+ was much esteemed by the Queen, and we joined the sledge parties with Her
+ Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the third or fourth day of these excursions I again had the honour to
+ dine with Her Majesty, when, in the presence of the Princesse Elizabeth,
+ she asked me if I were still of the same opinion with respect to the
+ person it was her intention to add to her household?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I myself had totally forgotten the topic and entreated Her Majesty's
+ pardon for my want of memory, and begged she would signify to what subject
+ she alluded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Princesse Elizabeth laughed. 'I thought,' cried she, 'that you had
+ known it long ago! The Queen, with His Majesty's consent, has nominated
+ you, my dear Princess (embracing me), superintendent of her household.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen, also embracing me, said, 'Yes; it is very true. You said the
+ individual destined to such a situation could not be otherwise than happy;
+ and I am myself thoroughly happy in being able thus to contribute towards
+ rendering you so.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was perfectly at a loss for a moment or two, but, recovering myself
+ from the effect of this unexpected and unlooked for preferment, I thanked
+ Her Majesty with the best grace I was able for such an unmerited mark of
+ distinction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen, perceiving my embarrassment, observed, 'I knew I should
+ surprise you; but I thought your being established at Versailles much more
+ desirable for one of your rank and youth than to be, as you were, with the
+ Duc de Penthievre; who, much as I esteem his amiable character and
+ numerous great virtues, is by no means the most cheering companion for my
+ charming Princess. From this moment let our friendships be united in the
+ common interest of each other's happiness.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen took me by the hand. The Princesse Elizabeth, joining hers,
+ exclaimed to the Queen, 'Oh, my dear sister! let me make the trio in this
+ happy union of friends!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the society of her adored Majesty and of her saint-like sister
+ Elizabeth I have found my only balm of consolation! Their graciously
+ condescending to sympathise in the grief with which I was overwhelmed from
+ the cruel disappointment of my first love, filled up in some degree the
+ vacuum left by his loss, who was so prematurely ravished from me in the
+ flower of youth, leaving me a widow at eighteen; and though that loss is
+ one I never can replace or forget, the poignancy of its effect has been in
+ a great degree softened by the kindnesses of my excellent father-in-law,
+ the Duc de Penthievre, and the relations resulting from my situation with,
+ and the never-ceasing attachment of my beloved royal mistress."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION VII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The connexion of the Princesse de Lamballe with the Queen, of which she
+ has herself described the origin in the preceding chapter, proved so
+ important in its influence upon the reputation and fate of both these
+ illustrious victims, that I must once more withdraw the attention of the
+ reader, to explain, from personal observation and confidential
+ disclosures, the leading causes of the violent dislike which was kindled
+ in the public against an intimacy that it would have been most fortunate
+ had Her Majesty preferred through life to every other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The selection of a friend by the Queen, and the sudden elevation of that
+ friend to the highest station in the royal household, could not fail to
+ alarm the selfishness of courtiers, who always feel themselves injured
+ by the favour shown to others. An obsolete office was revived in favour
+ of the Princesse de Lamballe. In the time of Maria Leckzinska, wife of
+ Louis XV., the office of superintendent, then held by Mademoiselle de
+ Clermont, was suppressed when its holder died. The office gave a control
+ over the inclinations of Queens, by which Maria Leckzinska was sometimes
+ inconvenienced; and it had lain dormant ever since. Its restoration by a
+ Queen who it was believed could be guided by no motive but the desire to
+ seek pretexts for showing undue favour, was of course eyed askance, and
+ ere long openly calumniated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Comtesse de Noailles, who never could forget the title the Queen
+ gave her of Madame Etiquette, nor forgive the frequent jokes which Her
+ Majesty passed upon her antiquated formality, availed herself of the
+ opportunity offered by her husband's being raised to the dignity of
+ Marshal of France, to resign her situation on the appointment of the
+ Princesse de Lamballe as superintendent. The Countess retired with
+ feelings embittered against her royal mistress, and her annoyance in the
+ sequel ripened into enmity. The Countess was attached to a very powerful
+ party, not only at Court but scattered throughout the kingdom. Her
+ discontent arose from the circumstance of no longer having to take her
+ orders from the Queen direct, but from her superintendent. Ridiculous as
+ this may seem to an impartial observer, it created one of the most
+ powerful hostilities against which Her Majesty had afterwards to
+ contend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though the Queen esteemed the Comtesse de Noailles for her many good
+ qualities, yet she was so much put out of her way by the rigour with
+ which the Countess enforced forms which to Her Majesty appeared puerile
+ and absurd, that she felt relieved, and secretly gratified, by her
+ retirement. It will be shown hereafter to what an excess the Countess
+ was eventually carried by her malice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the popular objections to the revival of the office of
+ superintendent in favour of the Princesse de Lamballe arose from its
+ reputed extravagance. This was as groundless as the other charges
+ against the Queen. The etiquettes of dress, and the requisite increase
+ of every other expense, from the augmentation of every article of the
+ necessaries as well as the luxuries of life, made a treble difference
+ between the expenditure of the circumscribed Court of Maria Leckzinska
+ and that of Louis XVI.; yet the Princesse de Lamballe received no more
+ salary than had been allotted to Mademoiselle de Clermont in the
+ selfsame situation half a century before.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ (And even that salary she never appropriated to any private use of her
+ own, being amply supplied through the generous bounty of her
+ father-in-law, the Duc de Penthievre; and latterly, to my knowledge,
+ so far from receiving any pay, she often paid the Queen's and
+ Princesse Elizabeth's bills out of her own purse.)
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ So far from possessing the slightest propensity either to extravagance
+ in herself or to the encouragement of extravagance in others, the
+ Princesse de Lamballe was a model of prudence, and upon those subjects,
+ as indeed upon all others, the Queen could not have had a more discreet
+ counsellor. She eminently contributed to the charities of the Queen, who
+ was the mother of the fatherless, the support of the widow, and the
+ general protectress and refuge of suffering humanity. Previously to the
+ purchase of any article of luxury, the Princess would call for the list
+ of the pensioners: if anything was due on that account, it was instantly
+ paid, and the luxury dispensed with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She never made her appearance in the Queen's apartments except at
+ established hours. This was scrupulously observed till the Revolution.
+ Circumstances then obliged her to break through forms. The Queen would
+ only receive communications, either written or verbal, upon the subjects
+ growing out of that wretched crisis, in the presence of the Princess;
+ and hence her apartments were open to all who had occasion to see Her
+ Majesty. This made their intercourse more constant and unceremonious.
+ But before this, the Princess only went to the royal presence at fixed
+ hours, unless she had memorials to present to the King, Queen, or
+ Ministers, in favour of such as asked for justice or mercy. Hence,
+ whenever the Princess entered before the stated times, the Queen would
+ run and embrace her, and exclaim: "Well, my dear Princesse de Lamballe!
+ what widow, what orphan, what suffering or oppressed petitioner am I to
+ thank for this visit? for I know you never come to me empty-handed when
+ you come unexpectedly!" The Princess, on these occasions, often had the
+ petitioners waiting in an adjoining apartment, that they might instantly
+ avail themselves of any inclination the Queen might show to see them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once the Princess was deceived by a female painter of doubtful
+ character, who supplicated her to present a work she had executed to the
+ Queen. I myself afterwards returned that work to its owner.
+ Thenceforward, the Princess became very rigid in her inquiries, previous
+ to taking the least interest in any application, or consenting to
+ present any one personally to the King or Queen. She required thoroughly
+ to be informed of the nature of the request, and of the merit and
+ character of the applicant, before she would attend to either. Owing to
+ this caution Her Highness scarcely ever after met with a negative. In
+ cases of great importance, though the Queen's compassionate and good
+ heart needed no stimulus to impel her to forward the means of justice,
+ the Princess would call the influence of the Princesse Elizabeth to her
+ aid; and Elizabeth never sued in vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marie Antoinette paid the greatest attention to all memorials. They were
+ regularly collected every week by Her Majesty's private secretary, the
+ Abbe Vermond. I have myself seen many of them, when returned from the
+ Princesse de Lamballe, with the Queen's marginal notes in her own
+ handwriting, and the answers dictated by Her Majesty to the different,
+ officers of the departments relative to the nature of the respective
+ demands. She always recommended the greatest attention to all public
+ documents, and annexed notes to such as passed through her hands to
+ prevent their being thrown aside or lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of those who were least satisfied with the appointment of the
+ Princesse de Lamballe to the office of superintendent was her
+ brother-in-law, the Duc d'Orleans, who, having attempted her virtue on
+ various occasions and been repulsed, became mortified and alarmed at her
+ situation as a check to his future enterprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At one time the Duc and Duchesse d'Orleans were most constant and
+ assiduous in their attendance on Marie Antoinette. They were at all her
+ parties. The Queen was very fond of the Duchess. It is supposed that the
+ interest Her Majesty took in that lady, and the steps to which some time
+ afterwards that interest led, planted the first seeds of the unrelenting
+ and misguided hostility which, in the deadliest times of the Revolution,
+ animated the Orleanists against the throne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duc d'Orleans, then Duc de Chartres, was never a favourite of the
+ Queen. He was only tolerated at Court on account of his wife and of the
+ great intimacy which subsisted between him and the Comte d'Artois. Louis
+ XVI. had often expressed his disapprobation of the Duke's character,
+ which his conduct daily justified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Princesse de Lamballe could have no cause to think of her
+ brother-in-law but with horror. He had insulted her, and, in revenge at
+ his defeat, had, it was said, deprived her, by the most awful means, of
+ her husband. The Princess was tenderly attached to her sister-in-law,
+ the Duchess. Her attachment could not but make her look very
+ unfavourably upon the circumstance of the Duke's subjecting his wife to
+ the humiliation of residing in the palace with Madame de Genlis, and
+ being forced to receive a person of morals so incorrect as the guardian
+ of her children. The Duchess had complained to her father, the Duc de
+ Penthievre, in the presence of the Princesse de Lamballe, of the very
+ great ascendency Madame de Genlis exercised over her husband; and had
+ even requested the Queen to use her influence in detaching the Duke from
+ this connexion.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ (It was generally understood that the Duke had a daughter by Madame de
+ Genlis. This daughter, when grown up, was married to the late Irish
+ Lord Robert Fitzgerald.)
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ But she had too much gentleness of nature not presently to forget her
+ resentment. Being much devoted to her husband, rather than irritate him
+ to further neglect by personal remonstrance, she determined to make the
+ best of a bad business, and tolerated Madame de Genlis, although she
+ made no secret among her friends and relations of the reason why she did
+ so. Nay, so far did her wish not to disoblige her husband prevail over
+ her own feelings as to induce her to yield at last to his importunities
+ by frequently proposing to present Madame de Genlis to the Queen. But
+ Madame de Genilis never could obtain either a public or a private
+ audience. Though the Queen was a great admirer of merit and was fond of
+ encouraging talents, of which Madame de Genlis was by no means
+ deficient, yet even the account the Duchess herself had given, had Her
+ Majesty possessed no other means of knowledge, would have sealed that
+ lady's exclusion from the opportunities of display at Court which she
+ sought so earnestly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was another source of exasperation against the Duc d'Orleans; and
+ the great cause of a new and, though less obtrusive, yet perhaps an
+ equally dangerous foe under all the circumstances, in Madame de Genlis.
+ The anonymous slander of the one was circulated through all France by
+ the other; and spleen and disappointment feathered the venomed arrows
+ shot at the heart of power by malice and ambition. Be the charge true or
+ false, these anonymous libels were generally considered as the offspring
+ of this lady: they were industriously scattered by the Duc d'Orleans;
+ and their frequent refutation by the Queen's friends only increased the
+ malignant industry of their inventor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An event which proved the most serious of all that ever happened to the
+ Queen, and the consequences of which were distinctly foreseen by the
+ Princesse de Lamballe and others of her true friends, was now growing to
+ maturity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deposed Court oracle, the Comtesse de Noailles, had been succeeded
+ as literary leader by the Comtesse Diane de Polignac. She was a
+ favourite of the Comte d'Artois, and was the first lady in attendance
+ upon the Countess, his wife.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ (The Comtesse Diane de Polignac had a much better education, and
+ considerably more natural capacity, than her sister-in-law, the
+ Duchess, and the Queen merely disliked her for her prudish
+ affectation. The Comtesse d'Artois grew jealous of the Count's
+ intimacy with the Comtesse Diane. While she considered herself as the
+ only one of the Royal Family likely to be mother of a future
+ sovereign, she was silent, or perhaps too much engrossed by her
+ castles in the air to think of anything but diadems; but when she saw
+ the Queen producing heirs, she grew out of humour at her lost
+ popularity, and began to turn her attention to her husband's
+ Endymionship to this now Diana! When she had made up her mind to get
+ her rival out of her house, she consulted one of the family; but being
+ told that the best means for a wife to keep her husband out of harm's
+ way was to provide him with a domestic occupation for his leisure
+ hours at home, than which nothing could be better than a handmaid
+ under the same roof, she made a merit of necessity and submitted ever
+ after to retain the Comtesse Diane, as she had been prudently advised.
+ The Comtesse Diane, in consequence, remained in the family even up to
+ the 17th October, 1789, when she left Versailles in company with the
+ De Polignacs and the D'Artois, who all emigrated together from France
+ to Italy and lived at Stria on the Brenta, near Venice, for some time,
+ till the Comtesse d'Artois went to Turin.)
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ The Queen's conduct had always been very cool to her. She deemed her a
+ self-sufficient coquette. However, the Comtesse Diane was a constant
+ attendant at the gay parties which were then the fashion of the Court,
+ though not greatly admired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader will scarcely need to be informed that the event to which I
+ have just alluded is the introduction by the Comtesse Diane of her
+ sister-in-law, the Comtesse Julie de Polignac, to the Queen; and having
+ brought the record up to this point I here once more dismiss my own pen
+ for that of the Princesse de Lamballe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be obvious to every one that I must have been indebted to the
+ conversations of my beloved patroness for most of the sentiments and
+ nearly all the facts I have just been stating; and had the period on
+ which she has written so little as to drive me to the necessity of
+ writing for her been less pregnant with circumstances almost entirely
+ personal to herself, no doubt I should have found more upon that period
+ in her manuscript. But the year of which Her Highness says so little was
+ the year of happiness and exclusive favour; and the Princess was above
+ the vanity of boasting, even privately in the self-confessional of her
+ diary. She resumes her records with her apprehensions; and thus
+ proceeds, describing the introduction of the Comtesse Julie de Polignac,
+ regretting her ascendency over the Queen, and foreseeing its fatal
+ effects.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "I had been only a twelvemonth in Her Majesty's service, which I believe
+ was the happiest period of both our lives, when, at one of the Court
+ assemblies, the Comtesse Julie de Polignac was first introduced by her
+ sister-in-law, the Comtesse Diane de Polignac, to the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She had lived in the country, quite a retired life, and appeared to be
+ more the motherly woman, and the domestic wife, than the ambitious Court
+ lady, or royal sycophant. She was easy of access, and elegantly plain in
+ her dress and deportment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her appearance at Court was as fatal to the Queen as it was propitious to
+ herself!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She seemed formed by nature to become a royal favourite, unassuming,
+ remarkably complaisant, possessing a refined taste, with a good-natured
+ disposition, not handsome, but well formed, and untainted by haughtiness
+ or pomposity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It would appear, from the effect her introduction had on the Queen, that
+ her domestic virtues were written in her countenance; for she became a
+ royal favourite before she had time to become a candidate for royal
+ favour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen's sudden attachment to the Comtesse Julie produced no
+ alteration in my conduct, while I saw nothing extraordinary to alarm me
+ for the consequences of any particular marked partiality, by which the
+ character and popularity of Her Majesty might be endangered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, seeing the progress this lady made in the feelings of the Queen's
+ enemies, it became my duty, from the situation I held, to caution Her
+ Majesty against the risks she ran in making her favourites friends; for it
+ was very soon apparent how highly the Court disapproved of this intimacy
+ and partiality: and the same feeling soon found its way to the many-headed
+ monster, the people, who only saw the favourite without considering the
+ charge she held. Scarcely had she felt the warm rays of royal favour, when
+ the chilling blasts of envy and malice began to nip it in the bud of all
+ its promised bliss. Even long before she touched the pinnacle of her
+ grandeur as governess of the royal children the blackest calumny began to
+ show itself in prints, caricatures, songs, and pamphlets of every
+ description.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A reciprocity of friendship between a Queen and a subject, by those who
+ never felt the existence of such a feeling as friendship, could only be
+ considered in a criminal point of view. But by what perversion could
+ suspicion frown upon the ties between two married women, both living in
+ the greatest harmony with their respective husbands, especially when both
+ became mothers and were so devoted to their offspring? This boundless
+ friendship did glow between this calumniated pair calumniated because the
+ sacredness and peculiarity of the sentiment which united them was too pure
+ to be understood by the grovelling minds who made themselves their
+ sentencers. The friend is the friend's shadow. The real sentiment of
+ friendship, of which disinterested sympathy is the sign, cannot exist
+ unless between two of the same sex, because a physical difference
+ involuntarily modifies the complexion of the intimacy where the sexes are
+ opposite, even though there be no physical relations. The Queen of France
+ had love in her eyes and Heaven in her soul. The Duchesse de Polignac,
+ whose person beamed with every charm, could never have been condemned,
+ like the Friars of La Trappe, to the mere memento mori.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When I had made the representations to Her Majesty which duty exacted
+ from me on perceiving her ungovernable partiality for her new favourite,
+ that I might not importune her by the awkwardness naturally arising from
+ my constant exposure to the necessity of witnessing an intimacy she knew I
+ did not sanction, I obtained permission from my royal mistress to visit my
+ father-in-law, the Duc de Penthievre, at Rambouillet, his country-seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Soon after I arrived there, I was taken suddenly ill after dinner with
+ the most excruciating pains in my stomach. I thought myself dying. Indeed,
+ I should have been so but for the fortunate and timely discovery that I
+ was poisoned certainly, not intentionally, by any one belonging to my dear
+ father's household; but by some execrable hand which had an interest in my
+ death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The affair was hushed up with a vague report that some of the made dishes
+ had been prepared in a stew-pan long out of use, which the clerk of the
+ Duke's kitchen had forgotten to get properly tinned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This was a doubtful story for many reasons. Indeed, I firmly believe that
+ the poison given me had been prepared in the salt, for every one at table
+ had eaten of the same dish without suffering the smallest inconvenience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The news of this accident had scarcely arrived at Versailles, when the
+ Queen, astounded, and, in excessive anxiety, instantly sent off her
+ physician, and her private secretary, the Abbe Vermond, to bring me back
+ to my apartments at Versailles, with strict orders not to leave me a
+ moment at the Duke's, for fear of a second attempt of the same nature. Her
+ Majesty had imputed the first to the earnestness I had always shown in
+ support of her interests, and she seemed now more ardent in her kindness
+ towards me from the idea of my being exposed through her means to the
+ treachery of assassins in the dark. The Queen awaited our coming
+ impatiently, and, not seeing the carriages return so quickly as she
+ fancied they ought to arrive, she herself set off for Rambouillet, and did
+ not leave me till she had prevailed on me to quit my father-in-law's, and
+ we both returned together the same night to Versailles, where the Queen in
+ person dedicated all her attention to the restoration of my health.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As yet, however, nothing in particular had discovered that splendour for
+ which the De Polignacs were afterwards so conspicuous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed, so little were their circumstances calculated for a Court life,
+ that when the friends of Madame de Polignac perceived the growing
+ attachment of the young Queen to the palladium of their hopes, in order to
+ impel Her Majesty's friendship to repair the deficiencies of fortune, they
+ advised the magnet to quit the Court abruptly, assigning the want of means
+ as the motive of her retreat. The story got wind, and proved propitious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen, to secure the society of her friend, soon supplied the
+ resources she required and took away the necessity for her retirement. But
+ the die was cast. In gaining one friend she sacrificed a host. By this act
+ of imprudent preference she lost forever the affections of the old
+ nobility. This was the gale which drove her back among the breakers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I saw the coming storm, and endeavoured to make my Sovereign feel its
+ danger. Presuming that my example would be followed, I withdrew from the
+ De Polignac society, and vainly flattered myself that prudence would impel
+ others not to encourage Her Majesty's amiable infatuation till the
+ consequences should be irretrievable. But Sovereigns are always surrounded
+ by those who make it a point to reconcile them to their follies, however
+ flagrant, and keep them on good terms with themselves, however severely
+ they may be censured by the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I had read the book of fate I could not have seen more distinctly the
+ fatal results which actually took place from this unfortunate connexion.
+ The Duchess and myself always lived in the greatest harmony, and equally
+ shared the confidence of the Queen; but it was my duty not to sanction Her
+ Majesty's marked favouritism by my presence. The Queen often expressed her
+ discontent to me upon the subject. She used to tell me how much it grieved
+ her to be denied success in her darling desire of uniting her friends with
+ each other, as they were already united in her own heart. Finding my
+ resolution unalterable, she was mortified, but gave up her pursuit. When
+ she became assured that all importunity was useless, she ever after
+ avoided wounding my feelings by remonstrance, and allowed me to pursue the
+ system I had adopted, rather than deprive herself of my society, which
+ would have been the consequence had I not been left at liberty to follow
+ the dictates of my own sense of propriety in a course from which I was
+ resolved that even Her Majesty's displeasure should not make me swerve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Once in particular, at an entertainment given to the Emperor Joseph at
+ Trianon, I remember the Queen took the opportunity to repeat how much she
+ felt herself mortified at the course in which I persisted of never making
+ my appearance at the Duchesse de Polignac's parties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I replied, 'I believe, Madame, we are both of us disappointed; but Your
+ Majesty has your remedy, by replacing me by a lady less scrupulous.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I was too sanguine,' said the Queen, 'in having flattered myself that I
+ had chosen two friends who would form, from their sympathising and uniting
+ their sentiments with each other, a society which would embellish my
+ private life as much as they adorn their public stations.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I said it was by my unalterable friendship and my loyal and dutiful
+ attachment to the sacred person of Her Majesty that I had been prompted to
+ a line of conduct in which the motives whence it arose would impel me to
+ persist while I had the honour to hold a situation under Her Majesty's
+ roof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen, embracing me, exclaimed, 'That will be for life, for death
+ alone can separate us!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is the last conversation I recollect to have had with the Queen upon
+ this distressing subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Abbe Vermond, who had been Her Majesty's tutor, but who was now her
+ private secretary, began to dread that his influence over her, from having
+ been her confidential adviser from her youth upwards, would suffer from
+ the rising authority of the all-predominant new favourite. Consequently,
+ he thought proper to remonstrate, not with Her Majesty, but with those
+ about her royal person. The Queen took no notice of these side-wind
+ complaints, not wishing to enter into any explanation of her conduct. On
+ this the Abbe withdrew from Court. But he only retired for a short time,
+ and that to make better terms for the future. Here was a new spring for
+ those who were supplying the army of calumniators with poison. Happy had
+ it been, perhaps, for France and the Queen if Vermond had never returned.
+ But the Abbe was something like a distant country cousin of an English
+ Minister, a man of no talents, but who hoped for employment through the
+ power of his kinsman. 'There is nothing on hand now,' answered the
+ Minister, 'but a Bishop's mitre or a Field-marshal's staff.'&mdash;'Oh,
+ very well,' replied the countryman; 'either will do for me till something
+ better turns up.' The Abbe, in his retirement finding leisure to reflect
+ that there was no probability of anything 'better turning up' than his
+ post of private secretary, tutor, confidant, and counsellor (and that not
+ always the most correct) of a young and amiable Queen of France, soon made
+ his reappearance and kept his jealousy of the De Polignacs ever after to
+ himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Abbe Vermond enjoyed much influence with regard to ecclesiastical
+ preferments. He was too fond of his situation ever to contradict or thwart
+ Her Majesty in any of her plans; too much of a courtier to assail her ears
+ with the language of truth; and by far too much a clergyman to interest
+ himself but for Mother Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In short, he was more culpable in not doing his duty than in the mischief
+ he occasioned, for he certainly oftener misled the Queen by his silence
+ than by his advice."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION VIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have already mentioned that Marie Antoinette had no decided taste for
+ literature. Her mind rather sought its amusements in the ball-room, the
+ promenade, the theatre, especially when she herself was a performer, and
+ the concert-room, than in her library and among her books. Her coldness
+ towards literary men may in, some degree be accounted for by the disgust
+ which she took at the calumnies and caricatures resulting from her
+ mother's partiality for her own revered teacher, the great Metastasio. The
+ resemblance of most of Maria Theresa's children to that poet was coupled
+ with the great patronage he received from the Empress; and much less than
+ these circumstances would have been quite enough to furnish a tale for the
+ slanderer, injurious to the reputation of any exalted personage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The taste of Marie Antoinette for private theatricals was kept up till
+ the clouds of the Revolution darkened over all her enjoyments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These innocent amusements were made subjects of censure against her by
+ the many courtiers who were denied access to them; while some, who were
+ permitted to be present, were too well pleased with the opportunity of
+ sneering at her mediocrity in the art, which those, who could not see her,
+ were ready to criticise with the utmost severity. It is believed that
+ Madame de Genlis found this too favourable an opportunity to be slighted.
+ Anonymous satires upon the Queen's performances, which were attributed to
+ the malice of that authoress, were frequently shown to Her Majesty by
+ good-natured friends. The Duc de Fronsac also, from some situation he held
+ at Court, though not included in the private household of Her Majesty at
+ Trianon, conceiving himself highly injured by not being suffered to
+ interfere, was much exasperated, and took no pains to prevent others from
+ receiving the infection of his resentment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of all the arts, music was the only one which Her Majesty ever warmly
+ patronised. For music she was an enthusiast. Had her talents in this art
+ been cultivated, it is certain from her judgment in it that she would have
+ made very considerable progress. She sang little French airs with great
+ taste and feeling. She improved much under the tuition of the great
+ composer, her master, the celebrated Sacchini. After his death, Sapio was
+ named his successor; but, between the death of one master and the
+ appointment of another, the revolutionary horrors so increased that her
+ mind was no longer in a state to listen to anything but the howlings of
+ the tempest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In her happier days of power, the great Gluck was brought at her request
+ from Germany to Paris. He cost nothing to the public Treasury, for Her
+ Majesty paid all his expenses out of her own purse, leaving him the
+ profits of his operas, which attracted immense sums to the theatre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Marie Antoinette paid for the musical education of the French singer,
+ Garat, and pensioned him for her private concerts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her Majesty was the great patroness of the celebrated Viotti, who was
+ also attached to her private musical parties. Before Viotti began to
+ perform his concertos, Her Majesty, with the most amiable condescension,
+ would go round the music saloon, and say, 'Ladies and gentlemen, I request
+ you will be silent, and very attentive, and not enter into conversation,
+ while Mr. Viotti is playing, for it interrupts him in the execution of his
+ fine performance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gluck composed his Armida in compliment to the personal charms of Marie
+ Antoinette. I never saw Her Majesty more interested about anything than
+ she was for its success. She became a perfect slave to it. She had the
+ gracious condescension to hear all the pieces through, at Gluck's request,
+ before they were submitted to the stage for rehearsal. Gluck said he
+ always improved his music after he saw the effect it had upon Her Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He was coming out of the Queen's apartment one day, after he had been
+ performing one of these pieces for Her Majesty's approbation, when I
+ followed and congratulated him on the increased success he had met with
+ from the whole band of the opera at every rehearsal. 'O my dear Princess!'
+ cried he, 'it wants nothing to make it be applauded up to the seven skies
+ but two such delightful heads as Her Majesty's and your own.'&mdash;'Oh,
+ if that be all,' answered I, 'we'll have them painted for you, Mr. Gluck!'&mdash;'No,
+ no, no! you do not understand me,' replied Gluck, 'I mean real, real
+ heads. My actresses are very ugly, and Armida and her confidential lady
+ ought to be very handsome:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "However great the success of the opera of Armida, and certainly it was
+ one of the best productions ever exhibited on the French stage, no one had
+ a better opinion of its composition than Gluck himself. He was quite mad
+ about it. He told the Queen that the air of France had invigorated his
+ musical genius, and that, after having had the honour of seeing Her
+ Majesty, his ideas were so much inspired that his compositions resembled
+ her, and became alike angelic and sublime!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The first artist who undertook the part of Armida was Madame Saint
+ Huberti. The Queen was very partial to her. She was principal female
+ singer at the French opera, was a German by birth, and strongly
+ recommended by Gluck for her good natural voice. At Her Majesty's request,
+ Gluck himself taught Madame Saint Huberti the part of Armida. Sacchini,
+ also, at the command of Marie Antoinette, instructed her in the style and
+ sublimity of the Italian school, and Mdlle. Benin, the Queen's dressmaker
+ and milliner, was ordered to furnish the complete dress for the character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen, perhaps, was more liberal to this lady than to any other
+ actress upon the stage. She had frequently paid her debts, which were very
+ considerable, for she dressed like a Queen whenever she represented one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gluck's consciousness of the merit of his own works, and of their
+ dignity, excited no small jealousy, during the getting up of Armida, in
+ his rival with the public, the great Vestris, to whom he scarcely left
+ space to exhibit the graces of his art; and many severe disputes took
+ place between the two rival sharers of the Parisian enthusiasm. Indeed, it
+ was at one time feared that the success of Armida would be endangered,
+ unless an equal share of the performance were conceded to the dancers. But
+ Gluck, whose German obstinacy would not give up a note, told Vestris he
+ might compose a ballet in which he would leave him his own way entirely;
+ but that an artist whose profession only taught him to reason with his
+ heels should not kick about works like Armida at his pleasure. 'My
+ subject,' added Gluck, 'is taken from the immortal Tasso. My music has
+ been logically composed, and with the ideas of my head; and, of course,
+ there is very little room left for capering. If Tasso had thought proper
+ to make Rinaldo a dancer he never would have designated him a warrior.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rinaldo was the part Vestris wished to be allotted to his son. However,
+ through the interference of the Queen, Vestris prudently took the part as
+ it had been originally finished by Gluck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen was a great admirer and patroness of Augustus Vestris, the god
+ of dance, as he was styled. Augustus Vestris never lost Her Majesty's
+ favour, though he very often lost his sense of the respect he owed to the
+ public, and showed airs and refused to dance. Once he did so when Her
+ Majesty was at the opera. Upon some frivolous pretext he refused to
+ appear. He was, in consequence, immediately arrested. His father, alarmed
+ at his son's temerity, flew to me, and with the most earnest supplications
+ implored I would condescend to endeavour to obtain the pardon of Her
+ Majesty. 'My son,' cried he, 'did not know that Her Majesty had honoured
+ the theatre with her presence. Had he been aware of it, could he have
+ refused to dance for his most bounteous benefactress? I, too, am grieved
+ beyond the power of language to describe, by this mal apropos contretemps
+ between the two houses of Vestris and Bourbon, as we have always lived in
+ the greatest harmony ever since we came from Florence to Paris. My son is
+ very sorry and will dance most bewitchingly if Her Majesty will graciously
+ condescend to order his release!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I repeated the conversation verbatim, to Her Majesty, who enjoyed the
+ arrogance of the Florentine, and sent her page to order young Vestris to
+ be set immediately at liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Having exerted all the wonderful powers of his art, the Queen applauded
+ him very much. When Her Majesty was about leaving her box, old Vestris
+ appeared at the entrance, leading his son to thank the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Ah, Monsieur Vestris,' said the Queen to the father, you never danced as
+ your son has done this evening.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'That's very natural, Madame,' answered old Vestris, 'I never had a
+ Vestris, please Your Majesty, for a master.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Then you have the greater merit,' replied the Queen, turning round to
+ old Vestris&mdash;'Ah, I shall never forget you and Mademoiselle Guimard
+ dancing the minuet de la cour.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On this old Vestris held up his head with that peculiar grace for which
+ he was so much distinguished. The old man, though ridiculously vain, was
+ very much of a gentleman in his manners. The father of Vestris was a
+ painter of some celebrity at Florence, and originally from Tuscany."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION IX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The visit of the favourite brother of Marie Antoinette, the Emperor
+ Joseph the Second, to France, had been long and anxiously expected, and
+ was welcomed by her with delight. The pleasure Her Majesty discovered at
+ having him with her is scarcely credible; and the affectionate tenderness
+ with which the Emperor frequently expressed himself on seeing his
+ favourite sister evinced that their joys were mutual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Like everything else, however, which gratified and obliged the Queen, her
+ evil star converted even this into a misfortune. It was said that the
+ French Treasury, which was not overflowing, was still more reduced by the
+ Queen's partiality for her brother. She was accused of having given him
+ immense sums of money; which was utterly false.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The finances of Joseph were at that time in a situation too superior to
+ those of France to admit of such extravagance, or even to render it
+ desirable. The circumstance which gave a colour to the charge was this:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Emperor, in order to facilitate the trade of his Brabant subjects,
+ had it in contemplation to open the navigation of the Scheldt. This
+ measure would have been ruinous to many of the skippers, as well as to the
+ internal commerce of France. It was considered equally dangerous to the
+ trade and navigation of the North Hollanders. To prevent it, negotiations
+ were carried on by the French Minister, though professedly for the mutual
+ interest of both countries, yet entirely at the instigation and on account
+ of the Dutch. The weighty argument of the Dutch to prevent the Emperor
+ from accomplishing a purpose they so much dreaded was a sum of many
+ millions, which passed by means of some monied speculation in the Exchange
+ through France to its destination at Vienna. It was to see this affair
+ settled that the Emperor declared in Vienna his intention of taking France
+ in his way from Italy, before he should go back to Austria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The certainty of a transmission of money from France to Austria was quite
+ enough to awaken the malevolent, who would have taken care, even had they
+ inquired into the source whence the money came, never to have made it
+ public. The opportunity was too favourable not to be made the pretext to
+ raise a clamour against the Queen for robbing France to favour and enrich
+ Austria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Emperor, who had never seen me, though he had often heard me spoken
+ of at the Court of Turin, expressed a wish, soon after his arrival, that I
+ should be presented to him. The immediate cause of this let me explain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was very much attached to the Princesse Clotilde, whom I had caused to
+ be united to Prince Charles Emanuel of Piedmont. Our family had, indeed,
+ been principally instrumental in the alliances of the two brothers of the
+ King of France with the two Piedmontese Princesses, as I had been in the
+ marriage of the Piedmontese Prince with the Princess of France. When the
+ Emperor Joseph visited the Court of Turin he was requested when he saw me
+ in Paris to signify the King of Sardinia's satisfaction at my good
+ offices. Consequently, the Emperor lost no time in delivering his message.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When I was just entering the Queen's apartment to be presented, 'Here,'
+ said Her Majesty, leading me to the Emperor, 'is the Princess,' and, then
+ turning to me, exclaimed, 'Mercy, how cold you are!' The Emperor answered
+ Her Majesty in German, 'What heat can you expect from the hand of one
+ whose heart resides with the dead?' and subjoined, in the same language,
+ 'What a pity that so charming a head should be fixed on a dead body.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I affected to understand the Emperor literally, and set him and the Queen
+ laughing by thanking His Imperial Majesty for the compliment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Emperor was exceedingly affable and full of anecdote. Marie
+ Antoinette resembled him in her general manners. The similitude in their
+ easy openness of address towards persons of merit was very striking. Both
+ always endeavoured to encourage persons of every class to speak their
+ minds freely, with this difference, that Her Majesty in so doing never
+ forgot her dignity or her rank at Court. Sometimes, however, I have seen
+ her, though so perfect in her deportment with inferiors, much intimidated
+ and sometimes embarrassed in the presence of the Princes and Princesses,
+ her equals, who for the first time visited Versailles: indeed, so much as
+ to give them a very incorrect idea of her capacity. It was by no means an
+ easy matter to cause Her Majesty to unfold her real sentiments or
+ character on a first acquaintance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I remember the Emperor one evening at supper when he was exceedingly
+ good-humoured, talkative, and amusing. He had visited all his Italian
+ relations, and had a word for each, man, woman, or child&mdash;not a soul
+ was spared. The King scarcely once opened his mouth, except to laugh at
+ some of the Emperor's jokes upon his Italian relations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He began by asking the Queen if she punished her husband by making him
+ keep as many Lents in the same year as her sister did the King of Naples.
+ The Queen not knowing what the Emperor meant, he explained himself, and
+ said, 'When the King of Naples offends his Queen she keeps him on short
+ commons and 'soupe maigre' till he has expiated the offence by the penance
+ of humbling himself; and then, and not till then, permits him to return
+ and share the nuptial rights of her bed.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'This sister of mine,' said the Emperor, 'is a proficient Queen in the
+ art of man training. My other sister, the Duchess of Parma, is equally
+ scientific in breaking-in horses; for she is constantly in the stables
+ with her grooms, by which she 'grooms' a pretty sum yearly in buying,
+ selling, and breaking-in; while the simpleton, her husband, is ringing the
+ bells with the Friars of Colorno to call his good subjects to Mass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'My brother Leopold, Grand Duke of Tuscany, feeds his subjects with plans
+ of economy, a dish that costs nothing, and not only saves him a multitude
+ of troubles in public buildings and public institutions, but keeps the
+ public money in his private coffers; which is one of the greatest and most
+ classical discoveries a Sovereign can possibly accomplish, and I give
+ Leopold much credit for his ingenuity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'My dear brother Ferdinand, Archduke of Milan, considering he is only
+ Governor of Lombardy, is not without industry; and I am told, when out of
+ the glimpse of his dragon the holy Beatrice, his Archduchess, sells his
+ corn in the time of war to my enemies, as he does to my friends in the
+ time of peace. So he loses nothing by his speculations!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen checked the Emperor repeatedly, though she could not help
+ smiling at his caricatures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'As to you, my dear Marie Antoinette,' continued the Emperor, not heeding
+ her, 'I see you have made great progress in the art of painting. You have
+ lavished more colour on one cheek than Rubens would have required for all
+ the figures in his cartoons.' Observing one of the Ladies of Honour still
+ more highly rouged than the Queen, he said, 'I suppose I look like a
+ death's head upon a tombstone, among all these high-coloured furies.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen again tried to interrupt the Emperor, but he was not to be put
+ out of countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He said he had no doubt, when he arrived at Brussels, that he should hear
+ of the progress of his sister, the Archduchess Maria Christina, in her
+ money negotiations with the banker Valkeers, who made a good stock for her
+ husband's jobs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'If Maria Christina's gardens and palace at Lakin could speak,' observed
+ he, 'what a spectacle of events would they not produce! What a number of
+ fine sights my own family would afford!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'When I get to Cologne,' pursued the Emperor, there I shall see my great
+ fat brother Maximilian, in his little electorate, spending his yearly
+ revenue upon an ecclesiastical procession; for priests, like opposition,
+ never bark but to get into the manger; never walk empty-handed; rosaries
+ and good cheer always wind up their holy work; and my good Maximilian, as
+ head of his Church, has scarcely feet to waddle into it. Feasting and
+ fasting produce the same effect. In wind and food he is quite an adept&mdash;puffing,
+ from one cause or the other, like a smith's bellows!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed, the Elector of Cologne was really grown so very fat, that, like
+ his Imperial mother, he could scarcely walk. He would so over-eat himself
+ at these ecclesiastical dinners, to make his guests welcome, that, from
+ indigestion, he would be puffing and blowing, an hour afterwards, for
+ breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'As I have begun the family visits,' continued the Emperor, 'I must not
+ pass by the Archduchess Mariana and the Lady Abbess at Clagenfurt; or, the
+ Lord knows, I shall never hear the end of their klagens.&mdash;[A German
+ word which signifies complaining.]&mdash;The first, I am told, is grown so
+ ugly, and, of course, so neglected by mankind, that she is become an utter
+ stranger to any attachment, excepting the fleshy embraces of the
+ disgusting wen that encircles her neck and bosom, and makes her head
+ appear like a black spot upon a large sheet of white paper. Therefore
+ klagen is all I can expect from that quarter of female flesh, and I dare
+ say it will be levelled against the whole race of mankind for their want
+ of taste in not admiring her exuberance of human craw!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'As to the Lady Abbess, she is one of my best recruiting sergeants. She
+ is so fond of training cadets for the benefit of the army that they learn
+ more from her system in one month than at the military academy at Neustadt
+ in a whole year. She is her mother's own daughter. She understands
+ military tactics thoroughly. She and I never quarrel, except when I
+ garrison her citadel with invalids. She and the canoness, Mariana, would
+ rather see a few young ensigns than all the staffs of the oldest
+ Field-marshals!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen often made signs to the Emperor to desist from thus exposing
+ every member of his family, and seemed to feel mortified; but the more Her
+ Majesty endeavoured to check his freedom, and make him silent, the more he
+ enlarged upon the subject. He did not even omit Maria Theresa, who, he
+ said, in consequence of some papers found on persons arrested as spies
+ from the Prussian camp, during the seven years' war, was reported to have
+ been greatly surprised to have discovered that her husband, the Emperor
+ Francis I., supplied the enemy's army with all kinds of provision from her
+ stores.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King scarcely ever answered excepting when the Emperor told the Queen
+ that her staircase and antechamber at Versailles resembled more the
+ Turkish bazars of Constantinople than a royal palace. 'But,' added he,
+ laughing, 'I suppose you would not allow the nuisance of hawkers and
+ pedlars almost under your nose, if the sweet perfumes of a handsome
+ present did not compensate for the disagreeable effluvia exhaling from
+ their filthy traffic.'
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [It was an old custom, in the passages and staircase of all the royal
+ palaces, for tradespeople to sell their merchandise for the
+ accommodation of the Court.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "On this, Louis XVI., in a tone of voice somewhat varying from his usual
+ mildness, assured the Emperor that neither himself nor the Queen derived
+ any advantage from the custom, beyond the convenience of purchasing
+ articles inside the palace at any moment they were wanted, without being
+ forced to send for them elsewhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'That is the very reason, my dear brother,' replied Joseph, 'why I would
+ not allow these shops to be where they are. The temptation to lavish money
+ to little purpose is too strong; and women have not philosophy enough to
+ resist having things they like, when they can be obtained easily, though
+ they may not be wanted.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Custom,' answered the King&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'True,' exclaimed the Queen, interrupting him; custom, my dear brother,
+ obliges us to tolerate in France many things which you, in Austria, have.
+ long since abolished; but the French are not to be: treated like the
+ Germans. A Frenchman is a slave to habit. His very caprice in the change
+ of fashion proceeds more from habit than genius or invention. His very
+ restlessness of character is systematic; and old customs and national
+ habits in a nation virtually spirituelle must not be trifled with. The
+ tree torn up by the roots dies for want of nourishment; but, on the
+ contrary, when lopped carefully only of its branches the pruning makes it
+ more valuable to the cultivator and more pleasing to the beholder. So it
+ is with national prejudices, which are often but the excrescences of
+ national virtues. Root them out and you root out virtue and all. They must
+ only be: pruned and turned to profit. A Frenchman is more easily killed
+ than subdued. Even his follies generally spring from a high sense of
+ national dignity and honour, which foreigners cannot but respect.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Emperor Joseph while in France mixed in all sorts of society, to gain
+ information with respect, to the popular feeling towards his sister, and
+ instruction as to the manners and modes of life and thinking of the
+ French. To this end he would often associate with the lowest of the common
+ people, and generally gave them a louis for their loss of time in
+ attending to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One day, when he was walking with the young Princesse Elizabeth and
+ myself in the public gardens at Versailles and in deep conversation with
+ us, two or three of these louis ladies came up to my side and, not knowing
+ who I was, whispered, 'There's no use in paying such attention to the
+ stranger: after all, when he has got what he wants, he'll only give you a
+ louis apiece and then send you about your business.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION X.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I remember an old lady who could not bear to be told of deaths. 'Psha!
+ Pshaw!' she would exclaim. 'Bring me no tales of funerals! Talk of births
+ and of those who are likely to be blest with them! These are the joys
+ which gladden old hearts and fill youthful ones with ecstasy! It is our
+ own reproduction in children which makes us quit the world happy and
+ contented; because then we only retire to make room for another race,
+ bringing with them all those faculties which are in us decayed; and
+ capable, which we ourselves have ceased to be, of taking our parts and
+ figuring on the stage of life so long as it may please the Supreme Manager
+ to busy them in earthly scenes! Then talk no more to me of weeds and
+ mourning, but show me christenings and all those who give employ to the
+ baptismal font!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such also was the exulting feeling of Marie Antoinette when she no longer
+ doubted of her wished-for pregnancy. The idea of becoming a mother filled
+ her soul with an exuberant delight, which made the very pavement on which
+ she trod vibrate with the words, 'I shall be a mother! I shall be a
+ mother!' She was so overjoyed that she not only made it public throughout
+ France but despatches were sent off to all her royal relatives. And was
+ not her rapture natural? so long as she had waited for the result of every
+ youthful union, and so coarsely as she had been reproached with her
+ misfortune! Now came her triumph. She could now prove to the world, like
+ all the descendants of the house of Austria, that there was no defect with
+ her. The satirists and the malevolent were silenced. Louis XVI., from the
+ cold, insensible bridegroom, became the infatuated admirer of his
+ long-neglected wife. The enthusiasm with which the event was hailed by all
+ France atoned for the partial insults she had received before it. The
+ splendid fetes, balls, and entertainments, indiscriminately lavished by
+ all ranks throughout the kingdom on this occasion, augmented those of the
+ Queen and the Court to a pitch of magnificence surpassing the most
+ luxurious and voluptuous times of the great and brilliant Louis XIV.
+ Entertainments were given even to the domestics of every description
+ belonging to the royal establishments. Indeed, so general was the joy
+ that, among those who could do no more, there could scarcely be found a
+ father or mother in France who, before they took their wine, did not first
+ offer up a prayer for the prosperous pregnancy of their beloved Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And yet, though the situation of Marie Antoinette was now become the
+ theme of a whole nation's exultation, she herself, the owner of the
+ precious burthen, selected by Heaven as its special depositary, was the
+ only one censured for expressing all her happiness!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /> <a name="p334" id="p334"></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="p334.jpg (147K)" src="images/p334.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Those models of decorum, the virtuous Princesses, her aunts, deemed it
+ highly indelicate in Her Majesty to have given public marks of her
+ satisfaction to those deputed to compliment her on her prosperous
+ situation. To avow the joy she felt was in their eyes indecent and
+ unqueenly. Where was the shrinking bashfulness of that one of these
+ Princesses who had herself been so clamorous to Louis XV. against her
+ husband, the Duke of Modena, for not having consummated her own marriage?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The party of the dismissed favourite Du Barry were still working
+ underground. Their pestiferous vapours issued from the recesses of the
+ earth, to obscure the brightness of the rising sun, which was now rapidly
+ towering to its climax, to obliterate the little planets which had once
+ endeavoured to eclipse its beautiful rays, but were now incapable of
+ competition, and unable to endure its lustre. This malignant nest of
+ serpents began to poison the minds of the courtiers, as soon as the
+ pregnancy was obvious, by innuendoes on the partiality of the Comte
+ d'Artois for the Queen; and at length, infamously, and openly, dared to
+ point him out as the cause?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thus, in the heart of the Court itself, originated this most atrocious
+ slander, long before it reached the nation, and so much assisted to
+ destroy Her Majesty's popularity with a people, who now adored her
+ amiableness, her general kind-heartedness, and her unbounded charity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have repeatedly seen the Queen and the Comte d'Artois together under
+ circumstances in which there could have been no concealment of her real
+ feelings; and I can firmly and boldly assert the falsehood of this
+ allegation against my royal mistress. The only attentions Marie Antoinette
+ received in the earlier part of her residence in France were from her
+ grandfather and her brothers-in-law. Of these, the Comte d'Artois was the
+ only one who, from youth and liveliness of character, thoroughly
+ sympathised with his sister. But, beyond the little freedoms of two young
+ and innocent playmates, nothing can be charged upon their intimacy,&mdash;no
+ familiarity whatever farther than was warranted by their relationship. I
+ can bear witness that Her Majesty's attachment for the Comte d'Artois
+ never differed in its nature from what she felt for her brother the
+ Emperor Joseph.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [When the King thought proper to be reconciled to the Queen after the
+ death of his grandfather, Louis XV., and when she became a mother, she
+ really was very much attached to Louis XVI., as may be proved from her
+ never quitting him, and suffering all the horrid sacrifices she endured,
+ through the whole period of the Revolution, rather than leave her
+ husband, her children, or her sister. Marie Antoinette might have saved
+ her life twenty times, had not the King's safety, united with her own
+ and that of her family, impelled her to reject every proposition of
+ self-preservation.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "It is very likely that the slander of which I speak derived some colour
+ of probability afterwards with the million, from the Queen's
+ thoughtlessness, relative to the challenge which passed between the Comte
+ d'Artois and the Duc de Bourbon. In right of my station, I was one of Her
+ Majesty's confidential counsellors, and it became my duty to put restraint
+ upon her inclinations, whenever I conceived they led her wrong. In this
+ instance, I exercised my prerogative decidedly, and even so much so as to
+ create displeasure; but I anticipated the consequences, which actually
+ ensued, and preferred to risk my royal mistress's displeasure rather than
+ her reputation. The dispute, which led to the duel, was on some point of
+ etiquette; and the Baron de Besenval was to attend as second to one of the
+ parties. From the Queen's attachment for her royal brother, she wished the
+ affair to be amicably arranged, without the knowledge either of the King,
+ who was ignorant of what had taken place, or of the parties; which could
+ only be effected by her seeing the Baron in the most private manner. I
+ opposed Her Majesty's allowing any interview with the Baron upon any
+ terms, unless sanctioned by the King. This unexpected and peremptory
+ refusal obliged the Queen to transfer her confidence to the librarian, who
+ introduced the Baron into one of the private apartments of Her Majesty's
+ women, communicating with that of the Queen, where Her Majesty could see
+ the Baron without the exposure of passing any of the other attendants. The
+ Baron was quite gray, and upwards of sixty years of age! But the
+ self-conceited dotard soon caused the Queen to repent her misplaced
+ confidence, and from his unwarrantable impudence on that occasion, when he
+ found himself alone with the Queen, Her Majesty, though he was a constant
+ member of the societies of the De Polignacs, ever after treated him with
+ sovereign contempt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen herself afterwards described to me the Baron's presumptuous
+ attack upon her credulity. From this circumstance I thenceforward totally
+ excluded him from my parties, where Her Majesty was always a regular
+ visitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The coolness to which my determination not to allow the interview gave
+ rise between Her Majesty and myself was but momentary. The Queen had too
+ much discernment not to appreciate the basis upon which my denial was
+ grounded, even before she was convinced by the result how correct had been
+ my reflection. She felt her error, and, by the mediation of the Duke of
+ Dorset, we were reunited more closely than ever, and so, I trust, we shall
+ remain till death!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was much more attempted to be made of another instance, in which I
+ exercised the duty of my office, than the truth justified&mdash;the
+ nightly promenades on the terrace at Versailles, or at Trianon. Though no
+ amusement could have been more harmless or innocent for a private
+ individual, yet I certainly, disapproved it for a Queen, and therefore
+ withheld the sanction of my attendance. My sole objection was on the score
+ of dignity. I well knew that Du Barry and her infamous party were constant
+ spies upon the Queen on every occasion of such a nature; and that they
+ would not fail to exaggerate her every movement to her prejudice. Though
+ Du Barry could not form one of the party, which was a great source of
+ heartburning, it was easy for her, under the circumstances, to mingle with
+ the throng. When I suggested these objections to the Queen, Her Majesty,
+ feeling no inward cause of reproach, and being sanctioned in what she did
+ by the King himself, laughed at the idea of these little excursions
+ affording food for scandal. I assured Her Majesty that I had every reason
+ to be convinced that Du Barry was often in disguise, not far from the seat
+ where Her Majesty and the Princesse Elizabeth could be overheard in their
+ most secret conversations with each other. 'Listeners,' replied the Queen,
+ 'never hear any good of themselves.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'My dear Lamballe,' she continued, 'you have taken such a dislike to this
+ woman that you cannot conceive she can be occupied but in mischief. This
+ is uncharitable. She certainly has no reason to be dissatisfied with
+ either the King or myself. We have both left her in the full enjoyment of
+ all she possessed, except the right of appearing at Court or continuing in
+ the society her conduct had too long disgraced.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I said it was very true, but that I should be happier to find Her Majesty
+ so scrupulous as never to give an opportunity even for the falsehoods of
+ her enemies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her Majesty turned the matter off, as usual, by saying she had no idea of
+ injuring others, and could not believe that any one would wantonly injure
+ her, adding, 'The Duchess and the Princesse Elizabeth, my two sisters, and
+ all the other ladies, are coming to hear the concert this evening, and you
+ will be delighted.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I excused myself under the plea of the night air disagreeing with my
+ health, and returned to Versailles without ever making myself one of the
+ nocturnal members of Her Majesty's society, well knowing she could
+ dispense with my presence, there being more than enough ever ready to
+ hurry her by their own imprudence into the folly of despising criticisms,
+ which I always endeavoured to avoid, though I did not fear them. Of these
+ I cannot but consider her secretary as one. The following circumstance
+ connected with the promenades is a proof:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Abbe Vermond was present one day when Marie Antoinette observed that
+ she felt rather indisposed. I attributed it to Her Majesty's having
+ lightened her dress and exposed herself too much to the night air.
+ 'Heavens, madame!' cried the Abbe, 'would you always have Her Majesty
+ cased up in steel armour, and not take the fresh air, without being
+ surrounded by a troop of horse and foot, as a Field-marshal is when going
+ to storm a fortress? Pray, Princess, now that Her Majesty, has freed
+ herself from the annoying shackles of Madame Etiquette (the Comtesse de
+ Noailles), let her enjoy the pleasure of a simple robe and breathe freely
+ the fresh morning dew, as has been her custom all her life (and as her
+ mother before her, the Empress Maria Theresa, has done and continues to
+ do, even to this day), unfettered by antiquated absurdities! Let me be
+ anything rather than a Queen of France, if I must be doomed to the slavery
+ of such tyrannical rules!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'True; but, sir,' replied I, 'you should reflect that if you were a Queen
+ of France, France, in making you mistress of her destinies, and placing
+ you at the head of her nation, would in return look for respect from you
+ to her customs and manners. I am born an Italian, but I renounced all
+ national peculiarities of thinking and acting the moment I set my foot on
+ French ground.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'And so did I,' said Marie Antoinette.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I know you did, Madame,' I answered; but I am replying to your
+ preceptor; and I only wish he saw things in the same light I do. When we
+ are at Rome, we should do as Rome does. You have never had a regicide
+ Bertrand de Gurdon, a Ravillac or a Damiens in Germany; but they have been
+ common in France, and the Sovereigns of France cannot be too circumspect
+ in their maintenance of ancient etiquette to command the dignified respect
+ of a frivolous and versatile people.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen, though she did not strictly adhere to my counsels or the
+ Abbe's advice, had too much good sense to allow herself to be prejudiced
+ against me by her preceptor; but the Abbe never entered on the propriety
+ or impropriety of the Queen's conduct before me, and from the moment I
+ have mentioned studiously avoided, in my presence, anything which could
+ lead to discussion on the change of dress and amusements introduced by Her
+ Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Although I disapproved of Her Majesty's deviations from established forms
+ in this, or, indeed, any respect, yet I never, before or after, expressed
+ my opinion before a third person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never should I have been so firmly and so long attached to Marie
+ Antoinette, had I not known that her native thorough goodness of heart had
+ been warped and misguided, though acting at the same time with the best
+ intentions, by a false notion of her real innocence being a sufficient
+ shield against the public censure of such innovations upon national
+ prejudices, as she thought prayer to introduce,&mdash;the fatal error of
+ conscious rectitude, encouraged in its regardlessness of appearances by
+ those very persons who well knew that it is only by appearances a nation
+ can judge of its rulers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I remember a ludicrous circumstance arising from the Queen's innocent
+ curiosity, in which, if there were anything to blame, I myself am to be
+ censured for lending myself to it so heartily to satisfy Her Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the Chevalier d'Eon was allowed to return to France, Her Majesty
+ expressed a particular inclination to see this extraordinary character.
+ From prudential as well as political motives, she was at first easily
+ persuaded to repress her desire. However, by a most ludicrous occurrence,
+ it was revived, and nothing would do but she must have a sight of the
+ being who had for some time been the talk of every society, and at the
+ period to which I allude was become the mirth of all Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Chevalier being one day in a very large party of both sexes, in
+ which, though his appearance had more of the old soldier in it than of the
+ character he was compelled 'malgre lui', to adopt, many of the guests
+ having no idea to what sex this nondescript animal really belonged, the
+ conversation after dinner happened to turn on the manly exercise of
+ fencing.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [It may be necessary to observe here that the Chevalier, having for some
+ particular motives been banished from France, was afterwards permitted
+ to return only on condition of never appearing but in the disguised
+ dress of a female, though he was always habited in the male costume
+ underneath it.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ Heated by a subject to him so interesting, the Chevalier, forgetful of the
+ respect due to his assumed garb, started from his seat, and, pulling up
+ his petticoats, threw himself on guard. Though dressed in male attire
+ underneath, this sudden freak sent all the ladies&mdash;and many of the
+ gentlemen out of the room in double&mdash;quick time. The Chevalier,
+ however, instantly recovering from the first impulse, quietly pat down
+ his, upper garment, and begged pardon in, a gentlemanly manner for having
+ for a moment deviated from the forma of his imposed situation. All, the
+ gossips of Paris were presently amused with the story, which, of coarse,
+ reached the Court, with every droll particular of the pulling up and
+ clapping down the cumbrous paraphernalia of a hoop petticoat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King and Queen, from the manner in which they enjoyed the tale when
+ told them (and certainly it lost nothing in the report), would not have
+ been the least amused of the party had they been present. His Majesty
+ shook the room with laughing, and the Queen, the Princesse Elizabeth, and
+ the other ladies were convulsed at the description.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When we were alone, 'How I should like,' said the Queen, 'to see this
+ curious man-woman!'&mdash;'Indeed,' replied I, 'I have not less curiosity
+ than yourself, and I think we may contrive to let Your Majesty have a peep
+ at him&mdash;her, I mean!&mdash;without compromising your dignity, or
+ offending the Minister who interdicted the Chevalier from appearing in
+ your presence. I know he has expressed the greatest mortification, and
+ that his wish to see Your Majesty is almost irrepressible.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'But how will you be able to contrive this without its being known to the
+ King, or to the Comte de Vergennes, who would never forgive me?' exclaimed
+ Her Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Why, on Sunday, when you go to chapel, I will cause him, by some means
+ or other, to make his appearance, en grande costume, among the group of
+ ladies who are generally waiting there to be presented to Your Majesty.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Oh, you charming creature!' said the Queen. 'But won't the Minister
+ banish or exile him for it?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'No, no! He has only been forbidden an audience of Your Majesty at
+ Court,' I replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In good earnest, on the Sunday following, the Chevalier was dressed en
+ costume, with a large hoop, very long train, sack, five rows of ruffles,
+ an immensely high powdered female wig, very beautiful lappets, white
+ gloves, an elegant fan in his hand, his beard closely shaved, his neck and
+ ears adorned with diamond rings and necklaces, and assuming all the airs
+ and graces of a fine lady!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, unluckily, his anxiety was so great, the moment the Queen made her
+ appearance, to get a sight of Her Majesty, that, on rushing before the
+ other ladies, his wig and head-dress fell off his head; and, before they
+ could be well replaced, he made so, ridiculous a figure, by clapping them,
+ in his confusion, hind part before, that the King, the Queen, and the
+ whole suite, could scarcely refrain from laughing; aloud in the church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thus ended the long longed for sight of this famous man-woman!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As to me, it was a great while before I could recover myself. Even now, I
+ laugh whenever I think of this great lady deprived of her head ornaments,
+ with her bald pate laid bare, to the derision of such a multitude of
+ Parisians, always prompt to divert themselves at the expense of others.
+ However, the affair passed off unheeded, and no one but the Queen and
+ myself ever knew that we ourselves had been innocently the cause of this
+ comical adventure. When we met after Mass, we were so overpowered, that
+ neither of us could speak for laughing. The Bishop who officiated said it
+ was lucky he had no sermon to preach that day, for it would have been
+ difficult for him to have recollected himself, or to have maintained his
+ gravity. The ridiculous appearance of the Chevalier, he added, was so
+ continually presenting itself before him during the service that it was as
+ much as he could do to restrain himself from laughing, by keeping his eyes
+ constantly riveted on the book. Indeed, the oddity of the affair was
+ greatly heightened when, in the middle of the Mass, some charitable hand
+ having adjusted the wig of the Chevalier, he re-entered the chapel as if
+ nothing had happened, and, placing himself exactly opposite the altar,
+ with his train upon his arm, stood fanning himself, a la coquette, with an
+ inflexible self-possession which only rendered it the more difficult for
+ those around him to maintain their composure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thus ended the Queen's curiosity. The result only made the Chevalier's
+ company in greater request, for every one became more anxious than ever to
+ know the masculine lady who had lost her wig!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /> <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ MEMOIRS OF LOUIS XV. AND XVI.
+ </h1>
+ <h3>
+ Being Secret Memoirs of Madame du Hausset, Lady's Maid to Madame de
+ Pompadour, and of an unknown English Girl and the Princess Lamballe
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ BOOK 2.
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION I.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [From the time that the Princesse de Lamballe saw the ties between the
+ Queen and her favourite De Polignac drawing closer she became less
+ assiduous in her attendance at Court, being reluctant to importune the
+ friends by her presence at an intimacy which she did not approve. She
+ could not, however, withhold her accustomed attentions, as the period of
+ Her Majesty's accouchement approached; and she has thus noted the
+ circumstance of the birth of the Duchesse d'Angouleme, on the 19th of
+ December, 1778.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "The moment for the accomplishment of the Queen's darling hope was now at
+ hand: she was about to become a mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It had been agreed between Her Majesty and myself, that I was to place
+ myself so near the accoucheur, Vermond,
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [Brother to the Abbe, whose pride was so great at this honour conferred
+ on his relative, that he never spoke of him without denominating him
+ Monsieur mon frere, d'accoucher de sa Majeste, Vermond.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ as to be the first to distinguish the sex of the new-born infant, and if
+ she should be delivered of a Dauphin to say, in Italian, 'Il figlio e
+ nato.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her Majesty was, however, foiled even in this the most blissful of her
+ desires. She was delivered of a daughter instead of a Dauphin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From the immense crowd that burst into the apartment the instant Vermond
+ said, The Queen is happily delivered, Her Majesty was nearly suffocated. I
+ had hold of her hand, and as I said 'La regina e andato', mistaking
+ 'andato' for 'nato', between the joy of giving birth to a son and the
+ pressure of the crowd, Her Majesty fainted. Overcome by the dangerous
+ situation in which I saw my royal mistress, I myself was carried out of
+ the room in a lifeless state. The situation of Her Majesty was for some
+ time very doubtful, till the people were dragged with violence from about
+ her, that she might have air. On her recovering, the King was the first
+ person who told her that she was the mother of a very fine Princess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Well, then,' said the Queen, 'I am like my mother, for at my birth she
+ also wished for a son instead of a daughter; and you have lost your
+ wager:' for the King had betted with Maria Theresa that it would be a son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King answered her by repeating the lines Metastasio had written on
+ that occasion.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "'Io perdei: l'augusta figlia <br /> A pagar, m'a condemnato; <br /> Ma
+ s'e ver the a voi somiglia <br /> Tutto il moudo ha guadagnato.'"
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The Princesse de Lamballe again ceased to be constantly about the
+ Queen. Her danger was over, she was a mother, and the attentions of
+ disinterested friendship were no longer indispensable. She herself about
+ this time met with a deep affliction. She lost both of her own parents;
+ and to her sorrows may, in a great degree, be ascribed her silence upon
+ the events which intervened between the birth of Madame and that of the
+ Dauphin. She was as assiduous as ever in her attentions to Her Majesty
+ on her second lying-in. The circumstances of the death of Maria Theresa,
+ the Queen's mother, in the interval which divided the two accouchements,
+ and Her Majesty's anguish, and refusal to see any but De Lamballe and De
+ Polignac, are too well known to detain us longer from the notes of the
+ Princess. It is enough for the reader to know that the friendship of Her
+ Majesty for her superintendent seemed to be gradually reviving in all
+ its early enthusiasm, by her unremitting kindness during the
+ confinements of the Queen, till, at length, they became more attached
+ than ever. But, not to anticipate, let me return to the narrative.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "The public feeling had undergone a great change with respect to Her
+ Majesty from the time of her first accouchement. Still, she was not the
+ mother of a future King. The people looked upon her as belonging to them
+ more than she had done before, and faction was silenced by the general
+ delight. But she had not yet attained the climax of her felicity. A second
+ pregnancy gave a new excitement to the nation; and, at length, on the 22nd
+ October, 1781, dawned the day of hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In consequence of what happened on the first accouchement, measures were
+ taken to prevent similar disasters on the second. The number admitted into
+ the apartment was circumscribed. The silence observed left the Queen in
+ uncertainty of the sex to which she had given birth, till, with tears of
+ joy, the King said to her: 'Madame, the hopes of the nation, and mine, are
+ fulfilled. You are the mother of a Dauphin.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Princesse Elizabeth and myself were so overjoyed that we embraced
+ every one in the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At this time Their Majesties were adored. Marie Antoinette, with all her
+ beauty and amiableness, was a mere cipher in the eyes of France previous
+ to her becoming the mother of an heir to the Crown; but her popularity now
+ arose to a pitch of unequalled enthusiasm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have heard of but one expression to Her Majesty upon this occasion in
+ any way savouring of discontent. This came from the royal aunts. On Marie
+ Antoinette's expressing to them her joy in having brought a Dauphin to the
+ nation, they replied, 'We will only repeat our father's observation on a
+ similar subject. When one of our sisters complained to his late Majesty
+ that, as her Italian husband had copied the Dauphin's whim, she could not,
+ though long a bride, boast of being a wife, or hope to become a mother&mdash;"a
+ prudent Princess," replied Louis XV., "never wants heirs!"' But the
+ feeling of the royal aunts was an exception to the general sentiment,
+ which really seemed like madness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I remember a proof of this which happened at the time. Chancing to cross
+ the King's path as he was going to Marly and I coming from Rambouillet, my
+ two postillions jumped from their horses, threw themselves on the high
+ road upon their knees, though it was very dirty, and remained there,
+ offering up their benedictions, till he was out of sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The felicity of the Queen was too great not to be soon overcast. The
+ unbounded influence of the De Polignacs was now at its zenith. It could
+ not fail of being attacked. Every engine of malice, envy, and detraction
+ was let loose; and, in the vilest calumnies against the character of the
+ Duchess, her royal mistress was included.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was, in truth, a most singular fatality, in the life of Marie
+ Antoinette that she could do nothing, however beneficial or disinterested,
+ for which she was not either criticised or censured. She had a tenacity,
+ of character which made her cling more closely to attachments from which
+ she saw others desirous of estranging her; and this firmness, however
+ excellent in principle, was, in her case, fatal in its effects. The Abbe
+ Vermond, Her Majesty's confessor and tutor, and, unfortunately, in many
+ respects, her ambitious guide, was really alarmed at the rising favour of
+ the Duchess; and, though he knew the very obstacles thrown in her way only
+ strengthened her resolution as to any favourite object, yet he ventured to
+ head an intrigue to destroy the great influence of the De Polignacs,
+ which, as he might have foreseen, only served to hasten their
+ aggrandisement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At this crisis the dissipation of the Duc de Guemenee caused him to
+ become a bankrupt. I know not whether it can be said in principle, but
+ certainly it may in property, 'It is an ill wind that blows no one any
+ good.' The Princess, his wife, having been obliged to leave her residence
+ at Versailles, in consequence of the Duke's dismissal from the King's
+ service on account of the disordered state of his pecuniary circumstances,
+ the situation of governess to the royal children became necessarily
+ vacant, and was immediately transferred to the Duchesse de Polignac. The
+ Queen, to enable her friend to support her station with all the eclat
+ suitable to its dignity, took care to supply ample means from her own
+ private purse. A most magnificent suite of apartments was ordered to be
+ arranged, under the immediate inspection of the Queen's maitre d'hotel, at
+ Her Majesty's expense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is there anything on earth more natural than the lively interest which
+ inspires a mother towards those who have the care of her offspring? What,
+ then, must have been the feelings of a Queen of France who had been
+ deprived of that blessing for which connubial attachments are formed, and
+ which, vice versa, constitutes the only real happiness of every young
+ female, what must have been, I say, the ecstasy of Marie Antoinette when
+ she not only found herself a mother, but the dear pledges of all her
+ future bliss in the hands of one whose friendship allowed her the
+ unrestrained exercise of maternal affection,&mdash;a climax of felicity
+ combining not only the pleasures of an ordinary mother, but the greatness,
+ the dignity, and the flattering popularity of a Queen of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Though the pension of the Duchesse de Polignac was no more than that
+ usually allotted to all former governesses of the royal children of
+ France, yet circumstances tempted her to a display not a little injurious
+ to her popularity as well as to that of her royal mistress. She gave too
+ many pretexts to imputations of extravagance. Yet she had neither
+ patronage, nor sinecures, nor immunities beyond the few inseparable from
+ the office she held, and which had been the same for centuries under the
+ Monarchy of France. But it must be remembered, as an excuse for the
+ splendour of her establishment, that she entered her office upon a footing
+ very different from that of any of her predecessors. Her mansion was not
+ the quiet, retired, simple household of the governess of the royal
+ children, as formerly: it had become the magnificent resort of the first
+ Queen in Europe; the daily haunt of Her Majesty. The Queen certainly
+ visited the former governess, as she had done the Duchesse de Duras and
+ many other frequenters of her Court parties; but she made the Duchesse de
+ Polignac's her Court; and all the courtiers of that Court, and, I may say,
+ the great personages of all France, as well as the Ministers and all
+ foreigners of distinction, held there their usual rendezvous;
+ consequently, there was nothing wanting but the guards in attendance in
+ the Queen's apartments to have made it a royal residence suitable for the
+ reception of the illustrious personages that were in the constant habit of
+ visiting these levees, assemblies, balls, routs, picnics, dinner, supper,
+ and card parties.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [I have seen ladies at the Princesse de Lamballe's come from these card
+ parties with their laps so blackened by the quantities of gold received
+ in them, that they have been obliged to change their dresses to go to
+ supper. Many a chevalier d'industree and young military spendthrift has
+ made his harvest here. Thousands were won and lost, and the ladies were
+ generally the dupes of all those who were the constant speculative
+ attendants. The Princease de Lamballe did not like play, but when it was
+ necessary she did play, and won or lost to a limited extent; but the
+ prescribed sum once exhausted or gained she left off. In set parties,
+ such as those of whist, she never played except when one was wanted,
+ often excusing herself on the score of its requiring more attention than
+ it was in her power to give to it and her reluctance to sacrifice her
+ partner; though I have heard Beau Dillon, the Duke of Dorset, Lord
+ Edward Dillon, and many others say that she understood and played the
+ game much better than many who had a higher opinion of their skill in
+ it. Lord Edward Fitzgerald was admitted to the parties at the Duchesse
+ de Polignac's on his first coming to Paris; but when his connection with
+ the Duc d'Orleans and Madame de Genlis became known he was informed that
+ his society would be dispensed with. The famous, or rather the infamous,
+ Beckford was also excluded.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "Much as some of the higher classes of the nobility felt aggrieved at the
+ preference given by the Queen to the Duchesse de Polignac, that which
+ raised against Her Majesty the most implacable resentment was her
+ frequenting the parties of her favourite more than those of any other of
+ the 'haut ton'. These assemblies, from the situation held by the Duchess,
+ could not always be the most select. Many of the guests who chanced to get
+ access to them from a mere glimpse of the Queen&mdash;whose general
+ good-humour, vivacity, and constant wish to please all around her would
+ often make her commit herself unconsciously and unintentionally&mdash;would
+ fabricate anecdotes of things they had neither seen nor heard; and which
+ never had existence, except in their own wicked imaginations. The scene of
+ the inventions, circulated against Her Majesty through France, was, in
+ consequence, generally placed at the Duchess's; but they were usually so
+ distinctly and obviously false that no notice was taken of them, nor was
+ any attempt made to check their promulgation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Exemplary as was the friendship between this enthusiastic pair, how much
+ more fortunate for both would it have been had it never happened! I
+ foresaw the results long, long before they took place; but the Queen was
+ not to be thwarted. Fearful she might attribute my anxiety for her general
+ safety to unworthy personal views, I was often silent, even when duty bade
+ me speak. I was, perhaps, too scrupulous about seeming officious or
+ jealous of the predilection shown to the Duchess. Experience had taught me
+ the inutility of representing consequences, and I had no wish to quarrel
+ with the Queen. Indeed, there was a degree of coldness towards me on the
+ part of Her Majesty for having gone so far as I had done. It was not until
+ after the birth of the Duc de Normandie, her third child, in March, 1785,
+ that her friendship resumed its primitive warmth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As the children grew, Her Majesty's attachment for their governess grew
+ with them. All that has been said of Tasso's Armida was nothing to this
+ luxurious temple of maternal affection. Never was female friendship more
+ strongly cemented, or less disturbed by the nauseous poison of envy,
+ malice, or mean jealousy. The Queen was in the plenitude of every earthly
+ enjoyment, from being able to see and contribute to the education of the
+ children she tenderly loved, unrestrained by the gothic etiquette with
+ which all former royal mothers had been fettered, but which the kind
+ indulgence of the Duchesse de Polignac broke through, as unnatural and
+ unworthy of the enlightened and affectionate. The Duchess was herself an
+ attentive, careful mother. She felt for the Queen, and encouraged her
+ maternal sympathies, so doubly endeared by the long, long disappointment
+ which had preceded their gratification. The sacrifice of all the cold
+ forms of state policy by the new governess, and the free access she gave
+ the royal mother to her children, so unprecedented in the Court of France,
+ rendered Marie Antoinette so grateful that it may justly be said she
+ divided her heart between the governess and the governed. Habit soon made
+ it necessary for her existence that she should dedicate the whole of her
+ time, not taken up in public ceremonies or parties, to the cultivation of
+ the minds of her children. Conscious of her own deficiency in this
+ respect, she determined to redeem this error in her offspring. The love of
+ the frivolous amusements of society, for which the want of higher
+ cultivation left room in her mind, was humoured by the gaieties of the
+ Duchesse de Polignac's assemblies; while her nobler dispositions were
+ encouraged by the privileges of the favourite's station. Thus, all her
+ inclinations harmonising with the habits and position of her friend, Marie
+ Antoinette literally passed the greatest part of some years in company
+ with the Duchesse de Polignac,&mdash;either amidst the glare and bustle of
+ public recreation, or in the private apartment of the governess and her
+ children, increasing as much as possible the kindness of the one for the
+ benefit and comfort of the others. The attachment of the Duchess to the
+ royal children was returned by the Queen's affection for the offspring of
+ the Duchess. So much was Her Majesty interested in favour of the daughter
+ of the Duchess, that, before that young lady was fifteen years of age, she
+ herself contrived and accomplished her marriage with the Duc de Guiche,
+ then 'maitre de ceremonie' to Her Majesty, and whose interests were
+ essentially, promoted by this alliance.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The Duc de Guiche, since Duc de Grammont, has proved how much he
+ merited the distinction he received, in consequence of the attachment
+ between the Queen and his mother-in-law, by the devotedness with which
+ he followed the fallen fortunes of the Bourbons till their restoration,
+ since which he has not been forgotten. The Duchess, his wife, who at her
+ marriage was beaming with all the beauties of her age, and adorned by
+ art and nature with every accomplishment, though she came into notice at
+ a time when the Court had scarcely recovered itself from the debauched
+ morals by which it had been so long degraded by a De Pompadour and a Du
+ Barry, has yet preserved her character, by the strictness of her
+ conduct, free from the censorious criticisms of an epoch in which some
+ of the purest could not escape unassailed. I saw her at Pyrmont in 1803;
+ and even then, though the mother of many children, she looked as young
+ and beautiful as ever. She was remarkably well educated and
+ accomplished, a profound musician on the harp and pianoforte, graceful
+ in her conversation, and a most charming dancer. She seemed to bear the
+ vicissitudes of fortune with a philosophical courage and resignation not
+ often to be met with in light-headed French women. She was amiable in
+ her manners, easy of access, always lively and cheerful, and
+ enthusiastically attached to the country whence she was then excluded.
+ She constantly accompanied the wife of the late Louis XVIII. during her
+ travels in Germany, as her husband the Duke did His Majesty during his
+ residence at Mittau, in Courland, etc. I have had the honour of seeing
+ the Duke twice since the Revolution; once, on my coming from Russia, at
+ General Binkingdroff's, Governor of Mittau, and since, in Portland
+ Place, at the French Ambassador's, on his coming to England in the name
+ of his Sovereign, to congratulate the King of England on his accession
+ to the throne.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "The great cabals, which agitated the Court in consequence of the favour
+ shown to the De Polignacs, were not slow in declaring themselves. The
+ Comtesse de Noailles was one of the foremost among the discontented. Her
+ resignation, upon the appointment of a superintendent, was a sufficient
+ evidence of her real feeling; but when she now saw a place filled, to
+ which she conceived her family had a claim, her displeasure could not be
+ silent, and her dislike to the Queen began to express itself without
+ reserve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Another source of dissatisfaction against the Queen was her extreme
+ partiality for the English. After the peace of Versailles, in 1783, the
+ English flocked into France, and I believe if a poodle dog had come from
+ England it would have met with a good reception from Her Majesty. This was
+ natural enough. The American war had been carried on entirely against her
+ wish; though, from the influence she was supposed to exercise in the
+ Cabinet, it was presumed to have been managed entirely by herself. This
+ odious opinion she wished personally to destroy; and it could only be done
+ by the distinction with which, after the peace, she treated the whole
+ English nation.'
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The daughter of the Duchesse de Polignac (of my meeting with whom I
+ have already spoken in a note), entering with me upon the subject of
+ France and of old times, observed that had the Queen limited her
+ attachment to the person of her mother, she would not have given all the
+ annoyance which she did to the nobility. It was to these partialities to
+ the English, the Duchesse de Guiche Grammont alluded. I do not know the
+ lady's name distinctly, but I am certain I have heard the beautiful Lady
+ Sarah Bunbury mentioned by the Princesse de Lamballe as having received
+ particular attention from the Queen; for the Princess had heard much
+ about this lady and "a certain great personage" in England; but, on
+ discovering her acquaintance with the Duc de Lauzun, Her Majesty
+ withdrew from the intimacy, though not soon enough to prevent its having
+ given food for scandal. "You must remember," added the Duchesse de
+ Guiche Grammont, "how much the Queen was censured for her enthusiasm
+ about Lady Spencer." I replied that I did remember the much-ado about
+ nothing there was regarding some English lady, to whom the Queen took a
+ liking, whose name I could not exactly recall; but I knew well she
+ studied to please the English in general. Of this Lady Spencer it is
+ that the Princess speaks in one of the following pages of this chapter.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "Several of the English nobility were on a familiar footing at the parties
+ of the Duchesse de Polignac. This was quite enough for the slanderers.
+ They were all ranked, and that publicly, as lovers of Her Majesty. I
+ recollect when there were no less than five different private
+ commissioners out, to suppress the libels that were in circulation over
+ all France, against the Queen and Lord Edward Dillon, the Duke of Dorset,
+ Lord George Conway, Arthur Dillon, as well as Count Fersen, the Duc de
+ Lauzun, and the Comte d'Artois, who were all not only constant frequenters
+ of Polignac's but visitors of Marie Antoinette.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By the false policy of Her Majesty's advisers, these enemies and
+ libellers, instead of being brought to the condign punishment their infamy
+ deserved, were privately hushed into silence, out of delicacy to the
+ Queen's feelings, by large sums of money and pensions, which encouraged
+ numbers to commit the same enormity in the hope of obtaining the same
+ recompense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But these were mercenary wretches, from whom no better could have been
+ expected. A legitimate mode of robbery had been pressed upon their notice
+ by the Government itself, and they thought it only a matter of fair
+ speculation to make the best of it. There were some libellers, however, of
+ a higher order, in comparison with whose motives for slander, those of the
+ mere scandal-jobbers were white as the driven snow. Of these, one of the
+ worst was the Duc de Lauzun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The first motive of the Queen's strong dislike to the Duc de Lauzun
+ sprang from Her Majesty's attachment to the Duchesse d'Orleans, whom she
+ really loved. She was greatly displeased at the injury inflicted upon her
+ valued friend by De Lauzun, in estranging the affection of the Duc
+ d'Orleans from his wife by introducing him to depraved society. Among the
+ associates to which this connection led the Duc d'Orleans were a certain
+ Madame Duthee and Madame Buffon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When De Lauzun, after having been expelled from the drawing-room of the
+ Queen for his insolent presumption,&mdash;[The allusion here is to the
+ affair of the heron plume.]&mdash;meeting with coolness at the King's
+ levee, sought to cover his disgrace by appearing at the assemblies of the
+ Duchesse de Polignac, Her Grace was too sincerely the friend of her
+ Sovereign and benefactress not to perceive the drift of his conduct. She
+ consequently signified to the self-sufficient coxcomb that her assemblies
+ were not open to the public. Being thus shut out from Their Majesties,
+ and, as a natural result, excluded from the most brilliant societies of
+ Paris, De Lauzun, from a most diabolical spirit of revenge, joined the
+ nefarious party which had succeeded in poisoning the mind of the Duc
+ d'Orleans, and from the hordes of which, like the burning lava from Etna,
+ issued calumnies which swept the most virtuous and innocent victims that
+ ever breathed to their destruction!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Among the Queen's favourites, and those most in request at the De
+ Polignac parties, was the good Lady Spencer, with whom I became most
+ intimately acquainted when I first went to England; and from whom, as well
+ as from her two charming daughters, the Duchess of Devonshire and Lady
+ Duncannon, since Lady Besborough, I received the greatest marks of cordial
+ hospitality. In consequence, when her ladyship came to France, I hastened
+ to present her to the Queen. Her Majesty, taking a great liking to the
+ amiable Englishwoman, and wishing to profit by her private conversations
+ and society, gave orders that Lady Spencer should pass to her private
+ closet whenever she came to Versailles, without the formal ceremony of
+ waiting in the antechamber to be announced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One day, Her Majesty, Lady Spencer, and myself were observing the
+ difficulty there was in acquiring a correct pronunciation of the English
+ language, when Lady Spencer remarked that it only required a little
+ attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I beg your pardon,' said the Queen, 'that's not all, because there are
+ many things you do not call by their proper names, as they are in the
+ dictionary.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Pray what are they, please Your Majesty?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Well, I will give you an instance. For example, 'les culottes'&mdash;what
+ do you call them?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Small clothes,' replied her ladyship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Ma foi! how can they be called small clothes for one large man? Now I do
+ look in the dictionary, and I find, for the word culottes&mdash;breeches.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Oh, please Your Majesty, we never call them by that name in England.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Voila done, j'ai raison!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'We say "inexpressibles"!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Ah, c'est mieux! Dat do please me ver much better. Il y a du bon sens la
+ dedans. C'est une autre chose!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the midst of this curious dialogue, in came the Duke of Dorset, Lord
+ Edward Dillon, Count Fersen, and several English gentlemen, who, as they
+ were going to the King's hunt, were all dressed in new buckskin breeches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I do not like,' exclaimed the Queen to them, dem yellow irresistibles!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lady Spencer nearly fainted. 'Vat make you so frightful, my dear lady?'
+ said the Queen to her ladyship, who was covering her face with her hands.
+ 'I am terrified at Your Majesty's mistake'&mdash;'Comment? did you no tell
+ me just now, dat in England de lady call les culottes "irresistibles"?'&mdash;'Oh,
+ mercy! I never could have made such a mistake, as to have applied to that
+ part of the male dress such a word. I said, please Your Majesty,
+ inexpressibles.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On this the gentlemen all laughed most heartily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Vell, vell,' replied the Queen, 'do, my dear lady, discompose yourself.
+ I vill no more call de breeches irresistibles, but say small clothes, if
+ even elles sont upon a giant!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At the repetition of the naughty word breeches, poor Lady Spencer's
+ English delicacy quite overcame her. Forgetting where she was, and also
+ the company she was in, she ran from the room with her cross stick in her
+ hand, ready to lay it on the shoulders of any one who should attempt to
+ obstruct her passage, flew into her carriage, and drove off full speed, as
+ if fearful of being contaminated,&mdash;all to the no small amusement of
+ the male guests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her Majesty and I laughed till the very tears ran down our cheeks. The
+ Duke of Dorset, to keep up the joke, said there really were some counties
+ in England where they called 'culottes irresistibles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now that I am upon the subject of England, and the peace of 1783, which
+ brought such throngs of English over to France, there occurs to me a
+ circumstance, relating to the treaty of commerce signed at that time,
+ which exhibits the Comte de Vergennes to some advantage; and with that let
+ me dismiss the topic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Comte de Vergennes, was one of the most distinguished Ministers of
+ France. I was intimately acquainted with him. His general character for
+ uprightness prompted his Sovereign to govern in a manner congenial to his
+ own goodness of heart, which was certainly most for the advantage of his
+ subjects. Vergennes cautioned Louis against the hypocritical adulations of
+ his privileged courtiers. The Count had been schooled in State policy by
+ the great Venetian senator, Francis Foscari, the subtlest politician of
+ his age, whom he consulted during his life on every important matter; and
+ he was not very easily to be deceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the treaty of commerce took place, at the period I mention, the
+ experienced Vergennes foresaw&mdash;what afterwards really happened&mdash;that
+ France would be inundated with British manufactures; but Calonne
+ obstinately maintained the contrary, till he was severely reminded of the
+ consequence of his misguided policy, in the insults inflicted on him by
+ enraged mobs of thousands of French artificers, whenever he appeared in
+ public. But though the mania for British goods had literally caused an
+ entire stagnation of business in the French manufacturing towns, and
+ thrown throngs upon the 'pave' for want of employment, yet M. de Calonne
+ either did not see, or pretended not to see, the errors he had committed.
+ Being informed that the Comte de Vergennes had attributed the public
+ disorders to his fallacious policy, M. de Calonne sent a friend to the
+ Count demanding satisfaction for the charge of having caused the riots.
+ The Count calmly replied that he was too much of a man of honour to take
+ so great an advantage, as to avail himself of the opportunity offered, by
+ killing a man who had only one life to dispose of, when there were so many
+ with a prior claim, who were anxious to destroy him 'en societe'. I Bid M.
+ de Calonne,' continued the Count, 'first get out of that scrape, as the
+ English boxers do when their eyes are closed up after a pitched battle. He
+ has been playing at blind man's buff, but the poverty to which he has
+ reduced so many of our tradespeople has torn the English bandage from his
+ eyes!' For three or four days the Comte de Vergennes visited publicly, and
+ showed himself everywhere in and about Paris; but M. de Calonne was so
+ well convinced of the truth of the old fox's satire that he pocketed his
+ annoyance, and no more was said about fighting. Indeed, the Comte de
+ Vergennes gave hints of being able to show that M. de Calonne had been
+ bribed into the treaty."
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The Princesse de Lamballe has alluded in a former page to the happiness
+ which the Queen enjoyed during the visits of the foreign Princes to the
+ Court of France. Her papers contain a few passages upon the opinions Her
+ Majesty entertained of the royal travellers; which, although in the
+ order of time they should have been mentioned before the peace with
+ England, yet, not to disturb the chain of the narrative, respecting the
+ connection with the Princesse de Lamballe, of the prevailing libels, and
+ the partiality shown towards the English, I have reserved them for the
+ conclusion of the present chapter. The timidity of the Queen in the
+ presence of the illustrious strangers, and her agitation when about to
+ receive them, have, I think, been already spoken of. Upon the subject of
+ the royal travellers themselves, and other personages, the Princess
+ expresses herself thus:]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen had never been an admirer of Catharine II. Notwithstanding her
+ studied policy for the advancement of civilization in her internal empire,
+ the means which, aided by the Princess Dashkoff, she made use of to seat
+ herself on the imperial throne of her weak husband, Peter the Third, had
+ made her more understood than esteemed. Yet when her son, the Grand Duke
+ of the North,&mdash;[Afterwards the unhappy Emperor Paul.]&mdash;and the
+ Grand Duchess, his wife, came to France, their description of Catharine's
+ real character so shocked the maternal sensibility of Marie Antoinette
+ that she could scarcely hear the name of the Empress without shuddering.
+ The Grand Duke spoke of Catharine without the least disguise. He said he
+ travelled merely for the security of his life from his mother, who had
+ surrounded him with creatures that were his sworn enemies, her own spies
+ and infamous favourites, to whose caprices they were utterly subordinate.
+ He was aware that the dangerous credulity of the Empress might be every
+ hour excited by these wretches to the destruction of himself and his
+ Duchess, and, therefore, he had in absence sought the only refuge. He had
+ no wish, he said, ever to return to his native country, till Heaven should
+ check his mother's doubts respecting his dutiful filial affection towards
+ her, or till God should be pleased to take her into His sacred keeping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King was petrified at the Duke's description of his situation, and
+ the Queen could not refrain from tears when the Duchess, his wife,
+ confirmed all her husband had uttered on the subject. The Duchess said she
+ had been warned by the untimely fate of the Princess d'Armstadt, her
+ predecessor, the first wife of the Grand Duke, to elude similar jealousy
+ and suspicion on the part of her mother-in-law, by seclusion from the
+ Court, in a country residence with her husband; indeed, that she had made
+ it a point never to visit Petersburg, except on the express invitation of
+ the Empress, as if she had been a foreigner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In this system the Grand Duchess persevered, even after her return from
+ her travels. When she became pregnant, and drew near her accouchement, the
+ Empress-mother permitted her to come to Petersburg for that purpose; but,
+ as soon as the ceremony required by the etiquette of the Imperial Court on
+ those occasions ended, the Duchess immediately returned to her hermitage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This Princess was remarkably well-educated; she possessed a great deal of
+ good, sound sense, and had profited by the instructions of some of the
+ best German tutors during her very early years. It was the policy of her
+ father, the Duke of Wirtemberg, who had a large family, to educate his
+ children as 'quietists' in matters of religion. He foresaw that the
+ natural charms and acquired abilities of his daughters would one day call
+ them to be the ornaments of the most distinguished Courts in Europe, and
+ he thought it prudent not to instil early prejudices in favour of peculiar
+ forms of religion which might afterwards present an obstacle to their
+ aggrandisement.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The first daughter of the Duke of Wirtemberg was the first wife of the
+ present Emperor of Austria. She embraced the Catholic faith and died
+ very young, two days before the Emperor Joseph the Second, at Vienna.
+ The present Empress Dowager, late wife to Paul, became a proselyte to
+ the Greek religion on her arrival at Petersburg. The son of the Duke of
+ Wirtemburg, who succeeded him in the Dukedom, was a Protestant, it being
+ his interest to profess that religion for the security of his
+ inheritance. Prince Ferdinand, who was in the Austrian service, and a
+ long time Governor of Vienna, was a Catholic, as he could not otherwise
+ have enjoyed that office. He was of a very superior character to the
+ Duke, his brother. Prince Louis, who held a commission under the
+ Prussian Monarch, followed the religion of the country where he served,
+ and the other Princes, who were in the employment of Sweden and other
+ countries, found no difficulty in conforming themselves to the religion
+ of the Sovereigns under whom they served. None of them having any
+ established forms of worship, they naturally embraced that which
+ conduced most to their aggrandisement, emolument, or dignity.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "The notorious vices of the King of Denmark, and his total neglect both of
+ his young Queen, Carolina Matilda, and of the interest of his distant
+ dominions, while in Paris, created a feeling in the Queen's mind towards
+ that house which was not a little heightened by her disgust at the King of
+ Sweden, when he visited the Court of Versailles. This King, though much
+ more crafty than his brother-in-law, the King of Denmark, who revelled
+ openly in his depravities, was not less vicious. The deception he made use
+ of in usurping part of the rights of his people, combined with the
+ worthlessness and duplicity, of his private conduct, excited a strong
+ indignation in the mind of Marie Antoinette, of which she was scarcely
+ capable of withholding the expression in his presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was during the visit of the Duke and Duchess of the North, that the
+ Cardinal de Rohan again appeared upon the scene. For eight or ten years he
+ had never been allowed to show himself at Court, and had been totally shut
+ out of every society where the Queen visited. On the arrival of the
+ illustrious, travellers at Versailles, the Queen, at her own expense, gave
+ them a grand fete at her private palace, in the gardens of Trianon,
+ similar to the one given by the Comte de Provence&mdash;[Afterwards Louis
+ XVIII.]&mdash;to Her Majesty, in the gardens of Brunoi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the eve of the fete, the Cardinal waited upon, me to know if he would
+ be permitted to appear there in the character he had the honour to hold at
+ Court, I replied that I had made it a rule never to interfere in the
+ private or public amusements of the Court, and that His Eminence must be
+ the best judge how far he, could obtrude himself upon the Queen's private
+ parties, to which only a select number had been invited, in consequence of
+ the confined spot where the fete was to be given.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Cardinal left me, not much satisfied at his reception. Determined to
+ follow, as usual, his own misguided passion, he immediately went too
+ Trianon, disguised with a large cloak. He saw the porter, and bribed him.
+ He only wished, he said, to be placed in a situation whence he might see
+ the Duke and Duchess of the North without being seen; but no sooner did he
+ perceive the porter engaged at some distance than he left his cloak at the
+ lodge, and went forward in his Cardinal's dress, as if he had been one of
+ the invited guests, placing himself purposely in the Queen's path to
+ attract her attention as she rode by in the carriage with the Duke and
+ Duchess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen was shocked and thunderstruck at seeing him. But, great as was
+ her annoyance, knowing the Cardinal had not been invited and ought not to
+ have been there, she only discharged the porter who had been seduced to
+ let him in; and, though the King, on being made acquainted with his
+ treachery, would have banished His Eminence a hundred leagues from the
+ capital, yet the Queen, the royal aunts, the Princesse Elizabeth, and
+ myself, not to make the affair public, and thereby disgrace the high order
+ of his ecclesiastical dignity, prevented the King from exercising his
+ authority by commanding instant exile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed, the Queen could never get the better of her fears of being some
+ day, or in some way or other, betrayed by the Cardinal, for having made
+ him the confidant of the mortification she would have suffered if the
+ projected marriage of Louis XV. and her sister had been solemnized. On
+ this account she uniformly opposed whatever harshness the King at any time
+ intended against the Cardinal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thus was this wicked prelate left at leisure to premeditate the horrid
+ plot of the famous necklace, the ever memorable fraud, which so fatally
+ verified the presentiments of the Queen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The production of 'Le Mariage de Figaro', by Beaumarchais, upon the
+ stage at Paris, so replete with indecorous and slanderous allusions to
+ the Royal Family, had spread the prejudices against the Queen through
+ the whole kingdom and every rank of France, just in time to prepare all
+ minds for the deadly blow which Her Majesty received from the infamous
+ plot of the diamond necklace. From this year, crimes and misfortunes
+ trod closely on each others' heels in the history of the ill-starred
+ Queen; and one calamity only disappeared to make way for a greater.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The destruction of the papers which would have thoroughly explained the
+ transaction has still left all its essential particulars in some degree
+ of mystery; and the interest of the clergy, who supported one of their
+ own body, coupled with the arts and bribes of the high houses connected
+ with the plotting prelate, must, of course, have discoloured greatly
+ even what was well known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be recollected that before the accession of Louis XVI. the
+ Cardinal de Rohan was disgraced in consequence of his intrigues; that
+ all his ingenuity was afterwards unremittingly exerted to obtain renewed
+ favour; that he once obtruded himself upon the notice of the Queen in
+ the gardens of Trianon, and that his conduct in so doing excited the
+ indignation it deserved, but was left unpunished owing to the entreaties
+ of the best friends of the Queen, and her own secret horror of a man who
+ had already caused her so much anguish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the histories of the fraud every one is acquainted. That of Madame
+ Campan, as far as it goes, is sufficiently detailed and correct to spare
+ me the necessity of expatiating upon this theme of villany. Yet, to
+ assist the reader's memory, before returning to the Journal of the
+ Princesse de Lamballe, I shall recapitulate the leading particulars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Cardinal had become connected with a young, but artful and
+ necessitous, woman, of the name of Lamotte. It was known that the
+ darling ambition of the Cardinal was to regain the favour of the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The necklace, which has been already spoken of, and which was originally
+ destined by Louis XV. for Marie Antoinette&mdash;had her hand, by
+ divorce, been transferred to him&mdash;but which, though afterwards
+ intended by Louis XV. for his mistress, Du Barry, never came to her in
+ consequence of his death&mdash;this fatal necklace was still in
+ existence, and in the possession of the crown jewellers, Boehmer and
+ Bassange. It was valued at eighteen hundred thousand livres. The
+ jewellers had often pressed it upon the Queen, and even the King himself
+ had enforced its acceptance. But the Queen dreaded the expense,
+ especially at an epoch of pecuniary difficulty in the State, much more
+ than she coveted the jewels, and uniformly and resolutely declined them,
+ although they had been proposed to her on very easy terms of payment, as
+ she really did not like ornaments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was made to appear at the parliamentary investigation that the artful
+ Lamotte had impelled the Cardinal to believe that she herself was in
+ communication with the Queen; that she had interested Her Majesty in
+ favour of the long slighted Cardinal; that she had fabricated a
+ correspondence, in which professions of penitence on the part of De
+ Rohan were answered by assurances of forgiveness from the Queen. The
+ result of this correspondence was represented to be the engagement of
+ the Cardinal to negotiate the purchase of the necklace secretly, by a
+ contract for periodical payments. To the forgery of papers was added, it
+ was declared, the substitution of the Queen's person, by dressing up a
+ girl of the Palais Royal to represent Her Majesty, whom she in some
+ degree resembled, in a secret and rapid interview with Rohan in a dark
+ grove of the gardens of Versailles, where she was to give the Cardinal a
+ rose, in token of her royal approbation, and then hastily disappear. The
+ importunity of the jewellers, on the failure of the stipulated payment,
+ disclosed the plot. A direct appeal of theirs to the Queen, to save them
+ from ruin, was the immediate source of detection. The Cardinal was
+ arrested, and all the parties tried. But the Cardinal was acquitted, and
+ Lamotte and a subordinate agent alone punished. The quack Cagliostro was
+ also in the plot, but he, too, escaped, like his confederate, the
+ Cardinal, who was made to appear as the dupe of Lamotte.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen never got over the effect of this affair. Her friends well
+ knew the danger of severe measures towards one capable of collecting
+ around him strong support against a power already so much weakened by
+ faction and discord. But the indignation of conscious innocence
+ insulted, prevailed, though to its ruin!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is time to let the Princesse de Lamballe give her own impressions
+ upon this fatal subject, and in her own words.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "How could Messieurs Boehmer and Bassange presume that the Queen would
+ have employed any third person to obtain an article of such value, without
+ enabling them to produce an unequivocal document signed by her own hand
+ and countersigned by mine, as had ever been the rule during my
+ superintendence of the household, whenever anything was ordered from the
+ jewellers by Her Majesty? Why did not Messieurs Boehmer and Bassange wait
+ on me, when they saw a document unauthorised by me, and so widely
+ departing from the established forms? I must still think, as I have often
+ said to the King, that Boehmer and Bassange wished to get rid of this dead
+ weight of diamonds in any way; and the Queen having unfortunately been led
+ by me to hush up many foul libels against her reputation, as I then
+ thought it prudent she should do, rather than compromise her character
+ with wretches capable of doing anything to injure her, these jewellers,
+ judging from this erroneous policy of the past, imagined that in this
+ instance, also, rather than hazard exposure, Her Majesty would pay them
+ for the necklace. This was a compromise which I myself resisted, though so
+ decidedly adverse to bringing the affair before the nation by a public
+ trial. Of such an explosion, I foresaw the consequences, and I ardently
+ entreated the King and Queen to take other measures. But, though till now
+ so hostile to severity with the Cardinal, the Queen felt herself so
+ insulted by the proceeding that she gave up every other consideration to
+ make manifest her innocence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The wary Comte de Vergennes did all he could to prevent the affair from
+ getting before the public. Against the opinion of the King and the whole
+ council of Ministers, he opposed judicial proceedings. Not that he
+ conceived the Cardinal altogether guiltless; but he foresaw the fatal
+ consequences that must result to Her Majesty, from bringing to trial an
+ ecclesiastic of such rank; for he well knew that the host of the higher
+ orders of the nobility, to whom the prelate was allied, would naturally
+ strain every point to blacken the character of the King and Queen, as the
+ only means of exonerating their kinsman in the eyes of the world from the
+ criminal mystery attached to that most diabolical intrigue against the
+ fair fame of Marie Antoinette. The Count could not bear the idea of the
+ Queen's name being coupled with those of the vile wretches, Lamotte and
+ the mountebank Cagliostro, and therefore wished the King to chastise the
+ Cardinal by a partial exile, which might have been removed at pleasure.
+ But the Queen's party too fatally seconded her feelings, and prevailed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I sat by Her Majesty's bedside the whole of the night, after I heard what
+ had been determined against the Cardinal by the council of Ministers, to
+ beg her to use all her interest with the King to persuade him to revoke
+ the order of the warrant for the prelate's arrest. To this the Queen
+ replied, 'Then the King, the Ministers, and the people, will all deem me
+ guilty.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her Majesty's remark stopped all farther argument upon the subject, and I
+ had the inconsolable grief to see my royal mistress rushing upon dangers
+ which I had no power of preventing her from bringing upon herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The slanderers who had imputed such unbounded influence to the Queen over
+ the mind of Louis XVI. should have been consistent enough to consider
+ that, with but a twentieth part of the tithe of her imputed power,
+ uncontrolled as she then was by national authority, she might, without any
+ exposure to third persons, have at once sent one of her pages to the
+ garde-meuble and other royal depositaries, replete with hidden treasures
+ of precious stones which never saw the light, and thence have supplied
+ herself with more than enough to form ten necklaces, or to have fully
+ satisfied, in any way she liked, the most unbounded passion for diamonds,
+ for the use of which she would never have been called to account.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But the truth is, the Queen had no love of ornaments. A proof occurred
+ very soon after I had the honour to be nominated Her Majesty's
+ superintendent. On the day of the great fete of the Cordon Bleu, when it
+ was the etiquette to wear diamonds and pearls, the Queen had omitted
+ putting them on. As there had been a greater affluence of visitors than
+ usual that morning, and Her Majesty's toilet was overthronged by Princes
+ and Princesses, I fancied in the bustle that the omission proceeded from
+ forgetfulness. Consequently, I sent the tirewoman, in the Queen's hearing,
+ to order the jewels to be brought in. Smilingly, Her Majesty replied, 'No,
+ no! I have not forgotten these gaudy things; but I do not intend that the
+ lustre of my eyes should be outshone by the one, or the whiteness of my
+ teeth by the other; however, as you wish art to eclipse nature, I'll wear
+ them to satisfy you, ma belle dame!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King was always so thoroughly indulgent to Her Majesty, with regard
+ both to her public and private conduct, that she never had any pretext for
+ those reserves which sometimes tempt Queens as well as the wives of
+ private individuals to commit themselves to third persons for articles of
+ high value, which their caprice indiscreetly impels them to procure
+ unknown to their natural guardians. Marie Antoinette had no reproach or
+ censure for plunging into excesses beyond her means to apprehend from her
+ royal husband. On the contrary, the King himself had spontaneously offered
+ to purchase the necklace from the jewellers, who had urged it on him
+ without limiting any time for payment. It was the intention of His Majesty
+ to have liquidated it out of his private purse. But Marie Antoinette
+ declined the gift. Twice in my presence was the refusal repeated before
+ Messieurs Boehmer and Bassange. Who, then, can for a moment presume, after
+ all these circumstances, that the Queen of France, with a nation's wealth
+ at her feet and thousands of individuals offering her millions, which she
+ never accepted, would have so far degraded herself and the honour of the
+ nation, of which she was born to be the ornament, as to place herself
+ gratuitously in the power of a knot of wretches, headed by a man whose
+ general bad character for years had excluded him from Court and every
+ respectable society, and had made the Queen herself mark him as an object
+ of the utmost aversion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If these circumstances be not sufficient adequately to open the eyes of
+ those whom prejudice has blinded, and whose ears have been deafened
+ against truth, by the clamours of sinister conspirators against the
+ monarchy instead of the monarchs; if all these circumstances, I repeat, do
+ not completely acquit the Queen, argument, or even ocular demonstration
+ itself, would be thrown away. Posterity will judge impartially, and with
+ impartial judges the integrity of Marie Antoinette needs no defender.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the natural tendency of the character of De Rohan to romantic and
+ extraordinary intrigue is considered in connection with the associates he
+ had gathered around him, the plot of the necklace ceases to be a source of
+ wonder. At the time the Cardinal was most at a loss for means to meet the
+ necessities of his extravagance, and to obtain some means of access to the
+ Queen, the mountebank quack, Cagliostro, made his appearance in France.
+ His fame had soon flown from Strasburg to Paris, the magnet of vices and
+ the seat of criminals. The Prince-Cardinal, known of old as a seeker after
+ everything of notoriety, soon became the intimate of one who flattered him
+ with the accomplishment of all his dreams in the realization of the
+ philosopher's stone; converting puffs and French paste into brilliants;
+ Roman pearls into Oriental ones; and turning earth to gold. The Cardinal,
+ always in want of means to supply the insatiable exigencies of his
+ ungovernable vices, had been the dupe through life of his own credulity&mdash;a
+ drowning man catching at a straw! But instead of making gold of base
+ materials, Cagliostro's brass soon relieved his blind adherent of all his
+ sterling metal. As many needy persons enlisted under the banners of this
+ nostrum speculator, it is not to be wondered at that the infamous name of
+ the Comtesse de Lamotte, and others of the same stamp, should have thus
+ fallen into an association of the Prince-Cardinal or that her libellous
+ stories of the Queen of France should have found eager promulgators, where
+ the real diamonds of the famous necklace being taken apart were divided
+ piecemeal among a horde of the most depraved sharpers that ever existed to
+ make human nature blush at its own degradation!
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [Cagliostro, when he came to Rome, for I know not whether there had been
+ any previous intimacy, got acquainted with a certain Marchese Vivaldi, a
+ Roman, whose wife had been for years the chere amie of the last Venetian
+ Ambassador, Peter Pesaro, a noble patrician, and who has ever since his
+ embassy at Rome been his constant companion and now resides with him in
+ England. No men in Europe are more constant in their attachments than
+ the Venetians. Pesaro is the sole proprietor of one of the moat
+ beautiful and magnificent palaces on the Grand Canal at Venice, though
+ he now lives in the outskirts of London, in a small house, not so large
+ as one of the offices of his immense noble palace, where his agent
+ transacts his business. The husband of Pesaro's chere amie, the Marchese
+ Vivaldi, when Cagliostro was arrested and sent to the Castello Santo
+ Angelo at Rome, was obliged to fly his country, and went to Venice,
+ where he was kept secreted and maintained by the Marquis Solari, and it
+ was only through his means and those of the Cardinal Consalvi, then
+ known only as the musical Abbe Consalvi, from his great attachment to
+ the immortal Cimarosa, that Vivaldi was ever allowed to return to his
+ native country; but Consalvi, who was the friend of Vivaldi, feeling
+ with the Marquis Solari much interested for his situation, they together
+ contrived to convince Pius VI. that he was more to be pitied than
+ blamed, and thus obtained his recall. I have merely given this note as a
+ further warning to be drawn from the connections of the Cardinal de
+ Rohan, to deter hunters after novelty from forming ties with innovators
+ and impostors. Cagliostro was ultimately condemned, by the Roman laws
+ under Pope Pius VI., for life, to the galleys, where he died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Proverbs ought to be respected; for it is said that no phrase becomes a
+ proverb until after a century's experience of its truth. In England it
+ is proverbial to judge of men by the company they keep. Judge of the
+ Cardinal de Rohan from his most intimate friend, the galley-slave.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "Eight or ten years had elapsed from the time Her Majesty had last seen
+ the Cardinal to speak to him, with the exception of the casual glance as
+ she drove by when he furtively introduced himself into the garden at the
+ fete at Trianon, till he was brought to the King's cabinet when arrested,
+ and interrogated, and confronted with her face to face. The Prince started
+ when he saw her. The comparison of her features with those of the guilty
+ wretch who had dared to personate her in the garden at Versailles
+ completely destroyed his self-possession. Her Majesty's person was become
+ fuller, and her face was much longer than that of the infamous D'Oliva. He
+ could neither speak nor write an intelligible reply to the questions put
+ to him. All he could utter, and that only in broken accents, was, 'I'll
+ pay! I'll pay Messieurs Bassange.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Had he not speedily recovered himself, all the mystery in which this
+ affair has been left, so injuriously to the Queen, might have been
+ prevented. His papers would have declared the history of every particular,
+ and distinctly established the extent of his crime and the thorough
+ innocence of Marie Antoinette of any connivance at the fraud, or any
+ knowledge of the necklace. But when the Cardinal was ordered by the King's
+ Council to be put under arrest, his self-possession returned. He was given
+ in charge to an officer totally unacquainted with the nature of the
+ accusation. Considering only the character of his prisoner as one of the
+ highest dignitaries of the Church, from ignorance and inexperience, he
+ left the Cardinal an opportunity to write a German note to his factotum,
+ the Abbe Georgel. In this note the trusty secretary was ordered to destroy
+ all the letters of Cagliostro, Madame de Lamotte, and the other wretched
+ associates of the infamous conspiracy; and the traitor was scarcely in
+ custody when every evidence of his treason had disappeared. The note to
+ Georgel saved his master from expiating his offence at the Place de Grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The consequences of the affair would have been less injurious, however,
+ had it been managed, even as it stood, with better judgment and temper.
+ But it was improperly entrusted to the Baron de Breteuil and the Abbe
+ Vermond, both sworn enemies of the Cardinal. Their main object was the
+ ruin of him they hated, and they listened only to their resentments. They
+ never weighed the danger of publicly prosecuting an individual whose
+ condemnation would involve the first families in France, for he was allied
+ even to many of the Princes of the blood. They should have considered that
+ exalted personages, naturally feeling as if any crime proved against their
+ kinsman would be a stain upon themselves, would of course resort to every
+ artifice to exonerate the accused. To criminate the Queen was the only and
+ the obvious method. Few are those nearest the Crown who are not most
+ jealous of its wearers! Look at the long civil wars of York and Lancaster,
+ and the short reign of Richard. The downfall of Kings meets less
+ resistance than that of their inferiors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Still, notwithstanding all the deplorable blunders committed in this
+ business of De Rohan, justice was not smothered without great difficulty.
+ His acquittal cost the families of De Rohan and De Conde more than a
+ million of livres, distributed among all ranks of the clergy; besides
+ immense sums sent to the Court of Rome to make it invalidate the judgment
+ of the civil authority of France upon so high a member of the Church, and
+ to induce it to order the Cardinal's being sent to Rome by way of
+ screening him from the prosecution, under the plausible pretext of more
+ rigid justice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Considerable sums in money and jewels were also lavished on all the
+ female relatives of the peers of France, who were destined to sit on the
+ trial. The Abbe Georgel bribed the press, and extravagantly paid all the
+ literary pens in France to produce the most Jesuitical and sophisticated
+ arguments in his patron's justification. Though these writers dared not
+ accuse or in any way criminate the Queen, yet the respectful doubts, with
+ which their defence of her were seasoned, did indefinitely more mischief
+ than any direct attack, which could have been directly answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The long cherished, but till now smothered, resentment of the Comtesse de
+ Noailles, the scrupulous Madame Etiquette, burst forth on this occasion.
+ Openly joining the Cardinal's party against her former mistress and
+ Sovereign, she recruited and armed all in favour of her protege; for it
+ was by her intrigues De Rohan had been nominated Ambassador to Vienna.
+ Mesdames de Guemenee and Marsan, rival pretenders to favours of His
+ Eminence, were equally earnest to support him against the Queen. In short,
+ there was scarcely a family of distinction in France that, from the libels
+ which then inundated the kingdom, did not consider the King as having
+ infringed on their prerogatives and privileges in accusing the Cardinal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shortly after the acquittal of this most artful, and, in the present
+ instance, certainly too fortunate prelate, the Princesse de Conde came to
+ congratulate me on the Queen's innocence, and her kinsman's liberation
+ from the Bastille.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Without the slightest observation, I produced to the Princess documents
+ in proof of the immense sums she alone had expended in bribing the judges
+ and other persons, to save her relation, the Cardinal, by criminating Her
+ Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Princesse de Conde instantly fell into violent hysterics, and was
+ carried home apparently, lifeless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have often reproached myself for having given that sudden shock and
+ poignant anguish to Her Highness, but I could not have supposed that one
+ who came so barefacedly to impress me with the Cardinal's innocence, could
+ have been less firm in refuting her own guilt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I never mentioned the circumstance to the Queen. Had I done so, Her
+ Highness would have been forever excluded from the Court and the royal
+ presence. This was no time to increase the enemies of Her Majesty, and,
+ the affair of the trial being ended, I thought it best to prevent any
+ further breach from a discord between the Court and the house of Conde.
+ However, from a coldness subsisting ever after between the Princess and
+ myself, I doubt not that the Queen had her suspicions that all was not as
+ it should be in that quarter. Indeed, though Her Majesty never confessed
+ it, I think she herself had discovered something at that very time not
+ altogether to the credit of the Princesse de Conde, for she ceased going,
+ from that period, to any of the fetes given at Chantilly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These were but a small portion of the various instruments successfully
+ levelled by parties, even the least suspected, to blacken and destroy the
+ fair fame of Marie Antoinette.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The document which so justly alarmed the Princesse de Conde, when I
+ showed it to her came into my hands in the following manner:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whenever a distressed family, or any particular individual, applied to me
+ for relief, or was otherwise recommended for charitable purposes, I
+ generally sent my little English protegee&mdash;whose veracity, well
+ knowing the goodness of her heart, I could rely&mdash;to ascertain whether
+ their claims were really well grounded.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [Indeed, I never deceived the Princess on these occasions. She was so
+ generously charitable that I should have conceived it a crime. When I
+ could get no satisfactory information, I said I could not trace anything
+ undeserving her charity, and left Her Highness to exercise her own
+ discretion.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "One day I received an earnest memorial from a family, desiring to make
+ some private communications of peculiar delicacy. I sent my usual
+ ambassadress to inquire into its import. On making her mission known, she
+ found no difficulty in ascertaining the object of the application. It
+ proceeded from conscientious distress of mind. A relation of this family
+ had been the regular confessor of a convent. With the Lady Abbess of this
+ convent and her trusty nuns, the Princesse de Conde had deposited
+ considerable sums of money, to be bestowed in creating influence in favour
+ of the Cardinal de Rohan. The confessor, being a man of some consideration
+ among the clergy, was applied to, to use his influence with the needier
+ members of the Church more immediately about him, as well as those of
+ higher station, to whom he had access, in furthering the purposes of the
+ Princesse de Conde. The bribes were applied as intended. But, at the near
+ approach of death, the confessor was struck with remorse. He begged his
+ family, without mentioning his name, to send the accounts and vouchers of
+ the sums he had so distributed, to me, as a proof of his contrition, that
+ I might make what use of them I should think proper. The papers were
+ handed to my messenger, who pledged her word of honour that I would
+ certainly adhere to the dying man's last injunctions. She desired they
+ might be sealed up by the family, and by them directed to me.&mdash;[To
+ this day, I neither know the name of the convent or the confessor.]&mdash;She
+ then hastened back to our place of rendezvous, where I waited for her, and
+ where she consigned the packet into my own hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That part of the papers which compromised only the Princesse de Conde was
+ shown by me to the Princess on the occasion I have mentioned. It was
+ natural enough that she should have been shocked at the detection of
+ having suborned the clergy and others with heavy bribes to avert the
+ deserved fate of the Cardinal. I kept this part of the packet secret till
+ the King's two aunts, who had also been warm advocates in favour of the
+ prelate, left Paris for Rome. Then, as Pius VI. had interested himself as
+ head of the Church for the honour of one of its members, I gave them these
+ very papers to deliver to His Holiness for his private perusal. I was
+ desirous of enabling this truly charitable and Christian head of our
+ sacred religion to judge how far his interference was justified by facts.
+ I am thoroughly convinced that, had he been sooner furnished with these
+ evidences, instead of blaming the royal proceeding, he would have urged it
+ on, nay, would himself have been the first to advise that the foul
+ conspiracy should be dragged into open day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Comte de Vergennes told me that the King displayed the greatest
+ impartiality throughout the whole investigation for the exculpation of the
+ Queen, and made good his title on this, as he did on every occasion where
+ his own unbiassed feelings and opinions were called into action, to great
+ esteem for much higher qualities than the world has usually given him
+ credit for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have been accused of having opened the prison doors of the culprit
+ Lamotte for her escape; but the charge is false. I interested myself, as
+ was my duty, to shield the Queen from public reproach by having Lamotte
+ sent to a place of penitence; but I never interfered, except to lessen her
+ punishment, after the judicial proceedings. The diamonds, in the hands of
+ her vile associates at Paris, procured her ample means to escape. I should
+ have been the Queen's greatest enemy had I been the cause of giving
+ liberty to one who acted, and might naturally have been expected to act,
+ as this depraved woman did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Through the private correspondence which was carried on between this
+ country and England, after I had left it, I was informed that M. de
+ Calonne, whom the Queen never liked, and who was called to the
+ administration against her will&mdash;which he knew, and consequently
+ became one of her secret enemies in the affair of the necklace&mdash;was
+ discovered to have been actively employed against Her Majesty in the work
+ published in London by Lamotte.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Sheridan was the gentleman who first gave me this information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I immediately sent a trusty person by the Queen's orders to London, to
+ buy up the whole work. It was too late. It had been already so widely
+ circulated that its consequences could no longer be prevented. I was lucky
+ enough, however, for a considerable sum, to get a copy from a person
+ intimate with the author, the margin of which, in the handwriting of M. de
+ Calonne, actually contained numerous additional circumstances which were
+ to have been published in a second edition! This publication my agent,
+ aided by some English gentlemen, arrived in time to suppress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The copy I allude to was brought to Paris and shown to the Queen. She
+ instantly flew with it in her hands to the King's cabinet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Now, Sire,' exclaimed she, 'I hope you will be convinced that my enemies
+ are those whom I have long considered as the most pernicious of Your
+ Majesty's Councillors&mdash;your own Cabinet Ministers&mdash;your M. de
+ Calonne!&mdash;respecting whom I have often given you my opinion, which,
+ unfortunately, has always been attributed to mere female caprice, or as
+ having been biassed by the intrigues of Court favourites! This, I hope,
+ Your Majesty will now be able to contradict!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King all this time was looking over the different pages containing M.
+ de Calonne's additions on their margins. On recognising the hand-writing,
+ His Majesty was so affected by this discovered treachery of his Minister
+ and the agitation of his calumniated Queen that he could scarcely
+ articulate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Where,' said he, I did you procure this?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Through the means, Sire, of some of the worthy members of that nation
+ your treacherous Ministers made our enemy&mdash;from England! where your
+ unfortunate Queen, your injured wife, is compassionated!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Who got it for you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'My dearest, my real, and my only sincere friend, the Princesse de
+ Lamballe!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King requested I should be sent for. I came. As may be imagined, I
+ was received with the warmest sentiments of affection by both Their
+ Majesties. I then laid before the King the letter of Mr. Sheridan, which
+ was, in substance, as follows:
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "'MADAME,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'A work of mine, which I did not choose should be printed, was
+ published in Dublin and transmitted to be sold in London. As soon as I
+ was informed of it, and had procured a spurious copy, I went to the
+ bookseller to put a stop to its circulation. I there met with a copy of
+ the work of Madame de Lamotte, which has been corrected by some one at
+ Paris and sent back to the bookseller for a second edition. Though not
+ in time to suppress the first edition, owing to its rapid circulation, I
+ have had interest enough, through the means of the bookseller of whom I
+ speak, to remit you the copy which has been sent as the basis of a new
+ one. The corrections, I am told, are by one of the King's Ministers. If
+ true, I should imagine the writer will be easily traced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I am happy that it has been in my power to make this discovery, and I
+ hope it will be the means of putting a stop to this most scandalous
+ publication. I feel myself honoured in having contributed thus far to
+ the wishes of Her Majesty, which I hope I have fulfilled to the entire
+ satisfaction of Your Highness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Should anything further transpire on this subject, I will give you the
+ earliest information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I remain, madame, with profound respect, Your Highness' most devoted,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'very humble servant,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'RICHARD BRINSLEY SHERIDAN.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [Madame Campan mentions in her work that the Queen had informed her of
+ the treachery of the Minister, but did not enter into particulars, nor
+ explain the mode or source of its detection. Notwithstanding the parties
+ had bound themselves for the sums they received not to reprint the work,
+ a second edition appeared a short time afterwards in London. This, which
+ was again bought up by the French Ambassador, was the same which was to
+ have been burned by the King's command at the china manufactory at
+ Sevres.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "M. de Calonne immediately received the King's mandate to resign the
+ portfolio. The Minister desired that he might be allowed to give his
+ resignation to the King himself. His request was granted. The Queen was
+ present at the interview. The work in question was produced. On beholding
+ it, the Minister nearly fainted. The King got up and left the room. The
+ Queen, who remained, told M. de Calonne that His Majesty had no further
+ occasion for his services. He fell on his knees. He was not allowed to
+ speak, but was desired to leave Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The dismissal and disgrace of M. de Calonne were scarcely known before
+ all Paris vociferated that they were owing to the intrigues of the
+ favourite De Polignac, in consequence of his having refused to administer
+ to her own superfluous extravagance and the Queen's repeated demands on
+ the Treasury to satisfy the numerous dependants of the Duchess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This, however, was soon officially disproved by the exhibition of a
+ written proposition of Calonne's to the Queen, to supply an additional
+ hundred thousand francs that year to her annual revenue, which Her Majesty
+ refused. As for the Duchesse de Polignac, so far from having caused the
+ disgrace, she was not even aware of the circumstance from which it arose;
+ nor did the Minister himself ever know how, or by what agency, his
+ falsehood was so thoroughly unmasked."
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <h3>
+ NOTE:
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ [The work which is here spoken of, the Queen kept, as a proof of the
+ treachery of Calonne towards her and his Sovereign, till the storming of
+ the Tuileries on the 10th of August, 1792, when, with the rest of the
+ papers and property plundered on that memorable occasion, it fell into
+ the hands of the ferocious mob.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. de Calonne soon after left France for Italy. There he lived for some
+ time in the palace of a particular friend of mine and the Marquis, my
+ husband, the Countess Francese Tressino, at Vicenza.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In consequence of our going every season to take the mineral waters and
+ use the baths at Valdagno, we had often occasion to be in company with
+ M. de Calonne, both at Vicenza and Valdagno, where I must do him the
+ justice to say he conducted himself with the greatest circumspection in
+ speaking of the Revolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though he evidently avoided the topic which terminates this chapter, yet
+ one day, being closely pressed upon the subject, he said forgeries were
+ daily committed on Ministers, and were most particularly so in France at
+ the period in question; that he had borne the blame of various
+ imprudencies neither authorized nor executed by him; that much had been
+ done and supposed to have been done with his sanction, of which he had
+ not the slightest knowledge. This he observed generally, without
+ specifying any express instance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was then asked whether he did not consider himself responsible for
+ the mischief he occasioned by declaring the nation in a state of
+ bankruptcy. He said, "No, not in the least. There was no other way of
+ preventing enormous sums from being daily lavished, as they then were,
+ on herds of worthless beings; that the Queen had sought to cultivate a
+ state of private domestic society, but that, in the attempt, she only
+ warmed in her bosom domestic vipers, who fed on the vital spirit of her
+ generosity." He mentioned no names.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I then took the liberty of asking him his opinion of the Princesse de
+ Lamballe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, madame! had the rest of Her Majesty's numerous attendants possessed
+ the tenth part of that unfortunate Victim's virtues, Her Majesty would
+ never have been led into the errors which all France must deplore!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall never forget her," continued he, "the day I went to take leave
+ of her. She was sitting on a sofa when I entered. On seeing me, she rose
+ immediately. Before I could utter a syllable, 'Monsieur,' said the
+ Princess, 'you are accused of being the Queen's enemy. Acquit yourself
+ of the foul deed imputed to you, and I shall be happy to serve you as
+ far as lies in my power. Till then, I must decline holding any
+ communication with an individual thus situated. I am her friend, and
+ cannot receive any one known to be otherwise.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was something," added he, "so sublime, so dignified, and
+ altogether so firm, though mild in her manner, that she appeared not to
+ belong to a race of earthly beings!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeing the tears fall from his eyes, while he was thus eulogising her
+ whose memory I shall ever venerate, I almost forgave him the mischief of
+ his imprudence, which led to her untimely end. I therefore carefully
+ avoided wounding his few gray hairs and latter days, and left him still
+ untold that it was by her, of whom he thought so highly, that his
+ uncontradicted treachery had been discovered.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of the many instances in which the Queen's exertions to serve those whom
+ she conceived likely to benefit and relieve the nation, turned to the
+ injury, not only of herself, but those whom she patronised and the cause
+ she would strengthen, one of the most unpopular was that of the promotion
+ of Brienne, Archbishop of Sens, to the Ministry. Her interest in his
+ favour was entirely created by the Abbe Vermond, himself too superficial
+ to pronounce upon any qualities, and especially such as were requisite for
+ so high a station. By many, the partiality which prompted Vermond to
+ espouse the interests of the Archbishop was ascribed to the amiable
+ sentiment of gratitude for the recommendation of that dignitary, by which
+ Vermond himself first obtained his situation at Court; but there were
+ others, who have been deemed deeper in the secret, who impute it to the
+ less honourable source of self-interest, to the mere spirit of
+ ostentation, to the hope of its enabling him to bring about the
+ destruction of the De Polignacs. Be this as it may, the Abbe well knew
+ that a Minister indebted for his elevation solely to the Queen would be
+ supported by her to the last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This, unluckily, proved the case. Marie Antoinette persisted in upholding
+ every act of Brienne, till his ignorance and unpardonable blunders drew
+ down the general indignation of the people against Her Majesty and her
+ protege, with whom she was identified. The King had assented to the
+ appointment with no other view than that of not being utterly isolated and
+ to show a respect for his consort's choice. But the incapable Minister was
+ presently compelled to retire not only from office, but from Paris. Never
+ was a Minister more detested while in power, or a people more
+ enthusiastically satisfied at his going out. His effigy was burnt in every
+ town of France, and the general illuminations and bonfires in the capital
+ were accompanied by hooting and hissing the deposed statesman to the
+ barriers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen, prompted by the Abbe Vermond, even after Brienne's dismission,
+ gave him tokens of her royal munificence. Her Majesty feared that her
+ acting otherwise to a Minister, who had been honoured by her confidence,
+ would operate as a check to prevent all men of celebrity from exposing
+ their fortunes to so ungracious a return for lending their best services
+ to the State, which now stood in need of the most skilful pilots. Such
+ were the motives assigned by Her Majesty herself to me, when I took the
+ liberty, of expostulating with her respecting the dangers which threatened
+ herself and family, from this continued devotedness to a Minister against
+ whom the nation had pronounced so strongly. I could not but applaud the
+ delicacy of the feeling upon which her conduct had been grounded; nor
+ could I blame her, in my heart, for the uprightness of her principle, in
+ showing that what she had once undertaken should not be abandoned through
+ female caprice. I told Her Majesty that the system upon which she acted
+ was praiseworthy; and that its application in the present instance would
+ have been so had the Archbishop possessed as much talent as he lacked;
+ but, that now it was quite requisite for her to stop the public clamour by
+ renouncing her protection of a man who had so seriously endangered the
+ public tranquillity and her own reputation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As a proof how far my caution was well founded, there was an immense
+ riotous mob raised about this time against the Queen, in consequence of
+ her having, appointed the dismissed Minister's niece, Madame de Canisy, to
+ a place at Court, and having given her picture, set in diamonds, to the
+ Archbishop himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen, in many cases, was by far too communicative to some of her
+ household, who immediately divulged all they gathered from her unreserve.
+ How could these circumstances have transpired to the people but from those
+ nearest the person of Her Majesty, who, knowing the public feeling better
+ than their royal mistress could be supposed to know it, did their own
+ feeling little credit by the mischievous exposure? The people were
+ exasperated beyond all conception. The Abbe Vermond placed before Her
+ Majesty the consequences of her communicativeness, and from this time
+ forward she never repeated the error. After the lesson she had received,
+ none of her female attendants, not even the Duchesse de Polignac, to whom
+ she would have confided her very existence, could, had they been ever so
+ much disposed, have drawn anything upon public matters from her. With me,
+ as her superintendent and entitled by my situation to interrogate and give
+ her counsel, she was not, of course, under the same restriction. To his
+ other representations of the consequences of the Queen's indiscreet
+ openness, the Abbe Vermond added that, being obliged to write all the
+ letters, private and public, he often found himself greatly embarrassed by
+ affairs having gone forth to the world beforehand. One misfortune of
+ putting this seal upon the lips of Her Majesty was that it placed her more
+ thoroughly in the Abbe's power. She was, of course, obliged to rely
+ implicitly upon him concerning many points, which, had they undergone the
+ discussion necessarily resulting from free conversation, would have been
+ shown to her under very different aspects. A man with a better heart, less
+ Jesuitical, and not so much interested as Vermond was to keep his place,
+ would have been a safer monitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Though the Archbishop of Sens was so much hated and despised, much may be
+ said in apology for his disasters. His unpopularity, and the Queen's
+ support of him against the people, was certainly a vital blow to the
+ monarchy. There is no doubt of his having been a poor substitute for the
+ great men who had so gloriously beaten the political paths of
+ administration, particularly the Comte de Vergennes and Necker. But at
+ that time, when France was threatened by its great convulsion, where is
+ the genius which might not have committed itself? And here is a man coming
+ to rule amidst revolutionary feelings, with no knowledge whatever of
+ revolutionary principles&mdash;a pilot steering into one harbour by the
+ chart of another. I am by no means a vindicator of the Archbishop's
+ obstinacy in offering himself a candidate for a situation entirely foreign
+ to the occupations, habits, and studies of his whole life; but his
+ intentions may have been good enough, and we must not charge the physician
+ with murder who has only mistaken the disease, and, though wrong in his
+ judgment, has been zealous and conscientious; nor must we blame the
+ comedians for the faults of the comedy. The errors were not so much in the
+ men who did not succeed as in the manners of the times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The part which the Queen was now openly compelled to bear, in the
+ management of public affairs, increased the public feeling against her
+ from dislike to hatred. Her Majesty was unhappy, not only from the
+ necessity which called her out of the sphere to which she thought her sex
+ ought to be confined, but from the divisions which existed in the Royal
+ Family upon points in which their common safety required a common scheme
+ of action. Her favourite brother-in-law, D'Artois, had espoused the side
+ of D'ORLEANS, and the popular party seemed to prevail against her, even
+ with the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The various parliamentary assemblies, which had swept on their course,
+ under various denominations, in rapid and stormy succession, were now
+ followed by one which, like Aaron's rod, was to swallow up the rest. Its
+ approach was regarded by the Queen with ominous reluctance. At length,
+ however, the moment for the meeting of the States General at Versailles
+ arrived. Necker was once more in favour, and a sort of forlorn hope of
+ better times dawned upon the perplexed monarch, in his anticipations from
+ this assembly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The night before the procession of the instalment of the States General
+ was to take place, it being my duty to attend Her Majesty, I received an
+ anonymous letter, cautioning me not to be seen that day by her side. I
+ immediately went to the King's apartments and showed him the letter. His
+ Majesty humanely enjoined me to abide by its counsels. I told him I hoped
+ he would for once permit me to exercise my own discretion; for if my royal
+ Sovereign were in danger, it was then that her attendants should be most
+ eager to rally round her, in order to watch over her safety and encourage
+ her fortitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "While we were thus occupied, the Queen and my sister-in-law, the Duchesse
+ d'Orleans, entered the King's apartment, to settle some part of the
+ etiquette respecting the procession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I wish,' exclaimed the Duchess, 'that this procession were over; or that
+ it were never to take place; or that none of us had to be there; or else,
+ being obliged, that we had all passed, and were comfortably at home
+ again.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Its taking place,' answered the Queen, 'never had my sanction,
+ especially at Versailles. M. Necker appears to be in its favour, and
+ answers for its success. I wish he may not be deceived; but I much fear
+ that he is guided more by the mistaken hope of maintaining his own
+ popularity by this impolitic meeting, than by any conscientious confidence
+ in its advantage to the King's authority.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King, having in his hand the letter which I had just brought him,
+ presented it to the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'This, my dear Duchess,' cried the Queen, I comes from the Palais Royal
+ manufactory, [Palais d' Orleans. D.W.] to poison the very first sentiments
+ of delight at the union expected between the King and his subjects, by
+ innuendoes of the danger which must result from my being present at it.
+ Look at the insidiousness of the thing! Under a pretext of kindness,
+ cautions against the effect of their attachment are given to my most
+ sincere and affectionate attendants, whose fidelity none dare attack
+ openly. I am, however, rejoiced that Lamballe has been cautioned.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Against what?' replied I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Against appearing in the procession,' answered the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'It is only,' I exclaimed, 'by putting me in the grave they can ever
+ withdraw me from Your Majesty. While I have life and Your Majesty's
+ sanction, force only will prevent me from doing my duty. Fifty thousand
+ daggers, Madame, were they all raised against me, would have no power to
+ shake the firmness of my character or the earnestness of my attachment. I
+ pity the wretches who have so little penetration. Victim or no victim,
+ nothing shall ever induce me to quit Your Majesty.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen and Duchess, both in tears, embraced me. After the Duchess had
+ taken her leave, the King and Queen hinted their suspicions that she had
+ been apprised of the letter, and had made this visit expressly to observe
+ what effect it had produced, well knowing at the time that some attempt
+ was meditated by the hired mob and purchased deputies already brought over
+ to the D'ORLEANS faction. Not that the slightest suspicion of collusion
+ could ever be attached to the good Duchesse d'Orleans against the Queen.
+ The intentions of the Duchess were known to be as virtuous and pure as
+ those of her husband's party were criminal and mischievous. But, no doubt,
+ she had intimations of the result intended; and, unable to avert the storm
+ or prevent its cause, had been instigated by her strong attachment to me,
+ as well as the paternal affection her father, the Duc de Penthievre, bore
+ me, to attempt to lessen the exasperation of the Palais Royal party and
+ the Duke, her husband, against me, by dissuading me from running any risk
+ upon the occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The next day, May 5, 1789, at the very moment when all the resources of
+ nature and art seemed exhausted to render the Queen a paragon of
+ loveliness beyond anything I had ever before witnessed, even in her; when
+ every impartial eye was eager to behold and feast on that form whose
+ beauty warmed every heart in her favour; at that moment a horde of
+ miscreants, just as she came within sight of the Assembly, thundered in
+ her ears, 'Orleans forever!' three or four times, while she and the King
+ were left to pass unheeded. Even the warning of the letter, from which she
+ had reason to expect some commotions, suggested to her imagination nothing
+ like this, and she was dreadfully shaken. I sprang forward to support her.
+ The King's party, prepared for the attack, shouted 'Vive le roi! Vive la
+ reine!' As I turned, I saw some of the members lividly pale, as if fearing
+ their machinations had been discovered; but, as they passed, they said in
+ the hearing of Her Majesty, 'Remember, you are the daughter of Maria
+ Theresa.'&mdash;'True,' answered the Queen. The Duc de Biron, Orleans, La
+ Fayette, Mirabeau, and the Mayor of Paris, seeing Her Majesty's emotion,
+ came up, and were going to stop the procession. All, in apparent
+ agitation, cried out 'Halt!' The Queen, sternly looking at them, made a
+ sign with her head to proceed, recovered herself, and moved forward in the
+ train, with all the dignity and self-possession for which she was so
+ eminently distinguished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But this self-command in public proved nearly fatal to Her Majesty on her
+ return to her apartment. There her real feelings broke forth, and their
+ violence was so great as to cause the bracelets on her wrists and the
+ pearls in her necklace to burst from the threads and settings, before her
+ women and the ladies in attendance could have time to take them off. She
+ remained many hours in a most alarming state of strong convulsions. Her
+ clothes were obliged to be cut from her body, to give her ease; but as
+ soon as she was undressed, and tears came to her relief, she flew
+ alternately to the Princesse Elizabeth and to myself; but we were both too
+ much overwhelmed to give her the consolation of which she stood so much in
+ need.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Barnave that very evening came to my private apartment, and tendered his
+ services to the Queen. He told me he wished Her Majesty to be convinced
+ that he was a Frenchman; that he only desired his country might be
+ governed by salutary laws, and not by the caprice of weak sovereigns, or a
+ vitiated, corrupt Ministry; that the clergy and nobility ought to
+ contribute to the wants of the State equally with every other class of the
+ King's subjects; that when this was accomplished, and abuses were removed,
+ by such a national representation as would enable the Minister, Necker, to
+ accomplish his plans for the liquidation of the national debt, I might
+ assure Her Majesty that both the King and herself would find themselves
+ happier in a constitutional government than they had ever yet been; for
+ such a government would set them free from all dependence on the caprice
+ of Ministers, and lessen a responsibility of which they now experienced
+ the misery; that if the King sincerely entered into the spirit of
+ regenerating the French nation, he would find among the present
+ representatives many members of probity, loyal and honourable in their
+ intentions, who would never become the destroyers of a limited legitimate
+ monarchy, or the corrupt regicides of a rump Parliament, such as brought
+ the wayward Charles the First, of England, to the fatal block.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I attempted to relate the conversation to the Queen. She listened with
+ the greatest attention till I came to the part concerning the
+ constitutional King, when Her Majesty lost her patience, and prevented me
+ from proceeding.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [This and other conversations, which will be found in subsequent pages,
+ will prove that Barnave's sentiments in favour of the Royal Family long
+ preceded the affair at Varennes, the beginning of which Madame Campan
+ assigns to it. Indeed it must by this time be evident to the reader that
+ Madame Campan, though very correct in relating all she knew, with
+ respect to the history of Marie Antoinette, was not in possession of
+ matters foreign to her occupation about the person of the Queen, and, in
+ particular, that she could communicate little concerning those important
+ intrigues carried on respecting the different deputies of the first
+ Assembly, till in the latter days of the Revolution, when it became
+ necessary, from the pressure of events, that she should be made a sort
+ of confidante, in order to prevent her from compromising the persons of
+ the Queen and the Princesse de Lamballe: a trust, of her claim to which
+ her undoubted fidelity was an ample pledge. Still, however, she was
+ often absent from Court at moments of great importance, and was obliged
+ to take her information, upon much which she has recorded, from hearsay,
+ which has led her, as I have before stated, into frequent mistakes.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "The expense of the insulting scene, which had so overcome Her Majesty,
+ was five hundred thousand francs! This sum was paid by the agents of the
+ Palais Royal, and its execution entrusted principally to Mirabeau, Bailly,
+ the Mayor of Paris, and another individual, who was afterwards brought
+ over to the Court party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The history of the Assembly itself on the day following, the 6th of May,
+ is too well known. The sudden perturbation of a guilty conscience, which
+ overcame the Duc d'Orleans, seemed like an awful warning. He had scarcely
+ commenced his inflammatory address to the Assembly, when some one, who
+ felt incommoded by the stifling heat of the hall, exclaimed, 'Throw open
+ the windows!' The conspirator fancied he heard in this his death sentence.
+ He fainted, and was conducted home in the greatest agitation. Madame de
+ Bouffon was at the Palais Royal when the Duke was taken thither. The
+ Duchesse d'Orleans was at the palace of the Duc de Penthievre, her father,
+ while the Duke himself was at the Hotel Thoulouse with me, where he was to
+ dine, and where we were waiting for the Duchess to come and join us, by
+ appointment. But Madame de Bouffon was so alarmed by the state in which
+ she saw the Duc d'Orleans that she instantly left the Palais Royal, and
+ despatched his valet express to bring her thither. My sister-in-law sent
+ an excuse to me for not coming to dinner, and an explanation to her father
+ for so abruptly leaving his palace, and hastened home to her husband. It
+ was some days before he recovered; and his father-in-law, his wife, and
+ myself were not without hopes that he would see in this an omen to prevent
+ him from persisting any longer in his opposition to the Royal Family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The effects of the recall of the popular Minister, Necker, did not
+ satisfy the King. Necker soon became an object of suspicion to the Court
+ party, and especially to His Majesty and the Queen. He was known to have
+ maintained an understanding with D'ORLEANS. The miscarriage of many plans
+ and the misfortunes which succeeded were the result of this connection,
+ though it was openly disavowed. The first suspicion of the coalition arose
+ thus:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the Duke had his bust carried about Paris, after his unworthy
+ schemes against the King had been discovered, it was thrown into the mire.
+ Necker passing, perhaps by mere accident, stopped his carriage, and
+ expressing himself with some resentment for such treatment to a Prince of
+ the blood and a friend of the people, ordered the bust to be taken to the
+ Palais Royal, where it was washed, crowned with laurel, and thence, with
+ Necker's own bust, carried to Versailles. The King's aunts, coming from
+ Bellevue as the procession was upon the road, ordered the guards to send
+ the men away who bore the busts, that the King and Queen might not be
+ insulted with the sight. This circumstance caused another riot, which was
+ attributed to Their Majesties. The dismission of the Minister was the
+ obvious result. It is certain, however, that, in obeying the mandate of
+ exile, Necker had no wish to exercise the advantage he possessed from his
+ great popularity. His retirement was sudden and secret; and, although it
+ was mentioned that very evening by the Baroness de Stael to the Comte de
+ Chinon, so little bustle was made about his withdrawing from France, that
+ it was even stated at the time to have been utterly unknown, even to his
+ daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Necker himself ascribed his dismission to the influence of the De
+ Polignacs; but he was totally mistaken, for the Duchesse de Polignac was
+ the last person to have had any influence in matters of State, whatever
+ might have been the case with those who surrounded her. She was devoid of
+ ambition or capacity to give her weight; and the Queen was not so pliant
+ in points of high import as to allow herself to be governed or overruled,
+ unless her mind was thoroughly convinced. In that respect, she was
+ something like Catharine II., who always distinguished her favourites from
+ her Minister; but in the present case she had no choice, and was under the
+ necessity of yielding to the boisterous voice of a faction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From this epoch, I saw all the persons who had any wish to communicate
+ with the Queen on matters relative to the public business, and Her Majesty
+ was generally present when they came, and received them in my apartments.
+ The Duchesse de Polignac never, to my knowledge, entered into any of these
+ State questions; yet there was no promotion in the civil, military, or
+ ministerial department, which she has not been charged with having
+ influenced the Queen to make, though there were few of them who were not
+ nominated by the King and his Ministers, even unknown to the Queen
+ herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The prevailing dissatisfaction against Her Majesty and the favourite De
+ Polignac now began to take so many forms, and produce effects so dreadful,
+ as to wring her own feelings, as well as those of her royal mistress, with
+ the most intense anguish. Let me mention one gross and barbarous instance
+ in proof of what I say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After the birth of the Queen's second son, the Duc de Normandie, who was
+ afterwards Dauphin, the Duke and Duchess of Harcourt, outrageously jealous
+ of the ascendency of the governess of the Dauphin, excited the young
+ Prince's hatred toward Madame de Polignac to such a pitch that he would
+ take nothing from her hands, but often, young as he was at the time, order
+ her out of the apartment, and treat her remonstrances with the utmost
+ contempt. The Duchess bitterly complained of the Harcourts to the Queen;
+ for she really sacrificed the whole of her time to the care and attention
+ required by this young Prince, and she did so from sincere attachment, and
+ that he might not be irritated in his declining state of health. The Queen
+ was deeply hurt at these dissensions between the governor and governess.
+ Her Majesty endeavoured to pacify the mind of the young Prince, by
+ literally making herself a slave to his childish caprices, which in all
+ probability would have created the confidence so desired, when a most
+ cruel, unnatural, I may say diabolical, report prevailed to alienate the
+ child's affections even from his mother, in making him believe that, owing
+ to his deformity and growing ugliness, she had transferred all her
+ tenderness to his younger brother, who certainly was very superior in
+ health and beauty to the puny Dauphin. Making a pretext of this calumny,
+ the governor of the heir-apparent was malicious enough to prohibit him
+ from eating or drinking anything but what first passed through the hands
+ of his physicians; and so strong was the impression made by this interdict
+ on the mind of the young Dauphin that he never after saw the Queen but
+ with the greatest terror. The feelings of his disconsolate parent may be
+ more readily conceived than described. So may the mortification of his
+ governess, the Duchesse de Polignac, herself so tender, so affectionate a
+ mother. Fortunately for himself, and happily for his wretched parents,
+ this royal youth, whose life, though short, had been so full of suffering,
+ died at Versailles on the 4th of June, 1789, and, though only between
+ seven and eight years of age at the time of his decease, he had given
+ proofs of intellectual precocity, which would probably have made continued
+ life, amidst the scenes of wretchedness, which succeeded, anything to him
+ but a blessing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The cabals of the Duke of Harcourt, to which I have just adverted,
+ against the Duchesse de Polignac, were the mere result of foul malice and
+ ambition. Harcourt wished to get his wife, who was the sworn enemy of De
+ Polignac, created governess to the Dauphin, instead of the Queen's
+ favourite. Most of the criminal stories against the Duchesse de Polignac,
+ and which did equal injury to the Queen, were fabricated by the Harcourts,
+ for the purpose of excluding their rival from her situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Barnave, meanwhile, continued faithful to his liberal principles, but
+ equally faithful to his desire of bringing Their Majesties over to those
+ principles, and making them republican Sovereigns. He lost no opportunity
+ of availing himself of my permission for him to call whenever he chose on
+ public business; and he continued to urge the same points, upon which he
+ had before been so much in earnest, although with no better effect. Both
+ the King and the Queen looked with suspicion upon Barnave, and with still
+ more suspicion upon his politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The next time I received him, 'Madame,' exclaimed the deputy to me,
+ 'since our last interview I have pondered well on the situation of the
+ King; and, as an honest Frenchman, attached to my lawful Sovereign, and
+ anxious for his future prosperous reign, I am decidedly of opinion that
+ his own safety, as well as the dignity of the crown of France, and the
+ happiness of his subjects, can only be secured by his giving his country a
+ Constitution, which will at once place his establishment beyond the
+ caprice and the tyranny of corrupt administrations, and secure hereafter
+ the first monarchy in Europe from the possibility of sinking under weak
+ Princes, by whom the royal splendour of France has too often been debased
+ into the mere tool of vicious and mercenary noblesse, and sycophantic
+ courtiers. A King, protected by a Constitution, can do no wrong. He is
+ unshackled with responsibility. He is empowered with the comfort of
+ exercising the executive authority for the benefit of the nation, while
+ all the harsher duties, and all the censures they create, devolve on
+ others. It is, therefore, madame, through your means, and the well-known
+ friendship you have ever evinced for the Royal Family, and the general
+ welfare of the French nation, that I wish to obtain a private audience of
+ Her Majesty, the Queen, in order to induce her to exert the never-failing
+ ascendency she has ever possessed over the mind of our good King, in
+ persuading him to the sacrifice of a small proportion of his power, for
+ the sake of preserving the monarchy to his heirs; and posterity will
+ record the virtues of a Prince who has been magnanimous enough, of his own
+ free will, to resign the unlawful part of his prerogatives, usurped by his
+ predecessors, for the blessing and pleasure of giving liberty to a beloved
+ people, among whom both the King and Queen will find many Hampdens and
+ Sidneys, but very few Cromwells. Besides, madame, we must make a merit of
+ necessity. The times are pregnant with events, and it is more prudent to
+ support the palladium of the ancient monarchy than risk its total
+ overthrow; and fall it must, if the diseased excrescences, of which the
+ people complain, and which threaten to carry death into the very heart of
+ the tree, be not lopped away in time by the Sovereign himself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I heard the deputy with the greatest attention. I promised to fulfil his
+ commission. The better to execute my task, I retired the moment he left
+ me, and wrote down all I could recollect of his discourse, that it might
+ be thoroughly placed before the Queen the first opportunity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When I communicated the conversation to Her Majesty, she listened with
+ the most gracious condescension, till I came to the part wherein Barnave
+ so forcibly impressed the necessity of adopting a constitutional monarchy.
+ Here, as she had done once before, when I repeated some former
+ observations of Barnave to her, Marie Antoinette somewhat lost her
+ equanimity. She rose from her seat, and exclaimed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'What! is an absolute Prince, and the hereditary Sovereign of the ancient
+ monarchy of France, to become the tool of a plebeian faction, who will,
+ their point once gained, dethrone him for his imbecile complaisance? Do
+ they wish to imitate the English Revolution of 1648, and reproduce the
+ sanguinary times of the unfortunate and weak Charles the First? To make
+ France a commonwealth! Well! be it so! But before I advise the King to
+ such a step, or give my consent to it, they shall bury me under the ruins
+ of the monarchy.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'But what answer,' said I, 'does Your Majesty wish me to return to the
+ deputy's request for a private audience?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'What answer?' exclaimed the Queen. No answer at all is the best answer
+ to such a presumptuous proposition! I tremble for the consequences of the
+ impression their disloyal manoeuvres have made upon the minds of the
+ people, and I have no faith whatever in their proffered services to the
+ King. However, on reflection, it may be expedient to temporise. Continue
+ to see him. Learn, if possible, how far he may be trusted; but do not fix
+ any time, as yet, for the desired audience. I wish to apprise the King,
+ first, of his interview with you, Princess. This conversation does not
+ agree with what he and Mirabeau proposed about the King's recovering his
+ prerogatives. Are these the prerogatives with which he flattered the King?
+ Binding him hand and foot, and excluding him from every privilege, and
+ then casting him a helpless dependant on the caprice of a volatile
+ plebeian faction! The French nation is very different from the English.
+ The first rules of the established ancient order of the government broken
+ through, they will violate twenty others, and the King will be sacrificed,
+ before this frivolous people again organise themselves with any sort of
+ regular government.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Agreeably to Her Majesty's commands, I continued to see Barnave. I
+ communicated with him by letter,' at his private lodgings at Passy, and at
+ Vitry; but it was long before the Queen could be brought to consent to the
+ audience he solicited.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [Of these letters I was generally the bearer. I recollect that day
+ perfectly. I was copying some letters for the Princesse de Lamballe,
+ when the Prince de Conti came in. The Prince lived not only to see, but
+ to feel the errors of his system. He attained a great age. He outlived
+ the glory of his country. Like many others, the first gleam of political
+ regeneration led him into a system, which drove him out of France, to
+ implore the shelter of a foreign asylum, that he might not fall a victim
+ to his own credulity. I had an opportunity of witnessing in his latter
+ days his sincere repentance; and to this it is fit that I should bear
+ testimony. There were no bounds to the execration with which he
+ expressed himself towards the murderers of those victims, whose death he
+ lamented with a bitterness in which some remorse was mingled, from the
+ impression that his own early errors in favour of the Revolution had
+ unintentionally accelerated their untimely end. This was a source to him
+ of deep and perpetual self-reproach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was an eccentricity in the appearance, dress, and manners of the
+ Prince de Conti, which well deserves recording.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He wore to the very last&mdash;and it was in Barcelona, so late as 1803,
+ that I last had the honour of conversing with him&mdash;a white rich
+ stuff dress frock coat, of the cut and fashion of Louis XIV., which,
+ being without any collar, had buttons and button-holes from the neck to
+ the bottom of the skirt, and was padded and stiffened with buckram. The
+ cuffs were very large, of a different colour, and turned up to the
+ elbows. The whole was lined with white satin, which, from its being very
+ much moth-eaten, appeared as if it had been dotted on purpose to show
+ the buckram between the satin lining. His waistcoat was of rich green
+ striped silk, bound with gold lace; the buttons and buttonholes of gold;
+ the flaps very large, and completely covering his small clothes; which
+ happened very apropos, for they scarcely reached his knees, over which
+ he wore large striped silk stockings, that came half-way up his thighs.
+ His shoes had high heels, and reached half up his legs; the buckles were
+ small, and set round with paste. A very narrow stiff stock decorated his
+ neck. He carried a hat, with a white feather on the inside, under his
+ arm. His ruffles were of very handsome point lace. His few gray hairs
+ were gathered in a little round bag. The wig alone was wanting to make
+ him a thorough picture of the polished age of the founder of Versailles
+ and Marly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had all that princely politeness of manner which so eminently
+ distinguished the old school of French nobility, previous to the
+ Revolution. He was the thorough gentleman, a character by no means so
+ readily to be met with in these days of refinement as one would imagine.
+ He never addressed the softer sex but with ease and elegance, and
+ admiration of their persons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Could Louis XIV. have believed, had it been told to him when he placed
+ this branch of the Bourbons on the throne of Iberia, that it would one
+ day refuse to give shelter at the Court of Madrid to one of his family,
+ for fear of offending a Corsican usurper!]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed, Her Majesty had such an aversion to all who had declared
+ themselves for any innovation upon the existing power of the monarchy,
+ that she was very reluctant to give audience upon the subject to any
+ person, not even excepting the Princes of the blood. The Comte d'Artois
+ himself, leaning as he did to the popular side, had ceased to be welcome.
+ Expressions he had made use of, concerning the necessity for some change,
+ had occasioned the coolness, which was already of considerable standing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One day the Prince de Conti came to me, to complain of the Queen's
+ refusing to receive him, because he had expressed himself to the same
+ effect as had the Comte d'Artois on the subject of the Tiers Etat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'And does Your Highness,' replied I, 'imagine that the Queen is less
+ displeased with the conduct of the Comte d'Artois on that head than she is
+ with you, Prince? I can assure Your Highness, that at this moment there
+ subsists a very great degree of coolness between Her Majesty and her royal
+ brother-in-law, whom she loves as if he were her own brother. Though she
+ makes every allowance for his political inexperience, and well knows the
+ goodness of his heart and the rectitude of his intentions, yet policy will
+ not permit her to change her sentiments.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'That may be,' said the Prince, 'but while Her Majesty continues to
+ honour with her royal presence the Duchesse de Polignac, whose friends, as
+ well as herself, are all enthusiastically mad in favour of the
+ constitutional system, she shows an undue partiality, by countenancing one
+ branch of the party and not the other; particularly so, as the great and
+ notorious leader of the opposition, which the Queen frowns upon, is the
+ sister-in-law of this very Duchesse de Polignac, and the avowed favourite
+ of the Comte d'Artois, by whom, and the councils of the Palais Royal, he
+ is supposed to be totally governed in his political career.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'The Queen,' replied I, 'is certainly her own mistress. She sees, I
+ believe, many persons more from habit than any other motive; to which,
+ Your Highness is aware, many Princes often make sacrifices. Your Highness
+ cannot suppose I can have the temerity to control Her Majesty, in the
+ selection of her friends, or in her sentiments respecting them.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'No,' exclaimed the Prince, 'I imagine not. But she might just as well
+ see any of us; for we are no more enemies of the Crown than the party she
+ is cherishing by constantly appearing among them; which, according to her
+ avowed maxims concerning the not sanctioning any but supporters of the
+ absolute monarchy, is in direct opposition to her own sentiments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Who,' continued His Highness, 'caused that infernal comedy, 'Le Mariage
+ de Figaro', to be brought out, but the party of the Duchesse de Polignac?
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [Note of the Princesse de Lamballe:&mdash;The Prince de Conti never
+ could speak of Beaumarchais but with the greatest contempt. There was
+ something personal in this exasperation. Beaumarchais had satirized the
+ Prince. 'The Spanish Barber' was founded on a circumstance which
+ happened at a country house between Conti and a young lady, during the
+ reign of Louis XV., when intrigues of every kind were practised and
+ almost sanctioned. The poet has exposed the Prince by making him the
+ Doctor Bartolo of his play. The affair which supplied the story was
+ hushed up at Court, and the Prince was punished only by the loss of his
+ mistress, who became the wife of another.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ The play is a critique on the whole Royal Family, from the drawing up of
+ the curtain to its fall. It burlesques the ways and manners of every
+ individual connected with the Court of Versailles. Not a scene but touches
+ some of their characters. Are not the Queen herself and the Comte d'Artois
+ lampooned and caricatured in the garden scenes, and the most slanderous
+ ridicule cast upon their innocent evening walks on the terrace? Does not
+ Beaumarchais plainly show in it, to every impartial eye, the means which
+ the Comtesse Diane has taken publicly to demonstrate her jealousy of the
+ Queen's ascendency over the Comte d'Artois? Is it not from the same
+ sentiment that she roused the jealousy of the Comtesse d'Artois against
+ Her Majesty?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'All these circumstances,' observed I, 'the King prudently foresaw when
+ he read the manuscript, and caused it to be read to the Queen, to convince
+ her of the nature of its characters and the dangerous tendency likely to
+ arise from its performance. Of this Your Highness is aware. It is not for
+ me to apprise you that, to avert the excitement inevitable from its being
+ brought upon the stage, and under a thorough conviction of the mischief it
+ would produce in turning the minds of the people against the Queen, His
+ Majesty solemnly declared that the comedy should not be performed in
+ Paris; and that he would never sanction its being brought before the
+ public on any stage in France.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Bah! bah! madame!' exclaimed De Conti. The Queen has acted like a child
+ in this affair, as in many others. In defiance of His Majesty's
+ determination, did not the Queen herself, through the fatal influence of
+ her favourite, whose party wearied her out by continued importunities,
+ cause the King to revoke his express mandate? And what has been the
+ consequence of Her Majesty's ungovernable partiality for these De
+ Polignacs?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'You know, Prince,' said I, 'better than I do.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'The proofs of its bad consequences,' pursued His Highness, 'are more
+ strongly verified than ever by your own withdrawing from the Queen's
+ parties since her unreserved acknowledgment of her partiality (fatal
+ partiality!) for those who will be her ruin; for they are her worst
+ enemies.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Pardon me, Prince,' answered I, 'I have not withdrawn myself from the
+ Queen, but from the new parties, with whose politics I cannot identify
+ myself, besides some exceptions I have taken against those who frequent
+ them.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Bah! bah!' exclaimed De Conti, 'your sagacity has got the better of your
+ curiosity. All the wit and humour of that traitor Beaumarchais never
+ seduced you to cultivate his society, as all the rest of the Queen's party
+ have done.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I never knew him to be accused of treason.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Why, what do you call a fellow who sent arms to the Americans before the
+ war was declared, without his Sovereign's consent?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'In that affair, I consider the Ministers as criminal as himself; for the
+ Queen, to this day, believes that Beaumarchais was sanctioned by them and,
+ you know, Her Majesty has ever since had an insuperable dislike to both De
+ Maurepas and De Vergennes. But I have nothing to do with these things.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Yes, yes, I understand you, Princess. Let her romp and play with the
+ 'compate vous',&mdash;[A kind of game of forfeits, introduced for the
+ diversion of the royal children and those of the Duchesse de Polignac.]&mdash;but
+ who will 'compatire' (make allowance for) her folly? Bah! bah! bah! She is
+ inconsistent, Princess. Not that I mean by this to insinuate that the
+ Duchess is not the sincere friend and well-wisher of the Queen. Her
+ immediate existence, her interest, and that of her family, are all
+ dependent on the royal bounty. But can the Duchess answer for the same
+ sincerity towards the Queen, with respect to her innumerable guests? No!
+ Are not the sentiments of the Duchesses sister-in-law, the Comtesse Diane,
+ in direct opposition to the absolute monarchy? Has she not always been an
+ enthusiastic advocate for all those that have supported the American war?
+ Who was it that crowned, at a public assembly, the democratical straight
+ hairs of Dr. Franklin? Why the same Madame Comtesse Diane! Who was 'capa
+ turpa' in applauding the men who were framing the American Constitution at
+ Paris? Madame Comtesse Diane! Who was it, in like manner, that opposed all
+ the Queen's arguments against the political conduct of France and Spain,
+ relative to the war with England, in favour of the American Independence?
+ The Comtesse Diane! Not for the love of that rising nation, or for the
+ sacred cause of liberty; but from a taste for notoriety, a spirit of envy
+ and jealousy, an apprehension lest the personal charms of the Queen might
+ rob her of a part of those affections, which she herself exclusively hoped
+ to alienate from that abortion, the Comtesse d'Artois, in whose service
+ she is Maid of Honour, and handmaid to the Count. My dear Princess, these
+ are facts proved. Beaumarchais has delineated them all. Why, then, refuse
+ to see me? Why withdraw her former confidence from the Comte d'Artois,
+ when she lives in the society which promulgates antimonarchical
+ principles? These are sad evidences of Her Majesty's inconsistency. She
+ might as well see the Duc d'Orleans'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here my feelings overwhelmed me. I could contain myself no longer. The
+ tears gushed from my eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Oh, Prince!' exclaimed I, in a bitter agony of grief&mdash;'Oh, Prince!
+ touch not that fatal string. For how many years has he not caused these
+ briny tears of mine to flow from my burning eyes! The scalding drops have
+ nearly parched up the spring of life!'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION IV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The dismissal of M. Necker irritated the people beyond description. They
+ looked upon themselves as insulted in their favourite. Mob succeeded mob,
+ each more mischievous and daring than the former. The Duc d'Orleans
+ continued busy in his work of secret destruction. In one of the popular
+ risings, a sabre struck his bust, and its head fell, severed from its
+ body. Many of the rioters (for the ignorant are always superstitious)
+ shrunk back at this omen of evil to their idol. His real friends
+ endeavoured to deduce a salutary warning to him from the circumstance. I
+ was by when the Duc de Penthievre told him, in the presence of his
+ daughter, that he might look upon this accident as prophetic of the fate
+ of his own head, as well as the ruin of his family, if he persisted. He
+ made no answer, but left the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the 14th of July, and two or three days preceding, the commotions took
+ a definite object. The destruction of the Bastille was the point proposed,
+ and it was achieved. Arms were obtained from the old pensioners at the
+ Hotel des Invalides. Fifty thousand livres were distributed among the
+ chiefs of those who influenced the Invalides to give up the arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The massacre of the Marquis de Launay, commandant of the place, and of M.
+ de Flesselles, and the fall of the citadel itself, were the consequence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her Majesty was greatly affected when she heard of the murder of these
+ officers and the taking of the Bastille. She frequently told me that the
+ horrid circumstance originated in a diabolical Court intrigue, but never
+ explained the particulars of the intrigue. She declared that both the
+ officers and the citadel might have been saved had not the King's orders
+ for the march of the troops from Versailles, and the environs of Paris,
+ been disobeyed. She blamed the precipitation of De Launay in ordering up
+ the drawbridge and directing the few troops on it to fire upon the people.
+ 'There,' she added, 'the Marquis committed himself; as, in case of not
+ succeeding, he could have no retreat, which every commander should take
+ care to secure, before he allows the commencement of a general attack.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [Certainly, the French Revolution may date its epoch as far back as the
+ taking of the Bastille; from that moment the troubles progressively
+ continued, till the final extirpation of its illustrious victims. I was
+ just returning from a mission to England when the storms began to
+ threaten not only the most violent effects to France itself, but to all
+ the land which was not divided from it by the watery element. The spirit
+ of liberty, as the vine, which produces the most luxurious fruit, when
+ abused becomes the most pernicious poison, was stalking abroad and
+ revelling in blood and massacre. I myself was a witness to the
+ enthusiastic national ball given on the ruins of the Bastille, while it
+ was still stained and reeking with the hot blood of its late keeper,
+ whose head I saw carried in triumph. Such was the effect on me that the
+ Princesse de Lamballe asked me if I had known the Marquis de Launay. I
+ answered in the negative; but told her from the knowledge I had of the
+ English Revolution, I was fearful of a result similar to what followed
+ the fall of the heads of Buckingham and Stafford. The Princess
+ mentioning my observation to the Duc de Penthievre, they both burst into
+ tears.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The death of the Dauphin, the horrible Revolution of the 14th of July,
+ the troubles about Necker, the insults and threats offered to the Comte
+ d'Artois and herself,&mdash;overwhelmed the Queen with the most poignant
+ grief.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "She was most desirous of some understanding being established between the
+ government and the representatives of the people, which she urged upon the
+ King the expediency of personally attempting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King, therefore, at her reiterated remonstrances and requests,
+ presented himself, on the following day, with his brothers, to the
+ National Assembly, to assure them of his firm determination to support the
+ measures of the deputies, in everything conducive to the general good of
+ his subjects. As a proof of his intentions, he said he had commanded the
+ troops to leave Paris and Versailles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King left the Assembly, as he had gone thither, on foot, amid the
+ vociferations of 'Vive le roi!' and it was only through the enthusiasm of
+ the deputies, who thus hailed His Majesty, and followed him in crowds to
+ the palace, that the Comte d'Artois escaped the fury of an outrageous mob.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The people filled every avenue of the palace, which vibrated with cries
+ for the King, the Queen, and the Dauphin to show themselves at the
+ balcony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Send for the Duchesse de Polignac to bring the royal children,' cried I
+ to Her Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Not for the world!' exclaimed the Queen. 'She will be assassinated, and
+ my children too, if she make her appearance before this infuriate mob. Let
+ Madame and the Dauphin be brought unaccompanied.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen, on this occasion, imitated her Imperial mother, Maria Theresa.
+ She took the Dauphin in her arms, and Madame by her side, as that Empress
+ had done when she presented herself to the Hungarian magnates; but the
+ reception here was very different. It was not 'moriamur pro nostra
+ regina'. Not that they were ill received; but the furious party of the Duc
+ d'Orleans often interrupted the cries of 'Vive le roi! Vive la reine!'
+ etc., with those of 'Vive la nation! Vive d' Orleans!' and many severe
+ remarks on the family of the De Polignacs, which proved that the Queen's
+ caution on this occasion was exceedingly well-judged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not to wound the feelings of the Duchesse de Polignac, I kept myself at a
+ distance behind the Queen; but I was loudly called for by the mobility,
+ and, 'malgre moi', was obliged, at the King and Queen's request, to come
+ forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As I approached the balcony, I perceived one of the well-known agents of
+ the Duc d'Orleans, whom I had noticed some time before in the throng,
+ menacing me, the moment I made my appearance, with his upreared hand in
+ fury. I was greatly terrified, but suppressed my agitation, and saluted
+ the populace; but, fearful of exhibiting my weakness in sight of the
+ wretch who had alarmed me, withdrew instantly, and had no sooner
+ re-entered than I sunk motionless in the arms of one of the attendants.
+ Luckily, this did not take place till I left the balcony. Had it been
+ otherwise, the triumph to my declared enemies would have been too great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Recovering, I found myself surrounded by the Royal Family, who were all
+ kindness and concern for my situation; but I could not subdue my tremor
+ and affright. The horrid image of that monster seemed, still to threaten
+ me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Come, come!' said the King, 'be not alarmed, I shall order a council of
+ all the Ministers and deputies to-morrow, who will soon put an end to
+ these riots!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We were ere long joined by the Prince de Conde, the Duc de Bourbon, and
+ others, who implored the King not to part with the army, but to place
+ himself, with all the Princes of the blood, at its head, as the only means
+ to restore tranquillity to the country, and secure his own safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen was decidedly of the same opinion; and added, that, if the army
+ were to depart, the King and his family ought to go with it; but the King,
+ on the contrary, said he would not decide upon any measures whatever till
+ he had heard the opinion of the Council.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen, notwithstanding the King's indecision, was occupied, during
+ the rest of the day and the whole of the night, in preparing for her
+ intended; journey, as she hoped to persuade the King to follow the advice
+ of the Princes, and not wait the result of the next day's deliberation.
+ Nay, so desirous was she of this, that she threw herself on her knees to
+ the King, imploring him to leave Versailles and head the army, and
+ offering to accompany him herself, on horseback, in uniform; but it was
+ like speaking to a corpse he never answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Duchesse de Polignac came to Her Majesty in a state of the greatest
+ agitation, in consequence of M. de Chinon having just apprised her that a
+ most malicious report had been secretly spread among the deputies at
+ Versailles that they were all to be blown up at their next meeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen was as much surprised as the Duchess, and scarcely less
+ agitated. These wretched friends could only, in silence, compare notes of
+ their mutual cruel misfortunes. Both for a time remained speechless at
+ this new calamity. Surely this was not wanting to be added to those by
+ which the Queen was already so bitterly oppressed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was sent for by Her Majesty. Count Fersen accompanied me. He had just
+ communicated to me what the Duchess had already repeated from M. Chinon to
+ the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The rumour had been set afloat merely as a new pretext for the
+ continuation of the riots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The communication of the report, so likely to produce a disastrous
+ effect, took place while the King was with his Ministers deliberating
+ whether he should go to Paris, or save himself and family by joining the
+ army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His Majesty was called from the council to the Queen's apartment, and was
+ there made acquainted with the circumstance which had so awakened the
+ terror of the royal party. He calmly replied, 'It is some days since this
+ invention has been spread among the deputies; I was aware of it from the
+ first; but from its being utterly impossible to be listened to for a
+ moment by any one, I did not wish to afflict you by the mention of an
+ impotent fabrication, which I myself treated with the contempt it justly
+ merited. Nevertheless, I did not forget, yesterday, in the presence of
+ both my brothers, who accompanied me to the National Assembly, there to
+ exculpate myself from an imputation at which my nature revolts; and, from
+ the manner in which it was received, I flatter myself that every honest
+ Frenchman was fully satisfied that my religion will ever be an
+ insurmountable barrier against my harbouring sentiments allied in the
+ slightest degree to such actions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King embraced the Queen, begged she would tranquilise herself, calmed
+ the fears of the two ladies, thanked the gentlemen for the interest they
+ took in his favour, and returned to the council, who, in his absence, had
+ determined on his going to the Hotel de Ville at Paris, suggesting at the
+ same time the names of several persons likely to be well received, if His
+ Majesty thought proper to allow their accompanying him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "During this interval, the Queen, still flattering herself that she should
+ pursue her wished-for journey, ordered the carriages to be prepared and
+ sent off to Rambouillet, where she said she should sleep; but this Her
+ Majesty only stated for the purpose of distracting the attention of her
+ pages and others about her from her real purpose. As it was well known
+ that M. de St. Priest had pointed out Rambouillet as a fit asylum for the
+ mob, she fancied that an understanding on the part of her suite that they
+ were to halt there, and prepare for her reception, would protect her
+ project of proceeding much farther.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the council had broken up and the King returned, he said to the
+ Queen, 'It is decided.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'To go, I hope?' said Her Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'No'&mdash;(though in appearance calm, the words remained on the lips of
+ the King, and he stood for some moments incapable of utterance; but,
+ recovering, added)&mdash;'To Paris!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen, at the word Paris, became frantic. She flung herself wildly
+ into the arms of her friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Nous sommes perdus! nous sommes perdus!' cried she, in a passion of
+ tears. But her dread was not for herself. She felt only for the danger to
+ which the King was now going to expose himself; and she flew to him, and
+ hung on his neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'And what,' exclaimed she, 'is to become of all our faithful friends and
+ attendants!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I advise them all,' answered His Majesty, 'to make the best of their way
+ out of France; and that as soon as possible.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By this time, the apartments of the Queen were filled with the attendants
+ and the royal children, anxiously expecting every moment to receive the
+ Queen's command to proceed on their journey, but they were all ordered to
+ retire to whence they came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The scene was that of a real tragedy. Nothing broke the silence but
+ groans of the deepest affliction. Our consternation at the counter order
+ cast all into a state of stupefied insensibility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen was the only one whose fortitude bore her up proudly under this
+ weight of misfortunes. Recovering from the frenzy of the first impression,
+ she adjured her friends, by the love and obedience they had ever shown her
+ and the King, to prepare immediately to fulfil his mandate and make
+ themselves ready for the cruel separation!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Duchesse de Polignac and myself were, for some hours, in a state of
+ agony and delirium.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the Queen saw the body-guards drawn up to accompany the King's
+ departure, she ran to the window, threw apart the sash, and was going to
+ speak to them, to recommend the King to their care; but the Count Fersen
+ prevented it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'For God's sake, Madame,'&mdash;exclaimed he, 'do not commit yourself to
+ the suspicion of having any doubts of the people!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the King entered to take leave of her, and of all his most faithful
+ attendants, he could only articulate, 'Adieu!' But when the Queen saw him
+ accompanied by the Comte d'Estaing and others, whom, from their new
+ principles, she knew to be popular favourites, she had command enough of
+ herself not to shed a tear in their presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No sooner, however, had the King left the room than it was as much as the
+ Count Fersen, Princesse Elizabeth, and all of us could do to recover her
+ from the most violent convulsions. At last, coming to herself, she retired
+ with the Princess, the Duchess, and myself to await the King's return; at
+ the same time requesting the Count Fersen to follow His Majesty to the
+ Hotel de Ville. Again and again she implored the Count, as she went, in
+ case the King should be detained, to interest himself with all the foreign
+ Ministers to interpose for his liberation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Versailles, when the King was gone, seemed like a city deserted in
+ consequence of the plague. The palace was completely abandoned. All the
+ attendants were dispersed. No one was seen in the streets. Terror
+ prevailed. It was universally believed that the King would be detained in
+ Paris. The high road from Versailles to Paris was crowded with all ranks
+ of people, as if to catch a last look of their Sovereign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Count Fersen set off instantly, pursuant to the Queen's desire. He
+ saw all that passed, and on his return related to me the history of that
+ horrid day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He arrived at Paris just in time to see His Majesty take the national
+ cockade from M. Bailly and place it in his hat. He, felt the Hotel de
+ Ville shake with the long-continued cries of 'Vive le roi!' in
+ consequence, which so affected the King that, for some moments, he was
+ unable to express himself. 'I myself,' added the Count, 'was so moved at
+ the effect on His Majesty, in being thus warmly received by his Parisian
+ subjects, which portrayed the paternal emotions of his long-lacerated
+ heart, that every other feeling was paralysed for a moment, in exultation
+ at the apparent unanimity between the Sovereign and his people. But it did
+ not,' continued the Ambassador, 'paralyse the artful tongue of Bailly, the
+ Mayor of Paris. I could have kicked the fellow for his malignant
+ impudence; for, even in the cunning compliment he framed, he studied to
+ humble the afflicted Monarch by telling the people it was to them he owed
+ the sovereign authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'But,' pursued the Count, 'considering the situation of Louis XVI. and
+ that of his family, agonised as they must have been during his absence,
+ from the Queen's impression that the Parisians would never again allow him
+ to see Versailles, how great was our rapture when we saw him safely
+ replaced in his carriage, and returning to those who were still lamenting
+ him as lost!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'When I left Her Majesty in the morning, she was nearly in a state of
+ mental aberration. When I saw her again in the evening, the King by her
+ side, surrounded by her family, the Princesse Eizabeth, and yourself,
+ madame' said the kind Count, 'she appeared to me like a person risen from
+ the dead and restored to life. Her excess of joy at the first moment was
+ beyond description!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Count Fersen might well say the first moment, for the pleasure of the
+ Queen was of short duration. Her heart was doomed to bleed afresh, when
+ the thrill of delight, at what she considered the escape of her husband,
+ was past, for she had already seen her chosen friend, the Duchesse de
+ Polignac, for the last time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her Majesty was but just recovered from the effects of the morning's
+ agitation, when the Duchess, the Duke, his sister, and all his family set
+ off. It was impossible for her to take leave of her friend. The hour was
+ late&mdash;about midnight. At the same time departed the Comte d'Artois
+ and his family, the Prince de Conde and his, the Prince of Hesse
+ d'Armstadt, and all those who were likely to be suspected by the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her Majesty desired the Count Fersen to see the Duchess in her name. When
+ the King heard the request, he exclaimed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'What a cruel state for Sovereigns, my dear Count! To be compelled to
+ separate ourselves from our most faithful attendants, and not be allowed,
+ for fear of compromising others or our own lives, to take a last
+ farewell!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Ah!' said the Queen, 'I fear so too. I fear it is a last farewell to all
+ our friends!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Count saw the Duchess a few moments before she left Versailles.
+ Pisani, the Venetian Ambassador, and Count Fersen, helped her on the
+ coachbox, where she rode disguised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What must have been most poignantly mortifying to the fallen favourite
+ was, that, in the course of her journey, she met with her greatest enemy,
+ (Necker) who was returning, triumphant, to Paris, called by the voice of
+ that very nation by whom she and her family were now forced from its
+ territory,&mdash;Necker, who himself conceived that she, who now went by
+ him into exile, while he himself returned to the greatest of victories,
+ had thwarted all his former plans of operation, and, from her influence
+ over the Queen, had caused his dismission and temporary banishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For my own part, I cannot but consider this sudden desertion of France by
+ those nearest the throne as ill-judged. Had all the Royal Family,
+ remained, is it likely that the King and Queen would have been watched
+ with such despotic vigilance? Would not confidence have created
+ confidence, and the breach have been less wide between the King and his
+ people?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the father and his family will now be thoroughly reconciled, Heaven
+ alone can tell!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION V.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Barnave often lamented his having been betrayed, by a love of notoriety,
+ into many schemes, of which his impetuosity blinded him to the
+ consequences. With tears in his eyes, he implored me to impress the
+ Queen's mind with the sad truths he inculcated. He said his motives had
+ been uniformly the same, however he might have erred in carrying them into
+ action; but now he relied on my friendship for my royal mistress to give
+ efficacy to his earnest desire to atone for those faults, of which he had
+ become convinced by dear-bought experience. He gave me a list of names for
+ Her Majesty, in which were specified all the Jacobins who had emissaries
+ throughout France, for the purpose of creating on the same day, and at the
+ same hour, an alarm of something like the 'Vesparo Siciliano' (a general
+ insurrection to murder all the nobility and burn their palaces, which, in
+ fact, took place in many parts of France), the object of which was to give
+ the Assembly, by whom all the regular troops were disbanded, a pretext for
+ arming the people as a national guard, thus creating a perpetual national
+ faction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The hordes of every faubourg now paraded in this new democratic livery.
+ Even some of them, who were in the actual service of the Court, made no
+ scruple of decorating themselves thus, in the very face of their
+ Sovereign. The King complained, but the answer made to him was that the
+ nation commanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The very first time Their Majesties went to the royal chapel, after the
+ embodying of the troops with the national guards, all the persons
+ belonging to it were accoutred in the national uniform. The Queen was
+ highly incensed, and deeply affected at this insult offered to the King's
+ authority by the persons employed in the sacred occupations of the Church.
+ 'Such persons,' said Her Majesty, 'would, I had hoped, have been the last
+ to interfere with politics.' She was about to order all those who
+ preferred their uniforms to their employments to be discharged from the
+ King's service; but my advice, coupled with that of Barnave, dissuaded her
+ from executing so dangerous a threat. On being assured that those,
+ perhaps, who might be selected to replace the offenders might refuse the
+ service, if not allowed the same ridiculous prerogatives, and thus expose
+ Their Royal Majesties to double mortification, the Queen seemed satisfied,
+ and no more was said upon the subject, except to an Italian soprano, to
+ whom the King signified his displeasure at his singing a 'salva regina' in
+ the dress of a grenadier of the new faction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The singer took the hint and never again intruded his uniform into the
+ chapel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Necker, notwithstanding the enthusiasm his return produced upon the
+ people, felt mortified in having lost the confidence of the King. He came
+ to me, exclaiming that, unless Their Majesties distinguished him by some
+ mark of their royal favour, his influence must be lost with the National
+ Assembly. He perceived, he said, that the councils of the King were more
+ governed by the advice of the Queen's favourite, the Abbe Vermond, than by
+ his (Necker's). He begged I would assure Her Majesty that Vermond was
+ quite as obnoxious to the people as the Duchesse de Polignac had ever
+ been; for it was generally known that Her Majesty was completely guided by
+ him, and, therefore, for her own safety and the tranquillity of national
+ affairs, he humbly suggested the prudence of sending him from the Court,
+ at least for a time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was petrified at hearing a Minister dare presume thus to dictate the
+ line of conduct which the Queen of France, his Sovereign, should pursue
+ with respect to her most private servants. Such was my indignation at this
+ cruel wish to dismiss every object of her choice, especially one from
+ whom, owing to long habits of intimacy since her childhood, a separation
+ would be rendered, by her present situation, peculiarly cruel, that
+ nothing but the circumstances in which the Court then stood could have
+ given me patience to listen to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I made no answer. Upon my silence, Necker subjoined, 'You must perceive,
+ Princess, that I am actuated for the general good of the nation.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'And I hope, monsieur, for the prerogatives of the monarchy also,'
+ replied I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Certainly,' said Necker. 'But if Their Majesties continue to be guided
+ by others, and will not follow my advice, I cannot answer for the
+ consequences.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I assured the Minister that I would be the faithful bearer of his
+ commission, however unpleasant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Knowing the character of the Queen, in not much relishing being dictated
+ to with respect to her conduct in relation to the persons of her
+ household, especially the Abbe Vermond, and aware, at the same time, of
+ her dislike to Necker, who thus undertook to be her director, I felt
+ rather awkward in being the medium of the Minister's suggestions. But what
+ was my surprise, on finding her prepared, and totally indifferent as to
+ the privation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I foresaw,' replied Her Majesty, 'that Vermond would become odious to
+ the present order of things, merely because he had been a faithful
+ servant, and long attached to my interest; but you may tell M. Necker that
+ the Abbe leaves Versailles this very night, by my express order, for
+ Vienna.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If the proposal of Necker astonished me, the Queen's reception of it
+ astonished me still more. What a lesson is this for royal favourites! The
+ man who had been her tutor, and who, almost from her childhood, never left
+ her, the constant confidant for fifteen or sixteen years, was now sent off
+ without a seeming regret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I doubt not, however, that the Queen had some very powerful secret motive
+ for the sudden change in her conduct towards the Abbe, for she was ever
+ just in all her concerns, even to her avowed enemies; but I was happy that
+ she seemed to express no particular regret at the Minister's suggested
+ policy. I presume, from the result, that I myself had overrated the
+ influence of the Abbe over the mind of his royal pupil; that he had by no
+ means the sway imputed to him; and that Marie Antoinette merely considered
+ him as the necessary instrument of her private correspondence, which he
+ had wholly managed.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The truth is, Her Majesty had already taken leave of the Abbe, in the
+ presence of the King, unknown to the Princess; or, more properly, the
+ Abbe had taken an affectionate leave of them.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "But a circumstance presently occurred which aroused Her Majesty from this
+ calmness and indifference. The King came in to inform her that La Fayette,
+ during the night, had caused the guards to desert from the palace of
+ Versailles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The effect on her of this intelligence was like the lightning which
+ precedes a loud clap of thunder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Everything that followed was perfectly in character, and shook every
+ nerve of the royal authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Thus,' exclaimed Marie Antoinette, 'thus, Sire, have you humiliated
+ yourself, in condescending to go to Paris, without having accomplished the
+ object. You have not regained the confidence of your subjects. Oh, how
+ bitterly do I deplore the loss of that confidence! It exists no longer.
+ Alas! when will it be restored!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The French guards, indeed, had been in open insurrection through the
+ months of June and July, and all that could be done was to preserve one
+ single company of grenadiers, by means of their commander, the Baron de
+ Leval, faithful to their colours. This company had now been influenced by
+ General La Fayette to desert and join their companions, who had enrolled
+ themselves in the Paris national guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Messieurs de Bouille and de Luxembourg being interrogated by the Queen
+ respecting the spirit of the troops under their immediate command, M. de
+ Bouille answered, Madame, I should be very sorry to be compelled to
+ undertake any internal operation with men who have been seduced from their
+ allegiance, and are daily paid by a faction which aims at the overthrow of
+ its legitimate Sovereign. I would not answer for a man that has been in
+ the neighbourhood of the seditious national troops, or that has read the
+ inflammatory discussions of the National Assembly. If Your Majesty and the
+ King wish well to the nation&mdash;I am sorry to say it&mdash;its
+ happiness depends on your quitting immediately the scenes of riot and
+ placing yourselves in a situation to treat with the National Assembly on
+ equal terms, whereby the King may be unbiassed and unfettered by a
+ compulsive, overbearing mob; and this can only be achieved by your flying
+ to a place of safety. That you may find such a place, I will answer with
+ my life!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Yes,' said M. de Luxembourg, 'I think we may both safely answer that, in
+ such a case, you will find a few Frenchmen ready to risk a little to save
+ all!' And both concurred that there was no hope of salvation for the King
+ or country but through the resolution they advised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'This,' said the Queen, 'will be a very difficult task. His Majesty, I
+ fear, will never consent to leave France.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Then, Madame,' replied they, 'we can only regret that we have nothing to
+ offer but our own perseverance in the love and service of our King and his
+ oppressed family, to whom we deplore we can now be useful only with our
+ feeble wishes.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Well, gentlemen,' answered Her Majesty, 'you must not despair of better
+ prospects. I will take an early opportunity of communicating your loyal
+ sentiments to the King, and will hear his opinion on the subject before I
+ give you a definite answer. I thank you, in the name of His Majesty, as
+ well as on my own account, for your good intentions towards us.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Scarcely had these gentlemen left the palace, when a report prevailed
+ that the King, his family, and Ministers, were about to withdraw to some
+ fortified situation. It was also industriously rumoured that, as soon as
+ they were in safety, the National Assembly would be forcibly dismissed, as
+ the Parliament had been by Louis XIV. The reports gained universal belief
+ when it became known that the King had ordered the Flanders regiment to
+ Versailles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The National Assembly now daily watched the royal power more and more
+ assiduously. New sacrifices of the prerogatives of the nobles were
+ incessantly proposed by them to the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When His Majesty told the Queen that he had been advised by Necker to
+ sanction the abolition of the privileged nobility, and that all
+ distinctions, except the order of the Holy Ghost to himself and the
+ Dauphin, were also annihilated by the Assembly, even to the order of Maria
+ Theresa, which she could no longer wear, 'These, Sire,' answered she, in
+ extreme anguish, 'are trifles, so far as they regard myself. I do not
+ think I have twice worn the order of Maria Theresa since my arrival in
+ this once happy country. I need it not. The immortal memory of her who
+ gave me being is engraven on my heart; that I shall wear forever, none can
+ wrest it from me. But what grieves me to the soul is your having
+ sanctioned these decrees of the National Assembly upon the mere 'ipse
+ dixit' of M. Necker.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I have only, given my sanction to such as I thought most necessary to
+ tranquilise the minds of those who doubted my sincerity; but I have
+ withheld it from others, which, for the good of my people, require maturer
+ consideration. On these, in a full Council, and in your presence, I shall
+ again deliberate.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Oh, said the Queen, with tears in her eyes, could but the people hear
+ you, and know, once for all, how to appreciate the goodness of your heart,
+ as I do now, they would cast themselves at your feet, and supplicate your
+ forgiveness for having shown such ingratitude to your paternal interest
+ for their welfare!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But this unfortunate refusal to sanction all the decrees sent by the
+ National Assembly, though it proceeded from the best motives, produced the
+ worst effects. Duport, De Lameth, and Barnave well knew the troubles such
+ a course must create. Of this they forewarned His Majesty, before any
+ measure was laid before him for approval. They cautioned him not to trifle
+ with the deputies. They assured him that half measures would only rouse
+ suspicion. They enforced the necessity of uniform assentation, in order to
+ lull the Mirabeau party, who were canvassing for a majority to set up
+ D'ORLEANS, to whose interest Mirabeau and his myrmidons were then devoted.
+ The scheme of Duport, De Lameth, and Barnave was to thwart and weaken the
+ Mirabeau and Orleans faction, by gradually persuading them, in consequence
+ of the King's compliance with whatever the Assembly exacted, that they
+ could do no better than to let him into a share of the executive power;
+ for now nothing was left to His Majesty but responsibility, while the
+ privileges of grace and justice had become merely nominal, with the one
+ dangerous exception of the veto, to which he could never have recourse
+ without imminent peril to his cause and to himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Unfortunately for His Majesty's interest, he was too scrupulous to act,
+ even through momentary policy, distinctly against his conscience. When he
+ gave way, it was with reluctance, and often with an avowal, more or less
+ express, that he only complied with necessity against conviction. His very
+ sincerity made him appear the reverse. His adherents consequently
+ dwindled, while the Orleans faction became immeasurably augmented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the midst of these perplexities, an Austrian courier was stopped with
+ despatches from Prince Kaunitz. These, though unsought for on the part of
+ Her Majesty, though they contained a friendly advice to her to submit to
+ the circumstances of the times, and though, luckily, they were couched in
+ terms favourable to the Constitution, showed the mob that there was a
+ correspondence with Vienna, carried on by the Queen, and neither Austria
+ nor the Queen were deemed the friends either of the people or of the
+ Constitution. To have received the letters was enough for the faction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Affairs were now ripening gradually into something like a crisis, when
+ the Flanders regiment arrived. The note of preparation had been sounded.
+ 'Let us go to Versailles, and bring the King away from his evil
+ counsellors,' was already in the mouths of the Parisians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the meantime, Dumourier, who had been leagued with the Orleans
+ faction, became disgusted with it. He knew the deep schemes of treason
+ which were in train against the Royal Family, and, in disguise, sought the
+ Queen at Versailles, and had an interview with Her Majesty in my presence.
+ He assured her that an abominable insurrection was ripe for explosion
+ among the mobs of the faubourgs; gave her the names of the leaders, who
+ had received money to promote its organisation; and warned her that the
+ massacre of the Royal Family was the object of the manoeuvre, for the
+ purpose of declaring the Duke of Orleans the constitutional King; that he
+ was to be proclaimed by Mirabeau, who had already received a considerable
+ sum in advance, for distribution among the populace, to ensure their
+ support; and that Mirabeau, in return for his co-operation, was to be
+ created a Duke, with the office of Prime Minister and Secretary of State,
+ and to have the framing of the Constitution, which was to be modelled from
+ that of Great Britain. It was farther concerted that D'ORLEANS was to show
+ himself in the midst of the confusion, and the crown to be conferred upon
+ him by public acclamation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On his knees Dumourier implored Her Majesty to regard his voluntary
+ discovery of this infamous and diabolical plot as a proof of his sincere
+ repentance. He declared he came disinterestedly to offer himself as a
+ sacrifice to save her, the King, and her family from the horrors then
+ threatening their lives, from the violence of an outrageous mob of
+ regicides; he called God to witness that he was actuated by no other wish
+ than to atone for his error, and die in their defence; he looked for no
+ reward beyond the King's forgiveness of his having joined the Orleans
+ faction; he never had any view in joining that faction but that of aiding
+ the Duke, for the good of his country, in the reform of ministerial
+ abuses, and strengthening the royal authority by the salutary laws of the
+ National Assembly; but he no sooner discovered that impure schemes of
+ personal aggrandisement gave the real impulse to these pretended reformers
+ than he forsook their unholy course. He supplicated Her Majesty to lose no
+ time, but to allow him to save her from the destruction to which she would
+ inevitably be exposed; that he was ready to throw himself at the King's
+ feet, to implore his forgiveness also, and to assure him of his profound
+ penitence, and his determination to renounce forever the factious Orleans
+ party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As Her Majesty would not see any of those who offered themselves, except
+ in my presence, I availed myself, in this instance, of the opportunity it
+ gave me by enforcing the arguments of Dumourier. But all I could say, all
+ the earnest representations to be deduced from this critical crisis, could
+ not prevail with her, even so far as to persuade her to temporise with
+ Dumourier, as she had done with many others on similar occasions. She was
+ deaf and inexorable. She treated all he had said as the effusion of an
+ overheated imagination, and told him she had no faith in traitors.
+ Dumourier remained upon his knees while she was replying, as if stupefied;
+ but at the word traitor he started and roused himself; and then, in a
+ state almost of madness, seized the Queen's dress, exclaiming, 'Allow
+ yourself to be persuaded before it is too late! Let not your misguided
+ prejudice against me hurry you to your own and your children's
+ destruction; let it not get the better, Madame, of your good sense and
+ reason; the fatal moment is near; it is at hand!' Upon this, turning, he
+ addressed himself to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Oh, Princess,' he cried, 'be her guardian angel, as you have hitherto
+ been her only friend, and use your never-failing influence. I take God
+ once more to witness, that I am sincere in all I have said; that all I
+ have disclosed is true. This will be the last time I shall have it in my
+ power to be of any essential service to you, Madame, and my Sovereign. The
+ National Assembly will put it out of my power for the future, without
+ becoming a traitor to my country.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Rise, monsieur,' said the Queen, 'and serve your country better than you
+ have served your King!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Madame, I obey.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When he was about to leave the room, I again, with tears, besought Her
+ Majesty not to let him depart thus, but to give him some hope, that, after
+ reflection, she might perhaps endeavour to soothe the King's anger. But in
+ vain. He withdrew very much affected. I even ventured, after his
+ departure, to intercede for his recall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'He has pledged himself,' said I, 'to save you, Madame!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'My dear Princess,' replied the Queen, 'the goodness of your own heart
+ will not allow you to have sinister ideas of others. This man is like all
+ of the same stamp. They are all traitors; and will only hurry us the
+ sooner, if we suffer ourselves to be deceived by them, to an ignominious
+ death! I seek no safety for myself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'But he offered to serve the King also, Madame.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I am not,' answered Her Majesty, 'Henrietta of France. I will never
+ stoop to ask a pension of the murderers of my husband; nor will I leave
+ the King, my son, or my adopted country, or even meanly owe my existence
+ to wretches who have destroyed the dignity of the Crown and trampled under
+ foot the most ancient monarchy in Europe! Under its ruins they will bury
+ their King and myself. To owe our safety to them would be more hateful
+ than any death they can prepare for us.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "While the Queen was in this state of agitation, a note was presented to
+ me with a list of the names of the officers of the Flanders regiment,
+ requesting the honour of an audience of the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The very idea of seeing the Flanders officers flushed Her Majesty's
+ countenance with an ecstasy of joy. She said she would retire to compose
+ herself, and receive them in two hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen saw the officers in her private cabinet, and in my presence.
+ They were presented to her by me. They told Her Majesty that, though they
+ had changed their paymaster, they had not changed their allegiance to
+ their Sovereign or herself, but were ready to defend both with their
+ lives. They placed one hand on the hilt of their swords, and, solemnly
+ lifting the other up to Heaven, swore that the weapons should never be
+ wielded but for the defence of the King and Queen, against all foes,
+ whether foreign or domestic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This unexpected loyalty burst on us like the beauteous rainbow, after a
+ tempest, by the dawn of which we are taught to believe the world is saved
+ from a second deluge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The countenance of Her Majesty brightened over the gloom which had
+ oppressed her, like the heavenly sun dispersing threatening clouds, and
+ making the heart of the poor mariner bound with joy. Her eyes spoke her
+ secret rapture. It was evident she felt even unusual dignity in the
+ presence of these noble-hearted warriors, when comparing them with him
+ whom she had just dismissed. She graciously condescended to speak to every
+ one of them, and one and all were enchanted with her affability.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She said she was no longer the Queen who could compensate loyalty and
+ valour; but the brave soldier found his reward in the fidelity of his
+ service, which formed the glory of his immortality. She assured them she
+ had ever been attached to the army, and would make it her study to
+ recommend every individual, meriting attention, to the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Loud bursts of repeated acclamations and shouts of 'Vive la reine!'
+ instantly followed her remarks. She thanked the officers most graciously;
+ and, fearing to commit herself, by saying more, took her leave, attended
+ by me; but immediately sent me back, to thank them again in her name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They departed, shouting as they went, 'Vive la reine! Vive la Princesse!
+ Vive le roi, le Dauphin, et toute la famille royale!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the National Assembly saw the officers going to and coming from the
+ King's palace with such demonstrations of enthusiasm, they took alarm, and
+ the regicide faction hastened on the crisis for which it had been longing.
+ It was by no means unusual for the chiefs of regiments, destined to form
+ part of the garrison of a royal residence, to be received by the Sovereign
+ on their arrival, and certainly only natural that they should be so; but
+ in times of excitement trifling events have powerful effects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But if the National Assembly began to tremble for their own safety, and
+ had already taken secret, measures to secure it, by conspiring to put an
+ instantaneous end to the King's power, against which they had so long been
+ plotting, when the Flanders regiment arrived, it may be readily conceived
+ what must have been their emotions on the fraternisation of this regiment
+ with the body-guard, and on the scene to which the dinner, given to the
+ former troops by the latter, so unpremeditatedly led.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the day of this fatal dinner I remarked to the Queen, 'What a
+ beautiful sight it must be to behold, in these troublesome times, the
+ happy union of such a meeting!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'It must indeed!' replied the King; 'and the pleasure I feel in knowing
+ it would be redoubled had I the privilege of entertaining the Flanders
+ regiment, as the body-guards are doing.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Heaven forbid!' cried Her Majesty; 'Heaven forbid that you should think
+ of such a thing! The Assembly would never forgive us!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After we had dined, the Queen sent to the Marquise de Tourzel for the
+ Dauphin. When he came, the Queen told him about her having seen the brave
+ officers on their arrival; and how gaily those good officers had left the
+ palace, declaring they would die rather than suffer any harm to come to
+ him, or his papa and mamma; and that at that very time they were all
+ dining at the theatre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Dining in the theatre, mamma?' said the young, Prince. 'I never heard of
+ people dining in a theatre!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'No, my dear child,' replied Her Majesty, 'it is not generally allowed;
+ but they are doing so, because the body-guards are giving a dinner to this
+ good Flanders regiment; and the Flanders regiment are so brave that the
+ guards chose the finest place they could think of to entertain them in, to
+ show how much they like them; that is the reason why they are dining in
+ the gay, painted theatre.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Oh, mamma!' exclaimed the Dauphin, whom the Queen adored, 'Oh, papa!'
+ cried he, looking at the King, 'how I should like to see them!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Let us go and satisfy the child!' said the King, instantly starting up
+ from his seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen took the Dauphin by the hand, and they proceeded to the
+ theatre. It was all done in a moment. There was no premeditation on the
+ part of the King or Queen; no invitation on the part of the officers. Had
+ I been asked, I should certainly have followed the Queen; but just as the
+ King rose, I left the room. The Prince being eager to see the festival,
+ they set off immediately, and when I returned to the apartment they were
+ gone. Not being very well, I remained where I was; but most of the
+ household had already followed Their Majesties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the Royal Family making their appearance, they were received with the
+ most unequivocal shouts of general enthusiasm by the troops. Intoxicated
+ with the pleasure of seeing Their Majesties among them, and overheated
+ with the juice of the grape, they gave themselves up to every excess of
+ joy, which the circumstances and the situation of Their Majesties were so
+ well calculated to inspire. 'Oh! Richard! oh, mon roi!' was sung, as well
+ as many other loyal songs. The healths of the King, Queen, and Dauphin
+ were drunk, till the regiments were really inebriated with the mingled
+ influence of wine and shouting vivas!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the royal party retired, they were followed by all the military to
+ the very palace doors, where they sung, danced, embraced each other, and
+ gave way to all the frantic demonstrations of devotedness to the royal
+ cause which the excitement of the scene and the table could produce.
+ Throngs, of course, collected to get near the Royal Family. Many persons
+ in the rush were trampled on, and one or two men, it was said, crushed to
+ death. The Dauphin and King were delighted; but the Queen, in giving the
+ Princesse Elizabeth and myself an account of the festival, foresaw the
+ fatal result which would ensue; and deeply deplored the marked enthusiasm
+ with which they had been greeted and followed by the military.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was one more military spectacle, a public breakfast which took
+ place on the second of October. Though none of the Royal Family appeared
+ at it, it was no less injurious to their interests than the former. The
+ enemies of the Crown spread reports all over Paris, that the King and
+ Queen had manoeuvred to pervert the minds of the troops so far as to make
+ them declare against the measures of the National Assembly. It is not
+ likely that the Assembly, or politics, were even spoken of at the
+ breakfast; but the report did as much mischief as the reality would have
+ done. This was quite sufficient to encourage the D'ORLEANS and Mirabeau
+ faction in the Assembly to the immediate execution of their long-meditated
+ scheme, of overthrowing the monarchy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the very day following, Duport, De Lameth, and Barnave sent their
+ confidential agent to apprise the Queen that certain deputies had already
+ fully matured a plot to remove the King, nay, to confine Her Majesty from
+ him in a distant part of France, that her influence over his mind might no
+ farther thwart their premeditated establishment of a Constitution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But others of this body, and the more powerful and subtle portion, had a
+ deeper object, so depraved, that, even when forewarned, the Queen could
+ not deem it possible; but of which she was soon convinced by their
+ infernal acts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The riotous faction, for the purpose of accelerating this denouement, had
+ contrived, by buying up all the corn and sending it out of the country, to
+ reduce the populace to famine, and then to make it appear that the King
+ and Queen had been the monopolisers, and the extravagance of Marie
+ Antoinette and her largesses to Austria and her favourites, the cause. The
+ plot was so deeply laid that the wretches who, undertook to effect the
+ diabolical scheme were metamorphosed in the Queen's livery, so that all
+ the odium might fall on her unfortunate Majesty. At the head of the
+ commission of monopolisers was Luckner, who had taken a violent dislike to
+ the Queen, in consequence of his having been refused some preferment,
+ which he attributed to her influence. Mirabeau, who was still in the
+ background, and longing to take a more prominent part, helped it on as
+ much as possible. Pinet, who had been a confidential agent of the Duc
+ d'Orleans, himself told the Duc de Penthievre that D'ORLEANS had
+ monopolised all the corn. This communication, and the activity of the
+ Count Fersen, saved France, and Paris in particular, from perishing for
+ the want of bread. Even at the moment of the abominable masquerade, in
+ which Her Majesty's agents were made to appear the enemies who were
+ starving the French people, out of revenge for the checks imposed by them
+ on the royal authority, it was well known to all the Court that both Her
+ Majesty and the King were grieved to the soul at their piteous want, and
+ distributed immense sums for the relief of the poor sufferers, as did the
+ Duc de Penthievre, the Duchesse d'Orleans, the Prince de Conde, the Duc
+ and Duchesse de Bourbon, and others; but these acts were done privately,
+ while he who had created the necessity took to himself the exclusive
+ credit of the relief, and employed thousands daily to propagate reports of
+ his generosity. Mirabeau, then the factotum agent of the operations of the
+ Palais Royal and its demagogues, greatly added to the support of this
+ impression. Indeed, till undeceived afterwards, he believed it to be
+ really the Duc d'Orleans who had succoured the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I dispensed two hundred and twenty thousand livres merely to discover the
+ names of the agents who had been employed to carry on this nefarious plot
+ to exasperate the people against the throne by starvation imputed to the
+ Sovereign. Though money achieved the discovery in time to clear the
+ characters of my royal mistress and the King, the detection only followed
+ the mischief of the crime. But even the rage thus wickedly excited was not
+ enough to carry through the plot. In the faubourgs of Paris, where the
+ women became furies, two hundred thousand livres were distributed ere the
+ horror could be completely exposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But it is time for me to enter upon the scenes to which all the intrigues
+ I have detailed were intended to lead&mdash;the removal of the Royal
+ Family from Versailles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My heart sickens when I retrace these moments of anguish. The point to
+ which they are to conduct us yet remains one of the mysteries of fate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION VI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her Majesty had been so thoroughly lulled into security by the enthusiasm
+ of the regiments at Versailles that she treated all the reports from Paris
+ with contempt. Nothing was apprehended from that quarter, and no
+ preparations were consequently made for resistance or protection. She was
+ at Little Trianon when the news of the approach of the desolating torrent
+ arrived. The King was hunting. I presented to her the commandant of the
+ troops at Versailles, who assured Her Majesty that a murderous faction,
+ too powerful, perhaps, for resistance, was marching principally against
+ her royal person, with La Fayette at their head, and implored her to put
+ herself and valuables in immediate safety; particularly all her
+ correspondence with the Princes, emigrants, and foreign Courts, if she had
+ no means of destroying them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Though the Queen was somewhat awakened to the truth by this earnest
+ appeal, yet she still considered the extent of the danger as exaggerated,
+ and looked upon the representation as partaking, in a considerable degree,
+ of the nature of all reports in times of popular commotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Presently, however, a more startling omen appeared, in a much milder but
+ ambiguous communication from General La Fayette. He stated that he was on
+ his march from Paris with the national guard, and part of the people,
+ coming to make remonstrances; but he begged Her Majesty to rest assured
+ that no disorder would take place, and that he himself would vouch that
+ there should be none.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King was instantly sent for to the heights of Meudon, while the Queen
+ set off from Little Trianon, with me, for Versailles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The first movements were commenced by a few women, or men in women's
+ clothes, at the palace gates of Versailles. The guards refused them
+ entrance, from an order they had received to that effect from La Fayette.
+ The consternation produced by their resentment was a mere prelude to the
+ horrid tragedy that succeeded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The information now pouring in from different quarters increased Her
+ Majesty's alarm every moment. The order of La Fayette, not to let the
+ women be admitted, convinced her that there was something in agitation,
+ which his unexplained letter made her sensible was more to be feared than
+ if he had signified the real situation and danger to which she was
+ exposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A messenger was forthwith despatched for M. La Fayette, and another, by
+ order of the Queen, for M. de St. Priest, to prepare a retreat for the
+ Royal Family, as the Parisian mob's advance could no longer be doubted.
+ Everything necessary was accordingly got ready.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "La Fayette now arrived at Versailles in obedience to the message, and, in
+ the presence of all the Court and Ministers, assured the King that he
+ could answer for the Paris army, at the head of which he intended to
+ march, to prevent disorders; and advised the admission of the women into
+ the palace, who, he said, had nothing to propose but a simple memorial
+ relative to the scarcity of bread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen said to him, 'Remember, monsieur, you have pledged your honour
+ for the King's safety.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'And I hope, Madame, to be able to redeem it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He then left Versailles to return to his post with the army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A limited number of the women were at length admitted; and so completely
+ did they seem satisfied with the reception they met with from the King,
+ as, in all appearance, to have quieted their riotous companions. The
+ language of menace and remonstrance had changed into shouts of 'Vive le
+ roi!' The apprehensions of Their Majesties were subdued; and the whole
+ system of operation, which had been previously adopted for the Royal
+ Family's quitting Versailles, was, in consequence, unfortunately changed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But the troops, that had been hitherto under arms for the preservation of
+ order, in going back to their hotel, were assailed and fired at by the
+ mob.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The return of the body-guards, thus insulted in going to and coming from
+ the palace, caused the Queen and the Court to resume the resolution of
+ instantly retiring from Versailles; but it was now too late. They were
+ stopped by the municipality and the mob of the city, who were animated to
+ excess against the Queen by one of the bass singers of the French opera.&mdash;[La
+ Haise]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Every hope of tranquillity was now shaken by the hideous howlings which
+ arose from all quarters. Intended flight had become impracticable.
+ Atrocious expressions were levelled against the Queen, too shocking for
+ repetition. I shudder when I reflect to what a degree of outrage the
+ 'poissardes' of Paris were excited, to express their abominable designs on
+ the life of that most adored of Sovereigns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Early in the evening Her Majesty came to my apartment, in company with
+ one of her female attendants. She was greatly agitated. She brought all
+ her jewels and a considerable quantity of papers, which she had begun to
+ collect together immediately on her arrival from Trianon, as the
+ commandant had recommended.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [Neither Her Majesty nor the Princess ever returned to Versailles after
+ the sixth of that fatal October! Part of the papers, brought by the
+ Queen to the apartment of the Princess, were tacked by me on two of my
+ petticoats; the under one three fold, one on the other, and outside; and
+ the upper one, three or four fold double on the inside; and thus I left
+ the room with this paper undergarment, which put me to no inconvenience.
+ Returning to the Princess, I was ordered to go to Lisle, there take the
+ papers from their hiding-place, and deliver them, with others, to the
+ same person who received the box, of which mention will be found in
+ another part of this work. I was not to take any letters, and was to
+ come back immediately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I was leaving the apartment Her Majesty said something to Her
+ Highness which I did not hear. The Princess turned round very quickly,
+ and kissing me on the forehead, said in Italian, "My dear little
+ Englishwoman, for Heaven's sake be careful of yourself, for I should
+ never forgive myself if any misfortune were to befall you." "Nor I,"
+ said Her Majesty.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "Notwithstanding the fatigue and agitation which the Queen must have
+ suffered during the day, and the continued threats, horrible howlings, and
+ discharge of firearms during the night, she had courage enough to visit
+ the bedchambers of her children and then to retire to rest in her own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But her rest was soon fearfully interrupted. Horrid cries at her chamber
+ door of 'Save the Queen! Save the Queen! or she will be assassinated!'
+ aroused her. The faithful guardian who gave the alarm was never heard
+ more. He was murdered in her defence! Her Majesty herself only escaped the
+ poignards of immediate death by flying to the King's apartment, almost in
+ the same state as she lay in bed, not having had time to screen herself
+ with any covering but what was casually thrown over her by the women who
+ assisted her in her flight; while one well acquainted with the palace is
+ said to have been seen busily engaged in encouraging the regicides who
+ thus sought her for midnight murder. The faithful guards who defended the
+ entrance to the room of the intended victim of these desperadoes took
+ shelter in the room itself upon her leaving it, and were alike threatened
+ with instant death by the grenadier assassins for having defeated them in
+ their fiend-like purpose; they were, however, saved by the generous
+ interposition and courage of two gentlemen, who, offering themselves as
+ victims in their place, thus brought about a temporary accommodation
+ between the regular troops and the national guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All this time General La Fayette never once appeared. It is presumed that
+ he himself had been deceived as to the horrid designs of the mob, and did
+ not choose to show himself, finding it impossible to check the impetuosity
+ of the horde he had himself brought to action, in concurring to
+ countenance their first movements from Paris. Posterity will decide how
+ far he was justified in pledging himself for the safety of the Royal
+ Family, while he was heading a riotous mob, whose atrocities were
+ guaranteed from punishment or check by the sanction of his presence and
+ the faith reposed in his assurance. Was he ignorant, or did he only
+ pretend to be so, of the incalculable mischief inevitable from giving
+ power and a reliance on impunity to such an unreasoning mass? By any
+ military operation, as commander-in-chief, he might have turned the tide.
+ And why did he not avail himself of that authority with which he had been
+ invested by the National Assembly, as the delegates of the nation, for the
+ general safety and guardianship of the people? for the people, of whom he
+ was the avowed protector, were themselves in peril: it was only the
+ humanity (or rather, in such a crisis, the imbecility) of Louis XVI. that
+ prevented them from being fired on; and they would inevitably have been
+ sacrificed, and that through the want of policy in their leader, had not
+ this mistaken mercy of the King prevented his guards from offering
+ resistance to the murderers of his brave defenders!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The cry of 'Queen! Queen!' now resounded from the lips of the cannibals
+ stained with the blood of her faithful guards. She appeared, shielded by
+ filial affection, between her two innocent children, the threatened
+ orphans! But the sight of so much innocence and heroic courage paralysed
+ the hands uplifted for their massacre!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A tiger voice cried out, 'No children!' The infants were hurried away
+ from the maternal side, only to witness the author of their being offering
+ up herself, eagerly and instantly, to the sacrifice, an ardent and
+ delighted victim to the hoped-for preservation of those, perhaps, orphans,
+ dearer to her far than life! Her resignation and firm step in facing the
+ savage cry that was thundering against her, disarmed the ferocious beasts
+ that were hungering and roaring for their prey!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mirabeau, whose immense head and gross figure could not be mistaken, is
+ said to have been the first among the mob to have sonorously chanted, 'To
+ Paris!' His myrmidons echoed and re-echoed the cry upon the signal. He
+ then hastened to the Assembly to contravene any measures the King might
+ ask in opposition. The riots increasing, the Queen said to His Majesty:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Oh, Sire! why am I not animated with the courage of Maria Theresa? Let
+ me go with my children to the National Assembly, as she did to the
+ Hungarian Senate, with my Imperial brother, Joseph, in her arms and
+ Leopold in her womb, when Charles the Seventh of Bavaria had deprived her
+ of all her German dominions, and she had already written to the Duchesse
+ de Lorraine to prepare her an asylum, not knowing where she should be
+ delivered of the precious charge she was then bearing; but I, like the
+ mother of the Gracchi, like Cornelia, more esteemed for my birth than for
+ my marriage, am the wife of the King of France, and I see we shall be
+ murdered in our beds for the want of our own exertions!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King remained as if paralysed and stupefied, and made no answer. The
+ Princesse Elizabeth then threw herself at the Queen's feet, imploring her
+ to consent to go to Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /> <a name="pb138" id="pb138"></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="pb138.jpg (140K)" src="images/pb138.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'To Paris!' exclaimed Her Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Yes, Madame,' said the King. 'I will put an end to these horrors; and
+ tell the people so.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On this, without waiting for the Queen's answer, he opened the balcony,
+ and told the populace he was ready to depart with his family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This sudden change caused a change equally sudden in the rabble mob. All
+ shouted, 'Vive le roi! Vive la nation!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Re-entering the room from the window, the King said, 'It is done. This
+ affair will soon be terminated.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'And with it,' said the Queen, 'the monarchy!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Better that, Madame, than running the risk, as I did some hours since,
+ of seeing you and my children sacrificed!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'That, Sire, will be the consequence of our not having left Versailles.
+ Whatever you determine, it is my duty to obey. As to myself, I am resigned
+ to my fate.' On this she burst into a flood of tears. 'I only feel for
+ your humiliated state, and for the safety of our children.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Royal Family departed without having consulted any of the Ministers,
+ military or civil, or the National Assembly, by whom they were followed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Scarcely had they arrived at Paris when the Queen recollected that she
+ had taken with her no change of dress, either for herself or her children,
+ and they were obliged to ask permission of the National Assembly to allow
+ them to send for their different wardrobes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What a situation for an absolute King and Queen, which, but a few hours
+ previous, they had been!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I now took up my residence with Their Majesties at the Tuileries,&mdash;that
+ odious Tuileries, which I can not name but with horror, where the
+ malignant spirit of rebellion has, perhaps, dragged us to an untimely
+ death!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur and Madame had another residence. Bailly, the Mayor of Paris,
+ and La Fayette became the royal jailers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Princesse Elizabeth and myself could not but deeply deplore, when we
+ saw the predictions of Dumourier so dreadfully confirmed by the result,
+ that Her Majesty should have so slighted his timely information, and
+ scorned his penitence. But delicacy bade us lament in silence; and, while
+ we grieved over her present sufferings, we could not but mourn the loss of
+ a barrier against future aggression, in the rejection of this general's
+ proffered services.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It will be remembered, that Dumourier in his disclosure declared that the
+ object of this commotion was to place the Duc d'Orleans upon the throne,
+ and that Mirabeau, who was a prime mover, was to share in the profits of
+ the usurpation.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [But the heart of the traitor Duke failed him at the important crisis.
+ Though he was said to have been recognised through a vulgar disguise,
+ stimulating the assassins to the attempted murder of Her Majesty, yet,
+ when the moment to show himself had arrived, he was nowhere to be found.
+ The most propitious moment for the execution of the foul crime was lost,
+ and with it the confidence of his party. Mirabeau was disgusted. So far
+ from wishing longer to offer him the crown, he struck it forever from
+ his head, and turned against him. He openly protested he would no longer
+ set up traitors who were cowards.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "Soon after this event, Her Majesty, in tears, came to tell me that the
+ King, having had positive proof of the agency of the Duc d'Orleans in the
+ riots of Versailles, had commenced some proceedings, which had given the
+ Duke the alarm, and exiled him to Villers-Cotterets. The Queen added that
+ the King's only object had been to assure the general tranquillity, and
+ especially her own security, against whose life the conspiracy seemed most
+ distinctly levelled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Oh, Princess!' continued Her Majesty, in a flood of tears, 'the King's
+ love for me, and his wish to restore order to his people, have been our
+ ruin! He should have struck off the head of D'ORLEANS, or overlooked his
+ crime! Why did he not consult me before he took a step so important? I
+ have lost a friend also in his wife! For, however criminal he may be, she
+ loves him.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I assured Her Majesty that I could not think the Duchesse d'Orleans would
+ be so inconsiderate as to withdraw her affection on that account.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'She certainly will,' replied Marie Antoinette. 'She is the affectionate
+ mother of his children, and cannot but hate those who have been the cause
+ of his exile. I know it will be laid to my charge, and added to the hatred
+ the husband has so long borne me; I shall now become the object of the
+ wife's resentment.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the midst of one of the paroxysms of Her Majesty's agonising agitation
+ after leaving Versailles, for the past, the present, and the future state
+ of the Royal Family, when the Princesse Elizabeth and myself were in vain
+ endeavouring to calm her, a deputation was announced from the National
+ Assembly and the City of Paris, requesting the honour of the appearance of
+ the King and herself at the theatre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Is it possible, my dear Princess,' cried she, on the announcement, 'that
+ I can enjoy any public amusement while I am still chilled with horror at
+ the blood these people have spilled, the blood of the faithful defenders
+ of our lives? I can forgive them, but I cannot so easily forget it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Count Fersen and the Austrian Ambassador now entered, both anxious to
+ know Her Majesty's intentions with regard to visiting the theatre, in
+ order to make a party to ensure her a good reception; but all their
+ persuasions were unavailing. She thanked the deputation for their friendship;
+ but at the same time told them that her mind was still too much agitated
+ from recent scenes to receive any pleasure but in the domestic cares of
+ her family, and that, for a time, she must decline every other amusement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At this moment the Spanish and English Ambassadors came to pay their
+ respects to Her Majesty on the same subject as the others. As they
+ entered, Count Fersen observed to the Queen, looking around:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Courage, Madame! We are as many nations as persons in this room&mdash;English,
+ German, Spanish, Italian, Swedish, and French; and all equally ready to
+ form a rampart around you against aggression. All these nations will, I
+ believe, admit that the French (bowing to the Princesse Elizabeth) are the
+ most volatile of the six; and Your Majesty may rely on it that they will
+ love you, now that you are more closely among them, more tenderly than
+ ever.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Let me live to be convinced of that, monsieur, and my happiness will be
+ concentrated in its demonstration.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Indeed, gentlemen,' said the Princesse Elizabeth, the Queen has yet had
+ but little reason to love the French.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Where is our Ambassador,' said I, 'and the Neapolitan?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I have had the pleasure of seeing them early this morning,' replied the
+ Queen; 'but I told them, also, that indisposition prevented my going into
+ public. They will be at our card-party in your apartment this evening,
+ where I hope to see these gentlemen. The only parties,' continued Her
+ Majesty, addressing herself to the Princesse Elizabeth and the
+ Ambassadors, 'the only parties I shall visit in future will be those of
+ the Princesse de Lamballe, my superintendent; as, in so doing, I shall
+ have no occasion to go out of the palace, which, from what has happened,
+ seems to me the only prudent course.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Come, come, Madame,' exclaimed the Ambassadors; I do not give way to
+ gloomy ideas. All will yet be well.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I hope so,' answered Her Majesty; 'but till that hope is realized, the
+ wounds I have suffered will make existence a burden to me!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Duchesse de Luynes, like many others, had been a zealous partisan of
+ the new order of things, and had expressed herself with great indiscretion
+ in the presence of the Queen. But the Duchess was brought to her senses
+ when she saw herself, and all the mad, democratical nobility, under the
+ overpowering weight of Jacobinism, deprived of every privileged
+ prerogative and levelled and stripped of hereditary distinction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She came to me one day, weeping, to beg I would make use of my good
+ offices in her favour with the Queen, whom she was grieved that she had so
+ grossly offended by an unguarded speech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'On my knees,' continued the Duchess, I am I ready to supplicate the
+ pardon of Her Majesty. I cannot live without her forgiveness. One of my
+ servants has opened my eyes, by telling me that the Revolution can make a
+ Duchess a beggar, but cannot make a beggar a Duchess.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Unfortunately,' said I, 'if some of these faithful servants had been
+ listened to, they would still be such, and not now our masters; but I can
+ assure you, Duchess, that the Queen has long since forgiven you. See! Her
+ Majesty comes to tell you so herself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Duchess fell upon her knees. The Queen, with her usual goodness of
+ heart, clasped her in her arms, and, with tears in her eyes, said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'We have all of us need of forgiveness. Our errors and misfortunes are
+ general. Think no more of the past; but let us unite in not sinning for
+ the future:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Heaven knows how many sins I have to atone for,' replied the Duchess,
+ 'from the follies of youth; but now, at an age of discretion and in
+ adversity, oh, how bitterly do I reproach myself for my past levities!
+ But,' continued she, 'has Your Majesty really forgiven me?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'As I hope to be forgiven!' exclaimed Marie Antoinette. 'No penitent in
+ the sight of God is more acceptable than the one who makes a voluntary
+ sacrifice by confessing error. Forget and forgive is the language of our
+ Blessed Redeemer. I have adopted it in regard to my enemies, and surely my
+ friends have a right to claim it. Come, Duchess, I will conduct you to the
+ King and Elizabeth, who will rejoice in the recovery of one of our lost
+ sheep; for we sorely feel the diminution of the flock that once surrounded
+ us!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At this token of kindness, the Duchess was so much overcome that she fell
+ at the Queen's feet motionless, and it was some time before she recovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From the moment of Her Majesty's arrival at Paris from Versailles, she
+ solely occupied herself with the education of her children,-excepting when
+ she resorted to my parties, the only ones, as she had at first determined,
+ which she ever honoured with her attendance. In order to discover, as far
+ as possible, the sentiments of certain persons, I gave almost general
+ invitations, whereby, from her amiable manners and gracious condescension,
+ she became very popular. By these means I hoped to replace Her Majesty in
+ the good estimation of her numerous visitors; but, notwithstanding every
+ exertion, she could not succeed in dispelling the gloom with which the
+ Revolution had overcast all her former gaiety. Though treated with
+ ceremonious respect, she missed the cordiality to which she had been so
+ long accustomed, and which she so much prized. From the great emigration
+ of the higher classes of the nobility, the societies themselves were no
+ longer what they had been. Madame Necker and Madame de Stael were pretty
+ regular visitors. But the most agreeable company had lost its zest for
+ Marie Antoinette; and she was really become afraid of large assemblies,
+ and scarcely ever saw a group of persons collected together without
+ fearing some plot against the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed, it is a peculiarity which has from the first marked, and still
+ continues to distinguish, the whole conduct and distrust of my royal
+ mistress, that it never operates to create any fears for herself, but
+ invariably refers to the safety of His Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had enlarged my circle and made my parties extensive, solely to relieve
+ the oppressed spirits of the Queen; but the very circumstance which
+ induced me to make them so general soon rendered them intolerable to her;
+ for the conversations at last became solely confined to the topics of the
+ Revolution, a subject frequently the more distressing from the presence of
+ the sons of the Duc d'Orleans. Though I loved my sister-in-law and my
+ nephews, I could not see them without fear, nor could my royal mistress be
+ at ease with them, or in the midst of such distressing indications as
+ perpetually intruded upon her, even beneath my roof, of the spirit which
+ animated the great body of the people for the propagation of
+ anti-monarchical principles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My parties were, consequently, broken up; and the Queen ceased to be seen
+ in society. Then commenced the unconquerable power over her of those
+ forebodings which have clung to her with such pertinacity ever since.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I observed that Her Majesty would often indulge in the most melancholy
+ predictions long before the fatal discussion took place in the Assembly
+ respecting the King's abdication. The daily insolence with which she saw
+ His Majesty's authority deprived forever of the power of accomplishing
+ what he had most at heart for the good of his people gave her more anguish
+ than the outrages so frequently heaped upon herself; but her misery was
+ wrought up to a pitch altogether unutterable, whenever she saw those
+ around her suffer for their attachment to her in her misfortunes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Princesse Elizabeth has been from the beginning an unwavering
+ comforter. She still flatters Marie Antoinette that Heaven will spare her
+ for better times to reward our fidelity and her own agonies. The pious
+ consolations of Her Highness have never failed to make the most serious
+ impression on our wretched situation. Indeed, each of us strives to pour
+ the balm of comfort into the wounded hearts of the others, while not one
+ of us, in reality, dares to flatter herself with what we all so ardently
+ wish for in regard to our fellow-sufferers. Delusions, even sustained by
+ facts, have long since been exhausted. Our only hope on this side of the
+ grave is in our all-merciful Redeemer!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION VII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Editors Commentary:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader will not, I trust, be dissatisfied at reposing for a moment
+ from the sad story of the Princesse de Lamballe to hear some ridiculous
+ circumstances which occurred to me individually; and which, though they
+ form no part of the history, are sufficiently illustrative of the temper
+ of the times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had been sent to England to put some letters into the postoffice for the
+ Prince de Conde, and had just returned. The fashion then in England was a
+ black dress, Spanish hat, and yellow satin lining, with three ostrich
+ feathers forming the Prince of Wales's crest, and bearing his inscription,
+ 'Ich dien,' ("I serve.") I also brought with me a white satin cloak,
+ trimmed with white fur. This crest and motto date as far back, I believe,
+ as the time of Edward, the Black Prince.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this dress, I went to the French opera. Scarcely was I seated in the
+ bog, when I heard shouts of, "En bas les couleurs de d'empereur! En bas!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was very busy talking to a person in the box, and, having been
+ accustomed to hear and see partial riots in the pit, I paid no attention;
+ never dreaming that my poor hat and feathers, and cloak, were the cause of
+ the commotion, till an officer in the national guard very politely knocked
+ at the door of the box, and told me I must either take them off or leave
+ the theatre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is nothing I more dislike than the being thought particular, or
+ disposed to attract attention by dress. The moment, therefore, I found
+ myself thus unintentionally the object of a whole theatre's disturbance,
+ in the first impulse of indignation, I impetuously caught off the cloak
+ and hat, and flung them into the pit, at the very faces of the rioters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The theatre instantly rang with applause. The obnoxious articles were
+ carefully folded up and taken to the officer of the guard, who, when I
+ left the box, at the end of the opera, brought them to me and offered to
+ assist me in putting them on; but I refused them with true cavalier-like
+ loftiness, and entered my carriage without either hat or cloak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were many of the audience collected round the carriage at the time,
+ who, witnessing my rejection of the insulted colours, again loudly cheered
+ me; but insisted on the officer's placing the hat and cloak in the
+ carriage, which drove off amidst the most violent acclamations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another day, as I was going to walk in the Tuileries (which I generally
+ did after riding on horseback), the guards crossed their bayonets at the
+ gate and forbade my entering. I asked them why. They told me no one was
+ allowed to walk there without the national ribbon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, I always had one of these national ribbons about me, from the time
+ they were first worn; but I kept it in the inside of my riding-habit; and
+ on that day, in particular, my supply was unusually ample, for I had on a
+ new riding-habit, the petticoat of which was so very long and heavy that I
+ bought a large quantity to tie round my waist, and fasten up the dress, to
+ prevent it from falling about my feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, I was determined to plague the guards for their impudence. My
+ English beau, who was as pale as death, and knew I had the ribbon, kept
+ pinching my arm, and whispering, "Show it, show it; zounds, madame, show
+ it! We shall be sent to prison! show it! show it!" But I took care to keep
+ my interrupters in parley till a sufficient mob was collected, and then I
+ produced my colours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The soldiers were consequently most gloriously hissed, and would have been
+ maltreated by the mob, and sent to the guard-house by their officer, but
+ for my intercession; on which I was again applauded all through the
+ gardens as La Brave Anglaise. But my beau declared he would never go out
+ with me again: unless I wore the ribbon on the outside of my hat, which I
+ never did and never would do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that time the Queen used to occupy herself much in fancy needle-works.
+ Knowing, from arrangements, that I was every day in a certain part of the
+ Tuileries, Her Majesty, when she heard the shout of La Brave Anglaise!
+ immediately called the Princesse de Lamballe to know if she had sent me on
+ any message. Being answered in the negative, one of the pages was
+ despatched to ascertain the meaning of the cry. The Royal Family lived in
+ so continual a state of alarm that it was apprehended I had got into some
+ scrape; but I had left the Tuileries before the messenger arrived, and was
+ already with the Princesse de Lamballe, relating the circumstances. The
+ Princess told Her Majesty, who graciously observed, "I am very happy that
+ she got off so well; but caution her to be more prudent for the future. A
+ cause, however bad, is rather aided than weakened by unreasonable displays
+ of contempt for it. These unnecessary excitements of the popular jealousy
+ do us no good."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was, of course, severely reprimanded by the Princess for my frolic,
+ though she enjoyed it of all things, and afterwards laughed most heartily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Princess told me, a few days after these circumstances of the national
+ ribbon and the Austrian colours had taken place at the theatre, that some
+ one belonging to the private correspondence at the palace had been at the
+ French opera on the night the disturbance took place there, and, without
+ knowing the person to whom it related, had told the whole story to the
+ King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen and the Princesses Elizabeth and de Lamballe being present,
+ laughed very heartily. The two latter knew it already from myself, the
+ fountain head, but the Princesse Elizabeth said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Poor lady! what a fright she must have been in, to have had her things
+ taken away from her at the theatre."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No fright at all," said the King; "for a young woman who could act thus
+ firmly under such an insolent outrage will always triumph over cowards,
+ unmanly enough to abuse their advantages by insulting her. She was not a
+ Frenchwoman, I'll answer for it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, no, Sire. She is an Englishwoman," said the Princesse de Lamballe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am glad of it," exclaimed the King; "for when she returns to England
+ this will be a good personal specimen for the information of some of her
+ countrymen, who have rejoiced at what they call the regeneration of the
+ French nation; a nation once considered the most polished in Europe, but
+ now become the most uncivil, and I wish I may never have occasion to add,
+ the most barbarous! An insult offered, wantonly, to either sex, at any
+ time, is the result of insubordination; but when offered to a woman, it is
+ a direct violation of civilised hospitality, and an abuse of power which
+ never before tarnished that government now so much the topic of abuse by
+ the enemies of order and legitimate authority. The French Princes, it is
+ true, have been absolute; still I never governed despotically, but always
+ by the advice of my counsellors and Cabinet Ministers. If they have erred,
+ my conscience is void of reproach. I wish the National Assembly may govern
+ for the future with equal prudence, equity, and justice; but they have
+ given a poor earnest in pulling down one fabric before they have laid the
+ solid foundation of another. I am very happy that their agents, who,
+ though they call themselves the guardians of public order have hitherto
+ destroyed its course, have, in the courage of this English lady, met with
+ some resistance to their insolence, in foolishly occupying themselves with
+ petty matters, while those of vital import are totally neglected."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is almost superfluous to mention that, at the epoch of which I am
+ speaking in the Revolution, the Royal Family were in so much distrust of
+ every one about them, and very necessarily and justly so, that none were
+ ever confided in for affairs, however trifling, without first having their
+ fidelity repeatedly put to the test. I was myself under this probation
+ long before I knew that such had ever been imposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the private correspondence I had already been for some time
+ entrusted; and it was only previous to employing me on secret missions of
+ any consequence that I was subject to the severer scrutiny. Even before I
+ was sent abroad, great art was necessary to elude the vigilance of prying
+ eyes in the royal circle; and, in order to render my activity available to
+ important purposes, my connection with the Court was long kept secret.
+ Many stratagems were devised to mislead the Arguses of the police. To this
+ end, after the disorders of the Revolution began, I never entered the
+ palaces but on an understood signal, for which I have been often obliged
+ to attend many hours in the gardens of Versailles, as I had subsequently
+ done in that of the Tuileries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To pass the time unnoticed, I used generally to take a book, and seat
+ myself, occupied in reading, sometimes in one spot, sometimes in another;
+ but with my man and maid servant always within call, though never where
+ they could be seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On one of these occasions, a person, though not totally masked yet
+ sufficiently disguised to prevent my recognising his features, came behind
+ my seat, and said he wished to speak to me. I turned round and asked his
+ business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's coming to the point!" he answered. "Walk a little way with me, and
+ I will tell you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not to excite suspicion, I walked into a more retired part of the garden,
+ after a secret signal to my man servant, who followed me unperceived by
+ the stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am commissioned," said my mysterious companion, "to make you a very
+ handsome present, if you will tell me what you are waiting for."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I laughed, and was turning from him, saying, "Is this all your business?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," he replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then keep it to yourself. I am not waiting here for any one or anything;
+ but am merely occupied in reading and killing time to the best advantage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are you a poetess?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And scarcely a woman; for your answers are very short."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very likely."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But I have something of importance to communicate&mdash;&mdash;-"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is impossible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But listen to me&mdash;&mdash;-"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are mistaken in your person."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But surely you will not be so unreasonable as not to hear what I have to
+ say?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am a stranger in this country, and can have nothing of importance with
+ one I do not know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have quarrelled with your lover and are in an ill-humour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps so. Well! come! I believe you have guessed the cause."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! it is the fate of us all to get into scrapes! But you will soon make
+ it up; and now let me entreat your attention to what I have to offer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I became impatient, and called my servant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madame," resumed the stranger, "I am a gentleman, and mean no harm. But I
+ assure you, you stand in your own light. I know more about you than you
+ think I do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, madame, you are waiting here for an august personage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this last sentence, my lips laughed, while my heart trembled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish to caution you," continued he, "how you embark in plans of this
+ sort."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur, I repeat, you have taken me for some other person. I will no
+ longer listen to one who is either a maniac or an officious intruder."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon this, the stranger bowed and left me; but I could perceive that he
+ was not displeased with my answers, though I was not a little agitated,
+ and longed to see Her Highness to relate to her this curious adventure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few hours I did so. The Princess was perfectly satisfied with my
+ manner of proceeding, only she thought it singular, she said, that the
+ stranger should suspect I was there in attendance for some person of rank;
+ and she repeated, three or four times, "I am heartily glad that you did
+ not commit yourself by any decided answer. What sort of a man was he?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very much of the gentleman; above the middle stature; and, from what I
+ could see of his countenance, rather handsome than otherwise."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Was he a Frenchman?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No. I think he spoke good French and English, with an Irish accent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then I know who it is," exclaimed she. "It is Dillon: I know it from some
+ doubts which arose between Her Majesty, Dillon, and myself, respecting
+ sending you upon a confidential mission. Oh, come hither! come hither!"
+ continued Her Highness, overwhelming me with kisses. "How glad, how very
+ glad I am, that the Queen will be convinced I was not deceived in what I
+ told Her Majesty respecting you. Take no notice of what I am telling you;
+ but he was sent from the Queen, to tempt you into some imprudence, or to
+ be convinced, by your not falling into the snare, that she might rely on
+ your fidelity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What! doubt my fidelity?" said I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, my dear, you must excuse Her Majesty. We live in critical times. You
+ will be the more rewarded, and much more esteemed, for this proof of your
+ firmness. Do you think you should know him, if you were to see him again?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly, I should, if he were in the same disguise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That, I fear, will be rather difficult to accomplish. However, you shall
+ go in your carriage and wait at the door of his sister, the Marquise of
+ Desmond; where I will send for him to come to me at four o'clock
+ to-morrow. In this way, you will have an opportunity of seeing him on
+ horseback, as he always pays his morning visits riding."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I would willingly have taken a sleeping draught, and never did I wait more
+ anxiously than for the hour of four.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I left the Princess, and, in crossing from the Carrousel to go to the
+ Place Vendome, it rained very fast, and there glanced by me, on horseback,
+ the same military cloak in which the stranger had been wrapped. My
+ carriage was driving so fast that I still remained in doubt as to the
+ wearer's person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day, however, as appointed, I repaired to the place of rendezvous;
+ and I could almost have sworn, from the height of the person who alighted
+ from his horse, that he was my mysterious questioner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, I was not thoroughly certain. I watched the Princess coming out,
+ and followed her carriage to the Champs Elysees and told her what I
+ thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," replied she, "we must think no more about it; nor must it ever be
+ mentioned to him, should you by any chance meet him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I said I should certainly obey Her Highness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A guilty conscience needs no accuser. A few days after I was riding on
+ horseback in the Bois de Boulogne, when Lord Edward Fitzgerald came up to
+ speak to me. Dillon was passing at the time, and, seeing Lord Edward,
+ stopped, took off his hat, and observed, "A very pleasant day for riding,
+ madame!" Then, looking me full in the face, he added, "I beg your pardon,
+ madame, I mistook you for another lady with whom Lord Edward is often in
+ company."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I said there was no offence; but the moment I heard him speak I was no
+ longer in doubt of his being the identical person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I had learnt the ciphering and deciphering, and was to be sent to
+ Italy, the Queen acknowledged to the Princesse de Lamballe that she was
+ fully persuaded I might be trusted, as she had good reason to know that my
+ fidelity was not to be doubted or shaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dear, hapless Princess! She said to me, in one of her confidential
+ conversations on these matters, "The Queen has been so cruelly deceived
+ and so much watched that she almost fears her own shadow; but it gives me
+ great pleasure that Her Majesty had been herself confirmed by one of her
+ own emissaries in what I never for a moment doubted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But do not fancy," continued the Princess, laughing, "that you have had
+ only this spy to encounter. Many others have watched your motions and your
+ conversations, and all concur in saying you are the devil, and they could
+ make nothing of you. But that, 'mia cara piccola diavolina', is just what
+ we want!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION VIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Editor in continuation.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am compelled, with reluctance, to continue personally upon the stage,
+ and must do so for the three ensuing chapters, in order to put my readers
+ in possession of circumstances explanatory of the next portion of the
+ Journal of the Princesse de Lamballe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even the particulars I am about to mention can give but a very faint idea
+ of the state of alarm in which the Royal Family lived, and the perpetual
+ watchfulness and strange and involved expedients that were found necessary
+ for their protection. Their most trifling communications were scrutinized
+ with so much jealousy that when any of importance were to be made it
+ required a dexterity almost miraculous to screen them from the
+ ever-watchful eye of espionage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was often made instrumental in evading the curiosity of others, without
+ ever receiving any clue to the gratification of my own, even had I been
+ troubled with such impertinence. The anecdote I am about to mention will
+ show how cautious a game it was thought necessary to play; and the result
+ of my half-information will evince that over-caution may produce evils
+ almost equal to total carelessness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some time previous to the flight of the Royal Family from Paris, the
+ Princesse de Lamballe told me she wanted some repairs made to the locks of
+ certain dressing and writing-desks; but she would prefer having them done
+ at my apartments, and by a locksmith who lived at a distance from the
+ palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the boxes were repaired, I was sent with one of them to Lisle, where
+ another person took charge of it for the Archduchess at Brussels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was something which strongly marked the kind-heartedness of the
+ Princesse de Lamballe in a part of this transaction. I had left Paris
+ without a passport, and Her Highness, fearing it might expose me to
+ inconvenience, sent an express after me. The express arrived three hours
+ before I did, and the person to whom I have alluded came out of Brussels
+ in his carriage to meet me and receive the box. At the same time, he gave
+ me a sealed letter, without any address. I asked him from whom he received
+ it, and to whom it was to be delivered. He said he was only instructed to
+ deliver it to the lady with the box, and he showed me the Queen's cipher.
+ I took the letter, and, after partaking of some refreshments, returned
+ with it, according to my orders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On my arrival at Paris, the Princesse de Lamballe told me her motive for
+ sending the express, who, she said, informed her, on his return, that I
+ had a letter for the Queen. I said it was more than I knew. "Oh, I suppose
+ that is because the letter bears no address," replied she; "but you were
+ shown the cipher, and that is all which is necessary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She did not take the letter, and I could not help remarking how far, in
+ this instance, the rigour of etiquette was kept up, even between these
+ close friends. The Princess, not having herself received the letter, could
+ not take it from my hands to deliver without Her Majesty's express
+ command. This being obtained, she asked me for it, and gave it to Her
+ Majesty. The circumstance convinced me that the Princess exercised much
+ less influence over the Queen, and was much more directed by Her Majesty's
+ authority, than has been imagined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two or three days after my arrival at Paris, my servant lost the key of my
+ writing-desk, and, to remedy the evil, he brought me the same locksmith I
+ had employed on the repairs just mentioned. As it was necessary I should
+ be present to remove my papers when the lock was taken off, of course I
+ saw the man. While I was busy clearing the desk, with an air of great
+ familiarity he said, "I have had jobs to do here before now, my girl, as
+ your sweetheart there well knows."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I humoured his mistake in taking me for my own maid and my servant's
+ sweetheart, and I pertly answered, "Very likely."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes, I have," said he; "it was I who repaired the Queen's boxes in
+ this very room."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Knowing I had never received anything of the sort from Her Majesty, and
+ utterly unaware that the boxes the Princess sent to my apartments had been
+ the Queen's, I was greatly surprised. Seeing my confusion, he said, "I
+ know the boxes as well as I know myself. I am the King's locksmith, my
+ dear, and I and the King worked together many years. Why, I know every
+ creek and corner of the palace, aye, and I know everything that's going on
+ in them, too&mdash;queer doings! Lord, my pretty damsel, I made a secret
+ place in the palace to hide the King's papers, where the devil himself
+ would never find them out, if I or the King didn't tell!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though I wished him at the devil every moment he detained me from
+ disclosing his information at the palace, yet I played off the soubrette
+ upon him till he became so interested I thought he never would have gone.
+ At last, however, he took his departure, and the moment he disappeared,
+ out of the house I flew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The agitation and surprise of the Princess at what I related were extreme.
+ "Wait," cried she; "I must go and inform the Queen instantly." In going
+ out of the room, "Great God, what a discovery!" exclaimed Her Highness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not long before she returned. Luckily, I was dressed for dinner.
+ She took me by the hand and, unable to speak, led me to the private closet
+ of the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Majesty graciously condescended to thank me for the letter I had taken
+ charge of. She told me that for the future all letters to her would be
+ without any superscription; and desired me, if any should be given to me
+ by persons I had not before seen, and the cipher were shown at the same
+ time, to receive and deliver them myself into her hands, as the production
+ of the cipher would be a sufficient pledge of their authenticity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being desired to repeat the conversation with Gamin, "There, Princess!"
+ exclaimed Her Majesty, "Am I not the crow of evil forebodings? I trust the
+ King will never again be credulous enough to employ this man. I have long
+ had an extreme aversion to His Majesty's familiarity with him; but he
+ shall hear his impudence himself from your own lips, my good little
+ Englishwoman; and then he will not think it is prepossession or
+ prejudice."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few evenings elapsed, and I thought no more of the subject, till one
+ night I was ordered to the palace by the Princess, which never happened
+ but on very particular occasions, as she was fearful of exciting suspicion
+ by any appearance of close intimacy with one so much about Paris upon the
+ secret embassies of the Court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I entered the apartment, the King, the Queen, and the Princesse
+ Elizabeth were, as if by accident, in an adjoining room; but, from what
+ followed, I am certain they all came purposely to hear my deposition. I
+ was presently commanded to present myself to the august party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King was in deep conversation with the Princesse Elizabeth. I must
+ confess I felt rather embarrassed. I could not form an idea why I was thus
+ honoured. The Princesse de Lamballe graciously took me by the hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now tell His Majesty, yourself, what Gamin said to you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I began to revive, perceiving now wherefore I was summoned. I accordingly
+ related, in the presence of the royal guests assembled, as I had done
+ before Her Majesty and the Princesse de Lamballe, the scene as it
+ occurred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I came to that part where he said, "where the devil himself could
+ never find them out," His Majesty approached from the balcony, at which he
+ had been talking with the Princesse Elizabeth, and said, "Well! he is very
+ right&mdash;but neither he nor the devil shall find them out, for they
+ shall be removed this very night."
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [Which was done; and these are, therefore, no doubt, the papers and
+ portfolio of which Madame Campan speaks, vol. ii., p. 142, as having
+ been entrusted to her care after being taken from their hiding-place by
+ the King himself.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ The King, the Queen, and the Princesse Elizabeth most graciously said,
+ "Nous sommes bien obligis, ma petite anglaise!" and Her Majesty added,
+ "Now, my dear, tell me all the rest about this man, whom I have long
+ suspected for his wickedness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I said he had been guilty of no hostile indications, and that the chief
+ fault I had to find with him was his exceeding familiarity in mentioning
+ himself before the King, saying, "I and the King."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Go on," said Her Majesty; "give us the whole as it occurred, and let us
+ form our own conclusions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," cried the Princess, "parlate sciolto."&mdash;"Si Si," rejoined the
+ Queen, "parlate tutto&mdash;yes, yes, speak out and tell us all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I then related the remainder of the conversation, which very much alarmed
+ the royal party, and it was agreed that, to avoid suspicion, I should next
+ day send for the locksmith and desire him, as an excuse, to look at the
+ locks of my trunks and travelling carriage, and set off in his presence to
+ take up my pretended mistress on the road to Calais, that he might not
+ suspect I had any connection with any one about the Court. I was strictly
+ enjoined by Her Majesty to tell him that the man servant had had the boxes
+ from some one to get them repaired, without either my knowledge or that of
+ my mistress, and, by her pretended orders, to give him a discharge upon
+ the spot for having dared to use her apartments as a workshop for the
+ business of other people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now," said the Princesse de Lamballe, "now play the comic part you acted
+ between your servant and Gamin:" which I did, as well as I could recollect
+ it, and the royal audience were so much amused, that I had the honour to
+ remain in the room and see them play at cards. At length, however, there
+ came three gentle taps at the outer door. "Ora a tempo perche vene
+ andata," exclaimed Her Highness at the sound, having ordered a person to
+ call with this signal to see me out of the palace to the Rue Nicaise,
+ where my carriage was in waiting to conduct me home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not possible for me to describe the gracious condescension of the
+ Queen and the Princesse Elizabeth, in expressing their sentiments for the
+ accidental discovery I had made. Amid their assurances of tender interest
+ and concern, they both reproved me mildly for my imprudence in having,
+ when I went to Brussels, hurried from Paris without my passport. They gave
+ me prudential cautions with regard to my future conduct and residence at
+ Paris; and it was principally owing to the united persuasions and
+ remonstrances of these three angels in human form that I took six or seven
+ different lodgings, where the Princesse de Lamballe used to meet me by
+ turns; because had I gone often to the palace, as many others did, or
+ waited for Her Highness regularly in any one spot, I should, infallibly,
+ have been discovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gracious God!" exclaimed Her Majesty in the course of this conversation,
+ "am I born to be the misfortune of every one who shows an interest in
+ serving me? Tell my sister, when you return to Brussels again&mdash;and do
+ not forget to say I desired you to tell her&mdash;our cruel situation! She
+ does not believe that we are surrounded by enemies, even in our most
+ private seclusions! in our prison! that we are even thrown exclusively
+ upon foreigners in our most confidential affairs; that in France there is
+ scarcely an individual to whom we can look! They betray us for their own
+ safety, which is endangered by any exertions in our favour. Tell her
+ this," repeated the Queen three or four times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day I punctually obeyed my orders. Gamin was sent for to look at
+ the locks, and received six francs for his opinion. The man servant was
+ reproved by me on behalf of my supposed mistress, and, in the presence of
+ Gamin, discharged for having brought suspicious things into the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man being tutored in his part, begged Gamin to plead for my
+ intercession with our mistress. I remained inexorable, as he knew I
+ should. While Gamin was still by I discharged the bill at the house, got
+ into my carriage, and took the road towards Calais.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Saint Denis, however, I feigned to be taken ill, and in two days
+ returned to Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even this simple act required management. I contrived it in the following
+ manner. I walked out on the high road leading to the capital for the
+ purpose of meeting my servant at a place which had been fixed for the
+ meeting before I left Paris. I found him on horseback at his post, with a
+ carriage prepared for my return. As soon as I was out of sight he made the
+ best of his way forward, went to the inn with a note from me, and returned
+ with my carriage and baggage I had to lodgings at Passy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The joy of the Princess on seeing me safe again brought tears into her
+ eyes; and, when I related the scene I played off before Gamin against my
+ servant, she laughed most heavily. "But surely," said she, "you have not
+ really discharged the poor man?"&mdash;"Oh, no," replied I; "he acted his
+ part so well before the locksmith, that I should be very sorry to lose
+ such an apt scholar."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You must perform this 'buffa scena'," observed Her Highness, "to the
+ Queen. She has been very anxious to know the result; but her spirits are
+ so depressed that I fear she will not come to my party this evening.
+ However, if she do not, I will see her to-morrow, and you shall make her
+ laugh. It would be a charity, for she has not done so from the heart for
+ many a day!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION IX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Editor in continuation:
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every one who has read at all is familiar with the immortal panegyric of
+ the great Edmund Burke upon Marie Antoinette. It is known that this
+ illustrious man was not mean enough to flatter; yet his eloquent praises
+ of her as a Princess, a woman, and a beauty, inspiring something beyond
+ what any other woman could excite, have been called flattery by those who
+ never knew her; those who did, must feel them to be, if possible, even
+ below the truth. But the admiration of Mr. Burke was set down even to a
+ baser motive, and, like everything else, converted into a source of
+ slander for political purposes, long before that worthy palladium of
+ British liberty had even thought of interesting himself for the welfare of
+ France, which his prophetic eye saw plainly was the common cause of all
+ Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, keenly as that great statesman looked into futurity, little did he
+ think, when he visited the Queen in all her splendour at Trianon, and
+ spoke so warmly of the cordial reception he had met with at Versailles
+ from the Duc and Duchesse de Polignac, that he should have so soon to
+ deplore their tragic fate!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Could his suggestions to Her Majesty, when he was in France, have been put
+ in force, there is scarcely a doubt that the Revolution might have been
+ averted, or crushed. But he did not limit his friendship to personal
+ advice. It is not generally known that the Queen carried on, through the
+ medium of the Princesse de Lamballe, a very extensive correspondence with
+ Mr. Burke. He recommended wise and vast plans; and these, if possible,
+ would have been adopted. The substance of some of the leading ones I can
+ recall from the journal of Her Highness and letters which I have myself
+ frequently deciphered. I shall endeavour, succinctly, to detail such of
+ them as I remember.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Burke recommended the suppression of all superfluous religious
+ institutions, which had not public seminaries to support. Their lands, he
+ advised, should be divided, without regard to any distinction but that of
+ merit, among such members of the army and other useful classes of society,
+ as, after having served the specified time, should have risen, through
+ their good conduct, to either civil or military preferment. By
+ calculations upon the landed interest, it appeared that every individual
+ under the operation of this bounty would, in the course of twenty years,
+ possess a yearly income of from five to seven hundred francs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another of the schemes suggested by Mr. Burke was to purge the kingdom of
+ all the troops which had been corrupted from their allegiance by the
+ intrigues growing out of the first meeting of the Notables. He proposed
+ that they should sail at the same time, or nearly so, to be colonized in
+ the different French islands and Madagascar; and, in their place, a new
+ national guard created, who should be bound to the interest of the
+ legitimate Government by receiving the waste crown lands to be shared
+ among them, from the common soldier to its generals and Field-marshals.
+ Thus would the whole mass of rebellious blood have been reformed. To
+ ensure an effectual change, Mr. Burke advised the enrolment, in rotation,
+ of sixty thousand Irish troops, twenty thousand always to remain in
+ France, and forty thousand in reversion for the same service. The
+ lynx-eyed statesman saw clearly, from the murders of the Marquis de Launay
+ and M. Flesselles, and from the destruction of the Bastille, and of the
+ ramparts of Paris, that party had not armed itself against Louis, but
+ against the throne. It was therefore necessary to produce a permanent
+ revolution in the army.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [Mr. Burke was too great a statesman not to be the friend of his
+ country's interest. He also saw that, from the destruction of the
+ monarchy in France, England had more to fear than to gain. He well knew
+ that the French Revolution was not, like that of the Americans, founded
+ on grievances and urged in support of a great and disinterested
+ principle. He was aware that so restless a people, when they had
+ overthrown the monarchy, would not limit the overthrow to their own
+ country. After Mr. Burke's death, Mr. Fox was applied to, and was
+ decidedly of the same opinion. Mr. Sheridan was interrogated, and, at
+ the request of the Princesse de Lamballe, he presented, for the Queen's
+ inspection, plans nearly equal to those of the above two great
+ statesmen; and what is most singular and scarcely credible is that one
+ and all of the opposition party in England strenuously exerted
+ themselves for the upholding of the monarchy in France. Many
+ circumstances which came to my knowledge before and after the death of
+ Louis XVI. prove that Mr. Pitt himself was averse to the republican
+ principles being organized so near a constitutional monarchy as France
+ was to Great Britain. Though the conduct of the Duc d'Orleans was
+ generally reprobated, I firmly believe that if he had possessed
+ sufficient courage to have usurped the crown and re-established the
+ monarchy, he would have been treated with in preference to the
+ republicans. I am the more confirmed in this opinion by a conversation
+ between the Princesse de Lamballe and Mirabeau, in which he said a
+ republic in France would never thrive.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ There was another suggestion to secure troops around the throne of a more
+ loyal temper. It was planned to incorporate all the French soldiers, who
+ had not voluntarily deserted the royal standard, with two-thirds of Swiss,
+ German, and Low Country forces, among whom were to be divided, after ten
+ years' service, certain portions of the crown lands, which were to be held
+ by presenting every year a flag of acknowledgment to the King and Queen;
+ with the preference of serving in the civil or military departments,
+ according to the merit or capacity of the respective individuals.
+ Messieurs de Broglie, de Bouille, de Luxembourg, and others, were to have
+ been commanders. But this plan, like many others, was foiled in its birth,
+ and, it is said, through the intrigues of Mirabeau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, all concurred in the necessity of ridding France, upon the most
+ plausible pretexts, of the fomenters of its ruin. Now arose a fresh
+ difficulty. Transports were wanted, and in considerable numbers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A navy agent in England was applied to for the supply of these transports.
+ So great was the number required, and so peculiar the circumstances, that
+ the agent declined interfering without the sanction of his Government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A new dilemma succeeded. Might not the King of England place improper
+ constructions on this extensive shipment of troops from the different
+ ports of France for her West India possessions? Might it not be fancied
+ that it involved secret designs on the British settlements in that
+ quarter?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these circumstances required that some communication should be opened
+ with the Court of St. James; and the critical posture of affairs exacted
+ that such communication should be less diplomatic than confidential.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be recollected that, at the very commencement of the reign of
+ Louis XVI., there were troubles in Britanny, which the severe governorship
+ of the Duc d'Aiguillon augmented. The Bretons took privileges with them,
+ when they became blended with the kingdom of France, by the marriage of
+ Anne of Brittany with Charles VIII., beyond those of any other of its
+ provinces. These privileges they seemed rather disposed to extend than
+ relinquish, and were by no means reserved in the expression of their
+ resolution. It was considered expedient to place a firm, but conciliatory,
+ Governor over them, and the Duc de Penthievre was appointed to this
+ difficult trust. The Duke was accompanied to his vice-royalty by his
+ daughter-in-law, the Princesse de Lamballe, who, by her extremely
+ judicious management of the female part of the province, did more for the
+ restoration of order than could have been achieved by armies. The
+ remembrance of this circumstance induced the Queen to regard Her Highness
+ as a fit person to send secretly to England at this very important crisis;
+ and the purpose was greatly encouraged by a wish to remove her from a
+ scene of such daily increasing peril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For privacy, it was deemed expedient that Her Highness should withdraw to
+ Aumale, under the plea of ill-health, and thence proceed to England; and
+ it was also by way of Aumale that she as secretly returned, after the
+ fatal disaster of the stoppage, to discourage the impression of her ever
+ having been out of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mission was even unknown to the French Minister at the Court of St.
+ James.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Princess was ordered by Her Majesty to cultivate the acquaintance of
+ the late Duchess of Gordon, who was supposed to possess more influence
+ than any woman in England&mdash;in order to learn the sentiments of Mr.
+ Pitt relative to the revolutionary troubles. The Duchess, however, was too
+ much of an Englishwoman, and Mr. Pitt too much interested in the ruin of
+ France, to give her the least clue to the truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to fathom the sentiments of the opposition party, the Princess
+ cultivated the society also of the late Duchess of Devonshire, but with as
+ little success. The opposition party foresaw too much risk in bringing
+ anything before the house to alarm the prejudices of the nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French Ambassador, too, jealous of the unexplained purpose of the
+ Princess, did all he could to render her expedition fruitless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, though disappointed in some of her main objects with regard
+ to influence and information, she became so great a favourite at the
+ British Court that she obtained full permission of the King and Queen of
+ England to signify to her royal mistress and friend that the specific
+ request she came to make would be complied with.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The Princess visited Bath, Windsor, Brighton, and many other parts of
+ England, and associated with all parties. She managed her conduct so
+ judiciously that the real object of her visit was never suspected. In
+ all these excursions I had the honour to attend her confidentially. I
+ was the only person entrusted with papers from Her Highness to Her
+ Majesty. I had many things to copy, of which the originals went to
+ France. Twice during the term of Her Highness's residence in England I
+ was sent by Her Majesty with papers communicating the result of the
+ secret mission to the Queen of Naples. On the second of these two trips,
+ being obliged to travel night and day, I could only keep my eyes open by
+ means of the strongest coffee. When I reached my destination I was
+ immediately compelled to decipher the despatches with the Queen of
+ Naples in the office of the Secretary of State. That done, General Acton
+ ordered some one, I know not whom, to conduct me, I know not where, but
+ it was to a place where, after a sound sleep of twenty-four hours, I
+ awoke thoroughly refreshed, and without a vestige of fatigue either of
+ mind or body. On waking, lest anything should transpire, I was desired
+ to quit Naples instantly, without seeing the British Minister. To make
+ assurance doubly sure, General Acton sent a person from his office to
+ accompany me out of the city on horseback; and, to screen me from the
+ attack of robbers, this person went on with me as far as the Roman
+ frontier.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime, however, the troubles in France were so rapidly
+ increasing from hour to hour, that it became impossible for the Government
+ to carry any of their plans into effect. This particular one, on the very
+ eve of its accomplishment, was marred, as it was imagined, by the secret
+ intervention of the friends of Mirabeau. The Government became more and
+ more infirm and wavering in its purposes; the Princess was left without
+ instructions, and under such circumstances as to expose her to the
+ supposition of having trifled with the good-will of Their Majesties of
+ England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this dilemma I was sent off from England to the Queen of France. I left
+ Her Highness at Bath, but when I returned she had quitted Bath for
+ Brighton. I am unacquainted with the nature of all the papers she
+ received, but I well remember the agony they seemed to inflict on her. She
+ sent off a packet by express that very night to Windsor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Princess immediately began the preparations for her return. Her own
+ journal is explicit on this point of her history, and therefore I shall
+ leave her to speak for herself. I must not, however, omit to mention the
+ remark she made to me upon the subject of her reception in Great Britain.
+ With these, let me dismiss the present chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The general cordiality with which I have been received in your country,"
+ said Her Highness, "has made a lasting impression upon my heart. In
+ particular, never shall I forget the kindness of the Queen of England, the
+ Duchess of Devonshire, and her truly virtuous mother, Lady Spencer. It
+ gave me a cruel pang to be obliged to undervalue the obligations with
+ which they overwhelmed me by leaving England as I did, without giving them
+ an opportunity of carrying their good intentions, which, I had myself
+ solicited, into effect. But we cannot command fate. Now that the King has
+ determined to accept the Constitution (and you know my sentiments upon the
+ article respecting ecclesiastics), I conceive it my duty to follow Their
+ Majesties' example in submitting to the laws of the nation. Be assured,
+ 'Inglesina', it will be my ambition to bring about one of the happiest
+ ages of French history. I shall endeavour to create that confidence so
+ necessary for the restoration to their native land of the Princes of the
+ blood, and all the emigrants who abandoned the King, their families, and
+ their country, while doubtful whether His Majesty would or would not
+ concede this new charter; but now that the doubt exists no longer, I trust
+ we shall all meet again, the happier for the privation to which we have
+ been doomed from absence. As the limitation of the monarchy removes every
+ kind of responsibility from the monarch, the Queen will again taste the
+ blissful sweets she once enjoyed during the reign of Louis XV. in the
+ domestic tranquillity of her home at Trianon. Often has she wept those
+ times in which she will again rejoice. Oh, how I long for their return! I
+ fly to greet the coming period of future happiness to us all!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ POSTSCRIPT:
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although I am not making myself the historian of France, yet it may not be
+ amiss to mention that it was during this absence of Her Highness that
+ Necker finally retired from power and from France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The return of this Minister had been very much against the consent of Her
+ Majesty and the King. They both feared what actually happened soon
+ afterwards. They foresaw that he would be swept away by the current of
+ popularity from his deference to the royal authority. It was to preserve
+ the favour of the mob that he allowed them to commit the shocking murders
+ of M. de Foulon (who had succeeded him on his first dismission as Minister
+ of Louis XVI.) and of Berthier, his son-in-law. The union of Necker with
+ D'ORLEANS, on this occasion, added to the cold indifference with which
+ Barnave in one of his speeches expressed himself concerning the shedding
+ of human blood, certainly animated the factious assassins to methodical
+ murder, and frustrated all the efforts of La Fayette to save these victims
+ from the enraged populace, to whom both unfortunately fell a sacrifice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Necker, like La Fayette, when too late, felt the absurdity of relying upon
+ the idolatry of the populace. The one fancied he could command the
+ Parisian 'poissardes' as easily as his own battalions; and the other
+ persuaded himself that the mob, which had been hired to carry about his
+ bust, would as readily promulgate his theories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he forgot that the people in their greatest independence are only the
+ puppets of demagogues; and he lost himself by not gaining over that class
+ which, of all others, possesses most power over the million, I mean the
+ men of the bar, who, arguing more logically than the rest of the world,
+ felt that from the new Constitution the long robe was playing a losing
+ game, and therefore discouraged a system which offered nothing to their
+ personal ambition or private emolument. Lawyers, like priests, are never
+ over-ripe for any changes or innovations, except such as tend to their
+ personal interest. The more perplexed the state of public and private
+ affairs, the better for them. Therefore, in revolutions, as a body, they
+ remain neuter, unless it is made for their benefit to act. Individually,
+ they are a set of necessary evils; and, for the sake of the bar, the
+ bench, and the gibbet, require to be humoured. But any legislator who
+ attempts to render laws clear, concise, and explanatory, and to divest
+ them of the quibbles whereby these expounders&mdash;or confounders&mdash;of
+ codes fatten on the credulity of States and the miseries of unfortunate
+ millions, will necessarily encounter opposition, direct or indirect, in
+ every measure at all likely to reduce the influence of this most
+ abominable horde of human depredators. It was Necker's error to have gone
+ so directly to the point with the lawyers that they at once saw his scope;
+ and thus he himself defeated his hopes of their support, the want of which
+ utterly baffled all his speculations.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The great Frederick of Prussia, on being told of the numbers of lawyers
+ there were in England, said he wished he had them in his country. "Why?"
+ some one enquired. "To do the greatest benefit in my power to society."&mdash;"How
+ so?"&mdash;"Why to hang one-half as an example to the other!"]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ When Necker undertook to re-establish the finances, and to reform
+ generally the abuses in the Government, he was the most popular Minister
+ (Lord Chatham, when the great Pitt, excepted) in Europe. Yet his errors
+ were innumerable, though possessing such sound knowledge and judgment,
+ such a superabundance of political contrivance, diplomatic coolness, and
+ mathematical calculation, the result of deep thought aided by great
+ practical experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But how futile he made all these appear when he declared the national
+ bankruptcy. Could anything be more absurd than the assumption, by the
+ individual, of a personal instead of a national guarantee of part of a
+ national debt?&mdash;an undertaking too hazardous and by far too
+ ambiguous, even for a monarch who is not backed by his kingdom&mdash;flow
+ doubly frantic, then, for a subject! Necker imagined that the above
+ declaration and his own Quixotic generosity would have opened the coffers
+ of the great body of rich proprietors, and brought them forward to aid the
+ national crisis. But he was mistaken. The nation then had no interest in
+ his financial system. The effect it produced was the very reverse of what
+ was expected. Every proprietor began to fear the ambition of the Minister,
+ who undertook impossibilities. The being bound for the debts of an
+ individual, and justifying bail in a court of law in commercial matters,
+ affords no criterion for judging of, or regulating, the pecuniary
+ difficulties of a nation. Necker's conduct in this case was, in my humble
+ opinion, as impolitic as that of a man who, after telling his friends that
+ he is ruined past redemption, asks for a loan of money. The conclusion is,
+ if he obtains the loan, that "the fool and his money are soon parted."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was during the same interval of Her Highness's stay in England, that
+ the discontent ran so high between the people and the clergy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have frequently heard the Princesse de Lamballe ascribe the King's not
+ sanctioning the decrees against the clergy to the influence of his aunt,
+ the Carmelite nun, Madame Louise. During the life of her father, Louis
+ XV., she nearly engrossed all the Church benefices by her intrigues. She
+ had her regular conclaves of all orders of the Church. From the Bishop to
+ the sexton, all depended on her for preferment; and, till the Revolution,
+ she maintained equal power over the mind of Louis XVI. upon similar
+ matters. The Queen would often express her disapprobation; but the King
+ was so scrupulous, whenever the discussion fell on the topic of religion,
+ that she made it a point not to contrast her opinion with his, from a
+ conviction that she was unequal to cope with him on that head, upon which
+ he was generally very animated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is perfectly certain that the French clergy, by refusing to contribute
+ to the exigencies of the State, created some of the primary horrors of the
+ Revolution. They enjoyed one-third the national revenues, yet they were
+ the first to withhold their assistance from the national wants. I have
+ heard the Princesse de Lamballe say, "The Princesse Elizabeth and myself
+ used our utmost exertion to induce some of the higher orders of the clergy
+ to set the example and obtain for themselves the credit of offering up a
+ part of the revenues, the whole of which we knew must be forfeited if they
+ continued obstinate; but it was impossible to move them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The characters of some of the leading dignitaries of the time sufficiently
+ explain their selfish and pernicious conduct; when churchmen trifle with
+ the altar, be their motives what they may, they destroy the faith they
+ possess, and give examples to the flock entrusted to their care, of which
+ no foresight can measure the baleful consequences. Who that is false to
+ his God can be expected to remain faithful to his Sovereign? When a man,
+ as a Catholic Bishop, marries, and, under the mask of patriotism, becomes
+ the declared tool of all work to every faction, and is the weathercock,
+ shifting to any quarter according to the wind,&mdash;such a man can be of
+ no real service to any party: and yet has a man of this kind been by turns
+ the primum mobile of them all, even to the present times, and was one of
+ those great Church fomenters of the troubles of which we speak, who
+ disgraced the virtuous reign of Louis XVI.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION X.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amidst the perplexities of the Royal Family it was perfectly unavoidable
+ that repeated proposals should have been made at various times for them to
+ escape these dangers by flight. The Queen had been frequently and most
+ earnestly entreated to withdraw alone; and the King, the Princesse
+ Elizabeth, the Princesse de Lamballe, the royal children, with their
+ little hands uplifted, and all those attached to Marie Antoinette, after
+ the horrid business at Versailles, united to supplicate her to quit France
+ and shelter herself from the peril hanging over her existence. Often and
+ often have I heard the Princesse de Lamballe repeat the words in which Her
+ Majesty uniformly rejected the proposition. "I have no wish," cried the
+ Queen, "for myself. My life or death must be encircled by the arms of my
+ husband and my family. With them, and with them only, will I live or die."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would have been impossible to have persuaded her to leave France
+ without her children. If any woman on earth could have been justified in
+ so doing, it would have been Marie Antoinette. But she was above such
+ unnatural selfishness, though she had so many examples to encourage her;
+ for, even amongst the members of her own family, self-preservation had
+ been considered paramount to every other consideration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have heard the Princess say that Pope Pius VI. was the only one of all
+ the Sovereigns who offered the slightest condolence or assistance to Louis
+ XVI. and his family. "The Pope's letter," added she, "when shown to me by
+ the Queen, drew tears from my eyes. It really was in a style of such
+ Christian tenderness and princely feeling as could only be dictated by a
+ pious and illuminated head of the Christian Church. He implored not only
+ all the family of Louis XVI., but even extended his entreaties to me [the
+ Princesse de Lamballe] to leave Paris, and save themselves, by taking
+ refuge in his dominions, from the horrors which so cruelly overwhelmed
+ them. The King's aunts were the only ones who profited by the invitation.
+ Madame Elizabeth was to have been of the party, but could not be persuaded
+ to leave the King and Queen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the clouds grew more threatening, it is scarcely to be credited how
+ many persons interested themselves for the same purpose, and what
+ numberless schemes were devised to break the fetters which had been
+ imposed on the Royal Family, by their jailers, the Assembly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A party, unknown to the King and Queen, was even forming under the
+ direction of the Princesse Elizabeth; but as soon as Their Majesties were
+ apprised of it, it was given up as dangerous to the interests of the Royal
+ Family, because it thwarted the plans of the Marquis de Bouille. Indeed,
+ Her Majesty could never be brought to determine on any plan for her own or
+ the King's safety until their royal aunts, the Princesses Victoria and
+ Adelaide, had left Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first attempt to fly was made early in the year 1791, at St. Cloud,
+ where the horses had been in preparation nearly a fortnight; but the
+ scheme was abandoned in consequence of having been entrusted to too many
+ persons. This the Queen acknowledged. She had it often in her power to
+ escape alone with her son, but would not consent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second attempt was made in the spring of the same year at Paris. The
+ guards shut the gates of the Tuileries, and would not allow the King's
+ carriage to pass. Even though a large sum of money had been expended to
+ form a party to overpower the mutineers, the treacherous mercenaries did
+ not appear. The expedition was, of course, obliged to be relinquished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of the royal household were very ill-treated, and some lives
+ unfortunately lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, the deplorable journey did take place. The intention had been
+ communicated by Her Majesty to the Princesse de Lamballe before she went
+ abroad, and it was agreed that, whenever it was carried into effect, the
+ Queen should write to Her Highness from Montmedi, where the two friends
+ were once more to have been reunited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after the departure of the Princess, the arrangements for the fatal
+ journey to Varennes were commenced, but with blamable and fatal
+ carelessness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mirabeau was the first person who advised the King to withdraw; but he
+ recommended that it should be alone, or, at most, with the Dauphin only.
+ He was of opinion that the overthrow of the Constitution could not be
+ achieved while the Royal Family remained in Paris. His first idea was that
+ the King should go to the sea-coast, where he would have it in his power
+ instantly to escape to England, if the Assembly, through his (Mirabeau's),
+ means, did not comply with the royal propositions. Though many of the
+ King's advisers were for a distinct and open rejection of the
+ Constitution, it was the decided impression of Mirabeau that he ought to
+ stoop to conquer, and temporize by an instantaneous acceptance, through
+ which he might gain time to put himself in an attitude to make such terms
+ as would at once neutralize the act and the faction by which it was forced
+ upon him. Others imagined that His Majesty was too conscientious to avail
+ himself of any such subterfuge, and that, having once given his sanction,
+ he would adhere to it rigidly. This third party of the royal counsellors
+ were therefore for a cautious consideration of the document, clause by
+ clause, dreading the consequences of an 'ex abrupto' signature in binding
+ the Sovereign, not only against his policy, but his will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the midst of all these distracting doubts, however, the departure was
+ resolved upon. Mirabeau had many interviews with the Count Fersen upon the
+ subject. It was his great object to prevent the flight from being
+ encumbered. But the King would not be persuaded to separate himself from
+ the Queen and the rest of the family, and entrusted the project to too
+ many advisers. Had he been guided by Fersen only, he would have succeeded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The natural consequence of a secret being in so many hands was felt in the
+ result. Those whom it was most important to keep in ignorance were the
+ first on the alert. The weakness of the Queen in insisting upon taking a
+ remarkable dressing-case with her, and, to get it away unobserved,
+ ordering a facsimile to be made under the pretext of intending it as a
+ present to her sister at Brussels, awakened the suspicion of a favourite,
+ but false female attendant, then intriguing with the aide-de-camp of La
+ Fayette. The rest is easily to be conceived. The Assembly were apprised of
+ all the preparations for the departure a week or more before it occurred.
+ La Fayette, himself, it is believed, knew and encouraged it, that he might
+ have the glory of stopping the fugitive himself; but he was overruled by
+ the Assembly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the secretary of the Austrian Ambassador came publicly, by
+ arrangement, to ask permission of the Queen to take the model of the
+ dressing-case in question, the very woman to whom I have alluded was in
+ attendance at Her Majesty's toilet. The paramour of the woman was with
+ her, watching the motions of the Royal Family on the night they passed
+ from their own apartments to those of the Duc de Villequier in order to
+ get into the carriage; and by this paramour was La Fayette instantly
+ informed of the departure. The traitress discovered that Her Majesty was
+ on the eve of setting off by seeing her diamonds packed up. All these
+ things were fully known to the Assembly, of which the Queen herself was
+ afterwards apprised by the Mayor of Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the suite of the Count Fersen there was a young Swede who had an
+ intrigue purposely with one of the Queen's women, from whom he obtained
+ many important disclosures relative to the times.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [Alvise de Pisani, the last venetian Ambassador to the King, who was my
+ husband's particular friend, and with whom I was myself long acquainted,
+ and have been ever since to this day, as well as with all his noble
+ family, during my many years' residence at Venice, told me this
+ circumstance while walking with him at his country-seat at Stra, which
+ was subsequently taken from him by Napoleon, and made the Imperial
+ palace of the viceroy, and is now that of the German reigning Prince.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ The Swede mentioned this to his patron, who advised Her Majesty to
+ discharge a certain number of these women, among whom was the one who
+ afterwards proved her betrayer. It was suggested to dismiss a number at
+ once, that the guilty person might not suspect the exclusion to be
+ levelled against her in particular. Had the Queen allowed herself to be
+ directed in this affair by Fersen, the chain of communication would have
+ been broken, and the Royal Family would not have been stopped at Varennes,
+ but have got clear out of France, many hours before they could have been
+ perceived by the Assembly; but Her Majesty never could believe that she
+ had anything to fear from the quarter against which she was warned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not generally known that a very considerable sum had been given to
+ the head recruiting sergeant, Mirabeau, to enlist such of the constituents
+ as could be won with gold to be ready with a majority in favour of the
+ royal fugitives. But the death of Mirabeau, previous to this event, leaves
+ it doubtful how far he distributed the bribes conscientiously; indeed, it
+ is rather to be questioned whether he did not retain the money, or much of
+ it, in his own hands, since the strongly hoped for and dearly paid
+ majority never gave proof of existence, either before or after the journey
+ to Varennes. Immense bribes were also given to the Mayor of Paris, which
+ proved equally ineffective.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Mirabeau lived till the affair of Varennes, it is not impossible that
+ his genius might have given a different complexion to the result. He had
+ already treated with the Queen and the Princess for a reconciliation; and
+ in the apartments of Her Highness had frequent evening, and early morning,
+ audiences of the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is pretty certain, however, that the recantation of Mirabeau, from
+ avowed democracy to aristocracy and royalty, through the medium of
+ enriching himself by a 'salva regina', made his friends prepare for him
+ that just retribution, which ended in a 'de profundis'. At a period when
+ all his vices were called to aid one virtuous action, his thread of
+ vicious life was shortened, and he; no doubt, became the victim of his
+ insatiable avarice. That he was poisoned is not to be disproved; though it
+ was thought necessary to keep it from the knowledge of the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have often heard Her Highness say, "When I reflect on the precautions
+ which were taken to keep the interviews with Mirabeau profoundly secret
+ that he never conversed but with the King, the Queen, and myself&mdash;his
+ untimely death must be attributed to his own indiscreet enthusiasm, in
+ having confidentially entrusted the success with which he flattered
+ himself, from the ascendency he had gained over the Court, to some one who
+ betrayed him. His death, so very unexpectedly, and at that crisis, made a
+ deep impression on the mind of the Queen. She really believed him capable
+ of redressing the monarchy, and he certainly was the only one of the
+ turncoat constitutionalists in whom she placed any confidence. Would to
+ Heaven that she had had more in Barnave, and that she had listened to
+ Dumourier! These I would have trusted more, far more readily than the
+ mercenary Mirabeau!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I now return, once more, to the journal of the Princess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /> <a name="pb210" id="pb210"></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="pb210.jpg (100K)" src="images/pb210.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION XI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the midst of the perplexing debates upon the course most advisable
+ with regard to the Constitution after the unfortunate return from
+ Varennes, I sent off my little English amanuensis to Paris to bring me,
+ through the means of another trusty person I had placed about the Queen,
+ the earliest information concerning the situation of affairs. On her
+ return she brought me a ring, which Her Majesty had graciously,
+ condescended to send me, set with her own hair, which had whitened like
+ that of a person of eighty, from the anguish the Varennes affair had
+ wrought upon her mind; and bearing the inscription, 'Bleached by sorrow.'
+ This ring was accompanied by the following letter:
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "'MY DEAREST FRIEND,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'The King has made up his mind to the acceptance of the Constitution,
+ and it will ere long be proclaimed publicly. A few days ago I was
+ secretly waited upon and closeted in your apartment with many of our
+ faithful friends,&mdash;in particular, Alexandre de Lameth, Duport,
+ Barnave, Montmorin, Bertrand de Moleville, et cetera. The two latter
+ opposed the King's Council, the Ministers, and the numerous other
+ advisers of an immediate and unscrutinizing acceptance. They were a
+ small minority, and could not prevail with me to exercise my influence
+ with His Majesty in support of their opinion, when all the rest seemed
+ so confident that a contrary course must re-establish the tranquillity
+ of the nation and our own happiness, weaken the party of the Jacobins
+ against us, and greatly increase that of the nation in our favor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Your absence obliged me to call Elizabeth to my aid in managing the
+ coming and going of the deputies to and from the Pavilion of Flora,
+ unperceived by the spies of our enemies. She executed her charge so
+ adroitly, that the visitors were not seen by any of the household. Poor
+ Elizabeth! little did I look for such circumspection in one so
+ unacquainted with the intrigues of Court, or the dangers surrounding us,
+ which they would now fain persuade us no longer exist. God grant it may
+ be so! and that I may once more freely embrace and open my heart to the
+ only friend I have nearest to it. But though this is my most ardent
+ wish, yet, my dear, dearest Lamballe, I leave it to yourself to act as
+ your feelings dictate. Many about us profess to see the future as clear
+ as the sun at noon-day. But, I confess, my vision is still dim. I cannot
+ look into events with the security of others&mdash;who confound logic
+ with their wishes. The King, Elizabeth, and all of us, are anxious for
+ your return. But it would grieve us sorely for you to come back to such
+ scenes as you have already witnessed. Judge and act from your own
+ impressions. If we do not see you, send me the result of your interview
+ at the precipice.&mdash;[The name the Queen gave to Mr. Pitt]&mdash;'Vostra
+ cara picciolca Inglesina' will deliver you many letters. After looking
+ over the envelopes, you will either send her with them as soon as
+ possible or forward them as addressed, as you may think most advisable
+ at the time you receive them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"'Ever,
+ ever, and forever,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"'Your
+ affectionate,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"'MARIE
+ ANTOINETTE!
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "There was another hurried and abrupt note from Her Majesty among these
+ papers, obviously written later than the first. It lamented the cruel
+ privations to which she was doomed at the Tuileries, in consequence of the
+ impeded flight, and declared that what the Royal Family were forced to
+ suffer, from being totally deprived of every individual of their former
+ friends and attendants to condole with, excepting the equally oppressed
+ and unhappy Princesse Elizabeth, was utterly insupportable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the receipt of these much esteemed epistles, I returned, as my duty
+ directed, to the best of Queens, and most sincere of friends. My arrival
+ at Paris, though so much wished for, was totally unexpected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At our first meeting, the Queen was so agitated that she was utterly at a
+ loss to explain the satisfaction she felt in beholding me once more near
+ her royal person. Seeing the ring on my finger, which she had done me the
+ honour of sending me, she pointed to her hair, once so beautiful, but now,
+ like that of an old woman, not only gray, but deprived of all its
+ softness, quite stiff and dried up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madame Elizabeth, the King, and the rest of our little circle, lavished
+ on me the most endearing caresses. The dear Dauphin said to me, 'You will
+ not go away again, I hope, Princess? Oh, mamma has cried so since you left
+ us!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had wept enough before, but this dear little angel brought tears into
+ the eyes of us all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When I mentioned to Her Majesty the affectionate sympathy expressed by
+ the King and Queen of England in her sufferings, and their regret at the
+ state of public affairs in France, 'It is most noble and praiseworthy in
+ them to feel thus,' exclaimed Marie Antoinette; 'and the more so
+ considering the illiberal part imputed to us against those Sovereigns in
+ the rebellion of their ultramarine subjects, to which, Heaven knows, I
+ never gave my approbation. Had I done so, how poignant would be my remorse
+ at the retribution of our own sufferings, and the pity of those I had so
+ injured! No. I was, perhaps, the only silent individual amongst millions
+ of infatuated enthusiasts at General La Fayette's return to Paris, nor did
+ I sanction any of the fetes given to Dr. Franklin, or the American
+ Ambassadors at the time. I could not conceive it prudent for the Queen of
+ an absolute monarchy to countenance any of their newfangled philosophical
+ experiments with my presence. Now, I feel the reward in my own conscience.
+ I exult in my freedom from a self-reproach, which would have been
+ altogether insupportable under the kindness of which you speak.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As soon as I was settled in my apartment, which was on the same floor
+ with that of the Queen, she condescended to relate to me every particular
+ of her unfortunate journey. I saw the pain it gave her to retrace the
+ scenes, and begged her to desist till time should have, in some degree,
+ assuaged the poignancy of her feelings. 'That,' cried she, embracing me, I
+ can never be! Never, never will that horrid circumstance of my life lose
+ its vividness in my recollection. What agony, to have seen those faithful
+ servants tied before us on the carriage, like common criminals! All, all
+ may be attributed to the King's goodness of heart, which produces want of
+ courage, nay, even timidity, in the most trying scenes. As poor King
+ Charles the First, when he was betrayed in the Isle of Wight, would have
+ saved himself, and perhaps thousands, had he permitted the sacrifice of
+ one traitor, so might Louis XVI. have averted calamities so fearful that I
+ dare not name, though I distinctly foresee them, had he exerted his
+ authority where he only called up his compassion.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'For Heaven's sake,' replied I, 'do not torment yourself by these cruel
+ recollections!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'These are gone by,' continued Her Majesty, and greater still than even
+ these. How can I describe my grief at what I endured in the Assembly, from
+ the studied humiliation to which the King and the royal authority were
+ there reduced in the face of the national representatives! from seeing the
+ King on his return choked with anguish at the mortifications to which I
+ was doomed to behold the majesty of a French Sovereign humbled! These
+ events bespeak clouds, which, like the horrid waterspout at sea, nothing
+ can dispel but cannon! The dignity of the Crown, the sovereignty itself,
+ is threatened; and this I shall write this very night to the Emperor. I
+ see no hope of internal tranquillity without the powerful aid of foreign
+ force.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The only difference of any moment which ever existed between the Queen
+ and the Princesse de Lamballe as to their sentiments on the Revolution
+ was on this subject. Her Highness wished Marie Antoinette to rely on the
+ many persons who had offered and promised to serve the cause of the
+ monarchy with their internal resources, and not depend on the Princes
+ and foreign armies. This salutary advice she never could enforce on the
+ Queen's mind, though she had to that effect been importuned by upwards
+ of two hundred persona, all zealous to show their penitence for former
+ errors by their present devotedness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whenever," observed Her Highness, "we came to that point, the Queen
+ (upon seriously reflecting that these persons had been active
+ instruments in promoting the first changes in the monarchy, for which
+ she never forgave them from her heart) would hesitate and doubt; and
+ never could I bring Her Majesty definitely to believe the profferers to
+ be sincere. Hence, they were trifled with, till one by one she either
+ lost them, or saw them sacrificed to an attachment, which her own
+ distrust and indecision rendered fruitless."]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ The King has allowed himself to be too much led to attempt to recover his
+ power through any sort of mediation. Still, the very idea of owing our
+ liberty to any foreign army distracts me for the consequences.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My reinstatement in my apartments at the Pavilion of Flora seemed not
+ only to give universal satisfaction to every individual of the Royal
+ Family, but it was hailed with much enthusiasm by many deputies of the
+ constituent Assembly. I was honoured with the respective visits of all who
+ were in any degree well disposed to the royal cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One day, when Barnave and others were present with the Queen, 'Now,'
+ exclaimed one of the deputies, 'now that this good Princess is returned to
+ her adopted country, the active zeal of Her Highness, coupled with Your
+ Majesty's powerful influence over the mind of the King for the welfare of
+ his subjects, will give fresh vigour to the full execution of the
+ Constitution.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My visitors were earnest in their invitations for me to go to the
+ Assembly to hear an interesting discussion, which was to be brought
+ forward upon the King's spontaneous acceptance of the Constitution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I went; and amidst the plaudits for the good King's condescension, how
+ was my heart lacerated to hear Robespierre denounce three of the most
+ distinguished of the members, who had requested my attendance, as traitors
+ to their country!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This was the first and only Assembly discussion I ever attended; and how
+ dearly did I pay for my curiosity! I was accompanied by my 'cara
+ Inglesina', who, always on the alert, exclaimed, 'Let me entreat Your
+ Highness not to remain any longer in this place. You are too deeply moved
+ to dissemble.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I took her judicious advice, and the moment I could leave the Assembly
+ unperceived, I hastened back to the Queen to beg her, for God's sake, to
+ be upon her guard; for, from what I had just heard at the Assembly, I
+ feared the Jacobins had discovered her plans with Barnave, De Lameth,
+ Duport, and others of the royal party. Her countenance, for some minutes,
+ seemed to be the only sensitive part of her. It was perpetually shifting
+ from a high florid colour to the paleness of death. When her first
+ emotions gave way to nature, she threw herself into my arms, and, for some
+ time, her feelings were so overcome by the dangers which threatened these
+ worthy men, that she could only in the bitterness of her anguish exclaim,
+ 'Oh! this is all on my account!' And I think she was almost as much
+ alarmed for the safety of these faithful men, as she had been for that of
+ the King on the 17th of July, when the Jacobins in the Champ de Mars
+ called out to have the King brought to trial&mdash;a day of which the
+ horrors were never effaced from her memory!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King and Princesse Elizabeth fortunately came in at the moment; but
+ even our united efforts were unavailable. The grief of Her Majesty at
+ feeling herself the cause of the misfortunes of these faithful adherents,
+ now devoted victims of their earnestness in foiling the machinations
+ against the liberty and life of the King and herself, made her nearly
+ frantic. She too well knew that to be accused was to incur instant death.
+ That she retained her senses under the convulsion of her feelings can only
+ be ascribed to that wonderful strength of mind, which triumphed over every
+ bodily weakness, and still sustains her under every emergency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King and the Princesse Elizabeth, by whom Barnave had been much
+ esteemed ever since the journey from Varennes, were both inconsolable. I
+ really believe the Queen entirely owed her instantaneous recovery from
+ that deadly lethargic state, in which she had been thrown by her grief for
+ the destined sacrifice, to the exuberant goodness of the King's heart, who
+ instantly resolved to compromise his own existence, to save those who had
+ forfeited theirs for him and his family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Seeing the emotion of the Queen, 'I will go myself to the Assembly,' said
+ Louis XVI., 'and declare their innocence.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen sprang forward, as if on the wings of an angel, and grasping
+ the King in her arms, cried, 'Will you hasten their deaths by confirming
+ the impression of your keeping up an understanding with them? Gracious
+ Heaven! Oh, that I could recall the acts of attachment they have shown us,
+ since to these they are now falling victims! I would save them,' continued
+ Her Majesty, 'with my own blood; but, Sire, it is useless. We should only
+ expose ourselves to the vindictive spirit of the Jacobins without aiding
+ the cause of our devoted friends.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Who,' asked she, I was the guilty wretch that accused our unfortunate
+ Barnave?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Robespierre.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Robespierre!' echoed Her Majesty. 'Oh, God! then he is numbered with the
+ dead! This fellow is too fond of blood to be tempted with money. But you,
+ Sire, must not interfere!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Notwithstanding these doubts, however, I undertook, at the King's and
+ Queen's most earnest desire, to get some one to feel the pulse of
+ Robespierre, for the salvation of these our only palladium to the
+ constitutional monarchy. To the first application, though made through the
+ medium of one of his earliest college intimates, Carrier, the wretch was
+ utterly deaf and insensible. Of this failure I hastened to apprise Her
+ Majesty. 'Was any, sum,' asked she, 'named as a compensation for
+ suspending this trial?'&mdash;'None,' replied I. 'I had no commands to
+ that effect.'&mdash;'Then let the attempt be renewed, and back it with the
+ argument of a cheque for a hundred thousand livres on M. Laborde. He has
+ saved my life and the King's, and, as far as is in my power, I am
+ determined to save his. Barnave has exposed his life more than any of our
+ unfortunate friends, and if we can but succeed in saving him, he will
+ speedily be enabled to save his colleagues. Should the sum I name be
+ insufficient, my jewels shall be disposed of to make up a larger one. Fly
+ to your agent, dear Princess! Lose not a moment to intercede in behalf of
+ these our only true friends!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did so, and was fortunate enough to gain over to my personal entreaties
+ one who had the courage to propose the business; and a hundred and fifty
+ thousand livres procured them a suspension of accusation. All, however,
+ are still watched with such severity of scrutiny that I tremble, even now,
+ for the result.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [And with reason; for all, eventually, were sacrificed upon the
+ scaffold. Carrier was the factotum in all the cool, deliberate,
+ sanguinary operations of Robespierre; when he saw the cheque, he said to
+ the Princesse de Lamballe: "Madame, though your personal charms and
+ mental virtues had completely influenced all the authority I could
+ exercise in favour of your protege, without this interesting argument I
+ should not have had courage to have renewed the business with the
+ principal agent of life and death."]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "It was in the midst of such apprehensions, which struck terror into the
+ hearts of the King and Queen, that the Tuileries resounded with cries of
+ multitudes hired to renew those shouts of 'Vive le roi! vive la famille
+ royale!' which were once spontaneous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In one of the moments of our deepest affliction, multitudes were
+ thronging the gardens and enjoying the celebration of the acceptance of
+ the Constitution. What a contrast to the feelings of the unhappy inmates
+ of the palace! We may well say, that many an aching heart rides in a
+ carriage, while the pedestrian is happy!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The fetes on this occasion were very brilliant. The King, the Queen, and
+ the Royal Family were invited to take part in this first national
+ festival. They did so, by appearing in their carriage through the streets
+ of Paris, and the Champs Elysees, escorted only by the Parisian guard,
+ there being no other at the time. The mob was so great that the royal
+ carriage could only keep pace with the foot-passengers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Their Majesties were in general well received. The only exceptions were a
+ few of the Jacobin members of the Assembly, who, even on this occasion,
+ sought every means to afflict the hearts, and shock the ears, of Their
+ Majesties, by causing republican principles to be vociferated at the very
+ doors of their carriage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The good sense of the King and Queen prevented them from taking any
+ notice of these insults while in public; but no sooner had they returned
+ to the castle, than the Queen gave way to her grief at the premeditated
+ humiliation she was continually witnessing to the majesty of the
+ constitutional monarchy,&mdash;an insult less to the King himself than to
+ the nation, which had acknowledged him their Sovereign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the royal party entered the apartment, they found M. de Montmorin
+ with me, who had come to talk over these matters, secure that at such a
+ moment we should not be surprised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On hearing the Queen's observation, M. de Montmorin made no secret of the
+ necessity there was of Their Majesties dissembling their feelings; the
+ avowal of which, he said, would only tend to forward the triumph of
+ Jacobinism, 'which,' added he, 'I am sorry to see predominates in the
+ Assembly, and keeps in subordination all the public and private clubs.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'What!' exclaimed the Princesse Elizabeth, can that be possible, after
+ the King has accepted the Constitution?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Yes,' said the Queen; these people, my dear Elizabeth, wish for a
+ Constitution which sanctions the overthrow of him by whom it has been
+ granted.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'In this,' observed M. de Montmorin, 'as on some other points, I
+ perfectly agree with Your Majesty and the King, notwithstanding I have
+ been opposed by the whole Council and many other honest constituent
+ members, as well as the Cabinet of Vienna. And it is still, as it has ever
+ been, my firm opinion, that the King ought, previous to the acceptance of
+ the Constitution, to have been allowed, for the security of its future
+ organization, to have examined it maturely; which, not having been the
+ case, I foresee the dangerous situation in which His Majesty stands, and I
+ foresee, too, the non-promulgation of this charter. Malouet, who is an
+ honest man, is of my opinion. Duport, De Lameth, Barnave, and even La
+ Fayette are intimidated at the prevailing spirit of the Jacobins. They
+ were all with the best intentions for Your Majesty's present safety, for
+ the acceptance in toto, but without reflecting on the consequences which
+ must follow should the nation be deceived. But I, who am, and ever shall
+ be, attached to royalty, regret the step, though I am clear in my
+ impression as to the only course which ought to succeed it. The throne can
+ now only be made secure by the most unequivocal frankness of proceeding on
+ the part of the Crown. It is not enough to have conceded, it is necessary
+ also to show that the concession has some more solid origin than mere
+ expediency. It should be made with a good grace. Every motive of prudence,
+ as well as of necessity, requires that the monarch himself, and all those
+ most interested for his safety, should, neither in looks, manners, or
+ conversation, seem as if they felt a regret for what has been lost, but
+ rather appear satisfied with what has been bestowed.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'In that case,' said the Queen, 'we should lose all the support of the
+ royalists.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Every royalist, Madame,' replied he, 'who, at this critical crisis, does
+ not avow the sentiments of a constitutionalist, is a nail in the King's
+ untimely coffin.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Gracious God!' cried the Queen; 'that would destroy the only hope which
+ still flatters our drooping existence. Symptoms of moderation, or any
+ conciliatory measures we might be inclined to show, of our free will, to
+ the constitutionalists, would be immediately considered as a desertion of
+ our supporters, and treachery to ourselves, by the royalists.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'It would be placed entirely out of my power, Madame,' replied M. de
+ Montmorin, 'to make my attachment to the persons of Your Majesties
+ available for the maintenance of your rights, did I permit the factious,
+ overbearing party which prevails to see into my real zeal for the
+ restoration of the royal authority, so necessary for their own future
+ honour, security, and happiness. Could they see this, I should be accused
+ as a national traitor, or even worse, and sent out of the world by a
+ sudden death of ignominy, merely to glut their hatred of monarchy; and it
+ is therefore I dissemble.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I perfectly agree with you,' answered the Queen. That cruel moment when
+ I witnessed the humiliating state to which royalty had been reduced by the
+ constituents, when they placed the President of their Assembly upon a
+ level with the King; gave a plebeian, exercising his functions pro
+ tempore, prerogatives in the face of the nation to trample down hereditary
+ monarchy and legislative authority&mdash;that cruel moment discovered the
+ fatal truth. In the anguish of my heart, I told His Majesty that he had
+ outlived his kingly authority: Here she burst into tears, hiding her face
+ in her handkerchief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With the mildness of a saint, the angelic Princesse Elizabeth exclaimed,
+ turning to the King, 'Say something to the Queen, to calm her anguish!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'It will be of no avail,' said the King; 'her grief adds to my
+ affliction. I have been the innocent cause of her participating in this
+ total ruin, and as it is only her fortitude which has hitherto supported
+ me, with the same philosophical and religious resignation we must await
+ what fate destines!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Yes,' observed M. de Montmorin; 'but Providence has also given us the
+ rational faculty of opposing imminent danger, and by activity and exertion
+ obviating its consequences.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'In what manner, sir?' cried the Queen; 'tell me how this is to be
+ effected, and, with the King's sanction, I am ready to do anything to
+ avert the storm, which so loudly threatens the august head of the French
+ nation.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Vienna, Madame,' replied he; 'Vienna! Your Majesty's presence at Vienna
+ would do more for the King's safety, and the nation's future tranquillity,
+ than the most powerful army.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'We have long since suggested,' said the Princesse Elizabeth, 'that Her
+ Majesty should fly from France and take refuge&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Pardon me, Princess,' interrupted M. de Montmorin, 'it is not for refuge
+ solely I would have Her Majesty go thither. It is to give efficacy to the
+ love she bears the King and his family, in being there the powerful
+ advocate to check the fallacious march of a foreign army to invade us for
+ the subjection of the French nation. All these external attempts will
+ prove abortive, and only tend to exasperate the French to crime and
+ madness. Here I coincide with my coadjutors, Barnave, Duport, De Lameth,
+ etc. The principle on which the re-establishment of the order and
+ tranquillity of France depends, can be effected only by the
+ non-interference of foreign powers. Let them leave the rational resources
+ of our own internal force to re-establish our real interests, which every
+ honest Frenchman will strive to secure, if not thwarted by the threats and
+ menaces of those who have no right to interfere. Besides, Madame, they are
+ too far from us to afford immediate relief from the present dangers
+ internally surrounding us. These are the points of fearful import. It is
+ not the threats and menaces of a foreign army which can subdue a nation's
+ internal factions. These only rouse them to prolong disorders. National
+ commotions can be quelled only by national spirit, whose fury, once
+ exhausted on those who have aroused it, leave it free to look within, and
+ work a reform upon itself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "M. de Montmorin, after many other prudent exhortations and remarks, and
+ some advice with regard to the King and Queen's household, took his.
+ leave. He was no sooner gone than it was decided by the King that Marie
+ Antoinette, accompanied by myself and some other ladies, and the gentlemen
+ of the bedchamber, couriers, etc., should set out forthwith for Vienna.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The Princease de Lamballe sent me directions that very evening, some
+ time after midnight, to be at our place of rendezvous early in the
+ morning. I was overjoyed at the style of the note. It was the least
+ mysterious I had ever received from Her Highness. I inferred that some
+ fortunate event had occurred, with which, knowing how deeply I was
+ interested in the fate of her on whom my own so much depended, she was,
+ eager to make me acquainted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what was my surprise, on entering the church fixed on for the
+ meeting, to see the Queen's unknown confessor beckoning me to come to
+ him. I approached. He bade me wait till after Mass, when he had
+ something to communicate from the Princess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This confessor officiated in the place of the one whom Mirabeau had
+ seduced to take the constitutional oath. The Queen and Princess
+ confessed to him in the private apartment of Her Highness on the ground
+ floor; though it was never known where, or to whom they confessed, after
+ the treachery of the royal confessor. This faithful and worthy successor
+ was only known as "the known." I never heard who he was, or what was his
+ name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mass being over, I followed him into the sacristy. He told me that
+ the Princess, by Her Majesty's command, wished me to set off immediately
+ for Strasburg, and there await the arrival of Her Highness, to be in
+ readiness to follow her and Her Majesty for the copying of the cipher,
+ as they were going to Vienna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When everything, however, had been settled for their departure, which it
+ was agreed was to take place from the house of Count Fersen, the
+ resolution was suddenly changed; but I was desired to hold myself in
+ readiness for another journey.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "To say why this purpose was abandoned is unnecessary. The same fatality,
+ which renders every project unattainable, threw insuperable impediments,
+ in the way of this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION XII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The news of the death of the Emperor Leopold, in the midst of the other
+ distresses of Her Majesty, afflicted her very deeply; the more so because
+ she had every reason to think he fell a victim to the active part he took
+ in her favour. Externally, this monarch certainly demonstrated no very
+ great inclination to become a member of the coalition of Pilnitz. He
+ judged, very justly, that his brother Joseph had not only defeated his own
+ purposes by too openly and violently asserting the cause of their
+ unfortunate sister, but had destroyed himself, and, therefore, selected
+ what he deemed the safer and surer course of secret support. But all his
+ caution proved abortive. The Assembly knew his manoeuvres as well as he
+ himself did. He died an untimely death; and the Queen was assured, from
+ undoubted authority, that both Joseph and Leopold were poisoned in their
+ medicines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "During my short absence in England, the King's household had undergone a
+ complete change. When the emigration first commenced, a revolution in the
+ officers of the Court took place, but it was of a nature different from
+ this last; and, by destroying itself, left the field open to those who now
+ made the palace so intolerable. The first change to which I refer arose as
+ follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The greater part of the high offices being vacated by the secession of
+ the most distinguished nobility, many places fell to persons who had all
+ their lives occupied very subordinate situations. These, to retain their
+ offices, were indiscreet enough publicly to declare their dissent from all
+ the measures of the Assembly; an absurdity, which, at the commencement,
+ was encouraged by the Court, till the extreme danger of encouraging it was
+ discovered too late; and when once the error had been tolerated, and
+ rewarded, it was found impossible to check it, and stop these fatal
+ tongues. The Queen, who disliked the character of capriciousness, for a
+ long time allowed the injury to go on, by continuing about her those who
+ inflicted it. The error, which arose from delicacy, was imputed to a very
+ different and less honourable feeling, till the clamour became so great,
+ that she was obliged to yield to it, and dismiss those who had acted with
+ so much indiscretion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King and Queen did not dare now to express themselves on the subject
+ of the substitutes who were to succeed. Consequently they became
+ surrounded by persons placed by the Assembly as spies. The most
+ conspicuous situations were filled by the meanest persons&mdash;not, as in
+ the former case, by such as had risen, though by accident, still regularly
+ to their places&mdash;but by myrmidons of the prevailing power, to whom
+ Their Majesties were compelled to submit, because their rulers willed it.
+ All orders of nobility were abolished. All the Court ladies, not attached
+ to the King and Queen personally, abandoned the Court. No one would be
+ seen at the Queen's card-parties, once so crowded, and so much sought
+ after. We were entirely reduced to the family circle. The King, when weary
+ of playing with the Princesse Elizabeth and the Queen, would retire to his
+ apartments without uttering a word, not from sullenness, but overcome by
+ silent grief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen was occupied continually by the extensive correspondence she
+ had to carry on with the foreign Sovereigns, the Princes, and the
+ different parties. Her Majesty once gave me nearly thirty letters she had
+ written in the course of two days, which were forwarded by my cara
+ Inglesina&mdash;cara indeed! for she was of the greatest service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her Majesty slept very little. But her courage never slackened; and
+ neither her health, nor her general amiableness, was in the least
+ affected. Though few persons could be more sensible than herself to
+ poignant mortification at seeing her former splendour hourly decrease, yet
+ she never once complained. She was, in this respect, a real stoic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The palace was now become, what it still remains, like a police office.
+ It was filled with spies and runners. Every member of the Assembly, by
+ some means or other, had his respective emissary. All the antechambers
+ were peopled by inveterate Jacobins, by those whose greatest pleasure was
+ to insult the ears and minds of all whom they considered above themselves
+ in birth, or rank, or virtue. So completely were the decencies of life
+ abolished, that common respect was withheld even from the Royal Family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was determined to persevere in my usual line of conduct, of which the
+ King and Queen very much approved. Without setting up for a person of
+ importance, I saw all who wished for public or private audiences of Their
+ Majesties. I carried on no intrigues, and only discharged the humble
+ duties of my situation to the best of my ability for the general good, and
+ to secure, as far as possible, the comfort of Their Majesties, who really
+ were to be pitied, utterly friendless and forsaken as they were.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "M. Laporte, the head of the King's private police, came to me one day in
+ great consternation. He had discovered that schemes were on foot to poison
+ all the Royal Family, and that, in a private committee of the Assembly,
+ considerable pensions had been offered for the perpetration of the crime.
+ Its facility was increased, as far as regarded the Queen, by the habit to
+ which Her Majesty had accustomed herself of always keeping powdered sugar
+ at hand, which, without referring to her attendants, she would herself mix
+ with water and drink as a beverage whenever she was thirsty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I entreated M. Laporte not to disclose the conspiracy to the Queen till I
+ had myself had an opportunity of apprising her of his praiseworthy zeal.
+ He agreed, on condition that precautions should be immediately adopted
+ with respect to the persons who attended the kitchen. This, I assured him,
+ should be done on the instant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At the period I mention, all sorts of etiquette had been abolished. The
+ custom which prevented my appearing before the Queen, except at stated
+ hours, had long since been discontinued; and, as all the other individuals
+ who came before or after the hours of service were eyed with distrust, and
+ I remained the only one whose access to Their Majesties was free and
+ unsuspected, though it was very early when M. Laporte called, I thought it
+ my duty to hasten immediately to my royal mistress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I found her in bed. 'Has Your Majesty breakfasted?' said I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'No,' replied she; 'will you breakfast with me?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Most certainly,' said I, 'if Your Majesty will insure me against being
+ poisoned.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At the word poison Her Majesty started up and looked at me very
+ earnestly, and with a considerable degree of alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I am only joking,' continued I; 'I will breakfast with Your Majesty if
+ you will give me tea.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tea was presently brought. 'In this,' said I, 'there is no danger.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'What do you mean?' asked Her Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I am ordered,' replied I, taking up a lump of sugar, 'not to drink
+ chocolate, or coffee, or anything with powdered sugar. These are times
+ when caution alone can prevent our being sent out of the world with all
+ our sins upon our heads.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I am very glad to hear you say so; for you have reason to be particular,
+ after what you once so cruelly suffered from poison. But what has brought
+ that again into your mind just now?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Well, then, since Your Majesty approves of my circumspection, allow me
+ to say I think it advisable that we should, at a moment like this
+ especially, abstain from all sorts of food by which our existence may be
+ endangered. For my own part, I mean to give up all made dishes, and
+ confine myself to the simplest diet.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Come, come, Princess,' interrupted Her Majesty; 'there is more in this
+ than you wish me to understand. Fear not. I am prepared for anything that
+ may be perpetrated against my own life, but let me preserve from peril my
+ King, my husband, and my children!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My feelings prevented me from continuing to dissemble. I candidly
+ repeated all I had heard from M. Laporte.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her Majesty instantly rang for one of her confidential women. 'Go to the
+ King,' said Her Majesty to the attendant, 'and if you find him alone, beg
+ him to come to me at once; but, if there are any of the guards or other
+ persons within hearing, merely say that the Princesse de Lamballe is with
+ me and is desirous of the loan of a newspaper.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King's guard, and indeed most of those about him, were no better than
+ spies, and this caution in the Queen was necessary to prevent any jealousy
+ from being excited by the sudden message.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the messenger left us by ourselves, I observed to Her Majesty that
+ it would be imprudent to give the least publicity to the circumstance, for
+ were it really mere suspicion in the head of the police, its disclosure
+ might only put this scheme into some miscreant's head, and tempt him to
+ realize it. The Queen said I was perfectly right, and it should be kept
+ secret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Our ambassadress was fortunate enough to reach the King's apartment
+ unobserved, and to find him unattended, so he received the message
+ forthwith. On leaving the apartment, however, she was noticed and watched.
+ She immediately went out of the Tuileries as if sent to make purchases,
+ and some time afterwards returned with some trifling articles in her hand.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [This incident will give the reader an idea of the cruel situation in
+ which the first Sovereigns of Europe then stood; and how much they
+ appreciated the few subjects who devoted themselves to thwart and
+ mitigate the tyranny practised by the Assembly over these illustrious
+ victims. I can speak from my own experience on these matters. From the
+ time I last accompanied the Princesse de Lamballe to Paris till I left
+ it in 1792, what between milliners, dressmakers, flower girls, fancy toy
+ sellers, perfumers, hawkers of jewellery, purse and gaiter makers, etc.,
+ I had myself assumed twenty different characters, besides that of a
+ drummer boy, sometimes blackening my face to enter the palace unnoticed,
+ and often holding conversations analogous to the sentiments of the
+ wretches who were piercing my heart with the remarks circumstances
+ compelled me to encourage. Indeed, I can safely say I was known, in some
+ shape or other, to almost everybody, but to no one in my real character,
+ except the Princess by whom I was so graciously employed.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "The moment the King appeared, 'Sire,' exclaimed Her Majesty, 'the
+ Assembly, tired of endeavouring to wear us to death by slow torment, have
+ devised an expedient to relieve their own anxiety and prevent us from
+ putting them to further inconvenience.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'What do you mean?' said the King. I repeated my conversation with M.
+ Laporte. 'Bah! bah!' resumed His Majesty, 'They never will attempt it.
+ They have fixed on other methods of getting rid of us. They have not
+ policy enough to allow our deaths to be ascribed to accident. They are too
+ much initiated in great crimes already.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'But,' asked the Queen, 'do you not think it highly necessary to make use
+ of every precaution, when we are morally sure of the probability of such a
+ plot?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Most certainly! otherwise we should be, in the eyes of God, almost
+ guilty of suicide. But how prevent it? surrounded as we are by persons
+ who, being seduced to believe that we are plotting against them, feel
+ justified in the commission of any crime under the false idea of
+ self-defence!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'We may prevent it,' replied Her Majesty, 'by abstaining from everything
+ in our diet wherein poison can be introduced; and that we can manage
+ without making any stir by the least change either in the kitchen
+ arrangements or in our own, except, indeed, this one. Luckily, as we are
+ restricted in our attendants, we have a fair excuse for dumb waiters,
+ whereby it will be perfectly easy to choose or discard without exciting
+ suspicion.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This, consequently, was the course agreed upon; and every possible means,
+ direct and indirect, was put into action to secure the future safety of
+ the Royal Family and prevent the accomplishment of the threat of poison."
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [On my seeing the Princess next morning, Her Highness condescended to
+ inform me of the danger to which herself and the Royal Family were
+ exposed. She requested I would send my man servant to the persons who
+ served me, to fill a moderate-sized hamper with wine, salt, chocolate,
+ biscuits, and liquors, and take it to her apartment, at the Pavilion of
+ Flora, to be used as occasion required. All the fresh bread and butter
+ which was necessary I got made for nearly a fortnight by persons whom I
+ knew at a distance from the palace, whither I always conveyed it myself.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION XIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Editor in continuation:
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am again, for this and the following chapter, compelled to resume the
+ pen in my own person, and quit the more agreeable office of a transcriber
+ for my illustrious patroness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have already mentioned that the Princesse de Lamballe, on first
+ returning from England to France, anticipated great advantages from the
+ recall of the emigrants. The desertion of France by so many of the
+ powerful could not but be a deathblow to the prosperity of the monarchy.
+ There was no reason for these flights at the time they began. The
+ fugitives only set fire to the four quarters of the globe against their
+ country. It was natural enough that the servants whom they had left behind
+ to keep their places should take advantage of their masters'
+ pusillanimity, and make laws to exclude those who had, uncalled for,
+ resigned the sway into bolder and more active hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not mean to impeach the living for the dead; but, when we see those
+ bearing the lofty titles of Kings and Princesses, escaping with their
+ wives and families, from an only brother and sister with helpless infant
+ children, at the hour of danger, we cannot help wishing for a little
+ plebeian disinterestedness in exalted minds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have travelled Europe twice, and I have never seen any woman with that
+ indescribable charm of person, manner, and character, which distinguished
+ Marie Antoinette. This is in itself a distinction quite sufficient to
+ detach friends from its possessor through envy. Besides, she was Queen of
+ France, the woman of highest rank in a most capricious, restless and
+ libertine nation. The two Princesses placed nearest to her, and who were
+ the first to desert her, though both very much inferior in personal and
+ mental qualifications, no doubt, though not directly, may have entertained
+ some anticipations of her place. Such feelings are not likely to decrease
+ the distaste, which results from comparisons to our own disadvantage. It
+ is, therefore, scarcely to be wondered at, that those nearest to the
+ throne should be least attached to those who fill it. How little do such
+ persons think that the grave they are thus insensibly digging may prove
+ their own! In this case it only did not by a miracle. What the effect of
+ the royal brothers' and the nobility's remaining in France would have been
+ we can only conjecture. That their departure caused, great and irreparable
+ evils we know; and we have good reason to think they caused the greatest.
+ Those who abandon their houses on fire, silently give up their claims to
+ the devouring element. Thus the first emigration kindled the French flame,
+ which, though for a while it was got under by a foreign stream, was never
+ completely, extinguished till subdued by its native current.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unfortunate Louis XVI. and Marie Antoinette ceased to be Sovereigns
+ from the period they were ignominiously dragged to their jail at the
+ Tuileries. From this moment they were abandoned to the vengeance of
+ miscreants, who were disgracing the nation with unprovoked and useless
+ murders. But from this moment also the zeal of the Princesses Elizabeth
+ and de Lamballe became redoubled. Out of one hundred individuals and more,
+ male and female, who had been exclusively occupied about the person of
+ Marie Antoinette, few, excepting this illustrious pair, and the
+ inestimable Clery, remained devoted to the last. The saint-like virtues of
+ these Princesses, malice itself has not been able to tarnish. Their love
+ and unalterable friendship became the shield of their unfortunate
+ Sovereigns, and their much injured relatives, till the dart struck their
+ own faithful bosoms. Princes of the earth! here is a lesson of greatness
+ from the great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarcely had the Princesse de Lamballe been reinstated in the Pavilion of
+ Flora at the Tuileries, when, by the special royal command, and in Her
+ Majesty's presence, she wrote to most of the nobility, entreating their
+ return to France. She urged them, by every argument, that there was no
+ other means of saving them and their country from the horrors impending
+ over them and France, should they persevere in their pernicious absence.
+ In some of these letters, which I copied, there was written on the margin,
+ in the Queen's hand, "I am at her elbow, and repeat the necessity of your
+ returning, if you love your King, your religion, your Government, and your
+ country. Marie Antoinette. Return! Return! Return!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among these letters, I remember a large envelope directed to the Duchesse
+ de Brisac, then residing alternately at the baths of Albano and the
+ mineral waters at Valdagno, near Vicenza, in the Venetian States. Her
+ Grace was charged to deliver letters addressed to Her Majesty's royal
+ brothers, the Comte de Provence, and the Comte d'Artois, who were then
+ residing, I think, at Stra, on the Brenta, in company with Madame de
+ Polcatre, Diane de Polignac, and others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days after, I took another envelope, addressed to the Count Dufour,
+ who was at Turin. It contained letters for M. and Madame de Polignac, M.
+ and Madame de Guiche Grammont, the King's aunts at Rome, and the two
+ Princesses of Piedmont, wives of His Majesty's brothers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If, therefore, a judgment can be formed from the impressions of the Royal
+ Family, who certainly must have had ample information with respect to the
+ spirit which predominated at Paris at that period, could the nobility have
+ been prevailed on to have obeyed the mandates of the Queen and prayers and
+ invocations of the Princess, there can be no doubt that much bloodshed
+ would have been spared, and the page of history never have been sullied by
+ the atrocious names which now stand there as beacons of human infamy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The storms were now so fearfully increasing that the King and Queen, the
+ Duc de Penthievre, the Count Fersen, the Princesse Elizabeth, the Duchesse
+ d'Orleans, and all the friends of the Princesse de Lamballe, once more
+ united in anxious wishes for her to quit France. Even the Pope himself
+ endeavoured to prevail upon Her Highness to join the royal aunts at Rome.
+ To all these applications she replied, "I have nothing to reproach myself
+ with. If my inviolable duty and unalterable attachment to my Sovereigns,
+ who are my relations and my friends; if love for my dear father and for my
+ adopted country are crimes, in the face of God and the world I confess my
+ guilt, and shall die happy if in such a cause!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duc de Penthievre, who loved her as well as his own child, the
+ Duchesse d'Orleans, was too good a man, and too conscientious a Prince,
+ not to applaud the disinterested firmness of his beloved daughter-in-law;
+ yet, foreseeing and dreading the fatal consequence which must result from
+ so much virtue at a time when vice alone predominated, unknown to the
+ Princesse de Lamballe, he interested the Court of France to write to the
+ Court of Sardinia to entreat that the King, as head of her family, would
+ use his good offices in persuading the Princess to leave the scenes of
+ commotion, in which she was so much exposed, and return to her native
+ country. The King of Sardinia, her family, and her particular friend, the
+ Princess of Piedmont, supplicated ineffectually. The answer of Her
+ Highness to the King, at Turin, was as follows:
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "SIRE, AND MOST AUGUST COUSIN,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not recollect that any of our illustrious ancestors of the house
+ of Savoy, before or since the great hero Charles Emmanuel, of immortal
+ memory, ever dishonoured or tarnished their illustrious names with
+ cowardice. In leaving the Court of France at this awful crisis, I should
+ be the first. Can Your Majesty pardon my presumption in differing from
+ your royal counsel? The King, Queen, and every member of the Royal
+ Family of France, both from the ties of blood and policy of States,
+ demand our united efforts in their defence. I cannot swerve from my
+ determination of never quitting them, especially at a moment when they
+ are abandoned by every one of their former attendants, except myself. In
+ happier days Your Majesty may command my obedience; but, in the present
+ instance, and given up as is the Court of France to their most atrocious
+ persecutors, I must humbly insist on being guided by my own decision.
+ During the most brilliant period of the reign of Marie Antoinette, I was
+ distinguished by the royal favour and bounty. To abandon her in
+ adversity, Sire, would stain my character, and that of my illustrious
+ family, for ages to come, with infamy and cowardice, much more to be
+ dreaded than the most cruel death."
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ Similar answers were returned to all those of her numerous friends and
+ relatives, who were so eager to shelter her from the dangers threatening
+ Her Highness and the Royal Family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Highness was persuaded, however, to return once more to England, under
+ the pretext of completing the mission she had so successfully began; but
+ it is very clear that neither the King or Queen had any serious idea of
+ her succeeding, and that their only object was to get her away from the
+ theatre of disaster. Circumstances had so completely changed for the
+ worst, that, though Her Highness was received with great kindness, her
+ mission was no longer listened to. The policy of England shrunk from
+ encouraging twenty thousand French troops to be sent in a body to the West
+ Indies, and France was left to its fate. A conversation with Mr. Burke, in
+ which the disinclination of England to interfere was distinctly owned,
+ created that deep-rooted grief and apprehension in the mind of the Queen
+ from which Her Majesty never recovered. The Princesse de Lamballe was the
+ only one in her confidence. It is well known that the King of England
+ greatly respected the personal virtues of Their French Majesties; but upon
+ the point of business, both King and Ministers were now become ambiguous
+ and evasive. Her Highness, therefore, resolved to return. It had already
+ been whispered that she had left France, only to save herself, like the
+ rest; and she would no longer remain under so slanderous an imputation.
+ She felt, too, the necessity of her friendship to her royal mistress.
+ Though the Queen of England, by whom Her Highness was very much esteemed,
+ and many other persons of the first consequence in the British nation,
+ foreseeing the inevitable fate of the Royal Family, and of all their
+ faithful adherents, anxiously entreated her not to quit England, yet she
+ became insensible to every consideration as to her own situation and only
+ felt the isolated one of her august Sovereign, her friend, and
+ benefactress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION XIV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Editor in continuation:
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Events seemed molded expressly to produce the state of feeling which
+ marked that disastrous day, the 20th of June, 1792. It frequently happens
+ that nations, like individuals, rush wildly upon the very dangers they
+ apprehend, and select such courses as invite what they are most solicitous
+ to avoid. So it was with everything preceding this dreadful day. By a
+ series of singular occurrences I did not witness its horrors, though in
+ some degree their victim. Not to detain my readers unnecessarily, I will
+ proceed directly to the accident which withdrew me from the scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The apartment of the Princesse de Lamballe, in the Pavilion of Flora,
+ looked from one side upon the Pont Royal. On the day of which I speak, a
+ considerable quantity of combustibles had been thrown from the bridge into
+ one of her rooms. The Princess, in great alarm, sent instantly for me. She
+ desired to have my English man servant, if he were not afraid, secreted in
+ her room, while she herself withdrew to another part of the palace, till
+ the extent of the intended mischief could be ascertained. I assured Her
+ Highness that I was not only ready to answer for my servant, but would
+ myself remain with him, as he always went armed, and I was so certain of
+ his courage and fidelity that I could not hesitate even to trust my life
+ in his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For God's sake, 'mia cara'," exclaimed the Princess, "do not risk your
+ own safety, if you have any value for my friendship. I desire you not to
+ go near the Pavilion of Flora. Your servant's going is quite sufficient.
+ Never again let me hear such a proposition. What! after having hitherto
+ conducted yourself so punctually, would you, by one rash act, devote
+ yourself to ruin, and deprive us of your valuable services?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I begged Her Highness would pardon the ardour of the dutiful zeal I felt
+ for her in the moment of danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes," continued she; "that is all very well; but this is not the
+ first time I have been alarmed at your too great intrepidity; and if ever
+ I hear of your again attempting to commit yourself so wantonly, I will
+ have you sent to Turin immediately, there to remain till you have
+ recovered your senses. I always thought English heads cool; but I suppose
+ your residence in France has changed the national character of yours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once more, with tears in my eyes, I begged her forgiveness, and, on my
+ knees, implored that she would not send me away in the hour of danger.
+ After having so long enjoyed the honour of her confidence, I trusted she
+ would overlook my fault, particularly as it was the pure emanation of my
+ resentment at any conspiracy against one I so dearly loved; and to whom I
+ had been under so many obligations, that the very idea of being deprived
+ of such a benefactress drove me frantic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Highness burst into tears. "I know your heart," exclaimed she; "but I
+ also know too well our situation, and it is that which makes me tremble
+ for the consequences which must follow your overstepping the bounds so
+ necessary to be observed by all of us at this horrid period." And then she
+ called me again her cars 'Inglesina', and graciously condescended to
+ embrace me, and bathed my face with her tears, in token of her
+ forgiveness, and bade me sit down and compose myself, and weep no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarcely was I seated, when we were both startled by deafening shouts for
+ the head of Madame Veto, the name they gave the poor unfortunate Queen. An
+ immense crowd of cannibals and hired ruffians were already in the
+ Tuileries, brandishing all sorts of murderous weapons, and howling for
+ blood! My recollections from this moment are very indistinct. I know that
+ in an instant the apartment was filled; that the Queen, the Princesse
+ Elizabeth, all the attendants, even the King, I believe, appeared there. I
+ myself received a wound upon my hand in warding a blow from my face; and
+ in the turmoil of the scene, and of the blow, I fainted, and was conveyed
+ by some humane person to a place of safety, in the upper part of the
+ palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus deprived of my senses for several hours, I was spared the agony of
+ witnessing the scenes of horror that succeeded. For two or three days I
+ remained in a state of so much exhaustion and alarm, that when the
+ Princess came to me I did not know her, nor even where I was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as I was sufficiently recovered, places were taken for me and
+ another person in one of the common diligences, by which I was conveyed to
+ Passy, where the Princess came to me in the greatest confusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My companion in the palace was the widow of one of the Swiss guards, who
+ had been murdered on the 6th of October, in defending the Queen's
+ apartment at Versailles. The poor woman had been herself protected by Her
+ Majesty, and accompanied me by the express order of the Princesse de
+ Lamballe. What the Princess said to her on departing, I know not, for I
+ only caught the words "general insurrection," on hearing which the
+ afflicted woman fell into a fit. To me, Her Highness merely exclaimed, "Do
+ not come to Paris till you hear from me;" and immediately set off to
+ return to the Tuileries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, as usual, my courage soon got the better of my strength, and of
+ every consideration of personal safety. On the third day, I proposed to
+ the person who took care of me that we should both walk out together, and,
+ if there appeared no symptoms of immediate danger, it was agreed that we
+ might as well get into one of the common conveyances, and proceed
+ forthwith to Paris; for I could no longer repress my anxiety to learn what
+ was going on there, and the good creature who was with me was no less
+ impatient.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we got into a diligence, I felt the dread of another severe lecture
+ like the last, and thought it best not to incur fresh blame by new
+ imprudence. I therefore told the driver to set us down on the high road
+ near Paris leading to the Bois de Boulogne. But before we got so far, the
+ woods resounded with the howling of mobs, and we heard, "Vive le roi"
+ vociferated, mingled with "Down with the King,"&mdash;"Down with the
+ Queen;" and, what was still more horrible, the two parties were in actual
+ bloody strife, and the ground was strewn with the bodies of dead men,
+ lying like slaughtered sheep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was fortunate that we were the only persons in the vehicle. The driver,
+ observing our extreme agitation, turned round to us. "Nay, nay," cried he;
+ "do not alarm yourselves. It is only the constitutionalists and the
+ Jacobins fighting against each other. I wish the devil had them both."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was evident, however, that, though the man was desirous of quieting our
+ apprehensions, he was considerably disturbed by his own; for though he
+ acknowledged he had a wife and children in Paris, who he hoped were safe,
+ still he dared not venture to proceed, but said, if we wished to be driven
+ back, he would take us to any place we liked, out of Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our anxiety to know what was going forward at the Tuileries was now become
+ intolerable; and the more so, from the necessity we felt of restraining
+ our feelings. At last, however, we were in some degree relieved from this
+ agony of reserve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God knows," exclaimed the driver, "what will be the consequence of all
+ this bloodshed! The poor King and Queen are greatly to be pitied!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This ejaculation restored our courage, and we said he might drive us
+ wherever he chose out of the sight of those horrors; and it was at length
+ settled that he should take us to Passy. "Oh," cried he, "if you will
+ allow me, I will take you to my father's house there; for you seem more
+ dead than alive, both of you, and ought to go where you can rest in quiet
+ and safety."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My companion, who was a German, now addressed me in that language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "German!" exclaimed the driver on hearing her. "German! Why, I am a German
+ myself, and served the good King, who is much to be pitied, for many
+ years; and when I was wounded, the Queen, God bless her! set me up in the
+ world, as I was made an invalid; and I have ever since been enabled to
+ support my family respectably. D&mdash;&mdash; the Assembly! I shall never
+ be a farthing the better for them!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh," replied I, "then I suppose you are not a Jacobin?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The driver, with a torrent of curses, then began execrating the very name
+ of Jacobin. This emboldened me to ask him when he had left Paris. He
+ replied, "Only this very morning," and added that the Assembly had shut
+ the gates of the Tuileries under the pretence of preventing the King and
+ Queen from being assassinated. "But that is all a confounded lie,"
+ continued he, "invented to keep out the friends of the Royal Family. But,
+ God knows, they are now so fallen, they have few such left to be turned
+ away!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am more enraged," pursued he, "at the ingratitude of the nobility than
+ I am at these hordes of bloodthirsty plunderers, for we all know that the
+ nobility owe everything to the King. Why do they not rise en masse to
+ shield the Royal Family from these bloodhounds? Can they imagine they will
+ be spared if the King should be murdered? I have no patience with them!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I then asked him our fare. "Two livres is the fare, but you shall not pay
+ anything. I see plainly, ladies, that you are not what you assume to be."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My good man," replied I, "we are not; and therefore take this louis d'or
+ for your trouble."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He caught my hand and pressed it to his lips, exclaiming, "I never in my
+ life knew a man who was faithful to his King, that God did not provide
+ for."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then took us to Passy, but advised us not to remain at the place where
+ we had been staying; and fortunate enough it was for us that we did not,
+ for the house was set on fire and plundered by a rebel mob very soon
+ after.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told the driver how much I was obliged to him for his services, and he
+ seemed delighted when I promised to give him proofs of my confidence in
+ his fidelity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If," said I, "you can find out my servant whom I left in Paris, I will
+ give you another louis d'or." I was afraid, at first, to mention where he
+ was to look for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If he be not dead," replied the driver, "I will find him out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What!" cried I, "even though he should be at the Tuileries?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, madame, I am one of the national guard. I have only to put on my
+ uniform to be enabled to go to any part of the palace I please. Tell me
+ his name, and where you think it likely he may be found, and depend upon
+ it I will bring him to you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps," continued he, "it is your husband disguised as a servant; but
+ no matter. Give me a clue, and I'll warrant you he shall tell you the rest
+ himself by this time to-morrow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, then," replied I, "he is in the Pavilion of Flora."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What, with the Princesse de Lamballe? Oh, I would go through fire and
+ water for that good Princess! She has done me the honour to stand
+ godmother to one of my children, and allows her a pension."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I took him at his word. We changed our quarters to his father's house, a
+ very neat little cottage, about a quarter of a mile from the town. He
+ afterwards rendered me many services in going to and fro from Passy to
+ Paris; and, as he promised, brought me my servant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the poor fellow arrived, his arm was in a sling. He had been wounded
+ by a musket shot, received in defence of the Princess. The history of his
+ disaster was this:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the night of the riot, as he was going from the Pont Royal to the
+ apartment of Her Highness, he detected a group of villains under her
+ windows. Six of them were attempting to enter by a ladder. He fired, and
+ two fell. While he was reloading, the others shot at him. Had he not, in
+ the flurry of the moment, fired both his pistols at the same time, he
+ thinks he should not have been wounded, but might have punished the
+ assailant. One of the men, he said, could have been easily taken by the
+ national guard, who so glaringly encouraged the escape that he could
+ almost swear the guard was a party concerned. The loss of blood had so
+ exhausted him that he could not pursue the offender himself, whom
+ otherwise he could have taken without any difficulty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the employing of my servant had only been proposed, and the sudden
+ interruption of my conversation with Her Highness by the riot had
+ prevented my ever communicating the project to him, I wondered how he got
+ into the business, or ascertained so soon that the apartment of the
+ Princess was in danger. He explained that he never had heard of its being
+ so; but my own coachman having left me at the palace that day, and not
+ hearing of me for some time, had driven home, and, fearing that my not
+ returning arose from something which had happened, advised him to go to
+ the Pont Royal and hear what he could learn, as there was a report of many
+ persons having been murdered and thrown over the bridge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My man took the advice, and armed himself to be ready in case of attack.
+ It was between one and two o'clock after midnight when he went. The first
+ objects he perceived were these miscreants attempting to scale the palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He told me that the Queen had been most grossly insulted; that the gates
+ of the Tuileries had been shut in consequence; that a small part alone
+ remained open to the public, who were kept at their distance by a national
+ ribbon, which none could pass without being instantly arrested. This had
+ prevented his apprising the Princess of the attempt which he had
+ accidentally defeated, and which he wished me to communicate to her
+ immediately. I did so by letter, which my good driver carried to Paris,
+ and delivered safe into the hands of our benefactress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The surprise of the Princess on hearing from me, and her pleasure at my
+ good fortune in finding by accident such means, baffles all description.
+ Though she was at the time overwhelmed with the imminent dangers which
+ threatened her, yet she still found leisure to show her kindness to those
+ who were doing their best, though in vain, to serve her. The following
+ letter, which she sent me in reply, written amidst all the uneasiness it
+ describes, will speak for her more eloquently than my praises:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can understand your anxiety. It was well for you that you were
+ unconscious of the dreadful scenes which were passing around you on that
+ horrid day. The Princesse de Tarente, Madame de Tourzel, Madame de Mockau,
+ and all the other ladies of the household owed the safety of their lives
+ to one of the national guards having given his national cockade to the
+ Queen. Her Majesty placed it on her head, unperceived by the mob. One of
+ the gentlemen of the King's wardrobe provided the King and the Princesse
+ Elizabeth with the same impenetrable shield. Though the cannibals came for
+ murder, I could not but admire the enthusiastic deference that was shown
+ to this symbol of authority, which instantly paralyzed, the daggers
+ uplifted for our extermination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Merlin de Thionville was the stoic head of this party. The Princesse
+ Elizabeth having pointed him out to me, I ventured to address him
+ respecting the dangerous situation to which the Royal Family were daily
+ exposed. I flattered him upon his influence over the majority of the
+ faubourgs, to which only we could look for the extinction of these
+ disorders. He replied that the despotism of the Court had set a bad
+ example to the people; that he felt for the situation of the royal party
+ as individuals, but he felt much more for the safety of the French nation,
+ who were in still greater danger than Their Majesties had to dread, from
+ the Austrian faction, by which a foreign army had been encouraged to
+ invade the territory of France, where they were now waiting the
+ opportunity of annihilating French liberty forever!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To this Her Majesty replied, 'When the deputies of the Assembly have
+ permitted, nay, I may say, encouraged this open violation of the King's
+ asylum, and, by their indifference to the safety of all those who surround
+ us, have sanctioned the daily insults to which we have been, and still
+ are, exposed, it is not to be wondered, at that all Sovereigns should
+ consider it their interest to make common cause with us, to crush internal
+ commotions, levelled, not only against the throne, and the persons of the
+ Sovereign and his family, but against the very principle of monarchy
+ itself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here the King, though much intimidated for the situation of the Queen and
+ his family, for whose heads the wretches were at that very moment howling
+ in their ears, took up the conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'These cruel facts,' said he, 'and the menacing situation you even now
+ witness, fully justify our not rejecting foreign aid, though God knows how
+ deeply I deplore the necessity of such a cruel resource! But, when all
+ internal measures of conciliation have been trodden under foot, and the
+ authorities, who ought to check it and protect us from these cruel
+ outrages, are only occupied in daily fomenting the discord between us and
+ our subjects; though a forlorn hope, what other hope is there of safety? I
+ foresee the drift of all these commotions, and am resigned; but what will
+ become of this misguided nation, when the head of it shall be destroyed?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here the King, nearly choked by his feelings, was compelled to pause for
+ a moment, and he then proceeded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I should not feel it any sacrifice to give up the guardianship of the
+ nation, could I, in so doing, insure its future tranquillity; but I
+ foresee that my blood, like that of one of my unhappy brother Sovereigns,&mdash;[Charles
+ the First, of England.]&mdash;will only open the flood-gates of human
+ misery, the torrent of which, swelled with the best blood of France, will
+ deluge this once peaceful realm.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This, as well as I can recollect, is the substance of what passed at the
+ castle on this momentous day. Our situation was extremely doubtful, and
+ the noise and horrid riots were at times so boisterous, that frequently we
+ could not, though so near them, distinguish a word the King and Queen
+ said; and yet, whenever the leaders of these organized ruffians spoke or
+ threatened, the most respectful stillness instantly prevailed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I weep in silence for misfortunes, which I fear are inevitable! The King,
+ the Queen, the Princesse Elizabeth and myself, with many others under this
+ unhappy roof, have never ventured to undress or sleep in bed, till last
+ night. None of us any longer reside on the ground floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By the very manly exertions of some of the old officers incorporated in
+ the national army, the awful riot I have described was overpowered, and
+ the mob, with difficulty, dispersed. Among these, I should particularize
+ Generals de Vomenil, de Mandat, and de Roederer. Principally by their
+ means the interior of the Tuileries was at last cleared, though partial
+ mobs, such as you have often witnessed, still subsist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am thus particular in giving you a full account of this last
+ revolutionary commotion, that your prudence may still keep you at a
+ distance from the vortex. Continue where you are, and tell your man
+ servant how much I am obliged to him, and, at the same time, how much I am
+ grieved at his being wounded! I knew nothing of the affair but from your
+ letter and your faithful messenger. He is an old pensioner of mine, and a
+ good honest fellow. You may depend on him. Serve yourself, through him, in
+ communicating with me. Though he has had a limited education, he is not
+ wanting in intellect. Remember that honesty, in matters of such vital
+ import, is to be trusted before genius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My apartment appears like a barrack, like a bear garden, like anything
+ but what it was! Numbers of valuable things have been destroyed, numbers
+ carried off. Still, notwithstanding all the horrors of these last days, it
+ delights me to be able to tell you that no one in the service of the Royal
+ Family failed in duty at this dreadful crisis. I think we may firmly rely
+ on the inviolable attachment of all around us. No jealousy, no
+ considerations of etiquette, stood in the way of their exertions to show
+ themselves worthy of the situations they hold. The Queen showed the
+ greatest intrepidity during the whole of these trying scenes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At present, I can say no more. Petion, the Mayor of Paris, has just been
+ announced; and, I believe, he wishes for an audience of Her Majesty,
+ though he never made his appearance during the whole time of the riots in
+ the palace. Adieu, mia cara Inglesina!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The receipt of this letter, however it might have affected me to hear what
+ Her Highness suffered, in common with the rest of the unfortunate royal
+ inmates of the Tuileries, gave me extreme pleasure from the assurance it
+ contained of the firmness of those nearest to the sufferers. I was also
+ sincerely gratified in reflecting on the probity and disinterested
+ fidelity of this worthy man, which contrasted him, so strikingly and so
+ advantageously to himself, with many persons of birth and education, whose
+ attachment could not stand the test of the trying scenes of the
+ Revolution, which made them abandon and betray, where they had sworn an
+ allegiance to which they were doubly bound by gratitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My man servant was attended, and taken the greatest care of. The Princess
+ never missed a day in sending to inquire after his health; and, on his
+ recovery, the Queen herself not only graciously condescended to see him,
+ but, besides making him a valuable present, said many flattering and
+ obliging things of his bravery and disinterestedness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I should scarcely have deemed these particulars honourable as they are to
+ the feelings of the illustrious personages from whom they proceeded&mdash;worth
+ mentioning in a work of this kind, did they not give indications of
+ character rarely to be met with (and, in their case, how shamefully
+ rewarded!), from having occurred at a crisis when their minds were
+ occupied in affairs of such deep importance, and amidst the appalling
+ dangers which hourly threatened their own existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Majesty's correspondence with foreign Courts had been so much
+ increased by these scenes of horror, especially her correspondence with
+ her relations in Italy, that, ere long, I was sent for back to Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION XV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Journal of the Princess resumed and concluded:
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The insurrection of the 20th of June, and the uncertain state of the
+ safety of the Royal Family, menaced as it was by almost daily riots,
+ induced a number of well-disposed persons to prevail on General La Fayette
+ to leave his army and come to Paris, and there personally remonstrate
+ against these outrages. Had he been sincere he would have backed the
+ measure by appearing at the head of his army, then well-disposed, as
+ Cromwell did when he turned out the rogues who were seeking the Lord
+ through the blood of their King, and put the keys in his pocket. Violent
+ disorders require violent remedies. With an army and a few pieces of
+ cannon at the door of the Assembly, whose members were seeking the aid of
+ the devil, for the accomplishment of their horrors, he might, as was done
+ when the same scene occurred in England in 1668, by good management; have
+ averted the deluge of blood. But, by appearing before the Assembly
+ isolated, without 'voila mon droit,' which the King of Prussia had had
+ engraven on his cannon, he lost the opinion of all parties.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [In this instance the general grossly committed himself, in the opinion
+ of every impartial observer of his conduct. He should never have shown
+ himself in the capital, but at the head of his army. France,
+ circumstanced as it was, torn by intestine commotion, was only to be
+ intimidated by the sight of a popular leader at the head of his forces.
+ Usurped authority can only be quashed by the force of legitimate
+ authority. La Fayette being the only individual in France that in
+ reality possessed such an authority, not having availed himself at a
+ crisis like the one in which he was called upon to act, rendered his
+ conduct doubtful, and all his intended operations suspicious to both
+ parties, whether his feelings were really inclined to prop up the fallen
+ kingly authority, or his newly-acquired republican principles prompted
+ him to become the head of the democratical party, for no one can see
+ into the hearts of men; his popularity from that moment ceased to exist.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "La Fayette came to the palace frequently, but the King would never see
+ him. He was obliged to return, with the additional mortification of having
+ been deceived in his expected support from the national guard of Paris,
+ whose pay had been secretly trebled by the National Assembly, in order to
+ secure them to itself. His own safety, therefore, required that he should
+ join the troops under his command. He left many persons in whom he thought
+ he could confide; among whom were some who came to me one day requesting I
+ would present them to the Queen without loss of time, as a man condemned
+ to be shot had confessed to his captain that there was a plot laid to
+ murder Her Majesty that very night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hastened to the royal apartment, without mentioning the motive; but
+ some such catastrophe was no more than what we incessantly expected, from
+ the almost hourly changes of the national guard, for the real purpose of
+ giving easy access to all sorts of wretches to the very rooms of the
+ unfortunate Queen, in order to furnish opportunities for committing the
+ crime with impunity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After I had seen the Queen, the applicants were introduced, and, in my
+ presence, a paper was handed by them to Her Majesty. At the moment she
+ received it, I was obliged to leave her for the purpose of watching an
+ opportunity for their departure unobserved. These precautions were
+ necessary with regard to every person who came to us in the palace,
+ otherwise the jealousy of the Assembly and its emissaries and the national
+ guard of the interior might have been alarmed, and we should have been
+ placed under express and open surveillance. The confusion created by the
+ constant change of guard, however, stood us in good stead in this
+ emergency. Much passing and repassing took place unheeded in the bustle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the visitors had departed, and Her Majesty at one window of the
+ palace, and I at another, had seen them safe over the Pont Royal, I
+ returned to Her Majesty. She then graciously handed me the paper which
+ they had presented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It contained an earnest supplication, signed by many thousand good
+ citizens, that the King and Queen would sanction the plan of sending the
+ Dauphin to the army of La Fayette. They pledged themselves, with the
+ assistance of the royalists, to rescue the Royal Family. They, urged that
+ if once the King could be persuaded to show himself at the head of his
+ army, without taking any active part, but merely for his own safety and
+ that of his family, everything might be accomplished with the greatest
+ tranquillity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen exclaimed, 'What! send my child! No! never while I breathe!
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [Little did this unfortunate mother think that they, who thus pretended
+ to interest themselves for this beautiful, angelic Prince only a few
+ months before, would, when she was in her horrid prison after the
+ butchery of her husband, have required this only comfort to be violently
+ torn from her maternal arms!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little, indeed, did she think, when her maternal devotedness thus
+ repelled the very thought of his being trusted to myriads of sworn
+ defenders, how soon he would be barbarously consigned by the infamous
+ Assembly as the foot-stool of the inhuman savage cobbler, Simon, to be
+ the night-boy of the excrements of the vilest of the works of human
+ nature!]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ Yet were I an independent Queen, or the regent of a minority, I feel that
+ I should be inclined to accept the offer, to place myself at the head of
+ the army, as my immortal mother did, who, by that step, transmitted the
+ crown of our ancestors to its legitimate descendants. It is the monarchy
+ itself which now requires to be asserted. Though D'ORLEANS is actively
+ engaged in attempting the dethronement of His Majesty, I do not think the
+ nation will submit to such a Prince, or to any other monarchical
+ government, if the present be decidedly destroyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'All these plans, my dear Princess,' continued she, 'are mere castles in
+ the air. The mischief is too deeply rooted. As they have already
+ frantically declared for the King's abdication, any strong measure now,
+ incompetent as we are to assure its success, would at once arm the
+ advocates of republicanism to proclaim the King's dethronement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'The cruel observations of Petion to His Majesty, on our ever memorable
+ return from Varennes, have made a deeper impression than you are aware of.
+ When the King observed to him, "What do the French nation want?"&mdash;"A
+ republic," replied he. And though he has been the means of already costing
+ us some thousands, to crush this unnatural propensity, yet I firmly
+ believe that he himself is at the head of all the civil disorders fomented
+ for its attainment. I am the more confirmed in this opinion from a
+ conversation I had with the good old man, M. De Malesherbes, who assured
+ me the great sums we were lavishing on this man were thrown away, for he
+ would be certain, eventually, to betray us: and such an inference could
+ only have been drawn from the lips of the traitor himself. Petion must
+ have given Malesherbes reason to believe this. I am daily more and more
+ convinced it will be the case. Yet, were I to show the least energy or
+ activity in support of the King's authority, I should then be accused of
+ undermining it. All France would be up in arms against the danger of
+ female influence. The King would only be lessened in the general opinion
+ of the nation, and the kingly authority still more weakened. Calm
+ submission to His Majesty is, therefore, the only safe, course for both of
+ us, and we must wait events.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "While Her Majesty was thus opening her heart to me, the King and
+ Princesse Elizabeth entered, to inform her that M. Laporte, the head of
+ the private police, had discovered, and caused to be arrested, some of the
+ wretches who had maliciously attempted to fire the palace of the
+ Tuileries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Set them at liberty!' exclaimed Her Majesty; 'or, to clear themselves
+ and their party, they will accuse us of something worse.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Such, too, is my opinion, Sire,' observed I; 'for however I abhor their
+ intentions, I have here a letter from one of these miscreants which was
+ found among the combustibles. It cautions us not to inhabit the upper part
+ of the Pavilion. My not having paid the attention which was expected to
+ the letter, has aroused the malice of the writer, and caused a second
+ attempt to be made from the Pont Royal upon my own apartment; in
+ preventing which, a worthy man has been cruelly wounded in the arm.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Merciful Heaven!' exclaimed the poor Queen and the Princesse Elizabeth,
+ I not dangerously, I hope!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I hope not,' added I; 'but the attempt, and its escaping unpunished,
+ though there were guards all around, is a proof how perilous it will be,
+ while we are so weak, to kindle their rancour by any show of impotent
+ resentment; for I have reason to believe it was to that, the want of
+ attention to the letter of which I speak was imputed.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen took this opportunity, of laying before the King the
+ above-mentioned plan. His Majesty, seeing it in the name of La Fayette,
+ took up the paper, and, after he had attentively perused it, tore it in
+ pieces, exclaiming, 'What! has not M. La Fayette done mischief enough yet,
+ but must he even expose the names of so many worthy men by committing them
+ to paper at a critical period like this, when he is fully aware that we
+ are in immediate danger of being assailed by a banditti of inhuman
+ cannibals, who would sacrifice every individual attached to us, if,
+ unfortunately, such a paper should be found? I am determined to have
+ nothing to do with his ruinous plans. Popularity and ambition made him the
+ principal promoter of republicanism. Having failed of becoming a
+ Washington, he is mad to become a Cromwell. I have no faith in these
+ turncoat constitutionalists.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know that the Queen heartily concurred in this sentiment concerning
+ General La Fayette, as soon as she ascertained his real character, and
+ discovered that he considered nothing paramount to public notoriety. To
+ this he had sacrificed the interest of his country, and trampled under
+ foot the throne; but finding he could not succeed in forming a Republican
+ Government in France as he had in America, he, like many others, lost his
+ popularity with the demagogues, and, when too late, came to offer his
+ services, through me, to the Queen, to recruit a monarchy which his vanity
+ had undermined to gratify, his chimerical ambition. Her Majesty certainly
+ saw him frequently, but never again would she put herself in the way of
+ being betrayed by one whom she considered faithless to all."
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [Thus ended the proffered services of General La Fayette, who then took
+ the command of the national army, served against that of the Prince de
+ Conde, and the Princes of his native country, and was given up with
+ General Bournonville, De Lameth, and others, by General Dumourier, on
+ the first defeat of the French, to the Austrians, by whom they were sent
+ to the fortress of Olmutz in Hungary, where they remained till after the
+ death of the wretch Robespierre, when they were exchanged for the
+ Duchesse d'Angouleme, now Dauphine of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the retired life led by General La Fayette on his return to France,
+ there can be but little doubt that he spent a great part of his time in
+ reflecting on the fatal errors of his former conduct, as he did not
+ coincide with any of the revolutionary principles which preceded the
+ short-lived reign of imperialism. But though Napoleon too well knew him
+ to be attached from principle to republicanism&mdash;every vestige of
+ which he had long before destroyed&mdash;to employ him in any military
+ capacity, still he recalled him from his hiding- place, in order to
+ prevent his doing mischief, as he politically did&mdash;every other
+ royalist whom he could bring under the banners of his imperialism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Napoleon made use of his general knowledge of mankind in other
+ respects, as he politically did in France over his conquered subjects,
+ in respecting ancient habits, and gradually weaned them from their
+ natural prejudices instead of violently forcing all men to become
+ Frenchmen, all men would have fought for him, and not against him. These
+ were the weapons by which his power became annihilated, and which, in
+ the end, will be the destruction of all potentates who presume to follow
+ his fallacious plan of forming individuals to a system instead of
+ accommodating systems to individuals. The fruits from Southern climes
+ have been reared in the North, but without their native virtue or
+ vigour. It is more dangerous to attack the habits of men than their
+ religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The British Constitution, though a blessing to Englishmen, is very
+ ill-suited to nations not accustomed to the climate and its variations.
+ Every country has peculiarities of thought and manners resulting from
+ the physical influence of its sky and soil. Whenever we lose sight of
+ this truth, we naturally lose the affections of those whose habits we
+ counteract.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ Here ends the Journal of my lamented benefactress. I have continued the
+ history to the close of her career, and that of the Royal Family,
+ especially as Her Highness herself acted so important a part in many of
+ the scenes, which are so strongly illustrated by her conversation and
+ letters. It is only necessary to add that the papers which I have arranged
+ were received from Her Highness amidst the disasters which were now
+ thickening around her and her royal friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION XVI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /> <br /><br /> <a name="pb280" id="pb280"></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="pb280.jpg (154K)" src="images/pb280.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the time I left Passy till my final departure from Paris for Italy,
+ which took place on the 2nd of August, 1792, my residence was almost
+ exclusively at the capital. The faithful driver, who had given such proofs
+ of probity, continued to be of great service, and was put in perpetual
+ requisition. I was daily about on the business of the Queen and the
+ Princess, always disguised, and most frequently as a drummerboy; on which
+ occasions the driver and my man servant were my companions. My principal
+ occupation was to hear and take down the debates of the Assembly, and
+ convey and receive letters from the Queen to the Princesse de Lamballe, to
+ and from Barnave, Bertrand de Moleville, Alexandre de Lameth, Deport de
+ Fertre, Duportail, Montmorin, Turbo, De Mandat, the Duc de Brissac, etc.,
+ with whom my illustrious patronesses kept up a continued correspondence,
+ to which I believe all of them fell a sacrifice; for, owing to the
+ imprudence of the King in not removing their communications when he
+ removed the rest of his papers from the Tuileries, the exposure of their
+ connections with the Court was necessarily consequent upon the plunder of
+ the palace on the 10th of August, 1792.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In my masquerade visits to the Assembly, I got acquainted with an editor
+ of one of the papers; I think he told me his name was Duplessie. Being
+ pleased with the liveliness of my remarks on some of the organized
+ disorders, as I termed them, and with some comments I made upon the
+ meanness of certain disgusting speeches on the patriotic gifts, my new
+ acquaintance suffered me to take copies of his own shorthand remarks and
+ reports. By this means the Queen and the Princess had them before they
+ appeared in print. M. Duplessie was on other occasions of great service to
+ me, especially as a protector in the mobs, for my man servant and the
+ honest driver were so much occupied in watching the movements of the
+ various faubourg factions, that I was often left entirely unattended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The horrors of the Tuileries, both by night and day, were now grown
+ appallingly beyond description. Almost unendurable as they had been
+ before, they were aggravated by the insults of the national guard to every
+ passenger to and from the palace. I was myself in so much peril, that the
+ Princess thought it necessary to procure a trusty person, of tried
+ courage, to see me through the throngs, with a large bandbox of all sorts
+ of fashionable millinery, as the mode of ingress and egress least liable
+ to excite suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus equipped, and guarded by my cicisbeo, I one day found myself, on
+ entering the Tuileries, in the midst of an immense mob of regular trained
+ rioters, who, seeing me go towards the palace, directed their attention
+ entirely to me. They took me for some one belonging to the Queen's
+ milliner, Madame Bertin, who, they said, was fattening upon the public
+ misery, through the Queen's extravagance. The poor Queen herself they
+ called by names so opprobious that decency will not suffer me to repeat
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a volley of oaths, pressing upon us, they bore us to another part of
+ the garden, for the purpose of compelling us to behold six or eight of the
+ most infamous outcasts, amusing themselves, in a state of exposure, with
+ their accursed hands and arms tinged with blood up to the elbows. The spot
+ they had chosen for this exhibition of their filthy persons was
+ immediately before the windows of the apartments of the Queen and the
+ ladies of the Court. Here they paraded up and down, to the great
+ entertainment of a throng of savage rebels, by whom they were applauded
+ and encouraged with shouts of "Bis! bis!" signifying in English," Again!
+ again!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The demoniac interest excited by this scene withdrew the attention of
+ those who were enjoying it from me, and gave me the opportunity of
+ escaping unperceived, merely with the loss of my bandbox. Of that the
+ infuriated mob made themselves masters; and the hats, caps, bonnets, and
+ other articles of female attire, were placed on the parts of their
+ degraded carcases, which, for the honour of human nature, should have been
+ shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Overcome with agony at these insults, I burst from the garden in a flood
+ of tears. On passing the gate, I was accosted by a person who exclaimed in
+ a tone of great kindness, "Qu'as tu, ma bonne? qu'est ce qui vous
+ afflige?" Knowing the risk I should run in representing the real cause of
+ my concern, I immediately thought of ascribing it to the loss of the
+ property of which I had been plundered. I told him I was a poor milliner,
+ and had been robbed of everything I possessed in the world by the mob.
+ "Come back with me," said he, "and I will have it restored to you." I knew
+ it was of no avail, but policy stimulated me to comply; and I returned
+ with him into the garden toward the palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What should I have felt, had I been aware, when this man came up, that I
+ was accosted by the villain Danton! The person who was with me knew him,
+ but dared not speak, and watched a chance of escaping in the crowd for
+ fear of being discovered. When I looked round and found myself alone, I
+ said I had lost my brother in the confusion, which added to my grief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, never mind," said Danton; "take hold of my arm; no one shall molest
+ you. We will look for your brother, and try to recover your things;" and
+ on we went together: I, weeping, I may truly say, for my life, stopped at
+ every step, while he related my doleful story to all whose curiosity was
+ excited by my grief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On my appearing arm in arm with Danton before the windows of the Queen's
+ apartments, we were observed by Her Majesty and the Princesses. Their
+ consternation and perplexity, as well as alarm for my safety, may readily
+ be conceived. A signal from the window instantly apprised me that I might
+ enter the palace, to which my return had been for some time impatiently
+ expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding it could no longer be of any service to carry on the farce of
+ seeking my pretended brother, I begged to be escorted out of the mob to
+ the apartments of the Princesse de Lamballe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh," said Danton, "certainly! and if you had only told the people that
+ you were going to that good Princess, I am sure your things would not have
+ been taken from you. But," added he, "are you perfectly certain they were
+ not for that detestable Marie Antoinette?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh!" I replied, "quite, quite certain!" All this while the mob was at my
+ heels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then," said he, "I will not leave you till you are safe in the apartments
+ of the Princesse de Lamballe, and I will myself make known to her your
+ loss: she is so good," continued he, "that I am convinced she will make
+ you just compensation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I then told him how much I should be obliged by his doing so, as I had
+ been commissioned to deliver the things, and if I was made to pay for
+ them, the loss would be more serious than I could bear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bah! bah!" exclaimed he. "Laissez moi faire! Laissez moi faire!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he came to the inner door, which I pretended to know nothing about,
+ he told the gentleman of the chamber his name, and said he wished to see
+ his mistress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Highness came in a few minutes, and from her looks and visible
+ agitation at the sight of Danton, I feared she would have betrayed both
+ herself and me. However, while he was making a long preamble, I made
+ signs, from which she inferred that all was safe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Danton had finished telling her the story, she calmly said to me, "Do
+ you recollect, child, the things you have been robbed of?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I replied that, if I had pen and ink, I could even set down the prices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, well, then, child, come in," said Her Highness, "and we will see what
+ is to be done!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There!" exclaimed Danton; "Did I not tell you this before?" Then, giving
+ me a hearty squeeze of the hand, he departed, and thus terminated the
+ millinery speculation, which, I have no doubt, cost Her Highness a
+ tolerable sum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as he was gone, the Princess said, "For Heaven's sake, tell me the
+ whole of this affair candidly; for the Queen has been in the greatest
+ agitation at the bare idea of your knowing Danton, ever since we first saw
+ you walking with him! He is one of our moat inveterate enemies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I said that if they had but witnessed one half of the scenes that I saw, I
+ was sure their feelings would have been shocked beyond description. "We
+ did not see all, but we heard too much for the ears of our sex."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I then related the particulars of our meeting to Her Highness, who
+ observed, "This accident, however unpleasant, may still turn out to our
+ advantage. This fellow believes you to be a marchande de modes, and the
+ circumstance of his having accompanied you to my apartment will enable
+ you, in future, to pass to and from the Pavilion unmolested by the
+ national guard."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With tears of joy in her eyes for my safety, she could not, however, help
+ laughing when I told her the farce I kept up respecting the loss of my
+ brother, and my bandbox with the millinery, for which I was also soon
+ congratulated most graciously by Her Majesty, who much applauded my spirit
+ and presence of mind, and condescended, immediately, to entrust me with
+ letters of the greatest importance, for some of the most distinguished
+ members of the Assembly, with which I left the palace in triumph, but
+ taking care to be ready with a proper story of my losses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I passed the guard-room, I was pitied by the very wretches, who,
+ perhaps, had already shared in the spoils; and who would have butchered
+ me, no doubt, into the bargain, could they have penetrated the real object
+ of my mission. They asked me if I had been paid for the loss I sustained.
+ I told them I had not, but I was promised that it should be settled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Settled!" said one of the wretches. "Get the money as soon as you can. Do
+ not trust to promises of its being settled. They will all be settled
+ themselves soon!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day, on going to the palace, I found the Princesse de Lamballe in
+ the greatest agitation, from the accounts the Court had just received of
+ the murder of a man belonging to Arthur Dillon, and of the massacres at
+ Nantes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The horrid prints, pamphlets, and caricatures," cried she, "daily
+ exhibited under the very windows of the Tuileries, against His Majesty,
+ the Queen, the Austrian party, and the Coblentz party, the constant
+ thwarting of every plan, and these last horrors at Nantes, have so
+ overwhelmed the King that he is nearly become a mere automaton. Daily and
+ nightly execrations are howled in his ears. Look at our boasted
+ deliverers! The poor Queen, her children, and all of us belonging to the
+ palace, are in danger of our lives at merely being seen; while they by
+ whom we have been so long buoyed up with hope are quarrelling amongst
+ themselves for the honour and etiquette of precedency, leaving us to the
+ fury of a race of cannibals, who know no mercy, and will have destroyed us
+ long before their disputes of etiquette can be settled."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The utterance of Her Highness while saying this was rendered almost
+ inarticulate by her tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What support against internal disorganization," continued she, "is to be
+ expected from so disorganized a body as the present army of different
+ nations, having all different interests?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I said there was no doubt that the Prussian army was on its march, and
+ would soon be joined by that of the Princes and of Austria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You speak as you wish, mia cara Inglesina, but it is all to no purpose.
+ Would to God they had never been applied to, never been called upon to
+ interfere. Oh, that Her Majesty could have been persuaded to listen to
+ Dumourier and some other of the members, instead of relying on succours
+ which, I fear, will never enter Paris in our lifetime! No army can subdue
+ a nation; especially a nation frenzied by the recent recovery of its
+ freedom and independence from the shackles of a corrupt and weak
+ administration. The King is too good; the Queen has no equal as to heart;
+ but they have both been most grossly betrayed. The royalists on one side,
+ the constitutionalists on the other, will be the victims of the Jacobins,
+ for they are the most powerful, they are the most united, they possess the
+ most talent, and they act in a body, and not merely for the time being.
+ Believe me, my dear, their plans are too well grounded to be defeated, as
+ every one framed by the fallacious constitutionalists and mad-headed
+ royalists has been; and so they will ever be while they continue to form
+ two separate interests. From the very first moment when these two bodies
+ were worked upon separately, I told the Queen that, till they were united
+ for the same object, the monarchy would be unsafe, and at the mercy of the
+ Jacobins, who, from hatred to both parties, would overthrow it themselves
+ to rule despotically over those whom they no longer respected or feared,
+ but whom they hated, as considering them both equally their former
+ oppressors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "May the All-seeing Power," continued Her Highness, "grant, for the good
+ of this shattered State, that I may be mistaken, and that my predictions
+ may prove different in the result; but of this I see no hope, unless in
+ the strength of our own internal resources. God knows how powerful they
+ might prove could they be united at this moment! But from the anarchy and
+ division kept up between them, I see no prospect of their being brought to
+ bear, except in a general overthrow of this, as you have justly observed,
+ organized system of disorders, from which at some future period we may
+ obtain a solid, systematic order of government. Would Charles the Second
+ ever have reigned after the murder of his father had England been torn to
+ pieces by different factions? No! It was the union of the body of the
+ nation for its internal tranquillity, the amalgamation of parties against
+ domestic faction, which gave vigour to the arm of power, and enabled the
+ nation to check foreign interference abroad, while it annihilated anarchy
+ at home. By that means the Protector himself laid the first stone of the
+ Restoration. The division of a nation is the surest harbinger of success
+ to its invaders, the death-blow to its Sovereign's authority, and the
+ total destruction of that innate energy by which alone a country can
+ obtain the dignity of its own independence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION XVII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Her Highness was thus pondering on the dreadful situation of France,
+ strengthening her arguments by those historical illustrations, which, from
+ the past, enabled her to look into the future, a message came to her from
+ Her Majesty. She left me, and, in a few minutes, returned to her
+ apartment, accompanied by the Queen and Her Royal Highness the Princesse
+ Elizabeth. I was greatly surprised at seeing these two illustrious and
+ august personages bathed in tears. Of course, I could not be aware of any
+ new motive to create any new or extraordinary emotion; yet there was in
+ the countenances of all of the party an appearance different from anything
+ I had ever witnessed in them, or any other person before; a something
+ which seemed to say, they no longer had any affinity with the rest of
+ earthly beings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had all been just writing to their distant friends and relations. A
+ fatal presentiment, alas! too soon verified, told them it was for the last
+ time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Highness the Princesse de Lamballe now approached me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her Majesty," observed the Princess, "wishes to give you a mark of her
+ esteem, in delivering to you, with her own hands, letters to her family,
+ which it is her intention to entrust to your especial care.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On this step Her Majesty has resolved, as much to send you out of the way
+ of danger, as from the conviction occasioned by the firm reliance your
+ conduct has created in us, that you will faithfully obey the orders you
+ may receive, and execute our intentions with that peculiar intelligence
+ which the emergency of the case requires.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But even the desirable opportunity which offers, through you, for the
+ accomplishment of her mission, might not have prevailed with Her Majesty
+ to hasten your departure, had not the wretch Danton twice inquired at the
+ palace for the 'little milliner,' whom he rescued and conducted safe to
+ the apartments of the Pavilion of Flora. This, probably, may be a matter
+ of no real consequence whatever; but it is our duty to avoid danger, and
+ it has been decided that you should, at least for a time, absent Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Per cio, mia cara Inglesina, speak now, freely and candidly: is it your
+ wish to return to England, or go elsewhere? For though we are all sorry to
+ lose you, yet it would be a source of still greater sorrow to us, prizing
+ your services and fidelity as we do, should any plans and purposes of ours
+ lead you into difficulty or embarrassment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, mon Dieu! c'est vrai!" interrupted Her Majesty, her eyes at the same
+ time filled with tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should never forgive myself," continued the Princess, "if I should
+ prove the cause of any misfortune to you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nor I!" most graciously subjoined the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Therefore," pursued the Princess, "speak your mind without reserve."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here my own feelings, and the sobs of the illustrious party, completely
+ overcame me, and I could not proceed. The Princesse de Lamballe clasped me
+ in her arms. "Not only letters," exclaimed she, "but my life I would trust
+ to the fidelity of my vera, verissima, cara Inglesina! And now," continued
+ Her Highness, turning round to the Queen, "will it please Your Majesty to
+ give Inglesina your commands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here, then," said the Queen, "is a letter for my dear sister, the Queen
+ of Naples, which you must deliver into her own hands. Here is another for
+ my sister, the Duchess of Parma. If she should not be at Parma, you will
+ find her at Colorno. This is for my brother, the Archduke of Milan; this
+ for my sister-in-law, the Princesse Clotilde Piedmont, at Turin; and here
+ are four others. You will take off the envelope when you get to Turin, and
+ then put them into the post yourself. Do not give them to, or send them
+ by, any person whatsoever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tell my sisters the state of Paris. Inform them of our cruel situation.
+ Describe the riots and convulsions you have seen. Above all, assure them
+ how dear they are to me, and how much I love them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the word love, Her Majesty threw herself on a sofa and wept bitterly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Princesse Elizabeth gave me a letter for her sister, and two for her
+ aunts, to be delivered to them, if at Rome; but if not, to be put under
+ cover and sent through the post at Rome to whatever place they might have
+ made their residence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had also a packet of letters to deliver for the Princesse de Lamballe at
+ Turin; and another for the Duc de Serbelloni at Milan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Majesty and the Princesse Elizabeth not only allowed me the honour to
+ kiss their hands, but they, both gave me their blessing, and good wishes
+ for my safe return, and then left me with the Princesse de Lamballe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Majesty had scarcely left the apartment of the Princess, when I
+ recollected she had forgotten to give me the cipher and the key for the
+ letters. The Princess immediately went to the Queen's apartment, and
+ returned with them shortly after.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now that we are alone," said Her Highness, "I will tell you what Her
+ Majesty has graciously commanded me to signify to you in her royal name.
+ The Queen commands me to say that you are provided for for life; and that,
+ on the first vacancy which may occur, she intends fixing you at Court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Therefore mia cara Inglesina, take especial care what you are about, and
+ obey Her Majesty's wishes when you are absent, as implicitly as you have
+ hitherto done all her commands during your abode near her. You are not to
+ write to any one. No one is to be made acquainted with your route. You are
+ not to leave Paris in your own carriage. It will be sent after you by your
+ man servant, who is to join you at Chalon sur Saone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have further to inform you that Her Majesty the Queen, on sending you
+ the cipher, has at the same time graciously condescended to add these
+ presents as further marks of her esteem."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Highness then showed me a most beautiful gold watch, chain and seals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These," said she, placing them with her own hands, "Her Majesty desired
+ me to put round your neck in testimony of her regard."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time Her Highness presented me, on her own part, with a
+ beautiful pocketbook, the covers of which were of gold enamelled, with the
+ word "SOUVENIR" in diamonds on one side, and a large cipher of her own
+ initials on the other. The first page contained the names of the Queen and
+ Her Royal Highness the Princesse Elizabeth, in their own handwriting.
+ There was a cheque in it on a Swiss banker, at Milan, of the name of
+ Bonny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having given me these invaluable tokens, Her Highness proceeded with her
+ instructions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At Chalon," continued she, "mia cara, your man servant will perhaps bring
+ you other letters. Take two places in the stage for yourself and your
+ femme de chambre, in her name, and give me the memorandum, that our old
+ friend, the driver, may procure the passports. You must not be seen; for
+ there is no doubt that Danton has given the police a full description of
+ your person. Now go and prepare: we shall see each other again before your
+ departure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only a few minutes afterwards my man servant came to me to say that it
+ would be some hours before the stage would set off, and that there was a
+ lady in her carriage waiting for me in the Bois de Boulogne. I hastened
+ thither. What was my surprise on finding it was the Princess. I now saw
+ her for the last time!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me pass lightly over this sad moment. I must not, however, dismiss the
+ subject, without noticing the visible changes which had taken place in the
+ short space of a month, in the appearance of all these illustrious
+ Princesses. Their very complexions were no longer the same, as if grief
+ had changed the whole mass of their blood. The Queen, in particular, from
+ the month of July to the 2d of August, looked ten years older. The other
+ two Princesses were really worn out with fatigue, anxiety, and the want of
+ rest, as, during the whole month of July, they scarcely ever slept, for
+ fear of being murdered in their beds, and only threw themselves on them,
+ now and then, without undressing. The King, three or four times in the
+ night, would go round to their different apartments, fearful they might be
+ destroyed in their sleep, and ask, "Etes vous la?" when they would answer
+ him from within, "Nous sommes encore ici." Indeed, if, when nature was
+ exhausted, sleep by chance came to the relief of their worn-out and
+ languid frames, it was only to awaken them to fresh horrors, which
+ constantly threatened the convulsion by which they were finally
+ annihilated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be uncandid in me to be silent concerning the marked difference I
+ found in the feelings of the two royal sisters of Her Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had never had the honour before to execute any commissions for her Royal
+ Highness the Duchess of Parma, and, of course, took that city in my way to
+ Naples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I did not reach Parma till after the horrors which had taken place at the
+ Tuileries on the 10th of August, 1792. The whole of the unfortunate Royal
+ Family of France were then lodged in the Temple. There was not a feeling
+ heart in Europe unmoved at their afflicting situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /> <a name="pb306" id="pb306"></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="pb306.jpg (97K)" src="images/pb306.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I arrived at Colorno, the country residence of the Duchess of Parma, just
+ as Her Royal Highness was going out on horseback.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I ordered my servant to inform one of the pages that I came by express
+ from Paris, and requested the honour to know when it would be convenient
+ for Her Royal Highness to allow me a private audience, as I was going,
+ post-haste, to Rome and Naples. Of course, I did not choose to tell my
+ business either to my own or Her Royal Highness's servant, being in honour
+ and duty bound to deliver the letter and the verbal message of her then
+ truly unfortunate sister in person and in privacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mention of Paris I saw somewhat startled and confused her. Meantime,
+ she came near enough to my carriage for me to say to her in German, in
+ order that none of the servants, French or Italian, might understand, that
+ I had a letter to deliver into her own hands, without saying from whom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She then desired I would alight, and she soon followed me; and, after
+ having very graciously ordered me some refreshments, asked me from whom I
+ had been sent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I delivered Her Majesty's letter. Before she opened it, she exclaimed, "'O
+ Dio! tutto e perduto e troppo tardi'! Oh, God! all is lost, it is too
+ late!" I then gave her the cipher and the key. In a few minutes I enabled
+ her to decipher the letter. On getting through it, she again exclaimed,
+ "'E tutto inutile'! it is entirely useless! I am afraid they are all lost.
+ I am sorry you are so situated as not to allow of your remaining here to
+ rest from your fatigue. Whenever you come to Parma, I shall be glad to see
+ you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She then took out her pocket handkerchief, shed a few tears, and said
+ that, as circumstances were now so totally changed, to answer the letter
+ might only commit her, her sister, and myself; but that if affairs took
+ the turn she wished, no doubt, her sister would write again. She then
+ mounted her horse, and wished me a good journey; and I took leave, and set
+ off for Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I must confess that the conduct of the Duchess of Parma appeared to me
+ rather cold, if not unfeeling. Perhaps she was afraid of showing too much
+ emotion, and wished to encourage the idea that Princesses ought not to
+ give way to sensibility, like common mortals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But how different was the conduct of the Queen of Naples! She kissed the
+ letter: she bathed it with her tears! Scarcely could she allow herself
+ time to decipher it. At every sentence she exclaimed, "Oh, my dear, oh, my
+ adored sister! What will become of her! My brothers are now both no more!
+ Surely, she will soon be liberated!" Then, turning suddenly to me, she
+ asked with eagerness, "Do you not think she will? Oh, Marie, Marie! why
+ did she not fly to Vienna? Why did she not come to me instead of writing?
+ Tell me, for God's sake, all you know!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I said I knew nothing further of what had taken place at Paris, having
+ travelled night and day, except what I had heard from the different
+ couriers, which I had met and stopped on my route; but I hoped to be
+ better informed by Sir William Hamilton, as all my letters were to be sent
+ from France to Turin, and thence on to Sir William at Naples; and if I
+ found no letters with him, I should immediately set off and return to
+ Turin or Milan, to be as near France as possible for my speedy return if
+ necessary. I ventured to add that it was my earnest prayer that all the
+ European Sovereigns would feel the necessity of interesting themselves for
+ the Royal Family of France, with whose fate the fate of monarchy
+ throughout Europe might be interwoven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, God of Heaven!" cried the Queen, "all that dear family may ere now
+ have been murdered! Perhaps they are already numbered among the dead! Oh,
+ my poor, dear, beloved Marie! Oh, I shall go frantic! I must send for
+ General Acton."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wringing her hands, she pulled the bell, and in a few minutes the general
+ came. On his entering the apartment, she flew to him like one deprived of
+ reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There!" exclaimed she. "There! Behold the fatal consequences!" showing
+ him the letter. "Louis XVI. is in the state of Charles the First of
+ England, and my sister will certainly be murdered."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no, no!" exclaimed the general. "Something will be done. Calm
+ yourself, madame." Then turning to me, "When," said he, "did you leave
+ Paris?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When all was lost!" interrupted the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay," cried the general; "pray let me speak. All is not lost, you will
+ find; have but a little patience."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Patience!" said the Queen. "For two years I have heard of nothing else.
+ Nothing has been done for these unfortunate beings." She then threw
+ herself into a chair. "Tell him!" cried she to me, "tell him! tell him!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I then informed the general that I had left Paris on the 2d of August, but
+ did not believe at the time, though the daily riots were horrible, that
+ such a catastrophe could have occurred so soon as eight days after.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen was now quite exhausted, and General Acton rang the bell for the
+ lady-in-waiting, who entered accompanied by the Duchesse Curigliano
+ Marini, and they assisted Her Majesty to bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she had retired, "Do not," said the general to me, "do not go to Sir
+ William's to-night. He is at Caserte. You seem too much fatigued."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "More from grief," replied I, "and reflection on the fatal consequences
+ that might result to the great personages I have so lately left, than from
+ the journey."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take my advice," resumed he. "You had much better go to bed and rest
+ yourself. You look very ill."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I did as he recommended, and went to the nearest hotel I could find. I
+ felt no fatigue of mind or body till I had got into bed, where I was
+ confined for several days with a most violent fever. During my illness I
+ received every attention both from the Court, and our Ambassador and Lady
+ Hamilton, who kindly visited me every day. The Queen of Naples I never
+ again saw till my return in 1793, after the murder of the Queen of France;
+ and I am glad I did not, for her agony would have acted anew upon my
+ disordered frame, and might have proved fatal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was certainly somewhat prepared for a difference of feeling between the
+ two Princesses, as the unfortunate Marie Antoinette, in the letters to the
+ Queen of Naples, always wrote, "To my much beloved sister, the Queen of
+ the two Sicilies, etc.," and to the other, merely, "To the Duchess of
+ Parma, etc." But I could never have dreamt of a difference so little
+ flattering, under such circumstances, to the Duchess of Parma.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION XVIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the moment of my departure from Paris on the 2d of August, 1792, the
+ tragedy hastened to its denouement. On the night of the 9th, the tocsin
+ was sounded, and the King and the Royal Family looked upon their fate as
+ sealed. Notwithstanding the personal firmness of His Majesty, he was a
+ coward for others. He dreaded the responsibility of ordering blood to be
+ shed, even in defence of his nearest and dearest interests. Petion,
+ however, had given the order to repel force by force to De Mandat, who was
+ murdered upon the steps of the Hotel de Ville. It has been generally
+ supposed that Petion had received a bribe for not ordering the cannon
+ against the Tuileries on the night of the 9th, and that De Mandat was
+ massacred by the agents of Petion for the purpose of extinguishing all
+ proof that he was only acting under the instructions of the Mayor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I shall not undertake to judge of the propriety of the King's impression
+ that there was no safety from the insurgents but in the hall, and under
+ the protection of the Assembly. Had the members been well disposed towards
+ him, the event might have proved very different. But there is one thing
+ certain. The Queen would never have consented to this step but to save the
+ King and her innocent children. She would have preferred death to the
+ humiliation of being under obligations to her sworn enemies; but she was
+ overcome by the King declaring, with tears in his eyes, that he would not
+ quit the palace without her. The Princesses Elizabeth and de Lamballe fell
+ at her feet, implored Her Majesty to obey the King, and assured her there
+ was no alternative between instant death and refuge from it in the
+ Assembly. "Well," said the Queen, "if our lot be death, let us away to
+ receive it with the national sanction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I need not expatiate on the succession of horrors which now overwhelmed
+ the royal sufferers. Their confinement at the Feuillans, and their
+ subsequent transfer to the Temple, are all topics sufficiently enlarged
+ upon by many who were actors in the scenes to which they led. The
+ Princesse de Lamballe was, while it was permitted, the companion of their
+ captivity. But the consolation of her society was considered too great to
+ be continued. Her fate had no doubt been predetermined; and, unwilling to
+ await the slow proceedings of a trial, which it was thought politic should
+ precede the murder of her royal mistress, it was found necessary to detach
+ her from the wretched inmates of the Temple, in order to have her more
+ completely within the control of the miscreants, who hated her for her
+ virtues. The expedient was resorted to of casting suspicion upon the
+ correspondence which Her Highness kept up with the exterior of the prison,
+ for the purpose of obtaining such necessaries as were required, in
+ consequence of the utter destitution in which the Royal Family retired
+ from the Tuileries. Two men, of the names of Devine and Priquet, were
+ bribed to create a suspicion, by their informations against the Queen's
+ female attendant. The first declared that on the 18th of August, while he
+ was on duty near the cell of the King, he saw a woman about eleven o'clock
+ in the day come from a room in the centre, holding in one hand three
+ letters, and with the other cautiously opening the door of the right-hand
+ chamber, whence she presently came back without the letters and returned
+ into the centre chamber. He further asserted that twice, when this woman
+ opened the door, he distinctly saw a letter half-written, and every
+ evidence of an eagerness to hide it from observation. The second
+ informant, Priquet, swore that, while on duty as morning sentinel on the
+ gallery between the two towers, he saw, through the window of the central
+ chamber, a woman writing with great earnestness and alarm during the whole
+ time he was on guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the ladies were immediately summoned before the authorities. The hour
+ of the separation between the Princess and her royal friend accorded with
+ the solemnity of the circumstance. It was nearly midnight when they were
+ torn asunder, and they never met again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The examinations were all separate. That of the Princesse de Lamballe was
+ as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. Your name?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. Marie-Therese-Louise de Savoy, Bourbon Lamballe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. What do you know of the events which occurred on the 10th of August?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. Nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. Where did you pass that day?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. As a relative I followed the King to the National Assembly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. Were you in bed on the nights of the 9th and 10th?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. No.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. Where were you then?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. In my apartments, at the chateau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. Did you not go to the apartments of the King in the course of that
+ night?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. Finding there was a likelihood of a commotion, went thither towards one
+ in the morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. You were aware, then, that the people had arisen?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. I learnt it from hearing the tocsin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. Did you see the Swiss and National Guards, who passed the night on the
+ terrace?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. I was at the window, but saw neither.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. Was the King in his apartment when you went thither?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. There were a great number of persons in the room, but not the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. Did you know of the Mayor of Paris being at the Tuileries?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. I heard he was there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. At what hour did the King go to the National Assembly?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. Seven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. Did he not, before he went, review the troops? Do you know the oath he
+ made them swear?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. I never heard of any oath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. Have you any knowledge of cannon being mounted and pointed in the
+ apartments?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. No.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. Have you ever seen Messrs. Mandat and d'Affry in the chateau?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. No.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. Do you know the secret doors of the Tuileries?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. I know of no such doors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. Have you not, since you have been in the Temple, received and written
+ letters, which you sought to send away secretly?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. I have never received or written any letters, excepting such as have
+ been delivered to the municipal officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. Do you know anything of an article of furniture which is making for
+ Madame Elizabeth?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. No.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. Have you not recently received some devotional books?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. No.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. What are the books which you have at the Temple?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. I have none.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. Do you know anything of a barred staircase?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. No.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Q. What general officers did you see at the Tuileries, on the nights of
+ the 9th and 10th?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. I saw no general officers, I only saw M. Roederer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For thirteen hours was Her Highness, with her female companions in
+ misfortune, exposed to these absurd forms, and to the gaze of insulting
+ and malignant curiosity. At length, about the middle of the day, they were
+ told that it was decreed that they should be detained till further orders,
+ leaving them the choice of prisons, between that of la Force and of la
+ Salpetriere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Highness immediately decided on the former. It was at first determined
+ that she should be separated from Madame de Tourzel, but humanity so far
+ prevailed as to permit the consolation of her society, with that of others
+ of her friends and fellow-sufferers, and for a moment the Princess enjoyed
+ the only comfort left to her, that of exchanging sympathy with her
+ partners in affliction. But the cell to which she was doomed proved her
+ last habitation upon earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 1st of September the Marseillois began their murderous operations.
+ Three hundred persons in two days massacred upwards of a thousand defence
+ less prisoners, confined under the pretext of malpractices against the
+ State, or rather devotedness to the royal cause. The spirit which produced
+ the massacres of the prisons at Paris extended them through the principal
+ towns and cities all over France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even the universal interest felt for the Princesse de Lamballe was of no
+ avail against this frenzy. I remember once (as if it were from a
+ presentiment of what was to occur) the King observing to her, "I never
+ knew any but fools and sycophants who could keep themselves clear from the
+ lash of public censure. How is it, then, that you, my dear Princess, who
+ are neither, contrive to steer your bark on this dangerous coast without
+ running against the rocks on which so many good vessels like your own have
+ been dashed to pieces?" "Oh, Sire," replied Her Highness, "my time is not
+ yet come&mdash;I am not dead yet!" Too soon, and too horribly, her hour
+ did come!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The butchery of the prisons was now commenced. The Duc de Penthievre set
+ every engine in operation to save his beloved daughter-in-law. He sent for
+ Manuel, who was then Procureur of Paris. The Duke declared that half his
+ fortune should be Manuel's if he could but save the Princesse de Lamballe
+ and the ladies who were in the same prison with her from the general
+ massacre. Manuel promised the Duke that he would instantly set about
+ removing them all from the reach of the blood-hunters. He began with those
+ whose removal was least likely to attract attention, leaving the Princesse
+ de Lamballe, from motives of policy, to the last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, other messengers had been dispatched to different quarters for
+ fear of failure with Manuel. It was discovered by one of these that the
+ atrocious tribunal,&mdash;[Thibaudeau, Hebert, Simonier, etc.]&mdash;who
+ sat in mock judgment upon the tenants of these gloomy abodes, after
+ satiating themselves with every studied insult they could devise, were to
+ pronounce the word "libre!" It was naturally presumed that the predestined
+ victims, on hearing this tempting sound, and seeing the doors at the same
+ moment set open by the clerks of the infamous court, would dart off in
+ exultation, and, fancying themselves liberated, rush upon the knives of
+ the barbarians, who were outside, in waiting for their blood! Hundreds
+ were thus slaughtered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To save the Princess from such a sacrifice, it was projected to prevent
+ her from appearing before the tribunal, and a belief was encouraged that
+ means would be devised to elude the necessity. The person who interested
+ himself for her safety contrived to convey a letter containing these
+ words: "Let what will happen, for God's sake do not quit your cell. You
+ will be spared. Adieu."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Manuel, however, who knew not of this cross arrangement, was better
+ informed than its projector.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was aware it would be impossible for Her Highness to escape from
+ appearing before the tribunal. He had already removed her companions. The
+ Princesse de Tarente, the Marquise de Tourzel, her daughter, and others,
+ were in safety. But when, true to his promise, he went to the Princesse de
+ Lamballe, she would not be prevailed upon to quit her cell. There was no
+ time for parley. The letter prevailed, and her fate was inevitable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The massacre had begun at daybreak. The fiends had been some hours busy in
+ the work of death. The piercing shrieks of the dying victims brought the
+ Princess and her remaining companion upon their knees, in fervent prayer
+ for the souls of the departed. The messengers of the tribunal now
+ appeared. The Princess was compelled to attend the summons. She went,
+ accompanied by her faithful female attendant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A glance at the seas of blood, of which she caught a glimpse upon her way
+ to the Court, had nearly shocked her even to sudden death. Would it had!
+ She staggered, but was sustained by her companion. Her courage triumphed.
+ She appeared before the gore-stained tribunes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After some questions of mere form, Her Highness was commanded to swear to
+ be faithful to the new order of government, and to hate the King, the
+ Queen, and royalty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To the first," replied Her Highness, "I willingly submit. To the second,
+ how can I accede? There is nothing of which I can accuse the Royal Family.
+ To hate them is against my nature. They are my Sovereigns. They are my
+ friends and relations. I have served them for many years, and never have I
+ found reason for the slightest complaint."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Princess could no longer articulate. She fell into the arms of her
+ attendant. The fatal signal was pronounced. She recovered, and, crossing
+ the court of the prison, which was bathed with the blood of mutilated
+ victims, involuntarily exclaimed, "Gracious Heaven! What a sight is this!"
+ and fell into a fit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nearest to her in the mob stood a mulatto, whom she had caused to be
+ baptized, educated, and maintained; but whom, for ill-conduct, she had
+ latterly excluded from her presence. This miscreant struck at her with his
+ halbert. The blow removed her cap. Her luxuriant hair (as if to hide her
+ angelic beauty from the sight of the murderers, pressing tiger-like around
+ to pollute that form, the virtues of which equalled its physical
+ perfection)&mdash;her luxuriant hair fell around and veiled her a moment
+ from view. An individual, to whom I was nearly allied, seeing the
+ miscreants somewhat staggered, sprang forward to the rescue; but the
+ mulatto wounded him. The Princess was lost to all feeling from the moment
+ the monster first struck at her. But the demons would not quit their prey.
+ She expired gashed with wounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarcely was the breath out of her body, when the murderers cut off her
+ head. One party of them fixed it, like that of the vilest traitor, on an
+ immense pole, and bore it in triumph all over Paris; while another
+ division of the outrageous cannibals were occupied in tearing her clothes
+ piecemeal from her mangled corpse. The beauty of that form, though
+ headless, mutilated and reeking with the hot blood of their foul crime&mdash;how
+ shall I describe it?&mdash;excited that atrocious excess of lust, which
+ impelled these hordes of assassins to satiate their demoniac passions upon
+ the remains of this virtuous angel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This incredible crime being perpetrated, the wretches fastened ropes round
+ the body, arms, and legs, and dragged it naked through the streets of
+ Paris, till no vestige remained by which it could be distinguished as
+ belonging to the human species; and then left it among the hundreds of
+ innocent victims of that awful day, who were heaped up to putrefy in one
+ confused and disgusting mass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The head was reserved for other purposes of cruelty and horror. It was
+ first borne to the Temple, beneath the windows of the royal prisoners. The
+ wretches who were hired daily to insult them in their dens of misery, by
+ proclaiming all the horrors vomited from the national Vesuvius, were
+ commissioned to redouble their howls of what had befallen the Princesse de
+ Lamballe.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [These horrid circumstances I had from the Chevalier Clery, who was the
+ only attendant allowed to assist Louis XVI. and his unhappy family,
+ during their last captivity; but who was banished from the Temple as
+ soon as his royal master was beheaded, and never permitted to return.
+ Clery told me all this when I met him at Pyrmont, in Germany. He was
+ then in attendance upon the late Comtesse de Lisle, wife of Louie
+ XVIII., at whose musical parties I had often the honour of assisting,
+ when on a visit to the beautiful Duchesse de Guiche. On returning to
+ Paris from Germany, on my way back into Italy, I met the wife of Clery,
+ and her friend M. Beaumont, both old friends of mine, who confirmed
+ Clery's statement, and assured me they were all for two years in hourly
+ expectation of being sent to the Place de Greve for execution. The death
+ of Robespierre saved their lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Clery taught Marie Antoinette to play upon the harp. Madame
+ Beaumont was a natural daughter of Louis XV. I had often occasion to be
+ in their agreeable society; and, as might be expected, their minds were
+ stored with the most authentic anecdotes and information upon the topics
+ of the day.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ The Queen sprang up at the name of her friend. She heard subjoined to, it,
+ "la voila en triomphe," and then came shouts and laughter. She looked out.
+ At a distance she perceived something like a Bacchanalian procession, and
+ thought, as she hoped, that the Princess was coming to her in triumph from
+ her prison, and her heart rejoiced in the anticipation of once more being,
+ blessed with her society. But the King, who had seen and heard more
+ distinctly from his apartment, flew to that of the Queen. That the horrid
+ object might not escape observation, the monsters had mounted upon each
+ other's shoulders so as to lift the bleeding head quite up to the prison
+ bars. The King came just in time to snatch Her Majesty from the spot, and
+ thus she was prevented from seeing it. He took her up in his arms and
+ carried her to a distant part of the Temple, but the mob pursued her in
+ her retreat, and howled the fatal truth even at her, very door, adding
+ that her head would be the next, the nation would require. Her Majesty
+ fell into violent hysterics. The butchers of human flesh continued in the
+ interior of the Temple, parading the triumph of their assassination, until
+ the shrieks of the Princesse Elizabeth at the state in which she saw the
+ Queen, and serious fears for the safety of the royal prisoners, aroused
+ the commandant to treble the national guards and chase the barbarians to
+ the outside, where they remained for hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION XIX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It now remains for me to complete my record by a few facts and
+ observations relating to the illustrious victims who a short time survived
+ the Princesse de Lamballe. I shall add to this painful narrative some
+ details which have been mentioned to me concerning their remorseless
+ persecutors, who were not long left unpursued by just and awful
+ retribution. Having done this, I shall dismiss the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The execrable and sacrilegious modern French Pharisees, who butchered, on
+ the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd of September, 1792, all the prisoners at Paris, by
+ these massacres only gave the signal for the more diabolical machinations
+ which led to the destruction of the still more sacred victims of the 21st
+ of January, and the 16th of October, 1793, and the myriads who followed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King himself never had a doubt with regard to his ultimate fate. His
+ only wish was to make it the means of emancipation for the Queen and Royal
+ Family. It was his intention to appeal to the National Assembly upon the
+ subject, after his trial. Such also was the particular wish of his
+ saint-like sister, the Princesse Elizabeth, who imagined that an appeal
+ under such circumstances could not be resisted. But the Queen strongly
+ opposed the measure; and His Majesty said he should be loath, in the last
+ moments of his painful existence, in anything to thwart one whom he loved
+ so tenderly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had long accustomed himself, when he spoke of the Queen and royal
+ infants, in deference to the temper of the times, only to say, "my wife
+ and children." They, as he told Clery, formed a tie, and the only one
+ remaining, which still bound him to earth. Their last embraces, he said,
+ went so to his aching heart, that he could even yet feel their little
+ hands clinging about him, and see their streaming eyes, and hear their
+ agonized and broken voices. The day previous to the fatal catastrophe,
+ when permitted for the last time to see his family, the Princesse
+ Elizabeth whispered him, not for herself, but for the Queen and his
+ helpless innocents, to remember his intentions. He said he should not feel
+ himself happy if, in his last hour, he did not give them a proof of his
+ paternal affection, in obtaining an assurance that the sacrifice of his
+ life should be the guarantee of theirs. So intent was his mind upon this
+ purpose, said Clery to me, that when his assassins came to take him to the
+ slaughtering-place, he said, "I hope my death will appease the nation, and
+ that my innocent family, who have suffered on my account, will now be
+ released."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ruffians answered, "The nation, always magnanimous, only seeks to
+ punish the guilty. You may be assured your family will be respected."
+ Events have proved how well they kept their word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was to fulfil the intention of recommending his family to the people
+ with his dying breath that he commenced his address upon the scaffold,
+ when Santerre ordered the drums to drown his last accents, and the axe to
+ fall!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Princesse Elizabeth, and perhaps others of the royal prisoners, hoped
+ he would have been reprieved, till Herbert, that real 'Pere du chene',
+ with a smile upon his countenance, came triumphantly to announce to the
+ disconsolate family that Louis was no more!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps there never was a King more misrepresented and less understood,
+ especially by the immediate age in which he lived, than Louis XVI. He was
+ the victim of natural timidity, increased by the horror of bloodshed,
+ which the exigencies of the times rendered indispensable to his safety. He
+ appeared weak in intellect, when he was only so from circumstances. An
+ overwrought anxiety to be just made him hesitate about the mode of
+ overcoming the abuses, until its procrastination had destroyed the object
+ of his wishes. He had courage sufficient, as well as decision, where
+ others were not menaced and the danger was confined to himself; but, where
+ his family or his people were involved, he was utterly unfit to give
+ direction. The want of self-sufficiency in his own faculties have been
+ his, and his throne's, ruin. He consulted those who caused him to swerve
+ from the path his own better reason had dictated, and, in seeking the best
+ course, he often chose the worst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same fatal timidity which pervaded his character extended to his
+ manners. From being merely awkward, he at last became uncouth; but from
+ the natural goodness of his heart, the nearest to him soon lost sight of
+ his ungentleness from the rectitude of his intentions, and, to parody the
+ poet, saw his deportment in his feelings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Previous to the Revolution, Louis XVI. was generally considered gentle and
+ affable, though never polished. But the numberless outrages suffered by
+ his Queen, his family, his friends, and himself, especially towards the
+ close of his career, soured him to an air of rudeness, utterly foreign to
+ his nature and to his intention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must not be forgotten that he lived in a time of unprecedented
+ difficulty. He was a lamb governing tigers. So far as his own personal
+ bearing is concerned, who is there among his predecessors, that, replaced
+ upon the throne, would have resisted the vicissitudes brought about by
+ internal discord, rebellion, and riot, like himself? What said he when one
+ of the heterogeneous, plebeian, revolutionary assemblies not only insulted
+ him, but added to the insult a laugh? "If you think you can govern better,
+ I am ready to resign," was the mild but firm reply of Louis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How glorious would have been the triumph for the most civilized nation in
+ the centre of Europe had the insulter taken him at his word. When the
+ experimentalists did attempt to govern, we all know, and have too severely
+ felt, the consequences. Yet this unfortunate monarch has been represented
+ to the world as imbecile, and taxed with wanting character, firmness, and
+ fortitude, because he has been vanquished! The despot-conqueror has been
+ vanquished since!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His acquirements were considerable. His memory was remarkably retentive
+ and well-stored,&mdash;a quality, I should infer from all I have observed,
+ common to most Sovereigns. By the multiplicity of persons they are in the
+ habit of seeing, and the vast variety of objects continually passing
+ through their minds, this faculty is kept in perpetual exercise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the circumstance which probably injured Louis XVI. more than any other
+ was his familiarity with the locksmith, Gamin. Innocent as was the motive
+ whence it arose, this low connection lessened him more with the whole
+ nation than if he had been the most vicious of Princes. How careful
+ Sovereigns ought to be, with respect to the attention they bestow on men
+ in humble life; especially those whose principles may have been
+ demoralized by the meanness of the associations consequent upon their
+ occupation, and whose low origin may have denied them opportunities of
+ intellectual cultivation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This observation map even be extended to the liberal arts. It does not
+ follow because a monarch is fond of these that he should so far forget
+ himself as to make their professors his boon companions. He loses ground
+ whenever he places his inferiors on a level with himself. Men are
+ estimated from the deference they pay to their own stations in society.
+ The great Frederic of Prussia used to sap, "I must show myself a King,
+ because my trade is royalty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was only in destitution and anguish that the real character of Louis
+ developed itself. He was firm and patient, utterly regardless of himself,
+ but wrung to the heart for others, not even excepting his deluded
+ murderers. Nothing could swerve him from his trust in Heaven, and he left
+ a glorious example of how far religion can triumph over every calamity and
+ every insult this world has power to inflict.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a national guard, who, at the time of the imprisonment of the
+ Royal Family, was looked upon as the most violent of Jacobins, and the
+ sworn enemy of royalty. On that account the sanguinary agents of the
+ self-created Assembly employed him to frequent the Temple. His special
+ commission was to stimulate the King and Royal Family by every possible
+ argument to self-destruction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this man was a friend in disguise. He undertook the hateful office
+ merely to render every service in his power, and convey regular
+ information of the plots of the Assembly against those whom he was deputed
+ to persecute. The better to deceive his companions, he would read aloud to
+ the Royal Family all the debates of the regicides, which those who were
+ with him encouraged, believing it meant to torture and insult, when the
+ real motive was to prepare them to meet every accusation, by communicating
+ to them each charge as it occurred. So thoroughly were the Assembly
+ deceived, that the friendly guard was allowed free access to the
+ apartments, in order to facilitate, as was imagined, his wish to agonize
+ and annoy. By this means, he was enabled to caution the illustrious
+ prisoners never to betray any emotion at what he read, and to rely upon
+ his doing his best to soften the rigour of their fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The individual of whom I speak communicated these circumstances to me
+ himself. He declared, also, that the Duc d'Orleans came frequently to the
+ Temple during the imprisonment of Louis XVI., but, always in disguise; and
+ never, till within a few days after the murder of the poor King, did he
+ disclose himself. On that occasion he had bribed the men who were
+ accustomed to light the fires, to admit him in their stead to the
+ apartment of the Princesse Elizabeth. He found her on her knees, in
+ fervent prayer for the departed soul of her beloved brother. He performed
+ this office, totally unperceived by this predestined victim; but his
+ courage was subdued by her piety. He dared not extend the stratagem to the
+ apartment of the Queen. On leaving the angelic Princess, he was so
+ overcome by remorse that he: requested my informant to give him a glass of
+ water, saying, "that woman has unmanned me." It was by this circumstance
+ he was discovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen was immediately apprised by the good man of the occurrence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gracious God!" exclaimed Her Majesty, "I thought once or twice that I had
+ seen him at our miserable dinner hours, occupied with the other jailers at
+ the outside door. I even mentioned the circumstance to Elizabeth, and she
+ replied, "I also have observed a man resembling D'ORLEANS, but it cannot
+ be he, for the man I noticed had a wooden leg."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That was the very disguise he was discovered in this morning, when
+ preparing, or pretending to prepare, the fire in the Princesse Elizabeth's
+ apartment," replied the national guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Merciful Heaven!" said the Queen, "is he not yet satisfied? Must he even
+ satiate his barbarous brutality with being an eye-witness of the horrid
+ state into which he has thrown us? Save me," continued Her Majesty, "oh,
+ save me from contaminating my feeble sight, which is almost exhausted,
+ nearly parched up for the loss of my dear husband, by looking on him!&mdash;Oh,
+ death! come, come and release me from such a sight!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Luckily," observed the guard to me, "it was the hour of the general jail
+ dinner, and we were alone; otherwise, I should infallibly have been
+ discovered, as my tears fell faster than those of the Queen, for really
+ hers seemed to be nearly exhausted: However," pursued he, "that D'ORLEANS
+ did see the Queen, and that the Queen saw him, I am very sure. From what
+ passed between them in the month of July, 1793, she was hurried off from
+ the Temple to the common prison, to take her trial." This circumstance
+ combined, with other motives, to make the Assembly hasten the Duke's trial
+ soon after, who had been sent with his young son to Marseilles, there
+ being no doubt that he wished to rescue the Queen, so as to have her in
+ his own power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 16th of October, Her Majesty was beheaded. Her death was consistent
+ with her life. She met her fate like a Christian, but still like a Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps, had Marie Antoinette been uncontrolled in the exercise of her
+ judgment, she would have shown a spirit in emergency better adapted to
+ wrestle with the times than had been discovered by His Majesty. Certain it
+ is she was generally esteemed the most proper to be consulted of the two.
+ From the imperfect idea which many of the persons in office entertained of
+ the King's capacity, few of them ever made any communication of importance
+ but to the Queen. Her Majesty never kept a single circumstance from her
+ husband's knowledge, and scarcely decided on the smallest trifle without
+ his consent; but so thorough was his confidence in the correctness of her
+ judgment that he seldom, if ever, opposed her decisions. The Princesse de
+ Lamballe used to say, "Though Marie Antoinette is not a woman of great or
+ uncommon talents, yet her long practical knowledge gave her an insight
+ into matters of moment which she turned to advantage with so much coolness
+ and address amid difficulties, that I am convinced she only wanted free
+ scope to have shone in the history of Princes as a great Queen. Her
+ natural tendencies were perfectly domestic. Had she been kept in
+ countenance by the manners of the times, or favoured earlier by
+ circumstances, she would have sought her only pleasures in the family
+ circle, and, far from Court intrigue, have become the model of her sex and
+ age."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is by no means to be wondered at that, in her peculiar situation,
+ surrounded by a thoughtless and dissipated Court, long denied the natural
+ ties so necessary to such a heart, in the heyday of youth and beauty, and
+ possessing an animated and lively spirit, she should have given way in the
+ earlier part of her career to gaiety, and been pleased with a round of
+ amusement. The sincere friendship which she afterwards formed for the
+ Duchesse de Polignac encouraged this predilection. The plot to destroy her
+ had already been formed, and her enemies were too sharp-sighted and adroit
+ not to profit and take advantage of the opportunities afforded by this
+ weakness. The miscreant had murdered her character long, long before they
+ assailed her person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The charge against her of extravagance has been already refuted. Her
+ private palace was furnished from the State lumber rooms, and what was
+ purchased, paid for out of her savings. As for her favourites, she never
+ had but two, and these were no supernumerary expense or encumbrance to the
+ State.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps it would have been better had she been more thoroughly directed by
+ the Princesse de Lamballe. She was perfectly conscious of her good
+ qualities, but De Polignac dazzled and humoured her love of amusement and
+ display of splendour. Though this favourite was the image of her royal
+ mistress in her amiable characteristics, the resemblance unfortunately
+ extended to her weaknesses. This was not the case with the Princesse de
+ Lamballe; she possessed steadiness, and was governed by the cool foresight
+ of her father-in-law, the Duc de Penthievre, which both the other friends
+ wanted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unshaken attachment of the Princesse de Lamballe to the Queen,
+ notwithstanding the slight at which she at one time had reason to feel
+ piqued, is one of the strongest evidences against the slanderers of Her
+ Majesty. The moral conduct of the Princess has never been called in
+ question. Amid the millions of infamous falsehoods invented to vilify and
+ degrade every other individual connected with the Court, no imputation,
+ from the moment of her arrival in France, up to the fatal one of her
+ massacre, ever tarnished her character. To her opinion, then, the most
+ prejudiced might look with confidence. Certainly no one had a greater
+ opportunity of knowing the real character of Marie Antoinette. She was an
+ eye-witness to her conduct during the most brilliant and luxurious portion
+ of her reign; she saw her from the meridian of her magnificence down to
+ her dejection to the depths of unparalleled misery. If the unfortunate
+ Queen had ever been guilty of the slightest of those glaring vices of
+ which she was so generally accused, the Princess must have been aware of
+ them; and it was not in her nature to have remained the friend and
+ advocate, even unto death, of one capable of depravity. Yet not a breath
+ of discord ever arose between them on that score. Virtue and vice can
+ never harmonize; and even had policy kept Her Highness from avowing a
+ change of sentiments, it never could have continued her enthusiasm, which
+ was augmented, and not diminished, by the fall of her royal friend. An
+ attachment which holds through every vicissitude must be deeply rooted
+ from conviction of the integrity of its object.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The friendship that subsisted between this illustrious pair is an
+ everlasting monument that honours their sex. The Queen used to say of her,
+ that she was the only woman she had ever known without gall. "Like the
+ blessed land of Ireland," observed Her Majesty, "exempt from the reptiles
+ elsewhere so dangerous to mankind, so was she freed by Providence from the
+ venom by which the finest form in others is empoisoned. No envy, no
+ ambition, no desire, but to contribute to the welfare and happiness of her
+ fellow creatures&mdash;and yet, with all these estimable virtues, these
+ angelic qualities, she is doomed, from her virtuous attachment to our
+ persons, to sink under the weight of that affliction, which, sooner or
+ later, must bury us all in one common ruin&mdash;a ruin which is
+ threatening hourly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These presentiments of the awful result of impending storms were mutual.
+ From frequent conversations with the Princesse de Lamballe, from the
+ evidence of her letters and her private papers, and from many remarks
+ which have been repeated to me personally by Her Highness, and from
+ persons in her confidence, there is abundant evidence of the forebodings
+ she constantly had of her own and the Queen's untimely end.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [A very remarkable circumstance was related to me when I was at Vienna,
+ after this horrid murder. The Princess of Lobkowitz, sister to the
+ Princesse de Lamballe, received a box, with an anonymous letter, telling
+ her to conceal the box carefully till further notice. After the riots
+ had subsided a little in France, she was apprised that the box contained
+ all, or the greater part, of the jewels belonging to the Princess, and
+ had been taken from the Tuileries on the 10th of August.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is supposed that the jewels had been packed by the Princess in
+ anticipation of her doom, and forwarded to her sister through her agency
+ or desire.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ There was no friend of the Queen to whom the King showed any deference, or
+ rather anything like the deference he paid to the Princesse de Lamballe.
+ When the Duchesse de Polignac, the Comtesse Diane de Polignac, the Comte
+ d'Artois, the Duchesse de Guiche, her husband, the present Duc de
+ Grammont, the Prince of Hesse-Darmstadt, etc., fled from Paris, he and the
+ Queen, as if they had foreseen the awful catastrophe which was to destroy
+ her so horribly, entreated her to leave the Court, and take refuge in
+ Italy. So also did her father-in-law, the Duc de Penthievre; but all in
+ vain. She saw her friend deprived of De Polignac, and all those near and
+ dear to her heart, and became deaf to every solicitation. Could such
+ constancy, which looked death in its worst form in the face unshrinking,
+ have existed without great and estimable qualities in its possessor?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The brother-in-law of the Princesse de Lamballe, the Duc d'Orleans, was
+ her declared enemy merely from her attachment to the Queen. These three
+ great victims have been persecuted to the tomb, which had no sooner closed
+ over the last than the hand of Heaven fell upon their destroyer. That
+ Louis XVI. was not the friend of this member of his family can excite no
+ surprise, but must rather challenge admiration. He had been seduced by his
+ artful and designing regicide companions to expend millions to undermine
+ the throne, and shake it to pieces under the feet of his relative, his
+ Sovereign, the friend of his earliest youth, who was aware of the treason,
+ and who held the thunderbolt, but would not crush him. But they have been
+ foiled in their hope of building a throne for him upon the ruin they had
+ made, and placed an age where they flattered him he would find a diadem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince de Conti told me at Barcelona that the Duchesse d'Orleans had
+ assured him that, even had the Duc d'Orleans survived, he never could have
+ attained, his object. The immense sums he had lavished upon the horde of
+ his revolutionary satellites had, previous to his death, thrown him into
+ embarrassment. The avarice of his party increased as his resources
+ diminished. The evil, as evil generally does, would have wrought its own
+ punishment in either way. He must have lived suspected and miserable, had
+ he not died. But his reckless character did not desert him at the
+ scaffold. It is said that before he arrived at the Place de Greve he ate a
+ very rich ragout, and drank a bottle of champagne, and left the world as
+ he had gone through it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The supernumerary, the uncalled-for martyr, the last of the four devoted
+ royal sufferers, was beheaded the following spring. For this murder there
+ could not have been the shadow of a pretext. The virtues of this victim
+ were sufficient to redeem the name of Elizabeth from the stain with which
+ the two of England and Russia, who had already borne it, had clouded its
+ immortality.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [The eighteen years' imprisonment and final murder of Mary, Queen of
+ Scots, by Elizabeth of England, is enough to stigmatize her forever,
+ independently of the many other acts of tyranny which stain her memory.
+ The dethronement by Elizabeth of Russia of the innocent Prince Ivan, her
+ near relation, while yet in the cradle, gives the Northern Empress a
+ claim to a similar character to the British Queen.]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ She had never, in any way, interfered in political events. Malice itself
+ had never whispered a circumstance to her dispraise. After this wanton
+ assassination, it is scarcely to be expected that the innocent and candid
+ looks and streaming azure eyes of that angelic infant, the Dauphin, though
+ raised in humble supplication to his brutal assassins, with an eloquence
+ which would have disarmed the savage tiger, could have won wretches so
+ much more pitiless than the most ferocious beasts of the wilderness, or
+ saved him from their slow but sure poison, whose breath was worse than the
+ upas tree to all who came within its influence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duchesse d'Angouleme, the only survivor of these wretched captives, is
+ a living proof of the baleful influence of that contaminated prison, the
+ infectious tomb of the royal martyrs. That once lovely countenance, which,
+ with the goodness and amiableness of her royal father, whose mildness hung
+ on her lips like the milk and honey of human kindness, blended the
+ dignity, grace, elegance, and innocent vivacity, which were the
+ acknowledged characteristics of her beautiful mother, lost for some time
+ all traces of its original attractions. The lines of deep-seated sorrow
+ are not easily obliterated. If the sanguinary republic had not wished to
+ obtain by exchange the Generals La Fayette, Bournonville, Lameth, etc.,
+ whom Dumourier had treacherously consigned into the hands of Austria,
+ there is little: doubt but that, from the prison in which she was so long
+ doomed to vegetate only to make life a burthen, she would have been sent
+ to share the fate of her murdered family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How can the Parisians complain that they found her Royal Highness, on her
+ return to France, by no means what they required in a Princess? Can it be
+ wondered at that her marked grief should be visible when amidst the
+ murderers of her family? It should rather be a wonder that she can at all
+ bear the scenes in which she moves, and not abhor the very name of Paris,
+ when every step must remind her of some out rage to herself, or those most
+ dear to her, or of some beloved relative or friend destroyed! Her return
+ can only be accounted for by the spell of that all-powerful 'amor
+ patriae', which sometimes prevails over every other influence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /> <a name="pb350" id="pb350"></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="pb350.jpg (74K)" src="images/pb350.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before I dismiss this subject, it may not be uninteresting to my readers
+ to receive some desultory anecdotes that I have heard concerning one or
+ two of the leading monsters, by whom the horrors upon which I have
+ expatiated were occasioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ David, the famous painter, was a member of the sanguinary tribunal which
+ condemned the King. On this account he has been banished from France since
+ the restoration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If any one deserved this severity, it was David. It was at the expense of
+ the Court of Louis XVI. that this ungrateful being was sent to Rome, to
+ perfect himself in his sublime art. His studies finished, he was pensioned
+ from the same patrons, and upheld as an artist by the special protection
+ of every member of the Royal Family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet this man, if he may be dignified by the name, had the baseness to
+ say in the hearing of the unfortunate Louis XVI., when on trial, "Well!
+ when are we to have his head dressed, a la guillotine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At another time, being deputed to visit the Temple, as one of the
+ committee of public safety, as he held out his snuff-box before the
+ Princesse Elizabeth, she, conceiving he meant to offer it, took a pinch.
+ The monster, observing what she had done, darting a look of contempt at
+ her, instantly threw away the snuff, and dashed the box to pieces on the
+ floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robespierre had a confidential physician, who attended him almost to the
+ period when he ascended the scaffold, and who was very often obliged,
+ 'malgre-lui', to dine tete-a-tete with this monopolizer of human flesh and
+ blood. One day he happened to be with him, after a very extraordinary
+ number had been executed, and amongst the rest, some of the physician's
+ most intimate acquaintances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unwilling guest was naturally very downcast, and ill at ease, and
+ could not dissemble his anguish. He tried to stammer out excuses and get
+ away from the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robespierre, perceiving his distress, interrogated him as to the cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The physician, putting his hand to his head, discovered his reluctance to
+ explain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robespierre took him by the hand, assured him he had nothing to fear, and
+ added, "Come, doctor, you, as a professional man, must be well informed as
+ to the sentiments of the major part of the Parisians respecting me. I
+ entreat you, my dear friend, frankly to avow their opinion. It may perhaps
+ serve me for the future, as a guide for governing them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The physician answered, "I can no longer resist the impulse of nature. I
+ know I shall thereby oppose myself to your power, but I must tell you, you
+ are generally abhorred,&mdash;considered the Attila, the Sylla, of the
+ age,&mdash;the two-footed plague, that, walks about to fill peaceful
+ abodes with miseries and family mournings. The myriads you are daily
+ sending to the slaughter at the Place de Greve, who have, committed no
+ crime, the carts of a certain description, you have ordered daily to bear
+ a stated number to be sacrificed, directing they should be taken from the
+ prisons, and, if enough are not in the prisons, seized, indiscriminately
+ in the streets, that no place in the deadly vehicle may be left
+ unoccupied, and all this without a trial, without even an accusation, and
+ without any sanction but your own mandate&mdash;these things call the
+ public curse upon you, which is not the less bitter for not being
+ audible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" said Robespierre, laughing. "This puts me in mind of a story told of
+ the cruelty and tyranny, of Pope Sixtus the Fifth, who, having one night,
+ after he had enjoyed himself at a Bacchanalian supper, when heated with
+ wine, by way of a 'bonne bouche', ordered the first man that should come
+ through the gate of the 'Strada del popolo' at Rome to be immediately
+ hanged. Every person at this drunken conclave&mdash;nay, all Rome&mdash;considered
+ the Pope a tyrant, the most cruel of tyrants, till it was made known and
+ proved, after his death, that the wretch so executed had murdered his
+ father and mother ten years previously. I know whom I send to the Place de
+ Greve. All who go there are guilty, though they may not seem so. Go on,
+ what else have you heard?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, that you have so terrified all descriptions of persons, that they
+ fear even your very breath, and look upon you as worse than the plague;
+ and I should not be surprised, if you persist in this course of conduct,
+ if something serious to yourself should be the consequence, and that ere
+ long."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not the least extraordinary part of the story is that this dialogue
+ between the devil and the doctor took place but a very, few hours previous
+ to Robespierre's being denounced by Tallien and Carriere to the national
+ convention, as a conspirator against the republican cause. In defending
+ himself from being arrested by the guard, he attempted to shoot himself,
+ but the ball missed, broke the monster's jaw-bone only, and nearly impeded
+ his speaking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Singularly enough, it was this physician who was sent for to assist and
+ dress his wounds. Robespierre replied to the doctor's observations,
+ laughing, and in the following language:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, poor devils! they do not know their own interest. But my plan of
+ exterminating the evil will soon teach them. This is the only thing for
+ the good of the nation; for, before you can reform a thousand Frenchmen,
+ you must first lop off half a million of these vagabonds, and, if God
+ spare my life, in a few months there will be so many the less to breed
+ internal commotions, and disturb the general peace of Europe.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ [When Bonaparte was contriving the Consulship for life, and, in the
+ Irish way, forced the Italian Republic to volunteer an offer of the
+ Consulship of Italy, by a deputation to him at Paris, I happened to be
+ there. Many Italians, besides the deputies, went on the occasion, and,
+ among them, we had the good fortune to meet the Abbe Fortis, the
+ celebrated naturalist, a gentleman of first-rate abilities, who had
+ travelled three-fourths of the globe in mineralogical research. The Abbe
+ chanced one day to be in company with my husband, who was an old
+ acquaintance of his, where many of the chopfallen deputies, like
+ themselves, true lovers of their country, could not help declaring their
+ indignation at its degraded state, and reprobating Bonaparte for
+ rendering it so ridiculous in the face of Europe and the world. The Abbe
+ Fords, with the voice of a Stentor, and spreading his gigantic form,
+ which exceeded six feet in height, exclaimed: "This would not have been
+ the case had that just and wise man Robespierre lived but a little
+ longer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every one present was struck with horror at the observation. Noticing
+ the effect of his words, the Abbe resumed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I knew well I should frighten you in showing any partiality for that
+ bloody monopoliser of human heads. But you do not know the perfidy of
+ the French nation so well as I do. I have lived among them many years.
+ France is the sink of human deception. A Frenchman will deceive his
+ father, wife, and child; for deception is his element. Robespierre knew
+ this, and acted upon it, as you shall hear."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Abbe then related to us the story I have detailed above, verbatim,
+ as he had it from the son of Esculapius, who himself confirmed it
+ afterwards in a conversation with the Abbe in our presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having completed his anecdote, "Well," said the Abbe, "was I not right
+ in my opinion of this great philosopher and foreseer of evils, when I
+ observed that had he but lived a few months longer, there would have
+ been so many less in the world to disturb its tranquillity?"]
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ The same physician observed that from the immense number of executions
+ during the sanguinary reign of that monster, the Place de Greve became so
+ complete a swamp of human blood that it would scarcely hold the
+ scaffolding of the instrument of death, which, in consequence, was obliged
+ to be continually moved from one side of the square to the other. Many of
+ the soldiers and officers, who were obliged to attend these horrible
+ executions, had constantly their half-boots and stockings filled with the
+ blood of the poor sufferers; and as, whenever there was any national
+ festival to be given, it generally followed one of the most sanguinary of
+ these massacres, the public places, the theatres especially, all bore the
+ tracks of blood throughout the saloons and lobbies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The infamous Carrier, who was the execrable agent of his still more
+ execrable employer, Robespierre, was left afterwards to join Tallien in a
+ conspiracy against him, merely to save himself; but did not long survive
+ his atrocious crimes or his perfidy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is impossible to calculate the vast number of private assassinations
+ committed in the dead of the night, by order of this cannibal, on persons
+ of every rank and description.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My task is now ended. Nothing remains for me but the reflections which
+ these sad and shocking remembrances cannot fail to awaken in all minds,
+ and especially in mine. Is it not astonishing that, in an age so refined,
+ so free from the enormous and flagitious crimes which were the common
+ stains of barbarous centuries, and at an epoch peculiarly enlightened by
+ liberal views, the French nation, by all deemed the most polished since
+ the Christian era, should have given an example of such wanton, brutal,
+ and coarse depravity to the world, under pretences altogether chimerical,
+ and, after unprecedented bloodshed and horror, ended at the point where it
+ began!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The organized system of plunder and anarchy, exercised under different
+ forms more or less sanguinary, produced no permanent result beyond an
+ incontestible proof that the versatility of the French nation, and its
+ puny suppleness of character, utterly incapacitate it for that energetic
+ enterprise without which there can be no hope of permanent emancipation
+ from national slavery. It is my unalterable conviction that the French
+ will never know how to enjoy an independent and free Constitution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tree of liberty unavoidably in all nations has been sprinkled with
+ human blood; but, when bathed by innocent victims, like the foul weed,
+ though it spring up, it rots in its infancy, and becomes loathsome and
+ infectious. Such has been the case in France; and the result justifies the
+ Italian satire:
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <i>"Un albero senza fruta <br /> Baretta senza testa <br /> Governo che
+ non resta."</i>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /> <a name="guillotine" id="guillotine"></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="guillotine.jpg (108K)" src="images/guillotine.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+A liar ought to have a good memory
+Air of science calculated to deceive the vulgar
+And scarcely a woman; for your answers are very short
+Bad habit of talking very indiscreetly before others
+Beaumarchais sent arms to the Americans
+Because he is fat, he is thought dull and heavy
+Can make a Duchess a beggar, but cannot make a beggar a Duchess
+Canvassing for a majority to set up D'Orleans
+Clergy enjoyed one-third the national revenues
+Clouds&mdash;you may see what you please in them
+Danger of confiding the administration to noblemen
+Dared to say to me, so he writes
+Dead always in fault, and cannot be put out of sight too soon
+Declaring the Duke of Orleans the constitutional King
+Do not repulse him in his fond moments
+Educate his children as quietists in matters of religion
+Embonpoint of the French Princesses
+Fatal error of conscious rectitude
+Feel themselves injured by the favour shown to others
+Few individuals except Princesses do with parade and publicity
+Foolishly occupying themselves with petty matters
+Frailty in the ambitious, through which the artful can act
+French people do not do things by halves
+Fresh proof of the intrigues of the Jesuits
+He who quits the field loses it
+Honesty is to be trusted before genius
+How difficult it is to do good
+I dared not touch that string
+Infinite astonishment at his sharing the common destiny
+It is an ill wind that blows no one any good
+Judge of men by the company they keep
+Laughed at qualities she could not comprehend
+Les culottes&mdash;what do you call them?' 'Small clothes'
+Listeners never hear any good of themselves
+Madame made the Treaty of Sienna
+Many an aching heart rides in a carriage
+Mind well stored against human casualties
+Money the universal lever, and you are in want of it
+More dangerous to attack the habits of men than their religion
+My little English protegee
+No phrase becomes a proverb until after a century's experience
+Offering you the spectacle of my miseries
+Only retire to make room for another race
+Over-caution may produce evils almost equal to carelessness
+Panegyric of the great Edmund Burke upon Marie Antoinette
+Pension is granted on condition that his poems are never printed
+People in independence are only the puppets of demagogues
+Pleasure of making a great noise at little expense
+Policy, in sovereigns, is paramount to every other
+Quiet work of ruin by whispers and detraction
+Regardlessness of appearances
+Revolution not as the Americans, founded on grievances
+Ridicule, than which no weapon is more false or deadly
+Salique Laws
+Sending astronomers to Mexico and Peru, to measure the earth
+Sentiment is more prompt, and inspires me with fear
+She always says the right thing in the right place
+She drives quick and will certainly be overturned on the road
+Suppression of all superfluous religious institutions
+Sworn that she had thought of nothing but you all her life
+Thank Heaven, I am out of harness
+The King remained as if paralysed and stupefied
+These expounders&mdash;or confounders&mdash;of codes
+To be accused was to incur instant death
+To despise money, is to despise happiness, liberty...
+Traducing virtues the slanderers never possessed
+Underrated what she could not imitate
+We look upon you as a cat, or a dog, and go on talking
+We say "inexpressibles"
+When the only security of a King rests upon his troops
+Where the knout is the logician
+Who confound logic with their wishes
+Wish art to eclipse nature
+You tell me bad news: having packed up, I had rather go
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Secret Memoirs of Louis XV./XVI,
+Complete, by Madame du Hausset, an "Unknown English Girl" and the Princess Lamballe
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>