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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/3886.txt b/3886.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d77b766 --- /dev/null +++ b/3886.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2957 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Memoirs of Marie Antoinette, Queen Of +France, Volume 3, by Madame Campan + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Memoirs of Marie Antoinette, Queen Of France, Volume 3 + Being the Historic Memoirs of Madam Campan, First Lady in Waiting + to the Queen + + +Author: Madame Campan + +Release Date: December 4, 2004 [EBook #3886] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MARIE ANTOINETTE *** + + + + +Produced by David Widger + + + + + +MEMOIRS OF THE COURT OF MARIE ANTOINETTE, + +QUEEN OF FRANCE + +Being the Historic Memoirs of Madam Campan, + +First Lady in Waiting to the Queen + + + + +Volume 3 + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + + +During the first few months of his reign Louis XVI. dwelt at La Muette, +Marly, and Compiegne. When settled at Versailles he occupied himself with +a general examination of his grandfather's papers. He had promised the +Queen to communicate to her all that he might discover relative to the +history of the man with the iron mask, who, he thought, had become so +inexhaustible a source of conjecture only in consequence of the interest +which the pen of a celebrated writer had excited respecting the detention +of a prisoner of State, who was merely a man of whimsical tastes and +habits. + +I was with the Queen when the King, having finished his researches, +informed her that he had not found anything among the secret papers +elucidating the existence of this prisoner; that he had conversed on the +matter with M. de Maurepas, whose age made him contemporary with the epoch +during which the story must have been known to the ministers; and that M. +de Maurepas had assured him he was merely a prisoner of a very dangerous +character, in consequence of his disposition for intrigue. He was a +subject of the Duke of Mantua, and was enticed to the frontier, arrested +there, and kept prisoner, first at Pignerol, and afterwards in the +Bastille. This transfer took place in consequence of the appointment of +the governor of the former place to the government of the latter. It was +for fear the prisoner should profit by the inexperience of a new governor +that he was sent with the Governor of Pignerol to the Bastille. + +Such was, in fact, the truth about the man on whom people have been +pleased to fix an iron mask. And thus was it related in writing, and +published by M. ----- twenty years ago. He had searched the archives of +the Foreign Office, and laid the real story before the public; but the +public, prepossessed in favour of a marvellous version, would not +acknowledge the authenticity of his account. Every man relied upon the +authority of Voltaire; and it was believed that a natural or a twin +brother of Louis XIV. lived many years in prison with a mask over his +face. The story of this mask, perhaps, had its origin in the old custom, +among both men and women in Italy, of wearing a velvet mask when they +exposed themselves to the sun. It is possible that the Italian captive +may have sometimes shown himself upon the terrace of his prison with his +face thus covered. As to the silver plate which this celebrated prisoner +is said to have thrown from his window, it is known that such a +circumstance did happen, but it happened at Valzin, in the time of +Cardinal Richelieu. This anecdote has been mixed up with the inventions +respecting the Piedmontese prisoner. + +In this survey of the papers of Louis XV. by his grandson some very +curious particulars relative to his private treasury were found. Shares +in various financial companies afforded him a revenue, and had in course +of time produced him a capital of some amount, which he applied to his +secret expenses. The King collected his vouchers of title to these +shares, and made a present of them to M. Thierry de Ville d'Avray, his +chief valet de chambre. + +The Queen was desirous to secure the comfort of Mesdames, the daughters of +Louis XV., who were held in the highest respect. About this period she +contributed to furnish them with a revenue sufficient to provide them an +easy, pleasant existence: The King gave them the Chateau of Bellevue; and +added to the produce of it, which was given up to them, the expenses of +their table and equipage, and payment of all the charges of their +household, the number of which was even increased. During the lifetime of +Louis XV., who was a very selfish prince, his daughters, although they had +attained forty years of age, had no other place of residence than their +apartments in the Chateau of Versailles; no other walks than such as they +could take in the large park of that palace; and no other means of +gratifying their taste for the cultivation of plants but by having boxes +and vases, filled with them, in their balconies or their closets. They +had, therefore, reason to be much pleased with the conduct of Marie +Antoinette, who had the greatest influence in the King's kindness towards +his aunts. + +Paris did not cease, during the first years of the reign, to give proofs +of pleasure whenever the Queen appeared at any of the plays of the +capital. At the representation of "Iphigenia in Aulis," the actor who +sang the words, "Let us sing, let us celebrate our Queen!" which were +repeated by the chorus, directed by a respectful movement the eyes of the +whole assembly upon her Majesty. Reiterated cries of 'Bis'! and clapping +of hands, were followed by such a burst of enthusiasm that many of the +audience added their voices to those of the actors in order to celebrate, +it might too truly be said, another Iphigenia. The Queen, deeply +affected, covered her eyes with her handkerchief; and this proof of +sensibility raised the public enthusiasm to a still higher pitch. + +The King gave Marie Antoinette Petit Trianon. + +[The Chateau of Petit Trianon, which was built for Louis XV., was not +remarkably handsome as a building. The luxuriance of the hothouses +rendered the place agreeable to that Prince. He spent a few days there +several times in the year. It was when he was setting off from Versailles +for Petit Trianon that he was struck in the side by the knife of Damiens, +and it was there that he was attacked by the smallpox, of which he died on +the 10th of May, 1774.--MADAME CAMPAN.] + +Henceforward she amused herself with improving the gardens, without +allowing any addition to the building, or any change in the furniture, +which was very shabby, and remained, in 1789, in the same state as during +the reign of Louis XV. Everything there, without exception, was +preserved; and the Queen slept in a faded bed, which had been used by the +Comtesse du Barry. The charge of extravagance, generally made against the +Queen, is the most unaccountable of all the popular errors respecting her +character. She had exactly the contrary failing; and I could prove that +she often carried her economy to a degree of parsimony actually blamable, +especially in a sovereign. She took a great liking for Trianon, and used +to go there alone, followed by a valet; but she found attendants ready to +receive her,--a concierge and his wife, who served her as femme de +chambre, women of the wardrobe, footmen, etc. + +When she first took possession of Petit Trianon, it was reported that she +changed the name of the seat which the King had given her, and called it +Little Vienna, or Little Schoenbrunn. A person who belonged to the Court, +and was silly enough to give this report credit, wishing to visit Petit +Trianon with a party, wrote to M. Campan, requesting the Queen's +permission to do so. In his note he called Trianon Little Vienna. Similar +requests were usually laid before the Queen just as they were made: she +chose to give the permissions to see her gardens herself, liking to grant +these little favours. When she came to the words I have quoted she was +very, much offended, and exclaimed, angrily, that there were too many, +fools ready, to aid the malicious; that she had been told of the report +circulated, which pretended that she had thought of nothing but her own +country, and that she kept an Austrian heart, while the interests of +France alone ought to engage her. She refused the request so awkwardly +made, and desired M. Campan to reply, that Trianon was not to be seen for +some time, and that the Queen was astonished that any man in good society +should believe she would do so ill-judged a thing as to change the French +names of her palaces to foreign ones. + +Before the Emperor Joseph II's first visit to France the Queen received a +visit from the Archduke Maximilian in 1775. A stupid act of the +ambassador, seconded on the part of the Queen by the Abbe de Vermond, gave +rise at that period to a discussion which offended the Princes of the +blood and the chief nobility of the kingdom. Travelling incognito, the +young Prince claimed that the first visit was not due from him to the +Princes of the blood; and the Queen supported his pretension. + +From the time of the Regency, and on account of the residence of the +family of Orleans in the bosom of the capital, Paris had preserved a +remarkable degree of attachment and respect for that branch of the royal +house; and although the crown was becoming more and more remote from the +Princes of the House of Orleans, they had the advantage (a great one with +the Parisians) of being the descendants of Henri IV. An affront to that +popular family was a serious ground of dislike to the Queen. It was at +this period that the circles of the city, and even of the Court, expressed +themselves bitterly about her levity, and her partiality for the House of +Austria. The Prince for whom the Queen had embarked in an important +family quarrel--and a quarrel involving national prerogatives--was, +besides, little calculated to inspire interest. Still young, uninformed, +and deficient in natural talent, he was always making blunders. + +He went to the Jardin du Roi; M. de Buffon, who received him there, +offered him a copy of his works; the Prince declined accepting the book, +saying to M. de Buffon, in the most polite manner possible, "I should be +very sorry to deprive you of it." + +[Joseph II, on his visit to France, also went to see M. de Buffon, and +said to that celebrated man, "I am come to fetch the copy of your works +which my brother forgot."--NOTE BY THE EDITOR.] + +It may be supposed that the Parisians were much entertained with this +answer. + +The Queen was exceedingly mortified at the mistakes made by her brother; +but what hurt her most was being accused of preserving an Austrian heart. +Marie Antoinette had more than once to endure that imputation during the +long course of her misfortunes. Habit did not stop the tears such +injustice caused; but the first time she was suspected of not loving +France, she gave way to her indignation. All that she could say on the +subject was useless; by seconding the pretensions of the Archduke she had +put arms into her enemies' hands; they were labouring to deprive her of +the love of the people, and endeavoured, by all possible means, to spread +a belief that the Queen sighed for Germany, and preferred that country to +France. + +Marie Antoinette had none but herself to rely on for preserving the fickle +smiles of the Court and the public. The King, too indifferent to serve +her as a guide, as yet had conceived no love for her, notwithstanding the +intimacy that grew between them at Choisy. In his closet Louis XVI. was +immersed in deep study. At the Council he was busied with the welfare of +his people; hunting and mechanical occupations engrossed his leisure +moments, and he never thought on the subject of an heir. + +The coronation took place at Rheims, with all the accustomed pomp. At +this period the people's love for Louis XVI. burst forth in transports +not to be mistaken for party demonstrations or idle curiosity. He replied +to this enthusiasm by marks of confidence, worthy of a people happy in +being governed by a good King; he took a pleasure in repeatedly walking +without guards, in the midst of the crowd which pressed around him, and +called down blessings on his head. I remarked the impression made at this +time by an observation of Louis XVI. On the day of his coronation he put +his hand up to his head, at the moment of the crown being placed upon it, +and said, "It pinches me." Henri III. had exclaimed, "It pricks me." +Those who were near the King were struck with the similarity between these +two exclamations, though not of a class likely to be blinded by the +superstitious fears of ignorance. + +While the Queen, neglected as she was, could not even hope for the +happiness of being a mother, she had the mortification of seeing the +Comtesse d'Artois give birth to the Duc d'Angouleme. + +Custom required that the royal family and the whole Court should be +present at the accouchement of the Princesses; the Queen was therefore +obliged to stay a whole day in her sister-in-law's chamber. The moment +the Comtesse d'Artois was informed a prince was born, she put her hand to +her forehead and exclaimed with energy, "My God, how happy I am!" The +Queen felt very differently at this involuntary and natural exclamation. +Nevertheless, her behaviour was perfect. She bestowed all possible marks +of tenderness upon the young mother, and would not leave her until she was +again put into bed; she afterwards passed along the staircase, and through +the hall of the guards, with a calm demeanour, in the midst of an immense +crowd. The poissardes, who had assumed a right of speaking to sovereigns +in their own vulgar language, followed her to the very doors of her +apartments, calling out to her with gross expressions, that she ought to +produce heirs. The Queen reached her inner room, hurried and agitated; he +shut herself up to weep with me alone, not from jealousy of her +sister-in-law's happiness,--of that he was incapable,--but from sorrow at +her own situation. + +Deprived of the happiness of giving an heir to the crown, the Queen +endeavoured to interest herself in the children of the people of her +household. She had long been desirous to bring up one of them herself, +and to make it the constant object of her care. A little village boy, +four or five years old, full of health, with a pleasing countenance, +remarkably large blue eyes, and fine light hair, got under the feet of the +Queen's horses, when she was taking an airing in a calash, through the +hamlet of St. Michel, near Louveciennes. The coachman and postilions +stopped the horses, and the child was rescued without the slightest +injury. Its grandmother rushed out of the door of her cottage to take it; +but the Queen, standing up in her calash and extending her arms, called +out that the child was hers, and that destiny had given it to her, to +console her, no doubt, until she should have the happiness of having one +herself. "Is his mother alive?" asked the Queen. "No, Madame; my +daughter died last winter, and left five small children upon my hands." "I +will take this one, and provide for all the rest; do you consent?" "Ah, +Madame, they are too fortunate," replied the cottager; "but Jacques is a +bad boy. I hope he will stay with you!" The Queen, taking little Jacques +upon her knee, said that she would make him used to her, and gave orders +to proceed. It was necessary, however, to shorten the drive, so violently +did Jacques scream, and kick the Queen and her ladies. + +The arrival of her Majesty at her apartments at Versailles, holding the +little rustic by the hand, astonished the whole household; he cried out +with intolerable shrillness that he wanted his grandmother, his brother +Louis, and his sister Marianne; nothing could calm him. He was taken away +by the wife of a servant, who was appointed to attend him as nurse. The +other children were put to school. Little Jacques, whose family name was +Armand, came back to the Queen two days afterwards; a white frock trimmed +with lace, a rose-coloured sash with silver fringe, and a hat decorated +with feathers, were now substituted for the woollen cap, the little red +frock, and the wooden shoes. The child was really very beautiful. The +Queen was enchanted with him; he was brought to her every morning at nine +o'clock; he breakfasted and dined with her, and often even with the King. +She liked to call him my child, + +[This little unfortunate was nearly twenty in 1792; the fury of the people +and the fear of being thought a favourite of the Queen's had made him the +most sanguinary terrorist of Versailles. He was killed at the battle of +Jemappes.] + +and lavished caresses upon him, still maintaining a deep silence +respecting the regrets which constantly occupied her heart. + +This child remained with the Queen until the time when Madame was old +enough to come home to her august mother, who had particularly taken upon +herself the care of her education. + +The Queen talked incessantly of the qualities which she admired in Louis +XVI., and gladly attributed to herself the slightest favourable change in +his manner; perhaps she displayed too unreservedly the joy she felt, and +the share she appropriated in the improvement. One day Louis XVI. saluted +her ladies with more kindness than usual, and the Queen laughingly said to +them, "Now confess, ladies, that for one so badly taught as a child, the +King has saluted you with very good grace!" + +The Queen hated M. de La Vauguyon; she accused him alone of those points +in the habits, and even the sentiments, of the King which hurt her. A +former first woman of the bedchamber to Queen Maria Leczinska had +continued in office near the young Queen. She was one of those people who +are fortunate enough to spend their lives in the service of kings without +knowing anything of what is passing at Court. She was a great devotee; +the Abbe Grisel, an ex-Jesuit, was her director. Being rich from her +savings and an income of 50,000 livres, she kept a very good table; in her +apartment, at the Grand Commun, the most distinguished persons who still +adhered to the Order of Jesuits often assembled. The Duc de La Vauguyon +was intimate with her; their chairs at the Eglise des Reollets were placed +near each other; at high mass and at vespers they sang the "Gloria in +Excelsis" and the "Magnificat" together; and the pious virgin, seeing in +him only one of God's elect, little imagined him to be the declared enemy +of a Princess whom she served and revered. On the day of his death she ran +in tears to relate to the Queen the piety, humility, and repentance of the +last moments of the Duc de La Vauguyon. He had called his people +together, she said, to ask their pardon. "For what?" replied the Queen, +sharply; "he has placed and pensioned off all his servants; it was of the +King and his brothers that the holy man you bewail should have asked +pardon, for having paid so little attention to the education of princes on +whom the fate and happiness of twenty-five millions of men depend. +Luckily," added she, "the King and his brothers, still young, have +incessantly laboured to repair the errors of their preceptor." + +The progress of time, and the confidence with which the King and the +Princes, his brothers, were inspired by the change in their situation +since the death of Louis XV., had developed their characters. I will +endeavour to depict them. + +The features of Louis XVI. were noble enough, though somewhat melancholy +in expression; his walk was heavy and unmajestic; his person greatly +neglected; his hair, whatever might be the skill of his hairdresser, was +soon in disorder. His voice, without being harsh, was not agreeable; if +he grew animated in speaking he often got above his natural pitch, and +became shrill. The Abbe de Radonvilliers, his preceptor, one of the Forty +of the French Academy, a learned and amiable man, had given him and +Monsieur a taste for study. The King had continued to instruct himself; +he knew the English language perfectly; I have often heard him translate +some of the most difficult passages in Milton's poems. He was a skilful +geographer, and was fond of drawing and colouring maps; he was well versed +in history, but had not perhaps sufficiently studied the spirit of it. He +appreciated dramatic beauties, and judged them accurately. At Choisy, one +day, several ladies expressed their dissatisfaction because the French +actors were going to perform one of Moliere's pieces. The King inquired +why they disapproved of the choice. One of them answered that everybody +must admit that Moliere had very bad taste; the King replied that many +things might be found in Moliere contrary to fashion, but that it appeared +to him difficult to point out any in bad taste? + +[The King, having purchased the Chateau of Rambouillet from the Duc de +Penthievre, amused himself with embellishing it. I have seen a register +entirely in his own handwriting, which proves that he possessed a great +variety of information on the minutiae of various branches of knowledge. +In his accounts he would not omit an outlay of a franc. His figures and +letters, when he wished to write legibly, were small and very neat, but in +general he wrote very ill. He was so sparing of paper that he divided a +sheet into eight, six, or four pieces, according to the length of what he +had to write. Towards the close of the page he compressed the letters, and +avoided interlineations. The last words were close to the edge of the +paper; he seemed to regret being obliged to begin another page. He was +methodical and analytical; he divided what he wrote into chapters and +sections. He had extracted from the works of Nicole and Fenelon, his +favourite authors, three or four hundred concise and sententious phrases; +these he had classed according to subject, and formed a work of them in +the style of Montesquieu. To this treatise he had given the following +general title: "Of Moderate Monarchy" (De la Monarchie temperee), with +chapters entitled, "Of the Person of the Prince;" "Of the Authority of +Bodies in the State;" "Of the Character of the Executive Functions of the +Monarchy." Had he been able to carry into effect all the grand precepts +he had observed in Fenelon, Louis XVI. would have been an accomplished +monarch, and France a powerful kingdom. The King used to accept the +speeches his ministers presented to him to deliver on important occasions; +but he corrected and modified them; struck out some parts, and added +others; and sometimes consulted the Queen on the subject. The phrase of +the minister erased by the King was frequently unsuitable, and dictated by +the minister's private feelings; but the King's was always the natural +expression. He himself composed, three times or oftener, his famous +answers to the Parliament which he banished. But in his letters he was +negligent, and always incorrect. Simplicity was the characteristic of the +King's style; the figurative style of M. Necker did not please him; the +sarcasms of Maurepas were disagreeable to him. Unfortunate Prince! he +would predict, in his observations, that if such a calamity should happen, +the monarchy would be ruined; and the next day he would consent in Council +to the very measure which he had condemned the day before, and which +brought him nearer the brink of the precipice.--SOULAVIE, "Historical and +Political Memoirs of the Reign of Louis XVI.," vol. ii.] + +This Prince combined with his attainments the attributes of a good +husband, a tender father, and an indulgent master. + +Unfortunately he showed too much predilection for the mechanical arts; +masonry and lock-making so delighted him that he admitted into his private +apartment a common locksmith, with whom he made keys and locks; and his +hands, blackened by that sort of work, were often, in my presence, the +subject of remonstrances and even sharp reproaches from the Queen, who +would have chosen other amusements for her husband. + +[Louis XVI. saw that the art of lock-making was capable of application to +a higher study, He was an excellent geographer. The most valuable and +complete instrument for the study of that science was begun by his orders +and under his direction. It was an immense globe of copper, which was +long preserved, though unfinished, in the Mazarine library. Louis XVI. +invented and had executed under his own eyes the ingenious mechanism +required for this globe.--NOTE BY THE EDITOR.] + +Austere and rigid with regard to himself alone, the King observed the laws +of the Church with scrupulous exactness. He fasted and abstained +throughout the whole of Lent. He thought it right that the queen should +not observe these customs with the same strictness. Though sincerely +pious, the spirit of the age had disposed his mind to toleration. Turgot, +Malesherbes, and Necker judged that this Prince, modest and simple in his +habits, would willingly sacrifice the royal prerogative to the solid +greatness of his people. His heart, in truth, disposed him towards +reforms; but his prejudices and fears, and the clamours of pious and +privileged persons, intimidated him, and made him abandon plans which his +love for the people had suggested. + +Monsieur-- + +[During his stay at Avignon, Monsieur, afterwards Louis XVIII, lodged with +the Duc de Crillon; he refused the town-guard which was offered him, +saying, "A son of France, under the roof of a Crillon, needs no +guard."--NOTE BY THE EDITOR.] + +had more dignity of demeanour than the King; but his corpulence rendered +his gait inelegant. He was fond of pageantry and magnificence. He +cultivated the belles lettres, and under assumed names often contributed +verses to the Mercury and other papers. + +His wonderful memory was the handmaid of his wit, furnishing him with the +happiest quotations. He knew by heart a varied repertoire, from the +finest passages of the Latin classics to the Latin of all the prayers, +from the works of Racine to the vaudeville of "Rose et Colas." + +The Comte d'Artoisi had an agreeable countenance, was well made, skilful +in bodily exercises, lively, impetuous, fond of pleasure, and very +particular in his dress. Some happy observations made by him were +repeated with approval, and gave a favourable idea of his heart. The +Parisians liked the open and frank character of this Prince, which they +considered national, and showed real affection for him. + +The dominion that the Queen gained over the King's mind, the charms of a +society in which Monsieur displayed his wit, and to which the Comte +d'Artois--[Afterwards Charles X.]--gave life by the vivacity of youth, +gradually softened that ruggedness of manner in Louis XVI. which a +better-conducted education might have prevented. Still, this defect often +showed itself, and, in spite of his extreme simplicity, the King inspired +those who had occasion to speak to him with diffidence. Courtiers, +submissive in the presence of their sovereign, are only the more ready to +caricature him; with little good breeding, they called those answers they +so much dreaded, Les coups de boutoir du Roi.--[The literal meaning of the +phrase "coup de boutoir," is a thrust from the snout of a boar.] + +Methodical in all his habits, the King always went to bed at eleven +precisely. One evening the Queen was going with her usual circle to a +party, either at the Duc de Duras's or the Princesse de Glumenee's. The +hand of the clock was slily put forward to hasten the King's departure by +a few minutes; he thought bed-time was come, retired, and found none of +his attendants ready to wait on him. This joke became known in all the +drawing-rooms of Versailles, and was disapproved of there. Kings have no +privacy. Queens have no boudoirs. If those who are in immediate +attendance upon sovereigns be not themselves disposed to transmit their +private habits to posterity, the meanest valet will relate what he has +seen or heard; his gossip circulates rapidly, and forms public opinion, +which at length ascribes to the most august persons characters which, +however untrue they may be, are almost always indelible. + +NOTE. The only passion ever shown by Louis XVI. was for hunting. He was +so much occupied by it that when I went up into his private closets at +Versailles, after the 10th of August, I saw upon the staircase six frames, +in which were seen statements of all his hunts, when Dauphin and when +King. In them was detailed the number, kind, and quality of the game he +had killed at each hunting party during every month, every season, and +every year of his reign. + +The interior of his private apartments was thus arranged: a salon, +ornamented with gilded mouldings, displayed the engravings which had been +dedicated to him, drawings of the canals he had dug, with the model of +that of Burgundy, and the plan of the cones and works of Cherbourg. The +upper hall contained his collection of geographical charts, spheres, +globes, and also his geographical cabinet. There were to be seen drawings +of maps which he had begun, and some that he had finished. He had a +clever method of washing them in. His geographical memory was prodigious. +Over the hall was the turning and joining room, furnished with ingenious +instruments for working in wood. He inherited some from Louis XV., and he +often busied himself, with Duret's assistance, in keeping them clean and +bright. Above was the library of books published during his reign. The +prayer books and manuscript books of Anne of Brittany, Francois I, the +later Valois, Louis XIV., Louis XV., and the Dauphin formed the great +hereditary library of the Chateau. Louis XVI. placed separately, in two +apartments communicating with each other, the works of his own time, +including a complete collection of Didot's editions, in vellum, every +volume enclosed in a morocco case. There were several English works, +among the rest the debates of the British Parliament, in a great number of +volumes in folio (this is the Moniteur of England, a complete collection +of which is so valuable and so scarce). By the side of this collection was +to be seen a manuscript history of all the schemes for a descent upon that +island, particularly that of Comte de Broglie. One of the presses of this +cabinet was full of cardboard boxes, containing papers relative to the +House of Austria, inscribed in the King's own hand: "Secret papers of my +family respecting the House of Austria; papers of my family respecting the +Houses of Stuart and Hanover." In an adjoining press were kept papers +relative to Russia. Satirical works against Catherine II. and against +Paul I. were sold in France under the name of histories; Louis XVIII. +collected and sealed up with his small seal the scandalous anecdotes +against Catherine II., as well as the works of Rhulieres, of which he had +a copy, to be certain that the secret life of that Princess, which +attracted the curiosity of her contemporaries, should not be made public +by his means. + +Above the King's private library were a forge, two anvils, and a vast +number of iron tools; various common locks, well made and perfect; some +secret locks, and locks ornamented with gilt copper. It was there that +the infamous Gamin, who afterwards accused the King of having tried to +poison him, and was rewarded for his calumny with a pension of twelve +thousand livres, taught him the art of lock-making. This Gamin, who +became our guide, by order of the department and municipality of +Versailles, did not, however, denounce the King on the 20th December, +1792. He had been made the confidant of that Prince in an immense number +of important commissions; the King had sent him the "Red Book," from +Paris, in a parcel; and the part which was concealed during the +Constituent Assembly still remained so in 1793. Gamin hid it in a part of +the Chateau inaccessible to everybody, and took it from under the shelves +of a secret press before our eyes. This is a convincing proof that Louis +XVI. hoped to return to his Chiteau. When teaching Louis XVI. his trade +Gamin took upon himself the tone and authority of a master. "The King was +good, forbearing, timid, inquisitive, and addicted to sleep," said Gamin +to me; "he was fond to excess of lock-making, and he concealed himself +from the Queen and the Court to file and forge with me. In order to convey +his anvil and my own backwards and forwards we were obliged to use a +thousand stratagems, the history of which would: never end." Above the +King's and Gamin's forges and anvils was an, observatory, erected upon a +platform covered with lead. There, seated on an armchair, and assisted by +a telescope, the King observed all that was passing in the courtyards of +Versailles, the avenue of Paris, and the neighbouring gardens. He had +taken a liking to Duret, one of the indoor servants of the palace, who +sharpened his tools, cleaned his anvils, pasted his maps, and adjusted +eyeglasses to the King's sight, who was short-sighted. This good Duret, +and indeed all the indoor servants, spoke of their master with regret and +affection, and with tears in their eyes. + +The King was born weak and delicate; but from the age of twenty-four he +possessed a robust constitution, inherited from his mother, who was of the +House of Saxe, celebrated for generations for its robustness. There were +two men in Louis XVI., the man of knowledge and the man of will. The King +knew the history of his own family and of the first houses of France +perfectly. He composed the instructions for M. de la Peyrouse's voyage +round the world, which the minister thought were drawn up by several +members of the Academy of Sciences. His memory retained an infinite +number of names and situations. He remembered quantities and numbers +wonderfully. One day an account was presented to him in which the +minister had ranked among the expenses an item inserted in the account of +the preceding year. "There is a double charge," said the King; "bring me +last year's account, and I will show it yet there." When the King was +perfectly master of the details of any matter, and saw injustice, he was +obdurate even to harshness. Then he would be obeyed instantly, in order +to be sure that he was obeyed. + +But in important affairs of state the man of will was not to be found. +Louis XVI. was upon the throne exactly what those weak temperaments whom +nature has rendered incapable of an opinion are in society. In his +pusillanimity, he gave his confidence to a minister; and although amidst +various counsels he often knew which was the best, he never had the +resolution to say, "I prefer the opinion of such a one." Herein +originated the misfortunes of the State.--SOULAVIE'S "Historical and +Political Memoirs Of the Reign Of LOUIS XVI.," VOL ii. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + + +The winter following the confinement of the Comtesse d'Artois was very +severe; the recollections of the pleasure which sleighing-parties had +given the Queen in her childhood made her wish to introduce similar ones +in France. This amusement had already been known in that Court, as was +proved by sleighs being found in the stables which had been used by the +Dauphin, the father of Louis XVI. Some were constructed for the Queen in +a more modern style. The Princes also ordered several; and in a few days +there was a tolerable number of these vehicles. They were driven by the +princes and noblemen of the Court. The noise of the bells and balls with +which the harness of the horses was furnished, the elegance and whiteness +of their plumes, the varied forms of the carriages, the gold with which +they were all ornamented, rendered these parties delightful to the eye. +The winter was very favourable to them, the snow remaining on the ground +nearly six weeks; the drives in the park afforded a pleasure shared by the +spectators. + +[Louis XVI., touched with the wretched condition of the poor of Versailles +during the winter of 1776, had several cart-loads of wood distributed +among them. Seeing one day a file of those vehicles passing by, while +several noblemen were preparing to be drawn swiftly over the ice, he +uttered these memorable words: "Gentlemen, here are my sleighs!"--NOTE BY +THE EDITOR.] + +No one imagined that any blame could attach to so innocent an amusement. +But the party were tempted to extend their drives as far as the Champs +Elysees; a few sleighs even crossed the boulevards; the ladies being +masked, the Queen's enemies took the opportunity of saying that she had +traversed the streets of Paris in a sleigh. + +This became a matter of moment. The public discovered in it a +predilection for the habits of Vienna; but all that Marie Antoinette did +was criticised. + +Sleigh-driving, savouring of the Northern Courts, had no favour among the +Parisians. The Queen was informed of this; and although all the sleighs +were preserved, and several subsequent winters lent themselves to the +amusement, she would not resume it. + +It was at the time of the sleighing-parties that the Queen became +intimately acquainted with the Princesse de Lamballe, who made her +appearance in them wrapped in fur, with all the brilliancy and freshness +of the age of twenty,--the emblem of spring, peeping from under sable and +ermine. Her situation, moreover, rendered her peculiarly interesting; +married, when she was scarcely past childhood, to a young prince, who +ruined himself by the contagious example of the Duc d'Orleans, she had had +nothing to do from the time of her arrival in France but to weep. A widow +at eighteen, and childless, she lived with the Duc de Penthievre as an +adopted daughter. She had the tenderest respect and attachment for that +venerable Prince; but the Queen, though doing justice to his virtues, saw +that the Duc de Penthievre's way of life, whether at Paris or at his +country-seat, could neither afford his young daughter-in-law the +amusements suited to her time of life, nor ensure her in the future an +establishment such as she was deprived of by her widowhood. She +determined, therefore, to establish her at Versailles; and for her sake +revived the office of superintendent, which had been discontinued at Court +since the death of Mademoiselle de Clermont. It is said that Maria +Leczinska had decided that this place should continue vacant, the +superintendent having so extensive a power in the houses of queens as to +be frequently a restraint upon their inclinations. Differences which soon +took place between Marie Antoinette and the Princesse de Lamballe +respecting the official prerogatives of the latter, proved that the wife +of Louis XV. had acted judiciously in abolishing the office; but a kind of +treaty made between the Queen and the Princess smoothed all difficulties. +The blame for too strong an assertion of claims fell upon a secretary of +the superintendent, who had been her adviser; and everything was so +arranged that a firm friendship existed between these two Princesses down +to the disastrous period which terminated their career. + +Notwithstanding the enthusiasm which the splendour, grace, and kindness of +the Queen generally inspired, secret intrigues continued in operation +against her. A short time after the ascension of Louis XVI. to the +throne, the minister of the King's household was informed that a most +offensive libel against the Queen was about to appear. The lieutenant of +police deputed a man named Goupil, a police inspector, to trace this +libel; he came soon after to say that he had found out the place where the +work was being printed, and that it was at a country house near Yverdun. +He had already got possession of two sheets, which contained the most +atrocious calumnies, conveyed with a degree of art which might make them +very dangerous to the Queen's reputation. Goupil said that he could +obtain the rest, but that he should want a considerable sum for that +purpose. Three thousand Louis were given him, and very soon afterwards he +brought the whole manuscript and all that had been printed to the +lieutenant of police. He received a thousand louis more as a reward for +his address and zeal; and a much more important office was about to be +given him, when another spy, envious of Goupil's good fortune, gave +information that Goupil himself was the author of the libel; that, ten +years before, he had been put into the Bicetre for swindling; and that +Madame Goupil had been only three years out of the Salpetriere, where she +had been placed under another name. This Madame Goupil was very pretty +and very intriguing; she had found means to form an intimacy with Cardinal +de Rohan, whom she led, it is said, to hope for a reconciliation with the +Queen. All this affair was hushed up; but it shows that it was the +Queen's fate to be incessantly attacked by the meanest and most odious +machinations. + +Another woman, named Cahouette de Millers, whose husband held an office in +the Treasury, being very irregular in conduct, and of a scheming turn of +mind, had a mania for appearing in the eyes of her friends at Paris as a +person in favour at Court, to which she was not entitled by either birth +or office. During the latter years of the life of Louis XV. she had made +many dupes, and picked up considerable sums by passing herself off as the +King's mistress. The fear of irritating Madame du Barry was, according to +her, the only thing which prevented her enjoying that title openly. She +came regularly to Versailles, kept herself concealed in a furnished +lodging, and her dupes imagined she was secretly summoned to Court. + +This woman formed the scheme of getting admission, if possible, to the +presence of the Queen, or at least causing it to be believed that she had +done so. She adopted as her lover Gabriel de Saint Charles, intendant of +her Majesty's finances,--an office, the privileges of which were confined +to the right of entering the Queen's apartment on Sunday. Madame de +Villers came every Saturday to Versailles with M. de Saint Charles, and +lodged in his apartment. M. Campan was there several times. She painted +tolerably well, and she requested him to do her the favour to present to +the Queen a portrait of her Majesty which she had just copied. M. Campan +knew the woman's character, and refused her. A few days after, he saw on +her Majesty's couch the portrait which he had declined to present to her; +the Queen thought it badly painted, and gave orders that it should be +carried back to the Princesse de Lamballe, who had sent it to her. The +ill success of the portrait did not deter the manoeuvrer from following up +her designs; she easily procured through M. de Saint Charles patents and +orders signed by the Queen; she then set about imitating her writing, and +composed a great number of notes and letters, as if written by her +Majesty, in the tenderest and most familiar style. For many months she +showed them as great secrets to several of her particular friends. +Afterwards, she made the Queen appear to write to her, to procure various +fancy articles. Under the pretext of wishing to execute her Majesty's +commissions accurately, she gave these letters to the tradesmen to read, +and succeeded in having it said, in many houses, that the Queen had a +particular regard for her. She then enlarged her scheme, and represented +the Queen as desiring to borrow 200,000 francs which she had need of, but +which she did not wish to ask of the King from his private funds. This +letter, being shown to M. Beranger, 'fermier general' of the finances, +took effect; he thought himself fortunate in being able to render this +assistance to his sovereign, and lost no time in sending the 200,000 +francs to Madame de Villers. This first step was followed by some doubts, +which he communicated to people better informed than himself of what was +passing at Court; they added to his uneasiness; he then went to M. de +Sartine, who unravelled the whole plot. The woman was sent to St. +Pelagie; and the unfortunate husband was ruined, by replacing the sum +borrowed, and by paying for the jewels fraudulently purchased in the +Queen's name. The forged letters were sent to her Majesty; I compared +them in her presence with her own handwriting, and the only +distinguishable difference was a little more regularity in the letters. + +This trick, discovered and punished with prudence and without passion, +produced no more sensation out of doors than that of the Inspector Goupil. + +A year after the nomination of Madame de Lamballe to the post of +superintendent of the Queen's household, balls and quadrilles gave rise to +the intimacy of her Majesty with the Comtesse Jules de Polignac. This +lady really interested Marie Antoinette. She was not rich, and generally +lived upon her estate at Claye. The Queen was astonished at not having +seen her at Court earlier. The confession that her want of fortune had +even prevented her appearance at the celebration of the marriages of the +Princes added to the interest which she had inspired. + +The Queen was full of consideration, and took delight in counteracting the +injustice of fortune. The Countess was induced to come to Court by her +husband's sister, Madame Diane de Polignac, who had been appointed lady of +honour to the Comtesse d'Artois. The Comtesse Jules was really fond of a +tranquil life; the impression she made at Court affected her but little; +she felt only the attachment manifested for her by the Queen. I had +occasion to see her from the commencement of her favour at Court; she +often passed whole hours with me, while waiting for the Queen. She +conversed with me freely and ingenuously about the honour, and at the same +time the danger, she saw in the kindness of which she was the object. The +Queen sought for the sweets of friendship; but can this gratification, so +rare in any rank, exist between a Queen and a subject, when they are +surrounded, moreover, by snares laid by the artifice of courtiers? This +pardonable error was fatal to the happiness of Marie Antoinette. + +The retiring character of the Comtesse Jules, afterwards Duchesse de +Polignac, cannot be spoken of too favourably; but if her heart was +incapable of forming ambitious projects, her family and friends in her +fortune beheld their own, and endeavoured to secure the favour of the +Queen. + +[The Comtesse, afterwards Duchesse de Polignac, nee Polastron, Married the +Comte (in 1780 the Duc) Jules de Polignac, the father of the Prince de +Polignac of Napoleon's and of Charles X.'s time. She emigrated in 1789, +and died in Vienna in 1793.] + +The Comtesse de Diane, sister of M. de Polignac, and the Baron de Besenval +and M. de Vaudreuil, particular friends of the Polignac family, made use +of means, the success of which was infallible. One of my friends (Comte +de Moustier), who was in their secret, came to tell me that Madame de +Polignac was about to quit Versailles suddenly; that she would take leave +of the Queen only in writing; that the Comtesse Diane and M. de Vaudreuil +had dictated her letter, and the whole affair was arranged for the purpose +of stimulating the attachment of Marie Antoinette. The next day, when I +went up to the palace, I found the Queen with a letter in her hand, which +she was reading with much emotion; it was the letter from the Comtesse +Jules; the Queen showed it to me. The Countess expressed in it her grief +at leaving a princess who had loaded her with kindness. The narrowness of +her fortune compelled her to do so; but she was much more strongly +impelled by the fear that the Queen's friendship, after having raised up +dangerous enemies against her, might abandon her to their hatred, and to +the regret of having lost the august favour of which she was the object. + +This step produced the full effect that had been expected from it. A +young and sensitive queen cannot long bear the idea of contradiction. She +busied herself in settling the Comtesse Jules near her, by making such a +provision for her as should place her beyond anxiety. Her character +suited the Queen; she had merely natural talents, no pedantry, no +affectation of knowledge. She was of middle size; her complexion very +fair, her eyebrows and hair dark brown, her teeth superb, her smile +enchanting, and her whole person graceful. She was seen almost always in +a demi-toilet, remarkable only for neatness and good taste. I do not +think I ever once saw diamonds about her, even at the climax of her +fortune, when she had the rank of Duchess at Court. + +I have always believed that her sincere attachment for the Queen, as much +as her love of simplicity, induced her to avoid everything that might +cause her to be thought a wealthy favourite. She had not one of the +failings which usually accompany that position. She loved the persons who +shared the Queen's affections, and was entirely free from jealousy. Marie +Antoinette flattered herself that the Comtesse Jules and the Princesse de +Lamballe would be her especial friends, and that she should possess a +society formed according to her own taste. "I will receive them in my +closet, or at Trianon," said she; "I will enjoy the comforts of private +life, which exist not for us, unless we have the good sense to secure them +for ourselves." The happiness the Queen thought to secure was destined to +turn to vexation. All those courtiers who were not admitted to this +intimacy became so many jealous and vindictive enemies. + +It was necessary to make a suitable provision for the Countess. The place +of first equerry, in reversion after the Comte de Tesse, given to Comte +Jules unknown to the titular holder, displeased the family of Noailles. +This family had just sustained another mortification, the appointment of +the Princesse de Lamballe having in some degree rendered necessary the +resignation of the Comtesse de Noailles, whose husband was thereupon made +a marshal of France. The Princesse de Lamballe, although she did not +quarrel with the Queen, was alarmed at the establishment of the Comtesse +Jules at Court, and did not form, as her Majesty had hoped, a part of that +intimate society, which was in turn composed of Mesdames Jules and Diane +de Polignac, d'Andlau and de Chalon, and Messieurs de Guignes, de Coigny, +d'Adhemar, de Besenval, lieutenant-colonel of the Swiss, de Polignac, de +Vaudreuil, and de Guiche; the Prince de Ligne and the Duke of Dorset, the +English ambassador, were also admitted. + +It was a long time before the Comtesse Jules maintained any great state at +Court. The Queen contented herself with giving her very fine apartments +at the top of the marble staircase. The salary of first equerry, the +trifling emoluments derived from M. de Polignac's regiment, added to their +slender patrimony, and perhaps some small pension, at that time formed the +whole fortune of the favourite. I never saw the Queen make her a present +of value; I was even astonished one day at hearing her Majesty mention, +with pleasure, that the Countess had gained ten thousand francs in the +lottery. "She was in great want of it," added the Queen. + +Thus the Polignacs were not settled at Court in any degree of splendour +which could justify complaints from others, and the substantial favours +bestowed upon that family were less envied than the intimacy between them +and their proteges and the Queen. Those who had no hope of entering the +circle of the Comtesse Jules were made jealous by the opportunities of +advancement it afforded. + +However, at the time I speak of, the society around the Comtesse Jules was +fully engaged in gratifying the young Queen. Of this the Marquis de +Vaudreuil was a conspicuous member; he was a brilliant man, the friend and +protector of men of letters and celebrated artists. + +The Baron de Besenval added to the bluntness of the Swiss all the +adroitness of a French courtier. His fifty years and gray hairs made him +enjoy among women the confidence inspired by mature age, although he had +not given up the thought of love affairs. He talked of his native +mountains with enthusiasm. He would at any time sing the "Ranz des +Vaches" with tears in his eyes, and was the best story-teller in the +Comtesse Jules's circle. The last new song or 'bon mot' and the gossip of +the day were the sole topics of conversation in the Queen's parties. Wit +was banished from them. The Comtesse Diane, more inclined to literary +pursuits than her sister-in-law, one day, recommended her to read the +"Iliad" and "Odyssey." The latter replied, laughing, that she was +perfectly acquainted with the Greek poet, and said to prove it: + +"Homere etait aveugle et jouait du hautbois." + +(Homer was blind and played on the hautboy.) + +[This lively repartee of the Duchesse de Polignac is a droll imitation of +a line in the "Mercure Galant." In the quarrel scene one of the lawyers +says to his brother quill: 'Ton pere etait aveugle et jouait du +hautbois.'] + +The Queen found this sort of humour very much to her taste, and said that +no pedant should ever be her friend. + +Before the Queen fixed her assemblies at Madame de Polignac's, she +occasionally passed the evening at the house of the Duc and Duchesse de +Duras, where a brilliant party of young persons met together. They +introduced a taste for trifling games, such as question and answer, +'guerre panpan', blind man's buff, and especially a game called +'descampativos'. The people of Paris, always criticising, but always +imitating the customs of the Court, were infected with the mania for these +childish sports. Madame de Genlis, sketching the follies of the day in +one of her plays, speaks of these famous 'descampativos'; and also of the +rage for making a friend, called the 'inseparable', until a whim or the +slightest difference might occasion a total rupture. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + + +The Duc de Choiseul had reappeared at Court on the ceremony of the King's +coronation for the first time after his disgrace under Louis XV. in 1770. +The state of public feeling on the subject gave his friends hope of seeing +him again in administration, or in the Council of State; but the opposite +party was too firmly seated at Versailles, and the young Queen's influence +was outweighed, in the mind of the King, by long-standing prejudices; she +therefore gave up for ever her attempt to reinstate the Duke. Thus this +Princess, who has been described as so ambitious, and so strenuously +supporting the interest of the House of Austria, failed twice in the only +scheme which could forward the views constantly attributed to her; and +spent the whole of her reign surrounded by enemies of herself and her +house. + +Marie Antoinette took little pains to promote literature and the fine +arts. She had been annoyed in consequence of having ordered a performance +of the "Connstable de Bourbon," on the celebration of the marriage of +Madame Clotilde with the Prince of Piedmont. The Court and the people of +Paris censured as indecorous the naming characters in the piece after the +reigning family, and that with which the new alliance was formed. The +reading of this piece by the Comte de Guibert in the Queen's closet had +produced in her Majesty's circle that sort of enthusiasm which obscures +the judgment. She promised herself she would have no more readings. Yet, +at the request of M. de Cubieres, the King's equerry, the Queen agreed to +hear the reading of a comedy written by his brother. She collected her +intimate circle, Messieurs de Coigny, de Vaudreuil, de Besenval, Mesdames +de Polignac, de Chalon, etc., and to increase the number of judges, she +admitted the two Parnys, the Chevalier de Bertin, my father-in-law, and +myself. + +Mold read for the author. I never could satisfy myself by what magic the +skilful reader gained our unanimous approbation of a ridiculous work. +Surely the delightful voice of Mold, by awakening our recollection of the +dramatic beauties of the French stage, prevented the wretched lines of +Dorat Cubieres from striking on our ears. I can assert that the +exclamation Charming! charming! repeatedly interrupted the reader. The +piece was admitted for performance at Fontainebleau; and for the first +time the King had the curtain dropped before the end of the play. It was +called the "Dramomane" or "Dramaturge." All the characters died of eating +poison in a pie. The Queen, highly disconcerted at having recommended +this absurd production, announced that she would never hear another +reading; and this time she kept her word. + +The tragedy of "Mustapha and Mangir," by M. de Chamfort, was highly +successful at the Court theatre at Fontainebleau. The Queen procured the +author a pension of 1,200 francs, but his play failed on being performed +at Paris. + +The spirit of opposition which prevailed in that city delighted in +reversing the verdicts of the Court. The Queen determined never again to +give any marked countenance to new dramatic works. She reserved her +patronage for musical composers, and in a few years their art arrived at a +perfection it had never before attained in France. + +It was solely to gratify the Queen that the manager of the Opera brought +the first company of comic actors to Paris. Gluck, Piccini, and Sacchini +were attracted there in succession. These eminent composers were treated +with great distinction at Court. Immediately on his arrival in France, +Gluck was admitted to the Queen's toilet, and she talked to him all the +time he remained with her. She asked him one day whether he had nearly +brought his grand opera of "Armide" to a conclusion, and whether it +pleased him. Gluck replied very coolly, in his German accent, "Madame, it +will soon be finished, and really it will be superb." There was a great +outcry against the confidence with which the composer had spoken of one of +his own productions. The Queen defended him warmly; she insisted that he +could not be ignorant of the merit of his works; that he well knew they +were generally admired, and that no doubt he was afraid lest a modesty, +merely dictated by politeness, should look like affectation in him. + +[Gluck often had to deal with self-sufficiency equal to his own. He was +very reluctant to introduce long ballets into "Iphigenia." Vestris deeply +regretted that the opera was not terminated by a piece they called a +chaconne, in which he displayed all his power. He complained to Gluck +about it. Gluck, who treated his art with all the dignity it merits, +replied that in so interesting a subject dancing would be misplaced. +Being pressed another time by Vestris on the same subject, "A chaconne! A +chaconne!" roared out the enraged musician; "we must describe the Greeks; +and had the Greeks chaconnes?" "They had not?" returned the astonished +dancer; "why, then, so much the worse for them!"--NOTE BY THE EDITOR.] + +The Queen did not confine her admiration to the lofty style of the French +and Italian operas; she greatly valued Gretry's music, so well adapted to +the spirit and feeling of the words. A great deal of the poetry set to +music by Gretry is by Marmontel. The day after the first performance of +"Zemira and Azor," Marmontel and Gretry were presented to the Queen as she +was passing through the gallery of Fontainebleau to go to mass. The Queen +congratulated Gretry on the success of the new opera, and told him that +she had dreamed of the enchanting effect of the trio by Zemira's father +and sisters behind the magic mirror. Gretry, in a transport of joy, took +Marmontel in his arms, "Ah! my friend," cried he, "excellent music may be +made of this."--"And execrable words," coolly observed Marmontel, to whom +her Majesty had not addressed a single compliment. + +The most indifferent artists were permitted to have the honour of painting +the Queen. A full-length portrait, representing her in all the pomp of +royalty, was exhibited in the gallery of Versailles. This picture, which +was intended for the Court of Vienna, was executed by a man who does not +deserve even to be named, and disgusted all people of taste. It seemed as +if this art had, in France, retrograded several centuries. + +The Queen had not that enlightened judgment, or even that mere taste, +which enables princes to foster and protect great talents. She confessed +frankly that she saw no merit in any portrait beyond the likeness. When +she went to the Louvre, she would run hastily over all the little "genre" +pictures, and come out, as she acknowledged, without having once raised +her eyes to the grand compositions. + +There is no good portrait of the Queen, save that by Werthmuller, chief +painter to the King of Sweden, which was sent to Stockholm, and that by +Madame Lebrun, which was saved from the revolutionary fury by the +commissioners for the care of the furniture at Versailles. + +[A sketch of very great interest made when the Queen was in the Temple and +discovered many years afterwards there, recently reproduced in the memoirs +of the Marquise de Tourzel (Paris, Plon), is the last authentic portrait +of the unhappy Queen. See also the catalogue of portraits made by Lord +Ronald Gower.] + +The composition of the latter picture resembles that of Henriette of +France, the wife of the unfortunate Charles I., painted by Vandyke. Like +Marie Antoinette, she is seated, surrounded by her children, and that +resemblance adds to the melancholy interest raised by this beautiful +production. + +While admitting that the Queen gave no direct encouragement to any art but +that of music, I should be wrong to pass over in silence the patronage +conferred by her and the Princes, brothers of the King, on the art of +printing. + +[In 1790 the King gave a proof of his particular good-will to the +bookselling trade. A company consisting of the first Parisian +booksellers, being on the eve of stopping payment, succeeded in laying +before the King a statement of their distressed situation. The monarch was +affected by it; he took from the civil list the sum of which the society +stood in immediate need, and became security for the repayment of the +remainder of the 1,200,000 livres, which they wanted to borrow, and for +the repayment of which he fixed no particular time.] + +To Marie Antoinette we are indebted for a splendid quarto edition of the +works of Metastasio; to Monsieur, the King's brother, for a quarto Tasso, +embellished with engravings after Cochin; and to the Comte d'Artois for a +small collection of select works, which is considered one of the chef +d'oeuvres of the press of the celebrated Didot. + +In 1775, on the death of the Marechal du Muy, the ascendency obtained by +the sect of innovators occasioned M. de Saint-Germain to be recalled to +Court and made Minister of War. His first care was the destruction of the +King's military household establishment, an imposing and effectual rampart +round the sovereign power. + +When Chancellor Maupeou obtained from Louis XV. the destruction of the +Parliament and the exile of all the ancient magistrates, the Mousquetaires +were charged with the execution of the commission for this purpose; and at +the stroke of midnight, the presidents and members were all arrested, each +by two Mousquetaires. In the spring of 1775 a popular insurrection had +taken place in consequence of the high price of bread. M. Turgot's new +regulation, which permitted unlimited trade in corn, was either its cause +or the pretext for it; and the King's household troops again rendered the +greatest services to public tranquillity. + +I have never be enable to discover the true cause of the support given to +M. de Saint-Germain's policy by the Queen, unless in the marked favour +shown to the captains and officers of the Body Guards, who by this +reduction became the only soldiers of their rank entrusted with the safety +of the sovereign; or else in the Queen's strong prejudice against the Duc +d'Aiguillon, then commander of the light-horse. M. de Saint-Germain, +however, retained fifty gens d'armes and fifty light-horse to form a royal +escort on state occasions; but in 1787 the King reduced both these +military bodies. The Queen then said with satisfaction that at last she +should see no more red coats in the gallery of Versailles. + +From 1775 to 1781 were the gayest years of the Queen's life. In the +little journeys to Choisy, performances frequently took place at the +theatre twice in one day: grand opera and French or Italian comedy at the +usual hour; and at eleven at night they returned to the theatre for +parodies in which the best actors of the Opera presented themselves in +whimsical parts and costumes. The celebrated dancer Guimard always took +the leading characters in the latter performance; she danced better than +she acted; her extreme leanness, and her weak, hoarse voice added to the +burlesque in the parodied characters of Ernelinde and Iphigenie. + +The most magnificent fete ever given to the Queen was one prepared for her +by Monsieur, the King's brother, at Brunoy. That Prince did me the honour +to admit me, and I followed her Majesty into the gardens, where she found +in the first copse knights in full armour asleep at the foot of trees, on +which hung their spears and shields. The absence of the beauties who had +incited the nephews of Charlemagne and the gallants of that period to +lofty deeds was supposed to occasion this lethargic slumber. But when the +Queen appeared at the entrance of the copse they were on foot in an +instant, and melodious voices announced their eagerness to display their +valour. They then hastened into a vast arena, magnificently decorated in +the exact style of the ancient tournaments. Fifty dancers dressed as pages +presented to the knights twenty-five superb black horses, and twenty-five +of a dazzling whiteness, all most richly caparisoned. The party led by +Augustus Vestris wore the Queen's colours. Picq, balletmaster at the +Russian Court, commanded the opposing band. There was running at the +negro's head, tilting, and, lastly, combats 'a outrance', perfectly well +imitated. Although the spectators were aware that the Queen's colours +could not but be victorious, they did not the less enjoy the apparent +uncertainty. + +Nearly all the agreeable women of Paris were ranged upon the steps which +surrounded the area of the tourney. The Queen, surrounded by the royal +family and the whole Court, was placed beneath an elevated canopy. A +play, followed by a ballet-pantomime and a ball, terminated the fete. +Fireworks and illuminations were not spared. Finally, from a prodigiously +high scaffold, placed on a rising ground, the words 'Vive Louis! Vive +Marie Antoinette!' were shown in the air in the midst of a very dark but +calm night. + +Pleasure was the sole pursuit of every one of this young family, with the +exception of the King. Their love of it was perpetually encouraged by a +crowd of those officious people who, by anticipating the desires and even +the passions of princes, find means of showing their zeal, and hope to +gain or maintain favour for themselves. + +Who would have dared to check the amusements of a queen, young, lively, +and handsome? A mother or a husband alone would have had the right to do +it; and the King threw no impediment in the way of Marie Antoinette's +inclinations. His long indifference had been followed by admiration and +love. He was a slave to all the wishes of the Queen, who, delighted with +the happy change in the heart and habits of the King, did not sufficiently +conceal the ascendency she was gaining over him. + +The King went to bed every night at eleven precisely; he was very +methodical, and nothing was allowed to interfere with his rules. The +noise which the Queen unavoidably made when she returned very late from +the evenings which she spent with the Princesse de Gugmenee or the Duc de +Duras, at last annoyed the King, and it was amicably agreed that the Queen +should apprise him when she intended to sit up late. He then began to +sleep in his own apartment, which had never before happened from the time +of their marriage. + +During the winter the Queen attended the Opera balls with a single lady of +the palace, and always found there Monsieur and the Comte d'Artois. Her +people concealed their liveries under gray cloth greatcoats. She never +thought she was recognized, while all the time she was known to the whole +assembly, from the first moment she entered the theatre; they pretended, +however, not to recognise her, and some masquerade manoeuvre was always +adopted to give her the pleasure of fancying herself incognito. + +Louis XVI. determined once to accompany the Queen to a masked ball; it was +agreed that the King should hold not only the grand but the petit coucher, +as if actually going to bed. The Queen went to his apartment through the +inner corridors of the palace, followed by one of her women with a black +domino; she assisted him to put it on, and they went alone to the chapel +court, where a carriage waited for them, with the captain of the Guard of +the quarter, and a lady of the palace. The King was but little amused, +spoke only to two or three persons, who knew him immediately, and found +nothing to admire at the masquerade but Punches and Harlequins, which +served as a joke against him for the royal family, who often amused +themselves with laughing at him about it. + +An event, simple in itself, brought dire suspicion upon the Queen. She +was going out one evening with the Duchesse de Lupnes, lady of the palace, +when her carriage broke down at the entrance into Paris; she was obliged +to alight; the Duchess led her into a shop, while a footman called a +'fiacre'. As they were masked, if they had but known how to keep silence, +the event would never have been known; but to ride in a fiacre is so +unusual an adventure for a queen that she had hardly entered the +Opera-house when she could not help saying to some persons whom she met +there: "That I should be in a fiacre! Is it not droll?" + +From that moment all Paris was informed of the adventure of the fiacre. It +was said that everything connected with it was mysterious; that the Queen +had kept an assignation in a private house with the Duc de Coigny. He was +indeed very well received at Court, but equally so by the King and Queen. +These accusations of gallantry once set afloat, there were no longer any +bounds to the calumnies circulated at Paris. If, during the chase or at +cards, the Queen spoke to Lord Edward Dillon, De Lambertye, or others, +they were so many favoured lovers. The people of Paris did not know that +none of those young persons were admitted into the Queen's private circle +of friends; the Queen went about Paris in disguise, and had made use of a +fiacre; and a single instance of levity gives room for the suspicion of +others. + +Conscious of innocence, and well knowing that all about her must do +justice to her private life, the Queen spoke of these reports with +contempt, contenting herself with the supposition that some folly in the +young men mentioned had given rise to them. She therefore left off +speaking to them or even looking at them. Their vanity took alarm at +this, and revenge induced them either to say, or to leave others to think, +that they were unfortunate enough to please no longer. Other young +coxcombs, placing themselves near the private box which the Queen occupied +incognito when she attended the public theatre at Versailles, had the +presumption to imagine that they were noticed by her; and I have known +such notions entertained merely on account of the Queen's requesting one +of those gentlemen to inquire behind the scenes whether it would be long +before the commencement of the second piece. + +The list of persons received into the Queen's closet which I gave in the +preceding chapter was placed in the hands of the ushers of the chamber by +the Princesse de Lamballe; and the persons there enumerated could present +themselves to enjoy the distinction only on those days when the Queen +chose to be with her intimates in a private manner; and this was only when +she was slightly indisposed. People of the first rank at Court sometimes +requested special audiences of her; the Queen then received them in a room +within that called the closet of the women on duty, and these women +announced them in her Majesty's apartment. + +The Duc de Lauzun had a good deal of wit, and chivalrous manners. The +Queen was accustomed to see him at the King's suppers, and at the house of +the Princesse de Guemenee, and always showed him attention. One day he +made his appearance at Madame de Guemenee's in uniform, and with the most +magnificent plume of white heron's feathers that it was possible to +behold. The Queen admired the plume, and he offered it to her through the +Princesse de Guemenee. As he had worn it the Queen had not imagined that +he could think of giving it to her; much embarrassed with the present +which she had, as it were, drawn upon herself, she did not like to refuse +it, nor did she know whether she ought to make one in return; afraid, if +she did give anything, of giving either too much or too little, she +contented herself with once letting M. de Lauzun see her adorned with the +plume. In his secret "Memoirs" the Duke attaches an importance to his +present, which proves him utterly unworthy of an honour accorded only to +his name and rank + +A short time afterwards he solicited an audience; the Queen granted it, as +she would have done to any other courtier of equal rank. I was in the +room adjoining that in which he was received; a few minutes after his +arrival the Queen reopened the door, and said aloud, and in an angry tone +of voice, "Go, monsieur." M. de Lauzun bowed low, and withdrew. The +Queen was much agitated. She said to me: "That man shall never again come +within my doors." A few years before the Revolution of 1789 the Marechal +de Biron died. The Duc de Lauzun, heir to his name, aspired to the +important post of colonel of the regiment of French guards. The Queen, +however, procured it for the Duc du Chaatelet. The Duc de Biron espoused +the cause of the Duc d'Orleans, and became one of the most violent enemies +of Marie Antoinette. + +It is with reluctance that I enter minutely on a defence of the Queen +against two infamous accusations with which libellers have dared to swell +their envenomed volumes. I mean the unworthy suspicions of too strong an +attachment for the Comte d'Artois, and of the motives for the tender +friendship which subsisted between the Queen, the Princesse de Lamballe, +and the Duchesse de Polignac. I do not believe that the Comte d'Artois +was, during his own youth and that of the Queen, so much smitten as has +been said with the loveliness of his sister-in-law; I can affirm that I +always saw that Prince maintain the most respectful demeanour towards the +Queen; that she always spoke of his good-nature and cheerfulness with that +freedom which attends only the purest sentiments; and that none of those +about the Queen ever saw in the affection she manifested towards the Comte +d'Artois more than that of a kind and tender sister for her youngest +brother. As to the intimate connection between Marie Antoinette and the +ladies I have named, it never had, nor could have, any other motive than +the very innocent wish to secure herself two friends in the midst of a +numerous Court; and notwithstanding this intimacy, that tone of respect +observed by persons of the most exalted rank towards majesty never ceased +to be maintained. + +The Queen, much occupied with the society of Madame de Polignac, and an +unbroken series of amusements, found less time for the Abbe de Vermond; he +therefore resolved to retire from Court. The world did him the honour to +believe that he had hazarded remonstrances upon his august pupil's +frivolous employment of her time, and that he considered himself, both as +an ecclesiastic and as instructor, now out of place at Court. But the +world was deceived his dissatisfaction arose purely from the favour shown +to the Comtesse Jules. After a fortnight's absence we saw him at +Versailles again, resuming his usual functions. + +The Queen could express herself with winning graciousness to persons who +merited her praise. When M. Loustonneau was appointed to the reversion of +the post of first surgeon to the King, he came to make his +acknowledgments. He was much beloved by the poor, to whom he had chiefly +devoted his talents, spending nearly thirty thousand francs a year on +indigent sufferers. The Queen replied to his thanks by saying: "You are +satisfied, Monsieur; but I am far from being so with the inhabitants of +Versailles. On the news of your appointment the town should have been +illuminated."--"How so, Madame?" asked the astonished surgeon, who was +very modest. "Why," replied the Queen, "if the poor whom you have +succoured for the past twenty years had each placed a single candle in +their windows it would have been the most beautiful illumination ever +witnessed." + +The Queen did not limit her kindness to friendly words. There was +frequently seen in the apartments of Versailles a veteran captain of the +grenadiers of France, called the Chevalier d'Orville, who for four years +had been soliciting from the Minister of War the post of major, or of +King's lieutenant. He was known to be very poor; but he supported his lot +without complaining of this vexatious delay in rewarding his honourable +services. He regularly attended the Marechal de Segur, at the hour +appointed for receiving the numerous solicitations in his department. One +day the Marshal said to him: "You are still at Versailles, M. +d'Orville?"--"Monsieur," he replied, "you may observe that by this board +of the flooring where I regularly place myself; it is already worn down +several lines by the weight of my body." The Queen frequently stood at +the window of her bedchamber to observe with her glass the people walking +in the park. Sometimes she inquired the names of those who were unknown +to her. One day she saw the Chevalier d'Orville passing, and asked me the +name of that knight of Saint Louis, whom she had seen everywhere for a +long time past. I knew who he was, and related his history. "That must +be put an end to," said the Queen, with some vivacity. "Such an example +of indifference is calculated to discourage our soldiers." Next day, in +crossing the gallery to go to mass, the Queen perceived the Chevalier +d'Orville; she went directly towards him. The poor man fell back in the +recess of a window, looking to the right and left to discover the person +whom the Queen was seeking, when she thus addressed him: "M. d'Orville, +you have been several years at Versailles, soliciting a majority or a +King's lieutenancy. You must have very powerless patrons."--"I have none, +Madame," replied the Chevalier, in great confusion. "Well! I will take +you under my protection. To-morrow at the same hour be here with a +petition, and a memorial of your services." A fortnight after, M. +d'Orville was appointed King's lieutenant, either at La Rochelle or at +Rochefort. + +[Louis XVI. vied with his Queen in benevolent actions of this kind. An old +officer had in vain solicited a pension during the administration of the +Duc de Choiseul. He returned to the charge in the times of the Marquis de +Montesnard and the Duc d'Aiguillon. He urged his claims, to Comte du Muy, +who made a note of them. Tired of so many fruitless efforts, he at last +appeared at the King's supper, and, having placed himself so as to be seen +and heard, cried out at a moment when silence prevailed, "Sire." The +people near him said, "What are you about? This is not the way to speak +to the King."--"I fear nothing," said he, and raising his voice, repeated, +"Sire." The King, much surprised, looked at him and said, "What do you +want, monsieur."--"Sire," answered he, "I am seventy years of age; I have +served your Majesty more than fifty years, and I am dying for +want."--"Have you a memorial?" replied the King. "Yes, Sire, I +have."--"Give it to me;" and his Majesty took it without saying anything +more. Next morning he was sent for by the, King, who said, "Monsieur, I +grant you an annuity of 1,500 livres out of my privy purse, and you may go +and receive the first year's payment, which is now due." ("Secret +Correspondence of the Court: Reign of Louis XVI.") The King preferred to +spend money in charity rather than in luxury or magnificence. Once during +his absence, M. d'Augivillers caused an unused room in the King's +apartment to be repaired at a cost of 30,000 francs. On his return the +King made Versailles resound with complaints against M. d'Augivillers: +"With that sum I could have made thirty families happy," he said.] + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + + +From the time of Louis XVI.'s accession to the throne, the Queen had been +expecting a visit from her brother, the Emperor Joseph II. That Prince +was the constant theme of her discourse. She boasted of his intelligence, +his love of occupation, his military knowledge, and the perfect simplicity +of his manners. Those about her Majesty ardently wished to see at +Versailles a prince so worthy of his rank. At length the coming of Joseph +II., under the title of Count Falkenstein, was announced, and the very day +on which he would be at Versailles was mentioned. The first embraces +between the Queen and her august brother took place in the presence of all +the Queen's household. The sight of their emotion was extremely +affecting. + +The Emperor was at first generally admired in France; learned men, +well-informed officers, and celebrated artists appreciated the extent of +his information. He made less impression at Court, and very little in the +private circle of the King and Queen. His eccentric manners, his +frankness, often degenerating into rudeness, and his evidently affected +simplicity,--all these characteristics caused him to be looked upon as a +prince rather singular than admirable. The Queen spoke to him about the +apartment she had prepared for him in the Chateau; the Emperor answered +that he would not accept it, and that while travelling he always lodged at +a cabaret (that was his very expression); the Queen insisted, and assured +him that he should be at perfect liberty, and placed out of the reach of +noise. He replied that he knew the Chateau of Versailles was very large, +and that so many scoundrels lived there that he could well find a place; +but that his valet de chambre had made up his camp-bed in a lodging-house, +and there he would stay. + +He dined with the King and Queen, and supped with the whole family. He +appeared to take an interest in the young Princesse Elisabeth, then just +past childhood, and blooming in all the freshness of that age. An +intended marriage between him and this young sister of the King was +reported at the time, but I believe it had no foundation in truth. + +The table was still served by women only, when the Queen dined in private +with the King, the royal family, or crowned heads. + +[The custom was, even supposing dinner to have commenced, if a princess of +the blood arrived, and she was asked to sit down at the Queen's table, the +comptrollers and gentlemen-in-waiting came immediately to attend, and the +Queen's women withdrew. These had succeeded the maids of honour in +several parts of their service, and had preserved some of their +privileges. One day the Duchesse d'Orleans arrived at Fontainebleau, at +the Queen's dinner-hour. The Queen invited her to the table, and herself +motioned to her women to leave the room, and let the men take their +places. Her Majesty said she was resolved to continue a privilege which +kept places of that description most honourable, and render them suitable +for ladies of nobility without fortune. Madame de Misery, Baronne de +Biache, the Queen's first lady of the chamber, to whom I was made +reversioner, was a daughter of M. le Comte de Chemant, and her grandmother +was a Montmorency. M. le Prince de Tingry, in the presence of the Queen, +used to call her cousin. The ancient household of the Kings of France had +prerogatives acknowledged in the state. Many of the offices were tenable +only by those of noble blood, and were sold at from 40,000 to 300,000 +franca. A collection of edicts of the Kings in favour of the prerogatives +and right of precedence of the persons holding office in the royal +household is still in existence.] + +I was present at the Queen's dinner almost every day. The Emperor would +talk much and fluently; he expressed himself in French with facility, and +the singularity, of his expressions added a zest to his conversation. I +have often heard him say that he liked spectaculous objects, when he meant +to express such things as formed a show, or a scene worthy of interest. +He disguised none of his prejudices against the etiquette and customs of +the Court of France; and even in the presence of the King made them the +subject of his sarcasms. The King smiled, but never made any answer; the +Queen appeared pained. The Emperor frequently terminated his observations +upon the objects in Paris which he had admired by reproaching the King for +suffering himself to remain in ignorance of them. He could not conceive +how such a wealth of pictures should remain shut up in the dust of immense +stores; and told him one day that but for the practice of placing some of +them in the apartments of Versailles he would not know even the principal +chef d'oeuvres that he possessed. + +[The Emperor loudly censured the existing practice of allowing shopkeepers +to erect shops near the outward walls of all the palaces, and even to +establish something like a fair in the galleries of Versailles and +Fontainebleau, and even upon the landings of the staircases.] + +He also reproached him for not having visited the Hotel des Invalides nor +the Ecole Militaire; and even went so far as to tell him before us that he +ought not only to know what Paris contained, but to travel in France, and +reside a few days in each of his large towns. + +At last the Queen was really hurt at the Emperor's remarks, and gave him a +few lectures upon the freedom with which he allowed himself to lecture +others. One day she was busied in signing warrants and orders for payment +for her household, and was conversing with M. Augeard, her secretary for +such matters, who presented the papers one after another to be signed, and +replaced them in his portfolio. While this was going forward, the Emperor +walked about the room; all at once he stood still, to reproach the Queen +rather severely for signing all those papers without reading them, or, at +least, without running her eye over them; and he spoke most judiciously to +her upon the danger of signing her name inconsiderately. The Queen +answered that very wise principles might be very ill applied; that her +secretary, who deserved her implicit confidence, was at that moment laying +before her nothing but orders for payment of the quarter's expenses of her +household, registered in the Chamber of Accounts; and that she ran no risk +of incautiously giving her signature. + +The Queen's toilet was likewise a never-failing subject for animadversion +with the Emperor. He blamed her for having introduced too many new +fashions; and teased her about her use of rouge. One day, while she was +laying on more of it than usual, before going to the play, he pointed out +a lady who was in the room, and who was, in truth, highly painted. "A +little more under the eyes," said the Emperor to the Queen; "lay on the +rouge like a fury, as that lady does." The Queen entreated her brother to +refrain from his jokes, or at all events to address them, when they were +so outspoken, to her alone. + +The Queen had made an appointment to meet her brother at the Italian +theatre; she changed her mind, and went to the French theatre, sending a +page to the Italian theatre to request the Emperor to come to her there. +He left his box, lighted by the comedian Clairval, and attended by M. de +la Ferte, comptroller of the Queen's privy purse, who was much hurt at +hearing his Imperial Majesty, after kindly expressing his regret at not +being present during the Italian performance, say to Clairval, "Your young +Queen is very giddy; but, luckily, you Frenchmen have no great objection +to that." + +I was with my father-in-law in one of the Queen's apartments when the +Emperor came to wait for her there, and, knowing that M. Campan was +librarian, he conversed with him about such books as would of course be +found in the Queen's library. After talking of our most celebrated +authors, he casually said, "There are doubtless no works on finance or on +administration here?" + +These words were followed by his opinion on all that had been written on +those topics, and the different systems of our two famous ministers, Sully +and Colbert; on errors which were daily committed in France, in points +essential to the prosperity of the Empire; and on the reform he himself +would make at Vienna. Holding M. Campan by the button, he spent more than +an hour, talking vehemently, and without the slightest reserve, about the +French Government. My father-in-law and myself maintained profound +silence, as much from astonishment as from respect; and when we were alone +we agreed not to speak of this interview. + +The Emperor was fond of describing the Italian Courts that he had visited. +The jealous quarrels between the King and Queen of Naples amused him +highly; he described to the life the manner and speech of that sovereign, +and the simplicity with which he used to go and solicit the first +chamberlain to obtain permission to return to the nuptial bed, when the +angry Queen had banished him from it. The time which he was made to wait +for this reconciliation was calculated between the Queen and her +chamberlain, and always proportioned to the gravity of the offence. He +also related several very amusing stories relative to the Court of Parma, +of which he spoke with no little contempt. If what this Prince said of +those Courts, and even of Vienna, had been written down, the whole would +have formed an interesting collection. The Emperor told the King that the +Grand Duke of Tuscany and the King of Naples being together, the former +said a great deal about the changes he had effected in his State. The +Grand Duke had issued a mass of new edicts, in order to carry the precepts +of the economists into execution, and trusted that in so doing he was +labouring for the welfare of his people. The King of Naples suffered him +to go on speaking for a long time, and then casually asked how many +Neapolitan families there were in Tuscany. The Duke soon reckoned them +up, as they were but few. "Well, brother," replied the King of Naples, "I +do not understand the indifference of your people towards your great +reforms; for I have four times the number of Tuscan families settled in my +States that you have of Neapolitan families in yours." + +The Queen being at the Opera with the Emperor, the latter did not wish to +show himself; but she took him by the hand, and gently drew him to the +front of the box. This kind of presentation to the public was most warmly +received. The performance was "Iphigenia in Aulis," and for the second +time the chorus, "Chantons, celebrons notre Reine!" was called for with +universal plaudits. + +A fete of a novel description was given at Petit Trianon. The art with +which the English garden was not illuminated, but lighted, produced a +charming effect. Earthen lamps, concealed by boards painted green, threw +light upon the beds of shrubs and flowers, and brought out their varied +tints. Several hundred burning fagots in the moat behind the Temple of +Love made a blaze of light, which rendered that spot the most brilliant in +the garden. After all, this evening's entertainment had nothing +remarkable about it but the good taste of the artists, yet it was much +talked of. The situation did not allow the admission of a great part of +the Court; those who were uninvited were dissatisfied; and the people, who +never forgive any fetes but those they share in, so exaggerated the cost +of this little fete as to make it appear that the fagots burnt in the moat +had required the destruction of a whole forest. The Queen being informed +of these reports, was determined to know exactly how much wood had been +consumed; and she found that fifteen hundred fagots had sufficed to keep +up the fire until four o'clock in the morning. + +After staying a few months the Emperor left France, promising his sister +to come and see her again. All the officers of the Queen's chamber had +many opportunities of serving him during his stay, and expected that he +would make them presents before his departure. Their oath of office +positively forbade them to receive a gift from any foreign prince; they +had therefore agreed to refuse the Emperor's presents at first, but to ask +the time necessary for obtaining permission to accept them. The Emperor, +probably informed of this custom, relieved the good people from their +difficulty by setting off without making a single present. + +About the latter end of 1777 the Queen, being alone in her closet, sent +for my father-in-law and myself, and, giving us her hand to kiss; told us +that, looking upon us both as persons deeply interested in her happiness, +she wished to receive our congratulations,--that at length she was the +Queen of France, and that she hoped soon to have children; that till now +she had concealed her grief, but that she had shed many tears in secret. + +Dating from this happy but long-delayed moment, the King's attachment to +the Queen assumed every characteristic of love. The good Lassone, first +physician to the King and Queen, frequently spoke to me of the uneasiness +that the King's indifference, the cause of which he had been so long in +overcoming, had given him, and appeared to me at that time to entertain no +anxiety except of a very different description. + +In the winter of 1778 the King's permission for the return of Voltaire; +after an absence of twenty-seven years, was obtained. A few strict +persons considered this concession on the part of the Court very +injudicious. The Emperor, on leaving France, passed by the Chateau of +Ferney without stopping there. He had advised the Queen not to suffer +Voltaire to be presented to her. A lady belonging to the Court learned +the Emperor's opinion on that point, and reproached him with his want of +enthusiasm towards the greatest genius of the age. He replied that for +the good of the people he should always endeavour to profit by the +knowledge of the philosophers; but that his own business of sovereign +would always prevent his ranking himself amongst that sect. The clergy +also took steps to hinder Voltaire's appearance at Court. Paris, however, +carried to the highest pitch the honours and enthusiasm shown to the great +poet. + +It was very unwise to let Paris pronounce with such transport an opinion +so opposite to that of the Court. This was pointed out to the Queen, and +she was told that, without conferring on Voltaire the honour of a +presentation, she might see him in the State apartments. She was not +averse to following this advice, and appeared embarrassed solely about +what she should say to him. She was recommended to talk about nothing but +the "Henriade," "Merope," and "Zaira." The Queen replied that she would +still consult a few other persons in whom she had great confidence. The +next day she announced that it was irrevocably decided Voltaire should not +see any member of the royal family,--his writings being too antagonistic +to religion and morals. "It is, however, strange," said the Queen, "that +while we refuse to admit Voltaire into our presence as the leader of +philosophical writers, the Marechale de Mouchy should have presented to me +some years ago Madame Geoffrin, who owed her celebrity to the title of +foster-mother of the philosophers." + +On the occasion of the duel of the Comte d'Artois with the Prince de +Bourbon the Queen determined privately to see the Baron de Besenval, who +was to be one of the witnesses, in order to communicate the King's +intentions. I have read with infinite pain the manner in which that +simple fact is perverted in the first volume of M. de Besenval's +"Memoirs." He is right in saying that M. Campan led him through the upper +corridors of the Chateau, and introduced him into an apartment unknown to +him; but the air of romance given to the interview is equally culpable and +ridiculous. M. de Besenval says that he found himself, without knowing +how he came there, in an apartment unadorned, but very conveniently +furnished, of the existence of which he was till then utterly ignorant. +He was astonished, he adds, not that the Queen should have so many +facilities, but that she should have ventured to procure them. Ten +printed sheets of the woman Lamotte's libels contain nothing so injurious +to the character of Marie Antoinette as these lines, written by a man whom +she honoured by undeserved kindness. He could not have had any +opportunity of knowing the existence of the apartments, which consisted of +a very small antechamber, a bedchamber, and a closet. Ever since the +Queen had occupied her own apartment, these had been appropriated to her +Majesty's lady of honour in cases of illness, and were actually so used +when the Queen was confined. It was so important that it should not be +known the Queen had spoken to the Baron before the duel that she had +determined to go through her inner room into this little apartment, to +which M. Campan was to conduct him. When men write of recent times they +should be scrupulously exact, and not indulge in exaggerations or +inventions. + +The Baron de Besenval appears mightily surprised at the Queen's sudden +coolness, and refers it to the fickleness of her disposition. I can +explain the reason for the change by repeating what her Majesty said to me +at the time; and I will not alter one of her expressions. Speaking of the +strange presumption of men, and the reserve with which women ought always +to treat them, the Queen added that age did not deprive them of the hope +of pleasing, if they retained any agreeable qualities; that she had +treated the Baron de Besenval as a brave Swiss, agreeable, polished, and +witty, whose gray hairs had induced her to look upon him as a man whom she +might see without harm; but that she had been much deceived. Her Majesty, +after having enjoined me to the strictest secrecy, told me that, finding +herself alone with the Baron, he began to address her with so much +gallantry that she was thrown into the utmost astonishment, and that he +was mad enough to fall upon his knees, and make her a declaration in form. +The Queen added that she said to him: "Rise, monsieur; the King shall be +ignorant of an offence which would disgrace you for ever;" that the Baron +grew pale and stammered apologies; that she left her closet without saying +another word, and that since that time she hardly ever spoke to him. "It +is delightful to have friends," said the Queen; "but in a situation like +mine it is sometimes difficult for the friends of our friends to suit us." + +In the beginning of the year 1778 Mademoiselle d'Eon obtained permission +to return to France, on condition that she should appear there in female +dress. The Comte de Vergennes entreated my father, M. Genet, chief clerk +of Foreign Affairs, who had long known the Chevalier d'Eon, to receive +that strange personage at his house, to guide and restrain, if possible, +her ardent disposition. The Queen, on learning her arrival at Versailles, +sent a footman to desire my father to bring her into her presence; my +father thought it his duty first to inform the Minister of her Majesty's +wish. The Comte de Vergennes expressed himself pleased with my father's +prudence, and desired that he would accompany him to the Queen. The +Minister had a few minutes' audience; her Majesty came out of her closet +with him, and condescended to express to my father the regret she felt at +having troubled him to no purpose; and added, smiling, that a few words +from M. de Vergennes had for ever cured her of her curiosity. The +discovery in London of the true sex of this pretended woman makes it +probable that the few words uttered by the Minister contained a solution +of the enigma. + +The Chevalier d'Eon had been useful in Russia as a spy of Louis XV. while +very young he had found means to introduce himself at the Court of the +Empress Elizabeth, and served that sovereign in the capacity of reader. +Resuming afterwards his military dress, he served with honour and was +wounded. Appointed chief secretary of legation, and afterwards minister +plenipotentiary at London, he unpardonably insulted Comte de Guerchy, the +ambassador. The official order for the Chevalier's return to France was +actually delivered to the King's Council; but Louis XV. delayed the +departure of the courier who was to be its bearer, and sent off another +courier privately, who gave the Chevalier d'Eon a letter in his own +writing, in which he said, "I know that you have served me as effectually +in the dress of a woman as in that which you now wear. Resume it +instantly; withdraw into the city; I warn you that the King yesterday +signed an order for your return to France; you are not safe in your hotel, +and you would here find too powerful enemies." I heard the Chevalier +d'Eon repeat the contents of this letter, in which Louis XV. thus +separated himself from the King of France, several times at my father's. +The Chevalier, or rather the Chevalaere d'Eon had preserved all the King's +letters. Messieurs de Maurepas and de Vergennes wished to get them out of +his hands, as they were afraid he would print them. This eccentric being +had long solicited permission to return to France; but it was necessary to +find a way of sparing the family he had offended the insult they would see +in his return; he was therefore made to resume the costume of that sex to +which in France everything is pardoned. The desire to see his native land +once more determined him to submit to the condition, but he revenged +himself by combining the long train of his gown and the three deep ruffles +on his sleeves with the attitude and conversation of a grenadier, which +made him very disagreeable company. + +[The account given by Madame Campan of the Chevalier d'Eon is now known to +be incorrect in many particulars. Enough details for most readers will be +found in the Duc de Broglie's "Secret of the King," vol. ii., chaps. vi. +and g., and at p. 89, vol. ii. of that work, where the Duke refers to +the letter of most dubious authenticity spoken of by Madame Campan. The +following details will be sufficient for these memoirs: The Chevalier +Charles d'Eon de Beaumont (who was born in 1728) was an ex-captain of +dragoons, employed in both the open and secret diplomacy of Louis XV. +When at the embassy in London he quarrelled with the ambassador, his +superior, the Comte de Guerchy (Marquis do Nangis), and used his +possession of papers concerning the secret diplomacy to shield himself. +It was when hiding in London, in 1765, on account of this business, that +he seems first to have assumed woman's dress, which he retained apparently +chiefly from love of notoriety. In 1775 a formal agreement with the +French Court, made by the instrumentality of Beaumarchais, of all people +in the world, permitted him to return to France, retaining the dress of a +woman. He went back to France, but again came to England, and died there, +at his residence in Millman Street, near the Foundling Hospital, May 22, +1710. He had been a brave and distinguished officer, but his form and a +certain coldness of temperament always remarked in him assisted him in his +assumption of another sex. There appears to be no truth in the story of +his proceedings at the Russian Court, and his appearing in female attire +was a surprise to those who must have known of any earlier affair of the +sort.] + +At last, the event so long desired by the Queen, and by all those who +wished her well, took place; her Majesty became enceinte. The King was in +ecstasies. Never was there a more united or happier couple. The +disposition of Louis XVI. entirely altered, and became prepossessing and +conciliatory; and the Queen was amply compensated for the uneasiness which +the King's indifference during the early part of their union had caused +her. + +The summer of 1778 was extremely hot. July and August passed, but the air +was not cooled by a single storm. The Queen spent whole days in close +rooms, and could not sleep until she had breathed the fresh night air, +walking with the Princesses and her brothers upon the terrace under her +apartments. These promenades at first gave rise to no remark; but it +occurred to some of the party to enjoy the music of wind instruments +during these fine summer nights. The musicians belonging to the chapel +were ordered to perform pieces suited to instruments of that description, +upon steps constructed in the middle of the garden. The Queen, seated on +one of the terrace benches, enjoyed the effect of this music, surrounded +by all the royal family with the exception of the King, who joined them +but, twice, disliking to change his hour of going to bed. + +Nothing could be more innocent than these parties; yet Paris, France, nay, +all Europe, were soon canvassing them in a manner most disadvantageous to +the reputation of Marie Antoinette. It is true that all the inhabitants +of Versailles enjoyed these serenades, and that there was a crowd near the +spot from eleven at night until two or three in the morning. The windows +of the ground floor occupied by Monsieur and Madame--[The wife of +Monsieur, the Comte de Provence.]--were kept open, and the terrace was +perfectly well lighted by the numerous wax candles burning in the two +apartments. Lamps were likewise placed in the garden, and the lights of +the orchestra illuminated the rest of the place. + +I do not know whether a few incautious women might not have ventured +farther, and wandered to the bottom of the park; it may have been so; but +the Queen, Madame, and the Comtesse d'Artois were always arm-in-arm, and +never left the terrace. The Princesses were not remarkable when seated on +the benches, being dressed in cambric muslin gowns, with large straw hats +and muslin veils, a costume universally adopted by women at that time; but +when standing up their different figures always distinguished them; and +the persons present stood on one side to let them pass. It is true that +when they seated themselves upon the benches private individuals would +sometimes, to their great amusement, sit down by their side. + +A young clerk in the War Department, either not knowing or pretending not +to know the Queen, spoke to her of the beauty of the night, and the +delightful effect of the music. The Queen, fancying she was not +recognised, amused herself by keeping up the incognito, and they talked of +several private families of Versailles, consisting of persons belonging to +the King's household or her own. After a few minutes the Queen and +Princesses rose to walk, and on leaving the bench curtsied to the clerk. +The young man knowing, or having subsequently discovered, that he had been +conversing with the Queen, boasted of it in his office. He was merely, +desired to hold his tongue; and so little attention did he excite that the +Revolution found him still only a clerk. + +Another evening one of Monsieur's body-guard seated himself near the +Princesses, and, knowing them, left the place where he was sitting, and +placed himself before the Queen, to tell her that he was very fortunate in +being able to seize an opportunity of imploring the kindness of his +sovereign; that he was "soliciting at Court"--at the word soliciting the +Queen and Princesses rose hastily and withdrew into Madame's +apartment.--[Soulavie has most criminally perverted these two +facts.--MADAME CAMPAN.]--I was at the Queen's residence that day. She +talked of this little occurrence all the time of her 'coucher'; though she +only complained that one of Monsieur's guards should have had the +effrontery to speak to her. Her Majesty added that he ought to have +respected her incognito; and that that was not the place where he should +have ventured to make a request. Madame had recognised him, and talked of +making a complaint to his captain; the Queen opposed it, attributing his +error to his ignorance and provincial origin. + +The most scandalous libels were based on these two insignificant +occurrences, which I have related with scrupulous exactness. Nothing +could be more false than those calumnies. It must be confessed, however, +that such meetings were liable to ill consequences. I ventured to say as +much to the Queen, and informed her that one evening, when her Majesty +beckoned to me to go and speak to her, I thought I recognised on the bench +on which she was sitting two women deeply veiled, and keeping profound +silence; that those women were the Comtesse du Barry and her +sister-in-law; and that my suspicions were confirmed, when, at a few paces +from the seat, and nearer to her Majesty, I met a tall footman belonging +to Madame du Barry, whom I had seen in her service all the time she +resided at Court. + +My advice was disregarded. Misled by the pleasure she found in these +promenades, and secure in the consciousness of blameless conduct, the +Queen would not see the lamentable results which must necessarily follow. +This was very unfortunate; for besides the mortifications they brought +upon her, it is highly probable that they prompted the vile plot which +gave rise to the Cardinal de Rohan's fatal error. + +Having enjoyed these evening promenades about a month, the Queen ordered a +private concert within the colonnade which contained the group of Pluto +and Proserpine. Sentinels were placed at all the entrances, and ordered +to admit within the colonnade only such persons as should produce tickets +signed by my father-in-law. A fine concert was performed there by the +musicians of the chapel and the female musicians belonging to the. Queen's +chamber. The Queen went with Mesdames de Polignac, de Chalon, and +d'Andlau, and Messieurs de Polignac, de Coigny, de Besenval, and de +Vaudreuil; there were also a few equerries present. Her Majesty gave me +permission to attend the concert with some of my female relations. There +was no music upon the terrace. The crowd of inquisitive people, whom the +sentinels kept at a distance from the enclosure of the colonnade, went +away highly discontented; the small number of persons admitted no doubt +occasioned jealousy, and gave rise to offensive comments which were caught +up by the public with avidity. I do not pretend to apologise for the kind +of amusements with which the Queen indulged herself during this and the +following summer; the consequences were so lamentable that the error was +no doubt very great; but what I have said respecting the character of +these promenades may be relied on as true. + +When the season for evening walks was at an end, odious couplets were +circulated in Paris; the 'Queen was treated in them in the most insulting +manner; her situation ranked among her enemies persons attached to the +only prince who for several years had appeared likely to give heirs to the +crown. People uttered the most inconsiderate language; and those improper +conversations took place in societies wherein the imminent danger of +violating to so criminal an extent both truth and the respect due to +sovereigns ought to have been better understood. A few days before the +Queen's confinement a whole volume of manuscript songs, concerning her and +all the ladies about her remarkable for rank or station was, thrown down +in the oiel-de-boeuf.--[A large room at Versailles lighted by a bull's-eye +window, and used as a waiting-room.]--This manuscript was immediately put +into the hands of the King, who was highly incensed at it, and said that +he had himself been at those promenades; that he had seen nothing +connected with them but what was perfectly harmless; that such songs would +disturb the harmony of twenty families in the Court and city; that it was +a capital crime to have made any against the Queen herself; and that he +wished the author of the infamous libels to be discovered and punished. A +fortnight afterwards it was known publicly that the verses were by M. +Champcenetz de Riquebourg, who was not even reprimanded. + +[The author of a great many songs, some of which are very well written. +Lively and satirical by nature, he did not lose either his cheerfulness or +his carelessness before the revolutionary tribunal. After hearing his own +sentence read, he asked his judges if he might not be allowed to find a +substitute.--MADAME CAMPAN.] + +I knew for a certainty that the King spoke to M. de Maurepas, before two +of his most confidential servants, respecting the risk which he saw the +Queen ran from these night walks upon the terrace of Versailles, which the +public ventured to censure thus openly, and that the old minister had the +cruelty to advise that she should be suffered to go on; she possessed +talent; her friends were very ambitious, and longed to see her take a part +in public affairs; and to let her acquire the reputation of levity would +do no harm. M. de Vergennes was as hostile to the Queen's influence as M. +de Maurepas. It may therefore be fairly presumed, since the Prime +Minister durst point out to his King an advantage to be gained by the +Queen's discrediting herself, that he and M. de Vergennes employed all +means within the reach of powerful ministers in order to ruin her in the +opinion of the public. + +The Queen's accouchement approached; Te Deums were sung and prayers +offered up in all the cathedrals. On the 11th of December, 1778, the +royal family, the Princes of the blood, and the great officers of State +passed the night in the rooms adjoining the Queen's bedchamber. Madame, +the King's daughter, came into the world before mid-day on the 19th of +December.--[Marie Therese Charlotte (1778-1861), Madame Royale; married in +1799 Louis, Duc d'Angouleme, eldest son of the Comte d'Artois.]--The +etiquette of allowing all persons indiscriminately to enter at the moment +of the delivery of a queen was observed with such exaggeration that when +the accoucheur said aloud, "La Reine va s'accoucher," the persons who +poured into the chamber were so numerous that the rush nearly destroyed +the Queen. During the night the King had taken the precaution to have the +enormous tapestry screens which surrounded her Majesty's bed secured with +cords; but for this they certainly would have been thrown down upon her. +It was impossible to move about the chamber, which was filled with so +motley a crowd that one might have fancied himself in some place of public +amusement. Two Savoyards got upon the furniture for a better sight of the +Queen, who was placed opposite the fireplace. + +The noise and the sex of the infant, with which the Queen was made +acquainted by a signal previously agreed on, as it is said, with the +Princesse do Lamballe, or some error of the accoucheur, brought on +symptoms which threatened fatal consequences; the accoucheur exclaimed, +"Give her air--warm water--she must be bled in the foot!" The windows +were stopped up; the King opened them with a strength which his affection +for the Queen gave him at the moment. They were of great height, and +pasted over with strips of paper all round. The basin of hot water not +being brought quickly enough, the accoucheur desired the chief surgeon to +use his lancet without waiting for it. He did so; the blood streamed out +freely, and the Queen opened her eyes. The Princesse de Lamballe was +carried through the crowd in a state of insensibility. The valets de +chambre and pages dragged out by the collar such inconsiderate persons as +would not leave the room. This cruel custom was abolished afterwards. The +Princes of the family, the Princes of the blood, the chancellor, and the +ministers are surely sufficient to attest the legitimacy of an hereditary +prince. The Queen was snatched from the very jaws of death; she was not +conscious of having been bled, and on being replaced in bed asked why she +had a linen bandage upon her foot. + +The delight which succeeded the moment of fear was equally lively and +sincere. We were all embracing each other, and shedding tears of joy. The +Comte d'Esterhazy and the Prince de Poix, to whom I was the first to +announce that the Queen was restored to life, embraced me in the midst of +the cabinet of nobles. We little imagined, in our happiness at her escape +from death, for how much more terrible a fate our beloved Princess was +reserved. + +NOTE. The two following specimens of the Emperor Joseph's correspondence +forcibly demonstrate the vigour, shrewdness, and originality of his mind, +and complete the portrait left of him by Madame Campan. + +Few sovereigns have given their reasons for refusing appointments with the +fullness and point of the following letter + +To a Lady. + +MADAM.--I do not think that it is amongst the duties of a monarch to grant +places to one of his subjects merely because he is a gentleman. That, +however, is the inference from the request you have made to me. Your late +husband was, you say, a distinguished general, a gentleman of good family, +and thence you conclude that my kindness to your family can do no less +than give a company of foot to your second son, lately returned from his +travels. + +Madam, a man may be the son of a general and yet have no talent for +command. A man may be of a good family and yet possess no other merit +than that which he owes to chance,--the name of gentleman. + +I know your son, and I know what makes the soldier; and this twofold +knowledge convinces me that your son has not the disposition of a warrior, +and that he is too full of his birth to leave the country a hope of his +ever rendering it any important service. + +What you are to be pitied for, madam, is, that your son is not fit either +for an officer, a statesman or a priest; in a word, that he is nothing +more than a gentleman in the most extended acceptation of the word. + +You may be thankful to that destiny, which, in refusing talents to your +son, has taken care to put him in possession of great wealth, which will +sufficiently compensate him for other deficiencies, and enable him at the +same time to dispense with any favour from me. + +I hope you will be impartial enough to see the reasons which prompt me to +refuse your request. It may be disagreeable to you, but I consider it +necessary. Farewell, madam.--Your sincere well-wisher, JOSEPH +LACHSENBURG, 4th August, 1787. + +The application of another anxious and somewhat covetous mother was +answered with still more decision and irony: + +To a Lady. + +MADAM.--You know my disposition; you are not ignorant that the society of +the ladies is to me a mere recreation, and that I have never sacrificed my +principles to the fair sex. I pay but little attention to +recommendations, and I only take them into consideration when the person +in whose behalf I may be solicited possesses real merit. + +Two of your sons are already loaded with favours. The eldest, who is not +yet twenty, is chief of a squadron in my army, and the younger has +obtained a canonry at Cologne, from the Elector, my brother. What would +you have more? Would you have the first a general and the second a +bishop? + +In France you may see colonels in leading-strings, and in Spain the royal +princes command armies even at eighteen; hence Prince Stahremberg forced +them to retreat so often that they were never able all the rest of their +lives to comprehend any other manoeuvre. + +It is necessary to be sincere at Court, and severe in the field, stoical +without obduracy, magnanimous without weakness, and to gain the esteem of +our enemies by the justice of our actions; and this, madam, is what I aim +at. JOSEPH VIENNA, September, 1787. + +(From the inedited Letters of Joseph IL, published at Paris, by Persan, +1822.) + + + + +CHAPTER X. + + +During the alarm for the life of the Queen, regret at not possessing an +heir to the throne was not even thought of. The King himself was wholly +occupied with the care of preserving an adored wife. The young Princess +was presented to her mother. "Poor little one," said the Queen, "you were +not wished for, but you are not on that account less dear to me. A son +would have been rather the property of the State. You shall be mine; you +shall have my undivided care, shall share all my happiness, and console me +in all my troubles." + +The King despatched a courier to Paris, and wrote letters himself to +Vienna, by the Queen's bedside; and part of the rejoicings ordered took +place in the capital. + +A great number of attendants watched near the Queen during the first +nights of her confinement. This custom distressed her; she knew how to +feel for others, and ordered large armchairs for her women, the backs of +which were capable of being let down by springs, and which served +perfectly well instead of beds. + +M. de Lassone, the chief physician, the chief surgeon, the chief +apothecary, the principal officers of the buttery, etc., were likewise +nine nights without going to bed. The royal children were watched for a +long time, and one of the women on duty remained, nightly, up and dressed, +during the first three years from their birth. + +The Queen made her entry into Paris for the churching. One hundred +maidens were portioned and married at Notre-Dame. There were few popular +acclamations, but her Majesty was perfectly well received at the Opera. + +A few days after the Queen's recovery from her confinement, the Cure of +the Magdelaine de la City at Paris wrote to M. Campan and requested a +private interview with him; it was to desire he would deliver into the +hands of the Queen a little box containing her wedding ring, with this +note written by the Cure: "I have received under the seal of confession +the ring which I send to your Majesty; with an avowal that it was stolen +from you in 1771, in order to be used in sorceries, to prevent your having +any children." On seeing her ring again the Queen said that she had in +fact lost it about seven years before, while washing her hands, and that +she had resolved to use no endeavour to discover the superstitious woman +who had done her the injury. + +The Queen's attachment to the Comtesse Jules increased every day; she went +frequently to her house at Paris, and even took up her own abode at the +Chateau de la Muette to be nearer during her confinement. She married +Mademoiselle de Polignac, when scarcely thirteen years of age, to M. de +Grammont, who, on account of this marriage, was made Duc de Guiche, and +captain of the King's Guards, in reversion after the Duc de Villeroi. The +Duchesse de Civrac, Madame Victoire's dame d'honneur, had been promised +the place for the Duc de Lorges, her son. The number of discontented +families at Court increased. + +The title of favourite was too openly given to the Comtesse Jules by her +friends. The lot of the favourite of a queen is not, in France, a happy +one; the favourites of kings are treated, out of gallantry, with much +greater indulgence. + +A short time after the birth of Madame the Queen became again enceinte; +she had mentioned it only to the King, to her physician, and to a few +persons honoured with her intimate confidence, when, having overexerted +her strength in pulling lip one of the glasses of her carriage, she felt +that she had hurt herself, and eight days afterwards she miscarried. The +King spent the whole morning at her bedside, consoling her, and +manifesting the tenderest concern for her. The Queen wept exceedingly; +the King took her affectionately in his arms, and mingled his tears with +hers. The King enjoined silence among the small number of persons who +were informed of this unfortunate occurrence; and it remained generally +unknown. These particulars furnish an accurate idea of the manner in +which this august couple lived together. + +The Empress Maria Theresa did not enjoy the happiness of seeing her +daughter give an heir to the crown of France. That illustrious Princess +died at the close of 1780, after having proved by her example that, as in +the instance of Queen Blanche, the talents of a sovereign might be blended +with the virtues of a pious princess. The King was deeply affected at the +death of the Empress; and on the arrival of the courier from Vienna said +that he could not bring himself to afflict the Queen by informing her of +an event which grieved even him so much. His Majesty thought the Abbe de +Vermond, who had possessed the confidence of Maria Theresa during his stay +at Vienna, the most proper person to discharge this painful duty. He sent +his first valet de chambre, M. de Chamilly, to the Abbe on the evening of +the day he received the despatches from Vienna, to order him to come the +next day to the Queen before her breakfast hour, to acquit himself +discreetly of the afflicting commission with which he was charged, and to +let his Majesty know the moment of his entering the Queen's chamber. It +was the King's intention to be there precisely a quarter of an hour after +him, and he was punctual to his time; he was announced; the Abbe came out; +and his Majesty said to him, as he drew up at the door to let him pass, "I +thank you, Monsieur l'Abbe, for the service you have just done me." This +was the only time during nineteen years that the King spoke to him. + +Within an hour after learning the event the Queen put on temporary +mourning, while waiting until her Court mourning should be ready; she kept +herself shut up in her apartments for several days; went out only to mass; +saw none but the royal family; and received none but the Princesse de +Lamballe and the Duchesse de Polignac. She talked incessantly of the +courage, the misfortunes, the successes, and the virtues of her mother. +The shroud and dress in which Maria Theresa was to be buried, made +entirely by her own hands, were found ready prepared in one of her +closets. She often regretted that the numerous duties of her august +mother had prevented her from watching in person over the education of her +daughters; and modestly said that she herself would have been more worthy +if she had had the good fortune to receive lessons directly from a +sovereign so enlightened and so deserving of admiration. + +The Queen told me one day that her mother was left a widow at an age when +her beauty was yet striking; that she was secretly informed of a plot laid +by her three principal ministers to make themselves agreeable to her; of a +compact made between them, that the losers should not feel any jealousy +towards him who should be fortunate enough to gain his sovereign's heart; +and that they had sworn that the successful one should be always the +friend of the other two. The Empress being assured of this scheme, one +day after the breaking up of the council over which she had presided, +turned the conversation upon the subject of female sovereigns, and the +duties of their sex and rank; and then applying her general reflections to +herself in particular, told them that she hoped to guard herself all her +life against weaknesses of the heart; but that if ever an irresistible +feeling should make her alter her resolution, it should be only in favour +of a man proof against ambition, not engaged in State affairs, but +attached only to a private life and its calm enjoyments,--in a word, if +her heart should betray her so far as to lead her to love a man invested +with any important office, from the moment he should discover her +sentiments he would forfeit his place and his influence with the public. +This was sufficient; the three ministers, more ambitious than amorous, +gave up their projects for ever. + +On the 22d of October, 1781, the Queen gave birth to a Dauphin.--[The +first Dauphin, Louis, born 1781, died 1789.]--So deep a silence prevailed +in the room that the Queen thought her child was a daughter; but after the +Keeper of the Seals had declared the sex of the infant, the King went up +to the Queen's bed, and said to her, "Madame, you have fulfilled my wishes +and those of France: you are the mother of a Dauphin." The King's joy was +boundless; tears streamed from his eyes; he gave his hand to every one +present; and his happiness carried away his habitual reserve. Cheerful +and affable, he was incessantly taking occasion to introduce the words, +"my son," or "the Dauphin." As soon as the Queen was in bed, she wished +to see the long-looked-for infant. The Princesse de Guemenee brought him +to her. The Queen said there was no need for commending him to the +Princess, but in order to enable her to attend to him more freely, she +would herself share the care of the education of her daughter. When the +Dauphin was settled in his apartment, he received the customary homages +and visits. The Duc d'Angouleme, meeting his father at the entrance of +the Dauphin's apartment, said to him, "Oh, papa! how little my cousin +is!"--"The day will come when you will think him great enough, my dear," +answered the Prince, almost involuntarily.--[Eldest son of the Comte +d'Artois, and till the birth of the Dauphin with near prospects of the +succession.] + +The birth of the Dauphin appeared to give joy to all classes. Men stopped +one another in the streets, spoke without being acquainted, and those who +were acquainted embraced each other. In the birth of a legitimate heir to +the sovereign every man beholds a pledge of prosperity and tranquillity. + +[M. Merard de Saint Just made a quatrain on the birth of the Dauphin to +the following effect: + +"This infant Prince our hopes are centred in, will doubtless make us +happy, rich, and free; And since with somebody he must begin, My fervent +prayer is--that it may be me!" + +--NOTE BY THE EDITOR.] + +The rejoicings were splendid and ingenious. The artificers and tradesmen +of Paris spent considerable sums in order to go to Versailles in a body, +with their various insignia. Almost every troop had music with it. When +they arrived at the court of the palace, they there arranged themselves so +as to present a most interesting living picture. Chimney-sweepers, quite +as well dressed as those that appear upon the stage, carried an ornamented +chimney, at the top of which was perched one of the smallest of their +fraternity. The chairmen carried a sedan highly gilt, in which were to be +seen a handsome nurse and a little Dauphin. The butchers made their +appearance with their fat ox. Cooks, masons, blacksmiths, all trades were +on the alert. The smiths hammered away upon an anvil, the shoemakers +finished off a little pair of boots for the Dauphin, and the tailors a +little suit of the uniform of his regiment. The King remained a long time +upon a balcony to enjoy the sight. The whole Court was delighted with it. +So general was the enthusiasm that (the police not having carefully +examined the procession) the grave-diggers had the imprudence to send +their deputation also, with the emblematic devices of their ill-omened +occupation. They were met by the Princesse Sophie, the King's aunt, who +was thrilled with horror at the sight, and entreated the King to have the +audacious, fellows driven out of the procession, which was then drawing up +on the terrace. + +The 'dames de la halle' came to congratulate the Queen, and were received +with the suitable ceremonies. + +Fifty of them appeared dressed in black silk gowns, the established full +dress of their order, and almost all wore diamonds. The Princesse de +Chimay went to the door of the Queen's bedroom to receive three of these +ladies, who were led up to the Queen's bed. One of them addressed her +Majesty in a speech written by M. de la Harpe. It was set down on the +inside of a fan, to which the speaker repeatedly referred, but without any +embarrassment. She was handsome, and had a remarkably fine voice. The +Queen was affected by the address, and answered it with great +affability,--wishing a distinction to be made between these women and the +poissardes, who always left a disagreeable impression on her mind. + +The King ordered a substantial repast for all these women. One of his +Majesty's maitres d'hotel, wearing his hat, sat as president and did the +honours of the table. The public were admitted, and numbers of people had +the curiosity to go. + +The Garden-du-Corps obtained the King's permission to give the Queen a +dress ball in the great hall of the Opera at Versailles. Her Majesty +opened the ball in a minuet with a private selected by the corps, to whom +the King granted the baton of an exempt. The fete was most splendid. All +then was joy, happiness, and peace. + +The Dauphin was a year old when the Prince de Guemenee's bankruptcy +compelled the Princess, his wife, who was governess to the children of +France, to resign her situation. + +The Queen was at La Muette for the inoculation of her daughter. She sent +for me, and condescended to say she wished to converse with me about a +scheme which delighted her, but in the execution of which she foresaw some +inconveniences. Her plan was to appoint the Duchesse de Polignac to the +office lately held by the Princesse de Guemenee. She saw with extreme +pleasure the facilities which this appointment would give her for +superintending the education of her children, without running any risk of +hurting the pride of the governess; and that it would bring together the +objects of her warmest affections, her children and her friend. "The +friends of the Duchesse de Polignac," continued the Queen, "will be +gratified by the splendour and importance conferred by the employment. As +to the Duchess, I know her; the place by no means suits her simple and +quiet habits, nor the sort of indolence of her disposition. She will give +me the greatest possible proof of her devotion if she yields to my wish." +The Queen also spoke of the Princesse de Chimay and the Duchesse de Duras, +whom the public pointed out as fit for the post; but she thought the +Princesse de Chimay's piety too rigid; and as to the Duchesse de Duras, +her wit and learning quite frightened her. What the Queen dreaded as the +consequence of her selection of the Duchesse de Polignac was principally +the jealousy of the courtiers; but she showed so lively a desire to see +her scheme executed that I had no doubt she would soon set at naught all +the obstacles she discovered. I was not mistaken; a few days afterwards +the Duchess was appointed governess. + +The Queen's object in sending for me was no doubt to furnish me with the +means of explaining the feelings which induced her to prefer a governess +disposed by friendship to suffer her to enjoy all the privileges of a +mother. Her Majesty knew that I saw a great deal of company. + +The Queen frequently dined with the Duchess after having been present at +the King's private dinner. Sixty-one thousand francs were therefore added +to the salary of the governess as a compensation for this increase of +expense. + +The Queen was tired of the excursions to Marly, and had no great +difficulty in setting the King against them. He did not like the expense +of them, for everybody was entertained there gratis. Louis XIV. had +established a kind of parade upon these excursions, differing from that of +Versailles, but still more annoying. Card and supper parties occurred +every day, and required much dress. On Sundays and holidays the fountains +played, the people were admitted into the gardens, and there was as great +a crowd as at the fetes of St. Cloud. + +Every age has its peculiar colouring; Marly showed that of Louis XIV. even +more than Versailles. Everything in the former place appeared to have +been produced by the magic power of a fairy's wand. Not the slightest +trace of all this splendour remains; the revolutionary spoilers even tore +up the pipes which served to supply the fountains. Perhaps a brief +description of this palace and the usages established there by Louis XIV. +may be acceptable. + +The very extensive gardens of Marly ascended almost imperceptibly to the +Pavilion of the Sun., which was occupied only by the King and his family. +The pavilions of the twelve zodiacal signs bounded the two sides of the +lawn. They were connected by bowers impervious to the rays of the sun. +The pavilions nearest to that of the sun were reserved for the Princes of +the blood and the ministers; the rest were occupied by persons holding +superior offices at Court, or invited to stay at Marly. Each pavilion was +named after fresco paintings, which covered its walls, and which had been +executed by the most celebrated artists of the age of Louis XIV. On a line +with the upper pavilion there was on the left a chapel; on the right a +pavilion called La Perspective, which concealed along suite of offices, +containing a hundred lodging-rooms intended for the persons belonging to +the service of the Court, kitchens, and spacious dining-rooms, in which +more than thirty tables were splendidly laid out. + +During half of Louis XV.'s reign the ladies still wore the habit de cour +de Marly, so named by Louis XIV., and which differed little from, that +devised for Versailles. The French gown, gathered in the back, and with +great hoops, replaced this dress, and continued to be worn till the end of +the reign of Louis XVI. The diamonds, feathers, rouge, and embroidered +stuffs spangled with gold, effaced all trace of a rural residence; but the +people loved to see the splendour of their sovereign and a brilliant Court +glittering in the shades of the woods. + +After dinner, and before the hour for cards, the Queen, the Princesses, +and their ladies, paraded among the clumps of trees, in little carriages, +beneath canopies richly embroidered with gold, drawn by men in the King's +livery. The trees planted by Louis XIV. were of prodigious height, which, +however, was surpassed in several of the groups by fountains of the +clearest water; while, among others, cascades over white marble, the +waters of which, met by the sunbeams, looked like draperies of silver +gauze, formed a contrast to the solemn darkness of the groves. + +In the evening nothing more was necessary for any well-dressed man to +procure admission to the Queen's card parties than to be named and +presented, by some officer of the Court, to the gentleman usher of the +card-room. This room, which was very, large, and of octagonal shape, rose +to the top of the Italian roof, and terminated in a cupola furnished with +balconies, in which ladies who had not been presented easily obtained +leave to place themselves, and enjoy, the sight of the brilliant +assemblage. + +Though not of the number of persons belonging to the Court, gentlemen +admitted into this salon might request one of the ladies seated with the +Queen at lansquenet or faro to bet upon her cards with such gold or notes +as they presented to her. Rich people and the gamblers of Paris did not +miss one of the evenings at the Marly salon, and there were always +considerable sums won and lost. Louis XVI. hated high play, and very +often showed displeasure when the loss of large sums was mentioned. The +fashion of wearing a black coat without being in mourning had not then +been introduced, and the King gave a few of his 'coups de boutoir' to +certain chevaliers de St. Louis, dressed in this manner, who came to +venture two or three louis, in the hope that fortune would favour the +handsome duchesses who deigned to place them on their cards. + +[Bachaumont in his "Memoirs," (tome xii., p. 189), which are often +satirical; and always somewhat questionable, speaks of the singular +precautions taken at play at Court. "The bankers at the Queen's table," +says he, "in order to prevent the mistakes [I soften the harshness of his +expression] which daily happen, have obtained permission from her Majesty +that before beginning to play the table shall be bordered by a ribbon +entirely round it, and that no other money than that upon the cards beyond +the ribbon shall be considered as staked."--NOTE By THE EDITOR.] + +Singular contrasts are often seen amidst the grandeur of courts. In order +to manage such high play at the Queen's faro table, it was necessary to +have a banker provided with large, sums of money; and this necessity +placed at the table, to which none but the highest titled persons were +admitted in general, not only M. de Chalabre, who was its banker, but also +a retired captain of foot, who officiated as his second. A word, trivial, +but perfectly appropriate to express the manner in which the Court was +attended there, was often heard. Gentlemen presented at Court, who had +not been invited to stay at Marly, came there notwithstanding, as they did +to Versailles, and returned again to Paris; under such circumstances, it +was said such a one had been to Marly only 'en polisson';--[A contemptuous +expression, meaning literally "as a scamp" or "rascal"]--and it appeared +odd to hear a captivating marquis, in answer to the inquiry whether he was +of the royal party at Marly, say, "No, I am only here 'en polisson'," +meaning simply "I am here on the footing of all those whose nobility is of +a later date than 1400." The Marly excursions were exceedingly expensive +to the King. Besides the superior tables, those of the almoners, +equerries, maitres d'hotel, etc., were all supplied with such a degree of +magnificence as to allow of inviting strangers to them; and almost all the +visitors from Paris were boarded at the expense of the Court. + +The personal frugality of the unfortunate Prince who sank beneath the +weight of the national debts thus favoured the Queen's predilection for +her Petit Trianon; and for five or six years preceding the Revolution the +Court very seldom visited Marly. + +The King, always attentive to the comfort of his family, gave Mesdames, +his aunts, the use of the Chateau de Bellevue, and afterwards purchased +the Princesse de Guemenee's house, at the entrance to Paris, for +Elisabeth. The Comtesse de Provence bought a small house at Montreuil; +Monsieur already had Brunoy; the Comtesse d'Artois built Bagatelle; +Versailles became, in the estimation of all the royal family, the least +agreeable of residences. They only fancied themselves at home in the +plainest houses, surrounded by English gardens, where they better enjoyed +the beauties of nature. The taste for cascades and statues was entirely +past. + +The Queen occasionally remained a whole month at Petit Trianon, and had +established there all the ways of life in a chateau. She entered the +sitting-room without driving the ladies from their pianoforte or +embroidery. The gentlemen continued their billiards or backgammon without +suffering her presence to interrupt them. There was but little room in +the small Chateau of Trianon. Madame Elisabeth accompanied the Queen +there, but the ladies of honour and ladies of the palace had no +establishment at Trianon. When invited by the Queen, they came from +Versailles to dinner. The King and Princes came regularly to sup. A +white gown, a gauze kerchief, and a straw hat were the uniform dress of +the Princesses. + +[The extreme simplicity of the Queen's toilet began to be strongly +censured, at first among the courtiers, and afterwards throughout the +kingdom; and through one of those inconsistencies more common in France +than elsewhere, while the Queen was blamed, she was blindly imitated. +There was not a woman but would have the same undress, the same cap, and +the same feathers as she had been seen to wear. They crowded to +Mademoiselle Bertin, her milliner; there was an absolute revolution in the +dress of our ladies, which gave importance to that woman. Long trains, +and all those fashions which confer a certain nobility on dress, were +discarded; and at last a duchess could not be distinguished from an +actress. The men caught the mania; the upper classes had long before +given up to their lackeys feathers, tufts of ribbon, and laced hats. They +now got rid of red heels and embroidery; and walked about our streets in +plain cloth, short thick shoes, and with knotty cudgels in their hands. +Many humiliating scrapes were the consequence of this metamorphosis. +Bearing no mark to distinguish them from the common herd, some of the +lowest classes got into quarrels with them, in which the nobles had not +always the best of it.--MONTJOIE, "History of Marie Antoinette."] + +Examining all the manufactories of the hamlet, seeing the cows milked, and +fishing in the lake delighted the Queen; and every year she showed +increased aversion to the pompous excursions to Marly. + +The idea of acting comedies, as was then done in almost all country +houses, followed on the Queen's wish to live at Trianon without ceremony. + +[The Queen got through the characters she assumed indifferently enough; +she could hardly be ignorant of this, as her performances evidently +excited little pleasure. Indeed, one day while she was thus exhibiting, +somebody ventured to say, by no means inaudibly, "well, this is royally +ill played!" The lesson was thrown away upon her, for never did she +sacrifice to the opinion of another that which she thought permissible. +When she was told that her extreme plainness in dress, the nature of her +amusements, and her dislike to that splendour which ought always to attend +a Queen, had an appearance of levity, which was misinterpreted by a +portion of the public, she replied with Madame de Maintenon: "I am upon +the stage, and of course I shall be either hissed or applauded." Louis +XIV. had a similar taste; he danced upon the stage; but he had shown by +brilliant actions that he knew how to enforce respect; and besides, he +unhesitatingly gave up the amusement from the moment he heard those +beautiful lines in which Racine pointed out how very unworthy of him such +pastimes were.--MONTJOIE, "History of Marie Antoinette."] + +It was agreed that no young man except the Comte d'Artois should be +admitted into the company of performers, and that the audience should +consist only of the King, Monsieur, and the Princesses, who did not play; +but in order to stimulate the actors a little, the first boxes were to be +occupied by the readers, the Queen's ladies, their sisters and daughters, +making altogether about forty persons. + +The Queen laughed heartily at the voice of M. d'Adhemar, formerly a very +fine one, but latterly become rather tremulous. His shepherd's dress in +Colin, in the "Devin du Village," contrasted very ridiculously with his +time of life, and the Queen said it would be difficult for malevolence +itself to find anything to criticise in the choice of such a lover. The +King was highly amused with these plays, and was present at every +performance. Caillot, a celebrated actor, who had long quitted the stage, +and Dazincourt, both of acknowledged good character, were selected to give +lessons, the first in comic opera, of which the easier sorts were +preferred, and the second in comedy. The office of hearer of rehearsals, +prompter, and stage manager was given to my father-in-law. The Duc de +Fronsac, first gentleman of the chamber, was much hurt at this. He +thought himself called upon to make serious remonstrances upon the +subject, and wrote to the Queen, who made him the following answer: "You +cannot be first gentleman when we are the actors. Besides, I have already +intimated to you my determination respecting Trianon. I hold no court +there, I live like a private person, and M. Campan shall be always +employed to execute orders relative to the private fetes I choose to give +there." This not putting a stop to the Duke's remonstrances, the King was +obliged to interfere. The Duke continued obstinate, and insisted that he +was entitled to manage the private amusements as much as those which were +public. It became absolutely necessary to end the argument in a positive +manner. + +The diminutive Duc de Fronsac never failed, when he came to pay his +respects to the Queen at her toilet, to turn the conversation upon +Trianon, in order to make some ironical remarks on my father-in-law, of +whom, from the time of his appointment, he always spoke as "my colleague +Campan." The Queen would shrug her shoulders, and say, when he was gone, +"It is quite shocking to find so little a man in the son of the Marechal +de Richelieu." + +So long as no strangers were admitted to the performances they were but +little censured; but the praise obtained by the performers made them look +for a larger circle of admirers. The company, for a private company, was +good enough, and the acting was applauded to the skies; nevertheless, as +the audience withdrew, adverse criticisms were occasionally heard. The +Queen permitted the officers of the Body Guards and the equerries of the +King and Princes to be present at the plays. Private boxes were provided +for some of the people belonging to the Court; a few more ladies were +invited; and claims arose on all sides for the favour of admission. The +Queen refused to admit the officers of the body guards of the Princes, the +officers of the King's Cent Suisses, and many other persons, who were +highly mortified at the refusal. + +While delight at having given an heir to the throne of the Bourbons, and a +succession of fetes and amusements, filled up the happy days of Marie +Antoinette, the public was engrossed by the Anglo-American war. Two +kings, or rather their ministers, planted and propagated the love of +liberty in the new world; the King of England, by shutting his ears and +his heart against the continued and respectful representations of subjects +at a distance from their native land, who had become numerous, rich, and +powerful, through the resources of the soil they had fertilised; and the +King of France, by giving support to this people in rebellion against +their ancient sovereign. Many young soldiers, belonging to the first +families of the country, followed La Fayette's example, and forsook +luxury, amusement, and love, to go and tender their aid to the revolted +Americans. Beaumarchais, secretly seconded by Messieurs de Maurepas and +de Vergennes, obtained permission to send out supplies of arms and +clothing. Franklin appeared at Court in the dress of an American +agriculturist. His unpowdered hair, his round hat, his brown cloth coat +formed a contrast to the laced and embroidered coats and the powder and +perfume of the courtiers of Versailles. This novelty turned the light +heads of the Frenchwomen. Elegant entertainments were given to Doctor +Franklin, who, to the reputation of a man of science, added the patriotic +virtues which invested him with the character of an apostle of liberty. I +was present at one of these entertainments, when the most beautiful woman +out of three hundred was selected to place a crown of laurels upon the +white head of the American philosopher, and two kisses upon his cheeks. +Even in the palace of Versailles Franklin's medallion was sold under the +King's eyes, in the exhibition of Sevres porcelain. The legend of this +medallion was + +"Eripuit coelo fulmen, sceptrumque tyrannis." + +The King never declared his opinion upon an enthusiasm which his correct +judgment no doubt led him to blame. The Queen spoke out more plainly +about the part France was taking respecting the independence of the +American colonies, and constantly opposed it. Far was she from foreseeing +that a revolution at--such a distance could excite one in which a +misguided populace would drag her from her palace to a death equally +unjust and cruel. She only saw something ungenerous in the method which +France adopted of checking the power of England. + +However, as Queen of France, she enjoyed the sight of a whole people +rendering homage to the prudence, courage, and good qualities of a young +Frenchman; and she shared the enthusiasm inspired by the conduct and +military success of the Marquis de La Fayette. The Queen granted him +several audiences on his first return from America, and, until the 10th of +August, on which day my house was plundered, I preserved some lines from +Gaston and Bayard, in which the friends of M. de La Fayette saw the exact +outline of his character, written by her own hand: + + "Why talk of youth, + When all the ripe experience of the old + Dwells with him? In his schemes profound and cool, + He acts with wise precaution, and reserves + For time of action his impetuous fire. + To guard the camp, to scale the leaguered wall, + Or dare the hottest of the fight, are toils + That suit th' impetuous bearing of his youth; + Yet like the gray-hair'd veteran he can shun + The field of peril. Still before my eyes + I place his bright example, for I love + His lofty courage, and his prudent thought. + Gifted like him, a warrior has no age." + +[During the American war a general officer in the service of the United +States advanced with a score of men under the English batteries to +reconnoitre their position. His aide-de-camp, struck by a ball, fell at +his side. The officers and orderly dragoons fled precipitately. The +general, though under the fire of the cannon, approached the wounded man +to see whether any help could be afforded him. Finding the wound had been +mortal, he slowly rejoined the group which had got out of the reach of the +cannon. This instance of courage and humanity took place at the battle of +Monmouth. General Clinton, who commanded the English troops, knew that the +Marquis de La Fayette generally rode a white horse; it was upon a white +horse that the general officer who retired so slowly was mounted; Clinton +desired the gunners not to fire. This noble forbearance probably saved M. +de La Fayette's life, for he it was. At that time he was but twenty-two +years of age.--"Historical Anecdotes of the Reign of Louis XVI."] + +These lines had been applauded and encored at the French theatre; +everybody's head was turned. There was no class of persons that did not +heartily approve of the support given openly by the French Government to +the cause of American independence. The constitution planned for the new +nation was digested at Paris, and while liberty, equality, and the rights +of man were commented upon by the Condorcets, Baillys, Mirabeaus, etc., +the minister Segur published the King's edict, which, by repealing that of +1st November, 1750, declared all officers not noble by four generations +incapable of filling the rank of captain, and denied all military rank to +the roturiers, excepting sons of the chevaliers de St. Louis. + +["M. de Segur," says Chamfort, "having published an ordinance which +prohibited the admission of any other than gentlemen into the artillery +corps, and, on the other hand, none but well-educated persons being proper +for admission, a curious scene took place: the Abbe Bossat, examiner of +the pupils, gave certificates only to plebeians, while Cherin gave them +only to gentlemen. Out of one hundred pupils, there were not above four +or five who were qualified in both respects."] + +The injustice and absurdity of this law was no doubt a secondary cause of +the Revolution. To understand the despair and rage with which this law +inspired the Tiers Etat one should have belonged to that honourable class. +The provinces were full of roturier families, who for ages had lived as +people of property upon their own domains, and paid the taxes. If these +persons had several sons, they would place one in the King's service, one +in the Church, another in the Order of Malta as a chevalier servant +d'armes, and one in the magistracy; while the eldest preserved the +paternal manor, and if he were situated in a country celebrated for wine, +he would, besides selling his own produce, add a kind of commission trade +in the wines of the canton. I have seen an individual of this justly +respected class, who had been long employed in diplomatic business, and +even honoured with the title of minister plenipotentiary, the son-in-law +and nephew of colonels and town mayors, and, on his mother's side, nephew +of a lieutenant-general with a cordon rouge, unable to introduce his sons +as sous-lieutenants into a regiment of foot. + +Another decision of the Court, which could not be announced by an edict, +was that all ecclesiastical benefices, from the humblest priory up to the +richest abbey, should in future be appanages of the nobility. Being the +son of a village surgeon, the Abbe de Vermond, who had great influence in +the disposition of benefices, was particularly struck with the justice of +this decree. + +During the absence of the Abbe in an excursion he made for his health, I +prevailed on the Queen to write a postscript to the petition of a cure, +one of my friends, who was soliciting a priory near his curacy, with the +intention of retiring to it. I obtained it for him. On the Abbe's return +he told me very harshly that I should act in a manner quite contrary to +the King's wishes if I again obtained such a favour; that the wealth of +the Church was for the future to be invariably devoted to the support of +the poorer nobility; that it was the interest of the State that it should +be so; and a plebeian priest, happy in a good curacy, had only to remain +curate. + +Can we be astonished at the part shortly afterwards taken by the deputies +of the Third Estate, when called to the States General? + + + + +ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS: + +Elegant entertainments were given to Doctor Franklin +Fashion of wearing a black coat without being in mourning +Favourite of a queen is not, in France, a happy one +History of the man with the iron mask +Of course I shall be either hissed or applauded. +She often carried her economy to a degree of parsimony +Shocking to find so little a man in the son of the Marechal +Simplicity of the Queen's toilet began to be strongly censured +The charge of extravagance +The three ministers, more ambitious than amorous +Well, this is royally ill played! +While the Queen was blamed, she was blindly imitated + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Memoirs of Marie Antoinette, Queen +Of France, Volume 3, by Madame Campan + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MARIE ANTOINETTE *** + +***** This file should be named 3886.txt or 3886.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/8/3886/ + +Produced by David Widger + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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Hart +and may be reprinted only when these Etexts are free of all fees.] +[Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be used in any sales +of Project Gutenberg Etexts or other materials be they hardware or +software or any other related product without express permission.] + +*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.07/27/01*END* + + + + + +This etext was produced by David Widger <widger@cecomet.net> + + + + + +[NOTE: There is a short list of bookmarks, or pointers, at the end of the +file for those who may wish to sample the author's ideas before making an +entire meal of them. D.W.] + + + + + +MEMOIRS OF THE COURT OF MARIE ANTOINETTE, QUEEN OF FRANCE + +Being the Historic Memoirs of Madam Campan, +First Lady in Waiting to the Queen + + + +BOOK 3. + + +CHAPTER VI. + +During the first few months of his reign Louis XVI. dwelt at La Muette, +Marly, and Compiegne. When settled at Versailles he occupied himself +with a general examination of his grandfather's papers. He had promised +the Queen to communicate to her all that he might discover relative to +the history of the man with the iron mask, who, he thought, had become so +inexhaustible a source of conjecture only in consequence of the interest +which the pen of a celebrated writer had excited respecting the detention +of a prisoner of State, who was merely a man of whimsical tastes and +habits. + +I was with the Queen when the King, having finished his researches, +informed her that he had not found anything among the secret papers +elucidating the existence of this prisoner; that he had conversed on the +matter with M. de Maurepas, whose age made him contemporary with the +epoch during which the story must have been known to the ministers; +and that M. de Maurepas had assured him he was merely a prisoner of a +very dangerous character, in consequence of his disposition for intrigue. +He was a subject of the Duke of Mantua, and was enticed to the frontier, +arrested there, and kept prisoner, first at Pignerol, and afterwards in +the Bastille. This transfer took place in consequence of the appointment +of the governor of the former place to the government of the latter. +It was for fear the prisoner should profit by the inexperience of a new +governor that he was sent with the Governor of Pignerol to the Bastille. + +Such was, in fact, the truth about the man on whom people have been +pleased to fix an iron mask. And thus was it related in writing, and +published by M. ----- twenty years ago. He had searched the archives of +the Foreign Office, and laid the real story before the public; but the +public, prepossessed in favour of a marvellous version, would not +acknowledge the authenticity of his account. Every man relied upon the +authority of Voltaire; and it was believed that a natural or a twin +brother of Louis XIV. lived many years in prison with a mask over his +face. The story of this mask, perhaps, had its origin in the old custom, +among both men and women in Italy, of wearing a velvet mask when they +exposed themselves to the sun. It is possible that the Italian captive +may have sometimes shown himself upon the terrace of his prison with his +face thus covered. As to the silver plate which this celebrated prisoner +is said to have thrown from his window, it is known that such a +circumstance did happen, but it happened at Valzin, in the time of +Cardinal Richelieu. This anecdote has been mixed up with the inventions +respecting the Piedmontese prisoner. + +In this survey of the papers of Louis XV. by his grandson some very +curious particulars relative to his private treasury were found. Shares +in various financial companies afforded him a revenue, and had in course +of time produced him a capital of some amount, which he applied to his +secret expenses. The King collected his vouchers of title to these +shares, and made a present of them to M. Thierry de Ville d'Avray, his +chief valet de chambre. + +The Queen was desirous to secure the comfort of Mesdames, the daughters +of Louis XV., who were held in the highest respect. About this period +she contributed to furnish them with a revenue sufficient to provide them +an easy, pleasant existence: The King gave them the Chateau of Bellevue; +and added to the produce of it, which was given up to them, the expenses +of their table and equipage, and payment of all the charges of their +household, the number of which was even increased. During the lifetime +of Louis XV., who was a very selfish prince, his daughters, although they +had attained forty years of age, had no other place of residence than +their apartments in the Chateau of Versailles; no other walks than such +as they could take in the large park of that palace; and no other means +of gratifying their taste for the cultivation of plants but by having +boxes and vases, filled with them, in their balconies or their closets. +They had, therefore, reason to be much pleased with the conduct of Marie +Antoinette, who had the greatest influence in the King's kindness towards +his aunts. + +Paris did not cease, during the first years of the reign, to give proofs +of pleasure whenever the Queen appeared at any of the plays of the +capital. At the representation of "Iphigenia in Aulis," the actor who +sang the words, "Let us sing, let us celebrate our Queen!" which were +repeated by the chorus, directed by a respectful movement the eyes of the +whole assembly upon her Majesty. Reiterated cries of 'Bis'! and clapping +of hands, were followed by such a burst of enthusiasm that many of the +audience added their voices to those of the actors in order to celebrate, +it might too truly be said, another Iphigenia. The Queen, deeply +affected, covered her eyes with her handkerchief; and this proof of +sensibility raised the public enthusiasm to a still higher pitch. + +The King gave Marie Antoinette Petit Trianon. + + [The Chateau of Petit Trianon, which was built for Louis XV., was + not remarkably handsome as a building. The luxuriance of the + hothouses rendered the place agreeable to that Prince. He spent a + few days there several times in the year. It was when he was + setting off from Versailles for Petit Trianon that he was struck in + the side by the knife of Damiens, and it was there that he was + attacked by the smallpox, of which he died on the 10th of May, + 1774.--MADAME CAMPAN.] + +Henceforward she amused herself with improving the gardens, without +allowing any addition to the building, or any change in the furniture, +which was very shabby, and remained, in 1789, in the same state as during +the reign of Louis XV. Everything there, without exception, was +preserved; and the Queen slept in a faded bed, which had been used by the +Comtesse du Barry. The charge of extravagance, generally made against +the Queen, is the most unaccountable of all the popular errors respecting +her character. She had exactly the contrary failing; and I could prove +that she often carried her economy to a degree of parsimony actually +blamable, especially in a sovereign. She took a great liking for +Trianon, and used to go there alone, followed by a valet; but she found +attendants ready to receive her,--a concierge and his wife, who served +her as femme de chambre, women of the wardrobe, footmen, etc. + +When she first took possession of Petit Trianon, it was reported that she +changed the name of the seat which the King had given her, and called it +Little Vienna, or Little Schoenbrunn. A person who belonged to the +Court, and was silly enough to give this report credit, wishing to visit +Petit Trianon with a party, wrote to M. Campan, requesting the Queen's +permission to do so. In his note he called Trianon Little Vienna. +Similar requests were usually laid before the Queen just as they were +made: she chose to give the permissions to see her gardens herself, +liking to grant these little favours. When she came to the words I have +quoted she was very, much offended, and exclaimed, angrily, that there +were too many, fools ready, to aid the malicious; that she had been told +of the report circulated, which pretended that she had thought of nothing +but her own country, and that she kept an Austrian heart, while the +interests of France alone ought to engage her. She refused the request +so awkwardly made, and desired M. Campan to reply, that Trianon was not +to be seen for some time, and that the Queen was astonished that any man +in good society should believe she would do so ill-judged a thing as to +change the French names of her palaces to foreign ones. + +Before the Emperor Joseph II's first visit to France the Queen received a +visit from the Archduke Maximilian in 1775. A stupid act of the +ambassador, seconded on the part of the Queen by the Abbe de Vermond, +gave rise at that period to a discussion which offended the Princes of +the blood and the chief nobility of the kingdom. Travelling incognito, +the young Prince claimed that the first visit was not due from him to the +Princes of the blood; and the Queen supported his pretension. + +From the time of the Regency, and on account of the residence of the +family of Orleans in the bosom of the capital, Paris had preserved a +remarkable degree of attachment and respect for that branch of the royal +house; and although the crown was becoming more and more remote from the +Princes of the House of Orleans, they had the advantage (a great one with +the Parisians) of being the descendants of Henri IV. An affront to that +popular family was a serious ground of dislike to the Queen. It was at +this period that the circles of the city, and even of the Court, +expressed themselves bitterly about her levity, and her partiality for +the House of Austria. The Prince for whom the Queen had embarked in an +important family quarrel--and a quarrel involving national prerogatives-- +was, besides, little calculated to inspire interest. Still young, +uninformed, and deficient in natural talent, he was always making +blunders. + +He went to the Jardin du Roi; M. de Buffon, who received him there, +offered him a copy of his works; the Prince declined accepting the book, +saying to M. de Buffon, in the most polite manner possible, "I should be +very sorry to deprive you of it." + + [Joseph II, on his visit to France, also went to see M. de Buffon, + and said to that celebrated man, "I am come to fetch the copy of + your works which my brother forgot."--NOTE BY THE EDITOR.] + +It may be supposed that the Parisians were much entertained with this +answer. + +The Queen was exceedingly mortified at the mistakes made by her brother; +but what hurt her most was being accused of preserving an Austrian heart. +Marie Antoinette had more than once to endure that imputation during the +long course of her misfortunes. Habit did not stop the tears such +injustice caused; but the first time she was suspected of not loving +France, she gave way to her indignation. All that she could say on the +subject was useless; by seconding the pretensions of the Archduke she had +put arms into her enemies' hands; they were labouring to deprive her of +the love of the people, and endeavoured, by all possible means, to spread +a belief that the Queen sighed for Germany, and preferred that country to +France. + +Marie Antoinette had none but herself to rely on for preserving the +fickle smiles of the Court and the public. The King, too indifferent to +serve her as a guide, as yet had conceived no love for her, +notwithstanding the intimacy that grew between them at Choisy. In his +closet Louis XVI. was immersed in deep study. At the Council he was +busied with the welfare of his people; hunting and mechanical occupations +engrossed his leisure moments, and he never thought on the subject of an +heir. + +The coronation took place at Rheims, with all the accustomed pomp. At +this period the people's love for Louis XVI. burst forth in transports +not to be mistaken for party demonstrations or idle curiosity. He +replied to this enthusiasm by marks of confidence, worthy of a people +happy in being governed by a good King; he took a pleasure in repeatedly +walking without guards, in the midst of the crowd which pressed around +him, and called down blessings on his head. I remarked the impression +made at this time by an observation of Louis XVI. On the day of his +coronation he put his hand up to his head, at the moment of the crown +being placed upon it, and said, "It pinches me." Henri III. had +exclaimed, "It pricks me." Those who were near the King were struck with +the similarity between these two exclamations, though not of a class +likely to be blinded by the superstitious fears of ignorance. + +While the Queen, neglected as she was, could not even hope for the +happiness of being a mother, she had the mortification of seeing the +Comtesse d'Artois give birth to the Duc d'Angouleme. + +Custom required that the royal family and the whole Court should be +present at the accouchement of the Princesses; the Queen was therefore +obliged to stay a whole day in her sister-in-law's chamber. The moment +the Comtesse d'Artois was informed a prince was born, she put her hand to +her forehead and exclaimed with energy, "My God, how happy I am!" The +Queen felt very differently at this involuntary and natural exclamation. +Nevertheless, her behaviour was perfect. She bestowed all possible marks +of tenderness upon the young mother, and would not leave her until she +was again put into bed; she afterwards passed along the staircase, and +through the hall of the guards, with a calm demeanour, in the midst of an +immense crowd. The poissardes, who had assumed a right of speaking to +sovereigns in their own vulgar language, followed her to the very doors +of her apartments, calling out to her with gross expressions, that she +ought to produce heirs. The Queen reached her inner room, hurried and +agitated; he shut herself up to weep with me alone, not from jealousy of +her sister-in-law's happiness,--of that he was incapable,--but from +sorrow at her own situation. + +Deprived of the happiness of giving an heir to the crown, the Queen +endeavoured to interest herself in the children of the people of her +household. She had long been desirous to bring up one of them herself, +and to make it the constant object of her care. A little village boy, +four or five years old, full of health, with a pleasing countenance, +remarkably large blue eyes, and fine light hair, got under the feet of +the Queen's horses, when she was taking an airing in a calash, through +the hamlet of St. Michel, near Louveciennes. The coachman and postilions +stopped the horses, and the child was rescued without the slightest +injury. Its grandmother rushed out of the door of her cottage to take +it; but the Queen, standing up in her calash and extending her arms, +called out that the child was hers, and that destiny had given it to her, +to console her, no doubt, until she should have the happiness of having +one herself. "Is his mother alive?" asked the Queen. "No, Madame; my +daughter died last winter, and left five small children upon my hands." +"I will take this one, and provide for all the rest; do you consent?" +"Ah, Madame, they are too fortunate," replied the cottager; "but Jacques +is a bad boy. I hope he will stay with you!" The Queen, taking little +Jacques upon her knee, said that she would make him used to her, and gave +orders to proceed. It was necessary, however, to shorten the drive, so +violently did Jacques scream, and kick the Queen and her ladies. + +The arrival of her Majesty at her apartments at Versailles, holding the +little rustic by the hand, astonished the whole household; he cried out +with intolerable shrillness that he wanted his grandmother, his brother +Louis, and his sister Marianne; nothing could calm him. He was taken +away by the wife of a servant, who was appointed to attend him as nurse. +The other children were put to school. Little Jacques, whose family name +was Armand, came back to the Queen two days afterwards; a white frock +trimmed with lace, a rose-coloured sash with silver fringe, and a hat +decorated with feathers, were now substituted for the woollen cap, the +little red frock, and the wooden shoes. The child was really very +beautiful. The Queen was enchanted with him; he was brought to her every +morning at nine o'clock; he breakfasted and dined with her, and often +even with the King. She liked to call him my child, + + [This little unfortunate was nearly twenty in 1792; the fury of the + people and the fear of being thought a favourite of the Queen's had + made him the most sanguinary terrorist of Versailles. He was killed + at the battle of Jemappes.] + +and lavished caresses upon him, still maintaining a deep silence +respecting the regrets which constantly occupied her heart. + +This child remained with the Queen until the time when Madame was old +enough to come home to her august mother, who had particularly taken upon +herself the care of her education. + +The Queen talked incessantly of the qualities which she admired in Louis +XVI., and gladly attributed to herself the slightest favourable change in +his manner; perhaps she displayed too unreservedly the joy she felt, and +the share she appropriated in the improvement. One day Louis XVI. +saluted her ladies with more kindness than usual, and the Queen +laughingly said to them, "Now confess, ladies, that for one so badly +taught as a child, the King has saluted you with very good grace!" + +The Queen hated M. de La Vauguyon; she accused him alone of those points +in the habits, and even the sentiments, of the King which hurt her. +A former first woman of the bedchamber to Queen Maria Leczinska had +continued in office near the young Queen. She was one of those people +who are fortunate enough to spend their lives in the service of kings +without knowing anything of what is passing at Court. She was a great +devotee; the Abbe Grisel, an ex-Jesuit, was her director. Being rich +from her savings and an income of 50,000 livres, she kept a very good +table; in her apartment, at the Grand Commun, the most distinguished +persons who still adhered to the Order of Jesuits often assembled. The +Duc de La Vauguyon was intimate with her; their chairs at the Eglise des +Reollets were placed near each other; at high mass and at vespers they +sang the "Gloria in Excelsis" and the "Magnificat" together; and the +pious virgin, seeing in him only one of God's elect, little imagined him +to be the declared enemy of a Princess whom she served and revered. +On the day of his death she ran in tears to relate to the Queen the +piety, humility, and repentance of the last moments of the Duc de La +Vauguyon. He had called his people together, she said, to ask their +pardon. "For what?" replied the Queen, sharply; "he has placed and +pensioned off all his servants; it was of the King and his brothers that +the holy man you bewail should have asked pardon, for having paid so +little attention to the education of princes on whom the fate and +happiness of twenty-five millions of men depend. Luckily," added she, +"the King and his brothers, still young, have incessantly laboured to +repair the errors of their preceptor." + +The progress of time, and the confidence with which the King and the +Princes, his brothers, were inspired by the change in their situation +since the death of Louis XV., had developed their characters. I will +endeavour to depict them. + +The features of Louis XVI. were noble enough, though somewhat melancholy +in expression; his walk was heavy and unmajestic; his person greatly +neglected; his hair, whatever might be the skill of his hairdresser, +was soon in disorder. His voice, without being harsh, was not agreeable; +if he grew animated in speaking he often got above his natural pitch, +and became shrill. The Abbe de Radonvilliers, his preceptor, one of the +Forty of the French Academy, a learned and amiable man, had given him and +Monsieur a taste for study. The King had continued to instruct himself; +he knew the English language perfectly; I have often heard him translate +some of the most difficult passages in Milton's poems. He was a skilful +geographer, and was fond of drawing and colouring maps; he was well +versed in history, but had not perhaps sufficiently studied the spirit of +it. He appreciated dramatic beauties, and judged them accurately. At +Choisy, one day, several ladies expressed their dissatisfaction because +the French actors were going to perform one of Moliere's pieces. The +King inquired why they disapproved of the choice. One of them answered +that everybody must admit that Moliere had very bad taste; the King +replied that many things might be found in Moliere contrary to fashion, +but that it appeared to him difficult to point out any in bad taste? + + [The King, having purchased the Chateau of Rambouillet from the Duc + de Penthievre, amused himself with embellishing it. I have seen a + register entirely in his own handwriting, which proves that he + possessed a great variety of information on the minutiae of various + branches of knowledge. In his accounts he would not omit an outlay + of a franc. His figures and letters, when he wished to write + legibly, were small and very neat, but in general he wrote very ill. + He was so sparing of paper that he divided a sheet into eight, six, + or four pieces, according to the length of what he had to write. + Towards the close of the page he compressed the letters, and avoided + interlineations. The last words were close to the edge of the + paper; he seemed to regret being obliged to begin another page. He + was methodical and analytical; he divided what he wrote into + chapters and sections. He had extracted from the works of Nicole + and Fenelon, his favourite authors, three or four hundred concise + and sententious phrases; these he had classed according to subject, + and formed a work of them in the style of Montesquieu. To this + treatise he had given the following general title: "Of Moderate + Monarchy" (De la Monarchie temperee), with chapters entitled, "Of + the Person of the Prince;" "Of the Authority of Bodies in the + State;" "Of the Character of the Executive Functions of the + Monarchy." Had he been able to carry into effect all the grand + precepts he had observed in Fenelon, Louis XVI. would have been an + accomplished monarch, and France a powerful kingdom. The King used + to accept the speeches his ministers presented to him to deliver on + important occasions; but he corrected and modified them; struck out + some parts, and added others; and sometimes consulted the Queen on + the subject. The phrase of the minister erased by the King was + frequently unsuitable, and dictated by the minister's private + feelings; but the King's was always the natural expression. He + himself composed, three times or oftener, his famous answers to the + Parliament which he banished. But in his letters he was negligent, + and always incorrect. Simplicity was the characteristic of the + King's style; the figurative style of M. Necker did not please him; + the sarcasms of Maurepas were disagreeable to him. Unfortunate + Prince! he would predict, in his observations, that if such a + calamity should happen, the monarchy would be ruined; and the next + day he would consent in Council to the very measure which he had + condemned the day before, and which brought him nearer the brink of + the precipice.--SOULAVIE, "Historical and Political Memoirs of the + Reign of Louis XVI.," vol. ii.] + +This Prince combined with his attainments the attributes of a good +husband, a tender father, and an indulgent master. + +Unfortunately he showed too much predilection for the mechanical arts; +masonry and lock-making so delighted him that he admitted into his +private apartment a common locksmith, with whom he made keys and locks; +and his hands, blackened by that sort of work, were often, in my +presence, the subject of remonstrances and even sharp reproaches from +the Queen, who would have chosen other amusements for her husband.? + + [Louis XVI. saw that the art of lock-making was capable of + application to a higher study, He was an excellent geographer. The + most valuable and complete instrument for the study of that science + was begun by his orders and under his direction. It was an immense + globe of copper, which was long preserved, though unfinished, in the + Mazarine library. Louis XVI. invented and had executed under his + own eyes the ingenious mechanism required for this globe.--NOTE BY + THE EDITOR.] + +Austere and rigid with regard to himself alone, the King observed the +laws of the Church with scrupulous exactness. He fasted and abstained +throughout the whole of Lent. He thought it right that the queen should +not observe these customs with the same strictness. Though sincerely +pious, the spirit of the age had disposed his mind to toleration. +Turgot, Malesherbes, and Necker judged that this Prince, modest and +simple in his habits, would willingly sacrifice the royal prerogative to +the solid greatness of his people. His heart, in truth, disposed him +towards reforms; but his prejudices and fears, and the clamours of pious +and privileged persons, intimidated him, and made him abandon plans which +his love for the people had suggested. + +Monsieur-- + + [During his stay at Avignon, Monsieur, afterwards Louis XVIII, + lodged with the Duc de Crillon; he refused the town-guard which was + offered him, saying, "A son of France, under the roof of a Crillon, + needs no guard."--NOTE BY THE EDITOR.] + +had more dignity of demeanour than the King; but his corpulence rendered +his gait inelegant. He was fond of pageantry and magnificence. He +cultivated the belles lettres, and under assumed names often contributed +verses to the Mercury and other papers. + +His wonderful memory was the handmaid of his wit, furnishing him with the +happiest quotations. He knew by heart a varied repertoire, from the +finest passages of the Latin classics to the Latin of all the prayers, +from the works of Racine to the vaudeville of "Rose et Colas." + +The Comte d'Artoisi had an agreeable countenance, was well made, skilful +in bodily exercises, lively, impetuous, fond of pleasure, and very +particular in his dress. Some happy observations made by him were +repeated with approval, and gave a favourable idea of his heart. The +Parisians liked the open and frank character of this Prince, which they +considered national, and showed real affection for him. + +The dominion that the Queen gained over the King's mind, the charms of a +society in which Monsieur displayed his wit, and to which the Comte +d'Artois--[Afterwards Charles X.]-- gave life by the vivacity of youth, +gradually softened that ruggedness of manner in Louis XVI. which a +better-conducted education might have prevented. Still, this defect +often showed itself, and, in spite of his extreme simplicity, the King +inspired those who had occasion to speak to him with diffidence. +Courtiers, submissive in the presence of their sovereign, are only the +more ready to caricature him; with little good breeding, they called +those answers they so much dreaded, Les coups de boutoir du Roi.--[The +literal meaning of the phrase "coup de boutoir," is a thrust from the +snout of a boar.] + +Methodical in all his habits, the King always went to bed at eleven +precisely. One evening the Queen was going with her usual circle to a +party, either at the Duc de Duras's or the Princesse de Glumenee's. +The hand of the clock was slily put forward to hasten the King's +departure by a few minutes; he thought bed-time was come, retired, and +found none of his attendants ready to wait on him. This joke became +known in all the drawing-rooms of Versailles, and was disapproved of +there. Kings have no privacy. Queens have no boudoirs. If those who +are in immediate attendance upon sovereigns be not themselves disposed to +transmit their private habits to posterity, the meanest valet will relate +what he has seen or heard; his gossip circulates rapidly, and forms +public opinion, which at length ascribes to the most august persons +characters which, however untrue they may be, are almost always +indelible. + +NOTE. The only passion ever shown by Louis XVI. was for hunting. He was +so much occupied by it that when I went up into his private closets at +Versailles, after the 10th of August, I saw upon the staircase six +frames, in which were seen statements of all his hunts, when Dauphin and +when King. In them was detailed the number, kind, and quality of +the game he had killed at each hunting party during every month, every +season, and every year of his reign. + +The interior of his private apartments was thus arranged: a salon, +ornamented with gilded mouldings, displayed the engravings which had been +dedicated to him, drawings of the canals he had dug, with the model of +that of Burgundy, and the plan of the cones and works of Cherbourg. The +upper hall contained his collection of geographical charts, spheres, +globes, and also his geographical cabinet. There were to be seen +drawings of maps which he had begun, and some that he had finished. He +had a clever method of washing them in. His geographical memory was +prodigious. Over the hall was the turning and joining room, furnished +with ingenious instruments for working in wood. He inherited some from +Louis XV., and he often busied himself, with Duret's assistance, in +keeping them clean and bright. Above was the library of books published +during his reign. The prayer books and manuscript books of Anne of +Brittany, Francois I, the later Valois, Louis XIV., Louis XV., and the +Dauphin formed the great hereditary library of the Chateau. Louis XVI. +placed separately, in two apartments communicating with each other, the +works of his own time, including a complete collection of Didot's +editions, in vellum, every volume enclosed in a morocco case. There were +several English works, among the rest the debates of the British +Parliament, in a great number of volumes in folio (this is the Moniteur +of England, a complete collection of which is so valuable and so scarce). +By the side of this collection was to be seen a manuscript history of all +the schemes for a descent upon that island, particularly that of Comte de +Broglie. One of the presses of this cabinet was full of cardboard boxes, +containing papers relative to the House of Austria, inscribed in the +King's own hand: "Secret papers of my family respecting the House of +Austria; papers of my family respecting the Houses of Stuart and +Hanover." In an adjoining press were kept papers relative to Russia. +Satirical works against Catherine II. and against Paul I. were sold in +France under the name of histories; Louis XVIII. collected and sealed up +with his small seal the scandalous anecdotes against Catherine II., as +well as the works of Rhulieres, of which he had a copy, to be certain +that the secret life of that Princess, which attracted the curiosity of +her contemporaries, should not be made public by his means. + +Above the King's private library were a forge, two anvils, and a vast +number of iron tools; various common locks, well made and perfect; some +secret locks, and locks ornamented with gilt copper. It was there that +the infamous Gamin, who afterwards accused the King of having tried to +poison him, and was rewarded for his calumny with a pension of twelve +thousand livres, taught him the art of lock-making. This Gamin, who +became our guide, by order of the department and municipality of +Versailles, did not, however, denounce the King on the 20th December, +1792. He had been made the confidant of that Prince in an immense number +of important commissions; the King had sent him the "Red Book," from +Paris, in a parcel; and the part which was concealed during the +Constituent Assembly still remained so in 1793. Gamin hid it in a part +of the Chateau inaccessible to everybody, and took it from under the +shelves of a secret press before our eyes. This is a convincing proof +that Louis XVI. hoped to return to his Chiteau. When teaching Louis XVI. +his trade Gamin took upon himself the tone and authority of a master. +"The King was good, forbearing, timid, inquisitive, and addicted to +sleep," said Gamin to me; "he was fond to excess of lock-making, and he +concealed himself from the Queen and the Court to file and forge with me. +In order to convey his anvil and my own backwards and forwards we were +obliged to use a thousand stratagems, the history of which would: never +end." Above the King's and Gamin's forges and anvils was an, +observatory, erected upon a platform covered with lead. There, seated on +an armchair, and assisted by a telescope, the King observed all that was +passing in the courtyards of Versailles, the avenue of Paris, and the +neighbouring gardens. He had taken a liking to Duret, one of the indoor +servants of the palace, who sharpened his tools, cleaned his anvils, +pasted his maps, and adjusted eyeglasses to the King's sight, who was +short-sighted. This good Duret, and indeed all the indoor servants, +spoke of their master with regret and affection, and with tears in their +eyes. + +The King was born weak and delicate; but from the age of twenty-four he +possessed a robust constitution, inherited from his mother, who was of +the House of Saxe, celebrated for generations for its robustness. There +were two men in Louis XVI., the man of knowledge and the man of will. +The King knew the history of his own family and of the first houses of +France perfectly. He composed the instructions for M. de la Peyrouse's +voyage round the world, which the minister thought were drawn up by +several members of the Academy of Sciences. His memory retained an +infinite number of names and situations. He remembered quantities and +numbers wonderfully. One day an account was presented to him in which +the minister had ranked among the expenses an item inserted in the +account of the preceding year. "There is a double charge," said the +King; "bring me last year's account, and I will show it yet there." When +the King was perfectly master of the details of any matter, and saw +injustice, he was obdurate even to harshness. Then he would be obeyed +instantly, in order to be sure that he was obeyed. + +But in important affairs of state the man of will was not to be found. +Louis XVI. was upon the throne exactly what those weak temperaments whom +nature has rendered incapable of an opinion are in society. In his +pusillanimity, he gave his confidence to a minister; and although amidst +various counsels he often knew which was the best, he never had the +resolution to say, "I prefer the opinion of such a one." Herein +originated the misfortunes of the State.--SOULAVIE'S "Historical and +Political Memoirs Of the Reign Of LOUIS XVI.," VOL ii. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +The winter following the confinement of the Comtesse d'Artois was very +severe; the recollections of the pleasure which sleighing-parties had +given the Queen in her childhood made her wish to introduce similar ones +in France. This amusement had already been known in that Court, as was +proved by sleighs being found in the stables which had been used by the +Dauphin, the father of Louis XVI. Some were constructed for the Queen in +a more modern style. The Princes also ordered several; and in a few days +there was a tolerable number of these vehicles. They were driven by the +princes and noblemen of the Court. The noise of the bells and balls with +which the harness of the horses was furnished, the elegance and whiteness +of their plumes, the varied forms of the carriages, the gold with which +they were all ornamented, rendered these parties delightful to the eye. +The winter was very favourable to them, the snow remaining on the ground +nearly six weeks; the drives in the park afforded a pleasure shared by +the spectators. + + [Louis XVI., touched with the wretched condition of the poor of + Versailles during the winter of 1776, had several cart-loads of wood + distributed among them. Seeing one day a file of those vehicles + passing by, while several noblemen were preparing to be drawn + swiftly over the ice, he uttered these memorable words: "Gentlemen, + here are my sleighs!"--NOTE BY THE EDITOR.] + +No one imagined that any blame could attach to so innocent an amusement. +But the party were tempted to extend their drives as far as the Champs +Elysees; a few sleighs even crossed the boulevards; the ladies being +masked, the Queen's enemies took the opportunity of saying that she had +traversed the streets of Paris in a sleigh. + +This became a matter of moment. The public discovered in it a +predilection for the habits of Vienna; but all that Marie Antoinette did +was criticised. + +Sleigh-driving, savouring of the Northern Courts, had no favour among the +Parisians. The Queen was informed of this; and although all the sleighs +were preserved, and several subsequent winters lent themselves to the +amusement, she would not resume it. + +It was at the time of the sleighing-parties that the Queen became +intimately acquainted with the Princesse de Lamballe, who made her +appearance in them wrapped in fur, with all the brilliancy and freshness +of the age of twenty,--the emblem of spring, peeping from under sable and +ermine. Her situation, moreover, rendered her peculiarly interesting; +married, when she was scarcely past childhood, to a young prince, who +ruined himself by the contagious example of the Duc d'Orleans, she had +had nothing to do from the time of her arrival in France but to weep. +A widow at eighteen, and childless, she lived with the Duc de Penthievre +as an adopted daughter. She had the tenderest respect and attachment for +that venerable Prince; but the Queen, though doing justice to his +virtues, saw that the Duc de Penthievre's way of life, whether at Paris +or at his country-seat, could neither afford his young daughter-in-law +the amusements suited to her time of life, nor ensure her in the future +an establishment such as she was deprived of by her widowhood. She +determined, therefore, to establish her at Versailles; and for her sake +revived the office of superintendent, which had been discontinued at +Court since the death of Mademoiselle de Clermont. It is said that Maria +Leczinska had decided that this place should continue vacant, the +superintendent having so extensive a power in the houses of queens as to +be frequently a restraint upon their inclinations. Differences which +soon took place between Marie Antoinette and the Princesse de Lamballe +respecting the official prerogatives of the latter, proved that the wife +of Louis XV. had acted judiciously in abolishing the office; but a kind +of treaty made between the Queen and the Princess smoothed all +difficulties. The blame for too strong an assertion of claims fell upon +a secretary of the superintendent, who had been her adviser; and +everything was so arranged that a firm friendship existed between these +two Princesses down to the disastrous period which terminated their +career. + +Notwithstanding the enthusiasm which the splendour, grace, and kindness +of the Queen generally inspired, secret intrigues continued in operation +against her. A short time after the ascension of Louis XVI. to the +throne, the minister of the King's household was informed that a most +offensive libel against the Queen was about to appear. The lieutenant of +police deputed a man named Goupil, a police inspector, to trace this +libel; he came soon after to say that he had found out the place where +the work was being printed, and that it was at a country house near +Yverdun. He had already got possession of two sheets, which contained +the most atrocious calumnies, conveyed with a degree of art which might +make them very dangerous to the Queen's reputation. Goupil said that he +could obtain the rest, but that he should want a considerable sum for +that purpose. Three thousand Louis were given him, and very soon +afterwards he brought the whole manuscript and all that had been printed +to the lieutenant of police. He received a thousand louis more as a +reward for his address and zeal; and a much more important office was +about to be given him, when another spy, envious of Goupil's good +fortune, gave information that Goupil himself was the author of the +libel; that, ten years before, he had been put into the Bicetre for +swindling; and that Madame Goupil had been only three years out of the +Salpetriere, where she had been placed under another name. This Madame +Goupil was very pretty and very intriguing; she had found means to form +an intimacy with Cardinal de Rohan, whom she led, it is said, to hope for +a reconciliation with the Queen. All this affair was hushed up; but it +shows that it was the Queen's fate to be incessantly attacked by the +meanest and most odious machinations. + +Another woman, named Cahouette de Millers, whose husband held an office +in the Treasury, being very irregular in conduct, and of a scheming turn +of mind, had a mania for appearing in the eyes of her friends at Paris as +a person in favour at Court, to which she was not entitled by either +birth or office. During the latter years of the life of Louis XV. she +had made many dupes, and picked up considerable sums by passing herself +off as the King's mistress. The fear of irritating Madame du Barry was, +according to her, the only thing which prevented her enjoying that title +openly. She came regularly to Versailles, kept herself concealed in a +furnished lodging, and her dupes imagined she was secretly summoned to +Court. + +This woman formed the scheme of getting admission, if possible, to the +presence of the Queen, or at least causing it to be believed that she had +done so. She adopted as her lover Gabriel de Saint Charles, intendant of +her Majesty's finances,--an office, the privileges of which were confined +to the right of entering the Queen's apartment on Sunday. Madame de +Villers came every Saturday to Versailles with M. de Saint Charles, and +lodged in his apartment. M. Campan was there several times. She painted +tolerably well, and she requested him to do her the favour to present to +the Queen a portrait of her Majesty which she had just copied. M. Campan +knew the woman's character, and refused her. A few days after, he saw on +her Majesty's couch the portrait which he had declined to present to her; +the Queen thought it badly painted, and gave orders that it should be +carried back to the Princesse de Lamballe, who had sent it to her. The +ill success of the portrait did not deter the manoeuvrer from following +up her designs; she easily procured through M. de Saint Charles patents +and orders signed by the Queen; she then set about imitating her writing, +and composed a great number of notes and letters, as if written by her +Majesty, in the tenderest and most familiar style. For many months she +showed them as great secrets to several of her particular friends. +Afterwards, she made the Queen appear to write to her, to procure various +fancy articles. Under the pretext of wishing to execute her Majesty's +commissions accurately, she gave these letters to the tradesmen to read, +and succeeded in having it said, in many houses, that the Queen had a +particular regard for her. She then enlarged her scheme, and represented +the Queen as desiring to borrow 200,000 francs which she had need of, but +which she did not wish to ask of the King from his private funds. This +letter, being shown to M. Beranger, 'fermier general' of the finances, +took effect; he thought himself fortunate in being able to render this +assistance to his sovereign, and lost no time in sending the 200,000 +francs to Madame de Villers. This first step was followed by some +doubts, which he communicated to people better informed than himself of +what was passing at Court; they added to his uneasiness; he then went to +M. de Sartine, who unravelled the whole plot. The woman was sent to St. +Pelagie; and the unfortunate husband was ruined, by replacing the sum +borrowed, and by paying for the jewels fraudulently purchased in the +Queen's name. The forged letters were sent to her Majesty; I compared +them in her presence with her own handwriting, and the only +distinguishable difference was a little more regularity in the letters. + +This trick, discovered and punished with prudence and without passion, +produced no more sensation out of doors than that of the Inspector +Goupil. + +A year after the nomination of Madame de Lamballe to the post of +superintendent of the Queen's household, balls and quadrilles gave rise +to the intimacy of her Majesty with the Comtesse Jules de Polignac. This +lady really interested Marie Antoinette. She was not rich, and generally +lived upon her estate at Claye. The Queen was astonished at not having +seen her at Court earlier. The confession that her want of fortune had +even prevented her appearance at the celebration of the marriages of the +Princes added to the interest which she had inspired. + +The Queen was full of consideration, and took delight in counteracting +the injustice of fortune. The Countess was induced to come to Court by +her husband's sister, Madame Diane de Polignac, who had been appointed +lady of honour to the Comtesse d'Artois. The Comtesse Jules was really +fond of a tranquil life; the impression she made at Court affected her +but little; she felt only the attachment manifested for her by the Queen. +I had occasion to see her from the commencement of her favour at Court; +she often passed whole hours with me, while waiting for the Queen. She +conversed with me freely and ingenuously about the honour, and at the +same time the danger, she saw in the kindness of which she was the +object. The Queen sought for the sweets of friendship; but can this +gratification, so rare in any rank, exist between a Queen and a subject, +when they are surrounded, moreover, by snares laid by the artifice of +courtiers? This pardonable error was fatal to the happiness of Marie +Antoinette. + +The retiring character of the Comtesse Jules, afterwards Duchesse de +Polignac, cannot be spoken of too favourably; but if her heart was +incapable of forming ambitious projects, her family and friends in her +fortune beheld their own, and endeavoured to secure the favour of the +Queen. + + [The Comtesse, afterwards Duchesse de Polignac, nee Polastron, + Married the Comte (in 1780 the Duc) Jules de Polignac, the father of + the Prince de Polignac of Napoleon's and of Charles X.'s time. She + emigrated in 1789, and died in Vienna in 1793.] + +The Comtesse de Diane, sister of M. de Polignac, and the Baron de +Besenval and M. de Vaudreuil, particular friends of the Polignac family, +made use of means, the success of which was infallible. One of my +friends (Comte de Moustier), who was in their secret, came to tell me +that Madame de Polignac was about to quit Versailles suddenly; that she +would take leave of the Queen only in writing; that the Comtesse Diane +and M. de Vaudreuil had dictated her letter, and the whole affair was +arranged for the purpose of stimulating the attachment of Marie +Antoinette. The next day, when I went up to the palace, I found the +Queen with a letter in her hand, which she was reading with much emotion; +it was the letter from the Comtesse Jules; the Queen showed it to me. +The Countess expressed in it her grief at leaving a princess who had +loaded her with kindness. The narrowness of her fortune compelled her to +do so; but she was much more strongly impelled by the fear that the +Queen's friendship, after having raised up dangerous enemies against her, +might abandon her to their hatred, and to the regret of having lost the +august favour of which she was the object. + +This step produced the full effect that had been expected from it. A +young and sensitive queen cannot long bear the idea of contradiction. +She busied herself in settling the Comtesse Jules near her, by making +such a provision for her as should place her beyond anxiety. Her +character suited the Queen; she had merely natural talents, no pedantry, +no affectation of knowledge. She was of middle size; her complexion very +fair, her eyebrows and hair dark brown, her teeth superb, her smile +enchanting, and her whole person graceful. She was seen almost always in +a demi-toilet, remarkable only for neatness and good taste. I do not +think I ever once saw diamonds about her, even at the climax of her +fortune, when she had the rank of Duchess at Court. + +I have always believed that her sincere attachment for the Queen, as much +as her love of simplicity, induced her to avoid everything that might +cause her to be thought a wealthy favourite. She had not one of the +failings which usually accompany that position. She loved the persons +who shared the Queen's affections, and was entirely free from jealousy. +Marie Antoinette flattered herself that the Comtesse Jules and the +Princesse de Lamballe would be her especial friends, and that she should +possess a society formed according to her own taste. "I will receive +them in my closet, or at Trianon," said she; "I will enjoy the comforts +of private life, which exist not for us, unless we have the good sense to +secure them for ourselves." The happiness the Queen thought to secure +was destined to turn to vexation. All those courtiers who were not +admitted to this intimacy became so many jealous and vindictive enemies. + +It was necessary to make a suitable provision for the Countess. The +place of first equerry, in reversion after the Comte de Tesse, given to +Comte Jules unknown to the titular holder, displeased the family of +Noailles. This family had just sustained another mortification, the +appointment of the Princesse de Lamballe having in some degree rendered +necessary the resignation of the Comtesse de Noailles, whose husband was +thereupon made a marshal of France. The Princesse de Lamballe, although +she did not quarrel with the Queen, was alarmed at the establishment of +the Comtesse Jules at Court, and did not form, as her Majesty had hoped, +a part of that intimate society, which was in turn composed of Mesdames +Jules and Diane de Polignac, d'Andlau and de Chalon, and Messieurs de +Guignes, de Coigny, d'Adhemar, de Besenval, lieutenant-colonel of the +Swiss, de Polignac, de Vaudreuil, and de Guiche; the Prince de Ligne and +the Duke of Dorset, the English ambassador, were also admitted. + +It was a long time before the Comtesse Jules maintained any great state +at Court. The Queen contented herself with giving her very fine +apartments at the top of the marble staircase. The salary of first +equerry, the trifling emoluments derived from M. de Polignac's regiment, +added to their slender patrimony, and perhaps some small pension, at that +time formed the whole fortune of the favourite. I never saw the Queen +make her a present of value; I was even astonished one day at hearing her +Majesty mention, with pleasure, that the Countess had gained ten thousand +francs in the lottery. "She was in great want of it," added the Queen. + +Thus the Polignacs were not settled at Court in any degree of splendour +which could justify complaints from others, and the substantial favours +bestowed upon that family were less envied than the intimacy between them +and their proteges and the Queen. Those who had no hope of entering the +circle of the Comtesse Jules were made jealous by the opportunities of +advancement it afforded. + +However, at the time I speak of, the society around the Comtesse Jules +was fully engaged in gratifying the young Queen. Of this the Marquis de +Vaudreuil was a conspicuous member; he was a brilliant man, the friend +and protector of men of letters and celebrated artists. + +The Baron de Besenval added to the bluntness of the Swiss all the +adroitness of a French courtier. His fifty years and gray hairs made him +enjoy among women the confidence inspired by mature age, although he had +not given up the thought of love affairs. He talked of his native +mountains with enthusiasm. He would at any time sing the "Ranz des +Vaches" with tears in his eyes, and was the best story-teller in the +Comtesse Jules's circle. The last new song or 'bon mot' and the gossip +of the day were the sole topics of conversation in the Queen's parties. +Wit was banished from them. The Comtesse Diane, more inclined to +literary pursuits than her sister-in-law, one day, recommended her to +read the "Iliad" and "Odyssey." The latter replied, laughing, that she +was perfectly acquainted with the Greek poet, and said to prove it: + + "Homere etait aveugle et jouait du hautbois." + + (Homer was blind and played on the hautboy.) + + [This lively repartee of the Duchesse de Polignac is a droll + imitation of a line in the "Mercure Galant." In the quarrel scene + one of the lawyers says to his brother quill: 'Ton pere etait + aveugle et jouait du hautbois.'] + +The Queen found this sort of humour very much to her taste, and said that +no pedant should ever be her friend. + +Before the Queen fixed her assemblies at Madame de Polignac's, she +occasionally passed the evening at the house of the Duc and Duchesse de +Duras, where a brilliant party of young persons met together. They +introduced a taste for trifling games, such as question and answer, +'guerre panpan', blind man's buff, and especially a game called +'descampativos'. The people of Paris, always criticising, but always +imitating the customs of the Court, were infected with the mania for +these childish sports. Madame de Genlis, sketching the follies of the +day in one of her plays, speaks of these famous 'descampativos'; and also +of the rage for making a friend, called the 'inseparable', until a whim +or the slightest difference might occasion a total rupture. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +The Duc de Choiseul had reappeared at Court on the ceremony of the King's +coronation for the first time after his disgrace under Louis XV. in 1770. +The state of public feeling on the subject gave his friends hope of +seeing him again in administration, or in the Council of State; but the +opposite party was too firmly seated at Versailles, and the young Queen's +influence was outweighed, in the mind of the King, by long-standing +prejudices; she therefore gave up for ever her attempt to reinstate the +Duke. Thus this Princess, who has been described as so ambitious, and so +strenuously supporting the interest of the House of Austria, failed twice +in the only scheme which could forward the views constantly attributed to +her; and spent the whole of her reign surrounded by enemies of herself +and her house. + +Marie Antoinette took little pains to promote literature and the fine +arts. She had been annoyed in consequence of having ordered a +performance of the "Connstable de Bourbon," on the celebration of the +marriage of Madame Clotilde with the Prince of Piedmont. The Court and +the people of Paris censured as indecorous the naming characters in the +piece after the reigning family, and that with which the new alliance was +formed. The reading of this piece by the Comte de Guibert in the Queen's +closet had produced in her Majesty's circle that sort of enthusiasm which +obscures the judgment. She promised herself she would have no more +readings. Yet, at the request of M. de Cubieres, the King's equerry, +the Queen agreed to hear the reading of a comedy written by his brother. +She collected her intimate circle, Messieurs de Coigny, de Vaudreuil, de +Besenval, Mesdames de Polignac, de Chalon, etc., and to increase the +number of judges, she admitted the two Parnys, the Chevalier de Bertin, +my father-in-law, and myself. + +Mold read for the author. I never could satisfy myself by what magic the +skilful reader gained our unanimous approbation of a ridiculous work. +Surely the delightful voice of Mold, by awakening our recollection of the +dramatic beauties of the French stage, prevented the wretched lines of +Dorat Cubieres from striking on our ears. I can assert that the +exclamation Charming! charming! repeatedly interrupted the reader. The +piece was admitted for performance at Fontainebleau; and for the first +time the King had the curtain dropped before the end of the play. It was +called the "Dramomane" or "Dramaturge." All the characters died of +eating poison in a pie. The Queen, highly disconcerted at having +recommended this absurd production, announced that she would never hear +another reading; and this time she kept her word. + +The tragedy of "Mustapha and Mangir," by M. de Chamfort, was highly +successful at the Court theatre at Fontainebleau. The Queen procured the +author a pension of 1,200 francs, but his play failed on being performed +at Paris. + +The spirit of opposition which prevailed in that city delighted in +reversing the verdicts of the Court. The Queen determined never again to +give any marked countenance to new dramatic works. She reserved her +patronage for musical composers, and in a few years their art arrived at +a perfection it had never before attained in France. + +It was solely to gratify the Queen that the manager of the Opera brought +the first company of comic actors to Paris. Gluck, Piccini, and Sacchini +were attracted there in succession. These eminent composers were treated +with great distinction at Court. Immediately on his arrival in France, +Gluck was admitted to the Queen's toilet, and she talked to him all the +time he remained with her. She asked him one day whether he had nearly +brought his grand opera of "Armide" to a conclusion, and whether it +pleased him. Gluck replied very coolly, in his German accent, "Madame, +it will soon be finished, and really it will be superb." There was a +great outcry against the confidence with which the composer had spoken of +one of his own productions. The Queen defended him warmly; she insisted +that he could not be ignorant of the merit of his works; that he well +knew they were generally admired, and that no doubt he was afraid lest a +modesty, merely dictated by politeness, should look like affectation in +him. + + [Gluck often had to deal with self-sufficiency equal to his own. + He was very reluctant to introduce long ballets into "Iphigenia." + Vestris deeply regretted that the opera was not terminated by a + piece they called a chaconne, in which he displayed all his power. + He complained to Gluck about it. Gluck, who treated his art with + all the dignity it merits, replied that in so interesting a subject + dancing would be misplaced. Being pressed another time by Vestris + on the same subject, "A chaconne! A chaconne!" roared out the + enraged musician; "we must describe the Greeks; and had the Greeks + chaconnes?" "They had not?" returned the astonished dancer; "why, + then, so much the worse for them!"--NOTE BY THE EDITOR.] + +The Queen did not confine her admiration to the lofty style of the French +and Italian operas; she greatly valued Gretry's music, so well adapted to +the spirit and feeling of the words. A great deal of the poetry set to +music by Gretry is by Marmontel. The day after the first performance of +"Zemira and Azor," Marmontel and Gretry were presented to the Queen as +she was passing through the gallery of Fontainebleau to go to mass. The +Queen congratulated Gretry on the success of the new opera, and told him +that she had dreamed of the enchanting effect of the trio by Zemira's +father and sisters behind the magic mirror. Gretry, in a transport of +joy, took Marmontel in his arms, "Ah! my friend," cried he, "excellent +music may be made of this."--"And execrable words," coolly observed +Marmontel, to whom her Majesty had not addressed a single compliment. + +The most indifferent artists were permitted to have the honour of +painting the Queen. A full-length portrait, representing her in all the +pomp of royalty, was exhibited in the gallery of Versailles. This +picture, which was intended for the Court of Vienna, was executed by a +man who does not deserve even to be named, and disgusted all people of +taste. It seemed as if this art had, in France, retrograded several +centuries. + +The Queen had not that enlightened judgment, or even that mere taste, +which enables princes to foster and protect great talents. She confessed +frankly that she saw no merit in any portrait beyond the likeness. When +she went to the Louvre, she would run hastily over all the little "genre" +pictures, and come out, as she acknowledged, without having once raised +her eyes to the grand compositions. + +There is no good portrait of the Queen, save that by Werthmuller, chief +painter to the King of Sweden, which was sent to Stockholm, and that by +Madame Lebrun, which was saved from the revolutionary fury by the +commissioners for the care of the furniture at Versailles. + + [A sketch of very great interest made when the Queen was in the + Temple and discovered many years afterwards there, recently + reproduced in the memoirs of the Marquise de Tourzel (Paris, Plon), + is the last authentic portrait of the unhappy Queen. See also the + catalogue of portraits made by Lord Ronald Gower.] + +The composition of the latter picture resembles that of Henriette of +France, the wife of the unfortunate Charles I., painted by Vandyke. Like +Marie Antoinette, she is seated, surrounded by her children, and that +resemblance adds to the melancholy interest raised by this beautiful +production. + +While admitting that the Queen gave no direct encouragement to any art +but that of music, I should be wrong to pass over in silence the +patronage conferred by her and the Princes, brothers of the King, on the +art of printing. + + [In 1790 the King gave a proof of his particular good-will to the + bookselling trade. A company consisting of the first Parisian + booksellers, being on the eve of stopping payment, succeeded in + laying before the King a statement of their distressed situation. + The monarch was affected by it; he took from the civil list the sum + of which the society stood in immediate need, and became security + for the repayment of the remainder of the 1,200,000 livres, which + they wanted to borrow, and for the repayment of which he fixed no + particular time.] + +To Marie Antoinette we are indebted for a splendid quarto edition of the +works of Metastasio; to Monsieur, the King's brother, for a quarto Tasso, +embellished with engravings after Cochin; and to the Comte d'Artois for a +small collection of select works, which is considered one of the chef +d'oeuvres of the press of the celebrated Didot. + +In 1775, on the death of the Marechal du Muy, the ascendency obtained by +the sect of innovators occasioned M. de Saint-Germain to be recalled to +Court and made Minister of War. His first care was the destruction of +the King's military household establishment, an imposing and effectual +rampart round the sovereign power. + +When Chancellor Maupeou obtained from Louis XV. the destruction of the +Parliament and the exile of all the ancient magistrates, the +Mousquetaires were charged with the execution of the commission for this +purpose; and at the stroke of midnight, the presidents and members were +all arrested, each by two Mousquetaires. In the spring of 1775 a popular +insurrection had taken place in consequence of the high price of bread. +M. Turgot's new regulation, which permitted unlimited trade in corn, was +either its cause or the pretext for it; and the King's household troops +again rendered the greatest services to public tranquillity. + +I have never be enable to discover the true cause of the support given to +M. de Saint-Germain's policy by the Queen, unless in the marked favour +shown to the captains and officers of the Body Guards, who by this +reduction became the only soldiers of their rank entrusted with the +safety of the sovereign; or else in the Queen's strong prejudice against +the Duc d'Aiguillon, then commander of the light-horse. M. de Saint- +Germain, however, retained fifty gens d'armes and fifty light-horse to +form a royal escort on state occasions; but in 1787 the King reduced both +these military bodies. The Queen then said with satisfaction that at +last she should see no more red coats in the gallery of Versailles. + +From 1775 to 1781 were the gayest years of the Queen's life. In the +little journeys to Choisy, performances frequently took place at the +theatre twice in one day: grand opera and French or Italian comedy at the +usual hour; and at eleven at night they returned to the theatre for +parodies in which the best actors of the Opera presented themselves in +whimsical parts and costumes. The celebrated dancer Guimard always took +the leading characters in the latter performance; she danced better than +she acted; her extreme leanness, and her weak, hoarse voice added to the +burlesque in the parodied characters of Ernelinde and Iphigenie. + +The most magnificent fete ever given to the Queen was one prepared for +her by Monsieur, the King's brother, at Brunoy. That Prince did me the +honour to admit me, and I followed her Majesty into the gardens, where +she found in the first copse knights in full armour asleep at the foot of +trees, on which hung their spears and shields. The absence of the +beauties who had incited the nephews of Charlemagne and the gallants of +that period to lofty deeds was supposed to occasion this lethargic +slumber. But when the Queen appeared at the entrance of the copse they +were on foot in an instant, and melodious voices announced their +eagerness to display their valour. They then hastened into a vast arena, +magnificently decorated in the exact style of the ancient tournaments. +Fifty dancers dressed as pages presented to the knights twenty-five +superb black horses, and twenty-five of a dazzling whiteness, all most +richly caparisoned. The party led by Augustus Vestris wore the Queen's +colours. Picq, balletmaster at the Russian Court, commanded the opposing +band. There was running at the negro's head, tilting, and, lastly, +combats 'a outrance', perfectly well imitated. Although the spectators +were aware that the Queen's colours could not but be victorious, they did +not the less enjoy the apparent uncertainty. + +Nearly all the agreeable women of Paris were ranged upon the steps which +surrounded the area of the tourney. The Queen, surrounded by the royal +family and the whole Court, was placed beneath an elevated canopy. A +play, followed by a ballet-pantomime and a ball, terminated the fete. +Fireworks and illuminations were not spared. Finally, from a +prodigiously high scaffold, placed on a rising ground, the words 'Vive +Louis! Vive Marie Antoinette!' were shown in the air in the midst of a +very dark but calm night. + +Pleasure was the sole pursuit of every one of this young family, with the +exception of the King. Their love of it was perpetually encouraged by a +crowd of those officious people who, by anticipating the desires and even +the passions of princes, find means of showing their zeal, and hope to +gain or maintain favour for themselves. + +Who would have dared to check the amusements of a queen, young, lively, +and handsome? A mother or a husband alone would have had the right to do +it; and the King threw no impediment in the way of Marie Antoinette's +inclinations. His long indifference had been followed by admiration and +love. He was a slave to all the wishes of the Queen, who, delighted with +the happy change in the heart and habits of the King, did not +sufficiently conceal the ascendency she was gaining over him. + +The King went to bed every night at eleven precisely; he was very +methodical, and nothing was allowed to interfere with his rules. The +noise which the Queen unavoidably made when she returned very late from +the evenings which she spent with the Princesse de Gugmenee or the Duc de +Duras, at last annoyed the King, and it was amicably agreed that the +Queen should apprise him when she intended to sit up late. He then began +to sleep in his own apartment, which had never before happened from the +time of their marriage. + +During the winter the Queen attended the Opera balls with a single lady +of the palace, and always found there Monsieur and the Comte d'Artois. +Her people concealed their liveries under gray cloth greatcoats. She +never thought she was recognized, while all the time she was known to the +whole assembly, from the first moment she entered the theatre; they +pretended, however, not to recognise her, and some masquerade manoeuvre +was always adopted to give her the pleasure of fancying herself +incognito. + +Louis XVI. determined once to accompany the Queen to a masked ball; +it was agreed that the King should hold not only the grand but the petit +coucher, as if actually going to bed. The Queen went to his apartment +through the inner corridors of the palace, followed by one of her women +with a black domino; she assisted him to put it on, and they went alone +to the chapel court, where a carriage waited for them, with the captain +of the Guard of the quarter, and a lady of the palace. The King was but +little amused, spoke only to two or three persons, who knew him +immediately, and found nothing to admire at the masquerade but Punches +and Harlequins, which served as a joke against him for the royal family, +who often amused themselves with laughing at him about it. + +An event, simple in itself, brought dire suspicion upon the Queen. She +was going out one evening with the Duchesse de Lupnes, lady of the +palace, when her carriage broke down at the entrance into Paris; she was +obliged to alight; the Duchess led her into a shop, while a footman +called a 'fiacre'. As they were masked, if they had but known how to +keep silence, the event would never have been known; but to ride in a +fiacre is so unusual an adventure for a queen that she had hardly entered +the Opera-house when she could not help saying to some persons whom she +met there: "That I should be in a fiacre! Is it not droll?" + +From that moment all Paris was informed of the adventure of the fiacre. +It was said that everything connected with it was mysterious; that the +Queen had kept an assignation in a private house with the Duc de Coigny. +He was indeed very well received at Court, but equally so by the King and +Queen. These accusations of gallantry once set afloat, there were no +longer any bounds to the calumnies circulated at Paris. If, during the +chase or at cards, the Queen spoke to Lord Edward Dillon, De Lambertye, +or others, they were so many favoured lovers. The people of Paris did +not know that none of those young persons were admitted into the Queen's +private circle of friends; the Queen went about Paris in disguise, and +had made use of a fiacre; and a single instance of levity gives room for +the suspicion of others. + +Conscious of innocence, and well knowing that all about her must do +justice to her private life, the Queen spoke of these reports with +contempt, contenting herself with the supposition that some folly in the +young men mentioned had given rise to them. She therefore left off +speaking to them or even looking at them. Their vanity took alarm at +this, and revenge induced them either to say, or to leave others to +think, that they were unfortunate enough to please no longer. Other +young coxcombs, placing themselves near the private box which the Queen +occupied incognito when she attended the public theatre at Versailles, +had the presumption to imagine that they were noticed by her; and I have +known such notions entertained merely on account of the Queen's +requesting one of those gentlemen to inquire behind the scenes whether it +would be long before the commencement of the second piece. + +The list of persons received into the Queen's closet which I gave in the +preceding chapter was placed in the hands of the ushers of the chamber by +the Princesse de Lamballe; and the persons there enumerated could present +themselves to enjoy the distinction only on those days when the Queen +chose to be with her intimates in a private manner; and this was only +when she was slightly indisposed. People of the first rank at Court +sometimes requested special audiences of her; the Queen then received +them in a room within that called the closet of the women on duty, and +these women announced them in her Majesty's apartment. + +The Duc de Lauzun had a good deal of wit, and chivalrous manners. The +Queen was accustomed to see him at the King's suppers, and at the house +of the Princesse de Guemenee, and always showed him attention. One day +he made his appearance at Madame de Guemenee's in uniform, and with the +most magnificent plume of white heron's feathers that it was possible to +behold. The Queen admired the plume, and he offered it to her through +the Princesse de Guemenee. As he had worn it the Queen had not imagined +that he could think of giving it to her; much embarrassed with the +present which she had, as it were, drawn upon herself, she did not like +to refuse it, nor did she know whether she ought to make one in return; +afraid, if she did give anything, of giving either too much or too +little, she contented herself with once letting M. de Lauzun see her +adorned with the plume. In his secret "Memoirs" the Duke attaches an +importance to his present, which proves him utterly unworthy of an honour +accorded only to his name and rank + +A short time afterwards he solicited an audience; the Queen granted it, +as she would have done to any other courtier of equal rank. I was in the +room adjoining that in which he was received; a few minutes after his +arrival the Queen reopened the door, and said aloud, and in an angry tone +of voice, "Go, monsieur." M. de Lauzun bowed low, and withdrew. The +Queen was much agitated. She said to me: "That man shall never again +come within my doors." A few years before the Revolution of 1789 the +Marechal de Biron died. The Duc de Lauzun, heir to his name, aspired to +the important post of colonel of the regiment of French guards. The +Queen, however, procured it for the Duc du Chaatelet. The Duc de Biron +espoused the cause of the Duc d'Orleans, and became one of the most +violent enemies of Marie Antoinette. + +It is with reluctance that I enter minutely on a defence of the Queen +against two infamous accusations with which libellers have dared to swell +their envenomed volumes. I mean the unworthy suspicions of too strong an +attachment for the Comte d'Artois, and of the motives for the tender +friendship which subsisted between the Queen, the Princesse de Lamballe, +and the Duchesse de Polignac. I do not believe that the Comte d'Artois +was, during his own youth and that of the Queen, so much smitten as has +been said with the loveliness of his sister-in-law; I can affirm that I +always saw that Prince maintain the most respectful demeanour towards the +Queen; that she always spoke of his good-nature and cheerfulness with +that freedom which attends only the purest sentiments; and that none of +those about the Queen ever saw in the affection she manifested towards +the Comte d'Artois more than that of a kind and tender sister for her +youngest brother. As to the intimate connection between Marie Antoinette +and the ladies I have named, it never had, nor could have, any other +motive than the very innocent wish to secure herself two friends in the +midst of a numerous Court; and notwithstanding this intimacy, that tone +of respect observed by persons of the most exalted rank towards majesty +never ceased to be maintained. + +The Queen, much occupied with the society of Madame de Polignac, and an +unbroken series of amusements, found less time for the Abbe de Vermond; +he therefore resolved to retire from Court. The world did him the honour +to believe that he had hazarded remonstrances upon his august pupil's +frivolous employment of her time, and that he considered himself, both as +an ecclesiastic and as instructor, now out of place at Court. But the +world was deceived his dissatisfaction arose purely from the favour shown +to the Comtesse Jules. After a fortnight's absence we saw him at +Versailles again, resuming his usual functions. + +The Queen could express herself with winning graciousness to persons who +merited her praise. When M. Loustonneau was appointed to the reversion +of the post of first surgeon to the King, he came to make his +acknowledgments. He was much beloved by the poor, to whom he had chiefly +devoted his talents, spending nearly thirty thousand francs a year on +indigent sufferers. The Queen replied to his thanks by saying: "You are +satisfied, Monsieur; but I am far from being so with the inhabitants of +Versailles. On the news of your appointment the town should have been +illuminated."--"How so, Madame?" asked the astonished surgeon, who was +very modest. "Why," replied the Queen, "if the poor whom you have +succoured for the past twenty years had each placed a single candle in +their windows it would have been the most beautiful illumination ever +witnessed." + +The Queen did not limit her kindness to friendly words. There was +frequently seen in the apartments of Versailles a veteran captain of the +grenadiers of France, called the Chevalier d'Orville, who for four years +had been soliciting from the Minister of War the post of major, or of +King's lieutenant. He was known to be very poor; but he supported his +lot without complaining of this vexatious delay in rewarding his +honourable services. He regularly attended the Marechal de Segur, +at the hour appointed for receiving the numerous solicitations in his +department. One day the Marshal said to him: "You are still at +Versailles, M. d'Orville?"--"Monsieur," he replied, "you may observe that +by this board of the flooring where I regularly place myself; it is +already worn down several lines by the weight of my body." The Queen +frequently stood at the window of her bedchamber to observe with her +glass the people walking in the park. Sometimes she inquired the names +of those who were unknown to her. One day she saw the Chevalier +d'Orville passing, and asked me the name of that knight of Saint Louis, +whom she had seen everywhere for a long time past. I knew who he was, +and related his history. "That must be put an end to," said the Queen, +with some vivacity. "Such an example of indifference is calculated to +discourage our soldiers." Next day, in crossing the gallery to go to +mass, the Queen perceived the Chevalier d'Orville; she went directly +towards him. The poor man fell back in the recess of a window, looking +to the right and left to discover the person whom the Queen was seeking, +when she thus addressed him: "M. d'Orville, you have been several years +at Versailles, soliciting a majority or a King's lieutenancy. You must +have very powerless patrons."--"I have none, Madame," replied the +Chevalier, in great confusion. "Well! I will take you under my +protection. To-morrow at the same hour be here with a petition, and a +memorial of your services." A fortnight after, M. d'Orville was +appointed King's lieutenant, either at La Rochelle or at Rochefort. + + [Louis XVI. vied with his Queen in benevolent actions of this kind. + An old officer had in vain solicited a pension during the + administration of the Duc de Choiseul. He returned to the charge in + the times of the Marquis de Montesnard and the Duc d'Aiguillon. He + urged his claims, to Comte du Muy, who made a note of them. Tired + of so many fruitless efforts, he at last appeared at the King's + supper, and, having placed himself so as to be seen and heard, cried + out at a moment when silence prevailed, "Sire." The people near him + said, "What are you about? This is not the way to speak to the + King."--"I fear nothing," said he, and raising his voice, repeated, + "Sire." The King, much surprised, looked at him and said, "What do + you want, monsieur."--"Sire," answered he, "I am seventy years of + age; I have served your Majesty more than fifty years, and I am + dying for want."--"Have you a memorial?" replied the King. "Yes, + Sire, I have."--"Give it to me;" and his Majesty took it without + saying anything more. Next morning he was sent for by the, King, + who said, "Monsieur, I grant you an annuity of 1,500 livres out of + my privy purse, and you may go and receive the first year's payment, + which is now due." ("Secret Correspondence of the Court: Reign of + Louis XVI.") The King preferred to spend money in charity rather + than in luxury or magnificence. Once during his absence, M. + d'Augivillers caused an unused room in the King's apartment to be + repaired at a cost of 30,000 francs. On his return the King made + Versailles resound with complaints against M. d'Augivillers: "With + that sum I could have made thirty families happy," he said.] + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +From the time of Louis XVI.'s accession to the throne, the Queen had been +expecting a visit from her brother, the Emperor Joseph II. That Prince +was the constant theme of her discourse. She boasted of his +intelligence, his love of occupation, his military knowledge, and the +perfect simplicity of his manners. Those about her Majesty ardently +wished to see at Versailles a prince so worthy of his rank. At length +the coming of Joseph II., under the title of Count Falkenstein, was +announced, and the very day on which he would be at Versailles was +mentioned. The first embraces between the Queen and her august brother +took place in the presence of all the Queen's household. The sight of +their emotion was extremely affecting. + +The Emperor was at first generally admired in France; learned men, well- +informed officers, and celebrated artists appreciated the extent of his +information. He made less impression at Court, and very little in the +private circle of the King and Queen. His eccentric manners, his +frankness, often degenerating into rudeness, and his evidently affected +simplicity,--all these characteristics caused him to be looked upon as a +prince rather singular than admirable. The Queen spoke to him about the +apartment she had prepared for him in the Chateau; the Emperor answered +that he would not accept it, and that while travelling he always lodged +at a cabaret (that was his very expression); the Queen insisted, and +assured him that he should be at perfect liberty, and placed out of the +reach of noise. He replied that he knew the Chateau of Versailles was +very large, and that so many scoundrels lived there that he could well +find a place; but that his valet de chambre had made up his camp-bed in a +lodging-house, and there he would stay. + +He dined with the King and Queen, and supped with the whole family. He +appeared to take an interest in the young Princesse Elisabeth, then just +past childhood, and blooming in all the freshness of that age. An +intended marriage between him and this young sister of the King was +reported at the time, but I believe it had no foundation in truth. + +The table was still served by women only, when the Queen dined in private +with the King, the royal family, or crowned heads. + + [The custom was, even supposing dinner to have commenced, if a + princess of the blood arrived, and she was asked to sit down at the + Queen's table, the comptrollers and gentlemen-in-waiting came + immediately to attend, and the Queen's women withdrew. These had + succeeded the maids of honour in several parts of their service, and + had preserved some of their privileges. One day the Duchesse + d'Orleans arrived at Fontainebleau, at the Queen's dinner-hour. The + Queen invited her to the table, and herself motioned to her women to + leave the room, and let the men take their places. Her Majesty said + she was resolved to continue a privilege which kept places of that + description most honourable, and render them suitable for ladies of + nobility without fortune. Madame de Misery, Baronne de Biache, the + Queen's first lady of the chamber, to whom I was made reversioner, + was a daughter of M. le Comte de Chemant, and her grandmother was a + Montmorency. M. le Prince de Tingry, in the presence of the Queen, + used to call her cousin. The ancient household of the Kings of + France had prerogatives acknowledged in the state. Many of the + offices were tenable only by those of noble blood, and were sold at + from 40,000 to 300,000 franca. A collection of edicts of the Kings + in favour of the prerogatives and right of precedence of the persons + holding office in the royal household is still in existence.] + +I was present at the Queen's dinner almost every day. The Emperor would +talk much and fluently; he expressed himself in French with facility, and +the singularity, of his expressions added a zest to his conversation. I +have often heard him say that he liked spectacculous objects, when he +meant to express such things as formed a show, or a scene worthy of +interest. He disguised none of his prejudices against the etiquette and +customs of the Court of France; and even in the presence of the King made +them the subject of his sarcasms. The King smiled, but never made any +answer; the Queen appeared pained. The Emperor frequently terminated his +observations upon the objects in Paris which he had admired by +reproaching the King for suffering himself to remain in ignorance of +them. He could not conceive how such a wealth of pictures should remain +shut up in the dust of immense stores; and told him one day that but for +the practice of placing some of them in the apartments of Versailles he +would not know even the principal chef d'oeuvres that he possessed. + + [The Emperor loudly censured the existing practice of allowing + shopkeepers to erect shops near the outward walls of all the + palaces, and even to establish something like a fair in the + galleries of Versailles and Fontainebleau, and even upon the + landings of the staircases.] + +He also reproached him for not having visited the Hotel des Invalides nor +the Ecole Militaire; and even went so far as to tell him before us that +he ought not only to know what Paris contained, but to travel in France, +and reside a few days in each of his large towns. + +At last the Queen was really hurt at the Emperor's remarks, and gave him +a few lectures upon the freedom with which he allowed himself to lecture +others. One day she was busied in signing warrants and orders for +payment for her household, and was conversing with M. Augeard, her +secretary for such matters, who presented the papers one after another to +be signed, and replaced them in his portfolio. While this was going +forward, the Emperor walked about the room; all at once he stood still, +to reproach the Queen rather severely for signing all those papers +without reading them, or, at least, without running her eye over them; +and he spoke most judiciously to her upon the danger of signing her name +inconsiderately. The Queen answered that very wise principles might be +very ill applied; that her secretary, who deserved her implicit +confidence, was at that moment laying before her nothing but orders for +payment of the quarter's expenses of her household, registered in the +Chamber of Accounts; and that she ran no risk of incautiously giving her +signature. + +The Queen's toilet was likewise a never-failing subject for animadversion +with the Emperor. He blamed her for having introduced too many new +fashions; and teased her about her use of rouge. One day, while she was +laying on more of it than usual, before going to the play, he pointed out +a lady who was in the room, and who was, in truth, highly painted. "A +little more under the eyes," said the Emperor to the Queen; "lay on the +rouge like a fury, as that lady does." The Queen entreated her brother +to refrain from his jokes, or at all events to address them, when they +were so outspoken, to her alone. + +The Queen had made an appointment to meet her brother at the Italian +theatre; she changed her mind, and went to the French theatre, sending a +page to the Italian theatre to request the Emperor to come to her there. +He left his box, lighted by the comedian Clairval, and attended by M. de +la Ferte, comptroller of the Queen's privy purse, who was much hurt at +hearing his Imperial Majesty, after kindly expressing his regret at not +being present during the Italian performance, say to Clairval, "Your +young Queen is very giddy; but, luckily, you Frenchmen have no great +objection to that." + +I was with my father-in-law in one of the Queen's apartments when the +Emperor came to wait for her there, and, knowing that M. Campan was +librarian, he conversed with him about such books as would of course be +found in the Queen's library. After talking of our most celebrated +authors, he casually said, "There are doubtless no works on finance or +on administration here?" + +These words were followed by his opinion on all that had been written on +those topics, and the different systems of our two famous ministers, +Sully and Colbert; on errors which were daily committed in France, in +points essential to the prosperity of the Empire; and on the reform he +himself would make at Vienna. Holding M. Campan by the button, he spent +more than an hour, talking vehemently, and without the slightest reserve, +about the French Government. My father-in-law and myself maintained +profound silence, as much from astonishment as from respect; and when we +were alone we agreed not to speak of this interview. + +The Emperor was fond of describing the Italian Courts that he had +visited. The jealous quarrels between the King and Queen of Naples +amused him highly; he described to the life the manner and speech of that +sovereign, and the simplicity with which he used to go and solicit the +first chamberlain to obtain permission to return to the nuptial bed, when +the angry Queen had banished him from it. The time which he was made to +wait for this reconciliation was calculated between the Queen and her +chamberlain, and always proportioned to the gravity of the offence. He +also related several very amusing stories relative to the Court of Parma, +of which he spoke with no little contempt. If what this Prince said of +those Courts, and even of Vienna, had been written down, the whole would +have formed an interesting collection. The Emperor told the King that +the Grand Duke of Tuscany and the King of Naples being together, the +former said a great deal about the changes he had effected in his State. +The Grand Duke had issued a mass of new edicts, in order to carry the +precepts of the economists into execution, and trusted that in so doing +he was labouring for the welfare of his people. The King of Naples +suffered him to go on speaking for a long time, and then casually asked +how many Neapolitan families there were in Tuscany. The Duke soon +reckoned them up, as they were but few. "Well, brother," replied the +King of Naples, "I do not understand the indifference of your people +towards your great reforms; for I have four times the number of Tuscan +families settled in my States that you have of Neapolitan families in +yours." + +The Queen being at the Opera with the Emperor, the latter did not wish to +show himself; but she took him by the hand, and gently drew him to the +front of the box. This kind of presentation to the public was most +warmly received. The performance was "Iphigenia in Aulis," and for the +second time. the chorus, "Chantons, celebrons notre Reine!" was called +for with universal plaudits. + +A fete of a novel description was given at Petit Trianon. The art with +which the English garden was not illuminated, but lighted, produced a +charming effect. Earthen lamps, concealed by boards painted green, threw +light upon the beds of shrubs and flowers, and brought out their varied +tints. Several hundred burning fagots in the moat behind the Temple of +Love made a blaze of light, which rendered that spot the most brilliant +in the garden. After all, this evening's entertainment had nothing +remarkable about it but the good taste of the artists, yet it was much +talked of. The situation did not allow the admission of a great part of +the Court; those who were uninvited were dissatisfied; and the people, +who never forgive any fetes but those they share in, so exaggerated the +cost of this little fete as to make it appear that the fagots burnt in +the moat had required the destruction of a whole forest. The Queen being +informed of these reports, was determined to know exactly how much wood +had been consumed; and she found that fifteen hundred fagots had sufficed +to keep up the fire until four o'clock in the morning. + +After staying a few months the Emperor left France, promising his sister +to come and see her again. All the officers of the Queen's chamber had +many opportunities of serving him during his stay, and expected that he +would make them presents before his departure. Their oath of office +positively forbade them to receive a gift from any foreign prince; they +had therefore agreed to refuse the Emperor's presents at first, but to +ask the time necessary for obtaining permission to accept them. The +Emperor, probably informed of this custom, relieved the good people from +their difficulty by setting off without making a single present. + +About the latter end of 1777 the Queen, being alone in her closet, sent +for my father-in-law and myself, and, giving us her hand to kiss; told us +that, looking upon us both as persons deeply interested in her happiness, +she wished to receive our congratulations,--that at length she was the +Queen of France, and that she hoped soon to have children; that till now +she had concealed her grief, but that she had shed many tears in secret. + +Dating from this happy but long-delayed moment, the King's attachment to +the Queen assumed every characteristic of love. The good Lassone, first +physician to the King and Queen, frequently spoke to me of the uneasiness +that the King's indifference, the cause of which he had been so long in +overcoming, had given him, and appeared to me at that time to entertain +no anxiety except of a very different description. + +In the winter of 1778 the King's permission for the return of Voltaire; +after an absence of twenty-seven years, was obtained. A few strict +persons considered this concession on the part of the Court very +injudicious. The Emperor, on leaving France, passed by the Chateau of +Ferney without stopping there. He had advised the Queen not to suffer +Voltaire to be presented to her. A lady belonging to the Court learned +the Emperor's opinion on that point, and reproached him with his want of +enthusiasm towards the greatest genius of the age. He replied that for +the good of the people he should always endeavour to profit by the +knowledge of the philosophers; but that his own business of sovereign +would always prevent his ranking himself amongst that sect. The clergy +also took steps to hinder Voltaire's appearance at Court. Paris, +however, carried to the highest pitch the honours and enthusiasm shown to +the great poet. + +It was very unwise to let Paris pronounce with such transport an opinion +so opposite to that of the Court. This was pointed out to the Queen, +and she was told that, without conferring on Voltaire the honour of a +presentation, she might see him in the State apartments. She was not +averse to following this advice, and appeared embarrassed solely about +what she should say to him. She was recommended to talk about nothing +but the "Henriade," "Merope," and "Zaira." The Queen replied that she +would still consult a few other persons in whom she had great confidence. +The next day she announced that it was irrevocably decided Voltaire +should not see any member of the royal family,--his writings being too +antagonistic to religion and morals. "It is, however, strange," said the +Queen, "that while we refuse to admit Voltaire into our presence as the +leader of philosophical writers, the Marechale de Mouchy should have +presented to me some years ago Madame Geoffrin, who owed her celebrity to +the title of foster-mother of the philosophers." + +On the occasion of the duel of the Comte d'Artois with the Prince de +Bourbon the Queen determined privately to see the Baron de Besenval, +who was to be one of the witnesses, in order to communicate the King's +intentions. I have read with infinite pain the manner in which that +simple fact is perverted in the first volume of M. de Besenval's +"Memoirs." He is right in saying that M. Campan led him through the +upper corridors of the Chateau, and introduced him into an apartment +unknown to him; but the air of romance given to the interview is equally +culpable and ridiculous. M. de Besenval says that he found himself, +without knowing how he came there, in an apartment unadorned, but very +conveniently furnished, of the existence of which he was till then +utterly ignorant. He was astonished, he adds, not that the Queen should +have so many facilities, but that she should have ventured to procure +them. Ten printed sheets of the woman Lamotte's libels contain nothing +so injurious to the character of Marie Antoinette as these lines, written +by a man whom she honoured by undeserved kindness. He could not have had +any opportunity of knowing the existence of the apartments, which +consisted of a very small antechamber, a bedchamber, and a closet. Ever +since the Queen had occupied her own apartment, these had been +appropriated to her Majesty's lady of honour in cases of illness, and +were actually so used when the Queen was confined. It was so important +that it should not be known the Queen had spoken to the Baron before the +duel that she had determined to go through her inner room into this +little apartment, to which M. Campan was to conduct him. When men write +of recent times they should be scrupulously exact, and not indulge in +exaggerations or inventions. + +The Baron de Besenval appears mightily surprised at the Queen's sudden +coolness, and refers it to the fickleness of her disposition. I can +explain the reason for the change by repeating what her Majesty said to +me at the time; and I will not alter one of her expressions. Speaking of +the strange presumption of men, and the reserve with which women ought +always to treat them, the Queen added that age did not deprive them of +the hope of pleasing, if they retained any agreeable qualities; that she +had treated the Baron de Besenval as a brave Swiss, agreeable, polished, +and witty, whose gray hairs had induced her to look upon him as a man +whom she might see without harm; but that she had been much deceived. +Her Majesty, after having enjoined me to the strictest secrecy, told me +that, finding herself alone with the Baron, he began to address her with +so much gallantry that she was thrown into the utmost astonishment, and +that he was mad enough to fall upon his knees, and make her a declaration +in form. The Queen added that she said to him: "Rise, monsieur; the King +shall be ignorant of an offence which would disgrace you for ever;" that +the Baron grew pale and stammered apologies; that she left her closet +without saying another word, and that since that time she hardly ever +spoke to him. "It is delightful to have friends," said the Queen; "but +in a situation like mine it is sometimes difficult for the friends of our +friends to suit us." + +In the beginning of the year 1778 Mademoiselle d'Eon obtained permission +to return to France, on condition that she should appear there in female +dress. The Comte de Vergennes entreated my father, M. Genet, chief clerk +of Foreign Affairs, who had long known the Chevalier d'Eon, to receive +that strange personage at his house, to guide and restrain, if possible, +her ardent disposition. The Queen, on learning her arrival at +Versailles, sent a footman to desire my father to bring her into her +presence; my father thought it his duty first to inform the Minister of +her Majesty's wish. The Comte de Vergennes expressed himself pleased +with my father's prudence, and desired that he would accompany him to the +Queen. The Minister had a few minutes' audience; her Majesty came out of +her closet with him, and condescended to express to my father the regret +she felt at having troubled him to no purpose; and added, smiling, that a +few words from M. de Vergennes had for ever cured her of her curiosity. +The discovery in London of the true sex of this pretended woman makes it +probable that the few words uttered by the Minister contained a solution +of the enigma. + +The Chevalier d'Eon had been useful in Russia as a spy of Louis XV. +while very young he had found means to introduce himself at the Court of +the Empress Elizabeth, and served that sovereign in the capacity of +reader. Resuming afterwards his military dress, he served with honour +and was wounded. Appointed chief secretary of legation, and afterwards +minister plenipotentiary at London, he unpardonably insulted Comte de +Guerchy, the ambassador. The official order for the Chevalier's return +to France was actually delivered to the King's Council; but Louis XV. +delayed the departure of the courier who was to be its bearer, and sent +off another courier privately, who gave the Chevalier d'Eon a letter in +his own writing, in which he said, "I know that you have served me as +effectually in the dress of a woman as in that which you now wear. +Resume it instantly; withdraw into the city; I warn you that the King +yesterday signed an order for your return to France; you are not safe in +your hotel, and you would here find too powerful enemies." I heard the +Chevalier d'Eon repeat the contents of this letter, in which Louis XV. +thus separated himself from the King of France, several times at my +father's. The Chevalier, or rather the Chevalaere d'Eon had preserved +all the King's letters. Messieurs de Maurepas and de Vergennes wished to +get them out of his hands, as they were afraid he would print them. This +eccentric being had long solicited permission to return to France; but it +was necessary to find a way of sparing the family he had offended the +insult they would see in his return; he was therefore made to resume the +costume of that sex to which in France everything is pardoned. The +desire to see his native land once more determined him to submit to the +condition, but he revenged himself by combining the long train of his +gown and the three deep ruffles on his sleeves with the attitude and +conversation of a grenadier, which made him very disagreeable company. + + [The account given by Madame Campan of the Chevalier d'Eon is now + known to be incorrect in many particulars. Enough details for most + readers will be found in the Duc de Broglie's "Secret of the King," + vol. ii., chaps. vi. and g., and at p. 89, vol. ii. of that + work, where the Duke refers to the letter of most dubious + authenticity spoken of by Madame Campan. The following details will + be sufficient for these memoirs: The Chevalier Charles d'Eon de + Beaumont (who was born in 1728) was an ex-captain of dragoons, + employed in both the open and secret diplomacy of Louis XV. When at + the embassy in London he quarrelled with the ambassador, his + superior, the Comte de Guerchy (Marquis do Nangis), and used his + possession of papers concerning the secret diplomacy to shield + himself. It was when hiding in London, in 1765, on account of this + business, that he seems first to have assumed woman's dress, which + he retained apparently chiefly from love of notoriety. In 1775 a + formal agreement with the French Court, made by the instrumentality + of Beaumarchais, of all people in the world, permitted him to return + to France, retaining the dress of a woman. He went back to France, + but again came to England, and died there, at his residence in + Millman Street, near the Foundling Hospital, May 22, 1710. He had + been a brave and distinguished officer, but his form and a certain + coldness of temperament always remarked in him assisted him in his + assumption of another sex. There appears to be no truth in the + story of his proceedings at the Russian Court, and his appearing in + female attire was a surprise to those who must have known of any + earlier affair of the sort.] + +At last, the event so long desired by the Queen, and by all those who +wished her well, took place; her Majesty became enceinte. The King was +in ecstasies. Never was there a more united or happier couple. The +disposition of Louis XVI. entirely altered, and became prepossessing and +conciliatory; and the Queen was amply compensated for the uneasiness +which the King's indifference during the early part of their union had +caused her. + +The summer of 1778 was extremely hot. July and August passed, but the +air was not cooled by a single storm. The Queen spent whole days in +close rooms, and could not sleep until she had breathed the fresh night +air, walking with the Princesses and her brothers upon the terrace under +her apartments. These promenades at first gave rise to no remark; but it +occurred to some of the party to enjoy the music of wind instruments +during these fine summer nights. The musicians belonging to the chapel +were ordered to perform pieces suited to instruments of that description, +upon steps constructed in the middle of the garden. The Queen, seated on +one of the terrace benches, enjoyed the effect of this music, surrounded +by all the royal family with the exception of the King, who joined them +but, twice, disliking to change his hour of going to bed. + +Nothing could be more innocent than these parties; yet Paris, France, +nay, all Europe, were soon canvassing them in a manner most +disadvantageous to the reputation of Marie Antoinette. It is true that +all the inhabitants of Versailles enjoyed these serenades, and that there +was a crowd near the spot from eleven at night until two or three in the +morning. The windows of the ground floor occupied by Monsieur and Madame +--[The wife of Monsieur, the Comte de Provence.]-- were kept open, and +the terrace was perfectly well lighted by the numerous wax candles +burning in the two apartments. Lamps were likewise placed in the garden, +and the lights of the orchestra illuminated the rest of the place. + +I do not know whether a few incautious women might not have ventured +farther, and wandered to the bottom of the park; it may have been so; but +the Queen, Madame, and the Comtesse d'Artois were always arm-in-arm, and +never left the terrace. The Princesses were not remarkable when seated +on the benches, being dressed in cambric muslin gowns, with large straw +hats and muslin veils, a costume universally adopted by women at that +time; but when standing up their different figures always distinguished +them; and the persons present stood on one side to let them pass. It is +true that when they seated themselves upon the benches private +individuals would sometimes, to their great amusement, sit down by +their side. + +A young clerk in the War Department, either not knowing or pretending not +to know the Queen, spoke to her of the beauty of the night, and the +delightful effect of the music. The Queen, fancying she was not +recognised, amused herself by keeping up the incognito, and they talked +of several private families of Versailles, consisting of persons +belonging to the King's household or her own. After a few minutes the +Queen and Princesses rose to walk, and on leaving the bench curtsied to +the clerk. The young man knowing, or having subsequently discovered, +that he had been conversing with the Queen, boasted of it in his office. +He was merely, desired to hold his tongue; and so little attention did he +excite that the Revolution found him still only a clerk. + +Another evening one of Monsieur's body-guard seated himself near the +Princesses, and, knowing them, left the place where he was sitting, and +placed himself before the Queen, to tell her that he was very fortunate +in being able to seize an opportunity of imploring the kindness of his +sovereign; that he was "soliciting at Court"--at the word soliciting the +Queen and Princesses rose hastily and withdrew into Madame's apartment.-- +[Soulavie has most criminally perverted these two facts.-MADAME CAMPAN.]- +I was at the Queen's residence that day. She talked of this little +occurrence all the time of her 'coucher'; though she only complained that +one of Monsieur's guards should have had the effrontery to speak to her. +Her Majesty added that he ought to have respected her incognito; and that +that was not the place where he should have ventured to make a request. +Madame had recognised him, and talked of making a complaint to his +captain; the Queen opposed it, attributing his error to his ignorance and +provincial origin. + +The most scandalous libels were based on these two insignificant +occurrences, which I have related with scrupulous exactness. Nothing +could be more false than those calumnies. It must be confessed, however, +that such meetings were liable to ill consequences. I ventured to say as +much to the Queen, and informed her that one evening, when her Majesty +beckoned to me to go and speak to her, I thought I recognised on the +bench on which she was sitting two women deeply veiled, and keeping +profound silence; that those women were the Comtesse du Barry and her +sister-in-law; and that my suspicions were confirmed, when, at a few +paces from the seat, and nearer to her Majesty, I met a tall footman +belonging to Madame du Barry, whom I had seen in her service all the time +she resided at Court. + +My advice was disregarded. Misled by the pleasure she found in these +promenades, and secure in the consciousness of blameless conduct, the +Queen would not see the lamentable results which must necessarily follow. +This was very unfortunate; for besides the mortifications they brought +upon her, it is highly probable that they prompted the vile plot which +gave rise to the Cardinal de Rohan's fatal error. + +Having enjoyed these evening promenades about a month, the Queen ordered +a private concert within the colonnade which contained the group of Pluto +and Proserpine. Sentinels were placed at all the entrances, and ordered +to admit within the colonnade only such persons as should produce tickets +signed by my father-in-law. A fine concert was performed there by the +musicians of the chapel and the female musicians belonging to the. +Queen's chamber. The Queen went with Mesdames de Polignac, de Chalon, +and d'Andlau, and Messieurs de Polignac, de Coigny, de Besenval, and de +Vaudreuil; there were also a few equerries present. Her Majesty gave me +permission to attend the concert with some of my female relations. There +was no music upon the terrace. The crowd of inquisitive people, whom the +sentinels kept at a distance from the enclosure of the colonnade, went +away highly discontented; the small number of persons admitted no doubt +occasioned jealousy, and gave rise to offensive comments which were +caught up by the public with avidity. I do not pretend to apologise for +the kind of amusements with which the Queen indulged herself during this +and the following summer; the consequences were so lamentable that the +error was no doubt very great; but what I have said respecting the +character of these promenades may be relied on as true. + +When the season for evening walks was at an end, odious couplets were +circulated in Paris; the 'Queen was treated in them in the most insulting +manner; her situation ranked among her enemies persons attached to the +only prince who for several years had appeared likely to give heirs to +the crown. People uttered the most inconsiderate language; and those +improper conversations took place in societies wherein the imminent +danger of violating to so criminal an extent both truth and the respect +due to sovereigns ought to have been better understood. A few days +before the Queen's confinement a whole volume of manuscript songs, +concerning her and all the ladies about her remarkable for rank or +station was, thrown down in the oiel-de-boeuf.--[A large room at +Versailles lighted by a bull's-eye window, and used as a waiting-room.]-- +This manuscript was immediately put into the hands of the King, who was +highly incensed at it, and said that he had himself been at those +promenades; that he had seen nothing connected with them but what was +perfectly harmless; that such songs would disturb the harmony of twenty +families in the Court and city; that it was a capital crime to have made +any against the Queen herself; and that he wished the author of the +infamous libels to be discovered and punished. A fortnight afterwards it +was known publicly that the verses were by M. Champcenetz de Riquebourg, +who was not even reprimanded. + + [The author of a great many songs, some of which are very well + written. Lively and satirical by nature, he did not lose either his + cheerfulness or his carelessness before the revolutionary tribunal. + After hearing his own sentence read, he asked his judges if he might + not be allowed to find a substitute.--MADAME CAMPAN.] + +I knew for a certainty that the King spoke to M. de Maurepas, before two +of his most confidential servants, respecting the risk which he saw the +Queen ran from these night walks upon the terrace of Versailles, which +the public ventured to censure thus openly, and that the old minister had +the cruelty to advise that she should be suffered to go on; she possessed +talent; her friends were very ambitious, and longed to see her take a +part in public affairs; and to let her acquire the reputation of levity +would do no harm. M. de Vergennes was as hostile to the Queen's +influence as M. de Maurepas. It may therefore be fairly presumed, since +the Prime Minister durst point out to his King an advantage to be gained +by the Queen's discrediting herself, that he and M. de Vergennes employed +all means within the reach of powerful ministers in order to ruin her in +the opinion of the public. + +The Queen's accouchement approached; Te Deums were sung and prayers +offered up in all the cathedrals. On the 11th of December, 1778, the +royal family, the Princes of the blood, and the great officers of State +passed the night in the rooms adjoining the Queen's bedchamber. Madame, +the King's daughter, came into the world before mid-day on the 19th of +December.--[Marie Therese Charlotte (1778-1861), Madame Royale; married +in 1799 Louis, Duc d'Angouleme, eldest son of the Comte d'Artois.]-- +The etiquette of allowing all persons indiscriminately to enter at the +moment of the delivery of a queen was observed with such exaggeration +that when the accoucheur said aloud, "La Reine va s'accoucher," the +persons who poured into the chamber were so numerous that the rush nearly +destroyed the Queen. During the night the King had taken the precaution +to have the enormous tapestry screens which surrounded her Majesty's bed +secured with cords; but for this they certainly would have been thrown +down upon her. It was impossible to move about the chamber, which was +filled with so motley a crowd that one might have fancied himself in some +place of public amusement. Two Savoyards got upon the furniture for a +better sight of the Queen, who was placed opposite the fireplace. + +The noise and the sex of the infant, with which the Queen was made +acquainted by a signal previously agreed on, as it is said, with the +Princesse do Lamballe, or some error of the accoucheur, brought on +symptoms which threatened fatal consequences; the accoucheur exclaimed, +"Give her air--warm water--she must be bled in the foot!" The windows +were stopped up; the King opened them with a strength which his affection +for the Queen gave him at the moment. They were of great height, and +pasted over with strips of paper all round. The basin of hot water not +being brought quickly enough, the accoucheur desired the chief surgeon to +use his lancet without waiting for it. He did so; the blood streamed out +freely, and the Queen opened her eyes. The Princesse de Lamballe was +carried through the crowd in a state of insensibility. The valets de +chambre and pages dragged out by the collar such inconsiderate persons as +would not leave the room. This cruel custom was abolished afterwards. +The Princes of the family, the Princes of the blood, the chancellor, and +the ministers are surely sufficient to attest the legitimacy of an +hereditary prince. The Queen was snatched from the very jaws of death; +she was not conscious of having been bled, and on being replaced in bed +asked why she had a linen bandage upon her foot. + +The delight which succeeded the moment of fear was equally lively and +sincere. We were all embracing each other, and shedding tears of joy. +The Comte d'Esterhazy and the Prince de Poix, to whom I was the first to +announce that the Queen was restored to life, embraced me in the midst of +the cabinet of nobles. We little imagined, in our happiness at her +escape from death, for how much more terrible a fate our beloved Princess +was reserved. + + +NOTE. The two following specimens of the Emperor Joseph's correspondence +forcibly demonstrate the vigour, shrewdness, and originality of his mind, +and complete the portrait left of him by Madame Campan. + +Few sovereigns have given their reasons for refusing appointments with +the fullness and point of the following letter + + To a Lady. + +MADAM.--I do not think that it is amongst the duties of a monarch to +grant places to one of his subjects merely because he is a gentleman. +That, however, is the inference from the request you have made to me. +Your late husband was, you say, a distinguished general, a gentleman of +good family, and thence you conclude that my kindness to your family can +do no less than give a company of foot to your second son, lately +returned from his travels. + +Madam, a man may be the son of a general and yet have no talent for +command. A man may be of a good family and yet possess no other merit +than that which he owes to chance,--the name of gentleman. + +I know your son, and I know what makes the soldier; and this twofold +knowledge convinces me that your son has not the disposition of a +warrior, and that he is too full of his birth to leave the country a hope +of his ever rendering it any important service. + +What you are to be pitied for, madam, is, that your son is not fit either +for an officer, a statesman or a priest; in a word, that he is nothing +more than a gentleman in the most extended acceptation of the word. + +You may be thankful to that destiny, which, in refusing talents to your +son, has taken care to put him in possession of great wealth, which will +sufficiently compensate him for other deficiencies, and enable him at the +same time to dispense with any favour from me. + +I hope you will be impartial enough to see the reasons which prompt me to +refuse your request. It may be disagreeable to you, but I consider it +necessary. Farewell, madam.--Your sincere well-wisher, + JOSEPH +LACHSENBURG, 4th August, 1787. + + +The application of another anxious and somewhat covetous mother was +answered with still more decision and irony: + + To a Lady. + +MADAM.--You know my disposition; you are not ignorant that the society of +the ladies is to me a mere recreation, and that I have never sacrificed +my principles to the fair sex. I pay but little attention to +recommendations, and I only take them into consideration when the person +in whose behalf I may be solicited possesses real merit. + +Two of your sons are already loaded with favours. The eldest, who is not +yet twenty, is chief of a squadron in my army, and the younger has +obtained a canonry at Cologne, from the Elector, my brother. What would +you have more? Would you have the first a general and the second a +bishop? + +In France you may see colonels in leading-strings, and in Spain the royal +princes command armies even at eighteen; hence Prince Stahremberg forced +them to retreat so often that they were never able all the rest of their +lives to comprehend any other manoeuvre. + +It is necessary to be sincere at Court, and severe in the field, stoical +without obduracy, magnanimous without weakness, and to gain the esteem of +our enemies by the justice of our actions; and this, madam, is what I aim +at. + JOSEPH +VIENNA, September, 1787. + +(From the inedited Letters of Joseph IL, published at Paris, by Persan, +1822.) + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +During the alarm for the life of the Queen, regret at not possessing an +heir to the throne was not even thought of. The King himself was wholly +occupied with the care of preserving an adored wife. The young Princess +was presented to her mother. "Poor little one," said the Queen, "you +were not wished for, but you are not on that account less dear to me. A +son would have been rather the property of the State. You shall be mine; +you shall have my undivided care, shall share all my happiness, and +console me in all my troubles." + +The King despatched a courier to Paris, and wrote letters himself to +Vienna, by the Queen's bedside; and part of the rejoicings ordered took +place in the capital. + +A great number of attendants watched near the Queen during the first +nights of her confinement. This custom distressed her; she knew how to +feel for others, and ordered large armchairs for her women, the backs of +which were capable of being let down by springs, and which served +perfectly well instead of beds. + +M. de Lassone, the chief physician, the chief surgeon, the chief +apothecary, the principal officers of the buttery, etc., were likewise +nine nights without going to bed. The royal children were watched for a +long time, and one of the women on duty remained, nightly, up and +dressed, during the first three years from their birth. + +The Queen made her entry into Paris for the churching. One hundred +maidens were portioned and married at Notre-Dame. There were few popular +acclamations, but her Majesty was perfectly well received at the Opera. + +A few days after the Queen's recovery from her confinement, the Cure of +the Magdelaine de la City at Paris wrote to M. Campan and requested a +private interview with him; it was to desire he would deliver into the +hands of the Queen a little box containing her wedding ring, with this +note written by the Cure: "I have received under the seal of confession +the ring which I send to your Majesty; with an avowal that it was stolen +from you in 1771, in order to be used in sorceries, to prevent your +having any children." On seeing her ring again the Queen said that she +had in fact lost it about seven years before, while washing her hands, +and that she had resolved to use no endeavour to discover the +superstitious woman who had done her the injury. + +The Queen's attachment to the Comtesse Jules increased every day; she +went frequently to her house at Paris, and even took up her own abode at +the Chateau de la Muette to be nearer during her confinement. She +married Mademoiselle de Polignac, when scarcely thirteen years of age, to +M. de Grammont, who, on account of this marriage, was made Duc de Guiche, +and captain of the King's Guards, in reversion after the Duc de Villeroi. +The Duchesse de Civrac, Madame Victoire's dame d'honneur, had been +promised the place for the Duc de Lorges, her son. The number of +discontented families at Court increased. + +The title of favourite was too openly given to the Comtesse Jules by her +friends. The lot of the favourite of a queen is not, in France, a happy +one; the favourites of kings are treated, out of gallantry, with much +greater indulgence. + +A short time after the birth of Madame the Queen became again enceinte; +she had mentioned it only to the King, to her physician, and to a few +persons honoured with her intimate confidence, when, having overexerted +her strength in pulling lip one of the glasses of her carriage, she felt +that she had hurt herself, and eight days afterwards she miscarried. The +King spent the whole morning at her bedside, consoling her, and +manifesting the tenderest concern for her. The Queen wept exceedingly; +the King took her affectionately in his arms, and mingled his tears with +hers. The King enjoined silence among the small number of persons who +were informed of this unfortunate occurrence; and it remained generally +unknown. These particulars furnish an accurate idea of the manner in +which this august couple lived together. + +The Empress Maria Theresa did not enjoy the happiness of seeing her +daughter give an heir to the crown of France. That illustrious Princess +died at the close of 1780, after having proved by her example that, as in +the instance of Queen Blanche, the talents of a sovereign might be +blended with the virtues of a pious princess. The King was deeply +affected at the death of the Empress; and on the arrival of the courier +from Vienna said that he could not bring himself to afflict the Queen by +informing her of an event which grieved even him so much. His Majesty +thought the Abbe de Vermond, who had possessed the confidence of Maria +Theresa during his stay at Vienna, the most proper person to discharge +this painful duty. He sent his first valet de chambre, M. de Chamilly, +to the Abbe on the evening of the day he received the despatches from +Vienna, to order him to come the next day to the Queen before her +breakfast hour, to acquit himself discreetly of the afflicting commission +with which he was charged, and to let his Majesty know the moment of his +entering the Queen's chamber. It was the King's intention to be there +precisely a quarter of an hour after him, and he was punctual to his +time; he was announced; the Abbe came out; and his Majesty said to him, +as he drew up at the door to let him pass, "I thank you, Monsieur l'Abbe, +for the service you have just done me." This was the only time during +nineteen years that the King spoke to him. + +Within an hour after learning the event the Queen put on temporary +mourning, while waiting until her Court mourning should be ready; she +kept herself shut up in her apartments for several days; went out only to +mass; saw none but the royal family; and received none but the Princesse +de Lamballe and the Duchesse de Polignac. She talked incessantly of the +courage, the misfortunes, the successes, and the virtues of her mother. +The shroud and dress in which Maria Theresa was to be buried, made +entirely by her own hands, were found ready prepared in one of her +closets. She often regretted that the numerous duties of her august +mother had prevented her from watching in person over the education of +her daughters; and modestly said that she herself would have been more +worthy if she had had the good fortune to receive lessons directly from a +sovereign so enlightened and so deserving of admiration. + +The Queen told me one day that her mother was left a widow at an age when +her beauty was yet striking; that she was secretly informed of a plot +laid by her three principal ministers to make themselves agreeable to +her; of a compact made between them, that the losers should not feel any +jealousy towards him who should be fortunate enough to gain his +sovereign's heart; and that they had sworn that the successful one should +be always the friend of the other two. The Empress being assured of this +scheme, one day after the breaking up of the council over which she had +presided, turned the conversation upon the subject of female sovereigns, +and the duties of their sex and rank; and then applying her general +reflections to herself in particular, told them that she hoped to guard +herself all her life against weaknesses of the heart; but that if ever an +irresistible feeling should make her alter her resolution, it should be +only in favour of a man proof against ambition, not engaged in State +affairs, but attached only to a private life and its calm enjoyments,--in +a word, if her heart should betray her so far as to lead her to love a +man invested with any important office, from the moment he should +discover her sentiments he would forfeit his place and his influence with +the public. This was sufficient; the three ministers, more ambitious +than amorous, gave up their projects for ever. + +On the 22d of October, 1781, the Queen gave birth to a Dauphin.-- +[The first Dauphin, Louis, born 1781, died 1789.]--So deep a silence +prevailed in the room that the Queen thought her child was a daughter; +but after the Keeper of the Seals had declared the sex of the infant, the +King went up to the Queen's bed, and said to her, "Madame, you have +fulfilled my wishes and those of France:, you are the mother of a +Dauphin." The King's joy was boundless; tears streamed from his eyes; he +gave his hand to every one present; and his happiness carried away his +habitual reserve. Cheerful and affable, he was incessantly taking +occasion to introduce the words, "my son," or "the Dauphin." As soon as +the Queen was in bed, she wished to see the long-looked-for infant. The +Princesse de Guemenee brought him to her. The Queen said there was no +need for commending him to the Princess, but in order to enable her to +attend to him more freely, she would herself share the care of the +education of her daughter. When the Dauphin was settled in his +apartment, he received the customary homages and visits. The Duc +d'Angouleme, meeting his father at the entrance of the Dauphin's +apartment, said to him, "Oh, papa! how little my cousin is!"--"The day +will come when you will think him great enough, my dear," answered the +Prince, almost involuntarily.--[Eldest son of the Comte d'Artois, and +till the birth of the Dauphin with near prospects of the succession.] + +The birth of the Dauphin appeared to give joy to all classes. Men +stopped one another in the streets, spoke without being acquainted, +and those who were acquainted embraced each other. In the birth of a +legitimate heir to the sovereign every man beholds a pledge of prosperity +and tranquillity . + + [M. Merard de Saint Just made a quatrain on the birth of the Dauphin + to the following effect: + + "This infant Prince our hopes are centred in, + will doubtless make us happy, rich, and free; + And since with somebody he must begin, + My fervent prayer is--that it may be me!" + + --NOTE BY THE EDITOR.] + +The rejoicings were splendid and ingenious. The artificers and tradesmen +of Paris spent considerable sums in order to go to Versailles in a body, +with their various insignia. Almost every troop had music with it. When +they arrived at the court of the palace, they there arranged themselves +so as to present a most interesting living picture. Chimney-sweepers, +quite as well dressed as those that appear upon the stage, carried an +ornamented chimney, at the top of which was perched one of the smallest +of their fraternity. The chairmen carried a sedan highly gilt, in which +were to be seen a handsome nurse and a little Dauphin. The butchers made +their appearance with their fat ox. Cooks, masons, blacksmiths, all +trades were on the alert. The smiths hammered away upon an anvil, the +shoemakers finished off a little pair of boots for the Dauphin, and the +tailors a little suit of the uniform of his regiment. The King remained +a long time upon a balcony to enjoy the sight. The whole Court was +delighted with it. So general was the enthusiasm that (the police not +having carefully examined the procession) the grave-diggers had the +imprudence to send their deputation also, with the emblematic devices of +their ill-omened occupation. They were met by the Princesse Sophie, the +King's aunt, who was thrilled with horror at the sight, and entreated the +King to have the audacious, fellows driven out of the procession, which +was then drawing up on the terrace. + +The 'dames de la halle' came to congratulate the Queen, and were received +with the suitable ceremonies. + +Fifty of them appeared dressed in black silk gowns, the established full +dress of their order, and almost all wore diamonds. The Princesse de +Chimay went to the door of the Queen's bedroom to receive three of these +ladies, who were led up to the Queen's bed. One of them addressed her +Majesty in a speech written by M. de la Harpe. It was set down on the +inside of a fan, to which the speaker repeatedly referred, but without +any embarrassment. She was handsome, and had a remarkably fine voice. +The Queen was affected by the address, and answered it with great +affability,--wishing a distinction to be made between these women and the +poissardes, who always left a disagreeable impression on her mind. + +The King ordered a substantial repast for all these women. One of his +Majesty's maitres d'hotel, wearing his hat, sat as president and did the +honours of the table. The public were admitted, and numbers of people +had the curiosity to go. + +The Garden-du-Corps obtained the King's permission to give the Queen a +dress ball in the great hall of the Opera at Versailles. Her Majesty +opened the ball in a minuet with a private selected by the corps, to whom +the King granted the baton of an exempt. The fete was most splendid. +All then was joy, happiness, and peace. + +The Dauphin was a year old when the Prince de Guemenee's bankruptcy +compelled the Princess, his wife, who was governess to the children of +France, to resign her situation. + +The Queen was at La Muette for the inoculation of her daughter. She sent +for me, and condescended to say she wished to converse with me about a +scheme which delighted her, but in the execution of which she foresaw +some inconveniences. Her plan was to appoint the Duchesse de Polignac to +the office lately held by the Princesse de Guemenee. She saw with +extreme pleasure the facilities which this appointment would give her for +superintending the education of her children, without running any risk of +hurting the pride of the governess; and that it would bring together the +objects of her warmest affections, her children and her friend. "The +friends of the Duchesse de Polignac," continued the Queen, "will be +gratified by the splendour and importance conferred by the employment. +As to the Duchess, I know her; the place by no means suits her simple and +quiet habits, nor the sort of indolence of her disposition. She will +give me the greatest possible proof of her devotion if she yields to my +wish." The Queen also spoke of the Princesse de Chimay and the Duchesse +de Duras, whom the public pointed out as fit for the post; but she +thought the Princesse de Chimay's piety too rigid; and as to the Duchesse +de Duras, her wit and learning quite frightened her. What the Queen +dreaded as the consequence of her selection of the Duchesse de Polignac +was principally the jealousy of the courtiers; but she showed so lively a +desire to see her scheme executed that I had no doubt she would soon set +at naught all the obstacles she discovered. I was not mistaken; a few +days afterwards the Duchess was appointed governess. + +The Queen's object in sending for me was no doubt to furnish me with the +means of explaining the feelings which induced her to prefer a governess +disposed by friendship to suffer her to enjoy all the privileges of a +mother. Her Majesty knew that I saw a great deal of company. + +The Queen frequently dined with the Duchess after having been present at +the King's private dinner. Sixty-one thousand francs were therefore +added to the salary of the governess as a compensation for this increase +of expense. + +The Queen was tired of the excursions to Marly, and had no great +difficulty in setting the King against them. He did not like the expense +of them, for everybody was entertained there gratis. Louis XIV. had +established a kind of parade upon these excursions, differing from that +of Versailles, but still more annoying. Card and supper parties occurred +every day, and required much dress. On Sundays and holidays the +fountains played, the people were admitted into the gardens, and there +was as great a crowd as at the fetes of St. Cloud. + +Every age has its peculiar colouring; Marly showed that of Louis XIV. +even more than Versailles. Everything in the former place appeared to +have been produced by the magic power of a fairy's wand. Not the +slightest trace of all this splendour remains; the revolutionary spoilers +even tore up the pipes which served to supply the fountains. Perhaps a +brief description of this palace and the usages established there by +Louis XIV. may be acceptable. + +The very extensive gardens of Marly ascended almost imperceptibly to the +Pavilion of the Sun., which was occupied only by the King and his family. +The pavilions of the twelve zodiacal signs bounded the two sides of the +lawn. They were connected by bowers impervious to the rays of the sun. +The pavilions nearest to that of the sun were reserved for the Princes of +the blood and the ministers; the rest were occupied by persons holding +superior offices at Court, or invited to stay at Marly. Each pavilion +was named after fresco paintings, which covered its walls, and which had +been executed by the most celebrated artists of the age of Louis XIV. +On a line with the upper pavilion there was on the left a chapel; on the +right a pavilion called La Perspective, which concealed along suite of +offices, containing a hundred lodging-rooms intended for the persons +belonging to the service of the Court, kitchens, and spacious dining- +rooms, in which more than thirty tables were splendidly laid out. + +During half of Louis XV.'s reign the ladies still wore the habit de cour +de Marly, so named by Louis XIV., and which differed little from, that +devised for Versailles. The French gown, gathered in the back, and with +great hoops, replaced this dress, and continued to be worn till the end +of the reign of Louis XVI. The diamonds, feathers, rouge, and +embroidered stuffs spangled with gold, effaced all trace of a rural +residence; but the people loved to see the splendour of their sovereign +and a brilliant Court glittering in the shades of the woods. + +After dinner, and before the hour for cards, the Queen, the Princesses, +and their ladies, paraded among the clumps of trees, in little carriages, +beneath canopies richly embroidered with gold, drawn by men in the King's +livery. The trees planted by Louis XIV. were of prodigious height, +which, however, was surpassed in several of the groups by fountains of +the clearest water; while, among others, cascades over white marble, the +waters of which, met by the sunbeams, looked like draperies of silver +gauze, formed a contrast to the solemn darkness of the groves. + +In the evening nothing more was necessary for any well-dressed man to +procure admission to the Queen's card parties than to be named and +presented, by some officer of the Court, to the gentleman usher of the +card-room. This room, which was very, large, and of octagonal shape, +rose to the top of the Italian roof, and terminated in a cupola furnished +with balconies, in which ladies who had not been presented easily +obtained leave to place themselves, and enjoy, the sight of the brilliant +assemblage. + +Though not of the number of persons belonging to the Court, gentlemen +admitted into this salon might request one of the ladies seated with the +Queen at lansquenet or faro to bet upon her cards with such gold or notes +as they presented to her. Rich people and the gamblers of Paris did not +miss one of the evenings at the Marly salon, and there were always +considerable sums won and lost. Louis XVI. hated high play, and very +often showed displeasure when the loss of large sums was mentioned. The +fashion of wearing a black coat without being in mourning had not then +been introduced, and the King gave a few of his 'coups de boutoir' to +certain chevaliers de St. Louis, dressed in this manner, who came to +venture two or three louis, in the hope that fortune would favour the +handsome duchesses who deigned to place them on their cards. + + [Bachaumont in his "Memoirs," (tome xii., p. 189), which are often + satirical; and always somewhat questionable, speaks of the singular + precautions taken at play at Court. "The bankers at the Queen's + table," says he, "in order to prevent the mistakes [I soften the + harshness of his expression] which daily happen, have obtained + permission from her Majesty that before beginning to play the table + shall be bordered by a ribbon entirely round it, and that no other + money than that upon the cards beyond the ribbon shall be considered + as staked."--NOTE By THE EDITOR.] + +Singular contrasts are often seen amidst the grandeur of courts. In +order to manage such high play at the Queen's faro table, it was +necessary to have a banker provided with large, sums of money; and this +necessity placed at the table, to which none but the highest titled +persons were admitted in general, not only M. de Chalabre, who was its +banker, but also a retired captain of foot, who officiated as his second. +A word, trivial, but perfectly appropriate to express the manner in which +the Court was attended there, was often heard. Gentlemen presented at +Court, who had not been invited to stay at Marly, came there +notwithstanding, as they did to Versailles, and returned again to Paris; +under such circumstances, it was said such a one had been to Marly only +'en polisson';--[A contemptuous expression, meaning literally "as a +scamp" or "rascal"]--and it appeared odd to hear a captivating marquis, +in answer to the inquiry whether he was of the royal party at Marly, say, +"No, I am only here 'en polisson'," meaning simply "I am here on the +footing of all those whose nobility is of a later date than 1400." The +Marly excursions were exceedingly expensive to the King. Besides the +superior tables, those of the almoners, equerries, maitres d'hotel, etc., +were all supplied with such a degree of magnificence as to allow of +inviting strangers to them; and almost all the visitors from Paris were +boarded at the expense of the Court. + +The personal frugality of the unfortunate Prince who sank beneath the +weight of the national debts thus favoured the Queen's predilection for +her Petit Trianon; and for five or six years preceding the Revolution the +Court very seldom visited Marly. + +The King, always attentive to the comfort of his family, gave Mesdames, +his aunts, the use of the Chateau de Bellevue, and afterwards purchased +the Princesse de Guemenee's house, at the entrance to Paris, for +Elisabeth. The Comtesse de Provence bought a small house at Montreuil; +Monsieur already had Brunoy; the Comtesse d'Artois built Bagatelle; +Versailles became, in the estimation of all the royal family, the least +agreeable of residences. They only fancied themselves at home in the +plainest houses, surrounded by English gardens, where they better enjoyed +the beauties of nature. The taste for cascades and statues was entirely +past. + +The Queen occasionally remained a whole month at Petit Trianon, and had +established there all the ways of life in a chateau. She entered the +sitting-room without driving the ladies from their pianoforte or +embroidery. The gentlemen continued their billiards or backgammon +without suffering her presence to interrupt them. There was but little +room in the small Chateau of Trianon. Madame Elisabeth accompanied the +Queen there, but the ladies of honour and ladies of the palace had no +establishment at Trianon. When invited by the Queen, they came from +Versailles to dinner. The King and Princes came regularly to sup. A +white gown, a gauze kerchief, and a straw hat were the uniform dress of +the Princesses. + + [The extreme simplicity of the Queen's toilet began to be strongly + censured, at first among the courtiers, and afterwards throughout + the kingdom; and through one of those inconsistencies more common in + France than elsewhere, while the Queen was blamed, she was blindly + imitated. There was not a woman but would have the same undress, + the same cap, and the same feathers as she had been seen to wear. + They crowded to Mademoiselle Bertin, her milliner; there was an + absolute revolution in the dress of our ladies, which gave + importance to that woman. Long trains, and all those fashions which + confer a certain nobility on dress, were discarded; and at last a + duchess could not be distinguished from an actress. The men caught + the mania; the upper classes had long before given up to their + lackeys feathers, tufts of ribbon, and laced hats. They now got rid + of red heels and embroidery; and walked about our streets in plain + cloth, short thick shoes, and with knotty cudgels in their hands. + Many humiliating scrapes were the consequence of this metamorphosis. + Bearing no mark to distinguish them from the common herd, some of + the lowest classes got into quarrels with them, in which the nobles + had not always the best of it.--MONTJOIE, "History of Marie + Antoinette."] + +Examining all the manufactories of the hamlet, seeing the cows milked, +and fishing in the lake delighted the Queen; and every year she showed +increased aversion to the pompous excursions to Marly. + +The idea of acting comedies, as was then done in almost all country +houses, followed on the Queen's wish to live at Trianon without ceremony. + + [The Queen got through the characters she assumed indifferently + enough; she could hardly be ignorant of this, as her performances + evidently excited little pleasure. Indeed, one day while she was + thus exhibiting, somebody ventured to say, by no means inaudibly, + "well, this is royally ill played!" The lesson was thrown away upon + her, for never did she sacrifice to the opinion of another that + which she thought permissible. When she was told that her extreme + plainness in dress, the nature of her amusements, and her dislike to + that splendour which ought always to attend a Queen, had an + appearance of levity, which was misinterpreted by a portion of the + public, she replied with Madame de Maintenon: "I am upon the stage, + and of course I shall be either hissed or applauded." Louis XIV. + had a similar taste; he danced upon the stage; but he had shown by + brilliant actions that he knew how to enforce respect; and besides, + he unhesitatingly gave up the amusement from the moment he heard + those beautiful lines in which Racine pointed out how very unworthy + of him such pastimes were.--MONTJOIE, "History of Marie + Antoinette."] + +It was agreed that no young man except the Comte d'Artois should be +admitted into the company of performers, and that the audience should +consist only of the King, Monsieur, and the Princesses, who did not play; +but in order to stimulate the actors a little, the first boxes were to be +occupied by the readers, the Queen's ladies, their sisters and daughters, +making altogether about forty persons. + +The Queen laughed heartily at the voice of M. d'Adhemar, formerly a very +fine one, but latterly become rather tremulous. His shepherd's dress in +Colin, in the "Devin du Village," contrasted very ridiculously with his +time of life, and the Queen said it would be difficult for malevolence +itself to find anything to criticise in the choice of such a lover. +The King was highly amused with these plays, and was present at every +performance. Caillot, a celebrated actor, who had long quitted the +stage, and Dazincourt, both of acknowledged good character, were selected +to give lessons, the first in comic opera, of which the easier sorts were +preferred, and the second in comedy. The office of hearer of rehearsals, +prompter, and stage manager was given to my father-in-law. The Duc de +Fronsac, first gentleman of the chamber, was much hurt at this. He +thought himself called upon to make serious remonstrances upon the +subject, and wrote to the Queen, who made him the following answer: "You +cannot be first gentleman when we are the actors. Besides, I have +already intimated to you my determination respecting Trianon. I hold no +court there, I live like a private person, and M. Campan shall be always +employed to execute orders relative to the private fetes I choose to give +there." This not putting a stop to the Duke's remonstrances, the King +was obliged to interfere. The Duke continued obstinate, and insisted +that he was entitled to manage the private amusements as much as those +which were public. It became absolutely necessary to end the argument in +a positive manner. + +The diminutive Duc de Fronsac never failed, when he came to pay his +respects to the Queen at her toilet, to turn the conversation upon +Trianon, in order to make some ironical remarks on my father-in-law, of +whom, from the time of his appointment, he always spoke as "my colleague +Campan." The Queen would shrug her shoulders, and say, when he was gone, +"It is quite shocking to find so little a man in the son of the Marechal +de Richelieu." + +So long as no strangers were admitted to the performances they were but +little censured; but the praise obtained by the performers made them look +for a larger circle of admirers. The company, for a private company, was +good enough, and the acting was applauded to the skies; nevertheless, as +the audience withdrew, adverse criticisms were occasionally heard. The +Queen permitted the officers of the Body Guards and the equerries of the +King and Princes to be present at the plays. Private boxes were provided +for some of the people belonging to the Court; a few more ladies were +invited; and claims arose on all sides for the favour of admission. The +Queen refused to admit the officers of the body guards of the Princes, +the officers of the King's Cent Suisses, and many other persons, who were +highly mortified at the refusal. + +While delight at having given an heir to the throne of the Bourbons, and +a succession of fetes and amusements, filled up the happy days of Marie +Antoinette, the public was engrossed by the Anglo-American war. Two +kings, or rather their ministers, planted and propagated the love of +liberty in the new world; the King of England, by shutting his ears and +his heart against the continued and respectful representations of +subjects at a distance from their native land, who had become numerous, +rich, and powerful, through the resources of the soil they had +fertilised; and the King of France, by giving support to this people in +rebellion against their ancient sovereign. Many young soldiers, +belonging to the first families of the country, followed La Fayette's +example, and forsook luxury, amusement, and love, to go and tender their +aid to the revolted Americans. Beaumarchais, secretly seconded by +Messieurs de Maurepas and de Vergennes, obtained permission to send out +supplies of arms and clothing. Franklin appeared at Court in the dress +of an American agriculturist. His unpowdered hair, his round hat, his +brown cloth coat formed a contrast to the laced and embroidered coats and +the powder and perfume of the courtiers of Versailles. This novelty +turned the light heads of the Frenchwomen. Elegant entertainments were +given to Doctor Franklin, who, to the reputation of a man of science, +added the patriotic virtues which invested him with the character of an +apostle of liberty. I was present at one of these entertainments, when +the most beautiful woman out of three hundred was selected to place a +crown of laurels upon the white head of the American philosopher, and two +kisses upon his cheeks. Even in the palace of Versailles Franklin's +medallion was sold under the King's eyes, in the exhibition of Sevres +porcelain. The legend of this medallion was + + "Eripuit coelo fulmen, sceptrumque tyrannis." + +The King never declared his opinion upon an enthusiasm which his correct +judgment no doubt led him to blame. The Queen spoke out more plainly +about the part France was taking respecting the independence of the +American colonies, and constantly opposed it. Far was she from +foreseeing that a revolution at--such a distance could excite one in +which a misguided populace would drag her from her palace to a death +equally unjust and cruel. She only saw something ungenerous in the +method which France adopted of checking the power of England. + +However, as Queen of France, she enjoyed the sight of a whole people +rendering homage to the prudence, courage, and good qualities of a young +Frenchman; and she shared the enthusiasm inspired by the conduct and +military success of the Marquis de La Fayette. The Queen granted him +several audiences on his first return from America, and, until the 10th +of August, on which day my house was plundered, I preserved some lines +from Gaston and Bayard, in which the friends of M. de La Fayette saw the +exact outline of his character, written by her own hand: + + "Why talk of youth, + When all the ripe experience of the old + Dwells with him? In his schemes profound and cool, + He acts with wise precaution, and reserves + For time of action his impetuous fire. + To guard the camp, to scale the leaguered wall, + Or dare the hottest of the fight, are toils + That suit th' impetuous bearing of his youth; + Yet like the gray-hair'd veteran he can shun + The field of peril. Still before my eyes + I place his bright example, for I love + His lofty courage, and his prudent thought. + Gifted like him, a warrior has no age." + + [During the American war a general officer in the service of the + United States advanced with a score of men under the English + batteries to reconnoitre their position. His aide-de-camp, struck + by a ball, fell at his side. The officers and orderly dragoons fled + precipitately. The general, though under the fire of the cannon, + approached the wounded man to see whether any help could be afforded + him. Finding the wound had been mortal, he slowly rejoined the + group which had got out of the reach of the cannon. This instance + of courage and humanity took place at the battle of Monmouth. + General Clinton, who commanded the English troops, knew that the + Marquis de La Fayette generally rode a white horse; it was upon a + white horse that the general officer who retired so slowly was + mounted; Clinton desired the gunners not to fire. This noble + forbearance probably saved M. de La Fayette's life, for he it was. + At that time he was but twenty-two years of age.--"Historical + Anecdotes of the Reign of Louis XVI."] + +These lines had been applauded and encored at the French theatre; +everybody's head was turned. There was no class of persons that did not +heartily approve of the support given openly by the French Government to +the cause of American independence. The constitution planned for the new +nation was digested at Paris, and while liberty, equality, and the rights +of man were commented upon by the Condorcets, Baillys, Mirabeaus, etc., +the minister Segur published the King's edict, which, by repealing that +of 1st November, 1750, declared all officers not noble by four +generations incapable of filling the rank of captain, and denied all +military rank to the roturiers, excepting sons of the chevaliers de St. +Louis. + + ["M. de Segur," says Chamfort, "having published an ordinance which + prohibited the admission of any other than gentlemen into the + artillery corps, and, on the other hand, none but well-educated + persons being proper for admission, a curious scene took place: the + Abbe Bossat, examiner of the pupils, gave certificates only to + plebeians, while Cherin gave them only to gentlemen. Out of one + hundred pupils, there were not above four or five who were qualified + in both respects."] + +The injustice and absurdity of this law was no doubt a secondary cause of +the Revolution. To understand the despair and rage with which this law +inspired the Tiers Etat one should have belonged to that honourable +class. The provinces were full of roturier families, who for ages had +lived as people of property upon their own domains, and paid the taxes. +If these persons had several sons, they would place one in the King's +service, one in the Church, another in the Order of Malta as a chevalier +servant d'armes, and one in the magistracy; while the eldest preserved +the paternal manor, and if he were situated in a country celebrated for +wine, he would, besides selling his own produce, add a kind of commission +trade in the wines of the canton. I have seen an individual of this +justly respected class, who had been long employed in diplomatic +business, and even honoured with the title of minister plenipotentiary, +the son-in-law and nephew of colonels and town mayors, and, on his +mother's side, nephew of a lieutenant-general with a cordon rouge, unable +to introduce his sons as sous-lieutenants into a regiment of foot. + +Another decision of the Court, which could not be announced by an edict, +was that all ecclesiastical benefices, from the humblest priory up to the +richest abbey, should in future be appanages of the nobility. Being the +son of a village surgeon, the Abbe de Vermond, who had great influence in +the disposition of benefices, was particularly struck with the justice of +this decree. + +During the absence of the Abbe in an excursion he made for his health, I +prevailed on the Queen to write a postscript to the petition of a cure, +one of my friends, who was soliciting a priory near his curacy, with the +intention of retiring to it. I obtained it for him. On the Abbe's +return he told me very harshly that I should act in a manner quite +contrary to the King's wishes if I again obtained such a favour; that the +wealth of the Church was for the future to be invariably devoted to the +support of the poorer nobility; that it was the interest of the State +that it should be so; and a plebeian priest, happy in a good curacy, had +only to remain curate. + +Can we be astonished at the part shortly afterwards taken by the deputies +of the Third Estate, when called to the States General? + + + + +ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS: + +Elegant entertainments were given to Doctor Franklin +Fashion of wearing a black coat without being in mourning +Favourite of a queen is not, in France, a happy one +History of the man with the iron mask +Of course I shall be either hissed or applauded. +She often carried her economy to a degree of parsimony +Shocking to find so little a man in the son of the Marechal +Simplicity of the Queen's toilet began to be strongly censured +The charge of extravagance +The three ministers, more ambitious than amorous +Well, this is royally ill played! +While the Queen was blamed, she was blindly imitated + + + + +End of this Project Gutenberg Etext of The Memoirs of Marie Antoinette, v3 +by Madame Campan + diff --git a/old/cm49b10.zip b/old/cm49b10.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..807afe8 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/cm49b10.zip |
