Duchsss of Portsmouth ntk Court of Charles II. li THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES GIFT OF COMMODORE BYRON MCCANDLESS / c {^ A vr LOUISE DE KEROUALLE, gucbcss of povtsmoutlj, 1649-1734 OR, HOW THE DUKE OF RICHMOND GAINED HIS PENSION. COMPILED FROM STATE PAPERS PRESERVED IM THE ARCHIVES OF THE FRENCH FOREIGN OFFICE BY H FORNERON. Mitf) ^artrnits, JFacstmile ILetter, etc., anti a PREFACE BY MRS. G. M. CRAWFORD, SECOND EDITION. LONDON : SWAN SONNENSCHEIN, LOWREY & CO., PATERNOSTER SQUARE. 18S7. Butler &■ Tattiier, 7he SelTvood Printing U^orks, Frome, and Loftdon. DEDICATION. This translation of the true story of the origin of pension of the ducal family of Richmond, is respectfully dedicated to the ladies of the Primrose League, who will see in it the beauty of their theory of Crown and Constitution, when consistendy applied. It is also dedicated to Mr. Henry Labouchere, who has shown such fine trust in common sense, in his war aeainst time-honoured abuses — arrorant oiants that ought to be slain, and the tyranny of follies which put on the mask of " ancestral wisdom." The Translator owes the idea of translating this truthful (no pun meant) little book, to a question vainly put by Mr. La- bouchere in the House of Commons, and •' a 3 iv DEDICATION. hopes that a perusal of Louise de Keroualle's progress at Whitehall may embolden him to again ask why the Duke of Richmond is a great pensioner of England. PREFACE BY MRS. G. M. CRAWFORD. »t9n< On the stormy 3rd of September, 1658, the soul of that master man Cromwell, which had so often undergone gloomy eclipses, lay in deep darkness. The throes of death were on the Protector, and black presentiments took hold of his mind. One of the causes of his anouish was leavinor behind him an unfin- ished work. This, to a man of his genius and disposition, was like leaving in hard times an infant child to buffet alone with the troubles of life. Limp and gritless, Richard Cromwell was no meet guardian for such a ward as the young Commonwealth of England ; and which of the Major- Generals could better assume the office ? In the broken phrases the Protector uttered, he showed a foreboding of the deca- dence into which his nation was to fall, and of the moral crisis through which, like a drunken Bacchante, she was to reel and stagger with vi PREFACE BY MRS, G. M. CRAWFORD. a merry monarch at her head, and a crew of greedy and sensual nobles — arrant knaves and rascals for the most part — at his heels. Cromwell, it being no use to take thought for the morrow and the days after, did what it was best under the circumstances to do. He ended by leaving the whole matter for his dis- quietude to God. Oppressed with the feeling that he was a " miserable worm " and " a poor, foolish creature," he took his stand on the Covenant of Grace, and in his quaint Puritan speech, supplicated on behalf of the people he had led, for higher guidance. He was an affectionate kinsman, and his heart habitually went out to his children. But on that stormy September day, which brought back memories of his greatest victories, and placed him face to face with death, he was so absorbed in patriotic anxiousness that, said one who v/atched beside him, " He forgot to entreat God for his own family." " However, Lord," cried the dying hero, "Thou do dispose of me, do good for Thy people. Give them consistency of judgment, and go to deliver them with the work of refor- mation." PREFACE BY MRS. G. M. CRAWFORD. vii "With the work of reformation!" Think of that, all honest Britons, whether Tory or Primrose Leaofuer, for this book is not intended to point a moral for the teaching of the dis- honest, they being unteachable. If God's mill grinds fine, the grinding pro- cess Is — when men and women do not keep up a good supply of grist — so slow as to be im- perceptible, unless we look to the work it does in the lonof course of orenerations. Cromwell's prayer was answered, but in a way that neither he himself nor those around him could have looked forward to. The tale this volume fur- nishes, of a French harlot's progress at White- hall, and of the solid anchorage (^19,000 a year for ever!) which a supine nation allowed to her offspring, would not on the first blush seem to justify this view. What would any old Ironside have thought of the power of a good man's prayer, were Harvey, at the time of the Rye- House Plot convictions and executions, to have told him what he overheard Cromwell utter when the shadow of death was upon him ? It would not have occurred to him that the slow grinding niill was grinding at all. Nor was it, in a general way in England, where the viii PREFACE BY MRS. G. M. CRAWFORD. supply of grist was too miserably stinted for the millstones not to grind each other out, if they did long and strong spells of work. Here and there, there was a soul in touch with Heaven. But persecution was the lot of such. One of them, the tinker Bunyan, escaped from a jail-bird's noisome sufferings by a flight into Dreamland. He dreamed day-dreams, in which the vulgar facts of life — the heart-wringings that sprang from inability to protect his dear blind little child — the slips, the falls, and the hindrances to moral growth, were transmuted into the circumstances of an epic poem. We find in his Dream counterparts of Louise de Keroualle and her Court of Whitehall rivals, in Madam Bubble, Mrs. Lechery, Mrs. Bats- eyes, and Mrs. Filth. Fashion travelled slowly in those times — but it travelled. The titled demi-reps who formed the cortdge of the Merry Monarch had, we may rest assured, their copy- ists in the low-lying social strata which the tinker was only able to observe. Among the phenomena of nervous diseases there are none more curious than susceptibility to " suggestion " and anesthesia or transfer of vital force from one member of the body to another. PREFACE BY MRS. G. M. CRAWFORD. ix In the one case a human being- can be directed by the expressed — or, what is more noteworthy, the verbally iinuttered— will of a strong-minded person in full health. Hypnotic patients of Doctor Charcot have afforded instances of this strange susceptibility. In the lives of nations we often see collective maladies similar to those which trouble individuals. England, after Cromwell's death, was like a machine going at full speed, when it loses the fly-wheel. She fell into a state of nervous unbalancement and then moral inertia. There were times when, acting under — as it is shown by the author of " Louise de Keroualle," — the " suofsrestions " of a French faction, secretly organized in London to work her ruin, she was as one demented. This faction, was managed dexterously by French ambassadors, and through Louise de Keroualle it held the Crown. Indeed, all the disposing and directing powers of the nation were exer- cised according^ to orders or suQraestions from Versailles. England had no more volition of her own than an hypnotic patient of Doctor Charcot. Her condition was closely watched and reported on by the agents of Louis to that monarch, and worked upon for the furtherance of a great X PREFACE BY MRS. G. M. CRAWFORD. political scheme, which was a feasible one. This plan of policy broke down chiefly because the legitimate offspring of the Grand Monarch had all bad constitutions, and died early. In con- sequence, the French crown passed, at the begin- ning of the eighteenth century, to a child of no natural political ability and of vicious instincts, who was placed under the tutelage of a volup- tuary. England had under Charles become so deranged in mind as to justify a French diplo- matist writing to his King that if a thing was irrational and absurd, it was the more certain for that reason to succeed among the English. Yet there was no lack of cleverness, and fine talents cropped up in literature and science. But these various gifts and capacities did not make for the general weal. The aristocracy were profligate and knavish, and, according to their degree, their leading men as much the pensioners of Louis as their monarch. In their orgies, they kept their eyes Vv^ell fixed on the main chances of their class. Their wits were success- fully employed in throwing off the military burdens with which their broad estates were charged, and shiftincj them to the shoulders of mercantile lacklands. So far as the middle and PREFACE BY MRS. G. M. CRAWFORD. xi lower middle class went, there was a clear case of anesthesia, as shown in the transfer of re- forming power and self-governing will to New England. When Louise de Keroualle was above the crowned Oueen at Whitehall, that New Enij- land territory was the sparsely colonized fringe of the wildest and biggest wilderness in the world. Its colonists were "the people," to whom by early associations and Puritan breed- ing Cromwell belonged and gave his last thouo-hts. God's mill was then orlndino- fast and fine among them, because the supply of grist was plentiful. But New England was out of the sio^ht and mind of old England, which was supine and inert, when she was not either carousing, attacked with nervous convulsions, or a prey to wild panics, got up by ao-ents of the Prince of Oranore and limbs of the French faction. These scares are known to us as the Papist and the Rye- House Plots. Hitherto their causes have remained in semi- obscurity. In " Louise de Keroualle " they are brought into a light, full and clear to fierceness. It has been a subject of anxiety to the translator, whether he should tone down what xii PREFACE BY MRS. C. M. CRAWFORD. might appear to many well-meaning persons the too crisp scandals of the Court of White- hall, which fill so large a place in the letters of French ambassadors to their king and his secretary for foreign affairs. Happily he has been induced not to Bowdlerize. This book is for the information of men and women who like to see the facts of history divested of con- ventional forms, and allowed to speak for them- selves, in their own way. So the letter and the spirit are adhered to of the documents to which we owe this new vista on the wildly dissipated court of Charles II. Nothing is watered; nor would morality be served by a watering process. There are great lessons to be deduced from the piquant gossip in which this volume abounds. They would miss their mark were the trans- lator to have toned them down. M. Forneron's book came out in Paris a few years ago, when the Duke of Richmond was in the enjoyment of an hereditary annuity of ;^ 19,000 a year. The last edition of the Financial Refoj'nt Abnanac states that his pension has been commuted by a sum of nearly half a million sterling. It is to be supposed that this arrangement was hastened forward and quietly PREFACE BY MRS. G. M. CRAWFORD. xiii got through because the pubHcation of " Louise de Keroualle " was expected in England, and a foretaste of it given in the House of Commons in a question put by Mr. Labouchere. Nobody who has any share in bringing this book before the English pubHc harbours any sort of grudge against the ducal family of Richmond. At the same time, it is hard to conceive anything more monstrous than the commutation of the pension originally granted to Louise de Keroualle, Its enormity must come home to all who read in this volume the story of her aims and efforts. We have to go back three thousand years, to the Valley of Sorek, to find a wanton who was a match for her in cold- blooded astuteness. There is a good deal to be forgiven to a Magdalen who loves much, even though she has loved often. But the woman who plans betrayal while bewitching with her caresses, deserves outlawry. This was what Louise de Keroualle did. However, there was a sound spot in her. Though gorged with English money (and indeed Irish money too), and always expectant of, and hungering for more, her allegiance to her own king was never shaken. She was born, xiv PREFACE BY MRS. G. M. CRAWFORD. lived, and died a Frenchwoman. Under all circumstances, and in every case, she was a leal and intelligent agent of Louis the Four- teenth in London ; and she won every wage he paid her, by consciously trying to bring England into subjection to France. She all but succeeded. Unfortunately for her and the King of France, the means they took de- feated their object. Charles's vices being over- stimulated and overdone, he died before his time, and then a new chapter of history was opened. Had he lived a few years more, the work of reformation on which Cromwell set his heart, and which after his time went on so well across the Atlantic, must have been nipped in the bud. It is in general idle to speculate upon " what might have been." But it is easy to say what, under given circumstances, could not have been. Thus, if Louise de Keroualle had remained effective queen at Whitehall for a few years more, that Greater Britain, wherein the Irish Celt has full play for his tumultuous activities and the Anglo-Saxon all the personal liberty he wants, must have fallen into the limbo of the could- not-have-beens. It was a part of the French scheme to edge PREFACE BY MRS. G. M. CRAWFORD. xv Enorland out of North America. Sceinof that France held Canada and the Mississippi Valley, was herself a great naval power, the greatest existing military power, and had her hand on Holland, the design was essentially practicable. Its success must have relegated the Boston Harbour tea fi^ht to the could-not-have-beens ; and we know that out of that event arose, not only a fresh order of things in the New World, but in the Old World too. It was the people with whom Cromwell was in his last hour in heart and thought, who settled around Boston Harbour. The changes to which the tea fray led in Europe brought about the suppression — and without commutation ! — of the ducal hef of Aubigny in France, which was granted to Louise de Keroualle and her heirs, for her secret ser- vices in England.' But the perpetual wages which the Merry Monarch granted her out of ^ I am told, but have as yet been unable to obtain documentary evidence, that the late Duke, in the reign of Charles X., put in, as disestablished lord of Aubigny, a claim for a slice of the ;^ 10,000,000 "sterling indemnity voted to the emigres of the French aristocracy by " la Chambre in- trouvable." xvi PREFACE BY MRS. G. M. CRAWFORD his lackland subjects' pockets, for the means she took to render these services to her own king, continue to gild the ducal coronet of Richmond. I wish it were otherwise, for the sake of the readers who like to see, in novels and at the close of the play, vice well whipped and vir- tue triumphaijt. But history evolves itself in- dependently of our likings or dislikings ; and all that historians should do is to record, to seek for missing links, to connect them, when found, with the rest of the chain, and to leave their narrative to point its own moral. CONTENTS. — ►I8«*« CHAPTER I. ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. Indebtedness of France to Louise de Keroualle. — French ingratitude for services rendered by her at the Court of Whitehall. — Pedigree of Louise. — Her early life. — Adventures at the French court. — Libels and lampoons. — Ambitious policy of Louis the Fourteenth. — England the main ob- stacle to its accomplishment. — Charles H. his disposition and vices. — Henrietta Maria, her intrigues and secret marriage. — Catherine of Braganza, her ugliness and incapacity to become a useful tool of France. — Her bridal humiliations. — Her displeasure at Lady Castlemaine's supre- macy at Whitehall. — The beautiful Lady Castle- maine. — Her truculence and triumph over the Queen. — Presents sent her by the King of France. — Inconstancy of Charles II. — The lovely and vacuous Miss Stuart. — Nelly Gwynn, her thea- trical career, jests, and frolics. — Arlington and Buckingham, their foreign intrigues. — Sir Sam- uel Morland, his life and adventures. — French noblemen at Whitehall. — French diplomatists, diplomatic wires and wire pullers. — Manoeuvres to hold Charles. — The Italian astrologer, his erroneous forecasts of the Newmarket races and his recall to France sviii CONTENTS. CHAPTER II. MADAME HENRIETTE. PAGE Buckingham's suspicions of Henriette, Duchess of Orleans and Princess of England. — Influence of the Duchess with Charles II. — Her intervention in the French intrigues at Whitehall advised by Colbert. — The Countess of Shrewsbury's relations with Buckingham and complicity in Killegrew's murder. — Charles's greed for French gold. — He proposes a secret league to Louis XIV. — Its un- English purport. — Holland to be sacrificed. — Hitch on the French side about Hamburg. — Hen- rietta's dexterity. — Her visit to England decided upon. — Choice by her of Louise de Keroualle to attend her there. — Meeting of Charles and Hen- riette. — Betrayal of England by her King. — Louis, at Dunkirk, watches the progress of negocia- tions at Dover. — Henriette returns to France. — Her sudden death, and suspicion that she was poisoned. — Louise de Keroualle sent to London to console and manage Charles. — His susceptibility to her charms. — Lady Castlemaine's jealousy. — The Royal bastards. — Louise's adroitness. — Public suspicions of her and the Cabal. — Her close game and aft'ected coyness. . . 47 CHAPTER in. ACCESSION OF LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. Louise pursues her close game. — She remains coy. — Uneasiness thereat of the French Embassy. — Fury of the Duchess of Cleveland. — The King's CONTENTS. xix PAGB fancy for Louise. — Her soft graces and refine- ment. — Lady Arlington's plot to break down her supposed scruples. — Euston Hall. — The King goes to Euston from Newmarket. — Louise fetched to meet him. — Mock marriage of Charles and the French beauty at Euston Hall. — France, through her ambassador, congratulates the pseudo bride, and turns her new position to diplomatic account. — Charles declares war on Holland. — Louis con- quers Flanders. — Attempts to make Charles declare himself a Catholic. — The Duke of York. — Intrigues to bring him to propose for the Duchess of Guise 64 CHAPTER IV. THE RIVALS. The Dangers which beset Louise. — The Queen's bad health. — The French favourite aims at the Crown. — Catherine's Doctors and their prognos- tics. — A Royal divorce mooted. — The King's new amours. — Their cost to the nation. — The Duchess of Cleveland's four sons. — The three rival beauties. — English taste for boisterous fun. — The Queen's jollifications. — Her Majesty's adventure at Saffron Walden fair. — Actresses under Charles II. — Mary Davies. — Louise holding ground against Court and people. — Her tact, — Refuses to urge the Conversion of Charles. — Her match-making scheme for the Duke of York. — His uxorious- ness. — He stands out for a pretty wife. — A princess of Wurtemburg offered. — Louise gets her set aside. — The Duke of York marries Mary Beatrice of Este. — Louise enters the XX CONTENTS. PAGE peerage as Baroness of Peterfield, Countess of Farnham, Duchess of Pendennis, and Duchess of Portsmouth. She aspires to a French Duchy. — Obstacles to her ambition. — Charles II. solicits for her the Ducal fief of Aubigny which she desires. — Its Royal Stuart associations. — French nobles at Whitehall. — Duras created Earl of Feversham. — The Frenchmen of Buckingham's set. — Saint Evremond. — The Marquis de Sessac. — His gambling gains. — Buckingham a secret service agent of France. — His plan to buy M.P.'s for Louis. — De Ruvigny's mission, his honour- able life. — His Protestantism and relationship to the Russells. — His secret mission to London. — Is instructed to purchase King and Parliament. — France stretches her Frontiers. — Louis feels England slipping from him. — Alarm given to France by the Comte D'Estrades. — Tide of public hatred turning against Roman Catholicism and France. — Charles is given a bribe of eight millions of francs. — Buckingham curries popular favour, reforms his life and goes to church. — Peace with Holland . . . . . » 79 CHAPTER V. THE DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH'S FIRST CHECK. Plain Speech the rule at the polished Court of Ver- sailles. — Prudish niceness unknown there. — The sins of Charles and Louise find them out. — Ruvigny's letters about Charles. — Louise seeks a cure at Tunbridge Wells. — Derision of the Marchioness of Worcester. — The Household CONTENTS. XXI J'AfiE guard escorts Louise from the Wells to Windsor. — The King's doctor treats her. — Henriette her sister comes to England and marries Lord Pem- broke. — Louise still solicits a French Duchy. — Nell Gwynn derides her for her oft vaunted high connections. — Versailles finds matter for amuse- ment in her progress at Whitehall. — Madame de Sdvigne's jests. — Her sketch of Nell Gwynn. — Queen Catherine's card table. — Hierarchy of the King's Seraglio. — Louise's son created Duke of Richmond. — Maternal tricks to secure him pre- cedence over the King's other progeny. — Their success. — The Dukes of Grafton and St. Albans. — A Scotch Countess named governess to Louise's son. — Pensions and emoluments granted to the Duchesses of the Seraglio and to their heirs. — The fair favourites fleece the exchequer. — The French favourite's passion for gaming. — Her sumptuous lodgings a cause of envy. — The con- tempt in which the English held her. — Advent of the Duchess INIazarin ..... 107 CHAPTER VL THE DUCHESS MAZARIN. Close of a great era. — The Congress of Nimeguen. — Danby gained for Louis by Louise. — French subsidy of two millions of francs for Charles. — Parliament prorogued for fifteen months. — Charles's old passion for the Duchess Mazarin revived. — Her story, domestic misery, fanatical husband, imprisonments in convents, flight to Italy, subsequent adventures and Roman style of XX ii CONTENTS. beauty. — Triumphant reception at Whitehall. — She is welcomed by English rivals of Louise. — Struggle between the three Duchesses. — The Duchess of Cleveland retires to France. — Louise's new cares. — Her jealousy and altered looks. — Pecuniary troubles. — The Duchess of York's friendship for the Duchess Mazarin. — Monetary straits of the latter. — De Ruvigny unable to manage Charles and the Seraglio. — He is super- seded by Courlin .123 CHAPTER Vn. COURTIN. Courtin's career. — His honourable name. — His rela- tions in London with the Duchess Mazarin. — Asks her husband to increase her allowance, and advises Louis XIV. to make him do so. — Liaison of the Duchess with the Abbe St. Real.— The Duchess of Portsmouth tries the Bath waters, and halts at Windsor on her way back to London. — Her dinner to the Comte and Com- tesse de Ruvigny, and dejected manner. — Lou- vois. — Laughter at her lachrymosity. — Courtin hides her decline in Royal favour from the other ambassadors. — He advises her to conceal mortifi- cation. — Passes his evenings at the Duchess Mazarin's. — The Countess of Sussex. — Beauteous and well-bred Mrs. Middleton. — A moonlight walk in St. James's Park. — A fete given to the Court belles at the French Embassy. — Card parties at Madame Mazarin's. — Her library, bright wit, companions, and care to preserve CONTE/VrS. xxiii FAGB appearances. — Courtin on Englishwomen's feet, and their smart shoes, stockings, and garters. — His gossip about Charles II. and his Court. — The romping games of Lady Sussex and the Duchess Mazarin. — John Churchill. — Louis the Fourteenth declines to give him a regiment. — His attachment to Miss Jennings, and refusal to marry an ugly heiress. — Is discredited in France for having plundered the Duchess of Cleveland. — Further decline of the Duchess of Portsmouth's influence. — Suppers at Nell Gwynn's. — Charles's nocturnal visits to the Duchess Mazarin. — His day visits to the Duchess of Portsmouth. — Haste of Louis XIV. to work whatever power remains to Louise. — He forces the Prince of Orange to raise the siege of Maestricht. — Sullen hatred of the English people to France. — Charles's auto- graph receipts for French bribes. — The opposi- tion in the Commons. — Courtin told to ascertain what members are purchasable. — Importuned for bribes by Lord Berkshire. — Knavery of that nobleman. — English lords and commoners will- ing to pocket French money, but afraid to keep to their bargains with France. — The Duke and Duchess of Lauderdale. — The canny prudence of the Duchess, and her fear of compromising her husband. — Presents of French wines to in- corruptible Englishmen. — Their liking for cham- pagne. — A dinner at the Duchess of Ports- mouth's. — Courtin patches up a peace between the ladies of the Seraglio. — Lady Hervey and Nell Gwynn at the Duchess of Mazarin's. — Nell bids for the post of agent to King Louis. — She xxiv CONTENTS. shows her petticoats to the company. — Lady Hervey's mental gifts and vices. — Parallel be- tween the belles of Versailles and the beauties of Whitehall. — The Duchess of IMazarin's style of livin?. — Chiffinch. — War between Parliament and Palace. — Union of all the ladies deemed neces- sary by the French party. — Outcry against the French intrigues at Court. — Louis takes Valen- ciennes, St. Omer, and Cambray. — French bribes paid to Charles in 1677. — Welsh flannel worn by the King. — The Duchess of Portsmouth regains her looks at Bath. — Lord Ibrickan. — Courtin retires from diplomacy. — Barrillon succeeds him. 139 CHAPTER VIII. BARRILLON. Barrillon's qualifications for his mission to London. — His professional unscrupulousness. — His friend- ship with IMadame de Sevigne. — He enters into close relations with corrupt English politicians. — Meets with a check. — The Prince of Orange visits London. — He wins the Princess Mary. — Their marriage. — National joy. — Dangerous ill- ness of the Duchess of Portsmouth. — Her struggles with new rivals. — Disgrace of the Duchess of Cleveland. — The King's passion abates for the Duchess Mazarin. — Louise regains influence. — The Marquise de Courcelles. — Her set on Charles. — Her adventures. — Romping games at the Duchess of York's. — Cabal there against the Duchess of Portsmouth. — The Duke of York's duplicity. — Louise plays into Barrillon's CONTENTS. XXV hand. — She persuades Charles that he is devoted to him. — Her courtiers. — Sunderland. — The Countess of Sunderland's animosity to the French jade. — Louise as an Exchequer horse-leech. — Her traffic in Royal pardons. — Her profits in the sale of convicts to West India planters. — A London mercer's bill for finery supplied her. — Male attire the fashion for ladies. — The lump sums and annuities paid to the King's concubines, and to purveyors to his Seraglio. — Barrillon's account books. — The political men in his pay. — Austere Puritans corrupted. — Sir John Baber, Poole, Littleton. — Fifteen thousand guineas for Mon- tagu. — His sudden pretended change of front. — Denounces Danby as having, when talking loudest against France, been its agent. — Double games of Montagu, Danby, and Barrillon. — Barrillon's mission to keep England divided. — Danby deserts France. — He concludes a treaty with Holland and makes up the breach between King and Commons. — Energetic campaign of Louis in Flanders. — Ghent, Ypres, and Mons fall into his hands. — Holland crippled. — Anti- Catholic frenzy of England. — Shaftesbury profits by the fury of the nation, to ruin Danby and humiliate Charles. — The Popish Plot. — Cole- man's knavery and trial. — Gates' perjuries. — Terror of Charles and his ladies. — The Duchess of Portsmouth wants to retire to France. — The Duke of York leaves England. — Strafford tried and executed. — Shaftesbury's preponderance. — He discards the Prince of Grange to set up Monmouth as heir to the Crown. — The King's xxvi CONTENTS. embarrassment. — He sends for Barrillon, ex- presses fear of a republic, and conjures Louis to make England dependent on him, — Mon- mouth's fabulous maternal pedigree. — English taste for romantic improbability. — Louis stops the subsidies to Charles. — No serious services, no more money. — Louis advances 500,000 francs to prevent Parliament meeting. — The Duchess of Portsmouth pleads at the French Embassy for Charles to be kept supplied. — His secret meetings with Barrillon revealed by Lady Sunderland. — Louise's dexterity. — She courts Monmouth, and is lampooned. — Charles attacked with fever. — Political effects of his illness. — Monmouth sent from London. — France secretly stirs up a quarrel between Charles and the Country Party. — Mon- mouth comes back, — His intimacy with Nell Gvvynn. — Nell sets up to head the Protestant party. — Parliament demands the banishment of Louise de Keroualle. — Her trial and execution agitated for, — Parliament prorogued . . .193 CHAPTER IX. SUNDERLAND AND SHAFTESBURY. English hatred to France grows hotter, — It threatens the Duchess of Portsmouth. — The King finds a new and noble mistress, — Politic game of the Duchess. — She tries to keep friends and avoid exasperating foes. — Allies herself with Sunder- land. — They play Monmouth against the Prince of Orange and the Duke of York. — Louise de- clares for the Prince of Orange. — The seeming CONTENTS. xxvii sincerity of this declaration ruffles Barrillon. — He ceases to deem her services important. — Her further campaign of corruption. — Lady Hervey's rapacity. — French bribes for Nonconformist ministers. — Lords and members of the House of Commons proposed for bribery by Barrillon. — Barrillon's political indifference. — His plan of setting all English parties by the ears. — His relations with Sidney. — His relations with Presby- terians and popular preachers. — Nell Gwynn's eldest son dies. — The Duchess of Portsmouth rears the daughter of Mary Davis. — The Duchess suffers the King to show attention to the Queen, — Parliament meets.— Bill to exclude, the Duke of York. — Barrillon's secret efforts against the Prince of Orange. — Montagu, Herbert, Sidney, Hampden, Baber, and Lady Hen-ey, usefuUest allies of Barrillon. — France finds it cheaper to bribe the Opposition than the King. — Louise de Keroualle urges Charles to prorogue indefinitely. — Her ignorance of Barrillon's relations with Republicans and Nonconformists. — Her astonish- ment at being thwarted by Barrillon. — He prefers bribery to intrigue.— Her consummate address. — She makes for the Duke of York's friendship. — She gets a percentage on Irish taxes. — Webs of intrigue woven round Charles. — His utter sub- jection to Louis. — Parliament indefinitely pro- rogued. — Louise recovers mental serenity. — Her portrait by Gascar. — Count Kcenigsmarck prose- cuted for murder. — Louis intervenes to stop prosecution. — The Kcenigsmarck scandal. — The heiress of the Earl of Northumberland. — The xxviii CONTENTS, PAGE girl-wife and widow of Lord Ogle. — Her abduc- tion and marriage with Thynne. — Thynne's assassination. — Her third marriage at fifteen with the Duke of Somerset. — Apparent accomplish- ment of Louis the Fourteenth's scheme. — Louise de Keroualle becomes the direct link between him and Charles. — She keeps England in subjec- tion to France. — She longs to revisit Versailles . 234 CHAPTER X. RETURN TO FRANCE. Charles goes to Newmarket and Louise visits France. — She draws her pension in advance. — The letters of recommendation that she takes to Louis XIV. — By his command she is received as a sovereign. — Her visit to the Capucines in the Rue St. Honore. — The Duke of York's French investments. — The Duchess of Ports- mouth triumphs in France. — Her success there dazzles the English. — She returns to London. — Her undisputed power there. — She takes offence at the Dutch minister. — He humbles himself before her. — The Queen deferential towards her. — The Duchess Mazarin accepts Louise de Keroualle's supremacy.— Gallants and courtiers of the Duchess Mazarin. — Her nephew, Prince Eugene, of Savoy. — She captivates him. — Her daughters. — One of them elopes from a convent. The fugitive's adventures and marriage. — The gloom and sadness of the Duchess Mazarin. — She kills care in drink and gambling. — Her antique vices. — How she lived at Newmarket. — Her court of ladies ...... 253 CONTENTS. xxix PAGE CHAPTER XL END OF THE REIGN. Louise de Keroualle's love affair with the Grand Prior of France. — Love makes her imprudent. — Charles takes umbrage, but puts up with his rival. — Louise receives fresh tokens of regard from Louis. — Charles jealous but unnerved. — Bar- rillon comes to his aid. — The Grand Prior has to leave England. — Louise fears her new lover's indiscreet tongue. — Louis orders him to keep silence. — The Grand Prior recalled to Versailles. — Charles's French annuity of ;^6o,ooo. — Rochester and Louise alone know of it. — They both direct the whole Royal family. — Louise is consulted about the proposed match of Princess Anne and Prince George of Demark. — She sends her miniature to the King of Denmark. — She receives ambassadors in state. — She settles inter- national broils. — She represents France at the marriage of the Princess Anne. — Indignation of the old Ironsides. — Charles in their eyes " the Man of Sin." — Marks of God's displeasure at his profligacy. — The Rye House Plot. — Executions of Sidney and Lord Grey. — Charles pities Lord Grey's children. — Louise hardens his heart against them. — She obtains their father's confis- cated estate for herself and Rochester. — Sub- jection to her of Rochester and Godolphin. — Barrillon chafes at her yoke. — Louis goes on supporting her. — Charles's distress. — He grants her fresh privileges. — Her French Duchy to revert to her son. — Her scandalous luxury. — XXX CONTENTS. Her sumptuous rooms at Whitehall. — A sugges- tive haberdasher's bill. — The spoils Louise's sister took to France. — Voluptuousness of the Court. — The Breton favourite is the Government of England. — Louis on the point of complete success. — The death of Charles IL — Confusion of the courtiers. — Louise alone shows presence of mind. — She comes out as a good Catholic. — James IL promises her his friendship. — His base motives. — The young Duke of Richmond ceases to be Grand Equerry. — Louise aims at securing ^^i 9,000 a year. — James grants her ;^3,ooo a year. — ;^2,ooo a year granted to the Duke of Richmond. — Louise claims ^30,000 a year out of the Irish taxes, — She misses this mark. — What she can take to France. — James visits her. — She leaves England .... 264 CHAPTER XIL IN RETIREMENT. Those whom the Duchess of Portsmouth survived. — Her sister's private marriage. — The Duke of Richmond. — He openly enters the Catholic Church. — His subsequent relapse into Protes- tantism. — His debauchery. — Louise visits Eng- land. — Courtin prevents Louis XIV. from exiling her. — Her obligatory relations with England. — Her niece marries Judge Jeffrey's son. — Louise is suspected in France of being a spy of England. She and her son pay court to AVilliam III — Her English annuity suspended. — Her furniture destroyed in the fire at Whitehall. — The Duke CONTENTS. vxxi PACE of Richmond becomes an Orangist. — He cuts his French connections. — Louis transfers his pen- sion to Louise. — Her portraits. — Her pecuniary troubles. — Her creditors. — French orders of Council to stay their executions, — Louise's appe- tite for French public money. — Her claims on the French Crown. — Impoverishment of the French Exchequer. — Louise's begging petitions to the Regent. — Their success. — Death of Louise's sister and son. — Louise devotes herself to piety and charity. — Her death and burial. — Her ne- glected tomb. — Her French duchy and chateau. — Her descendants. — England pays for the services rendered to ungrateful France . . 292 Letters of the Duchess of Portsmouth . . . 309 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. CHAPTER I. ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. Louise de Keroualle was the pretty Breton who became, at the court of Charles II., the pivot on which the ambitious and wide-reaching pohcy of Louis XIV. turned. To her, more than to any statesman, France is indebted for French Flanders, the Franche Comt6, her twice secular possession of Alsace, her old ownership of the valley of the Mississippi and Canada, and her lately revived claim on Madagascar. One owes the sacrifice of everything save honour to one's country; but Louise abandoned fair fame, and — although her posterity still fatten on her ill-gotten gains at the expense of the country on which she saddled them — her memory rots in England. Englishmen go on paying the B LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. tribute she extracted from them, without look- ing into its origin. But can they ever pardon her for having during fifteen years held Great Britain in her delicate little hand, and manipu- lated its king and statesmen as dexterously as she might have done her fan ? She made that country a tool of Louis XIV. 's policy, and en- abled him, by the fineness of her diplomatic art, to consolidate the geographical unity of France. The French nation has foro^otten this Ao^nes Sorel, who undertook to seduce, get round, and hold a monarch whom she never loved, and who, when she undertook to make his conquest, was prematurely old from profligacy. She is so utterly fallen into oblivion, that her countrymen do not know how to write her name.^ The same forgetfulness extends to the name of her family estate. Even Louise de Perrencour de Keroualle's descendants suffer the /'^^r^^(£',^ that 1 The English call her Querouailles, and the French genealogists Keroual. Colbert de Croissy wrote her name Queroul t in the charter of donation to her of the lands of Aubigny, it is K^roel, I write Keroualle, after old family papers in the Archives Nationales, J. 152 ; 6. {Author's Note.) 2 Burke : Dictionary of the Peerage^ under the heading of •' Richmond," gives as the root of the ducal house of ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 3 Golden Book of the English nobility, to state that they are descended from the daughter of a certain Guillaume de Penencourt. Yet these Perrencours were not a family to be denied, even by such high-placed descendants as the Dukes of Richmond. The following is a sketch of their ancestry. Fran9ois de Penhoet married Jeanne, Lady of Keroualle de Penancoet, on loth May, 1330. The Penhoets were one of the great families of the bishopric of Leon, of whom it was said, " The Penhoets for antiquity, the Ker- mans for riches, and the De Kergournadecs for chivalry." The children of this marriage, took the maternal name, with its coat of arms. One of their descendants, Guillamue de Penan- cour, married, in 1645, ^larie de Ploeuc de Timeur, daughter of Marie de Rieux ; and one of their children was Louise, Duchess of Pendennis and Portsmouth, in England, and of Aubigny, in France.^ Richmond, "Louise Renee de Perrencourt " ; under the heading of " Aubigny " {foreign titles), he puts " Louise R^n^e de Penencourt de Quenouaille, Duchess of Ports- mouth in England, daughter of Guillaume de Penencourt." 1 Bibliothecpie Natio?iaie, Cabinet des Titres, No. 50,417. {^Author's Note.) LOUISE DE KEROUALLE It does not count for much in our time to be a De Rieux, or to have a forefather so renowned for bravery in the 14th century, as the fair Louise was for her cold-blooded gallantries in the 1 7th century ; but these facts of race and blazon explain the circumstances of her youth, and enable us to understand how she was able to become a maid of honour to Henrietta of England, Duchess of Orleans. They also set at nauQ-ht the ridiculous stories of the adven- tures in which, according to some lampoonists and pamphleteers, her early years were spent. The most widely known of the libellous fictions published in England against her, is The Secret History of the Duchess of Ports- mouth. An English edition and two French ones, as well as a large number of manuscript copies,^ of this fact2pn were circulated. Accord- ing to it, Mademoiselle de Keroualle fled from the house of an aunt living in Paris, disguised as a page, and accompanied the Due de Beaufort 1 I have in my possession one of these manuscripts ; but I have not been able to find at the Bihliotheque Nationale either the English edition of i6go of The Secret History of the Duchess of Portsmouth, the French editions of 1690, or the Memoires Secrets de la Duchesse de Fortstnouth, by Jacques Lacombe, 2 vols., i2mo; Paris, 1805, {Author's Note.) ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 5 in the expedition to Candia, which lasted from 5th June until loth October, 1669. Now during that time she was under the eyes of the whole Court, serving as maid of honour to Henrietta, Duchess of Orleans. The calumny must have originated in the part taken by Louise's brother Sebastien in the unfortunate Beaufort expedition. He died on his return from Candia, a few days after he landed in Provence.^ The mournino- into which his family were thrown w^as distorted by the libeller into a burlesque fiction. Most of the episodes of Louise's life were malig- nantly twisted in the same way. The so- called biographer knew enough about her early life to give an air of truth to his cruel inventions.^ It was in the year in which Sebastien died in the Due de Beaufort's service that Louise 1 Of the three children, only the daughters, Louise and Henriette, survived. 2 There were many other publications of this kind : Memoirs of the Court of England, by the Countess Dunois, 1708 ; Tlie Secret History of the Reigns of King Charles II. and James II., s.l. 1690. There is a French translation of the latter, Cologne, 1690, and also a refutation, T/ie Blatant Beast Muzzl'd, s.l., 1691. {Aut/wr's Note.) 6' LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. made the acquaintance of the Comte de Sault. This cfentleman was son of the Due de Lesdiguieres, and was chief victor in the famous jousts which were held in 1662, under the windows of Tuileries, and gave their name to the Place de Carrousel. Father Anselmo tells us that he passed for being in love with a maid of honour of Henrietta of England/ or Madame Henriette, as she was called in France, Thirteen years later a haughty English nobleman insultingly reminded Louise de Keroualle ^ of this early attachment. However innocent may have been the flirta- tions, in a dissipated court, of a girl of rank who was poor, and impatient to find a husband, it is certain that the fair fame of the Bretonne was tarnished. Madame de Sevigne and Lou- vois speak slightingly and pitilessly of her relations with De Sault. Saint Simon ^ charges her parents with having aimed at throwing her in the king's way, in the hope that he might 1 Pere Anselme. 2 MS. Affaires Elratigcres, Angleierre, tome cxiv., fol. 119, du 6 Aout, 1674. 3 Hachette : Ecrits inedits de Saint Simon, t. iv., p. 485. ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. ^ cast her his pocket-handkerchief, and to further this mode of obtaining a settlement for her, got her into the household of his sister-in-law, who was then suspected of being his mistress. Un- fortunately for Mademoiselle de Keroualle, Louise de la Valliere was also a maid of honour to that princess ; and the king fell in love with her soft eyes, which only spoke of tender, devoted love. If this Louise had little cleverness, " she was gentle, good-natured, and obliging, and made herself liked at court." Without believing the calumnious pamphlets, it may be supposed that, whether owing to impru- dent talk or to ambitious avowals, Louise passed for aspiring to the situation of king's favourite. Before Louis XIV. tried what might be effected through women, in preserving the alliance, or at least the neutrality, of England, he had had recourse to means which were not sanctioned by diplomatic usage. The great French statesmen who preceded him never risked an important foreign enter- prise without first securing an ally. Richelieu entered into an understanding with Gustavus Adolphus, and Mazarin with Cromwell. Union with Great Britain was all the more necessary LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. during the youth of Louis XIV., because the frontiers of his kingdom tended to advance into Flanders, a country Hnked with England by the proximity of their coasts and by trade relations, which had gone on for several hun- dred years. It would be unjust to suppose that the only sentiment which alienated England from France in the 1 7th century, was jealousy at seeing the extension of French influence and com- merce in Flanders. The Protestant passions of the people, and the Liberal ideas of the aristocracy, inevitably placed England in con- flict with an absolute, and a Catholic king. Political interests became intertwined with re- ligious feeling to such a point, that public opinion in England was led into reversing against the Court the foreign policy of Crom- well by supporting Spain, the most ardent foe of the Reformation, against Louis XIV. Whilst the posterity of Philip II. was falling into decrepitude, and slowly dying out at the Escurial, each of the powers watched for an opportunity to snatch a part of its heritage. Louis wanted to seize on all Flanders. He saw that, to be able to strike his blow at an ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV 9 opportune moment, the agreement of England was necessary. Now, towards the close of Charles II. 's reign, the hatred in which the Encrlish held Louis was not doubtful. There o was no reliance to be placed in the unstable- minded British monarch. And yet it was on Charles II. that the entire efforts of French diplomacy were of necessity concentrated. He was the only possible ally. With his con- nivance in the projects of the Court of Ver- sailles, the animosity of England — the nation — would not matter. His complicity was the one condition of success. Without it, every chance must be given up of preponderance in Europe, and of the happy execution of a grand scheme of colonial aoforrandisement. France might, if she held Charles, do as she pleased, not only in Flanders, but, with the aid of the Jesuits, all the world over. The diplomatists of Louis XIV., seeing what frontier extension, and indeed wide-world expansion, was to be obtained, came to the conclusion that all scru- ples should be laid aside. But there never was a harder man to hold than Charles II., whose will was singularly unsteady, and whose mind was the most ver- lo LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. satile, bright, shifty, and frivolous of any prince in Europe. When young, he was voluptuous, loquacious, easy to captivate, and charitable towards intriguers of every sort, because he held a low opinion of human nature, and felt that he set an example himself of lax morals and had mire-ward proclivities. He put on with smiling grace a show of elegance, affected sensibility, and made prodigality pass for the outcome of generous impulse. In many respects he was like Henri HI., he being profuse, a con- noisseur of art, easy going with those around him, insincere, Avithout respect for his engage- ments, incurably apt to confound knavery with statecraft, and so fond of lapdogs as to turn his apartments into a disgusting kennel. They bred about on his sofas, and even in his bed. In the bottom of his heart he was a Catholic, at the time when he became head of the An- glican Church. He understood the power of quinine to check ague and other fevers ; dab- bled in alchemy and vivisection, gave a fillip to the study of natural philosophy, was free from prejudices, devoid of principle, and was an amiable epicurean, so entirely without back- bone that he went so far in cowardly meanness ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OE LOUIS XIV. ii as to deny his own father.^ This degrading denial took place when Charles I. was hemmed in by fanatical Scotcli Puritans. It was given the specious name of "The Prince of Wales's Declaration." In it he "humbled himself before Almighty God because of the com- placency with which his father had hearkened unto evil counsels, because of his opposition to the Covenant, and likewise because of the blood of the Lord's people which he had shed. The Prince of Wales also confessed his own manifold sins and the sins of his father's house." He was wholly devoid of moral sense, and never rose to a perception of the social use of honour. Such was the man whom it was the task of French diplomacy to hold. His mother her- self, it was remembered at Versailles, could exert no durable authority over his vacillating will and versatile spirit. In appearing to yield, he was always ready to slide away. He was only a liar under pressure, but he was as slippery as an eel, and as fond of the mud. Henrietta Maria, daughter of Henri IV., had ruled her husband, Charles I. Miss Strickland and some of Vandyke's portraits make her out ^ Walker: Historical Discourses^ p. 170. 12 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. a beauty. She probably had when young the comeHness of youth ; but after the Restoration she was a httle, vulgar-looking, and very com- monplace woman. As a child, she was the most petted member of her family ; and the person on whom she doubtless unconsciously modelled herself, was her mother's arrogant and domineering foster-sister, favourite, and general directress, Leonore de Galigai, wife of Concini, INIarechal d'Ancre, also a favourite of Marie de Medici, and suspected, with too good reason, of having plotted the assassination of Henri I V.^ Henrietta Maria behaved on the throne like a spoiled child and shrew. She does not seem to have had any plan of conduct or principle of government, beyond doing just as she pleased, and imposing on her husband the notion which happened to be uppermost in her mind. He was uxorious, and obeyed her. The beginning ^ The Grand Duke of Florence, father of Marie de Medici, said to his daughter, when she was setting out as a proxy-married bride for France : " Above all things, make haste to have an heir." He sent with her three gallants whom Henry IV. tolerated. They were Virginio and Paolo Orsini, and Concini, afterwards the Mare'chal d'Ancre, whose assassination by De Luynes released Louis XHI. from the thraldom in which his mother's favourite held him. ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 13 of his misfortunes was his acquiescence in her order, to go to the House of Commons, and bring her " by the ears" the five members who stood out against his exorbitant prerogatives. She called them " those five crop -headed rogues." The tragedies in which this queen was in- volved, her terrible reverses of fortune, and the oratorical genius of Bossuet, who preached her funeral sermon, surrounded her, in the eyes of those who did not study her life, with the nimbus of a martyr. Her contemporaries judged her severely, and wasted but small sympathy on her. She was held in slight esteem at the Court of France, when she re- turned to Paris a widow and a proscript. Her apologists, past and present, have tried to ex- plain away the sarcasms of those Englishmen of her time and circle who noticed her fondness for Lord Jermyn and submission to him, her fear of giving him offence, his meddling and overbearing interference in all her concerns, and his masterful tone in speaking to her.^ They 1 Sir John Reresby : Memoirs, p. 4. "Lord Jermyn had the queen greatly in awe of him, and indeed it was obvious that he had uncommon interest in her and her concerns ; 14 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. have tried to disprove that she had a daughter, the issue of a secret marriaofe with him. How- ever, he and she were inseparable, and she braved pubHc opinion in going, accompanied with him, to pay visits of ceremony/ Colbert de Croissy^ and her nephew Louis XIV. him- self^ are crushino; witnesses aofainst her. The but that he . . . had children by her I did not then believe, though the thing was certainly so." Her own son, James II., did not dare in terms to contradict this fact, so evident was it to his contemporaries. In his reply {The Blatant Beast MiizzPii) to the pamphleteers, he replied mildly and in a propitiating tone to those who charged his mother with being the mistress and then the wife of Lord Jermyn, whilst he refuted with passionate virulence all the other attacks on his family. He merely said in reply to the former accusations, " They must pardon me if I don't believe them." ^ Evelyn: Diary\ Aug. 14, 1662. Hamilton, always so well informed, speaks of this union. See the anonymous author of the curious Relation d'Aiigleterre, which is in Les Cifiq Cents de Colbert, tome iv. p. 78 : " Le Comte de St. Jermyn est toujours attache h, ses inte'rests." {Translator's Note.) 2 MS. Affaires Etrangeres, Angleterre, tome xciii., fol. 181, du 28 Nov., 1668. 8 Colber de Croissy was a brother of the great minister Colbert, and for some time ambassador of Louis XIV. to Whitehall. He was sent on other embassies. In nego- tiating with men, he showed great ability ; but he did not understand how to utilize women. On his recall from England he was named Secretary for Foreign Affairs. ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 15 former, in writing from London to Versailles just after the formation of the Cabal, says : " The Duke of Buckincjham takes for orranted the necessity of an impossible thing, when he speaks of a secret imparted to the queen- dowager of England not coming to Lord St. Albans' (Jermyn's) knowledge. It would be the sheerest self-deception to hope that this might be done." In counting, therefore, on Henrietta Maria, the Court of Versailles would have had to reckon on St. Albans. Those who had hoped otherwise were nursing an illusion. The king of France therefore sought to find a wife for Charles soon after the Restoration had been effected. It being useless to try and hold him by means of the queen-dowager, he tried to influence him through a queen-consort. Spain being an adversary of France, it was amongf her most bitter foes that Louis sought a wife for the restored monarch. He chose a Portuguese princess, in doing which he made a blunder. The Portuguese then, like the Moors, kept their women in ignorance and seclusion. Instead of a princess used to the intrigues and complexities of Court life, and able to domineer I6 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. a rakish husband, Charles II. was mated to a swarthy dwarf of twenty-four, who, when she arrived in England, had never in her life spoken to a man, even during the voyage. Her sedentary habits had made her obese ; and this defect was thrown into relief by her curious mode of dressing. She was of a squat figure and a brown complexion ; her teeth were so badly set as to be a deformity.^ "There really is nothing in her face to inspire positive disgust," said Charles mournfully, after the first interview.^ He was mightily pleased, when the wedding ceremony was over, that she was too tired after her voyage not to wish to be left entirely alone.^ The Portuguese ladies who came with her were not seductive,* and wore monstrous hoops, which followed the waddling 1 According to Lord Dartmouth, " her fore teeth stood out so as to shorten her upper Hp." Evelyn makes the same remark : " Her teeth wrongeth her mouth by sticking out too far." These defects are artistically slurred over by Sir Peter Lely. 2 Letter of Clarendon, cited by Miss Strickland, viii., p. 304. ^ The king to Clarendon, May 21, 1662, published from the MS. of the British Museum by Fellowes {Historical Sketches). ■* Evelyn : Diary, May 30, 1662. ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 17 movement of their gait. These farthingales were called by them gardes-infantes. Their headgears were as funny, to English and P^rench eyes, as their skirts ; and the skins of all were of a deep olive. Charles wished for more pleasing objects. Instead of retaining them in his wife's service, he drew up a list of bedchamber ladies, at the head of which he placed the Countess of Castlemaine. Ignorant as the new queen was, she uttered a cry of protest when she heard of this bed- chamber nomination. Lady Castlemaine had, as Mrs. Palmer, en- gaged in an amorous intrigue with Charles soon after the Restoration.^ He, the Duke of York, and young sparks in their suites made up to her to infuriate her husband and enjoy the game of making him justly jealous. The Duke of York, to keep his mind from absorbing the heretical Anglican service which he had to attend at the Chapel Royal, used to draw aside the curtains of the royal pew to ogle Mrs. Palmer, who performed her devotions in the one next to it. She appears, however, to have soon dropped the heir presumptive, to become 1 Pepys ; Diary, 13th July, 1660. C i8 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. publicly the king's favourite. At the time of the formation of the Cabal, she was in all the pride of her beauty, which was splendidly attractive. If her nose was slightly turned up,^ it gave her a sauciness that was piquant. Her figure was tall, and of a rich, harmonious out- line. The eyes and hair were dark, and her skin glowed with health and life. Her lips were cherry red, and her bust, — which, in the fashion of the day, her loose and falling upper garments and thin smocks did not hide, — was white as snow. The eyes, if not large, were lively and bright. They spared none of their artillery to conquer, and promised everything to retain the captive. Nor did the lady dis- appoint the hopes she thus excited. There must have been something very taking in her appearance, which enabled her to face the London populace in its den. Lady Castle- maine was fond of going to see the puppets at St. Bartholomew's fair. The common people, hearing that she was there, collected round the show to hoot " the king's miss." But the sight of her lovely face disarmed them, and she was allowed to go quietly to her carriage, and ride off. ^ Relation d'Angkterre. Cinq Cents de Colbert, t. v., p. 478. ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 19 Lady Castlemaine did not long hold her ground against Louise de Keroualle, when that charming French beauty entered the arena against her ; but she had an easy triumph over Queen Catherine, who pricked ^ her name from the king's list of bedchamber women, and who, when she saw her husband lead the beau- tiful mistress in to her by the hand, was seized with convulsions and got black in the face. This was taken as an affront by Lady Castle- maine, who meant to lie in at Hampton Court, and demanded an apology. Charles thought the queen should humble herself before the favourite, and wrote to say so to the Chancellor Clarendon, who was trying to make peace between the royal couple. The mistress flared up at his daring to meddle in the matter, and put the king on to resent his interference. " Nobody," he wrote to Clarendon, " shall pre- sume to meddle in the affairs of the Countess of Castlemaine. Whoever dares to do so, will have cause to repent it to the last moment of his life. Nothing will shake the resolution I have taken with regard to her ; and I shall consent to be miserable in this world and the I See Clarendon, Fellowes, Miss Strickland. LOUISE DE KEROUALLE, next, if I yield in my decision, which is, that she continue a bedchamber lady to the queen. I shall, to the last hour of my life, regard any one who opposes me in this as my enemy ; and whosoever shows himself hostile to the Countess will, I swear by my honour, earn my undying- displeasure," The queen remained inflexible for some weeks, and was open in her anger. She then let herself be coaxed round. The citizens of London were treated to the sight of wife and concubine driving through the streets, in grand array, in the same carriage,^ along with young Crofts,^ the son of a former mistress, and the darling of the queen, the queen-dowager, and of Lady Castlemaine. After yielding, Catherine made up her mind to struggle no more, and to lead an easy life by shutting her eyes to her husband's vices. She put up with the companionship of his favourite, and even showed a oreater likincr for her than o o for any other lady at court. The English esteemed the queen a good wife, who bore 1 Pepys : Diary\ 7th September, 1662. 2 Afterwards Duke of Monmouth. ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 21 herself meekly when her patience was most severely tried. Catherine was avenged on her husband by the shrewish temper of her rival. Charles was constantly the object of Lady Castlemaine's truculent abuse. He often returned from her house overpowered by it. Every one knew she played him false. If he dared show jealousy, he was soon reduced to beg pardon on his knees, and swear that he would never again harbour insulting suspicions about her con- duct.^ When he caught her in John Churchill's arms, he only showed his resentment by saying to the young man that, as he had become her lover to escape from starving, he forgave him.^ Lady Castlemaine was ready to accept over- tures from France, and to support the policy of Louis XIV., as Colbert de Croissy soon informed him. "The king," wrote in answer Secretary 1 Pepys : Diary, 7th August, 1667. 2 MS. Affaires Etrangcres, Afigleterre, tome cxxxvii., fol. 400. delation de la Cour d^A?igletcrre. See also, on this subject, the letter of the ambassador Courtin to the minister Louvois, ibid., tome cxx., C, fol. 206, Nov. 16, 1676. 22 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE Lionne/ " thinks well of your efforts to obtain the help of the Countess of Castlemaine, and read with interest of her point-blank way of telling you how King Charles^ had confided to her that Lord Arlington would not hear of an alliance with France. His majesty hopes that you will profit by this good beginning, and he authorizes you, if you judge well, to let her know that you have reported what she said to his majesty, who charges you to offer her his warmest thanks. In this order of ideas, the king has directed your brother, the Treasurer, to send her a handsome present, which you can give her as if from yourself. Ladies are fond of such keepsakes, whatever may be their breeding or disposition ; and a nice little present can in any case do no harm." Lionne ^ renewed his instructions a few days later in these terms : "His majesty attaches great importance to all you can say about Lady 1 In all the diplomatic French despatches the king is Louis XIV. To every other king the name of the country over which he reigns is added. It is however impossible to cling to this formula in all the extracts from official papers. 2 MS. A^aires Etrangcres, 3 Avril, 1667. 8 April 20, 1669. ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 23 Castlemaine. You can, if you think fit, agree with your brother touching the present the king intends to make this lady. . . . His majesty warmly approves your idea of getting her to put into the King of England's head that the Presbyterians and Nonconformists are ill affected towards monarchy." ^ But Madam Castlemaine was not the kind of secret service agent the king of France wanted. Not that she was insensible to nice little presents, or that she was not in constant need of money. Her hatred of every curb to her luxurious caprices, and her prodigality, drew her into expenses which astonished the Court. Whitehall wondered at the fineness of her cambric shifts ; at her smocks and linen petticoats frilled with the richest lace, and at her costly furniture and plate. But an ambassador could not rely on her support, because she gave herself up completely to the passion of the moment, whether it was an amorous one or arose from ardent rivalry with some other lady of the Court. Her quarrels with the beauties of easy virtue who sur- rounded Charles H. were as much (if not more) 1 April 23, 1669. 24 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. the object of deep concern to the King of France, as the mihtary evolutions of Turenne and Conde. A war with England depended on the humour of an actress or a bedchamber woman. The Treasurer, Colbert, wrote in these terms to his brother, the Marquis Colbert de Croissy,^ to London : " I think it would please the king if you were to send M. de Lionne gossiping letters about everything that happens in the private life of the king of England, and in what is known as the inner circle of his Court." " As you have not," returned M. de Croissy,^ " thought amiss that I should keep you informed about the squabbles of these ladies, which are often as much a cause of deep concern to the King of England as the most serious business, I shall continue to write about them." " I have," wrote Louis XIV. himself to M. Colbert de Croissy,^ "heard read with great pleasure the curious details you have written to ]\I. de Lionne about the intrieues of the English Court, and the broils of the ladies who are the chief personages there." 1 MS. Affaires Etrani^eres^ 20 Janvier, 1669, 2 Ibid., 31 Janvier, 1669. * Ibid., 9 Fdvrier, 1669, ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 25 " I shall take more pains than ever," replied Colbert/ to ascertain what goes on among the ladies, since you do not think it beneath you to show an interest in their quarrels, and the kinof himself deii^ns to wish for information in those little affairs, on which great events s*^ often hinge." Colbert de Croissy thinks well to make a fresh present to Madam Castlemaine. He says,^ " I have given away all that I brought from France, not excepting the skirts and smocks made up for my wife, and I have not money enough to go on at this rate. Nor do I see the use of going to much expense, in satisfying the greed of the women here for rich keepsakes. The king often says,^ that the only woman who has really a hold on him, is his sister, the Duchess of Orleans. If hand- some gifts are lavished on Madam Castlemaine, his majesty may think that, in spite of his assertions to the contrary, we fancy that she rules him, and take it in bad part. I should therefore advise giving her only such trifling tokens as a pair of French gloves, ribands, a 1 MS. Affaires Etrafigh-es, 14 Jan., 1669. 8 Ibid., 7 Fevrier, 1669. 8 Ibid., 14 Fevrier, 1669. 26 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. Parisian undress gown, or some little object of finery." ^ A graver matter than bedizenments for Madam Castlemaine was dealt with, at this juncture, in the correspondence of M. Colbert de Croissy. He was struck with the sadness of the King of England's manner, his constant depression, and his aversion to chat about European affairs, which used to be one of his favourite topics.^ *' The gloom which the king's face and manner betray has been such, that it was impossible not to feel there was some great cause for it. After seeking on all sides for a reason, I discovered that it sprang from an amour with a young girl in Madam Castlemaine's household, whose grace and beauty made, when she served the king, the impression that might be expected on a prince who is fond of change. As she thought it her duty not to stand out against his desire, her mistress was so vexed, that she turned her into the street at midnight. But this amour does not prevent Madam Castlemaine from being as powerful as ever." 1 This present was sent by the minister Colbert, on May 8, 1669. 2 Colbert de Croissy k Lionne, 28 Fevrier, 1669. ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 27 Barbara Villiers had already been the victim of her fancy to be surrounded by the hand- somest damsels she could find. The most adu- lated beauties were glad to be in her train. The proud Lady Sandwich humbly spoke of Barbara as her Queen of Beauty.^ Madam Castlemaine had also among her maids of honour Frances Stuart, known as the beautiful Miss Stuart, whom she often kept to sleep in her rooms at Whitehall, and slightingly spoke of as her little Stuart.^ The king, who seldom failed to visit Barbara before she got up in the morning, saw Miss Stuart in the bed beside her. It was not possible to unite greater beauty and more dulness than were to be found in this young belle. All her features were of perfect regularity. She was of an erect carriage, and above the common height, We still are able to judge of the Grecian regularity of her visage, and of the outlines of her figure, which would have been faultless, were her waist less high and her carriage less stiff.^ Miss Stuart served 1 Pepys, July 26, 1662. 2 Pepys, March 23, 1663 ; Hamilton : Manoires de Gramont. 3 Relation d'Angkterrc, MS. Bibl. Nat, Fonds Colbert, 478. 2 3 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. as a model for the Britannia which is on the copper coins of England. The engraver, Philip de Rothier,^ reproduced her on the public medals struck by the English mint in his day ; and all his successors have copied her effigy. The face and form of Miss Stuart are therefore the most widely known of any beauty that ever lived. " She had," ^ said a diploma- tic despatch, "a leg so admirably shaped that an ambassador, on arriving in England and callinof on her, befjored her as a favour to let him see almost up to her knee, so as to be able to write to his master to confirm what he had heard about the perfection of her calf and ankle. ^ Miss Stuart was not rapacious. She was satisfied with a pension of ^700 a year, which Charles granted her, and only asked him for ^6000 worth of jewels when she was 1 The three brothers Rothier were French, and were em- ployed to design medals at the English mint, from 1661. See Redington's Calendar of Treasury Papers, preface, p. 1 6. The two youngest, Joseph and Philip, took the direction of the Paris and Brussels mints ; John, the eldest, remained alone in England. He lost his right hand in 1689, and was replaced by his son James. 2 Relation d' Afigleierre, MS. Affaires Etrajigeres, tome cxxxvii., fol. 400. 3 Ibid ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 29 enofaofcd to be married to the Duke of Rich- mond, whom she persuaded that, notwithstand- ing- her four years' intimacy with the king and Lady Castlemaine, she was as virtuous as no matter what pure EngHsh girl.^ She went on receiving the king's visits after her marriage. But he only called on her at night, and un- attended by his gentlemen, or by an escort. ** Sometimes he stole down the river stairs at Somerset House, and sculled himself in a punt to Richmond House, landing beneath a low wall which he climbed over." The French ambassador was not so unaccustomed to the manners of the Court of Enorland as to think that a middle-aged king who acted thus was a disgrace to monarchy. The lovely Stuart was destined to be arrayed among the enemies of Louise Keroualle, pitted with smallpox and blind of an eye.^ In the Cytherean anarchy which preceded the reign of Louise Keroualle, the woman in whom she was to find her most formidable rival began to fix attention. She was an orange girl of such a finely-wrought physique 1 Pepys, April, 1667. 2 She was a widow in 1672, and died m 1702. 30 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. that professional vice, to which she was reared, and every sort of hardship could not spoil her body nor depress her spirits. This wench was witty and pretty, had a comic genius, grace, brass, mirth ; and, albeit goodnatured, her tonofue was cuttinor. Her fio-ure was so elegantly feminine that she could wear man's clothes with advantage. She had risen from the pit of the King's Theatre, in which she sold oranges, to the stage, and drew all the Court in the "Vagaries of Flora," in which she was the goddess of flowers ; in the " Maiden Queen," in which she was ** Florimell," a gay young spark ; and in Dryden's " Conquest of Grenada," in which she played the part of "Queen Almahide" in a jauntily-set broad- brimmed hat. Her name was Gwynn, and she was a powerful stimulant to the over-raked Court. Originally, she was, it was said, a dancing-girl in a show. Nell Gwynn had simultaneously for lovers the Earl of Dorset, whom she called her " Charles I." ; Hart, the actor, who was her "Charles H." ; and the king, who was her " Old Rowley." In her com- pany, whatever moral soundness had remained to Charles soon died out. His will got emas- ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 31 Ciliated from his own vices and pleasurable contact with the vices of all nations. Italian eunuchs came to sing to him in his green chamber. The wife of his valet, Chaffinch, fetched him from theatres Nelly Gwynn, Peg Hughes, and other actresses. His inseparable boon companion in his life of sensuality, was one of the most happily-gifted, and yet most despicable, men of the period — the Duke of Buckingham. Buckingham was as skilled in seducing a woman as in gaining a popular assembly. He was married to a niece of Cromwell, but never troubled his head about her, unless to wish for her death. Prompt to undertake no matter what, and incapable to realize any of his schemes, he was credulous wath charlatans, open to great thoughts, servile, insolent, and the slave of each whim that held his fancy. Out of hatred to his rival, Arlington, who was bribed by Spain, he threw himself entirely on the French side. Arlineton and Buckingham thought alike on one point only. They were both afraid of the return of Clarendon, whom their Cabal had exiled. " Arlington is fond of luxury and 32 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. amusement,"^ wrote M. de Croissy. "If he were in less close relations with Spain, he would have to live savingly. He has the mark of a sword-cut across his nose, which, as it does not heal, he covers with a bit of lozenge- shaped sticking-plaister. So far from being a disfigurement, it gives him an air of manly seriousness foreign to his nature." ^ The Mar- quis de Ruvigny informed the Court of Ver- sailles that " Arlino^ton would sell his soul to the devil to worst an enemy." ^ Each of these English noblemen had an agent who secretly took charge of his interests at the French Court. Buckinorham's ag-ent was one Leyton, a sharp, vulgar, and grasping London tradesman, Williamson, who served Arlington, was disinterested and close-mouthed. Louis XIV. was not ignorant of their political rela- tions, and thus spoke of them in an autograph letter to Colbert de Croissy : * " Leyton for Buckingham, and Williamson for Arlington his 1 Rdatio7i d'Angleterre. IMS. Bibl. Nat, Fonds Colbert, 478. 2 Ruvigny k Pomponne. MS. Aff. Eir., Angleierre, tome cxvii. fol. 57, Nov. 4, 1675. 3 Le Roi h. Colbert de Croissy. Ibid.^ tome xciii. fol. 164, Nov. 7, 1668. * Ibid. ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 33 master, try to make you believe they can soon bring about a close union between me and the King of England, provided you play into their hands and no longer try to get the Chancellor recalled from exile. Arlincrton does not act towards me in a way to make me desire the continuance of his influence. You are to make both one and the other think the re- call of the said Chancellor possible, and even probable, if I support him. If they engage to effect the union between me and their king, you can give all the sureties they ask, that I will make use of any means they suggest to block every road by which Clarendon can go back. But I see very well that I shall make no real progress so long as I have not gained the Duke and Arlington by forwarding their separate interests. If each has a strong motive for helping me, they will both, however they may detest each other, plot for a common ob- ject. Hints may be held out to Ley ton and Williamson, that they are to receive some gifts from me. I prefer that it should be in money. When they have received payment of this kind, I shall in a degree have the ad- vantage of them ; and it seems to me, that D 34 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. when they are thus in my power, you can without danger use plain speech with them. Let me know what sums should be offered to the two agents, as well as to the Duke and to Lord Arlington. The affair is so important that I am willing to make any sacrifice of money, provided that payment of the gross amount is stayed, until after the blow is struck." Leyton did not stand out for a high price. He was bought for four hundred pistoles. "But," said Louis in another autograph letter,^ " do not stop at that, if more is wanted. Seeing how irresolute the King of England is, do not neglect to gain Arlington. I would willingly spend on him twenty thousand gold pieces. You must take care not to frighten the king by letting him feel that I am seeking to draw him into a war with Holland." Williamson ^ remained incorruptible. Ley- ton, on the contrary, came to France to pay his court to Louis. " I have treated him {rdgalS) to a ring worth four hundred pistoles," ^ 1 MS. Aff, Etr.y Angleterre, Le Roi a Colbert^ Nov. 24, 1668. 2 Letter of Nov. 28, 1668. 3 Le Roi au Colbert, Dec. 12, 1668. This was an extra present. ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 35 wrote that sovereicfn, " and admitted him to converse twice with me." Some months later he was granted a French pension of three hundred Jacobus ^ and the promise of a hand- some present. " We know," remarked the French ambassador in a despatch to Lionne, "what a knave he is.^ Nevertheless, he is active, pushing, and intriguing ; and as he has the ear of the king, rubs shoulders with the highest men at Court, and is a leading member of the Merchant Taylors' Company and of the Corporation of the City of London, I believe he can keep us well informed." So his Most Christian Majesty went on granting him au- diences and treating him as a person of rare distinction. Louis did not wholly trust to the two great members of the Cabal. He worked many other secret springs with which Charles was surrounded. He had notoriously with him the famous Samuel Morland, and found an agent- in every Frenchman settled in London. Lionne was instructed by Colbert de Croissy never to mention Morland's name, but to speak 1 Lettre du 27 Mars, 1669, tome xciv., fol. 287. 2 Lettre du 25 Fev., 1669, ibid., tome xciv. o 6 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. of him as " our secret manacrer." ^ Morland was a scholar and scientist, who ruined himself in trying to work his inventions, and then re- sorted to fraudulent expedients to get out of trouble. One of his inventions was the parent of the steam engine. He constructed hydraulic wheels, curiously combined. When secretary to Thurlow, the chief minister of Cromwell, he got hold of State secrets, and with so much art and secresy delivered them to the banished Stuarts, that the Englishmen who shared their exile were astounded when he was one of the first to present himself to Charles II. on his restoration, and to be knighted by him. He was overwhelmed with places and pensions, and being unable to ask for more at Whitehall, he intrifjued for the Kinsf of France. His wife, Susan de Milleville, was French. He sold his pensions and privileges to build a chateau in France, and the chateau to pursue his scientific and industrial experiments. When a widower, and ruined, he was harassed by creditors. An adventure then befell him more incredible than any that was ever invented by ^ Lionne h Colbert, 26 Aout^ 1668, tome xciii., fol. 94. ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 37 an author of the romances of his day.-^ A man whom in the heyday of prosperity he had saved from hunger came to propose to him a marriaore which would reHeve him from his embarrassments. " A lady, virtuous, pious, of an amiable disposition, having an estate of ^500 a year, ^4,000 in gold, and furniture, plate, and jewels," was prepared to take him for her husband. He married her, and a fortnioht later discovered that she had not a shilling, was a coachman's daughter, and would in a few months give the king another subject. Morland brought a suit in the Ecclesiastical Court to set aside the marriage, but lost it. His creditors pursuing him, he did not dare to quit the lodging where he was hiding. On the advice of a Nonconformist minister, he was going to be reconciled to his wife, when he heard that durinof the suit she lived with Sir Gilbert Gerrard. So he attacked her for adultery, ob- tained a divorce, and married a third time.^ 1 See Defoe's Moll of Flanders and Smollett's Roderick Random. There are letters of Morland, in his Appendix to Pepys' Diary. 2 A quay in Paris is still called after Morland, in whose fertile brain the idea fust originated of raising water to the ro}al gardens at Marly by means of the great hydraulic wheel on the Seine. LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. Real life was reflected in the plays and novels which show that in England, under the reign of Charles II., depravity was uni- versal. It is only just to condemn the profli- gacy of the Court, but it would be ridiculous to ignore it. Indeed, to understand the history of European politics in the second half of the seventeenth century, it is necessary to discard all prudery, and to unveil the private lives of Charles and his courtiers. These dishonoured dead will teach no useful lesson if we do not study the vices and the passions to which they were the slaves when livinof. It is not the business of the historian to evoke unsubstantial phantoms on a fancifully-decorated stage, but to raise bodies from the grave, make them again the temples of the souls which have flown from them, place them in the surround- ings in which they lived, and analyse their hidden motives, good, bad, and indifferent. The French in London, by the propriety of their manners, contrasted with the English. Notable among them was Saint Evremont, a general of distinction, who had learned the art of war under the great Conde, and who is only, now, remembered as an elegant writer and ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 39 an epicurean wit. He was disgraced after the battle of the Pyrenees, and retired to London, where his tact, the dignity of his Hfe, and the charm of his mind and conversation assured him an important place. He devoted all his advantages to the consolidation of the French alliance, and to the procuring of valuable in- formation for the ambassadors of Louis XIV. His company was sought for by men of in- tellect, birth, and position.^ The venerable Marquis de Rouvigny, father-in-law of Lord William Russell, and head of the French Protestants in England, passed several months in London every year, and was universally respected. Louis XIV., observing the esteem in which he was held, eventually utilized him in his diplomacy. The most noisy of these Frenchmen, and, thanks to the chef cVoeitvre of Hamilton, the most celebrated, was the Chevalier de Gramont. The French in London were nearly all con- nected with the Court. The few tradespeople had also a special influence, by which Louis knew how to profit. A Paris milliner,^ Madame ^ Saint Simon. Evelyn. 2 Evelyn : Diary, March i, 1667, 40 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. Desborde, Qroverned Oueen Catherine. She decided with sovereign authority in all that related to petticoats, smocks, laces, stomachers, fans, frills, furbelows, and other French baga- telles for ladies' wear. The wine merchant to the king was a M. de Pontac,^ of Chateau Pontac and Chateau O'Brien, in the Gironde, a Gascon whose high spirits and voluble tongue amused the silent English, while the wine de- canter, at after-dinner bouts, was being passed round the table. But these diplomatic threads, which were woven into a web by such a powerful will, rotted as time flew on. Charles was always promising to join with France against Europe, and was always ready to join with Holland against France. Every month that sped weak- ened the secret springs which Louis directed, and new combinations had to be resorted to. In the first nine years of his reign Charles II. had twice abandoned Louis XIV.^ There was nothing in the situation of England to impose rn him a French alliance. On the contrary, ^ Evelyn: Diary, July 13, 1683. ^ See MiGNON : Negociations relatives ct la Succession (TEspagne; and Camille Rousset: Histoire de Louvois. ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 41 the interests of his people and a care for his popularity should have made him resist Louis's attempts to seize on the mouths of the Scheldt and Rhine, His chanQfingf humour and his duty both drew him from the French king, who, to soften the animosity of the English and give a sop to their traders, devised a sham treaty which would lead them to hope /or many commercial advantages. Colbi^rt de Croissy, the Intendant of Paris, was charged, in July, 1668, to negotiate this instrument, the basis of which was drawn up in the king's handwriting. " The negotiations confided to you are the most important of all Europe,"^ said the minis- ter Colbert, in a memorandum addressed to his brother the ambassador.^ " The treaty of commerce is only to throw dust in the eyes of the trading class in England ; and you are to make it drag under all the pretexts which 1 W^. Affaires Etrangeres, 14 Septembre, 1668. ^ From October i, 1668, the French who went to Eng- land affected a deep interest in horse-racing, and were re- ported to know nothing about it. The briUiant de Gramont had no eye for a good horse, if we can believe Algernon Sydney. " He's such a proud ass that he neither knows what's good and won't believe any one else." See, also, Algernon Sydney's letters to Henry Saville. 42 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. may suggest themselves to you. It should also afford you pretexts and occasions to strengthen political ties, and widen your rela- tions with political men." When Charles II. went to Newmarket, Lionne wrote to Colbert de Croissy : ^ " Were I in your place, I skottld also set out in two or three days^ so as to have an excuse * for settling all when you come back ; ' but I should never go away, finding always some pretext for staying, such as a cold or an attack of illness in the house." After lonor searchinor for an accent who mio^ht be able to hold the volatile Charles, Louis, in 1668, at length thought he had found the man he wanted. It was at the time that Charles usually went to Newmarket. The King of France noticed this passage in one of his ambassador's gossipping letters : " The King of England, who is so inconstant in most things, shows in one respect fixity of application. Come what m.ay, he spends daily a part of his ^ Liomie a Colbert, 23 Fevrier, 1669. 2 The italics are in the original. As the secretaries of Louis Quatorze were clear in their instructions, and assumed intelligent attention on the part of their agents, they only underlined when there was not time for the latter to give mature consideration to despatches. {Translator's Note.) ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 43 time in a laboratory making' chemical experi- ments." Since the attempt to govern him throuo'h Madam Castlemaine had not sue- ceeded, why not try to manage him through the laboratory for which he clearly had a passion ? At this juncture Louis had at his call an Italian monk, named Pregnani, who dazzled the Electress of Bavaria with his know- ledge of judicial astrology. After taking him from his convent she recommended him to the Kinof of France, whom she asked to gfet him made an abbe.^ "He understands," wrote her Serene Highness, " how to blow a bellows and use crucibles according to the rules of alchemy, has infinite cleverness, marvellous suppleness and dexterity in attaining his ends." But how brinof Precfnani into the Court circle without exciting suspicion ? The vehicle chosen was the Duke of Monmouth, the eldest of the King's bastards, who was weak-minded and credulous, and the best-beloved son of his Royal sire. At a supper where he met different members of the French embassy, his curiosity was adroitly ex- cited by tales of the wonderful transmutations Pregnani could operate, and the horoscopes 1 Ltonfie i Colbert, 23 Fcvrier, 1669. 44 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. he cast. Monmouth secretly wished to know whether the heavenly bodies favoured his pre- tensions to the Crown of England. He invited Pregnani to London. The abbe hastened there. He went at night to see Colbert de Croissy; for Louis XIV., whose sense of what he owed to . the dignity of the crown he wore never failed him, in the midst of the lowest intrigues, was half-ashamed to be in any degree represented by a charlatan, and wished the mission to re- main secret. The abbe Pregnani followed the Court to Newmarket.^ The means which he made use of to arouse the interest of the king and fix his attention, were very droll. The Duke of Monmouth beins: in love with a girl of some beauty, to whom he thought the king, his father, and his uncle, the Duke of York, were both making advances, had the curiosity to ask the abbe which of the three would obtain her the first. The soothsayer, without having seen her, described her face, her humour and in- clinations, and said what her past was and what her future would be. He was so circum- stantial that the king was informed of the matter by the duke, and wished to have his 1 Colbert a Lionne, i8 Mars, 1669. ENGLAND AND THE POLICY OF LOUIS XIV. 4: own horoscope drawn. The abbe was com- manded to meet the king's desire by fetching his astrological books to Newmarket. " Such, Monsieur, is the beginning of the business. If it ends well, I shall apprise you ; and I believe I shall have queer things to tell you of before long." The cunning Italian ^ was able, without re- ferring to his books, to read the disposition of Charles ; but he was careful to hide his game, and took nobody, unless Colbert de Croissy, into his confidence. "He (the abbe) does not think much of the King of England's mind, which he says is prone to busy itself with amusing trifles, to the exclusion of what is serious. He has an unconquerable aversion to sustained effort, and recoils from every sort of business. The abbe, however, hopes that he will be able to over- come his taste for mental trifling, and to bring him to take a good resolution by forecasting in his horoscope impending disasters. I wish I could be confident on this point, because the king said to me, on arriving from Newmarket, that the abbe's predictions about the races ^ Colbert a Lionne^ i Avril, 1669. 46 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. there were wrong in every single case ; and that his errors had caused great loss to the Duke of Monmouth's servants, who regulated their bets according to his forecasts. Certain gain had been promised to them all. The King of England has since puzzled the abbe about his misleading prognostics ; but as his majesty's curiosity is great, perhaps he will resort in private to what he affects to laugh at in public." This unfortunate application of sorcery to horse-racing caused the disgrace of the pre- sumptuous abbe at Versailles. Lionne some days later wrote : ^ ** As to the Pregnani, since he has been unable to gain ground with the king by his astrology and chemical tricks, it is not probable that he can be of future use to us. Take means to send him back to France, where we can have him under finger and thumb. To prevent him refusing to leave England, where he might get in our way, affect to send him with a confidential message to Versailles." ^ Lionne a Colbert de Cr cissy ^ 4 Mai^ 1669. CHAPTER II. MADAME HENRIETTE. The Duke of Buckingham alone suspected that an intrigue was hidden beneath the as- trologer's predictions. But he was far from supposing that Louis XIV., Colbert, and Lionne were mixed up with a low cunning charlatan. What he thought was, that Hen- rietta, or Henriette, Duchess of Orleans, was afraid her hold on Charles might relax because of her enforced absence from England, and sought to maintain it by the agency of the Italian priest. As Buckingham set up to be her lover, and to govern the king vicariously for her, he was angry at the fancied substi- tution for him of the abbe. " She sends," he complained to Leyton,^ " a humbugging as- trologer, who flatters himself that I am his dupe in love and politics, and who makes me a 1 Colbert's despatch to Louis XIV. on March 14, 1669, giving an account of a conversation with Leyton. 47 48 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. lauo'liino'-stock for Monmouth and Hamilton." "He shows all the fury," added Colbert de Croissy, " of a too enterprising gdllant, who is vexed at finding himself an object of mirth. Perhaps the best thing to do would be to send over Madame^ herself, to keep alive her brother's tenderness, and heal the wounded vanity of Buckingham, which may breed hatred where love was." The ambassador knew that the French Court had been reflecting on the expediency of bringing the influence of Madame Henriette to bear upon her brother. One of the Frenchmen who was most often at the Court of Charles, the Marquis de Flam- merens, some months previously had spoken to Colbert about chareinof the Duchess of Orleans with a mission to England.^ Madame Henriette, youngest sister of Charles n. and wife of the French king's only brother, had the charming liveliness of her grandfather, ■'■ The king's brother was, at the Court of Versailles, given the title of " Monsieur," without any other qualifica- tion, when he was spoken of or spoken to. His wife was " Madame." She was sometimes familiarly called Madame Henriette, to distinguish her from the widow of Gaston, Due d'Orle'ans, her aunt-in-law. {Translator's Note.) 2 MS. Aff. Etr. Angkterre, vol. xciii., fol. 174. MADAME HENRIETTE. 49 Henri IV. She was slender, white-skinned, and dehcate and small. The two kings were equally fond of her. But her influence with both was the cause of bitter and violent jealousies, and her intervention would only be too patent so as perhaps to defeat its object. Apart from the suspicions of Buckingham, who kept Henriette informed, through his confidant Leyton,^ with what went on in England, there was Lady Castlemaine to be humoured. That self-willed beauty hated " foreign meddlers." " The Countess of Castlemaine," wrote Colbert de Croissy to Louis, "has given me in my wife's presence a piece of her mind on many subjects, into which I propose to go for your Majesty's information. This lady having said that she had had a letter from Madame, who advised her strongly to make up her quarrel with Buckingham, and that she was puzzled to think why Madame was so anxious for a reconciliation, my wife observed that union with France depended on the agreement of all the favourites with each other," ^ 1 Colbert to Lionne, relating conversations with Leyton, Feb. 13 and March 9, 1669. 2 Despatch of Colbert to Lionne, ^lay 13, 1669. E so LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. Happily for France, Buckingham and Lady Castlemaine had each their cares and troubles, and did not, after Pregnani was shipped back to France, dare to show themselves exacting. Buckingham was dominated by the Countess of Shrewsbury, a woman of a violent temper, who had just got into a dangerous scrape. " Infuriated against Killegrew," writes Col- bert de Croissy,^ " because he boasted that she had denied him no favour, she nursed her answer acrainst him until she could wreak ven- geance. She was able to do this yesterday. Killegrew had arranged to visit her at her house, which is six miles from London. He went alone in a coach, and on the way fell asleep. He was awoke by the thrust of a sword which pierced his neck, and came out at the shoulder. Before he could cry out, he was flung from the vehicle, and stabbed in three other places by varlets of the Countess. The. lady herself looked on from her own coach and six, in which she was with her three daughters, and cried out to the assassins to ' kill the villain.' Nor did she drive off until he was thought dead. He was but badly 1 Colbert to Lionne, May 20, 1669. MADAME HENRIETTE. 51 wounded, and has sworn informations. You may fancy the noise the attempt to murder him causes, and the worry and anxiety of the Duke of Buckingham, who is still passionately in love with this virago, whose husband he killed in a duel for havinof resisted her brow- beatings." As to Lady Castlemaine, she was not In such a humour as the French ambassador, to laugh at the "buffooneries" of Nell Gwynn,^ or at the pleasure the king took in them. The orange girl had the charm of novelty ; and if her tongue was coarse, her wit was glancing and her laughter was gay and stimulating to the over- raked Charles. He could not help yawning when he was with Lady Castlemaine ; but his spirits rose in the company of the jocular Nell. Charles suddenly made up his mind to have an interview with his sister. He told Colbert de Croissy^ that he passionately desired to see and converse with her. " I was greatly sur- prised," adds the ambassador, " at the intima- tion and I lose no time in sending you an ex- 1 Colbert to Lionne, Nov. 17, 1669, and Jan. 26, 1670. 2 Colbert to Louis XIV., Jan. 2, 1670. LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. press to say that this is a case, if ever there was one, in which the iron should be hammered while it is hot." The conditions which the Kine of England hoped by his sister's advocacy to bring Louis to adopt, show more greed for money than statescraft. They were as follows : — "The league between the Kine of Great Britain and the Most Christian King, shall be so durable that nothino- in the world shall henceforth divide their majesties. The King of Great Britain being convinced of the truth of the Catholic religion, and resolved to declare himself a Catholic, and to be reconciled to the Church of Rome, believes that, for the fulfil- ment of this design, the aid of the Most Christian Kino; will be needed."^ This was written in 1669, more than fifteen years previous to the death of Charles II. ; and during these fifteen years a prince so con- vinced and resolved simulated the Protestant faith, remained the protector of the Episcopal Anglican Church, took part in its services and ceremonies, and went on appointing bishops. Charles also agreed to connive at the seiz- ure by Louis XIV. of any countries which it ^ MS. Aff. Etr. Angleterre, tome xcv., fol. 235. MADAME I/ENRIETTE. 53 might suit him to annex to his monarchy, whether to the detriment of Spain or the United Provinces. But, in return, Louis en- gaged to pay him ^200,000 sterling, plus the cost of any English troops engaged in helping him. This cost was to be rated at a minimum of £2> i^i'. a day per soldier, and ^800,000 a month while the campaign lasted. The King of France was to cede to England, out of the common conquests, the Isle of Minorca and the port of Ostend, and all the countries and strongholds in America under Spanish rule. The king's nephew, the Prince of Orange, was to receive compensation for his losses, but in what form was not stipulated. As the Senate and Republic of Hamburg were bound by ties of interest with the United Provinces, war was to be declared on them." These crude and incoherent proposals came suddenly on Louis, who had been long study- ing how to carry out the well elaborated schemes of Mazarin, by securing the inaction of England. "The most odious of the clauses," observed Colbert de Croissy,^ "is the one bind- ing us to attack Hamburg, without any given 1 Colbert to the King of France, Dec. 19, 1669. 54 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE motive or plausible excuse. To do so would be to foolishly bring down on our backs the Hanseatic towns and the princes of the German E" 1 mpire. It was hiMi time for Madame Henriette to come forward and negotiate. She began by writing to her brother^ that Louis XIV. was shocked at the demand to attack Hamburg, which had never given any one cause for com- plaint ; and she insisted that Arlington should be forced to modify the proposed basis for ne- Q^otiation. Arlinoton at bottom was a Roman Catholic, and would not like Charles to have haggled about the sum of money that he was to pocket as a premium for going over to Rome. " The King of England," he notified to Louis, " will not hear of the sums which your Majesty agrees to let him have, in con- sideration of his chancfe of religion, beinof made payable in Paris. ^ I think, I own, it very hard 1 Colbert wanted to bring the Hanse towns as share- holders, into his two great organizations for establishing a French Colonial Empire ; viz., the chartered Company of the East, or East India Company, and the chartered Company of the West, or American Company. {Translator'' s Note.) 2 Colbert to the King of France, Jan. 29, 1670. "^ Ibid.^ May 15, 1670. MADAME HENRIETTE. 55 on your Majesty, that the money promised for a declaration of CathoHcity should be trans- ported at your Majesty's expense to London." Arlinofton seems to have been disinterested for the time and Court in which he lived. His wife had begged Madame Colbert ^ " to send her from Paris enough of the finest Venice brocatelle to make hangings for an anteroom, and covers for twelve chairs ; bed curtains in green damask, and covering of the same stuff for a sofa a set of chairs and fauteuils in another chamber. "If the kin^y thinks it for the pfood of his service to make this present, it would, I fancy, much gratify the lady." The stuff and furniture were sent from Paris ; but Lady Arlington frequently, in the course of a few months, offered to pay for them. Little by little, difficulties began to vanish under the dexterous manipulation of Madame Henriette. She got a draft treaty prepared, which left the King of France full liberty to conquer in the North, and bound Charles to 1 Colbert to the King of France, February 24, 1670. Madame Colbert was a daughter of a bourgeois of Lyons, who made a fortune in the manufacture of French half- farthings, or Hards. She was mother of the Marquis Colbert de Torcy. 56 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. declare himself a Roman Catholic, in return for a subvention payable in London. To over- come every remaining difficulty, the Duchess of Orleans set out for England, after arranging to meet Charles at Dover. Madame Henriette had the happy thought, in choosing the maids of honour who were to attend her to England, to select Louise de Keroualle. It is hardly probable that she designed increasing her own power over her brother by taking with her this young girl, whose baby face, melancholy eyes, and languid walk did not indicate an adroit diplomatic agent/ But it is certain that Louise was pre- sent at the interviews between Charles and his sister, and made a deep impression on him. He was tired of the furious temper of his dark Castlemaine, and of the vulgarity of Nell Gwynn. The conversation of the Breton blonde, who appeared sad and gentle, interested him. She had also the charming freshness of twenty, and the high delicate breeding which 1 A mistake. A languid manner, when not arising from ill health, often goes with falsity, and gains time for deliber- ation. Frankness is direct, and does not loiter. {Trajts I at or' s Note.) MADAME HENRIETTE. 57 distino^uished the Court of Louis XIV. before that monarch's illegitimate children grew up. Whether to prolong the enjoyment of spend- ing quiet evenings with his sister, or to keep the pretty Louise some time longer in England, Charles insisted on Madame Henriette delay- ing her return to France. This treaty, he argued, is an affair of the highest importance, and should be discussed maturely. My sub- jects hate the French. The pains they are now at to create a great trade, and to become a maritime power will sharpen their jealousy.^ The Kinor of France wants to hold all the great ports of the Continent, and bring under his sway a maritime people which have been the main rivals of England on sea and in the colonial trade. I must therefore be very wary, and not show my hand too soon. Madame Henriette did not easily obtain a prolonged leave of absence at Dover. She had a hus- band whom she always treated as an infe- rior being, which his effeminacy and base, false nature justified her in doing. He was jealous of her, and saw with umbrage the importance ^ See Mignet's Ni'gociations relatives a la Succession d Es^agne, tome iii., p. 50. 58 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. she was obtaining by the political part she played in England. Louis XIV., who was at Dunkirk, watching anxiously the progress of the negotiations, had to command his brother not to be an obstacle to the conclusion of a State affair of the greatest importance. He wrote to Colbert de Croissy : ^ " I send you this to inform you that my brother has consented to let Madame remain ten or twelve days longer at Dover. You can exaggerate to King Charles the efforts we make, and points we stretch to be agreeable to him. Let him feel how much oblig^ed he should be to us, so that when we make de- mands, he will be in a humour to yield." A month later, Madame Henriette died. It was rumoured that she was poisoned.^ The Court of England appeared to believe that she was. The diplomatic web she had helped to weave seemed ravelled. 1 The original autograph letter is in the archives of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs, English section, vol. xcvii., folio 257, May 31, 1670. ^ Littre seemed to have established that she died a natu- ral death. He drew this conclusion from the medical report on her post viortem examination. M. Lair has, however, taken up the old theory, that her death was caused by poison. MADAME HENRIETTE. 59 '^Miist we abandon the great affair ? " asked Colbert cle Croissy of Lionne. "It is to be feared ^ that the grief of the King of England, which is deeper than can be imagined, and the malevolent talk and rumours of our enemies, will spoil everything." The enemies of France were not the only ones to attack her. Buckinoham turned a^rainst the French alliance. Colbert de Croissy informed Lionne that, had it been possible, Buckingham would have picked a quarrel with France, if only to win popularity.^ Louis despatched Marshal de Bellefonds to present his official condolence to Charles on his sister's death. The Marshal was a very fine gentleman, had bland manners, and was skilled in smoothing down angles. " When do they intend to let the Chevalier de Lorraine back to Court?" asked the Kincr of England, with a rudeness foreion to his manners and disposition. «' I replied," said the Marshal, " that I did 1 Colbert to Lionne, July 2, 1670. 2 Original autograph letter of Marshal Bellefonds to the King of France. Affr. Etr. Atigleterre, tome xcviii., fol. 35, du 10 Juillet, 1670. 6o LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. not know ; that it was not easy to divine the thoughts of your Majesty on such a trifling subject ; and that none of your servants would take the liberty of conversing about it, unless your Majesty first broached the matter." It was feared that Charles and his Court had slipped from the grasp of Louis. A last re- source was to be tried. Louise de Keroualle, whom Charles in his interview with de Belle- fonds associated, with apparent tenderness, with the memory of his sister, was packed off in all haste to Calais, to be at his beck and call. Apprised of this attention, Charles sent a yacht to take her across to Dover. He wept, and fell into a sentimental mood on meeting her, and named her maid of honour to his patient wife. Her presence assuaged his grief. Re- lations with France grew less ticklish. But man walketh in a vain show, truly ! In the funeral oration in honour of Madame Henriette, Bossuet said : " The worthy link which bound the two greatest monarchs of the earth was broken, but now is soldered up a^fain.-^ Their noble desires win confidence of ^ Bossuet : Oraison Fimlbre de Aladame. MADAME HENRIETTE. 6l their peoples, and virtue henceforth shall be the only mediator between them." ^ It was not hard to recrain Buckingham. The French ambassador apprised Lionne that in obtaining a pension for the Countess of Shrewsbury, he would make the Duke his obedient servant. The pension was fixed at 10,000 livres, and faithfully paid. Colbert de Croissy was not slow to perceive the spell in which Louise de Keroualle held Charles, and the advantages to be obtained therefrom. "■ The king is always finding opportunities to talk with this beauty in the queen's room. But he has not, contrary to what is reported, gone yet to chat with her in her own room,^ contrary to what has been said here." Lady Castlemaine prepared to make war on the French charmer. She demanded the title of Duchess of Cleveland, and looked for sup- port to the Spanish faction.^ She made believe that she still reigned over the king, by getting royal favours heaped upon herself. Her patent of duchess was scarcely made out, when she exacted for her eldest son the title of ^ Colbert to Lionne, August 28 and Sept. 10, 1670. 2 Ibid., Dec. 15, 1670. 62 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. Marquis of Southampton, and for the second that of Earl of Northumberland. " In a few years," cried a malcontent, " Eng- land will be so happy as to see a House of Peers extracted out of the blood Royal." These evidences of victory caused sharper rivalry. Louise de Keroualle began seriously to study her game, and to play it with no light purpose at the balls given in December, 1670, at Whitehall. " The fashion of masquerading, introduced this winter," wrote Colbert de Croissy, " is a source of great diversion to persons of quality." The treaty of Madame was defended by Louise, who had not yet sa- crificed honour to her country. On the other hand, public feeling weighed on the statesmen of the Cabal. The English people had a true instinct of their maritime future, and of the great hidden danger that faced it. They cried out for the king to support Protestant Holland, and even Catholic Spain,^ against the King of ^ In this, popular feeling was wiser than Cromwell, great statesman though he was, had shown himself, twelve years earlier, in allowing Mazarin to circumvent him and to lead him into prostrating the naval power of Spain, which, in the Protector's time, had almost fallen into a decrepit state. {Tra}islaiot^s Note.) MADAME HENRIETTE. 63 France. It had an uneasy feeling that a great conspiracy was being hatched, but was Ignorant of its nature. The brooding suspicions came to a head, when England got into a state of frenzy about the Popish Plot. Louise was not sure of her empire, and found herself an object of ill-will to the Eng- lish. Her only chance, she saw, was in the discomfiture of the Duchess of Cleveland, to bring about which she seemed Inclined to yield to Charles, and yet, when pressed too closely, slipped away from him. In the close game of the masquerading winter, her affected coyness was ill-understood by her ally, the French am- bassador, who, not venturing to believe in her full success, and fearing a return of the vindic- tive Duchess of Cleveland, wrote to Louis, " I think it safe, while undermining that lady, to keep her on our side by appearing to be with her."i 1 Colbert to the King of France, Dec. 12, 1670. CHAPTER III. ACCESSION OF LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. " I NOW also saw that famous beauty, but in my opinion of a childish simple baby face, Mademoiselle Querouaille, maid of honour to Madame, and now to be so to the Oueen," Evelyn jotted in his Diary. The baby face was a deceptive one ; and the simplicity was a mask for transcendent art in finessino-. " How long," asked Louis XIV., Louvois, Lionne Colbert, and the Court of Louis XIV., *' will the resistance of this childish-looking girl be carried on ? " Meanwhile, the Court of Whitehall noted the furious tantrums of the Duchess of Cleveland, and other signs of her disgrace. " The influ- ence of the Duchess," reported the French ambassador,^ " visibly wanes. The trouble and expense which the Conde Molina has been at to get her round to the Spanish side, have been thrown away. While she loses favour, 1 Colbert to Louvois, Sept. 21, 1671. «4 ACCESSION OF LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. 65 the King of England's fancy for Mademoiselle de Keroualle fjrows stronirer. The attacks of nausea she had yesterday, when dining with me, makes me hope I shall find in her a useful ally as long as my embassy lasts." ^ This attack of nausea was a cause of de- light to the Court of France. " The King was greatly pleased," wrote Louvois, " to hear In what manner Mademoiselle Keroualle suf- fered when dining the other day at the French embassy. There was nothing in her conduct since she left France, to lead us to expect that such a piece of good fortune was going so soon to befall her. His Majesty is anxious to be informed of what may grow out of this situation, and of the terms on which she and the King have come to stand mutually." ^ But the rejoicing was premature, and the sickness recorded in the diplomatic paper had not the cause suspected. Louise continued to blow hot and cold at King Charles. She seemed to make light of the great interests which her coyness might damage. Her re- 1 Colbert to Louvois, Sept. 21, 167 1. ~ Louvois to Colbert de Croissy, in original autograph, Sept. 29, 167 1, Aff. Etr., Angle/erre, tome cii., fol. 283. F 66 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. sistance alarmed the Court of Versailles. Doubtless, Charles found pleasure in her society only. But he was not a man to suffer a prude long to reign over him. Was it not to be feared, that he would console himself for her reserve, with some other beauty ? "It is certain that the Kinof of England shows a warm passion for Mademoiselle Keroualle ; and perhaps you may have heard from other sources, what a finely furnished set of lodgings have been given to her at Whitehall. His Majesty goes to her rooms at nine o'clock every morning, never stays there for less than an hour, and often re- mains until eleven o'clock. He returns after dinner, and shares at her card-table in all her stakes and losses, never letting her want for anything. All the ministers, therefore, seek her friendship. Milord Arlington said to me quite recently, that he was much pleased at this new attachment of the king ; and that although His Majesty never communicated state affairs to ladies, still, as they could when- ever they pleased, render ill-services to states- men, and defeat their plans, it was well for the king's good servants that his majesty ACCESSION OF LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. 67 should have a fancy for Mademoiselle Kerou- alle, who was not of an evil disposition, and was a lady. It was better to have dealings with her than with lewd and bouncing orange- girls and actresses, of whom no man of quality could take the measure. She was no terma- gant or scold ; and when the king was with her, persons of breeding could, without loss of dignity, go to her rooms, and pay him and her their court. Milord Arlino^ton told me to advise Mademoiselle Keroualle to cul- tivate the king's good graces, and to so man- age, that he should only find at her lodgings enjoyment, peace, and quietness. He added that, if Lady Arlington took his advice, she would urge the new favourite either to yield unreservedly to the King, or to retire to a French convent. In his opinion, I should also advise her in this sense. I answered jocularly, that I was not such a fool, or so ungrateful to the king, as to tell her to pre- fer religion to his good graces ; that I was persuaded she did not await my advice, but that, nevertheless, I should not spare it upon her, to show how both I and Milord appre- ciated her influence, and in what esteem he 68 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. held her. I believe I can assure you that she has so ciot round Kino- Charles as to be of the greatest service to our sovereign and master, if she only does her duty." ^ The Countess of Arlington ended by fol- lowing her husband's advice, and concerted with Colbert de Croissy how to bring about the complete surrender of the young French beauty. This ambassador had held a high place in the French Judicature as President a Mortier. "He was a safe and sagacious mediocrity, who, by dint of application and plain com- mon sense, made up for what he spoiled by the coarse manners and self-sufficient dispo- sition of his family." He did not think the tradition of judicial dignity anywise in- compatible with ministering to the vicious fancies of Charles, as the ensuing despatch to Lionne shows. " The king did me yesterday the honour to sup at the Embassy, where he proved to me, by indulging in a gay and unfettered de- bauch, that he does not mistrust me,"^ Charles ' Colbert to Louvois, Oct. 8, 167 1, tome ci., fol. 167. 2 January 15, 167 1. ACCESSION OF LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. 69 was therefore brouoht, without difhculty, to accept an invitation from the Countess of Arhng-ton, to take Louise Keroualle to her ladyship's seat at Euston, so that he might escape there from his Court, which he had brought to Newmarket, and triumph over her remaining scruples. " I am going," the ambassador informed Louis, " to the Arlingtons' place at Euston ; and as the kincr's inclination for Mademoiselle Keroualle, who is to go there with me, is rising, I foresee that he will often run across from Newmarket to see her."^ The plot was approved of by Louis ; but, to save his dignity, when it was a little bruited he affected to treat it as a good practical joke. " His Majesty was vastly amused," Louvois was instructed to say,^ " with all that was in your letter about Mile, de Keroualle, and will have pleasure in hearing of the progress she makes in the King's favour. He even jested on the subject, and says that there must either be small love for the mistress or great confi- 1 October 8, 167 1. 2 Oct. 20, 1 67 1. Original autograph, Affaires Etraiigeres Ang/eteire, tome cii., fol. 290. LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. dence felt in you, to suffer you to go to Euston in such jolly company.' Lady Arlington was a Dutchwoman. Her maiden name was De Brederode, and her grand- father was the illegitimate son of Prince Henry Frederick of Orange. She was fond of lux- urious living and sumptuous surroundings, and had been forced by the necessities arising from these tastes, to promise in marriage her only child, — one of the most lovely girls that ever bloomed on English soil, — to the son of the Duchess of Cleveland. She insured herself against the loss of patronage which the dis- grace of that mistress would entail, by making her own seat, near Newmarket, the theatre of the French favourite's grand triumph. Euston is an immense house, built in brick, with two wings and four pavilions. A balus- trade crowns the mansion, and is ornamented at equal distances with alternate vases and statues. There was there, in 1672, a picture gallery and billiard room ; a chapel, an orangery, and a conservatory adorned with busts of the Caesars in alabaster. The apart- ments of each guest were so well isolated, that he, or she, might cut off all communication ACCESSION OF LOUISE BE KEROUALLE. 71 with the rest of the house, and enjoy an inde- pendent estabhshment. The king's apartments were painted in fresco. All the others were elegantly furnished. There were numerous bath "rooms, a pharmacy; and in the poultry yard coops for fattening fowl. The stables contained thirty horses, and the park a thou- sand deer. No member of the aristocracy had so many coaches in his mews as Lord Arlington. Besides the French party, Lady Arlinirton had invited the Countess of Sun- derland and a laroe number of members of the Court. The king, who was at Newmarket, came every other day, and often slept at Euston in the month of October. " The king," wrote Colbert,^ " comes here for his repasts ; and after eating he passes several hours with Mile, Keroualle. He has already paid her three visits ; and he invited us yesterday to Newmarket, to see the races. We went, and were charmingly entertained, and he seemed more than ever solicitous to please JNIlle. Keroualle. Those small atten- tions which denote a great passion were lavished on her ; and as she showed by her expressions 1 Colbert to Louvois, Oct. 22, 1671, /■i LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. of gratitude that she was not insensible to the kindness of a great king, we hope she will so behave that the attachment will be durable and exclude every other." It may be, that the Countesses of Arlington and Sunderland, under the pretext of killing the tedium of October evenings in a country house, got up a burlesque wedding in which Louise de Keroualle was the bride and the king the bridegroom, with all the immodest cere- monies which marked, in the good old times, the retirement of the former into her nuptial chamber. " The events of that night were the talk of the whole Court, and the subject of the pam- phlets of the day." These pamphlets, in their sharp precision and directness, bear the stamp of truth. They give in broken English the coy exclamations of Louise, " Me no bad woman. If me taut me was one bad woman, me would cut mine own trote." ^ A guest of 1 See Evelyn, Oct. 9, 167 1 ; and The Secret History of the Reigns of Charles JI. and James II. See also The Blatant Beast. The English puritans braved modesty when they wanted to defend decency against licence. Their de- scriptions of " the nights at Euston " are too strong for mo- dern taste to bear. The Royal Wanton, and Andrew Marvel's ACCESSION OF LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. 73 the Arlingtons, Evelyn, declares that he never saw at Euston a fete such as is described by the pamphleteers. But he adds, that he was only admitted twice to the king's table ; and he states that Louise remained in her undress for a whole day, whilst every one was trying to amuse and pet her. At any rate, she had a son exactly nine months after the mock marriage at Euston,^ and Louis XIV. on being informed of what took place there, ordered his ambassador to present his congratulations to Mile, de Keroualle. " I have made that young lady joyful," replied Colbert de Croissy, " in assuring her of the pleasure with which his majesty learned of her brilliant conquest. There is every prospect that she will hold long what she has conquered." The French ladies at Paris and Versailles viewed the intriorue in another lio-ht. INI me. de Sevigne wrote to her daughter,^ " Don't you like to hear that little Keroualle, whose star was divined before she left, has followed lampoons show how English feeling was in revolt against the French mistress of Charles. 1 Colbert to Louvois, Nov. 2, 167 1. - March 30, 1672. 74 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. it faithfully. The King of England, on seeing her, straightway fell in love, and she did not frown at him when he declared his passion. The upshot is, that she is in an interesting state. Is it not all astonishinfy ! Castlemaine is in disgrace. England, truly, is a droll country ! " Yet in that "droll country" Milton had, four years earlier, published his Paradise Lost, and Newton in that very year his Theory of Light. Louis at once tried to turn Louise's situation to diplomatic account. Three advantages, he believed, might be derived from the favour she enjoyed : (i) an alliance against Holland ; (2) a profession by Charles of the Catholic faith ; (3) a match between the king's brother, the Duke of York, and a princess chosen by Louis. The alliance was soon concluded. In the face of the interests, the prejudices, and the religious feelings of the English, Charles de- clared war against Holland in March, 1672, in the sixth month of Louise's pregnancy. On the 28th of April of the same year, Louis set out from St. Germain en Laye on his con- quering tour in Flanders. The profession by Charles of the Cathoh'c ACCESSION OF LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. 75 faith was not so easy to obtain. He began by objecting' that the Pope was too old to bring to a happy conclusion a step of such im- portance,^ and that the Enghsh CathoHcs were too weak in numbers, and had too few strong" brains among them, to give him good support. Louise and his wife's confessor. Father Patrick, tried to screw his courage up,^ because the Cathohc reh'gion could only be set up again, they argued, through a close union between the Most Christian King and Charles. Father Patrick kept Colbert de Croissy well informed about the king's objections, and everything else that he thought worth reporting. Charles and Arlino^ton more than hinted that it would be gratifying to them were Louis to grant the diplomatic priest an abbey, with a salary of four or five thousand livres. This wish was strongly dwelt upon in despatches of Col- bert de Croissy, who said that Father Patrick had so brought round Charles that he sent word to the Queen of Spain that he was de- termined to become a Catholic.^ ^ Colbert to Lionne, tome c, fol. 82. - Ibid., March i, 1672. 8 Colbert to Poniponne, March 14, 1672. The Queen 76 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. Charles's brother had no sort of hesitation to profess his religion. His wife had just died in the Catholic faith, and expressing all the sentiments which a recent conversion mieht be expected to prompt. His son followed her to the grave a few days later. The Duke of York asked the king's leave to remarry, taking a Catholic wife, and declaring openly his faith. All the belles of the court bedizened themselves in their precious stones and other finery, to make a conquest of the heir presumptive to the throne. The beauty and wealth of the widowed Duchess of Northumberland made her a redoubtable competitor. Lady Fal- mouth, another widow, was then spoken of.^ " But," said Colbert, " I doubt whether this Prince's passion for her is so great as to lead him to marry her. He would rather take a French princess, to whom his majesty might give a dowry." ^ of Spain, placed between her conscience and her political interest, coldly said : " Me haveis alegrado mnclio con la buena neuva de la piadosa i?ih'ncton del rey vuestro aino. Yo ayudare ciiinplimienio de tod as mis fuercas." 1 Colbert to the King of France, April 13, 1671. Lady Falmouth received immense sums and secret subventions from Charles. ^ Sept. 29, 1671. ACCESSION OF LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. 77 " If the Duke of York," answered Louvois, "wants a wife who is almost certain to bear him children, he can't do better than take Madame de Guise,^ who laid in thrice in two years, and whose birth, wealtli, and hopes of fecundity should make up for her want of beauty." The Duke of York, meanwhile, sought to console himself for the loss of his wife by giving up Arabella Churchill, and becoming intimate with Miss Sedley, who passed for being a prude. ^ Colbert was therefore puzzled to think how he could draw the Duke into wishing for a marriafre between himself and Madame de Guise. He promised Lionne to neglect no opportunity to bring about a match 1 Elizabeth d'Orlcans, second daughter of Gaston, brother of Louis XIII., married in 1667 to Louis Joseph, sixth Due de Guise, a widow in July, 167 1 ; died in 1696. The desirability of a match between the Duke of York and la Grande Mademoiselle was never once discussed, although that Princess said she was asked to marry him. 2 Miss Sedley had the gift of wit. On coming to the throne, James created her Countess of Dorchester, and when he was dethroned by his daughter Mary, Sir Charles Sedley, who voted for the Prince and Princess of Orange, said : " James made my daughter a Countess, and I now make his daughter a Queen." 78 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. with that lady, who, being the second daughter of Gaston, Due d'Orleans, was a niece of Henrietta Maria, and a first cousin of the Duke of York. On the 23rd of January, 1673, he wrote, " I shall neglect no means to ensure success in this affair, and I hope to triumph over every difficulty through the queen's con- fessor and the new mistress." CHAPTER IV. THE RIVALS. Colbert de Croissy ignored none of the dan- gers which beset Louise de Keroualle, who was hated and attacked by such old favourites as the Duchesses of Cleveland and Richmond, and the fresher theatrical ones like Nell Gwynn. In his despatch of December 24th he wrote to Lou vols : " The king is going to sup and dance at Lord Arlington's, and I am to be of the party. So also is the Duchess of Rich- mond. Her orreat talent is dancincj. Made- moiselle de Keroualle may be taken in by all these parties, and all the more so because she does not keep her head sober, since she has got the notion into it that it is possible she may yet be Queen of England. She talks from morning till night of the Queen's ailments as if they were mortal." The tongues of every one else, it must be owned, ran on the same topic, and each de- 79 So LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. manded the other when Catherine might be expected to die. " AI. Frazer, the king's physician, has ob- tained the kinfj's leave to examine into the queen's malady, and has found it to be con- sumption, which will end her life in two or three months, or, at latest, in a year. I hear it said, that the king was resolved the moment God takes this princess to Himself, not to let a month pass without satisfying the prayers of his subjects. He would choose for his wife some young and beautiful person of high birth capable of bearing him children. The doctors all talk thus to ingfratiate themselves with the kin t> rr "1 Catherine, though reputed so feeble and dis- eased, had a long life before her. She died thirty-two years later. But the theologians came to the help of the doctors, when it was found the latter had excited false hopes. The death of the queen, they said, was not necessary for the king's happiness. He was, as Luther taught in a parallel case, free to take a second wife while the first was living.^ ^ Colbert to Louvois, Feb. 20, 1673. 2 This was the opinion of Gilbert Barnet, the theologian cUyfis^rtm^ey (rf- cyO/r^JUf. '^a6i^?i^^. THE RIVALS. 8l But as Charles had no fixity of aim, he was led by his pleasures from the idea of a second marriacre. Without meaninsf to afflict the queen, or vex any of his mistresses, he was drawn into fresh amours. In eight months he gave Lady Falmouth seven thousand pounds, and the Duchess of Cleveland more than forty thousand. The duchess held the king by her four children, of three of whom he thought himself the father. She hectored him into acknow- ledging himself the parent of the fourth, which she did not deny to be a son of Henry Jermyn, brother of the Queen Dowager's domestic ty- rant, and husband, in fact if not in name. Henry himself stood in a similar relation to the Prin- cess Dowager of Orange, born Princess Royal of England. The Duchess of Cleveland, not- withstanding her undisguised passion for him, remained virtual sovereign, not only at the court festivities, but in the queen's bed- chamber. Louise de Keroualle was unable and historian of William of Orange. His famous treatises : Solution of two Cases of Cofiscience, and T/ie other Devorce, and ivhat Scripture allows in those Cases, have not been re- printed in the collection of his works, but are to be found in John Mackey's Coiirt of Great Britain. G 82 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE to dislodge her from that position until her Grace had to retire to France to escape from her creditors. The two rivals were, therefore, at the time of Catherine's great illness, face to face. Barbara was a furious scold, and ab- sorbed in amours which could not be termed secret, inasmuch as they were the town talk. Louise was tender, languishing, reticent, and de- voted to French interests, or rather to her own interests, which were bound up in those of France. One impudently played the wanton with other men, and the other sold Charles. Barbara scolded, laughed, and swore ; Louise pretended to love and languish. Of all the favourites, the only one the English liked was Nelly Gwynn, the gay, piquant orange-girl and actress. Sparks about the Court, and statesmen, took liberties with her, which she sometimes re- sented in a way that would, were it not for her feminine charm and good temper, have been thought too rough and ready. Colbert de Croissy informed Pomponne ^ that Buckingham, having one morning entered the reserved apartment of the king to talk with him about state affairs, found Nell there, she still having the good ^ Colbert to Pomponne, Jan. 23, 1672. THE RIVALS. 83 fortune to please Charles. The duke pressed her hard to grant him the favours she accorded to his master ; and as he rumpled her collar in trying to snatch kisses, she boxed his ears. At least so she said, and those who heard, believed her. Her adventures were the town talk, and amused rather than shocked the good folks of London. It is clear that she was an impudent jade, with irrepressible spirits and romping ways. But the English, under the merry monarch, liked boisterous gaiety and coarse fun. Clarendon's popularity was due to his jollity, frank bluntness, hilarious sensuality, and complete absence of pretension. He let him- self be ruined by buffoons and mistresses, and had a joyous disposition of a purely English type, which prevented him taking any pleasure in French fashions and ceremonious festivity. Sympathy with high animal spirits was general at Whitehall in the time of Charles H. Even the poor queen herself was drawn into the torrent of jollification. She did not think it beneath her dignity to disguise herself as a country-woman to mingle in the popular sports at fairs and markets and around Maypoles. When a visitor of the Countess of Suffolk at 84 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. Auclley End, she in such a disguise started off on a pillion behind old Sir Bernard Gas- coigne.^ The beautiful Frances Stuart, Duchess of Richmond, was in attendance, dressed as a farmer's wife, and also on a pillion behind Mr. Roper, In these travesties they went to the fair of Saffron Walden. The real country folks, taking them for play-actors, mobbed them so roughly that they had to get on horse- back and gallop off. A band of well-mounted yeomen rode after them, giving them chase to Audley End, where the porters, when the fugitives dashed into the park, shut the gates in the faces of their pursuers. Successful actresses, in the reign of Charles, lived in great luxury. Nell Gwynn's bed was adorned with ornaments in carved and repoiissd silver.^ She was, in the Royal favour, the suc- 1 A Florentine gentleman, brought into England by Mary de Medici when Queen Dowager of France and mother-in- law of Charles I. Sir Bernard Gascoigne had served in the Royal army in the Civil War. 2 See the documents that have been preserved at Mal- vern Wells, at Mr. Francis Hopkinson's. Nell made the Treasury pay for her boxes at the theatres to which she went as a spectator. She saw the "Tempest" four times at the cost of the country ; and " Macbeth," " Hamlet," THE RIVALS. 85 cesser of Mary, or Moll Uavies, whom the king got Sir Francis Ratcliffe to marry, after she had given birth to a daughter, christened Mary Tudor, to point out that she was of the blood royal. ^ Moll was Welsh, like Nell ; and so were the Tudors. In turn, Nell Gwynn was supplanted by a comic actress, named Knight. But she was never wholly abandoned by the king, whose last words were : " Don't let poor Nelly starve." She was popular to the end. The most hated of all the favourites was Louise de Keroualle, who was thought sly and intriofuinof, and was recfarded as the incarna- tion of the French king's policy, and the worst enemy of England. Court and people were of one mind about her ; and it must be owned that popular instinct roughly, but truly, divined the part she was playing, and the danger there and "Lear," once between September, 1674, and June, 1675. See also the Conmission on Historical Manuscripts, vol. iii., p. 266 ; and Pennant's Account of London. 1 This girl was, on growing up, provided with a dowry from the Exchequer, and given in marriage to the Earl of Derwentwater. Her son was the Catholic earl who was implicated ni the Jacobite rising against George I., and executed, Feb. 24, 17 16. 86 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. was, through her toils, of an arrest of the national evolution. It was into her ear, chiefly, that Charles poured his complaints of the rude and restive behaviour of his Parliaments. " The King of England," wrote Colbert de Croissy, on March 9, 1673, "hides his chagrin as well as he can. But I see that he has plenty of it ; and, if I can believe Mademoiselle de Keroualle, he told her yesterday that there was no course open to him but to dissolve Parliament. Although such a step would be of the most vital importance to your Majesty's interests, I have not yet ventured to try and obtain from Arlington confirmation of what the new favourite told me." Louise was very adroit and careful in feeling her way, and keeping w^ithin her depth. She abstained from urging anything which might lead to civil war. Seeing it would be fatal to her influence, and to her matrimonial hopes, to force Charles into making a profession of Roman Catholicism, she got the ambassador, Colbert, to inform Louis that, if the King of Encrland once declared himself a Catholic, every one would forsake him. The part of the nation which alone had backbone and THE RIVALS. 87 Stubborn will, was anti- Popish. The Duke of York, by his rash zeal, had made a public reconciliation of his brother with the Church of Rome impossible. There was but a single course to follow. It was by slow degrees to habituate the En and Nell ^2,862 ; 1 John Yonge Akermann : Moneys received atid paid for. 2 MS. British Museum addal., 28,094, fol. 54. BARRILLON. 205 in 1677 the Duchess ^27,300, and Gwynn only ;!^5,250. But the Duchess grasped and gnawed in many other directions, and was always eating into secret funds, whereas Nell was satisfied with her regular pension. A tradesman's account ^ of bills she ran up at his shop shows that if she clutched at money with one hand, she flung it away with her other like a modern French deini-mondaine. This bill contains the follow- ing entries : " Madame Carwell, now Dutchess of Portsmouth, Dr. to W. Watts :— " A coat of pigeon-breast and silver brocade ; breeches k la rhingrave with canons.- A coat faced with white taffety and lined with camlet ; breeches also faced at pockets and knees with tafteta ; breeches having at the thigh slashed seams, to show red and silver lace, canons idem, idem with deep frill of point lace. A coat enriched with plain satin and watered ribbons and red and silver cord with red, silver, and point lace at the cuffs. A linen collar embroidered over with needle open-work ; silk pockets of chamois leather for coat and breeches. Six dozen buttons of red and silver cloth ; eight ells of taffeta for lining sleeves and breeches. A pair of silk stockings. A belt and embroidered pair of garters. A black beaver hat laced with red and silver," 1 List of assets furnished by the executors of W. Watts, mercer to the Duchess of Portsmouth. 2 Canons w-ere the frills worn at the knees. One still sees them at the Theatre Fra?icais, in Moliere's Precieuses Ridicules and other plays. 2o6 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. Nell Gwynn had had such success on the stage in " Florimel," and other masculine characters, that men's clothes, which in the seventeenth century were bright in colour and very dressy, became the rage among the ladies at Whitehall. They did not want the pretext of a masquerade to don them there. The honest W, Watts charged " Madam Carwell " twice for the same taffety lining for her coat and inex- pressibles, which must have eclipsed in spruce elegance the stage habiliments of Nelly. The heavy pensions and emoluments, as it has been shown, were for Louise, and the small ones for Nell. Below these charmers there was a mob of rampant harlots, bastards, pimps and bawds, who all figure in the Treasury account books. Mistress Chiffinch, for showing ladies of easy virtue up the back stairs to the king's assignation rooms at Whitehall, had a pension of ^1,200 a year. Catherine Crofts had one of ^1,500. Frances Stuart, the stupid, but it cannot be said very mercenary, beauty, who married the Duke of Richmond, put up with ^150 a year. The pretty Bulkely had ^400 a year. A crowd of lesser concubines were only given sums of ^50 each. BARRILLON. 207 It was French money ^ that Charles scattered with such a loose hand ; and England was to pay for it in the arrest of national evolution and development. The valet de chambre, Chifiinch, went to receive the instalments of subsidies at the French Embassy; and his wife, a seam- stress by trade, gave the occasional mistresses their allowances. But the cash-box was opened for many others. All Barrillon's account-books have been preserved at the Ministry for Foreign Affairs. One learns in them, at what prices English patriots sold themselves, and under the stress of what temptation austere Puritans be- trayed their principles. Algernon Sidney is still in English eyes surrounded with the nimbus of a pure-souled martyr. He received ^500 for each parliamentary session, from the King of France.^ The friends of Government did not stay empty-handed. Lord Berkshire was given ;^ 1,000, and Colenian ^360. He was also entrusted with ^700 to buy members of 1 Not so. The Treasury clerks who paid Louise de Keroualle the vast sums already mentioned, never fingered a stiver of French money. {Translatoi's Note.) 2 See Aff^. Etr. Aiig/eierre, tome cxxx., fol. 6S ; tome cxxxi., fol. 146, for 1678. 2oS LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. the House of Commons, as his receipts and memoranda show. One Scott, a knight, according to his receipt, had ^200 for the same kind of work. Barrillon gave into the hands of different persons of note, for the in- formation they communicated to him, one hundred and eight pounds six and eightpence. He furthermore spent four hundred pounds in obtaining secret reports from officers of the army, treasury clerks, and secretaries of state. Before the year 1678 had expired, Barrillon found it expedient to renew his largesses. He was frightened at the drain on the French exchequer ; and yet he did not dare, from a fear of compromising a long-laid scheme of policy, to put a stop to it. No bribe was care- lessly given. Sir John Baber^ was engaged by him to sound Littleton, and bring him and Poole into close relations with the French Embassy. Poole was one of the leaders of the Puritan party, and distinguished himself by ^ This Baber constantly appears in the secret service accounts of Barrillon, who attached great importance to his information. He was doubtless the person whose reserve and reticence Fepys eulogizes in the Diary ^ March 14, 1660. BARRILLON. 209 his virulence acrainst the honest Strafford. Littleton received a bribe, direct from Barrillon. It would be difficult, the latter reported to his Government, to find two men who had more credit for patriotism and austere virtue in the House of Commons. It was impossible to with- hold from Montaoru fifteen hundred guineas for which he asked to bribe obscure country mem- bers, whose votes would tell at a division. This intervention of Montagfu was an odd complication of the ties which bound Louis XIV. to Charles. Montagu was the brother of Lady Harvey, and had long been ambassador in France. All the political men regarded him as belonging to the French party, when he suddenly de- nounced the Treasurer Danby as having been for many months engaged in secret negotia- tions with the Court of Versailles, and that, at a time when frightened by the strong tide of Opposition, he talked in public the loudest against France, and prepared with much noise a treaty of alliance between England and the Netherlands. Thus, Louis, abandoned by Charles, and be- trayed by Danby, at the moment that he was p 2IO LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. about to enter upon a new campaign in Flanders, found himself obliged, at no matter what price, to paralyse the action of England for at least another summer. He struck out a course with quick decision ; and did not hesi- tate, in paying Charles to adjourn or pro- rogue Parliament, to employ Montagu to attack Danby, whom he was also bribing. He entered into the p-ame of each of his adversaries, and supplied them with money, on the condition that they were not to make up and unite against France, but to prolong agitation, and reduce England to the condition of an impo- tent State. By his orders, his worst enemies in Parliament were encouraged by Montagu. Barrillon was deliorhted at this double Intriofue ; and, while he eofs^ed on the Kino- of Eng-land against the Opposition, he seconded the Russells, Lord Holies, ^ and Buckingham in opposing Charles. Louis, in an autograph letter, in- structed him to make use of the king's authority ^ Barrillon was mistaken in his estimate of Holies, who was second son of the Earl of Clare, was created Baron Denzil in 1661, sent as ambassador to France in 1663, as plenipotentiary to the Hague in 1662, and who died in 1680, before he could receive a splendid gift Lous XIV. intended sending him. BARRILLON. 211 and friendly feeling against the House of Com- mons, and of the Parliament to prevent effect beino' criven to resolutions which Charles mijjht be brought to take against him. Danby's treaty with Holland reconciled Charles and his Parliament ; but party divisions were sufficiently prolonged to enable Louis to strike a decisive blow in his campaign of 1678. He went to war early in that year. On March 1 2th, Ghent fell into his hands. Ypres yielded a few days later, and Mons was invested. The Dutch plenipotentiaries hastened to sign the peace of Nimeguen. Spain followed their example in the next month, and the German Empire gave in at the beginning of winter. Louis issued triumphantly from his struggle with coalesced Europe. This triumph of France was due to the long neutrality of England. The English people beheld with rage the crippling of Protestant Holland by a Catholic power. They were carried away against the Catholics by one of those frenzies of contaerious hatred which sometimes take hold of a nation like an epidemic. When a nation is possessed by a fit of such fury, there is always a statesman ready to pander to it. 212 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. Shaftesbury, in this instance, came forward to throw fuel on the rao-ino- fire. Ashley Cooper, Earl of Shaftesbury, had in his youth fought for Charles I. against the Parliament ; and turned round to serve the Parliament, when he saw it was the strongest. He flattered the Republicans, by celebrating the fall of the Malignants ; and was " the loudest bagpipe of the noisy crew." When monarchy was restored, he cast off the sanc- timonious mask, and, to please Charles, pos- tured as a libertine. He played each part so well, as to be successively lauded as a patriot and a God-fearing man by the Puritans, and to deserve being called by Charles " the most vicious dog in England." A daughter of the Protector Cromwell, whom he courted, refused to marry him. He was incapable either of piety or libertinage, because a born sceptic and of a feeble constitution. He had in youth the body of an old man, was ghastly, wrinkled, and his hands shook from palsy. When a minister of Charles, he courted the Opposition, and prepared to avenge himself, not only on Danby, whose head he wanted, but on Charles himself, whom he longed to humiliate. DARIULLON. , 213 Shaftesbury was never so humble and ob- sequious as when he was meditating vengeance. He wrote to the kinsf, that all he wanted was " to lye at his feet, and make publicly, in the House of Lords, any acknowledgment and submission that his Majesty demanded," But while he cringed, he was suborning the crew of false witnesses who were gathered together by Titus Oates. That monster announced that the English Catholics had hatched a plot for the assassination of the kino- and all the Pro- testants. The people, who were in a state of frenzied anger at the impunity granted to Louis, swallowed Oates' fable with a credulity which had no parallel in history. They wanted victims to satisfy their rage ; and nobody sus- pected of sympathizing with the Papists was in safety. The first victim was the knave Coleman,^ the Secretary of State, whose receipts figure in Barrillon's accounts. The French ambas- sador wrote coolly to Versailles : " Coleman has sent me word to be in no wise uneasy, because nobody can find in his papers a scrap of writing to testify to his transactions with me." ^ AJf aires Etrangcres, tome cxxxi. fol. 53. 214 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. We now know that Coleman was a traitor to his country. But those who accused him and those who found him guilty had nothing to go upon. He was charged with not having shown horror at the Papist Plot, and with having ne- glected to keep minutes of the letters that he wrote. " Don't be afraid," said the Lord Chief Justice to him. " There will be no condemna- tion if your crimes are not brought home to you. We shall not act towards you as you wanted to act towards us, in trying to murder us." Thus, the judge held him morally guilty before his counsel spoke of the crime invented by the perjured informer. It is worth noting that the English people, who are imbued with the notion of fair play, are the most respectful of law, and the most scrupulously observant of legal forms, have produced the greatest number of servile judges, and in their State trials shown the most revolting examples of juridical iniquity. English history, from the time of the Tudors to the reign of George III., is a narrative of juridical murders. Coleman was accused of having incited the Jesuits of St. Omer to assassinate the king, in return for the payment of 30,000 masses. Gates swore BARRILLON. tliat he had learned of tliis barcrani at St. Onier, and the Lord Chief Justice praised him for his coLiraQfe in ofivinof evidence to this effect. He also swore that Coleman was to pay the Irish ^200,000 to rise in rebellion. The miserable wretch had sold himself to Barrillon for ;^20o ! The king was to have been either poisoned, poignarded, or shot. Titus Gates, who pretended he had seen Coleman in a Jesuit conclave, was unable to identify him. But the jury were indifferent to this point. The scene described had taken place by candle light, which, every one knew, dimmed the sight. In cross-examination he was asked why he had not been so circumstantial in his early deposi- tions ? The answer was, that he gave them standing, and that being on one's legs impairs the memory. The Lord Chief Justice adopted this explanation. Coleman wanted to establish the Catholic religion, by assassinating the king and placing the Duke of York, his friend and patron, on the throne. This could only be done by assassinating Charles. Therefore he planned the assassination. In virtue of this reasoning, the judge summed up against the prisoner, the jury found him guilty, and he was 2i6 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. sentenced to be disembowelled, and his intes- tines burned before his eyes. This example terrified Charles. His ladies ceased from quarrelling, and gathered round him in dismay. Oates denounced the Duchess Mazarin as the accomplice of all the plots ao^ainst the Protestant relis^ion. The Duchess of Portsmouth, who had a Catholic chaplain in her household,^ felt that at any instant she might become the mark for popular fury. She saw that Charles was ready to bend to the storm, and that if it burst over her head it would be idle to hope for his protection. She told Barrillon that she could not help remem- bering how, three hundred years before,^ Alice Perrers, the mistress of Edward III., was obliged to appear before Parliament and swear that she would never again see that king. England was a country of precedents. Perhaps she thought her wisest plan would be to return to France. " Madame de Portsmouth," wrote Barrillon to Louis on Dec. i, 1678, "has had another conversation with me.^ She is not 1 Courtin to Pumponne, March 25, 1677. 2 In 1376. ^ Barrillon to King Louis, Dec. i, 1678. BARRILLON. 217 sure that she can stay in England. There are many persons who are minded to name her in Parliament, as conspiring against the Protestant relicrion for the Kincf of France. She thinks it would not be a great misfortune to be obliged to retire to France, especially since your Majesty has assured her, through Lord Sunderland, of your kind protection. Her presence here, she is afraid, must embarrass King Charles, and she would prefer to get away while he preserves some kind feeling for her, than, by staying longer, to expose herself to the rage of a whole nation. Her position would be sad indeed, if, after she lost the king's favour, she was assailed by Parliament and people." The queen herself was in danger during this hurricane, and clung to the Duchess of Ports- mouth. The Duke of York left England. Charles did not dare to keep his band of P'rench musicians at Whitehall, because they were Papists, and sent word to Barrillon through Louise, to beg that he would shelter the poor fellows at the Embassy. The King of England finally cowered down to the lowest depth of abasement, and abandoned every one whom he 2i8 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. was in honour bound to protect. He had not even the courage to defend his wife, who, as a Cathohc, was set upon by the Shaftesbury crew. The hbertine in difficult circumstances rarely preserves dignity. The habit of enjoyment lowers every energy. Love of pleasure de- stroys courage. One sees in a full strong light, in Charles, a common enough character, that of a man of happy endowments who sinks down into a life of slothful ease and luxury, regards every difficulty with dread, loses all self-respect, and, although naturally goodnatured, becomes capable of no matter what bad action, from sheer indolence and cowardice. H«. got the better of the jealous rages of his mistresses by yielding to them. This habit was brought into his policy ; and when the people demanded the heads of Popish plotters, he let them have them, in order to enjoy quietly his epicurean pleasures, He not only sacrificed innocent and estimable persons, but became their persecutor ; and he even ofave his countenance to the false wit- nesses. Nobody knew better than Charles what the Catholics wanted. He was a Catholic himself. He was more guilty than any of the suborners, false witnesses, and intriguers, be- BARRILLON. 219 cause he not only was chief magistrate, but because, with the money paid for his promise to declare himself a Catholic, he was paying Titus Oates and his band of fellow perjurers. He let them sleep beside him, and surrounded them with his guards ; he saw to the preparation of their meals ; recruited, with the money he had received from Louis, subordinate informers, and paid limbs of law who were employed to dog Papists and hunt them down. In the bottom of the money-chest, which the mistresses had nearly emptied, he found ^10 a week for Titus Oates, whom he boarded and lodged in his palace of Whitehall. The weekly allowance of ^10 was augmented to ;^i2. Charles paid for the maintenance of false witnesses in town, he paid spies engaged in discovering Popish plots. The Protestants did not force him to do this. On the contrary, he hid his hand when it made these payments. It was all done out of the secret fund, with money that he obtained from abroad for his seraglio. One Millicent Hanson obtained "^10 for seeking out priests." One Massal orot ^20 for trackinor and arresting a priest. Dangerfield and Oates, besides their stipends, were allowed for expenses and time 230 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. lost in going to depose ; for discovering Papists hidden at Court, and for informing where Jesuits had property concealed. They also received handsome presents. Among the victims of this shameful panic,^ was the most respected member of the House of Lords, and the most odiously condemned of all the alleged plotters — the Earl of Strafford. ^ Charles II., who knew his moral worth, in- curred the same reproach for weakness as his father earned in desertins^ the first Lord Straf- ford. He was guilty, besides, of having paid out of his pleasure fund the perjurers who swore away the second Earl's life. He gave Charles Clare, " for finding witnesses and bring- ing them into court, ^loo." The Duchess of Portsmouth did not descend with the kinof so low as to court Titus Gates. 1 The popular instinct was right. All that M. Fornenon has brought to light shows that the panic was well founded. But it took a wrong direction — the king being the arch plotter, not so much to destroy Protestantism, as, for the gratification of his shameful vices, to reduce England to the rank of a satellite of France, which then, to obtain the co- operation of the Jesuits in Louisiana, Indo-China, and in the Spanish Colonies, became more Catholic almost than the Pope. {Translator' s I\'ole.) BARRILLON. 221 But she judged well to meike peace with Shaftesbury, and helped him to re-enter the Cabinet. Shaftesbury then became the prepon- derant minister. BuckinMiam ^ was discredited in the eyes of every party, and was harassed into his grave by his creditors. Danby was a prisoner in the Tower. Sunderland entirely depended on the support of Louise Keroualle. But this orreat rise in the tide of his fortune turned Shaftesbury's head. He thought him- self able to get rid once and for ever of the real chief of his party, — a man as ailing and ambitious as himself, — the Prince of Orange. Some other heir to the throne was essential to the perpetuation of Shaftesbury's power. He wanted a docile tool, and made the blunder of setting up as a Pretender the Duke of Mon- mouth, the eldest of the king's bastards, six of whom were dukes, and brought forward as his sons when he touched for the evil. Monmouth had many natural gifts ; but he had been adulated from his cradle, spoiled by his father, caressed by the mistresses of Charles and of the Duke of York, and corrupted by the atmosphere and examples amid which he was 1 The Ziaui of Diyden's Absalom and Achiiophel. LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. reared and thrown by all the circumstances of his early manhood into libertinage and nerve- less poltroonery. He was a poor chief to offer to the Protestants during their effervescence. Charles certainly was fond of him ; but he had not sunk so low as to wish him to be accepted as his heir. The king, in his embarrassment, sent word by the Duchess of Portsmouth, that he would be glad to have some talk with Barrillon at Whitehall, as soon as the company she usually received there in the eveninof had retired. When the ambassador went, Charles told him that the King of France might, if he chose, preserve to him his crown, and attach him for the rest of his life to his interests. It was not a time for compliments and empty words, but for rapid action. The King of France would have to decide whether England was to remain a monarchy or become a republic. Things had come to such a pass that his majesty would have to make up his mind to support Royalty. Unless he did so, nothing could prevent the Parliament from absolutely disposing of ques- tions of peace, war, and alliances. Finally, Charles urged Barrillon to repeat all that he BARRILLON. 223 said to his sovereign, and to conjure the King of France, in his name, to help a course which for the rest of his hfe would make Enijland dependent upon him, and attach the Crown indissolubly to his interests. Barrillon profited by the opportunity to tax Charles with paltering- conduct ; and with some sharpness reproached him with the Princess Mary's Dutch marriage. He reminded him that, notwithstanding the heavy pecuniary sacrifices which the King of France had made, he had always reason to complain that English neutrality was insecure. Charles asked for the favour of another conversation, an account of which, along with that of the one just cited, is given on July 13, 1676, in the Foreign Affairs archives. The Kinof of Enofland owned that the re- proaches of Barrillon were well founded, and yet not quite just. How was it possible to resist the Duke of York and the Lord Treasurer, who wanted to fish for popularity in crying out against France ? Secretly he stood out against them as far as he could ; but there were resistless fatalities that drae^'cd him on. Charles admitted that he erred in 224 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. not foreseeing what the Dutch match would lead to. But his bitter experience would be a guarantee of his future conduct ; and the King of France might credit him when he declared that, in future, nothing in the world would detach him from his interests. He saw with pain and deep grief the shedding of innocent blood. But if he had stood between the accused Catholics and the national fury, he would have risked everything. Meanwhile, young Monmouth, — and particu- larly in the evenings after supper, when excited by wine, — claimed through his mother, Lucy Walters,^ descent from Edward IV. and the 1 Charles, who seems to have had a taste for Celtic beauty had among his concubines a Breton (Louise de Keroualle), two Welsh women (Lucy Walters, or Barlow, and Nell Gwynn), and an Irish woman (Peg Hughes). Lucy Walters, Monmouth's mother, was, — in 1649, when she was with him at St. Germains en Laye, where Evelyn first saw her, — a beautiful, brown, bold, and insipid creature. She was the daughter of Richard Walters, of Haverfordwest in Wales, a gentleman of little means, and she came to London to seek her fortune. Algernon Sidney, when a colonel in Cromwell's army, meant to have her, and gave her fifty broad pieces (as he told the Duke of York), but missed his bargain, he having been hastily sent away with his regiment. She fell into the hands of his brother. Colonel Robert Sidney, from whom Charles H. got her in his BARR/LLOA. 22 = rights of the Mouse of Plantagenet. This, Barrillon thought, might be regarded at Ver- sailles as chimerical. But chimeras were less ridiculous in EnMand than elsewhere.^ There was a general taste for romantic improbability, which would serve the ends of an impostor ; and the common people liked the fables they saw played in the theatres, about mysterious marriages being cleared up, and true heirs in the end, coming by their own. Louis stopped supplies, and drily wrote, that until a positive engagement was made that Parliament would not be again convoked, no further subsidy would be given. Charles accepted his humiliation, and, at the Duchess of Portsmouth's rooms, told Barrillon that he had resolved to follow the course proposed by Louis, and not to let Parliament assemble until wanderings. The world had cause to doubt whether Mon- mouth was a Stuart or a Sidney. He had the countenance, complexion, stature, and even the wart on the face of Robert Sidney. However, ihe king owned him. Lucy Walters called herself Mrs. Barlow. She led such a loose life during the campaign of Charles, ending in his escape at Worcester, that he would have nothing more to do with her ; and she became a woman of the town in Paris, where she died miserably. {Translator's Note.) 1 Barrillon to King Louis, July 6, and July 13, 1679. Q 226 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. the King of France judged that it might be convoked without inconvenience to him. The ambassador recriminated on the sovereign, and asked him how he could reasonably hope that the French Exchequer could afford to sub- sidize Charles with unstinted generosity, if he played into the hands of the enemies of the King of France, and by doing so helped Euro- pean coalitions to make war upon him. The last war he sustained against Spain, Holland, and the Empire, was a wasting one. If Charles had an intelligent perception of his own interest, he would try to spare France every kind of military expense. But instead of that, the last war had been begun by the King of England. He made peace certainly with reluctance, and under the constraint of the House of Commons, which forced him to make it on a separate footing, and to leave France single-handed to fight Europe. This misfor- tune drained the French exchequer. It was no longer possible to give heavy subsidies un- less for serious services. Formerly they had been given out of brotherly friendship, and this might have been continued had Charles proved staunch in cleaving to the French alliance, BARRILLON. 227 and enabled Louis to dispose rapidly of his enemies. However, as Louis did not wish to see Charles distressed for want of money, he would give him a proof of his desire to see him free from pecuniary embarrassments and his authority restored. To this end he had ordered Barrillon to offer him an advance of ;^ 20,000 If he would engage not to convoke Parliament before the month of March. Charles expressed great surprise at the offer of so Inconsiderable a sum, and spoke warmly about the alternative which was imposed on him of either being reduced to dependence on Louis orof lettine the House ot Commons act accord- ing to its impetuous hatred or caprice. He got the Duchess of Portsmouth to plead for him, and submitted to her in everything. She had the skill to direct the Government through the medium of Sunderland. What little energy remained to Charles he showed in defending her. Two young courtiers, Jarret and Dunquot,^ set her little blackamoor drunk, and gave him money to tell them things derogatory to the ladies, and In particular to the one most 1 Probably Duncomb. English names are sometimes mis-spelt by Louis's imbassadors, {Translator's Note.) 22 8 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. honoured by the attentions of the King of E norland. When the slanderous tittle-tattle which they based on what they heard from the blackamoor came to the king's ears, he forbade them to appear at Court. A cause of fresh and deep annoyance to him was, to find that his secret conferences with Barrillon were re- vealed by Sunderland's wife, who feared her husband might be compromised by his rela- tions with France. She vowed to every one that she was in a state of constant hostility to the Duchess of Portsmouth, and that that " designing jade " brought about interviews be- tween the king and Barrillon, gave the latter his cue, and that he repeated what she told him like a prating starling. The Countess protested, that all she asked was to extricate her husband from dano-erous intrioues.^ At o o the same time, Algernon Sidney^ beheld with irritation the favour which the Frenchwoman 1 Henry Sidney's Diary of tJie Times of Charles II., ed. 1843, vol. I, p. 232, the Countess of Sunderland to H. Sidney, Jan. 13, 1676. - Algernon Sidnefs Letters to H. Saville in the Year 1679. London: 1742. See letters from Feb. 20 to April 28, 1679. I do not know what value is to be attached to these letters on the score of authenticity. BARRILLON. 229 enjoyed, and the want of energy of the House of Commons, which, when her name was men- tioned in a debate, did not seize the opportunity to attack her. To prevent herself being- attacked, she adroitly looked for support in Monmouth. There was in her followins: a confidential servant, one Mistress Wall,^ who cried on the house-tops about Louise's passion for him, and of her disinterested tenderness in trying to further his pretensions. This Mistress Wall was given, as a recompense, the privilege of furnishing body-linen to the queen, and promised the secret function of Mistress Chif- finch whenever she might die.^ These tricks came out, and were made a theme for satirical lampoons. The pamphleteers published " inter- cepted letters " from Madam Carwell to the Duke of Monmouth. They taxed their in- genuity to place her, to the nation, in the most odious light, by holding her up as the sheet-anchor of the Catholics and of France. She was made to say to Monmouth, "All these English hate me, but that does not trouble me, since the king tells me everything, and my friends alone have influence." 1 Henry Sidneys Diary, vol. i., p. 170, Nov. 17, 1679. 2 Ibid., vol. ii., p. 22, April 2, 16S0. 230 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. The Duchess renewed her instances with the French ambassador on behalf of Charles. " I saw yesterday," wrote Barrillon,^ "Madame de Portsmouth, from whom the Kinor of Ene- land keeps nothing hidden. She came to tell me that if your Majesty would give him four millions of livres a year for three years, he would enter into any engagement your Majesty might propose. But without this sum he could not avoid assemblinof Parliament. The kine himself told me later in the day, that he was mortified to be reduced to driving a bargain with your Majesty." While these negotiations were going on, the hopes of Monmouth and Shaftesbury were raised. But Charles was taken with a maligf- nant fever, and seemed on the verge of the grave, when his doctors gave him up and allowed him to take the Chevalier Talbot's quinine specific, which was then a novelty and known as Jesuits' bark.^ This illness ' This letter should be regarded as of doubtful authenti- city. It is not in any of the French State records, and is only found in the MS. of the British Museum. 2 The disease, according to Evelyn, was ague; and quinine, or quinquina, had been brought into vogue, not by Talbot, but by Tudor, the king's apothecary. The physicians would BARRILLON. 231 brought about Shaftesbury's and Sunderland's diso;race. The Duchess of Portsmouth and the Duke of York united to get Monmouth sent from London. He was saved from exile by Louis, who feared such a stretch of authority would give rise to a situation that would force Charles to make concessions to Parliament. He also pointed out to Barrillon that the, for him, cheapest manner of proceed- ing, was to foment quarrels between the king and Opposition, by giving subventions only to members of both Houses ; and he continued his largesses to the Country party. To this end Barrillon paid Algernon Sidney^ not, out of envy of Tudor, give it to Charles, until the king secretly obtauied the opinion of Ur. Short, in whom he had confidence because he was reputed (falsely) a Papist, and was told that it was the only thing that could save him. {Translator's Note.) 1 It is due to the memory of Sidney, to say that his Re- publicanism was thought sincere by the different agents of Louis, and that they classed him among the political English- men of his time who were not bereft of moral sense. There is no direct evidence in the French records to show under what pretext or through what agency the French Embassy got round Sidney, and induced him to be a pensioner of Louis. But from much in them the inference may be drawn that he thought any stick good enough to beat down such 232 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. the 500 guineas that he wanted ; to Baber, the Presbyterian leader in the Commons, 500 guineas ; to Littleton, 500 guineas ; to Powels, 500 guineas ; to Herbert, ^ 500 guineas ; and " to maintain Bulstrode in his employment at Brussels," 400 guineas. Notwithstanding these g7'atificaiions, Parlia- ment continued unmanageable. Monmouth came back triumphantly to London. Barrillon informed Louis that an event had just taken place " which would have appeared most ex- traordinary in any other country."^ It was the return of Monmouth, *' who every night," Barrillon added, " sups with Nelly, the courte- san who has borne the king two children, and whom he daily visits." Nelly set up to place a vile thing as the Engh'sh throne had become ; and made up his mind to accept aids which Barrillon artfully led him to hope for. Sidney spent a good deal of money in trying to get up a Republican movement. {Translator's Note.) ^ Probably the Herbert who became Lord Herbert of Cherbury in 1678, and was grandson of Herbert the author. He married Catherine, daughter of the Earl of Bradford. The other Herbert was William, Earl of Powis, Marquis of Montgomery, who, being a Catholic, could have no influence. Herbert Earl of Pembroke, Louise Keroualle's brother-in law, was never in the House of Commons. 2 Barrillon to Louis, Dec. 14, 1679. BARRILLON. 233 herself at the head of the Protestants, whicli did not prevent her subsequently from going over to the Catholic Church.^ Parliament demanded the removal from Court of the Duchess of Portsmouth and Sunderland, against whom the heads of an impeachment were drawn up. It was proposed to execute them both, with Danby and the Catholics who were in the Tower. Charles at last resolved to prorogue Parlia- ment. As the treaty of which this step was a condition remained a secret, it was attributed to " Madam Carwell." She, it was said, feeling herself exposed to an impeachment, made the king prorogue for a long period. She was alarmed at the rumours to this effect, and fell ill from sheer fright. She spoke of dismissing all her Catholic servants, and prepared to re- tire, herself, to France. ' Letters in the Verney collection at Claydon House. CHAPTER IX. SUNDERLAND AND SHAFTESBURY. The sudden blow which Charles struck de- ferred the danger in which Louise stood, with- out suppressing it. Popular hatred of France ran higher than ever; and the judges were as abject in pandering to the animosity of the nation, as they had been servile to the Govern- ment. The Duchess of Portsmouth, by boldly standing up in this crisis for the French alliance, became the object of general hatred, and was not sure that the king would persevere in defending her, or of the sincerity of the Duke of York when he sought to unite with her. The king had again found another mistress, who was the daughter of a nobleman. ^ His brother sought to make his peace with the Protestants, and offered as a holocaust the 1 Thought to be the daughter of Rochester, who, in 1683, married Lord Ossory. =34 SUNDERLAND AND SHAFTESBURY. 235 Duchess of Portsmouth.^ She had therefore to manoeuvre with extreme dexterity in keeping all her friends, and in not exasperating her enemies. She entered into the closest union with Sunderland. In this she scandalized his beautiful wife, who wrote : " So damned a jade as this would sell us without hesitation for 500 guineas." Louise and Sunderland drew to- wards them, and brought into their orbit the supple, .adventurous, and clever Godolphin, who was coquetting with the Prince of Orange. The latter was becoming uneasy at the preten- sions of Monmouth. The efforts of the Duchess of Portsmouth and Sunderland in 16S0 were directed towards keeping alive the uneasiness of the Prince of Orange, husband to the pre- sumptive heiress to the throne ; not letting the Duke of York, whom they knew to be cold and selfish, play them false, and avoiding to stir the bile of Shaftesbury, or to wound Mon- mouth's vanity. The Frenchwoman took the audacious course of declaring openly for the Prince and Princess of Orange ; and was so explicit in declaring she preferred English to ^ Barrillon to Louis : " I believe each wishes to save himself at the cost of the other." 236 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE French interests as to seriously alarm Barrillon and make him lose his temper, which was further tried on his hearingf that she sought to be on good terms with the arch-enemy of France. But she re-assured him somewhat, by coming privily to tell him that the king at bottom was what he always had been, and that he wished to preserve the friendship and alliance of the King of France.^ The French ambassador, however, could extract nothing from her regarding the conclusion of the treaty. Barrillon did not attach at this time much importance to the services of the Duchess. He knew that public opinion had risen against her with a violence which he thought irresistible. He overheard tipsy bloods in the theatre^ speak in abusive terms of her and Lord Sun- derland ; and on the same day the Duke of Monmouth's health was drunk by the wild young men about town, in all the taverns and coffee-houses,^ Barrillon thought he might by ^ Barrillon to King Louis, to whom, after Pomponne's disgrace in 1679, he addressed most of his letters. ^ Barrillon to King Louis, Jan. 15, 1680. 3 May 20, 1680. It was in this letter Barrillon said of the future Duke of Marlborough : " He is wholly inexpe- rienced in public busniess." SUNDERLAND AND SHAFTESBURY. 237 his efforts create a cross current of opinion which would take from the tumultuous force of the one that was growing up, and that he might get the better of intriguers by corruption. He moreover thought it of the highest im- portance to retain Montagu by his sister, Lady Harvey, who had power over his mind, and who could render many useful services. She might be secured by a nice present ; and the snuff-box intended for Lord Holies, not having been given to him, might go to the lady. If his Majesty thought it too considerable, a sum of less value than it represented would do as well, for she was not above taking money. Her rapacity might be stimulated by insinu- ating that she might expect further gifts from France. As her aid could be most valuable, Barrillon was anxious to secure it. He also, he said in the despatch on this subject, had gained two Nonconformist preachers.^ His aim was to form a solid group of agents from the different parties, and to use alike Republi- cans and courtiers. To well understand this policy, his "list of persons to whom gratuities may be offered " - should be read. 1 July I, 16S0. - July 24, 16S0. 238 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. In the letter which accompanied that docu- ment he says : " The Duke of Monmouth is now more considerable than anybody else. He might perhaps not relish being offered money ; but I think that, under the pretext of enabling him to withstand the machinations of courtiers, a sum might be offered for him to dispose of as he i/i07/o-/ii well. In oraininof him, all his partisans would be gained as well, and he w^ould be placed in a situation in which he could never more be reconciled with the Court, or the Prince of Orange. However, it should be made clear to him that he was to prevent Parliament voting the king any money, because, if his majesty Charles II. does not feel his depend- ence, he will give us the slip. I think the Duke should be offered ^^4,000. This would be more efficacious than if we spent twice as much in bribing the Parliament. Shaftesbury directs all the attacks against the Court, and is at the head of the malcontents. If mxoney is given him, and he thinks he has France behind him, he will be more daring. ;^4,ooo is the least that could be offered to him. The mem- bers of the House of Commons who might be usefully bought are : Algernon Sidney, for SUNDERLAND AND SHAFTESBURY. 239 500 guineas down, with the promise of 500 guineas more; Powels, 1,000 guineas ; Herbert, 1,000 guineas ; Baber, 1,000 guineas. All the other members named in the annexed list were tested in the Danby affair, and were very use- ful. Baber is not in Parliament, but he mixes a good deal with Parliamentary men and with the Presbyterians, and he has their confidence. He is a man from whom I have much profit, and it is to him that I owe my intimacy with Lord Holies. There are other members of the House of Commons who could be made, ac- cording to opportunities and conjunctures, to serve our ends. Vindington,^ who has been Solicitor-General ; Colonel Titus, Burnet, Ber- nard, and Eslon and Papilion, who are all merchants of the City of London, and highly respected Presbyterians ; Player, treasurer of the Corporation of London ; Sacheverell,^ and Harley, the ex-governor of Dunkirk. It is 1 Probably Sir T. Widdrington, who was Speaker under Cromwell, but very old in 1680. ^ Not the preacher who obtained for himself prominence in Anne's time, but an M.P. who was rabid against the second Earl of Strafford. Player was the City Chamberlain, and the " railing Rabsheka " of Dryden's Absalom and Achiiophel. 240 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. hard to say what mi^rht be offered to each of them. But there might be a fund of 20,000 crowns placed at my disposal, which could be employed according to the utility and facility that there would be in oainingr them. It is indispensable to begin with a payment of 1,000 guineas to Montagu, who is industrious, capable of continuous application, and enjoys the entire confidence of the Duke of Monmouth, This money ought to be remitted to him before the end of September, when I promised that he was to have it." Louis XIV. wrote in pencil on the margin of the letter : " M. Colbert will give an order for 4,000 pistoles. Instruct M. Colbert to have a letter of change sent to M. Barrillon for 100,000 francs." Barrillon insisted that, in his judgment, France should not have a secret bias for any party,^ but set them all on, one against the other, and keep them at daggers drawn. Thus the King of 1 It is to be gathered from the correspondence between him and the Court of Versailles, that he was reproached with having encouraged Sidney to appeal to his old Iron- side comrades against Monarchy. The warmth with which he insists that the King of France should be indifferent as to means, Republican or other, in a degree clears Sidney's memory. {Translator's Note.) SUNDERLAND AND SHAFTESBURY. 241 France, who was destined to revoke the Edict of Nantes, was led to support the Presbyteri- ans, because the Prince of Orange, whom he hated, was drawing close to Charles. His ambassador only thought of preventing these sectarians falling into pits dug for them by the Court ; and with this object made the acquaint- ance of their chief orators. He so gained Powels ^ that he was able to write : " This person is entirely with me, and will follow all my instructions. I have taken the same steps to bring Herbert into my hand. Nobody made himself so useful in the Danby affair. He stayed a whole day when the impeachment debate was going on,^ and only allowed those whom he thought favourable to the Court to go out, and prevented the others leaving, almost by force.^ He is a strong, vehement, hot-tem- pered, and selfish fellow. I have much inter- course with Sidney. He is greatly opposed 1 Poule. 2 Oct. 4, 16S0. 3 The English historians never seem to have suspected the real cause of Danby's impeachment. They regard it as due to political rivalry or patriotic indignation. It was simply owing to the rancour of Louis, and to all the money he spent in hunting down Danby, whose fall, he thought, would serve as a warning to Charles. {Translator's A^ote.) R 243 LOUISE PR KEROUAT.T.E. to the Court. But I have reason to fear that Sunderland, who is his nephew, is getting round him for the Prince of Orange. I know that Sidney has a strong leaning towards the Republic. Baber continues to work the Pres- byterians. It is through him that I have gained two popular preachers, who can insinu- ate things which it would never do to say openly. I know they have spoken in the pulpit of a matter which would not count any where else, unless here, but which in England is no trifle. It is, that the Prince of Orange hunts on Sundays." The Duchess of Portsmouth had no cause, at this tiine, to be afraid of Nell Gwynn, whose eldest son ^ had just died. She had recruited to her side another actress, Mary Davis, whose daughter she was bringing up under her own eyes, with the intention of giving her in mar- riage to Sunderland's son. She even suffered the queen to receive some little marital atten- 1 James Beauclerc, died in i6So ; the second son, Charles, born May 8, 1670, was created Duke of St. Albans on Jan. 10, 1684, and married, in 1694, Diana de Vere, the last of the Oxford de Veres. He was the ancestor of the present Duke of St. Albans. SUNDERLAND AND SHAFTESBURY. 243 tions from her indolent husband. He went to inform Catherine of what had taken place at a debate in the House of Lords/ and, as a mark of extraordinary kindness, sat for some time in her chamber after dinner, and then took a long nap there — a thing he was only in the habit of doing in the rooms of the Duchess of Portsmouth. The apoplectic Charles had allowed Parlia- ment to be convoked at the end of 1680, when it discussed a bill to exclude his brother from the throne. Barrillon redoubled his efforts to destroy the chances of the Prince of Orange.^ He was obliged to go to work through agents. To have treated directly with him, would have been to expose life and fortune. Montagu and his sister, Herbert, Algernon Sidney, and Baber were his best auxiliaries. Mrs. Harvey was bold and enterprising, and was intimate with numerous courtiers and members of Parliament. She recruited Hampden^ and Haber — both men of weight in the Opposition. Algernon Sidney, Barrillon reported as a man of great views and designs, which all made 1 Nov. 28, 16S0. - Dec. 5, 1680. ^ Son of tlie patriot who stood out against Charles I. 244 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. for the establishment of a Repubhc. He be- longed to the party of the Independents and other sectarians who carried all before them in the anti- Popish disorders. They were not strong in Parliament, but were powerful in the City ; and it was owing to Sidney's manage- ment that Bethel ^ was elected Sheriff. The services that Sidney rendered were not ap- parent, because he had to deal with obscure and hidden men. Herbert was a friend of Montagu, and vigilant, active, pushing, and wanted to make his fortune in obtaining pay- ments for services rendered to France. He often brought information of great value to the French Embassy. Baber was a link be- tween Barrillon and the Presbyterians. Louis instructed Barrillon to persevere in keeping England weak by internal divisions. He was to prevent, at any cost, the reconciliation of the Court and Parliament. It is probable that the King of France found it cheaper to bribe members than to go on bribing Charles. The expense of doing the former, for the session which ended on January i6, 1681, was not so Slingsby Bethcll, Sheriff of London in 1680, and the Shimei of Absalom and AchitJiophel. SUNDERLAND AND SHAFTESBURY. 245 heavy as the smallest subsidy to the king. Hampden and Herbert received 1,000 guineas each; Haber, Titus, Hermstrand, Baber, Hill, Boscowen, and Algernon Sidney, 500 guineas each ; Bennett, Hodam, Hicdal, Frankland, Tompton, Harvey, Garowan, Sacheverell,Tolen, and Bide, 300 guineas each ; one Ducros, resid- ing in Holstein, and a friend of Lord Sandwich, 150 guineas, " for furnishing good information " ; one Le Pin, a clerk of Sunderland, 150 guineas, " who sometimes gave valuable hints ; " to Baron de Witt, a Spanish agent, 100 guineas, also "for hints and news;" and 1,000 guineas to Montagu.^ Louis was workino- to obli!T;e Charles to indefinitely prorogue Parliament. He knew to what degree he was unnerved by pleasure, and how lazy his mind had become. Louis also feared a reconciliation at his expense. He stirred up, therefore, the king against the Commons, and egged on the Commons to aggress upon the king. As the force of Oppo- sition lay in the most intolerant Protestant ' See Les Etats de Ban-illon, inserted in Affaires Efran- geres, Anglcferre, tome cxl. fol. 338, and tome cxlii. fol. 170, from Dec. 5 to Feb. 13, 16S1. 246 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. sects, he subventloned the preachers who led these fanatical bodies to attack the Crown. The Duchess of Portsmouth was not in the secret of this Presbyterian and Republican policy, which was begun when Louis was com- mencing to persecute his own Protestant sub- ects. She imagined she was pleasing him when she intrigued to restore the authority of Charles, and was astonished to find herself often thwarted by Barrillon. To find out how things really stood between the French Em- bassy and Versailles, she pretended to him that she had been sent a warning from France, that Louis was not satisfied with her conduct, and that yet, as the ambassador well knew, she had done her utmost to restore good intelli- gence between the kings of France and Eng- land.^ But Barrillon, while acknowledging that the French favourite was holding her own and was not shaken by the downfall of her ally, Sunderland, preferred acting without her and winning his way by the sheer force of money. She, however, affected to ignore his change of tactics, continued to tell him everything,^ and did not appear to suspect the too great sim- 1 Feb. 27, 1681. ^ August 28, 1681. SUNDERLAND AND SHAFTESBURY. 247 plicity with which he opened his mind to Lord Montaoru, He orave to this nobleman a second bribe of 2,000 guineas, and was soon after, under a clumsy pretext, asked for a third. ^ In- deed, in a vague elucubration, having a cock- and-bull flavour, Montagu told the ambassador of Louis that he would soon be able to ren- der his Majesty the King of France services of not less importance than those he discharged when the interests of that sovereign demanded the impeachment of Danby. But he could bind himself to do nothing more, if full and entire payment were not guaranteed. What his proposed services were, he refused to say, because, if he disclosed them prematurely, he would risk to seem frivolous in the eyes of the King of France. Nevertheless, they were of a nature to place England in a situation which would long prevent her injuring France. On finding that she was no longer utilized as a secret-service agent, Louise de Keroualle struck up a friendship with the Duke of York. She had a percentage on the Irish taxes, and got the grant, in virtue of which she derived this income, confirmed. She also leant with 1 Sept. 22, 1681. 24S LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. one arm on the king, and with the other on the Duke of York, his brother. Meanwhile Barril- lon and the Prince of Orange ^ worked, each on his own behalf, the House of Commons. Shaftesbury and Monmouth fancied they could trust in their partisans, and the Republicans hoped to deceive their corruptor. Findino; himself unable to deal with the com- plicated web of intrigue woven around him, Charles II. submitted himself without reserve to Louis XIV. He prorogued Parliament in- definitely, and turned into his own coffers by his docility all the French money that came into England and which would, if he had not obeyed, have gone on losing itself in a number of pockets. The calm his submission produced, was sudden and complete. The Duchess of Portsmouth soon recovered her serenity of spirit. It was during this lull that she summoned 1 To understand to what extent English patriots were corrupted by the Prince of Orange, see Barrillon to the king, July 7, 1681 : "The Earl of Arran (Duke of Hamil- ton's son) has not yet accepted the 500 guineas which your Majesty permitted me to offer him, because he wished first decently to decline offers made him by the Prince of Orange." Perhaps he wanted to see whether he could not get more out of the Prince. SUNDERLAND AND SHAFTESBURY. 249 to London Henri Gascar,^ a French painter. Another French artist, Ramboury, was author- ized by Louis XIV. to go and execute at Windsor^ paintings which his Britannic Majesty wished him to do. No mark of confidence and satisfaction was spared by the King of France, who was already preparing the campaign in which he meant to take Courtray and Luxem- bourg, and who wrote, by the hand of his secretary Rose (who was authorized to imitate his writing, so that it would pass for his auto- graph), to proffer a request which, in the place of Charles, he would have never granted. It was to ask the Kinqf of Enoland to exert his authority to put a stop to the prosecution of Count Koenio-smarck.^ This affair throws a 1 Gascar, born in Paris in 1635, died in Rome in 1701. There are two portraits by him extant of the Duchess of Portsmouth. One represents her with a Portuguese head- dress ; the other, which has been engraved, shows her defending against a cupid a bird that is in her lap. Gascar painted also Henriette de Keroualle. The oldest portrait of the Duchess is by Anthony Cooper. It must have been done soon after she first arrived in England, Cooper having died in 1670. There are also portraits by Kneller and by Lely. Gascar's is at Hampton, and INIignard's at Ken- sington. ~ Oct. 26, 1681. ^ Barrillon to Colbert de Croissy, Nov. 24, 1670. 250 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. Strong light upon English manners in the reign of Charles II. Lady Elizabeth Percy, daughter of the last Earl of Northumberland, had been married at the age of twelve to Lord Ogle, and was a widow in the following year. Her husband was hardly in the grave when she was abducted. She had set sail for Holland with Lady Tem- ple, and Sidney had escorted her to a yacht which he had obtained for her. The old Countess of Northumberland and the youth- ful widow's guardian, a Mr. Bret, forced her to marry Mr. Thomas Thynne,^ of Longleat, who had an estate worth ^10,000 a year. But he was in no haste, for a cogent reason, to consummate the marriage. Lady Ogle was told the legal consequences of this ; and as she knew she had been deceived and sold, she availed herself of them to try to get the marriage declared null, or at least to escape from Thynne. Miss Trevor appeared at her side when she went to give evidence, and swore that she and Thynne were solemnly engaged. But three months later, Thynne^ 1 The Issachar of Dryden's Absalom and AcJiithophel. 2 Barrillon to tlie King, Affaires E/rangeres, Angleierre, tome cxlvi., fol. 343. SUNDERLAND AND SHAFTESBURY. 251 being- in London, was, when riding" along Pall Mall, at seven in the evening, attacked by three armed men. One of them fired at him six musket-balls, which entered his body and killed him. Count de Kceniofsmarck was one of the murderers. He had aspired to marry Lady Ogle,^ and wanted to be avenged on Thynne for snatching her up. The Count was the lover of Sophia Dorothea, Electress of Hanover, and aunt of the second wife of the Due d' Orleans, nde Princess Palatine, with whom the Electress kept up an affectionate correspondence. This fact explains why the King of France interfered to save an assassin, whom it was, once that monarch interfered on his behalf, impossible to hang. The pro- secution was so managed by the Attorney- General that, though he was notoriously guilty, no proof of guilt was produced, and he was acquitted. The heiress who, at the age of fourteen, was twice widowed, married the Duke of Somerset when she was scarcely fifteen. 1 Swift, in doggerel verse, accused her of complicity in Thynne's murder. She avenged herself by, on her knees, imploring Queen Anne not to give him a bishopric. That dull but amiable monarch said, a good man could not have such a bitter enemy, and refused the see to Swift. {Translator's Note.) LOUISE DE KEROUALLE The dream of Louis was accomplished. He held England in tlie web he had woven round her. Charles became more and more attached to his even-tempered mistress, who had weathered out with him the storm of the Popish Plot. She was sure henceforth of exer- cising undisputed authority, and was no longer obliged to conceal that she headed the French party and was the connecting link between the kines of France and EnMand. She had such confidence in her force, that she did not fear to absent herself from Charles for several months. It had been her dearest wish to return to the French Court, the scene of her early humili- ations, to shine there as the favourite of the Kinof of EnMand. She desired to tell Louis by word of mouth all she had done to reduce the British nation to be the satellite of France, and to a state of durable subjection. The period of her visit to France was one of splendid triumph and gratified pride. She triumphed In the most brilliant Court In the world, and among those satirical French ladies who had known her poor, humble, and blown upon. CHAPTER X. RETURN TO FRANCE. Charles and the Duchess of Portsmouth se- parated from each other for some months at the besflnninof of March, 1682, the kinof ^oino; to Newmarket, and the Duchess to her native country. But before she set out she was care- ful to draw in advance the quarter of her pen- sion which was to fall due at the end of the month. ^ She moreover provided herself with letters from the King of England and Barrillon, one of which asked and the other advised Louis to grant her the favour enjoyed by the Duchess of Cleveland at Versailles, namely the right to sit on a tabouret when she went to pay her respects to the queen.^ She also wished for more solid favours ; and Charles did not shrink from speaking about them to Barrillon.^ 1 Money for secret services, fol. 68. 3 March 5, 1682. 5 Barrillon to King Louis, I\Iarch 16, 1682. 253 25+ LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. "He has charged me to suppHcate your Majesty to accord to her your protection, for the arrangement of her private affairs in France. I turned the conversation to another subject, when he spoke about her wish that your Ma- jesty should withdraw the domain of Aubigny from the Crown to give it to her. But I made him hope that your Majesty would give her other marks of kindness. The truth about her is, that she has shown great, constant, and in- telligent zeal for your Majesty's interests, and given me numberless useful hints and pieces of information. She believes that the Kinsf of England wishes to further your Majesty's in- terests. The enemies of the Duchess of Ports- mouth give out that she is going to France to settle there." The Duchess embarked at Greenwich on board a yacht, that was fitted up purposely for her, and landed at Dieppe.^ She was received as a sovereign at the French Court and invited to all the fetes at St. Cloud. ^ She wrote to 1 Barrillon said, at Dieppe ; Godolphin said, at Calais. See Godolphin to Bulstrode, in a letter preserved at Keele Hall by the Rev. W. Sneyd. ~ See correspondence of Preston, the English ambassador to Louis XIV., which is at Netherby Hall. RETURN TO FRANCE. -33 inform Charles of her triumphal reception, and he hastened to address to Louis "his best thanks for the kindness he had shown to the Duchess of Portsmouth." " There has never been a parallel for the treatment she meets with," St. Simon bears witness. " When, on a high holiday, she went to visit the Capucines in the Rue St. Honore, the poor monks, who were told beforehand of her intention, came out processionally to re- ceive her, with cross, holy-water, and incense. They received her just as if she had been the queen, and threw her all in a heap, she not expecting so much honour." ^ On the 29th of April she left St. Cloud for Aubigny, where she spent some days, because she was to take the waters of Bourbon in the middle of May. At that watering-place she met her sister the Countess of Pembroke, stayed with her about three weeks, and then traversed Paris again, towards the middle of June,^ probably to revisit Brittany. She showed herself at Court a month later, and busied herself with investing the 1 Ecrits in'edits de St. Simon, t. iv. p. 4S5. - Sec the Preston correspondence, at Netherby Hall and at Keele Hall. 256 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. fortune which she had amassed in England. It was usual at the English Court to invest money in foreign securities. The Duke of York trusted for this purpose ^160,000 to Father Gaufre, a French Jesuit/ on learning of whose death he was much concerned. Barrillon had advised him to lodge the money in la Chambre des Emprunts. in the name of the honest Courtin. The victorious progress of Louise Keroualle in France had its reflex action in London, when she reappeared there at the end of July, 1682. " She has never been previously," Barrillon wrote to Louis,^ " treated here as a person of high quality and great consequence. She and the Duke of York are very intimate."^ He spoke some months later of " the homage paid her by Louis XIV. being like sunshine, gilding and glorifying an insignificant object." It dazzled the Court of England ; and the dazed eyes there no longer saw her imperfections. Her power became incontestable, and her cool- ness of head and intriguing dexterousness seem to have been favourably judged by the 1 Barrillon to Colbert, May 14, 1682. 2 July 27, 1682. 3 Oct. 18, 1682. RETURN TO FRANCE. 257 political men in France, for Louis himself sent her word that he had the fullest confidence in her judgment, and that no blunder could be committed so long as she was his medium. He thought it was due to her tact and discernment to consult her on everything relating to the Court, and that there was to be no suspicious hanging back from any step that she recom- mended. It became dangerous to cross the path of the woman who was to be henceforth the link between two kings of great nations. The Dutch minister, Vanbeunengen, learned to his cost how ill-advised he was to stand in her way. He thought well to call attention to her familiarity with Barrillon,^ whose access to her at all hours showed a confidence and a close intimacy which could hardly fail to grive umbrage to the Kinor of Eno-land's allies. Louise took offence at his remark, and com- plained to the king of his want of respect for her. Vaubeunengen offered formally to beg her pardon, and to give her any explanation that would show how far he was from wishing to offend a lady for whom his Britannic Majesty showed such great regard. He was even will- 1 Oct. 20, 16S2. 258 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. ing to go to the rooms of the Duchess at Whitehall and to apologise there. The queen herself obliged her ladles to be deferential towards the favourite. One of Catherine's maids of honour, Philis Temple/ had the boldness to speak ill of the Duchess before Lady Conway, who meanly and hum- bly ran off to denounce her. The Duchess, who had the gift of tears, wept and complained to the queen, who deprived Miss Temple of a quarter's salary. The Duchess Mazarin was too observant to remain unconscious of the meridian height to which Louise's star had mounted, and descended with a good grace to a secondary rank in the seraglio. She sought a compensation in a gay life with persons of easy morals. There were only two things which disturbed her epicurean serenity. Her income was not equal to her expenses ; and, her husband having withdrawn her pension, she depended entirely on Charles's generosity. The King of England preferring that M. Mazarin should join in the expense of maintaining the lady, the King ^ Letter in Sir H. Verney's possession at Claydon House, dated, Oct. 23, 1682 RETURN TO FRANCE. 259 of France was again pressed to make him give her an annuity. Charles suppHcated Barrillon^ to tell his master what an obhgation he would confer on him, if he exerted his authority in behalf of the Duchess Mazarin, who had not received any remittance for two years from France. She almost simultaneously assured the ambassador that she had not craved the good offices of Charles, because she placed all her hopes in the bounty and protection of Louis. The other cause of trouble to the Duchess Mazarin, were the importunities of her gallants. She so wonderfully retained the charms with which she was gifted, that her situation of king's mistress did not inspire awe, or prevent her from being the object of the most romantic and passionate adoration. After the Prince of Monaco, who had come to spend two days in London, and remained two years, absorbed in her worship — after the Portuguese Vascon- cellos,^ who did not see that the blindness of his love made him an object of ridicule — after Montao^u, who neMected for her sake the iFeb. 9, 16S2. 2 Dom Luis de Vasoncellos y Souza, who had been in London from 1667. 26o LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. political intrigues on the success of which he staked his head — there appeared among her worshippers a Swedish hero, and a young Frenchman, her own sister's son, who was destined to humble the pride of Louis. The Chevalier de Soissons, better known as Prince Eugene de Savoy-Carignan, came to London and fell in love with his aunt. Baron de Bainer, son of one of the generals of Gusta- vus Adolphus, was also captivated by her. They had both attracted attention by their hectoring airs and the great length of their swords, which dragged on the pavement as they strode along. They grew jealous of each other, and fought a duel in which Bainer was killed. The combat amused the Court of Ver- sailles,^ where lords and ladies wondered at the eyes of a grandmother doing such execution. Madame Mazarin, when Prince Eugene killed de Bainer, was the mother of a son and three grown-up daughters. The second daughter was Abbess of Lys ; the youngest had married the Marquis de Bellefonts in 1681 ; and the eldest, whom the father wanted, in spite of her aversion to a religious life, to take the veil, got ^ De Skvigne, Nov. 26, 1684. RETURN TO FRANCE, 261 the Marquis de Richelieu to run away with her from the Convent of Ste. Marie of Chaillot, and was still running about Switzerland and elsewhere, while the young lady's father was consulting monks and other Churchmen at Grenoble, la Trappe, and Angers, as to whether he should consent to the marriasre of the fupfitives. Both families were for lettinof them get married. But the Duke Mazarin went on asking theological consultations ; and the run- away couple would have been obliged to go on as lover and mistress, if the king had not inter- fered.^ At the end of two years the scrupu- lously pious father was forced to give his consent to marriage, but showed his reluctance by refusing to give a dowry of more than loo.ooof. The king signed a pardon — the first ever granted for the abduction of a novice from her convent.^ But the habits of wild liberty contracted when she was an outlaw prevented M. de Richelieu's wife from settling down quietly. Her husband, forgetting how he had taught her to use scaling-ladders, confined her in ijan. 1683. 2 Dangeau, Sept, 5, and Oct. 17, 1684. 262 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE the English nunnery in the Faubourg St. Jacques, from which she got away, by cHmbing over the w^all/ The mother was mortified at her daughter's adventures and at Prince Eugene's duel. She talked of embracing a conventual life, and of her salutary sadness and disgust with everything. Saint Evremond, in elegantly turned stanzas, painted her black melancholy, from which she eventually found a solace in drink. Mean- while the passion for gambling took posses- sion of her, and was a cause of chagrin to her poetic adorer, who speaks of 1682, as the year in which the preponderance of the Duchess of Portsmouth became definitive, and her rival's love for basset got to an incurable height. She passed her nights at the card-table, where she held the bank, and forgot Maurice her buffoon. Chop her dog, Pussy her cat, and Pretty her parrot. Of Roman origin, she was accused of ancient Roman vices, which she mixed up with modern French and English modes of sinning. In the daytime, she searched for Oriental curiosities in the ships that had freshly arrived from India. At Newmarket, she was up and 1 Dangeau, April i, 1703 RETURN TO FRANCE. 263 out on horseback, at five in the morning. On racing days there were the excitements of bet- ting, and of being jostled in the crowd which rushed to see the horses on the course. In the evening there was the theatre and Shak- speare's plays, which, as well as the English drama of the period, Saint Evremond thought tedious. After the play came the oyster sup- per, and then basset. Madame Mazarin had at Newmarket her reo;ular court of ladies. Besides Lady Harvey, she was watched with admiration by Mademoiselle Beverweert- Nassau,^ whom she called Lotte, and employed to serve at her toilette. The other fair followers were Mesdemoiselles de Bratjelone, Grenier, and de la Rocheguilliem, the novelist. This group of women did not attempt to cross the path of Louise de Keroualle after her return from France. Her power was thence- forth undisputed and indisputable. 1 Daughter of Prince Louis of Nassau, the Dutch am- bassador to Whitehall CHAPTER XL END OF THE REIGN The Duchess of Portsmouth also held gam- bline tables and a bank in her rooms. But the excitement of cards did not entirely absorb her. She played at the more dangerous pastime — amorous intrigue with Philippe de Vendome, Grand Prior of France. This French nobleman was grandson of Henri IV. and la Belle Gabrielle, and son of the Duke de Vendome and Laura Mancini, sister of the Duchess Mazarin. He came to London in 1683, when he was twenty-eight, had a bright wit, was singularly handsome, but did not pass for being brave. He slipped out of a duel about the Duchess de Ludre with M. de Vivonne by riding off to the country, and slid out of the army on the eve of the battle in which Turenne was killed. This descendant of Henri IV. was received and retained in London by the Duchess of Ports- 264 END OF THE REIGN. 265 mouth with a tenderness so undisguised as to excite the raillery of the whole Court. The watchful and crafty Barrillon did not like this.^ He saw that the king took um- brage at Louise's fondness for the Grand Prior, and that now and then he showed himself suspicious and ill-humoured about him. But these fits did not last long. Prudence should have made the Duchess of Portsmouth order the Grand Prior to return to France. But she was so happy to have him with her that none of her friends had the courage to tell her what she ought to do. To advise her to separate from de Vendome would have displeased her. Sunderland feared that the king's suspicions would become angry convictions, and bring on a rupture. Nevertheless, although she did not banish the Grand Prior, she continued to find favour in the eyes of Charles.^ The leading ministers kept in close intimacy with her. Her enemies were alert to do her mischief, but she was no less so to defeat their malignity. Sunderland, in spite of the fears he expressed to Barrillon, took care to be on good terms 1 Barrillon to Louis, June 17, 16S3.. * Ibid., June 28, 1683. 266 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE, with iM. de Vendome, whom he asked to dine at his house. The suspicions that Louise was playing the wanton with her countryman, did not prevent Louis from keeping up with her an autograph correspondence, and charging Tilladet, his Lieutenant-General and Captain of his Cent Suisses, when he sent him on a mission to Charles, '^ to remain in constant relations with Madame de Portsmouth." ^ That envoy informed the King of France* that, on reaching London, he called on the favourite, and informed her that he had been ordered to tell her in what hio-h regard his Majesty held her, and to assure her that he desired to give her proofs of his friendship in all sorts of occasions. She received the mes- sage with signs of the deepest respect, and prayed the Lieutenant-General to say to his Majesty how unfortunate she esteemed herself in not having been so far able to prove to him her gratitude, and how sorry she was that his Majesty had been obliged to content himself with good intentions only, ^ July 29, 1683, tome cl., fol. 124. 2 Autograph letter of Tilladet to Louis, Affaires Eiran- gives, A tighter re^ tome cl, fol. 163, END OF THE REIGN. 267 Charles beheld, with no unmoved counte- nance, the Grand Prior's visits. Not that he dared voluntarily to show his displeasure. His will was flaccid, and he was too conscious of that limp state which throws worn-out epi- cureans under the domination of their mis- tresses. He, however, tried by peaceable means to get rid of Vendome's odious presence. To this end he asked Barrillon, through Sunderland, to forbid the Grand Prior to visit the Duchess of Portsmouth, in whose rooms the erandson of Henri IV. and the Beautiful Gabrielle did not appear for four or five days.^ But this absence made her irresistibly attrac- tive to him, and he renewed his attentions. The king, finding this out, thought it a reason for expelling the Grand Prior from England. Barrillon undertook to break to him Charles's intention in the gentlest way possible, and thought to make him go away quietly. But M. de Vendome declared he would only leave when the king himself ordered him by word of mouth to go, and requested the ambassador to demand for him an audience. Barrillon, to prevent a storm, obtained, after much suppli- 1 Barrillon to Louis, Nov. 21, 16S3. 268 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. cation, leave for the Grand Prior to speak to his Majesty in his chamber. There he at- tempted to justify himself; but the king declined to hold conversation on the subject, and would not rescind his decision. The Grand Prior did not make any preparations for leaving, wanted Barrillon to refuse to intimate to him the order to quit England, and, although menaced with the displeasure of Louis, refused to tear him- self from Whitehall. Charles sent for the French Ambassador, who prayed him not to impose on him the harsh necessity of telling the Grand Prior that he must quit the country. After letting the matter drag some days. Lieutenant Griffin, of the Household Guard, intimated to M. de Vendome that if he did not leave in two days he had orders to arrest him and put him on board a packet which was to sail for Calais, The distracted lover still held out. He offered to go to the country, or to go to France, pro- vided he were allowed to come back to Eno-- land. At the secret entreaty of Louise, who wanted to avoid a scandal, Barrillon com- municated these proposals to Charles. But he remained firm to the message he had sent by END OF THE REIGN. 269 Griffin ; and so the Grand Prior sailed at the end of November for Holland. The friends of the Duchess of Portsmouth breathed again freely, and she found relief in the absence of the fancy lover. She had been in terror lest the Grand Prior should think she was playing a double game, and show the letters he had received from her. He was as much stimulated by ambition as love to stick to her, he hoping to derive great advantages and consideration from a liaison with her. Up to the moment that the ship in which he sailed left her moorings, the Duchess of Portsmouth was in dread of a public scene. Louis XIV., of whose foreign policy the Duchess was still a necessary agent, helped her through this scrape. He ordered the Due de Vendome to write to the Grand Prior to inform him that he was free to return to the Court of France, where he would meet with a better reception than his bad conduct in England had given him a right to expect. The Grand Monarch himself instructed Bar- rillon to let Madame de Portsmouth know how he had sent Croissy to warii her lover, that if ever he said a word to her disadvantage, he :7o LOUISE DE KEROVALLE. would incur his resentment.-^ He spoke to the same effect to the Due de Vendome, so that the lady might feel assured she would not be in France an object of raillery or slander. Indeed, Louis expressed his will sa clearly, that the Grand Prior never opened his lips about his Whitehall adventure, which v/as kept so dark that the Due d'^Orleans, who abtained some inkling of it, either from the king his uncle or the De Vendomes, fancied the object of the Grand Prior's passion was one of Charles's minor concubines. He would not have paid any attention to the matter if he had not been amused at the audacity of a foreigner in brav- inor a kinor in his own State and at his own Court. The Duchess of Portsmouth, in her relations with the Grand Prior, had formed such a low opinion of him that, notwithstanding the threats of Louis, she feared an ill use might be made of her letters. What strengthened her uneasi- ness was, his persistence in remaining at the Hague, and saying he would return to London. An order, at her instance, was sent to him from ^ Dec. 21, 1683. The Duke of Vendome was eldest brother of the Grand Prior. END OF THE REIGN. 271 Versailles, to proceed there forthwith ; and the French ambassador was instructed, that if he showed himself m England, King Charles was to be encouraged to use his authority in having him arrested and expelled,^ so that the Duchess of Portsmouth was to be exposed to no further annoyance. In due time the Grand Prior ap- peared at Versailles,, and thus ended noiselessly an affair which had been a cause of deep anx- iety to Louise de Keroualle.^ Charles, during this period of his reign, received ^60,000 a year from Louis. The receipts were signed by Rochester, who alone, with the Duchess of Portsmouth, was in the secret of this transaction. He was a brother of the Duke of York's first wife. The Duke of Rochester and Louise were on the best under- standing with each other, and they three direc- ted all the affairs of the Royal family. When the Duke of York was looking for a match for his second daughter, the Princess Anne, he consulted the Duchess of Portsmouth on the choice of a husband. She was charged to ascertain the opinion of Louis Ouatorze on Prince George of Denmark, and to send the I Feb. 14, 1684. 2 Jan, 1684; Feb. 18, 1684. 272 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. likeness of the Princess to Copenhagen.^ The King of Denmark reph'ed by sending his minia- ture set in brilhants to the Duchess.^ In Lon- don the gift was estimated at 1,500 guineas. When the ambassadors of Morocco came to London, it was not the Queen or Duchess of York, but the Duchess of Portsmouth, who entertained them. She received them, surrounded by all the mistresses who were admitted to the Court. These dames, — the accomplished Evelyn spoke of them as " cattle," — were as splendid as flowered tabby dresses, point lace, and jewels could make them. They blazed in diamonds. Chocolate was served to them all. When Louis Quatorze ordered the Marquis de Preuilly^ to sail up the Channel without deigning to send a notification to Charles, it was she who undertook to show the kinof that this was not to be taken as a sig-n of want of respect or friendliness, and that his best course was to make believe it was con- certed between the two sovereigns. Otherwise those who wanted to detach him from France 1 Barrillon to Colbert. 2 Affaires Etrangcres, Afigleferre, tome cxlix., fol. 401. 2 Barrillon to King Louis, June 21, 1683. '■'///■ I ^>'i;9ly/t/C''. END OF THE REIGN, 273 would see in it an opportunity to weigh upon his determination to lean on that country. Barrillon, who was so adroit and crafty, treated her as a colleatrue. When the Princess Anne was married, she asked him whether the Court of Versailles would not send a special envoy to the wedding ? He answered : You and I will suffice to pay all the compliments, and it would be a mistake for persons in our situation to ask for a special Embassy to be sent." The eood understandinof between the two monarchs was heightened by a favourable turn in public opinion, which was brought about by a blundering plot. Some old Ironsides of Crom- well, and fanatical preachers, burning with shame and indignation at the debauchery of king and Court, and the contempt in which England was held abroad, conspired together to assassinate Charles, who, they discovered, was the Man of Sin and the Son of Perdition. The iniquities of him and his Court were rotting the fibres of the nation, and bringing God's displeasure upon it, as shown in severe winters, prolonged east winds, the great fire, the plague, small-pox, and the disrespect into which the name of England had fallen. That there was a plot, is estab- T 274 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. lished. But the names of the plotters are not so well known. The Court had the adroitness to Implicate the principal members of the Op- position ; and the judges, with their habitual servility, summed up against them, Shaftesbury disappeared from the political scene, and Al- gernon Sidney was beheaded. The arrest of Monmouth relieved the partisans of the French alliance from a strong rallying-point for its adversaries. Charles had turned against his eldest son, and spoke cynically about him.^ Lord Grey had been among those tried, at- tainted, and condemned to death. After his execution the King's heart melted, and he wanted to restore his confiscated estates to the children of the unfortunate nobleman. But the intervention of the Duchess of Portsmouth prevented the desired act of restitution ; and she was able to obtain for herself and her friend Rochester^ a grant of all that had belonged to Lord Grey. Rochester and Godolphin were in utter subjection to the Duchess, who judged well to apprise the latter of the secret treaty with France, and of the different subsidies which ' Barrillon to Louis, July 12, 1683. ^ Ibid., Ajfaires Etrangcres, AngMerre, tome clvi. fol. 30. END OF THE REIGN. 275 Charles had received from Louis XIV. She ventured to do herself the honour to write to the King of France to answer for the intentions and conduct of Godolphin as she would for her own. Barrillon sometimes grew restive under her yoke. But neither Charles nor Louis XIV. showed impatience under it. One day Charles called aside the French ambassador/ and told him that the Duchess of Portsmouth and her son, the Duke of Richmond, were the persons above all others in the world whom he loved the most, and would be deeply obliged to the Kine of France if he ag^reed to reconvert the estate of Aubigny into a duchy for her, with the reversion to her son and his future issue. " Is not this outstepping all bounds ? " wrote Barrillon.^ " As an English duchess, she has by courtesy the same honours in France as a French duchess. But that does not satisfy her. She must have them in virtue of letters patent, and as a right sit on a tabouret when- ever she may go to pay her respects to the queen at Versailles." Louis did not regard the application in the same light. Barrillon I Barrillon to Louis, Jan. 14, 16S4. ^ Jan. 21, 1684. 276 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. was informed by return of post that the letters patent to revive the Duchy of Aubigny were being made out.^ This news was received with the utmost grladness at Whitehall. When Barrillon brought it to Charles there, he was delighted, and ran across the room to tell it to the Duchess of Portsmouth, who was over- joyed ; and when it got out, she received the concrratulations of the whole Court. From that hour she held so completely England in her hands, that she was the real sovereign. When she fell ill, in November, 1684, public business came to a full stop.^ The king was never out of her room. Inquiries were made constantly about her state by the different ambassadors ; and Barrillon was constantly asking how she was, in the name of the King of France. Her malady was an opportunity for him to grant her fresh privileges. She was uneasy^ lest her son, he being a foreigner, should not be able to inherit the money she had invested in France. Without delay, Louis 1 The King to Barrillon, Jan. 21, 1684. The letters patent are in Les Archives Nationales, tome xxviii. fol. 150. 2 Barrillon to Louis, Nov. 15, 1684. 3 Barrillon, Nov. 30, 1684. END OF THE REIGN. 277 issued letters of naturalization in favour of his very dear and well-beloved cousin Prince Charles Lennox, Duke of Richmond, who, as well as his mother, was to enjoy all the privileges, franchises, and liberties to which gentlemen were entitled in the kingdom of France.^ The riches heaped up in the apartments of the Duchess at Whitehall, scandalized the English. She was always building and pulling down her rooms at extravagant expense. On risinof in the mornino; she received in her loose undress gown, surrounded by young girls ; and sittinof before her toilet mirror she irave audiences to courtiers. She had that gift of nature to Bretons of both sexes — a splendid head of hair, which a maid combed out when she was receiving visitors. Her sanctuary was reached by galleries and saloons hung with exquisite French stuffs, and with Gobelins tapestries, then newly invented, representing the twelve palaces of the great king. Inlaid cabinets, tables, desks, and buffets, Japan screens, finely carved timepieces, massive 1 Registered Jan. 22, 16S5. See Aff. Etr. Angkierre, tome cli., fol. 230. 278 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE pieces of silver in profusion, ornaments and rare pictures, at first delighted and dazzled, and then surfeited the eye. This magnifi- cence stirred the bile not only of Puritans, but of men of the world who still retained some honest feeling. They reflected that it was not only the wages of a wanton, but of a traitress, who, whenever her Royal paramour embraced her, compassed how she might bring him and the country he ruled into utter servitude to France. The queen's rooms seemed plain, compared to those of " Madam Carwell," whose wardrobe was as fine as her other belongings. The bills run up by her sister, the Countess of Pembroke, whose luxury was on an inferior scale, give some idea of the style in which Court beauties at Whitehall dressed. They were incurred in part for gloves, ribbons, and other haberdashery fur- nished by one Lesgu, a shopkeeper of Paris, and Jaquillon Laurent, his wife, and are in the French national archives. In the last three months of 1682 this couple sold to Lady Pem- broke " twenty eight pairs of openwork white gloves, with orange and amber scent, and one pair of gloves costing thirty- three livres, END OF THE REIGN. 279 trimmed with ribbon, gold and silver at the arms, and herring-boned in gold and silver on the back of the hand ; seventy pairs of gloves embroidered and fastened at the arm, opening with strings and bows of point de diamaiit ribbons ; twenty sashes and fringed ends, in various embroideries and brocades." The Earl of Pembroke dying, the gloves are no longer perfumed with orange and amber, but violet and hyacinth. All the fans are mournino- ones : and crold clocks are worked on black silk stockings, which are fastened up with feiiille morte and silver garters. The fontanges in golden crape are falling cravats. They were called after a favourite of Louis XIV., who enjoyed his admiration for nine months, and died giving birth to the fruit of the amour. At the end of the twelve months' mourning, flame-coloured bows of ribbon are placed over the button-holes of some of the gloves. On others there are flame and silver, or crold and blue. Some of the ofloves are to match with a rose-coloured tab Her, or front breadth of the skirt, surrounded with " silver clouds." When the Countess quitted her all- powerful sister, to live permanently in France, 2So LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. several ships were chartered to transport the booty she was taking with her from England. One bill of lading speaks of chests filled with silk moire, with Indian stuffs flowered with silver, with Welsh flannel, with cabinets, gueri- dons, look ino-.a! ass frames. And such small haberdashery as a hundred pounds weight of pins and needles ; a hundred pounds of best wax tapers, and several chests of dip candles, with five pounds of iris-root scent. Another bill of ladinof mentions : Seventeen dozen gloves, thirteen pairs of silk stockings, thirty pounds of jMoka coffee, four bales of soap, a chest of chocolate, a large chestful of Greek currants, wax candles, a large chestful of spices, including cloves, mace, ginger, nutmeg, and cinnamon. In the bill of lading of the ship in which the lady herself sailed, we find a pearl necklace worth twenty thousand francs ; ear- ring drops and clasps, idem, a miniature of King" Charles set in brilliants, a basin and ewer in carved silver, worth respectively 12,000, 20,000, and 4,000 livres ; several dozens of massy silver plates and dishes, with salvers, bowls, candlesticks, snuffers and snuff" trays, goblets, chocolate mugs, spirits of wine heaters. END OF THE REIGN. 281 dish covers, dish heaters. The Countess's bed is of crimson Genoa velvet, hung in brocade, with a white ground to the red pattern, and satin Hninofs for the curtains, head-board, and canopy. The coverlet is of needlework point. The other bedchamber furniture is composed of a grand cabinet in old Chinese laquer; a Chinese incense-burner in old silver ; twenty rare and precious tapestries ; a very rich and grotesque screen ; many teapots ; Chinese and Japanese curiosities ; much other household furniture ; coaches, chaises, Sedan chairs ; a whole set of kitchen utensils, with pewter platters for the servants' hall. Voluptuousness reigned at Whitehall, where, listenino^ to the French melodies of Francois Duperrier, or to erotic songs sung by children, the sleepy Charles was to be seen in the grand gallery, reclining between his three favourites, who were in the full bloom of womanhood. He was decrepit and aged although but fifty- two. The ladies with whom he toyed and chatted were dazzlingly fresh and magnificently attired ; and gold flowed with a soft chink on the basset tables, which were lighted up with wax candles. It was in the Whitehall gallery 282 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. that he passed his evenings with the Duchesses of Portsmouth and Mazarin, in the winter of 1684-85. There had been premonitory signs of a break-down of constitution, and a more than ordinary aversion to mental effort. His Breton mistress more than ever spared him the trouble of transacting State business, by managing it all with Barrillon and the corrupt intriguers who at last accepted her as queen in all but name. She held the reins of such government as there was ; and the King of France no longer felt that Great Britain was an obstacle to his ambitious plans. He was to strike another blow in the end of March, which would give him solid supremacy, not only in Europe, but in Asia, Africa, and America. It seemed that in a few months more Holland was to be a French province, and all the Dutch colonies to pass under the dominion of Louis. But the work of a single statesman, however industrious, politic, and powerful, is always fragile, and at the mercy of an accident On the evening of February 12, 1685, Charles, in rising to withdraw from the grand gallery and its dissipations, suddenly lost consciousness, and fell. His face was contorted, and he gave no END OF THE REIGN. 283 sio-n of recoQfnition to the courtiers who pressed around him. BHsters were clapped on his head, his arms, and his legs. He was cupped between the shoulders, bled, and emetics were poured down his throat ; but nothing roused him from his torpor, and he remained still unconscious until one o'clock on the next day. A hot warming-pan was then placed on his head, and his jugular vein was opened. He was again bled at four o'clock in the other arm, and the blood flowed abundantly. Nobody was prepared for the catastrophe, and ereat were the tumult and confusion. The Portuguese queen was clamorous in her distress ; and the courtiers were fussy and officious. The Duke of York coolly summoned the leading statesmen who were not his open enemies, to prepare to assert his rights to the Crown. Servants ran hither and thither, not knowing what to do, and having no one to direct them. As for the French, they were in consternation. The only person who showed any head, or heart, was Louise de Keroualle, who at once sent for Barrillon." " I found her," he said, in the account he transmitted to Versailles of this blow of destiny. jS4 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. " in ereat o-rief. But instead of bemoaninof her own sad and altered position, and her impend- ing fall, she took me into a little room and said : " Monsieur I'Ambassadeur, I am now going to tell you a secret, although its public revelation would cost me my head. The King of England is in the bottom of his heart a Catholic, and there he is, surrounded with Protestant Bishops ! There is nobody to tell him of his state or speak to him of God. I cannot decently enter his room. Besides, the queen is now there constantly. The Duke of York is too busy with his own affairs to trouble himself about the king's conscience. Go and tell him that I have conjured you to warn him that the end is approaching, and that it is his duty to save without loss of time, his brother's soul." The motives of Louise probably were mixed. Bretons are religious Catholics ; and then, in showing that she was anxious for Charles to die in the arms of the Church of Rome, it may be supposed that she hoped to win the esteem and kind regard of the Duke of York, to whom the Crown was on the point of devolving. Be this as it may, Barrillon hastened to the queen. A END OF THE REIGN. 285 priest was discovered who had found favour in the eyes of Protestant Royahsts for the sword- cuts he had inihcted on Roundheads in the civil war. He was taken to Chaffinch, the minister of the king's amorous affairs, and introduced by a back stair and secret corridor to the bedside of the dying monarch. He took for granted everything the Church required of the king, and gave absokition. On the fifth day of his illness, Charles died. An hour after his decease, his brother, now James H., went to see the Duchess of Portsmouth, and assured her that she might trust in his friendship. He had in doing so but one simple object in view — to Qet Louis XIV. to continue the subven- tion that he paid the late king. The Duchess also placed her hopes in Louis, who, in answer to a prayer transmitted by the medium of Barrillon, that she might hope to be honoured by his protection, wrote that it would be con- tinued to her. This promise was the only bright spot in her overclouded prospects. She had sore need to ask for his assistance, which he was prompt in giving. " I have learned with surprise," he wrote to ^ his ambassador, " that 1 March 2, 16S5 286 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. the new King of England had deprived the Duke of Richmond of the office of grand equerry, notwithstanding the manner in which the late king recommended this son of his to his brother." As Louis held the purse, James humbled himself before Barrillon, and multi- plied his visits to the Duchess of Portsmouth. He openly declared^ that what was said in Holland about her would only have the effect of making him pay her greater attention and go more often to see her. It is true, added Barrillon, that he has been twice to her rooms within the last few days, and has given her numerous marks of confidence and esteem. I am happy to find that she is beginning to think her prospects less dark. She has ac- cepted the reasons put forward by King James for not leaving the place of grand equerry to a boy of thirteen, who cannot fill it for many years. In thus yielding, she hopes to be well used in the settlement of other affairs of major importance. She is now trying to get herself confirmed in the income of ^19,000 allowed her by King Charles. Lord Rochester is well disposed towards her. She has pressed me 1 Barrillon to Louis, March 8, 1685. END OF THE REIGN. 287 to let your Majesty know that a mark of your esteem would be, in the present conjuncture, of decisive importance to her, and that she would thereby secure incomparably better treatment. I have told her that I am com- manded to render her every good office in my power, and that I have even defended her interests warmly in speaking to the king ; that your Majesty has given her and the Duke of Richmond the highest dignity that you can confer ; and that her past services would be remembered, even though your Majesty had never promised in writing not to forget them. I can see that she does not, apart from your Majesty's protection, hope for much more from France, than for a sum of money to pay her debts and to buy a dwelling-house in Paris. The Kinir of Enoland has told me that he had obtained the promise of the Duchess of Ports- mouth not to rear her son a Protestant, al- though he must be classed as one, and that if she keeps it he will do everything in his power for him. The power of the purse was the uppermost one at this juncture. James and Louise were hungferinof and manoeuvrino^ to obtain French 288 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. money. She knew herself to be held In horror by the English, and that the pensions which remained to her, and her share of the revenue duties, could not be paid for a long time. " It is generally rumoured," said Barrillon, " that the Duchess of Portsmouth and Lord Sunderland were the principal agents in bring- ing your Majesty and the late King of England into a close understanding. This is why they are both hated by the whole country. The Duchess apprehends attacks on her in the next Parlia- ment, and she wishes therefore to hasten away from England before it has time to meet, and to retire to France. She is not satisfied with the treatment she has met with, and makes no great secret of her discontent.^ His Bri- tannic IMajesty allows her a pension of three thousand guineas for herself, and two thousand for the Duke of Richmond. She sent him word to give all the five thousand to her son, because she would not trouble him on her own account. She has, besides, two thousand a )ear from a part of the confiscated estate of Lord Grey, which, however, is to belong to the Duke of Richmond when he is of age. 1 Barrillon to Louis, August 13, 1685. END OF THE REIGN. 289 She claims the right to go on drawing from twenty-five thousand to thirty thousand pounds a year from the Irish taxes ; but she has not yet been able to get herself confirmed in the enjoyment of this income, which was granted her by the late king. The disgust so caused, along with the withdrawal from her son of the post of grand equerry, has pro- voked her into using plain speech ; and she complains that the services rendered in obtain- ing money for the expenses of the Crown of England from your Majesty have been for- gotten." Whether James was too ungrateful or the Duchess too greedy, it is hard at this distance of time to say. But each had a well-accentu- ated vice. The Duchess returned to France with an English estate worth ^5,000 a year, exclusive of the money she had invested in France, or of her furniture, her jewels, her ^2,000 a year during Richmond's minority out of the confiscated Grey lands, or the 250,000 francs in gold that she drew the in- stant Charles had drawn his last breath. The poor Breton soldier's daughter, the humble maid of honour of Madame Henriette, assuredly was u 290 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. not to be pitied. When the day of her de- parture was fixed, she had the pleasure of receiving a visit from the new king, who told her he would befriend her and her son. He allowed her to keep her rooms at White- hall, spoke kindly to her son, and exhorted him to embrace the true reliofion. This she wished him to do ; and she hoped that the King of France would, later, find occasion to complete the work of conversion begun by King James, Her adroit mode of thus Bat- tering both monarchs, rendered her interesting to them. She embarked in August, 1685, and on landing proceeded to Versailles. When she quitted the English shore, England issued from its fifteen years of degrading and dangerous moral torpor and servitude to France. Not that James's palm itched less for Tournois livres than that of Charles, But his narrow and fanatical mind and his base spirit brought his reign to a speedy close, and afforded the opportunity to the arch-adversary of Louis XIV. to ascend the throne of England. The disasters which his diplomatists had ap- prehended, and which Louise de Keroualle had skilfully averted, overwhelmed France. END OF THE REIGN. 291 The diplomatic strategy wliich so marvel- lously succeeded for fifteen years in paralyzing England, and placing its government in a foreign woman's hands, does not seem to have been often repeated. Villars, however, boasted of havincr been its imitator. Remarkino:^ that the Elector of Bavaria was broucfht into the orbit of the Court of Vienna by the Countess Von Kaunitz, he eo-o-ed on that prince to draw the young Countess Von Wilin, a lady of the Empress, to Munich. She came, but she was so stupid that the Marquis de Villars soon found she would not help him to break the chain in which the Countess Von Kaunitz had bound the Elector. A young Italian named Canossa took her place. This enchantress had studied gallantry in Venice, and was more beautiful than she had need to be with her great cleverness and experience. 1 Memoires of Comte de Vogue, published in 16S7. See analogous intrigues in the i8th century, in Le Secret du Rot, par le Due de Broglie, tome i., p. 36S, and Louis XV. et la Czarine Elisabeth, by Albert Vandal, p. 62. CHAPTER XII. IN RETIREMENT. 1'he Duchess of Portsmouth had still fifty long years of life before her. She survived Charles half a century ; and, after outliving most of her contemporaries, died in the reign of Louis XV., amid a generation who knew her not, and whose eyes were turned towards other horizons than those on which the courtiers of Louis XIV. gazed. Monmouth was the first to go down for ever. He plotted against James II., and was coldly beheaded. His widow married Lord Cornvvallis. James II., dethroned by his daughter, found a refuge at St.-Germain en Laye. The Duchess of Cleveland, grown old, and continuing irascible and a gambler, became a widow in 1705, and married a second time, in her sixty-fifth year. Beau Plelding, who played false to her and ruined her. She died in 1709. Her son, the Duke of Grafton,^ 1 Henry, Duke of Grafton, born in 1663, created duke in 232 IN RETIREMENT. 293 was allowed to keep her pension, which has been handed down to his posterity. He was killed in fighting for King James against Marlborough, his mother's paramour, at the siege of Cork. Nell Gwynn for a short time was outlawed by her creditors. But James, who had promised Charles not to let her starve, paid her debts, often made her presents, cleared off the mortgage on her residence of Bestwood Park, and paid for her funeral and grave. She was buried, in 1687, in St. Martin's-in-the- Fields. Her son, Charles Beauclerc, was the ancestor of the present Duke of St. Alban's. The blood of Charles H. runs in the veins of many peers of the realm of Great Britain-^ 1675, witli, — for a youth with a bar sinister on his arms, — the strange motto of: ^'' Et decus et pretium recti." Married Lady Isabella Bennet, Arlington's daughter. ^Of the children whom Charles II. owned, the following grew up : James, Duke of Monmouth and Buccleugh, son of Lucy Walters ; Mary, daughter of Lucy Walters ; Charlotte Boyle Fitzroy, daughter of Viscountess Shannon ; Charles FitzCharles and a girl, children of Catherine Peg ; Henry Fitzroy, Duke of Grafton \ George, Earl of Northumberland, and Charlotte Fitzroy, Countess of Sussex, the children of the Duchess of Cleveland ; the two Beauclercs, sons of Nell Gwynn ; the Duke of Richmond, son of Louise de Keroualle ; Mary Tudor, daughter of Moll Davis, and 294 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. The Duchess Mazarin shed floods of tears for that monarch, to the astonishment of Saint Evremond, who compared her to Artemisia, and wondered why she troubled her head more about him than for any of her other lovers. She survived him fourteen years, and died in 1699 without ever having quitted England. Bacchus consoled her as she descended towards the grave. Her husband claimed her corpse, and was overjoyed to obtain it. He took it about with him for a year, from one estate to another, and gave it temporary sepulture at Notre Dame de Liesse, where the country folks treated it as the remains of a saint, and touched the coffin with their chaplets. He ended by placing it in the same tomb with her famous uncle in le College de Quatre Nations, now the Palace of the Institute. The Duchess trans- mitted her sovereign charms to her five grand- daughters the De Mailly-Nesles, who, with the Mancini blood, received the power to captivate kiniTs. The eldest was declared the mistress o married to the Earl of Derwcntwater ; and Benedicte Fitzroy, Prioress of the Hotel Dieu de St. Nicolas at Pontoise. There was another Benedicte, who was said to be an early fruit of the amour of Henrietta Maria and Lord Jermyn. IN RETIREMENT, 295 of Louis XV. in 1 735, some months after Louise de Keroualle's death, and was a Httle later cut out by the second, who was echpsed by the third, who had in turn to make way for the fifth.^ Barrillon become the inseparable friend of Madame de Sevigne, and died, rich, fat, and old, in 1691. The Duchess of Portsmouth had the morti- fication, on arriving in France, to find her sister in an interesting state, and forced to own that she had privately married the Marquis de Thois, governor of Blois.^ The young Duke of Richmond entered the Catholic Church, but was not for that the less corrupt and vicious. He relapsed to Anglican Protestantism, or rather lived and died a godless life, and was to its end plunged in drunkenness and debauchery. From being one of the handsomest young men in Eneland he became the most hideous old rake. The Duchess of Portsmouth went back to England a year after she left it. Whether this journey appeared suspicious to Louis XIV., or 1 The five granddaughters of Madame Mazarin were the Duchesses de Mailly-Nesles, de Vintimille, de Lauraguis, de Flavacount, and de la Toumelle. « See Dangeau, t. i., Feb. 5, 1685. 296 LOUISE BE KEROUALLE. whether, as Saint Simon avers/ she dared to talk too freely of Madame de Maintenon, an order was given to Louvois to draw up a lettre de cachet for her exile. The minute of this letter was on Louvois' desk when Courtin entered his cabinet. He took up the paper, and on reading it protested. No doubt she had been in fault, but even so, it would be a mistake to go further than to warn her. To exile her after the services she rendered, would be to dishonour the kinsf. Louis, to whom Courtin defended her, burned the lettre de cachet, and admitted the Duchess to a long conversation, from which she issued greatly- satisfied.^ Her interests obliged her to be in constant relations with England. In July, 1688, she made up a match between her niece, the daughter of the Earl and Countess of Pembroke, and the son of Jeffreys, the hanging judge. Her correspondence with English kinsfolk and friends was often denounced ; and the denuncia- 1 Saint Simon's notes on Dangeau. 2 Dangeau and Saint Simon differ in some points on this interview ; and Saint Simon is not in full agreement with himself, in the Papier s Iticdiis recently published by Hachette. IN Ri:T!REMEi\T. 297 tions obliged her to make humiliating- explana- tions. On January ist, 1689, the young Duke of Richmond presented himself at the king's coiu/ier, to speak in favour of his mother. Louis told him that he knew both of them too well to have suspected them for a moment. However, to draw certain revenues, they were obliged to pay their court to William of Orange. The Duchess of Portsmouth got Henry Sidney, Algernon's brother, to remind him of the evenings he spent at her rooms at Whitehall, and how she intrigued for him, against Mon- mouth. But the Revolution of 1688 had upset many of the fortunes granted out of the reve- nue by Charles H. Even her income out of the Post Office returns, which the Duchess of Portsmouth thought so sure, was suspended. She was informed simultaneously that none of her English pensions would be paid until further orders ; that her apartments at Whitehall, with all her sumptuous furniture, had been burned ; and that her father was dying. The Duke of Richmond absconded from her to England, with out letting her know where he was going. She sent word to Louis, that she could not doubt of her son's folly ; and that, believing he had gone 298 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. over to the Prince of Orange, she was ready to die of despair. This despair was all the more real, because Louis had granted the young scamp a pension of twenty thousand livres — which, in a degree, consoled his mother for the loss of her Eng- lish emoluments. But whilst misfortunes were crowding on her, the King of France did not abandon her. He transferred to her a part of the pension which her son had abandoned. From this time she devoted herself to the management of her estate of Aubigny, and exerted for the benefit of her serfs what in- fluence remained to her. Owing to the per- sistent patronage of Louis, her position in France remained a good one. The collections of portrait engravings of the principal Court ladies ^ always included the likeness of the ^ Five engravings of the series, executed at this period, represent the Duchess of Portsmouth as Venus, and her son as Cupid, against whose arrows a Sphinx protects her, Chez Marriette, Kiie St. Jacques ; in a loose undress on a couch, Chez Barry, Graveur, Rtie St. Jacques ; an imitation of the preceding, R. B. del, chez N. Bonnart, Rue St. Jacques ; toying with a glove and perroquet, Chez H. Bonnart, au Coq ; with a cane (the most charming of any), in which the Duchess's back is shown, with her head turned round, Chez Trouvain, Rue St. Jacques, 1695. IN RETIREMENT. 299 Duchess of Portsmouth, liut her income fell off rapidly. William of Orange grudged her the smallest sum. In 1697 she obtained leave to go to London, and Louis spoke with much kindness on the subject.^ William, who divined the object of her journey, and had no wish to let her fill her purse with guineas, sent her word that he would prevent her landing. So, she was obliged to face her creditors. Procurators' pens ran on slips of parchment, which bailiffs served on her; and her chattels were on the point of being seized and sold. Louis again saved her. By a decree signed in Council, he ordered her creditors to desist from pursuing her for a year. When that period elapsed, there were fresh writs, followed by fresh petitions to the king to intervene, " The state of the Duchess of Portsmouth's affairs," it was set forth in an order of Council, "does not allow her at present to discharge the debts that she has contracted, for which cause, her creditors harassing and pursuing her, she is obliged to have recourse to his Majesty's authority, and humbly to supplicate him in his good pleasure to stay these pursuits ; and whereas, in con- ^ Dangeau, t. iv, p. 207. 300 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. sideration of the said Duchess's petition, his Majesty in Council has prorogued and prorogues for a full year, ending September 9th, 1700, the effect of the writs obtained by such creditors, or any which may be within that time taken out ; and his Majesty forbids all the creditors of the said Duchess during that period to make any seizure of her furniture, equipages, or other chattels belonging to her, under pain of nullity of proceedings, the payment of all costs and damages," Year after year the petition was renewed, and always received with favour. To protect this woman in the enjoyment of her ill-gotten gains, Louis suspended the course of justice, ruined tradesmen who sold in good faith, and shook the security of commercial transactions. She had only to write to him, that the present state of her affairs did not allow her to pay her debts, and the sovereign's hand was stretched out to drive away her creditors. There were identical orders of Council in 1699, in 1700, on Oct. 5, 1 701, on Oct. 2, 1702, and 1703, and on Dec. 10, 1704, and Dec. 30, 1705.^ In 1 Archives Natioiiales de France^ E. 191 7; E. 1924; E. 1929; E. 1933. IN RETIREMENT. 301 1706 the unfortunate tradesmen were able to find protectors, and began to defend them- selves before the Council from abuses of the royal authority. The Sieurs Galpin, Pillet, and Lefevre presented balances coming to a total of 130,926 livres, 16 sols. The Duchess had put them off by paying an instalment on a total of 160,000 livres, recoverable in eight years on the rents of Aubigny, in the proportion of 20,000 liv7^es annually. The order of Council did not deign to look into this contract. It only took cognisance of the distressed lady's prayer. The wars between France and Eng- land having, she represented in 1706, with- drawn from her during fourteen years a pension of 150,000 livi'es, accorded her by the late King Charles, she was, to keep up her rank, obliged to borrow money, and often to live on credit." " But," pleaded the creditors, " it cannot have been the intention of his Majesty to place the said lady in the enjoyment of an income which she has assigned them." ^ The Council decided that the creditors to whom the rents of Aubigny were conveyed, in the propor- ' Archives Nat., E. 1934, du 20 Juin 1703. 302 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. tion of 20,000 livrcs a year for eight years, were not to be meddled with ; but that the others, who claimed as large a sum, were to get no- thing. This order of Council, as inconsistent with French law as with natural justice, was made " in order to ensure facilities to the said Duchess for the payment of her debts." There was another similar order granted for two years, ^ beginning on April 28, 1710. The gratitude of Louis for the services ren- dered such a long time previously only died with him. The Duchess was not only pro- tected against her creditors, but against the States of Brittany and the administration of the Crown Domain. The Duchess had, in the beginning of the last century, the rare piece of good fortune to be " evicted for reasons of public utility." The poor manor house of her father, overlooking the port of Brest, was comprised in the evic- tions which the creation of arsenals, rope- walks, and naval stores would necessitate. But Louis XIV. had decided that the price of the properties situated at Brest, in the borough of the Recouvrance, was to be paid I Arch. N'at., E. 1937; E. 1952, fol. 57. IN RETIREMENT. 303 for, on the eviction of the owners, by the States of Brittany. They tried not to pay, and then contested the valuations. The Duchess of Portsmouth, whose paternal manor was in the borough of the Recouvrance, ap- plied to the Comptroller-general of Finances, and obtained an order of the Council orrantino- her 56,122 livreSy payable by the Exchequer of the States of Brittany. Only the half of it was paid, and a new order was petitioned for and obtained.^ The treasurer of Brittany was commanded to pay it on the king's authority, which covered his responsibility, and not to be impeded by anything which the States might have determined. But this functionary had not faith in the validity of the command he received. He fell back on the petitions of other landowners near Brest, who stood out against any one claimant being paid in full while the other creditors were only partially satisfied. This difficulty was settled by a further order to pay every one in full. The Duchess had a sharp appetite for public ^ For all the proceedings in this affair see Archives Natiotiales, Feb. 26, 1704, E. 741; 242; July 6, 1704, E. 1927 ; July 1, 1704, E. 746. 304 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. money. When the governor of the provuice in which Aubigny was situated offered for sale the functions of surveyors and valuators of land, with liberty to sit as royal notaries, she entered a protest, and claimed the exclusive right, in virtue of her seigneurial privileges, to sell these functions/ The Council, to which she appealed, ruled in her favour.^ But if she was so keen in defending any old usage that helped to swell her income, she was equally ready to evade all seigneurial obligations. The Chateau of Aubigny fell out of repair. She pleaded that it was for the Crown to keep it up, inas- much as it was an appanage which, in the event of her posterity becoming extinct, would revert to the Royal Domain. She could not, therefore, be bound to make any great and necessary repair. Now, the roof was falling in, the chapel had gone to ruin, and the forests had to be replanted. The plea was accepted. Towards the close of the Great King's reign the Exchequer was impoverished, and the Duchess's allowances fell into arrear. She 1 Arch. Nat., July i, 1704, E. 746. 2 Arret du 20 Janvier, 1707, Arch. Nat., E. 776 IN RETIREMENT. 305 again applied, and not in vain, to the Comp- troller-general. After the death of Louis XIV., begging supplications were sent up to the Regent, who augmented her pension from 1 2,000 to 20,000 and then to 24,000 livres} She was then wholly converted — a penitent, in debt, and ob- liged to live entirely in the country. The ser- vices she rendered to the French cause when she was the all-powerful mistress of Charles, were still remembered. However, she had learned by hard experience not to trust to pensions. When she saw the financial crash of the Regency coming on, she proposed that her pension should be commuted into a go- vernment debenture, and prevailed upon the Regent to sign the following order. " M. Pierre Gruyn, the keeper of the Royal Treasury, is hereby ordered to pay in ready money to Madame Louise Rene'e de Penancoat de Keroualle, Duchess of Portsmouth and Aubigny, the sum of 600,000 livres, which have been accorded to her by the king, to be employed in buying a life-annuity, payable out of his Majesty's Exchequer, and to replace the pension of 24,000 livres which was partially granted her by the late king and partially by his present 1 Dangeau, June 20, 17 18, t. xvii., p. 329. X 3o6 . LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. Majesty, in consideration of the great services she has ren- dered France, and to enable her to support her rank and dignity. Signed on 28th October, 1721. — Philippe d'Orli^ans." ^ The Duchess of Portsmouth's son, the Duke of Richmond, died in 1723. Two years later her sister Henriette, Countess of Pembroke and Marquise de Thois, felt that her end was near,^ and had a notary fetched to her house in the Rue de Varennes, on May 12, 1725. There "seated in an arm-chair in a ground-floor room, looking on the garden of the said hotel, she dictated her will, and died on May 24. Louise survived her nine years, and in that time never quitted Aubigny.^ She there founded a con- vent of hospital nuns, who equally divided their time between the education of the young and the care of the sick. She also spent freely in decorating churches. In October, 1734, she went to Paris to consult a doctor, and died on November 14, at the age of eighty-five. She was buried in the church of the Barefooted Carmelites, where there was a chapel of the 1 MS. Bibl. Nat., t. 50417. 2 Arch. Nat, t. 152 ; 6. 5 Mercure de France, Nov. 1734, p. 2533. JN RETIREMENT. 307 Des Rieux, who still were proud of being of her kindred. Louise's English descendants, who lived in Encrland on the wacres of her double iniquity, neglected body and tomb, but made haste to enter into possession of the fief of Aubigny, Its Chateau, in the reign of Louis XVL, was lent to the Duchess of Lein- ster by her brother, the Duke of Richmond. That lady was then the wife of M. Ogilby. She took with her to Aubigny her son, Lord Edward Fitzgerald, who spent some years there in his boyhood, in ignorance of the story of how it came into his relative's hands. Aubigny was taken from the Richmond family, when fiefs were abolished by the Revolution. But the pension the grasping Duchess of Portsmouth extracted from the unpatriotic Charles IL, and which was sequestrated by William of Orange, was restored to her son ; and the British Parliament, which thinks ^1,200 a year enough to relieve the distressed families of authors, artists, scientists, and other benefactors of their country, continues to pay the Duke of Richmond ^19,000 a year in virtue of the secret services rendered to Louis XIV. by his ancestress Louise de 3o8 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. Keroualle. While thus Great Britain heaps wealth on her descendants, France has suffered her memory to fall into oblivion, and still owes her the statue which she so well earned, for enabling the most brilliant of her monarchs to conquer Flanders, Alsace, and le Franche Comte, and to bring Holland for a short time within his grasp. ^^ttcrs of Ijje DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH. 309 In giving the following letters, the Translator thought better not to attempt a translation, because all that shows a total absence of educa- tion in them is untranslatable. " Le style, cest riiomme ;'' and, perhaps in a greater degree, le style, cest la femme. Louise de Keroualle has no style whatever. She spells like a serving- wench who has taken to gallantry, and, apt to write love letters, is not mistress of her pen, and shows in the inability to say plainly what she wants to express, a disposition lacking frankness. Although orthography was not fixed in her time, there was a current mode of spelling among men and women of good breedinor. Well-bred women, in the seven- teenth century, were well read and were ad- mirable letter-writers. Nobody knew better how to say just what she wanted, without 311 312 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. surplusage or baldness, than Madame de Main- tenon, And who was ever more skilled in using elegant language for the purpose of saying nothing, when she had to write a good deal and appear effusive ? This is shown in her letters to the Princesse des Ursins, when that diplomatic lady was directing Philip V. and his wife, or later, trying to inveigle that king into makinor her his second wife. Madame de Sevigne was so spontaneous and frank that one can almost see the workings of her heart and brain in her letters. Madame de Montes- pan gave the clear, sharp stamp of a coin to the ideas that circulated around her. The Princesse des Ursins and the Comtesse d'Aulnoy were at the court of Madrid what Lady Wortley Montague long after was at Stamboul. These women were prepared by severe mental drill in youth to be the bright and unconscious chroniclers of their time ; and belonged to sets priding themselves on scholarly taste, which then took a tinge from Spain and a strong colour from Italy. Madame de Sevigne was at home in the Italian poets, which she read in their own tongue, and in the Latin authors ; and she was at once a LE TTERS OF D UCHESS OF P OR TSMO U TH. 3 1 3 bookish, a brilliantly sociable, and a business woman. She called ignorance, by which she meant non- acquaintance with the standard books, ancient and modern, of her time, an *' ugly beast." The library of Hortense Man- cini, Duchess Mazarin, was, when she was a refugee in London, one of the subjects of table talk at Whitehall and St. James's. Ninon d'Enclos, the enchantress of three generations, divined in her old age the part Voltaire was likely to play in the world, and gave the first impetus to his literary career by leaving him her books. The brilliant French women of Louise de Keroualle's time, save Mdlle. de la Valliere, were maitr esses femines — a term for , which strong-minded women is not quite an equiva- lent. They were women of initiative and of genius, which is always an independent thing, and bears trammels uneasily. Madame de Sevigne's genius was governed by her mater- nal passion, and strengthened by good sense. Mesdames de Montespan and de Maintenon were, in the bottom of their hearts, merely ambitious of governing the ablest and most self-willed monarch of their time ; and they 314 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. succeeded — one by her wit and her imperious temper, and the other by her strength and coolness of head, and her reposeful, simple, elegant conversation, and her craft. A little later, two of the illegitimate daugh- ters of Louis the Fourteenth turned out to be the most accomplished rhyming lampoonists that ever used the French tongue for a ribald and malignant use. They possessed the spirit and the form of the chanson in a no less degree than Beranger. But they polluted all they touched, graceful and light as their muse w^as, for they went in the way of the old Princess Palatine in grossness, and had a pruriency of feeling for which their origin accounted. Their grand position was, I may here remark, due to the example set by Charles II. and its action on the court of Versailles. Those accounts given by French ambassadors for the private reading of their King, of the ofoinors on in the seraMio at Whitehall, and of the English king's prodigality in giving pensions and duchies to the children bred therein, doubt- less helped to break down that respect for what was seemly, which Evelyn and other English- men so much noticed in Louis the Fourteenth, LETTERS OF DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH. z^S and contrasted with the disregard for decency of the merry monarch in saddling his ladies and their offspring on the nation. May not the desire that Louis so often showed, to hear all about the corruptions of the English court and the shamelessness of Charles in giving dukeries to these children, have arisen from a secret wish to find in his bad example a pretext for legitimizing and enriching the offspring of Mademoiselle de la Vallicre and Madame de Montespan ? The existence of the sons and daughters of both ladies was kept long a mystery. Madame de Maintenon took charge as governess of the Montespan lot, which were hidden away at Issy. Evelyn, when in France, noticed the care taken to keep them out of sight. It was only when the mind of Louis was saturated with letters about Whitehall that he thought of legitimizing and heaping appanages on his illegitimate sons and securing the most brilliant matches in France for the daughters. To do him justice, he did not seek so much to enrich them at the cost of the country as at the cost of his elderly and eccentric cousin la Grande Mademoiselle, or rather, at that of M. de Lauzun, a Gascon who 3i6 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. made fascinating the fair the business of his life, and had infatuated the princess in ques- tion. The evil communications of the French ambassadors in London corrupted, there is room to believe, the good manners of their master. The mission to which nature called Louise de Keroualle, was to be a conscious tool ; and her main ambition, to be la cottrtesane la inieux entretejtue en Europe. She had much subtlety and social tact, but little or none of that sym- pathy for ideas which made some of the most brilliant Frenchwomen of her day revel in the lofty ethics of Corneille, and quit cards and other dissipations to hear Bossuet discourse on " la vie cachde en Dieit,'' or Bourdaloue exert his penetrating eloquence in teaching those whom he exhorted to strengthen themselves for a higher life by prayer. The big sprawling handwritinof of the woman is as full of siofnifi- cance as her spelling. A facsimile of the former is oriven in this volume. It is that of a child who has hardly got beyond writing m's and n's in large copy-book characters. This is to some extent a sign of an inactive mind and a poor heart. An affectionate woman must LETTERS OF DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH. -:,\i have scribbled often and at lencrth to friends and relatives whom she left behind in quitting her home-country. She would have packed a deal into small space, letter-paper and postage between France and England being very dear, and the opportunities for sending letters from one country to another being rare and irregular. Use would have made her mistress of her pen. The fact of Louise de Keroualle. being in a foreign and a hostile country, the tongue of which she never mastered, ought to have been a stimulus to the epistolary faculty. We must conclude that this grift was altocfether wantingr in her, and that she was one of those character- less women whom Pope best liked. An inde- pendent and an active intellect would have been in her way. It was her business to take cues from the French Embassy, and she did this with docility, and, because of her lazy brain, sans trop de zele. This laziness is shown in her handwriting. The pen snails along la- boriously because the thoughts shape them- selves slowly. Wealth and luxury were the grand objects of her life. She wanted them both for herself and her son, and certainly suc- ceeded well in getting them. It is not to the 31 8 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. credit of England that this woman, whose cour- tesan-level of mind would have withheld her from attaining distinction at Versailles, directed the policy of Charles II, for so many years. G. M. C TO HENRY SIDNEY. Letter published in the diary of Henry Sidney, vol. ii., p. 307. Paris, 8 mars 1689. Je sais toutes les bontes avec lesquelles vous avez parle dc moi, Monsieur, dont je vous suis infiniment obligee. Vous savez combien toute ma vie j'ai ete dans vos interets de vous et de vos amis. De mon cote je ne suis point changee, et Ton ne pent prendre plus de part a tout ce qui vous regarde que je fais. Que mon absence ne me nuise done non plus aupres de vous, et veuillez, en ce qui dependra de vous, de bonne foi proteger mes interets. Vous savez qu'ils sont si attaches a ceux du due de Richmond que Ton ne les peut separer. Je ne doute point que le souvenir que vous avez de qui il a I'honneur d'etre fils, ne vous porte davantage a nous continuer votre amitie que je souhaite tresfort et pour I'un et pour I'autre. Vous voulez bien que je vous suppHe d'avoir un peu de bonte pour M. Hornby qui est celui qui vous rendra cette lettre. II est tout a fait dans mes in- terets et de mes amis. Ce me seroit un grand plaisir 319 320 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. si je pouvois autant compter sur vous, II est sur, mon cher oncle, que vous ne pouvez jamais etre des amis de qui que ce soit qui soit plus des votres, ni qui vous honore plus parfaitement que L., duchesse DE PORTSMOUTH. II. TO THE COMTE DE PONTCHARTRAIN. Letter preserved in the National Archives, G", controle gene- ral des finances, and published in the Musce des ArcJiives, n° 897, p. 540. Original autograph document. Paris, 4 octobre 1692. L'extresme misere dais abistans et dais paysant a I'antour d'Aubignie, qui est ma duche, me fait, Mon- sieur, avec instence vous conjurer d'avoyr pities du malheureux estat ou il sont reduyt, tams par lagrande charge de taille et des ustensille qu'ils ont tous les ans, que par le malheur qu'ils ont eu d'une grelle qui les a tous grelle st'anne. lis sont sy accabl6 et sy peu annestat de payer qu'ils abandonnent et la ville et la taire. C'est ce qui fait, Monsieur, que j'ose vous conjurer par pities d'an avoyr pour eux, et de vouloyr mander a M. de Ceraucour, intandant de Bourge, de les vouloir exsanter de jens de guerre st'anne, et de vouloyr leur diminuer la taille, estent apsollumant une taire ruyn^e, sy vous n'aves ste bontes-la pour moy. Monsieur, ne me la refusse pas, estent une vrais chariste, et la misere y estent au dellas de ce LETTERS OF DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH. 321 que vous pouves vous ymaginer. Pardones moy mais frequantes inportunistes, vous m'avcs permis de conter sur vos bontes essseiitiellcment : ainsy, Mon- sieur, ge m'adresse a vous avec con fiance. L., duchesse DE PORTSMOUTH. III. TO CHAMILLART. Letter preserved in the British Museum, Ms. Add^' 18675, f° 74- Original autograph document. De Paris, ce 2 d'avril 1701. Sachant et connessant, Monsieur, lais anbarras d'afaire que vous avez, je n'e osse tous se terns cy vous trop presser et vous conjurer de vouloyr pancer a moy comme vous m'aves fait la grasse de me le promestre. O nom de Dieu, Monsieur, ayes asses de bonte pour moy et de pitie pour matriste sirconstance pour vouloyr m'accorder le payeumant dais quinsse mille franc que vous m'aves dist que le Roy ordonest que je touchasse a pressant, et acordes moy I'expe- dission de mon arrest pour le surplus ; que je me flate, Monsieur, que vous ne me feres le tord de mettre cy bas mais interais que M. Pelltier les a reduyts ; que je vous aye done la sansible obligassion, Monsieur, que je ne perde poinst moy tie par moytie, de con- siderer qu'estens sur les estats que je sere ancore bien du tems sans toucher mon arjent. Ainsi, Monsieur, ayes I'umaniste d'antrer dans mon malheureux estat V LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. ct que la liquidassion que vous voulles bien avoyr la bonte de faire soyt en ma faveur et la plus avanta- geusse qu'il vous sera possible ; car de vostre bonte an sesy despand tous le bonneur et I'arengemant de mais afaire ; je charge mon homme d'afaire d'avoyr I'honneur de vous presenter sette lestre. Vous ores la bonte de luy ordonner lais pas que vous treveres bien que je fasse auprais de vous pour la terminesson de sette afaire ycy ; donnes luy done, s'il vous plest, vos ordres avec autems de bonte que vous m'aves permis d'esperer que vous ories pour moy. J'osse vous an conjurer tres-instammant, Monsieur, et de vouloyr bien croyre que vous n'an pouves avoyr pour personne qui estoyt plus vesristablement sansible ny qui vous estimme et honnore cy parfaitement que moy. L., duchesse DE PORSTMOUT. IV. TO CHAMILLARD. National Archives, G., 7. Original autograph document.^ De Paris, ce 5 daoust 1702. Permestez moy, Monsieur, dosser ancore vous de- mander une grasse qui est seuUement de me vouloir faire mestre sur la feuille de distribution ; vous nan pesrez pa plus tot sy vous ne le voullez, mais si vous * This letter, and the eleven following, were discovered by M. A, de Boislisle. LETTERS OF DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH. 323 me voullez bicn faire ce plcsir la je trevc le moicn de macosmoder avec mais jens dafaire, sy vous me donnez ceste marque de bonte. Ne me la reffuse pas, Monsieur, je vous an conjure, car par la vous me donerez le moien de sortir davec dais arabe qui me tiranisse de toute maniere. Soufre done, Monsieur, que je vous conjure de me donner ce secours et de vouloir bien vous donner la pennc de mc faire savoir sy vous orez ceste bont6 pour moy. Je natems que sella pour partir disy et finir et sortir absollument dafaire, sy je suis asse heureuse pour que vous veillez bien me donner ce secours que je vous demande instamment avec la justisse. Monsieur, de me croyre la personne du monde qui vous estime, ayme et honore le plus parfaistement. L., duchesse DE PORTSMOUTH. V. TO DESMARETS. Letter preserved in the National Archives, G., 7, 543. Original autograph document. De Paris, ce 20 mars 1708. Ne pouvant avoyr I'honneur de vous voir, Mon- sieur, par le grand abattement qui me reste d'une violente fiesvre et une etresipelle que je eu dans la taite et sur tout le visage, je prant la liberte de vous 324 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. cscrire sais Hgnes pour vous suplier devouloir bien vous resouvenir de la promesse que vous avez eu la bonte de me faire aupres de M. Nicolle, qui anagist le plus mal du monde avec moy car, depuis castre moy, je ne pas pus parvenir a tirer un soult de luy pour ma subsistance. II a ma belle tapisserie dont il se sert et qu'il gaste toute, et je me trcve pis que je nettais avec Thevening, car au moins me payes til legulliesrement tout lay moy ; mais tapisserie ne servoient poingt et estetfort soigneusement conserve; je ne luy donne que huit pour cent, jendonne dix a icelluy cy, il touche mon revenu et il ne me payen poingt et me lesse manquer de tout ; enfin s'yl ne luy parest pas que vous macordye une forte protection, je n'en viendere jamais about. Ne me la refusse pas, Monsieur, je vous ansupli, et donnez-vous la penne de luy parller comme luy marquant voullant estre obeys. Josse esperer cet esantiel servisse de vous^ Monsieur, et que vous serez persuade que personne dans le monde ne vous peut estimer et honorer sy parfaite- ment que moy. L., duchesse DE Portsmouth. Je prie Monsieur de de ce doner la penne de vous rendre cette lettre, et de vous dire ce dont je le charge ; soutenez-moi, je vous ansuplie. LETTERS OF DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH, y.'^ VI. To DESMARETS. Letter preserved in the National Archives, G., 7, 543. Original autograph signed document.^ De Paris, ce 12 avril 1708, Ma sante ne me permettant pas encore d'aller a Versailles, Monsieur, je vous envoy le sieur Pinson pour vous porter un memoyre ; il vous expliquera, sy vous voullcz bien macorder le plesir de luy doner un mosmant dodyance, la consequance que ce mest de macorder la grasse que je vous demande ; je lieux de me flater de vos bontes et desperer de vous tous lais secours qui sont a vostre pouvoyr ; selluy cy est antiesremant, acordelle moy done, Monsieur, je vous an conjure, la pronte expedission mest importente, et vous le connesterez parce quil aura I'honneur de vous dire. Josse esp^rer que vous macorderez cette marque de I'interait que vous me foite I'honneur de prendre an moy comme a la personne du monde qui sertennemant vous honore, ayme et estime le plus parfaitement. L., duchesse DE PORTSMOUTH. * Some of the letters of Louise de Keroualle in the National Archives are unsigned. LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. VII. TO DESMARETS. Letter preserved in the National Archives, G., 543, Original document with the note, " Par le sieur de Lonchant." De Paris, ce 9 juillet 1708. Comme vous m'avez permis de center sur vos bontes, Monsieur, josse prandre la liberte de les inplorer non an chosse qui vous peuvent estre a charge, car sait ce que je vister6 toujours, mais comme vous mavez fait I'honneur de me dire dans le cos- mancement que vous avez este controlleur general ^, que vous ne trouvesriez pas movais que je vous presantasse autems dafaire que on man donnerest qui parussent resonnable, je mosse flater que vous avez asse de bontes pour moy pour aymer autems et j'espere mieux me faire du bien de cette maniere ca des personnes indisferente ; vous connaisse mais besoings et le malheureux estat ou je suis et de quelle consequance me peut estre un secour comme selluy sy qui ne fait tort a personne et qui notte rien dais cofifre du Roy ; ne me reffuse done poingt vostre protection. Vous m'aviez paru sy rempli de bonte, d'amitid et de bonne vollonte pour moy devent destre ' Desmarets only became controleur general in the month of February this year. LETTERS OF DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH. 327 dans le poste ou vous cste, que josse me promestre, Monsieur, que dans dais chosse comme celle-cy vous me voudrez bien proqurer tous lais secour a ma movesse situassion qui despenderont de vous. Vous voullez done bien me permettre de vous faire souvenir par ce memoyre, que je joingt a ma lettre, des deux affaires que jus I'honneur de vous prdsenter la surveille de vostre despart. La pcrsonne qui a I'honneur de vous presanter ma lettre est le sieur de Longchant qui me les a donne et qui est un homme fort indus- trieux dans sait chosse la ; anfin, Monsieur, josse esperer que je trevesre an vous dans dais chose qui ne vous seront pas plus anbarrassante ny plus disficille que selle sy, une vraie protection et un veristable et essantielle ami, et que vous me fer6 la justisse destre fortement persuadd que personne ne vous ayme, ne vous estime et honore sy parfaitement que je le fais veritablement. L., duchesse DE PORTSMOUTH. Permettez-moi de vous suplier de vous souvenir de me faire mestre sur I'estat de distribussion pour ma pansion eschue depuis le commancement de juin. LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. VIII. TO DESMARETS. Letter preserved in the National Archives, G, 7, 543. Original autograph document. De Paris, ce iSjuillet 1708. J'osse esperer, Monsieur, que la grasse que vous avez bien voullu accorder a monsieur le marquis de Thoye an parllant an sieur Volland pour luy, ne seras pas retraite par voiis conirne monsieur le marquis de Vallance ce le proinest et qiiil la fait entandre an, sieur Valiant an luy demandant six ou sept Jour pour an- ployer sait sollicitassion auprais de vous. Je me flatte, Monsieur, quelle noront nulle lieux et que vous orez la bonte de nous continuer vostre protection, monsieur de Thoye ayant toute lais suretes a donner au sieur Volland. Ne me refusez done poingt ceste marque de bonte et de consideration que josse vous dire, Monsieur, que je meriste pas lais santimants d'amities et destime que je pour vous comme pour un des plus honneste homme du mondc et qui a le plus de merite et que j'onnore le plus parfaitemcnt. L., duchesse DE PORTSMOUTH. Permettez-moy ancore. Monsieur, d'osser vous suplier de vous voulloyr souvenir de moy pour ma pansion qui est eschue depuis le cosmancement du moy passe. LETTERS OF DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH. 329 IX. TO DESMARETS. National Archives, G, 7, 543. Original autograph document. De Paris, ce 8 daoust 1708. La maniesre obligente avec laquelle vous me fiste la grasse, Monsieur, dantrer dans mes interais quant jus I'honneur de vous parller de ceste grande afaire des billiey de monoye manhardy de vous importuner de sals lignc-sy, pour vous representer quelle doyt parestre a un homme aussy esclere que vous, sy aventajeuse pour le servisse du Roy quelle meriste que vous y donniez toute vostre atantion, afin de la conclure insesemmant et que ceux qui I'entreprennent puisse travailler a s'arenger la dessu. Ainsy j'espere. Monsieur, que vous leur manderez insesamment de vous aller trever a Fonteneblaux. Monsieur Nicollas man a entretenue a fond et dans mon peux de juge- ment, je treve qui la possede sy bien que rien ne peut manquer de leur part a I'exeqution. II m'a paru quil a fait de serieuse rcflecsion sur tous lais ^v6nemens et quil ne craing auqun inconvenient pour vous ny pour eux. Je ne voye an luy qu'un tres grand selle pour vostre service et une franchise qui lobligerest d'abandonner lafaire, syl nestet persuade que vous y orez de grands avcntages et baucoup 330 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. donneur dedans et dehor du royaume, et cy je nestais pas persuade je ne prandrais pas, Monsieur, cette libcrte. Sertennement personne ne s'interessant plus vivement anvous que moy, sait ce qui me poite a vous marquer quil faudra que vous mandiez monsieur Nicolla et un associe et puis retenir Nicolla tout seul pour vous instruyre a fon et vous mestre en estat toute lafaire pour la conclure ; je de nouvaux de luy sa parole quil fera pour moy tout au monde ce que vous voudrez. Mais ne croyez pas s'il vous plest, Monsieur, que sy je nanvissajest pas la chose glo- rieusse et utille pour vous, que I'interais que il peux avoyr me fit vous representer la chose sy vivement, ne trevez done poingt movais. Monsieur, la liberte que je prand et soyez persuade de mon atachement et de ma saingsere amitie pour vous, personne ne pouvant vous considerer avec une plus parfaite estime et vous honorer plus infisnisment que je le fais. L., duchesse DE Portsmouth. Trevez bon que je vous supli aussy de vous resou- venir de ma pansion et d'ordonner que je soye paye. LETTERS OF DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH. 331 X. TO DESMARETS. National Archives, G, 7, 543. Original autograph document. De Paris, ce 14 aoust 1708. Je resoy, Monsieur, dans le mosmant la lettre que vous m'avez fait I'honneur de mescrire ; je charge mon- sieur Niscolla davoyr Ihonneur de vous rendre selle ycy, qui san retourne a Fontenneblaux pour attendre vos hordre contems et croyant estre sur et an estat de lever toute lais difticultes que vous pouvez trevez dans stafaire, sy vous voullez bien luy faire la grasse de luy an parler, Ne refusez pas je vous pris la liberie que j'osse prandre dantrer dans stafaire comme presumant de vous exsiter et persuader contre vostre propre jugement et vos grandes lumieres ny maime par un esprit davisdiste et d'interais desresonnable, car jc ne la souette quantems quelle vous pouras estre agreable et utille. An ce cas la jeanresantire un sansible plaisir puisque vous pourez estre mon bien faiteur sans qu'il vous an coute rien dauqune manicre que quelque parolle. Ainsy quant josse vous suplier de voulloir aprofondir la chosse avec le sieur Nicollas, se nest que pour que vous an ayez un parfait esclercissement et lesprit satisfait ladessus pour vous desterminer comme vous le jugerez le plus apropos. II serest reste pour atamdre vos hordres et vostre tems sans quil avest LOUJSE DE KEROUALLE. ysy eune a faire de consequance. Aujourdhuy je vous suis infiniment oblige, Monsieur, de la bonte que vous me faite esperer que vous hordonnerez le paye- ment de ma pansion ; soyez persuadd, je vous suplie, de mon parfait atachement pour vous et que personne ne se peut interesser avec plus d'amitie a tousse qui vous regarde, ny vous estimer et honnorer plus par- faitement que moy. L., duchesse DE Portsmouth. XI. TO DESMARETS. National Archives, G, 7, 543. Original autograph document. De Paris, ce 16 octobre 1708. Je viens d'aprandre. Monsieur, que quelque hun de messieurs les intendant de fisnance avest antrepris doptenir de vous pour un ostre compaigny que celle de monsieur Vollant et sais assossies dont vous tre- vesrez les noms sy joings, lafaire de latribustion de la noblesse. Josse esperer, Monsieur, que vous n'avez pas oublier que je vous la proposse sainc ou six jours aprais que vous fuste nom^ controlleur general et que vous me fiste I'honneur de m'assurer que vous ne la feriez que pour moi et vous la renvoyatte a, monsieur Couturier que vous an avez charge pour vous an faire souvenir. Sait un bien que vous me ferez, Monsieur, LETTERS OF DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH. 333 et dont je mosse flater que vous aymerez micux que je profitte que quelques amis de messieurs lais intendant de fisnance. Comme vous mavez fait la grasse de me donner vostre parolle, je suis persuade que vous orez la bont6 de me la tenir et de voulloyr preferer la compaigny du sieur Vollant a tout offre et de leur permettre de vous faire leur soumission. Lextresme craincte, Monsieur, de vous importuner a fait que je ne pas osse trop souvent vous an parller pour vous an rafrcchir la memoyre non plus que de I'afaire de la banque, mourant toujours de peur de vous estre trop incosmode ; cependant, Monsieur, se sont dais plesir et dais grasse quil faut que vous fassiez a quelquun ; vous savez la cruelle situation de mais afaire, par sais deux que je eu I'honneur de vous proposer vous me proqurez un repaux esternel et vous devennez serten- nemant mon bienfaiteur et hor destat de vous devoyr a la venir trop importuner. Accordez moy done, Monsieur, sais deux grasse et ansella une marque de vos bontt^s et de vostre amitie et de vouloyr bien me faire savoir le tems a peu prais que vous trevesrez a propos de les fisnir pour que je prcnne lais mesure necessaire pour la surette de ce que les uns et les ostres mont ofert tant pour la faire de la banque que pour selle de la noblesse ; je natems que vostre des- sision pour manaller a ma campaigne, mettent de consequance de ne poingt quiter que je nay eu mais suretes pour proficter du bien et de lavantage que josse espcrer que vous voudrez bien me faire et me 334 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. proqurer dont je vous orez une esternelle obligassion, car, Monsieur, sertennement vous ne ferez jamais de plesir ny de bien a personne qui lais ressante avec une plus parfaitte reconnessance ny qui vous estime, ayme vesristablement, Monsieur, et honore plus par- faitement que moy. L., duchesse DE PORTSMOUTH. TJie folloiving is the list mentioned in the letter : Monseigneur aura la bonte de se souvenir de la proposition de I'attribution de noblesse aux commis- saires ordinaire des guerres, a ceux de la marine, galleres et artilleMe dont Sa Grandeur a charge M. Le Cousturier pour la travailler avec les proposant qui sont : Rolland, Lantage, Accault, Caquet, Vollant, Montmarque, Durbec, Vannelle, Merite, La Bussiere, Saint-Leon, Imbert Nicolas, Lacombe, Le Vasseur. XII. TO DESMARETS. National Archives, G, 7, 543. Original autograph document. De Paris, ce 25 Janvier 1709. La bonte que vous avez eu, Monsieur, de me pro- mestre quan fessant Xafaire consernant la noblesse dais 8 cosmissere vous agririez la conipaignie que jorais VJwjineur de votts pr^santer, dont le sieur Volland est LETTERS OF DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH. 335 a la taite ct qui a estd travaillc par Ic sicur dc la Combe, me fait cspcrer, Monsieur, que vous voudrez bien vous an souvenir, ce qui fait que je prand la liberie de vous inportuner de sais ligne sait que je me suis lesse dire que monsieur Poultier voullest vous an parler pour loptenir pour un otre compaigny ; mais je terns de foy an vous, cas moings que ce ne soyt pas un oubli, je mosse asse flater de vostre amitie, pour me persuader que vous voudrez bien man continuer lais marque et ne rien changer asse que vous mavez faist I'honneur de me promettre. Je vous ansuplie tres instamment et vous demande la justisse. Monsieur, de croyre que personne ne pent avoyr plus de recosnessence et de sansibillite de vos bontes ny ne vous peut estimer, considerer et honorer plus parfaitement que L., duchesse DE PORTSMOUTH. Je vous envoye si joingt, Monsieur, les noms de ce qui compose la compaigny : RoUand, Lantage, Acco, Oiseau, Vanelle, Le Vasseur, Caquet. 336 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. XIII. TO DESMARETS. National Archives, G, 7, 543. Original autograph letter. De Paris, ce 24 juillet 1709. L'estat ou je me treve, Monsieur, me forsse a prandre la liberty de vous importuner de sais lignes pour vous demander an grasse tres instenmant de vouloyr bien mordonner le payement de ma pansion. Si vous trevez la disfisqulte de me faire donner quelque espesse qui me ferest pour terns fort grand plesir, au moings accordez-moy la marque de pro- tection et d'amitie de lordonner an billais de monoye. Ne me refusse pas, Monsieur, je vous suplis, ce secour essentiel ; je natems que ceste marque de vostre considerassion et damitie pour partir pour la province. Josse, Monsieur, me flater que vostre bon coeur et vostre pitie pour moy vous portera a ma- corder mon instente priesre comme a la personne du monde qui y sera la plus sansible et quy vous ayme, estime et honore, Monsieur, plus parfaitement que je ne le puis exprimer. L., duchesse DE PORTSMOUTH. Oserds je espdrer un mot de reponse de vous ? Quelle soyt je vous conjure favorable. LETTERS OF DVCIIESS OF PORTSMOUTH. 337 XIV. TO DESMAKETS. National Archives, G, 7, 543. Original autograph document. Noted with these words : A. M. de Vaiiboiirg. Daubigny, ce 5 oclobre 1709. Je ne sais, Monsieur, sy vous avez la bonte de remarquer par mon sillance la craingte que j^ et que je vous ay toujour marquer de vous estre importune. Terns que je pus, je suyvis ansella mon goust et la veritable consideration que je pour vous ; mais an veriste, Monsieur, je me treve dans un sy rigoureux estat, que je me treve forcd d'implorer vostre secours et vostre amitie. Jestay venue isy contems dy trever quelque douseur et qiielque essance ; mais la mis^re y est sy afreuse que Ton ne sorest tircr un soult car Ion a pas seullement de coy acheter du graing pour semer, et sy vous navez pitie de moy, mais taire ne seront pas ancemance, car, sy je nc lais fait pas faire moy maime, lay fermier sont hors d'estat et cassy tous a la mandiscitc ; trevez done bon, Monsieur, que je vous supli instamment de me donner une marque de distingtion et de bonte partiqulliesre, an me fessant hordonner le payeumant de ma pansion, ce seras une obligassion esternelle que je vous orez, car je suis o non plus. Ne me rcfusse pas. Monsieur, je vous an suplie, et laisse vous toucher aux besoings d'une amie z 338 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. qui vous honore autems que je fais. Trevcz ancore bon, Monsieur, de resevoyr un plasset de ma part qun homme a moy ora I'honneur de vous presanter sur le sujest de mais boys. Ce plaset vous instruyra ; ayez, syl vous plest, atantion. Que je treve done, Monsieur, en vous, un essentiel ami dans mes vrais besoings, josse me le promestre et man flater et que vous serez bien persuade que personne ne peut estre avec une plus parfaite estime. Monsieur, vostre tres umble et tres obeissante servante que je la suis. L., duchesse DE PORTSMOUTH. XV. TO DESMARETS. National Archives, G, 7, 543- Original autograph document. Daubigni, ce 27 novembre, 1709. J'us I'honneur, il y a deux mois, de vous faire pre- santer un plasset. Monsieur, par lequel je demandais qu'il vois plut ordonner que lais vente dais boys de mon duche Daubigny fussent remise a I'annee pro- chenne dans lesperance que j'avais quelle serest porte a un plus hault pris que stannee, et nayant poingt este statue sur ce plassait, Ion a exequste laroit du con- seil qui an hordonnait la vente. Lay boys furent vandus le sainc du present moy pour la somme de dix-huit cent livres, et mestent par moy maime fait informe, Ion ma raportd qu'ils estet porte a leur juste LETTERS OF DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH. 339 valleur terns par raport a leur caslitc ca leur situas- sion, estant esloingne de neuf lieux dais riviere. Cependant comme monsieur Thiton grand mcstre ma fait voyr lordre que vous luy avez envoy^ le quinsse novambre pour la remise de I'adjudication, josse vous suplicr de vouloyr bien luy ordonner quil nanpesche poingt I'adjudicataire de jouir puisque sait une chose conforme et que le retar me serest tres prejudissiable ; josse ancosre, Monsieur, vous conjurer davoir pitie de ma triste situassion qui est plus rigoureuse que vous ne pouvez vous I'imaginer. Je suis tr^s persuade que le Roy qui nignore pas depuis fort longtems mon malheureux estat, que si vous aviez la bonte de le luy ancosre represanter an bon et veritable amie, que ny luy, ny vous, ne pouvez pas trever auqun desren- gemant pour dix mille franc de plus ou de moings dans lais afaire. Dautant que sait la senile grasse et le seul bienfait dont il mest jamais honore et mayant fait I'honncur de masurer quant je pris la liberte de luy andcmander dautre qu'il ne le pouvest pas, mais qu'il me ferest payer regulliesrement et preferable- ment. Onon de dieu, Monsieur, veillez antrer avec un coeur umaing ct tandre dans mon rigoureux be- soing. Josse esperer ceste marque de vostre amitie et de vostre bonte comme la justisse. Monsieur, destre persuade que de toute lais personne qui ont toujour fait profession destre de vos amis il ny en a auqune qui vous aime et honore aussy parfaitement que moy. L., duchesse de Portsmouth. 340 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. XVI. TO DESMARETS. Letter preserved in the British Museum, Ms. Add'"' 18675, f' 75. Original autograph document. De Paris, ce 22 septembre 171 1. Comme vous avies eu la bonte, Moniseur, de ni'as- surer que vous donneries ordre de me faire resevoyr une anne de la pansion dont le Roy m'onore, je este au tresor royal che M. Groing et chez M. de Tur- menis ; il m^ont assure que vous n'an avies donne auqun a ma faveur, et comme je ne doute poingt que vostre intansion ne soyt de me faire resevoyr les neuf mille, et tems de livre que vous m^avez fait la grasse de me promestre, et que comme vous aves I'esprit auqup^ de chose tres-importente vous pouves avoyr oublie de pancer a moy, treves bon ste lestre pour vous an faire souvenir et pour vous suplier instanmant de vouloyr bien anvoyer vos hordre possitive pour que je puisse profister de vostre promesse, an ayant, je vous assure, Monsieur, un bessoings infisnis. Ayes done cette bonte pour moy, je vous an conjure instanmant, comme de m'accorder la justisse d'estre bien per- suade, Monsieur, que personne ne vous estime, con- sidere et honore plus parfaitement que moy. L., duchesse DE PORTSMOUT. LETTERS OF DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH. 341 Treves bon, Monsieur, que dans cctte mcsme lestre j'ose vous suplier, sy sella ne vous ayt pas desagre- able, de vouloyr bien an ma recosmandassion accordcr au sieur de Mongela, fils ennd du sieur Grimaux, un des fermiers generaux, une souferme dais ayde, soyt dans le Lionnays ou de Chaslon an Champaigne ou dans le Bourbonnay. Se sont dais jens tres solvable et qui peyront bien, et qui sont persuades que vous m'onores d'un peux de bonte et d'amitie, et qui ont crus que vous leur acorderies par raport a moy plus tot cette faveur la que par d'autre voye. Comme je leurs ay obligassion, je ne pas refusse de vous an faire ma tresumble priesre; ne le treves pas movais, je vous an suplis, IMonsieur. Et permestes moy de vous de- mander an grasse un most de reponce, et s'yl ce peut quelle me soyt favorable an tout. XVII. TO DESMARETS. National Archives, G, 7, 543. Original autograph document.* De Paris, ce 2 fevrier 17 13. Je suis bien mortifie, Monsieur, de me trever oblige par la cruelle situation de mais affaire et mon malheureux estat de vous inportuner sy souvant pour 1 This letter and the following one were discovered by ]\I. de Boislisle. 343 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. vous conjurer davoyr la bonte de me faire au moing payer une annee de pansion sur selle qui me sont dus, Accordez moy dene, Monsieur, sette marque de bonte et d'amitie de vouloyr bien antrer dans mon extresme besoing et de me faire mcstre sur I'estat de distribution de dimanche et avec un ordre positif d'estre paye et sanrien qui ne me fasse pas languir. An veriste, Monsieur, ma consideration pour vous et mon atachement a vous honorer depuis le moment que je eu I'honneur de vous cosnestre, meryterest un peux de protection et de secours dun ceur aussy bien fait et aussy juste que le vostre ; ne me refusse done pas, Monsieur, la grasse et la justisse que je vous demande instammant, non plus que la justice destre tres fortement persuade que vous ne lacorderez a personne qui vous souette plus de bon- heur, qui vous honore plus parfaitement, ny qui soyt plus vesristablement, Monsieur, vostre tres umble et tres obeissante servente que moy. L., duchesse DE Portsmouth. LETTERS OF DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH. 343 XVIII. TO DESMARETS. National Archives, G, 7, 543- Original autograph document. De Paris, ce 9 mars 17 13. Je resge toujours, Monsieur, asse malheureuse pour que vous ne veillez jamais antrer avec un peux de bont^ et dumaniste dans ma cruelle sytuassion et dans mais extresme besoings. Je vous avourez, Monsieur, que la sirconstance ou je me treve me mest au desespoyr, et se qui maflige an caure le plus griesvement, sait de cecasprais mestre osse flater d'un peux de part dans I'honneur de vostre amitie je la doulleur de nan pas resevoyr la moindre petite marque ny de ne vous trever jamais disposse a entrer dans aucune considerassion pour moy ny de soulager mon malheureux estat et mais extresme bessoing, mestent dus troys annees de la pension dont le Roy ma honore. An veriste. Monsieur, par lestime et la consideration que je toujour eu pour vous depuis que je I'avantage de vous cosnestre, je mestais cru androyt desperer une marque de vos bontes et de vostre justice. Je vous la demande, ]\Ionsicur, avec toute lais instance qun tres presant besoing le peut exsiger et que vous veilliez bien au moings mor- donner une annce. Vous me laviez fait esperer de- 344 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. vant le voyage de Fonteneblaux : ne me refusse pas, Monsieur, je vous ansuplie, et veillez vous souvenir que je suis une dais personne du monde qui ayt tou- jour plus pris de part a vos avantages que qui que se soyt. Ainsi, Monsieur, par umanite, sy je ne le puis optenir de vostre amitie, compastisse a ma triste conjoncture an ma cordant la grasse que je vous demande ysy et la justisse an maime tems de me croyre avec toute la consideration possyble vostre tres umble et tres obeissante servente. L., duchesse DE PORTSMOUTH. XTX. TO THE CONTROLEUR GENERAL OF FINANCE.^ Signed letter ; collection of M. de Baiberey. A Aubigny, le lo decenibre 1731. Permettez-moi, Monsieur, de vous prier cctte annee, comme j'ay fait I'annee derniere, de m'estre favorable aupres de M: le Cardinal dans la demande que je luy fait de la grattiffication annuelle qu'il m'a jusqu'a present fait accorder par Sa Majeste, et d'une petite augmentation, si cela est possible. Vous trou- verez cy-joint. Monsieur, la copie du memoire que j'ay fait presenter a M. le Cardinal ; comme il vous ' Philibert Orry was contioleur general from March 1730 to December 1745. LETTERS OF DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH. 345 sera apparemment renvoyc, je vous prie de voulloir bien I'appuyer de votre credit aupres de Son Emi- nence, et de I'cngager a m'accorder ma demande. Je me flatte par I'amitie que vous m'avez temoignee que vous voudrcz bien me rendre service en cette occasion, et que vous etes bien persuade de I'estinie et de la consideration avec laquelle je suis, Monsieur, votre tres-humble et tres-obcissante servante. L., duchesse DE PORTSMOUTH. On the margin is written in a handwriting re- sembling Orry's : "Bon pour 5,000. Repondre en conformite a madame de Portsmouth." The copy of the following memorial and of the petition to the King are appended to Letter XIX. : To Monseigneiir the Cardinal de Fleiiry. MONSEIGNEUR, Vous avez eu la bonte de faire donner a la duchesse de Portsmouth en I'annee 1726 une ordon- nance de grattiffication extraordinaire de dix mil livres ; en 1727 une de six mil livres, et les annees suivantes cinq mil livres sculement. Et cela en consideration des services importants qu'elle a rendus autrefois a I'Etat et a cause de la perte qu'elle a fait de presque tout son bien dans le papier ; la reduction qu'elle a souffert sur quelques rentes viageres qu'elle avoit, et dont jusqu'a present elle A A 346 LOUISE DE KEROUALLE. n'a pu obtenir le retablissement, ayant encore rendu sa situation plus facheuse. Elle supplie tres-humblement Votre Eminence de voulloir bien lay accorder pour la pr^sente annee 1 73 1 une ordonnance de cette grattiffication un peu plus forte que celle de I'annee pr^cedente et la pro- portionner a ses besoins et a son age de plus de quatre-vingt-deux ans. Note subjoined : Madame la duchesse de Portsmouth Supplie Sa Majesty dc lui continuer la meme grace qu'elle a la bonte de luy accorder depuis plusieurs annees, en luy faisant donner une gratification pour la presente annee. La reduction qu'elle a soufferte sur quelques rentes viageres qu'elle avoit, et dont elle n'a point demande le retablissement, ayant rendu sa situation encore plus facheuse. Sa Majeste luy a accorde : En 1726 10,000 liv. En 1727 6,000 — En 172S, 1729 et 1730 . . 5,000 — FINIS. bidder &• Tanner. The Selwooci Trinting Works, Frome. nnd London. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY Los Angeles This book is DUE on the last date stamped below. NOV 2 7 1951 mi 1988 INTERLIBRARY LOfNS rtB 2 1972 Three weeks kom date of ^^ E C E [ V L MAIN LOAN D^SJ iiRi t-5 If JAI\J I 9 ffiSS : lYI • -^gJLg iLl'l2|l|2l3U .|R'lfl f receipt a? U mk — m-. LD F£b 16 7i^ D |£EB171372 P.M. i f&C'» U—" !£, FEBlMS?2 Uffli f^^r.TR k^'. Mpyo JUN161983 JJUL131983 Foirn L9-32rn-8,'58(5876s4)444 NOV 1 5 '99 uc SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY I mil nil nil AA 000 428 232 3