GEISEL LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN OttCiU LA JOLLA. CALIFORNIA MEMOIRS OF TTE AYAOTViA HH3J :<3$i • SON PORTRAIT OF MARIE ANTOINETTE BY MME. VIGEE EEBBUN (he original in the Museum at Versailles MEMOIRS OF MARIE ANTOINETTE Queen of France and Wife of Louis XVI BY MADAME CAMPAN Her Lady-in- Wailing With a Special Introduction and Illustrations lllll "3 1 lElSfli^l im BS MOM NEW YORK P F COLLIER & SON PUBLISHERS Copyright iqio By P. F. Collier & Son CONTENTS PAGE Introduction 13 CHAPTER I The Court of Louis XV.— His Character.— The King's De- botter. — Characters of Mesdames His Daughters —Re- treat of Madame Louise to the Carmelites of St. Denis. — Madame du Barry. — The Court Divided between the Party of the Due de Choiseul and That of the Due d'Aiguillon 17 CHAPTER II Birth of Marie Antoinette Attended by a Memorable Calam- ity. — Maria Theresa's Character. — Education of the Arch- duchesses. — Preceptors Provided for Marie Antoinette by the Court of Vienna. — Preceptor Sent Her by the Court of France.— Abbe de Vermond. — Change in the French Min- istry. — Cardinal de Rohan Succeeds Baron de Breteuil as Ambassador at Vienna. — Portrait of That Prelate . . 31 CHAPTER III Arrival of the Archduchess in France. — Brilliant Reception of the Dauphiness at Versailles. — She Charms Louis XV. — Madame du Barry's Jealousy. — Court Intrigues. — The Dauphin. — His Brothers and Their Wives .... 41 CHAPTER IV Death of Louis XV. — Picture of the Court— Madame du Barry Dismissed. — Departure of the Court to Choisy. — M. de Maurepas Minister. — Conduct of the Abbe de Ver- mond ... 56 CHAPTER V Influence of Example upon the Courtiers. — Enthusiasm Raised by the New Reign. — Mourning at La Muette. — The Vol. 3 3 Memoirs— 1 4 CONTENTS PAGE Queen. — The King and the Princes, His Brothers, Are Inoculated. — Stay at Marly. — Calumnies against the Queen. — Boehmer, the Jeweller. — Mademoiselle Bertin. — Changes of Fashion. — Simplicity of the Court of Vienna. — Ex- treme Temperance, Decorum, and Modesty of Marie An- toinette. — The Code of Service. — Public Dinners. — The Queen's Wardrobe. — Her Toilet. — Daily Routine. — Hear- ing Mass 63 CHAPTER VI Examination of the Papers of Louis XV. by Louis XVI. — Man in the Iron Mask. — The Late King's Interest in Cer- tain Financial Companies. — Representation of " Iphigenia in Aulis." — The King Gives Petit Trianon to the Queen. — The Archduke Maximilian's Journey to France. — Ques- tions of Precedence. — Misadventure of the Archduke. — Accouchement of the Comtesse d'Artois. — The Poissardes Cry Out to the Queen to Give Heirs to the Throne. — Death of the Due de La Vauguyon. — Portrait of Louis XVI. ; of the Comte de Provence; of the Comte d'Artois 83 CHAPTER VII Severe Winter. — The Princesse de Lamballe Appointed Su- perintendent of the Household. — The Comtesse Jules de Polignac Appears at Court. — M. de Vaudreuil. — Due and Duchesse de Duras. — Fashionable Games .... 96 CHAPTER VIII The Due de Choiseul Returns to Court. — The Queen Obtains a Pension of 1,200 Francs for Chamfort. — She Invites Gluck to France and Patronises Music. — Encouragement Given to the Art of Printing.— Turgot— M. de Saint- Germain. — Amusements at Court. — Particulars of the Household. — Masked Balls at the Opera. — The Queen Goes There in a Fiacre; Slanderous Reports. — The Heron Plume. — The Due de Lauzun. — The Queen's Attachment to the Princesse de Lamballe and the Duchesse de Poli- gnac. — Anecdote of the Abbe de Vermond . . . .107 CHAPTER IX Joseph II. 's Visit to France. — His Reception at the Opera. — Fete Given to Him by the Queen at Trianon. — The Queen CONTENTS 5 PAGE Enceinte. — Voltaire's Return to Paris. — Duel between the Comte d'Artois and the Due de Bourdon. — Return of the Chevalier d'Eon to France. — Particulars Relative to His Missions, and the Causes of His Disguise. — Night Promenades upon the Terrace of Trianon. — Couplets against the Queen. — Indignation of Louis XVI. — Birth of Madame 121 CHAPTER X Public Rejoicing. — Death of Maria Theresa; the Queen's Affliction. — Anecdotes of Maria Theresa. — Birth of the Dauphin. — Bankruptcy of the Prince de Guemenee. — The Duchesse de Polignac Is Appointed Governess of the Children of France. — Jealousy of the Court. — Mode of Life at Trianon. — Presumption of the Due de Fronsac. — American War. — Franklin. — M. de La Fayette. — Order for Admitting None but Gentlemen to the Rank of Officer. — Spirit of the Third Estate 139 CHAPTER XI Visit of the Grand Duke of Russia and His Duchess to France. — Entertainment and Supper at Trianon. — Cardi- nal de Rohan. — Cold Reception Given to Comte d'Haga (Gustavus III., King of Sweden). — Peace with Eng- land. — The English Flock into France. — Conduct to be Observed at Court. — Mission of the Chevalier de Bressac to the Queen. — Court of Naples. — Queen Caroline. — The Minister Acton. — Debates between the Courts of Naples and Madrid. — Insolent Reply of the Spanish Am- bassador to Queen Caroline. — Interference of France. — MM. de Segur and de Castries Appointed Ministers through the Queen's Influence. — Treachery of M. de Maurepas towards M. Necker. — Appointment of M. de Calonne. — Observations of Marie Antoinette . . . 158 CHAPTER XII The Queen Is Dissatisfied with the Appointment of M. de Calonne. — Acts of Benevolence. — Purchase of St. Cloud. — Regulations of Internal Police. — State of France. — Beau- marchais. — " Manage de Figaro." — Character of M. de Vaudreuil 176 6 CONTENTS CHAPTER XIII PAGE The Diamond Necklace. — Account of Bcehmer, the Jew- eller. — His Interview with Madame Campan. — The Cardi- nal de Rohan Interrogated in the King's Cabinet. — Particulars Relative to Madame de Lamotte and Her Family. — Steps Taken by the Cardinal's Relations. — The Prosecution.— The Clergy Remonstrate.— Decree of the Parliament. — The Queen's Grief. — Remark of Louis XVI 187 CHAPTER XIV The Archbishop of Sens Is Appointed to the Ministry.— The Abbe de Vermond's Joy on the Occasion.— The Queen Is Obliged to Take a Part in Business.— Money Sent to Vienna Contrary to Her Inclination. — Anecdotes. — The Queen Supports the Archbishop of Sens in Office- Public Rejoicings on His Dismissal.— Opening of the States General.— Cries of "Vive le Due d' Orleans! "— Their Effect upon the Queen.— Mirabeau— He Requests an Embassy.— Misfortunes Induce the Queen to Yield to Superstitious Fears.— Anecdotes.— Prejudices of the Provincial Deputies of the Tiers Etat— Causes of These Prejudices.— Death of the First Dauphin.— Anecdotes . 205 CHAPTER XV " Oath of the Tennis Court."— Insurrection of the 14th of j u ly _The King Goes to, the National Assembly.— Anec- dotes.— Spectacle Presented by the Courtyards of the Chateau of Versailles.— Report that the National Assem- bly Is Threatened.— The King's Speech Rebutting These Suspicions. — Anecdotes. — Disposition of the Troops- Departure of the Comte d'Artois ; the Prince de Conde, and the Due and Duchesse de Polignac— The Latter Is Recognised by a Postilion, Who Saves Her.— The King Goes to Paris.— Alarm at Versailles.— The Queen Deter- mines to Go to the National Assembly.— Speech Prepared by Her.— The King's Return— Bailly's Speech.— Assassi- nation of MM. Foulon and Berthier— Plans Presented by Foulon to the King for Arresting the Progress of the Revolution.— Remark by Barnave.— His Repentance . . 218 CHAPTER XVI Creation of the National Guard.— Departure of the Abbe de Vermond.— The Queen Desires Madame Campan to Por- CONTENTS 7 PAGE tray His Character. — The French Guards Quit Ver- sailles. — Entertainment Given by the Body Guards to the Regiment of Flanders. — The King, the Queen, and the Dauphin Are Present at It. — Proceedings of the 5th and 6th of October. — Detestable Threats against the Queen. — Devotion of One of the Body Guard. — The Life of Marie Antoinette in Danger. — The Queen Is Required to Appear on the Balcony. — The Royal Family Repair to Paris.— Residence at the Tuileries. — Change of Feeling. — The Queen Applauded with Enthusiasm by the Women of the Populace. — Private Life. — Ingenuous Observations of the Dauphin. — It Is Proposed that the Queen Shall Quit Her Family and France. — Her Noble Refusal. — She Devotes Herself to the Education of Her Children. — Picture of the Court. — Anecdote of Luckner. — Exasperated State of Feeling 230 CHAPTER XVII Loyalty of M. de Favras. — His Prosecution and Death. — His Children Are Imprudently Presented to the Queen. — Plan Laid for Carrying off the Royal Family. — Singular Letter from the Empress Catherine to Louis XVI. — The Queen Is Unwilling to Owe the Reestablishment of the Throne to the Emigres. — Death of the Emperor Joseph II. — First Negotiation between the Court and Mira- beau. — Louis XVI. and His Family Inhabit St. Cloud. — New Plans for Escaping 252 CHAPTER XVIII First Federation. — Attempts to Assassinate the Queen. — Affecting Scene. — Account of the Affair of Nancy, Written by Madame Campan, at Night, in the Council Chamber, by the King's Dictation. — Madame Campan Becomes the Subject of Calumnious Denunciation. — Marks of Confidence Bestowed upon Her by the Queen. — Interview between the Queen and Mirabeau in the Gar- dens of St. Cloud. — He Treats with the Court. — Ridicule of the Revolutionary Party. — Stones of the Bastille Of- fered to the Dauphin. — The Queen Feels Her Aversion to M. de La Fayette Increase. — Plan Formed by the Princes for Reentering France through Lyons. — Imprudence of Persons Attached to the Queen. — Anecdote Relative to M. de La Fayette. — Departure of the King's Aunts. — Death of Mirabeau 263 8 CONTENTS CHAPTER XIX PAGE Preparations for the Journey to Varennes. — The Queen Watched and Betrayed. — Madame Campan's Departure for Auvergne Precedes That of the Royal Family for Versailles. — Madame Campan Hears of the King's Arrest. — Xote Written to Her by the Queen Immediately upon Her Return to Paris. — Anecdotes. — Measures Taken for Keeping the King at the Tuileries. — Barnave Gains the Esteem and Confidence of Marie Antoinette during the Return from Varennes. — His Honourable and Re- spectful Conduct. — She Contrasts It with That of Petion. — Bravery of Barnave. — His Advice to the Queen. — Par- ticulars Respecting the Varennes Journey .... 275 CHAPTER XX Acceptance of the Constitution. — Opinion of Barnave and His Friends Approved by the Court of Vienna. — Secret Policy of the Court. — The Legislative Assembly Delib- erates upon the Ceremony to Be Observed on Receiving the King. — Offensive Motion. — Louis XVI. Is Received by the Assembly with Transport. — He Gives Way to Pro- found Grief When with His Family. — Public Fetes and Rejoicings. — M. de Montmorin's Conversation with Madame Campan upon the Continual Indiscretions of the People about the Court. — The Royal Family Go to the Theatre Frangais. — Play Changed. — Personal Conflicts in the Pit of the Italiens. — Double Correspondence of the Court with Foreign Powers. — Maison Civile. — The Queen's Misfortunes Do Not Alter the Sweetness of Her Disposition. — Method Adopted by the Queen Respecting Her Secret Correspondence. — Madame Campan's Con- duct When Attacked by Both Parties. — Particulars Re- specting M. Genet, Her Brother, Charge d' Affaires from France to Russia. — Written Testimony of the Queen in Favour of Madame Campan's Zeal and Fidelity. — The King Comes to See Her, and Confirms These Marks of Confidence and Satisfaction. — Projected Interview be- tween Louis XVI. and Barnave. — Attempts to Poison Louis XVI. — Precautions Taken. — The Queen Consults Pitt about the Revolution. — His Reply. — The Emigres Oppose All Alliance with the Constitutionals. — Letter from Barnave to the Queen 295 CHAPTER XXI Fresh Libel by Madame de Lamotte. — The Queen Refuses to Purchase the Manuscript. — The King Buys It. — The CONTENTS 9 PAGE Queen Performs Her Easter Devotions Secretly in 1792. — She Dares Not Confide in General Dumouriez. — Bar- nave's Last Advice. — Insults Offered to the Royal Family by the Mob. — The King's Dejection. — 20th of June. — The King's Kindness to Madame Campan. — Iron Closet. — Louis XVI. Entrusts a Portfolio to Madame Campan. — Importance of the Documents It Contained. — Procedure of M. de La Fayette. — Why It Was Unsuccessful. — An Assassin Conceals Himself in the Queen's Apart- ments 320 CHAPTER XXII Madame Campan's Communications with M. Bertrand de Molleville for the King's Service. — Hope of a Speedy Deliverance. — The Queen's Reflections upon the Character of Louis XVI. — Insults. — Inquiry Set on Foot by the Princesse de Lamballe Respecting the Persons of the Queen's Household. — The 10th of August. — Curious Par- ticulars. — Battle. — Scenes of Carnage. — The Royal Family at the Feuillans 337 CHAPTER XXIII Petion Refuses Madame Campan Permission to Be Impris- oned in the Temple with the Queen. — She Excites the Suspicions of Robespierre. — Domiciliary Visits. — Madame Campan Opens the Portfolio She Had Received from the King. — Papers in It, with the Seals of State. — Mirabeau's Secret Correspondence with the Court. — Destroyed as Well as the Other Papers. — The Only Document Pre- served. — It Is Delivered to M. de Malesherbes on the Trial of the Unfortunate Louis XVI. — The Royal Family in the Temple. — Trial of the King. — Parting of the Royal Family. — Execution. — The Royal Prisoners. — Separation of the Dauphin from His Family. — Removal of the Queen. — The Last Moments of Marie Antoinette. — The Last Separation. — Execution of Madame Elisa- beth. — Death of the Dauphin. — Release of Madame Royale. — Her Marriage to the Due d'Angouleme. — Return to France. — Death. — The Ceremony of Expiation . . 359 NOTE The following titles ing the period covered monseigneur Monsieur Monsieur le Prince Monsieur le Due Monsieur le Grand Monsieur le Premier Enfans de France Madame { Mesdames $ Madame Elisabeth Madame Royale . Mademoiselle have the signification given below dur- by this work: . The Dauphin. . The eldest brother of the King, Comte de Provence, after- wards Louis XVIII. . The Prince de Condi, head of the House of Conde. . The Due de Bourbon, the eldest son of the Prince de Conde {and the father of the Due d'Enghien shot by Napoleon). . The Grand Equerry under the ancien regime. . The First Equerry under the an- cien regime. . The royal children. . Sisters or daughters of the King, or Princesses near the Throne (sometimes used also for the wife of Monsieur, the eldest brother of the King, the Princesses Adelaide, Victoire, Sophie, Louise, daughters of Louis XV., and aunts of Louis XVI.). . The Princesse Elisabeth, sister of Louis XVI. . The Princesse Marie Therese, daughter of Louis XVI., af- terwards Duchesse d'Angou- leme. . The daughter of Monsieur, the brother of the King. INTRODUCTION The closing years of the French monarchy could scarcely have found a more faithful chronicler, or one better fitted for the task both by training and situation, than Madame Campan. Introduced into the Court of Louis XV. as a young girl, she became one of the household of Marie Antoinette immediately after that princess came from Austria to wed the Dauphin ; and followed the fortunes of her royal mistress with un- swerving devotion until the prison gates separated them. Even then she would not have turned aside — despite the ominous shadow of the scaffold — had not the interests of her mistress and an inexorable jailer alike demanded it. But it is not through loyalty alone that Madame Campan deserves recognition as a biographer and historian. Her education and endowments, which rendered her remarkable even at a tender age, ripened with especial opportunities and experience. Jeanne Louise Henriette Genet was born in Paris, October 6, 1752. Her father was first clerk in the Foreign Office, and this position brought him into touch with men of affairs and culture from all over the world. His home was one of quiet refinement, in which the talents of his daughter found full develop- ment. Her progress in music and languages was rapid. Albaneze instructed her in singing, and Gol- doni in Italian. She was equally proficient in English. Tasso, Milton, Dante, and Shakespeare were read in 13 14 INTRODUCTION the original. She was also apt in elocution, reciting passages in Racine and Moliere to delighted audiences. Such a prodigy was soon spoken of at Court, and she presently obtained a place as reader to the Princesses — the four daughters of Louis XV. "I was then fifteen," she says; "my father felt some regret at yielding me up at so early an age to the jealousies of the Court. The day on which I first put on my Court dress, and went to embrace him in his study, tears filled his eyes, and mingled with the ex- pression of his pleasure." She stood somewhat in awe of the King, who was fond of jokes at others' expense. "Louis XV," she says, "had the most imposing presence. His eyes re- mained fixed upon you all the time he was speaking; and, notwithstanding the beauty of his features, he inspired a sort of fear. I was very young, it is true, when he first spoke to me; you shall judge whether it was in a very gracious manner. I was fifteen. The King was going out to hunt, and a numerous retinue followed him. As he stopped opposite me he said : 'Mademoiselle Genet, I am assured you are very learned, and understand four or five foreign lan- guages.' T only know two. Sire,' I answered, trem- bling. 'Which are they?' 'English and Italian.' 'Do you speak them fluently?' 'Yes, Sire, very fluently.' 'That is quite enough to drive a husband mad.' After this pretty compliment the King went on; the retinue saluted me, laughing; and, for my part, I remained for some moments motionless with surprise and con- fusion." When Marie Antoinette was married to the Dauphin, afterwards Louis XVI, Mademoiselle Genet became the wife of Campari, son of the Queen's secretary. The King himself gave her a dowry, show- ing that he was not greatly alarmed about her mar- INTRODUCTION 15 riageability despite his jests, and she became reader and companion to the Dauphiness. Thenceforth a close sincere attachment was maintained between the two, which was to bear fruit in the volume of Memoirs written by Madame Campan in her old age. After the stormy events leading to the death of Louis XVI. and his Queen, Madame Campan fled from Paris carrying valuable state papers on behalf of her mistress, and during the Reign of Terror re- mained concealed at Combertin. After the fall of Robespierre she opened a female boarding school at St. Germain, where among other pupils she received Hortense, daughter of Josephine de Beauharnais. When the latter married Bonaparte he took lively in- terest in Madame Campan, appointing her lady super- intendent of the institution founded by him at Ecouen, for the education of daughters of officers of the Legion of Honour. After the Restoration this school was suppressed, and Madame Campan, again an exile, retired to Mantes, where she died, in 1822. In her declining years her mind reverted to her life at Court, and she set herself the devoted task of clear- ing the memory of its ill-fated Queen. She has done far more than this in the resulting work, "Memoires sur la Vie Privee de la Reine Marie Antoinette." It is an exceedingly valuable source-book of history filled with personal impressions of a momentous period. She gives her reasons for writing, in the following memo- randum left with the original work : "Louis XVI meant to write his own Memoirs ; the manner in which his private papers were arranged indicated this design. The Queen also had this inten- tion; she long preserved a large correspondence, and a great number of minute reports, made in the spirit and upon the event of the moment. But after the 20th day of June, 1792, she was obliged to burn a 16 INTRODUCTION large portion of what she had collected, and the re- mainder were conveyed out of France. "Considering the rank and situation of persons capable of elucidating by their writings the history of our political storms, it will not be imagined that I aim at placing myself on a level with them ; but I have spent half my life either with the daughters of Louis XV or with Marie Antoinette. I knew the character of those Princesses; I became privy to some extraor- dinary facts, the publication of which may be inter- esting, and the truth of the details will form the merit of my work. "Twenty years before the Revolution I often heard it remarked that the imposing character of the power of Louis XIV was no longer to be found in the Palace of Versailles ; that the institutions of the ancient mon- archy were rapidly sinking; and that the people, crushed beneath the weight of taxes, were miserable, though silent; but that they began to give ear to the bold speeches of the philosophers, who loudly pro- claimed their sufferings and their rights ; and, in short, that the age would not pass away without the oc- currence of some great outburst, which would unsettle France, and change the course of its progress. "Destiny having formerly placed me near crowned heads, I now amuse my solitude when in retirement with collecting a variety of facts which may prove interesting to my family when I shall be no more. I have put together all that concerned the domestic life of an unfortunate princess, whose reputation is not yet cleared of the stains it received from the at- tacks of calumny, and who justly merited a different lot in life, a different place in the opinion of mankind after her fall." MEMOIRS OF MARIE ANTOINETTE CHAPTER I I WAS fifteen years of age when I was appointed reader to Mesdames. I will begin by describing the Court at that period. Maria Leczinska was just dead; the death of the Dauphin had preceded hers by three years; the Jesuits were suppressed, and piety was to be found at Court only in the apartments of Mesdames. The Due de Choiseul ruled. Etiquette still existed at Court with all the forms it had acquired under Louis XIV.; dignity alone was wanting. As to gaiety, there was none. Versailles was not the place at which to seek for assemblies where French spirit and grace were displayed. The focus of wit and intelligence was Paris. The King thought of nothing but the pleasures of the chase : it might have been imagined that the courtiers indulged themselves in making epigrams by hearing them say seriously, on those days when the King did not hunt, " The King does nothing to-day." The arrangement beforehand of his movements was also a matter of great importance with Louis XV. On the first day of the year he noted down in his alma- nac the days of departure for Compiegne, Fontaine- bleau, Choisy, etc. The weightiest matters, the most serious events, never deranged this distribution of his time. 17 i8 THE MEMOIRS OF Since the death of the Marquise de Pompadour, the King had no titled mistress; he contented himself with his seraglio in the Parc-aux-Cerfs. It is well known that the monarch found the separation of Louis de Bourbon from the King of France the most ani- mating feature of his royal existence. " They would have it so; they thought it for the best," was his way of expressing himself when the measures of his minis- ters were unsuccessful. The King delighted to man- age the most disgraceful points of his private expenses himself; he one day sold to a head clerk in the War Department a house in which one of his mistresses had lodged ; the contract ran in the name of Louis de Bourbon, and the purchaser himself took in a bag the price of the house in gold to the King in his private closet. Louis XV. saw very little of his family. He came every morning by a private staircase into the apart- ment of Madame Adelaide. He often brought and drank there coffee that he had made himself. Madame Adelaide pulled a bell which apprised Madame Vic- toire of the King's visit; Madame Victoire, on rising to go to her sister's apartment, rang for Madame So- phie, who in her turn rang for Madame Louise. The apartments of Mesdames were of very large dimen- sions. Madame Louise occupied the farthest room. This latter lady was deformed and very short; the poor Princess used to run with all her might to join the daily meeting, but, having a number of rooms to cross, she frequently, in spite of her haste, had only just time to embrace her father before he set out for the chase. Every evening, at six, Mesdames interrupted my reading to them to accompany the Princes to Louis XV.; this visit was called the King's debotter, and was marked by a kind of etiquette. Mesdames put on MARIE ANTOINETTE 19 an enormous hoop, which set out a petticoat orna- mented with gold or embroidery; they fastened a long train round their waists, and concealed the undress of the rest of their clothing by a long cloak of black taf- fety which enveloped them up to the chin. The che- valiers dlionneur, the ladies in waiting, the pages, the equerries, and the ushers bearing large flambeaux, ac- companied them to the King. In a moment the whole palace, generally so still, was in motion; the King kissed each Princess on the forehead, and the visit was so short that the reading which it interrupted was fre- quently resumed at the end of a quarter of an hour; Mesdames returned to their apartments, and untied the strings of their petticoats and trains; they resumed their tapestry, and I my book. During the summer season the King sometimes came to the residence of Mesdames before the hour of his debotter. One day he found me alone in Ma- dame Victoire's closet, and asked me where Coche was; I started, and he repeated his question, but without being at all the more understood. When the King was gone I asked Madame of whom he spoke. She told me that it was herself, and very coolly explained to me, that, being the fattest of his daughters, the King had given her the familiar name of Coche; that he called Madame Adelaide, Loque, Madame Sophie, Graillc, and Madame Louise, Chide. The people of the King's household observed that he knew a great number of such words; possibly he had amused himself with picking them out from dictiona- ries. If this style of speaking betrayed the habits and tastes of the King, his manner savoured nothing of such vulgarity; his walk was easy and noble, he had a dignified carriage of the head, and his aspect, with- out being severe, was imposing; he combined great politeness with a truly regal demeanour, and grace- 2 o THE MEMOIRS OF fully saluted the humblest woman whom curiosity led into his path. He was very expert in a number of trifling matters which never occupy attention but when there is a lack of something better to employ it; for instance, he would knock off the top of an egg-shell at a single stroke of his fork; he therefore always ate eggs when lie dined in public, and the Parisians who came on Sundays to see the King dine, returned home less struck with his fine figure than with the dexterity with which he broke his eggs. Repartees of Louis XV., which marked the keen- ness of his wit and the elevation of his sentiments, were quoted with pleasure in the assemblies of Versailles. This Prince was still beloved; it was wished that a style of life suitable to his age and dignity should at length supersede the errors of the past, and justify the love of his subjects. It was painful to judge him harshly. If he had established avowed mistresses at Court,' the uniform devotion of the Queen was blamed for it. Mesdames were reproached for not seeking to prevent the King's forming an intimacy with some new favourite. Madame Henriette, twin sister of the Duchess of Parma, was much regretted, for she had considerable influence over the King's mind, and it was remarked that if she had lived she would have been assiduous in finding him amusements in the bosom of his family, would have followed him in his short excursions, and would have done the honours of the petits soupers which he was so fond of giving in his private apartments. Mesdames too much neglected the means of pleas- ing the King, but the cause of that was obvious in the little attention he had paid them in their youth. In order to console the people under their suffer- MARIE ANTOINETTE 21 ings, and to shut their eyes to the real depredations on the treasury, the ministers occasionally pressed the most extravagant measures of reform in the King's household, and even in his personal expenses. Cardinal Fleury, who in truth had the merit of reestablishing the finances, carried this system of economy so far as to obtain from the King the suppression of the household of the four younger Princesses. They were brought up as mere boarders in a convent eighty leagues distant from the Court. Saint Cyr would have been more suitable for the reception of the King's daughters; but probably the Cardinal shared some of those prejudices which will always attach to even the most useful institutions, and which, since the death of Louis XIV., had been raised against the noble establishment of Madame de Maintenon. Madame Louise often assured me that at twelve years of age she was not mistress of the whole alphabet, and never learnt to read fluently until after her return to Versailles. Madame Victoire attributed certain paroxysms of terror, which she was never able to conquer, to the violent alarms she experienced at the Abbey of Fontevrault, whenever she was sent, by way of pen- ance, to pray alone in the vault where the sisters were interred. A gardener belonging to the abbey died raving mad. His habitation, without the walls, was near a chapel of the abbey, where Mesdames were taken to repeat the prayers for those in the agonies of death. Their prayers were more than once inter- rupted by the shrieks of the dying man. When Mesdames, still very young, returned to Court, they enjoyed the friendship of Monseigneur the Dauphin, and profited by his advice. They devoted themselves ardently to study, and gave up 22 THE MEMOIRS OF almost the whole of their time to it; they enabled themselves to write French correctly, and acquired a good knowledge of history. Italian, English, the higher branches of mathematics, turning and dial- ling, filled up in succession their leisure moments. Madame Adelaide, in particular, had a most insatiable desire to learn; she was taught to play upon all instruments, from the horn (will it be believed!) to the Jew's-harp. Madame Adelaide was graced for a short time with a charming figure; but never did beauty so quickly vanish. Madame Victoire was handsome and very graceful; her address, mien, and smile were in per- fect accordance with the goodness of her heart. Madame Sophie was remarkably ugly; never did I behold a person with so unprepossessing an appear- ance; she walked with the greatest rapidity; and, in order to recognise the people who placed them- selves along her path without looking at them, she acquired the habit of leering on one side, like a hare. This Princess was so exceedingly diffident that a person might be with her daily for years together without hearing her utter a single word. It was asserted, however, that she displayed talent, and even amiability, in the society of some favourite ladies. She taught herself a great deal, but she studied alone; the presence of a reader would have disconcerted her very much. There were, however, occasions on which the Princess, generally so intrac- table, became all at once affable and condescending, and manifested the most communicative good-nature; this would happen during a storm; so great was her alarm on such an occasion that she then approached the most humble, and would ask them a thousand obliging - questions; a flash of lightning made her squeeze their hands; a peal of thunder would drive MARIE ANTOINETTE 23 her to embrace them, but with the return of the calm, the Princess resumed her stiffness, her reserve, and her repellent air, and passed all by without taking the slightest notice of any one, until a fresh storm restored to her at once her dread and her affability. Mesdames found in a beloved brother, whose rare attainments are known to all Frenchmen, a guide in everything wanting to their education. In their august mother, Maria Leczinska, they possessed the noblest example of every pious and social virtue; that Princess, by her eminent qualities and her modest dignity, veiled the failings of the King, and while she lived she preserved in the Court of Louis XV. that decorous and dignified tone which alone secures the respect due to power. The Princesses, her daughters, were worthy of her; and if a few degraded beings did aim the shafts of calumny at them, these shafts dropped harmless, warded off by the elevation of their sentiments and the purity of their conduct. If Mesdames had not tasked themselves with nu- merous occupations, they would have been much to be pitied. They loved walking, but could enjoy nothing beyond the public gardens of Versailles; they would have cultivated flowers, but could have no others than those in their windows. The Marquise de Durfort, since Duchesse de Civrac, afforded to Madame Victoire agreeable society. The Princess spent almost all her evenings with that lady, and ended by fancying herself domiciled with her. Madame de Narbonne had, in a similar way, taken pains to make her intimate acquaintance pleasant to Madame Adelaide. Madame Louise had for many years lived in great seclusion; I read to her five hours a day. My voice frequently betrayed the exhaustion of my lungs; the 24 THE MEMOIRS OF Princess would then prepare sugared water for me, place it by me, and apologise for making me read so long, on the score of having prescribed a course of reading for herself. One evening, while I was reading, she was informed that M. Bertin, ministre des parties casuelles, desired to speak with her; she went out abruptly, returned, resumed her silks and embroidery, and made me re- sume my book; when I retired she commanded me to be in her closet the next morning at eleven o'clock. When I got there the Princess was gone out; I learnt that she had gone at seven in the morning to the Convent of the Carmelites of St. Denis, where she was desirous of taking the veil. I went to Madame Victoire; there I heard that the King alone had been acquainted with Madame Louise's project; that he had kept it faithfully secret, and that, having long previously opposed her wish, he had only on the preceding evening sent her his consent; that she had gone alone into the convent, where she was expected; and that a few minutes afterwards she had made her appearance at the grating, to show to the Princesse de Guistel, who had accompanied her to the convent gate, and to her equerry, the King's order to leave her in the monastery. Upon receiving the intelligence of her sister's de- parture, Madame Adelaide gave way to violent parox- ysms of rage, and reproached the King bitterly for the secret, which he had thought it his duty to preserve. Madame Victoire missed the society of her favourite sister, but she shed tears in silence only. The first time I saw this excellent Princess after Madame Louise's departure, I threw myself at her feet, kissed her hand, and asked her, with all the confidence of youth, whether she would quit us as Madame Louise had done. She raised me, embraced me, and said, MARIE ANTOINETTE 25 pointing to the lounge upon which she was extended, " Make yourself easy, my dear; I shall never have Louise's courage. I love the conveniences of life too well; this lounge is my destruction." As soon as I obtained permission to do so, I went to St. Denis to see my late mistress; she deigned to receive me with her face uncovered, in her private parlour; she told me she had just left the wash-house, and that it was her turn that day to attend to the linen. " I much abused your youthful lungs for two years before the execution of my project," added she. " I knew that here I could read none but books tending to our sal- vation, and I wished to review all the historians that had interested me." She informed me that the King's consent for her to go to St. Denis had been brought to her while I was reading; she prided herself, and with reason, upon having returned to her closet without the slight- est mark of agitation, though she said she felt so keenly that she could scarcely regain her chair. She added that moralists were right when they said that happiness does not dwell in palaces; that she had proved it; and that, if I desired to be happy, she ad- vised me to come and enjoy a retreat in which the liveliest imagination might find full exercise in the contemplation of a better world. I had no palace, no earthly grandeur to sacrifice to God; nothing but the bosom of a united family; and it is precisely there that the moralists whom she cited have placed true happiness. I replied that, in private life, the absence of a beloved and cherished daughter would be too cruelly felt by her family. The Princess said no more on the subject. The seclusion of Madame Louise was attributed to various motives; some were unkind enough to suppose it to have been occasioned by her mortification at 26 THE MEMOIRS OF being, in point of rank, the last of the Princesses. I think I penetrated the true cause. Her aspirations were lofty; she loved everything sublime; often while I was reading she would interrupt me to exclaim, "That is beautiful; that is noble!" There was but one brilliant action that she could perform, — to quit a palace for a cell, and rich garments for a stuff gown. She achieved it ! I saw Madame Louise two or three times more at the grating. I was informed of her death by Louis XVI. " My Aunt Louise," said he to me, " your old mistress, is just dead at St. Denis. I have this mo- ment received intelligence of it. Her piety and resig- nation were admirable, and yet the delirium of my good aunt recalled to her recollection that she was a princess, for her last words were, ' To paradise, haste, haste, full speed.' No doubt she thought she was again giving orders to her equerry." Madame Victoire, good, sweet-tempered, and affa- ble, lived with the most amiable simplicity in a society wherein she was much caressed; she was adored by her household. Without quitting Versailles, without sacrificing her easy chair, she fulfilled the duties of religion with punctuality, gave to the poor all she pos- sessed, and strictly observed Lent and the fasts. The table of Mesdames acquired a reputation for dishes of abstinence, spread abroad by the assiduous parasites at that of their maitre d'hotel. Madame Victoire was not indifferent to good living, but she had the most religious scruples respecting dishes of which it was allowable to partake at penitential times. I saw her one day exceedingly tormented by her doubts about a water-fowl, which was often served up to her during Lent. The question to be determined was, whether it was maigre or gras. She consulted a bishop, who happened to be of the party: the prelate immediately MARIE ANTOINETTE ^ assumed the grave attitude of a judge who is about to pronounce sentence. He answered the Princess that, in a similar case of doubt, it had been resolved that after dressing the bird it should be pricked over a very cold silver dish; if the gravy of the animal congealed within a quarter of an hour, the creature was to be accounted flesh; but if the gravy remained in an oily state, it might be eaten without scruple. Madame Victoire immediately made the experiment : the gravy did not congeal; and this was a source of great joy to the Princess, who was very partial to that sort of game. The abstinence which so much occupied the attention of Madame Victoire was so disagreeable to her, that she listened with impatience for the midnight hour of Holy Saturday; and then she was immedi- ately supplied with a good dish of fowl and rice, and sundry other succulent viands. She confessed with such amiable candour her taste for good cheer and the comforts of life, that it would have been necessary to be as severe in principle as insensible to the ex- cellent qualities of the Princess, to consider it a crime in her. Madame Adelaide had more mind than Madame Victoire; but she was altogether deficient in that kindness which alone creates affection for the great, — abrupt manners, a harsh voice, and a short way of speaking, rendering her more than imposing. She carried the idea of the prerogative of rank to a high pitch. One of her chaplains was unlucky enough to say Dominns vobiscum with rather too easy an air; the Princess rated him soundly for it after mass, and told him to remember that he was not a bishop, and not again to think of officiating in the style of a prelate. Mesdames lived quite separate from the King. Since the death of Madame de Pompadour he had lived alone. The enemies of the Due de Choiseul did 28 THE MEMOIRS OF not know in what department, nor through what chan- nel, they could prepare and bring about the downfall of the man who stood in their way. The King was connected only with women of so low a class that they could not be made use of for any delicate intrigue; moreover, the Parc-aux-Cerfs was a seraglio, the beau- ties of which were often replaced; it was desirable to give the King a mistress who could form a circle, and in whose drawing-room the long-standing attachment of the King for the Due de Choiseul might be over- come. It is true that Madame du Barry was selected from a class sufficiently low. Her origin, her educa- tion, her habits, and everything about her bore a char- acter of vulgarity and shamelessness; but by marrying her to a man whose pedigree dated from 1400, it was thought scandal would be avoided. The conqueror of Mahon conducted this coarse intrigue. Such a mis- tress was judiciously selected for the diversion of the latter years of a man weary of grandeur, fatigued with pleasure, and cloyed with voluptuousness. Neither the wit, the talents, the graces of the Marquise de Pompadour, her beauty, nor even her love for the King, would have had any further influence over that worn-out being. Pie wanted a Roxalana of familiar gaiety, without any respect for the dignity of the sovereign. Madame du Barry one day so far forgot propriety as to desire to be present at a Council of State. The King was weak enough to consent to it. There she remained ridiculously perched upon the arm of his chair, play- ing all sorts of childish monkey tricks, calculated to please an old sultan. Another time she snatched a packet of sealed let- ters from the King's hand. Among them she had observed one from Comte de Broglie. She told the King that she knew that rascal Broglie spoke ill of MARIE ANTOINETTE 29 her to him, and that for once, at least, she would make sure he should read nothing respecting - her. The King wanted to get the packet again; she re- sisted, and made him run two or three times round the table, which was in the middle of the council- chamber, and then, on passing the fireplace, she threw the letters into the grate, where they were consumed. The King became furious; he seized his audacious mistress by the arm, and put her out of the door without speaking to her. Madame du Barry thought herself utterly disgraced; she returned home, and remained two hours, alone, abandoned to the utmost distress. The King went to her; she threw herself at his feet, in tears, and he pardoned her. Madame la Marechale de Beauvau, the Duchesse de Choiseul, and the Duchesse de Grammont had re- nounced the honour of the King's intimate acquaint- ance rather than share it with Madame du Barry. But a few years after the death of Louis XV., Ma- dame la Marechale being alone at the Val, a house belonging to M. de Beauvau, Mademoiselle de Dillon saw the Countess's calash take shelter in the forest of St. Germain during a violent storm. She invited her in, and the Countess herself related these par- ticulars, which I had from Madame de Beauvau. The Comte du Barry, surnamed le roue (the prof- ligate), and Mademoiselle du Barry advised, or rather prompted, Madame du Barry in furtherance of the plans of the party of the Marechal de Richelieu and the Due d'Aiguillon. Sometimes they, even set her to act in such a way as to have a useful influence upon great political measures. Under pretence that the page who accompanied Charles I. in his flight was a Du Barry or Barrymore, they persuaded the Comtesse du Barry to buy in London that fine por- trait which we now have in the Museum. She had 30 MARIE ANTOINETTE the picture placed in her drawing-room, and when she saw the King hesitating upon the violent measure of breaking up his Parliament, and forming that which was called the Maupeou Parliament, she de- sired him to look at the portrait of a king who had given way to his Parliament. The men of ambition who were labouring to over- throw the Due de Choiseul strengthened themselves by their concentration at the house of the favourite, and succeeded in their project. The bigots, who never forgave that minister the suppression of the Jesuits, and who had always been hostile to a treaty of alliance with Austria, influenced the minds of Mesdames. The Due de La Vauguyon, the young Dauphin's governor, infected them with the same prejudices. Such was the state of the public mind when the young Archduchess Marie Antoinette arrived at the Court of Versailles, just at the moment when the party which brought her there was about to be overthrown. Madame Adelaide openly avowed her dislike to a princess of the House of Austria; and when M. Cam- pan, my father-in-law, went to receive his orders, at the moment of setting off with the household of the Dauphiness, to go and receive the Archduchess upon the frontiers, she said she disapproved of the mar- riage of her nephew with an archduchess; and that, if she had the direction of the matter, she would not send for an Austrian. CHAPTER II MARIE ANTOINETTE JOSEPHE JEANNE DE LORRAINE, Archduchess of Austria, daughter of Francois de Lorraine and of Maria Theresa, was born on the 2d of November, 1755, the day of the earthquake at Lisbon; and this catas- trophe, which appeared to stamp the era of her birth with a fatal mark, without forming a motive for su- perstitious fear with the Princess, nevertheless made an impression upon her mind. As the Empress al- ready had a great number of daughters, she ardently desired to have another son, and playfully wagered against her wish with the Due de Tarouka, who had insisted that she would give birth to an archduke. He lost by the birth of the Princess, and had executed in porcelain a figure with one knee bent on the earth, and presenting tablets, upon which the following lines by Metastasio were engraved: / lose by your fair daughter's birth Who prophesied a son ; But if she share her mother's worth, Why, all the world has won ! The Queen was fond of talking of the first years of her youth. Her father, the Emperor Francis, had made a deep impression upon her heart; she lost him when she was scarcely seven years old. One of those circumstances which fix themselves strongly in the memories of children frequently recalled his last caresses to her. The Emperor was setting out for 31 32 the memoirs of Innspruck; he had already left his palace, when he ordered a gentleman to fetch the Archduchess Marie Antoinette, and bring her to his carriage. When she came, he stretched out his arms to receive her, and said, after having pressed her to his bosom, " I wanted to embrace this child once more." The Emperor died suddenly during the journey, and never saw his beloved daughter again. The Queen often spoke of her mother, and with profound respect, but she based all her schemes for the education of her children on the essentials which had been neglected in her own. Maria Theresa, who inspired awe by her great qualities, taught the Arch- duchesses to fear and respect rather than to love her; at least I observed this in the Queen's feelings towards her august mother. She therefore never desired to place between her own children and her- self that distance which had existed in the imperial family. She cited a fatal consequence of it, which had made such a powerful impression upon her that time had never been able to efface it. The wife of the Emperor Joseph II. was taken from him in a few days by an attack of smallpox of the most virulent kind. Her coffin had recently been deposited in the vault of the imperial family. The Archduchess Josepha, who had been betrothed to the King of Naples, at the instant she was quitting Vienna received an order from the Empress not to set oft* without having offered up a prayer in the vault of her forefathers. The Archduchess, per- suaded that she should take the disorder to which her sister-in-law had just fallen a victim, looked upon this order as her death-warrant. She loved the young Archduchess Marie Antoinette tenderly; she took her upon her knees, embraced her with tears, and told her she was about to leave her, not for Naples, but MARIE ANTOINETTE 33 never to see her again ; that she was going down then to the tomb of her ancestors, and that she should shortly go again there to remain. Her anticipation was realised; confluent smallpox carried her off in a very few days, and her youngest sister ascended the throne of Naples in her place. The Empress was too much taken up with high political interests to have it in her power to devote herself to maternal attentions. The celebrated Wans- vietten, her physician, went daily to visit the young imperial family, and afterwards to Maria Theresa, and gave the most minute details respecting the health of the Archdukes and Archduchesses, whom she her- self sometimes did not see for eight or ten days at a time. As soon as the arrival of a stranger of rank at Vienna was made known, the Empress brought her family about her, admitted them to her table, and by this concerted meeting induced a belief that she her- self presided over the education of her children. The chief governesses, being under no fear of in- spection from Maria Theresa, aimed at making them- selved beloved by their pupils by the common and blamable practice of indulgence, so fatal to the future progress and happiness of children. Marie Antoinette was the cause of her governess being dismissed, through a confession that all her copies and all her letters were invariably first traced out with pencil; the Comtesse de Brandes was appointed to succeed her, and fulfilled her duties with great exactness and talent. The Queen looked upon having been con- fided to her care so late as a misfortune, and always continued upon terms of friendship with that lady. The education of Marie Antoinette was certainly very much neglected. With the exception of the Italian language, all that related to belles lettres, and particu- larly to history, even that of her own country, was 34 THE MEMOIRS OF almost entirely unknown to her. This was soon found out at the Court of France, and thence arose the generally received opinion that she was deficient in sense. It will be seen in the course of these " Mem- oirs " whether that opinion was well or ill founded. The public prints, however, teemed with assertions of the superior talents of Maria Theresa's children. They often noticed the answers which the young Princesses gave in Latin to the harangues addressed to them; they uttered them, it is true, but without understanding them; they knew not a single word of that language. Mention was one day made to the Queen of a drawing made by her, and presented by the Empress to M. Gerard, chief clerk of Foreign Affairs, on the occasion of his going to Vienna to draw up the ar- ticles for her marriage-contract. " I should blush," said she, " if that proof of the quackery of my educa- tion were shown to me. I do not believe that I ever put a pencil to that drawing." However, what had been taught her she knew perfectly well. Her facility of learning was inconceivable, and if all her teachers had been as well informed and as faithful to their duty as the Abbe Metastasio, who taught her Italian, she would have attained as great a superiority in the other branches of her education. The Queen spoke that language with grace and ease, and translated the most difficult poets. She did not write French cor- rectly, but she spoke it with the greatest fluency, and even affected to say that she had lost German. In fact she attempted in 1787 to learn her mother- tongue, and took lessons assiduously for six weeks; she was obliged to relinquish them, finding all the difficulties which a Frenchwoman, who should take up the study too late, would have to encounter. In the same manner she gave up English, which I had MARIE ANTOINETTE 35 taught her for some time, and in which she had made rapid progress. Music was the accomplishment in which the Queen most delighted. She did not play well on any instrument, but she had become able to read at sight like a first-rate professor. She attained this degree of perfection in France, this branch of her education having been neglected at Vienna as much as the rest. A few days after her arrival at Versailles, she was introduced to her singing-master, La Garde, author of the opera of " Egle." She made a distant appointment with him, needing, as she said, rest after the fatigues of the journey and the numer- ous fetes which had taken place at Versailles; but her motive was her desire to conceal how ignorant she was of the rudiments of music. She asked M. Campan whether his son, who was a good musician, could give her lessons secretly for three months. " The Dauphiness," added she, smiling, " must be careful of the reputation of the Archduchess." The lessons were given privately, and at the end of three months of constant application she sent for M. la Garde, and surprised him by her skill. The desire to perfect Marie Antoinette in the study of the French language was probably the motive which determined Maria Theresa to provide for her as teach- ers two French actors : Auf resne, for pronunciation and declamation, and Sainville, for taste in French singing; the latter had been an officer in France, and bore a bad character. The choice gave just umbrage to our Court. The Marquis de Durfort, at that time ambassador at Vienna, was ordered to make a repre- sentation to the Empress upon her selection. The two actors were dismissed, and the Princess required that an ecclesiastic should be sent to her. Several eminent ecclesiastics declined taking upon themselves so delicate an office; others who were pointed out by Vol. 3 Memoirs — 2 36 THE MEMOIRS OF Maria Theresa (among the rest the Abbe Grisel) belonged to parties which sufficed to exclude them. The Archbishop of Toulouse one day went to the Due de Choiseul at the moment when he was much embarrassed upon the subject of this nomination; he proposed to him the Abbe de Vermond, librarian of the College des Quatre Nations. The eulogistic man- ner in which he spoke of his protege procured the appointment for the latter on that very day; and the gratitude of the Abbe de Vermond towards the prel- ate was very fatal to France, inasmuch as after seven- teen years of persevering attempts to bring him into the ministry, he succeeded at last in getting him named Comptroller-General and President of the Council. This Abbe de Vermond directed almost all the Queen's actions. He established his influence over her at an age when impressions are most durable; and it was easy to see that he had taken pains only to render himself beloved by his pupil, and had troubled himself very little with the care of in- structing her. He might have even been accused of having, by a sharp-sighted though culpable policy, purposely left her in ignorance. Marie Antoinette spoke the French language with much grace, but wrote it less perfectly. The Abbe de Vermond re- vised all the letters which she sent to Vienna. The insupportable folly with which he boasted of it displayed the character of a man more flattered at being admitted into her intimate secrets than anxious to fulfil worthily the high office of her preceptor. His pride received its birth at Vienna, where Maria Theresa, as much to give him authority with the Archduchess as to make herself acquainted with his character, permitted him to mix every evening with MARIE ANTOINETTE 37 the private circle of her family, into which the future Dauphiness had been admitted for some time. Joseph II., the elder Archduchess, and a few noblemen hon- oured by the confidence of Maria Theresa, composed the party; and reflections on the world, on courts, and the duties of princes were the usual topics of con- versation. The Abbe de Vermond, in relating these particulars, confessed the means which he had made use of to gain admission into this private circle. The Empress, meeting him at the Archduchess's, asked him if he had formed any connections in Vienna. " None, Madame," replied he; "the apartment of the Arch- duchess and the hotel of the ambassador of France are the only places which the man honoured with the care of the Princess's education should frequent." A month afterwards Maria Theresa, through a habit common enough among sovereigns, asked him the same question, and received precisely the same answer. The next day he received an order to join the im- perial family every evening. It is extremely probable, from the constant and well-known intercourse between this man and Comte de Mercy, ambassador of the Empire during the whole reign of Louis XVI., that he was useful to the Court of Vienna, and that he often caused the Queen to decide on measures, the consequences of which she did not consider. Not of high birth, im- bued with all the principles of the modern philosophy, and yet holding to the hierarchy of the Church more tenaciously than any other ecclesiastic; vain, talka- tive, and at the same time cunning and abrupt; very ugly and affecting singularity; treating the most exalted persons as his equals, sometimes even as his inferiors, the Abbe de Vermond received ministers and bishops when in his bath; but said at the same time that Cardinal Dubois was a fool; that a man 38 THE MEMOIRS OF such as he, having obtained power, ought to make cardinals, and refuse to be one himself. Intoxicated with the reception he had met with at the Court of Vienna, and having till then seen noth- ing of high life, the Abbe de Vermond admired no other customs than those of the imperial family; he ridiculed the etiquette of the House of Bourbon inces- santly; the young Dauphiness was constantly incited by his sarcasms to get rid of it, and it was he who first induced her to suppress an infinity of practices of which he could discern neither the prudence nor the political aim. Such is the faithful portrait of that man whom the evil star of Marie Antoinette had re- served to guide her first steps upon a stage so con- spicuous and so full of danger as that of the Court of Versailles. It will be thought, perhaps, that I draw the charac- ter of the Abbe de Vermond too unfavourably; but how can I view with any complacency one who, after having arrogated to himself the office of confidant and sole counsellor of the Queen, guided her with so little prudence, and gave us the mortification of see- ing that Princess blend, with qualities which charmed all that surrounded her, errors alike injurious to her glory and her happiness? While M. de Choiseul, satisfied with the person whom M. de Brienne had presented, despatched him to Vienna with every eulogium calculated to inspire unbounded confidence, the Marquis de Durfort sent off a hairdresser and a few French fashions; and then it was thought sufficient pains had been taken to form the character of a princess destined to share the throne of France. The marriage of Monseigneur the Dauphin with the Archduchess was determined upon during the admin- istration of the Due de Choiseul. The Marquis de MARIE ANTOINETTE 39 Durfort, who was to succeed the Baron de Breteuil in the embassy to Vienna, was appointed proxy for the marriage ceremony; but six months after the Dau- phin's marriage the Due de Choiseul was disgraced, and Madame de Marsan and Madame de Guemenee, who grew more powerful through the Duke's disgrace, conferred that embassy upon Prince Louis de Rohan, afterwards cardinal and grand almoner. Hence it will be seen that the Gazette de France is a sufficient answer to those libellers who dared to assert that the young Archduchess was acquainted with the Cardinal de Rohan before the period of her marriage. A worse selection in itself, or one more disagreeable to Maria Theresa, than that which sent to her, in quality of ambassador, a man so frivolous and so immoral as Prince Louis de Rohan, could not have been made. He possessed but superficial knowl- edge upon any subject, and was totally ignorant of diplomatic affairs. His reputation had gone before him to Vienna, and his mission opened under the most unfavourable auspices. In want of money, and the House of Rohan being unable to make him any con- siderable advances, he obtained from his Court a patent which authorised him to borrow the sum of 600,000 livres upon his benefices, ran in debt above a million, and thought to dazzle the city and Court of Vienna by the most indecent and ill-judged extrava- gance. He formed a suite of eight or ten gentlemen, of names sufficiently high-sounding; twelve pages equally well born, a crowd of officers and servants, a company of chamber musicians, etc. But this idle pomp did not last; embarrassment and distress soon showed themselves; his people, no longer receiving pay, in order to make money, abused the privileges of ambassadors, and smuggled with so much effrontery that Maria Theresa, to put a stop to it without offend- 4 o MARIE ANTOINETTE ing the Court of France, was compelled to suppress the privileges in this respect of all the diplomatic bodies, — a step which rendered the person and con- duct of Prince Louis odious in every foreign Court. He seldom obtained private audiences from the Em- press, who did not esteem him, and who expressed herself without reserve upon his conduct both as a bishop and as an ambassador. He thought to obtain favour by assisting to effect the marriage of the Arch- duchess Elizabeth, the elder sister of Marie Antoi- nette, with Louis XV., an affair which was awkwardly undertaken, and of which Madame du Barry had no difficulty in causing the failure. I have deemed it my duty to omit no particular of the moral and political character of a man whose existence was subsequently so injurious to the reputation of Marie Antoinette. CHAPTER III A SUPERB pavilion had been prepared upon the frontier near Kehl. It consisted of a vast salon, connected with two apartments, one of which was assigned to the lords and ladies of the Court of Vienna, and the other to the suite of the Dauphin- ess, composed of the Comtesse de Noailles, her lady of honour; the Duchesse de Cosse, her dame d'atours; four ladies of the palace; the Comte de Saulx- Tavennes, chevalier d'honnenr; the Comte de Tesse, first equerry; the Bishop of Chartres, first almoner; the officers of the Body Guard, and the equerries. When the Dauphiness had been entirely undressed, in order that she might retain nothing belonging to a foreign Court (an etiquette always observed on such an occasion), the doors were opened; the young Prin- cess came forward, looking round for the Comtesse de Noailles; then, rushing into her arms, she implored her, with tears in her eyes, and with heartfelt sincer- ity, to be her guide and support. While doing justice to the virtues of the Comtesse de Noailles, those sincerely attached to the Queen have always considered it as one of her earliest misfor- tunes not to have found, in the person of her adviser, a woman indulgent, enlightened, and administering good advice with that amiability which disposes young persons to follow it. The Comtesse de Noailles had nothing agreeable in her appearance; her demeanour was stiff and her mien severe. She was perfect mis- tress of etiquette; but she wearied the young Princess with it, without making her sensible of its importance. 41 42 THE MEMOIRS OF It would have been sufficient to represent to the Dauphiness that in France her dignity depended much upon customs not necessary at Vienna to secure the respect and love of the good and submissive Austrians for the imperial family; but the Dauphiness was per- petually tormented by the remonstrances of the Com- tesse de Noailles, and at the same time was led by the Abbe de Vermond to ridicule both the lessons upon etiquette and her who gave them. She preferred raillery to argument, and nicknamed the Comtesse de Noailles Madame I'Etiquctte. The fetes which were given at Versailles on the marriage of the Dauphin were very splendid. The Dauphiness arrived there at the hour for her toilet, having slept at La Muette, where Louis XV. had been to receive her; and where that Prince, blinded by a feeling unworthy of a sovereign and the father of a family, caused the young Princess, the royal family, and the ladies of the Court, to sit down to supper with Madame du Barry. The Dauphiness was hurt at this conduct; she spoke of it openly enough to those with whom she was intimate, but she knew how to conceal her dis- satisfaction in public, and her behaviour showed no signs of it. She was received at Versailles in an apartment on the ground floor, under that of the late Queen, which was not ready for her until six months after her marriage. The Dauphiness, then fifteen years of age, beam- ing with freshness, appeared to all eyes more than beautiful. Her walk partook at once of the dignity of the Princesses of her house, and of the grace of the French; her eyes were mild, her smile amiable. When she went to chapel, as soon as she had taken the first few steps in the long gallery, she discerned, MARIE ANTOINETTE 43 all the way to its extremity, those persons whom she ought to salute with the consideration due to their rank; those on whom she should bestow an inclina- tion of the head; and lastly, those who were to be satisfied with a smile, calculated to console them for not being entitled to greater honours. Louis XV. was enchanted with the young Dauphin- ess; all his conversation was about her graces, her vivacity, and the aptness of her repartees. She was yet more successful with the royal family when they beheld her shorn of the splendour of the diamonds with which she had been adorned during the first days of her marriage. When clothed in a light dress of gauze or taffety she was compared to the Venus dei Medici, and the Atalanta of the Marly Gardens. Poets sang her charms; painters attempted to copy her features. One artist's fancy led him to place the portrait of Marie Antoinette in the heart of a full- blown rose. His ingenious idea was rewarded by Louis XV. The King continued to talk only of the Dauphiness; and Madame du Barry ill-naturedly endeavoured to damp his enthusiasm. Whenever Marie Antoinette was the topic, she pointed out the irregularity of her features, criticised the bons mots quoted as hers, and rallied the King upon his prepossession in her favour. Madame du Barry was affronted at not receiving from the Dauphiness those attentions to which she thought herself entitled; she did not conceal her vexation from the King; she was afraid that the grace and cheerfulness of the young Princess would make the domestic circle of the royal family more agreeable to the old sovereign, and that he would escape her chains; at the same time, hatred to the Choiseul party contributed powerfully to excite the enmity of the favourite. 44 THE MEMOIRS OF The fall of that minister took place in November, 1770, six months after his long influence in the Coun- cil had brought about the alliance with the House of Austria and the arrival of Marie Antoinette at the Court of France. The Princess, young, frank, volatile, and inexperienced, found herself without any- other guide than the Abbe de Vermond, in a Court ruled by the enemy of the minister who had brought her there, and in the midst of people who hated Aus- tria, and detested any alliance with the imperial house. The Due d'Aiguillon, the Due de La Vauguyon, the Marechal de Richelieu, the Rohans, and other con- siderable families, who had made use of Madame du Barry to overthrow the Duke, could not flatter them- selves, notwithstanding their powerful intrigues, with a hope of being able to break off an alliance solemnly announced, and involving such high political interests. They therefore changed their mode of attack, and it will be seen how the conduct of the Dauphin served as a basis for their hopes. The Dauphiness continually gave proofs of both sense and feeling. Sometimes she even suffered herself to be carried away by those transports of compassionate kindness which are not to be controlled by the customs which rank establishes. In consequence of the fire in the Place Louis Xy., which occurred at the time of the nuptial entertain- ments, the Dauphin and Dauphiness sent their whole income for the year to the relief of the unfortunate families who lost their relatives on that disastrous day. This was one of those ostentatious acts of generosity which are dictated by the policy of princes, at least as much as by their compassion; but the grief of Marie Antoinette was profound, and lasted several days; nothing could console her for the loss of so many innocent victims; she spoke of it, weeping, to her MARIE ANTOINETTE 45 ladies, one of whom, thinking, no doubt, to divert her mind, told her that a great number of thieves had been found among the bodies, and that their pockets were filled with watches and other valuables. " They have at least been well punished," added the person who related these particulars. " Oh, no, no, madame! " replied the Dauphiness; " they died by the side of honest people." The Dauphiness had brought from Vienna a con- siderable number of white diamonds; the King added to them the gift of the diamonds and pearls of the late Dauphiness, and also put into her hands a collar of pearls, of a single row, the smallest of which was as large as a filbert, and which had been brought into France by Anne of Austria, and appropriated by that Princess to the use of the Queens and Dauphinesses of France. The three Princesses, daughters of Louis XV., joined in making her magnificent presents. Ma- dame Adelaide at the same time gave the young Princess a key to the private corridors of the Cha- teau, by means of which, without any suite, and with- out being perceived, she could get to the apartments of her aunts, and see them in private. The Dauphin- ess, on receiving the key, told them, with infinite grace, that if they had meant to make her appreciate the superb presents they were kind enough to bestow upon her, they should not at the same time have offered her one of such inestimable value; since to that key she should be indebted for an intimacy and advice unspeakably precious at her age. She did, in- deed, make use of it very frequently; but Madame Victoire alone permitted her, so long as she continued Dauphiness, to visit her familiarly. Madame Adelaide could not overcome her prejudices against Austrian princesses, and was wearied with the somewhat petu- 46 THE MEMOIRS OF lant gaiety of the Dauphiness. Madame Victoire was concerned at this, feeling that their society and counsel would have been highly useful to a young person otherwise likely to meet with none but syco- phants. She endeavoured, therefore, to induce her to take pleasure in the society of the Marquise de Durfort, her lady of honour and favourite. Sev- eral agreeable entertainments took place at the house of this lady, but the Comtesse de Noailles and the Abbe de Vermond soon opposed these meetings. A circumstance which happened in hunting, near the village of Acheres, in the forest of Fontainebleau, afforded the young Princess an opportunity of dis- playing her respect for old age, and her compassion for misfortune. An aged peasant was wounded by the stag; the Dauphiness jumped out of her calash, placed the peasant, with his wife and children, in it, had the family taken back to their cottage, and bestowed upon them every attention and every nec- essary assistance. Her heart was always open to the feelings of compassion, and the recollection of her rank never restrained her sensibility. Several persons in her service entered her room one evening, expecting to find nobody there but the officer in waiting; they perceived the young Princess seated by the side of this man, who was advanced in years; she had placed near him a bowl full of water, was stanching the blood which issued from a wound he had received in his hand with her handkerchief, which she had torn up to bind it, and was fulfilling towards him all the duties of a pious sister of charity. The old man, affected even to tears, out of respect allowed his august mistress to act as she thought proper. He had hurt himself in endeavouring to move a rather heavy piece of furniture at the Prin- cess's request. MARIE ANTOINETTE 47 In the month of July, 1770, an unfortunate oc- currence that took place in a family which the Dauphiness honoured with her favour contributed again to show not only her sensibility but also the benevolence of her disposition. One of her women in waiting had a son who was an officer in the gens d'armes of the guard; this young man thought him- self affronted by a clerk in the War Department, and imprudently sent him a challenge; he killed his adversary in the forest of Compiegne. The family of the young man who was killed, being in possession of the challenge, demanded justice. The King, dis- tressed on account of several duels which had recently taken place, had unfortunately declared that he would show no mercy on the first event of that kind which could be proved; the culprit was therefore arrested. His mother, in the deepest grief, hastened to throw herself at the feet of the Dauphiness, the Dauphin, and the young Princesses. After an hour's suppli- cation they obtained from the King the favour so much desired. On the next day a lady of rank, while congratulating the Dauphiness, had the malice to add that the mother had neglected no means of success on the occasion, having solicited not only the royal family, but even Madame du Barry. The Dauphiness replied that the fact justified the favour- able opinion she had formed of the worthy woman; that the heart of a mother should hesitate at nothing for the salvation of her son; and that in her place, if she had thought it would be serviceable, she would have thrown herself at the feet of Zamor. Some time after the marriage entertainments the Dauphiness made her entry into Paris, and was received with transports of joy. After dining in the King's apartment at the Tuileries, she was forced, by the reiterated shouts of the multitude, with whom 48 THE MEMOIRS OF the garden was filled, to present herself upon the balcony fronting the principal walk. On seeing such a crowd of heads with their eyes fixed upon her, she exclaimed, " Grand Dieit! what a concourse! " " Ma- dame," said the old Due de Brissac, the Governor of Paris, " I may tell you, without fear of offend- ing the Dauphin, that they are so many lovers." The Dauphin took no umbrage at either acclamations or marks of homage of which the Dauphiness was the object. The most mortifying indifference, a coldness which frequently degenerated into rudeness, were the sole feelings which the young Prince then manifested towards her. Not all her charms could gain even upon his senses. This estrangement, which lasted a long time, was said to be the work of the Due de La Vauguyon. The Dauphiness, in fact, had no sincere friends at Court except the Due de Choiseul and his party. Will it be credited that the plans laid against Marie Antoinette went so far as divorce? I have been assured of it by persons holding high situations at Court, and many circumstances tend to confirm the opinion. On the journey to Fontaine- bleau, in the year of the marriage, the inspectors of public buildings were gained over to manage so that the apartment intended for the Dauphin, communi- cating with that of the Dauphiness, should not be finished, and a room at the extremity of the building was temporarily assigned to him. The Dauphiness, aware that this was the result of intrigue, had the courage to complain of it to Louis XV., who, after severe reprimands, gave orders so positive that within the week the apartment was ready. Every method was tried to continue or augment the indifference which the Dauphin long manifested towards his youth- ful spouse. She was deeply hurt at it, but she never suffered herself to utter the slightest complaint on the MARIE ANTOINETTE 49 subject. Inattention to, even conttmpt for, the charms which she heard extolled on all sides, nothing induced her to break silence; and some tears, which would in- voluntarily burst from her eyes, were the sole symp- toms of her inward sufferings discoverable by those in her service. Once only, when tired out with the misplaced re- monstrances of an old lady attached to her person, who wished to dissuade her from riding on horseback, under the impression that it would prevent her pro- ducing heirs to the crown, " Mademoiselle," said she, " in God's name, leave me in peace; be assured that I can put no heir in danger." The Dauphiness found at the Court of Louis XV., besides the three Princesses, the King's daughters, the Princes also, brothers of the Dauphin, who were re- ceiving their education, and Clotilde and Elisabeth, still in the care of Madame de Marsan, governess of the children of France. The elder of the two latter Princesses, in 1777, married the Prince of Piedmont, afterwards King of Sardinia. This Princess was in her infancy so extremely large that the people nick- named her gros Madame. The second Princess was the pious Elisabeth, the victim of her respect and ten- der attachment for the King, her brother. She was still scarcely out of her leading-strings at the period of the Dauphin's marriage. The Dauphiness showed her marked preference. The governess, who sought to advance the Princess to whom nature had been least favourable, was offended at the Dauphiness's partiality for Madame Elisabeth, and by her injudicious com- plaints weakened the friendship which yet subsisted be- tween Madame Clotilde and Marie Antoinette. There even arose some degree of rivalry on the subject of education; and that which the Empress Maria The- resa bestowed on her daughters was talked of openly 5 o THE MEMOIRS OF and unfavourably enough. The Abbe de Vermond thought himself affronted, took a part in the quarrel, and added his complaints and jokes to those of the Dauphiness on the criticisms of the governess; he even indulged himself in his turn in reflections on the tui- tion of Madame Clotilde. Everything becomes known at Court. Madame de Marsan was informed of all that had been said in the Dauphiness's circle, and was very angry with her on account of it. From that moment a centre of intrigue, or rather gossip, against Marie Antoinette was established round Madame de Marsan's fireside; her most trifling actions were there construed ill; her gaiety, and the harmless amusements in which she sometimes indulged in her own apartments with the more youthful ladies of her train, and even with the women in her service, were stigmatised as criminal. Prince Louis de Rohan, sent through the influence of this clique ambassador to Vienna, was the echo there of these unmerited com- ments, and threw himself into a series of culpable ac- cusations which he proffered under the guise of zeal. He ceaselessly represented the young Dauphiness as alienating all hearts by levities unsuitable to the dig- nity of the French Court. The Princess frequently received from the Court of Vienna remonstrances, of the origin of which she could not long remain in ig- norance. From this period must be dated that aver- sion which she never ceased to manifest for the Prince de Rohan. About the same time the Dauphiness received in- formation of a letter written by Prince Louis to the Due d'Aiguillon, in which the ambassador expressed himself in very free language respecting the inten- tions of Maria Theresa with relation to the partition of Poland. This letter of Prince Louis had been read at the Comtesse du Barry's; the levity of the ambassa- MARIE ANTOINETTE 51 dor's correspondence wounded the feelings and the dig- nity of the Dauphiness at Versailles, while at Vienna the representations which he made to Maria Theresa against the young Princess terminated in rendering the motives of his incessant complaints suspected by the Empress. Maria Theresa at length determined on sending her private secretary, Baron de Neni, to Versailles, with directions to observe the conduct of the Dauphiness with attention, and form a just estimate of the opin- ion of the Court and of Paris with regard to that Princess. The Baron de Neni, after having devoted sufficient time and intelligence to the subject, unde- ceived his sovereign as to the exaggerations of the French ambassador; and the Empress had no diffi- culty in detecting, among the calumnies which he had conveyed to her under the specious excuse of anxiety for her august daughter, proofs of the enmity of a party which had never approved of the alliance of the House of Bourbon with her own. At this period the Dauphiness, though unable to obtain any influence over the heart of her husband, dreading Louis XV., and justly mistrusting everything connected with Madame du Barry and the Due d'Ai- guillon, had not deserved the slightest reproach for that sort of levity which hatred and her misfortunes afterwards construed into crime. The Empress, con- vinced of the innocence of Marie Antoinette, directed the Baron de Neni to solicit the recall of the Prince de Rohan, and to inform the Minister for Foreign Affairs of all the motives which made her require it; but the House of Rohan interposed between its protege and the Austrian envoy, and an evasive answer merely was given. It was not until two months after the death of Louis XV. that the Court of Vienna obtained his re- 52 THE MEMOIRS OF call. The avowed grounds for requiring it were, first, the public gallantries of Prince Louis with some ladies of the Court and others, secondly, his surliness and haughtiness towards other foreign ministers, which would have had more serious consequences, especially with the ministers of England and Denmark, if the Empress herself had not interfered; thirdly, his con- tempt for religion in a country where it was particu- larly necessary to show respect for it. He had been seen frequently to dress himself in clothes of dif- ferent colours, assuming the hunting uniforms of vari- ous noblemen whom he visited, with so much audacity that one day in particular, during the Fete Dien, he and all his legation, in green uniforms laced with gold, broke through a procession which impeded them, in order to make their way to a hunting party at the Prince de Paar's; and fourthly, the immense debts con- tracted by him and his people, which were tardily and only in part discharged. The succeeding marriages of the Comte de Provence and the Comte d'Artois with two daughters of the King of Sardinia procured society for the Dauphiness more suitable to her age, and altered her mode of life. A pair of tolerably fine eyes drew forth, in favour of the Comtesse de Provence, upon her arrival at Ver- sailles, the only praises which could reasonably be be- stowed upon her. The Comtesse d'Artois, though not deformed, was very small; she had a fine complexion; her face, tolerably pleasing, was not remarkable for anything except the extreme length of the nose. But being good and generous, she was beloved by those about her, and even possessed some influence so long as she was the only Princess who had produced heirs to the crown. From this time the closest intimacy subsisted be- MARIE ANTOINETTE 53 tween the three young families. They took their meals together, except on those days when they dined in pub- lic. This manner of living en fmnille continued until the Queen sometimes indulged herself in going to dine with the Duchesse de Polignac, when she was gov- erness; but the evening meetings at supper were never interrupted; they took place at the house of the Com- tesse de Provence. Madame Elisabeth made one of the party when she had finished her education, and sometimes Mesdames, the King's aunts, were invited. The custom, which had no precedent at Court, was the work of Marie Antoinette, and she maintained it with the utmost perseverance. The Court of Versailles saw no change in point of etiquette during the reign of Louis XV. Play took ' place at the house of the Dauphiness, as being the first lady of the State. It had, from the death of Queen Maria Leczinska to the marriage of the Dau- phin, been held at the abode of Madame Adelaide. This removal, the result of an order of precedence not to be violated, was not the less displeasing to Madame Adelaide, who established a separate party for play in her apartments, and scarcely ever went to that which not only the Court in general, but also the royal family, were expected to attend. The full-dress visits to the King on his dcbotter were continued. High mass was attended daily. The airings of the Princesses were nothing more than rapid races in berlins, during which they were accompanied by Body Guards, equerries, and pages on horseback. They galloped for some leagues from Versailles. Calashes were used only in hunting. The young Princesses were desirous to infuse ani- mation into their circle of associates by something use- ful as well as pleasant. They adopted the plan of learn- ing and performing all the best plays of the French 54 THE MEMOIRS OF theatre. The Dauphin was the only spectator. The three Princesses, the two brothers of the King and Messieurs Campan, father and son, were the sole per- formers, but they endeavoured to keep this amusement as secret as an affair of State; they dreaded the cen- sure of Mesdames, and they had no doubt that Louis XV. would forbid such pastimes if he knew of them. They selected for their performance a cabinet in the entresol which nobody had occasion to enter. A kind of proscenium, which could be taken down and shut up in a closet, formed the whole theatre. The Comte de Provence always knew his part with imperturbable accuracy; the Comte d'Artois knew his tolerably well, and recited elegantly; the Princesses acted badly. The Dauphiness acquitted herself in some characters with discrimination and feeling. The chief pleasure of this amusement consisted in all the costumes being elegant and accurate. The Dauphin entered into the spirit of these diversions, and laughed heartily at the comic characters as they came on the scene; from these amusements may be dated his discontinuance of the timid manner of his youth, and his taking pleasure in the society of the Dauphiness. It was not till a long time afterwards that I learnt these particulars, M. Campan having kept the secret; but an unforeseen event had well-nigh exposed the whole mystery. One day the Queen desired M. Cam- pan to go down into her closet to fetch something that she had forgotten; he was dressed for the character of Crispin, and was rouged. A private staircase led di- rect to the entresol through the dressing-room. M. Campan fancied he heard some noise, and remained still, behind the door, which was shut. A servant be- longing to the wardrobe, who was, in fact, on the staircase, had also heard some noise, and, either from fear or curiosity, he suddenly opened the door; the MARIE ANTOINETTE 55 figure of Crispin frightened him so that he fell down backwards, shouting with his might, "Help! help!" My father-in-law raised him up, made him recognize his voice, and laid upon him an injunction of silence as to what he had seen. He felt himself, however, bound to inform the Dauphiness of what had hap- pened, and she was afraid that a similar occurrence might betray their amusements. They were therefore discontinued. The Princess occupied her time in her own apart- ment in the study of music and the parts in plays which she had to learn; the latter exercise, at least, produced the beneficial effect of strengthening her memory and familiarising her with the French lan- guage. While Louis XV. reigned, the enemies of Marie An- toinette made no attempt to change public opinion with regard to her. She was always popular with the French people in general, and particularly with the inhabitants of Paris, who went on every opportunity to Versailles, the majority of them attracted solely by the pleasure of seeing her. The courtiers did not fully enter into the popular enthusiasm which the Dauphin- ess had inspired; the disgrace of the Due de Choiseul had removed her real support from her; and the party which had the ascendency at Court since the exile of that minister was, politically, as much opposed to her family as to herself. The Dauphiness was therefore surrounded by enemies at Versailles. Nevertheless everybody appeared outwardly de- sirous to please her; for the age of Louis XV., and the apathetic character of the Dauphin, sufficiently warned courtiers of the important part reserved for the Princess during the following reign, in case the Dauphin should become attached to her. CHAPTER IV A BOUT the beginning of May, 1774, Louis XV., /\ the strength of whose constitution had prom- ^ -^ ised a long enough life, was attacked by con- fluent smallpox of the worst kind. Mesdames at this juncture inspired the Dauphiness with a feeling of respect and attachment, of which she gave them re- peated proofs when she ascended the throne. In fact, nothing was more admirable nor more affecting than the courage with which they braved that most horrible disease. The air of the palace was infected; more than fifty persons took the smallpox, in consequence of having merely loitered in the galleries of Versailles, and ten died of it. The end of the monarch was approaching. His reign, peaceful in general, had inherited strength from the power of his predecessor; on the other hand, his own weakness had been preparing misfortune for who- ever should reign after him. The scene was about to change; hope, ambition, joy, grief, and all those feel- ings which variously affected the hearts of the cour- tiers, sought in vain to disguise themselves under a calm exterior. It was easy to detect the different mo- tives which induced them every moment to repeat to everyone the question: "How is the King?" At length, on the 10th of May, 1774, the mortal career of Louis XV. terminated. The Comtesse du Barry had, a few days previously, withdrawn to Ruelle, to the Due d'Aiguillon's. Twelve or fifteen persons belonging to the Court thought it their duty to visit her there; their liveries were ob- 56 MARIE ANTOINETTE 57 served, and these visits were for a long time grounds for disfavour. More than six years after the King's death one of these persons being spoken of in the circle of the royal family, I heard it remarked, " That was one of the fifteen Ruelle carriages." The whole Court went to the Chateau; the ceil-de- boenf was filled with courtiers, and the palace with the inquisitive. The Dauphin had settled that he would depart with the royal family the moment the King should breathe his last sigh. But on such an occasion decency forbade that positive orders for departure should be passed from mouth to mouth. The heads of the stables, therefore, agreed with the people who were in the King's room, that the latter should place a lighted taper near a window, and that at the instant of the King's decease one of them should extinguish it. The taper was extinguished. On this signal the Body Guards, pages, and equerries mounted on horse- back, and all was ready for setting off. The Dauphin was with the Dauphiness. They were expecting to- gether the intelligence of the death of Louis XV. A dreadful noise, absolutely like thunder, was heard in the outer apartment; it was the crowd of courtiers who were deserting the dead sovereign's antechamber, to come and do homage to the new power of Louis XVI. This extraordinary tumult informed Marie An- toinette and her husband that they were called to the throne; and, by a spontaneous movement, which deeply affected those around them, they threw themselves on their knees; both, pouring forth a flood of tears, exclaimed : " God! guide us, protect us; we are too young to reign." The Comtesse de Noailles entered, and was the first to salute Marie Antoinette as Queen of France. She requested their Majesties to condescend to quit the inner apartments for the grand salon, to receive the 58 THE MEMOIRS OF Princes and all the great officers, who were desirous to do homage to their new sovereigns. Marie Antoi- nette received these first visits leaning upon her hus- band, with her handkerchief held to her eyes; the carriages drove up, the guards and equerries were on horseback. The Chateau was deserted; every one hastened to fly from contagion, which there was no longer any inducement to brave. On leaving the chamber of Louis XV., the Due de Villequier, first gentleman of the bedchamber for the year, ordered M. Andouille, the King's chief surgeon, to open the body and embalm it. The chief surgeon would inevitably have died in consequence. " I am ready," replied Andouille, " but while I operate you shall hold the head; your office imposes this duty upon you." The Duke went off without saying a word, and the corpse was neither opened nor embalmed. A few under-servants and workmen continued with the pes- tiferous remains, and paid the last duty to their mas- ter; the surgeons directed that spirits of wine should be poured into the coffin. The entire Court set off for Choisy at four o'clock; Mesdames the King's aunts in their private carriage, and the Princesses under tuition with the Comtesse de Marsan and the under-governesses. The King, the Queen, Monsieur, the King's brother, Madame, and the Comte and Comtesse d'Artois went in the same carriage. The solemn scene that had just passed be- fore their eyes, the multiplied ideas offered to their imaginations by that which was just opening, had naturally inclined them to grief and reflection; but, by the Queen's own confession, this inclination, little suited to their age, wholly left them before they had gone half their journey; a word, drolly mangled by the Comtesse d'Artois, occasioned a general burst of laughter; and from that moment they dried their tears. MARIE ANTOINETTE 59 The communication between Choisy and Paris was incessant; never was a Court seen in greater agitation. What influence will the royal aunts have, — and the Queen? What fate is reserved for the Comtesse du Barry? Whom will the young King choose for his ministers? All these questions were answered in a few days. It was determined that the King's youth required a confidential person near him; and that there should be a prime minister. All eyes were turned upon De Machault and De Maurepas, both of them much advanced in years. The first had retired to his estate near Paris; and the second to Pont Chartrain, to which place he had long been exiled. The letter recalling M. de Machault was written, when Madame Adelaide obtained the preference of that important appointment for M. de Maurepas. The page to whose care the first letter had been actually consigned was recalled. The Due d'Aiguillon had been too openly known as the private friend of the King's mistress; he was dis- missed. M. de Vergennes, at that time ambassador of France at Stockholm, was appointed Minister for Foreign Affairs; Comte du Muy, the intimate friend of the Dauphin, the father of Louis XVI., obtained the War Department. The Abbe Terray in vain said, and wrote, that he had boldly done all possible injury to the creditors of the State during the reign of the late King; that order was restored in the finances; that nothing but what was beneficial to all parties remained to be done; and that the new Court was about to en- joy the advantages of the regenerating part of his plan of finance; all these reasons, set forth in five or six memorials, which he sent in succession to the King and Queen, did not avail to keep him in office. His talents were admitted, but the odium which his opera- tions had necessarily brought upon his character, com- bined with the immorality of his private life, forbade 60 THE MEMOIRS OF his further stay at Court; he was succeeded by M. de Clugnv. De Maupeou, the chancellor, was exiled ; this caused universal joy. Lastly, the reassembling of the Parliaments produced the strongest sensation; Paris was in a delirium of joy, and not more than one per- son in a hundred foresaw that the spirit of the ancient magistracy would be still the same; and that in a short time it would make new attempts upon the royal authority. Madame du Barry had been exiled to Pont-aux-Dames. This was a measure rather of ne- cessity than of severity; a short period of compulsory retreat was requisite in order completely to break off her connections with State affairs. The possession of Louveciennes and a considerable pension were con- tinued to her. Everybody expected the recall of M. de Choiseul; the regret occasioned by his absence among the nu- merous friends when he had left at Court, the attachment of the young Princess who was indebted to him for her elevation to the throne of France, and all concurring circumstances, seemed to foretell his return; the Queen earnestly entreated it of the King, but she met with an insurmountable and un- foreseen obstacle. The King, it is said, had imbibed the strongest prejudices against that minister, from secret memoranda penned by his father, and which had been committed to the care of the Due de La Vauguyon, with an injunction to place them in his hands as soon as he should be old enough to study the art of reigning. It was by these memoranda that the esteem which he had conceived for the Marechal du Muy was inspired, and we may add that Madame Adelaide, who at this early period powerfully influenced the decisions of the young mon- arch, confirmed the impressions they had made. The Queen conversed with M. Campan on the re- MARIE ANTOINETTE 61 gret she felt at having been unable to procure the recall of M. de Choiseul, and disclosed the cause of it to him. The Abbe de Vermond, who, down to the time of the death of Louis XV., had been on terms of the strictest friendship with M. Campan, called upon him on the second day after the arrival of the Court at Choisy, and, assuming a serious air, said, " Mon- sieur, the Queen was indiscreet enough yesterday to speak to you of a minister to whom she must of course be attached, and whom his friends ardently desire to have near her; you are aware that we must give up all expectation of seeing the Duke at Court; you know the reasons why; but you do not know that the young Queen, having mentioned the conversation in question to me, it was my duty, both as her preceptor and her friend, to remonstrate severely with her on her indis- cretion in communicating to you those particulars of which you are in possession. I am now come to tell you that if you continue to avail yourself of the good nature of your mistress to initiate yourself in secrets of State, you will have me for your most inveterate enemy. The Queen should find here no other con- fidant than myself respecting things that ought to re- main secret." M. Campan answered that he did not covet the important and dangerous character at the new Court which the Abbe wished to appropriate ; and that he should confine himself to the duties of his of- fice, being sufficiently satisfied with the continued kindness with which the Queen honoured him. Not- withstanding this, however, he informed' the Queen, on the very same evening, of the injunction he had received. She owned that she had mentioned their conversation to the Abbe; that he had indeed seriously scolded her, in order to make her feel the necessity of being secret in concerns of State; and she added, " The Abbe cannot like you, my dear Campan; he did 62 MARIE ANTOINETTE not expect that I should, on my arrival in France, find in my household a man who would suit me so exactly as you have done. I know that he has taken umbrage at it; that is enough. I know, too, that you are in- capable of attempting anything to injure him in my esteem; an attempt which would besides be vain, for I have been too long attached to him. As to yourself, be easy on the score of the Abbe's hostility, which shall not in any way hurt you." The Abbe de Vermond having made himself mas- ter of the office of sole confidant to the Queen, was nevertheless agitated whenever he saw the young King; he could not be ignorant that the Abbe had been promoted by the Due de Choiseul, and was believed to favour the Encyclopedists, against whom Louis XVI. entertained a secret prejudice, although he suffered them to gain so great an ascendency during his reign. The Abbe had, moreover, observed that the King had never, while Dauphin, addressed a single word to him; and that he very frequently only answered him with a shrug of the shoulders. He therefore determined on writing to Louis XVI., and intimating that he owed his situation at Court solely to the confidence with which the late King had honoured him; and that as habits contracted during the Queen's education placed him continually in the closest intimacy with her, he could not enjoy the honour of remaining near her Majesty without the King's consent. Louis XVI. sent back his letter, after writing upon it these words : " I approve the Abbe de Vermond continuing in his office about the Queen." CHAPTER V A T the period of his grandfather's death, Louis l\ XVI. began to be exceedingly attached to the JL JL Queen. The first period of so deep a mourning not admitting of indulgence in the diversion of hunt- ing, he proposed to her walks in the gardens of Choisy; they went out like husband and wife, the young King giving his arm to the Queen, and accompanied by a very small suite. The influence of this example had such an effect upon the courtiers that the next day several couples, who had long, and for good reasons, been disunited, were seen walking upon the terrace with the same apparent conjugal intimacy. Thus they spent whole hours, braving the intolerable wearisomeness of their protracted tete-a-tetes, out of mere obsequious imitation. The devotion of Mesdames to the King their father throughout his dreadful malady had produced that effect upon their health which was generally appre- hended. On the fourth day after their arrival at Choisy they were attacked by pains in the head and chest, which left no doubt as to the danger of their situation. It became necessary instantly to send away the young royal family; and the Chateau de la Muette, in the Bois de Boulogne, was- selected for their reception. Their arrival at that residence, which was very near Paris, drew so great a concourse of people into its neighbourhood, that even at daybreak the crowd had begun to assemble round the gates. Shouts of " Vive le Roil " were scarcely interrupted for a moment between six o'clock in the morning and 63 64 THE MEMOIRS OF sunset. The unpopularity the late King had drawn upon himself during his latter years, and the hopes to which a new reign gives birth, occasioned these transports of joy. A fashionable jeweller made a fortune by the sale of mourning snuff-boxes, whereon the portrait of the young Queen, in a black frame of shagreen, gave rise to the pun: "Consolation in chagrin." All the fashions, and every article of dress, received names expressing the spirit of the moment. Symbols of abundance were everywhere represented, and the head-dresses of the ladies were surrounded by ears of wheat. Poets sang of the new monarch; all hearts, or rather all heads, in France were filled with enthu- siasm. Never did the commencement of any reign excite more unanimous testimonials of love and attach- ment. It must be observed, however, that, amidst all this intoxication, the anti-Austrian party never lost sight of the young Queen, but kept on the watch, with the malicious desire to injure her through such errors as might arise from her youth and inexperience. Their Majesties had to receive at La Muette the condolences of the ladies who had been presented at Court, who all felt themselves called on to pay homage to the new sovereigns. Old and young hastened to present themselves on the day of general reception; little black bonnets with great wings, shaking heads, low curtsies, keeping time with the motions of the head, made, it must be admitted, a few venerable dowagers appear somewhat ridiculous; but the Queen, who possessed a great deal of dignity, and a high re- spect for decorum, was not guilty of the grave fault of losing the state she was bound to preserve. An indiscreet piece of drollery of one of the ladies of the palace, however, procured her the imputation of doing so. The Marquise de Clermont-Tonnerre, whose MARIE ANTOINETTE 65 office required that she should continue standing be- hind the Queen, fatigued by the length of the cere- mony, seated herself on the floor, concealed behind the fence formed by the hoops of the Queen and the ladies of the palace. Thus seated, and wishing to attract attention and to appear lively, she twitched the dresses of those ladies, and played a thousand other tricks. The contrast of these childish pranks with the solemnity which reigned over the rest of the Queen's chamber disconcerted her Majesty; she several times placed her fan before her face to hide an involuntary smile, and the severe old ladies pronounced that the young Queen had derided all those respectable per- sons who were pressing forward to pay their homage to her; that she liked none but the young; that she was deficient in decorum; and that not one of them would attend her Court again. The epithet moqucusc was applied to her; and there is no epithet less fa- vourably received in the world. The next day a very ill-natured song was circu- lated; the stamp of the party to which it was attribu- table might easily be seen upon it. I remember only the following chorus : " Little Queen, you must not be So saucy, with your twenty years; Your ill-used courtiers soon will see You pass, once more, the barriers. Fal lal lal, fal lal la." The errors of the great, or those which ill-nature chooses to impute to them, circulate in the world with the greatest rapidity, and become historical traditions, which every one delights to repeat. More than fifteen years after this occurrence I heard some old ladies in the most retired part of Auvergne relating all the par- ticulars of the day of public condolence for the late King, on which, as they said, the Queen had laughed 66 THE MEMOIRS OF in the faces of the sexagenarian duchesses and prin- cesses who had thought it their duty to appear on the occasion. The King and the Princes, his brothers, determined to avail themselves of the advantages held out by inoc- ulation, as a safeguard against the illness under which their grandfather had just fallen; but the utility of this new discovery not being then generally acknowl- edged in France, many persons were greatly alarmed at the step; those who blamed it openly threw all the responsibility of it upon the Queen, who alone, they said, could have ventured to give such rash advice, inoculation being at this time established in the North- ern Courts. The operation upon the King and his brothers, performed by Doctor Jauberthou, was fortu- nately quite successful. When the convalescence of the Princes was per- fectly established, the excursions to Marly became cheerful enough. Parties on horseback and in calashes were formed continually. The Queen was desirous to afford herself one very innocent gratification; she had never seen the day break; and having now no other consent than that of the King to seek, she intimated her wish to him. He agreed that she should go, at three o'clock in the morning, to the eminences of the gardens of Marly; and, unfortunately, little dis- posed to partake in her amusements, he himself went to bed. Foreseeing some inconveniences possible in this nocturnal party, the Queen determined on having a number of people with her; and even ordered her waiting women to accompany her. All precautions were ineffectual to prevent the effects of calumny, which thenceforward sought to diminish the general attachment that she had inspired. A few days after- wards, the most wicked libel that appeared during the earlier years of her reign was circulated in Paris. MARIE ANTOINETTE 67 The blackest colours were employed to paint an en- joyment so harmless that there is scarcely a young- woman living in the country who has not endeav- oured to procure it for herself. The verses which appeared on this occasion were entitled " Sunrise." The Due d'Orleans, then Due de Chartres, was among those who accompanied the young Queen in her nocturnal ramble : he appeared very attentive to her at this epoch; but it was the only moment of his life in which there was any advance towards intimacy between the Queen and himself. The King disliked the character of the Due de Chartres, and the Queen always excluded him from her private society. It is therefore without the slightest foundation that some writers have attributed to feelings of jealousy or wounded self-love the hatred which he displayed towards the Queen during the latter years of their existence. It was on this first journey to Marly that Bcehmer, the jeweller, appeared at Court, — a man whose stupidity and avarice afterwards fatally affected the happiness and reputation of Marie Antoinette. This person had, at great expense, collected six pear- formed diamonds of a prodigious size; they were per- fectly matched and of the finest water. The earrings which they composed had, before the death of Louis XV., been destined for the Comtesse du Barry. Bcehmer, by the recommendation of several persons about the Court, came to offer these jewels to the Queen. He asked four hundred thousand francs for them. The young Princess could not withstand her wish to purchase them; and the King having just raised the Queen's income, which, under the former reign, had been but two hundred thousand livres, to one hundred thousand crowns a year, she wished to make the purchase out of her own purse, and not Vol. 3 Memoirs*— 3 68 THE MEMOIRS OF burthen the royal treasury with the payment. SHe proposed to Bcehmer to take off the two buttons which formed the tops of the clusters, as they could be replaced by two of her own diamonds. He con- sented, and then reduced the price of the earrings to three hundred and sixty thousand francs; the pay- ment for which was to be made by instalments, and was discharged in the course of four or five years by the Queen's first femme de chambre, deputed to man- age the funds of her privy purse. I have omitted no details as to the manner in which the Queen first became possessed of these jewels, deeming them very needful to place in its true light the too famous cir- cumstance of the necklace, which happened near the end of her reign. It was also on this first journey to Marly that the Duchesse de Chartres, afterwards Duchesse d'Orleans, introduced into the Queen's household Mademoiselle Bertin, a milliner who became celebrated at that time for the total change she effected in the dress of the French ladies. It may be said that the mere admission of a mil- liner into the house of the Queen was followed by evil consequences to her Majesty. The skill of the mil- liner, who was received into the household, in spite of the custom which kept persons of her description out of it, afforded her the opportunity of introducing some new fashion every day. Up to this time the Queen had shown very plain taste in dress; she now began to make it a principal occupation; and she was of course imitated by other women. All wished instantly to have the same dress as the Queen, and to wear the feathers and flowers to which her beauty, then in its brilliancy, lent an indescrib- able charm. The expenditure of the younger ladies was necessarily much increased; mothers and husbands MARIE ANTOINETTE 69 murmured at it; some few giddy women contracted debts; unpleasant domestic scenes occurred; in many families coldness or quarrels arose; and the general report was, — that the Queen would be the ruin of all the French ladies. Fashion continued its fluctuating progress; and head-dresses, with their superstructures of gauze, flowers, and feathers, became so lofty that the women could not find carriages high enough to admit them; and they were often seen either stooping, or holding their heads out of the windows. Others knelt down in order to manage these elevated objects of ridicule with less danger. Innumerable caricatures, exhibited in all directions, and some of which artfully gave the features of the Queen, attacked the extravagance of fashion, but with very little effect. It changed only, as is always the case, through the influence of incon- stancy and time. The Queen's toilet was a masterpiece of etiquette; everything was done in a prescribed form. Both the dame d'honneur and the dame d'atours usually at- tended and officiated, assisted by the first femme de chambre and two ordinary women. The dame d'atours put on the petticoat, and handed the gown to the Queen. The dame d'honneur poured out the water for her hands and put on her linen. When a prin- cess of the royal family happened to be present while the Queen was dressing, the dame d'honneur yielded to her the latter act of office, but still did not yield it directly to the Princesses of the blood; in such a case the dame d'honneur was accustomed to present the linen to the first femme de chambre, who, in her turn, handed it to the Princess of the blood. Each of these ladies observed these rules scrupulously as affecting her rights. One winter's day it happened that the ,Queen, who was entirely undressed, was just going to 70 THE MEMOIRS OF put on her shift; I held it ready unfolded for her* the dame d'honneur came in, slipped off her gloves, and took it. A scratching was heard at the door; it was opened, and in came the Duchesse d'Orleans : her gloves were taken off, and she came forward to take the garment; but as it would have been wrong in the dame d'honneur to hand it to her she gave it to me, and I handed it to the Princess. More scratching: it was Madame la Comtesse de Provence; the Du- chesse d'Orleans handed her the linen. All this while the Queen kept her arms crossed upon her bosom, and appeared to feel cold; Madame observed her un- comfortable situation, and, merely laying down her handkerchief without taking off her gloves, she put on the linen, and in doing so knocked the Queen's cap off. The Queen laughed to conceal her impatience, but not until she had muttered several times, " How disagreeable ! how tiresome ! " All this etiquette, however inconvenient, was suit- able to the royal dignity, which expects to find serv- ants in all classes of persons, beginning even with the brothers and sisters of the monarch. Speaking here of etiquette, I do not allude to ma- jestic state, appointed for days of ceremony in all Courts. I mean those minute ceremonies that were pursued towards our Kings in their inmost privacies, in their hours of pleasure, in those of pain, and even during the most revolting of human infirmities. These servile rules were drawn up into a kind of code; they offered to a Richelieu, a La Rochefoucauld and a Duras, in the exercise of their domestic func- tions, opportunities of intimacy useful to their inter- ests; and their vanity was flattered by customs which converted the right to give a glass of water, to put on a dress, and to remove a basin, into honourable prerogatives. MARIE ANTOINETTE 71 Princes thus accustomed to be treated as divinities naturally ended by believing that they were of a dis- tinct nature, of a purer essence than the rest of mankind. This sort of etiquette, which led our Princes to be treated in private as idols, made them in public martyrs to decorum. Marie Antoinette found in the Chateau of Versailles a multitude of established cus- toms which appeared to her insupportable. The ladies-in-waiting, who were all obliged to be sworn, and to wear full Court dresses, were alone entitled to remain in the room, and to attend in con- junction with the dame d'honneur and the tirewoman. The Queen abolished all this formality. When her head was dressed, she curtsied to all the ladies who were in her chamber, and, followed only by her own women, went into her closet, where Mademoiselle Bertin, who could not be admitted into the chamber, used to await her. It was in this inner closet that she produced her new and numerous dresses. The Queen was also desirous of being served by the most fashionable hairdresser in Paris. Now the custom which forbade all persons in inferior offices, employed by royalty, to exert their talents for the public, was no doubt intended to cut off all communication between the privacy of princes and society at large; the lat- ter being always extremely curious respecting the most trifling particulars relative to the private life of the former. The Queen, fearing that the taste of the hairdresser would suffer if he should discontinue the general practice of his art, ordered him to attend as usual certain ladies of the Court and of Paris; and this multiplied the opportunities of learning details respecting the household, and very often of misrepre- senting them. One of the customs most disagreeable to the Queen 12 THE MEMOIRS OF was that of dining every day in public. Maria Le- czinska had always submitted to this wearisome prac- tice : Marie Antoinette followed it as long as she was Dauphiness. The Dauphin dined with her, and each branch of the family had its public dinner daily. The ushers suffered all decently dressed people to enter; the sight was the delight of persons from the country. At the dinner-hour there were none to be met upon the stairs but honest folks, who, after having seen the Dauphiness take her soup, went to see the Princes eat their bouilli, and then ran themselves out of breath to behold Mesdames at their dessert. Very ancient usage, too, required that the Queens of France should appear in public surrounded only by women; even at meal-times no persons of the other sex attended to serve at table; and although the King ate publicly with the Queen, yet he himself was served by women with everything which was presented to him directly at table. The dame d'honneur, kneeling, for her own accommodation, upon a low stool, with a napkin upon her arm, and four women in full dress, presented the plates to the King and Queen. The dame d'honneur handed them drink. This service had formerly been the right of the maids of honour. The Queen, upon her accession to the throne, abolished the usage altogether. She also freed herself from the necessity of being followed in the Palace of Versailles by two of her women in Court dresses, during those hours of the day when the ladies-in-waiting were not with her. From that time she was accompanied only by a single valet de chambre and two footmen. All the changes made by Marie Antoinette were of the same description; a disposition gradually to substitute the simple customs of Vienna for those of Versailles was more injurious to her than she could possibly have imagined. MARIE ANTOINETTE 73 When the King slept in the Queen's apartment he always rose before her; the exact hour was commu- nicated to the head femme de chambre, who entered, preceded by a servant of the bedchamber bearing a taper; she crossed the room and unbolted the door which separated the Queen's apartment from that of the King. She there found the first valet de chambre for the quarter, and a servant of the chamber. They entered, opened the bed curtains on the King's side, and presented him slippers generally, as well as the dressing-gown, which he put on, of gold or silver stuff. The first valet de chambre took down a short sword which was always laid within the railing on the King's side. When the King slept with the Queen, this sword was brought upon the armchair appropriated to the King, and which was placed near the Queen's bed, within the gilt railing which sur- rounded the bed. The first femme de chambre con- ducted the King to the door, bolted it again, and, leaving the Queen's chamber, did not return until the hour appointed by her Majesty the evening before. At night the Queen went to bed before the King; the first femme de chambre remained seated at the foot of her bed until the arrival of his Majesty, in order, as in the morning, to see the King's attendants out and bolt the door after them. The Queen awoke habitu- ally at eight o'clock, and breakfasted at nine, fre- quently in bed, and sometimes after she had risen, at a table placed opposite her couch. In order to describe the Queen's private service intelligibly, it must be recollected that service of every kind was honour, and had not any other denomination. To do the honours of the service was to present the service to a person of superior rank, who happened to arrive at the moment it was about to be performed, Thus, supposing the Queen asked for a glass of water, 74 THE MEMOIRS OF the servant of the chamber handed to the first woman a silver gilt waiter, upon which were placed a covered goblet and a small decanter; but should the lady of honour come in, the first woman was obliged to present the waiter to her, and if Madame or the Com- tesse de'Artois came in at the moment, the waiter went again from the lady of honour into the hands of the Princess before it reached the Queen. It must be observed, however, that if a princess of the blood instead of a princess of the family entered, the serv- ice went directly from the first woman to the prin- cess of the blood, the lady of honour being excused from transferring to any but princesses of the royal family. Nothing was presented directly to the Queen; her handkerchief or her gloves were placed upon a long salver of gold or silver gilt, which was placed as a piece of furniture of ceremony upon a side-table, and was called a gantiere. The first woman presented to her in this manner all that she asked for, unless the tirewoman, the lady of honour, or a princess were present, and then the gradation pointed out in the instance of the glass of water was always observed. Whether the Queen breakfasted in bed or up, those entitled to the petites entrees were equally admitted; this privilege belonged of right to her chief physician, chief surgeon, physician in ordinary, reader, closet secretary, the King's four first valets de chambre and their reversioners, and the King's chief physicians and surgeons. There were frequently from ten to twelve persons at this first entree. The lady of honour or the superintendent, if present, placed the breakfast equi- page upon the bed; the Princesse de Lamballe fre- quently performed that office. As soon as the Queen rose, the wardrobe woman was admitted to take away the pillows and prepare the bed to be made by some of the valets de chambre. MARIE ANTOINETTE 75 She undrew the curtains, and the bed was not gener- ally made until the Queen was gone to mass. Gener- ally, excepting at St. Cloud, where the Queen bathed in an apartment below her own, a slipper bath was rolled into her room, and her bathers brought every- thing that was necessary for the bath. The Queen bathed in a large gown of English flannel buttoned down to the bottom; its sleeves throughout, as well as the collar, were lined with linen. When she came out of the bath the first woman held up a cloth to conceal her entirely from the sight of her women, and then threw it over her shoulders. The bathers wrapped her in it and dried her completely. She then put on a long and wide open chemise, entirely trimmed with lace, and afterwards a white taffety bed-gown. The wardrobe woman warmed the bed; the slippers were of dimity, trimmed with lace. Thus dressed, the Queen went to bed again, and the bathers and serv- ants of the chamber took away the bathing apparatus. The Queen, replaced in bed, took a book or her tap- estry work. On her bathing mornings she breakfasted in the bath. The tray was placed on the cover of the bath. These minute details are given here only to do justice to the Queen's scrupulous modesty. Her temperance was equally remarkable; she breakfasted on coffee or chocolate ; at dinner ate nothing but white meat, drank water only, and supped on broth, a wing of a fowl, and small biscuits, which she soaked in a glass of water. The tirewoman had under her order a principal under-tirewoman, charged with the care and preserva- tion of all the Queen's dresses; two women to fold and press such articles as required it; two valets, and a porter of the wardrobe. The latter brought every morning into the Queen's apartments baskets covered with taffety, containing all that she was to wear dur- 7 6 THE MEMOIRS OF ing the day, and large cloths of green taffety covering the robes and the full dresses. The valet of the ward- robe on duty presented every morning a large book to the first femme de chambre, containing patterns of the gowns, full dresses, undresses, etc. Every pattern was marked, to show to which sort it belonged. The first femme de chambre presented this book to the Queen on her awaking, with a pincushion; her Maj- esty stuck pins in those articles which she chose for the day, — one for the dress, one for the afternoon undress, and one for the full evening dress for card or supper parties in the private apartments. The book was then taken back to the wardrobe, and all that was wanted for the day was soon after brought in in large taffety wrappers. The wardrobe woman, who had the care of the linen, in her turn brought in a covered basket containing two or three chemises and handkerchiefs. The morning basket was called pret du jour. In the evening she brought in one contain- ing the nightgown and nightcap, and the stockings for the next morning; this basket was called pret de la nuit. They were in the department of the lady of honour, the tirewoman having nothing to do with the linen. Nothing was put in order or taken care of by the Queen's women. As soon as the toilet was over, the valets and porter belonging to the wardrobe were called in, and they carried all away in a heap, in the taffety wrappers, to the tirewoman's wardrobe, where all were folded up again, hung up, examined, and cleaned with so much regularity and care that even the cast-off clothes scarcely looked as if they had been worn. The tirewoman's wardrobe consisted of three large rooms surrounded with closets, some furnished with drawers and others with shelves; there were also large tables in each of these rooms, on which the gowns and dresses were spread out and folded up. MARIE ANTOINETTE 77 For the winter the Queen had generally twelve full dresses, twelve undresses called fancy dresses, and twelve rich hoop petticoats for the card and supper parties in the smaller apartments. She had as many for the summer; those for the spring served likewise for the autumn. All these dresses were discarded at the end of each season, unless, indeed, she retained some that she particularly liked. I am not speaking of muslin or cambric gowns, or others of the same kind — they were lately intro- duced; but such as these were not renewed at each returning season, they were kept several years. The chief women were charged with the care and exami- nation of the diamonds; this important duty was formerly confided to the tirewoman, but for many years had been included in the business of the first femmes de chanibre. The public toilet took place at noon. The toilet- table was drawn forward into the middle of the room. This piece of furniture was generally the richest and most ornamented of all in the apartment of the Princesses. The Queen used it in the same manner and place for undressing herself in the evening. She went to bed in corsets trimmed with ribbon, and sleeves trimmed with lace, and wore a large neck handkerchief. The Queen's combing cloth was pre- sented by her first woman if she was alone at the commencement of the toilet; or, as well as the other articles, by the ladies of honour if they were come. At noon the women who had been in attendance four and twenty hours were relieved by two women in full dress; the first woman went also to dress herself. The grandes entrees were admitted during the toilet; sofas were placed in circles for the superintendent, the ladies of honour, and tirewomen, and the governess of the children of France when she came there; the duties of /S THE MEMOIRS OF the ladies of the bedchamber, having nothing to do with any kind of domestic or private functions, did not begin until the hour of going out to mass; they waited in the great closet, and entered when the toilet was over. The Princes of the blood, captains of the Guards, and all great officers having the entry paid their court at the hour of the toilet. The Queen saluted by nodding her head or bending her body, or leaning upon her toilet-table as if moving to rise; the last mode of salutation was for the Princes of the blood. The King's brothers also came very generally to pay their respects to her Majesty while her hair was being dressed. In the earlier years of the reign the first part of the dressing was performed in the bed- chamber and according to the laws of etiquette; that is to say, the lady of honour put on the chemise and poured out the water for the hands, the tirewoman put on the skirt of the gown or full dress, adjusted the handkerchief, and tied on the necklace. But when the young Queen became more seriously devoted to fashion, and the head-dress attained so extravagant a height that it became necessary to put on the chemise from below, — when, in short, she determined to have her milliner, Mademoiselle Bertin, with her whilst she was dressing, whom the ladies would have refused to admit to any share in the honour of attending on the Queen, the dressing in the bedchamber was discon- tinued, and the Queen, leaving her toilet, withdrew into her closet to dress. On returning into her chamber, the Queen, standing about the middle of it, surrounded by the superin- tendent, the ladies of honour and tirewomen, her ladies of the palace, the chevalier d'honncur, the chief equerry, her clergy ready to attend her to mass, and the Princesses of the royal family who happened to come, accompanied by all their chief attendants and MARIE ANTOINETTE 79 ladies, passed in order into the gallery as in going to mass. The Queen's signatures were generally given at the moment of entry into the chamber. The sec- retary for orders presented the pen. Presentations of colonels on taking leave were- usually made at this time. Those of ladies, and such as had a right to the tabouret, or sitting in the royal presence, were made on Sunday evenings before card-playing began, on their coming in from paying their respects. Ambas- sadors were introduced to the Queen on Tuesday mornings, accompanied by the introducer of ambas- sadors on duty, and by M. de Sequeville, the secretary for the ambassadors. The introducer in waiting usually came to the Queen at her toilet to apprise her of the presentations of foreigners which would be made. The usher of the chamber, stationed at the entrance, opened the folding doors to none but the Princes and Princesses of the royal family, and announced them aloud. Quitting his post, he came forward to name to the lady of honour the persons who came to be presented, or who came to take leave; that lady again named them to the Queen at the moment they saluted her; if she and the tire- woman were absent, the first woman took the place and did that duty. The ladies of the bedchamber, chosen solely as companions for the Queen, had no domestic duties to fulfil, however opinion might dig- nify such offices. The King's letter in appointing them, among other instructions of etiquette, ran thus : " Having chosen you to bear the Queen company." There were hardly any emoluments accruing from this place. The Queen heard mass with the King in the trib- une, facing the grand altar and the choir, with the exception of the days of high ceremony, when their chairs were placed below upon velvet carpets fringed 80 THE MEMOIRS OF with gold. These days were marked by the name of grand chapel days. The Queen named the collector beforehand, and informed her of it through her lady of honour, who was besides desired to send the purse to her. The collectors were almost always chosen from among those who had been recently presented. After return- ing from mass the Queen dined every Sunday with the King only, in public in the cabinet of the nobility, a room leading to her chamber. Titled ladies having the honours sat during the dinner upon folding-chairs placed on each side of the table. Ladies without titles stood round the table; the captain of the Guards and the first gentlemen of the chamber were behind the King's chair; behind that of the Queen were her first maitre d'hotel, her chevalier d'honneur, and the chief equerry. The Queen's maitre d'hotel was furnished with a large staff, six or seven feet in length, orna- mented with golden fleurs-de-lis, and surmounted by fleurs-de-lis in the form of a crown. He entered the room with this badge of his orifice to announce that the Queen was served. The comptroller put into his hands the card of the dinner; in the absence of the maitre d'hotel he presented it to the Queen himself, otherwise he only did him the honours of the service. The maitre d'hotel did not leave his place, he merely gave the orders for serving up and removing; the comptroller and gentlemen serving placed the vari- ous dishes upon the table, receiving them from the inferior servants. The Prince nearest to the crown presented water to wash the King's hands at the moment he placed himself at table, and a princess did the same service to the Queen. The table service was formerly performed for the Queen by the lady of honour and four women in full MARIE ANTOINETTE 81 dress; this part of the women's service was trans- ferred to them on the suppression of the office of maids of honour. The Queen put an end to this etiquette in the first year of her reign. When the dinner was over the Queen returned without the King to her apartment with her women, and took off her hoop and train. This unfortunate Princess, against whom the opin- ions of the French people were at length so much excited, possessed qualities which deserved to obtain the greatest popularity. None could doubt this who, like myself, had heard her with delight describe the partriarchal manners of the House of Lorraine. She was accustomed to say that, by transplanting their manners into Austria, the Princes of that house had laid the foundation of the unassailable popularity en- joyed by the imperial family. She frequently related to me the interesting manner in which the Dues de Lorraine levied the taxes. " The sovereign Prince," said she, "went to church; after the sermon he rose, waved his hat in the air, to show that he was about to speak, and then mentioned the sum whereof he stood in need. Such was the zeal of the good Lor- rainers that men have been known to take away linen or household utensils without the knowledge of their wives, and sell them to add the value to their contri- bution. It sometimes happened, too, that the Prince received more money than he had asked for, in which case he restored the surplus." All who were acquainted with the Queen's private qualities knew that she equally deserved attachment and esteem. Kind and patient to excess in her rela- tions with her household, she indulgently considered all around her, and interested herself in their fortunes and in their pleasures. She had, among her women, young girls from the Maison de St. Cyr, all well 82 MARIE ANTOINETTE born; the Queen forbade them the play when the performances were not suitable; sometimes, when old plays were to be represented, if she found she could not with certainty trust to her memory, she would take the trouble to read them in the morning, to enable her to decide whether the girls should or should not go to see them, — rightly considering herself bound to watch over their morals and conduct. CHAPTER VI DURING the first few months of his reign Louis XVI. dwelt at La Muette, Marly, and Com- piegne. When settled at Versailles he occu- pied himself with a general examination of his grandfather's papers. He had promised the Queen to communicate to her all that he might discover relative to the history of the man with the iron mask, who, he thought, had become so inexhaustible a source of con- jecture only in consequence of the interest which the pen of a celebrated writer had excited respecting the detention of a prisoner of State., who was merely a man of whimsical tastes and habits. I was with the Queen when the King, having finished his researches, informed her that he had not found anything among the secret papers eluci- dating the existence of this prisoner; that he had conversed on the matter with M. de Maurepas, whose age made him contemporary with the epoch during which the story must have been known to the minis- ters; and that M. de Maurepas had assured him he was merely a prisoner of a very dangerous character, in consequence of his disposition for intrigue. He was a subject of the Duke of Mantua, and was enticed to the frontier, arrested there, and kept prisoner, first at Pignerol, and afterwards in the Bastille. This transfer took place in consequence of the appoint- ment of the governor of the former place to the gov- ernment of the latter. It was for fear the prisoner should profit by the inexperience of a new governor 83 84 THE MEMOIRS OF that he was sent with the Governor of Pignerol to the Bastille. Such was, in fact, the truth about the man on whom people have been pleased to fix an iron mask. And thus was it related in writing, and published by M. twenty years ago. He had searched the archives of the Foreign Office, and laid the real story before the public; but the public, prepossessed in fa- ' vour of a marvellous version, would not acknowledge the authenticity of his account. Every man relied upon the authority of Voltaire; and it was believed that a natural or a twin brother of Louis XIV. lived many years in prison with a mask over his face. The story of this mask, perhaps, had its origin in the old custom, among both men and women in Italy, of wear- ing a velvet mask when they exposed themselves to the sun. It is possible that the Italian captive may have sometimes shown himself upon the terrace of his prison with his face thus covered. As to the silver plate which this celebrated prisoner is said to have thrown from his window, it is known that such a cir- cumstance did happen, but it happened at Valzin, in the time of Cardinal Richelieu. This anecdote has been mixed up with the inventions respecting the Piedmontese prisoner. In this survey of the papers of Louis XV. by his grandson some very curious particulars relative to his private treasury were found. Shares in various finan- cial companies afforded him a revenue, and had in course of time produced him a capital of some amount, which he applied to his secret expenses. The King collected his vouchers of title to these shares, and made a present of them to M. Thierry de Ville d'Avray, his chief valet dc chambre. The Queen was desirous to secure the comfort of Mesdames, the daughters of Louis XV., who were MARIE ANTOINETTE 85 held in the highest respect. About this period she contributed to furnish them with a revenue sufficient to provide them an easy, pleasant existence. The King gave them the Chateau of Bellevue; and added to the produce of it, which was given up to them, the expenses of their table and equipage, and payment of all the charges of their household, the number of which was even increased. During the lifetime of Louis XV., who was a very selfish prince, his daughters, although they had attained forty years of age, had no other place of residence than their apartments in the Chateau of Versailles; no other walks than such as they could take in the large park of that palace; and no other means of gratifying their taste for the cultivation of plants but by having boxes and vases, filled with them, in their balconies or their closets. They had, therefore, reason to be much pleased with the conduct of Marie Antoinette, who had the greatest influence in the King's kindness towards his aunts. Paris did not cease, during the first years of the reign, to give proofs of pleasure whenever the Queen appeared at any of the plays of the capital. At the representation of " Iphigenia in Aulis," the actor who sang the words, " Let us sing, let us celebrate our Queen! " which were repeated by the chorus, directed by a respectful movement the eyes of the whole assembly upon her Majesty. Reiterated cries of Bis! and clapping of hands, were followed by such a burst of enthusiasm that many of the audience added their voices to those of the actors in order to celebrate, it might too truly be said, another Iphigenia. The Queen, deeply affected, covered her eyes with her handkerchief; and this proof of sensibility raised the public enthusiasm to a still higher pitch. The King gave Marie Antoinette Petit Trianon. 86 THE MEMOIRS OF Henceforward she amused herself with improving the gardens, without allowing any addition to the build- ing, or any change in the furniture, which was very shabby, and remained, in 1789, in the same state as during the reign of Louis XV. Everything there, without exception, was preserved; and the Queen slept in a faded bed, which had been used by the Comtesse du Barry. The charge of extravagance, generally made against the Queen, is the most unac- countable of all the popular errors respecting her character. She had exactly the contrary failing; and I could prove that she often carried her economy to a degree of parsimony actually blamable, especially in a sovereign. She took a great liking for Trianon, and used to go there alone, followed by a valet; but she found attendants ready to receive her, — a con- cierge and his wife, who served her as femme de chambre, women of the wardrobe, footmen, etc. When she first took possession of Petit Trianon, it was reported that she changed the name of the seat which the King had given her, and called it Little Vienna, or Little Schambrnnn. A person who be- longed to the Court, and was silly enough to give this report credit, wishing to visit Petit Trianon with a party, wrote to M. Campan, requesting the Queen's permission to do so. In his note he called Trianon Little Vienna. Similar requests were usually laid before the Queen just as they were made: she chose to give the permissions to see her gardens herself, liking to grant these little favours. When she came to the words I have quoted she was very much offended, and exclaimed, angrily, that there were too many fools ready to aid the malicious; that she had been told of the report circulated, which pretended that she had thought of nothing but her own country, and that she kept an Austrian heart, while the in- MARIE ANTOINETTE 87 terests of France alone ought to engage her. She refused the request so awkwardly made, and desired M. Campan to reply that Trianon was not to be seen for some time, and that the Queen was astonished that any man in good society should believe she would do so ill-judged a thing as to change the French names of her palaces to foreign ones. Before the Emperor Joseph II. 's first visit to France the Queen received a visit from the Archduke Maxi- milian in 1775. A stupid act of the ambassador, sec- onded on the part of the Queen by the Abbe de Vermond, gave rise at that period to a discussion which offended the Princes of the blood and the chief no- bility of the kingdom. Travelling incognito, the young Prince claimed that the first visit was not due from him to the Princes of the blood; and the Queen sup- ported his pretension. From the time of the Regency, and on account of the residence of the family of Orleans in the bosom of the capital, Paris had preserved a remarkable de- gree of attachment and respect for that branch of the royal house; and although the crown was becoming more and more remote from the Princes of the House of Orleans, they had the advantage (a great one with the Parisians) of being the descendants of Henri IV. An affront to that popular family was a serious ground of dislike to the Queen. It was at this period that the circles of the city, and even of the Court, expressed themselves bitterly about her lev- ity, and her partiality for the House of Austria. The Prince for whom the Queen had embarked in an important family quarrel — and a quarrel involving national prerogatives — was, besides, little calculated to inspire interest. Still young, uninformed, and deficient in natural talent, he was always making blunders. 88 THE MEMOIRS OF He went to the Jardin du Roi ; M. de Buffon, who received him there, offered him a copy of his works; the Prince declined accepting the book, saying to M. de Buffon, in the most polite manner possible, " I should be very sorry to deprive you of it." It may be supposed that the Parisians were much entertained with this answer. The Queen was exceedingly mortified at the mis- takes made by her brother; but what hurt her most was being accused of preserving an Austrian heart. Marie Antoinette had more than once to endure that imputation during the long course of her misfortunes. Habit did not stop the tears such injustice caused; but the first time she was suspected of not loving France, she gave way to her indignation. All that she could say on the subject was useless; by second- ing the pretensions of the Archduke she had put arms into her enemies' hands; they were labouring to deprive her of the love of the people, and endeav- oured, by all possible means, to spread a belief that the Queen sighed for Germany, and preferred that country to France. Marie Antoinette had none but herself to rely on for preserving the fickle smiles of the Court and the public. The King, too indifferent to serve her as a guide, as yet had conceived no love for her, notwith- standing the intimacy that grew between them at Choisy. In his closet Louis XVI. was immersed in deep study. At the Council he was busied with the welfare of his people; hunting and mechanical occu- pations engrossed his leisure moments, and he never thought on the subject of an heir. The coronation took place at Rheims, with all the accustomed pomp. At this period the people's love for Louis XVI. burst forth in transports not to be mis- taken for party demonstrations or idle curiosity. He MARIE ANTOINETTE 89 replied to this enthusiasm by marks of confidence, worthy of a people happy in being governed by a good King; he took a pleasure in repeatedly walking with- out guards, in the midst of the crowd which pressed around him, and called down blessings on his head. I remarked the impression made at this time by an observation of Louis XVI. On the day of his corona- tion he put his hand up to his head, at the moment of the crown being placed upon it, and said, " It pinches me." Henri III. had exclaimed, " It pricks me." Those who were near the King were struck with the similarity between these two exclamations, though not of a class likely to be blinded by the superstitious fears of ignorance. While the Queen, neglected as she was, could not even hope for the happiness of being a mother, she had the mortification of seeing the Comtesse d'Artois give birth to the Due d'Angouleme. Custom required that the royal family and the whole Court should be present at the accouchement of the Princesses; the Queen was therefore obliged to stay a whole day in her sister-in-law's chamber. The moment the Comtesse d'Artois was informed a prince was born, she put her hand to her forehead and ex- claimed with energy, " My God, how happy I am ! " The Queen felt very differently at this involuntary and natural exclamation. Nevertheless, her behaviour was perfect. She bestowed all possible marks of tenderness upon the young mother, and would not leave her until she was again put into bed; she afterwards passed along the staircase, and through the hall of the guards, with a calm demeanour, in the midst of an immense crowd. The poissardes, who had assumed a right of speaking to sovereigns in their own vulgar language, followed her to the very doors of her apartments, calling out to her with gross ex- po THE MEMOIRS OF pressions, that she ought to produce heirs. The Queen reached her inner room, hurried and agitated; she shut herself up to weep with me alone, not from jealousy of her sister-in-law's happiness, — of that she was incapable, — but from sorrow at her own situation. Deprived of the happiness of giving an heir to the crown, the Queen endeavoured to interest herself in the children of the people of her household. She had long been desirous to bring up one of them her- self, and to make it the constant object of her care. A little village boy, four or five years old, full of health, with a pleasing countenance, remarkably large blue eyes, and fine light hair, got under the feet of the Queen's horses, when she was taking an airing in a calash, through the hamlet of St. Michel, near Louveciennes. The coachman and postilions stopped the horses, and the child was rescued without the slightest injury. Its grandmother rushed out of the door of her cottage to take it; but the Queen, stand- ing up in her calash and extending her arms, called out that the child was hers, and that destiny had given it to her, to console her, no doubt, until she should have the happiness of having one herself. "Is his mother alive?" asked the Queen. "No, Madame; my daughter died last winter, and left five small children upon my hands." " I will take this one, and provide for all the rest; do you con- sent?" "Ah, Madame, they are too fortunate," replied the cottager; "but Jacques is a bad boy. I hope he will stay with you!" The Queen, taking little Jacques upon her knee, said that she would make him used to her, and gave orders to proceed. It was necessary, however, to shorten the drive, so violently did Jacques scream, and kick the Queen and her ladies. MARIE ANTOINETTE 9 1 The arrival of her Majesty at her apartments at Versailles, holding the little rustic by the hand, astonished the whole household; he cried out with intolerable shrillness that he wanted his grandmother, his brother Louis, and his sister Marianne; nothing could calm him. He was taken away by the wife of a servant, who was appointed to attend him as nurse. The other children were put to school. Little Jacques, whose family name was Armand, came back to the Queen two days afterwards; a white frock trimmed with lace, a rose-coloured sash with silver fringe, and a hat decorated with feathers, were now substituted for the woollen cap, the little red frock, and the wooden shoes. The child was really very beautiful. The Queen was enchanted with him; he was brought to her every morning at nine o'clock; he breakfasted and dined with her, and often even with the King. She liked to call him my child, and lavished caresses upon him, still main- taining a deep silence respecting the regrets which constantly occupied her heart. This child remained with the Queen until the time when Madame was old enough to come home to her august mother, who had particularly taken upon her- self the care of her education. The Queen talked incessantly of the qualities which she admired in Louis XVI., and gladly attributed to herself the slightest favourable change in his manner; perhaps she displayed too unreservedly the joy she felt, and the share she appropriated in the improve- ment. One day Louis XVI. saluted her ladies with more kindness than usual, and the Queen laughingly said to them, " Now confess, ladies, that for one so badly taught as a child, the King has saluted you with very good grace ! " The Queen hated M. de La Vauguyon; she accused 92 THE MEMOIRS OF him atone of those points in the habits, and even the sentiments, of the King which hurt her. A former first woman of the bedchamber to Queen Maria Leczinska had continued in office near the young Queen. She was one of those people who are for- tunate enough to spend their lives in the service of kings without knowing anything of what is passing at Court. She was a great devotee; the Abbe Grisel, an ex-Jesuit, was her director. Being rich from her savings and an income of 50,000 livres, she kept a very good table; in her apartment, at the Grand Commun, the most distinguished persons who still adhered to the Order of Jesuits often assembled. The Due de La Vauguyon was intimate with her; their chairs at the Eglise des Recollets were placed near each other; at high mass and at vespers they sang the " Gloria in Excelsis " and the " Magnificat " together; and the pious virgin, seeing in him only one of God's elect, little imagined him to be the declared enemy of a Princess whom she served and revered. On the day of his death she ran in tears to relate to the Queen the piety, humility, and repentance of the last moments of the Due de La Vauguyon. He had called his people together, she said, to ask their pardon. "For what?" replied the Queen, sharply; " he has placed and pensioned off all his servants; it was of the King and his brothers that the holy man you bewail should have asked pardon, for having paid so little attention to the education of princes on whom the fate and happiness of twenty-five millions of men depend. Luckily," added she, " the King and his brothers, still young, have incessantly laboured to re- pair the errors of their preceptor." The progress of time, and the confidence with which the King and the Princes, his brothers, were inspired by the change in their situation since vhe MARIE ANTOINETTE 93 death of Louis XV., had developed their characters. I will endeavour to depict them. The features of Louis XVI. were noble enough, though somewhat melancholy in expression; his walk was heavy and unmajestic; his person greatly neg- lected; his hair, whatever might be the skill of his hairdresser, was soon in disorder. His voice, without being harsh, was not agreeable; if he grew animated in speaking he often got above his natural pitch, and became shrill. The Abbe de Radonvilliers, his pre- ceptor, one of the Forty of the French Academy, a learned and amiable man, had given him and Mon- sieur a taste for study. The King had continued to instruct himself; he knew the English language per- fectly; I have often heard him translate some of the most difficult passages in Milton's poems. He was a skilful geographer, and was fond of drawing and col- ouring maps; he was well versed in history, but had not perhaps sufficiently studied the spirit of it. He appreciated dramatic beauties, and judged them accu- rately. At Choisy, one day, several ladies expressed their dissatisfaction because the French actors were going to perform one of Moliere' s pieces. The King inquired why they disapproved of the choice. One of them answered that everybody must admit that Moliere had very bad taste; the King replied that many things might be found in Moliere contrary to fashion, but that it appeared to him difficult to point out any in bad taste. This Prince combined with his attainments the attributes of a good husband, a tender father, and an indulgent master. Unfortunately he showed too much predilection for the mechanical arts; masonry and lock-making so de- lighted him that he admitted into his private apart- ment a common locksmith, with whom he made keys and locks; and his hands, blackened by that sort of 94 THE MEMOIRS OF work, were often, in my presence, the subject of re- monstrances and even sharp reproaches from the Queen, who would have chosen other amusements for her husband. Austere and rigid with regard to himself alone, the King observed the laws of the Church with scrupulous exactness. He fasted and abstained throughout the whole of Lent. He thought it right that the Queen should not observe these customs with the same strict- ness. Though sincerely pious, the spirit of the age had disposed his mind to toleration. Turgot, Male- sherbes, and Necker judged that this Prince, modest and simple in his habits, would willingly sacrifice the royal prerogative to the solid greatness of his people. His heart, in truth, disposed him towards reforms; but his prejudices and fears, and the clamours of pious and privileged persons, intimidated him, and made him abandon plans which his love for the people had suggested. Monsieur had more dignity of demeanour than the King; but his corpulence rendered his gait inelegant. He was fond of pageantry and magnifi- cence. He cultivated the belles lettres, and under as- sumed names often contributed verses to the Mercury and other papers. His wonderful memory was the handmaid of his wit, furnishing him with the happiest quotations. He knew by heart a varied repertoire, from the finest passages of the Latin classics to the Latin of all the prayers, from the works of Racine to the vaudeville of " Rose et Colas." The Comte d'Artois had an agreeable countenance, was well made, skilful in bodily exercises, lively, im- petuous, fond of pleasure, and very particular in his dress. Some happy observations made by him were repeated with approval, and gave a favourable idea of MARIE ANTOINETTE 95 his Heart. The Parisians liked the open and frank character of this Prince, which they considered na- tional, and showed real affection for him. The dominion that the Queen gained over the King's mind, the charms of a society in which Monsieur displayed his wit, and to which the Comte d'Artois gave life by the vivacity of youth, gradually softened that ruggedness of manner in Louis XVI. which a better-conducted education might have pre- vented. Still, this defect often showed itself, and, in spite of his extreme simplicity, the King inspired those who had occasion to speak to him with diffi- dence. Courtiers, submissive in the presence of their sovereign, are only the more ready to caricature him; with little good breeding, they called those answers they so much dreaded, les coups de boutoir du Roi. Methodical in all his habits, the King always went to bed at eleven precisely. One evening the Queen was going with her usual circle to a party, either at the Due de Duras's or the Princesse de Guemenee's. The hand of the clock was slily put forward to hasten the King's departure by a few minutes; he thought bed-time was come, retired, and found none of his attendants ready to wait on him. This joke became known in all the drawing-rooms of Versailles, and was disapproved of there. Kings have no privacy. Queens have no boudoirs. If those who are in im- mediate attendance upon sovereigns be not themselves disposed to transmit their private habits to posterity, the meanest valet will relate what he has seen or heard; his gossip circulates rapidly, and forms public opinion, which at length ascribes to the most august persons characters which, however untrue they may be, are almost always indelible. CHAPTER VII THE winter following the confinement of the Comtesse d'Artois was very severe; the recol- lections of the pleasure which sleighing-parties had given the Queen in her childhood made her wish to introduce similar ones in France. This amusement had already been known in that Court, as was proved by sleighs being found in the stables which had been used by the Dauphin, the father of Louis XVI. Some were constructed for the Queen in a more modern style. The Princes also ordered several; and in a few days there was a tolerable number of these vehi- cles. They were driven by the princes and noblemen of the Court. The noise of the bells and balls with which the harness of the horses was furnished, the elegance and whiteness of their plumes, the varied forms of the carriages, the gold with which they were all ornamented, rendered these parties delightful to the eye. The winter was very favourable to them, the snow remaining on the ground nearly six weeks; the drives in the park afforded a pleasure shared by the spectators. No one imagined that any blame could attach to so innocent an amusement. But the party were tempted to extend their drives as far as the Champs £lysees ; a few sleighs even crossed the boule- vards; the ladies being masked, the Queen's enemies took the opportunity of saying that she had traversed the streets of Paris in a sleigh. This became a matter of moment. The public dis- covered in it a predilection for the habits of Vienna; but all that Marie Antoinette did was criticised. 9 6 MARIE ANTOINETTE 97 Sleigh-driving, savouring of the Northern Courts, had no favour among the Parisians. The Queen was informed of this; and although all the sleighs were preserved, and several subsequent winters lent them- selves to the amusement, she would not resume it. It was at the time of the sleighing-parties that the Queen became intimately acquainted with the Prin- cesse de Lamballe, who made her appearance in them wrapped in fur, with all the brilliancy and freshness of the age of twenty, — the emblem of spring, peeping from under sable and ermine. Her situation, more- over, rendered her peculiarly interesting; married, when she was scarcely past childhood, to a young prince, who ruined himself by the contagious exam- ple of the Due d'Orleans, she had had nothing to do from the time of her arrival in France but to weep. A widow at eighteen, and childless, she lived with the Due de Penthievre as an adopted daughter. She had the tenderest respect and attachment for that vener- able Prince; but the Queen, though doing justice to his virtues, saw that the Due de Penthievre's way of life, whether at Paris or at his country-seat, could neither afford his young daughter-in-law the amuse- ments suited to her time of life, nor ensure her in the future an establishment such as she was deprived of by her widowhood. She determined, therefore, to establish her at Versailles; and for her sake revived the office of superintendent, which had been discon- tinued at Court since the death of Mademoiselle de y Clermont. It is said that Maria Leczinska had de- cided that this place should continue vacant, the superintendent having so extensive a power in the houses of queens as to be frequently a restraint upon their inclinations. Differences which soon took place between Marie Antoinette and the Princesse de Lam- balle respecting the official prerogatives of the latter, 98 THE MEMOIRS OF proved that the wife of Louis XV. had acted judi- ciously in abolishing the office; but a kind of treaty- made between the Queen and the Princess smoothed all difficulties. The blame for too strong an assertion of claims fell upon a secretary of the superintendent, who had been her adviser; and everything was so arranged that a firm friendship existed between these two Princesses down to the disastrous period which terminated their career. Notwithstanding the enthusiasm which the splen- dour, grace, and kindness of the Queen generally in- spired, secret intrigues continued in operation against her. A short time after the ascension of Louis XVI. to the throne, the minister of the King's household was informed that a most offensive libel against the Queen was about to appear. The lieutenant of police deputed a man named Goupil, a police inspector, to trace this libel; he came soon after to say that he had found out the place where the work was being printed, and that it was at a country house near Yverdun. He had already got possession of two sheets, which contained the most atrocious calum- nies, conveyed with a degree of art which might make them very dangerous to the Queen's reputation. Gou- pil said that he could obtain the rest, but that he should want a considerable sum for that purpose. Three thousand louis were given him, and very soon afterwards he brought the whole manuscript and all that had been printed to the lieutenant of police. He received a thousand louis more as a reward for his address and zeal; and a much more important office was about to be given him, when another spy, envious of Goupil's good fortune, gave information that Goupil himself was the author of the libel; that, ten years before, he had been put into the Bicetre for swindling; and that Madame Goupil had been only three years MARIE ANTOINETTE 99 out of the Salpetriere, where she had been placed under another name. This Madame Goupil was very- pretty and very intriguing; she had found means to form an intimacy with Cardinal de Rohan, whom she led, it is said, to hope for a reconciliation with the Queen. All this affair was hushed up; but it shows that it was the Queen's fate to be incessantly attacked by the meanest and most odious machinations. Another woman, named Cahouette de Villers, whose husband held an office in the Treasury, being very- irregular in conduct, and of a scheming turn of mind, had a mania for appearing in the eyes of her friends at Paris as a person in favour at Court, to which she was not entitled by either birth or office. During the latter years of the life of Louis XV. she had made many dupes, and picked up considerable sums by- passing herself off as the King's mistress. The fear of irritating Madame du Barry was, according to her, the only thing which prevented her enjoying that title openly. She came regularly to Versailles, kept herself concealed in a furnished lodging, and her dupes imagined she was secretly summoned to Court. This woman formed the scheme of getting admis- sion, if possible, to the presence of the Queen, or at least causing it to be believed that she had done so. She adopted as her lover Gabriel de Saint Charles, in- tendant of her Majesty's finances, — an office, the priv- ileges of which were confined to the right of entering the Queen's apartment on Sunday. Madame de Vil- lers came every Saturday to Versailles with M. de Saint Charles, and lodged in his apartment. M. Cam- pan was there several times. She painted tolerably- well, and she requested him to do her the favour to present to the Queen a portrait of her Majesty which she had just copied. M. Campan knew the woman's Vol. 3 Memoirs — £ ioo THE MEMOIRS OF character, and refused her. A few days after, he saw on her Majesty's couch the portrait which he had de- clined to present to her; the Queen thought it badly painted, and gave orders that it should be carried back to the Princesse de Lamballe, who had sent it to her. The ill success of the portrait did not deter the manceu- vrer from following up her designs; she easily pro- cured through M. de Saint Charles patents and orders signed by the Queen; she then set about imitating her writing, and composed a great number of notes and letters, as if written by her Majesty, in the tenderest and most familiar style. For many months she showed them as great secrets to several of her particu- lar friends. Afterwards, she made the Queen appear to write to her, to procure various fancy articles. Un- der the pretext of wishing to execute her Majesty's commissions accurately, she gave these letters to the tradesmen to read, and succeeded in having it said, in many houses, that the Queen had a particular re- gard for her. She then enlarged her scheme, and rep- resented the Queen as desiring to borrow 200,000 francs which she had need of, but which she did not wish to ask of the King from his private funds. This letter, being shown to M. Beranger, fermier-general of the finances, took effect; he thought himself fortunate in being able to render this assistance to his sovereign, and lost no time in sending the 200,000 francs to Ma- dame de Villers. This first step was followed by some doubts, which he communicated to people better in- formed than himself of what was passing at Court; they added to his uneasiness; he then went to M. de Sartine, who unravelled the whole plot. The woman was sent to St. Pelagie; and the unfortunate husband was ruined, by replacing the sum borrowed, and by paying for the jewels fraudulently purchased in the Queen's name. The forged letters were sent to her MARIE ANTOINETTE 101 Majesty; I compared them in her presence with her own handwriting, and the only distinguishable differ- ence was a little more regularity in the letters. This trick, discovered and punished with prudence and without passion, produced no more sensation out of doors than that of the Inspector Goupil. A year after the nomination of Madame de Lam- balle to the post of superintendent of the Queen's household, balls and quadrilles gave rise to the inti- macy of her Majesty with the Comtesse Jules de Polignac. This lady really interested Marie Antoi- nette. She was not rich, and generally lived upon her estate at Claye. The Queen was astonished at not having seen her at Court earlier. The confes- sion that her want of fortune had even prevented her appearance at the celebration of the marriages of the Princes added to the interest which she had inspired. The Queen was full of consideration, and took de- light in counteracting the injustice of fortune. The Countess was induced to come to Court by her hus- band's sister, Madame Diane de Polignac, who had been appointed lady of honour to the Comtesse d'Ar- tois. The Comtesse Jules was really fond of a tranquil life; the impression she made at Court affected her but little; she felt only the attachment manifested for her by the Queen. I had occasion to see her from the commencement of her favour at Court; she often passed whole hours with me, while waiting for the Queen. She conversed with me freely and ingen- uously about the honour, and at the same time the danger, she saw in the kindness of which she was the object. The Queen sought for the sweets of friend- ship; but can this gratification, so rare in any rank, exist between a Queen and a subject, — when they are surrounded, moreover, by snares laid by the artifice of 102 THE MEMOIRS OF courtiers ? This pardonable error was fatal to the hap- piness of Marie Antoinette. The retiring character of the Comtesse Jules, after- wards Duchesse de Polignac, cannot be spoken of too favourably; but if her heart was incapable of forming ambitious projects, her family and friends in her for- tune beheld their own, and endeavoured to secure the favour of the Queen. The Comtesse de Diane, sister of M. de Polignac, and the Baron de Besenval and M. de Vaudreuil, par- ticular friends of the Polignac family, made use of means, the success of which was infallible. One of my friends (Comte de Moustier), who was in their secret, came to tell me that Madame de Polignac was about to quit Versailles suddenly; that she would take leave of the Queen only in writing; that the Comtesse Diane and M. de Vaudreuil had dictated her letter, and the whole affair was arranged for the purpose of stim- ulating the attachment of Marie Antoinette. The next day, when I went up to the palace, I found the Queen with a letter in her hand, which she was reading with much emotion; it was the letter from the Comtesse Jules; the Queen showed it to me. The Countess ex- pressed in it her grief at leaving a princess who had loaded her with kindness. The narrowness of her for- tune compelled her to do so; but she was much more strongly impelled by the fear that the Queen's friend- ship, after having raised up dangerous enemies against her, might abandon her to their hatred, and to the re- gret of having lost the august favour of which she was the object. This step produced the full effect that had been ex- pected from it. A young and sensitive queen cannot long bear the idea of contradiction. She busied her- self in settling the Comtesse Jules near her, by making such a provision for her as should place her beyond MARIE ANTOINETTE 103 anxiety. Her character suited the Queen; she had merely natural talents, no pedantry, no affectation of knowledge. She was of middle size; her complexion very fair, her eyebrows and hair dark brown, her teeth superb, her smile enchanting, and her whole person graceful. She was seen almost always in a demi-toilet, remarkable only for neatness and good taste. I do not think I ever once saw diamonds about her, even at the climax of her fortune, when she had the rank of Duchess at Court. I have always believed that her sincere attachment for the Queen, as much as her love of simplicity, induced her to avoid everything that might cause her to be thought a wealthy favourite. She had not one of the failings which usually accom- pany that position. She loved the persons who shared the Queen's affections, and was entirely free from jeal- ousy. Marie Antoinette flattered herself that the Comtesse Jules and the Princesse de Lamballe would be her especial friends, and that she should possess a society formed according to her own taste. " I will re- ceive them in my closet, or at Trianon," said she; " I will enjoy the comforts of private life, which exist not for us, unless we have the good sense to secure them for ourselves." The happiness the Queen thought to secure was destined to turn to vexation. All those courtiers who were not admitted to this in- timacy became so many jealous and vindictive enemies. It was necessary to make a suitable provision for the Countess. The place of first equerry, in reversion af- ter the Comte de Tesse, given to Comte Jules unknown to the titular holder, displeased the family of Noailles. This family had just sustained another mortification, the appointment of the Princesse de Lamballe having in some degree rendered necessary the resignation of the Comtesse de Noailles, whose husband was there- 104 THE MEMOIRS OE upon made a marshal of France. The Princesse de Lamballe, although she did not quarrel with the Queen, was alarmed at the establishment of the Com- tesse Jules at Court, and did not form, as her Majesty- had hoped, a part of that intimate society, which was in turn composed of Mesdames Jules and Diane de Polignac, d'Andlau and de Chalon, and Messieurs de Guignes, de Coigny, d'Adhemar, de Besenval, lieu- tenant-colonel of the Swiss, de Polignac, de Vau- dreuil, and de Guiche; the Prince de Ligne and the Duke of Dorset, the English ambassador, were also admitted. It was a long time before the Comtesse Jules main- tained any great state at Court. The Queen contented herself with giving her very fine apartments at the top of the marble staircase. The salary of first equerry, the trifling emoluments derived from M. de Polignac's regiment, added to their slender patrimony, and perhaps some small pension, at that time formed the whole fortune of the favourite. I never saw the Queen make her a present of value; I was even aston- ished one day at hearing her Majesty mention, with pleasure, that the Countess had gained ten thousand francs in the lottery. " She was in great want of it," added the Queen. Thus the Polignacs were not settled at Court in any degree of splendour which could justify complaints from others, and the substantial favours bestowed upon that family were less envied than the intimacy between them and their proteges and the Queen. Those who had no hope of entering the circle of the Comtesse Jules were made jealous by the opportunities of advancement it afforded. However, at the time I speak of, the society around the Comtesse Jules was fully engaged in gratifying the young Queen. Of this the Marquis de Vaudreuil was MARIE ANTOINETTE 105 a conspicuous member; he was a brilliant man, the friend and protector of men of letters and celebrated artists. The Baron de Besenval added to the bluntness of the Swiss all the adroitness of a French courtier. His fifty years and gray hairs made him enjoy among women the confidence inspired by mature age, although he had not given up the thought of love affairs. He talked of his native mountains with enthusiasm. He would at any time sing the " Ranz des Vaches " with tears in his eyes, and was the best story-teller in the Comtesse Jules's circle. The last new song or bon mot and the gossip of the day were the sole topics of conversation in the Queen's parties. Wit was ban- ished from them. The Comtesse Diane, more inclined to literary pursuits than her sister-in-law, one day recommended her to read the " Iliad " and " Odys- sey." The latter replied, laughing, that she was per- fectly acquainted with the Greek poet, and said to prove it: " Homere etait aveugle et jouait du hautbois." (Homer was blind and played on the hautboy.) The Queen found this sort of humour very much to her taste, and said that no pedant should ever be her friend. Before the Queen fixed her assemblies at Madame de Polignac's, she occasionally passed the evening at the house of the Due and Duchesse de Duras, where a brilliant party of young persons met together. They introduced a taste for trifling games, such as question and answer, guerre panpan, blind man's buff, and es- pecially a game called descampativos. The people of Paris, always criticising, but always imitating the cus- toms of the Court, were infected with the mania for 106 MARTE ANTOINETTE these childish sports. Madame de Genlis, sketching the follies of the day in one of her plays, speaks of these famous dcscampativos; and also of the rage for making a friend, called the inseparable, until a whim or the slightest difference might occasion a total rupture. CHAPTER VIII THE Due de Choiseul had reappeared at Court on the ceremony of the King's coronation for the first time after his disgrace under Louis XV. in 1770. The state of public feeling on the subject gave his friends hope of seeing him again in administration, or in the Council of State; but the opposite party was too firmly seated at Versailles, and the young Queen's influence was outweighed, in the mind of the King, by long-standing prejudices; she therefore gave up for ever her attempt to reinstate the Duke. Thus this Princess, who has been described as so ambitious, and so strenuously supporting the interest of the House of Austria, failed twice in the only scheme which could forward the views constantly attributed to her; and spent the whole of her reign surrounded by enemies of herself and her house. Marie Antoinette took little pains to promote liter- ature and the fine arts. She had been annoyed in con- sequence of having ordered a performance of the " Connetable de Bourbon," on the celebration of the marriage of Madame Clotilde with the Prince of Pied- mont. The Court and the people of Paris censured as indecorous the naming characters in the piece after the reigning family, and that with which the new al- liance was formed. The reading of this piece by the Comte de Guibert in the Queen's closet had produced in her Majesty's circle that sort of enthusiasm which obscures the judgment. 'She promised herself she would have no more readings. Yet, at the request of M. de Cubieres, the King's equerry, the Queen agreed 107 io8 THE MEMOIRS OF to hear the reading of a comedy written by his brother. She collected her intimate circle, Messieurs de Coigny, de Vaudreuil, de Besenval, Mesdames de Polignac, de Chalon, etc., and to increase the number of judges, she admitted the two Parnys, the Chevalier de Bertin, my father-in-law, and myself. Mole read for the author. I never could satisfy myself by what magic the skill- ful reader gained our unanimous approbation of a ridiculous work. Surely the delightful voice of Mole, by awakening our recollection of the dramatic beau- ties of the French stage, prevented the wretched lines of Dorat Cubieres from striking on our ears. I can assert that the exclamation Charming! Charming! re- peatedly interrupted the reader. The piece was ad- mitted for performance at Fontainebleau ; and for the first time the King had the curtain dropped before the end of the play. It was called the " Dramomane " or " Dramaturge." All the characters died of eating poison in a pie. The Queen, highly disconcerted at having recommended this absurd production, an- nounced that she would never hear another reading; and this time she kept her word. The tragedy of " Mustapha and Zeangir," by M. de Chamfort, was highly successful at the Court the- atre at Fontainebleau. The Queen procured the au- thor a pension of 1,200 francs, but his play failed on being performed at Paris. The spirit of opposition which prevailed in that city delighted in reversing the verdicts of the Court. The Queen determined never again to give any marked countenance to new dramatic works. She reserved her patronage for musical composers, and in a few years their art arrived at a perfection it had never before attained in France. It was solely to gratify the Queen that the manager of the Opera brought the first company of comic actors MARIE ANTOINETTE 109 to Paris. Gluck, Piccini, and Sacchini were attracted there in succession. These eminent composers were treated with great distinction at Court. Immediately on his arrival in France, Gluck was admitted to the Queen's toilet, and she talked to him all the time he remained with her. She asked him one day whether he had nearly brought his grand opera of " Armide " to a conclusion, and whether it pleased him. Gluck replied very coolly, in his German accent, " Madame, it will soon be finished, and really it will be superb." There was a great outcry against the confidence with which the composer had spoken of one of his own pro- ductions. The Queen defended him warmly; she in- sisted that he could not be ignorant of the merit of his works; that he well knew they were generally admired, and that no doubt he was afraid lest a mod- esty, merely dictated by politeness, should look like affectation in him. The Queen did not confine her admiration to the lofty style of the French and Italian operas; she greatly valued Gretry's music, so well adapted to the spirit and feeling of the words. A great deal of the poetry set to music by Gretry is by Marmontel. The day after the first performance of " Zemira and Azor," Marmontel and Gretry were presented to the Queen as she was passing through the gallery of Fon- tainebleau to go to mass. The Queen congratulated Gretry on the success of the new opera, and told him that she had dreamed of the enchanting effect of the trio by Zemira's father and sisters behind the magic mirror. Gretry, in a transport of joy, took Marmon- tel in his arms, "Ah! my friend," cried he, "excel- lent music may be made of this." " And execrable words," coolly observed Marmontel, to whom her Majesty had not addressed a single compliment. The most indifferent artists were permitted to have no THE MEMOIRS OF the honour of painting the Queen. A full-length por- trait, representing her in all the pomp of royalty, was exhibited in the gallery of Versailles. This picture, which was intended for the Court of Vienna, was exe- cuted by a man who does not deserve even to be named, and disgusted all people of taste. It seemed as if this art had, in France, retrograded several centuries. The Queen had not that enlightened judgment, or even that mere taste, which enables princes to foster and protect great talents. She confessed frankly that she saw no merit in any portrait beyond the likeness. When she went to the Louvre, she would run hastily over all the little " genre " pictures, and come out, as she acknowledged, without having once raised her eyes to the grand compositions. There is no good portrait of the Queen, save that by Werthmiiller, chief painter to the King of Sweden, which was sent to Stockholm, and that by Madame Lebrun, which was saved from the revolutionary fury by the commissioners for the care of the furniture at Versailles. The composition of the latter picture re- sembles that of Henriette of France, the wife of the unfortunate Charles I., painted by Vandyke. Like Marie Antoinette, she is seated, surrounded by her children, and that resemblance adds to the melancholy interest raised by this beautiful production. While admitting that the Queen gave no direct en- couragement to any art but that of music, I should be wrong to pass over in silence the patronage conferred by her and the Princes, brothers of the King, on the art of printing. To Marie Antoinette we are indebted for a splendid quarto edition of the works of Metastasio; to Mon- sieur, the King's brother, for a quarto Tasso, embel- lished with engravings alter Cochin; and to the Comte MARIE ANTOINETTE in d'Artois for a small collection of select works, which is considered one of the chefs-d'ceuvre of the press of the celebrated Didot. In 1775, on the death of the Marechal du Muy, the ascendency obtained by the sect of innovators occa- sioned M. de Saint-Germain to be recalled to Court and made Minister of War. His first care was the destruction of the King's military household estab- lishment, an imposing and effectual rampart round the sovereign power. When Chancellor Maupeou obtained from Louis XV. the destruction of the Parliament and the exile of all the ancient magistrates, the Mousquetaires were charged with the execution of the commission for this purpose ; and at the stroke of midnight, the presidents and members were all arrested, each by two Mousque- taires. In the spring of 1775 a popular insurrection had taken place in consequence of the high price of bread. M. Turgot's new regulation, which permitted unlimited trade in corn, was either its cause or the pretext for it; and the King's household troops again rendered the greatest services to public tranquillity. I have never been able to discover the true cause of the support given to M. de Saint-Germain's policy by the Queen, unless in the marked favour shown to the captains and officers of the Body Guards, who by this reduction became the only soldiers of their rank en- trusted with the safety of the sovereign; or else in the Queen's strong prejudice against the Due d'Aiguillon, then commander of the light-horse. M. de Saint-Ger- main, however, retained fifty gens d'armes and fifty light-horse to form a royal escort on state occasions; but in 1787 the King reduced both these military bodies. The Queen then said with satisfaction that at last she should see no more red coats in the gallery of Versailles. 112 THE MEMOIRS OF From 1775 to 1781 were the gayest years of the Queen's life. In the little journeys to Choisy, per- formances frequently took place at the theatre twice in one day; grand opera and French or Italian com- edy at the usual hour; and at eleven at night they returned to the theatre for parodies in which the best actors of the Opera presented themselves in whimsical parts and costumes. The celebrated dancer Guimard always took the leading characters in the latter per- formance; she danced better than she acted; her ex- treme leanness, and her weak, hoarse voice added to the burlesque in the parodied characters of Ernelinde and Iphigenie. The most magnificent fete ever given to the Queen was one prepared for her by Monsieur, the King's brother, at Brunoy. That Prince did me the honour to admit me, and I followed her Majesty into the gardens, where she found in the first copse knights in full armour asleep at the foot of trees, on which hung their spears and shields. The absence of the beauties who had incited the nephews of Charlemagne and the gallants of that period to lofty deeds was supposed to occasion this lethargic slumber. But when the Queen appeared at the entrance of the copse they were on foot in an instant, and melodious voices announced their eagerness to display their valour. They then hastened into a vast arena, magnificently decorated in the exact style of the ancient tournaments. Fifty dancers dressed as pages presented to the knights twenty-five superb black horses, and twenty-five of a dazzling whiteness, all most richly caparisoned. The party led by Augustus Vestris wore the Queen's col- ours. Picq, ballet-master at the Russian Court, com- manded the opposing band. There was running at the negro's head, tilting, and, lastly, combats a outrance, perfectly well imitated. Although the spectators were MARIE ANTOINETTE 113 aware that the Queen's colours could not but be vic- torious, they did not the less enjoy the apparent un- certainty. Nearly all the agreeable women of Paris were ranged upon the steps which surrounded the area of the tourney. The Queen, surrounded by the royal family and the whole Court, was placed beneath an elevated canopy. A play, followed by a ballet-panto- mime and a ball, terminated the fete. Fireworks and illuminations were not spared. Finally, from a pro- digiously high scaffold, placed on a rising ground, the words Vive Louis! Vive Marie Antoinette! were shown in the air in the midst of a very dark but calm night. Pleasure was the sole pursuit of every one of this young family, with the exception of the King. Their love of it was perpetually encouraged by a crowd of those officious people who, by anticipating the desires and even the passions of princes, find means of show- ing their zeal, and hope to gain or maintain favour for themselves. Who would have dared to check the amusements of a queen, young, lively, and handsome? A mother or a husband alone would have had the right to do it; and the King threw no impediment in the way of Marie Antoinette's inclinations. His long indifference had been followed by admiration and love. He was a slave to all the wishes of the Queen, who, delighted with the happy change in the heart and habits of the King, did not sufficiently conceal the ascendency she was gaining over him. The King went to bed every night at eleven pre- cisely; he was very methodical, and nothing was al- lowed to interfere with his rules. The noise which the Queen unavoidably made when she returned very late from the evenings which she spent with the Prin- H4 THE MEMOIRS OF cesse de Guemenee or the Due de Duras, at last an- noyed the King, and it was amicably agreed that the Queen should apprise him when she intended to sit up late. He then began to sleep in his own apart- ment, which had never before happened from the time of their marriage. During the winter the Queen attended the Opera balls with a single lady of the palace, and always found there Monsieur and the Comte d'Artois. Her people concealed their liveries under gray cloth greatcoats. She never thought she was recognized, while all the time she was known to the whole assembly, from the first moment she entered the theatre; they pretended, however, not to recognize her, and some masquerade manoeuvre was always adopted to give her the pleas- ure of fancying herself incognito. Louis XVI. determined once to accompany the Queen to a masked ball; it was agreed that the King should hold not only the grand but the petit coucher, as if actually going to bed. The Queen went to his apartment through the inner corridors of the palace, followed by one of her women with a black domino; she assisted him to put it on, and they went alone to the chapel court, where a carriage waited for them, with the captain of the Guard of the quarter, and a lady of the palace. The King was but little amused, spoke only to two or three persons, who knew him immediately, and found nothing to admire at the mas- querade but Punches and Harlequins, which served as a joke against him for the royal family, who often amused themselves with laughing at him about it. An event, simple in itself, brought dire suspicion upon the Queen. She was going out one evening with the Duchesse de Luynes, lady of the palace, when her carriage broke down at the entrance into Paris; she was obliged to alight; the Duchess led her into a shop, MARIE ANTOINETTE 115 while a footman called a fiacre. As they were masked, if they had but known how to keep silence, the event would never have been known; but to ride in a fiacre is so unusual an adventure for a queen that she had hardly entered the Opera-house when she could not help saying to some persons whom she met there: " That I should be in a fiacre. Is it not droll? " From that moment all Paris was informed of the adventure of the fiacre. It was said that everything connected with it was mysterious; that the Queen had kept an assignation in a private house with the Due de Coigny. He was indeed very well received at Court, but equally so by the King and Queen. These accusations of gallantry once set afloat, there were no longer any bounds to the calumnies circulated at Paris. If, during the chase or at cards, the Queen spoke to Lord Edward Dillon, De Lambertye, or others, they were so many favoured lovers. The people of Paris did not know that none of those young persons were admitted into the Queen's private circle of friends; the Queen went about Paris in disguise, and had made use of a fiacre; and a single instance of levity gives room for the suspicion of others. Conscious of innocence, and well knowing that all about her must do justice to her private life, the Queen spoke of these reports with contempt, contenting her- self with the supposition that some folly in the young men mentioned had given rise to them. She therefore left off speaking to them or even looking at them. Their vanity took alarm at this, and revenge induced them either to say, or to leave others to think, that they were unfortunate enough to please no longer. Other young coxcombs, placing themselves near the private box which the Queen occupied incognito when she attended the public theatre at Versailles, had the presumption to imagine that they were noticed by her; n6 THE MEMOIRS OF and I have known such notions entertained merely ori account of the Queen's requesting one of those gentle- men to inquire behind the scenes whether it would be long before the commencement of the second piece. The list of persons received into the Queen's closet which I gave in the preceding chapter was placed in the hands of the ushers of the chamber by the Prin- cesse de Lamballe; and the persons there enumerated could present themselves to enjoy the distinction only on those days when the Queen chose to be with her intimates in a private manner; and this was only when she was slightly indisposed. People of the first rank at Court sometimes requested special audiences of her; the Queen then received them in a room within that called the closet of the women on duty, and these women announced them in her Majesty's apartment. The Due de Lauzun had a good deal of wit, and chivalrous manners. The Queen was accustomed to see him at the King's suppers, and at the house of the Princesse de Guemenee, and always showed him at- tention. One day he made his appearance at Madame de Guemenee's in uniform, and with the most magnifi- cent plume of white heron's feathers that it was pos- sible to behold. The Queen admired the plume, and he offered it to her through the Princesse de Gue- menee. As he had worn it the Queen had not imag- ined that he could think of giving it to her; much embarrassed with the present which she had, as it were, drawn upon herself, she did not like to refuse it, nor did she know whether she ought to make one in return; afraid, if she did give anything, of giving either too much or too little, she contented herself with once letting M. de Lauzun see her adorned with the plume. In his secret " Memoirs " the Duke attaches an importance to his present, which proves him utterly MARIE ANTOINETTE 117 unworthy of an honour accorded only to his name and rank. A short time afterwards he solicited an audience; the Queen granted it ; as she would have done to any other courtier of equal rank. I was in the room ad- joining that in which he was received; a few minutes after his arrival the Queen reopened the door, and said aloud, and in an angry tone of voice, " Go, monsieur." M. de Lauzun bowed low, and withdrew. The Queen was much agitated. She said to me : " That man shall never again come within my doors." A few years before the Revolution of 1789 the Marechal de Biron died. The Due de Lauzun, heir to his name, as- pired to the important post of colonel of the regi- ment of French guards. The Queen, however, pro- cured it for the Due de Chatelet. The Due de Biron espoused the cause of the Due d'Orleans, and became one of the most violent enemies of Marie Antoinette. It is with reluctance that I enter minutely on a de- fence of the Queen against two infamous accusations with which libellers have dared to swell their enven- omed volumes. I mean the unworthy suspicions of too strong an attachment for the Comte d'Artois, and of the motives for the tender friendship which sub- sisted between the Queen, the Princesse de Lamballe, and the Duchesse de Polignac. I do not believe that the Comte d'Artois was, during his own youth and that of the Queen, so much smitten as has been said with the loveliness of his sister-in-law; I can affirm that I always saw that Prince maintain the most re- spectful demeanour towards the Queen; that she al- ways spoke of his good-nature and cheerfulness with that freedom which attends only the purest senti- ments; and that none of those about the Queen ever saw in the affection she manifested toward the Comte d'Artois more than that of a kind and tender sister for n8 THE MEMOIRS OF her youngest brother. As to the intimate connection between Marie Antoinette and the ladies I have named, it never had, nor could have, any other motive than the very innocent wish to secure herself two friends in the midst of a numerous Court; and not- withstanding this intimacy, that tone of respect ob- served by persons of the most exalted rank towards majesty never ceased to be maintained. The Queen, much occupied with the society of Ma- dame de Polignac, and an unbroken series of amuse- ments, found less time for the Abbe de Vermond; he therefore resolved to retire from Court. The world did him the honour to believe that he had hazarded remonstrances upon his august pupil's frivolous em- ployment of her time, and that he considered himself, both as an ecclesiastic and as instructor, now out of place at Court. But the world was deceived: his dissatisfaction arose purely from the favour shown to the Comtesse Jules. After a fortnight's absence we saw him at Versailles again, resuming his usual func- tions. The Queen could express herself with winning gra- ciousness to persons who merited her praise. When M. Loustonneau was appointed to the reversion of the post of first surgeon to the King, he came to make his acknowledgments. He was much beloved by the poor, to whom he had chiefly devoted his talents, spending nearly thirty thousand francs a year on in- digent sufferers. The Queen replied to his thanks by saying: "You are satisfied, Monsieur; but I am far from being so with the inhabitants of Versailles. On the news of your appointment the town should have been illuminated." "How so, Madame?" asked the astonished surgeon, who was very modest. " Why," replied the Queen, "if the poor whom you have suc- coured for the past twenty years had each placed a MARIE ANTOINETTE 119 single candle in their windows it would have been the most beautiful illumination ever witnessed." The Queen did not limit her kindness to friendly words. There was frequently seen in the apartments of Versailles a veteran captain of the grenadiers of France, called the Chevalier d'Orville, who for four years had been soliciting from the Minister of War the post of major, or of King's lieutenant. He was known to be very poor; but he supported his lot without complaining of this vexatious delay in reward- ing his honourable services. He regularly attended the Marechal de Segur, at the hour appointed for receiving the numerous solicitations in his depart- ment. One day the Marshal said to him : " You arc still at Versailles, M. d'Orville?" "Monsieur," he replied, " you may observe that by this board of the flooring where I regularly place myself; it is already worn down several lines by the weight of my body." The Queen frequently stood at the window of her bedchamber to observe with her glass the people walking in the park. Sometimes she inquired the names of those who were unknown to her. One day she saw the Chevalier d'Orville passing, and asked me the name of that knight of Saint Louis, whom she had seen everywhere for a long time past. I knew who he was, and related his history. " That must be put an end to," said the Queen, with some vivacity. " Such an example of indifference is calculated to discourage our soldiers." Next day, in crossing the gallery to go to mass, the Queen perceived the Chevalier d'Or- ville; she went directly towards him. The poor man fell back in the recess of a window, looking to the right and left to discover the person whom the Queen was seeking, when she thus addressed him : " M. d'Orville, you have been several years at Versailles, soliciting a majority or a King's lieutenancy. You must have 120 MARIE ANTOINETTE very powerless patrons." " I have none, Madame," replied the Chevalier, in great confusion. " Well ! I will take you under my protection. To-morrow at the same hour be here with a petition, and a memo- rial of your services." A fortnight after, M. d'Orville was appointed King's lieutenant, either at La Rochelle or at Roche fort. CHAPTER IX. FROM the time of Louis XVI. 's accession to the throne, the Queen had been expecting a visit from her brother, the Emperor Joseph II. That • Prince was the constant theme of her discourse. She boasted of his intelligence, his love of occupation, his military knowledge, and the perfect simplicity of his manners. Those about her Majesty ardently wished to see at Versailles a prince so worthy of his rank. At length the coming of Joseph II., under the title of Count Falkenstein, was announced, and the very day on which he would be at Versailles was mentioned. The first embraces between the Queen and her august brother took place in the presence of all the Queen's household. The sight of their emo- tion was extremely affecting. The Emperor was at first generally admired in France; learned men, well-informed officers, and celebrated artists appreciated the extent of his in- formation. He made less impression at Court, and very little in the private circle of the King and Queen. His eccentric manners, his frankness, often degenerating into rudeness, and his evidently af- fected simplicity, — all these characteristics caused him to be looked upon as a prince rather singular than admirable. The Queen spoke to him about the apartment she had prepared for him in the Chateau; the Emperor answered that he would not accept it, and that while travelling he always lodged at a cabaret (that was his very expression) ; the Queen insisted, and assured him that he should be at per- 122 THE MEMOIRS OF feet liberty, and placed out of the reach of noise. He replied that he knew the Chateau of Versailles was very large, and that so many scoundrels lived there that he could well find a place; but that his valet de chambre had made up his camp-bed in a lodging- house, and there he would stay. He dined with the King and Queen, and supped with the whole family. He appeared to take an interest in the young Princesse Elisabeth, then just past childhood, and blooming in all the freshness of that age. An intended marriage between him and this young sister of the King was reported at the time, but I believe it had no foundation in truth. The table was still served by women only, when the Queen dined in private with the King, the royal family, or crowned heads. I was present at the Queen's dinner almost every day. The Emperor would talk much and fluently; he expressed himself in French with facility, and the singularity of his expressions added a zest to his conversation. I have often heard him say that he liked spectaculous objects, when he meant to express such things as formed a show, or a scene worthy of interest. He disguised none of his prejudices against the etiquette and cus- toms of the Court of France; and even in the pres- ence of the King made them the subject of his sarcasms. The King smiled, but never made any answer; the Queen appeared pained. The Emperor frequently terminated his observations upon the ob- jects in Paris which he had admired by reproaching the King for suffering himself to remain in ignorance of them. He could not conceive how such a wealth of pictures should remain shut up in the dust of im- mense stores; and told him one day that but for the practice of placing some of them in the apartments of Versailles he would not know even the principal MARIE ANTOINETTE 123 chef-d'oeuvre that he possessed. He also reproached him for not having visited the Hotel des Invalides nor the Ecole Militaire; and even went so far as to tell him before us that he ought not only to know what Paris contained, but to travel in France, and reside a few days in each of his large towns. At last the Queen was really hurt at the Emper- or's remarks, and gave him a few lectures upon the freedom with which he allowed himself to lecture others. One day she was busied in signing warrants and orders for payment for her household, and was conversing with M. Augeard, her secretary for such matters, who presented the papers one after an- other to be signed, and replaced them in his port- folio. While this was going forward, the Emperor walked about the room; all at once he stood still, to reproach the Queen rather severely for signing all those papers without reading them, or, at least, without running her eye over them; and he spoke most judiciously to her upon the danger of signing her name inconsiderately. The Queen answered that very wise principles might be very ill applied; that her secretary, who deserved her implicit confidence, was at that moment laying before her nothing but orders for payment of the quarter's expenses of her household, registered in the Chamber of Accounts; and that she ran no risk of incautiously giving her signature. The Queen's toilet was likewise a never-failing subject for animadversion with the Emperor. He blamed her for having introduced too many new fash- ions; and teased her about her use of rouge. One day, while she was laying on more of it than usual, before going to the play, he pointed out a lady who was in the room, and who was, in truth, highly painted. " A little more under the eyes," said the 124 THE MEMOIRS OF Emperor to the Queen; "lay on the rouge like a fury, as that lady does." The Queen entreated her brother to refrain from his jokes, or at all events to address them, when they were so outspoken, to her alone. The Queen had made an appointment to meet her brother at the Italian theatre; she changed her mind, and went to the French theatre, sending a page to the Italian theatre to request the Emperor to come to her there. He left his box, lighted by the comedian Clairval, and attended by M. de la Ferte, comptroller of the Queen's privy purse, who was much hurt at hearing his Imperial Majesty, after kindly expressing his regret at not being present dur- ing the Italian performance, say to Clairval, " Your young Queen is very giddy; but, luckily, you French- men have no great objection to that." I was with my father-in-law in one of the Queen's apartments when the Emperor came to wait for her there, and, knowing that M. Campan was librarian, he conversed with him about such books as would of course be found in the Queen's library. After talk- ing of our most celebrated authors, he casually said, " There are doubtless no works on finance or on ad- ministration here?" These words were followed by his opinion on all that had been written on those topics, and the differ- ent systems of our two famous ministers, Sully and Colbert; on errors which were daily committed in France, in points essential to the prosperity of the Empire; and on the reform he himself would make at Vienna. Holding M. Campan by the button, he spent more than an hour talking vehemently, and without the slightest reserve, about the French Gov- ernment. My father-in-law and myself maintained profound silence, as much from astonishment as from MARIE ANTOINETTE 125 respect; and when we were alone we agreed not to speak of this interview. The Emperor was fond of describing the Italian Courts that he had visited. The jealous quarrels be- tween the King and Queen of Naples amused him highly; he described to the life the manner and speech of that sovereign, and the simplicity with which he used to go and solicit the first chamberlain to obtain permission to return to the nuptial bed, when the angry Queen had banished him from it. The time which he was made to wait for this reconciliation was calculated between the Queen and her chamberlain, and always proportioned to the gravity of the offence. He also related several very amusing stories relative to the Court of Parma, of which he spoke with no little contempt. If what this Prince said of those Courts, and even of Vienna, had been written down, the whole would have formed an interesting collection. The Em- peror told the King that the Grand Duke of Tuscany and the King of Naples being together, the former said a great deal about the changes he had effected in his State. The Grand Duke had issued a mass of new edicts, in order to carry the precepts of the econ- omists into execution, and trusted that in so doing he was labouring for the welfare of his people. The King of Naples suffered him to go on speaking for a long time, and then casually asked how many Nea- politan families there were in Tuscany. The Duke soon reckoned them up, as they were but few. " Well, brother," replied the King of Naples, " I do not un- derstand the indifference of your people towards your great reforms; for I have four times the number of Tuscan families settled in my States that you have of Neapolitan families in yours." The Queen being at the Opera with the Emperor, the latter did not wish to show himself; but she took 126 THE MEMOIRS OF him by the hand, and gently drew him to the front of the box. This kind of presentation to the public was most warmly received. The performance was " Iphi- genia in Aulis," and for the second time the chorus, " Chantons, celebrons notre Rcine! " was called for with universal plaudits. A fete of a novel description was given at Petit Trianon. The art with which the English garden was not illuminated, but lighted, produced a charm- ing effect. Earthen lamps, concealed by boards painted green, threw light upon the beds of shrubs and flowers, and brought out their varied tints. Sev- eral hundred burning fagots in the moat behind the Temple of Love made a blaze of light, which rendered that spot the most brilliant in the garden. After all, this evening's entertainment had nothing remarkable about it but the good taste of the artists, yet it was much talked of. The situation did not allow the ad- mission of a great part of the Court; those who were uninvited were dissatisfied; and the people, who never forgive any fetes but those they share in, so exagger- ated the cost of this little fete as to make it appear that the fagots burnt in the moat had required the destruction of a whole forest. The Queen being in- formed of these reports, was determined to know ex- actly how much wood had been consumed; and she found that fifteen hundred fagots had sufficed to keep up the fire until four o'clock in the morning. After staying a few months the Emperor left France, promising his sister to come and see her again. All the officers of the Queen's chamber had many opportunities of serving him during his stay, and ex- pected that he would make them presents before his departure. Their oath of office positively forbade them to receive a gift from any foreign prince; they had therefore agreed to refuse the Emperor's pres- MARIE ANTOINETTE 127 ents at first, but to ask the time necessary for obtain- ing permission to accept them. The Emperor, proba- bly informed of this custom, relieved the good people from their difficulty by setting off without making a single present. About the latter end of 1777 the Queen, being alone in her closet, sent for my father-in-law and myself, and, giving us her hand to kiss, told us that, looking upon us both as persons deeply interested in her hap- piness, she wished to receive our congratulations,— that at length she was the Queen of France, and that she hoped soon to have children; that till now she had concealed her grief, but that she had shed many tears in secret. Dating from this happy but long-delayed moment, the King's attachment to the Queen assumed every characteristic of love. The good Lassone, first phy- sician to the King and Queen, frequently spoke to me of the uneasiness that the King's indifference, the cause of which he had been so long in overcoming, had given him, and appeared to me at that time to entertain no anxiety except of a very different description. In the winter of 1778 the King's permission for the return of Voltaire, after an absence of twenty- seven years, was obtained. A few strict persons con- sidered this concession on the part of the Court very injudicious. The Emperor, on leaving France, passed by the Chateau of Ferney without stopping there. He had advised the Queen not to suffer Voltaire to be presented to her. A lady belonging to the Court learned the Emperor's opinion on that point, and re- proached him with his want of enthusiasm towards the greatest genius of the age. He replied that for the good of the people he should always endeavour to profit by the knowledge of the philosophers; but 128 THE MEMOIRS OF that his own business of sovereign would always pre- vent his ranking- himself amongst that sect. The clergy also took steps to hinder Voltaire's appearance at Court. Paris, however, carried to the highest pitch the honours and enthusiasm shown to the great poet. It was very unwise to let Paris pronounce with such transport an opinion so opposite to that of the Court. This was pointed out to the Queen, and she was told that, without conferring on Voltaire the honour of a presentation, she might see him in the State apart- ments. She was not averse to following this advice, and appeared embarrassed solely about what she should say to him. She was recommended to talk about noth- ing but the " Henriade," " Merope," and " Zaira." The Queen replied that she would still consult a few other persons in whom she had great confidence. The next day she announced that it was irrevocably de- cided Voltaire should not see any member of the royal family, — his writings being too antagonistic to reli- gion and morals. " It is, however, strange," said the Queen, " that while we refuse to admit Voltaire into our presence as the leader of philosophical writers, the Marechale de Mouchy should have presented to me some years ago Madame Geoffrin, who owed her celeb- rity to the title of foster-mother of the philosophers." On the occasion of the duel of the Comte d'Artois with the Prince de Bourbon the Queen determined privately to see the Baron de Besenval, who was to be one of the witnesses, in order to communicate the King's intentions. I have read with infinite pain the manner in which that simple fact is perverted in the first volume of M. de Besenval's " Memoirs." He is right in saying that M. Campan led him through the upper corridors of the Chateau, and introduced him into an apartment unknown to him; but the air of romance given to the interview is equally culpable MARIE ANTOINETTE 129 and ridiculous. M. de Besenval says that he found himself, without knowing how he came there, in an apartment unadorned, but very conveniently furnished, of the existence of which he was till then utterly ignorant. He was astonished, he adds, not that the Queen should have so many facilities, but that she should have ventured to procure them. Ten printed sheets of the woman Lamotte's libels contain nothing so injurious to the character of Marie Antoinette as these lines, written by a man whom she honoured by undeserved kindness. He could not have had any op- portunity of knowing the existence of the apartments, which consisted of a very small antechamber, a bed- chamber, and a closet. Ever since the Queen had occupied her own apartment, these had been appro- priated to her Majesty's lady of honour in cases of illness, and were actually so used when the Queen was confined. It was so important that it should not be known the Queen had spoken to the Baron be- fore the duel that she had determined to go through her inner room into this little apartment, to which M. Campan was to conduct him. When men write of recent times they should be scrupulously exact, and not indulge in exaggerations or inventions. The Baron de Besenval appears mightily surprised at the Queen's sudden coolness, and refers it to the fickleness of her disposition. I can explain the reason for the change by repeating what her Majesty said to me at the time; and I will not alter one of her expres- sions. Speaking of the strange presumption of men, and the reserve with which women ought always to treat them, the Queen added that age did not deprive them of the hope of pleasing, if they retained any agreeable qualities; that she had treated the Baron de Besenval as a brave Swiss, agreeable, polished, and witty, whose gray hairs had induced her to look upon 130 THE MEMOIRS OF him as a man whom she might see without harm; but that she had been much deceived. Her Majesty, after having enjoined me to the strictest secrecy, told me that, finding herself alone with the Baron, he began to address her with so much gallantry that she was thrown into the utmost astonishment, and that he was mad enough to fall upon his knees, and make her a declaration in form. The Queen added that she said to him: " Rise, monsieur; the King shall be ignorant of an offence which would disgrace you for ever;" that the Baron grew pale and stammered apologies; that she left her closet without saying another word, and that since that time she hardly ever spoke to him. " It is delightful to have friends/' said the Queen; "but in a situation like mine it is some- times difficult for the friends of our friends to suit us." In the beginning of the year 1778 Mademoiselle d'Eon obtained permission to return to France, on condition that she should appear there in female dress. The Comte de Vergennes entreated my father, M. Genet, chief clerk of Foreign Affairs, who had long known the Chevalier d'Eon, to receive that strange personage at his house, to guide and restrain, if possi- ble, her ardent disposition. The Queen, on learning her arrival at Versailles, sent a footman to desire my father to bring her into her presence; my father thought it his duty first to inform the Minister of her Majesty's wish. The Comte de Vergennes expressed himself pleased with my father's prudence, and de- sired that he would accompany him to the Queen. The Minister had a few minutes' audience; her Maj- esty came out of her closet with him, and conde- scended to express to my father the regret she felt at having troubled him to no purpose; and added, smiling, that a few words from M. de Vergennes MARIE ANTOINETTE 131 had for ever cured her of her curiosity. The dis- covery in London of the true sex of this pretended woman makes it probable that the few words uttered by the Minister contained a solution of the enigma. The Chevalier d'Eon had been useful in Russia as a spy of Louis XV. While very young he had found means to introduce himself at the Court of the Empress Elizabeth, and served that sovereign in the capacity of reader. Resuming afterwards his mili- tary dress, he served with honour and was wounded. Appointed chief secretary of legation, and afterwards minister plenipotentiary at London, he unpardonably insulted Comte de Guerchy, the ambassador. The official order for the Chevalier's return to France was actually delivered to the King's Council; but Louis XV. delayed the departure of the courier who was to be its bearer, and sent off another courier privately, who gave the Chevalier d'Eon a letter in his own writ- ing, in which he said, " I know that you have served me as effectually in the dress of a woman as in that which you now wear. Resume it instantly; withdraw into the city; I warn you that the King yesterday signed an order for your return to France; you are not safe in your hotel, and you would here find too powerful enemies." I heard the Chevalier d'Eon re- peat the contents of this letter, in which Louis XV. thus separated himself from the King of France, sev- eral times at my father's. The Chevalier, or rather the Chevalier e d'Eon had preserved all the King's let- ters. Messieurs de Maurepas and de Vergennes wished to get them out of his hands, as they were afraid he would print them. This eccentric being had long solicited permission to return to France; but it was necessary to find a way of sparing the family he had offended the insult they would see in his return; he was therefore made to resume the costume of that sex Vol. 3 Memoirs — 5 132 THE MEMOIRS OF to which in France everything is pardoned. The de- sire to see his native land once more determined him to submit to the condition, but he revenged himself by combining the long train of his gown and the three deep ruffles on his sleeves with the attitude and con- versation of a grenadier, which made him very dis- agreeable company. At last, the event so long desired by the Queen, and by all those who wished her well, took place; her Majesty became enceinte. The King was in ec- stasies. Never was there a more united or happier couple. The disposition of Louis XVI. entirely altered, and became prepossessing and conciliatory; and the Queen was amply compensated for the uneasi- ness which the King's indifference during the early part of their union had caused her. The summer of 1778 was extremely hot. July and August passed, but the air was not cooled by a single storm. The Queen spent whole days in close rooms, and could not sleep until she had breathed the fresh night air, walking with the Princesses and her brothers upon the terrace under her apartments. These promenades at first gave rise to no remark; but it occurred to some of the party to enjoy the music of wind instruments during these fine summer nights. The musicians belonging to the chapel were ordered to perform pieces suited to instruments of that description, upon steps constructed in the middle of the garden. The Queen, seated on one of the terrace benches, enjoyed the effect of this music, surrounded by all the royal family with the excep- tion of the King, who joined them but twice, disliking to change his hour of going to bed. Nothing could be more innocent than these parties; yet Paris, France, nay, all Europe, were soon canvass- ing them in a manner most disadvantageous to the MARIE "ANTOINETTE 133 reputation of Marie Antoinette. It is true that all the inhabitants of Versailles enjoyed these serenades, and that there was a crowd near the spot from eleven at night until two or three in the morning. The windows of the ground floor occupied by Monsieur and Madame were kept open, and the terrace was perfectly well lighted by the numerous wax candles burning in the two apartments. Lamps were like- wise placed in the garden, and the lights of the or- chestra illuminated the rest of the place. I do not know whether a few incautious women might not have ventured farther, and wandered to the bottom of the park; it may have been so; but the Queen, Madame, and the Comtesse d'Artois were always arm-in-arm, and never left the terrace. The Princesses were not remarkable when seated on the benches, being dressed in cambric muslin gowns, with large straw hats and muslin veils, a costume univer- sally adopted by women at that time; but when standing up their different figures always distin- guished them; and the persons present stood on one side to let them pass. It is true that when they seated themselves upon the benches private individ- uals would sometimes, to their great amusement, sit down by their side. A young clerk in the War Department, either not knowing or pretending not to know the Queen, spoke to her of the beauty of the night, and the delightful effect of the music. The Queen, fancying she was not recognised, amused herself by keeping up the incognito, and they talked of several private families of Versailles, consisting of persons belonging to the King's household or her own. After a few minutes the Queen and Princesses rose to walk, and on leav- ing the bench curtsied to the clerk. The young man knowing, or having subsequently discovered, that he 134 THE MEMOIRS OF had been conversing with the Queen, boasted of it in his office. He was merely desired to hold his tongue; and so little attention did he excite that the Revo- lution found him still only a clerk. Another evening one of Monsieur's body-guard seated himself near the Princesses, and, knowing them, left the place where he was sitting, and placed himself before the Queen, to tell her that he was very for- tunate in being able to seize an opportunity of implor- ing the kindness of his sovereign; that he was "so- liciting at Court " — at the word soliciting the Queen and Princesses rose hastily and withdrew into Ma- dame's apartment. I was at the Queen's residence that day. She talked of this little occurrence all the time of her concher; though she only complained that one of Monsieur's guards should have had the ef- frontery to speak to her. Her Majesty added that he ought to have respected her incognito; and that that was not the place where he should have ventured to make a request. Madame had recognised him, and talked of making a complaint to his captain; the Queen opposed it, attributing his error to his igno- rance and provincial origin. The most scandalous libels were based on these two insignificant occurrences, which I have related with scrupulous exactness. Nothing could be more false than those calumnies. It must be confessed, however, that such meetings were liable to ill consequences. I ventured to say as much to the Queen, and informed her that one evening, when her Majesty beckoned to me to go and speak to her, I thought I recognised on the bench on which she was sitting two women deeply veiled, and keeping profound silence; that those women were the Comtesse du Barry and her sister-in- law; and that my suspicions were confirmed, when, at a few paces from the seat, and nearer to her Maj- MARIE ANTOINETTE 135 esty, I met a tall footman belonging to Madame du Barry, whom I had seen in her service all the time she resided at Court. My advice was disregarded. Misled by the pleasure she found in these promenades, and secure in the con- sciousness of blameless conduct, the Queen would not see the lamentable results which must necessarily fol- low. This was very unfortunate; for besides the mor- tifications they brought upon her, it is highly probable that they prompted the vile plot which gave rise to the Cardinal de Rohan's fatal error. Having enjoyed these evening promenades about a month, the Queen ordered a private concert within the colonnade which contained the group of Pluto and Proserpine. Sentinels were placed at all the entrances, and ordered to admit within the colonnade only such persons as should produce tickets signed by my father-in-law. A fine concert was performed there by the musicians of the chapel and the female musi- cians belonging to the Queen's chamber. The Queen went with Mesdames de Polignac, de Chalon, and d'Andlau, and Messieurs de Polignac, de Coigny, de Besenval, and de Vaudreuil; there were also a few equerries present. Her Majesty gave me permission to attend the concert with some of my female rela- tions. There was no music upon the terrace. The crowd of inquisitive people, whom the sentinels kept at a distance from the enclosure of the colonnade, went away highly discontented; the small number of persons admitted no doubt occasioned jealousy, and gave rise to offensive comments which were caught up by the public with avidity. I do not pretend to apolo- gise for the kind of amusements with which the Queen indulged herself during this and the following sum- mer; the consequences were so lamentable that the error was no doubt very great; but what I have said 136 THE MEMOIRS OF respecting - the character of these promenades may be relied on as true. When the season for evening walks was at an end, odious couplets were circulated in Paris; the Queen was treated in them in the most insulting manner; her situation ranked among her enemies persons at- tached to the only prince who for several years had appeared likely to give heirs to the crown. People uttered the most inconsiderate language; and those improper conversations took place in societies wherein the imminent danger of violating to so criminal an extent both truth and the respect due to sovereigns ought to have been better understood. A few days before the Queen's confinement a whole volume of manuscript songs, concerning her and all the ladies about her remarkable for rank or station, was thrown down in the oeil-de-bccuf. This manuscript was im- mediately put into the hands of the King, who was highly incensed at it, and said that he had himself been at those promenades; that he had seen nothing connected with them but what was perfectly harm- less; that such songs would disturb the harmony of twenty families in the Court and city; that it was a capital crime to have made any against the Queen herself; and that he wished the author of the infa- mous libels to be discovered and punished. A fort- night afterwards it was known publicly that the verses were by M. Champcenetz de Riquebourg, who was not even reprimanded. I knew for a certainty that the King spoke to M. de Maurepas, before two of his most confidential serv- ants, respecting the risk which he saw the Queen ran from these night walks upon the terrace of Versailles, which the public ventured to censure thus openly, and that the old minister had the cruelty to advise that she should be suffered to go on; she possessed talent; her MARIE ANTOINETTE 137 friends were very ambitious, and longed to see her take a part in public affairs; and to let her acquire the reputation of levity would do no harm. M. de Vergennes was as hostile to the Queen's influence as M. de Maurepas. It may therefore be fairly pre- sumed, since the Prime Minister durst point out to his King an advantage to be gained by the Queen's discrediting herself, that he and M. de Vergennes employed all means within the reach of powerful ministers in order to ruin her in the opinion of the public. The Queen's accouchement approached; Te Dennis were sung and prayers offered up in all the cathe- drals. On the nth of December, 1778, the royal family, the Princes of the blood, and the great offi- cers of State passed the night in the rooms adjoining the Queen's bedchamber. Madame, the King's daugh- ter, came into the world before mid-day on the 19th of December. The etiquette of allowing all persons indiscriminately to enter at the moment of the deliv- ery of a queen was observed with such exaggeration that when the accoucheur said aloud, " La Reine va s'accoucher," the persons who poured into the chamber were so numerous that the rush nearly destroyed the Queen. During the night the King had taken the precaution to have the enormous tapestry screens which surrounded her Majesty's bed secured with cords; but for this they certainly would have been thrown down upon her. It was impossible to move about the chamber, which was filled with so motley a crowd that one might have fancied himself in some place of public amusement. Two Savoyards got upon the furniture for a better sight of the Queen, who was placed opposite the fireplace. The noise and the sex of the infant, with which the Queen was made acquainted by a signal previ- 138 MARIE ANTOINETTE ously agreed on, as it is said, with the Princesse de Lamballe, or some error of the accoucheur, brought on symptoms which threatened fatal consequences; the accoucheur exclaimed, " Give her air — warm water — she must be bled in the foot ! " The win- dows were stopped up; the King opened them with a strength which his affection for the Queen gave him at the moment. They were of great height and pasted over with strips of paper all round. The basin of hot water not being brought quickly enough, the accoucheur desired the chief surgeon to use his lancet without waiting for it. He did so; the blood streamed out freely, and the Queen opened her eyes. The Prin- cesse de Lamballe was carried through the crowd in a state of insensibility. The valets de chambre and pages dragged out by the collar such inconsiderate persons as would not leave the room. This cruel custom was abolished afterwards. The Princes of the family, the Princes of the blood, the chancellor, and the ministers are surely sufficient to attest the legitimacy of an hereditary prince. The Queen was snatched from the very jaws of death; she was not conscious of having been bled, and on being replaced in bed asked why she had a linen bandage upon her foot. The delight which succeeded the moment of fear was equally lively and sincere. We were all embrac- ing each other, and shedding tears of joy. The Comte d'Esterhazy and the Prince de Poix, to whom I was the first to announce that the Queen was restored to life, embraced me in the midst of the cabinet of nobles. We little imagined, in our happiness at her escape from death, for how much more terrible a fate our beloved Princess was reserved. CHAPTER X DURING the alarm for the life of the Queen, regret at not possessing an heir to the throne was not even thought of. The King himself was wholly occupied with the care of preserving an adored wife. The young Princess was presented to her mother. " Poor little one," said the Queen, " you were not wished for, but you are not on that account less dear to me. A son would have been rather the property of the State. You shall be mine; you shall have my undivided care, shall share all my happiness, and console me in all my troubles." The King despatched a courier to Paris, and wrote letters himself to Vienna, by the Queen's bedside; and part of the rejoicings ordered took place in the capital. A great number of attendants watched near the Queen during the first nights of her confinement. This custom distressed her; she knew how to feel for others, and ordered large armchairs for her women, the backs of which were capable of being let down by springs, and which served perfectly well instead of beds. M. de Lassone, the chief physician, the chief sur- geon, the chief apothecary, the principal officers of the buttery, etc., were likewise nine nights without going to bed. The royal children were watched for a long time, and one of the women on duty remained, nightly, up and dressed, during the first three years from their birth. 139 i 4 o THE MEMOIRS OF The Queen made her entry into Paris for the churching. One hundred maidens were portioned and married at Notre-Dame. There were few popu- lar acclamations, but her Majesty was perfectly well received at the Opera. A few days after the Queen's recovery from her confinement, the Cure of the Magdelaine de la Cite at Paris wrote to M. Campan and requested a private interview with him; it was to desire he would deliver into the hands of the Queen a little box containing her wedding ring, with this note written by the Cure: " I have received under the seal of confession the ring which I send to your Majesty; with an avowal that it was stolen from you in 1771, in order to be used in sorceries, to prevent your having any children." On seeing her ring again the Queen said that she had in fact lost it about seven years before, while washing her hands, and that she had resolved to use no en- deavour to discover the superstitious woman who had done her the injury. The Queen's attachment to the Comtesse Jules in- creased every day; she went frequently to her house at Paris, and even took up her own abode at the Cha- teau de la Muette to be nearer during her confine- ment. She married Mademoiselle de Polignac, when scarcely thirteen years of age, to M. de Grammont, who, on account of this marriage, was made Due de Guiche, and captain of the King's Guards, in rever- sion after the Due de Villeroi. The Duchesse de Civrac, Madame Victoire's dame d'honneur, had been promised the place for the Due de Lorges, her son. The number of discontented families at Court increased. The title of favourite was too openly given to the Comtesse Jules by her friends. The lot of the favour- ite of a queen is not, in France, a happy one; the MARIE ANTOINETTE 141 favourites of kings are treated, out of gallantry, with truch greater indulgence. A short time after the birth of Madame the Queen became again enceinte; she had mentioned it only to the King, to her physician, and to a few persons hon- oured with her intimate confidence, when, having over- exerted her strength in pulling up one of the glasses of her carriage, she felt that she had hurt herself, and eight days afterwards she miscarried. The King spent the whole morning at her bedside, consoling her, and manifesting the tenderest concern for her. The Queen wept exceedingly; the King took her affectionately in his arms, and mingled his tears with hers. The King enjoined silence among the small number of persons who were informed of this unfor- tunate occurrence; and it remained generally un- known. These particulars furnish an accurate idea of the manner in which this august couple lived together. The Empress Maria Theresa did not enjoy the hap- piness of seeing her daughter give an heir to the crown of France. That illustrious Princess died at the close of 1780, after having proved by her example that, as in the instance of Queen Blanche, the talents of a sovereign might be blended with the virtues of a pious princess. The King was deeply affected at the death of the Empress; and on the arrival of the courier from Vienna said that he could not bring him- self to afflict the Queen by informing her of an event which grieved even him so much. His Majesty thought the Abbe de Vermond, who had possessed the confidence of Maria Theresa during his stay at Vienna, the most proper person to discharge this painful duty. He sent his first valet de chambre, M. de Chamilly, to the Abbe on the evening of the day he received the despatches from Vienna, to order him to come the next day to the Queen before her break- 142 THE MEMOIRS OF fast hour, to acquit himself discreetly of the afflicting commission with which he was charged, and to let his Majesty know the moment of his entering the Queen's chamber. It was the King's intention to be there precisely a quarter of an hour after him, and he was punctual to his time; he was announced; the Abbe came out; and his Majesty said to him, as he drew up at the door to let him pass, " I thank you, Mon- sieur l'Abbe, for the service you have just done me." This was the only time during nineteen years that the King spoke to him. Within an hour after learning the event the Queen put on temporary mourning, while waiting until her Court mourning should be ready; she kept herself shut up in her apartments for several days; went out only to mass; saw none but the royal family; and received none but the Princesse de Lamballe and the Duchesse de Polignac. She talked incessantly of the courage, the misfortunes, the successes, and the virtues of her mother. The shroud and dress in which Maria Theresa was to be buried, made entirely by her own hands, were found ready prepared in one of her closets. She often regretted that the numer- ous duties of her august mother had prevented her from watching in person over the education of her daughters; and modestly said that she herself would have been more worthy if she had had the good for- tune to receive lessons directly from a sovereign so enlightened and so deserving of admiration. The Queen told me one day that her mother was left a widow at an age when her beauty was yet striking; that she was secretly informed of a plot laid by her three principal ministers to make them- selves agreeable to her; of a compact made between them, that the losers should not feel any jealousy towards him who should be fortunate enough to gain MARIE ANTOINETTE 143 his sovereign's heart; and that they had sworn that the successful one should be always the friend of the other two. The Empress being assured of this scheme, one day after the breaking up of the council over which she had presided, turned the conversation upon the subject of female sovereigns, and the duties of their sex and rank; and then applying her general reflections to herself in particular, told them that she hoped to guard herself all her life against weaknesses of the heart; but that if ever an irresistible feeling should make her alter her resolution, it should be only in favour of a man proof against ambition, not engaged in State affairs, but attached only to a pri- vate life and its calm enjoyments, — in a word, if her heart should betray her so far as to lead her to love a man invested with any important office, from the moment he should discover her sentiments he would forfeit his place and his influence with the public. This was sufficient; the three ministers, more ambi- tious than amorous, gave up their projects for ever. On the 22d of October, 1781, the Queen gave birth to a Dauphin. So deep a silence prevailed in the room that the Queen thought her child was a daughter; but after the Keeper of the Seals had declared the sex of the infant, the King went up to the Queen's bed, and said to her, " Madame, you have fulfilled my wishes and those of France : you are the mother of a Dauphin." The King's joy was bound- less; tears streamed from his eyes; he gave his hand to every one present; and his happiness carried away his habitual reserve. Cheerful and affable, he was incessantly taking occasion to introduce the words, " my son," or " the Dauphin." As soon as the Queen was in bed, she wished to see the long-looked-for infant. The Princesse de Guemenee brought him to 144 THE MEMOIRS OF her. The Queen said there was no need for com- mending him to the Princess, but in order to enable her to attend to him more freely, she would herself share the care of the education of her daughter. When the Dauphin was settled in his apartment, he received the customary homages and visits. The Due d'Angouleme, meeting his father at the entrance of the Dauphin's apartment, said to him, " Oh, papa! how little my cousin is! " " The day will come when you will think him great enough, my dear," answered the Prince, almost involuntarily. The birth of the Dauphin appeared to give joy to all classes. Men stopped one another in the streets, spoke without being acquainted, and those who were acquainted embraced each other. In the birth of a legitimate heir to the sovereign every man beholds a pledge of prosperity and tranquillity. The rejoicings were splendid and ingenious. The artificers and tradesmen of Paris spent considerable sums in order to go to Versailles in a body, with their various insignia. Almost every troop had music with it. When they arrived at the court of the palace, they there arranged themselves so as to present a most interesting living picture. Chimney-sweepers, quite as well dressed as those that appear upon the stage, carried an ornamented chimney, at the top of which was perched one of the smallest of their fra- ternity. The chairmen carried a sedan highly gilt, in which were to be seen a handsome nurse and a little Dauphin. The butchers made their appearance with their fat ox. Cooks, masons, blacksmiths, all trades were on the alert. The smiths hammered away upon an anvil, the shoemakers finished off a little pair of boots for the Dauphin, and the tailors a little suit of the uniform of his regiment. The King remained a long time upon a balcony to enjoy MARIE ANTOINETTE 145 the sight. The whole Court was delighted with it. So general was the enthusiasm that (the police not having carefully examined the procession) the grave- diggers had the imprudence to send their deputation also, with the emblematic devices of their ill-omened occupation. They were met by the Princesse Sophie, the King's aunt, who was thrilled with horror at the sight, and entreated the King to have the audacious fellows driven out of the procession, which was then drawing up on the terrace. The dames de la halle came to congratulate the Queen, and were received with the suitable ceremonies. Fifty of them appeared dressed in black silk gowns, the established full dress of their order, and almost all wore diamonds. The Princesse de Chimay went to the door of the Queen's bedroom to receive three of these ladies, who were led up to the Queen's bed. One of them addressed her Majesty in a speech written by M. de la Harpe. It was set down on the inside of a fan, to which the speaker repeatedly referred, but without any embarrassment. She was handsome, and had a remarkably fine voice. The Queen was affected by the address, and answered it with great affability, — wishing a distinction to be made between these women and the poissardes, who always left a disagreeable impression on her mind. The King ordered a substantial repast for all these women. One of his Majesty's maitres d' hotel, wear- ing his hat, sat as president and did the honours of the table. The public were admitted,, and numbers of people had the curiosity to go. The Gardes-du-Corps obtained the King's permis- sion to give the Queen a dress ball in the great hall of the Opera at Versailles. Her Majesty opened the ball in a minuet with a private selected by the corps, to whom the King granted the baton of an exempt. 146 THE MEMOIRS OF The fete was most splendid. All then was joy, hap- piness, and peace. The Dauphin was a year old when the Prince de Guemenee's bankruptcy compelled the Princess, his wife, who was governess to the children of France, to resign her situation. The Queen was at La Muette for the inoculation of her daughter. She sent for me, and condescended to say she wished to converse with me about a scheme which delighted her, but in the execution of which she foresaw some inconveniences. Her plan was to appoint the Duchesse de Polignac to the office lately held by the Princesse de Guemenee. She saw with extreme pleasure the facilities which this appointment would give her for superintending the education of her children, without running any risk of hurting the pride of the governess; and that it would bring together the objects of her warmest affections, — her children and her friend. " The friends of the Duchesse de Polignac," continued the Queen, " will be gratified by the splendour and importance conferred by the employment. As to the Duchess, I know her; the place by no means suits her simple and quiet habits, nor the sort of indolence of her disposition. She will give me the greatest possible proof of her devotion if she yields to my wish." The Queen also spoke of the Princesse de Chimay and the Duchesse de Duras, whom the public pointed out as fit for the post ; but she thought the Princesse de Chimay's piety too rigid; and as to the Duchesse de Duras, her wit and learning quite frightened her. What the Queen dreaded as the consequence of her selection of the Duchesse de Polignac was principally the jealousy of the courtiers; but she showed so lively a desire to see her scheme executed that I had no doubt she would soon set at naught all the obstacles she discovered. MARIE ANTOINETTE 147 I was not mistaken; a few days afterwards the Duchess was appointed governess. The Queen's object in sending for me was no doubt to furnish me with the means of explaining the feel- ings which induced her to prefer a governess disposed by friendship to suffer her to enjoy all the privileges of a mother. Her Majesty knew that I saw a great deal of company. The Queen frequently dined with the Duchess after having been present at the King's private dinner. Sixty-one thousand francs were therefore added to the salary of the governess as a compensation for this increase of expense. The Queen was tired of the excursions to Marly, and had no great difficulty in setting the King against them. He did not like the expense of them, for everybody was entertained there gratis. Louis XIV. had established a kind of parade upon these excur- sions, differing from that of Versailles, but still more annoying. Card and supper parties occurred every day, and required much dress. On Sundays and holi- days the fountains played, the people were admitted into the gardens, and there was as great a crowd as at the fetes of St. Cloud. Every age has its peculiar colouring; Marly showed that of Louis XIV. even more than Versailles. Everything in the former place appeared to have been produced by the magic power of a fairy's wand. Not the slightest trace of all this splendour remains; the revolutionary spoilers even tore 'up the pipes which served to supply the fountains. Perhaps a brief description of this palace and the usages estab- lished there by Louis XIV. may be acceptable. The very extensive gardens of Marly ascended almost imperceptibly to the Pavilion of the Sun, which was occupied only by the King and his family. 148 THE MEMOIRS OF The pavilions of the twelve zodiacal signs bounded the two sides of the lawn. They were connected by bowers impervious to the rays of the sun. The pavilions nearest to that of the sun were reserved for the Princes of the blood and the ministers; the rest were occupied by persons holding superior offices at Court, or invited to stay at Marly. Each pavilion was named after fresco paintings, which covered its walls, and which had been executed by the most celebrated artists of the age of Louis XIV. On a line with the upper pavilion there was on the left a chapel; on the right a pavilion called La Perspec- tive, which concealed a long suite of offices, containing a hundred lodging-rooms intended for the persons be- longing to the service of the Court, kitchens, and spa- cious dining-rooms, in which more than thirty tables were splendidly laid out. During half of Louis XV.'s reign the ladies still wore the habit de cour de Marly, so named by Louis XIV., and which differed little from that devised for Versailles. The French gown, gathered in the back, and with great hoops, replaced this dress, and con- tinued to be worn till the end of the reign of Louis XVI. The diamonds, feathers, rouge, and embroi- dered stuffs spangled with gold, effaced all trace of a rural residence; but the people loved to see the splendour of their sovereign and a brilliant Court glit- tering in the shades of the woods. After dinner, and before the hour for cards, the Queen, the Princesses, and their ladies, paraded among the clumps of trees, in little carriages, beneath cano- pies richly embroidered with gold, drawn by men in the King's livery. The trees planted by Louis XIV. were of prodigious height, which, however, was sur- passed in several of the groups by fountains of the clearest water; while, among others, cascades over MARIE ANTOINETTE 149 white marble, the waters of which, met by the sun- beams, looked like draperies of silver gauze, formed a contrast to the solemn darkness of the groves. In the evening nothing more was necessary for any well-dressed man to procure admission to the Queen's card parties than to be named and presented, by some officer of the Court, to the gentleman usher of the card-room. This room, which was very large, and of octagonal shape, rose to the top of the Italian roof, and terminated in a cupola furnished with balconies, in which ladies who had not been presented easily obtained leave to place themselves, and enjoy the sight of the brilliant assemblage. Though not of the number of persons belonging to the Court, gentlemen admitted into this salon might request one of the ladies seated with the Queen at lansquenet or faro to bet upon her cards with such gold or notes as they presented to her. Rich peo- ple and the gamblers of Paris did not miss one of the evenings at the Marly salon, and there were always considerable sums won and lost. Louis XVI. hated high play, and very often showed displeasure when the loss of large sums was mentioned. The fashion of wearing a black coat without being in mourning had not then been introduced, and the King gave a few of his coups de boutoir to certain chevaliers de St. Louis, dressed in this manner, who came to venture two or three louis, in the hope that fortune would favour the handsome duchesses who deigned to place them on their cards. Singular contrasts are often seen amidst the gran- deur of courts. In order to manage such high play at the Queen's faro table, it was necessary to have a banker provided with large sums of money; and this necessity placed at the table, to which none but the highest titled persons were admitted in general, not 150 THE MEMOIRS OF only M. de Chalabre, who was its banker, but also a retired captain of foot, who officiated as his second. A word, trivial, but perfectly appropriate to express the manner in which the Court was attended there, was often heard. Gentlemen presented at Court, who had not been invited to stay at Marly, came there not- withstanding, as they did to Versailles, and returned again to Paris; under such circumstances, it was said such a one had been to Marly only en polisson; and it appeared odd to hear a captivating marquis, in an- swer to the inquiry whether he was of the royal party at Marly, say, " No, I am only here en polisson;" meaning simply " I am here on the footing of all those whose nobility is of a later date than 1400." The Marly excursions were exceedingly expensive to the King. Besides the superior tables, those of the almoners, equerries, maitres d' hotel, etc., were all supplied with such a degree of magnificence as to allow of inviting strangers to them; and almost all the visitors from Paris were boarded at the expense of the Court. The personal frugality of the unfortunate Prince who sank beneath the weight of the national debts thus favoured the Queen's predilection for her Petit Trianon; and for five or six years preceding the Revo- lution the Court very seldom visited Marly. The King, always attentive to the comfort of his family, gave Mesdames, his aunts, the use of the Cha- teau de Bellevue, and afterwards purchased the Prin- cesse de Guemenee's house, at the entrance to Paris, for Elisabeth. The Comtesse de Provence bought a small house at Montreuil; Monsieur already had Brunoy; the Comtesse d'Artois built Bagatelle; Ver- sailles became, in the estimation of all the royal family, the least agreeable of residences. They only fancied themselves at home in the plainest houses, MARIE ANTOINETTE 151 surrounded by English gardens, where they better enjoyed the beauties of nature. The taste for cas- cades and statues was entirely past. The Queen occasionally remained a whole month at Petit Trianon, and had established there all the ways of life in a chateau. She entered the sitting-room without driving the ladies from their pianoforte or embroidery. The gentlemen continued their bil- liards or backgammon without suffering her pres- ence to interrupt them. There was but little room in the small Chateau of Trianon. Madame Elisabeth accompanied the Queen there, but the ladies of honour and ladies of the palace had no establishment at Tri- anon. When invited by the Queen, they came from Versailles to dinner. The King and Princes came regularly to sup. A white gown, a gauze kerchief, and a straw hat were the uniform dress of the Prin- cesses. Examining all the manufactories of the ham- let, seeing the cows milked, and fishing in the lake delighted the Queen; and every year she showed in- creased aversion to the pompous excursions to Marly. The idea of acting comedies, as was then done in almost all country houses, followed on the Queen's wish to live at Trianon without ceremony. It was agreed that no young man except the Comte d'Artois should be admitted into the company of performers, and that the audience should consist only of the King, Monsieur, and the Princesses, who did not play; but in order to stimulate the actors a -little, the first boxes were to be occupied by the readers, the Queen's ladies, their sisters and daughters, making altogether about forty persons. The Queen laughed heartily at the voice of M. d'Adhemar, formerly a very fine one, but latterly become rather tremulous. His shepherd's dress in Colin, in the " Devin du Village," contrasted very 152 THE MEMOIRS OF ridiculously with his time of life, and the Queen said it would be difficult for malevolence itself to find any- thing to criticise in the choice of such a lover. The King was highly amused with these plays, and was present at every performance. Caillot, a celebrated actor, who had long quitted the stage, and Dazincourt, both of acknowledged good character, were selected to give lessons, the first in comic opera, of which the easier sorts were preferred, and the second in comedy. The office of hearer of rehearsals, prompter, and stage manager was given to my father-in-law. The Due de Fronsac, first gentleman of the chamber, was much hurt at this. He thought himself called upon to make serious remonstrances upon the subject, and wrote to the Queen, who made him the following an- swer : " You cannot be first gentleman when we are the actors. Besides, I have already intimated to you my determination respecting Trianon. I hold no court there, I live like a private person, and M. Cam- pan shall be always employed to execute orders rela- tive to the private fetes I choose to give there." This not putting a stop to the Duke's remonstrances, the King was obliged to interfere. The Duke continued obstinate, and insisted that he was entitled to man- age the private amusements as much as those which were public. It became absolutely necessary to end the argument in a positive manner. The diminutive Due de Fronsac never failed, when he came to pay his respects to the Queen at her toilet, to turn the conversation upon Trianon, in order to make some ironical remarks on my father-in-law, of whom, from the time of his appointment, he always spoke as " my colleague Campan." The Queen would shrug her shoulders, and say, when he was gone, " It is quite shocking to find so little a man in the son of the Marechal de Richelieu." MARIE ANTOINETTE 153 So long as no strangers were admitted to the per- formances they were but little censured; but the praise obtained by the performers made them look for a larger circle of admirers. The company, for a pri- vate company, was good enough, and the acting was applauded to the skies; nevertheless, as the audience withdrew, adverse criticisms were occasionally heard. The Queen permitted the officers of the Body Guards and the equerries of the King and Princes to be pres- ent at the plays. Private boxes were provided for some of the people belonging to the Court; a few more ladies were invited; and claims arose on all sides for the favour of admission. The Queen refused to admit the officers of the body guards of the Princes, the officers of the King's Cent Suisses, and many other persons, who were highly mortified at the refusal. While delight at having given an heir to the throne of the Bourbons, and a succession of fetes and amuse- ments, filled up the happy days of Marie Antoinette, the public was engrossed by the Anglo-American war. Two kings, or rather their ministers, planted and propagated the love of liberty in the new world; the King of England, by shutting his ears and his heart against the continued and respectful representations of subjects at a distance from their native land, who had become numerous, rich, and powerful, through the resources of the soil they had fertilised; and the King of France, by giving support to this people in rebellion against their ancient sovereign. Many young soldiers, belonging to the first families of the coun- try, followed La Fayette's example, and forsook lux- ury, amusement, and love, to go and tender their aid to the revolted Americans. Beaumarchais, secretly seconded by Messieurs de Maurepas and de Vergennes, obtained permission to send out supplies of arms and clothing. Franklin appeared at Court in the dress of 154 THE MEMOIRS OF an American agriculturist. His unpowdered hair, his round hat, his brown cloth coat formed a con- trast to the laced and emboidered coats and the powder and perfume of the courtiers of Versailles. This novelty turned the light heads of the French- women. Elegant entertainments were given to Doc- tor Franklin, who, to the reputation of a man of science, added the patriotic virtues which invested him with the character of an apostle of liberty. I was present at one of these entertainments, when the most beautiful woman out of three hundred was selected to place a crown of laurels upon the white head of the American philosopher, and two kisses upon his cheeks. Even in the palace of Versailles Franklin's medallion was sold under the King's eyes, in the ex- hibition of Sevres porcelain. The legend of this me- dallion was : " Eripuit coelo fulmen, sceptrumque tyrannis." The King never declared his opinion upon an en- thusiasm which his correct judgment no doubt led him to blame. The Queen spoke out more plainly about the part France was taking respecting the inde- pendence of the American colonies, and constantly opposed it. Far was she from foreseeing that a revolution at such a distance could excite one in which a misguided populace would drag her from her palace to a death equally unjust and cruel. She only saw something ungenerous in the method which France adopted of checking the power of England. However, as Queen of France, she enjoyed the sight of a whole people rendering homage to the prudence, courage, and good qualities of a young Frenchman; and she shared the enthusiasm inspired by the con- duct and military success of the Marquis de La Fayette. The Queen granted him several audiences MARIE ANTOINETTE 155 on his first return from America, and, until the 10th of August, on which day my house was plundered, I preserved some lines from Gaston and Bayard, in which the friends of M. de La Fayette saw the exact outline of his character, written by her own hand: " Why talk of youth, When all the ripe experience of the old Dwells with him? In his schemes profound and cool, He acts with wise precaution, and reserves For time of action his impetuous fire. To guard the camp, to scale the leaguered wall, Or dare the hottest of the fight, are toils That suit th' impetuous bearing of his youth; Yet like the gray-hair'd veteran he can shun The field of peril. Still before my eyes I place his bright example, for I love His lofty courage, and his prudent thought. Gifted like him, a warrior has no age." These lines had been applauded and encored at the French theatre; everybody's head was turned. There was no class of persons that did not heartily approve of the support given openly by the French Govern- ment to the cause of American independence. The constitution planned for the new nation was digested at Paris, and while liberty, equality, and the rights of man were commented upon by the Condorcets, Baillys, Mirabeaus, etc., the minister Segur published the King's edict, which, by repealing that of 1st Novem- ber, 1750, declared all officers not noble by four gen- erations incapable of filling the rank of captain, and denied all military rank to the roturiers, excepting sons of the chevaliers de St. Louis. The injustice and absurdity of this law was no doubt a secondary cause of the Revolution. To understand the despair and rage with which this law inspired the Tiers Etat one should have belonged to that honourable class. The provinces were full of roturier families, who for ages 156 THE MEMOIRS OF had lived as people of property upon their own do- mains, and paid the taxes. If these persons had sev- eral sons, they would place one in the King's serv- ice, one in the Church, another in the Order of Malta as a chevalier servant d' amies, and one in the magis- tracy; while the eldest preserved the paternal manor, and if he were situated in a country celebrated for wine, he would, besides selling his own produce, add a kind of commission trade in the wines of the canton. I have seen an individual of this justly respected class, who had been long employed in diplomatic business, and even honoured with the title of minister plenipo- tentiary, the son-in-law and nephew of colonels and town mayors, and, on his mother's side, nephew of a lieutenant-general with a cordon rouge, unable to in- troduce his sons as sous-lieutenants into a regiment of foot. Another decision of the Court, which could not be announced by an edict, was that all ecclesiastical bene- fices, from the humblest priory up to the richest abbey, should in future be appanages of the nobility. Being the son of a village surgeon, the Abbe de Vermond, who had great influence in the disposition of benefices, was particularly struck with the justice of this decree. During the absence of the Abbe in an excursion he made for his health, I prevailed on the Queen to write a postscript to the petition of a cure, one of my friends, who was soliciting a priory near his curacy, with the intention of retiring to it. I obtained it for him. On the Abbe's return he told me very harshly that I should act in a manner quite contrary to the King's wishes if I again obtained such a favour; that the wealth of the Church was for the future to be invariably devoted to the support of the poorer nobil- ity; that it was the interest of the State that it should MARIE ANTOINETTE 157 be so; and a plebeian priest, happy in a good curacy, had only to remain curate. Can we be astonished at the part shortly afterwards taken by the deputies of the Third Estate, when called to the States General? CHAPTER XI A BOUT the close of the last century several of /-\ the Northern sovereigns took a fancy for trav- ■*« * elling. Christian III., King of Denmark, vis- ited the Court of France in 1763, during the reign of Louis XV. We have seen the King of Sweden and Joseph II. at Versailles. The Grand Duke of Russia (afterwards Paul I.), son of Catherine II., and the Princess of Wurtemberg, his wife, likewise resolved to visit France. They travelled under the titles of the Comte and Comtesse du Nord. They were presented on the 20th of May, 1782. The Queen received them with grace and dignity. On the day of their arrival at Versailles they dined in private with the King and Queen. The plain, unassuming appearance of Paul I. pleased Louis XVI. He spoke to him with more confidence and cheerfulness than he had spoken to Joseph II. The Comtesse du Nord was not at first so successful with the Queen. This lady was of a fine height, very fat for her age, with all the German stiffness, well informed, and perhaps display- ing her acquirements with rather too much confi- dence. When the Comte and Comtesse du Nord were presented the Queen was exceedingly nervous. She withdrew into her closet before she went into the room where she was to dine with the illustrious travellers, and asked for a glass of water, confessing " she had just experienced how much more difficult it was to play the part of a queen in the presence of other sovereigns, or of princes born to become so, 158 MARIE ANTOINETTE 159 than before courtiers." She soon recovered from her confusion, and reappeared with ease and confidence. The dinner was tolerably cheerful, and the conversa- tion very animated. Brilliant entertainments were given at Court in honour of the King of Sweden and the Comte du Nord. They were received in private by the King and Queen, but they were treated with much more ceremony than the Emperor, and their Majesties always appeared to me to be very cautious before these personages. However, the King one day asked the Russian Grand Duke if it were true that he could not rely on the fidelity of any one of those who ac- companied him. The Prince answered him without hesitation, and before a considerable number of persons, that he should be very sorry to have with him even a poodle that was much attached to him, because his mother would take care to have it thrown into the Seine, with a stone round its neck, before he should leave Paris. This reply, which I myself heard, horrified me, whether it depicted the disposition of Catherine, or only expressed the Prince's prejudice against her. The Queen gave the Grand Duke a supper at Trianon, and had the gardens illuminated as they had been for the Emperor. The Cardinal de Rohan very indiscreetly ventured to introduce himself there without the Queen's knowledge. Having been treated with the utmost coolness ever since his return from Vienna, he had not dared to ask her himself for permission to see the illumination; but he per- suaded the porter of Trianon to admit him as soon as the Queen should have set off for Versailles, and his Eminence engaged to remain in the porter's lodge until all the carriages should have left the chateau. He did not keep his word, and while the porter was 160 THE MEMOIRS OF busy in the discharge of his duty, the Cardinal, who wore his red stockings and had merely thrown on a greatcoat, went down into the garden, and, with an air of mystery, drew up in two different places to see the royal family and suite pass by. Her Majesty was highly offended at this piece of boldness, and next day ordered the porter to be discharged. There was a general feeling of disgust at the Cardinal's conduct, and of commiseration towards the porter for the loss of his place. Affected at the misfortune of the father of a family, I obtained his forgiveness; and since that time I have often re- gretted the feeling which induced me to interfere. The notoriety of the discharge of the porter of Trianon, and the odium that circumstance would have fixed upon the Cardinal, would have made the Queen's dis- like to him still more publicly known, and would probably have prevented the scandalous and notorious intrigue of the necklace. The Queen, who was much prejudiced against the King of Sweden, received him very coldly. All that was said of the private character of that sovereign, his connection with the Comte de Vergennes, from the time of the Revolution of Sweden, in 1772, the character of his favourite Armfeldt, and the preju- dices of the monarch himself against the Swedes who were well received at the Court of Versailles, formed the grounds of this dislike. He came one day un- invited and unexpected, and requested to dine with the Queen. The Queen received him in the little closet, and desired me to send for her clerk of the kitchen, that she might be informed whether there was a proper dinner to set before Comte d'Haga, and add to it if necessary. The King of Sweden assured her that there would be enough for him; and I could not help smiling when I thought of the length MARIE ANTOINETTE 161 of the menu of the dinner of the King and Queen, not half of which would have made its appearance had they dined in private. The Queen looked significantly at me, and I withdrew. In the evening she asked me why I had seemed so astonished when she ordered me to add to her dinner, saying that I ought instantly to have seen that she was giving the King of Sweden a lesson for his presumption. I owned to her that the scene had appeared to me so much in the bourgeois style, that I involuntarily thought of the cutlets on the gridiron, and the omelette, which in families in humble circumstances serve to piece out short com- mons. She was highly diverted with my answer, and repeated it to the King, who also laughed heartily at it. The peace with England satisfied all classes of society interested in the national honour. The de- parture of the English commissary from Dunkirk, who had been fixed at that place ever since the shameful peace of 1763 as inspector of our navy, occasioned an ecstasy of joy. The Government communicated to the Englishman the order for his departure before the treaty was made public. But for that precaution the populace would have prob- ably committed some excess or other, in order to make the agent of English power feel the effects of the resentment which had constantly increased during his stay at that port. Those engaged in trade were the only persons dissatisfied with the treaty of 1783. That article which provided for the free admission of English goods annihilated at one blow the trade of Rouen and the other manufacturing towns through- out the kingdom. The English swarmed into Paris. A considerable number of them were presented at Court. The Queen paid them marked attention; doubtless she wished them to distinguish between 1 62 THE MEMOIRS OF the esteem she felt for their noble nation and the political views of the Government in the support it had afforded to the Americans. Discontent was, however, manifested at Court in consequence of the favour bestowed by the Queen on the English noble- men; these attentions were called infatuations. This was illiberal; and the Queen justly complained of such absurd jealousy. The journey to Fontainebleau and the winter at Paris and at Court were extremely brilliant. The spring brought back those amusements which the Queen began to prefer to the splendour of fetes. The most perfect harmony subsisted between the King and Queen; I never saw but one cloud between them. It was soon dispelled, and the cause of it is perfectly unknown to me. My father-in-law, whose penetration and experi- ence I respected greatly, recommended me, when he saw me placed in the service of a young queen, to shun all kinds of confidence. " It procures," said he, " but a very fleeting, and at the same time dangerous sort of favour; serve with zeal to the best of your judgment, but never do more than obey. Instead of setting your wits to work to discover why an order or a commission which may appear of consequence is given to you, use them to prevent the possibility of your knowing anything of the matter." I had oc- casion to act on this wise advice. One morning at Trianon I went into the Queen's chamber; there were letters lying upon the bed, and she was weeping bit- terly. Her tears and sobs were occasionally inter- rupted by exclamations of " Ah! that I were dead! — wretches! monsters! What have I done to them?" I offered her orange-flower water and ether. " Leave me," said she, "if you love me; it would be better to kill me at once." At this moment she threw her MARIE ANTOINETTE 163; arm over my shoulder and began weeping afresh. I saw that some weighty trouble oppressed her heart, and that she wanted a confidant. I suggested send- ing for the Duchesse de Polignac; this she strongly opposed. I renewed my arguments, and her opposi- tion grew weaker. I disengaged myself from her arms, and ran to the antechamber, where I knew that an outrider always waited, ready to mount and start at a moment's warning for Versailles. I ordered him to go full speed, and tell the Duchesse de Polignac that the Queen was very uneasy, and desired to see her instantly. The Duchess always had a carriage ready. In less than ten minutes she was at the Queen's door. I was the only person there, having been for- bidden to send for the other women. Madame de Polignac came in; the Queen held out her arms to her, the Duchess rushed towards her. I heard her sobs renewed and withdrew. A quarter of an hour afterwards the Queen, who had become calmer, rang to be dressed. I sent her woman in; she put on her gown and retired to her boudoir with the Duchess. Very soon afterwards the Comte d'Artois arrived from Compiegne, where he had been with the King. He eagerly inquired where the Queen was; remained half an hour with her and the Duchess; and on coming out told me the Queen asked for me. I found her seated on the couch by the side of her friend; her features had resumed their usual cheerful and gracious appearance. She held out her hand to me, and said to the Duchess, " I know I have made her so uncomfortable this morning that I must set her poor heart at ease." She then added, " You must have seen, on some fine sum- mer's day, a black cloud suddenly appear and threaten to pour down upon the country and lay it waste. The lightest wind drives it away, and the blue sky and Vol. 3 Memoirs — 6 1 64 THE MEMOIRS OF serene weather are restored. This is just the image of what has happened to me this morning." She afterwards told me that the King would return from Compiegne after hunting there, and sup with her; that I must send for her purveyor, to select with him from his bills of fare all such dishes as the King liked best; that she would have no others served up in the evening at her table; and that this was a mark of attention that she wished the King to notice. The Duchesse de Polignac also took me by the hand, and told me how happy she was that she had been with the Queen at a moment when she stood in need of a friend. I never knew what could have created in the Queen so lively and so transient an alarm; but I guessed from the particular care she took respecting the King that attempts had been made to irritate him against her; that the malice of her enemies had been promptly discovered and counteracted by the King's penetration and attachment; and that the Comte d'Artois had hastened to bring her intelligence of it. It was, I think, in the summer of 1787, during one of the Trianon excursions, that the Queen of Naples sent the Chevalier de Bressac to her Majesty on a secret mission relative to a projected marriage be- tween the Hereditary Prince, her son, and Madame, the King's daughter; in the absence of the lady of honour he addressed himself to me. Although he said a great deal to me about the close confidence with which the Queen of Naples honoured him, and about his letter of credit, I thought he had the air of an adventurer. He had, indeed, private letters for the Queen, and his mission was not feigned; he talked to me very rashly even before his admission, and entreated me to do all that lay in my power to dispose the Queen's mind in favour of his sovereign's MARIE ANTOINETTE 165 wishes; I declined, assuring him that it did not become me to meddle with State affairs. He endeav- oured, but in vain, to prove to me that the union contemplated by the Queen of Naples ought not to be looked upon in that light. I procured M. de Bressac the audience he desired, but without suffering myself even to seem acquainted with the object of his mission. The Queen told me what it was; she thought him a person ill-chosen for the occasion; and yet she thought that the Queen, her sister, had done wisely in not sending a man worthy to be avowed, — it being impossible that what she solicited should take place. I had an opportunity on this occasion, as indeed on many others, of judging to what extent the Queen valued and loved France and the dignity of our Court. She then told me that Madame, in marrying her cousin, the Due d'Angou- leme, would not lose her rank as daughter of the Queen; and that her situation would be far preferable to that of queen of any other country; and that there was nothing in Europe to be compared to the Court of France; and that it would be necessary, in order to avoid exposing a French Princess to feelings of deep regret, in case she should be married to a foreign prince, to take her from the palace of Versailles at seven years of age, and send her immediately to the Court in which she was to dwell; and that at twelve would be too late; for recollections and comparisons would ruin the happiness of all the rest of her life. The Queen looked upon the destiny of' her sisters as far beneath her own; and frequently mentioned the mortifications inflicted by the Court of Spain upon her sister, the Queen of Naples, and the necessity she was under of imploring the mediation of the King of France. She showed me several letters that she had received 1 66 THE MEMOIRS OF from the Queen of Naples relative to her differences with the Court of Madrid respecting the Minister Acton. She thought him useful to her people, inas- much as he was a man of considerable information and great activity. In these letters she minutely ac- quainted her Majesty with the nature of the affronts she had received, and represented Mr. Acton to her as a man whom malevolence itself could not suppose capable of interesting her otherwise than by his serv- ices. She had had to suffer the impertinences of a Spaniard named Las Casas, who had been sent to her by the King, her father-in-law, to persuade her to dismiss Mr. Acton from the business of the State, and from her intimacy. She complained bitterly to the Queen, her sister, of the insulting proceedings of this charge d'affaires, whom she told, in order to con- vince him of the nature of the feelings which at- tached her to Mr. Acton, that she would have portraits and busts of him executed by the most eminent artists of Italy, and that she would then send them to the King of Spain, to prove that nothing but the desire to retain a man of superior capacity had induced her to bestow on him the favour he enjoyed. This Las Casas dared to answer her that it would be useless trouble; that the ugliness of a man did not always render him displeasing; and that the King of Spain had too much experience not to know that there was no accounting for the caprices of a woman. This audacious reply filled the Queen of Naples with indignation, and her emotion caused her to mis- carry on the same day. In consequence of the medi- ation of Louis XVI. the Queen of Naples obtained complete satisfaction, and Mr. Acton continued Prime Minister. Among the characteristics which denoted the good- ness of the Queen, her respect for personal liberty MARIE ANTOINETTE 167 should have a place. I have seen her put up with the most troublesome importunities from people whose minds were deranged rather than have them arrested. Her patient kindness was put to a very disagreeable trial by an ex-councillor of the Bordeaux Parliament, named Castelnaux; this man declared himself the lover of the Queen, and was generally known by that appellation. For ten successive years did he follow the Court in all its excursions. Pale and wan, as people who are out of their senses usually are, his sinister appearance occasioned the most uncomfort- able sensations. During the two hours that the Queen's public card parties lasted, he would remain opposite her Majesty. He placed himself in the same manner before her at chapel, and never failed to be at the King's dinner or the dinner in public. At the theatre he invariably seated himself as near the Queen's box as possible. He always set off for Fontainebleau or St. Cloud the day before the Court, and when her Majesty arrived at her various resi- dences, the first person she met on getting out of her carriage was this melancholy madman, who never spoke to any one. When the Queen stayed at Petit Trianon the passion of this unhappy man became still more annoying. He would hastily swallow a morsel at some eating-house, and spend all the rest of the day, even when it rained, in going round and round the garden, always walking at the edge of the moat. The Queen frequently met him when she was either alone or with her children; and yet she would not suffer any violence to be used to relieve her from this intolerable annoyance. Having one day given M. de Seze permission to enter Trianon, she sent to desire he would come to me, and directed me to inform that celebrated advocate of M. de Castelnaux's derange- ment, and then to send for him that M. de Seze might 168 THE MEMOIRS OF have some conversation with him. He talked to him nearly an hour, and made considerable impression upon his mind; and at last M. de Castelnaux re- quested me to inform the Queen positively that, since his presence was disagreeable to her, he would retire to his province. The Queen was very much rejoiced, and desired me to express her full satisfaction to M. de Seze. Half an hour after M. de Seze was gone the unhappy madman was announced. He came to tell me that he withdrew his promise, that he had not sufficient command of himself to give up seeing the Queen as often as possible. This new determination was a disagreeable message to take to her Majesty; but how was I affected at hearing her say, " Well, let him annoy me ! but do not let him be deprived of the blessing of freedom." The direct influence of the Queen on affairs during the earlier years of the reign was shown only in her exertions to obtain from the King a revision of the decrees in two celebrated causes. It was contrary to her principles to interfere in matters of justice, and never did she avail herself of her influence to bias the tribunals. The Duchesse de Praslin, through a crimi- nal caprice, carried her enmity to her husband so far as to disinherit her children in favour of the family of M. de Guemenee. The Duchesse de Choiseul, who was warmly interested in this affair, one day entreated the Queen, in my presence, at least to condescend to ask the first president when the cause would be called on; the Queen replied that she could not even do that, for Tt would manifest an interest which it was her duty not to show. If the King had not inspired the Queen with a lively feeling of love, it is quite certain that she yielded him respect and affection for the goodness of his disposi- tion and the equity of which he gave so many proofs MARIE ANTOINETTE 169 throughout his reign. One evening she returned very late; she came out of the King's closet, and said to M. de Misery and myself, drying her eyes, which were filled with tears, " You see me weeping, but do not be uneasy at it: these are the sweetest tears that a wife can shed; they are caused by the impression which the justice and goodness of the King have made upon me; he has just complied with my request for a revision of the proceedings against Messieurs de Bellegarde and de Monthieu, victims of the Due d'Aiguillon's hatred to the Due de Choiseul. He has been equally just to the Due de Guines in his affair with Tort. It is a happy thing for a queen to be able to admire and esteem him who has admitted her to a participation of his throne; and as to you, I congratulate you upon your having to live under the sceptre of so virtuous a sovereign." The Queen laid before the King all the memorials of the Due de Guines, who, during his embassy to England, was involved in difficulties by a secretary, who speculated in the public funds in London on his own account, but in such a manner as to throw a sus- picion of it on the ambassador. Messieurs de Ver- gennes and Turgot, bearing but little good-will to the Due de Guines, who was the friend of the Due de Choiseul, were not disposed to render the ambassa- dor any service. The Queen succeeded in fixing the King's particular attention on this affair, and the in- nocence of the Due de Guines triumphed through the equity of Louis XVI. An incessant underhand war was carried on be- tween the friends and partisans of M. de Choiseul, who were called the Austrians, and those who sided with Messieurs d'Aiguillon, de Maurepas, and de Vergennes, who, for the same reason, kept up the intrigues carried on at Court and in Paris against the lyo THE MEMOIRS OF Queen. Marie Antoinette, on her part, supported those who had suffered in this political quarrel, and it was this feeling which led her to ask for a revision of the proceedings against Messieurs de Bellegarde and de Monthieu. The first, a colonel and inspector of artillery, and the second, proprietor of a foundry at St. Etienne, were, under the Ministry of the Due d'Aiguillon, condemned to imprisonment for twenty years and a day for having withdrawn from the arsenals of France, by order of the Due de Choiseul, a vast number of muskets, as being of no value except as old iron, while in point of fact the greater part of those muskets were immediately embarked and sold to the Americans. It appears that the Due de Choiseul imparted to the Queen, as grounds of de- fence for the accused, the political views which led him to authorise that reduction and sale in the manner in which it had been executed. It rendered the case of Messieurs de Bellegarde and de Monthieu more unfavourable that the artillery officer who made the reduction in the capacity of inspector was, through a clandestine marriage, brother-in-law of the owner of the foundry, the purchaser of the rejected arms. The innocence of the two prisoners was, neverthe- less, made apparent; and they came to Versailles with their wives and children to throw themselves at the feet of their benefactress. This affecting scene took place in the grand gallery, at the entrance to the Queen's apartment. She wished to restrain the women from kneeling, saying that they had only had justice done them; and that she ought to be congratu- lated upon the most substantial happiness attendant upon her station, that of laying such appeals before the King. On every occasion, when the Queen had to speak in public, she used the most appropriate and elegant MARIE ANTOINETTE 171 language, notwithstanding the difficulty a foreigner might be expected to experience. She answered all addresses herself, a custom which she learned at the Court of Maria Theresa. The Princesses of the House of Bourbon had long ceased to take the trouble of speaking in such cases. Madame Adelaide blamed the Queen for not doing as they did, assuring her that it was quite sufficient to mutter a few words that might sound like an answer, while the addressers, occupied with what they had themselves been saying, would always take it for granted that a proper answer had been returned. The Queen saw that idleness alone dictated such a proceeding, and that as the practice even of muttering a few words showed the necessity of answering in some way, it must be more proper to reply simply but clearly, and in the best style possible. Sometimes, indeed, when apprised of the subject of the address, she would write down her answer in the morning, not to learn it by heart, but in order to settle the ideas or sentiments she wished to introduce. The influence of the Comtesse de Polignac increased daily; and her friends availed themselves of it to ef- fect changes in the Ministry. The dismissal of M. de Montbarrey, a man without talents or character, was generally approved of. It was rightly attributed to the Queen. He had been placed in administration by M. de Maurepas, and maintained by his aged wife; both, of course, became more inveterate than ever against the Queen and the Polignac circle. The appointment of M. de Segur to the place of Minister of War, and of M. de Castries to that of Minister of Marine, were wholly the work of that circle. The Queen dreaded making ministers; her favourite often wept when the men of her circle compelled her to interfere. Men blame women for 172 THE MEMOIRS OF meddling in business, and yet in courts it is con- tinually the men themselves who make use of the influence of the women in matters with which the latter ought to have nothing to do. When M. de Segur was presented to the Queen on his new appointment, she said to me, " You have just seen a minister of my making. I am very glad, so far as regards the King's service, that he is appointed, for I think the selection a very good one; but I almost regret the part I have taken in it. I take a responsi- bility upon myself. I was fortunate in being free from any; and in order to relieve myself from this as much as possible I have just promised M. de Segur, and that upon my word of honour, not to back any petition, nor to hinder any of his operations by solicitations on behalf of my proteges." During the first administration of M. Necker, whose ambition had not then drawn him into schemes repugnant to his better judgment, and whose views appeared to the Queen to be very judicious, she in- dulged in hopes of the restoration of the finances. Knowing that M. de Maurepas wished to drive M. Necker to resign, she urged him to have patience until the death of an old man whom the King kept about him from a fondness for his first choice, and out of respect for his advanced age. She even went so far as to tell him that M. de Maurepas was always ill, and that his end could not be very distant. M. Necker would not wait for that event. The Queen's predic- tion was fulfilled. M. de Maurepas ended his days im- mediately after a journey to Fontainebleau in 1781. M. Necker had retired. He had been exasperated by a piece of treachery in the old minister, for which he could not forgive him. I knew something of this intrigue at the time; it has since been fully explained to me by Madame la Marechale de Beauvau. M. MARIE ANTOINETTE 173 Necker saw that his credit at Court was declining-, and fearing lest that circumstance should injure his financial operations, he requested the King to grant him some favour which might show the public that he had not lost the confidence of his sovereign. He concluded his letter by pointing out five requests — such an office, or such a mark of distinction, or such a badge of honour, and so on, and handed it to M. de Maurepas. The ors were changed into ands; and the King was displeased at M. Necker's ambition, and the assurance with which he displayed it. Madame la Marechale de Beauvau assured me that the Mare- chal de Castries saw the minute of M. Necker's letter, and that he likewise saw the altered copy. The interest which the Queen took in M. Necker died away during his retirement, and at last changed into strong prejudice against him. He wrote too much about the measures he would have pursued, and the benefits that would have resulted to the State from them. The ministers who succeeded him thought their operations embarrassed by the care that M. Necker and his partisans incessantly took to occupy the public with his plans; his friends were too ardent. The Queen discerned a party spirit in these combinations, and sided wholly with his enemies. After those inefficient comptrollers-general, Mes- sieurs Joly de Fleury and d'Ormesson, it became necessary to resort to a man of more acknowledged talent, and the Queen's friends, at that time combin- ing with the Comte d'Artois and with M. de Ver- gennes, got M. de Calonne appointed. The Queen was highly displeased, and her close intimacy with the Duchesse de Polignac began to suffer for this. Her Majesty, continuing to converse with me upon 174 THE MEMOIRS OF the difficulties she had met with in private life, told me that ambitious men without merit sometimes found means to gain their ends by dint of importunity, and that she had to blame herself for having procured M. d'Adhemar's appointment to the London embassy, merely because he teased her into it at the Duchess's house. She added, however, that it was at a time of perfect peace with the English; that the Ministry knew the inefficiency of M. d'Adhemar as well as she did, and that he could do neither harm nor good. Often in conversations of unreserved frankness the Queen owned that she had purchased rather dearly a piece of experience which would make her carefully watch over the conduct of her daughters-in-law, and that she would be particularly scrupulous about the qualifications of the ladies who might attend them; that no consideration of rank or favour should bias her in so important a choice. She attributed several of her youthful mistakes to a lady of great levity, whom she found in her palace on her arrival in France. She also determined to forbid the Princesses coming under her control the practice of singing with professors, and said, candidly, and with as much severity as her slanderers could have done, " I ought to have heard Garat sing, and never to have sung duets with him." The indiscreet zeal of Monsieur Augeard contrib- uted to the public belief that the Queen disposed of all the offices of finance. He had, without any author- ity for doing so, required the committee of fermiers- general to inform him of all vacancies, assuring them that they would be meeting the wishes of the Queen. The members complied, but not without murmuring. When the Queen became aware of what her secretary had done, she highly disapproved of it, caused her MARIE ANTOINETTE 175 resentment to be made known to the fermiers-gencral, and abstained from asking for appointments, — mak- ing only one request of the kind, as a marriage por- tion for one of her attendants, a young woman of good family. CHAPTER XII THE Queen did not sufficiently conceal the dis- satisfaction she felt at having been unable to prevent the appointment of M. de Calonne; she even one day went so far as to say at the Duchess's, in the midst of the partisans and protectors of that minister, that the finances of France passed alternately from the hands of an honest man without talent into those of a skilful knave. M. de Calonne was thus far from acting in concert with the Queen all the time that he continued in office; and, while dull verses were circulated about Paris describing the Queen and her favourite dipping at pleasure into the coffers of the comptroller-general, the Queen was avoiding all communication with him. During the long and severe winter of 1783-84 the King gave three millions of livres for the relief of the indigent. M. de Calonne, who felt the necessity of making advances to the Queen, caught at this opportunity of showing her respect and devotion. He offered to place in her hands one million of the three, to be distributed in her name and under her direction. His proposal was rejected; the Queen answered that the charity ought to be wholly dis- tributed in the King's name, and that she would this year debar herself of even the slightest enjoyments, in order to contribute all her savings to the relief of the unfortunate. The moment M. de Calonne left the closet the Queen sent for me : " Congratulate me, my dear," said she; " I have just escaped a snare, or at least a mat- 176 MARIE ANTOINETTE 177 ter which eventually might have caused me much regret." She related the conversation which had taken place word for word to me, adding, " That man will complete the ruin of the national finances. It is said that I placed him in his situation. The people are made to believe that I am extravagant; yet I have refused to suffer a sum of money from the royal treasury, although destined for the most laud- able purpose, even to pass through my hands." The Queen, making monthly retrenchments from the expenditure of her privy purse, and not having spent the gifts customary at the period of her confine- ment, was in possession of from five to six hundred thousand francs, her own savings. She made use of from two to three hundred thousand francs of this, which her first women sent to M. Lenoir, to the cures of Paris and Versailles, and to the Sceurs Hospita- lieres, and so distributed them among families in need. Desirous to implant in the breast of her daughter not only a desire to succour the unfortunate, but those qualities necessary for the due discharge of that duty, the Queen incessantly talked to her, though she was yet very young, about the sufferings of the poor dur- ing a season so inclement. The Princess already had a sum of from eight to ten thousand francs for char- itable purposes, and the Queen made her distribute part of it herself. Wishing to give her children yet another lesson of beneficence, she desired me on New Year's eve to get from Paris, as in other years, all the fashionable play- things, and have them spread out in her closet. Then taking her children by the hand, she showed them all the dolls and mechanical toys which were ranged there, and told them that she had intended to give them some handsome New Year's gifts, but that the cold made the poor so wretched that all her money i 7 3 THE MEMOIRS OF was spent in blankets and clothes to protect them from the rigour of the season, and in supplying them with bread; so that this year they would only have the pleasure of looking at the new playthings. When she returned with her children into her sitting-room, she said there was still an unavoidable expense to be incurred; that assuredly many mothers would at that season think as she did, — that the toyman must lose by it; and therefore she gave him fifty louis to repay him for the cost of his journey, and console him for having sold nothing. The purchase of St. Cloud, a matter very simple in itself, had, on account of the prevailing spirit, unfa- vourable consequences to the Queen. The palace of Versailles, pulled to pieces in the interior by a variety of new arrangements, and mu- tilated in point of uniformity by the removal of the ambassadors' staircase, and of the peristyle of col- umns placed at the end of the marble court, was equally in want of substantial and ornamental repair. The King therefore desired M. Micque to lay before him several plans for the repairs of the palace. He consulted me on certain arrangements analogous to some of those adopted in the Queen's establishment, and in my presence asked M. Micque how much money would be wanted for the execution of the whole work, and how many years he would be in completing it. I forget how many millions were mentioned : M. Micque replied that six years would be sufficient time if the Treasury made the necessary periodical advances with- out any delay. " And how many years shall you require," said the King, " if the advances are not punctually made?" "Ten, Sire," replied the archi- tect. " We must then reckon upon ten years," said his Majesty, " and put off this great undertaking until the year 1790; it will occupy the rest of the century." MARIE ANTOINETTE 179 The King afterwards talked of the depreciation of property which took place at Versailles whilst the Regent removed the Court of Louis XV. to the Tuile- ries, and said that he must consider how to prevent that inconvenience; it was the desire to do this that promoted the purchase of St. Cloud. The Queen first thought of it one day when she was riding out with the Duchesse de Polignac and the Comtesse Diane; she mentioned it to the King, who was much pleased with the thought, — the purchase confirming him in the intention, which he had entertained for ten years, of quitting Versailles. The King determined that the ministers, public officers, pages, and a considerable part of his stabling should remain at Versailles. Messieurs de Breteuil and de Calonne were instructed to treat with the Due d'Orleans for the purchase of St. Cloud; at first they hoped to be able to conclude the business by a mere exchange. The value of the Chateau de Choisy, de la Muette, and a forest was equivalent to the sum demanded by the House of Orleans; and in the ex- change which the Queen expected she only saw a sav- ing to be made instead of an increase of expense. By this arrangement the government of Choisy, in the hands of the Due de Coigny, and that of La Muette, in the hands of the Marechal de Soubise, would be suppressed. At the same time the two concierges, and all the servants employed in these two royal houses, would be reduced; but while the treaty was going forward Messieurs de Breteuil and de Calonne gave up the point of exchange, and some millions in cash were substituted for Choisy and La Muette. The Queen advised the King to give her St. Cloud, as a means of avoiding the establishment of a gov- ernor; her plan being to have merely a concierge there, by which means the governor's expenses would 180 THE MEMOIRS OF be saved. The King agreed, and St. Cloud was pur- chased for the Queen. She provided the same liver- ies for the porters at the gates and servants at the chateau as for those at Trianon. The concierge at the latter place had put up some regulations for the household, headed, " By order of the Queen." The same thing was done at St. Cloud. The Queen's livery at the door of a palace where it was expected none" but that of the King would be seen, and the words " By order of the Queen " at the head of the printed papers pasted near the iron gates, caused a great sensation, and produced a very unfortunate effect, not only among the common people, but also among persons of a superior class. They saw in it an attack upon the customs of monarchy, and cus- toms are nearly equal to laws. The Queen heard of this, but she thought that her dignity would be com- promised if she made any change in the form of these regulations, though they might have been altogether superseded without inconvenience. "My name is not out of place," said she, " in gardens belonging to my- self; I may give orders there without infringing on the rights of the State." This was her only answer to the representations which a few faithful servants ventured to make on the subject. The discontent of the Parisians on this occasion probably induced M. d'Espremenil, upon the first troubles about the Parliament, to say that it was impolitic and immoral to see palaces belonging to a Queen of France. The Queen was very much dissatisfied with the manner in which M. de Calonne had managed this matter. The Abbe de Vermond, the most active and persevering of that minister's enemies, saw with de- light that the expedients of those from whom alone new resources might be expected were gradually be- coming exhausted, because the period when the Arch- MARIE ANTOINETTE 181 bishop of Toulouse would be placed over the finances was thereby hastened. The royal navy had resumed an imposing attitude during the war for the independence of America; a glorious peace with England had compensated for the former attacks of our enemies upon the fame of France; and the throne was surrounded by numerous heirs. The sole ground of uneasiness was in the finances, but that uneasiness related only to the man- ner in which they were administered. In a word, France felt confident in its own strength and re- sources, when two events, which seem scarcely worthy of a place in history, but which have, nevertheless, an important one in that of the French Revolution, in- troduced a spirit of ridicule and contempt, not only against the highest ranks, but even against the most august personages. I allude to a comedy and a great swindling transaction. Beaumarchais had long possessed a reputation in certain circles in Paris for his wit and musical talents, and at the theatres for dramas more or less indiffer- ent, when his " Barbier de Seville " procured him a higher position among dramatic writers. His " Memoirs " against M. Goesman had amused Paris by the ridicule they threw upon a Parliament which was disliked; and his admission to an intimacy with M. de Maurepas procured him a degree of influence over important affairs. He then became ambitious of influencing public opinion by a kind of drama, in which established manners and customs should be held up to popular derision and the ridicule of the new philosophers. After several years of prosperity the minds of the French had become more generally critical; and when Beaumarchais had finished his monstrous but diverting " Mariage de Figaro," all people of any consequence were eager for the gratifi- 182 THE MEMOIRS OF cation of hearing it read, the censors having decided that it should not be performed. These readings of " Figaro " grew so numerous that people were daily heard to say, " I have been (or I am going to be) at the reading of Beaumarchais's play." The desire to see it performed became universal; an expression that he had the art to use compelled, as it were, the approbation of the nobility, or of persons in power, who aimed at ranking among the magnanimous; he made his " Figaro " say that " none but little minds dreaded little books." The Baron de Breteuil, and all the men of Madame de Polignac's circle, entered the lists as the warmest protectors of the comedy. Solicitations to the King became so pressing that his Majesty determined to judge for himself of a work which so much engrossed public attention, and de- sired me to ask M. Le Noir, lieutenant of police, for the manuscript of the " Mariage de Figaro." One morning I received a note from the Queen ordering me to be with her at three o'clock, and not to come without having dined, for she would detain me some time. When I got to the Queen's inner closet I found her alone with the King; a chair and a small table were ready placed opposite to them, and upon the table lay an enormous manuscript in several books. The King said to me, " There is Beaumarchais's comedy; you must read it to us. You will find sev- eral parts troublesome on account of the erasures and references. I have already run it over, but I wish the Queen to be acquainted with the work. You will not mention this reading to any one." I began. The King frequently interrupted me by praise or censure, which was always just. He fre- quently exclaimed, " That's in bad taste ; this man continually brings the Italian concetti on the stage." At that soliloquy of Figaro in which he attacks vari- MARIE ANTOINETTE 183 ous points of government, and especially at the tirade against State prisons, the King rose up and said, indig- nantly : 'That's detestable; that shall never be played; the Bastille must be destroyed before the license to act this play can be any other than an act of the most dangerous inconsistency. This man scoffs at every- thing that should be respected in a government." " It will not be played, then ? " said the Queen. "No, certainly," replied Louis XVI.; "you may rely upon that." Still it was constantly reported that " Figaro " was about to be performed; there were even wagers laid upon the subject; I never should have laid any my- self, fancying that I was better informed as to the probability than anybody else; if I had, however, I should have been completely deceived. The pro- tectors of Beaumarchais, feeling certain that they would succeed in their scheme of making his work public in spite of the King's prohibition, distributed the parts in the " Mariage de Figaro " among the actors of the Theatre Franc, ais. Beaumarchais had made them enter into the spirit of his characters, and they determined to enjoy at least one performance of this so-called chef d'ceuvre. The first gentlemen of the chamber agreed that M. de la Ferte should lend the theatre of the Hotel des Menus Plaisirs, at Paris, which was used for rehearsals of the opera; tickets were distributed to a vast number of leaders of so- ciety; and the day for the performance was fixed. The King heard of all this only on the very morning, and signed a lettre de cachet, which prohibited the performance. When the messenger who brought the order arrived, he found a part of the theatre al- ready filled with spectators, and the streets leading to the Hotel des Menus Plaisirs filled with carriages; 1 84 THE MEMOIRS OF the piece was not performed. This prohibition of the King's was looked upon as an attack on public liberty. The disappointment produced such discontent that the words oppression and tyranny were uttered with no less passion and bitterness at that time than during the days which immediately preceded the downfall of the throne. Beaumarchais was so far put off his guard by rage as to exclaim, " Well, gentlemen, he won't suffer it to be played here; but I swear it shall be played, — perhaps in the very choir of Notre- Dame ! " There was something prophetic in these words. It was generally insinuated shortly after- wards that Beaumarchais had determined to suppress all those parts of his work which could be obnoxious to the Government; and on pretence of judging of the sacrifices made by the author, M. de Vaudreuil ob- tained permission to have this far-famed " Mariage de Figaro " performed at his country house. M. Campan was asked there; he had frequently heard the work read, and did not now find the alterations that had been announced ; this he observed to several persons belong- ing to the Court, who maintained that the author had made all the sacrifices required. M. Campan was so astonished at these persistent assertions of an obvious falsehood that he replied by a quotation from Beau- marchais himself, and assuming the tone of Basilio in the " Barbier de Seville," he said, " Faith, gentlemen, I don't know who is deceived here; everybody is in the secret." They then came to the point, and begged him to tell the Queen positively that all which had been pronounced reprehensible in M. de Beau- marchais's play had been cut out. My father-in-law contented himself with replying that his situation at Court would not allow of his giving an opinion unless the Queen should first speak of the piece to him. The Queen said nothing to him about the matter. Shortly MARIE ANTOINETTE 185 afterwards permission to perform this play was at length obtained. The Queen thought the people of Paris would be finely tricked when they saw merely an ill-conceived piece, devoid of interest, as it must appear when deprived of its satire. Under the per- suasion that there was not a passage left capable of malicious or dangerous application, Monsieur attended the first performance in a public box. The mad en- thusiasm of the public in favour of the piece and Monsieur's just displeasure are well known. The author was sent to prison soon afterwards, though his work was extolled to the skies, and though the Court durst not suspend its performance. The Queen testified her displeasure against all who had assisted the author of the " Mariage de Figaro " to deceive the King into giving his consent that it should be represented. Her reproaches were more particularly directed against M. de Vaudreuil for hav- ing had it performed at his house. The violent and domineering disposition of her favourite's friend at last became disagreeable to her. One evening, on the Queen's return from the Duch- ess's, she desired her valet de chambre to bring her billiard cue into her closet, and ordered me to open the box that contained it. I took out the cue, broken in two. It was of ivory, and formed of one single elephant's tooth; the butt was of gold and very taste- fully wrought. " There," said she, " that is the way M. de Vaudreuil has treated a thing I valued highly. I had laid it upon the couch while I was talking to the Duchess in the salon; he had the assurance to make use of it, and in a fit of passion about a blocked ball, he struck the cue so violently against the table that he broke it in two. The noise brought me back into the billiard-room; I did not say a word to him, but my looks showed him how angry I was. He is the 1 86 MARIE ANTOINETTE more provoked at the accident, as he aspires to the post of Governor to the Dauphin. I never thought of him for the place. It is quite enough to have con- sulted my heart only in the choice of a governess; and I will not suffer that of a Governor to the Dau- phin to be at all affected by the influence of my friends. I should be responsible for it to the nation. The poor man does not know that my determination is taken; for I have never expressed it to the Duch- ess. Therefore, judge of the sort of an evening he must have passed!" CHAPTER XIII SHORTLY after the public mind had been thrown into agitation by the performance of the " Man- age de Figaro," an obscure plot, contrived by swindlers, and matured in a corrupted society, at- tacked the Queen's character in a vital point and assailed the majesty of the throne. I am about to speak of the notorious affair of the necklace purchased, as it was said, for the Queen by Cardinal de Rohan. I will narrate all that has come to my knowledge relating to this business; the most minute particulars will prove how little reason the Queen had to apprehend the blow by which she was threatened, and which must be attributed to a fatality that human providence could not have foreseen, but from which, to say the truth, she might have ex- tricated herself with more skill. I have already said that in 1774 the Queen pur- chased jewels of Bcehmer to the value of three hun- dred and sixty thousand francs, that she paid for them herself out of her own private funds, and that it required several years to enable her to complete the payment. The King afterwards presented her with a set of rubies and diamonds of a fine water, and sub- sequently with a pair of bracelets worth two hundred thousand francs. The Queen, after having her dia- monds reset in new patterns, told Bcehmer that she found her jewel case rich enough, and was not desir- ous of making any addition to it. Still, this jeweller busied himself for some years in forming a collection of the finest diamonds circulating in the trade, in 187 1 88 THE MEMOIRS OF order to compose a necklace of several rows, which he hoped to induce her Majesty to purchase; he brought it to M. Campan, requesting him to mention it to the Queen, that she might ask to see it, and thus be in- duced to wish to possess it. This M. Campan refused to do, telling him that he should be stepping out of the line of his duty were he to propose to the Queen an expense of sixteen hundred thousand francs, and that he believed neither the lady of honour nor the tirewoman would take upon herself to execute such a commission. Bcehmer persuaded the King's first gen- tleman for the year to show this superb necklace to his Majesty, who admired it so much that he himself wished to see the Queen adorned with it, and sent the case to her; but she assured him she should much re- gret incurring so great an expense for such an article, that she had already very beautiful diamonds, that jewels of that description were now worn at Court not more than four or five times a year, that the necklace must be returned, and that the money would be much better employed in building a man-of-war. Bcehmer, in sad tribulation at finding his expectations delusive, endeavoured for some time, it is said, to dispose of his necklace among the various Courts of Europe. A year after his fruitless attempts, Bcehmer again caused his diamond necklace to be offered to the King, proposing that it should be paid for partly by instalments, and partly in life annuities; this proposal was represented as highly advantageous, and the King, in my presence, mentioned the matter once more to the Queen. I remember the Queen told him that, if the bargain really was not bad, he might make it, and keep the necklace until the marriage of one of his children; but that, for her part, she would never wear it, being unwilling that the world should have to MARIE ANTOINETTE 189 reproach her with having coveted so expensive an article. The King replied that their children were too young to justify such an expense, which would be greatly increased by the number of years the dia- monds would remain useless, and that he would finally decline the offer. Bcehmer complained to everybody of his misfortune, and all reasonable people blamed him for collecting diamonds to so considerable an amount without any positive order for them. This man had purchased the office of jeweller to the Crown, which gave him some rights of entry at Court. After several months spent in ineffectual attempts to carry his point, and in idle complaints, he obtained an audience of the Queen, who had with her the young Princess, her daughter; her Majesty did not know for what purpose Bcehmer sought this audience, and had not the slightest idea that it was to speak to her again about an article twice refused by herself and the King. Bcehmer threw himself upon his knees, clasped his hands, burst into tears, and exclaimed, " Madame, I am ruined and disgraced if you do not purchase my necklace. I cannot outlive so many misfortunes. When I go hence I shall throw myself into the river." " Rise, Bcehmer," said the Queen, in a tone suffi- ciently severe to recall him to himself; " I do not like these rhapsodies; honest men have no occasion to fall on their knees to make their requests. If you were to destroy yourself I should regret you as a madman in whom I had taken an interest, but I should not be in any way responsible for that misfortune. Not only have I never ordered the article which causes your present despair, but whenever you have talked to me about fine collections of jewels I have told you that I should not add four diamonds to those which I already possessed. I told you myself that I declined iQO THE MEMOIRS OF taking the necklace; the King wished to give it to me, but I refused him also; never mention it to me again. Divide it and try to sell it piecemeal, and do not drown yourself. I am very angry with you for acting this scene of despair in my presence and before this child. Let me never see you behave thus again. Go." Bcehmer withdrew, overwhelmed with confu- sion, and nothing further was then heard of him. When Madame Sophie was born the Queen told me M. de Saint-James, a rich financier, had apprised her that Bcehmer was still intent upon the sale of his necklace, and that she ought, for her own satisfaction, to endeavour to learn what the man had done with it; she desired me the first time I should meet him to speak to him about it, as if from the interest I took in his welfare. I spoke to him about his necklace, and he told me he had been very fortunate, having sold it at Constantinople for the favourite sultana. I communicated this answer to the Queen, who was delighted with it, but could not comprehend how the Sultan came to purchase his diamonds in Paris. The Queen long avoided seeing Bcehmer, being fear- ful of his rash character; and her valet de chambre, who had the care of her jewels, made the necessary repairs to her ornaments unassisted. On the bap- tism of the Due d'Angouleme, in 1785, the King gave him a diamond epaulet and buckles, and directed Bcehmer to deliver them to the Queen. Bcehmer presented them on her return from mass, and at the same time gave into her hands a letter in the form of a petition. In this paper he told the Queen that he was happy to see her " in possession of the finest diamonds known in Europe," and entreated her not to forget him. The Queen read Bcehmer's address to her aloud, and saw nothing in it but a proof of mental aberration; she lighted the paper at a wax MARIE ANTOINETTE 191 taper standing near her, as she had some letters to seal, saying, " It is not worth keeping." She after- wards much regretted the loss of this enigmatical memorial. After having burnt the paper, her Maj- esty said to me, " That man is born to be my torment; he has always some mad scheme in his head; remem- ber, the first time you see him, to tell him that I do not like diamonds now, and that I will buy no more so long as I live; that if I had any money to spare I would rather add to my property at St. Cloud by the purchase of the land surrounding it; now, mind you enter into all these particulars and impress them well upon him." I asked her whether she wished me to send for him; she replied in the negative, add- ing that it would be sufficient to avail myself of the first opportunity afforded by meeting him; and that the slightest advance towards such a man would be misplaced. On the 1 st of August I left Versailles for my country house at Crespy; on the 3d came Boehmer, extremely uneasy at not having received any answer from the Queen, to ask me whether I had any commis- sion frorrfher to him; I replied that she had entrusted me with none; that she had no commands for him, and I faithfully repeated all she had desired me to say to him. " But," said Boehmer, " the answer to the letter I presented to her, — to whom must I apply for that ? " "To nobody," answered I; "her Majesty burnt your memorial without even comprehending its mean- ing." " Ah! madame," exclaimed he, " that is impossible; the Queen knows that she has money to pay me!" "Money, M. Boehmer? Your last accounts against the Queen were discharged long ago." " Madame, you are not in the secret. A man who 192 THE MEMOIRS OF is ruined for want of payment of fifteen hundred thou- sand francs cannot be said to be satisfied." " Have you lost your senses? " said I. " For what can the Queen owe you so extravagant a sum ? " " For my necklace, madame," replied Bcehmer, coolly. " What ! " I exclaimed, " that necklace again, which you have teased the Queen about so many years ! Did you not tell me you had sold it at Constantinople? " " The Queen desired me to give that answer to all who should speak to me on the subject," said the wretched dupe. He then told me that the Queen wished to have the necklace, and had had it purchased for her by Monseigneur, the Cardinal de Rohan. 'You are deceived," I exclaimed; "the Queen has not once spoken to the Cardinal since his return from Vienna; there is not a man at her Court less favour- ably looked upon." " You are deceived yourself, madame," said Bceh- mer; "she sees him so much in private that it was to his Eminence she gave thirty thousand francs, which were paid me as an instalment; she took them, in his presence, out of the little secretaire of Sevres porcelain next the fireplace in her boudoir." "And the Cardinal told you all this?" . " Yes, madame, himself." " What a detestable plot ! " cried I. " Indeed, to say the truth, madame, I begin to be much alarmed, for his Eminence assured me that the Queen would wear the necklace on Whit-Sunday, but I did not see it upon her, and it was that which induced me to write to her Majesty." He then asked me what he ought to do. I advised him to go on to Versailles, instead of returning to Paris, whence he had just arrived; to obtain an imme- diate audience from the Baron de Breteuil, who, as MARIE ANTOINETTE 193 head of the King's household, was the minister of the department to which Bcehmer belonged, and to be circumspect; and I added that he appeared to me extremely culpable, — not as a diamond merchant, but because being a sworn officer it was unpardonable of him to have acted without the direct orders of the King, the Queen, or the Minister. He answered, that he had not acted without direct orders; that he had in his possession all the notes signed by the Queen, and that he had even been obliged to show them to several bankers in order to induce them to extend the time for his payments. I urged his departure for Ver- sailles, and he assured me he would go there imme- diately. Instead of following my advice, he went to the Cardinal, and it was of this visit of Bcehmer's that his Eminence made a memorandum, found in a drawer overlooked by the Abbe Georgel when he burnt, by order of the Cardinal, all the papers which the latter had at Paris. The memorandum was thus worded : " On this day, 3d August, Bcehmer went to Madame Campan's country house, and she told him that the Queen had never had his necklace, and that he had been deceived." When Bcehmer was gone, I wanted to follow him, and go to the Queen; my father-in-law prevented me, and ordered me to leave the minister to elucidate such an important affair, observing that it was an infernal plot; that I had given Bcehmer the best advice, and had nothing more to do with the busi- ness. Bcehmer never said one word to me about the woman De Lamotte, and her name-was mentioned for the first time by the Cardinal in his answers to the interrogatories put to him before the King. After seeing the Cardinal, Bcehmer went to Trianon, and sent a message to the Queen, purporting that I had advised him to come and speak to her. His very i 9 4 THE MEMOIRS OF words were repeated to her Majesty, who said, " He is mad; I have nothing to say to him, and will not see him." Two or three days afterwards the Queen sent for me to Petit Trianon, to rehearse with me the part of Rosina, which she was to perform in the " Bar- bier de Seville." I was alone with her, sitting upon her couch; no mention was made of anything but the part. After we had spent an hour in the rehearsal, her Majesty asked me why I had sent Bcehmer to her; saying he had been in my name to speak to her, and that she would not see him. It was in this manner I learnt that he had not followed my advice in the slightest degree. The change of my countenance, when I heard the man's name, was very perceptible; the Queen perceived it, and questioned me. I en- treated her to see him, and assured her it was of the utmost importance for her peace of mind; that there was a plot going on, of which she was not aware; and that it was a serious one, since engagements signed bv herself were shown about to people who had lent Bcehmer money. Her surprise and vexation were great. She desired me to remain at Trianon, and sent off a courier to Paris, ordering Bcehmer to come to her upon some pretext which has escaped my recollec- tion. He came next morning; in fact it was the day on which the play was performed, and that was the last amusement the Queen allowed herself at that retreat. The Queen made him enter her closet, and asked him by what fatality it was that she was still doomed to hear of his foolish pretence of selling her an article which she had steadily refused for several years. He replied that he was compelled, being unable to pacify his creditors any longer. " What are your creditors to me?" said her Majesty. Bcehmer then regularly related to her all that he had been made to believe MARIE ANTOINETTE 195 had passed between the Queen and himself through the intervention of the Cardinal. She was equally incensed and surprised at each thing she heard. In vain did she speak; the jeweller, equally importunate and dangerous, repeated incessantly, " Madame, there is no longer time for feigning; condescend to confess that you have my necklace, and let some assistance be given to me, or my bankruptcy will soon bring the whole to light." It is easy to imagine how the Queen must have suffered. On Bcehmer's going away, I found her in an alarming condition; the idea that any one could have believed that such a man as the Cardinal possessed her full confidence; that she should have employed him to deal with a tradesman without the King's knowledge, for a thing which she had refused to accept from the King himself, drove her to des- peration. She sent first for the Abbe de Vermond, and then for the Baron de Breteuil. Their hatred and contempt for the Cardinal made them too easily forget that the lowest faults do not prevent the higher orders of the empire from being defended by those to whom they have the honour to belong; that a Rohan, a Prince of the Church, however culpable he might be, would be sure to have a considerable party which would naturally be joined by all the discontented persons of the Court, and all the frondeurs of Paris. They too easily believed that he would be stripped of all the advantages of his rank and order, and given up to the disgrace due to his irregular conduct; they deceived themselves. I saw the Queen after the departure of the Baron and the Abbe; her agitation made me shudder. " Fraud must be unmasked," said she; " when the Roman purple and the title of Prince cover a mere money-seeker, a cheat who dares to compromise the Vol. 3 Memoirs — 7 196 THE MEMOIRS OF wife of his sovereign, France and all Europe should know it." It is evident that from that moment the fatal plan was decided on. The Queen perceived my alarm; I did not conceal it from her. I knew too well that she had many enemies not to be apprehen- sive on seeing her attract the attention of the whole world to an intrigue that they would try to complicate still more. I entreated her to seek the most prudent and moderate advice. She silenced me by desiring me to make myself easy, and to rest satisfied that no imprudence would be committed. On the following Sunday, the 15th of August, being the Assumption, at twelve o'clock, at the very moment when the Cardinal, dressed in his pontifical garments, was about to proceed to the chapel, he was sent for into the King's closet, where the Queen then was. The King said to him, " You have purchased dia- monds of Boehmer?" "Yes, Sire." "What have you done with them?" " I thought they had been delivered to the Queen." "Who commissioned you?" " A lady, called the Comtesse de Lamotte-Valois, who handed me a letter from the Queen ;^ and I thought I was gratifying her Majesty by taking this business on myself." The Queen here interrupted him, and said, " How, monsieur, could you believe that I should select you, to whom I have not spoken for eight years, to nego- tiate anything for me, and especially through the mediation of a woman whom I do not even know ? " " I see plainly," said the Cardinal, " that I have been duped. I will pay for the necklace; my desire to please your Majesty blinded me; I suspected no trick in the affair, and I am sorry for it." MARIE ANTOINETTE 197 He then took out of his pocket-book a letter from the Queen to Madame de Lamotte, giving him this commission. The King took it and, holding it towards the Cardinal, said: " This is neither written nor signed by the Queen. How could a Prince of the House of Rohan, and a Grand Almoner of France, ever think that the Queen would sign Marie Antoinette de France ? Everybody knows that queens sign only by their baptismal names. But, monsieur," pursued the King, handing him a copy of his letter to Bcehmer, " have you ever written such a letter as this ? " Having glanced over it, the Cardinal said, " I do not remember having written it." " But what if the original, signed by yourself, were shown to you ? " " If the letter be signed by myself it is genuine." He was extremely confused, and repeated several times, " I have been deceived, Sire; I will pay for the necklace. I ask pardon of your Majesties." " Then explain to me," resumed the King, " the whole of this enigma. I do not wish to find you guilty; I had rather you would justify yourself. Ac- count for all the manoeuvres with Bcehmer, these assurances and these letters." The Cardinal then, turning pale, and leaning against the table, said, " Sire, I am too much con- fused to answer your Majesty in a way " " Compose yourself, Cardinal, and go into my cabinet; you will there find paper, pens, and ink, — write what you have to say to me." The Cardinal went into the King's cabinet, and returned a quarter of an hour afterwards with a document as confused as his verbal answers had been. The King then said, " Withdraw, monsieur." The Cardinal left the King's chamber, with the Baron de 198 THE MEMOIRS OF Breteuil, who gave him in custody to a lieutenant of the Body Guard, with orders to take him to his apartment. M. d'Agoult, aide-major of the Body Guard, afterwards took him into custody, and con- ducted him to his hotel, and thence to the Bastille. But while the Cardinal had with him only the young lieutenant of the Body Guard, who was much em- barrassed at having such an order to execute, his Eminence met his hey due at the door of the Salon of Hercules; he spoke to him in German, and then asked the lieutenant if he could lend him a pencil; the officer gave him that which he carried about him, and the Cardinal wrote to the Abbe Georgel, his grand vicar and friend, instantly to burn all Madame de Lamotte's correspondence, and all his other letters. This commission was executed before M. de Crosne, lieutenant of police, had received an order from the Baron de Breteuil to put seals upon the Cardinal's papers. The destruction of all his Eminence's cor- respondence, and particularly that with Madame de Lamotte, threw an impenetrable cloud over the whole affair. From that moment all proofs of this intrigue dis- appeared. Madame de Lamotte was apprehended at Bar-sur-Aube; her husband had already gone to Eng- land. From the beginning of this fatal affair all the proceedings of the Court appear to have been prompted by imprudence and want of foresight; the obscurity resulting left free scope for the fables of which the voluminous memorials written on one side and the other consisted. The Queen so little imag- ined what could have given rise to the intrigue, of which she was about to become the victim, that, at the moment when the King was interrogating the Car- dinal, a terrific idea entered her mind. With that rapidity of thought caused by personal interest and MARIE ANTOINETTE 199 extreme agitation, she fancied that, if a design to ruin her in the eyes of the King and the French people were the concealed motive of this intrigue, the Cardi- nal would, perhaps, affirm that she had the necklace; that he had been honoured with her confidence for this purchase, made without the King's knowledge; and point out some secret place in her apartment, where he might have got some villain to hide it. Want of money and the meanest swindling were the sole motives for this criminal affair. The neck- lace had already been taken to pieces and sold, partly in London, partly in Holland, and the rest in Paris. The moment the Cardinal's arrest was known a uni- versal clamour arose. Every memorial that appeared during the trial increased the outcry. On this occa- sion the clergy took that course which a little wisdom and the least knowledge of the spirit of such a body ought to have foreseen. The Rohans and the House of Conde, as well as the clergy, made their complaints heard everywhere. The King consented to having a legal judgment, and early in September he addressed letters-patent to the Parliament, in which he said that he was " filled with the most just indignation on see- ing the means which, by the confession of his Emi- nence the Cardinal, had been employed in order to inculpate his most dear spouse and companion." Fatal moment! in which the Queen found herself, in consequence of this highly impolitic step, on trial with a subject, who ought to have been dealt with by the power of the King alone. The Princes and Prin- cesses of the House of Conde, and of the Houses of Rohan, Soubise, and Guemenee, put on mourning, and were seen ranged in the way of the members of the Grand Chamber to salute them as they proceeded to the palace, on the days of the Cardinal's trial; and -oo THE MEMOIRS OF Princes of the blood openly canvassed against the Queen of France. The Pope wished to claim, on behalf of the Cardi- nal de Rohan, the right belonging to his ecclesiastical rank, and demanded that he should be judged at Rome. The Cardinal de Bernis, ambassador from France to his Holiness, formerly Minister for Foreign Affairs, blending the wisdom of an old diplomatist with the principles of a Prince of the Church, wished that this scandalous affair should be hushed up. The King's aunts, who were on very intimate terms with the ambassador, adopted his opinion, and the conduct of the King and Queen was equally and loudly cen- sured in the apartments of Versailles and in the hotels and coffee-houses of Paris. Madame, the King's sister-in-law, had been the sole protectress of De Lamotte, and had confined her pat- ronage to granting her a pension of twelve to fifteen hundred francs. Her brother was in the navy, but the Marquis de Chabert, to whom he had been recom- mended, could never train a good officer. The Queen in vain endeavoured to call to mind the features of this person, of whom she had often heard as an in- triguing woman, who came frequently on Sundays to the gallery of Versailles. At the time when all France was engrossed by the persecution against the Cardinal, the portrait of the Comtesse de Lamotte- Valois was publicly sold. Her Majesty desired me one day, when I was going to Paris, to buy her the engraving, which was said to be a tolerable likeness, that she might ascertain whether she could recognise in it any person whom she might have seen in the gallery. The woman De Lamotte's father was a peasant at Auteuil, though he called himself Valois. Madame de Boulainvilliers once saw from her terrace two MARIE ANTOINETTE 201 pretty little peasant girls, each labouring under a heavy bundle of sticks. The priest of the village, who was walking with her, told her that the children pos- sessed some curious papers, and that he had no doubt they were descendants of a Valois, an illegitimate son of one of the princes of that name. The family of Valois had long ceased to appear in the world. Hereditary vices had gradually plunged them into the deepest misery. I have heard that the last Valois then known occupied the estate called Gros Bois; that as he seldom came to Court, Louis XIII. asked him what he was about that he remained so constantly in the country; and that this M. de Va- lois merely answered, " Sire, I only do there what I ought." It was shortly afterwards discovered that he was coining. Neither the Queen herself nor any one near her ever had the slightest connection with the woman De Lamotte; and during her prosecution she could point out but one of the Queen's servants, named Desclos, a valet of the Queen's bedchamber, to whom she pre- tended she had delivered Bcehmer's necklace. This Desclos was a very honest man; upon being confronted with the woman De Lamotte, it was proved that she had never seen him but once, which was at the house of the wife of a surgeon-accoucheur at Versailles, the only person she visited at Court ; and that she had not given him the necklace. Madame de Lamotte married a private in Monsieur's body-guard; she lodged at Versailles at the Belle Image, a very in- ferior furnished house; and it is inconceivable how so obscure a person could succeed in making herself believed to be a friend of the Queen, who, though so extremely affable, seldom granted audiences, and only to titled persons. The trial of the Cardinal is too generally known 202 THE MEMOIRS OF to require me to repeat its details here. The point most embarrassing to him was the interview he had in February, 1785, with M. de Saint-James, to whom he confided the particulars of the Queen's pretended commission, and showed the contract approved and signed Marie Antoinette de Frajice. The memoran- dum found in a drawer of the Cardinal's bureau, in which he had himself written what Bcehmer told him after having seen me at my country house, was like- wise an unfortunate document for his Eminence. I offered to the King to go and declare that Bcehmer had told me that the Cardinal assured him he had received from the Queen's own hand the thirty thousand francs given on account upon the bargain being concluded, and that his Eminence had seen her Majesty take that sum in bills from the porcelain sec- retaire in her boudoir. The King declined my offer, and said to me, " Were you alone when Bcehmer told you this?" I answered that I was alone with him in my garden. " Well," resumed he, " the man would deny the fact; he is now sure of being paid his six- teen hundred thousand francs, which the Cardinal's family will find it necessary to make good to him; we can no longer rely upon his sincerity; it would look as if you were sent by the Queen, and that would not be proper." The procureur-general' s information was severe on the Cardinal. The Houses of Conde and Rohan and the majority of the nobility saw in this affair only an attack on the Prince's rank, the clergy only a blow aimed at the privileges of a cardinal. The clergy demanded that the unfortunate business of the Prince Cardinal de Rohan should be submitted to ecclesiasti- cal jurisdiction, and the Archbishop of Narbonne, then President of the Convocation, made representations upon the subject to the King; the bishops wrote to MARIE ANTOINETTE 203 his Majesty to remind him that a private ecclesiastic implicated in the affair then pending would have a right to claim his constitutional judges, and that this right was refused to a cardinal, his superior in the hierarchical order. In short, the clergy and the greater part of the nobility were at that time outrageous against authority, and chiefly against the Queen. The procureur-gcncral's conclusions, and those of a part of the heads of the magistracy, were as severe towards the Cardinal as the information had been; yet he was fully acquitted by a majority of three voices; the woman De Lamotte was condemned to be whipped, branded, and imprisoned; and her husband, for contumacy, was condemned to the galleys for life. M. Pierre de Laurencel, the procureur-gencral's substitute, sent the Queen a list of the names of the members of the Grand Chamber, with the means made use of by the friends of the Cardinal to gain their votes during the trial. I had this list to keep among the papers which the Queen deposited in the house of M. Campan, my father-in-law, and which, at his death, she ordered me to preserve. I burnt this statement, but I remember ladies performed a part not very creditable to their principles ; it was by them, in consideration of large sums which they received, that some of the oldest and most respected members were won over. I did not see a single name amongst the whole Parliament that was gained directly. The belief confirmed by time is, that the Cardinal was completely duped by the woman De Lamotte and Cagliostro. The King may have been in error in thinking him an accomplice in this miserable and criminal scheme, but I have faithfully repeated his Majesty's judgment about it. 204 MARIE ANTOINETTE However, the generally received opinion that the Baron de Breteuil's hatred for the Cardinal was the cause of the scandal and the unfortunate result of this affair contributed to the disgrace of the former still more than his refusal to give his granddaughter in marriage to the son of the Due de Polignac. The Abbe de Vermond threw the whole blame of the im- prudence and impolicy of the affair of the Cardinal de Rohan upon the minister, and ceased to be the friend and supporter of the Baron de Breteuil with the Queen. In the early part of the year 1786, the Cardinal, as has been said, was fully acquitted, and came out of the Bastille, while Madame de Lamotte was con- demned to be whipped, branded, and imprisoned. The Court, persisting in the erroneous views which had hitherto guided its measures, conceived that the Cardinal and the woman De Lamotte were equally culpable and unequally punished, and sought to re- store the balance of justice by exiling the Cardinal to La Chaise-Dieu, and suffering Madame de Lamotte to escape a few days after she entered l'Hopital. This new error confirmed the Parisians in the idea that the wretch De Lamotte, who had never been able to make her way so far as to the room appropriated to the Queen's women, had really interested the Queen herself. CHAPTER XIV THE Abbe de Vermond could not repress his exultation when he succeeded in getting the Archbishop of Sens appointed head of the council of finance. I have more than once heard him say that seventeen years of patience were not too long a term for success in a Court; that he spent all that time in gaining the end he had in view; but that at length the Archbishop was where he ought to be for the good of the State. The Abbe, from this time, in the Queen's private circle no longer con- cealed his credit and influence; nothing could equal the confidence with which he displayed the extent of his pretensions. He requested the Queen to order that the apartments appropriated to him should be enlarged, telling her that, being obliged to give audi- ences to bishops, cardinals, and ministers, he required a residence suitable to his present circumstances. The Queen continued to treat him as she did before the Archbishop's arrival at Court; but the house- hold showed him increased consideration: the word " Monsieur " preceded that of Abbe; and from that moment not only the livery servants, but also the people of the antechambers rose when Monsieur l'Abbe was passing, though there never was, to my knowledge, any order given to that effect. The Queen was obliged, on account of the King's disposition and the very limited confidence he placed in the Archbishop of Sens, to take a part in public affairs. While M. de Maurepas lived she kept out of that danger, as may be seen by the censure which 205 206 THE MEMOIRS OF the Baron de Besenval passes on her in his memoirs for not availing herself of the conciliation he had promoted between the Queen and that minister, who counteracted the ascendency which the Queen and her intimate friends might otherwise have gained over the King's mind. The Queen has often assured me that she never interfered respecting the interests of Austria but once; and that was only to claim the execution of the treaty of alliance at the time when Joseph II. was at war with Prussia and Turkey; that she then demanded that an army of twenty-four thousand men should be sent to him instead of fifteen millions, an alternative which had been left to option in the treaty, in case the Emperor should have a just war to maintain; that she could not obtain her object, and M. de Vergennes, in an interview which she had with him upon the subject, put an end to her im- portunities by observing that he was answering the mother of the Dauphin and not the sister of the Emperor. The fifteen millions were sent. There was no want of money at Vienna, and the value of a French army was fully appreciated. " But how," said the Queen, " could they be so wicked as to send off those fifteen millions from the general post-office, diligently publishing, even to the street porters, that they were loading carriages with money that I was sending to my brother! — whereas it is certain that the money would equally have been sent if I had belonged to another house; and, be- sides, it was sent contrary to my inclination." When the Comte de Moustier set out on his mis- sion to the United States, after having had his public audience of leave he came and asked me to procure him a private one. I could not succeed even with the strongest solicitations; the Queen desired me to MARIE ANTOINETTE 207 wish him a good voyage, but added that none but ministers could have anything to say to him in pri- vate, since he was going to a country where the names of King and Queen must be detested. Marie Antoinette had then no direct influence over State affairs until after the deaths of M. de Maurepas and M. de Vergennes, and the retirement of M. de Calonne. She frequently regretted her new situa- tion, and looked upon it as a misfortune which she could not avoid. One day, while I was assisting her to tie up a number of memorials and reports, which some of the ministers had handed to her to be given to the King, "Ah!" said she, sighing, "there is an end of all happiness for me, since they have made an intriguer of me." I exclaimed at the word. "Yes," resumed the Queen, "that is the right term; every woman who meddles with affairs above her understanding or out of her line of duty is an in- triguer and nothing else; you will remember, how- ever, that it is not my own fault, and that it is with regret I give myself such a title; Queens of France are happy only so long as they meddle with nothing, and merely preserve influence sufficient to advance their friends and reward a few zealous servants. Do you know what happened to me lately? One day since I began to attend private committees at the King's, while crossing the ceil-de-boeuf, I heard one of the musicians of the chapel say so loud that I lost not a single word, ' A Queen who does her duty will remain in her apartment to knit.' I said within my- self, ' Poor wretch, thou art right; but thou knowest not my situation; I yield to necessity and my evil destiny.' " This situation was the more painful to the Queen inasmuch as Louis XVI. had long accustomed him- self to say nothing to her respecting State affairs; 2o8 THE MEMOIRS OF and when, towards the close of his reign, she was obliged to interfere in the most important matters, the same habit in the King frequently kept from her particulars which it was necessary she should have known. Obtaining, therefore, only insufficient in- formation, and guided by persons more ambitious than skilful, the Queen could not be useful in im- portant affairs; yet, at the same time, her ostensible interference drew upon her, from all parties and all classes of society, an unpopularity the rapid progress of which alarmed all those who were sincerely attached to her. Carried away by the eloquence of the Archbishop of Sens, and encouraged in the confidence she placed in that minister by the incessant eulogies of the Abbe de Vermond on his abilities, the Queen unfortunately followed up her first mistake of bringing him into office in 1787 by supporting him at the time of his disgrace, which was obtained by the despair of a whole nation. She thought it was due to her dignity to give him some marked proof of her regard at the moment of his departure; misled by her feelings, she sent him her portrait enriched with jewelry, and a brevet for the situation of lady of the palace for Ma- dame de Canisy, his niece, observing that it was neces- sary to indemnify a minister sacrificed to the intrigues of the Court and a factious spirit of the nation; that otherwise none would be found willing to devote them- selves to the interests of the sovereign. On the day of the Archbishop's departure the pub- lic joy was universal, both at Court and at Paris; there were bonfires; the attorneys' clerks burnt the Archbishop in effigy, and on the evening of his dis- grace more than a hundred couriers were sent out from Versailles to spread the happy tidings among the country seats. I have seen the Queen shed bitter MARIE ANTOINETTE 209 tears at the recollection of the errors she committed at this period, when subsequently, a short time before her death, the Archbishop had the audacity to say, in a speech which was printed, that the sole object of one part of his operations, during his administration, was the salutary crisis which the Revolution had produced. The benevolence and generosity shown by the King and Queen during the severe winter of 1788, when the Seine was frozen over and the cold was more in- tense than it had been for eighty years, procured them some fleeting popularity. The gratitude of the Pari- sians for the succour their Majesties poured forth was lively if not lasting. The snow was so abundant that since that period there has never been seen such a prodigious quantity in France. In different parts of Paris pyramids and obelisks of snow were erected with inscriptions expressive of the gratitude of the people. The pyramid in the Rue d'Angiviller was supported on a base six feet high by twelve broad; it rose to the height of fifteen feet, and was terminated by a globe. Four blocks of stone, placed at the angles, corresponded with the obelisk, and gave it an elegant appearance. Several inscriptions, in honour of the King and Queen, were affixed to it. I went to see this singular monument, and recollect the following inscription: "TO MARIE ANTOINETTE. "Lovely and good, to tender pity true, Queen of a virtuous King, this trophy view; Cold ice and snow sustain its fragile form, But ev'ry grateful heart to thee is warm. Oh, may this tribute in your hearts excite, Illustrious pair, more pure and real delight, Whilst thus your virtues are sincerely prais'd, Than pompous domes by servile flatt'ry rais'd." The theatres generally rang with praises of the 210 THE MEMOIRS OF beneficence of the sovereigns : " La Partie de Chasse de Henri IV." was represented for the benefit of the poor. The receipts were very considerable. When the fruitless measure of the Assembly of the Notables, and the rebellious spirit in the parliaments, had created the necessity for States General, it was long discussed in council whether they should be as- sembled at Versailles or at forty or sixty leagues from the capital; the Queen was for the latter course, and insisted to the King that they ought to be far away from the immense population of Paris. She feared that the people would influence the deliberations of the deputies; several memorials were presented to the King upon that question; but M. Necker prevailed, and Versailles was the place fixed upon. The day on which the King announced that he gave his consent to the convocation of the States General, the Queen left the public dinner, and placed herself in the recess of the first window of her bedchamber, with her face towards the garden. Her chief butler followed her, to present her coffee, which she usually took standing, as she was about to leave the table. She beckoned to me to come close to her. The King was engaged in conversation with some one in his room. When the attendant had served her he re- tired; and she addressed me, with the cup still in her hand : " Great Heavens ! what fatal news goes forth this day! The King assents to the convocation of the States General." Then she added, raising her eyes to heaven, " I dread it; this important event is a first fatal signal of discord in France." She cast her eyes down, they were filled with tears. She could not take the remainder of her coffee, but handed me the cup, and went to join the King. In the evening, when she was alone with me, she spoke only of this momen- tous decision. " It is the Parliament," said she, " that MARIE ANTOINETTE 211 has compelled the King to have recourse to a measure long considered fatal to the repose of the kingdom. These gentlemen wish to restrain the power of the King; but they give a great shock to the authority of which they make so bad a use, and they will bring on their own destruction." The double representation granted to the Tiers Etat was now the chief topic of conversation. The Queen favoured this plan, to which the King had agreed; she thought the hope of obtaining ecclesiastical favours would secure the clergy of the second order, and that M. Necker was sure to have the same degree of influ- ence over the lawyers, and other people of that class comprised in the Tier's Etat. The Comte d'Artois, holding the contrary opinion, presented a memorial in the names of himself and several princes of the blood to the King against the double representation. The Queen was displeased with him for this; her confi- dential advisers infused into her apprehensions that the Prince was made the tool of a party; but his con- duct was approved of by Madame de Polignac's circle, which the Queen thenceforward only frequented to avoid the appearance of a change in her habits. She almost always returned unhappy; she was treated with the profound respect due to a queen, but the devotion of friendship had vanished, to make way for the coldness of etiquette, which wounded her deeply. The alienation between her and the Comte d'Ar- tois was also very painful to her, for she had loved him almost as tenderly as if he had 'been her own brother. The opening of the States General took place on the 4th of May, 1789. The Queen on that occasion appeared for the last time in her life in regal mag- nificence. During the procession some low women, seeing the Queen pass, cried out " Vive le Due d'Or- 212 THE MEMOIRS OF leans! " in so threatening a manner that she nearly fainted. She was obliged to be supported, and those about her were afraid it would be necessary to stop the procession. The Queen, however, recovered her- self, and much regretted that she had not been able to command more presence of mind. The rapidly increasing distrust of the King and Queen shown by the populace was greatly attributable to incessant corruption by English gold, and the proj- ects, either of revenge or of ambition, of the Due d'Orleans. Let it not be thought that this accusation is founded on what has been so often repeated by the heads of the French Government since the Revolu- tion. Twice between the 14th of July and the 6th of October, 1789, the day on which the Court was dragged to Paris, the Queen prevented me from mak- ing little excursions thither of business or pleasure, saying to me, " Do not go on such a day to Paris; the English have been scattering gold, we shall have some disturbance." The repeated visits of the Due d'Orleans to England had excited the Anglomania to such a pitch that Paris was no longer distinguish- able from London. The French, formerly imitated by the whole of Europe, became on a sudden a nation of imitators, without considering the evils that arts and manufactures must suffer in conse- quence of the change. Since the treaty of com- merce made with England at the peace of 1783, not merely equipages, but everything, even to ribands and common earthenware, were of English make. If this predominance of English fashions had been confined to filling our drawing-rooms with young men in Eng- lish frock-coats, instead of the French dress, good taste and commerce might alone have suffered; but the principles of English government had taken pos- session of these young heads. Constitution, Upper MARIE ANTOINETTE 213 House, Lozver House, national guarantee, balance of power, Magna Charta, Law of Habeas Corpus, — all these words were incessantly repeated, and seldom un- derstood; but they were of fundamental importance to a party which was then forming. The first sitting of the States took place on the following day. The King delivered his speech with firmness and dignity; the Queen told me that he had taken great pains about it, and had repeated it fre- quently. His Majesty gave public marks of attach- ment and respect for the Queen, who was applauded; but it was easy to see that this applause was in fact rendered to the King alone. It was evident, during the first sittings, that Mira- beau would be very dangerous to the Government. It is affirmed that at this period he communicated to the King, and still more fully to the Queen, part of his schemes for abandoning them. He brandished the weapons afforded him by his eloquence and audacity, in order to make terms with the party he meant to attack. This man played the game of revolution to make his own fortune. The Queen told me that he asked for an embassy, and, if my memory does not deceive me, it was that of Constantinople. He was refused with well-deserved contempt, though policy would doubtless have concealed it, could the future have been foreseen. The enthusiasm prevailing at the opening of this assembly, and the debates between the Tiers Etat, the nobility, and even the clergy, daily' increased the alarm of their Majesties, and all who were attached to the cause of monarchy. The Queen went to bed late, or rather she began to be unable to rest. One evening, about the end of May, she was sitting in her room, relating several remarkable occurrences of the day; four wax candles were placed upon her 214 THE MEMOIRS OF toilet-table; the first went out of itself; I relighted it; shortly afterwards the second, and then the third went out also; upon which the Queen, squeezing my hand in terror, said to me ; " Misfortune makes us superstitious; if the fourth taper should go out like the rest, nothing can prevent my looking upon it as a sinister omen." The fourth taper went out. It was remarked to the Queen that the four tapers had prob- ably been run in the same mould, and that a defect in the wick had naturally occurred at the same point in each, since the candles had all gone out in the order in which they had been lighted. The deputies of the Tiers Etat arrived at Versailles full of the strongest prejudices against the Court. They believed that the King indulged in the pleasures of the table to a shameful excess; and that the Queen was draining the treasury of the State in order to satisfy the most unbridled luxury. They almost all determined to see Petit Trianon. The extreme plain- ness of the retreat in question not answering the ideas they had formed, some of them insisted upon seeing the very smallest closets, saying that the richly fur- nished apartments were concealed from them. They particularised one which, according to them, was or- namented with diamonds, and with wreathed columns studded with sapphires and rubies. The Queen could not get these foolish ideas out of her mind, and spoke to the King on the subject. From the description given of this room by the deputies to the keepers of Trianon, the King concluded that they were looking for the scene enriched with paste ornaments, made in the reign of Louis XV. for the theatre of Fontainebleau. The King supposed that his Body Guards, on their return to the country, after their quarterly duty at Court, related what they had seen, and that their MARIE ANTOINETTE 215 exaggerated accounts, being repeated, became at last totally perverted. This idea of the King, after the search for the diamond chamber, suggested to the Queen that the report of the King's propensity for drinking also sprang from the guards who accom- panied his carriage when he hunted at Rambouillet. The King, who disliked sleeping out of his usual bed, was accustomed to leave that hunting-seat after sup- per; he generally slept soundly in his carriage, and awoke only on his arrival at the courtyard of his palace; he used to get down from his carriage in the midst of his Body Guards, staggering, as a man half awake will do, which was mistaken for intoxi- cation. The majority of the deputies who came imbued with prejudices produced by error or malevolence, went to lodge with the most humble private individ- uals of Versailles, whose inconsiderate conversa- tion contributed not a little to nourish such mis- takes. Everything, in short, tended to render the deputies subservient to the schemes of the leaders of the rebellion. Shortly after the opening of the States General the first Dauphin died. That young Prince suffered from the rickets, which in a few months curved his spine, and rendered his legs so weak that he could not walk without being supported like a feeble old man. How many maternal tears did his condition draw from the Queen, already overwhelmed with apprehensions re- specting the state of the kingdom! Her grief was enhanced by petty intrigues, which, when frequently renewed, became intolerable. An open quarrel be- tween the families and friends of the Due d'Harcourt, the Dauphin's governor, and those of the Duchesse de Polignac, his governess, added greatly to the Queen's affliction. The young Prince showed a strong dislike 2i6 THE MEMOIRS OF to the Duchesse de Polignac, who attributed it either to the Due or the Duchesse d'Harcourt, and came to make her complaints respecting it to the Queen. The Dauphin twice sent her out of his room, saying to her, with that maturity of manner which long illness always gives to children: " Go out, Duchess; you are so fond of using perfumes, and they always make me ill;" and yet she never used any. The Queen perceived, also, that his prejudices against her friend extended to herself; her son would no longer speak in her presence. She knew that he had become fond of sweetmeats, and offered him some marshmallow and jujube lozenges. The under-governors and the first valet de chambre requested her not to give the Dauphin anything, as he was to receive no food of any kind without the consent of the faculty. I forbear to describe the wound this prohibition inflicted upon the Queen; she felt it the more deeply because she was aware it was unjustly believed she gave a decided preference to the Due de Normandie, whose ruddy health and amiability did, in truth, form a striking contrast to the languid look and melancholy disposition of his elder brother. She even suspected that a plot had for some time existed to deprive her of the affection of a child whom she loved as a good and tender mother ought. Previous to the audience granted by the King on the ioth August, 1788, to the envoy of the Sultan Tippoo Saib, she had begged the Due d'Harcourt to divert the Dauphin, whose deformity was already apparent, from his intention to be present at that ceremony, being un- willing to expose him to the gaze of the crowd of inquisitive Parisians who would be in the gallery. Notwithstanding this injunction, the Dauphin was suffered to write to his mother, requesting her per- mission to be present at the audience. The Queen was obliged to refuse him, and warmly reproached the MARIE ANTOINETTE 217 governor, who merely answered that he could not oppose the wishes of a sick child. A year before the death of the Dauphin the Queen lost the Princess Sophie; this was, as the Queen said^ the first of a series of misfortunes. CHAPTER XV THE ever-memorable oath of the States General, taken at the Tennis Court of Versailles, was followed by the royal sitting of the 23d of June. In this seance the King declared that the Orders must vote separately, and threatened, if further obstacles were met with, to himself act for the good of the peo- ple. The Queen looked on M. Necker's not accom- panying the King as treachery or criminal cowardice : she said that he had converted a remedy into poison; that being in full popularity, his audacity, in openly disavowing the step taken by his sovereign, had em- boldened the factious, and led away the whole As- sembly; and that he was the more culpable inasmuch as he had the evening before given her his word to accompany the King. In vain did M. Necker en- deavour to excuse himself by saying that his advice had not been followed. Soon afterwards the insurrections of the nth, T2th, and 14th of July opened the disastrous drama with which France was threatened. The massacre of M. de Flesselles and M. de Launay drew bitter tears from the Queen, and the idea that the King had lost such devoted subjects wounded her to the heart. The character of the movement was no longer merely that of a popular insurrection; cries of " Vive la Nation! Vive le Roi! Vive la Libcrte! " threw the strongest light upon the views of the reformers. Still the people spoke of the King with affection, and ap- peared to think him favourable to the national desire for the reform of what were called abuses; but they 218 MARIE ANTOINETTE 219 imagined that he was restrained by the opinions and influence of the Comte d'Artois and the Queen; and those two august personages were therefore objects of hatred to the malcontents. The dangers incurred by the Comte d'Artois determined the King's first step with the States General. He attended their meeting on the morning of the 15th of July with his brothers, without pomp or escort ; he spoke standing and un* covered, and pronounced these memorable words : " I trust myself to you; I only wish to be at one with my nation, and, counting on the affection and fidelity of my subjects, I have given orders to the troops to remove from Paris and Versailles." The King re- turned on foot from the chamber of the States Gen- eral to his palace; the deputies crowded after him, and formed his escort, and that of the Princes who accompanied him. The rage of the populace was pointed against the Comte d'Artois, whose unfavour- able opinion of the double representation was an odious crime in their eyes. They repeatedly cried out, " The King for ever, in spite of you and your opinions, Monseigneur ! " One woman had the impu- dence to come up to the King and ask him whether what he had been doing was done sincerely, and whether he would not be forced to retract it. The courtyards of the Chateau were thronged with an immense concourse of people; they demanded that the King and Queen, with their children, should make their appearance in the balcony. The Queen gave me the key of the inner doors, which led to the Dauphin's apartments, and desired me to go to the Duchesse de Polignac to tell her that she wanted her son, and had directed me to bring him myself into her room, where she waited to show him to the people. The Duchess said this order indicated that she was not to accompany the Prince. I did not answer; she 220 THE MEMOIRS OF squeezed my hand, saying, " Ah ! Madame Campan, what a blow I receive!" She embraced the child and me with tears. She knew how much I loved and valued the goodness and the noble simplicity of her disposition. I endeavoured to reassure her by saying that I should bring back the Prince to her; but she persisted, and said she understood the order, and knew what it meant. She then retired to her private room, holding her handkerchief to her eyes. One of the under-governesses asked me whether she might go with the Dauphin; I told her the Queen had given no order to the contrary, and we hastened to her Majesty, who was waiting to lead the Prince to the balcony. Having executed this sad commission, I went down into the courtyard, where I mingled with the crowd. I heard a thousand vociferations; it was easy to see, by the difference between the language and the dress of some persons among the mob, that they were in disguise. A woman, whose face was covered with a black lace veil, seized me by the arm with some vio- lence, and said, calling me by my name, " I know you very well; tell your Queen not to meddle with gov- ernment any longer; let her leave her husband and our good States General to effect the happiness of the people." At the same moment a man, dressed much in the style of a marketman, with his hat pulled down over his eyes, seized me by the other arm, and said, ' Yes, yes ; tell her over and over again that it will not be with these States as with the others, which produced no good to the people; that the nation is too enlightened in 1789 not to make something more of them; and that there will not now be seen a deputy of the Tiers Etat making a speech with one knee on the ground ; tell her this, do you hear ? " I was struck with dread; the Queen then appeared in the balcony. MARIE ANTOINETTE 221 " Ah ! " said the woman in the veil, " the Duchess is not with her." " No," replied the man, " but she is still at Versailles; she is working underground, mole- like; but we shall know how to dig her out." The detestable pair moved away from me, and I reentered the palace, scarcely able to support myself. I thought it my duty to relate the dialogue of these two strangers to the Queen; she made me repeat the particulars to the King. About four in the afternoon I went across the ter- race to Madame Victoire's apartments ; three men had stopped under the windows of the throne-chamber. " Here is that throne," said one of them aloud, " the vestiges of which will soon be sought for." He added a thousand invectives against their Majesties. I went in to the Princess, who was at work alone in her closet behind a canvas blind, which prevented her from be- ing seen by those without. The three men were still walking upon the terrace; I showed them to her, and told her what they had said. She rose to take a nearer view of them, and informed me that one of them was named Saint-Huruge ; that he was sold to the Due d'Orleans, and was furious against the Gov- ernment, because he had been confined once under a lettre de cachet as a bad character. The King was not ignorant of these popular threats; he also knew the days on which money was scattered about Paris, and once or twice the Queen prevented my going there, saying there would cer- tainly be a riot the next day, because she knew that a quantity of crown pieces had been distributed in the faubourgs. On the evening of the 14th of July the King came to the Queen's apartments, where I was with her Majesty alone; he conversed with her respecting the scandalous report disseminated by the factious, that 222 THE MEMOIRS OF he had had the Chamber of the National Assembly undermined, in order to blow it up ; but he added that it became him to treat such absurd assertions with contempt, as usual; I ventured to tell him that I had the evening before supped with M. Begouen, one of the deputies, who said that there were very respectable persons who thought that this horrible contrivance had been proposed without the King's knowledge. " Then," said his Majesty, " as the idea of such an atrocity was not revolting to so worthy a man as M. Begouen, I will order the chamber to be examined early to-morrow morning." In fact, it will be seen by the King's speech to the National Assembly, on the 15th of July, that the suspicions excited obtained his attention. " I know," said he in the speech in question, " that unworthy insinuations have been made ; I know there are those who have dared to as- sert that your persons are not safe; can it be neces- sary to give you assurances upon the subject of reports so culpable, denied beforehand by my known character? " The proceedings of the 15th of July produced no mitigation of the disturbances. Successive deputa- tions of poissardcs came to request the King to visit Paris, where his presence alone would put an end to the insurrection. On the 1 6th a committee was held in the King's apartments, at which a most important question was discussed : whether his Majesty should quit Versailles and set off with the troops whom he had recently or- dered to withdraw, or go to Paris to tranquillise the minds of the people. The Queen was for the de- parture. On the evening of the 16th she made me take all her jewels out of their cases, to collect them in one small box, which she might carry off in her own carriage. With my assistance she burnt a large MARIE ANTOINETTE 223 quantity of papers; for Versailles was then threatened with an early visit of armed men from Paris. The Queen, on the morning of the 16th, before attending another committee at the King's, having got her jewels ready, and looked over all her papers, gave me one folded up but not sealed, and desired me not to read it until she should give me an order to do so from the King's room, and then I was to execute its contents; but she returned her- self about ten in the morning; the affair was decided; the army was to go away without the King; all those who were in imminent danger were to go at the same time. " The King will go to the Hotel de Ville to-morrow," said the Queen to me; "he did not choose this course for himself; there were long debates on the question; at last the King put an end to them by rising and saying, ' Well, gentlemen, we must decide; am I to go or to stay? I am ready to do either.' The majority were for the King staying; time will show whether the right choice has been made." I returned the Queen the paper she had given me, which was now useless ; she read it to me ; it contained her orders for the departure ; I was to go with her, as well on account of my office about her person as to serve as a teacher to Madame. The Queen tore the paper, and said, with tears in her eyes, " When I wrote this I thought it would be useful, but fate has ordered otherwise, to the misfortune of us all, as I much fear." After the departure of the troops the new adminis- tration received thanks ; M. Necker was recalled. The artillery soldiers were undoubtedly corrupted. "Wherefore all these guns?" exclaimed the crowds of women who filled the streets. " Will you kill your mothers, your wives, your children?" "Don't be afraid," answered the soldiers; "these guns shall 224 THE MEMOIRS OF rather be levelled against the tyrant's palace than against you ! " The Comte d'Artois, the Prince de Conde, and their children set off at the same time with the troops. The Due and Duchesse de Polignac, their daughter, the Duchesse de Guiche, the Comtesse Diane de Po- lignac, sister of the Duke, and the Abbe de Baliviere, also emigrated on the same night. Nothing could be more affecting than the parting of the Queen and her friend; extreme misfortune had banished from their minds the recollection of differences to which political opinions alone had given rise. The Queen several times wished to go and embrace her once more after their sorrowful adieu, but she was too closely watched. She desired M. Campan to be present at the departure of the Duchess, and gave him a purse of five hundred louis, desiring him to insist upon her allowing the Queen to lend her that sum to defray her expenses on the road. The Queen added that she knew her situ- ation; that she had often calculated her income, and the expenses occasioned by her place at Court; that both husband and wife, having no other fortune than their official salaries, could not possibly have saved any- thing, however differently people might think at Paris. M. Campan remained till midnight with the Duch- ess to see her enter her carriage. She was disguised as a femme de chambre, and got up in front of the berlin; she requested M. Campan to remember her frequently to the Queen, and then quitted for ever that palace, that favour, and that influence which had raised her up such cruel enemies. On their arrival at Sens the travellers found the people in a state of insurrection; they asked all those who came from Paris whether the Polignacs were still with the Queen. A group of inquisitive persons put that question to the Abbe de Baliviere, who answered them in the MARIE ANTOINETTE 225 firmest tone, and with the most cavalier air, that they were far enough from Versailles, and that we had got rid of all such bad people. At the following stage the postilion got on the doorstep and said to the Duchess, " Madame, there are some good people left in the world : I recognised you all at Sens." They gave the worthy fellow a handful of gold. On the breaking out of these disturbances an old man above seventy years of age gave the Queen an extraordinary proof of attachment and fidelity. M. Peraque, a rich inhabitant of the colonies, father of M. d'Oudenarde, was coming from Brussels to Paris; while changing horses he was met by a young man who was leaving France, and who recommended him if he carried any letters from foreign countries to burn them immediately, especially if he had any for the Queen. M. Peraque had one from the Archduchess, the Gouvernante of the Low Countries, for her Majesty. He thanked the stranger, and carefully con- cealed his packet; but as he approached Paris the insurrection appeared to him so general and so violent, that he thought no means could be relied on for secur- ing this letter from seizure. He took upon him to unseal it, and learned it by heart, which was a wonder- ful effort for a man at his time of life, as it contained four pages of writing. On his arrival at Paris he wrote it down, and then presented it to the Queen, telling her that the heart of an old and faithful sub- ject had given him courage to form and execute such a resolution. The Queen received M. Peraque in her closet, and expressed her gratitude in an affecting manner most honourable to the worthy old man. Her Majesty thought the young stranger who had ap- prised him of the state of Paris was Prince George of Hesse-Darmstadt, who was very devoted to her, and who left Paris at that time. 226 THE MEMOIRS OF The Marquise de Tourzel replaced the Duchesse de Polignac. She was selected by the Queen as being the mother of a family and a woman of irreproachable conduct, who had superintended the education of her own daughters with the greatest success. The King went to Paris on the 17th of July, accom- panied by the Marechal de Beauvau, the Due de Villeroi, and the Due de Villequier; he also took the Comte d'Estaing, and the Marquis de Nesle, who were then very popular, in his carriage. Twelve Body Guards, and the town guard of Versailles, escorted him to the Pont du Jour, near Sevres, where the Parisian guard was waiting for him. His departure caused equal grief and alarm to his friends, notwith- standing the calmness he exhibited. The Queen restrained her tears, and shut herself up in her private rooms with her family. She sent for several persons belonging - to her Court ; their doors were locked. Terror had driven them away. The silence of death reigned throughout the palace ; they hardly dared hope that the King would return. The Queen had a robe prepared for her, and sent orders to her stables to have all her equipages ready. She wrote an address of a few lines for the Assembly, determining to go there with her family, the officers of her palace, and her servants, if the King should be detained prisoner at Paris. She got this address by heart ; it began with these words : " Gentlemen, I come to place in your hands the wife and family of your sovereign; do not suffer those who have been united in heaven to be put asunder on earth." While she was repeating this address she was often interrupted by tears, and sorrowfully exclaimed: "They will not let him re- turn!" It was past four when the King, who had left Versailles at ten in the morning, entered the Hotel MAKIE "ANTOINETTE 227 de Ville. At length, at six in the evening, M. de Lastours, the King's first page, arrived; he was not half an hour in coming from the Barriere de la Con- ference to Versailles. Everybody knows that the moment of calm in Paris was that in which the un- fortunate sovereign received the tricoloured cockade from M. Bailly, and placed it in his hat. A shout of " Vive la Roi!" arose on all sides; it had not been once uttered before. The King breathed again, and with tears in his eyes exclaimed that his heart stood in need of such greetings from the people. One of his equerries (M. de Cubieres) told him the people loved him, and that he could never have doubted it. The King replied in accents of profound sensibility: " Cubieres, the French loved Henri IV., and what king ever better deserved to be beloved ? " His return to Versailles filled his family with inex- pressible joy ; in the arms of the Queen, his sister, and his children, he congratulated himself that no accident had happened ; and he repeated several times, " Happily no blood has been shed, and I swear that never shall a drop of French blood be shed by my order,"— a determination full of humanity, but too openly avowed in such factious times ! The King's last measure raised a hope in many that general tranquillity would soon enable the Assembly to resume its labours, and promptly bring its session to a close. The Queen never flattered herself so far; M. Bailly's speech to the King had equally wounded her pride and hurt her feelings. " Henri IV. con- quered his people, and here are the people conquering their King." The word "conquest" offended her; she never forgave M. Bailly for this fine academical phrase. Five days after the King's visit to Paris, the depar- ture of the troops, and the removal of the Princes and Vol. 3 Memoirs — 8 228 THE MEMOIRS OF some of the nobility whose influence seemed to alarm the people, a horrible deed committed by hired assas- sins proved that the King had descended the steps of his throne without having effected a reconciliation with his people. M. Foulon, adjoint to the administration while M. de Broglie was commanding the army assembled at Versailles, had concealed himself at Viry. He was there recognised, and the peasants seized him, and dragged him to the Hotel de Ville. The cry for death was heard; the electors, the members of com- mittee, and M. de La Fayette, at that time the idol of Paris, in vain endeavoured to save the unfortunate man. After tormenting him in a manner which makes humanity shudder, his body was dragged about the streets, and to the Palais Royal, and his heart was carried by women in the midst of a bunch of white carnations! M. Berthier, M. Foulon's son-in- law, intendant of Paris, was seized at Compiegne, at the same time that his father-in-law was seized at Viry, and treated with still more relentless cruelty. The Queen was always persuaded that this horrible deed was occasioned by some indiscretion; and she informed me that M. Foulon had drawn up two me- morials for the direction of the King's conduct at the time of his being called to Court on the removal of M. Necker; and that these memorials contained two schemes of totally different nature for extricating the King from the dreadful situation in which he was placed. In the first of these projects M. Foulon ex- pressed himself without reserve respecting the crim- inal views of the Due d'Orleans ; said that he ought to be put under arrest, and that no time should be lost in commencing a prosecution against him, while the criminal tribunals were still in existence; he likewise pointed out such deputies as should be MARIE ANTOINETTE 229 apprehended, and advised the King not to separate himself from his army until order was restored. His other plan was that the King should make himself master of the revolution before its complete explosion; he advised his Majesty to go to the As- sembly, and there, in person, to demand the cahiers, and to make the greatest sacrifices to satisfy the legit- imate wishes of the people, and not to give the factious time to enlist them in aid of their criminal designs. Madame Adelaide had M. Foulon's two memorials read to her in the presence of four or five persons. One of them, Comte Louis de Narbonne, was very intimate with Madame de Stael, and that intimacy gave the Queen reason to believe that the opposite party had gained information of M. Foulon's schemes. It is known that young Barnave, during an aberra- tion of mind, since expiated by sincere repentance, and even by death, uttered these atrocious words : " Is then the blood now Hozving so pure?" when M. Ber- thier's son came to the Assembly to implore the eloquence of M. de Lally to entreat that body to save his father's life. I have since been informed that a son of M. Foulon, having returned to France after these first ebullitions of the Revolution, saw Barnave, and gave him one of those memorials in which M. Foulon advised Louis XVI. to prevent the revolu- tionary explosion by voluntarily granting all that the Assembly required before the 14th of July. " Read this memorial," said he; "I have brought it to in- crease your remorse : it is the only revenge I wish to inflict on you." Barnave burst into tears, and said to him all that the profoundest grief could dictate. CHAPTER XVI AFTER the 14th of July, by a manoeuvre for which the most skilful factions of any age » might have envied the Assembly, the whole population of France was armed and organised into a National Guard. A report was spread throughout France on the same day, and almost at the same hour, that four thousand brigands were marching towards such towns or villages as it was wished to induce to take arms. Never was any plan better laid ; terror spread at the same moment all over the kingdom. In 1 79 1 a peasant showed me a steep rock in the moun- tains of the Mont d'Or on which his wife concealed herself on the day when the four thousand brigands were to attack their village, and told me they had been obliged to make use of ropes to let her down from the height which fear alone had enabled her to climb. Versailles was certainly the place where the na- tional military uniform appeared most offensive. All the King's valets, even of the lowest class, were metamorphosed into lieutenants or captains; almost all the musicians of the chapel ventured one day to make their appearance at the King's mass in a military costume; and an Italian soprano adopted the uniform of a grenadier captain. The King was very much offended at this conduct, and forbade his servants to appear in his presence in so unsuitable a dress. The departure of the Duchesse de Polignac natu- rally left the Abbe de Vermond exposed to all the dangers of favouritism. He was already talked of as an adviser dangerous to the nation. The Queen 230 MARIE ANTOINETTE 231 was alarmed at it, and recommended him to remove to Valenciennes, where Count Esterhazy was in com- mand. He was obliged to leave that place in a few days and set off for Vienna, where he remained. On the night of the 17th of July the Queen, being unable to sleep, made me watch by her until three in the morning. I was extremely surprised to hear her say that it would be a very long time before the Abbe de Vermond would make his appearance at Court again, even if the existing ferment should subside, because he would not readily be forgiven for his at- tachment to the Archbishop of Sens; and that she had lost in him a very devoted servant. Then she suddenly remarked to me, that although he was not much prejudiced against me I could not have much regard for him, because he could not bear my father- in-law to hold the place of secretary of the closet. She went on to say that I must have studied the Abbe's character, and, as I had sometimes drawn her portraits of living characters, in imitation of those which were fashionable in the time of Louis XIV., she desired me to sketch that of the Abbe, without any reserve. My astonishment was extreme ; the Queen spoke of the man who, the day before, had been in the greatest intimacy with her with the utmost cool- ness, and as a person whom, perhaps, she might never see again ! I remained petrified ; the Queen persisted, and told me that he had been the enemy of my family for more than twelve years, without having been able to injure it in her opinion; so that I had no occasion to dread his return, however severely I might depict him. I promptly summarised my ideas about the favourite; but I only remember that the portrait was drawn with sincerity, except that everything which could denote antipathy was kept out of it. I shall make but one extract from it : I said that he had been 232 THE MEMOIRS OF born talkative and indiscreet, and had assumed a character of singularity and abruptness in order to conceal those two failings. The Queen interrupted me by saying, " Ah ! how true that is ! " I have since discovered that, notwithstanding the high favour which the Abbe de Vermond enjoyed, the Queen took precautions to guard herself against an ascendency the consequences of which she could not calculate. On the death of my father-in-law his executors placed in my hands a box containing a few jewels deposited by the Queen with M. Campan on the de- parture from Versailles of the 6th of October, and two sealed packets, each inscribed, " Campan will take care of these papers for me." I took the two packets to her Majesty, who kept the jewels and the larger packet, and, returning me the smaller, said, " Take care of that for me as your father-in-law did." After the fatal ioth of August, 1792, when my house was about to be surrounded, I determined to burn the most interesting papers of which I was the depository; I thought it my duty, however, to open this packet, which it might perhaps be necessary for me to preserve at all hazards. I saw that it contained a letter from the Abbe de Vermond to the Queen. I have already related that in the earlier days of Ma- dame de Polignac's favour he determined to remove from Versailles, and that the Queen recalled him by means of the Comte de Mercy. This letter contained nothing but certain conditions for his return; it was the most whimsical of treaties; I confess I greatly regretted being under the necessity of destroying it. He reproached the Queen for her infatuation for the Comtesse Jules, her family, and society ; and told her several truths about the possible consequences of a friendship which ranked that lady among the favour- ites of the Queens of France, a title always disliked MARIE ANTOINETTE 233 by the nation. He complained that his advice was neglected, and then came to the conditions of his re- turn to Versailles; after strong assurances that he would never, in all his life, aim at the higher church dignities, he said that he delighted in an unbounded confidence; and that he asked but two things of her Majesty as essential : the first was, not to give him her orders through any third person, and to write to him herself; he complained much that he had had no letter in her own hand since he had left Vienna; then he demanded of her an income of eighty thousand livres, in ecclesiastical benefices; and concluded by saying that, if she condescended to assure him herself that she would set about procuring him what he wished, her letter would be sufficient in itself to show him that her Majesty had accepted the two conditions he ventured to make respecting his return. No doubt the letter was written; at least it is very certain that the benefices were granted, and that his absence from Versailles lasted only a single week. In the course of July, 1789, the regiment of French guards, which had been in a state of insurrection from the latter end of June, abandoned its colours. One single company of grenadiers remained faithful to its post at Versailles. M. le Baron de Leval was the captain of this company. He came every evening to request me to give the Queen an account of the dispo- sition of his soldiers; but M. de La Fayette having sent them a note, they all deserted during the night and joined their comrades, who were enrolled in the Paris guard ; so that Louis XVI. on rising saw no guard whatever at the various posts entrusted to them. The decrees of the 4th of August, by which all privileges were abolished, are well known. The King sanctioned all that tended to the diminution of his own personal gratifications, but refused his consent to the 234 THE MEMOIRS OF other decrees of that tumultuous night; this refusal was one of the chief causes of the ferments of the month of October. In the early part of September meetings were held at the Palais Royal, and propositions made to go to Versailles ; it was said to be necessary to separate the King from his evil counsellors, and keep him, as well as the Dauphin, at the Louvre. The proclama- tions by the officers of the commune for the restora- tion of tranquillity were ineffectual; but M. de La Fayette succeeded this time in dispersing the popu- lace. The Assembly declared itself permanent; and during the whole of September, in which no doubt the preparations were made for the great insurrections of the following month, the Court was not disturbed. The King had the Flanders regiment removed to Versailles ; unfortunately the idea of the officers of that regiment fraternising with the Body Guards was conceived, and the latter invited the former to a din- ner, which was given in the great theatre of Ver- sailles, and not in the Salon of Hercules, as some chroniclers say. Boxes were appropriated to various persons who wished to be present at this entertain- ment. The Queen told me she had been advised to make her appearance on the occasion, but that under existing circumstances she thought such a step might do more harm than good ; and that, moreover, neither she nor the King ought directly to have anything to do with such a festival. She ordered me to go, and desired me to observe everything closely, in order to give a faithful account of the whole affair. The tables were set out upon the stage; at them were placed one of the Body Guard and an officer of the Flanders regiment alternately. There was a nu- merous orchestra in the room, and the boxes were filled with spectators. The air, " O Richard, 6 mon MARIE ANTOINETTE 235 Roi!" was played, and shouts of "Five le Roi!" shook the roof for several minutes. I had with me one of my nieces, and a young person brought up with Madame by her Majesty. They were crying " Vive le Roi! " with all their might when a deputy of the Third Estate, who was in the next box to mine, and whom I had never seen, called to them, and reproached them for their exclamations; it hurt him, he said, to see young and handsome Frenchwomen brought up in such servile habits, screaming so outrageously for the life of one man, and with true fanaticism exalting him in their hearts above even their dearest relations; he told them what contempt worthy American women would feel on seeing Frenchwomen thus corrupted from their earliest infancy. My niece replied with tolerable spirit, and I requested the deputy to put an end to the subject, which could by no means afford him any satisfaction, inasmuch as the young persons who were with me lived, as well as myself, for the sole purpose of serving and loving the King. While I was speaking what was my astonishment at seeing the King, the Queen, and the Dauphin enter the cham- ber! It was M. de Luxembourg who had effected this change in the Queen's determination. The enthusiasm became general; the moment their Majesties arrived the orchestra repeated the air I have just mentioned, and afterwards played a song in the " Deserter," " Can we grieve those whom we love? " which also made a powerful impression upon those present: on all sides were heard praises of their Maj- esties, exclamations of affection, expressions of regret for what they had suffered, clapping of hands, and shouts of " Vive le Roi! Vive la Reine! Vive le Dau- phin!" It has been said that white cockades were worn on this occasion; that was not the case; the fact is, that a few young men belonging to the Na- 236 THE MEMOIRS OF tional Guard of Versailles, who were invited to the entertainment, turned the white lining of their na- tional cockades outwards. All the military men quitted the hall, and reconducted the King and his family to their apartments. There was intoxication in these ebullitions of joy: a thousand extravagances were committed by the military, and many of them danced under the King's windows; a soldier belong- ing to the Flanders regiment climbed up to the bal- cony of the King's chamber in order to shout " Vive le Roi!" nearer his Majesty; this very soldier, as I have been told by several officers of the corps, was one of the first and most dangerous of their insurgents in the riots of the 5th and 6th of October. On the same evening another soldier of that regiment killed himself with a sword. One of my relations, chaplain to the Queen, who supped with me, saw him stretched out in a corner of the Place d'Armes ; he went to him to give him spiritual assistance, and received his con- fession and his last sighs. He destroyed himself out of regret at having suffered himself to be corrupted by the enemies of his King, and said that, since he had seen him and the Queen and the Dauphin, remorse had turned his brain. I returned home, delighted with all that I had seen. I found a great many people there. M. de Beaumetz, deputy for Arras, listened to my description with a chilling air, and, when I had finished, told me that all that had passed was terrific; that he knew the dispo- sition of the Assembly, and that the greatest misfor- tunes would follow the drama of that night ; and he begged my leave to withdraw that he might take time for deliberate reflection whether he should on the very next day emigrate, or pass over to the left side of the Assembly. He adopted the latter course, and never appeared again among my associates. MARIE ANTOINETTE 237 On the 26. of October the military entertainment was followed up by a breakfast given at the hotel of the Body Guards. It is said that a discussion took place whether they should not march against the As- sembly; but I am utterly ignorant of what passed at that breakfast. From that moment Paris was con- stantly in commotion; there were continual mobs, and the most virulent proposals were heard in all public places; the conversation was invariably about proceed- ing to Versailles. The King and Queen did not seem apprehensive of such a measure, and took no pre- caution against it; even when the army had actually left Paris, on the evening of the 5th of October, the King was shooting at Meudon, and the Queen was alone in her gardens at Trianon, which she then be- held for the last time in her life. She was sitting in her grotto absorbed in painful reflection, when she received a note from the Comte de Saint-Priest, en- treating her to return to Versailles. M. de Cubieres at the same time went off to request the King to leave his sport and return to the palace; the King did so on horseback, and very leisurely. A few minutes afterwards he was informed that a numerous body of women, which preceded the Parisian army, was at Chaville, at the entrance of the avenue from Paris. The scarcity of bread and the entertainment of the Body Guards were the pretexts for the insurrection of the 5th and 6th of October, 1789; but it is clear to demonstration that this new movement of the peo- ple was a part of the original plan of the factious, insomuch as, ever since the beginning of September, a report had been industriously circulated that the King intended to withdraw, with his family and ministers, to some stronghold; and at all the popular assemblies there had been always a great deal said about going to Versailles to seize the King. 238 THE MEMOIRS OF At first only women showed themselves; the lat- ticed doors of the Chateau were closed, and the Body Guard and Flanders regiment were drawn up in the Place d'Armes. As the details of that dreadful day are given with precision in several works, I will only observe that general consternation and disorder reigned throughout the interior of the palace. I was not in attendance on the Queen at this time. M. Campan remained with her till two in the morn- ing. As he was leaving her she condescendingly, and with infinite kindness, desired him to make me easy as to the dangers of the moment, and to repeat to me M. de La Fayette's own words, which he had just used on soliciting the royal family to retire to bed, undertaking to answer for his army. The Queen was far from relying upon M. de La Fayette's loyalty; but she has often told me that she believed on that day that La Fayette, having affirmed to the King, in the presence of a crowd of witnesses, that he would answer for the army of Paris, would not risk his honour as a commander, and was sure of being able to redeem his pledge. She also thought the Parisian army was devoted to him, and that all he said about his being forced to march upon Ver- sailles was mere pretence. On the first intimation of the march of the Pari- sians, the Comte de Saint-Priest prepared Rambouillet for the reception of the King, his family, and suite, and the carriages were even drawn out ; but a few cries of " Vive Ic Roi! " when the women reported his Majesty's favourable answer, occasioned the inten- tion of going away to be given up, and orders were given to the troops to withdraw. The Body Guards were, however, assailed with stones and musketry while they were passing from the Place d'Armes to their hotel. Alarm revived; again it was thought MARIE ANTOINETTE 239 necessary that the royal family should go away ; some carriages still remained ready for travelling; they were called for; they were stopped by a wretched player belonging to the theatre of the town, seconded by the mob : the opportunity for flight had been lost. The insurrection was directed against the Queen in particular; I shudder even now at the recollection of the poissardes, or rather furies, who wore white aprons, which they screamed out were intended to receive the bowels of Marie Antoinette, and that they would make cockades of them, mixing the most ob- scene expressions with these horrible threats. The Queen went to bed at two in the morning, and even slept, tired out with the events of so distressing a day. She had ordered her two women to bed, imagining there was nothing to dread, at least for that night; but the unfortunate Princess was indebted for her life to that feeling of attachment which pre- vented their obeying her. My sister, who was one of the ladies in question, informed me next day of all that I am about to relate. On leaving the Queen's bedchamber, these ladies called their femmes de chambre, and all four re- mained sitting together against her Majesty's bed- room door. About half -past four in the morning they heard horrible yells and discharges of firearms; one ran to the Queen to awaken her and get her out of bed; my sister flew to the place from which the tumult seemed to proceed ; she opened the door of the ante- chamber which leads to the great guard-room, and beheld one of the Body Guard holding his musket across the door, and attacked by a mob, who were striking at him; his face was covered with blood; he turned round and exclaimed : " Save the Queen, ma- dame; they are come to assassinate her! " She hastily shut the door upon the unfortunate victim of duty, 240 THE MEMOIRS OF fastened it with the great bolt, and took the same precaution on leaving the next room. On reaching the Queen's chamber she cried out to her, " Get up, Madame! Don't stay to dress yourself; fly to the King's apartment ! " The terrified Queen threw her- self out of bed; they put a petticoat upon her without tying it, and the two ladies conducted her towards the ceil-de-bccuf. A door, which led from the Queen's dressing-room to that apartment, had never before been fastened but on her side. What a dreadful mo- ment ! It was found to be secured on the other side. They knocked repeatedly with all their strength; a servant of one of the King's valets de chambre came and opened it; the Queen entered the King's chamber, but he was not there. Alarmed for the Queen's life, he had gone down the staircases and through the corridors under the ccil-de-bceuf , by means of which he was accustomed to go to the Queen's apartments without being under the necessity of crossing that room. He entered her Majesty's room and found no one there but some Body Guards, who had taken refuge in it. The King, unwilling to expose their lives, told them to wait a few minutes, and afterwards sent to desire them to go to the ml-de-bceuj. Madame de Tourzel, at that time governess of the children of France, had just taken Madame and the Dauphin to the King's apartments. The Queen saw her children again. The reader must imagine this scene of tender- ness and despair. It is not true that the assassins penetrated to the Queen's chamber and pierced the bed with their swords. The fugitive Body Guards were the only per- sons who entered it; and if the crowd had reached so far they would all have been massacred. Besides, when the rebels had forced the doors of the ante- chamber, the footmen and officers on duty, knowing MARIE ANTOINETTE 241 that the Queen was no longer in her apartments, told them so with that air of truth which always carries conviction. The ferocious horde instantly rushed towards the ceil-de-bceuf , hoping, no doubt, to intercept her on her way. Many have asserted that they recognised the Due d'Orleans in a greatcoat and slouched hat, at half-past four in the morning, at the top of the marble staircase, pointing out with his hand the guard-room, which led to the Queen's apartments. This fact was deposed to at the Chatelet by several individuals in the course of the inquiry instituted respecting the transactions of the 5th and 6th of October. The prudence and honourable feeling of several officers of the Parisian guards, and the judicious con- duct of M. de Vaudreuil, lieutenant-general of marine, and of M. de Chevanne, one of the King's Guards, brought about an understanding between the grena- diers of the National Guard of Paris and the King's Guard. The doors of the ceil-de-bocuf were closed, and the antechamber which precedes that room was filled with grenadiers who wanted to get in to massacre the Guards. M. de Chevanne offered him- self to them as a victim if they wished for one, and demanded what they would have. A report had been spread through their ranks that the Body Guards set them at defiance, and that they all wore black cock- ades. M. de Chevanne showed them that he wore, as did the corps, the cockade of their uniform; and promised that the Guards should exchange it for that , of the nation. This was done; they even went so far as to exchange their grenadiers' caps for the hats of the Body Guards; those who were on guard took off their shoulder-belts; embraces and transports of fraternisation instantly succeeded to the savage eager- ness to murder the band which had shown so much 242 THE MEMOIRS OF fidelity to its sovereign. The cry was now " Vivent le Roi, la Nation, et les Gardes-dn-corps! " The army occupied the Place d'Armes, all the court- yards of the Chateau, and the entrance to the avenue. They called for the Queen to appear in the balcony: she came forward with Madame and the Dauphin. There was a cry of " No children! " Was this with a view to deprive her of the interest she inspired, accompanied as she was by her young family, or did the leaders of the democrats hope that some madman would venture to aim a mortal blow at her person? The unfortunate Princess certainly was impressed with the latter idea, for she sent away her children, and with her hands and eyes raised towards heaven, advanced upon the balcony like a self-devoted victim. A few voices shouted " To Paris ! " The exclama- tion soon became general. Before the King agreed to this removal he wished to consult the National As- sembly, and caused that body to be invited to sit at the Chateau. Mirabeau opposed this measure. While these discussions were going forward it became more and more difficult to restrain the immense disorderly multitude. The King, without consulting any one, now said to the people : " You wish, my children, that I should follow you to Paris : I consent, but on con- dition that I shall not be separated from my wife and family." The King added that he required safety also for his Guards; he was answered by shouts of " Vive le Roi! Vivent les Gardes-du-corps! " The Guards, with their hats in the air, turned so as to exhibit the cockade, shouted " Vive le Roil Vive la Nation!" Shortly afterwards a general discharge of all the muskets took place, in token of joy. The King and Queen set off from Versailles at one o'clock. The Dauphin, Madame the King's daughter, Mon- sieur, Madame, Madame Elisabeth, and Madame de MARIE ANTOINETTE 243 Tourzel, were in the carriage; the Princesse de Chimay and the ladies of the bedchamber for the week, the King's suite and servants, followed in Court carriages; a hundred deputies in carriages, and the bulk of the Parisian army, closed the procession. The poissardes went before and around the carriage of their Majesties, crying, " We shall no longer want bread! We have the baker, the baker's wife, and the baker's boy with us ! " In the midst of this troop of cannibals the heads of two murdered Body Guards were carried on poles. The monsters, who made trophies of them, conceived the horrid idea of forcing a wigmaker of Sevres to dress them up and powder their bloody locks. The unfortunate man who was forced to perform this dreadful work died in con- sequence of the shock it gave him. The progress of the procession was so slow that it was near six in the evening when this august family, made prisoners by their own people, arrived at the Hotel de Ville. Bailly received them there ; they were placed upon a throne, just when that of their ances- tors had been overthrown. The King spoke in a firm yet gracious manner; he said that he always came with pleasure and confidence among the inhabitants of his good city of Paris. M. Bailly repeated this observation to the representatives of the commune, who came to address the King; but he forgot the word confidence. The Queen instantly and loudly re- minded him of the omission. The King and Queen, their children, and Madame Elisabeth, retired to the Tuileries. Nothing was ready for their reception there. All the living-rooms had been long given up to persons belonging to the Court; they hastily quitted them on that day, leaving their furniture, which was purchased by the Court. The Comtesse de la Marck, sister to the Marechaux de Noailles and 244 THE MEMOIRS OF de Mouchy, had occupied the apartments now appro- priated to the Queen. Monsieur and Madame retired to the Luxembourg. The Queen had sent for me on the morning of the 6th of October, to leave me and my father-in-law in charge of her most valuable property. She took away only her casket of diamonds. Comte Gouvernet de la Tour-du-Pin, to whom the military government of Versailles was entrusted pro tempore, came and gave orders to the National Guard, which had taken posses- sion of the apartments, to allow us to remove every- thing that we should deem necessary for the Queen's accommodation. I saw her Majesty alone in her private apartments a moment before her departure for Paris; she could hardly speak; tears bedewed her face, to which all the blood in her body seemed to have rushed; she condescended to embrace me, gave her hand to M. Campan to kiss, and said to us, " Come immediately and settle at Paris; I will lodge you at the Tuileries; come, and do not leave me henceforward; faithful servants at moments like these become useful friends; we are lost, dragged away, perhaps to death; when kings become prisoners they are very near it." I had frequent opportunities during the course of our misfortunes of observing that the people never entirely give their allegiance to factious leaders, but easily escape their control when some cause reminds them of their duty. As soon as the most violent Jac- obins had an opportunity of seeing the Queen near at hand, of speaking to her, and of hearing her voice, they became her most zealous partisans; and even when she was in the prison of the Temple several of those who had contributed to place her there perished for having attempted to get her out again. On the morning of the 7th of October the same MARIE ANTOINETTE 245 women who the day before surrounded the carriage of the august prisoners, riding on cannons and utter- ing the most abusive language, assembled under the Queen's windows, upon the terrace of the Chateau, and desired to see her. Her Majesty appeared. There are always among mobs of this description orators, that is to say, beings who have more assurance than the rest; a woman of this description told the Queen that she must now remove far from her all such courtiers as ruin kings, and that she must love the inhabitants of her good city. The Queen answered that she had loved them at Versailles, and would like- wise love them at Paris. "Yes, yes," said another; " but on the 14th of July you wanted to besiege the city and have it bombarded; and on the 6th of October you wanted to fly to the frontiers." The Queen replied, affably, that they had been told so, and had believed it; that there lay the cause of the unhappiness of the people and of the best of kings. A third addressed a few words to her in German : the Queen told her she did not understand it; that she had become so entirely French as even to have for- gotten her mother tongue. This declaration was answered with "Bravo!" and clapping of hands; they then desired her to make a compact with them. " Ah," said she, " how can I make a compact with you, since you have no faith in that which my duty points out to me, and which I ought for my own happiness to respect?" They asked her for the rib- bons and flowers out of her hat; her Majesty herself unfastened them and gave them; they were divided among the party, which for above half an hour cried out, without ceasing, " Marie Antoinette for ever ! Our good Queen for ever ! " Two days after the King's arrival at Paris, the city and the National Guard sent to request the Queen to 246 THE MEMOIRS OF appear at the theatre, and prove by her presence and the King's that it was with pleasure they resided in their capital. I introduced the deputation which came to make this request. Her Majesty replied that she would have infinite pleasure in acceding to the invitation of the city of Paris; but that time must be allowed her to soften the recollection of the dis- tressing events which had just occurred, and from which she had suffered too much. She added, that having come into Paris preceded by the heads of the faithful Guards who had perished before the door of their sovereign, she could not think that such an entry into the capital ought to be followed by rejoicings; but that the happiness she had always felt in appearing in the midst of the inhabitants of Paris was not effaced from her memory, and that she should enjoy it again as soon as she found herself able to do so. Their Majesties found some consolation in their private life : from Madame's gentle manners and filial affection, from the accomplishments and vivacity of the little Dauphin, and the attention and tenderness of the pious Princess Elisabeth, they still derived moments of happiness. The young Prince daily gave proofs of sensibility and penetration; he was not yet beyond female care, but a private tutor, the Abbe Davout, gave him all the instruction suitable to his age; his memory was highly cultivated, and he re- cited verses with much grace and feeling. The day after the arrival of the Court at Paris, terrified at hearing some noise in the gardens of the Tuileries, he threw himself into the arms of the Queen, crying out, " Grand Dieu, mamma ! will it be yesterday over again?" A few days after this af- fecting exclamation, he went up to the King, and looked at him with a pensive air. The King asked him what he wanted; he answered, that he had some- MARIE ANTOINETTE 247 thing very serious to say to him. The King having prevailed on him to explain himself, the young Prince asked why his people, who formerly loved him so well, were all at once angry with him; and what he had done to irritate them so much. His father took him upon his knees, and spoke to him nearly as fol- lows : " I wished, child, to render the people still happier than they were ; I wanted money to pay the expenses occasioned by wars. I asked my people for money, as my predecessors have always done ; magis- trates, composing the Parliament, opposed it, and said that my people alone had a right to consent to it. I assembled the principal inhabitants of every town, whether distinguished by birth, fortune, or talents, at Versailles; that is what is called the States General. When they were assembled they required concessions of me which I could not make, either with due respect for myself or with justice to you, who will be my successor ; wicked men inducing the people to rise have occasioned the excesses of the last few days; the people must not be blamed for them." The Queen made the young Prince clearly com- prehend that he ought to treat the commanders of battalions, the officers of the National Guard, and all the Parisians who were about him, with affability ; the child took great pains to please all those people, and when he had had an opportunity of replying obligingly to the mayor or members of the commune he came and whispered in his mother's ear, " Was that right?" He requested M. Bailly to show him the shield of Scipio, which is in the royal library; and M. Bailly asking him which he preferred, Scipio or Hannibal, the young Prince replied, without hesitation, that he preferred him who had defended his own country. He gave frequent proofs of ready wit. One day, 248 THE MEMOIRS OF while the Queen was hearing Madame repeat her exercises in ancient history, the young Princess could not at the moment recollect the name of the Queen of Carthage; the Dauphin was vexed at his sister's want of memory, and though he never spoke to her in the second person singular, he bethought himself of the expedient of saying to her, " But dis done the name of the Queen, to mamma; dis done what her name was." Shortly after the arrival of the King and his family at Paris the Duchesse de Luynes came, in pursuance of the advice of a committee of the Constitutional Assembly, to propose to the Queen a temporary re- tirement from France, in order to leave the constitu- tion to perfect itself, so that the patriots should not accuse her of influencing the King to oppose it. The Duchess knew how far the schemes of the conspirers extended, and her attachment to the Queen was the principal cause of the advice she gave her. The Queen perfectly comprehended the Duchesse de Luynes's mo- tive; but replied that she would never leave either the King or her son; that if she thought herself alone obnoxious to public hatred she would instantly offer her life as a sacrifice; but that it was the throne which was aimed at, and that, in abandoning the King, she should be merely committing an act of cowardice, since she saw no other advantage in it than that of saving her own life. One evening, in the month of November, 1790, I returned home rather late; I there found the Prince de Poix; he told me he came to request me to assist him in regaining his peace of mind; that at the com- mencement of the sittings of the National Assembly he had suffered himself to be seduced into the hope of a better order of things; that he blushed for his error, and that he abhorred plans which had already MARIE ANTOINETTE 249 produced such fatal results; that he broke with the reformers for the rest of his life; that he had given in his resignation as a deputy of the National As- sembly; and, finally, that he was anxious that the Queen should not sleep in ignorance of his senti- ments. I undertook his commission, and acquitted myself of it in the best way I could; but I was to- tally unsuccessful. The Prince de Poix remained at Court; he there suffered many mortifications, never ceasing to serve the King in the most dangerous com- missions with that zeal for which his house has al- ways been distinguished. When the King, the Queen, and the children were suitably established at the Tuileries, as well as Ma- dame Elisabeth and the Princesse de Lamballe, the Queen resumed her usual habits; she employed her mornings in superintending the education of Madame, who received all her lessons in her presence, and she herself began to work large pieces of tapestry. Her mind was too much occupied with passing events and surrounding dangers to admit of her applying herself to reading; the needle was the only employment which could divert her. She received the Court twice a week before going to mass, and on those days dined in public with the King; she spent the rest of the time with her family and children; she had no con- cert, and did not go to the play until 1791, after the acceptation of the constitution. The Princesse de Lamballe, however, had some evening parties in her apartments at the Tuileries, which were tolerably brilliant in consequence of the great number of per- sons who attended them. The Queen was present at a few of these assemblies; but being soon convinced that her present situation forbade her appearing much in public, she remained at home, and conversed as she sat at work. The sole topic of her discourse was, as 250 THE MEMOIRS OF may well be supposed, the Revolution. She sought to discover the real opinions of the Parisians respecting her, and how she could have so completely lost the af- fections of the people, and even of many persons in the higher ranks. She well knew that she ought to im- pute the whole to the spirit of party, to the hatred of the Due d'Orleans, and the folly of the French, who desired to have a total change in the constitution; but she was not the less desirous of ascertaining the private feelings of all the people in power. From the very commencement of the Revolution General Luckner indulged in violent sallies against her. Her Majesty, knowing that I was acquainted with a lady who had been long connected with the General, desired me to discover through that channel what was the private motive on which Luckner's hatred against her was founded. On being questioned upon this point, he answered that Marechal de Segur had assured him he had proposed him for the command of a camp of observation, but that the Queen had made a bar against his name ; and that this par, as he called it, in his German accent, he could not forget. The Queen ordered me to repeat this reply to the King myself, and said to him: " See, Sire, whether I was not right in telling you that your ministers, in order to give themselves full scope in the distribution of favours, persuaded the French that I interfered in everything; there was not a single license given out in the country for the sale of salt or tobacco but the people believed it was given to one of my favourites." "That is very true," replied the King; "but I find it very difficult to believe that Marechal de Segur ever said any such thing to Luckner; he knew too well that you never interfered in the distribution of favours. That Luckner is a good-for-nothing fellow, and Segur is a brave and honourable man who never uttered MARIE ANTOINETTE 251 such a falsehood ; however, you are right ; and because you provided for a few dependents, you are most un- justly reported to have disposed of all offices, civil and military." All the nobility who had not left Paris made a point of presenting themselves assiduously to the King, and there was a considerable influx to the Tuileries. Marks of attachment were exhibited even in external symbols; the women wore enormous bouquets of lilies in their bosoms and upon their heads, and sometimes even bunches of white ribbon. At the play there were often disputes between the pit and the boxes about re- moving these ornaments, which the people thought dangerous emblems. National cockades were sold in every corner of Paris; the sentinels stopped all who did not wear them; the young men piqued themselves upon breaking through this regulation, which was in some degree sanctioned by the acquiescence of Louis XVI. Frays took place, which were to be regretted, because they excited a spirit of lawlessness. The King adopted conciliatory measures with the Assembly in order to promote tranquillity; the revolutionists were but little disposed to think him sincere; unfor- tunately the royalists encouraged this incredulity by incessantly repeating that the King was not free, and that all that he did was completely null, and in no way bound him for the time to come. Such was the heat and violence of party spirit that persons the most sincerely attached to the King were not even per- mitted to use the language of reason, and recommend greater reserve in conversation. People would talk and argue at table without considering that all the servants belonged to the hostile army; and it may truly be said there was as much imprudence and levity in the party assailed as there was cunning, boldness„ and perseverance in that which made the attack. CHAPTER XVII IN February, 1790, another matter gave the Court much uneasiness ; a zealous individual of the name of Favras had conceived the scheme of carrying 1 off the King, and effecting a counter-revolution. Mon- sieur, probably out of mere benevolence, gave him some money, and thence arose a report that he thereby wished to favour the execution of the enterprise. The step taken by Monsieur in going to the Hotel de Ville to explain himself on this matter was unknown to the Queen; it is more than probable that the King was acquainted with it. When judgment was pro- nounced upon M. de Favras the Queen did not con- ceal from me her fears about the confessions of the unfortunate man in his last moments. I sent a confidential person to the Hotel de Ville; she came to inform the Queen that the condemned had demanded to be taken from Notre-Dame to the Hotel de Ville to make a final declaration, and give some particulars verifying it. These particulars com- promised nobody; Favras corrected his last will after writing it, and went to the scaffold with heroic cour- age and coolness. The judge who read his condemna- tion to him told him that his life was a sacrifice which he owed to public tranquillity. It was asserted at the time that Favras was given up as a victim in order to satisfy the people and save the Baron de Besenval, who was a prisoner in the Abbaye. On the morning of the Sunday following this execu- tion M. de la Villeurnoy came to my house to tell me that he was going that day to the public dinner of 252 MARIE ANTOINETTE 253 the King- and Queen to present Madame de Favras and her son, both of them in mourning for the brave Frenchman who fell a sacrifice for his King; and that all the royalists expected to see the Queen load the unfortunate family with favours. I did all that lay in my power to prevent this proceeding. I fore- saw the effect it would have upon the Queen's feeling heart, and the painful constraint she would experi- ence, having the horrible Santerre, the commandant of a battalion of the Parisian guard, behind her chair during dinner-time. I could not make M. de la Vil- leurnoy comprehend my argument; the Queen was gone to mass, surrounded by her whole Court, and I had not even means of apprising her of his in- tention. When dinner was over I heard a knocking at the door of my apartment, which opened into the corridor next that of the Queen; it was herself. She asked me whether there was anybody with me; I was alone; she threw herself into an armchair, and told me she came to weep with me over the foolish conduct of the ultras of the King's party. " We must fall," said she, " attacked as we are by men who possess every talent and shrink from no crime, while we are defended only by those who are no doubt very estimable, but have no adequate idea of our situation. They have exposed me to the animosity of both parties by presenting the widow and son of Favras to me. Were I free to act as I wish, I should take the child of the man who has just sacrificed himself for us and place him at table between the King and myself; but surrounded by the assassins who have destroyed his father, I did not dare even to cast my eyes upon him. The royalists will blame me for not having appeared interested in this poor child; the revolutionists will be enraged at the idea that his presentation should have been thought 254 THE MEMOIRS OF agreeable to me." However, the Queen added that she knew Madame de Favras was in want, and that she desired me to send her next day, through a person who could be relied on, a few rouleaus of fifty louis, and to direct that she should be assured her Majesty would always watch over the fortunes of herself and her son. In the month of March following I had an oppor- tunity of ascertaining the King's sentiments respect- ing the schemes which were continually proposed to him for making his escape. One night about ten o'clock Comte d'Inisdal, who was deputed by the nobility, came to request that I would see him in private, as he had an important matter to communi- cate to me. He told me that on that very night the King was to be carried off; that the section of the National Guard, that day commanded by M. d'Au- mont, was gained over, and that sets of horses, fur- nished by some good royalists, were placed in re- lays at suitable distances; that he had just left a number of the nobility assembled for the execution of this scheme, and that he had been sent to me that I might, through the medium of the Queen, obtain the King's positive consent to it before midnight ; that the King was aware of their plan, but that his Maj- esty never would speak decidedly, and that it was necessary he should consent to the undertaking. I greatly displeased Comte d'Inisdal by expressing my astonishment that the nobility at the moment of the execution of so important a project should send to me, the Queen's first woman, to obtain a consent which ought to have been the basis of any well-con- certed scheme. I told him, also, that it would be impossible *or me to go at that time to the Queen's apartments without exciting the attention of the peo- ple in the antechambers; that the King was at cards MARIE ANTOINETTE 255 with tHe Queen and his family, and that I never broke in upon their privacy unless I was called for. I added, however, that M. Campan could enter without being called; and if the Count chose to give him his confidence he might rely upon him. My father-in-law, to whom Comte dTnisdal re- peated what he had said to me, took the commission upon himself, and went to the Queen's apartments. The King was playing at whist with the Queen, Mon- sieur, and Madame; Madame Elisabeth was kneeling on a stool near the table. M. Campan informed the Queen of what had been communicated to me; no- body uttered a word. The Queen broke silence and said to the King, " Do you hear, Sire, what Campan says to us?" "Yes, I hear," said the King, and continued his game. Monsieur, who was in the habit of introducing passages from plays into his conversa- tion, said to my father-in-law, " M. Campan, that pretty little couplet again, if you please; " and pressed the King to reply. At length the Queen said, " But something must be said to Campan." The King then spoke to my father-in-law in these words: 'Tell M. dTnisdal that I cannot consent to be carried off!" The Queen enjoined M. Campan to take care and re- port this answer faithfully. " You understand," added she, "the King cannot consent to be carried off." Comte d'Inisdal was very much dissatisfied with the King's answer, and went out, saying, " I understand; he wishes to throw all the blame, beforehand, upon those who are to devote themselves for him." He went away, and I thought the enterprise would be abandoned. However, the Queen remained alone with me till midnight, preparing her cases of valuables, and ordered me not to go to bed. She imagined the King's answer would be understood as a tacit con- 256 THE MEMOIRS OF sent, and merely a refusal to participate in the design, I do not know what passed in the King's apartments during the night; but I occasionally looked out at the windows : I saw the garden clear ; I heard no noise in the palace, and day at length confirmed my opinion that the project had been given up. " We must, how- ever, fly," said the Queen to me, shortly afterwards; " who knows how far the factious may go ? The danger increases every day." This Princess received advice and memorials from all quarters. Rivarol ad- dressed several to her, which I read to her. They were full of ingenious observations ; but the Queen did not find that they contained anything of essential service under the circumstances in which the royal family was placed. Comte du Moustier also sent memorials and plans of conduct. I remember that in one of his writings he said to the King, " Read ' Tele- machus ' again, Sire ; in that book which delighted your Majesty in infancy you will find the first seeds of those principles which, erroneously followed up by men of ardent imaginations, are bringing on the ex- plosion we expect every moment." I read so many of these memorials that I could hardly give a faithful ac- count of them, and I am determined to note in this work no other events than such as I witnessed; no other words than such as (notwithstanding the lapse of time) still in some measure vibrate in my ears. Comte de Segur, on his return from Russia, was employed some time by the Queen, and had a certain degree of influence over her; but that did not last long. Comte Augustus de la Marck likewise endeav- oured to negotiate for the King's advantage with the leaders of the factious. M. de Fontanges, Archbishop of Toulouse, possessed also the Queen's confidence; but none of the endeavours which were made on the spot produced any beneficial result. The Empress MARIE ANTOINETTE 257 Catherine II. also conveyed her opinion upon the situ- ation of Louis XVI. to the Queen, and her Majesty made me read a few lines in the Empress's own hand- writing, which concluded with these words : " Kings ought to proceed in their career undisturbed by the cries of the people, even as the moon pursues her course unimpeded by the baying of dogs." This maxim of the despotic sovereign of Russia was very inapplicable to the situation of a captive king. Meanwhile the revolutionary party followed up its audacious enterprise in a determined manner, without meeting any opposition. The advice from without, as well from Coblentz as from Vienna, made various impressions upon the members of the royal family, and those cabinets were not in accordance with each other. I often had reason to infer from what the Queen said to me that she thought the King, by leaving all the honour of restoring order to the Co- blentz party, would, on the return of the emigrants, be put under a kind of guardianship which would in- crease his own misfortunes. She frequently said to me, " If the emigrants succeed, they will rule the roast for a long time; it will be impossible to refuse them anything; to owe the crown to them would be contracting too great an obligation." It always ap- peared to me that she wished her own family to counterbalance the claims of the emigrants by disin- terested services. She was fearful of M. de Calonne, and with good reason. She had proof that this min- ister was her bitterest enemy, and that he made use of the most criminal means in order to blacken her reputation. I can testify that I have seen in the hands of the Queen a manuscript copy of the infamous memoirs of the woman De Lamotte, which had been brought to her from London, and in which all those passages where a total ignorance of the customs of 258 THE MEMOIRS OF Courts had occasioned that wretched woman to make blunders which would have been too palpable were cor- rected in M. de Calonne's own handwriting. The two King's Guards who were wounded at her Majesty's door on the 6th of October were M. du Re- paire and M. de Miomandre de Sainte-Marie; on the dreadful night of the 6th of October the latter took the post of the former the moment he became in- capable of maintaining it. A considerable number of the Body Guards, who were wounded on the 6th of October, betook them- selves to the infirmary at Versailles. The brigands wanted to make their way into the infirmary in order to massacre them. M. Viosin, head surgeon of that infirmary, ran to the entrance hall, invited the as- sailants to refresh themselves, ordered wine to be brought, and found means to direct the Sister Supe- rior to remove the Guards into a ward appropriated to the poor, and dress them in the caps and greatcoats furnished by the institution. The good sisters ex- ecuted this order so promptly that the Guards were removed, dressed as paupers, and their beds made, while the assassins were drinking. They searched all the wards, and fancied they saw no persons there but the sick poor; thus the Guards were saved. M. de Miomandre was at Paris, living on terms of friendship with another of the Guards, who, on the same day, received a gunshot wound from the brigands in another part of the Chateau. These two officers, who were attended and cured together at the infirmary of Versailles, were almost constant companions; they were recognised at the Palais Royal, and insulted. The Queen thought it necessary for them to quit Paris. She desired me to write to M. de Miomandre de Sainte-Marie, and tell him to come to me at eight o'clock in the evening; and then to communicate to MARIE ANTOINETTE 259 him her wish to hear of his being in safety; and ordered me, when he had made up his mind to go, to tell him in her name that gold could not repay such a service as he had rendered ; that she hoped some day to be in sufficiently happy circumstances to recom- pense him as she ought; but that for the present her offer of money was only that of a sister to a brother situated as he then was, and that she requested he would take whatever might be necessary to discharge his debts at Paris and defray the expenses of his jour- ney. She told me also to desire he would bring his friend Bertrand with him, and to make him the same offer. The two Guards came at the appointed hour, and accepted, I think, each one or two hundred louis. A moment afterwards the Queen opened my door; she was accompanied by the King and Madame Elisabeth ; the King stood with his back against the fireplace; the Queen sat down upon a sofa and Madame Elisa- beth sat near her; I placed myself behind the Queen, and the two Guards stood facing the King. The Queen told them that the King wished to see before they went away two of the brave men who had af- forded him the strongest proofs of courage and at- tachment. Miomandre said all that the Queen's af- fecting observations were calculated to inspire. Ma- dame Elisabeth spoke of the King's gratitude; the Queen resumed the subject of their speedy departure, urging the necessity of it; the King was silent; but his emotion was evident, and his eyes were suffused with tears. The Queen rose, the King went out, and Madame Elisabeth followed him; the Queen stopped and said to me, in the recess of a window, " I am sorry I brought the King here ! I am sure Elisabeth thinks with me; if the King had but given utterance to a fourth part of what he thinks of those brave men Vol. 3 Memoirs — 9 260 THE MEMOIRS OF they would have been in ecstasies; but he cannot overcome his diffidence." The Emperor Joseph died about this time. The Queen's grief was not excessive; that brother of whom she had been so proud, and whom she had loved so tenderly, had probably suffered greatly in her opinion ; she reproached him sometimes, though with modera- tion, for having adopted several of the principles of the new philosophy, and perhaps she knew that he looked upon our troubles with the eye of the sovereign of Germany rather than that of the brother of the Queen of France. The Emperor on one occasion sent the Queen an engraving which represented unfrocked nuns and monks. The first were trying on fashionable dresses, the latter were having their hair arranged ; the picture was always left in the closet, and never hung up. The Queen told me to have it taken away; for she was hurt to see how much influence the philosophers had over her brother's mind and actions. Mirabeau had not lost the hope of becoming the last resource of the oppressed Court ; and at this time some communications passed between the Queen and him. The question was about an office to be conferred upon him. This transpired, and it must have been about this period that the Assembly decreed that no deputy could hold an office as a minister of the King until the expiration of two years after the cessation of his legislative functions. I know that the Queen was much hurt at this decision, and considered that the Court had lost a promising opening. The palace of the Tuileries was a very disagreeable residence during the summer, which made the Queen wish to go to St. Cloud. The removal was decided on without any opposition; the National Guard of Paris followed the Court thither. At this period new MARIE ANTOINETTE 261 opportunities of escape were presented ; nothing would have been more easy than to execute them. The King had obtained leave (!) to go out without guards, and to be accompanied only by an aide-de-camp of M. de La Fayette. The Queen also had one on duty with her, and so had the Dauphin. The King and Queen often went out at four in the afternoon, and did not return until eight or nine. I will relate one of the plans of emigration which the Queen communicated to me, the success of which seemed infallible. The royal family were to meet in a wood four leagues from St. Cloud ; some persons who could be fully relied on were to accompany the King, who was always followed by his equerries and pages; the Queen was to join him with her daughter and Madame Elisabeth. These Princesses, as well as the Queen, had equerries and pages, of whose fidelity no doubt could be entertained. The Dauphin like- wise was to be at the place of rendezvous with Madame de Tourzel; a large berlin and a chaise for the at- tendants were sufficient for the whole family; the aides-de-camp were to have been gained over or mas- tered. The King was to leave a letter for the Presi- dent of the National Assembly on his bureau at St. Cloud. The people in the service of the King and Queen would have waited until nine in the evening without anxiety, because the family sometimes did not return until that hour. The letter could not be forwarded to Paris until ten o'clock. at the earliest. The Assembly would not then be sitting; the Presi- dent must have been sought for at his own house or elsewhere; it would have been midnight before the Assembly could have been summoned and couriers sent off to have the royal family stopped ; but the latter would have been six or seven hours in advance, as they would have started at six leagues' distance 262 MARIE ANTOINETTE from Paris; and at this period travelling was not yet impeded in France. The Queen approved of this plan ; but I did not venture to interrogate her, and I even thought if it were put in execution she would leave me in ignorance of it. One evening in the month of June the people of the Chateau, finding the King did not return by nine o'clock, were walking about the courtyards in a state of great anxiety. I thought the family was gone, and I could scarcely breathe amidst the con- fusion of my good wishes, when I heard the sound of the carriages. I confessed to the Queen that I thought she had set off; she told me she must wait until Mesdames the King's aunts had quitted France, and afterwards see whether the plan agreed with those formed abroad. CHAPTER XVIII THERE was a meeting at Paris for the first fed- eration on the 14th of July, 1790, the anni- versary of the taking of the Bastille. What an astonishing assemblage of four hundred thousand men, of whom there were not perhaps two hundred who did not believe that the King found happiness and glory in the order of things then being established. The love which was borne him by all, with the excep- tion of those who meditated his ruin, still reigned in the hearts of the French in the departments; but if I may judge from those whom I had an opportunity of seeing, it was totally impossible to enlighten them; they were as much attached to the King as to the con- stitution, and to the constitution as to the King ; and it was impossible to separate the one from the other in their hearts and minds. The Court returned to St. Cloud after the federa- tion. A wretch, named Rotondo, made his way into the palace with the intention of assassinating the Queen. It is known that he penetrated to the inner gardens: the rain prevented her Majesty from going out that day. M. de La Fayette, who was aware of this plot, gave all the sentinels the strictest orders, and a description of the monster was distributed throughout the palace by order of the General. I do not know how he was saved from punishment. The police belonging to the King discovered that there was likewise a scheme on foot for poisoning the Queen. She spoke to me, as well as to her head physician, M. Vicq-d'Azyr, about it, without the slightest emotion, 263 264 THE MEMOIRS OF but both he and I consulted what precautions it would be proper to take. He relied much upon the Queen's temperance ; yet he recommended me always to have a bottle of oil of sweet almonds within reach, and to renew it occasionally, that oil and milk being, as is known, the most certain antidotes to the divellication of corrosive poisons. The Queen had a habit which rendered M. Vicq- d'Azyr particularly uneasy : there was always some pounded sugar upon the table in her Majesty's bed- chamber ; and she frequently, without calling anybody, put spoonfuls of it into a glass of water when she wished to drink. It was agreed that I should get a considerable quantity of sugar powdered ; that I should always have some papers of it in my bag, and that three or four times a day, when alone in the Queen's room, I should substitute it for that in her sugar- basin. We knew that the Queen would have pre- vented all such precautions, but we were not aware of her reason. One day she caught me alone making this exchange, and told me she supposed it was agreed on between myself and M. Vicq-d'Azyr, but that I gave myself very unnecessary trouble. " Remember," added she, " that not a grain of poison will be put in use against me. The Brinvilliers do not belong to this century : this age possesses calumny, which is a much more convenient instrument of death; and it is by that I shall perish." Even while melancholy presentiments afflicted this unfortunate Princess, manifestations of attachment to her person, and to the King's cause, would frequently raise agreeable illusions in her mind, or present to her the affecting spectacle of tears shed for her sor- rows. I was one day, during this same visit to St. Cloud, witness of a very touching scene, which we took great care to keep secret. It was four in the MARIE ANTOINETTE 265 afternoon; the guard was not set; there was scarcely anybody at St. Cloud that day, and I was reading to the Queen, who was at work in a room the balcony of which hung over the courtyard. The windows were closed, yet we heard a sort of inarticulate murmur from a great number of voices. The Queen desired me to go and see what it was; I raised the muslin curtain, and perceived more than fifty persons beneath the balcony: this group consisted of women, young and old, perfectly well dressed in the country costume, old chevaliers of St. Louis, young knights of Malta, and a few ecclesiastics. I told the Queen it was probably an assemblage of persons residing in the neighbourhood who wished to see her. She rose, opened the window, and appeared in the balcony; im- mediately all these worthy people said to her, in an undertone : " Courage, Madame ; good Frenchmen suffer for you, and with you; they pray for you. Heaven will hear their prayers; we love you, we re- spect you, we will continue to venerate our virtuous King." The Queen burst into tears, and held her handkerchief to her eyes. " Poor Queen ! she weeps ! " said the women and young girls; but the dread of exposing her Majesty, and even the persons who showed so much affection for her, to observation, prompted me to take her hand, and prevail upon her to retire into her room; and, raising my eyes, I gave the excellent people to understand that my conduct was dictated by prudence. They comprehended me, for I heard, "That lady is right;" and afterwards, " Farewell, Madame! " from several of them; and all this in accents of feeling so true and so mournful, that I am affected at the recollection of them even after a lapse of twenty years. A few days afterwards the insurrection of Nancy took place. Only the ostensible cause is known; there 266 THE MEMOIRS OF was another, of which I might have been in full pos- session, if the great confusion I was in upon the subject had not deprived me of the power of paying attention to it. I will endeavour to make myself un- derstood. In the early part of September the Queen, as she was going to bed, desired me to let all her peo- ple go, and to remain with her myself; when we were alone she said to me, " The King will come here at midnight. You know that he has always shown you marks of distinction; he now proves his confidence in you by selecting you to write down the whole affair of Nancy from his dictation. He must have several copies of it." At midnight the King came to the Queen's apartments, and said to me, smiling, " You did not expect to become my secretary, and that, too, during the night." I followed the King into the coun- cil chamber. I found there sheets of paper, an ink- stand, and pens all ready prepared. He sat down by my side and dictated to me the report of the Mar- quis de Bouille, which he himself copied at the same time. My hand trembled; I wrote with difficulty; my reflections scarcely left me sufficient power of attention to listen to the King. The large table, the velvet cloth, seats which ought to have been filled by none but the King's chief councillors; what that cham- ber had been, and what it was at that moment, when the King was employing a woman in an office which had so little affinity with her ordinary functions ; the misfortunes which had brought him to the necessity of doing so, — all these ideas made such an impression upon me that when I had returned to the Queen's apartments I could not sleep for the remainder of the night, nor could I remember what I had written. The more I saw that I had the happiness to be of some use to my employers, the more scrupulously careful was I to live entirely with my family; and I MARIE ANTOINETTE 267 never indulged in any conversation which could be- tray the intimacy to which I was admitted; but noth- ing at Court remains long concealed, and I soon saw I had many enemies. The means of injuring others in the minds of sovereigns are but too easily obtained, and they had become still more so, since the mere suspicion of communication with partisans of the Revolution was sufficient to forfeit the esteem and confidence of the King and Queen; happily, my con- duct protected me, with them, against calumny. I had left St. Cloud two days, when I received at Paris a note from the Queen, containing these words : " Come to St. Cloud immediately ; I have something concerning you to communicate." I set off without loss of time. Her Majesty told me she had a sacrifice to request of me; I answered that it was made. She said it went so far as the renunciation of a friend's society; that such a renunciation was always painful, but that it must be particularly so to me; that, for her own part, it might have been very useful that a deputy, a man of talent, should be constantly received at my house; but at this moment she thought only of my welfare. The Queen then informed me that the ladies of the bedchamber had, the preceding evening, assured her that M. de Beaumetz, deputy from the nobility of Artois, who had taken his seat on the left of the Assembly, spent his whole time at my house. Perceiving on what false grounds the attempt to in- jure me was based, I replied respectfully, but at the same time smiling, that it was impossible for me to make the sacrifice exacted by her Majesty; that M. de Beaumetz, a man of great judgment, had not de- termined to cross over to the left of the Assembly with the intention of afterwards making himself un- popular by spending his time with the Queen's first woman; and that, ever since the 1st of October, 1789, 268 THE MEMOIRS OF I had seen him nowhere but at the play, or in the public walks, and even then without his ever coming to speak to me; that this line of conduct had appeared to me perfectly consistent : for whether he was desir- ous to please the popular party, or to be sought after by the Court, he could not act in any other way towards me. The Queen closed this explanation by saying, " Oh ! it is clear, as clear as the day ! this opportunity for trying to do you an injury is very ill chosen; but be cautious in your slightest actions; you perceive that the confidence placed in you by the King and myself raises you up powerful enemies." The private communications which were still kept up between the Court and Mirabeau at length procured him an interview with the Queen, in the gardens of St. Cloud. He left Paris on horseback, on pretence of going into the country, to M. de Clavieres, one of his friends; but he stopped at one of the gates of the gar- dens of St. Cloud, and was led to a spot situated in the highest part of the private garden, where the Queen was waiting for him. She told me she accosted him by saying, " With a common enemy, with a man who had sworn to destroy monarchy without appreciating its utility among a great people, I should at this mo- ment be guilty of a most ill-advised step; but in speaking to a Mirabeau," etc. The poor Queen was delighted at having discovered this method of exalting him above all others of his principles; and in im- parting the particulars of this interview to me she said, " Do you know that those words, ' a Mirabeau,' appeared to flatter him exceedingly." On leaving the Queen he said to her with warmth, " Madame, the monarchy is saved ! " It must have been soon after- wards that Mirabeau received considerable sums of money. He showed it too plainly by the increase of his expenditure. Already did some of his remarks MARIE ANTOINETTE 269 upon the necessity of arresting the progress of the democrats circulate in society. Being once invited to meet a person at dinner who was very much attached to the Queen, he learned that that person withdrew on hearing that he was one of the guests; the party who invited him told him this with some degree of satisfac- tion ; but all were very much astonished when they heard Mirabeau eulogise the absent guest, and declare that in his place he would have done the same; but, he added, they had only to invite that person again in a few months, and he would then dine with the re- storer of the monarchy. Mirabeau forgot that it was more easy to do harm than good, and thought himself the political Atlas of the whole world. Outrages and mockery were incessantly mingled with the audacious proceedings of the revolutionists. It was customary to give serenades under the King's windows on New Year's Day. The band of the Na- tional Guard repaired thither on that festival in 1791 ; in allusion to the liquidation of the debts of the State, decreed by the Assembly, they played solely, and re- peatedly, that air from the comic opera of the " Debts," the burden of which is, " But our creditors are paid, and that makes us easy." On the same day some " conquerors of the Bastille," grenadiers of the Parisian guard, preceded by military music, came to present to the young Dauphin, as a New Year's gift, a box of dominoes, made of some of the stone and marble of which that state prison was built. The Queen gave me this inauspicious curios- ity, desiring me to preserve it, as it would be a curious illustration of the history of the Revolution. Upon the lid were engraved some bad verses, the purport of which was as follows : " Stones from those walls, which enclosed the innocent victims of arbitrary power, have been converted into a toy, to be pre- 270 THE MEMOIRS OF seated to you, Monseigneur, as a mark of the people's love ; and to teach you their power." The Queen said that M. de La Fayette's thirst for popularity induced him to lend himself, without dis- crimination, to all popular follies. Her distrust of the General increased daily, and grew so powerful that when, towards the end of the Revolution, he seemed willing to support the tottering throne, she could never bring herself to incur so great an obliga- tion to him. M. de J , a colonel attached to the staff of the army, was fortunate enough to render several services to the Queen, and acquitted himself with discretion and dignity of various important missions. Their Majesties had the highest confidence in him, although it frequently happened that his prudence, when incon- siderate projects were under discussion, brought upon him the charge of adopting the principles of the con- stitutionals. Being sent to Turin, he had some dif- ficulty in dissuading the Princes from a scheme they had formed at that period of reentering France, with a very weak army, by way of Lyons ; and when, in a council which lasted till three o'clock in the morn- ing, he showed his instructions, and demonstrated that the measure would endanger the King, the Comte d'Artois alone declared against the plan, which emanated from the Prince de Conde. Among the persons employed in subordinate situa- tions, whom the critical circumstances of the times involved in affairs of importance, was M. de Goguelat, a geographical engineer at Versailles, and an excel- lent draughtsman. He made plans of St. Cloud and Trianon for the Queen ; she was very much pleased with them, and had the engineer admitted into the staff of the army. At the commencement of the Revolution he was sent to Count Esterhazy, at Va- MARIE ANTOINETTE 271 lenciennes, in the capacity of aide-de-camp. The lat- ter rank was given him solely to get him away from Versailles, where his rashness endangered the Queen during the earlier months of the Assembly of the States General. Making a parade of his devotion to the King's interests, he went repeatedly to the trib- unes of the Assembly, and there openly railed at all the motions of the deputies, and then returned to the Queen's antechamber, where he repeated all that he had just heard, or had had the imprudence to say. Unfortunately, at the same time that the Queen sent away M. de Goguelat, she still believed that, in a dangerous predicament, requiring great self-devotion, the man might be employed advantageously. In 1791 he was commissioned to act in concert with the Mar- quis de Bouille in furtherance of the King's intended escape. Projectors in great numbers endeavoured to intro- duce themselves not only to the Queen, but to Madame Elisabeth, who had communications with many indi- viduals who took upon themselves to make plans for the conduct of the Court. The Baron de Gilliers and M. de Vanoise were of this description; they went to the Baronne de Mackau's, where the Princess spent almost all her evenings. The Queen did not like these meetings, where Madame Elisabeth might adopt views in opposition to the King's intentions or her own. The Queen gave frequent audiences to M. de La Fayette. One day, when he was in her inner closet, his aides-de-camp, who waited for him, were walking up and down the great room where the persons in attendance remained. Some imprudent young women were thoughtless enough to say, with the intention of being overheard by those officers, that it was very alarming to see the Queen alone with a rebel and a brigand. I was annoyed at their indiscretion, and 2-J2 THE MEMOIRS OF imposed silence on them. One of them persisted in the appellation " brigand." I told her that M. de La Fayette well deserved the name of rebel, but that the title of leader of a party was given by history to every man commanding forty thousand men, a capital, and forty leagues of country; that kings had frequently treated with such leaders, and if it was convenient to the Queen to do the same, it remained for us only to be silent and respect her actions. On the morrow the Queen, with a serious air, but with the greatest kind- ness, asked what I had said respecting M. de La Fayette on the preceding day; adding that she had been assured I had enjoined her women silence, be- cause they did not like him, and that I had taken his part. I repeated what had passed to the Queen, word for word. She condescended to tell me that I had done perfectly right. Whenever any false reports respecting me were conveyed to her she was kind enough to inform me of them; and they had no effect on the confidence with which she continued to honour me, and which I am happy to think I have justified even at the risk of my life. Mesdames, the King's aunts, set out from Bellevue in the beginning of the year 1791. Alexandre Ber- thier, afterwards Prince de Neufchatel, then a colonel on the staff of the army, and commandant of the National Guard of Versailles, facilitated the depar- ture of Mesdames. The Jacobins of that town pro- cured his dismissal, and he ran the greatest risk, on account of having rendered this service to these Prin- cesses. I went to take leave of Madame Victoire. I little thought that I was then seeing her for the last time. She received me alone in her closet, and assured me that she hoped, as well as wished, soon to return to France; that the French would be much to be MARIE ANTOINETTE 273 pitied if the excesses of the Revolution should arrive at such a pitch as to force her to prolong her absence. I knew from the Queen that the departure of Mes- dames was deemed necessary, in order to leave the King free to act when he should be compelled to go away with his family. It being impossible that the constitution of the clergy should be otherwise than in direct opposition to the religious principles of Mes- dames, they thought their journey to Rome would be attributed to piety alone. It was, however, difficult to deceive an Assembly which weighed the slightest actions of the royal family, and from that moment they were more than ever alive to what was passing at the Tuileries. Mesdames were desirous of taking Madame Elisa- beth to Rome. The free exercise of religion, the hap- piness of taking refuge with the head of the Church, and the prospect of living in safety with her aunts, whom she tenderly loved, were sacrificed by that virtu- ous Princess to her attachment to the King. The oath required of priests by the civil constitution of the clergy introduced into France a division which added to the dangers by which the King was already surrounded. Mirabeau spent a whole night with the cure of St. Eustache, confessor of the King and Queen, to persuade him to take the oath required by that constitution. Their Majesties chose another con- fessor, who remained unknown. A few months afterwards (2d April, 1791), the too celebrated Mirabeau, the mercenary democrat and venal royalist, terminated his career. The Queen re- gretted him, and was astonished at her own regret; but she had hoped that he who had possessed adroit- ness and weight enough to throw everything into confusion would have been able by the same means to repair the mischief he had caused. Much has been 274 MARIE ANTOINETTE said respecting the cause of Mirabeau's death. M. Cabanis, his friend and physician, denied that he was poisoned. M. Vicq-d'Azyr assured the Queen that the proces-verbal drawn up on the state of the intes- tines would apply just as well to a case of death pro- duced by violent remedies as to one produced by poison. He said, also, that the report had been faith- ful; but that it was prudent to conclude it by a decla- ration of natural death, since, in the critical state in which France then was, if a suspicion of foul play were admitted, a person innocent of any such crime might be sacrificed to public vengeance. CHAPTER XIX IN the beginning of the spring of 1791, the King, tired of remaining at the Tuileries, wished to re- turn to St. Cloud. His whole household had al- ready gone, and his dinner was prepared there. He got into his carriage at one ; the guard mutinied, shut the gates, and declared they would not let him pass. This event certainly proceeded from some suspicion of a plan to escape. Two persons who drew near the King's carriage were very ill treated. My father-in- law was violently laid hold of by the guards, who took his sword from him. The King and his family were obliged to alight and return to their apartments. They did not much regret this outrage in their hearts; they saw in it a justification, even in the eyes of the people, of their intention to leave Paris. So early as the month of March in the same year, the Queen began to busy herself in preparing for her departure. I spent that month with her, and executed a great number of secret orders which she gave me respecting the intended event. It was with uneasiness that I saw her occupied with cares which seemed to me useless, and even dangerous, and I remarked to her that the Queen of France would- find linen and gowns everywhere. My observations were made in vain; she determined to have a complete wardrobe with her at Brussels, as well for her children as her- self. I went out alone and almost disguised to pur- chase the articles necessary and have them made up. I ordered six chemises at the shop of one seam- 275 276 THE MEMOIRS OF stress, six at that of another, gowns, combing cloths, etc. My sister had a complete set of clothes made for Madame, by the measure of her eldest daughter, and I ordered clothes for the Dauphin from those of my son. I filled a trunk with these things, and ad- dressed them, by the Queen's orders, to one of her women, my aunt, Madame Cardon, — a widow living at Arras, by virtue of an unlimited leave of absence, — in order that she might be ready to start for Brus- sels, or any other place, as soon as she should be directed to do so. This lady had landed property in Austrian Flanders, and could at any time quit Arras unobserved. The Queen was to take only her first woman in attendance with her from Paris. She apprised me that if I should not be on duty at the moment of departure, she would make arrangements for my join- ing her. She determined also to take her travelling dressing-case. She consulted me on her idea of send- ing it off, under pretence of making a present of it to the Archduchess Christina, Gouvernante of the Neth- erlands. I ventured to oppose this plan strongly, and observed that, amidst so many people who watched her slightest actions, there would be found a sufficient number sharp-sighted enough to discover that it was only a pretext for sending away the property in ques- tion before her own departure; she persisted in her intention, and all I could arrange was that the dress- ing-case should not be removed from her apartment, and that M. de , cliarge d'affaires from the Court of Vienna during the absence of the Comte de Mercy, should come and ask her, at her toilet, before all her people, to order one exactly like her own for Madame the Gouvernante of the Netherlands. The Queen, therefore, commanded me before the charge d'affaires to order the article in question. This occasioned only MARIE ANTOINETTE 277 an expense of five hundred louis, and appeared calcu- lated to lull suspicion completely. About the middle of May, 1791, a month after the Queen had ordered me to bespeak the dressing-case, she asked me whether it would soon be finished. I sent for the ivory-turner who had it in hand. He could not complete it for six weeks. I informed the Queen of this, and she told me she should not be able to wait for it, as she was to set out in the course of June. She added that, as she had ordered her sister's dressing-case in the presence of all her attendants, she had taken a sufficient precaution, especially by saying that her sister was out of patience at not receiving it, and that therefore her own must be emptied and cleaned, and taken to the charge d'af- faires, who would send it off. I executed this order without any appearance of mystery. I desired the wardrobe woman to take out of the dressing-case all that it contained, because that intended for the Arch- duchess could not be finished for some time; and to take great care to leave no remains of the perfumes which might not suit that Princess. The woman in question executed her commission punctually; but, on the evening of that very day, the 15th of May, 1791, she informed M. Bailly, the Mayor of Paris, that preparations were making at the Queen's residence for a departure; and that the dressing-case was already sent off, under pretence of its being presented to the Archduchess Christina. It was necessary, likewise, to send off all the dia- monds belonging to the Queen. Her Majesty shut herself up with me in a closet in the entresol, looking into the garden of the Tuileries, and we packed all the diamonds, rubies, and pearls she possessed in a small chest. The cases containing these ornaments, being altogether of considerable bulk, had been de- 278 THE MEMOIRS OF posited, ever since the 6th of October, 1789, with the valet de chambre who had the care of the Queen's jewels. That faithful servant, himself detecting the use that was to be made of the valuables, destroyed all the boxes, which were, as usual, covered with red morocco, marked with the cipher and arms of France. It would have been impossible for him to hide them from the eyes of the popular inquisitors during the domiciliary visits in January, 1793, and the discovery might have formed a ground of accusation against the Queen. I had but a few articles to place in the box when the Queen was compelled to desist from packing it, being obliged to go down to cards, which began at seven precisely. She therefore desired me to leave all the diamonds upon the sofa, persuaded that, as she took the key of her closet herself, and there was a sentinel under the window, no danger was to be apprehended for that night, and she reckoned upon returning very early next day to finish the work. The same woman who had given information of the sending away of the dressing-case was also deputed by the Queen to take care of her more private rooms. No other servant was permitted to enter them; she renewed the flowers, swept the carpets, etc. The Queen received back the key, when the woman had finished putting them in order, from her own hands; but, desirous of doing her duty well, and sometimes having the key in her possession for a few minutes only, she had probably on that account ordered one without the Queen's knowledge. It is impossible not to believe this, since the despatch of the diamonds was the subject of a second accusation which the Queen heard of after the return from Varennes. She made a formal declaration that her Majesty, with the assistance of Madame Campari, had packed up MARIE ANTOINETTE 279 all her jewelry some time before the departure ; that she was certain of it, as she had found the diamonds, and the cotton which served to wrap them, scat- tered upon the sofa in the Queen's closet in the entre- sol; and most assuredly she could only have seen these preparations in the interval between seven in the evening and seven in the morning. The Queen having met me next day at the time appointed, the box was handed over to Leonard, her Majesty's hair- dresser, who left the country with the Due de Choi- seul. The box remained a long time at Brussels, and at length got into the hands of Madame la Duchesse d'Angouleme, being delivered to her by the Emperor on her arrival at Vienna. In order not to leave out any of the Queen's dia- monds, I requested the first tirewoman to give me the body of the full dress, and all the assortment which served for the stomacher of the full dress on days of state, articles which always remained at the wardrobe. The superintendent and the dame d'honneur being absent, the first tirewoman required me to sign a re- ceipt, the terms of which she dictated, and which ac- quitted her of all responsibility for these diamonds. She had the prudence to burn this document on the 10th of August, 1792. The Queen having deter- mined, upon the arrest at Varennes, not to have her diamonds brought back to France, was often anxious about them during the year which elapsed between that period and the 10th of August, and dreaded above all things that such a secret should be discovered. In consequence of a decree of the Assembly, which deprived the King of the custody of the Crown dia- monds, the Queen had at this time already given up those which she generally used. She preferred the twelve brilliants called Mazarins, 28o THE MEMOIRS OF from the name of the Cardinal who had enriched the treasury with them, a few rose-cut diamonds, and the Sanci. She determined to deliver, with her own hands, the box containing them to the commissioner nominated by the National Assembly to place them with the Crown diamonds. After giving them to him, she offered him a row of pearls of great beauty, saying to him that it had been brought into France by Anne of Austria; that it was invaluable, on ac- count of its rarity; that, having been appropriated by that Princess to the use of the Queens and Dauphin- esses, Louis XV. had placed it in her hands on her arrival in France; but that she considered it national property. " That is an open question, Madame," said the commissary. " Monsieur," replied the Queen, " it is one for me to decide, and is now settled." My father-in-law, who was dying of the grief he felt for the misfortunes of his master and mistress, strongly interested and occupied the thoughts of the Queen. He had been saved from the fury of the pop- ulace in the courtyard of the Tuileries. On the day on which the King was compelled by an insurrection to give up a journey to St. Cloud, her Majesty looked upon this trusty servant as inevitably lost, if, on going away, she should leave him in the apartment he occupied in the Tuileries. Prompted by her apprehensions, she ordered M. Vicq-d'Azyr, her physician, to recommend him the waters of Mont d'Or in Auvergne, and to persuade him to set off at the latter end of May. At the moment of my going away the Queen assured me that the grand project would be executed between the 15th and the 20th of June; that as it was not my month to be on duty, "Madame Thibaut would take the journey; but that she had many directions to give me before I went. She then desired me to write to my aunt, Madame MARIE ANTOINETTE 281 Cardon, who was by that time in possession of the clothes which I had ordered, that as soon as she should receive a letter from M. Auguie, the date of which should be accompanied with a B, an L, or an M, she was to proceed with her property to Brussels, Luxembourg, or Montmedy. She desired me to ex- plain the meaning of these three letters clearly to my sister, and to leave them with her in writing, in order that at the moment of my going away she might be able to take my place in writing to Arras. The Queen had a more delicate commission for me; it was to select from among my acquaintance a prudent person of obscure rank, wholly devoted to the interests of the Court, who would be willing to receive a portfolio which she was to give up only to me, or some one furnished with a note from the Queen. She added that she would not travel with this portfolio, and that it was of the utmost importance that my opinion of the fidelity of the person to whom it was to be entrusted should be well founded. I proposed to her Madame Vallayer Coster, a painter of the Acad- emy, and an amiable and worthy artist, whom I had known from my infancy. She lived in the galleries of the Louvre. The choice seemed a good one. The Queen remembered that she had made her marriage possible by giving her a place in the financial offices, and added that gratitude ought sometimes to be reck- oned on. She then pointed out to me the valet be- longing to her toilet, whom I was to take with me, to show him the residence of Madame Coster, so that he might not mistake it when he should take the port- folio to her. The day before her departure the Queen particularly recommended me to proceed to Lyons and the frontiers as soon as she should have started. She advised me to take with me a confidential person, fit to remain with M. Campan when I should leave him, 282 THE MEMOIRS OF and assured me that she would give orders to M. to set off as soon as she should be known to be at the frontiers in order to protect me in going out. She condescended to add that, having a long journey to make in foreign countries, she determined to give me three hundred louis. I bathed the Queen's hands with tears at the mo- ment of this sorrowful separation; and, having money at my disposal, I declined accepting her gold. I did not dread the road I had to travel in order to rejoin her; all my apprehension was that by treachery or miscalculation a scheme, the safety of which was not sufficiently clear to me, should fail. I could answer for all those who belonged to the service im- mediately about the Queen's person, and I was right; but her wardrobe woman gave me well-founded rea- son for alarm. I mentioned to the Queen many rev- olutionary remarks which this woman had made to me a few days before. Her office was directly under the control of the first fcmme de chambre, yet she had refused to obey the directions I gave her, talking insolently to me about " hierarchy overturned, equal- ity among men," of course more especially among persons holding offices at Court; and this jargon, at that time in the mouths of all the partisans of the Revolution, was terminated by an observation which frightened me. " You know many important secrets, madame," said this woman to me, " and I have guessed quite as many. I am not a fool; I see all that is going forward here in consequence of the bad advice given to the King and Queen; I could frustrate it all if I chose." This argument, in which I had been promptly silenced, left me pale and trembling. Un- fortunately, as I began my narrative to the Queen with particulars of this woman's refusal to obey me, — and sovereigns are all their lives importuned with MARIE ANTOINETTE 283 complaints upon the rights of places, — she believed that my own dissatisfaction had much to do with the step I was taking; and she did not sufficiently fear the woman. Her office, although a very inferior one, brought her in nearly fifteen thousand francs a year. Still young, tolerably handsome, with comfortable apartments in the entresols of the Tuileries, she saw a great deal of company, and in the evening had assem- blies, consisting of deputies of the revolutionary party. M. de Gouvion, major-general of the National Guard, passed almost every day with her; and it is to be presumed that she had long worked for the party in opposition to the Court. The Queen asked her for the key of a door which led to the principal vestibule of the Tuileries, telling her she wished to have a similar one, that she might not be under the necessity of going out through the pavilion of Flora. M. de Gouvion and M. de La Fayette would, of course, be apprised of this circumstance, and well-informed per- sons have assured me that on the very night of the Queen's departure this wretched woman had a spy with her, who saw the royal family set off. As soon as I had executed all the Queen's orders, on the 30th of May, 1791, I set out for Auvergne, and was settled in the gloomy narrow valley of Mont d'Or, when, about four in the afternoon of the 25th of June, I heard the beat of a drum to call the inhabitants of the hamlet together. When it had ceased I heard a hairdresser from Bresse proclaim in the provincial dialect of Auvergne : " The King and Queen were taking flight in order to ruin France, but I come to tell you that they are stopped, and are well guarded by a hundred thousand men under arms." I still ventured to hope that he was repeating only a false report, but he went on : " The Queen, with her well- 284 THE MEMOIRS OF known haughtiness, lifted up the veil which covered 1 her face, and said to the citizens who were upbraid- ing the King, ' Well, since you recognise your sover- eign, respect him.' " Upon hearing these expressions, which the Jacobin club of Clermont could not have invented, I exclaimed, " The news is true ! " I immediately learnt that, a courier being come from Paris to Clermont, the procureur of the com- mune had sent off messengers to the chief places of the canton ; these again sent couriers to the districts, and the districts in like manner informed the vil- lages and hamlets which they contained. It was through this ramification, arising from the establish- ment of clubs, that the afflicting intelligence of the misfortune of my sovereigns reached me in the wild- est part of France, and in the midst of the snows by which we were environed. On the 28th I received a note written in a hand which I recognised as that of M. Diet, usher of the Queen's chamber, but dictated by her Majesty. It contained these words: "I am this moment arrived; I have just got into my bath; I and my family exist, that is all. I have suffered much. Do not return to Paris until I desire you. Take good care of my poor Campan, soothe his sorrow. Look for happier times." This note was for greater safety addressed to my father-in-law's valet de chambre. What were my feelings on perceiving that after the most dis- tressing crisis we were among the first objects of the kindness of that unfortunate Princess! M. Campan having been unable to benefit by the waters of Mont d'Or, and the first popular efferves- cence having subsided, I thought I might return to Clermont. The committee of surveillance, or that of general safety, had resolved to arrest me there; but the Abbe Louis, formerly a parliamentary counsellor,. MARIE ANTOINETTE 285 and then a member of the Constituent Assembly, was kind enough to affirm that I was in Auvergne solely for the purpose of attending my father-in-law, who was extremely ill. The precautions relative to my absence from Paris were limited to placing us under the surveillance of the procureur of the commune, who was at the same time president of the Jacobin club; but he was also a physician of repute, and without having any doubt that he had received secret orders relative to me, I thought it would favour the chances of our safety if I selected him to attend my patient. I paid him according to the rate given to the best Paris physicians, and I requested him to visit us every morning and every evening. I took the pre- caution to subscribe to no other newspaper than the Moniteur. Doctor Monestier (for that was the physi- cian's name) frequently took upon himself to read it to us. Whenever he thought proper to speak of the King and Queen in the insulting and brutal terms at that time unfortunately adopted throughout France, I used to stop him and say, coolly, " Monsieur, you are here in company with the servants of Louis XVI. and Marie Antoinette. Whatever may be the wrongs with which the nation believes it has to reproach them, our principles forbid our losing sight of the respect due to them from us." Notwithstanding that he was an inveterate patriot, he felt the force of this remark, and even procured the revocation of a second order for our arrest, becoming responsible for us to the committee of the Assembly, and to the Jacobin society. The two chief women about the Dauphin, who had accompanied the Queen to Varennes, Diet, her usher, and Camot, her gargon de toilette, — the women on account of the journey, and the men in consequence of the denunciation of the woman belonging to the ward- 286 THE MEMOIRS OF robe, — were sent to the prisons of the Abbaye. After my departure the gargon de toilette whom I had taken to Madame Vallayer Coster's was sent there with the portfolio she had agreed to receive. This commission could not escape the detestable spy upon the Queen. She gave information that a portfolio had been carried out on the evening of the departure, adding that the King had placed it upon the Queen's easy-chair, that the gargon de toilette wrapped it up in a napkin and took it under his arm, and that she did not know where he had carried it. The man, who was re- markable for his fidelity, underwent three examina- tions without making the slightest disclosure. M. Diet, a man of good family, a servant on whom the Queen placed particular reliance, likewise experienced the severest treatment. At length, after a lapse of three weeks, the Queen succeeded in obtaining the re- lease of her servants. The Queen, about the 15th of August, had me in- formed by letter that I might come back to Paris without being under any apprehension of arrest there, and that she greatly desired my return. I brought my father-in-law back in a dying state, and on the day preceding that of the acceptation of the consti- tutional act, I informed the Queen that he was no more. " The loss of Lassonne and Campan," said she, as she applied her handkerchief to her stream- ing eyes, " has taught me how valuable such subjects are to their masters. I shall never find their equals." I resumed my functions about the Queen on the 1st of September, 1791. She was unable then to converse with me on all the lamentable events which had occurred since the time of my leaving her, hav- ing on guard near her an officer whom she dreaded more than all the others. She merely told me that 1 should have some secret services to perform for her, MARIE ANTOINETTE 287 and that she would not create uneasiness by long conversations with me, my return being a subject of suspicion. But next day the Queen, well knowing the discretion of the officer who was to be on guard that night, had my bed placed very near hers, and having obtained the favour of having the door shut, when I was in bed she began the narrative of the journey, and the unfortunate arrest at Varennes. I asked her permission to put on my gown, and kneel- ing by her bedside I remained until three o'clock in the morning, listening with the liveliest and most sorrowful interest to the account I am about to re- peat, and of which I have seen various details, of tolerable exactness, in papers of the time. The King entrusted Count Fersen with all the preparations for departure. The carriage was or- dered by him; the passport, in the name of Madame de Korf, was procured through his connection with that lady, who was a foreigner. And lastly, he him- self drove the royal family, as their coachman, as far as Bondy, where the travellers got into their berlin. Madame Brunier and Madame Neuville, the first women of Madame and the Dauphin, there joined the principal carriage. They were in a cabriolet. Mon- sieur and Madame set out from the Luxembourg and took another road. They as well as the King were recognised by the master of the last post in France, but this man, devoting himself to the fortunes of the Prince, left the French territory, and. drove them himself as postilion. Madame Thibaut, the Queen's first woman, reached Brussels without the slightest difficulty. Madame Cardon, from Arras, met with no hindrance; and Leonard, the Queen's hairdresser, passed through Varennes a few hours before the royal family. Fate had reserved all its obstacles for the unfortunate monarch. 288 THE MEMOIRS OF Nothing worthy of notice occurred in the begin- ning of the journey. The travellers were detained a short time, about twelve leagues from Paris, by some repairs which the carriage required. The King chose to walk up one of the hills, and these two cir- cumstances caused a delay of three hours, precisely at the time when it was intended that the berlin should have been met, just before reaching Varennes, by the detachment commanded by M. de Goguelat. This detachment was punctually stationed upon the spot fixed on, with orders to wait there for the ar- rival of certain treasure, which it was to escort; but the peasantry of the neighbourhood, alarmed at the sight of this body of troops, came armed with staves, and asked several questions, which manifested their anxiety. M. de Goguelat, fearful of causing a riot, and not finding the carriage arrive as he expected, divided his men into two companies, and unfortunately made them leave the highway in order to return to Varennes by two cross roads. The King looked out of the carriage at Ste. Menehould, and asked several questions concerning the road. Drouet, the post- master, struck by the resemblance of Louis to the im- pression of his head upon the assignats, drew near the carriage, felt convinced that he recognised the Queen also, and that the remainder of the travellers consisted of the royal family and their suite, mounted his horse, reached Varennes by cross roads before the royal fugitives, and gave the alarm. The Queen began to feel all the agonies of terror; they were augmented by the voice of a person un- known, who, passing close to the carriage in full gallop, cried out, bending towards the window with- out slackening his speed, " You are recognised ! " They arrived with beating hearts at the gates of Varennes without meeting one of the horsemen by MARIE ANTOINETTE 289 whom they were to have been escorted into the place. They were ignorant where to find their relays, and some minutes were lost in waiting, to no purpose. The cabriolet had preceded them, and the two ladies in attendance found the bridge already blocked up with old carts and lumber. The town guards were all under arms. The King at last entered Varennes. M. de Goguelat had arrived there with his detach- ment. He came up to the King and asked him if he chose to effect a passage by force! What an un- lucky question to put to Louis XVI., who from the very beginning of the Revolution had shown in every crisis the fear he entertained of giving the least order which might cause an effusion of blood ! " Would it be a brisk action? " said the King. " It is impossible that it should be otherwise, Sire," replied the aide-de- camp. Louis XVI. was unwilling to expose his fam- ily. They therefore went to the house of a grocer, Mayor of Varennes. The King began to speak, and gave a summary of his intentions in departing, anal- ogous to the declaration he had made at Paris. He spoke with warmth and affability, and endeavoured to demonstrate to the people around him that he had only put himself, by the step he had taken, into a fit situation to treat with the Assembly, and to sanction with freedom the constitution which he would main- tain, though many of its articles were incompatible with the dignity of the throne, and the force by which it was necessary that the sovereign should be sur- rounded. Nothing could be more affecting, added the Queen, than this moment, in which the King felt bound to communicate to the very humblest class of his subjects his principles, his wishes for the happi- ness of his people, and the motives which had deter- mined him to depart. Whilst the King was speaking to this mayor, whose 290 THE MEMOIRS OF name was Sauce, the Queen, seated at the farther end of the shop, among parcels of soap and candles, en- deavoured to make Madame Sauce understand that if she would prevail upon her husband to make use of his municipal authority to cover the flight of the King and his family, she would have the glory of having contributed to restore tranquillity to France. This woman was moved; she could not, without streaming eyes, see herself thus solicited by her Queen ; but she could not be got to say anything more than, " Bon Dleu, Madame, it would be the de- struction of M. Sauce; I love my King, but I love my husband too, you must know, and he would be answer- able, you see." Whilst this strange scene was passing in the shop, the people, hearing that the King was arrested, kept pouring in from all parts. M. de Goguelat, making a last effort, demanded of the dragoons whether they would protect the departure of the King; they replied only by murmurs, dropping the points of their swords. Some person unknown fired a pistol at M. de Goguelat; he was slightly wounded by the ball. M. Romeuf, aide-de-camp to M. de La Fayette, arrived at that moment. He had been chosen, after the 6th of October, 1789, by the com- mander of the Parisian guard to be in constant at- tendance about the Queen. She reproached him bit- terly with the object of his mission. " If you wish to make your name remarkable, monsieur," said the Queen to him, " you have chosen strange and odious means, which will produce the most fatal conse- quences." This officer wished to hasten their depar- ture. The Queen, still cherishing the hope of seeing M. de Bouille arrive with a sufficient force to extricate the King from his critical situation, prolonged her stay at Varennes by every means in her power. The Dauphin's first woman pretended to be taken . MM* ifc. '■**»• ,, 1 i mF ^a**~mmZ> l M ! iBL Jitf "<*£« ll ' r WL 9 ^W /^ &EL1 f^'JJM '(^c^fT"" J- 1 , ""4 ■z&mm K A MARIE ANTOINETTE 291 ill with a violent colic, and threw herself upon a bed, in the hope of aiding the designs of her superiors; she went and implored for assistance. The Queen understood her perfectly well, and refused to leave one who had devoted herself to follow them in such a state of suffering. But no delay in departing was allowed. The three Body Guards (Valory, Du Mous- tier, and Maiden) were gagged and fastened upon the seat of the carriage. A horde of National Guards, animated with fury and the barbarous joy with which their fatal triumph inspired them, surrounded the car- riage of the royal family. The three commissioners sent by the Assembly to meet the King, MM. de Latour-Maubourg, Barnave, and Petion, joined them in the environs of Epernay. The two last mentioned got into the King's carriage. The Queen astonished me by the favourable opinion she had formed of Barnave. When I quitted Paris a great many persons spoke of him only with horror. She told me he was much altered, that he was full of talent and noble feeling. " A feeling of pride which I cannot much blame in a young man belonging to the Tiers Etat," she said, " made him applaud every- thing which smoothed the road to rank and fame for that class in which he was born. And if we get the power in our own hands again, Barnave's pardon is al- ready written on our hearts." The Queen added, that she had not the same feeling towards those nobles who had joined the revolutionary party, who had always received marks of favour, often to the injury of those beneath them in rank, and who, born to be the safe- guard of the monarchy, could never be pardoned for having deserted it. She then told me that Barnave's conduct upon the road was perfectly correct, while Petion's republican rudeness was disgusting; that the latter ate and drank in the King's berlin in a slovenly Vol. 3 Memoirs— 10 2Q2 THE MEMOIRS OF manner, throwing the bones of the fowls out through the window at the risk of sending them even into the King's face; lifting up his glass, when Madame Elisa- beth poured him out wine, to show her that there was enough, without saying a word ; that this offensive behaviour must have been intentional, because the man was not without education; and that Barnave was hurt at it. On being pressed by the Queen to take something, " Madame," replied Barnave, " on so solemn an occasion the deputies of the National As- sembly ought to occupy your Majesties solely about their mission, and by no means about their wants." In short, his respectful delicacy, his considerate atten- tions, and all that he said, gained the esteem not only of the Queen, but of Madame Elisabeth also. The King began to talk to Petion about the situa- tion of France, and the motives of his conduct, which were founded upon the necessity of giving to the ex- ecutive power a strength necessary for its action, for the good even of the constitutional act, since France could not be a republic. " Not yet, 'tis true," replied Petion, " because the French are not ripe enough for that." This audacious and cruel answer silenced the King, who said no more until his arrival at Paris. Petion held the little Dauphin upon his knees, and amused himself with curling the beautiful light hair of the interesting child round his fingers; and, as he spoke with much gesticulation, he pulled his locks hard enough to make the Dauphin cry out. " Give me my son," said the Queen to him ; " he is accus- tomed to tenderness and delicacy, which render him little fit for such familiarity." The Chevalier de Dampierre was killed near the King's carriage upon leaving Varennes. A poor vil- lage cure, some leagues from the place where the crime was committed, was imprudent enough to draw MARIE ANTOINETTE 293 near to speak to the King; the cannibals who sur- rounded the carriage rushed upon him. " Tigers," exclaimed Barnave, " have you ceased to be French- men? Nation of brave men, are you become a set of assassins ? " These words alone saved the cure, who was already upon the ground, from certain death. Barnave, as he spoke to them, threw himself almost out of the coach window, and Madame Elisabeth, affected by this noble burst of feeling, held him by the skirt of his coat. The Queen, while speaking of this event, said that on the most momentous occasions whimsical contrasts always struck her, and that even at such a moment the pious Elisabeth holding Barnave by the flap of his coat was a ludicrous sight. The deputy was astonished in another way. Ma- dame Elisabeth's comments upon the state of France, her mild and persuasive eloquence, and the ease and simplicity with which she talked to him, yet with- out sacrificing her dignity in the slightest degree, appeared to him unique, and his heart, which was doubtless inclined to right principles though he had followed the wrong path, was overcome by admira- tion. The conduct of the two deputies convinced the Queen of the total separation between the republican and constitutional parties. At the inns where she alighted she had some private conversation with Barnave. The latter said a great deal about the errors committed by the royalists during the Revolu- tion, adding that he had found the interest of the Court so feebly and so badly defended that he had been frequently tempted to go and offer it, in him- self, an aspiring champion, who knew the spirit of the age and nation. The Queen asked him what was the weapon he would have recommended her to use. " Popularity, Madame." 294 THE MEMOIRS OF " And how could I use that," replied her Majesty, "of which I have been deprived?" " Ah ! Madame, it was much more easy for you to regain it, than for me to acquire it." The Queen mainly attributed the arrest at Varennes to M. de Goguelat; she said he calculated the time that would be spent in the journey erroneously. He performed that from Montmedy to Paris before taking the King's last orders, alone in a post-chaise, and he founded all his calculations upon the time he spent thus. The trial has been made since, and it was found that a light carriage without any courier was nearly three hours less in running the distance than a heavy carriage preceded by a courier. The Queen also blamed him for having quitted the high-road at Pont-de-Sommevelle, where the carriage was to meet the forty hussars commanded by him. She thought that he ought to have dispersed the very small number of people at Varennes, and not have asked the hussars whether they were for the King or the nation; that, particularly, he ought to have avoided taking the King's orders, as he was pre- viously aware of the reply M. dTnisdal had received when it was proposed to carry off the King. After all that the Queen had said to me respecting the mistakes made by M. de Goguelat, I thought him of course disgraced. What was my surprise when, having been set at liberty after the amnesty which followed the acceptance of the constitution, he pre- sented himself to the Queen, and was received with the greatest kindness! She said he had done what he could, and that his zeal ought to form an excuse for all the rest. When the royal family was brought back from Varennes to the Tuileries, the Queen's attendants found the greatest difficulty in making their way to MARIE ANTOINETTE 295 her apartments; everything had been arranged so that the wardrobe woman, who had acted as spy, should have the service; and she was to be assisted in it only by her sister and her sister's daughter. M. de Gouvion, M. de La Fayette's aide-de-camp, had this woman's portrait placed at the foot of the staircase which led to the Queen's apartments, in order that the sentinel should not permit any other women to make their way in. As soon as the Queen was informed of this contemptible precaution, she told the King of it, who sent to ascertain the fact. His Majesty then called for M. de La Fayette, claimed freedom in his household, and particularly in that of the Queen, and ordered him to send a woman in whom no one but himself could confide out of the palace. M. de La Fayette was obliged to comply. On the day when the return of the royal family was expected, there were no carriages in motion in the streets of Paris. Five or six of the Queen's women, after being refused admittance at all the other gates, went with one of my sisters to that of the Feuil- lans, insisting that the sentinel should admit them. The poissardes attacked them for their boldness in resisting the order excluding them. One of them seized my sister by the arm, calling her the slave of the Austrian. " Hear me," said my sister to her, " I have been attached to the Queen ever since I was fifteen years of age; she gave me my marriage por- tion; I served her when she was powerful and happy. She is now unfortunate. Ought I to abandon her ? " " She is right," cried the poissardes; " she ought not to abandon her mistress; let us make an entry for them." They instantly surrounded the sentinel, forced the passage, and introduced the Queen's women, accompanying them to the terrace of the Feuillans. One of these furies, whom the slightest 296 THE MEMOIRS OF impulse would have driven to tear my sister to pieces, taking her under her protection, gave her advice by which she might reach the palace in safety. " But of all things, my dear friend," said she to her, " pull off that green ribbon sash; it is the color of that d'Artois, whom we will never forgive." The measures adopted for guarding the King were rigorous with respect to the entrance into the palace, and insulting as to his private apartments. The commandants of battalion, stationed in the salon called the grand cabinet, and which led to the Queen's bedchamber, were ordered to keep the door of it al- ways open, in order that they might have their eyes upon the royal family. The King shut this door one day; the officer of the guard opened it, and told him such were his orders, and that he would always open it; so that his Majesty in shutting it gave himself useless trouble. It remained open even during the night, when the Queen was in bed; and the officer placed himself in an armchair between the two doors, with his head turned towards her Majesty. They only obtained permission to have the inner door shut when the Queen was rising. The Queen had the bed of her first femme de chambre placed very near her own; this bed, which ran on casters, and was fur- nished with curtains, hid her from the officer's sight. Madame de Jar j aye, my companion, who continued her functions during the whole period of my absence, told me that one night the commandant of battalion, who slept between the two doors, seeing that she was sleeping soundly, and that the Queen was awake, quitted his post and went close to her Majesty, to advise her as to the line of conduct she should pur- sue. Although she had the kindness to desire him to speak lower in order that he might not disturb Madame de Jarjaye's rest, the latter awoke, and MARIE ANTOINETTE 297 nearly died with fright at seeing a man in the uni- form of the Parisian guard so near the Queen's bed. Her Majesty comforted her, and told her not to rise; that the person she saw was a good Frenchman, who was deceived respecting the intentions and situation of his sovereign and herself, but whose conversation showed sincere attachment to the King. There was a sentinel in the corridor which runs behind the apartments in question, where there is a staircase, which was at that time an inner one, and enabled the King and Queen to communicate freely. This post, which was very onerous, because it was to be kept four and twenty hours, was often claimed by Saint Prix, an actor belonging to the Theatre Fran- cois. He took it upon himself sometimes to contrive brief interviews between the King and Queen in this corridor. He left them at a distance, and gave them warning if he heard the slightest noise. M. Collot, commandant of battalion of the National Guard, who was charged with the military duty of the Queen's household, in like manner softened down, so far as he could with prudence, all the revolting orders he received; for instance, one to follow the Queen to the very door of her wardrobe was never executed. An officer of the Parisian guard dared to speak insolently of the Queen in her own apartment. M. Collot wished to make a complaint to M. de La Fayette against him, and have him dismissed. The Queen opposed it, and condescended to say. a few words of explanation and kindness to the man; he instantly became one of her most devoted partisans. The first time I saw her Majesty after the unfortu- nate catastrophe of the Varennes journey, I found her getting out of bed; her features were not very much altered; but after the first kind words she uttered to me she took off her cap and desired me to observe 293 MARIE ANTOINETTE the effect which grief had produced upon her hair. It had become, in one single night, as white as that of a woman of seventy. Her Majesty showed me a ring she had just had mounted for the Princesse de Lamballe; it contained a lock of her whitened hair, with the inscription, " Blanched by sorrow." At the period of the acceptance of the constitution the Prin- cess wished to return to France. The Queen, who had no expectation that tranquillity would be re- stored, opposed this; but the attachment of Madame de Lamballe to the royal family impelled her to come and seek death. When I returned to Paris most of the hard pre- cautions were abandoned; the doors were not kept open; greater respect was paid to the sovereign; it was known that the constitution soon to be completed would be accepted, and a better order of things was hoped for. CHAPTER XX ON my arrival at Paris on the 25th of August I found the state of feeling there much more temperate than I had dared to hope. The conversation generally ran upon the acceptance of the constitution, and the fetes which would be given in consequence. The struggle between the Jacobins and the constitutionals on the 17th of July, 1791, never- theless had thrown the Queen into great terror for some moments; and the firing of the cannon from the Champ de Mars upon a party which called for a trial of the King, and the leaders of which were in the very bosom of the Assembly, left the most gloomy impressions upon her mind. The constitutionals, the Queen's connection with whom was not slackened by the intervention of the three members already mentioned, had faithfully served the royal family during their detention. " We still hold the wire by which this popular mass is moved," said Barnave to M. de J one day, at the same time showing him a large volume, in which the names of all those who were influenced with the power of gold alone were registered. It was at that time proposed to hire a considerable number of per- sons in order to secure loud acclamations when the King and his family should make their appearance at the play upon the acceptance of the constitution. That day, which afforded a glimmering hope of tran- quillity, was the 14th of September; the fetes were brilliant; but already fresh anxieties forbade the royal family to encourage much hope. 299 300 THE MEMOIRS OF The Legislative Assembly, which had just succeeded the Constituent Assembly (October, 1791), founded its conduct upon the wildest republican principles; created from the midst of popular assemblies, it was wholly inspired by the spirit which animated them. The constitution, as I have said, was presented to the King on the 3d of September, 1791. The ministers, with the exception of M. de Montmorin, insisted upon the necessity of accepting the constitutional act in its entirety. The Prince de Kaunitz was of the same opinion. Malouet wished the King to express him- self candidly respecting any errors or dangers that he might observe in the constitution. But Duport and Barnave, alarmed at the spirit prevailing in the Jacobin Club, and even in the Assembly, where Robes- pierre had already denounced them as traitors to the country, and dreading still greater evils, added their opinions to those of the majority of the ministers and M. de Kaunitz; those who really desired that the con- stitution should be maintained advised that it should not be accepted thus literally. The King seemed in- clined to this advice; and this is one of the strongest proofs of his sincerity. Alexandre Lameth, Duport, and Barnave, still re- lying on the resources of their party, hoped to have credit for directing the King through the influence they believed they had acquired over the mind of the Queen. They also consulted people of acknowledged talent, but belonging to no council nor to any assembly. Among these was M. Dubucq, formerly intendant of the marine and of the colonies. He answered laconi- cally in one phrase : " Prevent disorder from organis- ing itself." The letter written by the King to the Assembly, claiming to accept the constitution in the very place where it had been created, and where he announced MARIE ANTOINETTE 301 he would be on the 14th September at mid-day, was received with transport, and the reading was repeat- edly interrupted by plaudits. The sitting terminated amidst the greatest enthusiasm, and M. de La Fayette obtained the release of all those who were detained on account of the King's journey [to Varennes], the abandonment of all proceedings relative to the events of the Revolution, and the discontinuance of the use of passports and of temporary restraints upon free travelling, as well in the interior as without. The whole was conceded by acclamation. Sixty members were, deputed to go to the King and express to him fully the satisfaction his Majesty's letter had given. The Keeper of the Seals quitted the chamber, in the midst of applause, to precede the deputation to the King. The King answered the speech addressed to him, and concluded by saying to the Assembly that a de- cree of that morning, which had abolished the order of the Holy Ghost, had left him and his son alone permission to be decorated with it; but that an order having no value in his eyes, save for the power of conferring it, he would not use it. The Queen, her son, and Madame, were at the door of the chamber into which the deputation was admitted. The King said to the deputies, " You see there my wife and children, who participate in my sentiments;" and the Queen herself confirmed the King's assurance. These apparent marks of confi- dence were very inconsistent with the agitated state of her mind. " These people want no sovereigns," said she. " We shall fall before their treacherous though well-planned tactics; they are demolishing the monarchy stone by stone." Next day the particulars of the reception of the deputies by the King were reported to the Assembly, 302 THE MEMOIRS OF and excited warm approbation. But the President having put the question whether the Assembly ought not to remain seated while the King took the oath — " Certainly," was repeated by many voices; " and the King, standing, uncovered" M. Malouet observed that there was no occasion on which the nation, as- sembled in the presence of the King, did not acknowl- edge him as its head; that the omission to treat the head of the State with the respect due to him would be an offence to the nation, as well as to the monarch. He moved that the King should take the oath stand- ing, and that the Assembly should also stand while he was doing so. M. Malouet' s observations would have carried the decree, but a deputy from Brittany ex- claimed, with a shrill voice, that he had an amend- ment to propose which would render all unanimous. " Let us decree," said he, " that M. Malouet, and who- ever else shall so please, may have leave to receive the King upon their knees; but let us stick to the decree." The King repaired to the chamber at mid-day. His speech was followed by plaudits which lasted several minutes. After the signing of the constitutional act all sat down. The President rose to deliver his speech; but after he had begun, perceiving that the King did not rise to hear him, he sat down again. His speech made a powerful impression; the sentence with which it concluded excited fresh acclamations, cries of " Bravo ! " and " Vive le Roi! " " Sire," said he, " how important in our eyes, and how dear to our hearts — how sublime a feature in our history — must be the epoch of that regeneration which gives citizens to France, and a country to Frenchmen, — to you, as a king, a new title of greatness and glory, and, as a man, a source of new enjoyment." The whole Assem- bly accompanied the King on his return, amidst the MARIE ANTOINETTE 303 people's cries of happiness, military music, and salvoes of artillery. At length I hoped to see a return of that tranquil- lity which had so long vanished from the countenances of my august master and mistress. Their suite left them in the salon; the Queen hastily saluted the la- dies, and returned much affected; the King followed her, and, throwing himself into an armchair, put his handkerchief to his eyes. " Ah ! Madame/' cried he, his voice choked by tears, " why were you present at this sitting? to witness — " these words were inter- rupted by sobs. The Queen threw herself upon her knees before him, and pressed him in her arms. I remained with them, not from any blamable curiosity, but from a stupefaction which rendered me incapable of determining what I ought to do. The Queen said to me, " Oh ! go, go ! " with an accent which expressed, " Do not remain to see the dejection and despair of your sovereign!" I withdrew, struck with the con- trast between the shouts of joy without the palace and the profound grief which oppressed the sover- eigns within. Half an hour afterwards the Queen sent for me. She desired to see M. de Goguelat, to announce to him his departure on that very night for Vienna. The renewed attacks upon the dignity of the throne which had been made during the sitting; the spirit of an Assembly worse than the former; the monarch put upon a level with the President, without any deference to the throne, — all this. proclaimed but too loudly that the sovereignty itself was aimed at. The Queen no longer saw any ground for hope from the Provinces. The King wrote to the Emperor; she told me that she would herself, at midnight, bring the letter which M. de Goguelat was to bear to the Em- peror, to my room. During all the remainder of the day the Chateau 304 THE MEMOIRS OF and the Tuileries were crowded; the illuminations were magnificent. The King and Queen were re- quested to take an airing in their carriage in the Champs-Elysees, escorted by the aides-de-camp, and leaders of the Parisian army, the Constitutional Guard not being at the time organised. Many shouts of "Vive le Roi!" were heard; but as often as they ceased, one of the mob, who never quitted the door of the King's carriage for a single instant, exclaimed with a stentorian voice, "No, don't believe them! Vive la Nation! " This ill-omened cry struck terror into the Queen. A few days afterwards M. de Montmorin sent to say he wanted to speak to me ; that he would come to me, if he were not apprehensive his doing so would attract observation; and that he thought it would ap- pear less conspicuous if he should see me in the Queen's great closet at a time which he specified, and when nobody would be there. I went. After having made some polite observations upon the services I had already performed, and those I might yet perform, for my master and mistress, he spoke to me of the King's imminent danger, of the plots which were hatching, and of the lamentable composition of the Legislative Assembly; and he particularly dwelt upon the neces- sity of appearing, by prudent remarks, determined as much as possible to abide by the act the King had just recognised. I told him that could not be done with- out committing ourselves in the eyes of the royalist party, with which moderation was a crime; that it was painful to hear ourselves taxed with being consti- tutionalists, at the same time that it was our opinion that the only constitution which was consistent with the King's honour, and the happiness and tranquillity of his people, was the absolute power of the sover- eign; that this was my creed, and it would pain me MARIE ANTOINETTE 305 to give any room for suspicion that I was wavering in it. " Could you ever believe," said he, " that I should desire any other order of things ? Have you any doubt of my attachment to the King's person, and the main- tenance of his rights? " "I know it, Count," replied I; "but you are not ignorant that you lie under the imputation of having adopted revolutionary ideas." " Well, madame, have resolution enough to dissem- ble and to conceal your real sentiments; dissimulation was never more necessary. Endeavours are being made to paralyse the evil intentions of the factious as much as possible ; but we must not be counteracted here by certain dangerous expressions which are circulated in Paris as coming from the King and Queen." I told him that I had been already struck with apprehension of the evil which might be done by the intemperate observations of persons who had no power to act; and that I had felt ill consequences from hav- ing repeatedly enjoined silence on those in the Queen's service. "I know that," said the Count; "the Queen in- formed me of it, and that determined me to come and request you to increase and keep alive, as much as you can, that spirit of discretion which is so necessary." While the household of the King and Queen were a prey to all these fears, the festivities in celebration of the acceptance of the constitution proceeded. Their Majesties went to the Opera; the audience consisted entirely of persons who sided with the King, and on that day the happiness of seeing him for a short time surrounded by faithful subjects might be enjoyed. The acclamations were then sincere. " La Coquette Corrigee " had been selected for rep- resentation at the Theatre Frangais solely because it 3o6 THE MEMOIRS OF was the piece in which Mademoiselle Contat shone most. Yet the notions propagated by the Queen's enemies coinciding in my mind with the name of the play, I thought the choice very ill-judged. I was at a loss, however, how to tell her Majesty so; but sincere attachment gives courage. I explained my- self; she was obliged to me, and desired that another play might be performed. They accordingly selected " La Gouvernante," almost equally unfortunate in title. The Queen, Madame the King's daughter, and Ma- dame Elisabeth were all well received on this occa- sion. It is true that the opinions and feelings of the spectators in the boxes could not be otherwise than favourable, and great pains had been taken, previously to these two performances, to fill the pit with proper persons. But, on the other hand, the Jacobins took the same precautions on their side at the Theatre Italien, and the tumult was excessive there. The play was Gretry's " Les Evenements Imprevus." Unfor- tunately, Madame Dugazon thought proper to bow to the Queen as she sang the words, " Ah, how I love my mistress ! " in a duet. About twenty voices im- mediately exclaimed from the pit, " No mistress ! no master! liberty! " A few replied from the boxes and slips, "Vive le Roi! vive la Reine!" Those in the pit answered, "No master! no Queen!" The quar- rel increased; the pit formed into parties; they began fighting, and the Jacobins were beaten; tufts of their black hair flew about the theatre. A military guard arrived. The Faubourg St. Antoine, hearing of what was going on at the Theatre Italien, flocked together, and began to talk of marching towards the scene of action. The Queen preserved the calmest demeanour; the commandants of the guard surrounded and en- couraged her; they conducted themselves promptly MARIE ANTOINETTE 307 and discreetly. No accident happened. The Queen was highly applauded as she quitted the theatre; it was the last time she was ever in one! While couriers were bearing confidential letters from the King to the Princes, his brothers, and to the foreign sovereigns, the Assembly invited him to write to the Princes in order to induce them to return to France. The King desired the Abbe de Montes- quiou to write the letter he was to send; this letter, which was admirably composed in a simple and affect- ing style, suited to the character of Louis XVI., and filled with very powerful arguments in favour of the advantages to be derived from adopting the principles of the constitution, was confided to me by the King, who desired me to make him a copy of it. At this period M. M , one of the intendants of Monsieur's household, obtained a passport from the Assembly to join that Prince on business relative to his domestic concerns. The Queen selected him to be the bearer of this letter. She determined to give it to him herself, and to inform him of its object. I was astonished at her choice of this courier. The Queen assured me he was exactly the man for her purpose, that she relied even upon his indiscretion, and that it was merely necessary that the letter from the King to his brothers should be known to exist. The Princes were doubtless informed beforehand on the subject by the private correspondence. Monsieur nevertheless manifested some degree of- surprise, and the messenger returned more grieved than pleased at this mark of confidence, which nearly cost him his life during the Reign of Terror. Among the causes of uneasiness to the Queen there was one which was but too well founded — the thoughtlessness of the French whom she sent to foreign Courts. She used to say that they had no 308 THE MEMOIRS OF sooner passed the frontiers than they disclosed the most secret matters relative to the King's private sen- timents, and that the leaders of the Revolution were informed of them through their agents, many of whom were Frenchmen who passed themselves off as emi- grants in the cause of their King. After the acceptance of the constitution, the forma- tion of the King's household, as well military as civil, formed a subject of attention. The Due de Brissac had the command of the Constitutional Guard, which was composed of officers and men selected from the regiments, and of several officers drawn from the National Guard of Paris. The King was satisfied with the feelings and conduct of this band, which, as is well known, existed but a very short time. The new constitution abolished what were called honours, and the prerogatives belonging to them. The Duchesse de Duras resigned her place of lady of the bedchamber, not choosing to lose her right to the tabouret at Court. This step hurt the Queen, who saw herself forsaken through the loss of a petty privilege at a time when her own rights and even life were so hotly attacked. Many ladies of rank left the Court for the same reason. However, the King and Queen did not dare to form the civil part of their household, lest by giving the new names of the posts they should acknowledge the abolition of the old ones, and also lest they should admit into the highest posi- tions persons not calculated to fill them well. Some time was spent in discussing the question, whether the household should be formed without chevaliers and without ladies of honour. The Queen's consti- tutional advisers were of opinion that the Assembly, having decreed a civil list adequate to uphold the splendour of the throne, would be dissatisfied at see- ing the King adopting only a military household, and MARIE ANTOINETTE 309 not forming his civil household upon the new consti- tutional plan. " How is it, Madame," wrote Barnave to the Queen, " that you will persist in giving these people even the smallest doubt as to your sentiments? When they decree you a civil and a military house- hold, you, like young Achilles among the daughters of Lycomedes, eagerly seize the sword and scorn the mere ornaments." The Queen persisted in her deter- mination to have no civil household. " If," said she, " this constitutional household be formed, not a single person of rank will remain with us, and upon a change of affairs we should be obliged to discharge the per- sons received into their place." " Perhaps," added she, " perhaps I might find one day that I had saved the nobility, if I now had reso- lution enough to afflict them for a time; I have it not. When any measure which injures them is wrested from us they sulk with me; nobody comes to my card party; the King goes unattended to bed. No allow- ance is made for political necessity; we are punished for our very misfortunes." The Queen wrote almost all day, and spent part of the night in reading : her courage supported her physi- cal strength; her disposition was not at all soured by misfortunes, and she was never seen in an ill-humour for a moment. She was, however, held up to the people as a woman absolutely furious and mad when- ever the rights of the Crown were in any way attacked. I was with her one day at one of her windows. We saw a man plainly dressed, like an ecclesiastic, sur- rounded by an immense crowd. The Queen imagined it was some abbe whom they were about to throw into the basin of the Tuileries; she hastily opened her window and sent a valet de chambre to know what was going forward in the garden. It was Abbe 310 THE MEMOIRS OF Gregoire, whom the men and women of the tribunes were bringing back in triumph, on account of a mo- tion he had just made in the National Assembly against the royal authority. On the following day the democratic journalists described the Queen as witnessing this triumph, and showing, by expressive gestures at her window, how highly she was exas- perated by the honours conferred upon the patriot. The correspondence between the Queen and the foreign powers was carried on in cipher. That to which she gave the preference can never be detected; but the greatest patience is requisite for its use. Each correspondent must have a copy of the same edition of some work. She selected " Paul and Virginia." The page and line in which the letters required, and occasionally a monosyllable, are to be found are pointed out in ciphers agreed upon. I assisted her in finding the letters, and frequently I made an exact copy for her of all that she had ciphered, without knowing a single word of its meaning. There were always several secret committees in Paris occupied in collecting information for the King respecting the measures of the factions, and in influ- encing some of the committees of the Assembly. M. Bertrand de Molleville was in close correspondence with the Queen. The King employed M. Talon and others; much money was expended through the latter channel for the secret measures. The Queen had no confidence in them. M. de Laporte, minister of the civil list and of the household, also attempted to give a bias to public opinion by means of hireling publica- tions; but these papers influenced none but the royal- ist party, which did not need influencing. M. de Laporte had a private police which gave him some useful information. MARIE ANTOINETTE 311 I determined to sacrifice myself to my duty, but by no means to any intrigue, and I thought that, circum- stanced as I was, I ought to confine myself to obeying the Queen's orders. I frequently sent off couriers to foreign countries, and they were never discovered, so many precautions did I take. I am indebted for the preservation of my own existence to the care I took never to admit any deputy to my abode, and to refuse all interviews which even people of the highest im- portance often requested of me; but this line of con- duct exposed me to every species of ill-will, and on the same day I saw myself denounced by Prud'homme, in his Gazette Revohitionnaire, as capable of making an aristocrat of the mother of the Gracchi, if a person so dangerous as myself could have got into her house- hold; and by Gauthier's Gazette Royaliste, as a mon- archist, a constitutionalist, more dangerous to the Queen's interests than a Jacobin. At this period an event with which I had nothing to do placed me in a still more critical situation. My brother, M. Genet, began his diplomatic career suc- cessfully. At eighteen he was attached to the em- bassy to Vienna; at twenty he was appointed chief secretary of Legation in England, on occasion of the peace of 1783. A memorial which he presented to M. de Vergennes upon the dangers of the treaty of commerce then entered into with England gave offence to M. de Calonne, a patron of that treaty, and particularly to M. Gerard de Rayneval, chief clerk for foreign affairs. So long as M. de Vergennes lived, having upon my father's death declared him- self the protector of my brother, he supported him against the enemies his views had created. But on his death M. de Montmorin, being much in need of the long experience in business which he found in M. de Rayneval, was guided solely by the latter. The 312 THE MEMOIRS OF office of which my brother was the head was sup- pressed. He then went to St. Petersburg, strongly- recommended to the Comte de Segur, minister from France to that Court, who appointed him secretary of Legation. Some time afterwards the Comte de Segur left him at St. Petersburg, charged with the affairs of France. After his return from Russia, M. Genet was appointed ambassador to the United States by the party called Girondists, the deputies who headed it being from the department of the Gironde. He was recalled by the Robespierre party, which overthrew the former faction, on the 31st of May, 1793, and condemned to appear before the Convention. Vice- President Clinton, at that time Governor of New York, offered him an asylum in his house and the hand of his daughter, and M. Genet established him- self prosperously in America. When my brother quitted Versailles he was much hurt at being deprived of a considerable income for having penned a memorial which his zeal alone had dictated, and the importance of which was afterwards but too well understood. I perceived from his cor- respondence that he inclined to some of the new no- tions. He told me it was right he should no longer conceal from me that he sided with the constitutional party; that the King had in fact commanded it, hav- ing himself accepted the constitution; that he would proceed firmly in that course, because in this case disingenuousness would be fatal, and that he took that side of the question because he had had it proved to him that the foreign powers would not serve the King's cause without advancing pretensions prompted by long-standing interests, which always would in- fluence their councils; that he saw no salvation for the King and Queen but from within France, and that he would serve the constitutional King as he MARIE ANTOINETTE 313 served him before the Revolution. And lastly, he requested me to impart to the Queen the real senti- ments of one of his Majesty's agents at a foreign Court. I immediately went to the Queen and gave her my brother's letter; she read it attentively, and said, " This is the letter of a young man led astray by discontent and ambition; I know you do not think as he does; do not fear that you will lose the confi- dence of the King and myself." I offered to discon- tinue all correspondence with my brother; she opposed that, saying it would be dangerous. I then entreated she would permit me in future to show her my own and my brother's letters, to which she consented. I wrote warmly to my brother against the course he had adopted. I sent my letters by sure channels; he answered me by the post, and no longer touched upon anything but family affairs. Once only he informed me that if I should write to him respecting the af- fairs of the day he would give me no answer. " Serve your august mistress with the unbounded de- votion which is due from you," said he, " and let us each do our duty. I will only observe to you that at Paris the fogs of the Seine often prevent people from seeing that immense capital, even from the Pavilion of Flora, and I see it more clearly from St. Peters- burg." The Queen said, as she read this letter, " Perhaps he speaks but too truly; who can decide upon so disastrous a position as ours has become? " The day on which I gave the Queen my brother's first letter to read she had several audiences to give to ladies and other persons belonging to the Court, who came on purpose to inform her that my brother was an avowed constitutionalist and revolutionist. The Queen replied, " I know it; Madame Campan has told me so." Persons jealous of my situation having sub- jected me to mortifications, and these unpleasant cir- 314 THE MEMOIRS OF cumstances recurring daily, I requested the Queen's permission to withdraw from Court. She exclaimed against the very idea, represented it to me as ex- tremely dangerous for my own reputation, and had the kindness to add that, for my sake as well as for her own, she never would consent to it. After this conversation I retired to my apartment. A few min- utes later a footman brought me this note from the Queen : " I have never ceased to give you and yours proofs of my attachment; I wish to tell you in writ- ing that I have full faith in your honour and fidelity, as well as in your other good qualities; and that I ever rely on the zeal and address you exert to serve me." At the moment that I was going to express my gratitude to the Queen 1 heard a tapping at the door of my room, which opened upon the Queen's inner corridor. I opened it; it was the King. I was con- fused; he perceived it, and said to me, kindly: "I alarm you, Madame Campan; I come, however, to comfort you; the Queen has told me how much she is hurt at the injustice of several persons towards you. But how is it that you complain of injustice and calumny when you see that we are victims of them? In some of your companions it is jealousy; in the people belonging to the Court it is anxiety. Our situation is so disastrous, and we have met with so much ingratitude and treachery, that the appre- hensions of those who love us are excusable ! I could quiet them by telling them all the secret serv- ices you perform for us daily; but I will not do it. Out of good-will to you they would repeat all I should say, and you would be lost with the Assembly. It is much better, both for you and for us, that you should be thought a constitutionalist. It has been mentioned to me a hundred times already; I have MARIE ANTOINETTE 315 never contradicted it; but I come to give you my word that if we are fortunate enough to see an end of all this, I will, at the Queen's residence, and in the presence of my brothers, relate the important services you have rendered us, and I will recompense you and your son for them." I threw myself at the King's feet and kissed his hand. He raised me up, saying, ''Come, come, do not grieve; the Queen, who loves you, confides in you as I do." Down to the day of the acceptance it was impos- sible to introduce Barnave into the interior of the palace; but when the Queen was free from the inner guard she said she would see him. The very great precautions which it was necessary for the deputy to take in order to conceal his connection with the King and Queen compelled them to spend two hours wait- ing for him in one of the corridors of the Tuileries, and all in vain. The first day that he was to be admitted, a man whom Barnave knew to be dangerous having met him in the courtyard of the palace, he determined to cross it without stopping, and walked in the gardens in order to lull suspicion. I was desired to wait for Barnave at a little door belonging to the entresols of the palace, with my hand upon the open lock. I was in that position for an hour. The King came to me frequently, and always to speak to me of the uneasiness which a servant belonging to the Chateau, who was a patriot, gave him. He came again to ask me whether I had hea'rd the door called de Decret opened. I assured him nobody had been in the corridor, and he became easy. He was dreadfully apprehensive that his connection with Bar- nave would be discovered. " It would," said the King, " be a ground for grave accusations, and the unfortu- nate man would be lost." I then ventured to remind his Majesty that as Barnave was not the only one 316 THE MEMOIRS OF in the secret of the business which brought him in contact with their Majesties, one of his colleagues might be induced to speak of the association with which they were honoured, and that in letting them know by my presence that I also was informed of it, a risk was incurred of removing from those gentle- men part of the responsibility of the secret. Upon this observation the King quitted me hastily and re- turned a moment afterwards with the Queen. " Give me your place," said she; " I will wait for him in my turn. You have convinced the King. We must not increase in their eyes the number of persons informed of their communications with us." The police of M. de Laporte, intendant of the civil list, apprised him, as early as the latter end of 1791, that a man belonging to the King's offices who had set up as a pastry-cook at the Palais Royal was about to resume the duties of his situation, which had de- volved upon him again on the death of one who held it for life; that he was so furious a Jacobin that he had dared to say it would be a good thing for France if the King's days were shortened. His duty was con- fined to making the pastry; he was closely watched by the head officers of the kitchen, who were devoted to his Majesty; but it is so easy to introduce a subtle poison into made dishes that it was determined the King and Queen should eat only plain roast meat in future; that their bread should be brought to them by M. Thierry de Ville-d'Avray, intendant of the smaller apartments, and that he should likewise take upon himself to supply the wine. The King was fond of pastry; I was directed to order some, as if for myself, sometimes of one pastry-cook, and sometimes of another. The pounded sugar, too, was kept in my room. The King, the Queen, and Madame Elisabeth ate together, and nobody remained to wait on them. MARIE ANTOINETTE 317 Each had a dumb waiter and a little bell to call the servants when they were wanted. M. Thierry used himself to bring me their Majesties' bread and wine, and I locked them up in a private cupboard in the King's closet on the ground floor. As soon as the King sat down to table I took in the pastry and bread. All was hidden under the table lest it might be necessary to have the servants in. The King thought it dangerous as well as distressing to show any apprehension of attempts against his person, or any mistrust of his officers of the kitchen. As he never drank a whole bottle of wine at his meals (the Princesses drank nothing but water), he filled up that out of which he had drunk about half from the bottle served up by the officers of his butlery. I took it away after dinner. Although he never ate any other pastry than that which I brought, he took care in the same manner that it should seem that he had eaten of that served at table. The lady who succeeded me found this duty all regulated, and she executed it in the same manner; the public never was in possession of these particulars, nor of the apprehensions which gave rise to them. At the end of three or four months the police of M. de Laporte gave notice that nothing more was to be dreaded from that sort of plot against the King's life; that the plan was en- tirely changed; and that all the blows now to be struck would be directed as much against the throne as against the person of the sovereign. • There are others besides myself who know that at this time one of the things about which the Queen most desired to be satisfied was the opinion of the famous Pitt. She would sometimes say to me, " I never pronounce the name of Pitt without feeling a chill like that of death." (I repeat here her very expressions.) "That man is the mortal enemy of 318 THE MEMOIRS OF France; and he takes a dreadful revenge for the impolitic support given by the Cabinet of Versailles to the American insurgents. He wishes by our destruction to guarantee the maritime power of his country forever against the efforts made by the King to improve his marine power and their happy results during the last war. He knows that it is not only the King's policy but his private inclination to be solicitous about his fleets, and that the most active step he has taken during his whole reign was to visit the port of Cherbourg. Pitt had served the cause of the French Revolution from the first disturbances; he will perhaps serve it until its annihilation. I will endeavour to learn to what point he intends to lead us, and I am sending M. to London for that purpose. He has been intimately connected with Pitt, and they have often had political conversations respecting the French Government. I will get him to make him speak out, at least so far as such a man can speak out." Some time afterwards the Queen told me that her secret envoy was returned from London, and that all he had been able to wring from Pitt, whom he found alarmingly reserved, was that he would not suffer the French monarchy to perish; that to suffer the revolu- tionary spirit to erect an organised republic in France would be a great error, affecting the tranquillity of Europe. " Whenever," said she, " Pitt expressed himself upon the necessity of supporting monarchy in France, he maintained the most profound silence upon what concerns the monarch. The result of these conversations is anything but encouraging; but, even as to that monarchy which he wishes to save, will he have means and strength to save it if he suffers us to fall?" The death of the Emperor Leopold took place on MARIE ANTOINETTE 319 the 1st of March, 1792. When the news of this event reached the Tuileries, the Queen was gone out. Upon her return I put the letter containing it into her hands. She exclaimed that the Emperor had been poisoned; that she had remarked and preserved a newspaper, in which, in an article upon the sitting of the Jacobins, at the time when the Emperor Leopold declared for the coalition, it was said, speaking of him, that a pie-crust would settle that matter. At this period Barnave obtained the Queen's consent that he should read all the letters she should write. He was fearful of private correspondences that might hamper the plan marked out for her; he mistrusted her Majesty's sincerity on this point; and the diver- sity of counsels, and the necessity of yielding, on the one hand, to some of the views of the constitu- tionalists, and on the other, to those of the French Princes, and even of foreign Courts, were unfortu- nately the circumstances which most rapidly impelled the Court towards its ruin. However, the emigrants showed great apprehen- sions of the consequences which might follow in the interior from a connection with the constitutionalists, whom they described as a party existing only in idea, and totally without means of repairing their errors. The Jacobins were preferred to them, be- cause, said they, there would be no treaty to be made with any one at the moment of extricating the King and his family from the abyss in which they were plunged. CHAPTER XXI IN the beginning of the year 1792, a worthy priest requested a private interview with me. He had learned the existence of a new libel by Madame de Lamotte. He told me that the people who came from London to get it printed in Paris only desired gain, and that they were ready to deliver the manu- script to him for a thousand louis, if he could find any friend of the Queen disposed to make that sacri- fice for her peace; that he had thought of me, and if her Majesty would give him the twenty-four thousand francs, he would hand the manuscript to me. I communicated this proposal to the Queen, who rejected it, and desired me to answer that at the time when she had power to punish the hawkers of these libels she deemed them so atrocious and incredible that she despised them too much to stop them; that if she were imprudent and weak enough to buy a sin- gle one of them, the Jacobins might possibly discover the circumstance through their espionage; that were this libel bought up, it would be printed neverthe- less, and would be much more dangerous when they apprised the public of the means she had used to suppress it. Baron d'Aubier, gentleman-in-ordinary to the King, and my particular friend, had a good memory and a clear way of communicating the substance of the debates and decrees of the National Assembly. I went daily to the Queen's apartments to repeat all this to the King, who used to say, on seeing me, 320 MARIE ANTOINETTE 321 " Ah ! here's the Postilion par Calais," — a newspaper of the time. M. d'Aubier one day said to me : " The Assembly has been much occupied with an information laid by the workmen of the Sevres manufactory. They brought to the President's office a bundle of pamphlets which they said were the life of Marie Antoinette. The director of the manufactory was ordered up to the bar, and declared he had received orders to burn the printed sheets in question in the furnaces used for baking his china." While I was relating this business to the Queen the King coloured and held his head down over his plate. The Queen said to him, " Do you know anything about this, Sire?" The King made no answer. Madame Elisabeth requested him to explain what it meant. Louis was still silent. I withdrew hastily. A few minutes afterwards the Queen came to my room and informed me that the King, out of "regard lor her, had purchased the whole edition struck off from the manuscript which I had mentioned to her, and that M. de Laporte had not been able to devise any more secret way of destroying the work than that of having it burnt at Sevres, among two hundred workmen, one hundred and eighty of whom must, in all probability, be Jacobins! She told me she had concealed her vexation from the King; that he was in consternation, and that she could say nothing, since his good intentions and his affection. for her had been the cause of the mistake. Some time afterwards the Assembly received a de- nunciation against M. de Montmorin. The ex-min- ister was accused of having neglected forty despatches from M. Genet, the charge d'affaires from France in Russia, not having even unsealed them, because M. Genet acted on constitutional principles. M. de Mont- 322 THE MEMOIRS OF morin appeared at the bar to answer this accusation. Whatever distress I might feel in obeying the order I had received from the King to go and give him an account of the sitting, I thought I ought not to fail in doing so. But instead of giving my brother his family name, I merely said " your Majesty's charge d'affaires at St. Petersburg." The King did me the favour to say that he noticed a reserve in my account, of which he approved. The Queen condescended to add a few obliging remarks to those of the King. However, my office of journalist gave me in this instance so much pain that I took an opportunity, when the King was expressing his satis- faction to me at the manner in which I gave him this daily account, to tell him that its merits belonged wholly to M. d'Aubier; and I ventured to request the King to suffer that excellent man to give him an ac- count of the sittings himself. I assured the King that if he would permit it, that gentleman might proceed to the Queen's apartments through mine unseen; the King consented to the arrangement. Thenceforward M. d'Aubier gave the King repeated proofs of zeal and attachment. The Cure of St. Eustache ceased to be the Queen's confessor when he took the constitutional oath. I do not remember the name of the ecclesiastic who suc- ceeded him; I only know that he was conducted into her apartments with the greatest mystery. Their Majesties did not perform their Easter devotions in public, because they could neither declare for the con- stitutional clergy, nor act so as to show that they were against them. The Queen did perform her Easter devotions in 1792; but she went to the chapel attended only by myself. She desired me beforehand to request one of my relations, who was her chaplain, to celebrate a MARIE ANTOINETTE 323 mass for fier at five o'clock in the morning. It was still dark; she gave me her arm, and I lighted her with a taper. I left her alone at the chapel door. She did not return to her room until the dawn of day. Dangers increased daily. The Assembly were strengthened in the eyes of the people by the hos- tilities of the foreign armies and the army of the Princes. The communication with the latter party became more active; the Queen wrote almost every day. M. de Goguelat possessed her confidence for all correspondence with the foreign parties, and I was obliged to have him in my apartments; the Queen asked for him very frequently, and at times which she could not previously appoint. All parties were exerting themselves either to ruin or to save the King. One day I found the Queen extremely agitated; she told me she no longer knew where she was; that the leaders of the Jacobins offered themselves to her through the medium of Dumouriez; or that Dumouriez, abandoning the Jacobins, had come and offered himself to her; that she had granted him an audience; that when alone with her, he had thrown himself at her feet, and told her that he had drawn the bonnet rouge over his head to the very ears; but that he neither was nor could be a Jacobin; that the Revolution had been suffered to extend even to that rabble of destroyers who, thinking of nothing but pil- lage, were ripe for anything, and might furnish the Assembly with a formidable army, ready to under- mine the remains of a throne already but too much shaken. Whilst speaking with the utmost ardour he seized the Queen's hand and kissed it with transport, exclaiming, "Suffer yourself to be saved!" The Queen told me that the protestations of a traitor were not to be relied on; that the whole of his con- Vol. 3 Memoirs — 11 324 THE MEMOIRS OF duct was so well known that undoubtedly the wisest course was not to trust to it; that, moreover, the Princes particularly recommended that no confidence should be placed in any proposition emanating from within the kingdom; that the force without became imposing; and that it was better to rely upon their success, and upon the protection due from Heaven to a sovereign so virtuous as Louis XVI. and to so just a cause. The constitutionalists, on their part, saw that there had been nothing more than a pretence of listening to them. Barnave's last advice was as to the means of continuing, a few weeks longer, the Constitutional Guard, which had been denounced to the Assembly, and was to be disbanded. The denunciation against the Constitutional Guard affected only its staff, and the Due de Brissac. Barnave wrote to the Queen that the staff of the guard was already attacked; that the Assembly was about to pass a decree to reduce it; and he entreated her to prevail on the King, the very instant the decree should appear, to form the staff afresh of persons whose names he sent her. Barnave said that all who were set down in it passed for de- cided Jacobins, but were not so in fact; that they, as well as himself, were in despair at seeing the mon- archical government attacked; that they had learnt to dissemble their sentiments, and that it would be at least a fortnight before the Assembly could know them well, and certainly before it could succeed in making them unpopular; that it would be necessary to take advantage of that short space of time to get away from Paris, immediately after their nomination. The Queen was of opinion that she ought not to yield to this advice. The Due de Brissac was sent to Or- leans, and the guard was disbanded. Barnave, seeing that the Queen did not follow his MARIE ANTOINETTE '325 counsel in anything, and convinced that she placed all her reliance on assistance from abroad, determined to quit Paris. He obtained a last audience. " Your misfortunes, Madame," said he, " and those which I anticipate for France, determined me to sacrifice my- self to serve you. I see, however, that my advice does not agree with the views of your Majesties. I augur but little advantage from the plan you are induced to pursue, — you are too remote from your succours; you will be lost before they reach you. Most ardently do I wish I may be mistaken in so lamentable a predic- tion; but I am sure to pay with my head for the in- terest your misfortunes have raised in me, and the services I have sought to render you. I request, for my sole reward, the honour of kissing your hand." The Queen, her eyes suffused with tears, granted him that favour, and remained impressed with a favourable idea of his sentiments. Madame Elisa- beth participated in this opinion, and the two Prin- cesses frequently spoke of Barnave. The Queen also received M. Duport several times, but with less mys- tery. Her connection with the constitutional depu- ties transpired. Alexandre de Lameth was the only one of the three who survived the vengeance of the Jacobins. The National Guard, which succeeded the King's Guard, having occupied the gates of the Tuileries, all who came to see the Queen were insulted with im- punity. Menacing cries were uttered aloud even in the Tuileries; they called for the destruction of the throne, and the murder of the sovereign; the gross- est insults were offered by the very lowest of the mob. About this time the King fell into a despondent state, which amounted almost to physical helpless- ness. He passed ten successive days without uttering 326 THE MEMOIRS OF a single word, even in the bosom of his family; except, indeed, when playing at backgammon after dinner with Madame Elisabeth. The Queen roused him from this state, so fatal at a critical period, by throwing herself at his feet, urging every alarming idea, and employing every affectionate expression. She represented also what he owed to his family; and told him that if they were doomed to fall they ought to fall honourably, and not wait to be smoth- ered upon the floor of their apartment. About the 15th of June, 1792, the King refused his sanction to the two decrees ordaining the deporta- tion of priests and the formation of a camp of twenty thousand men under the walls of Paris. He himself wished to sanction them, and said that the general insurrection only waited for a pretence to burst forth. The Queen insisted upon the veto, and reproached herself bitterly when this last act of the constitu- tional authority had occasioned the day of the 20th of June. A few days previously about twenty thousand men had gone to the Commune to announce that, on the 20th, they would plant the tree of liberty at the door of the National Assembly, and present a petition to the King respecting the veto which he had placed upon the decree for the deportation of the priests. This dreadful army crossed the garden of the Tuileries, and marched under the Queen's windows; it consisted of people who called themselves the citizens of the Fau- bourgs St. Antoine and St. Marceau. Clothed in filthy rags, they bore a most terrifying appearance, and even infected the air. People asked each other where such an army could come from; nothing so disgusting had ever before appeared in Paris. On the 20th of June this mob thronged about the Tuileries in still greater numbers, armed with pikes, MARIE ANTOINETTE 32^ hatchets, and murderous instruments of all kinds, decorated with ribbons of the national colours, shout- ing, "The nation for ever! Down with the veto!" The King was without guards. Some of these des- peradoes rushed up to his apartment; the door was about to be forced in, when the King commanded that it should be opened. Messieurs de Bougainville, d'Hervilly, de Parois, d'Aubier, Acloque, Gentil, and other courageous men who were in the apartment of M. de Septeuil, the King's first valet de chambre, instantly ran to his Majesty's apartment. M. de Bougainville, seeing the torrent furiously advancing, cried out, " Put the King in the recess of the window, and place benches before him." Six royalist grena- diers of the battalion of the Filles Saint Thomas made their way by an inner staircase, and ranged them- selves before the benches. The order given by M. de Bougainville saved the King from the blades of the assassins, among whom was a Pole named Lazousky, who was to strike the first blow. The King's brave defenders said, " Sire, fear nothing." The King's reply is well known : " Put your hand upon my heart, and you will perceive whether I am afraid." M. Vanot, commandant of battalion, warded off a blow aimed by a wretch against the King; a grenadier of the Filles Saint Thomas parried a sword-thrust made in the same direction. Madame Elisabeth ran to her brother's apartments; when she reached the door she heard loud threats of death against the Queen: they called for the head of the Austrian. " Ah ! let them think I am the Queen," she said to those around her, " that she may have time to escape." The Queen could not join the King; she was in the council chamber, where she had been placed behind the great table to protect her, as much as pos- sible, against the approach of the barbarians. Pre- 328 THE MEMOIRS OF serving a noble and becoming demeanour in this dreadful situation, she held the Dauphin before her, seated upon the table. Madame was at her side; the Princesse de Lamballe, the Princesse de Tarente, Madame de la Roche-Aymon, Madame de Turzel, and Madame de Mackau surrounded her. She had fixed a tri-coloured cockade, which one of the National Guard had given her, upon her head. The poor little Dauphin was, like the King, shrouded in an enormous red cap. The horde passed in files before the table; the sort of standards which they carried were symbols of the most atrocious barbarity. There was one rep- resenting a gibbet, to which a dirty doll was sus- pended; the words "Marie Antoinette a la lanterne'* were written beneath it. Another was a board, to which a bullock's heart was fastened, with " Heart of Louis XVI." written round it. And a third showed the horn of an ox, with an obscene inscription. One of the most furious Jacobin women who marched with these wretches stopped to give vent to a thousand imprecations against the Queen. Her Majesty asked whether she had ever seen her. She replied that she had not. Whether she had done her any personal wrong? Her answer was the same; but she added : "It is you who have caused the misery of the nation." "You have been told so/' answered the Queen; " you are deceived. As the wife of the King of France, and mother of the Dauphin, I am a French- woman; I shall never see my own country again, — - I can be happy or unhappy only in France; I was happy when you loved me." The fury began to weep, asked her pardon, and said, " It was because I did not know you; I see that you are good." MARIE ANTOINETTE 329 Santerre, the monarch of the faubourgs, made his subjects file off as quickly as he could; and it was thought at the time that he was ignorant of the object of this insurrection, which was the murder of the royal family. However, it was eight o'clock in the evening before the palace was completely cleared, Twelve deputies, impelled by attachment to the King's person, ranged themselves near him at the commence- ment of the insurrection; but the deputation from the Assembly did not reach the Tuileries until six in the evening; all the doors of the apartments were broken. The Queen pointed out to the deputies the state of the King's palace, and the disgraceful manner in which his asylum had been violated under the very eyes of the Assembly; she saw that Merlin de Thionville was so much affected as to shed tears while she spoke. " You weep, M. Merlin," said she to him, " at see- ing the King and his family so cruelly treated by a people whom he always wished to make happy." "True, Madame," replied Merlin; "I weep for the misfortunes of a beautiful and feeling woman, the mother of a family; but do not mistake, not one of my tears falls for either King or Queen; I hate kings and queens, — it is my religion." The Queen could not appreciate this madness, and saw all that was to be apprehended by persons who evinced it. All hope was gone, and nothing was thought of but succour from abroad. The Queen appealed to her family and the King's brothers; her letters probably became more pressing, and expressed apprehensions upon the tardiness of relief. Her Majesty read me one to herself from the Archduchess Christina, Gou- vernante of the Low Countries: she reproached the Queen for some of her expressions, and told her that those out of France were at least as much alarmed as 330 THE MEMOIRS OF herself at the King's situation and her own; but that the manner of attempting to assist her might either save her or endanger her safety; and that the mem- bers of the coalition were bound to act prudently, en- trusted as they were with interests so dear to them. The 14th of July, 1792, fixed by the constitution as the anniversary of the independence of the nation, drew near. The King and Queen were compelled to make their appearance on the occasion; aware that the plot of the 20th of June had their assassination for its object, they had no doubt but that their death was determined on for the day of this national festi- val. The Queen was recommended, in order to give the King's friends time to defend him if the attack should be made, to guard him against the first stroke of a dagger by making him wear a breastplate. I was directed to get one made in my apartments : it was composed of fifteen folds of Italian taffety, and formed into an under-waistcoat and a wide belt. This breastplate was tried; it resisted all thrusts of the dagger, and several balls were turned aside by it. When it was completed the difficulty was to let the King try it on without running the risk of being sur- prised. I wore the immense heavy waistcoat as an under-petticoat for three days without being able to find a favourable moment. At length the King found an opportunity one morning to pull off his coat in the Queen's chamber and try on the breastplate. ~ The Queen was in bed; the King pulled me gently by the gown, and drew me as far as he could from the Queen's bed, and said to me, in a very low tone of voice: "It is to satisfy her that I submit to this inconvenience: they will not assassinate me; their scheme is changed; they will put me to death an- other way." The Queen heard the King whispering to me, and when he was gone out she asked me what MARIE ANTOINETTE 331 he had said. I hesitated to answer; she insisted that I should, saying that nothing must be concealed from her, and that she was resigned upon every point. When she was informed of the King's remark she told me she had guessed it, that he had long since observed to her that all which was going forward in France was an imitation of the revolution in England in the time of Charles I., and that he was incessantly reading the history of that unfortunate monarch in order that he might act better than Charles had done at a similar crisis. " I begin to be fearful of the King's being brought to trial," continued the Queen; "as to me, I am a foreigner; they will assassinate me. What will become of my poor children?" These sad ejaculations were followed by a torrent of tears. I wished to give her an antispasmodic; she refused it, saying that only happy women could feel nervous; that the cruel situation to which she was reduced rendered these remedies useless. In fact, the Queen, who during her happier days was frequently "attacked by hysterical disorders, enjoyed more uniform health when all the faculties of her soul were called forth to support her physical strength. I had prepared a corset for her, for the same pur- pose as the King's under-waistcoat, without her knowledge; but she would not make use of it; all my entreaties, all my tears, were in vain. " If the factions assassinate me," she replied, " it will be a fortunate event for me ; they will deliver me from a most painful existence." A few days after the King had tried on his breastplate I met him on a back staircase. I drew back to let him pass. He stopped and took my hand; I wished to kiss his; he would not suffer it, but drew me towards him by the hand, and kissed both my cheeks without saying a single word. 332 THE MEMOIRS OF The fear of another attack upon the Tuileries oc- casioned scrupulous search among the King's papers: I burnt almost all those belonging to the Queen. She put her family letters, a great deal of correspond- ence which she thought it necessary to preserve for the history of the era of the Revolution, and particu- larly Barnave's letters and her answers, of which she had copies, into a portfolio, which she entrusted to M de J . That gentleman was unable to save this deposit, and it was burnt. The Queen left a few papers in her secretaire. Among them were instructions to Madame de Tourzel, respecting the dispositions of her children and the characters and abilities of the sub-governesses under that lady's orders. This paper, which the Queen drew up at the time of Madame de Tourzel's appointment, with several letters from Maria Theresa., filled with the best advice and instructions, was printed after the ioth of August by order of the Assembly in the collection of papers found in the secretaires of the King and Queen. Her Majesty had still, without reckoning the in- come of the month, one hundred and forty thousand francs in gold. She was desirous of depositing the whole of it with me; but I advised her to retain fif- teen hundred louis, as a sum of rather considerable amount might be suddenly necessary for her. The King had an immense quantity of papers, and un- fortunately conceived the idea of privately making, with the assistance of a locksmith who had worked with him above ten years, a place of concealment in an inner corridor of his apartments. The place of concealment, but for the man's information, would have been long undiscovered. The wall in which it was made was painted to imitate large stones, and the opening was entirely concealed among the brown grooves which formed the shaded part of these painted MARIE ANTOINETTE 333 stones. But even before this locksmith had denounced what was afterwards called the iron closet to the As- sembly, the Queen was aware that he had talked of it to some of his friends; and that this man, in whom the King from long habit placed too much confidence, was a Jacobin. She warned the King of it, and pre- vailed on him to fill a very large portfolio with all the papers he was most interested in preserving, and en- trust it to me. She entreated him in my presence to leave nothing in this closet; and the King, in order to quiet her, told her that he had left nothing there. I would have taken the portfolio and carried it to my apartment, but it was too heavy for me to lift. The King said he would carry it himself; I went before to open the doors for him. When he placed the portfolio in my inner closet he merely said, " The Queen will tell you what it contains." Upon my return to the Queen I put the question to her, deem- ing, from what the King had said, that it was neces- sary I should know. " They are," the Queen answered me, " such documents as would be most dangerous to the King should they go so far as to proceed to a trial against him. But what he wishes me to tell you is, that the portfolio contains a proces-verbal of a cabinet council, in which the King gave his opinion against the war. He had it signed by all the minis- ters, and, in case of a trial, he trusts that this docu- ment will be very useful to him." I asked the Queen to whom she thought I ought to commit the portfolio. "To whom you please," answered she; "you alone are answerable for it. Do not quit the palace even during your vacation months: there may be circum- stances under which it would be very desirable that we should be able to have it instantly." At this period M. de La Fayette, who had probably given up the idea of establishing a republic in France 334 THE MEMOIRS OF similar to that of the United States, and was desirous to support the first constitution which he had sworn to defend, quitted his army and came to the Assembly for the purpose of supporting by his presence and by an energetic speech a petition signed by twenty thou- sand citizens against the late violation of the residence of the King and his family. The General found the constitutional party powerless, and saw that he him- self had lost his popularity. The Assembly disap- proved of the step he had taken; the King, for whom it was taken, showed no satisfaction at it, and he saw himself compelled to return to his army as quickly as he could. He thought he could rely on the National Guard; but on the day of his arrival those officers who were in the King's interest inquired of his Maj- esty whether they were to forward the views of Gen- eral de La Fayette by joining him in such measures as he should pursue during his stay at Paris. The King enjoined them not to do so. From this answer M. de La Fayette perceived that he was abandoned by the remainder of his party in the Paris guard. On his arrival a plan was presented to the Queen, in which it was proposed by a junction between La Fayette's army and the King's party to rescue the royal family and convey them to Rouen. I did not learn the particulars of this plan; the Queen only said to me upon the subject that M. de La Fayette was offered to them as a resource; but that it would be better for them to perish than to owe their safety to the man who had done them the most mischief, or to place themselves under the necessity of treating with him. I passed the whole month of July without going to bed; I was fearful of some attack by night. There was one plot against the Queen's life which has never been made known. I was alone by her bedside at one MARIE ANTOINETTE 335 o'clock in the morning; we heard somebody walking softly down the corridor, which passes along the whole line of her apartments, and which was then locked at each end. I went out to fetch the valet de chambre; he entered the corridor, and the Queen and myself soon heard the noise of two men fighting. The unfor- tunate Princess held me locked in her arms, and said to me, "What a situation! insults by day and assassins by night ! " The valet de chambre cried out to her from the corridor, " Madame, it is a wretch that I know; I have him! " " Let him go," said the Queen; "open the door to him; he came to murder me; the Jacobins would carry him about in triumph to-morrow." The man was a servant of the King's toilet, who had taken the key of the corridor out of his Majesty's pocket after he was in bed, no doubt with the intention of committing the crime suspected. The valet de chambre, who was a very strong man, held him by the wrists, and thrust him out at the door. The wretch did not speak a word. The valet de chambre said, in answer to the Queen, who spoke to him gratefully of the danger to which he had ex- posed himself, that he feared nothing, and that he had always a pair of excellent pistols about him for no other purpose than to defend her Majesty. The next day M. de Septeuil had all the locks of the King's inner apartments changed. I did the same by those of the Queen. We were every moment told that the Faubourg St. Antoine was preparing to march against the palace. At four o'clock one morning towards the latter end of July a person came to give me information to that effect. I instantly sent off two men, on whom I could rely, with orders to proceed to the usual places for assembling, and to come back speedily, and give me an account of the state of the city. We knew that at least 336 MARIE ANTOINETTE an hour must elapse before the populace or the fau- bourgs assembled on the site of the Bastille could reach the Tuileries. It seemed to me sufficient for the Queen's safety that all about her should be awakened. I went softly into her room; she was asleep; I did not awaken her. I found General de W in the great closet; he told me the meeting was, for this once, dispersing. The General had endeavoured to please the populace by the same means as M. de La Fayette had employed. He saluted the lowest pois- sarde, and lowered his hat down to his very stirrup. But the populace, who had been flattered for three years, required far different homage to its power, and the poor man was unnoticed. The King had been awakened, and so had Madame Elisabeth, who had gone to him. The Queen, yielding to the weight of her griefs, slept till nine o'clock on that day, which was very unusual with her. The King had already been to know whether she was awake; I told him what I had done, and the care I had taken not to disturb her. He thanked me, and said, " I was awake, and so was the whole palace; she ran no risk. I am very glad to see her take a little rest. Alas! her griefs double mine ! " What was my chagrin when, upon awaking and learning what had passed, the Queen burst into tears from regret at not having been called, and began to upbraid me, on whose friendship she ought to have been able to rely, for having served her so ill under such circumstances ! In vain did I reit- erate that it had been only a false alarm, and that she required to have her strength recruited. " It is not diminished," said she; "misfortune gives us addi- tional strength. Elisabeth was with the King, and I was asleep, — I who am determined to perish by his side! I am his wife; I will not suffer him to incur the smallest risk without my sharing it." CHAPTER XXII DURING July the correspondence of M. Bertrand de Molleville with the King and Queen was most active. M. de Marsilly, formerly a lieutenant of the Cent-Suisses of the Guard, was the bearer of the letters. He came to me the first time with a note from the Queen directed to M. Bertrand himself. In this note the Queen said : " Address yourself with full confidence to Madame Campan; the conduct of her brother in Rus- sia has not at all influenced her sentiments; she is wholly devoted to us; and if, hereafter, you should have anything to say to us verbally, you may rely en- tirely upon her devotion and discretion." The mobs which gathered almost nightly in the faubourgs alarmed the Queen's friends; they entreated her not to sleep in her room on the ground floor of the Tuileries. She removed to the first floor, to a room which was between the King's apartments and those of the Dauphin. Being awake always from daybreak, she ordered that neither the shutters nor the window-blinds should be closed, that her long sleepless nights might be the less weary. About the middle of one of these nights, when the moon was shining into her bedchamber, she gazed at it, and told me that in a month she should not see that moon unless freed from her chains, and beholding the King at liberty. She then imparted to me all that was concurring to deliver them; but said that the opinions of their intimate advisers were alarmingly at vari- ance; that some vouched for complete success, while 338 THE MEMOIRS OF others pointed out insurmountable dangers. She added that she possessed the itinerary of the march of the Princes and the King of Prussia : that on such a day they would be at Verdun, on another day at such a place, that Lille was about to be besieged, but that M. de J , whose prudence and intelligence the King, as well as herself, highly valued, alarmed them much respecting the success of that siege, and made them apprehensive that, even were the commandant devoted to them, the civil authority, which by the con- stitution gave great power to the mayors of towns, would overrule the military commandant. She was also very uneasy as to what would take place at Paris during the interval, and spoke to me of the King's want of energy, but always in terms expressive of her veneration for his virtues and her attachment to him- self. "The King," said she, "is not a coward; he possesses abundance of passive courage, but he is overwhelmed by an awkward shyness, a mistrust of himself, which proceeds from his education as much as from his disposition. He is afraid to command, and, above all things, dreads speaking to assembled numbers. He lived like a child, and always ill at ease under the eyes of Louis XV., until the age of twenty-one. This constraint confirmed his timidity. Circumstanced as we are, a few well-delivered words addressed to the Parisians, who are devoted to him, would multiply the strength of our party a hundred- fold : he will not utter them. What can we expect from those addresses to the people which he has been advised to post up? Nothing but fresh outrages. As for myself, I could do anything, and would appear on horseback, if necessary. But if I were really to begin to act, that would be furnishing arms to the King's enemies; the cry against the Austrian, and against the sway of a woman, would become general MARIE ANTOINETTE 339 in France; and, moreover, by showing myself, I should render the King a mere nothing. A queen who is not regent ought, under these circumstances, to re- main passive and prepare to die." The garden of the Tuileries was full of maddened men, who insulted all who seemed to side with the Court. " The Life of Marie Antoinette " was cried under the Queen's windows, infamous plates were annexed to the book, the hawkers showed them to the passers-by. On all sides were heard the jubilant outcries of a people in a state of delirium almost as frightful as the explosion of their rage. The Queen and her children were unable to breathe the open air any longer. It was determined that the garden of the Tuileries should be closed; as soon as this step was taken the Assembly decreed that the whole length of the Terrace des Feuillans belonged to it, and fixed the boundary between what was called the national ground and the Coblentz ground by a tricoloured rib- bon stretched from one end of the terrace to the other. All good citizens were ordered, by notices affixed to it, not to go down into the garden, under pain of being treated in the same manner as Foulon and Ber- thier. A young man who did not observe this written order went down into the garden; furious outcries, threats of la lantemc, and the crowd of people which collected upon the terrace warned him of his impru- dence, and the danger which he ran. He immediately pulled off his shoes, took out his handkerchief, and wiped the dust from their soles. The people cried out, "Bravo! the good citizen for ever!" He was carried off in triumph. The shutting up of the Tuile- ries did not enable the Queen and her children to walk in the garden. The people on the terrace sent forth dreadful shouts, and she was twice compelled to return to her apartments. 340 THE MEMOIRS OF In the early part of August many zealous per- sons offered the King money; he refused consider- able sums, being unwilling to injure the fortunes of individuals. M. de la Ferte, intendant of the menus plaisirs, brought me a thousand louis, requesting me to lay them at the feet of the Queen. He thought she could not have too much money at so perilous a time, and that every good Frenchman should hasten to place all his ready money in her hands. She refused this sum, and others of much greater amount which were offered to her. However, a few days afterwards, she told me she would accept M. de la Ferte' s twenty- four thousand francs, because they would make up a sum which the King had to expend. She therefore directed me to go and receive those twenty-four thou- sand francs, to add them to the one hundred thousand francs she had placed in my hands, and to change the whole into assignats to increase their amount. Her orders were executed, and the assignats were delivered to the King. The Queen informed me that Madame Elisabeth had found a well-meaning man who had engaged to gain over Petion by the bribe of a large sum of money, and that deputy would, by a precon- certed signal, inform the King of the success of the project. His Majesty soon had an opportunity of seeing Petion, and on the Queen asking him before me if he was satisfied with him, the King replied, " Neither more nor less satisfied than usual; he did not make the concerted signal, and I believe I have been cheated." The Queen then condescended to ex- plain the whole of the enigma to me. " Petion," said she, " was, while talking to the King, to have kept his finger fixed upon his right eye for at least two seconds." " Pie did not even put his hand up to his chin," said the King; " after all, it is but so much money stolen: the thief will not boast of it, and the MARIE ANTOINETTE 341 affair will remain a secret. Let us talk of something else." He turned to me and said, " Your father was an intimate friend of Mandat, who now commands the National Guard; describe him to me; what ought I to expect from him? " I answered that he was one of his Majesty's most faithful subjects, but that with a great deal of loyalty he possessed very little sense, and that he was involved in the constitutional vortex. " I understand," said the King; " he is a man who would defend my palace and my person, because that is enjoined by the constitution which he has sworn to support, but who would fight against the party in favour of sovereign authority; it is well to know this with certainty." On the next day the Princesse de Lamballe sent for me very early in the morning. I found her on a sofa facing a window that looked upon the Pont Royal. She then occupied that apartment of the Pavilion of Flora which was on a level with that of the Queen. She desired me to sit down by her. Her Highness had a writing-desk upon her knees. " You have had many enemies," said she; "attempts have been made to deprive you of the Queen's favour; they have been far from successful. Do you know that even I my- self, not being so well acquainted with you as the Queen, was rendered suspicious of you; and that upon the arrival of the Court at the Tuileries I gave you a companion to be a spy upon you; and that I had another belonging to the police placed at your door! I was assured that you received five or six of the most virulent deputies of the Tiers Etat; but it was that wardrobe woman whose rooms were above you. In short," said the Princess, " persons of integrity have nothing to fear from the evil-disposed when they belong to so upright a prince as the King. As to the Queen, she knows you, and has loved you ever since 342 THE MEMOIRS OF she came into France. You shall judge of the King's opinion of you : it was yesterday evening decided in the family circle that, at a time when the Tuileries is likely to be attacked, it was necessary to have the most faithful account of the opinions and conduct of all the individuals composing the Queen's service. The King takes the same precaution on his part re- specting all who are about him. He said there was with him a person of great integrity, to whom he would commit this inquiry; and that, with regard to the Queen's household, you must be spoken to, that he had long studied your character, and that he es- teemed your veracity." The Princess had a list of the names of all who belonged to the Queen's chamber on her desk. She asked me for information respecting each individual. I was fortunate in having none but the most favour- able information to give. I had to speak of my avowed enemy in the Queen's chamber; of her who most wished that I should be responsible for my brother's political opinions. The Princess, as the head of the chamber, could not be ignorant of this circumstance; but as the person in question, who idol- ised the King and Queen, would not have hesitated to sacrifice her life in order to save theirs, and as pos- sibly her attachment to them, united to considerable narrowness of intellect and a limited education, con- tributed to her jealousy of me, I spoke of her in the highest terms. The Princess wrote as I dictated, and occasionally looked at me with astonishment. When I had done I entreated her to write in the margin that the lady alluded to was my declared enemy. She embraced me, saying, " Ah ! do not write it ! we should not record an unhappy circumstance which ought to be forgotten." We came to a man of genius who was MARIE ANTOINETTE 343 much attached to the Queen, and I described him as a man born solely to contradict, showing himself an aristocrat with democrats, and a democrat among aristocrats; but still a man of probity, and well dis- posed to his sovereign. The Princess said she knew many persons of that disposition, and that she was delighted I had nothing to say against this man, be- cause she herself had placed him about the Queen. The whole of her Majesty's chamber, which con- sisted entirely of persons of fidelity, gave throughout all the dreadful convulsions of the Revolution proofs of the greatest prudence and self-devotion. The same cannot be said of the antechambers. With the ex- ception of three or four, all the servants of that class were outrageous Jacobins; and I saw on those occa- sions the necessity of composing the private household of princes of persons completely separated from the class of the people. The situation of the royal family was so unbearable during the months which immediately preceded the 10th of August that the Queen longed for the crisis, whatever might be its issue. She frequently said that a long confinement in a tower by the seaside would seem to her less intolerable than those feuds in which the weakness of her party daily threatened an inevitable catastrophe. Not only were their Majesties prevented from breathing the open air, but they were also insulted at the very foot of the altar. The Sunday before the last day of the monarchy, while the royal family went through the gallery to the chapel, half the soldiers of the National Guard exclaimed, " Long live the King!" and the other half, "No; no King! Down with the veto ! " and on that day at vespers the choristers preconcerted to use loud and threat- ening emphasis when chanting the words, " Deposuit 344 THE MEMOIRS OF potentes de sede," in the " Magnificat." Incensed at such an irreverent proceeding, the royalists in their turn thrice exclaimed, " Et reginam," after the " Domine salvum fac regem." The tumult during the whole time of divine service was excessive. At length the terrible night of the ioth of August, 1792, arrived. On the preceding evening Petion went to the Assembly and informed it that preparations were making for an insurrection on the following day; that the tocsin would sound at midnight; and that he feared he had not sufficient means for resist- ing the attack which was about to take place. Upon this information the Assembly passed to the order of the day. Petion, however, gave an order for re- pelling force by force. M. Mandat was armed with this order; and, finding his fidelity to the King's person supported by what he considered the law of the State, he conducted himself in all his operations with the greatest energy. On the evening of the 9th I was present at the King's supper. While his Majesty was giving me various orders we heard a great noise at the door of the apartment. I went to see what was the cause of it, and found the two sentinels fighting. One said, speaking of the King, that he was hearty in the cause of the constitution, and would defend it at the peril of his life; the other maintained that he was an encumbrance to the only constitution suitable to a free people. They were almost ready to cut one another's throats. I returned with a countenance which betrayed my emotion. The King desired to know what was going forward at his door; I could not conceal it from him. The Queen said she was not at all surprised at it, and that more than half the guard belonged to the Jacobin party. The toscin sounded at midnight. The Swiss were drawn up like walls; and in the midst of their soldier- MARIE ANTOINETTE 345 like silence, which formed a striking contrast with the perpetual din of the town guard, the King informed M. de J , an officer of the staff, of the plan of defence laid down by General Viomenil. M. de J said to me, after this private conference, " Put your jewels and money into your pockets; our dan- gers are unavoidable; the means of defence are nil; safety might be obtained by some degree of energy in the King, but that is the only virtue in which he is deficient." An hour after midnight the Queen and Madame Elisabeth said they would lie down on a sofa in a room in the entresols, the windows of which com- manded the courtyard of the Tuileries. The Queen told me the King had just refused to put on his quilted under- waiscoat; that he had con- sented to wear it on the 14th of July because he was merely going to a ceremony where the blade of an assassin was to be apprehended; but that on a day on which his party might fight against the revolu- tionists he thought there was something cowardly in preserving his life by such means. During this time Madame Elisabeth disengaged herself from some of her clothing which encumbered her in order to lie down on the sofa : she took a cornelian pin out of her cape, and before she laid it down on the table she showed it to me, and desired me to read a motto engraved upon it round a stalk of lilies. The words were, " Oblivion- of injuries; pardon for offences." " I much fear," added that virtuous Princess, " this maxim has but little influ- ence among our enemies; but it ought not to be less dear to us on that account." The Queen desired me to sit down by her; the two Princesses could not sleep; they were convers- ing mournfully upon their situation when a musket 346 THE MEMOIRS OF was discharged in the courtyard. They both quitted the sofa, saving, " There is the first shot, unfortunately it will not be the last; let us go up to the King." The Queen desired me to follow her; several of her women went with me. At four o'clock the Queen came out of the King's chamber and told us she had no longer any hope; that M. Mandat, who had gone to the Hotel de Ville to receive further orders, had just been assassinated, and that the people were at that time carrying his head about the streets. Day came. The King, the Queen, Madame Elisabeth, Madame, and the Dauphin went down to pass through the ranks of the sections of the National Guard; the cry of "Vive le Roi!" was heard from a few places. I was at a window on the garden side; I saw some of the gunners quit their posts, go up to the King, and thrust their fists in his face, insulting him by most brutal language. Messieurs de Salvert and de Bridges drove them off in a spirited manner. The King was as pale as a corpse. The royal family came in again. The Queen told me that all was lost; that the King had shown no energy; and that this sort of review had done more harm than good. I was in the billiard-room with my companions; we placed ourselves upon some high benches. I then saw M. d'Hervilly with a drawn sword in his hand, ordering the usher to open the door to the French noblesse. Two hundred persons entered the room nearest to that in which the family were; others drew up in two lines in the preceding rooms. I saw a few people belonging to the Court, many others whose features were unknown to me, and a few who figured technically without right among what was called the noblesse, but whose self-devo- tion ennobled them at once. They were all so MARIE ANTOINETTE 347 t>adly armed that even in that situation the indom- itable French liveliness indulged in jests. M. de Saint-Souplet, one of the King's equerries, and a page, carried on their shoulders instead of muskets the tongs belonging to the King's antechamber, which they had broken and divided between them. Another page, who had a pocket-pistol in his hand, stuck the end of it against the back of the person who stood before him, and who begged he would be good enough to rest it elsewhere. A sword and a pair of pistols were the only arms of those who had had the precau- tion to provide themselves with arms at all. Mean- while, the numerous bands from the faubourgs, armed with pikes and cutlasses, filled the Carrousel and the streets adjacent to the Tuileries. The sanguinary Marseillais were at their head, with cannon pointed against the Chateau. In this emergency the King's Council sent M. Dejoly, the Minister of Justice, to the Assembly to request they would send the King a depu- tation which might serve as a safeguard to the execu- tive power. His ruin was resolved on; they passed to the order of the day. At eight o'clock the depart- ment repaired to the Chateau. The procureur-syndic, seeing that the guard within was ready to join the assailants, went into the King's closet and requested to speak to him in private. The King received him in his chamber; the Queen was with him. There M. Rcederer told him that the King, all his family, and the people about them would inevitably -perish unless his Majesty immediately determined to go to the Na- tional Assembly. The Queen at first opposed this advice, but the procureur-syndic told her that she rendered herself responsible for the deaths of the King, her children, and all who were in the palace. She no longer objected. The King then consented to go to the Assembly. As he set out, he said to the 348 THE MEMOIRS OF minister and persons who surrounded him, " Come, gentlemen, there is nothing more to be done here." The Queen said to me as she left the King's chamber, "Wait in my apartments; I will come to you, or I will send for you to go I know not whither." She took with her only the Princesse de Lamballe and Ma- dame de Tourzel. The Princesse de Tarente and Madame de la Roche-Aymon were inconsolable at be- ing left at the Tuileries; they, and all who belonged to the chamber, went down into the Queen's apartments. We saw the royal family pass between two lines formed by the Swiss grenadiers and those of the battalions of the Petits-Peres and the Filles Saint Thomas. They were so pressed upon by the crowd that during that short passage the Queen was robbed of her watch and purse. A man of great height and horrible appearance, one of such as were to be seen at the head of all the insurrections, drew near the Dau- phin, whom the Queen was leading by the hand, and took him up in his arms. The Queen uttered a scream of terror, and was ready to faint. The man said to her, " Don't be frightened, I will do him no harm;" and he gave him back to her at the entrance of the chamber. I leave to history all the details of that too mem- orable day, confining myself to recalling a few of the frightful scenes acted in the interior of the Tuileries after the King had quitted the palace. The assailants did not know that the King and his family had betaken themselves to the Assembly; and those who defended the palace from the side of the courts were equally ignorant of it. It is supposed that if they had been aware of the fact the siege would never have taken place. The Marseillais began by driving from their posts several Swiss, who yielded without resistance; a few MARIE ANTOINETTE 349 of the assailants fired upon them; some of the Swiss officers, seeing their men fall, and perhaps thinking the King was still at the Tuileries, gave the word to a whole battalion to fire. The aggressors were thrown into disorder, and the Carrousel was cleared in a moment; but they soon returned, spurred on by rage and revenge. The Swiss were but eight hundred strong; they fell back into the interior of the Chateau; some of the doors were battered in by the guns, others broken through with hatchets; the populace rushed from all quarters into the interior of the palace; al- most all the Swiss were massacred; the nobles, flying through the gallery which leads to the Louvre, were either stabbed or shot, and the bodies thrown out of the windows. M. Pallas and M. de Marchais, ushers of the King's chamber, were killed in defending the door of the council chamber; many others of the King's servants fell victims to their fidelity. I mention these two persons in particular because, with their hats pulled over their brows and their swords in their hands, they exclaimed, as they defended themselves with unavail- ing courage, " We will not survive!' — this is our post; our duty is to die at it." M. Diet behaved in the same manner at the door of the Queen's bedchamber; he experienced the same fate. The Princesse de Tarente had fortunately opened the door of the apartments; otherwise, the dreadful band seeing several women collected in the Queen's salon would have 'fancied she was among us, and would have immediately massacred us had we resisted them. We were, indeed, all about to perish, when a man with a long beard came up, exclaiming, in the name of Petion, " Spare the women; don't dishonour the nation ! " A particular circum- stance placed me in greater danger than the others. In my confusion I imagined, a moment before the 350 THE MEMOIRS OF assailants entered the Queen's apartments, that my sister was not among the group of women collected there; and I went up into an entresol, where I supposed she had taken refuge, to induce her to come down, fancying it safer that we should not be separated. I did not find her in the room in question; I saw there only our two femmes de chambre and one of the Queen's two heyducs, a man of great height and mili- tary aspect. I saw that he was pale, and sitting on a bed. I cried out to him, "Fly! the footmen and our people are already safe." " I cannot," said the man to me; " I am dying of fear." As he spoke I heard a number of men rushing hastily up the stair- case; they threw themselves upon him, and I saw him assassinated. I ran towards the staircase, followed by our women. The murderers left the hcyduc to come to me. The women threw themselves at their feet, and held their sabres. The narrowness of the staircase impeded the assassins; but I had already felt a horrid hand thrust into my back to seize me by my clothes, when some one called out from the bottom of the staircase, " What are you doing above there ? We don't kill women." I was on my knees; my executioner quitted his hold of me, and said, " Get up, you jade; the na- tion pardons you." The brutality of these words did not prevent my suddenly experiencing an indescribable feeling which partook almost equally of the love of life and the idea' that I was going to see my son, and all that was dear to me, again. A moment before I had thought less of death than of the pain which the steel, suspended over my head, would occasion me. Death is seldom seen so close without striking his blow. I heard every syllable uttered by the assassins, just as if I had been calm. MARIE ANTOINETTE 1351 Five or six men seized me and my companions, and, having made us get up on benches placed before the windows, ordered us to call out, " The nation for ever!" I passed over several corpses; I recognised that of the old Vicomte de Broves, to whom the Queen had sent me at the beginning of the night to desire him and another old man in her name to go home. These brave men desired I would tell her Majesty that they had but too strictly obeyed the King's orders in all circumstances under which they ought to have exposed their own lives in order to preserve his; and that for this once they would not obey, though they would cherish the recollection of the Queen's goodness. Near the grille, on the side next the bridge, the men who conducted me asked whither I wished to go. Upon my inquiring, in my turn, whether they were at liberty to take me wherever I might wish to go, one of them, a Marseillais, asked me, giving me at the same time a push with the butt end of his musket, whether I still doubted the power of the people? I answered " No," and I mentioned the number of my brother-in-law's house. I saw my sister ascending the steps of the parapet of the bridge, surrounded by mem- bers of the National Guard. I called to her, and she turned round. " Would you have her go with you? " said my guardian to me. I told him I did wish it. They called the people who were leading my sister to prison; she joined me. Madame de la Roche-Aymon and her daughter, Mademoiselle Pauline de Tourzel, Madame de Gine- stoux, lady to the Princesse de Lamballe, the other women of the Queen, and the old Comte d'Affry, were led off together to the Abbaye. Our progress from the Tuileries to my sister's house was most distressing. We saw several Swiss pursued 352 THE MEMOIRS OF and killed, and musket-shots were crossing each other in all directions. We passed under the walls of the Louvre; they were firing from the parapet into the windows of the gallery, to hit the knights of the dag- ger; for thus did the populace designate those faithful subjects who had assembled at the Tuileries to defend the King. The brigands broke some vessels of water in the Queen's first antechamber; the mixture of blood and water stained the skirts of our white gowns. The poissardes screamed after us in the streets that we were attached to the Austrian. Our protectors then showed some consideration for us, and made us go up a gateway to pull off our gowns; but our petticoats being too short, and making us look like persons in disguise, other poissardes began to bawl out that we were young Swiss dressed up like women. We then saw a tribe of female cannibals enter the street, carry- ing the head of poor Mandat. Our guards made us hastily enter a little public-house, called for wine, and desired us to drink with them. They assured the landlady that we were their sisters, and good patriots. Happily the Marseillais had quitted us to return to the Tuileries. One of the men who remained with us said to me in a low voice : " I am a gauze-worker in the faubourg. I was forced to march; I am not for all this; I have not killed anybody, and have res- cued you. You ran a great risk when we met the mad women who are carrying Mandat's head. These hor- rible women said yesterday at midnight, upon the site of the Bastille, that they must have their revenge for the 6th of October, at Versailles, and that they had sworn to kill the Queen and all the women attached to her; the danger of the action saved you all." As I crossed the Carrousel, I saw my house in flames; but as soon as the first moment of affright MARIE ANTOINETTE 353 was over, I thought no more of my personal mis- fortunes. My ideas turned solely upon the dreadful situation of the Queen. On reaching my sister's we found all our family in despair, believing they should never see us again. I could not remain in her house; some of the mob, col- lected round the door, exclaimed that Marie Antoi- nette's confidante was in the house, and that they must have her head. I disguised myself, and was concealed in the house of M. Morel, secretary for the lotteries. On the morrow I was inquired for there, in the name of the Queen. A deputy, whose sentiments were known to her, took upon himself to find me out. I borrowed clothes, and went with my sister to the Feuillans. We got there at the same time with M. Thierry de Ville-d'Avray, the King's first valet de chambre. We were taken into an office, where we wrote down our names and places of abode, and we received tickets for admission into the rooms belong- ing to Camus, the keeper of the Archives, where the King was with his family. As we entered the first room, a person who was there said to me, "Ah! you are a brave woman; but where is that Thierry, that man loaded with his master's bounties?" " He is here," said I; "he is following me. I perceive that even scenes of death do not banish jealousy from among you." Having belonged to the Court from my earliest youth, I was known to many persons whom I did not know. As I traversed a corridor above the cloisters which led to the cells inhabited by the unfortunate Louis XVI. and his family, several of the grenadiers called me by name. One of them said to me, " Well, the poor King is lost! The Comte d'Artois would have managed it better." " Not at all," said another. 354 THE MEMOIRS OF The royal family occupied a small suite of apart- ments consisting of four cells, formerly belonging to the ancient monastery of the Feuillans. In the first were the men who had accompanied the King: the Prince de Poix, the Baron d'Aubier, M. de Saint- Pardou, equerry to Madame Elisabeth, MM. de Goguelat, de Chamilly, and de Hue. In the second we found the King; he was having his hair dressed; he took two locks of it, and gave one to my sister and one to me. We offered to kiss his hand; he op- posed it, and embraced us without saying anything. In the third was the Queen, in bed, and in indescriba- ble affliction. We found her accompanied only by a stout woman, who appeared tolerably civil; she was the keeper of the apartments. She waited upon the Queen, who as yet had none of her own people about her. Her Majesty stretched out her arms to us, say- ing, " Come, unfortunate women; come, and see one still more unhappy than yourselves, since she has been the cause of all your misfortunes. We are ruined," continued she; "we have arrived at that point to which they have been leading us for three years, through all possible outrages; we shall fall in this dreadful revolution, and many others will perish after us. All have contributed to our downfall; the re- formers have urged it like mad people, and others through ambition, for the wildest Jacobin seeks wealth and office, and the mob is eager for plunder. There is not one real patriot among all this infamous horde. The emigrant party have their intrigues and schemes; foreigners seek to profit by the dissensions of France; every one has a share in our misfortunes." The Dauphin came in with Madame and the Mar- quise de Tourzel. On seeing them the Queen said to me, " Poor children ! how heartrending it is, instead of handing down to them so fine an inheritance, to MARIE ANTOINETTE 355 say it ends with us!" She afterwards conversed with me about the Tuileries and the persons who had fallen; she condescended also to mention the burning of my house. I looked upon that loss as a mischance which ought not to dwell upon her mind, and I told her so. She spoke of the Princesse de Tarente, whom she greatly loved and valued, of Madame de la Roche- Aymon and her daughter, of the other persons whom she had left at the palace, and of the Duchesse de Luynes, who was to have passed the night at the Tuileries. Respecting her she said, " Hers was one of the first heads turned by the rage for that mis- chievous philosophy; but her heart brought her back, and I again found a friend in her." I asked the Queen what the ambassadors from foreign powers had done under existing circumstances. She told me that they could do nothing; and that the wife of the Eng- lish ambassador had just given her a proof of the personal interest she took in her welfare by sending her linen for her son. I informed her that, in the pillaging of my house, all my accounts with her had been thrown into the Carrousel, and that every sheet of my month's expend- iture was signed by her, sometimes leaving four or five inches of blank paper above her signature, a circumstance which rendered me very uneasy, from an apprehension that an improper use might be made of those signatures. She desired me to demand ad- mission to the committee of general safety, and to make this declaration there. I repaired thither instantly and found a deputy, with whose name I have never become acquainted. After hearing me he said that he would not receive my deposition; that Marie Antoinette was now nothing more than any other Frenchwoman; and that if any of those detached papers bearing her signature should be mis- Vol. 3 Memoirs — 12 356 THE MEMOIRS OF applied, she would have, at a future period, a right to lodge a complaint, and to support her declaration by the facts which I had just related. The Queen then regretted having sent me, and feared that she had, by her very caution, pointed out a method of fabricating forgeries which might be dangerous to her; then again she exclaimed, " My apprehensions are as ab- surd as the step I made you take. They need nothing more for our ruin; all has been told." She gave us details of what had taken place subse- quently to the King's arrival at the Assembly. They are all well known, and I have no occasion to record them; I will merely mention that she told us, though with much delicacy, that she was not a little hurt at the King's conduct since he had quitted the Tuileries; that his habit of laying no restraint upon his great appetite had prompted him to eat as if he had been at his palace; that those who did not know him as she did, did not feel the piety and the magnanimity of his resignation, all which produced so bad an effect that deputies who were devoted to him had warned him of it; but no change could be effected. I still see in imagination, and shall always see, that narrow cell at the Feuillans, hung with green paper, that wretched couch whence the dethroned Queen stretched out her arms to us, saying that our misfor- tunes, of which she was the cause, increased her own. There, for the last time, I saw the tears, I heard the sobs of her whom high birth, natural endowments, and, above all, goodness of heart, had seemed to des- tine to adorn any throne, and be the happiness of any people! It is impossible for those who lived with Louis XVI. and Marie Antoinette not to be fully con- vinced, while doing full justice to the King's virtues, that if the Queen had been from the moment of her arrival in France the object of the care and affection MARIE ANTOINETTE 357 of a prince of decision and authority, she would have only added to the glory of his reign. What affecting things I have heard the Queen say in the affliction caused her by the belief of part of the Court and the whole of the people that she did not love France! How did that opinion shock those who knew her heart and her sentiments! Twice did I see her on the point of going from her apartments in the Tuileries into the gardens, to address the im- mense throng constantly assembled there to insult her. " Yes," exclaimed she, as she paced her chamber with hurried steps, " I will say to them : Frenchmen, they have had the cruelty to persuade you that I do not love France! — I! the mother of a Dauphin who will reign over this noble country ! — I ! whom Providence has seated upon the most powerful throne of Europe ! Of all the daughters of Maria Theresa am I not that one whom fortune has most highly favoured? And ought I not to feel all these advantages ? What should I find at Vienna? Nothing but sepulchres! What should I lose in France? Everything which can con- fer glory ! " I protest I only repeat her own words; the sound- ness of her judgment soon pointed out to her the dan- gers of such a proceeding. " I should descend from the throne," said she, " merely, perhaps, to excite a momentary sympathy, which the factious would soon render more injurious than beneficial to me." Yes, not only did Marie Antoinette love France, but few women took greater pride in the courage of Frenchmen. I could adduce a multitude of proofs of this; I will relate two traits which demonstrate the noblest enthusiasm : The Queen was telling me that, at the coronation of the Emperor Francis II., that Prince, bespeaking the admiration of a French gen- eral officer, who was then an emigrant, for the fine 358 MARIE ANTOINETTE appearance of his troops, said to him, " There are the men to beat your sans culottes! " " That remains to be seen, Sire," instantly replied the officer. The Queen added, " I don't know the name of that brave Frenchman, but I will learn it; the King ought to be in possession of it." As she was reading the public papers a few days before the ioth of August, she observed that mention was made of the courage of a young man who died in defending the flag he car- ried, and shouting, " Vive la Nation!" "Ah! the fine lad ! " said the Queen; " what a happiness it would have been for us if such men had never left off crying, ' Vive le Roi! ' " In all that I have hitherto said of this most unfor- tunate of women and of queens, those who did not live with her, those who knew her but partially, and especially the majority of foreigners, prejudiced by infamous libels, may imagine I have thought it my duty to sacrifice truth on the altar of gratitude. For- tunately I can invoke unexceptionable witnesses; they will declare whether what I assert that I have seen and heard appears to them either untrue or improbable. CHAPTER XXIII HE Queen having been robbed of her purse as she was passing from the Tuileries to the Feuillans, requested my sister to lend her twenty-five louis. I spent part of the day at the Feuillans, and her Majesty told me she would ask Petion to let me be with her in the place which -the Assembly should decree for her prison. I then returned home to pre- pare everything that might be necessary for me to accompany her. On the same day (nth August), at nine in the evening, I returned to the Feuillans. I found there were orders at all the gates forbidding my being ad- mitted. I claimed a right to enter by virtue of the first permission which had been given to me; I was again refused. I was told that the Queen had as many people as were requisite about her. My sister was with her, as well as one of my companions, who came out of the prisons of the Abbaye on the nth. I ( renewed my solicitations on the 12th; my tears and entreaties moved neither the keepers of the gates, nor even a deputy, to whom I addressed myself. I soon heard of the removal of Louis XVI. and his family to the Temple. I went to Petion accompanied by M. Valadon, for whom I had procured a place in the post-office, and who was devoted to me. He de- termined to go up to Petion alone; he told him that those who requested to be confined could not be sus- pected of evil designs, and that no political opinion could afford a ground of objection to these solicita- 359 360 THE MEMOIRS OF tions. Seeing that the well-meaning man did not suc- ceed, I thought to do more in person; but Petion persisted in his refusal, and threatened to send me to La Force. Thinking to give me a kind of consolation, he added I might be certain that all those who were then with Louis XVI. and his family would not stay with them long. And in fact, two or three days afterwards the Princesse de Lamballe, Madame de Tourzel, her daughter, the Queen's first woman, the first woman of the Dauphin and of Madame, M. de Chamilly, and M. de Hue were carried off during the night and transferred to La Force. After the de- parture of the King and Queen for the Temple, my sister was detained a prisoner in the apartments their Majesties had quitted for twenty- four hours. From this time I was reduced to the misery of having no further intelligence of my august and unfortunate mistress but through the medium of the newspapers or the National Guard, who did duty at the Temple. The King and Queen said nothing to me at the Feuillans about the portfolio which had been depos- ited with me; no doubt they expected to see me again. The minister Roland and the deputies com- posing the provisional government were very intent on a search for papers belonging to their Majesties. They had the whole of the Tuileries ransacked. The infamous Robespierre bethought himself of M. Campan, the Queen's private secretary, and said that his death was feigned; that he was living unknown in some obscure part of France, and was doubtless the depositary of all the important papers. In a great portfolio belonging to the King there had been found a solitary letter from the Comte d'Artois, which, by its date, and the subjects of which it treated, indicated the existence of a continued correspondence. (This MARIE ANTOINETTE 361 letter appeared among the documents used on the trial of Louis XVI.) A former preceptor of my son's had studied with Robespierre; the latter, meeting him in the street, and knowing the connection which had subsisted between him and the family of M. Campan, required him to say, upon his honour, whether he was certain of the death of the latter. The man replied that M. Campan had died at La Briche in 1791, and that he had seen him interred in the cemetery of Epinay. " Well, then," resumed Robespierre, " bring me the certificate of his burial at twelve to-morrow; it is a document for which I have pressing occasion." Upon hearing the deputy's demand I instantly sent for a certificate of M. Campan' s burial, and Robes- pierre received it at nine o'clock the next morning. But I considered that, in thinking of my father-in- law, they were coming very near me, the real deposi- tary of these important papers. I passed days and nights in considering what I could do for the best under such circumstances. I was thus situated when the order to inform against those who had been denounced as suspected on the 10th of August led to domiciliary visits. My servants were told that the people of the quarter in which I lived were talking much of the search that would be made in my house, and came to apprise me of it. I heard that fifty armed men would make themselves masters of M. Auguie's house, where I then was. I had just received this intelligence when M. Gougenot, the King's maitre d'hotel and receiver- general of the taxes, a man much attached to his sovereign, came into my room wrapped in a riding- cloak, under which, with great difficulty, he carried the King's portfolio, which I had entrusted to him. He threw it down at my feet, and said to me, " There is your deposit; I did not receive it from our unfor- 62 THE MEMOIRS OF tunate King's own hands; in delivering it to you I have executed my trust." After saying this he was about to withdraw. I stopped him, praying him to consult with me what I ought to do in such a trying emergency. He would not listen to my entreaties, or even hear me describe the course I intended to pursue. I told him my abode was about to be surrounded; I imparted to him what the Queen had said to me about the contents of the portfolio. To all this he answered, " There it is; decide for yourself; I will have no hand in it." Upon that I remained a few seconds thinking, and my conduct was founded upon the following rea- sons. I spoke aloud, although to myself; I walked about the room with agitated steps; M. Gougenot was thunderstruck. " Yes/' said I, " when we can no longer communicate with our King and receive his orders, however attached we may be to him, we can only serve him according to the best of our own judg- ment. The Queen said to me, ' This portfolio con- tains scarcely anything but documents of a most dangerous description in the event of a trial taking place, if it should fall into the hands of revolutionary persons.' She mentioned, too, a single document which would, under the same circumstances, be use- ful. It is my duty to interpret her words, and con- sider them as orders. She meant to say, ' You will save such a paper, you will destroy the rest if they are likely to be taken from you.' If it were not so, was there any occasion for her to enter into any de- tail as to what the portfolio contained? The order to keep it was sufficient. Probably it contains, more- over, the letters of that part of the family which has emigrated; there is nothing which may have been foreseen or decided upon that can be useful now; and there can be no political thread which has not been cut by the events of the ioth of August and the im- MARIE ANTOINETTE 363 prisonment of the King. My house is about to be surrounded; I cannot conceal anything of such bulk; I might, then, through want of foresight, give up that which would cause the condemnation of the King. Let us open the portfolio, save the document alluded to, and destroy the rest." I took a knife and cut open one side of the portfolio. I saw a great number of envelopes endorsed by the King's own hand. M. Gougenot found there the former seals of the King, such as they were before the Assembly had changed the inscription. At this moment we heard a great noise; he agreed to tie up the portfolio, take it again under his cloak, and go to a safe place to execute what I had taken upon me to determine. He made me swear, by all I held most sacred, that I would affirm, under every possible emergency, that the course I was pursuing had not been dictated to me by anybody; and that whatever might be the result, I would take all the credit or all the blame upon myself. I lifted up my hand and took the oath he required; he went out. Half an hour afterwards a great number of armed men came to my house; they placed sentinels at all the outlets; they broke open secretaires and closets of which they had not the keys; they searched the flower- pots and boxes; they examined the cellars; and the commandant repeatedly said, " Look particularly for papers." In the afternoon M. Gougenot returned. He had still the seals of France about him, and he brought me a statement of all that he had burnt. The portfolio contained twenty letters from Mon- sieur, eighteen or nineteen from the Comte d'Artois, seventeen from Madame Adelaide, eighteen from Madame Victoire, a great many letters from Comte Alexandre de Lameth, and many from M. de Male- sherbes, with documents annexed to them. There were also some from M. de Montmorin and other ex- 364 THE MEMOIRS OF ministers or ambassadors. Each correspondence had its title written in the King's own hand upon the blank paper which contained it. The most volumi- nous was that from Mirabeau. It was tied up with a scheme for an escape, which he thought necessary. M. Gougenot, who had skimmed over these letters with more attention than the rest, told me they were of so interesting a nature that the King had no doubt kept them as documents exceedingly valuable for a history of his reign, and that the correspondence with the Princes, which was entirely relative to what was going forward abroad, in concert with the King, would have been fatal to him if it had been seized. After he had finished he placed in my hands the proces-verbal, signed by all the ministers, to which the King attached so much importance, because he had given his opinion against the declaration of war; a copy of the letter written by the King to the Princes, his brothers, inviting them to return to France; an account of the diamonds which the Queen had sent to Brussels (these two documents were in my handwrit- ing) ; and a receipt for four hundred thousand francs, under the hand of a celebrated banker. This sum was part of the eight hundred thousand francs which the Queen had gradually saved during her reign, out of her pension of three hundred thousand francs per annum, and out of the one hundred thousand francs given by way of present on the birth of the Dauphin. This receipt, written on a very small piece of paper, was in the cover of an almanac. I agreed with M. Gougenot, who was obliged by his office to reside in Paris, that he should retain the proces-verbal of the Council and the receipt for the four hundred thousand francs, and that we should wait either for orders or for the means of transmitting these documents to the King or Queen; and I set out for Versailles. MARIE ANTOINETTE 365 The strictness of the precautions taken to guard the illustrious prisoners was daily increased. The idea that I could not inform the King of the course I had adopted of burning his papers, and the fear that I should not be able to transmit to him that which he had pointed out as necessary, tormented me to such a degree that it is wonderful my health endured the strain. The dreadful trial drew near. Official advocates were granted to the King; the heroic virtue of M. de Malesherbes induced him to brave the most imminent dangers, either to save his master or to perish with him. I hoped also to be able to find some means of informing his Majesty of what I had thought it right to do. I sent a man, on whom I could rely, to Paris, to request M. Gougenot to come to me at Versailles: he came immediately. We agreed that he should see M. de Malesherbes without availing himself of any intermediate person for that purpose. M. Gougenot awaited his return from the Temple at the door of his hotel, and made a sign that he wished to speak to him. A moment afterwards a serv- ant came to introduce him into the magistrates' room. He imparted to M. de Malesherbes what I had thought it right to do with respect to the King's papers, and placed in his hands the proces-verbal of the Council, which his Majesty had preserved in order to serve, if occasion required it, for a ground of his defence. However, that paper is not mentioned in either of the speeches of his advocates; probably it was determined not to make use of it. I stop at that terrible period which is marked by the assassination of a King whose virtues are well known; but I cannot refrain from relating what he deigned to say in my favour to M. de Malesherbes : " Let Madame Campan know that she did what I 366 THE MEMOIRS OF should myself have ordered her to do; I thank her for it ; she is one of those whom I regret I have it not in my power to recompense for their fidelity to my person, and for their good services." I did not hear of this until the morning after he had suffered, and I think I should have sunk under my despair if this honourable testimony had not given me some consolation. Supplement to Chapter XXIII Madame Campan's narrative breaking off abruptly at the time of the painful end met with by her sister, we have supplemented it by abridged accounts of the chief incidents in the tragedy which overwhelmed the royal house she so faithfully served, taken from contemporary records and the best historical authorities. The Royal Family in the Temple The Assembly having, at the instance of the Com- mune of Paris, decreed that the royal family should be immured in the Temple, they were removed thither from the Feuillans on the 13th of August, 1792, in the charge of Petion, Mayor of Paris, and Santerre, the commandant-general. Twelve Commissioners of the general council were to keep constant watch at the Temple, which had been fortified by earth-works and garrisoned by detachments of the National Guard, no person being allowed to enter without permission from the municipality. The Temple, formerly the headquarters of the Knights Templars in Paris, consisted of two build- jng S> — the Palace, facing the Rue de Temple, usually occupied by one of the Princes of the blood; and the MARIE ANTOINETTE 367 Tower, standing behind the Palace. The Tower was a square building, with a round tower at each corner and a small turret on one side, usually called the Tourelle. In the narrative of the Duchesse d'Angou- leme she says that the soldiers who escorted the royal prisoners wished to take the King alone to the Tower, and his family to the Palace of the Temple, but that on the way Manuel received an order to imprison them all in the Tower, where so little provision had been made for their reception that Madame Elisabeth slept in the kitchen. The royal family were accom- panied by the Princesse de Lamballe, Madame de Tourzel and her daughter Pauline, Mesdames de Navarre, de Saint-Brice, Thibaut, and Bazire, MM. de Hue and de Chamilly, and three men-servants. An order from the Commune 'soon removed these devoted attendants, and M. de Hue alone was permitted to return. " We all passed the day together," says Ma- dame Royale. " My father taught my brother geog- raphy; my mother history, and to learn verses by heart; and my aunt gave him lessons in arithmetic. My father fortunately found a library which amused him, and my mother worked tapestry. . . . We went every day to walk in the garden, for the sake of my brother's health, though the King was always insulted by the guard. On the Feast of Saint Louis ' Ca Ira ' was sung under the walls of the Temple. Manuel that evening brought my aunt a letter from her aunts at Rome. It was the last the family received from without. My father was no longer called King. He was treated with no kind of respect; the officers always sat in his presence and never took off their hats. They deprived him of his sword and searched his pockets. . . . Petion sent as gaoler the horrible man who had broken open my father's door on the 20th June, 1792, and who had been near assassinating 3 68 THE MEMOIRS OF him. This man never left the Tower, and was in- defatigable in endeavouring to torment him. One time he would sing the ' Carmagnole,' and a thousand other horrors, before us; again, knowing that my mother disliked the smoke of tobacco, he would puff it in her face, as well as in that of my father, as they happened to pass him. He took care always to be in bed before we went to supper, because he knew that we must pass through his room. My father suffered it all with gentleness, forgiving the man from the bottom of his heart. My mother bore it with a dig- nity that frequently repressed his insolence." The only occasion, Madame Royale adds, on which the Queen showed any impatience at the conduct of the officials, was when a municipal officer woke the Dau- phin suddenly in the night to make certain that he was safe, as though the sight of the peacefully sleep- ing child would not have been in itself the best assurance. Clery, the valet de chambre of the Dauphin, having with difficulty obtained permission to resume his duties, entered the Temple on the 24th August, and for eight days shared with M. de Hue the personal attendance; but on the 2d September De Hue was arrested, seals were placed on the little room he had occupied, and Clery passed the night in that of the King. On the following morning Manuel arrived, charged by the Commune to inform the King that De Hue would not be permitted to return, and to offer to send another person. " I thank you," answered the King. " I will manage with the valet de chambre of my son; and if the Council refuse I will serve my- self. I am determined to do it." On the 3d Sep- tember Manuel visited the Temple and assured the King that Madame de Lamballe and all the other prisoners who had been removed to La Force were MARIE ANTOINETTE .369 well, and safely guarded. " But at three o'clock," says Madame Royale, " just after dinner, and as the King was sitting down to tric-trac with my mother (which he played for the purpose of having an oppor- tunity of saying a few words to her unheard by the keepers), the most horrid shouts were heard. The officer who happened to be on guard in the room behaved well. He shut the door and the window, and even drew the curtains to prevent their seeing anything; but outside the workmen and the gaoler Rocher joined the assassins and increased the tumult. Several officers of the guard and the municipality now arrived, and on my father's asking what was the matter, a young officer replied, ' Well, since you will know, it is the head of Madame de Lamballe that they want to show you.' At these words my mother was overcome with horror; it was the only occasion on which her firmness abandoned her. The municipal officers were very angry with the young man; but the King, with his usual goodness, excused him, saying that it was his own fault, since he had questioned the officer. The noise lasted till five o'clock. We learned that the people had wished to force the door, and that the municipal officers had been enabled to prevent it only by putting a tricoloured scarf across it, and allowing six of the murderers to march round our prison with the head of the Princess, leaving at the door her body, which they would have dragged in also." Clery was not so fortunate as to escape the fright- ful spectacle. He had gone down to dine with Tison and his wife, employed as servants in the Temple, and says : " We were hardly seated when a head, on the end of a pike, was presented at the window. Tison's wife gave a great cry; the assassins fancied they recognised the Queen's voice, and responded by 37o THE MEMOIRS OF savage laughter. Under the idea that his Majesty was still at table, they placed their dreadful trophy where it must be seen. It was the head of the Prin- cesse de Lamballe; although bleeding, it was not disfigured, and her light hair, still in curls, hung about the pike." At length the immense mob that surrounded the Temple gradually withdrew, " to follow the head of the Princesse de Lamballe to the Palais Royal." Mean- while the royal family could scarcely believe that for the time their lives were saved. " My aunt and I heard the drums beating to arms all night," says Ma- dame Royale; "my unhappy mother did not even at- tempt to sleep. We heard her sobs." In the comparative tranquillity which followed the September massacres, the royal family resumed the regular habits they had adopted on entering the Tem- ple. " The King usually rose at six in the morning," says Clery. " He shaved himself, and I dressed his hair; he then went to his reading-room, which, being very small, the municipal officer on duty remained in the bedchamber with the door open, that he might always keep the King in sight. His Majesty continued praying on his knees for some time, and then read till nine. During that interval, after putting his cham- ber to rights and preparing the breakfast, I went down to the Queen, who never opened her door till I arrived, in order to prevent the municipal officer from going into her apartment. At nine o'clock the Queen, the children, and Madame Elisabeth went up to the King's chamber to breakfast. At ten the King and his family went down to the Queen's chamber, and there passed the day. He employed himself in educating his son, made him recite passages from Corneille and Racine, gave him lessons in geography, and exercised him in colouring the maps. The Queen, MARIE ANTOINETTE 371 on her part, was employed in the education of her daughter, and these different lessons lasted till eleven o'clock. The remaining time till noon was passed in needlework, knitting, or making tapestry. At one o'clock, when the weather was fine, the royal family were conducted to the garden by four munici- pal officers and the commander of a legion of the National Guard. • As there were a number of work- men in the Temple employed in pulling down houses and building new walls, they only allowed a part of the chestnut-tree walk for the promenade, in which I was allowed to share, and where I also played with the young Prince at ball, quoits, or races. At two we returned to the Tower, where I served the dinner, at which time Santerre regularly came to the Temple, attended by two aides-de-camp. The King sometimes spoke to him, — the Queen never. " After the meal the royal family came down into the Queen's room, and their Majesties generally played a game of piquet or tric-trac. At four o'clock the King took a little repose, the Princesses round him, each with a book. . . . When the King woke the conversation was resumed, and I gave writing lessons to his son, taking the copies, according to his instruc- tions, from the works of Montesquieu and other cele- brated authors. After the lesson I took the young Prince into Madame Elisabeth's room, where we played at ball, and battledore and shuttlecock. In the evening the family sat round a table, while the Queen read to them from books of history, or other works proper to instruct and amuse the children. Madame Elisabeth took the book in her turn, and in this manner they read till eight o'clock. After that I served the supper of the young Prince, in which the royal family shared, and the King amused the children with charades out of a collection of 372 THE MEMOIRS OF French papers which he found in the library. After the Dauphin had supped, I undressed him, and the Queen heard him say his prayers. At nine the King went to supper, and afterwards went for a moment to the Queen's chamber, shook hands with her and his sister for the night, kissed his children, and then re- tired to the turret-room, where he sat reading till mid- night. The Queen and the Princesses locked themselves in, and one of the municipal officers remained in the little room which parted their chamber, where he passed the night; the other followed his Majesty. In this manner was the time passed as long as the King remained in the small tower." But even these harmless pursuits were too often made the means of further insulting and thwarting the unfortunate family. Commissary Le Clerc inter- rupted the Prince's writing lessons, proposing to sub- stitute Republican works for those from which the King selected his copies. A smith, who was present when the Queen was reading the history of France to her children, denounced her to the Commune for choosing the period when the Connetable de Bour- bon took arms against France, and said she wished to inspire her son with unpatriotic feelings; a munici- pal officer asserted that the multiplication table the Prince was studying would afford a means of " speak- ing in cipher," so arithmetic had to be abandoned. Much the same occurred even with the needlework: the Queen and Princess finished some chairbacks, which they wished to send to the Duchesse de Tarente; but the officials considered that the patterns were hieroglyphics, intended for carrying on a cor- respondence, and ordered that none of the Princesses' work should leave the Temple. The short daily walk in the garden was also embittered by the rude be- haviour of the military and municipal gaolers; some- MARIE ANTOINETTE 373 times, however, it afforded an opportunity for marks of sympathy to be shown. People would station themselves at the windows of houses overlooking the Temple gardens, and evince by gestures their loyal affection, and some of the sentinels showed, even by tears, that their duty was painful to them. On the 2 1 st September the National Convention was constituted, Petion being made president and Collot d'Herbois moving the " abolition of royalty " amidst transports of applause. That afternoon a municipal officer attended by gendarmes a cheval, and followed by a crowd of people, arrived at the Temple, and, after a flourish of trumpets, proclaimed the establishment of the French Republic. The man, says Clery, " had the voice of a Stentor." The royal family could distinctly hear the announcement of the King's deposition. " Hebert, so well known under the title of Pere Duchesne, and Destournelles were on guard. They were sitting near the door, and turned to the King with meaning smiles. He had a book in his hand, and went on reading without changing countenance. The Queen showed the same firmness. The proclamation finished, the trumpets sounded afresh. I went to the window; the people took me for Louis XVI., and I was overwhelmed with insults." After the new decree the prisoners were treated with increased harshness. Pens, paper, ink, and pen- cils were taken from them. The King and Madame Elisabeth gave up all, but the Queen and her daugh- ter each concealed a pencil. " In the beginning of October," says Madame Royale, " after my father had supped, he was told to stop, that he was not to re- turn to his former apartments, and that he was to be separated from his family. At this dreadful sen- tence the Queen lost her usual courage. We parted 374 THE MEMOIRS OF from him with abundance of tears, though we ex- pected to see him again in the morning. They brought in our breakfast separately from his, however. My mother would take nothing. The officers, alarmed at her silent and concentrated sorrow, allowed us to see the King, but at meal-times only, and on condi- tion that we should not speak low, nor in any foreign language, but loud and in ' good French.' We went down, therefore, with the greatest joy to dine with my father. In the evening, when my brother was in bed, my mother and my aunt alternately sat with him or went with me to sup with my father. In the morning, after breakfast, we remained in the King's apartments while Clery dressed our hair, as he was no longer allowed to come to my mother's room, and this arrangement gave us the pleasure of spending a few moments more with my father." The royal prisoners had no comfort except their affection for each other. At that time even common necessaries were denied them. Their small stock of linen had been lent them by persons of the Court during the time they spent at the Feuillans. The Princesses mended their clothes every day, and after the King had gone to bed Madame Elisabeth mended his. " With much trouble," says Clery, " I procured some fresh linen for them. But the workwomen hav- ing marked it with crowned letters, the Princesses were ordered to pick them out." The room in the great tower to which the King had been removed con- tained only one bed, and no other article of furniture. A chair was brought on which Clery spent the first night; painters were still at work on the room, and the smell of the paint, he says, was almost unbearable. This room was afterwards furnished by collecting from various parts of the Temple a chest of drawers, a small bureau, a few odd chairs, a chimney-glass, and MARIE ANTOINETTE 375 a bed hung with green damask, which had been used by the captain of the guard to the Comte d'Artois. A room for the Queen was being prepared over that of the King, and she implored the workmen to finish it quickly, but it was not ready for her occupation for some time, and when she was allowed to remove to it the Dauphin was taken from her and placed with his father. When their Majesties met again in the great Tower, says Clery, there was little change in the hours fixed for meals, reading, walking, and the education of their children. They were not allowed to have mass said in the Temple, and therefore com- missioned Clery to get them the breviary in use in the diocese of Paris. Among the books read by the King while in the Tower were Hume's " History of England" (in the original), Tasso, and the " De Imitatione Christi." The jealous suspicions of the municipal officers led to the most absurd investiga- tions; a draught-board was taken to pieces lest the squares should hide treasonable papers; macaroons were broken in half to see that they did not contain letters; peaches were cut open and the stones cracked; and Clery was compelled to drink the essence of soap prepared for shaving the King, under the pretence that it might contain poison. In November the King and all the family had fe- verish colds, and Clery had an attack of rheumatic fever. On the first day of his illness he got up and tried to dress his master, but the King, seeing how ill he was, ordered him to lie down, and himself dressed the Dauphin. The little Prince waited on Clery all day, and in the evening the King contrived to ap- proach his bed, and said, in a low voice, " I should like to take care of you myself, but you know how we are watched. Take courage; to-morrow you shall see my doctor." Madame Elisabeth brought the valet 376 THE MEMOIRS OF cooling draughts, of which she deprived herself; and after Clery was able to get up, the young Prince one night with great difficulty kept awake till eleven o'clock in order to give him a box of lozenges when he went to make the King's bed. On 7th December a deputation from the Commune brought an order that the royal family should be de- prived of " knives, razors, scissors, penknives, and all other cutting instruments." The King gave up a knife, and took from a morocco case a pair of scis- sors and a penknife; and the officials then searched the room, taking away the little toilet implements of gold and silver, and afterwards removing the Prin- cesses' working materials. Returning to the King's room, they insisted upon seeing what remained in his pocket-case. " Are these toys which I have in my hand also cutting instruments ? " asked the King, showing them a cork-screw, a turn-screw, and a steel for lighting. These also were taken from him. Shortly afterwards Madame Elisabeth was mending the King's coat, and, having no scissors, was compelled to break the thread with her teeth. " What a contrast ! " he exclaimed, looking at her tenderly. ' You wanted nothing in your pretty house at Montreuil." " Ah, brother," she answered, " how can I have any regret when I partake your misfortunes?" The Queen had frequently to take on herself some of the humble duties of a servant. This was especially painful to Louis XVI. when the anniver- sary of some State festival brought the contrast be- tween past and present with unusual keenness be- fore him. " Ah, Madame," he once exclaimed, " what an em- ployment for a Queen of France ! Could they see that at Vienna! Who would have foreseen that, in MARIE ANTOINETTE 377 uniting your lot to mine, you would have descended so low? " " And do you esteem as nothing," she replied, " the glory of being the wife of one of the best and most persecuted of men? Are not such misfortunes the noblest honours? " Meanwhile the Assembly had decided that the King should be brought to trial. Nearly all parties, except the Girondists, no matter how bitterly opposed to each other, could agree in making him the scape- goat; and the first rumour of the approaching ordeal was conveyed to the Temple by Clery's wife, who, with a friend, had permission occasionally to visit him. " I did not know how to announce this terrible news to the King," he says; "but time was pressing, and he had forbidden my concealing anything from him. In the evening, while undressing him, I gave him an account of all I had learnt, and added that there were only four days to concert some plan of corresponding with the Queen. The arrival of the municipal officer would not allow me to say more. Next morning, when the King rose, I could not get a moment for speaking with him. He went up with his son to breakfast with the Princesses, and I followed. After breakfast he talked long with the Queen, who, by a look full of trouble, made me understand that they were discussing what I had told the King. During the day I found an opportunity of describing to Madame Elisabeth how much it had cost me to augment the King's dis- tresses by informing him of his approaching trial. She reassured me, saying that the King felt this as a mark of attachment on my part, and added, ' That which most troubles him is the fear of being separated from us.' In the evening the King told me how satisfied he was at having had warning that he was to appear before the Convention. ' Continue,' he said, ' to en- tf8 THE MEMOIRS OF deavour to find out something as to what they want to do with me. Never fear distressing me. I have agreed with my family not to seem pre-informed, in order not to compromise you.' " On the nth December, at five o'clock in the morning, the prisoners heard the generate beaten throughout Paris, and cavalry and cannon entered the Temple gardens. At nine the King and the Dauphin went as usual to breakfast with the Queen. They were allowed to remain together for an hour, but con- stantly under the eyes of their republican guardians. At last they were obliged to part, doubtful whether they would ever see each other again. The little Prince, who remained with his father, and was igno- rant of the new cause for anxiety, begged hard that the King would play at ninepins with him as usual. Twice the Dauphin could not get beyond a certain number. " Each time that I get up to sixteen," he said, with some vexation, " I lose the game." The King did not reply, but Clery fancied the words made a painful impression on him. ' At eleven, while the King was giving the Dauphin a reading lesson, two municipal officers entered and said they had come " to take young Louis to his mother." The King inquired why, but was only told that such were the orders of the Council. At one o'clock the Mayor of Paris, Chambon, accompanied by Chaumette, Procureur de la Commune, Santerre, commandant of the National Guard, and others, ar- rived at the Temple and read a decree to the King, which ordered that " Louis Capet " should be brought before the Convention. " Capet is not my name," he replied, " but that of one of my ancestors. I could have wished," he added, " that you had left my son with me during the last two hours. But this treat- ment is consistent with all I have experienced here. MARIE ANTOINETTE 379 I follow you, not because I recognise the authority of the Convention, but because I can be compelled to obey it." He then followed the Mayor to a carriage which waited, with a numerous escort, at the gate of the Temple. The family left behind were over- whelmed with grief and apprehension. "It is im- possible to describe the anxiety we suffered," says Ma- dame Royale. " My mother used every endeavour with the officer who guarded her to discover what was passing; it was the first time she had condescended to question any of these men. He would tell her nothing." Trial of the King. — Parting of the Royal Family. — Execution The crowd was immense as, on the morning of the nth December, 1792, Louis XVI. was driven slowly from the Temple to the Convention, escorted by cavalry, infantry, and artillery. Paris looked like an armed camp; all the posts were doubled; the muster-roll of the National Guard was called over every hour; a picket of two hundred men watched in the court of each of the right sections; a reserve with cannon was stationed at the Tuileries, and strong de- tachments patrolled the streets and cleared the road of all loiterers. The trees that lined the boulevards, the doors and windows of the houses, were alive with gazers, and all eyes were fixed on the King. He was much changed since his people last beheld him. The beard he had been compelled to grow after his razors were taken from him covered cheeks, lips, and chin with light-coloured hair, which concealed the melan- choly expression of his mouth; he had become thin, and his garments hung loosely on him; but his man- ner was perfectly collected and calm, and he recog- 380 THE MEMOIRS OF nised and named to the Mayor the various quarters through which he passed. On arriving at the Feuil- lans he was taken to a room to await the orders of the Assembly. It was about half-past two when the King appeared at the bar. The Mayor and Generaux Santerre and Wittengoff were at his side. Profound silence per- vaded the Assembly. All were touched by the King's dignity and the composure of his looks under so great a reverse of fortune. By nature he had been formed rather to endure calamity with patience than to con- tend against it with energy. The approach of death could not disturb his serenity. " Louis, you may be seated," said Barere. " An- swer the questions that shall be put to you." The King seated himself and listened to the reading of the acte enonciatif, article by article. All the faults of the Court were then enumerated and imputed to Louis XVI. personally. He was charged with the interruption of the sittings of the 20th of June, 1789, with the Bed of Justice held on the 23d of the same month, the aristocratic conspiracy thwarted by the insurrection of the 14th of July, the entertainment of the Life Guards, the insults offered to the national cockade, the refusal to sanction the Declaration of Rights, as well as several constitutional articles; lastly, all the facts which indicated a new con- spiracy in October, and which were followed by the scenes of the 5th and 6th; the speeches of reconciliation which had succeeded all these scenes, and which promised a change that was not sincere; the false oath taken at the Federation of the 14th of July ; the secret practices of Talon and Mirabeau to effect a counter-revolution; the money spent in brib- ing a great number of deputies; the assemblage of the " knights of the dagger " on the 28th of Febru- MARIE ANTOINETTE 381 ary, 1791; the flight to Varennes; the fusilade of the Champ de Mars; the silence observed respecting the Treaty of Pilnitz; the delay in the promulgation of the decree which incorporated Avignon with France; the commotions at Nimes, Montauban, Mende, and Jales; the continuance of their pay to the emi- grant Life Guards and to the disbanded Consti- tutional Guard; the insufficiency of the armies assembled on the frontiers; the refusal to sanction the decree for the camp of twenty thousand men; the disarming of the fortresses; the organisation of secret societies in the interior of Paris; the review of the Swiss and the garrison of the palace on the 10th August; the summoning the Mayor to the Tuileries; and lastly, the effusion of blood which had resulted from these military dispositions. After each article the President paused, and said, " What have you to answer?" The King, in a firm voice, denied some of the facts, imputed others to his ministers, and always appealed to the constitution, from which he declared he had never deviated. His answers were very temperate, but on the charge, " You spilt the blood of the people on the 10th of August," he ex- claimed with emphasis, "No, monsieur, no; it was not I." All the papers on which the act of accusation was founded were then shown to the King, and he disa- vowed some of them and disputed the existence of the iron chest; this produced a bad impression, and was worse than useless, as the fact had been proved. Throughout the examination the King showed great presence of mind. He was careful in his answers never to implicate any members of the constituent and legislative Assemblies; many who then sat as his judges trembled lest he should betray them. The Jacobins beheld with dismay the profound impression 382 THE MEMOIRS OF made on the Convention by the firm but mild de- meanour of the sovereign. The most violent of the party proposed that he should be hanged that very night; a laugh as of demons followed the proposal from the benches of the Mountain, but the majority, composed of the Girondists and the neutrals, decided that he should be formally tried. After the examination Santerre took the King by the arm and led him back to the waiting-room of the Convention, accompanied by Chambon and Chaumette. Mental agitation and the length of the proceedings had exhausted him, and he staggered from weakness. Chaumette inquired if he wished for refreshment, but the King refused it. A moment after, seeing a gren- adier of the escort offer the Procureur de la Commune half a small loaf, Louis XVI. approached and asked him, in a whisper, for a piece. " Ask aloud for what you want," said Chaumette, retreating as though he feared being suspected of pity. " I asked for a piece of your bread," replied the King. " Divide it with me," said Chaumette. " It is a Spartan breakfast. If I had a root I would give you half." Soon after six in the evening the King returned to the Temple. " He seemed tired," says Clery, simply, " and his first wish was to be led to his family. The officers refused, on the plea that they had no orders. He insisted that at least they should be informed of his return, and this was promised him. The King ordered me to ask for his supper at half -past eight The intervening hours he employed in his usual read- ing, surrounded by four municipals. When I an- nounced that supper was served, the King asked the commissaries if his family could not come down. MARIE ANTOINETTE 383 They made no reply. ' But at least,' the King said, ' my son will pass the night in my room, his bed being here ? ' The same silence. After supper the King again urged his wish to see his family. They an- swered that they must await the decision of the Con- vention. While I was undressing him the King said, ' I was far from expecting all the questions they put to me.' He lay down with perfect calmness. The order for my removal during the night was not exe- cuted." On the King's return to the Temple being known, " my mother asked to see him instantly," writes Madame Royale. " She made the same request even to Chambon, but received no answer. My brother passed the night with her; and as he had no bed, she gave him hers, and sat up all the night in such deep affliction that we were afraid to leave her; but she compelled my aunt and me to go to bed. Next day she again asked to see my father, and to read the newspapers, that she might learn the course of the trial. She entreated that if she was to be de- nied this indulgence, his children, at least, might see him. Her requests were referred to the Commune. The newspapers were refused; but my brother and I were to be allowed to see my father on condition of being entirely separated from my mother. My father replied that, great as his happiness was in seeing his children, the important business which then occupied him would not allow of his attending altogether to his son, and that his daughter could not- leave her mother." The Assembly having, after a violent debate, re- solved that Louis XVI. should have the aid of counsel, a deputation was sent to the Temple to ask whom he would choose. The King named Messieurs Target and Tronchet. The former refused his services on the ground that he had discontinued practice since 1785; 384 THE MEMOIRS OF the latter complied at once with the King's request; and while the Assembly was considering whom to nominate in Target's place, the President received a letter from the venerable Malesherbes, then seventy years old, and " the most respected magistrate in France," in the course of which he said: "I have been twice called to be counsel for him who was my master, in times when that duty was coveted by every one. I owe him the same service now that it is a duty which many people deem dangerous. If I knew any possible means of acquainting him with my de- sires, I should not take the liberty of addressing myself to you." Other citizens made similar pro- posals, but the King, being made acquainted with them by a deputation from the Commune, while ex- pressing his gratitude for all the offers, accepted only that of Malesherbes. On 14th December M. Tronchet was allowed to confer with the King, and later in the same day M. de Malesherbes was admitted to the Tower. " The King ran up to this worthy old man, whom he clasped in his arms," said Clery, " and the former minister melted into tears at the sight of his master." An- other deputation brought the King the Act of Accusa- tion and the documents relating to it, numbering more than a hundred, and taking from four o'clock till mid- night to read. During this long process the King had refreshments served to the deputies, taking nothing himself till they had left, but considerately reproving Clery for not having supped. From the 14th to the 26th December the King saw his counsel and their colleague M. de Seze every day. At this time a means of communication between the royal family and the King was devised: a man named Turgi, who had been in the royal kitchen, and who contrived to obtain employment in the Temple, when conveying MARIE ANTOINETTE 385 the meals of the royal family to their apartments, or articles he had purchased for them, managed to give Madame Elisabeth news of the King. Next day, the Princess, when Turgi was removing the dinner, slipped into his hand a bit of paper on which she had pricked with a pin a request for a word from her brother's own hand. Turgi gave this paper to Clery, who conveyed it to the King the same evening; and he, being allowed writing materials while preparing his defence, wrote Madame Elisabeth a short note. An answer was conveyed in a ball of cotton, which Turgi threw under Clery's bed while passing the door of his room. Letters were also passed between the Princess's room and that of Clery, who lodged be- neath her, by means of a string let down and drawn up at night. This communication with his family was a great comfort to the King, who, nevertheless, constantly cautioned his faithful servant. " Take care," he would say kindly, " you expose yourself too much." During his separation from his family the King refused to go into the garden. When it was pro- posed to him he said, " I cannot make up my mind to go out alone; the walk was agreeable to me only when I shared it with my family." But he did not allow himself to dwell on painful reflections. He talked freely to the municipals on guard, and sur- prised them by his varied and practical knowledge of their trades, and his interest in their domestic affairs. On the 19th December the King's breakfast was served as usual; but, being a fast-day, he refused to take anything. At dinner-time the King said to Clery, '■ Fourteen years ago you were up earlier than you were to-day; it is the day my daughter was born — to-day, her birthday," he repeated, with tears, " and to be prevented from seeing her ! " Madame Royale 386 THE MEMOIRS OF had wished for a calendar; the King ordered Clery to buy her the " Almanac of the Republic," which had replaced the " Court Almanac," and ran through it, marking with a pencil many names. " On Christmas Day," says Clery, " the King wrote his will." On the 26th December, 1792, the King appeared a second time before the Convention. M. de Seze, labouring night and day, had completed his defence. The King insisted on excluding from it all that was too rhetorical, and confining it to the mere discussion of essential points. At half-past nine in the morn- ing the whole armed force was in motion to conduct him from the Temple to the Feuillans, with the same precautions and in the same order as had been ob- served on the former occasion. Riding in the car- riage of the Mayor, he conversed, on the way, with the same composure as usual, and talked of Seneca, of Livy, of the hospitals. Arrived at the Feuillans, he showed great anxiety for his defenders; he seated himself beside them in the Assembly, surveyed with great composure the benches where his accusers and his judges sat, seemed to examine their faces with the view of discovering the impression produced by the pleading of M. de Seze, and more than once conversed smilingly with Tronchet and Male- sherbes. The Assembly received his defence in sullen silence, but without any tokens of disappro- bation. Being afterwards conducted to an adjoining room with his counsel, the King showed great anxiety about M. de Seze, who seemed fatigued by the long defence. While riding back to the Temple he con- versed with his companions with the same serenity as he had shown on leaving it. No sooner had the King left the hall of the Con- MARIE ANTOINETTE 3^7 vention than a violent tumult arose there. Some were for opening the discussion. Others, complaining of the delays which postponed the decision of this process, demanded the vote immediately, remarking that in every court, after the accused had been heard, the judges proceed to give their opinion. Lanjuinais had from the commencement of the proceedings felt an indignation which his impetuous disposition no longer suffered him to repress. He darted to the tribune, and, amidst the cries excited by his presence, demanded the annulling of the proceedings altogether. He exclaimed that the days of ferocious men were gone by, that the Assembly ought not to be so dis- honoured as to be made to sit in judgment on Louis XVI., that no authority in France had that right, and the Assembly in particular had no claim to it; that if it resolved to act as a political body, it could do no more than take measures of safety against the ci- devant King; but that if it was acting as a court of justice it was overstepping all principles, for it was subjecting the vanquished to be tried by the conquer- ors, since most of the present members had declared themselves the conspirators of the ioth of August. At the word " conspirators " a tremendous uproar arose on all sides. Cries of "Order!" "To the Abbaye ! " " Down with the Tribune ! " were heard. Lanjuinais strove in vain to justify the word " con- spirators," saying that he meant it to be taken in a favourable sense, and that the ioth of August was a glorious conspiracy. He concluded by declaring that he would rather die a thousand deaths than condemn, contrary to all laws, even the most execrable of tyrants. A great number of speakers followed, and the con- fusion continually increased. The members, deter- mined not to hear any more, mingled together, formed Vol. 3 Memoirs — 13 388 THE MEMOIRS OF groups, abused, and threatened one another. After a tempest of an hour's duration, tranquillity was at last restored; and the Assembly, adopting the opinion of those who demanded the discussion on the trial of Louis XVI., declared that it was opened, and that it should be continued, to the exclusion of all other business, till sentence should be passed. The discussion was accordingly resumed on the 27th, and there was a constant succession of speakers from the 28th to the 31st. Vergniaud at length ascended the tribune for the first time, and an ex- traordinary eagerness was manifested to hear the Girondists express their sentiments by the lips of their greatest orator. The speech of Vergniaud produced a deep im- pression on all his hearers. Robespierre was thunder- struck by his earnest and persuasive eloquence. Ver- gniaud, however, had but shaken, not convinced, the Assembly, which wavered between the two parties. Several members were successively heard, for and against the appeal to the people. Brissot, Gensonne, Petion, supported it in their turn. One speaker at length had a decisive influence on the question. Barere, by his suppleness, and his cold and evasive eloquence, was the model and oracle of the centre. He spoke at great length on the trial, reviewed it in all its bearings — of facts, of laws, and of policy — and furnished all those weak minds, who only wanted specious reasons for yielding, with motives for the condemnation of the King. From that moment the unfortunate King was condemned. The discussion lasted till the 7th, and nobody would listen any longer to the continual repetition of the same facts and argu- ments. It was therefore declared to be closed without opposition, but the proposal of a fresh adjournment excited a commotion among the most violent, and MARIE ANTOINETTE '389 ended in a decree which fixed the 14th of January for putting the questions to the vote. Meantime the King did not allow the torturing sus- pense to disturb his outward composure, or lessen his kindness to those around him. On the morning after his second appearance at the bar of the Convention, the commissary Vincent, who had undertaken secretly to convey to the Queen a copy of the King's printed defence, asked for something which had belonged to him, to treasure as a relic; the King took off his neck-handkerchief and gave it to him; his gloves he bestowed on another municipal, who had made the same request. " On January 1st," says Clery, " I approached the King's bed and asked permission to offer him my warmest prayers for the end of his mis- fortunes. ' I accept your good wishes with affection,' he replied, extending his hand to me. As soon as he had risen, he requested a municipal to go and inquire for his family, and present them his good wishes for the new year. The officers were moved by the tone in which these words, so heartrending considering the position of the King, were pronounced. . . . The correspondence between their Majesties went on constantly. The King being informed that Madame Royale was ill, was very uneasy for some days. The Queen, after begging earnestly, obtained permission for M. Brunnier, the medical attendant of the royal children, to come to the Temple. This seemed to quiet him." The nearer the moment which was to decide the King's fate approached, the greater became the agi- tation in Paris. " A report was circulated that the atrocities of September were to be repeated there, and the prisoners and their relatives beset the depu- ties with supplications that they would snatch them from destruction. The Jacobins, on their part, al- 390 THE MEMOIRS OF leged that conspiracies were hatching in all quarters to save Louis XVI. from punishment, and to restore royalty. Their anger, excited by delays and obstacles, assumed a more threatening aspect ; and the two par- ties thus alarmed one another by supposing that each harboured sinister designs." On the 14th of January the Convention called for the order of the day, being the final judgment of Louis XVI. " The sitting of the Convention which concluded the trial," says Hazlitt, " lasted seventy-two hours. It might naturally be supposed that silence, restraint, a sort of religious awe, would have pervaded the scene. On the contrary, everything bore the marks of gaiety, dissipation, and the most grotesque con- fusion. The farther end of the hall was converted into boxes, where ladies, in a studied deshabille, swallowed ices, oranges, liqueurs, and received the salutations of the members who went and came, as on ordinary occasions. Here the doorkeepers on the Mountain side opened and shut the boxes reserved for the mistresses of the Due d'Orleans; and there, though every sound of approbation or disapprobation was strictly forbidden, you heard the long and indig- nant ' Ha, ha's ! ' of the mother-duchess, the patroness of the bands of female Jacobins, whenever her ears were not loudly greeted with the welcome sounds of death. The upper gallery, reserved for the people, was during the whole trial constantly full of strangers of every description, drinking wine as in a tavern. Bets were made as to the issue of the trial in all the neighbouring coffee-houses. Ennui, impatience, disgust sat on almost every countenance. The fig- ures passing and repassing, rendered more ghastly by the pallid lights, and who in a slow, sepulchral voice pronounced only the word — Death; others calculat- MARIE ANTOINETTE 391 ing if they should have time to go to dinner before they gave their verdict; women pricking cards with pins in order to count the votes; some of the depu- ties fallen asleep, and only waking up to give their sentence, — all this had the appearance rather of a hideous dream than of a reality." The Due d'Orleans, when called on to give his vote for the death of his King and relation, walked with a faltering step, and a face paler than death itself, to the appointed place, and there read these words : " Exclusively governed by my duty, and convinced that all those who have resisted the sovereignty of the people deserve death, my vote is for death!" Important as the accession of the first Prince of the blood was to the Terrorist faction, his conduct in this instance was too obviously selfish and atrocious not to excite a general feeling of indignation; the agitation of the Assembly became extreme; it seemed as if by this single vote the fate of the monarch was irrevo- cably sealed. The President having examined the register, the result of the scrutiny was proclaimed as follows: Against an appeal to the people . . . 480 For an appeal to the people .... 283 Majority for final judgment . . . 197 The President having announced that he was about to declare the result of the scrutiny, a profound si- lence ensued, and he then gave in the following declaration: that, out of 719 votes, 366 were for Death, 319 were for imprisonment during the war, two for perpetual imprisonment, eight for a suspen- sion of the execution of the sentence of death until after the expulsion of the family of the Bourbons, twenty-three were for not putting him to death until the French territory was invaded by any foreign 392 THE MEMOIRS OF power, and one was for a sentence of death, but with power of commutation of the punishment. After this enumeration the President took off hi c hat, and, lowering his voice, said : " In consequence oi this expression of opinion I declare that the punish- ment pronounced by the National Convention against Louis Capet is Death ! " Previous to the passing of the sentence the Presi- dent announced on the part of the Foreign Minister the receipt of a letter from the Spanish Minister rel- ative to that sentence. The Convention, however, re- fused to hear it. [It will be remembered that a similar remonstrance was forwarded by the English Govern- ment.] M. de Malesherbes, according to his promise to the King, went to the Temple at nine o'clock on the morning of the 17th. " All is lost," he said to Clery. " The King is condemned." The King, who saw him arrive, rose to receive him. M. de Malesherbes, choked by sobs, threw himself at his feet. The King raised him up and affectionately embraced him. When he could control his voice, De Malesherbes informed the King of the decree sentencing him to death; he made no movement of surprise or emotion, but seemed only affected by the distress of his advocate, whom he tried to comfort. On the 20th of January, at two in the afternoon, Louis XVI. was awaiting his advocates, when he heard the approach of a numerous party. He stopped with dignity at the door of his apartment, apparently unmoved. Garat then told him sorrowfully that he was commissioned to communicate to him the decrees of the Convention. Grouvelle, secretary of the Execu- tive Council, read them to him. The first declared Louis XVI. guilty of treason against the general safety of the State; the second condemned him to MARIE ANTOINETTE 393 death; the third rejected any appeal to the people; and the fourth and last ordered his execution in twenty- four hours. Louis, looking calmly round, took the paper from Grouvelle, and read Garat a letter, in which he demanded from the Convention three days to prepare for death, a confessor to assist him in his last moments, liberty to see his family, and permission for them to leave France. Garat took the letter, promising to submit it immediately to the Convention. Louis XVI. then went back into his room with great composure, ordered his dinner, and ate as usual. There were no knives on the table, and his attendants refused to let him have any. " Do they think me so cowardly," he exclaimed, " as to lay violent hands on myself? I am innocent, and I am not afraid to die." The Convention refused the delay, but granted some other demands which he had made. Garat sent for Edgeworth de Firmont, the ecclesiastic whom Louis XVI. had chosen, and took him in his own carriage to the Temple. M. Edgeworth, on being ushered into the presence of the King, would have thrown himself at his feet, but Louis instantly raised him, and both shed tears of emotion. He then, with eager curiosity, asked various questions concerning the clergy of France, several bishops, and particularly the Archbishop of Paris, requesting him to assure the latter that he died faithfully attached to his com- munion. The clock having struck eight, he rose, begged M. Edgeworth to wait, and retired with emo- tion, saying that he was going to see his family. The municipal officers, unwilling to lose sight of the King, even while with his family, had decided that he should see them in the dining-room, which had a glass door, through which they could watch all his motions with- 394 THE MEMOIRS OF out hearing what he said. At half-past eight the door opened. The Queen, holding the Dauphin by the hand, Madame Elisabeth, and Madame Royale rushed sobbing into the arms of Louis XVI. The door was closed, and the municipal officers, Clery, and M. Edgeworth placed themselves behind it. Dur- ing the first moments it was but a scene of confusion and despair. Cries and lamentations prevented those who were on the watch from distinguishing anything. At length the conversation became more calm, and the Princesses, still holding the King clasped in their arms, spoke with him in a low tone. " He related his trial to my mother," says Madame Royale, " apol- ogising for the wretches who had condemned him. He told her that he would not consent to any attempt to save him, which might excite disturbance in the country. He then gave my brother some religious advice, and desired him, above all, to forgive those who caused his death; and he gave us his blessing. My mother was very desirous that the whole family should pass the night with my father, but he opposed this, observing to her that he much needed some hours of repose and quiet." After a long conversa- tion, interrupted by silence and grief, the King put an end to the painful meeting, agreeing to see his family again at eight the next morning. " Do you promise that you will?" earnestly inquired the Prin- cesses. " Yes, yes," sorrowfully replied the King. At this moment the Queen held him by one arm, Madame Elisabeth by the other, while Madame Royale clasped him round the waist, and the Dauphin stood before him, with one hand in that of his mother. At the moment of retiring Madame Royale fainted; she was carried away, and the King returned to M. Edgeworth deeply depressed by this painful interview. The King retired to rest about midnight; M. Edge- MARIE ANTOINETTE 395 worth threw himself upon a bed, and Clery took his place near the pillow of his master. Next morning, the 21st of January, at five, the King awoke, called Clery, and dressed with great calmness. He congratulated himself on having re- covered his strength by sleep. Clery kindled a fire, and moved a chest of drawers, out of which he formed an altar. M. Edgeworth put on his pontifical robes, and began to celebrate mass. Clery waited on him, and the King listened, kneeling with the greatest devotion. He then received the communion from the hands of M. Edgeworth, and after mass rose with new vigour, and awaited with composure the moment for going to the scaffold. He asked for scissors that Clery might cut his hair; but the Commune refused to trust him with a pair. At this moment the drums were beating in the capital. All who belonged to the armed sections repaired to their company with complete submission. It was reported that four or five hundred devoted men were to make a dash upon the carriage, and rescue the King. The Convention, the Commune, the Execu- tive Council, and the Jacobins were sitting. At eight in the morning, Santerre, with a deputation from the Commune, the department, and the criminal tribunal, repaired to the Temple. Louis XVI., on hearing them arrive, rose and prepared to depart. He desired Clery to transmit his last farewell to his wife, his sister, and his children; he gave him a sealed packet, hair, and various trinkets, with directions to deliver these arti- cles to them. He then clasped his hand and thanked him for his services. After this he addressed himself to one of the municipal officers, requesting him to transmit his last will to the Commune. This officer, who had formerly been a priest, and was named Jacques Roux, brutally replied that his business was 396 THE MEMOIRS OF to conduct him to execution, and not to perform his commissions. Another person took charge of it, and Louis, turning towards the party, gave with firmness the signal for starting. Officers of gendarmerie were placed on the front seat of the carriage. The King and M. Edgeworth occupied the back. During the ride, which was rather long, the King read in M. Edgeworth's breviary the prayers for persons at the point of death; the two gendarmes were astonished at his piety and tranquil resignation. The vehicle advanced slowly, and amidst universal silence. At the Place de la Revolution an extensive space had been left vacant about the scaffold. Around this space were planted cannon; the most violent of the Federalists were stationed about the scaffold; and the vile rabble, always ready to insult genius, virtue, and misfortune, when a signal is given it to do so, crowded behind the ranks of the Federal- ists, and alone manifested some outward tokens of satisfaction. At ten minutes past ten the carriage stopped. Louis XVI., rising briskly, stepped out into the Place. Three executioners came up; he refused their assistance, and took off his clothes himself. But, perceiving that they were going to bind his hands, he made a movement of indignation, ^ and seemed ready to resist. M. Edgeworth gave him a last look, and said, " Suffer this outrage, as a last resemblance to that God who is about to be your reward." At these words the King suffered himself to be bound and conducted to the scaffold. All at once Louis hurriedly advanced to address the people. " Frenchmen," said he, in a firm voice, " I die inno- cent of the crimes which are imputed to me; I for- give the authors of my death, and I pray that my blood may not fall upon France." He would have MARIE ANTOINETTE 397 continued, but the drums were instantly ordered to beat: their rolling drowned his voice; the execu- tioners laid hold of him, and M. Edge worth took his leave in these memorable words : " Son of Saint Louis, ascend to heaven!" As soon as the blood flowed, furious wretches dipped their pikes and handkerchiefs in it, then dispersed throughout Paris, shouting " Vive la Republique! Vive la Nation! " and even went to the gates of the Temple to display brutal and factious joy. The Royal Prisoners. — Separation of the Dauphin from His Family. — Removal of the Queen On the morning of the King's execution, according to the narrative of Madame Royale, his family rose at six: "The night before, my mother had scarcely strength enough to put my brother to bed. She threw herself, dressed as she was, on her own bed, where we heard her shivering with cold and grief all night long. At a quarter-past six the door opened; we believed that we were sent for to the King, but it was only the officers looking for a prayer-book for him. We did not, however, abandon the hope of seeing him, till shouts of joy from the infuriated populace told us that all was over. In the afternoon my mother asked to see Clery, who probably had some message for her; we hoped that seeing him would occasion a burst of grief which might relieve the state of silent and chok- ing agony in which we saw her." The request was refused, and the officers who brought the refusal said Clery was in " a frightful state of despair " at not being allowed to see the royal family; shortly after- wards he was dismissed from the Temple. " We had now a little more freedom," continues the Princess; '" our guards even believed that we 398 THE MEMOIRS OF were about to be sent out of France ; but nothing could calm my mother's agony; no hope could touch her heart, and life or death became indifferent to her. Fortunately my own affliction increased my illness so seriously that it distracted her thoughts. . . . My mother would go no more to the garden, because she must have passed the door of what had been my father's room, and that she could not bear. But fearing lest want of air should prove injurious to my brother and me, about the end of February she asked permission to walk on the leads of the Tower, and it was granted." The Council of the Commune, becoming aware of the interest which these sad promenades excited, and the sympathy with which they were observed from the neighbouring houses, ordered that the spaces between the battlements should be filled up with shutters, which intercepted the view. But while the rules for the Queen's captivity were again made more strict, some of the municipal commissioners tried slightly to alleviate it, and by means of M. de Hue, who was at liberty in Paris, and the faithful Turgi, who remained in the Tower, some communications passed between the royal family and their friends. The wife of Tison, who waited on the Queen, sus- pected and finally denounced these more lenient guard- ians, who were executed, the royal prisoners being subjected to a close examination. " On the 20th of April," says Madame Royale, " my mother and I had just gone to bed when Hebert arrived with several municipals. We got up hastily, and these men read us a decree of the Commune directing that we should be searched. My poor brother was asleep; they tore him from his bed under the pretext of examining it. My mother took him up, shivering with cold. All they took was a shop- MARIE ANTOINETTE 399 keeper's card which my mother had happened to keep, a stick of sealing-wax from my aunt, and from me une sacre emir de Jesus and a prayer for the welfare of France. The search lasted from half-past ten at night till four o'clock in the morning." The next visit of the officials was to Madame Elisa- beth alone; they found in her room a hat which the King had worn during his imprisonment, and which she had begged him to give her as a souvenir. They took it from her in spite of her entreaties. " It was suspicious," said the cruel and contemptible tyrants. The Dauphin became ill with fever, and it was long before his mother, who watched by him night and day, could obtain medicine or advice for him. When Thierry was at last allowed to see him his treatment relieved the most violent symptoms, but, says Madame Royale, " his health was never reestablished. Want of air and exercise did him great mischief, as well as the kind of life this poor child led, who at eight years of age passed his days amidst the tears of his friends, and in constant anxiety and agony." While the Dauphin's health was causing his family such alarm, they were deprived of the services of Tison's wife, who became ill, and finally insane, and was removed to the Hotel Dieu, where her ravings were reported to the Assembly and made the ground of accusations against the royal prisoners. No woman took her place, and the Princesses themselves made their beds, swept their rooms, and waited upon the Queen. Far worse punishments than menial work were prepared for them. On 3d July a decree of the Convention ordered that the Dauphin should be separated from his family and " placed in the most secure apartment of the Tower." As soon as he heard this decree pronounced, says his sister, " he 4 oo THE MEMOIRS OF threw himself into my mother's arms, and with vio- lent cries entreated not to be parted from her. My mother would not let her son go, and she actually defended against the efforts of the officers the bed in which she had placed him. The men threatened to call up the guard and use violence. My mother exclaimed that they had better kill her than tear her child from her. At last they threatened our lives, and my mother's maternal tenderness forced her to the sacrifice. My aunt and I dressed the child, for my poor mother had no longer strength for anything. Nevertheless, when he was dressed, she took him up in her arms and delivered him her- self to the officers, bathing him with her tears, fore- seeing that she was never to behold him again. The poor little fellow embraced us all tenderly, and was carried away in a flood of tears. My mother's horror was extreme when she heard that Simon, a shoemaker by trade, whom she had seen as a municipal officer in the Temple, was the person to whom her child was confided. . . . The officers now no longer remained in my mother's apartment; they only came three times a day to bring our meals and examine the bolts and bars of our windows; we were locked up together night and day. We often went up to the Tower, because my brother went, too, from the other side. The only pleasure my mother enjoyed was seeing him through a crevice as he passed at a distance. She would watch for hours together to see him as he passed. It was her only hope, her only thought." The Queen was soon deprived even of this melan- choly consolation. On ist August, 1793, it was re- solved that she should be tried. Robespierre opposed the measure, but Barere roused into action that deep- rooted hatred of the Queen which not even the sacri- fice of her life availed to eradicate. " Why do the MARIE ANTOINETTE 401 enemies of the Republic still hope for success ? " he asked. " Is it because we have too long forgotten the crimes of the Austrian? The children of Louis the Conspirator are hostages for the Republic . . . but behind them lurks a woman who has been the cause of all the disasters of France." At two o'clock on the morning of the following day, the municipal officers " awoke us," says Madame Royale, " to read to my mother the decree of the Convention, which ordered her removal to the Con- ciergerie, preparatory to her trial. She heard it without visible emotion, and without speaking a single word. My aunt and I immediately asked to be allowed to accompany my mother, but this favour was refused us. All the time my mother was making up a bundle of clothes to take with her, these officers never left her. She was even obliged to dress herself before them, and they asked for her pockets, taking away the trifles they contained. She embraced me, charging me to keep up my spirits and my courage, to take tender care of my aunt, and obey her as a second mother. She then threw herself into my aunt's arms, and recommended her children to her care; my aunt replied to her in a whisper, and she was then hurried away. In leaving the Temple she struck her head against the wicket, not having stooped low enough. The officers asked whether she had hurt herself. ' No,' she replied, ' nothing can hurt The Last Moments of Marie Antoinette We have already seen what changes had been made in the Temple. Marie Antoinette had been separated from her sister, her daughter, and her son, by virtue of a decree which ordered the trial and exile of the 4 02 THE MEMOIRS OF last members of the family of the Bourbons. She had been removed to the Conciergerie, and there, alone in a narrow prison, she was reduced to what was strictly necessary, like the other prisoners. The imprudence of a devoted friend had rendered her situ- ation still more irksome. Michonnis, a member of the municipality, in whom she had excited a warm interest, was desirous of introducing to her a person who, he said, wished to see her out of curiosity. This man, a courageous emigrant, threw to her a car- nation, in which was enclosed a slip of very fine paper with these words : " Your friends are ready'' — false hope, and equally dangerous for her who received it, and for him who gave it ! Michonnis and the emigrant were detected and forthwith appre- hended; and the vigilance exercised in regard to the unfortunate prisoner became from that day more rigorous than ever. Gendarmes were to mount guard incessantly at the door of her prison, and they were expressly forbidden to answer anything that she might say to them. That wretch Hebert, the deputy of Chaumette, and editor of the disgusting paper Pere Duchesne, a writer of the party of which Vincent, Ronsin, Varlet, and Leclerc were the leaders, — Hebert had made it his particular business to torment the unfortunate remnant of the dethroned family. He asserted that the family of the tyrant ought not to be better treated than any sans-cnlotte family; and he had caused a resolution to be passed by which the sort of luxury in which the prisoners in the Temple were maintained was to be suppressed. They were no longer to be allowed either poultry or pastry; they were reduced to one sort of aliment for breakfast, and to soup or broth and a single dish for dinner, to two dishes for supper, and half a bottle of wine apiece. Tallow candles were MARIE ANTOINETTE 403 to be furnished instead of wax, pewter instead of sil- ver plate, and delft ware instead of porcelain. The wood and water carriers alone were permitted to enter their room, and that only accompanied by two com- missioners. Their food was to be introduced to them by means of a turning box. The numerous establish- ment was reduced to a cook and an assistant, two men-servants, and a woman-servant to attend to the linen. As soon as this resolution was passed, Hebert had repaired to the Temple and inhumanly taken away from the unfortunate prisoners even the most trifling articles to which they attached a high value. Eighty louis which Madame Elisabeth had in reserve, and which she had received from Madame de Lamballe, were also taken away. No one is more dangerous, more cruel, than the man without acquirements, with- out education, clothed with a recent authority. If, above all, he possess a base nature, if, like Hebert, who was check-taker at the door of a theatre, and embezzled money out of the receipts, he be destitute of natural morality, and if he leap all at once from the mud of his condition into power, he is as mean as he is atrocious. Such was Hebert in his conduct at the Temple. He did not confine himself to the annoyances which we have mentioned. He and some others conceived the idea of separating the young Prince from his aunt and sister. A shoemaker named Simon and his wife were the instructors to whom it was deemed right to consign him for the purpose of giving him a sans-culotte education. Simon and his wife were shut up in the Temple, and, becoming prisoners with the unfortunate child, were directed to bring him up in their own way. Their food was better than that of the Princesses, and they shared the table of the municipal commissioners who 404 THE MEMOIRS OF were on duty. Simon was permitted to go down, accompanied by two commissioners, to the court of the Temple, for the purpose of giving the Dauphin a little exercise. Hebert conceived the infamous idea of wringing from this boy revelations to criminate his unhappy mother. Whether this wretch imputed to the child false revelations, or abused his tender age and his condition to extort from him what admissions soever he pleased, he obtained a revolting deposition; and as the youth of the Prince did not admit of his being brought before the tribunal, Hebert appeared and de- tailed the infamous particulars which he had himself either dictated or invented. It was on the 14th of October that Marie Antoi- nette appeared before her judges. Dragged before the sanguinary tribunal by inexorable revolutionary vengeance, she appeared there without any chance of acquittal, for it was not to obtain her acquittal that the Jacobins had brought her before it. It was necessary, however, to make some charges. Fouquier therefore collected the rumours current among the populace ever since the arrival of the Princess in France, and, in the act of accusation, he charged her with having plundered the exchequer, first for her pleasures, and afterwards in order to transmit money to her brother, the Emperor. He insisted on the scenes of the 5th and 6th of October, and on the dinners of the Life Guards, alleging that she had at that period framed a plot, which obliged the people to go to Versailles to frustrate it. He after- wards accused her of having governed her husband, interfered in the choice of ministers, conducted the intrigues with the deputies gained by the Court, pre- pared the journey to Varennes, provoked the war, and transmitted to the enemy's generals all our plans MARIE ANTOINETTE 405 of campaign. He further accused her of having pre- pared a new conspiracy on the 10th of August, of having on that day caused the people to be fired upon, having induced her husband to defend himself by taxing him with cowardice; lastly, of having never ceased to plot and correspond with foreigners since her captivity in the Temple, and of having there treated her young son as King. We here observe how, on the terrible day of long-deferred vengeance, when subjects at length break forth and strike such of their princes as have not deserved the blow, everything is distorted and converted into crime. We see how the profusion and fondness for pleasure, so natural to a young princess, how her attachment to her native country, her influence over her husband, her regrets, always more indiscreet in a woman than a man, nay, even her bolder courage, appeared to their inflamed or malignant imaginations. It was necessary to produce witnesses. Lecointre, deputy of Versailles, who had seen what had passed on the 5th and 6th of October, Hebert, who had frequently visited the Temple, various clerks in the ministerial offices, and several domestic servants of the old Court were summoned. Admiral d'Estaing, formerly commandant of the guard of Versailles; Manuel, the ex-procureur of the Commune; Latour- du-Pin, minister of war in 1789; the venerable Bailly, who, it was said, had been, with La Fayette, an accomplice in the journey to Varennes; lastly, Valaze, one of the Girondists destined to the scaffold, were taken from their prisons and compelled to give evidence. No precise fact was elicited. Some had seen the Queen in high spirits when the Life Guards testified their attachment; others had seen her vexed and dejected while being conducted to Paris, or brought 406 THE MEMOIRS OF back from Varennes; these had been present at splendid festivities which must have cost enormous sums ; those had heard it said in the ministerial offices that the Queen was adverse to the sanction of the decrees. An ancient waiting-woman of the Queen had heard the Due de Coigny say, in 1788, that the Emperor had already received two hundred millions from France to make war upon the Turks. The cynical Hebert, being brought before the unfortunate Queen, dared at length to prefer the charges wrung from the young Prince. He said that Charles Capet had given Simon an account of the journey to Varennes, and mentioned La Fayette and Bailly as having cooperated in it. He then added that this boy was addicted to odious and very premature vices for his age; that he had been sur- prised by Simon, who, on questioning him, learned that he derived from his mother the vices in which he indulged. Hebert said that it was no doubt the intention of Marie Antoinette, by weakening thus early the physical constitution of her son, to secure to herself the means of ruling him in case he should ever ascend the throne. The rumours which had been whispered for twenty years by a malicious Court had given the people a most unfavourable opinion of the morals of the Queen. That audience, however, though wholly Jacobin, was disgusted at the accusations of Hebert. He nevertheless persisted in supporting them. The unhappy mother made no reply. Urged anew to explain herself, she said, with extraordinary emotion, " I thought that human na- ture would excuse me from answering such an impu- tation, but I appeal from it to the heart of every mother here present." This noble and simple reply affected all who heard it. In the depositions of the witnesses, however, all MARIE ANTOINETTE 407 was not so bitter for Marie Antoinette. The brave D'Estaing, whose enemy she had been, would not say anything to inculpate her, and spoke only of the courage which she had shown on the 5th and 6th of October, and of the noble resolution which she had expressed, to die beside her husband rather than fly. Manuel, in spite of his enmity to the Court during the time of the Legislative Assembly, declared that he could not say anything against the accused. When the venerable Bailly was brought forward, who formerly so often predicted to the Court the calamities which its imprudence must produce, he appeared pain- fully affected; and when he was asked if he knew the wife of Capet, " Yes," said he, bowing respectfully, " I have known Madame." He declared that he knew nothing, and maintained that the declarations extorted from the young Prince relative to the jour- ney to Varennes were false. In recompense for his deposition he was assailed with outrageous reproaches, from which he might judge what fate would soon be awarded to himself. In all the evidence there appeared but two serious facts, attested by Latour-du-Pin and Valaze, who de- posed to them because they could not help it. Latour- du-Pin declared that Marie Antoinette had applied to him for an accurate statement of the armies while he was minister of war. Valaze, always cold, but re- spectful towards misfortune, would not say anything to criminate the accused; yet he could not help de- claring that, as a member of the commission of twenty-four, being charged with his colleagues to examine the papers found at the house of Septeuil, treasurer of the civil list, he had seen bonds for various sums signed Antoinette, which was very na- tural; but he added that he had also seen a letter in which the minister requested the King to transmit to 4o8 THE MEMOIRS OF the Queen the copy of the plan of campaign which he had in his hands. The most unfavourable construc- tion was immediately put upon these two facts, the ap- plication for a statement of the armies, and the com- munication of the plan of campaign; and it was con- cluded that they could not be wanted for any other purpose than to be sent to the enemy, for it was not supposed that a young princess should turn her atten- tion, merely for her own satisfaction, to matters of administration and military plans. After these depositions, several others were received respecting the expenses of the Court, the influence of the Queen in public affairs, the scene of the ioth of August, and what had passed in the Temple; and the most vague rumours and most trivial circumstances were eagerly caught at as proofs. Marie Antoinette frequently repeated, with presence of mind and firmness, that there was no precise fact against her; that, besides, though the wife of Louis XVI., she was not answerable for any of the acts of his reign. Fouquier nevertheless declared her to be sufficiently convicted; Chaveau-Lagarde made un- availing efforts to defend her; and the unfortunate Queen was condemned to suffer the same fate as her husband. Conveyed back to the Conciergerie, she there passed in tolerable composure the night preceding her execu- tion, and on the morning of the following day, the 16th of October, she was conducted, amidst a great concourse of the populace, to the fatal spot where, ten months before, Louis XVI. had perished. She listened with calmness to the exhortations of the ecclesiastic who accompanied her, and cast an indifferent look at the people who had so often applauded her beauty and her grace, and who now as warmly applauded her exe- cution. On reaching the foot of the scaffold she per- MARIE ANTOINETTE 409 ceived the Tuileries, and appeared to be moved; but she hastened to ascend the fatal ladder, and gave her- self up with courage to the executioner. The infa- mous wretch exhibited her head to the people, as he was accustomed to do when he had sacrificed an illus- trious victim. The Last Separation. — Execution of Madame Elisa- beth. — Death of the Dauphin The two Princesses left in the Temple were now almost inconsolable; they spent days and nights in tears, whose only alleviation was that they were shed together. '' The company of my aunt, whom I loved so tenderly," said Madame Royale, " was a great com- fort to me. But alas ! all that I loved was perishing around me, and I was soon to lose her also. ... In the beginning of September I had an illness caused solely by my anxiety about my mother; I never heard a drum beat that I did not expect another 3d of September." In the course of the month the rigour of their cap- tivity was much increased. The Commune ordered that they should only have one room; that Tison (who had done the heaviest of the household work for them, and since the kindness they showed to his insane wife had occasionally given them tidings of the Dauphin) should be imprisoned in the turret; that they should be supplied with only the barest necessa- ries; and that no one should enter their room save to carry water and firewood. Their quantity of firing was reduced, and they were not allowed candles. They were also forbidden to go on the leads, and their large sheets were taken away, " lest " — notwith- standing the gratings !• — " they should escape from the windows." 410 THE MEMOIRS OF On 8th October, 1793, Madame Royale was ordered to go down-stairs, that she might be interrogated by some municipal officers. " My aunt, who was greatly affected, would have followed, but they stopped her. She asked whether I should be permitted to come up again; Chaumette assured her that I should. 'You may trust/ said he, ' the word of an honest repub- lican. She shall return.' I soon found myself in my brother's room, whom I embraced tenderly; but we were torn asunder, and I was obliged to go into another room. . . . Chaumette then questioned me about a thousand shocking things of which they ac- cused my mother and aunt; I was so indignant at hearing such horrors that, terrified as I was, I could not help exclaiming that they were infamous false- hoods. But in spite of my tears they still pressed their questions. There were some things which I did not comprehend, but of which I understood enough to make me weep with indignation and horror. . . . They then asked me about Varennes, and other things. I answered as well as I could without implicating any- body. I had always heard my parents say that it were better to die than to implicate anybody." When the examination was over the Princess begged to be allowed to join her mother, but Chaumette said he could not obtain permission for her to do so. She was then cautioned to say nothing about her exam- ination to her aunt, who was next to appear before them. Madame Elisabeth, her niece declares, " re- plied with still more contempt to their shocking ques- tions." The only intimation of the Queen's fate which her daughter and her sister-in-law were allowed to receive was through hearing her sentence cried by the news- man. But " we could not persuade ourselves that she was dead," writes Madame Royale. " A hope, so MARIE ANTOINETTE 411 natural to the unfortunate, persuaded us that she must have been saved. For eighteen months I re- mained in this cruel suspense. We learnt also by the cries of the newsman the death of the Due d' Orleans. It was the only piece of news that reached us during the whole winter." The severity with which the prisoners were treated was carried into every detail of their life. The officers who guarded them took away their chessmen and cards because some of them were named kings and queens, and all the books with coats of arms on them; they refused to get ointment for a gathering on Madame Elisabeth's arm; they would not allow her to make an herb-tea which she thought would strengthen her niece; they declined to supply fish or eggs on fast-days or during Lent, bringing only coarse fat meat, and brutally replying to all remonstrances, " None but fools believe in that stuff nowadays." Madame Elisabeth never made the officials another request, but reserved some of the bread and cafe- au-lait from her breakfast for her second meal. The time during which she could be thus tormented was growing short. On 9th May, 1794, as the Princesses were going to bed, the outside bolts of the door were unfastened and a loud knocking was heard. " When my aunt was dressed," says Madame Royale, " she opened the door, and they said to her, ' Citoyenne, come down.' ' And my niece?' 'We shall take care of her afterwards/ She embraced me, and to calm my agitation promised to return. ' No, citoyenne,' said the men, ' bring your bonnet; you shall not return.' They overwhelmed her with abuse, but she bore it patiently, embracing me, and exhorting me to trust in Heaven, and never to forget the last commands of my father and mother." Madame Elisabeth was then taken to the Concierge- 412 THE MEMOIRS OF rie, where she was interrogated by the vice-president at midnight, and then allowed to take some hours' rest on the bed on which Marie Antoinette had slept for the last time. In the morning she was brought before the tribunal, with twenty-four other prisoners, of varying ages and both sexes, some of whom had once been frequently seen at Court. "Of what has Elisabeth to complain?" Fouquier- Tinville satirically asked. " At the foot of the guillo- tine, surrounded by faithful nobility, she may imagine herself again at Versailles." " You call my brother a tyrant," the Princess re- plied to her accuser; " if he had been what you say, you would not be where you are, nor I before you ! " She was sentenced to death, and showed neither surprise nor grief. " I am ready to die," she said, " happy in the prospect of rejoining in a better world those whom I loved on earth." On being taken to the room where those condemned to suffer at the same time as herself were assembled she spoke to them with so much piety and resignation that they were encouraged by her example to show calmness and courage like her own. The women, on leaving the cart, begged to embrace her, and she said some words of comfort to each in turn as they mounted the scaffold, which she was not allowed to ascend till all her companions had been executed be- fore her eyes. " It is impossible to imagine my distress at finding myself separated from my aunt," said Madame Royale. " Since I had been able to appreciate her merits, I saw in her nothing but religion, gentleness, meekness, modesty, and a devoted attachment to her family! she sacrificed her life for them, since nothing could persuade her to leave the King and Queen. I never can be sufficiently grateful to her for her good- MARIE ANTOINETTE 413 ness to me, which ended only with her life. She looked on me as her child, and I honoured and loved her as a second mother. I was thought to be very- like her in countenance, and I feel conscious that I have something of her character. Would to God I might imitate her virtues, and hope that I may here- after deserve to meet her, as well as my dear parents, in the bosom of our Creator, where I cannot doubt that they enjoy the reward of their virtuous lives and meritorious deaths." Madame Royale vainly begged to be allowed to rejoin her mother or her aunt, or at least to know their fate. The municipal officers would tell her nothing, and rudely refused her request to have a woman placed with her. " I asked nothing but what seemed indispensable, though it was often harshly refused," she says. " But I at least could keep my- self clean. I had soap and water, and carefully swept out my room every day. I had no light, but in the long days I did not feel this privation much. ... I had some religious works and travels, which I had read over and over. I had also some knitting, qui m'ennuyait beauconp." Once, she believes, Robes- pierre visited her prison. " The officers showed him great respect; the people in the Tower did not know him, or at least would not tell me who he was. He stared insolently at me, glanced at my books, and, after joining the municipal officers in a search, re- tired." When Laurent was appointed by the Convention to the charge of the young prisoners, Madame Royale was treated with more consideration. " He was always courteous," she says; he restored her tinder- box, gave her fresh books, and allowed her candles and as much firewood as she wanted, " which pleased me greatly." This simple expression of relief gives 4 i4 THE MEMOIRS OF a clearer idea of what the delicate girl must have suffered than a volume of complaints. But however hard Madame Royale's lot might be, that of the Dauphin was infinitely harder. Though only eight years old when he entered the Temple, he was by nature and education extremely precocious; " his memory retained everything, and his sensitive- ness comprehended everything." His features " re- called the somewhat effeminate look of Louis XV., and the Austrian hauteur of Maria Theresa; his blue eyes, aquiline nose, elevated nostrils, well-defined mouth, pouting lips, chestnut hair parted in the mid- dle and falling in thick curls on his shoulders, re- sembled his mother before her years of tears and tor- ture. All the beauty of his race, by both descents, seemed to reappear in him." For some time the care of his parents preserved his health and cheerful- ness even in the Temple; but his constitution was weakened by the fever recorded by his sister, and his gaolers were determined that he should never regain strength. " What does the Convention intend to do with him?" asked Simon, when the innocent victim was placed in his clutches. "Transport him?" " No." "Kill him?" " No." " Poison him ? " " No." "What then?" " Why, get rid of him." For such a purpose they could not have chosen their instruments better. " Simon and his wife cut off all those fair locks that had been his youthful glory and his mother's pride. This worthy pair stripped him of the mourning he wore for his father; MARIE ANTOINETTE 415 and as they did so, they called it ' playing at the game of the spoiled king.' They alternately induced him to commit excesses, and then half starved him. They beat him mercilessly; nor was the treatment by night less brutal than that by day. As soon as the weary boy had sunk into his first profound sleep, they would loudly call him by name, ' Capet ! Capet ! ' Startled, nervous, bathed in perspiration, or sometimes trem- bling with cold, he would spring up, rush through the dark, and present himself at Simon's bedside, mur- muring, tremblingly, ' I am here, citizen.' ' Come nearer; let me feel you.' He would approach the bed as he was ordered, although he knew the treat- ment that awaited him. Simon would buffet him on the head, or kick him away, adding the remark, ' Get to bed again, wolf's cub; I only wanted to know that you were safe.' On one of these occasions, when the child had fallen half stunned upon his own miserable couch, and lay there groaning and faint with pain, Simon roared out with a laugh, ' Suppose you were king, Capet, what would you do to me ? ' The child thought of his father's dying words, and said, ' I would forgive you.' " The change in the young Prince's mode of life, and the cruelties and caprices to which he was subjected, soon made him fall ill, says his sister. " Simon forced him to eat to excess, and to drink large quantities of wine, which he detested. . . . He grew extremely fat without increasing in height or strength." His aunt and sister, deprived of the pleasure of tending him, had the pain of hearing his childish voice raised in the abominable songs his gaolers taught him. The brutality of Simon " depraved at once the body and soul of his pupil. He called him the young wolf of the Temple. He treated him as the young of wild animals are treated when taken from the mother and 416 THE MEMOIRS OF reduced to captivity, — at once intimidated by blows and enervated by taming. He punished for sensi- bility; he rewarded meanness; he encouraged vice; he made the child wait on him at table, sometimes striking him on the face with a knotted towel, some- times raising the poker and threatening to strike him with it." Yet when . Simon was removed the poor young Prince's condition became even worse. His horrible loneliness induced an apathetic stupor to which any suffering would have been preferable. " He passed his days without any kind of occupation; they did not allow him light in the evening. His keepers never approached him but to give him food;" and on the rare occasions when they took him to the platform of the Tower, he was unable or unwilling to move about. When, in November, 1794, a commis- sary named Gomin arrived at the Temple, disposed to treat the little prisoner with kindness, it was too late. " He took extreme care of my brother," says Madame Royale. " For a long time the unhappy child had been shut up in darkness, and he was dying of fright. He was very grateful for the attentions of Gomin, and became much attached to him." But his phys- ical condition was alarming, and, owing to Gomin's representations, a commission was instituted to exam- ine him. " The commissioners appointed were Har- mond, Mathieu, and Reverchon, who visited ' Louis Charles,' as he was now called, in the month of Feb- ruary, 1795. They found the young Prince seated at a square deal table, at which he was playing with some dirty cards, making card houses and the like, — the materials having been furnished him, probably, that they might figure in the report as evidences of indul- gence. He did not look up from the table as the com- missioners entered. He was in a slate-coloured dress. MARIE ANTOINETTE 417 bare-headed; the room was reported as clean, the bed in good condition, the linen fresh; his clothes were also reported as new; but, in spite of all these asser- tions, it is well known that his bed had not been made for months, that he had not left his room, nor was permitted to leave it, for any purpose whatever, that it was consequently uninhabitable, and that he was covered with vermin and with sores. The swell- ings at his knees alone were sufficient to disable him from walking. One of the commissioners approached the young Prince respectfully. The latter did not raise his head. Harmond in a kind voice begged him to speak to them. The eyes of the boy remained fixed on the table before him. They told him of the kindly intentions of the Government, of their hopes that he would yet be happy, and their desire that he would speak unreservedly to the medical man that was to visit him. He seemed to listen with profound atten- tion, but not a single word passed his lips. It was an heroic principle that impelled that poor young heart to maintain the silence of a mute in presence of these men. He remembered too well the days when three other commissaries waited on him, regaled him with pastry and wine, and obtained from him that hellish accusation against the mother that he loved. He had learnt by some means the import of the act, so far as it was an injury to his mother. He now dreaded seeing again three commissaries, hearing again kind words, and being treated again with fine promises. Dumb as death itself he sat before them, and remained motionless as stone, and as mute. His disease now made rapid progress, and Gomin and Lasne, superintendents of the Temple, thinking it necessary to inform the Government of the melan- choly condition of their prisoner, wrote on the regis- ter: "Little Capet is unwell." No notice was taken 418 THE MEMOIRS OF of this account, which was renewed next day in more urgent terms : " Little Capet is dangerously ill." Still there was no word from beyond the walls. " We must knock harder," said the keepers to each other, and they added, "It is feared he will not live," to the words " dangerously ill." At length, on Wednesday, 6th May, 1795, three days after the first report, the authorities appointed M. Desault to give the invalid the assistance of his art. After having written down his name on the register he was ad- mitted to see the Prince. He made a long and very attentive examination of the unfortunate child, asked him many questions without being able to obtain an answer, and contented himself with prescribing a de- coction of hops, to be taken by spoonfuls every half- hour, from six o'clock in the morning till eight in the evening. On the first day the Prince steadily refused to take it. In vain Gomin several times drank off a glass of the potion in his presence; his example proved as ineffectual as his words. Next day Lasne renewed his solicitations. " Monsieur knows very well that I desire nothing but the good of his health, and he distresses me deeply by thus refusing to take what might contribute to it. I entreat him as a fa- vour not to give me this cause of grief." And as Lasne, while speaking, began to taste the potion in a glass, the child took what he offered him out of his hands. " You have, then, taken an oath that I should drink it," said he, firmly; "well, give it me, I will drink it." From that moment he conformed with docility to whatever was required of him, but the policy of the Commune had attained its object; help had been withheld till it was almost a mockery to supply it. The Prince's weakness was excessive; his keepers could scarcely drag him to the top of the Tower; Marie Antoinette listening to the act of accusation. —p. 408 From the painting by E. M. Ward, B.A. MARIE ANTOINETTE 3:19 walking- hurt his tender feet, and at every step he stopped to press the arm of Lasne with both hands upon his breast. At last he suffered so much that it was no longer possible for him to walk, and his keeper carried him about, sometimes on the platform, and sometimes in the little tower, where the royal family had lived at first. But the slight improve- ment to his health occasioned by the change of air scarcely compensated for the pain which his fatigue gave him. On the battlement of the platform nearest the left turret, the rain had, by perseverance through ages, hollowed out a kind of basin. The water that fell remained there for several days; and as, during the spring of 1795, storms were of frequent occur- rence, this little sheet of water was kept constantly supplied. Whenever the child was brought out upon the platform, he saw a little troop of sparrows, which used to come to drink and bathe in this reservoir. At first they flew away at his approach, but from being accustomed to see him walking quietly there every day, they at last grew more familiar, and did not spread their wings for flight till he came up close to them. They were always the same, he knew them by sight, and perhaps like himself they were inhabi- tants of that ancient pile. He called them his birds; and his first action, when the door into the terrace was opened, was to look towards that side, — and the sparrows were always there. He delighted in their chirping, and he must have envied them their wings. Though so little could be done to alleviate his sufferings, a moral improvement was taking place in him. He was touched by the lively interest dis- played by his physician, who never failed to visit him at nine o'clock every morning. He seemed pleased with the attention paid him, and ended by placing entire confidence in M. Desault. Gratitude loosened Vol. 3 Memoirs— 14 420 THE MEMOIRS OF his tongue; brutality and insult had failed to extort a murmur, but kind treatment restored his speech: he had no words for anger, but he found them to express his thanks. M. Desault prolonged his visits as long as the officers of the municipality would per- mit. When they announced the close of the visit, the child, unwilling to beg them to allow a longer time, held back M. Desault by the skirt of his coat. Suddenly M. Desault's visits ceased. Several days passed and nothing was heard of him. The keepers wondered at his absence, and the poor little invalid was much distressed at it. The commissary on duty (M. Benoist) suggested that it would be proper to send to the physician's house to make inquiries as to the cause of so long an absence. Gomin and Lasne had not yet ventured to follow this advice, when next day M. Benoist was relieved by M. Bidault, who, hearing M. Desault's name mentioned as he came in, immediately said, " You must not expect to see him any more; he died yesterday." M. Pelletan, head surgeon of the Grand Hospice de l'Humanite, was next directed to attend the prisoner, and in June he found him in so alarming a state that he at once asked for a coadjutor, fearing to undertake the responsibility alone. The physician — sent for form's sake to attend the dying child, as an advocate is given by law to a criminal condemned beforehand — blamed the officers of the municipality for not having removed the blind, which obstructed the light, and the numerous bolts, the noise of which never failed to remind the victim of his captivity. That sound, which always caused him an involuntary shudder, disturbed him in the last mournful scene of his unparalleled tor- tures. M. Pelletan said authoritatively to the munici- pal on duty, "If you will not take these bolts and casings away at once, at least you can make no objec- MARIE ANTOINETTE 421 tion to our carrying the child into another room, for I suppose we are sent here to take charge of him." The Prince, being disturbed by these words, spoken as they were with great animation, made a sign to the physician to come nearer. " Speak lower, I beg of you," said he; "I am afraid they will hear you up- stairs, and I should be very sorry for them to know that I am ill, as it would give them much uneasiness." At first the change to a cheerful and airy room revived the Prince and gave him evident pleasure, but the improvement did not last. Next day M. Pelletan learned that the Government had acceded to his request for a colleague. M. Dumangin, head phy- sician of the Hospice de l'Unite, made his appearance at his house on the morning of Sunday, 7th June, with the official despatch sent him by the committee of pub- lic safety. They repaired together immediately to the Tower. On their arrival they heard that the child, whose weakness was excessive, had had a fainting fit, which had occasioned fears to be entertained that his end was approaching. He had revived a little, how- ever, when the physicians went up at about nine o'clock. Unable to contend with increasing exhaus- tion, they perceived there was no longer any hope of prolonging an existence worn out by so much suffering, and that all their art could effect would be to soften the last stage of this lamentable disease. While stand- ing by the Prince's bed, Gomin noticed that he was quietly crying, and asked him kindly what was the matter. " I am always alone," he said. " My dear mother remains in the other tower." Night came, — his last night, — which the regulations of the prison condemned him to pass once more in solitude, with suffering, his old companion, only at his side. This time, however, death, too, stood at his pillow. When Gomin went up to the child's room on the morning 422 THE MEMOIRS OF of 8th June, he said, seeing him calm, motionless, and mute : " I hope you are not in pain just now? " " Oh, yes, I am still in pain, but not nearly so much, — the music is so beautiful!" Now there was no music to be heard, either in the Tower or anywhere near. Gomin, astonished, said to him, " From what direc- tion do you hear this music ? " " From above! " "Have you heard it long?" "Since you knelt down. Do you not hear it? Listen! Listen!" And the child, with a nervous motion, raised his faltering hand, as he opened his large eyes illuminated by delight. His poor keeper, unwilling to destroy this last sweet illusion, appeared to listen also. After a few minutes of attention the child again started, and cried out, in intense rapture, " Amongst all the voices I have distinguished that of my mother! " These were almost his last words. At a quarter- past two he died, Lasne only being in the room at the time. Lasne acquainted Gomin and Damont, the commissary on duty, with the event, and they repaired to the chamber of death. The poor little royal corpse was carried from the room into that where he had suffered so long, — where for two years he had never ceased to suffer. From this apartment the father had gone to the scaffold, and thence the son must pass to the burial-ground. The remains were laid out on the bed, and the doors of the apart- ment were set open, — doors which had remained closed ever since the Revolution had seized on a child, then full of vigour and grace and life and health! At eight o'clock next morning (9th June) four MARIE ANTOINETTE 423 members of the committee of general safety came to the Tower to make sure that the Prince was really dead. When they were admitted to the death-chamber by Lasne and Damont they affected the greatest in- difference. " The event is not of the least impor- tance," they repeated, several times over ; " the police commissary of the section will come and receive the declaration of the decease; he will acknowledge it, and proceed to the interment without any ceremony; and the committee will give the necessary directions." As they withdrew, some officers of the Temple guard asked to see the remains of little Capet. Damont hav- ing observed that the guard would not permit the bier to pass without its being opened, the deputies decided that the officers and non-commissioned officers of the guard going off duty, together with those coming on, should be all invited to assure themselves of the child's death. All having assembled in the room where the body lay, he asked them if they recognised it as that of the ex-Dauphin, son of the last King of France. Those who had seen the young Prince at the Tuileries, or at the Temple (and most of them had), bore wit- ness to its being the body of Louis XVII. When they were come down into the council-room, Darlot drew up the minutes of this attestation, which was signed by a score of persons. These minutes were in- serted in the journal of the Temple tower, which was afterwards deposited in the office of the Minister of the Interior. During this visit the surgeons entrusted with the autopsy arrived at the outer gate of the Temple. These were Dumangin, head physician of the Hos- pice de l'Unite; Pelletan, head surgeon of the Grand Hospice de l'Humanite; Jeanroy, professor in the medical schools of Paris; and Lassus, professor of legal medicine at the Ecole de Sante of Paris. The 424 THE MEMOIRS OF last two were selected by Dumangin and Pelletan be- cause of the former connection of M. Lassus with Mesdames de France, and of M. Jeanroy with the House of Lorraine, which gave a peculiar weight to their signatures. Gomin received them in the council- room, and detained them until the National Guard, descending from the second floor, entered to sign the minutes prepared by Darlot. This done, Lasne, Darlot, and Bouquet went up again with the surgeons, and introduced them into the apartment of Louis XVII., whom they at first examined as he lay on his death-bed; but M. Jeanroy observing that the dim light of this room was but little favourable to the accomplishment of their mission, the commissaries prepared a table in the first room, near the window, on which the corpse was laid, and the surgeons began their melancholy operation. At seven o'clock the police commissary ordered the body to be taken up, and that they should pro- ceed to the cemetery. It was the season of the longest days, and therefore the interment did not take place in secrecy and at night, as some misinformed narrators have said or written; it took place in broad daylight, and attracted a great concourse of people before the gates of the Temple palace. One of the municipals wished to have the coffin carried out se- cretly by the door opening into the chapel enclosure; but M. Dusser, police commissary, who was specially entrusted with the arrangement of the ceremony, opposed this indecorous measure, and the procession passed out through the great gate. The crowd that was pressing round was kept back, and compelled to keep a line, by a tricoloured ribbon, held at short distances by gendarmes. Compassion and sorrow were impressed on every countenance. A small detachment of the troops of the line from MARIE ANTOINETTE 425 the garrison of Paris, sent by the authorities, was waiting to serve as an escort. The bier, still covered with the pall, was carried on a litter on the shoulders of four men, who relieved each other two at a time; it was preceded by six or eight men, headed by a ser- geant. The procession was accompanied a long way by the crowd, and a great number of persons followed it even to the cemetery. The name of " Little Capet," and the more popular title of Dauphin, spread from lip to lip, with exclamations of pity and compassion. The funeral entered the cemetery of Ste. Marguerite, not by the church, as some accounts assert, but by the old gate of the cemetery. The interment was made in the corner, on the left, at a distance of eight or nine feet from the enclosure wall, and at an equal distance from a small house, which subsequently served as a school. The grave was filled up, — no mound marked its place, — and not even a trace remained of the inter- ment! Not till then did the commissaries of police and the municipality withdraw, and enter the house opposite the church to draw up the declaration of interment. It was nearly nine o'clock, and still daylight. Release of Madame Royale. — Her Marriage to the Due d'Angouleme. — Return to France. — Death The last person to hear of the sad events in the Temple was the one for whom they had the deepest and most painful interest. After her brother's death the captivity of Madame Royale was much lightened. She was allowed to walk in the Temple gardens, and to receive visits from some ladies of the old Court, and from Madame de Chantereine, who at last, after several times evading her questions, ventured cau- tiously to tell her of the deaths of her mother, aunt, 426 THE MEMOIRS OF and brother. Madame Royale wept bitterly, but had much difficulty in expressing her feelings. " She spoke so confusedly," says Madame de la Ramiere in a letter to Madame de Verneuil, " that it was difficult to understand her. It took her more than a month's reading aloud, with careful study of pronunciation, to make herself intelligible, — so much had she lost the power of expression." She was dressed with plain- ness amounting to poverty, and her hands were disfig- ured by exposure to cold and by the menial work she had been so long accustomed to do for herself, and which it was difficult to persuade her to leave off. When urged to accept the services of an attendant, die replied, with a sad prevision of the vicissitudes of her future life, that she did not like to form a habit which she might have again to abandon. She suffered herself, however, to be persuaded gradually to modify her recluse and ascetic habits. It was well she did so, as a preparation for the great changes about to follow. Nine days after the death of her brother, the city of Orleans interceded for the daughter of Louis XVI., and sent deputies to the Convention to pray for her deliverance and restoration to her family. Nantes followed this example; and Charette, on the part of the Vendeans, demanded, as a condition of the pacifi- cation of La Vendee, that the Princess should be allowed to join her relations. At length the Conven- tion decreed that Madame Royale should be exchanged with Austria for the representatives and ministers whom Dumouriez had given up to the Prince of Cobourg, — Drouet, Semonville, Maret, and other prisoners of importance. At midnight on 19th De- cember, 1795, which was her birthday, the Princess was released from prison, the Minister of the Interior, M. Benezech, to avoid attracting public attention and uossible disturbance, conducting her on foot from the MARIE ANTOINETTE 427 Temple to a neighbouring street, where his carriage awaited her. She made it her particular request that Gomin, who had been so devoted to her brother, should be the commissary appointed to accompany her to the frontier; Madame de Soucy, formerly under- governess to the children of France, was also in at- tendance ; and the Princess took with her a dog named Coco, which had belonged to Louis XVI. She was frequently recognised on her way through France, and always with marks of pleasure and respect. It might have been supposed that the Princess would rejoice to leave behind her the country which had been the scene of so many horrors and such bitter suffering. But it was her birthplace, and it held the graves of all she loved; and as she crossed the frontier she said to those around her, " I leave France with regret, for I shall never cease to consider it my country." She arrived in Vienna on 9th Janu- ary, 1796, and her first care was to attend a memorial service for her murdered relatives. After many weeks of close retirement she occasionally began to appear in public, and people looked with interest at the pale, grave, slender girl of seventeen, dressed in the deepest mourning, over whose young head such terrible storms had swept. The Emperor wished her to marry the Archduke Charles of Austria, but her father and mother had, even in the cradle, destined her hand for her cousin, the Due d'Angouleme, son of the Comte d'Artois, and the memory of their lightest wish was law to her. Her quiet determination entailed anger and oppo- sition amounting to persecution. Every effort was made to alienate her from her French relations. She was urged to claim Provence, which had become her own if Louis XVIII. was to be considered King of France. A pressure of opinion was brought to 428 THE MEMOIRS OF bear upon her which might well have overawed so young a girl. " I was sent for to the Emperor's cabinet," she writes, " where I found the imperial family assembled. The ministers and chief imperial counsellors were also present. . . . When the Em- peror invited me to express my opinion, I answered that to be able to treat fittingly of such interests I thought I ought to be surrounded not only by my mother's relatives, but also by those of my father. . . . Besides, I said, I was above all things French, and in entire subjection to the laws of France, which had rendered me alternately the subject of the King my father, the King my brother, and the King my uncle, and that I would yield obedience to the latter, whatever might be his commands. This declaration appeared very much to dissatisfy all who were pres- ent, and when they observed that I was not to be shaken, they declared that my right being independent of my will, my resistance would not be the slightest obstacle to the measures they might deem it necessary to adopt for the preservation of my interests." In their anxiety to make a German princess of Marie Therese, her imperial relations suppressed her French title as much as possible. When, with some difficulty, the Due de Grammont succeeded in obtain- ing an audience of her, and used the familiar form of address, she smiled faintly, and bade him beware. " Call me Madame de Bretagne, or de Bourgogne, or de Lorraine," she said, " for here I am so identified with these provinces that I shall end in believing in my own transformation." After these discussions she was so closely watched, and so many restraints were imposed upon her, that she was scarcely less a pris- oner than in the old days of the Temple, though her cage was this time gilded. Rescue, however, was at hand. MARIE ANTOINETTE 429 In 1798 Louis XVIII. accepted a refuge offered to him at Mittau by the Czar Paul, who had promised that he would grant his guest's first request, whatever it might be. Louis begged the Czar to use his in- fluence with the Court of Vienna to allow his niece to join him. " Monsieur, my brother," was Paul's an- swer, " Madame Royale shall be restored to you, or I shall cease to be Paul I." Next morning the Czar despatched a courier to Vienna with a demand for the Princess, so energetically worded that refusal must have been followed by war. Accordingly, in May, 1799, Madame Royale was allowed to leave the capital which she had found so uncongenial an asylum. In the old ducal castle of Mittau, the capital of Courland, Louis XVIII. and his wife, with their nephews, the Dues d'Angouleme and de Berri, were awaiting her, attended by the Abbe Edgeworth, as chief ecclesiastic, and a little Court of refugee nobles and officers. With them were two men of humbler position, who must have been even more welcome to Madame Royale, — De Maiden, who had acted as courier to Louis XVI. during the flight to Varennes, and Turgi, who had waited on the Princesses in the Temple. It was a sad meeting, though so long anxiously desired, and it was followed on 10th June, 1799, by an equally sad wedding, — exiles, pensioners on the bounty of the Russian monarch, fulfilling an engagement founded, not on personal preference, but on family policy and reverence for the wishes of the dead, the bride and bridegroom had small cause for rejoicing. During the eighteen months of tranquil seclusion which followed her marriage, the favourite occupation of the Duchess was visiting and relieving the poor. In January, 1801, the Czar Paul, in com- pliance with the demand of Napoleon, who was just then the object of his capricious enthusiasm, ordered 430 THE MEMOIRS OF the French royal family to leave Mittau. Their wanderings commenced on the 21st, a day of bitter memories; and the young Duchess led the King to his carriage through a crowd of men, women, and chil- dren, whose tears and blessings attended them on their way. The exiles asked permission from the King of Prussia to settle in his dominions, and while awaiting his answer at Munich they were painfully surprised by the entrance of five old soldiers of noble birth, part of the body-guard they had left behind at Mittau, relying on the protection of Paul. The " mad Czar " had de- creed their immediate expulsion, and, penniless and almost starving, they made their way to Louis XVIII. All the money the royal family possessed was bestowed on these faithful servants, who came to them in de- tachments for relief, and then the Duchess offered her diamonds to the Danish consul for an advance of two thousand ducats, saying she pledged her property " that in our common distress it may be rendered of real use to my uncle, his faithful servants, and my- self." The Duchess's consistent and unselfish kind- ness procured her from the King, and those about him who knew her best, the name of " our angel." Warsaw was for a brief time the resting-place of the wanderers, but there they were disturbed in 1803 by Napoleon's attempt to threaten and bribe Louis XVIII. into abdication. It was suggested that refusal might bring upon them expulsion from Prussia. " We are accustomed to suffering," was the King's answer, " and we do not dread poverty. I would, trusting in God, seek another asylum." In 1808, after many changes of scene, this asylum was sought in Eng- land, Gosfield Hall, Essex, being placed at their dis- posal by the Marquis of Buckingham. From Gosfield, the King moved to Hartwell Hall, a fine old Eliza- bethan mansion rented from Sir George Lee for £500 MARIE ANTOINETTE 431 a year. A yearly grant of £24,000 was made to the exiled family by the British Government, out of which a hundred and forty persons were supported, the royal dinner-party generally numbering two dozen. At Hartwell, as in her other homes, the Duchess was most popular amongst the poor. In general society she was cold and reserved, and she disliked the notice of strangers. In March, 18 14, the royalist successes at Bordeaux paved the way for the restoration of roy- alty in France, and amidst general sympathy and con- gratulation, with the Prince Regent himself to wish them good fortune, the King, the Duchess, and their suite left Hartwell in April, 18 14. The return to France was as triumphant as a somewhat half-hearted and doubtful enthusiasm could make it, and most of such cordiality as there was fell to the share of the Duchess. As she passed to Notre-Dame in May, 1814, on entering Paris, she was vociferously greeted. The feeling of loyalty, however, was not much longer- lived than the applause by which it was expressed; the Duchess had scarcely effected one of the strong- est wishes of her heart, — the identification of what remained of her parents' bodies, and the magnifi- cent ceremony with which they were removed from the cemetery of the Madeleine to the Abbey of St. Denis, — when the escape of Napoleon from Elba in February, 181 5, scattered the royal family and their followers like chaff before the wind. The Due d'Angouleme, compelled to capitulate at Toulouse, sailed from Cette in a Swedish vessel. The Comte d'Artois, the Due de Berri, and the Prince de Conde withdrew beyond the frontier. The King fled from the capital. The Duchesse d'Angouleme, then at Bordeaux celebrating the anniversary of the Proclama- tion of Louis XVIII. , alone of all her family made any stand against the general panic. Day after day 432 THE MEMOIRS OF she mounted her horse and reviewed the National Guard. She made personal and even passionate appeals to the officers and men, standing firm, and prevailing on a handful of soldiers to remain by her, even when the imperialist troops were on the other side of the river and their cannon were directed against the square where the Duchess was reviewing her scanty followers. With pain and difficulty she was convinced that resistance was vain; Napoleon's banner soon floated over Bordeaux; the Duchess issued a farewell proclamation to her " brave Bordelais," and on the ist April, 1815, she started for Pouillac, whence she embarked for Spain. During a brief visit to England she heard that the reign of a hundred days was over, and the 27th of July, 18 15, saw her second triumphal return to the Tuileries. She did not take up her abode there with any wish for State ceremonies or Court gaieties. Her life was as secluded as her position would allow. Her favourite retreat was the Pavilion, which had been inhabited by her mother, and in her little oratory she collected relics of her family, over which on the anniversaries of their deaths she wept and prayed. In her daily drives through Paris she scrupulously avoided the spot on which they had suffered; and the memory of the past seemed to rule all her sad and self-denying life, both in what she did and what she refrained from doing. Her somewhat austere goodness was not of a nature to make her popular. The few who really understood her loved her, but the majority of her pleasure-seeking subjects regarded her either with ridicule or dread. She is said to have taken no part in politics, and to have exerted no influence in public affairs, but her sympathies were well known, and " the very word lib- erty made her shudder;" like Madame Roland, she had seen " so many crimes perpetrated under that name." MARIE ANTOINETTE 433 The claims of three pretended Dauphins — Herva- gault, the son of the tailor of St. Lo; Bruneau, son of the shoemaker of Vergin; and Naundorf or Norn- dorff, the watchmaker — somewhat troubled her peace, but never for a moment obtained her sanction. Of the many other pseudo-Dauphins (said to number a dozen and a half) not even the names remain. In February, 1820, a fresh tragedy befell the royal family in the assassination of the Due de Berri, brother-in- law of the Duchesse d'Angouleme, as he was seeing his wife into her carriage at the door of the Opera-house. He was carried into the theatre, and there the dying Prince and his wife were joined by the Duchess, who remained till he breathed his last, and was present when he, too, was laid in the Abbey of St. Denis. She was present also when his son, the Due de Bor- deaux, was born, and hoped that she saw in him a guarantee for the stability of royalty in France. In September, 1824, she stood by the death-bed of Louis XVIII., and thenceforward her chief occupation was directing the education of the little Due de Bordeaux, who generally resided with her at Villeneuve l'Etang, her country house near St. Cloud. Thence she went in July, 1830, to the Baths of Vichy, stopping at Dijon on her way to Paris, and visiting the theatre on the evening of the 27th. She was received with " a roar of execrations and seditious cries," and knew only too well what they signified. She instantly left the theatre and proceeded to Tonnere, where she received news of the rising in Paris, and, quitting the town by night, was driven to Joigny with three attend- ants. Soon after leaving that place it was thought more prudent that the party should separate and pro- ceed on foot, and the Duchess and M. de Foucigny, disguised as peasants, entered Versailles arm-in-arm, to obtain tidings of the King. The Duchess found 434 THE MEMOIRS OF him at Rambouillet with her husband, the Dauphin, and the King met her with a request for " pardon," being fully conscious, too late, that his unwise decrees and his headlong flight had destroyed the last hopes of his family. The act of abdication followed, by which the prospect of royalty passed from the Dauphin and his wife, as well as from Charles X. — Henri V. being proclaimed King, and the Due d'Orleans (who refused to take the boy monarch under his personal protection) lieutenant-general of the kingdom. Then began the Duchess's third expatriation. At Cherbourg the royal family, accompanied by the little King without a kingdom, embarked in the Great Britain, which stood out to sea. The Duchess, re- maining on deck for a last look at the coast of France, noticed a brig which kept, she thought, suspi- ciously near them. "Who commands that vessel?" she inquired. " Captain Thibault." " And what are his orders? " " To fire into and sink the vessels in which we sail, should any attempt be made to return to France." Such was the farewell of their subjects to the House of Bourbon. The fugitives landed at Wey- mouth; the Duchesse d'Angouleme under the title of Comtesse de Marne, the Duchesse de Berri as Com- tesse de Rosny, and her son, Henri de Bordeaux, as Comte de Chambord, the title he retained till his death, originally taken from the estate presented to him in infancy by his enthusiastic people. Holyrood, with its royal and gloomy associations, was their appointed dwelling. The Due and Duchesse d'An- gouleme, and the daughter of the Due de Berri, travelled thither by land, the King and the young Comte de Chambord by sea. " I prefer my route to MARIE ANTOINETTE 435 that of my sister," observed the latter, " because I shall see the coast of France again, and she will not." The French Government soon complained that at Holyrood the exiles were still too near their native land, and accordingly, in 1832, Charles X., with his son and grandson, left Scotland for Hamburg, while the Duchesse d'Angouleme and her niece repaired to Vienna. The family were reunited at Prague in 1833, where the birthday of the Comte de Chambord was celebrated with some pomp and rejoicing, many Legitimists flocking thither to congratulate him on attaining the age of thirteen, which the old law of monarchical France had fixed as the majority of her princes. Three years later the wanderings of the unfortunate family recommenced; the Emperor Fran- cis II. was dead, and his successor, Ferdinand, must visit Prague to be crowned, and Charles X. feared that the presence of a discrowned monarch might be embarrassing on such an occasion. Illness and sor- row attended the exiles on their new journey, and a few months after they were established in the Chateau of Graffenburg at Goritz, Charles X. died of cholera, in his eightieth year. At Goritz, also, on the 31st May, 1844, the Duchesse d'Angouleme, who had sat beside so many death-beds, watched over that of her husband. Theirs had not been a marriage of affec- tion in youth, but they respected each other's virtues, and to a great extent shared each other's tastes; ban- ishment and suffering had united them very closely, and of late years they had been almost inseparable, — walking, riding, and reading together. When the Duchesse d'Angouleme had seen her husband laid by his father's side in the vault of the Franciscan con- vent, she, accompanied by her nephew and niece, removed to Frohsdorf, where they spent seven tran- quil years. Here she was addressed as " Queen " by 436 THE MEMOIRS OF her household for the first time in her life, but she herself always recognised Henri, Comte de Cham- bord, as her sovereign. The Duchess lived to see the overthrow of Louis Philippe, the usurper of the inher- itance of her family. Her last attempt to exert herself was a characteristic one. She tried to rise from a sick-bed in order to attend the memorial ser- vice held for her mother, Marie Antoinette, on the 16th October, the anniversary of her execution. But her strength was not equal to the task; on the 19th she expired, with her hand in that of the Comte de Chambord, and on 28th October, 1851, Marie Therese Charlotte, Duchesse d'Angouleme, was buried in the Franciscan convent. The Ceremony of Expiation " In the spring of 1814 a ceremony took place in Paris at which I was present because there was nothing in it that could be mortifying to a French heart. The death of Louis XVI. had long been admitted to be one of the most serious misfortunes of the Revolution. The Emperor Napoleon never spoke of that sovereign but in terms of the highest respect, and always prefixed the epithet unfortunate to his name. The ceremony to which I allude was proposed by the Emperor of Russia and the King of Prussia. It consisted of a kind of expiation and purification of the spot on which Louis XVI. and his Queen were beheaded. I went to see the ceremony, and I had a place at a window in the hotel of Madame de Remusat, next to the Hotel de Crillon, and what was termed the Hotel de Courlande. " The expiation took place on the 10th of April. The weather was extremely fine and warm for the season. The Emperor of Russia and King of Prussia, MARIE ANTOINETTE 437 accompanied by Prince Schwartzenberg, took their station at the entrance of the Rue Royale; the King of Prussia being on the right of the Emperor Alex- ander, and Prince Schwartzenberg on his left. There was a long parade, during which the Russian, Prus- sian, and Austrian military bands vied with each other in playing the air, ' Vive Henri IV. ! ' The cavalry defiled past, and then withdrew into the Champs- Elysees; but the infantry ranged themselves round an altar which was raised in the middle of the Place, and which was elevated on a platform having twelve or fifteen steps. The Emperor of Russia alighted from his horse, and, followed by the King of Prussia, the Grand Duke Constantine, Lord Cathcart, and Prince Schwartzenberg, advanced to the altar. When the Emperor had nearly reached the altar the ' Te Deum ' commenced. At the moment of the benedic- tion, the sovereigns and persons who accompanied them, as well as the twenty-five thousand troops who covered the Place, all knelt down. The Greek priest presented the cross to the Emperor Alexander, who kissed it; his example was followed by the individuals who accompanied him, though they were not of the Greek faith. On rising, the Grand Duke Constantine took off his hat, and immediately salvoes of artillery were heard." UnJversUy of CaWorn^a SOUTHERN R EG, ? N ft ^ n L 'e.esCA 90024-1388 R TomwhlcMtj««8bojTO^d. iff*?