- J. f^^ 'ni\ '^ .OFCAIIFO/?^ I . ^WE UNIVERi/A ^^clOSANCElfj-;^ A^UIBRAR ^.OfCALlFOI Afi vvlOSANC[l5j> c j.lOSANCFlfj'^ ■^.M3A!Nil3V\V^ ^;nj\^^^ J .y Nil VOJi'VI jvY —; ^^ '-lUk:;//, o- vlOS-ANLfL^.. '.r' ^- i m: z ^ Ml- z g ^ ^C^AHVJJHIl-^ "^/S«3/MN0 ]V\V y' VFRVa x««*^ ^ t'SOl >J<- s m i Ki0S/v;ctifj> .^orCMirn/i't;, ^.oPCA[iR:)ftv;, ■>■ >^ =5 ^r./i?\ 5 I -ir^qn VV wy'' SJv- Vt' ■SOI •^.- ' '. .'. ~z '€ \ THE MAEEIED LIFE OF ANNE OF AUSTEIA, QUEEN OF FRANCE, MOTHER OF LOUIS XIV. AND DON SEBASTIAN, KING OF PORTUGAL listorical ftuiiics. FROM NUMEROUS UNPUBLISHED SOURCES, INCLUDING MS. DOCUMENTS IN THE BIBLIOTHKQUE IMPERIALE, AND THE ARCHIVES OP SPAIN AND PORTUGiVL. MARTHA WALKER FREER, Avithor of "The Life of Marguerite d'AiigoulGme, Queen of Navan-e ;" "The Life of Jeanne d'Albret ; " '• The Court and Times of Hecry III., King of France and Poland; " "The Life of Henri Quatre," &,c., -norant blunders, and for 1(325.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 51 liis total want of discriniiiiatioii. The duke's hcvues were so common, tliat lie was declared to be the hero of every laughable misadventure which diverted the court. M. de Montbazon was completely ruled by his liigh-spirited daughter ; and as he revered few things not present to his visual comprehension, and finding that the imrvcmi de Luynes had attained to a rank and splendour hitherto denied to the blood of Rohan, he graciously consented to the alliance when proposed to him by his sovereign. The handsome person of the young favourite '•■ had favourably impressed jMadcmoisdle de.Montl)azon : — "To hate M. de Luynes," says a contemporary, "it Avas necessary not to have seen him ; for he had so pleasant and afl'able an expression of countenance, that many foes were thereby after an interview converted into friends." The fortunate favourite, moreover, was all-powerful to flatter, and pro- pitiate the foibles of tlie haughty IMarie. The Khig promised to erect the estate of Maille near to Tours, purchased by de Lnynes, into a duclw pairic, if this marriage w\as accomplished. Most of the high offices filled by the IMarquis d'Ancre were transferred to de Luynes. Louis, moreover, promised to nominate * " La douceur complaisante de son visag-e luy est commo ime lettre generale de crcance pour toute sorte d'affaires ; et vers toutes sortes de personnes." 52 THE MAKRIED LIFE OF [1(317— the Duchess de Liiynes, surintendente de la maison de la Heine, an office which conferred ahiiost absolute power over the Queen's household; and to possess which, it is thought, greatly influenced the decision of Mademoiselle de Montbazon. De Luynes, in addition, bribed the good graces of his lady-love by magni- ficent gifts ; and, as crowning tokens of his devotion, he obtained for her, previous to her marriage, the much-coveted tabouret, or a folding-seat in the presence of the Queen — a privilege which no prin- cess of the house of Rohan, either married or single, had before enjoyed ; and lastly, he laid at the feet of his mistress the mao-nificent diamonds of the unfor- tunate Marquise d'Ancre — a casket of which a queen might have been proud. The marriage took place in the month of August, 1C17 ; and the King created his favourite, according to his promise, Duke de Luynes, and installed him as first minister of the crown. Louis also fulfilled his promise relative to the new Duchess de Luynes, who was appointed grandmistress of the palace, and chief lady of her ]\L^jesty's household.* A feminine revolt followed this appointment. Anne absolutely refused to * " La femme de Luynes est une escervelce, qui n'a que dix-neuf ans, a laquelle son mari bailie une govemante pour la conduire ; et cepend- aut M. de Luynes veut qui la maison do la reine passe sous sa disposi- tion," &c. — Le Contadin Provencal, — Pamphlet contra M. le Due de Luynes, Connetable de France. 1G25.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 53 accci)t the services of a princess, wlio, she said, was personally disagreeable to licr. The Condesa de las Torres protested against the assumption l)y Madame do Luyncs of power over the camarera mayor : the good and virtuous Duchesse de ]\Iont- morency, first da?}ie du imlais, gave in her resig- nation, " as, being the widow of the late Constable de Montmorency, she could not retain a subordinate office in the royal household." The result of these squabbles was, that the King never visited his consort for six weeks. The Spanish Ambassador, moved by the distress of tlie Queen, thereupon sought audience of the Duke dc Luyncs, to be officially informed of the source of the fracas. Luyncs replied that the King hated the Spanish ladies of his consort's house- hold, especially Madame de las Torres, and the old Duchess of Villcquieras, her majesty's former gover- ness ; but that this latter lady was so repugnant to the Kin"- that Louis had resolved never a2;ain to share her ^Majesty's apartment until after the depar- ture cf the said duchess.* Monteleone faithfully reported the matter to Philip IIL, who, without further parky, recalled all the Spanish ladies, much to the distress and indignation of the Queen. Anne, meantime, had been so excited by the vexa- * MS. Simancas, A. 75. — Capefigue, Vie d'Annc d'Aiitriche : the -svords of the despatch are " y que por no veria, dixava uo domiir coii la Ri'yna." 54 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1617— tious events of the year, that about the month of November she fell dangerously ill of low fever. The King showed much solicitude during the dangerous crisis of the malady, and frequently visited her sick- chamber. On learning the danger of her young mistress, the Duchess de Montmorency returned to the Louvre, and generously helped Madame de Luynes to discharge her functions at her Majesty's bedside ; for etiquette required that a duchess should replace the surintendente during those inter- vals when leave of absence was requisite for repose and refreshment. Anne's recovery w\as tedious. The Ambassador Monteleone despatched weekly expresses to Madrid with news of her health. He prays Philip to send his daughter a quantity of oranges " similar to those your Majesty sent last year, which arrived as fresh as if just gathered from the tree." Monteleone proceeds to congratulate King Philip on the improved relations subsisting between the royal pair ; and states, that the King evidently greatly admired his consort, who was growing up a beautiful and graceful woman ; also, that the King often proudly alluded to the incom- parable complexion of his wife, and remarked her abundant fair hair, " in which attractions she had not a rival in Prance." Louis, about whom all these anxious specu- 1G25.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 55 lations flowed, had now completed liis eighteenth year; Ijut the monarch who had just exiled his mother — who held the first prince of the blood a captive in the Bastille, and who had raised an obscui'e favourite to the altitude of a duke and minister iu chief — is described by Bassompierre as "amusing himself by little games and devices, such as painting little pictures, singing, making little models Avith (piills of the fountains at St. Germain, and by drumming — for his majesty was a skilful drunniier." * " Bassompierre," said his Majesty, one day, " I must now begin to practise on the horn ; some day I will waken the echoes in my forests I " " Sire," replied the skilful cour- tier, " I do not advise such exercise. Charles IX., it is said, ruptured a blood-vessel by blowing the horn ! " " You are mistaken," promptly replied his jMajesty ; " the King only quarrelled with his mother, Catherine de' j\ledici, and kept her at Monceaux. Now, if the King had followed the good advice of ]M. de Retz, and had not returned to her, he would not have died at the earlv a^'e which he did ! " '•' Trom that period," remarks Bassompierre,! * " Le Roy etait bon coniitiu-ier, bon jardinier ; il fit muiir des pois verts, qu'il envoya vendre au marche. On dit qvie Moutaiiron les acheta bien cher, car c'etaient les loremiers veniis." — Tallemaut, Vie de Louis XIII. t Bassompierre, Journal de ma Vie. 56 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1617— " I took heed never to mention the Queen-mother in the presence of the king, finding that his fears had been excited respecting her." Marie de' Medici, during this interval, wearied of the insults daily inflicted, fled from Blois, with the aid of her old friend Epemon ; and had retired under his escort to Loches, where she threatened the realm with civil war. On the 21st of February, 1619, the Queen escaped from the castle by a window 120 feet from the ground, by means of a rope-ladder sent to her by Epemon.* Her two women followed, and her chevalier d'honneiir, the Count de Brennes. A coach was in waiting, in which her Majesty entered, and took the road towards Montrichard. She was met outside the town of Blois by the Cardinal de la Valette, then Archbishop of Toulouse, with 300 gentlemen, who accompanied her to the fortress of Loches ; where Marie was rapturously welcomed by Epernon, and afterwards received an oath of fidehtv fr; ■- - ": :s of the 2:arrison. The utmost panic seized the King and his ministers when they heard of this event. Louis retiu-ned to Paris from St. Germain to hold council, at which it was determined to send le P. Berulle to negotiate ; whose brain was thought to be a match for that of the subtle Richeheu, whom her Majesty, on arriving at * ELLit. de la Mere et dn Fi]?. t. 2. DretLs; du Radier, t. 5. lf!2.'>.] ANNE OF AUSTIMA. 57 Loches, liiid summoned. Bciitivoglio, wlio tlien filled the post of Nuncio at the court of France, caused this suggestion to be conveyed to the privy council. Although most of the great peers of France liad returned to their duty on the downfall of Concini, yet the elements of revolt were not extinct in France. Moreover, the courts of Parliament throughout the realm had interceded f(jr the Queen- mother, la veuve de Henri IV., and had exhorted the Khig to be reconciled with her. At court she had many ardent partisans, such as Bassompierre, Guise, Bellegardc, and others. It was, therefore, now deemed by Luynes to be a politic and po[)ular course to disarm lier IMajesty by negotiation, and to propose an inter- view of reconciliation with the Kins;. The Cardinal de la Rochefoucault was despatched to offer to the Queen the government of Anjou, with the fortresses of Angers, Pont de Ce, and Clunon, provided that she consented to relinquish the government of Nor- mandy. The Prince of Piedmont, whose recent marriairc with the Princess Christine without the consent or participation of the Queen-mother, had filled the measiu'e of Marie's grievances,* now made reparation by visiting her ]\Iajesty at Angouleme. * " Marier ma fiUe a im prince etranger sans m'avoir ajijielce, afin que ma lionte soit manifcste a tons Ics roys et princes de la Chrustiente, et de tonte la France," wrote IMarie, indignantly, in the letter addressed to her son, and entitled " Piaintes de la Eej-ne-Mere an Roy son Fils." 68 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1G17— The Duke de Montbazon also made the same pilgrim- age on behalf of his son-in-law de Lnynes ; to ex- press the earnest desire of the latter for reconcilia- tion. Marie, by the counsel of Richelieu, accepted the proposals and overtures of her son, and promised to join the court at Tours. The young Queen, there- fore, journeyed from Paris to Tours, where she made a sojourn of three months.* After the meeting and reconciliation between Louis and his mother, the King set out for the south of France, attended by his favourite, to restore the Catholic faith throughout Beam ; while Anne returned to Paris, having re- ceived a promise from Queen Marie to join her there, after she had visited her new government of Anjou, and the fortresses ceded in that province. During the next two years the history of the young Queen presents few incidents worthy of record. Her great grief, and the chief topic of the Spanish Ambassador the Marquis de Mirabel, who liad succeeded Monteleone in the Paris embassage, was the devotion manifested by the King for the young and brilliant Duchess de Luynes ; who first moved the heart of Louis Treize, and taught his * Anne wrote from Tours a pleasant little note to Madame de Montglat, wlio still resided at St. Germain, as preceptress to the sisters of the King. Her Majesty desired her love to the Princesses — " mais non pas a ma soeur de Vemeuil, qui est une paresseuse." — MS. Bibl. Imp. F. fr. 3818. 1625.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 53 Majesty sonic of the tender refinements of la Idle passion. "The King," writes tlie Ambassador, " abounds in courtesies and attentions for the Duchess de Luynes : I have, nevertheless, good hope that the worst suspicions take rise only in the excited fancy of the Infanta-queen, and in the malicious tattlings of her ■\vomcn. The King, I believe, is too wise and virtuous to merit the imputa- tion of criminal intrigue. Your Majesty should exhort the Queen to propitiate her husband, and to render herself agreeable and nccessaiy to him by the thou- sand little coquelteries proper to enchain and entice volatile hearts." Anne was too haughty and re- sentful to profit by such counsel : she adopted with the Duchess de Luynes a distant and condescend- in<>- demeanour : but towards the Kins: her manner ■was grave, serious, and respectful. Louis, at this period, showed great consideration for his consort in public ; nor vras it until he fell again under the baneful iniiuence of the Queen-mother that those miserable domestic tracasscries commenced wliich poisoned his existence. The iSuncio Bentivoglio mentions even, that, during- the absence of the Kinij from Paris in 10:20 — to subdue the menaced in- surrection excited by the distrust of ?»Iarie de' Medici in the provinces recently confided to her — the young Queen, '•' to the joy of everybody,'"' daily 60 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1G17— presided at the council of state. These days were the brightest and most prosperous of Anne's married hfe. A shadow at this period was, nevertheless, cast over the content of the Queen by the anger which Louis displayed at the assiduities manifested towards her by the Dukes de Montmorency and de Belle- garde. M. de Luynes was even one day compelled to leave the circle at the peremptory command of his royal master, for having presumed to press to his lips a flower which had fallen from a bouquet worn by her Majesty. This boyish petulance, and his own neglect of her in private, angered the Queen ; who now having attained to woman's estate, and being con- scious of her charms, resented the cpierulous tyranny to which she was often subjected. The Duchess de Luynes meantime lived in the greatest harmony with her parvenu lord, spite of the prevalent rumours re- specting her intimacy with her liege,* She espoused the interests of the Duke with that energy for which she was renowned : the palace under her sway was a model of order and discipline; nevertheless, she never at this period succeeded in gaining even the coldest approval from her royal mistress. Anne had a pungent tongue, and her memory was seldom at * " La Duchesse de Luynes etait tres bien avec son mari." — Madame de ]\Iotteville, Mem., vol. i. 1625.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 61 fault ; the Queen, therefore, in her circle, often in the most naive manner alluded to reminiscences uhieh the superb minister would fain have forgot- ten. Ilis four years of rule, however, had weakened his influence with the King, who could not en- dure the brightness of the light which he him- self had kindled. The lips of Louis often turned white with passion as he beheld the homage ex- acted 1)y De Luynes, " Le Roy Luynes," as he bitterly nuu'nuu-ed.* Nevertheless, with strange inconsistency, in the year 1021, Louis conferred the sword of Constable of Trance on de Luynes, with the greatest pomj). The sword of the new Constable presented by his jMajesty was valued at 30,000 crowns. The court was afterwards sumptuously en- tertained by the Constable at his Hotel, the former abode of the Marquis d'Ancrc ; but which was then known by the familiar sobriquet of Hotel des Trois l\ois, as at the commencement of de Luynes' career his brothers lived with him. For each of these per- sonages, Louis, with the most amazing recklessness, had ci'cated a diichc pairie. Cadenet espoused the heiress of Pequigny, and was made Duke de Chaul- nes; Brantes made a still more illustrious alhauce, * One day Louis, riding by the Hotel de Luynes, saw the English ambassador alight from his coach and enter the mansion. " Ah ! il va a I'audience du Roi Luj-nes," bitterly exclaimed the King. G2 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1G17— and married the heiress of Luxembourg, Charlotte Marguerite, only daughter of the Duke de Pincy Luxembourg, whose title he eventually bore. The new Constable meantime followed his royal master to the siege of Montauban, one of the strong- holds of the Huguenots ; a place defended by the Marquis de la Force with incredible valour. The siege lasted three months, and terminated by the retreat of the royal array. The displeasure and dis- taste of the King for De Luynes increased during the progress of the siege operations ; his arrogant inde- pendence sometimes excited his Majesty to frenzy. Bassompierre was made the confidant of Louis's dis- satisfaction, very much to the dismay of that astute personage. " I will compel him, the base-born in- grate, to restore all that he has rifled ; he desires to make himself King, but I shall counteract his plots ! The poor adventurer ! " sneered the petulant boy- King, " ^vhy, his relations once arrived by boat-loads, and not one of them had a silk robe to ajjpear in mv presence ! " The disgust indulged by Louis at length attained such fervour, that he one day told the Constable in public that the Duke de Chevreuse was madly enamoured of Madame de Luynes ; and therefore that he warned him to be on the watch. " l^ut, sire," remonstrated the good-natured Bassom- pierre, " I have heard that it ranks as heinous sin to 1G25.] ANNE OF AUSTUIA. C3 SOW dissension between husband and wife." " May God please to grant nie pardon," responded liis Majesty, " but I have now such joy in spiting j\I. Ic Connetable, and in giving liini annoyance ! " Such being the sentiments of the King, expressed in semi- confidence to tlic most ])rivileged amongst his cour- tiers, i)redictions abounded on tlie api)roaching over- throw (jf tlie Constable. The royal aversion was not lessened ])y the comments of Queen ^larie ; who now, having made jx'are with her son, had taken up her abode at the Luxembouig. On the raising of the siege of jMontauban, fever raged in the camp ; Luynes retired to Longuetille, and there encamped, feeling indisposed. In the course of a few hours the dreaded pestilence seized him ; his comfortless (piarters and his perturbation of mind increased the severity of the attack, and death soon delivered the King from the man he now so utterly loathed. De Luynes died on the r21st of December, 1G21, after an illness of a few hours' duration. His favour lasted five years. Tew crimes mar his career : Luynes was weak and ostentatious ; his greatest merit, perhaps, was that he had discerned the ex- traordinary genius of the Bishop of Lucon ; and at the time of his death was ncGrotiatino; with Richelieu to (juit the service of ]^Iarie de' ]\ledici for his own, ottering, as a bribe, a seat in the privy council. 64 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1G17— Luyiies left a son and one daughter* by his consort. The King suffered the young duke to inherit his father's enormous wealth, under the guardianship of his mother. During the following year, 1G23, Madame de Luynes married Claude de Lorraine, Duke de Chevreuse, son of Henri, Duke de Guise, killed at the States of Blois. The alliance was an illustrious one. M. de Chevreuse, however, was weak and incapable, and totally unable to guide or rule his witty and able wife. He was luxurious and indolent ; and while enjoying the ease of the Hotel Chevreuse, cared little for the intrigues of his con- sort, or for the success of her political enterprises. Before her second marriage, the Duchess de Luynes incurred a temporary disgrace. The Queen, to the great joy of the nation, had been declared enceinte. Prayers were offered throughout the realms of France and Spain for a safe and pros- perous term ; and Anne was committed to the care of the Queen-mother, and ordered by her royal hus- band not to act in defiance of such authority. It happened that the Princess de Condef suffered from temporary indisposition, and was compelled to keep her bed in her apartments at the Louvre. Anne * Anne Marie de Lujnies, who died a nun, at IMaubuisson, in great odoiir of piety. The son of the Constal^le, Louis Charles Albert, Due de Luynes, was born December 2.">, IG^O, and died October, U!00. t Charlotte Marguerite de Montmorency. IC2.X] AXXE OF AUSTRIA. 65 and a gay party of courtiers, including her widowed surintendente and jMademoiselle de Verneuil, went to visit the invalid. The evening was spent merrily, being enlivened by the wit, and the amusing adven- tures of the Marshal dc Bassompierre, and the Duke de Bellcgardc. At ten o'clock the Queen took leave of Madame de Conde. To arrive at her apartment, it was necessary to traverse the great gallery of tlie Louvre, at the end of which a magnificent canopy and throne stood, which on this evening was partly draped for a state rece})tion on the morrow. On entering this apartment ^ladanie de Luyncs, and JMademoiselle de Verneuil took the Queen each by ;ni arm, ami proposed, in the exuberance of their mirth, that her Majesty should run with them a race down its length. Anne suffered herself to be persuaded 1)}' their importunity.; unfortunately, her ladies sud- denly releasing their hold as they approached the throne, the Queen fell on her face over a footstool. A few lioiu's subsequently, a catastrophe occurred which dismavcd the courtiers, and moved the Kins; to one of those bursts of passion to which he was sub- ject. AVith his own hand Louis wrote to the Duchess de Lu} lies, and to Mademoiselle de Verneuil, exiling them from the Louvre, and forbidding them to see the Queen to say farewell. The letters were deli- vered to the delinrpients by the Qneen-mother, who 66 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1617— administered to each an angry reprimand, and dis- missed tlie ladies, weeping bitterly."^'' The Duchess de Montmorency! was thereupon promoted to the office of surintendente, which she retained for many years, concihating every one by her gentle and winning deportment. The return of the Queen-mother to Paris had been attended with many annoyances to the Queen, her daughter-in-law. After the death of the Constable de Luynes, Marie again beheld herself supreme over the court, ruling almost as imperiously as before the overthrow of the Marquis d'Ancre, and her subsequent exile. Distrustfid of his own powers and judgment, Louis again sought refuge in his mother's more enterprising and resolute character ; while Marie relied on the hidden support, and sage counsels of her chancehor, Richelieu, bishop of Lucon. The power and disaffection of the great nobles still menaced the royal authority. Conde had been released from the Bastille by de Luynes, to counterbalance, as he hoped, the renewed influence of the Queen-mother, after her reconciliation with her son at Tours. The prince was esteemed to be one of the wisest and most prudent of men : his military * Journal de ma Vie, Bassompierre. — Annce 1022. ■}• Laurence de Clermont, the third wife of the Constable Henri Due de Montmorency. — See Freer's Last Decade of a Glorious Reigii, iov the history of the Duchess, and of her persecutions, vol. 2, p. 17. 1G25.1 ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 67 talents were not great; but his name, Lis alliances, and his relationship with many of the great Hugue- not nobles, added to the guileful cuiming of his character, had gained him reputation. For the first six months after the death of de Luynes, Conde filled the vacant place of royal ]\[entor ; and during this interval Marie lived in intimate union with (^ueen Anne, their majesties usually appearing in public together, and amiably })atronizing the Princess de Conde. The young Duke of Orleans at this period became a daily visitor at the lever of the Queen his si:-ter-in-law. Gaston was a beautiful forward boy of fourteen, idolized by his mother for his sprightly wit, and for his apparent devotion to herself. The brothers, in character, were en- tirely opposite. Louis XIII. resembled his father, Henri W ., in his contempt of soft luxury ; and in his readiness to submit to temporary privation. jNIonsieur, on the contrary, was fastidious, luxury- loving, and ])lcasure-seeking. His raiment was perfumed, and made of the most costly fabrics ; rini2;s c-littered on his white fino;ers ; and his fair lono; hair was adjusted to perfection. The dancing of the young prince was pronounced to be exquisite ; his voice was melodious ; he excelled in the composition of charades, and jeiuv d'esjwit ; and he aimed at a lisping precision of speech, which ere long became a 6S THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1617— fashion at court. Bciieatli tins eft'cminate exterior, nevertheless, the heroic spirit of his ancestors of Albret slumbered. Monsieur showed an early pre- dilection for arms ; his fencing was admirable ; he was an expert archer; and rode on horseback with an ease and grace which always excited the envy of the King.'" Monsieur's inclination for magnificence and costly ornamentation pervaded all his pursuits. While his brother contented himself with snaring magpies and small birds, Gaston, at this period, having just attained his majority, and therefore becoming master of his patrimony, set up a hunting establishment on a grand scale at his chateau of Montargis ; where he built kennels and stables, which, a few years subsequently, were razed to the ground, ivhen the Duke capriciously trans- ferred his stud to Villers Coterets, a huntiiig- lodofc in the forest of Soissons. The Duke at this period divided his leisure, when in Paris, between the Louvre and the Luxembourg ; spending hours at the latter place with his royal mother in the studio of the maestro, Rubens, whom Marie de' Medici had lured from Antwerp to embellish her * Un gentil mot du Sicur de Pluvincl etait — Que le Roy a pied est Roy de ses sujets ; mais qu'^ clieval il est Roy des Rois — voulaiit mon- trer combien est excellente en cette art sa majeste. — Le Portrait du Roy Limis XIIL, par le Sieur de Bellemavre au Sieiu- de Merencourt h, Veuise. Paris, 1<;1.S. 162.x] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 69 palace ])y Lis immortal pencil. Wlicii at the Louvre, Gaston entertained liis fair sister-in-law and her ladies ; and once more made the saloons echo, as in olden times, with merry laughter, and witly repartee. Soon the greatest solace of the fair young Queen was the society of so fascinating a cavalier as her brother- in-law ; who, moreover, with lazy good nature, ad- justed many a little dis})ute arising between Aime and the Qiicen-motlici', which might have ac({uired unsought-for importance, if submitted to the arbi- tration of Louis Treize. Prominent amoMii-st the grievances between Anne and her imperious mother- in-law, was the fact that !Marie proposed that the state receptions of the Louvre should be transferred to her saloons ; and, through Richelieu, she even succeeded in convinciuii- her roval son that such arrangement would obviate many evils to be anti- cipated from the youth, and inexperience of his consort. Anne replied, that such tutelage was un- becoming her proud position as reigning Queen of Trance, and Lifanta of the Spains. Her ^Majesty, therefore, firmly declhied to be present at the Luxembourg whenever the court paid its homage to the " august Marie de' ]Mcdici." This resolution was supported by the counsel of the Duchess de Chevreuse,* who, after her marriage, had again ap- * Marie de Rohan, widow of the deceased Cuiistable de Lu\-aes. She 70 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1617— peared at court as chief lady of honour in waiting, and wiser perchance for her brief echpse. Marie also complained, that Anne, when addressing her by letter, terminated with the words "voire affec- tionee Jille" instead of by the formula, in imita- tion of that adopted by the King, of " voire tr^s Immhle et obeissanie filled The Queen bore with meekness the coldness of the Queen-mother, and the anger of the King, who was again en- slaved by his mother ; for at this period Riche- lieu still acted in subordination to the directions of Marie de' Medici. Marie, and her chancellor continually depreciated the intellect, and savoir vt'vre of Queen Aiine, so apprehensive were they of a rival in Louis' confidence. " Nevertheless," says an enthusiastic contemporary, " Anne is truly pious ; her heart is noble, her constancy great, her self-control eminent : she unhappily remembers injuries ; but she is easily persuaded by commenda- tion, and by affectionate appeal." The intercourse between Anne and Monsieur was not over-pleas- ing to Louis XIIL ; that sombre nature ever construed friendship for another, into depreciation of himself. Anne, unhappily for her future peace, married the Duke de Clievrevise in 1(J22. " C'etait le second des MM. de Guise, et le mieirx fait de tous les quatre : le Cardinal etait plus beau, mais M. de Clievreuse etait rhouime de la meilleure mine qu'on pouvait voir ; il avait de Tesprit passablement." — Tallemant, t. 2, p. 38. 1G25.] ANNE OF AUHTIMA. 71 Jiiid adopted the iiiaxiius of tlie famous Marquise de Sable — at this period in tlie meridian of licr celebrity, but who, nevertheless, was one of the most selfish and heartless of the " brilliant women," the glory of the Parisian saloons of the 17th and iSth centuries. " 1 am persuaded," said ^ladame de Sable, " that men without criminality may feel and demonstrate the tendercst sentiments for the lady of (heir heart, and fancy. I maintain that the desire of pleasing women insj)ires tlie grandest and noblest actions; and that it imparts wit, liberality, and countless virhu^s. A\()mcn, being the gems and orna- ments of the world, arc created to become the reci- j)ients of such homage ; they may therefore accept, and ought to encourage adoration and service ; which, however, they need repay only by innocent condescen- sions." Such a code was repugnant to the jealous tem- ])erof the King; isolated, and living at the Louvre, as her sister-in-law the Queen of S})ain, lived in the seclu- sion of El Escorial, Anne might have ruled Louis XIIL and France ; but the frolics of the court, and the etourdcries of the Queen offended the King's sus- ceptibilities, which became further aggrieved by the ironical expostulations with which Anne met his remonstrances. "The admiration shown for me by ]Mi\L les Dues de ]\Iontmorency and de Bellegarde, is only a just tribute to the attractions of their 72 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1017— queen !"* exclaimed Anne, proudly. Louis also tartly reprimanded his consort for permitting tlie assi- duities of Monsieur ; inasmucli as her coquetting and ridicule, he said, rendered the Duke more averse than ever to offer suitable devoirs to his betrothed wife Marie de Bourbon Montpensier ; an alliance approved, and desired by the Queen- mother, and by himself. Mademoiselle de j\Iont- pensier being the richest heiress in France, it had been deemed imperative by Henri IV. that the succession to so many duchies should neither lapse to a subject ; nor be possessed by a foreign prince. Henriette, Duchess de Joyeuse, in her own right, and dowager of JNIontpensier, had taken for her second husband the Duke de Guise ; her daughter, therefore, was receiving her education with her half brothers and sisters of Lorraine. The little heiress was plain, pale, and insij)id, triste in humour, small, slightly deformed in person, totally unable to comprehend, and even feeling friirhtencd at the brilliant sallies of her affianced loi'd. The Queen disparaged her future sister-in-law, * " Le Due de Montmorency ^tait tres assidn auijres d'Anne d'Au- triclie ; il fit meme le passiond. Loiiis en parut alanne ; et les amis du Due lui conseillerent de s'absenter de la cour, ]\Iarie de' Medici se char- geant de convaincre son fils que ee bruit injurieux i la jeiine reine n'etait qu'iuie imposture des ennemis de Montmorency." — Anquetil, Tallemant. Madame de Motteville allows tliat the Duke permitted himself great liberty towards the Queen, under the cloak of what was termed " la galanterie espagnole." 1625.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 73 and did all she could to render Monsieur indifferent ; "because," argued her Majesty, "if the future Madame brings her hu.sl)and children, 1 shall fall in public esteem, and suffer deeper political insignificance." Nevertheless, on the hint of her royal consort, whose wrath subdued even Anne's assurance, her ]\lajesty attempted to persuade the young Duke t'o seek the society of his aftianced. The Queen-mother and her policy, meantime, con- tiiuied to be in the ascendant. The death of the Car- dinal de Retz, and of the Keeper of the Seals Du Vic, creatures of the late Constable de Luynes, enabled ]\Iaric to extend her patronage. The sword of Constable was given to Lesdiguiercs on his abjuration of the Calvinist faith ; and the ]\[arquis de Mcuville, an old adherent of the Queen's, received the seals. The Chancellor de Sillery was banished from the court ; and, at the \n-gent demand of the Queen- mother, Richelieu was admitted a member of the privy council. ]\Iarie had demanded a cardinal's liat for her protege after the signature of the peace of Angers. De Luynes promised the interest of the French c;overiuuent with the IIolv See : but as the King manifesteil displeasure at the elevation of Riche- lieu, whom he was wont to designate " an officious meddler," a private letter was addressed to Lis Holi- ness to neutralise the effect of the public demand. 74 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1617— Richelieu discovered the intrigue through the cele- brated Capuchin, Father Joseph de Tremblay,* and meekly informed his patroness. Upon this Marie promptly proposed a marriage between M. Combalet, nephew of de Luynes, with Mademoiselle de Pont dc Courlay,t the niece of Richelieu, and thus won the true support of de Luynes. All persons, therefore, being, as the Queen hoped, propitiated, a second application had been made to his Holiness. During the interval the Constable de Luynes died. Louis, therefore, advised by Conde of this fresh application, again dispatched a message throngh Corsini, the papal nuncio, to the effect " that he should not feel aggrieved if his Holiness deemed it advisable, and found excuses, to refuse this request." Again the royal duplicity was discovered by Richelieu, and confided to the Queen-mother. Marie entered her son's cabinet in a passion of resentment : she drew the most disastrous picture of the condition of France ; and her eulogy of " the humble prelate * Francois Leclerc de Tremblay, bom in Paris, Nov. ith, 1577, son of Jean Leclerc de Tremblay, French Ambassador at Venice, chancellor of the Duke d'Alengon, brother of Heniy III., and of Marie de la Fayette, daughter of Claude de la Fayette, Sieur de St. Romain. He took the habit of St. Francis, February 2, 1509, and entered '22. The astute Richelieu had no sooner received the insignia of his cardinalate from the hand of his sovereign, at Lyons, than he prostrated himself at the feet of ^Lu'ie de' ^ledici : " Gracious Majesty ! this purple, which I owe to your ]\lajesty, will be ever before my eyes as a symbol of the solemn vow which I have made, and uow renew, to shed every drop of i\iy blood, if uecessary, in your service ! " The joy of Marie was intense : the mother of the King — mother, and trusted ally of ^lonsieur heir-presumptive — the mistress of Richelieu, and able to command at will that glorious intellect and unrivalled daring — ]\Iarie miglit well consider her newly-recovered power^ steadfast and immoveable ! The rule of the Cardinal de Richelieu commenced. ILs first process of government was to exhibit to the timid and suspicious Louis the volcano beneath his throne ; and to direct his startled gaze on the swarm 76 THE MAP.HIED LIFE OF [1617— of malcontents which stung, and ravaged his fair heritage and prerogatives. RicheUeu displayed ter- rible pictures : the revolt and arrogance of the great peers, wliose ambition shook the throne ; the treason of the Huguenots of the realm — their tenure of fortified places by treaty ; their alliances with foreign powers ; and their insolent demand for separate political and synodical action. He then changed the scene to the domestic disqnietndes of the court — the towering- ambition of ]\rarie de' Me- dici, the Cardinal observed, no faiihful minister of Louis XHL might ignore ; the levity and Spanish inclinations of the reigning Queen ; the ambition and frivolity of the heir-presumptive, whose vanity might betray him into the toils of unprincipled men ! Every one of these bristling thorns pierced the heart of the King. The Cardinal's system Avith Marie de' Medici was, to bemoan the suspicions and illiberality of the King his royal master ; liis head- strong will and lack of filial deference ; the cunning of Conde ; the insecurity of her Majesty's position ; and the high promise of Monsieur. Por a season this course of tactics succeeded with ]\Iarie de' Me- dici ; but the Queen required the Cardinal's deeds to accord with his words ; and his actions to follow, or at any rate to assimilate with his predictions — a con- sequence overlooked, in his astuteness, by RichcHeu. lG-15.] AXNE OF AUSTRIA. 77 The court was divided by the new law-giver into two camps — liis friends, and his enemies. For the former no caresses and privileges were deemed too high a boon : for the latter, mendacity could not sufficiently blacken their motives and character; or persecution and ruin too thoroughly overthrow their j)rospects. The meek humility of Richeheu's manner towards his household dependants ; the deferential homage which, at the commencing of his power, he j)aid to the high })crsonagcs of the court ; and the tri[)Ic velvet with which he encased the potent hand so terrible in its blows, enabled the first years of his ministry — his initiation in office — to glide away with but little notice, and no opposition. The method which Richelieu is recorded to have taken in order to propitiate and to gain the favour of Aime of Austria is so extraordinary, and opposed to his intercourse with his royal patron during the following decade of years, that it is difficidt to l)clieve a fact, which is related and affirmed by trustworthy historians, and chroniclers of the l)eriod. It is asserted that Richelieu attempted to strengthen his position by commencing an intrigue with the wife of his soverei2;n. There is no doubt that the isolated position of the young and fas- cinating Queen, estranged from her royal husband partly through his strange caprices, and exactions. 78 THE MAKRIED LIFE OF [1617— and badly counselled by her friend and confidente Madame de Chevreuse, offered a tempting lure to the vicious, and unscrupulous. Richelieu hated Monsieur the heir-presumptive, with bitter hatred — at first, for some rude words of sarcasm, the more galling as fall- ing from boyish lips ; and because he descried in the disposition of the Duke a fretfulness which convinced him that so restless, and volatile a spirit never would retain its subjection to the will of any minister. Richelieu's admiration was calmly accepted, it is said, by Anne, as a homage rendered to her charms ; and as incense offered by the first minister to the poli- tical personage which she never ceased from aspiring to become. " The Queen," says Anne's ardent friend and apologist, Madame de Motteville, " confessed to me that in her youth she never could comprehend that what is called VJionncte (jalanterie could be blameable, any more than the liberty enjoyed by Spanish ladies of the court of Madrid ; who, living like nuns in the palace, and never speaking of men but ill the presence of the King or Queen of Spain, yet boast of their conquests ; and discourse upon them as facts calculated rather to enhance their reputation, than to defame it." Anne related to Madame de Motteville, in days when the memory of the sore trials of her youtli had almost faded from the mind of the mother of Louis XIV., that one ]f]25.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 79 (lay Richelieu was craving her friendship, and assist- ance with an air too gallant and animated, and witii words of passionate admiration, and that she, who detested him, was preparing to answer in con- temptuous anger, when the door opened, and the King appeared. Anne added, that she never after reverted to the subject, fearing to do the Cardinal too much honour by appearing to remember his presumption; "but I did myself infinite injury with the King my consort ; for the bad offices of j\I. le Cardinal increased our niisundcrstandin2;s."* Riclic- lieu, it might be imagined, would have been the last man to hivolve himself in the meshes of a perilous intrigue : but it is asserted, that the Cardinal, at this period, was consumed with a frantic admira- tion for his young mistress ; and that Anne, whose heart remained untouched, anuiscd herself by ridi- culing and s})uriiing this foible. But for certain suspicious incidents which occurred between the pair, years after this event, and when the Car- dinal's passion was supposed to be extinct, the episode would seem too improbable to challenge * " Le Cardinal haissait Monsieiir ; et craignant, vu le peu de sante qiie le Roi avait, qu'il ne parvint a la couronne, il fit dessein de gagner la Reine. Poiir parvenir a son but, il la mit sans qu'elle sut d'ou cela venait fort mal avec le Roi et avec la Reine-mere, jusqne-la qu'elle etait fort maltraitee de I'un et de I'autre. Apres il lui fit dire, jmr Madame de Fargis, dame d'atoiu's, que si eUe vouloit, il le tireroit bientot de la misere dans laquelle elle vivoit." — Tallemant, t. 2, p. 282. 80 THE MAKRIED LIFE OF [1G17— belief. The evil influences of Madame de Chevreuse were fast dissipating the decorous reserve of Anne's manners ; and vitiating her mind. Anne had learned to love her and to trust her, as the forlorn cling to the one bright, and genial object which cheers their existence. Marie de Rohan was now devoted to the Queen. Anne's enemies were her foes ; and the beautiful, strong-minded woman would have given her life, as she eventually sacrificed fortune, for the sake of her royal mistress. Intrigue, unhappily, occupied the mind of the Duchess ; and, incor- rigible in her vanity, Marie succeeded too well in diverting the melancholy of the Queen by the recital of her forbidden diversions. When condoled with by her intimates on the indolence, and pompous empti- ness of the Duke her husband, Madame de Chevreuse replied promptly, '' Je men endommage !" Subse- quent to this period Madame de Chevreuse engaged in a correspondence with the handsome Earl of Hol- land, then Lord Rich, who had visited France in 1G22, to negotiate for the Rochellois ; and who returned in 1624 as one of the ambassadors sent to confer on the marriage of Ilenriette Marie de France, with Charles, Prince of Wales. In their correspondence these persons naturally wrote much concerning the leading personages of their respective courts, and Anne of Austria, and George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, 1G2.':;.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 81 the favourite of James I. of England, often afforded a tlicrae for the writers. The magnificence of VilHers, his beauty of person and chivah'ous cha- racter, is l)ehcved, even at this period, to have made a deep impression on the fancy of the Qnecn. Buckingham, also, she was told, was joined to a partner uncongenial, and incapable of appre- ciating his rare powers, Anne believed this hero- W()r.shi[) to be blameless, — the great ocean separated her from Buckingham, — besides, it invested the correspondence of ]\Iadanie de Chevreuse with a personal interest. The Queen, therefore, imagined (liat she might fearlessly accept the messages of her admirer; and reciprocate la belle (jalanterie, without dread of the spies, and the reprimands of the Louvre. While Anne Avas thus indulging in soft blandish- ments, she, with her imprudent contidentc, ventured upon all kinds of malicious minaudcries towards the Cardinal. They dared to jest with, and ridicule his professions ; and to devise des pidts d' amour, into which they devoutly lioped he might fall. One day the flippant Duchess told his Eminence that her Majesty would be charmed, she thought, to see a churchman arrayed in cloth of silver, — (/ris de Ua ! Still farther, these thoughtless women are said to have indulged their mirth. The Count de Brienne 82 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1617— is the relater of the anecdote, which he thus retails : * ''The Queen and her confidente were at this time mad with fun and froHc. One day, when they were convers- ing together, and coukl talk and laugh at nothing, save at the expense of the amorous Cardinal, Madame de Chevreuse said, ' He is, I assure you, passionately smitten, and I know of nothing which he would not do to please your Majesty. Shall I send him here some evening, dressed en baladin, to dance a saraband? Shall I ? Would your Majesty like it ?' ' What folly! ' replied the Queen : nevertheless, Anne was young, she was a woman, she was full of spirit and fun, and the idea diverted her. The great minister, although he had in hand all the politics of Europe, could not defend his heart from the assaults of love. He accepted the singular rendezvous proposed by the Duchess — for already he believed himself secure of conquest. Boccan, who played admirably on the violin, was summoned. Secrecy was impressed upon him, but when are such secrets kept? Hichelieu appeared clad in pantaloons of green velvet : at his garters hung silver bells, on his hands were cas- tanets, and he danced the saraband, which Boccan played. The Queen and her favourite, attended by * Mem. de Brienne, t. 1, p. 274. " On rioit a gorge deployee ; et qui pouvait s'en empeclier, puisque apres ciuquante aus j'en ris eucore moi- meme ? " asks the Count de Brienne, when he ends his story. 1625.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 83 Vauticr and hy Beringlien, remained concealed be- liind a screen, tlirougli wliicli the gestures and movements of the dancer were seen ! " The Cardinal speedily detected the cscajjades of which he had become the victim, and resented the insult ; at any rate, his project of captivating the mind of the giddy young Queen had failed. " She rejected," he complained, "his friendship, his paternal care ; and, in the haughtiness of her Austrian blood, despised his counsels." If Richelieu failed, as recorded by de Brienne and other chroniclers, to obtahi power over tlu; mind of Anne of Austria, it is certain that the minister discerned a way- wardness in her character, which convinced him of the necessity of compassing her subjugation by rougher, and more arbitrary measures. Fate did not long withhold from the unscrupulous minister the power which he coveted. The treaty with England, by which a daughter of Henri IV. was given to Charles I., was finally signed in I'liris, March 13, 1G.25, after the death of .Tames I.; who had previously subscribed the marriage contract of his heir, with Henriette ]\Iarie. The Earls of Car- lisle and Holland were the ambassadors sent by- Charles to sign, on his behalf, the articles and the private arrangements agreed to between the courts ; and to be present at the marriage ceremony, which G 2 84 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1617— took place, May 11th, 1625, on a platform of state raised before the portal of Notre Dame. IMadame de Chevreuse had been the great promoter of the alli- ance, being won over to English interests by Lord Holland, " who had," says Bishop Hacket, " an amorous temper and a wise head ; and could court it as smoothly as any man with the French ladies." Marie de' Medici also sanctioned her dauG;hter's mar- riage with a heretic prince ; and entered into the views of Richelieu ; who desired, with politic fore- sight, to wrest from the Huguenots of the realm their great ally, by uniting the crowns in matri- monial alliance. The young Queen at first declared herself inimical to the alliance, on account of her sister the Infanta Marguerite, whom she held to have been betrayed, and deserted by King Charles. Persuaded by IMadame de Chevreuse, Anne, swayed by a multitude of motives, at length cordially con- gratulated her sister-in-law, Avhose society, never- theless, she seems to have seldom sought ; and declared herself "so truly French as to prefer* the alliance of Charles with Henriette, rather than that with her own sister jMadame I'lnfante,* for whom she had other views ! " King James, before his decease, had issued a command to the Duke of Buck- ingham, " to get the English fleet in order, to brhig * The Infanta Marg'uerite espoused the Emperor Ferdiuaud III. 1(325.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 85 over our dearly belovd daughter, the priucess Hen- rietta : " a mandate confirmed by the new sovereign, Avho was even more infatuated than his father, with tlie superb favourite. Great was the sensation at the French court when it was announced th;it the Duke, the dispenser of the revenues of three potent rcahns, was about to sliine in Paris, Many a heart throbbed in expectation of the visit ; and amongst tliose whose anticipations were perhaps the keenest, \\as tlie fair Queen of France, and her companion, ]\Iadame de Chevreuse. At this period Anne possessed as Httle influence in the state as her friend — perhaps, indeed, a less degree of power — because Madame de Chevreuse lavished Avit, beauty, and wealth to win adherents ; and was fettered by no scruples. The King seldom saw his consort in private. He Avas often absent from Paris on short military cam- })aigns ; and when resident at the Louvre, Anne Avas too petulant and resentful to submit to his brusijKcrie ; or too impatient to devote herself to the task of soothing his melancholy, or of sharing the dreary conversation, and still more dreary musical entertainment of two guitars, and a violin, which often whiled away the evenings in his Majesty's apart- ments. Louis had nothinii: to sav to a vounr>- and beautiful woman : he loved to sit in silent abstrac- 86 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1617— tion, and disliked the presence of ladies. His praises of Richelieu incensed the Queen; as did also his habitual abuse of Spain, and the dynasty of Ilaps- burg, whose overthrow, he was wont to declare, it was the high mission of France to accomplish. This indifference between the royal couple enabled Riche- lieu to insert .the wedge of a still more entire dis- union : the minister and the Queen-mother inspired the mind of Louis with distrust of his wife ; and Anne did nothing to kindle love, or to command respect. The Duke de Chevreuse had been appointed as the proxy of King Charles to wed Henriette ; he was also, with tlie duchess his wife, chosen to conduct Queen Henriette to Dover, to meet her newly espoused lord. The duke's wealth and splendid jewels, was the public reason assigned for the distinc- tion conferred upon him ; for Madame de Chevreuse possessed, by the bequest of her first husband, the diamonds of the unfortunate Marquise d'Ancre. One evening Lord Holland visited the Duke de Chevreuse unexpectedly, and found him, with his consort, dressed for a masque at the Louvre ; " but never did I before behold such jewels, and never again expect to see such profusion adorning the per- sons of subjects ! " * The duchess coveted the am- * Thomson's Life of George Villiers, Diikc of Buckingham. 1C2.>.] AXNE OF AUSTRIA. 87 bassage to the court of England, not so much to dis- play her diamonds, as the lustre of her eyes before the admiring gaze of Lord Holland ; a fact, which she scrupled not to confess. The marriage ceremony of the Princess Marie Henriette remained a memo- rable pageant to Queen Anne of Austria ; as on this occasion only, during the reign of her consort, did she publicly enjoy the magnificence and appareil of her })osition as Queen-consort. At this ceremony, never- theless, she was compelled to yield precedence " to Marie de' Medici.* The charming bride. Princess llerniette, won, by her grace and amiability, the praise of the English ambassadors. " ]\Iy lord," wrote Lord Holland to the Duke of Buckingham, " I protest that she is a lovely, and sweet young creature. Her gi'owth is not great, but they all swear that her sister, the Princess of Piedmont (Madame Christine), was not taller than she is at her age." f In most of his despatches Holland mentions Anne of Austria ; so that the imagination of Buckingham, by the time he aiTived in Prance, fired by dwelling on the beauty, the wrongs, and the isolation of the Queen, was ready to assign evil significance to every kindly overture * Godefroy, Grand Cerem. de France, t. 2. Mercnre de France, ann. \C^2'>. "Apres siuvait la reine de France tres superbenaent vttiie d'nne robe de toile d'ai'gent en broderie ; menee et couduite par se.s deux ecnyers." f Thomson's Life of the Duke of Buckingham. «8 THE MAinUED LIFE OF [1617- tendered by her Majesty. Rumours of the superb retinue appointed to attend the Duke of Buckingham, excited curiosity, and interest in Paris. It was ironi- cally said " that King Louis must vacate his Louvre, to afford space for the Duke and his suite ! " On the 24th of May, Buckingham entered Paris ; his suite consisted of seven hundred persons ! He was accompanied by the Marquis of Hamilton, by his brother-in-law the Earl of Denbigh, and by six gentlemen, sons of noble families. His equipages consisted of three coaches lavishly gilt and adorned, drawn each by eight horses. Buckingham was also attended by a band of musicians ; and by his staff of Thames watermen — twenty-two in number — clad in rich liveries. For his personal attire, Buckingham made elaborate preparation ; " for, my lord, they are here so fine, so curious, and so magnificent, that your Excellency will be much pleased," had been the report of Gerbier, steward of the Duke's household, sent by his master to purchase paintings, and goldsmiths' work in Prance. " For his body, my lord had twenty-seven suits embroidered and laced with silk and silver plushes ; besides one satten uncut velvet suit, set all over, both suit and cloak, with diamonds, the value whereof is thought to be about 10,000 pounds. He has, moreover, a feather made with great diamonds ; a sword-girdle, hat-band, and 1625.] AXXE OF AUSTRIA. 89 spurs, all studded with diamonds ; and another rich suit of purple satten embroidered 'with fine pearls." * The nohlc, and handsome face of Buckingham beamed with delight, Avhen, after making his obeisance to the King and the Qucen-mollicr in the great hall of the Louvre, he inclined before the fair young sovereign, whose attractions had so stimulated his vanity, and presumption. The jealous and carping spirit of the French cavaliers found no rallying point as they be- held the personal gifts of Villiers, and the kingly carriage " of the handsomest-bodied man of Eng- land." The polish of his address, which Clarendon lauds as " sweet and accostable," and his generosity and magnificence, were noted with admiration. Nevertheless, the pomp afiected by the Duke kindled the ire of his entertainers ;f and his gifts, which were at first accepted with gratitude, ofiended by their prodigality. The impression made on the Duke by the charms of Anne of Austria increased his infatuation ; while Anne herself imprudently gave him every oppor- tunity of access to her presence. Madame de Chevreuse continued to be the arch-temptress, and * Bassompierre. Mem. d'lin Favoiy du Due d'Orleans : ecrit par M. de Bois d'Anneraets — I'heiu-eux Favory. Thomson's Life of the Didie of Buckingham. Cabala MS., 312. t The Duke was hospitably entertained by the Duke de Chevreuse at his hotel, Rue St. Thomas du Louvre. 90 THE MAKRIED LIFE OF [1617— persuaded her royal mistress, at the suggestion, it is said, of Lord Holland, that to flatter and encou- rage the passion of the Duke would tend to the glory of France ; inasmuch as the Queen, reigning over the heart of Buckingham, would govern the counsels of King Charles. Nevertheless, the Queen admitted the reality of Buckingham's attentions with reluctance, Madame de Motteville asserts, that no treason to her husband and King entered the imagination of Anne of Austria. The Duke was handsome, and the pearl of European chivalry; and, by the extraordinary familiarity in which he lived with King Charles, was admitted by other monarchs to intimate freedoms. Proud, therefore, of her conquest — and glad, perhaps, to exhibit before her husband's eyes the homage which her charms excited in the bosom of the most fastidious of cavaliers — Anne acted on the evil counsel of Madame de Chevreuse, forgetting her queenly rank. " The Dake of Buckingham," relates Madame de Motteville,* whose mother, at this period, held the office of bed-chauiber woman to Anne of Austria, "had the audacity to attack her Majesty's heart. He was tall, well-made, handsome, noble, spirited, * Mem. de Madame de Motteville, t. I. Madame de Slotte-sdlle was not an eye-witness of the facts she records, as she had not then permanently entered into the service of the Queen. She records the reminiscences and confessions of Anne of Austria. It was in the year 16-10 that Madame de Motteville became resident bed-chamber woman to the Queen. 102.').] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 91 mngnificent, liberal, and the favourite of a great king. He had the spending of all his master's trea- sure, with the loan of all the crown jewels of England to adorn his person. Is it marvellous, therefore, that, possessed of so many aiiiial)le (jualities, his aim was high ? or that he indulged in noble, but dangerous and blameable, desires? If the happiness was his of persuading those around that his homage was not im- portunate, we must presume that his aspirations were received, as the Divinities of old were said to accept the offerings of mortals — that is to say, that their devotees remained in ignorance whether their homage was acceptable, or the reverse. The Queen made no secret of these events ; but has without reserve con- fessed to me that in her youth (though the illusion is noAV dissipated) she did not comprehend that what is termed I'honnete gnlanfcrie could be wrong, when no pledges were given or accepted." The experi- ment was a dangerous one, as Anne was not long in discovering ; for the penetrating eye of Richelieu com- prehended the insolence of the aspirations cherished by Buckingham. He beheld with mingled satisfac- tion, and perhaps jealousy, the condescensions of the Queen ; for he perceived that no artifice could more certainly serve him to neutralise Anne's enmity, and to annul her influence, than to arouse the jealous ire of Louis XIII. as to his consort's inclination for the 92 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1617— Duke personally ; and licr relations with him as the ambassador of the English king. Moreover, a scene of levity in the gardens of the Louvre, most dis- graceful in Anne's position as Queen of Trance, came to the ears of the minister ; and which, years afterwards, was related in detail by Madame de Chev- reuse to the famous coadjutor, Cardinal de Retz, and is recorded by him, doubtless with much pro- flicrate exaor^eration, in the orio;inal edition of his Memoirs. The homage and adulations of all the ladies of the capital seem well-nigh to have turned the ill-poised mind of the Duke of Buckingham. The beautiful Madame de Chevreuse divided her condescensions between himself and her old lover Lord Holland ; the Duchess de Guise regaled him by sumptuous banquets and masques ; the Queen- mother did the honours of her Luxeml^ourg to so privileged a guest ; Madame de Sable held recep- tions in his honour, in which the wit and learning of the capital were arrayed for his delectation ; and the brothers de Luynes, Dukes de Chaulnes, and de Luxembourg, placed their establishments at his dis- posal. Conde held festivals at Chantilly in his honour; the new constable Duke de Lesdiguieres, and his ple- beian but hearty consort Marie JMignot, welcomed the splendid ambassador and his suite. Anne of Austria 1(>25.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 93 was gracious ; liis majesty King Louis, smiled grimly on the genial representative of his brother- in-law ; and Queen Henriette Marie left nothing to be desired in her anxiety to propitiate the favourite, who ruled the court of England. No wonder that l^uckingham, amid these fair and witty dames, forgot his "silly Kate;"* and was in no haste to exchange the revels of the Louvre, for those of Whitehall, His sojourn in Paris, however, did not exceed eight days. The royal bride then left the Louvre, en route for Calais, where she was to embark for England. The ([ueens Marie, and Anne, were to accompany Hen- riette, and to say farewell at Calais. Richelieu re- mained in Paris ; while the King, after taking leave of his sister, repaired to Eontaineblean, where the court was to assemble on returning from Calais. On the second day of June, K).^^, a magnificent cavalcade quitted the Louvre and defiled through the gates of Paris, on the high road towards Amiens. The royal suite comprised the Duke and Duchess de Clievreuse, Mesdames de Launay, de Boissiere, de Guerchcville, and de St. George; the Dukes de Belle- garde, de la Eorce, and d'Elbocuf ; and the Duke of Buckingham and his colleagues. Lords Carlisle and Holland. At Amiens the royal progress was arrested * The name gi\'eu to the Duchess of Buckingham iu their cor- respondence l)y King Charles and her husband. 94 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1C17- by the sudden indisposition of Marie de' Medici. The court therefore, halted for the space of a few days, that the Queen-mother might be able to resume her journey to Calais. " ]\Iarie lodged in the episcopal palace ; Anne of Austria in a house with a large garden attached, on the banks of the Somme. Buck- ingham, meantime, acted the despairing and dis- tracted lover, at the prospect of his approaching separation from the young Queen, "that fairest and sweetest of sovereigns ;" and to put the mildest construction on Anne's conduct, it must have been volatile and giddy to a degree, which might warrant most injurious inferences. There seems to be little doubt but that her heart and fancy were touched by the devotion of Buckingham ; who talked in ex- alted strains of the political wonders which he would achieve for France, as a tribute to her charms. The life of the Queen had Ijeen hitherto so joyless and uncongenial, that probably the very glow of her gratitude at the Duke's homage, may have incited him to bolder enterprise. Festivals, meantime, diver- sified the sojourn of the court at Amiens, The bap- tism of the eldest son of the Duke de Chauhies* was celebrated by a fete given at the citadel. The * Honore cV Albert, Seigneur de Cadenet, created Duke de Chaulues on his man-iage with Charlotte d'Ailly, Couutess de Chaulne« and do Pequiny. The King gave him the government of Picardy. 1G25.] AXXE OF AUSTRIA. 95 sponsors of the young heir were the three queens, IMarie, Anne, and Ilenriette, and Monsieur. Bucking- ham on this occasion appeared in magnificence truly regal, " portant le })lus bel habillement, et mieux assorti que se verra jamais !" He wore the collars and badges of four Orders — the Garter, the St. Esprit, tlic Golden Meece, and the Order of St. George. His hat was adorned with a heron's plume blazing Avitli diamonds, and fastened by a cluster of five of the largest diamonds belonging to the British crown. A ball followed the banquet, which was opened by Buckingham and the Queen, ^Monsieur dancing with his sister, Queen Hcnriette. ]\Iadame de Chevreusc followed, led by Lord Holland ; and the Duke dc Chaulnes danced with the young Duchess d'Elboeuf.* The next day ]\Ionsieur gave a sumptuous entertain- ment. At the conclusion of the banquet, Buckingham and the English ambassadors escorted Queen Anne to her abode. In the 2;ardcn on the banks of the Sonimc, in the soft June moonlight, another suspicious interview between the Queen and the Duke of Buck- ingham ensued ; which produced a disastrous impres- sion even on her Majesty's truest friends, who felt how ungenerously the Duke had compromised their royal mistress. It appears that the Queen, attended by * Catherine Heiiriettc de Bourbon, daughter of lleuri Quatre and Gabrielle d'Estrces. The Duchess died June 20, 1(5G3. 96 THE MAIJPJED LIFE OF [1C17— the Duchess de Chevreiise, by her lady-in-waiting, Madame du Vernet, and by her equerry, M. de Putange, and accompanied by the Duke of Bucking- ham, and by Lord Holland, strolled into the garden at dusk hour. The Duke led the Queen ; Madame de Chevreuse was escorted by Holland ; and Madame du Vernet by M. de Putange. It was the duty of this last named person never to lose sight of his royal mistress, but to be always ready to perform any slight service \^'hich she might require. Nothing at first occiu'red to disturb the serenity of the pro- menaders : the Queen and her cavalier, with the other personages of the suite, reposed for some time on chairs by the river side, enjoying the refreshing breeze. Anne at length rose, and was led by the Duke into an alley shaded on one side by lofty elms, and on the other, closed by a tall trellis covered with creeping plants. Instead of following the Queen, Madame de Chevreuse and her cavalier turned into another sombre walk ; while M. de Putange and his companion discreetly remained seated where they were, not wishing to intrude on the conversation of such illustrious personages — the more so, as Putange declared that he supposed M. de Buckingham had some message to impart to her Majesty before his departure, which was fixed for the foUowins: dav. In a few minutes the voice of the I(i25.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 97 Queen was heard summoning her equerry. ^la- dame de Vernet and Putange hastened to join their royal mistress, whom they found agitated and discomposed ; while Buckingham, with his hand grasping the hilt of his sword, leaned defiantly against the trellis. Anne ])cgan to reprimand her latly and her equerry for having quitted her ; but when respectfully asked the cause of her alarm, her Majesty re})lied in confusion, "that its cause was, sur- prise at finding herself alone with M. I'Ambassadeur." " The Duke of Buckingham," relates J^a Porte,* an e(pierry who was in attendance on the Queen at Amiens, " finding himself alone with her ]\Iajesty, and favoured by the gathering obscurity, took the insolent liberty of attenq)ting to kiss the Queen, Avho immediately cried out, so that aid quickly ar- rived. Putange, ecpierry in waiting, was not far away ; and doubtless the consequences might have been perilous had not Putange permitted the said Duke to retiie. Everybody in the garden soon gathered on the spot ; then everybody fled, and * La Porte, -who was coufideutiallj- trusted by the Queen, and who was then an inmate of her abode in Amiens, gives the following relation of the adventnre : — " Apres s'etre bien promenee la reine se rejjosa qiielquo temps, et toutes les dames aussi ; puis elle se levait et dans le toiu-ne- ment d'une allee oii les dames ne la suivirent pas, sitot le due de Buck- ingham se voyant seul avec elle a la favem* de robscurite qui conimeu- 9ait k chasser la lumiere, s'emancipa fort insolemment jusqu'a vouloir caresser la reine, qui en meme temps fit un cri auquel tout le monde accourut." — Mem. Particuliers de La Porte : Geneve, 17.5('.. 98 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1017— it was resolved to suppress all mention of the matter." * " Chance," says the methodical Madame de Motte- ville, the confidente of Anne's more sober years, " having led her Majesty with the Duke of Bucking- ham into a walk concealed by a tall trellis or pali- sade, the Queen, surprised at finding herself alone, and doubtless importuned and frightened by some too passionate expressions from the Duke, cried out aloud, and calling her equerry, blamed him for having neglected to follow her. By this cry her Majesty demonstrated her wisdom and virtne, prefer- ring unsullied innocence and self-respect, rather than to yield to the prompting of fear which possessed her, lest her cry of distress, coming to the ears of the King, might cost her much sorrow. If on this occasion," continues Anne's warm apologist, " her Majesty betrayed that her heart was susceptible of some tenderness for the man who adored her, it must be owned that her love for virtuous purity, and pro- priety prevailed."! The following day, Buckingham quitted Amiens with Queen Henrietta. Marie and Anne escorted the bride for a distance of one leajTue on her road, for the Queen-mother continued too unwell to * Ibid., Mem. de La Porte. t Mem. de Motteville, tome I . The Duke de la Rocliefoucauld also relates the iucident, which created uuspeakaljle consternation and com- ment. He says, " Que la reine fut contrainte d'appeler ses femmes." 1625.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 99 make the entire journey to Calais, and King Charles was beginning to be impatient, and to wonder at the delay of his bride. " The Queen did me the honour to confide to me," says Madame de Mottevillc, " that when the Duke of Buckingham presented himself to say a last farewell, and to kiss her robe, she was sitting on the front seat of her coach, with the Princess dc Conty by her side ; and that the said Duke hid his foce behind the curtain, as if to speak a few words in private, but in reality to conceal his tears, which were falhng plentifully. The Piincess de Conty then said that she could answer to the King for the virtue of the Queen ; though she could not speak so positively of the hardness of her heart, as the tears of the Duke evidently affected her spirits." Enough had, however, been done, and said, to render very bitter the future life of Anne of Austria ; and to fill the mind of Louis XIII. with suspicion. From the period of the advent of Richelieu to power, the young Queen was always attended by his shadow, in the person of a household spy and informer ; but who the person then was thus employed by his Eminence, does not clearly appear, though probably it was Madame de Vernet.* * Nicolette d'Albert, youngest sister of the Constal)le de Luynes ; she espoused M. Veniet, a person of low origin, dancing-master to the pages of the Duke de Montmorency. Mademoiselle d'Albert, previous to her 100 THE MARRIED LTFE OF [1017— The Duke of Orleans, and all the chief noblemen in attendance at Amiens, accompanied Queen Henrietta to Bonlogne, leaving their Majesties with a very limited suit. Tempestuous winds, however, unfor- tunately prevented the embarkation of the Queen of England. The English fleet lay at anchor in Boulogne roads, having landed the Duchess of Buckingham, the Countess of Denbigh, and the Marchioness of Hamilton, who had been despatched by King Charles to pay homage to their royal mistress. The delay lasted for more than a week ; during which Anne frequently corresponded with Madame de Chevreuse, and sent her letters by La Porte. " I came and I returned," says the latter ; "I carried letters to Madame de Chevreuse, and re- turned with her replies, which appeared to be of the utmost consequence, because Queen Anne ordered M. le Due de Chaulnes to take care that the gates of Amiens were never closed, so that I might not be delayed at any hour, even in the night."* Anne at the time when she issued so unusual an order, little dreamed of the construction likely to be attached thereto. A prey to the wildest grief at quitting m.iiTiag-o, had greatly compromised her reputation. She was handsome and sprightly, and tlu'ough her brother's influence was appointed dame d'atours to the Queen ; while her husband was made Governor of Calais. She subsequently married Henri de la Marck Due de Bouillon, through the favour of Richelieu. * Mem. Particuliers de M. de La Porte. 1025.J ANNK OF AUSTltlA. 101 France, Buckiiigliaiii dctcniiiiicd to bid one more dis- tracted adieu " to the fairest vision which had ever gladdened his sight." An express from his master King Charles, served as an excuse for his sudden return to Amiens with La Porte, accompanied by Lord Holland ; inider pretext that he was t)rdered to consult the Queen-mother on some matter, as he said, relative to the reception in London of Cardinal de Berulle, and of Henrietta's unwelcome suit of ecclesiastics. Madame de Chevreusc, meantime, de- spatched private letters to Anne of Austria, warn- ing her of Buckingham's audacious intentions; and counselling her not to admit him to her presence. Buckingham's consort also sent a humble missive to Anne, accompanied by an elegant fan of feathers, adorned with the portraits of Charles L, and of her husband. AVhile the Duke proceeded to audience of Queen ]\Lu'ic, La Porte sought the abode of the young Queen, and was admitted to her ante-room. Anne was in bed, having recently been bled ; she took the letters from La Porte with an indifferent air, and exclaimed, after perusnig them, hearing of the arrival of the Duke, " They are indeed come back, these cavaliers ; I thought that we were deli- vered finally from the society of ' ces IMessieurs ' ! " Anne, therefore, being forewarned, had leisure to deny admittance to the Duke had she been wisely 102 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1G17— iiicliiied. Having rapidly despatched liis business with the Queen-mother, Buckingham hurried to Anne's abode. The Queen was jesting with Madame de la Boissiere on the Duke's return, when he abruptly entered the apartment. Without observing the pre- liminary salutations prescribed by royal etiquette to those persons admitted to such audience, the Duke rushed forwards, and dropped on his knees by the Queen's pillow. So great apparently was Anne's surprise, that she remained silent for some moments ; and then turned an appealing look, half laughing, half weeping, at the grim matron her lady of honour, who stood in Ihe ruelle of the bed. " ' Monseigneur/ said Madame de la Launay, indignantly, ' it is not our custom to act as you are now doing ! ' * Madame, I am not a frenchman ; neither am I bound by your laws ! ' So saying," relates Madame de Motteville, "he addressed the Queen, uttering aloud tender decla- rations. Her Majesty replied by complaining of his audacity, but without perhaps showing as much anger as she ought ; but still commanding the said Duke, in severe tones, to rise, and retire from her presence."* "When I returned to her Majesty to receive her orders for the morj-ow," * Mem. de Motteville, t. 1. ir,2r>.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 103 nevertheless, relates La Porte, " I found both my English lords, who were staying much later than etiquette admitted. Madame de la Launay, the lady in- waiting, never left her Majesty's side; neither would she permit any of the attendant women, and officers of the chamber to depart, until these gentle- men had taken their leave."* Buckingham again obtained audience of Anne on the following day ; and then took his final departure for Boulogne. The young Queen of England sailed on the 22nd of June,f much to the delight of King Charles, and of his goodly company of lords and ladies, who had been waiting the arrival of the beautiful bride since the be- ginning of the month. " Queen Henrietta — so it is alleged — was detained by her mother's illness ; but if all be true that is reported, they can have made no great haste, having to march to Boulogne instead of Calais, with a little army of 4000 at least ; whereof, the Duke de Chevreuse and his folloAvers make up 300, besides GO that belong to his kitchen." On the same day the French court set out for Eontainebleau, where Louis XIIL waited. Anne * La Porte, Mem. Pai-ticiiliers. These memoirs are included in the Collection Petitot. t Mem. d'un Favory de Monseigneur le Due de OrK-ans. " C'etoit une chose atlmirable de voir se superbe appareil (de vaisseaux Auglais) ; on ne se la peut reprdsenter qu'on ne s'imagine de voir une grande ville flottaute ayant plusieurs clochers." 104 THE MAUPJED LIFE OF [1617— trembled, as she anticipated the effect which the report of the festivities at Amiens might have pro- duced on the mind of her stern consort. " The King," relates La Porte, the most faithful of all Anne's adherents, " testified the strongest jealousy at all these proceedings ; and believed the malignant interpreta- tion put upon them by her Majesty's enemies. The Queen-mother, however, tried to disabuse her son's mind ; and told him that it was nothing, for that if the Queen had desired to do evil it was impos- sible, she having had so many around her. This reason, though incontestable, did not extinguish the jealousy of the King, as he proceeded to demonstrate. " On the 20th of July, just five days after the arrival of Anne of Austria at Fontainebleau, Louis sent his confessor, le P. Segueran, to intimate to Madame de Vcrnct, his will that she should resign her office of dame cTatotirs to the Queen his consort, and retire from court. The same dismissal was given to J\L de Putange, and to the Queen's first phy- sician, Ribera,* who both departed from the palace on the same day. The Chevalier du Jars, another officer of the Queen's household, whom her Majesty had just sent to England with letters for Madame de Chevreuse, and one wliom she especially favoured, * The reason of the disgrace of Anne's Spanish physician has never been ascertained. Ribera was not permitted to remain in France. 1025.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 105 was likewise dismissed. La Porte was also included in the sentence ; his zeal for the Queen's service being well known. On the 21st of July, therefore, Segueran again made his ominous appearance at her Majesty's lever. " The King, Madame, desires that you will still dismiss another servant of your household of the name of La Porte." " The Queen looked at me very sorrowfully ; and then deshed the reverend father to say to his Majesty, that she begged him to name at once all those persons whom he would not permit her to retain, that the affair might be ended." These proceedings greatly increased the discord between the royal pair.'" Louis addressed the sharpest of written rebukes to his thoughtless consort : and even threatened her with divorce. " Teatino ! so early a visit as this to my lady Queen bodes no good. Alas ! the signs are evil !" had been the exclamation of iJona Estephania, Anne's Spanish tirewoman and nurse, when she had admitted Father Segueran to the presence of her royal mistress. Anne remained at Fontaincbleau in a condition of great depression and solitude for upwards of two months. She seems to have offered no excuses to her royal husband ; while her resentment * Anne sharply observed one day to her royal consort, " Qu'elle n'avait pu emp6cher que le Duo de BoiLkingham n'eut de Testime, et meme de I'anaour d'elle ! " an observation which greatly incensed the King. 106 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1617— against Richelieu glowed fiercely. Anne, in her wrath, accused the Cardinal of seeking to sow dissension between the King and herself, to procure her divorce, so that Louis might marry Richelieu's niece, la Veuve Comhalet — a pretty but shrewish woman, who, during her uncle's despotic reign, shared his influence, and became the divinity of the politic Parisians. Richelieu made several attempts to conciliate her Majesty, and to intercede for her restoration to the good graces of her husband. Anne repulsed every overture; but drew forth her weapons of retaliation and, " offered the astute Cardi- nal war to the death.'' It might have been supposed that the chagrin and anxiety which Anne had en- dured would have taught her prudence ; instead of which, her correspondence multiplied wdth Madame de Chevreuse, who still remained in England, and with the newly-arrived Spanish Ambassador, the Marquis de Mirabel. She manifested interest in all the proceedings of the Duke of Buckingham ; and once, when some alleged act of the Duke's was acci- dentally discussed in her presence, she coolly con- tradicted the report, saying, ''je viens de recevoir de ses lettres .'" In England, also, the Duke's enthusiasm for Anne of Austria was not tempered by prudential considerations ; or by delicacy for the feelings and honour of a great monarch, the brother of his own 1C25.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 107 royal mistress, Queen Henrietta. He wore Anne's portrait ; toasted lier at the AVhiteliall banquets ; displayed her likeness in most of the chambers of his princely mansions, disregardful of the feelings of his own " silly Kate," — all uhich aberrations were duly chronicled by the French ambassador in London ; and transmitted for the perusal of the Cardinal minister, and to become the source of endless gloomy ponderings in the mind of King Louis. 108 THE MARHIED LIFE OF [1626. CHAPTER III. 1626. ANNE OF AUSTRIA AND THE CONSPIRACY OF THE FRINCE DE CHALAIS. The marriage of Madame Henriette over, tlie excitement of the com-t subsided ; and the daily incidents of the palace were varied only by the dis- sensions and reconciliations of iMarie de' Medici, and her minister. These violent spirits differed, clamoured, threatened each other with annihilation, wept, and embraced. The successful issue of Richelieu's policy in the affair of the strongholds of the Valteline, which France refused to deliver up to the Holy See, pending the settlement of the question relative to the disputed possession of these places, raised the reputa- tion of his Eminence to high repute. The important concessions, moreover, which Richelieu wrested from some of the chief Huguenots of the realm ; and his firm attitude in upholding the majesty and dignity of the crown, delighted the King, whose aspirations were despotic, though he lacked firmness to en- force his will. In the deportment of the Cai'dinal ]fi26.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 109 there was a novel ingredient wlueli astonished and awed the swarm of unruly courtiers, who had ren- dered the regency of the Queen-mother one vast cabal. Richelieu jested with the merry, wept with the melancholy, granted favours to the unfortunate ; looked downcast under verbal obloquy, and even seemed anxious to turn away wrath by the magic of a soft answer : great, therefore, had been the in- dividual surprises of certain railers, malcontents, and caballers, to find themselves suddenly transported to the Bastille by vii'tue of a privy-council warrant ; or seized in the night, and conveyed under escort to some distant chateau, all under the hand and seal of the gracious churchman, who dominated at the Louvre. Le Pere Joseph,* or F Eminence Grise, as was the sobriquet of the able tool of Richelieu — so clever, indeed, that doubt arises whether the Cardinal was not the puppet, and Le Pere Joseph the motive power in the relation between these astute men — also, was fast rising into a personage of importance ; being treated with deference by the ministers whom it had pleased Richelieu to retain at their posts. Over the life of Anne of Austria, however, the darkest blight had fallen. Her lord. King Louis, suffered her indeed to live under the shelterino; roof * Joseph Leclerc de Trcmblay, Capucin. 110 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626. of liis royal Louvre ; but he permitted her there to exist only as a political and social nLdlity, to whom the most ordinary amusements of her rank and station were denied — a Queen, who had to ask permission to quit the precincts of the palace ; who could confer no favour ; and whose splendour, even on pubhc occasions, was surpassed by that of the Queen-mother, to whom she had to yield precedence. The proud spirit of the Queen rebelled against these restrictions ; over the heart of her husband her beauty exercised no spell ; to him her vivacity was re- pellant ; while the very sound of her rich and sonorous language reminded Louis of a foe. No rival, never- theless, dominated over the heart of the boy -king ; the wanton beauties of the late reign never attracted a glance from the sad eyes of Louis XIIL ; indeed, flippancy of manner was punished by exclusion from the Louvre — a rigour which was for some time un- sparingly exercised after the scandals of Henrietta's marriage festivities. Anne's most happy time was spent in seclusion at St. Germain, where she often craved permission to sojourn, followed by a few ladies, in order to superintend the formation of the gardens planned by Henri Quatre. The Queen passionately loved flowers ;* and a similarity of taste often * Anne had a great aversion to roses, and fainted on inhaling their perfume. 1G26.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. Ill brought into her society licr young and brilliant brother-in-law, Monsieur. Impetuous in all things, Anne gave herself up to the pleasure of his society ; and discarded in favour of Monsieur most of the etiquettes which then hedged in a queen of France, even from familiarity with her husband's brother. She was heard to address Monsieur in public as mon frere ; she permitted him to kiss her hands ; to enter her presence unannounced ; she sent him letters, which she asserted related only to botany, a science in which the young Duke was an adept. In short, with girlish coquetry Anne was preparing for herself a more cruel ordeal than any she had yet undergone. Gaston, Duke of Orleans, had now attained his eighteenth year. Ileir-prcsumptive to a throne — the occupier of which was childless, and pronounced by the most learned ])hysicians of the realm to be in a condition of health, from epileptic fits and other maladies, from which fatal results might ensue at any period — Monsieur was a personage to be revered and conciliated. Fondly beloved from his youth upwards by his mother, and indulged by her without reason, the young Duke, until after the exile of Queen Marie, set discipline at defiance. The late King had nominated M. de Breves as the Grovernor of his son o 112 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1G26 — Gaston — a statesman of enlightenment, who had added to the glory of the reign of Henri Qiiatre by his able diplomacy at foreign courts. His attach- ment to Marie de' Medici rendering him suspected, de Breves was dismissed by the Constable de Luynes, who gave the office to his own early patron, the Count de Liide. M. de Lude Avas too wealthy and influential a nobleman to give that abject obedience to the royal commands expected from him ; and there- fore, soon resigned his post to the ]\Iarshal d'Or- nano, who forthwith entered on his functions, and prospered. Monsieur, on the completion of his educa- tion, became the centre of a knot of idle, insolent, and mischievous young cavaliers; who, living on their wits, and by the sufferance of certain potent dames of the court, sought to kindle the ambition of their roval master : and to uro;e him into endless schemes opposed to the government of the King, all tending to their own au'Girandisement. The leaders amonu'st these gentlemen Avere ]\IM. de Puylaurcns, de Chalois, de la Valette, de Bois d'Annemets, the Duke de Ven- dome and the Grand Prior his brother, the young Count de Lude, J\I. de Marcheville, the Count de Louvigny, and ]\IM. de Coigneux and de la Riviere, and others.* These unruly spirits professed reve- * The Count de Soissous and the Duke de Bellegarde inscri))ed them- selves of the faction of Monsieur. The i^rinces of Vendome were the sons of Henri Quatre by Gabrielle d'Estrees. 162fl.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 113 rcntial devotion for the Queens, Anne and Marie ; they sympathised with the former; and to mark such feehng attended assiduously the levers of the Spanish ambassador. The Cardinal do Richeheu they abhorred and ridiculed ; wliilc they crooned over his Majesty, and predicted his early death, and the consequent elevation of their own royal master. Instead of checking this licence of word and deed, Ornano encouraged such, being con- vinced likewise, that Gaston would ultiniatclv be- come Khm- of France. It mit'lit seem difiicult for these mischief-makers to find grievances for Monsieur, who was young, flattered, indulged, and surfeited with luxury and Avealth ; nevertheless, two wrongs l)y which he was afflicted wxre discovered, discussed, and unfolded. The first grievance Avas, the alliance contracted for the Duke with ]\larie de Mont- pensier ; the which, barred him from the free choice of a consort ; deprived him of the influence accru- ing from a foreign alliance ; and rendered him for ever subject in ])urse and dignity to his brother the King. The betrothal of the Duke to Mademoiselle de Montpensier was the subject of much factious dis- cussion. The King, the Queen-mother, and Richelieu, promoted it as a matter of sound policy, and of honourable fulfilment of a pledge given by the late king. The Prince and Princess de Conde naturally 114 . THE MAERIED LIFE OF [1626. gave no encouragement to a marriage, which would probably remove Conde from his proud position of the third personage in the reahn. A portion of the house of Guise-Lorraine jealously deprecated the elevation of its head, by the marriage of the step- daughter of M.'de Guise with the heir-presumptive. Gaston himself spoke spitefully of his pale fiancee ; and imprudently declared, that, like M. de Buck- ingham, he would voAv allegiance only to his sister- in-law, Queen Anne. The young Count de Soissons opposed the alliance, on the ground that Made- moiselle de Montpensier had been promised to him- self by Marie de' Medici, during her regency, in lieu of her own daughter Madame Henriette, should the alliance of the latter with the heir of the English crown be accomplished. The sentiments of the young princess were in favour of alliance with Monsieur ; and probably no person was more astonished than Marie de Montpensier herself to hear a union discussed, which from childhood she had deemed to be her destiny. Anne very im- jn'udently suffered her wishes and o})hiions on the alliance to transpire ; Avhich declaration was met on the part of the King by an absolute command to Monsieur to fulfil his engagement. The Queen- mother at the same time reiterated this order ; though it is believed that she now secretly encouraged 1()26.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 115 tlie Duko in his aversion for his betrothed. The falterin": health of Kin 2; Louis rendered Monsieur a grand card in the hands of skilful diplomatists. Spain wished to maintain the French alliance. Anne of Austria, childless, and probably soon likely to become a widow, pleased the young prince, and was said to be herself influenced by his fascinations. The question, therefore, arose in the subtle brain of the Queen-mother, whether sound policy, and a due regard to her own interest did not direct that Gaston d'Orleans, on succeeding to his brother's crown, should also take to wife the widow of his predecessor ? It is asserted, and on very strong evidence, that the young Queen likewise pondered deeply on this question ; and eventually signified to Mirabel, and to others, her willingness, in case of widowhood, to follow the example of Queen Anne de Bretagne, v»ho twice wore the matrimonial crown of France,'^ There can be no doubt that at this period the alliance between Monsieur and the Queens, to overthrow the power of Richelieu, was projected. Marie de' Medici fiercely resented the independence of Richelieu, and hated his system of centralization and repression ; and to j^rocure his * Consort of Charles VIII., and subsequently of Louis XII., by whom the queen had two daughters — ^Claude, heiress of Bretagne, who married Francis I., King of France ; and Renee, married to Duke Ercolel., of Ferrara. 1 2 116 THE MAEPJED LIFE OF [1626. disgrace, or reuioval from the ministry, was tlie first necessary step towards his overthrow. AVhether Anne contemplated the dilemma into which her resentment was plunging her is doubtful ; the Queen throughout her chequered career was ever ready to plot, and to dissemble ; but the consequences of her intrigues never seemed to have aroused her solicitude, Madame de Chevreuse, meantime, that arch and daring spirit, so full of resource and constancy, had not yet returned to Trance; but, alarmed at the wrath of her sovereign, the Duchess had Avisely remained at Brussels, on a visit to the Arch- duchess Infanta Isabel. By some means, not on record, though probably by a letter from the Queen, the Duchess was put au coiirant with the proposed intrigue; and entered into it with ardour, and with her accustomed audacity. Through Madame de Chevreuse, therefore, Anne caused a notification to be made to the Marshal d'Ornano, the ex-gover- nor, but bosom friend of Monsieur, " that it would gratify her much if he could find means to prevent the marriage of M. d'Ork'ans with jNIarie de Bourbon- Montpensier."* " I acted thus, because I believed that this marriage, favoured by the Queen-mother, Avas against my interests ; l^ecause, if the future * Mem. de Motteville, t. i. p. 27. 1020.] AXXE OF AUSTIMA. 117 jMadauie bore children, and I had none, she would l)(i more highly considered than myself/'* is Anne's own declaration. Amongst the most devoted admirers of Madame de Chevreuse was Henri de Talleyrand, Prince de Chalais,j master of the wardrobe to the King, in\d first gentleman to j\ronsieLir, in whose train he always ap])eared. Chalais, therefore, betrayed by the dazzling charms of this syren, and too happy to supplant Lord Holland in her favour, prepared to obey her behests. D'Ornano, meanwhile, having declared himself a devoted adherent of Queen Anne, did all he could to disgust the Duke of Orleans with his bride-elect. ''If you, jMonseigneur, espouse a subject of the King your brother, you will yourself fall into greater subjection to his authority. Your fortune and lands will ever remain in his Majesty's power ; and if at anv future ])eriod yon stand in need of foreign support, or help, to not one })otentate of Europe can you a})pcal I " | * Mem. de Mottevillo, t. i. p. 27. f Hcuri de TallejTaud-Perigord, Prince de Chalais, grandson of the famous Marshal Blaise de Montluc. He was master of the wardrobe to the King, and one of the lords in waiting on Monsieiu". Chalais had married Jeanne de Castille, danghter of the financier Jeannin de Castille, and widow of the Coiuit de Chancy. " Madame de Chalais est luie belle personne. EUe s'aime tellement qu'elle s'evanouit si elle vient seukinent a souhaiter quelque chose qti'elle ne piiisse avoir." J Mtm. d'un Favori de Monseig'neur le Due d'Orltans. M. de Bois d'Annemets was the favourite, and the writer of the memoirs ; wliich therefore possess the value of having been written by an eye-witness of the events -uhich they record. 1.18 THE MARRIED LIFE OF • [1626. The foreign alliance to which, it is supposed, d'Ornano hinted, was the union of Monsieur with tlie Infanta Marguerite, sister of Anne, once the betrothed of King Charles I. of England, and even- tually the consort of the Emperor Ferdinand III. This alliance — failing one with Anne of Austria in the event of the death of the King — was highly approved by Monsieur ; being, as he said, altogether more august and profitable, if less wealthy than a marriage with Mademoiselle de Montpensier. This grievance of his compulsory marriage being well engrafted on the willing mind of Gaston d'Orleans, the Marshal d'Ornano next commented on his shameful exclusion from the privy council ; a disgrace inflicted by the parvenu minister, whose dismissal Avas necessary to vindicate the honour of Monsieur. The Duke declared that this slight was keenly felt by himself; and that he was determined to have redress, or to withdraw from court. At the be- ginning of Easter week, 1C2G, the King left Paris for Eontaineblcau, accompanied by Monsieur, and by the Queen-mother. Anne likewise received a command to follow ; and as her Majesty loved very much " a respirer Vair dcs bois" she journeyed thither with pleasure. The day following the arrival of the court at Eontaineblcau, Monsieur opened his battery by hiforining King Louis " that it was a reproach and IG1C>.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. IVJ shame to liira, that being his Majesty's brother, he liad no share, or influence, in aff'airs of state." A sharp discussion ensued, during which ]\Ionsieur took the opportunity peremptorily to dechne the hand of Marie de Montpensier ; adding, " that tlie neglect wliich he experienced convinced liini of the wisdom of the opinion expressed by his friends, that a foreign alliance was requisite for his honour and prosperity.''* L(juis replied soothingly, " that he would consider the request, and make answer in a few days." E-ichelieu, meantime, had his attention riveted on the malcontents ; and soon he discovered the sinnuer- ings of their resentment, and fathomed the sullen passiveness of Anne of Austria. Prom her Majesty the eyes of his Eminence took survey of the position of the Duchess de Chevreuse in Brussels, " cettefcmme qui faisoit plus de mal que personne ;" and with his habitual discernment, Richelieu divined that some plot, hostde to the existing order of affairs in France, Avas in agitation. ^Monsieur, meantime, stormed, and despatched d'Ornano, the bearer of his complaints, to the villa of the Cardinal at Fleury ; where the prudent prelate had deemed himself safer than to abide at Fontainebleau. The ^Marshal obtained audience of * Mem. d'lm Favori. — Vie du Pere Joseph, Capiicin nomme au car- diualat, contenant I'Histoire Anecdote du Cardinal de Eiclielieu. A. St Jean de Slaiu'ienne, chez Gaspard Butler. 1704. ]20 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626. tlie minister, who received Monsieur's message with- out surprise, and declared himself " the humble servant of ]\L d'Orleans." During a promenade made by d'Ornano and the minister in the gardens of the latter, the Marshal was seized with cramp in the leg and a trembling of the limbs ;* ailments, which after- wards were declared to be sympathetic with the ire which surged in the heart of his Eminence. The following day — as five days had elapsed since the Duke petitioned the King — Monsieur sought audience of his mother, and announced his resolve to leave Fontainebleau ; adding menaces concerning his in- tended destination. Marie, alarmed, soothed her son, and promised, that as on the morrow a privy council was to sit, his wishes should be gratified. JFrom this point it is diflicult to follow the Queen- mother in her dubious course; whether or no Richelieu temporarily resumed his old power over her mind by his concessions relative to Monsieur, it is certain that the acts of Marie do' ^ledici again corresponded, for some interval, with the policy of the minister. A secret council was holden the same evening, in the apartments of the Queen-mother, at which the King, the Cardinal, and the Chancellor d'Aligre were * " U luy arriva un accident dig-ne de remarque, ayont ete saisy, en se promenant dans le jardin du Cardinal, d'un tremblement si furieux dans une jambe et line cuisse, qu'il i^en.sa tnmljer de son liaut." — Mem. d'un Favori. — Archives Curieiises, t. 3. 1620.J ANXK OF AUSTllIA. 121 present. It was resolved to gi'ntify Monsieur, but to arrest so pernicious a counsellor as the Marshal (VOrnano. The introduction of the Duke as a privy councillor was effected on the morrow, after an angry tirade from the Marshal ; who claimed, but was re- fused, the privilege of entering the council chamber with his late pupil, and standing behind his chair, as the secretaries of state attended his Majesty. The same night d'Ornaiio was arrested in the Chamhrc Ocalc, and conveyed to the chamber which had been used as a temporary prison for the unfortunate i\[arshal de Biron, also made a prisoner at Fontaine- bleau. The tumult in the palace Avas great ; and Puylaurcns, one of the mignons of ]\Ionsicnr, rushed to the chamber of the Duke, crying out in consterna- tion that M. d'Ornano was arrested ! The Duke sprang from his bed in frantic passion, and was hastily arraying himself, when an ccpierry entered and summoned him to the presence of the King. Gaston found the King surrounded by the chief noblemen present at Fontainebleau, and looking cool and unmoved, as he mi^'ht have been if discusshiii; the odds of a game of tennis. In the apartment was the Queen-mother, en robe de cJiamhrc ; also the Cardinal. Louis opened the conference by calmly saying, " that to his very trreat re2;ret he had been com- })elled to order the arrest of the Marshal d'Ornano, 122 THE MAERIED LIFE OF [1626. who had treacherously attempted to create brawls between his brother, and himself." The eyes of Monsieur sparkled with fury. " Yo'n' IMajesty has been grossly deceived : nobody can judge of the innocence of M. d'Ornano better than myself ! Never has he given me advice counter to your Majesty's service. The authors of this evil deed are abomi- nable and wicked ; and never will I jjardon them imtil I have reduced them to dust under my feet." The Cardinal here interposed, and gravely demanded whether Monseigneur referred in such language to his Majesty's ministers ? "I speak of, and refer to the accusers of ]\I. d'Ornano. See, Messieurs, whether you will dare to be amongst their number ! " replied Monsieur. The King here assured Monsieur of his affection, saying, " that he regarded him as a son and an only brother, and would soon make clear to him les tromperies de M. le Marechal. " The very thing I beseech your Majesty to do," responded Gaston undauntedly, " as I pray you to give me back my friend promptly, Avhen you are assured of his innocence." ]\Ionsieur then abruptly left the room.^'" A silence of some moments ensued. Riche- lieu then proposed the further arrest of MM. de Masargues and Dangeant, the brother-in-law, and * MS. Bibl. Imp. Beth. 9ir,2, fol. IS. 1G2C.] ANNE OF AUSTlilA. 123 tlic secretary of the prisoner ; also, that Madame ki Marechalc d'Oriiano should be arrested, and con- ducted outside the gates of Paris, and there dis- charged from custody.* I lis iMajesty gave assent to these measures ; and then dismissed the high person- ages present, complaining of fatigue. The next day d'Ornano was conveyed to the fortress of Vincennes under a strong guard, and confined in its most un- wholesome cham1)er, which admitted a pestilential malaria from the moat beneath. f The friends of the Marshal asserted tliat he was a victim to the Kin2;'s indecision respecting Monsieur; for that when the Duke was emancipated from the control of his tutors, his IMajesty had commanded Ornano to repress the ardour of Gaston's siut to Mademoiselle de Mont- pensier. The rage of jMonsieur was not assuaged when he learned the departure of the Marshal for Vincennes ; and the young cavaliers of his suite assi- duously inflamed his wrath, especially Chalais, and M. de Louvigny. The Duke one day suddenly encoun- tered the Chancellor d'AIigie, and haughtily asked him, whether he was one of those who had counselled the iniquitous arrest of j\l. d'Ornano ? Surprised by the excitement of the Duke's manner, the Chancellor * " Madame d'Omano fut menee par ixn enseigiio des gardes nomm^ FougueroUes a Gentilly." — Mem. d'un Favori du Due d'Orleans. t Ihid. 124 TKE MARRIED LIFE OF [1G26. stammered " that lie was as mucli astonished as his royal highness, and had nothing to do with the affair;" an answer which was punished by immediate dis- missal from office.* The Duke put the same abrupt question to Richelieu, who boldly responded, " that he was not intending to make the same answer as ]M. le Chancelier ; who, as well as himself, had advised the King to effect that arrest, after healing his Majesty's statements." As moderation and apparent disinterestedness were assumed by Richelieu at the commencement of his power, he immediately petitioned the King to suffer him to withdraw to his house at Pleury ; as he found that he had irrevocably offended IMonsieur. Without waiting for the royal reply, which Louis never save but with hesitation, his Eminence ordered his coach and quitted Fontainebleau.f This " flicrht," as it was termed bv Monsieur and the turl)uleiit spirits around him, raised the con- fidence of the conspirators in their insane projects ; and confirmed them in a criminal design they har- boured, to rid themselves of the obnoxious minister l)v taking: his life. The Count de Soissons promised * Bassompien-e, Journal de ma Vie, ann. 102(!. " Les dames de la cour," -mites the gallant Marshal, " etoient fort melees dans ces intrigues ; les unes en haine de la maison de Guise, qu'ellcs voyoient agrandir jjar la prochaine alliance de Monsieur ; les autres en haine de Mademoiselle de jMontpensier ; et les autres pour I'interet du mariage de IMonsieur." f Joiirnal de ma Vie, Bassompierre. 1620.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 125 liis co-operation, after exacting a solemn declaration from Monsieur, that lie relinquished all pretensions to the linnd of Marie de Montpensier. The Duke de Vendomc, and the Gi-and Prior, his brother, flocked to the standard of Monsieur on this supposed triumph of his poHcy ; while frequent communications passed between Chalais and Madame de Chevreuse. These letters were submitted to ]\lonsieur, who showed them to Queen Anne. Madame de Chevreuse, meantime, maintained the closest relations with the Marcpiis dc T.aiiiez, an attache of the Spanish lega- tion at Brussels. The assassination of Ivichelieu was daringly discussed by these plotters ; a deed to be followed by the emancipation of ]\[. d'Orleans, the liberation of the Queen from her matrimonial bondage, and possibly by the compulsory abdication of Louis XIII. in favour of his brother. As a step to the accomplishment of this great project, Chalais advised that ]\I. le Grand-Prieur,* "qui ctait ires vedoutable d h(ihili\ ai/ant sur tons part en r esprit de Monsieur," should without delay repair to Havre, and win over his uncle the Due de Villars, governor of that impor- tant port, to the cause of Gaston. Up to this point * Alcxauflre de Vendome, Prior of St. John's, yoimgest .son of Henri IV. and Gabrielle d'Estrees, Chevalier de Vendome. "M. le Grand-Prieiu- professait une inimitie publiqvie contre Richelieu, qu'il accusait de detoiu'ner les graces que le Roi vovilait verser sur .sa maison ; il se vantait d'etre le seul Mardochee qui ne flcchissait jjar le genou devant ce superbe Aman." 126 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626. all liad prospered in safety and secrecy : the retire- ment of Richelieu from court, however, moved the impatient spirit of the hostile clique ; and it was determined to forestall the slow progress of any ne- gotiation with Spain, by striking an immediate blow at the life of the Cardinal. Nine of Monsieur's most intimate friends held council tliree days after the arrest of Ornano, and decided the matter under the presidency of the Duke ; these persons were Chalais, Soissons, the Marquis de la Valette,* Puylaurens, Bois d'Annemets, Louvigny, Marsillac, Vendome, and St. Gery. The scheme of the assassins was simple in its atrocity : it was planned to send six inferior officers of the household of Monsieur to Fleury, the country house of Richelieu, where the latter was re- siding alone and comparatively unattended, at three o'clock in the morning of the day but one following. These personages were to rouse the household of his Eminence by clamorous shouts ; when admittance was obtained, which was to be demanded in the name of M. d'Orleans, who, they were to state, was on his road to breakfast at Fleury, they were to pick a quarrel with the servants, draAv their swords, and to assassinate the Cardinal in the melee. f The Duke • Son of the Due d'Epemon, and husband of Gabrielle de Balzac- Vemeiiil, daiTg-hter of Heiu-i IV. and Madame de Vemeuil. + Bassompierre. — Mem. d'un Favori de M. le Due d'Orleans. — Mem. Anecdotes, &c., Louis XIII., t. 4. — Le Yassor, Hist, de Louis XIII. 1G26.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 127 was tlicn to put himself at the liead of the malcon- tents, and act as circumstances might dictate. His seditious challenge was to be for the Church, the liberty of the })rinces of the blood, the annihilation of the Huguenots, tlie alliance with Spain, and the rights of the Queen. When all was prepared, and nothino; but the actual blow of the assassin seemed needed to effect the longed-for emancipation, Chalais failed his accomplices. He possessed a friend, one M. de Valencey, who had appeared to relish the designs of the confederates when a word of disaffection had been accidentally dropped in his presence; but who had never actually declared himself. To this ])er- sonage Chalais had the weakness to confide the plot on the eve of its execution. " How, monsieur," ex- claimed Valencey, in generous indignation, " so auda- cious and abominable a plot is projected by the King's servants, to slay another and a cherished servant of his Majesty, and you do not hasten to denounce the vile conspiracy ! You will at once do so, monsieur; or take the consequences of my own immediate reve- lation of the treachery ! " In vain Chalais entreated for silence ; but A^alencey insisted that he should at once accompany him to Fleury, and warn M. le Car- dinal : " Do it, Monsieur, in your own words ; give your own explanation — make the best of it ; but go I nuist to his Eminence alone, or in your company." 128 THE MAEEIED LIFE OF [1626. Chalais in despair obeyed; and the two repaired to rieury and obtained audience of the Cardinal. Richeheu listened to the story with an aspect of pitying compassion ; and feigned to beheve the re- peated assertions of Chalais that he had always hated the foul plot, and had resolved to denounce it. His apparent belief, and gentle deprecation, with the tears he plentifully shed on this occasion, quite reassured the indiscreet young cavalier ; who hastened from Fleury back to Fontainebleau, hoping to prevent the departure of Monsieur's band of bravoes. Valcncey meantime, after receiving the cordial thanks of the Cardinal, was directed by him to seek instant audience of the King and Queen- mother, and to unfold the plot. It was betw^een eleven and midnight when Valencey reached Fon- tainebleau ; but access was readily obtained to their Majesties by the pass furnished by Richelieu. Marie's consternation was intense ; while Louis summoned du Hallier and j\l. de Vitry, and conunanded them to repair to Floury, taking thirty archers and thirty horse soldiers to guard the Cardinal, whose meekness in remaining at his house after being warned of his peril deeply affected their Majesties.* This detachment met Richelieu at dawn on his * Bassompien'e, Journal de ma Vie, ami. 1020. BassompieiTe was in waiting at Fontainebleau while the events occiuTed which he relates. 1626.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 129 way to Fontaineblcan. The duke's assassins had arrived during the night at Fleury, knocked up the household as had been arranged, with every aggra- vation of insolence, and violence. The doors of the mansion, however, to their siu-prise, flew open on their mandate. The retainers of Richelieu bowed obsequiously before the avant-coureurs of so august a person as Monseigneur; while the Cardinal in person expressed his sense of the honour done him, " so much so, that he placed the chateau at the command of the leader of the company, and intended himself to set out and escort his royal highness to Fleury." While ]\Ionsieur's envoys were meditating on the purport of these words, the clever Cardinal gave them the slip, and stepping into his coach, which he had caused to be prepared, he set out for Fontainebleriu. Gaston was just rising when Richelieu arrived : the Cardinal proceeded straight to the apartment of the young prince, and mildly reproached him for not giving him warning of the honour he intended to confer by his visit; ending, by placing Fleury at his command. Taking ]\Ionsieur's shirt from the trembling hands of M. de Chalais, the Cardinal cour- teously handed it to the astonished yonng prince, and took his leave.* The incident was then suffered * Mem. de Richelieu. — Bassompierre. — The diike, to conceal his desigTi, and to account for an early departiu-e from the palace on the morning fixed 130 THE MARRIED LIFE OF 1626. to drop. Queen Anne and Monsieur were filled with amazement at tlie failure of tlicir enterprise, not knowing from what quarter the Cardinal had obtained his information. Chalais kept his own counsel, until the truth was forced from him a few weeks later by the address of Madame de Chevreuse. The intrigue, however, received only a check from the unexpected denouement at Fleury. The design of the Cardinal's assassination was still the topic of the correspondence of the conspirators ; amongst whom M. de Chalais, despite of his recent treachery, became the recognised organ of approach to the ear of the Duke of Orleans.* Richelieu, however, held a clue. Had Chalais promptly avowed his breach of faith, the subtle intriguers might have been less confident and more cautious. The first step in the counterplot was skilful : his Eminence overwhelmed Chalais with attentions ; and as an eminent mark of confidence, announced his intention to take up his abode at the house of the latter at iMaison Rouge, when the court removed to Blois. He then blandly requested as a personal favour from the King, that ]\Iadame de Che- for the execution of the plot, had organised a hunting- expedition. " Monsieur," said Richelieu significantly, on taking leave, " vous ne vous etes pas leve assez matin ; vous ne trouverez plus la bete au gite ! " * Chalais promit d'etre fidele a I'avenir ; et leur donnait cette libre reconnoissauce de sa faute, qu'il lem- faisoit pour marque de sincerite." 162(5.] AXNE OF AUSTRIA. 131 vreuse might return to court, as he desired to merit the favour, and approbation of Queen Anne. M. de Vendome, at the intercession of the Cardinal, was reassured, and bidden by his Majesty to bring back his brother and join the court at Blois, "when their grievances should be redressed. M. de Soissons re- ceived an unexpected communication from ]\1. le Cardinal, conveying the information that his Majesty confided to him the peace of the capital dm'ing his absence in tlie provinces ; and directing the Count on no pretext to (put Paris.* As soon as the Cardinal was settled at IMaison Rouge, he summoned his friend the formidable Capuchin Pere Joseph, and relating all that had recently occurred, asked for aid to thread the labyrinth. t " It is at Brussels that we must search out the intrigue : give me a sure man, and I will answer for the result ! " exclaimed Pere Joseph. The Cardinal acquiesced ; selecting the young Count de Rochefort, one of his pages, and a Rohan by birth, he sent him to Pere Joseph, with orders to obey the Capuchin in all matters. Rochefort Avas conducted to the Capuchin monastery, Rue St. Honore, and was there taught to imitate the deportment, and the rule * Bassompierre ; ibid. Vie dii Prince de Clialais, Henri de Talley- rand. Galerie des Personnages Ulustres de la Cour de France. f Vie du Pere Joseph. Memoires d'lin FaYori de Monsieiu-. Archives Curieuses. K 2 132 THE MAEEIED LIFE OF [1626. of tlie fathers. When the travesty was perfect, Pere Joseph sent him on foot to Brussels, wearing the habit of a Capuchin monk, and furnished with a letter to the superior of the Order in Brussels, who Ijad promised further introductions. Eochefort was the cousin of Madame de Chevreuse ; he was gifted with the energy and spirit of his race. By the assumption of sanctity, and by the secret influence of Eichelieu, the young Capuchin soon procured an introduction to Marquis de Lainez. To this noble- man he pretended to confide his discontent with his calling, and his hatred of France ; adding, that his desire would be to enter a monastery in Spain. So cleverly did he at length insinuate himself into the confidence of Lainez, that the latter undertook to procure him permission to drink the mineral waters at Borges ; which Rochefort stated, w^as a boon neces- sary for his health, though unattainable, on account of the dislike with Avhich he was regarded by the Provincial of the Order in Prance. The pass Avas obtained at the recjuest of the Archduke ; and Roche- fort prcj)ared to return to Prance, triumphant in the possession of a packet of papers, which Lainez, as he anticipated, had affectionately requested him to con- vey thither, and deliver to a personage who would await him at Forges. A courier from the Cardinal met Rochefort half way between Brussels and Porges, to 1626.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 133 whom lie delivered the important packet, Richelieu had copies made on the spot of the contents of the packet, which was then rcsealcd and given again to Rochefort. The latter continued his journey, and arriving at Forges found a person who gave the name and address of La Pierre, advocate, Rue Perdue, Place Maubert, Paris ; who, exhibiting a letter from Lainez, demanded the papei's. This person was followed by the Cardinal's spies to Paris, and was traced with his papers to the house of the Prince de Chalais, On his return home, an agent of police arrested La Pierre under pretext of robbery ; his person was then searched, and the packet being missing, was at once known to have been left in the possession of I\L dc Chalais. The copied papers seized were then ex- amined by the Cardinal ; who found, amongst other documents, a long letter without signature, addressed to Chalais, in which not only was his own assassina- tion spoken of as un fait accompli, but the writer went on to discuss casualties which might attend the death, or deposition " of the most august person of the realm." * This event accomplished, the marriage of Anne of Austria with Khig Gaston was assumed as a future fact which had received her Majesty's own assent, and that of the Qucen-inother ; and which, * Vie clu Pere Joseph Leclerc de TrembLay. 134 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626. when commnnicated to Philip IV., King of Spain, had also obtained his Catholic Majesty's approbation. Mention was made also, of a letter, written by Anne to her brother, in which she had intimated her con- sent to, and approbation of all the designs of the con- spirators ; and moreover, that she had despatched a special courier to Madrid, to convey this epistle to King Philip. Furnished with such a detail of this " infernal project," Richelieu triumphed — for the most august heads of Prance must incline reverently before the power won by this knowledge. The letters written by Chalais in return were intercepted; and by these the Cardinal came by the further informa- tion, that the Spanish cabinet agreed to the design of the conspirators ; but declined to take a part in the plot until some notable success had been attained. The intercepted correspondence was at once laid before the King by his minister. With a cry of an- guish, the unhappy King read, and bewailed the cruel destiny which arrayed against him his nearest kins- men. He insisted, nevertheless, on the immediate arrest of all concerned in the plot. Richelieu com- bated this desire ; he wished to envelope the plotters, and to allow them no avenue of escape, before the final blow was struck. Towards his wife the bitterest resentment rankled in the heart of Louis, never more 1620. j ANNE OF AUSTKIA. 135 to be eflPaced. The apologists of Anne of Austria aver that the Cardinal enveloped her in this conspi- racy, which in reality was aimed only at his own overthrow^, on purpose to neutralise her power ; and to render the criminal wife, the helpless foe. They aver that no one but the King and Richelieu saw the letter addressed to Chalais, which was afterwards said to be destroyed ; and they deny that Anne ever wrote to her brother in approval of the plot as directed against the person, and the throne of Louis XIII.* It is not, however, denied that Anne consented to espouse Gaston d'Orleans ; and was looking for- ward to the death of her husband as a fact of speedy accomplishment. The archives of Siniancas furnish proof positive of her assent ; and of her knowledge of the negotiation then proceeding for her future union with M. d'Orleans. jMoreover, the arrests and sentences which by and by followed, smiting some of the noblest princes of the land, must have moved the nation with strong indignation, if inflicted to vindicate a cruel fraud ; at the instiga- tion likewise, of a minister new to the people, and * No apologies which have since been made for Anne of Austria can efface the undoubted fact that Louis XIII. beUeved her to be guilty ; besides, why was the Queen subjected to persecution and surveillance, if no evidence attested her connivance in the projects of Chalais, and other conspu-ators ? 136 THE MAEEIED LIFE OF [1626. whose power was not then cemented by pubhc confi- dence, or awe. On the 6th of June the court removed to Blois, the Cardinal still remaining at Maison Rouge. On the 12th the Duke de Vendome and his brother the Grand Prior arrived : and on the night of the 14th of the same month, the princes were both arrested in their beds by Du Hallier captain of the body-guard, and committed close prisoners to the castle of Amboise. The reason assigned by his Majesty for the arrest of his illegitimate brothers was, that they excited the people to hatred of his government, and to contempt of his person ; besides traitorously assuming an attitude hostile to M. de Richelieu.* Meantime, Madame de Chevreuse re- turned to France, and joined her royal mistress at Blois, resuming her empire over the mind of the Queen ; and more than her past influence with M. de Chalais. Monsieur also arrived at Blois, fearing not to stand over the mine he was preparing to explode. Here the expediency of gaining over some of the principal governors of provinces and important fron- tier towns, was suggested to Monsieur, by Bois * Relation de tout ce qui s'est passd a remiirisounement de M. le Due de Vendome, et M. le Grand Prieiir son Frere, au Chateau de Blois. — Archives Curieuses, t. 3, 2eme sdrie. 1(J2(;.] ANNE OF AUSTlilA. 137 d'Aniicmcts, and Clialais. A certain Abbe d'Auba- sine presented himself at Blois to pay his respects to the King ; and happening to state in confidence to Chalais that the Due d'Epernon, Governor of the Angouinois, and of the Pays des Trois Eveches, was disaffected, and a partisan of Monsieur, it was deter- mined that his royal highness should write to the duke, and make certain propositions. Chalais had some difficulty in persuading the duke to this step ; as Monsieur always showed an intense aversion to attach his signature to any document. In this instance he suffered himself to be overpersuadcd ; and whilst he was engaged in the concoction of the epistle, M. de Marcheville suddenly entered the apartment. Monsieur being startled in the very act of doing violence to his inclination, turned pale, and seizing the paper, stuffed it into the pocket of his haiits de chausscs. This Marcheville, though one of the mignons, had carefully avoided giving coun- tenance to the designs of the malcontents ; and feigned to be ignorant that his royal master had secrets.* The sudden resignation of j\I. de Marcheville on the following day ; and leave of absence being solicited by another of the duke's chamberlains, M. d'Audilly, * Mem. d'un Favori de M. le Due d'Orleans.— Archives Curieuses, t. 3. 138 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626. might have warned Gaston, and liis friends, that prudence, and caution were advisable. Chalais, however, continued to repair in the dead of the night to the chamber of Monsieur ; and there, amongst other evil counsels, he induced the infa- tuated Prince to follow up his letter to the Due d'Epernon by another to M. de la Valette, the duke's son and Lis lieutenant at ]\Ietz ; on whom Gaston was told that he had claims, as jMadame de la Valette was the illegitimate daughter of Henri Quatre. The Due d'Epernon, grateful, perhaps, for the clemency shown by Louis after the troubles excited by the flight of Marie de' Medici from Blois, sent Monsieur's letter straight to the King. The young Marquis de la Valette, a few days later, also replied through M. de Louvigny, "that he was the humble servant of Monsieur, and would be happy to serve him : nevertheless, in an affair of such importance as to deliver up to his royal high- ness his Majesty's fortress of Metz, he must first consult his father and chief, Monsieur le Due d'Eper- non."* Richelieu, at this juncture, having secured his proofs of the treasonable negotiations pending ; and having skilfully assembled his foes at Blois, presented * Relation de tout ce qui s'est passi? au Proces de Chalais, 1G26. Aubery, Mem. pour servir a rHistoire du Cardinal-Due de Richelieu, t. 1. Cologne, 1G67. 1626.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 139 himself before tlic King, and denounced the traitors. He also informed his Majesty that the Count de Soissons had insolently prepared measures to accom- plish the abduction of Mademoiselle de IMontpensier, who was living in Paris at the Hotel Guise ; and that M. d'Orleans and Queen Anne were privy to the intended outrage. Louis became violently agitated ; but after poring some time over the documents sub- mitted by his minister, he ordered the latter to proceed with the utmost rigour to unmask the traitors, and to confound tlicir devices ; pledging his roval word to be cruided bv the counsels of his Emi- nence. Richelieu then advised his master to pro- ceed forthwith to the city of Nantes — a visit already jotted down in the royal prograu^jne of travel before the return of Louis to the capital. He next des- patched Rochefort to Paris, the bearer of an order commandinoj Madame de Guise and her daughter IMademoiselle de ]\Iontpensicr, to give his ^lajesty rendezvous at Nantes — thus defeating any enterprise contemplated by the Count de Soissons. Monsieur and his friends now commenced to feel the prickings of distrust : private warnings harassed them ; in which it was reported that Goulas, the duke's secre- tary, and ]\DL de Marcheville and d'Andilly had been observed stealthily creeping from the abode of 140 THE MAEEIED LIFE OF [1626. M. le Cardinal. Moreover, their friends in Brussels seemed to lose heart at the enterprise; while the Marquis de Mirabel maintained an ominous silence respecting Richelieu, and mentioned even the word " submission." The Queen, likewise, was observed to weep in secret, and that little intercourse existed between the Queen-mother and Anne ; while the King studiously avoided, as far as possible, any acknowledgment of the fact that the partner of his throne inhabited Blois. A further augury of coming evil was descried in the visit paid by the Pi'ince de Conde to the Cardinal at Limours — an honour never before conferred. The court, meantime, commenced its progress, and made temporary sojourn at Tours, Saumur, and Amiens. At Saumur a quarrel happened between M. de Louvigny and the Count de Candale. Chalais, who was of the party, took the side of Candale ; when ]\I. de Louvigny, beside himself with rage, reproached Chalais with his treasonable intelligence in the pre- sence of the Due d'Elboeuf. Louvigny having thus committed himself, sought audience of the King on the morrow, and confessed the overture which he had made to M. d'Epernon and his son, on Ijehalf of Monsieur. Louis listened coldly ; dismissed Lou- vigny, but commanded his arrest before the Lapse of 1026.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 141 three hours. Under the searching scrutiny of Eicheheu, Louvigny confirmed his previous confession, and oAviicd to be piivy to the plot for the assassina- tion of his Eminence ; moreover adding, that Chalais meditated the death of the King, which he intended to accomplish when, as master of the wardrobe, he adjusted his Majesty's ruff, by scratching him slightly on the neck with a poisoned pin. A warrant there- upon was at once despatched for the arrest of M. de Chalais, who was seized and carried to Nantes, as he was stepping on board the barge in which Monsieur was travelling, at a place just below Amiens. The Cardinal now held every clue to the projects of his enemies. Chalais lay in prison ; Madame de Chevreuse and her royal mistress trembled as the dark tribulation approached. JVIarie de' jNIedici, who had been accused in some of the papers intercepted, of approving the marriage of the supposed widow of Louis XIII. with ^lonsieur, and anxious to vindicate herself in the opinion of her son, was nervously com- })la!sant ; ]\Iademoiselle de Montpensier, smitten with awe at finding herself involved in a state plot, was humble and obedient. Ornano, and the two brothers de Vendome lay in prison ; Conde, that irascible and touchy personage, so haughtily patronising, had been compelled, lest he should be suspected of collusion in Ii2 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626. the plot, to seek the good will of his Eminence at Limours ; and even to sooth any probable irritation by speaking of an alliance as possible, between the heir of the Condes and la petite Clemence de Maille Brexe, niece of Richelien.* As for Monsieur, it was the policy of Richelieu to unmask and to humble him ; but to cast him prostrate at the royal feet eventually on easy terms. Expiation by death, by torture, by banishment, by humiliations unparalleled, was never- theless to be exacted from the miserable tools, and dupes of his royal highness's ambition, and duplicity. Above all, Anne of Austria was for evermore to be reduced to a position of abject dependence on the King and his minister ; and discredited to a degree that her favour or disfavour became alike indifferent ; while the fact that her Majesty was the eldest daughter of Spain, then considered to be the most potent monarchy of the universe, increased rather than diminished the triumph of the Cardinal. Monsieur, therefore, during the journey between Tours and Nantes, was scolded, cajoled, caressed, and * Nicole du Plessis de Richelieu, sister of the Cardinal de Richelieu, married Urban Marquis de Breze, subsequently Marshal of France. She had two children, the Princess de Conde, and Armand de Breze, Duke de Fronsac, co-heir of the Cardinal with his cousin de Pontcourlay, also nephew of the Cardinal. Madame de Breze died insane. For many years previous to her death she laboiu-ed under the delusion that she was made of glass, and slurieked if approached. 1026.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 143 frightened. lie was mysteriously exhorted, both by the Cardmal and the Queen-mother, to be on his guard ; that tlie gentlemen of his household were in bad odour with the King ; and that some political catastrophe was at hand. M. de Coigneux, who though in favour with his royal highness, had not participated in the cabal, was chosen by Louis as his medium of communication with his brother ; while the Cardinal prepared more potent seduction for the weak brain of Monsieur from the lips of his trusty Capuchin, Pere Joseph, who was summoned to Nantes by express. A commission, composed of the new Lord Keeper Marillac, of the presidents Cusse and De Bry, and of the King's private secretary Beauclcrc, of Fouquet, ]\L^chault, and De Criquevillc, Masters of Requests, and of six members of the Parliament of Breta2;iie, was empowei eel to try the unhappy Chalais ; and to investigate the alleged plot to its most secret ramifications.* Monsieur, though outwardly free, was warned by the Queen-mother not to venture Avithout the city, under pain of arrest. Madame * E elation de tout ce qui s'est passe au Proces de C'lialais. — Aubeiy, Mem. pour servir a THistoii-e du Cardinal-Due de Richelieu, t. 1. The pro- ceeding of the Cardinal caused great murniurings. Chalais. it was asserted, ought to have been tried before a Parliament of the realm, and not by a tribunal of judges nominated by his accusers. The act of the minister was stigmatised as " un precede inique." " Les amis du cardinal repon- dirent qu'il avait pris ce biais pour menager rhonnem* des families." Hi THE MAKRIED LIFE OF [1626. tie Chevreuse, likewise, perceived herself to be under surveillance ; while the young Queen cowered under the displeasure of her lord, and while weeping over her forlorn condition, was repeatedly heard to utter the undignified wail, "that M. le Cardinal wanted to send her back to Spain, in order to marry the King to la veuve Comhalet" Richelieu, meantime, proceeded to unravel the plot, with the utmost parade of moderation, and attention to the forms of ancient procedure ; it w^as the first essay of the power of the minister ; and a foretaste of the judicial arrangements by special commission wdiich eventually made every disloyal heart quake. Certain mendjers of the commission were appointed to interrogate the Duke of Orleans. Monsieur w^as previously admonished to make candid, and ample revelations ; while Pere Joseph " assui'ed Monsieur that if he confessed everything demanded from him, that he should receive a pardon, and even a recompense." Letters were first shown to the young Prince from the envoys of France at certain small German courts ; and also one from the ambassador in Vienna, Avarning the King that a conspiracy existed, and that its details were not unknown to Monsieur, to her Majesty the Queen consort, and to certain personages mentioned : its objects being first, to assassinate the Cardinal de 162G.J ANNK OF AUSTRIA. 115 Richelieu, and subsequently to dethrone the King for incapacity, mental and physical ; and to marry Queen Anne, to the Duke of Orleans. The plot was to be supported by the influence of the Duke of Buckingham over the English cabinet. Monsieur shuddered at his peril, and clung to the protection of Richelieu as his refuge in the terrible inves- tigations pending. The morning of the 11th of August, therefore, found Monsieur ready and fluent ; he made and signed a declaration, of which the following is an abstract: — Istly: That it was true M. le Comtc de Soissons was in his confidence, and diligently reported to hini affairs brought before the privy council ; 2ndly : That Chalais was em- ployed as their amanuensis and messenger ; that it Avas true the latter had advised him to slay ]\I. le Cardinal, to seize the fortress of Havre, and to de- mand for M. de Coouvres the government of Pont de I'Arche, which strong fort they coveted in order to protect their flight from Paris to Plavre ; that Chalais had comiselled him to propitiate, and to enter into secret relations with the Huguenot chief- tains ; that the said Chalais had instructed, and recommended one Louvigny to journey to Metz to invite and gain over the ]\Iarquis de la Valette to his (Monsieur's) interests ; 3rdly : That M. de Chalais had told, and sworn to him (Monsieur) that 14G THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626. the King had encamped 10,000 men in the vicmity of Nantes, in order, as Chalais concluded, to compel him to retire to Nancy, or to Brussels."* This cowardly avowal formed the nucleus of the charge of treason against M. de Chalais. The letters of the Duchess de Chevreuse,f of the Duke d'Epernon, and of M. de la Valette were given in as evidence ; also certain letters which had been intercepted, from Joannes valet to M. de Chalais, addressed to Martin, his brother. Lastly : Richelieu and le Pere Joseph produced their charge against iMonsieur, Queen Anne, and Madame de Chevreuse, by show- ing copies of the letter brought into France by M. de Rochefort, addressed to Chalais, with the replies returned by that miserable young cavalier. On the same day, the lltli of August, the Commis- sioners met in the refectory of the monastery of the Franciscans at Nantes ; and proceeded to the dis- charge of their preliminary duties, previous to com- manding the presence of the criminal before their tribunal. Chalais during this interval had remained iu a condition of pitiable despair. Madame de Chevreuse * Relation tie tout ce qui s'est passe au Proces de M. de Chalais.— Vie du P. Joseph de Tremblay. — -Le Vassor, Hist, de Louis XIII. t These letters were found in a casket at Maison Rouge, the coimtiy house of Chalais ; they wore chiefly love epistles — " Mais il se trouvades choses peu respectueuses pour Louis XIIL, que ces amants railloient sur sa froideur, et sur ses autres defauts naturels." — Galerie des Personuag'es [llustres de la Cour de France, t. 4. Lyon, 1 sofi. 1626.] ANNE OF AUSTKIA. 147 alone, with noble generosity, souglit to soothe his trouble ; and addressed to the poor captive a com- forting note, which she caused to be sewed within the plait of a starched rufl' sent to Chalais, by his request, to wxar when he appeared before his judges. Such was the panic occasioned by the sudden arrests, and the mystcriousness of the hidden causes of in- quiry, that the agent employed by Madame de Chevreuse proved a traitor, and carried her note to the Cardinal ; who caused the writing to be copied, and produced it on the following day against the Duchess. It was determined by the High Court to issue orders of arrest against the Duchess de Chevreuse, the Count de Soissons, the Due d'Epcrnon, and his son, I'Abbe Aubasine, M. de Louvigny, and certain mignons of Monsieur — to wit, MM. de Bois d'Anne- niets, Puylam-ens, St. Gery, Marsillac, le Meille- raye, and de IMouay, — nevertheless, that such warrants should first be authenticated by the sign- manual of the King.* Triumphant in the posses- sion of these documents f Richelieu laid them before the King at a council specially summoned on the * Relation de tout ce qiii s'est passe au Proces de M. de Clialais.— Anbeiy, ^lem. poiir Si3iTir a rHistoire du Caixliual de Richelieu, t. 1.— • Mem. d'un Favori de M. le Due d'Orlcaus. f '• Richelieu assura le Xonce Spada que Chalais avait engage Gaston a des eclats qui auroient du devenir tres prejudiciables a la paix du roj-aume. comme de quitter la cour, de se retircr a La Rochelle, et de {. % as THK MAErJED LIFK OF [1629. morrow. Louis desired to hear some of the wit- nesses ; the council was therefore adjourned till after dinner of the same day. Invitations were issued to the Presidents Cusse and de Bry to attend ; and before this assemblage Louis resolved, by the advice of his minister, to summon Queen Anne and ]\Iadame de Chevreuse, The Duke de Belle- garde, Louvigny, the Duke d'Elboeuf, le Pere Joseph, the Count de Rochefort, and the Marquis d'Effiat were first heard, The intercepted correspondence was read over by the secretary Beauclerc, in the presence of his Majesty, who reclined in a fauteuil with a gloomy scowl upon his countenance, Marie de' Medici presently entered, and seated herself by Richelieu ; in so doing her Majesty whispered a word in his ear, which his Eminence noticed by a slight inclination of the head. At the command of the King the folding doors opposite were opened, and Anne of Austria appeared on the threshold, un- attended, save by an usher and by one half-scared lady, Anne dismissed her attendant ; and then advanced, and took a seat at the bottom of the table indicated by the Cardinal, as the King neither rose, nor took the smallest notice of her presence. The interrogatory which followed unfortunately never cioiilever les Huguenots." — Galerie des Personuages Illustres de la Cour de France. 1C20.J AN^E of AUSTRIA, 14i? transpired ; that it was severe and uncompromising, the tears shed by the Queen, and its after effect on lier health and temper testify. Anne seems steadily to have denied the allegations against her; unfortu- nately, however, her Majesty had previously given peremptory contradiction to undoubted facts well known to her royal husband and to his minister, from terror at the consequences of her indiscretion. The letter written by Madame de Chevreuse to Chalais, and placed in the Queen's hands, must have taxed her fortitude ; for there now remains little doubt that Anne had tampered in the schemes of these foolish plotters to a degree which fur ever bereft her of the regard of her husband ; who emphatically affirmed his belief in her culpability. When questioned con- cerning her speculations on the King's intended de[)0-' sition, and her design to espouse ^Monsieur, Anne replied, " that she should have gained thereby too small a stake to render it even probable that she had blackened her conscience by the imagination of such a crime ! " * " Her Majesty thereupon, with tears, bitterly upbraided the Queen-mother for the persecu- * " Le Roy fit venir la Reine an conseil, ou il lui reprocha qu'elle avoit conspire centre sa vie pour avoir tm autre mari. La Reine, a qui rinnocence donna des forces, outree de douleur de cette accusation, lui parla avec fermete, et lui dit, a ce que j'ai scu par elle-meme, qu'elle auroit trop peu gagne au change pour vouloir se noircir d'un crime jjour lin iDetit interet.'' — Metteville, t. i., p. 28. Madame de Motteville always believes the statements offered to her by Anne of Austria with implicit faith, deeming her I\Iajesty immaculate. 150 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [162G. tions and indignities heaped upon lier since lier arrival in Prance." No minute of this council was preserved. Anne's reply, relative to M. d'Orlcans, alone, of all her answers to the various charges, was suffered to transpire. When the Queen retired, Madame de Chevreuse was summoned before the Council. The Duchess entered, sustained by a consciousness of wit, beauty, and of aptness of speech, and retort. She was subjected by the King himself to a long and humiliating inter- rogatory; and dismissed, placed under the surveillcmce of the captain of the body-guard. M. de Louvigny was next introduced, to make further revelations relative to the malignity of the treason of M. de Chalais. The latter, besides his avowed intent to kill Richelieu, and to depose the King, was accused of regicidal designs by de Louvigny ; who, a few weeks previously, was considered to be the intimate friend of the unhappy prisoner. Chalais, who was master of the wardrobe, meditated the murder of the King, according to the statement of Louvigny, by steeping the shirts worn by his jMajesty in a subtle poison ; intending to accelerate the action of the venom, by scratchhig the King on the nape of the neck with a poisoned pin, while adjusting his ruff. " This Chalais," says the Abbe d'Artigny,"'^ * Hist, du Critique et de la Littt'rature, t. 0, p. 21 i>. ^C,2C,.] ANNE OF AUSTltlA. ]ol " was of a temper so nuilicious and spiteful, that when lie was attiring liis Majesty lie made faces behind the King's back ; also, when in prison, he could not hold himself from speaking evil things of the King ; and even to offend him deeply, by letters which he presumed to write. Louis XIII. could not refrain, therefore, from one day exclaiming, ' This man has truly a malignant, and churlish temper ! ' " On the 18tli of August, Clialais was led before his judges, after having been subjected to three searching interrogatories. His condemnation was unanimously voted ; the })risoner appealing against his sentence, and denying the charges alleged. The decree con- demned Chalais to decapitation, after suffering the torture of les brodeqidns, and to the pains of degrada- tion, and the confiscation of his estates. No sooner was the unfortunate man conducted back to his prison, than he was again beset by the emissaries of Richelieu, seeking, by any promises, to extort con- fession ; and especially, to wring from the unwihing lips of the prisoner full details respecting the Jkiison existing between Anne of Austria and her brother- in-law. For long Chalais resolutely insisted on the innocence of the Queen ; stating, although it was true, that for a period of seventeen days the death of the King and his minister had been discussed — yet, that after the arrest of MM. de Vendome, and after 152 THE MAKEIEl) LIFE OF [1R20 the failure of the conspiracy to kill Richelieu at Fleury, he had tampered with the conspirators, at the command only of the minister, to discover their progress and designs. Vanquished at length by the subtle Pere Joseph,'^ Chalais made other avowals : he stated that Queen Anne, Monsieur, and Madame de Chevreuse, were implicated in the conspiracy ; that the Queen-mother herself was so far committed, that she had acknowledged if the King died, a wise policy would direct the acceptance by IMonsieur of the hand of his brother's richly dowered widow, on assumino: the crown of France : that the death of the Cardinal de Richelieu had been decided upon, to be accomplished as opportunity occurred ; that it was a fact that the Queen had connnunicated the details of the conspiracy to her kindred in Spain, and had received the approbation of Philip IV. her brother. Transported with his success, the wily Capuchin entered his patron's presence, and ten- dered the admissions which placed the highest personages of the realm at the mercy of the Cardinal. Richelieu, it is said, repaired privately the same night to the dungeon of the prisoner, and promised him life, and ultimate pardon, provided * " Le Capucin Tassura, de la part dii Cardinal, qixe s'il avouait tout ce qu'on lui demanderoit, il aurait sa grace ; et siir la pai'ole d'un religieuj; dont la rejiutatioii n'avoit jjoiut ete attaqude, cet accuse declara plus qu'il ne savoit pour certain des mecon tents." — Vie du Pere Joseph, Capucin. ](;-2C.] AXNE OF AUSTIIIA. 153 that he would repeat his confession in the hearing of his guards ; or reveal every incident in a private interview with the King. The Duke of Orleans, during these proceedings, maintained a most undignified attitude : avoided by the courtiers — uncertain whether he would long he tolerated by the King ; clinging to the wily Capuchin Joseph; and creeping warily to the apartments of the Queen-mother, who scarcely dared speak to her son, to learn the attitude of affairs. The young cavaliers of his suite fled from Nantes. Puylaurens and Bois d'Annemets alone mustered courage to face the storm. Le Coigneux, meantime, ascertained that Monsieur could free himself from the effects of his misconduct, only by consenting to immediate marriage with jMademoiselle de ]\Iont- pensier. The Duke thereupon, ventured to propose stipulations, one of which was, the pardon of j\I. de Chalais ; but was met by the crushing inti- mation that the criminal had made confession, and had deeply implicated both Monsieur and Queen Anne; and therefore, tliat the Duke must accept M'itli gratitude the will of the King, or take the consequences. Monsieur then alleged certain rea- sons, which would prevent his immediate espou- sals ; nevertheless, on the morrow he suddenly visited Marie de' Medici, and assented to his mar- 154 THE MAT^r.TED LIFK OF [1G21. riage, provided that the Marshal d'Ornano and Chalais were liberated ; and that certain pecuniary concessions * were granted — all which negotiations he committed to her care, and to that of M. le Coigneux. The Duke's submission was well timed : the irritated spirit of Louis XIII. brooked not trifling ; and his Majesty conceived that his honour demanded that the immediate union of his brother to Marie de Montpensier, should stifle and refute the reports current respecting Monsieur's liaison with Anne of Austria. Certain reforms were like- wise commenced in the household of the Duke, on the authority of the King : three of his chamber- lains were summarily dismissed ; and the Due de Bellegarde was placed at the head of his establish- ment.f Louis, meanwhile, offered to his brother oblivion of the past, on condition of his marriage with Marie de i\Iontpensier : I upon that event, his Majesty proposed to put Monsieur into possession of his appanage, the duchies de Chartres and d'Orleans and the county of Blois ; to settle upon him lands to the amount of 1.00,000 livres annually; with a * Mem. d'lm Favori de M. le Due d'Orleans'. f Joixmal de ma Vie. — Bassompierre, ann. KIlTi, J Richelieu, it is said, caused Monsieur's horoscope to he drawn before his maniage, to ascertain whether his royal highness, or his posterity, were likely to succeed to the crown of France. The answer of the oracle was " Imperium non gustabit in aatenium." ](;2ii.l ANNE OF AUSTRIA. n>'j nett revenue of 7 GO, 000 livrcs for the expenses of his household.* Le Pere Joseph undertook to render Monsieur satisfied with this munificent offer : a few arguments, a httle deprecation, and the trans- })arcnt assurance " that after Monsieur's reconcilia- tion with the King, he would be in a better con- dition to intercede for the prisoner, and the rest of the accused," prevailed. The ceremony of the affiancing was performed August 20th, in the apart- ment of the Queen-mother, by the Cardinal dc Richelieu ; and the pair were married at midnight. The ceremony was performed with the pomp befit- ting the occasion, and the publicity which King Louis desired. The marriage contract was signed at five p.m. on a table standing on a platform of state. The King sat under a canopy, supported by the Queen-mother ; opposite, sat Queen Anne, with an aspect pale and discomposed, having on her right the young bride. At the table stood Richelieu, at the head of a numerous assemblage of bishops. The apartment was filled with a brilliant court, including Bellegarde, d'Elbocuf, Bassompierre, Marsillac, th.c Duchesses de Rohan, d'Halluin, de Guise, de Belle- garde, and others. The King had commanded that no order of precedence should be obsei ved ; and that the ladies should take place in the vicinity * ^Jlt'm. d'nn Fjivori de M. le Due d'Orleans.— Vie du Vive Joseph. 1.^6 THE MARKIED LIFE OF [1G20. of the haut dais, as they arrived. A scramble for precedence, nevertheless, occurred between the Duchesses d'Halluin and de Rohan — the latter lady being the strongminded and resolute daughter of the Duke de Sully—during which, the illustrious ladies so far forgot decorum as to pinch each other in their efforts not to lose the terrain, that each declared the other wished to usurp.* " The royal pair were affianced, and at midnight espoused. Never was there before seen so sad a ceremony. Madame was dressed in a robe of white satin, adorned with her own superb pearls, and with those belong- ing to the Queen. We had neither violins, nor music of any kind. Monsieur had not even a new habit. Furniture was borrowed to decorate the bridal chamber. Few private persons have been married Avith such scanty pomp. The King came to the coucher of IMonsieur, and handed him his shirt ; and the Queen-mother was present at the toilette of Madame. When every one had retired, a laughable incident occurred. A little lap-dog was accidentally shut up in the chamber of the newly-married pair ; which obliged Madame de Guise, who occupied an adjacent apartment, to rise and hunt the miserable * Benediction Xuptiale de Monseigneivr le Due d'Orleans, Frh-e de Louis XIIL, et de Marie de Montpensier. — Godefroy, Grand C($rem. de France, t. 2, 1626,] ANNE oF AUSTJMA. animal, whose yelps added to the ridicule of this fine mamage."* The marriage concluded,! Monsieur ventured to insist on the hopes inspired by M. le Cardinal, that mercy might be shown to the accused. Chalais also loudly claimed the immunity so perfidiously promised by the Cardinal, on condition of his confession. The sentence pronounced on the unfor- tunate young man was, nevertheless, confirmed by the King ; who mitigated only the rigour of the ])enalty, by forbidding that torture should be employed before execution. Kis Majesty was pleased, moreover, to annul the attainder of that branch of the house of Talleyrand from which Chalais sprang. I The sentence was appointed to be carried out three days after the celebration of IMonsieur's marriage ; meantime, the fate of the minor dclin- quents was pronounced. ]\Iadame de Chevreuse received sentence of banishment from court ; and was conducted by an exempt of the royal guards to her husband's castle of Dampierre ; where she was * Mem. d'un Favori de M. le Due d'Orleans. f " Chalais apprit ce manage i^ar le bruit de canon. II ne dit mot, et attend tristement le sort que cet evenement lui annonce. On I'avoit mis en cachot." — Galerie des Personnages lUustres, t. 4. f Relation de tout ce qui s'est passe au Proces de M. de Chalais. — Aubery, t. 1. One chronicler, an eye-witness of the execution, states that Chalais said on the scaffold : — " Ce n'est pas sur I'esperance qu'on m'a donne de ma grace que j'ai avoue, mais pai'ceque la conviction etait entiere." 158 TIIK MARRIED LIFE OF [1626. consigned to strict surveillance. The King for some days insisted on her imprisonment in the Bastille ; and was deterred only from this severity by the intercession of Richelieu, who was a great admirer of the spirited Duchess ; and by the entreaties of M. de Chevreuse, who undertook to answer for her submission. "The Duchess was transported with fury," writes Richelieu ; " she went so far as to assert that we knew her not, when we concluded that she had only wit, coquetry, and vanity : never- theless, she would soon show us that she was good for something else; for there was nothing that she would not suffer to be avenged, and no indignity to Avhich she Avould not joyfully submit to compass such."* Before her departure for Dampierre the Duchess had petitioned to be allowed to retire to England, where her beauty and vivacity had rendered her popular.! Madame de Chevreuse, hov/evcr, who hated the melancholy solitudes of Dampierre, continued to agitate so effectually, that, after an interval of six months, she obtained permission to visit her husband's kindred of Lorraine, at Nanc^^ The Count de Soissons, advised of the accusations * Cousin, Vie de Madairie de Clievreiise.— Mem. du Cardinal de Riclie- lieu, t. 3. f " Madame de Chevreuse fit confesser (aux dames Anglaises) quo toutes leurs beantes n'etoient rien au prix dc la sienue,"~-3Iem. d'un Favori de M. le Due d'Orlcans. 1020,] ANNK UF AUSTKIA. ir.9 prefciTcd against him, propitiated the wiatii ut ins royal master by resigning his post as governor of Paris, and by qnitting the reahii, a self-condemned exile : the warrant of arrest was thereupon cancelled. The post of governor of Bretagne was taken from the Due de A'endome, who continued for some time a captive at Vincennes. Condc also bowed before the policy of the Cardinal ; and did not vcntuie to present himself for a long period at court for his supposed connivance in the plot at rieury. Suiidiy minor awards were allotted to the inferior Jigents of the conspiracy ; fines, imprison- ments, and banishments warned the valetaillc of the great lords that the formidable rider of Trance took cognizance also of their derelictions, as well as of the more heinous oilences of their niasters. The most illustrious offender still remained to be visited with a public manifestation of royal Avrath. The condition of the yoimg Queen was pitiable. The King refused to hold communication with her ; and she was forbidden to see the Duchess de Chevreuse, or to converse with j\I. dOrleans. Marie de' Medici, sheltered only by Kichclieu from the indignation of her son for her semi-adherence to the intrigues under investigation, dared not afford even a sem- blance of protection or countenance to the Queen. 160 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626. On the 2 7 til of August an order was issued, signed by Louis, and countersigned by his minister, for- bidding entree to the Queen's saloons and cabinets to the noblemen and gentlemen in waiting, or to the courtiers of the Louvre, unless they paid their respects to her Majesty in the King's presence ; and entered her apartments, and departed therefrom in his suite. A restriction more humiliating, and sub- versive of the courtly splendours and deference enjoyed by her predecessors queens of France, could not have been inflicted. Anne likewise received the imperious commands of her royal husband never to grant a private audience without first advertising Queen Marie, or the Cardinal ; and naming the per- sonage whom she was about to receive, and the object of the interview.* Correspondence with Madame de Chevreuse was strictly forbidden ; as also with Madame de la Valette. The severity of this punishment, however, did not subdue the proud heart of the Queen. Neglected by her husband, she persistently turned for sympathy towards her own kindred of Spain, whose counsels aggravated her position ; for the King her brother, never effec- * Mem. de la Rochefoucauld, t. ]. — Dreux du Radier, Vje d'Anne d'Autriche. — Motteville, t. 1. — The hatter insists that the " persecutions " which the Queen experienced were not inflicted for any fault of her own, "Mais les premiers marques de I'affection du Cardinal de Richelieu fiirent les persecutions qu'il lui fit." — Griffct, Hist, de Loui^; XTTI., t. I. 1020.1 ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 161 tually interfered to ameliorate her position ; or to intercede in her behalf. The Duke of Orleans continued to make unceasing efforts to procure a commutation of the sentence pronounced on Chalais, but to no purpose. Early on the morning following his brother's marriage, the King quitted Nantes for Paris, being preceded by the Queens, Anne and ]\larie. It was thought that his Majesty's sudden journey was to avoid further solicitations on the part of IMonsieur. The Duke, nevertheless, continued his intercession ; and implored the Cardinal to stay the execution, until he could rejoin the King his brother. His Eminence replied, " that he had no power to grant the request of his Royal Highness." The same answer Richelieu re- turned to the mother* of the unfortunate Chalais ; who, on her knees, implored mercy for her mis- guided son on the plea, that Chalais had previously saved the Cardinal's life, by confessing the plot to assassinate him, at his chateau de Pleury. It must, nevertheless, be owned that Louis acted with cle- mency towards the guilty contrivers of a plot so ajyo-ravated : for to assert that such existed onlv in the schemino; ima2;ination of the Cardinal de Richelieu, is utterlv to disregard the evidence * Franjoise de Montluc, dau^'-hter of Blaise de Montluj, 3Iarshal of France. 162 THE MAEIllED LIFE OF [1626. whicli has descended to tliese days. That many documents were suppressed, as daraaguig to the honour of the crown, and to the reputation of Queen Anne, is not surprising ; neither can it excite wonder that King Louis commanded that no minutes of the privy council before which his Queen was arraigned, should be preserved and registered. " She wished for my death, and coveted another husband during my lifetime ! " was often the bitter remark of Louis XIIL when any one pleaded the cause of the Queen ; and such remained his Majesty's settled conviction on his death-bed. The Duke of Orleans, the Count de Soissons, the Duke d'Epernon and M, de la Valette, the Duchess de Chevreuse, and her potent kindred of Rohan, were not likely to have accepted the odium of such a conspiracy with- out protest, if, in fact, the whole affair had been a device, trumped up by Richelieu to rivet his power, Philip IV. of Spain remained silent ; and never denied, through his ambassador or otherwise, the re- ception of the letter stated to have been written by the Queen. The Archduchess-Lifanta Isabel, more- over, never repudiated the assertion that the intrigue was discussed and matured in Brussels, her own capital ; which so good, and conscientious a })rincess would have done if possible, in aid of her niece Queen Anne, oppressed under so grave a charge of domestic. 1G2G.J ANXE OF AUSTRIA. 163 and state treason. The fact, however, which seems amply to prove the truth of the consph'acy, and of the charges respecting the Queen, is, that three years later, Anne, of her own accord, proposed a renewed discussion of the policy of her alliance with M. d'Orleans, after the then expected death of Louis XIII. The health of the King was precarious ; and the result of his re})catcd attacks of illness so uncertain under the rude medical treatment of the day, that the expectation of his death repeatedly acted as a snare, to lure the malcontents to premature revelation of their designs. J\I. de Chalais suffered on the twenty-sixth day of August. ■'=' Before his execution he made recan- tation of all his avowals ; and adhered only to the statement, " that for seventeen days only, before his interview with ]\I. le Cardinal at Tleury, he had meditated the death of the Cardinal ; and the de- position of Louis XIII." The interference of his friends, however, served to prolong his agony. In the hope that the prayers of ]\L d'Orleans might * Relation du Proces de Chalais. — Aubery, Mem. poiir ser\-ir a I'HiS' toire du Cardinal de Richelieu, t. 1. " II n'a rien dit h, tout cela [son aiTet], qu'il resignait son ame 5, Dieu, et son corps au Roy. Chalais est mort dans la plus gxande resolution qui ait jamais ete veue. II a dit dans la chapelle : ' Xe suis-je pas bien malhem-eux d'avoir dessei-vy le meilleiu- prince qui soit au monde ? ' " — Deux Lettres touchant la Mort de M. de Chalais, de Xantes, ce 26 Aoust 1(526, a 7 lieiu'es de soii-.-« Aubery, t. 1, 164 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626. eventually prevail, and therefore that the gain of a few days might be life to Chalais, they bribed and carried off the public executioner of Nantes. The morning appointed for the execution dawned, and no headsman appeared. By order of the Car- dinal, the execution was delayed until six in the evening, when two prisoners under condemnation of death taken from the common jail, undertook to perforin the task, on receiving a pardon foi* their services. These unskilful executioners mangled the poor prisoner in the most shocking manner ; and succeeded in despatching him only after thirty-five strokes of the axe.* The body of the unfortunate Chalais was given to his mother ; who caused it to be interred before the high altar of the Church of the Franciscans of Nantes. When all was over, M. de Louvigny, the original denouncer of Chalais, was arrested and committed to close prison at the suit of Monsieur, for having accused the latter falsely, maliciously, and disloyally ; attributing to the brother of the King, high crimes * " On a tirez deux homines destinez au gibets des prisons de cette ville, dont I'un a fait I'executeiu', et I'autre lui a assiste pour lui servir. Mais 9a a ete avec si peu d'adresse, que, outre les deux premiers coujis d'une epee de Suisse, qu'on a achet^e sur le champ, il lui en a domie trente-quatre d'une doloire dout se servent les tonneliers ; et a ete con- traint de le retoiu-ner de I'autre cote pour I'achever de coujier, le patiejftt criant jusqu'au vingtieme coujd — ' Jesus, Maria, et Rcgina C'oeli 1 ' " — Extrait de Deux Lettres touchant la Mort de M. de Chalais. Auliery, M6m. i^our servir a I'Histoire de M. le Cardinal de Richelieu. 1G20.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 165 which had no foundation ; and which, for the honour of the crown, needed to be atoned for, and retracted. Having pardoned Monsieur for his late, and principal share in the conspiracy for which Chalais suffered, Louis XIII. and his minister required justification for their clemency ; and a plausible, statement which might clear the reputation of the heir-presumptive of France. 16G THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626- CHAPTEU IV. 1626— 1G30. ANNE OF AUSTRIA AND MARIE DE' MEDICI. On her arrival in Paris, Anne earnestly petitioned to be allowed to retire to St. Germain. She was afflicted with a constant nervous tremor ; and suf- fered at intervals from such prostration of strength as to create serious alarm. The mental anxiety which she had undergone had shaken her health ; and in her solitude and depression, Anne la- mented her separation from Madame de Chevreuse. Peril and disgrace, however, unfortunately brought not to the Queen's mind a juster appreciation of the responsibilities, and dignity of her position. She took no step, on her return to the Louvre, to reconcile herself with her husband ; she treated Richelieu in public with negligent iuditFerence ; and made no attempt to conceal the greatness of her indignation as:ainst Marie de' Medici, for "the shame- ful abandonment " which she had experienced at 1G30.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 1G7 Nantes. Festivities were rare events at the Louvre ; and the recent ordinance, forbidding entree to the Queen's cabinets and saloon to the gentlemen of the court, had condemned Anne to virtual solitude. The Queen was surrounded l)y domestic spies, who made reports to Richelieu ; for the latter watched with jealous vigOance her correspondence in England, and Spain, Aware of this surveillance, the Queen never- theless, continued to correspond with the Duchess de Chevreuse, witli her kindred in Spain, with the Infanta at Brussels, with the Queen of England, and even with the Duke of Buckingham, through the instrumentality of Gerbicr, steward of the household to Buckingham ; who yet lingered in Erance, under pretext of collecting works of art for the decoration of his master's palaces. King Charles and his minis- ters were at this period specially odious to Louis : the feuds of the French attendants of Queen Henrietta Maria, and the indiscreet zeal of the priests, had ne- cessitated their banishment from Eno;land. London was provoked almost to a tumult by the doings of these personages ; and by the unhappy influence which Madame de St. Georges exercised over the quick temper of her royal mistress.* From this lady, * Galerie des Personnag-es Illustres de la Conr de France, t. 4. Charles had given his wife foiu- ladies of honour — the Duchess of Buckingham, the Marchioness of Hamilton, and the Coiintesses of Denbigh and Car- lisle, with whom the Fi-ench ladies were perpetually at feud. 163 THE MAREIED LIFE OF [1626— who was the daughter of the King's old goiivernante, Madame de Montglat, Louis heard of the extravagant, and indecorous manner in which Buckindiam raved o of the Queen of France ; and of the Duke's indis- creet comments on Anne's unfortunate destiny as a wife. Lord Montague was despatched by Charles to explain the step which he had found himself com- pelled to sanction, relative to the expulsion from England of Henrietta's French attendants.* Louis, however, being apprized by Madame de St. Georges, that the ambassador carried letters from Buckini>;ham to the Queen, and to the Duchess de Chevreuse, Mon- tague received, on his arrival in Paris, an order to leave the realm without audience ; or being permitted to deliver his despatches. Bassompierre was appointed, a few days subsequently, as ambassador extraordinary to the court of Great Britain ; deputed to mediate, on behalf of the Queen-mother and King Louis, between Charles and his Queen ; and to insist on the plenary execution of the marriage contract whicli granted to Henrietta the full, and public exercise of her faith. The office of first dame d'atoiirs, vacant by the * " Les dames et les aixtres etrangcres re^oiveut ordre de se prej^arer a retourner en France dan.s vingt-quatre heiu'es. — Le Roi les va voir a I'hotel Sommerset, leur declare sa volonte, et leur fait qnelques presents. On les embarque au plutot. Henriette, desolce, ecrit en France." — Pcr- sonnages Ulustres, t. 4. 1C30.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 1(59 banishment of iMadamc de Chevreuse, was given by tlic Cardinal to ]\Iadainc de Fargis, the wife of de Fargis,* hite French ambassador at jMadrid. Anne objected violently to the appointment ; but, after a few months of sullen protest, ended by taking Madame de Fargis into favour ; and by yielding absurd compliance to her counsels. jVladame de Fargis was the daughter of M. de la Rochepot, the old and faithful servant of Henri Quatre, and his ambassador for many years at the court of Madrid. So flighty and ill regulated, was the con- duct of IMadeleine de Silly, that at an early age she had been confided by her father to the care of his old friend the Countess de St. Paul, a rigid Huguenot, as became the representative of the elder line of Caumont de la Force ; and whose hotel in Paris, seems to have served as a kind of penitentiary for unruly damsels of rank. The discipline of the Hotel de St. Paul proved of no avail. ^Mademoiselle de Silly so compromised her reputation with the Count de Cramail and others, that she was compelled to seek the shelter of a convent. " One might have imagined," says a contemporary, " that this lightsome lady was beautiful : not at all ; her face was marked by small-pox; but she was agreeable, witty, lively, * Charles d'Angennes, Seigneiu* de Fargis. He was ambassador in Spain from the year \('>'20 to 1G24. 170 THE MARKIED LIFE OF [162G— gallant, and a most charming companion." Made- moiselle de Silly, however, declined to take vows ; and remained at her convent, the Carmelites of the Faubourg St. Jacques — often scandalizing the com- munity, but ^vinning toleration by her incomparable temper, and fun — until the death of her father, and of her eldest and only sister, the Countess de Retz.* Madeleine, now sole heiress of her late father, thereupon took leave of her friends the Carmelites, under pretext that her health forbade her to follow the severity of their rule. Her old levity returned in full vigour, on mingling again "with the world ; she appeared at the assemblies of the Hotel Ram- bouillet, and there captivated M. de Fargis d'An- gennes, cousin-german of the Marquis de Ram- bouillet, her host. Wit, humour, and joyous abandon Avere more to a d'Angennes than morality, or hien- seance. Madeleine de Silly became the wife of M. de Fargis, who had just been appointed ambas- sador to Madrid, and accompanied him to Spain. Her sojourn there lasted four years ; and great had been the admiration excited by the graceful, and lively ambassadress. Madame de Fargis, however, rejoiced in her husband's recall from his mission ; for * Franyoise de Sillj-, wife of Philippe Emmauuel de Gondy, Geudra des Galeres, subsequently priest of the Order de I'Oratoire. He died in 1C62. 1(530.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 171 The gloomy and decorous court of Philip IV. wearied, and taxed too severely her powers of self-control. She had scarcely arrived in Paris when the post of lady of the bedchamber to Queen Anne fell at the disposal of Richelieu. Madame de Pargis instantly solicited the appointment through the Cardinal de Berulle, who was confessor, and director of the Carmelites of the Paubourg St. Jacques ; and whose friendship she had won during her seclusion with the nuns. Berulle introduced the fair petitioner to the potent minister;* who found tlie wit of Madame de Pargis so much to his taste, and was so satisfied with her apparent devotion to his interests, and by her promises to rule the Queen and her household in subservience to his will, that Richelieu decided upon the appointment. jMadame de Pargis accordingly, in defiance of the repugnance manifested by the Queen, entered upon her functions, which virtually gave her the privileges of the first lady of the household, as Anne at this period had no dames da palais. Madame de la Plotte f was at the same time appointed by the Cardinal as governess of * " Le Cardinal (de Riclielieu) donne des rendez-vous h, 3Iadame de Fargis cliez le Caixlinal de Benille, a Fontaiuebleaii et ailleiu-s, de peur de faii-e trop d'eclat si c'etait chez lui-meme ; et aussi a cause que Be- rulle passoit pour un beat." — Tallemant, t. 2. + Cathcriue Le Voyer de Liguerolles, wife of Eeue du BeUay, Seigneur de la Flotte Hauterive ; her daughter, Renee du BeUay, was the mother of Jlaric de Hautefort. 172 THE MAP.RIED LIFE OF [1626— Queen Marie's maids of honour; and about this period she introduced her grand-daughter, the cele- brated Marie de Hautefort, at the Luxembourg. The merit of Mademoiselle de Hautefort was dis- cerned by Marie ; who presented her to the notice of Louis XIIL, as a damsel of " singular virtue and probity." Madame de Chevreuse, meantime, had been busily engaged on the work of proving to the Cardinal de Richelieu " that she was not the friendless, and in- competent personage he took her to be." Intent on vengeance, few could have more skilfully com- bined the elements of dissension ; or have fostered so cleverly the prevailing discord between the powers of Europe. Li France discontent was rife : the crown was gradually, but firmly resuming its ancient grants of privileges to the great barons of the realm, which had been so cruelly misused ; the King aimed at being in future the sole fountain of honour, and dispenser of grace. The haughty lords, who were paramount over the provinces of the kingdom, saw themselves displaced for trivial misdemeanours ; and their governments given to new men, creatures of the minister, and dependent upon the bounty of the King for their position, and revenue. The Husuenots rebelled under the strong hand of Riche- lieu ; the Rohans beheld their pretensions to the l(;3n.] AXXE OF AUSTRIA. 173 oDce Protestant principality of liuarn, so long a menace to the descendants of Henri IV., derided. Duplessis-Mornay wrote in vain, and found his threats futile ; and Lesdiguieres, wise in his day, secured the fortunes of his house by renouncing Calvinism. The strongholds wrested from Henri IV. by his restless subjects of the reformed faith, Richelieu now rcdcniandcd ; and announced that, that focus of sedi- tion La Rochelle, and its adjacent territory, must submit to the universal ascendancy of the crown, by the expulsion of its heretic nuniicipality ; and of its defenders, de Rohan, and his brothers of Soubise. The frantic cries of the French Protestants, thus menaced by a minister armed with irresponsible ])o\ver, echoed in the English council ; and the Duke de Rohan sent his brothers de Soubise, to implore the aid of Charles I. and the favourable auspices of Buckingham. A mandate of extermination for the great Huguenot citadel had already gone forth ; the engineers, and the survevors of the Cardinal encircled La Rochelle ; and by the command of his Eminence were enn;ao;ed in fortifvins; the island of Re, which had been captured by M. de St. Luc, after the Huguenots had suffered a naval defeat from the ships under ]\I. de Montmorency. The influence of the Duchess de Chevreuse was yet alive in Eng- land. Lord Holland was devoted to her ; Bucking- 174 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626— ham conciliated her favour for the sake of, and as a means of access to Anne of Austria ; and King Charles admired her sprightliness, and extolled her personal charms. She was, moreover, a near kinswoman of the "great Rohans." Marie de Rohan Chevreuse, therefore, whose relatives might kindle civil war throughout Bretagne, and the south of France, felt that her enmity could make itself felt, even when her foe was the omnipotent Cardinal ruler of France. Spain, already passively inimical, was ready to take up arms on the slightest provocation. The restraint in which her ambassador lived in Paris ; the griev- ances of the young Queen Anne ; the unfriendly distance maintained by King Louis towards his wife's kinsmen ; and the earnest desire manifested by Philip IV. to disturb the entente between the crowns of Prance and England, apparently riveted by the marriage of a French princess with Charles L rendered the Spanish minister accessible to nego- tiation. The question concerning the succession to the duchy of Mantua, moreover, opened a multitude of grievances, and heartburnings. The new duke was one of Louis' most potent princes, Charles de Gonzague de Cleves, Due de Nevers. The Emperor Ferdinand IL opposed his investiture ; and, in con- cert with the Spanish Viceroy of Milan, and the Duke of Savoy, invaded the duchy and its dependency of 1(130.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 17o Moiitferrato. Nevers appealed to Louis Xlll., and besouglit liis intervention ; a praj^er, to which the politic Richelieu gave little heed, pending his warlike designs on the Rochellois. In the Duke of Lorraine, Madame do Chevreuse found a ready and willing ally,* Charles IV. had espoused his cousin Nicole, eldest daughter of Duke Henry of Lorraine and JMargue- rite de Gonzague, and heiress of the duchy. The duke was a vacillating, unsteady man ; a slave to feminine charms and wiles ; and indifferent to his consort, whose attachment he repaid by attempts, after their marriage, to set aside her claims on the duchy, and to assert those of his father the Count de Vaudemont, as the nearest male heir of the late duke his father-in-law. f Charles received Madame de Chevreuse with distinction ; he assigned for her use the beautiful palace of Blamont ; and abetted her mtrigues to bring about a coalition of the Powers against France. The campaign was to be inau- gurated by the succour of La Rochelle. The Duke aiwavs inclined to the alliance of Austria, rather than * " Elle ^blouit, seduisit, entraina I'imiJetueux et aventureiis Charles IV." — Cousin, Vie de Madame de Chevi-euse. t Henry Duke of Lorraine had two daughters, co-heiresses, Xicole and Claude. Xicole married Charles IV., her coiLsin, eldest son of the Count de Vaudemont, third brother of the duke her father. Claude married Francois, yoimger brother of Charles IV., and their ijosterity continued the ducal line of Lorraine. Claude was the mother of the famous Duke Charles V. of Lorraine, who never possessed his duchj, then confiscated by the French. He became the brother-in-law of the Emperor Leopold. 17(3 THE IMAEEIED LIFE OF [1626 — to that of France. Richelieu had demanded several of Charles' frontier strongholds ; and, unable to cope against so potent a pleader, he had sought safety under the protection of the Emperor. The design of the confederates, after the relief of La Rochelle by the British fleet, was, that the Duke of Buckingham should disembark, and accept a command in the late beleaguered city ; that the Duke of Savoy should then invade Provence ; that the Duke cle Rohan, at the head of the Calvinist armies, should raise Languedoc ; while the Duke de Lorraine made his way through Champagne to the very gates of the capital, — such having been the proposed campaign, and dream of all the traitorous subjects of France from the days of the great Constable de Bourbon. To execute the plan of the conspiracy it was necessaiy that the English fleet should take the initiative ; and by the succour of La Rochelle, and the destruction of Richelieu's famous forts on the island of Re, enable the French dissidents in the south to take heart enough to listen to the subtle promptings of Philip IV. and his minister, the Count-duke de Olivarez. As Philip IL, the zealous champion of the popedom, had tampered with the allegiance of the heretic Henri de Navarre, in his war with his orthodox sovereign King Uenry IIL, and promised aid to the Huguenots; so now, Philip IV. was ready 1630.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 177 to become the ally of the Rohan s^ provided that the realm suffered calamity enough to destroy its com- petition ^vith the monarchy of Spain. It appears that the Queen was kept constantly informed of the progress of this negotiation : unadmonished by her recent narrow escape, and by the clemency which she had received at the hands of the King her consort, and of the minister whom she pursued with such reckless hate, Anne ventured still to cabal. Such was the Queen's hardihood, and so perfect were her powers of dissimulation and silent endurance, that no past danger ever seems to have been sufficiently remembered to act as a warning for the future. Her very helplessness, beauty, and affability, won devoted attachment ; so that no princess ever pos- sessed adherents more faithful, and determined. Under a silent and submissive demeanour strong passions agitated the spirit of the Queen : her haughtiness of character invested her with self- control ; wliile her })assive, but determined enmity rendered her a foe to be dreaded even by Richelieu. The young Duchess of Orleans, during the course of these events, gave birth to a daughter at the Louvre, ^lay 29th ; and died a few days afterwards, survivino- her marriao-e with JMonsieur scarcely ten months.* To propitiate Monsieur, and to make * BassompieiTe, Journal fic ma Vie. — " En ce temps Madame nc-i-oucha vol,. I. X 178 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [162G— hiiu loyally oblivious of the vexations he had expe- rienced at Nantes, Madame received enthusiastic welcome at the Louvre ; and was invested with pri- vileges derogatory to the prerogatives of the Queen- consort. The duchess was dispensed from the obli- gation of visiting the saloon of the Queen daily ; neither was she expected to present herself three times in the week at her Majesty's leve7% as had been the invariable etiquette of the court of France. At the public receptions of the Louvre, Marie de' Medici, and Madame gathered around them a coterie of the most brilliant personages of the court ; while Anne sat in her chair of state comparatively aban- doned, being timidly addressed by Monsieur, and saluted with ceremonious politeness by the King. Madame does not appear to have been deeply lamented ; her infant daughter,* heiress of her immense wealth, was confided to the care of Marie de' Medici, who had her brought up at the Taileries, under Madame de St. Georges, f The fancy of ]\Ionsieur soon became fascinated by the radiant loveliness of a fair young princess of Gonzague-Nevers, daughter d'une fille, centre Fattente et desir de leui-s Majestes et de Monsieur, qui eussent plutot demande un ills ; et elle, etant demeuree malade de sa couche, mourut peu de temps apres." — Mem. de Mademoiselle de Mont- pensier, t. i. Madame, and Queen Anne had lived in much mutual coolness, and dislike. " Madame se regardoit comme la future reine," and exacted obsequious homage. * Anne Louise Marie d'Orleans, la Grande Mademoiselle. t Jeanne de Harlay, Marquise de St. Georges. 1630.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 179 of the Duke of Mantua, a debutante at court, and to whom he commenced to offer ardent suit. Bassompierre, meanwhile, had returned from London, having partially succeeded in mediating between Charles, and his consort. Henrietta, how- ever, still mourning her early friends, and believing herself lost in a land of heretics, where her priests were pelted in the streets by the London populace, and her faith derided, implored the Queen her mother to permit her to visit France — " But, Madame, this happiness, if you grant it to me, can only be obtained by permitting ]\L de Buckingham to become my escort to your court." The Duke of Buckingham also confided to Bassompierre his longing desire to return to Paris ; and charged the ambassador to sound the Cardinal on the subject, and to hint that great achievements in diplomacy, very advantageous to France, might be obtained by their personal con- ference.* Bassompierre performed his mission, and stated the Duke's wish, which was met on the part of Louis XIIL by an indignant refusal. f Anne also * " Je lui fis entendre qii'on ne le recevrait pas, et envoyai Montague en toute diligence vers lui." — Bassompierre, Journal. " Buckingham pretend se servir de I'occasion des brouilleries qu'il cause lui-meme, afin de voir la Reine Anne d'Autriclae, dont il se declarait Tainant." — Mem. du Due de Rohan. "i" " Puisqii'on refuse de me recevoir en France conime un ambassa- deur qui veut i:)orter le pais, j'y entrerai malgi'e les Francjois, en general d'armee qui porte la gueiTe ! " retorted the Diikeof Buckingham. — Jlem. du Due de Rohan. N 2 180 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626— privately requested Bassompierre to write to M. de Buckingham to put off his visit ; and to state in her name, that such wou.ld be very displeasing to her.* The disappointment of Buckingham hurried him into the folly of lending a favourable ear to the solicita- tions of the Rochellois, whose interests were sup- ported in England by i\I. de Soubise. lie moreover, entered into a close correspondence with Madame de Chevreuse ; and selected as the medium of his com- munications with the Duchess, Walter Montague, second son of the first Earl of Manchester, who was about to travel in Erance. Richelieu, however, was too wary to be so surprised ; or to suffer the enemies of Erance to complete their coalition ere he struck the blow which should subjugate his master's rebellious subjects of the reformed faith. Moreover, Monsieur was again sullen and unmanageable, although honours, privileges, and wealth were heaped upon him with a lavish hand. Eor some inscrutable reason of her own, Marie de' ]\[edici opposed the desire of Monsieur to espouse for his second wife the Princess Marie de Gonzague, of whom he continued madly enamoured. The Cardinal, whose policy it was to humour his royal patroness in all possible ways, save in those matters which might have operated for his own downfall, supported her Majesty in this refusal; and * " La Reine me commanda d'ecrire au Due. iioiir lui faire savoir que sa venue ne lui sera pas agr^able." — BassompiciTe. ICSO.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 181 gained over the King to show similar disapproljation. Monsieur threatened, stormed — but was finally pro- pitiated for an interval, by the promise of a military command.''" Without waiting, therefore, for his foes to perfect their design, Louis XIII. invested La Rochelle ; and appointed his brother as general-in- chief of his armies, nominating Bassompierre, and ]\I. do Schomberg, as his aides-de-camp, and coun- sellors. This concession, howcNer, was extorted from the King, who jealously watclicd the career of Monsieur : and was conceded only, on news of the sailing of Buckingham, and the fleet from Ports- mouth, during a sharp attack of his old malady, which prevented Louis from heaving the Chateau de Villeroy, whither he had arrived from Paris en route for the camp. Buckino;haiii meanwhile set sail, at the be2;innini>: of July, 1627, with a fleet of fifty men-of-war, and of sixty smaller vessels, and an army of 7,000 men.f Charles declared to his council that his reasons for invadino- Prance were threefold — 1st, that YJwv^ Louis had declined to grant a passage through Prance to some English levies under Count ^lans- field ; 2ndly, that the Prench fleet had made prizes * Bassompiere, Journal de ma Vie ; Tallemant, Vie du Due d'Oiieans ; Le Vassor, Histoire du Regne de Louis XIII. t Hume, Reign of Charles I.; Siege de La Rochelle, Archives Cu- rieuses, t. 3, deuxieme series. ]S2 THE MARKIEI) LIFE OF [1626— of some small coastino- vessels hoverina; about La Rochelle; and lastly, because the Huguenots were oppressed, and in danger of losing all their strong- holds, La Rochelle being already besieged. The Duke of Buckingham was more candidly explicit on the causes, and motives of the war. "In spite of all the power and might of France, I will see her fair Queen again ! " exclaimed he publicly, at a farewell banquet at Whitehall. The Duke's galley was adorned with a yellow and black banner, the colours of Anne of Austria; and her cipher was everywhere displayed.* The chief cabin on board was dedicated to her charms : it was draped with yellow silk damask ; at one end was a life-size picture of the Queen^ shrouded by superb curtains of cloth of gold, before which golden candelabra were placed, holding lighted tapers of white wax.f The madness and infatuation of this conduct admit of no palliation ; the prosperity of the Duke's career must have induced insanity; and have rendered him cruelly forgetful of the posi- tion of Anne of Austria, and of the disgrace Avhich his insensate ambition had already inflicted. So un- expectedly was the expedition decided upon that the municipality of La Rochelle were not even apprised * Tallemant des Reaux ; Le Cardinal de Richelieu. t " Cette cliambre ^tait fort doree ; le plancher etait convert de tapis de Perse, et il y avait ime espece d'autel ou etait le portrait de la Reine, avec plusieurs flambeaux allumds." KiSO.] A\XK OF AUSTRIA 183 of the sailing of the fleet when Buckingham appeared before the town : the people therefore refused to admit their intending allies, before due inquiry had been made as to the object of the landing of so formidable a force.* Buckingham thus repulsed, attacked the island of Re, and began to batter the great fort of St. Martin, which was defended by the brave M. de Toiras with admirable valour. The cannonade, however, was suspended for a few days, by order of the Duke ; who, being })robably assailed with misgivings as to the motive of the war, and perhaps a little disheartened by his reception by the Rochellois, abated in much of his boasted vi2;our. Ivichelieu immediately ordered the despatch of GOOD men under Schomberg, to Re, who encamped on the island, and rendered essential assistance to Toiras ; while Monsieur diligently pushed the siege by land. The Duke of Buckingham was profuse in his civi- hties to any French gentleman who visited his fleet. M. Saint Surin, a distant kinsman of Richelieu, espe- cially recommended himself to the Duke's favour ; and the latter one day introduced him into the chamber on board the galley where the picture of * The Rochellois, who had received no previous hints of this exiie- dition, refused to admit the English succours into their town, on pre- tence that they covild not take such a material resolution without the concurrence of the other Protestants, with whom they were associated ; but in reality they were afraid of their allies, suspecting that Soubise and Blancas had agreed to betray the place into the hands of the English. — Hume. 184 THE MAUKIED LIFE OF [1626— Anne of Austria hung. Buckingham boldly avowed his admiration for the Queen, and his desire to visit Paris ; bitterly complaining of the uncourteous refusal of the prayer, which he had preferred through Bas- sompierre. He ended by requesting M. Saint Surin to communicate again his desire to the Cardinal ; engaging, if his Christian Majesty consented to re- ceive him in the capacity of ambassador from his Britannic Majesty, that he would presently take pretext to retire from before La Rochelle, and leave the city to its fate. St, Surin undertook the mission ; but repented his officiousness when he found himself arrested after his interview with the minister, and about to be consigned to the Bastille " for pre- sumptuous and traitorous communication with the enemy ; " a fate from which his kinship to Richelieu delivered him.* Meanwhile the garrison of Fort St. Martin was reinforced by the unforeseen and gallant descent of Schomberg. The blockade, also, being loosely maintained, the beleaguered garrison obtained abundance of provision. On the 20th of October Buckingham landed his troops, and again attacked the fort ; he was repulsed with im- mense slaughter, and his soldiers driven into the sea by the troops under Schomberg. Retreat be- came inevitable ; and the embarkation of the soldiers * Tallemant, Vie clu Cardinal de Richelieu. 1630.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 185 uiuler sucli disastrous circumstances was attended witli furtlier loss of life. The Duke rejoined his fleet, having lost more than half of his land forces, and immediately set sail for England.* The vigilance of the Cardinal was rewarded in another quarter by an important cipture. Walter Montague,! as has before been related, had been charged with the perilous office of carrying the corre- spondence, and the replies returned by the Englisli court to ]\[adamc de Chevreuse. Through his spies Richelieu learned that suspicious circumstances were attached to the fre(pient journeys to and from Nancy made by the young Englishman ; and that the letters he was known to carry, were probably of more mo- mentous import, than effusions sent by the English admirers of the Duchess. A warrant was thereupon issued for the detention of ^Montague, which was delivered for execution to the Marquis de Borbonne, who arrested him on the frontiers of Lorraine, and conveyed him a })risoner to the neighbouring castle of Coissy.;]: His papers were seized and despatched to Paris. The fact of the arrest of ^lontague was * Siege d.eLaRochelle,ArcliivesCurieuses; Hume, Reigii of Charles I.; Bassompierre, Joiu-nal de ma Vie. + Walter, second son of the first Earl of Manchester, a Roman Catholic, and subseqiiently abbot of St. Martin de Pontoise. Jlontague possessed much influence in the councils of France under Marie de' Medici and Anne of Aiistria. He died, 1G70, at the abbey of St. Martin, and was inten-ed in the chiurch of I'Hopital des Incurables, Paris. J La Porte, Mem. p. 304. 186 THE MARPJED LIFE OF [1626— communicated to the Queen, as her Majesty was supping in pubUc. Anne turned deadly pale, and pushed the dishes from before her as they were pre- sented ; then rising, at the conclusion of the repast, she retired to her private apartments. Her distress and consternation appear to have been extreme ; it was possible that Montague's papers might again fatally compromise her position — at any rate, she dreaded lest the examination of the prisoner would reveal her own guilty knowledge of the design form- ing, for the invasion of France. Her perturbation was increased by the arrival, a few hours later, of a note from Madame de Chevreuse, written in wild alarm, apprising her Majesty of the arrest of Montague ; but professing total ignorance as to the nature of the despatches, and letters of Avhich he was the bearer. Anne spent the night, and part of the following day weeping in her oratory, alone with Madame de Fargis, devising means for communicating with ]\Iontague, in order to discover what the confiscated papers contained. The sympathy of Madame de Fargis at this juncture, elicited the Queen's entire confidence : with all her wilful perversity, and dissi- mulation, there was, at any crisis, a touching help- lessness, and grief in Anne's aspect, which usually proved irresistible in evoking the best energies of 1030.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 187 her adherents. Her friends felt themselves honoured by the outward abandonment, on the part of their royal mistress, of the distance imposed by her rank ; by her naive appeals to their sympathy ; and by lier admissions that, abandoned by their help, she esteemed herself lost. Through the Cardinal de Berulle, Madame de Fargis discovered that the prisoner Montague was to be immediately escorted to the Bastille ; and that certain regiments of the royal guards, were already selected to proceed to Coissy on the morrow. In one of these regiments the Queen suddenly remembered that her faithful La Porte had been drafted as a soldier after his dismissal fjom her service, on the return of the court from Amiens. Her Majesty, therefore, ap: plied to M. Lavaux, who was intimate with La Porte, and the father of one of her dressers, to bring the latter to the Louvre at midnight, when she would confer with him secretly in her oratory. To such clandestine, and undignified interviews Anne ^vas driven, to hide the miserable intrigues, from which she could not refrain. iVnne seems always to have taken the opportunity to cabal when her adopted country was in straits, and needed loyal devotion. At this period France was menaced abioad by the arms of England, Spain, Savoy, and Lorraine — the Emperor Ferdinand defied 188 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [lfi2G— lier poAver ; and in spite of earnest expostulations, was proceeding to ruin, and dethrone the French prince, whom the rights of primogeniture had placed on the ducal throne of Mantua. At home civil war menaced the realm ; the Huguenots VA^ere utterly disaffected and malcontent ; and the heir presump- tive to the throne threatened to league with rebels, against whom he had accepted a command. Mon- sieur had suddenly retired from the camp before La Rochelle on the arrival there of the King. He stated in excuse, that Lonis had promised him the command in chief, which eno-ao-ement was annulled by the royal presence ; moreover, that the continued opposition made to his marriage with Marie de Gonzague convinced him that " their Majesties never had his welfare and happiness at heart." At court the Queen-mother was involved in violent dissensions with the Cardinal minister, respecting the Lord Keeper Marillac, whom Richelieu wished to supersede in the ministry in favour of the more able de Chateauneuf. Such was the position of affairs when Queen Anne joined in the correspon- dence of the Duchess de Chevreuse with the foes of France. This incident in the troubled career of the Queen, would probably have escaped record, but for the pen of La Porte. It does not appear that, at this period, any correspondence injurious to 1630.] AXXE OF AUSTRIA. 189 Anne fell into the hands of tlie Kinor. Richelieu o probably did suspect, and acted on his suspicion ; but proof of Anne's misdemeanour failed him ; and it was ever the policy of the Cardinal, " never to accuse, without he could likewise stab." " The news of the arrestation of my lord Montague threw the Queen into a strange fright," records La Porte:* "she dreaded lest her name might be compromised hy the papers taken from ^loiitague ; which, if such a fact had been laid before the King, with whom she was not then on good terms, his .Majesty might ill-treat her and send her back to Spain, as he Avonld most assuredly have done. This fear so greatly disquieted her ^Majesty, that she could neither eat, nor sleep. She was in this quandary when her ]\Iajesty suddenly remembered that I was a soldier of one of the regiments chosen for the escort of my lord. She, therefore, enquired of Lavanx where I could be found ; he looked me up, and conducted me at midnight to the Queen's cham- ber, after every person had retired. Her Majesty explained to me her trouble ; adding, that having no person whom she could trust, she had sent for me, believing that I should serve her with devotion. She said, that on the report which I was to bring her, depended her Avorldly salvation, and honour. * Page .'101 et scq., Memoires, La Porte, Pettitot, vol. o-i. 190 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626— The Queen then explamed her desire ; and directed me to take the opportunity when I was on guard near to the person of the said prisoner Montague, to ask him whether in the papers taken from him her Majesty was named ? Also, if it should happen, as it was certain to befal, that when in the Bastille he should be subjected to severe interrogatories, and pressed to reveal all the accomplices in the intended league, I was to pray, and admonish earnestly the said my lord, not to name her Majesty. I succeeded in informing Montague of the distress of the Queen ; and he replied, ' That her IMajesty might rest tranquil ; for that he believed she Avas not named directly, or indirectly, in any of the letters, and despatches taken from him ; ' also, he assured me I might tell the Queen, ' that he would rather die than reveal, or say anything that could injure her ! ' When I delivered this reply, the Queen actually trembled for joy ! " writes La Porte. Anne escaped this time with the fright. The young " my lord " was subjected to no examination of consequence in the Bastille, and was simply detained there until the peace with England, concluded hi 1G29; when, out of deference to the clamour of the Duke of Lorraine, " the ambassador accredited to his court," was conducted under escort to the frontiers of the duchy, and there released. The Rochellois, meantime, were comforted in their 1G30.] AXXE OF AUSTRIA. 101 adversity, and desertion by the entry into their har- bour of a fast saiHng vessel, bringing a letter from Charles I., assuring the citizens of his continued support : and that he was preparing a fleet, and armament which would at once insure the conces- sion of their liberties. Delays, however, arose, of \vhich the French government knew how to profit. Throughout tlie winter of 1G27, and the first months of the following year, the siege was carried on with wonderful vigour. The king remained in camp until the 9th of February, 1G2S; when, feeling indisposed, he returned to Paris, leaving Richelieu sole com- mander-in-chief, with the power of life and death over every person engaged in the siege.* Aware that the Rochellois could never be subdued while their city was open to the approach of an English fleet, Richelieu commenced that wonderful work, the mole and fortification which close the harbour of La Rochelle. Two French engineers, Louis jMetezeau, a townsman of Dreux, and Jean Tiriot, were the designers of the work, which was carried on under the inspection of the Cardinal ; whose courage, and perseverance were sustained by his able counsellor * Bassompierre, Joiuiial de ma Vie ; Siege de La Rochelle, Archives Curieuses. Aubery, M^m. pour servir a I'Histoire de M. le Cardinal de Richelieu. " Le Roi donna orilre expres au Due d'Angouleme et aux Marechaux de Bassompierre et de Schomberg, d'obeir au Cardinal comme a sa propre personne. " — Richard, Vie du Pere Joseph. 192 THE MAKRIED LIFE OF [1626- the Capuchin father, Joseph de Tremblay. The Car- dinal hved in a lone house known as Le Pont de la Pierre, situated a stone's cast from the beach. There the Cardinal and " his shadow " worked, plotted, pondered, and sustained each other daring the blockade : they sketched imaginary schemes for the glory, and the political government of Prance, which, impossible as these designs then appeared, the match- less genius of these two men realised under the fostering growth of King Louis' inaptitude for affairs of state ; his ever wavering health ; and the suspicions which poisoned his existence. Lono- and angry debates ensued meanwhile, in the English Parliament relative to Buckingham's policy ; * which retarded the sailing of the pro- mised succours, and enabled the French engineers to continue their w^orks, the aim of which mystified the British cabinet. The fate of the rebel city was rendered more desperate by the assassination of Buckingham ; who fell by the knife of one Felton, Auoust 24th, 1G28, after granting audience to Soubise, and other French gentlemen at Portsmouth, as he was again about to embark to relieve Rochelle.f The * It has been asserted tliat Anne of Austria was compelled by tlie Kino- and by Riclielieu to exert her influence over Bucking-ham, for the welfare of her country, by -writing- a letter to the Duke, in which she commanded him not to set sail before a period which she indicated. t Hume ; Thomson's Life of George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham ; Le Vassor, Hist, de Louis XIII. ; Rapin, History of the Reign of Charle;-, I. 1030.] ANNE OF AUSTlilA. 193 assassin had served in the former expedition to Re, and liad felt himself aggrieved, because the captain of his ship having fallen during the memorable embarkation from that island, the Duke declined to promote him to the vacant post. The news of the death of Buckingham was received with satisfaction in France. The Queen refused for long to believe that the gallant, handsome favourite had fallen. " No ! " exclaimed Anne, " it is impossible ! I have just received letters from the Duke."* When con- vinced of his death, her dejection was great ; and for some time her Majesty seemed to find solace only, in the correspondence of Queen Henrietta. The latter, however, had hated the presuming favourite, whom she accused of attempting to degrade her to the forlorn position of her sister-in-laAv ; and Avho had siio:2;ested the banislimcnt of her French ladies, to aveni^e his own exclusion from the Louvre. The command of the English fleet was conferred on the Earl of Lindsay; who, on the 2Sth of September, appeared off La Rochelle with a fleet of seventy- two vessels, and attacked Richelieu's new fortifica- * Buckingham often spoke of his conquests over royal ladies in terms highly irreverential. Madame de Chevreuse told the celebrated coadjutor archbishop of Paris, De Retz, that the Duke said to her one day, " J'ai aime trois reines, et j'ai ete oblige de las gourmer (to cixS them) toutes trois." " De vivre avcc la reine (Anne d'Autriche) d'lme maniere un pen galaute et rude, a deux faces, de I'humeur dont je connois la reine," said 3Iadame de Chevi'euse. 194 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626— tions, but failed to destroy them ; or to open the harbour. The inhabitants, meantime, were reduced to the last extremities of famine ; on the repulse of their allies, their despair and sufferings compelled them to open negotiations with their incensed sovereign, and his minister. These overtures w^ere made October 23rd. On the 30th the city sur- rendered, and was punished by the total abrogation of its charters and privileges ; besides the imposition of a fine to an immense amount, to defray the cost of the fortifications and siege works. On the 1st of November, All Saints' Day, the victorious Richelieu celebrated mass at the hiofh altar of the late heretic cathedral dedicated to Ste. Marguerite, after the solemn reconsecration of the church by the Arch- bishop of Bordeaux. The same day Louis XIII. made his state entry into the revolted city. Thus, after seven successful revolts against the royal autho- rity in the space of 100 years, the factious Rochellois w^ere totally subdued ; their fortifications levelled ; their privileges annulled ; and their harbour effec- tually barred against the approach of any fleet but that of their liege sovereign. The English fleet under Lord Lindsay made sail after the surrender of La Rochelle, and safely put into port in Portsmouth harbour. The ignoble termination of this expedition occasioned stormy, and even tumultuous debates in 1630.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 195 the English Chambers. Peace, however, was even- tually concluded with France in September of the following year, 1029 : the articles of the marriage treaty of llenriette Marie were confirmed again ; England abandoned the Huguenots of France to their late ; an amnesty was to be granted for all concerned in the late transactions ; and Madame de Chevreuse was to l)e recalled from banishment, and suffered to reside in the chateau of Dampierre.* The submission of La Kochelle was followed by an expedition undertaken by the King in person to com- pel the Spaniards to raise the siege of Casale ; which was invested by Don Gonzalez de Cordova. The Emperor persisted in his refusal to grant investiture of the duchy of Mantua to Charles de Gonzagues ; and demanded that the territory should be relin- quished to him as lord paramount, until the rights of the various claimants were examined, and adjusted. Duke Charles implored the succour of the King ; and the pohcy of Richelieu being now favourable to the old tactics of Sully and Henri Quatre, the Duke's prayer was conceded. The reduction of the remainino- Huguenot strono-holds of the South the minister postponed to the more propitious season, * Tlie charms of the Duchess de Che%T:euse had much power over Richelieu. Madame de Motteville saya, " que ce ministre, malgre la rigueiu' qu'il avait eue pour elle, ne I'avait jamais haie ; et que sa beaute avait eu des charmes pour lui." — Motteville, p. G2, t. i. 2 196 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626- wlien both Spain and Austria, humbled by the vic- torious arms of France, as he had predetermined, should thereby be compelled to abandon these rebel- lious vassals to the mercy of the government. The King, accompanied by Richelieu, quitted Paris February 4, 1629, for his Italian expedition. He was attended by the Dukes de Longueville, d'Elboeuf, de Schomberg ; the Marshals de Bassompierre, de Crequi, and other noblemen. The army, flushed with its recent success before La Rochelle, was obedient and enthusiastic ; and regarded the relief of the fortress of Casale, and the expulsion of the Spaniards and Savoyards from Montferrat, as a very inferior achievement. The prospect of a war with Spain was a bitter accession of grievance to the Queen ; and at this period her stolen interviews became so frequent with the Spanish ambassador the Marquis de Mirabel, as to give great umbrage to the King. One day before the departure of Richelieu from Paris, he paid a visit of formal courtesy to Queen Anne, to say farewell. As the visit of the minister had not been previously announced, he found Mirabel closeted with her Majesty ; the other person only present being Madame de Fargis. The Cardinal advanced, and after inclining profoundly before the Queen, addressed j\Ii- raljel with his usual bktnd cordiality of tone. " aNIon- sieur rAmbassadcur," said he, ''his Christian Majesty 1030.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 197 desired nic, on the first opportunity, to express to you his regret and astonishment at the haste which the Emperor has shown in sending his armies into the Mihmese, and against Duke Charles of Mantua, an okl subject of France ! " " The Emperor might cer- tainly have shown more prudence if he had waited for the termination of our nc^gotiations with your Eiui- nence. His Imperial Majesty doubtless believed that the afi'air would drag on here with endless tedium, as it has so often happened ; he therefore deemed it })olitie to urge on a denouement by arms ! " res[)ouded jMirabel, sarcastically. Richelieu showed that he was pi{j[ued at this reply ; and to turn the conversation he addressed the (^ueen on some inditferent matter. Anne, however, I'ose, and taking the hand of Mirabel interposed, saying, " M. I'Ambassadeur, do not excite } ourself. I, who have at heart the interests of Spain in equal degree with those of France, cannot approve of the j)recipitaiK'y shown by the Emperor in sending his armies as a menace to our frontiers. I will my- self write to the King my brother, on the subject." * It had been often better for the Queen if she had remembered the celebrated axiom of Richelieu : — " If words are the first power in the world, silence is the second ! " When this conversation was repeated * Capefigue, Vic d'Anne d'Autriclie — Archives de Simancas, § i7I. MS. quoted by M. Capefigue. 198 THE MAERIED LIFE OF [1626— by Richelieu to tlie King, he was greatly offended that the Queen had declared " that she had the inte- rest of Spain as much at heart as that of France," and personally administered a sharp rebuke ; forbidding her Majesty during his absence to see the Spanish ambassador, who had alone disobeyed the recent ordinance prohibiting entree to the Queen's private saloons, to the gentlemen of the court. During the absence of the King, Anne withdrew to St. Germain, attended by her household ; while Marie de' JNledici, installed in the Louvre, represented the absent majesty of France, and held all court recep- tions. Occasionally Anne ventured to trespass upon the strict injunctions which she had received to avoid the capita], by paying private visits to the Val de Grace, a convent which she had recently founded. Even this jorivilege of retreat Anne had managed to abuse, by granting secret audiences in the convent to Mirabel, and to other personages who presumed not to present themselves at the Louvre. Richelieu's spies, however, soon detected the sub- terfuge ; and it was several times reported to the minister that Isl. de JMirabel had been seen to leave his coach in an obscure street adjacent to the Faubourg St. Jacques, and proceed on foot to the Val de Grace, where he was admitted ; and after an interval of several hours, was observed in the same 1030.] ANXE OF AUSTRIA. 199 furtive manner, to return to his coaeh.* The mystery so fooUslily maintained by the Queen in her intercourse Avith her own family, and her pertinacity in refusing to impart the purport of any of her frequent connnunications ; added to the well-known facts, that she was in correspondence with Madame de Chevreuse, and occasionally so with iNIonsieur, afforded ground for the suspicion that she was dis- loyal to lur husband's crown. ller preference for everything Spanish ; and the favour which she showed to [)ersons who spoke her native tongue, such as Mesdames Bertaut and de Targis, and the daughter of the former, afterwards the celebrated ]\Jadamc de Motteville, perpetuated the notion, of which Anne unreasonably complained, that she was still in heart an alien from Prance. It was moreover suspected, and all but proved, that at this period Anne re[)orted to ]\lirabel any decision of the privy council affecting her brother's affairs which accidentally came to her knowledo'c : on any hastv, and inconsiderate word which dropped in her presence from the lips of the King or his minister, concerning their Catholic ]\Iajes- ties.f In the abbess of the Yal de Grace, Luisa de * Journal de Cardinal de Richelieu, qu'il a fait durant le grand orage de la coiu-, ez aunees 1G30 a IG-t-t. Tire des Memoires qu'il a ecrit de sa main. — Amsterdam, IGG-t. f Philip IV. and Elizabeth de Bourbon, eldest daughter of Henri Qnatre and Marie de' Medici. 200 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626— Milley, Anne fonnd a companion and firm friend. Tlie brotlier of tlie abbess was a subject of Spain, being a native of Pranclie Comte, and governor of Besan9on. Luisa de Milley had been educated in the Carmelite convent of Avila : all her aspirations were therefore Spanish ; and as many of her con- nections resided in Spain, this liaison afforded the Qneen an easy, and invaluable mode of communi- cation with her own country. " The Queen," writes Madame de Motteville, " being still young, but desirous of providing for her eternal salvation before all things, had selected the convent of the Val de Grace as a place of retreat, where she could always retire, and taste that peace which is to be found only at the footstool of God." Anne, in 1621, bought the Hotel de Valois, for the sum of 30,000 livres ; the old building was partially demolished, July, 1G23, and the remaining apartments adapted to conventual purposes, after the Queen had selected a suite of rooms for her own occupation. Anne built a superb private ora- tory, the altar of which was decorated with a painting and a crucifix, gifts of Philip IV. of Spain. The community of Val Profond, a small convent situated about nine miles from Bievre, was chosen to inhabit her Majesty's new foundation; but why these ladies were so favoured does not 1030.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 201 appear. Tlic iiiiii.s, with their abbess, La Merc d'Arbouze, were installed at the Val de Grace in the early part of the year 1G23. The community was of the Benedictine order ; and their abbess ap})ears to liave been renowned for saintly austerity, as she was transferred during the following year to the convent of La Charitc ; there to enforce discipline, and the rule of St. Benedict, which had fallen into disuse, to the great scandal of the neighbourhood. Luisa de .Millev, abbess of St. Etienne, Avas then chosen by the Queen as the head of her house, and assumed rvde at Val de Grace about the year 1G25. Anne inuuediately established relations of the closest confidence with the new abbess, who sympathised deeply in her Majesty's distresses. The al)bess Avas subsequently accused of having sanctioned public prayer in her chapel, for the downfall of the Cardinal minister; and of all the other enemies of the very Christian, and persecuted Queeu of France. La ]\Iere Luisa and her nuns looked upou Anne as an immaculate saint, whose prayers and patronage brouo-ht the blessiu"- of Heaven on their house : they faithfully kept her secrets, and performed her bidding, even when such involved imminent risk to themselves. No betrayal, or hostile witness ever confronted the Queen from the Val de Grace ; and the glorious, and magnificent house which hereafter 202 THE MAERIED LIFE OF [1626— rose on the foundation of tlie liumble convent of La Mere Luisa, was dedicated by Anne of Austria as much in memory of the devoted fidehty which she had there experienced, as a lofty monument of her joy, and thanksgiving for the birth of Louis XIV. The other personages, besides tlie Abbess Luisa and Mesdames de Chevreuse and de Fargis, at this period in the confidence of Queen Anne, were her physician, Vaultier, and her apothecary, jMichel Danse. Vaultier had been for some time high in the favour of Marie de' Medici, who had taken measures to bespeak for him a cardinal's hat. He subsequently passed from the service of Marie into that of her daughter-in-law, Queen Anne ; and became an ardent, but injudicious servant of the latter, entering into all the petty cabals, which the ladies and women of Anne's house- hold raised against the minister. Amongst her humbler servants were La Porte, Lavaux, his wife and daughter, a dresser named Catherine, and her nurse, Dona Estafania, who wisely shut her ears against insinuations and scandals, and consequently, lived a life of trancjuillity. The Duke of Orleans, meantime, fled from the kingdom to Nancy ; so intense was his resentment at the persistent opposition manifested by his mother and the King, at his suit to the Princess Marie de GonzaQ;ue. Marie de' Medici, durino; the Italian lf530.J ANNE OF AUSTIMA. 203 campaign, dominated in Paris, living for tlie moment on amicable terms with Richelieu's beloved niece, Madame de Combalet, who was about to shine at the Palais Cardinal, as Duchess d'Aiguillon. A glorious campaign, which terminated by the success- ful action of the Pas de Susa ; and the relief and cession of Casale to the French, rejoiced the court and nation. The King, after installing the Marshals de Crequi and de Bassompierre over the captured territor}-, received the thanks of the Duke of Mantua, and returned to Prance to carry on the campaign in the South for the total reduction of the Iluii-uenot power. The exploits of " I'Armee de Valence " were as signal as those of the division in possession of Montferrat. Town after town, with but few exceptions, submitted to the royal power, and was graciously pardoned for past treasons, though de- prived of treasured charters and religious exemp- tions. Lanii'uedoc submitted : the Duke de Rohan laid down arms, and accepted articles signed at Alais, in which it was stipulated that the fortifica- tions of the great Huguenot strongholds of Nimes, Castres, d'Usez, and ]\lontauban, should be demo- lished. The Huguenots were compelled to make restoration of Church lands and benefices seized, or appropriated by them from the commencement of the civil wars in 1561 ; all churches were dedicated 204 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626— afresh, and the orthodox service re-established. The Cardinal refused to receive the petitions of the ministers of the churches ; he declared that he knew no distinction between the religion of any of his Majesty's subjects ; that all should participate in the paternal regard of the govern, went ; and no person, or sect be distinguished, except for loyalty, and devotion to the glorious race of Bourbon. Louis XIII., leaving his minister at Montauban, arrived at Fontainebleau at the becrhmino; of Mav O CD •/ 1629, where the Queens had repaired to offer their congratulations. Marie received her son as a hero descended from Mount Olympus ; but the pouting lips of Anne of Austria had no smiles for Louis. Iler ironical salutations, and allusion to his victories over Spain and the Empire justly provoked his anger ; while her dejection, the absence of splendour in her attire, and the readiness with, which she yielded her precedence, and prerogative to Marie de' Medici, excited the King's distrust. Anne ever thus let the opportunity slip to establish ascendency over the mind of Louis. While the Cardinal dic- tated peace at Montauban, she should have seized the moment to propitiate her consort ; who found the e.vigeant humours of the Queen-mother hard to endure. Until the return of Richelieu, Louis found 1630.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 205 recreation in the chase. He also derived relaxation from his musical instruments ; and in setting verses to dreary tunes of his own composition. The King also found anmscment in carving wooden shrines with liis under secretary, M. de Noyers, wlio excelled in that ait. Richelieu at length returned to receive tlie congratulations of his royal master on his diplo- matic victories in the South, 'i'he reception of his Eminence by Marie de' Medici, however, was stormy and ominous. Richelieu, during his sojourn in tlic South, had taken no counsel of the Queen-mother respecting his compact with Rohan and his followers ; he had even severely re[)rimanded ]\Iarie for her arbitrary detention at A incennes of the Princess Marie de Gonzague ; and had sent an order for the release of the young [)rincess, at the solicitation of Monsieur, and of her cousin-german the Duke de Longueville. ^Moreover, he hiid l)huned the conduct of Marie in other matters relative to the Duke of Orleans ; who, while pretending to respond to the overtures of the King to return from his self-inflicted exile, had stipulated that he should not be required to visit his Majesty, until time had allayed the acrimony of his feelings in having been so cruelly thwarted in his matrimonial designs. The Duke had there- fore sullenly retired to the capital of his appanage, Orleans. Richelieu had recourse to his usual remedy 206 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626— to defeat the anger of the Queen-mother : he pre- tended to be overwhelmed with dismay, and prepared to quit Fontainebleau, " as he perceived that his fate was sealed, and her Majesty's displeasure irrevocable." His subtle Eminence next commanded his niece, De Combalet, to resign her office in Marie's household ; and his cousin, De Meilleraye, to tender his baton of chamberlain. The King, alarmed at these pre- parations, flew to his mother and besought her to pardon a delinquent so submissive. Marie, unable to resist the entreaties of her King and son ; and moved by the meek deportment of a minister whose power as she well knew, might, if he chose to exert it, prove irresistible, consented to a truce.* The winter of 1629-30, therefore, passed in stormy altercations and reconciliations ; the ill-regulated temper of Queen Marie relieving itself by vilifying the Cardinal in public ; and by accusing him to the King as a liar, a deceiver, and an ingrate. " We shall see M. le Cardinal ere long, ].ack up his * Journal de ma Vie, Bassompierre, annee 1C20. Aubery, ]\Iem. poiir FHistoire clu Cardinal de Richelieu. The Queen-mother, when she first saw the Cardinal after his return, asked after his health. " Je me porte mieux que beaucoup de gens qui sont ici ne voudroient ! " replied Richelieu. Marie, sivrprised, then turned the conversation by a jest on the Cardinal de BeruUe. " Je voudrois bien," interposed Richelieu, " etre aussi avant dans vos bonnes graces, comme est celui dont vous Yous moquez." Eu quittaut Marie de' Medici, Richelieu alia chez le Roi, et lui demanda permission de se retirer du ministcre. 1G30.] AXXE OF AUSTRIA. 207 baggage and (Iccainp, or I shall (piit the court ! " M. lioiinevil, first valet de chamhre to her Majesty, represented that i\I. le Cardinal seemed greatly depressed at the re[)ort of tlie depreciating things she was constantly heard to utter. " M. le Cardinal," replied Marie de' Medici, " is elastic, and able to adapt himself to any role ; one minute his spirits are joyous, the next he seems to be half dead : rising from a [)Oor little pitiful abbe, see how grandly he plays the part of Eminence, and prime minister ! lie treats me, his l)enefactress, with a more bitter hate tlian he gave to M. de Luynes ; and he pretends to exclude me, the mother of his King, from power ! Ah ! M. le Cardinal weeps his crocodile tears at pleasure I "' In such fashion did this violent woman agitate the court. Duriui^ the winter season of 1().09 the cabal was formed that nearly overturned the power of Hiclielieu ; and which Avas defeated only by his own extraordinary sagacity, and by the weakness of Louis XIII. Marie was the soul of the cabal ; her Majesty gathered round her, in support of her cause, and the downfall of the insolent prelate, the Princess de Conti Marguerite Louise de Lorraine - Guise, the old friend of Henri Quatre, who was still frivolous, cocpiettisli, flighty, and fascinating — " la premiere dame qui a appris a sa majeste Anne d'Autriclie 208 THE MAERIED LIFE OF [1C26— d'etre coquette " — the Duke cle Guise, Conde, Mon- sieur, the Duchess d'Elboeuf; Marillac, whose dis- missal from office had been resolved at the Palais Cardinal ; the Duchess de Lesdiguiercs, the Marshal de Bassompierre, Mesdames de Fargis and de Chev- reuse, Vaultier, the Count de Soissons — in short, all the influential malcontents of the realm. The Queens, moreover, sought reconciliation ; which was presently demonstrated to the world by the frequent appearance of Anne at the Luxembourg ; and by Marie's presence in the saloons of the Louvre. The Cardinal took matters quietly ; he armed a legion of spies, domestic and pubUc, who followed his foes to their most private retirement ; and the result of their investigations, he jotted down in that amusing Journal of Events, in which he records, apparently with naive surprise, the agencies employed for his overthrow. Early in the year 1030, however, the note of warfare again resounded. Spain refused to ratify the concession made by Don Gonsalez de Cordova, Viceroy of Milan, and agreed to l)y the Duke of Savoy ; and her armies, under the famous Marquis de Spinola, marched to invest the fortress of Casale, which was still garrisoned by French troops under the Marshal de Crequi ; while Count Colalto besieged Mantua. Richelieu was prepared for a campaign, 1630.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 209 Avliicli he had foreseen : the triumph of the Emperor over his revolted Bohemian subjects — who liad thrown off their allegiance and elected for their King the Protestant brother-in-law of Kincj Charles of Enoj- land, the Elector Palatine — had inspired liis Imperial Majesty with the notion that his array was invin- cible ; and would soon sweep Montferrat of her Gallic invaders. The gallant veterans of Susa and of La Ixochelle, and of many a hard contested siege in the South, rose again to arms at the call of their King; and Louis soon saw himself at the head of a line army, every soldit'r of which longed to lly to the rescue of his countrvmen, beleaGruered bv the hated Spaniards, in Casale. Eor the moment political feuds were forgotten ; and every class in the realm acqui- esced in the wise, and able mandates of the minister. The Kin2; insisted on assumini^ the coiuluct of the war; an enthusiasm, nevertheless, partly kindled by the warlike counsels of Richelieu, who descried less danger in being followed to the camp liy the King, than in leaving Louis exposed to the hostile influences of the Louvre. His jMajesty (piitted Paris and arrived at Lyons, accompanied by the Queens,* about the 3rd of April ; from thence Louis proceeded to * Marie de' Medici was offered, but refused, the regency of the realm during the King's absence, in order to follow her son, and more effec- tually subvert the influence of Richelieu. VOL. I. r 210 THE MARIUED LIFE OF [1626- join the camp at Grenoble, after makiug a short sojourn in the district of the Lyonnais. Richeheii, meantime, had been negotiating with the Duke of Savoy ; overtures which resulted in nothing, and which were terminated by the sudden advance of part of the royal army to besiege Pignerol. His Eminence, however, quitted the camp, and journeyed to meet the King at Grenoble, attended by Giulio Mazarin — afterwards the famous Cardinal of that name — who had been sent by the Pope on a secret mission to negotiate an armistice between the Powers. From Grenoble Richelieu travelled to Lyons to salute the Queen-mother ; and to test his favour in the capricious esteem of Marie. He found her Majesty more hostile than ever, and surrounded by his hottest foes, such as Beringhen, Vaultier, and others, and especially the Lord Keeper Marillac. Li noting this last fact, Richelieu, in his Journal, adds the signifi- cant line, "Qui amat pericuhim, peribit in illo." * On the occasion of this visit, Mazarin first bent the knee before Anne of Austria, being presented to her by Richelieu, with the following insolent words * Journal du Cardinal de Richelieu, qu'il a fait durant le grand orage de la cour es annees ](;;50 jusques a MMU. " La Reine dita Bullion qu'elle attendoit son temps, auquel le Roy ouvriroit les yeux et les oreiUes : et qu'elle mourrait plutot que de voir le Cardinal. Vaultier a aussi dit, que la Reine esp^roit que Dieu la vengeroit." 1630.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 211 — " Madame, I present to you the Sieur Giulio Mazarin ; your Majesty will doubtless approve of this sagacious personage ; as he, an agent of his Holiness, bears, as you perceive, a strong resem- blance to the late Duke of Buckingham." * Anne blushed, and unfurled her fan to cover her con- fusion. Chambery, meantime, capitulated to the royal arms during the sojourn of the Cardinal at Lyons, much to the secret triumph of Louis. The campaign in Savoy })rospered ; place after place surrendered, as during tlie previous invasion of the duchy by Henri Quatre. The health of the King, however, gave way before the excitement, and fatigue to which he was exposed. He fell ill at St. Jean de ■Maurienne ; from which place his Majesty, at the earnest entreaty of his phy- sicians, returned to Lvons, leavim;; the further con- duct of the war to Richelieu, Schomberg, Crecpii, and Bassompierre. Louis' disorder was bilious fever, of very aggravated description. The weakness and de- pression of the King increased : and ]\Iarie de' Medici beheld her son restored, as slie hoped, to her ma- ternal influence. i\Ielancholv, irritable at the slisrhtest proposal to discuss or transact state affairs ; anxious alone for conference with his confessor, the vene- rable Fere Soutfran ; and lured only to momentary * Tallemant, Tie du Caixlinal de Richelieu, Hist. %%. p 2 212 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1C26— forgetfulness of his niisery by tlie blue eyes of Mavie de Hautefort, Louis was ready to agree to any stipu- lation, or concession rather than debate a point.* The hopes of Richeheu's enemies therefore revived : the cabal rallied ; and letters of counsel, and entreaty poured upon the Queens, that they should now exert their united powers of persuasion to exact from the King a lettre de cachet forbidding the return of Richelieu to court ; and decreeing his banishment from the realm. Anne entered with eao;erness into the conspiracy ; and constantly discussed its details with the Queen-mother, and with Vaultier, and those interested in the downfall of the minister. The principal persons in the secret were the Princess de Conty, the Lord Keeper Marillac, the Duchesses d'Elboeuf f and d'Ornano, j the Duchess de Lesdi- guieres, Madame de Fargis, Bassompierre, and the Due de Guise and his consort Henriette, heiress of the house of Joyeuse. The Duke of Orleans was also consulted ; and an active correspondence was again imprudently instituted between the young Queen and Monsieur. The S})anish am])assador. * Vittorio Siri, Mein. Recondite, t. 3. — Bassompien-e. f Henriette Catherine, legitim^e de France, daughter of Henri IV. and Gabrielle d'Estrees. X Renee de Lorraine, daughter of the Diike de Mayeune, chief of the League. Her husband, the Duke d'Ornano, was a prince of the house of Sforza Santa Fiore. KJiJD.J AXNE OF AUSTRIA. 213 likewise, seems to have advised Anne to enter ag;iin on the perilous course of intrigue, which had already entailed such degradation on the royal dignity. As the King's malady increased, the spirit of the caballers became sanguine ; and they proceeded to discuss not only the removal of Richelieu from office, but whether his high misdemeanors did not meiit rttrii)ution. Monsieur counselled the arrest of his Imminence, in which opiniijii he seems to have consuUed the wishes of Marie dc' Medici; others proposed, that he should be assassinated in camp ; another proposal was, that the person of his Eminence should be made over to the Spanish government, to 1)e transported to one of Philip's colonies of the New \\ orld ! Madame de Fargis, meantime, was employed by the Queen to write epistles, and to convey mes- saii'cs. Anne's animosity against the Cardinal is de- scribed as unsurpassed by that of his most bitter j)olitical opponent. By the advice, it is said, of Madame do Fargis, prompted by ^lirabel the Spanish ambassador, Anne was reckless enough to consent again to the discussion of the policy of her mar- riage with ^lonsieur, in case of the speedy decease of Louis.* Madame de Fargis, at any rate, was a party to this correspondence ; as there is no * Dreixx dii Eaclier, Vie de la Reine Anne d'Autriche ; Siri, Mem. Recondite ; Auberr, Mem. du Cardinal de Richelieu. 214 THE MAERIED LIFE OF [162'3— doubt that the project was again submitted to Monsieur, with the assent and full knowledge of Anne of Austria. The prospect of being deprived of the queenly diadem, of France had inexpressible bitterness for Anne of Austria ; who certainly had no reason to review either with pleasure, or with triumph the events of her married life. In this interval she had suffered as a princess and a wdfe; her husband had openly showed alienation and dislike — wrongs, she had attempted to avenge by culpable intrigues, which had heaped upon her disgrace, and privations. The crown matrhnonial of France, however, seems to have borne a super- lative charm for all the princesses of Hapsburg ; and they clung to its glittering honours amid contumely and neglect. Eleanor of Austria, Elizabeth of Austria, Anne of Austria, Marie Theresa of x^ustria, and Marie Antoinette of Austria, were women, all dis- tinguished for personal, and mental charms ; but their married life was fraught with domestic, and political misfortune ; and they failed personally to adapt them- selves, either to the sovereigns their respective hus- bands, or to the manners and traditions of the land of their adoption. In the case of Anne of Austria, absolute dislike existed between Louis XIII. and herself, in addition to the absence of personal sym- pathies, and pursuits. The Queen had many un- IrtSn.] AXXE OF AUSTRIA. 215 tloiibted grievances to suffer from the frigid, im- perious, and vacillating temper of her consort ; and from his almost ludicrous dread of dictation, to which, however, no man coidd have been more subject. She saw her personal charms despised,* and her society avoided ; her pecuniary means were curtailed from dread of the power which the connnand of money would have given her to intrigue, with foreign courts. To avenge herself for her privations and want of influence, Anne had recklessly sullied her royal dignity ; her adventures with Buchiugham resounded throughout Europe ; and her connivance in the conspiracy of Chalais had greatly redounded to her discredit ; while it must be confessed that few husbands could have pardoned the treachery, and indelicacy of her overtures to Monsieur, in case of her own widowhood, and his accession to the throne of France. The precarious condition of Louis' health renewed Anne's political anxieties. On the 30th of the month of September, 1630, the disease presented so unfavourable an aspect, that his ^lajesty's physicians gave up their hope of saving his life. An abscess had formed on the liver ; the sufferings of Louis * " Elle avoit les mains parfaites, et ne les regardoit pas sans une secrete complaisance." — Monville, Vie de jMignai't, who painted tlie por- trait of the Queen in 1659. 216 THE MARRIED LIFE OF []626— were intense, and his strength rapidly failed. Marie de' Medici never left the bedside of the King, except when he was engaged with SoufFran, his confessor.* During the intervals of his relief from pain, Marie extorted from the King a solemn promise, or, as is stated by some contem- poraries, his oath, that in case of his recovery he would dismiss Richelieu. Anne also showed herself assiduous in the sick chamber. On the 1st of October the physicians informed the King that his recovery was hopeless. Louis received the tidings with resignation, and requested the sacraments of the Church. Mass was celebrated by the Cardinal de Lyons, in the presence of the Queens ; f at the end of the service Louis caused himself to be raised on his couch, and addressing those present, said, — " I grieve that I am too weak to speak to you all — I can only ask you to pardon any wrong that I have com- mitted. I wish the same prayer to be made to all my subjects. Le Pere Souffran will tell you all that I would add, if strength permitted me."| He then * Recit du Maladie du Roy a la ville de Lyons, par le Rev. P. SoufFran, son Confesseur ordinaire. Lyons, Vermonet, liioO. — Le Vassor, Hist, de Louis XIII. f " Monsieur le Cardinal de Lyons dit la messe dans la cliambre, et le communia." I " Ces paroles attendi'irent si fort le coeur de ceux qui etoient i^r^- sents, que tous, la Reine, messievu's les Cardinaux, et autres ofiiciers de sa maison, se jettant a genoux, jileurants et sanglottants, crierent : ' C'est a nous. Sire, de vous demander paixlon. Pardonnez-nous, Sire ! ' " 1130.] AXXE OF AUSTRIA. 217 ])eckoned to the Queen to approaeh his bed ; wlieii he bade Aiine farewell, and embraced her. All persons then retired, leaving the King with his surgeons, and his confessor. The Queens betook themselves, as it was said, to prayer ; Marie de' Medici especially professing to be overwhelmed with grief and con- sternation. On this day Bassompierre returned from a special mission to ^lonsieur at Orleans, and obtained im- mediate audience of the Queens, Amie and ]\Iarie. The j\rarshal brought messages from Monsieur to his mother, referring to the measures which he considered advisable in case of the demise of Louis, and of his own accession. xVmonG;st other directions Marie was instructed to connnand the arrest of the Cardinal minister ; who was known to be on his road from the camp to Lyons — a iournev which he had undertaken after receivin": certain intelligence of the precarious condition of the King. AYhat message Bassompierre was intrusted with, to Queen Anne never transpired ; Monsieur had a salutaiy remembrance of the peril incurred in the affair of Chalais, and seems to have coldly responded to her Majesty's overtures. Lidced Anne had lost much in his reo;ard and esteem, bv her late — Recit du Pere Souffran. " Ego testis oculatus et auiitus," testifies the reverend Jesuit. 218 THE MAREIED IJFE OF Ll'j26— pertinacious opposition to his union with ]\Iarie de Gonzague. Richelieu, meantime, had been warned of the intrigues concocting against his power, and perhaps against his hfe, by the zeal of M. de St. Simon ; * a gentleman, whom he had a little time previously recommended for service in the royal household, on the displacement of personages which occurred after the execution of Chalais. This St. Simon had quietly insinuated himself in the good graces of Louis, by his modest demeanour and ap- parent indifference to politics. " On my arrival in Paris from my English ambassage," writes Bassom- pierre, in 1627 — "I found that Barradasf had been dismissed, and that his place [in the King's chamber] was given to a young boy of pitiful aspect, and still more sorry wit, of the name of St. Simon." " You have heard that Barradas has been dismissed," writes the poet Malherbe, December, 19, 1G27 ; "we have in his place a Sieur de St. Simon. The King pre- sented him on Wednesday last to the Queen his * Claude Due de St. Simon, bom 1G06 ; maiTied Diane de Budos, by whom he had one daughter, married to the Duo de Brissac ; for his second wife, M. de St. Simon espoused, Charlotte de I'Aubespine, who was the mother of the celebrated Due de St. Simon. f A young cavalier of Burgiindy, who succeeded to brief favour after the death of De Luynes, whose lineage appears to have been almost iiruknown. The reason of his disgrace is thus recounted by Malherbe : " Un jour le Hoi par earesse, lui jeta quelques gouttes d'eau de fleur d'orange au visage dans la chambre de la Reine. Barradas se mit dans luie telle colere, qu'il sauta sur les mains du Roi, lui aiTacha le petit pot oil etoit I'eau, et le lui lanca aux pieds." 1(530] AXNK OF AUSTRIA. 219 mother : he is a young boy of eighteen." The King first showed favour to St. Simon because the hitter brought him accurate news of the hunts holdeii on the royal doinain ; and he was also a good rider, and was careful of his Majesty's horses. St. Simon, who possessed the shrewd discrimination which distin- guished his celebrated son, perceiving that his fortune rested neither in the hands of the Queens, nor even in the favour of his royal master, attached himself to Richelieu ; and served the minister by the accuracy of his reports, and the vigilance of his wai'uings. From the latter, tlierefore, Richelieu received report of the activity of the cabal plotting his overthrow ; and immediately set out to neutralize, and confront the danu'er. Orders had been issued bv Marie de' Medici to refuse entrance into the King's chamber to M. le Cardinal. On Richelieu's arrival in Lyons, however, one of those miraculous revivals had oc- curred in the condition of the King, which had so often destroyed the projects of Monsieur, and his clique. Louis peremptorily asked to see his minister, of whose presence in Lyons he was apprised by St. Simon, and by his confessor SoufFran.^ The unex- pected turn in the King's malady caused great affright and consternation ; and a conference was holden in the chamber of .Marie de' Medici to decide * Eecit du Pere Souffran. 220 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626— on the steps to be adopted. The Queen-mother dwelt on the solemn promise made her by the King to dismiss his minister — Louis having stipulated only, that peace might first be re-established in Germany : also between France, and the Empire by the conces- sion of the rights of the Duke of Mantua. The Marshal de Marillac, nevertheless, advised that the death of the minister should now be compassed, and offered to strike the blow ; his brother, the Lord Keeper, counselled the Cardinal's immediate exile to his diocese of Lu^on ; Bassompierre his arrest and imprisonment in the Bastile ; the Queen-mother declared herself in favour of a sentence of banish- ment; an award stated to be likewise approved by the Duke of Orleans. Anne demanded the exile of the minister whom she denounced as the great obstacle to a cordial understanding between the courts of France and Spain.* Tliis conference was scarcely over before all its details were fully known to Richelieu ; and afterwards, in the coming period of his unquestioned power, he is said to have retaliated on the wily plotters their own award on himself. The same evening the King passed through another * Bassompierre : " On rapporte qu'il y eut une g-rande assemblee a ce sujet, chez Madame de Fargis ; et que le Cardinal entendit tout au moyen d'une surbacane, et que chacun subit plus tard le traitement qu'il voulait faire eprouver au miuistre." — Notice sur RiclieUeu ; Mem. de Richelieu, depuis 1(510 jusqu'a 1620. 1030.] AXXE OF AUSTRIA. 221 dangerous crisis of liis malady ; and for some hours all again was agitation, and panic. Believing that his end approached, Louis sent his confessor, SoufTran, to his consort, to ask in his name pardon for all the trials, and possible provocations of her married life. " But this august princess," records the vcneial)Ie father, " took to weeping and shrieking* in such frantic emotion, when I opened my mission, and seemed on tlu; point of fainting, so that I could not conclude all that I wished to impart to her Majesty. Prayers were diligently offered for the King's re- covery night and day; and the Holy Sacrament was exposed on the altars of all the churches in Lyons." Anne's hysterical tears doubtless, flowed from extreme suspense, and from the agony of fear which assailed her at the presence of the minister ; being conscious of the equivocal character of her correspondence with M. d'Orleans. The same cveninrr, and durin": a paroxysm of the King's disorder, when all persons present round his Majesty's couch believed that respiration so laboured must soon cease, Richelieu sent for Bassompierre, who was colonel of the Swiss guards, and humbly recpiested him to bring over the officers of that regiment to his service ; so that in * " Cette princesse jeta de si haiit'; cris, et espandit tant de larmes, quand je lui dis cela, qu'elle pensa s'evanoiiir ; et je ne piis parachever ce que je voulois dire." — Recit du Rev. Pere Souffran. 222 THE MAKRIED LIFE OF [1626— the event of the King's death he might reckon on a faithful mihtary escort to the frontier.* The Cardinal wept, and assumed his most beseeching demeanour. Bassompierre, as indeed it was his duty to do, listened with gravity : and replied, that his oath of fealty forbade him to divert the services of the royal guards, even for a temporary purpose ; but that M. le Car- dinal, in the event which he anticipated, nuist submit himself to Queen Marie de' Medici, who, he was in- formed, would assume the direction of affairs until the arrival of the new king from Orleans. f Richelieu dismissed the Marshal with a little salutation full of resignation : and prepared himself for the coming event. His niece, Madame de Combalet, quitted Lyons during the night, taking with her many valuable effects appertaining to her uncle ; while the Cardinal himself made rapid preparation for flight. Everyone avoided the fallen minister excepting the newly married Duchess de Bouillon, sister of the late Constable de Luynes, who offered to Richelieu the shelter of her husband's stronghold of Sedan. At six o'clock on the following morning the ])ells of all the churches of the town rang jubilant j)eals ; the altars * Preface des editeurs de la premiere edition des jMemoires de Bassom- pierre. Cologne, 1605. f Bassompien-e is said to have hinted to the Cardinal that he might obtain his desire by prompt application to M. de Villeroi, Governor of Lyons, through M. de Chateauneuf, cousin-german to Villeroi, and tlie Cardinal's devoted axiherent. 1630.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 223 were adorned, and the gorgeous aisles of St. Jean de Lyons at mid-day echoed to tlie notes of " Te Deum Laudamus " — the night of suspense was passed ; and Louis le Juste was restored to his people ! The breaking of another internal tumour had brought the King to tlic verge of the tomb ; but Louis slowly revived from the deep syncope of exhaustion, feeble but free from pain, and comforted by the favourable verdict of his physicians, who now answered for the life of their royal patient."*' The court at Lyons fell again at the feet of Richelieu; the Queens nursed their wrath ; and took comfort in the solemn pledge which they had extorted. A dreadful misgiving, however, seized the young Queen, that possibly the Cardinal was in possession of the secret of her correspondence with Monsieur, which knowledge he might impart to the King. The re- covery of Louis was marvellously rapid; on the 14th of October he removed for change of air to the Chateau de Bellecour,t near to Roanne, and soon continued his journey to Paris. Marie meantime, had been laid up for a few days at Lyons with a swelled knee, and did not accompany her son to Bellecour. Louis * Recit du Rev. P. Souffran, who teiininates his interesting narrative with the wish that the King's unexpected recovery " ser\-e a I'amende- ment de cette conr, qui est maintenant pleine de bonne volonte ; mai.s coimoissant son inconstance je crains que, vtnitnt Jilil usque ad partum, et non est virtus jHirlendi.'" t " Maison de Madame de Chaponay." — Bassompierre. 224 THE MARKIED LIFE OF [1626— had urgently prayed his mother to hide their deter- mination to dispense with the Cardinal's services, until after the arrival of the court in Paris. The King piqued himself on his powers of dissimulation ; and was even proud to be compared in crafty address to Charles IX. Richelieu, under pretext of state business, remained with the Queens, and even at- tended them to Paris, travelling in the same boat ; so important did the Cardinal deem it to prevent further communications between Anne, and the Duke of Orleans. The personage who at this period played the part of spy in the household of the young Queen does not appear ; probably the Cardinal's agent was Madame de la Flotte Hauterive, a lady who, by dint of solicitation, and by the bright eyes of her grand- daughter, Marie de Hautefort, had recently succeeded in obtaining her nomination as ()ouvernante of Queen Anne's maids of honour.* Madame de la Flotte originally had visited Paris to sue in person a cause pending before the Parliament of Paris ; and which involved the whole of her little patrimony. She waited upon the powerful minister, authorised by a passport to his presence from Madame de Combalet, and accompanied by her grand-daughter. The acute powers of observation, and of resolve possessed by his petitioner were not lost on the Cardinal ; the * " Un emploi au-dessous d'elle," says Tallemant des Reaiix. l(;:3ii.] • AXNE OF AUSTRIA. i:-j chamiiiig face, and dignity of demeanour of the young girl, her companion, confirmed Richeheu's prepos- session. The widow quitted the presence of his Eminence flattered, and moved by strange ambitious anticipations. The suit w^as in the course of a few days decided in her favour; and Mademoiselle de 1 lautefort was presented by Madame de Combalet to the Pi-inccssc de Conty ; who, captivated by her lovely face, took her that same evening in her coach to the fashionable promenade, Le Cours de la Reine, and introduced her to the Queen-mother. Marie de Ilaute- fort was subsequently enrolled amongst ]\Iarie's maids, and was lodged in the Luxembourg : while her grandmother, who was still handsome, entered the service of the politic minister; and was eventually ])laced by him in the Louvre in the important, thoua;h subordinate office of "overness of the maids of honour, of her ^Majesty Queen Anne. On the arrival of the Queens in Paris,* the hostile cabal eagerly greeted their Majesties, who returned triumphant in the possession of the King's promise to * " jiarie de' IMedici descendit au convent des Cannelites dn Fanbourg St. Jacqnes, avant d'aller an Lnxemboiu'g. On cmt qne la peile dn ministre fnt encore concertee la, entre Ics dens reines, etMarillac, Garde des Sceanx. Les apologistes de ces princesses sontiennent qn'on ne s'occnpa que de devotion chez les Carmeiites ; et que les deivs. reines, entrees dans le monastere, n'eut pas un lung entretien avec Maiillac," etc., etc. — Galerie des Personnages Illnstres de la Cour de France, pendant les regnes de Henri lY. et de Louis XIII., t. -t. 2-2(1 THE MARRIED LIfE OF [.1G26— exile his minister. The peace, meantime, upon which Louis had based his assent, was on the eve of accom- phshment. The I'rench envoys, le Pere Joseph and M. de Brulart, Avrung from the fears of the Emperor a recognition of the rights of the Duke de Nevcrs to the ducal throne of Mantua. On the 13th of October, 1G30, the treaty was signed between his Imperial Majesty Ferdinand II. and the King of Trance in the town of Ratisbon. Casale was ceded to the Duke of Mantua, and Avas to be evacuated by the Spanish garrison ; and the King engaged no longer to oppose the election of the Imperial prince as King of the Romans ; or to sanction the designs of Gustavus Adolphus King of Sweden, who, in alliance with the deposed Elector Palatine King of Bohemia, and other Protestant princes of Germany, threatened the empire with sanguinary warfare. The reluctance of the King to disgrace his minister, nevertheless, was manifest -. in the course of a few weeks, Richelieu's ascendency had been confirmed ; and the bewilder- ment of the King amid the accumulations of state business accruing on the termination of the Avar, was painfully conspicuous. The Queen-mother, meantime, continued to besiege the King with reproaches, for his tardy fulfilment of his solcnm promise. In vain Louis sought to pacify his mother ; and to persuade her even into a temporary reconciliation with the I'O]- ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 227 Cardinal. He explained the urgency of his affairs, the dearth of able statesmen, his own fears and presentiments ; and finally, implored her to pardon Richelieu, to accept a seat in the council of state, and to act in conjunction with a i)relate so shrewd, faithful, and competent to exalt the nation, and to maintain the royal prerogatives. Marie responded to her son's appeal by a rude negative : " Either M. le Cardinal leaves the court, or I abandon yoin* ^Ma- jesty. What ! you hesitate to give this just satis- faction to your mother, and prefer an insolent church- man, who Avill finally drive your ])eople to revolt, as he has already rcndei'ed your court a desert P"'"^ The young Queen added her entreaties, and besought her husband to conciliate the Princes, to give due pre- ])onderance to the Queen his mother, and to recon- cile himself sincerely with the king her brother, and with ]\[. d'Orleans, — all which might be achieved by the disgrace of ]\I. le Cardinal. Richelieu, meantime, conducted himself with consummate prudence. lie * Joiu-ual de M. le Cardiual-Duc de Richelieu. The Cardinal relates with considerable complacency aU the violent speeches made by the Queen-mother. One day she exclaimed to Bullion, secretary of state, " Je me donnerois plutot au diable, que je ne me vengeasse I " Another day, 3Iarie, conversing with a Jcsiiit of the coui-t, le Pere Chrysostom, said that she hated the Cardinal, " poiu- I'etat qu'il avoit mis la France." The Jesuit replied, " que tout le monde estimait le contraire." '• Le peuplo est ime bete ; il ne faut pas prendre gaixle de ce qu'il dit," re- plied her Majesty angTily. " EUe dit au roi que j'etais un gi-and men- teur ; et que je lui avals fait signer des papiers pour d'autres." — Journal de Iiichelieu. 228 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1626- sent his niece from Paris, and commanded that his most valuable effects in the Palais Cardinal should be packed ; while he constantly alluded in public to his probable departure, and dismissal from office ; and made parade of recommending certain persons, whose abilities, he thought, might serve the state, to the various chiefs over departments of the government. Daily he presented himself in the antechamber of Marie de' Medici, and of Anne of Austria. The doors of the Luxembourg Palace were closed against him : the young Queen, however — moved perhaps by her dread of what the Cardinal might betray^ — granted him occasional audience. The meek deportment of his minister touched the King — most vividly, perhaps, when Richelieu presented himself in the royal closet laden with state papers, despatches, minutes from the provinces, reports from the disaffected districts of the realm, ecclesiastical edicts, and summaries of the doings of those encroaching personages, M^I. de la Cour du Parlement ; all of which he now made parade of lay- ing before his royal master for perusal, and signature. Louis yawned, and irritably pushed aside the ob- noxious documents. On one of these occasions he beckoned to his new favourite St. Simon, who was occupied in the antechamber in finishing off a trifling toy, put together by the King. Louis rose from his chair, and, followed by St. Simon, approached the 1G30.] AXNE OF AUSTRIA. 229 window. " Let us stay here in peace awhile," said his Majesty hstlessly, " et puis ennuyons-nous, ennuyons- nous, ennuyons-nous /"'* Fresh pohtical conipUcations menaced the newly-signed peace of Ratisbon, raised by the clever Richelieu, and his clever agent the Ca- puchin Joseph. The spirit of Louis died within him at the bare contemplation o[ the diplomacy and in- trigue impending ; and to vancpiish which, as Riche- lieu made his j\lajesty clearly understand, his own services, or those of ]\Iarie do' Medici and her son d'Orleans, were indispensable. On the 0th day of November, therefore, his Majesty paid an early visit to the Luxembourg, to explain to the Queen-mother his political necessities, his personal wishes, and, above all, to intimate his determination respecting his minister. He found the Queen more irate than ever against the Cardinal ; and incensed at his dissensions with the Lord-Keeper Marillac, which betokened the prompt dismissal of that functionary. She declared Richelieu to be an unprincipled trickster, the hollowness of whose apparent devotion to herself she could no longer doubt. Louis listened to her Majesty's tirades in sullen silence, utterly confounded by ]\Iarie's passion and vehemence. " This said Cardinal, lies in word and deed. Has he not written to our son d'Orleans, that if he will abandon our interests, his political * Tallemant des Reaux, Hist, de Loi\is XIII. 230 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [162(5— grievances shall be redressed ? Has he not written to Messieurs de Vendome that we desire their eternal captivity ? ]\I, le Prince, also, has been informed by this mendacious slanderer, that our enmity is the cause of his continued exile."* Whilst their Majes- ties were thus in high altercation, Richelieu arrived at the Luxembourg. His opportune visit had doubtless been concerted with the King ; who had commanded him to make every submission requisite to pacify Queen Marie. The ushers on duty had refused, as usual, to pass his Eminence on to the royal cabinet. The Cardinal, however, went to the chapel ; and from thence boldly traversed tlie private corridor which led to the Queen's apartments, and thus gained access to the room in which Marie and her son were con- ferring.f The Cardinal rapped at the door, which was opened by the King, who took the hand of his minister, and presented him to Queen Marie. " Madame, you were speaking of me, your humble servant, who deprecates your anger and prays for pardon." Marie, with a gesture of disdain, turned from the Cardinal, who had fallen on his knees at her * Joirmal de Riclielieu sur les orages de la cour, es annees 1G30 — 1G41. " Que dites-vous la, IMadame ? La colere vous empoite trop loin," ex- claimed the King. " Vous ra'aflfligez si sensiblement que je ne me re- mettrai jamais du cliagrin que vous me causez." — Galerie des Person- nages Illustres de la Cour de France, t. i. t Bassompien-e, Journal de ma Vie. Louis is said by Bassomijien-e to have exclaimed with dismay, on seeing his minister, " Le voici ! " 1630.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 231 feet. " Behold, mon fils, this wicked and false traitor 1 His intention is to take your crown, and give it to M. le Comte de Soissons, when the latter shall have espoused la Veuve Combalet ! Are you unnatural and undutifid enough to prefer such a varlet to your mother? Sire, spurn from you this destroyer of your domestic concord, the Inttcr foe of your mother, your wife, and your brother!" As the Queen-mother had now worked herself into an extremity of passion, Louis retired; hut made a sign to the Cardinal to remain.* Kiclielieu again tried to deprecate tlie wrath of his once confiding patroness ; but Marie drove him from her presence with reproaches, and by protestations of never-ending enmity. The same evening Louis again sought his mother, and found her in conference Avitli the Princesse de Conty,t a de- termined o})ponent of Richelieu's policy. A second parley ensued ; in which the King was so moved by the tears and entreaties of his mother, that he again solemnly renewed his promise to dismiss Richelieu. His Majesty then retired, announcing his intention to depart for Versailles ; from which palace a letter of dis- missal, and exile should be addressed to the minister. * Galeric des Personnages ILliistres, etc. etc. ; Histoire clu Cardinal de Richelieu ; Aixbeiy ; Le Yassor, Histoire de Loiiis XIII. ; Leti, Teatro Gallico, t. 1, in 4to ; Dreux du Radier, Vie de ilarie de' Medici. t Louise-Marguerite de Lorraine-Guise. After tlie death of the Prince de Conty, in 161i, she is supposed to have made a secret marriage with BassompieiTe. 232 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [162<3— Meantime panic prevailed amongst the friends and adherents of Richeheu. That much-enduring lady, Madame de Combalet, again received notice to pack up her effects, and await the final resolution of her uncle, who contemplated a retreat to Pontoise, and from thence to Havre de Grace. The following day the King made fresh efforts to subdue the obduracy of the Queen- mother. He prayed her to consent that the presi- dency of the council might at least remain with the minister for six weeks longer. " My affairs absolutely demand this concession. In fact, Madame, I have commanded my generals in Italy to hazard a battle if Casale is not surrendered, as stipulated by the peace of Ratisbon." Marie wept, but made no sign of relent- ing. " Madame," resumed his Majesty, eloquent in the defence of a minister, who monopolized all the toils of government, "Madame,! entreat that, at least for this period, you will speak more condescendingly to M. le Cardinal ; in truth, he is indispensable to me ; you are too prejudiced, too violent. M. le Cardinal serves me faithfully. I shall never recover from the grief and chagrin which you occasion me !" Marie, however, refused to listen to her son's expos- tulations ; and peremptorily insisted on the departure of the minister. " Mon fils," said her Majesty, " either the Cardinal or I myself leave Paris within the next few hours. Choose, mon fils, between a mother who 1G30.] AN>rE OF AUSTIHA. 233 loves you, aiul a traitor who betrays you and yours ! " Madame de Couiljalet at tliis instant, chancing to send l)y one of licr Majesty's ladies a petition to make a farewell visit, Marie declined to grant (lie audience. Louis, therefore, again took leave of his niollier, despairing to move her purpose. At the Louvre he entered his chamber, and, throwing himself on a couch, remained some time in meditation. " St. Simon," at length exclaimed his Majesty with a sigh, " St. Simon, did you ever hear, or witness before such a scene? My mother is implacable." "Sire, I confess I thought myself in another world on hearing your ]\Tajesty so thwarted ! Nevertheless, you are our master; it is for you alone to decide ! "* Louis rose : the shadow of wrathful suspicion fell, which so often darkened his youthful features ; and his lips trembled with passion. " 1 am master, as you say ; who shall ])resume to judge between me and my faithful min- ister ? I will show them all that I am master ! " The Kiuii: n2;ain fell into taciturn silence. St. Simon had heard enough, however, to encourage him to send word to the Cardinal de la Valette, to counsel Riche- * Galerie des Personnages Illustres, t. 4. The Due de St. Simon, iu his Memoirs, relates : " U est soiivent aiTive a mon pere d'etre reveille en sursaut en pleine niiit par nn valet de chambre qui tiroit son rideau, une bougie a la main, ayant derriere lui le Cardinal de Richelieu, qui s'asseyoit siu- le lit, en prenant la bougie, s'ecriant quelquefois qu'il etoit perdu, et venoit au conseil et aux secours de mon perc,siu- des avis qu'on lui avoit donnes, ou sur les prises qu'il avoit eues avec le Roi." — M^m. t. 1, chap. iii. 234 TJIK MARRIED LIFE OF [1626— lieu to avoid too precipitate a departure, as matters might still be adjusted. The King quitted Paris early on the following morning, St. Martin's Day, 11th of November, 1630, attended by St. Simon, Beringhen, the Marquis de Mortemar, the Dukes de Montmorency, and de Crequi, and other officers of his household. Marie de' Medici on the preceding evening had an- nounced her intention to attend her son to Ver- sailles. It was the Queen's habit to take a cup of broth in the morning before she left her bed, and to sleep afterwards for an hour : her Majesty, therefore, failed to rise in time to accompany the King. At 10 o'clock Richelieu, being apprized of the departure of the King, determined again to wait upon Marie. " Monsieur," said he to Bassompierre in the guard-room of the Luxem- bourg, "you will not long be troubled to salute, or present arms to a disgraced and unfortunate man like myself!" 'The Marshal made courteous reply; and attended Richelieu, cap in hand, to the door of the chamber where Marie and Anne were closeted together in earnest conference. St. Simon, meantime, mindful of the benefits con- ferred upon him by his patron, ventured again to rouse Louis from his depression by interceding for Richelieu, whose crime, he said, was " in having dared to repress the treasonable enterprises of the Queens 1G30.J ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 235 and of M. d'Orleans ; the latter wisliiiig to usurp tlic royal power, if his projects had not even a M'idcr scope, as was asserted by M. de Chalais." " Your Majesty's glory and reputation arc involved in not weakly sacrificing to feminine vengeance a minister so loyal, and able ! " St. Simon then affirmed that M. de Richelieu was in possession of an important secret : the disclosure of which de- [)ended on his remaining in power, as its betrayal would all probability prove fatal to a })rivate per- sonao-e. Louis listened with eaii;er interest: so much so, that St. Simon despatched an express to the Cardinal (le la Valettc, advising his Eminence to set out with- out delay with Eichelieu, for Versailles ; but carefully to prevent his intention from transpiring.* This transporting intelligence greeted Richelieu on his re- turn from the Luxcmbouro:, where he had been a^ain vainly to plead for reconciliation at the feet of Marie de' Medici, and of Anne of Austria. Some inkling of the King's vacillation, and of a probable turn of fortune in the minister's favour, actuated some of the more prudent members of the court. Richelieu found * " Je ne m'aiTeterai point a la fameiise Joiuiiee des Dupes," wi-ites the Due de St. Simon, " ou mon pere eut le sort du Cai'dinal Richelieu entre les mains, parceque je I'ai trouvee dans (Siri .'), toute telle que mon pere me I'a racontee." — Tome i., chap. iii. The name of the historian quoted by St. Simon cannot be deciphered in the MS. of his Memoires. Yittorio Siri, however (Mem, Recondite), states that he re- ceived every detail of La Journee des Dupes from the lips of M. de St. Simon. 23G THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1G2G— iiis hotel crowded with personages assembled to offer him respectful condolence. Amongst these person- ages was M. de Chateauneuf, then the friend of R-ichelieu, and Lord-Keeper elect after the fall of M. de Marillac, an event resolved upon by the Cardinal. Chateauneuf presented to the Cardinal a letter from the Duchesse de Chevreuse ; who had been tempo- rarily won over to the side of Richelieu by his patronage of Chateauneuf, with whom she was in confidential correspondence. M. le Jais, and the Cardinal de la Valette, MM. de Meilleraye and de Breze, likewise joined the assemblage.* The news from Versailles soon brought Richelieu Mte-a-tete with Louis XIIL, who shed tears, and threw himself on the neck of the Cardinal. Louis then heard Avitli indignation the history of the intrigues at Lyons ; the detail of Queen Anne's correspondence with Monsieur, when he (the King) was supposed to be lying on the eve of dissolution ; of the empressement shown by Marie de' Medici to act for her son d'Orleans ; and of the orders transmitted by Mon- sieur from Orleans, through M. de Bassompierre. " The King then exposed to j\L le Cardinal all the * Galerie des Personnages Illustres de la Cour de France, sous les regiies de Henri IV. et Louis XIIL, t. 4, p. 114, ct seq. " Le bagage du Cardinal etait deja en chemin sous I'escorte de quelques soldats, et ses mulets allerent jusqu'a trente-cinq lieues au-dela de Paris, sans entrer dans aucune ville de peur qu'ils ne fussent ai-retes, et que le ijeuj^le ne s'avisat de piller le tresor qu'ils porterent." KJ30.] ANXE OF AUSTRIA. 207 diabolical things attrilnited to him by the Queen mother, with all the artifices by Avhich she hoped to persuade her son to remove him from the con(hict of afi'airs." " j\I. le Cardinal," exclaimed lioiiis, " the Queen my mother, is instigated l)y a few turbulent spirits to ])ersecute you. I will, however, control such ! It sullices, Monseigneur, I am content with your services. Stay with me I I give you my royal word to protect you against their cabals." Louis then, with tliat mingled majesty and decision, which on rare occasions he could assume, gave his haiul to his minister, and leading him into an adjacent gallery, where the gentlemen waited, presented him to the asseml)led court.* Tn Paris, the coterie of Queen Marie continued jubilant over her supposed triumph. On the even- ing of the 11th, their J^rajestics held a reception, which was attended by many of Richelieu's friends; who, ignorant of the revolution in their patron's favour, thought it politic to conciliate the power supposed to be in the ascendant. These persons received no signs of recognition from their Majesties. The following day, November 12th, the news of the great counter-plot at Versailles burst upon the * " Les Dues de Montmorency et Cre(ini, aveilis sons mains par St. Simon, vont a Versailles ; mais BassompieiTe fut une des plus grandes dupes de cette fameuse joumee." 238 THE MARFJED LIFE OF [162(1— astonished courtiers, and convulsed the Qaeen- mother with despair, and indignation. The first intimation was the arrival of an order of arrest is- sued by the King, and countersigned by Richelieu, against the Lord-Keeper JMarillac ; who was at once seized, and conveyed under a strong guard to a house wdiicli he possessed in Lorraine. The seals were given to M. de Chateauneuf, a personage who was the confidential friend and ally of the exiled Duchesse de Chevreuse. The King despatched the secretary of state de Brieinie, to inform the Queen-mother of Richelieu's re-establishment in office ; and to pray her Majesty's consent, and approval. On the 20th, Louis removed to St. Germain, and summoned the Queen his consort, and Madame de Fargis, to meet him there. Anne obeyed in trembling uncertainty. M. d'Orleans also received a similar order, which he obeyed, as he thought it expedient to make friends with the Cardinal ; especially, as he knew from trusty sources, that Richelieu had been informed of the matrimonial overtures which had been again hazarded by the young Queen. Monsieur therefore paid a visit in great state to Eichclicu, attended by twelve gentlemen, and promised him favour and reconciliation. " Thus," says a contemporary, " the great day of St. Martin des Dupes passed without eftect whatever ; Queen Marie, compelled to tolerate 1630.] AXNE OF AUSTRIA. 239 the Cardinal, refused a conference, or any token of amity whatever. ' Ja prcndrai man icmps; je le troiiverai, et ferny cc (jiie jn veuoe ! Dicu ne paye pas toutes Ics seuiaines, mais enjin il payeV said her Majesty." On tlic 29th of November, the Queen and her son met. Louis greeted his mother shyly, but respectfully ; and asked as a favour, that she would contimie to give him the benefit of her presence at the council: and to aid his minister Richelieu by her great experience. ]\Iarie wrathfully replied, " that she would never voluntarily sec ls\. le Cardinal ; that she would rather die than assist him with her coun- sels!" Another day at St. Germain, M. de Nogent, one of the gentlemen of Queen Anne's chamber, but a secret partisan of Richelicn, suddenly entered the saloon of his mistress, and found Anne in tearful con- ference with the (^ueen-mothcr, the Marquis de Mirabel the Spanish and)assador, and with her phy- sician Vaultier. When Nogent entered he overheard the young Queen exclaim, " Ah, Avhat beautiful and consolatory sentences one finds in the Psalms of David ! My spirit revives when I read such words as ' Qui seminat in lachrymis, in exultatione metet.' "* Nogent immediately reported what he had heard to the Cardinal, who was at St. Germain. The entente between the Queens again renewed Richelieu's * Journal du Cardinal de Richelieu. 240 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [162!!— terrors. " Bonnevil, about the 12tli of December, informed the Kmg and M. le Cardinal that he beheved there was a cabal offensive and defensive formed by the two Queens and Monsieur ; the object of which was to ruin his Eminence by the diabolical lies, and testimony of Madame de Eargis, and others," is the record entered by the pen of Richelieu, in his Diary of tlie exciting events of this crisis in his history. Marie at length showed signs of relenting, fear- ing that hostilities might terminate by her total exclusion from affairs of state. On Christmas day, she intimated to the King her willingness to meet Richelieu in council, provided that the members met in the apartments of the young Queen ; as, wrote she, " I cannot yet resolve to receive M. de Richelieu at the Luxembourg."* To humour the exacting spirit of Marie de' Medici, Louis had hitherto assembled the privy council in an apart- ment of the Luxembourg. Eurtlier conditions were attempted by JMarie : she demanded the pardon of Marillac ; a promise of protection for her own partisans ; also an assurance that Monsieur should * " Parceque le dit Cardinal avoit trop de temps a etre chez elle en attendant le conseil qu'on ne tiendroit pas toujoiirs des lors que le Roi scroit entre ; ce qu'elle ne vouloit pas, ponr I'aversion qn'elle avoit centre luy; et la peine que ce luy ctoit de le souffrir, et encore rien qui luy appartient." 1630.] AXNK OF AUSTRIA. 241 not be pLTUiitted to marry without her peniiissioii. All these conditions were peremptorily declined, as the Queen-mother continued to demonstrate a spirit essentially hostile. Monsieur met the minister in the court of the Louvre, and responded to his obei- sance by turning his back on Richelieu. Marie also made a ra.nzia in her household, and dismissed ('71 masse every person related to the minister, or snp[)osed to be favourable to his j)(jlicy : moreover she sent to demand from Richelieu his key of ottice as supcrintendL'ut of her household ; ■•" and com- manded him to restore to her the Hotel du Petit Luxembourif, — a 2;ift which she had made him in the palmy days of his favour. * IMarie aggravated this extreme mark of displeasure by .sending as her messenger a simple ralet de chamhir, with a verbal message ! 242 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1630— CHAPTER V. 1630—1631. ANNE OF AUSTEIA AND MADEMOISELLE DE HAUTEFORT. Madame de Fargis, meanwhile, contiiiuetl to assail the Cardinal cle Richelieu, to npbraid hira for his ingratitude, and to flay his reputation by her sarcasm. According to Richelieu, she was accessory to all the peril and annoyances which he experi- enced ; exasperating her mistress, Queen Anne, against him ; and proving herself the steady ally of M. Vaultier, and the agent of the exiled princes in their attempts to convulse the court. Meantime, it w'as said that the liaison which Madame de Fargis retained with the Count de Cramail, and with Beringhen, first valet cle cliambre to the King, was open to grave suspicion; so much so, as to render her removal from the household of the Queen advisable. The King, moreover, could not endure the presence of a personage who had acted in accord with his con- sort throughout her late negotiations with Monsieur : his Majesty, therefore, listened greedily to the defa- matory stories in circulation, and thereupon resolved 1631.1 ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 213 Oil the dismissal of do Fargis.* At the same time, Richelieu resolved to forbid the frequent inter- views holden between Anne, and the Spanish am- bassador. Boutillier was therefore despatched to Mirabel to deliver a formal order from the King, for])idding the Marquis from entree to the Louvre, ('xct;pt on state festivals ; f also, it was intimated that for the future, Avheii the ambassador wished for audience of Queen Anne, such privilege was to be solicited in the prescribed way, notice being given to her Majesty's chamberlain three days previously- The abbess of Yal de Grace, moreover, received a notice not to admit persons within her convent during the abode there of Queen Anne ; and to forward to the minister a list of all applicants for audience. The ambassador, in a state of extreme irritation, sought an immediate interview with King Louis, to ask reparation for so notable an affront. The King coolly rcpUcd, " ^L rAmbassadeur, you are cognisant of the intrigues afloat at my court, which deprive me of tranqidllity. You ought not, * The Queeu -mother seems also to have ucqiiiesced in the propriety of this dismissal : " La reine-mcre vint an couseil ou Ton resolu la libeite de M. de Yeiidome, et Teloignemeut de Madame de Fargis." — Journal de Richelieu. f "On resolut, aiissi, de mauder au Marquis de Mirabel que le roy d^siroit qu'il vescut en France comme les ambassadeurs de France font en Espagne ; et qu'il ne vint plus an Lou\T:e sans audience, et ne pensat plus n'y sa femme d'ayoir librc entree, laquelle ils avaient usuiiaee jusques a present." — Ibid. r2 244 THK ]\lAl!i;iEi) LIFK OF [1630— by your frequent audience of her Majesty, to have provoked comment ; or to have seemed to sanction and encourage such disorders. It is not my intention to revoke my mandate. I will thank yon to inform me, whether the King your master, would have suffered for a single day at his court, the cabals, and disquietudes which for years have convulsed mine ? " * Richelieu then added, that M. de Barrault, liis Majesty's ambassador in Spain, was compelled to adhere to the recognised etiquette in his visits to her Cathohc Majesty, sister of King Louis ; and that during the last four months he had never failed to present himself twice in the week to salute her Catholic Majesty, and had not been admitted to audience. Intelligence of these pro- ceedings reached the ear of Anne, who now passed most of her time at the Luxembourg, in the society of the Queen-mother, and was often many days without seeing her husljand. Mirabel paid a fur- tive visit the following day, to the Val de Grace, whilst Anne was attending mass in the convent chapel ; and succeeded in obtaining brief audience of her Majesty, who was attended by de Eargis, as she cpiitted the convent. On the 27th, Anne sent for M. Boutilhcr, under secretary of state. The interview is thus related hy the pungent pen of *" Journal cTu C.aroint de dire : Jc ne luy paruoimerai jamais — non jamais I " — IV)id. 246 THE MAERIED LIFE OF [1630- this decision by pique at the conduct of de Fargis ; Avlio had obtained her nomination to the royal household by professions of devotion to his interests. " On the 30th of December," writes Richelieu, " la Fargis received an order to leave the court, in the most considerate and favourable manner possible, as she Avas to ask for permission to resign. The Queen testified great indignation against the Cardinal. She said several times, in the presence of Madame d'Angouleme, and of Madame la Princesse, ' that, as for the order which had been given to the ambassa- dor of Spain, it was for the King of Spain her brother, to resent and avenge it, as would be seen ; but the exile of Madame de JFargis was her affair; and tliat all concerned in it might be assured that she would never relax in her displeasure.' ]\lore- over," continues Eichelieu, " the fury of the Queen was unappeasable, for she exclaimed, in the presence of little Lavaux, ' No, never will I pardon M. le Cardinal.' " ''January 3, 1G31. — The Queen went to visit the Queen-mother, where she remained a long time ; on her return, her eyes were red and swelled. She l}itterly complained of tlie indignities to Avliich she was subjected, especially that his iMajesty threatened to dismiss her apothecary, Michel Danse : the said Michel Danse having observed to her JNIajesty, 1031.] ANNE OF AUSTIUA. 247 that he knew why M. le Cardinal wished to dismiss him — it was, to have opportunity to poison her, so that the King might espouse Madame de Combalet ! Tlie Queen responded again wdth a menace, adding — ' No es mas tiempo de habler con el Cardcnal, pero Hen de hazer ! ' ''January 5. — Tlie Spanish ambassador waited on M, Ic Cardinal to notify that her Majesty had ap|)licd to liiui to intercede for her apothecary : the said Cardinal responded* 'that he would mention the request to the King, who was master and lord.' "January 0. — ]\I. de Chaulnes visited the Cardinal Avitli the King. After his jMajesty had departed, the said de Chaulnes informed the Cardinal that his sister, ]\Iadame de Bouillon,! met the Queen at the Carmelite Convent, and that her IMajesty made bitter comment on her position and treatment ; upon which the said Dame de Bouillon replied, ' that perhaps it was her Majesty's own fault, by living on bad terms with the King, and with those persons in whom his Majesty confided.' Her Majesty replied, with warmth, ' No I M. le Cardinal wishes to divorce me from the King, my lord, and send me back to Spain.' i The same ''■' Journal dvi Cardinal de Riclielieu es Orag'es de la Cour, kc. kc. t Sister of the brothers De Luynes. The Duchess, -R-heu Madame de Vernet, had been dismissed for her share in the disorders of the coiu't when at Amiens. She had subsequently married the Diike de Bouillon. :; " La Eeine a encore tenu ce meme langage a M. de Chaulnes (Honore de Liiynes) le 2 Janvier, 1G31. a ce qu'il dit a M. le Cardinal." 248 THE MARKIED LIFE OF [1630— day, M. le Cardinal de la Valette went to pay liis respects to her Majesty, and while in discourse he gently observed that her Majesty should not so bitterly resent the past ; neither ought she to threaten so unreservedly. The Queen replied, 'I fear nothing : they have done the worst against me that they can. I know what my conduct in future shall be, and they have no power to prevent me. I repeat, I have nothing to fear ! I need patience only — and time will do the rest.' The Queen then paused, and glancing uneasily at the Cardinal de la Valette, hastily added — "I perceive that, perhaps, I talk too much : I will say no more.' " January 7. — The King has had intelligence that the Spanish ambassador has been all this afternoon shut up with the Queen at Val de Grace ; also, that la Fargis was lodging with le Pere de Gondy, close at hand; and that a person named Bordier has been going between the said ambassador, the Queen, and la Fargis, in defiance of the strict orders given by his Majesty, that the said ambassador should not see the Queen without leave. The am- bassador quitted Val de Grace at dusk hour; and whilst he was there, his coach waited in an adjacent street. " The King desiring, this same evening, to go to the play, her jNIajesty refused to accompany him ; and 1631.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 2 ID simulated faiiitncss in order to be alile to excuse herself. ''January b. — The King expressed again the same desire, and sent to ask the Queen liis wife, to accom- pany him to see a comedy : her Majesty refused to go, although M'. de Bonncvil "'•• gravely represented the matter. " The Cardinal de la Valette informed the Cardi- nal that on a certain day the two (Queens, as they retired from the court circle, said (alluding to his Eminence), ' Noas avons Incn. a fairc de lay do)mer plaisir tandis quil nous iwoaure du dcplaisir, et de la yeinc I ' " January '1^). — The prioress of A^d de Grace sent secretly to inform M. le Cardinal par le 11. de P. [si&j, that ]\Iontagu,t in disguise, had talked at the grate with the Queen ; also, that many per- sons whom they did not know, now spoke there to her Majesty ; and that the last time that she visited the convent a letter was given to her at the grate, which her Majesty read and then burned : the writer was supposed to be Madame de Fargis." \ This entertaining Journal, written by the Cardinal, * One of the foiu- secretaries of state, and often sent by the King to expostulate Avitli Queen Anne. t Walter Montague, then a monk of St. Martin de Pontoise, and greatly in the confidence of the Queens. t Jonrnal du Cardinal de Richelieu. 250 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1630-- reveals the irritating espmmage exercised over the Avords and actions of tlie young Queen. Anne's puerile plots to displace the poAverful minister recoiled upon herself, and covered her with obloquy. Her position at the court of France, over which her predecessors had ruled so imperiously, was humilia- ting to a great princess. Her personal liberty even was fettered ; and St. Germain, the Luxembourg, and the Val de Grace, were the only places which she had permission to visit at pleasure. The court assembled in the splendid saloons of the minister ; and while Queen Anne moped in a corner of the Louvre, Madame de Combalet received the homage of the great ladies of the capital. In defiance of the orders of the minister, Madame de Fargis lingered in Paris ; from whence, however, she made precipitate retreat to Joiiarre on learning that a packet of letters, which she had formerly Avritten to some person in Lorraine,"''' had been seized on the person of one M. de Senclle, ex-apothecary to the King ; whom she had sent to Nancy to recover possession of these papers, which she novv' deemed it expedient to destroy. At Jouarre, de Fargis had an interview with the Duchess de Chevreuse. Marie apparently greeted the fugitive with sympathy, and listened to her plaints against the Cardinal; with * Probal)ly to Madame de Clievreuse. 1031.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 251 wlioin, liowever, the Duchess was now reconciled through her friend the Lord Keeper de Chateauneuf. From Jouarre, dc Fargis travelled to Nancy ; and from thence she was imprudent enough to despatch letters to the young Queen and to other high per- sonages, repeating her slanderous accusations against the minister. Scarcely had her messenger passed tlic fiontier of Lorraine, than Richelieu's emissaries seized and despoiled him of his despatches, which were at o]icc transmitted to Paris. " Amongst these papers,'' writes the Cardinal,* '' were found letters addressed to the Queen, and others for M. Ic Comte de Cramail, ^lademoiselle du Tillet, and the j\Lnrqnise de Sourdis. These letters contained mention of high crimes ; and discussed advantages to be derived from the death of the Cardinal. They also made allusion to the death of the King ; and mentioned the old project of marrying the Queen to Monsieur. They stated that the Queen- mother opposed the marriage of Monsieur with a princess of Mantua to please the Queen, as his Majesty's health was apparently greatly on the decline. They testified to intimate correspondence * Journal de Eiclielieu. '' Ces lettres parlaient de la mort du Roi advenaut, de faire epoiiser la reine a Monsieur. Elle ecrit au Comte de Cramail qu'elle envoyait des memoires a la reine centre le Cardinal. Les lettres t^smoig-nent un veritable amour entre elle et le Comte de Cramail." 252 THE MARRIED LIFE OE [1630— between the writer, the Queen-consort, and Mon- sieur ; and gave advice to the said Queen Anne to do her utmost against the Cardinal. De Eargis, also, wrote to M. de Cramail, to get up petitions against the Cardinal, and to forward them to the Queen. De Targis, moreover, said to M. de Cramail ' that she would send the necessary tokens to the individual indicated; but it would be requisite that this man should be especially faithful, as she herself was.' AJl these said letters were shown, and identified to be in the handwriting of de Fargis, by the persons to whom they were addressed." The Duchess de Chevreuse, meantime, paid a brief visit of a few days to Paris, and was permitted to see the Queen without restriction ; which concession diminished the acrimony of Anne's resentment. Her Majesty sent the duchess to the hotel of the minister to intercede for de Fargis ; and, likewise, she persuaded Monsieur, who was then staying at the Luxembourg with Queen Marie, to speak to the King on the same subject. Louis silenced Monsieur's loquacity ; adding, bitterly, " that in a few hours her Majesty would be made aware of the justice of the proceedings against a personage every way so con- temptible, and unworthy." The Cardinal replied, "that the exile of the said Dame de Fargis being approved even by the Marquis de IMirabrl, and ordored by 1631.] AWE OF ArSTKIA. 253 Ills Majesty Louis Xiil., he could iu no way interfere." * The day l)ut one following, as Anne was preparing to depart for the Val de Grace, to grant a stolen interview to Mirabel, Boutillier, under- secretary of state, appeared to demand audience of the Queen on behalf of the Cardinal de Richelieu, the Jjord Keeper de Chateauneuf, and the ministers of state de Schomberg and d'Elfiat, who presented themselves at the })ortal of Anne's audience chamber, before her ^fajesty could command her- self sufficiently to reply to their message. Anne's usual placid demeanour faltered somewhat, as she took her seat, and prepared to listen to the com- munication about to be made in such formal state. Uichelieu then blandly informed her ^Majesty of the arrest of Senelle, and of another envoy of the Countess de Fargis ; and laid the letters captured from these persons on the table, for Anne's inspec- tion — '• which we did," relates his Eminence, "with all possible respect." The Queen then identified the writing and letters of de Fargis ; but said much against the said de Fargis, for the wicked thoughts that she suggested respecting the marriage between Monsieur and herself, in case of the demise of his * " Le ^Marquis de Mirabel dit a Bounevil, quoique pique de la defense d'enti'er an Louvre, qu'il eut voulu qu'on eut oste IMadame de Fargis il y a longtemps."— Journal de Richelieu. 254 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1630— Majesty. She said " that she had conceived such an aversion for the person of Monsieur, that she did not think that she could ever be brought to consent to such an alhance." The Cardinal then drew her Majesty's attention to a paragraph in one of the letters of Madame de Eargis to the Count de Cra- mail, in which she exhorted the latter, " to forward as many petitions as possible to the Queen against Richelieu." " Madame," observed the Cardinal, ''truth is everywhere to be obtained. I pray you, therefore, do not seek so far for grievances against me ; but if your Majesty has aught to complain of, tell me my fault." "Mon seigneur, I must be very malicious to say anything against you, not having cause." * The audience terminated with a ceremo- nious farewell ; previous to wdiich Richelieu apprised the Queen that the Marquise de Senece had been appointed by the King to replace Madame de Eargis as first lady of the palace. Anne received the communication in silence : but after the departure of the minister her tears flowed ; and she hurriedly retired to her oratory, and appeared no more in public during the day. The court, meantime, continued to be a very focus of hitrigue : pleasure and festivities were no longer * Journal de Richelieti. " EUe i-q)oiulit, qu'elle sca'ait bieu inechaute tie dire quelque cliose coutre lui ; ii'en ayant ancuu .siijet." 1631.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 255 sought by the courtiers, but were replaced by the evil excitements of petty plotting, scandal, and slander. Each man and woman of the court was attached to one or other of the hostile parties ; and either rallied round Marie de' Medici at the Luxem- bourg, Anne of Austria at the Louvre, Monsieur at the Hotel d' Orleans, or llichehcu at the Palais Cardinal. Jealousy, suspicions, and a lawless ex- citement relative to the issue of tlic political feuds prevailing, quenched the wit, the gaiety, and the magnificence of the courtiers. in these days of cabal, frivolous stories acquired a disastrous degree of importance ; a depreciatory whisper sufficed to blast a promising career, and to inscribe a name on the terrible black list of the Cardinal. The spirit of Marie de' Medici quailed al the contest 1)efore her ; and yet she rejected with disdain the overtures of the minister, while weeping in the solitude of her palace at the obloquy which had befallen her; and at the fatal omens '■' which she descried of approaching calamity. The Duke of Orleans, who was watched with gloomy suspicion by King Louis, one day courted the smiles and friendship of " II arrha, comme la reyue se couche a miuuit, line grosse et grande bougie qui dure jusqu'a neuf ou dix hemes du matin, s'eteignit sur les quatre heiires du matin. La reyne envoya querir le dit Censure poiu- lui demander si cela ne sigiiifioit qu'elle dut perdre?" "On dit que la reine a diverses prophecies, qui lui disent que dans la fin de 1631 elle sera aussi heiu-euse et grande que jamais I " — Joumal de Richelieu. 256 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1630— Richelieu ; and on the next furiously declaimed against his power, and vowed to support his mother to the death. Reassured by the sympathy of her younger son, Marie, during January of the year 1631, took the fatal resolve of making one more effort to dislodge Richelieu. Stories were circulated by her Majesty's command, depreciating the honour and fame of the minister; ludicrous incidents Avere invented, and industriously detailed to undermine his influence, in which ridicule Anne and Marie joined. Marie had appointed Richelieu, in the former days of his favour, lord-steward for life of her household ; and had presented him with the Hotel du Petit Luxembourg, a mansion joining her own palace, as his official residence. This office she had com- manded him to resign; also, possession of le Petit Luxembourg, which was then inhabited by the Cardinal's niece, Madame de Combalet. Richelieu audaciously disregarded the mandate, alleging that the office of lord-steward was permanent : as for the Petit Luxembourg, Queen Marie had promised him an indemnity of 30,000 livres, if, at the com- mand of the King, or from any other motive, she was compelled to resume her gift ; which otherwise, Avas to be considered a donation given and accepted for life. Marie appealed to the King, and offered to pay the indemnity ; but Louis decided that the 1(J31.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 257 hotel belonged to his iniiiister, and tliut the Queen could not tlius arbitrarily annul an appointment.* Thus tliwarted, Marie injudiciously sought support fVoiu Monsieur, who entered into the quarrel with acrimony — so much so, that meeting the minister one day in public, he again passed him without salu- tation, or any notice whatever. Meantiuie, the friends of Queen Marie held almost open conuuunication ^vith ]\I. de Soissons, and other exiled princes. State secrets oozed out in a mysterious manner at the courts of IMadrid, London, and Nancy. Couriers were continually passing to and from those coun- tries boarhig dispatches for the Queen-mother, for C^neen Anne, or for JMonsieur, the contents of which were never disclosed. The clandestine visits of Anne to her connnunity at the Val de Grace became more frequent than ever : and the Car- dinal obtained information that she constantly there granted interviews to M. dc ]\Iirabel and Madame de Pargis, who had had the audacity to visit Paris in disguise ; and to one Croft, f who acted as the * "Louis declara que le Petit Luxembourg demeureroit a Richelieu . Tl fallut eucore que la Reine JIarie devorat encore le chagrin d'appreudre qu'ou faisoit des changements dans son palais au gre du Cardinal et de sa niece, qu'on y batissoit des bains, et qu'ou j touchoit meme a la maitresse miu'aille du Grand Palais." — Galerie des Personuages Illustres de la Cour de France. f Sir Herbert Croft, who, espoiising the faith of Rome, became a lay- lirother of the Benedictines of Douay, 1(507. Croft died April, KiSl', leaving loxiv sous and three daughters, born in wedlock previous to his 258 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1630— agent of the English government, and to whom Qneen Anne was accused of betraying any state secrets she might become possessed of, relating to the Huguenot subjects of the realm. There can be little doubt that Anne, in her anger at the coercion to which she was subjected, did impart much in- formation to the envoys of foreign states. Dazzled by the promise of future power and consideration, o-uaranteed to her by her ambitious niother-in-lavv% and by Monsieur, she eagerly entered into their miserable plots to overthrow Richelieu. Matters were brought to a crisis by a rude refusal on the part of the President le Jay to pay a pecuniary mandate of considerable amount drawn on the treasury by Queen Marie ; also, by the independent act of the Cardinal, who bestowed the government of the Pays d'Aunis with La Rochelle, without previously con- sulting M. d'Orleans, which was a breach, as Monsieur alleged, of their late treaty of amity. Monsieur, consequently, waited on his Eminence one morning, attended by a numerous suite— all having previously been concerted with the Queens : — " Your Eminence will doubtless feel surprise at my visit," began Mon- sieur, in a tone which Piichelieu shrank not from calliu"- insolent, in his account of the interview to the profession. Croft, and Montague were heart and soul devoted to the i nterests of Anne of Austria. 1031.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 259 King. " As long as I believed that you were in- clined faithfully to serve my interests, I was willing to remain your friend ; now, as I perceive that you fail to perforin that which you promised, and have, therefore, broken faith with me, I ain here to with- draw my promise to aid and to patronise you." * The great minister inclined before the young Prince, and, with an air of dejp respect, " begged to be informed in what manner he had failed to give satisfaction to his roval Ilia-hness ? " " Monsieur, vou have failed in all your engagements relative to the Duke of Lorraine : you have also done all in your power to throw discredit, and to attribute loss of influence, to Queen Marie your benefactress, and to myself." " Monseigneur, ' replied Richelieu, " have not I promised to consider the claims of M. de Lorraine, when the said jjrince shall invite me so to do by his envoys? As for yourself, your highness, receivins; all, and more than vou demand, can have no just cause of complaint." Monsieur replied that further argument was un.necessary ; upon which his Eminence made profound obeisance. The Duke next observed that he was intending to retire to Orleans, \vhere^ in case of need, he should " know how to defend himself." This notification was also received by the Cardinal with low reverence ; and his Highness * Journal de Richelieu— Retraite de ilonsieiu". 260 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1630— then departed, making signs to his cavaliers to close round him, so that Richelieu might be prevented from conducting him to his coacli. Monsieur then repaired to the Luxembourg to hold final conference with the Queen-mother on the order and method of the se- ditious risings they contemplated in the provinces. As her quota towards the fund requisite to organise the demonstrations, Marie gave 200,000 francs, and jewels to a large amount. She, also, delivered to Monsieur the diamonds wliicli had belonged to his late wife ; * and which, by the King's command, had been entrusted to her guardianship for her infant grand- daughter Mademoiselle, whose nursery Avas in the adjacent palace of the Tuileries. Monsieur was also informed, by another " exalted personage," that the Spanish Government had paid in a large sum to his credit in the bank at Brussels, to be applied to purposes heretofore agreed upon. The exhortations, and commendations of his mother, and sister-in-law raised the duke's opinion of his prowess and power; * Journal dii Cardinal de Richelieu. The Duke had an interview with the Princess de Conty, which lasted three hours. The same evening- these illustrious ladies, Mesdames de Conty, de IMouay, and the Duchess d'Omano, conversing together, betrayed their suspicion of the flight of Monsieiu-, which Richelieu states, that they could onlj"- have learned from Queen Anne. " Je gage que Monsiei^r n'aitra pas le coeur de publier qu'il est sorty a cause du traitement qu'on fait a la Reyne sa mere," said Madame d'Omano. " Si fera, que je croy," replied Madame de Conty. "II le fera," continiied the princess ; "j'en suis asseiu-ee ; et je vous dis que la Rejiie savoit bien sa sortie." This conversation Richelieu remembered. 1C31.] ANNE OF AUSTJtIA. -jiIl and persuaded him that their great eiieiiiy must disappear before his first hostile manifesto. Letters were then signed and despatched to the exiled Princes, to the Duke de Montmorency, to the chief- tains of Rohan, and to the Duke de Bouillon ; whose possession of the independent principality and fortress of Sedan rendered him an important ally in any seditious rising. Monsieur next wrote to the King his brother, assurances of personal zeal, and devoted loyalty ; this missive he despatched by his equerry Chaudebonne, as he entered his coach to quit Paris ; for Gaston wisely deemed his liberty in danger, if, after the warlike notilication lie had made ill the morning at the Palais Cardinal, lie spent another night in Paris. The same night Marie feigned to be overwhelmed with consternation. On leaniiiif the flight from Paris of M. d'Orleans, she despatched a gentleman of her honsehold, named Villiers, to the King, to explain her dismay at " this ill-advised step of her misguided son ; " the shock of which had caused her almost to faint * on learning that ]\loii- sieur had actually quitted the capital. From the li])s of his minister, however, and by the uneriinrr pages of the Cardinal's famous Diary, Louis had been initiated, step by step, in the intrigue ; and had * " Que pen s'en etoit fallu qu'elle ne fust evanouie quanci IMoiisieur luy avoit mande qu'il s'en alloit de la cour." 262 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1630— been brought round to tlie opinion, that his mother was ready to sacrifice himself and his reahii, in the pursuit of her revenge, and ambition. The following morning Louis visited the Queen -mother at the liuxembourg ; and a scene of mutual reproach and violence ensued, during which Marie was compelled to acknowledge that she had given the Montpensier diamonds to her son, for purposes which she pre- tended to ignore. She nevertheless betrayed her influence over Monsieur at this crisis, by offering to effect his return to Paris, provided that the King granted him carte blanche respecting his marriage either with Marie de Gonzague, or with the Princess Marguerite of Lorraine ; and gave him the investi- ture of the fortresses and governments of I'lsle de France, Soissons, Coussi, Charny, Laon, and Mont- pellier. Louis absolutely refused ; adding, " that lie doubted not Monsieur would soon be brouo'ht to reason and to obedience." His Majesty then requested the Queen to retire for an interval from court, as his government was unhappily so dis- tasteful; and suggested, that her dower castle of Moulins would be an appropriate residence. Louis moreover, commanded her to withdraw her support from the exiled Princes ; and to remain absolutely neutral in the pending contest excited by her au'ents. The Kins; then took his leave, before her 1C31.] ANXE OF AUSTRIA. 263 ]\Ii»jesty had recovered from the first effects of her surprise, and fury on hearing such propositions. The next day ]\laric sent her confessor, le Perc Souffran,* to decHne obeying the commands of her son, " as her proposed sojourn at Mouhns was only a subtle snare of the Cardinal to entice her from Paris, that her person might be seized, and her liberty endangered. "t A council was therefore summoned, when it was decided to give her Majesty the alter- native of signing a document, in which she engaged herself by a solemn promise not to undertake, abet, or cncourasre risino;s in the realm : and to withdraw protection, friendship, and communication from all ])crsons exiled by the King for political offences, Marie returned the document, accompanied by a written refusal; as she said, "experience had proved to her that the opponents of M. de Richelieu were considered as the foes of the King; and that she was not disposed to sacrifice her friends, and de])ende]its to the evil wrath of the said minister." A second council was then assembled, at which Richelieu spoke, after he had been commanded expressly so to do by Louis. "With the eloquence, and precision in facts for which he was renowned, Richelieu obeyed. He represented * Jean Sonffran, Jesuit, confessor to Marie de' !MecIici and to Loiiis XIII. He followed the queen in her exile, and died at Flushing in 1641 . f Mem. Recondite. — Mem. du Cardinal de Richelieu. — Xotice des Editeurs. MSS., Bibl. Imp,, Lettres de Marie de' Medici.— F. Colbert. T>i THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1G30 — " that the Emperor, the Kings of Spain and England, and the Dukes of Savoy and Lorraine, jealous of the glory of Louis, and unable to mar the prosperity of France by open warfare, sought to effect their object by troubling the kingdom by secret intrigue, and seduction — that considerable sums had been sub- scribed for that purpose by Spain and England ; while a contingent of troops had been promised by Germany. " Sire, the Duke of Lorraine, and his kindred of Guise, have dared to brave your authority, and that of our venerated Parliament. The mal- contents are supported by the approval of her Majesty your consort, and by Queen Marie — a fact incredible almost, and unparalleled in the annals of history. Monsieur, therefore, will never make submission Avhile he is supported by the Queen- mother ; and as long as this Princess remains at court she is formidable, inasmuch as the power of procuring the dismissal of your minister is attri- buted to her. Li the midst of such intrigues and insubordination, order becomes impossible — sedition will increase ; and on your first indisposition, Sire, the Queen-mother will render herself master of your person, and state. Your faithful servants cannot defend you — happy, indeed, will they be if they can shield themselves from the veno'eance of two Princesses, whose anger we know to be implacable." l I'i AUSTIHA. ^h',) lion to share tlic deliberations of the couiieil ; noj- longer to sanetion })y her presence tlie infamous man- dates of ■\I. de RicheUeu." Louis therefore signed the requisite manchites necessary for the detention of tlie Queen-mother ; and tlie arrest of her most zealous adherents. It was determined, moreover, that same night to execute the project ; by leaving Marie at Compiegne under the charge and .surveil- lance of the Marshal d'Estrees and his regiment of guards, then on duty in, and about the palace. The design was well considered, feasible, and avoided violence, or show of disrespect to the unhappy Princess. D'Estrees was one of the most polished of the courtiers ; a nobleman of wit, refined manners, and savoir-faire, lie unhesitatingly undertook the otlicc pressed upon him : he promised to Richelieu unwearied vi2;ilance and fidelitv ; and assured the King that no eftbrt on his part should be wanting, to reconcile the Queen to her position ; and to induce her to make overtures likely to prove satisfactory to his Majesty and the realm. One by one the gentle- nu^n in attendance on the Kin": were summoned, and instructed to meet their roval master at midnight in the Capuchin monastery of Compiegne, under an inj miction of strict secrecy. Anne, of Austria, meantime, retired at her usual hour, unsuspicious that any event of moment im- 270 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1630— pended. Louis had too little faitli in her loyalty and discretion to impart his design ; neither, it is to be feared, was he greatly concerned at the fright likely to be inflicted, by the sudden revelation of so startling an event. Anne had passed the evening in the apart- ments of IMaiie de' Medici, and had returned there- from much depressed. In the middle of the night the Queen and her ladies, Mesdames de Senece and de la Plotte, were aroused by a loud knocking at the door of the antechamber. The blow^s were re- peated with greater energy, and voices were heard without. Anne opened her curtains in affright, and called Madame de Senece, who directed Mademoiselle Filandre, a feiiune de cJiambre, to inquire who the intruders were, and their business. '"^ " It is the King, the King ! " exclaimed Anne, fearfully ; " open to his Majesty ! " The sound of male voices, and the rino- of arms now reached the ears of the ea2;er listeners. Daylight just glimmered ; and all the Queen's ladies and women, pale with fright, crowded round their royal mistress. " A thousand fearful thoughts then agitated the mind of the Queen," re- lates jMadame de Motteville. " She had every reason to distrust the King her husband ; and, as she con- fided to me, she believed that some dreadful event was about to happen to her — the least that she * 31em, de Motteville, t. 1. 1031.] ANXE UF AUSTRIA. 271 expected being, that she was to be banished fruni the reahn. Looking upon the next few minutes as the supreme moments of her fate, the Queen prepared herself for the emergency, and summoned all her courage. She had a firm mind, and a resolute will; and I douljt not, judging from what her Majesty told me when relating these i)articulars, that the first shock being over, she would have received, with the utmost resignation and patience, the fate Heaven had destined her to endure." The Qneen's suspense was at length relieved by the return of Mademoiselle Filandre, with the intelligence that Monseigncur, the Lord Keeper Chateauncuf, desired to speak to her Majesty on behalf of the King. Anne rose from her bed ; and putting on the rohc de chanibre presented by Madame de Sendee, who afterwards described herself as " plus morte (jue vive," ordered ^L de Ghateauneuf to be admitted. Chuteauneuf bowed be- fore his young mistress as she trcnil)Hngly advanced with tlushed cheeks, and in utter disarray-. " ^la- dame," said he, "I have to make known to your Majesty the orders Avhich I have received from the lips of the King our master. To insure the welfai-e of this realm, his ]\lajesty finds himself compelled to leave his mother at Compiegne, under the surveillance of the Marshal d'Estrees. It is therefore his Majesty's command, that you attempt not an interview with .272 THE MAPJIIED LIFE OF [1G30— licr said Majesty, the Queen -mother; but that you immediately hasten to the church of the Capuchin convent, where his Majesty expects you." "'^ Chateau- neuf then withdrew, before the emotion of the Queen permitted her to reply. The lord-keeper, however, managed to whisper an injunction into tlie ear of the Marquise de Senece to hasten the preparations of her vouno; mistress, unless she wished to see her involved in the same disgrace as her mother-in-law. Anne soon recovered her accustomed coolness and decision ; and, with many anathemas on the Cardi- nal's audacity and tyranny, she refused to leave the palace Avithout a parting interview with Marie de' Medici. Time was elapsing ; and the king's orders had been precise that Anne should not see the Queen-mother, but hasten to join him in the church of the Capuchins. Madame de Senece, knowing the wayward perverseness of her mistress, and anxious to save her from a direct act of disobedience in a juncture of such importance, proposed that Ma- demoiselle Filandre should be despatched on a journey of discovery to the Queen's apartments ; from whence she should bring a message from Marie, in case her Majesty still remained ignorant of the coiip cVelat, expressing a desire to see Queen Anne. * Mom. de Motteville. — Le Vassor, Hist, de Louis XIII. — Journal do rjcliclieii. 1631.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 273 Tlie apartments of the Quecii-inotlier were silent and undisturbed. Filandre made her way to the bed of Caterina Selvaggio, chief tirewoman, and whis- pered an agitated entreaty that Queen Marie would send to request an interview with her daughter-in- law, as her Majesty had something to impart, and dared not leave her a[)artments unsummoned. This ruse succeeded : Marie, ever on the alert, sent Ca- terina to summon Queen Anne, under pretext that she had had an ao-itatinii; dream, and found herself indisposed. Anne flew to the apartments of Marie, followed by Madame de Senece, carrying a ])ortion of her mistress's attire.* Marie was sitting up in bed, clasping her knees, with a face of deepest woe. Anne threw herself in the arms of the unha})py princess, sobbing forth the words, " Oh ! ma mere, ma mere — I am to leave you — I have not an instant to explain — the King expects me at the Capuchin church ! " " Ma fille, am I to die ? — am I a pri- soner ? Speak ! The King, does he desert me ? What is to become of me ? " Anne then sis-ned to Madame de Senece to retire out of hearing; and while she finished dressing, she recounted all that had befallen her, with the order signified by Chateau- * " La Heine prit seulement uue robe de chambre, et toute en chemise passa chez la Heine sa belle-mere, qu'elle trouva dans son lit assise sur son scant. EUe tenoit les genoux embrasses, ne sachant que de\aner de ce luystere." — Motteville, t. 1. vol,. I. T •27i THE JiIAEKIED LIFE OF [1630— iieuf. With many tears the princesses then em- braced, and separated.* King Louis received his consort in the choir of the Capuchin church. His Majesty was attended by the Cardinal minister, by Chateauneuf, by the abbot of the Capuchins, and by a swarm of courtiers, many of whom had been roused from their beds to join the King, and scarcely yet comprehended their position. Two ladies also were present — Madame de la Flotte and her lovely grand-daughter. The King briefly recapitulated his reason for the arrest of the Queen his mother. "Madame," continued his Majesty, address- ing his consort, " the indiscretions of Madame de Fargis having caused her removal from your service, I present to you in her stead Madame de la Flotte Flauterive; and for second dcwie d'atours, Mademoiselle Marie de Flautefort. For both these ladies I request your favour." f Anne had hitherto steadily declined to permit any lady to fulfil the functions of the exiled Madame de Fargis ; \ she was, however, now com- pelled to put the ])est face on the matter, as the King was evidently in no humour to be trifled with. " EUe les rend toutes demv faisant la meilleure mine du '■■" Motteville, t. 1 ; MS. Beth. B. Imp., Fontanieu. t Motteville, t. 1. — Victor Consiii, Vie de Madame de Haute- fort. X Madame de Seiiece was fir.st (hum: ihi jkiIkIs to Queeu Auue. 1G31.] ANNE OF ACSTKIA. 275 7nonde," relates Madame de Mottcville. Anne, how- ever, still clung to lier de iargis, who, like herself, was an adherent of the Queen-mother of Spain, and of the French malcontents ; and she viewed her new ladies, especially Mademoiselle de Hautefort, not only as her rival in the King's favour, hut as an enemy, and a spy in the pay of the Cardhial. Marie dc Hautefort was the daughter of Charles, Marquis dc Hautefort, and of Renee du Belley. At this period she had accomplished her eighteenth year. Her beauty w%as less dazzling than that of Madame de Chevrcuse, but of a nobler type. The expression of her featui'es was serious and thoughtful : she was pious, ambitious, sedate in manner, and reserved to a surprising degree for a damsel of her age, so early introduced at the court of France. When Made- moiselle de Hautefort spoke, she did so advisedly ; her language w\as well chosen, and perfectly expressed her ideas. The })oor but illustrious family from which J\Iarie sprang, had little to bestow on a younger daughter of their race, and she had been destined for the cloister. Louis, however, had now resolved that Mademoiselle de Hautefort shoidd be drafted into the household of the young Queen ; as he found inde- scribable consolation in her repose of manner, deco- rous discourse, and sweet smiles. Marie, on her part, professed respectful devotion for Louis Treize ; and 276 THE MxUUUED LIFE OF [1630— exalted liiiii into a hero, wliosc domestic misfortunes inspired profound sympathy. The two, however, had never met in private ; for their interview's were hoklcn in a small cabinet adjacent to the saloon in Avhicli Marie de' Medici received the court. The King, with a triste expression on his sallow, pensive face, sat and sighed by the object of his admiration ; who, serenely gracious, entertained him with the on-dits of conventual gossip ; or related her early reminiscences of rural life, in which his Majesty seemed to take deep interest. The King and Queen, after their salutations in the grey twilight of this February morning, commanded mass to be said before they quitted the chapel. Louis seized the opportunity to indicate that a fresh influence had dawned over the court. The maids of the Queen, accordhig to custom, sat and knelt on the ground during mass, the ladies of honour having alone the privilege of cushions and stools. The King, observing this, rose, and taking the velvet cushion of his own prie-Dieu, sent it to Mademoiselle de Haute- fort with a gracious gesture. Marie blushed, for she felt that the eyes of all persons present were watch- ing her. She, in her turn, looked anxiously at Queen Anne, who signed to her to take the cushion. Marie obeyed, but modestly laid it by her ; and, when mass v.as concluded, she rose, and, with a deep obeisance. 1631.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 277 returned the cusliion to the King.* Louis continued lii.s journey with the court to SciiUs. There, many victims were sacrificed to the hate, and to the fears of UicheUeu ; arrests, perhaps rendered necessary ])y the catastrophe of Marie's detention at Cora- piegne. An hour after liis arrival in Senhs, M. Vaultier, Marie's obnoxious physician and friend, was on liis way to the Bastille under escort. Lettrcs de cachet were despatched by M. dc la Villc-aux-Clercs to the Princess de Conty, jMarguerite de Lorraine- Guise, the intimate companion of the Queens, and the wife of Bassompierre ; wliich exiled her to the castle of Eu, permitting her only six hours to set out from Paris. On the .2 Ith of February, Bassompierre, the brilliant and popular trifier, was arrested, ostensibly as a partizan of ^larie de' ]\Iedici ; but, as it was surmised, to avenge the counsel which he had given at Lyons in 16-30, to imprison Richelieu for life. It was also debated in council to arrest the Duke d'Epcr- iion, and the Marshal dc Crcqui. The Duchesses d'Elboeuf, de Rohan, d'Ornano likewise received an order to retire from Paris. All things seemed now at the feet of the victorious minister : he possessed the ear of the King ; and directed at will the re- sources, and alliances of the realm. The enemies which remained to be overthrovrn, Richelieu prepared * Cousin, Vie de Madame de Hautefort, p. 10. 278 THE MAERIED LIFE OF [1630— to do battle against, in the full conviction of eventual triumph. Queen Marie was at first paralysed by grief and amazement at her detention. For hours, it is re- corded, she wept with passionate excitement,* and threatened the authors of her disgrace with future retribution. From the hour of her arrest Richelieu never intended to promote her reconciliation with Louis ; and from Paris, and the court she was for ever to be exiled, so long as the Cardinal retained power. Nevertheless, Richelieu deemed it politic to temporise — the conscience, and the filial feelings of King Louis might prompt him to annul the act accomplished after so many relentings and doubts. It is certain that Marie was urged, nay implored, to leave Compiegne, and take up her abode at Moulins, unfettered by restrictions of any kind, except her parole, not to leave the town without the permission of her son. The letters addressed to his mother by Louis, in this sorrowful crisis of their history, are forbearing and modest. His first letter, after their separation, written at the beginning of the following month of March, contains the following passage : f™" The continual excuses which it has ■•■ BassompieiTe states, " Que les larmes de la Reine-mere ne conloient pas, mais se dardoient horsde ses yeiix." t MS. Bibl. Imp. Fontanieu, 2C2, p. 12G. Madame de Guercheville 1631.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 279 pleased you to assign against taking up your abode in your house at Moulins render it necessary for nie again to remind you how requtsite it is for the welfare of my realm, that you should yield to the entreaties that I have aforetime made, and make again. You would be there accommodated more at your pleasure and mine, as you would not bo sur- rounded witli unpleasant facts as at Compicgne. Neither, Madame, is it true that the })lague is raging at Moulins, nor that your house there is out of repair ; nevertheless, as 1 have told you before, you can, if you choose, stay at Nevers. I am writing on the subject to the Marshal d'Estrees; you will, therefore, if it pleases you, give credit to anything which he may impart to you in my name." In answer to this letter. Queen ]\Iarie writes to inform her son, that indisposition has hitherto prevented her from setting out to Moulins : she then reproaches him bitterly for his abandonment of her; avers that she has been always a good and conscientious mother; and that the reward which she now reaps for count- less privations, and devoted zeal for the interests of his Majesty and the realm, is, that she is sacrificed to the vengeance of her bitter foe ! Finally, her Ma- jesty asserts that her health is not in condition to remained as lady-in-waiting on the Queen. She had also her favoiuites, Caterina Selvaggio, and M. Fabroni and his wife. 280 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1630— undertake so long a journey; that her nerves are shaken; and that she may as well meet death, if such be her son's will, at Compiegne, as in a lone castle, badly drained, where she would be in the power of M. le Premier, who coveted her Ufe, and was ready to sanction any unhallowed act of violence.* Driven thus into a corner by her enemy the Cardinal, Marie de' Medici had not the tact to dissimulate her resentment and deint; her protests against the out- rage to which she had been subjected, resounded throughout the realm, and at the courts of London, Madrid, and Brussels. The Queen drcAv up a violent diatribe against the Cardinal, which she forwarded to the Parhament of Paris. The members, however, prudently transmitted the document to the King with its seals unbroken. The Marquis de Mirabel mean- time, instigated by Anne of Austria, asked audience of King Louis on behalf of his Catholic Majesty, Don Philip TV., to intercede for the Queen-mother ; and to request permission to visit her Majesty at Com- piegne. Louis wrathfully refused permission. " Sire, apparently, then, her Majesty is a prisoner under * MS. Bibl. Imp. Fontanieu, 202, p. 1.31. MS. Diipuy, Bibl. Imp., 49. The King sent the secretary of state, Ville-aux-Clercs, to inform his mother, " Qu'eUe avait liberte de sortir, et de se promener lorsqne le temps le voudroit permettre." Also, that M. Vaultier, her physician, should return to her when she had obeyed the command of the King to retire to Moulins. — Aubery, Mem. pour servir a I'Histoire du Card, de Richelieu. Lettre de Yille-aiix-Clercs. 1631.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 281 arrest?" " Monscigneur, nobody but ignorant people, or people perversely malignant, will so assert," answered the King, impatiently. " I find it, however, strange that the King of Spain should interfere ; foreign princes have no right to intervene in such matters. Remember, ]\I. I'Ambassadeur, that when the ambassador of Charles IX. asked permission to see Queen Elizabeth de Valois, a daughter of France, he could not obtain his desire. T will not recur, Monsieur, to the sequel of that unhappy history ; suffice for the present, that you have no reason to take amiss my decision in this matter!" "The King spoke thus," relates the Cardinal in his Journal, " because the Queen his mother, had boasted to his Majesty, that the Spanish ambassador was privy to all her intrigues for the ruin of the Cardinal." * Louis continued his correspondence with his mother from Dijon, where he had arrived at the head of a corps d'armte in pursuit of Monsieur ; who, on re- ceiving the intelligence of his mother's arrest, pro- claimed a levy of troops over all the lands of his appanage, and fled to Nancy, after publishing a * Jomaial dii Cardiual de Richelieu. " L'ambassadeur tesmoigna au Roi, et ensuite a tant d'autres ijersonnes, le deplaisir qu'il avait de ce refiis, et qu'il etait sur le point d'en faire une plainte i^ublique au Nonce, et aux aiitres ambassadeiirs, mais il s'etait retenu par les persua- sions de son secretaire." 282 THE MARRIED LIFE OF • [1630— hostile manifesto against lliclielien. His Majesty Avrote tlms from Dijon : — LOUIS XIII. TO QUEEN MARIE DE' MEDICI* " Madame, — I have no occasion to enter into ex- planations with you relative to the reason and just causes, which have compelled me to separate myself from you for an interval, for nobody understands such better than yourself; also, the efforts I have made to save both yourself and me from such annoyance. You are aware that remaining at my court, offended and discontented as you have for some time declared yourself to be, prevented me from providing remedy to put down the intrigues which there abound ; and, faihng to subdue which, my realm and my person are in danger. Nevertheless, all this need not prevent me from feeling and testifying for you, the respect and the friendship which you can expect from a good son ; although my duty to my subjects, and to my crown is esteemed by me as my first earthly calling. Having always received from me numberless proofs of regard, I feel astonished that you should imagine that I am capable of conceiving against you violent resolutions : believe me, Madame, that such thoughts have never entered my head, nor have they been "MS. Bibl. Imp. Foutauieii, 2Gi>, p. 131. 1631.1 ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 283 concerted by any of my servants. For what end, or aim, you persist in impressing upon the world that your ruin is resolved I cannot imagine, when all the evil which you have hitherto received is separation from myself — a fact, which you have yourself brought about, by opposing and alienating all persons who please me, and arc likely to serve me, and my realm. I hear, also, with extreme displeasure, that you arc still delaying your departure from Compicgne. If indisposition is the cause of your delay, I shall expe- rience a double annoyance ; but I do not hear that your illness is serious enough to prevent you from travelling. I request you, therefore, to set out ; for your departure is important to my crown, and will check the rumours which you have spread, that I have made you a prisoner. At Moulins, moreover, you will have no person near you likely to offend you, or to curtail in any way your freedom. I doubt not, therefore, Madame, that you will promptly comply with my desire ; the which accomplished, you shall always receive the truest tokens of regard and honour from, Madame, " Your majesty's humble, and obedient son, "Louis." Marie replied in tones of indignant reproach ; she denies that she had ever troubled the realm, and 284 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1630 - asserts that M. le Cardinal never desired reconciliation, and was not sincere in his overtures to be restored to her good graces. " Do me the favour, if it pleases you, to believe that it is out of my power to comply with your Majesty's commands to leave this place, and to journey towards Moulins. I beg you to reflect, that having received the treatment which I have, I possess good cause for the apprehensions which smite me, and which prevent me from repairing to ]\Ioulins ; from which place I might be seized and put in a boat on the Rhone, and so, against my will, be transported on board your Majesty's galleys, which are assembling (at Marseilles) for Italy. Italy, it is true, is the land of my birth ; but as I brought from thence into France all the wealth whicli appertained to me, there remains for me, even in my own country, neither honour, riches, nor refuge, except by the favour of distant relatives, who have never seen me ; and who would have great right to decline to receive mc in their dominions, seeing that my own son could not tolerate me, nor suffer me to end my days within his potent realm." * The unhappy princess continues thus throughout a long letter of three pages ; and her despair everywhere transpires, as the promptings of her own vindictive temper convinced her that Richelieu would never permit her reconciliation with * Marie de' Medici a Louis XIII. ; Bibl. Imp., MS. Font., 2G2, p. 13o. 1G31.] AXXl', or au,sti;l\. 285 the King ; or share liis power with one whom he had so mortally offended.* The hopes of the Queen for liberty and revenge, centred in her second son, the heir-presumptive. Monsieur had safely arrived in Lorraine, pursued by the victorious arms of his brother to the very walls of Nancy. Richelieu, nevertheless, found it requisite to dissimulate in order to achieve his final purpose ; which was, to drive Marie de' Medici to a voluntary flight from the realm, by practising on her rash and impulsive temper ; {uid on her dread of his craft and enmity. f In this design lu; I'oinul a i\'a(ly ally in Pere Joseph, who had managed to render liimself agreeable to the Queen, and was not suspected by her. The King had evidently misgivings, and perhaps relentings, in * "The Queen pertinaciously demanded that her pliysician, Vaultier, should return to her. The King promised that he should meet her at Moulins. Meantime, however, Slarie was informed of his committal to the Bastille. The King- consented that two of the Queen's women should return to the Liixembom-g, to pack up her wardi'obe and rich eifects. Also that Calignon, her secretary, might visit, and aiTauge her papers." f The King seems animated by the most perfect good faith throughout his correspondence during Miu'ie's detention at Compiegne. His Majesty appeared willing to make any concession, short of permitting- the Queen- mother to return to Paris. Finding- that Marie's objections to Moulins were not to be overcome, he offered her the choice of the castle of Angers, or of any other chateau in that government. He proposed that she should occupy the castle of Blois ; he offered to dismiss her guards, and to provide that evei-y where the Queen should be treated as " souveraine dame, mere, et reine." Louis wished his mother to quit Compiegne, to contradict the reports that he had arrested and confined her to that palace. Marie, with her usual obstinacy, protested that nothing should induce her to leave Compiegne, except to rejoin his Majesty in Paris. " EUe a envoye quijrir des soyes pour travailler a des ouvrages, a present que les jours sont grands," wrote d'Estrees to the secretary, Ville-aux-Clercs. 286 THE MAERIED LIFE OF [1630— favour of his mother ; nor was it probable that Louis could ever be induced to sign against her a decree of exile, or of imprisonment in a state fortress. The Cardinal perceived that the very tenure of his power depended on the dissensions of the royal family — on the absence of his haughty and intriguing patroness ; in the humiliation of Queen Anne of Austria ; the disgrace of M. d'Orleans ; the banishment of the Princes of the blood royal, and the discontent of such formidable vassals of the crown, as Bouillon, Guise, Rohan, Epernon, and others. Le Pere Joseph, therefore, wrote to Marie, offering his good offices to reconcile her with the minister, and sent his missive by a humble Capuchin brother. In that clever satire, " Le Catolicon Pran^ais," which professes to reveal the mental craft of the statesmen of this period, Pichelieu is made thus to argue :— " Whilst I diverted that good lady (Marie de' Medici) by divers journeyings to and from Compiegne, I built up and cemented, by Pere Joseph, the old suspicions that I had in- fused on both sides ; telling the King that Monsieur was the elder born in his mother's affection ; and to the Queen, that her son, who piqued himself on his powers of dissimulation, meant to snare, entrap, and hold her captive." Marie de' Medici, meantime, had been herself busily weaving an intrigue by wliich she hoped to break her bonds, and taste the delights of 1C31.1 ANNE OF AUSTIUA. 287 revenge. Marie dc Bcuil, Countess de Moret, once a mistress of Henri Qiiatrc, had espoused the son of the Marquis de Vardes, governor of the neighbouring fortress of La Capelle, and resided with her husband in that stronghold. The countess found means to communicate secretly with the Queen, and offered to receive her in La Capellc, provided she could escape from Compiegne. Marie eagerly cm])raced the over- ture ; taking the precaution, however, to write to the Archduchess Isabel, asking for temporary refuge at Brussels, in case any accident, after leaving Com- piegne, should frustrate her design. The Queen, therefore, escaped the surveillance of her jailors, at ten o'clock on the night of July 10th, attended only by La Ma/ure, lieutenant of her body-guard. "'•■ Her fears had been strongly excited during the preceding day by the report of d'Estrees, that the ^Marshal Schomberg was on his way to Compiegne, at the head of 1200 horse, to convey her to JMarseilles ; where she was to be })ut on board a ship bound for Leghorn. There is no doubt that the subtle Riche- lieu, aware of the Queen's intrigues with IMadame de Vardes, employed gentle pressure to urge her depar- ture from Compiegne ; and had taken care to remove * Information faite par M. de Nesmoud, Maitre des Requetes, sur la sortie de la Reine-mere de Compii' gue. — Aiibery, Jleni. pour sei-vir a I'Hist. du Card, de Richelieu. 288 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1630— all obstacles. At the end of the street of Compiegne, the Queen found a coach and six, provided by Madame de Fresney, niece of the Bishop of Leon, who took her uncle's equipage without his knowledge or assent — a freedom which nearly "cost the bishop his see.* The Queen passed the river Aisne at Choisy ; relays of horses awaited her along the road ; and the ven- ture appeared to prosper beyond her most san- guine hopes. Madame de Vardes, however, failed to meet her Majesty at the appointed place — a league from La Capelle. After an interval of suspense, a messenger appeared, who announced that the old Marquis de Vardes, had suddenly entered La Capelle ; and, after arresting his son for his trai- torous correspondence with the Queen-mother, had sent Madame de Vardes and the ladies privy to the plot to deliver up the fortress, under strong escort to Paris, to await the stern pleasure of the Cardinal. Richelieu received daily advices from Compiegne, all of which he jotted down in his Journal. Aware, therefore, of the design of the Queen to entrench herself in La Capelle, he had. given notice to the Marquis de Vardes f to circuni- * Ibid. The bishop was tried for high treason ; suspended from his episcopal functions ; and was restored only after the decease of the cardinal. — Urquefort, L'Ambassadeur et ses Ponctions, livre 1, p. 112. t Renti Dulaec, premier Marquis de Vardes. The marquis married Helene d'O. His son, Ren^ II. du noni, espoused Jacqueline do Benil, 1631.] AXNK OF AUSTKIA. 289 vent the project by his own opportune arrival. The unfortunate Marie, therefore, not daring to return to Coinpiegne, took the road, with the utmost precipita- tion, to the town of Avesne, where she was received with ostentatious honour by the Marquis de Creve- coeur. A messenger was despatched to Brussels to inform the Infanta Doila Isabel of the Queen's arrival. The Prince d'Epinay, governor of the province of liainault, received commands to attend her ]\lajesty to Mons ; where tlic Infanta repaired for an interview. Marie, again fatally swayed by her resentments, suffered herself to be escorted by the Spanish ambassador, the .\[arquis de Aytona, whom she subsequently deputed to compliment, and thank Doila Isabel. The frantic anuer of Louis XIII., against his mother, needed no further impetus after her imprudence had 1)cen expatiated iqjon in council, l)y the Cardinal de Richelieu. In reply to the letter despatched by Marie, the King wrote : — " Madame, my cousin the Cardinal de Richelieu gives me daily numerous proofs of devotion, fidelity, affection, and sinceritv. He pavs a relio;ious deference to mv commands : and the faithful care he gives to the welfare of my realm, and my own person vouch for Countess de Moret ; and their eldest son, the tliird iMarquis de Vardes, Count de Moret, was the celebrated cavalier of Louis XIV., captain of the Swiss and body u'liards. 290 THE MARlUKr) LIFE OF [1630— his truth. You will therefore permit me, Madame, to observe, that the act which you have just com- mitted, aud the intrigues in which you participate, have enlightened me as to your past intentions, and put me on my guard against future attempts. The respect, Madame, which I ought to bear you prevents me from adding more to this epistle." * Some officious person at this season remarked to Anne of Austria, that, at least, M. Ic Cardinal showed her more indulgence, and respect than he had vouchsafed to Queen Marie. Anne assumed her most icy mannei', and replied, with scornful gesture, " There can and shall be no comparison between the Queen-mother, and myself : her rank is not such as mine : she has not the influence and support which I possess, and which I have the right to expect/' t The triumphant 1-vichelieu consunnnated his vic- tory by the issue of a proclamation of outlawry against all the followers of the Due d'Orleans. The names of the proscribed traitors were the Count de Moret, natural brother of the King ; the Dukes de Bellegarde, d'Elboeuf, de Rohan ; the Presidents Ic Coigneux aiul de Payen, and M. de Puylaurent, le P. Chanteloubc, j confessor to Marie de' Medici ; ■ Lettre de Louis XIII. a Marie Ue' iMedici.—Biljl. Imp. MS. Font. 2(i4. f Journal de Richelieii. i Le Pcve Chuntelouljo \s'as Ijani^hed, or rather Hed, to Brussels, to 1631.] AXXE OF AUSTRIA. -291 and Mousigiiot, private secretary to Monsieiu'. When this edict was sent to the Parhament to be registered, the members modified the decree against the adherents of the heir presumptive, by entering on the register what was called un arret de par- iage ; which placed on record the names of the members protesting against the decree. The King therefore commanded the attendance of the High Court in the great gallery of the Louvre. Louis commanded the registers to be laid ])efore him ; and with his own hand lie tore therefrom the leaf upon which the act had been inscribed under pro- test. The King then caused a decree of the privy council to be inserted, Avhich prohibited any debate in the Chambers upon matters relating to state affairs — topics, which appertained only to the ministers, and sworn counsellors of the crown. Judicial proceedings were next instituted against the Countess de Pargis, who was supposed to be lingering in the neighbourhood of Paris in disguise. Such was the terror inspired by the late proceedings of the King and his minister, that the friends of Anne of Austria failed in their alleo-iance to her avoid aiTest for an alleged coimivauce in a plot to caiTy off 3Iadame de Combalet. " Afin de mettre le cai-dinal a la raison, quand elle aiiroit ce qu'il aimoit tant. Mademoiselle de Rambouillet et-oit avee elle : elle alloit voir Madame de Rambouillet." The plot was real — one of Jlarie de' Medici's insane expedients to annoy the cardinal. V2 292 THE MAIIKIED LIFE OF [1630— service, and caprice. The Abbess of the Val de Grace,"* stirred by a significant hint from the Palais Cardinal, that seditiously inclined sisterhoods had been dissolved, and their members draughted into more loyal communities, hastened to send information to the Cardinal that two suspicious personages, thought to be Croft and Montagu, had asked at the gate of the convent to speak with her Majesty; moreover, that a letter had been delivered into the hands of the Queen by an unknown person, as her Majesty entered the nunnery upon her first visit after the return of the court from Compiegne. The personages mentioned in the letters of de Fargis, taken from M. Senelle, Avere arrested, and subjected to severe inter- rogatories. Amongst these persons were the Marquis de Crequi, and the Count de Cramail, M. Senelle, and Mademoiselle du Tillet. This last lady deposed that she had twice forwarded letters from the accused to M. de Cramail ; also, that two days after the return of the court fj-oni Compiegne, Anne had sent for her to take charge of a letter Avhicli her Majesty desired secretly to forward to de Fargis, but that the Queen had decided finally to send it by a special messenger. " I feel no surprise that Madame de " BI. lie St. Etienne man-ied Marie de Tremblaj', sister of Father Joseph. The Abbess of the Val de Grace was a sister of M. de St. Etienne. and therefore honoured with marks of gracious notice by the famous Capiachin. 1631.1 ANNE OF ACSTKIA. 293 Fargis has l)ccn dismissed from tlic Queen's service ; tlic mystery is, what influence coukl ever induce I\I. Ic Cardinal to sanction the nomination of une femme si decriee to the first office in her IMajesty's household ! " * Avas the malicious comment of Made- moiselle du Tillet ; in allusion to the notorious intrigues which once subsisted between de Fargis, Cramaii, liichelieu, and the disgraced Lord-Keeper de Marillac. As the countess never surrendered to take her trial in obedience to the citation of tlic criminal court sitting at the Arsenal, judgment was allowed to go by default. The award of the court declared la Dame de Fargis d'Aiigennes guilty of high treason, and sentenced her to decapitation ; which decree was performed on an effigy of the countess in the Place duCarrefour de St. Paul, November Sth, 1031. j\[. Senelle, ujion whom tlie letters of the countess were found, was condemned to the galleys for life ; Vaultier, to perpetual im})risoiimcnt in the Bastille, f Tlie ^Marshal de Marillac, generalissimo of the Italian army, towards whom Pichelieu bore inveterate hate, was arrested and put u])on his trial upon frivolous charges of malversation during the construction of the citadel of Verdun, by which he had derived illicit profit : and of mal-administration * Journal du Cardinal dc Ricliclieu. — Amsterdam, 1(jG4. t Il)id. 294 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1630— of the King's moneys forwarded for the payment of the army under his command. The true crime of Marillac was, his offer at the memorable secret con- ference at Lyons, during the King's illness, to slay the obnoxious Cardinal minister with his own hand. The Lord-Keeper Chateauneuf presided at the trial, which took place, against all precedent, in the pri- vate mansion of Richelieu, at Ruel. On the 8th of May, sentence of decapitation was pronounced upon Marillac ; the crime of this old, and faithful servant of Henri Quatre being his devoted attach- ment to the widow of his late master ; and the power which his probity, virtue, and affability enabled him to exercise over the army under his command. " A page ought not to be flogged for the misdeeds for which I am arraigned ! For forty years I have served two great kings : all that they can accuse me of, are trifling inaccuracies in accounts for lime, straw, hay, wood, and stone ! " The foflowing day the head of Marillac fell* So great was the horror and irritation of Queen Marie when she heard of this murder, that she is said to have made a solemn vow that if ever she returned to France, and regained her lost power, the head of Richelieu should be * Vie clu Marechal de Marillac. Bayle, Diet. TaUemant des Reaiix. Bassompien-e. Mem. du Sieur de Poutis ; the which, contain a full detail of the trial and execution of the unfortunate marshal, as De Pontis was the officer charged with the guard of Marillac after his arrest. 1631.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 295 severed, without form or process, on the spot upon which the virtuous, and good marshal suffered. The ex-Lord-Keeper brother of Marillac, survived his brother only four months : he died at .Chateaudun, crippled from the dampness, and unhealthiness of his prison ; and overwhelmed with grief at the ruin of his house. Richelieu, meantime, despatched letters and mis- sives in every direction, to express his dismay at the arrest, and flight of Marie de' Medici ; towards whom he positively avers that no harm, or disgrace was intended, except a temporary exile to her dower castle of Moulins. In one of these epistles addressed to the Cardinal de la Valette, Richelieu thus expresses his regrets : — " It is with the most incredible and smartino- reo;ret that I announce to \'ou the resolve which his j\Ia- jcsty found himself obliged to take at Compiegne, to request the Queen his mother, to retii'e for a time to Moulins. I would wish, at the price of my blood, and at the forfeiture of my life, to have rendered this separation unnecessary, although, please God, its duration will be brief. If it had pleased Almighty God to have granted my prayers, my last moment would have preceded this alienation ; for which I can never be consoled, seeing a Queen whom I have so long revered, and served, reduced to this condition. 296 THE MAEIIIED LIFE OF [1630— But the sway of evil and termagant spirits liad too long dominated over the court. During the war in Italy, they did all they could to produce a failure of that campaign ; since which Monsieur has fled from court. The King, on many occasions, entreated the Queen his mother, to open her eyes upon these woes and to arrest their ]:)rogress, but her Majesty was not pleased to comply ; nor would she enter the council chamber, saying that she did not wish her name to be used as an authority for the indispensable measures there resolved. The King, finding her inexorable in this resolution, wisely decided that if she declined to permit her influence to be used in support of his government, her presence in Paris was highly adverse to the welfare of his realm — as declaring herself malcontent, and remaining at court, gave to many personages boldness and freedom to proclaim themselves so likewise."* A few days later, the Cardinal wrote to the Commander de la Porte, uncle of M. de St. Simon, to announce the departure of Marie from Compiegne. In this letter he says — " Believe me, there is nothing in the world vv^hich we would not have done to persuade tlie Queen to renounce her alliance with Monsieiu-, and with the realm of Spain. We ofl'ered to confide to her the government of Anjou, and to confirm her * Aulj^ry, Mem. pour I'Hist. du Cardinal de Richelieu, t. 5. 1631.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 297 Majesty's sway over other places already conferred ; but she steadily refused all honourable terms, and requisite precautions, which Ave proposed."* ''The Queen," said Richelieu, " treated in the same manner persons, who brought her an atrocious calumny, or a pure truth. She kept the secret of all, and received true friends, and false ones with the same cordiality. Everyone, therefore, fearlessly palmed upon her bad coin mingled with good. I lost my hold on the Queen-mother," continues he, "by not putting down evil cabals when they first cro})pcd out. To save one's self one must seize the initiative. It is better, in such circumstances, to do nuich rather than little ; provided precaution goes only the length of exiling from court all personages, who, being able to perpe- trate evil, inspire suspicions by imprudent, or malig- nant conduct and censure." f Having thus punished his late opponents, exiled the Queen-mother, and suspended a threatening scourge over the head of his sovereign's wife, Richelieu next offered admonition to his royal master. Imbued with a thorough persuasion of his * Aubeiy, Mem. pour I'Hist. du Ccardinal de Richelieu, t. 5. ■f Memoire donne an Roy par le Cardinal de Richelieu apres que la Reyne-mere I'eut ^loignd de sa maison, touchant les cabales dans la cour. Auberj', t. 5, p. 26G. " II ne faut pas croire, Sire, qu'on i^uisse avoir des preu-vT."es math^matiques des conspirations et des cabales ; elles ne se connoissent ainsi que par I'evenement, lorsqu'elles ne sont jiliTS capables de remede," writes the politic minister. 298 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1630— own administrative capacity, and the weakness of the King, Richelieu caused the following maxims to be laid before Louis by the Capuchin Joseph ; in which, particle by article, he prescribed the manner in which he chose to wield the arbitrary power he had usurped : — 1. A great Prince ought to have a council of state to advise with on the affairs of his realm. 2. It is necessary for a King to have a prime minister ; and this prime minister must have three qualities, to whit, — to possess no other interest than that of his Prince; to be able, and faithful; and to be a member of Holy Church. 3. A Prince ought to love his prime minister with perfect affection. 4. A Prince ought never to dismiss, or degrade his prime minster. 5. A Prince ought to confide implicitly in his prime minister. 1631.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 299 6. A Prince ought always to grant free, and constant access to his presence to his prime minister. 7. A Prince ought to invest his prime minister with sovereign authority over the people of the realm. 8. A Prince ought to heap honours, and riches on his prime minister. 9. A Prince ought to regard his prime minister as his richest treasiu'e. 10. A Prince ought to put no faith in reports and accusations against his prime minister : he ought not to take pleasure in such slander : but, on the contrary, rigorously punish him by whom his minister is falsely accused. 11. A Prince ought to make plenary revelation to his prime minister of all slanders, and accusations hurled against the said minister ; even when the King may have solemnly promised secrecy. 300 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1630— 12. A Prince ought not only to love his realm, but his prime minister also ; after them, his kindred, and relatives. 13. A Prince ought to forestal calamity by wise provision. 14. A Prince is not to be blamed for using just severity in governing his realm. 15. A Prince ought carefully to prevent his kingdom from being governed by Avomen, and favourites. The audacity of these fifteen maxims wrung a grim smile from Louis Xlll. He, however, carefully put the paper by, in the presence of the wily Capuchin ; and desired the reverend father to assure himself that he had perfect faith in the fidelity, ability, and resource of M. le Cardinal. 1»J:J].] ANN'K OF AL'STIIIA. 30l CHAPTER VI. 1G31— 1G37. ANXE OF AUSTKIA, iMADEMOlSELLF DK LA FAYETTE, AND THE DUCHESS DE ClIEVKEL'SE. After the return of Aiiiie of Austria from Com- picgnc, her restless spirit subsided. Everywhere the pohcy and the will of Richelieu were dominant : alhanee with him conferred power, and opposition to his fiats, tlisgrace and ignominy. The palace swarmed with his spies ; and, even in the retii'c- mciit of her bedchamber, Anne knew that the Car- dinal's wary eye tracked her actions, and analysed her motives. Rut one fact foiled the will of the Cardinal— and that was her own indomitable hate and enmity. Had the Queen joined her interests to those of Richelieu, — had she smiled on the minister, and have declared herself favourable to his policy and to his power, — the aspect of Anne's daily life would probably have been transformed from a lot of obscurity and persecution, to the most Ijrilliant and ])Owerful position ever occupied by a queen-consort 302 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1631 — of France. The proposition had been more than once made to her by the Cardinal through Mesdames de Chevreuse, and de Fargis.' Often, Richelieu was heard to lament the division subsisting between himself and Queen Anne, and to laud rapturously her beauty, wit, and sagacity; while he pathe- tically deplored that these rare gifts should be employed in plots against the government, in upholding rebel vassals of the crown, and, above all, in supporting M. d'Orleans in his criminal attempts to inflict upon France the curse of civil Avar, and foreign invasion. The hidden motives of this dis- loyalty, and indifference to the interests and glory of her adopted country, the Cardinal discerned in the uncertainty of the King's life ; and in the hope which ever animated the childless Queen that, on the death of Louis XIII., she might a second time ascend the throne as the consort of the brother, and successor of her husband. Actuated by this wicked foresight, Anne, Richelieu averred, and with much apparent truth, sacrificed her conjugal and queenly duty ; and made no effort to conciliate * " Le Cardiual lui fit dire par Madame de Fargis, dame d'atoiu's, que si elle voiiloit, 11 la tireroit bientot de la misere dans laqnelle elle vivoit. La reme alors, qiii ne croyoit point que ce fut lui qui la fit maltraiter. pensa d'abord que ce fut par compassion qu'il liii offrit son assistance, souffiit qu'il lui ecrivit et lui fit meme r^ponse ; car elle ne s'imaginoit point que ce commerce produisit autre chose qu'une simple galanterie." — Tallemant. 1(537.1 ANNE OF AUSTRIA, 303 licr liusl^and, or to efface from his suspicious mind the iuipressioii cast thereon by the revelations con- sequent on tlie tiial of Chalais. No relations could be colder than those subsisting between Louis and his consort during the winter, and the spring of the years 1631-2. The King avoided his wife in private ; while in public, ceremonious etiquette divided them. Anne never set foot within the King's apartments ; all hei- communications with his Majesty passed through the hands of Riche- lieu, and were generally imparted to the minister by the Spanish ambassador, or by Madame de Senece. When Louis visited his palaces of Com- piegne, Fontainebleau, Versailles, or Vincenues, no- tice was given to her Majesty, who made preparation to follow the King ; or, accepting the alternative generally offered, she retired to St. Germain, and lived there in strict privacy. Anne now received a liberal allowance for her privy pm-se : at this period, the sum amounted to ten thousand pounds yearly, which she disposed of at \W11; and upon which no demand was made for expenses connected with her household. With the people of Paris Anne was popular; there was a fascination in her smile and manner ^vhicli made the Parisians greet her with enthusiasm ; besides, they half resented her shabby equipages, 30i THE MAKRIIiD LIFE OF [1631— and tlie absence of pompous appareil, and of the attendants, which had formed the escort of the queens her predecessors. The Queen was never attended by more than three ladies ; and the edict, given after the trial of Chalais, suspended the func- tions of the noblemen of her household, excepting when the royal pair made a joint progress. The people, therefore, cheered their young Queen on her dreary progresses to the convents of Val de Grace, and the Carmelites of the Rue St. Jacques, despite her well-known mutinous defiance of the will of her liege lord Louis XIII. and the law of his minister. The Queen was, nevertheless, compelled to dissimulate her discontent : utter isolation might lead to her banishment from the capital, could Louis be per- suaded that her presence had little influence on the assembling at the Louvre of the few great personages in the good graces of the Cardinal, who composed the court. She had, therefore, summoned Mirabel to the Val de Grace, — who obeyed her behests at the risk of being arrested, conducted to the frontier, and dis- missed the realm, — to request him to wait upon Richelieu, and hint, in the name of his Catholic Majesty, that " the latter regretted his Eminence did not frequent the lever, or the saloon of Queen Anne his sister, as such intimacy could not fail to be pro- ductive of hajipy results, and might give M. le Car- 1637.] ANNE OF ^USTPJA. 305 diiial opportunity for friendly counsel."* Richelieu thanked the ambassador for his obliging discourse ; but gave no intimation as to whether he purposed to act ill accord thereto. Probably the Cardinal pre- ferred to trust to the good offices of Madame de Chevreuse to bring about a better understanding between the Queen and himself ; rather than to ven- ture alone into her j\Iajesty's presence. The ap- proaching return of Marie de Rohan to court excited in the bosom of the powerful minister, hopes which were never realised. He professed profound admira- tion for the clever and witty duchess ; he wished for her friendly aUiance ; and, if the scandalous chronicles of this reign arc to be believed, he desired of her something more in addition. Marie, wearied of her enforced sojourn at Dampierre, and anxious to share the power of her friend Chateauneuf, befooled the Cardinal by professions of admiration ; and by pro- mises of converting Anne of Austria fi'om his foe, to a devoted ally. The adoration which King Louis began to lavish on Mademoiselle de Hautefort, any comment upon which his Majesty fiercely resented, began to inflict uneasiness on the minister. Anne had already thrown the glamour of her fascinations * Journal de Riclaelieu. " L'ambassadeiir m'a dit qiii j'y devois aller librement quand le roy y etoit, ou n'y etoit pas, liiy dire un mot de ce qu'elle devoit faire, tan tot la divertir de ce qvi'on jugeroit a propos ; que je luy ferois plaisir d'en user aiusi," VOL. I, X 306 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1631— over her young dame d'atours, and sliowed no jealousy of lier influence with the King ; while Marie de Hautefort bravely informed Richelieu, " tliat she loved and revered her royal mistress ; and could not blame her Majesty if, when surrounded by neglect and persecutions, she had recourse to the sympathy and aid of her brother King Philip." One of the most remarkable faculties possessed by the Queen was the power of commanding the affectionate attachment of her principal ladies ; those who most disapproved of her intrigues, when they entered her service, never afterwards betrayed her to the minister. The gentle manners of the Queen, her apparent helplessness, her affectionate condescen- sion, the interest she showed in the personal affairs of her friends, and the tearful softness of her blue eyes, were powerful weapons against the as- cendency of the Cardinal, within the precincts of the palace. Meantime, the sombre and imperious admiration of Louis XIII. filled the mind of Marie de Hautefort with foreboding. Amongst the beautiful women of the era of Louis XIII. , Marie de Hautefort stands prominent, as one of the most noble, heroic, and virtuous, rirm in her principles, and devoted in her friendship and duty to the Queen her mis- tress, Marie seems to have confided to Anne her 1C37.] AXXE OF AUSTIMA. 307 misgivings. Endowed with a heart worthy of a queen, or of a heroine, Marie at first l)ehekl witli complacency tlie homage of her King ; and accepted with elation the assiduities of Richelieu, lor her sake, and to obtain the coveted interview, Louis daily repaired, twice and thrice, to the apartments of the Queen, where Mademoiselle dc Ilautefort was often summoned from a conference with her jMajesty to become the recipient of the sighs, and plaints of the King. Anne comforted and reassured her friend; the King professed sentiments purely Platonic ; he wanted, he said, the solace of friendship, and confi- dential intercourse ; he liked to cavil at his minister ; above all, he desired faithful, exclusive attachment. Marie, inspired with genuhic compassion for the dreariness of a life of emotions so repressed, accepted* with the secret sanction of the Queen, the office of comforter. Anne gloried in the hope that in this liaison she descried the future germ of her enemy's downfall. The King's bashful shyness in his inter- com'se with Marie, allayed the most prudish sus- picion. It is related, that one day Louis abruptly entered the Queen's closet, when Anne was sitting tete~a-k^te with her dame d'afours ; who, with heio-ht- ened colour, was reading to her ^Lnjesty a note, which, on the entrance of the King, she hastily folded. A dark shadow gloomed over the King's X 3 808 THE MxiRRIED LIFE OF [1631— brow; and he peremptorily demanded to see the letter so hastily hidden. Treason to his realm might afford a daily pastime to Anne of Austria; while treason against his attachment might give delight to Marie de Hautefort — for Louis had been informed by his minister of the admiration professed by the Due de Liancour, and the young Prince de Mar- sillac,* for the lovely young dame (Tatours. By some historians, the letter is said to have been written by Richelieu, and that it contained offers of a recipro- cal friendly alliance ; others, state that the epistle congratulated Mademoiselle de Hautefort on her favour, and ended by a demand for protection from some cringing courtier. True to herself, however, Marie refused to gratify the curiosity of the King ; 'and to end the debate she hid the note in her bosom. t Anne, meantime, looked on with mocking derision ; especially when she beheld the confusion of the King, and his hesitation to draw the note from its hiding-place. Her Majesty, however, presently seized the hands of Mademoiselle de Hautefort, and laughingly exhorted the King " to take the note while she thus held its owner captive." Louis * Heir of La Eochefoiicauld, and afterwards the celebrated duke of that name, author of " The Maxims." t Monglat states that Mademoiselle de Hautefort exclaimed, " Prenez- la (la lettre) tant que vous voudrez a cette heiu-e ! " — Cou.sin, Vie de Madame de Hautefort. 1037.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 309 blushed, stammered, advanced, and retreated; and at lengtli, taking up from the hearth a small pair of silver tongs, he tried to possess himself of the note, wliieli was visible beneath the transparent lace which covered Marie's bosom. The peals of laughter which this extraordinary device drew from the Queen ; and the blushing confusion, and deprecatory looks of Marie, fairly drove Louis from the apart- ment,* The ladies then hastened to destroy the letter, just in time to forestal a formal summons for its surrender, by the under secretary of state, Machault. " Mademoiselle de llautefort is of tall stature and fine figure ; her eyes are blue, large, open, and full of vivacity ; her nose is aquiline ; her mouth small and rosy ; while her smile displays teeth, white and even as pearls. Two little dimples give a grace to the lovely mouth and cheeks. The colour of her luiir is blond cendrc, of which she has an abmidance, falling in ringlets around a beautiful and stately throat. In her aspect there is altogether so much dignity, gentleness, and grace, that it excites sentiments of tenderness, awe, and esteem." Such is the description given of the charms of the young * " Le roi prit de pincettes cVargent qiii utaient aiipres du feu pom- essayer s'il pouvait avoix ce billet avec les pincettes : mais elle I'avait mis trop avant, et ainsi la reine la laissa aUer, apres s'etre bien divertie de la peiu- de Madame de Hautefort, et de celle du roi." — Tie de Madame de Hautefort.— Coasiu, quoted from la Vie MS, 810 THE MAKRIED LIFE OF [1631— darne d'atours by a contemporary.* The heavy assi^ duities of Louis were often felt as insupportable re- straints by one so gifted and charming ; who beheld all the cavaliers of the court vanquished by her fasci- nations ; but, nevertheless, withheld from offering per- sonal homage, daunted by their dread of exciting the resentment of the sovereign. Madame de la Motte, however, did not fail to remind her granddaughter that the homage of Louis XIIL had enabled her adorers to discern many a captivating grace hitherto undiscovered, when Marie was the humble Jille d'Jionneur of the exiled Queen-mother. When the Louvre rang with the praises of Mademoiselle de Hautefort,t and the courtiers celebrated the charms of— Hautefort la merv^eille i Eeveille Tous les seus de Louis, Quand sa bouche veiineille Lui fait voir im soui-is ! the Cardinal deemed it time to provide an antidote^ which he summoned in the form of the Duchess de Chevreuse; and in the promotion to a more dis- tinguished position in the royal household of another fair young maid of honour, Louise Angehque Motier de la Fayette. Richelieu felt tliat if the Duchess was * Vie de Madame de Hautefort. — Cousin, qiioted from la Vie M.S. f Mademoiselle de Hautefort was known at covu-t by the sobri'/uct of " Sainte Hautefort." 1G37.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 311 Oil his side, he had nothing to fear from the probable combination of the Queen and La Hautefort, He relied on the sagacity of Marie de Rohan* to resume her old ascendency over the heart of Anne of Austria ; and to drive into obscurity the presump- tive girl who had dared to aspire to royal favour, and to the confidence of the Queen. After five years of exile, Madame de Chcvreuse, therefore, re-appeared permanently, as she hoped, on the scene of her ancient triumphs, much to the dismay of her husband ; "who, during her enforced residence at Dainpierrc, had been revelling in luxurious ease, troubling himself seldom with the wishes, or the fate of his consort. IMadame de Chevreuse, as the widow and sole heiress of the late Constable do Luynes, had brought her second husband immense wealth in jewels, lands, and rich effects. The Due de Chevreuse was recklessly extravagant : being in want of a coach, he was once known to com- mand fifteen to be built that he mioht select the most comfortable. His donations to dissolute com- panions were immense. The Duke, nevertheless, knew- how to uphold his dignity as became a scion * 'VMien the Queen Marie de' Medici heard of the retiuii to Paris of Madame de Chevreiise, she exclaimed, " He bien, elle retoiuTie apres ciuq aus de bauissemeiit ; et avoir I'te en divers lieus. Le cardinal ue saiu-oit avoii- pense, n'y faire la moindre action qiie je ne sache a quoi ello tend." — Aubery, Mem. pour I'Hist. du Card, de Richelieu, t. 2. 312 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1631— of Lorraine Guise, and greatly disapproved of his wife's proceedings. The return of the Duchess, therefore, was an event which he deprecated — the more especially, as, under the cloak of her new favour with Richelieu, and the Lord-Keeper Cha- teauneuf, Madame de Chevreuse commenced a suit against her husband for profligate expenditure during her absence, and demanded a separation de corps et de Mens, which she easily obtained. Monsieur de Chevreuse, therefore, retired from the Hotel Luynes ; while the Duchess complacently established herself alone in that splendid mansion, and prepared for the career before her. Anne received her old friend with open arms ; and this cordiality ought to have aroused Richelieu to examine the sincerity of the professions of the Duchess. Madame de Chevreuse became a daily visitor at the Louvre ; though Louis refused to reinstate her in her old apartments within the palace, and evidently regarded her presence as an unwelcome intrusion. The court, nevertheless, during the next few months, was joyous and gallant. Richelieu and his master required the splendour and excitement of a few brilliant festivals to neutralize, in degree, the gloom everywhere prevalent, and to divert public attention from politics, and from the discontent manifested in the provinces at the exile of the Queen-mother, and of the heir presumptive. 1637.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 313 " The court was very agreeable at this period," re- counts Mademoiselle :* " the attachment of the King to Madame de Ilautefort contributed greatly to our pleasure, as his ]\Iajcsty tried to find her daily diversion. Hunt in": was the greatest of the Kin";'s recreations ; and we often accompanied his Majesty. Mesdamcs de Hautefort and St. Louis, d'Escars and de Beaumont attended me. We were attired in our respective colours, and rode palfreys richly accoutred. To shade our complexion from the sun, we all wore hats ornamented with a great quantity of drooping plumes. The hunt always was made to take the direction of some great house, where we found a sumptuous collation prepared. When we returned the King usually entered my coach, sitting between me, and Madame de Ilautefort. AVheii his Majesty was in ii-ood humour, he conversed verv afa'eeablv. At this period he permitted us to speak of the Cardinal de Richelieu ; and as a sign that he was not displeased at our comments, he joined in our conversation. As soon as we returned to the Louvre, we repaired to the saloon of the Queen, where I took pleasure in waiting upon her Majesty whilst she supped, her maidens handing the dishes. Three times a week we had the diversion of music, * La Grande ilademoiselle Anne Louise d'Orleans, daughter of 3Ion- sieui" and of Maiie, Ducliesse de Montpensier. — 3Iem., t. i. 314 THE MA.REIED LIFE OF [1631— and the King's musicians attended. The airs played and sung were generally composed by the King : he also wrote the words of the songs, which had always Madame de Hautefort for their theme. The humour of the King, at this period, was so gallant, that at the country collations which he gave us, he sometimes declined to take his place at table, but waited upon the ladies ; though we were aware that this civility had but one object. He took his repast after we had finished, but pretended not to pay more attention to Madame de Hautefort than to any one of us, so anxious was his Majesty to conceal his gallant devoirs. Nevertheless, if any dispute happened between them, all our diversions were immediately suspended ; and if the King came, during this interval, into the Queen's saloon, he spoke to no one, neither did any person dare to address his Majesty. He retired into a corner, and there sat, yawned, and slept. The King's melancholy aspect chilled every- body ; and during this interval, between the quarrel and reconciliation, he consoled himself by putting down on paper all that he had said to Madame de Hautefort, with her replies ; and so true is this fact, that after his Majesty's death copious minutes were found amongst his private papers detailing at length all the quarrels he had had with his mistresses ; to the eternal praise of whom, be it avowed, as also to KJ37.] ANXE OF AUSTRIA. 315 his Majesty's honour, he never loved any })ut the most vh'tuoiis, and discreet of women." Louis \\nd the greatest horror of profligate liaisons : and thoiigli ahenatcd from the Queen, he was rigidly faithful to her. " Alademoiselle de Hautefort told nie," writes ]\[adanie dc Motteville, " that the decorum of the King was such that he seldom talked to her on any subjects but about his dogs, his birds, and hunting. I have seen her, Avith all her wisdom and virtue, relate with derision the fright the King was in when Mith her alone ; and that at such periods he scarcely dared approach near enough to discourse with her." On occasions, however, when the King and Mademoi- selle de Hautefort were alone, Marie spoke earnestly respecting the Queen, and besought the Khig to become reconciled to her ; and the subject of their fre(|uent disputes, to which ^Mademoiselle alludes, was the zeal which Marie displayed for the cause of her royal mistress. Louis contided his suspicions, and stated his conviction that Anne was the accomplice of Chalais ; and that he owed his life, and crown to the vigilance of Richelieu. '" The Queen hates me, — she intrigues against my realm — she is Spanish at heart — she is perpetually plotting against my happi- ness." This conviction nothing could ever shake. " ^ladame," continued Louis ; " mark my words — you love and support an ungrateful woman. Wait, and 316 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1631 — see how one day she will repay your services ! " Marie de Hautefort, like many others, believed fer- vently in the Queen, with her sweet smiles, and gentle seductions. Anne was mistress of the arts of persuasion ; and the disgraces which followed her persistent petty treasons seemed the more to en- dear her to her adherents. Perhaps her power lay in the unpopularity of the King. The penalties, moreover, with which her deviations were visited, lay open to the comment and pity of the court; while the cause of this severity was often concealed by the express command of Louis, who shrank from the publication of his domestic miseries. Anne persuaded her friends that her clandestine corre- spondences with Spain were innocent ; and that her stolen conferences with the Spanish ambassador, and with Gerbier, Montague, and Croft, Catholic agents of Queen Henrietta of England, were legitimate. She was persecuted, — her ]\Iajesty, therefore, appealed to the sympathy of her brother King Philip, and to that of IMarie de' Medici, and of Monsieur, and disregarded the tyrannical orders of the minister, to be silent and submit. The word of Anne of Austria, as Uicheheu often observed, could not be depended upon. Her Majesty, it was true, rarely perjured herself; but her modes of evasion, and f'fiuivocation were so diverse and ingenious, that she 1G37.] ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 317 seldom avowed what slic wished to conceal, even under the most rigid examination ; or promised exactly that which she knew she had no intention to fulfil. If Anne could have accepted her lot, and her uncongenial consort with resignation, her court might have been brilliant and joyous, despite the absence of the great personages disgraced by the policy of the minister. Beautiful women, such as the Duchesses de Montbazon,* de Chevreuse, and the Princess de Guemene,t adorned the court circle ; the wit of the Marquise de Sable, and of the Prince de Marsillac, of Madame de Rambouillct, and of the Princesses Marie, and Anne de Gonzague-Nevers, gave verve and animation ; the rich heiress of the elder branch of Kohan, the granddaughter of Sully, was a prize suflicient to excite a piquant emulation amongst the younger courtiers ; while the charms of Anne's maidens, Plautefort, and la Fayette, and de Chemerault, and the grace and repartee of Ma- * Mai-ie de Vertiis dite de Bretagne, daughter of Claude de Bretagne, Count de Vertus, aud of Cathei-ine Fouquet. She maiTied, in 1C2S, Hercules de Rohan, Duke de IMontbazon, father of the Duchess de Che\T.-euse. Slarie was quite a child when she married the Duke, who took her from a convent, where she was destined to make profession. The Duke de Montbazon, thei'efore, always called her " J/a reJhjieusey Madame de IMontbazon was one of the most beautiful women of the court, and one of the most intrigante, and masculine in mind. She died in Id.")?, aged 45. f Anne de Rohan, wife of M. de Guemene, eldest son of the Duke de Montbazon, and brother of Madame de Chevreuse. ai-8 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1631— demoiselle cle Veiidome, all miglit have contributed to the renown of the court. Moreover, there stood in close proximity to the throne Marguerite de Mont- morency, Princesse de Conde, in the bright zenith of her charms, and still encircled by the halo of the mad passion of Henri le Grand. Besides her, was her daughter Anne Genevieve de Bourbon, lovely like her mother, of strong intellect, apt at political intrigue, in the which she had been nurtured ; but shrinking at this very period from sharing the grand ancestral home, name, and mature years of the Due de Longueville. By Madame de Conde was her son — after M. d'Orleans, heir of the crown — afterwards known as the great Conde, whose powerful arm first shook, and then established the throne of the future Louis Quatorze. The eagle eye of Richelieu had marked this noble heir of the Condes ; and with unfaltering faith in his own fortunes and ability, he had resolved on the first fortunate contingency — some opportunity, when the dark jealousy of Louis Treize had been roused against the princes of his blood — to unite the young Due d'Enghein with his niece, Claire Clemence de Maille-Breze. Mademoiselle de Breze was one of the playfellows of Mademoiselle in her nursery at the Tuilerics : she was excessively petite in stature, and wore high-heeled shoes, which entailed upon 1037.] ANXK OF AUSTKIA. 319 licr many a fall Avliilc dancing the loaie conrante with the merry princess, who seems to have amused herself heartily with the terrors of the timid child. One day iMademoiselle ordered a ballet to Ije per- formed in honour of the return of her father Mon- sieur, to Paris, in which slie and her maidens performed. During a scene of the ])allct, a number of caged birds were liberated ; and a linnet, after flying about the apartment, nestled into one of the deep plaits of the ruff worn l)y Mademoiselle de Br^ze, who screamed with fright, and fainted as the bird fluttered about her neck. It was to propitiate Madame de Conde that Richelieu caused that won- drous doll's house to be constructed, the first that had ever been seen in Trance, at a cost of 2000 crowns, and presented it to Mademoiselle de Bourbon.* The trusty friend and equerry of Anne of Austria, de Rochechouart, Chevalier de Jars, had also received a pardon, and a recall from his banishment in England, where he had remained ever since the memorable embassy of the Duke of Buckingham to Paris ; having been convicted of carrying to London certain mis- sives addressed to the ambassador by his royal * " On il y avait six poiipees, line femme en conches, line nonmce, quasi an natnrel, un enfant, ime garde, une sage-femme, et la grancF- maman. Mesdemoiselles de Rambonillet et de Boiiteville joiiaient avec elle, desliabillaient et conchaient tons les jours ces ponpees, etc." — Talle- mant, Hist, du Card, de Richelieu. 320 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1G31— mistress. The Christmas of 1631 passed away in this negative state of tranqmlhty, when, with the pubhc declaration of the marriage of Monsieur with Marguerite/"' sister of the Duke of Lorraine, occurred the rising, in Languedoc, on behalf of Monsieur and of his mother the exiled Queen ; and the news that Spain was preparing to invade France at the sum- mons of the heir presumptive. The gallant Due de Montmorency, seduced by the promises and entreaties of Monsieur; and misled by his statements of the forces he could muster in support of his revolt, promised to receive the duke in Languedoc ; and to place the fortresses and towns therein, in the possession of the rebel forces. The Duke pledged himself to Montmorency to enter France at the head of 2000 men — levies with he purposed to raise in the Netherlands, with funds placed at his disposal by the Queen his mother, who had disposed of her jewels for this purpose ; and by the aid of the trea- sury of Spain. JMoreover, the Duke of Lorraine had engaged to join their army with a reinforcement of 1500 men; while a powerful body of Spanish troops was to appear on the frontiers of Savoy, to aid in the overthrow of the usurping minister, and thus * Mai'guerite de Lorraine Yaudemont, daughter of Frangois, Count de Vaudemont, and of rran9oise de Salnis. Her father was the brother of Henri, Due de Lorraine, and father of Duke Charles IV., Duke of Lorraine in right of his wife Nicole. 1037.] ANNE OF AUHTUIA. 321 to achieve! the salvation of France, the reunion of the royal family, and the liberation of the King. Un- happily, some private sources of discontent rendered Montmorency an easy dupe to the sophistry of Monsieur.* He allied himself with the Duke ; pro- mised to take up arms in his cause ; and to open to him a high road through his government of Langue- doc. Having agreed to the convention, Montmo- rency effectually closed against himself the avenues of mercy in the breast of the suspicious Louis, by sending the Count do Grammont to assure the King of his fidelity ; and that the rumours current of his alliance with Monsieur were unfounded. Three days afterwards, Monsieur made his appearance at Lodeve, at the head of an undisciplined band, half AValloon, half Spanish, officered by a few French adventurers and malcontents, ready to throw for the same lot as ]\[onsieur. AYith such an army of adventurers, the Duke hesitated not to endanger the lives of cavaliers like JMontmorency, Elboeuf, Moret, and M. de la * Montmorency had asked for the sword of Constable, and for the government of the citadel of Montpellier, which were refused to his solicitations : " On n'avait garde de rendi-e le Due plus puissant en Lan- guedoc." The Duke had a trifling quarrel with the Duke de Che\'Teuse which had inciuTed the resentment and bad ofiices of Madame de Che%i"euse.^ — Vie du Due de Montmorency — Galerie des Personnages lUustres. The Duke proposed to the States of the province to vote a supply for the King's service, which he intended to divert to the purposes of the revolt, as Montmorency himself allows in a letter to Monsieiu- : "On saisira les sccours d'argent qu'iLs doivent accorder an Roi poiu' le service de Monsieiu'." — Mem. du Due de Montmorency : Paris, 1CG5. 322 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1631 — Valette, the husband of his half-sister, Gabrielle dc Bourbon ; and, to make the risk still more fatal, he entered France three days before the period agreed upon, and while Montmorency was at Lunel. All true patriots throughout the realm, nmch as they deprecated Richelieu's harsh treatment of the mother, brother, and wife of his sovereign, rose to repulse the invaders. Marshal Schomberg was dispatched with an army to bar Monsieur's advance on Orleans, and to offer battle to the rebels ; while tlie Marshal de la Force entered Languedoc by the Pont St. Esprit, at the head of a second division. The marriage of Monsieur with Marguerite de Lorraine was solemnly declared null and void, by a mandate of the privy council, and by edict of the Parliament ; while Louis himself, accompanied by Queen Anne, departed for the scene of conflict. Before the arrival of his Majesty, the fight of Cas- telnaudari had put dowm the rebellion, by the cap- ture of Mortmorency on the battle-field ; and by the total rout of the rebels by the troops under Schom- berg. Monsieur fled from the field, without making eff'ort to retrieve the fortune of tlie day, or to save the lives of the brave men deluded to their ruin by his representations. The Duke sought refuge in Beziers, himself secure from the punishment due to his rebellion, by his position as heir-presumptive. icy?.] ANNE OF AUSTKIA. 323 A great example of royal justice, nevertheless, was needed : and it was decreed that the brave and chivalrous Montmorency should suffer the death of a traitor on the scaffold, as a wholesome warning to the Due de Bouillon, to Soissons, and other seditious subjects at large. Monsieur, therefore, was informed that pardon for his late enterprise might be obtained, on condition, that he abandoned Montmorency, and other noble captives taken at Castclnaudari, to the penalty they had incurred ; and promised, for the future, " lo love, and to support the Cardinal-minis- ter." All this Gaston promised with alacrity : his craven s])irit cowered beneath the threats of Louis and his minister, who were now on their way to Toulouse, followed bv the Princessc de Conde, who journeyed thither to intercede for her gallant brother. On the 27th of October, Montmorency was brought, under escort, by the Marshal de Breze, to Toulouse ; and a conunission was constituted, headed by the Lord-Keeper Chatcauneuf, to try him for treason. On the morrow the Duke appeared before his judges. On the oOth of October, 1G32, sentence was pro- nounced ; and during the afternnoon of the sauje dav, Montmorency expiated his crime on the scafibld. Incredible exertions had been made to save his life. ]\b)nsicur sent special messengers .three times to im- plore his pardon. Madame de Conde knelt at the 324 THE MAERIED LIFE OF [1631— feet of the Cardinal imploring his mercy, having been refused admittance to his Majesty's presence. The Dukes d'Epernon and de Chevreuse, the Cardinal de la Valette'^ and the Papal Nuncio Spada, implored that the doom of death might be averted. Louis gloomily repHed to all supplications — " The fate of M. de Montmorency remains with the Parliament of Toulouse, his judge ! " In former years, the Duke had subscribed himself the devoted admirer and servant of Anne of Austria ; and now, in Montmorency's great extremity, the Due d'Epernon requested audi- ence of her Majesty to implore her intercession. Anne turned very pale: she hesitated, but at length pro- mised to speak to M. le Cardinal. Around the arm of the Duke, when the sleeve of his habit was cut on the held of battle, to enable the surgeons to dress his wounds, a bracelet was found, containing the portrait of the Queen. The Marshal de Breze, the officer to whom Montmorency surrendered, took the bracelet, which he sent to his kinsman, Richelieu. " The King," says Anquctil, " who Avas before disposed to show mercy * Brother of the fii"st Due d'Epernon, a prelate whose theolog-ical attainments were far inferior to his military acquirements. For details of the trial and execution of Montmorency, see Vie du Due de Mont- morency, Paris, 1GG5 ; Galerie des Personnages lUustres de la Com- de Louis XIII., t. 4 ; Mem. de Bassompien-e, de Pontis, Talleraant ; Aixbery, Hist, du Cardinal de Richelieu ; Pere Griffet, Continuation de I'Histoire du Pere Daniel ; Le Vassor, Hist, de Louis XIII. ; Madame de Motteville, Mem., t. 1. 1037.] ANNE OF AUSTUIA. 325 to the Duke, became inflexibly resolved on his death, when he was informed by his minister that a portrait had been taken from the person of the Duke, the original of which respect forbade him to name ; but a portrait, nevertheless, which deeply interested the King."* Whether Anne was aware of this circum- stance cannot be ascertained : she, nevertheless, ventured to appeal to Hichelicu, who, in his conduct to the Queen mingled a certain gallantry, even in his fiercest repidscs ; and when she condescended to petition, it had often prevailed. Perhaps the thought of the brave hearts, and noble reputations, wrecked by her levity, may have inspired Anne with courage on this occasion. The Duke de Bellegardc owed the disfavour which had terminated in exile to her smiles ; Buckingham had perished by the hand of an assassin, when arming in her behalf — and, as some believed, by her secret command, for the in- vasiou of her adopted country ; ^Montmorency was about to perish on a scaffold ; the Due d'Orleans, be- trayed in the first instance, by her beauty and alleged regard, into treasonable conspiracy against the state, * Anquetil. Le Pere GrifEet, who states that Richelieu revealed the circiunstauce to the King, with the intention of increasing the wrath of his IMajesty. " Le Due de Montmorency," writes Madame Motteville, " I'toit tiX'S assidu auprcs d'Anne d'Autriche ; il fit meme le passionne, et il poiunrait etre arrive qu'il se fut pare de son portrait par une galan- terie cspagnole, assez a la mode dans ce temps." S26 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1G31— remained a perpetual dishonour to the crown to which his birth rendered him heir-presumptive, and hved an ahen from France. Upon Mesdames de Vernet, de Chevreuse, de Fargis, ruin had fallen for their faithful devotion to Anne of Austria ; while exile, death, and imprisonment had been, besides, the fate of numerous less-known agents in her in- trigues. Anne, therefore, took courage, and resolved to make an attempt to save the life of Montmo- rency. Moreover, the Queen often asserted that she possessed power over the inclinations of the Car- dinal-minister ; and that her supplications, when she condescended to make such, would prevail over the most important state interests. This assertion, which was frequently made by Anne, is not devoid of probability. Richelieu's anger at her underhand proceedings seems ever prompted by secret depit ; while the vexatious persecutions- by the which he avenged himself, appeared rather to bespeak mor- tification, and an irritable impatience at not being able to command submission and confidence. Riche- lieu listened to Anne's pleadings for the life of Montmorency, in silence and tears. "/St. Gerinain-en-Laye, on leaving the palace after an audience of the King, and conducted under a strong escort to his chateau at lluftec, in Limousin. The day following, his house in Paris was searched by the under secretaries of state, BouthilHer, Bullion, and Chavigny, who seized his papers, which filled several large coffers, and conveyed them to 1637.] AXXE OF AUSTRIA. 330 the abode of M. do Bullion. On the 29tli of February, the papers were sorted, and analysed, and forwarded to Richelieu, who discovered what he suspected — a large packet of letters addressed to Chateauneuf by the Duchess de Chevreuse, partly written in cipher ; the key to which, however, was found in an ebony cabinet which had been also conveyed from the house of the Lord-Keeper, on the supposition that important papers were concealed in its secret recesses. Amongst the spoil captured were fifty-two letters from ]\Iadame de Chevreuse; thirty-one from Montagu, which treated of foreign alliances and conspiracies, for the overthrow of Richelieu's i^ower ; twenty-nine letters from the Chevalier du Jars, who seems to have acted as a busy agent of M. d'Orleans in France during the late risings, and as his royal highness's servant in every mischievous intrigue for the subversion of the government ; thirty-one letters from the Queen of Great Britain ; and one paper of verses — all which were immediately placed in a portfolio, and forwarded nnopened to King Louis, at St. Germain. Numbers of letters, also, were found from Lord Holland, M. de Puylaurents favourite-in-chief of Monsieur, from the Duke de Vendome, and the Count de Biron — all bitter opponents of the Cardinal.* * Proces- Verbal de la Visite des Papiers de M. de Chateauneiif, faite z 2 340 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1631— The correspondence of Madame de Chevreuse with the Lord-Keeper was the booty which RicheHeu panted to peruse, and to gain possession of which he had instituted these summary proceedings. The rage and mortification of Richehen are not to be described, when he discovered by this correspondence that the woman whom he admired, and whom he had restored to her former proud position, was faithless ; and pitilessly ridiculed his weakness to his fortunate rival. What was worse, the Cardinal saw himself designated in their correspondence under a sohrirjuct too insulting and indecent to find i)lace in these pages. "28* (Madame de Chevreuse) saw 22 (the cardinal) to-day, Avhen with 24 (the queen). He l^aid 24 all the compliments imaginable before 28, to whom he affected to speak coldly and indifferently ; but she treated him in her accustomed manner, and feigned not to perceive his humour. In reply to a jest hazarded by the Cardinal, Madame de Chevreuse rallied him, even to the point of speaking slightingly of his power. The Cardinal seemed astonished rather than angry, and changed his tone to one of civility and great courtesy. I know not whether it was, that par MM. Boutliillicr et de Bullion; copie communiqude par M. le Ducde Liiynes; Cousin, Vie de Madame de Chevreuse, p. 242. * The names in the correspondence between Madame de Chevi-euse and Chateaimeuf were indicated by ciphers : 22 stood for Richelieu ; 24, the queen ; 28, Madame de C:hevi-euse, who always alludes to herself in the third i^erson. 1637,1 ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 341 he did not ^vish to show anger in the presence of the Queen, or whether he did not desire to quarrel witli Madame de Chevreuse. I am to see the Cardinal to-morrow at two o'clock. Be assured, that ^ladame dc Chevreuse will have left this world when she ceases to belong to you."* In another letter, Richelieu stumbled on the following observations : — " I (Madame de Chevreuse) have no news lately from the Cardinal. If he is as glad not to hear of me as I am not to hear from him, he is now highly content, r>nd I delivered from a persecution from which time, and ni}-^ own good wit may free me. The tyranny of the Cardinal momentarily increases. He storms and raves because 28 (Madame de Chevreuse) does not call upon him. Twice I have written to him compli- ments of which he is unworthy — a thing I should never have done but for 31. de Chjvreuse, who tells me that is the way to buy peace. The favour of the King has raised his presumption to a pitch which cannot be surpassed. He thinks to daunt me ; and would fain persuade himself that there is nothing that I would not do to appease him, although I prefer to perish rather than to make submission. The pride of the Cardinal is intolerable to me. He said * Cousin, Vie de ]\Iadame de Chevi'ense. These letters are also quoted by le P. Griffet, Hist, du Eegne de Louis XIII. ; Continuation de I'Hist. de France du Pore Daniel. 342 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1631— recently to my husband that my humour was un- bearable to a sensitive person hke himself ; and that he had resolved to render me in future no especial attention, as I was not capable of conferring either friendship, or confidence. I confide this only to you. Do not apprise M. de Chevreuse that you know this. He has quarrelled with me ; being intimidated by the insolence of the said Cardinal, and because I would not endure such obloquy. I have that opinion of your courage and afi"ection, that I wish you to know every- thing that concerns me. I so entirely trust you, that I deem my interests as safe in your hands as in my own. Love me with fidehty ; and believe that, despite of persecution, I will ever show myself worthy thereof." Again the duchess wrote : — " To- night the Cardinal sent me a letter by express, to implore me to grant him two things : the first was, not to speak to M. de Biron ; and the second, never to admit you (M. de Chateauneuf). My resolve to demonstrate my affection for M. de Chateauneuf is stronger than any consideration for the Cardinal. I have therefore excused myself to the said Cardinal on the plea, that my affairs with M. de Chevreuse compel me to see M. de Chateauneuf"' The duchess sends, with this letter, a valuable diamond to her lover ; she exhorts him to be firm as the precious gem she sends him ; and to shine, like its lustrous 1637.] AXXE OF AT^'^TRIA. 343 rays, a light amid darkness. Again she writes, in the third person : — " I believe that M. de Chateau- neuf is absolutely devoted to Madame de Chevreuse. Madame de Chevreuse promises eternal fidelity to M. de Chateauneuf, If all the world turn against M. de Chateauneuf, Madame de Chevreuse w411 love and esteem him worthily. If he loves her as he states, ]\Iadame de Chevreuse will satisfy him, for all the powers of earth cannot make her change her resolve. She swears to you that this is fact, and commands you to believe it, and to love faithfully." The duchess kept this vow. To the day of his death she was faithful in her attachment to the Lord-Keeper through weal and woe ; refusing to participate in any future triumphs after the death of their enemy, Richelieu, unless shared by him. Chateauneuf had passed his 50tli year : he was plain in person, without courtly grace, or wit. Amid all her aberra- tions, Madame de Chevreuse never abjured her one great redeeming attribute — fidelity. Bitter must have been Richelieu's reflections as he perused this correspondence, and probably pictured the mocking lip, and wicked merriment of the beautiful syren w^hom he feared ; and whom, because he so feared, he wished to bend to his toils. " The Cardinal's mad vagaries are wonderful ! " continues the impracticable duchess. " He sent for Madame de Chevreuse, and 34i THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1631— made strange complaints. He declared that she was perpetually sparring with him in the presence of Lord Jermyn, in order that the said lord miglit return to his country, and recount how little respect she bore him. He said he knew that Madame de Chevreuse and M. de Ch^teauneuf understand each other; and that she also receives M. de Biron, though all the world knows that the said Biron is in love with her — a proceeding M. le Cardinal is resolved no longer to tolerate. Madame de Chevreuse is in better health, and more resolved than ever to esteem M. de Chateauneuf, as she has promised him." " Chateauneuf," writes Tallemant, " etoit un Jiomme tout confit en galanierie. I have seen him ride on horseback by the Queen's coach, on the side occupied by Madame de Chevreuse, attired in a splendid satin robe, and displaying his horsemanship. The Cardinal was devoured with jealousy, especially as it was suspected that the Garde des Sceaux was also an admirer of the Queen." The thunder of the minister's wrath soon fell on these unhappy triflers. The very nature of the correspondence seized in the dwelHng of J\I. de Chateauneuf precluded his public arraignment for treason. The King's sister, Henrietta Maria, was compromised: and Richelieu shrank from public ridicule, such as would have befallen him on the publication of the letters of ]\radame de 1H37.1 ANNE OF AUSTRIA. 345 Chevreuse; and from the unsparing revelations likely to fall from the lips of the duchess, if put upon her tri.'d by the side of Chateauneuf. Orders were despatched to remove the ex-Lord-Keeper to the citadel of Angoulemo ; where he was subjected to severe incarceration and privations, for what the Cardinal called " un mauvais procede,'' and totally debarred from communication with the world. Having thus avenged himself on his ftithless friend, Richelieu proceeded next to exile the Duchess de Chevreuse, with all startling foi-malitics. Tn the dead of the night, an officer of the royal guard, followed by a troop, entered the court-yard of the superb dwelling of the duchess. An instant inter- view was demanded de par le rot. Madame de Chevreuse appeared and was presented with a k'ttre dc cachet, which exiled her to Dampierre, where she was to remain under suiveiUance. Five hours only were allowed her to make preparation for departure from the capital. ' Escorted by a guard of soldiers, Madame de Chevreuse reached her destination, before the Queen heard of her exile. The minor personages, meanwhile — those within the reach of the minister's vengeance — paid the penalty of their patron's misdemeanour. Arrests were made on all sides : a fear came over the people * Cousin, Vie de Madame de Chevreuse ; Motteville, t. c. 346 THE MARRIED LIFE OF [1631— of Paris that another dire conspiracy had transpired. The Chevaher du Jars was arrested, thrown into the Bastille, tried before the infamous Judge LafFemas, popularly called le hourreau du Cardinal, tortured, condemned to decapitation for holding intelligence with Monsieur, and for treasonable collusion with the enemies of the realm. On the scaffold with his head on the block, the unfortunate man, waiting for the headsman's swift blow, was informed that the King's gracious clemency had commuted his punishment into incarceration for life in the Bastille.""' The Chevalier fainted away ; and suffered ever afterwards from partial paralysis of the limbs. The brother of the Garde des Sceaux, the Marquis de Hauterive, escaped, in disguise, to the coast, put off from France in a fishing smack, and was landed in Holland, after undergoing extraordinary perils and privations. The Count de Leuville, the young son of Hauterive, was seized, and conveyed to the Bastille by command of Richelieu ; while every relative, however distant, of the ex-Keeper of the Seals was banished from the capital. The dejj^^ amoureUcV of the Cardinal could scarcely avenge itself more rigorously ; especially after Queen Anne received commands, from the lips of her royal consort, to cease all correspondence with the * Cousin, Vie dc l^Iadame de Clie\Teuse ; Jlotteville, t. c. 1637.1 .\XXE OF AUSTRIA, 347 exiled duchess, on pain of incurring his signal dis- pleasure. Anne, deeming that she had been treated with very little deference in the matter ; and that some connnunication was due to her dignity before her chief lady of honour was summarily deposed and exiled, listened to her husband's prohibition with that icy composure which Louis said, " was always a sure indication that the Queen intended to follow her own pleasure." It was now the Queen's habit, when in Paris, to retire during a part of every day to the Val-de-Gracc. In the oratory stood a box, in which Anne placed any corresjDondence she wished to des- patch secretl}''; and in which she found the letters sent to her privately under cover to the abbess, or that had been boldly left for her at the gate. The toiiricrc was the Queen's devoted servant, and received all letters, which she gave to the abbess ; who at tlie same time confided to her any which had been written by the Queen, and left at the convent to be despatched. Letters from the King of Spain, from the Empress Marguerite her sister, from the Infant Don Ferdinando, from Queen Henrietta ]\Iaria, from the Queen-mother, and from [Monsieur, thus came to Anne privately, and unknown to the King. At this period the energies of France were almost spent in maintainins; the national honour. War was rao'ino; 348 THE MAEEIED LIFE OF [1631 - ill Germany, and every political betrayal might cause events of momentous import ; and French soldiers were meeting on the field of battle the combined hosts of Spain, and the Empire. From the Val-de- Grace Anne, therefore, communicated with the Duchess de Chevreuse ; and for some weeks they interchanged a secret, but active correspondence. Madame de Chevreuse, furious against the Cardinal, was ready to sacrifice anything for vengeance. Dam- j^ierre, the place of her exile, was then a dreary, and half-furnished chateau.* M. de Chevreuse cherished a great distaste for the place ; which, during the reign of Henri Quatre, had likewise been his prison, to avenge the audacity of his homage to the fa- vourite, the Marquise de Verneuil. Richeheu had managed to infuse an additional sting in his punish- ment, by sending the duchess to her husband's castle of Dampierre ; from whom, when in the plenitude of her power and pride, she had obtained a separation. Correspondence at length failed to satisfy the Queen and her friend : thev determined to meet, in de- * Dampierre Ijecamc subsequently one of the most magnificent seats in France. It was restored by the grandson of Madame de Che\Teuse, son of her son by the Constable de Luynes, upon whom the peerage of her second husband was confirmed. The Duke de Chevreuse and De Luyiies married the eldest daughter of the famous Colbert, who was a wealthy heiress. Madame de Chevreuse had three daughters by her second husband ; Anne Marie de LoiTaine, abbess of Pont-aux-Dame ; Hen- riette, abbess of Jouarre ; and Mademoiselle de Chevreuse, celebrated for her beauty, and the admiration of the coadjutor Dc Retz. 1C37.] ANXE OF AUSTRIA. 349 fiance of the ministei', and liis mandates. One day therefore, Marie disguised herself in the coarse garb of a peasant woman, and, steahng from the castle on foot, actually arrived at the Val-de-Grrace at vesper hour. Anne was in her oratory ; and the two friends fell into each other's arms to weep, and lament their persecution, and to devise fresh snares to entrap their common cnem}^ " Madame de Chevreuse," writes Tallcmant, " was exiled to Dampierre, from whence she came to visit the Queen, in the disguise of a dirty vagrant, at the hour wc call c?i(re c/iicn ct loupT This meetiuL:; occurred twice, accordinii; to the state- ment wliicli, at a subsequent period, the Queen was compelled to make on oath. Other chroniclers, how- ever, relate that the clandestine interviews between Anne and her friend were frequent ; and were, for an interval enjoyed with impunity. The audacious defiance of his command, never- theless, at length came to the knowledge of the Cardinal and was by him communicated to Kino- Lonis. A few hours later a coach, escorted by a company of musketeers, drove into the court-yard of the castle of Dampierre, and Madame de Clie- vreusc Avas directed to enter the vehicle. In vain ]Marie expostulated, and petitioned for delay ; she was compelled to submit; and, on being shown the instructions iriven to the commandins: officer of the 350 THE MAKRIED LIFE OF [1631— escort, even to congratulate herself on the leniency with which she was treated. The Constable cle Luynes had bequeathed the domain, and chateau de Milly to his widow. The castle was a few miles from Tours, and stood in the midst of a vast forest. Before the high altar of its chapel was the tomb of the late Constable. To this lonesome abode Richelieu now consigned the duchess ; one waiting-woman only was permitted to share her captivity ; her actions were subjected to strict surveillance ; and all pecuniary expenses incurred by the inmates of the chateau were to be defrayed, and regulated by the Due de Chevreuse ! In vain Marie, frantic with impotent rage, defied, and even threatened, her foe : so vigilantly was the surveillance maintained by the officer on guard that, for an interval, the restless inti'igante was thoroughly caged. King Louis XIll., during these events, gave the Cardinal no less cause for dissatisfaction. His Ma- jesty's platonic friendship with De Hautefort pros- pered not : if the latter spoke to any cavalier of the court, if she smiled while Louis felt sad, if she yawned with irrepressible ennui during their evening's dis- course, sombre suspicion enveloped the King's mind, and petulant repinings ensued. " This young lady," relates Tallemant, " wishing to marry and secure a position, suffered the King's attentions impatiently. 1637.] ANNE OF AUSTKLV. 351 She was very handsome ; but during eight days the King agreed well with her, and during a subsequent eight days he quarrelled with her." Louis vainly tried to detach Mademoiselle de Hautefort from her duty and affection for the Queen, whom ]\Iarie resolutely supported. lie forbade her to accompany her mistress to the Carmelites, or to the Val-de- Grace ; but as this injunction was never officially communicated, ]\Iarie chose to treat the King's wishes with