UC-NRLF SB ES4 DbS wssr: THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BEQUEST OF ANITA D. S. BLAKE ,vvyVQ>Yv' * W'W,^ ^ jW LA. >, * ::: 'pmiym THE HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. LONDON: ' BRADBURY AXD EVAXS, PRINTERS, WHITErRlA*R THE HISTORY OF THE BASTILE, AND OF ITS PRINCIPAL CAPTIYES. BY R. A. DAVENPORT. AUTHOR OF THB " NEW BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY," ETC. BT. Then shame to manhood, and opprobrious more To France than all her losses and defeats, Old or of later date, by sea or land, Her house of bondage, worse than that of old Which God avenged on Pharaoh the Bastile. COWPER. LONDON: PRINTED FOR THOMAS TEGG, 73, CHEAPSIDE. 1839. LOAN STACK GIFT .5 D3 ADVERTISEMENT. THE execution of a plan so frequently falls immea- surably short of the author's original conception, that some wit, of whom I have forgotten the name, has likened them to the cry of an Oriental fruit-hawker : " In the name of the Prophet figs!" I can bear witness how much what is purposed goes beyond what is accomplished. I began loftily, and perhaps the reader will say, that I have ended with figs. At the outset I designed to link, in some measure, the history of the Bastile with that of France, and to trace the rise and progress of those parties, factions, and sects, which furnished inmates to the prisons of state. But I soon discovered that the contracted limits of a single volume would not admit of my plan being- carried into execution. By much enlarging the page, and by making, at no small cost, a very considerable addition to the number of pages, the publisher has 22G Tl ADVERTISEMENT. liberally endeavoured to give me the means of ren- dering the work less imperfect than it would other- wise have been; but I have, nevertheless, been exceedingly cramped by the want of adequate space. But, though I have not done all that I wished to do, I am by no means disposed to disparage my labours. I have consulted every document that was accessible, and have conscientiously tried to be strictly just, and to combine information with amusement. I indulge a hope that the volume will tend not only to keep up an abhorrence of arbitrary power, but also to inspire affection for governments which hold it to be a duty to promote the happiness of the people. What- ever may be its defects, it is the only work in the English language that has even the slightest preten- sion to be denominated a History of the Bastile. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. PAGE Original meaning of the word Ea stile Various Bastiles Description of " The Bastile " Officers'of the fortress Inte- rior of it The Garden The Court where the prisoners took exercise The Towers, Dungeons, Apartments, Furni- ture, Food, of the prisoners The Library The Chapel Lettres de Cachet described Advocate of them Change in the treatment of prisoners Narrative of a prisoner Strict search of prisoners. Harshness to them Artifices employed against them Silence enjoined to the Guards, &c. ? of the prison Mode of receiving visiters Suppression of letters Secrecy and mystery Medical attendance Wills Insanity Clandestine burial of the dead. . . . . CHAPTER II. Reign of John II. Stephen Marcel, Provost of the Mer- chants Reign of Charles V. Hugh Aubriot Reign of Charles VI. Noviant La Riviere Peter des Essarts John de Montaigu Contests of the factions at Paris The Count of Armagnac The Burgundians obtain possession of Paris Massacre of the Armagnacs Assassination of the Duke of Burgundy Reign of Charles VII. Paris in the hands of the English Villiers de 1'Isle Adam The English expelled from Paris Reign of Louis XI. Anthony de Chabannes The Count de Melun Cardinal de Balue William d'Harau- cour Charles d'Armagnac Louis de Luxembourg The Duke of Nemours and his children. . . . .33 Vlll CONTENTS. CHAPTER III. l-AGK Reign of Francis I. Semblan^ai The Chancellor Duprat The Chancellor Poyet. Admiral de Chabot. Fall of Poyet -Reign of Henry II. Anne du Bourg Louis du Faur Reign of Francis II. Execution of du Bourg Francis de Vendome Reign of Charles IX. The Duke of Lunebourg Henry of Navarre and the Prince of Conde in danger of the Bastile Faction of the Politicians La Mole Coconas Marshal de Montrnorenci Marshal de Cosse Reign of Henry III. Bussi d'Amboise. ... 74 CHAPTER IV. Reign of Henry III. continued Conspiracy of Salcede Francis de Rosires Peter de Belloy Francis le Breton Bernard Palissy Daring plots of the League Henry III. expelled from Paris The Bastile surrenders to Guise Bussi le CJerc appointed governor Damours James de la Guesle Reign of Henry IV. Members of the parliament arrested President de Harlay Potier de Blancmesnil The family of Seguier Speeches of Henry IV. Louis Seguier James Gillot Outrage committed by the Council of Sixteen It is punished by the duke of Mayenne Henry IV. enters Paris Surrender of the Bastile Du Bourg Treasure deposited in the Bastile by Henry. . . . . 102 CHAPTER V. Reign of Henry IV. continued Viscount de Tavannes The marshal duke of Biron Faults of Biron Friendship of Henry IV. for Biron La Fin, and his influence over Biron The duke of Savoy Biron's first treason pardoned Em- bassies of Biron Speech of Queen Elizabeth to Biron Dis- content among the nobles Art of La Fin Imprisonment of Renaze La Fin betrays Biron Artifices employed to lull Biron into security Arrest of Biron, and the count of Auvergne Conduct of Biron in the Bastile His trial His execution Respect paid to his remains Monbarot sent to the Bastile The count of Auvergne He is sent to the Bas- tile but soon released He plots again Cause and intent of the conspiracy He is again arrested Sentence of death passed on him, but commuted for imprisonment He spends twelve years in the Bastile Mary of Medicis releases him Con- spiracy of Merargues He is executed Death of Henry IV. 133 CONTENTS. IX CHAPTER VI. PAGE Reign of Louis XIII. The treasure of Henry IV. dissi- pated Prevalent belief in magic Cesar and Ruggieri Henry, prince of Conde The marchioness d'Ancre Mar- shal Ornano Prevalence of duelling The count de Bou- teville The Day of the Dupes Vautier, the physician of Mary of Medicis The marshal de Bassompierre The cheva- lier de Jars Infamy of Laffemas Three citizens of Paris sent to the Bastile Despotic language of Louis XIII. The count de Cramail The marquis of Vitry Peter de la Porte Noel Pigard Dubois, an alchemical impostor The count de Granc and the marquis de Praslin The prince Palatine Count Philip d'Aglie Charles de Beys Letter from an un- known prisoner to Richelieu. . . .172 CHAPTER VII. Reign of Louis XIV. Regency of Anne of Austria In- auspicious circumstances under which she assumed the regency George de Casselny The count de Montresor- The mar- quis de Fontrailles Marshal de Rantzau The count de Rieux Bernard Guyard Broussel, governor of the Bastile The duchess of Montpensier orders the cannon of the Bastile to be fired on the king's army Conclusion of the war of the Fronde Surrender of the Bastile Despotism of Louis XIV. Slavishness of the nobles John Herauld Gourville The count de Guiche Nicholas Fouquet Paul Pellisson-Fon- tainier Charles St. Evremond Simon Morin The marquis de Vardes Count Bussy Rabutin Saci le Maistre The duke of Lauzun Marquis of Cavoie The chevalier de Rohan A nameless prisoner Charles D'Assoucy Miscel- laneous prisoners. . . . 217 CHAPTER VIII. The Poisoners The Marchioness of Brinvilliers Penau- tier La Voisin and her accomplices and dupes The " Cham- bre Ardente" The Countess of Soissons The Duchess of Bouillon The Duke of Luxembourg Stephen de Bray The Abbe Primi Andrew Morell Madame Guyon Courtils de Sandraz Constantine de Renneville The Man with the Iron Mask Jansenists Tiron, Veillant, and Lebrun Desmarets The Count de Bucquoy The Duke de Richelieu Miscellaneous Prisoners. . 27 X CONTENTS. CHAPTER IX. PACK Reign of Louis XV. Regency of the Duke of Orleans Oppressive measures against all persons connected with the Finances Their failure Prisoners in the Bastile Freret Voltaire The Cellarnare conspiracy The Duchess of Maine Madame de Stael Malezieu Bargeton Mahudel The Mississippi scheme Count de Horn Death of the Regent Administration of the Duke of Bourhon La Blanc Paris Duverney The Count de Belleisle< The Chevalier de Bel- leisle Madame de Tencin. , . . 314 CHAPTER X. Reign of Louis XV. continued The Bull Unigenitus A Notary Public G. N. Nivelle G. C. Buffard Death of Deacon Paris Rise, progress, and acts, of the Convulsionaiies Persecution of them, and artifices employed by them to foil their persecutors Lenglet Dufresnoy La Beaumelle F. de Marsy Marmontel the Abb Morellet. Mirabeau the elder The Chevalier Resseguier Groubendal and Du- laurens. Robbe de Beauveset Mahe de la Bourdonnais Count Lally La Chalotais Marin Durosoi Prevost de Beaumont Barletti St. Paul Dumouriez. , . 346 CHAPTER XI. Captivity and Sufferings of Masers de Latude Cause of his Imprisonment He is removed from the Bastile to Vin- cennes He escapes He is retaken, and sent to the Bastile Kindness of M. Berryer D'Alegre is confined in the same apartment with him Latude forms a plan for escaping Pre- parations for executing it The Prisoners descend from the summit of the Bastile, and escape They are recaptured in Holland, and brought back Latude is thrown into a horrible dungeon He tames rats, and makes a musical pipe Plans suggested by him His writing materials He attempts suicide Pigeons tamed by him New plans suggested by him Finds means to fling a packet of papers from the top of the Bastile He is removed to Vincennes He escapes Is recap- tured Opens a communication with his fellow-prisoners Is transferred to Charenton His situation there His momen- tary liberation ^He is re^-arrested, and sent to the Bietre Horrors of that prison Heroic benevolence of Madame Legros She succeeds in obtaining his release Subsequent fate of Latude. ..... 382 CONTENTS. XI CHAPTER XII. PAGE Reign of Louis XVI. Enormous numbers of Lettres de Cachet issued in two reigns William Debure the elder Blaizot imprisoned for obeying the King Pelisseri Prisoners from St. Domingo Linguet Duvernet The Count de Parades Marquis de Sade Brissot The Countess de la Motte Cardinal de Rohan Cagliostro The affair of the Diamond Necklace Reveillon takes shelter in the Bastile Attack and capture, of the Bastile by the Parisians Conclusion. 435 PLAN OF THE BASTILE. A. Avenue from St. Anthony's Street- B. Entrance, and first draw- bridge C. The Governor's house D. First court E. Avenue lead- ing to the gate of the fortress F. Drawbridge and gates of the for- tress G. Guard- houses H. The great court within the towers I. Staircase leading to the Council Chamber K. Council Chamber L. Court du Puits, or Well Court M. Way to the garden N. Steps leading into the garden O. Garden P. the moat of the fortress Q. Passage to the Arsenal garden R. A wooden road round the walls for the night patrole 1. Tower du Puits 2. Tower de la Liberte 3. Tower de la Bertaudiere 4. Tower de la Baziniere 5. Tower de la Comte 6. Tower du Tresor 7. Tower de la Chapelle 8. Tower du Coin. THE HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. CHAPTER I. Original meaning of the word Bastile. Various Bastiles. De- scription of " The Bastile." Officers of the fortress. Interior of it. The Garden. The Court where the prisoners took exer- cise. The Towers, Dungeons, Apartments, Furniture, Food, of the prisoners. The Library. The Chapel. Lettres de Cachet described. Advocate of them. Change in the treatment of prisoners. Narrative of a prisoner. Strict search of prisoners. Harshness to them. Artifices employed against them. Silence enjoined to the Guards, &c. of the prison. Mode of receiving visiters. Suppression of letters. Secrecy and mys- tery, Medical attendance. Wills. Insanity. Clandestine burial of the dead. THE word Bastile, which has now long been, and will ever remain, a term of opprobrious import, to desig- nate the dungeons of arbitrary power, has, like many other words, deviated widely in the lapse of years from its original meaning. Its derivation is traced, somewhat doubtfully, to the Italian bastia or bastione. In former times, it was applied to any fort, whether permanent or temporary. In our old writers, as well as in those of France, we find it repeatedly given to field works. The redoubts, for instance, by means of which, in the reign of the sixth Henry, the English blockaded Orleans, are so denominated by French chroniclers. The same is the case with respect to more durable works; there were, at an early period, no less than three bastiles at Paris, those of St. Denis, B 2 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. the Temple, and St. Anthony, all of which were situ- ated to the north of the Seine. Eventually, the name was confined to the last of these buildings. The quad- rangular castle of St. Denis was demolished in 1671 ; but the tower of the Temple, in which the unfortunate Louis the Sixteenth and his family were confined, outlasted the Bastile itself for nearly a quarter of a century, and was used as a state prison till 1811, when it ceased to exist. The Bastile of St. Anthony which structure I shall henceforth mention only as the Bastile is generally supposed to have been founded by Hugh Aubriot. This opinion is, however, erroneous. It is beyond a doubt, that the original plan and construction of it must be assigned to the celebrated Stephen Marcel, provost of the merchants of Paris. When, in 1356, after the disastrous battle of Poitiers, the English detachments were ravaging the vicinity of the French capital, and the citizens were filled with terror, Stephen undertook to repair the dilapidated bulwarks of the city, and add other defences. Among his additions was a gate, fortified with towers on each side, leading from the suburb of St. Anthony into the street of the same name. These towers must be considered as the first rudiments of the Bastile. The haste with which, while an enemy was at hand, the walls had been constructed, had not allowed of giving to them that height and solidity which were requisite for effectually resisting an attack. In 1369, Charles the Fifth resolved to remedy this defect. The task of making the necessary improvements was committed to Hugh Aubriot, the provost of Paris,. Among the changes which Aubriot made, was the adding of two towers to those which already existed at St. Anthony's gate. They were erected parallel with those built by Marcel ; so that the whole formed a square fort, with towers at the angles. In the reign HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 3 of Charles the Sixth, after the Maillotin insurrection, in 1382, the Bastile was again enlarged, by the addi- tion of two towers at each end of the fortress ; thus presenting a front of four towers to the city, and as many to the suburb. To render more difficult any attempt to surprise the place, the road, which, as we have seen, ran through it, was turned to one side. The body of the fortress received no further accession; but, before the middle of the seventeenth century, a bas- tion was constructed on the side toward the suburb, and a broad dry ditch, about forty yards wide and twelve deep, faced with masonry, encircled the whole. Along the summit of the exterior wall of the ditch, which was at an elevation of sixty -feet above the bottom of the ditch, was a wooden gallery, called the Rounds, reached by two flights of steps. Day and night sentinels were constantly moving about in this gallery-; every quarter of an hour they were visited by some of the officers or Serjeants; and, more completely to secure their vigilance, each man had certain num- bered pieces of copper pierced with holes, which, at stated times, he was to drop on the point of an instru- ment fixed in a padlocked box. A bell was also rung upon, the Rounds, every quarter of an hour, through- out the night. The officers on the establishment of the Bastile con- sisted of a governor, the king's lieutenant, a major, who officiated as secretary, and prepared the reports and monthly accounts for the minister, two adjutants to assist him, a physician, a surgeon and his assistant, a chaplain, two priests, and a confessor, a keeper of the records, clerk, superintendant of the buildings, engineer, four turnkeys, and a company of invalids. No soldier was allowed to sleep out of the place with - out leave from the governor; nor could any officer dine out or be absent all night, without permission from the minister. Originally only the governor and the 4 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. king's lieutenant were appointed by the king, the rest being nominated by the governor ; and guard was mounted at the castle by a body of citizens, which bore the name of the Independent Company of Archers. The change was made about the middle of the eighteenth century. The interior of the gloomy fabric must now be de- scribed. Having passed down St. Anthony's-street, and arrived nearly at the city gate, leading to the sub- urb of the same name, he who wished or was compelled to visit the Bastile, turned to the right hand, in the direction of the Arsenal, where stood a sentinel, to warn off all idle gazers. Before, however, the main building could be entered, the visiter had to pursue his way along an approach, bent nearly into the form of three sides of a square, Z], flanked with buildings of various kinds, on the whole of one side, and a part of the other. Over the entrance-gate was an armoury, and on the right of it a guard-room ; on the left hand was a range of suttling-houses, and on the right were barracks. The road then made an abrupt turn, on the right of which were stables, coach-houses, and a door, into a space which was called the Elm Court. This first division was named the Passage Court. At the extremity of it was a drawbridge, with a guard-house at its further end. This bridge led to a second court, taking its name from the governor's house, which, with his garden, occupied one-half of its circuit. Another abrupt turn brought the visiter opposite the portal of the fortress, which he at length reached, after having passed by the kitchens, and traversed the great draw- bridge. Between the street and the interior of the fortress there were five massy gates, at all of which sentinels were posted. The principal drawbridge being passed, and the gate opened, the visiter stood within the Bastile itself. Leav- ing on his right a guard-room, he found himself in the HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 5 Great Court of the Castle, a parallelogram of about a hundred and two feet long by seventy-two broad, con- taining six towers, three on the side looking towards the suburb, and as many on the city side : the former were named de la Comte, du Tresor, and de la Chapelle ; the latter de la Bazaniere, de la Bertau- diere, and de la Liberte. Between the three left-hand towers were rooms for the archives and other purposes, and the chapel ; between the towers du Tresor and de la Chapelle was, in former times, the gate of St. Anthony, and the road into the city. A pile of buildings, comparatively modern, extend- ing across the shortest diameter of the fortress, from the Tour de la Chapelle to the miscalled Tour de la Liberte, divided this principal court from another, called the Well Court. This pile contained the coun- cil chamber, the library, the repository for the pri- soners' effects, and apartments for the king's lieu- tenant, the major, and other officers, and, occasionally, for the sick, and captives of distinction. The length of the Well Court was between seventy and eighty feet, the breadth between forty and fifty. At the angle on the right was the tower du Coin, on the left the tower du Puit. In this court were some lodgings for the drudges of the place ; and, as the poultry were fed and the offal was thrown out here, it was always dirty and unwholesome. The garden, formed out of what once was a bastion, on the suburb side of the castle, was laid out in walks, and planted with trees. It appears, that, till a period not long previous to the downfall of the Bastile, such prisoners as were not confined for flagitious crimes, or for the express purpose of being rendered supremely wretched, were permitted to walk there. To the last governor, M. de Launay, they were indebted for being deprived of this privilege. To increase his already enormous emoluments, he let it to a gardener, and he 6 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. had interest enough with the minister to obtain his sanction for this encroachment on the scanty comforts of the prisoners an order was issued by which they were excluded from it. Nor was this all, or the worst. The platforms, along the summit of the towers, and connecting curtains, had hitherto afforded a pleasant and airy walk ; but these, too, were shut up, at his de- sire, partly to save trouble to those who watched the prisoners, and partly to diminish the chance of con- versation between the former and the latter. Such conduct is, however, not strange in the man who could meet the complaints of his oppressed inmates with ob- scenely vulgar language ; and could add, that " people either ought not to put themselves in the way of be- ing sent to the Bastile, or ought to know how to suffer when they got there/' Humanity deplores his subsequent fate, and execrates the brutality of his murderers ; but, as far as regards him personally, M. de Launay. appears to have been deserving of very little respect. The only remaining spot in which exercise could be taken was the principal court. " The walls which enclose it," says M. Linguet, " are more than a hun- dred feet high, without windows ; so that, in fact, it is a large well, where the cold is unbearable in winter, because the north-east wind pours into it, and in summer the heat is no less so, because, there being no circulation of air, the sun makes an absolute oven of it. This is the sole lyceum where such of the pri- soners as have permission (for all do not have it) can, each in his turn, for a few moments in the day, dis- encumber their lungs from the pestilential air of their dwelling." But even this poor gratification, which seldom extended to an hour, was considerably abridged by circumstances. Any increase in the number of prisoners diminished the time which was allotted. Whenever, as was frequently the case, any stranger HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 7 entered the court, the prisoner was obliged to hurry into a narrow passage, called the Cabinet, and shut himself in closely, that he might not be seen. M. Linguet states, that three quarters of an hour was often wasted in these compulsory retreats to the Ca- binet. If they were not promptly made, or the captive displayed any curiosity, the least penalty inflicted was confining the delinquent within the limits of his cell. The towers, which were at least a hundred feet high, were seven feet thick at the top, and the thickness gradually increased down to the foundation. Lowest of all in them were dungeons, under the level of the soil, arched, paved, lined with stone, dripping with perpetual damps, the darkness of which was made visible by means of a narrow slit through the wall, on the side next the ditch. In this foetid den, swarmed newts, toads, rats, and every variety of vermin which haunt confined and gloomy spots. Planks, laid across iron bars fixed in the wall, formed the couch of the captive, and his only bedding, even in the most incle- ment season, was a little straw. Two doors, each seven inches thick, with enormous locks and bars, closed the entrance to each of these horrible abodes, over which might fitly have been inscribed the terrific line that shone dimly over the gate of hell, " All hope abandon ye who enter here !" Above the dungeons were four stories, each con- sisting of a single room, with, .in some instances, a dark closet scooped out of the wall. All were shut in by ponderous double doors ; as were also the stair- cases. In three of the stories, the rooms, of an irre- gular octagonal shape, were about twenty feet in diameter, and eighteen in height. In many of the rooms the ceilings were double, with a considerable vacuity between them ; the lower one was of lath and plaster, the upper of solid oak. The highest story of all, which was termed la Calotte, was neither so lofty 8 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. nor so large as the others ; it was arched to support the roof and platform, and its curvature prevented its inhabitant from walking in any part but the middle of the room. On the towers and curtains several pieces of cannon were mounted. The light which was thrown into these chambers was broken and imperfect ; prospect from them there was none. Each room had only one window ; and, independent of the obstacle opposed to sight by the massiveness of the walls, there was another, in the double iron gratings, at the outside and middle, formed of bars as thick as a man's arm, which closed the nar- row aperture. In the lower stories, that there might be no chance of seeing or being seen, the opening was filled half way up with stone and mortar, or with planks fastened to the external grating. Three steps led up to some of the windows, if windows they may be called; in other cases they were level with the floor. A glass casement excluded the wind in the better apartments ; the dungeons were left exposed to all the rigour of the elements. The rooms were floored with tile or stone, and all of them, except the dungeons, had chimneys or stoves; the chimneys were secured, in several parts, by iron bars. In winter, six pieces of wood were allowed daily for firing. M. Linguet complains in his Me- moirs, that the quantity was insufficient, and the qua- lity execrable. It is obvious that, to enhance his pro-* fits, an avaricious governor would purchase as cheaply, and deal out as scantily, as it was possible for him to do. The rooms were designated from their situation in the towers, numbering from the bottom, and the pri- soners were designated by the number of their room. Thus, for instance, the first chamber above the dun- geon in the Baziniere tower was called the first Bazi- niere, and so on to the topmost, which was known as the Calotte Baziniere. The prisoner was consequently HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 9 mentioned not by his name but by the number of his room the first Baziniere, the first Bertaudiere, the third Comte, &c. &c. In some cases it appears that the prisoner received another name instead of his own, which was never uttered or written. In this way De la Tude, of whom we shall have occasion to speak, was denominated Daury. In what manner these pleasant abodes were fur- nished M. Linguet shall describe. " Two worm-eaten mattresses, a cane elbow chair, the bottom of which was held together by packthread, a tottering table, a water jug, two pots of delftware, one of which was to drink out of, and two flag stones, to support the fire ; such was the inventory, at least such was mine. I was indebted only to the commiseration of the turnkey, after several months' confinement, for a pair of tongs and fire-shovel. It was not possible for me to pro- cure dog-irons ; and whether it arises from policy or inhumanity I know not, what the governor will not supply, he will not allow a prisoner to procure at his own expense. It was eight months ere I could obtain permission to buy a tea-pot, twelve before I could procure a tolerably strong chair, and fifteen ere I was suffered to replace by a crockery vessel the filthy and disgusting pewter vessel which is the only one that is used in the Bastile. " The single article which I was at the outset al- lowed to purchase was a new blanket, and the occa- sion was as follows : " The month of September, as every body knows, is the time when the moths that prey upon woollens are transformed into winged insects. When the an tre which was assigned to me was opened, there arose from the bed, I will not say a number, nor a cloud, but a large and dense column of moths, which over- spread the chamber in an instant. I started back with horror. c Pooh ! pooh ! ' said one of my conductors 10 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. with a smile, ' before you have lain here two nights, there will not be one of them left/ "In the evening, the lieutenant of police came, according to custom, to welcome me. I manifested so violent a repugnance to such a populous flock bed, that they were gracious enough to permit me to put on a new covering, and to have the mattress beaten^ the whole at my own cost. As feather beds are pro- hibited articles in the Bastile, doubtless because such luxuries are not suitable for persons to whom the ministry wishes above all things to give lessons of mortification, I was very desirous that, every three months at least, my shabby mattress should have the same kind of renovation. But, though it would have cost him nothing, the proprietory governor opposed it with all his might, 'for/ said he, 'it wears them out/" Each prisoner was supplied with flint, steel, and tinder, a candle a day, a broom once a week, and a pair of sheets every fortnight. Captives of rank were undoubtedly somewhat better accommodated, and, where there were no particular rea- sons for annoying them, they were favoured by being allowed to receive articles from their homes ; but the common run of convenience and comfort appears not to have gone beyond what is described by M. Linguet. The food of the prisoners was paid for by the king at so much per head, according to a graduated scale ; but the supply and management of it w T ere left, seem- ingly without control, in the hands of the governor. By this arrangement the prisoners were placed at the mercy of their jailor, who, if he happened to have a great love of gain, and a scanty portion of humanity, might fill his purse by furnishing bad provisions, or not sufficient to sustain life. " There are prisoners in the Bastile," says Linguet, " who have not more than four ounces of meat at a meal; this has been ascertained more than once by weighing what was given to them ; HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 1 1 the fact is notorious to all the under officers, who are grieved by it." In estimating the amount of the wrong thus inflicted, it must be borne in mind, that the man who is in bonds requires more andbetter nourishment, to keep nature from sinking, than is necessary for the man who is a free agent. There was, in this instance, no excuse for stint. The sum allowed by the king for the maintenance of the captives was exceedingly liberal. It was nearly half-a-crown a day for an individual of the humblest class ; four shillings for a tradesman ; eight shillings for a priest, a person in the finance department, or an ordinary judge; twelve shil- lings for a parliament counsellor ; twenty shillings for a lieutenant-generaHn the army ; one pound ten for a marshal of France; and two guineas for a prince of the blood. If the sovereign oppressed those who incurred his anger, he at least did not mean to starve them. What was the fare which this high rate of remune- ration obtained for the prisoners ? It is thus described in a work published in 1774, by one who had himself long tried it. I am not aware that the accuracy of the statement has ever been impeached ; on the con- trary, there is the testimony of other witnesses to the same effect. " The kitchen is supplied by the governor's steward, who has under him a cook, a scullion, and a man whose employment is to cut wood for fuel. All the victuals are bad, and generally ill- dressed; and this is a mine of gold to the governor, whose revenue is daily aug- mented by the hard fare of the prisoners under his keeping. Besides these profits, which are inconceiv- ably great, the governor receives a hundred and fifty livres a day for fifteen prison rooms, at ten livres each, as a sort of gratification in addition to his salary ; and he often derives other considerable emoluments. " On flesh days the prisoners have soup with boiled meat, c. for dinner ; at night a slice of roast meat, a 12 HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. ragout and salad. The diet on fast days consists, at dinner, of fish, and two other dishes ; at night, of eggs, with greens. The difference in the quality of the diet is very small between the lowest rank of prisoners, and those who are classed at five or ten livres ; the table of the latter is furnished with perhaps half a starved chicken, a pigeon, a wild rabbit, .or some small bird, with a dessert : the portion of each rarely exceeds the value of twopence. " The Sunday s dinner consists of some bad soup, a slice of a cow, which they call beef, and four little pates ; at night a slice of roast veal or mutton, or a little plate of haricot, in which bare bones and turnips greatly predominate ; to these are added a salad, the oil to which is always rancid. The suppers are pretty uniformly the same on flesh days. Monday : instead of four pates, a haricot. Tuesday: at noon, a sausage, half a pig's foot, or a small pork chop. Wednesday : a tart, generally either half warm or burnt up. Thurs- day : two very thin mutton chops. Friday : half a small carp, either fried or stewed, a stinking haddock or cod, with butter and mustard ; to which are added greens or eggs; at supper, eggs, with spinach mixed up with milk and water. /Saturday: the same. And this perpetual rotation recommences on Sunday. " On the three holidays, St. Louis, St. Martin, and Twelfth-day, every prisoner has an addition made to his allowance, of half a roasted chicken, or a pigeon On Holy Monday, his dinner is accompanied by a tart extraordinary. " Each prisoner has an allowance of a pound of bread and a bottle of wine per day ; but the wine is generally flat and good for nothing. The dessert con- sists of an apple, a biscuit, a few almonds and raisins, some cherries, gooseberries, or plums ; these are com- monly served in pewter, though sometimes they are favoured with earthen dishes and a silver spoon and HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 13 fork. If any one complains of receiving bad pro- visions, a partial amendment may take place for a few days ; but the complainant is sure to meet with some unpleasant effects of resentment. There is no cook's shop in the kingdom, where you may not get a better dinner for a shilling than what are served in the Bas- tile. The cookery, in short, is wretchedly bad, the soup tasteless, and the meat of the worst quality, and ill dressed. All this must operate to injure the health of the prisoners; and, added to other grievances, excites frequent imprecations of vengeance from Heaven." With respect to the badness of the wine, Linguet corroborates the statement of this writer. The go- vernor, it appears, in addition to the diet-money, had the privilege of taking into his cellars near a hundred hogsheads of wine, duty free. "What does he do?" says Linguet. " He sells his privilege to a Parisian tavern-keeper, of the name of Joli, who gives him 250/. for it, and he takes in exchange from him the very cheapest kind of wine for the use of the prisoners; which wine, as may easily be imagined, is nothing but vinegar." This was a fraud at once upon the government and the prisoners. The sole mental recreation which the prison afforded was derived from a small library, consisting of about five hundred volumes. This collection is said to have been founded by a foreign prisoner, who died in the Bastile, about the beginning of the eighteenth century, and to have been enlarged by later sufferers. In some cases, prisoners were allowed to read in the library ; but, generally, the works were taken to the cells of the captives, and the selection of them depended on the taste of the turnkeys. Few of the books were unmu- tilated ; for the prisoners now and then indulged in writing bitter remarks on the blank spaces. As soon as a book was returned, every leaf was carefully exa- mined, and woe be to the rash offender who had suf- 14 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. fered passion to get the better of prudence! An epigram, or a sarcasm, on his persecutors, or on men in office, exposed him to the worst that irresponsible power could inflict. As to the volume, if the writing was on the margin, the piece was cut off; but when it chanced to be inserted between the lines, the page was torn out. It seems to have been thought by no means necessary that a prisoner, who was deprived of all earthly com- forts, should receive consolation from regular attend- ance on religious worship. The chapel was a miserable hole, of about seven or eight feet square, under the pigeon-house of the king's lieutenant. " In this cha- pel," says one who had been a captive, "are five small niches or closets, with strong locks, of which three are formed in the wall ; the others are only wainscot. Every prisoner admitted to hear mass is put in by himself,"' 5 ' and can neither see objects nor be seen of any. The doors of these niches are secured by two bolts on the outside, and lined within by iron bars ; they are also glazed ; but before each is hung a cur- tain, which is drawn back at the Sanctus, and again closed at the concluding prayer. Five prisoners only being admitted at each mass, it follows that no more than ten can assist at that ceremony in a day. If there be a greater number than this in the Castle, they either do not go at all, or go alternately; because there are generally found some who have a constant permission." There was a confessor in the fortress; but it is scarcely possible that a prisoner could repose entire confidence in a spiritual director who was in the pay of his oppressors. Though it is going much too far to say, as M. Linguet does, that such a man is "a cow- ardly double-dealer, who prostitutes the dignity of his character," it must be owned that some doubts and sus- * M. Linguet says, that each of these niches was but just large enough for one person, and had neither light nor air except at the moment when the door was opened. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 15 picions as to him might naturally arise ; it matters not that they would be unjust, the possibility of their being excited ought to have been carefully avoided. Let us now turn to the concise but terrible instru- ment by virtue of which an individual was consigned to captivity, perhaps for life. This was the lettre de cachet, or sealed letter, so called to distinguish it from tk? patent or open letter, which was merely folded. In former days, such epistles were called lettres closes, or clauses. The name was not given to all sealed-up mis- sives, but only to those which contained some command or information from the sovereign. They were signed by the king, and countersigned by one of the secreta- ries of state. Thesame appellation was originally given to all letters of the kind described ; but in later times, it was principally if not wholly applied, at least in com- mon parlance, to royal orders of exile and imprisonment. The oldest recorded mandate of this species is that which Thierry the Second issued, at the instigation of Brunehaut, against St. Columbanus, who had severely censured the vices of the mother and the son. It directed that he should be removed from the monas- tery of Luxeuil, and banished to Besangon, where he was to remain during the king's pleasure. The saint yielded only to force, and, as soon as the guards were withdrawn, he retired to his convent. Violence, how- ever, at length compelled him to quit the dominions of the licentious Thierry. The lettre de cachet was usually carried into effect by the officers of police ; sometimes the arrest was made at the dwelling of the individual, sometimes ontheroads or in the street by night ; but, in all cases, it appears to have been accomplished with as much secrecy as possible, so that it was no uncommon thing for per- sons to be missing for years, without their friends being able to discover what had become of them. Men of rank were at times spared the disgrace of being taken 16 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. into custody ; they were favoured by being allowed to carry the letter themselves to the prison mentioned in it, and surrender to the governor. Here is a specimen of these obliging billets, which was addressed to the prince of Monaco, a brigadier in the French army. "My Cousin, " Being by no means satisfied with your conduct, I send you this letter, to apprise you that my intention is, that, as soon as you receive it, you shall proceed to my castle of the Bastile, there to remain till you have my further orders. On which, my cousin, I pray God to have you in his holy keeping. Given at Versailles, this 25th of June, 1748. (Signed) " Louis." (Countersigned) " YOYER D'ARGENSON." By such a scrap of paper as this might any man in France be doomed to close and hopeless imprisonment. Malice, wounded pride, rivalry, revenge, all the base and cruel passions, availed themselves of it to torment their enemies. The titled harlot, whose shame had excited laughter or reprobation, the minister, whose measures were unpopular, the frivolous courtier whose folly had been satirised, the debauchee, who wished to remove an obstacle to his lust, the parent, who preferred ruling his offspring rather by fear than love, was eager to obtain one of these convenient scorpion scourges, and the wish was too often gratified. There is scarcely any enormity so monstrous that it cannot find a defender. Even lettres de cachet have not been without an apologist ; and to make the won- der the greater, an English apologist. Let us listen to his plea. " Perhaps (says he) it was the abuse of the lettres de cachet, rather than their institution, that merited the execration in which they were held ; for however extraordinary it may seem, they were not unfrequently used to serve the purposes of humanity. There are many instances of persons who, on account HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 17 of private disputes, or affairs of state, would have been exposed to public punishment, that were shut up by a lettre de cachet, until the danger was past, or the mat- ter accommodated or forgotten. It may undoubtedly be objected, that keeping a person from justice is itself a crime against the public ; but in forming a judgment upon this subject, we ought to take into consideration the prejudices entertained in the country where this authority was employed. It should be remembered that, by an old and barbarous practice, the disgrace attending a capital punishment, inflicted by the laws, was reflected upon all the family of the criminal ; and that in many instances it required a public act of the supreme power to wipe off the stain, and again enable them to serve their country. In as far, there- fore, as the lettres cte cachet counteracted the effects of these prejudices, they were useful ; but though they were signed by the king, from the idea that it was pro per to have them ready for cases of emergency, minis- ters, and governors of provinces, fyc., were generally furnished with them in blank, to be filled up at their discretions ; and the friends and favourites of those ministers sometimes obtained them from them, as is proved by the case of M. de Fratteaux, and in many other instances!' * This is, indeed, carrying to a ridiculous extent the determination to find " a soul of good^in things evil !" Perhaps it would not be uncharitable to put a harsher construction on such language. Public justice is to be defrauded, thousands are to be plunged into misery, personal safety is to be hourly jeoparded, crime com- mitted by the rich and powerful is to escape with all but complete impunity, and the motives which most * M. de Fratteaux was seized in England, and carried off by the French officers of police. " His misfortunes seem to have been ow- ing to an unnatural father, who being on terms of intimacy with the minister, obtained a lettre de cachet to arrest and confine his son." C 18 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. influence individuals to bridle their unruly passions are to to be weakened, merely " to counteract the effects of a prejudice" on a few ancient families ! Never was an infinitely small benefit bought at a more extravagant price. From certain particulars, which we find in various memoirs, it would seem that, generally speaking, more indulgences were granted to the inmates of the Bastile in former days, than during the last thirty years of its existence. At all times, however, much would un- doubtedly depend on the personal character of the governor; if he chanced to be liberal-minded and humane, he would, as far as he could venture to do so, mitigate the sufferings of his captives ; if, on the con- trary, he were greedy of gain, and harsh in his dis- position, he would stint and deteriorate their diet, wantonly deny them even the most trifling comforts, and, in short, do his best to make the management of the prison " render life a burthen," which, with an impudent candour, one of the officers of the castle avowed to be its especial purpose. It must be owned that, in some respects, modern times witnessed an improvement in the practice of the Bastile. The cages which it is known once to have contained, were removed. The rack, also, and other instruments of torture, ceased to be called into use. At what period the change took place is not said. That, in the latter end of Louis the Thirteenth's reign, the instruments still existed in the castle, we learn from the Memoirs of the faithful La Porte, who saw them, and was threatened with them to extort a confession. "What the Bastile was in its mildest form will appear from the following narrative, written by a person who was confined for eight months. u About five in the morning of the 2d of April, 1771," says the narrator, " I was awakened by a violent knocking at my cham- ber door, and was commanded, in the name of the king, to open it. I did so, and an exempt of the police, HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 19 three men who appeared to be under his orders, and a commissary, entered the room. They desired me to dress myself and began to search the apartment. They ordered me to open my drawers, and having examined my papers, they took such as they chose, and put them into a box, which, as I understood afterwards, was carried to the police-office. The commissary asked me my name, my age, the place where I was born, how long I had been at Paris, and the manner in which I spent my time. The examination was written down by him ; a list was made of everything found in the room, which, together with the examination, I was desired to read and sign. The exempt then told me to take all my body linen, and such clothes as I chose, and to come along with them. At the word all I started ; I guessed where they were about to take me, and it seemed to announce to me a long train of misery. " Having shut and sealed the drawers, they desired me to follow them ; and in going out, they locked the chamber door and took the key. On coming to the street, I found a coach, into which I was desired to go, and the others followed me. After sitting for some time, the commissary told me they were carrying me to the Bastile, and soon afterwards I saw the towers. They did not go the shortest and direct road ; which I suppose was to conceal our destination from those who might have observed us. The coach stopped at the gate in St. Anthony's street. I saw the coachman make signs to the sentinel, and soon after the gate was opened : the guard was under arms, and I heard the gate shut again. On coming to the first drawbridge, it was let down, the guard there being likewise under arms. The coach went on, and entered the castle, where I saw another guard under arms. It stopped at a flight of steps, at the bottom of the court, where being desired to go out, I was conducted to a room which I heard named the council chamber. I found three c 2 20 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. persons sitting at a table, who ? as I was told, were the king's lieutenant, the major, and his deputy. The ma- jor asked me nearly the same questions which the com- missary had done, and observed the same formalities in directing me to read and sign the examination. I was then desired to empty my pockets and lay what I had in them on the table. My handkerchief and snuff-box being returned to me, my money, watch, and indeed everything else, were put into a box that was sealed in my presence, and an inventory having been made of them, it was likewise read and signed by me. The ma- jor then called for the turnkey whose turn of duty it was, and having asked what room was empty, he said, the Calotte de la Bertaudiere. He was ordered to con- vey me to it, and to carry thither my linen and clothes. The turnkey having done so, left me and locked the doors. The weather was still extremely cold, and I was glad to see him return soon afterwards with fire- wood, a tinder-box, and a candle. He made my fire, but told me, on leaving the tinder-box, that I might in future do it myself when so inclined.* " From the time the exempt of police came into my room, I had not ceased to form conjectures about the cause of my imprisonment. I knew of none unless it were some verses and sketches, relative to the affairs of the times. Though they were indiscreet, they were of little importance. The only writing that might have seriously given offence to the government, I had never shown, but to one person in whom I thought I could confide. I found afterwards he had betrayed me. " When I heard the double doors shut upon me a second time, casting my eyes round my habitation, I fancied I now saw the extent of all that was left to me * Prisoners who were not allowed to have a servant of their own, sometimes were indulged with an invalid soldier to attend them ; but those who had neither, made their bed, lighted their fire, and dwept their room, themselves. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 21 in tliis world for the rest of my days. Besides the ma- lignity of enemies, and the anger of a minuter, I felt that I ran the risk of being forgotten ; the fate of many who have no one of influence to protect them, or who have not particularly attracted the notice of the public. Naturally fond of society, I confess / looked forward to the abyss of lonely wretchedness, that I thought awaited me, with a degree of horror that cannot easily be described. I even regretted now what I had formerly considered as the greatest bless- ing, a healthy constitution that had never been affected by disease. " I recollect with humble gratitude the first gleam of comfort that shot across this gloom. It was the idea, that neither massive walls, nor tremendous bolts, nor all the vigilance of suspicious keepers, could con- ceal me from the sight of God. This thought I fondly cherished, and it gave me infinite consolation in the course of my imprisonment, and principally con- tributed to enable me to support it, with a degree of fortitude and resignation that I have since wondered at I no longer felt myself alone. " At eleven, my reflections were interrupted by the turnkey, who entered with my dinner. Having spread the table with a clean napkin, he placed the dishes on it, cut the meat, and retired, taking away the knife. The dishes, plates, fork, spoon, and goblet, were of pew- ter. The dinner consisted of soup and bouilli, a piece of roasted meat, abottle of good table wine, and a pound loaf of the best kind of household bread. In the even ing, at seven, he brought my supper, which consisted of a roast dish and a ragout. The same ceremony was observed in cutting the meat, to render the knife un- necessary to me. He took away the dishes he had brought for dinner, and returned at eight the next morning to take away the supper things. Fridays and Saturdays being fast or maigre days, the dinner con- 22 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. sisted of soup, a dish of fish, and two dishes of vege- tables ; the suppers, of two dishes of garden stuff, and an omelet, or something made with eggs and milk. The dinners and suppers of each day in the week were different, but every week was the same : so that the ordinary class of prisoners saw in the course of the first week their bill of fare for fifty years, if they staid so long. " I had remained in my room about three weeks, when I was one morning carried down to the coun- cil chamber, where I found the commissary. He began by asking most of the questions that had been put to me before. He then asked if I had any know- ledge of some works he named, meaning those that had been written by me; if I was acquainted with the author of them ; whether there were any persons con- cerned with him ; and if I knew whether they had been printed ? I told him that, as I did not mean to conceal any thing, I should avoid giving him needless trouble; that I myself was the author of the works he had mentioned, and guessed I was there on that ac- count ; that they never had been printed ; that the work, which I conceived was the cause of my confine- ment, had never been shown to any but one person, whom I thought my friend ; and having no accom- plices, the offence, if there was any, rested solely with myself. He said my examination was one of the short- est he had ever been employed at, for it ended here. I was carried 4)ack to my room, and the next day was shaved for the first time since my confinement. u A few days afterwards I wrote to the lieutenant of the police, requesting to be indulged with the use of books, pen, ink, and paper, which was granted ; but I was not allowed to go down to the library to choose the books. Several volumes were brought to me by the turnkey, who, when I desired it, carried them back and brought others. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 23 " After my last examination I was taken down almost daily, and allowed to walk about an hour in the court within view of the sentinel : but my walks were frequently interrupted ; for if any one appeared, the sentinel called out ' To the Cabinet ! ' and I was then obliged to conceal myself hastily in a kind of dark closet in the wall near the chapel. " The sheets of my bed were changed once a fort- night, I was allowed four towels a week, and my linen was taken to be washed every Saturday. I had a tallow candle daily, and in the cold season a certain number of pieces of firewood. I was told that the allowance of fire to the prisoners began the 1st of November, and ceased on the 1st of April, and that my having a fire in April was a particular indulgence. " After being detained above eight months, I was informed that an order had come to discharge me. I was desired to go down to the council chamber : every thing I had brought with me was returned, together with the key of my apartment, which I found exactly in the state I left it on the morning of the 2nd of April, 1771. " During my confinement I wrote many letters to several of my friends, which were always received with civility, but not one of them had been delivered." The aspect of captivity in the Bastile, even when stripped of a part of its horrors, is surely hideous enough. But there can be no doubt that, in a multi- tude of cases, an enormous degree of severity was ex- ercised. Instead of being told, as in this instance, to give up the contents of his pockets, the prisoner was rudely searched by four men, who amused themselves with making vulgar jokes and remarks while they were performing the task : sometimes his own gar- ments were taken from him, and he was clothed in rags. His sufferings from imprisonment might als' be frightfully aggravated, by thrusting him into one 24 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE, of the humid and pestilential dungeons, or into a room which was in the vicinity of a nuisance. M. Linguet was confined in a chamber which fronted the mouth of the common sewer of St. Anthony's street, so that the air which he breathed w^as never pure ; but in hot wea- ther, in the spring and autumnal floods, and whenever the sewer was cleaned, the mephitic vapours, which penetrated into his cell, and accumulated there for want of an outlet, were scarcely to be endured. What were the interior accommodations of this cell the reader has already seen. The prisoner was not left to divine the motive for depriving him of all incisive and pointed instruments; he was bluntly informed that it was done to prevent him from cutting his own throat or the throats of his keepers. The reason assigned for the precaution shows sufficiently, that the officers of the Bastile rightly esti- mated the capability of exciting despair, which was possessed by their prison. This preventive system was carried to an almost ludicrous extent. Wishing to beguile the tedium of captivity M. Linguet resolved to resume his geometrical studies, and he accordingly re- quested to be supplied with a case of mathematical in- struments. After much demur, the case was obtained, but it was without a pair of compasses. When he remonstrated respecting the omission, he was told, that " arms were prohibited in the Bastile." At length, his jailors hit upon the happy idea of having the compasses made of bone. Candour, however, requires the ac- knowledgment that their fears werenot wholly ground- less, instances having occurred in which prisoners were driven to desperation. It was with a pair of compasses that the unfortunate Count Lally endeavoured to put an end to his existence. His attempt was made in the year 1766, and, in the following year, a more fatal event took place. A captive, Drohart by name, con- trived to secrete a knife, with which he first mortally wounded a turnkey, and then destroyed himself. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 25 For some time after his arrival at the Bastile, every thing seems to have been studiously contrived to shock a prisoner's habits, insulate him from the human race, and deliver him up to squalid wretchedness and dis- tracting thoughts. The manifest purpose of this was, to break his courage, and thereby induce him to make such confessions as would answer the ends of his per- secutors. It .was not till after he had undergone a second examination that he was allowed to be shaved; and months often elapsed before this favour was granted. Neither was he permitted to have books, pens, or paper, nor to attend mass, nor to walk in the court. He could not even write to the lieutenant of police, through whom alone any indulgence was to be obtained. The sight of the turnkey, for a few moments, thrice a day, was the sole link which con- nected him with his fellow beings. Every stratagem which cunning could devise was put in practice to entrap a prisoner into an avowal of guilt, the betraying of his suspected friends, or, failing these, into such contradictions as might give a colour for refusing to believe him innocent. Threats, too, were not spared, nor even flatteries and promises. At one moment, papers were shown to him, but not put into his hands, which his examiners affirmed to contain decisive proof of his criminality ; at another, he was told that his accomplices had divulged the whole, and that his obstinate silence would subject him to be tried by a special commission, while, on the contrary, if he would speak out frankly he should be speedily liberated. He who was seduced by this arti- fice was sure to repent of his folly. When the irre- vocable words had passed his lips, he was informed that the power of his deluders did not extend to setting him free, but that they would exert all their influence, and hoped to succeed. It is scarcely necessary to say, that there was not a syllable of truth in their assur- 26 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. ances, and that he who had confided in them was treated with increased severity. It was not only in official examinations that the captive was exposed to be thus circumstanced ; the same system was pursued throughout. There was no one who approached him to whom he could venture to breathe a whisper of complaint. If he was visited by the lieutenant of police, the sole aim of the lieutenant was to draw forth something which might be turned against him. If he was allowed to be attended by one of the invalids, the attendant treasured up for his masters every word that was dropped. Sometimes, apparently as a mat- ter of grace and kindness, a companion, said to be a fellow- sufferer, was given to him ; the companion was a police spy, who was withdrawn when he had wormed out the secret, or had become convinced that it was unattainable. To Hsten to that which seemed the voice of pity was dangerous ; for the turnkeys and other officers, enjoined though they were to be mute on other occasions, had their tongues let loose for frau- dulent ends, and were taught to lure the prisoners into indiscreet language, by feigned expressions of sympathy. In general, a silence was maintained by the officers and attendants, which might rival that of the monks of La Trappe. " When a corporal or any other (said the instructions), is ordered to attend a prisoner, who may have permission to walk in the garden, or on the towers, it is expressly forbidden that he speak to him. He is to observe his actions, to take care that he make no signs to any one without, and to bring him back at the hour fixed, delivering him over to an officer, or one of the turnkeys, as may have been ordered." " The sentinel in the court must constantly keep in view the prisoners who may be permitted to walk there : he must be attentive to observe if they drop any paper, letter, note, or anything else : he must pre- HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 27 vent them from writing on the walls, and render an exact account of every thing he may have remarked whilst on duty. All persons whatsoever, except the officers of the staff and turnkeys, are forbidden ever to speak to any prisoner, or even to answer him, under any pretence whatever." As it was supposed that strangers might chance to feel pity for the victims of despotism, and of course be disposed to express it, or to serve them, care was taken to guard against that evil. It was therefore ordered that, " if workmen should be employed in the castle, as many sentinels must be put over them as may be thought necessary, who must observe them with the same attention as they do the prisoners, in order that they may not approach these, nor do anything that may be con- trary to the rules of the place/' Visits from without seem never to have been per mitted except in minor cases of offence. No permis- sion was granted till after the final examination, and not then till repeated requests had been made, and powerful interest employed. Even when the favoiir was obtained, its value was seriously diminished by the restrictions with which it was clogged. The prisoner was obliged to receive his relative or friend in the council chamber, on one side of which he was placed, and his visitor on the other, with two officers between them ; nor were the parties suffered to converse on any subject which had the most remote reference to the cause or circumstances of the prisoner's confine- ment. The same system was followed when one cap- tive had an interview with another. There was but one case, in which incarcerated individuals could have a free interchange of thoughts ; it was when the full- ness of the prison, or the humanity of the governor, caused two of them to be located in the same chamber. Intercourse by letters was equally shackled, though there was an insulting affectation of a readiness to 28 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. facilitate correspondence. It has, indeed, been con- jectured, that "this apparent indulgence to prisoners was one of the many artifices employed to discover their secrets, and the persons with whom they were connected ;" and this supposition may not be far from the truth. There can be no doubt, that of the letters written by captives, few arrived at their destination. We have seen, in the narrative of a prisoner, that the whole of those which he wrote were suppressed. M. Linguet tells us, that, knowing the king's brothers, Monsieur and the Count d'Artois, (afterwards Louis XVIII. and Charles X.) to be favourable to him, he wrote to them, to solicit their intercession. " The letters," says he, " were sealed. The lieutenant of police, some time after, told ine he had read but not transmitted them ; that he had not been allowed. When I observed to him that, since he knew the con- tents, he might make them known to the generous princes from whom he had detained them, he replied, that he had no access to such high personages. Thus the man, who was prohibited from approaching such high personages, had the privilege of breaking open and suppressing their letters, of rendering fruitless their good intentions and those of the monarch, and, in short, of raising round me ramparts more impenetra- ble than all the magic castles with which imagination has ever peopled our romances/' Profound secrecy and mystery were among the most prominent features in the management of the Bastile. He who was fortunate enough to emerge from this den of Cacus, was previously compelled to swear that he would never reveal whatever he had seen or heard during his abode in it. He who was retained, to waste away life within its dreary limits, was sedulously shut out from all knowledge of what was passing in the world. The malignant enemy, by whom he had been deprived of freedom, might be HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 29 gone to his last account, but to him he still lived and tyrannized, for no whisper of his departure was suf- fered to reach him. When the fact of a person being in the Bastile was not so notorious as to preclude the possibility of denying it, his being there was unblush- ingly denied. When enquiry was made, the officers, the governor, the minister himself, would not scruple to affirm, and that, too, in the most solemn manner, that they knew nothing of any such individual. Thus were his friends discouraged, and led to slacken in their exertions for his relief, or wholly to discontinue thern.^ If however, they discovered the falsehood, and persisted in their efforts, there was still another resource for defeating them ; slander was resorted to, the worst crimes were attributed to him, and he was Tield up as an abandoned miscreant, whom it was a disgrace to patronize, and mercy to confine. At last, weariness, disgust, or death, robbed him of all who had loved or pitied him, and, even though his original persecutor had ceased to exist, the victim was left to perish forgotten in his dungeon. There was one object, besides the wish to elicit imprudent speeches or confessions, which had power to open the lips of the jailors ; that object was the desire of tormenting, of making the prisoner feel how completely he was insulated from mankind, no less by its own baseness than by his prison walls. " I was daily told with a laugh," says M. Linguet, " that I ought not to trouble myself any longer about what the world was doing, because I was believed to be dead ; the joke was carried so far, as to relate to me circumstances which insane rage or horrible levity added to my pretended exit. I was assured, also, that I had nothing to hope from the warmth and fidelity of my friends ; not so much because, like others, they were deceived with respect to my existence, as because they had become treacherous. This double imposture 30 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. had for its purpose, not merely to torture me, but at once to inspire me with a boundless reliance on the only traitor whom I had reason to fear, and who was perpetually represented as being my only true friend, and to discover, from the manner in which I was affected by these tidings, whether I had really any secrets which could lay me open to a betrayer/' Though the captive was not allowed to live with even a shadow of comfort, or to hasten his own end, a wide opening was left for death to accomplish his de- liverance in one of the regular modes. From the even- ing meal till that of the morning, he was hermetically sealed up by massy, iron-lined double doors; in all that time no human being approached him. The turnkey slept in a distant chamber, where neither voice nor the sound of knocking could reach him. Bells seem to have been thought too great a luxury for the place. If illness suddenly came, there was no resource for the sufferer, but to c&l to the nearest sentinel, on the other side of the broad moat. If his voice were too weak, if his strength failed to carry him to the window, or if the wind drowned his cries, he must remain unaided. If his disorder were apoplectic, or he broke a blood- vessel, it is manifest that his fate was sealed. But, supposing him to be heard, prompt assistance was by no means to be expected. The sentinels gave the alarm to each other, till it reached the guard-house ; the turnkey was then to be called, who, on his part, had to rouse the servant of the king's lieutenant, that he might awake his master, and procure from him the keys. Two hours were thus spent before the surgeon was drawn from his bed, where, in truth, he might as well have continued, since, interdicted as he w T as from prescribing by himself, he could only make a report to the governor, and promise that the physician, who resided three miles off, and was overloaded with prac- tice, should be sent to on the morrow. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 31 If the disease was not immediately dangerous, some medicine was brought, and the sick man must help himself as well as he could, and be thankful if his malady were not thought to be simulated. "But when he was reduced to extremity, when he was so far gone that he could not rise from the worm-eaten couch on which he lay, a nurse was given to him. And who was this nurse ? a stupid, coarse, brutal invalid sol- dier, incapable of attentions, little assiduities, every thing which is indispensable for a sick person. But a still worse thing is, that when this soldier is once fas- tened on you, he can never quit you ; he himself becomes a prisoner. It is therefore necessary to begin by purchasing his consent, and prevailing on him to be shut up with you as long as your captivity lasts ; and, if you recover, you must make up your mind to bear the bad temper, the discontent, the re- proaches, the ennui, of this companion, who takes ample vengeance upon your health for the seeming services which he has lent to your sickness/' There was yet another stab to be inflicted on those who were sinking into the grave, and by this the living could be wounded at the same time! To regulate the manner in which, after his death, his property shall be distributed, and, by so doing, to save a wife and offspring from the perplexity, endless trouble, ex- pense, and perhaps ruin, which may arise out of a disputed succession, or the want of needful formalities, is a duty which every rational being will be anxious to perform. That the person is a captive, only ren- ders more necessary the performance of the duty. But not so thought the myrmidons of the Bastile. It is on record that a prisoner, who was stretched for two months on a bed of sickness, expecting that each hour would be his last, repeatedly and vainly implored a French minister of state to grant him the customary legal aid for executing his will; his prayer was sternly 32 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. refused, though there was a lawyer, who belonged to the ."prison establishment. That this was a solitary instance, it would be folly to imagine. It was not of unfrequent occurrence in the Bastile, for the bodily faculties of a prisoner to survive his mental. Shut out from the beautiful forms of nature, the treasures of intellect, and the delights of social converse, from all that can animate or console ; racked by a thousand remembrances, conjectures, passions, and fears ; brooding in deep seclusion and silence over the past and the present, and vainly struggling to pe- netrate the darkness of the future ; his mind at length gave way, and idiotism or madness ensued. Yet even that must be deemed a blessing, if it brought with it oblivion of his fate. But the long and unbroken series of woes is at last ended ; death has rent asunder the fetters of the cap- tive, and he is " where the wicked cease from trou- bling, and the weary are at rest." Is there yet a way left, by which his ingenious tormentors can make their vengeance reach beyond the grave, by which they can, in some measure, entail upon his kindred a share of suffering ? There is. How was this important pur- pose effected in the Bastile ? As soon as the breath was out of the body, a notice was sent to the minister of the home department and the lieutenant-general of police. The king's commissary then visited the prison, to minute down the circumstances. This being done, orders were issued to inter the body. In the gloom of evening it was conveyed to the burying- ground of St. Paul's ; two persons belonging to the Bastile attended it to sign the parish register ; and the name under which the deceased was entered, and the description of the rank which he held, were ficti- tious, that all trace of him might be obliterated. An- other register, containing his real name and station, was, in truth, kept at the Bastile ; but it was almost HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 33 inaccessible, a sight of it, for the purpose of making an extract, being never allowed, without a strict inquiry into the reason why the application was made. His family and friends, meanwhile, remained in pro- found ignorance of his having been released from his troubles. No mourning mother, wife, or child, fol- lowed his remains to their last abode ; and even the poor consolation was denied them of knowing the spot where he reposed, that they might water it with their tears. Thus, in death, as in life, oppression and malice triumphantly asserted their absolute dominion over the captives of the Bastile. CHAPTER II. Reign of Jolm II. Stephen Marcel, Provost of the Merchants Reign of Charles V. Hugh Aubriot Reign of Charles VI. Noviant La Riviere Peter des Essarts John de Montaigu Contests of the factions at Paris The Count of Armagnac The Burgundians obtain possession of Paris Massacre of the Armagnacs Assassination of the Dnke of Burgundy Reign of CharlesYII Paris in the hands of the English Vjlliersde Tlsle Adam The English expelled from Paris Reign of Louis XL Anthony deChabannes; TheCountdeMelun- Cardinal deBalne William d'Haraucour Charles d' Armagnac- Louis de Lux- embourg The Duke of Nemours and his children. A MIND tinctured with superstition, even though it were not of the darkest hue, might be tempted to be- lieve that a fatality pursued the men by whom the Bastile was raised. It has been seen that the original founder was the famous Stephen Marcel, Provost of the Merchants. Marcel, though his character has uniformly been blackened by writers devoted to abso- lute monarchy, seems to have been influenced, at least in the greatest portion of his career, by truly patriotic motives. It is not the object which he laboured to 34 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. obtain, but some of the means which he employed for its attainment, that merits censure. To confine the royal authority within reasonable bounds, and to give the national representatives their proper weight in the scale of government, were the purposes which he sought to accomplish. The dangerous circumstances in which the country was placed, and the heavy op- pression under which the people groaned, pointed out such a reform as being no less wise than just. The time for attempting it was favourable ; inasmuch as the captivity of the king, and the presence of a vic- torious foreign army, would, it was supposed, compel the dauphin, Charles, to look to the States- General for the means of saving France from still greater calamities. Yet, so strong was princely dislike to receiving aid from the legitimate guardians of the public purse, that Charles preferred raising supplies by the fraudulent and ruinous expedient of debasing the coin. In that scheme he was fortunately defeated by the stubborn opposition of the Provost. The alliance formed by Marcel with Charles, sur- named the Bad, king of Navarre, was, perhaps, an im- politic act; not so much because the Navarrese monarch deserved the epithet given to him by French historians for we may doubt whether he was, in reality, much more blame- worthy than his namesake, the dauphin, on whom the same historians have lavished their praise but because a junction with a man who was exceed- ingly obnoxious to a large party in France was likely to give rise to suspicions with respect to his principles and motives. It is probable, however, that he was led to it, by a wish to have some stronger prop to lean on than the fluctuating favour of the populace. The " va- rium et mutabile semper," by which Virgil, somewhat harshly, characterises the female sex, may, w r ith less appearance of satire, be applied to the multitude. This truth Marcel was doomed to learn by experience. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 35 For nearly two years, the Provost, with more or less steadiness, kept his footing on the tottering emi- nence to which he had risen. During that time he was actively engaged in securing the French capital from external and internal foes. He fortified and enlarged its circuit, supplied it with arms and pro- visions, established a guard of citizens, which was night and day on the watch, and barricaded the entrances of the streets by ponderous chains, which were fastened to the houses : these chains were the first barricades which were formed in Paris. The capital was undoubtedly saved from pillage and devastation by the provident care of Marcel. In spite, however, of his exertions, his popularity waned; the minds of his fellow citizens were poisoned by the arts and insinuations of the dauphin's friends, and irritated by his connexion with the king of Navarre, whose troops were mercilessly ravaging all the circumjacent country. While the Parisians were in this ferment, the dauphin promised a general amnesty to them, on con- dition of their giving up to him the Provost, and twelve other persons, whom he should select. Fearing, pro- bably, that this temptation would be too great for them to resist, the Provost, in an evil hour, resolved to admit into the city the troops of the king of Navarre. It is also said, though there does not appear to be any proof of the fact, that he intended to make a general massacre of the opposite party, and transfer the crow r n of France to Charles the Bad. For this we have only the word of his enemies. It was on the night of the 31st of July, 1358, that Marcel designed to open the gates of Paris to the Na- varrese soldiery. He was too late. At noon, he went to the gate of the Bastile of St. Denis, and ordered the guard to deliver up the keys to Joceran de Mascon, the king of Navarre's treasurer. The guard refused to comply, and a loud altercation arose. The noise 36 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. brought to the place John Maillard, the commandant of the quarter. Up to this moment, Maillard had been the zealous friend of Marcel, but he now resolutely opposed the scheme of the latter. A violent quarrel ensued between them, which ended by Maillard springing on horseback, unfurling the banner of France, and summoning the citizens to assist him in preventing the Provost from betraying the city to the English. The summons speedily brought a throng around him. The friends of the dauphin, likewise, did not let slip this opportunity of acting in his behalf. A considerable body of men was collected by them, at the head of which were placed two gentlemen, named Pepin des Essarts and John de Charny. From the gate of St. Denis, meanwhile, Marcel pro- ceeded on the same errand to the other gates. He was not more successful than on his first attempt ; obe- dience was everywhere refused. As a last resource, he bent his course to the bastile of St. Anthony. Here again he was foiled. His enemies were beforehand with him. The keys he did by some means obtain, but they were useless. Maillard had already reached the scene of action, with a numerous train of followers, and he was almost immediately joined by the partisans of the dauphin. With the keys of the Bastile in his hand, Marcel began to ascend the entrance ladder, striving at the same time to keep off his assailants. A terrible cry now burst forth of u Kill them ! kill them ! death to the Provost of the Merchants and his accom- plices !" Alarmed by the clamour, he attempted to save himself by flight, but he was struck on the head with an axe by de Charny, and he fell at the foot of the Bastile, which he had himself built. His body was immediately pierced with innumerable wounds by the infuriated crowd. Giles Marcel, his nephew, and fifty - three others, the whole of the party which had attended him, were either slain on the spot or thrown into prison. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 37 Three days afterwards, the dauphin re-entered Paris, and began to feed his revenge with blood. By Hugh Aubriot the Bastile was advanced another step towards its completion. Born at Dijon, of hum- ble parents, Aubriot gained the favour of Charles the fifth, and of his brother, the duke of Anjo.u, and was appointed minister of finance. He was also raised to the dignified though troublesome and dangerous office of Provost of Paris. Charles the fifth had a love of building, and he found in the Provost a man who had talents and activity to carry his wishes into effect. Pa- ris was indebted to Aubriot for numerous works, which conduced to its safety, ornament, and salubrity. He strengthened and added to the ramparts, constructed sewers, which he was the first to introduce into the capital, formed quays, rebuilt the Pont au Change, and built the Pont St. Michel. In these labours he em- ployed, at a fixed rate of payment, all the mendicants, destitute persons, and disorderly characters of the city; thus compelling them to earn that subsistence which they had been in the habit of extorting or plundering from the citizens. The police of the city was greatly improved by him in other respects. Among the ordi- nances which he issued, for that purpose, was one which revived that of Louis the ninth, relative to prostitutes. Paris was now overrun with loose women ; the ordinance enjoined them, under penalty of fine and imprisonment, to reside only in certain places, which were specified, to the number of nine. The strict performance of his duty proved to be the ruin of Aubriot. Among the worst nuisances of the capital were the scholars of the University of Paris ; they were addicted, among other things, to drunken- ness, libertinism, and robbery, and their insolence was still more insufferable than their vices. Perpetual quar- rels and contests, in which they were almost always the aggressors, took place between these votaries of 38 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. learning and the citizens. The main cause of their ex- cesses being thus pushed beyond all bounds was the complete impunity which they enjoyed. Fonder of its privileges than of morality and justice, the Univer- sity on all occasions strenuously resisted the efforts of the magistrates to bring scholars to punishment. In more than one instance it threw its protecting shield over plunderers and assassins, and pursued with a deadly hatred those individuals who had dared to en- force the laws against criminals. This crying abuse Aubriot determined to suppress. In the prison of the Little Chatelet, which was built by him, he ordered two strong and not over comfortable cells to be con- structed, for the reception of delinquent scholars. These he called his clos Bruneau and rue de Fouaire ; the University schools being situated in places w r hich were so named. By this stinging joke, and by the vigorous measures of Aubriot, the University \vas in- expiably offended. Regardless of its anger, he, how- ever, resolutely persisted in arresting and committing to prison every student who ventured to transgress. While Charles the fifth lived, Aubriot remained safe ; but the death of his patron, and the weakness and confusion of a minority, laid him open to the malice of his enemies. The University had sworn to accomplish his ruin, and this oath it held sacred. In his public character he had so deported himself as to be intangible ; and, therefore, his private life was ransacked to find matter for accusation. It was dis- covered, or feigned, that he was too warm a lover of women, and, to give a darker colour to this fault, it was added, that he had an especial predilection for Jewesses. From this, by a curious process of logic, it was deduced as an inference, that he was himself a Jew and a heretic ; his accusers not perceiving, or not choosing to perceive, that the one of these conditions excluded the other. Their reasoning was akin to that HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 39 which, in the fable, the wolf uses to the lamb. Un- luckily, too, for the Provost, they resembled the wolf in other points ; they had his savageness and his ability to injure. The University and the clergy joined in a clamour against him, and were supported by the Duke of Berry, who was hostile to the Bur- gundian party, to which Aubriot belonged. Charged with impiety and heresy, Aubriot was brought to trial before an ecclesiastical tribunal. With such prosecutors and such judges, conviction was cer- tain. To such a pitch did the University and the clergy carry their animosity against him, that he would have been doomed to the flames, had not his friends at court powerfully exerted their influence to procure a milder sentence. But though his life was spared, he was not suffered to escape without feeling how venomous are the fangs of fanatics and pedants. He was condemned to public exposure and penance, in presence of the heads and scholars of the Univer- sity, to ask pardon upon his knees, and, with no other food than bread and water, to spend in strict confine- ment the remnant of his days. Aubriot was conveyed to the Bastile, to undergo the last part of his sentence. In the course of a few months, probably because he was treated with too much lenity in a state prison, he was removed to the bishops' prison, called For-1'Eveque, where he was thrown into one of those dungeons which bore the significant name of oubliettes. There he might have languished long, or perished quickly, but never have hoped for deliverance, had not in 1381, the intolerable oppression exercised by the government given rise to the insurrection which, from the circumstance of the revolters being armed with leaden malls was called the Maillotin. In want of a leader, the insurgents be- thought them of Hugh Aubriot ; and it is not unlikely that,as he had suffered heavy wrongs, they supposed he 40 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. would espouse their cause with heart and soul. They accordingly liberated him. Aubriot, however, was either too old, or too prudent, to become the head of a revolt ; he spoke his deliverers fair, but, on the very evening that he was set free, he crossed the Seine, and hastened to Burgundy, his native country, where he is believed to have died in the following year. While Charles the sixth was labouring under his first attack of insanity, the political feuds and intrigues which distracted his court gave fresh inhabitants to the Bastile. When, in 1392, the Dukes of Burgundy and Berry assumed the government, the overthrow of Clisson, the constable of France, and prime minister, necessarily ensued, and in his fall was involved the ministry he had formed. Three of the ministers, La Begue de Yillaine, Noviant, and La Riviere, were arrested ; Montaigu, the fourth, escaped to Avignon. La Begue, an aged man, who had served in the field with honour under several kings, was soon released ; Noviant and La Riviere were reserved as scape-goats, and were shut up in the Bastile. Of Noviant no- thing important is recorded. La Riviere had enjoyed, in the highest degree, the confidence and friendship of Charles the fifth ; so much, indeed, did the monarch value him, that, by his express commands, whenever his favourite died, the royal mausoleum of St. Denis was to be the place of interment. At the accession of Charles the sixth, La Riviere suffered a temporary eclipse ; but he shone forth again when the young monarch assumed the reins of government. Noviant and La Riviere were now in the hands of their enemies, and had little to hope ; for they were rich enough to excite a hungering after their spoils, and had been too long in possession of power not to be loathed by their rivals. It is the curse and the shame of politics, that they render men insensible to, or, which is still worse, incapable of acknowledging, HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 41 the merit really owned by those who differ from them in views and principles. Thorough-going politicians are but too apt to affirm what is false, or suppress what is true, provided it will injure their opponents. It follows, as a natural consequence of this unworthy feeling, that, though the two ministers fully vindicated themselves on every article of impeachment, they had but small chance of escaping. Their fate was deemed so inevitable, that more than once during the trial the brute populace rushed to the place of execution, lured by the report that the ministers were about to be brought to the scaffold. Luckily for them, they had a protector, stronger than their innocence. This was the young and lovely princess Jane, countess of Bou- logne, the wife of the duke of Berry. Her marriage with the duke had been brought about by the influence of La Riviere, and this circumstance, together with the minister's estimable qualities, had secured for him her affection and esteem. Her pleadings softened her husband, and thus prevented a deadly sentence from being passed on the fallen statesmen. It is not to be supposed, however, that they were allowed to go unscathed. To declare them guiltless would have been a tacit confession of error, an act which is not to be expected from weak and base minds ; and, besides, hatred could not consent to let loose its objects with- out previously making them feel a touch of its fangs. The ministers, therefore, after having been captives for twelve months, and in hourly dread of death, were only condemned to confiscation of their property, and exile to a distance from the court. With respect to the latter part of the sentence, they might well have exclaimed, like Diogenes, " and we condemn you to remain at court \" Charles, on his temporary return to sanity, restored their estates, but they were not again employed. La Riviere died in 1400, and was buried at St. Denis. 42 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. There was a moment when the Bastile seemed about to be converted to its original purpose, that of a fortress for the defence of Paris. After the duke of Burgundy had, in 1405, obtained possession of the king, the dauphin, and the capital, preparations to recover Paris were made by the beautiful but worth - less queen Isabella, and her paramour, the duke of Orleans. In consequence of this, the Burgundian prince placed garrisons in the Bastile and the Louvre ; and a report having been spread, that there was a plot to carry off the dauphin, a chain was stretched across the river, from the Bastile to the opposite bank, to prevent the passage of vessels. It was on this occasion that, to win the good will of the Paris- ians, the duke induced the king to restore to them the barricading chains, of which they had been de- prived in 1383, and which had ever since been kept in the castle of Vincennes. The precautions were prudent, but they were made useless, by a treaty between the hostile parties. It has already been observed, that the office of Pro- vost of Paris was no less perilous than honourable. During the disturbed and disastrous reign of Charles the sixth, there were as many as twenty-four provosts, and there were few of them who did not find their dignity a burthen. Among the most unfortunate of them was Peter des Essarts. He was one of the French nobles who w r ere sent to aid the Scotch in their contest with the English ; and, in 1402, he fell into the hands of the latter. After he was ransomed he returned to France, and became a 'zealous partisan of John the Fearless, the duke of Burgundy. The duke amply rewarded him for his services. He suc- cessively obtained for him the posts of Provost of Paris, grand butler, grand falconer, first lay president of the chamber of accounts, supreme commissioner of woods and waters, and superintendant of finance, HISTORY OF THE BASTTLE. 43 and also the governments of Cherbourg, Montargis, and Nemours. As provost of Paris, it fell to his lot to arrest a man whose rise had been no less rapid than his own. His task was performed with a thorough good will. Mon- taigu, whom we have seen flying to Avignon after the downfall of Clisson, returned to the French cap- ital when the storm was blown over. There he became more than ever a favourite of the king, who loaded him with honours, promoted his relations, and procured for his son the hand of the constable d'Albret's sister. Among the offices which were lavished on Montaigu, were those of finance minister and grand master of the royal household. His riches were soon increased to an enormous degree, and his pride to a still greater. To the duke of Bur- fundy he had rendered himself peculiarly obnoxious, y thwarting his plans, and being a determined ad- herent of the queen and the house of Orleans. The Burgundian affected to be reconciled to him, but he did not the less resolve upon his destruction. To accomplish the ruin of Montaigu, the duke instituted an inquiry into the conduct of those who had managed the finances ; a species of inquiry which was always applauded by the tax-burthened people. At the same time, he likewise procured for the Parisians the res- toration of various privileges, which had been taken from them as a punishment for the Maillotin insurrec- tion. Having thus fortified his popularity, he took advantage of the king being visited by one of his fits of madness, to commence operations against Montaigu. The favourite had been cautioned against his danger, and advised to fly from it, but confiding in the support of the queen and the duke of Berry, he was deaf to advice. He was arrested in the street by des Essarts, and committed to the Little Chatelet. It strongly marks his insufferable pride and insolence, that, when 44 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. he was seized by the provost, he exclaimed, " Ribald ! how hast thou the audacity to touch me ?" This was the arrogance of an upstart, for he was of humble birth. He was brought to trial, with little attention to the forms or the spirit of justice, and, after having been tortured, was condemned to lose his head ; his property was confiscated, but, instead of being appro- priated to replenish the treasury, it was divided among his enemies. The sentence was executed in the autumn of 1409. If ambition had not entirely banished prudence, the fate of Montaigu might have taught des Essarts to reflect on the frail tenure by which, in an age of faction, the most conspicuous partisans hold their for- tunes and their lives. Nor was he without a still more impressive warning. In a moment of displea- sure, the duke of Burgundy said to him, " Provost of Paris, John de Montaigu was three-and-twenty years in getting his head cut off, but verily you will not be three years about it :" ominous words, where the prophet had the power of bringing his prophecy to pass ! In 1410 the contending factions once more resumed their arms. By a rapid march, the Burgundian prince made himself master of Paris, which he garrisoned with eight thousand men. For the support of the troops, a heavy tax was imposed upon the citizens. Des Essarts was charged with the levying of this tax, and he is accused of having swelled his own coffers with the largest share of the produce. By this oner- ous measure, the popularity of the duke and the pro- vost was materially diminished. In the course of a few months, the duke deemed it prudent to conclude another simular of a treaty ; it was called the treaty of the Bicetre, from the place where it was negotiated, and by one of its articles he consented that des Essarts should be removed from the provostship of Paris. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 45 It seems impossible for the signers of such treaties to have put their hands to them without heing tempted to laugh in each other's faces ; the compacts were notoriously intended to be broken on the first favour- able opportunity. Accordingly, but a few months elapsed, after the conclusion of the peace, before the Burgundian and Orleanist parties were again in arms, and vituperating each other in the most virulent lan- guage. Des Essarts was re-established as provost of Paris ; and during the temporary ascendancy of the Orleanists, his exertions to supply the city with pro- visions gained for him, from the citizens, the flattering appellation of the Father of the People. When, how- ever, the Parisians ceased to be in dread of having hungry bellies, they ceased to applaud him ; and in the following year, he became an object of their hatred. A sharp contest of a few months was terminated by another hollow truce, under the name of a peace. By this time the Burgundian prince appears to have been converted into a deadly enemy of des Essarts. Three causes are assigned for this change. The provost is said to have in private charged him with appropriating a large sum of the public money to his own use ; to have entered into correspondence with the Orleanist leaders, and w T arned them that the duke designed to assassinate them ; aud likewise to have formed, with the concurrence of the dauphin, a plan for rescuing that prince and the king from the state of tutelage in which they were kept by the Burgundian ruler. It is highly probable that, disgusted by the duke having abandoned him in the treaty of the Bicetre, he had really gone over to the Orleanist faction. Any one of these causes was sufficient to make his former pa* tron resolve upon his ruin. There was also another circumstance which wore a threatening aspect for des Essarts. The States-general were now sitting at Paris, and in that assembly clamours began to be 46 HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. heard against financial depredators, amongst whom the multitude, so lately his adulators, did not hesitate to class him. To elude the storm, which he saw ap- proaching from more than one quarter, he resigned his office of finance minister, in which he had suc- ceeded Montaigu ; but he did not forget to secure an adequate compensation for the sacrifice which he made. He then retired to his government of Cherbourg. The Burgundian was at this period in apparent amity with the dauphin ; nor had he, as yet, openly manifested his animosity against the provost. The dauphin, was, however, at heart hostile to him, and impatient of his yoke. It was, no doubt, w r ith a view to having a firm hold of Paris, that he resolved to be- come master of the Bastile ; but to the duke the rea- son which he assigned was, the mutinous disposition of the people, which it was necessary to have the means of repressing. Imagining that the provost was still trusted by the duke, he proposed to confide to him the task of seizing upon the Bastile. The clear- sighted Burgundian at once saw through the scheme, but he gave a willing consent to its execution ; for it would enable him to accomplish two objects, the get- ting of des Essarts into his hands, and the gaining a complete triumph over the dauphin himself. Des Essarts was consequently summoned from Cherbourg; he accepted the commission ; and he managed so well, that he secured the Bastile, without the least opposition. The provost was scarcely in possession of the for- tress before the scene changed. The Burgundjan prince had skilfully laid a train, and a violent explo- sion suddenly took place. A rumour was spread throughout Paris, that the Orleanists, or Armagnacs, as they now began to be called, intended to carry off the dauphin with his own consent, and that the pro- vost was at the head of the plot. A furious multi- tude, the leaders of which were two of the duke's HISTORY OF THE BASTILE." 47 attendants, immediately hurried to invest the Bastile on all sides. It swelled every moment, till it con- sisted of not fewer than twenty thousand armed men, all /clamorous for the blood of des Essarts, and deter- mined to storm the castle, in order to satisfy their rage. Another body, led by John de Troie, a sur- geon, proceeded, at the same time, to the dauphin's palace, loaded him with insult, and arrested several of his officers and friends, some of whom were mur- dered on their way to prison. The Duke of Burgundy now came forward, appa- rently as a mediator. The besiegers he induced to suspend their attack, by promising that their object should be attained without force being used. He then tried his eloquence on des Essarts. In the first inter- view he failed, in the second he succeeded. By dint of representing to him that it was impossible to re- strain the people, and that, if they effected their en- trance, which they certainly would, the provost would be torn in pieces, he shook his resolution of defending himself ; and, by pledging his honour that no harm should befall him, he finally prevailed on him to surrender. Des Essarts would have done more wisely to brave death from the sanguinary croXvd, than to rely on the honour of an acknowledged assassin. Ostensibly for the purpose of saving him from the violence of his enemies, he was led to the prison of the Chatelet, where he seems to have thought that all danger was at an end. He was speedily undeceived, by his be- ing brought to trial. In addition to various crimes charged against him in his official capacity, he was accused of having caused the renewal of the war be- tween the princes after the treaty of Chartres, and of having plotted to carry off from Paris the king, the queen, and the dauphin. He was, of course, found guilty, and was condemned to lose his head, and to 48 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. have his remains suspended from the gibbet of Mont- faucon. Four years had not elapsed since the con- victed Montaigu was conveyed by him to the same spot. The sentence passed on des Essarts was exe- cuted on the first of July 1413. He went to the scaffold with great courage ; a circumstance which his enemies attributed to his having flattered himself that the people would rise and rescue him. If he enter- tained any such visionary hopes, his long experience of the people must have been entirely lost upon him. The changes in the fortune of the two factions which desolated France succeeded each other with an almost ludicrous rapidity ; the party which was triumphant on one day was prostrate on the morrow. We have just seen the dauphin humbled by the duke of Burgundy ; yet the same year did not pass away before the dau- phin and the Armagnacs gained the upper hand, and the duke found it prudent to retire to his own domi- nions. That he might keep a firm hold of the capital, the dauphin gave the command of the Bastile to his uncle, prince Louis of Bavaria, appointed the duke of Berry governor of Paris, gave the provostship to Tanneguy de Chatel, removed to the Bastile the chains used for barricading the streets, and issued orders for the citizens to deliver up all kinds of arms. The duke of Burgundy appealed to the sword, but without success, and the treaty of Arras, which was the result of his failure, relieved France for awhile from his incursions and his intrigues. It was not till nearly two years afterwards, when the battle of Agincourt had given a rude shock to the French throne, that he re-appeared upon the scene, Under his auspices, the Burgundian faction at Paris formed a conspiracy for a general massacre of the Armagnacs, in which the king himself was not to be spared, should he venture to resist. It was detected at the critical moment, and the Armagnacs avenged themselves by murders, pro- HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 49 scriptions, and excessive taxes, which alienated many of their friends, without crushing their enemies. The death of the dauphin Louis, speedily followed by that of his brother and successor John, gave the dignity of dauphin to Charles, the youngest son of the king. The duke of Burgundy had hoped to exercise an influence over John, but he had only hostility to expect from Charles, who, as far as a boy of fifteen could be anything, was a partisan of the A rmagnacs. By war alone could anything be gained, and he there- fore prepared to wage it. The gross impolicy of the opposite party gave him manifold advantages. While the count of Armagnac, the constable, who was the head of the reigning faction, goaded the people by forced loans, enormous imposts, and severities against all whom he suspected, he and the dauphin contrived also to exasperate the queen, by seizing her treasures, casting, perhaps not undeservedly, a stain upon her character, and banishing her to Tours. Driven to desperation by these injuries and insults, she abjured her long-cherished hatred of the duke, and wrote to him for succour. He gladly listened to the call, re- leased her from captivity, and escorted her to Chartres, where, in virtue of an obsolete ordinance of the king, she assumed the title of regent, and created a parlia- ment, to counterbalance that of the capital. A pre- ponderating weight was thus thrown into the scale of the Burgundian prince. Nor did he neglect to strengthen himself by conciliating the people ; for, while the count of Armagnac was daily irritating them by his extortions, the duke held out to them a tempting lure, by proclaiming that all the towns which opened their gates to him should be freed from taxes. En- couraged by these circumstances, his partisans in the capital formed a plan for admitting him into the city; but it was discovered and frustrated. The return of our Henry the fifth to France, in 1417, 50 HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. and the progress which he was making in Normandy, recalled to their senses most of the leaders of the fac- tions. The necessity of union being felt, negotiations were opened. The queen, the dauphin, and the duke of Burgundy were willing to come to terms; the prin- cipal article agreed on was, that the queen and the duke should form a part of the royal council. But the count of Armagnac would hear of no treaty that did not really leave in his hands the whole power of the state; and he accordingly strained every nerve, and was even guilty of the most revolting cruelty, to ren- der impossible an accommodation with theBurgundian leaders. He little dreamt how soon he was to be pre- cipitated from the pinnacle of greatness, and trampled in ths mire by the basest of the base. Harassed and impoverished by tyranny and exaction within the walls, and beset by foes beyond them, the Parisians were hungering for peace. They were the more inveterate against Armagnac, because they were tantalised by the object for which they longed being almost within their reach. Peace had, in fact, been con- cluded at Montereau, and publicly announced in Paris, and the count, seconded by de Marie, the chancellor, was the sole obstacle to its being enjoyed. He was inflex- ible in his resistance. To bring about a rupture of the treaty, he sent troops to attack two of the Burgundian posts; seemingly struck with a judicial blindness, the forerunner of his fall, he pushed to an unbearable length his arrogance, extortion, and gloomy precautions; and he is said to have even meditated a sweeping massacre of such of the citizens as were hostile to him, and to have ordered leaden medals to be struck for distribution to his partisans, that the murderers might distinguish them in the hour of carnage. If the character of the man, and the spirit of those barbarous times, were not in accordance with this sanguinary project, we might, perhaps, imagine him to be unjustly charged with it ; HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 51 for, in all ages, it has been the custom to blacken an overthrown tyrant, by loading him with imaginary crimes. That, however, it was possible for persons of the highest rank to tolerate, and probably to command, the cold-blooded slaughter of their foes, was but too speedily proved. Terrible as the multitude is when once moved, it is slow to be moved. Mutual distrust, and the dread of failure, keep its component parts from uniting, till some one, more daring than the rest, or provoked into action by flagrant w r rongs, assumes the lead, and gives to it the principle of cohesion. It was a denial of justice which brought into play the man who was want- ing, to convert into open revolt the passive disaffection of the citizens. The servant of an Armagnac noble having grossly maltreated Perinet le Clerc, whose father, an ironmonger, was the quartinier, or magi- strate of his ward, Perinet applied to the provost for redress. His application was contemptuously rej ected, and he swore to be revenged. In concert with some of his friends, he matured a plan for admitting the Burgundian troops, and he opened a correspondence on the subject with Villiers de 1'Isle Adam, who commanded at Pontoise, for the duke. The chance of success seemed so fair, that 1'Isle Adam readily agreed to risk a portion of his garrison in the attempt. The negotiation was conducted with so much secrecy that not a breath of it transpired. The plan was carried into effect on the night of the 28th of May, 1418. Perinet was a man of ready re- sources, equally discreet and resolute, and he omitted nothing that could tend to secure a triumph. By vir- tue of his office, the father of Perinet held the keys of St. Germain's gate, and had the relieving of the guard there. On the appointed night, having first contrived to place on guard many of his associates, Perinet stole to his father's bed-side, and, undiscovered, drew the E2 52 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. keys from beneath bis pillow. L'Isle Adam was wait- ing' near the gate with eight hundred men. At two in the morning, it was opened by Perinet, who, as soon as the troops had entered, locked the gate, and threw the keys over the walls, that, retreat being impossible, the soldiers might be compelled to combat with despe- rate valour. The adventurers proceeded in dead silence along the streets till they reached the Little Chatelet, where they were joined by several hundred armed citizens, who had been assembled to receive them. The confederates now loudly raised the rallying cry of " Peace! peace! Burgundy for ever!" and it was soon as loudly echoed from every side. From all the streets crowds of citizens sallied forth, wearing on their dress the St. Andrew's cross, which was the distin- guishing mark of the Burgundian party. In a very short time, tens of thousands were in arms. Scattered over a large city, and taken by surprise, the Armagnacs could make no resistance. Tannegui du Chatel, the governor of the Bastile, had barely time to hurry to the dauphin's abode, snatch him half awaked from the couch, wrap him in the bedclothes, and convey him for safety to the Bastile, whence, without delay, he removed him to Melun. While he was thus occupied, a party of Burgundians marched to the king's palace, and compelled him to take horse, and put himself at their head. Other parties spread themselves over the city, and slaughtered, or dragged to prison, all the Armagnacs on whom they could lay their hands. Nobles, warriors, ministers of state, bishops, abbots, magistrates, and the humble followers who had moved at their beck, were indiscriminately thrust into durance. The jails were speedily crowded till they could hold no more, and it then became ne- cessary to confine the captives in public buildings and private houses. The constable, in the rags of a beggar, at first eluded his pursuers, and found shelter in the HISTORY OF THE BASTJLE. 53 dwelling of a poor mason ; but a threatening procla- mation against whoever should harbour an Armagnac, terrified his host into betraying him. The Bastile, and consequently the power of enter- ing Paris, was yet held by Tannegui du Chatel. In the hope of recovering the capital before preparations could be made for its defence, he hurried back from Melun, along with other officers, among whom was Barbazan, who is honourably distinguished in the French annals, as the irreproachable knight, and the restorer of the kingdom and crown of France. At the head of a large body of gendarmes, he, on the first of June, made a sally from the Bastile, and advanced up St. Anthony's -street, towards the palace, with the intention of making himself master of the king's person. The king, however, had been removed, and Tannegui was soon encountered by 1'Isle Adam, who bad gathered together some troops, and was every moment reinforced by the citizens. A desperate con- test took place, but the Armagnac general was finally compelled to retreat, with the loss of four hundred men. The corpses of the slain were ignominiously thrown into the common sewer by the victors. Leav- ing a small garrison in the Bastile, he retired with the remainder of his force, and distributed it among the neighbouring fortresses of Corbeil, Meaux, and Me- lun. Two days after the departure of Tannegui, the governor of the Bastile deemed it prudent to capitulate. Already irritated by Tannegui's attempt, the par- tisans of the Burgundians were excited almost to mad- ness by a letter from the queen, in which she declared that neither she nor the duke would return to Paris, till it was purged of the Armagnacs. It has been truly remarked, that " such a letter was, in reality, a de- cree of death." That was the construction put upon it by the Burgundian faction ; and, unrestrained by any religious or humane feeling, they promptly carried 54 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. the sentence into effect. On the morning of the 12th of June, a report being spread that the enemy were attacking two of the gates, the citizens hastily as- sembled from every quarter. " All issued from their houses," says an old writer, "like swarms of bees from various hives. Malls, hatchets, axes, clubs, poles shod with iron points, swords, pikes, javelins, and halberts, were called into use by the insurgent people." The signal of carnage was given by one Lambert, who harangued them, and proposed to massacre the captives. His sanguinary suggestion was instantly adopted by the brutal crowd, and they hurried to the numerous prisons, uttering loud cries of " Kill those dogs 1 Kill those Armagnac traitors !" A scene of horror ensued at which nature shudders. Some of the victims were flung from the towers of the buildings upon the pikes of the assassins ; some were chopped down with hatchets, some were drowned, and others were burned alive in their dungeons ; their mangled remains were exposed to every kind of indignity ; and torrents of blood flowed through the streets. From the jails the slaughter was extended to the suspected inhabitants of houses, and was followed by pillage. The work of murder and robbery was untiringly continued throughout the whole of the night, and was recommenced in the morning, after the labourers in it had refreshed themselves by a short repast. Nineteen hundred of the Armagnacs are said to have fallen on this terrible day. Nor did they alone suffer, for numbers of the Burgundian party fell be- neath the weapons of their private foes, who availed themselves of this opportunity to gratify their revenge. After having for three days been dragged through the streets by the mob, the naked and disfigured corpse of the constable was conveyed out of Paris in the scaven- gers' cart, and thrown among the filth and ordure of HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 55 the city laystall. That no proof of their ferocity might be wanting, his murderers cut a portion of his skin into the form of a scarf, and hung it round him in ridicule of the white scarf which was the badge of his party. A supplementary massacre, of equal extent, and attended by circumstances equally atrocious, occurred shortly after, in which perished the prisoners from the Bastile and Yin-cennes, and those who had been ar- rested since the first slaughter. On this occasion, the captives in the Great and Little Chatelet strove to defend themselves, by hurling down stones and tiles on their enemies, but their resistance was soon over- powered, and not one of them escaped. These enormities prefigurations of those which, nearly four centuries later, were to be committed in the same city were succeeded by riotous rejoicings for the arrival of the queen and the duke, and by " one of the finest religious processions that ever was seen/' But the wrath of Heaven did not slumber long. " The joy of Paris," says an old annalist, " was speedily changed into mourning, for three months had not passed away after this carnage, when so cruel a pestilence fell upon the city, that it destroyed more than eighty thousand persons in three months. His- tory records, that this Perinet and his companions, after having squandered all that they had gained by plunder, died miserably, not long enjoying the fruits of their robberies ; and that the greater part of the nobles and gentlemen, who had acted with the mur- derers, were carried off by the pestilence, except Tlsle Adam, who was reserved to be chastised by king Henry of England, though it was on another account, as we shall relate in the proper place. And was it not God who took vengeance for these cruelties ?" In a little more than a year from this time, John the Fearless, himself an assassin, fell by an assassin's band, at the conference of Montereau. His life had 56 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. been productive of great evils to France ; his death brought on it still greater. The murder of John gave birth to that coalition between his successor Philip the Good, Henry the fifth of England, and queen Isabella, which, for more than a quarter of a century, deluged the kingdom with blood, and nearly wrested the sceptre from the ancient line of monarchs. In 1420, Paris was delivered into the hands of the English, and for sixteen years they retained possession of it ; the Louvre, the Bastile, and Vincennes, were their prin- cipal posts in the capital and its immediate vicinity. The only prisoner whom, during their domination, the English are recorded to have confined in the Bas- tile, was the very man but for whose activity and daring the capital would, perhaps, never have been in their power. It was 1'Isle Adam. This warrior, who was born about 1384, of an ancient and noble family, was taken by the English, at Honfleur, in 14 15. After he recovered his liberty, he joined the party of John the Fearless, and was made governor of Pontoise. We have seen by what means he gained Paris for the Burgundian prince. That he was deeply implicated in the massacres appears to be a melancholy truth ; and all his talents and valour are insufficient to cleanse his reputation from that damnable spot. For his ser- vices he was rewarded, by the duke of Burgundy, with the rank of marshal. It is not clear in what manner T Isle Adam incurred the displeasure of our Henry the fifth, the regent of France. French writers ascribe the circumstance to the pride and arrogance of the English sovereign, who required the most abject homage from all his French courtiers. I/Isle Adam, they tell us, having one day come into the royal presence in a plain grey dress, the monarch sternly asked him whether that was a fit dress for a marshal. " Dearest lord," said the offender, " I had it made to travel in from Sens to Paris ;" and> HISTORY OF THE. BASTILE. 57 while lie spoke, he looked at the king. " What ! " ^exclaimed Henry, " do you dare to look a prince in the face ? " " Most dread lord," answered the marshal, "it is the custom in France; and if any one avoids looking at the person to whom he talks, he is con- sidered as a had man and a traitor : therefore, in God's name, do not be offended." " Such is not our custom," Henry sourly replied, and here the dialogue ended. If this story be true, it speaks ill for the policy, and worse for the disposition, of the victor of Agincourt. A few days after this conversation is supposed to have occurred, I/Isle Adam was committed to the Bastile, on the false and absurd charge of meaning to betray Paris to the dauphin. About a thousand of the citizens took up arms to rescue him, on his way to the fortress, but they were put to flight by the small band of English archers, which was escorting him to prison. I/Isle Adam, it is affirmed, would have passed from the Bastile to the scaffold, had he not been saved by the remonstrances of Philip the Good, and the death of Henry. After the decease of Henry, 1'Isle Adam rejoined the Burgundian standard, and took so active and effective a part in the war, that, when the order of the Golden Fleece was established, he was one of the first on whom it was conferred. In 1437, he fol- lowed the duke of Burgundy into Brabant, and on the 22nd of May, of that year, he was killed in a popular insurrection which took place at Bruges. It was not till the 22nd of September, 1429, that any attempt was made to disturb the English in their occupation of Paris. Flushed with its recent suc- cesses, and hoping that the citizens would rise upon the garrison, the army of Charles assaulted on that day the ramparts of the capital, between the gates of St. Honore and St. Denis. The assault, led by Joan of Arc, continued for four hours ; but the glorious 58 HISTORY OF THE BASTILF.. heroine was severely wounded through the thigh, and the assailants were compelled to retire. For seven years after this attack, the English kept their ground in Paris. But the English power in France was now daily crumbling into dust. The Burgundian, their ally for several years, was become their active enemy ; the duke of Bedford, whose valour and s-kill so long upheld a tottering cause, had sunk into the grave ; town after town, willingly or on compulsion, opened its gates to Charles ; succours arrived seldom and in scanty numbers ; and frequent insurrections, in Normandy and other quarters, com- pelled them to disseminate their troops, so that it became impossible for them to take the field with a formidable army. At this critical moment. Paris had only a feeble garrison of fifteen hundred men ; a force wholly inadequate to defend the place, even had the citizens been far less disaffected than they really were. They were weary of war, and, besides, prudence dis- suaded them from persisting to oppose a sovereign Whose throne was evidently established on a solid basis. Such being the state of things, Charles thought the time was come to recover his capital. A negotia- tion was secretly opened with the citizens ; and, on condition of a general amnesty, they agreed to return to their allegiance. On the night of the 13th of April, 1436, the king's troops were admitted into the city. Though he was taken by surprise, Willoughby, the governor, a brave and intelligent officer, took such measures as would have baffled his assailants, had he received any aid from the Parisians. But not a hand was raised in his behalf, and he had no other resource than a retreat to the Bastile, which he effected in good order. An honourable capitulation, allowing him to retire, with bag and baggage, to Rouen, was offered to Willoughby, and, as lie knew that resistance must be unavailing, he wisely accepted HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 59 an offer which he could not hope would be repeated. Thus ended the sway of the English in Paris. During the remainder of the reign of Charles VII., nothing more occurred which belongs to this narra- tive. Abundant materials are, however, supplied by the iron sway of his son and successor, Louis XI. Historians in speaking of Louis XL, have charactered him, and with justice, as a violator of all social duties, as being a " bad son, a bad husband, a bad father, a bad brother, a bad kinsman, a bad friend, a bad neigh- bour, a bad master, and a most dangerous enemy." That, on attaining supreme power, such a man should take heavy vengeance for injuries, real or supposed, is in the natural order of things. Immediately on his accession to the throne, Louis displaced from their offices all persons who had rendered themselves ob- noxious to him ; and, in some instances, his revenge was more signally manifested. Among the most conspicuous of those who felt his anger was Anthony de Chabannes, count of Dam- martin. Chabannes had played an active part in the long war between Charles VII. and the English, and on various occasions had done signal service. Like many other nobles of that period, he was, however, possessed of far more courage than honourable prin- ciples. To swell his coffers with plunder, he did not hesitate to put himself at the head of the ferocious banditti known by the descriptive name of ecorcheurs^ or flayers, with whom he ravaged the north-eastern provinces of France, as far as the Swiss frontier. He quitted them in 1439, to marry a rich wife, after which he again entered into the king's service. Chabannes, as is often the case with criminals, could more easily commit crimes than bear to be told of them. The monarch having one day laughingly greeted him by the title of king of the flayers, he angrily replied, " I never flayed any but your ene- 60 HISTORY OF THE BASTIL3. mi es ; and it appears to me that you have derived more benefit from their skins than I have." Not satisfied with this retort, he further gratified his offended feelings by prompting the dauphin to become the leader of the malcontents, in the ephemeral civil war which is known as the war of the Praguerw. After the Praguerie was over, Chabannes was again received into favour by Charles, and he seems ever after to have remained faithful to him. He even dis- closed a conspiracy which the dauphin had formed, to deprive the monarch of his crown and liberty. The dauphin, on being brought face to face with him, hardily denied the fact, and gave him the lie. The conduct of Chabannes, in this instance, was not un- dignified. " I know," said he, " the respect which is due to the son of my master ; but the truth of my deposition I am ready to maintain, by arms, against all those of the dauphin's household who will come forward to contradict it." No one was hardy enough to accept this challenge. It is less creditable to Chabannes, that he presided over the commission which was appointed to try, or rather to find guilty, the persecuted Jacques Ccenr, and that he contrived to obtain, at a shamefully in- adequate price, several of Coeur's estates. In 1455, Chabannes, by performing his duty to his sovereign, gave fresh offence to the dauphin. Irritated at last by the political intrigues of his son, and by his having persisted for ten years to absent himself from the court, Charles determined to 'de- prive him of the petty sovereignty of Dauphine, and to secure his person. Chabannes was chosen to carry this determination into effect : and he acted with such vigour, that, after having prevailed on the duke of 8avoy to refuse the prince an asylum, he compelled him to seek shelter in the dominions of the duke of Burgundy. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 61 Chabannes was, consequently, one of the earliest victims on the accession of Louis to the throne. De- prived of his office of grand master of France, he took flight, but he soon returned, and claimed a fair trial. The king refused to admit the claim, and ordered him to quit the kingdom ; an order which he obeyed. While he was absent, his property was confiscated, and he was summoned to appear, and answer the charges against him. Confiding in his innocence, he complied with the summons ; but he was found guilty of high treason, and condemned to death. The sen- tence was commuted to banishment by Louis ; who, however, changed his mind as to the punishment, and shut him up in the Bastile. In the Bastile Chabannes remained for four years. On the breaking out of the war (the parties in which called their confederacy the League of the Public- Good), he contrived to escape ; and, on his way to joiii the malcontents, he made himself master of the. towns of St. Fargeau and St. Maurice. He was one of those who benefited by the treaty of Conflans, which terminated this war. His sentence was annulled, and his estates were restored to him. It is a singular circumstance that, with respect to Chabannes, Louis passed at once from the extreme of hatred and suspicion, to that of kindness and confidence. He not only restored his estates, but he added to their number. At a later date, when he instituted the order of St. Michael, Chabannes was one of the first whom he nominated. Favours con- ferred by a gloomy and unprincipled tyrant cast a doubt on the character of the receiver, even when it has been hitherto unstained, which was not the case with the new knight. The nomination gave occa- sion to a severe sarcasm from the duke of Brittany. Louis having sent to him the collar of the order, the the restless and unprincipled John, Count of Armagnac,was slain atLectoure, by the royal troops, his brother Charles, who had taken no part in the contest, was arrested by order of Louis the ele- venth, sent to the Conciergerie, and put to the torture. He was on the point of proving his innocence, when he was removed to the Bastile, and secluded from all access of friends. L'Huillier, the governor, treated him with a cold-blooded barbarity which was worthy of a man who held office under Louis. There was nothing that cruelty could suggest that was not prac- tised on the unfortunate Charles. The agonies of the captive were protracted for a period of fourteen years, during all which time he inhabited a dreary and noi- some dungeon, in which water almost continually dropped upon him, and he could not move without wading through slimy mud. He was liberated, and his property was restored, by Charles the eighth. The boon, however, came too late to be of any avail. His reason was shaken by what he had undergone ; he languished for a few years, and died in 1497. Less compassion is due to the next inhabitant of the Bastile who appears upon the scene. Faithful to no party, he fell regretted by none. Louis de Luxem- bourg, Count of St. Pol, who was born in 1418, suc- ceeded to the possessions of his father, when he was only fifteen. He did not receive his moral education in schools where humanity and honour were to be learned. His uncle and guardian, Count de Ligni, was well qualified to brutalise his youthful mind. It was de Ligni that basely sold the heroine Joan of Arc to the English, for ten thousand livres. In one of his campaigns, lie took his nephew \vith him, that the boy might kill some of the prisoners, in order to accustom him to scenes of blood. Louis is said to have proved an apt scholar, and to have taken delight in the performance of his murderous task. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 69 At his outset in life, St. Pol, like most of his family, was a warm partisan of the English party. Circum- stances, however, having compelled him to visit the court of Charles the seventh, he met with so flattering a reception, that he deserted his party, and devoted himself to that monarch. With the dauphin (who was afterwards Louis the eleventh) he contracted as close a friendship as can subsist between two such characters. St. Pol distinguished himself in the service of his new master on various occasions, par- ticularly at the sieges of the Norman fortresses. Though St. Pol had given up the English party, he did not break off his old connexion with the Burgun- dian prince. He fought for him against the insurgent citizens of Ghent, and he even joined in the League of the Public Good, as it was ludicrously styled, and led the vanguard of the count de Charolais, at the battle of Montlheri. At the peace of Conflans, Louis, in the hope of winning him over from the Burgundian interest, promoted him to be constable of France ; and soon after, with the same view, he gave him the hand of Mary of Savoy, the queen's sister, and granted him a wide extent of territory. These favours did not produce the desired effect. St. Pol seems to have had little gratitude in his nature ; .and, in this case, he perhaps thought that there was none due for what was rather a bribe than a free gift. As he imagined that his safety consisted in preventing a good understanding between the king and the duke of Burgundy, he was constantly intriguing to keep them at variance, and he alternately betrayed them. His intrigues being discovered, the two princes, during one of their short periods of amity, entered into a compact, by which they declared him their common enemy. The duke of Burgundy promised, that if the constable fell into his hands, he would sur- render him to the king within eight days. For this he 70 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. \vas to be rewarded by the restoration of St. Quentin, Amiens, and other towns on the Soinme. This agreement was of course kept a profound secret. What St. Pol had already done was sufficient to ser his fate; but he roused the anger of Louis still fartlie. by an act of personal disrespect, and by leaguing wit! Edward the fourth of England for the invasion ol France. It was not, however, till he had got rid of Edward by a treaty, and had artfully contrived to irri- tate the duke of Burgundy stilt more against St. Pol, that Louis seriously prepared for taking vengeance on the offender. The negotiation between Edward and Louis had already alarmed the constable, and, to con- ciliate the latter, he had offered to attack the English. This offer Louis communicated to Edward, who, indig- nant at the treachery of his recent confederate, sent the letters which he had received from him to the French monarch. Louis was thus furnished with decisive proofs. To the overtures of St. Pol he replied in am- biguous words, the real meaning of which was soon made evident : " I am overwhelmed by so many affairs," said the Machiavelian monarch, " that I have great need of a good head like yours to get through them." The preparations of the king at length made St. Pol fully aware of his danger. Hesitating as to the measure which in this emergency he ought to adopt, he for a moment half resolved to stand on his defence; but reflection on the superior resources of his enemy persuaded him that he had 110 chance of success from arms. Yet, had he boldly appealed to the sword, he might, perhaps, have saved his life, or at least have met with an honourable death. He preferred throw- ing himself on the duke of Burgundy, whom he tempted by offering him his strong towns, as the price of protection. Louis demanded that he should be given up to him ; and after some qualms of conscience as to sacrificing a suppliant, who was also his cousin, HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 71 Charles of Burgundy complied with the demand. St. Pol was conveyed to the Bastile. The French monarch gave him his choice, either to make a full confession, or to be tried in the customary manner. The latter alternative was chosen by the prisoner, who knew not that his letters to Edward and the duke of Burgundy, were in the king's hands, and therefore believed that there was not legal evidence to warrant his conviction. His judges sentenced him to lose his head, and he was executed on the 19th of December, 1475. The last captive in the Bastile, during the reign of Louis the eleventh, or rather the last of whom any record remains for there were doubtless numbers of the nameless tlirong was an Armagnac ; a name which seems to have been fatal to its owners. We have seen one Armagnac torn in pieces by the popu- lace, another treacherously slain after the surrender of his stronghold, a third losing his reason in a dun- geon, and we are now to witness the leading of a fourth to the scaffold, under circumstances the most horrible. James of Armagnac, duke of Nemours, was the son of the count de la Marche, who was the governor of the youthful dauphin. When the pupil of the count ascended the throne, he gave his cousin Louisa in marriage to James of Armagnac, and conferred on him the dukedom of Nemours, with all the rights and privileges of the peerage ; an honour~which had never before been enjoyed by any other than princes of the royal family. Nemours, nevertheless, joined the League of the Public Good. Louis, as we have seen, was obliged to succumb to the League; and, by the consequent peace of Conflans, James of Ar- magnac obtained the government of Paris and the Isle of France. Little more than three years elapsed before Nemours was again .engaged in intrigues against the monarch. 72 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. But the time was gone by when revolt could lead to promotion. Louis had strengthened his authority, and he was not disposed to see it set at nought. He, however, pardoned him ; but it was on condition that any future offence should render him liable to punish- ment for the past, and that he should then be deprived of his privilege of peerage, and be tried as a private individual. In the course of a few years Nemours once more, and finally, brought down the wrath of the monarch on his head. He was accused of treason, and Beau- jeu was despatched to besiege him in the town of Carlat, to which the duke had retired. Carlat was supposed to be impregnable, and it was provisioned for two or three years. Nemours, nevertheless, sur- rendered without resistance, on condition that his life should be spared; Beaujeu guaranteed this condition, as did likewise Louis le Graville, lord of Montaigu, and Bonfile le Juge, who enjoyed the royal confidence. The wife of the duke, who was confined in child-bed, died of grief and terror, on seeing her husband be- come a prisoner. Nemours was conveyed, first, to Pierre-Encise, whence he was removed to the Bastile : where he was subjected to the harshest usage. All his supplications to the king, during two years' abode in the Bastile, were unavailing ; or rather, indeed, seem to have tended to irritate him. The duke had, undoubtedly, been a turbulent subject ; but nothing can palliate the infamy of the king's conduct, after he had Ne- mours in his powder. It is difficult to account for the inveteracy of his hatred. There was no conceivable violation of justice of which he was not guilty. To have broken the pledge solemnly given by his general was little compared with what followed. Such of the judges as seemed inclined to show mercy were threat- ened and displaced; others were tempted by being pro- HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. 73 mised to share in the spoils of the prisoner ; the place where the court held its sittings was more than once arbitrarily changed : and the decent formalities of the law, as well as its essential principles, were con- temptuously discarded. No wonder that Nemours was condemned to death. But now a scene opens which casts all the rest into shade, and at which nature shudders. Nothing was omitted that could render death terrible to the duke. The chamber where he confessed to the priest was hung with black ; the horse which took him to execu tion was covered with a housing of the same hue. lie was already agonised by the thought that his children, who were little more than infants, were reduced to beggary. But this was not enough : a scaffold was expressly constructed for him to suffer on, with wide openings between the planks, and underneath, clad in white, their heads naked, and their hands bound, were placed his children, that they might be drenched with their parent's blood. It was on the 4th of August, 1477, that this horrible tragedy was acted. Did the brutal vindictiveness of the monarch end here ? It did not. The guiltless children, of whom the youngest was only five years old, were taken back to the Bastile, and plunged into a loathsome dungeon,' where they had scarcely the power of moving. There they remained, for five years, till the accession of Charles the eighth opened their prison door. A part of the confiscated property of their father was subse- quently restored to them by Charles. The health of two of them was so broken that they did not long sur- vive. The youngest inherited the title of Nemours, rose to be viceroy of Naples, and fell at the battle of Cerignoles, in 1503, 74 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. CHAPTER III. Reign of Francis I. Semblan^ai The Chancellor Dupraf The ChancellorPoyet. Admiralde Chabot. Fall ofPoyet Reign of Henry II. Annedu Bourg. Louis du Faur. Reign of Francis II. Execution of du Bourg. Francis de Vendome Reign of Charles IX. The Duke of Lunebourg. Henry of Navarre and the Prince of Conde in danger of the Bastilc. Faction of the Politicians. La Mole. Coconas. Marshal de Montrnorenci Marshal de Cosse. Reign of Henry III. Bussi d'Amboise. DURING the reigns of Charles the eighth and Louis the twelfth, a period of more than thirty years, no prisoners of note appear to have been incarcerated in the Bastile. In the reign of Francis the first, we again find it receiving persons of rank within its gloomy walls. The first who was consigned to it hy Francis was James de Beaune, baron of Semblan9ai. He was the eldest son of John de Beaune, a citizen of Tours, who acquired a large fortune by commerce, and who after having withdrawn from mercantile pursuits, held the office of steward to Louis the eleventh and to Charles the eighth. Semblan^ai en^ tered early into the royal service, and in the reign of Charles the eighth, rose to the high situation of su- perintendant of the finances, and retained it under Louis the twelfth and Francis the first. It was to his talents he was indebted for preferment ; and his conduct, in the difficult and dangerous post which he occupied, justified his elevation, and gained for him the confidence of the three monarchs. Francis was even accustomed to address him with the flattering appellation of father. Keeping aloof from all court intrigues, he displayed, in his official character, an ex- emplary regularity, economy, and probity ; and he crowned the whole by a virtue which is still more rare HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 75 in a finance minister that of endeavouring to alle- viate the burthens of the people, and prevent them from being despoiled by unprincipled nobles. The man who acted thus was not likely to be with- out enemies ; all the greedy, who were disappointed of thrusting their hands into the public purse, and all the wasteful and corrupt, to whom his example was a stinging rebuke, would of course abhor him. But Semblancai, might have set their malice at defiance, had they not found an invincible ally in a female, whose venomous hatred was rendered fatal to him by her unbounded influence. This powerful female was Louisa of Savoy, duchess of Angouleme, the mother of Francis the first. She was beautiful in person, a doating mother, and en- dowed with many intellectual qualities of a superior class ; but she was immeasurably ambitious, vindictive, and rapacious.- Such was her avidity for riches, and such her success in gratifying it, that, at the time of her death, her coffers contained no less than a million and a half of golden crowns an enormous, not to say disgraceful hoard, especially when we consider what was the value of the sum at that period. In two in- stances, her criminal passions were the cause of shame and misfortune to France. Of the first of these we are about to speak ; the second was her persecution of the Constable de Bourbon a base and disastrous measure, which was prompted either by resentment for his rejection of her love, or by her eagerness to seize upon his ample domains, or, perhaps, by a com- bination of both these unworthy motives. The regard w r hich was manifested for Semblansai by Francis was, at one period, equally felt by the duchess of Angouleme. There exists, under her hand, the strongest testimony to the rectitude of the superin-* tendant, and of the generous sacrifices which he made to provide for the wants of the state. It was not till 76 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. the necessity of vindicating his own character com- pelled him to criminate her, that she became his enemy. Jealous of the influence possessed by the countess of Chateaubriant, the mistress of Francis, whose bro - ther, Lautrec, was then governor of the Milanese and commander of the French army in that province, the duchess appears to have formed the plan of aiming a deadly blow at the sister through the side of the bro- ther. If, by disabling him from defending the Mi- lanese, she could bring Lautrec into disgrace, it was not improbable that -the disgusted and indignant monarch, who set a high value on his Italian con- quest, would extend his anger to the countess. The means which she adopted for bringing her scheme to bear, had also an additional and not trivial merit in her eyes; that of contributing to swell the mass of trea- sure which she had already accumulated. In the first part of her project, she completely suc- ceeded. Deprived of the pecuniary resources which he had expected from France, and which were the more needful, as the harshness of his government had rendered him unpopular in Italy, Lautrec was defeated at the battle of the Bicocco, was deserted by his Swiss auxiliaries, and at length was driven from the duchy of Milan. The disgrace thus cast upon the French arms, and that, too, in a country which he in person had won, could not fail to exasperate a young and warlike sove- reign. When Lautrec returned to his native land, the king refused to admit him to his presence ; but at last, through the intercession of his sister, and of the Constable de Bourbon, the vanquished general ob- tained an audience. He was received with a frowning countenance ; and he boldly complained of his recep- tion. " Is it possible for me," said Francis, sternly, u to look favourably on a man who is guilty of having lost my duchy of Milan ?" HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 77 Nowise daunted by this rebuff, Lautrec firmly re- plied, "I will dare to assert, that your majesty is the sole cause of that loss. For eighteen months your gendarmes had not a single farthing of pay. The Swiss, with whose disposition as to money you are well acquainted, were also left unpaid. It was solely by my management that they were retained for several months with my army. There would have been no reason for wonder had they quitted it with- out drawing their swords ; their respect for me in- duced them, however, not to desert me till after a sanguinary combat. They compelled me to give battle, though I foresaw clearly that there was no hope of victory ; but, in my circumstances, prudence dictated to risk every thing, however little chance there might appear that our efforts would be success- ful. The whole of my crime amounts to this/' The astonishment of Francis was excited by this speech of Lautrec. " What!" exclaimed he, "did you not receive the four hundred thousand crowns, which I ordered to be sent to you soon after your arrival at Milan ?" " No, sire," answered Lautrec ; " your majesty's letters came to hand, but no money was forwarded to me; nor did it ever pass the Alps." Semblan9ai was immediately summoned into his presence by Francis, to account for such an extra- ordinary violation of his duty. In his defence, the superintendant stated, that the duchess, vested with authority as regent, had demanded from him the four hundred thousand crowns, and that he held her receipt for the sum. Irritated by this unexpected discovery, Francis hastened to his mother's apartment, and reproached her for conduct which had cost him a part of his dominions. The duchess is said to have begun her reply by a denial of the fact. She was, however, ultimately compelled to own that she had indeed ob - 78 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. tained four hundred thousand crowns from .Semblan- gai ; but she artfully pretended, that she had pre- viously confided the money to his care, and that it was the produce of savings from her income. Sem- blangai, on the contrary, strenuously protested that she had never entrusted anything to his keeping, and that when she drew from him the funds in question, he had told her that they were set apart by the king for the service of the forces in Italy. Francis was no doubt convinced of her guilt, but he could not bear the idea of openly stigmatizing a mother whom he loved. There was consequently no- thing to be done but to bury, as far as was possible, the whole transaction in oblivion. Abruptly putting an end to the altercation between the duchess and the superintendant, he said, " Let us think no more on the subject ! we did not deserve to conquer ; it was in vain that fortune declared on our side ; we threw insuperable obstacles in the way of her favour. Let us cease to be traitors to each other, and let us hence- forth endeavour to act for the public good, with more wisdom and union than we have hitherto displayed." That Semblangai continued to hold his place, is a sufficient proof that his assertion was credited by the king. That the revengeful duchess was eager to ruin him, we might easily have believed, even had the- result not afforded evidence of the fact. For a consi- derable time, however, she silently nursed her wrath. It was not till 1524, when a new expedition was in preparation against the Milanese, that she found an opportunity of striking her blow. Money was wanted; and Semblangai, who had come forward on former occasions, was desired to make an advance from his private fortune. But this he declined to do ; pleading, as a reason for his refusal, that a debt of three hun- dred thousand crowns was already owing to him. He was punished by dismissal from his office if that can HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 79 he called a punishment for which he appears to have sought and, after having given in his accounts, and shown that they were correct, he retired to his estate of Balan, in the neighbourhood of Tours. On the departure of Francis for Italy, he again appointed his mother to act as regent. . She had now unlimited power; and, as far as concerned Semblancjai, she exercised it cruelly and basely. She began by instituting against him a suit, to recover a balance which she alleged to be due to her, as part of the pretended deposit. To bolster up her cause, she is accused of having stooped to the most degrading means. Gentil, the confidential clerk of Semblan^ai, was enamoured of one of her attendants ; and this female the regent employed to steal, or obtain by blandishments, the receipt which had been given to the superintendant. This suit \vas probahly meant to answer the double purpose of narrowing his resources and injuring his character. But this mode of proceeding was " too poor, too weak, for her revenge," arid she soon adopted another, which struck directly at his life. His secretary, John Prevost, who seems himself to have had reason for dreading an inquiry into his offi- cial conduct, was tampered with, to cause the ruin of his master. Impunity for his own misdoings was to be the price of his new crime. A charge of pecula- tion was brought against Semblangai, and, towards the close of 15 26, he was committed to the Bastile. To render his fate certain, the office of sitting in judgment upon him was entrusted to the Chancellor Duprat, who had been his rival, was still his deadliest foe, and was, besides, a devoted tool of the queen mother. As his colleagues, or rather accomplices, Duprat selected, from the various parliaments, men on whose subserviency he could rely. From a tribunal thus infamously constituted, not even a 80 HISTORY OF THE BASTILF. semblance of justice could be expected. On the 9tb of August, 1527, Semblanc^ai, who was then in his sixty-second year, was condemned to be hanged ; and this sentence was, shortly after, executed on him, at the gibbet of Montfaucon. The popular feeling, with respect to Semblangai, may be considered as at least a strong presumptive proof of his innocence. It is not often that the fall of a finance minister is a subject of sorrow to the multitude. In his case we find one of the few excep- tions ; for the people beheld his melancholy fate with grief, surprise, and indignation, and they long looked with an evil eye on the malignant princess by whom he was judicially murdered. There is an apparent but not a real discrepancy in the accounts of the behaviour of Semblan^ai, when his doom was sealed. From the language of Du Bouchet, who represents him as weeping bitterly, and cherishing hopes of pardon till the last moment, a hasty conclusion might be drawn, that the courage of the victim deserted him. But wounded honour^ and a keen sense of the ingratitude with which a life of services was repaid, might well wring tears from his eyes, though his mind remained unmoved by the fear of death. That his firmness was, in fact, not to be shaken, we have the unexceptionable testimony of Marot, who probably witnessed the calm deportment of Semblangai when going to the scaffold. In his lines, which bear the title of "Du Lieutenant Crimi- nel et de Semblancjai," the poet thus forcibly ex- presses himself " When Maillard, hellish judge, led Semblanfai On gallows tree to pass from life away, Say which of them most undisturbed was seen ?" " I'll tell you, friend : so blank was Maillard's mien, He looked as though he saw the direful dart Of death hang o'er him ; but so brave a heart Semblangai showed, you would have sworn that he Was leading Maillard to the gallows tree.'' HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 81 We have seen that the chancellor, Duprat, was the instrument which Louisa of Savoy em ployed to accom- plish the destruction of Semhlangai. At an earlier period he had served her as effectually in a similar case. Her suit against theConstahle de Bourbon, to strip him of his vast estates, is said to have been suggested by Duprat, and was certainly brought to a favourable issue by the exercise of his influence over the judges. His hatred of the constable was caused, or sharpened, by Bourbon having refused to comply with a request relative to the grant of an estate in Auvergne. De- tested by all France, for the fiscal oppressions of which he was the author, and for his having betrayed the liberties of the Gallican church, the chancellor nevertheless retained his power to the last, and died loaded with titles and riches. Another tool of the duchess of Angouleme, who closely imitated the conduct of Duprat, was not equally fortunate. William Poyet, a native of Angers, bom about 1474, had acquired a high reputation at the bar before he was chosen the queen-mother's advocate against the Constable de Bourbon. The manner in which he performed his new task ensured his promo- tion. He became successively advocate-general, and president-a-mortier,and was employed in various nego- tiations; and, at length, in 1538, his ambition was gratified by his appointment to the high office of chan- cellor. If servility to the monarch, and an utter disre- gard of the rights and happiness of the people, are qua- lifications for that office, his fitness cannot be denied. He was undoubtedly worthy of succeeding to Duprat. The profligate readiness with which Poyet encou- raged Francis the first to load his subjects with heavy taxes, drew T upon him a severe reproof from Duchatel, the virtuous and benevolent bishop of Orleans. Hear- ing the chancellor tell the king that his majesty was the master of all that his subjects possessed, the bishop 82 HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. indignantly exclaimed, "Carry such tyrannical maxims to the Caligulas and Neros, and, if you have no respect for yourself, at least respect a monarch who is the friend of humanity, and who knows that to hold its rights sacred is the first of his duties." This speech did honour to the prelate, but there ia no ground for believing that it produced any good effect upon either the sovereign or the minister. It was by female influence that Poyet was raised to his lofty station ; it was by the same influence that he was precipitated from it. Two parties existed at court, those of the dauphin and the duke of Alen9on ? the heads of which were the constable de Montmo- renci and the admiral de Chabot. Besides the hatred which he felt against Chabot as a political rival, the haughty Montmorenci found, in the unceremonious tone of equality with which he was addressed by the admiral, another reason for hating him. To ruin an enemy by underhand measures, was the natural pro- ceeding of a courtier. He insinuated to the king that Chabot had acquired his riches by iniquitous prac- tices ; and, by holding out the lure of a cardinal's hat, he induced Poyet to assist in Chabot's destruction. The chancellor exerted himself so strenuously in raking up matter of accusation against the intended victim, that he at length produced five-and-twenty charges, each of which, he declared, would subject the delinquent to capital punishment. Xhe alleged crimi- nality of Chabot was soon made known to the king. It is probable, nevertheless, that remembering the services of Chabot, and the friendship which had existed ever since their youthful days, Francis would have overlooked the supposed crimes, had he not been pro^- voiced by a speech which sounded like defiance. Some trifling dispute occurring between them, he threatened to bring him to trial; to which Chabot boldly replied, that a trial had no terrors for him, his conduct having HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 83 always been so irreproachable, that neither his life nor his honour could be put in danger. Francis was weak enough to take offence at this implied challenge ; he committed the offender to the castle of Melun, and directed the chancellor to prosecute him. Poyet rushed upon his prey with the ferocity of a hungry tiger. He began by selecting the commis- sioners who were to sit in judgment on Chabot ; and, to ensure their obedience, he himself, contrary to esta- blished custom, presided over them. Yet, with such instruments, and in spite of all his unprincipled efforts to spur them on, he was not able fully to accomplish his purpose. So groundless were the articles of im- peachment, there being only two of them which at all, and those but slightly, affected the prisoner, that, instead of voting for death, the judges were disposed either to acquit him, or, at most, to pass a lenient sen- tence. By dint, however, of threats, the chancellor compelled them to go far beyond their intention ; they consequently condemned Chabot to a- fine of fifteen thousand livres, confiscation of property and perpetual exile. One of them is said to have added to his signa- ture the Latin word m^ in almost imperceptible charac- ters ; thus signifying that force had been used to ex- tort his consent. Not content with the daring con- tempt of justice which he had already displayed, Poyet, in drawing up the judgment of the court, did not hesitate to falsify it, by inserting additional crimes, and aggravating the penalty. Though Francis was irritated by the honourable boldness of Chabot, he had never intended to carry matters to extremity against him. He could not now avoid being astonished that the charges had dwindled into such utter insignificance, and that nevertheless a sentence of such undue severity was pronounced ; and he appears to have been also warmly solicited in his behalf by a prevailing advocate, the duchess of Etampes, G2 84 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. the royal mistress, who was a relation of Chabot. Yet though the king designed to receive the admiral again into favour, he could not deny himself the mean grati- fication of taunting him. "Well," said he to him, " will you again boast of your innocence ? " "Sire," replied Chabot, " I have but too well learned, that -before God and his sovereign no man must call him- self innocent ; but I have one consolation, that all the malice of my enemies has failed to convict me of having ever been unfaithful to your majesty/' Cha- bot was pardoned, and reinstated in his offices. This tardy justice came too late ; though his enemies had been unable to drag him to the scaffold, they had suc- ceeded in shortening his days. In little more than twelve months, his existence was terminated by a -disease, seemingly of the heart, w r hich was brought on by the grief and anxiety that he had suffered. Chabot, however, lived long enough to witness the downfall of his adversaries. ToMontmorenci the king intimated, that he had no longer occasion for his ser- vices; and the dismissed courtier in consequence re- tired to Chantilly, whence he did not emerge during the remainder of Francis's reign. A heavier misfor- tune a waited Poyet, and it speedily fell upon him. Two females, the duchess of Etampes and the queen of Na- varre, were the foes who overthrew him. The duchess, who was already offended by his persecution of her re- lative, he exasperated beyond measure, by refusing to perform an illegal act in favour of one of her friends ; the queen of Navarre he alienated in a similar man- ner ; and he rendered both of them more inveterate, by some bitter remarks on the influence which females possessed over the mind of the sovereign. They com- bined together for his ruin, and they effected it. In August, 1542, he was dragged from his bed, and car- Tied to the Bastile. Thus, after having been allowed to be unjust with impunity, he was punished for re- HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 85 collecting at last that he had duties to perform. In this emergency, he had the mingled audacity and meanness to write to Chabot, imploring his forgive- ness and protection. After having been three years in prison, he was declared incapable of ever holding office, and was sentenced to five years' imprisonment, and to pay a fine of a hundred thousand livres. The king himself, with a strange want of decorum, came forward as a witness against him on the trial. Poyct died in 1548, an object of general contempt. The captives, to whom our attention is now to be directed, were of a very different character, from the chancellor Poyet ; they were sufferers for conscience' sake; men who, when the question related to religious interests, deemed it a duty not to submit in silence to arbitrary power. Their names were Anne du Bourg, and Louis du Faur, and they were counsellors of the parliament at Paris. The uncle of du Bourg was chancellor in the reign of Francis I. Du Faur was of a family which had produced many eminent charac- ters, among whom is to be numbered Guy du Faur, lord of Pibrac, author of the well-known Quatrains. Pressed, it is said, by the Guises, and by the duchess of Yalentinois, his mistress, the latter of whom was looking forward to the benefit she might expect from confiscations, Henry the second unwisely resolved to carry to the fulLextent the persecution of the Protest- ants. Hitherto, only the humbler classes had been marked out for punishment ; but as nothing more than the mere pleasure of tormenting could be derived from pursuing them, it was now determined that men of higher rank should suffer in their turn. This was at least impartial injustice. It was believed that the re- formed doctrines had many partisans among the magis- tracy ; and the members of the parliament of Paris were therefore selected, as the subjects upon whom the new experiment of rigour should be first tried. This step 86 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. was taken at the suggestion of le Maitre, the chief pre- sident, who had the baseness to deliver privately to the king a list of his protestant colleagues, and also a tempt- ing statement of the property which they possessed. "it was a custom of the heads of the parliament to meet at stated periods, for the purpose, among other things, of inquiring into any alleged neglect or viola- tion of duty on the part of the members. These meetings, which were established by an edict of Charles VIII., were called the Mercuriales, from the circumstance of their taking place on a Wednesday. To one of these assemblies, while it was in the midst of a debate on the measures which ought to be adopted with respect to heretics, the king suddenly came, without any previous notice, accompanied by the Guises, and other rigidly catholic nobles, and guarded by a formidable escort. Previously to his arrival, the balance of opinion had inclined to the side of a lenient administration of the law, until the discipline of the church had been re- formed by a new oecumenical council. Though the monarch affected to be calm, it was easy to perceive that he was under the influence of passion. He made a vehement harangue, in which he dwelt on the dis- turbances caused by sectaries, and on the necessity of defending the church, and then ordered the members to resume the debate, and promised them freedom of speech. The promise was meant only as a snare. The man- ner in which the king had come to the sitting, in open contempt of usage and even of decorum, plainly showed that his intention was to intimidate. But, by pretend- ing to guarantee the privilege of freely speaking, he hoped to do away the impression which his abrupt coming had made, and delude the speakers into a dis- closure of their real sentiments. There were some, perhaps, who confided in his word ; there were others HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. 87 who, doubtless, were aware that no reliance was to be placed on it, but who, nevertheless, thought they were called upon to maintain, at all hazards, what they deemed to be the cause of religion and truth. Of the latter class were Anne du Bourg and Louis du Faur. Du Faur admitted that troubles arose in the state from the difference of religions, but he contended that it ought to be inquired who was really the author of those troubles ; and with a manifest allusion to the king, he added, that if this were done, the same reply might perhaps be made as was given on a similar oc- casion by the prophet Elijah to Ahab, " I have not troubled Israel, but thou and thy father's house, in that ye have forsaken the commandments of the Lord, and thou hast followed Baalim." The speech of du Bourg, though it seemed to be less directly personal to the monarch, was as well cal- culated as that of du Faur to excite angry feelings in Henry, and in many of the hearers, on whose vices it made a rude attack. There were men, he said, whose blasphemies, adulteries, horrible debaucheries, and repeated perjuries, crimes worthy of the worst death, were not merely overlooked, but shamefully en- couraged, while every day new punishments were invented for men who were irreproachable. " For of what crime can they be accused ?" exclaimed he. " Can they be charged with high treason, they who never mention the sovereign but in the prayers w r hich they offer up for him ? Who can say that they violate the laws of the state, endeavour to shake the fidelity of the towns, or incite the provinces to revolt ? With all the pains that have been taken, not even with witnesses picked out for the purpose, has it been pos- sible to convict them of having so much as thought of these things. No ! All their fault and misfortune is that, by means of the light of the Holy Scriptures, they have discovered and revealed the shameless tur- 88 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. pitude of the Papal power, and have demanded a salutary reformation. This is their sedition." When all the members had delivered their opinions, some of which were favourable to mild measures, the king called for the register, in which were inscribed the opinions of those who had spoken before his arri- val, and also on a previous day. He then addressed to the assembly another speech of censure and menace, and ended by ordering the arrest of du Bourg and du Faur, who were present, and likewise of six absent members. The two former were conveyed to the Bas- tile, where du Bourg, and probably du Faur also, were shut up in a cage. Three of the others escaped ; the rest were sent to other places of confinement. This arbitrary act was the last which Henry had the power of committing. On that day fortnight, at a tournament, he was mortally wounded by a splinter from the lance of the count de Montgomery. The scene of the tournament was near the Bastile ; and it is said that as the wounded monarch was carried "past the prison, his conscience smote him, and he more than once expressed his fears that he had behaved unjustly to men who were innocent. The cardinal of Lorraine, who was with him, is also said to have as- sured him, that such an idea could have been inspired only by the arch-fiend, and admonished him to reject it, and adhere firmly to his faith. This story, how- ever, has no other foundation than popular report. The reign of Francis II. opened under no favour- able auspices for the protestants. The minor king was wholly under the influence of the Guises, and of his mother Catherine of Medicis, all of whom had vowed a deadly hostility to them. The persecution was accor- dingly resumed with an increase of vigour. The trial of the members of the parliament was pushed on ; but it was against du Bourg that the hatred of the court was peculiarly directed the sweeping crimination, HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 89 which was contained in his speech before the deceased Henry, had wounded many great personages too deeply to be forgiven. Before the death of Henry, a commission had been appointed, which had interrogated du Bourg on the sub- ject of his religious tenets. He having candidly avowed them, they were pronounced heretical by the bishop of Paris, and he was delivered over to the secular autho- rity. Du Bourg appealed to the Archbishop of Sens, and to the parliament, but without effect. The trial was proceeded with, and, while it was pending, an event occurred, which contributed to render his enemies still more inveterate. One of his judges was a counsellor named Minard, a man of profligate life, who had given violent advice to the late king. Du Bourg, therefore, repeatedly challenged him as incompetent to sit upon the trial, and, on Minard refusing to withdraw, the prisoner is said to have exclaimed, " God will know how to compel thee !" It unfortunately happened that, returning one evening to his home from the trial, Mi- nard was assassinated by a pistol being fired at him. Du Bourg was suspected, and not without an appear- ance of reason, of being implicated in the murder, and this hastened his fate. There is no ground whatever to believe that he was concerned in the foul deed ; but it must be owned, that such prophecies as he ventured upon are dangerous, because they have a tendency to bring about their own fulfilment. It is not improbable, that the act was suggested to the mind of some fana- tical Protestant by the words of the prisoner. It was in vain that the Elector Palatine wrote to the French monarch, to entreat him to spare the life of du Bourg, and that numerous eminent persons, even Ca- tholics, solicited to the same effect. Neither their intercession, nor his acknowledged integrity and pure morals, availed to save him. He was condemned to be hanged, and his body burnt, at the Place de Greve. 90 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. lie died at the age of thirty-eight, w r ith a calm heroism, and Christian spirit of forgiveness, which excited gene- ral admiration. His death, far from being beneficial to the Catholic cause, was exceedingly injurious to it. The Protestants regarded him as a martyr, gloried in him as an honour to their party and faith, and were not slow in taking a heavy vengeance for his untimely doom. The blood of du Bourg seems to have deadened the fire of persecution, as far as related to the other parlia- mentary prisoners. Some were subjected to little more than nominal punishments; and even duFaur,the most obnoxious of them, was only condemned to pay a fine, ask pardon, and be suspended from his judicial func- tions for five years. But, comparatively light as this sentence was, du Faur refused to acquiesce in it ; he boldly protested against it, and after a hard struggle, he was fortunate enough to obtain its revocation, and to be re -established in his magisterial capacity. Nor does it appear that this A 7 ictory was purchased by any sacrifice of principle. Among those who, during the new crusade against Protestants, had to lament the loss of liberty, was Fran- cis de Vendome, Vidame of Chartres, allied to the princes of the blood and the potent house of -Montmo- renci. Vendome had served in Italy, as a volunteer, under the Duke of Aumale, and subsequently held a command there under the Duke of Guise, after which he was appointed governor of Calais. Closely con- nected with the house of Montmorenci, he was irritated beyond measure by the dismissal of the constable, and cherished a deadly animosity against the Guises, who were the authors of that measure. It is not wonderful that, under the influence of these feelings, he should make common cause with the Prince of Conde and the King of Navarre, who were preparing for resistance to the court. Vendome took an active part in rousing the Protestants to arms in various parts of the kingdom. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 91 But some of his letters, to the Prince of Conde, having been found upon la Sague, an emissary of the Protest- ant party, he was arrested and sent to the Bastile. There he was treated with extreme rigour, and was refused permission to see his wife, though she offered to become a prisoner with him. The letters were in appearance merely complimentary, but the dread of the torture induced la Sague to disclose that important secrets were written with sympathetic ink on the cover that contained them. The death of Francis II. and the pretended reconcilement of the hostile parties on the accession of Charles IX., would have saved Yen- dome from the scaffold, but he did not live to recover his freedom. Worn out by a life of dissipation, he died in his thirty-eighth year, at the Tournelles, to which prison he had been removed from the Bastile. The decease of Yendome took place in 1560, and, for several years, with the exception of the Duke of Lunebourg, who was imprisoned for a quarrel with the Duke of Guise, no prisoner, at least none whose fate history has thought worthy of recording, appears to have found an abode within the walls of the Bastile. After the horrible massacre of St. Bartholomew, there was a moment when the fortress seemed about to receive a princely captive. The King of Navarre (afterwards Henry IY,) had yielded to the threats of the royal murderer, and had changed his religion ; but the Prince of Conde was made of sterner stuff. He resisted so firmly all attempts to induce him to apostatise, that Charles IX. ordered him to be brought before him, and, in a furious tone, addressed to him three ominous w r ords ; " The mass, death, or the Bas- tile." Conde held out a little longer, but he yielded when he found that du Rosier, a famous Protestant minister, had been converted to the Catholic faith. It was not till towards the close of the reign of Charles IX. that the Bastile was again tenanted. That u 92 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. monarch was then sinking rapidly into the grave, under the pressure of bodily disease, and the perpetual stings of his conscience. Haunted by appalling dreams, and by direful spectres and dismal sounds, which his fancy incessantly conjured up, he had fallen into a state which scarcely the remembrance of his crimes can pre- vent us from pitying. It was at this period that the party was formed w r hich adopted the appellations of Politicians and Malcontents. The first of these names was chosen to show that the persons assuming it were not actuated, like the Protestants, by religious motives. The oppressive weight of the taxes, the insolent licentiousness of the soldiery, and the cruelty and flagrant incapacity of those who managed the public affairs, were their grounds of complaint. At the head of this party, which soon became consider- able, were William de Montmorenci and his nephew, the Viscount de Turenne. Though this party con- sisted of Catholics, yet as among the objects which it sought to obtain there were many which the Pro- testants no less eagerly desired, it was not long before a coalition was formed between them. To give greater weight and consistence to the party, it was thought advisable to provide for it a chief of a more elevated rank than Montmorenci and Turenne. The Duke of Alengon, one of the king's brothers, who is known in English history as the Duke of Anjou, was the chosen individual. With many defects, and a scanty share of virtues, he had some qualifications for being head of the party. To the Protestants he was recommended by his being far less hostile than the rest of his family, and by his having been an unalter- able friend of the murdered Admiral Coligni. Alengon was irritated by the restraint, little short of imprison- ment, under which he was kept at court, and by the refusal to confer on him the lieutenant-generalship of the kingdom, which had been held by his brother HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. 93 Henry ; and was consequently not averse from join- ing those who could contribute to gratify his ambi- tion. It has, indeed, been supposed, and the suppo- sition is by no means improbable, that the party, or at least the protestant branch of it, would have been willing to raise him to the throne, to the exclusion of Henry, his elder brother. Two of the principal agents in forwarding the de- sign of the malcontents were la Mole, and the count de Coconas, the favourites of the duke of Alen$on. La Mole was an officer, a native of Provence. Among the ladies of the court he -was much admired for his liveliness and companionable qualities. His time was divided, not quite equally, bet ween sinning and hearing mass ; the latter of which he attended three or four times a day. It was said of him by the king, that whoever wished to keep a register of la Mole's debau- cheries, need only reckon up his masses. He was notoriously one of the gallants of Margaret of Yalois, as Coconas was of the duchess of Nevers, the eldest of three sisters, who were called the Graces. Coconas was one of the many Italians who were attracted into France by the hope of receiving patronage from Ca- therine of Medicis. One anecdote will suffice to de- monstrate the fiendishness of his nature. During the massacre of St. Bartholomew, he bought from the populace thirty Huguenot prisoners, that he might gratify himself, by subjecting them to torture both of body and mind. After having, by a promise of saving their lives, induced them to renounce their faith, he put them slowly to death by numerous superficial dag- ger wounds. Of this act he was accustomed to boast. The fate of such a man can excite no pity. All was arranged for the flight of the Duke of Alenon,the King of Navarre, and the Prince of Conde from the court, in order to join the maclontents, and hoist the standard of opposition. Bands of troops were 94 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. hovering round the palace of St. Germain, to protect their retreat. But the plot was disconcerted by the vigilance of Catherine of Medicis, the imprudence of some of the plotters, and the hesitation of the feeble- minded duke. At two in the morning, Catherine hur- ried the dying Charles from St. Germain to Paris in a litter, and placed guards over the duke and the king of Navarre ; Conde, more prudent than his associates, had embraced the first opportunity to escape. There were some ludicrous circumstances connected with the hasty retreat to Paris. " The cardinals of Bour- bon, Lorrain, and Guise," says d'Aubigne, "the chan- cellor Birague, and Morvilliers and Bellievre, were all mounted on Italian coursers, grasping with both hands their saddle-bows, and as thoroughly frightened at their horses as at the enemy." Contrasting strongly with this was the pitiable state of the monarch, with his frame debilitated, and all the weight of the St. Bartholomew on his soul, groaning, and mournfully exclaiming, " At least they might have waited till I was dead ! " Indignant at what he called a foul conspiracy, the king ordered that a rigid inquiry should instantly be commenced. La Mole denied every thing ; Coconas, on the contrary, disclosed all that he knew, and per- haps more. But the fate of the conspirators was sealed by the duke of Alengon, who made an ample confes- sion, without even having attempted to stipulate for the lives of his confederates. Coconas and la Mole, who had been sent to the Bastile, were now brought to trial ; and, by dint of legal sophistry, the project of bringing about the flight of the princes was con- strued into a design against the person of the king. Coconas and la Mole were condemned to be put to the torture and then beheaded. " Poor la Mole !" exclaimed the latter, while he was suffering the first part of his sentence, " is there no way to obtain a par- HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 3 don ? The duke, my master, to whom I owe innu- merable obligations, commanded me on my life to say nothing of what he was about to do. I answered, Yes, sir, if you do nothing against the king/' The unfortunate man, like vast numbers at that period, had faith in magic arts. A waxen image, of which the heart was pierced through with a needle, had been found among his effects. On being questioned whe- ther this was not meant to represent the king, and to be an instrument of tormenting his majesty, he replied that its only purpose was to inspire love in a lady of whom he was deeply enamoured. On the scaffold, before he laid down his head on the block, he significantly said to the by-standers, " You see, sirs, that the little ones are caught, and that the great ones, who have been guilty of the fault, are allowed to escape." La Mole displayed his ruling passion strong in death. His last words, after having prayed to God and the Virgin, were, " commend me to the kind remembrance of the queen of Navarre and the ladies." lie was not forgotten by his lady love ; neither was his companion. Queen Margaret and the duchess of Nevers are said by some to have em- balmed the heads of their admirers, that they might always preserve them for contemplation ; while by others they are asserted to have taken them in a car- riage to a chapel, at the foot of Montmartre, and buried them with their own hands. Two years afterwards, the sentences against la Mole and Coco- nas were annulled by Henry III. The abortive plot in favour of the duke of Alengon proved a source of trouble to two individuals, more eminent in rank, and far more estimable in character, than were la Mole and Coconas. The marshals Fran- cis de Montmorenci, and Arthur de Cosse, the former of whom was the eldest son of the celebrated con- stable, were suspected, or pretended to be so, by the 96 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. queen-mother ; Montmorenci'was also well known to feel that hatred of the Guises which was character- istic of his family. At her suggestion, therefore, they were committed to the Bastile, by Charles IX. This was nearly the last exercise of his authority. He died about a fortnight after, leaving his mother to hold the office of regent, till his successor, the third Henry, could return from Poland. Montmorenci was the husband of Diana, the natu- ral daughter of Henry II., and had been employed on numerous occasions, civil and military, in all of which he had honourably acquitted himself. Of his martial exploits the most prominent was the brave though unsuccessful defence of Terouane. He was liberal, high-minded, learned, firm, and of invariable rectitude, Cosse was still more illustrious in arms than his fel- low prisoner. He had distinguished himself at vari- ous sieges, particularly those of Sens and Metz, and in the battle of St. Denis, and ma,ny other encounters. Nor \vas he a mere enterprising soldier. It is said of him, by contemporary historians, and it is no light praise, " that his head was as good as his arm." The party which had hitherto been known as that of the Politicians now took the name of the Third Party. It received a large increase, by the junction of Catholics, whose indignation was excited by the constraint put upon the difke of Alen9on and the king of Navarre, at Yincennes, and the close imprisonment of two such eminent men as de Montmorenci and de Cosse. Conde, too, was busy in Germany, stirring up the Protestant princes to succour his friends, and keeping up a 'continual correspondence with the French Calvinists. On his taking possession of the throne, Henry set at liberty the king of Navarre and the duke of Alen - 9 on. The marshals, however, were still retained in confinement. Diana, the wife of Montmorenci, had HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 97 adopted a singular mode of moving in her husband's behalf the feelings of the monarch. Dressed in deep mourning, and followed by all her female attendants in the same garb, she met Henry as he was passing through the street, fell at his feet, and entreated him to take compassion on her husband, whose health was declining in a prison, into which he had been thrown without being convicted, or so much as accused, of any crime. She likewise forcibly urged that, even if his majesty supposed him to be guilty, he ought to grant him a fair trial. The king seemed to be affected by her appeal, which was backed by some of the nobles who were present ; and he promised to inquire into the business with as little delay as possible. The promise of the king, however, if sincere at the moment, was soon disregarded. Cosse, who, like his fellow captive, was suffering from bad health, w r as, indeed, allowed to take up his abode in his own house, under a guard ; but the only deliverance which was destined for Montmorenci was deliverance from all the troubles of this world. It appears, in fact, that his life would not have been safe for a moment, but for the salutary fear that his death would drive into open hostility his brother Damville, who held the go- vernment of Languedoc. A report having been spread that Damville w r as dead, the king resolved to have the marshal strangled in prison, and, as a preliminary step, it was industriously given out that he w r as subject to apoplectic attacks. This barbarous and cowardly scheme would have been carried into effect, had not an obstacle occurred. Giles de Souvre, who had been mistakenly selected to perform the- assassin's part, chanced to be a more honest man than his royal mas- ter, and he purposely interposed so many delays, that time was afforded to ascertain the falsehood of the report which had announced the death of Damville. It was neither to the clemency nor the justice of H 98 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. his sovereign that Montmorenci was ultimately in- debted for the recovery of his freedom. Endangered by the betrayal of a plot into which he had entered against his brother, Alengon mustered up courage enough to run away. His flight took place on the 16th of September, 1575. As soon as he was in safety at Dreux, he issued a manifesto, not unartfully contrived, to gain partisans in various quarters. Re-- form in every department was the tempting burden of its song. It worked its intended effect ; the Pro- testants were in raptures^ the Third Party was satisfied with it, and he speedily found himsalf in a situation to sat the court at defiance. William, one of the brothers of Montmorenci, whom wo have seen one of the original chiefs of the Politi- cians, was now about to enter the French territory at the head of a division of troops, designed to herald the way to the army which the prince of Conde had suc- ceeded in obtaining from the Elector Palatine. In the first outbreak of her anger, on hearing this news, the queen mother sent him word, that if he dared to ad- vance, she would despatch to him the heads of the two marshals. His reply was, " Should the queen do as she threatens, there is nothing of hers in France on which I will not leave the marks of my revenge/' Menace having failed, the wily Catherine resorted to an opposite mode of proceeding. Aware that the liberation of the two marshals would be imperatively demanded by their armed friends, and that the king was too weak to refuse it, she determined to try whether she could not secure their gratitude, by appearing to have the merit of voluntarily releasing them. They were accordingly restored to liberty. By a declaration, un- der the royal seal, Montmorenci was pronounced to be " absolutely innocent of the crime which had been laid to his charge." When a similar exculpatory document was offered ta Cosse by the king, he chivalrously HISTOIIY OF THE BASTILB, 99 replied, " Excuse me, sire, for declining it ; a Cosse ought to think that no one can believe him to be guilty." Though they could not be ignorant of the motive which had induced Catherine to throw open their prison doors, the marshals acted as if a favour had really been granted to them. Montmorenci had the largest share in bringing about the truce, and the sub- sequent treaty, between the king and the duke of Alen^on ; and the loyalty of Cosse was considered to be so unimpeachable that, in 1578, he received the order of the Holy Ghost. Montmorenci died m 1579 ; Cosse in 1582, The principal favourite of the duke of Alengon, after the death of la Mole and Coconas, was Louis de Cler- mont, better known by the appellation of Bussy d'Am- boise. In profligacy he went beyond his predecessors. He seems to, have been a compound of vices, without a single virtue; unless, indeed, we may give the name of virtue to mere brutal courage. Full of pride and Insolence, eager to involve others in deadly quarrels, a libertine, a professed duellist, and a cold-blooded assas- sin, his being tolerated at the French court, and even admired by many persons, is an unrefutable evidence of the wretched state of morals among the nobility of France. Bravery must have been held in a sort of idolatrous, estimation, when respect for it could induce such a man as Crillon to be the friend of d'Amboise. The first achievement which Bussy is known to have performed stamps his name with infamy. He was en- gaged in a law-suit against the marquis of Renel, one of his relations, to recover from him the marquisate, which Bussy claimed as his. right. The marquis had come to Paris, with the king of Navarre, and was there when the massacre of St. Bartholomew took place. In the midst of the carnage, Bussy sought him out, and stabbed him to the heart. The parliament, soon after, passed a decree, admitting the murderer's claim ; but H 2 100 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. it is consolatory to find that the decree was subse- quently annulled. Having attached himself to the duke of Alen9on, he was entrusted with the government of the castle of Angers, and he soon made himself universally hated, by his extortion and tyranny. When he visited the court with his master, his arrogance and audacity rose to such a height, that the king's favourites, whom he had often insulted, at length formed a scheme to assassinate him. The attack was made at night, and with superior numbers ; but it was foiled by the skill and resolution of Bussy and his followers. The monarch himself was not safe from the con- temptuous sarcasms of Bussy. In their dress, Henry and his minions carried to the most extravagant length the costly and absurd fashions of that period. Bussy one day attended his patron to court. He himself was simply dressed, but he was followed by six pages, clad in cloth of gold, and tricked out in the most approved style of finery. That the point of this silent satire might not be lost, he insultingly proclaimed aloud, that " the time was come when ragamuffins would make the most show!" The king was so irritated by this language, that, for a while, the duke was obliged to forbid Bussy from appearing in his train. About the same time, Bussy gave fresh cause of offence to the king. Ever seeking an opportunity to indulge his passion for duelling, he had wantonly quar- relled with a gentleman named St. Phal. Looking at some embroidery, St. Phal remarked that the letter X was worked on it ; Bussy, from sheer contradiction, asserted that the letter was a Y. A duel of six against six in consequence took place, and Bussy was slightly wounded. As, however, Bussy sent his antagonist a se- cond challenge, and expressed a stubborn determination to follow up the quarrel to the last extremity, the king interposed to put an end to it. Bussy reluctantly con- HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 101 sented to meet St. Phal, in the king's presence, for the purpose of reconcilement, and when, with that intent, he went to the Louvre, he was accompanied into the palace by a band of two hundred determined partisans. The anger of the king was excited by this irruption of bravoes, but for the present he re- strained it. In one of those fits of suspecting his brother, with which Henry was occasionally seized, he went by night to put him under arrest, and, at the same time, he sent Bussy to the Bastile. On the following morn - ing, a council was held, at which, prompted by the queen mother, the ministers declared that the step which the king had taken was impolitic, and advised him to be reconciled with the duke. Henry consented. The only stipulation which he made was, that Bussy, on being liberated, should be reconciled to Caylus, the king's favourite, with whom he was at enmity. Bussy complied, and, in complying, contrived to throw ridicule on the weak monarch. " Sire," said he, " if you wish me to kiss him, I am quite ready to do it ;" then, suiting the action to the word, he embraced Caylus in such a thoroughly farcical style, that the spectators were unable to repress their laughter. It was not long before the libertinism of Bussy sup- plied Henry with the means of destroying him. It is probable that, in his amours, the pleasure of betraying the women who confided in him formed one of the greatest inducements to pursue them a base feeling which is still prevalent. In a letter to the duke of Anjou, he boasted that he had been spreading his nets for the Great Huntsman's beast, and that he held her fast in them. The Great Huntsman was the count de Montsoreau, who held that office ; the beast, as she was politely called, was the count's wife, whom the profligate writer had seduced. This letter Anjou put into the king's hands, as a good jest. Henry kept it, 102 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. and communicated it to the count, whom he urged to revenge himself on the offender. Montsoreau was not backward to follow the king's advice. He hurried home, and compelled his wife to write to Bvtssy, to make an assignation with him. Bussy was true to the appointment. Instead, however, of meeting the countess, he was attacked by Montsoreau and several men, 'all of whom wore coats of mail. In spite of the odds against him, he fought for some time with deter- mined spirit; but, finding that he must eventually be overpowered, he tried to escape through the window, and was slain by a stab in the back, " The whole province," says de Thou, " was delighted at his fall, and even the duke of Anjou was not very sorry to be rid of a man who began to be a burthen to him." CHAPTER IV. Reign of Henry III. continued Conspiracy of Sal cede Francis de Rosi&res Peter de Belloy Francis le Breton Bernard Palissy Daring plots of the League Henry III. expelled from Paris The Bastile surrenders to Guise Bussi le Clerc ap- pointed governor Dam ours James de la Guesle Reign of Henry IV. Members of the parliament arrested President de Harlay Potier de Blancmesnil The family of Seguier Speeches of Henry IV. Louis Seguier James Gillot Outrage committed by the Council of Sixteen It is punished by the duke ofMayenne Henry IV. enters Paris Surrender of the Bastile DuBourg Treasure deposited in the Bastile by Henry. IT was a conspiracy against the duke of Anjou, and the king of France, that brought the next prisoner of importance to the Bastile. This conspiracy originated with the Guises, was promoted by that great artisan of mischief Philip the Second of Spain, and contained the seminal principle of the subsequent war, which is known as the war of the League. The agent employed in carrying it on was Nicholas Salcede, a man of daring HISTORY OF TIIE BASTILE. 103 and profligate character, whose father, a Spanish gen- tleman, the governor of Vic, in Lorraine, haying of- fended the Guises, was slain, though he was a catholic, in the massacre of St. Bartholomew. By dint, how- ever, of heaping favours and attentions on him, the Guises, to whom, indeed, he was distantly related, soon induced Salcede to forget the murder of his parent. By a crowning act of kindness, they, in some measure, ac- quired a right to his services. Counterfeiting the king's coin, as well asthat of foreign states, was a crime which, for a long series of years, was of common occurrence in France among persons of rank. The punishment of throwing them into boiling oil was insufficient to deter them ; for it was so often evaded that it ceased to create terror. Salcede had carried the practice of coining to such an extent as to be able to purchase an estate. Being detected, he was summoned to take his trial at Rouen, and, as he prudently refused to appear, sentence of death W 7 tis passed upon him as a contumacious cri- minal. But the duke of Lorraine interceded for him, and his pardon was granted. This, and the prospect of honours and rewards, linked him firmly to the Guises. The duke of Anjou was, at this period, struggling to acquire the sovereignty of the Netherlands, and under his banner were arrayed an immense number of the French nobles. To the members of the house of Lor- raine he was inveterately hostile; for he looked upon them as his personal enemies, and as having been au- thors of the many mortifications which he had under- gone. To prevent him from entering France, for the purpose of succouring his brother Henry, was, there- lore, an object of primary importance; as, if that were not attained, their project of dethroning the king, or at least becoming viceroys over him, could scarcely hope for success. Morality was, in those days, at so low an ebb among the great, that it is probable the Guises would have felt but few scruples in accomplishing their 104 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. purpose by the death of the duke ; though, avowedly, their sole aim was to shut him out of France, by closing against him the northern frontier and the ports of Brittany. The daring spirit and desperate situation of Salcede for he was deeply involved in debt pointed him out to the Guises as a fit instrument. The duke of Guise tempted him by a solemn assurance, that the king of Spain would reward him with rank and occupation proportioned to the magnitude of his services ; and he backed his arguments and promises by descanting on the benefit which the catholic religion would derive from ruining the duke of Anjou. His eloquence prevailed, and Salcede unreluctantly devoted himself to the furtherance of the treasonable scheme. It was arranged, that the Guises should secretly fur- nish funds for raising a regiment, to be commanded by Salcede, and that he should then proceed to the duke of Anjou, and offer to bring to his banner a chosen body of men, who would engage to remain under it for several months. No doubt was entertained that, as the duke was scantily provided with money, was, in conse- quence, daily deserted by some of his troops, and had no great confidence in the Belgians, he would gladly accept this offer ; and would either intrust the new corps with the keeping of some important fortress, or reserve it as a guard for his own person. In either case, the conspirators could turn the circumstance to account. The seizure of Dunkirk and Cambray were the main points to which Salcede' s attention was to be directed ; but he was also to do his best to shake the fidelity of Anjou' s officers, and, of course, was to act as spy for the Spanish monarch. The prince of Parma, meanwhile, was gradually to approach Calais, the go- vernor of which town, it is said, had promised to be- tray his trust. The sudden loss of Calais would, it was imagined, so terrify Henry, that he would give the HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 105 supreme command of his forces to the duke of Guise ; the French accomplices of the Guises would then rise in arms ; and the plan of subverting the government would be easily executed. As had been expected, the proposal of Salcede was listened to with much pleasure by the duke of An- jou, who treated him as a valuable friend. The duke was as yet ignorant that the conspirator had been reconciled to the Cruises. Nor was he aware that, in his way to Bruges, Salcede had visited the enemy's camp, had a conference with the prince of Parma, the viceroy, and been accompanied to Bruges by two of the prince's agents. But the sharp-sighted prince of Orange was not disposed to grant his confidence to the new- comer so readily as the duke; he disliked and suspected him, both as being in his origin a Spaniard, and as having been found guilty of an infamous offence. The inquiries of the prince of Orange elicited sufficient evi- dence to justify his suspicion that Salcede had sinister designs, and he, therefore, advised the duke to arrest him. This advice was followed by Anjou, who had al- ready learned, from another quarter, that his pretended partisan was connected with the Guises. Salcede was accordingly arrested on his coming to the palace. The two agents of the prince of Parma were waiting at the palace gate for their confederate's return ; one of them escaped, the other, Francis Baza by name, was seized and committed to prison. In the course of a few days, Baza put an end to his existence. In the first examination, mysterious hints were all that could be drawn from Salcede ; in the second, he spontaneously disclosed so complicated and gigantic a conspiracy, that his hearers were astounded. That part of it which related to Belgium and the duke of Anjou was the smallest part ; a mere episode in the Guisian Iliad. The conspirators purposed nothing less than to imprison the king of France, exterminate the 106 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. royal family, and subject the kingdom to the domina- tion of Spain. Their means Salcede stated to be im- mense. As implicated in the plot, he named a multi- tude of the most powerful nobles, a majority of the governors of provinces and towns, and even some of the king's ministers and favourites. The provinces of Picardy, Champagne, Burgundy, Brittany, and the Cotentin, were, he said, secured by the plotters ; nor would foreign aid be wanting, as the papal and Pied- montese troops were to enter France on the side of Lyons, while two Spanish armies were to pass the Pyrenees into Beam and Gascony, where the malcon- tents were in readiness to receive them. This deposi- tion, after a lapse of some days, he voluntarily re- peated and enlarged, and he offered to prove it, by being confronted with three persons whom he had before mentioned, and who, he w r as convinced, would confess that he had spoken but the truth. This disclosure was of too much importance to Henry of France to admit of delay in making it known to him. The duke of Anjou accordingly despatched one of his chamberlains to Paris, with the depositions, and a let- ter, in which the Guises were not spared. At first, Henry was startled at the seeming danger ; but his natural dislike of business, and his love of pleasure, soon induced him to take refuge in the idea that the whole was an invention of some one who wished to disturb his quiet, or a stratagem of his brother, to obtain liberal succours. Not so thought his minister Bellievre, in whom he placed great confidence. While the minister perused the paper, the changes in his countenance plainly showed that he thought the plot was real, and the peril from it extreme. It was at length settled, that Bellievre, accompanied by Brulart, one of the secretaries of state, should proceed to Bruges, interrogate Salcede, and require that the criminal should be transferred to Paris. " If," said HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 107 the king, u my brother consents to the transfer, I shall believe that a conspiracy exists." When Bellievre questioned him, Salcede, for the third time, repeated his story. He was now conveyed to France, and placed in the castle of Yincennes ; the duke of Anjou having readily acceded to the wish of his brother. When, however, he was brought before the king in council, he disavowed all that he had pre- viously said. His confession had, he affirmed, been dictated to him by three persons in the duke's service, who compelled him to write it. " Why, then, did you say the same to Bellievre, when those persons were absent?" inquired the king. To this the unblushing prisoner answered, that Bellievre had intimidated him by threats, and that he had always been under the in- fluence of terror while he was in the ducal palace. Bel- lievre was a man remarkable for patience and polite- ness, but he was so provoked by this charge, that he could not forbear from exclaiming, " You are an im- pudent slanderer." At the close of the examination, Salcede was removed to the Bastile. There he was again examined, and there he persisted in his disavowal. It now became a question what should be done with Salcede. The president de Thou advised that he should be retained in prison. He urged that, if the conspiracy were real, his detention would intimidate his accom- plices, and afford the means of convicting them in case of need ; while, on the other hand, if the conspiracy were only a calumny, invented by turbulent and ill- disposed persons, the existence of the criminal might serve to justify the innocence of those whom he had accused. His son, the celebrated historian, tells us, that the president had an additional motive in thus ad- vising ; he wished not merely to hold the conspirators in check, by preserving the evidence of their guilt, but, at the same time, to keep before the king's eyes a me- mento of the danger to which he exposed himself by 108 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. his unbridled licentiousness, and his oppressive mis- government. This prudent counsel was, however, strenuously opposed. It was contended that, in whatever light the question was viewed, the culprit ought to die. Sup- posing the plot to be a reality, his death would terrify his associates ; his being suffered to live might drive them to rebellion through despair. If, on the contrary, his tale were false, death ought .to punish the calumny; and the more so because, if impunity were granted to him, resentment, at being unjustly suspected, might provoke innocent persons to become really criminal. The motive which prompted many to insist on the latter mode of proceeding cannot be mistaken ; they were pleading for their own lives, or the lives of their friends. The weakness of their reasoning is so evident as to need no exposure. It was not by stifling inquiry that the monarch could hope to neutralize or convert his enemies. History does, indeed, record instances where it was wise as well as generous to throw the veil of oblivion over an incipient plot, and save the plotters from the necessity of becoming open rebels ; but this was not a case of the kind. The plotters against Henry were irreclaimable, and, ascribing his conduct to fear and not to mildness, would only be encou- raged to persist in their destructive projects. When justice has pronounced upon the criminal, then is the time for a sovereign to show mercy ; and if he have a humane heart, he will set ho other bounds to his cle- mency than those which are imperatively prescribed by the safety of the state. But he who shrinks from pro- secuting a traitor offers a premium for the growth of treason. Henry, nevertheless, decided otherwise. He adopted the opinion of those who were for sending Salcede to the scaffold. In thus following their insidious advice, he was not influenced by principle or mistaken policy ; HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 109 he was mainly actuated by a childish impatience, an eagerness to get rid of a disagreeable subject, which interrupted his contemptible pleasures. Like the stu- pid bird, which hopes to baffle its pursuers by hiding its head, he seems to have thought that if danger were out of sight it could not reach him. He had, however, another and an equally mean reason for his decision ; the wish to mortify de Thou. The president had re- cently offended him by a virtuous and truly loyal act. Dreading the effect which would be produced by the king's incessant edicts to extort money, he implored him to pause, lest poverty and despair should drive the people to resistance. Instead of profiting by this pa- triotic warning, Henry turned round to his train of flatterers, and sneeringly exclaimed, " The poor man is in a state of dotage !" He was righteously punished for his scorn of honest and prudent counsel. Ere many years had gone by, he was taught to lamentwith tears the loss of this doting magistrate, and to confess that, had de Thou lived, Paris would never have revolted. Salcede was brought to trial. Everything that could throw light on the fact of the conspiracy was studiously suppressed ; there was no search for evidence relative to it, no examination and confronting of the persons who had been charged by the prisoner. The sole ob- ject was to obtain a sentence of death against the man whose existence might prove fatal to the conspirators. That object was accomplished on the 25th of October, 1582. Salcede was pronounced guilty of high treason, and was condemned to be torn into quarters by four horses ; his quarters were to be placed on gibbets, at the principal gates of Paris, and his head was to be sent to Antwerp, to be exposed in a similar manner. Im mediately previous to his execution, he was likewise to be put to the torture ; this was a supererogatory act of cruelty, for, even if we admit the possibility of justi- fying the use of torture, its infliction in this instance 110 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. could answer no useful purpose. It was decreed, also, by his judges, that " his confessions, the private letters found on him, and the declarations which he had made since the commencement of Ms trial, should be burnt to ashes ; as having been malignantly and calumni- ously invented, to prejudice the honour of various princes, nobles, and other persons." Here is the key to the whole proceedings v Light dies before thy uncreatifig word ! Thy hand, great anarch, lets the curtain fall, And universal darkness buries all." The king was sufficiently devoid of feeling to witness, behind a curtain, the torturing of the prisoner, and to go to the Town Hall, to see executed the ferocious and sickening sentence, which condemned a fellow being to be torn to pieces by horses. But, even in that corrupt and sami-barbarous age, there were not wanting per- sons who passed a severe censure on Henry, for con- duct which was disgraceful to him, as a king and a man. When the torture was-applied, Salcede again veered about ; he re-asserted the whole of what he had ori- ginally stated, with respect to the conspiracy. This blow was, however, adroitly parried by those whom it might otherwise have injured. As he was passing up a dark staircase, after having been tortured, he was joined by a priest, of the order of Jesuits, who exhorted him to retract his confession once more. This ghostly adviser no doubt worked powerfully on his hopes and fears, with regard to another world, and he succeeded in prevailing on him to make a new retractation. As nothing was to be gained by varying in his story, he persisted in this retractation, and, at the place of ex- ecution, he loudly extolled the virtues, and proclaimed the innocence^ of his patrons, the Guises. He lived a villain, and he died a self-convicted liar. In the folio wing year, 1583, there occurred another, but comparatively a trivial, illustration of the ambitious HISTORY OF THE BA8TILE. Ill views of the Guises, and the vacillation and timidity of the king. Francis de Rosieres, a native of Toul, born in 1534, was a man of prepossessing manners, and of considerable erudition and eloquence. He rose to be archdeacon of Toul, and through the patronage of car- dinal de Guise, obtained several benefices, and the of- fice of counsellor to the duke of Lorraine. To prove his gratitude to his benefactors, and probably at their instigation, he composed and published a voluminous work, on " the genealogy of the dukes of Lorraine and Bar." Its evident purpose was to degrade the reigning family, and exalt that of the Guises. Not satisfied with tracing back in a direct line to Charlemagne the descent of the house of Lorraine, he carried it further through the starless night of ages, up to a son of Clo^ dion, from whom Merovasus was pretended to have usurped the crown. The inference was easy, that the monarchs of the Capetian race were intruders, and that the Guises alone had a legitimate right to the throne. From thence to the assertion of the right was but a single step, on the propriety of which it was for pnir- dence to decide, the question of justice being already settled. This doctrine was, in fact, openly taught in other works, which the Guises, however, affected to disavo w, and to regard as fabrications of the protestants, for the purpose of throwing suspicion on their loyalty. In addition to his laboured genealogy of his patrons, Rosieres had been guilty of various misrepresentations, and of a personal attack upon Henry ; and he had sup- ported his fabric of falsehood by documents which were manifestly spurious, and by altering others, so as to suit them to his purpose. The other libels Henry had repelled only by employing Ponsde Thyard, a man of varied talents, to write an elaborate answer : against this he resolved to proceed in a different manner ; he treated it as a state crime. He who had swallowed the camel of last year's conspiracy, now strained at this. 112 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. gnat of a volume. And here again his infirmity of purpose betrayed him to the scorn of his enemies. Commencing vigorously, he despatched Brulart to Toul, to interrogate Rosieres ; after which the arch- deacon was conveyed to Paris, and housed in the Bas- tile. Thus far, Henry seemed to have meditated a tragedy ; hut, in its further progress, the drama dwin- dled down to a miserable farce. The plan which he adopted had the demerit of alike disclosing an inclina- tion to mortify the Guises, and a dread of offending them. It was the latter feeling which prompted him to prohibit the parliament from intervening in the cause, because that body would probably pass a sen- tence derogatory to the house of Lorraine ; it was the former feeling which induced him to persevere in seeking to gain the shadow of a triumph. He could not see that any thing short of complete victory w r as in reality a defeat. Pursuing the absurd system which he had framed for himself, Henry now convoked, at the Louvre, a numerous council of nobles and eminent men ; all the heads of the Lorraine family were present. Rosieres was brought from the Bastile, and, on his knees con- fessed his fault, owned that he deserved rigorous pun- ishment, and sued for pardon. The keeper of the seals then gravely lectured him on the enormity of his crime, and declared him to be guilty of high treason. It was next the turn of the queen-mother to play her part; and,accordingly,as had previously been arranged, she stepped forward, and entreated her son to forgive the offender, for the sake of the duke of Lorraine. The king graciously consented, and delivered Rosieres into the hands of the duke. This ludicrous scene was terminated by a decree, that the book should be torn to pieces before the author's face, but that no public record should be made of these things, " lest reproach should fall on the illustrious house of Lor- HISTORY OP THE B ASTILE. 113 raine." Anquetil pithily remarks, that the crime ought either to have been left unnoticed, or been more severely chastised. Rosieres did not pass the whole of his remaining days in tranquillity. He involved himself in a quarrel with his bishop, and was under the necessity of repair- ing to Rome, to plead his own cause. How he sped in the holy city is doubtful ; one writer affirms that he was censured,- another maintains that he was absolved.. He died in 1607. Besides the Genealogy, he wrote various works, which are as dead as their author. Writers who ventured to thwart the Guises in their treasonable designs did not meet with so much lenity from them as was shown to Rosieres by the feeble- minded Henry. No merit whatever could counterba- lance the sin of opposing them. This was experienced by Peter de Belloy, an eminent jurisconsult, who was born at Montauban, about 1540, and became public professor and counsellor at Toulouse. Belloy was a zealous Catholic, and his three elder brothers had fallen in combatting against the Protestants. But these claims to consideration were not sufficient to prevent him from being persecuted by the house of Lorraine. Asserting the King of Navarre's right to succeed to the reigning monarch, and exposing the machinations and hollow pretexts of the Guises, was the crime of which Belloy was guilty. The works which drew on him the vengeance of the Guisian faction were the " Catholic Apology ;" " A Refutation of the Bull of Pope Pius Y . against the Navarrese sovereign ;" and v " An Examination of the Discourse published against the Royal House of France." In these works, which were given to the press in 1585 and 1586. he con- tended, that the Protestantism of Henry of Navarro did not deprive him of his title to the crown ; that the king could not disinherit his legitimate heir ; that tho pope had no authority to sit in judgment upon the 114 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. question of the succession ; and that the seeming ardour of the Guises, in behalf of Catholicism, was nothing more than a mask to cover their designs upon the throne. His language was strictly decorous, his candour and impartiality were evident, but his facts and arguments were unforgivable. Slander was the weapon which his enemies began by using against Belloy. To his " Catholic Apology" a reply was published by a Jesuit, who assumed the designation of Francisculus Romulus, but who is believed to have been the celebrated Bellarmin. To give weight to his reasonings, the Jesuit boldly asserted that his opponent, who falsely took the name of Catholic, was at least a heretic, if not an atheist. This calumny fell harmless upon the object at which it was aimed. It was not so with calumny from a higher quarter. The Guises were not satisfied with defaming him ; they determined to make him feel their power more effectually. An unfortunate ma- niac, le Breton by name, of whom I shall have next occasion to speak, had written a seditious libel. This libel the Guises ascribed to Belloy. Failing to effect their purpose by this accusation, they painted him in the darkest colours to the king, as a dangerous mis- chief-maker and heretic, and the weak monach was at last prevailed upon to commit him to the prison of the Conciergerie. After Henry had assassinated the Duke of Guise, the Council of Sixteen removed Belloy to the Bastile, where he remained in close confinement for nearly four years. He at length found means to escape, and he sought refuge at St. Denis, which was garrisoned by the troops of Henry IV. He was introduced to Henry, by Yic, the governor ; and the king rewarded his talents and fidelity, by appointing him advocate- general to the parliament of Toulouse. His subse- quent life appears to have been passed in quiet. The HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 115 date of his death is not known, but in 1612 he was still living. He wrote various works, besides those which have already been mentioned : among them are a " Dissertation on the Origin and Institution of various Orders of Chivalry ;" and an Exposition of the Seventy Weeks of Daniel/' Francis le Breton, to whom I have already alluded, affords a striking proof that, when Henry the third forbore to punish, it was not clemency, but fear, in- dolence, or caprice, that withheld his hand. Le Bre- ton was a barrister of Poitiers, who had acquired con- siderable reputation by his forensic talents. It speaks strongly in favour of his honesty and the kindness of his nature, that he espoused so warmly the part of those for whom he pleaded, as entirely to identify their interest with his own. A mere mercenary counsel, indifferent to the justice or injustice of his client's claim, could have had no such feelings. Unfortunately, le Breton was of a family in which symptoms of in- sanity had often appeared, and the dreadful malady was lurking in his brain. The loss of a cause, in which he was engaged for a poor individual, at once roused the latent disease into action. He burst into vehement invectives against the judges, and presented a violent memorial against them to a higher tribunal. The superior judges, who saw how he was affected, gave him a gentle rebuke, and dismissed the com- plaint. Irritated by this, he journeyed to Paris, to v make an appeal to the king. Having fastened his memorial on the end of a stick, he went to the Louvre, where the guards, who rightly concluded that he was bereft of his senses, endeavoured to drive him away. Le Breton, however, was immovable, and he exclaimed so loudly and incessantly, " The cause of the poor is abandoned, and God will take vengeance for it," that the noise reached the king's ear, and he ordered him to be admitted. Henry listened to his story, and then i2 116 HISTORY OF THE BASTJLE. commanded him to return to his own country, and to keep silence in public. To have sent him to the hos- pital would have been a more praiseworthy act. Instead of proceeding to Poitiers, the maniac wan- dered through the provinces, calling on the people to recover their liberty, and sending inflammatory writ- ings to the towns which were too distant for him to visit. At last he reached Bordeaux, and demanded an interview with the Duke of Mayenne. It was granted ; and the unfortunate lunatic employed the whole of it in conjuring the duke to defend the cause of the poor. Mayenne, who felt that le Breton's harangues to the multitude, mad as he was, might be serviceable to the Guises, gave him money, and probably hopes, and then desired him to withdraw. Encouraged by this gracious reception, le Breton made the best of his way to Paris, where he sat down to compose a furious invective against the king, whom, with more truth than prudence or decorum, he styled a debauched tyrant, and the magistrates, whom he stigmatised as men steeped in wickedness, who, to please that tyrant, and gratify men in power, betrayed the cause of the poor. Two printers were found who had sufficient boldness to risk the printing of this libel. But, just as it was about to appear, the whole impression was seized, and the author was lodged in the Bastile. The printers were sentenced to be Whipped, with their necks in a halter, and then to be banished from the kingdom. The libel was burnt by the public executioner. Believing, or affecting to believe, that the prisoner was less a madman than an instrument of the mal- contents, Henry endeavoured, by secret interroga- tions, to obtain a confession that such was the fact. The attempt failed, and the prisoner was then given up to the parliament for trial. It was his misfortune that he was not the agent of some formidable conspi- HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 117 rator ; he would in that case have had a fair chance of escaping. When le Breton was brought before the parlia- ment, his malady manifested itself in a more extrava- gant manner than ever. He treated the court witli unbounded contempt, spoke to the members with his hat on, and would answer no questions. As he thus suffered judgment to go by default, sentence of death was passed upon him, as guilty of having excited the. people to revolt ; but his equitable and compassionate - judges also decreed, that " a deputation should wait upon the king, to represent that the culprit laboured under mental alienation, and to entreat that his ma- jesty would pardon a crime which was rather the effect of disease than of free will/' But neither the prayer of the parliament, nor the supplications of le Breton's mother, who brought irre- fragable evidence of his madness, had any effect upon the heartless Henry. Here was a victim whom he could safely sacrifice, and he would not forego the pleasure. Yet even here his mental cowardice peeped out. Instead of the involuntary offender being con- veyed to the Greve, which was the usual place of ex- ecution, he was hanged in the palace court. It seems to have been supposed, and perhaps correctly, that the people could not witness without emotion the death of a man whose malady and whose fate had been brought upon him by commiseration for their sor- rows, and who perished because he had no friend, while notorious criminals were daily allowed to brave the laws with impunity. Far from acting as an ex- ample to deter others, the' murder of le Breton for, in his deplorable situation it was a murder only served to exasperate the people in a tenfold degree. It was the singular infelicity of Henry never to be right in his treatment of crime ; he was despised when he did not punish, he was hated when he did. 118 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. Political persecution consigned to the Bastile, at this period, and when he was on the verge of the grave from extreme old age, a man who was a bene- factor, and an honour, to his native land. Bernard Palissy was born about the year 1500, in the bishopric of Agen. His parents were so scantily favoured by fortune that they could do little for his education ; but he contrived to acquire a knowledge of reading and writing, and sufficient skill in drawing and land- measuring to gain a livelihood as a draughtsman, a painter of glass and images, and a land surveyor. Geology, natural philosophy, and chemistry, next attracted his attention, and with respect to the two former he was far in advance of his contemporaries. It was about the year 1539, when he had settled at Saintes, after his journeys through the provinces, that a circumstance occurred which gave a colour to all his future life. He chanced to be shown a beauti- ful enamelled porcelain cup, manufactured in Italy. It struck him that, if he could discover the secret of fabricating this ware, he might obtain riches, and likewise serve his country by introducing into it a new art. From that moment he pursued his object with admirable energy and perseverance. Innumer- able experiments failed, his resources wasted away, poverty and almost starvation stared him in the face, yet still, in spite of this, and of the exhortations of some, and the sneers of others, he steadily persisted, At length, after having suffered a mental martyrdom of sixteen years' duration, he succeeded in his efforts, and independence and fame were his reward. For the adornment of their palaces and gardens, the king and all the nobles of France were eager to possess the figures and vases which were produced by Palissy 's taste and skill. Bernard Palissy had too enlarged a mind to devote himself wholly to the heaping up of riches. The toils HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 119 of business he diversified and lightened by liberal studies. He formed a cabinet of natural history at Paris; gave, for several years, a course of lectures on natural history and physics ; and wrote a variety of works, valuable for their facts and reasonings and the new and just views contained in them, and unaffected and pleasing in their style. Paligsy was a Protestant, firmly attached to his reli- gion, and from that attachment arose the only troubles which molested him in the decline of life. When the public exercise of their worship was prohibited, he fathered into a private assembly, a few individuals of is own class, each of whom in his turn expounded the tenets of the Gospel. In 1562, though the duke of Montpensier had given him a safeguard, and his ma- nufactory had been declared a privileged place, the bigoted judges of Saintes destroyed his establishment, and would have destroyed the proprietor also, had not the king interposed, and rescued him from theirhands. The memory of Charles the ninth is branded with eter- nal infamy, but candour requires it to be owned that he was a man of taste and talent ; a lover of literature and the arts. It is melancholy to think upon what he might have been, and what he was. He invited the per- secuted artist to Paris and gave him apartments in the Tuileries. Thus protected, Palissy remained unhurt during the horrible slaughter of St. Bartholomew's day. The protection which Charles the ninth extended to Palissy, the weaker-minded Henry the third wanted courage to continue. When the influence .of the Guises became predominant in Paris, the venerable artist was arrested by the Council of Sixteen, and thrown into the Bastile. There Henry visited him. " My good man," said the king, " if you cannot bring yourself to conform on the point of religion, I shall be compelled to leave you in the clutches of my enemies." Palissy was then nearly ninety years of age, but his spirit was 120 HISTORY OF THE not bowed by the weight of years, or the prospect of death. He firmly replied, " Sire, you have several times said that you pity me ; but I pity you, who have uttered the words ' I am compelled/ This is not speaking like a king. I will teach you the royal language. Neither the Guisarts, nor your whole people, can ever compel me to bend my knee before an image, for 1 know how to die/' The firmness of Palissy was not put to the extreme proof; but, had it been so, there is no reason to believe that his conduct would have belied his words. He was saved from the fiery ordeal by the duke of May- enne, who humanely threw so many obstacles in the way of his trial, that Palissy died a natural death, in the Bastile, about the year 1589, no less respected for his virtues than admired for his talents*. Those enemies of Henry, into whose hands he feared that he should be " compelled " to deliver up Palissy, continued to plot against the monarch with an astonishing degree of audacity, which could be equalled only by the tamenesswith which he endured it. Plans were successively formed by them, to obtain possession of Boulogne; to arrest him on his way from Yincenne% and, subsequently, at the fair of St. Germain; and to make themselves masters of the Bastile, the Arsenal, the Temple, and other posts in Paris, massacre the ministers, judges and courtiers, and depose and im- prison him. Among the bitterest and most active of his enemies was the duchess of Montpensier, sister of the duke of Guise, who constantly wore at her girdle a pair of golden scissors, for the purpose, as she inso- lently said, of giving the monkish tonsure to brother Henry of Yalois, previous to his being sent to a mo- nastery. Henry frustrated these schemes, but had not * I have passed lightly over the life of Palissy, because I shall have occasion to dwell upon it, in another volume of the Family Library. HISTORY OF THE BABTILE* 121 spirit to punish them. The impunity which the cri- minals enjoyed produced its natural effect. The re- sources and the boldness of the conspirators were in- creased ; the memorable day of the barricades ensued ; the monarch was expelled from Paris ; and he entered it no more. As soon as the king had taken flight from the Lou- vre, Guise put garrisons into the Arsenal, and other military positions of Paris, and likewise into Vincennes and the town of Corbeil. The Bastile might still have remained in the power of Henry, and afforded him an easy entrance into his capital, had he not been guilty of an unaccountable act of folly. Colonel Ornano, an officer of established reputation, had offered to pledge his head that, if he were intrusted with the command, he would hold the place to the last extremity ; but Henry preferred leaving it in the hands of Lawrence Testu, of whom it was sarcastically said, that he was more fit to govern a bottle than a fortress. He justi- fied the contempt which was expressed for him, by surrendering the moment that he Deceived a summons from Guise. His prompt submission called forth another sarcasm, by which he was declared to have given up his post, because he had no oranges to fla- vour his ragout of partridges. The government of the Bastile was conferred, by Guise, on Bussi le Clerc, the most active member of the Council of Sixteen, a determined hater of the king and the Protestants, and devoted heart and soul to the Guises. Bussi was originally a fencing-master, but changed his calling, and became an attorney. He was not long without prisoners. Among the first whom he received were Perreuse, late the provost of the mer- chants, who was expelled from his office for being faithful to the king, La Guesle, the attorney-general, and Dam ours, a Protestant minister. Damours was fortunate. Some ferocious wild beasts 122 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. have been known to contract an attachment to helpless animals which were thrown into their dens. Bussi did so with respect to Damours. Instead of tormenting him, and being eager to send him to the flames, a mode of proceeding which might have been expected from a zealous and unenlightened Catholic, he took a singular liking for him. With many oaths, he declared that, " thorough Hugonot as he was, Damours was worth more than all those politicians, the presidents and counsellors, who were nothing but hypocrites ;" and he bestirred himself so vigorously on behalf of his favourite, that he procured his liberation. James de la Guesle was born in 1557, and succeeded his father in the office of attorney-general. After the day of the barricades, he endeavoured to escape in dis- guise from Paris, for the purpose of joining the fugi- tive king ; but he was recognised, and committed to prison. He did not long remain in the Bastile, and, as soon as he was set free, he proceeded to St. Cloud, where Henry was residing. The death of the king, which soon after occurred, afforded the enemies of La Guesle a pretext to throw out insinuations against him ; for it was by him that Clement, the assassin monk, was introduced into the presence of the monarch. His loyalty was, however, too well known to admit of being stained by calumny. After having held office throughout the reign of Henry IV., and enjoyed the full confidence of that sovereign, La Guesle died in 1612. The Bastile was not allowed to remain untenanted by prisoners of distinction. Bussi had soon the gratification of wreaking his hatred upon u the presi- dents and counsellors" whom he had described as being "nothing but hypocrites." The parliament, still faithful to the king, was a serious obstacle in the way of the Leaguers, and the council of Sixteen determined, therefore, to apply an effectual remedy HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 123 to this evil. This remedy was of the same nature as that which, long afterwards, was employed in England, by Oliver Cromwell, and is known by .the name of Pride's Purge. Bussi le Clerc was the colonel Pride on this occasion. On the 16th of January, 1589, while the parliament was about to choose deputies, for a mission to the king, at Blois, Bussi, who had surrounded the hall with troops, suddenly entered, attended by some of his armed followers, and began to read a list of the proscribed members, among whom were the two presidents. On hearing this, the whole of the members simultaneously declared, that they would share the fate of their chiefs. Bussi took them at their word, and they were led away to the Bastile, where they were soon joined by some of their colleagues, who, suspecting what would happen, had not quitted their homes, but whose caution had failed to ensure their safety. All those who were not on Bussi's list were, however, liberated in the course of the same evening, and a part of the others w T ere allowed to return to their homes, on their friends be- coming answerable for them. Having thus got rid of the persons who were obnoxious to them, the Leaguers remodelled the parliament, in such a manner as to render it subservient to their purposes. The most distinguished of the parliamentary mem- bers who were kept in hold were Achille de Harlay, Nicholas Potier de Blancmesnil, Louis Seguier, and James Gillot. The personal and mental courage of Harlay qualified him well for the stormy times in which he lived. To the influence of fear he seems to have been scarcely accessible. To the merit of unchangeable loyalty he added the rarer merit of opposing the rash and oppres- sive edicts of the sovereign His legal knowledge was profound, and his integrity without a stain. He was born in 1536, and he sprung from a family which 124 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. bad distinguished itself, for more than two centuries, on the seat of justice or in the field of battle. At the age of forty-six, he succeeded his father-in-law, Chris- topher deThou, as president of the parliament of Paris. When the success of his partisans, on the day of the Barricades, had rendered the duke of Guise master of the capital, he went, with a train of followers, to the house of Harlay, for the purpose of prevailing on him to convoke the parliament, that the recent measures might obtain something like a sanction. The presi- dent was walking in the garden, and he did not deign to notice his visiter till the duke approached him ; then, raising his voice, he said, " It is a lamentable thing when the servant drives out his master. As to all the rest, my soul is God's, my heart is the king's, and my body is in the hands of the wicked ; let them do as they please with it." Guise still pressing him to assemble the parliament, he sternly replied, "When the majesty of the monarch is violated, the magistrate has no longer any authority." Hoping to intimidate him, some of the duke's followers threatened him with death, but their threats were as unavailing as the request of Guise had been. "I have," replied the undaunted magistrate, " neither head nor life that I value more than the love I owe to God, the service which I owe to the king, and the good which I owe to my country." After an imprisonment of several months, Harlay obtained his liberty, at the price of ten thousand crowns. The moment that he was free he departed from Paris, to join Henry the fourth at Tours, and the monarch appointed him president of the parliament sitting in that city, and composed of Parisian mem- bers, who had succeeded in escaping from the clutches of the Leaguers. In this post, Harlay sustained his high reputation, by the vigour and eloquence with which he refuted the manifestos of Spain and the League, and the bulls of the Roman Pontiff. HISTORY OF THE BASTILB. 125 Peace at length came, and Henry rewarded his ser- vices by the estate of Beaumont, with the title of count. When the first president returned to Paris, all the members of the parliament went out to meet and con- gratulate him. As Harlay advanced in years he did not bate one jot of the spirit which he had manifested at an earlier period. He still unflinchingly supported the rights of the kingdom, and the liberties of the Gal- lican church, and protested against whatever he deemed pernicious to the people or the monarch. The re- establishment of the Jesuits he strongly but vainly opposed. From one of his speeches to Henry the fourth, in 1604, we may judge with what an honest freedom he uttered his sentiments. The parliament having dissented from a measure which the Council had resolved upon, its dissent was construed into dis- obedience. " If to serve well be disobedience," replied the venerable magistrate, " the parliament is in the habit of committing that fault ; and, when a conflict arises between the king's absolute power and the good of his service, it prefers the one to the other, not . from disobedience, but from a desire to do its duty, and to keep its conscience clear." After having held the first presidentship for thirty- four years, Harlay, whose sight and hearing were im- paired, resigned it early in 1616, and he died, on the l^3d of October, of the same year, at the age of eighty. Born at Paris, in 1541, of a family which had given several eminent magistrates to the state, Potier de Blancmesnil attained the rank of president a mortier in 1578. With talents less splendid than those of Harlay, he was not inferior to him in probity and de- voted loyalty. From the imprisonment which followed his seizure by Bussi le Clerc he was released in a few days; but he did not long retain his liberty. When Henry, on the 1st of November, 1589, made himself master of the suburbs of Paris, and there seemed reason 126 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. to believe that the new monarch would soon enter the city in triumph, the joy of Potier was so undisguised, that the Leaguers again sent him to his old quarters in the Bastile. He was brought to trial, as an adhe- rent of the Bearnese for so Henry was contemptu- ously called and he would no doubt have suffered an ignominious death, had not the duke of Mayenne in- terposed, and released him from prison. Throwing him- self at the feet of his deliverer, Potier exclaimed u My Lord, I am indebted to you for my life ; yet I dare to request from you a still greater benefit, that of per- mitting me to join my legitimate sovereign. I shall all my life acknowledge you as my benefactor ; but I cannot serve you as my master !" Mayenne had great- ness of mind enough not to be offended by this speech. Affected even to tears by the appeal, he raised up and embraced the suppliant, and allowed him to depart. It is delightful to find a few bright flowers of virtue among the lurid and noxious growth produced by civil war. Henry the Fourth rewarded Potier by making him president of the parliament of Chalons. In that office he continued during the whole of Henry's reign. When the monarch perished by the knife of Ravaillac, the news was carried to Chalons, accompanied, as is customary in such cases, by a thousand terrific ru- mours. As soon as he heard the lamentable tidings, Rene Potier, the president's SOD, who was bishop of Beauvais, hurried to the hall where the parliament was sitting, and entreated him to quit the place with- out delay, in a carriage which he had brought for the purpose. But the magistrate had more firmness than the prelate. He answered, in a loud voice, that the state and the country called on him not to absent himself on such an emergency, but to die, if needfu), in order to secure the obedience which was due to Henry the fourth's son ; and he earnestly exhorted his colleagues not to remove from their seats. It HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. J 27 was probably for this opportune act of courage and fidelity that Mary de Medicis conferred on him the title of her chancellor. Potier lived to the venerable age of ninety-four, preserving all his faculties to the last. His decease took place on the 1st of June 1635. It has been remarked by French writers, that no family furnished more magistrates than that of Seguier. From the first appearance of the name in the parlia- ment of Toulouse, when that body was originally formed, in the 14th century, down to the period of the French revolution, the number amounted to sixty- eight, of whom many possessed high talents, and con- summate legal knowledge. Peter, the first who bore that prenomen, is characterised, by the poet Scevola St. Marthe, as "one of the most brilliant lights of the temple of the laws," and in this praise there is no poetical exaggeration. To this magistrate France owes eternal gratitude, for his having frustrated the project of introducing the Inquisition into that coun- try. He was warned beforehand that he would do well to avoid venturing too far in his opposition, but he nobly set the danger at defiance, and he triumphed. The six sons who survived him were all of the legal profession. No monarch ever paid a more graceful compliment to a subject than that which Henry the fourth paid to the second Peter, a son of the first, who became president on the resignation of his father. The courtiers pressing so closely round the king that the president could not reach him, Henry held out his hand to Seguier, and said, " Gentlemen, allow to come to me my inseparable during my bad fortune, which, with you, he aided me to surmount. I can answer for it, that notwithstanding the business with which I burthen him, he will always be too much my friend to neglect me/' In a similar strain he publicly addressed Anthony, another brother, who was setting 128 HISTOBY OF THE BASTILE. off on an embassy to Yeniee. " You made your way into my affections," said he, " in the same manner that I did into my kingdom, in spite of the resistance and the slanders of my enemies and enviers." Louis, the fourth brother, was a councillor of the parliament, and also dean of the cathedral church of Notre Dame, at Paris. He obtained his release from the Bastile by paying a large ransom ; but he was not allowed to remain in peace, he being soon after expelled from the capital by the Leaguers. lie was subsequently sent to Rome, by Henry the fourth, to negotiate with the pope for the monarch's absolution. On his return, he was offered the bishopric of Laon, which would have given him the elevated and much coveted rank of duke and peer". Seguier, however, devoid of ambition, preferred to remain in the humble station of dean. He died in 1610. Gillot, the last of those whom I have mentioned as having been lodged in the Bastile by Bussi le Clerc, was certainly entitled to share the fate of his com- panions, his attachment to the royal cause being a matter of notoriety. He was of a noble Burgundian family, possessed a good fortune, much erudition, and a valuable library, was connected with most of the wits and learned men of that period, and assembled them frequently at his social board, where they con- versed on topics of philosophy and literature. He had also the higher merit of being beneficent, sincere, and candid. It was said of him, that he had so be- nign a disposition that his sole delight was in obliging. Gillot was educated for the church, and became dean of Langres, and canon of the Holy Chapel at Paris ; he was likewise one of the ecclesiastical counsellors, or judges, in the parliament. His abode in the Bas- tile does not appear to have been of long duration ; it is probable that he ransomed himself. For his in- carceration he took an ample revenge, by bearing a HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 129 part in writing the admirable satire called " la Satire Menippee, ou le Catholicon d'Espagne,"which covered the Leaguers with ineffaceable ridicule, and is said to have been more injurious to their cause than the sword of Henry the fourth. The harangue of the legate at the opening of the states of the League, and the laughable idea of the procession of the Leaguers, are attributed to Gillot. This estimable and talented man died in 1619. The Council of Sixteen, like the Common Council of Paris in 1792 and 1793, was eager to monopolise all the power of the state. It carried on a secret cor- respondence with the Pope and the Spanish monarch, and was obviously preparing to subvert the authority of the duke of Mayenne. In furtherance of its plan, it resolved to strike the parliament with terror, and of course render that body subservient, by a decisive blow. A pretext was furnished by the acquittal of a person named Brigard, who had been tried on a charge of corresponding with the royalists. A cry was immediately raised, that the parliament had vio- lated its duty, by granting impunity to treason, and that some measure must be adopted, to prevent the recurrence of such a crime. Several meetings were clandestinely held, to decide upon what should be done. The result was, that on the 15th of November, 1591, the president Brisson,and the counsellors Larcher and Tardif, were seized by order of the Sixteen, carried to prison, and hanged there upon a beam, without even the semblance of a trial. The bodies, with calum- nious papers attached to them, were then removed to the Greve, and publicly exposed on three gibbets. This last outrage caused the downfall of the Six- teen. Mayenne had long been dissatisfied with the conduct of these turbulent and sanguinary men, and he was heartily glad of this opportunity to punish them, and annihilate their political influence. He 130 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE, could do both with safety, as a great majority of the citizens were shocked and disgusted by the murderous act which had been committed. The duke was then with his army at Soissons, where he was expecting to be joined by the prince of Parma. Leaving his troops under the command of the young duke of Guise, he hastened, with three hundred horse and fifteen hun- dred foot> to Paris. A few days after his arrival, he consigned four of the criminals to execution, pro- scribed two who had escaped, prohibited, under pain of death, all secret meetings, and thus put an end for ever to the tyranny of the council. The partisans and agents of Spain murmured in private at these de- cisive measures, but they were in too feeble a minority- to venture upon doing more. Among those who were executed was not Bussi le Clerc; though, as he had been the most conspicuous ac- tor in the murders, he richly deserved death. It was to being governor of the Bastile that he was indebted for his safety. When Mayenne came to Paris, Bussi prudently kept within the walls of the fortress ; and, as there were various reasons which made it unadvis- able to besiege him, he was allowed to negociate. On condition that he should not be punished for his share in the murder of Brisson,. Larcher, and Tardif, and that he should be at liberty to go wheresoever he pleased with his property, he agreed to surrender the Bastile. The first of these articles was faithfully per- formed ; but with respect to the second he was not so lucky, for Mayenne's soldiers deprived him of the booty which he had made during the civil war. He retired to Brussels, where, during forty years, he earned a scanty subsistence, as an obscure teacher of fencing. The custody of the Bastile was confided, by the duke of Mayenne, to du Bourg, a brave and trusty officer. In 1589, after Henry the fourth's attempt upon Paris, when he had little more than the shadow of an HISTORY OF THE BASTILE* 131 army left, and was obliged to retreat on Normandy, the Parisians were so confident that the Bearnese would be brought back a prisoner by the duke of Mayenne, that the windows in St. Anthony's-street were hired to see him pass along in his way to the Bastile ; in the following year he held them cooped up within their walls, suffering the direst extremity of famine ; and now, in 1594, he entered the capital in triumph, as an acknowledged sovereign, amidst, the shouts of the multitude. It must be owned, however, that for the submission of Paris, as well as of many other cities, Henry had to thank his purse rather than his sword. For giving up Paris, Brissac, the go- vernor, received nearly seventeen hundred thousand livres. The whole of the strong places which the king bought, cost him no less than thirty-two millions of livres, besides governments, offices,, and titles. At dinner, on the day of his entry, he pointedly alluded to this circumstance, in the presence of some of the vendors. Nicholas, a jovial poet and man of wit, was standing by Httary's chair : " Well," said the king to him, " what say you to seeing me here in Paris ?" " Sire," replied Nicholas, "that which is Caesar's has been rendered unio Caesar." " Yentre saint-gris !" exclaimed Henry in reply, " I have not been treated at all like Caesar, for it has not been rendered to me but sold to me, and at a pretty high price too." There was, nevertheless, one man among the Leaguers who was not venal. This was du Bourg, the governor of the Bastiie. His vigilance had re- cently frustrated a plot to seize on the fortress, and he now prepared to defend his charge to the utmost. For five days he refused to listen to any overtures, and he even turned his cannon upon the city. But having received information that it was impossible for Mayenne to succour him, he consented to capitulate upon honourable terms. His garrison was allowed to K2 132 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. retire with arms and baggage. Money he refused to accept ; nor would he acknowledge Henry as his master ; he had, he said, given his faith to the duke of Mayenne, and he would not violate it. With a strange mixture of ferocity, coarseness, and chivalrous feeling, he added, that Brissac was a traitor, that he would maintain it in mortal combat with him before the king, and that he " would eat his heart in his belly." The circumstances of the times, which rendered it necessary to reign with some degree of caution, but still more the generous and clement character of Henry, - for a few years prevented the Bastile from having many captive inmates. Menaces of sending indivi- duals to it were occasionally thrown out, but they were not executed. In 1596, for instance, when, to supply his pressing wants, Henry had unjustly seized on the money destined to pay annuitants at the town- hall, we find him giving vent to a momentary fit of anger, and threatening whoever should presume to hold what he was pleased to call seditious language, with respect to this arbitrary measure. The seditious language, which thus excited his wrath, was nothing more than a petition, which a citizen named Carel had drawn up on behalf of the plundered annuitants. There was a moment when the Bastile was on the point of receiving an illustrious victim ; no less a man than Theodore Agrippa d'Aubigne, the long tried and faithful friend of Henry, amidst peril and mis- fortune. Irritated by d'Aubigne s restless zeal in the cause of the Huguenots, the king gave Sully an order to arrest him, but it was soon withdrawn. In 1602, Sully was appointed governor of the Bastile. Since 1597 he had been at the head of the finance department, and during his able administra- tion, a part of the Bastile was occupied in a manner such as it had never before been, nor ever was after- wards. It became a place of deposit for the yearly HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 133 surplus of revenue, which was obtained by the judi- cious system of the minister. The amount of the treasure thus accumulated has been variously esti- mated, but it was probably about forty millions of livres. It was designed to be appropriated to the realising of Henry's military projects. The Tour du Tresor is supposed to have derived its name from its having been the tower in which this hoard was secured. CHAPTER V. Reign of Henry IV. continued Viscount de Tavannes The mar. shal duke of Biron Faults of Biron Friendship of Henry IV. for Biron La Fin, and his influence over Biron The duke of Savoy Biron's first treason pardoned Embassies of Biron Speech of Queen Elizabeth to Biron Discontent among the no- bles Art of la Fin Imprisonment of Renaze La Fin betrays Biron Artifices employed to lull Biron into security Arrest of Biron, and the count of Auvergne Conduct of Biron in the Bastile His trial His execution Respect paid to his remains Monbarot sent to the Bastile The count of Auvergne He is sent to the Bastile but soon released He plots again Cause and intent of the conspiracy He is again arrested Sen- tence of death passed on him, but commuted for imprisonment He spends twelve years in the Bastile Mary of Medicis re- leases him Conspiracy of Merargues He is executed Death of Henry IV. THE first distinguished prisoner of the Bastile, after the firm establishment of Henry on the throne, was John de Saulx, viscount de Tavannes, second son of that marshal who acquired an undying but unenviable fame during the massacre of St. Bartholomew. He was born in 1555, and may be said to have been nursed in a deadly hatred to the protestants. The viscount accompanied Henry the third to Poland, remained behind when his master departed, visited the Turkish frontier provinces, was engaged in various actions, and at length fell into the hands of the Otto- 134 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. mans. He managed, however, to get free, and, in 1575, he revisited his native country. In the wars between the catholics and |he protest- ants, Tavannes was an indefatigable scourge of the latter. On one occasion, while he was governor of Auxonne, he was in no small danger ; he ^was sur- prised and wounded in a church by the enemy, and was confined in a castle. Yet though the wall was a hundred feet high, and he was guarded in sight, he contrived to escape. In the war of the League, against both Henries, he rendered himself conspicuous by his violence and perseverance. He proposed to arm the people with pikes, but this proposal was overruled, on the ground that it tended to excite in their minds the idea of a republic. In attempting to relieve Noyon, he was again made prisoner ; he was, however, soon exchanged, the mother, wife, and two sisters of the duke of Longueville being given as an equivalent for him. In 1592, he was appointed to the government of Burgundy, and he maintained the contest till 1595> when, being abandoned by all his companions in the cause, he yielded a sullen submis- sion to Henry. Having refused to join the king at the siege of Amiens, he- was arrested, in 1597, and committed to the Bastile. Tavannes had certainly a talent for escaping; we have seen that he twice extricated him- self from confinement, and he now did so for the third time. By what means he eluded the vigilance of his jailors does not appear. Henry seems to have cherished no very strong resentment against the fugi- tive; for, instead af placing him in surer custody, he allowed him to reside unmolested on his estate, where Tavannes died, about the year 1630. The viscount published a life of his father, a curious and valuable work ; of which, however, some passages are animated by a spirit dishonourable to the writer. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 135 ThatTavannes, who was long his determined enemy, and never professed to have become his friend, should be openly or secretly hostile to -him, could excite no surprise in Henry; but his feelings must have received a deep wound, when he discovered that he might say, with the inspired royal psalmist, " Yea, mine own familiar friend, in whom I trusted, which did eat of my bread, hath lifted his heel against me." Charles de Gontaut, duke of Biron, the son of a man distinguished for his honour, loyalty, valour, and martial exploits, was born about 1562, and inherited his father's warlike spirit, but not his praise- worthy qualities. In his childhood he was so dull of apprehension that he could scarcely be taught to read. In his military studies he must, however, have made early and extraordinary progress ; for at fourteen he was colonel of the Swiss regiments, and when he was only fifteen, the command of the army in Guienne was entrusted to him for some weeks by his father, who had broken one of his thighs. His religion we may believe to have hung loosely enougli upon him, as he twice changed it before he reached his sixteenth year. There were two crying sins of the age, duelling and gaming, in which Biron made himself conspicuous. He was not yet twenty, when he fought a duel with the prince of Carency, who was a rival suitor to the heiress of the family of Caumont. Each party had two se- conds, all of whom were in habits of friendship with each other. It was in a snow-storm, at daybreak, that the combatants met ; and, by taking their ground so that the snow drove into the faces of their antagonists, Biron and his seconds contrived to destroy them. This triple murder was pardoned by Henry the third, at the request of the duke of Epernon. As a gamester, Bi- ron played so deeply, and with such infatuated perse- verance, that he himself said, " I know not whether I 136 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. shall die on the scaffold ; but, if I do not, I am sure that I shall die in a workhouse." The scaffold which, with somewhat of a divining spirit, he seems to have thought his not improbable doom, was more than once predicted to him. The basis on which one prediction was built may excite a smile. u The archbishop of Lyons," says an old writer, "judged better than any one else of the nature of men by their countenances. For having one day curiously contemplated the features and characters of the mar- shal Biron's face, he pronounced that he had an exceed- ingly bad physiognomy, verily that of a man who was fated to perish wretchedly." On surer grounds, on a knowledge of his son's disposition, his father sometimes said to him, " Baron," (that was his early title) " I advise you to go and plant cabbages on your estate, as soon as peace is made ; for, otherwise, you will cer- tainly lose your head at the Greve." The faults of Biron were, indeed, such as to justify melancholy forebodings with respect to his end. He was vain, imperious, passionate, restlessly active, so greedy of praise that he deemed himself robbed of all that was given to others, so high an estimater of his own services that he never thought them enough re- warded, and so reckless of speech, that, when he was in an angry mood, his invectives and reproaches did not spare even the sovereign. These faults were rendered more dangerous to him by his habits of profusion, and the consequent occasional emptiness of his purse, which laid him open to temptation, especially during his fits of dissatisfaction and disgust. On the other hand, it is beyond atl doubt that Biron, for some years after the outset of his career, was devoted to Henry the fourth ; he was eminently intrepid, dis- played unwearied zeal, gave an admirable example of discipline, and was a consummate master of his pro- fession. " No one," said Henry, " has a keener eye HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 137 in reconnoitring an enemy, nor a more ready hand at arraying an army." At the battles of Arques, I vry, and Aumale, at the sieges of Paris and Rouen, and on various other occa- sions, Biron was conspicuous among his fellow chiefs. His promotion kept pace with his exploits, and he rose rapidly to the highest dignities. In 1592, Henry ap- pointed him admiral of France, and, in 1594, a mar- shal ; on receiving the latter rank he gave up the office of admiral, which Villars demanded as a part of his reward for the surrender of Rouen. It has been ima- gined, that Biron cherished a rankling resentment for the deprivation of the admiralship ; but this is more than doubtful : he appears, on the contrary, to have acceded to it with a good grace. In 1595, he obtained the go- vernment of Burgundy, andhislife was saved by Henry, at the sharp encounter of Fontaine-Fra^aise. After having manifested his wonted military talents at the siege of Amiens, in 1598, Biron attained the zenith of his elevation, by being created a duke and peer. When the deputies of the parliament waited on the king, in Picardy, to congratulate him on the success of his arms, he paid to the new-made peer one of those well-turned compliments by which he so often delighted his warriors and statesmen. In turning to account that part of "the cheap defence of nations" which consists in grace- fully bestowing praise, no man was more of a proficient than Henry. " Gentlemen," said he to the deputies, " I introduce to you the Marshal de Biron, whom I pre- sent with equal success to my enemies and my friends," Thenceforth, thanks to his own folly, the star of Bi- ron gradually declined till it set in blood. He soon be- came unsafe to be opposed to the king's enemies, and unworthy of being presented to his friends. Vanity and prodigality were the faults which began his ruin; the one led him to think that his superlative merit was inadequately requited, the other caused him to accuse 108 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. Henry of avarice and ingratitude, because the monarch did not feed his extravagance with boundless supplies. Biron might, nevertheless, have stopped short of des- truction, had there not been perpetually a tempter at his ear, whispering sinister counsels. His evil genius was Beauvais La Nocle, sieur de La Fin, a veteran in- triguer, who had spent his life in disturbing the public peace, and was still in correspondence with Spain, Sa- voy, the banished partisans of the League, and the mal- contents in various provinces. He is truly described as having been " an enterprising, active, insinuating man, especially skilful in getting on the weak side of those whom he wished to seduce. Bold with the rash, cir- cumspect w r ith the prudent, he seemed to give himself up entirely to his accomplices, that he might provide for his own safety at their expense." Henry, w T ho well knew the character of the man, warned Biron against him, but the warning was slighted.* The peace of Yervins, which relieved France from a burdensome war, precipitated the fall of Biron. Even before it was concluded, he had listened to the blan- dishments of Spanish emissaries, and had suffered them to tempt his ambition with the prospect of independent sovereignty, but he had stopped short on the verge of disloyalty. While his mind was thus susceptible of treasonable infection, he was unfortunately despatched by Henry to Brussels, for the purpose of interchang- ing, with the archduke, the customary oaths as to the faithful performance of the treaty. There he was sur- rounded by every imaginable seduction. He was " the observed of all observers ;" the most splendid enter- tainments were given, expressly in honour of him ; and * Henry pointed his advice with a pun, which is not translatable. He recommended to Biron, " Qu'il 1'otat d'auprek de lui, sinon que La Fin Vajfineroit.'" In English, if such a deceiver's name were Cousin, we might similarly say, " If you do not get rid of that Cousin, he will cozen you." HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 139 he heard nothing but exaggerated praises of his trans- cendent valour and skill, insidious expressions of regret that he should serve a master so blind to his worth, or so meanly jealous of it, and highly- coloured repre- sentations of the glorious career which he might run, if he would devote his talents to the cause of the Spa- nish sovereign. When it was imagined that his head was sufficiently turned, a treaty with Philip was pro- posed to him. But he was not yet prepared to go thus far ; he would give no more than a vague promise to join the Catholics, in case of their rising against Henry, and he returned to Paris only half a traitor. That which had been begun in the Netherlands was completed in France. During the troubles of the League, the Duke of Savoy, Charles Emmanuel, had seized upon the marquisate of Saluzzo. Hitherto he had held nearly undisturbed possession of it, but Henry, now that he was relieved from the pressure of foreign and domestic hostility, resolved to recover a territory which was of importance from its affording a passage into Italy. For the same reason, the duke was anxious to retain it ; he could not see without apprehension and disgust a powerful neighbour con- stantly posted within a few miles of his capital. In the hope of prevailing on Henry to cede the marquisate to him, the duke adopted the plan of visiting the French court. Charles Emmanuel had seductive manners, and a ready eloquence, and he concealed profound dissimulation under the semblance of open- ness and sincerity. Henry, however, though he treated him with an almost ostentatious kindness and pomp, was inflexible on the main point, and the duke found himself under the necessity of signing a disad- vantageous treaty. But Charles Emmanuel had not relied solely on the policy or the generosity of Henry ; he knew that the embers of disaffection were still alive in some of the 140 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. French nobles, and he hoped to fan them into a flame which should scorch the monarch. To win the dis- contented to his side, he scattered with a lavish hand his largesses, under the disguise of presents. Though from some of those whom he tempted he failed to pro- cure an explicit avowal of their sentiments, he doubted not that they might be reckoned upon in case of an explosion ; others spoke out more plainly ; and Biron threw himself unreservedly into the arms of the wily Savoyard. It was partly, perhaps, by ministering to the marshal's wants, but much more by rousing his wrath against the king, that the duke succeeded in making him a traitor. He artfully communicated to him some depreciating language which Henry was said to have used, and the vain and passionate Biron no longer hesitated to cast off his allegiance. The reward of his treason was to be the sovereignty of Burgundy, and the hand of one of Charles Emma- nuel's daughters. Yet at the moment when he was rushing headlong into rebellion, he publicly refused to accept a present of two fine horses from the Duke of Savoy : assigning as the reason, that it would not be- come him to receive gifts from a prince between whom and his own sovereign there were differences existing. Thus hypocrisy was added to the list of his vices. Imagining that the succour which he expected from the Spanish court, and the movements of the French malcontents, would render it impossible for Henry to attack him, Charles Emmanuel, on his return to Turin, refused to carry the treaty into effect. Henry deter- mined, therefore, to resort to force. To Biron, of whose fidelity he did not yet doubt, he offered the command of the army ; and the marshal, in order to avoid suspicion, was compelled to accept it. All that, without betraying himself, he could do to shun suc- cess, he did. But the Duke of Savoy, relying on his intrigues, had left his fortresses scantily provided with HISTORY OF THE BASTILB. 141 the means of defence, and they consequently made only a feeble resistance, in spite of Biron's wishes and faulty measures. It was a fatal circumstance for the Savoyard prince, that the power of Spain was palsied by the recent accession of the contemptible Philip the third. Had the second Philip been alive, the viceroy of Milan, the count de Fuentes, a deadly foe of Henry, would probably have led his numerous forces from the Mi- lanese, and made the contest something like what the duke had vauntingly threatened to make it, " a forty years' affair." As it w y as, Fuentes could only recom- mend to Biron, to seize the king and send him to Spain, " where," said he, contemptuously, " he shall be well treated, and we will divert him with dancing, and banqueting among the ladies." Biron shrank from this step, yet, in one of his furious outbreaks of passion, he meditated a fouler crime. At the siege of fort St. Catherine, knowing that the king was about to visit the trenches, he sent a message to the gover- nor, to point his cannon in a certain part of them, and to place in another a company of musketeers, who were to fire when a signal was given. But he quickly repented of his purpose, and kept the king from ap- proaching the perilous spots. Though the marshal renounced the base idea of becoming the murderer of his sovereign, he did not renounce his plots against him. La Fin was still em- ployed in negotiating for him with the count de Fu- entes, and a second treaty was agreed upon at Milan. It was arranged that the duke of Savoy should sign a peace, which, however, he was to break as soon as the French armies were withdrawn, and the Spanish troops were ready ; that the Spanish monarch should give to the marshal the title of his lieutenant-general, and secure to him Burgundy, and a princess of Spain or Savoy ; and that, in case of the war being unsuc- cessful, he should be indemnified for his loss by the 142 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. payment of twelve hundred thousand golden crowns, and an annuity of a hundred and twenty thousand. By this time the suspicions of Henry began to be awakened with regard to Biron. There were many circumstances which conspired to rouse them ; not one of the least of which was the incomprehensible apathy of the duke of Savoy ; who, as he scarcely made an effort to defend himself, must be supposed to look for deliverance by some unknown means. Rumours, too, began to be spread of dark and dangerous intrigues ; and it is probable, that the manner in which the mili- tary operations were conducted by the marshal, so unlike his wonted vigour, w r as not unremarked. All this appears to have induced Henry to refuse to give the government of the citadel of Bourg to Biron, who urgently requested it. There can be no doubt that Biron wished to be master of this citadel, solely to enable him the better to act in concert with Charles Emmanuel ; yet he considered as an inexpiable insult the king's refusal to grant it. No longer doubting that the marshal had become entangled in dangerous projects, and anxious to save a man whom he loved, Henry took the step of coming to a personal explanation with him. Taking Biron aside, in the cloister of the Cordeliers, at Lyons, he questioned him as to the purpose and cause of the correspondence which he carried on with the enemies of the state, promising, at the same time, a full pardon for all past errors. Thus caught by surprise and pressed, the marshal could not wholly deny his fault, but he described it so as to make it appear only venial, suppressed everything that it was important for the king to know; and affirmed that, though he was tempted by the prospect of marrying a princess of Savoy, he should never for a moment have wavered in his duty had he not been refused the government of the citadel of Bourg. Without seeking to pene- HISTORY OF TIIE BASTILE. 143 trate deeper into the mystery, Henry embraced him, and said, "Well, marshal, do you think no more about Bourg, and, for my part, I will never remember what has occurred/' The king, however, hinted that a relapse would be productive of dangerous effects. In the following year, 1601, Biron was sent as ambassador to England, to announce to Elizabeth the marriage of Henry. He was accompanied by the counts of Auvergne and Chateauroux, the marquis de Crequi, and a splendid train of a hundred and fifty gentlemen. Elizabeth received him in the most flat- tering manner ; but there was one of her conversa- tions with him which might well have excited ominous thoughts in his mind. Essex had recently suffered. Speaking of that nobleman, she said, " I raised him to the most eminent dignities, and he enjoyed all my favour ; but the rash man had the audacity to ima- gine that I could not do without him. His too pros- perous fortune and his ambition rendered him haughty, perfidious, and the more criminal from kis having seemed to be virtuous. He suffered a just punish- ment ; and if the king my brother would take my advice, he would act at Paris as I have done here. He ought to sacrifice to his safety all the rebels and traitors. God grant that his clemency may not prove fatal to him. For my part, I will never show any mercy to those who dare to disturb the peace of the realm." Biron must surely have felt his heart sink within him, when he heard this language, which, in all ways, was so applicable to himself. It is said, and we may easily believe it, that he omitted to mention this speech, when he gave an account of his embassy. The forbearance of Henry, and the lesson of Eliza- beth, were alike powerless to check the downward ca- reer of the infatuated Biron. His treasonable practices were still persevered in. After his return from Eng- land, he was sent as ambassador to Soleure, to ratify 144 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. a treaty "with the Swiss, and, on his way thither, he had a four hours' conversation with Watteville, the duke of Savoy's agent. Instead of proceeding to Paris, to render an account of his mission, he stayed at Dijon, the capital of his government, where the violent and insulting language in which he spoke of the king, gave abundant proof that little reliance could be placed upon his fidelity. In the meanwhile, various parts of the kingdom, particularly Poitou,the Limousin, and Peri- gord, in the last of which provinces the marshal had numerous partisans and vassals, were thrown into a ferment by insidious reports of Henry's tyrannical in- tentions. Among the nobles, also, discontent was at work; the duke of Bouillon and the count of Auvergne were the principal malcontents. The provinces Henry quieted by the kindness which he displayed, in a jour- ney through them ; the nobles were not so easily to be reclaimed. It was obvious that a speech which the duke of Savoy made, after his leaving France, was not a mere idle vaunt. His friends rallying him on his failure, and alluding to the season at which he came home, told him that he had brought nothing but mud back from France. " If I have put my feet into the mud," replied the duke, " I have put them in so far, and have left such deep marks behind, that France will never efface them." While, within the kingdom, men's minds were in this uneasy state, the news from without was by no means consolatory. Philip Dufresne Canaye, the French ambassador at Venice, was laudably active in procur- ing information of all movements among the Italian powers, by which his country might be affected. He learned that, while throughout Italy the utmost pains w r ere taken to blacken the character and depreciate the resources of Henry, French subjects, disguised, were busy at Turin and Milan, and that they had frequent nocturnal interviews with the ministers of the two HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 145 courts. He described minutely the features, demean- our, and dress of these emissaries, and offered to have one of them seized, and carried off to France, if a small remittance were sent to him. Some strange lethargy seems to have come over the king and the French ministry at this moment ; for they not only refused the money which was required, but even failed to send that which was indispensable for the payment of his spies. From this ill-timed slumber they would probably have been startled up by a fatal explosion, had not the catastrophe been averted by a disclosure of nearly all that related to the plot which had so long been carried on. The terrible secret was divulged by that very La Fin who had so largely contributed to lead Biron astray. La Fin's first feeling of alienation from the great conspirator is supposed to have arisen out of the only act for which, during a considerable period, the marshal had been deserving of praise. From Biron' s sudden abandonment of the plan to kill the king, in the trenches of fort St. Catherine, his confidant drew the conclusion that his firmness w^as not to be relied upon, and that consequently, at some time or other, he might bring ruin upon those who were connected with him. That he might have the means of shielding himself in case of such an event, he immediately began to preserve all the papers that passed through his hands ; and when the marshal desired him to burn any of them before his face, he, by a dexterous sleight, contrived to throw others into the fire in their stead. Still La Fin continued to be employed in his perilous office of a negotiator. It is probable, however, that, now his fears were excited, and it was become a main object with him to keep open a door for escape, he did not display the same alacrity and zeal as before. Biron did not suspect him, but the more cautious and pene- trating count de Fuentes did ; and his suspicions are L 146 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. said to have been strengthened by some words which dropped from La Fin. Those suspicions the count took especial care to conceal from the person who had inspired them. " Dead men," says the proverb, " tell no tales ;" and the case is much the same with men entombed alive in a dungeon. Fuentes thought it pru- dent to provide against the danger of a betrayal, by getting rid of La Fin. In order to effect this, he found a pretext for requesting him to pass through Piedmont, on his way to France. Either La Fin had some mis- giving as to the intention of the Spanish viceroy, or chance served him well ; for, instead of going himself to Turin, he took the road through Switzerland, and sent Renaze, his confidential secretary, to the duke of Savoy. Renaze was immediately arrested, and car- ried to the castle of Chiari. It was in vain that La Fin strove to interest the marshal in behalf of the se- cretary ; Biron spoke coldly of the captive, as a man who must be sacrificed for the safety of the rest ; and he is said even to have advised his confidant to take secret measures for effectually silencing all who had been the companions of his travels, or could give any clue to his proceedings. Already, though he seems not to have had the slightest idea that La Fin would be unfaithful to him, he had deemed it politic to transfer his dangerous confidence to the baron de Luz, his cou- sin, and two subordinate agents. Of this La Fin ob- tained information ; and it did not tend to quiet his fears. It might be thought advisable to make him share the fate of Renaze. But, even supposing this not to happen, he saw plainly that the violent conduct of Biron towards the king must inevitably soon bring matters to extremities, and that, if the conspirators failed, which it was highly probable they would,his own life would be periled beyond redemption. His nephew, the vidams of Chartres, was also urgent with him to secure his head while there was yet an opportunity. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE* 147 La Fin at length passed the Rubicon. He made known to the king, that he had momentous secrets to communicate. In reply, he was told, that he should be rewarded for this service ; but he stipulated only for pardon, and it was readily granted. The whole of the proofs of Biron's guilt were then placed by him in the hands of Henry, who was deeply afflicted by these convincing testimonies of the marshal's treason. Justice seems to be degraded, and almost to change its nature, when its purpose is attained by fraudulent means. The net was spread for Biron, but in quieting his fears, and luring him into it, a scene of trickery and falsehood was exhibited, which cannot be contemplated without pain. Sully had set a better example, by a stratagem which is not amenable to censure. To pre- vent Biron from maintaining a war in Burgundy, the minister prudently withdrew from the fortresses of that province the greatest part of the cannon and gunpow- der, on the plea that the former were damaged and ought to be recast, and the latter was weakened by age, and must be re-manufactured,, and he took care not to replace them. The right arm of Biron's strength was thus cut off. The marshal, nevertheless, might still take flight ; he had more than once evaded a summons to confer with Henry ; and it was of primary import- ance to secure his person. As alarm might be excited by La Fin journeying to court, he was instructed to write to the marshal, that the king had required his presence, that he could not refuse to comply without giving rise to surmises ; and that nothing should drop from his lips which could prejudice his friend. In the allusions which it made, and the caution which it re- commended, the reply of Biron furnished additional evidence of his guilt. The monarch, too, played his part in the deception. To the baron de Luz, who had been sent from Burgundy to observe what was going on, and was about to return to that province, he spoke L 2 J48 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. of the marshal in terms of kindness, and declared that his heart was lightened by a conversation which he had held with La Fin, as it proved that many of the charges brought against Biron were wholly unfounded. La Fin,atthe same time, assured the marshal that the king was entirety satisfied,and would receive him with open arms. Deluded by these artifices, Biron determined to join Henry at Fontainebleau, notwithstanding that the incredulous de Luz, and others of his adherents, strenuously endeavoured to dissuade him. Various cir- cumstances, ominous of evil, are said to have preceded his departure. On his road he received more than one warning from his well-wishers, but he spurned them all, and proceeded to Fontainebleau. As he was descending from his horse, he was saluted by the trai- torous La Fin, who whispered, " Courage and wary speech, my master ! they know nothing/' His belief in these words consummated the ruin of Biron. In spite of Biron' s faults, the heart of Hemy still yearned towards him. Though he could not greet the offender with his customary warmth and frankness, he received him graciously, and led him through the palace pointing out the improvements which had been made. At length he touched upon the delicate subject of the marshal's deviation from the path of duty. He hinted that he had incontrovertible proof, but assured him that an honest confession would cancel everything, and replace him on the summit of favour. Misled by his pride, and the fatal mistake that his secret was safe, Biron, instead of seizing this opportunity to extricate himself from danger, was mad enough to assume the lofty tone of conscious and wronged innocence ; studi- ously cold in his general manner, he sometimes verged upon insolence, and he loudly declared, that he came not to justify his conduct, but to demand vengeance upon those who had slandered him, or, if need were, to take it. Twice more, in the course of the day once HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 149 in person, and once through Biron' s friend, the count of Soissons Henry renewed his efforts, and was haugh- tily repulsed. On the morrow the monarch returned to the charge, and made other two attempts to save the marshal from the gulf which was opening to receive him. Oblivion for the past, friendship for the future, were earnestly offered to his acceptance. But Biron was like the deaf adder ; he even broke out into a fit of passion on being pressed for the last time ; and Henry was reluctantly compelled to resign him to his fate. It is probable that the king would have borne with Biron for a while longer, had not the terrors, entreaties, and tears of his consort, impelled him to decisive mea- sures. Mary of Medicis believed, that it was a part of the policy of Spain to cut off the royal family, and she shuddered at the idea of what, in the case of a mi- nority, might happen to herself and her offspring from the hostility of a man who was in all ways so formid- able as Biron. The king himself had already be- trayed the same apprehension to Sully. After having, in melancholy terms, confessed his lingering affection for the marshal, he added, " But all my dread is, that were I to pardon him, he would never pardon me, or my children, or my kingdom." The gates of mercy were in consequence shut upon the dangerous criminal. Biron had been in the habit of contemptuously reflecting upon the character of Essex, for what he considered as a cowardly surrender, and of maintain- ing that a man of spirit ought rather to suffer himself to be cut to pieces, than run the risk -of dying by the headsman's axe. The time was now come when it was to be seen whether he could practise his own doctrine. It was midnight when he quitted the presence of the king. Everything had been prepared for his arrest, and that of the count of Auvergne, who was suspected of sharing in the treason. The latter nobleman was taken into custody by Praslin, at the palace gate. No 150 HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. sooner had Biron passed out of the antechamber than Yitry, the captain of the guard, seized the marshal's arm, informed him that he was a prisoner, and de- manded his sword. At first he supposed it to be a jest ; and, when he was undeceived, he desired to see the king, that he might deliver the weapon into his hands. He was told that Henry could not be seen, and his sword was again required. " What ! " exclaimed he furiously, " take the sword from me, who have served the king so well ! My sword, which ended the war, and gave peace to France ! Shall the sword which my enemies could not" wrest from me be taken by my friends!" At length he submitted. When he was led along the gallery, through a double line of guards, he imagined that he was going to execution, and he wildly cried out, " Companions ! give me time to pray to God, and put into my hand a firebrand, or a candlestick, that I may at least have the comfort to die while I am defending myself/* When, however, he found that he was in no instant danger, he meanly endeavoured to irritate the soldiers against the king, by saying to them, " You see how good Catholics are treated ! " He passed a sleepless and agitated night, pacing about his cham- ber, striking the walls, raving to himself, and occasion- ally to the sentinels, pouring forth invectives and im- precations, and sometimes with singular imprudence striving to seduce a valet- de-chambre of the king, who watched him, to write to his secretaries, directing them to keep out of the way, and to maintain, in case of their being taken and questioned, that he never had carried on any correspondence in cipher. From Fontainebleau the prisoners were conveyed by water to the Bastile. During the passage, Biron was lost in gloomy reverie, and when he entered within the walls of the prison his mind was racked with the worst forebodings. Nor were the circumstances attendant on his abode in the Bastile at all of a nature to raise HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 151 his spirits. Placed in the chamber whence the consta- ble St. Pol had passed to the scaffold, watched with lynx-eyed vigilance, and so carefully kept from weapons that he was allowed only a blunted knife at his- meals, he could not help exclaiming, " This is the road to the Greve." While he was in this disturbed state, supersti- tious weakness is said to have lent its aid to complete his distraction. He was told that the Parisian executioner was a native of Burgundy ; and it instantly flashed into his recollection, that having shown to la Brosse, an astrologer, his own horoscope under another per- son's name, the wizard predicted the beheading of the person ; and that Cesar, a pretended magician, of whom more will be seen in the next chapter, had said, that " a single blow given behind by a Burgun- dian would prevent him from attaining royalty." The shock seems for the moment to have utterly deprived him of his senses. Refusing to eat, or drink, or sleep, he incessantly raved, threatened, and ^blasphemed. A visit from the archbishop of Bourges, who came to offer the consolations of religion, and who gave him some hopes of mercy on earth, rendered Biron less violent. At the prisoner's request, Yilleroi and Silleri, two of the king's ministers, also visited him ; and, either that his brain was still wandering, or that he thought to establish a claim to pardon by appearing to make important discoveries, or that he was prompted by a malignant wish to involve in his own ruin those whom he hated, he is said to have charged, and in the strongest terms, a number of innocent persons with being engaged in treasonable practices. Whatever was his motive, his purpose was frustrated ; Henry did not thirst for blood ; and it has been remarked, that the documents which, on the trial, were brought forward against the culprit, were not those that most forcibly criminated him, but those which criminated him alone. 152 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE, While Biron was thus the sport of his unruly pas- sions, his friends were actively employed in endeavour- ing to save him. Henry had returned to the capital., amidst the shouts and congratulations of his subjects. Soon after his arrival, many of the nobles, some of whom were of Biron's nearest kindred, waited upon the king, to intercede for the criminal. The Duke of la Force was their spokesman ; he spoke on his knees, and, though Henry desired him to rise, he retained that posture. He pleaded the services of the culprit and his father, the Divine command to forgive our ene- mies, the pardon which the king had extended to others, and especially the deep indelible stain which would be thrown upon the family by a public execution; and, as far as was possible, he laboured to extenuate the mar- shal's guilt, by representing that it arose from the warmth of his temper, and had never been carried be- yond mere intention. There was one point in the duke's speech which it was, perhaps, impolitic in him to urge ; that in which he stated himself to speak in the name of a hundred thousand men, who had served under Biron. This was begging too much in the style of the Spanish beggar in Gil Bias, and was not calcu- lated to propitiate a man like Henry. The monarch answered temperately, and even kindly, but with due firmness. Reminding them that he did not resemble some of his predecessors, who would not suf- fer parents to sue for their children on such an occa- sion, he declared, that the mercy for which they asked would in fact be the worst of cruelty. He alluded to the love which he had always borne to Biron, and told them, that had the offence been only against himself he would willingly have forgiven it, and did forgive it as far as related to his person, but that the safety of his children and of the whole kingdom was implicated, and he must perform his duty to them. With respect to the disgrace which it was feared would attach to HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 153 the relatives of the culprit, he treated the fear as a visionary one ; he was, he said, himself descended from the constable St. Pol and the Armagnacs, who suf- fered on a scaffold, yet he did not feel dishonoured. In conclusion, he assured them that, far from depriv- ing the marshal's kindred of the titles and offices which they possessed, he was much more inclined to add to the number, so long as they continued to serve the state with fidelity and zeal. The king having authorised the parliament to pro- ceed to trial, a deputation from that body, with the first president Harlay at its head, went to the Bas- tile, to take the necessary examinations, and confront the witnesses. With only one exception, which ex- ception the internal evidence supplied by the papers soon obliged him to retract, Biron recognised all the letters and memorials which were shown to him ; but he strove to put aji innocent construction upon them, and as they were written in a studiously ambiguous style, he might have thrown doubts upon the subject, had they been unsupported by oral testimony. In this stage of the business, he was asked what was his opinion of La Fin ? Still believing that person to be true to him, he replied that he was " an honourable gentleman, a good man, and his friend." The depo- sitions of La Fin were then read, and he was brought face to face with the prisoner. The marshal now burst out into the most furious abuse of the man whom, but a moment before, he had declared to be his honourable and worthy friend. " O good God !" exclaims a contemporary chronicler, " what said he, and what did he not say ! With what more atrocious revilings could he have torn to pieces the character of the most execrable being in the world ! With what more horrible protestations, with what more terrible oaths, could he have called upon men, angels, and God himself, to be the witnesses and judges of his 154 HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. innocence !" La Fin, however, stood his ground against the storm of invective ; and supported his evi- dence by corroborative circumstances, and additional documents in the prisoner's hand- writing. It seemed as though everything conspired against Biron at this dreadful moment. " If Renaze," said he, "were here, he would prove La Fin to be a liar." To his utter surprise and consternation, the witness whom he had invoked, but whom he imagined to be dead, was sud- denly brought forward, and amply confirmed the whole of La Fin's story. On the very day that Biron was arrested, Renaze contrived to escape from the castle of Chiari, and he now sealed the fate of the marshal. Driven to his last resource, Biron pleaded the pardon which was granted to him at Lyons, and protested that, since he received it, he had never entertained any criminal designs. In this plea he was no less unfortunate than in the others. From his own incau- tious avowal, it was gathered that he did not make a full confession to the king ; and one of his letters showed that lie had continued to plot for many months after the monarch had forgiven him. The preliminary proceedings being completed, three days were occupied by the parliament in going over the mass of evidence, and hearing the summing up of the attorney-general. The courts of justice, in those times, always commenced their sittings at an early hour. Between five and six o'clock on the morning of the fourth day, Biron, closely guarded, was taken by water to the hall of the parliament, where a hundred and twelve of the members were in waiting to receive him ; the peers had unanimously refused to sit upon his trial. At the sight of this array of judges he changed colour, but he soon reco- vered his self-possession, and is said to have assumed a kind of theatrical air which w r as scarcely decorous. A contemporary describes him as rudely bidding the HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 155 chancellor speak louder, and as "putting forward his right foot, holding his mantle under his arm, with his hand on his side, and raising his other hand to hea- ven, and smiting his breast with it, whenever he called upon God and the celestial beings to be witnesses of his integrity in the service of the king and kingdom." The whole of the crimes attributed to him had been arranged under five heads, concerning which he was interrogated by the chancellor. The questioning and defence of Biron lasted between four and five hours, and it must be owned that, in this final struggle for life and reputation, he made a noble stand. Though, in the course of a long speech, he sometimes became entangled in contradictions, its general tenor was well calculated to produce a favourable effect ; at moments he was even eloquent, aud worked strongly on the feelings of his auditors. Much he denied, and what he could not deny he palliated ; with respect to the treasons charged against him, he was, he said, the seduced and not the seducer ; a man not deliberately wicked, but led astray by hateful intriguers, who wrought his violent passions into frenzy, by represent- ing that the monarch had undervalued and insulted him a representation which seemed to be confirmed by his being refused the government of Bourg ; he pleaded that his errors had gone no farther than in- tention, that they had been fully and freely pardoned, and had never been repeated; he urged his numerous and eminent services as a counterbalance to his faults, and the mercy which had uniformly been shown to far worse offenders as a reason why it should be ex- tended to him ; and he repelled, as an infamous ca- lumny, the accusation of having intended to bring about the death of Henry yet, imprudent as such language was, he could not forbear from broadly hint- ing that the monarch was fickle, unjust, and cruel : "I rely more upon you, gentlemen," said he, "than I 156 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. do upon the king, who, having formerly looked on me with the eyes of his affection, no longer sees me but with the eye of his hatred, and thinks it a virtue to be cruel to me, and a fault to exercise towards me an act of clemency." At the close of his speech, few of his hearers were unmoved, but all were unconvinced. The most curious part of his defence is yet to be mentioned. If he did not spare his sovereign, it is not to be supposed that he would spare La Fin. When- ever he mentioned him he could not restrain his fury, but gave vent to a flood of abuse. Coining, and an unnatural regard for Renaze, w T ere among the nume- rous crimes which he imputed to him. Strange that he did not perceive the folly of thus vituperating a man, whom he had so recently recognized as his ho- nourable and worthy friend, and whose sins, if they really existed, he must then have known ! But this was not all. For his vindication he mainly trusted to one plea that he had not been a free agent, that he was under the irresistible influence of La Fin, who was a sorcerer, and had dealings with the devil. He averred, seriously, that La Fin was in the habit of breathing on him, biting his ear, and kissing his left eye, and calling him his master, his lord, his prince, and his king ; that whenever his eye was kissed he felt a tendency to do evil; that the magician also en- chanted him by making him drink charmed waters; and that he showed him waxen images which moved and spoke, and one of which pronounced, in Latin, the words, " Impious king, thou shalt perish!" " If by magic he could give voice to an inanimate body," said he, "is it wonderful that he should have such power over me as to bend my will to an entire con- formity with his own ?" Deceived by the compassion which some of his judges had manifested, Biron cherished the flattering hope of an acquittal. His spirits were so elated by HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 157 this idea, that he amused himself with repeating to his guards various portions of his defence, and mimicking the gestures and speeches which he supposed the chancellor to have made in the course of the siibse- quent proceedings. His vanity, too, contributed to buoy him up. He ran over, in conversation, the list of French commanders, found some defect in each of them, and thence concluded that, as his military ta- lents were obviously indispensable to the state, his life was secure. The termination of that life was, nevertheless, ra- pidly approaching. By an unanimous vote, on the day after his appearance at their bar, the parliament pronounced Biron guilty of high treason, and con- demned him to lose his head on the Greve. The place of execution was changed by the king to the interior of the Bastile, at the request, it was said, of the cri- minal's friends ; but partly, perhaps, in the fear that a popular commotion might occur, and partly because a report was spread, that some of his domestics intended to throw a sword to him on the scaffold, that he might at least have the chance of dying an honourable death . It was wise not to run the risk of encountering his despair. The first intimation which Biron received of his impending doom, was from seeing that crowds were gathering together in the neighbourhood of the Bas- tile. The change of time and place had not been pub- licly made known. " I am sentenced ! I am a dead man ! " he instantly exclaimed. He then sent a mes- senger to Sully, to request that he would come to him, or would intercede with the king. With these requests Sully declined to comply, but he desired the messenger to leave the marshal in doubt as to the king's intention. On the following morning, the last day of July, 1602, the chancellor, accompanied by some of his officers, 158 HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. proceeded to the Bastile, to read the sentence to him, and announce its immediate execution. Biron was at the moment deeply engaged in calculating his nativity. When he was taken down to the chancellor, he ad- dressed him in an unconnected rhapsody of prayers, lamentations, invectives, and reproaches, intermingled with protestations of innocence, and vaunts of the ser- vices which he was yet capable of rendering to the state. He besought that he might be suffered to live, even though it were in prison and in chains ! It w y as a con- siderable time before the chancellor could obtain a hearing, and he was speedily interrupted by sallies of rage from the marshal, who reproached him with hard- ness of heart, execrated La Fin, accused the king of being revengeful, and the parliament of injustice in not having allowed sufficient time for his vindication, and, finally, asserted that he was put to death be- cause he was a sincere Catholic. This burst of insane passion was succeeded by a lucid interval, during which he calmly dictated his will, sent tokens of remembrance to his friends, and distributed in alms the money which he had about him. The reading of some parts of his sentence again roused his irritable feelings. When he heard the charge of hav- ing intended to destroy the king, he exclaimed, "That is false ! blot it out !" and when the Greve was men- tioned, he declared that no power on earth should drag him thither, and that he would sooner be torn to pieces by wild horses than submit to such an indignity. He was quieted by being told of the change which had been made ; but when it was hinted to him that his arms must be bound, he relapsed into such violence that it was thought advisable to leave his hands at liberty. He then made his confession to the priest ; and it was remarked that he, who had just before boasted of being a good Catholic, was ignorant of the commonest forms HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 159 of prayer, prayed more like a soldier than a Christian, and seemed to be thinking less of his salvation than of the things of this world. It being now near five o'clock, the hour which was appointed for the execution, he was informed that he must descend into the court of the prison. As he was quitting the chapel, he caught sight of the executioner. " Begone ! " vociferated he : "touch me not till it is time ; if you come near me till then, I swear that I will strangle you !" He twice repeated the command and the threat when he was at the scaffold. Looking round on the soldiers, he mournfully said, " Would but some one of you fire his musket through my body, how thankful I should be ! What misery it is to die so wretchedly, and by so shameful a blow 1" The sentence was then read again, and again he lost all patience at being accused of planning Henry's death. It was with much difficulty that the clerk of the par- liament completed the reading of the sentence, his voice being almost drowned by the clamour of the prisoner. Thrice Biron tied a handkerchief over his eyes, and as often he tore it off again, and once more he vented his rage on the executioner, who had maddened him by wishing to cut off his hair behind. " Touch me not," he cried, " except with the sword. If you lay hands on me while I am alive, if I am driven into a fury, I will strangle half the folks that are here, and compel the rest to kill me." So terrible were his looks and his tone, that several of the persons present were on the point of taking flight. It was believed that he meditated seizing the death -sword, but the executioner had prudently desired his attendant to conceal it till it was wanted. At last, after long delay, the marshal requested Baranton, one of the officers of the Bastile, to bandage his eyes and tuck up his hair ; and, when this was done, he laid his head upon the block. " Bo 160 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. quick ! be quick !" were his last words, and they were promptly obeyed. They were scarcely out of the mouth of the speaker when the sword descended, and by a single blow Biron ceased to exist. The remains of Biron were interred in the church of St. Paul. Not only was his funeral followed by multitudes, but multitudes visited the church after- wards, for the purpose of sprinkling his grave with holy water. " Never was there a tomb," says de Thou, " on which so much holy water was poured ; a circumstance rather disagreeable to the court, which was vexed to see that a step which all ought to have deemed necessary for the safety of the king and state, was so wrongly interpreted as to become a subject of public dissatisfaction/' Almost the last wish of Biron was for vengeance on La Fin ; the wish was gratified. After a lapse of four years, La Fin ventured to visit Paris. In the middle of the day, and in the centre of the capital, he was at- tacked by twelve or fifteen well-mounted men who un- horsed him, and stretched him on the ground, welter- ing in his blood. Several passengers were killed or wounded by the random firing. The perpetrators of this deed, though not unknown, w r ere never brought to justice. La Fin himself was undeserving of pity ; but his murderers, even had he been the only victim, ought to have been shortened by the head. Faithless to a sovereign who had lavished kindness and honours upon him, borne with his caprices and er- rors, and more than once saved his life on the field of battle, Biron was rightfully punished; but the severity which, on very slight grounds of suspicion, was shown to Rene de Marc, sieur de Monbarot, seems to im- peach the justice of Henry. When, however, we re- collect that his mind was painfully agitated by the plots which were thickening round him, we may perhaps be HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 161 inclined to pity rather than blame the monarch, that, in one instance, its natural bias towards lenity was turned aside. In the bay of Douarnenez, off the Breton coast, there is an islet, called Tristin, or Frimeau, which commands the entrance to the harbour of Douarnenez. The go- vernment of it was held by the baron de Fontanelles, who, during the war of the League, had rendered him- self notorious by his activity in plundering. Not being any longer able to gratify his rapacity in this manner, he sought for other resources, and hoped he had found them in becoming an accomplice of Biron, and in open- ing a negotiation with the Spaniards, to deliver up to them the island and the neighbouring town. This would have put Spa in into possession of a very annoying post in Britanny. Fortunately his treason was disco- vered, and he was sentenced to be broken on the wheel. Three other persons, two of whom were Bretons, par- ticipated in his guilt, and the latter were executed. Before the accomplices of Fontanelles were led to the scaffold, they were put to the torture, and, while they were writhing under that iniquitous infliction, something dropped from them which was construed into an implication of Monbarot, who was governor of Rennes. Monbarot had done good service against the duke of Mercosur, during the war of the League, and, since the peace, he had made strenuous exertions to maintain the royal authority in Britanny. All this was, nevertheless, insufficient to save him from being suspected of treasonable designs, and immured in the Bastile. Monbarot languished in prison for three years and to a solitary captive years are ages. He would, per- haps, have remained there during a much longer period, had not filial love been a persevering suitor for him. His only son repeatedly solicited the king to set his parent free ; and, failing to obtain that boon, he en- M 162 HISTORY OF THE BA&TILE. treated that he might be allowed to lighten his sorrows, by sharing his captivity. At length, Monbarot's enemies having failed to procure any proof whatever against him, he was liberated by Henry. But, though he was declared to be innocent, he was punished as though he were guilty. Instead of being, as far as was possible, compensated for three years of suffering, he was de- prived of the government of Rennes, which was given to Philip de Bethune, Sully's younger brother. It is probable, indeed, that the persecution of Monbarot was set on foot for the sole purpose of wresting from him his coveted office. Charles of Valois,count of Auvergne,who was after- wards known as duke of Angouleme, was a son of Charles the ninth, by Maria Touchet, and was born in 1573. He was admitted a knight of Malta, and became grand prior of France ; but Catherine of Medicis having be- queathed to him the counties of Auvergne and Laura- gais, he quitted the order of Malta, and married a daughter of the constable Montmorenci. Charles was one of the first to join Henry of Navarre, on the acces- sion of that prince, and he fought valiantly for him at Arques, Ivry, and Fontaine Frangaise. In the course of a few years, however, his loyalty evaporated, and we find him an accomplice of Biron. When he was ar- rested, his pleasantry and presence of mind did not forsake him. On Praslin demanding his sword, he laughingly said, " Here it is ; it has never killed any thing but wild boars. If you had given me a hint of this business, I should have been in bed and asleep two hours ago." He preserved the same gay humour while he was in prison. In October he was released, after having disclosed the whole that he knew of the conspiracy. As, however, the king had procured the same information from other quarters, Auvergne would probably have been severely punished but for two favourable circumstances he was the half brother of HISTORY OF THE BASTILE* 163 the king's mistress, the marchioness of Yerneuil, and he had been particularly recommended to himbyllenry the third, when that monarch was on his death-bed. A very short time elapsed before Auvergne was again involved in treasonable projects. His confede- rates were the marchioness of Yerneuil, her father, Francis de Balsac d'Entragues, and an Englishman named Thomas Morgan. The duke of Bouillon, and other nobles, were also ready to lend their aid. The marchioness, who, in consequence of the promise of marriage which the king had given to her during the insanity of his passion, affected to consider herself as his wife, was irritated by the birth of a dauphin, which seemed to shut out the possibility of her son ever pos- sessing what she called his right. t)'Entragues was deeply wounded in his feelings, by the stain which Henry's licentious love for his daughter had cast upon him. Some writers, who appear to suppose that a French father could not think himself dishonoured by his child becoming a king's concubine, throw doubts on the sincerity of d'Entragues' indignation ; but I can see no real grounds for their so doing. There is an air of sincerity, in what he says upon this subject, which is greatly in his favour. After touching upon the in- gratitude with which his faithful services had been re- paid, he adds, " Borne down by years and maladies, I was condemned to suffer more deadly blows from blind fortune. My daughter, the sole consolation of my old age, pleased the king, and this last stroke completed my misery. Grief aggravated my maladies, and still more intense mental anguish was joined to the pains which my body endured. I found myself exposed to all the gibes of the courtiers; and that which generally constitutes the happiness of a father, and which ought to have formed the glory and felicity of my family, was, on the contrary, the cause of my shame, of the dishonour of my house, and of the insulting scorn with M 2 164 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. which I was overwhelmed." As often as he implored for leave to withdraw from court he was refused, and at length he was forbidden to see his daughter. Not content with inflicting these wrongs upon him, Henry was striving to seduce his second daughter also. Assuredly if such injuries are not sufficient to rouse the wrath of a father, it is difficult to imagine what would be. That d'Entragues keenly felt them is certain ; for he more than once endeavoured to inter- cept and kill the king, while he was on his way to the marchioness arid to her sister, and Henry is said to have narrowly escaped. The design to assassinate is indefensible ; but it at least proves that the father was in earnest. At a subsequent period, Henry said to d'Entragues, "Is it true, as is reported, that you meant to kill me?" "Yes, Sire," replied the un- daunted noble, " and the idea will never be out of my mind, while your majesty persists to blot my honour in the person of my daughter/' The particulars of the conspiracy are very imper- fectly known. It is said the principal stipulations of the treaty with Spain were, that Philip should recognise as dauphin the natural son of Henry by the marchioness of Yerneuil, on her putting him into his hands ; that, in the first instance, the mother and child should seek refuge at Sedan, under the pro- tection of the duke of Bouillon, and that subsequently five Portuguese fortresses should be ceded to them as places of security ; and that France should be invaded on the frontiers of Champagne, Burgundy, and Pro- vence, by the marquis of Spinola, the count of Fuentes, and the duke of Savoy. To the prosecution of Auvergne there were two obstacles, which arose out of the conduct of Henry. When the count was released from the Bastile, he offered to continue his correspondence with the Spanish court, for the purpose of betraying its secrets to the HISTORY OF THE BASTILE, 165 king ; and a regular authority for so doing was un- wisely granted to him. It was base in Auvergne to make such a proposal, and scarcely less so in Henry to adopt it. By another act, the monarch gave him a fresh pretext for holding intercourse with a power which was thoroughly hostile at heart. Henry being- attacked by a fit of illness, the marchioness, who had insulted Mary of Medicis beyond endurance, affected to feel, or perhaps felt, such extreme dread of what would befal her and her offspring in case of his death, that the king gave her half brother a written per- mission to negotiate an asylum for her in a foreign country. Cambray was the place which she and Auvergne selected as the city of refuge; and this selection afforded them, while the negotiation was proceeding, an opportunity to carry on intrigues with the emissaries of Spain. Apprehending, probably, that his treasonable dupli- city would soon be detected, Auvergne, by challenging the count of Soissons, artfully contrived to be banished from court. Soissons complained, and Henry, to sa- tisfy him, exiled the challenger to the province whence he derived his title. This was what Charles of Yalois had aimed at ; for, in that province, his possessions, his popularity, and the rugged nature of the country, would contribute to secure him from danger. While he was there, a letter written by him, to one of his friends at Paris, was intercepted, and, though its lan- guage was obscure, it gave the king reason to believe that, under pretence of betraying Spain, the count was in reality plotting with it. Henry immediately summoned him to return to court. Auvergne was, however, aware of the reason and the danger. " It is only for the purpose of bringing my head to the scaffold," said he, " that I am called to Paris." The mere idea of being re-immured in " that great heap of stones," as he called the Bastile, made him shudder. Neither a safe- 166 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. conduct, nor a formal pardon, which were offered to him, nor the assurances of several persons, whom the king sent to him, could remove his suspicions. To avoid being taken by surprise, he lived in the woods and the most solitary spots, and kept dogs and sen- tinels continually on the watch. Yet he was at last circumvented. His regiment of cavalry was pur- posely ordered to pass near his abode, and he could not deny himself the gratification of inspecting it. In this pleasure he thought he might safely indulge, as he was resolved that he would neither dismount nor be surrounded, and was on the back of a fleet horse, that could gallop ten leagues without stopping. He was, nevertheless, adroitly seized, and carried off to the Bastile, where he was placed in the chamber that Biron had inhabited. On his way thither he had pre- served his serenity, but, when he entered the chamber, the remembrance of his friend drew from him a few tears. He soon, however, recovered his equanimity, and jocosely told the governor, " there was no inn at Paris so bad that he would not rather go to bed in it, than in this building." As soon as Auvergne was secured, d'Entragues was arrested and lodged in the Conciergerie, and the marchioness of Yerneuil was placed under a guard in her own homse. The parliament was now directed to take cogni- zance of the plot. Henry, however, whose main ob- . ject in all this was to render his haughty mistress more submissive, sent one of his confidential servants to make her an offer of pardon on certain conditions. He was repulsed, as he richly deserved to be. The mar- chioness disdainfully replied, that, as she had never committed a crime against the king, there was no room for a pardon. The trial accordingly proceeded. The conspirators defended themselves dextrously. Biron had been ruined partly by admitting, at the outset, the fair character and veracity of intended witnesses* Ths HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 167 marchioness and the count at least avoided that rock, by manifesting an apparently bitter hostility to each other. As to d'Entragues, he censured them both ; but his vindication principally consisted of a severe exposure and impeachment of Henry's conduct, with respect to himself, the marchioness, and her sister. Though in a legal point of view, whatever they might be in a moral, the proofs against the prisoners were by no means clear, the judges, on the 1 st of February, 1 6 05, found Auvergne, d'Entragues, and Morgan, guilty of high treason, and condemned them to lose their heads. The marchioness was sentenced to be confined in a monastery, while further inquiries were being made into her past proceedings. She was, however, soon after allowed to reside in her own house at Yerneuil ; and no long time elapsed before the king ordered that all inquiry into her acts should be discontinued. The punishment of the remaining offenders was next com- muted. D'Entragues was exiled to his house at Malesherbes, Morgan was sent out of the kingdom, and Auvergne was doomed to remain in " that great heap of stones," which he so much abhorred. Thus ended a farce which was eminently disgrace- ful to Henry, and for which he was justly censured. u It excited indignation/' says de Thou, u to see the ministry of the most respectable tribunal in the realm profaned by a court intrigue. The king, it was said, had brought the marchioness to trial, not for the pur- pose of punishing her, nor to give an example which was equally necessary and full of equity, but that her father and brother, who had tried to withdraw her from the court, might be foremost in exhorting her to renew her connexion with a prince who madly loved her." To crown the whole, the monarch who, to secure more effectually a refractory mistress, had thus made a laughing-stock of the laws and the magistracy, speedily deserted that mistress, and trans- 168 HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. ferred his fickle affections to Jacqueline de Beuil, whom he created countess of Moret. The death of Henry did not open the prison doors of the count of Auvergne. He spent nearly twelve years in the Bastile. Happily for him, he had been well educated, and though, while he was immersed in the debaucheries of an immoral court, he had lost sight of literature, his taste for it was not de- stroyed. He was therefore enabled to solace by study his long captivity ; and we may believe that ? when he once more emerged from his durance, reflec- tion and added years had made him a wiser and a better man. He had need of consolation while he was incarcerated ; for, the year after he was com- mitted to the Bastile, he received another heavy blow. Queen Margaret instituted a suit, to recover from him the vast property which he derived from her mother, and the tribunal decided against him. At last, in 1616, he was set free by Mary of Me- dicis, that he might assist in forming a counterpoise to the Condean faction; and in 1619, he was created duke of Angouleme. He subsequently served the state with honour, on various occasions, both as am- bassador and general. His death took place in 1650, Scarcely were the proceedings against Auvergne and his accomplices brought to a close before another conspiracy was discovered ; it was the last which was formed, or rather, perhaps, which was made public, during the reign of Henry. The author of this plot was Louis d'Alagon, sieur de Merargues, a Provengal noble, nearly allied to some great families. We have seen that the Spaniards were desirous to obtain an establishment on the Breton coast, w r hich might be a thorn in the side of France. They now sought to gain a much more dangerous footing on the shore of the Mediterranean. The important city of Marseilles was the object which they coveted, and Merargues was the HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 169 person on whom they reckoned to put it into their possession. Almost the first step which Merargues took, after becoming a traitor, showed how unfit he was to act the part which he had chosen ; he had all the will in the world to be a dangerous conspirator, and wan ted only the talent. Some years before he had proposed to the king to keep two galleys ready for service, in order to secure the port of Marseilles ; the plan was adopted, and as a recompense, he received the command of the vessels. In maturing this scheme, he derived much assistance from a galley- slave, who was a man of abi- lity. To this man, whom he imagined to be entirely devoted to him, and capable of daring deeds, Merargues communicated his purpose of betraying Marseilles to the Spanish monarch. By means of the two galleys he considered himself to be master of the port ; and he had no doubt of being elected to the office of Yiguier, or Royal Provost, for the following year, which would give him full authority over the city and the forts. In order to fathom to the bottom the project of Merargues, the wily galley-slave affected to lend a willing ear to the projector. He, however, deemed . it more prudent to trust to the gratitude of his own sovereign for a reward, than to that of Philip of Spain. As soon as he had acquired a thorough knowledge of the particulars, he wrote to the duke of Guise, offer- ing to give information of the utmost importance, on condition of recovering his liberty. His offer was made known to the king by the duke, and was ac- cepted. Guise was at the same time directed to keep the affair a profound secret, till decisive proof could be obtained against the criminal, and to take the ne- cessary precautions for the safety of the city. Meragues himself was not slow in furnishing the evi- dence which was wanted. He had already had various conferences with Zuniga, the Spanish ambassador, 170 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. an able and intriguing diplomatist, but his correspond- ence on the subject was principally carried on through Bruneau, the ambassador's secretary. Unconscious that his scheme was known to the French govern- ment, he now visited Paris, on a mission to the court, from the states of Provence ; a mission which he no doubt readily undertook, that he might have an op- portunity of making arrangements with his foreign confederates. By order of the king he was closely watched, and it was soon discovered that he had secret interviews with Zuniga and Bruneau. The latter was tracked to the abode of Merargues, and both of them were arrested. On the secretary, who tried in vain to draw his sword, was found a paper, which bore witness to the criminality of his purpose. Merargues, on being seized, exclaimed, " I am a dead man ! but if the king will spare my life, I will disclose great things to him !" He was conveyed to the Bas- tile, and Bruneau to the Chatelet. No sooner did Zuniga learn the detention of his secretary than he demanded an audience of the king. It must excite a smile, to hear that he complained bitterly of heavy wrong, and assumed the lofty tone of offended dignity. In the face of the clearest evi- dence, he denied all sinister designs; and talked largely of the privilege of ambassadors being violated, and the law of nations set at nought as if any pri- vileges or law could exist authorizing an envoy to conspire in the very court of the monarch to whom he is deputed. Nor did he forget to recriminate upon the ministers of Henry, as being fomentors of revo- lution in the Spanish dominions, nor to throw out threats of hostility, in case redress were denied. Angered by the haughty language of Zuniga, Henry retorted with at least equal acrimony, and concluded by a peremptory refusal to release Bruneau, till the question of his guilt or innocence had been thoroughly HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 171 investigated. In the course of a few days, however, Bruneau was sent back to his master ; but not be- fore he had answered interrogatories, and been con- fronted with Merargues. The fate of Merargues could not be doubtful. He was sentenced to be beheaded, and then quartered. As the culprit was related to the families of the duke of Montpensier and the cardinal de Joyeuse, the king sent to those personages, to offer the commutation of the punishment into perpetual imprisonment. They, however, with a praiseworthy spirit, replied that, though they were grateful for his kindness, they must decline to accept it ; of all such villains they would, they said, be glad to see France cleared, and, although the criminal was their relative, they would do justice on him with their own hands, if there were no exe- cutioner to perform that duty. Merargues was in consequence executed, at the Greve, and his head was sent to Marseilles, and exposed on the summit of one of the city gates. On the same day that Merargues was led to the scaffold, the life of Henry was endangered by the violence of one John de Lisle, a madman. In the course of a few months another accident occurred; he narrowly escaped drowning, while crossing the ferry of Neuilly in his carriage. At the expiration of five years, treason accomplished its purpose, and the ex- istence of this justly celebrated monarch was cut short by the knife of Ravaillac. 172 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. CHAPTER VI. Reign of Louis XIII. The treasure of Henry IV. dissipated Prevalent belief in magic Cesar and Ruggieri Henry, prince of Conde The marchioness d'Ancre Marshal Ornano Pre- valence of duelling The count de Bouteville The Day of the Dupes Vautier, the physician of Mary of Medicis The marshal de Bassompierre The chevalier de Jars Infamy of Laffemas Three citizens of Paris sent to theBastile Despotic language of Louis XIII.- The count de Cramail The marquis of Vitry Peter de la Porte Noel Pigard Dubois, an alchemical impostor The count de Granc4 and the marquis de Praslin The prince Palatine Count Philip d'Aglie Charles de Beys Letter from an unknown prisoner to Richelieu. THE treasure deposited in the Bastile, by Henry IV., did not remain long undissipated after his death. It began to melt a way, like snow in the sun, as soon as the regency of Mary of Medicis was commenced. Swarms of her favourites and dependants clamoured to obtain the reward of their sycophancy. Like the horse- leech's two -daughters, they were perpetually crying, " Give ! Give !" and, had such personages existed in the days of Solomon, he might have added a fifth thing to the four which he describes as never saying " It is enough." Most prominent among the group were Concini and his wife ; and as they were exceed- ingly unpopular, they endeavoured to silence the cry against them, by stopping, at the public expense, the mouths of their most formidable censors. But it was not only her friends, as they called themselves, that Mary of Medicis had to satisfy; her enemies, and she had many, were to be bought off, and they sold their forbearance dearly. Fraud and shameless rapacity be- came universal. "Governors," says Anquetil, "called for guards which they never enlisted, for augmenta- HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 173 tlons of their garrisons, that they might gain some- thing out of the pay, and fortifications, which often were useless. They themselves made the bargains, and, at the king's cost, managed matters with the con- tractors. Reversions were granted down to the third generation. Those who by this means were excluded, required drafts on the royal treasury. Nothing was more common than the doubling and trebling of sala- ries, from the highest office to the lowest. Some ob- tained dowries for their daughters, others the payment of their debts : so that it was a general pillage." To all this must be added, the loss sustained, and the in- jury done to every branch of industry, by the creation or revival of obnoxious tolls, privileges, and monopolies. Thus the money accumulated by Henry was speed- ily squandered. After all, it was, perhaps, more in- nocently spent in this manner, than it would have been in carrying on the wide-spreading war which he had planned, to realise his chimerical projects. Some drops of the golden shower probably descended among the multitude ; and myriads were not led forth to spill their blood in foreign lands. The real mischief in this case was, that, when the hoard was gone, the spirit of spending remained : and to satisfy that spirit new taxes and exactions were pitilessly imposed on a peo- ple whose burthens were already oppressive. , Having wholly lost his influence, Sully resigned many of his offices, and returned into private life. Among the places which he relinquished were the su- perintendence of the finances, and the government of the Bastile. He, however, did not make the sacrifice without taking especial care to be well remunerated for it. A million of livres, and a yearly pension of forty-eight thousand livres, was his price. It is quite clear that the virtuous Sully did not think, like Pope, that " virtue alone is happiness below." For the first four or five years of the regency of 174 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. Mary of Medicis, the Bastile seems to have contained no prisoner of note. At the end of that time it re- ceived an individual, who, though he had no rank to boast of, professed to be in the service of a potent master. The belief in magic was almost general at that period. We have seen that Biron attributed his crimes to the influence of magic upon him. All the world was running mad, after charms, spells, and phil- tres ; the boldest of the throng had a violent curiosity to see the devil. Among those who preyed upon the credulity of the crowd, history has preserved the names of two one was called Cesar, the other was Ruggieri, a Florentine. It is to the extraordinary mode in which they are asserted to have quitted the world, that we are indebted for our knowledge of them. Cesar is gravely stated to have had the power of calling down hail and thunder at his pleasure. He had a familiar spirit, and a dog, who seems to have been a sort of minor fiend, acting as messenger, to carry his letters, and bring back answers. Cesar was a manu- facturer of love potions to make young girls enamoured of young men ; and, on occasion, could help a cow- ardly enemy to destroy without risk the man whom he hated. It was charged against him, that he had formed a charmed image for the purpose of making a gentle- man waste away. This was a very common practice when sorcery and witchcraft were in vogue. But it seems probable that the crime which brought him to the Bastile was an" indiscretion which he committed with respect to one of the gentle sex. He was accus- tomed to attend the witches' sabbath ; and he boasted that, atone of those unholy meetings, a great lady of the court had granted him the last favour which a female can bestow. Such a vaunt was well calculated to bring him into durance. It did that, and more. On the eleventh of March, 1615, all Paris was astonished, by learning that, in the dead of the night, the devil had HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 175 come, with a tremendous din, and strangled Cesar in his bed. Four days afterwards his satanic majesty, who appears to have wanted the services of two ma- gicians at once, snatched away, in the same manner, the soul of the Florentine Ruggieri, who was then re- siding in the house of a French marshal. It is not dif- ficult to account for these supposed supernatural events. A curious description of the tricks whichCesar played upon his dupes is given by a contemporary author, who speaks in the character of the magician. The representa- tion is probably correct. " You would hardly believe," says he, " how many young courtiers and young Pari- sians there are, who teaze me to show them the devil. Finding this to be the case, I hit upon one of the drollest inventions in the world to get money. About a quarter of a league from this city, I found a very deep quarry, which has long ditches on the right and left hand. When anybody wants to see the devil, I take him into that ; but before he enters, he must pay me forty or fifty pistoles at least ; swear never to say a word of the matter ; and promise not to be afraid, or call on the gods or demigods, or pronounce any holy words. " All this being done, I enter the cavern first; then, before going further, I make circles, and involutions, and fulminations, and mutter some speech composed of barbarous words, which I have no sooner uttered than my curious fool and I hear the rattling of heavy chains, and the growling of large mastiffs. Then I ask him if he is afraid ; if he says yes (and there are many who dare not proceed), I lead him out again, and, having thus cured him of his impertinent curiosity, I pocket his money. " If he is not afraid, I go forward, mumbling out some terrific words. When I have reached a particu- lar spot, I redouble my incantations, and utter loud cries, as if I had gone frantically mad. Immediately six men, whom I keep hidden in the cavern, throw out 176 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. flashes of flame, to the right and left of us, from burn- ing rosin. Seen through these flames I point out to my inquisitive companion a monstrous goat, loaded with great heavy chains of iron, painted with vermilion, to look as though they were red hot. On each side, there are two enormous mastiffs, with their heads fas- tened into long wooden cases, which are wide at one end, and very narrow at the other. While the men keep goading them they howl with all their might, and this howling echoes in such a manner, through the in- struments on their heads, that the cavern is filled with sounds so terrific that, though I know the cause of the hurlyburly, even my own hair stands on end. The goat, whom ! have taught his lesson, plays his part so well, rattling his chains, and brandishing his horns, that there is nobody but what would believe him to be the devil in earnest. My six men, whom I have also thoroughly trained,are like wise loaded with red chains, and dressed like furies. There is no light in the cavern but what they no wand then make with powdered rosin. " Two of them, after having played the devil to perfection, now come to torment my poor curious gull, with long bags of cloth full of sand ; with these they so belabour him all over his body, that I am at last obliged to drag him out of the cavern half dead. Then, when he has come to himself a little, I tell him that it is a most perilous thing to wish to see the devil, and I beg that he will never indulge it in future ; and I assure you that no one ever does after having been so double damnably beaten." The year after the foul fiend had fetched away Cesar and Ruggieri, the Bastile was tenanted by an occupant of high rank Henry, prince of Conde, the second who bore that Christian name. Conde was born in 1588, and, till the birth of a dauphin, was presumptive heir to the throne of France. The prince was well educated, witty and pleasant in conversation, HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 177 spoke several languages, and was better acquainted with literature and the sciences than most contempo- rary men of high birth ; but his person was not at- tractive. It was probably the latter circumstance which induced Henry the fourth to unite him to Hen- rietta de Montmorenci, the loveliest and richest female of that time. Her inclinations leaned towards the handsome, gallant, and accomplished Bassompierre; but Henry, who was smitten with an extravagant passion for her, seems to have thought that he could more easily seduce her if she were the wife of Conde. He was mistaken. The prince, on whose " liking the chase a hundred thousand times better than he liked women" Henry had rather erroneously calculated, was not disposed to be dishonoured, even by a king who was his uncle. Henry, previous to the marriage, had, indeed, pledged his word that, on his account, the prince need have no fears ; but Henry was not a man to be trusted in such cases. The nuptial knot was scarcely tied before the conduct of the monarch became such as to awake, and justify, all the jealous fears of the husband ; who was further aggrieved by being compelled to endure the contempt and insolence of Sully. To avoid the danger which hung over him, his sole resource was to fly the country with his wife; and he accordingly contrived to make his escape, and to obtain an asylum in the court of the archduke Albert, at Brussels. When Henry found that his intended prey was be- yond his reach, his behaviour resembled rather that of a madman than of a sage monarch, at the mature age of fifty-seven. He ran about asking advice of his courtiers, the ministers were summoned, councils were held, parties of troops were despatched to seize the fugitives, and war was threatened against Spain, if she refused to give them up. When Sully was told of what had happened, he replied in a surly tone, Ci I 178 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. am not astonished at it, sire ; I foresaw it clearly and warned you of it ; and had you taken my advice a fortnight ago, when he was going to Moret, you would have put him into the Bastile, where you would find him now, and where I should have kept a good watch over him for you." Such was the morality of the austere Sully ! This " well-seeming Angelo," who has been praised, at least as much as he deserves, could be indignant at the idea of the monarch marrying Henrietta d'Entragues, his mistress ; but he could see 110 dishonour in that monarch breaking his plighted word, as well as all moral obligations, by seducing the wife of his nephew ; nor in he himself volunteering his assistance to forward an adulterous intercourse, by prompting the seizure of the injured husband, and becoming his gaoler ! It was not without reason that the prince dreaded to trust his wife within the corrupted atmosphere of the French court. Had she remained there, it appears certain that she must have fallen. As it was, her fidelity was, for a moment, on the point of being shaken. Henrietta was little more than sixteen, and the glory of the sovereign, his boundless generosity to her, and his idolatrous fondness, dazzled her imagination so far, that, while she was at Brussels, a correspondenc? was actually carried on between them. An attempt was made by Henry's emissaries to carry her off, but it failed. When d'Estrees, marquis of Coeuvres, who conducted this attempt, was reproached for his base- ness by Conde, his defence was, that he had acted upon orders from the king his master, and that it was his duty to execute them, whether they were just or un- just. Henrietta repaired her momentary error by her subsequent conduct. Not believing himself to be safe, Conde removed to Milan, where he published a manifesto to justify his having quitted France. From policy he passed over HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 179 in silence the main cause of his flight ; but he indem- nified himself by pouring forth all the bitterness of his resentment on Sully, whom he painted in the dark- est colours. Some overtures were made, to lure the prince back to France, but they were ineffectual. But, while Henry was preparing to carry war into the terri- tory of his neighbours, he fell by the hand of an assas- sin, and the way was thus opened for the return of the prince. Conde aspired to the regency, but his ambitious hopes were disappointed. Chagrined at the failure of some of his subsequent schemes, and the refusal of favours which he sought, the prince, with many of the nobles, took up arms against the court. For this, he and his adherents were declared guilty of treason. A peace was, nevertheless, patched up between the par- ties, and he returned to Paris in a sort of triumph. Not more than a year elapsed before the obvious intention of Conde, to monopolize all the power of the state, compelled Mary of Medicis to venture upon de- cisive measures against him. Sully was active in prompting her to this step. The strength of the prince's party rendered the attempt hazardous; but the business was kept so secret., and w T as so ably managed, that he was arrested in the Louvre, and conveyed to the Bastile, without opposition. Here, and at Yin- cennes, he remained for three years, during part of which time he was harshly treated. It was not without much difficulty, and till he had been long con- fined, that his wife, \vho had become sincerely attached to him, was allowed to share his prison. His libera- tion was brought about by the fall of Concini, and he was reinstated in his honours. Thenceforth, he served Louis the thirteenth faithfully in the cabinet and the field. He died in 1646. Voltaire truly says, with respect to him, that his being the father of the great Conde, \vas his greatest glory. 180 HISTORY OP THE BASTltE. The downfall of Concini, marshal d'Ancre, which opened the gates of the Bastile to let out Conde, opened them also to admit, for a short time, the wife of the murdered marshal. After Concini had been assassinated by Vitry and his accomplices, and his body had been dragged from the grave, and torn into frag- ments, by an ignorant and savage populace, Leonora, his widow, was hurried to prison. She was a daughter of the female by whom Mary of Medicis was nursed, and had been the playmate of the princess. When Mary became the consort of Henry IV., she took Leonora in her train to Paris. So attached was Mary to her, that Leonora is said, by Mezeray, " to have directed at her pleasure the desires, the affections, and the hatreds of the queen." Riches were, of course, heaped upon her. She is charged with having fomented the disagreements of Mary and her inconstant hus- band, by making false statements, to excite the jea- lousy of her mistress. If she did so, which may be doubted, she was performing a work of supereroga- tion ; for Henry rendered falsehood unnecessary, by affording abundant and undisguised cause for com- plaint. The light of the sun was not more obvious than his conjugal infidelity. It was also objected, that she insolently shut her door against the princesses and nobles, who came to pay court to her in the height of her power. If this be true, it proves only that she had spirit and good sense enough to despise the syco- phancy of those by whom she knew herself to be de- tested. It is much in favour of Leonora's private character, that Mary of Medicis was so firmly her friend ; for, unlike the titled dames who surrounded her, Mary was a modest and virtuous woman. That the marshal and his partner fattened on the spoils of the state it would be folly to deny ; but, mean and criminal as such conduct undoubtedly is, we must bear in mind that the crime was common to all the cour- HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. 181 tiers of that period. Every one was eager, as the French phrase expresses it, " to carry off a leg or a wing/' It was envy, not abhorrence of robbing the public, that caused the destruction of Mary's favourites. In France, to live upon the imposts squeezed from the people was not deemed an impeachable act, un- less, perhaps, by those who had failed to get a share of the pillage ; and consequently there was no legal ground for dragging the widow of Concini to the bar. But hatred is ingenious in finding means to effect its pur- pose. Having first been so effectually plundered by the police officers, that she had not even a change of linen left, she was sent before a special commission, to be tried for Judaism and sorcery. Other charges were brought forward, but it is obvious that they were only meant to increase the odium under which she was labouring. The trial was, throughout, a mockery of justice. Evidence the most trivial in some instances, and absurd in others, was produced to substantiate the charge of Judaism and sorcery. Some Hebrew books, which were found in her apartment, were gravely sup- posed to be used by her for necromantic purposes. " By what magic did you gain such an influence over the mind of the queen-mother ?" was one of the ques- tions put by her judges. " My only magic," replied the prisoner, " was the power strong minds have over weak ones" a memorable reply, which goes far to prove that she was a woman of superior talent. Though the judges had, no doubt, been selected for the purpose of ensuring her condemnation to death, it turned out that a mistake had been made with respect to some of them, and that they were not of the opinion of d'Estrees, who thought that the orders of a master ought to be executed, whether they were just or unjust. Five of them absented themselves, and a few others voted for banishment. The majority, however, were 182 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. faithful to their mission, and she was sentenced to be beheaded, and her remains burnt, and scattered to the winds. By the same sentence, her husband's memory was branded with infamy, her son was declared ignoble, and incapable of holding office or dignity ; their man- sion, near the Louvre, was ordered to be levelled with the ground, and all their property was confiscated. On hearing this sentence, to which she was com- pelled to listen bareheaded, in the midst of an insulting crowd, nature for a moment prevailed in the bosom of Leonora, and she sobbed loudly. The disgrace of her son seems to have been more painful to her than even her own fate. She soon, however, recovered herself, and became resigned to her doom. When she was led to execution, her deportment so won for her the respect of the multitude, that not a syllable of reproach was heard. She looked firmly, yet without any theatrical affectation of heroism, on the block and the flaming pile ; submitted to the blow without a mur- mur ; and thus triumphantly vindicated her claim to the possession of a strong mind. Having passed over an interval of seven years, after the judicial murder of the Marchioness d'Ancre, we find the Bastile receiving John Baptist Ornano, the son of a father who enjoyed and deserved the friend- ship of Henry IV. Ornano was born in 1581, and was not more than fourteen when he commanded a company of cavalry at the siege of la Fere. He sub- sequently served with distinction in Savoy and other quarters. In 16 19, Louis the thirteenth appointed him gover- nor of Gaston, duke of Anjou, the king's brother, who was presumptive heir to the throne. Gaston had, for some time, been under the care of the count de Lude, than whom it would have been difficult to find a man more unfit for' his office, unless he was chosen for the purpose of leading his pupil astray. Ornano, by a pro- HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 183 per mixture of firmness and kindness, soon succeeded in perfectly acquiring the respect and affection of the prince. One part of the system, by which he pur- posed to break the bad habits of his youthful charge, is said to have consisted in awakening his ambition. With this view he dwelt upon the strong probability of the prince succeeding to the crown, and the neces - sity of making himself acquainted with affairs of state; and he taught him to believe, that he could gain such knowledge only by being admitted into the king's council. It may be supposed that, in thus acting, Ornano was not without an eye to his own advance- ment and influence. La Yieville, however, who then ruled, did not wish to see Gaston in the council, and still less Ornano. He, therefore, persuaded Louis to remove the prince's governor, and send him into Provence. Ornano refused to resign, and he was punished by being sent to the Bastile, whence he was transferred to the castle of Caen. Gaston remonstrated strongly against being deprived of his friend and preceptor; but his remonstrances would probably have been of little avail, had not la Vieville been precipitated from power. Ornano was then released by the king, and was placed at the head of the prince's household. In 1626, at the request of Gaston, seconded by the advice of Richelieu, he was created marshal of France. This promotion was the precursor of his fall. It was a part of the policy of Richelieu to grant, in the first instance, more to suitors of rank than they were entitled to expect, that, in case of their afterwards opposing him, he might treat them without mercy. It appears he soon began to suspect that the new-made marshal was not likely to be a sub- missive dependant, and this was enough to induce him to work his ruin. Ornano himself aided his dangerous enemy, by pertinaciously requiring admittance into the council, and by using offensive language on his demand 184 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. being refused. Various acts of the marshal were now represented in the darkest colours to the suspicious king, by Richelieu ; and Louis, always open to sug- gestions of this kind, imprisoned the supposed offender in the castle of Yincennes. Ornano died there, in September, 1626. His death was attributed to poison, but the report was certainly unfounded. Whether, if he had lived, he would have saved his head, is doubt- ful ; for when Richelieu had once resolved to have a man's head, it was hot easy to disappoint him. Among the few whom justice, not tyranny or ca- price, immured within the walls of the Bastile. may be reckoned Francis, count de Bouteville, of the ancient and illustrious family of Montmorenci, whose father, Louis de Montmorenci, was vice-admiral of France in the reign of Henry the fourth. The example which was made of him was necessary, to vindicate the in- sulted laws, and to check a murderous practice which had shed some of the best blood in the kingdom. For a long series of years, in defiance of the severe edicts issued against it by Henry IY. and Louis XIII., duelling had been carried to an extent which it is frightful to contemplate. War itself would scarcely have swept off more victims of the privileged class, than were sacrificed in private and frivolous quarrels. Paris, in particular, swarmed with professed duel- lists, who gloried in their exploits, and counted up their slain with the same exultation that a sportsman counts the game he has killed. Some, who prided themselves on a peculiar delicacy of honour, were ever on the watch to find a pretext for taking offence. Even to look at them, to touch any part of their dress in passing by them, or to utter a word which could be misconstrued, sufficed to draw from them a chal- lenge to mortal combat. Bouteville was one of the most conspicuous of these offenders. In 1624, M. Pontgibaud, in 1626, the HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 185 count de Thorigny and the Marquis Desportes, and in January, 1627, M. Lafrette, fell beneath his weapon. In consequence of the last of these encounters, he, and his second, the count des Chappelles, were com- pelled to take refuge at Brussels. Thither he was followed by the marquis de Beuvron, a relation of the count de Thorigny, who was eager to avenge his death. The archduchess Isabella, who then governed the Netherlands, brought about a semblance of recon- ciliation between them, but their rancour remained unabated; for even at the moment when, in sign of forgiveness, they embraced each other, Beuvron whispered to Bouteville, " I shall never be satisfied till I have met you sword in hand." The archduchess also solicited Louis the thirteenth to grant the pardon of Bouteville, but the monarch refused. On hearing this, the rash and insolent culprit exclaimed, " Since a pardon is denied, I will fight in Paris, ay, and in the Place Royale too ! " He was as good as his word. In May he returned to the French capital, and his first step was to offer Beuvron the satisfaction which that nobleman had expressed a wish to obtain. A combat of three against three was arranged, and the Place Royale was chosen as the spot for deciding it. Beuvron was seconded by Buquet, his equerry, and by Bussy d'Amboise, the latter of whom had been ill of fever for several days, and was weakened by repeated bleedings. Boute- ville brought with him des Chappelles, his cousin, and constant auxiliary on such occasions, and another gentleman. They fought with sword and dagger. Bussy being killed by des Chappelles, the five re- maining combatants, who began to dread the vengeance of the violated laws, sought for safety in flight. Beuvron and Buquet succeeded in escaping to England. Bou- teville and his cousin fled towards Lorraine. Unfor- tunately for them, Louis the thirteenth was then at the 186 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. Louvre, and, as soon as he heard of the duel, he ordered a vigorous pursuit of the offenders. At Vitry, in Champagne, the officers of justice overtook Bouteville and his associate ; the latter wished to resist, but the former prevailed on him to surrender. On their ar- rival at Paris, they were committed to the Bastile, and no time was lost in bringing them to trial. From all quarters the king was importuned by en- treaties to pardon the criminals. The countess de Bouteville threw herself at his feet, to beg the life of her husband ; but lie passed on without replying. " I pity her/' said he to his courtiers, " but I must and will maintain my authority." The nobility were not more successful in their supplications to the king and the parliament. At the trial all that forensic talent could do for the prisoners was done by Chastelet, their counsel. The plea which he put in for them was written with so much eloquence and boldness., that cardinal Richelieu sternly told him it seemed to im- peach the justice of the king. " Excuse me, sir," re- plied Chastelet, " it is only meant to justify his mercy, in case he should extend it to one of the bravest men in his kingdom." When the sentence of death was passed, another effort was made to move the king. The princess of Conde, accompanied by three duch- esses, and the wife of Bouteville, requested an audience of his Majesty. He at first refused to see them ; but he subsequently admitted them to a private interview in the queen's apartments. They pleaded in vain. " I regret their fate as much as you do," said he ; " but my conscience forbids me to pardon them." Bouteville seems, from the beginning, to have made up his mind to die, and to have been unfeignedly re- pentant. "While he was in the Bastile, he was attended by Cospean, the bishop of Nantes, one of the most highly gifted preachers of the age. It was by the exhortations of this pious prelate that Bouteville was HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 187 awakened to a due sense of his crimes. So moved was he by the fervid eloquence of his spiritual guide that, while his trial was yet pending, he said to him, and doubtless with perfect sincerity, " So resigned am I to the will of God, and so ready to do every thing to save my soul, if to save it be possible, that, even more pressingly than my wife now begs for my par- don, I will beg my judges to condemn me to the gib- bet, and to be drawn to it on a hurdle, in order to render my death more ignominious and meritorious/' It was not without difficulty that Cospean could dis- suade him from seeking salvation by means of this extraordinary self-abasement. Contrition alone, and not an act which would cast a stigma on his family, the prelate justly observed, was required to appease the wrath of an offended Deity. Bouteville and his cousin met death with much firmness ; the former refused to allow his eyes to be bandaged. On the scaffold a circumstance occurred, which appears to prove that vanity, like hope, some- times does not leave us till we die. The mustachios of Bouteville were large and handsome, and he put up his hands, as though to save them, when the exe- cutioner came to cutoff his hair. " What! my son," exclaimed Cospean, who attended him to the last, " are you still thinking on this world ! " The plan which, under seemingly favourable auspices, was formed, by Mary of Medicis and her partisans, to sub vert the power of Richelieu, and which was shattered to pieces on the day emphatically called the Day of the Dupes (November 11, 1630), was disastrous to many who were concerned in or suspected of favouring it. Of the Marillacs, one, a proved soldier, was brought to the scaffold ; the other, a magistrate of unimpeachable conduct, \vas hurried from one prison to another, and closely confined, and he died a captive. But we must restrict ourselves to those individuals who were com- 188 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. mitted to the Bastile. One of these was Yautier, born at Montpelier, in 1 592, who was the queen mother's principal physician. If we were to give credit to Guy Patin, we must believe that Yautier-was a worse pest than a whole host of duellists, and richly deserved to be the inmate of a dungeon. " He was," says Patin, " a rascally Jew of the A vignonese territory, very proud and very ignorant, who was lucky in having escaped the gallows for coining, and who afterwards found means to wriggle himself in at court." But the evidence of Patin is liable to more than suspicion in this instance ; for Yautier was a friend to antimony and chemical remedies, all of which his censurer held in abhorrence : to prescribe them was worse in his eyes than being guilty of all the deadly sins. Yautier, however, certainly appears to have been of an obstinate dispo- sition, and at times unjust. Yautier was believed to have so much influence with the queen mother, that he was one of the first to be arrested after the Day of the Dupes. He was con- fined for a while at Senlis, whence he was removed to the Bastile. In the Parisian fortress he remained for twelve years, during which period no communication with him was permitted. It was in vain that, after her flight, when she was so dangerously ill at Ghent, Mary of Medicis intreated to have the services of her confi- dential physician. Richelieu kept fast hold of his prey. In 1643, the captive was set at liberty by Mazarin, who subsequently appointed him head physician to the king. Patin flings his venom upon this appointment. It was, he says, bought of the minister for twenty thousand crowns, and the purchaser was to act as his Spy. He adds an insinuation, which does no credit to his heart. " See what policy is ! " he exclaims ; " this man was twelve years imprisoned by the father, yet the health of the son is entrusted to him." M. Patin seems to have thought, that a man who has been in- HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 189 jured by the parent, must needs wish to poison the child. Vautier died in 1652. The grave physician is succeeded by a very different personage ; a courtier of high birth, handsome, ac- complished, full of gallantry in both senses of theword^ witty, and with his natural talents improved by early study. Francis de Bassompierre, who was all this, was born in Lorraine, in 1579, and was descended from the princely house of Cleves. On returning from his travels, he visited the court of Henry IV., and soon acquired the friendship of that sovereign* Among a crowd of courtiers, each vying with the other in splendour and extravagance, he was one of the foremost. At the baptism of the king's children, he wore a dress of cloth of gold, covered with pearls, the cost of which was nine hundred pounds. Gaming, thanks to the bad example set by Henry, was scan- dalously prevalent ; and here, too, Bassompierre was prominent. He tells us, in his memoirs, that riot a day passed, while he was at Fontainebleau, in which tw r enty thousand pistoles were not won and lost, and that he was a winner of half a million of livres within twelve months. Desirous of adding the reputation of a soldier to his other pretensions, he served a campaign in Savoy, in 1602, and in Hungary the following year. Having established his military character, he resumed his sta<- tion at the French court. The greatest part of the business of his life seems now, and for many years, to have been amorous intrigues to apply the word love to them would be a profanation of it. However eager he might be to swell the number of his conquests, there is the best reason for believing, that those whom he attacked were willing enough to be overcome. It at once proves his attractions, and speaks volumes as to the low state of morals among the females at that period, that when, at a later date, Bassompierre was 190 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. about tobe imprisoned,he burnt more than six thousand letters, which contained the proofs of his amatory suc- cess. One of the most notorious of his amours was that in which he involved himself with Mdlle. En- tragues, sister of the king's mistress, the marchioness of Verneuil. By this lady he had a son. She is said to have obtained from him a promise of marriage, and for several years she sought to enforce the performance of it, and persisted in bearing his name. Meeting him one day at the Louvre, she told him publicly that he ought to cause the customary honours to be paid to her there, as his wife. " Why," said he, " will you take a nom de guerre ?" " You are the greatest fool in all the court !" exclaimed the enraged lady. "What would you have said to me, then, if I had married you ?" retorted the provoking Bassompierre. In 1605, the career of the gay deceiver was near being cut short by a serious accident. At a tourna- ment, in front of the Louvre, where the king was pre- sent, Bassompierre was so severely wounded by the lance of the duke of Guise, his antagonist, that his life was long in danger. This tournament was the last which was exhibited in France; the dangerous amuse- ment was discontinued, in consequence of this misad- venture. People began to be of the same opinion as the Turkish sultan, that it was too much for a jest and too little for earnest. Bassompierre at last appears to have felt that it was time for him "to live cleanly as a nobleman should do," and he resolved to marry. His choice fell on Charlotte de Montmorenci, one of the most rich and beautiful women in France, and neither she nor her father, the constable, was averse from the union. It has been seen, in the sketch of Conde's career, that Henry IV. became excessively enamoured of her. In some cases her marriage would have made no difference ; as Henry might have assented to it, HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 191 and bound down the husband not to exercise his con- jugal rights, as he had done with respect to Gabrielle d'Estrees and Jacqueline du Beuil. To such a re- striction he probably thought that Bassompierre would not submit. Calling him therefore to his bed-side for Henry was ill of the gout he told him that he meant to unite him to Mdlle. d' Aumale, and revive for him the dukedom of Aumale. On Bassompierre asking with a smile whether his majesty meant him to have two wives, the king sighed deeply, and said, " Bas- sompierre, I will speak to you as a friend. I am be- come not only in love with Mdlle. de Montmorenci, but absolutely beside myself for her. If you marry her, and she loves you, I shall hate you ; if she loves me, you will hate me. It is much better that this should not occur, to disturb the good understanding between us ; for I have the most affectionate regard for you." The result w T as that the courtier resigned his mistress, and was rewarded for the sacrifice with the rank of colonel-general of the Swiss regiments. Bassompierre would fain make us believe that he was sorely grieved, at being thus deprived of the beautiful Montmorenci ; but we may be sceptical on this head, since we have his confession, that, in order " not to be idle, and to console himself for his loss, he immediately made up his quarrel with three ladies, whom he had entirely quit- ted when he thought that he should be wedded." For more than twenty years, Bassompierre conti- nued to be a flourishing courtier. Once only, in that long period, he was in danger ; it was from the hosti- lity of la Yieville, the minister, who strove to cage him in the Bastile. The time of Bassompierre was, however, not yet come, and he had the satisfaction to witness the downfall of his enemy. In the course of these twenty years, he acquired reputation, both in the field and the cabinet ; he was active at various sieges and battles, particularly at the sieges of Rochelle and 192 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. Montauban, and he was entrusted with embassies to Spain, Switzerland, and England, which he executed in an able manner. For a short time he had the cus- tody of the Bastile ; and, in 1623, he rose to the rank of marshal. His being employed as a negotiator was the work of the royal favourite, Luynes, who was jealous of the influence which Bassompierre possessed with the monarch. Luynes was candid enough to confess this. " I love you, and esteem you," said he> " but the liking which the king has for you gives me umbrage. I am, in truth, situated like a husband who fears being deceived, and cannot see with pleasure an amiable man frequenting his wife." To remove from court the man whom he dreaded, Luynes offered the choice of a command, a government, or an embassy ; Bassompierre chose the last. Richelieu proved a far more formidable adversary than la Yieville. He doubted not that Bassompierre had been engaged in the late plot against him ; he knew that he was a friend of the queen mother ; and he suspected him of having borne a part in the clan- destine marriage of the duke of Orleans with the princess Margaret of Lorraine. It is said, also, that the cardinal imagined the marshal to have voted for imprisoning him, in case of the malecontents being successful. This was more than enough to bring down on him the vengeance of the triumphant minis- ter. Bassompierre was warned more than once of what would happen, and was advised to escape, but he refused to follow this advice. He was taken to the Bastile, in February, 1631 . His arrest cost the death of the princess of Conti, to whom he had long been secretly married ; she died of grief in little more than two months. Bassompierre had reason to hope that his imprison- ment would be but of short duration. The evening before he was seized, he had mentioned to the king HISTORY OF THE BAST1LE. 193 the reports which were afloat, and Louis had declared them to be false and expressed much affection for him. The day after the deed was done, the monarch sent him a message, that he considered him to be a faithful servant, that he was not arrested for any fault, but in the fear of his being led to commit one, and that he should soon be released. Year after year elapsed, however, and the promised liberation was still delayed. Hopes were often held out to him, apparently with no other intention than that of making him feel the pain of disappointment. There seems, indeed, to have been a malignant resolution formed to torment him. The grain on his Lorrain estate was seized, the estate itself was ravaged, his nephew's mansion was destroyed, his pay was stopped, cabals were excited against him in the Bastile, and he was compelled to relinquish his commission of colonel- general for an inadequate compensation. Yet, while Richelieu was acting thus, he could ask Bassompierre to lend him his country-house ! To add to the prisoner's vexa- tions, his property was going to ruin, some of his friends proved faithless, and death was busy among among his dearest relatives. It was twelve years before the decease of Richelieu gave freedom to Bassompierre. His post of colonel- general was restored to him by Mazarin ; and an in- tention was manifested of appointing him governor to the minor king, but this intention was frustrated by a fit of apoplexy, which put an end to his exist- ence in October 1646. Of the many individuals who were persecuted by the cardinal-king, none were more estimable than Francis de Rochechouart, who was usually denominated the chevalier de Jars. He was of an ancient and noble family, which traced back its origin to the viscounts of Limoges, early in the eleventh century. To great personal and mental graces, and prepossessing man- 194 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. ners, he added a mind of such firmness as is not of common occurrence, especially among the cour- tier tribe. His eminent qualities gained him the friendship of Anne of Austria, which alone was suf- ficient to excite the suspicion and hatred of Richelieu that ultra Turk, who could bear "no rival near his throne," nor even the friend of any one who could possibly become a rival. In 1626, de Jars was there- fore ordered to quit the court. He retired to Eng- land, where he soon won the favour of Charles I., his queen Henrietta Maria, the duke of Buckingham, and other distinguished characters. Bassompierre, an acute observer, was at that time in England as am- bassador from Louis XIII., and from the manner in which he mentions him, it is evident that de Jars was in high repute at the court of Charles. In 1631, de Jars was allowed to return, or was recalled to his native country. Whether he was lured over to France, that he might be within the grasp of his potent enemy, cannot now be ascertained. It is probable that he was, for he did not long remain at liberty. In February, 1632, he was involved in the downfall of Chateauneuf, the keeper of the seals, who had inexpiably offended the implacable minister. De Jars had sufficient demerit to bring down this misfor- tune on him ; he was the friend, and, as Bassompierre affirms, the confidant of Chateauneuf, possessed the queen's esteem, and was perhaps, suspected of being looked upon with a favourable eye by the beautiful and fickle duchess of Chevreuse, of whom Richelieu was enamoured. As, however the first two of these offences would have hardly justified his imprisonment and trial, and as the third had the same defect in a greater degree, and, besides, could not have been decorously urged against him by a high dignitary of the church, the crime attributed to him was that of assisting Anne of Austria to correspond with Spain, and of planning inSTORY OF THE BASTILE, 195 the removal to England of the queen-mother and the duke of Orleans. It was the depth of winter when de Jars was thrown Into one of the dungeons of the Bastile, and there he was kept for eleven months, till the clothes rotted off his back. The reader will remember what horrible abodes these dungeons were. It being supposed, per- haps, that his spirit was by this time enough broken, he was sent for trial to Tours, where a tribunal of obe- dient judges had been formed, for the express purpose of sitting in judgment upon him. At the head of this tribunal was one Laffemas, or La Fymas ; a man who was redeemed from the contempt of mankind for his baseness, only by the hatred which was excited by his power and will to do mischief. He was the ready tool, or, to use a more emphatic and appropriate French phrase, the dme damnee of Richelieu, and was capa- ble of diving to the lowest deep of degradation, in the service of his' master. Pie bore the well-earned and significant nickname of " the cardinal's hangman." At the Bastile and at Troyes, de Jars underwent no fewer than eighty examinations. In these, Laffemas strained every nerve to seduce, or beguile, or terrify, the prisoner into avowals which would manifest or Imply guilt in himself or in his friends. But de Jars was proof alike against feigned sympathy, intreaties, artful snares, and ferocious threats. Not a word I renounce you as my judge, and I call upon every one who hears me to bear witness that I protest against your being so." This singular scene drew the wondering congrega- tion round the parties. But the people were by 110 means inclined to interfere in behalf of the intendant, and some time elapsed before the soldiers could extri- cate him from the gripe of the prisoner. Laffemas seems not to have been deficient in courage. Undis- concerted by this sudden attack, he said, in a conci- liating tone, " Do not make yourself uneasy, sir ; I assure you that the cardinal loves you ; you will get off with merely going to travel in Italy ; but you must first allow us to show you some billets, in your own hand- writing, which will convince you that you are more blameable than you say you are." " Such an insinuation," remarks Aiiquetil, " was not calculated to set him at ease. Richelieu, as Madame de Motte-* ville tells us, said, that ' with two lines of a man's writing, how r ever innocent that man might be, he might be brought to trial ; because, by proper ma- nagement, whatever was wanted could be found in them/ Accordingly, when de Jars heard talk of writing, he gave himself up for lost, but he soon armed himself with renovated courage." The insinuation that written evidence existed was a falsehood. Fresh arts were therefore employed, to obtain a confession. They were as fruitless as all the HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 197 former had been. Sentence of death was then passed ; and, this having been done, final efforts mere made to move him, first by a promise of pardon, next by the menace of torture. He treated both with contempt. He was at last led to the scaffold ; he ascended it with calm courage ; and, after once more asserting his inno- cence, he laid his head upon the block. While he was waiting for the blow, and all earthly hopes must have been dead in his bosom, he was suddenly raised up, and told that his life was spared. As he was about to descend from the scaffold, the infamous Laffemas approached, and besought him, in return for the king's mercy, to disclose whatever he knew respecting the misdeeds of Chateauneuf. But de Jars disdainfully replied, " It is in vain that you seek to take advantage of my disturbed state of mind; since the fear of death failed to extort from me anything that could injure my friend, you may be certain that all your labour will be thrown away.*' 5 "" It is said that the whole of this scene a disgraceful scene to all the actors but one was got up by Laffe- mas under the direction of Richelieu. Packed as the * Biographers and historians differ with respect to the circum- stances which ensued on the pardon being announced. While some give the statement which I have adopted, others affirm that, when de Jars was taken back to prison, he remained for a long while speechless, and seemingly deprived of all consciousness. This is asserted by Madame de Motteville ; and, as she was his intimate friend, her authority has considerable weight. But her assertion may be correct, and yet it is more than probable that de Jars may have made the reply which is attributed to him. I think the con- duct ascribed to him in the text more consonant than any othei with his intrepid character. Nature, however, can endure only to a certain point, and the effort that is made to bear up, and which, as long as danger is present, seldom fails with the honourable and brave, necessarily produces exhaustion when the struggle is over. It may therefore easily be believed, that, though de Jars was capa- ble of answering Laffemas with his wonted spirit and the very sight of such a monster would stimulate that spirit he might sink into insensibility on his return to prison. 198 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. judges were, it was supposed that, if they thought death were to ensue, even they would shrink from pronouncing the guilt of a man against whom there was not a shadow of proof. The pardon was, there- fore, shown to them, and they were told that the mockery of an execution was only meant to intimi- date the prisoner into the desired confession. But of what stuff must judges have been made in those days, when they could thus consent to violate the dignity of justice, and the feelings of humanity, in order to gratify the malice of a minister ! From Troyes, de Jars was sent back to the Bastile. He remained there till the spring of 1638, when he was liberated on condition of his immediate departure, to travel in Italy. From Guy Patin's letters, we learn that the chevalier was indebted for his release to the intercession of Charles I. of England and Hen- rietta Maria. He did not return to France till after the decease of his persecutor. De Jars was engaged in the early part of the poli- tical contest, which led to the ridiculous war of the Fronde ; but he seems to have been rather a peace- maker than a firebrand, for he endeavoured to arrange matters by bringing about a reconciliation between Mazarin, with whom he had become acquainted at Rome, and Chateauneuf, the keeper of the seals, of whom he was a constant friend. He at length with- drew from the court, passed his latter years in happy retirement, and died in 1670. Nearly at the same time that de Jars was set free, the gates of the Bastile were opened to admit three citizens of Paris, who had been guilty of a crime which could not be overlooked ; they had dared to remon- strate, perhaps somewhat too roughly, against being robbed of the means of subsistence, " They went,** says Guy Patin, " to M. Corneuil, and in some de- gree threatened him, on a report being spread, that HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 199 the payment of the annuities receivable at the Town Hall was about to be suspended, and the money to be applied in usus bellicos. The names of these three annuitants are Bourges, Chenu, and Celoron, and they are all three boni mri optimeque mihi noti. God grant, I pray, that no misfortune may happen to them." Whether the kind prayer of Patin was heard, we are not told. That such things should occur in a country go- verned as France was, is quite natural. Richelieu brooked not even the shadow of opposition ; and, Louis, submissive slave though he was to an imperious minister, had all the brutal pride of an Oriental des- pot. In two instances (out of many which might be quoted), the one not long before, and the other shortly after, this period, the monarch, to whom parasites prostituted the title of " the just," did not scruple to treat with contumelious insolence the parliament of Paris, a body of magistrates eminent for their learn- ing and other qualities. On the first occasion, having taken offence at a request which they made, he told them that, " in future, whenever he came to them, he should expect to be received outside the door of their hall, by four presidents on their knees, as the custom had formerly been." The second time, when, with respect to the duke de Valette's trial, the president Bellievre, in decorous but dignified language, remon- strated with Louis on his gross violation of justice and proper feeling, in wishing the judges to sit in his own palace, while he was present to overawe them, he fu- riously replied, that he detested all those who opposed his trying a duke and peer wherever he pleased. They were, he told them, ignorant beings, unfit for their office, and he did not know whether he should not put others in their place. " I will be obeyed," said he ; " and I will soon make you see plainly that all privileges are founded only on a bad custom, and that 200 HISTORY OF THE BASTILfi. I will not hear them talked about any more." But from this which, however, can scarcely be called a digression let us return to his captives in the Bastile. During a part of the time that De Jars was in the Bastile, there was within its walls a prisoner equally as brave, and of as honourable a character, as him- self. This was Adrien de Montluc, count de Cramail, born in 1568, a grandson of that intrepid but cruel Montluc whose commentaries were called by Henry IY. the Soldier's Bible. In the second of Regnier's satires, which is addressed to Cramail, the poet winds up an animated panegyric on him, by declaring that he proves " virtue not to be dead in all courtiers." There was more truth in this than is always to be found in the eulogies lavished by a poet. It appears, from various authorities, that he shone in conversation, was well-informed, and was an honourable, benevolent, and judicious man. As a military officer, he earned repu- tation in various battles. His conduct at the combat of Yeillane, in 1630, where Montmorenci utterly de- feated a force five times as numerous as his own, called forth a complimentary letter from cardinal Richelieu. " Fewer lines than you have received blows," says his eminence, "will suffice to testifymy joy that the enemy has cut out more work for your tailor than your sur- geon. I pray to God that, after such rencounters, you may always have more to spend for clothes than plais- ters ; and that, for the advantage of the king's service, and the glory of those who have acquired so much on this occasion, others of the same kind may often occur; among which there will, I hope, be some that will enable me to convince you that I am, &c. &c." The manner in which Richelieu proved his friend- ship for Cramail was by sending him to the Bastile. It has been stated that Cramail was put into confine- ment shortly after the Day of the Dupes, and his at- tachment to the prince of Conde was the cause of it. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 201 This, however, appears to be a mistake. Cramail was undoubtedly serving under Louis XIII. in Lor- rain, as late as 1635, at the period when the French arms were under a temporary eclipse ; and we learn from Laporte, and other writers, that, believing the king's person to be in jeopardy, the count advised him to return to Paris. For this advice, reasonable as it was, he was incarcerated by Richelieu. His imprison- ment did not terminate till after the death of the car- dinal. He did not long survive his persecutor ; his health was broken by captivity and harsh treatment, and he died in 1646. Cramail was the author of three works " La Comedie des Proverbes ; " " Les Jeux de Tlnconnu ; " and " Les Pensees du Solitaire." Among the contemporaries of Bassompierre, de Jars, and Cramail, within the walls of the Bastile, there was another of equal rank, but not of an equally noble mind. His hands were stained with blood ; his earliest promotion was bought by perpetrating a cowardly murder. This personage was Nicholas de 1'Hospital, marquis of Yitry, to whom I have slightly alluded in my notice of the marchioness d'Ancre. He was the degenerate son of a warrior, who was incapable of a dishonourable action. Vitry, who was born in 1611, succeeded his father as captain of the royal guards, and ingratiated himself with Luynes, the minion of Louis XIII. In concert with Luynes, he formed the plan of assassinating marshal d'Ancre, who was ob- noxious to the king. Eager to win the marshal's staff which was held by Concini, Yitry let slip no opportu- nity of irritating the king against the intended victim, and of pressing for permission to assassinate him. The monarch hesitated for a while, not from virtue but from fear ; he ended by granting his sanction, and Yitry lost not a moment in acting upon it. With his brother du Hallier, and an associate named Perray, he waited for Concini at the entrance of the Louvre, and there 202 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. the three confederates despatched him with pistols, which they had kept concealed beneath their cloaks. When Louis was informed that the deed was done, he had the ineffable baseness to look out at the palace window, and exclaim, " Many thanks to you, Yitry ! I am now really king ! " It must, however, be owned that the baseness of the monarch was kept in coun- tenance by that of his courtiers and flatterers, who lauded the assassin as profusely as though he had been the saviour of the state. For this disgraceful service, Yitry was rewarded by the great object of his ambition, the rank of marshal. On hearing of this, the duke of Bouillon indignantly declared that he blushed at being a French marshal, now that the marshal's staff was made the recompense of one who traded in murder. Though, of the two favourites of the queen-mother, Yitry had slain the husband with his own hand, and thus been the cause of the wife's public execution, and though at that time he had treated her with disgusting insolence, yet when, two years afterwards, a feigned reconcilement took place between Mary of Medicis and her son, she allowed Yitry to be presented to her. On this occasion a scene of dissimulation occurred, which has not often been paralleled. Yitry bent to kiss the hem of her garment, but she graciously stretched out her hand to raise him, saying, at the same time, " I have always praised your affectionate zeal in the king's service/' To which, with equal since- rity, he replied, "it was that consideration alone which induced me to do all that the king desired ; without, however, my having had the slightest idea of offending your majesty." If we cannot praise, the parts which these actors played, we must at least admit that they played them skilfully. The military career of Yitry did not begin till the breaking out of the war between the Protestants and HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 203 Catholics, in 1621 . Though he was deficient in prin- ciple, he was not so in courage ; in the course of the war he distinguished himself upon many occasions, particularly in the isle of Rhe and at the blockade of Rochelle. He obtained the government of Pro- vence in 1631, and he held it for six years. At the expiration of that period, he was arrested, and sent to the Bastile. His having caned an archbishop, and misused his authority in various cases, were among the causes of his imprisonment. Richelieu said of him that, " though his courage and fidelity rendered him worthy to govern Provence, yet it was necessary to deprive him of office, because, being of a haughty and insolent disposition, he was not fit to- rule a people so jealous as the Provengals were of their franchises and privileges." Vitry spent six years in the Bastile, from which pri- son he was not released till after the death of cardinal Richelieu. During the latter part of his imprisonment he participated in intrigues, which would have brought him to the block had they been discovered. In con- junction with Bassompierre, Cramail, and others, he entered into the plot of which the gallant count de Soissons was the head. The state prisoners in the Bastile were, at that period, allowed so much freedom of intercourse, both with their friends and among them- selves, that they had plenty of opportunity to con- spire. It was arranged, between Yitry, Bassompierre, and their associates, that, as soon as Soissons had gained a victory, they should seize the Bastile and the Arsenal, and call the citizens of Paris to arms. De Retz is of opinion that the success of their scheme would have been certain ; but the death of Soissons, who fell in the battle of Marfee at the moment of his victory, prevented the conspirators from carrying their design into effect. Fortunately for those who were 204 HISTORY THE BASTILE. concerned, their secret practices were never disclosed while cardinal Richelieu was alive. Vitry was created a duke in 1644, but he died in a few months after he obtained this title. He left a son, possessed of talent far superior to his own, and who in character more resembled his grandfather than liis father. The count de la Chatre, in his Memoirs, relates a circumstance respecting the liberation of Vitry and his fellow- prisoners. The anecdote shows among other things, to what an extent Louis XIII. was in- fected with what Byron calls the " good old gentle- manly vice" of avarice. " The cardinal (Mazarin) and M. de Chavigny," says la Chatre, " solicited the king for the deliverance of the marshals * Vitry and Bassompierre, and the count de Cramail. The means which they employed on this Occasion deserve to be recorded, as being rather pleasant ; for, finding that the king was not very willing to comply, they attacked him on his weak side, and represented to him that these three prisoners cost him an enormous sum to keep them in the Bastile, and that, as they were no longer able to raise cabals in the kingdom, they might as wellbe at home, where they would cost him nothing. This indirect mode succeeded, this prince being pos- sessed by such extraordinary avarice, that whoever asked him for money was an insufferable burthen to him ; so far did he carry this, that, after the return of Treville, Beaupuy, and others, whom the violence of the late cardinal (Richelieu) had, when he was dying forced him to abandon, he sought occasion to give a rebuff to each of them, that he might prevent them from hoping to be rewarded for what they had suffered for him." Here we see a king beginning his reign by prompting his servants to commit murder, and ending it by displaying cold-blooded ingratitude to those HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 205 who had been faithful to him fit end for such a beginning ! From a noble, who stained his hands with blood, to win the favour of a king, we gladly turn to a plebeian, who risked his life, rather than violate his fidelity to the neglected and ill-used consort of that monarch. Peter de la Porte was this plebeian, who, though his trials were not carried to such a dreadful extent as those of the chevalier de Jars, has a legitimate claim, as far as regards probity and firmness of mind, to be placed in the same class with that distinguished character. La Porte was born in 1603, and entered into the service of Anne of Austria at the age of eighteen, as one of her cloak-bearers. It being suspected that he was trusted by the queen, he was deprived of his office in 1626, when a desperate attempt was made by the mi- nister to implicate her in the conspiracy of LaChalais. He then entered into her body guards. In 1631, he was, however, allowed to resume his former situation. Ever studying to abase the queen, Richelieu be- lieved that he had at last found an opportunity to ac- complish his purpose effectually . This w T as in 1 637 * . That the queen should privately keep up some corre- spondence with the king of Spain and the cardinal infant, who were her brothers, and also with the per- sons whom she valued in the courts of Madrid and Brussels, was natural, more especially in her discom- fortable situation, slighted as she was by her husband, and thwarted and misrepresented by the minister and * It has been conjectured, by some writers, that Richelieu \vas stimulated to this new attack upon the queen by the circumstance of her being pregnant, which induced him to dread that her influ- ence would be greatly increased, if he did not find the means of rendering her an object of suspicion. But the conjecture is erro- neous, as a comparison of dates will prove. The attack upon her was commenced in the summer of 1637 (La Porte was sent to Ibe Bastile in August), and the queen was not brought to bed till Sep- tember 1638, thirteen months afterwards. 206 HISTORY OP THE BASTlLE. the minister's satellites. But Anne of Austria had a sincere attachment to France, and there is no reason to believe that her letters contained anything which could prejudice her adopted country. Yet, it was not advisable that they should come into the hands of a man, who boasted that with only two lines of an in- nocent person's writing he could ruin him a boast which could be made by no one that was not dead to honour and shame. It was necessary, therefore, to provide a safe place, where the correspondence might be deposited. The queen's favourite convent of Val de Grace, of which she was the foundress, was the place which she chose. There Anne had an elegant apartment, or oratory, in which, after her devotions were over, she could sometimes, free from the con- straint and heartlessness of the court, enjoy a few hours of social intercourse with the inmates of the convent. One of the nuns received the letters from Spain and the Netherlands, and placed them in a closet, whence they were taken by the queen, whose answers were forwarded in the same manner. Richelieu, who had spies in all quarters, discovered the secret of the correspondence which was carried on through the Yal de Grace. He lost not a moment in filling the mind of the weak Louis with phantoms of danger, which was to arise from the queen's unautho- rised communications with her relatives. The queen was hurried off by her husband to Chantilly, where she was confined to her own room, scantily attended, and was obliged to submit to being interrogated by the chancellor. Such was the baseness of the courtiers that, believing her to be lost, not one of them would venture even to look up at her window. Her confi- dential servants were shut up in various prisons. The chancellor himself visited Yal de Grace to make a rigorous search for papers ; but he found nothing. That he failed in his search is not marvellous ; for he is HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 207 believed to have previously contrived to give the queen notice of the intended visit. All the papers had con- sequently been removed, and placed under the care of the marchioness of Sourdis. Foiled in this attempt to reach the secret, Riche- lieu tried whether it might not be wrung from the servants of the queen. La Porte, as being supposed to possess a large share of her confidence, was of course most open to suspicion and persecution. There had, besides, been found upon him a letter from the queen to the duchess of Chevreuse, who was then in exile. In the month of August, 1637, he was committed to the Bastile. Here he was repeatedly and severely questioned, but nothing to criminate his royal mistress could be drawn from him. It was in vain that the cardinal himself employed threats and promises, to obtain the information which he so much desired. The obstinate fidelity of La Porte was not to be shaken, even when the commissary showed him a paper, w r hich he said contained an order for applying to him the torture, and took him to the room that he might see the instruments. He was equally proof to the fear of death. In May, 1638, it being then certain that, after being childless for two-and-twenty years, Anne of Austria was in a situation to give an heir to the throne, the liberation of La Porte was granted to her. He was, however, exiled to Sauinur, where he resided till the decease of Louis XIII. When Anne became regent, she recalled him, and gave him a hundred thousand francs, that he might purchase the place of principal valet-de-chambre to the king. This office he held for several years. But La Porte was too honest to prosper in a corrupt court. Sincerely attached to the queen-regent, he thought it his duty to apprise her of the degrading reports which were spread on the subject of her long interviews with Mazarin, and 208 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. by this candour he cooled her friendship and gratitude, while, at the same time, he incurred the enmity of the cardinal himself, by communicating to her a circum- stance, relative to the young king, which Mazarin was desirous of keeping concealed. In revenge, Mazarin deprived him of his place, and forbad him to appear at court. It was not till after the death of the cardinal that La Porte was again admitted to the king's pre- sence, and from him he met with a kind reception. He died in 1680. Alchemy, the rock on which the peace and fortune of numbers have been wrecked, was still more fatal to Noel Pigard Dubois, a restless and certainly unprin- cipled adventurer, whom it deprived of liberty and life. He was a native of Coulomiers, adopted his father's profession, that of a surgeon, then abandoned it, and voyaged to the Levant, where he spent four years. During his stay in the East, he studied the occult sciences. Returning to Paris, he passed there four years of an obscure and often intemperate existence, associating chiefly with pretenders to alchemical know- ledge. Caprice, or a sudden fit of devotion, next induced him to enter a Capuchin convent, but he appears to have speedily become tired of restraint, and accordingly he scaled the walls and escaped. At the expiration of three years he re-embraced a monastic life, took the vows, and was ordained a priest, in which character he was known by the name of Father Simon. The quicksilver of his disposition seemed at length to be fixed, for he continued to wear the monkish habit during ten years ; but he verified the proverb that the cowl does not make the monk, his unquiet spirit was again roused into action, and he fled into Germany. There he became a convert to the doctrines of Luther, and once more devoted him- self to seeking for the philosopher's stone. 1 1 oping, perhaps, that there would be more believers, HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 209 or fewer rivals, in his own country than in Germany, he retraced his steps to Paris. Probably he was him- self half dupe, half knave, almost believing that he had really found the great secret, but resolved at all events to turn his supposed skill to his own advantage. His first step was to abjure protestantism ; his next was to marry under a fictitious name. Rumours of his wonderful hermetic discoveries were speedily bruited about. They procured him the acquaintance of an Abbe Blondeau, an evidently credulous man, who introduced him to Father Joseph, the favourite and confidant of Richelieu, as a person who might be useful to the state. For the services which Dubois was to render, it was stipulated that his past misdeeds should be buried in oblivion. France was at that time groaning under a heavy load of taxation, money was raised by the most abominable exactions ; and, consequently, it was but just that an individual who promised to procure supplies more innocently than by grinding the face of the people, should be forgiven for offences which, though deserving of punishment, were somewhat less iniquitous than systematic tyranny and extortion. It affords a striking proof to what an extent the delusions of alchemy prevailed in that age, that the strong-minded Richelieu instantly grasped at the bubble which floated before him. Had only the weak Louis done so, there would have been no cause for wonder. But the minister was full as eager as his nominal sovereign. It was arranged that Dubois should perform the " great work" in the presence of the king, the queen, and a throng of illustrious per- sonages. The Louvre was the place at which the new and never- failing gold mine w r as to be opened. When the important day arrived, Dubois adroitly acted in a manner which was calculated to inspire con- fidence. He requested that some one might be charged 210 HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. to keep an eye on his proceedings. One of his hody fuards, named Saint Amour, was chosen by the king 3r this purpose. Musket balls, given by a soldier, together with a grain of the powder of projection, were placed in a crucible, the whole was covered with cinders, and the furnace fire was soon raised to a pro- per pitch. The transmutation was now declared by Dubois to be accomplished, and he requested that Louis would himself blow off the ashes from the pre- cious contents of the crucible. Eager to see the first specimen of the boundless riches which were about to flow in upon him, the king plied the bellows with such violence, that the eyes of the queen and many of the courtiers were nearly blinded with the dust. At last a lump of gold emerged to view, and his transports were boundless. He hugged Dubois with childish rapture, ennobled him, and appointed him president of the treasury, nominated Blondeau a privy counsellor, promised a cardinal's hat to Father Joseph, and gave eight thousand livres to Saint Amour. The master of perennial treasures could afford to be generous. The experiment is said to have been repeated, and with the same success as in the first instance. Dubois must at least have been a clever knave, an adept in legerdemain, to have deluded so many strongly inte- rested spectators, and that, too, in spite of the precau - tions which he had himself daringly recommended, for the prevention of fraud. But there was a rock on which the luckless adven- turer was doomed to split. Humbler patrons than he had found might for a long while have been satisfied with the scanty portion of gold contained in the bottom of a crucible ; but the desires of his powerful friends were of a more greedy and impatient kind, not to be fed with distant hopes, but demanding large and im- mediate fruition. Richelieu loudly called upon the HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 214 alchemist to operate on an extensive scale ; and he proved that it was necessary to do so, by requiring that Dubois should furnish weekly a sum which should not be less than six hundred thousand livres, about 25,000^. The startled Dubois requested time to make the requisite preparations, and time was granted. In truth, as the powder of projection was believed to be procurable only by a protracted and laborious pro- cess, it was impossible not to admit his claim for delay. The marvel is, that he did not avail himself of the respite, to get beyond the reach of danger. When the day arrived which he had named, he was of course compelled to own that he was not yet prepared. Suspicion being excited, he was imprisoned at Yin- cennes, whence he was transferred to the Bastile. Offended pride and vanity and disappointed cupidity are often cruel passions. To punish Dubois for his sins against them, the cardinal appointed a commission to try him ; but being averse from coming forward int the character of a dupe, he ordered him to be arraigned on a charge of dealing in magic. As the wretched man obstinately persisted in denying his guilt, he was put to the torture. To gain a brief reprieve from his sufferings, he offered to realise the golden dreams which he had excited. Faith was not quite extinct in his patrons, and he was allowed to make another experiment. It is needless to say that he failed. Being thus driven from his last hold, he avowed his impos- ture, was sentenced to death, and terminated his exist- ence on the scaffold, on the 23rd of June, 1637. The battle of Thionville, which was fought in 1639, and terminated in the defeat of the French, and the death of Feuquieres, their general, gave two prisoners to the Bastile; not foreign enemies, or rebellious Frenchmen, but officers who had combated for their country the count de Grance and the marquis de Praslin. At Thionville, the troops under their orders 212 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. refused to advance, and finally ran away. It appears, from the testimony of Bassompierre, that no blame was attributable to the count or the marquis ; they were nevertheless immured in the Bastile, though it does not seem easy to discern how the cowardice of soldiers is to be cured by imprisoning their officers. It was, however, in a similar kind of spirit, only some- what more barbarous, that in England, more than a century afterwards, admiral Byng was sacrificed (mur- dered is the proper word) ; not, as Yoltaire sarcasti- cally observes, " to encourage the others," but to di- vert public indignation from its proper objects. The system was carried to a horrible length in France, during the reign of terror. Less sanguinary, in this instance, than his imitators, Richelieu contented him- self with inflicting a short deprivation of liberty. The two captives were restored to favour, and Grance rose, in the next reign, to the rank of marshal. The next two cases which are on record, afford a strik- ing proof of the contempt in which Richelieu held justice and the law of nations, whenever they chanced to stand in the way of his political schemes, and the gratification of his vindictive spirit. On the death of the gallant warrior, Bernard of Saxe Weimar, which took place in the summer of 1639, the possession of his admirably trained army became an object which all the bellige- rent powers were eager to obtain. Among those who sought the prize was the Prince Palatine, a son of the unfortunate Frederic, who lost the crown of Bohemia and his own hereditary states. The prince was pass- ing through France, from England, to enter on the negociation, when he was arrested, and sent to the Bastile, under pretence of his being an unknown and suspected person. Richelieu, meanwhile, pushed on his treaty with the officers of the deceased duke, and succeeded in purchasing their services for France. When this was accomplished, it was discovered that HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 213 the arrest of the Prince Palatine was a mistake, and he was consequently set free. The second case occurred in the following year, 1640, and was a still more flagrant violation of inter- national laws, and more fraught with circumstances of baseness and malignity. Louis XIII. had a sister, Christina, beautiful, accomplished, and of winning manners ; in a word, as worthy of being beloved as he was the contrary. This princess was the widow of the duke of Savoy, who left to her the regency of his states, during the minority of Emanuel Philibert, his son. On the decease of her husband, the ambition of his brothers prompted them to grasp at the reins of government, and, to effect their purpose, they called in the aid of Spain. The duchess was sorely pressed by her enemies. In this strait, nature and policy com- bined to makg her apply to Louis for aid. The appeals to him, in her letters, are often affecting. Richelieu was willing enough to send succours, but he was deter- mined that they should be bought at an extravagant rate. His object, in truth, was to place the dominions of the minor, and even the minor himself, at the mercy of France. He not only required that certain for- tresses should be delivered up to him, but also that the young duke should be put into the hands of the French king, that is to say, into his own. To bring this about, he descended to the most unworthy in- trigues and double dealing ; alternately calumniating the duchess to her brothers-in-law, and them to her, in order to render impossible an accommodation be- tween them. Borne down by necessity, the duchess at length consented to admit French garrisons into some of her fortresses, but she resolutely persisted in refusing to surrender her son. The firmness of the duchess was sustained by count Philip d'Aglie, one of her principal ministers, a man of discernment and talent, who never slackened in 214 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. his hostility to the scheme of Richelieu . He feared that the visit of the young duke to France would resemhle the descent into Avernus " Sed revocare gradum, hoc opuS) hie labor est" The cardinal had hoped that, in an inter view which the duchess had with Louis at Grenoble, she might he cajoled or terrified into com- pliance. But on that occasion her own firmness was backed by the presence of count d' Aglie, and the ex- pectations of the ungodly churchman were in conse- quence frustrated. So irritated was he by his dis- appointment, that he proposed, in council, to arrest the count ; but, powerful and feared as he was, he could not prevail upon the members to assent to this measure. It was therefore postponed to a better op- portunity. In the meanwhile, calumny was set at work to blacken the character of the devoted indivi- dual, that when the happy time arrived for pouncing upon him, he might excite no sympathy. That the slander would wound the duchess also was a matter of little concern to the personage by whom it was propagated. It was roundly asserted, apparently with- out the shadow of a reason for it, that an illicit inter- course subsisted between the duchess and the minis- ter, the latter of whom the cardinal, with an affectation of virtuous anger, was pleased to designate as " the wretch who was ruining the reputation of Christina." It was not till the following year that he could suc- ceed in wreaking his malice on the count. As soon as the French troops had recovered Turin from the Spaniards, Richelieu ordered d' Aglie to be seized ; and, in spite of the remonstrances of the duchess against this gross violation of her sovereignty, he was hurried into France, and confined in the Bastile. The date of the count's deliverance I am unable to ascertain, but it is probable that his imprisonment was not protracted beyond the life of the cardinal. It appears to have been about this time that there HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 215 was published a bitter satire upon the cardinal, for which an unlucky author, who had no concern with it, was conveyed to the Bastile. The satire bore the title of " The Milliad," from its consisting of a thousand lines. One edition is intituled, " The Pre- sent Government, or the Eulogy of the Cardinal." It was attributed to Charles de Beys, a now-forgotten author, who wrote three plays and some verses, and was lauded as a rival of Malherbe, by a few of his ill -judging contemporaries. It must have been some mischievous joker that ascribed " The Milliad " to him, for Beys was not the sort of man to meddle with po- litical satire, especially on such a dangerous subject; he was of an indolent, convivial disposition, and spent the largest portion of his time in enjoying the plea- sures of the table. He w r as, nevertheless, pent up in the Bastile, as the libeller of the all-potent cardinal. Fortunately for him, he was able to prove his inno- cence, was set at liberty, and continued to follow his former course of life, till his constitution gave way, and he died, in 1659, at the age of forty. In the winter of 1642, Richelieu, who had so largely fed the prisons and scaffolds of France, ter- minated his career of ambition and blood. There is extant a letter which, while the cardinal was on his death bed, was written to him by one of his victims, named Dussault. The letter bears date on the first of December, three days previous to the decease of the minister, and it seems never to have reached him. What was the offence of Dussault is not known ; from a broad hint which is given in his epistle, it appears that he suffered for having refused to execute some sanguinary order given to him by Richelieu. When he penned the following lines, he had been more than eleven years an inmate of the Bastile. " My Lord, There is a time when man ceases to be barbarous and unjust ; it is when his approaching 216 klSTORY OF THE BASTILE. dissolution compels him to descend into the gloom of his conscience, and to deplore the cares, griefs, pains, and misfortunes, which he has caused to his fellow creatures : allow me to say fellow creatures, for you must now see that of which you would never before allow yourself to be convinced, or persuade yourself to know, that the sovereign and excellent celestial Workman has formed us all on the same model, and that he designed men to be distinguished from each other by their virtues alone. Now, then, my lord, you are aware that foreleven years you have subjected me to sufferings, and to enduring a thousand deaths in the Bastile, where the most disloyal and wicked subject of the king would be still worthy of pity and compassion. How much more then ought they to be shown to me, whom you have doomed to rot there, for having disobeyed your order, which, had I per- formed it, would have condemned my soul to eternal torment, and made me pass into eternity with blood- stained hands. Ah ! if you could but hear the sobs, the lamentations and groans, which you extort from me, you would quickly set me at liberty. In the name of the eternal God, who will judge you as well as me, I implore you, my lord, to take pity on my sufferings and bewailings ; and, if you wish that He should show mercy to you, order my chains to be broken before your death hour comes, for when that comes, you will no longer be at leisure to do me that justice which I must require only from you, and you will persecute me even after you are no more, from which God keep us, if you will permit yourself to be moved by the most humble prayer of a man who has ever been a loyal subject to the king/' This application was made in vain. If the cardinal ever saw it, which is doubtful, it failed to penetrate his iron heart ; he " died, and made no sign," in favour of the wretched supplicant. From Dussault's evident HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 217 despair of ever being freed except by Richelieu, it may be conjectured that, as an agent of the minister, he had given inexpiable offence to some one on whom power was now likely to devolve ; and this supposition is rendered more probable, by his captivity having been subsequently protracted to an extraordinary length. It was not till the 20th of June, 1692, that he was dismissed, after having languished in the Bas- tile for sixty-one years ! At his advanced age, for he must at least have been between eighty and ninety he could scarcely have deemed the boon of liberty a blessing. In the common course of nature, all his kindred and friends must have been gone, and as his habits were wholly unfitted for the turmoil of the world, and he was perhaps exposed to want, it is not unnatural to conclude that he may have been a solitary and starving wanderer for the brief remainder of his existence. A situation more forlorn than this it would be difficult to imagine. CHAPTER VII. Reign of Louis XIV. Regency of Anne of Austria Inauspicious circumstances under which she assumed the Regency George de Casselny The count de Montresor The marquis de Fontrail- les-r-Marshal de Rantzau The count de Rieux Bernard Guyard Broussel, governor of the Bastile The duchess of Mont- pensier orders the cannon of the Bastile to be fired on the king's army Conclusion of the war of the Fronde Surrender of the Bastile Despotism of Louis XIV. Slavishness of the nobles John Herauld Gourville The count de G niche Nicholas Fouquet Paul Pellisson-Fontainier Charles St. Evremond Simon Morin The marquis de Vardes Count Bussy Rabutin Saci le Maistre The duke of Lauzun Marquis of Cavoie The chevalier de Rohan A nameless prisoner Charles D'As- soucy Miscellaneous prisoners. THE regency of Anne of Austria commenced under auspices which were not of the most favourable kind. 218 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. For a long series of years she had been persecuted by a tyrant minister, and discredited and humiliated, in every possible manner, by an unfeeling husband. It would be a tedious task to enumerate all the slights and injuries to which she was exposed ; a specimen may suffice. To avoid the disgrace of being sent back to Spain, she had been compelled to confess before the Council a fault which she everywhere else disavowed, and of which it is improbable that she was guilty ; on her bringing Louis XIV . into the w^orld, she had suf- fered a stinging insult from her consort, who had per- tinaciously refused to give her the embrace which was customary on such occasions an insult which affected her so deeply that her life was endangered ; when he was on the brink of the grave, and she earnestly sought to remove his prejudices against her, he coldly replied to Chavigni, who was pleading her cause, "In my si- tuation I must forgive, but I am not obliged to believe her ;" and, in settling the regency, he would fain have excluded from it the object of his hatred, but, that being impracticable, he took care to shackle her autho- rity in such a way as would have left her scarcely more than the mere title of regent. Her having been childless for twenty-two years, and been treated in childbed with such marked aversion by him,were also circumstances which were well calculated to throw dangerous doubts on the legitimacy of the infant so- vereign. Yet Anne of Austria triumphed over all this, procured the setting aside of her deceased husband's arrangements, obtained unlimited power, and for five years governed France without opposition, and with a considerable enhancement of its military fame. It was not till the troubles of the Fronde broke out that she encountered unpopularity and resistance. During the peaceable period of the queen mother's government, the Bastile seems to have had but few inmates, at least few whom history has deemed worthy HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 219 of being recorded; and during the war of the Fronde, and even before, the castle of Vincennes was the prison which received the captives of the highest class, such as the duke of Beaufort, the prince of Conde, and cardinal de Rctz. The first prisoner in the Bastile, of whom any notice occurs during the regency, was a Spanish agent, named George de Casselny. Philip IV. of Spain had recently lost his consort Elizabeth, and it appears that Casselny was commissioned to make overtures for the monarch's marriage with that singular female the duchess of Montpensier, a w r oman who had more manly qualities than her vacillating father, the duke of Orleans. " There was a certain Spaniard, named George de Casselny (says the duchess, in her me- moirs), who had been made prisoner in Catalonia, and was on his parole; he went to M. de Surgis, at Orleans, to request that he would procure for him an interview with Monsieur (the duke of Orleans), who put him off till he could see him at Paris. In consequence of this delay, the Spaniard's intention got wind, and he was put into the Bastile, and the cardinal (Mazarin), told Monsieur that it was a man who wanted to divert him from the service of the king by this proposal of marriage ; which Monsieur believed and still believes. Many persons, however, affirm, that it was not a pre- text, and that this gentleman had orders to make solid and sincere propositions for the marriage of his king with me, which he had thought it proper to commu- nicate to Monsieur, before he made them known to the court. Nevertheless, this poor creature was kept a prisoner for several years, and when he was set at liberty, he was sent out of the kingdom under a guard." The next prisoner was one who, for a long period, was closely connected with Monsieur, the father of the duchess. Claude de Bourdeille, count de Montresor, was born about 1608, and was a grand-nephew of that 220 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. pleasant but unscrupulous writer Brantome, \vlio ber queathed to him his mansion of Richemont. Mon- tresor was early admitted into the train of the duke of Orleans, and at length became his confidential friend, whom he consulted on all occasions. He availed him- self of his influence to keep at a distance from the duke all the friends of Richelieu, to incite him stilj more against that minister, and to link him in confe- deracy with the count of Soissons. In 1636, he went much further. In conjunction with Saint Ibal and others, he formed a plan for assassinating the cardinal, and to this plan the duke and the count gave their assent. The murder was to be perpetrated as the minister was leaving the council chamber ; Saint Ibal was behind him, ready to strike the blow, and waited only for an affirmative sign from the duke ; but at this critical moment, either the courage of Orleans gave way, or his conscience smote him, for he turned away his head, and hurried from the spot. The cardinal consequently escaped. While Montresor was subsequently busy in Guyenne, labouring to induce the duke of Epernon and his son to take up arms for Monsieur, he was suddenly abandoned by his employer, who made his own peace with Riche- lieu. Montresor now retired to his estate, where, for more than five years, he lived in the utmost privacy. He had, however, secret interviews with Monsieur, and, at his solicitation, he engaged in the conspiracy of Cinq Mars. Again he was deserted by him, and more disgracefully than in the first instance ; for the dishonourable prince did not scruple to disavow the proceedings of his agent, and to aver that Cinq Mars and Montresor were the persons who had misled him. Montresor would have ascended the scaffold with Cinq Mars and de Thou, had he not prudently taken refuge in England, whence he did not return till the cardinal was no more. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 221 When the government devolved on Anne of Austria, the enemies of Richelieu had reason to hope that they would become the dominant party. The haughty bearing which this hope led them to assume, obtained for them the appellation of " The Cabal of the Im- portants." They soon, however, contrived to disgust the queen-regent; and before twelve months had elapsed, Montresor, Chateauneuf, the duchess of Chev- reuse, and several others of the faction, were ordered to quit the court. Montresor retired for a while to Holland. Late in 1645, he visited Paris, and, soon after, two letters to him, from the exiled duchess de Chevreuse, having been intercepted, Mazarin sent him to the Bastile. The prisoner was removed to Vin- cennes, where he was rigorously treated for fourteen months. At length, moved by the solicitations of Montresor's relatives, the cardinal set him at liberty, and even offered him his friendship. Montresor, how- ever, chose rather to league himself with Mazarin's bitterest foe, the celebrated Coadjutor, afterwards the cardinal de Retz, and he took an active part in the war of the Fronde. In 1653 he was reconciled to the court, and from that time till his decease, which occurred in 1 663, he led a peaceable life. Though ambition and a propensity to political intrigue could lead him to dip his hands in blood, Montresor is said to have had many social qualities ; to have been generous, sincere, and a firm and ardent friend. His " Memoirs" form a va- luable contribution to the history of his times. Among the agents of the duke of Orleans was Louis d'Astarac, marquis of Fontrailles, a descendant from an ancient Armagnac family. When the conspi- racy of Cinq Mars was formed, Fontrailles was dis- patched to Spain, to negociate with the* Spanish cabinet a treaty, for assistance to the conspirators. By this treaty, Spain engaged to furnish the duke of Orleans with 12,000 infantry, 5000 cavalry, 400,000 crowns 222 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. to raise levies in France ; and a monthly allowance of 12,000 crowns for his private expenses. But, before any step could be taken to carry the treaty into effect, the conspiracy was rendered abortive. Fontrailles, against whom an order of arrest had been issued, was fortunate enough to escape to England. The death of the cardinal and of his vassal sovereign, which took place soon after, enabled the proscribed fugitive to re- turn to France. He became one of the Cabal of the Importants, and shared in the downfall of that faction. In the summer of 1647, he was sent to the Bastile ; for what fault he was imprisoned I know not, or when he was released. Guy Pat in intimates that the charge was not of a capital nature. Fontrailles died in 1677. The next who passes before us is a brave and injured soldier. Count Josias de Rantzau was descended from an ancient family of Holstein, thirty-two mem- bers of which are said to have greatly distinguished themselves. The fidelity of this family to its sove- reigns was so remarkable, that the expression, " As faithful as a Rantzau to his king," passed into a pro- verb. Josias was born in 1610, and seems first to have borne arms in the Swedish service ; he com- manded a body of Swedes at the siege of Andernach, headed the Swedish left w T ing at the combat of Pake- nau, and was present at the siege of Brisac. In 1635, he accompanied the celebrated Oxenstiern into France, where Louis XIII. appointed him a major-general, and colonel of two regiments. The subsequent ca- reer of Rantzau was often successful, and was never stained with disgrace. He effectually covered the retreat of the French after the raising of the siege of Dole, vic- toriously defended St. Jean de Lone against Galas, bore a conspicuous part in the subsequent campaigns in Flan - ders and Germany, and was twice maimed at the siege of Arras, and displayed signal valour at the siege of Aire. Fortune deserted him at the combat of Honnecourt and HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 223 the battle of Dutlingen, in 1642 and 1643, and in both instances he was taken prisoner. She, however, soon became favourable to him. Between 1645 and 1649, he made himself master of Gravelines, Dixmude, Lens, and all the maritime towns of Flanders. To reward his services he received the government of Gravelines and Dunkirk, and was raised to the rank of marshal. Mazarin, nevertheless, suspected him of being con- nected with his enemies, and in February, 1649, the marshal was conveyed to the Bastile, where he re- mained for eleven months. His innocence being at length ascertained, he was set at liberty; but a dropsy, which he had contracted in his confinement, proved fatal to him in the course of a few months. He died in September, 1650. Rantzau was possessed of brilliant valour, much talent and military skill, and spoke all the principal languages of Europe ; his only defect was an inordinate love of wine. Like our Nelson, but even in a greater degree, his person had been severely mutilated ; he had lost an ear, an eye, a leg, and an arm. To this fact the following epitaph alludes : " But half of great Rantzau this tomb contains, The other half in battle fields remains ; His limbs and fame he widely spread around. And still, though mangled, conqueror was he found : His blood a hundred victories did acquire, And nothing but his heart by Mars was left entire ! " A brawl brought to the Bastile, in 1652, the count de Rieux, a son of the duke of Elboeuf. A dispute with the prince of Tarentum, as to precedence, gave rise to it. The prince of Conde, the great Conde, was the other actor. " The prince of Conde," says the duchess of Montpensier, "took the part of the prince of Tarentum, who is nearly related to him, against the count de Rieux, and one day he got heated in the dis- pute; he imagined that the count de Rieux had pushed him, which obliged him to return it by a box on the 224 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. ear ; the count de Rieux then gave him a blow. The prince, who had no sword, made a dart at that of the baron de Migenne, who was present. M. de Rohan, who was also there> put himself between them, and got out the count de Rieux, whom his royal highness (the duke of Orleans) sent to the Bastile, for having dared to fail in respect. Many persons say, that the prince struck first ; if he did so, be must have taken some gesture of the count for an insult, for though he is very passionate, he is not so much so as to do an action of this kind. I saw him after dinner, and he said, ' You see a man who has been beaten for the first time in his life/ The count de Rieux remained in the Bastile till the arrival of M. de Lorraine, who set him free, and blamed him very much/' It must have been a ludi- crous sight, to see a prince of the blood, the victor of Rocroi, Fribourg, Nordlingen, and Lens, at fisticuffs amidst a ring of courtiers, in the palace of the duke of Orleans ! " This was not the way," remarks Voltaire, "to regain the hearts of the Parisians/' The leaders of the Frondeur faction were by no means tolerant of censure, even when it came from clerical lips. Bernard Guyard, a dominican, had rea*- son to repent his having too honestly indulged in it. Guyard, who was born in 1601, at Craon, in Anjou, took the religious habit, and was admitted, in 1645, a doctor of the Sorbohne, and became popular for his pulpit eloquence, so much so that Anne of Austria ap- pointed him her preacher, and the duchess of Orleans chose him as her confessor. While the war of the Fronde was being carried on a war of which it has wittily and truly been said, that it ought to be recorded in burl eso t ue verse Guyard ventured to reprobate, in the pulpit, the conduct of those ambitious and unprin- cipled personages by whom its flames had been lighted up. The punishment of his offence followed close upon the commission of it. As he was leaving the church, HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. 225 he was arrested, and conveyed to the Bastile, where he continued for some months. He died in 1674, at which period he was theological professor in the con- vent of St. James. All his works have long since ceased to attract notice, with the exception, perhaps, of the " The Fatality of St. Cloud," which is a para- doxical attempt to prove that not Clement, nor a Dominican, but a leaguer, disguised as a monk, was the murderer of Henry III. During the war of the Fronde, the Bastile, for a short time, and for the last, was again a fortress as well as a prison ; but in the latter character its ser- vices were only once required. When, in 1649, the queen-regent suddenly quitted Paris with the youn* king, she imprudently neglected to throw into the Bas- tile a garrison. It was guarded by only twenty-two soldiers, who had neither ammunition nor provisions. Du Tremblai, the governor, was therefore obliged to yield. The custody of the fortress \vas committed to Peter Broussel, for whose deliverance the Parisians had risen in arms on the day of the Barricades, and from whom he had received the flattering appellations of the father and the protector of the people. As Broussel was an aged man, his son, La Louviere, was joined with him in the government. In 1652, Broussel was ap- pointed provost of the merchants, and the keeping of the Bastile remained with La Louviere alone. The two pieces of cannon which, in 1649, the Pa- risians fired at the Bastile to hasten its submission, would have been the only artillery employed, either against it or by it, had not the daring of a woman brought its guns into action. The duchess of Mont- pensier, who was called Mademoiselle, had recently distinguished herself by her spirited conduct at Orleans. Being sent by her father to that city, to encourage his partisans, she was at first refused admittance, but she fo'rced her way in, through a hole in a gate, roused the Q 226 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. people in her favour, and succeeded in preventing the king's troops from occupying that important post. She was now at Paris, and soon found a fresh opportunity to display her courage and presence of mind. On the second of July, 1652, the sanguinary battle of the suburb of St. Anthony was raging ; the army of the prince of Conde, overborne by the far superior num- bers which Turenne led against him, could barely hold its ground ; the prince had in vain entreated for its admission at various gates ; the enemy, reinforced, was preparing for a new attack on its front and flanks ; and, pent in between the king's troops and the city walls, its destruction seemed to be inevitable. At this perilous moment it was saved by the duchess of Mont- pensier. First from her father, and next from the mu- nicipal authorities sitting at the Town Hall, she in a manner extorted an order for opening the gate of St. Anthony to the nearly overwhelmed battalions of Conde. She then ascended to the summit of the Bas- tile, and directed the cannon to be charged, removed from the city side, and pointed to the opposite quarter. They were opened upon the royalists, who pressed on the retreating Condeans, and their commanding fire compelled the pursuers to fall back beyond their range. Mademoiselle was at that time cherishing a hope that should be united to her cousin the king, or at least to some crowned head ; and it was with allusion to this circumstance that, when he heard she had ordered the firing, Mazarin coolly remarked, " Those cannon-shots have killed her husband." Four months did not pass away before, tired of wast- ing their lives and properties in a contest which could benefit only the privileged classes, the Parisians invited the king to return to his capital. The monarch entered it on the 21st of October, 1652. The faction of the Fronde was annihilated, and its leaders were scattered in all directions; their vanity, selfishness, and utter HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 227 want of principle and patriotism, deserved such a fate. Had they been animated by noble motives, had they possessed even a moderate share of wisdom and virtue, they might have laid the groundwork of a stable and beneficent government, and thereby saved their country from innumerable immediate and remote evils. But " The sensual and the base rebel in vain, Slaves by their own compulsion !" As soon as the king had entered Paris, the Bastile was summoned, and La Louviere was informed that, if he were rash enough to stand a siege, the gibbet would be his portion. Too prudent to run so useless and formidable a risk, he readily gave up his charge. From the moment when Mademoiselle directed its fire upon the king's troops, a hundred and thirty-seven years elapsed before the Bastile again heard th (roar of artillery fired in anger. One of the first acts of Louis XIV. was to hold a bed of justice, in which he ordered the registration of an edict to abridge the power of the parliament. By this edict, the parliament was strictly prohibited from deliberating on state and financial affairs, andinstituting any proceedings whatever against the ministers whom he might be pleased to employ. Louis was then only a boy of fourteen, and this act was of course the work of Mazarin ; but, young as he was, the monarch was already thoroughly imbued with the principles on which it was framed. Three years afterwards he gave a striking proof of this. The parliament having ventured to manifest a faint opposition to some of his many oppressive fiscal edicts, he took a step which showed how deeply despotism was ingrained into his character. He was engaged in the chase, at Yincennes, when in- formation was brought to him thathiswill was disputed. Hurrying back to Paris, he entered the parliament chamber, the sanctuary of justice, booted, spurred, whip in hand, and thus addressed the assembly of Q 2 28 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. venerable magistrates : " Sirs, everybody knows the calamities which the meetings of the parliament have produced. I will henceforth prevent those meetings. I order you, therefore, to desist from those which you have begun, with respect to the edicts which, in my late bed of justice, I directed to be registered. You, Mr. First President, I forbid to allow of these assem- blies ; and I forbid every one of you to demand them." Having thus spoken he departed, leaving his hearers in astonishment. He was then a beardless youth, who had not reached his seventeenth year. The members of the parliament might well have called to mind the words of Scripture " If these things are done in the green tree, what will be done in a dry ?" Six years afterwards Mazarin died, and thenceforth JLouis had no prime minister ; he became, in every sense of the word, the head of the government, the autocrat of France. A new era, that of abject submission to the monarch, and almost idolatrous worship of his person and great- ness, commenced when the war of the Fronde was over. The slaves had had their Saturnalia, and they sank back we may almost say rushed back into a slavery more degrading than that from which they had for a moment emerged. There were no longer any Epernons, ruling their provinces as they pleased, and bearding the sovereign ; the feudal pride was extinct. This would have been a happy circumstance for France, had the nobles, in losing their pride, preserved their dignity. But from one extreme they passed to the other. The power which they had lost, w T hich was, in fact, but the power of doing mischief, they might have replaced by a power more honourable and durable, that which would have arisen from promoting the welfare and happiness of those whom they called their vassals. But their extensive domains were looked on only as mines, from which the last grain of gold was to be ex- tracted, that they might squander it in the capital. It HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 229 seemed as though it were impossible for them to exist out of the king's presence ; and when they were ex- cluded from it, they lamented and whined in a manner which excites at once wonder and contempt. The consequences of this general prostration were slowly, but surely and fatally, unfolded. Let us revert to the captives of the Bastile. The destiny of John Herauld Gourville, who was born in 1625, was a singular one; he not only raised himself from a humble state to be the companion and friend of princes, but was appointed to be one of the representa- tives of his sovereign while in exile, and while a Parisian court of justice was hanging him in effigy as a convicted runaway peculator. After having received a scanty edu- cation, he was placed in an attorney's office by his wi- dowed mother. Having by his cleverness fortunately attracted the notice of the duke de la Rochefoucault, the author of the " Maxims," that nobleman made him his secretary. During the war of the Fronde, Gour- ville displayed such talent and activity, that he ac- quired the warm friendship of his employer and the prince of Conde. His gratitude engaged him in many desperate adventures for their service, and the mode in which he raised the supplies for them was some- times not much unlike that of a bandit ; the moral code of the Frondeurs was not remarkable for its strictness. When Rochefoucault became weary of the inglorious contest in which he was an actor, Gour- ville negotiated the duke's peace with the court ; and in doing this he manifested so much ability and pru- dence, that Mazarin despatched him to Bordeaux, to treat with the prince of Conti. In this mission he was successful ; and he was rewarded by being ap- pointed commissary-general of the French army in Catalonia. At the close of the campaign of 1655, he returned to Paris, and Mazarin, who suspected that he came to intrigue for the prince of Conti, shut him up 230 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. in the Bastile. In his Memoirs, Gourville candidly con- fesses that his six months' imprisonment was insuffer- ably wearisome, and that he could think of little else than how he should put an end to it. He was maturing a plan of escape, in concert with six other prisoners, when the cardinal relented, took him again into favour, and even prevailed on Fouquet to give him the lucrative place of receiver-general of the province of Guienne. In this office Gourville amassed an immense fortune, which he increased by his extraordinary good luck at play. When Fouquet fell, the whole of his subalterns were involved in his fall; but, far from deserting him in his calamity, Gourville nobly furnished 100,000 livres to assist in gaining over some of his enemies, and a still larger sum for the establishment of his son, the count de Yaux. He soon, however, became him- self an object of impeachment, on a charge of pecula- tion, and he deemed it prudent to quit France. At that moment there was certainly no chance of his ob- taining a fair trial. After having visited England and Holland, he settled at Brussels. Though he was com- pelled to live in a foreign country, Gourville still pre- served a strong affection for his native land, and he proved it, by influencing the princes of Brunswick and Hanover in favour of France. For this patriotic conduct Louis XI Y. nominated him his plenipoten- tiary at the court of Brunswick ; while at the same moment his enemies at Paris obtained against him a degrading sentence from his judges ! That not a love of justice, but a desire to extort money from him, gave rise to his being prosecuted, is made evident by Col- bert having offered a pardon, at the price of 800,000 livres, which he afterwards reduced to 600,000. Gour- ville, however, either could not or would not purchase this costly commodity. He was subsequently em r ployed as a diplomatist in Spain, and again in Ger- many; and at length in 1681, a free pardon was. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 231 granted to him. From that time he led a tranquil life in the French capital, in habits of friendship with, and much beloved by, the most eminent men of genius and rank. At one period there was an intention of making him the successor of Colbert, as comptroller-general of the finances, an office for which he was well qua- lified ; but he had ceased to be ambitious of dangerous honours, and was happy to avoid them. The length of time which his servants continued in his service, and the cordial manner in which he speaks of them, afford strong proofs of his kind-heartedness ; never did a selfish or harsh master long retain a domestic. Haughtiness to inferiors is the miserable make-shift of a man who has no true dignity to support his pre- tensions. Gourville mentions four persons who had been with him for fifteen, seventeen, twenty-five, and thirty-two years. He died in 1703, at the age of seventy-eight. His Memoirs, which he composed in four months, to amuse himself while he was confined by a disease in the leg, are deservedly praised by Madame de Sevigne and Yoltaire. The next who appears on the scene was a noble, whom Madame de Sevigne characterizes as "a hero of romance, who does not resemble the rest of mankind." This is somewhat exaggerated, but not wholly untrue. Armand de Grammont, Count de Guiche, who was born in 1638, was a proficient in all manly exercises, splendid in dress and equipage, spirited, witty, well educated, handsome in person, and cultivated in mind. His valour was early proved, at the sieges ofLandrecy, Yalenciennes, and Dunkirk. In a voluptuous court, and with his attractive qualities, it is not wonderful that Guiche was engaged in amorous intrigues. His desire of conquest aimed so high Henrietta Stuart, Duchess of Orleans, was its great object that Louis XI Y. thrice exiled him ; and it was probably on this account that he became an inmate of the Bastile, from 232 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE, which prison he was released in the autumn of 1660, Having a third time offended, he was sent to Poland, where he distinguished himself in the war against the Turks. At the end of two years, he was recalled ; but it was not long before he again fell into disgrace, by participating in the despicable conduct of the Marquis de Vardes, which will be described in the sketch of that courtier's career. Guiche was banished to Hol- land. Too active to remain unemployed, he served in the campaign against the Bishop of Munster, and on board the Dutch Squadron, in the sea-fight with the English, off the Texel. He was allowed to return to France in 1669, but was not re-admitted at court till two years afterwards. It was he who, in 1672, led the way at the celebrated passage of the Rhine, near Tollhuis ; an exploit which is extravagantly lauded by Boileau. He died at Creutznach, in Germany, in 1673; excessive chagrin, occasioned by Montecuculi having defeated him, was the cause of his death. Guiche is the author of a volume of Memoirs concerning the United Provinces. The first important act of Louis XIV., after his taking the administration of public affairs into his own hands, was the disgracing and ruining Fouquet, the su- perintendant of the finances. Nicholas Fouquet, a son of Viscount de Yaux, was born at Paris, in 1615, and was educated for the legal profession. At twenty he was master of requests, and at thirty-five he filled the very considerable office of attorney-general to the parliament of Paris. It would have been happy for him had he steadily pursued his career in the magis- tracy, instead of deviating into a path that was beset with dangers. During the troubles of the Fronde he was unalterably faithful to the queen-mother, and in gratitude for this she raised him, in 1652, to the post of superintendant. It was a fatal boon. By all who were connected with it, the French trea- HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 233 sury seems, in those days, to have been considered as a mine which they were privileged to work for their own benefit. Mazarin had recently been a wholesale plunderer of it ; and there can be little doubt that Fouquet was a peculator to a vast extent. Yet the superintendant had one merit, which was wanting in other depredators though he took, he likewise gave ; for at one period, when money ran short, he mortgaged his property and his wife's, and borrowed on his own bills, to supply the necessities of the state. The fatal failing of Fouquet was his magnificent ex- travagance. He had a taste for splendour and lavish expenditure, which might have qualified him for an oriental sovereign. On his estate at Yaux he built a mansion, or rather a palace, which threw into the shade the country residences of theFrench monarch for Ver- sailles was not then in existence. Whole hamlets were levelled to the ground to afford space for its gardens. The building was sumptuously decorated, and in every part of it was painted his device, a squirrel, with the ambitious motto " Quo non ascendam ?" Whither shall I not rise ? It is a curious circumstance, that the squirrel was represented as being pursued by a snake, which was the arms of Colbert, the bitter enemy of Fouquet. The edifice cost eighteen millions of livres ; a sum equivalent to three times as much at the present day. The largesses of the superintendant, which in many cases deserve the name of bribes, were immense. Great numbers of the courtiers did not blush to become his pensioners. On extraordinary occasions they also received presents from him. Each of the nobles, who was invited with Louis XI Y. to the grand entertain- ment at Yaux, found in his bed-chamber a purse filled with gold; which, says a sarcastic writer, " the nobles did not forget to take away." There was another abundant source of expense, which arose out of his 234 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. licentious passions; he lavished immense sums in purchasing the venal charms of the French ladies of distinction, and was eminently successful in finding sellers. " There were few at court," says Madame de Motteville, " who did not sacrifice to the golden calf." Policy, no doubt, had a share in prompting his liberality to the courtiers ; and, perhaps, it sometimes was mingled with lust and vanity in his gifts to frail females of rank ; but we may attribute to a purer mo- tive the kindness and courtesy which he manifested to persons of talent. The result was quite natural ; the great deserted him in his hour of danger and disgrace, the people of talent clung with more tenacity than ever to their fallen benefactor and friend. Mazarin, when on his death-bed, is said to have awakened the fears and suspicions of Louis against Fouquet ; and, to deepen the impression which he had made, he left l}ehind him two deadly foes of the su- perintendant. These foes were Le Tellier and Colbert, of whom the latter was the most inveterate and the most dangerous. When Louis formed the resolution of being his own prime minister, Fouquet, who evi- dently wished to succeed to the power of Richelieu and Mazarin, essayed to turn the monarch from his purpose, by daily heaping on him a mass of dry, intri- cate, and erroneous financial statements. He failed in his attempt. These papers the king every evening examined, with the secret assistance of Colbert, whose acuteness and practised skill instantly unravelled their artful tangles, and exposed their errors. It was not alone the squandering of the royal trea- sure that irritated Louis ; though that would have been a sufficiently exciting cause to a man whose own lavish habits required large supplies. He asserted, and might perhaps believe, that the offender aspired to sovereignty. In a long conversation with the pre- sident Lamoignon, he said, " Fouquet wished to make HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 235 himself duke of Brittany, and king of the neighbour- ing isles ; he won over every body by his profusion ; there was not a single soul in whom I could put confi- dence." So much was he impressed with this idea, that he repeated it over and over to the president. For this absurd fear there was no other ground than that the superintendant had purchased and fortified Belleisle ; a measure which was prompted by patriotic motives, it being his design to make that island an emporium of commerce. There is said to have been another and a not less powerful cause for the monarch's hatred of Fouquet; the superintendant had been im- prudent enough to attempt to include La Valliere in the long catalogue of his mistresses, and this was an offence not to be pardoned by the proudest and vainest of kings. As soon as the ruin of Fouquet was determined upon, the most profound dissimulation was used by the king and Colbert, to prevent him from N suspecting their purpose. All his measures seemed to give perfect satisfaction ; unlimited trust was apparently placed in him ; and hints were thrown out, that the coveted post of prime minister was within his reach. The hints had a further purpose than that of blinding him to the peril in which he stood ; they were meant to rob him of a shield against injustice. By virtue of his office, as attorney-general to the parliament, he had the privilege of being tried' only by the assembled chambers; but, as it w^as intended that his trial should take place before a packed tribunal, it was ne- cessary to divest him of the privilege. For this rea- son it was insinuated, that the post of attorney-general stood in the way of his being raised to the premier- ship, and also of his obtaining the blue riband. Fouquet fell into the snare, and sold his office for 1,400,000 livres, which sum, with a blind generosity, he instantly lent to the Exchequer. To confirm Fouquet's delu- 236 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. sion, Louis graced with his presence a gorgeous festi- val which was held at Yaux. But the splendour of the place, the excessive magnificence of the entertain- ment, and the presumptuousness of the superintend- ant's motto, roused his anger to such a pitch, that, had not the queen-mother remonstrated, he would have committed the unkingly act of arresting Fouquet on the spot. When the courage inspired by passion had evapo- rated, Louis delayed yet awhile to effect his purpose, till he had guarded in all possible ways against the danger which was to be apprehended from the formi- dable conspirator. Had Fouquet been capable of calling up legions from the earth by the stamp of his foot, more precautions could not have been taken. The blow was struck at last. Louis was at Nantes, to which city he had removed under the idea that it would be easier to accomplish the arrest there than at Paris. Thither he was followed by Fouquet. Some of the superintendant's friends warned him of the peril which hung over him, but he gave no credence to their tidings. On the 5th of September, 1661, as he was leaving the council, he was arrested, and was conveyed without delay to the castle of Angers, Messengers were immediately despatched to Paris, to seize his papers, and to order the arrest of many of his partisans. Fouquet was bandied about from prison to prison, from Angers to Amboise, Moret, and Yincennes, till he was finally lodged in the Bastile. He bore his misfortune with an unshaken mind. His enemies, meanwhile, were proceeding with the most malignant activity, and with a perfect contempt of justice and decorum. It was the common talk of Paris, that Colbert would be satisfied with nothing less than the execution of the superintendant. He was even plainly charged by Fouquet with having fraudu- lently made in his papers a multitude of alterations. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 237 Le Tellier, though less openly violent than Colbert, was equally hostile. For the trial of the prisoner, twenty-two commissioners were picked out from the French parliaments ; nearly all if not all -of them were notoriously inimical to him, or connected with persons who were known to be so, and at their head was the chancellor Seguier, one of his most deadly enemies. One benefit the fallen minister derived from this injustice, and from the protracted trial which ensued; public opinion, which at first had been adverse to him, gradually grew more and more favourable. Fouquet the peculator, brought to judgment before an honest and impartial tribunal, would have excited no sym- pathy ; Fouquet, persecuted by his rivals for power, and destined to be legally assassinated, could not fail to excite a warm interest in the mind of > every one who was not destitute of honourable feelings. Those who were in habits of intimacy with Fouquet needed no other stimulus than the benefits or the winning courtesies, which they had experienced from him. He had on his side all who loved or practised literature, all who could be captivated by prepossessing manners and boundless generosity. " Never," says Voltaire, " did a placeman have more personal friends, never was a persecuted man better served in his mis- fortunes." Many men of letters wielded the pen in his behalf, with a courage which deserves no small praise, when we consider that the Bastile was staring them in the face. Pelisson in his dungeon tasked all his powers to defend his ruined master; La Fontaine, in a touching elegy, vainly strove to awake the cle- mency of Louis; Loret eulogised Fouquet in his " Mercure Burlesque," and was punished by the loss of his pension ; Hesnault, the translator of Lucretius, attacked Colbert in the bitterest and boldest of sonnets ; and a crowd of other assailants showered 238 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. epigrams and lampoons on the vindictive minister. The authors wore, in general, lucky enough to find impunity ; but numbers of news writers, printers, and hawkers, were seized, all of whom were imprisoned, and some were sent from prison to the galleys. Fouquet began by denying the competency of the tribunal before which he was summoned. He was, however, compelled to appear; but, though he an- swered interrogatories, he persisted in protesting against the authority of his judges. He defended himself with admirable skill, eloquence, and mode- ration. There were, indeed, moments when he was roused to retaliate. A single example of the pun- fency with which he could reply, will show that is persecutors were not wise in provoking him. Behind a mirror, at his country-house of St. Mande, was found a sketch of a paper, drawn up by him fifteen years before, and evidently long forgotten by him. It contained instructions to his friends how they were to proceed, in case of an attempt being made to subvert his power. This was construed into a proof of conspiracy. Seguier having pertinaciously called on him to own that the drawing up of such a paper was a crime against the state, Fouquet said, " I confess that it is a foolish and wild act, but not a state crime. A crime against the state is when, holding a principal office, and being entrusted witli the secrets of the prince, the individual all at once deserts to the enemy, engages the whole of his family in the same interest, causes governors to open the gates of cities to the enemy's army, and to close them against their rightful master, and betrays to the hostile party the secrets of the government this, sir, is what is called a crime against the state." This was a stunning blow to the chancellor, for it was the past conduct of that magistrate himself that was thus forcibly described by the prisoner. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 239 The trial lasted three years. It was not the fault of some of his judges that it was not brought to a speedier issue. They listened with reluctance to his eloquent defence, and would fain have cut it short. Possort, one of them, who was an uncle of Colbert, once exclaimed, on Fouquet closing his speech, " Thank Heaven ! he cannot complain that he has been pre- vented from talking his fill ! " Others, still more insensible to shame, made a motion, that he should be restricted to the mere answering of questions; they were, however, overruled. It was not till the middle of December, 1664, that Talon, the advocate-general, summed up the evidence, and demanded that the culprit should be hanged on a gallows, purposely erected in the Palace Court. But the time for this excessive severity was gone by. Some of the judges had become accessible to feelings of pity ; others had been won over by the potent influence of gold, of which the superintendant's friends undoubtedly availed themselves to a considerable extent. Among the most conspicuous of those who leaned to the side of mercy were MM. d'Ormesson and Roquesante, men of unquestionable integrity. Only nine voted for death ; a majority of the commissioners, thirteen in number, gave their suffrage for confiscation of pro- perty and perpetual banishment. The king is said to have been grievously disap- pointed by this sentence. Colbert was furious. In one of her letters, written at the moment, Madame de Sevigne, who had a warm esteem for Fouquet, says, u Colbert is so exceedingly enraged, that we may expect from him something unjust and atrocious enough to drive us all to despair again." In another letter, she hints her fears that poison may be employed; Guy Patin was also of the same opinion. Neither poison nor steel was, however, resorted to ; it was probably tli ought .that to render the life of Fouquet a burthen to him, 240 HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. would be a more exquisite gratification than taking of it away. To grant mercy has always been regarded -as the noblest prerogative of a monarch ; to refuse it was more to the taste of Louis. He altered the sentence of Fouquet from banishment to endless imprisonment in a remote fortress, and this was in mockery called a commutation of the penalty. Fouquet was immediately sent off to Pignerol, and the members of his family, who were doomed to suffer for his errors, were scattered in various direc- tions. His judges did not wholly escape without marks of the king's anger. M. de Roquesante, a native of the sunny Provence, who had spoken in favour of the prisoner, was banished, in the depth of winter, to the distant and imperfectly civilised pro- vince of Lower Brittany. On his way to Pignerol, and during his captivity there, Fouquet was treated with great harshness. About six months after his arrival, he was placed in imminent danger. The lightning fell on the citadel where he was confined, and blew up the powder magazine. Numbers of persons were buried under the ruins, but he stood in the recess of a window and remained unhurt. There is a singular veil of mystery hanging over his last days. He is generally said to have died at Pignerol, in 1680; yet Gourville, his friend, positively states him to have been set at liberty before his decease, and he adds, that he received a letter from him. Voltaire, too, declares that the fact of the liberation was confirmed to him by the countess de Yaux, the daughter-in-law of Fouquet ; but here all clue to the subject is lost. It has recently been suggested that Fouquet may have again been arrested, and that he was the individual who is known by the appellation of the Man in the Iron Mask. While fidelity in friendship, inviolably preserved under the most trying circumstances, shall continue to HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 241 be admired by mankind, the name of Paul Pelisson will always be mentioned with respect. He had talents, too, which were of no mean order. Pelisson, who from affection to his mother assumed also her maiden name of Fontanier, was born in 1624, at Bezieres, and was brought up in the Protestant faith. He attained an early and rapid proficiency in litera- ture and languages ; nor were severer studies neglected for at the age of only nineteen he produced an ex- cellent Latin paraphrase of the first book of Justinian's Institutes. He was beginning to shine at the bar, when he was attacked by small-pox. The disease so excessively disfigured his countenance, and impaired his constitution, that he was under the necessity of re- linquishing his profession, and retiring into the country to recruit his health. As soon as Pelisson was again able to take a part in active life, he settled in Paris. It was not long before he acquired a multitude of friends ; and the French Academy, in return for a history which he wrote of its early labours, made him a supernumerary member, and destined for him the first vacancy which should occur. Fouquet, who knew his abilities, ap- pointed him his'chief clerk, and reposed in him an im- plicit confidence, which was well deserved. Had Fou- quet followed the advice of his assistant, who coun- selled him never to part with his office of attorney- general, he would have done wisely. "When this advice came to the knowledge of Louis, he said " the clerk is more sharp-sighted than the master." Pelisson shared the fate of Fouquet ; he was sent to the Conciergerie, whence he was removed to the Bastile. All attempts to elicit from him the secrets of the superintendant were made in vain. Once only, to answer a purpose, he seemed to make" a disclosure. Fearing that, from not knowing whether the docu- ments were in existence, Fouquet might commit him- 242 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. self in his answers to certain questions, Pelisson feigned to divulge some unimportant particulars which related to the subject. Fouquet, who was astonished at this seeming defection of his friend, was confronted with him, and denied the correctness of what had been stated : " Sir," said Pelisson, in an emphatic tone, " you would not deny so boldly if you did not know that all the papers concerning that affair are de- stroyed/* Fouquet instantly comprehended the stra- tagem," and acted accordingly. In the early part of his confinement, Pelisson found means to compose three memorials in defence of Fou- quet. For eloquence and argument they may be con- sidered as his master-pieces ; they were published, and produced a strong impression. As a punishment, he was still more closely immured, and pen and paper were withheld from him ; but he contrived to foil his persecutors, by writing with ink made of burnt crust and wine, on the blank leaves and margins of the re- ligious works which he was allowed to read. They were equally unsuccessful when, hoping that he might drop some unguarded words, they gave him, as an attendant, a spy, who concealed cunning under the mask of coarse simplicity. Pelisson saw through the deception, and adroitly converted the spy into an in- strument of his own. The imprisonment of Pelisson lasted four years and a half. Among the means which he employed to be- guile his lonely hours is said to havebeen that of taming a spider ; a task which he effected so completely, that at a signal it would fetch its prey from the further end of the room, or even take it out of his hand. It is, however, doubtful whether Pelisson was the person who performed this. De Eenneville, who is good au- thority on this subject, ascribes the taming of the spider to the count de Lauzun ; and adds, that the jailer, St. Mars, brutally crushed the insect, and exclaimed that HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 243 criminals like Lauzun did not deserve to enjoy the slightest amusement* The solicitations of Pelisson's friends at length procured his release ; in memory of which he ever after yearly liberated some unfortunate prisoner. After some lapse of time, he was even received into the good graces of Louis, who probably thought that the man who had been faithful to a ruined minister would not be wanting in fidelity to his sovereign. It was, besides, no small merit in the king's eyes, that Pelisson had become a Catholic. Louis first appointed him his historiographer, with a pension ; then gave him several valuable benefices; and, lastly, entrusted him with the management of the fund which was employed in purchasing proselytes. Pelisson died in 1693. Pelisson was not the only literary character who was drawn into the vortex by the sinking of Fouquet. The gay and witty Epicurean philosopher, St. Evre- mond, was punished for the crime of being a friend of the fallen superintendant. Charles St. Evremond was born in 1613, at St. Denis le Guast, near Coutances. From the study of the law, and the prospect of a high station in the magistracy, he was seduced by his love of arms, and, at the age of sixteen, he obtained an en- signcy. He still, however, retained his taste for philo- sophy and literature. By his bravery he acquired the esteem of his superiors; and that esteem was height- ened by his varied acquirements and the charm of his conversation. That he might always enjoy the plea- sure of his society, the duke of Enghien appointed him lieutenant of his guards. In this post St. Evre- mond fought gallantly at Rocroi, Fribourg, and Nord- lingen, in the last of which battles he was dangerously wounded. His familiar intercourse with the prince was not of long duration ; Enghien delighted to see others exposed to the wit and raillery of his lieuten- ant, but he could not endure to be himself their object ; 244 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. St. Evremond ventured to aim some pleasantries at his princely protector, and the great Conde had the little- ness to take offence, and to insist on the offender resign- ing his commission in the guards. In the war of the Fronde, St. Evremond served the royal cause with pen and sword, and he was rewarded with a pen- sion and the rank of major-general. Some satirical remarks on Mazarin, which he soon after made at a dinner party, were the cause of his being thrown into the Bastile. Mazarin, however, was not of an impla- cable nature, like his predecessor Richelieu. At the expiration of three months he set the prisoner free, took him into favour, and afterwards, from among a crowd of rivals, selected him as his companion, when he went to negociate the peace of the Pyrenees. Dis- satisfied with the terms of that peace, St. Evremond gave vent to his dissatisfaction, in a private letter to the Marshal de Crequi. In writing it he unconsciously wrote his own sentence of banishment. A copy of it was found among the papers of Fouquet; and Colbert, who rejoiced to have an opportunity of injuring a friend of Fouquet, malignantly represented it in such a light to Louis XI Y. that an order was issued to convey the author to the Bastile. St. Evremond was riding in the forest of Orleans when he received intelligence from his friends of the danger that hung over him. As he did not wish to pay a second visit to a state prison, he provided for his safety by an immediate and rapid flight. In England he was welcomed with open arms, and was idolized by the wits and courtiers. In 1664 he visited Holland, where he met with an equally cor- dial reception, and gained the friendship of the prince of Orange. Charles II. invited him to return to Eng- land, in 1670, and settled on him a pension. Hence- forth, till his decease, which took place in 1703, he continued to reside in London. His friends in France made repeated efforts to obtain his recall ; but they HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 245 could not succeed till 1689, when Louis XIV. was pleased to grant their request. St. Evremond refused to accept the tardy boon. Living at his ease in a free country, and in the highest society, and admired and esteemed by the fair, the witty, and the noble, he was too wise to put himself into " circumscription and con- fine," and purchase the privilege of bending before a despotic monarch, at the risk of being condemned to solitary meditation in one of the towers of the Bas- tile. St. Evremond was ninety when he died, but he preserved his faculties to the last. He was interred in Westminster Abbey. His poetry never rises above mediocrity, and does not always reach it ; but his prose is often excellent. Justice has scarcely been done to him either by La Harpe or Voltaire. A harder fate than that of voluntary exile was the lot of Simon Morin, an insane visionary, a man of humble birth, who was born about 1623, at Riche- mont, in Normandy. His horrible death, which was in fact a judicial murder, perpetrated by a fanaticism far worse than his own, leaves an indelible stain on the character of the judges by whom it was directed. Morin was originally a clerk in the war-office, but lost his situation by neglecting his duties ; and he subse- quently gained a scanty subsistence as a copyist, for which he was well qualified by the beauty of his hand- writing. His reason appears to have been early af- fected, as he must have been under twenty when he was first put into prison for his extravagant ideas in religious matters. After his release, he seems to have gradually become more and more deranged. Like all madmen of his class, however, he gained numerous proselytes, who listened to his harangues, and read his printed reveries, with implicit belief. His success drew on him the attention of the government, and, in July 1644, he was sent to the Bastile. At the expi- ration of twenty months, he was set at liberty. Im- 246 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. prisonment had only heightened his malady, and he consequently laboured with more vigour than ever to disseminate his opinions. Those opinions he embo- died in a work entitled, " Thoughts of Morin, with his Canticles and Spiritual Quatrains," dedicated to the king. He called himself the Son of Man, and maintained that Christ was incorporated in him ; that in his person was to take place the second advent of the Saviour in a state of glory ; and that the result would be a general reformation of the Church, and the conversion of all people to the true faith. There was much more of the same kind ; he was in France what Brothers, long afterwards, was in England. Of his tenets, several bear a resemblance to those which, later in the 17th century, were held by the Quietists. The publication of this volume again brought the police upon him. For some time he eluded them, but he was at last discovered, and recommitted to the Bastile. In 1649, he retracted his errors, and was released, and he repeated his retractation four months after his being set free. It was not long, however, before he relapsed, and for this he was sent to the Conciergerie, whence he was transferred to the Pe- tites Maisons, as an incurable lunatic. The last was the only sensible measure which was adopted with respect to him. By another abjuration, he once more recovered his liberty; and, as soon as he was let loose, he once more asserted his claim to be an incar- nation of the Deity. There can be little doubt that he had short lucid intervals, and that it was during these intervals that he renounced his errors. Thus, alternately raving and recanting, Morin went on till 1661, when, in an evil hour, he contracted an intimacy with a man who was no less a visionary than he himself was, and whose nature was deeply tinctured with malignity and deceit. This man, John Desma- rets de St. Sorlin 3 a member of the French Academy, HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 247 \vas the author of several works, now sunk into obli- vion, among which are a ponderous epic called Clovis, and several theatrical pieces. From his own showing, he appears to have been in youth a monster of immo- rality ; and though in advanced life he affected piety, his conduct did not prove his heart to he much ame- liorated ; he became fanatical instead of becoming vir- tuous. A brief specimen, from some of his rhapsodies, will show how completely his wits were " turned the seamy side without." He asserted that God, in his infinite goodness, had given him the key of the treasure of the Apocalypse ; that he was Eliachim Michael, a prophet ; that he had the Divine command to raise an army of 144,000 men, bearing the seal of God on their foreheads, which army was to be headed by the king, to exterminate the impious and the Jansenists ; and that Louis XIY. was indicated by the prophets as the person who was destined to drive out the Turks, and extend throughout the whole earth the kingdom of Christ. Had not Desmarets been a hater of the Jansenists, and a flatterer of the monarch, he would undoubtedly have been sent to study the Apocalypse in the solitude of a prison. The trite proverb, that " two of a trade cannot agree," was verified by Desmarets ; he resolved to destroy the man who dared to make pretensions that eclipsed his own. To effect his purpose, he acted with the cunning of a lunatic, and the dark- hearted- ness of a fiend. By paying assiduous court to Morin, by pretending to be one of his most submissive dis- ciples, and even by going so far as to write him a letter, unequivocally recognising him as the Son of Man, he contrived to insinuate himself into the con- fidence of his unfortunate victim, and to draw from him his most secret thoughts. In the course of their conversations, Morin is said to have declared, among other things, that unless the king acknowledged his 248 HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. mission he would die. Having thus furnished himself with evidence against the man whom he had deluded, Desmarets hastened to denounce him as a heretic and traitor. Orders were issued for arresting Morin, who was found engaged in copying out a " Discourse to the King," which began with " the Son of Man to the King of France." He was brought to trial, and was sentenced to be burned alive. Some of his followers were condemned to whipping and the galleys. The iniquitous judgment passed on Morin was executed on the 14th of March, 1663. At the stake his reason seems to have returned ; he repeatedly called on the Saviour and the Virgin, and humbly prayed for mercy to the Creator of all things. Little commiseration is due to him whose imprison- ment is next recorded; his baseness met with deserved punishment. Francis Rene Crispin du Bee, Marquis of Yardes, was of a good family, and served with reputation in Flanders, France, Italy, and Spain. During the war of the Fronde, he was constant to the royal party ; and it was doubtless his zeal and fidelity on this occasion which acquired for him the friendship of Louis XI Y. He rose to high rank in the army ; was made captain- colonel of the Hundred Swiss in 1655 ; and next year succeeded the duke of Orleans in the government of Aigues-Mortes, and was invested with the various orders of knighthood. He was on the point of being created a duke and peer, when the discovery of a dishonourable act of which he had been guilty, stopped his promotion, and deprived him of his liberty. Louis had chosen Yardes as his friend, and had confided to him his passion for the celebrated Mile, de la Valliere, who was one of the maids of honour to the duchess of Orleans. It appears that the duchess and her friend, the countess of Soissons, and their lovers, the count de Guiche and Yardes, * had hoped, by means of La Yalliere, to obtain a pre- HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 249 dominant influence over Louis. But the royal mis- tress loved Louis with a sincere and disinterested affection, and was not disposed to become the instru- ment of court intriguers. It was resolved, therefore, to oust her, and substitute in her stead Mile, de la Mothe Houdancourt, who, it was imagined, would be more subservient. To effect this object, Yardes wrote a letter, purporting to be from the Spanish monarch, to his daughter the French queen, informing her of her consort's connection with La Yalliere ; it was translated into Spanish by Guiche. The letter, how- ever, fell into the hands of Louis. While endeavour- ing to discover the author, the king consulted Yardes, and Yardes was so ineffably base as to lead him to believe that the offender was the duchess of Noailles. The duchess, a woman of strict virtue, had the super- intendence of the queen's maids of honour, and had already dissatisfied Louis by her vigilant care of her charge. He therefore readily believed the suggestion of Yardes, and, without farther inquiry, deprived the duchess and her husband of all the places which they held, and ordered them to retire to their estate. For three years the perfidy of Yardes remained a secret, and it would perhaps always have remained so, had he not caused a disclosure of it, by conduct which was at once a flagrant breach of confidence to his friend, the count de Guiche, and a gross insult to the duchess of Orleans. He obtained possession of the letters written by the count to the duchess, and refused to give them up ; and he incited the chevalier de Lor- raine to make offensive advances to her. This pro- ceeding brought on a quarrel, the result of which was that the king became acquainted with the treachery of the man whom ,he had trusted. Yardes was sent to the Bastile in December, 1664, from whence he was removed to the citadel of Montpellier, where he was closely confined for eighteen months. He was at 250 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. length allowed to reside in his government of Aigues- Mortes ; but eighteen years passed away before he was recalled to the court. He is said to have em- ployed in study the period of his exile, and to have made himself generally esteemed in Languedoc. When, after his long banishment, he was graciously received by the king, Vardes was dressed in the fashion of his early days, and, when Louis laughed at the antique cut of his coat, the supple courtier replied, " Sire, when one is so wretched as to be banished from you, one is not only unfortunate, but ridiculous ! " Yardes did not long enjoy his re-establishment in the royal favour ; he died in 1688. To Vardes succeeds another noble, count Roger Bussy de Rabutin, who, though he is not accused of such baseness as that of which Yardes was guilty, was by no means a model of delicacy and virtue. He seems, indeed, to have been of opinion, that honour and ho- nesty were not necessary qualities in the persons whom he had about him ; for, in his Memoirs, he coolly describes one gentleman, who was of his train, as hav- ing been all his life a cut-purse ; and another, on whom he bestows praise for some things, as being addicted to every vice, and no less familiar with robbery and murder than with eating and drinking. Such being his laxity of principles, it is no wonder that he some- times participated in disgusting orgies, and was even suspected of feeling a more than parental love for Madame de la Riviere, his daughter. Bussy de Ra- butin was born in 1618, entered the army when he was only twelve years of age, served in all the cam- paigns between 1 634 and 1 663, and attained the rank of lieutenant-general. His bravery was undoubted, but his vanity, arrogance, and satirical spirit, made him numerous enemies among his brother officers. On one occasion he lampooned Turenne, and that great general, deviating from his usual magnanimity, HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 251 avenged himself by writing to the king, that " M. de Bussy was the best officer in the army for songs." In 1641, Bussy was an inmate of the Bastile for five months. The defective discipline of his regiment, and its having engaged in smuggling salt, was the ostensible cause of his imprisonment ; he himself assigned as the reason, that his father was hated by Desnoyers the minister. The same faults by which his companions in arms had been converted into foes, proved his ruin at court. He wrote a libellous work, called the " Amorous History of the Gauls," which was published in 1665, and excited a general outcry among the personages whom it describes Bussy affirms that it was sent to the press without his con- sent, and even with malignant alterations and addi- tions, by an unfaithful mistress, to whom he entrusted the manuscript. This production was made the pre- text for committing him to the Bastile ; but it is said that his real offence was a song, in which he ridiculed the king's passion for the duchess of la Valliere. His imprisonment lasted twenty months, and he candidly owns, in his Memoirs and Letters, that it was not very patiently endured. By dint of importunity, seconded by an illness with which he was attacked, he at length recovered his liberty. During his captivity, he was compelled to resign, for a much less sum than it cost him, the major-generalship of the light cavalry. But though Bussy was released, he was not pardoned; he was banished to his estate. Notwithstanding his abject supplications, which were incessantly renewed, he remained an exile for sixteen years. At last, in 1682, he was graciously permitted to re-appear at court. His happiness was, however, still incomplete ; for the courtiers soon began to cabal against him, and the monarch to treat him coldly ; and, though he suc- ceeded in procuring a pension for himself, and pen- sions and preferments for his children, he failed to 252 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. obtain the blue riband and a marshal' a staff, which were the great objects of his ambition. He died in 1693. A longer term of imprisonment than was under- gone by Bussy Rabutin fell to the lot of the next pri- soner. Among the victims of the persecution which was carried on against the Jansenists, was Louis Isaac le Maistre, better known by the name of Saci, which is an anagram formed by him from one of his Christian names. He was born in 1613, and was educated at the college of Beauvais, along with his uncle, the celebrated Anthony Arnauld. Though he was early destined to the clerical profession, he did not take orders till he was in his thirty-fifth year ; a praise- worthy humility having long induced him to doubt his being competent to fulfil properly the duties of a gospel minister. He was soon after appointed director of the Port Royal nuns, on which occasion he took up his abode in the convent, resigning to it all his property, except a small annuity, and of that he dis- tributed the largest portion to the poor. His time was spent in study, prayer, and pious exercises. But a blameless life was not sufficient to shield him from theological hatred. In 1661, he was compelled to fly from the convent, and he remained in concealment till 1666, when he was discovered and conveyed to the Bastile. In that prison he was immured for three years and a half, and he solaced his lonely hours by undertaking a translation of the Bible, a considerable part of which he accomplished while he was held in durance. He, however, did not live to complete it. In the autumn of 1669 he was set at liberty. The minister, to whom he was presented on leaving the Bastile, seems to have been willing to grant him some favour, as a compensation for his unmerited sufferings; but all that Saci asked was, that the prisoners might be more leniently treated. After the destruction of HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 253 Port Royal, he found an asylum in the house of his cousin, the marquis of Pomponne, and there he ended his days, in 1684. Saci was such an enemy to con- troversy that, though often attacked, he is said never to have replied except in one instance. Yoltaire speaks of him as " one of the good writers of Port Royal." In the poetical compositions of Saci, which were his earliest literary attempts, there are passages that rise above mediocrity. Among his principal works, be- sides his version of the Bible, are translations of the Psalms, St. Thomas a Kempis, two books of the Eneid, the Fables of Phsedrus, and three of the Co- medies of Terence. From the pious and humble pastor we must turn to a very different sort of personage, to one of the cour- tier species, a man more remarkable for his sudden rise, and for the vicissitudes which he experienced, than for genius or virtue. Three of his eminent con temporaries have left on record their opinion of An- toninus de Caumont, count, and afterwards, duke of Lauzun. The witty Bussy Rabutin pithily describes him as being " one of the least men, in mind as well as body, that God ever created." The more phleg- matic duke of Berwick says of him, " he had a sort of talent, which, however, consisted only in turning every thing into ridicule, insinuating himself into everybody's confidence, worming out their secrets, and playing upon their foibles. He was noble in his carriage, generous, and lived in a splendid style. He loved high play, and played like a gentleman. His figure was very diminutive, and it is incomprehensible how he could ever have become a favourite with the ladies." The satirical St. Simon has drawn, in his best manner, a full-length portrait of Lauzun, which has scarcely a single redeeming feature. He does, indeed, allow, that he was a good friend, " when he chanced to be a friend, which was rarely," and a good 254 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. relation ; that he had noble manners, and was brave to excess. This is the sole speck of light in the pic- ture ; the rest is all shade. In the likeness drawn by St. Simon, we see Lauzun, " full of ambition, caprices, and whimsies^ jealous of every one, striving always to fo beyond the mark, never satisfied, illiterate, una- orned and unattractive in mind, morose, solitary, and unsociable in disposition, mischievous and spiteful by nature, and still more so from ambition and jealousy, prompt to become an enemy, even to those who were not his rivals, cruel in exposing defects, and in finding and making subjects for ridicule, scattering his ill-natured wit about him without sparing any one ; and to crown the whole, a courtier equally insolent, scoffing, and base even to servility, and replete with arts, intrigues, and meannesses, to accomplish his designs." Such Was the man whom the king long delighted to honour. Lauzun, who at his outset bore the title of marquis de Puyguilhem, was the youngest son of a noble Gas- con family, and was introduced at court by the mar- shal de Grammont, his relation. He soon became the favourite of Louis, who heaped riches and places upon him ; some of the latter were expressly created for him. When the duke of Mazarin resigned the mastership. of the ordnance, the king promised it to Lauzun, but bound him to keep the matter secret for a short time. The folly and vanity of the favourite, who could not refrain from boasting of his good for- tune, were the cause of his disappointment. Louvois thus obtained a knowledge of the nomination, and re- monstrated against it so strongly, and with such sound reasons, that it was revoked by the monarch. On this occasion a scene took place such as has seldom occurred between monarch and subject. After having vainly tried to persuade the king to carry into effect his original intention, Lauzun burst into a furious HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 255 passion, turned his back on him, broke his own sword under his foot, and vowed that he would never again serve a prince who had violated his word so shame- fully. Louis acted in this instance with true dignity. Opening the window, he threw out his cane, and, as he was quitting the room, he coolly said, " I should be sorry to have struck a man of rank/' The next morning, however, Lauzun was conveyed to the Bastile. But Louis was soon induced to forgive the offender, and even to offer him, as an indemnity for his loss, the post of captain of the royal guards. It strongly marks the insolence of Lauzun, that he at first refused the proffered grace, and that entreaties were required to induce him to accept it. Lauzun had scarcely been twelve months out of the Bastile, before he had an opportunity of becoming the richest subject in Europe. A grand-daughter of Henry IV., the celebrated duchess of Montpensier, usually known by the appellation of Mademoiselle, who had reached her forty-second year, fell violently in love with him. In her Memoirs she gives a curi- ous and amusing account of her wooing, for the court- ship was all on the side of the lady. So completely had Lauzun recovered his influence, that the king- gave his consent to their union. The marriage con- tract secured to him three duchies and twenty millions of livres. A second time his fortune was marred by his vanity. His friends urged him to hasten the nup- tials, but he delayed, that they might be celebrated with royal splendour. Of this delay his enem ies availed themselves to work upon the pride of the monarch, and they succeeded in breaking off the match. The duchess was rendered inconsolable by this event; Lauzun seems to have borne it with sufficient philo- sophy. A secret marriage between them is believed to have subsequently taken place. Lauzun was supposed to be now more firmly fixed 256 HISTORY OF THE EASTILE. than ever in the king's good graces. He was placed at the head of the army which, in 1670, escorted the king and the conrt to Flanders, and he displayed ex- traordinary magnificence in this command. But, flat- tering as appearances were, he was on the eve of his fall. He had two active and powerful enemies ; Lou- vois, whom he constantly thwarted and provoked in various ways, and Madame de Montespan, the king's mistress, whom he had more than once grossly in- sulted. Political rivalry and hatred, and female re- venge, were finally triumphant. The minister and the mistress so incessantly laboured to blacken Lauzun, whose private marriage with Mademoiselle is said to have aided their efforts, that, in November 1671, he was sent to the Bastile, whence he was soon after removed to the fortress of Pignerol. In that fortress he was closely confined in a cell for nearly five years. His situation was at length somewhat ameliorated, but his imprisonment was continued for five years more. It is probable that he would have spent the rest of his days at Pignerol, had not the duchess of Montpensier purchased his freedom, by sacrificing the duchy of Aumale, the earldom of Eu, and the prin- cipality of Dombes, to form an appanage for the ille- gitimate son of Louis by Madame de Montespan. It is an additional stain on the character of Lauzun, that he proved ungrateful to his deliverer. Though Lauzun was released, he was not suffered to approach the court. Tired of his exile from Ver- sailles, he passed over to England. On the revolution of 1688 breaking out, James placed the queen and the infant prince under his care, to be conveyed to France. This trust opened the way to his re-admission into the royal presence, and to his being created a duke j but he never regained the confidence of the monarch. He led a reinforcement of the French troops to James in Ireland ; and displayed, as the duke of Berwick HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 257 states, none of the qualities of a general. He died in 1723, at the age of more than ninety. The closing scene of his life was perhaps the only one for which he deserves praise. His disease was cancer in the mouth, the protracted and horrible torture of which he bore with astonishing temper and fortitude. The severe example which was made of de Boute- ville, in the reign of Louis XIII., though it gave a temporary check to the practice of duelling, was far from putting an end to it. Nor did better success attend the ordinances issued in 1634 by Louis XIII., and in 1643, 1651, and 1670, by Louis XIV. The feebleness of the royal authority, during a disturbed regency, and the war of the Fronde, with the quarrels arising out of it, doubtless tended to neutralise the laws. But, even when Louis XIV. was in uncontested pos- session of despotic power, we find that the murderous custom of fighting in parties was still existing. In 1663, a famous duel took place between the two La Frettes, Saint Aignan, and Argenlieu, on the one side, and Chalais, Noirmoutier, d'Antin, and Flama- rens, on the other. The axe was at length laid to the root of the evil, by the edict of August 1679, which constituted the marshals of France, and the governors of provinces, supreme judges in all cases where individuals supposed their honour to have been wounded. This edict prohibited, under the heaviest penalties, all private combats and rencounters, both within and without the kingdom. One clause seems excellently calculated to produce its intended effect, no less by the insinuation with which it opens, than by the denunciations with which it concludes. " Those," it says, " who, doubting of their own courage, shall have called in the aid of seconds, thirds, or a greater number of persons, shall, besides the punishment of death and confiscation, be degraded from their nobility, and have their coat of arms publicly blackened and 258 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. broken by the hangman ; their successors shall be obliged to adopt new arms ; and the seconds, thirds, and other accomplices shall be punished in the same manner/' This salutary edict appears to have nearly accomplished the purpose for which it was framed. The slavish fear of incurring the displeasure of the sovereign, a feeling which was so prevalent among the courtiers of Louis XIV., perhaps aided materially in producing obedience to the law. It would have been well if a worse effect had never resulted from that kind of fear. Among the fashionable gladiators of those days was Philip d'Oger, Marquis of Cavoie, a man whom na- ture had liberally endowed with the means of shining in a nobler sphere. Cavoie, born in 1640, and de- scended from an ancient Picard family, was the son of a woman of talent, who gained the good graces of Anne of Austria, and availed herself of her influence to forward the fortune of her offspring. His personal appearance was greatly in his favour ; he was one of the handsomest and best made men in France, and he dressed with singular elegance. His courage, too, was no less conspicuous than his corporeal qualities. In 1666, he served as a volunteer on board of the Dutch fleet, under Da Ruyter ; and in the battle with the duke of Albemarle he distinguished himself by the perilous exploit of proceeding in a boat to cut the cable with which some English sloops were towing down a fire-ship on the Dutch admiral. He succeeded in his daring attempt, and escaped unhurt. By this gallant action he acquired the friendship of the celebrated Turenne. Long before this he had become known as u the brave Cavoie," in consequence of his gallant bearing in the single combats which were still too common in France. It was for having acted as second in one of thes-a combats, that ho was immure! in th-3 Bastile. His HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 259 imprisonment would, perhaps, have been protracted, but for a curious circumstance, of which a pleasant account is given by the duke de St. Simon. Mile, de Coetlogon, one of the maids of honour to the consort of Louis XIV., had fallen madly in love with Gavoie. St. Simon describes her as being " ugly, prudent, na'ive, much liked, and a very good creature." It is no slight proof of her amiability, that, in a frivolous and satirical court, her sorrows were a subject of pity instead of laughter. Cavoie was anything but de- lighted with her idolatrous fondness, which sheseemed to glory in manifesting ; and he strove to rid himself of it by being obdurate, and even downright harsh. In spite of his repulsive conduct, however, she became every day fonder. W hen he went to the army,her tears and cries were incessant, and during the whole of the campaign she obstinately abstained from adorning her person in the smallest degree. It was not till he came back that she resumed her customary style of dress. His being committed to the Bastile renewed her grief. " She spoke to the king in behalf of Cavoie," says St. Simon, a and not being able to obtain his deliverance, she scolded his majesty so violently as to abuse him. The king laughed heartily, at which she was so much incensed that she threatened him with her nails, and he thought it prudent not to run the risk of them. He every day dined and supped publicly with the queen; at dinner it was usual for the duchess of Richelieu and the queen's maids of honour to wait upon them. On these occasions, Coetlogon never would hand anything to the king ; either she avoided him, or she flatly refused, and told him that he did not deserve to be waited upon by her. Next she was ill of jaundice, and had violent hysterics, and fits of despair. This went so far, that the king and queen seriously desired the duchess of Richelieu to accom- pany her to the Bastile, to see Cavoie ; and this was s2 260 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. twice or thrice repeated. At last he was released, and Coetlogon, in raptures, again took to dressing; but it was not without much difficulty that she could be reconciled to the king." It is delightful to know that the devoted love of this warm-hearted female was rewarded ; and it is honourable to Louis XI Y. that, instead of meanly re- senting her bursts of passion, he kindly and success- fully exerted himself to render her happy. In con- junction with the queen, he more than once pleaded for the enamoured lady, but he found Cavoie averse from a marriage. At length, the death of his grand marechal-de-logis enabled the king to attack Cavoie with advantage. This time, however, he spoke in the tone of an absolute monarch ; for he insisted that Cavoie should wed Mile, de Coetlogon ; but, in re- turn, he promised to put him in the road to fortune, and, as a dowry to the portionless maid, he gave him the splendid office which had just become vacant. Despotism thus exercised may be forgiven, if only for its rarity. Cavoie yielded to the command of his sove- reign, and the desired union took place. The result was more satisfactory than might have been expected. Cavoie proved to be an indulgent husband, and she, on her part, never ceased to look up to him as a sort of superior being. Neither in her maiden nor in her married state, was her virtue for a moment doubted. Cavoie accompanied Louis XIV . in all his campaigns. At the passage of the Rhine, his intrepidity called forth praise from the king himself. A report having soon after been spread, that Cavoie was among the slain, Louis exclaimed, " O, how grieved M. de Tu- renne will be !" The courtiers who surrounded him were joining in a general chorus of eulogium upon the supposed dead man, when a horseman was seen plung - ing into the river on the opposite side, and swimming over. It was Cavoie, whom the Prince de Conde had HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 261 sent to the monarch, to announce to him the complete success of his army. For many years Cavoie was held in high esteem at court, and enjoyed the confidence of his master. A circumstance at length occurred to disturb his peace. He had hoped to be included in the number of those on whom the order of the Holy Ghost was conferred in 1688, but he was disappointed. This disappoint- ment was the work of Louvois, who hated him, be- cause he was the old and firm friend of the marquis de Seignalai. Wounded by this slight, the grand marechal wrote a letter to Louis, informing him that he intended to retire. But the vows of chagrined courtiers are as brittle as those of lovers. The king called him into his cabinet, and, with that graciousness which he well knew how to assume, he said to him, " We have lived too long together to part now ; I cannot let you quit me ; I will see that you shall be satisfied." Cavoie abandoned his design of withdraw- ing from court ; but the promised blue riband was never bestowed on him. At a later period, about twenty years before his decease, he resumed and carried into execution his purpose of seceding from public life. He was a patron of literary characters in general, and was in habits of close intimacy with Racine, Boileau, and other emi- nent authors. Cavoie died in i 7 16, at the age of 76, leaving behind him the enviable reputation of having been a man on whose sincerity and probity an implicit reliance might with safety be placed. From Cavoie we pass to an individual of a less esti- mable character. Louis, prince of Rohan, commonly known by the title of the Chevalier Rohan, a degene- rate descendant from illustrious ancestors, was born about 1635. . Rohan was endowed by nature with a handsome and graceful person, and many intellectual qualities ; but all these advantages were nullified by 282 HISTORY OF THE BASTlLE. his follies and vices. The marquis de la Fare de- scribes him as being made up of contradictions ; some- times witty, at others the contrary ; sometimes digni- fied and brave, at others mean and dastardly. In the annals of gallantry he seems to have been ambitious of holding a conspicuous place. The most celebrated of his amorous adventures was his carrying off, aided by her brother, the duke of Nevers, the beautiful and frail Hortensia Mancini, who was united to the contemptible duke of Mazarin. That he gamed high, and was careless of his gold, we learn from an anec- dote which is related of him. He had lost to the king, at the gaming-table, a large sum, which was to be paid in louis-d'or. Rohan counted out seven or eight hundred, but, not having enough of them, he added two hundred Spanish pistoles. Louis objected to the latter, upon which the chevalier snatched them up, and threw them out of the window, saying at the same time, " Since your majesty will not have them, they are good for nothing." The king complained of this to cardinal Mazarin, who replied, " Sire, the chevalier de Rohan played like a king, and you played like a chevalier de Rohan." This action of Rohan has been praised as a " piquant lesson" to Louis; it seems, however, to have been rather an absurd mode of rebuking the monarch's unprincely conduct. Rohan continued in favour at court for several years, and in 1 656 was appointed grand huntsman of France, an office equivalent to our master of the buck-hounds; he was afterwards made colonel of the guards. He served in 1654, 1655, 1672, and 1677, and displayed great valour. The commencement of his decline seems to have been his being obliged to give up the office of grand huntsman, in consequence of his amour with the duchess of Mazarin. His extravagance and profli- gacy at length ruined his fortune and reputation. To HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 263 repair his shattered finances, he engaged in a plot at once treasonable and absurd, which completed the de- struction of his character, and brought him to the scaffold. Into this scheme he was seduced by La- truaumont, a Norman officer, a man as impoverished and licentious as himself. Their accomplices were Preault, a young officer, the marchioness of Villiers- Bourdeville, his mistress, and a schoolmaster, named Van den Enden ; all of whom are said to have disbe- lieved that the soul is immortal. Their plan was, to put into the hands of the Dutch the town of Quille- bceuf, in Normandy, and to excite the province to revolt, for which service they were to be liberally rewarded. The magnitude of their project forms a striking contrast with the scantiness of their means. The conspiracy was discovered by the government, before the conspirators could begin their operations. Rohan was committed to the Bastile, and M. de Bris- sac was sent into Normandy to arrest Latruaumont. The latter defended himself, was mortally wounded, and died in a few hours. He had at least some ho- nourable feelings, for, in order to save his confederates, he persisted to the last moment that he was the sole criminal. The friends of Rohan nightly made the cir- cuit of the Bastile, and vociferated, through a speak- ing-trumpet, "Latruaumont is dead, and has confessed nothing." They were, however, unheard by the che- valier. He, meanwhile, was perseveringly pressed to acknowledge his guilt, but he refused; and, as his participation in the plot was known only to the de- ceased, and no written proof existed against him, he might have saved his life, had he not been circum- vented by one of those stratagems which were cm- ployed against prisoners. De Bezons, one of the counsellors of state who interrogated the captive, had the baseness to assure him that the king meant to pardon him if he would declare the truth, although 264 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. everything was already known from the dying avowal of Latruaumont. Trusting to the assurances of his treacherous adviser, Rohan acknowledged his treason. Pie soon learned the deceit which had been practised on him ; and he burst into such violent paroxysms of rage, that his keepers were compelled to manacle him that he might not lay violent hands on himself. Ro- han and his accomplices were soon after sentenced to death; they were executed in front of the Bastile, on the 27th of November, 1674. In spite of her erro- neous principles, the sufferer most worthy of pity was, perhaps, Madame de Yilliers, who displayed a noble fortitude and forgiving spirit. The only evidence against her was some of her letters to Preault, which he had unwisely preserved. At first, she uttered a few words of mild reproof for his fatal imprudence ; but she quickly changed her tone, and said with a smile, " We must not think on what is passed, but only how to die/' The same year that consigned Rohan to the scaf- fold, saw his place in the Bastile filled by a youthful victim, who was doomed to waste a large part of his life in captivity, for having offended a vindictive and powerful religious body. His name is not recorded, but it is evident that he was of a good family. Louis XI Y. was requested, by the Jesuits of Cler- mont College, to be present at the representation of a tragedy by their pupils. He complied, and was highly gratified by the piece ; the more so, perhaps, as it was thickly strewn with passages in praise of him. A noble- man in attendance having spoken to him in terms of admiration, as to the manner in which the drama had been played, the king replied, " Where's the wonder ? is it not my college?" These words were not lost upon the principal of the college, who was standing by. As soon as the king was gone, the old inscrip- tion, " Collegium Claromwitanum Societati Jesus," HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 265 which was on the front of the building, was taken down, and workmen were all night employed to in- scribe the words, " Collegium Ludovici Magni" in gold letters, on a tablet of black marble. In the morning the new inscription was seen con- spicuously displayed on the edifice. A youth of six- teen, a pupil in the college, had the good sense and the good taste to be disgusted with this worse than indecorous adulation, and he gave vent to his feelings in a Latin distich, which, during the night, he fastened on the gate. The meaning of his lilies may be thus given : t( Christ's name expunged, the king's now fills the stone : O impious race ! by this is plainly shown That Louis is the only god you own !" The pungent lines excited a violent clamour among the Jesuits, and no pains were spared to trace the writer. The juvenile offender was discovered, and was shut up in the Bastile. After having been con- fined there for a long while, he was transferred to the citadel of St. Marguerite, on the coast of Provence. There he continued for several years ; after which he was taken back to the Bastile. One-and-thirty years he passed in this manner, and the remainder of his life would doubtless have been consumed in the same way, had he not, in 1705, become sole heir to the estates of his family. The confessor of the Bastile, who was a Jesuit, now remonstrated with his brethren on the impolicy of keeping in prison an individual from whom, by procuring his release, they might reap such a golden harvest. His advice was taken, and the captive was set free at their intercession. There can be no doubt that their tardy and interested mercy received a liberal reward. Among the fellow prisoners of the nameless satirist of the Jesuits was, for a short time, another writer of verses, but verses of a very different kind. The 266 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. * person in question was Charles Dassouci, who lu- dicrously designated himself as "Emperor of the Burlesque, the first of that name." He was horn at Paris, ahout 16.04, and was the son of a bar- rister. His bringing up, and his early habits, were not calculated to make him an estimable member of society. His parents were separated, and the ty- ranny of a female, who was at once the servant and the concubine of his father, drove him from his home. When he was only nine years old, he wandered to Calais, where he passed himself off as an adept in astrology, the son of Cesar, that dealer in magic whose fate has been narrated in the pre- ceding chapter. The boy having, by the power of imagination, worked a cure upon a hypochondriacal individual, the wise people of Calais considered this fact to be a decisive proof of his intercourse with the devil, and were about to throw him into the sea, but he was saved by some of his friends, who conveyed him privately out of the place. After having led a roving life for some time, he became player on the lute and singer to Christina, duchess of Savoy, the daughter of Henry IY. In 1640, he was introduced to Louis XIII., who gave him the same situation that he had filled in the household of the duchess, and he was continued in it during the minority of Louis XI Y. Resolving to return to Turin, he quitted Paris in 1655; but, before his departure from the kingdom, he visited various parts in the south of France. He was accompanied every where by two handsome youths, called his musical pages ; his connexion with whom afforded to his enemies a reason, or a pretext, for fixing a deep stain on his moral character. Fail- ing to obtain patronage at Turin, he went to Rome; and there he was put into the prison of the Inquisi- tion, for having satirised some powerful prelates. On being liberated he went back to Paris, where he was HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 267 not more fortunate than he had been in Italy, for he was committed to the Bastile, in 1675, whence he was transferred to the Chatelet. To his licentious conduct and writings he is said to have been indebted for his imprisonment, which lasted six months. He died about 1679. His principal works are, " Ovid in Good Humour," which is a travestie upon part of the Metamorphoses ; Claudian's Rape of Proserpine burlesqued ; and many poems in a similar style. Das- souci, who was sometimes called "the ape of Scarron," received a lash from the satirical scourge of Boileau, and he complained heavily of the injury. In his Art of Poetry, Boileau thus alludes to the popularity which Dassouci had once enjoyed : c< The scurviest joker charmed some kindred mind, And even Dassouci could readers find." It must be owned, however, that in the works of " the emperor of burlesque," there are some passages which prove that, though his taste and his morals were defective, he was not destitute of talent. - The reader has seen that, with very few exceptions, the prisoners who have been mentioned in this chap- ter belonged to the courtier-class; that they were men who seemed to feel a difficulty of breathing whenever they did not inhale the vapours of a fri- volous and voluptuous court. We ought always to abhor injustice, and therefore we must hate the power which was unjust to them; but they have no title to that liberal share of our pity which is the right of humbler victims, for it was an implied con- dition of their artificial existence that they should bend to a despot's will ; they purchased the smiles of their master, the pleasures, such as they were, of the Louvre and Versailles, and a portion of the pub- lic spoils, by the renunciation of their free agency, and by encountering the risk of being capriciously 268 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. transferred from a palace to a dungeon. If, rely- ing on his good luck, a man will venture to play with a gambler whom he knows to assert the privilege of now and then cogging the dice, his folly perhaps deserves more compassion than his misfortune. Let us now see in what manner other classes were affected by the working of an arbitrary government ; whether its tyranny was impartially distributed among them. A few examples, taken between the years 1660 and 1670, will enable us to form a tolerably cor- rect judgment upon this subject. Before we proceed to give these examples, it may, however, be well to ap- prise the reader," that committals to the Bastile were not things of rare occurrence, but the contrary. In 1663, fifty- four persons were sent to that dreary pile ; in some years the number was fewer ; in others it rose to nearly a hundred and fifty. The Bastile was*so crowded in 1665, that a part of the prisoners were obliged to be removed to other places of confinement. It must, indeed, have been full to overflowing, before this removal could have been thought necessary. Such being the case with the Bastile, it is probable that Yincennes, and many other state prisons, were in a similar situation. Though, as far as can be judged from imperfect re- gisters, it appears that a large majority of the persons incarcerated in the Bastile were the victims of caprice, malice, or religious and political persecution, there can be no doubt that many were really criminal. Some instances of the latter class occur in the years between 1660 and 1670. The crime of coining, which we have seen so common at an earlier period, was still preva- lent, and was still committed by men who held a respectable rank in society. In 1666 twelve comers were hanged within a fortnight, and they accused se- veral others, among whom was a M. Delcampe, who is described as u the celebrated master of an academy HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 269 in the suburb of St. Germain." He was escorted in a carriage to the Bastile, by three companies of the guards, and little more than a week elapsed before he was beheaded. The crowd to witness his execution was so great, that many persons were killed or wounded by being pressed or trampled on. The Bastile was often employed as an engine of extor- tion. To contribute to the wants of the state, or, rather, to the prodigalities of the court, immense sums were levied upon individuals holding offices, and upon con- tractors, and all who had had any concern with the finances. It must, of course, have been taken for granted that they had robbed the public ; and it could hardly have been expected that they would not indem- nify themselves, by future peculation, for their present loss. Messat, a registrar of the council, was bastiled for remonstrating against a demand of six hundred thousand livres from himself and three of his col- leagues. Catalan, a contractor, shared the same fate, and was threatened with death to boot; but after a confinement of several months, he ransomed himself for six millions of livres. From another individual nine hundred thousand livres, and from three of the treasurers of the exchequer several millions, were squeezed by this powerful instrument. M. Deschiens, one of M. Colbert's head clerks, was also frightened into the payment of a good round sum, by a visit to the Bastile. Other equally honourable means of raising money were resorted to ; all of which helped to fill the pri- sons as well as the coffers of the monarch. Among 'them were " free gifts," once known in England under ' the name of " benevolences." From the city of Sens, for instance, twelve thousand livres were demanded as a free gift, besides nearly thrice as much for the pay of the gendarmerie. The citizens replied that they had no money, but would give a thousand 270 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. hogsheads of excellent wine. Whether the wine was accepted, or whether any of the citizens were imprisoned for the misdemeanour of being pennyless, I cannot say. Immense sums were raised by the sale of offices. For the title of counsellor of the court, 75,000 crowns were paid, and 90,000 for a place at the board of exchequer. Numerous purchasers were found at far higher prices. There is perhaps much truth in Patin's sarcastic remark on this occasion : " They must have robbed at a great rate," says he, " or they would not have so much money to squander/' Monopolies likewise lent their aid to replenish the royal store. Niceron, a grocer, who appears to have been an agent, or spokesman, of the Parisian companies of tradesmen, was lodged in the Bastile for having ventured to remonstrate against a projected mono- poly of whale-oil. Another article of supply w r as the stopping of the annuities payable at the town hall ; a measure for which we have seen a precedent in the reign of Henry IV, Poignant, a respectable citizen of Paris, was sent to the Bastile for having spoken on this subject ; and a female, named Madame de la Trousse, was, for the same cause, prohibited from going to the town hall, or to any other meeting, under pain of corporal punishment ! On another occasion, the president le Lievre was banished from Paris, for having made some observations which were unfavourable to the taxes. The money thus obtained was lavishly spent on the pomps and amusements of the court. A part was dis- sipated at the gaming-table ; Louis being then a con- stant and an unlucky gamester. Theatrical enter- tainments absorbed another portion. The getting up of a single grand ballet is said to have cost no less than forty thousand pounds. Guy Patin had reason to exclaim ? they talk much at the Louvre of balls, HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 271 ballets, and rejoicings, but nothing is said of relieving the people, who a*v 'b'ing of such unexampled want, after so great and sowmn a general peace has been concluded. pudor ! 6 mores ! 6 tempora ! " But though, in his private letters, Patin could ven - ture to censure profusion and exaction, he would soon have been fitted with what he somewhere calls " a stone doublet," had he dared to breathe a word against them in public. It was dangerous even for a barrister to perform faithfully his duty to a client. M. Burai, an eminent advocate, was committed to the Bastile, in 1655, for having undertaken the defence of Guene- gaut, one of the treasurers, who was prosecuted by the government. The press was completely muzzled. We find De Prez, a printer, sent to the Bastile, for having printed a letter by the bishop of Aleth, which displeased the Jesuits ; a second unlucky typographer, for offending the archbishop of Paris ; and a third, named Coquier, for privately printing an answer to a work of the che- valier Talon, who had attacked Coquier' s former mas- ter, the superintendant Fouquet. It was a perilous task for a man to defend himself against the minions of favour. The Journal des Sgavans having abused Charles Patin, he was about to reply, when it was intimated to him that if he did not desist, the Bastile would receive him : the journal happened to be pro- tected by M. Colbert, the minister. Such protection ive a decisive advantage over a less fortunate rival, he conduct of Renaudot, the printer of the Gazette, affords a strong proof of the tyrannical use which was made of it. There appears to have been at this period a sort of partnership, the members of which gained a livelihood by compiling and vending a manu- script gazstte. As the sale of this paper diminished that of his own, Renaudot made a bold attempt to get rid of his competitors. He is said to have been ex- 272 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. tremely desirous that they should be hanged ; hut h is benevolent wish was not gratified. He had, how- ever, the satisfaction of procuring seven of them to be sent to the Bastile, one of whom was publicly whipped through the streets. Yet these measures, harsh as they were, did not succeed in putting down the manuscript gazetteers ; for, five years afterwards, six more of them were committed to prison. From its long continuance, and the risks which the traders were willing to encounter, we may infer that the trade was productive. To have a different opinion from the sovereign, as to the merit of any one whom he placed in office, was a heavy offence. M. de Montespan expiated, by imprisonment in Fort-1'Eveque, his having doubted the wisdom of choosing M. Montausier as governor to the dauphin. Some were thrown into the Bastile for impossible crimes ; such was the case of Saint Severin, a priest, who was Accused of sorcery. Of others, the fault and the meaning of their punishment are now undiscoverable. With respect to L'Epine, a priest, for example, we are only told that he was discharged from the Bastile, on condition of quitting Paris within twenty-four hours, and going to Egypt. The reason of this singular species of banishment must remain an enigma. One of the instances in which despair prompted an inmate of the Bastile to commit suicide, occurred in 1669, and is recorded by Patin. " A state prisoner," says he, " has poisoned himself in the Bastile, terri- fied by the punishment which could not fail to be inflicted on him, for having spoken very badly de Domino Priore." HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 273 CHAPTER VIII. The Poisoners The Marchioness of Brinvilliers Penaulier La Voisin and her accomplices and dupes The "Chambre Ardente" TheCountessofSoissons The Duchess of Bouillon The Duke of Luxemhourg Stephen de Bray The Abbe Primi Andrew Morell Madame Guyon Courtils de Sandraz Constantino de Renneville The Man with the Iron Mask Jansenists Tiron, Veillant, and Lebrun Desmarets The Count de Bucquoy The Duke de Richelieu Miscellaneous Prisoners. IN the year 1676, the Bastile received a criminal, whose guilt was of the blackest dye, and who was soon followed by a crowd of imitators, more profoundly wicked, if possible, than she herself was. Poisoning was their crime, and the practice of it became so com- mon, that Madame de Sevigne expresses a fear that, in foreign countries, the words Frenchman and poi- soner would be considered as synonymous. Foremost in the dark catalogue stands the mar- chioness of Brinvilliers, the daughter of Dreux d'Aubrai, the Civil Lieutenant. She was beautiful, reserved in her manners, and apparently devout ; but her heart was corrupted to the core. From her own confession, it appears, that when she was only seven years old, she had already lost her maiden innocence, and had also set fire to a house. Her later years were worthy of this beginning. Between 1666 and 1670, she poisoned her father, two brothers, a sister, and many of her acquaintance. She is said to have administered poison to her husband, though without effect ; and also, with fatal success, to the poor, and the sick in the hospitals, to whom she gave biscuits, in which deadly drugs were mixed. The latter facts are denied by Voltaire ; they are, however, positively affirmed by Madame de Sevigne. The diabolical art which she so widely practised 274 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. was learned from St. Croix, a young officer, who was her paramour. He w^as a friend of her husband, who, in opposition to her real or feigned remonstrances, made him an inmate of his house. A criminal inti- macy soon took place between the wife and the friend. The husband, a man of dissipated habits, seems to have been regardless of their intrigue ; but her father was so disgusted by its shameless publicity that he obtained a lettre-de-cachet, and St. Croix was lodged in the Bastile, where he continued for twelve months. There St. Croix was placed in the same apartment with Exili, an Italian, who was confined on suspicion of being, as he really was, a com pounder and vender of poisons. Exili taught St. Croix all his detestable secrets, and the latter communicated them to the marchioness, who was a willing scholar. St. Croix died suddenly in 1672, and, as he had no relatives, the government took possession of his effects. Among them was a small box, which was importu- nately claimed by the marchioness. It w T as opened, and found to contain a note, desiring that it might be delivered, without the contents being disturbed, to Madame de Brinvilliers. The box was filled with poisons of all kinds, some of the marchioness's letters to him, and a note of hand to him, for 30,000 livres, bearing her signature. Disappointed in all attempts to gain possession of the box, and finding that suspicion began to fall hea- vily upon her, Brinvilliers took flight. After having visited England, she fixed her residence at Liege. Fresh presumptions of her guilt having arisen, it was resolved to arrest her. Desgrais, the exempt of police, was accordingly despatched to Liege. He disguised himself as an abbe, pretended to be enamoured of her, insinuated himself into her good graces, and ultimately succeeded in seizing the lady and her papers, and conveying them to Paris. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 275 Brinvilliers now disavowed all knowledge of the box ; but it was too late. For a little while her spirits deserted her, and she made an ineffectual attempt at suicide. She, however, soon rallied them, and pre- served her courage to the last. Among her papers was found a written confession of the numerous crimes which she had committed. To extort an oral confession, it was resolved to put her to the ordinary question, which consisted in forcing down the throat of the culprit an immense quantity of water. When she saw three buckets in the torture room, she coolly observed, " This must be for the purpose of drowning me, for they can never expect to make a woman of my size drink it all." She was saved from the trial, by making a full avowal of her misdeeds. Her sentence she heard with an unaltered coun- tenance. In the last twenty-four hours of her existence she is said to have manifested -sincere penitence. She was beheaded, and her remains were burned, on the 16th of July, 1676. It will perhaps scarcely be believed that, on the morrow, the besotted populace collected her ashes ; assigning as their reason for so doing, that she was a saint ! With Brinvilliers was implicated Penautier, who held the lucrative offices of treasurer-general of the clergy, and of the states of Languedoc. He was known to be her intimate friend> and was believed, apparently with reason, to be one of her favoured lovers. It is asserted, that in the box which was left by St. Croix, there was a packet of poison, addressed to Penautier. That the receiver -general had the reputation of making use of such packets is certain, and was a subject of public jest. Cardinal de Bonzi, archbishop of Narbonne, who was his strenuous pro- tector, used to say laughingly, " None of those who have pensions on my benefices are long -lived, for my star is fatal to them all." The caustic Abbe Fouquet T2 276 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. one day saw the prelate and Penautier in a carriage together, and he told everybody that he had just met cardinal de Bonzi. and his star. Penautier was imprisoned, and appears to have been in imminent danger ; from which he is said to have been extricated only by the most powerful influence, and the sacrifice of half his riches. Instead of operating as a warning, the execution of the marchioness would rather seem to have stimulated others to the commission of the horrible species of crime for which she suffered. After her death, poisoning is said to have become prevalent to an extraordinary degree. Loud complaints arose from numbers of families, members of which were sup- posed to have been taken off secretly by their enemies, or by those who were eager to inherit their riches. It was with reference to the latter motive that the name of " powder of succession" was given to the drug administered. We may believe that the com- plaints were not unfrequently groundless for it has always been the practice of weak minds to ascribe sudden death to poison but still, it is certain that there were very many cases in which the suspicion was borne out by facts. So general did the clamour become, that, in January, 1680, the king issued an ordinance, naming commis- sioners, who were to hold their sittings at the Arsenal, for the purpose of trying poisoners and magicians ! This commission is known by the name of la Chambre Ardente. It has been supposed, that it derived this appellation from its being established to take cogni- zance of crimes which were punishable by fire. This appears to be a mistake ; the name having, in old times, been given to the hall in which criminals of high birth were tried, and which was so called because it was hung with black, and lighted with torches. The same title was, however, borne by a sort of committee, HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 277 which Francis II. instituted in each parliament, for the trial of Protestants, and which mercilessly con- demned them to the flames. The principal distributor of the poisons, a widow, by the name of Monvoisin, but who was known under the appellation of La Voisin, was already in the Bas- tile, with about forty persons charged as her accom- plices. The most prominent of these subordinate culprits were, a female named La Yigoureux, and her brother, and Coeuvrit, a priest, who was called Lesage. La Yoisin was a midwife \ but her profession not proving lucrative, she deserted it for the more profitable speculation of turning to account the cre- dulity, the folly, and at last the vices, of mankind. The most innocent part of her employment consisted in telling fortunes on the cards, discovering stolen goods, casting nativities, and selling charms and spells, to render women beautiful and beloved, and men in- vulnerable and fortunate ! Her pretensions to super- natural skill did not stop here ; for she boldly under- took to show spirits, and even the devil himself, to her dupes. Such is the gullibility of the crowd, whether of high or low degree, that the number of her visiters, the majority of whom were people of rank, soon enabled her to remove from a mean lodging into a splendid mansion, and keep an equipage and a train of attend- ants. That her house was made a convenience for the purposes of seduction, and for carrying on illicit con- nexions, there can be no doubt ; many of those who frequented it, of both sexes, being notorious profligates. The round of La Voisin's occupations was completed by the sale of poisons to those who were desirous of destroying the proof of incontinence, taking vengeance on a rival or an enemy, or getting rid of superannuated husbands and long-lived relatives. The newly established tribunal found the whole of the prisoners guilty. All but La Yoisin were con- 278 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. demned to punishments short of death ; to imprison- ment, exile, or the galleys. She alone was sentenced to be hurned alive on the Place de Greve, and her ashes scattered to the winds. The narrative of her last hours proves that, to a considerable portion of bru- tal courage, or rather insensibility, she added the most disgusting sensuality, vulgarity, and impiety. When she was informed of her doom, she invited her guards to have a midnight revel with her, at which she drank largely of wine, and sang twenty bacchanalian songs* The next evening, after having undergone the ques- tion, she repeated the revel ; and when she was told that she had better think on God, and sing hymns, she sang two hymns in a burlesque style. On the morning of her execution, she was enraged at being refused any other food than soup. Before she was placed in the sledge she was advised to confess ; but she obstinately refused, and thrust away from her the confessor and the cross. At Notre-Dame, it was impossible to make her repeat the amende honorable, arid when she reached the Greve she struggled furiously against the officers, and it was not without using force that they could take her from the vehicle, bind her, and place her on the pile. Consistent to the last, she several times kicked off the straw, poured forth a vol- ley of oaths, and did not cease her violence till the flames deprived her of the power of motion and speech. Either with the hope of obtaining impunity, by im- plicating the great and powerful in her crimes, or, which her character renders more probable, that she might enjoy the malignant delight of involving them in her ruin, La Yoisin disclosed the names of many of the noblest personages of the court, who had con- sulted her ; and she stated circumstances which gave rise to terrible suspicions against them. Among those whom she thus dragged into public view, were the countess of Soissoixs and the Duchess of Bouillon,, HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 279 nieces of cardinal Mazarin, the princess de Tingri, Madame de Polignac, and the duke of Luxembourg. Against some of the suspected or accused individuals, the Chamber issued warrants ; others it summoned to appear, and answer interrogatories. The countess of Soissons, mother of the celebrated prince Eugene, was a woman whose reputation was already sullied by the stains of political and amorous intrigue. Among the crimes which were attributed to her, was the death of her husband, who died suddenly in 1673. In her early years, before he became en- amoured of her sister Mary, Louis had paid her some attentions. It was probably the remembrance of his transient flame that induced him to send to the coun- tess a message, that if she were innocent he advised her to enter the Bastile, in which case he would be- friend her, but that, if she were guilty, she might retire wherever she pleased. She replied that she was blameless, but that she could not endure imprisonment. The countess immediately set off for Brussels, and she never returned to France. It would, however, be doing her injustice to conceal, that she offered to come back and justify herself, on condition that she should not be confined while the trial was pending. The con- dition was not granted, and she died in exile, in 1708. The duchess of Bouillon, her sister, passed through the ordeal more triumphantly. There is something amusing in the flippant contempt with which she treated her judges. The carriages of nine dukes went in procession with her to the Chambre Ardente, into which she was handed by her husband and the duke of Yendome. Before she would take notice of any question that was put to her, she ordered the clerk to minute down, " that she came there solely out of respect to the king's orders, and not at all to the Chamber, which she would not recognise, because ghe would not derogate from the privilege of the ducal 280 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. class/' She then answered, but with no small disdain, the various questions, some of which were, in truth, ridiculous enough. Her reason for going to La Yoi- sin's house was, she said, that she wished to see the Sibyls, which that female had promised to show her. La Reynie, one of the judges, being absurd enough to ask if she had seen the devil, she replied that she saw him at that moment, that he w T as very ugly and filthy, and was disguised in the garb of a counsellor of state. As she quitted the court, she said aloud, that she had never before heard so many foolish speeches so gravely uttered. There being nothing more to urge against her than that she had been credulous and sillily curious, no further proceedings were taken by the court, but, angry at her having made laugh- ing-stocks of his magistrates, Louis sent her in exile to Nerac, in the distant province of Guienne. If in France military talents of the highest order, and important services rendered to the state, had pos- sessed any protecting influence, Francis Henry de Montmorenci, duke of Luxembourg, would not have been made a prisoner, and nearly a victim, by an implacable and unprincipled minister. Luxem- bourg was the posthumous son of that Bouteville whom, in a preceding chapter, we have seen con- signed to the scaffold for the crime of duelling. He was warmly patronised by the princess of Conde, who placed him as aide-de-camp to her son. The young Conde soon became attached to him. At the battle of Lens, Bouteville distinguished himself so greatly, that though he was not more than twenty, Anne of Austria made him a major-general. During the war of the Fronde, Bouteville followed the fortunes of Conde ; he joined the Spaniards with him, acquired in numerous encounters a well-merited reputation, and finally, returned to his allegiance along with his friend. There is an anecdote recorded of him> HISTORY OF THE EASTILE. 281 on the latter occasion, which is much to his honour. After Bouteville had ceased to bear arms against France, the Spanish monarch sent him 60,000 crowns, as a reward for his services. He refused to take the money: "I never," said he, "considered myself in the service of Spain, and will receive favours only from my own sovereign." Soon after this, he married the heiress of the house of Luxembourg, by which union he gained a dukedom, and a splendid fortune. If we may believe St. Simon, rank and riches were all that the husband derived from this match, the lady being " frightfully ugly, both in figure and face," and not at all atoning for her personal defects by intellectual qualities. As far as regarded beauty, the puir had no right to reproach each other; for Luxembourg himself had repulsive features, a prominence on his chest, and another behind. Between 1667 and 1679, Luxembourg, sometimes commander-in-chief, sometimes as second to the great Conde and the duke of Orleans, displayed, in Tranche Comte, Holland, and Flanders, a degree of skill which gave him a conspicuous place in the first class of generals : in fact, Turenne having fallen, and Conde retired, Luxembourg had no equal in France. The marshal's staff was conferred on him in 1675. But neither the ancient descent, nor the high rank, nor the still higher renown of Luxembourg, were suf- ficient to shield him from the malice of his potent enemy. That enemy was Louvois Louvois, the perpetual inciter of Lorfis to war, the director of the horrible crimes committed by the French troops in Holland, and the incendiary of the Palatinate. He was, at one time, the friend of Luxembourg, but they quarrelled; and he thenceforth hated him, with even a more deadly hatred than he had cherished against Turenne. The affair of the poisoners seemed to afford 282 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. him an opportunity, which he eagerly seized, of dis - gracing, and perhaps destroying the duke. It was by a credulous belief in the power of pre- tended sorcerers, that Luxembourg was brought into peril. Bonnard, clerk to one of his lawyers, had lost some papers, which were indispensable to the success of a lawsuit instituted by the duke. To recover them, he applied to Lesage, one of the confederates of La Yoisin. Lesage required 2000 crowns, and the performance of certain mummeries by Bonnard ; and his demand was granted. The papers were then found to be in the hands of a girl named Dupin, who refused to give them up. A power of attorney was now obtained from the duke, by Bonnard, authorising steps to be taken against Dupin, to compel her to resign the papers. This he gave to Lesage, who, between the body of the document and the signature, inserted two lines, containing a transfer of the duke's soul to his Satanic majesty. Luckily, the clumsy forger had written these lines in a hand writing quite different from that of the instrument itself. This compact with the devil formed the main proof against Luxembourg. He appears, indeed, to have afforded a further pretext for suspicion, by his weakness in applying to Lesage for the horoscopes of various individuals. It w r as on this slender foundation that the plot against him w^as built. When his name began to be called in question, he is said to have been insidiously counselled by Louvois, to save himself by flight. The brave Cavoie, who was his friend, proved him- self to be so, by advising him to surrender himself voluntarily to the Bastile ; and this advice was wisely followed by the duke. On his arrival there he was placed in a comfortable chamber, and, on the second day, he underwent a preliminary interrogation. But it was not the intention of the minister who had HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 283 driven him into a prison that he should enjoy any comfort there ; and accordingly, on the third day he was removed to one of the filthiest of dungeons, not more than six feet and a half in diameter, and no further notice was taken of him for five weeks. % He claimed his privilege, as a peer, of heing tried by the Parliament, but no attention was paid to his claim, and he was obliged to be contented with protesting against this denial of justice. It was afterwards made a subject of reproach to him by some of the peers, that he had not stood up with sufficient bold- ness for the rights of the peerage. Luxembourg remained for fourteen months in the noisome den into which Louvois had thrown him. The fetid atmosphere which he breathed, the want of exercise, and the disturbed state of his mind, brought on a fit of illness, and so much injured his constitution that he never thoroughly recovered. It must have been no small aggravation of his sufferings, that he was occasionally drawn forth, to be confronted with the profligate Lesage, and others of the same class, and to hear them impudently charge him with the foulest crimes. Lesage maintained, that the duke had entered into the compact with Satan for the purpose of procuring the death of Dupin ; his accomplices added, that by his order they had mur- dered her, cut the body into quarters, and thrown it into the river. Besides this improbable story, they told another, equally improbable, that he had given poisoned wine to a brother of Dupin, and to a mistress whom that brother kept, and had endeavoured to destroy several persons by means of sorcery. Their depositions may, indeed, contest the palm of absur- dity and falsehood with those of Titus Gates and his perjured associates. This, however, was not all. It would seem, from their evidence, that the duke had driven a hard bar- 284 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. gain with the prince of darkness, for they asserted that the compact was designed not only to bring about the murder of Dupin, but also to obtain the government of a province or a fortress, and the marriage of his son with the daughter of Louvois. In a letter to a friend, Luxembourg has left on record his dignified answer to the last of these stupid calumnies. After treating with ridicule the idea that he would sell his soul for a government, he says, with respect to the remainder, "I replied that when the villain (Lesage) told such an untruth, he did not know that I was of a family which did not purchase alliances by crimes; that it would have been a great honour to me had my son married Mdlle. de Louvois, but that I would not have adopted for the purpose any means which would have subjected me to self-reproach ; and that when Matthew de Montmorenci espoused a queen of France, the mother of a minor king, he did not give himself to the devil for this marriage, since the thing was done by a resolution of the States General, who declared ihat to gain for the monarch the services of the lords of Montmorenci, it was necessary to form this union. It was even out of delicacy that I used the word services, for I believe that, in the declaration, the word protection is used." Such testimony as was produced against Luxem- bourg was not deemed by his judges sufficient to warrant his conviction, even though a minister of state was eager for his ruin. He was, in consequence, set free on the 14th of May, 1680. Notwithstanding the duke's acquittal, Louis banished him from the court, and he remained in exile till the summer of 1681, when he was recalled, and resumed his duties as captain of the body-guards. It is somewhat re- markable that Louis never made the slightest allusion to what had passed. For ten years, Luxembourg remained without a HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 285 command. In 1690, however, Louis himself placed him at the head of the army in Flanders. Luxem- bourg had scarcely taken the field, before he gained the splendid victory of Fleurus. The fall of Namur, or of Charleroi, would probably have been the result of this success, had he not been thwarted by the malignant Louvois, who forbade his besieging either of those fortresses, and deprived him of the best part of his army, to reinforce Boufflers. In the succeeding campaigns, Luxembourg pursued his triumphant pro - gress, and won the battles of Leuze, Steenkirk, and Neerwinden. Such a number of standards were taken, and sent to be hung up in the cathedral of Notre- Dame, at Paris, that the prince of Conti wittily deno- minated him " the tapestry-hanger of Notre -Dame." Irritated by his defeats, William III. is said to have exclaimed, " Am I never to beat that hunchback ?" u Hunchback !" said the duke, when he was told of this speech, " what docs he know about it ? He has never seen my back !" The career of Luxembourg was abruptly closed, by an illness of only five days, on the 4th of January, 1695. Several persons of distinction were censured by the " Chambre Ardente," and were, in consequence, for- bidden the court, or sent into exile. Among the latter was Madame de Polignac. The monarch was so de- cidedly hostile to her, that, five years afterwards, he spoke of her with unmeasured severity, and interfered to prevent the marriage of her son with Mdlle. de Rambures. It was said, that she had once formed the scheme of giving him a philtre, to inspire him with a passion for her. One of the humbler class of culprits who was im- prisoned in the Bastile, and who finally suffered the extreme sentence of the law, was Stephen de Bray, described as the accomplice of James Dechaux and Jane Chanfrain, who were perhaps rivals of La Yoisin 286 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. and her confederates in their detestable trade. The crimes alleged against him were blasphemy, sacrilege, and poisoning, and he was burned at the Greve. From poisoners, and mercenary pretenders to sorcery, we turn to an adventurer of a less noxious species. The abbe Prirni was a native of Bologna, in which city his father was a cap-maker. He had acuteness, wit, and a pleasing person, and with these mental and corporeal qualities he hoped to make his way at Paris. On his journey thither he became ac- quainted with a man of talent, named Duval. One of the travellers in the coach smelt so offensively that the others were anxious to get rid of him ; and accord- ingly Duval and Primi secretly concerted a scheme for that purpose. Primi was to pretend to the gift of foretelling, from only seeing a person's hand -writing, what had happened and would happen, to him. Primi, being questioned by Duval on this head, gave him elaborate answers, which the latter admitted to be correct. Specimens of the penmanship of the rest of the travellers, who were in the plot, were then handed to Primi, and of course they were satisfied with the re- sult. The obnoxious passenger at length begged the oracular Italian to do for him the same favour that he had done for the rest. When Primi looked at the paper, he pretended to be shocked, and hastily gave it back, declining to say more than that " he hoped lie was mistaken." The applicant, however, solicited so earnestly to know his fate, that Primi told him he was destined to be assassinated at Paris, if he went- thither. This startling intelligence produced the designed effect ; the strong-scented querist took the first oppor- tunity to discontinue his journey, and return to his home. When they reached Paris, Duval presented Primi to the abbe de la Baume, who was afterwards arch- bishop of Embrun ; and the abbe introduced him to HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. 287 the duke of Vendome, and his brother, the Grand Prior. The trick played off in the stage was talked over, and it was agreed that a repetition of it in the French capital w r ould be productive of infinite amuse- ment. Primi was therefore kept carefully secluded, for nearly two months, till he had learned by heart the genealogy and the secret history of most of the persons about the court. When he had obtained a thorough knowledge of their connexions, amours, rivalships, enmities, and presumed motives, his skill in his novel kind of divination was spread about by his employers, and all the rank and fashion of France soon flocked to consult him. Among the distinguished females who patronized him, were the countess of Soissons and the duchess of Orleans ; the latter of whom Primi firmly convinced of his powers, by mentioning many circum- stances relative to her correspondence with the count de Guiche. The duchess prevailed on Louis XIY. to let her show his hand -writing to the Italian. To her utter astonishment, Primi no sooner saw it than he declared it to be written by a miserly curmudgeon, who was not possessed of a single good quality. When she returned the paper to Louis, and told him what Primi had said, the king was no less astonished than she was. The paper was indeed written by a man of whom his enemies spoke in the same manner as Primi. It was the hand-writing of Rose, the king's cabinet secretary, who wrote exactly like Louis, and whom he often employed to answer letters, that he might himself avoid trouble. To get at the bottom of this mystery, the king ordered Primi to be brought into his cabinet. " Primi/' said the monarch, " I have only two words to say disclose to me your secret, for which I will pay you with a pension of two thousand livres or else make up your mind to be hanged." There was no resisting the bribe and the threat, and Primi consequently related his own history, 288 HISTORY or THE BASTILE. and all that had come to his knowledge since he had lived in the capital. On going into the queen's apart- ment, Louis mentioned, before the courtiers, that he had admitted Primi to an interview, and he added, " I must acknowledge that he told me things which no being of his kind has ever before revealed to any one." This strong testimony to the merit of Primi contri- buted not a little to enhance his reputation. The pension granted to him by Louis placed Primi above the necessity of resorting to deception for a livelihood ; nor, indeed, was the part which he had been playing one which could be carried on for any length of time. He married the daughter of Frederic Leonard, an eminent Parisian printer, and sought to gain reputation by chronicling the actions of the French monarch. In an Italian narrative, which he wrote, of the Dutch campaign of Louis, he divulged the secret of the private treaty between that monarch and our Charles II. For this he was sent to the Bastile ; but he was soon released, and received an ample present. The publication is believed to have, in fact, been autho- rized by the king, to punish the defection of Charles ; the imprisonment of the author being merely a blind, to prevent his master from being suspected. Louvois, who will for ever be infamously remembered for his outrages upon humanity, was the tyrant who twice consigned to the Bastile the celebrated medallist, Andrew Morell. Berne was the native place of Morell, who was born in 1646. He was remarkable for his memory and acuteness. The study of history led him to that of numismatics, in w r hich he made an al- most unequalled progress ; and he learned drawing, in order to render his medallic knowledge more perfect and available. Charles Patin, the son of Guy, then an exile from France, who was himself no mean nu- mismatist, became acquainted with Morell, and aided him by his counsel and purse. It was probably by HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 289 his ad vice that, in 1680, Morell visited Paris, where he met with a warm reception from the most distin- guished men of learning and science. Encouraged by them, he undertook the laborious task of publish- ing a description of all the antique medals which were contained in the numerous cabinets of Europe. As a prelude, he gave a specimen to the world. But his scheme was interrupted, for the moment, by a circum- stance which would ultimately have benefited it, had he not been ungenerously treated. He was appointed coadjutor of Rainssart, the keeper of the king's medals. In assiduously arranging and reducing to order the vast collection which was placed under his care he spent several years. When he claimed his promised reward it was withheld, and, on his venturing to resent this breach of faith, he was committed to the Bastile, in 1688, by Louvois. His friends obtained his release ; but, in little more than twelve months, he was again immured in that prison, probably for the same reason as before. Yet, while he was thus persecuted by an arrogant minister, he continued to enjoy the esteem of Louis XIV. ; a curious fact, which proves how strong was the influence of Louvois over his master. While he was in the Bastile, his colleague died, and he was offered the vacant place of sole keeper of the king's cabinet, on condition that he would change his reli- gion. Morell, however, rejected the offer. It was not till 1691, nor till the government of Berne had interfered in his behalf, that Morell was set free. Disgusted with the treatment which he had experienced, he returned to his native country. His subsequent existence was embittered by severe bodily suffering. His health was so much injured by con- finement, and by vexation at his favourite project being frustrated, that palsy deprived him of the use of one side, and rendered him incapable of handling pen or pencil. He was somewhat recovered, and had, u 290 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. acquired the patronage of the count of Schwartzen- burg-Armstadt, a lover of medals, when he was over- turned in a carriage, and one of his shoulders dislo- cated. This accident brought on another attack of palsy, to which he fell a victim in 1703. The mate- rials for his unfinished work were arranged and pub- lished by Havercamp, in 1734, with the title of " Thesaurus Morellianus." Another of his works, a " Numismatic History of the Twelve Emperors," was given to the public, in 1753, by Hevercamp, Schlegel, and Gori, who overlaid it with a ponderous mass of confused and discordant commentaries. The doctrines of Quietism, the origin of which may be traced to oriental climes, but of which a Spanish monk, Michael Molinos, was the European apostle, and finally the victim, were espoused by one of the most amiable of French enthusiasts, and they brought on her, as they had brought on him, calumny, perse- cution, and imprisonment. Madam Guy on, whose maiden name was Bouvier de la Motte, was born at Montargis, in 1648. Even in very early youth she had a strong tendency to mysticism, and would have adopted a monastic life, had her parents not prevented her. At sixteen she was married ; at eight-and- twenty she -became a widow. The visionary ideas which she had cherished before marriage now resumed their empire, and a powerful stimulus was given to them by her confessor, and by the titular bishop of Geneva, and other ecclesiastics, all of whom laboured to fill her with the belief that Heaven had destined her to play an extraordinary part for the advancement of religion. " Left a widow when she was still tolerably young," says Voltaire, " with riches, beauty, and a mind fitted for society, she became infatuated with what is called spiritualism. A monk of Anneci, near Geneva, named Lacombe, was her director. This man, characterised by a not uncommon mixture of HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 291 passions and religion, and who died mad, plunged the mind of his penitent into the mystic reveries by which it was already affected. The longing desire to be a French St. Theresa did not allow her to perceive how different the French character is from the Spanish, and made her go much further than St. Theresa. The ambition of having disciples, which is, perhaps, the strongest of all the kinds of ambition, took entire pos- session of her heart." In ascribing such a motive to Madame Guyon, Yoltaire does her wrong, there not being a shadow of a reason for supposing that she was actuated by anything but a sincere though erroneous belief, that she was fulfilling a solemn duty. He is more correct in the description which he gives of her doctrines. " She taught a complete renunciation of self, the silence of the soul, the annihilation of all its faculties, internal worship, and the pure and disinte- rested love of God, which is neither degraded by fear, nor animated by the hope of reward." It must be owned that, both in language and ideas, she often fell into enormous absurdity, in her efforts to explain and enforce these doctrines. For five years Madame Guyon wandered through Piedmont, Dauphiny, and the adjacent provinces, spreading her opinions by the press as well as by oral communication. As w r as to be expected, she made many ardent proselytes, and not a few enemies. In 1686 she returned to Paris, and continued her labours, and was left unmolested for two years. At length she attracted the notice of the archbishop of Paris, who affected to be shocked at the resemblance which her tenets bore to those of Molinos. The see of Paris was at that time filled by Harlay de Chamvallou, an individual infamously celebrated for his profligate debauchery. This prelate, who certainly was not likely to comprehend a pure and disinterested love of God, or of man or woman either, procured Laconibe L 2 292 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. to be sent to the Bastile as a seducer, and Madame Guyon to the Yisitandines convent. At the Yisitan- dines she was generally beloved, and made several converts. She was soon after snatched from the clutches of Harlay by Madame de Maintenon, who admitted her at St. Cyr, and became much attached to her. It was at St. Cyr that she was also intro- duced to Fenelon ; a friendship took place between them which nothing could ever shake. But though Fenelon continued true to his friend, Madame de Maintenon ultimately deserted her. This desertion was the work of Godet-Desmarais, bishop of Chartres, who was the religious director of St. Cyr and of Madame de Maintenon. The mind of the king was also poisoned against her ; and she was exposed to a long series of persecutions, not the least painful of which was a slanderous attack on her character, made in the form of a letter from Lacombe, exhorting her to repent of their criminal intimacy. Lacome was then insane. So irreproachable, however, was her conduct, that her innocence was universally acknow- ledged. In 1695 she was sent to Yincennes, whence she was removed to the Bastile ; but she was released through the intervention of Noailles, w r ho had suc- ceeded the shameless Harlay in the archbishopric of Paris. In 1698 she w r as again immured in the Bas- tile, and was not liberated till 1702. After her libe- ration, she was exiled to Blois, where, for fifteen years, her patience, piety, and charity, were admired by everyone. She died in 1717, at the age of sixty-nine. Influenced by prejudice, Yoltaire has been unjust to Madame Guyon ; he denies that she possessed ta- lent, and sneeringly says, that "she wrote verses like Cofan, and prose like Punchinello," This is not the first time that truth has been sacrificed, for the sake of giving an epigrammatic turn to a sentence. To HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 293 the opinion of Voltaire may be opposed that of the shrewd duke of St. Simon, which is very different. Nor is it probable that Fenelon would have held in high estimation a mere senseless enthusiast. That in her writings, which extend to nine- and-thirty volumes, much erroneous reasoning, mystic jargon, and even nonsense, may be found, admits of no dispute ; but they also contain many fine sentiments strikingly expressed. That she was endowed with a prevailing eloquence appears to be undeniable. There is an anecdote recorded of her which proves, likewise, that in the common business of life she was possessed of a large share of penetration and sound sense. She was chosen as sole umpire in a cause in which she and twenty-two of her relations were interested. After thirty days' close investigation of the documents and claims, she drew up an award, which received the prompt and full approbation of all the contending parties. It may be doubted, whether there have been many arbitrators who have given such universal satis- faction as Madame Guyon. About the time that Madame Guyon was released from the Bastile, that prison became the abode of Gatien de Courtils de Sandraz, a fertile writer, but whose productions are, for the most part, of a class which merits censure rather than praise. This author, a Parisian, born in 1644, must be reckoned among those who poison the sources of history. " He was," says Voltaire, u one of the most culpable writers of this kind. He inundated Europe with fictions under the name of histories." Many of those fictions profess to be written by persons who, during the reigns of Louis XIII. and Louis XIV., had borne a part in affairs of state and court intrigues. More than forty volumes of memoirs of this sort, biographies, romances, and political tracts, were produced by his indefa- tigable pen. He was originally a captain in the 294 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. regiment of Champagne, but went to Holland in 1 683, and staid in that country for five years. It was while he was there that he gave some of his earliest works to the press. In 1689, the partiality which he manifested on the side of France occasioned him to be sent out of the Dutch territory, and he went to Paris, where he continued till 1694. He then returned to Holland, where he continued for eight years. In 1 702, he went back to his native land, but his reception was calculated to make him regret having done so. He was immediately sent to the Bastile, where he lan- fuished for nine years, during the first three of which e was very harshly treated. His offence is not known ; but his Annals of Paris and the Court, in which he attacked the character of some powerful personages, are conjectured to have been the cause of his imprisonment. His decease took place in 1712. Of those who suffered in the Bastile very few indeed revealed to the world the secrets of the prison-house. The first who disclosed them was Rene Augustus Constantine de Renneville, a Norman gentleman, who was born at Caen, in 1650. De Renneville was the youngest of ten brothers, seven of whom fell in the service of their country. After having borne arms in, and retired from, the mousquetaires, he was pa- tronised by Chamillart, one of the ministers, who employed him in various confidential affairs, and rewarded him by a respectable and lucrative office in Normandy. De Renneville passed several years in his native province, filling up by literary pursuits his intervals of leisure from his official duties. The per- secution of the Protestants, of whom he was one, drove him, in 1699, into Holland. Being, however, unable to find there a satisfactory establishment for his family, he yielded to the solicitations of Chamillart, and re- turned, in 1702, to France. The minister received him with open arms, gave him a pension, and pro- HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 295 mised him the first place that might become vacant in his own department. But the scene soon changed. Envy was excited by the reception which he had met with, and it quickly found or made the means of crushing him. Some years before, in a splenetic mood, he had writtten some bouts rimes, which were by no means complimentary to France. As, however, this would hardly authorise a heavy punishment, he was accused of being a spy, and of keeping up a cor- respondence with foreign powers. In consequence of this he was sent to the Bastile, in May, 1702. He was placed in a wretched chamber, dirty, gloomy, and swarming with fleas, and his bed was overrun with vermin of a more disgusting kind. He was never- theless tolerably well treated by his jailors till after the escape of count de Bucquoy, in which he was supposed to have assisted. On this supposition he was thrown into one of the worst dungeons of the fortress, where he remained till life was nearly extinct. He tells us that his only sustenance was bread and water, and that his sleeping place was the bare ground, where, without straw, or even a stone to lay his head on, he lay stretched in the mire, and the slaver of the toads. His situation when he was taken out was pitiable. " My eyes," says he, " were almost out of my head, my nose was as large as a middling-sized cucumber, more than half my teeth, which previously were very good, had fallen out by scurvy, my mouth was swelled, and entirely covered with an eruption, and my bones came through my skin in more than twenty places." His captivity lasted for some years after his removal from the dungeon, and although he was not again reduced to the same degree of misery, he was treated with much harshness. He bore his misfortune with courage, and solaced his lonely hours by reading and composition. His pen was a small bone, his ink was lampblack mixed with wine, and he wrote bet ween 296 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. the lines, and on the margins, of books which he had concealed. Under these disadvantages, he composed several works of considerable length. Among these works was a " Treatise on the Duties of a Faithful Christian." They were taken away from him by his persecutors, and he deeply regretted the loss of them. 'After having been confined for eleven years, lie was set at liberty ; but was ordered to quit France for ever. It would have been strange had he wished to remain there. De Renneville sought an asylum in England, where George I. gave him a pension; and in 1715 he published his " French Inquisition, or the History of the Bastile," which went through three or four editions, and was translated into various languages. It was probably at the instigation of those who were branded in this book, that he was attacked in the street by three cut-throats, whom, however, he bravely repulsed. De Renneville was living in 1724 ; but the time and place of his decease are not known. Among his works is a Collection of Voyages for the Establishment, &c., of the Dutch East India Company. The next prisoner comes before us wrapped in such a mysterious cloud, that he scarcely seems to wear the aspect of a being of this world. His birth, his name, his country, his crime, are all unknown ; all that we really know of him is, that he was long a captive, and that he died. It cannot be necessary to say, that the problematical individual alluded to is the personage who is distinguished by the appellation of " The Man with the Iron Mask." There appears to have been in France, during the first forty years of the 18th century, a sort of indis- tinct tradition respecting a masked prisoner, who had been in various state prisons. It was not, however, till 1745 that any attempt was made to lift the veil which covered the subject. In that year came out HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 297 and a heart which, though corrupted, was not dead to HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 339 kind and noble feelings ; but Bourbon, harsh in dis- position, rude in manners, repulsive in personal ap- pearance, and governed by an artful and profligate mistress, had no one good quality to throw even a faint lustre over his numerous defects. The sway of Bourbon lasted little more than two years, and, in that brief space of time, he committed so many enor- mous political errors, springing from ignorance, pre- sumption, and intolerance, that the kingdom was thrown into discontent and confusion. The minister of the war department, Claude le Blanc, was one of those who suffered by the change which took place on the death of the duke of Orleans. Le Blanc was born in 1669, and had filled several important offices before he became one of the minis- ters. The machinations of his enemies, one of the most inveterate of whom was the marshal de Villeroi, procured his temporary banishment from court in 1723, on suspicion of his having participated in pecu- lation committed by the treasurer. He was confined in the Bastile by the duke of Bourbon, and the par- liament was directed to bring him to trial. To secure his conviction, his adversaries calumniously asserted, that he had employed an assassin to murder one of his principal accusers. The parliament, however, fully acquitted him of all the charges which were brought against him. He was, nevertheless, exiled by the duke. In 1726, cardinal de Fleury placed him once more at the head of the war department, where he continued till his decease, in 1 728. It is in favour of his character that he died poor, and that he was beloved by the people. Le Blanc was scarcely restored to his office, before his vacant place in the Bastile was filled by one who had been among the most active of his enemies. Joseph Paris Duverney, a native of Dauphine, of humble birth, was one of four brothers, all of whom were men of z 2 340 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. talent. A fortunate chance gave them the opportunity of exercising their talents in a wider field than, consi- dering their primitive station in life, they could have hoped to find. They were the sons of a man who kept a small solitary inn at the foot of the Alps, and whom they assisted in his business. The duke of Vendome was then at the head of the French army in Italy, and all his plans were rendered abortive by the failure of supplies. This want of subsistence was caused by the scandalous conduct of Bouchu, the commissary gene- ral. Bouchu, who was old, had the folly to make love to a young girl, and she had the good sense to prefer his deputy, who had youth and personal ap- pearance on his side. To revenge himself for this slight, Bouchu retarded the collecting of provisions, in order to throw the blame on his deputy, who was charged with the merely mechanical part of the operations. Knowing that further delay would be ruin to him, the deputy contrived to collect a portion of the supplies that were wanted ; but he was yet far from being out of his difficulties, for the Alps were interposed between him and the French army, and he knew not where to find in the neighbourhood a practicable pass. While he was labouring under this embarrassment, he luckily fell in with the four brothers, and they engaged to extricate him from it. They were thoroughly ac- quainted with every path and goat track in that wild region, and they conducted the convoy with so much skill, through apparently impassable ways, that they reached the French camp without having suffered the slightest loss. This service, for which they were liberally rewarded, laid the foundation of their fortune. The contractors and commissaries employed them, and promoted them rapidly ; and, at no distant time, the brothers became themselves contractors, and extensive commercial spe- culators. Riches rapidly flowed in upon them, and HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 341 they were called to take a share in managing the finances of the state. They experienced, however, a temporary eclipse during the ascendancy of Law, to whom they were hostile, and who avenged him self by procuring their exile into Dauphine. The flight of Law put an end to their banishment ; they returned to Paris, were in higher credit than ever, and con- tributed much to mitigate the evils which had been caused by the Mississippi scheme. They continued to have great weight in the government, till they lost it in consequence of a political intrigue, in which Joseph Paris imprudently engaged, with the mar- chioness de Prie, the duke of Bourbon's mistress. Their intent was to exclude cardinal de Fleury from public affairs, and to give the duke an unbounded ascendancy over the youthful monarch. Fleury dis- covered the plot ; the duke was deprived of power ; and the brothers were once more exiled. Joseph was soon after arrested, at his asylum near Langres, arid was sent to the Bastile, where he remained for nearly two years. In 1730, however, he recovered his influence, and he kept it till his death in 1770. France is indebted to Joseph Duverney for the project of the Royal Military School, which was carried into execution in 1751. Two grandsons of the unfortunate Fouquet, the count de Belleisle, and the chevalier de Belleisle, were involved in the fall of Le Blanc, and were for some time inmates of the Bastile. The count was born in 1684 ; the chevalier in 1693. The count had acquired a high military character, in the war of the succession, and in the Spanish campaign of 1719, when, with his brother, he was immured in a prison. After his release, he served with distinction in various quarters, and rose to the rank of marshal. Cardinal de Fleury placed entire confidence in his civil as well as his military talents. It was not, however, till the breaking 342 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. out of the war of 1741 that his genius shone forth in its full lustre. The secret negotiations for raising the elector of Bavaria to the dignity of emperor were carried on by him, and on this occasion he gave con- vincing proof of his diplomatic skill. Placed at the head of the French army, which was to maintain Charles VII. on the throne, Belleisle carried Prague by assault. But while, as ambassador extraordinary of Louis XV., he was securing the election of Charles at Frankfort, the Austrians threatened to deprive him of his recent conquests. He therefore hastened back to his army, obtained some advantages, and would probably have triumphed, had not the sudden defection of Prussia and Saxony left him to bear the whole weight of Maria Theresa's forces. Prague, garrisoned by 28,000 French, was soon invested by 60,000 enemies. Belleisle offered to give up the Bohemian capital, on condition of being allowed to retire without molestation; but thebesiegers would listen to nothing short of a surrender at dis- cretion. After having made a protracted defence, he began to be threatened by famine, and, in this extremity, he resolved to break through the Austrian quarters. At the head of 15,000 men, with twelve days' provisions, he sallied from Prague, on the night of the 16th of December, 1742, and directed his march upon Egra, which city was at the distance of thirty- eight leagues. He took his measures so well, that, though he was closely pursued by the enemy's light troops, he sustained little injury. The sufferings of the French army were, nevertheless, extreme. Com- pelled to bivouac for ten nights among snow and ice, and often without wood for fires, the mortality among the troops was appalling. The line of the retreat was marked throughout by whole platoons frozen to death; seventeen hundred men perished in the course of the ten days. In 1746 and 1747, Belleisle was HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 343 charged with the defence of Dauphine ; these were his last campaigns. In 1748 he was created a duke and peer, and in 1757 he became war minister. He held the war department for three years, and reformed many abuses. In 1761 he died childless, the last of his family, his heir, the count of Gisors, having fallen at the biittle of Crevelt. His brother, the chevalier, had gone before him, the victim of an intemperate courage. From 1734 to 1746, the chevalier was often actively engaged, both in fighting and negotiating, and displayed equal talents in each occupation. It being an object of importance to open a passage into the heart of Piedmont, the two brothers agreed that an attack should be made on the formidable intrenched post of the Piedmontese, at the Col de 1'Assiette. The chevalier was animated by the prospect of gaining the rank of marshal, in case of success. The position of the enemy was all but inac- cessible, and was fortified with more than usual care, well provided with artillery, and held by a large force. Belleisle led his men to the attack, but found it impossible even to approach his antagonists, who scattered death among his ranks, with almost perfect impunity to themselves. Instead of retiring from a hopeless contest, he madly persisted in his efforts, till the slaughter became horrible. He at last put himself at the head of a body of officers, and made a desperate but fruitless assault, in which he fell, along with most of those who surrounded him. Nearly four thousand of the assailants were slain, and half as many wounded, while the loss of the Piedmontese fell far short of a hundred men. We have, in the former part of this chapter, seen one literary female an inmate of the Bastile ; we must now contemplate in the same situation another, of equal talents, but with a more sullied character. The second of these females was Madame de Tencin, sister of the 344 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. cardinal of that name. Though, like most French- women of that period, it is probable that Madame de Staal did not preserve an inviolate chastity, she cer- tainly paid more respect to appearances than was paid by Madame de Tencin, and was less stimulated by mere animal passion. " I shall paint only my bust," Madame de Staal is said to have replied, when she was asked how, in her Memoirs, she would contrive to speak of her love affairs ; with respect to Madame de Tencin, it may doubted whether, at least while she was moving in the circle of the court, she would have hesitated to delineate a whole-length likeness of herself. Tencin was a name derived from a small estate; the family name was Guerin. The lady in question was born in 1681, and her father was president of the parliament of Grenoble. She was placed in the convent of Montfleury, near Grenoble, where she resided for five years. If credit may be given to the statements of St. Simon and others, her conduct while she wore the veil was anything but pious and decorous. The consequence of one of her amours is said to have rendered it indispensable for her to leave the convent, of which she was already tired. Her great object was to shine in Paris, and this she accomplished. Through the interest of Fontenelle, who took a great interest in her, she obtained a dispensation from the Pope, and she then gave full swing to her pleasures. She be- came the mistress of the ultra profligate Dubois; and the scandalous chronicles of the time charge her with having joined in the orgies of the regent and his com- panions, and prostituted her talents by the composition of obscene works. With Law, the Mississippi pro- jector, she w r as intimate, and she and her brother appear to have profited largely by speculations during that period of national madness. It is one pleasing feature in her character, that she was more anxious to establish her brother than herself. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 345 The celebrated d'Alembert was the fruit of one of her amours ; the father was the chevalier Destouches. The infant was, in the first instance, deserted by its parents ; it was left on the steps of the church of St. John de la Ronde, where it was found in such a state of weakness, that instead of sending it to the Found- ling Hospital, -the commissary of police humanely gave it to the w r ife of a poor glazier to be nursed. Such a want of maternal feeling, had it not been in some measure atoned for, would have justified a sar- casm of the Abbe Trublet, who, on some one praising to him the mild disposition of Madame de Tencin, replied, " Oh, yes ! if she had an interest in poisoning you, she would choose the mildest poison for the purpose." The parents are, however, said to have relented in the course of a few days ; the father set- tled on him a pension of 1200 livres.' It was the fatal result of another of her amours that gave her a place in the Bastile. In 1 726, La Fresnaye, one of the members of the Great Council, shot him- self through the head at her house. A paper in his handwriting was found, in which he declared that, if ever he died a violent death, she would be the cause of it. From this paper, which certainly bears on the face of it a very different meaning, it was hastily and harshly concluded, that she had a hand in his murder. She was consequently committed to the Conciergerie, whence she was removed to the Bastile ; but she was not long a prisoner. In her later years, the conduct of Madame de Tencin underwent a complete reformation ; the catastrophe of La Fresnaye perhaps contributed to the change. She kept up a correspondence with car- dinal Lambertini, which was not discontinued when he became Pope Benedict XI V., and her house was the resort of all the wit and talent of Paris, with Fon- tenelle and Montesquieu at their head. Her as- 346 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. semblage of literary men she used jocosely to call her menagerie, and her animals, and it was her custom, on New-year's-day, to present each individual with two ells of velvet, for a pair of breeches. It is not easy to suppress a smile at the ludicrous idea of such a present. Madame de Tencin died in 1749. Her three romances, the Count de Comminge, the Siege of Calais, and the Misfortunes of Love, still deservedly maintain a high rank among works of that class. It has been said, that she was assisted in writing them by two of her nephews ; but the truth of this is at least doubtful. CHAPTER X. Reign of Louis XV. continued The Bull Unigenitus A Notary Public G. N. Nivelle G. C. Buffard - Death of Deacon Paris Rise, progress, and acts, of the Convulsionaiies Perse- cution of them, and artifices employed by them to foil their per- secutors Lenglet Dufrcsnoy- La Beaumelle F. de Marsy Marmontel the Abb Morellet Mirabeau the elder The Chevalier Resseguier Groubendal and Dulaurens. Robbe de Beauveset Mahe de la Bourdonnais Count Lally La Cha- lotais Marin Durosoi Prevost de Beaumont Barletti St. Paul Dumouriez. RELIGIOUS intolerance on the one hand, and disgust- ing fanaticism on the other, contributed largely to swell the number of captives in the Bastile, and in other places of confinement. For many years after Pope Clement XI., at the instigation of the bigoted Le Tellier and Louis XIV., had thrown among the clergy of the Gallican church that ecclesiastical fire- brand the bull Unigenitus, it continued to spread the flames of fierce contention, hatred, and persecution. The first individual for whom the bull found an abode in a prison was, I believe, a notary public. While the HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 347 regency was held by the duke of Orleans, the bishops of Mirepoix, Senez, Montpellier, and Boulogne, had the boldness to sign an act, protesting against the bull, and appealing from the pope to a future council ; and, accompanied by a notary, they solemnly presented this act to the assembled Sorbonne. As to have im- prisoned the four bishops would scarcely have been politic, they were only ordered to retire to their dioceses ; the notary, of whom a scape-goat could more conveniently be made, was sent to the Bastile. Backed by power, the supporters of the bull were finally triumphant, and they did not fail to make the vanquished party experience the consequence of being defeated by men who did not consider forbearance as a virtue. It would be useless to dwell upon the many appellants who^were chastised for having ventured to doubt the pontifical infallibility, and insist on referring the question in dispute to a future council ; I will, therefore, only make mention of two individuals. Among those who were most active in opposing the bull Unigenitus, and who, consequently, were proscribed by its champions, was Gabriel Nicholas Nivelle ; he was indefatigable in drawing up memo- rials and tracts, and soliciting appeals against it. He more than once contrived to elude his pursuers ; but, in 1730, he was taken and committed to the Bastile, where he remained for four months. His zeal was, however, rather excited than cooled by this imprison- ment; and, till his decease in 1761, when he was in his seventy-fourth year, he continued to be a deter- mined opponent of the bull. Nivelle edited several voluminous works relative to the contest in which his party was engaged ; the principal of which, in four folio volumes, bears the title of The Constitution Unigenitus denounced to the Universal Church, or a General Collection of the Acts of Appeal. Equally hostile to the bull, and equally persecuted 348 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. by its victorious friends, was Gabriel Charles Buffard, a native of Bayeux, who was born in 1683. He was rector of the university of Caen, and canon of Bayeux ; but was expelled from his offices, and banished out of the diocese, in 1722. Buffard settled at Paris, where he was not long allowed to remain in quiet. He was conveyed to the Bastile, and, after having been there for some time, he was called to Auxerre. From Auxerre he was speedily dragged to suffer another imprisonment in the Bastile. Fortunately, he found a protector in cardinal des Gesvres, through whose intercession he was set at liberty. Buffard thenceforth lived in retirement, and gained a sub- sistence by giving opinions as a chamber counsel, and by assisting young scholars in the study of the canon law. He died in 1763. It was an opinion of bishop Butler, the celebrated author of The Analogy of Religion, that " whole communities and public bodies might be seized with fits of insanity, as well as individuals ; " and, indeed, that " nothing but this principle, that they are liable to insanity, equally at least with private persons, can account for the major part of those transactions which we read of in history." Singular as, at first sight, this opinion may appear to be, there are many circum- stances which ought to induce us to pause, before we reject it as erroneous. The strange scenes, for instance, which took place among the Janseriists, scenes arising out of the deatli of the deacon Paris, may almost authorise a belief that large bodies of individuals can be simultaneously smitten with mono- mania, or at least can communicate it to each other with wonderful rapidity. Francis Paris, a strenuous opponent of the bull Unigenitus, was the son of a French counsellor. Pious, humble, and benevolent, Paris relinquished to his brother all claim to the paternal succession, re- HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 349 nounced the world, lived by the labour of his own hands, and spent his leisure moments in prayer, and in succouring, consoling, and instructing the poor. His modest estimate of his own abilities deterred him from taking holy orders. He died on the 1st of May, 1727, and was buried in the church-yard of St. Medard. Many of those to whom he had been a comforter and guide, looked upon him as a beatified being, and came to pray at his tomb. Among the number were many females. Rumours soon began to be spread, that miracles were worked by the in- fluence of the sainted defunct ; sight was said to be restored, and contracted limbs extended to their full longitude. Multitudes now flocked to the sacred ground. Then ensued, especially among the women, contortions and convulsive movements, attended by cries, shrieks, and groans, all of which were regarded as manifestations of divine power. All convulsive movements are catching, and consequently, the num- ber of persons who displayed them at St. Medard, increased daily to an enormous extent. The jargon which was uttered by the convulsionaries, during their paroxysms, was next supposed to be the language of prophecy; and a whole volume of it was actually published, under the title of " A Collection of Inte- resting Predictions." Before, however, we laugh at our Gallic neighbours for such folly, it may be well to remember some things which have happened in England, within the last quarter of a century. After these practices had gone on, with hourly increas- ing vigour, for some years, the government closed the church-yard of St. Medard, which was become the theatre of exhibitions calculated to mislead the weak- minded, and disgust men of sound intellect. But the sect of the convulsionaries (for it had by this time grown into a strong and regularly organised sect) was not discouraged by this measure. Earth from the church- 350 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. yard where the deacon Paris was interred, and water from the spring which had supplied him with drink, be- came the symbols of this buried idol, and the means of working miracles. Meetings were held in private houses, and there fanaticism, of the darkest, wildest kind, gave full scope to all its gloomy inspirations. A regular system of torture was practised by the deluded votaries ; women being the principal sufferers. To be beaten with logs on the tenderest portions of the human frame ; to bend the body into a semi- circular form, and allow a weight of fifty pounds to be dropped from the ceiling on to the abdomen ; to lie with a plank on the same part, while several men stood on it ; to be tied up with the head downwards, and to have the breasts and nipples torn with pincers, were among the inflictions to which females submitted, and apparently with delight. The blows were inflicted by vigorous young men, who were called Secouristes. The highly sublimed madness of some pushed them to still more dreadful extremities ; it prompted them to be tied on spits, and exposed to the flames, or to be nailed by the hands and feet to a cross. The per- formance of these unnatural acts was denominated " the work." The Convulsionaries did not form a homogeneous body ; as was to be expected, they were split into parties, bearing various appellations, and being, in some instances, hostile to each other. There were the Yaillantistes, the Augustinians, the Melangistes, the Margoullistes, the Figuristes, and many more. The Yaillantistes took their name from Peter Yaillant, a priest, who taught that the prophet Elijah \vas resus- citated, and that he would appear on earth, to convert the Jews and the court of Rome. His disciple, Housset, maintained that Yaillant himself was the prophet. Darnaud, another priest, boldly assumed the character of the prophet Enoch. The Angus- HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 351 tinians, who carried their fanaticism to such a pitch that they were looked upon as heretical by other con- vulsionary sects, were the followers of a friar of the name of Augustin. Among their peculiar follies, was that of making nocturnal processions, with torches in their hands, and halters round their necks, to Notre Dame, and thence to the place de Greve ; these pro- cessions were a sort of rehearsal of the tragic scene in which they expected they should ultimately be called upon to perform. The Melangistes were those who distinguished two causes producing convulsions; one which gave rise to useless or improper acts, another which inspired divine and supernatural acts. The tenets of the Margoullistes have not been handed down to us. The Figuristes were so called from their representing, in their convulsive paroxysms, various phases of the passion of Christ, and the martyrdom of the saints. The fierce enthusiasm of all these sectarians has never been exceeded. Like American Indians, they set at defiance the utmost severity of pain. Even slight stimulus would rouse them into violent action. " I have seen them," says Yoltaire, "when they were talking of the miracles of St. Paris, grow heated by degrees, till their whole frame trembled, their faces were disfigured by rage, and they would have killed whoever dared to contradict them. Yes, I have seen them writhe their limbs, and foam, and cry out 'There must be blood ! ' " Not the slightest concession would they make to avoid punishment. A pardon was offered to several of them, who were sentenced to the pillory ; they refused it, for they could not, they said, repent of having done right. No lapse of time could eradicate this feeling from- their minds. In 1775, when M. de Malesherbes visited the Conciergerie, he found there a male and a female convulsionary, who had been im- prisoned for forty-one years. Age had not chilled in 352 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. them the resentment which was excited by their wrongs. He offered them liberty, if they would only ask for it ; but they firmly replied, that they had been unjustly detained, and that it was the business of justice to atone for its errors, and to give the repa- ration to which they were entitled. They were re- leased. It must not be imagined that the sect of the con- vulsionaries consisted merely of poor and ignorant people. Such was not the case. Strange as the fact may appear, the sect included great numbers of pious, learned, and intellectual men. Very many rich indi- viduals also belonged to it, and contributed to the maintenance of their less fortunate brethren. A count Daverne was sent to the Bastile u for wasting his property in supporting the convulsionaries ;" and the same crime brought a similar penalty on other individuals. That there were, however, numerous impostors, who pretended to espouse the doctrines of the sect, in order to further their own purposes, admits of no doubt. There were men who gave regular les- sons in the art of bringing on convulsions. A hot persecution was perseveringly carried on against this sect, and with the usual result ; the sect throve in spite of it, or rather, perhaps, in conse- quence of it. For five-and-thirty years it mocked all attempts to exterminate it, and it did not begin to decline till it was left 'to the withering influence of ridicule and neglect. It is believed to have retained a few votaries even to a recent period. The Bastile and the other Parisian prisons were yearly crowded with convulsionaries. Of those who were confined in the Bastile, one of the earliest was Peter Yaillant, from whom the Yaillantistes derived their name. He had previously suffered there an imprisonment of three years, for his opposition to the bull Unigenitus. In 1734, he was again sent thither, and, after having HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 353 been there for two-and-twenty years, he was trans- ferred to Vincennes, where he died. Housset, his disciple; Darnaud, who called himself the prophet Enoch ; the abbe Blondel, author of Lives of the Saints ; the abbes Deffart, Planchon, and Deribat ; Lequeux, prior of St. Yves, the learned editor of Bossuet's works ; and Carre de Montgeron, a coun- sellor of the parliament of Paris ; were of the number of those who were sent to the Bastile. Montgeron was born in the French capital, in 1686, and we have his own word for it that, till he was suddenly converted in St. Medard'schurchyard,he was a thoroughly worth- less unbeliever. By a natural transition, he became one of the most credulous and enthusiastic of dupes. In 1737, he printed a quarto volume, illustrated with twenty plates, u to demonstrate the truth of the miracles operated by the intercession of the beatified Paris." This volume he presented to Louis XY. at Versailles, and the next day, by order of the monarch, he was conveyed to the Bastile. He was afterwards an inmate of various prisons, and died at last in the citadel of Yalence. While he was in confinement, he added two more volumes to his rhapsody. In hunting down the humbler class of delinquents, the police found abundant employment, and they per- formed their task in the most oppressive manner. Renault, the lieutenant of police, an irascible and un- reasoning man, was an ardent partisan of the Jesuits, and, of course, was a violent enemy of the proscribed sect. His myrmidons spread terror in all directions. They are charged with having, " even in the dead of night, penetrated into the dwellings of individuals, scaled the walls, broken open the doors, and shown no respect to age or sex, when their object was to discover, imprison, consign to the pillory, banish, and ruin, those who favoured the convulsionaries." It was dangerous to be subject to epileptic or other fits ; 354 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. persons who were attacked by them in the streets having been pitilessly hurried off to gaol. The vigilance of the police was also kept on the stretch, and in a majority of cases was eluded, by the prints, posting-bills, pamphlets, and periodical writings of the convulsionaries, as well as by their secret meet- ings. Of the prints, one represented the tree of reli- gion, in the branches of which were seated Quesnel, Paris, and other apostles of Jansenism, while two Jesuits were striving to root it up. For this, a rhymer and engraver, Cointre by name, was committed to the Bastile. In another, archbishop Yintimille was seen throwing a stone at the sainted deacon Paris, and the lieutenant of police was holding the archiepiscopal cross, and stimulating the prelate. This print pro- cured for Mercier, the vender of it, a place in the Bastile. In a third of these caricatures was depicted the pope larded with a dozen Jesuits. In placarding the walls, and distributing hand-bills, all sorts of stratagems were employed. The following is one of the most ingenious modes which was adopted by the bill-stickers. A woman, raggedly dressed, with a large pannier strapped on her back, leaned her pannier against the wall, as though she wished to rest herself. In the pannier was a child, who, as soon as she stopped, opened the cover, and fixed a bill on the wall. As soon as his task was performed he closed the aperture, and his bearer proceeded with him to another convenient place. The bills and short pam- phlets, which were made public in this and other ways, were innumerable. In the library of the duke de la Valliere, there was an imperfect collection of them, which formed thirteen quarto volumes. Most of them seem to have been printed in the environs of the capital ; they were often brought into the city by females, and in searching for them, the police officers were guilty of the grossest indecency. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 855 But the great object which the police sought to obtain, and in which it was utterly foiled, w T as the sup- pression of a periodical publication which bore the title of Nouvelles Ecclesiastiques. This obnoxious work was vigorously continued for more than twenty years, without the government being able to lay hands on the writers, or to stop the printing and distributing of it. Many persons w r ere, indeed, committed to the Bastile and other prisons, on suspicion of being its editors or contributors, but no positive proof could ever be procured. The police where wholly at fault ; and the authors of the paper appear to have taken a provoking pleasure in showing the lieutenant of police their contempt of his efforts. In one instance, while his satellites were fruitlessly searching a house which was suspected of being a printing-office, a bundle of the papers, wet from the press, was thrown into his carriage, almost before his face. The paper was some- times printed in the city, and sometimes in the neigh- bourhood. At one time the press w T as secreted even under the dome of the Luxembourg ; at another, it was hidden among piles of timber, and the printers were disguised as sawyers ; on other occasions, it was contained in a boat on the Seine. When the paper was printed in the vicinity of Paris, various artifices were resorted to for smuggling it into the town, one of which deserves especial notice. Water-dogs were trained as carriers ; they were closely shorn, the papers were wrapped round them, a large rough skin was then sewn carefully over the whole, and the sagacious animals then took their way, unsuspected, to their several destinations. But enough has been said on the victims of religion* delusion ; and we must now turn our view to persons of a different class. The fertile author of little short of thirty works, and the editor of an equal number, nearly all of which are forgotten, Lenglet Dufresnoy, A A 2 356 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. who was born at Beauvais in 1764, was perhaps a more frequent visitor to the Bastile than any other person. It is said that he was so accustomed to lettres- de-cachet, that as soon as he saw M. Tapin, the officer, enter his apartment, he would greet him with, " Ah, M. Tapin, good day to you ;" and then say to his servant, " Come, be quick ; make up my little bundle, and put in my linen and my snuff;" which being done, he would add, " Now, M. Tapin, I am at your service/' Between 1718 and 1751, he was at least five times in the Bastile. He was also acquainted with Vincennes and other gaols. His first committal to the Parisian state prison was perhaps the one which was most dishonourable to him ; he was sent there to act the part of a spy, and worm out the secrets of the persons who were in durance for being concerned in the Cellamare conspiracy. It is asserted, that he had already appeared in a similar degrading character at Lille, in 1708, where he was paid for intelligence by the allies and the French, and betrayed both parties. Lenglet was of a quarrelsome and caustic disposition, which involved him in per- sonal disputes, and he appears to have paid little respect to truth ; but he had at least one estimable quality, an unconquerable love of independence, no offers, however flattering or lucrative, could prevail on him to place himself under the galling yoke of the rich and the great. His death, which took place in 1755, was occasioned by his falling into the fire while he was asleep. The Bastile twice received Laurent Angliviel la Beaumelle, who was born in 1727, at Yallerangue, in Lower Lauguedoc. His first imprisonment, in 1753, which lasted six months, was caused by his Notes on the Age of Louis XI Y. ; for his second, in the follow- ing year, he was indebted to a passage in his Memoirs of Madame de Maintenon, which charged the Aus- HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 357 trian court with keeping poisoners in its pay. His release, at the end of five months, was generously obtained by the intercession of that court which he had so grossly insulted. La Beaumelle was brought up in the Catholic religion, but, during a residence of some years in Geneva, lie became a protestant. At the age of twenty-one, he was appointed professor of French literature at Copenhagen, and his first work, " Mes Pensees," was published in the Danish capital. Lured by the patronage which Frederic of Prussia held out to authors, La Beaumelle removed to Berlin. Voltaire, who w T as then at the Prussian court, visited him, and expressed a wish to be numbered among his friends ; but their amicable intercourse was soon changed into deadly hostility. There was a short paragraph in Mes Pensees, which wounded the va- nity of Voltaire, and La Beaumelle was also guilty of having a respect for Maupertuis, whom Voltaire detested, and missed no opportunity of ridiculing. The rabid hatred with which Voltaire ever after pur- sued his foe, and the virulent and even low abuse which he lavished on him, can excite only disgust. The malign influence of Voltaire having rendered Berlin a disagreeable abode, La Beaumelle returned to his native country. After having resided in peace at Toulouse for several years, he obtained a place in the King's Library, at Paris, which, however, he did not long retain ; his death, which happened in 1779, followed close upon his appointment. La Beaumelle had certainly no mean talents ; and it is much to be regretted, that they were so often thrown away upon literary squabbles. Of his works, the best are Mes Pensees ; a Defence of the Spirit of Laws; and Letters to M. de Voltaire. The literary successor of La Beaumelle in the Bastile, was Francis de Marsy, a native of Paris, born in 1714. After he had finished his studies, he was 358 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. admitted a member of the society of Jesuits. His first productions were two Latin poems, on Tragedy and Painting, from which, particularly the latter, he derived considerable reputation, his Latinity being good, his versification flowing and spirited, and his imagery poetical. Encouraged perhaps by the praise which he received for these works, he became an author by profession, and wasted, in the ungrateful occupation of writing -for booksellers, those talents which, otherwise employed, might have given him permanent fame. One of his tasks, an analysis of the works of Bayle, which he published in 1755, was condemned by the parliament of Paris, and made him, for some months, an inmate of the Bastile. He died in 1763. Among his works are the first twelve volumes of the History of the Chinese, Japanese, &c. ; and an edition of Rabelais in eight volumes. The former is a hasty compilation ; the latter he spoiled, by retouching and modernising the style it is probable, however, that the clothing of Rabelais in a modern garb was a sagacious scheme of the publishers. To hazard censure upon an individual of the pri- vileged class, or even to be suspected of having done so, was an infallible passport to the Bastile. That versatile and elegant writer Marmontel was one of those who were taught the danger of a courtier's hos- tility. This enemy was the duke d'Aumont, whom, in his Memoirs, he truly describes as being " the most stupid, the most vain, and the most choleric, of all the gentlemen of the king's chamber." John Francis Marmontel, the son of parents in a humble station, was born in 1723, at the town of Bort, in the Limousin. He has drawn a delightful picture of the comfort and content in which his family lived, " The property on which we all subsisted was very small. Order, domestic arrangement, labour, a HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 359 little trade, and frugality, kept us above want. Our little garden produced nearly as many vegetables as the con- sumption of the family required ; the orchard afforded us fruits ; and our quinces, our apples, and our pears, preserved with the honey of our bees, were, in winter, most exquisite breakfasts for the good old women and children. They were clothed by the small flock of sheep that folded at St. Thomas, My aunts spun the wool, and the hemp of thefield that furnished us with linen; and in the evenings, when, by the light of a lamp, w T hich our nut-trees supplied with oil, the young peo- ple of the neighbourhood came to help us to dress our flax, the picture w r as exquisite. The harvest of the little farm secured us subsistence ; the wax and honey of the bees, to which one of my aunts carefully at- tended, formed a revenue that cost but little ; the oil pressed from our green walnuts had a taste and smell that we preferred to the flavour and perfume of that of the olive. Our buck- wheat cakes, moistened, smoking hot, with the good butter of Mont d'Or, were a deli- cious treat to us. I know not what dish would have appeared to us better than our turnips and chesnuts ; and on a winter evening, while these fine turnips were roasting round the fire, and we heard the water boiling in the vase where our chesnuts were cooling, so relish- ing and sweet, how did our hearts palpitate with joy 1 I well remember, too, the perfume that a fine quince used to exhale when roasting under the ashes, and the pleasure our grandmother used to have in dividing it amongst us. The most moderate of women made us all gluttons. Thus, in a family where nothing was lost, trivial objects united made plenty, and left but little to expend, in order to satisfy all our wants. In the neighbouring forest there was an abundance of dead wood of trifling value there my father was permitted to make his annual provision. The excellent butter of the mountain, and the most delicate cheese, were 360 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. common, and cost but little ; wine was not dear, and my father himself drank of it soberly." Marmontel was designed by his father to be brought up to trade, but his desire of learning w r as unconquer- able, and was at last allowed to be gratified. His early education he received from the Jesuits, at the humble college of Mauriac, and he completed it at Clermont and Toulouse. At one time he fancied that he had a vocation for the ecclesiastical state, and he would have become one of the fraternity of Jesuits, had he not been deterred by the pathetic entreaties and remonstrances of his mother. It was at Toulouse that he made his first literary essay, in a competition for one of the prizes bestowed by the academy for Floral Games. A correspondence, into which he entered with Vol- taire, induced the poet to advise him to take up his abode in Paris, and on this advice he acted in 17 45. For a considerable time after his settling in the ca- pital, he had to contend against poverty. The com- plete success which attended his tragedy of Dionysius the Tyrant, lifted him at once into fortune and fame. u In one day," says he, " almost in one instant, I found myself rich and celebrated. I made a worthy use of my riches, but it was not so with my celebrity. My fame became the origin of my dissipation, and the source of my errors. Till then, my life had been ob- scure and retired." It is honourable to him that all his family benefited by his improved circumstances ; and in palliation of his errors, we must consider how difficult it was for a young and flattered poet to escape the contagious effect of a corrupted capital. He finally renounced his licentious habits, and became an affectionate and happy husband and father. Dionysius was followed by Aristomenes, Cleopatra, and other tragedies, of which only Aristomenes was eminently successful. His wide-spread reputation at length gained for him the patronage of Madame de HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 361 Pompadour, through whom he obtained the place of Secretary of the Royal Buildings, and a pension on the French Mercury. It was for the Mercury that he he - gan those tales, which have been translated into En- glish under the erroneous appellation of Moral Tales. On the death of Boissy in 1758, Marmontel, by the favour of Pompadour, received the patent of the Mer- cury; and, under his management, the work rose into high repute. He, however, enjoyed this lucrative em- ployment for only two years. Cury, a wit, who had been deeply injured by the stupid and spiteful duke d'Aumont, composed a satire on his titled enemy. He repeated the verses to Marmontel, and the latter, who had an excellent memory, repeated them to a company at Madame Geoffrin's. This circumstance was in- stantly reported to the duke d'Aumont, who lost not a moment in procuring a lettre-de-cachet, by virtue of which Marmontel was conveyed to theBastile, charged with being the author of the satire. His confinement lasted only eleven days; but as he generously refused to betray the writer's name, the patent of the Mer- cury was taken from him, and nothing was left to him except a pension payable out of the profits of the work. In 1763, Marmontel became a member of the French Academy, and twenty years later, he was appointed its perpetual secretary. After he was de- prived of the Mercury, he pursued his literary labours, for many years, with equal vigour and credit. Among the w^orks which he produced during that period are Belisarius, the Incas, a translation of the Pharsalia, a new series of tales, various comic operas, miscella- neous pieces-, a History of the Regency of the duke of Orleans, Elements of Literature, and Memoirs of his own Life. During the fierce struggles between the republican parties, after the downfall of the throne, Marmontel lived in retirement, and in a state of penury which bordered upon poverty. He was elected a 362 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. member of the council of elders, in 1797, but the revolution of the 18th Fructidor deprived him of his seat, and he withdrew to his cottage in Normandy, happy in not being exiled to another hemisphere, as was the case with many of his colleagues. Marmontel died of apoplexy, on the last day of 1799. Morellet, the friend, and by marriage the relative, of Marmontel, was, like that writer, one who suffered from the vengeance of the great. It must be owned, however, that there was less injustice in his punish- ment than in that of his friend, as he was really the author of the satire for which he was confined, and it was published under circumstances which made even Yoltaire doubt whether the conduct of the writer was perfectly justifiable. Andrew Morellet, to whom some of his acquaintance gave the punning appellation of Mord-les, or Bite-'em, was born at Lyons, in 1727. lie received the early part of his education at the Jesuits' College in that city, arid he completed his studies at Paris, in the seminary of Trente-Trois, and the Sorbonne. He appears, however, to have paid at least as much attention to the works of modern philo- sophers as to those of the theologians. At Paris he became intimate with D'Alembert, Diderot, and other contributors to the Encyclopaedia. Returning to Paris, after a tour which he made with a pupil, he was gladly admitted into the most talented society in the capital. Palissot, in his comedy of the Philosophers, having ridiculed the philosophical party, Morellet resented the insult by a satirical production, called The Vision. In this work there were some severe lines on the princess of Robecq, an enemy of the encyclopedists, who was then lying on her death-bed. For these lines Morellet suffered an imprisonment of several months in the Bastile. Morellet was admitted into the French Aca- demy in 1 784, and he contributed much to the Dic- tionary of that body. In 1803 he became a member HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 363 of the Institute, and in 1807 attained a seat in the legislature. His life was protracted to the age of ninety-two, and, for nearly the whole of that time his pen was actively employed on subjects of political economy and general literature, and in translations, principally from the English language. A selection from his writings was made by himself, in four volumes, with the title of Literary and Philosophical Miscel- lanies of the 18th Century. He died in 1819. By Marmontel, w y ho married his friend's niece, he is thus characterised: " The abbe Morellet, with more order and clearness, in a very rich magazine of every kind of knowledge, possessed in conversation a source of sound; pure, profound ideas, that, without ever being exhausted, never overflowed. He showed himself at our dinners with an openness of soul, a just and firm mind, and with as much rectitude in his heart as in his understanding. One of his talents, and the most dis- tinguishing, was a turn of pleasantry delicately ironical, of w T hich Swift alone had found the secret. With this facility of being severe, if he had been inclined, no man w r as ever less so ; and, if he ever permitted himself to indulge in personal raillery, it was but a rod in his hand to chastise insolence or punish malignity." A less amiable captive than Marmontel and Morel- let next claims our attention. Though he was by no means destitute of talent or information, Victor Ri- quetti, marquis of Mirabeau, owes the redemption of his name from oblivion less to his numerous literary productions than to his being the father of the cele- brated Mirabeau. The marquis, who was descended from a Florentine family, was born at Perthes in 17 1 5. He became a disciple of Quesnay, and published many works, to disseminate the doctrines of the political economists. His compositions are disfigured by a de- testable style, great affectation, and a want of method* Of his labours, which amount to more than twenty 364 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. volumes, it will suffice to mention L'Ami des Hommes and the Tlieorie de 1'Impot. With reference to the former, Yoltaire satirically speaks of Mirabeau as " the friend of man, who talks, who talks, who talks, who decides, who dictates, who is so fond of the feudal government, who commits so many blunders, and who gets so often into the wrong box the pretended friend of the Immali race/' He bestows equal contempt on the second work " I have read the Theory of Taxa- tion," says he, " and it seems to me no less absurd than ~ ridiculously written. I do not like those friends of man, who are for ever telling the enemies of the state fc we are ruined ; come ; you will have an easy task/ " The government seems to have been of the same opinion as Yoltaire, for the Theory of Taxation procured for its author a lodging in the Bastile. Mirabeau, however, continued to write and to publish till nearly his last moments; he died in 1789. This pretended friend of the human race, as Yoltaire with justice calls him, deserved abhorrence in all the rela- tions of social life. He was an oppressive master, and a tyrannical and brutal husband and father. He, was perpetually soliciting for lettres-de- cachet to plunge some branch or other of his family into a dungeon. Of those letters he is said to have obtained fifty-four, many of which were enforced against his highly-gifted though erring son, the count de Mirabeau, whom he hated, and whom, by his persevering cruelty, he contributed to drive into desperate courses. Among those who felt the vengeance of the vindic- tive Pompadour was the chevalier Resseguier, a native of Toulouse, who was much admired in the Parisian circles for his gaiety and wit. An epigram which he aimed at the royal mistress, speedily made him an inmate of the Bastile. There, like many other unfor- tunate victims of the marchioness, he might perhaps have spent the rest of his days, had not his brother, a HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 305 member of the parliament of Toulouse, hastened up to the capital and succeeded in mollifying Pompadour. In their way home from the Bastile, the grave magis- trate began to give his brother some pruolent advice. Little disposed to listen to it, the chevalier thrust his head out of the coach window, and, in the words of Philoxenus of Syracuse, exclaimed, " Take me back to the quarries !" The brother still persisting to adminis- ter caution and reproof, the chevalier lost all patience, censured him bitterly for having stooped to ask a favour from the marchioness, and then leaped from the carriage. Resseguier of course continued to scatter his sarcasms on all sides. For one of them, directed against the notorious President Maupeou, who was afterwards chancellor, he ran considerable risk of pay- ing a second visit to the Bastile. He was dining, on a fast-day, at the house of M. de Sartine, and some of the guests were admiring the size of the fish. " Yes," said Marin, (whose name the reader will meet with again,) "they are very fine fish; but I dined yesterday with the president, and he had still larger." " Ah !" replied Resseguier, " I do not wonder in the least at that ; it is the place for everything monstrous." Lous XV. was informed of this pungent attack on the instrument of his despotism, and was greatly irri- tated by it. The next literary prisoner was the involuntary proxy of an offender, who took care to get beyond the reach of the police. In 1761, Grouber de Grouber- dal, a German by birth, and barrister by profession, author of Irus, ou le Savetier du Coin, and a poem with the title of Le Sexe Triomphant, was sent to the Bastile, on suspicion of having written a satire called the Jesuitics, to which he appears to have only con- tributed some verses. Grouber, however, escaped with no more than a month's imprisonment. A friend of Grouber's was the real author. Henry Joseph 366 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. Dulaurens was born at Douay, and very early dis- played abilities of a superior order. He was less amiable than talented ; for he is said to have been suspicious, sarcastic, hasty, restless, and turbulent : that he was licentious, is proved by his works. Du- laurens was destined for the church, but abandoned the clerical profession. His satire, the Jesuitics,. which was modelled on the celebrated Philippics of La Grange Chancel, was aimed at the Jesuits, to whom he had long been bitterly hostile. Fearing that it would bring him into peril, he set off for Holland, on the morning after it was published, with out warning his friend Grouber that danger was to be apprehended. In Holland he became a writer for the booksellers; but, though his pen was extremely fertile, and his productions, which were generally marked by origi- nality and spirit, obtained an extensive sale, he was scarcely able to avoid sinking into poverty : the book- sellers throve on those fruits of his talent, by which he himself was barely kept alive. By liis flight from Paris, Dulaurens had eluded a residence in the Bastile, but it ultimately brought on him a more protracted confinement than he would have endured had he remained in France. In the hope of bettering his condition, he quitted Amsterdam, and went to Liege, whence he removed to Frankfort. While he was living in the latter city, he was prosecuted by the ecclesiastical chamber of Mentz, as an anti-religious writer, and was condemned to perpetual imprison- ment. He died in 1797, in a convent near Mentz, after having been a prisoner during thirty years. Of his works, the most remarkable are, Le Compere Mathieu, L'Evangile de la Raison, Irma, and L'Aretin Moderne, in prose ; and Le Balai, and La Chandelle d' Arras, two mock-heroic poems ; of these poems, which are of considerable length, the first was com- posed in twenty-two days, and the second in fifteen. HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 367 Of all the writers who, during the reign of Louis XV., found or deserved a lodging in the Bastile, Peter Robbe de Beauveset may, perhaps, be con- sidered as one of the most degraded, in a moral point of view. He was born at Vendome, in 17 14, received* a good education, and was not destitute of talent. At an early age, he began to write poems of the coarsest obscenity, and he continued the practice till almost the close of a long life. To repeat them to all companies that w r ould listen, seems to have been one of his greatest pleasures. Next to licentious compo- sition, he delighted in satire. His verses were insuf- ferably harsh ; but they now and then displayed happy thoughts and forcible expressions. To give an idea of his propensity to wallow in the mire, it will be sufficient to say, that he chose for one of his themes the only disease which is a disgrace to the sufferer, and that the song was worthy of the theme. This drew on him the sarcasm, likely enough to be true, that he was " the bard of the unclean malady, and that he was full of his subject." Having tried his satirical skill upon Louis XV., an order was issued to seize his papers, and he would certainly have paid a visit to the Bastile, had he not skilfully parried the blow. Being timely warned of his danger, he destroyed the obnoxious piece, and substituted in its place another of an opposite kind. This stratagem was successful. Instead of sending him to prison, the king pensioned him, and gave him apartments in the palace of St. Germain. Severe censors have hinted, that the debauched monarch wished to have a mono- poly of the poet's obscene rhymes. Robbe likewise received a pension from the archbishop of Paris, on condition that he should not publish his objectionable pieces. He kept to the letter of his agreement ; he did not print them ; he contented himself with reciting them to as many hearers as he could find. The 368 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. motive of the archbishop we can comprehend ; but it is not easy to perceive what could have induced the duchess of Olone to leave a legacy of 15,000 francs to so shameless a writer, and to speak in flattering- terms of his reputation as an author ! Before his death, which took place in 1794, he is said to have manifested some signs of reformation. The liability to be thrust into a prison, for the purpose of gratifying a courtier, or other powerful enemy, was not the fate of authors alone; the men who devoted their talents, and shed their blood, to enlarge or defend the dominion of their country, were equally subject to it. Striking proof of this fact is afforded by the persecution which fell to the lot of Mahe de la Bourdonnais and count Lally. Bernard Francis Mah6 de la Bourdonnais was born in 1699, at St. Malo ; entered the service of the East India Company at an early period, and displayed such talent, and such consummate knowledge of mercantile as well as of naval concerns, that, in 1735, he was appointed governor- general of the Isles of France and Bourbon. On his arrival in the Isle of France, he found everything in a state of penury and confusion. In a very short time, however, he showed what can be done by a man of abilities and perseverance. A new and vivifying spirit was breathed by him into the languishing frame of the colony. Laws and police were established ; arsenals, docks, forts, magazines, and canals, were constructed ; and the cultivation of indigo, cotton, manioc, and sugar, was introduced. All this was accomplished within the space of five years. Twice La Bourdonnais was sent to the coast of Coro- mandel, with succours for his ungenerous rival and enemy Dupleix; the first time in 1741, the second in 1746. To narrate all the exertions of La Bour- donnais, on these occasions, would require a volume. His conduct was such as to win the warm praise of HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 369 the English, who suffered by his success. The result of his operations, in 1746, was the surrender of Madras ; but the terms of the capitulation were dis- honourably violated by Dupleix,in spite of the remon- strances of the indignant conqueror. Dupleix having appointed another governor at the Isle of France, La Bourdonnais returned to Europe, and on his way homeward was taken by an English vessel. In England he met with that reception which was due to a talented and noble foe, and was allowed to proceed on parole to his native country. A far different greeting awaited him in France, where his mean and malignant enemies had long been labouring effectually for his ruin. He had only been three days in Paris before all his papers were seized, and he was hurried to the Bastile. There he was kept in solitary con- finement for twenty-six months, not even his wife and children being allowed access to him ; nor was he permitted to have the means of writing. One of the charges against him, founded on the testimony of a soldier who had been hired to perjure himself, was that he had secretly conveyed on board of his vessel a large sum of money from Madras. To refute this charge, by showing that it was impossible for the witness to have seen any such proceeding from the spot where he was posted, La Bourdonnais, destitute as he was of materials, drew from memory an exact plan of Madras, and contrived to have it conveyed to the commissioners who were appointed to investigate his conduct. The plan was drawn on a white hand- kerchief, with a rude sort of pencil formed from a slip of box, and dipped in brown and yellow colours, which he obtained from coffee, and the verdigris scraped from copper coins. This curious document quickened the movements of his judges, and they took steps to bring the question to an issue. After having under- gone an imprisonment of three years, he was pro- B B 370 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. nounced innocent, and was released. The gift of liberty came too late to save his life ; his health was undermined by grief, anxiety,, and the unwholesome- ness of his dungeon, and his fortune had melted away in the hands of his persecutors ; he languished in severe pain, and in a state of indigence, till 1755, when death put an end to his sufferings. A doom still more severe than that of La Bourdon- nais was assigned to the unfortunate count Lally. Thomas Arthur Lally was born in 1702, and was the son of Sir Gerard Lally, one of those high-minded but mistaken Irishmen, whose ideas of duty led them to expatriate themselves rather than renounce their alle- giance to the second James. Young Lally was early conversant with war ; he was not twelve years old when he first mounted guard, in the trenches before Barcelona. In the course of the next thirty years, he distinguished himself in numerous battle-fields, parti- cularly at Dettingen and Fontenoy, and was employed in missions to England and Russia, the former of which, not a little perilous, was undertaken in 1737, for the service of the Stuart family. To the house of Hanover he was an inveterate foe, and he was fertile in plans for its overthrow. On the breaking out of the war between England and France in 1756, he was made a lieutenant-general, and appointed commandant of all the French establishments in Hindostan. Un- fortunately for him, the government unwisely delayed his departure, and withdrew a part of the force which had been intended to accompany him. When he reached Pondicherry he found everything in confusion, none of the resources which he had expected to find, and, worse than all, men in office who knew that he meant to punish peculators, and who were therefore incessantly on the alert to thwart all his plans. Their machinations were aided by his own defects ; for he was harsh, violent, and headstrong, in an extraordi- HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 37 1 nary degree. Voltaire says of him, that " he had found the secret of making himself hated by every- body," and that " every one, except the executioner, had a right to kill him/' There is much exaggera- tion in this ; but it is certain that Lally was, and deserved to be, an unpopular man. In spite of the scantiness of his means, Lally took the field against the English with a firm resolve to drive them out of India. His first operations were successful. He made himself master of Goudalour, Fort St. David, and Devicotta, but here his good for- tune ended ; he was foiled in an attack on Tanjore, and was subsequently compelled to raise the siege of Madras. His failure must not be attributed to want of military skill ; he was nearly without resources, and there was in his own army a powerful faction which was hostile to him. The council of Pondi- cherry, too, hated him with such a deadly hatred that it rejoiced in, and even helped to cause his disappoint- ments. Invested at last in Pondicherry by the En- glish, he defended the place with desperate courage, but was compelled by famine to surrender. On his return to France, Lally attacked his enemies with his wonted impetuosity. Their influence, how- ever, was superior to his, and he was sent to the Bast ile. Nineteen months elapsed before he was even questioned. The trial was at last commenced, and it occupied more than two years. The whole of the proceedings teemed with the most flagrant injustice ; there was a manifest determination to send the pri- soner to the scaffold. The language used by some of his judges deserved the severest punishment.. Sen- tence of death was pronounced on the 6th May, 1 766. On its being made known to him, Lally stabbed him- self with a pair of compasses, but the wound w T as not mortal. Three days afterwards, he was taken to exe- cution, and, that nothing might be wanting to lacerate B B 2 372 HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. his feelings, he was conveyed in a mud-cart, and his mouth was gagged. This brutality had a contrary effect to that which was expected ; it excited for him the sympathy of the spectators, and covered his ene- mies with execration and disgrace. The son of count Lally, advantageously known during the revolution as count Lally-Tolendal, obtained, some years after- wards, a solemn reversal of the sentence, and the restoration of his parent's honour. Caradeuc de la Chalotais, a Breton magistrate, estimable for his talents and rectitude, is the next who comes forward on the scene. He appears to have been indebted for his misfortunes partly to the Jesuits, whose order he had assisted to sup- press in France, and partly to the duke d'Aiguillon, whom he had offended, by venturing to hint a doubt of his courage. He was a native of Rennes, born in 1701, and became attorney-general in the parliament of Brittany. His two Comptes Rendus, against the Jesuits, which contributed much to their overthrow, and his Essay on National Edu- cation, which forms a kind of supplement to them, are spoken of in the most laudatory terms by Voltaire. La Chalotais subsequently acted a con- spicuous part, when the parliament of Brittany refused to register some of the royal edicts, which violated the Breton privileges. The duke d'Aiguil- lon was then governor of the province, and we may believe that he was not sorry to take ven- geance for the sarcasm which the attorney-general had aimed at him. The Jesuits, too, are said to have spared no pains to accomplish their enemy's destruction. In November, 1765, La Chalotais, his son, and four of the parliament counsellors, were arrested, and in the following month, they were placed in close confinement in the citadel of St. Malo. The main charges against La Chalo- HISTORY OF THE SASTILE. 373 tais were, that he had written two anonymous letters to one of the secretaries of state, which contained insults upon the king and his ministers, and that he had entered into a conspiracy against the regal authority. With respect to the letters, though some persons accustomed to examine hand- writings asserted them to be his, the vulgar style and incorrect spelling render it in the highest degree improbable that he was their author. He himself denied the charge in the most emphatic manner. La Chalotais was carefully secluded from all correspondence, and deprived of pen and ink ; he, nevertheless, contrived to produce three elo- quent memorials in his defence, and to procure a wide circulation of them. They were w T ritten on scraps of paper which had contained sugar and chocolate, with a pen made from a toothpick, and ink composed of soot, sugar, vinegar, and water. A commission was at first formed to try the prisoners, but the cause was afterwards removed into the council of state, and the captives were transferred to the Bastile. A stop was, however, put to the proceedings by the king, and the accused indi- viduals were exiled to Saintes. An attempt was made to prevail on La Chalotais to resign his office, but he refused to listen to the messenger. On the death of Louis XY. his successor allowed La Chalotais to resume his seat in parliament, and the magistrate retained it till his decease in 1785. The celebrated Curran, whose conversational talents no one that witnessed them could possibly forget, once said to me, in allusion to the transient intoxication produced by champagne, that it made a runaway rap at a man's head. It may, perhaps, from a similar reason, be allowable to say, that a runaway rap was made at the liberty of the person who is the subject of this sketch. Francis Louis 374 HISTORY OP THE BASTILE. Marin had scarcely time to lament the loss of his liberty before it was restored to him. Marin was a Proven9al born at Ciotat, in 1721 ; after having been a chorister, and then an organist, he adopted the clerical profession, and went to Paris, where he became tutor to the son of a nobleman. His manner and figure, which were good, and his talents, which were far from contemptible, gained him many patrons in the French capital. He now quitted his ecclesiastical pursuits, was admitted a barrister, and published various works, one of which, the History of Salad in, is perhaps the best of all his productions, and is still in repute ; it was dedicated to St. Flo- rentin, one of the ministers, and gained for its author the appointment of royal censor, to which was sub- sequently added that of secretary-general to Sartine, who had been placed at the head of the inquisi- torial office, to which printers and publishers were amenable. As secretary-general he seems to have satisfied no one ; he was desirous of befriending the philosophical party, in which he had several friends, but was still more desirous of retaining his lucrative post. The consequence was, that he sometimes winked at, and even aided, infractions of the law, and then sought to propitiate his employers by additional vigilance and severity. Marin was certainly not overburthened with delicacy ; and, un- less he is much belied, he increased his income by acting as purveyor to .the disgraceful amours of his royal master. In 1763, he was confined for twenty- four hours in the Bastile, for having, in his censorial character, neglected to expunge some lines from one of Dorat's tragedies. A few years afterwards, he was deprived of a pension of 2000 livres, because he had allowed Favart's comic opera of the Gleaner to be acted and published In 177 1, he was made editor of the Gazette de France, in which capacity he brought SlSTOftY OP THE BASTILE. 375 upon himself a perpetual shower of epigrams and sarcasms. Many of these annoying shafts were aimed at him by the " Nouvelles a-la-main," and he had the weakness to demand that the editor of the paper should be arrested. He had soon the mis- fortune or the folly to provoke a much more for- midable enemy, the witty and eloquent Beaumar- chais, who covered him with ridicule. To com- plete his vexation, no long time elapsed before the count de Yergennes dismissed him, and in the most humiliating manner, from the royal censorship and the superintendence of the Gazette. Marin then re- tired to his native tow T n, where he busied himself in literary pursuits. By the revolution he lost a considerable part of his income ; but to his credit it must be owned, that he did not lose his temper or his spirits ; he died in 1809. Marin had some praise- worthy qualities ; he is said to have been ready to do acts of kindness, and even to have often run serious risks to serve his friends. But here we must stop, for it appears that his principles and his morals were lamentably defective ; one of his biographers, who writes of him in a friendly spirit, owns that in extreme old age he had " a taste for pleasure, and even for libertinism." Less fortunate than Marin, Farmain De Rozoi, or as he was generally called Durosoi, did not pay a visit of only twenty-four hours to the Bastile. Durosoi was a Parisian by birth, and seems to have early betaken himself to "the idle trade" of literature. He tried many kinds of authorship, arid was far below mediocrity in all ; novels, histories, poems, and plays, especially the latter, he poured forth in rapid succession, drawing down abundance of bitter sarcasms from the critics, and gaining little emolument to himself. Among the dramatic subjects which he chose was Henry IY., and he was so de- 376 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. lighted with his hero, that he brought him on the stage in three different pieces. The appellation of " the modern Ravaillac," which he acquired by these pieces, shows how woefully the monarch fared under his hands. But Durosoi had worse enemies than the critics ; on an erroneous suspicion of his being the author of two obnoxious works, he was shut up for two months in the Bastile. When the revolu- tion broke out he espoused the royal cause, and became editor of the Gazette de Paris. He was a zealous .and certainly an honest advocate of that cause. Though slenderly endowed with talents, he was by no means deficient in courage and noble feelings. When Louis XVI., after his flight to the frontier, was under restraint in the Tuileries, Du- rosoi formed the romantic but generous project of obtaining the king's liberty, by inducing the friends of Louis to offer themselves as hostages for him ; and a great number of individuals actually consented to render themselves personally responsible for the sovereign's conduct. Durosoi did not slacken in his hostility to the revolutionists, till their final success on the I Oth of August compelled him to drop the pen. He was one of their earliest victims on the scaffold, he being executed by torch-light only nine- teen days after the downfall of the monarchy. He died with the utmost firmness ; in a letter which he left behind him, he declared, that, " a royalist like him was worthy to die on St. Louis's day, for his religion and his king/' It is said, that, with the laudable desire of benefiting mankind by his death, he was desirous that his blood should be employed in trying the experiment of transfusion. The French revolution, which ultimately con- signed Durosoi to death, opened the prison-gates of a man, of whom few particulars are recorded, but whose courage and unmerited sufferings deserve our HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 377 admiration and pity. It will scarcely be credited that, from a very early period of the reign of Louis XV. there existed an infamous monopoly of grain, which was managed for the benefit of the monarch. Corn, bought at a low price in plentiful seasons, was hoarded up, and sold at an immense profit in times of scarcity. The circumstance was kept as secret as possible for many years, but the truth got out, and the name of "the compact of famine" was popu- larly given to the monopoly. A patriotic individual, Prevost de Beaumont, the secretary of the clergy, formed the daring project of at one sweep gaining possession of all the documents relative to this affair, and revealing to France the whole machinery of the scandalous system. When, however, he was about to carry his plan into effect, he was seized by the police, and conveyed to the Bastile. In that prison, and at Vincennes, he spent twenty-two years, his hands and feet heavily ironed, a bare bQard for his bed, and a scanty portion of bread and water for his daily subsistence ; he would no doubt have pe- rished in his dungeon, had not the chains which he had so long worn been broken by the strong hand of the French people. A striking proof how liable to abuse is irrrespon- sible power placed in the hands of ministers of state and of monopolising corporations, is afforded by the persecution of Barletti St. Paul, a man of consider- able abilities, who was born at Paris, in 1734. So precocious was his talent, that, at the age of sixteen, he had made himself master of all that the best teachers could communicate to him. After having been for a while sub-preceptor of the junior branches of the royal family, he was involved in a quarrel, in consequence of which he quitted France. He resided for six years at Naples, after which he was intrusted by the Dauphin with a diplomatic mission at Rome ; 378 HISTORY OF THE BASTlLE. and, when he had fulfilled this mission, he returned to his native country. Rapidly as St. Paul had acquired knowledge, he was thoroughly dissatisfied with the method of in- struction then in use, and particularly with the various and discordant systems which were followed by pre- ceptors. He, therefore, undertook the Herculean task of forming a collection of elementary treatises on the sciences and arts, with new modes of studying lan- guages, On this encyclopedic labour he was, at inter- vals, employed during nearly the whole of his life. Eighteen volumes of it were completed, and he was on the point of seeing them brought before the public, when his prospects were destroyed by the base jealousy of one learned body, and the legal despotism of another. As the cost of printing the work would be great, asoci- etyof his friends was formed, for the purpose of accom- plishing the publication in concert, and a public meet- ing was announced, to deliberate on the necessary ar- rangements. * But the University of Paris had taken the alarm. Like all old and pampered institutions, it hated novelty, and trembled lest its monopoly should be shaken. To avert the dreaded evil, it had recourse to the parliament ; and the compliant parliament issued a prohibition against the meeting. This step was backed by the appointment of four commissioners to examine the work. It did not require the spirit of prophecy to predict that commissioners, chosen under such auspices, would be anything but impartial. The hackneyed joke, of suing his Satanic majesty in one of the infernal courts, is pretty sure to be realised on such occasions. The report which they made was so unfavourable, that a complete stop was put to the scheme of publishing. St. Paul did not tamely submit to this treatment. He procured to be printed, at Brussels, a pamphlet, which was entitled The Secret JReveakd. Sartine, the minister of police, who had HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 379 been one of his active enemies, was somewhat roughly handled in this production. The king of spies, gaols, and gibbets, was not a man to be attacked witli im- punity, and he avenged himself in a manner which was worthy of him, by suppressing the pamphlet, and sending its author to the Bastile. At the expiration of three months, the intercession of the cardinal de Rohan obtained the liberation of St. Paul. He then went to Spain, w r here he became pro- fessor of belles-lettres at Segovia ; an appointment which he held for three years. Returning again to France, he published a New System of Typography, to diminish the labour of compositors. For this the government rewarded him by a grant of twenty thou- sand livres, and by printing five hundred copies of his volume at the Louvre press. His improvement con- sisted in casting in one mass the diphthongs, triph- thongs, and all the most frequently occurring combi- nations of letters. A similar plan, with the name of the Logographic, was tried in London, a few years afterwards, but it was soon abandoned. St. Paul continued to labour indefatigably on his ameliorated system of education ; he gained in its favour the suffrage of Sicard, who was one of three per- sons whom the National Institute nominated to exa- mine it ; but he did not live to complete it, and only a small specimen of it was ever published. He passed unhurt through the storms of the Revolution, and died at Paris, in 1809. One of his best works, " The Means of avoiding the customary Errors in the In- struction of Youth," suggests a mode by which two scholars may reciprocally give lessons to each other. Almost the last prisoner, perhaps the last of any note, who was committed to the Bastile in the closing year of Louis the Fifteenth's reign, was a man who subsequently acted a conspicuous part in politics and war. Charles Francis Duperier Dumouriez, born at 380 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. Cambray, in 1 739, was the son of an army commissary, who translated the Ricciardetto, and wrote some dra- matic pieces. After having been educated with much care, Dumouriez obtained a cornetcy, and, before the close of the seven years' war, he had received two- and-twenty wounds, nineteen of which were inflicted on him in a combat which he gallantly maintained against twenty hussars, five of whom he disabled. Peace being concluded, he travelled in Italy, Spain, and Portugal. In 1768 and 1769, he served with distinction in Corsica, and rose to the rank of colonel. The duke de Choiseul employed, him in 1770, on a mission in Poland, to support the confederation of Bar against the Russians, but the dismissal of the duke, which took place soon after, led to the recall of the envoy. Dumouriez was next intrusted by Louis XV . with a secret mission to the court of Gustavus of Sweden, relative to the revolution which that sove- reign was then planning. This was done by Louis, who was in the habit of taking similar steps, with- out the knowledge of the duke d'Aiguillon, the mi- nister for foreign affairs. Dumouriez was in conse- quence arrested at Hamburgh, by order of the duke, and conveyed to the Bastile, Louis not having spirit enough to avow his own acts. During his six months' imprisonment, Dumouriez wrote various works. The accession of Louis XVI. restored the captive to liberty; and he successively obtained the government of Cher- bourg, and the command of the country bet ween Nantes and Bordeaux. That such a man should not take an active part in the French revolution was impossible. But Dumouriez was not, as the ultra-royalists have unjustly described him to be, an enemy of the throne; he was, in truth, a constitutional royalist. In 1792, lie was promoted to the rank of lieutenant-general, and was appointed minister for foreign affairs, from which office he was shortly afterwards removed to the HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 381 War department. That department, however, he held only for four days, at the end of which term he re- signed. The duration of his official existence did not exceed three months. He was now placed at the head of the army which was destined to repel the Prussians, who were led by the duke of Brunswick. By a masterly disposition of his troops, in the defiles of Champagne, he completely foiled the enemy, and compelled them to make a ruinous retreat. He then broke into the Netherlands, gained the battle of Jemappe, revolutionised the whole country, and car- ried the French arms into Holland. Quitting his army for a while, he visited Paris, for the purpose of endeavouring to save the king, but in that he failed, and rendered himself an object of suspicion. The tide of military success, too, at length began to turn against him. He lost the battle of Neerwinden, and was forced to abandon the Low Countries. Commis- sioners were now sent by the Convention to arrest him ; and, after having vainly endeavoured to rally his army on his side, he was obliged to seek for safety in flight. After having resided in various foreign countries, he finally settled in England, where he was often consulted by the ministers. Though he was decidedly hostile to the emperor Napoleon, he took no share in the restoration of the Bourbons, nor did he approve of their conduct. Dumouriez died on the 14th of March, 1823, and was interred at Henley, in Oxfordshire. His works are numerous ; the most interesting of them are, his Memoirs, and the Present State of Portugal. 382 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. CHAPTER XL Captivity and Sufferings of Masers de Latude Cause of his Im- prisonment He is removed from the Bastile to Vinrennes He escapes He is retaken, arid sent to the Bastile Kindness of M. Berryer D'Alegre is confined in the same apartment with him Latude forms a plan for escaping Preparations for exe- cuting it The Prisoners descend from the summit of the Bas- tile, and escape They are recaptured in Holland, and brought back Latude is thrown into a horrible dungeon He tames rats, and makes a musical pipe Plans suggested by him His writing materials He attempts suicide Pigeons tamed by him New plans suggested by him Finds means to fling a packet of papers from the top of the Bastile Ho is removed to Vincennes He escapes Is recaptured Opens a communication with his fellow-prisoners Is transferred to Charenton His situation there His momentary liberation He is re-arrested, and sent to the Bicetre Horrors of that prison Heroic benevolence of Madame Legros She succeeds in obtaining his release Subse- quent fate of Latude. IN one of the finest passages that ever flowed from his pen, Sterne alludes to the comparatively trifling effect produced on the mind, when it endeavours to form a collective idea of the misery which is felt by a throng of sufferers. u Leaning iny head upon my hand/' says he, " I began to figure to myself the miseries of confinement. I was in a right frame for it, and so I gave full scope to my imagination. "I was going to begin with the millions of my fel- low-creatures born to no inheritance but slavery ; but finding, however affecting the picture was, that I could not bring it near me, but that the multitude of groups in it did but distract me, I took a single captive, and having first shut him up in his dungeon, I then looked through the twilight of his grated door to take his picture. " I beheld his body half wasted away with long expectation and confinement, and felt what sickness of HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 383 tlie heart it was which arises from hope deferred. Upon looking hearer, I saw him pale and feverish ; in thirty years the western breeze had not once fanned his blood; he had seen no sun, no moon, in all that time nor had the voice of friend or kinsman breathed through his lattice/' It is even as Sterne asserts. The contemplation of the woes which are undergone by a large aggregate of persons, seems indeed to act on the mind somewhat in the manner of a heavy misfortune ; it bewilders and benumbs the feelings. When we read of a single individual falling beneath the knife of a murderer, we are more violently startled and thrilled, and the im- pression made is more permanent, than when we read of the thousands who groan out their lives on the field of battle ; though, in the latter case, the largest part of the victims, mutilated, torn, trampled on, and slowly dying without succour, and distant from all that is dear to them, endure agonies far beyond those which are inflicted by the stab of an assassin. Let us, therefore, now follow the example of Sterne. Hitherto the reader has seen only a rapid succession of captives passing before him, like the shadows of a magic lantern ; he has had but glimpses of the wretchedness that falls to the lot of a prisoner ; for, with respect to nearly the whole of the individuals chronicled in this volume, we know, as to their situa- tion while in durance, little beyond the circumstance of their having been incarcerated ; their persecutors ensured their silence by retaining them till they sunk into the grave, or by the terror of becoming once more inmates of a dungeon. While the Bastile was standing, few would venture even to whisper whatthey had experienced within its walls. Fortunately, how- ever, there does, exist one faithful record of the severest woes, protracted by untirable tormentors, through a series of years, extending to half the naturallife of man. 384 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. Let us then avail ourselves of it, fix our attention steadily on a single individual, watch his anguish, bodily and mental, his privations, his struggles, and his despair, and mark how deeply the iron can be made to enter into his soul by vindictive and ruthless tyrants. Henry Masers de Latude, the person alluded to, spent thirty-five years in the Bastile and other places of confinement. If we did not know that power, when it is held by the base-minded, is exercised by them without mercy, to punish whoever offends them, we might suppose that Latude brought his long agonies upon himself by the commission of some enormous crime. That he committed a fault is undeniable, and it was a fault of that sort which most disgusts high- spirited men, because it bears the stamp of meanness and fraud. It deserved a sharp reprimand, perhaps even a moderate chastisement; but no heart that was not as hard as the nether millstone, could have made it a pretext for the infliction of such lengthened misery as he was doomed to undergo. Latude, who was in his twenty-fifth year when his misfortunes began, was the son of the marquis de Latude, a military officer, and was born in Languedoc. He was intended for the engineer service, but the peace of Aix-la-Chapelle prevented him from being enrolled. The notorious marchioness de Pompadour, who united in herself the double demerit of being the royal harlot and procuress, was then in the zenith of her power, and was as much detested by the people as she was favoured by the sovereign. As Latude was one day sitting in the garden of the Tuileries, he heard two men vehemently inveighing against her ; and a thought struck him, that by turning this cir- cumstance to account, he might obtain her patronage. His plan was a clumsy one, and it was clumsily exe- cuted. He began by putting into the post-office a packet of harmless powder, directed to the marchioness; HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 385 he then waited on her, related the conversation which he had overheard, said that he had seen them put a packet into the post-office, and expressed his fears that it contained some extremely subtle poison. She offered him a purse of gold, but he refused it, and declared that he was only desirous of being rewarded by her protection. Suspicious of his purpose, she wished to see his handwriting; and, therefore, under pretence of intending to communicate with him, she asked for his address. He wrote it, and, unfortunately for him, he wrote it in the same hand in which he had directed the pretended poison. He was then graciously dis- missed. The sameness of the writing, and the result of the experiments which she ordered to be made on the contents of the packet, convinced her that the whole was a fraud. It is scarcely possible not to smile at the blundering folly of the youthful impostor; had he sent real poison, and disguised his handwriting, he would perhaps have succeeded. But this proved to be no laughing matter to the luckless Latude. The marchioness looked upon the trick as an unpardonable insult, and she was not slow in revenging it. In the course of a few days, while he was indulging in golden dreams, he was painfully awoke from them by the appearance of the officers of justice. They carried him to the Bastile, and there he was stripped, deprived of his money, jewels, and papers, clothed in wretched rags, and shut up in the Tower du Coin. On the following day, the 2nd of May, 1749, he was interrogated by M. Berry er, the lieutenant of police. Unlike many of his class, Ber- ryer was a man of feeling ; he promised to intercede for him with the marchioness, and, in the meanwhile, he endeavoured to make him as comfortable as a man could be who was robbed of his liberty. To make the time pass less heavily, he gave him a comrade, a Jew, a man of abilities, Abuzaglo by name, who was accused c c 386 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. of being a secret British agent. The two captives soon became friends ; Abuzaglo had hopes of speedy liberation through the influence of the prince of Conti, and he promised to obtain the exercise of that influence in behalf of his companion. Latude, on his part, in case of his being first released, bound himself to strain every nerve to rescue Abuzaglo. Ever on the listen to catch the conversation of the prisoners, the jailors appear to have obtained a know- ledge of the hopes and reciprocal engagements of the friends. When Latude had been four months at the Bastile, three turnkeys entered, and said that an order was come to set him free. Abuzaglo embraced him, and conjured him to remember his promise. But no sooner had the joyful Latude crossed the threshold of his prison, than he was told that he was only going to be removed to Yincennes. Abuzaglo was liberated shortly after ; but believing that Latude was free, and had broken his word to him, he ceased to take an interest in his fate. It is not wonderful that the health of Latude gave way under the pressure of grief and disappointment. M. Berryer came to console him, removed him to the most comfortable apartment in the castle, and allowed him to walk daily for two hours in the garden. But he did not conceal that the marchioness was inflexible, and in consequence of this, the captive, who felt a prophetic fear that he -was destined to perpetual impri- sonment, resolved to make an attempt to escape. Nearly nine months elapsed before he could find an opportunity to carry his plan into effect. The moment at length arrived. One of his fellow- prisoners, an eccle- siastic, was frequently visited by an abbe ; and this circumstance he made the basis of his project. To succeed, it was necessary for him to elude the vigilance of two turnkeys, who guarded him when he walked, and of four sentinels, who watched the outer doors, HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. 387 and this was no easy matter. Of the turnkeys, one often waited in the garden, while the other went to fetch the prisoner. Latude began by accustoming the second turnkey to see him hurry down stairs, and join the first in the garden. When the day came on which he was determined to take flight, he, as usual, passed rapidly down the stairs without exciting any suspicion, his keeper having no doubt that he should find him in the garden. At the bottom was a door, which he hastily bolted to pre- vent the second turnkey from giving the alarm to his companion. Successful thus far, he knocked at the gate which led out of the castle. It was opened, and, with an appearance of much eagerness, he asked for the abbe, and was answered that the sentinel had not seen him. " Our priest has been waiting for him in the garden more than two hours," exclaimed Latude ; " I have been running* after him in all direc-i tions to no purpose ; but, egad, he shall pay me for my running !" He was allowed to pass ; he repeated the same inquiry to the three other sentinels, received similar answers, and at last found himself beyond his prison walls. Avoiding as much as possible the high road, he traversed the fields and vineyards, and finally reached Paris, where he shut himself up in a retired lodging. In the first moments of recovered liberty, the feel- ings of Latude were those of unmixed pleasure. They were, however, soon alloyed by doubt, apprehension, and anxiety. What was he to do ? whither was he to fly ? To remain concealed was impossible, and,, even had it been possible, would have been only an~ other kind of captivity ; to fly from the kingdom was nearly, if not quite as difficult ; and, besides, he was reluctant to give up the gaieties of the capital and his prospects of advancement. In this dilemma he roman- tically determined to throw himself uponthe generosity c c 2 388 HISTORY OF THE BASTILE. of his persecutor.