The Historical Nights' Entertainment - Rafael Sabatini (chrysanthemum read aloud TXT) 📗
- Author: Rafael Sabatini
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did those from whom you had expectations cling obstinately and
inconsiderately to life, the witches by incantations and the use of
powders - in which arsenic was the dominant charm - could usually
put the matter right for you. Indeed, so wide and general was the
practice of poisoning become, that the authorities, lately aroused
to the fact by the sensational revelations of the Marchioness de
Brinvilliers, had set up in this year 1670 the tribunal known as
the Chambre Ardente to inquire into the matter, and to conduct
prosecutions.
La Voisin promised help to the Marchioness. She called in another
witch of horrible repute, named La Filastre, her coadjutor Lesage,
and two expert poisoners, Romani and Bertrand, who devised an
ingenious plot for the murder of the Duchess of Fontanges. They
were to visit her, Romani as a cloth merchant, and Bertrand as his
servant, to offer her their wares, including some Grenoble gloves,
which were the most beautiful gloves in the world and unfailingly
irresistible to ladies. These gloves they prepared in accordance
with certain magical recipes in such a way that the Duchess, after
wearing them, must die a lingering death in which there could be no
suspicion of poisoning.
The King was to be dealt with by means of a petition steeped in
similar powders, and should receive his death by taking it into his
hands. La Voisin herself was to go to Saint-Germain to present
this petition on Monday, March 13th, one of those days on which,
according to ancient custom, all comers were admitted to the royal
presence.
Thus they disposed. But Fate was already silently stalking La
Voisin.
It is to the fact that an obscure and vulgar woman had drunk one
glass of wine too many three months earlier that the King owed his
escape.
If you are interested in the almost grotesque disparity that can
lie between cause and effect, here is a subject for you. Three
months earlier a tailor named Vigoureux, whose wife secretly
practised magic, had entertained a few friends to dinner, amongst
whom was an intimate of his wife’s, named Marie Bosse. This Marie
Bosse it was who drank that excessive glass of wine which, drowning
prudence, led her to boast of the famous trade she drove as a
fortuneteller to the nobility, and even to hint of something
further.
“Another three poisonings,” she chuckled, “and I shall retire with
my fortune made!”
An attorney who was present pricked up his ears, bethought him of
the tales that were afloat, and gave information to the police.
The police set a trap for Marie Bosse, and she betrayed herself.
Later, under torture, she betrayed La Vigoureux. La Vigoureux
betrayed others, and these others again.
The arrest of Marie Bosse was like knocking down the first of a row
of ninepins, but none could have suspected that the last of these
stood in the royal apartments.
On the day before she was to repair to Saint-Germain, La Voisin,
betrayed in her turn, received a surprise visit from the police -
who, of course, had no knowledge of the regicide their action was
thwarting - and she was carried off to the Chatelet. Put to the
question, she revealed a great deal; but her terror of the horrible
punishment reserved for regicides prevented her to the day of her
death at the stake - in February of 1680 from saying a word of her
association with Madame de Montespan.
But there were others whom she betrayed under torture, and whose
arrest followed quickly upon her own, who had not her strength of
character. Among these were La Filastre and the magician Lesage.
When it was found that these two corroborated each other in the
incredible things which they related, the Chambre Ardente took
fright. La Reynie, who presided over it, laid the matter before
the King, and the King, horror-stricken by the discovery of the
revolting practices in which the mother of his children had been
engaged, suspended the sittings of the Chambre Ardente, and
commanded that no further proceedings should be taken against Lesage
and La Filastre, and none initiated against Romani, Bertrand, the
Abbe Guibourg, and the scores of other poisoners and magicians who
had been arrested, and who were acquainted with Madame de Montespan’s
unholy traffic.
But it was not out of any desire to spare Madame de Montespan that
the King proceeded in this manner; he was concerned only to spare
himself and his royal dignity. He feared above all things the
scandal and ridicule which must touch him as a result of publicity,
and because he feared it so much, he could impose no punishment
upon Madame de Montespan.
This he made known to her at the interview between them procured by
his minister Louvois, at about the time that the sittings of the
Chambre Ardente were suspended.
To this interview that proud, domineering woman came in dread, and
in tears and humility for once. The King’s bearing was cold and
hard. Cold and hard were the words in which he declared the extent
of his knowledge of her infamy, words which revealed the loathing
and disgust this knowledge brought him. If at first she was
terror-stricken, crushed under the indictment, yet she was never of
a temper to bear reproaches long. Under his scorn her anger kindled
and her humility was sloughed.
“What then?” she cried at last, eyes aflash through lingering tears.
“Is the blame all mine? If all this is true, it is no less true
that I was driven to it by my love for you and the despair to which
your heartlessness and infidelity reduced me. To you,” she
continued, gathering force at every word, “I sacrificed everything
- my honour, a noble husband who loved me, all that a woman prizes.
And what did you give me in exchange? Your cruel fickleness exposed
me to the low mockery of the lick-spittles of your Court. Do you
wonder that I went mad, and that in my madness I sacrificed what
shreds of self-respect you had left me? And now it seems I have
lost all but life. Take that, too, if it be your pleasure. Heaven
knows it has little value left for me! But remember that in
striking me you strike the mother of your children - the legitimate
children of France. Remember that!”
He remembered it. Indeed, he was never in danger of forgetting it;
for she might have added that he would be striking also at himself
and at that royal dignity which was his religion. And so that all
scandalous comment might be avoided she was actually allowed to
remain at Court, although no longer in her first-floor apartments;
and it was not until ten years later that she departed to withdraw
to the community of Saint Joseph.
But even in her disgrace this woman, secretly convicted among other
abominations of attempting to procure the poisoning of the King and
of her rival, enjoyed an annual pension of 1,200,000 livres; whilst
none dared proceed against those who shared her guilt - not even
the infamous Guibourg, the poisoners Romani and Bertrand, and La
Filastre - nor yet against some scores of associates of these, who
were known to live by sorcery and poisonings, and who might be
privy to the part played by Madame de Montespan in that horrible
night of magic at the Chateau de Villebousin.
The hot blast of revolution was needed to sweep France clean.
VII. THE NIGHT OF GEMS
THE “AFFAIRS” OF THE QUEEN’S NECKLACE
Under the stars of a tepid, scented night of August of 1784, Prince
Louis de Rohan, Cardinal of Strasbourg, Grand Almoner of France,
made his way with quickened pulses through the Park of Versailles
to a momentous assignation in the Grove of Venus.
This illustrious member of an illustrious House, that derived from
both the royal lines of Valois and Bourbon, was a man in the prime
of life, of a fine height, still retaining something of the willowy
slenderness that had been his in youth, and of a gentle, almost
womanly beauty of countenance.
In a grey cloak and a round, grey hat with gold cords, followed
closely by two shadowy attendant figures, he stepped briskly amain,
eager to open those gates across the path of his ambition, locked
against him hitherto by the very hands from which he now went to
receive the key.
He deserves your sympathy, this elegant Cardinal-Prince, who had been
the victim of the malice and schemings of the relentless Austrian
Empress since the days when he represented the King of France at the
Court of Vienna.
The state he had kept there had been more than royal and royal in
the dazzling French manner, which was perturbing to a woman of
Marie Therese’s solid German notions. His hunting-parties, his
supper-parties, the fetes he gave upon every occasion, the worldly
inventiveness, the sumptuousness and reckless extravagance that
made each of these affairs seem like a supplement to “The Arabian
Nights’ Entertainments,” the sybaritic luxury of his surroundings,
the incredible prodigality of his expenditure, all served profoundly
to scandalize and embitter the Empress.
That a priest in gay, secular clothes should hunt the stag on
horseback filled her with horror at his levity; that he should flirt
discreetly with the noble ladies of Vienna made her despair of his
morals; whilst his personal elegance and irresistible charm were
proofs to her of a profligacy that perverted the Court over which
she ruled.
She laboured for the extinction of his pernicious brilliance, and
intrigued for his recall. She made no attempt to conceal her
hostility, nor did she love him any the better because he met her
frigid haughtiness with an ironical urbanity that seemed ever to
put her in the wrong. And then one day he permitted his wit to be
bitingly imprudent.
“Marie Therese,” he wrote to D’Aiguillon, “holds in one hand a
handkerchief to receive her tears for the misfortunes of oppressed
Poland, and in the other a sword to continue its partition.”
To say that in this witticism lay one of the causes of the French
Revolution may seem at first glance an outrageous overstatement.
Yet it is certain that, but for that imprudent phrase, the need
would never have arisen that sent Rohan across the Park of Versailles
on that August night to an assignation that in the sequel was to
place a terrible weapon in the hands of the Revolutionary party.
D’Aiguillon had published the gibe. It had reached the ears of
Marie Antoinette, and from her it had travelled back to her mother
in Vienna. It aroused in the Empress a resentment and a bitterness
that did not rest until the splendid Cardinal-Prince was recalled
from his embassy. It did not rest even then. By the ridicule to
which the gibe exposed her - and if you know Marie Therese at all,
you can imagine what that meant - it provoked a hostility that was
indefatigably to labour against him.
The Cardinal was ambitious, he had confidence in his talents and in
the driving force of his mighty family, and he looked to become
another Richelieu or Mazarin, the first Minister of the Crown, the
empurpled ruler of France, the guiding power behind the throne. All
this he looked confidently to achieve; all this he might have
achieved but for the obstacle that Marie Therese’s resentment flung
across his path. The Empress saw to it that, through the person of
her daughter, her hatred should pursue him even into France.
Obedient ever to the iron will of her mother, sharing her mother’s
resentment, Marie Antoinette exerted all her influence to thwart
this Cardinal
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