.dt Autobiography of Miss Cornelia Knight, Vol II, by Ellis Cornelia Knight-A\
Project Gutenberg eBook
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AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF MISS KNIGHT.
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AUTOBIOGRAPHY|OF|MISS CORNELIA KNIGHT,|Vol II
.nf c
LADY COMPANION TO THE
PRINCESS CHARLOTTE OF WALES.
WITH EXTRACTS FROM HER JOURNALS AND ANECDOTE BOOKS.
IN TWO VOLUMES.
VOL. II.
LONDON:
W. H. ALLEN AND CO., 7, LEADENHALL STREET.
MDCCCLXI.
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CONTENTS TO VOL. II.
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CHAPTER I.
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Miss Knight’s Narrative of Events attending the Rupture of the\
Orange-Marriage—Dismissal of the Household of the Princess\
Charlotte—Letter to the Regent—Miss Knight’s Pension | #1:ch01#
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CHAPTER II.
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The Princess’s Birthday—Suspected Intrigues—Letter to the\
Queen—The Year 1815—Journal continued | #26:ch02#
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CHAPTER III.
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Preparations for War—The Queen’s Levee—Treatment of the\
Princess Charlotte—Napoleon and the Bourbons—Rumours\
from the Seat of War—The Battle of Waterloo | #52:ch03#
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CHAPTER IV.
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Rejoicings for Waterloo—The Marriage of the Duke of Cumberland—Prince\
Leopold—Marriage Rumours—Marriage of the\
Princess Charlotte—How it was brought about—Later Revelations—Character\
of the Princess Charlotte | #71:ch04#
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CHAPTER V.
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France revisited—Chantilly—Parisian Society—The Court of the Bourbons—The\
Prince de Condé—Marshal Marmont—The\
French Stage—Invitation from the Princess Charlotte | #92:ch05#
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CHAPTER VI.
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Return to England—Meeting with the Princess Charlotte—France\
under the Bourbons—Parisian Society | #111:ch06#
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CHAPTER VII.
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Society in Paris—Journey to Homburg—The Landgrave and the Landgravine—the\
Dowager Queen of Würtemberg—Christmas at Louisburg | #133:ch07#
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CHAPTER VIII.
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Departure from Louisburg—Paris—Coronation of Charles X.—London—The\
Princess Charlotte’s Monument—Anecdotes of\
Charles X.—Return to Germany | #148:ch08#
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CHAPTER IX.
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Paris and London—Death of the Queen-Dowager of Würtemberg—Homburg—The\
Landgrave and Landgravine—Life at a German\
Court—Return to Louisburg—Baden | #165:ch09#
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CHAPTER X.
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Genoa—The Pallavicini Family—Character of the Genoese—Return\
to England—The Royal Family at Brighton—London—Gloomy\
Retrospect.—Anecdotes | #183:ch10#
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CHAPTER XI.
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Anecdotes—Talleyrand—Charles Albert—Masséna—Ferdinand of Spain—Lord\
Wellesley—Alfieri—Charles X.—Death of Miss\
Knight | #202:ch11#
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EXTRACTS FROM MISS KNIGHT’S JOURNALS.
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Rome and Naples, 1781–1798.
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Consecration of a Catholic Bishop—The Grand-Duke Paul of\
Russia—Princess Dashkoff—Père Jacquier—Joseph II. of Austria—Gustavus\
of Sweden—Alfieri—The Countess of Albany—The\
Piozzis—General Acton—Arrival of Admiral Nelson | #214#
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Windsor, 1805—1812.
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Miss Knight’s Settlement at Windsor—Gaieties at Court—Lord\
St. Vincent—Rejoicings at Windsor—Death of Princess Amelia—State\
of the King’s Health—Princess Amelia’s Funeral—Progress\
of the King’s Malady–The Regency Act—Conduct of the Regent | #260#
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EXTRACTS FROM MISS KNIGHTS ANECDOTE BOOKS.
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James Boswell—Madame Piozzi—Lord Nelson—The Queen of\
Naples—Sir Thomas Troubridge—The Bronté Estate—Admiral\
Barrington—Cardinal de Bernis—Italian Anecdotes—The Princess\
Dashkoff—Louis Philippe—The Emperor Joseph II.—Miss\
Knight’s last Records—Her Religious Faith | #285#
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APPENDIX.
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Exclusion of the Princess of Wales from the Queen’s Drawing-Room | #343#
Death of the Princess Charlotte | #349#
Footnotes | #351#
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AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF MISS KNIGHT.
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CHAPTER I.
.sp 1
.pm ch-hd-start
MISS KNIGHT’S NARRATIVE OF EVENTS ATTENDING THE RUPTURE OF THE
ORANGE-MARRIAGE—DISMISSAL OF THE HOUSEHOLD OF THE PRINCESS
CHARLOTTE—LETTER TO THE REGENT—MISS KNIGHT’S PENSION.
.pm ch-hd-end
[The following additional narrative of the transactions
related at the close of the first volume, was
drawn up by Miss Knight for the perusal of a female
friend:]
Princess Charlotte having had a long discussion
with respect to residence in Holland, of which all
the papers were preserved by her Royal Highness,
it was at length granted by the Regent’s confidential
servants that an article should be inserted in the
marriage contract to prevent her being taken or
kept out of England against her own consent and
that of the Regent—at least, this was the meaning
of the words.
The Prince of Orange had always appeared to
prefer an establishment in England to one in Holland,
and had always said that when his father’s
// 010.png
.pn +1
consent to the insertion of such an article came, he
would look out for a house, and take one, in case
one was not provided by Government.
This consent came, and the article was prepared;
but the Regent wished Princess Charlotte even then
to waive it as a compliment to the House of Orange,
but her Royal Highness persisted in claiming the
article. Nearly a fortnight passed after everything
appeared to be arranged, and her Royal Highness,
seeing the Prince of Orange daily in presence of
Miss Knight, often asked him what preparations
were making with respect to a house, establishment,
&c. He always answered that nothing had
been said to him, appeared to be ignorant, and did
not then talk of taking a house himself.
While the Prince of Orange was at Oxford, a
letter came from one of Princess Charlotte’s aunts,
who is very intimate with the Regent, to say that
she understood he meant, as soon as the Emperor
and King of Prussia were gone, to write over for
the Oranges and have the marriage celebrated as
soon as possible. This alarmed Princess Charlotte,
and she said she resolved to enter into a clear explanation
with the young Prince to avoid disputes
afterwards.
The morning after he returned from Oxford this
explanation took place, and it appeared evident to
Miss K., who was present, that they thought it
could not go on; that the duties of the Prince of
// 011.png
.pn +1
Orange called him to Holland, and Princess Charlotte’s
to remain in England, and that neither of
them chose to give way; that in that respect the
affair stood nearly as at the setting out in December,
and that no preparations were made for a residence in
England. They, however, parted, agreeing to think
it over till night, when Princess Charlotte promised
to write to the Prince of Orange. No letter came
from him during this interval, and about eleven at
night her Royal Highness wrote him a letter breaking
off the marriage, and desiring he would inform
the Regent of it. This letter went on Thursday (I
think the 16th of June); all Friday no answer. On
Saturday her Royal Highness received a note from
a friend who had been dancing at a ball the night
before with the Prince of Orange, and who said he
had told her he had not informed the Regent of the
breaking off the marriage, and did not intend to
inform him. Princess Charlotte immediately wrote
an affectionate and respectful letter to her father
telling him this circumstance, and her horror at the
delay. About three came the answer from the
Prince of Orange, which was literally as follows,
her Royal Highness having allowed me to copy it:
.pm letter-start
.rj
8, Clifford-street, June 18, 1814.
I found the night before last your letter, and have lost
no time to acquaint my family with its contents, but I cannot
comply with your wish by doing the same with regard
to the Regent, finding it much more natural that you should
// 012.png
.pn +1
do it yourself; and it is, besides, much too delicate a matter
for me to say anything to him on the subject. Hoping that
you shall never feel any cause to repent of the step you
have taken, I remain,
.ti +8
Yours sincerely,
.ti +6
(Signed) William,
.ti +10
Hereditary Prince of Orange.
.pm letter-end
Her Royal Highness sent the original of this
letter to the Regent, with the copy of a note she
ordered Miss Knight to write that day, after the
receipt of his letter to the Prince of Orange, to ask
for her portrait and letters. The portrait and some
of the letters were a little while after sent back to
Miss Knight by the Prince’s aide-de-camp, and the
packet of letters sealed by the same.
Some time elapsed, and no further notice was
taken; no communication from Carlton House
(except a short note on the 18th from the Prince to
Princess Charlotte expressing his concern), no visit
from any of the family. The Duchess of Leeds sent
in her resignation.
In the beginning of July the Bishop of Salisbury
had a conference with Princess Charlotte, which she
mentioned to Miss Knight, who was not present at
it. Her Royal Highness said it was to induce her
to write a submissive letter to the Regent expressing
her concern for having offended him, and
holding out the hope that in three or four months
she might be induced to renew the treaty with the
Prince of Orange. Her Royal Highness added, that
// 013.png
.pn +1
the Bishop had said, if she did not write this letter,
arrangements very disagreeable to herself would
take place.
Miss Knight wrote to the Bishop desiring to know
what these arrangements were, saying, as she wished
nothing more than a reconciliation between Princess
Charlotte and her father, she begged to know what
arguments she might use to enforce the step he
dictated, only observing she did not flatter him with
a hope that Princess Charlotte would marry the
Prince of Orange, or any one who had a right to
sovereignty.
Of the Bishop’s answer the following is an extract:
[N.B.—The Bishop was at the time in the habit
of seeing the Chancellor, and, I believe, also Lord
Liverpool.]
“Having heard from three different quarters that
the Regent was most severely wounded and deeply
afflicted by his daughter’s conduct, and that an
arrangement was making for the Princess Charlotte
which might not be according to her wishes; having
also a hint given to me that probably a dutiful, respectful,
and affectionate letter from the daughter
to the father might soften the Prince’s mind, and
tend to lessen the rigour of any measure he might
have in contemplation, I felt it incumbent on me
to state all this to the Princess, and I did most
strenuously recommend to her Royal Highness to
// 014.png
.pn +1
write such a letter. I did also go further, and
ventured to tell her, that as the intended match
with the Prince of Orange had been so highly acceptable,
and so much desired by the whole nation,
so the breaking it off had been the cause of universal
regret and displeasure. I told her, also, that there
was still a sanguine hope entertained that her Royal
Highness might see her objections in a different
point of view, and that when the affairs of Holland
were completely settled, and its Prince had his time
more at his own command, that then her Royal
Highness might be induced to change her opinion,
and give herself to the wishes of her father and her
country.
“With respect to the arrangement, which I
understand is at this time in contemplation, I know
nothing but that an arrangement is making,” &c. &c.
About this time Baillie, Clive, and Keate had
given a paper expressing their advice that her
Royal Highness should go to the sea-side for two
or three months in the autumn. Princess Charlotte
therefore wrote to request this favour of her father,
and at the same time expressed the most poignant
grief for his displeasure, and the most anxious wish
to be restored to his favour. This letter was sent
on the 9th. Various rumours in the mean while
reached Warwick House of new ladies, amongst
whom Lady Ilchester and Mrs. Campbell, being appointed,
of confinement at Carlton House, &c. &c.
// 015.png
.pn +1
The Prince of Saxe-Coburg had never been but
once at Warwick House, where he stayed about
half an hour or three-quarters, in presence of the
Duchess of Leeds, Miss K., and Miss Mercer
Elphinstone. Princess Charlotte had received him
civilly, but rather coldly. He had sometimes rode
near her carriage; but her Royal Highness in general
avoided speaking to him, and only once exchanged
a few words in the Park. She never expressed
the slightest partiality for him, but, on the
contrary, her displeasure, when one of her most
intimate friends (Miss M. E.) talked of him. She
often expressed her astonishment that he should
know so much of her affairs as her friend said he
did, for that he had talked of Miss K. being sent
away, and of a corner being fitted up at Carlton
House for her Royal Highness.
About the same time it was reported that this
Prince saw the Princess Charlotte often, and had
drunk tea at Warwick House; himself told the
friend of Princess Charlotte that he had been
severely lectured by the Regent on the subject.
These reports made Miss K. uneasy, and she mentioned
them as false to Lady Bathurst. She also
wrote a letter to contradict them, which she was
about to send to the Regent, when on Monday, the
11th, the Bishop came in the evening, and said he
was to be in attendance to go to Carlton House,
and that something was to be done. Her Royal
// 016.png
.pn +1
Highness Princess Charlotte and Miss K. talked to
him, and said everything they could to induce him
to mitigate the anger of the Regent, and to explain
any circumstances which had been misrepresented.
He went, and was long closeted with the Regent or
his Ministers. At length he came, and said the
communication was to be made at five, but he was
not at liberty to mention what. Soon after a message
came from the Regent to order her Royal
Highness and Miss K. to go over. Princess Charlotte
was so wretched and so ill that she could not go.
Miss K. went and made her apology, taking this
opportunity to confute the scandal respecting the
Prince of Saxe-Coburg, when the Regent said that
was perfectly cleared up, that the young man was
honourable, and had written him a letter explaining
everything. He then ordered that Princess
Charlotte should come the next day if she was well
enough, or Dr. Baillie to say she could not.
The following day, 12th of July, her Royal
Highness wrote a note to the Regent, saying she
was so distressed and unwell, that she begged he
would excuse her coming, but, as she wished much
to see him, that he would come to her.
The Regent sent his love, and said he would
come after the levee. He came about six, attended
by the Bishop, whom he left below, and came into
the drawing-room, desiring Miss Knight to leave
him alone with Princess Charlotte. He was shut
// 017.png
.pn +1
up with her for about three-quarters of an hour,
after which the Bishop was called up, and remained
with them about a quarter more. The door then
opened, and Princess Charlotte came out in an
agony of grief, telling Miss Knight, who followed
her into her dressing-room, that “all was over; she
was to be dismissed, the servants to be turned off,
the new ladies in possession of the house, herself to
go over to Carlton House, or, if not well enough
that day, the next (and in the mean while the Regent
and the ladies to sleep in the house) and to be
shut up for five days at Carlton House, after which
to be taken to Cranbourne Lodge, and remain there
for some time without seeing anybody but the
Queen once a week.” Miss Knight begged she
would compose herself, and go over quietly. She
fell on her knees, and, in the greatest agitation, exclaimed,
“God Almighty grant me patience!”
Miss Knight, she said, must go immediately to the
Regent; which she did, and he communicated to
her the same intentions Princess Charlotte had just
related, adding that he was sorry to put a lady to inconvenience,
but that he wanted her room that night.
Miss Knight begged to know in what she had offended,
but the Regent answered he made no complaints,
and should make none. He, however, said
he believed many things were done in the house
without her knowledge, which she denied. When
she came out, to her great dismay Princess Charlotte
// 018.png
.pn +1
had disappeared. She searched for her everywhere,
and at length Miss Mercer (who was changing
her dress in Princess Charlotte’s bedroom adjoining)
came and begged to see the Regent. She
told him her suspicions that Princess Charlotte
might be gone to her mother, and offered to go
with the Bishop to persuade her to come back.
Miss Knight went afterwards, and then returned
to Carlton House and asked to see the Regent, but
was shown into a room where the Chancellor and
Lord Ellenborough were.
.tb
.pm letter-start
You will feel that all I have written is in great
measure confidential, though the strictest truth.
The letter of the Prince of Orange, in particular, I
would not wish to make any improper use of; but
happening to have it, I copied it, as a proof of
what I had asserted. I join a copy of my letter to
the Prince Regent, which has not been answered.
It would have been a great blessing if we had
been living at Carlton House for the last year and
a half. I wished nothing so much as that the Regent
and his daughter should be much together,
which, alas! was not the case, for his health or
business prevented his coming to Warwick House,
where he was only four times since the 10th of
December, and Princess Charlotte was only sent
for when the Queen and Princesses were in town;
besides, nothing was communicated to her until it
was settled. In that it was not like one family.
// 019.png
.pn +1
I know she would have been most happy to
have been on more intimate terms with her father,
and he always assured me of his affection for her.
It seemed as if some malignant power kept them
asunder, when their real happiness and interest demanded
their having confidence in each other.
I mean no complaint against the Regent. I
was much hurt when he dismissed me, and felt
angry; for which reason I made apologies in my
letter, though I am not conscious of having said or
done anything to offend him. I had no authority
to keep away visitors he did not like, and in one
instance, when he gave an absolute command, the
lady never came again. The few who did come
were certainly all women of character.
I hear it now reported that Princess Charlotte
has been sometimes seen alone in her carriage,
which is a decided falsehood.
I know, my dear Miss L., I can trust your discretion;
and the high opinion my old friend, Lord
St. Vincent, has of Lord Ellenborough, assures me
I may trust to his.
You will have the goodness to return me these
papers at your leisure. I called yesterday, but did
not find you at home. Excuse all this trouble, and
believe me,
.ti +8
My dear Miss L.,
.ti +12
Very sincerely yours,
.ti +16
E. C. Knight.
Friday, 5th August, 1814.
// 020.png
.pm letter-end
.tb
.pn +1
The paragraphs which appeared on this occasion
in all the Government papers, and the reports circulated,
were most injurious to Princess Charlotte and
to me. I therefore thought it my duty to remain
in town to hear and to contradict all this nonsense.
.nf c
MISS KNIGHT TO THE RIGHT REV. BISHOP OF SALISBURY.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
.rj
9, Little Stanhope-street, May Fair.
My dear Lord,—Have the goodness to look over the
paragraph I have marked in to-day’s Morning Post.[#] It
evidently alludes to yourself and to me, as I was the only
person living in Warwick House, and the only one dismissed.
I am sure you will not hesitate to contradict it as
far as this goes, and trust also that you will state whether
the Prince Regent did not repeatedly say that he had no
complaint to make of me, and that he would make none.
I must request you also, in my own vindication, to state
whether you discovered me to be a person “possessing pernicious
sentiments, alike hostile to the peace of the daughter,
the father, and the country.” It is impossible for me not
to anticipate your contradiction of this base insinuation,
when I remember the assurances I received from your Lordship,
so late as Monday last, that you had zealously, though
ineffectually, endeavoured to change his Royal Highness
the Prince Regent’s resolution of removing me from my
attendance on Princess Charlotte.
.ti +8
Believe me, my dear Lord,
.ti +12
Your faithful, humble servant,
.ti +16
E. C. Knight.
.pm letter-end
.pm fn-start // A
“Aware of this unnatural rebellion,
the Royal parent, as might be expected,
became anxious to ascertain
the description of persons by whom his
daughter was immediately surrounded,
and by means of one of the most pious
and virtuous characters of the land, it
was soon discovered that many of her
associates were persons possessing pernicious
sentiments alike hostile to the
peace of the daughter, the father, and
the country. Under these circumstances
there was but one safe or advisable
course to pursue; the determination
was prompt, and the whole
of the obnoxious associates were dismissed
by order of the Regent from
Warwick House.”—Morning Post, July
14, 1814.
.pm fn-end
// 021.png
.pn +1
A few days afterwards Princess Charlotte went to
Cranbourne Lodge; the Princess of Wales asked
permission to visit her; but was answered that her
daughter should pass a day with her to take leave
of her before she went to Worthing.
This took place;[#] and Princess Charlotte, as
I heard, went to Connaught-place, attended by
Lady Ilchester, and Lady Rosslyn, and General
Garth, who was also appointed to be of her suite.
Before they parted, the Princess of Wales asked
Princess Charlotte whether there was any chance
of her renewing the treaty of marriage with the
Prince of Orange, and she positively declared she
never would. The Bishop, Dr. Short, Mr. S——, and
Mr. K—— attended as usual; had houses at
Windsor, and went to Cranbourne Lodge in the
evening.
.pm fn-start // A
“The Princess Charlotte came to
town on Saturday, attended by her
ladies-in-waiting, in the Prince Regent’s
open carriage and four, with
three of the Prince Regent’s footmen
as outriders, to visit the Princess of
Wales at Connaught House, and after
dinner, her Royal Highness returned to
Cranbourne Lodge. This visit was to
take leave previous to the Princess of
Wales leaving town for Worthing,
where her Royal Highness has taken
a house. It is said that the Princess
of Wales does not return to London
from thence, but proceeds from that
place to leave England for a short time
to visit her native country. The Princess
Charlotte’s visit to Connaught
House was occasioned by a message
of the Princess of Wales to the Minister,
stating that she intended to go to
Cranbourne Lodge to see her daughter,
and expected to be admitted. The
answer was, that the Princess Charlotte
would be allowed to come to Connaught
House on Saturday. Miss
Mercer was allowed to go to Cranbourne
Lodge to visit the Princess
Charlotte on Sunday, and to remain
with her Royal Highness till to-morrow.”—Morning
Chronicle, July 26,
1814.
“Sompting Abbey, Sussex. July
29, 1814.... I saw Princess Charlotte
on Saturday, two days before I
set out; she seems much more calm
and resigned to her prison at Cranbourne
Lodge than I expected. She
is to go afterwards to the sea-side.
Warwick House is to be demolished,
and a new wing built to Carlton
House; and the Regent is to remove
to the Duke of Cumberland’s apartments
in St. James’s Palace.”—Extract
of Letter from Princess of Wales,
given in Lady Campbell’s Diary, vol. i.
.pm fn-end
// 022.png
.pn +1
The Princess of Wales invited me to dine with
her before she left town, which I respectfully declined,
but called to take leave. She seemed agitated,
had just had leeches applied to her temples, and
asked me whether the report of Princess Charlotte
having gone out in the carriage alone were true. I
contradicted it positively, wondering how such a
silly report could have gained ground for a moment.
I then read her the following letter, which I had
just written to the Prince in justification of Princess
Charlotte and myself:
.nf c
MISS KNIGHT TO THE PRINCE REGENT.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
Sir,—As a subject, and one who had the honour of being
admitted into your Royal Highness’s family, I consider it a
sacred duty to express the grief I feel for having incurred
your displeasure.
Your Royal Highness will do me the justice to allow that
I was actuated by no ambitious views, but by loyalty and
attachment, when I accepted the employment which has
been the source of my degradation. I have no near connections
left to plead my cause. My sole protection must
be derived from the honourable feelings of your Royal
Highness. I am not disposed to seek it from the influence
of patronage, and still less from the clamours of faction.
Your Royal Highness was graciously pleased to promise
me, through Lord Moira, that you would support me in
every difficulty, and never give me up. These claims (from
accusations to me unknown) your Royal Highness may
think I have forfeited. I will therefore only venture to
enforce them so far as to solicit your attention to a few
words in my justification. Indeed, I need not enforce them.
As a good and just Prince, your Royal Highness will listen
// 023.png
.pn +1
to the vindication of an individual who appeals to no other
tribunal.
Anxious as I was to evince my dutiful attachment to
your Royal Highness and to Princess Charlotte, permit me
to say that I could not have accepted the employment offered
me if I could have foreseen that I was to be the constant
and sole inmate of Warwick House. I concluded that the
responsibility must almost wholly devolve on the lady who
was appointed governess, and that my intended colleague
and myself as “Ladies Companions to Princess Charlotte,”
the title specified when I came into office, were only to
share the duty of attending on her Royal Highness, and to
cultivate what was ever my most anxious wish—the greatest
harmony between her Royal Highness and every branch of
the Royal Family.
No colleague was appointed, and circumstances, no doubt
unforeseen by your Royal Highness, rendered my situation
very different from what I had expected, but they could
not change the nature of my employment, nor invest me
with a character, against which your Royal Highness will
recollect my remonstrating when the papers erroneously
styled me sub-governess.
All this gave me pain, but did not alter my sentiments.
I felt the delicacy of my situation, and I devoted myself
entirely to the duties which had fallen to my lot. I gave up
all society, and nearly all intercourse with my friends. I
can solemnly declare that I never left Warwick House but
to attend her Royal Highness, unless the Duchess of Leeds
was there, and even then so rarely, that I do not believe I
made six visits in the space of a year and a half.
For many weeks last winter a violent cough and almost
constant fever could not induce me to remain one day in
my room. I never went to rest until Princess Charlotte
had retired to her chamber, and I always rose before her
Royal Highness, availing myself of this short interval to see
any one with whom I had business.
// 024.png
.pn +1
Princess Charlotte never went out unattended by the
Duchess of Leeds or myself (a circumstance so obvious that
I should not mention it, if I had not accidentally heard that
the contrary had been reported). The carriage was never
ordered without my knowledge, and visitors were announced
to the Duchess or to me.
No gentlemen were in the habit of visiting her Royal
Highness, nor was she left alone, or expressed a wish to that
effect, even with her masters.
If I have erred, it has been against my intention, and
without my knowledge. I have no acquaintance, nor have
I had any communication with persons of seditious principles,
improper conduct, or sentiments hostile to your Royal
Highness. I trusted the whole tenor of my life would have
exempted me from the suspicion. I can only say that I have
done my duty to the best of my power, and I can safely aver
that, during my attendance on Princess Charlotte, not only
her Royal Highness’s conduct, in the usual sense of the
word, has been blameless, but her time usefully employed in
the cultivation of her talents.
My devoted attachment to Princess Charlotte will not be
considered as a crime by your Royal Highness, who was
generously pleased, on account of that very attachment, and
of her condescension in wishing it, to place me about her;
but after it had been the pleasure of your Royal Highness
to dismiss me, I could not wish Princess Charlotte to urge
my stay. God forbid that I should become a source of
controversy between your Royal Highness and Princess
Charlotte! May you rather be united and happy when I
am forgotten!
I only beg for the restoration of your Royal Highness’s
favour, which may put an end to the injurious suspicions so
sudden a dismissal may have raised against me; and if,
when struck to the heart by the accumulated anguish of
sustaining the weight of your Royal Highness’s displeasure,
the pang of parting from my beloved mistress, and the
// 025.png
.pn +1
obloquy of being discarded from her service, any expression
may have escaped me which might offend your Royal
Highness, or appear inconsistent with my dutiful and loyal
attachment, I humbly entreat your Royal Highness’s forgiveness.
.nf c
I am, Sir,
With the most profound respect,
Your Royal Highness’s most dutiful servant,
.nf-
.rj
C. E. Knight.
July 24, 1814.
.pm letter-end
Lady C. Lindsay told me that Mr. Brougham
said, when he was obliged to tell Princess Charlotte
that she could not in law refuse going to her father,
he was so shocked at the manner in which she received
this account, that it appeared to him like
pronouncing sentence of death on a criminal. The
Princess of Wales asked me whether Princess
Charlotte was attached to any one of the foreign
Princes who had been in England, for that if she
was, she (the Princess of Wales) would move
heaven and earth to get him for her. I answered
that I believed her Royal Highness’s principal wish
was to be left quiet on subjects of that nature, at
least for many months; and the Princess said that
was all she could get out of Princess Charlotte.
Mr. Canning was announced, and ordered to be
shown up-stairs. I took my leave. It is certain
that on the fatal evening in Connaught-place it
struck me that the Princess of Wales was more
anxious for the removal of Princess Charlotte out
of her house than the Prince was to get her into
// 026.png
.pn +1
his. She departed next day for Worthing.[#] Soon
afterwards we heard that she had asked and obtained
leave for going abroad; and it was said Mr. Canning
had persuaded her. It is certain that she had for
several months formed the plan, which Princess
Charlotte had opposed in the most urgent and respectful
manner.
.pm fn-start // A
“The Princess of Wales arrived
at her house near Worthing on Tuesday
night, and next evening she walked to
Worthing, accompanied by her lady-in-waiting
and attendants. Chairs
were immediately placed on the beach,
where her Royal Highness sat two
hours. The moonbeams danced on the
waves, and the pleasure-boats glided
at her feet, forming a most delightful
scene. The company is now select and
numerous, and the packet which regularly
sails to and from Dieppe is a
great convenience, as it enables parties
to drink champagne at Worthing
in the evening, and old port on the
French coast the next morning.”—Morning
Chronicle, August 3, 1814.
.pm fn-end
I sent my letter to the Prince, and heard it was
delivered, but received no answer. I had, during
our last interview, asked his leave to visit Princess
Charlotte, which he had refused, saying she was to
receive no visits. I then had asked permission to
write to her, and his answer was, “better not at
present.”
I went to Twickenham, where I passed a few
weeks with Lord and Lady Aylesbury. Time passed,
and Princess Charlotte remained at Cranbourne
Lodge till the Morning Chronicle[#] published the
medical report given in July, recommending her
going to the sea. This occasioned great anger, and
Baillie was ordered to inquire, in a manner the
// 027.png
.pn +1
most inquisitorial, who had obtained and caused
this to be published. Amongst the rest I was
questioned by letter, and answered that the copy I
possessed I gave to the Regent on the 12th of July,
and had no means of discovering how it got into
the hands of the editor of a newspaper.
.pm fn-start // B
“We understand that Princess
Charlotte is going this day to Cranbourne
Lodge, from whence, we trust,
she will be permitted to repair to the
sea-coast, bathing having been recommended
by three eminent professional
men as indispensably necessary for her
general health, as well as for a local
affection in the knee. Health and
peace be with her!”—Morning Chronicle,
August 18, 1814.
.pm fn-end
.nf c
DR. BAILLIE TO MISS KNIGHT.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
Dear Madam,—I am very sorry to give you any trouble
at present, but I am commanded by high authority to ask
you the following questions:
Do you know by what individual the medical opinion recommending
a residence on the sea-coast this autumn to
Princess Charlotte was put into the hands of Mr. Perry, the
editor of the Morning Chronicle?
Do you know whether the original opinion, which was at
one time mislaid or lost, was ever recovered, and, in that
case, what became of it?
I request that you will be so good as to send me an
answer to these two questions as early as you can, directed
to me at Sunning Hill, Berks.
.nf c
I remain, Madam,
Your most obedient humble servant,
.nf-
.rj
M. Baillie.
Sunning Hill, Berks, Sept. 1, 1814.
.pm letter-end
.tb
.nf c
MISS KNIGHT TO DR. BAILLIE.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
.rj
Lord Aylesbury’s, Twickenham, Sept. 3, 1814.
Dear Sir,—No apology is necessary for the questions
you ask, as I am happy at all times to obey the commands
referred to in your letter, which reached me last night after
post time.
I neither know nor can discover through what channel
// 028.png
.pn +1
the editor of a newspaper obtained a copy of the medical
opinion recommending the sea-side to her Royal Highness
the Princess Charlotte.
That which was in my possession I delivered to the
Prince Regent on Tuesday, the 12th of July.
This is all the information I can give on the subject, and
no one could be more surprised than myself when I heard
it had found its way into the Morning Chronicle.
.ti +8
Believe me, dear Sir,
.ti +12
Sincerely yours,
.ti +16
E. C. Knight.
.pm letter-end
However, Princess Charlotte was sent to Weymouth,[#]
and the air was of great use to her general
health as well as to her knee. She formed an acquaintance
with the Lady Grenvilles, daughters of
Lord Warwick, and was allowed to see Lord and
Lady Ashbrook,[#] who went there on her account,
though on pretence of a tour. She was more
comfortable there than she had been at Cranbourne
Lodge, to which place she did not return
until the winter was advanced; but since she has
been there the family, and the Queen in particular,
have been more kind to her than they ever before
were.
.pm fn-start // A
“The removal of the Princess
Charlotte from Cranbourne Lodge to
the King’s house at Weymouth is expected
to take place this day or to-morrow.
Her Royal Highness will be
accompanied by the Countesses of Ilchester
and Rosslyn, the Misses Coutts
(Coates), Mrs. Campbell, General
Garth, Major Price,” &c.—Morning
Chronicle, August 24.
The names of General Garth and
Major Price will be familiar to the
readers of Madame D’Arblay’s Diary,
with whom the Major was an especial
favourite.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // B
The fourth Viscount Ashbrook.
Lady Ashbrook, his second wife, was
sister of the late Lord Metcalfe, and
daughter of Sir Theophilus Metcalfe,
Bart.
.pm fn-end
I have since passed much of my time at Rochetts,
// 029.png
.pn +1
Lord St. Vincent’s, who is as much alive to all this
at eighty as if he were only thirty-five.
When I found no payment of salary was made
me in October, I wrote to Lord Liverpool, and the
Prince ordered 300l. a year should be paid me from
the Civil List as a compensation for having left the
Queen’s service to attend on Princess Charlotte. To
the servants, wages and board wages have been
granted.
.tb
.nf c
[The following is the correspondence referred to:]
MISS KNIGHT TO LORD LIVERPOOL.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
My Lord,—When, by the special desire of the Prince
Regent, I left her Majesty’s service for that of Princess
Charlotte, his Royal Highness was graciously pleased to
promise (through the medium of the Earl of Moira) that I
should never be a sufferer by the change.
I therefore take the liberty of requesting that your Lordship
will lay before the Prince my humble petition for the
continuation of my salary; and I am so fully convinced of
the humanity, liberality, and justice of his Royal Highness,
that I am confident he will not refuse me a provision, which
I really would not claim were it not essential to my subsistence
in the station of life which Providence has assigned
me.
.nf c
I have the honour to be,
My Lord,
Your Lordship’s obedient servant,
.nf-
.rj
E. C. Knight.
.pm letter-end
.tb
.nf c
LORD LIVERPOOL TO MISS KNIGHT.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
Lord Liverpool presents his compliments to Miss Knight,
and begs to acknowledge the receipt of her letter to him of
// 030.png
.pn +1
yesterday’s date. Lord Liverpool will not fail to lay it
before the Prince Regent when his Royal Highness returns
to town.
Fife House, November 1, 1814.
.pm letter-end
.tb
.nf c
MISS KNIGHT TO LORD ST. VINCENT.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
.rj
Saturday, December 3.
My dear Lord,—I am just returned from Fife House,
whither I went by appointment at twelve. I said that my
first motive was to thank his Lordship for his obliging attention
to my request in laying my letter before the Prince
Regent, and my next to show him a letter from Lord Moira,
which I had preserved, as, although it contained no specific
promises, it implied much. He read it attentively, and I
then showed him that from Sir H. Halford, with the intention
of giving me the rank of Honourable, and the certainty
of my remaining in the family, &c. He read that also attentively.
I added that I had several letters from the
Princesses to the same effect, if not still more explicit, but
that I considered them as sacred. He was silent for a little
while, and then said the Prince had directed that what I
had from the Queen should be given to me; that he had
laid my letters before his Royal Highness, and had no
further power. I answered that I should not dispute with
my Sovereign, nor refuse whatever he chose to give me, but
that it was not a compensation for what I left, as, besides
the salary, I had apartments and other advantages adequate
at least to the 500l. I received at Warwick House. I subjoined
that I had hoped his Royal Highness would have
continued my salary, as, when he dismissed me, he said he
did not complain of anything; since which, however, I had
written him a letter in my justification, which, not being
answered, I concluded there was no complaint to make.
Lord L. bowed assent. I then said I neither wished to
trouble his Lordship nor to refuse the pension, but was
anxious to put him in the possession of facts. He said the
// 031.png
.pn +1
pension was clear of all expenses but the property tax, and
inquired what was the time of my last payment of salary.
I said the 5th of July, and that I was dismissed on the 12th.
He could not exactly tell, he said, when the pension might
begin, as it depended on what money was in the Exchequer.
I rose to wish him a good morning. He asked if I had a
carriage, and I hoped Lady Liverpool was well. So we
parted.
I am glad I saw him, as I think my visit has answered
two purposes; one, to solicit accusation, or at least to prove
to him, as I had before done to the Chancellor and Lord
Ellenborough, that I had urged the Prince Regent to make
complaints, if any were to be made, and none were; secondly,
that I have made known, though respectfully, to the Prince
Regent my dissatisfaction as to what is called remuneration
or compensation, which leaves my claim open for future
times if I live to want an addition to my income.
Pray tell Miss Brenton that I have called in Bryanstone-street,
and saw Lady Brenton, but Sir Jahleel was in his
bed. Many thanks for your Lordship’s letter, and the
enclosure from Lady Jane Loftus, who has at length given
me her Dublin direction. I saw Prince Castelcicala this
morning; he augurs well of Naples.
.ti +12
Ever, my dear Lord,
.ti +8
Your much obliged and affectionate,
.rj
E. C. Knight.
.pm letter-end
.tb
.nf c
MISS KNIGHT TO LORD LIVERPOOL.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
Miss Knight presents her compliments and thanks to
Lord Liverpool for his obliging notes. She is just returned
to town, and requests his Lordship will allow her to see him
for a few minutes at any time he will have the goodness to
appoint for her calling.
9, Little Stanhope-street, May Fair,
.in 4
Thursday, Dec. 1, 1814.
.pm letter-end
// 032.png
.pn +1
.tb
.nf c
LORD LIVERPOOL TO MISS KNIGHT.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
Lord Liverpool presents his compliments to Miss Knight,
and will be glad to receive her at twelve o’clock to-morrow.
Fife House, Friday, December 2.
.pm letter-end
.tb
.nf c
MR. WILLIMOTT TO MISS KNIGHT.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
.rj
Fife House, December 9, 1814.
My dear Madam,—Lord Liverpool has desired me to
inquire whether you would wish your pension warrant to be
made out in the name of two trustees, or merely in your own
name; and also whether you would like to have the following
words inserted—viz. “for her sole and separate use.”
As soon as you can favour me with an answer to the
above queries, Lord Liverpool will direct the warrant to be
prepared.
.ti +8
I have the honour to be,
.ti +12
My dear Madam,
.ti +16
Your sincere humble servant,
.rj
R. Willimott.
.pm letter-end
.tb
.nf c
MISS KNIGHT TO MR. WILLIMOTT.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
.rj 2
9, Little Stanhope-street, May Fair,
Monday, Dec. 12, 1814.
Dear Sir,—I beg you will return my best thanks to
Lord Liverpool for his very obliging attention as to the
mode in which the warrant for my pension should be made
out. Indeed, I am fully sensible of his Lordship’s readiness
to oblige throughout the whole, and I am convinced that
after the explanation I had with him, if he can obtain for
me the whole of my salary (500l. a year) he will, although
I am too dutifully attached to the Prince Regent to murmur
at whatever he thinks proper to grant.
I do not see any necessity for trustees, or even for the
// 033.png
.pn +1
insertion “sole and separate use,” though the latter may be
more regular.
.ti +8
Believe me, dear Sir,
.ti +12
Very sincerely yours,
.rj
E. C. Knight.
.pm letter-end
.tb
.nf c
LORD ST. VINCENT TO MISS KNIGHT.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
My dear Madam,—Thanks for the relation of what
passed at the Fife House interview, which was most ably
and honestly conducted on your part, and unless the specific
sum of 300l. per annum was expressed by the Regent, Lord
L. ought to, and I hope will, bring the case again before his
Royal Highness. I return your letter because the statement
it contains, taken down the moment of your return home,
may be profitably referred to on some future occasion.
My cough is so incessant I can only add how truly I am
.ti +8
Your affectionate,
.ti +12
St. Vincent.
Rochetts, December 4, 1814.
I rejoice in every event which contributes to the gratification
of Prince Castelcicala. Miss Brenton is very sensible
of your kind attention to her brother and sister; she and
Thomas Parker send you their best wishes.
.rj
St. Vt.
.pm letter-end
.sp 2
// 034.png
.pn +1
.pb
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch02
CHAPTER II.
.sp 1
.pm ch-hd-start
THE PRINCESS’S BIRTHDAY—SUSPECTED INTRIGUES—LETTER TO THE
QUEEN—THE YEAR 1815—JOURNAL CONTINUED.
.pm ch-hd-end
On Princess Charlotte’s birthday, 7th January,
1815, I wrote to Princess Mary,[#] enclosing a few
lines for Princess Charlotte, merely to express my
sentiments on the day. Princess Mary answered
that the Prince had desired that his sisters should
not deliver any letter or message to his daughter,
but that when she had an opportunity she would
// 035.png
.pn +1
ask his leave. I have heard nothing more of it,
and I am now writing on the 24th February.
Miss Mercer Elphinstone has been allowed to visit
Princess Charlotte since her return from Cranbourne,
and is in constant and undisturbed correspondence
with her. I am told she continues to
be very intimate with the Russian Ambassadress,
Madame de Lieven,[#] and most people think the
latter a great intriguante, whether truly or not I
cannot say. Miss M. is also accused by many of
playing a double part. I believe her to be desirous
of governing Princess Charlotte without a rival,
but I cannot think she would deal treacherously
by her, though she may not be aware of the use
made of her by her uncle, Mr. Adam, who is the
Prince’s Chancellor for the Duchy of Cornwall,
and is supposed to be devoted to the Duke of
York. Miss Mercer is in her politics strongly attached
to the Opposition, and very intimate with
many of them. The motion made by the Duke of
Sussex (or rather, I should say, announced, for by
the advice of Lord Grey he withdrew it), relative
to an inquiry into the measures pursued with respect
to Princess Charlotte, was disapproved by
// 036.png
.pn +1
many of the Opposition[#] as well as Ministers, but
His Royal Highness gives as a reason for it, his
wish to clear his character. It is supposed that
Mr. Brougham was sent to meet Lord Grey on the
road to persuade him to give the advice he did to
the Duke of Sussex. All this involves matters in
much mystery, and naturally raises suspicion in the
minds of many; but it is to be remembered that
Miss Mercer is an heiress, and very clever, and
will, therefore, always excite jealousy. Time alone
can show what her real intentions are, and consequently
what her real conduct has been.
.pm fn-start // A
The following are the letters to
which Miss Knight refers:—
.pm letter-start
“My dearest Madam,—To suffer
the 7th January to pass entirely without
notice is a self-denial of which I
do not feel myself capable, although I
have not ventured to ask permission
for paying my personal respects.
“That every blessing may attend
your Royal Highness, in this and many
succeeding years, is the constant, and
will be among the latest, prayers of
.ti +8
“My dearest madam,
.ti +12
“Your Royal Highness’s
.ti +8
“Most dutifully attached servant.”
.pm letter-end
.nf c
“To H.R.H. the Princess Charlotte.”
.nf-
.pm letter-start
“My dear Madam,—The liberty I
take in enclosing a letter for Princess
Charlotte, merely to offer my dutiful
respects, will, I trust, be mitigated by
the assurance that I leave it entirely
to the discretion of your Royal Highness
whether it should be given or not.
“Nothing can ever alter the sentiments
of respectful attachment with
which I have the honour to be,
.ti +8
“My dear madam,
.ti +12
“Your Royal Highness’s
“Most obliged and obedient servant.
“To H.R.H. the Princess Mary.”
.pm letter-end
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // A
“Madame de Lieven is a Livonian
by birth, and is remarkable for the
distinction of her appearance as well
as for her general talents. She is the
only foreigner who was ever made a
patroness of Almack’s, into the tracasseries
of which establishment she entered
very cordially, and as her manner
at times is tinctured with a certain
degree of hauteur, she has not failed
to make many enemies. Madame de
Lieven is, however, in every sense of
the word, a très grande dame, and has
formed friendships and intimacies with
the highest persons of all parties in
England.”—Raikes’s Journal, vol. i.
.pm fn-end
Lady Downshire, whose intimacy with the
Prince Regent ceased when he left his old associates
for the present Ministry, has been particularly
kind to me since I left Warwick House, and
very anxious about Princess Charlotte. Another
affair has interested her warmly, the dismissal of
twenty-five officers of the Prince’s own regiment of
Hussars (the 10th), for their complaint against
Colonel Quentin. Lord Arthur Hill being one of
these, it was natural that his mother should feel it
acutely, and Colonel Palmer (who was obliged to
be the prosecutor, and who had already suffered
great anxiety on account of his father’s affair, which
the Regent first patronised warmly, and afterwards
opposed) is not only her friend, but also a protégé
of Lord St. Vincent and Lord Moira.
.pm fn-start // A
See extract in Appendix from the Duke of Buckingham’s “Memoirs of
the Regency.”
.pm fn-end
// 037.png
.pn +1
Peace with America (at least, the preliminaries)
was signed at Ghent in the beginning of January,
I think, and there was much talk of a change of
Ministers. I came to Rochetts on the 23rd January,
and soon after heard of Colonel Quentin challenging
Colonel Palmer at Paris. The friends of
the latter had heard of this intention some time
before he did, as he was gone to Bordeaux to see
an estate he had bought in that neighbourhood,
and they advised Colonel Palmer not to accept the
challenge. However, he did, but would not cock
his pistol till Quentin had fired at him and missed,
when he did, and fired it into the air. After his
return he went and spent a day and night at
Rochetts. Parliament met on the 9th February,
but the Prince did not arrive till the Monday following.
I wrote to inquire about the time of payment of
my pension, when I heard of it from Lord Liverpool
the last time I was at Rochetts. I was advised by
Lord St. Vincent to explain to Lord Liverpool how
inadequate it was as a compensation to what I had
with the Queen, as, besides the 300l. a year, I had
apartments, &c. I saw Lord Liverpool on this
subject, and showed him letters which contained
great promises: but nothing more was done, and I
am tired of the subject, being at the same time
truly thankful to Providence that I am in the
situation in which I am. I have received for
// 038.png
.pn +1
answer to my last inquiries, that it is dated 28th
October, and that the first quarter will not be paid
for some time.
Princess Charlotte finds means of writing to me
when she can; and her letters are always kind and
confidential, but we are obliged to keep this correspondence
secret.
Lord St. Vincent, though kindly anxious to keep
me here, is of opinion that when I go to town I
ought to go to the drawing-room, and mix in
society as much as possible, that I may not have
the appearance of shunning public observation.
The very kind attentions of all my friends, and of
many who were before only common acquaintance,
facilitate this plan; and I have also received
the most friendly invitations from my friends in
France, and very gracious messages from the Duchess
d’Angoulême.
[In consequence of this suggestion, the following
letter was addressed to Queen Charlotte:]
.nf c
MISS KNIGHT TO THE QUEEN.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
.rj
4th March, 1815.
Madam,—Since I had the misfortune of losing your
Majesty’s favour, it has been my earnest wish not to increase
the displeasure I incurred. I therefore take the
liberty of once more addressing your Majesty, as I am
greatly embarrassed on a point which no other human being
can settle agreeably to my feelings.
I understand your Majesty intends holding a drawing-room
// 039.png
.pn +1
next Thursday,[#] and respect as well as inclination
prompt me to appear at it; but I know not whether this
would be construed as an act of respect or of presumption.
Rather than incur the suspicion of the latter, I am willing
to relinquish an intention, which, in the opinion of all my
friends, I ought to fulfil; rather than offend your Majesty,
I would abstain from it at the risk of satisfying the malevolent,
who might attribute my absence to a consciousness
of not having done my duty at Warwick House, although,
in answer to my urgent solicitation on the subject, the
Prince Regent, when he dismissed me, never brought forward
any accusation; and although my own conscience
acquits me of all design or even thought incompatible with
my dutiful respect for his Royal Highness. This my
friends feel, and it is one of the reasons why they wish me
to appear; but the attachment I must ever feel for your
Majesty will not allow me to intrude myself into your
Majesty’s presence without knowing that I am right in so
doing.
I do not presume to expect an answer; but, should your
Majesty, unfortunately for me, disapprove my joining the
crowd to pay my respects, I humbly entreat Madame
Beckersdorff may be allowed to inform me.
.rj
E. C. K.
.pm letter-end
[The following extracts from Miss Knight’s
journals continue the record of the eventful year
1815:]
Feb. 27th.—Returned to town from Rochetts.
// 040.png
.pn +1
The weather beautiful. On the way saw the walls
in various places chalked with invectives against
the Corn Bill.[#]
.pm fn-start // A
March 9th, but it was subsequently
postponed to the 13th, on
which occasion Miss Knight was present,
and her dress is thus described
in the Morning Post of the following
day:—“A petticoat of white satin
with draperies of peach-blossom silver
gauze, most tastefully disposed with
silver trimming, which formed a lacing
between each to display the petticoat
underneath, and ornamented with silver
cords and tassels. Robe to correspond,
trimmed with point lace.
Head-dress, feathers, and diamonds.”
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // A
Mr. Robinson’s bill to prohibit the
importation of corn, except for bonding
purposes, until the average price
of wheat had reached 80s. a quarter.
.pm fn-end
Received a letter from ——,[#] contradicting the
reports in the Morning Chronicle respecting his supposed
marriage. It came enclosed in one to the
Duke of Sussex, which he sent me to read, and it
was to the same effect, declaring the story to be
absolutely false, and without foundation.
I went at half-past three to Lady Downshire’s,
where I met the Duke, and heard that the Princess
of Wales had written to Lord Liverpool to ask for
a frigate to bring her home, but had been refused
by the Prince, saying there were none disposable.[#]
Dined at Prince Castelcicala’s.[#] At ten he and his
youngest son set off for Paris, whither he is ordered
to go on an important mission for his own Court.
.pm fn-start // B
Probably the Duke of Cumberland,
whose marriage with the Dowager
Princess of Salms was several
times announced in the Morning Chronicle—and
it did ultimately take place.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // C
“The Princess of Wales has
asked for a ship of war to convey her
home to Great Britain from Naples,
and has been informed that no vessel
could be conveniently spared at this
time from the Mediterranean station
to accommodate her Royal Highness.”—Morning
Chronicle, February 25.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // D
Prince Castelcicala died at Paris
of cholera in 1832, at which time he
was Neapolitan Ambassador at the
Court of France. He was in the
eightieth year of his age, and “had
long been known,” pleasantly observes
Mr. Raikes, “for his self-indulgent
mode of life.”
.pm fn-end
28th.—Saw Dr. Baird and Mrs. Balfour, who
was an intimate friend of poor Lady Day. Afterwards
walked to Weymouth-street, to inquire after
Mrs. C. B. Egerton’s little girl, who is dangerously
ill; only saw the General. Called on Miss Mercer
// 041.png
.pn +1
Elphinstone, who said she had been at Cranbourne,
and that Princess Charlotte was to come to the
drawing-room on the 9th, but that she had been
suffering with bad headaches.
March 1st.—I called in the evening on Lady
Aylesbury, Lady Neave, &c. The people are
discontented with the Corn Bill, and write horrid
things on the wall, such as “Bread or blood,”
“More Bellinghams,” “Bread, or else the Regent’s
head.” It is, however, said, and I believe with
truth, that the Regent is against the bill. There
was a sort of riot yesterday in the Borough,[#] and
the Horse Guards were sent to quell it. I dined
with Princess Castelcicala, and met Count Woronzow
there in the evening. He said Lord Castlereagh
would be at Paris on the 3rd.
.pm fn-start // A
On the occasion of the chairing
of Mr. Barclay, who was compelled
to take refuge in the Horns
Tavern, Kennington. The tumult
arose from a misapprehension with
respect to Mr. Barclay’s vote on the
Corn-law Question.
.pm fn-end
In the evening I went to Lady Charleville’s,
where two Spaniards, one named Rosquillos, and
Naldi’s daughter sang. There was a large party,
though, I believe, not what is called large in
London. Very good company. Mrs. Perceval,[#]
now Lady Carr, was there, looking gay and handsome,
and followed by some of her daughters.
.pm fn-start // B
Widow of Mr. Perceval, the Prime
Minister, assassinated by Bellingham,
May 11, 1812.
.pm fn-end
Thursday and Friday I spent chiefly with poor
Mrs. C. B. Egerton, whose little girl died this week,
and on the second of those days I heard from
// 042.png
.pn +1
Princess Charlotte, who informed me of Cranbourne
Lodge having been given to her “en propriété,”
and of the intention of Ministers to give her 8000l.
a year on the Civil List, for her Windsor expenses
and “menus plaisirs,” at her own disposal. She
believes she is to come to town for a day or two
whenever anything is going forward, and to be on
those occasions at Carlton House until Warwick
House is converted into a wing of that building.
She mentions the Queen being gracious, and even
affectionate to her, and says her Majesty has in a
late transaction stood forward fairly and humanely
as her friend. She complains of headaches, but
says she occupies herself as much as possible to
abstract her mind from its cares. Her letter is
expressive of much considerate tenderness towards
me, and some of her friends and dependents.
I called and left a box of trinkets (belonging to
her Royal Highness, which was in my possession)
at Miss Mercer Elphinstone’s, who had given me a
message from Princess Charlotte to desire I would
send it by her. The drawing-room was announced
for the 9th, but it is postponed, probably on account
of the discontent of the people with respect
to the Corn Bill.[#]
.pm fn-start // A
It was said, because the rooms were being gilded and redecorated.
.pm fn-end
The Duke of Sussex sent me word that he had a
message from Princess Charlotte, to say that she
had been desired by her father to write to her
// 043.png
.pn +1
mother that she would never see her more, but
had declined it. It is said the Princess of Wales
will return in May.
March 4th.—I made several visits in the evening,
and heard much of the discontent about
the price of bread. I also heard that the paper
sent to Congress by the Prince of Benevento
(Talleyrand), was the best state paper which had
been seen for ages. It has restored great part of
Saxony to the King of that country, and it is
thought may have a good effect with respect to
the recovery of the kingdom of Naples, two hundred
thousand men restlessly anxious to be employed
on any service forming the great argument
which France can easily urge. In the evening I
went to Mrs. Egerton’s, to a party at Lady Neave’s
(which she gave in honour of the return of Lady
Sarah and Mr. Lyttleton), and to Lady Downshire’s
box at the Opera, just in time for the ballet
“Le Prince Troubadour.”[#] The dancers are said
not to be better than figurantes at Paris, but Mademoiselle
Mélanie is certainly graceful in many of
her attitudes, and Madame Leon is a pretty little
figure. Vestris, father and son, are of the number.
.pm fn-start // A
“The new favourite grand ballet
composed by Monsieur A. Vestris, entitled,
‘Le Prince Troubadour, ou la
Double Epreuve.’ The music by F.
Venua.”—The plot was taken from the
opera of “Joconde,” and the principal
performers were the two Vestrises, M.
Baptiste, Mesdames Leon and Del
Caro, and Mademoiselle Mélanie. It
was highly praised in the morning
papers.
.pm fn-end
5th.—I dined at Lady Downshire’s, and Lord
// 044.png
.pn +1
and Lady Aylesbury came in the evening. I heard
that Lord Proby intends to move for the reformation
of courts-martial. Lord Castlereagh arrived
yesterday from Vienna viâ Paris. The discontent
about the Corn Bill continues.
6th.—I walked out in the evening, but heard
nothing particular. I dined with Miss Tisdall[#]
and her brother, and passed the evening with Lady
Aylesbury, where I heard much, as I had likewise
at dinner, of the mob, which had been attacking
houses[#] in different parts of the town, on account
of the Corn Bill. A loaf steeped in blood had been
placed on Carlton wall. The Horse Guards were
out all day. I heard from Mr. ——, who has lately
returned from Brussels, that the Flemings by no
means like the Dutch—rather despise them; that
the nobility and commonalty are for their old
government, and the middle class for the French;
that the Prince of the Netherlands has only been
able to get together an army of five thousand
Dutch, and must trust entirely to English and
Hanoverians, who, in fact, command the country;
that the only thing which reconciles the Flemings
to the business is the prospect of having a Court of
their own, and that they are, therefore, still looking
forward to the marriage of the Princess Charlotte.
// 045.png
.pn +1
The Sovereign, they hear, is to divide his time
between the Hague and Brussels, and the Hereditary
Prince to live constantly at the latter place.
He is good humoured and civil, but has no dignity.
When the Flemings come in with proper etiquette,
and stand near the door, they are surprised to see
his English aides-de-camp run up to him and slap
him on the back—all but Lord March, who preserves
his good breeding. The Hereditary Prince
at first took no notice of any but English, which
offended the people of the country. He now invites
two or three of them every day to dine with
him, but he is evidently partial to the English. He
has a bad cook, and his dinners are dull.
.pm fn-start // A
Son and daughter of the Countess
Charleville, by her first husband,
James Tisdall, Esq.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // B
Lord Ellenborough’s, in Saint
James’s-square; Lord Eldon’s, in Bedford-square;
Mr. Robinson’s, in Burlington-street;
Lord Darnley’s, in
Berkeley-square; Mr. Yorke’s, in
Bruton-street.
.pm fn-end
7th.—The riots still continue. My servant tells
me he has just come from Old Burlington-street,
where they are pulling up the iron rails before a
house which he heard was that of the Chancellor’s
private secretary, but which was Mr. Robinson’s,[#]
and they were only finishing the work they began
last night. In the evening they knocked at Prince
Castelcicala’s door, where I dined, and asked who
lived there, inquiring for some person whose name
I could not learn. They went away quietly after
this; but I have since heard they did much mischief
// 046.png
.pn +1
to a house in Harley-street, and to Lord
Bathurst’s, in Mansfield-street. The Horse Guards
are on constant duty, and I hear the 16th Light
Dragoons are ordered into town from Hounslow.
.pm fn-start // A
Mr. Robinson, as proposer of the
Corn Regulations, was especially obnoxious
to the mob. The railings in
front of his house were torn up, the
windows and parlour shutters demolished,
and the street door split
open. Some soldiers who were in the
house then fired into the street at random,
and a man fell shot through the
head. From the buttons on his coat
it was conjectured that he was a naval
officer; he proved to be a midshipman,
named Edward Vyse—several other
persons being wounded.
.pm fn-end
8th.—I heard that Lord Uxbridge has the command
of the military force,[#] which increases hourly,
but does not seem to prevent the people from doing
what they like. Two persons were, however, killed
at Mr. Robinson’s by officers, as it is said, firing
from the house: one, a young midshipman, lies to
be owned. In the evening, about eight, I went to
Weymouth-street, to Mrs. Egerton’s, and met with
no mob going or coming from thence to Lady
Charleville’s, in Piccadilly, where, however, the
party was rather small, many being afraid to venture
out, and others uneasy on account of their
relations or friends in America, despatches having
been received from thence with an account of the
failure of Sir Alexander Cochrane and Sir Edward
Pakenham’s expedition,[#] the death of Sir Edward,
and that of General Sir Samuel Gibbs, with great
loss of officers and men. Mrs. Egerton had happily
received intelligence from Sir John Malcolm, that
her brother, Sir Thomas Troubridge, was safe, and
that he had distinguished himself on shore, where,
// 047.png
.pn +1
following the steps of his father, he had fought with
the land forces. Sir Pulteney Malcolm, Sir John’s
brother, being second in command of the fleet,
wrote this home to him. When I returned home,
I heard that the people had broken the windows
of Mr. Ponsonby,[#] in Curzon-street, and had apologised
for breaking one window by mistake in the
adjoining house. Lord Yarmouth had a strong
guard of soldiers to prevent anything happening
where he lives, at no great distance from Mr. Ponsonby’s.
I saw written on the walls on Tuesday,
“Guy Faux for ever!”
.pm fn-start // A
In addition to the household
troops, the 10th Dragoons occupied
the King’s Mews, the 16th Dragoons
the Queen’s Riding-house, the 5th
Dragoon Guards were at Romford, the
7th Hussars at Putney, the 18th in
Lambeth, the 5th Foot at Knightsbridge,
and the South Lincoln Militia
in the Tower.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // B
The attack on New Orleans on
the 8th January, when the British
were repulsed, with the loss of 2454
men, killed, wounded, and made prisoners.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // A
“March 8.—They next proceeded
to Mr. Ponsonby’s house, No. 19, in
Curzon-street, May-Fair, with their
numbers increasing on their way. On
their arrival at Mr. Ponsonby’s, they
presented a very formidable force.
They instantly commenced a furious
attack upon the house, demolished the
windows, and broke the iron palisades
in front. During this, some
firing began from the inside of the
house, through the door, while the
mob were endeavouring to break it
open. The door is much injured by
the bullets which were fired through
it, but we have not heard that any
person was hurt. The house of Mr.
Quentin Dick, next door to Mr. Ponsonby’s,
is also considerably injured
from the misdirection of the stone-throwers.
In a few minutes the cavalry
made their appearance, and the
populace immediately dispersed in various
directions.”—Annual Register,
1814, p. 23.
.pm fn-end
9th.—I saw Dr. F., who brought me a message
from the Duke of Sussex, to say that he heard
Princess Charlotte had been prevailed on to write
a letter to her mother, but not one so strong as
was wished, and that it had, therefore, not given
satisfaction at Carlton House. I went out to call
on Lady Aylesbury, the Duchess of Leeds, and a
few others, and came home round by the Park,
but did not meet any rioters. I dined at Baron
Montalembert’s, where I met the French Ambassador,
// 048.png
.pn +1
Count de la Châtre, a worthy old nobleman,
who had been for many years serving his master
faithfully, though secretly, in that capacity at our
Court, and was, therefore, justly placed in the
ostensible situation, with a salary of 10,000l. a
year, as soon as Louis XVIII. recovered his throne,
in preference to others of more weight and of more
brilliant talents. He had been introduced to me
one evening at Carlton House by the Count de
Blacas. M. and Madame de Rayneval also dined
there; a Colonel Murphy, a Spaniard of an Irish
family; and a Mr. Cheverix, a celebrated chemist.
Rayneval is a young man of great talents; he was
secretary to Caulincourt[#] in Russia, where he
married a modest and amiable Polish lady. Previous
to this he was secretary of embassy and
chargé d’affaires at Lisbon, when Lord St. Vincent
was there in 1806, and though attached to the
French Government of that time, acted always in
an honourable manner. He is now one of the secretaries
of embassy and consul-general.
.pm fn-start // A
The French Ambassador, M. de la
Châtre, in a letter to the editor of the
Anti-Gallican, denied that M. Rayneval
was ever private secretary to
Caulincourt. He was merely chargé
d’affaires at St. Petersburg until the
arrival of the latter. The editor, Mr.
Goldsmith, rejoined that, however that
might be, M. Rayneval was with Caulincourt
at Châtillon, and remained
with him until Napoleon’s abdication,
adding, “in fact, it was M. Rayneval
who drew up the treaty of Fontainebleau.”
.pm fn-end
In the evening there was a very good party, and
a man named Kalkbrenner[#] played very finely on
// 049.png
.pn +1
the pianoforte. Baron Montalembert and M. de
Rayneval sang an Italian and a French duet. They
are both excellent musicians, and sing particularly
well. I saw no riot in the streets, going or coming,
but met many soldiers, and all night I heard the
trampling of cavalry. The 10th Hussars, as well
as several other regiments, are come to guard the
metropolis. Madame de Lieven told me Miss Mercer
Elphinstone returned this morning from Cranbourne,
where she had been staying some days.
She left Princess Charlotte by no means well.
.pm fn-start // B
This “man” was the celebrated
pianist Frederick Kalkbrenner, son of
the equally well-known composer,
Christian Kalkbrenner. Frederick
Kalkbrenner visited London for the
first time in 1814, and excited the
greatest enthusiasm, eclipsing even the
long-established reputation of Cramer.
He resided in England ten years, and
made a very handsome fortune.
.pm fn-end
10th.—I saw Lady Cardigan, Miss Rainsford,
Mrs. Anderson, and others. Reports are spread
of coalheavers coming in large bodies to town, of
Bonaparte having escaped from the island of Elba[#]
with eleven hundred followers, and going to the
south of France, with other alarming stories, for
which there is probably no foundation. London
is full of soldiers. The depôt is in Manchester-square,
and Bedford-square[#] looks like a “place
d’armes.” People are so full of these riots that
very little mention is made of the failure at New
Orleans.
.pm fn-start // A
The first notice of this event was
received by Mr. Rothschild, who immediately
sold out stock to the amount
of 600,000l. before the news was generally
known.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // B
The Chancellor, Lord Eldon, lived
at No. 6, which was attacked by the
mob on the 6th, the iron railings torn
up, and every pane of glass and much
furniture broken and destroyed. The
windows being broken, it was facetiously
remarked that his Lordship at
last kept open house. The mob was
kept at bay by a party of soldiers sent
from the British Museum, until a troop
of the Horse Guards arrived and
cleared the square.
.pm fn-end
11th.—The account of Bonaparte landing at
Frejus is confirmed; and it is added that he has
// 050.png
.pn +1
been joined by Masséna and Augereau, but the
only official intelligence is his landing. The King
has published an edict declaring him a traitor and
a rebel,[#] and the Duke de Berri and the Duke
d’Orleans are gone against him.
12th.—It appears that Bonaparte landed at
Cannes, near Antibes, and that he has not been
joined by any one; that the great towns have
shown the most loyal spirit; and that Masséna has
written a letter to Paris in the same sense; that
Bonaparte is now (or was when the last accounts
came away) taking the road of Digny and Gap in
Haut Dauphiné. The King of France has written
a very satisfactory letter to the Regent. I dined
at Lady Downshire’s, where I met the Macclesfields,
Talbots, and some more, all of whom seemed
to be of opinion that Bonaparte’s invasion was not
to be considered of serious consequence.
13th.—I called on Lady Louisa Stuart, and
dined early at Mr. Hallam’s, after which we went
to Drury Lane Theatre, to see the performance of
“Richard the Second,” a play which has just been
revived after not having been acted for a hundred
years. Kean[#] is greatly admired, but his figure
and voice are so bad that his mode of speaking
and gesticulations suffer considerable disadvantage.
.pm fn-start // A
“Napoleon Bonaparte is declared
a traitor and a rebel for having appeared
with arms in his hands in the
Department of the Var.”—Art. IV. of
the Ordonnance du Roi.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // B
Richard II., Mr. Kean; John of
Gaunt, Mr. Pope; Bolingbroke, Mr.
Elliston; Duke of Norfolk, Mr. Rae;
the Queen, Mrs. Bartley.
.pm fn-end
// 051.png
.pn +1
He is, however, a great actor: in all sarcastic and
bitter passages very great; never pleasing, though
undoubtedly sometimes affecting. But this might be
owing to the play itself, which unquestionably has
in it some heartrending passages to excite compassion
in favour of the frivolous, insolent Richard.
The genius of Shakspeare is peculiarly manifest in
the change of sentiment you cannot fail experiencing
between the first and last act of this extraordinary
drama. It has been altered so as to
terminate with something like a dénouement,
making the Queen and Bolingbroke come and
lament over the dead Richard, which does very
well for the gallery, but does not coincide with
history or Shakspeare’s delineation of character.
Mrs. Bartley, formerly Miss Smith, ranted the
Queen, and is rather a fine-looking woman. Many
passages allusive to present times seemed to be
spoken with peculiar emphasis, and silence was
vociferated on these occasions.
The accounts from France are more alarming.
Bonaparte was telegraphed as approaching Lyons,
and it was supposed he entered that city on the
11th.
14th.—It is said that Bonaparte professes no
desire to trouble the lawful heir of the crown of
France, but claims his rights and those of his wife
and son. Reports are in town of the Marshals
Soult and Marmont being assassinated, and of an
// 052.png
.pn +1
insurrection at Paris, but it is difficult to obtain
certain intelligence from them. The King received
the ambassadors and foreigners on the 7th with his
usual propriety; remarked[#] that they saw him
suffering, but that it was with the gout, and that
they might inform their respective Courts that he
hoped that the peace of Europe would not be disturbed.
Lord Arthur Hill was at this levee, and
has, as well as others, written it home. I dined at
Princess Castelcicala’s, who had been making diligent
inquiries into the story of the Moniteur said
to be arrived with a telegraphic account of Bonaparte
having reached Bourgoin, and being expected
at Lyons, but could not find any one who
had seen this Moniteur.
.pm fn-start // A
“‘Messieurs,’ said the King, ‘you
see me suffering, but do not deceive
yourselves: it is not disquietude, but
gout which causes it. Assure your
Sovereigns, with respect to what is
passing in France, that the repose of
Europe will be no more disturbed than
that of France.’”—Morning Chronicle,
March 13, 1815.
.pm fn-end
15th.—Baroness Montalembert called with Mrs.
C. B. Egerton. She had been at the Foreign-office,
and found more Moniteurs of the 11th were arrived,
and of course the vicinity of Bonaparte to Lyons
confirmed. Rayneval says the game is up, but
Montalembert is going to fight for his King. At
the public offices the business is considered in as
bad a light as possible. Reports are spread of our
cruisers being bribed, &c. &c. I dined at General
Egerton’s, where I met Mr. and Mrs. Philip Egerton,
and Captain Finlay, who commanded the Harrier,
// 053.png
.pn +1
and brought to the Cape, in 1807, the fatal news of
the storm in which the Blenheim and Java disappeared.
The French Ambassador had received no despatches
from Paris. In a second edition of the
Courier the intelligence contained in the Moniteur
appeared.
16th.—The accounts from Paris are very bad.
Monsieur was well received at Lyons, and the
troops promised to stand by him; but the next
day, when they were ordered to march, they refused
to a man, saying, they wished no harm to Monsieur,
and would not do him any, but they would
not march against their former general. Monsieur
left Lyons, but stopped on the road for orders from
the King. The Duke of Orleans returned to Paris,
saw the King, and set off again for Lyons. Soult
is discovered to be a traitor, and the King has appointed
General Clarke[#] in his stead.
.pm fn-start // A
General Clarke, Duc de Feltre, formerly war minister
under the Emperor.
.pm fn-end
There has been no insurrection at Paris. Plays
and operas go on as usual; but it is said Bonaparte
will be there on the 17th. The King has declared
he will not leave Paris while there is a hope of the
troops fighting, and if they will not, he will retire
with his family to the Netherlands. The Duke de
Berri will stay to the last moment; five hundred
English are arrived at Dover, or waiting for a passage
from Calais. The Duchess of Wellington,
// 054.png
.pn +1
Lord Arthur Hill, and Colonel Roberts were
amongst the first. I dined at Mrs. Green’s, Bedford-place,
where Mr. Gipps, Member for Ripon,
arrived from the House, and said Lord Castlereagh’s
language was warlike. He had heard Macdonald,
Augereau, and some others had declared for the
King.
17th.—Received a note from Princess Castelcicala
to say that her son is arrived in England
with the Duchess de Blacas, who is near her confinement,
and the news is very bad. Prince Castelcicala
still remains at Paris. I went to Lady
Rolle’s, who is just arrived from Devonshire, and
seems to have left much discontent there with respect
to the Corn Bill. Afterwards I called on
Princess Castelcicala. M. de Joinville came from
the French Ambassador’s. He said Bonaparte was
not at Paris on the 14th, but that the troops all
went over to him. The generals are few of them
in his favour.
18th.—At nine, Prince Castelcicala arrived,
having conducted the Duchess d’Orleans and her
children safely to Dover. I went out with Lady
Aylesbury, who had been with Madame de Blacas.
She said Soult had not been dismissed, but had resigned,
as it was not known whether he was a
traitor or not. She seemed rather to think he was
not. When I came home I saw Charles Ruffo and
the Abbé de Longuemain, his tutor, who told me
// 055.png
.pn +1
that Prince Castelcicala had his audience on Sunday,
and that as he went to Court the people cried
“Vive le Roi!” “Vive le Souverain légitime de
Naples!” Only one man cried “Vive l’Empereur!”
and was taken by the collar and thrown out of the
crowd. Affairs do not appear to be as desperate
as they were represented. Madame de Talleyrand
(Princess de Benevento) and Madame Moreau are
arrived in England. The latter is said to be engaged
to Marshal Macdonald. He appears to be
very zealous in the royal cause.
19th.—The accounts from France are serious,
but certainly have a better complexion than they
had. Marshal Ney is said to be on his march to
meet Bonaparte, and a battle is expected. Much
will depend on the event of it.
20th.—Various reports of an engagement in
France, but without official authority. The only
certain news seemed to be that Bonaparte was
advancing without interruption. I dined at Mr.
Hallam’s. Mr. W. Spenser, the poet; M. de Pfeffel,
the Bavarian Minister, and his secretary of embassy,
were among the company.
21st.—No certain accounts from France. I dined
at Lord Rolle’s. In the evening had two letters
from Princess Charlotte, who has had great worries,
but the Orange business is at last really given up;
she corresponds with her father, who seems to have
something in view which will please all parties. I
// 056.png
.pn +1
may be sure she will do for the best. Very amiable
in her anxiety about the Royal Family of France,
and in her wish that they should be informed of it
if possible.
22nd.—I called on Lady Ashbrook, and made
other visits. She was very sad. Bonaparte near
if not in Paris. I dined at Prince Castelcicala’s,
and was at Lady Charleville’s in the evening. The
Colonel had just heard that the King had left Paris,
but did not think he would come to England. The
Duchess of Orleans, with her four children and
their governor, and the Countess de Visac, is at
the hotel at Dover. The Regent offered her the
Castle, which she declined, and also excused herself
from receiving his visit and that of the Duke of
Kent. Yesterday Lord Cochrane walked into the
House of Commons and took his seat there, whence
he was carried[#] back to prison in the King’s Bench.
Lady Castlereagh said the news from Paris was not
official.
.pm fn-start // A
“Four persons literally carried
his Lordship out of the House, he, however,
kicking and struggling somewhat
violently.”—Morning Chronicle,
March 22, 1815.
.pm fn-end
23rd.—The papers say Bonaparte entered Paris
without the slightest obstacle on the 20th;[#] that
the King had left it the day before, and slept at
Abbeville on the 21st, on his way to Calais.
.pm fn-start // B
Louis XVIII. left Paris at 8 P.M.
of the 19th, and slept at Abbeville on
the 20th. Napoleon entered Paris at
9 P.M. on the 20th.
.pm fn-end
24th (Good Friday).—Princess Castelcicala wrote
me that no certain news had been received of Bonaparte’s
// 057.png
.pn +1
being at Paris; that the King had certainly
left that city, but that he was not coming to England;
and that the accounts, though bad enough,
were not so desperate as the papers represented
them; that the Duchess of Orleans had not heard
from her husband, and would probably come to
Town; that the Princes were dispersed, and were
gone to their armies, and that more news was expected.
25th.—Everybody fearful of a new war, for
which great preparations seem to be making by sea
and land. The common people sadly discontented,
and very seditious in their expressions. In the
evening I received a note from Lady Mary Hill to
say that they had seen the Duke de Sérent in good
spirits; that the King of France would remain at
Lille; that the Duke d’Angoulême was going about
collecting troops, and that La Vendée was favourably
disposed towards the Royal cause.
26th (Easter Sunday).—I dined at Lord Rolle’s.
He had been at White’s, and brought very bad accounts
of the reports in town. It was said the
King could not remain at Lille, but was gone on to
Tournay, and would go to Mittau, in Courland,
where he was before; that Mr. Bagot was gone
with him; but that Lord Fitzroy Somerset was
detained at Paris. Lord Exmouth is going off
immediately to take the command of the fleet in
// 058.png
.pn +1
the Mediterranean, and arming by sea and land is
the order of the day.
27th.—The papers mention Lord Fitzroy Somerset’s
detention[#] at Paris, or at least his stay there,
but nothing about Tournay. I dined at Lord
Ashbrook’s; heard of the enormous tribe of people
who are living at Cranbourne Lodge, and the confused,
expensive manner in which they are going on.
.pm fn-start // A
This was not the case. Lord Fitzroy Somerset left Paris with the King.
.pm fn-end
26th.—Dined with Mrs. C. B. Egerton. General
Egerton asked an audience of the Duke of York,
to offer his services. He was the forty-second
person who had one this morning, and seven or
eight more were waiting in the ante-room.
29th.—Dined at Prince Castelcicala’s, and went
in the evening to the Duchess of Orleans (Princess
Maria Amelia of Naples). She received me with
great kindness, and appears more amiable than ever,
but is very thin, and has a dreadful cough. She has
with her four children, the Duke de Chartres, the
Duke de Nemours, and the Princesses Louise and
Marie. The Count de G. is governor to the Duke,
and the Countess de Visac, of the Vintimille family,
is with her. The King of France is at Ostend; Monsieur
at Namur. The Duchess d’Angoulême was at
Bordeaux on the 19th, and meaning to stay there,
as it was the anxious wish of the inhabitants that
she should; but what their opinion may be when
they hear of Paris being in the hands of Bonaparte,
// 059.png
.pn +1
is not known. An emigrant, who left Paris
on Easter Sunday, says that the strong manifesto
published by the Allied Sovereigns at Vienna, of
which two or three copies have been circulated at
Paris, has occasioned great alarm there, and also
that Bonaparte has excited jealousy between the
old Imperial Guards at Paris and those he brought
from Elba, by placing the latter, with a fine inscription,
as to the bravest of soldiers, in the Hôtel
des Cent Suisses. In the evening I saw the good
old Duke de Sérent, whose resignation, under all
his misfortunes, at eighty years of age, is truly admirable.
30th.—I heard nothing new, except that orders
have been despatched to the Transport Board for
sending out stores, &c., to Ostend. M. de Rayneval
went last night to the King with letters from
our Government. When Louis XVIII. found how
much the troops were disposed to join Bonaparte,
he dismissed them, saying he did not wish to commit
any one; that he was obliged to withdraw
himself for the present, but hoped to see them
again. One regiment of Chasseurs fell on their
knees and begged to follow his fortunes, an offer
which he accepted.
// 060.png
.sp 2
.pn +1
.pb
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch03
CHAPTER III.
.sp 1
.pm ch-hd-start
PREPARATIONS FOR WAR—THE QUEEN’S LEVEE—TREATMENT OF THE
PRINCESS CHARLOTTE—NAPOLEON AND THE BOURBONS—RUMOURS FROM
THE SEAT OF WAR—THE BATTLE OF WATERLOO.
.pm ch-hd-end
.h3
JOURNAL CONTINUED—1815.
.sp 2
April 3, 1815.—It is said Lords Liverpool and
Eldon are for peace, and Lord Castlereagh for
war; the same division is to be observed in the
councils of Opposition, Lord Grey and his party
being for peace, and Lord Grenville, with his adherents,
for war. The Duke d’Orleans and his
sister[#] arrived this evening.
.pm fn-start // A
Madame Adelaide.
.pm fn-end
5th.—Dined at Lord Rolle’s, and went in the
evening to Lady Charleville’s party. An officer[#]
arrived yesterday from Bordeaux, with letters
from the Duchess d’Angoulême to the King of
// 061.png
.pn +1
France. The inhabitants of the south of France
are very loyal. Lord Harrowby, Sir Henry
Torrens, and Mr. Wellesley Pole, are gone to
Louis XVIII., who is supposed to be, at present, at
Ghent. I had a letter from Rome, dated 10th of
March, by which it appears that everything was
quiet in Italy as to outward appearance.
.pm fn-start // B
Colonel the Baron Labadayse,
who reported that six thousand National
Guards and four thousand troops
of the line had sworn to remain faithful,
but their defection took place a
few days later.
.pm fn-end
7th.—Yesterday a message from the Prince Regent[#]
went down to Parliament, stating that the
events which had lately taken place had induced
him to order an increase of his Majesty’s forces by
sea and land, and to take the advice of his allies
for the security of Europe. I called on the Duke
de Sérent, and found he had received letters from
the Duchess, who is with Madame d’Angoulême, at
Bordeaux. The people there are loyal. I made
other visits, but heard nothing more. The papers
say Rochefort has declared for Bonaparte. He
had made the Parisians believe that the allies
would not attack him: but they begin to be undeceived.
.pm fn-start // A
“G. P. R.—The Prince Regent,
acting in the name and on the behalf
of his Majesty, thinks it right to inform
the House of Lords, that the
events which have recently occurred
in France, in direct contravention of
the engagements concluded with the
allied powers, at Paris, in the month of
April last, and which threaten consequences
highly dangerous to the tranquillity
and independence of Europe,
have induced his Royal Highness to
give directions for the augmentation
of his Majesty’s land and sea forces.
“The Prince Regent has likewise
deemed it incumbent upon him to lose
no time in entering into communications
with his Majesty’s allies, for the
purpose of forming such a concert as
may most effectually provide for the
general and permanent security of
Europe.
“And his Royal Highness confidently
relies on the support of the
House of Lords in all measures which
may be necessary for the accomplishment
of this important object.”
.pm fn-end
// 062.png
.pn +1
8th.—I dined at the Speaker’s, whose house
forms part of the House of Commons. The rooms
are large, and fitted up in the best style of Gothic
architecture, with furniture to correspond. The
dining-room is immediately under St. Stephen’s
Chapel, and is, I think, the handsomest room of
the kind I ever saw. It consists of three divisions,
separated only by two open arches; the ornaments,
though minute in the Gothic style, are well adapted
to the room, and the whole is well worth seeing.
We had a very pleasant party; but the accounts
arrived from France are very melancholy, and it
is said one of Bonaparte’s generals[#] has entered
Bordeaux, and the Duchess d’Angoulême has been
obliged to depart by sea.
.pm fn-start // A
General Clausel entered Bordeaux
on the 2nd April, the Duchess having
embarked at Pouillac on board an
English frigate, the Wanderer, on the
previous day, and landed at Plymouth
on the 19th.
.pm fn-end
9th.—I dined at Lady Downshire’s, and went in
the evening to Lady Aylesbury’s. People in general
seem to wish for peace, not willing to make
any sacrifices, and hardly wishing to hear good
news.
10th.—I went in the evening to the Duchess of
Orleans’; the Duchess of Leeds and Lady Catherine
went with me. Mademoiselle and the Duke were
there. She has a lady companion with her, the
Countess de Montjoie. She is said to be accomplished
and sensible; some add that she is an intriguante.
The Duke is much with Ministers. They
// 063.png
.pn +1
are all well-bred and affable; the Duchess of Orleans
good, and kind, and unaffected. Mademoiselle told
me the Duchess d’Angoulême was gone to Passages,
and the Duke to Marseilles.
11th.—I saw Baroness Montalembert, who told
me her husband was gone, with ten thousand stand
of arms, to the Duchess d’Angoulême; Colonel
Jenkinson with him. Before they sailed from
Plymouth they heard of the fall of Bordeaux, and
will act accordingly. Lord Bathurst seems to have
despatched them without loss of time. Princess
Charlotte came to town to-day. The entrance of
Warwick House towards the lane is secured by
bars of iron in the inside, and she goes through
Carlton House, or rather through the court. Lady
Ilchester and Mrs. Campbell are to sleep in the
house, and the other ladies and gentlemen to come
in the day; a list given and signed by the Prince
Regent of what people she is to see. Only Miss
Mercer Elphinstone, and Lady Warwick and her
daughters, to be suffered to see her in the evening.
She is to go once a week to the Play or the Opera,
but to go away before it is over, and not to court
publicity.
12th.—There is a report that Bordeaux is retaken
by the Royalists, but without foundation. In the
evening I was at Lady Aylesbury’s and Lady
Charleville’s. The Duchess of Leeds was there, and
told me she had been invited to Warwick House
// 064.png
.pn +1
the evening before, and that her name was first on
the list, which did not surprise me, as her resignation
had been the consequence of a hint given her
that if she resigned she should be always invited to
Carlton House, but that if she waited to be turned
out, she would not be asked any more.
13th.—I went to the Drawing-room; it was the
first which had been held since I was dismissed
from Warwick House. The Queen just spoke to
me, which is more than she has done for two years.
The Princesses, Duchess of York, and Princess
Sophia of Gloucester very kindly, and Princess
Charlotte as kindly as she could. I thought her
looking very pale. The rooms were very full, but
by the arrangements made since the Drawing-rooms
have been held at the Queen’s House, the Royal
Family stand in a small room, and people are only
allowed to stay while they are spoken to, and to
pass on. I dined at Lady Downshire’s. Lord
Arthur Hill is appointed aide-de-camp to the Duke
of Wellington.
14th.—I dined at Colonel Egerton’s, and went in
the evening to Princess Castelcicala’s. Lord Uxbridge
is to command the Cavalry, General Ponsonby
the Heavy Dragoons, and Sir Hussey Vivian
the Hussar Brigade. Troops are embarking as fast
as possible.
17th.—A Moniteur reported that the Duke d’Angoulême
had been taken and had been set at liberty
// 065.png
.pn +1
by order of Bonaparte, on condition he should get
the Crown jewels restored.
18th.—I dined at Prince Castelcicala’s, and went
in the evening to the Duchess of Orleans’, where
nothing new of the Duke d’Angoulême was known.
The Duchess d’Angoulême is gone to Bilboa.
19th.—I dined at Lord Ashbrook’s, where I met
the captain of one of the sloops of war that
attended Princess Charlotte at Weymouth[#] last
summer. He said her behaviour was so delightful
that there was not a man on board his ship who
would not lay down his life for her, and that he
little cared how long he lived, if he could but once
fight for her as Queen.
.pm fn-start // A
There were two armed yachts in
attendance on the Princess Charlotte
at Weymouth, the Royal Charlotte and
the Royal Sovereign.
.pm fn-end
20th.—The Moniteur says that the tricolored flag
is hoisted at Marseilles, but no accounts from the
Royalists there have arrived.
21st.—Lord Rolle called and told me he had
letters from Plymouth, which mentioned the arrival
there of the Duchess d’Angoulême from Bilboa.
The people were delighted to see her, and she was
very gracious. I dined at the Bishop of Lincoln’s;
there was very violent language in the House, as
Mr. Tomline reported, between Mr. Whitbread and
Lord Castlereagh on account of a copy of the treaty
between Austria, Russia, Prussia, and England,
signed by the plenipotentiaries of these four powers
// 066.png
.pn +1
at Vienna on the 25th of March, for driving Bonaparte
out of France if Louis XVIII. requires it.
22nd.—Madame d’Angoulême, with the Duchess
de Sérent and the Countess de Damas, arrived
yesterday evening at the French Ambassador’s. I
went to Lady Ashbrook’s in the evening, and received
a letter from Princess Charlotte, which gave
me sad accounts of the unkind manner in which she
is treated, not being spoken to by her father, nor
ever seeing him but when the Queen is in town.
The Duchess d’Orleans and Mademoiselle had
visited her, and she was to be allowed next day to
return the visit, but to have no further communication.
She is not allowed to go out in an open carriage,
and a coach makes her always sick. This,
however, is the only carriage allowed her, as she
must have two ladies and a gentleman with her.
Her letter was very kind, apologising for not
shaking hands with me at the Drawing-room, or
doing more than the others, and hoping I understood
her eyes.
23rd.—Last night a new play called “Ina,” on
the subject of Inez de Castro, though with Saxon
names, was acted at Drury Lane. It was written
by Mrs. Wilmot;[#] much supported by Whitbread
and Opposition people, and much cried down by
// 067.png
.pn +1
the contrary party; which prevailed, for it was
condemned. Everybody, however, allows that the
language is elegant, and the story interesting, but
not sufficient stage effect, and the last act particularly
weak. They also say there was a scene of an
altar and crucifix, which on a stage should not have
been, and that it resembled in principle German
plays, and had democratical allusions.
.pm fn-start // A
“The lady has rather produced a
dramatic poem than a regular drama.
The versification is sweet and harmonious,
the sentiments just and impressive,
the images poetical, and, though
not recommended by their actual
novelty, were rendered so by their
dress and elegance. It was a poem,
then, which will be read with delight,
but which wanted situation, incident,
and passion to give it dramatic effect
on the stage.”—Morning Chronicle,
April 24, 1815.
Mrs. Wilmot, the authoress of
“Ina,” was sister of Lady Asgill,
and, therefore, first cousin of Mrs.
Sheridan.
.pm fn-end
24th.—I went in the evening to Mrs. Weddell’s,
where there was a small party; amongst the rest,
Sir James Mackintosh, Mr. Heber, and other men
of letters.
25th.—I was at a party at Lady Neave’s, of a
different description. Dowager Lady Harcourt,
Dowager Lady Cardigan, Mrs. R. Walpole, Mrs. A.
Egerton, and other genuine whist-players, besides
many more, young and old.
28th.—Went in the evening to Madame d’Angoulême’s,
who receives company from seven to
nine. She appeared to be cheerful, and looked
better than when she left England, though her
ladies said she was altered from what she was at
Paris. She seemed to regret not having been able
to obtain any favour from the Admiralty for the
captain of the sloop who brought her over. Her
passage had been very stormy; but she said she
// 068.png
.pn +1
was too happy to find a ship of war to convey her.
She spoke very gratefully of the captain’s care of
her and her suite. She had been very sick; but I
heard from others that she had nursed and comforted
all the rest, thinking of herself the last. She
told me she had written to Princess Charlotte, and
wished to visit her, but had received an answer
from her, saying that she begged she would ask the
Prince Regent’s leave; which she thought very odd,
as it implied that Princess Charlotte could not ask
it herself. She asked whether he saw her often,
and appeared surprised when I said he had not
called on her since her arrival in town. I afterwards
went to Lady Aylesbury’s, and to a ball at
Lady Charleville’s, for the celebration of Lord Tullamore’s[#]
birthday, which was very full, and well
managed.
.pm fn-start // A
Lord Tullamore, born April 28, 1801, afterwards second Earl of Charleville.
.pm fn-end
30th.—Dowager Lady Harcourt called, and told
me there was a report of a courier having arrived
to say that the Emperor of Russia meant to act
only on the defensive. Lady Downshire afterwards
called with a newspaper, which says Murat has
been defeated by the Austrians, and has retired on
Ferrara. General Nugent, who commanded them,
was, in the Paris papers three days ago, announced
to be taken prisoner. I dined at Lord Rolle’s,
where Lord Powlett, Mr. Rose, and the Bishop of
// 069.png
.pn +1
Exeter said that a courier was arrived with this intelligence
from Lord Burghersh and, Lord Powlett
said, one afterwards from Lord W. Bentinck. In
the evening I went to the Duchess of Orleans’, who
is going to-morrow into the country. She said
Princess Charlotte had been with her in the morning,
and had spoken very kindly of me, saying that
she was under great obligations to me; and when
the Duchess was with her before, she had also
spoken in the same manner. The Parisians, who
are fond of bons mots, say “rendez-nous notre
Père de Gand (Paire de Gants).” They have
prints which represent on one side a bunch of
violets, the outline of which forms the portraits of
Napoleon, Marie Louise, and the boy,[#] and under
it is written “bouquet impérial;” but on the other
side is a bunch of lilies and roses, forming the profiles
of the Bourbons, and the motto is “bouquet
Français.” Desertions from Bonaparte to the King
are numerous, and the well-wishers to the Royal
cause wear “Pensées.” They say, “La saison des
violettes se passe,” a bunch of violets having been
the designation of the adherents of Bonaparte, whom
they used to toast as “Le Caporal Violet.” Mademoiselle
Mars, the comic actress, was hissed off the
stage the other night for having one of these
bouquets of violets.
.pm fn-start // A
Born King of Rome, died Duke de Reichstadt, a colonel in
the Austrian service.
.pm fn-end
// 070.png
.pn +1
May 1st.—I dined early at Lady Charleville’s,
and went with her to Covent Garden, where I
saw Kemble in “Coriolanus,”[#] with the masque of
“Comus,”[#] lately revived. Kemble is now old, and
was always stiff and pompous; but his figure is fine,
and his deportment and delivery above the common.
His acting puts me in mind of Seneca’s tragedies.
It is sententious, and not sufficiently natural; but
still it is more classical than that of most others.
“Comus” is so beautiful in itself that it is impossible
not to be pleased with it, though too many
songs are added not belonging to the original.
Miss Stephens[#] is, I believe, thought a good singer.
Conway’s figure in “Comus” did very well; the
dresses of the “rabble rout” were not sufficiently
gay and splendid, and the scenery, which might
have been beautiful, was not good.
.pm fn-start // A
Coriolanus, Mr. Kemble; Sicinius,
Mr. Barrymore; Brutus, Mr.
Murray; Volumnia, Mrs. Renaud.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // B
“Covent Garden Theatre. The
beautiful masque of ‘Comus’ was revived
last night (April 28) at this
theatre with great splendour. All the
music of Handel and Arne was retained,
with some additions by Bishop.
Miss Stephens sung the Echo song
with the most fascinating effect. Mrs.
Liston was encored in the fine song,
“By dimpled brook.” Mrs. Faucit in
The Lady, and Mr. Abbot in the Elder
Brother, gave strong effect to the
beautiful poetry, and Mr. Conway was,
at least, a very grand figure in Comus.
It was received throughout with rapturous
applause.”—Morning Chronicle,
April 29.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // C
The present Countess of Essex.
.pm fn-end
4th.—I went to Madame d’Angoulême’s with
Lady Rolle. No accounts are yet come of the
Duke. Desertions seem to be frequent in favour
of the King. The Marquis de Chabannes, a relation
of Talleyrand, has published a violent pamphlet
against the Count de Blacas.
// 071.png
.pn +1
6th.—Went to Lady Downshire’s box at the
Opera. Princess Charlotte was in the Regent’s
box, which is in the Pit row, and so much shaded
by the orchestra as to render those who sit in it
very little visible. “God save the King” was sung
by all the performers when she appeared, and there
was a little clapping; but it has been given out
that, if there is much applause, she will not be
allowed to come again. Lady Ilchester sat on the
same line with her, and one of the Misses Coates
behind, as also a gentleman—I believe General
Garth. I heard this evening that he had begged to
be excused going in the carriage when she took an
airing, as it made him subject to ridicule to be considered
as a gaoler, and that he obtained permission
to attend her on horseback.
8th.—I dined at Lady Downshire’s, went with
her and the Ladies Hill to the Duchess d’Angoulême’s,
and afterwards to a party at Lady Murray’s,
where it was reported that Murat was a prisoner,
but, I believe, without foundation.
9th.—I had a letter from the Countess of Albany,
dated Florence, 3rd April, in which she expresses
her grief for the partiality expressed by our English
travellers in favour of Bonaparte, and seems much
alarmed for the safety of Italy from the ambition of
Murat.
10th.—I find people who return from Italy speak
with great contempt of Murat, except as far as
// 072.png
.pn +1
personal courage is concerned, though they were at
first much cajoled by him. In the evening I was at
Lady Charleville’s, where some French children
acted two vaudevilles—“Le Mariage dans une
Rose,” and “Blaise et Babet.” I came away soon
after the beginning of the second; in the first was a
Captain Duval, who boasts of having beaten the
English. Some of the songs were pretty, but there
was not a little “mauvais ton” in them.
11th.—Dr. Baird called and said the Morning
Chronicle[#] announced the intended marriage of
Miss M. Elphinstone and the Duke of Devonshire.
I dined at Lord Aylesbury’s.
.pm fn-start // A
“We have great pleasure in announcing
that the marriage is settled
between the Duke of Devonshire and
Miss Mercer, daughter of Lord Keith.
It is to take place next week.”—Morning
Chronicle, May 11, 1815.
.pm fn-end
12th.—The marriage was contradicted in the
same paper.[#] In the morning I went with Lady
Rolle and Lady Morton to the Society of Arts,
where are exhibited drawings, and specimens under
them, which, I understood, those who wish to exhibit
them are obliged to make in presence of the
committee, that no deception may be practised. The
room is adorned by paintings of Barry, which show
learning and imagination, but very bad colouring.
I thought the drawings in general very uninteresting.
In the rooms below were models and inventions,
many of which have no doubt great merit.
.pm fn-start // B
“We are desired to contradict,
from authority, the report of the
Honourable Miss Mercer Elphinstone’s
marriage with the Duke of Devonshire.”—Ibid.,
May 12.
.pm fn-end
// 073.png
.pn +1
We afterwards went to see Mr. Rehberg’s and other
drawings in Pall-mall, and from thence to the British
Gallery, where is now exhibiting a fine collection of
Flemish paintings, lent to the Institution by their
different proprietors. Nothing can be more characteristic
of the speculating genius of this country
than these exhibitions: money does everything
here. It is true that it is a good way to procure
assistance for the charity, but still there is an oddity
in it which must strike every one who has lived out
of England, that the public should pay for an exhibition
of pictures belonging to Princes and noblemen.
I dined at Lord Rolle’s, and in the evening
went to Mrs. Montague Burgoyne’s.
16th.—Went to Chiswick to visit Lady Macartney:
a beautiful thorn in bloom in her grounds,
and the country in general looking very lovely.
She said the Duke of Devonshire had made great
improvements at his place here.
17th.—I was in the evening at Lady Charleville’s
assembly, where great news of Murat’s expulsion
from Naples was reported, but without sufficient
foundation.
18th.—In the morning I called on the Countess
de Narbonne, who is just returned from Paris, and
gives very favourable accounts of the state of the
people’s mind.
20th.—I met Princess Charlotte driving round
the Park in an open carriage with Lady Ilchester,
// 074.png
.pn +1
one of the Misses Coates, and Colonel Addenbroke.
I dined at Lady Ashbrook’s.
21st.—Dined at Prince Castelcicala’s. The official
despatches from Vienna prove that Murat’s
efforts to cut his way through the Austrian corps,
commanded by Bianchi, have proved ineffectual,
though many men were lost on both sides. Prince
Castelcicala has in his hands the original interesting
letters of Bonaparte to Murat, which were
pretended to be false, after being mentioned by
Lord Castlereagh in the House.
22nd.—I dined at Lord Rolle’s, and went with
Lady Rolle in the evening to Naldi’s concert. It
was held at a house in Grosvenor-place, which was
once that of Lord Whitworth and the Duchess of
Dorset, now inhabited by a Mrs. Maitland, from
India. Mrs. Dickons, Naldi, Rosquillos, and Braham,
Mrs. Salmon, &c., sang, and a Miss Mortimer,[#]
just arrived from Italy, who seems to have
great powers, and taste, and expression. It was a
great crowd.
.pm fn-start // A
“Mr. Naldi’s last concert for the
season was given at the superb mansion
of Mrs. Maitland, in Grosvenor-place,
on Monday last. The numerous
suite of rooms were crowded, and the
splendours of the ladies made it a grand
coup d’œil. The concert was chiefly
vocal, there being only two instrumental
pieces. Mr. Naldi had the assistance
of Mrs. Dickons, Mrs. Salmon,
Miss Mortimer, Miss Griglietti,
Mr. Braham, Mr. Ledesma, and other
artists. Miss Mortimer sang a duet,
by Zingarelli, with Mr. Ledesma, and
an aria by Meyer. In these she displayed
a highly cultivated taste and
extensive power of voice. Her musical
education has evidently been adapted
to the theatre rather than to the
orchestra, as was manifested in the
theatrical air by Meyer, which demanded
considerable execution, and
in which, therefore, we were able to
distinguish the character and style of
this native songster, who, for ten years
past, has performed in all the principal
theatres of Italy. She will be a
great acquisition to the British stage.”—Morning
Chronicle, May 25, 1815.
.pm fn-end
24th.—Last night, or rather this morning, at
// 075.png
.pn +1
one, after a debate, in which Lord Liverpool, Lord
Grey, Lord Bathurst, and Lord Grenville spoke,
the question for peace or war was decided by a
majority of 156 against 44, I think. I dined at
Lady Charleville’s, and stayed for her great party
in the evening; after which I went to Lady Aylesbury’s
ball. I had a very kind letter from Princess
Charlotte, who is sadly neglected by her father,
and annoyed by those about her.
27th.—I dined at Prince Castelcicala’s, who
seems in excellent spirits at the retreat of Murat,
and the general news from Italy.
28th.—Dined at Lord Rolle’s, and went in the
evening to the Countess of St. Antonio’s, where
Cherubini, Naldi, &c., with the lady of the house,
Miss Fitzroy, M. de Rayneval, &c., sang and
played.
29th.—At Lady Aylesbury’s ball. The Prince
Regent came at one, and stayed till two, but did
not speak to me, or to many others. Mrs. Fitzherbert
was there, and was much overcome—he
took no notice of her.
1st of June.—I was at Covent Garden, and saw
Miss O’Neill act Mrs. Haller, in “The Stranger.”
The simplicity, propriety, and good sense of her
acting pleased me infinitely.
3rd.—The report of some of the muskets and
ammunition[#] sent to La Vendée having fallen into
// 076.png
.pn +1
the enemy’s hands is confirmed, and the rest which
was promised is not to go. I dined at Prince Castelcicala’s.
News arrived at the Secretary of State’s
office, from the Admiralty, of the surrender of the
ships and stores[#] at Naples to English men-of-war,
and of the impatience of the people to be restored
to their ancient sovereign.
.pm fn-start // A
Fifteen thousand stand of arms taken over by M. Larochejaquelin.
.pm fn-end
5th.—While I was in the evening at Lady Aylesbury’s,
arrived the Gazette Extraordinary, with the
news of the defeat of Murat, the total dispersion of
his army, and the recovery of the kingdom of
Naples.
.pm fn-start // A
“The Duke de Gallo surrendered
two sail of the line, and the whole
arsenal of Naples, by capitulation, to
Captain Campbell, of the Tremendous,
on his threatening to bombard the
city.”—London Gazette, June 5.
.pm fn-end
6th.—I had a letter from Princess Charlotte,
expressing great uneasiness with respect to many
things, and particularly the speedy arrival of the
Duke of Cumberland, and perhaps of his Duchess,[#]
though opposed by the Queen. I dined at Mr.
Hallam’s.
.pm fn-start // B
“We hear the Duke of Cumberland
has signified his intention of coming
to England, for a very short time, after
his marriage, but that the Duchess was
not expected to accompany him on the
present occasion.”—Morning Chronicle,
June 10.
His Royal Highness arrived in London
on the 18th, and alone.
.pm fn-end
8th.—I saw Madame d’Angoulême at Battersea,
where I called to inquire after her. She looked
well, said she left the King so, and that she
had heard from the Duke d’Angoulême, who had
left Madrid, and had joined by this time the
Spanish army on the frontiers. I dined at Mrs.
Roberts’s, at Mitcham.
// 077.png
.pn +1
12th.—Dined at Mrs. Weddell’s. The treaty of
subsidy to Holland much found fault with by Mr.
Horner, as the debt of Russia was one contracted
for the first partition of Poland.
15th.—Went to Hampstead to see Miss [\_\_\_],
who is at school there, and was surprised at the
view, which is more extensive and wild than would
be expected so near London.
16th.—Dined at Lady Louisa Macdonald’s, at
Sheen. The country looked very beautiful; the
weather, however, has been rainy and uncertain.
18th.—I dined with Lady Rolle, and went in
the evening to the Magdalen, where a Mr. Stevens
preached a very flowery sermon, and the women
sang three hymns.
June 19th, 1815.—Went with Mrs. Hicks to the
Argyle Rooms, to hear a morning lecture of the
Abbé Sicard, on his mode of instructing the deaf
and dumb; and two of his scholars, one a young
man, and the other aged forty-two, answered metaphysical
questions. He was tedious and dull in
his manner of explaining; and I was not by any
means surprised at their answers or mode of reasoning,
thinking what I knew of the instruction of
similar beings, at Rome, more skilful and interesting.
This day reports were spread, of an unfavourable
nature, relative to the affairs in Flanders.
It was said that Bonaparte had made an attack,
and that the Duke of Wellington had been forced
to retreat.
// 078.png
.pn +1
20th.—In the evening I called on Princess Castelcicala,
and Mrs. Hicks; everybody very anxious
about the news. It was reported, however, that
victory was in our favour.
On the 22nd came the account of the most decisive
and important victory. The Duke of Brunswick
killed, gallantly fighting at the head of his
brave little army—the Prince of Orange wounded—Lord
Uxbridge lost a leg—General Picton killed.
The Prussians fought most nobly as well as our
own people, and Bonaparte lost almost all his artillery,
with the total defeat and dispersion of his
chosen body of Imperial Guards, and, indeed, of
his whole army. I went with Lady Aylesbury to
visit the Duchess d’Angoulême, whom we found
in sober joy.
// 079.png
.sp 2
.pn +1
.pb
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch04
CHAPTER IV.
.sp 1
.pm ch-hd-start
REJOICINGS FOR WATERLOO—THE MARRIAGE OF THE DUKE OF CUMBERLAND—PRINCE
LEOPOLD—MARRIAGE RUMOURS—MARRIAGE OF THE
PRINCESS CHARLOTTE—HOW IT WAS BROUGHT ABOUT—LATER REVELATIONS—CHARACTER
OF THE PRINCESS CHARLOTTE.
.pm ch-hd-end
.h3
JOURNAL CONTINUED.
.sp 2
June 23 and 24, 1815.—London was illuminated,
and order given out for the Court going
into mourning for the Duke of Brunswick, on the
29th, for two months. I went to the Opera with
Miss Tisdall, on the 24th; “I Riti d’Efeso,” and
“L’Enfant Prodigue”—a bad opera and bad ballet;
the subject of the latter was the beautiful parable
of the Prodigal Son, in the Arabian costume.
The actors came forward and sang “Exulta Britannia,”
which was composed last year, and “God
save the King.” The following week brought with
it nothing very interesting. I dined on Wednesday,
the 28th, at Count de Salis’s, where there was a
pleasant party, and most of my time I afterwards
// 080.png
.pn +1
spent with Princess Castelcicala, who was very uneasy
about her eldest son, from whom she had
not heard, and who appears to have been taken
prisoner. On the 30th I had a letter from Princess
Charlotte, very uneasy about the Duke and Duchess
of Cumberland[#] probably proposing a marriage
with her son, Prince Salms Brauenfels, by her
first husband, brother of the King of Prussia;
telling me, likewise, she had other views, which
were promoted by the Duke of York.
.pm fn-start // A
The Duke of Cumberland married
a daughter of the reigning Duke
of Mecklenburg Strelitz, niece of
Queen Charlotte, and widow of the
Prince Salms Brauenfels. The marriage
was first solemnised at Berlin,
but owing to some informality the
ceremony was repeated at Carlton
House on the 29th August, in a very
private manner, the old Queen refusing
to be present.
.pm fn-end
On the 2nd of July, I went to Lord St. Vincent’s,
at Rochetts. On the 3rd, the Duke of
Cumberland’s request for an additional grant of
6000l. a year for himself and his Duchess was
thrown out by a majority of one, which one was
Lord Cochrane, who had paid his fine and appeared
once more in the House. Dreadful abuse
of the two royal personages.
On the 8th we received the account of the
surrender of Paris,[#] by a military convention, to
the Duke of Wellington. Mr. Whitbread[#] cut his
throat the other morning; his friends say it was
// 081.png
.pn +1
on account of his disappointment as proprietor of
Drury Lane Theatre; his enemies suppose a political
conspiracy with Bonaparte, discovered by papers
found in the carriage of the latter. The most probable
reason is insanity, at least temporary, caused
by the pressure of blood on the brain, which had,
in the opinion of some, rendered him liable to
apoplexy. Colonel Palmer came on the 8th, and
stayed till the 9th, as did Mr. Parker. The
Duchess d’Angoulême was going to Bordeaux, as
Madame de Narbonne writes me, but waits, for
fear of committing the loyal Bordelais, now that
the remaining rebel army is permitted by the Convention
to take their route across the Loire. General
and Mrs. Egerton passed a day and night.
.pm fn-start // B
The news of the occupation of
Paris was announced by Mr. Elliston
on the 6th at the King’s Theatre,
where a mixed performance was being
given for the benefit of the widows and
orphans of those who fell at Waterloo.
In answer to a question, he said he
had it in command from Carlton
House to announce the tidings, which
were fully given in the morning papers
of the 7th.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // C
He was found dead in his dressing-room,
about 10 A.M., July 6.
.pm fn-end
Louis XVIII. entered Paris on the 8th, and was
received with acclamations and white cockades. On
the 10th the Emperors of Austria and Russia and
the King of Prussia arrived there.
I had a letter from Princess Charlotte on the
13th, and another on the 18th, both very kind and
confidential. The Queen very ill from vexation,
and still keeping firm in her refusal to receive the
Duke of Cumberland, who is daily expected; and
Princess Charlotte is ordered to leave town, which
she does on the 22nd. The Dowager Lady Rosslyn
has resigned, and new arrangements are mentioned.
She is first to go to Cranbourne Lodge, and afterwards
to Weymouth.
// 082.png
.pn +1
22nd.—News arrived of Bonaparte having surrendered
himself to Captain Maitland, of the Bellerophon,
off Rochefort.
On the 28th I left Rochetts to pass one night
in London, and proceeded next day to Savernak
Lodge. Lord and Lady Aylesbury, having made
up their minds to go to Paris for ten days or a
fortnight, wished me to stay with their children in
the mean while, and to take Lord Bruce on my
way. I dined at Prince Castelcicala’s, and called
on the Duke de Sérent and Madame de Narbonne.
Madame d’Angoulême was gone, and they had
heard of her safe arrival at Dieppe. In the evening
we walked through the Park to Lady Charleville’s.
29th.—In the morning I went to Mitcham, fetched
Lord Bruce, and arrived about half-past nine in the
evening at Tottenham Park. Bonaparte is to go
to St. Helena in the Northumberland, Admiral Sir
George Cockburn, guarded by Sir Hudson Lowe,
who was Blücher’s interpreter last year. St. Helena
is to be purchased by Government from the East
India Company, and a regiment to be sent to guard
the prisoner. It is reported that Madame Bertrand[#]
attempted to kill herself when she heard of this
destination, and that Bonaparte has declared he will
not be taken alive on board the Northumberland, or
// 083.png
.pn +1
out of the Bellerophon. Crowds of people get round
the ship daily to see him.
.pm fn-start // A
Daughter of Count Dillon, guillotined
at Paris in 1794 for his adherence
to the Bourbons. Her mother
was the Countess Latouche, of Martinique.
.pm fn-end
Princess Charlotte[#] arrived at Weymouth on the
3rd of this month (August). She was received with
enthusiasm wherever she passed, and the same at
Weymouth; but having a bad cold, she was obliged
to stay at home on her first arrival there.
.pm fn-start // A
Her Royal Highness left London
on the 26th July in a carriage and
four, attended by Lady Ilchester and
Colonel Addenbroke, Dr. Short, and
Mrs. Campbell.
.pm fn-end
August 12th.—Letters from Plymouth brought
accounts of Bonaparte having been transferred from
the Bellerophon to the Northumberland, off Torbay.
On Monday, the 7th, Lord Keith sailed from Plymouth
in the Tonnant, hoisting his flag on board
her for the purpose of presiding over the transhipment—a
word which seems to have been fabricated
for the present purpose. He went in the barge of
the Tonnant to fetch Bonaparte, who, with Marshal
Bertrand and his wife, and a Count and Countess
de Montholon (with their children), attended by a
few servants, are to go in the Northumberland,
Admiral Sir G. Cockburn, to St. Helena. An
officer who was on board the Northumberland when
they arrived on board, says, in a letter to his
sister, dated the same day, that Bonaparte was
rather in better humour, but had been very sulky
for several days, having expected to remain in
England. During the time the Bellerophon was off
// 084.png
.pn +1
Plymouth, the crowd of spectators which flocked in
boats around her was enormous. Lord R. writes
that the people began to be partial to Bonaparte.
The papers say this morning that Sir Hudson Lowe
is arrived in town, which appears as if he were not
to accompany the prisoner.
Sir Hudson is appointed Governor of St. Helena,
and is going out very soon. It is said a Prussian
and an Austrian Commissioner are appointed to
reside there also. Commissioners from all the
Courts, including France, have been appointed.
14th.—Lord and Lady Aylesbury returned from
Paris, where they left everything quiet, though in
a very odd state, and such a one as cannot be expected
to last. The Prussians are the most disliked,
the English praised, and the Russians courted. The
works of art are claimed by the Prussians and other
nations, from whom they were taken by the French.
On the 7th of October the two Chambers met,
and the King made a speech to them, announcing
the treaty he had made with the Allied Sovereigns,
the particulars of which he should in a short time
communicate to them. The French complain
heavily of the pictures, statues, and other works of
art which they had taken from other countries
being taken from them. Canova is at Paris, commissioned
by the Pope to pack up those which were
taken from Rome.
October 20th.—Accounts arrived from Paris of
// 085.png
.pn +1
the addresses of the Chamber of Peers and that of
Deputies to the King; both very loyal, and the
latter very strong with respect to the punishment
of traitors.
General Porlier, who with some officers and
about eight hundred men had attempted to revolutionise
Corunna, has been executed by order of the
Spanish Government.[#]
.pm fn-start // A
Owing to an affection of the eyes,
Miss Knight discontinued her journal
until the commencement of the ensuing
year.
.pm fn-end
.sp 2
.h3
[1816.]
.sp 2
January 10th.—Princess Charlotte summoned to
Cranbourne Lodge to accompany the Queen to
Brighton, where her birthday was to be kept, and
it was and still is expected that she is to marry the
Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg at her own request.
She went to Brighton with the Queen on
the 6th. Nothing extraordinary seems to have
been done for her birthday,[#] though it completes
her twentieth year. Many people of rank were
invited to meet the Queen when she was there at
Christmas, but not so now.
I had a kind message from Princess Charlotte
this morning, conveyed by a person who saw her
// 086.png
.pn +1
while at Cranbourne. She was much thinner, as she
had been reduced by the medicines she had been
obliged to take for a pain in her side, occasioned by
a bilious disorder, which was erroneously treated as
nervous.
.pm fn-start // B
“The morn (of January 7) was
ushered in by the ringing of bells, and
preparations were making in the early
part of the day for a general illumination
in the evening, in compliment to
the Princess Charlotte, whose natal
day it was; but a desire was expressed
that this mark of respect and loyalty
from the town might be dispensed
with.”—Morning Post, January 10,
1816.
There was a grand ball at the Pavilion,
attended by “all the families
of rank and fashion” at Brighton.
.pm fn-end
This morning I called on Lord St. Vincent in
Mortimer-street, as he came to consult Clive and
Sir Edward Horne for his wrist, which had suffered
by a fall. I also went with Princess Castelcicala to
see the paintings and drawings of Gottenburgh, a
German from Vienna. He is an old man, but still
makes beautiful small drawings in pencil, portraits
chiefly of Roman women; and his small copies in
oils, from Correggio and other masters, are very
good.
12th.—I called in the morning at Lady Louisa
Macdonald’s, Mr. Keate’s, and on the Ladies Bruce.
Everybody talks of this marriage, and K. told me
the Queen and Prince Regent, when they wrote
to order Princess Charlotte to Cranbourne and
Brighton, said she would meet with an agreeable
surprise. It is now supposed they will prolong
their stay at Brighton till after the 18th, and it is
supposed the young man will be sent for. People
say he has only 200l. a year, which they calculate
is just enough to buy him two coats and a dozen
of shirts. I dined at Mr. Hallam’s, where I met
Mr. Ward, Mr. H. Fane, and Mr. W. J. Rose. The
// 087.png
.pn +1
first is counted one of our first wits; has not been
long returned from Italy. He is certainly very
clever and entertaining, but odd, and rash in his
judgments.[#] Mr. H. Fane appears pedantic, but
well informed.
.pm fn-start // A
Mr. Ward, afterwards Lord Dudley,
was a great favourite with the
Princess of Wales. “How melancholy
are all the recollections attached to
his name! A person endowed with
such supremacy of talent and situation,
and yet so blasted by an invisible
hand, that none of the former availed
to his happiness. No one, it is said
(either for his own sake, or, alas!
more probably, for his brilliant position
in life), was ever more courted by
the fair sex, in despite of a very plain
exterior and coarseness of manner.
He was accounted one of the most
agreeable and seductive of men. The
beautiful Mrs. B. was one of those reported
to have been not insensible to
his attentions. Her melancholy death
was, it is said, the actual cause of
finally confirming his mental derangement.”—Lady
C. Campbell’s Diary,
vol. ii. p. 117.
.pm fn-end
13th.—I dined at Lady Downshire’s. The Duke
of Sussex and his son, Captain d’Este, &c. &c.,
dined there. No mention was made of Princess
Charlotte’s marriage. It is said that the Dukes of
Bedford and Devonshire have received nothing
from their tenants for the last year.
14th.—I dined at Prince Castelcicala’s. General
Count Nugent, commander of the Austrian army
in Italy, has married the orphan daughter of the
late Marquis Carleto at Naples, whose mother was
one of the daughters of Prince Xavier of Saxony.
17th.—Dined at Sir Archibald Macdonald’s.
Duchess-Dowager of Leeds and Lady Catherine
Osborne, Mr. Osborne Markham, Mr. Jekyll, and
Archdeacon Pott there. Sir Robert Wilson, Mr.
Hutchinson, and Mr. Bruce, who travelled with
// 088.png
.pn +1
Lady Hester Stanhope in the desert, were accused
of high treason in France for effecting the escape
of Lavalette.[#]
.pm fn-start // A
Major-General Sir Robert Thomas
Wilson, Michael Bruce, Esq., and
Captain John Hely Hutchinson, were
tried before the Court of Assize for
the Department of the Seine, found
guilty of being accessory to the concealment
and escape of General Lavalette,
and sentenced to three months’
imprisonment. The trial took place
on the 22nd of April. In the first instance,
they were accused of plotting
against the political system of Europe
in general, and the French monarchy
in particular, but these charges were
subsequently withdrawn.
.pm fn-end
18th.—Called on Miss Fielding, Lady Mary
Parker, and Miss Mercer Elphinstone. The latter
said she had received only one letter from Princess
Charlotte since her stay at Brighton, and no mention
in it of the marriage.
23rd.—I had letters from Lady Mary Hill, and
Mr. Hallam mentioned a paragraph in the Morning
Chronicle of a Prince Leopold of saxe-coburg
being married at Vienna, but it proves to be a
Prince Ferdinand.
February 6th.—I had a letter from a friend,
who mentions Princess Charlotte as desiring to contradict
the reports relative to her marriage. It
appears that there is some obstacle which she cannot
surmount, as she wishes to consult the papers
respecting her engagement with the Prince of
Orange. Probably in this instance, as in that, her
father and his Ministers wish her to live abroad.
8th.—Went to town. Princess Castelcicala and
the Ladies Hill called. It seems Prince Leopold of
// 089.png
.pn +1
Saxe-Coburg asked for the command of the troops
in Hanover. I dined at Lady Downshire’s.
22nd.—I called on the Misses [\_\_\_]. Mr.
D. said he had just seen Lord Liverpool, and that
he and Lord Castlereagh were to accompany the
Prince of Saxe-Coburg to Brighton to-morrow.
Afterwards called on Mrs. R. Keate and Lady
Neave. Mr. Lyttleton had been there, and said
the Princess Charlotte would not marry the Prince
of Saxe-Coburg, as he would take her to Hanover.
26th.—Princess Charlotte goes with the Queen
to-day to Brighton. At Windsor they consider the
marriage as certain.
28th.—I received a very kind letter from Princess
Charlotte, dated Saturday, 24th. Very happy in
the thoughts of approaching freedom, and saying
that she should send for me to visit her as soon as
she was mistress of her own house. I went this
morning to Chantry’s, while Lord St. Vincent sat
for his bust.
I afterwards saw a person, who told me Princess
Mary had informed him that the Prince Regent was
quite nervous with impatience to get Princess
Charlotte married, as otherwise the Opposition
might clamour for her being treated as an heir-apparent,
and want more than ministers could, or
it would be proper to, give.
March 1.—I was at a small party at Lady Harrington’s.
It was said there that orders had been
// 090.png
.pn +1
sent to Weymouth to prepare the Lodge for the
reception of somebody, but of whom it is not
known. Some said the Prince of Saxe-Coburg
was to remain there until the marriage; others,
that Princess Charlotte was; others, that perhaps
they were to be married soon, and both go there
to stay till after Easter. It is now said the Prince
Regent is to come to town on the 10th.
The introduction of Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg
was very embarrassing to Princess Charlotte,
and (what must have been still more so)
the Queen then left them together. He is now
sent on a tour, and to finish at Weymouth, where
he is to remain till the day before the marriage.
She is gone back to Cranbourne Lodge. Lord Winchilsea,
who is just returned from Windsor, said at
the Opera that the message about the marriage
was to go down to Parliament to-day. Others say
it is not to be till this day week. I dined at Prince
Castelcicala’s. I believe it is true that the Duke de
Berri is to marry the grand-daughter of the King
of Naples, by the first wife of the Hereditary
Prince, who was sister of the Emperor of Austria.
6th.—The message[#] did not come down; and
// 091.png
.pn +1
Mr. Thomas Granville told Mr. T. that the reason
was because there was a difficulty; for that the
Prince Regent wished 50,000l. a year to be asked
for Princess Charlotte and her husband, but
only 10,000l. of it to be given into their hands
for their privy purse, and the salaries of three
ladies and three gentlemen; the other 40,000l. to
be given to him to provide house, &c. for them.
This being an intention subversive of all confidence
in their future Queen, Mr. Thomas Granville considered
as impossible to be proposed by any Ministers,
and therefore concluded some alteration in it
must take place. How true this account might be
I know not; but the provision has been settled at
10,000l. a year to Prince Leopold, for their joint
expenses, and 60,000l. as an outfit.
.pm fn-start // A
A message was sent from the
Prince Regent to each House of Parliament
on the 14th of March, announcing
the forthcoming marriage
of his daughter, Princess Charlotte
Augusta, with his Serene Highness
Leopold George Frederick Prince of
Coburg of Saalfeld. The Commons
granted the illustrious pair the annual
sum of 60,000l., of which 10,000l.
were for the exclusive use of the
Princess. They also voted the sums
of 40,000l. to purchase furniture, plate,
equipages, &c., 10,000l. for the Princess’s
dresses, and 10,000l. for jewels.
.pm fn-end
29th.—The Duke de Berri’s approaching marriage
with the Princess Caroline, daughter of the
Hereditary Prince of Naples, by his first wife, a
sister of the Emperor, is confirmed.
Cards have been sent to the Queen’s ladies for
the 4th of May, to attend the wedding of Princess
Charlotte. It is said the precedent for the wedding,
&c., is the marriage of the late Duchess of
Brunswick, but all Peers and Peeresses were invited
to that, and will not be to this.
Lady John Thynne and Lady Emily Murray are
appointed ladies of the bedchamber to Princess
Charlotte; Mrs. Campbell, privy purse and bedchamber
// 092.png
.pn +1
woman; Miss F. Coates, bedchamber
woman; Colonel Addenbroke, equerry. The marriage
is now fixed for the 2nd of May.
May 1.—The Queen came to Town on the 29th
of April. Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg to the
apartments of the Duke of Clarence, and Princess
Charlotte to Warwick House. The royal
household, the Cabinet Ministers and their wives,
and Foreign Ministers and their wives, are invited
to the wedding.
6th.—Intend leaving London to-morrow for
Dover, in my way to Paris with Sir Thomas and
Lady Troubridge, and two Mr. Norgates. Received
a very kind message from Princess Charlotte, which
she gave to Madame [\_\_\_] on the day of her
wedding, regretting my going.
.tb
[This appears to be the fittest place for the introduction
of the following supplementary remarks on
the career and character of the Princess Charlotte,
which are entered in a separate note-book, and bear
proof of having been written, from memory, at a
much later date. Some passages have been advisedly
omitted, either because they contain statements of
doubtful authenticity, recorded as such by Miss
Knight, or because they touch, in a manner that
// 093.png
.pn +1
might give pain, on the private concerns of living
individuals:]
The marriage of the Hereditary Prince of Orange
with a sister of the Emperor of Russia gave reason
for many people to believe that he and the Grand-Duchess
Catherine had contributed to disunite the
Prince and Princess Charlotte. What passed at
the Portland Hotel seemed intended to prove the
contrary.
The King of Würtemberg has since then assured
me that the late Queen, the Grand-Duchess, constantly
expressed the greatest fondness for Princess
Charlotte, and the most fervent regret for her
death.
The marriage of the Princess Mary with the
Duke of Gloucester took place very soon after that
of Princess Charlotte with Prince Leopold, in 1816.
The wish of the Princess Charlotte, after the
rupture of the intended marriage with the Hereditary
Prince of Orange, was to marry one of the
Prussian Princes, and some months elapsed before
she entirely gave up this plan, which was opposed
on both sides of the water. * * * *
An English lady, who happened to be standing
very near the Prince of Orange soon after the
news of Princess Charlotte’s death had reached
him, assured me that his sighs and sobs were quite
affecting.
// 094.png
.pn +1
At a party given by their present Majesties
(William IV. and Queen Adelaide) I met the
Prince of Orange, who came to solicit protection
and assistance during the troubles of Belgium. He
took no notice of me, and I have always heard he
had been much prejudiced against me, for which I
cannot account, as I did what I could with propriety
in his favour, after Princess Charlotte had
once given her consent; and, indeed, I thought she
would have been happier in Holland than in England,
as every motive must have engaged the King
and Queen of that country to endeavour to gain her
affection; and here unfortunately the heir-apparent
is always an object of jealousy on the one hand, and
of artful intrigues on the other.
The conduct of the Prince of Orange, however,
since his marriage has not been such as to make
one believe that she would have been happy with
him. Providence has done the best for her, and,
as it appears, for Princess Victoria.
I have lived to witness the termination of many
things, and I humbly bend with resignation and
gratitude to the Divine dispensations.
With respect to myself, all I can say is this. I
cannot help regretting having left the Queen. My
intentions were not bad, but in many respects I
consulted my feelings more than my reason. My
mind was then too active, perhaps now it is too
// 095.png
.pn +1
indolent; but either I ought to have remained with
the Queen, or I ought to have carried things with
a higher hand to be really useful while I was with
Princess Charlotte. I had no support from the
good Duchess; nor, indeed, from any one. She
had neither energy of character nor powerful connexions.
I had the romantic desire that Princess
Charlotte should think for herself, and think wisely.
Was that to be expected from a girl of seventeen,
and from one who had never had proper care taken
of her since early childhood? She might have been
great indeed. She had a heart and a mind capable
of rendering her so. She had the most charitable
disposition possible.
I forgot to mention in my journal for 1814, that
when I perceived the marriage treaty must be broken
off, if some assurance were not given of an establishment
in England, I begged to see Lord Liverpool
myself, that I might tell him my apprehensions,
and beg that something might be done to prevent
the mischief. He only came and asked for Princess
Charlotte, but when I heard he was in the library,
I asked her permission to go down and speak to him
first, which she granted. I went and told him what
I thought my duty to say, but he made no decisive
answer, and seemed impatient to go up-stairs.
When Princess Charlotte entered on the subject,
all she could get from him was, that some arrangement
// 096.png
.pn +1
might be made like that between two persons,
who were named, by no means of distinguished
families, and at last said he would try to obtain
from the Regent permission that she might retain
Warwick House for some time after her marriage.
When Princess Charlotte told all this to the
Prince of Orange, he was still more indignant than
herself, both on account of the comparison with
Mr. —— and Miss ——, and also of Warwick
House, saying, “Did Lord Liverpool think he
would live in such an ugly old place?”
Another thing which made Princess Charlotte
very unhappy was, that not a word was said to her
about what was to be her household, or how it was
to be composed. But I remember hearing one of
my own acquaintance say, “Would she not have
had a very agreeable existence at Brussels, where
she and her husband were to have kept their
Court?”
Princess Charlotte had not the slightest idea of
that, but supposed she was expected to live with
the King and Queen of the Netherlands.
It is possible that when Princess Charlotte was a
child, her temper might have been violent and head-strong,
and the world held that opinion when she was
grown up.[#] I never saw anything of this violence
// 097.png
.pn +1
or obstinacy. Much agitation, nervous uneasiness,
and sometimes nervous impatience,—all this I observed,
and sometimes to such a degree as to injure
her health. As a proof of this, it may be remarked
that she was so much afraid of her father, that
when she had seen him, or expected him, she
stuttered exceedingly,[#] which she never did at
times when there was nothing particular to agitate
// 098.png
.pn +1
her. This nervous feeling was perhaps one of the
principal causes why, so far from being obstinate,
she was often persuaded to things she did not like,
and would think firmness so essential to the happiness
of every one, and more especially of a royal
person.
.pm fn-start // A
“Notwithstanding some disadvantages,
the Princess (Charlotte) had
grown up to womanhood with many
attractions, both mental and personal.
Her Royal Highness possessed, also,
a nature susceptible of every generous
impression; unsuspicious and trusting,
she readily became the dupe of persons
who sought for their own objects to
influence her through her sympathies,
but when the influence was removed,
the natural good sense of the Princess
suggested a line of conduct becoming
her sex and position. During the
period when the society of her mother
was least restricted, there is nothing
to prove that her Royal Highness testified
for it a very decided partiality;
and it was scarcely possible for her to
have been a frequent visitor at Blackheath
and Kensington, without obtaining
a knowledge that must have
circumscribed her affection. Her disposition
was extremely amiable, notwithstanding
an impulsiveness that,
under peculiar provocation, may have
led her on one or two occasions into
error; a pleasing proof of which was
exhibited in her conduct to Lord
Eldon, after he had brought her home,
subsequently to her elopement from
Warwick House. In her communications
with, or observations on her
mother, after the latter had left England,
there are quite sufficient evidences
of filial interest, tempered with
a reserve naturally arising out of a
sense of her objectionable conduct.”—Duke
of Buckingham’s Memoirs of the
Court of the Regency, vol. ii. p. 156.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // A
The Princess Charlotte in 1811.
“She is grown excessively, and has
all the fulness of a person of five-and-twenty.
She is neither graceful nor
elegant; yet she has a peculiar air et
tous les prestiges de la royauté et du
pouvoir. The Princess is above the
middle height, extremely spread for
her age; her bosom full, but finely
shaped; her shoulders large, and her
whole person voluptuous, but of a
nature to become soon spoiled; and
without much care and exercise, she
will shortly lose all beauty in fat and
clumsiness. Her skin is white, but
not a transparent white. There is
little or no shade in her face, but her
features are very fine. Their expression,
like that of her general demeanour,
is noble. Her feet are rather
small, and her hands and arms are
finely moulded. She has a hesitation
in her speech amounting almost to a
stammer—an additional proof, if any
were wanting, of her being her father’s
own child; but in everything she is
his very image. Her voice is flexible,
and its tones dulcet, except when she
laughs, then it becomes too loud, but
is never unmusical. She seems to
wish to be admired more as a lovely
woman than as a Queen. Yet she has
quickness both of penetration and
fancy, and would fain reign despotically,
or I am much mistaken. I fear
she is capricious, self-willed, and obstinate.
I think she is kind-hearted,
clever, and enthusiastic. Her faults
have evidently never been checked,
nor her virtues fostered.”—Lady C.
Campbell’s Diary, vol. i. p. 65.
.pm fn-end
Of this want of firmness the artful and designing
took advantage, and unfortunately those about her
had been so often changed, and she had so few
natural friends, that it was difficult to obtain her
perfect confidence; or, I should rather say, to preserve
it.
Her humanity and kindness to all who were in
distress or affliction surpass belief, and I never
knew a person less selfish. The only value she set
on a present was as it proved more or less the kind
intentions of the person who made it. I never saw
in her any personal vanity, and there was nothing
unforgiving in her disposition.
Her notions were aristocratical, though her mind
had received from her father an early bias in favour
of the Whig party, of which he was long considered
as the support, and of course that party did not
neglect any opportunity of making her their friend,
and persuading her that the good of the country
would depend on her continuing to encourage them.
However, she was equally attentive to all who paid
// 099.png
.pn +1
her proper respect, whether of the Ministry or Opposition.[#]
.pm fn-start // A
“I received a visit from Miss
Knight. Her presence recalled Kensington
and the poor Princess to my
mind. She conversed with sense and
kindliness on these topics, but her exceeding
prudence always restrains the
expression of her feelings, and she appeared
averse to dwelling on the subject.
The only remark she made which
struck me as singular was that, in
speaking of the King’s illness and probable
decease, she said she conceived
it would be a fortunate event for the
country. Miss Knight has a very refined
mind, and takes delight in every
subject connected with literature and
the arts. She is exceedingly well read,
and has an excellent judgment in these
matters.... I alluded once to the poor
Princess Charlotte’s death, but Miss
Knight only replied, ‘Ah, that was a
melancholy event!’ and passed on to
other subjects. She did not impress
me with the idea of lamenting the
Princess so much as I should have
supposed she would have done. But
perhaps she may, in reality, mourn her
melancholy fate, and that she only
forbears speaking of her lest she should
say too much. Certainly Miss Knight
was very ill-used by the Queen and
the Regent, and I do not think Princess
Charlotte liked, although she
esteemed her. Miss Knight was not
sufficiently gay, or of a style of character
suited to her Royal Highness.”—Lady
C. Campbell’s Diary, vol. iii.
p. 7.
.pm fn-end
.sp 2
// 100.png
.pn +1
.pb
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch05
CHAPTER V.
.sp 1
.pm ch-hd-start
FRANCE REVISITED—CHANTILLY—PARISIAN SOCIETY—THE COURT OF THE
BOURBONS—THE PRINCE DE CONDÉ—MARSHAL MARMONT—THE FRENCH
STAGE—INVITATIONS FROM THE PRINCESS CHARLOTTE.
.pm ch-hd-end
.h3
JOURNAL CONTINUED.
.sp 2
Montreuil, May, 1816.—The appearance of
France is exactly what it was when I first travelled,
but the inhabitants wear a different aspect. The
women are not much altered; if anything, rather
graver; the men more stern and sententious than
before the Revolution. The people we met looked
pale and wretched, and, except the postilions, we
saw scarcely a single young man. The woman of
the inn at Montreuil seemed a good Royalist, and
talked with much feeling of the bon Roi, who had
kissed her child when she saw him at Calais.
Some of our Horse Artillery and of the 7th Light
Dragoons (Lord Anglesea’s) are still quartered in
// 101.png
.pn +1
this neighbourhood. The woman did not speak ill
of our troops, but owned that our young officers
were twice nearly setting fire to her house.
12th.—Some of our party walked into the church
at Clermont, and found the curate and vicar instructing
the children. The shops, however, were
mostly open, though it was Sunday; and the last
stage to Montreuil we were driven by a priest,
brother of one of the postilions, the other one
being absent.
We had a pleasant drive from Clermont to
Chantilly; the people dancing in the fields. We
passed through the ruined and desolate park of
the Prince of Condé; but, melancholy as its appearance
was, it was pleasant to think he is again
the master, and every one looking forward to his
passing some time here this spring. When we
came to the inn, which is called “Bourbon Condé,”
the mistress of the house, a very intelligent and
loyal person, told us she was now sure of the
Prince coming, for three hampers of Champagne
had arrived. She gave a dreadful account of the
sufferings of the people from the conscription under
Bonaparte, and other acts of oppression. We
did not, however, find that the English were much
liked, though a Mr. Jolliffe, who had been there
with Lord Combermere, had given an order for
purchasing four hundred cub foxes, which are
to be sent over fifty at a time. We saw some of
// 102.png
.pn +1
these creatures ready for transportation. The
French pay forty sous a head for their destruction.
Paris, May 16.—I called on Lady Elizabeth
Stuart, who had sent me a card. Her husband,
Sir Charles Stuart, ambassador from our Court, is
son of the late General Sir Charles Stuart, son of
Lord Bute, the Prime Minister at the beginning of
our present King’s reign. The house inhabited by
our ambassador was the palace of Pauline, Princess
Borghese, sister of Bonaparte, and is a magnificent
and elegantly fitted-up dwelling; perhaps
rather too showy. I called, also, on the Duke de
Sérent and his daughter, Madame de Narbonne,
whose husband, ambassador at Naples, has lately
been made a Duke, as a compliment for his negotiating
the marriage between the Duke de Berri
and Princess Caroline of Naples. The Duke de Sérent’s
hotel is beautiful, both with respect to situation
and neatness: it has a terrace overlooking a
garden.
I engaged a very pretty lodging in Rue Grenoble,
Faubourg St. Germain, where I have a
hall, dining-room, drawing-room, and three bedrooms,
all remarkably well furnished in silk and
muslin, besides servants’ rooms, closets, stable, and
coach-house, for four hundred francs a month.
Sunday, May 19.—I had a note from the Duchess
de Sérent, to say that Madame, Duchess
d’Angoulême, would see me at three. I first called
// 103.png
.pn +1
on Madame de Sérent, whom I found on a ground-floor
of the Tuileries, her room filled with plants
and flowers. At three I crossed the court, and
entered an apartment of the palace to the right.
In the first hall were guards, and in the ante-room
pages, who announced me. Madame came out of
an inner room into the salon, where she made me
sit down beside her, and kept me for more than
half an hour. She spoke of Princess Charlotte’s
marriage, of the forthcoming one of the Duke de
Berri, and of her regard for the late mother of the
Duchess, whom she had known at Vienna. She
expressed much gratitude towards the Regent, but
seemed rather surprised that he had not dismissed
Sir Robert Wilson from the service. Sir Charles
Stuart had sent my name in for presentation to
the King and Madame for the following Monday;
but the Duchess de Sérent advised me to put it
off as a useless ceremony if I could see them in
private.
22nd.—Went to Calaghan’s, the banker, where,
for 65l. sterling, I received 1788 francs, the exchange
being considerably in our favour. I dined
with Prince Castelcicala, to meet Princess Broglie
and (her daughter) Baroness Nicolay; and afterwards
went with them to the Théâtre des Variétés,
on the Boulevards, where we saw four “petites
pièces,” performed by good actors with great spirit,
and altogether very laughable. There were some
political allusions, which were clapped with great
// 104.png
.pn +1
loyalty, as was also the air of “Henri Quatre,”
which was played twice. All the ladies were in
morning dresses, with great bonnets. It is a pretty
little theatre, and the manner of lighting it is much
better for the eyes than ours, and more advantageous
for the performers.
23rd.—M. de Bernis called upon me, and said the
reason why three magistrates of Amiens had been
dismissed from their employments was that they
had obliged a gentleman to say that the Duke of
Orleans[#] had a right to the crown of France after
the present royal family. They had threatened
him with instant death if he refused. Their defence
was, that they meant it as a joke; but the
Government took it up seriously.
.pm fn-start // A
Louis Philippe, son of Philippe l’Egalité, Duke of
Orleans: afterwards King of the French.
.pm fn-end
26th.—I went out to make some visits, but
found no one at home except Cardinal de Bayane,
who is old and deaf, but otherwise not much
altered from what he was at Rome. I am afraid
he has “incensed” the idol, and lowered himself in
the opinion of many by so doing; particularly by
obliging his niece to become lady of the bedchamber
to Madame Mère.
27th.—In the evening, a little before eight, 1
went to the Tuileries to be presented to the King.
The guards, who lined the grand staircase, and
were stationed in the hall, presented arms as the
// 105.png
.pn +1
ladies passed, and an officer showed us the way.
We stopped in the salon which forms the ante-room
to that in which the Duchesses and wives of
the Ambassadors and Marshals waited for the King.
When they had had their audience, the English
ladies were the first admitted. Lady Hardwick,
Lady Caledon, Lady le Despenser, the two beautiful
Ladies Bingham, Lady Belmere, and two or
three others, formed the group. We had long
trains, and lappets, but no hoops. The King was
very gracious, and spoke to me in English. The
Dukes d’Angoulême and Berri were standing near
him, and Monsieur stood by their side: the latter
talked to me about Princess Charlotte. We were
introduced by the Duke de la Châtre, “premier
gentilhomme de la chambre,” and the “grand
maître des cérémonies,” M. de Brézé. We passed
on to the great gallery, and going down another
flight of stairs, found our carriages at the further
gate. The gentlemen go to Court in the morning.
The apartments were well lighted, and the whole
had an appearance of decorum and state which was
very striking. I felt a most pleasing sensation
from seeing the King in his own palace after so
long and dreadful a revolution.
28th.—In the morning we went with the Marquis
de Dolomieu to the King’s Library, where he
introduced an Orientalist, a M. Langlés, who was
very obliging, and showed us autographs of Racine,
// 106.png
.pn +1
La Fontaine, Voltaire, Boileau, Louis XIV., Madame
de Maintenon, &c., and a set of drawings
(coloured), in a manuscript, describing everything
relating to tournaments. He asserted they were
the work of Réné of Anjou, father of Margaret,
Queen of Henry VI. I should rather have supposed
them to be of the time of Pietro Perugino,
the master of Raphael. They are excellent, and
truly interesting. M. Langlés is celebrated for his
skill in Asiatic researches, and he showed us Arabic
and Tartar manuscripts, &c.
29th.—Breakfasted with the Chevalier de Bayane:
chickens, lampreys, petits pâtés, fruit, green
peas, cream, tea, coffee, wine; in short, everything
that can be imagined. He lives with his brother,
the Cardinal, and several of their relations, male
and female, in a very handsome house purchased
by the Cardinal. They are both aged, but in good
health and spirits.
31st.—Dined at the Duke de Sérent’s, where I
met M. de B——, a distinguished deputy, who is
a pure Royalist, and has written well on the subject
of divorce. It appears that these pure Royalists
have a great objection to the Charter and the
Ministers, whom the allies timorously support, to
the great annoyance of the former. The ministerial
party give the Royalists the character of enthusiasts,
and tell you they are revengeful and unconscionable;
and Society suffers by all these dissensions.
// 107.png
.pn +1
The Royalists, however, are much to be
pitied. They have recovered little more than the
privilege of remaining in France, while the others
preserve their property, or the power of disposing
of it to the best advantage.
June 1.—I went with Prince Castelcicala to the
old Duchess of Orleans. She has a fine house,
which was formerly that of the director Cambacérès.
She seemed very good natured, and invited
me to dine with her the first day the Prince
could bring me. She had a lady in attendance,
and an old Abbé, whom she calls her chancellor,
and to whom some people have thought her
to be privately married. An old Bishop was visiting
her, and two ladies, one of whom was Baroness
de Talleyrand, formerly ambassadress at Naples.
We afterwards called on Lady Hardwick, and on
the Duchess d’Escars, who, as the wife of the grand
maître d’hôtel, lives in the Pavillon de Flore, at
the Tuileries, very high up, and, of course, commanding
an extensive view. Her apartments are
attics, and small, but finely furnished and fitted
up, which was done by Bonaparte for Madame
C——, one of his favourites, and reader to Marie
Louise.
3rd.—In the evening I went to pay my visit to
Monsieur and the Duke de Berri, who live in the
Pavillon Marsan. Their apartments are simply
and elegantly furnished. They were both very
// 108.png
.pn +1
courteous, Monsieur particularly so, and everybody
about them attentive.
4th.—I called on Mrs. and Miss Rawdon, who
are just arrived; and we afterwards went to see
the house of Cardinal Fesch, Bonaparte’s uncle,
who is at Rome, and his furniture here is selling
off. The King of Holland and the Prince of
Orange lived here, and the chairs and sofas are
not the better for their servants. We saw many
pictures, but none struck me as very fine. There
were some beautiful vases and busts, and some
good antique bas-reliefs. The house is spacious,
and was built by the Cardinal, who endeavoured
to make it an Italian palace, but his taste was
not perfect enough for the undertaking.
6th.—In the morning I went to the Palais Royal,
and to M. Vien, a painter, son of the senator Vien,
who was formerly director of the French Academy
at Rome. I saw some beautiful small paintings,
historical compositions, which he did at the age of
ninety-three. He has been dead only six years.
The son told me he had a Prussian officer lodging
in his house, and liked him so well that he begged
him to remain beyond the time allotted for his
quarters. The inhabitants of Versailles also spoke
of the Prussians as doing no more harm than they
could possibly help. In the orangery there, by-the-by,
we were shown a statue of Louis XIV.,
whose head had been cut off to make room for
// 109.png
.pn +1
that of Brutus. M. Vien had in a small room the
bust of a Garde du Corps, his friend, which he had
begun before Bonaparte’s landing, and worked at
by stealth during the three months of his usurpation,
the original having gone to the King at Ghent.
He said it was incredible what he and his family
had suffered. Yet his father had been made a
senator, and was buried in the Pantheon. In the
evening I went to the Duchess of Narbonne’s, where
I saw Prince Hohenlohe, who has just entered the
service of France. He is to have the command of a
German brigade, and has the promise of a Cordon
Bleu. Afterwards I went to the Countess de
Chastellux, where I saw some drawings made by her
second daughter, illustrative of events in the war
of La Vendée, witnessed by her cousin, Madame de
la Rochejacquelein, who has written her Memoirs.
8th.—I dined with the Dowager-Duchess of
Orleans. There were several ladies present, and
Prince Hohenlohe and Prince Castelcicala also
dined there. The dinner was very good, chiefly
consisting of fish, and when we went into the
drawing-room the Duchess and two other ladies
worked. A card-party was formed, and a backgammon-table
set out. They were cheerful and
pleasant, and the Duchess extremely affable.
9th.—In the evening I went with M. and Madame
de Béthisy to the Prince de Condé’s, who inhabits
a pavilion of the Hôtel de Bourbon, which, notwithstanding
// 110.png
.pn +1
the bad weather, appeared to be very
beautifully situated in the midst of a garden. The
good old Prince is wheeled about in his arm-chair,
and his memory often fails him, but he received us
with great politeness. His premier gentilhomme
de la chambre, Count Banqui du Cayla, introduced
me; and Madame de Rully, the natural
daughter of the Duke de Bourbon, assisted in doing
the honours. She is mild and pleasing. Amongst
other ladies who came in, Madame de Béthisy
pointed out one who, she said, was a daughter of
the grandfather of the present Duke of Orleans.
10th.—Went to the Duchess of Orleans, and to
a ball at Mrs. Hammond’s.[#] Mr. H. is residing
here as commissary for settling commercial and
boundary matters, &c. He inhabits the house
which was formerly Joseph Bonaparte’s, and, what
is singular enough, the same Joseph Bonaparte has
just purchased in America the house in which Mr.
Hammond was married.
.pm fn-start // A
George Hammond, Esq., and
David R. Morier, Esq., his Majesty’s
Consul-General in France, were gazetted
December 20, 1815, as his Majesty’s
Commissioners of Arbitration.
.pm fn-end
11th.—Dined at Prince de Condé’s. M. and
Madame de Béthisy and several officers were of
the party. M. and Madame de Rully live with the
Prince. The latter was very cheerful and kind,
and after dinner sent for some little portraits to
show me. One of them was of a natural sister
of his own, excessively pretty, with a fly cap and
// 111.png
.pn +1
capuchin. Another was a little figure of Madame
de Montespan as a Magdalen in the desert.
Madame de Rully showed me the billiard-room,
where I saw the busts of the great Condé and of
Turenne on the chimney-piece. I was pleased to
observe the respect the Prince paid to the memory
of Turenne, whom he seemed desirous to praise
equally with his own great ancestor. He has starts
of recollection, and still retains the unassuming,
steady character which distinguished him at the
head of his army. At eight I went to the Duke de
Sérent’s, where I heard much of the robberies
committed by the Bonaparte family; including
Cardinal Fesch, who pillaged the Villa Mattei at
Rome to adorn his palace in Paris, and who has
not yet paid the transport of his chairs and sofas
from Rome, whither he had sent them to be gilt.
12th.—While I was at the Prince of Condé’s
to-day, Marshal Marmont came in—a vulgar-looking
man, without any military grace. The Prince,
when he found out who it was, spoke civilly to him.
The King went to Fontainebleau to meet the bride,
and to give an opportunity for preparations at the
Tuileries. Talleyrand sat beside him, and the Duke
de la Châtre, premier gentilhomme de la chambre,
with the captain of the Gardes du Corps, on the
opposite seat. There was much crying “Vive le
Roi!”
13th.—I was at a party at Sir Charles Stuart’s,
// 112.png
.pn +1
chiefly English. All the rooms were thrown open,
and some of the guests walked in the garden. The
Duke of Wellington came in a cabriolet.
14th.—Everybody is most anxious to get tickets
for the forthcoming fêtes, and ladies are to have
only one each, choosing which they please. The
King has given orders that all whose names are
sent in by Sir Charles Stuart are to be accommodated.
I found, too, when I returned home, one
for the church, and one “pour le Jeu du Roi” on
Monday.
15th.—I went to see the cabinet of cameos,
intaglios, and medals at the King’s Library. In the
first effervescence of the Revolution orders were
issued for dissolving them all; but Barthélémi, the
author of “Anacharsis,” found means to delay the
execution of the warrant, and they were fortunately
forgotten. I saw the bracelets of Diane de Poictiers,
Duchess of Valentinois, the Twelve Cæsars worn as
coat-buttons by Henri Quatre, an intaglio portrait
of the Dauphin worn as a ring by Louis XVI., the
bracelets of Madame de Pompadour, cameos of
Louis XV. and Henri IV. set in emeralds, the
beautiful intaglio of Michael Angelo worn by
Louis XIV., and the fine one on an amethyst, by
Glycon, of Achilles playing on the harp. Henri IV.
seems to have had a decided taste for cameos. His
town sword is adorned with them, and his fighting
sword has a falcon on it.
// 113.png
.pn +1
16th.—I went out about ten to see the processions,
as the Fête-Dieu is celebrated to-day. I believe
this fête has been solemnised only once—the
year before last—these twenty-five years. The procession
of St. Sulpice was the most numerous, and
many ladies walked in it. That of the parish of
St. Thomas d’Aquin stopped at the gate of the
Duchess d’Orleans, entered the court in which an
altar had been erected, and gave the benediction to
the Duchess, her ladies, and household. The people
seemed pleased with the revival of these religious
ceremonies. A large canopy for one of the processions
was given by the Duchess de Bourbon, who
has written a book on Theology. The National
Guards, who escorted the processions, and who do
duty in Paris on almost all occasions, are said to be
very loyal. They are all “bourgeois,” but are well
dressed and at their own expense, and have a
soldier-like appearance. They had nosegays on
their bouquets, and nearly everybody who attended
the processions, priests included, had flowers, and
the streets were hung with carpeting and tapestry.
I was delighted to see the venerable priests, who
had survived so many horrors, once more peaceably
chanting through the streets. How innocent their
errors in comparison with the crimes of their persecutors!
About three we went with Madame and Mademoiselle
de Chastellux and their friend Madame de
// 114.png
.pn +1
Fontanes[#] to the apartments of Madame Montgolfier,
widow of the inventor of balloons, to see
the arrival of the King with the Duchess de Berri.
His Majesty arrived a little after four in an open
carriage. The Duchess d’Angoulême and the Duke
and Duchess de Berri were with him. The bride
was dressed in white and silver, with feathers, and
had a small white parasol. The Duchess d’Angoulême
was in blue, and looked remarkably well. The
bride is very fair,[#] but the people said she was too
thin. Cries of “Vive le Roi!” accompanied them.
The military bore themselves particularly well, and
the whole scene was very agreeable. The windows
at which we were placed looked on the Boulevards,
and the cheerfulness of the place, with its decorations
of hangings, flowers, leaves, &c. &c., had a
delightful effect.
.pm fn-start // A
Probably wife of M. de Fontanes,
who translated into French Pope’s
“Essay on Man.” By the Emperor
he was created Count of the Empire,
Commandant of the Legion of Honour,
and Grand Master of the Imperial
University; and by Louis XVIII. he
was subsequently created Peer of
France and Officer of the Legion of
Honour.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // B
Lady Morgan’s “chef d’un magasin
de blanchissage” was willing to
“pardon the King much for giving
‘la nation une princesse blanche comme
la neige.’”—Lady Morgan’s France in
1816, vol. i. p. 105.
.pm fn-end
17th.—In the evening the wedding ceremony was
performed at Notre-Dame. I had a ticket, but did
not go, as I was afraid of the crowd. I understand
it was well regulated. At six I went to the Tuileries
“au Jeu de Roi.” Card-tables were set in the
Galerie des Cerfs, and in the midst a large round
one for the King and Royal Family. They came in
// 115.png
.pn +1
about seven, the Duke de Berri dressed à la Henri
Quatre, Madame leading the bride. I happened to
be near the table, and she introduced me to her.
The Peers who had been witnesses of the marriage
wore mantles; the uniforms were very fine, and
the scene splendid. Those who had tickets for seeing
the banquet followed the King when he left the
Gallery. As I passed out I observed the Place du
Carrousel full of people, which, with the cries of
“Vive le Roi!” and the illumination, had a very
fine effect. At eleven I went to a ball at the Duke
of Wellington’s: his house[#] handsome, and the
gardens prettily illuminated.
.pm fn-start // A
The Duke of Wellington occupied
the Hôtel de la Regnière. “It was in
this hotel that his Grace gave a splendid
ball, on the occasion of the marriage
of the Duc de Berri, which,
from the circumstance of all the guests
coming fresh from the grand couvert at
the Tuileries in their splendid court
dresses, together with the illuminations
of the hotel and gardens in honour of
the event, produced an effect of brilliancy
and magnificence to which description
can do no possible justice....
It was curious to see in this congress
of beauty and fashion, to which
so many countries lent some of their
lovely representatives, the belles of
Berlin, Petersburg, Rome, London,
Paris, Edinburgh, and Dublin, all assembled
under the same roof; Bonapartist
generals waltzing in close embrace
with pretty royalistes enragées,
and revolutionary senators linked in
a chaîne-entière with ultra partners,
formed the best illustration of the
‘Holy Alliance’ that could possibly be
given.”—Lady Morgan’s France in
1816, vol. ii. p. 81.
.pm fn-end
18th.—Anniversary of the battle of Waterloo.
There was a pause in the fêtes. The Royal Family
went to dine at St. Cloud.
19th.—Colonel Palmer brought me a letter from
Princess Charlotte, expressing a wish to see me in
England, with a very handsome message from her
husband. In the evening I was at the “bal paré”
at the Tuileries, in the Salle de l’Opéra, where the
// 116.png
.pn +1
banquet had been held. The whole of the Royal
Family were present. The Duchess de Berri danced
a French and an English country dance with the
Duke d’Angoulême, and waltzed with her husband.
At ten they retired.
20th.—A review of twenty-four thousand men,
and a “bénédiction des drapeaux” in the Champ de
Mars. The old Archbishop of Rheims performed
the ceremony, and Madame and the Duchess de
Berri tied the “cravates,” white handkerchiefs,
round the staffs of the colours. I was in the tent
of the Etat-Major-General. It was a long ceremony,
but very interesting.
24th.—I went in the evening in court dress to
the Tuileries[#] “aux premières loges.” The King
and all the Royal Family there to see the representation
of “Adélaïde du Guesclin,” and “Les
Etourdis, ou Le Mort Supposé.” Talma and Mademoiselle
George acted in the first, and Mademoiselle
// 117.png
.pn +1
Mars in the second. I admire Talma and Mademoiselle
Mars exceedingly. The company produced
a fine effect. The Maréchaux de France had seats
on the left hand of the Royal Family, as also had
the Ambassadors and their suites; the ladies being
on the right hand. There were also upper boxes
in which the company were dressed, but not in court
dresses. The pit full of gentlemen with swords and
bags, or uniforms.
.pm fn-start // A
“The arrangements of this comparatively
small theatre combine all
that is chaste, elegant, light, and
splendid in architecture and decoration.
Illuminated with its thousand
lights reflected from their crystal
branches, it appears some fairy palace
of Parian marble and burnished gold,
at once noble and simple, magnificent
and tasteful. To this splendid theatre
no one was admitted who had not been
presented at Court, and received a
special invitation through the ‘premier
gentilhomme de la chambre,’ or
through their own ambassador. Every
one appeared in full court dress, and
the boxes, or rather the gallery which
was round the theatre, is so constructed
that every individual is distinctly
seen. The King and the
Royal Family occupy a centre box on
one side; the ministers and ambassadors
occupied a box on the left-hand
of the King, the French Duchesses on
the right, for the women do not
mingle with the men under the present
régime in the Court of the most
gallant country in the world. The
‘parterre’ was exclusively occupied
by the male part of the audience,”
&c. &c.—Lady Morgan’s France in
1816, vol. i. p. 221.
.pm fn-end
25th.—I dined at the Ambassador’s, and found
everybody much annoyed[#] at the allusions to England
in “Adélaïde du Guesclin.” It was certainly
an ill-chosen play, but I have since heard that it
was selected by the actors. In the evening I went
to a ball at the Duke of Wellington’s, where
Monsieur, the Duke d’Angoulême, and the Duke
and Duchess de Berri made their appearance and
danced—Monsieur excepted. On my return home
I heard that some confusion had been occasioned
// 118.png
.pn +1
by a cartridge having been thrown into the kitchen
window. Colonel Fremantle and another officer
went down and extinguished the fire, but it gave
rise to some conversation next day, though not so
much as the allusions to England at the theatre.
.pm fn-start // A
And not without reason, as the
following extracts will show. It must
be remembered, too, that the Duke of
Wellington and many of the Waterloo
heroes were in the house by special
invitation:
.pm verse-start
“Je prévois que bientôt cette guerre fatale,
Ces troubles intestins de la maison royale,
Ces tristes factions cèderont au danger
D’abandonner la France au fils de l’étranger.
Je vois que de l’Anglais la race est peu chérie,
Que leur joug est pesant! qu’on n’aime leur patrie.
.pm verse-end
.tb
.pm verse-start
... n’acceptera pour maître,
L’allié des Anglais, quelque grand qu’il puisse être.
.pm verse-end
.tb
.pm verse-start
... Je ne veux pas que l’Anglais en ces lieux,
Protecteur insolent, commande sous mes yeux;
Les Anglais avec moi pourraient mal s’accorder,
Jusqu’au dernier moment je veux seul commander,” &c. &c.
.pm verse-end
.pm fn-end
// 119.png
.pn +1
.sp 2
.pb
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch06
CHAPTER VI.
.sp 1
.pm ch-hd-start
RETURN TO ENGLAND—MEETING WITH THE PRINCESS CHARLOTTE—FRANCE
UNDER THE BOURBONS—PARISIAN SOCIETY.
.pm ch-hd-end
[On the 29th of June, Miss Knight left Paris and
travelled by way of St. Germain and Mantes to
Rouen, and so on to Dieppe, whence she crossed
over to Brighton, and arrived in London on the
3rd of July.]
.h3
JOURNAL CONTINUED.
.sp 2
July 4th, 1816.—The weather so cold and uncomfortable
that I was obliged to have a fire.
London is still full, but growing thinner. The
state of the country is rather alarming, owing to
the riots and the general discontent.
5th.—There has been a great bankruptcy in
London. Ministers have sent to stop deputations
from Manchester and Birmingham which were
// 120.png
.pn +1
coming to the Regent. He has a levee to-day. In
the evening I wrote a note to Princess Charlotte to
inform her of my arrival in England, and to inquire
when I might see her. I had a kind answer in
return, desiring to see me next day between one
and two.
6th.—I went to Princess Charlotte’s,[#] whom I
found sitting to Hayter, the miniature painter. He
remained during the whole of the time I was there,
which was an hour and a half, as he was told
that Prince Leopold wished to see him before he
left. She appeared agitated, but was friendly as
usual. Prince Leopold came in to look at the
picture, and announced the weather being fine
and the curricle ready, on which I took my leave.
He was civil.
.pm fn-start // A
Then residing at Camelford House.
.pm fn-end
11th.—A person called on me who has the
means of knowing many things relative to the
affairs of Princess Charlotte, and told me the
Regent and the Queen had opened their eyes with
respect to myself, and were now persuaded that my
conduct had been such as they could not think injurious
to themselves. It is probable they knew
who was the mischief-maker.
12th.—In the morning I saw Princess Charlotte,
who gave me a print of Prince Leopold. She was
very cordial, but, I believe, sees very few people.
Hayter was there, and Prince Leopold came in to
// 121.png
.pn +1
sit for his picture. Not having been very well, she
is not going to the grand ball given by the Regent
this evening.
13th.—The Duke of Sussex called on me early,
as he was going to Sheridan’s funeral.[#] He said
the Prince Regent was moving everything to
get a divorce. This I had heard from various
people, as also that Lord Exmouth was to be an
informer.
.pm fn-start // A
The Dukes of York and Sussex
were chief mourners, while the pall
was supported by the Dukes of Bedford
and Argyle, the Earl of Lauderdale,
Lords Mulgrave and Holland,
and the Bishop of London. “The
coffin,” says a writer in the Universal
Review for January, 1860, “was borne
to its resting-place in Westminster
Abbey by a crowd of titled and illustrious
mourners, whose homage to departed
genius offered rather a suggestive
contrast to their late neglect
of its living owner:
.pm verse-start
‘How proud they can press to the funeral array
Of him whom they shunned in his sickness and sorrow.’
.pm verse-end
No circumstance of splendid woe was
wanting to the burial of him whose last
illness had been embittered by the falling
away of friends, and the growing
pressure of pecuniary troubles, and
whose last hours were passed under
his own roof only through the kindness
or calculating fears of a sheriff’s
officer.”
.pm fn-end
22nd.—Having received accounts of the death of
Vittoria Ruffo, eldest daughter of Prince Castelcicala,
I returned to town from Rochetts for the purpose
of seeing her afflicted parents. She was accomplished
and sensible, and most useful in her own
family, and her loss must be felt by all who knew
her. When I arrived, I found they were not yet in
Town, as she is not to be buried till to-morrow
morning.
At nine in the evening the guns fired for Princess
Mary’s marriage with the Duke of Gloucester.
25th.—I saw Princess Charlotte; her husband,
// 122.png
.pn +1
and Hayter, the painter, were with her. She told
me she had Claremont, and seemed pleased with it.
30th.—I called to take leave of Princess Charlotte,
but could not see her, as Prince Leopold was
suffering from a pain in his face. She wrote me a
very affectionate note afterwards to apologise. I
left my name at Carlton House.
August 6th.—I went with Miss Jervis and the
Countess de F—— to New Hall, a large house
built by Henry VIII. at a little distance from
Chelmsford, now occupied by a convent of English
nuns, who, after various wanderings, in consequence
of being driven from their home at Liége by the
French, have been settled here about seventeen
years.[#] The superior, lately elected, is an agreeable
woman, sister of Sir William Gerard, of Lancashire.
Lady Frances Browne, a daughter of Lord Kenmare,
is there, and a sister of Lord Stourton has professed.
There are thirty-six nuns and sixty-five boarders,
the latter chiefly daughters of Roman Catholics of
fashion. They are not rich, but appear well-behaved
// 123.png
.pn +1
women, and are very hospitable. The
young ladies were dancing when we went into the
hall, and performed three quadrilles with great
propriety. Henry VIII. was staying here when
Anne Boleyn was beheaded, and there is a sign, at
a short distance on the road, which has his portrait
on one side and a headless woman on the other.
.pm fn-start // A
New Hall originally belonged to
Waltham Abbey, but in the reign of
Edward III. passed by exchange into
the possession of Sir John Shardelowe.
During the wars of the Roses it was
bestowed upon Bortello, Earl of Ormond,
a zealous Lancastrian, who
was taken prisoner at Towton, and
beheaded. The Manor House was
fortified by his brother, by permission
of Henry VII. It was obtained, by
exchange, by Henry VIII., who erected
it into an Honour, gave it the name
of Beaulieu, and frequently resided
there. After various vicissitudes, New
Hall was sold to Villiers, Duke of
Buckingham, who was assassinated
by Felton. At a later period it was
purchased by Oliver Cromwell for
five shillings, though yielding a rental
of 1300l. a year. Soon afterwards,
however, he gave New Hall, together
with a considerable sum of money, in
exchange for Hampton Court. Some
years later it was the residence of
Monk, Duke of Albemarle, after whose
time the glories of the place gradually
faded away, until the house, fast falling
to decay, was converted into a
convent for English nuns of good
family.
.pm fn-end
29th.—Arrived at Buckden.[#] The Bishop of
Lincoln has inhabited this palace thirty years. It
is not known when it was built, but it is mentioned
in the reign of King Stephen. The tower
which I inhabit, with four turrets at the angles,
was once the residence of Katharine of Aragon,
after her divorce from Henry, before she went to
Kimbolton. That place, belonging to the Duke
of Manchester, is not many miles distant from
hence. Buckden Palace is not large, but very
curious as a specimen of the architecture of many
ages. The grounds are laid out so as to agree perfectly
with the style of building. Over the second
gateway in entering the palace is the episcopal
library, not very large, but interesting from the
antiquity of some of the books. The Bishop has
his private library in a room he built for the purpose.
The appearance of the entire building gives
the idea of great strength. The Bishop has all Mr.
Pitt’s papers, and is writing his life.
.pm fn-start // A
Buckden Palace, in Huntingdonshire,
was granted to the Bishop of
Lincoln by the Abbot of Ely, in the
reign of Henry I.
.pm fn-end
// 124.png
.pn +1
August 9th.—Quitted Buckden, after passing my
time there very pleasantly, owing to the interesting
conversation of the Bishop[#] and Mrs. Tomline,
whose sister, Mrs. Maltby, was staying with them.
.pm fn-start // A
George Prettyman Tomline, D.D.,
consecrated Bishop of Lincoln in
1787, and promoted to the Bishopric
of Winchester in 1820. Mrs. Maltby
was wife of the Rev. Dr. Maltby,
who held the living of Buckden.
.pm fn-end
23rd.—Went to see an old tree in Thorndon
Park,[#] called “the Riven Oak.” It must be of extraordinary
age, as it is mentioned in papers belonging
to Lord Petrie’s family in the reign of
Henry VIII. as “the old oak.” Lord St. Vincent
told me it served as a boundary in the reign of
Henry VII. It is of considerable dimensions, and
in good foliage as far as the trunk goes, which
seems to be about one-third of its former height.
The several coats of bark, which grow whiter as
they advance in age, are very curious.
.pm fn-start // B
Thorndon Hall, the seat of Lord
Petrie, about two miles from Brentwood.
.pm fn-end
September 18th.—Called on Lady Loudon, who
has lately returned to England, on account of her
children. She goes back to Lord Moira in a few
months.
23rd.—Went with Lady Charleville to see the
cast which was taken from the first monument
erected to the memory of Shakspeare by his son-in-law.
The original figure, which is a sort of half
length, with hands, was, it seems, painted to represent
dress and drapery. It cannot, therefore, be
expected that the features should be correct or the
drawing good; but traditionally we learn that the
// 125.png
.pn +1
likeness was perfect. The forehead is beautiful.
Indeed, all the features are good, but there is more
of benevolence than of any other expression in the
countenance.
[In the spring of 1817, Miss Knight left England
on a tour through France and Italy, and did not
return to England until the latter end of May,
1819. The rough notes of her wanderings do
not, however, contain anything of general interest,
though she is mentioned in Mrs. Piozzi’s correspondence
as acting the part of cicerone to the
friends with whom she travelled.[#] At Rome, Miss
Knight received intelligence of the death, on the
6th of November, 1817, of the Princess Charlotte.
The entry in her diary, on this afflicting subject, is
brief and inexpressive. “The Count de Blacas,
Ambassador from France,” she writes in her journal
at the end of November, “and several of my former
Roman acquaintances, have been very kind. The
Duke of Devonshire, the Marquis of Douglas, and
many English, very obliging—particularly on the
melancholy event of the Princess Charlotte’s death,
the news of which arrived on the 22nd, but I did
not hear of it till the 23rd.”[#]
.pm fn-start // A
“Mrs. Lutwyche,” says Madame
Piozzi, “has written from Rome;
says her husband can walk now seven
miles a day. They spend their time
in seeing sights, under the direction
of the far-famed Cornelia Knight, and
rejoicing in the society of the first
society of the first city in Europe.—January,
1817.” See the second of
Mr. Hayward’s very pleasant volumes.
The date should be 1818, not 1817.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // B
See letter in Appendix—“Death
of the Princess Charlotte.]”
In 1821, Miss Knight again went abroad, and
arrived in Paris on the 12th of May.
.pm fn-end
.sp 2
// 126.png
.pn +1
.h3
JOURNAL CONTINUED.
.sp 2
May 13th, 1821.—The christening of the little
Duke de Bordeaux,[#] and the fêtes in consequence
of it, in the first week of the present month, went
off remarkably well; and the people, it seems,
appeared very happy. At the Chamber of Peers
a trial is going on for the conspiracy of last year,[#]
and it is supposed both Houses will sit till July.
M. de Chateaubriand is returned from Prussia, and
says that not only all is tranquil at Berlin, but that
the Government has energy, and the people are
satisfied. He sat beside Mr. Canning at a great
dinner on Monday, when they had much conversation
together on public affairs.
.pm fn-start // A
Now Count de Chambord. He
was born on the 29th of September,
1820. His father, the Duke de Berri,
was assassinated on the 14th of February
in the same year, as he was
leaving the Opera. The assassin was
a journeyman saddler, named Louvel,
who had previously been a soldier in
the old Imperial Guard, and who for
four years had meditated this crime.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // B
The conspiracy of the 19th August,
1820, having for its object the
overthrow of the Government and the
expulsion of the Bourbons. The trials
of the conspirators terminated on the
17th July, 1821, when three of them
were condemned to death, and six
others to various terms of imprisonment,
with or without fines.
.pm fn-end
19th.—Took possession of apartments, which I
had engaged for three months, in the Place
Bourbon, opposite to the Hôtel du Corps Législatif,
formerly the palace of the Prince de Condé. This
is a very central situation, being near the Pont de
Louis Quinze.
The Royalists have obtained a great victory in
the Chamber of Deputies, by carrying the bill for
the creation of several additional bishoprics.
// 127.png
.pn +1
24th.—The weather continues cold and windy.
The Duchess de Berri has gone to some chapel near
Soissons, on a pilgrimage. She will be absent five
days.
25th.—Went to Prince Castelcicala’s in the evening,
and met the Count de Sèze, who defended
Louis XVI. before the National Convention. He is
now a Peer, head of the first tribunal in the
kingdom, and decorated with orders. He was
fourteen months in a dungeon, and only obtained
his liberty on the death of Robespierre. Malesherbes,
who had invited him to come to stay with
him in the country, was guillotined. He told
several anecdotes of the King, and said that sometimes
his Majesty thought his life would be spared,
and that if he were obliged to abdicate he would
retire into Switzerland. It appeared to me, from
the conversation of De Sèze, that the reason why
Louis XVI. chose to be defended by the constitution
which he had sworn—or, rather, the reason
why he acknowledged the Assembly as his judges—was
that Charles I. had declined to make a similar
acknowledgment, and was beheaded. De Sèze said
that according to the constitution the King could
only be obliged to abdicate. He seemed to think
that Louis showed great firmness, and that he was
a man of abilities. He sometimes read Tacitus and
Livy with him. He also stated that the King was
sincere in his attachment to the constitution which
// 128.png
.pn +1
he had accepted and wanted to maintain. He
therefore made De Sèze leave out from the defence
which he was to read a preliminary part, in which
the latter had introduced a sentence against the
lawfulness of the tribunal before which he was to
plead the cause of his royal client. That Louis
XVI. had sanctioned what are now called liberal
principles there can be no doubt. His support of
the Americans, and his first measures with respect
to his own kingdom, demonstrated his having listened
to that party; but when he discovered his
danger, and perceived the excesses to which all this
had led, one would think that he must have been
heartily sick of the constitution. Indeed, the paper
which he left behind him when he fled—if it were
authentic—seems to prove this was the case.
De Sèze is a lively, active man. The King sent
him the other day a snuff-box, with the portrait of
Louis XVI., and a note written with his own hand,
telling him it was the only one worthy of him.
The Emperors of Austria and Russia and the King
of Prussia, when they were here, gave him boxes
set in diamonds.
27th.—Went by appointment to the Duchess
d’Angoulême’s. She looked thin and ill, but was
very gracious, and talked to me of the death of the
Duke de Berri, of the providential birth of the
Duke de Bordeaux, and of English affairs. She is
going for a month to the baths of Vichy. A M.
// 129.png
.pn +1
Prévost, who has often been employed on diplomatic
business, arrived from Naples. The King
entered that city on the 15th. M. de Blacas, now
a duke, accompanied his Majesty, and the joy
was universal—illuminations, music, dancing, and
general festivity, with immense crowds in the
streets.
30th.—Went to Neuilly, to pay my respects to
the Duchess d’Orleans.[#] It happened also to be the
nameday of her father, the King of Naples, and of
her son, the Duke de Chartres. The Duke d’Orleans
is now proprietor of Neuilly, having made an exchange
with Government. He is building and embellishing
both house and garden, and has already
added some handsome apartments for his sister.
.pm fn-start // A
Marie Amélie, daughter of Ferdinand
IV., King of the Two Sicilies,
by Caroline of Austria, Queen of the
French from 1830 to 1848. In the
revolution of February the Château de
Neuilly was sacked and fired by the
mob. The Duke de Chartres here mentioned
was afterwards Duke of Orleans,
killed by leaping from his carriage
whilst his horses were running
away.
.pm fn-end
June 1st.—Met at Prince Castelcicala’s the Russian
Ambassador at the Court of Naples, who is
going to England to compliment the King on his
coronation. There was the Baron de Vincent, the
Austrian ambassador here, who has arrived from
the Congress.[#] He was at the battle of Waterloo,
and was wounded there. He went as a volunteer,
being then Minister at Brussels, and is said to be a
very worthy man.
.pm fn-start // B
The Congress at Laybach.
.pm fn-end
4th.—Went in the evening, with Prince Castelcicala,
// 130.png
.pn +1
by invitation, to Madame de Gontaut’s, who
is governess of the little Duke de Bordeaux. There
was a considerable assembly of ladies, and several
gentlemen. The Duchess de Berri was there, and
talked to everybody. Monsieur came late, but, as
usual, was most amiable.
5th.—Accompanied Lady Stafford and Charles
Ruffo to the Chambre des Députés. The house is
in the form of an ancient theatre, but the speakers
are not well heard—and speakers they should not
be called, for they read their discourses, and in a
very monotonous way. We heard none of the
famous personages, to be sure, but there was one of
the Côté Droit, another of the Côté Gauche, and
another half and half. I clearly perceive that they
wish to prove that they have much judgment, are
great reasoners, and that they have what is called
“aplomb.” For this purpose they are as dull as
possible, and I judge, not only from what I now
heard, but from the speeches of some of their most
able men which I have read. The question was
about the budget, and the man who came from the
Côté Gauche was a caricature of our reformers, for
the small sum which he objected to appeared really
ludicrous. All he said was aimed against Government
and the clergy. One of his expressions was,
“Pourquoi devons-nous payer tant pour nous faire
gouverner?” and another, “Deux cent cinquante
francs à des gens qui ne s’occupent qu’à rester au
// 131.png
.pn +1
coin de leur feu, ou peut-être pis encore.” I am
afraid ten pounds a year would not make them very
warm au coin du feu. It is true the Côté Droit had
the good taste to laugh vehemently at some of these
tirades.
In the evening I was at a party at Lady Elizabeth
Stuart’s, where, by crowding all together into the
middle of the room, we contrived to appear a great
many English; but I do not think there are so
many as in former years since the peace.
18th.—Dined at Lord Stafford’s. Humboldt, the
traveller, Denon, Mr. Fazakerley,[#] &c., were there.
Humboldt talks much, and with great vivacity.
Denon I had not seen since 1796, when he was
Secretary of Embassy, with M. le Baron de Talleyrand,
at Naples, since when he has been made a
Baron.[#] He is now wild after lithography, and I
saw a portrait which he had done extremely well.
His etchings formerly were very spirited.
.pm fn-start // A
Described in Lord Holland’s
“Foreign Reminiscences” as “a man
of strict veracity and accurate memory.”
He had a very confidential
interview with the Emperor Napoleon
at the island of Elba.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // B
The celebrated Baron Denon,
Directeur-Général des Musées under
the first Empire, and author of a remarkable
work upon the monuments
of Egypt.
.pm fn-end
21st.—The weather is by no means warm yet,
but it has not rained for some days, notwithstanding
the ill-omen of St. Médard.[#] The Duchess-Dowager
of Orleans has been for several weeks in
a sad state with a cancer, and her release is daily
expected. Two days ago she received the pon-tifical
// 132.png
.pn +1
benediction from the Nuncio, and has blessed
her children and grandchildren.
.pm fn-start // C
The St. Swithin of the French
calendar. His festival falls on the 8th
of June.
.pm fn-end
23rd.—The Duchess of Orleans died this day.
She was a woman of great good nature, and very
charitable, but weakly guided by a man who, she
thought, had saved her life and property. Perhaps
he had, but scandal, very unjustly I believe, took
advantage of her gratitude, while his disagreeable
manners made him many enemies. He died a year
ago, but his widow remained with the Duchess. The
Duchess leaves an immense property, of which one-third
goes to her daughter (Madame Adelaide) and
two-thirds to the Duke, besides legacies and pensions
to her ladies and servants. The mourning is
to be six days in black and six in white.
24th.—At Lord Stafford’s I met at dinner the
Abbé de Montesquiou-Fénezac,[#] an entertaining,
agreeable man, and one of the last survivors of the
class of “aimables abbés” of the times of yore.
His manners are particularly good. As a minister
he did not shine. He seemed much attached to the
Duke d’Angoulême.
.pm fn-start // A
The Abbé de Montesquiou-Fénezac
was born in 1757, and was the
chief author of the Charter of 1814.
In the following month of July he
was appointed Minister of the Interior,
and rendered himself unpopular to the
ultra-Royalists by his moderation and
liberality. On one occasion, after he
had been violently abused for his impartiality,
which was called favouring
the Revolutionists, he quietly remarked
“que le Roi ne connaissait
point de révolutionnaires; qu’il ne
venait pas pour punir la révolution,
mais pour la faire oublier.” During
the Hundred Days he took refuge in
England, and after the second restoration
he was created a Peer of France,
and allowed to retain the title of
Minister of State, but he took no further
part in public affairs.
.pm fn-end
// 133.png
.pn +1
27th.—Dined at Epinay, at Madame de G.’s.
The Bishop of St. Cloud went with me: a sensible,
respectable man. Count Sorzo, a Ragusan, whom
I had formerly met at Rome and Venice, dined
there, as also a Frenchman, whose father having
been consul at Ragusa, he had had the good fortune
to be educated there. By which means he had
acquired wonderful knowledge (for a consul), and
they say he writes Latin verses with great facility,
like the Ragusans themselves. He has himself been
consul in the Levant. His conversation, and that
of Count Sorzo, were very interesting. Mme. de
Boufflers,[#] widow of the Chevalier Count de Sabran,
and her son by her first husband, who is an elegant
poet, and other clever people, dined there; yet it
was not a “blue” dinner—there was no pretension.
The gardens are very pretty; a lake, with a bridge
of cords over it, in imitation of the American ones
described by Humboldt; grottos; the Temple of
Truth, with mirrors reflecting every way, &c. &c.
.pm fn-start // A
Stanislas, Marquis de Boufflers,
was born at Lunéville in 1737, and
was named after the unfortunate King
of Poland, his godfather. He was
educated for the Church, hence he was
at first known as L’Abbé de Boufflers.
But he gave up the Church for the
Army, and became a Knight of Malta
and captain of hussars. In 1791 he
fled with Madame de Sabran and her
son to Berlin, where he soon afterwards
married her. In 1800 he returned
to France and published a book
entitled “Libre Arbitre,” and in 1804
was elected member of the French
Academy, as successor to Marshal
Noailles. The Chevalier died in 1815.
He has been described as “abbé libertin;
militaire philosophe; diplomate
chansonnier; émigré patriote; républicain
courtisan.” His stepson, Count
Elzéar Louis Marie de Sabran, at a
very early age gave proof of uncommon
talents. He was warmly attached
to Madame de Staël, and consequently
incurred the anger of Napoleon. In
1820 he composed a dithyrambic poem
on the assassination of the Duke de
Berri, which was much thought of at
the time. His death took place in
1846, in the seventieth year of his
age.
.pm fn-end
// 134.png
.pn +1
July 4th.—The King and Royal Family went to
St. Cloud, to stay a month. His Majesty does not
like moving from the Tuileries, where he has his
books and his visitors, but the apartments require
cleaning and repairing.
6th.—Received a telegraphic account of the death
of Bonaparte.[#]
.pm fn-start // A
The Emperor Napoleon died at
St. Helena on the 5th of May, 1821.
The intelligence was conveyed from
Calais to Paris by telegraph. “There
was a disposition,” says Lord Holland,
“in the people of Paris to disbelieve
in the death of Napoleon, there was
more in the middling classes to attribute
it to poison, and there was some
in the Court to affect the magnanimity
of stifling all resentment towards
the departed hero. Mourning
was worn by many, especially on the
15th August, the festival of St. Napoleon.
Publications on his character,
life, and death, were numerous, and
generally more full of commendation
than of censure. Portraits, engravings,
and prints in allusion to his exile and
death were bought up with an avidity
which alarmed the police, and led to
the temporary suppression of the exhibition
of such articles in the shops.”—Foreign
Reminiscences, p. 205.
.pm fn-end
17th.—I have observed very little sensation occasioned
by the death of Bonaparte. Dr. F——, who
lives in the Place Vendôme, told me he observed a
sort of procession walk round the column in the
night, but not of military men. They were probably
students, who, particularly those of surgery
and medicine, are disaffected to the present Government.
I heard also of some who carried staves in
their hands, walking in companies in the Palais
Royal and in the Rue des Petits Champs, but nothing
of consequence.
23rd.—Prince Leopold arrived in Paris, on his
way to Germany and Italy. He dined with the
King at St. Cloud.
28th.—Prince Leopold dined with Sir Charles
// 135.png
.pn +1
Stuart. He is often with the Orleans family. It is
said that the Duke de Richelieu has persuaded the
two Royalist Ministers, Messieurs de Corbière and
de Villèle, to remain in office. They were going to
resign.
29th.—At Prince Castelcicala’s I met Don Luigi
Medici, who has been to the coronation in England,
having left Rome a few weeks ago. He happily
escaped from Naples without passport or bill of
health, having concealed himself for three days, as
he was on the proscribed list, and would have been
murdered by the Carbonari. He was an excellent
Minister of Finance, but the rebels knew he would
not forward their views. His account of the whole
affair was very interesting. Amongst other horrid
things, there was a procession of forty thousand
men armed with stilettoes. It is difficult to decide
whether atrocious rapacity on the one side, or
cowardly weakness on the other, were most conspicuous.
Princess Augusta has gone to see her sisters in
Germany, and the King to Ireland.
August 9th.—The Duke de Richelieu received a
telegraphic account of the death of the Queen of
England.[#] For some days the reports of her case
had been very bad.
.pm fn-start // A
The coronation of George IV.
took place on the 19th July, and the
Queen died on the 7th of August following.
A riot took place on the 15th,
when her body was removed from
Brandenburg House to be taken to
Harwich for embarkation, the populace
being determined that the funeral
procession should pass through the
City of London, against the wishes of
the Government. Queen Caroline was
buried at Brunswick on the 24th, between
her father and her brother.
.pm fn-end
// 136.png
.pn +1
13th.—Mrs. Lutwyche and I went to the
Tuileries, where the King, Madame, and the Duke
d’Angoulême received company; all very gracious.
14th.—The remains of the late Queen of England
have been removed from Brandenburg House,
where she died, to be taken to Harwich, and embarked
for the Continent, as she had expressed a
desire that she might be buried at Brunswick. The
telegraph gave sad accounts of the scuffle between
the Government and the populace, in which some
persons lost their lives, and others were wounded.
September 7th.—I heard Don Luigi Medici say
that there was some reason for the persecution by
the English of the late Queen of Naples, Caroline of
Austria. He believed that Lord William Bentinck,
and the English in general, were deceived by letters
to Bonaparte, fabricated in her name. These letters
were forged by a Neapolitan notary, who imitated
her handwriting perfectly, and were thrown in the
way of the English, in order to be intercepted by
them. This notary was in the employ of Bonaparte.
Another circumstance which appeared to confirm
the suspicions of the English was this: When
Lucien Bonaparte was taken by an English frigate,
he wrote to the Queen of Naples, and enclosed
open letters, which he wished to have forwarded to
his sister, &c., throwing himself on her generosity.
Medici and others advised her to show those letters
to the English authorities, but she said that she
// 137.png
.pn +1
would not betray even an enemy, and particularly
one who had trusted her. These letters also were
intercepted, and told against her.
25th.—A telegraphic despatch from Calais announced
that the King of England had landed there
at five o’clock. He goes to Hanover, but it is said
that he has given up the intention of coming to
Paris on his way home. He had very stormy
weather on his passage from Ireland, and stayed in
London only long enough to appoint the Lords
Justices for the government of the kingdom during
his absence.
29th.—Michaelmas-day—anniversary of the birth
of the Duke de Bordeaux. I went to Court at the
Tuileries, and saw the King, Madame, the Duke
d’Angoulême, Monsieur, and the Duke de Berri.
Monsieur told me that the King of England did
not now mean to come to Paris, but that he gave
hopes of their seeing him in the spring.
October 7th.—Went to meet a party of English
at Baron Denon’s, who has fine apartments on the
Quai Voltaire, and a very large collection of paintings,
bronzes, and drawings. He was Director of
the Museum in the time of Bonaparte, and much
patronised by him. There was a head by David,
the beginning of a picture of Bonaparte when he
was in Italy. The hair is like that of the Covenanters
in the seventeenth century, and the countenance
is that of an ill-natured, scowling boy.
// 138.png
.pn +1
There was a curious ivory cabinet, with figures,
said to be of the time of St. Louis, and an ivory
bas-relief of Scripture history, from Constantinople,
of the fourth century, besides paintings by Velasquez
and Murillo, and a great quantity of lithographs
by Denon himself, who is now engaged on a
history of the Arts in different ages.
8th.—Went to dine with M. de G. at Epinay,
and before dinner went with Madame de Boufflers,
Count de Sabran (her son), and the Bishop of St.
Cloud, to the house of Larive,[#] a celebrated actor,
now retired from the stage, and aged seventy-five,
but remarkably active and well in health. He has
built a very pretty house on the summit of a steep
hill, and made walks through the woods, cutting
channels to drain off the water in a very curious
way. For, as you ascend, you everywhere hear the
water bubbling under your feet or beside you. He
recited a couple of speeches with great effect.
.pm fn-start // A
Larive, a celebrated French tragedian,
born at La Rochelle in 1749.
He was a pupil of Mademoiselle Clairon,
and was considered inferior only
to Lekain and Talma. He retired
from the stage at a comparatively
early age, and settled down on his
beautiful little property at Monlignon,
in the valley of Montmorency.
.pm fn-end
18th.—I was invited by the Duchess of Orleans
to Neuilly, to hear an improvisatore. His name is
Pestrucci, brother of the medallist in England; he
is also a painter. The Duchess de Berri, with one
of her ladies and her equerry, came uninvited.
There was a very small party.
His Majesty, having had two attacks of the gout
// 139.png
.pn +1
at Hanover, does not come to Paris this winter. A
turtle that had been sent for and kept for his
arrival by the King of France, is now put to death.
November 5th.—The two Chambers opened at
the Louvre by the King. Yesterday there was La
Messe du St. Esprit, at Notre-Dame, which was
attended by all the great personages of the kingdom.
About the end of November the ultra-Royalists
and the Liberals joined together to attack Ministers.
The King was very angry with their address, which
was chiefly, if not entirely, penned by the former.
The phrase which most hurt him was the implied
suspicion that he would forget the honour of
France to keep up a good intelligence with other
nations.
December 10th.—As yet nothing has been done
towards changing the Ministry. The Opposition
now declare they will vote against the Budget, and
if Ministers continue in a minority it is difficult to
say how they will get on. In the mean while, this
stupid business is canvassed in all societies, and
leads to nothing entertaining or instructive.
The Prince and Princess of Denmark are here.
I think them like our Royal Family. She is the
grand-daughter of poor Caroline Matilda, and he
the grandson of her persecutrix, the Dowager
Queen. The Ambassadors will not give place to
them, and they appear to assume very little state.
// 140.png
.pn +1
They go by the names of the Count and Countess
of Oldenburg.
15th.—A new Ministry.[#] Messieurs Villèle and
Corbière for the Finance and Home Departments
(Royalists); Viscount Mathieu de Montmorency,
who was a Constitutionalist, for the Foreign Office;
M. de Clermont-Tonnerre, also a Constitutionalist,
for the Marine; Victor, Duke de Bellune, one of
Bonaparte’s generals, who rose from the ranks,
Minister of War—said to be an excellent Royalist.
The ultras, on the whole, are much pleased. The
Duke de Richelieu and all the former Ministers
have resigned.
.pm fn-start // A
The change of Ministry took
place on the 14th. M. Villèle continued
in power till January, 1828,
when he was created a Peer of France,
and retired into private life.
.pm fn-end
.sp 2
// 141.png
.pn +1
.pb
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch07
CHAPTER VII.
.sp 1
.pm ch-hd-start
SOCIETY IN PARIS—JOURNEY TO HOMBURG—THE LANDGRAVE AND THE
LANDGRAVINE—THE DOWAGER QUEEN OF WÜRTEMBERG—CHRISTMAS
AT LOUISBURG.
.pm ch-hd-end
.h3
JOURNAL CONTINUED—1822.
.sp 2
January 12th.—Yesterday the Duchess de Bourbon
died suddenly in the newly consecrated church
of Sainte-Geneviève. She was in the seventy-second
year of her age, and was aunt to the Duke of
Orleans. She had been long separated from her
husband, having been very gay in her youth.
Latterly she did much good in charities. Her husband
was more afflicted at her death than could
have been expected. He said she had good qualities,
and, besides, she was the mother of his son, the unfortunate
Duke d’Enghien.
17th.—Yesterday evening the Duchess of Orleans
was brought to bed of a son, named the Duke
// 142.png
.pn +1
d’Aumale by the King. She has since had visits
from all the ladies of the Royal Family.
February 14th.—This morning there were masses
of requiem for the Duke de Berri at Notre-Dame,
St. Denis, &c. The Duchess de Berri had one in
her private chapel at five in the morning, the hour
at which he died. Madame de C., one of the ladies
of the late Duchess of Orleans, said that on the
night of the murder there was a ball at Talma’s,
and that the company danced all night. A person
of her acquaintance, who lived below him, sent up
to beg they would cease, and spare the feelings of
those who were in affliction for the calamity that
had happened. Talma contented himself with replying
that he had not killed the Duke, and that
he could not interrupt the amusements of his
guests.
May 18th.—The Duke de Richelieu died yesterday,
almost suddenly. He was going to Odessa in
a few days. It is remarkable that not many days
ago his writing-desk was broken open, and fifteen
thousand livres (six hundred pounds) stolen from
it. He went next day into the country, returned on
the 15th, was taken ill on the 17th, and the physicians,
when called in, said there was no hope. It
was called a “transport du cerveau.”
27th.—Went to St. Cloud. Walked in the
grounds, which are very extensive, with enormous
trees and a fine view; also in the flower-garden,
// 143.png
.pn +1
where an old gardener told M. Volney, who accompanied
us, that the day after Bonaparte got in
through the window and dissolved the Convention,
he found in the morning many of the scarlet robes
of the deputies in the basin of water in front of the
apartments, which they had thrown in as they ran
away in terror.
August 24th.—Left Paris; crossed from Calais
to Dover on the 27th, and arrived at Lord St. Vincent’s,
Rochetts, on the 29th.
[On the 13th March, 1823, Miss Knight was
deprived by death of her venerable friend Lord
St. Vincent. From the end of August, 1822, to
the 31st July, 1823, Miss Knight paid visits to
various friends in England, but on the last-named
day she again crossed from Dover to Calais, and
arrived in Paris on the 3rd of August, where she
remained until the 29th of June of the following
year. At this date the autobiographical memoir is
resumed.]
In the summer of 1824, I left Paris to visit
Princess Elizabeth,[#] Landgravine of Hesse Homburg,
who had been so good as to invite me long
before, and to whom I should have gone in the
preceding year had not business called me to England.
Her Royal Highness had also mentioned in
her letters the wish of the Queen-Dowager of Würtemberg[#]
// 144.png
.pn +1
that I should pass some time with her,
after having been at Homburg.
.pm fn-start // A
Princess Elizabeth, third daughter
Of George III., born May 22, 1770,
married the Landgrave of Hesse Homburg,
April 7, 1818.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // A
Princess Charlotte Augusta Matilda,
eldest daughter of George III.,
born September 29, 1766, married
May 18, 1797, to Frederick Charles
William, Hereditary Prince of Würtemberg,
who, by the treaty of Lunéville,
was raised to the dignity of
Elector in 1803. Through the favour
of Napoleon, and by virtue of the Convention
of Presburg, he was declared
King of Würtemberg on January 1,
1806. He died in 1816. His widow,
by reason of her universal benevolence,
was called “the good Queen-Dowager.”
She died October 6, 1828.
.pm fn-end
Metz was the last town in which I slept in France,
and after passing Forbach, I entered Germany, and
was surprised to observe the gaiety of the inhabitants.
They seemed to enjoy their music and
waltzing, in which the children exercise themselves
almost as soon as they can walk. On the 5th July
I slept at Kaiserlauten. The inn is an immense
building, of the strangest construction imaginable,
with wooden galleries running along both sides of
the court-yard. While at dinner, a courier arrived,
followed by two carriages, in one of which was
Baron de Rothschild, on his way to Frankfort, to
marry his niece. A great collection of people,
children in particular, crowded round the door, and
I afterwards heard they were most of them Jews,
some to present petitions, and others simply to beg
of him. None, however, were suffered to enter.
The sensation occasioned on the road by the passage
of M. Rothschild exceeded that usually produced
by a sovereign prince.
The appearance of Mayence struck me as very
// 145.png
.pn +1
melancholy. So long as this city belonged to the
Ecclesiastical Elector it was a capital at which
many rich families resided, and where there was a
corps diplomatique. But now no carriages were to
be heard rolling through the streets; few foot passengers
were to be seen; the garrison alone enlivening
the place. This was composed of Austrians
and Prussians, and each of those Courts in turn
appointed a Governor for three years. The Austrians
were quartered at one end of the city, and
the Prussians at the other. The former, in their
white regimentals, were tall, fine-looking men; the
Prussians, in blue, not so tall, but apparently very
active. Both had good bands of music.
I went to see the Cathedral, which, notwithstanding
the eleven years of peace, still wore the desolate
appearance in which it had been left by the French,
to the great annoyance of the good old beadle who
showed it to me, and who had witnessed the horrors
of the war. The sacred edifice had served as an
hospital for the wounded, and I recollect hearing
the Count de M., a French general, say that the air
was so mephitic, on account of the great number
of sufferers lying there, that in the evening it extinguished
the lights, or at least rendered them
scarcely visible. The destruction of the tombs was
wanton barbarism; but a few statues of Electors
were left standing, and amongst them one belonging
// 146.png
.pn +1
to an English family. These were placed at a
great height, which, I suppose, was the reason they
were spared.
At Frankfort I called on the Princess of Stolberg
Goedern, who was in her ninety-second year. She
told me she could not conceive how the Countess
of Albany, her eldest daughter, could have died so
young, for she had lost her a few months before at
the age of seventy. She was the daughter of a
Prince of Horn, by Lady Bruce, daughter of the
Earl of Aylesbury, who, as a Roman Catholic,
espoused the cause of the Stuarts, and died at
Brussels. He was father of the first Earl, who
settled at Tottenham Park, and left the estate to
his nephew, Thomas Brudenell, whom he intended
for the husband of his only daughter, Lady Mary,[#]
but she married the Duke of Richmond, and his
widow afterwards married General Conway. The
Princess of Stolberg was quite the great lady, but
had been reduced to poverty. The late and present
Lord Aylesbury allowed her an annuity, on which
she chiefly subsisted; but she has lately obtained
// 147.png
.pn +1
for herself and her unmarried daughter, who lives
with her, a pension of 500l. a year from the King
of England, for which they appeared to be very
grateful. His portrait was in one of their bedrooms.
The old lady is now able to indulge in the
constant use of a carriage, and in going to the
theatre, to balls, and great parties, from which she
is the last to retire. The daughter, whom I had
formerly seen at Rome with the Countess of Albany,
with whom I was not then acquainted, appeared to
be a sensible woman, and by no means so young in
her ideas and pursuits as her mother.
.pm fn-start // A
Lady Mary was the only daughter
of Charles, third Earl of Aylesbury,
by his third wife, Caroline, daughter
of John Campbell, Duke of Argyle,
who survived him and married, not
General Conway, but General Henry
Seymour, brother of the first Marquis
of Hertford. Lady Mary Bruce married
Charles, third Duke of Richmond,
and died without issue. Thomas Brudenell
took the name and arms of
Bruce in addition to his own, and in
1776 was created Earl of Aylesbury,
the title having become extinct at the
death of his uncle. The Count of
Horn married Charlotte, daughter of
Thomas, third Earl of Elgin and second
of Aylesbury, by his second wife, Charlotte
Countess of Samm, of the House
of Argenteau in Brabant. It was Robert,
second Earl of Elgin, who, for
his devoted loyalty to Charles I. and
Charles II., was created Earl of Aylesbury.
.pm fn-end
After staying a few days at Frankfort I went on
to Homburg, a small town situated on an eminence
of one of the little hills on the ascent to the Feldberg.
The castle is a large irregular building, and
in the midst of the inner court is a very high insulated
tower, which is said to be of Roman construction;
but the upper part seems to be of the middle
ages. It stands at the highest extremity of the
town, with a large garden and a terrace lined with
orange-trees. I found the Landgravine (Princess
Elizabeth) in a comfortable though not splendid
apartment, and she introduced me to the Landgrave
and to his sister, Princess Mary Anne, who
is married to Prince William of Prussia, brother to
the King. They have been staying here some time
with their three children, the eldest of whom is a
boy of thirteen, already in the service of the King
// 148.png
.pn +1
of Prussia. Two of the Landgrave’s brothers were
living in the castle—Prince Gustavus, married to a
Princess of Anhalt Dessau, and Prince Ferdinand.
Besides these, the Landgrave had two other brothers,
Prince Louis and Prince Philip, the former in the
Prussian service. The Landgrave himself, a general
officer in the Austrian army, commanded an Hungarian
regiment. Princes Philip, Gustavus, and
Ferdinand were likewise in the service of Austria,
and all had distinguished themselves greatly during
the war; and their conduct, as well as that of their
late father, had been highly honourable and disinterested.
I was much pleased with the Landgrave.
He had a noble frankness of character, and a patriarchal
kindness for his family, which, added to his
generous and humane care of his subjects, rendered
him truly worthy of being beloved by all who knew
him. There was a chapel in the castle in which
service was performed twice a day every Sunday,
alternately in the Calvinist and Lutheran manner.
He had chaplains for each, who dined in turns
with him; and we went to both services. There
were several Catholics in Homburg, who had a
chapel of their own, to which the Landgrave had
contributed. He not only found physicians for the
sick, but paid for all their medicines, and usually
visited them during their illness. He often, too,
attended funerals, and was, indeed, the father of
his people. He spoke and wrote French with great
// 149.png
.pn +1
correctness, and without any unpleasant accent.
He was well versed in history and geography, and
had a good library of books of that description, and
a great number of engravings, all of which he was
most willing to lend me. He was remarkably neat
in his person, and never came into company without
changing his dress if he had been smoking.
He was then about fifty-four.
Princess William of Prussia was very handsome,
and had a fine figure, with great dignity of manners.
I believe she was well informed, and patronised
literature at Berlin. Her sons, Prince Adalbert[#]
and Prince Waldemar, were then very young, and
her daughter, Princess Elizabeth, still younger.
Princess Louisa, the wife of Prince Gustavus, had
at that time only two daughters. She appeared to
be gentle and pleasing, but unfortunately was very
deaf. She mixed little in general society, being unwilling,
as she said, to give trouble.
.pm fn-start // A
Afterwards Lord High Admiral
of Prussia. He distinguished himself
in an attack on the Riff pirates. His
brother, Prince Waldemar, travelled
in India, and was present at the battle
of Ferozeshuhur, under the incognito
of Count Ravensburg.
.pm fn-end
The Germans are very fond of gardens, and pass
much of their time in them. Each of the Princes
had his own garden, and the Landgravine had two,
to one or other of which she used to take me in the
morning. We dined at two, except on Sunday,
when the hour was three, on account of the two
services at the chapel. On that day there were
// 150.png
.pn +1
usually at least thirty at dinner. We supped at nine,
and went to our rooms at ten. All these meals were
announced by beat of drum.
The Landgravine had two maids of honour, and
the Landgrave a master of the household, an aide-de-camp,
and an officer who served as secretary,
always in waiting, and who dined with us every day.
There was also a widow lady, who had belonged to
the Landgrave’s mother, who dined daily at the
castle, but only the maids of honour slept there.
There were other gentlemen who belonged to the
Landgrave, and often dined at his table, as did their
ladies on the Sunday. A Princess of Solms also
dined there frequently, and she lived in a house in
the town belonging to the Landgrave. There was
a maître d’hôtel, eighty years of age, who, with his
white wand, used to preside over the dinner and
supper tables. The servants were very numerous.
The private apartments of the Landgravine consisted
of several large rooms, well furnished, and a
small boudoir, in which she usually sat. There was
a very handsome suite of rooms, finely furnished,
for princely visitors. The Landgrave’s private
rooms, however, were more simple, but he had in
them some good pictures.
Prince and Princess William of Prussia did not
remain many days after my arrival. When they
were gone, the Landgrave and Landgravine took
me to dine with the Landgrave of Hesse, at Rumpenheim,
// 151.png
.pn +1
near Frankfort. He was the brother of
the late elector, and son of the Princess Royal of
England, daughter of George II. He had not long
before lost his wife, a Princess of Nassau, by whom
he had had several children, one of whom is the
Duchess of Cambridge. Her two eldest, Prince
George[#] and Princess Augusta, were then staying
with him and his unmarried daughter, Princess
Louisa, as was also his sister-in-law, a Princess of
Nassau, who had a house in Frankfort. Rumpenheim
had been built by the Landgrave Frederick’s
mother, quite in the style of an old-fashioned
English country-house, with a print-room, and furniture
such as was in vogue ninety years ago.
The garden was laid out after the same model.
Everything was remarkably neat, and the dinner
very good. The Landgrave had not forgotten his
English, and talked much of his visit to London,
and of “Aunt Emily.” I believe he was at that
time called “the handsome Prince of Hesse,” and
he had certainly great remains of beauty.
.pm fn-start // A
The present Duke of Cambridge,
Commander-in-Chief of her Majesty’s
Forces. Princess Augusta was then
only two years old, and is described in
Miss Knight’s Diary as being “very
pretty;” “they are both fine children.”
.pm fn-end
A violent thunderstorm accompanied us during
the greater part of our journey back to Homburg.
The Landgrave, with his aide-de-camp, M. Herman,
led the way, according to his usual custom, in a
drosky, and very prudently made us go as slowly
as possible, in order not to attract the lightning. I
// 152.png
.pn +1
have seen few countries in which the thunderstorms
are so violent as in Germany.
On the 14th of August I took leave of the Landgravine.
The Landgrave gave me four of his horses
to take me to Frankfort, and put me into the carriage
himself. On the 18th, I left Frankfort, and passed
through Darmstadt, Heidelberg, and Heilbrunn, to
Louisburg, the residence of the Queen-Dowager of
Würtemberg. It was just noon when I arrived, and
I was conducted to the Queen-Dowager, who received
me most graciously. Her countenance was
delightful; her manners equally courteous and
dignified. I felt as if I had long known her. We
entered the drawing-room at one o’clock, when she
introduced me to the ladies of her Court, and presented
the gentlemen, after which we sat down to
dinner in the adjoining room. Princess Pauline,
her grand-daughter, and daughter of Prince Paul
of Würtemberg, was living in the castle with her
governess, and dined always with the Queen.
Prince Frederick and Prince Augustus came occasionally.
Her eldest sister was already married to
the Grand-Duke Michael, brother of the Emperor
of Russia. The kindness of the Queen-Dowager to
these young people is not to be described. Indeed,
she was continually occupied in doing good. I know
not which was most to be praised, her devoted attachment
to her own family, to the memory of her
beloved father, and to the honour of her own
// 153.png
.pn +1
country, or her kindness to the family and country
of which she had become a member and an inhabitant.
[Miss Knight remained with the Queen-Dowager,
at her Majesty’s pressing invitation, until the 11th
of September, when she proceeded to Baden-Baden
for a fortnight. While there she received a letter
from the Queen-Dowager, requesting her to return
in the first week in November, and spend the winter
with her. At Baden, Miss Knight was presented to
the Queen of Sweden, of whom she speaks as being
“still handsome, and dignified in her manners.”
The month of October Miss Knight spent in Switzerland,
chiefly at Berne, and on the 5th of November
again became the guest of the Queen-Dowager,
then residing at Louisburg. The following
extracts are selected from her rough diary.]
The Queen-Dowager tells me that the late King
of England used often to mention a story which
was traditional in his family. This was, that
George I., not long before his last voyage to
Hanover, where he died, dreamed that his divorced
wife, the unfortunate Princess of Zell,[#] came to
meet him dressed in green. He was alarmed at this
dream, but fell asleep, and dreamed it a second
time. He then made a knot in his handkerchief,
and prayed that if it were meant as a warning he
// 154.png
.pn +1
might find the knot untied in the morning; which,
as the story goes, he did. He therefore told the
Duchess of Kendall, his favourite, that if she had
anything to ask of him she had better make haste,
for he did not think he should live long.
.pm fn-start // A
Sophia Dorothea, daughter of the
Duke of Zell. After the assassination
of her paramour, Count Philip de
Kœnigsmark, she was confined in the
Castle of Dahlen. She died in 1727,
only a few months before George I.
.pm fn-end
With respect to the mysterious death of the first
wife of the late King of Würtemberg, a Princess of
Brunswick,[#] the Queen-Dowager tells me her husband
said that she was always imprudent; but that
when she was in Russia with him the Empress Catherine
gave her very bad advice, and had great
power over her. One evening, instead of retiring
with him and the Grand-Duke and Duchess, as
usual, she went out of the other door with Catherine.
He never saw her again, but went off, and
took away his children with him. The Queen-Dowager
says she died in a Russian fortress; but
whether poisoned by order of the Empress, or in
child-bed, cannot be known.
.pm fn-start // A
His first wife was the Princess Augusta Carolina
Frederica Louisa of Brunswick, married 1780, died 1787.
.pm fn-end
Christmas-eve; snow and frost. We dined in
the library at five o’clock. The doors of the Queen’s
apartment were opened, and tables covered with
presents appeared. The Princess Pauline and her
two brothers were the first whom the Queen introduced
to their respective tables. She then took me
to mine, on which were placed a travelling-case in
small compass, containing a silver goblet, knife,
// 155.png
.pn +1
fork, tablespoon, and teaspoon, with a little box for
pepper and salt—all in silver, in a morocco case; a
gold bracelet, with a mosaic of the Coliseum at
Rome; amethyst cross and earrings, with small diamonds;
two small silver candlesticks; two pieces
of silk for gowns, one a dove-colour Turkish satin,
the other a violet figured silk with pansies; a
bracelet of cherries perfectly imitated; several bonbonneries;
a little box with small bottles of perfumes;
figures in sugar of Swiss peasants; bonbons
of different descriptions in great quantity;
and a very pretty work-bag and basket of velvet
and silk. All the Queen’s ladies had their separate
tables, filled with everything that could be agreeable
to them. In the other rooms were tables set
out with presents for her women and pages.
.sp 2
// 156.png
.pn +1
.pb
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch08
CHAPTER VIII.
.sp 1
.pm ch-hd-start
DEPARTURE FROM LOUISBURG—PARIS—CORONATION OF CHARLES X.—LONDON—THE
PRINCESS CHARLOTTE’S MONUMENT—ANECDOTES OF
CHARLES X.—RETURN TO GERMANY.
.pm ch-hd-end
.h3
JOURNAL CONTINUED—1825.
.sp 2
April 1st.—Good Friday. On the 2nd I was
invited to breakfast in Baron G.’s apartment, where
I met all the Queen’s ladies and gentlemen. We
had a little music, and painted eggs were placed on
the floor, between which the young ladies danced
blindfolded. The two young Princes, Frederick
and Augustus, came to dinner, and are to stay till
Wednesday. In the evening there was an Italian
from Brescia with canary-birds, that played tricks.
At tea the Queen-Dowager gave eggs, and little
presents of purses, bracelets, crosses, seals, or something
of that sort, to all the ladies. She gave to
myself a seal, a watch-key, a cross in bronze, a steel
buckle in the shape of a lyre. A few days previously
// 157.png
.pn +1
she had presented me with a writing-box
of her own painting, an amethyst ornament, and
some German books.
April 21st.—I left Louisburg with great regret,
and slept that night at Carlsruhe.
[On the 28th, Miss Knight reached Paris, having
travelled by way of Rheims, where great preparations
were making for the approaching coronation
of Charles X. Lord Grenville had succeeded Sir
Charles Stuart as British Ambassador at the French
Court. The Duke of Northumberland was also in
Paris on a special mission, to represent the King of
England at the coronation. His Grace’s suite was
very brilliant, his liveries in the old-fashioned style
magnificent, and his carriages and horses the admiration
of the Parisians. On the 7th of June the
Duke, assisted by Lord Grenville and Sir George
Nayler, Garter King of Arms, invested the King of
France with the insignia of the Most Noble Order
of the Garter.]
June 15th.—Went with Lady Downshire and
Lady Mary Hill to the great ball at the Duke
of Northumberland’s. The Dauphin, Dauphiness,
Duchess de Berri, and the Orleans family were
there; as also the young King and Queen of Würtemberg,
who are here under the title of Count
and Countess Teck. There were fireworks, splendid
illuminations, white and gold banners intermixed
with flowers, and the Duchess of Northumberland
// 158.png
.pn +1
had a dress trimmed with lilies for the occasion.
There were about fifteen hundred people, but the
apartments are large, and there is a very long gallery,
so that the crowd did not appear so great.
All the young noblemen[#] belonging to the embassy
had lilies in their button-holes, and stood on the
stairs to present a bouquet to each lady as she
came up.
.pm fn-start // A
Lord Prudoe, Lord Caermarthen,
Lord Pelham, Lord Hopetoun, Lord
Hervey, and Lord Strathmore. Sir
W. W. Wynne, Colonel Clive, and
Captain Perry were also attached to
the Duke of Northumberland.
.pm fn-end
[Towards the end of June, Miss Knight returned
to London.]
July 13th.—Dined with Princess Augusta, and
afterwards went with her to the Duke of Sussex’s,
at Kensington Palace. He gave a dinner to the
Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, and a few people
were invited for the evening. All the Royal Family
were there, for besides Princess Augusta, there
were present the Duchess of Kent, the Duchess of
Gloucester, and Princess Sophia, Princess Sophia
Matilda (the Duke is gone to Cheltenham), Prince
Leopold, and the Duke of Brunswick and his
brother. The Duchesses of Bedford and Hamilton,
Lady Jersey, and several gentlemen, were also
there. Mathews, the comedian, gave two acts of
his Imitations, which were very laughable. We
came away before one.
September 10th.—Went to Claremont on a visit
to Prince Leopold and the Duchess of Kent. His
// 159.png
.pn +1
mother, the Duchess of Coburg, is also staying
with him. The little Princess Victoria is very like
our Royal Family, and very handsome. I was much
overpowered at coming to this place. The poor old
servants so glad to see me! I walked in the Park
with the Baroness de Spinetti, the Duchess of Kent’s
lady, and wished to see the cottage begun by
Princess Charlotte, and which has been converted
into a monument to her memory, but the good lady
thought it would afflict me.
11th.—Sunday. Went to church at Esher with
Prince Leopold, attended by Sir Robert Gardiner
and the Duchess of Kent. After service the
Baroness de Spinetti and I called upon Lady Gardiner,
and saw some fine sketches, taken by Sir
Robert in Spain and Sicily. In the evening we
looked over prints, and the Prince, the Duchess of
Kent, and Princess Feodore, sang. The Duchess of
Coburg has two young ladies with her as maids of
honour.
12th.—Left Claremont after breakfast, and went
to Thomas’s Hotel, Berkeley-square, where I found
Lady Downshire, Lady Mary Hill, and Lord Augustus.
22nd.—Arrived at Windsor, and stayed there till
the 1st of October. On the 25th, I went to see
the monument erected by subscription to the late
Princess Charlotte. Matthew Wyatt was charged
with the execution of it, though he was brought up
// 160.png
.pn +1
to painting, not to sculpture. Mr. O’Reilly, the
surgeon and apothecary, has the key, as his
Majesty is not on good terms with the canons. It
is not to be open to the public until the King has
seen it. The chapel in which it is placed is the first
to the left of the end door which fronts the choir.
It has painted glass, representing, I think, St. Peter
and St. Paul, and the light which falls on the
monument from the left is of a gold colour, and
that from the right purple, or rather lilac. The
figure of the Princess, covered with a sheet, is represented
as on her death-bed, but appears convulsive.
Four veiled mourners are at the corners.
Above the lid is another figure of the Princess, as
rising to heaven and drawing aside a curtain. It is
certainly a resemblance, but too large. There is an
angel on each side, one of whom holds the child.
[On the 14th December, Miss Knight was once
more in Paris. She herself says that Monsieur—at
this time Charles X.—once observed to her:
“Vous aimez maintenant vivre en France; mais je
me rappelle que vous m’aviez dit en Angleterre que
vous n’aimeriez pas d’y aller.” “Naturellement,
Monseigneur,” she replied; “la France n’était pas
alors chez elle.” He smiled, and said, “Mais l’Angleterre
a été toujours chez elle, et toujours les livres
ouverts pour vous.” Though not very appropriate,
another anecdote of Monsieur related by Miss
Knight may be here introduced. “I recollect,”
she says, “being one evening at the Tuileries (I
// 161.png
.pn +1
believe it was the first time I went to Monsieur’s;
it was in 1816), and while we were standing round
in the usual circle, a lady, rather advanced in years,
seemed anxiously looking for the moment when her
turn should come to be spoken to by Monsieur.
She caught his eye while there were still one or two
between them, and he bowed and smiled. When
he came up to her he spoke kindly, and addressed
her by her name. “Ah, Monseigneur!” she cried,
apparently much agitated, “il y a si longtemps que
je n’ai pas eu l’honneur de voir votre Altesse Royale,
et pourtant elle se souvient de moi! Les années
changent tout——” Monsieur interrupted her,
and said, “Les années! Quant aux dernières vingt-cinq
il ne faut plus les compter.”]
.sp 2
.h3
[1826.]
.sp 2
January 11th.—Went with Mrs. Lutwyche to
the “reception” at the Palais Royal. All Paris
there in full dress, and the room very hot. The
young Duke de Chartres, who is little more than
fifteen, appeared in full uniform of Hussars, and
went round with his father, mother, and aunt. He
looked remarkably handsome and elegant. It is
said that Duke Mathieu de Montmorency is appointed
governor to the Duke de Bordeaux. There
have been riots[#] at St. Petersburg, on account of
// 162.png
.pn +1
the refusal of the Grand-Duke Constantine to ascend
the throne.
.pm fn-start // A
These riots were speedily suppressed
by the resolute daring of the
Emperor Nicholas, who ascended the
throne December 26, 1825.
.pm fn-end
26th.—In the evening to the Duchess of Orleans’,
where a small party had been invited to meet the
Dauphin, who dined there. Cards, backgammon,
books of prints, &c.
February 1st.—At the Duchess de Narbonne’s,
where there was a large party to hear Mdlle.
Delphine Gay[#] recite verses of her own composition.
Her mother was with her, and I understand
they are rather rich people in the class of employés.
They were much dressed. The poetess is pretty,
and when she recites has expression in her eyes and
tone, but her voice is harsh. She recited a passage
from a poem of her own on the restoration
to life of the widow’s son, and afterwards another
fragment on the triumphant entry of King Alfred.
It seems she has recited some of her verses before
the French Academy.
.pm fn-start // A
Married in 1831 to M. Emile de
Girardin. Mademoiselle Delphine Gay
was born at Aix-la-Chapelle about the
year 1800, and in 1822 competed for
the prize offered by the Academy for
the best poem “Sur le Dévouement
des Médecins Français et des Sœurs de
Sainte Camille pendant l’Epidémie de
Barcelone.” Had she conformed to the
conditions, she would have gained the
prize; as it was, it was read aloud by
M. Alexandre Duval, and created a
great sensation. The consecration of
Charles X., the deaths of General Foy
and of Mathieu de Montmorency, and
other subjects, furnished themes for
this accomplished poetess. After her
marriage she frequently contributed
feuilletons to the Presse under the
name of Vicomte Delaunay, and also
published some novels of considerable
merit. Her last literary work was the
popular drama, “La Joie fait Peur.”
.pm fn-end
27th.—At the Duchess de Narbonne’s, where
many ladies and gentlemen were assembled to hear
M. de St. Priest,[#] a very young man, read a tragedy
// 163.png
.pn +1
he has written, entitled “Clotilde.” Clotaire and
Sigebert, the two sons of Clovis, are at variance,
and their mother, Clotilde, endeavours to reconcile
them, but, according to history, it finishes most
horribly. There are many fine lines in the play,
and also interesting situations.
.pm fn-start // B
Count Alexis de Saint Priest,
author of several tragedies, and also
of historical works of more than average
merit.
.pm fn-end
March 19th.—At the Ambassador’s Chapel.
Bishop Luscombe preached. He was consecrated
by the Bishops of the Episcopal Church of Scotland,
and is on the Continent to exercise his functions
as a prelate without any particular diocese:
watching over the flock of travelling English. He
is said to be a very respectable man, and his sermon
was good.
April 12th.—Celebration of the anniversary of
the King’s entrance into Paris in 1814. There was
a review in the Champ de Mars, but the wind and
rain were unfavourable to it. I dined with Madame
de Labédoyère, and in the evening accompanied
Lady Mary Hill to the Duchess of Hamilton’s.
The Duchess sang delightfully, as also did the
Countess Apponyi, the wife of the Austrian Minister.
The Countess is an excellent musician, and sings
with great taste.
30th.—At the Ambassador’s Chapel. Mr.
Sidney Smith preached on the immortality of the
soul, as announced by the dissatisfaction felt here,
the desire to be remembered after death, &c. &c.
May 3rd.—To-day the King and Queen go in
procession to several churches, for the Jubilee, and
// 164.png
.pn +1
they lay the first stone of the monument to be
erected to Louis XVI., on the spot where he was
executed. The gendarmes would not allow carriages
to pass, so I was obliged, after making an attempt,
to come home again. I heard in the evening that
the ceremony was very fine and imposing. The
Nuncio says that it was more so than the coronation
at Rheims. After the performance of an expiatory
service, the first stone of the monument was laid by
the King himself, in the presence of all the Royal
Family—except the Dauphiness—a deputation of
Peers and Deputies, the Great Officers of State,
Courts of Justice, Ambassadors, &c. &c. The
Place Louis Quinze is now to be called Place Louis
Seize.
7th.—Went to chapel. In the evening to the
Tuileries, with the Marquise de Vaudreuil. There
were many ladies present, as all the Royal personages
received, and they are soon going into the
country. The King looked remarkably well, and
appeared very cheerful. Amongst other things,
speaking to me of activity, &c., he said (what is
very true, and exemplified in himself), “Il ne faut
pas se laisser aller.” It is a long way through the
subterranean, the court, the theatre, and the gallery
of the chapel, to the Duchess de Berri’s apartments.
She had a hat on.
June 11th.—Called upon Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg.
Went afterwards to the Bois de Boulogne
// 165.png
.pn +1
by a new road, called the “Champs Elysées,” in
compliment to the King. Young trees are planted
on each side, and it will be very pretty when they
are grown larger; in the mean while, it shortens the
distance.
August 4th.—Dined at Bishop Luscombe’s. Sir
Sidney Smith there. After a residence of many
years in France since the peace, he seems to think
of going to England, having taken leave of the
King at St. Cloud. Lord Guilford has lent him a
house near Walmer Castle, but he is going first to
Dieppe.
15th.—This is Assumption Day, as it is traditionally
called in Roman Catholic countries, from a
belief that on this day the Virgin Mary was taken
up to heaven. A great procession of the King and
his family takes place, in observance of a vow made
by Louis XIII., by which he placed himself, his
family, and kingdom, under the protection of the
Virgin. To-day also closes the Jubilee, and the
King has given a silver statue of the Virgin and
infant Saviour to the Cathedral of Notre-Dame.
September 23rd.—Arrived at Mayence. The
melancholy appearance of that once flourishing
city is really painful to behold. The inhabitants
say that they would be totally ruined were it not
for the money spent by the military. But the taxes
they have to pay to their present master, the Grand-Duke
of Hesse Darmstadt, and the impediments to
// 166.png
.pn +1
commerce and manufacture, with the departure of
so many noble families resident there during the
time of their Electors, reduce them to a state of
great misery. So much for the benefits arising from
revolutionary changes and extinction of ecclesiastical
power! They say they were better off under
the French than under the Grand-Duke, but nothing
to be compared to their ancient Electoral government,
and as the French were the cause of that
being overthrown, they naturally date their misfortunes
from that period. The military had given
some fêtes during the summer, and there was to be
music and illuminations on the following day, Sunday,
the 24th. That morning I left Mayence, to see
the lovely banks of the Rhine, which we followed
as far as Coblentz, by an excellent road. The old
castles and ruined monasteries, the beautiful trees
and rocks, render the journey very interesting. At
Bingen, about fifteen miles from Mayence, we
entered the Prussian territory. The postmasters
give a receipt at every stage. A printed paper was
also given to me for my baggage, and all seemed to
be done with civility and regularity. Under Bingen,
on a rock in the Rhine, are the ruins of the Mice
Tower, so called from the story of Hatto, the
Bishop of Mayence, who was said to have been
eaten up by those animals. There is a legend belonging
to each of the old ruined castles and monasteries.
The banks of the river are covered with
// 167.png
.pn +1
vines, raised in rows one above the other. At St.
Goar there was formerly a very large monastery.
The place appears more comfortable than many
others, and the situation is picturesque. I paid
thirteen posts to Coblentz, but the distance is not
so much, as I went in ten hours. At one place,
where the road passed under high rocks very near
the river, and had others of a similar description in
view on the opposite side, the postilion stopped and
blew his horn for some minutes in a very agreeable
manner, which was perfectly answered by the echo.
25th.—In the morning oppressively hot. Walked
down to the banks of the Rhine, where I witnessed
the departure of the “coche d’eau” for Mayence:
two horses, with very long ropes, were to drag it up
the river. In the afternoon I went in a calèche,
with a very intelligent driver, to see the fortress on
the other side of the Rhine, which the King of
Prussia is building on the ruins of Ehrenbreitstein.
The works are very fine. They were begun in 1816,
and will require four years more to finish them.
The rock appears almost perpendicular, yet I went
up in the carriage with great ease and safety, as it
is remarkably well made and a perfect zig-zag. I
saw the cannons, barracks, magazines, &c. Eight
thousand men, with provisions and ammunition, are
to be provided here, and the fortress is to be called
Frederick William, after its founder. The view is
very extensive from the platform at the top. The
// 168.png
.pn +1
Moselle, throwing itself into the Rhine, the town of
Coblentz, the bridge of boats, and the circumjacent
country, were at my feet, and the four forts opposite
were pointed out by my conductor, named
Francis, Alexander, Constantine, and Wellington.
The town, however, appeared enveloped in a pitchy
cloud. A heavy thunderstorm was coming on, and
I foolishly hoped to get back before it should break
over our heads. I therefore hurried away, and,
though the hood and apron of the calèche were put
up, my maid and I were wet to the skin by the time
we reached the hotel—the wind blowing torrents of
rain into the carriage.
26th.—Returned to Mayence. The prospects
appeared, if possible, more beautiful than before.
It is not the lovely, enchanting style of beauty
which Italian scenery presents, but it is wild and
romantic. It is the theatre of the mythology of the
middle ages.
30th.—Went to Homburg, and found the Landgrave
in the court—he had seen me drive in. He
took me to the Landgravine, and nothing could be
more kind and cordial than their reception of me.
October 21st.—We dined early, that we might go
at half-past one to the Feldberg, the highest mountain
in this part of the country—in ancient times
the Taunus. The weather was beautiful. The
Landgrave and his aide-de-camp, M. Herman, were
the vanguard; next came the Landgravine and
// 169.png
.pn +1
Princess Augusta of Solms; then Miss Cooper and
myself; and lastly, the two maids of honour,
Mdlles. de Stein and de Haller: all in droskies with
four horses, which ran up the mountain like greyhounds.
The road passed through woods till very
near the summit, which is covered with luxuriant
grass and fragments of rock. The Landgrave had
sent thirty men the day before to repair the road.
There is a mass of rock with grottoes in it, which
is called the Rock of Brunehilda. The view from
the summit is very extensive, embracing the Rhine
and the Maine, with the towns, cities, and villages
on their banks, Falkenstein, Konigstein, and other
mountains, with the ruins of castles and fortifications
on other parts of the Taunus, inferior in
height to the Feldberg, which is two thousand six
hundred and six feet above the surface of the sea.
The air felt sharp and pure. We partook of coffee
and cakes here. Warm punch was also served; for
the grottoes in Brunehilda’s rock served as a
kitchen, as well as for stables for the horses—a
table, chairs, &c., having been previously sent up.
We returned home with a fine sunset.
November 11th.—Arrived at the Castle of Louisburg
about six in the evening. Found the Queen-Dowager
and all her society most kind and friendly.
19th.—Went to Stuttgard, in consequence of
an invitation to dine with the King and Queen.
Dressed at the Hôtel du Roi d’Angleterre. At a
// 170.png
.pn +1
quarter-past four Baroness Seckendorff, the young
Queen’s first lady, came for me, and took me to the
palace. She introduced me to the Queen in her
Majesty’s private apartments, which are very elegant.
The Queen seated me on a sofa by her side, and the
King soon afterwards came in and sat down. They
were both very gracious and conversible. At five
they withdrew, and we went down to the apartments
below, where we found the gentlemen and
ladies of the Court, and the Prince and Princess of
Hohenlohe œhringen, which last is a first cousin of
his Majesty. Soon afterwards the King and Queen
came in, and we went to dinner. The King placed
the Princess of œhringen on his right hand, and
made me sit beside him on his left. He talked to
me all dinner-time, chiefly about the domestic events
of our Royal Family in 1814, when I was with the
late Princess Charlotte. After dinner we returned
to the drawing-room, where coffee was served; and
the King and Queen, after a very gracious leave-taking,
quitted the room and went to the theatre.
Madame de Seckendorff and the Queen’s Chamberlain
took me through the palace to the Queen-Dowager’s
box, and five minutes later the King
and Queen entered their private box; the rest of
the Royal Family occupying the great box in the
centre of the house. Between the opera and the
ballet the King and Queen joined the Royal Family,
and also spoke to Lady Erskine in the adjoining
// 171.png
.pn +1
box. I returned to Louisburg after the ballet,
arriving there a little past eleven.
December 1st.—This day the Constituent Assembly,
or States of Würtemberg, meet. It is held
every third year. The King opens the meeting,
and the Prince of Hohenlohe œhringen is the President.
No ladies are admitted as spectators.
15th.—At dinner the Prince of Wallerstein; descended
by the female side from the Würtemberg
family. This young man is Regent of the little
States belonging to his family, his eldest brother
having renounced his rights on marrying a gardener’s
daughter, with whom he retired to a castle
to enjoy rural felicity. The second brother, who is
now Prince, is in the Austrian service, and on garrison
duty in Bohemia, and has entrusted the Regency
to this Prince, who is the third son.
20th.—After dinner I went up-stairs to see a fine
suite of apartments above those of the late King,
called the Crown Prince’s. This castle is an immense
building. Were it inhabited at all in proportion
to its size, it would be very cheerful, for all
the apartments are light and spacious. The hangings
and furniture of those of the Crown Prince are
of damask, and there is much gilding. The pictures
are not good, but in some of the rooms very
numerous.
24th.—In the evening the Queen made her Christmas
presents to her ladies and gentlemen. There
// 172.png
.pn +1
was a table also for me, covered with pretty things,
including a gold chain, a cross, and earrings, a
silver cup and saucer, a silver tower for heating
water, three gowns,[#] &c.
.pm fn-start // A
It is amusing to contrast the
well-bred kindliness of feeling with
which Miss Knight accepts the dresses
presented to her by the Queen-Dowager
of Würtemberg, with the under-bred
fussiness displayed by Miss Burney,
when Queen Charlotte presumed
to send her a gown by the hands of
Madame Schwellenburg.
.pm fn-end
31st.—The year was finished very cordially in
the castle, and very noisily out of doors; for notwithstanding
all the edicts against it, gunpowder
announces the termination of the old year and the
commencement of the new one, to the great annoyance
of the peaceable inhabitants. In the town
there was a ball, and in the castle “pictures” were
represented by the principal dancers at the theatre.
.sp 2
// 173.png
.pn +1
.pb
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch09
CHAPTER IX.
.sp 1
.pm ch-hd-start
PARIS AND LONDON—DEATH OF THE QUEEN-DOWAGER OF WÜRTEMBERG—HOMBURG—THE
LANDGRAVE AND LANDGRAVINE—LIFE AT A GERMAN
COURT—RETURN TO LOUISBURG—BADEN.
.pm ch-hd-end
.h3
JOURNAL CONTINUED—1827.
.sp 2
January 11th.—In the afternoon Lord Erskine
brought the Queen-Dowager letters from Mr. Canning
and Count Munster, announcing the death of
the Duke of York at half-past nine in the evening
of the 5th. They came by a messenger despatched
by Mr. Canning, by order of his Majesty.
April 30th.—Arrived at Paris. The National
Guard are dismissed, in consequence of their riotous
behaviour last night, crying out “A bas les Ministres!”
It is said many ill-intentioned persons made
up uniforms and mixed with them, for the purpose
of creating confusion.
May 14th.—In the evening went with the Viscountess
de Vaudreuil to visit the Duke and Duchess
// 174.png
.pn +1
de Rivière at the Tuileries, in the apartments formerly
occupied by the King when he was Monsieur.
The little Duke de Bordeaux was there, M. de Rivière
being his governor. He appeared very lively
and good natured. He is not very tall for his age,
but has an elegant and well-proportioned figure.
He seems to possess quickness and intelligence.
His Royal Highness had with him two sub-preceptors
and a young companion—the son of the
Duke—three years and a half older than himself.
The “salon” is, as before, furnished with stools, and
with only one arm-chair for the King.
August 1st.—Went to St. Ouen to visit the
Countess du Cayla and her daughter, the Princess
de Craon. Their house is in the midst of very extensive
grounds and gardens. It appears like a
pavilion; but on entering we found an elegant
staircase, carpeted as in England, and well proportioned
rooms elegantly furnished. On the first
floor we saw a “salon” and two handsome bedrooms,
with a Gothic “cabinet” in the best style of
that species of architecture. On the ground floor
an excellent dining-room, billiard-room, “salon,”
and “cabinet de bain,” all fitted up in good taste,
the locks good, and the doors shutting well. In
the “salon” is an inscription by Louis XVIII., to
the effect that here began a new era in the liberties
of France. It was here that he met the Allied
Sovereigns and Ministers in 1814, and gave the
// 175.png
.pn +1
Charter. He afterwards with great secrecy rebuilt
the house, or, rather, erected this very beautiful
villa, and made all the plans himself. He then
presented it to Madame du Cayla, as a residence
for her life; and the present King allows her two
thousand five hundred livres a year to keep up the
place. The floors are very handsome, and almost
all the furniture is of French wood.
8th.—Went with the Bishop of Tulle to Athis, a
place belonging to the Baroness de Crussol, about
four leagues from Paris, on the road to Fontainebleau.
The grounds are well laid out, with fine
trees, and the house is large and commodious, very
nice, and in good order. The poor lady herself,
who is very civil and good natured, has nearly
lost her mental faculties; but a friend of her late
husband manages everything for her. In the
grounds is a Gothic chapel, as also the Temple
of Flora and a rustic building, all of which are
well placed. There is likewise the tomb of a dog,
with his image at the top. It seems that when this
place belonged to the Duchess de Roquelaure, in
the reign of Louis XIV., Mademoiselle de Scudéry
had a dog named Badine, who died while she was
staying here. At that time the philosophers wanted
to introduce the doctrine that animals are only machines.
The epitaph engraved on the tomb alludes
to this:
// 176.png
.pn +1
.pm verse-start
Ci-gît la célèbre Badine,
Qui n’eut ni beauté, ni bonté,
Mais dont l’esprit a démonté
Le système de la machine.
.pm verse-end
In the house are several good apartments: that in
which the Countess d’Alton sleeps was the chamber
of Marshal Villars. The views from the house are
very extensive.
9th.—News by the telegraph of the death of Mr.
Canning, who expired yesterday, at the Duke of
Devonshire’s villa at Chiswick.
13th.—Six Indians arrived, four men and two
women, with an interpreter and his son, and a
French colonel, from Havre de Grace. They come
from the banks of the river Missouri, in America.
The gate and opposite side of the street are thronged
with people trying to stare at them.
16th.—This morning the Indian chief and the
two women came to my apartment with the housekeeper
and the porter. He appeared grave in his
manners, but offered his hand, as did also the
women. The latter seemed very cheerful. Their
colour is bronze. I thought there was a natural
gracefulness in the figure of the chief, and in his
manner of holding his drapery. His arms were
bare, with silver armlets on them; but his white
mantle was wrapped about him. Their hair is
black and long, but, according to the Indian custom,
consisting of only one lock at the top of the head.
// 177.png
.pn +1
It is said they brought with them furs of value,
which they sold at Havre.
September 16th.—Dined at Prince Castelcicala’s,
to meet the Countess Esterhazy and her two daughters.
The Austrian Ambassador, Count Apponyi,
with the Countess and his nephew, and Monseigneur
Acton, also dined there. The Countess Esterhazy
is the most intimate friend of the Dauphiness. When
the latter went to Vienna from her prison at Paris,
a lady was placed about her who had a niece very
handsome and agreeable. At first the Dauphiness,
accustomed to the mournful and appalling solitude
of the Temple, could not appreciate the society of
this young lady, but by degrees the cheerfulness
and attentions of her companion made their way
into her heart, and ever since that time she has
loved her most sincerely. On the day on which
the Princess gave her hand to the Duke d’Angoulême,
her young friend was united to Count Esterhazy;
and since her return to France she has exacted
that every second year the Countess should
visit her and pass some time with her. Her Royal
Highness then takes her about to see everything
that is interesting, lodges her in the Park of St.
Cloud, and bestows upon her every mark of real
affection. The Count and Countess have passed
five winters in Rome on account of his health; but
they are now going to Hungary.
// 178.png
.pn +1
.sp 2
.h3
[1828.]
.sp 2
January 24th.—Went to the banker’s. Great preparations
in the court-yard for the forthcoming marriage
of Mademoiselle Lafitte with the Prince de la
Moskwa, son of the late Marshal Ney. The young
lady, it is said, wanted to marry her father’s head
clerk, but M. Lafitte had not sufficient love for
liberty and equality to allow this. It is curious to
observe how fond of titles are all these people who
profess “liberal” principles.
February 5th.—This morning the opening of the
Chambers took place at the Louvre, and the King
made a good speech, which was applauded, and he
was welcomed, and accompanied at his departure
by cries of “Vive le Roi!” Speaking of the battle
of Navarino, he called it imprévue; but alluded to
the glory of the French arms, and of their union
with those of their allies. I remarked, on hearing
the speech read, that his Majesty placed the King of
England before the Emperor of Russia.[#] Ecclesiastical
affairs and public instruction are to be separate.
It is said a very wealthy and sensible man
is appointed to be at the head of public instruction—a
lawyer, but of good religious and moral principles.[#]
.pm fn-start // A
In conformity with diplomatic
usage, Russia being the youngest
member of the great European family.
The Duke of Wellington it will be
remembered, called the battle of Navarino
an “untoward accident.” It was
fought on the 20th October, 1827.
.pm fn-end
.pm fn-start // B
M. de Vathnesuil, one of the six
Advocates-General of the Court of
Cassation.
.pm fn-end
// 179.png
.pn +1
21st.—Dined at Lady Downshire’s. Sir Thomas
Fellowes there. He has been in England since the
battle of Navarino, and is returning to Toulon to
rejoin the squadron. This evening he saw the King,
who spoke, as indeed he always does, most cordially
of England.
[On the 12th of April Miss Knight returned to
England, and expressed much astonishment at the
improvements in London since her former visit.]
June 16th.—In the evening at Princess Sophia’s.
Sir J. C. came in, and gave a droll account of the
magnificent breakfast given to-day by the Duchess
of St. Albans, at her villa near town. Almost all
the best musical performers of our nation were there,
besides the Tyrolese singers and others. A silver
bread-basket of vast dimensions was handed about,
and an inscription on it was read aloud, announcing
the happiness of the Duke and Duchess in this, the
first year of their married life, and their intention
of claiming the flitch of bacon at Dunmow six years
hence: for which purpose they had prepared this
basket. The Dukes of Cumberland and Sussex, and
Prince Leopold, were there.
July 10th.—Dined at Lord Stafford’s. Miss Eden,
Mr. and Mrs. Mason, Mr. Wilkie, the celebrated
painter, just returned from Italy and Spain, Mr.
and Mrs. Calcott, he a painter, and she the Mrs.
Graham who was governess to the children of the
Emperor of Brazil, were of the party. Saw some
// 180.png
.pn +1
good views of Edinburgh, Stirling, and other parts
of Scotland, by Lady Stafford. We were received
in the gallery where the Flemish pictures are hung,
and dined in the other, furnished with such noble
paintings, as also is the drawing-room—magnificent
treasures! The four great landscapes in the room
last named are to me delightful.
29th.—Went early to Princess Augusta at Frogmore.
The garden is much improved, and in great
beauty just now. Dear Princess Augusta makes
all happy around her.
[On the 13th of August, Miss Knight again left
England for Paris, where she remained until the
2nd of October. On that day she started for Germany,
and on her arrival at Frankfort, eight days
afterwards, received the melancholy news of the
death of the Queen-Dowager of Würtemberg, “who
expired on Monday, the 6th, at a quarter before
two—a dreadful loss to the country where she
lived, and to all who knew her.” On the following
day, October 11, Miss Knight reached Homburg,
and was, as usual, kindly greeted by the Landgrave
and Landgravine.]
November 7th.—M. Möller, architect of the
Grand-Duke of Hesse Darmstadt, dined here, and
he called upon me in the afternoon. He told me
that the Cathedral of Worms is of, what they call in
Germany, Byzantine architecture. There is a difference,
he says, between that and the Saxon; for
// 181.png
.pn +1
our Saxon buildings in England are, in fact, imitations
of the Roman, whereas the Byzantine came
from Constantinople, where the Roman was intermixed
with the Oriental, whence came the cupolas,
minarets, &c. He also mentioned that at Vienna
were preserved many records of the articles they
used to receive there from Constantinople, which
was in its time the arbiter of taste. In return, the
Germans sent to that city slaves in great numbers,
and these were the Slavi, or people of the Russian
States, whom the Germans made prisoners, and
sold to the Greek Emperors. M. Möller seems to
be a man of great reading and observation in his
own line of study. The Cathedral of Mayence, he
added, is of the Byzantine order.
26th.—This morning one of the Landgrave’s
officers, who is much employed by him, and dines
at the table every day, was married to the daughter
of the Landgrave’s Master of the Horse. He had
been ennobled by the Emperor of Austria at the
request of the Landgravine, because if the young
lady had not married an “edelman,” or noble, she
would have lost the portion given to her by a
Chapter to which she belongs. The Emperor signed
the letters of nobility, as a compliment, on the
Landgravine’s birthday. The wedding took place
at the house of the lady’s father. After the ceremony,
her parents, according to the custom of the
country, surrounded the bride, and tied a handkerchief
// 182.png
.pn +1
over her eyes. They then took off her garland
of myrtle and placed it on the head of the
young lady nearest to her, who happened to be
her own sister. This is supposed to prognosticate
which is the young person who will be the soonest
married.
One day very much resembles another. This is
the ordinary routine. At seven the drum beats
a réveil: a few minutes afterwards the stoves are
lighted. At half-past eight the servant brings hot
water, and at nine, coffee, boiled milk, a small
white loaf, a piece of brown bread, a slice of butter,
a salt-cellar, and in a saucer ten small lumps of
sugar. At half-past eleven a message from the
Landgravine to know how I have slept, and if I
should like to go out with her at a quarter or half-past
twelve. At which hour, if tolerably fine, we
go out in a drosky, and afterwards walk, returning
home by a quarter before two, when the trumpet
sounds for dress. At two, it sounds again to serve
up dinner. I then go through a long passage,
down twenty-five steps and up twenty-five steps,
which lead me to another long passage, and that to
the drawing-room, where I find two or three or
more guests. The door opens, and the gentleman
esteemed the most considerable gives me his arm.
We walk into the dining-room, and stand still till
the other door is thrown open, when the grand
maître d’hôtel, with a white wand and hat in
// 183.png
.pn +1
hand, enters, preceding the Landgrave and Landgravine,
followed by the aide-de-camp of the former
and the maids of honour of the latter. All sit
down to table, the Landgrave having made me a
sign to sit down beside him on his left hand. On
his right is the Landgravine, and next to her one
of his brothers—except when Princess Louise, their
sister-in-law, dines at table, for then she sits between
the Landgrave and Landgravine. Three or
four times in the week the band plays during
dinner, after which the brother gives his arm to
the Landgravine, and the Landgrave his to me.
During all these movements the ladies curtsey and
the gentlemen bow down to the ground. We walk
into the drawing-room; the Landgrave and his
brother stand at one window; the Landgravine
and the ladies sit near another; the gentlemen
stand at the other end of the room, unless any one
happens to be addressed by the Landgrave. Coffee
is served; after which the Landgrave and Landgravine
leave the room, making bows and curtseys,
which are answered by profound bows from all
present. A maid of honour throws a shawl over
the Landgravine’s shoulders and walks after her,
first turning to salute the company. The aide-de-camp
does the same, and follows the Landgrave,
after which everybody retires. The drum beats
soon after as a salute to the Landgrave and Landgravine
as they drive out in a drosky, returning
// 184.png
.pn +1
before six. About half-past six the Landgravine
sends for me. A servant with a lantern lights me
down stairs to her apartment, and I sit with her in
her boudoir till eight o’clock strikes. The servant
then lights me through the passages and up the
twenty-five steps, and I arrive at the drawing-room,
where I find a maid of honour at the tea-table,
and, about a quarter of an hour later, the
door flies open, and the Landgrave and Landgravine
enter. The former takes his tea, and then
desires the card parties to be formed; he playing
at one table and the Landgravine at another. At
a quarter before nine the other door opens, and
Prince Ferdinand, the Landgrave’s youngest brother,
comes in, and bows to the company. He
walks up and down and looks at the players, at a
little distance; then sits down, and then walks
again. I sit at the corner of the Landgravine’s
table. A few minutes after, the drum beats for
some time. At half-past nine the aide-de-camp
and a captain, who is always in waiting, come in
with low bows, and almost immediately afterwards
a servant enters, goes up to the grand maître, and
announces supper. He is probably playing at the
Landgrave’s table, but, as soon as the game will
permit, he rises, takes his white wand and hat from
the chair on which he had deposited them, and
comes up to the Landgravine’s table, where he
stands till he catches her eye. He then announces
// 185.png
.pn +1
supper, makes a bow, and retires. As soon as the
parties break up, all go to supper, as before to
dinner. The Landgrave and Landgravine retire
as soon as it is over; so do the company; and a
crowd of servants and kitchen-maids rush in to put
out the lights and carry away the plates and dishes.
The guard is relieved every two hours: at one,
three, five, &c. At eleven at night a man blows a
horn eleven times, once at one, and three times at
three. On Sundays we dine at three. The Princes
and officers all in full-dress uniforms, and company,
to the number of thirty to thirty-five, all full
dressed. On Mondays and Thursdays, the days
for hunting, we dine at half-past two.
In the latter part of December the Landgravine
received a letter from the Duchess of Gloucester,
telling her that, on the 21st, the King received the
little Queen, or Princess, of Portugal, Donna Maria
da Gloria, at Windsor Castle, the apartments of
which were fitted up with great elegance and magnificence.
The Duchess was there with the Duke,
and the Duke and Duchess of Clarence, the Duke
of Wellington, &c. &c. All thought the little
Princess remarkably like poor Princess Charlotte,
though on a smaller scale. She is nine years and
a half old, very fair, with blue eyes. She was
dressed like a young person of eighteen, and had
fine jewels, with her father’s portrait. She breakfasted
with the King, and behaved very properly.
// 186.png
.pn +1
[Miss Knight left Homburg on the 13th of January,
and proceeded to Louisburg, where she
found the ladies and gentlemen of the Court still
grieving over the loss of the late Queen-Dowager.
The Landgrave of Hesse-Homburg died, almost
suddenly, on the 3rd of March following.]
Stuttgard, Jan. 23rd.—Received a message from
the King and Queen, asking me to dine with them
and meet the English Minister. At a quarter before
five I went to the palace, and at five we dined.
Princess Pauline was there, and the usual persons
of the household, but no other company, except
Mr. and Mrs. Desbrowe. The Queen seemed much
affected, and shed tears in speaking of the late
Queen-Dowager. The King spoke of her with the
highest esteem and the deepest gratitude. He said
that during the fourteen years which had elapsed
since the death of his father, he had never in one
instance had reason to complain of his stepmother,
but, on the contrary, had always experienced from
her the kindest and most judicious conduct towards
himself and his family. Princess Pauline
was very civil and very gay, for she is much
pleased with the idea of her approaching marriage
with the Duke of Nassau.
February 25th.—Went to a ball at Court in the
state apartments, which are magnificent, and really
elegant; the music good, and the rooms perfectly
well lighted. It was Princess Pauline’s birthday.
// 187.png
.pn +1
The Duke of Nassau was there, and, it seems, made
her some fine presents on the occasion. He is about
thirty-six, not handsome, and rather short; but apparently
very good-natured, and not ill-looking.
He was with the Duke of Wellington at the battle
of Waterloo. Prince Augustus was at the ball. He
goes into the army in about three months. I came
away before supper, but saw the tables set out in
a very handsome style.
April 21st.—The Duke of Nassau arrived with
his grand chamberlain and two aides-de-camp. All
are to be lodged at the palace. The apartments—which,
I think, are those of the late Queen-Dowager—are
dressed out with young trees,
flowers, &c. The King and Queen have invited
me to the wedding, the dinner, and the Polonaise
ball for Thursday, but I have excused myself, from
being still weak.[#]
.pm fn-start // A
During the greater part of March, Miss Knight had been confined to her
room by severe illness.
.pm fn-end
23rd.—This day the Duke of Nassau was married
to Princess Pauline. The bride’s jewels are valued
at 300,000 florins.
May 25th.—Dined with the King and Queen.
There was no company, but some of their household.
They were very gracious, and I took leave
of them with feelings of sincere gratitude.
Baden, June 7th.—The weather improved, and
the country in great beauty. The theatre opens
// 188.png
.pn +1
this evening with the opera of “Tancredi.” Nine
hundred and ninety-three strangers already arrived,
though the “season” has not yet commenced.
Many new houses have been built since I was here
in 1824.
8th.—Walked in the afternoon up the hills,
where the scenery is very pleasing, and the grass
ornamented with wild flowers. I went into the
garden of the Grand-Duchess, whose house stands
on a little eminence. Baden is composed of various
hills, which render its situation very picturesque,
and the running rivulets from little cascades, added
to the magnificent oaks which enrich the scenery,
form altogether a very interesting picture. The
shape of the hills does not compose so good a background
as might be wished, but the houses, though
not of regular architecture, are pretty and fanciful.
Most of them have terraces, or balconies, with
flowers, and they are interspersed among the high
trees on the hills and hillocks.
July 1st.—Baden appears to fill daily. The
Grand-Duchess Stéphanie arrived this evening. It
seems she was a niece of Count Beauharnais, the
first husband of Joséphine, and that Lady Bute
(the wife of Sir James Pulteney) took compassion
on her, and had her educated in the south of
France. She was forced to go to Paris by Bonaparte,
who also compelled her to marry the Grand-Duke
of Baden, against her inclination and his.
// 189.png
.pn +1
Lady Bute left her 1000l. in her will, which Bonaparte
would not allow her to accept. The executors,
however, placed it in the funds, and she has
since received it, with the accumulated interest,
settling both on her youngest daughter. She had
two sons, who died, and has now three daughters.
She usually resides at Mannheim, but went this
spring to Paris to consult an oculist, and was well
received by the King, Dauphin, Dauphiness, &c. &c.
August 21.—The Russians are supposed to be
by this time in possession of Constantinople. By
the last accounts they were within a few leagues of
that capital.[#] I remember my mother used to say,
“Russia wants to drive the only honest man out of
Europe.”
.pm fn-start // A
Diebitch’s army had melted “like
snow at the glance of the Lord” by
the time he reached Adrianople. The
Treaty of Adrianople saved the remnants
of the Russian forces rather than
Constantinople.
.pm fn-end
[In the beginning of September, Miss Knight
quitted Baden and travelled by way of Zurich,
Lucerne, Berne, Friburg, Geneva, Mont Cenis, and
Susa, to Turin. In that city she remained only a
few days, and then continued her route to Genoa,
where she passed the ensuing winter. She here
met an old Roman acquaintance, Signor Gagliassi,
who, after visiting her one day, composed the following
lines of doubtful gallantry:
.pm verse-start
Salve, cui Noctis dedit Anglica patria nomen!
Noctis, quam propriam docta Minerva vocat.
Salve, quam vidi Romæ, Arcada! inter euntem,
Et nunc in Liguri lætor adesse solo.
// 190.png
.pn +1
Salve, quae pulchram ducens, viridemque senectam,
Ævo et consilio fœmina Nestor eris!
Accipe, quam scribo curru properante, salutem;
Vota tibi rediens fervidiora feram.
.pm verse-end
This “epigramma” Miss Knight copied out and
sent to a friend, accompanied by the following
verses:
.pm verse-start
Gagliassi seems to think it strange
That I still breathe the air of life,
And still abroad delight to range—
He says I might be Nestor’s wife.
The compliment has made you stare,
And, I confess, has made me smile;
But, could I Nestor’s wisdom share,
Such union might be worth the while.
As Greece is all the fashion now,
To Pylos I my course might steer,
And, should old Nestor make his bow,
There keep a Court and give good cheer.
But Night, dark Night, is not my name;
I spring not from Minerva’s race;
From Chivalry my lineage came;
Romance alone in me you trace.
.pm verse-end
.sp 2
// 191.png
.pn +1
.pb
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch10
CHAPTER X.
.sp 1
.pm ch-hd-start
GENOA—THE PALLAVICINI FAMILY—CHARACTER OF THE GENOESE—RETURN
TO ENGLAND—THE ROYAL FAMILY AT BRIGHTON—LONDON—GLOOMY RETROSPECT—ANECDOTES.
.pm ch-hd-end
.h3
JOURNAL CONTINUED—1830.
.sp 2
Genoa, January 1st.—The accounts of the weather
from all quarters very extraordinary. In
London terrible fogs; at Paris the Seine frozen
over; at Turin and at Milan more snow than has
ever been known before; and here, a greater succession
of north-east and north-west winds than
can be remembered for sixty years.
23rd.—The Prince of the Peace was at the Opera
last night with his wife.[#] He is on his way to
// 192.png
.pn +1
Paris, where, not long ago, or at least in the neighbourhood
of Paris, died the Lady of the House of
Bourbon, whom he married, and it was reported
that he had another wife. M. de B—— said that
in Spain he was assured that the Prince had not
been married to this other lady, but that he had
now married her. I remember meeting a son of
theirs at the house of a Spanish lady, at Paris, a
few years ago; and at Rome I heard that, in company
with the King and Queen of Spain, the
Prince of Peace, with his daughter by the Lady
of the House of Bourbon, were arrived in Italy.
The governor of this place, the Marquis d’Hyène,
has been greatly beloved wherever he has commanded.
At one place the good people wished to
pay him particular attention, and, among other
decorations for his reception, had a transparency
representing a hyæna surrounded by little Cupids
caressing it. To explain the meaning of this, they
// 193.png
.pn +1
said to the Marquis d’Hyène: “Noi siamo gli
amorini, e la bestià è l’eccellenza vostra.”
.pm fn-start // A
“It has been asserted” (says Lord
Holland in his “Foreign Reminiscences,”
p. 87) “that his (Manuel
Godoy’s) marriage with the daughter
of the Infant Don Luis originated in
a malicious trait of jealousy of the
Queen. The story goes, that she
brought the King unexpectedly to the
apartment of the favourite, and surprised
him when supping tête-à-tête
with Mademoiselle Tudo (the daughter
of an artillery officer), a lady of extraordinary
beauty, to whom he was
clandestinely married, though some
say by a contract which the laws
would consider as invalid; that the
King was partly shocked and partly
diverted at the discovery; that he
shortly afterwards, at the suggestion
of the Queen, with a view of providing,
without the peril of a deadly sin,
for the incontinence of his favourite,
insisted on matrimony, and condescended
to offer his young and recently
acknowledged cousin for a bride; that
the Prince of the Peace, not daring to
acknowledge his union with the Tudo,
and still less to decline the royal
alliance without alleging some such
insurmountable bar, prevailed on the
wife of his affections to suppress the
truth, and allowed Charles, in his zeal
to rescue him from more venial and
ordinary vices, to involve him in the
heinous and troublesome sin of bigamy.
I do not vouch for the truth of the
tale. Well-informed persons believed
it, and related it to me. It is certain
that the ostensible marriage with the
Princess, which took place in 1797,
never interrupted his connexion with
the Tudo. During his prosperity, she
was generally lodged in a royal palace,
or in an adjoining apartment. After
his exile and adversity, she followed
him to Rome, and has always been
treated by him, his friends, and even
the Royal Family, as a personage in
some sort legitimately entitled to the
society, tenderness, and protection of
the Prince of Peace.”
.pm fn-end
In the memoirs of the Pallavicini family, it appears
that a nobleman[#] of that name went to England
on a mission from the Pope to receive money
due to the Holy See, and that, after getting possession
of it, he became a Protestant, and appropriated
the money to his own use. His wife was
with him, and after his death she married a son of
Cromwell, and returned with her second husband
to Genoa, where they inhabited the villa still belonging
to the Pallavicini family, called La Peschiera.
If this be true, it must have happened
during the short reign of James II., for, otherwise,
what hope could the Pontiff have of getting money
from England? It seems odd, however, that he
should have sent a secular, and a married one, too;
// 194.png
.pn +1
but that might have been to avoid exciting suspicion.
I remember that when I was at Genoa,
many years ago, with my mother, we were told
that a son of Cromwell had lived in a villa over the
Zerbino, a little way out of the gate. This answers
to the Pallavicini villa.
.pm fn-start // A
Signor Horatio Pallavicini quitted
his native country and settled in the
Netherlands, where he married a woman
of low extraction. On her death,
he crossed over into England, and was
appointed by Queen Mary collector of
the papal taxes gathered in the kingdom.
At Mary’s decease he happened
to have thus a large sum of money in
his possession, and accordingly turned
Protestant. His talents and knowledge
of continental languages rendered
him very useful to Queen Elizabeth,
who conferred upon him the
honour of knighthood. In the following
year he fitted out and commanded
a ship against the Spanish Armada,
and his portrait was placed among
those of the patriots who distinguished
themselves on that occasion in the
tapestry that hung in the old House
of Lords. He died in 1600, leaving
his second wife, daughter of Egidius
Hooftman of Antwerp, in possession
of immense wealth. In the following
year she married Sir Oliver Cromwell,
uncle and godfather of the Protector.
Two sons and a daughter by her former
husband, Sir Horatio Pallavicini,
married two daughters and a son of
her second husband by his former
wife. It does not appear that Lady
Cromwell ever visited Genoa at all.
Her son Oliver may have done so, as
he was certainly a student at Padua.
He was killed by the fall of some
buildings at Rome. There is no mention
of any other member of the family
going to Italy. See the Rev. Mark
Noble’s “Memoirs of the Protectoral
House of Cromwell.”
.pm fn-end
Genoa is sadly altered and degraded. Many of
its finest buildings are falling to decay, and the
grass grows luxuriantly in their court-yards. And
yet trade flourishes more than ever. The principal
nobility and merchants are still very rich, and the
King of Sardinia does all in his power to render it
a flourishing seaport and an agreeable residence.
But it is more difficult to make the Genoese amuse
themselves than it is to make them get money—the
former implies spending it. There is great
inequality of fortune—great riches and great
poverty.
April 27.—This day was celebrated, outside the
gates, the feast of a saint held in great veneration
by the common people. On the eve there were
illuminations and fireworks, and the church was
crowded with people either from devotion or for
the sake of amusement. They say that this saint
was once upon a time servant to a baker, and used
to take a great many loaves every morning for the
poor. The baker missed his bread, and suspected
his servant. He watched her, and saw her go out
with her apron filled. On stopping her, he was
// 195.png
.pn +1
much surprised, for he saw nothing but flowers.
This is celebrated as a miracle.
When Lord Exmouth was at Genoa, he took
everything he could take, even to the brass rings
which received the chain of the port. How different
was this from the conduct of Lord Nelson
and Sir Thomas Troubridge when in the Mediterranean!
They came to rescue nations, and not to
plunder them.
It is said to be a custom here, that when a man
is displeased with another, as a token of resentment
and defiance, he lets his whiskers grow. Perhaps
this may be the reason why the King expressed
his dissatisfaction with a young nobleman
who allowed his whiskers to grow, though he was
not in the army. The young man cut them off,
but is so displeased that he will not go to Court.
The Marchesa Durezzo says, that of the lower
classes in Genoa the most courteous and good
natured are the sailors, whom I have always heard
spoken of as the best seamen of the Mediterranean.
There is a harshness in the lower orders, and a
stiffness in the higher classes of the Genoese, which
one does not meet with in other Italians. But
they have understanding and acuteness, and I believe
that, in reality, they have the affectionate heart
peculiar to their common country—but you
must get at it.
[At the end of May, Miss Knight resumed her
// 196.png
.pn +1
wanderings, halting, however, at Turin until the
middle of July. She thence proceeded to Milan
and across the Simplon to Geneva. Passing on by
way of Neufchâtel, she again entered France, and
arrived at Dijon on the 12th of August, under
which date occurs the following entry: “The town
was obliged to illuminate last night in honour of
the new King, Louis Philippe, being proclaimed
‘Roi des Français.’ The people display no enthusiasm,
and all is quiet in this district. Several
officers have resigned their commissions. On the
road I met some wounded Swiss and others of that
corps, and also of the Royal Guards, both of which
corps are now suppressed, and the men dismissed
to their respective homes.” Three days later, Miss
Knight arrived in Paris, and on the 9th of September
at Dover. “On the road from Paris to
Calais,” she remarks, “I perceived no signs of
gaiety or enthusiasm. A person disposed to criticise
the nation would, perhaps, divide it into three
classes—knaves, dupes, and people intimidated by
their recollection of the horrid scenes of the former
revolution. Certain it is that the prosperity of
France was great, and yearly increasing, and now
all has become precarious, thanks to designing ambition
and infamous journals. I am sick of the
subject, and what I did not write while in the
country from prudence, I now avoid writing from
disgust.” In the following October, Miss Knight
// 197.png
.pn +1
took apartments at Brighton, where she was presented
to William IV. and Queen Adelaide, and invited
to an evening party on the 21st, at which
“tableaux were represented by an actor from the
theatre. The King and Queen were very civil to
everybody.” She was again invited on the 27th
of December, when “the Pavilion was lighted up
and as hot as possible. I cannot admire the dragons
and other Oriental fancies, having been spoiled for
such things by being early accustomed to the dignified
simplicity of classic taste. Besides the two
Princesses, the Duke of Sussex was there, and some
of the new Ministers, Lord Grey, Sir James Graham,
Lord Holland, and Lord Durham.” The last
entry of the year runs in these words: “A whale
was caught near this place two days ago. It is
sixty-five feet in length. It was almost dead, and
had a harpoon in its body.” On the 28th of December,
Miss Knight takes a gloomy retrospective
view of the events of the previous twelve months.
“This miserable year,” she writes, “is almost at
its close. On the 26th of June, died George IV.,
who was succeeded by William Duke of Clarence.
On the 29th of July, Charles X. lost his throne—the
Dauphin as well as himself renouncing all right
to it. The Duke of Orleans was crowned by four
marshals in a very small assembly of the representatives
of the nation, and without any religious
ceremony. No etiquette, no distinctions, allowed.
// 198.png
.pn +1
Popular tumults in France and England. The
King and Queen of England deterred from dining
in the City owing to a communication from the
Lord Mayor, advising them of intended riots and
the cutting of the gas-pipes. The Duke of Wellington
left in a minority, and obliged to resign:
Lord Grey and his party forming the new administration.
The revolt of Belgium; disturbances in
many parts of Germany; the Duke of Brunswick
expelled in favour of his brother; the Grand-Duke
Constantine and the Russians driven out of Poland;
fires in many counties in England to destroy the
haystacks and corn-ricks!”
.sp 2
.h3
[1831.]
.sp 2
Mrs. Fitzherbert, when William IV. visited her
after his brother’s death, showed him the papers
which proved her marriage with the late King,
first by a Roman Catholic priest, and immediately
afterwards by a clergyman of the Church of England.
The King desired her to put on widow’s
weeds. Mrs. Fitzherbert also showed these papers
to the Duke of Wellington, then Prime Minister.
She is constantly invited to the Queen’s parties,
and is treated with much respect.
January 8.—Dined at General Egerton’s, and
went in the evening with him and Mrs. E. to a
great party at the Pavilion. The Prince of Orange
was there. He came yesterday, and is to stay till
// 199.png
.pn +1
the 10th. He has been some time in England,
and brought a letter to the King from his father,
requesting his Majesty to be kind to him, as he
himself had forgiven him. There was dancing,
and some musicians from Bohemia played and
sang.
February 14.—The King after dinner drank to
the memory of the Earl of St. Vincent, and of all
the brave officers and men who fought on that day
and are now no more, and to the health of those
who survive.
London, March 6.—The son of Murat lives in this
(Dover) street. He arrived lately from America,
where he is naturalised, and practises at the bar.
He often visits his cousin Lady Dudley Stuart, the
daughter of Lucien Bonaparte. The Prince of
Orange, I hear, is frequently at their parties.
Murat was at Lord Grey’s last night.
April 17.—Dined with the Duke and Duchess
of Cumberland, at their apartments in St. James’s
Palace. The Landgravine was also there. The
apartments are handsome. On the ground floor a
waiting-room, library, and dining-room; and up-stairs,
a large and superb drawing-room; excellent
bedchamber, dressing-room, &c. There are several
portraits—George III., Queen Charlotte, Mr. Pitt,
two sons of the Duchess, a bust of Goethe, &c.
The dinner was very good, and well served: all in
the most proper style. The Duchess has excellent
// 200.png
.pn +1
manners, and Prince George, who came in at the
dessert, with two young companions, is really a delightful
boy.
December 31.—This year has been one of the
most painful to the feelings of those who have been
accustomed to the principles of social order and
morality, that I can remember. The French revolution
in the last century cannot be recalled to
mind without horror, as every period of it was
marked by the most atrocious crimes, and a total
contempt of morality and religion. But the insidious
duplicity, the want of faith, and perversion
of reason, which have brought about and coloured
the progress of that of 1830, threaten Europe with
a total disorganisation of political and moral principle.
Alarm of every description is prevailing.
The ties of blood and of alliance are forgotten; and
while it is pretended that everything is being done
for the maintenance of peace, no security is given
for the preservation of internal tranquillity. France
is still under the government of Louis Philippe and
his Minister, Casimir Périer; Belgium, under that
of Leopold. Poland is reoccupied by Russia.
Italy, notwithstanding the efforts made to revolutionise
her, is still quiet, except, perhaps, in the
three Legations, and they are kept in awe by
Austria.
[At the end of this lamentation, Miss Knight records
various anecdotes she had picked up in the
// 201.png
.pn +1
course of the year, a few of which are worth extracting.]
April 19.—Prince de Talleyrand wrote the other
day to Louis Philippe, who had been intriguing to
get the throne of Belgium for his second son, the
Duke de Nemours: “Il faut que votre Majesté se
rappelle qu’avant de pouvoir mettre le pied en
Brabant, il faut avoir le pied en Europe.”
The Duke of Orleans was always making unjust
complaints of Louis XVIII., and one day went so
far as to say to M. de B. that it was very unwise
to treat him in that manner, for, added he, “Je
compte pour beaucoup en France.” M. de B. answered:
“Cela n’est pas possible, monseigneur,
car vous n’êtes ni brave, ni généreux;” and, turning
his back on him, left the room. The Duke
from that time overwhelmed M. de B. with civilities
and flatteries.
Charles X. says that his conscience acquits him
of having had anything in view contrary to the
good of his people, whose lives he wished to spare,
and whom he was only anxious to save from the
artifices of faction. He was made to believe that
there would be twenty-nine thousand troops in
Paris, and that all would pass over quietly. The
Dauphiness still speaks with tender affection of her
native country, notwithstanding all she has suffered
there. She said the other day to a lady: “On
// 202.png
.pn +1
nous calomnie cruellement; mais croyez-vous que
l’histoire nous rendra justice?”
The Grand-Duchess Helena is now (July) at
Sidmouth, and her father, Prince Paul of Würtemberg,
is with her. An Irish family were presented
to her amongst others, when she said to them:
“What are you doing here? You ought to be
in your own country, and spending your money
there.”
Don Pedro, Duke of Braganza, ex-Emperor of
Brazil, told a lady of very high rank, who repeated
it to me, that the misfortune of the present age was
that none of the sovereigns had a head to manage
affairs.
One of the French papers says, that in the
recent elections M. B., a Royalist, has been
chosen, at which it manifests great surprise, but
adds, that the department for which he had been
elected had not attained that degree of civilisation
which excludes the idea of legitimacy. From the
well-known opinions professed by the journal in
question, it cannot be suspected of jesting on the
subject.
Somebody having said in conversation that Ministers
had advised his Majesty to dismiss his
household troops, a gentleman answered: “In
that case he should begin by dismissing the
Greys.”
It is said Prince Leopold has been forced to
// 203.png
.pn +1
accept the crown of Belgium. The expression is,
“a pistol has been held to his throat, and another
to that of the King of Holland, to make the one
accept and the other resign, to avoid bringing
England and Holland into collision.” We are not,
however, obliged to believe this. Louis Philippe
has long had great influence over Prince Leopold.
The King (William IV.) said the other day, in
speaking of Don Pedro: “To be sure, we are both
sovereigns—at least, he was one: but there is a
great difference between us for all that; for I am
an honest man, and he is a thief.”
A Frenchman, lately arrived in London, was
asked if he had caught the influenza: “Ah! non,”
he replied; “je l’ai prise en grippe.”
Lady Talbot of Malahide is turned of ninety.
She is of a very ancient and distinguished family
in Ireland, and, in gratitude for certain favours
bestowed, came over to the Coronation, and went
also to the following Drawing-room. I met one
evening one of her sons, who is an Admiral, with
his niece, her grand-daughter, and they said she
was not in the least fatigued.
It has been discovered that four persons were
sent from Paris to take the life of the Duke de
Bordeaux. Three of them went in separate stagecoaches
to Edinburgh, but they have been forced
to return, and additional sentinels have been placed
at Holyrood. The child now does not walk out
// 204.png
.pn +1
with a servant as before, but only goes out in a
carriage. The fourth assassin does not seem to
have been found out.
A stranger happening to be in Paris soon after
the revolution of July, 1830, was stopped by a
young chimney-sweeper, who asked him if he had
seen the King of the French. The other replied
in the negative. “Would you like to see him?”
continued the chimney-sweeper. “Only give me
a piece of five francs and you shall see him.” The
stranger agreed to do so, and they went away together
to the Palais Royal. As soon as they were
in sight of the balcony the boy began to call out,
“Louis Philippe! Louis Philippe!” in which cry
he was joined by the rabble near him. The King
of the French came out to make his obeisance, and
the gentleman gave a five-franc piece to the
sweeper. “Now,” said the boy, “if you have a
mind to hear him sing, only promise me five more,
and you shall be satisfied.” The stranger assented,
and his Majesty, at the command of the mob,
joined in the Marseillaise Hymn, with all the appropriate
grimaces.
At the time when Louis Philippe was shaking
hands with everybody in the street, he held out his
hand to a man, who said, “Stop a little.” Thrusting
both hands in the mud he offered them to the
King, saying, “Now they are fit for you.”
// 205.png
.pn +1
Thirty years ago Louis Philippe remarked: “Je
n’aurai de paix que quand je serai Roi de France.”
Since the shameful business of the lawsuit respecting
the late Duke of Bourbon’s will, they call
Louis Philippe “Louis Filou.”
.pm verse-start
Le peuple! c’est le peuple qu’on loue et qu’on blâme:
Hélas! le bon peuple n’a ni raison ni tort:
Corps sain et vigoureux, dont un héros est l’âme,
Ou machine du traître agissant à ressort.
.pm verse-end
The young Duke de Bordeaux, while playing
at ball, was accosted by a Frenchman with many
compliments, who told him he would certainly
be king. “La place est prise,” answered the boy.
The man kept teasing him, and at last said: “Mais
j’ai envie d’assassiner celui qui a pris cette place.”
“Et moi,” replied the young Duke, “je le défendrai.”
This was said with an air of noble
contempt, and he would not listen to anything
more the man had to say.
The Countess de N. says she knows from certain
authority that Casimir Périer in his ravings,
during the last few days of his life, fancied himself
Charles X., and that he was constantly ordering to
the block the traitor Périer.
The Duke de B., who lived so many years on
the most intimate terms with Louis XVIII., declares,
that the Memoirs published in his Majesty’s
name were never written by him, for he burnt all
his papers a short time before his death. He thinks
// 206.png
.pn +1
they were revised by the Duke Decazes, but written
by a M. Capefigue, of Marseilles.
[During the year 1832, Miss Knight divided her
time between Brighton, Tunbridge Wells, London,
Tottenham Park, Cheltenham, and Oxford. At
the close of the year she was again at Brighton.
She sums up as follows the events of the preceding
twelve months: “What an eventful year! The
dreadful ravages of the cholera in many places,
especially in London and Paris, have carried off
many well-known persons. Charles X. and his
suite left Scotland, attended by the blessings and
regrets of the inhabitants. He is now at Prague.
The Duchess de Berri a prisoner in the castle of
Blois. The citadel of Antwerp, bravely defended
by General Chassé, compelled at length to surrender
to Marshal Gérard. The combined fleets of
France and England, meanwhile, unable to approach
the coast on account of the weather. Affairs
not yet settled. Prince Otho, of Bavaria,
now King of Greece, conveyed to the Piræus on
board an English ship of war!”]
.sp 2
.h3
[1833.]
.sp 2
[The greater part of the year 1833 was passed
by Miss Knight in London, but the only entry in
her Diary worthy of notice is the following one:]
June 14th.—Dined at Lady Charleville’s, to
meet Lady Charlotte Bury, Miss Porter, Mr. Disraeli,
// 207.png
.pn +1
Lord Oxmantown, Mr. Campbell, and others.
In the evening more company came. The manners
of Miss Porter appeared to me as pleasing and unassuming
as her novels are natural and entertaining,
no less than well principled. Mr. Campbell,
author of “The Pleasures of Hope,” &c., is grown
very large, and appears to be in ill-health. Mr.
Disraeli is an author, and the son of an author.
He talked much of the government of Syria, Egypt,
&c. Among those who came in the evening was
Lady Morgan, but I had no opportunity of hearing
her converse, as I came away early.
[A few anecdotes are inserted at the close of the
year, from which the following are selected. The
“local habitation,” assigned to the oft-quoted grace
on rabbits, is on the authority of the Princess Augusta.]
The Duke of Richmond, great-uncle of the present
one (recently deceased), was very fond of hares
and rabbits, especially the latter, and used to have
them constantly served at table, dressed in various
ways. His chaplain in ordinary, who used to sit
near the lower end, was not a little tired of them,
more especially as by the time they came to him
they were often quite cold. So, being asked to
say grace, he recited:
.pm verse-start
“Rabbits young, and rabbits old,
Rabbits hot, and rabbits cold,
Rabbits tender, rabbits tough,
Thanks to Heav’n, we’ve had rabbits enough.”
.pm verse-end
// 208.png
.pn +1
Sir Herbert Taylor says that “The English are
never so happy as when they are discontented;
the Irish never in such good humour as when they
are breaking heads; and the Scotch never so much
at home as when they are living upon others.”
Count de M., when Minister at Stockholm, was
staying at the house of the Count d’Uglas, after
the Countess and his young daughter, who was in
a bad state of health, had left him on their way
to Paris. One morning he told the Count and
Countess d’Uglas that he had passed a very uncomfortable
night, for that he had continually seen a
kneeling figure, sometimes on one, sometimes on
the other side of his bed, and that, though the
back was turned to him, it perfectly resembled his
daughter. The impression was so strong upon his
mind that he sketched the figure, which, in fact,
did resemble hers. On comparing dates, it afterwards
appeared that his daughter had died at that
very time.[#]
.pm fn-start // A
This story is told on the authority of the Countess
d’Uglas.
.pm fn-end
An old woman, who died a few years ago in
Ireland, had a nephew, a lawyer, to whom she left
by will all she possessed. She happened to have a
favourite cat, who never left her, and even remained
by the corpse after her death. After the
will was read in the adjoining room, on opening
the door the cat sprang at the lawyer, seized him
by the throat, and was with difficulty prevented
// 209.png
.pn +1
from strangling him. This man died about eighteen
months after this scene, and on his death-bed confessed
that he had murdered his aunt to get possession
of her money.
Lord Nelson, writing to the Admiralty for supplies
at a time when his squadron stood in great
need of them (in the year 1799, I think), said:
“We must have them from home, for Spain would
not, Naples and Sicily could not, and Sardinia ought
not, to supply them.”
.sp 2
// 210.png
.pn +1
.pb
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch11
CHAPTER XI.
.sp 1
.pm ch-hd-start
ANECDOTES—TALLEYRAND—CHARLES ALBERT—Masséna—FERDINAND OF
SPAIN—LORD WELLESLEY—ALFIERI—CHARLES X.—DEATH OF MISS
KNIGHT.
.pm ch-hd-end
[In July, 1834, Miss Knight again crossed the
Channel, and renewed her acquaintance with many
of her old friends in Paris, which she left for Nice
in the last week in October. Here she remained
until the latter part of July, 1835, when she proceeded
to Turin. Some of the anecdotes recorded
in her journal, during this period of her life,
though not all new, are worth preserving.]
The young King of Naples [the late monarch],
while reviewing his cavalry the other day (September,
1834), was displeased at the manner in which
they performed their manœuvres, and, to punish
them, led them to the bank of a river, into which
he plunged, swam his horse across, and made them
do the same, to their great astonishment.
A man, who squints very much, was talking to
// 211.png
.pn +1
M. de Talleyrand about public affairs, and wound
up by saying: “Enfin, Prince, tout va de travers.”
To which the other replied: “Oui, monsieur,
comme vous voyez.”
It is said that in a late debate which terminated
in the resignation of several of the Ministers, Lord
Stanley handed over to Sir James Graham a scrap
of paper, on which he had written with a pencil:
“Johnny will upset the coach”—meaning, of course,
Lord John Russell.
Some one having remarked to Talleyrand, when
he was living on his estate in banishment from the
Court during the later years of Bonaparte’s reign,
that he must find the life he led “bien monotone,”
the Prince replied: “Monsieur, le monotone fut le
berceau de la vie.”
Sir Edward Sugden, a celebrated lawyer who has
lately come into Parliament, having heard that he
had been turned into ridicule for being the son of
a hairdresser, made answer: “So I am, and I am
come into the House to give a dressing to the
Whigs.”
Sir Walter Scott told Mr. Howard, of Corby, that
the only verses David Hume ever wrote were made
at an inn in that neighbourhood. They were as
follows:
.pm verse-start
Chickens in eggs at breakfast sprawl;
Godless boys God’s glory squall;
Scotchmen’s heads adorn the wall;
Corby’s walks atone for all.
.pm verse-end
// 212.png
.pn +1
These lines were probably written soon after the
affair of ’45, and I suppose the “Scotchmen’s
heads” were exposed on the walls of Carlisle.
Mr. Howard was one day at a great dinner party
which the late Duke of Norfolk gave to several of
his neighbours. He sat at the bottom of the table,
the Duke being at the head, and one of the gentlemen
who sat near the Duke called out to him and
said: “Mr. Howard, will you drink a glass of wine
with me? There was a connexion between our
families.” “With a great deal of pleasure, sir,”
replied Mr. H., “though I don’t know exactly
what the connexion is; but in this county there
have been several marriages between neighbours.”
“Why, sir,” resumed the gentleman, “your ancestor,
Lord William Howard, hung up twenty-three
out of twenty-seven of my family, and you
must own that was a tie.” This reminded me of
an anecdote I heard at Brighton. General Dalrymple,
who was between ninety and a hundred
years of age, was introduced by the King to Lord
Errol as an old friend. “Ah! my Lord,” said the
General, “the last of your family I have seen was
Lord Kilmarnock’s head on Temple-bar.”
An English lady at Paris, who was obliged to
have an arm taken off, six months afterwards married
the surgeon who performed the operation. On
which a French gentleman remarked “Elle lui a
donné la main pour lui avoir coupé le bras.”
// 213.png
.pn +1
The King of Sardinia (Charles Albert) is very
kind and obliging to the French Royalists who are
at Turin. The Duke de F——, with whom he
is connected, has an employment about the Court—he
had been severely wounded, and lost a leg in
the affair of the Three Days. The King heard
that the Duke was anxious to visit the King and
Royal Family at Prague, but that his finances were
not favourable to so long a journey. His Majesty,
therefore, thought of an expedient which would
enable the Duke to gratify his loyalty, without his
feelings being wounded. “Duke,” he said, “would
you do me the favour to choose some horses for me
(at such a place) in Bohemia; and as your best
way will be through Prague, of course you will
pay your respects to the Royal Family there.” As
the journey was on the King’s service, the Duke
could feel no reluctance about having his expenses
paid.
The Countess de B. told me the other day that
her mother was once remarking to Cardinal Costa,
a very clever man, that she could not help feeling
indignant at the conduct of certain Ministers as
being without good faith or probity. “Ah, ma
chère dame,” he replied, “quand il s’agit de la
politique, il faut se rappeler que ce ne sont pas des
gens baptisés.”
Masséna was a native of the county of Nice;
when he was here after the Restoration he told a
// 214.png
.pn +1
story of what happened to him once when he had
the command of the French army in Spain. Early
in the morning of an expected battle he walked
through the camp, disguised by a soldier’s cloak,
that he might judge of the disposition of his men.
He heard three of them talking together about the
forthcoming engagement. One said: “Ah! I hope
I shall get a pair or two of stockings, for mine are
worn out.” Another wished for the acquisition of
a couple of shirts, as his own were in rags. Turning
to the third, they said: “And what do you
want? You say nothing.” The young man answered:
“What do I care about stockings and
shirts? I want to do something that will get me
the cross of the Legion of Honour, and then I may
rise like our general to be an officer and a marshal
of France, for he began like myself as a ‘pauvre
gredin.’”
Many stories are told respecting the death of
Ferdinand (of Spain) and his will. Some say that
he had signed a codicil revoking his disposal of the
crown, and restoring Don Carlos to his rights; but
that the Queen, on her return from hunting, finding
him dead, and having been told of the codicil,
sought for it in his secrétaire and in the drawers of
a table where he kept papers. Being unable to find
the secret place in which it was deposited, she ordered
the two pieces of furniture to be burned.
Others go still further, and pretend that, had she
// 215.png
.pn +1
been brought to bed of a son, Ferdinand would
have lived a little longer, &c. &c. It must, however,
be remembered, that where great personages are
concerned, and party spirit prevails, there are many
inventions. The character of Don Carlos is certainly
that of an honest man, even by the account
of his enemies. I recollect hearing the late Duke
of Gloucester say that Mina told him that, although
he was not himself of the party of Don Carlos,
he believed him to be the honestest man of the
family.
I forget who told me the following anecdote of
the Marquis of Wellesley, when Lord-Lieutenant of
Ireland. He was at table with a party of Irish
gentlemen who were chiefly Orangemen, and in
the dining-room hung a painting of the battle of
the Boyne, which in that country is usually called
the Victory of Boyne Waters. The company wishing
him to pronounce an opinion, invited him to
change his seat. “Surely, my Lord,” said one,
“you would not turn your back on Boyne
Waters?” Lord Wellesley answered, pointing to
a bottle of claret that stood before him: “Oh, I
never look at water when I can get wine.”
Count Alfieri, one morning, as he was sitting
with the Countess of Albany, was informed that
Napoleon had just issued orders for several children
of the first families of Florence, as of other
great cities of Italy, to be sent to Paris to serve as
// 216.png
.pn +1
his pages, and afterwards enter the army. One
asked, “What could be done?” Another, “How
could it be avoided?” A third remarked, “If
they go, their principles will be perverted, and
they will be estranged from their country; and if
they are not sent, their parents will be persecuted,
ruined, imprisoned. What is to be done with
them?” Alfieri suddenly exclaimed, with great
energy, “Ammazzarli!”[#]
.pm fn-start // A
“Massacre them!”
.pm fn-end
[At Turin Miss Knight remained throughout the
entire year 1836, the political events of which she
sums up in a few lines. “This year,” she writes,
“has been fruitful in events. Spain and Portugal
in commotion, and now three parties in the former.
In France an attempt to assassinate Louis Philippe;
and young Louis Napoleon Bonaparte arrested at
Strasburg, for his mad attempt to gain the throne—a
plot supposed to have an extensive ramification.
Death of Charles X., at Goritz. Loss of the French
at Constantine. Great political disputes in England,
and violent party spirit. A dreadful hurricane
felt there, in Holland, and some other countries.
Great inundations in France.” There are several
miscellaneous anecdotes, however, recorded in her
journal, which are not without interest.]
At a ball given by Count M., at Vienna, the
French Ambassador, M. de St. Aulaire, expressed
to the Countess his great admiration of a coronet
// 217.png
.pn +1
of diamonds she had on her head. “Ah! quelle
belle couronne, Madame la Comtesse!” “Au
moins,” she replied, “elle n’est pas volée.”
It has been remarked that during the long series
of Princes of the House of Savoy, neither assassinations,
nor family quarrels of any political consequence,
nor acts of unjust usurpation, have stained
the annals of their history; an observation that
could not be justly applied to any other royal
family now possessed of European thrones, or to
any other list of European sovereigns. The far
greater number of these Princes of Savoy have
been good monarchs, and many of them distinguished
for their bravery and military talent.
It is said that Tasso conceived his beautiful idea
of the Garden of Armida from the views in the
neighbourhood of Turin, and particularly from
the spot where stands the “vigna,” or villa, of
Sir Augustus Foster. The garden which is said
to have inspired him with the original conception
is supposed to have been what is now called the
Old Park. Tasso was on a visit to the Duke of
Savoy.
A celebrated surgeon, named Livois, who was in
the French army, took compassion on a dog whose
leg had been fractured by a shot during the siege
of some place or another. He set the bones, and
cured him. Some time afterwards he found waiting
at his door the same dog, with a companion
// 218.png
.pn +1
who had a broken leg, and whom he evidently
wished to introduce to him. The surgeon cured
this second dog also, and mentioned the circumstance
to the Countess du C., who repeated it
to me.
Charles X., who expired at Goritz, in Styria, in
the night between the 5th and 6th of November,
1836, had entered upon the eightieth year of his
age in the preceding month. He was active and
cheerful to the moment at which he was seized by
the fatal malady which closed his mortal existence
in less than thirty hours. During this time he
suffered greatly, but died tranquil and resigned,
forgiving his enemies, those who had injured him,
and those who had been misled. He had visited
the Princess of B. and his nephews, the sons of
Don Carlos, on his way to Goritz, where he was
about to establish himself with his family. The
4th of November, St. Charles’s day and his own
fête, he had celebrated with a few friends, and he
had been received with great cordiality by the inhabitants
of Goritz.
It has always appeared to me that Charles X.
was the true model of a gentleman. He was agreeable,
unaffected, and amiable in the best sense of
the word, and an affectionate and faithful friend.
His look came from the heart, and what he said,
however gratifying, could not be suspected of flattery.
If in his youth he was gay, his conduct in
// 219.png
.pn +1
mature age was respectable, without prejudice or
ostentation. His piety was sincere and fervent;
and, without presumption, I think we may venture
to say that he has made a blessed exchange. The
Duchess of Hamilton told me that he said to her at
Holyrood, speaking of the Revolution of 1830: “I
meant well; therefore I lay my head down peaceably
to rest.”
A banker having observed that one of the ladies
whom we call “exclusives” always bowed most
graciously to him when she took money at his bank,
but did not return his bow when he passed her
in the street, one day, when he met her, took out a
gold piece of twenty francs, and presenting it to
her, said: “C’est un peu cher, mais je serais bien
aise d’avoir un bon salut.”
In the island of Sardinia there are many persons
who live in the mountains, chiefly in the open air,
for they have no habitations, but sometimes seek
refuge in caves. They are remarkably brave, active,
and revengeful, bearing animosity against
those with whom they are at variance from father
to son. They are called banditti, and are punishable
by the laws of the Piedmontese Government
when they can be caught, but they do not attack
travellers, nor commit any robberies. Some of
them, it seems, lived not very far from the castle
of the Marquis de B., and between eight and nine
one evening, while he was at table, his butler whispered
// 220.png
.pn +1
to him that one of their chiefs, whose name
he knew, wished to speak to him. He ordered
him to be shown into his own room, and then went
to him. He was a man between forty and fifty
years of age, but his hair, including a long beard,
was already quite grey. He was armed with pistols,
dagger, and musket, and had with him a dog, as
had also each of his companions. These were four
in number, and one of them, a young man of
twenty-one, remarkably handsome. The chief
pressed the hand of the Marquis, and said that he
trusted to his honour, and was sure he would not
betray him, but that he wished to ask him to obtain,
if possible, their pardon. The Marquis could
not promise this, but assured him he should not be
betrayed. “If he were,” cried one of his companions,
“we would defend him to the last, and
even die with him.” The Marquis gave orders to
his butler to invite them to supper, which they
readily accepted. They sat down, each with his
dog by his side, but, before they would touch anything,
the chief said to the butler, “I must beg you
to begin; not that I expect any treachery here, but
some of our companions were poisoned at a supper.
Pray excuse me.” The butler complied; and when
they had finished their meal they retired, with
many thanks. At a short distance from the castle
a large party of this tribe were posted on a slight
eminence to protect their friends. When the Marquis
// 221.png
.pn +1
left the castle he saw them there, and they
cried out to him, “Buon viaggio!” This happened
in June, 1836.
The Sardinian gentlemen and ladies speak Italian,
but they have also a dialect which, of course, is
that of the common people: it is said to be a mixture
of Spanish and Arabic. In their persons they
mostly resemble the Spaniards. The country is
picturesque, but roads and inns are still wanting.
It appears to be the intention of the Piedmontese
Government to render Sardinia similar to the States
of Italy, but it will require much time to ascertain
the inclinations of all classes for the new mode of
existence.
.tb
[On the 14th of June, 1837, Miss Knight took
leave of her numerous friends in Turin, and set
out for Paris, where she arrived on the 22nd—“longæ
finis chartæque viæque.” Her wanderings
and her journals were alike approaching their termination.
The last entry in her Diary was made
on the 4th of December, and refers merely to the
visits she made that day. Two days afterwards
she was taken ill, and on the 17th of December,
1837, she closed her long and well-regulated life,
in the 81st year of her age.]
// 222.png
.sp 2
.pn +1
.pb
.h3
EXTRACTS FROM MISS KNIGHT’S JOURNAL.
.sp 2
[The following passages are extracted from Miss
Knight’s Diaries. They illustrate the Autobiographical
Memoir in the first volume. The narrative
would have been impeded by their insertion there;
but they are of sufficient interest to form a welcome
addition to the more continuous story of Miss
Knight’s life.]
.sp 2
.h3
Rome—1781.
.sp 2
December 30.—At eight in the morning we went
to the church of St. Louis to see the consecration
of Monseigneur l’Abbé de Bernis as Bishop of Apollonia.
A little before nine the Cardinal, the Abbé,
and Monsignore de Bayane arrived, the organ playing
as they entered, and soon after they went to
the door to receive the Pope, whom they followed
into the church, the organ playing, and the choir
singing “Ecce Sacerdos Magnus.” The Pope, the
Cardinal, and the new Bishop then went and prayed
// 223.png
.pn +1
at the altar in the chapel of St. Louis; after which
they walked up into the choir, where the Pope
again prayed at the great altar. The Bishop was
then presented to him and kissed his feet, and the
Pope embraced him. The Cardinal de Bernis stood
beside a small altar prepared for the Bishop on his
left hand, and by his side were Monsignori Onesti,
Doria, Stacy, Bayane, and other prelates, who now
proceeded to dress the Pope. Cardinal de Bernis
brought him the napkin to wipe his hands, and
took it again from him. In the mean while the
two assisting Bishops (the Archbishop of Athens,
the Pope’s almoner, and the Bishop of Carpentras)
had the new Bishop dressed, whose robes were very
fine, white and gold, with white buskins, having a
cross embroidered on them, &c. &c. He was then
again presented to the Pope, and seated in a chair
opposite to his Holiness, who read to him the
Articles of Faith and the duties of a Bishop. After
every interrogative, he had to answer and make a
genuflexion. After this, the Pope anointed his
hands and the tonsure at the top of his head, for
which purpose a bandage was tied round his head,
and another over his hands fastened round the
neck—he himself kneeling all the time. The Pope
afterwards put the cross on him, the mantle, and the
ring (a very beautiful one); when he prostrated
himself before the great altar and made his profession
of faith and his vows as a Bishop. He then
// 224.png
.pn +1
rose, and the Pope gave him his benediction, put a
gold mitre on his head, and, placing the crosier in
his hand, seated him in his own chair before the
great altar, himself standing beside him, and the
Bishops, who never quitted him, standing on the
other side. Those wore mitres of white cloth,
which alone are permitted to be worn in the Pope’s
presence except by a new Bishop. Monseigneur de
Bernis now rose, made a reverence to the Pope,
and asked permission to give his benediction, which
his Holiness granted, telling him only to go on the
other side, that it might not fall upon him (the
Pope). He then came down the church, giving
the benediction, with his Bishops on each hand,
and returned again to his chair at the great altar,
the canons of the church singing the “Te Deum.”
The Pope next gave him the Kiss of Peace, which
went round to the two other Bishops; after which
he was seated opposite the Pope, who delivered a
discourse (called a homily) thirty-five minutes in
length. In this he made compliments to the Cardinal
de Bernis and the Bishop, who both rose and
bowed in acknowledgment. He also gave a geographical
description of Apollonia, and said it was
probably so called from there having been a temple
there dedicated to Apollo. He remarked how lamentable
it was that it should be in the hands of
infidels, but he did not intend to send the Bishop
there, but only to Alby, which he must consider
// 225.png
.pn +1
as another Apollonia. When he named St. Peter
and St. Paul, he beat his breast, and sighed most
vehemently. As soon as he had finished, the Cardinal
went up and thanked him, and the Bishop
did the same, adding that he hoped to acquit himself
of his duty in the manner he desired. The
Pope replied that he had no doubt about it; gave
a general benediction, and went to a chapel, where
he said another mass. In the mean time all the
prelates, &c., congratulated the Cardinal and Monseigneur,
after which his Eminence embraced his
nephew in the most affectionate manner. The
Pope having now finished his mass, the Cardinal
accompanied him out, and shut the door of his carriage,
while the Bishops, &c., kneeled down, and
the ceremony thus terminated.
In one of the tribunes over the choir were three
Cardinals, and in the opposite one the Pope’s niece
and the foreign Ministers. The organ gallery was
allotted for the French, English, and other strangers,
but it was too far removed for them to see much.
Most of the French and English gentlemen stood
beside the balustrade of the choir, and we were in
a grated tribune erected for the purpose, with the
Princess Rezzonico, the Duchess of Lanti, Marchesa
Castiglioni, a Milanese, and other ladies. The Pope
ranted like a country comedian in the part of
Othello. Cardinal de Bernis acted his part with his
usual dignity, sense, and goodness, and Monseigneur
// 226.png
.pn +1
de Bernis went through his fatiguing office with
the decency of a good Christian and the propriety
of a man of fashion, without affectation, negligence,
or bigotry—extremes which appear to me very
difficult to avoid in the midst of such a mockery
of religion. The Maggiordomo, at the Pope’s expense,
gave a grand dinner on the occasion, to
which he invited the Cardinals of the palace, the
Senator, the Ministers connected with France, and
the principal Roman Princes, to meet the Cardinal
and Monseigneur. The latter presented twelve
crowns for a dinner to the Canons of St. Louis,
three sequins each to the under people of the
church, a crown to the sweepers, and half-a-crown
to the domestics, besides five sous each to all the
poor who were present.
.sp 2
.h3
Rome—1782.
.sp 2
On the morning of the 6th of January, Monseigneur
de Bernis went to St. Peter’s, where he
stood amongst the other Bishops till the Pope
called him to the foot of the throne. This ceremony
is styled making the “Vescovi assistenti al
Soglio,” who are always seated on the steps of the
Pope’s throne, and assist him on public occasions.
This honour entitles Monseigneur to the privilege of
making three Prothonotaries and eight Knights of
the Golden Spurs. He intends to give one of these
golden spurs to Belcour, his valet-de-chambre, and
// 227.png
.pn +1
the others to some of the Cardinal’s people. Cournau,
his Eminence’s maître d’hôtel, already possesses
this distinction. Monseigneur de Bernis is
likewise entitled, in virtue of this dignity, to send
every morning to the palace for his bread and his
wine, which he gives to his valet-de-chambre. The
bulls for this ceremony cost him 150 crowns.
.tb
The Grand-Duke Paul and his Duchess arrived
at Rome under the names of Count and Countess
of the North, and with them one of her brothers, a
Prince of Würtemberg. Madame de Beckersdorff
and two maids of honour were also with them, and
the first seemed to be her intimate friend, and a
very pleasing person. The Grand-Duke, though
not tall, had a good figure, but his face was Calmuck.
His manners were good, and he talked
agreeably to those who were introduced to him.
The Grand-Duchess was, like most of her family,
very handsome. She was tall, her figure majestic,
and her features and complexion very fine. Her
manners were dignified and gracious. We were
introduced to them at a concert given by the Cardinal
de Bernis for the birth of the Dauphin.
Princess D.,[#] who had been staying some time at
// 228.png
.pn +1
Rome with her son and married daughter, came to
the fête dressed in black. She was considered by
the Grand-Duke and Duchess as a spy on their proceedings;
and, at all events, the part which she
was supposed to have taken in the imprisonment
and death of the Grand-Duke’s father must have
rendered the sight of her very painful to them.
Unmindful of this, she seated herself at the concert
as near as possible to the Grand-Duke, just behind
him to the right. He was greatly annoyed, and,
turning towards her, said: “Madame, on ne vient
pas habillé en noir à la fête d’un souverain.” Princess
D. gave as an excuse the assurance that, as she
was about to leave Rome, all her other dresses were
packed up. The Grand-Duke replied: “On peut
toujours rester à la maison.”
.pm fn-start // A
The Princess Dashkoff, who had
been the chief instigator of the conspiracy
against Peter III. The ribbon
worn by the Princess was torn, it is
said by her own hands, from the person
of her sister, the Countess Woronzow,
the mistress of the unfortunate
monarch; both of them being the
daughters of Chancellor Woronzow.
.pm fn-end
The Princess was a short, fat, middle-aged woman,
with a very red face and harsh countenance; and
the broad red riband and star, which she wore in
the way such decorations are worn by men, added
to her formidable appearance. It is said she was
only eighteen years of age when the death of the
Emperor Peter took place, and that, seated at a
table with two pistols before her, she waited for the
news with the intention, if it proved contrary to
her wishes, of killing the messenger with one and
herself with the other.[#] Pistols, we were told, she
// 229.png
.pn +1
always carried about with her; and, notwithstanding
the services she had rendered to the Empress
Catherine, and the strange masculine honours conferred
upon her in return—such as this decoration,
and her being made President of the Academy of
Sciences—it is evident that her absence was more
agreeable to her Imperial mistress than her presence
would be, for she was many years in England,
Scotland, and Italy. She would not allow her
daughter to live with her husband, and she used to
lock up her son, who must have been turned of
twenty, every night. How unlike to her amiable
and excellent brother. It is said that she had a
sister who was gentleness itself. One would wish to
think that Princess Dashkoff was in some measure
misrepresented. I recollect saying something to
her son, with whom I was a little acquainted, about
the maids of honour attending on the Grand-Duchess,
and I naturally expressed myself in the
terms, “the ladies of the Grand-Duchess.” The
young man, who just before had been talking to
me with the civility usually shown to a young
woman, suddenly reddened, and looked quite
savage. “Madame,” said he, “the Grand-Duchess
has no ladies; she has no right to have any. They
are the ladies of our august sovereign, who allows
them to attend upon the Grand-Duchess in her
travels.” Does not this put one in mind of a remark
made by Bonaparte: “Pour peu qu’on y
gratte on trouve le Tartare?”
.pm fn-start // A
The murder of the Czar did not
take place for some days after his dethronement.
If there be any truth in
this story, which is questionable, it
must have been the tidings of the
success of the conspiracy that the
Princess was so anxiously expecting.
.pm fn-end
// 230.png
.pn +1
We paid our respects to the Grand-Duke and
Duchess, as did all the company at Rome, at their
own apartments. They seemed much pleased with
all they saw, and with the society. After Princess
D. left, they were perfectly at their ease. There
was at that time no Russian Ambassador, or Minister,
at Rome. I afterwards heard that they were
not so comfortable at Naples.
A tailor at Rome made a coat for the Grand-Duke.
When he brought it home the sleeves were
found to be too long. “I suppose,” said the Prince,
“you have heard that kings have long arms; but
mine as yet are only rags.” He and the Grand-Duchess
appeared to be very domestic, and liked to
talk of their children. I remember the Grand-Duchess
showing us portraits of some of them
en silhouette. Her dress was very magnificent at
Cardinal de Bernis’ fête. It was white, trimmed
with the most valuable sables, over which hung
large pearls in garlands, fastened with diamond
knots of great size and splendour.
.tb
On the 1st of March we went to Cardinal de
Bernis’. On account of the fêtes given by him in
honour of the birth of the Dauphin, torches and
guards were placed at the corners of all the streets
leading to his house. The front and both sides of
his palace were illuminated with four immense
// 231.png
.pn +1
wax-lights in each window, which made a most
brilliant appearance. All the carriages went in by
the back way, none being permitted to pass in
front of the palace, as opposite to it and before
the church of St. Marcel an elegant amphitheatre
had been erected for music, for the amusement of
the populace; the decorations were very pleasing,
and had a delightful effect from the windows. The
rooms were all decorated in a festal manner, with
a great deal of gilding and many looking-glasses;
the gallery with trophies on a gold ground, and
the ceiling with fleurs-de-lys and dolphins. At the
end of the gallery, within the columns, was an
amphitheatre for the musicians, who were all in
uniform. An infinite number of lights, perfectly
well arranged, were scattered about, and two rows
of seats were placed round both rooms for the
company. As we were going up-stairs we met the
cardinal, attended by his gentlemen, servants, &c.,
with eight torches and eight candles, going to receive
the Grand-Duke and Duchess, for whom
chairs had been placed across the gallery between
the columns. The Princess of Palestrine, who did
the honours of the Cardinal’s house, seated herself
beside them for a short time, but after a while gave
her place to the Pope’s niece. The Cardinal stood
behind the Grand-Duchess, as also did Monseigneur
de Bernis. The Prince of Würtemberg would
not sit down, but stood beside the Cardinal. The
// 232.png
.pn +1
lady who accompanies the Grand-Duchess, with
the two maids of honour, were placed near, but
there was an immense crowd. Immediately afterwards
began the cantata, which lasted an hour.
The poetry of it—in honour of the Dauphin—was
composed by a secretary of the Pope’s nephew, and
the music by a Maestro di Capella of the Pope.
The Grand-Duke and Duchess were very attentive,
and after refreshments had been offered to them,
which they declined, they went and sat down in
the next room, whither most of the company followed
them. Soon after we were seated the Cardinal
brought the Grand-Duke up to us, and presented
us in the most affectionate manner. He
then presented the Duchess Bobadilla and another
lady who sat beside us, but the Grand-Duke immediately
returned to us and entered into conversation,
until he was called off by two letters being
brought to him by express. He talked to us in
the most polite and attentive manner, and expressed
a desire for us to visit Russia. Upon our
mentioning that we were acquainted with Admiral
Knowles, he inquired with great affection after
Miss Knowles and Sir Charles, and said he had
much regretted the Admiral’s departure. When
we told him that the son was a captain in the
navy, he remarked that the post of captain in the
English navy was a most respectable rank, with
many other things that showed equally his sense
// 233.png
.pn +1
and good-breeding. He speaks French perfectly
well. They went away soon afterwards, when we
returned into the gallery and heard some very
good music, and did not get home till past twelve.
On the following night there was, if possible, more
company than on the previous one, and everything
still more in gala. The Grand-Duke and Duchess
came early, and were placed as before, only they
made the Princess of Palestrine sit between them,
and, when she went into the next room, the Cardinal
de Bernis. They were exceedingly pleased,
and made themselves very agreeable. The cantata
was written by the same author as the other, but
the music was by Cimarosa, and infinitely finer.
They stayed to hear two other pieces of music, and
then passed into the other room, where they remained
till near ten. The Grand-Duchess was
elegantly dressed, and looked exceedingly well:
the Grand-Duke wore a plain coat with superb
diamond buttons. I sat by the lady who accompanies
the Duchess, and found her very agreeable:
she is a German. The music lasted till after
eleven, and was very fine. The palace and the
street in front of it, with the orchestra opposite,
were as light as day. The Academy of France
was also lighted up, and had an orchestra in the
same manner. On the Sunday before, all the
money sent by the King of France to pay for this
fête was given away by the Cardinal in doweries—fifty
// 234.png
.pn +1
crowns each to one hundred and fifty brides
in Rome, and twenty-five crowns each to two
hundred at Albano. The Bishop of Apollonia
administered the Sacrament, and handed the
orders to them to receive the money at once,
instead of waiting till they were married, as is
usually the case. At a little after six on the next
day we went to pay our respects to the Grand-Duke
and Duchess, and found there the Princess
Doria, the Princess Santa Croce, and another lady,
with the German lady, the friend of the Duchess.
The Cardinal de Bernis and several other gentlemen
were also there. We went immediately into
the next room, where the Grand-Duchess received
us at the door, the Grand-Duke standing behind
her. She told my mother that she had saluted
her the night before, and had curtseyed twice, adding,
very politely, that as her husband had made
our acquaintance, she also much wished to do so.
She then had chairs placed round, and desired us
all to be seated. She chatted much about Rome,
and told Cardinal de Bernis that she would never
leave it were it not for her children. The Grand-Duke
came and talked to us for some time with the
greatest good-humour and affability. The Duchess
was very desirous that the gentlemen likewise
should sit down, and told a gentleman who accompanies
them, and whom she calls “Mon Général,”
to set them the example. When we took our
leave, she assured my mother that she should be
// 235.png
.pn +1
always very happy to see us; that her husband
was so pleased with making our acquaintance, that
she was likewise very anxious for it, &c. &c. In
short, nothing could be more flattering and attentive
than their reception of us. They appear very
much attached to one another.[#] The Duchess’s
figure is certainly very fine, and improves upon
one, while the Grand-Duke is so genteel and pleasing
in his manners, that his person seems to me at
present far from disagreeable.
.pm fn-start // A
At a later period, Paul was by no
means remarkable for his conjugal
fidelity. Of his personal appearance
the following mention is made in Masson’s
“Memoires Secrètes,” quoted by
Mr. Kelly in his “History of Russia,”
vol. ii. p. 154: “It is said that the
people of Paris, crowding to see Paul,
then a youth, cried, ‘My God, how
ugly he is!’ and that he had the good
sense to laugh at it. He is not improved
since he is grown old, bald, and
wrinkled. The Empress appears by his
side like one of those beautiful women
who are painted with a little deformed
blackamoor near them, as a contrast
to their dignity and grace. The singularity
which he affects in his dress,
and the severity of his manners, add
greatly to his deformity. Without
excepting even the Kalmuks and the
Kirghaz, Paul is the ugliest man in
his extensive dominions; and he himself
considers his countenance as so
shocking, that he dares not impress it
upon his coin.” Miss Knight herself
describes the Grand-Duke, in one
place, as “the ugliest man I ever
saw;” but this was before he had
spoken to her.
.pm fn-end
On the 14th we went to take leave of the Count
and Countess of the North. They received us with
the greatest goodness. The Count told me he regretted
infinitely that we had not met oftener;
that our visit then, though it made him happy,
was rather a pain than a pleasure; that it was not
their fault they had not seen us every day, but as
there were so many things to see they usually returned
home too late to receive company, and
could not make an exception to a general rule, or
they would have received us at any time; that he
// 236.png
.pn +1
had inquired whether we were at the concert at
Princess Doria’s, and would have come to us, but
the devil of etiquette prevented him. He pressed
exceedingly that we should go to St. Petersburg,
saying his house and the whole city should be at
our disposal. I then ventured to say that, if we
were not so happy as to travel so far, my mother
hoped that the Count and Countess of the North
would permit us to take the liberty of requesting
their interest with the Grand-Duke and Duchess
for any of our English sea officers who, if there
was a peace in our distracted country, might be
ambitious of serving in Russia. He replied that
they had some credit with those personages, and
nothing would make him happier than to be of
service to us, or to any of our friends; that my
mother and I had only to write to him and mention
how far they were in our esteem, and he
would treat them accordingly, as he was sure my
mother knew the Navy too well, and was too nice
to recommend any who were not deserving. “Believe
me,” he added, “upon my honour I wish
nothing more than to be useful to you. I beg you
will be assured of my sincerity, and I hope you
will soon put it to the proof. But if it should be
ten or twenty years’ hence, you may be equally
sure of it, for I could not forget you even if I were
inclined to do so; and I am certain that if I were
not in the world, the Countess would do the same.
I think power is never so agreeable as when it can
// 237.png
.pn +1
make one useful to one’s friends, and, as such, I
desire you will ever consider us.” He repeatedly
urged us to go to St. Petersburg; and upon my
remarking how difficult it was to travel in time of
war, he said, war had nothing to do with our
going there, because even if there was a war in
Russia, it could not be one disagreeable to us. He
added, that when he was master of himself there
was nothing he would not do for us, but, as it
was, he could be of some use to us in St. Petersburg.
The Countess was also excessively kind
to us, and pressed us strongly to go to Russia,
and, indeed, said the most obliging and flattering
things. She bade me draw everything at Rome as
fast as possible, and meet them at St. Petersburg—with
many more of the kindest expressions. She
said it gave her great pain to go away just as she
was beginning to make acquaintances, and that she
should have wished to have cultivated a friendship
with Cardinal de Bernis and with us; that she had
but small hopes of meeting him again, but would
always retain a regard for him. As for us, she said
she would not give up the idea of again seeing us,
and that she should quit us with tears in her eyes,
adding the most affectionate expressions of kindness.
The persons who accompany the Count and
Countess are all perfectly well chosen. The maids
of honour are both well behaved and good natured,
and the General’s lady is very amiable.
.tb
// 238.png
.pn +1
The Pope mentioned one night at supper that
the “barcarole” that brought him from Venice
had since gained three hundred crowns, at half a
baioccho from each person, by letting people kiss
the place where he was seated, adding: “Quanto
mi piace di vedere la fede di questi buoni Veneziani!”
He also said that one of his gloves having
fallen from his hand was instantly cut into a thousand
pieces for relics.
.tb
The Pope having lately found an obelisk, has
had it removed to Monte Cavallo, where it is to be
placed between the two statues. The expense and
trouble were no slight matter. The other day the
following inscription was placed on it: “Fac ut
lapides isti panes fiant.” Infinite pains were taken
to discover the author and have him punished, and
on the following morning was written beneath the
other: “The author is St. Luke, chap. iv. 3.”
.tb
The Pope stayed two nights and a day at Cesena,
and ordered his bed to be placed in the room in
which he was born. His people were so little used
to travelling, that they forgot the chocolate-cup,
and, after much searching in the town where they
happened to be, they told the Pope there was not
one to be got fit for his use. “Well, then,” said he,
“give me the chocolate in a pipkin.” When the
// 239.png
.pn +1
Pope wanted to change his linen, the valise in which
it was packed happened to be two hours behind on
the road. The baggage-cart broke down, and, it
seems, caused the oddest confusion ever beheld,
mitres and chalices tumbling about amongst pots
and pans. It resembled the furniture of a playhouse,
and a gentleman remarked that the Pope
was a good actor, and was now removing his theatre
to Vienna. He is a strolling player, then, said another.
Some one expressing a certain curiosity as
to the sort of honours the Emperor would show the
Pope at Vienna, a bystander replied: “He will
probably dispense with Lent, and give his Holiness
a masked ball.”
.tb
Princess Dashkoff being with other strangers in
the gallery of the Senate-house at Venice, where it
is not permitted to open the door after the sitting
commences, insisted upon going out, exclaiming
aloud, “Ces perruques m’ennuient.” She made so
much noise that the senators sent up to desire her
to be quiet, but she only repeated that “she would
go out.” Upon this, one of the senators said:
“Gentlemen, shall we have a ballot to see whether
this mad woman shall go out or not?” It was then
put to the vote and carried in the affirmative, and,
the door being opened, the Princess went out by
herself.
.tb
// 240.png
.pn +1
There is a negro woman at Rome much protected
by the Queen of Portugal. She is dressed in
red, and goes about with a Madonna in a box, asking
alms for founding a monastery in Portugal for
negro girls under the protection of the father and
mother of St. Joachim. She went to the Pope to
ask his permission, and mentioned the saints who
were to be the patrons of her order. The Pope answered,
that he had no doubt but what the father
and mother of St. Joachim were good people, but
they were not on his list.
.tb
A Cardinal’s cook in time of Lent having made
up all his “maigre” dishes with the gravy and fat
of meat, went to confession, and, among other sins,
mentioned this one. The confessor, however, refused
to give him absolution until he promised that
he would no longer make his master violate Lent.
Faithful to his promise, the cook changed his sauces,
whereupon the Cardinal complained bitterly that
his dinners were not so good as formerly, and the
cook was called up, and obliged to tell his story.
The Cardinal inquired the name of his confessor,
and having sent for him, remonstrated with him for
meddling with the private government of his family.
The friar replied, that the cook’s salvation was in
danger if he had continued to give his master gras
instead of maigre. “Well,” exclaimed the Cardinal,
// 241.png
.pn +1
“and do you think it reasonable that, to save the
soul of such a low fellow as that, you should expose
my Eminence to the discomfort of fasting!”[#]
.pm fn-start // A
Told on the authority of the Abbé Gabriel.
.pm fn-end
.tb
During the time the affair of the Jesuits was in
agitation, whenever Cardinal Marefoschi went to
visit Cardinal de Bernis, a valet-de-chambre in the
house of the latter, and who was also a spy, used to
hang a white handkerchief out at the top of a chimney,
to mark the commencement and termination
of the visit, as a signal to the Jesuits at the Roman
College, who looked out from the top of their church
for it.
.tb
On Wednesday morning, February 27th (1782),
the Pope set out for Vienna at half-past nine in the
morning. The Grand-Duke and Duchess of Russia,
who have been every day to St. Peter’s to see him,
were there between six and seven waiting to take
leave of his Holiness. They had some conversation
with him, and the Grand-Duke attended him to
his carriage. Monsignore Marcucci, Vicegerent and
Patriarch of Constantinople, and Monsignore Contesini,
Archbishop of Athens, both men of very low
extraction, accompanied him, besides some inferior
persons of his household. The streets were lined
with people, far beyond Ponte Molle. Many Roman
// 242.png
.pn +1
gentlemen rode on horseback before him for several
miles. The Pope threw himself almost out of the
carriage in order to bestow his benedictions upon
the people, who kept crying aloud: “Santo Padre,
la benedizione prima di partire;” and others,
“Buon viaggio.” It is said that the Minister of
Portugal, when he went with his lady and child to
take leave of the Pope, left upon the table a schedule
for sixty thousand crowns, by the Queen’s command.
The Venetians are to send twelve senators, among
whom, it is supposed, will be the Doge, with four
hundred men, to meet him on the frontiers and accompany
him through their States. The King of
Sardinia intends to wait upon his Holiness in person.
The Pope’s nephew, Don Lewis, attended him to
the coach, and held his hand for half a minute after
he was in. He was in the most violent distress, and
shed tears for three or four hours. His wife was at
the Villa Papa Giulia to take leave of his Holiness,
and was likewise much affected. The Pope told
her to take care of herself and go to her husband.
.tb
The Count and Countess of the North (Grand-Duke
and Duchess of Russia), when they were at
Naples, refused the Palace Giustiniani which the
King had fitted up for their reception, but they
dined at Court, and went to the balls and theatre.
The King got up a hunt for them, to which they promised
// 243.png
.pn +1
to go, but afterwards sent word to decline it.
The King, however, went, and did not return to
Caserta till the day before their departure. On
their journey to Pæstum, the King had engaged
them to stop at one of his country-houses, to which
he himself went the day before so as to be ready to
receive them. After he was gone, they sent him
word that they could not stop there. The Queen
called for them in her carriage to take them to a
balcony to see a horse-race, that had been got up on
purpose for them, and to which they had agreed to
go—and, after all, they would not. Whenever her
Majesty called for them, she had to wait half an
hour at their door. When they went away, the
people hissed them. They were very affable, however,
and good natured with artists. They called
on Mr. Jenkins, to choose statues for the Empress,
went all over his house, and stayed near two hours.
The Duchess bought a beautiful Faun, a Faustina,
in the shape of Venus, and a Genius. They were
also at the studio of Mr. Hewetson, where they saw
a fine monument which he is going to send to Ireland.
They were much pleased with a small statue
of Cleopatra in marble, which they purchased, and
the Duchess sat to him for her bust.
As they passed through Milan, the Archduke and
Duchess made a “Festino” for them. As there was
not nobility enough in the town, and as the lower
sort of people had never been admitted to their entertainments,
// 244.png
.pn +1
they made experiment of a “Festino,”
and let the latter come, and they behaved
themselves very becomingly. Amongst other masks
were two nuns and two friars, who walked about
and conducted themselves quietly and well. After
they had stayed about two hours, to the great surprise
of the company, an officer was sent to them
to say, that if they had remained long enough for
their own pleasure, their departure would be agreeable
to the company. They immediately went down
stairs, followed by an infinite number of the curious,
who saw them enter a carriage, the coachman and
servants of which were masked, and who were
ordered to drive to the Capucin convent, outside
such a gate. They drove off in a violent hurry,
and in a moment were out of sight, leaving the
spectators in as much astonishment as uncertainty.
It is generally supposed that it was a plan concerted
to test the feelings of the people with regard
to the Emperor’s projected abolition of convents.
.tb
The Prince of Solms was exceedingly pleased
with a young lady who was in the year of her novitiate
and about to become a nun. He fancied
that his attentions were beginning to shake her
resolution, and though the day of profession was
near at hand, he fancied that she would prefer him
to a cloister. One day, after he had paid her a long
visit at the grate, and had no great reason to complain
// 245.png
.pn +1
of her cruelty, she begged of him, as a particular
favour, a lock of his hair. The Prince, confirmed
in his flattering illusions by this request,
immediately cut one off for her. At his next visit
he found her particularly lively and agreeable.
“May I presume,” he said, “to hope that you have
given up all idea of a convent life, and have cast a
favourable look upon myself?” “So great is my
affection for you,” replied the lady, “that I have
just finished making a wig for the Infant Jesus out
of your hair, and if you come to my profession to-morrow
you will see it on the altar.”
.tb
.h3
[1783.]
.sp 2
One day in April, 1783, a Frenchman, who had
subsisted on charity, died in his thirty-third year,
and was carried to the Madonna de’ Monte to be
buried. His corpse was exposed there for several
days before interment, and many miracles are told
and believed as having been performed by him both
before and after his death. His limbs were flexible,
and he appeared asleep. Some say they smelt a
perfume; others, a stink; others, again, nothing
whatever. As they were lowering the body into
the grave it nearly fell, when it put out one hand
and supported itself on the bier, and this more than
once—as the story runs. A dumb person recovered
his speech, a lame person the use of his limbs, &c.
The Abbé Marotti says that he has dined with a
gentleman who was cured of a toothache by the
// 246.png
.pn +1
touch of a rosary that had been near the body;
that the young Duke de Rignano was so frightened
at hearing the dumb man speak, that he ran out of
the church; and much more nonsense to the same
effect. It is certain that the church has since been
constantly crowded with people, and amongst them
some persons of distinction, in whose presence a
vein was opened, but no blood appeared. The man
used to spend his whole time in praying, and was
so dirty that millions of vermin crawled about him,
none of which he would suffer to be killed, saying
they had as much right to live as himself. There
was found upon him a certificate from La Trappe,
saying that he had been there, but that the discipline
was so severe he had been obliged to quit it—adding,
that his sanctity was so exemplary he
would edify any place he went to. The stories told
of him, such as his predicting the hour of his
death, the cure of the butcher’s wife in whose
house he died, &c., are too tedious and ridiculous
to repeat.
.tb
Prince Altieri, who is blind, has been twice to
the Madonna de’ Monti, in the hope that the supposed
saint would restore his sight, but without
effect. He has promised, that if this miracle be
wrought in his favour, he will immediately erect a
chapel to the saint.
Abbé Marotti says he is perfectly well acquainted
// 247.png
.pn +1
with the priest who was his confessor at the Roman
College, and who quotes two instances in which the
“servo di Dio,” as they call the dead man, divined
his thoughts. The Contestabile Colonna’s mother
was carried the other day to the Madonna de’
Monti, in the hope that the saint would cure her
madness. The church is now shut up—some say
on account of the robberies, &c., committed there;
others, because they are setting up a tombstone to
the saint. The Princess Santa Croce assured us
that she had never experienced greater consolation
than in contemplating his dead body, and declared
that it was many years since any such miracles
have been performed. A Bostonian has abjured
Protestantism at the Santo Uffizio, being convinced,
according to his own report, by these miracles.
His instructor was an ex-Jesuit, and it is probable
that the true motive for his conversion was want of
money, as he appears very shabbily dressed. The
Duchess of Gallicano has given her infant the name
of Benedetto, in honour of the new saint, whose
name was Benoît Labré.
.tb
One of the best informed, and one of the most
delightful persons in every respect whom I ever
knew, was the Père Jacquier, a Minime of the
French convent, the “Trinité du Mont.” His
name was well known in England, as he and his
// 248.png
.pn +1
friend, Père le Sueur, were the best commentators
on Newton. His colleague had been dead a few
years, and Père Jacquier was himself rather advanced
in life, but his faculties were perfect, and
he was as active in person as in mind. He was a
native of Champagne, and became a monk when
very young, there being no regulations at that time
to prevent such early professions. He used to say
that it was not by the desire of his parents, but
that it was all arranged by an elder sister. His
genius was both sound and versatile, and his acquirements
very extensive. His proficiency in
every branch of mathematics scarcely exceeded his
taste for polite literature, the classical purity of his
Greek and Latin compositions, and the correctness
of his critical observations. He was also an excellent
historian, and well versed in many modern
languages. He was fond of society, and his manners
were not only polished in the highest degree,
but the beneficence of his disposition, and the sensibility
of his heart, rendered them so peculiarly attractive,
that he gained a new friend whenever he
made a new acquaintance. His feelings were extremely
acute, and the affection of those whom he
loved and esteemed was the only treasure he was
solicitous to keep. Never was there a more charitable
man. He gave away all he had, and was,
besides, ever ready to assist with his advice and
influence all who applied to him.
// 249.png
.pn +1
In his youth he had been engaged in busy
scenes with Cardinal Alberoni, and had lived with
Voltaire, and Madame du Châtelet, and, indeed,
with all the wits and philosophers then in fashion.
He was also employed in the education of the
Prince, afterwards Duke, of Parma. The friendship
that existed between him and Père le Sueur
was extraordinary. They agreed perfectly, because
they had the same general views and the same
goodness of principle, with diametrically opposite
dispositions. Le Sueur had all the judgment,
patience, and exactness necessary for the great
work they had in hand, and Jacquier all the
genius, fire, and penetration. In this social intercourse
this opposition of qualities kept them from
interfering with each other’s way of life, and the
loss of such a friend as Le Sueur was never repaired
to the survivor. I did not know Père
Jacquier till some years after this trying event,
which, I believe, threw him more than ever into
general society. As I have already remarked, he
was then an old man, but his imagination was as
vivid, and his heart as warm, as ever.
Strangers, politicians, men of letters, men of
fashion, were all alike desirous to become acquainted
with Père Jacquier. There was no pedantry,
no vanity, in his mode of conversing, but
if he thought himself neglected he was very unhappy;
not offended, but like a child whom its
// 250.png
.pn +1
parents have left at home. On this account Cardinal
de Bernis used to say of him: “Le Père
Jacquier a l’esprit d’un homme, et le cœur d’un
enfant.” We used to see him almost every day,
and he was so good as to take much pains with
me in my studies. It so happened that an English
naval officer came to Rome with a friend for a
few weeks, and my mother was anxious that they
should see everything most worthy of notice. This
often engaged us so that we were not always at
home at the hours Père Jacquier used to call. My
mother found out that he was much vexed, and
ordered me to write a note to him, to say that we
had two friends who were very desirous to make
his acquaintance, and would perhaps have some
favour to ask of him. This set all right immediately:
he became very intimate with them, and
paid them every possible attention. He was a
thoroughly good Christian, but by no means a
bigot, and his intimacy with the philosophers made
some people suspect his religious principles. But,
for my part, I never heard a word from him which
could be thought reprehensible by the severest
moralist or most scrupulous Christian; and when
some secret enemy wrote to the Bishop of his
diocese, to complain of his frequenting the society
of Voltaire and Madame du Châtelet, that prelate
answered, “he wished those personages were always
in such good company.” In fact, Père Jacquier
// 251.png
.pn +1
had seen enough of the philosophers to be able to
estimate them at their just value. His heart was
too warm to sympathise with their cold selfishness
and hypocritical philanthropy, and his mind too
enlightened to adopt the errors of their systematic
infidelity. He would say it is impossible to investigate
the earth and the skies without adoring the
Creator, or to feel the weakness of our nature without
being a Christian.
Pope Ganganelli would have secularised Père
Jacquier, but he declined it. He admitted that, if
he had to begin life again, he would not be a monk,
but it was now too late to make a change without
necessity. He was very well satisfied, he said, with
his present situation, which did not deprive him of
the pleasure of seeing his friends: any alteration,
therefore, would only make people talk to no purpose.
Besides his pension as professor at Rome, he
had one from the Duke of Parma, but he gave
everything away, and very often had no money
left before the end of the quarter. I think it was
in the beginning of February, and the weather
rather colder than usual, that he came in one morning
and complained of not being well. My mother
remarked his dress, and said: “Why, you have
got on your summer clothing already, and must
have caught cold.” He went home, and was laid
up for some days, and we afterwards learned that a
poor person having asked him for money when he
// 252.png
.pn +1
had none to give, he had put on his summer dress
and bestowed his winter one upon the mendicant.
Another day he came to us with a very pretty
little watch in his hand, which he had won in a
lottery. He was delighted with his prize, and
begged me to accept of it, but my mother said:
“Père Jacquier, I will tell you what to do with
the watch. Take it to the man of whom you hire
a carriage when you want one. I know you are
exact in payment” (for that he was). “Let it be
valued, and you will then have the pleasure of
visiting your friends, whether it rain, or shine, for
a long while.” He smiled and did as she advised,
for he never liked to hire a carriage unless he could
pay for it at once.
His conversation was full of anecdotes, which he
related in the most clear and succinct manner. He
was in correspondence with sensible and learned
men of all countries, for he had no prejudices, but
great discernment of character, and, though he
liked to know every one who had a name in the
world, he soon made the proper distinctions. One
day, as we were looking at different portraits in a
villa, the Chevalier de P., who was with us, observed
one of Père Jacquier, and wrote under it
the following lines, which are truly characteristic:
.pm verse-start
Sage et profond calculateur!
Heureux disciple d’Uranie!
Ses amis parlent de son cœur,
Et l’univers de son génie.
.pm verse-end
// 253.png
.pn +1
There was a lady then at Rome who passed for
being remarkably sensible and well informed; but
one of her most intimate associates was a young
man, who was thought the reverse of all that. I
was told that Père Jacquier said to her: “Take
care of what you are doing. I believe your conduct
to be very correct; but when a man or a
woman of great abilities is constantly seen with
one of the other sex who has not those advantages,
the world is ill natured enough to suppose that the
intimacy is not of the mind.”[#]
.pm fn-start // A
Père Jacquier died at Rome in 1787.
.pm fn-end
.tb
The Emperor Joseph II. was at that time
(1783) making many “reforms,” or “innovations,”
as they were respectively designated by those who
approved or disapproved of them. The Pope
thought it expedient to take a journey to Vienna
and converse with him on the subject, with a view,
if possible, to stop his going too far. The Romans,
who have a great talent for satire, criticised this
project, and, like other nations, talked not too
loyally of his proceedings. They particularly
noticed the number of prelates he took with him.
He has left us, they said, no one but Monsignore
Resta and Monsignore Testa, the only two Cardinals
who remained at Rome. It was also suggested
that, as the Grand-Duke of Russia called
// 254.png
.pn +1
himself “le Comte du Nord,” the Pope ought to
leave his card as “l’Abbé du Midi.” The Pope,
however, was received most courteously and respectfully
by the Emperor, his family, and his
subjects. He did not stay long, and when he came
back he said that he was perfectly satisfied; that
Joseph II. might have some odd ideas; but that, on
the whole, he was a sensible, well-meaning man,
a good Christian, and one who wished to promote
the happiness of his people.
That Pius VI. was a great sovereign cannot be
doubted. His draining the Pontine Marshes, his
works at Terracina, which his unfortunate fate
left unfinished, all he did for the arts, showed what
he was. But these great undertakings could not
be carried on without expense, and he was often
straitened for money. And when these works were
commenced how could he foresee the fatal storm
that was rising? Had he not reason to believe
that what he was doing would eventually enrich
his country? His noble demeanour in adversity
must have silenced those who were always finding
fault with him in his prosperity, as it furnished an
incontrovertible proof of the greatness of his mind.
Joseph II. returned his visit, and found at Rome
Gustavus III., King of Sweden. A greater contrast
could not be imagined than the appearance
of those two monarchs. The Emperor, in a plain
uniform, attended by an aide-de-camp in an equally
// 255.png
.pn +1
simple military dress, and the King of Sweden,
with his numerous suite of courtiers in velvets,
satins, and embroidery, went to all the great parties;
but no fêtes were given to them, at the Emperor’s
particular request.
There was something in the manner of Gustavus
III. very disadvantageous to him. He
chatted much, but always began by a silly sort
of laugh, which made one doubt his having the
understanding or information which he really possessed.
The gentlemen who were with him wore
white handkerchiefs tied round one arm, in remembrance
of what had been the signal for his partisans
in the change of constitution by which he had
so greatly offended many of the nobles of his
country. It was supposed that these innovations
had been suggested to him by M. de Vergennes,
and by others, during his stay at Paris. He was
apparently very partial to France, and he not only
spoke, but wrote, the language perfectly, for I have
read some very pretty French comedies composed
by him in very good taste; and also a drama, entitled
“Gustavus Vasa,” in Swedish, which he was
supposed to have written. In this was introduced
a scene in imitation of that where Richard III. sees
the ghosts of the persons whose death he had
caused. Here it is Christian, King of Denmark,
who is said to have committed such cruelties in
Sweden, and who was conquered by Gustavus
// 256.png
.pn +1
Vasa and the brave Dalecarlians. One of the
songs, for it is an opera, may be thus translated:
.pm verse-start
Noble shades! great sires arise!
Sweden’s heroes! knights of yore!
If her welfare still ye prize,
Give to Freedom life once more.
Say, shall tyrants—say, shall slaves,
Trample o’er your sacred graves?
No! your ghosts to war’s alarms
Let e’en thraldom’s name excite!
Stretch, vindictive, forth your arms
From the breast of endless Night!
.pm verse-end
Count de Fersen, who was so well known afterwards
for his attempts to save the unfortunate
Marie Antoinette,[#] and Count de Staël, who married
Mademoiselle Necker, were of the King’s suite.
It is well known that Gustavus was warmly hostile
to the French revolution, which he was preparing
to oppose in the most active manner when he was
assassinated.
.pm fn-start // A
At the time of the flight to Varennes.
.pm fn-end
Travellers of all nations were to be met at Rome,
and, what is usually called the best society not
being very extensive, it was more easy to form acquaintances,
and even intimacies, than in most
other great cities. We knew almost all the English,
and many of the foreigners. Amongst the
latter was a Knight of Malta, the Commander de
Dolomieu. He was a man of good family, from
Dauphiny, and very agreeable in society. He had
studied mineralogy and chemistry with great success,
// 257.png
.pn +1
and had written a highly esteemed work on
the great earthquake in Calabria.
[At a subsequent period, after the restoration of
the King of the Two Sicilies to Naples, in 1799,
Miss Knight was in a position to render the Commander
de Dolomieu a very important service. The
following mention is made of him in a memorandum
which appears to have formed part of a narrative
of events subsequent to Bonaparte’s Egyptian
campaign: “I received one day a letter from Messina,
signed by a merchant, I believe an English
Quaker, enclosing one from the Commander de
Dolomieu, who had long been our intimate friend,
and with whose family we were much acquainted.
He had, with other men of science, accompanied
Napoleon Bonaparte into Egypt, but on his return
had been obliged by bad weather to put into Messina,
where he was thrown into a dungeon. He
described his condition as most miserable, and no
doubt it was so in every respect.[#]
.pm fn-start // A
Through Miss Knight’s influence
with Sir William Hamilton he was
shortly afterwards restored to liberty.
His family showed her the most grateful
attentions when, in after years, she
much frequented Paris.
.pm fn-end
“The Commander de D. was a man of ability and
warm feeling. He was the second son of a noble
family in France, and, according to the custom of
those times, belonged to the Order of Malta. His
elder brother offended his father by his imprudence
and impropriety of conduct. When the Marquis
was in a state of health so precarious that little
// 258.png
.pn +1
hope was entertained of his life, these two sons
were sent for by their mother. The eldest was at
Paris, but put off his journey from day to day.
The second was with the Maltese galleys at Lisbon,
but obtained leave of absence, and instantly hastened
to the family château, near Lyons. On his
arrival his father told him that he meant to make
him his heir, and only leave to his elder brother
an annual income, enough for his maintenance
but not for the support of his extravagance. The
Chevalier de D. did all he could to persuade his
father not to disinherit his elder brother; but finding
his efforts were fruitless, he went off to Lyons,
and there, in a Chapter of his Order, pronounced
the irrevocable vows which put it out of his power
to receive the inheritance. After this noble, but
what many will think romantic, act of liberality,
he went back to Malta, where for some time he
held one of the highest employments, and enjoyed
the confidence of the Grand-Master. He had reason
to believe that about that time the Empress Catherine
was endeavouring to make a secret treaty with
the Neapolitan Government, for the purpose of becoming
Patroness, or perhaps Mistress, of the island
of Malta. When that island was given by the
Emperor Charles V. to the Knights of St. John of
Jerusalem, after the loss of Rhodes, he stipulated
that he was to receive from them, as their liege
lord, a falcon every year. That devolved to his
// 259.png
.pn +1
descendants, the Kings of Naples, and the Commander
de D. was persuaded that it would be
transferred to the Empress of Russia if the plot
succeeded. That it did not was attributed to his
influence with the Grand-Master, and, consequently,
he was not in good odour at Naples. He had also
enemies among his brother knights, and as he was
instrumental in the surrender of Malta to Bonaparte,
though he is said to have acted from a good
motive, this enmity was not a little increased. His
chemical and mineralogical studies naturally threw
him into the society of the philosophers, and at the
beginning of the Revolution he belonged to the
Constitutional party, but he was nevertheless one of
those who joined the Swiss Guards in defence of
Louis XV. at the Tuileries.”]
I ought before this to have mentioned the celebrated
dramatist, Count Alfieri. One of his tragedies,
the “Antigone,” had been represented on a stage
erected at the Spanish Ambassador’s, where several
plays were performed during the month of October,
and where, notwithstanding its being the season of
“villeggiatura,” there was much good company.
The Prince and Princess Rospigliosi, her brother
the Duke di Ceri, his young Duchess, and his
secretary, were the principal actors; but in the
“Antigone” Alfieri himself acted Creon; the Duke
di Giro, Hemon; the Duchess, Creusa; and Princess
Rospigliosi, Antigone. They all played their
// 260.png
.pn +1
parts with skill and propriety. The Duchess di
Ciro had been taught by Princess Giustiniani, her
mother, who had been very partial to this amusement,
in which she also excelled.
In the “Barber of Seville,” Prince Rospigliosi,
who in society appeared to be rather a grave man,
was a truly comic Figaro. The Countess of Albany
was then at Rome, and lived at the Chancery, in
the apartments of her brother-in-law, the Cardinal
of York. This lady, as is well known, was a Princess
of Stolberg, and great-grand-daughter by the
mother’s side of Thomas Earl of Aylesbury,[#] who
died at Brussels. She had been married to the
Pretender eight or ten years, and lived with him at
Florence, till one day she took refuge in a convent,
on account, she said, of the ill-treatment she received
from him when he was intoxicated. She
afterwards came to Rome, where, as I have said,
she was lodged at the Chancery. She had a lady
residing with her, a Chanoinesse. The Countess
was present at the performance of the “Antigone,”
but she did not in general go out to parties. Morning
visits, however, she paid, in which and in her
walks she was always attended by the Countess
de M. But the romantic attachment of Count
Alfieri, of which no mystery was made—indeed,
the verses he composed and the whole of his conduct
sufficiently declared it—induced Cardinal
// 261.png
.pn +1
York, on his return from a visit to his brother, who
had been very ill at Florence, to apply to the Pope
for the dismissal of the Count from Rome. Pius
made answer that, according to the laws and customs
of the State, he had no right to dismiss a
stranger who was committing no offence against
the country; and that all he could do would be to
write to the Countess of Albany, and request her to
persuade her friend, for the sake of her own character,
to leave Rome. He did so, and the Countess
answered, that Count Alfieri never came to visit
her but at the hour when her doors were open to
all her acquaintance; she would beg of him, however,
to comply with the request suggested by his
Holiness. Count Alfieri remained a few days
longer, and then went off at noon in a handsome
equipage to visit Paris, London, &c. There was
something very extraordinary, but very fine, in the
character of Alfieri. He was introduced to us, and
he asked my mother for letters to England, which
she was happy to give him.
.pm fn-start // A
This is explained elsewhere.
.pm fn-end
I think I never knew two persons more unlike
than Alfieri and the Countess of Albany, in appearance,
in manner, and even in sentiments. She
must, no doubt, have been very pretty in early
youth. She had fine eyes and teeth, but her figure
was not graceful. There was nothing of the ideal
beauty about her which one would have imagined
as the object of Alfieri’s dreams of bliss; but she
// 262.png
.pn +1
must have been very much admired, for all travellers,
as I have been told, used to call her the
Queen of Hearts. Married at twenty to a man of
fifty, and in a political, or rather, I should say,
historical situation so peculiar, she was perhaps
more noticed than she otherwise would have been.
To us she was very kind and attentive, invited us
to visit her, and never in any way neglected us.
She wrote plain, sensible letters, and was not devoid
of intelligence. Although I never heard her saying
anything which could offend religious or moral
principles, I have been told that she was very sceptical
with respect to the former.
.sp 2
.h3
Naples—1785.
.sp 2
The Bishop of Castellamare, who was more than
eighty years of age, still mounted his horse. He
was very good-natured and cheerful, and enjoyed
excellent health, which he attributed to his practice
of fumigating his apartments with perfumed gums.
He had been for many hours buried under the
ruins of the house he inhabited in Calabria, at the
time of the great earthquake. The solidity of a
beam saved him from being crushed when the roof
fell in. He is the only person whom I can recollect
of our Roman or Neapolitan acquaintance who
ever endeavoured to bring me over to the Roman
Catholic religion. I begged him not to talk to me
on the subject; but he persisted in doing so. At
// 263.png
.pn +1
last I said, with the impertinent familiarity which
his good nature encouraged: “Well, you shall say
what you please if for every half hour of this advice
you will send me a basket of curious specimens of
lava and minerals for a friend of mine, who is
making a fine collection.” The good Bishop took
the hint, sent me several baskets of curious specimens
of minerals, and never uttered another word
on the subject of conversion. I am sorry to
add, that soon after we left Naples, being made
“Cappellano Maggiore,” or high almoner to the
King, who had a great regard for him, he was
obliged to give up his usual mode of life, and did
not long survive his honours.
Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi passed the winter at Naples
and gave little concerts. He played with great
taste on the pianoforte, and used to carry about a
miniature one in his carriage. Mrs. Piozzi read to
my mother part of a manuscript, which she afterwards
published, respecting Dr. Johnson; but as
she was angry with him on account of his disapproval
of her second marriage, she occasionally
mentioned him in a manner that displeased my
mother, who always preserved a high veneration
for his memory.
Brilliant and gay as Naples then was, I did not
like it so well as Rome, nor indeed so well as I
liked it at two subsequent visits. However, we had
no reason to complain of the time we passed in this
// 264.png
.pn +1
capital, the Parthenope of old, and still in a great
measure retaining its ancient character. Balls were
given at what was called the “Accademia de’
Nobili,” something in the style of Almack’s. There
was also another “Accademia” for persons of the
second class, as there was a considerable number
of opulent merchants from different countries
visiting Naples. The King and Queen made their
appearance at each at least once a year, and the
foreign Ministers also went to both from time to
time.
Sir William Hamilton had a very fine collection
of Etruscan vases and some good pictures. From
his house, and more particularly from a boudoir
on the upper floor, he used to enjoy a magnificent
view of the bay, reflected on the mirrors which
covered the entire side of the room opposite to the
semicircular window. The bay, by moonlight, appeared
to great advantage, and sometimes the full
moon seemed to emerge from the crater of Mount
Vesuvius. On other nights it was curious to see
the lighted boats employed in the tunny fishery.
The various kinds of shell-fish which are found
here are not to be told. The sailors of the country
pretend that everything which exists on land has
its fellow in the sea. Sea-oranges and sea-lemons
I have seen and sketched; and one day, as we were
in a boat, we saw a little nautilus sailing and rowing
beside us.
// 265.png
.pn +1
The King of Naples had gone to Leghorn, I
forget on what occasion, but his little squadron
sailed in not long after our arrival, in very good
style. He was accompanied by an English frigate,
commanded by Captain Blankett, an old friend of
my mother, with whom she had constantly corresponded
since our departure from England, and
whose letters were very entertaining. Through
him we were first made known to General Acton,
who was then, and for many years afterwards,
everything at Naples. He was Commander-in-Chief
by land and sea, Minister, confidential friend
of the King and Queen, and in his politics much
attached to Austria and England. He was of a
very ancient English Roman Catholic family, but,
I think, was born in France or Flanders. His
elder brother was in the Austrian service. He
himself had been a midshipman in our navy, but
as in those days young men of his religion could
not hold commissions, he went into the Tuscan
service, in which he obtained the command of a
frigate. When the Court of Naples wanted to put
its navy on a better footing, he was summoned
thither for that purpose.
We were introduced to the Queen by her “Cameriera
Maggiore,” from whose apartment we
walked through many passages of the palace, preceded
by one of her footmen, carrying a lantern,
for it was evening. We found her Majesty standing
// 266.png
.pn +1
by a marble table between two windows. She
asked us a few indifferent questions, and then dismissed
us to receive others. From that time we
were invited to everything that was going forward,
but the amusements were chiefly hunting-parties;
no offence, however, was taken at sending excuses.
.sp 2
.h3
Naples—1798.
.sp 2
September 3.—The joy expressed by the Neapolitans
[at the victory of the Nile] is very great.
The King, when he heard it, was at table; he
rose and kissed the Queen and children, and said,
“Now, children, you are safe.” It happened to be
a gala for the birth of a Princess of Tuscany: the
Queen told all the ladies, &c., that Sicily was
safe.
22nd.—In the evening, went out with Sir William
and Lady Hamilton, music, &c., to meet
Admiral Nelson, who in the Vanguard, with the
Thalia frigate (Captain Newhouse), was seen coming
in. We went on board, about a league out at sea,
and sailed in with him: soon after us, the King
came on board, and stayed till the anchor was
dropped. He embraced the Admiral with the
greatest warmth, and said he wished he could have
been in the engagement, and served under his
orders; and that he likewise wished he could have
been in England when the news of the victory arrived
there. He went down to see the ship, and
// 267.png
.pn +1
was delighted to perceive the care taken of a
wounded man, who had two to serve him, and one
reading to him. He asked to see the hat which
saved the Admiral’s life, when he was wounded in
the head with a splinter. The Queen was taken
with a fit of the ague when she was coming on
board with the Princesses. Commodore Caraccioli
came soon after the King, and many of the Neapolitan
nobility, bands of music, &c. It happened to
be the anniversary of our King’s coronation. The
Admiral came on shore with us, and said, it was
the first time he had been out of his ship for six
months, except once on board the Lord St. Vincent.
The Russian Ambassador and all the Legation came
out to meet him. When we landed at the Health
Office, the applauses and the crowd of people were
beyond description. Admiral Nelson is little, and
not remarkable in his person either way; but he
has great animation of countenance, and activity in
his appearance: his manners are unaffectedly simple
and modest. He lodges at Sir William Hamilton’s,
who has given him the upper apartment. The whole
city is mad with joy.... In the evening, went
to visit the Admiral, at Sir William Hamilton’s,
where there was a grand illumination. The Neapolitans
have written up “Vittoria” and “Viva
Nelson” at every corner of the streets.
November 5.—Appeared in sight Admiral Nelson,
in the Vanguard, with the Minotaur, Captain Louis,
// 268.png
.pn +1
from Malta, and they were all day coming in; but
the Admiral came on shore at four o’clock, and
went immediately to Caserta, where he was scarce
arrived when the Hereditary Princess was brought
to bed of a daughter, and the bells were ringing,
guns firing, &c. Next morning, the 6th, the Admiral
presented to the King the French colours
taken at Gozo, telling his Majesty that he had sixteen
thousand subjects more than before.
December 15.—The night before last came in
two Portuguese ships, and the Alcmene (Captain
Hope), with a Turkish Ambassador, interpreters,
&c., bringing the diamond aigrette, &c., for Lord
Nelson. This Court is in the greatest consternation,
and does not trust any of its subjects. We
were desired by Lord Nelson and the Hamiltons to
pack up our things, previous to an embarkation,
which seems inevitable. The Queen and Princesses
are to go with Lord Nelson.
.sp 2
.h3
Windsor—1805.
.sp 2
[In the Autobiographical Memoir, it is stated
that Miss Knight became a resident at Windsor
in December of this year. From the following
extracts from her Journal, however, it would appear
that her residence commenced in June.]
.tb
June 22.—In the afternoon went to Windsor.
Stopped on the way at Hounslow for want of
horses, on account of the Ascot Races. The road
// 269.png
.pn +1
from Staines to Windsor very pretty, with neat
country houses. On my arrival at a house in
Park-street, near the entrance of Windsor, which
belongs to the Queen, I found very comfortable
apartments neatly fitted up, and a present of two
pieces of India muslin, two of English, and one of
Chambery, from her Majesty.
Sunday, 23rd.—In the evening went to Lady
Aylesbury’s apartments at the Castle, and with her,
at half-past eight, to the Queen’s drawing-room.
The King, Queen, and Princesses there. Music in
the ante-room. Came away at a little before eleven,
when the Royal Family went to supper.
26th.—In consequence of the Queen’s invitation,
went at half-past six in the evening to Frogmore,
with Miss Goldsworthy. The volunteers had dined
there. Besides their Majesties, the Royal Family,
and their suite, some of the neighbouring gentlemen
and ladies were invited, and Dr. Goodall with
his Etonians. In a barn fitted up with festoons
of evergreens and flowers, two German “petites
pièces” were extremely well acted by a company of
little children. After which, an automaton danced
on the rope, and a species of phantasmagoria was
represented, consisting of dancing figures, which
formed groups and separated in an ingenious manner.
All finished before ten.
December 22.—Great joy about the Emperor of
Russia’s conduct.[#] His birthday to-morrow. Princess
// 270.png
.pn +1
Elizabeth ate something to resemble a tallow-candle,
made of apple and burnt almond.
.pm fn-start // A
In inducing the King of Prussia to join the Allies against France.
.pm fn-end
.sp 2
.h3
Windsor—1808.
.sp 2
June 4.—The King’s birthday. Went to Lady
Charlotte Finch’s. The Queen, and the Princesses,
the Prince of Wales, and almost all the Royal
Dukes, came there, as also little Princess Charlotte,
who is very graceful and amiable. The
Duchess of Brunswick had been to visit the King,
and came afterwards (before the company arrived)
to see the apartments. She was dressed wholly in
white crape, and looked well, but much older than
the King. Her voice is loud.
9th.—In the morning went with the Queen and
Princess Elizabeth to Frogmore. Two Spanish
noblemen[#] arrived in town to ask assistance against
the French. Catalonia and the Asturias in arms.
The King much pleased, but would not leave the
novels that were being read to him.
.pm fn-start // A
The Viscount de Materosa and Don Diego de la Vega.
.pm fn-end
August 10.—Went at half-past ten in the morning
with Princess Elizabeth to her cottage at Old
Windsor, and helped to arrange things there till
between one and two, when we dressed for the
company, who were beginning to arrive. The
Queen and the Princesses, with the Princess Sophia
of Gloucester, came about half-past two. The day
was fine, and the grounds looked very pretty. The
// 271.png
.pn +1
Queen and Royal Family dined in the house: the
rest of the company in two tents, in one of which
Lady Isabella Thynne presided, and in the other,
Lady George Murray. The hands of the Oxford
Blues and the Staffordshire Militia played. After
dinner, when the children came, there were three
booths, at which they and all the company had
fairings; and then the children danced upon the
lawn. It was altogether a very pretty fête, and
the Queen seemed much pleased, as, indeed, did
everybody. She went away at seven, or a little
before, as the King was expected to return from
Town about that time. The rest of the company
stayed nearly an hour longer. In the evening I
went to the Queen’s party at the Castle.
October 7.—At Rochetts, Admiral Russell came.
He asked for a fortnight’s leave, but was dismissed
civilly from his command with great praises. He
said that, at all events, they would have teased him
out of it. He hoisted the Royal standard for the
Queen of France, but it was not approved.[#] He
asked Lord St. Vincent whether he had done right,
who answered: “You could not do too much for a
woman.” He is an honest, brave officer, and goes
by the name of Paddy Russell. He came in full
uniform. Lord and Lady St. Vincent are very
// 272.png
.pn +1
good to the poor. They have made gates instead
of stiles through all the grounds for the convenience
of the people who come to church.
.pm fn-start // A
As the ship conveying the Queen
of France and the Duchess d’Angoulême
and suite passed Admiral Russell’s
fleet, “the gallant veteran saluted
the illustrious visitors with a royal
salute.” Her Majesty landed at Harwich
on the 29th August.
.pm fn-end
.sp 2
.h3
[1809.]
.sp 2
June 24.—Went to the Queen’s party to hear
Mrs. Bates sing. She was a Miss Harrop, a poor
girl with a very fine voice, and was patronised by
the Dudley Ward family. She married, when
young, a Mr. Bates, commissioner of the Victualling
Department, whose widow she now is. She was
considered the finest singer of Handel’s music ever
known; and even now, though turned of fifty, she
preserves her voice most finely. Bartleman sang
some duets with her exceedingly well, and Wesley
played.
25th.—In the evening at the Queen’s party.
Wesley, who is a Methodist, but plays on the organ
finely, cannot, of course, be admitted into the choir.
He presented a petition to the King this morning,
who gave him 100l.
September 23.—The King was not at chapel this
morning. Mr. Perceval, Lord Liverpool, and the
Duke of York were with him, probably settling
the new Administration. He heard, but not from
Ministers, of the duel between Lord Castlereagh
and Mr. Canning on the evening of the day it
happened (the 22nd), but was not affected, though
he thought it very silly and wrong.
// 273.png
.pn +1
October 25.—Accession-day. The morning was
ushered in by the discharge of cannon, ringing of
bells, &c. Went early to chapel, the company
chiefly in Garter blue. Afterwards to Mrs. Duval’s,
to see the “feu de joie,” and the troops march past—horse
artillery, Blues, Stafford, Windsor, and
Clewer volunteers. An ox was roasted whole, and
two sheep, in a place called Bachelor’s Acre. The
Queen, the Princesses, and the Royal Dukes went
to see it, and tasted the beef and pudding. In the
evening I went to the Castle, where there was the
usual party: we were all dressed in white satin.
At nine, I accompanied Princess Elizabeth, Princess
Charlotte of Wales, and Lady Caroline Damer to
Frogmore. The Queen, the Prince of Wales, and
most of the Royal Dukes came a little after ten,
when the fireworks, &c., took place. Things were
not well managed in the gardens, but the supper
and all the arrangements in the house were very
pleasant. The Queen was much overcome by the
feelings of the day, and the accounts from Princess
Amelia have not been good for some time past.
The King appeared in good spirits. The town was
very orderly, though full of people. There were
two illuminated arches and several transparencies.
26th.—Went to the barracks of the Staffordshire
Militia to see the men at dinner. Their wives and
children were also entertained at tables in the
middle of the room—the men on each side. Tasted
// 274.png
.pn +1
their pudding. Many ladies and most of the officers
were there. A bull was baited this morning, and
a ball this evening at the Town Hall. The company
of the town and the chief attendants at the
Castle were in the upper rooms at Frogmore last
night with Madame Beckersdorff. Thirteen hundred
tickets were issued for the gardens. The
Queen’s party was about ninety, consisting, for the
most part, of the ladies and gentlemen of the neighbourhood
who visit their Majesties at the Castle, or
those who are in the habit of spending a few days
with them. The Archbishop of Canterbury was at
chapel in the morning. The Queen desired I would
write an inscription[#] for the illuminated building,
and I gave the following one: “Britannia, grateful
to Providence, celebrates the fiftieth year of a reign
sacred to piety and virtue.”
.pm fn-start // A
In the Annual Register for 1809,
this inscription is ascribed to her
Royal Highness the Princess Elizabeth.
.pm fn-end
November 7.—Princess Amelia returned from
Weymouth about three, in the Prince of Wales’s
carriage, in which a cot had been slung by Sir H.
Neale. The Duke of Clarence, Princess Mary, and
Lady George Murray with her. The Duke of Cambridge
rode in before them. She is in a sad state
of weakness and suffering.
.sp 2
.h3
[1810.]
.sp 2
October 30.—Bulletins given out of the King’s
illness, which it is, however, hoped will be more
// 275.png
.pn +1
favourable than formerly, as he submits to whatever
is ordered. Mr. Perceval and the Chancellor
came down, but could not see him: they saw
the Queen. He is attended by Sir H. Halford
and Dr. Baillie; and Messrs. Dundas and Battiscombe.
November 2.—Parliament met yesterday, and
only adjourned for a fortnight, as Ministers could
not obtain a signature from the King. I went to
the Queen at eleven; about twelve, dear Princess
Amelia expired, after a confinement of a year and
eight months, and the most dreadful sufferings, of
which her exemplary piety alone afforded any alleviation.
Mr. Charles Digby often read prayers by
her side, and she received the Sacrament three times
within the last month. The Prince of Wales and
all his brothers have been here constantly for the
last three weeks.
3rd.—Went to inquire after the King; the bulletin
says he had a better night, but no diminution
of fever.
4th.—In the morning went to Princess Augusta—and
also on the 7th. Passed the week in calling
on Lady Ilchester, Lady Ely, and at home. Sir
Henry and Lady Halford in the Lane. Received a
letter from the Vice-Chamberlain (Lord Dartmouth
being dead) to invite me to the funeral in the name
of her Majesty. Princess Augusta had before told
me that the King had named me to be at it on account
of dear Princess Amelia’s regard for me.
// 276.png
.pn +1
On the Wednesday evening, November 7th, sat
up with Lady George Murray to watch the remains
of dear Princess Amelia in the room adjoining.
The King continues very ill, and Francis Willis was
sent for, in addition to the physicians, three days
since.
10th.—Sir H. Halford seems to think the King
better. His lucid intervals are more frequent and
longer.
11th.—Sir H. Halford says the King was quite
rational this morning, and aware of the death of
Princess Amelia. He shed tears, and mentioned a
letter he had sent to her, and asked for the answer.
Ministers have been very cruelly impatient, and
their desire of getting his signature for proroguing
the House occasioned sad scenes with the physicians,
who boldly withstood them. They could
not, however, prevent their sending down Willis,
which will be a great affliction to the King when he
knows it, which he now must. He had made the
Queen and all the family swear he should never see
the Willises more.
13th.—At four, went by the Queen’s desire to
dine at the Castle with the ladies, as did Lady Halford.
The Queen and Royal Family dined by
themselves. Between six and seven we went in
three carriages to the cloisters. Lady Chesterfield,
chief mourner, with Ladies Ilchester and Macclesfield,
her supporters, and Lady Halford, trainbearer,
// 277.png
.pn +1
in the first. In the second, Ladies Ely,
Cranley, Isabella Thynne, and George Murray,
supporters of the pall; in the third, Mrs. Egerton,
Mrs. Feilding, and myself. (Miss Townshend was
not well enough to come.) Lady Albinia Cumberland,
as senior lady of the Princesses, went to
Augusta Lodge with Miss Goldsworthy and Mrs.
Williams, and Mrs. Adams went in the carriage
with them, following the Prince and the Duke of
Cambridge, the executors, to attend the hearse to
the church. We went to Dr. Heath’s, where
the equerries and grooms of the bedchamber were
to wait for being called. The Princes and chief
mourners were in the Garter-room. They were in
black veils and gloves, we in long white crape veils
and gloves, the Blues and Staffords on duty; the
Blues holding torches every fifth man. Madame
and Mademoiselle Beckersdorff, Miss Planta, and
Mademoiselle Montmellin also walked in the procession,
and the housekeepers and dressers; the
soldiers were in ranks, through which we passed.
The service chanted. The church looked awfully
fine, and the choir where the first part of the service
was performed still and sublime. The Dean,
who had just lost his brother (Lord Dartmouth,
Lord Chamberlain), performed the service. The
anthem, chosen by the King, was part of the 16th
Psalm, from the ninth verse to the end. It used
to be sung by the Royal Family. The body was
// 278.png
.pn +1
buried in a vault dug behind the altar. The whole
was very fine, and respectfully attended to by the
spectators. I felt an elevation of mind, which supported
me, and a sincere trust that the dear sufferer
is now happy. We got home about half-past ten.
A great number of gentlemen and noblemen attached
to the Court, and all the Ministers, attended.
14th.—Was sent for by Princess Elizabeth to
go to the Queen, who was calm and tolerably well;
afterwards went to Princess Elizabeth’s and to Dr.
Hallam’s. The King was asleep last night during
the funeral; he afterwards sent a kind message to
the Queen and Princesses, and said he was resigned,
but has cried much, and continues so to do. This
morning he wished to settle everything for the payment
of the people at Augusta Lodge. Lady and
Miss Halford, Mrs. and Miss Baillie, dined with me.
Sir Henry and Dr. B. drank tea—they are in almost
constant attendance on the King, and sit up
in their turn.
16th.—Parliament met yesterday, and was prorogued
for a fortnight longer. The physicians
were previously examined by Ministers. The King
was at that time better, but in the evening had
much fever; this evening he is again rather better.
22nd.—The King has been very ill for several
days, and has scarcely any sleep.
26th.—The King not so well last night; much
the same this morning.
// 279.png
.pn +1
29th.—The physicians were examined at the
Cockpit, by an open meeting of Privy Councillors,
yesterday and to-day.
30th.—Walked in the court. Sir Henry Halford.
He, and Lady and Miss Halford, dined with me.
Yesterday the majority for an adjournment of a
fortnight was more than a hundred in the House
of Commons; not so considerable in that of the
Lords. The Dukes of York and Cambridge voted
for Government; Clarence and Sussex against;
Kent and Cumberland stayed away.
December 6th.—In the morning the King not
so well as he has been for the last four or five
days.
7th.—The King very ill, but rather better than
yesterday.
8th.—The King continues very ill.
14th.—Went to the Queen, and to Princess
Augusta. Both Houses of Parliament met yesterday,
and Ministers, having stated that the King
was not yet well enough for business, proposed a
committee of twenty-one in each House, for examining
the physicians on the 14th and 15th;
their reports to be printed on Monday, the 17th,
and the House to meet on the 19th for debate.
25th.—Christmas-day. A most dreadfully tempestuous
night. The King was very ill in the
evening—a violent attack—and I believe in danger.
The Prince and Duke of Cumberland came
// 280.png
.pn +1
in the night. All the Princes are here. The
King’s fever is greatly abated; but he was in
serious danger last night; his pulse was at 125.
26th.—In the morning went to Frogmore with
the Queen, Princess Elizabeth, and Lady Aylesbury;
afterwards with the Queen at the Castle,
and with Lady A. The King much the same as
before his late attack.
27th.—The Regency will be proposed in the
House of Lords. The amendment for an address
lost by 26: 100 against 74. The Dukes of York
and Sussex spoke in favour of the amendment.
Lord Grenville for the bill, but against the conduct
of Ministers, accusing them of high treason.
.sp 2
.h3
[1811.]
.sp 2
January 2nd.—Yesterday Ministers were left in
a minority by 13, on the question of the household,
the amendment conferring part of the patronage
on the Prince of Wales, the rest on the
Queen, with the care of his Majesty’s person.
Evening at Miss Goldsworthy’s and Lady Aylesbury’s.
3rd.—Ministry yesterday left in a minority of 3,
on the restrictions they intended to impose on the
Regent. Lord Porchester proposed the amendment.
5th.—The Peers sat till five this morning. Opposition
carried every question except the right of
granting peerages. Majorities of 3.
// 281.png
.pn +1
18th.—The King walked on the terrace yesterday
with Willis and Heberden, and was joined
by Baillie. The fact is, Willis told him he
might go, and he was delighted; Heberden consented
through weakness; and the key of a tower
staircase was procured before the page (Bolt) could
refuse it. Sir H. Halford was in Town, and Baillie
did not know it, until, coming into the apartment
soon after, he missed his patient, and went down to
him. The Queen did not know it till the evening.
The effect was hurtful, as the irritation increased
in consequence of the walks not being continued,
which, considering the cold and damp of the north
terrace (the only one not overlooked), and other
inconveniences, it was impossible to allow. It was
probably a manœuvre of Willis to please Ministers
(and perhaps ordered by them), to make people
suppose the King better, and to get more votes on
the Regency Bill question, which came on that
day; and they had a majority of 27.
25th.—The Chancellor and Mr. Perceval could
not see the King yesterday, though the Chancellor
had declared he would see him, as he would not
put the Great Seal to the Bill without it; but
though the physicians all declared he might, they
would not either of them; probably not being satisfied
with what they heard of his Majesty’s state;
they say they will to-morrow; in the mean while a
debate of importance will have taken place. Lord
// 282.png
.pn +1
Moira carried (by two) the adjournment against
proxies on Wednesday; his speech was uncommonly
animated, and he very severely reprehended
the Ministers, said the Chancellor had come as a
champion, but in rusty armour, called them a nest
of scorpions, and said the nation was not so stultified
by the oppressions of late years as not to take
notice of their proceedings.
26th.—The Chancellor and Mr. Perceval saw the
King this morning, and the Great Seal is to be put
to the Regency Bill, as they can now have no
doubt of the unfortunate state of his mind.
30th.—Mr. Perceval saw the King this morning,
and told him of the Regency, which he bore very
well; indeed, he continues in high spirits—some
delusions.
February 1.—The King saw Lord Liverpool
and another of the Ministers this morning, and
they say he had no delusions—talked over the
Regency—very happy. The Prince sent a kind
and dutiful message to the King by Sir H. Halford,
saying he should be happy to give up power
to him again, &c.
3rd.—The Prince does not change the administration;
at least till he sees whether the King recovers
in a short time.
5th.—The Prince made known to the Ministers
that he only kept them as his father’s servants. It
is said the King is really recovering.
// 283.png
.pn +1
9th.—The King saw the Queen yesterday and
to-day, is much better, and walks on the terrace.
11th.—The King told the Queen the first day
he saw her, that never son had made greater sacrifices
to a father than the Prince had to him.
12th.—The Prince Regent saw the King this
morning.
13th.—The Queen held her first Council to-day,
and the physicians were examined.
April 11th.—Saw the Queen and Princess Augusta.
The King much the same.
17th.—The Queen’s Council, who come every
Wednesday and Saturday, made a good report of
the King to-day.
20th.—This morning the King was thought to
be much better; and in the afternoon, while he
was walking with the Dukes of York and Kent,
they thought him so far well, that it was found
necessary to acquaint the Queen’s Council, that
no new arrangement might be made.
23rd.—Went with the Queen and the Princesses
Elizabeth and Mary to Frogmore, and went round
the fields. The Duke of Sussex came at one.
27th.—The King walks on the terrace twice a
day, but his mind is still subject to many delusions,
and it is a sad time for all the family.
20th.—The King rode out to-day for the first
time since his illness.
30th.—The King was not out this morning, and
// 284.png
.pn +1
none of his family have seen him. The physicians
were all here yesterday, and the Queen’s Council.
July 13.—I went every evening this week (except
this) to Frogmore with the Queen and the
Princesses Elizabeth and Mary. The King has
been very ill the whole week, and continues so.
14th.—A bad bulletin, and the most attached
seem hopeless of the King’s recovery.
15th.—The King has been dangerously ill all to-day,
and has taken no nourishment—his mind more
distracted than ever, and his fever very high.
Willis was up with him all last night, and Sir
Henry Halford stays. I was at Lady Ilchester’s in
the evening.
16th.—The King took three jellies, and had a
little sleep this morning. The account in the evening
was the same, and that no new symptoms had
appeared.
17th.—I was with the Queen, the Princesses
Elizabeth and Mary, the Dukes of Cambridge and
Cumberland, at Frogmore. The King a little, but
very little, better; all the physicians remain. Great
alarm in London.
18th.—The Prince came to Windsor for a short
time, and had a conversation with the Queen.
There seems to be no amendment.
19th.—The Prince will not give away anything
vacant by death or resignation. The Ministers
complain that Government cannot go on without
// 285.png
.pn +1
it. He tells them he reserves them for the King to
fill up on his recovery, and that it was their fault
that these difficulties occurred, from the restraints
they laid. He has sent Tucker to get money from
his Duchy of Cornwall, that he may not be obliged
to Ministers.
29th.—During the last week nothing very material
has taken place. The King has been as ill as
ever, and takes so little nourishment that it is
scarcely possible he can recover any strength—his
mind as much deranged as ever. I have been almost
every evening with the Queen and Princesses Elizabeth
and Mary at Frogmore. Yesterday the King
was taken up, and put on his flannel gown; he
took four basins of milk; and he was thought to
be not so weak as was apprehended.
August 5.—The last week passed nearly like the
former. I went several evenings with the Queen
and Princesses Mary and Elizabeth to Frogmore.
The Queen read Thomson’s “Seasons;” but on
Thursday the Queen’s Council came unexpectedly
to propose calling in more physicians, or, at least,
that a consultation might be held. The Prince
came down several times. The King had another
paroxysm, and is still in a dreadful state of mind;
and will take nothing now but water and biscuit.
A consultation was held yesterday at Sir Henry
Halford’s. John Willis, Munro, and Simmons were
the additional members. Simmons, however, would
// 286.png
.pn +1
not give his opinion, as he said he could not, without
having seen the patient. He came from Oxfordshire,
through Windsor, for that purpose; but it
was not permitted, as the other two, J. Willis and
Munro, had not seen his Majesty.
7th.—Yesterday, Sir Henry Halford called and
told me that when Lords Aylesbury, Winchilsea,
and the Archbishop of Canterbury came to propose
John Willis, the Queen, by the advice of the
Prince, to whom she sent at Sir Henry’s request,
answered that she and all the family had taken a
solemn oath by which they promised the King that
they never would admit J. Willis to attend him
again, and that from the information given in
1804, during his Majesty’s last illness, the Privy
Council had declared that the King’s objections
were not without a foundation, in consequence of
which the then Ministers (Lord Sidmouth’s Administration)
had sent Simmons, a new person. Her
Majesty, however, to prove that she had no personal
prejudice against J. Willis, and did not wish
to exclude any advice which might be supposed
beneficial to the King, consented that a consultation
might be held, at which J. Willis, with the
addition of Drs. Simmons and Munro, might be
present. This was held at Sir H. Halford’s, and
last night the answers were given. Princess Mary
told me this morning they only recommended
acting as circumstances might require, and suggested
// 287.png
.pn +1
nothing new. The King was dreadfully ill
last night; and Willis even said they never attended
one so ill, except a gentleman who died
within forty-eight hours after. Yesterday, amidst
much incoherent matter, he said, on a sudden:
“The King is dying;” but then went on to other
ravings. This was told me last night by Miss
Goldsworthy. He is grown exceedingly thin, and
scarcely takes any nourishment.
14th.—The King has been nearly in the same
state in which he was a week ago. He takes more
nourishment, but his mind is in as bad a state as
ever; and the worse the more food he takes. The
Queen’s Council answered that for the present they
would not insist on J. Willis being admitted. They
seem to have a notion of a right to more than giving
advice. The Prince spent his birthday (the 12th)
here. He came the day before, and stayed till the
13th. He rode out with Princesses Sophia and
Augusta in the morning, and afterwards came to
Frogmore, where the Queen was with Princesses
Elizabeth and Mary, and the Duke of Clarence;
and I was with her. The Duke of Cumberland
came with the Prince. We sat long at luncheon,
and the Prince was very attentive. The Duchess
of York came to dinner, and all the Dukes were
there, except the Duke of Sussex, who is ill. I
was with Princess Sophia one evening, and twice
with Princess Augusta. It seems the King has
// 288.png
.pn +1
made no will, but it is thought he has made two
or three memorandums. The Prince has informed
his sisters that he means, in case of the King’s
death, to have their incomes increased, and to give
them apartments at St. James’s, as also to keep a
table for them.
I went almost every morning to Frogmore with
the Queen and Princesses Elizabeth and Mary. The
Queen read Rogers’s “Pleasures of Memory” and
Cowper’s “Task,” and planted little oaks and geraniums.
19th.—The King’s bodily health seems to be improved,
but his mind remains in as bad a state as
ever. The Queen’s Council (which seems to be
very despotically inclined) insisted on bark being
given him. The Prince spent the Duke of York’s
birthday here, as did all the family. Was every
morning with the Queen, except Saturday and
Sunday, and she read Cowper’s “Task.”
26th.—The King is certainly rather better; for
he sleeps, takes nourishment, is not always so violent,
and sometimes talks a little rationally, at least
within the last three days. Great apprehensions
have been entertained for the Duke of Sussex; and,
though better, he is thought to be in a very bad
way. All the family met to spend the Duke of
Clarence’s birthday (the 21st) here. I was with
the Queen and Princesses Mary and Elizabeth most
mornings at Frogmore. The Queen read Cowper
// 289.png
.pn +1
and Cicero’s “Letters,” and took me with her in
the little carriage, drawn by a pony.
September 3.—There seems to be little if any
difference in the state of the King. On Saturday
the Queen’s Council presented a petition, signed by
all but Lord Winchilsea and the Bishop of York,
requesting that her Majesty would send for Simmons.
Her reply was that she had promised the
King he should neither have Simmons nor Willis.
Lord Winchilsea wanted John Willis. I was every
morning with the Queen and Princesses Elizabeth
and Mary at Frogmore, except Saturday and Sunday.
The Queen read Cicero’s “Epistles.” I was
also with Princesses Augusta and Sophia.
9th.—Still the same uncomfortable state, and
certainly no amendment. I was with the Queen
and Princesses as usual.
Yesterday, the 8th, was the fiftieth anniversary of
the Queen’s wedding-day. The Duke and Duchess
of York, Duke of Clarence, and Duke of Kent,
dined with her. The Prince was prevented by
business: he is just returned from Lord Hertford’s.
16th.—Heberden and the other physicians quarrelling;
the former thinking the King better. It
does not appear that there is any improvement.
I was not out much with the Queen this week.
Looked over a manuscript of English history for
Princess Elizabeth. Went to Princess Augusta, &c.
// 290.png
.pn +1
Nothing very remarkable happened here in the
last three months of 1811. The King rather recovered
his bodily health, but his mind remained
the same. No one allowed to speak to him but
John Willis. The Queen began to have small
parties in her own drawing-room, consisting of the
ladies and gentlemen in waiting, on the week-days;
on the Sundays only her lady of the bedchamber
and myself. On Christmas evening the Archbishop
of Canterbury and Lord Walsingham. The Prince
fell down at Oatlands, and hurt his foot and hand,
which confined him a long while, and he took too
much laudanum.
.sp 2
.h3
[1812.]
.sp 2
On the 18th of February the Regency Act expired,
and the Prince of Wales became unfettered
by Parliament, but continued the same Ministers
in office, and only wrote a letter to the Duke of
York, desiring he would offer to Lord Grey to join
this Administration, and to communicate the same
to Lord Grenville. They refused to join, and those
of his former friends to whom the vacant Garters
were offered, refused them, as they did all places
and honours. Lord Cholmondeley alone accepted
a place. Lord Hertford was made Chamberlain;
and his son, Lord Yarmouth, Vice-Chamberlain.
Scandal very busy about the Prince and Lady
// 291.png
.pn +1
Hertford. Ten thousand pounds a year was added
by Parliament to the Queen’s income, and 3000l.
to each of the Princesses, on which they were to
have an establishment of their own. They appointed
one lady each: Princess Augusta, Miss C.
Onslow, getting for her the title of Lady; Princess
Elizabeth, the Dowager Lady Rosslyn; Princess
Mary, Lady Isabella Thynne; and Princess Sophia,
Lady Mary Powlett. They at the same time announced
to the Queen their intention of sometimes
making visits to their brothers. They also
took servants, and ordered carriages for themselves.
The Queen began to see a little more company,
but only those belonging to her, or very intimate
friends. I asked leave to go to Town, and into
Essex and Suffolk for seven weeks, to return for
the Queen’s birthday. I went on Monday, the
30th of March, and stayed a week in Town, four
days with Lady Nepean, at Fulham, and on the
10th went to Lord St. Vincent’s, at Rochetts, where
I dined and slept that night. The next day I
went on to Harwich (dining at Colchester), and
stayed two days at Mrs. Deane’s, at Harwich. I
went from thence on the 14th to Dr. Norgate’s,
at Ashfield, in Suffolk, and stayed a week there.
On the 21st I went to Bury, where I dined at Miss
Norgate’s, and from thence came to Halsted, and
slept at Mrs. Urquhart’s. Next day arrived at
// 292.png
.pn +1
Rochetts, and stayed there till the 9th of May,
when I came to Town. On the 11th, Bellingham
shot Mr. Perceval. I returned to Windsor on the
18th, and on the following evening was at the
Queen’s party. Princess Charlotte of Wales, the
Duchess of York, and Princess Sophia of Gloucester
there.
.sp 2
// 293.png
.pn +1
.pb
.sp 4
.h2
ANECDOTES.
.sp 2
[The following anecdotes are selected from a
large number, recorded by Miss Knight mostly at
the end of her journals. They were either written
from her own personal knowledge, or picked up
by her in society, and set down at the time in her
note-books. They are of unequal interest, and if
not all new, are, at all events, authentic.]
.tb
Mr. Boswell being asked by Burke why he put
so many absurdities into his Life of Dr. Johnson,
replied: “You, sir, have been guilty of greater
absurdities.” The other defied him to point them
out. “Do you remember,” asked Boswell, “when
you said in Parliament, ‘We have the best of
Kings and the most grateful people?’” Burke replied,
“You have reason.”
.tb
Boswell was asked by the King how he would
ever get through his work on Dr. Johnson.
“Sire,” said he, “I have a more difficult task than
// 294.png
.pn +1
that—how to call the unfortunate grandson of
James II., whose adventures in Scotland I propose
to narrate.” “Why,” replied the King, “call him
the unfortunate grandson of James II.”[#]
.pm fn-start // A
The anecdotes relating to Boswell were given to Miss Knight by Mrs. Piozzi.
.pm fn-end
.tb
Mrs. Piozzi says she has been punished, like a
vagabond, by hard labour and a month’s confinement;
and nine times in her life she has suffered
the same fate.
.tb
Lord Nelson says, that when he was seventeen
years of age, he won 300l. at a gaming-table; but
he was so shocked on reflecting that, had he lost
them, he should not have known how to pay them,
that from that time to this he has never played
again.
.tb
When Admiral Nelson’s arm was cut off, the
surgeon asked if he should not embalm it, to send
it to England to be buried; but he said, “Throw
it into the hammock with the brave fellow that
was killed beside me”—a common seaman.
.tb
As we were going in the Admiral’s barge the
other day, looking at the ships and talking of the
victory (of the Nile), Sir William Hamilton could
// 295.png
.pn +1
not be pacified for the French calling it a drawn
battle: “Nay, it was a drawn battle,” said the
Admiral, “for they drew the blanks and we the
prizes.”
.tb
The Queen of Naples desired to have a portrait
of Nelson. Little Prince Leopold said he would
get a copy, and stand continually opposite to it,
saying, “Dear Nelson, teach me to become like
you.”
.tb
Captain Troubridge wrote to condole with Captain
Darby, of the Bellerophon, for his wounds and
the number of people killed in his ship; but added,
that had his sufferings been fifty times as much, he
had rather have been in his place than have borne
the anguish he felt from running aground and being
kept out of the action; that he had found great
difficulty in keeping from shooting himself; and
that he even then frequently shed tears. Captain
Darby and Captain Gould, who was present when
he received the letter, both wept.
.tb
The estate of Bronté, near Mount Etna, so called
from one of the Cyclops, was given by the King to
Lord Nelson. It is a Dukedom, with estates valued
at between two and three thousand pounds sterling
per annum. His Majesty also presented him with
a sword set with diamonds which had belonged to
// 296.png
.pn +1
his father, the King of Spain, accompanied by a
letter, saying, that as this was the sword with which
his father had conquered Naples, it ought to belong
to Lord Nelson, who had recovered that kingdom.
Every officer who came in with good news received
a present from the Queen, of greater or less value,
according to the circumstances and his rank in our
service. She also gave some very valuable jewels
to Lady Hamilton. The Order of St. Ferdinand
was instituted by the King for the recovery of his
Italian States, and crosses were bestowed upon our
officers, and upon the Neapolitan Ministers, and
others attached to the Court who had followed the
Royal Family to Palermo. A Neapolitan one day
remarked that this Order had not been conferred
on a single Sicilian. A gentleman of the island
being present, and thinking this was said in an
invidious manner, replied, “His Majesty is perfectly
right to give his new Order to the few Neapolitans
who have remained faithful. Had he
given it to us, it must have been to every inhabitant
of the island, for all have been true to him.”
The Sicilians certainly did show great loyalty, and
were delighted with the presence of their sovereign,
but it must also be remembered that they had a
deep-rooted and hereditary dislike to the French.
They always spoke with pride of the Sicilian Vespers,
and would at any time have been ready to
repeat them. Similar feelings prevailed in Sardinia
// 297.png
.pn +1
and Malta, without any historical motive,
but there is an independence in the character of
islanders which is not easily overcome, unless
biased by commercial speculations.
.tb
The Turkish squadron, commanded by Cadir
Bey, came to Palermo (1799), with two other
ships of the line beside his own, under the orders
of a Vice and a Rear-Admiral, and a frigate called
the Eagle of the Sea, the Captain of which was a
young man related to the Grand Seignior, whom
the Turks called “the mad Prince,” because he was
very romantic. I recollect that one day, while
walking in the garden, he happened to see my
little dog, which he took up in his arms, and recited
some verses to it, apparently with great affection.
There was a Greek, who kept a coffee-house
at Palermo, and served as interpreter to the Turkish
officers, but he could not exactly translate these
verses, and all I could learn was that they were
“extempore.” He then told me that the Prince
had desired him to say that one day, as he was
riding along the shore of the Bosphorus, a spirited
horse threw him into the sea, when a dog jumped
in after and saved him; for which reason he had
imposed on himself the duty of paying a compliment
in verse to those animals whenever he found
a proper opportunity for so doing. A beautiful
// 298.png
.pn +1
fête was given at the palace for the recovery of
the kingdom of Naples, in the name of Prince Leopold,
who was then about nine years of age. His
tutor and the Queen made all the arrangements,
and the former composed a very pretty cantata on
the occasion. The Turkish Admiral went in the
carriage with us; the Vice and Rear-Admirals,
with the Captain of the Eagle of the Sea, in another,
but we could not persuade the latter to put on a
caftan like the others. He insisted on going in his
short dress and trousers, with bare arms and ankles,
declaring that it was disrespectful to appear before
the Queen in “a great coat;” just as we should
think it wrong to wear a shawl in the presence of
their Majesties. His turban was adorned with fine
jewels. His dress was of purple silk, richly embroidered
with silver, and his slippers of the same
colour, which exclusively belongs to members of
the imperial family. His linen was remarkably
fine, and beautifully washed; his trousers were
equally recherché, and without doubt he was the
model of a Constantinopolitan dandy.
After the performance of the concert there was
a magnificent firework, representing the blowing
up of L’Orient at the battle of the Nile. The Turks
were delighted with this compliment to our navy,
but the Russians did not appear equally well
pleased. The gardens were beautifully illuminated.
.tb
// 299.png
.pn +1
The Honourable Samuel Barrington, the younger
son of an Irish Peer, was sent into the Navy in his
extreme youth, and at an early age was made a
post-captain. He was one of those very few persons
who have many friends and scarcely one
enemy. He was not brilliant in understanding,
and his appearance was plain, but his heart was
excellent. He loved his friends, was charitable and
humane to an extensive circle, and constantly kind
and liberal to his family.
He was a good officer, and of the right school.
Not ambitious, neither was he eager after fame.
He wished to do his duty, and he did it well. If
he had ambition in any the slightest degree, it was
to get on in the service without making use of the
powerful interest of his brother, who was for many
years in the Ministry; and for this purpose he endeavoured
to have his ship better manned, to get
under weigh sooner, be sooner out of dock, &c. &c.,
than other people. It is not impossible that his
rank in life was often of service to him on these
occasions, but it was not his intention to avail himself
of that advantage. He was a father to his
officers and seamen, and was so generally liked in
the Navy, that it was remarked that no company of
sea-officers ever met without drinking his health.
When he was an Admiral he never desired to be
a commander-in-chief, for he did not like responsibility,
and he was envious of no man. He spent
// 300.png
.pn +1
his fortune in hospitality and acts of charity, avoiding
all ostentation, not only because he had no
taste for it, but because he would not hurt the
feelings of his brother officers by living in a manner
which those of more limited incomes could not
have imitated without distressing themselves.[#] He
was never violent in politics, and hatred seemed
banished from his nature. I believe Admiral
Barrington to have been a sincere Christian.
.pm fn-start // A
This is also stated in the Autobiography, vol. i. page 19.
.pm fn-end
His conduct at Santa Lucia, both in taking the
island and afterwards in defending it against the
infinitely superior force of D’Estaing, was greatly
applauded. In answer to the haughty letter in
which the French commander exhorted him to
give up a place which he could not defend against
such inequality of force, he only returned him his
letter, crossed over with two long scratches of his
pen, and defeated him completely.
Admiral Barrington was desired by my mother
to be her executor and my guardian, with the two
Admirals Drake, in case she died before I was of
age. But though he survived my mother, her
life was mercifully spared to me for many years
after that period; and he died before my return
to England, after a long illness, which kept him
chiefly at Bath during the last years of his existence.
.tb
// 301.png
.pn +1
I remember a young officer of the French Navy
saying one day: “I should like to be an English
Peer until I reached thirty-five. I would then be
a Marshal of France till fifty, and afterwards come
to Rome, be a Cardinal, and never die.” The same
officer, looking at the fine picture of the “Magdalen,”
by Guido, exclaimed: “Oh, what a lovely
picture! I have always liked Magdalens in every
stage of their existence.”
.tb
Signor Balbi was surprised to find that there was
no Burgundy left in his cellar, when he wanted to
place some before a party of friends who were
dining with him at his country villa. “Ah!” said
he, “it must have been that Englishman, Lord
Fortrose, who has been staying here some days
with my wife, that has drank it. Ah! I never
thought of my wine.”
.tb
The Bishop of Parma said, that in that climate
they had “nove mesi d’inverno, e tre d’inferno.”
.tb
It often happened in Genoa that, when any one
was building, or repairing his house, his opposite
neighbour, if he thought it so high as to be inconvenient
to himself, or disagreeable for any other
// 302.png
.pn +1
reason, had it fired at with musket-shot, or at least
pelted with stones. This occurred, whilst we were
there, to the house of Signor Negroni.
.tb
The Archbishop of Genoa hearing an Abbé say
that the earth moved round the sun, told him he
was astonished at his impiety in flatly contradicting
the Scriptures, which say, “Terra autem stat.”
.tb
Madame de Staël, daughter of M. Necker, being
at a ball with a lady, daughter of the late M. de
Guichen, Lieutenant-General of the Marine, for
whom she was in mourning, kept tormenting the
latter to dance. The lady replied that she could
not dance while she was in mourning for her
father; but Madame de Staël still importuned her,
until she said: “Consider, madam, if you had had
the misfortune to lose your father, could you think
of dancing so soon?” “Oh!” returned the other,
with a haughty air, “there is such a difference between
fathers and fathers.” “True, madam,” replied
her companion, “there is a great difference.
My father served his king and his country during
sixty years—yours in a fortnight has ruined both.”
.tb
Two Frenchmen of the lowest order, talking of
the present condition of their country as they were
// 303.png
.pn +1
crossing the Rhône, one of them said it was delightful
to be equal to the nobility and gentry.
“True,” replied the other, “it would have been
pleasant to have been upon an equality with them
while they were something; but now we have
brought them down and ruined them, I do not see
what we have gained by being equal to them.”
.tb
The Princess of Monaco stayed here a few days
after the Prince’s departure, in the hope that the
revolution aimed at by the aristocratic party would
take place. When she received an express from
the Prince, she wept bitterly while she read his
letter, and then immediately ordered post-horses
and set off, exclaiming: “Adieu, mon palais!
adieu, mes honneurs! Je ne suis plus rien.”
.tb
The Corsicans having lately heard that they were
to be restored to Genoa, represented to the Government
that, rather than be given to their former
masters, they begged that France would bestow
them on the person to whom Louis XI. formerly
gave the Genoese. During the reign of that monarch
the Genoese sent Ambassadors to his Court, with
instructions to place the republic under the protection
of France. “Les Gênois,” said they, “se donnent
à votre Majesté.” “Et moi,” answered the
King, “je les donne au diable.”
// 304.png
.pn +1
A Venetian, being asked by a German where his
countrymen got their lion with wings, replied:
“We caught him in the same forest where you
found your two-headed eagle.”
.tb
Linnæus hated Buffon. He used to say that
Buffon’s eloquence would mislead the world so as
to make it believe his lies. One day, being at
dinner with the mother of the present King of
Sweden (Gustavus III.), at her country-house at
Drottningholm, he saw a portrait of himself and
one of Buffon in the room. He rose from table,
and begged she would take away one or the other,
for he would not have his portrait in such company.
When very old, he used to go out herborising
with several hundred students of the University
of Upsal. He had a trumpet with him, by
which the signal was given to call his scholars
around him when he found any plant particularly
curious. They also brought to him all that they
had collected, which he classified and explained to
them, sitting down upon the grass. He was simple
in his habits and behaviour. He could speak French
very well, but would not, because he hated the
nation. He also spoke German, and a little English.
He was much beloved. When the funeral
service was performed over him, the man who had
been gardener for twenty years of the botanical
// 305.png
.pn +1
nursery he had established, came and strewed his
grave with boughs of cypress—which Linnæus had
introduced into Sweden—and with the most curious
exotics in the garden.
.tb
The Piedmontese called all the Genoese “Bacciacini,”
that being a common name at Genoa. When
they met any of the inhabitants of that city in the
streets of Turin, they plagued them by calling
out: “Bacciacini, dom, dom, dom”—imitating the
sound of the great bell for assembling the Consiglietto.
.tb
An Italian at Vienna was telling a lady how long
he had been travelling, and pronouncing French
according to the manner of his nation, he said:
“J’ai été un âne à Paris et un âne à Rome.” “Mon
cher Abbé,” replied the lady, “il paraît que vous
avez été un âne partout.”
.tb
M. Lageswärd said, in the presence of Baron de
Wrangel, that the latter had the reputation in
Sweden of being very fertile in point of gallantry.
“Why, no, indeed, my dear friend,” answered the
Baron; “I have really been very constant; but
consider, when a man has been making love near
sixty-five years, how many mistresses he must necessarily
have had.”
.tb
// 306.png
.pn +1
Signor Michel Angelo Cambiaso, who was long a
prelate in Rome, said that in that city two things
are eternal—the women and the friendships.
.tb
A few years since a Russian lady of high rank—who
had escaped from her own country, either on
account of her being acquainted with some circumstances
relative to the death of the late Emperor
(Peter III.), or because she had some right to the
crown by inheritance—stayed a few months in
Italy, and the Grand-Duke of Tuscany told her he
would answer for her safety so long as she remained
at Florence, but that he would not advise
her to trust to any Russian. Count Orloff, however,
became intimately acquainted with her, and
paid great court to her, till at last he persuaded
her to partake of an entertainment on board the
Russian fleet, at that time anchored off Leghorn.
Notwithstanding the advice of many persons, she
went on board, and has never since been heard of.
It is supposed that she was thrown into the sea.
Count Orloff despatched a messenger to his imperial
accomplice as soon as he had secured his
prisoner.[#]
.pm fn-start // A
This anecdote is related on the
authority of Baron Wrangel, and is
also mentioned in Wraxall’s “Memoirs
of his own Time.” It was said
that this “Russian lady of high rank”
was a daughter of the Empress Elizabeth
by Alexis Ragumofsky, and that
the English Consul, Mr. John Dick,
assisted Count Alexis Orloff in luring
her on board the Russian fleet. But
Mr. Kelly states that she was “an
adventurer who called herself Countess
Tarakanoff: he allured her on board
his ship and sent her to Petersburg.”—History
of Russia, vol. ii. p. 57.
.pm fn-end
.tb
// 307.png
.pn +1
When Lord Bruce and Mr. Brand were at Paris,
arms and liveries had been abolished about three
weeks. The people came and stared at the coronet
on Lord Bruce’s carriage, and at the motto,
“Fuimus.” Luckily, said Mr. B., none of the
Dames de la Halle understood Latin. The populace
looked at the Ambassadress’s footmen in livery
as the most extraordinary sight in the world,
though so short a time had elapsed since they had
been accustomed to see everybody’s servants dressed
after that fashion.
.tb
Mr. B. going to make a visit at Cambridge to
Prince William, son of the Duke of Gloucester, saw
a fiddle on the table, and, taking it up, asked the
tutor if his Royal Highness played. “Not much,”
said the other; “only God save his uncle, and such
little things.”
.tb
Signor Stefano Lassagna said the war of ’46
spoiled all the etiquette of Genoese society. Formerly
the gentlemen behaved much more politely
to the ladies, and he himself remembered the time
when Prince Doria walked beside the chair of
Madame Morando with his hat off, in a great fall
of snow, though he had his own chair following
behind.
.tb
A general reform having been instituted at Genoa
// 308.png
.pn +1
in the signs of inns and taverns, no saints or
foreign sovereigns were to be allowed. The man
who kept the “Santa Marta” being ordered to take
down that sign, put up “Albergo Imperiale” in its
stead. He was then told that the Emperor did not
rule in Genoa, and so he next stuck up the arms of
the republic, with the motto “Libertas,” and he
calls his inn “La Libertà.”
.tb
Prince Chigi, who was condemned to perpetual
imprisonment for attempting to poison Cardinal
Carandini, resided at Genoa, and went by his own
name. He paid a visit to Signor Bernardo Pallavicini,
brother of the Doge, and was lodged at
the “Santa Marta” (La Libertà). His servants
cooked for him in his own apartments. Mr. Devonport,
who had rooms near his, complained of the
noise of scraping pots and dishes, and was answered
by the people of the house that they had made the
same objections, but had been told that the Prince
had hired the rooms and would cook as he pleased.
.tb
Signora Marina Spinola having arranged to
marry her daughter to the son of Signor Dominico
Serra, said she did not mention the circumstance to
her till all was settled, because the young man is
agreeable; but had he been ugly, she would have
told her at once, to accustom her to the idea. One
// 309.png
.pn +1
Sunday the bridegroom went with his father and
mother and all their family, even to nephews and
nieces, to visit the bride, Signora Spinola having
also invited her relations to be present on the occasion.
The visitors arrived about half-past five,
when the young lady was to kiss the hand of her
future mother-in-law, which the latter was to endeavour
to prevent: however, she succeeded very
dexterously in doing it. Signora Serra went away
early, but left the sposo, telling Signora Spinola
that he would stay till she sent him away. This
puzzled Signora Spinola, but she arranged the
matter with Signor Cheeco Viale, who, at half-past
seven, told the young man it was time to walk
home. All the time of the visit the latter sat on a
sofa beside the young lady, talking to her on indifferent
subjects. The next day Signora Spinola,
her husband, and a friend, went to return the visit
of Signora Serra, when the latter requested her to
charge herself with the care of providing the marriage
outfit—which is always furnished by the
parents of the bridegroom—excusing herself on the
plea of ill health and the absence of her daughter.
She added, that she intended to spend as much as
she had done for the daughter of Prince Doria,
who was married to another of her sons. Signora
Spinola at first demurred to spending another person’s
money, but finally accepted the commission.
In the contract it was to be inserted that the marriage
// 310.png
.pn +1
should take place before September, and the Serra
family wished it to be in June. The young man was
to be dispensed from the ancient custom of watching
to meet the young lady whenever she went out
with her mother, and he was to be allowed now and
then to visit at the house. They were to live with
Signora Spinola for a year and a half, or two years,
until a house could be fitted up for them.
.tb
The King and Queen of Naples were wonderfully
pleased with Rome, though they had taken
a prejudice against it. They were magnificently
treated at the Pontine Marshes at the Pope’s expense.
The carriage of the gold plate, provisions,
&c., alone cost 150 crowns, and the dinner itself
not less than 600 crowns. When General Acton
met the King on the frontier, he asked if his
Majesty would take any refreshment, but the King
declined, saying that he had eaten enough for three
days. At Rome they invented a conversation,
supposed to have taken place between the Pope,
the King and Queen of Naples, General Acton, and
the Queen’s Confessor. The Pope says, “Io concedo
tutto;” the King, “Io voglio tutto quel che
vuole la Regina;” the Queen, “Io voglio tutto;”
Acton, “Io rubo tutto;” the Confessor, “Io assolvo
tutto;” and the Devil, in a corner of the
picture, “Io porto via tutti.”
.tb
// 311.png
.pn +1
The marriage contract of Signora Costanza Falconieri
and Count Onesti was signed on Thursday,
the 31st of May. There were twenty-four Cardinals
present, chiefly creations of this Pope, the four
prelates in the principal charges that lead to the
red hat—that is, the Governor, the Maggiordomo,
the Auditore della Camera, and the Treasurer, but
as the latter was already a Cardinal, he could not
sign the contract, and therefore deputed Monsignor
Doria to do so in his place. Twenty-two o’clock
(six P.M.) was the hour, and Signora Mobilia had
the candles lighted, that the ceremony might be
more imposing. * * * Early on the morning of
Monday, June 4, the sposa, accompanied by her
mother and grandmother, &c. &c., went to the Vatican,
where the Pope said mass in the Chapel Sestina.
After hearing a second mass, he married his
nephew and the young lady, making an exhortation
twenty-two minutes in length. He began by
giving good advice to the sposa, and then addressed
the sposo, and afterwards himself, saying
that it was in that place (the Sestine Chapel) he
was first married to the Church, and lamenting the
many errors he had committed since he was Pope,
notwithstanding his most ardent desires for the
good of the Church. There were no ladies present
but those of the family, many of whom were of all
conditions. After the ceremony they went down
to the Maggiordomo’s apartments, where a collation
// 312.png
.pn +1
had been prepared, and then proceeded to the
church of San Marcello, in the Corso, to pay their
devotions in the chapel of the Beata Giulia Falconieri,
an ancestor of the family, and a considerable
saint. They next made their devotions at the
little church of the Bergamaschi, in the Piazza Colonna,
and thence repaired to the house of the
sposo, Palazzo Braschi, where they all remained an
hour and a half, and afterwards dined at the Palazzo
Falconieri. The Senatress told the sposa she
gave her joy on her wedding, and also on the
presents she had received. “I had not so many
when I married the Pope’s nephew; but then,”
added she, “I did not want them.” An Abbé,
standing at Count Braschi Onesti’s door when they
came home from the marriage, exclaimed: “What
a fine breed of horses he has brought with him
from Cesena!” They were so enraged at this
speech that they had him arrested and sent to
prison. The Prince Borghese presented Count
Onesti with a pair of fine horses. Some said that
the latter asked for them, and others that he offered
to buy them, but that the Prince answered they
were for his own use. However, he understood the
Count’s meaning, and sent them off to the Maggiordomo.
.tb
François Joachim de Pierre de Bernis was of an
old family of gentle blood, whose hereditary estate
// 313.png
.pn +1
was near Pont St. Esprit, in Languedoc. He had
great taste and talent for Anacreontic poetry. His
compositions were lively and elegant, but rather
too highly coloured, and by no means instructive
for youthful readers. It was, no doubt, the error
of the times and of the nation. He was of a short
stature, and I do not think that either his features
or person could ever have been remarkable for
beauty, and yet he was universally known in his
youth as “le joli petit abbé,” and “l’aimable
abbé.” His mind was very liberal, and his temper
generous and disinterested, but he seems to have
been always somewhat too indiscriminate, or too
tolerant, in the choice of his acquaintance. His
circumstances were limited, so that during his
early years he was often subjected to great pecuniary
embarrassments; but he was always cheerful,
always the gentleman, and always well received.
He established the necessary proofs of ancestry for
becoming a Canon of the Noble Chapter of St. Jean
de Lion, of which he wore the cross to the last day
of his life, with more pleasure than any other of his
numerous decorations, for the consciousness of birth
made his other honours sit easy on him. He gained
the favour of Madame de Pompadour by his verses
and the charms of his society, for no one ever said
more amiable things in fewer words, or more to the
purpose. She was not, however, his only friend, or
the sole cause of his promotion, as it has been often
// 314.png
.pn +1
reported. A memoir he wrote on the dispute be
tween the Jesuits and Parliament pleased the
King (Louis XV.), and, besides, he was generally
popular, and had great and powerful protectors,
through whom he was sent Minister to Venice.
While he was there, the husband of the beautiful
Princess de Rohan died. The Princess and he had
long been attached to each other, and he knew that
she would propose to marry him, but he felt that
he would be regarded as too much her inferior
with respect to rank and fortune to make a graceful
figure in the world. He therefore took priest’s
orders when he heard that the Prince was so ill
that the next courier might bring tidings of his
death. This does not sound well; but it did not
forfeit him the friendship of the Princess, for, when
she died, she left him her whole fortune, which he
nobly gave up to the Rohans, merely reserving for
himself a ring, on which was a Moor’s head, and
this he wore until his death in remembrance of her.
At his return from Venice he was made Prime
Minister, but was soon displaced by the Choiseul
party, when he was created a Cardinal, but exiled
to one of his abbeys; subsequently he was allowed
to live at his archbishopric of Alby. Restored to
some degree of favour when Louis XVI. ascended
the throne, he was appointed Minister Plenipotentiary
of His Most Christian Majesty at the Court of
Rome, whither he had gone for the Conclave of
// 315.png
.pn +1
Ganganelli. There he shone with the greatest
splendour. His revenues were enormous, and he
expended them most generously. Indeed, his liberality
to his own countrymen, his hospitality to the
natives and to travellers, his charity to the poor,
and his beneficence to his own family, were only
limited by his income. He never wished to save,
but could not bear the idea of debt. His house
and table were sumptuous, his conversation lively
and animated, his manners polished, his expressions
guarded, and his behaviour dignified and
correct.
We had letters of recommendation to Cardinal
de Bernis when we first went to Rome, and were
intimately acquainted with him and his family,
particularly with his amiable niece, the Marchioness
du Puy-Montbrun, and his adopted nephew
and coadjutor, M. de Bernis, who was afterwards
his successor. The Cardinal was dismissed
from his post at Rome, on refusing to take the oath
exacted by the Revolutionists, and deprived of his
benefices in France. He had a pension, however,
from Spain, and received into his house at Rome,
where he continued to reside, Mesdames Adelaide
and Victoire, the sisters of Louis XVI. He bore
his change of fortune with dignity and temper, and
died about eighteen months before the French took
possession of Rome. He left behind him a poem
on religion, which he gave orders to have printed
// 316.png
.pn +1
after his death; and Memoirs of the most active
period of his life, intended only for the gratification
of his own family, with positive instructions that
they should never be made public. The following
lines were written by a lady of Alby, to be placed
beneath two small medallions, representing the
Cardinal and his nephew, the coadjutor:
.pm verse-start
Alby! tes deux prélats au temple de Mémoire
Attesteront du ciel la plus rare faveur;
Quand il eut fait l’un pour la gloire,
Il fit l’autre pour ton bonheur.
.pm verse-end
.tb
When the Cardinal de Bernis was to receive the
red hat, he knew that eight days afterwards he
would be exiled from the Court. He was then
Prime Minister. The morning he was to go to the
King he got up at two, and wrote till eight, when
he went to the palace and received the hat, and addressed
complimentary discourses to all the Royal
Family. He then returned to his own house, and
had five tables set out for company, consisting of
all the Ministers and clergy. After dinner the King
sent for him to the Council, which he left late at
night, and went home and wrote till two in the
morning. The pomp with which he was surrounded
was immensely magnificent—all the royal carriages
attending him. The Duke of Fitzjames, who was
standing with him at the entrance of his house, remarked:
// 317.png
.pn +1
“Quel beau jour pour vous, Monseigneur!”
“C’est plutôt un beau parapluie,” replied
the Cardinal; but the Duke being ignorant of his
approaching downfall did not understand him. The
Cardinal said, he remarked, while he was pronouncing
his discourses, that the courtiers were
endeavouring to find expressions that they could
lay hold of, to bring up against him afterwards.
Eight days later he was exiled to his abbey of
Visurenne, where for the space of one year he was
not permitted to see any one but the members of
his own family. During the two following years
he was allowed to see company, and then sent to
his archbishopric of Alby. The greatest demonstrations
of joy, such as the ringing of bells, the
firing of guns, troops drawn up to salute, &c., were
exhibited all along his journey through Languedoc.
While at Visurenne he used to dress in grey, lined
with red, with a white hat and a red riband round
it, like a shepherd.
.tb
After the Cardinal de Bernis was recalled from
exile he went to Paris, and happened to be in company
with the Duchess de Grammont, sister of
M. de Choiseul, who was then Minister. She took
occasion to introduce the subject of exile, and said
it must be the most disagreeable thing in the world.
“Madam,” replied the Cardinal, “it is the most
// 318.png
.pn +1
disagreeable thing possible when you are expecting
it, but the most agreeable when it is over.”
.tb
The Venetian Ambassador wrote the other day
to the Vicegerent (substitute of the Cardinal-Vicar),
requesting him to make inquiries about a young
couple who had run away from Venice, and who,
the Senate informed him, were concealed in Rome.
The Vicegerent sent back the Ambassador’s letter
with these words at the bottom of it: “Si burla di
me il Signore Ambasciadore” (Monsieur l’Ambassadeur
se moque de moi). The latter again wrote to
the Vicegerent, and more urgently than before, but
received only the same answer. Whereupon he
called in person upon the prelate, who told him
that the young couple were in the palace at Venice.
.tb
The Count d’Artois carried his little son, the
Duke d’Angoulême, to see the young Dauphin.
The child, expecting to see something extraordinary,
looked disappointed, and exclaimed: “Mon
papa, comme il est petit!” “Tu le trouveras un
jour beaucoup trop grand,” replied the Count.
.tb
The Père Procureur of the Order of Doctrinaires
came to make us a visit, and said that he was trying
to get the founder of his order canonised, provided
it did not cost too much. He had already
// 319.png
.pn +1
expended six hundred crowns on the congregations
before whom the question has to be laid. These
are composed of prelates, heads of orders, and cardinals;
but he believes the last do not receive anything.
Every congregation costs a hundred and
fifty crowns in chocolate; the lawyer gets twenty
more for his carriage and other expenses; and the
rest goes in mancias to the servants. The Prelate
Promoter of the Faith is usually styled “Avvocato
del Diavolo,” his business being to raise objections
to the proposed saint. The present candidate for
canonisation is of an ancient family of Avignon.
His brother was a “chef d’escadre,” and he himself
was in the army of Henri IV. At that time he
used to make verses to the ladies, and was a man of
the world; but he afterwards turned abbé, and
founded an order for the instruction of children.
His name was César de Busse. They are now trying
to prove his virtues to “an heroic degree,” and
afterwards they will come to his miracles, without
which he cannot be beatified. It is somewhat difficult
to find proofs of these, but they hope to succeed,
provided the order in France find money
enough; but there seems to be some reluctance to
spend much for these purposes. Connected with
this, the Père Procureur related to us an anecdote of
one of the Boromeo family, who told us his son need
not give himself so much trouble, for they would
never try to make a saint of him, as his uncle’s
canonisation had already ruined them. The feast
// 320.png
.pn +1
of a beatified saint is not observed by the Church
in general, but only by his own order.
.tb
When Marshal Richelieu went to Bordeaux he
was tired out with harangues from all sorts of
people. At last they told him that the Gardien of
the Capucins wanted to address him, but the Marshal
vowed he would hear no more. Being prevailed
on, however, by the people about him not
to mortify the poor man, he said he would receive
him provided his discourse were brief. The Capucin,
then entering, said: “Monsieur le Maréchal, nous
vous souhaitons autant de bien dans l’autre monde
que vous en avez eu dans celui-ci.”
.tb
When Marshal Villars was going to give battle to
the allied army, he looked at his troops, whose uniforms
had become very shabby, and said to them,
pointing to the new regimentals of the enemy:
“Habillez-vous, mes amis.”
.tb
The harlequin at the Comédie Italienne at Paris
called for a seat, and they brought him a chair.
“Non, non,” said he, “ce siége n’est pas assez long.
Je voudrais m’appuyer. Donnez-moi un autre siége:
donnez-moi un siége comme celui de Port-Mahon.”
.tb
// 321.png
.pn +1
A Neapolitan Prince, being on his death-bed,
sent for his confessor, and, after making a long
confession, he said there was one thing he had
omitted because he had not courage to tell it.
After much difficulty and many exhortations, the
friar prevailed upon him to impart the secret.
“Father,” said he, “I can never hope to be saved,
for I have fought a duel.” The confessor reproved
him in suitable terms, but added, that his repentance
would ensure his pardon. “Oh, father!” exclaimed
the Prince, “there were aggravating circumstances.
The dispute was occasioned by my
saying that Tasso was superior to Ariosto, and we
fought three times on that account.” “It was very
improper, to be sure,” replied the friar, “to have
risked your own life and that of a fellow-creature
for so slight a reason, but you may hope to be forgiven.”
“It is impossible, father,” persisted the
Prince, “for though I disputed so vehemently, I
have never read a line of either Tasso or Ariosto.”
.tb
When the Archduke Maximilian was at Paris,
he went to see the Cabinet du Roi. M. de Buffon
was there to receive him, and presented his Imperial
Highness with a copy of his works, elegantly
bound; but the Archduke said, he could not think
of robbing him. He went likewise to the Ecole
Militaire, where the young gentlemen were going
// 322.png
.pn +1
to be put through their exercises for his amusement,
but he said he did not wish to fatigue them.
The Parisians called him the “Archi-bête d’Autriche.”
.tb
When Pope Lambertini went to see the Opera
House fitted up for the cantata which the Duke
de Nivernois gave on the birth of the present King
of France (Louis XVI.), the prelate who was in
attendance wanted to take off the “stola,” thinking!
that it was not decent so sacred a habit should
appear in a theatre, but the Pope prevented him,
calling him a “minchione” (a blockhead). Somebody
wrote over the door, “Indulgenza pleniaria.”
.tb
When the Bishop of Derry was at Rome, he refused
to help a French gentleman at Cardinal de
Bernis’ table to some olives, saying he “would not
give the olive to France.” The Marquis de Fortia
replied, “And yet it is the duty of your profession
to do so, milord.”
.tb
On the road from Naples to Rome the Cavaliere
Lascaris was much annoyed at the slow pace the
postilion went. He called out to him several times
to go quicker, but the man always excused himself
by abusing the Pope for keeping such bad roads.
On reaching the end of the stage the Cavalier
// 323.png
.pn +1
caned him handsomely; and, that the people
around might not take the postilion’s part, he
went on saying what a rascal he was to abuse his
sovereign, such a good prince, too, &c. &c. The
other then protested that he did not mean the
present Pope, he meant Pope Rezzonico. “Worse
and worse,” cried the Cavalier, “for he was a
saint. I must beat you all the more.”
.tb
When the Duke of Arcas was sent by the King
of Spain to congratulate the King and Queen of
Naples on the birth of their eldest child, Ganganelli,
who was then Pope, knew that the Duke had
received instructions from his sovereign to press
for the extinction of the Order of Jesuits. He
resolved, therefore, to give the envoy no opportunity
of addressing him on the subject. The Spanish
Ambassador at Rome mentioned to the Pope’s confidant,
Padre Bontempi, that he hoped his Holiness
would treat the Duke with distinguished
civility, as he was charged with a special mission.
To which the Padre replied, that he could assure
him the Duke should be received in a manner that
would fully content him. When he arrived, the
Pope was staying at the Castle Gandolpho, and he
sent the Maestro di Camera and the Maggiordomo
to receive the Duke at the door, the greatest compliment
that can be shown even to a sovereign.
// 324.png
.pn +1
The Pope was standing when he entered the room,
and when he was about to kneel to kiss the feet of
his Holiness, the latter prevented him, took him in
his arms and embraced him, and seated him on a
sofa beside himself. As the Duke made some difficulty
about this, he said, “Do not look upon me
as the Pope, but as a friar.” He then conversed
with the envoy on various subjects, and kept up
the conversation for half an hour, without allowing
him the slightest opportunity to speak upon
his real business. Padre Bontempi, according to
previous arrangement, having made a sign that it
was dinner-time, the Pope said that he had already
observed that he was only a friar, and he lived like
one, dining at twelve o’clock, but the Maggiordomo
would take care of him (the Ambassador),
though probably he would not fare so well as at
the court of other sovereigns. He then rose, accompanied
the Duke to the door, and as he was
going out, said, “Remember me to Carluccio” (so
he called the King of Spain), “and tell him that I
am a man of honour, and will keep my promise
to him, but he must give me time enough.” The
Ambassador then took his leave, enchanted with
his reception.
.tb
As Mr. Hewetson was putting up a bust in the
Pantheon one day, three persons who had taken
refuge in the church offered to help him. One of
// 325.png
.pn +1
them said he had done nothing wrong, but the corporal
of the sbirri owed him a grudge; and another
declared that he was an honest man, he had never
stolen anything, he had only killed a man. When
any one here is taken up for a crime, the judge
asks him his name, and some have been cunning
enough to reply, “Chiesa” (Church). The judge
then says, “I have taken an oath that I would
never attempt anything against the Church, and
therefore, as that is your name, you must go before
the tribunal of Ecclesiastical Immunities.” The
man is accordingly sent there, and soon afterwards
returned to the judge, with a message, telling him
that he may do what he pleases, he will not offend
the Church. But if the prisoner persists in saying
that his name is Chiesa, the judge will have nothing
to do with him, and again refers him to the
tribunal, and so the affair drags on for ever. No
man, besides, is ever condemned to death unless
he confesses his crime, but the torture is applied
to extort the confession. One poor wretch made
a likeness of the gallows, and stuck it on his foot,
that he might remember in the midst of his sufferings
that it was worse to be hanged. Many outlaws
are living at Ostia, but all for homicide and
assassination. They would think it a disgrace to
their society to allow a robber to live amongst
them.
.tb
// 326.png
.pn +1
The following was one of the addresses to the
young Dauphin: “Monseigneur, votre naissance
fait notre joie, votre éducation fera nos espérances,
et vos vertus feront notre bonheur.”
.tb
The little Prince Santa Croce, about five or six
years of age, had got little Prince Giustiniani
down, and kicked him most unmercifully. The
latter took refuge in a corner, but the other ordered
him to come out, that he might kick him
again: “If you do not,” he added, “I’ll give you
a coltellata” (a stab).
.tb
As some officers of the Guards were showing
off their troops to General Elliot, with their fine
feathers, pink stocks, &c. &c., he said they only
wanted one thing, which he had seen in Italy, and
thought would be a great improvement to them.
Upon being asked what this was, replied, “An umbrella;”
which the Pope’s soldiers always carried.
.tb
Cardinal de Bernis said that Count Alfieri was
very prodigal of reflections, but very covetous of
words.
.tb
The Chevalier du Theil remarked to us, in
speaking of a Minister who was giving fêtes on
// 327.png
.pn +1
some public occasion, “On s’ennuie à les préparer,
on se ruine à les faire, on est critiqué quand on les
a faites.”
.tb
The expense of Monseigneur de Bernis’ bishopric,
including expedition of bulls, presents,
&c., amounted to about 480 Roman crowns. The
Pope would not take the price of the bulls, as he
was entitled to do.
.tb
The King of Prussia called the Emperor Joseph
II. the Quixote of the North.
.tb
The Marquis Castiglioni, as he was going to
Naples, scolded his wife because the cook’s carriage
had broken down, which, he said, was owing to
her not having gone to mass in the morning before
they set out. He afterwards said it was the
fault of the “femme de chambre,” whom he abused
dreadfully, but a few hours after desired the Marchioness
to give her two sequins.
.tb
A Jew of Pisa being very ill, ordered two Jew
attendants to call in a curate to baptise him, for
that his conscience would not allow him to die in
peace without he became a Christian. He said he
heard them in the next room agree that they had
better kill him than let him change his religion.
// 328.png
.pn +1
Upon that he desired so earnestly to be baptised,
that an angel, dressed in white, came down and
christened him; and from that moment he grew
better. On his recovery he informed the Archbishop
of Pisa of the miracle, and the Archbishop
wrote to Rome to know if the man ought to be
christened a second time. A Congregation was
accordingly appointed, at the head of which was
the Vicegerent, Monseigneur Contesini, and the
Bishop of Carpentras went to Cardinal de Bernis,
to inquire if he thought that baptism by an angel
was canonical. The Cardinal replied, as gravely
as he could, that perhaps it would be better to rechristen
the Jew, conditionally; and that as he had
never heard of any one being baptised by an angel,
he could not say whether it was canonical. He
then asked them if they were certain that the angel
had really appeared; and they answered that there
could be no doubt about it, for the man had told
it himself.
.tb
The Duke de Chartres built some houses round
the gardens of the Palais Royal, with shops under
them, in order to get money by letting them. He
was talking to the King of the beauty of one of his
gardens, describing the summer-houses, canals, &c.:
“Y a-t-il des boutiques aussi?” asked his Majesty.
The people were so enraged at seeing the trees cut
down and the beauty of the gardens spoiled to
// 329.png
.pn +1
build these houses, that they hissed the Duke as he
passed, and to escape the populace he ran through
a coffee-house and got away. Some one remarking
his blue ribbon, called out, “Est-ce la première fois
qu’on a vu fuir le Saint-Esprit?” that being the
name of the ship he commanded in the engagement
with Admiral Keppel. A caricature was
printed of a man picking up rags in the dirt, and
beneath it was written, “M. le Duc de Chartres,
qui cherche des loques à terre” (locataires). One
day, while talking to a lady, he described a friend
of hers by various ill-natured signs, to which she
replied, “Je vois bien, Monseigneur, que vous vous
entendez mieux aux signalements qu’aux signaux.”
.tb
The Duchess de Chabot told me nothing struck
her more disagreeably than to see, at the end of a
sentence of death, the King’s signature following
the words, “Tel est notre bon plaisir.”
.tb
Pope Lambertini having heard that Ghezzi, the
painter, had drawn caricatures of him and of all
the Sacred College, insisted on seeing his book.
The painter, in great terror, was obliged to comply;
but the Pope was so much pleased with his talent
that he gave him an employment of twelve crowns
a month, and kept the book. Whenever a Cardinal
// 330.png
.pn +1
came to see him he would show him his portrait,
and if it caused any displeasure, he would say:
“Do not be angry—here is my likeness also.” The
same Pope was told that a person had taken the
liberty to publish a book of his “bons mots,” and
was urged to punish the fellow. He replied that
he would certainly do so, and would inflict a very
severe punishment, for, said he, “I will have a
new edition printed with great additions, and then
nobody will buy the book he has been at the expense
of publishing.”
.tb
Princess Dashkoff being at Cardinal de Bernis’
in carnival time, boasted that she would not fear
to face forty cannons, and yet started when the
petards were fired to give the signal for the race.
She was asked if she felt cold, and she answered
that her imagination was colder than her person.
The Grand-Duke Paul of Russia told the young
Prince Dashkoff that he had already given him half
of his friendship on his mother’s account, and would
give him the other half when he knew him better.
He agreed with the Princess to forget past times,
and to think only of the present. When he was in
St. Peter’s, he said that such a church gave a higher
idea of the Divinity than any other temple he had
ever entered. He thought the columns were not
perfectly proper for the support of so noble an edifice,
but he was too much struck with the general
// 331.png
.pn +1
effect of the building to examine its details. The
city of Rome, he remarked, offered the most august,
and, at the same time, the most humiliating spectacle
in the world, as it showed to what a height
men could attain, and also how low they could
descend.
.tb
Mr. Bagnall remarked, that, on meeting the
Senator on the first day of carnival in his state
coach surrounded by his guards, and with pieces of
silk carried before him, it seemed to him as if the
Romans wished to perpetuate the memory of their
disgrace, and show how far they had sunk from
their former position. If Cato could return on
earth, what, he asked, would be his idea on encountering
Prince Rezzonico as the representative of
the Roman Senate, and Princess Santa Croce as the
representative of the Roman matrons—particularly
at Carnival time?
.tb
Countess Kaunitz, at Vienna, cheated intolerably
at cards. As she was walking one day with Lord
Finlater, a beggar asked alms of her, and she desired
his Lordship to give the man a sequin. Lord
F. demurred to such a large sum, but the lady insisted
on his showing his generosity. “Ah! je
vois, madame,” said he, “que c’est un cousin de
Pam.”
.tb
// 332.png
.pn +1
When the Prince of Hepenstein was at Paris, he
was one day at Madame de Barri’s toilette, surrounded
with courtiers. She was saying how much
she wished to have a little tiger, and every one was
recommending how it should be fed. Some said
with biscuits, others with macaroons, till the Prince,
tired of all this nonsense, suggested: “Give him,
madam, a courtier a day.”
.tb
Princess Dashkoff said she thought the Polish
nation the most servile in the world till she saw
the Italians.
.tb
Cardinal Zelada said that, when he was in the
Conclave, another Cardinal sent him an artichoke,
which he presented to another Cardinal, who passed
it on to a third, until it came back to Cardinal
Zelada. After this had happened six times the
latter terminated its travels by throwing it out of
the window, but not before it had cost him twenty-five
crowns. For it is customary when a Cardinal
makes a present to a “confrère,” to give at least
two sequins to the secretary of the donor, or to
some other member of his household.
.tb
Of the innumerable friars secularised by the
Emperor Joseph II., only two hundred have proved
fit to be employed as parish priests. The nuns of
// 333.png
.pn +1
the convents destroyed by his Majesty had permission
to enter other convents if they voluntarily
chose to continue a monastic life. Scarcely any of
the German nuns have confined themselves a second
time, and only one in Lombardy, who has come to
Rome for that purpose. The Pope has allowed her
a few days to see the city.
.tb
The King of Spain has been very anxious of late
for the canonisation of a lady who died about a
hundred and fifty years ago. Two miracles are
necessary for this purpose, and only one could be
proved to have been performed during her lifetime.
It was therefore proposed to supply the other by
the fact of her body having remained uncorrupted
for such a length of time. Accordingly the tomb
was opened, in order to ascertain whether the body
had been preserved naturally or by being embalmed.
Unfortunately, it crumbled into dust as
soon as it was exposed to the air, which was held
to be decisive against her sanctity. The King,
however, was so determined to have his way, that
he caused a second congregation to be convened,
but the result has been as unfavourable to his
wishes as before.
.tb
It is said of the Duke de Chartres (afterwards
Duke of Orleans, commonly known as Philippe
// 334.png
.pn +1
Egalité), that he was “paresseux sur mer, poltron
sur terre, polisson partout.”
.tb
Two instances of the cruelty practised in convents
came under the Countess de Château Dauphin’s
personal knowledge. One was of a friar
belonging to one of the mendicant orders at Turin,
who was chained under the cellar-stairs for ten
years, fed upon bread and water, and kept in a
most shocking state. The other was of a friar who
was confined for twenty-five years in a room of a
convent near her country house, where he was deprived
of the sight of a single human being—his
food being passed to him through a hole. Through
the Count’s influence he was at length set at liberty,
and permitted to walk about the convent.
.tb
The Emperor Joseph II. is called every morning
before six, and rises immediately, though he may
have been sound asleep just before. While dressing
he reads papers, and by seven he receives the
Council of State; after which the Archduke Maximilian,
if in Vienna, makes him a visit of a few
minutes, and they go together to church. The
Emperor then proceeds to his Chancellerie, where
he dictates to several secretaries, keeping them
fully employed until twelve or one, when he holds
// 335.png
.pn +1
a levee. About half-past one, or two, he drives a
calèche and pair to one of the gates of the town,
where a horse is awaiting him. He mounts and
rides round to see fortifications, buildings, gardens,
&c., and, after using violent exercise, returns home
about half-past four, when the signal for the Guards
to salute him is also the signal to serve up the
dinner. While this is being done, which usually
occupies seven minutes, the Emperor dresses himself—he
is always in uniform—and he remains less
than half an hour at table. He eats of the simplest
dishes, and of not more than two or three, talking
all the time to architects, directors of his gardens,
&c. After dinner he walks about the room for a
short time, when he returns to the Chancellerie,
and works assiduously till ten or eleven. He then
visits at one of about a dozen houses, to which he
goes by turns, almost all of them belonging to
widows of general officers, and the greater part Protestants.
They are all elderly women, with the exception
of two—the Princess of Lichtenstein, wife
of the General who is his personal friend; and another
lady, whose husband likewise is particularly
intimate with his Majesty, and works nearly as
hard. About midnight the Emperor returns to
the palace, and as he passes through his apartments
sits down to the harpsichord for a quarter of
an hour, his valet de chambre accompanying him
on the violin. He both plays and sings, and the
// 336.png
.pn +1
music is changed every night. He then goes to
bed. Such is his usual life at Vienna, but when he
is with his troops he surpasses them all in activity.
Rain, tempests, long and fatiguing marches, are
alike disregarded.
.tb
M. de Chevert, who died a lieutenant-general of
the French army, being about to take a fortress by
assault, gave the following instructions to a soldier:
“Tu monteras l’échelle; la sentinelle te criera ‘Qui
est là?’ tu ne répondras rien; il te criera une autre
fois; tu ne diras rien; il te tirera, il te manquera;
tu le tueras et moi je serai derrière toi.” The soldier
took his commander’s word, did as he was bid, and
everything happened precisely as M. de Chevert
had stated.
.tb
A son of Count Sambuca, Prime Minister of the
King of Naples, not long since had a person assassinated.
His father sent him off to Sicily, and it is
probable that no further notice will be taken of the
murder. Another son of the same Minister, as he
was going to a conversazione at Rome, observed
that Cardinal Visconti’s carriage was in front of
him, and immediately ordered his coachman to
drive past it. The man excused himself by saying
that it was not customary to pass a Cardinal; but
Signor Sambuca insisted, and gained his point.
Cardinal Visconti, when he alighted, unaware of the
// 337.png
.pn +1
real state of the case, and being, besides, a very
civil man, told the other that he was exceedingly
sorry for the dispute between their coachmen, but
that it was impossible to answer for the behaviour of
those people. “You are mistaken, Sir,” replied the
Neapolitan, “I ordered my man to pass you; ‘voi
altri Cardinali ci volete soverchiare in tutto.’”[#]
However, he was soon afterwards recalled to Naples
by his father.
.pm fn-start // A
“You cardinals want to give us the go-by in everything.”
.pm fn-end
.tb
It was mentioned lately at a conversazione of the
second class that some one had been murdered by a
servant. An Abbé, who was one of the guests,
being accompanied by his servant on his way home,
was asked by the man if he knew whose servant it
was, and he replied in the negative. “Why, it was
I, Sir,” said the fellow—“I killed the man myself.”
The poor Abbé was so much frightened at the intelligence
that he ordered him to take himself off,
with his livery and lantern.
.tb
In Italy, they call people who hurt their health
by painting, tight-lacing, &c., “martiri del diavolo.”
.tb
Prince Borghese gave a ball about a fortnight
after his sister’s death; whereupon it was written
over his door next morning: “Dignum sororis
// 338.png
.pn +1
funus.” His mother has been dead about a month,
and he is not yet in mourning. Next month he
proposes to give dances at his villa twice a week.
.tb
Lord Lucan said that the Ambassador from Malta
spoke amazingly good French for an African.
.tb
Cardinal Hertzan, Minister of the Empire, having
taken a palace through the interest of the Empress
Queen (Maria Theresa), wanted to turn out the
keeper of a coffee-house who lived in the palace.
The man went to consult a Friar Felice to know
how he could manage to resist the Cardinal. The
friar told him that he saw no human means whereby
he could avoid his loss, but that God Almighty
would perhaps prevent it. The Cardinal being afterwards
in danger of losing great part of his income
through the death of the Empress Queen, Friar
Felice passed for a saint.
.tb
Prince Doria gave to the (newly-made) Cardinal
Altimari a fine carriage, with a pair of beautiful
horses. Prince Borghese sent his tailor and his
merchant to the same Cardinal, desiring him to
order as many suits for himself, and as many
liveries for his servants, as he thought proper. A
woman of the second order, the widow of an “expéditionnaire,”
likewise presented him with one
// 339.png
.pn +1
thousand crowns in papetti, to give away as “mancia”
(“pour boire”—drinking-money), and defrayed
all his briefs, &c., for his new bishopric.
.tb
The Romans called Signora Giulia Falconieri,
“Papa Giulia.” The Pope’s nephews being at the
Opera with that lady, it was said, “Tutti li Santissimi
erano ad Aliberti.”
.tb
At La Valle, a guardian was introduced on the
stage, who advised his ward to keep good company,
and to receive the nobility at her house, but to
have nothing to do with painters. Monsignor Ferretti,
cavaliere servente to the Baroness G., told her
of this, and advised her to take the hint with regard
to a painter who is continually at her house. Upon
this a friend of hers went to the Governor and complained
that the comedians of La Valle had insulted
Madame G.
.tb
Signor Pisani, a Venetian, having had great flirtations
with a woman of the second order at Rome, was
told that he would not dare to continue them when
her cavaliere servente was present. He therefore
went and sat down upon the lady’s knees, and the
cavaliere servente gave him three boxes on the ear,
which he took very quietly—merely remarking that
he was unfortunate in not having his pistols in his
pocket. He afterwards complained of the affront to
// 340.png
.pn +1
the Venetian Ambassador, but a Roman lady said
to him that she wondered how he dared to enter
the company of ladies after an affair of that kind.
The Viscount de la Rochefoucault remarked that in
Rome a man who gives a blow is generally considered
“un brutal,” and that he who receives it is
pitied. The cavaliere servente was said to be the
gentleman of I forget what Prince; while Signor
Pisani belonged to the illustrious family which
gave so many heroes to the republic of Venice.
.tb
An Italian Countess was about to be interred
one day, when an order arrived from
the Secretary of State for the body to be opened,
on suspicion of her death having been caused by
poison. On examination it was found to be so,
and it was supposed that she was poisoned by a servant
who was bribed by her relations; for the deceased
had been a great devotee, and it was feared
that, if she made a will, she would leave all her
money to the Church.
.tb
The Elector-Palatine, after talking some time to
the Princess Santa Croce, went to pay his compliments
to some other lady. Whereupon Signora
Mobilia Falconieri, the mother of the Princess,
flew into a violent passion, and told her daughter
she wondered how she could submit to such an
// 341.png
.pn +1
affront. When she was young, she would never
have permitted a gentleman to leave her to speak
to any one else.
.tb
The following story was circulated in Rome, but
it was denied by Prince Chigi. While the Prince
was hunting on one of his estates, about twenty
miles from Rome, a wild boar made great ravages
on the lands of a poor man, his vassal. The latter
complained several times, but always in vain, and
at last one day shot the boar himself. The Prince’s
gamekeeper, who saw him do this, raised his gun,
fired, and killed the poor fellow on the spot. His
widow presented a memorial to the Prince, begging
redress of her wrongs, but he sent it back to
her, with this answer, “Ci rimedia in cinghiale”
(Give me redress in the matter of the wild boar).
She then came to Rome and appealed to the Pope,
who ordered the gamekeeper to be imprisoned, and
the Prince to pay the woman fifteen crowns a
month as long as she lived.
.tb
When the Constable de Bourbon’s troops sacked
Rome, they carried away with them a large quantity
of papers, among which were several notes
showing where people had buried their money and
plate. Many of the French afterwards returned,
and by means of this information found much
// 342.png
.pn +1
hidden property. This circumstance may have
given rise to the common belief of the Italians
that the French are magicians.
.tb
At one time devout plays representing Paradise,
Purgatory, and Hell, were acted in the theatre of
Chaumont, a small town in Champagne. But by
an unfortunate accident Paradise fell into Purgatory,
and Purgatory into Hell, since which no more
representations have been given, and the affair is
known as “La Diablerie de Chaumont.”
.tb
A Polish Prince having said something impertinent
to a lady at Rome, she answered: “Allez-vous-en;
vous êtes un bel enfant.” “Madame,”
he replied, “vous n’êtes ni l’un ni l’autre.” This
happened some years ago.
.tb
Pope Rezzonico wanted to establish a feast in a
little village, on the canonisation of St. Barbarigo,
a relative of his family. As the villagers did not
choose to go to the expense of a new picture, they
stuck a portrait of the new saint with wax over a
painting of St. Charles Borromée. But the candles
being lighted and the church growing warm, the
wax melted in the middle of the service, and the
temporary saint tumbled down, leaving St. Charles
// 343.png
.pn +1
triumphant. On which some of the people exclaimed,
“A miracle!” and declared that the Pope
had wanted to impose a saint upon them, but the
miracle proved that he was not a true saint.
.tb
When Cardinal Cornaro was Governor, a message
was brought to him while attending the Pope at a
function, stating that, in a quarrel between his
coachman and another, Prince Borghese had
cut to pieces the harness belonging to the latter.
The Pope asked what was the matter, and
Monseigneur Cornaro being taken by surprise, told
the whole affair, and was ordered by his Holiness
to confine the Prince to his own house. This was
done; but the accusation was soon proved to be
entirely false, and to have been got up to injure
the Governor with the Prince, who only a few
days before had sent him a pair of horses as a
present. No apology was made to the Prince;
only Cardinal Giraud was sent to him to say that
Sovereigns might sometimes make mistakes, but
their mistakes were not to be called in question.
.tb
The Abbess of the monastery of San Cesimato
told us, after making many apologies for fear of
scandalising Père Jacquier, who was with us, that
she had dreamt that morning that the three years
for her being abbess had terminated, and that all
// 344.png
.pn +1
the nuns came to desire her to continue in that
office. Upon which she was in such a passion that
she wished them all at the devil, and so loud that
the whole dormitory heard her. She was very lively,
and said that she took the veil at the age of fifteen,
when she was so thin that everybody thought her
in a consumption. She is now upwards of sixty,
and blessed with quite sufficient “en bon point.”
.tb
The coachman of Monseigneur Gregori, who was
about to be made a Cardinal, wounded his wife in
a quarrel, and the poor woman was carried to an
hospital. He insisted upon going in to see her—a
thing never permitted in the part of the building
allotted to women. Having a knife in his hand he
tried to get in by force, but one of the people of
the house picked up a big stone and frightened
him away, at the same time calling to the sbirri to
take him up. They were afraid, however, to do
so when they heard that he was Monseigneur
Gregori’s coachman, until the directors of the hospital
told them that they would be answerable.
They then carried him off to the prison at the
Governo. Monseigneur Gregori sent immediately
to the Governor, to say that he was going out and
wanted his coachman, but the Governor returned
for answer that he, too, wanted him.
// 345.png
.pn +1
Count Scutellari being with the Pope, his Holiness,
to give more weight to an assertion, said,
“Da galantuomo è vero.” The Count assured his
Holiness that he need not have used so strong an
expression, as he was obliged to believe him on
half a word.
.tb
When the Governor (Spinelli) was very ill, a
physician was sent for from Naples, who had been
recommended as the head of the profession in that
city. He said he wanted a man who was not afraid
to deal with the Roman doctors. When he came
they began, as usual, to give him an account of all
the bleedings, &c., with which they had treated
their patient. The Neapolitan, without waiting to
hear the end of their story, ran up, caught Monseigneur
Spinelli by the hand, and exclaimed,
“Séi vive ancora!” The physicians, disconcerted
at the expression, left the case in his hands, and
the Governor has himself told us that he believes
he owes his life entirely to this man. The Princess
of Palestrine went to see him one day when he
was at the worst, and as she was going out his
people asked her what she thought of his state:
“Why,” said she, “he appears to me beyond all
hope of recovery; but he is Spinelli, and till you
give him the last blow on the nose, like the cats he
will escape.”
.tb
// 346.png
.pn +1
The learned and excellent Abbate Cunich was
a native of Ragusa, and entered at an early age
into the order of Jesuits; after the extinction of
which he was Professor of the Greek language at
the Roman College for a long series of years. His
translation of Homer’s Iliad into Latin verse is
esteemed as one of the most faithful, and, at the
same time, one of the finest, versions as to style and
purity of language which it is possible to imagine.
He also translated many beautiful Greek epigrams
from the Anthologia with equal success, and composed
several himself, remarkable for their elegance,
and chiefly encomiastic. The purity of mind, sanctity
of manners, and innocent cheerfulness which
were conspicuous in the character of Cunich, rendered
him universally beloved and respected. He
had warm feelings, and naturally great quickness of
temper; but the deep sense of religion which influenced
his life and behaviour gave him great
power of self-government, which was further
strengthened by his unaffected humility and singular
moderation. At the advanced period of life
when I knew him, his form and features were still
beautiful, and his imagination as active and poetical
as it could have been at twenty-five. He died, as
far as I recollect, in 1796, of a long and painful illness,
which he had concealed and borne with the
greatest patience and resignation, not being confined
to his room till within a very short time of his
// 347.png
.pn +1
death. His affections, being by his profession confined
to friendships, were, in their warmth and sincerity,
more like those of ancient than of modern
times; and he was so disinterested that, although
he counted amongst his friends many persons of
high rank and considerable influence, he never solicited,
or even wished, for riches or distinctions.
He associated only with worthy characters, and,
not having the desire of celebrity, rather withdrew
from the world than encouraged the advances of
new acquaintances who admired his talents. But
this retirement from the world in general was not
owing to any dislike of it. He was singularly candid,
charitable in his opinion of others, and really,
I believe, imagined that others possessed the same
virtues, or, perhaps, greater than those which his
serenity of mind must have made him conscious of
possessing.
.tb
The Abbé Boscovich was also a native of Ragusa,
a small republic in Dalmatia, on the shores of
the Adriatic, celebrated for the industry of its
inhabitants, and for the singularity of its political
situation. I never yet knew a Ragusan who did
not possess genius and learning. Boscovich was a
great mathematician, and a man of probity. He
had a remarkable talent for making extempore
Latin verses. His epigram on the planets is deservedly
admired, as it scatters flowers on a subject
// 348.png
.pn +1
which did not appear susceptible of them. “As in
the order of succession in their orbits round the
Sun, our Earth,” says he, “is between Mars and
Venus, no wonder that love and war govern the
world.”
At the extinction of the order of Jesuits, Boscovich
took refuge in France, and was much beloved
there. A place was created on purpose for him,
the “Inspection of the Optics for the Marine.” He
was intimate with many of the first families of
France, but no sycophant. At an advanced age he
took the resolution of paying a visit to his own
country to see his mother, who was still alive and
in the enjoyment of her faculties. His voluminous
works he printed at Bassano, in the Venetian States.
He became childish at last, but fortunately died
before the French Revolution, which would have
deprived him of many comforts.
.tb
[Among the last of the memoranda collected by
Miss Knight is one bearing the initial letters C. S.,
which purports to describe the characteristic features
of the last three reigns:]
“The reign of George the Third was that of
public and private virtue. The reign of George
the Fourth was that of national fame and glory.
The reign of William the Fourth was that of
domestic kindness and happiness. We humbly
// 349.png
.pn +1
advise our young Queen to take the first for her
model, in which we trust that she will be rewarded
by the two others.”
On this hint Miss Knight composed the following
verses, dated July, 1837, and therefore within six
months of her death:
.pm verse-start
Of George the Third the long and arduous sway,
The reign of worth and virtue we may name.
With George the Fourth we see our isle display
The brilliant scenes of victory and fame.
Affection’s kind, domestic joys we view
In our late William’s short, benignant reign.
O may our Queen her Grandsire’s steps pursue,
And love and glory as reward obtain!
Possessing in all British hearts the place
Her noble ancestors so justly won;
And may the honours of the Brunswick race
Resplendent shine coeval with the sun!
.pm verse-end
.tb
On the back of a card, on which Queen Charlotte
had copied a short sacred poem, Miss Knight
has written:—“Copied by the Queen, and given by
her to E. C. K., December 10, 1805. God Almighty
grant, through the mediation of our Lord Jesus Christ,
that my sins may be forgiven, and that His will may
be the dearest wish of my heart, with gratitude (however
imperfect) for the blessings He has deigned to bestow
on me!”
.sp 2
// 350.png
.pn +1
.pb
.sp 4
.nf c
APPENDIX.
EXCLUSION OF THE PRINCESS OF WALES PROM THE QUEEN’S DRAWING
ROOM—DEATH OF THE PRINCESS CHARLOTTE.
.nf-
.sp 4
// 351.png
.pn +1
.pb
.h2
APPENDIX.
.hr 10%
[The following is the correspondence relative to the exclusion
of the Princess of Wales from the Queen’s Drawing-room,
to which reference is made at the end of the first
and commencement of this volume:]
.nf c
LETTER OF THE PRINCESS OF WALES TO THE
PRINCE REGENT.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
“Sir,—I am once more reluctantly compelled to address
your Royal Highness, and to enclose, for your inspection,
copies of a note which I have had the honour to receive
from the Queen, and of the answer which I have thought
it my duty to return to her Majesty. It would be in vain
for me to inquire into the reasons of the alarming declaration
made by your Royal Highness, that you have taken
the fixed and unalterable determination never to meet me,
upon any occasion, either in public or private. Of these,
your Royal Highness is pleased to state yourself to be the
only judge. You will perceive by my answer to her Majesty,
that I have only been restrained by motives of personal
consideration towards her Majesty, from exercising
my right of appearing before her Majesty at the public
drawing-rooms to be held in the ensuing month.
“But, Sir, lest it should be by possibility supposed that
the words of your Royal Highness can convey any insinuation
from which I shrink, I am bound to demand of your
// 352.png
.pn +1
Royal Highness, what circumstances can justify the proceedings
you have thus thought fit to adopt?
“I owe it to myself, to my daughter, and to the nation,
to which I am deeply indebted for the vindication of my
honour, to remind your Royal Highness of what you know:
that after open persecution and mysterious inquiries, upon
undefined charges, the malice of my enemies fell entirely
upon themselves; and that I was restored by the King,
with the advice of his Ministers, to the full enjoyment of
my rank in his court, upon my complete acquittal. Since
his Majesty’s lamented illness, I have demanded, in the
face of Parliament and the country, to be proved guilty
or to be treated as innocent. I have been declared innocent;
I will not submit to be treated as guilty.
“Sir, your Royal Highness may possibly refuse to read
this letter. But the world must know that I have written
it: and they will see my real motives for foregoing, in this
instance, the rights of my rank. Occasions, however, may
arise (one, I trust, is far distant) when I must appear in
public, and your Royal Highness must be present also.
Can your Royal Highness have contemplated the full extent
of your declaration? Has your Royal Highness forgotten
the approaching marriage of our daughter, and the
possibility of our coronation?
“I waive my rights in a case where I am not absolutely
bound to assert them, in order to relieve the Queen, as far
as I can, from the painful situation in which she is placed
by your Royal Highness; not from any consciousness of
blame, not from any doubt of the existence of those rights,
or of my own worthiness to enjoy them.
“Sir, the time you have selected for this proceeding is
calculated to make it peculiarly galling. Many illustrious
strangers are already arrived in England; among others, as
I am informed, the illustrious heir of the House of Orange,
who has announced himself to me as my future son-in-law.
From their society I am unjustly excluded. Others are
expected of rank equal to your own, to rejoice with your
// 353.png
.pn +1
Royal Highness in the peace of Europe. My daughter
will, for the first time, appear in the splendour and publicity
becoming the approaching nuptials of the presumptive
Heiress of this Empire. This season your Royal
Highness has chosen for treating me with fresh and unprovoked
indignity: and of all his Majesty’s subjects, I
alone am prevented by your Royal Highness from appearing
in my place to partake of the general joy, and am
deprived of the indulgence in those feelings of pride and
affection permitted to every mother but me.
.ti +8
“I am, Sir,
.ti +12
“Your Royal Highness’s
.ti +16
“Faithful wife,
.ti +20
“Caroline P.”
“Connaught House, May 26, 1814.”
.pm letter-end
.tb
.nf c
(Enclosures.)
THE QUEEN TO THE PRINCESS OF WALES.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
.rj
“Windsor Castle, May 23, 1814.
“The Queen considers it to be her duty to lose no time
in acquainting the Princess of Wales, that she has received
a communication from her son, the Prince Regent, in which
he states, that her Majesty’s intention of holding two
drawing-rooms in the ensuing month having been notified
to the public, he must declare that he considers that
his own presence at her court cannot be dispensed with;
and that he desires it may be distinctly understood, for
reasons of which he alone can be the judge, to be his
fixed and unalterable determination not to meet the Princess
of Wales upon any occasion, either in public or
private.
“The Queen is thus placed under the painful necessity
of intimating to the Princess of Wales the impossibility of
her Majesty’s receiving her Royal Highness at her drawing-rooms.
.rj
“Charlotte R.”
.pm letter-end
.tb
// 354.png
.pn +1
.nf c
ANSWER OF THE PRINCESS OF WALES TO THE QUEEN.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
“Madam,—I have received the letter which your Majesty
has done me the honour to address to me, prohibiting
my appearance at the public drawing-rooms which will be
held by your Majesty in the ensuing month, with great
surprise and regret.
“I will not presume to discuss with your Majesty topics
which must be as painful to your Majesty as to myself.
“Your Majesty is well acquainted with the affectionate
regard with which the King was so kind as to honour me
up to the period of his Majesty’s indisposition, which no
one of his Majesty’s subjects has so much cause to lament
as myself: and that his Majesty was graciously pleased to
bestow upon me the most unequivocal and gratifying proof
of his attachment and approbation, by his public reception
of me at his court at a season of severe and unmerited
affliction, when his protection was most necessary to me.
There I have since uninterruptedly paid my respects to
your Majesty. I am now without appeal or protection.
But I cannot so far forget my duty to the King, and to
myself, as to surrender my right to appear at any public
drawing-room to be held by your Majesty.
“That I may not, however, add to the difficulty and uneasiness
of your Majesty’s situation, I yield in the present
instance to the will of his Royal Highness the Prince Regent,
announced to me by your Majesty, and shall not
present myself at the drawing-rooms of the next month.
“It would be presumptuous in me to attempt to inquire
of your Majesty the reasons of his Royal Highness the
Prince Regent for this harsh proceeding, of which his
Royal Highness can alone be the judge. I am unconscious
of offence; and in that reflection I must endeavour to find
consolation for all the mortifications I experience; even for
this, the last, the most unexpected, and the most severe;
// 355.png
.pn +1
the prohibition given to me alone, to appear before your
Majesty, to offer my congratulations upon the happy termination
of those calamities with which Europe has been
so long afflicted, in the presence of the illustrious personages
who will in all probability be assembled at your
Majesty’s court, with whom I am so closely connected by
birth and marriage.
“I beseech your Majesty to do me an act of justice, to
which, in the present circumstances, your Majesty is the
only person competent, by acquainting those illustrious
strangers with the motives of personal consideration towards
your Majesty which alone induce me to abstain
from the exercise of my right to appear before your
Majesty: and that I do now, as I have done at all times,
defy the malice of my enemies to fix upon me the shadow
of any one imputation which could render me unworthy
of their society or regard.
“Your Majesty will, I am sure, not be displeased that I
should relieve myself from a suspicion of disrespect towards
your Majesty, by making public the cause of my absence
from court at a time when the duties of my station would
otherwise peculiarly demand my attendance.
.ti +4
“I have the honour to be,
.ti +8
“Your Majesty’s most obedient
.ti +12
“Daughter-in-law and servant,
.ti +16
“P. Caroline.
“Connaught House, May 24, 1814.”
.pm letter-end
.tb
.nf c
THE QUEEN TO THE PRINCESS OF WALES.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
.rj
“Windsor Castle, May 25, 1814.
“The Queen has received, this afternoon, the Princess
of Wales’s letter of yesterday, in reply to the communication
which she was desired by the Prince Regent to make
to her; and she is sensible of the disposition expressed by
// 356.png
.pn +1
her Royal Highness, not to discuss with her topics which
must be painful to both.
“The Queen considers it incumbent upon her to send a
copy of the Princess of Wales’s letter to the Prince Regent;
and her Majesty could have felt no hesitation in
communicating to the illustrious strangers who may possibly
be present at her court, the circumstances which will
prevent the Princess of Wales from appearing there, if
her Royal Highness had not rendered a compliance with her
wish to this effect unnecessary, by intimating her intention
of making public the cause of her absence.
.rj
“Charlotte R.”
.pm letter-end
.tb
.nf c
THE ANSWER OF THE PRINCESS OF WALES TO THE QUEEN.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
“The Princess of Wales has the honour to acknowledge
the receipt of a note from the Queen, dated yesterday;
and begs permission to return her best thanks to her
Majesty, for her gracious condescension in the willingness
expressed by her Majesty to have communicated to the
illustrious strangers, who will in all probability be present
at her Majesty’s court, the reasons which have induced
her Royal Highness not to be present.
“Such communication, as it appears to her Royal Highness,
cannot be the less necessary on account of any publicity
which it may be in the power of her Royal Highness
to give to her motives; and the Princess of Wales, therefore,
entreats the active good offices of her Majesty, upon
an occasion wherein the Princess of Wales feels it so essential
to her that she should not be misunderstood.
.rj
“Caroline, P.
“Connaught Place, May 26.”
.tb
.nf c
THE QUEEN TO THE PRINCESS OF WALES.
.nf-
.pm letter-start
“The Queen cannot omit to acknowledge the receipt of
the Princess of Wales’s note, of yesterday, although it does
// 357.png
.pn +1
not appear to her Majesty to require any other reply than
that conveyed to her Royal Highness’s preceding letter.
.rj
“Charlotte, R.”
.pm letter-end
.tb
.nf c
DEATH OF THE PRINCESS CHARLOTTE.
.nf-
[The following details of the Princess’s death are taken
from a letter, addressed by Mr. H. F. Cooke to Mr.
Thomas Raikes (under date November 6, 1817), and published
in the interesting volume entitled “Correspondence
of Thomas Raikes with the Duke of Wellington and other
Distinguished Contemporaries.”]
.pm letter-start
“The Princess Charlotte’s death has caused a general
gloom throughout the country. The particulars of this
truly melancholy event will be made known to you through
the papers, with all the accuracy of official report.
“There are some few circumstances as attending the
death of this interesting woman that may not find their way
abroad; for example, the courage with which she suffered,
and the resignation which she displayed in death.
“The faculty of mind never abandoned her. She asked,
about an hour previous to death, whether there was any
danger: the difficulty of breathing from about that time
prevented her speaking much. When Baillie and Croft
administered brandy, hot wine, sal-volatile, &c., she said,
‘You make me drunk. Pray leave me quiet. I find it
affects my head.’ And shortly after this, raising herself in
the bed, she heaved a deep sigh, fell back, and expired.
“The act of dying was not painful. There certainly
must have been spasm, but I have not heard that it was
at the heart. Neither do I believe the family conceived
that she was in danger, even an hour before she died. It
is a blow which the nation really appears to feel acutely,
as much as it is possible to suppose the fate of any one not
materially connected with one could be felt.
// 358.png
.pn +1
“The Regent is terribly shook by this blow; so unexpected
that he was completely overset when he was told
of it.
“He had left Sudbourn upon hearing of the protracted
labour, but was in London informed that the child was
dead and she remarkably well.”
.pm letter-end
.sp 2
.pb
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
FOOTNOTES.
.sp 2
.fm lz=th
.sp 4
.nf c
THE END.
.nf-
// 359.png
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.sp 4
.nf c
C. WHITING, BEAUFORT HOUSE, STRAND.
.nf-
.sp 4
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.sp 2
.dv class=tnbox // TN box start
.ul
.it Transcriber’s Notes:
.ul indent=1
.it Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
.it Typographical errors were silently corrected.
.it Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a\
predominant form was found in this book.
.if t
.it Text that was in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
.if-
.ul-
.ul-
.dv- // TN box end
\_