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Glyn Hughes' SQUASHED WRITERS ALL THE BOOKS YOU THINK YOU OUGHT TO HAVE READ In their own words... but magically Squashed into half-hour short stories... |
The
Squashed version of
Memoirs
of
Marguerite Jeanne de
Launay, Baronne de Staal
1755
A Convent Child
If I write the record of my life, it is not because it deserves
attention, but in order to amuse myself by my recollections. My
story is just the opposite of the ordinary romance, wherein a
girl brought up as a peasant becomes an illustrious princess; for
I was treated in childhood as a person of distinction, and had to
find out later that I was a nobody and owned nothing in the
world. And so, not having been trained from the first to ill
fortune, my spirit has always rebelled against the servitude in
which I have had to live.
My father, for some reason that I never knew, had to leave France
and live in England; and my mother, alone in Paris and without
resources, took me with her as an infant to find a refuge in the
abbey of Saint-Sauveur d'Evreux in Normandy, where Madame de La
Rochefoucauld, the abbess, received us free of charge.
There was at that time a lengthy disagreement between King Louis
XIV. and the Pope with regard to the nomination of abbesses, in
consequence of which two ladies Mesdames de Grieu, having been
disappointed of an expected establishment, retired to
Saint-Sauveur, where they formed a great friendship with my
mother, and became devoted to her two-year-old child. I was
naturally very popular in the convent, and having a bright
disposition I was educated with the utmost care.
Chiefly with a view to giving me greater advantage, the elder
Madame de Grieu sought and at length obtained the Priory of
Saint-Louis at Rouen, and took me thither with the consent of my
mother. Saint-Louis was like a little kingdom, where I reigned as
a sovereign; the abbess and her sister had no thought but to
satisfy my every fancy, and the whole convent was forced to pay
court to me. All that was done for me cost me so little that it
seemed a matter of course that I should be flattered and served,
and at an early age I had contracted all the defects which I have
since had to allow for in the great.
This extreme indulgence would have turned my defects into vices,
if devotion had not ruled my passions from the first. Religion
was the one great object before my eyes; I had been well
instructed in it; I read continually the devotional books in the
convent library, and passed much of my time in prayer and
meditation. Yet my early desire to become a nun passed gradually
away, until I thought of it no more.
Mademoiselle de Silly, an amiable and cultivated young lady whose
actions were ruled by principles rather than by feelings, came to
live at Saint-Louis, and I was soon attached to her with all the
ardour of a girl's affection; her tastes became mine, and I used
to read all day beside her. She was then studying the philosophy
of Descartes, and I became absorbed in questions of that kind to
the neglect of everything else, until, fearing lest they might
disturb my faith, I resolutely banished them from my mind.
I was about fourteen years old when the convent of Saint-Louis
fell into great poverty owing to a famine which was desolating
France, and the disaffection of the nuns was centred on me as a
chief cause of unnecessary expense. Their complaints came to the
archbishop of Rouen, and abbess had difficulty in keeping me with
her. My helpless condition began to force itself on my attention;
and I realised that if the abbess were to die I was alone and
without support in the world.
An unexpected event now drew me closer to Mademoiselle de Silly.
Her mother, having come to Rouen, took her home to Silly, and
invited me to accompany her. I accepted joyfully, and spent
several months in the solitary and melancholy old castle. The
Marquis was extremely economical, the Marquise very devout, and
we saw few people. One visitor from the neighborhood, however,
attracted me strongly; and as he came often and stayed long, my
friend and I agreed that one of us had pleased him. When he had
declared his affection, and it was not for me, I learned what
jealousy is-a kind of horror like that of falling down through a
fathomless abyss.
During the next visit to Silly in the following year the son of
the house arrived, and at first kept very much to himself and to
his books. But having heard his sister and myself complaining of
these unsociable ways, he frankly confessed his fault and amended
it, and from that day we spent every hour together. His mind and
his manner was infinitely agreeable; and in my successive visits
to Silly we formed a delightful friendship which was never
interrupted by more ardent feelings.
Thrown on the World
At length my dear abbess fell so dangerously ill that I saw I was
about to lose her; and I became desolately aware that I owed her
all, and that her death would not only leave me absolutely
helpless, but would also deprive me of my best friend. I never
knew anyone else so abundant in goodness, with so much sweetness,
attention for others and forgetfulness of self, nor with such
exact regard for every duty. Her death came soon, and it was
evident that neither her sister nor I could remain at the
convent. Several generous helpers came forward with offers of
support, but in my uncertain position I judged it better to
refuse them all. I was resolved to suffer any misery and
servitude rather than sacrifice my independence, and only
accepted a small loan sufficient to take me to Paris.
I was soon in the great city, looking out for a situation as
children's governess; fortunately, I had a taste for that
occupation, and imagined that taste for it meant talent. I had a
sister, in the household of the Duchess de La Ferté, and found
her very amiable and helpful. With her assistance I went to board
at a cheap rate in the convent of the Presentation, and she
succeeded in inspiring her mistress with so elevated an idea of
my attainments that the Duchess soon afterwards sent for me.
After showing me off as a prodigy of learning to all her friends,
the Duchess de La Ferté, a voluble and enthusiastic woman,
conceived a violent affection for me, and projected innumerable
schemes for my advancement, which ended in my being received into
her own household as her secretary.
I should have been delighted with this position if I had not
remembered how my sister, who had gone there as her favourite,
had fallen to the situation of chambermaid, and if I had not
realised that my mistress's affection would probably be as
short-lived as it was intemperate. It proved to be so indeed; it
was succeeded by a hatred as violent as her attachment had been;
and after subjecting me to every indignity she finally disposed
of me by placing me in the household of the Duchess of Maine, at
Sceaux.
Here I inhabited a tiny room, without windows or fireplace, and
so low that it was impossible to stand upright. I was given
sewing to do, but my first piece of work proved my incapacity,
and my extremely short-sight made me equally helpless in waiting
on the Duchess. I was astonished at the patience with which she
bore my awkwardness, but my fellow-servants, with whom I was most
unpopular, were less merciful. The hard and thankless existence,
so different from anything which I had been accustomed, threw me
into a profound depression, until I began to cherish the idea of
taking leave of life.
But gradually my situation altered for the better. Her Serene
Highness the Duchess began to take notice of me, and became
accustomed to speak to me and to take interest and pleasure in my
replies. She had now succeeded in raising her family to rank
equal to her own, and by a famous edict her children and their
descendants had been brought within the succession to the crown.
Her delight in amusements and in pageants was now at its highest,
and it happened that the Abbé de Vaubrun, designing a
spectacular piece in honor of Night, confided to me the task of
writing and delivering an epilogue in that character. My
stage-fright spoiled my elocution, but from that day I was
entrusted with the organisation of these magnificent
entertainments, and the last of them was entirely designed and
written by myself. By this means I came to take a quite different
place in the household.
Political Intrigues
King Louis XIV. had been failing for some time, though every one
pretended not to notice it; and the Duchess of Maine, ever
anxious for the greatness of her family, was very eager to know
his testamentary intentions. Enough was ascertained, by the help
of Madame de Maintenon, to show that the King's dispositions were
in favour of the Duke of Orleans, and the mistake was made of
confiding to the Duke his future advantage. As the illness
progressed, a council of regency was formed with the Duke of
Orleans at its head, and when the King died the Duke was
appointed Regent by Parliament, and the Duke of Maine was
entrusted with the education of the young King.
The Duchess of Maine, who had come up to Paris for this anxious
time, suffered a good deal from insomnia, and now called me in to
read to her every night. But there was more conversation than
reading, and she poured out to me in entire confidence all her
secrets, projects, complaints and regrets. This touching
confidence made me very deeply attached to her; and when she and
her husband removed to the Tuilleries to superintend the King's
education, they took me with them.
In defence of the interests of her family in the succession to
the Crown, which were threatened by the Duke of Orleans, Cardinal
Polignac and others undertook the preparation of a very learned
memoir, based on a great mass of historical and legal precedents;
the Duchess threw herself into the most laborious researches to
assist them, and I was set to study ancient volumes and to
correspond with all kinds of authorities. The great work was
finished at last; it was a fine, well-written production; but it
did not repay the trouble it had cost. The question was decided
against the family of Maine, the edict conferring on them the
succession to the Crown was revoked, and the rank of princes of
the blood was taken from them.
It is impossible to describe the sorrow of my mistress at this
sudden overthrow of the fortunes of her family. She was wholly
unable to acquiesce in it, and her illtreatment in France
suggested to her the idea of seeking help from the King of Spain.
The Baron de Walef, who was going to that court, undertook to
represent her case there, and the Duchess of Maine held secret
interviews with the Spanish ambassador in Paris. Several other
persons became implicated in these intrigues; the Duchess became
more deeply compromised than she had at first intended; and her
interests became interwoven with other chimerical projects,
including the restoration of the Pretender in England. These
movements became known to the Duke of Orleans, and my mistress's
intrigues were soon brought to an end.
On December 9, 1718, we were informed that the house of the
Spanish Ambassador was surrounded by troops, and a day or two
later we learned that our arrest, on the charge of inciting to
revolution, might be expected at any moment. On the 29th, we were
awakened early in the morning to find the house full of soldiers;
the Duchess was carried off to imprisonment at Dijon, and the
Duke of Maine was immured in the citadel of Dourlans in Picardy.
In the Bastille
I was taken in a carriage with three musketeers, to a little
bridge before a wall, and delivered to the governor of the
Bastille, who sent me to a large empty room, the walls of which
were covered with charcoal drawings executed by former prisoners.
A little chair was brought me, a bundle of wood was lighted on
the hearth, one small candle was fixed to the wall, and I heard
half a dozen locks and bolts closing the door that shut me off
from mankind. The first hour, which I spent gazing at my
crackling fire, was the most desolate of all my imprisonment.
Then the governor appeared, with my attendant Mademoiselle
Rondel; I was rejoiced to find that she was to relieve my
solitude, and to hear from her that she had managed to hide all
my papers after my capture. Our room was presently furnished with
beds, table and chairs; on the following day we were given books
and a pack of cards; our meals were tolerable, and except for our
captivity we were comfortable enough.
The two judges charged with the interrogation of the prisoners in
our affair, of whom there seemed to be a considerable number,
came daily, and held their interviews in a room immediately below
ours; so that Rondel could see through the window one of our
acquaintances after another being brought across the court to be
examined. My time did not come for many days, and I spent long
hours racking my brain for the answers which I ought to give. The
fear of the questions by torture began to force itself on my
mind; and though I thought I could face pain or even death I was
doubtful whether I should be able to keep silence under that
dreadful ordeal.
After these weeks of suspense I was called before the judges, and
was asked whether the Duchess of Maine had not great confidence
in me and whether I had not been aware of her treasonable
correspondence and intrigues. The line I took was to represent my
services to my mistress as having been of a very humble nature; I
insisted that I knew nothing of her private affairs, and had seen
and heard nothing that could at all compromise her loyalty to the
Government. This appeared to satisfy them for the present, and
after enquiring whether I was well treated in prison they
dismissed me.
I did not suffer from ennui in the Bastille; I devised for myself
many little occupations; and soon a surreptitious correspondence
with the Chevalier de Menil, who had been imprisoned for
participation in our affair, gave interest to the days. We were
even permitted occasional interviews by favour of one of the
subordinate officials, and before we regained our liberty I had
promised to be his wife.
The Regent at last became anxious to bring to an end the whole
episode of the Duchess of Maine's intrigue; but he wished first
to secure a full admission of guilt from the principal actors in
it. The Duchess was promised her complete liberty if she would
send him a frank confession in writing, which should be seen by
no one but himself. Finding herself in a position to secure the
freedom of all those whom she had imperilled, she sent the Duke
of Orleans the required paper, in which she disclosed everything
in detail and with entire sincerity.
I was examined again without making any disclosure, but after
receiving the written command of the Duchess I wrote out a
declaration of all that I knew and was a few days later set at
liberty, after two years of captivity. I went down at once to
Sceaux, where I was affectionately received by my mistress.
Returning to Paris two days later, to fetch my things from the
Bastille, I called at the Convent of the Presentation, and found
in the parlour the Chevalier de Menil. I was astonished at his
manner, no less than by what he said; it was evidently that his
only desire was to break his engagement with me. I realised that
the man was without honour or kindness, and yet it was difficult
to detach my affections from him.
It was about a year later that M. Dacier was introduced to me,
after the death of his wife, by the Duchess de La Ferté, and an
ardent desire for liberty from my condition of servitude led me
to accept his proposal of marriage, subject only to be the
permission of my Duchess. This she was reluctant to give, and the
matter was still under discussion when we heard of M. Dacier's
sudden death.
The rest of my life, though it has been a long one, contains
little of interest. I found myself without any object to live
for, and a strange deadness of feeling came over me, harder to
bear than illness or death. I had a distaste for existence and a
horror of the world, and desired nothing more than to hide myself
away. A little pension had been secured for me; my mistress had
fallen dangerously ill; I wished to leave Sceaux in order to run
away from a new attachment which was gaining power over me; and
the thought of entering a Carmelite house became a settled
project. But I was refused even this last refuge; the prioress
deciding that I had no vocation for the religious life.
I spent several years without coming to any harmony either with
myself or with fortune. Several offers of marriage were made to
me, but I could not bring myself to accept any of them, until a
sudden fancy for the sweet simplicities of country life led me to
agree to a marriage with M. de Staal.
A few days after my marriage I heard of the death of the Duchess
of Maine. I never knew a more perfectly reasonable woman. She was
all feeling; even her thoughts were really sentiments; she was
lively without moodiness, impassioned without violence, always
animated; sweet and sensible. There was a vivid warmth about her,
that made her a perfectly gracious friend.