Memoirs of Louis XIV and His Court and of the Regency — Volume 02 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 87 pages of information about Memoirs of Louis XIV and His Court and of the Regency — Volume 02.

Memoirs of Louis XIV and His Court and of the Regency — Volume 02 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 87 pages of information about Memoirs of Louis XIV and His Court and of the Regency — Volume 02.

My son this day (26th of August) assembled the Council of the Regency.  He had summoned the Parliament by a ‘lettre-de-cachet’:  they repaired to the Tuileries in a procession on foot, dressed in scarlet robes, hoping by this display to excite the people in their favour; but the mob only called out, “Where are these lobsters going?” The King had caused the Keeper of the Seals to make a remonstrance to the Parliament for having infringed upon his authority in publishing decrees without his sanction.  He commanded them to quash the decree, which was done; and to confirm the authority of the Keeper of the Seals, which they did also.  He then ordered them with some sternness not to interfere with the affairs of the Government beyond their province; and as the Duc du Maine had excited the Parliament against the King, he was deprived of the care of His Majesty’s education, and he with his brothers were degraded from the rank of Princes of the blood, which had been granted to them.  They will in future have no other rank than that of their respective peerages; but the Duc du Maine alone, for the fidelity he has always manifested towards the King, will retain his rank for his life, although his issue, if he should have any, will not inherit it.

[Saint-Simon reports that it was the Comte de Toulouse who was allowed to retain his rank.—­See The Memoirs of Saint-Simon, Chapter XCIII.—­D.W.]

Madame d’Orleans was in the greatest despair, and came to Paris in such a condition as moved my pity for her.  Madame du Maine is reported to have said, three weeks ago, at a grand dinner, “I am accused of having caused the Parliament to revolt against the Duc d’Orleans, but I despise him too much to take so noble a vengeance; I will be revenged in another manner.”

The Parliament had very notable projects in hand.  If my son had delayed four-and-twenty hours longer in removing the Duc du Maine from the King it would have been decided to declare His Majesty of full age; but my son frustrated this by dismissing the Duke, and degrading him at the same time.  The Chief President is said to have been so frightened that he remained motionless, as if he had been petrified by a gaze at the head of Medusa.  That celebrated personage of antiquity could not have been more a fury than Madame du Maine; she threatened dreadfully, and did not scruple to say, in the presence of her household, that she would yet find means to give the Regent such a blow as should make him bite the dust.  That old Maintenon and her pupil have also had a finger in the pie.

The Parliament asked pardon of my son, which proves that the Duc and Duchesse du Maine were the mainsprings of the plot.

There is reason to believe that the old woman and the former Chancellor were also implicated in it.  The Chancellor, who would have betrayed my son in so shameful a manner, was under the heaviest obligations to him.  What has happened is a great mortification to Maintenon, and yet she has not given up all hopes.  This makes me very anxious, for I know how expertly she can manage poison.  My son, instead of being cautious, goes about the town at night in strange carriages, sometimes supping with one or another of his people, none of whom are worthy of being trusted, and who, excepting their wit, have not one good quality.

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Memoirs of Louis XIV and His Court and of the Regency — Volume 02 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.