Suddenly the door of the room where Joan was so earnestly praying
opened with a dull sound: two Hungarian barons in armour entered and signed
to the queen to follow them. Joan arose silently and obeyed; but a cry
of pain went up from her heart when she recognised the place where
both Andre and Charles of Durazzo had died a violent death. But she
collected her forces, and asked calmly why she was brought hither. For all
answer, one of the men showed her a cord of silk and gold....
"May the
will of a just God be done!" cried Joan, and fell upon her knees. Some
minutes later she had ceased to suffer.
This was the third corpse that
was thrown over the balcony at Aversa.
*THE MAN IN THE IRON
MASK [An Essay]*
(This is the essay entitled The Man in the Iron
Mask, not the novel "The Man in the Iron Mask" [The Novel]
Dumas #28[nmaskxxx.xxx]2759])
For nearly one hundred years this
curious problem has exercised the imagination of writers of fiction—and of
drama, and the patience of the learned in history. No subject is more obscure
and elusive, and none more attractive to the general mind. It is a legend to
the meaning of which none can find the key and yet in which everyone
believes. Involuntarily we feel pity at the thought of that long
captivity surrounded by so many extraordinary precautions, and when we dwell
on the mystery which enveloped the captive, that pity is not only
deepened but a kind of terror takes possession of us. It is very likely that
if the name of the hero of this gloomy tale had been known at the time,
he would now be forgotten. To give him a name would be to relegate him
at once to the ranks of those commonplace offenders who quickly exhaust
our interest and our tears. But this being, cut off from the world
without leaving any discoverable trace, and whose disappearance
apparently caused no void—this captive, distinguished among captives by
the unexampled nature of his punishment, a prison within a prison, as if
the walls of a mere cell were not narrow enough, has come to typify for
us the sum of all the human misery and suffering ever inflicted by
unjust tyranny.
Who was the Man in the Mask? Was he rapt away into
this silent seclusion from the luxury of a court, from the intrigues of
diplomacy, from the scaffold of a traitor, from the clash of battle? What did
he leave behind? Love, glory, or a throne? What did he regret when hope had
fled? Did he pour forth imprecations and curses on his tortures and
blaspheme against high Heaven, or did he with a sigh possess his soul in
patience?
The blows of fortune are differently received according to the
different characters of those on whom they fall; and each one of us who
in imagination threads the subterranean passages leading to the cells
of Pignerol and Exilles, and incarcerates himself in the
Iles Sainte-Marguerite and in the Bastille, the successive scenes of
that long-protracted agony will give the prisoner a form shaped by his
own fancy and a grief proportioned to his own power of suffering. How
we long to pierce the thoughts and feel the heart-beats and watch
the trickling tears behind that machine-like exterior, that impassible
mask! Our imagination is powerfully excited by the dumbness of that fate
borne by one whose words never reached the outward air, whose thoughts
could never be read on the hidden features; by the isolation of forty
years secured by two-fold barriers of stone and iron, and she clothes
the object of her contemplation in majestic splendour, connects the
mystery which enveloped his existence with mighty interests, and persists
in regarding the prisoner as sacrificed for the preservation of
some dynastic secret involving the peace of the world and the stability of
a throne.
And when we calmly reflect on the whole case, do we feel
that our first impulsively adopted opinion was wrong? Do we regard our belief
as a poetical illusion? I do not think so; on the contrary, it seems to
me that our good sense approves our fancy’s flight. For what can be
more natural than the conviction that the secret of the name, age,
and features of the captive, which was so perseveringly kept through
long years at the cost of so much care, was of vital importance to
the Government? No ordinary human passion, such as anger, hate,
or vengeance, has so dogged and enduring a character; we feel that
the measures taken were not the expression of a love of cruelty, for
even supposing that Louis XIV were the most cruel of princes, would he
not have chosen one of the thousand methods of torture ready to his
hand before inventing a new and strange one? Moreover, why did he
voluntarily burden himself with the obligation of surrounding a prisoner with
such numberless precautions and such sleepless vigilance? Must he not
have feared that in spite of it all the walls behind which he concealed
the dread mystery would one day let in the light? Was it not through
his entire reign a source of unceasing anxiety? And yet he respected
the life of the captive whom it was so difficult to hide, and the
discovery of whose identity would have been so dangerous. It would have been
so easy to bury the secret in an obscure grave, and yet the order was
never given. Was this an expression of hate, anger, or any other
passion? Certainly not; the conclusion we must come to in regard to the
conduct of the king is that all the measures he took against the prisoner
were dictated by purely political motives; that his conscience,
while allowing him to do everything necessary to guard the secret, did
not permit him to take the further step of putting an end to the days of
an unfortunate man, who in all probability was guilty of no
crime.
Courtiers are seldom obsequious to the enemies of their master, so
that we may regard the respect and consideration shown to the Man in the
Mask by the governor Saint-Mars, and the minister Louvois, as a
testimony, not only to his high rank, but also to his innocence.
For
my part, I make no pretensions to the erudition of the bookworm, and I cannot
read the history of the Man in the Iron Mask without feeling my blood boil at
the abominable abuse of power—the heinous crime of which he was the
victim.
A few years ago, M. Fournier and I, thinking the subject suitable
for representation on the stage, undertook to read, before dramatising
it, all the different versions of the affair which had been published up
to that time. Since our piece was successfully performed at the Odeon
two other versions have appeared: one was in the form of a letter
addressed to the Historical Institute by M. Billiard, who upheld the
conclusions arrived at by Soulavie, on whose narrative our play was founded;
the other was a work by the bibliophile Jacob, who followed a new system
of inquiry, and whose book displayed the results of deep research
and extensive reading. It did not, however, cause me to change my
opinion. Even had it been published before I had written my drama, I should
still have adhered to the idea as to the most probable solution of the
problem which I had arrived at in 1831, not only because it was
incontestably the most dramatic, but also because it is supported by those
moral presumptions which have such weight with us when considering a dark
and doubtful question like the one before us. It will, be objected,
perhaps, that dramatic writers, in their love of the marvellous and the
pathetic, neglect logic and strain after effect, their aim being to obtain
the applause of the gallery rather than the approbation of the learned.
But to this it may be replied that the learned on their part sacrifice
a great deal to their love of dates, more or less exact; to their
desire to elucidate some point which had hitherto been considered obscure,
and which their explanations do not always clear up; to the temptation
to display their proficiency in the ingenious art of manipulating facts
and figures culled from a dozen musty volumes into one consistent
whole.
Our interest in this strange case of imprisonment arises, not
alone from its completeness and duration, but also from our uncertainty as to
the motives from which it was inflicted. Where erudition alone
cannot suffice; where bookworm after bookworm, disdaining the conjectures
of his predecessors, comes forward with a new theory founded on
some forgotten document he has hunted out, only to find himself in his
turn pushed into oblivion by some follower in his track, we must turn
for guidance to some other light than that of scholarship; especially if,
on strict investigation, we find that not one learned solution rests on
a sound basis of fact.
In the question before us, which, as we said
before, is a double one, asking not only who was the Man in the Iron Mask,
but why he was relentlessly subjected to this torture till the moment of his
death, what we need in order to restrain our fancy is
mathematical demonstration, and not philosophical induction.
While I
do not go so far as to assert positively that Abbe Soulavie has once for all
lifted the veil which hid the truth, I am yet persuaded that no other system
of research is superior to his, and that no other suggested solution has so
many presumptions in its favour. I have not reached this firm conviction on
account of the great and prolonged success of our drama, but because of the
ease with which all the opinions adverse to those of the abbe may be
annihilated by pitting them one against the other.
The qualities that
make for success being quite different in a novel and in a drama, I could
easily have founded a romance on the fictitious loves of Buckingham and the
queen, or on a supposed secret marriage between her and Cardinal Mazarin,
calling to my aid a work by Saint-Mihiel which the bibliophile declares he
has never read, although it is assuredly neither rare nor difficult of
access. I might also have merely expanded my drama, restoring to the
personages therein their true names and relative positions, both of which the
exigencies of the stage had sometimes obliged me to alter, and while allowing
them to fill the same parts, making them act more in accordance with
historical fact. No fable however far-fetched, no grouping of characters
however improbable, can, however, destroy the interest which the innumerable
writings about the Iron Mask excite, although no two agree in details, and
although each author and each witness declares himself in possession of
complete knowledge. No work, however mediocre, however worthless even, which
has appeared on this subject has ever failed of success, not even,
for example, the strange jumble of Chevalier de Mouhy, a kind of
literary braggart, who was in the pay of Voltaire, and whose work was
published anonymously in 1746 by Pierre de Hondt of The Hague. It is divided
into six short parts, and bears the title, ’Le Masque de Fer, ou
les Aventures admirables du Prre et du Fils’. An absurd romance by
Regnault Warin, and one at least equally absurd by Madame Guenard, met with
a like favourable reception. In writing for the theatre, an author
must choose one view of a dramatic situation to the exclusion of all
others, and in following out this central idea is obliged by the inexorable
laws of logic to push aside everything that interferes with its
development. A book, on the contrary, is written to be discussed; it brings
under the notice of the reader all the evidence produced at a trial which has
as yet not reached a definite conclusion, and which in the case before
us will never reach it, unless, which is most improbable, some lucky
chance should lead to some new discovery.
The first mention of the
prisoner is to be found in the ’Memoires secrets pour servir a l’Histoire de
Perse’ in one 12mo volume, by an anonymous author, published by the
’Compagnie des Libraires Associes d’Amsterdam’ in 1745.
"Not having
any other purpose," says the author (page 20, 2nd edit.), "than to relate
facts which are not known, or about which no one has written, or about which
it is impossible to be silent, we refer at once to a fact which has hitherto
almost escaped notice concerning Prince Giafer (Louis de Bourbon, Comte de
Vermandois, son of Louis XIV and Mademoiselle de la Valliere), who was
visited by Ali-Momajou (the Duc d’Orleans, the regent) in the fortress of
Ispahan (the Bastille), in which he had been imprisoned for several years.
This visit had probably no other motive than to make sure that this prince
was really alive, he having been reputed dead of the plague for over thirty
years, and his obsequies having been celebrated in presence of an entire
army.
"Cha-Abas (Louis XIV) had a legitimate son, Sephi-Mirza (Louis,
Dauphin of France), and a natural son, Giafer. These two princes, as
dissimilar in character as in birth, were always rivals and always at enmity
with each other. One day Giafer so far forgot himself as to
strike Sephi-Mirza. Cha-Abas having heard of the insult offered to the heir
to the throne, assembled his most trusted councillors, and laid the
conduct of the culprit before them—conduct which, according to the law of
the country, was punishable with death, an opinion in which they all
agreed. One of the councillors, however, sympathising more than the others
with the distress of Cha-Abas, suggested that Giafer should be sent to
the army, which was then on the frontiers of Feidrun (Flanders), and
that his death from plague should be given out a few days after his
arrival. Then, while the whole army was celebrating his obsequies, he should
be carried off by night, in the greatest secrecy, to the stronghold on
the isle of Ormus (Sainte-Marguerite), and there imprisoned for
life.
"This course was adopted, and carried out by faithful and
discreet agents. The prince, whose premature death was mourned by the army,
being carried by unfrequented roads to the isle of Ormus, was placed in
the custody of the commandant of the island, who, had received
orders beforehand not to allow any person whatever to see the prisoner.
A single servant who was in possession of the secret was killed by
the escort on the journey, and his face so disfigured by dagger thrusts
that he could not be recognised.
"The commandant treated his prisoner
with the most profound respect; he waited on him at meals himself, taking the
dishes from the cooks at the door of the apartment, none of whom ever looked
on the face of Giafer. One day it occurred to the prince to scratch, his name
on the back of a plate with his knife. One of the servants into whose hands
the plate fell ran with it at once to the commandant, hoping he would be
pleased and reward the bearer; but the unfortunate man was greatly mistaken,
for he was at once made away with, that his knowledge of such an
important secret might be buried with himself.
"Giafer remained
several years in the castle Ormus, and was then transported to the fortress
of Ispahan; the commandant of Ormus having received the governorship of
Ispahan as a reward for faithful service.
"At Ispahan, as at Ormus,
whenever it was necessary on account of illness or any other cause to allow
anyone to approach the prince, he was always masked; and several trustworthy
persons have asserted that they had seen the masked prisoner often, and had
noticed that he used the familiar ’tu’ when addressing the governor, while
the latter showed his charge the greatest respect. As Giafer survived
Cha-Abas and Sephi-Mirza by many years, it may be asked why he was never set
at liberty; but it must be remembered it would have been impossible
to restore a prince to his rank and dignities whose tomb actually
existed, and of whose burial there were not only living witnesses but
documentary proofs, the authenticity of which it would have been useless to
deny, so firm was the belief, which has lasted down to the present day,
that Giafer died of the plague in camp when with the army on the frontiers
of Flanders. Ali-Homajou died shortly after the visit he paid to
Giafer."
This version of the story, which is the original source of all
the controversy on the subject, was at first generally received as true.
On a critical examination it fitted in very well with certain events
which took place in the reign of Louis XIV.
The Comte de Vermandois
had in fact left the court for the camp very soon after his reappearance
there, for he had been banished by the king from his presence some time
before for having, in company with several young nobles, indulged in the most
reprehensible excesses.
"The king," says Mademoiselle de Montpensier
(’Memoires de Mademoiselle de Montpensier’, vol. xliii. p. 474., of ’Memoires
Relatifs d’Histoire de France’, Second Series, published by Petitot), "had
not been satisfied with his conduct and refused to see him. The young prince
had caused his mother much sorrow, but had been so well lectured that it
was believed that he had at last turned over a new leaf." He only
remained four days at court, reached the camp before Courtrai early in
November 1683, was taken ill on the evening of the 12th, and died on the 19th
of the same month of a malignant fever. Mademoiselle de Montpensier
says that the Comte de Vermandois "fell ill from drink."
There are, of
course, objections of all kinds to this theory.
For if, during the four
days the comte was at court, he had struck the dauphin, everyone would have
heard of the monstrous crime, and yet it is nowhere spoken of, except in the
’Memoires de Perse’. What renders the story of the blow still more improbable
is the difference in age between the two princes. The dauphin, who already
had a son, the Duc de Bourgogne, more than a year old, was born the 1st
November 1661, and was therefore six years older than the Comte de
Vermandois. But the most complete answer to the tale is to be found in a
letter written by Barbezieux to Saint-Mars, dated the 13th August
1691:—
"When you have any information to send me relative to the prisoner
who has been in your charge for twenty years, I most earnestly enjoin on
you to take the same precautions as when you write to M. de
Louvois."
The Comte de Vermandois, the official registration of whose
death bears the date 1685, cannot have been twenty years a prisoner in
1691.
Six years after the Man in the Mask had been thus delivered over to
the curiosity of the public, the ’Siecle de Louis XIV’ (2 vols.
octavo, Berlin, 1751) was published by Voltaire under the pseudonym of M.
de Francheville. Everyone turned to this work, which had been
long expected, for details relating to the mysterious prisoner about
whom everyone was talking.
Voltaire ventured at length to speak more
openly of the prisoner than anyone had hitherto done, and to treat as a
matter of history "an event long ignored by all historians." (vol. ii. p. 11,
1st edition, chap. xxv.). He assigned an approximate date to the beginning of
this captivity, "some months after the death of Cardinal Mazarin" (1661);
he gave a description of the prisoner, who according to him was "young
and dark-complexioned; his figure was above the middle height and
well proportioned; his features were exceedingly handsome, and his
bearing was noble. When he spoke his voice inspired interest; he
never complained of his lot, and gave no hint as to his rank." Nor was
the mask forgotten: "The part which covered the chin was furnished
with steel springs, which allowed the prisoner to eat without uncovering
his face." And, lastly, he fixed the date of the death of the
nameless captive; who "was buried," he says, "in 1704., by night, in the
parish church of Saint-Paul."
Voltaire’s narrative coincided with the
account given in the ’Memoires de Peyse’, save for the omission of the
incident which, according to the ’Memoires’, led in the first instance to the
imprisonment of Giafer. "The prisoner," says Voltaire, "was sent to the Iles
Sainte-Marguerite, and afterwards to the Bastille, in charge of a trusty
official; he wore his mask on the journey, and his escort had orders to shoot
him if he took it off. The Marquis de Louvois visited him while he was on
the islands, and when speaking to him stood all the time in a
respectful attitude. The prisoner was removed to the Bastille in 1690, where
he was lodged as comfortably as could be managed in that building; he
was supplied with everything he asked for, especially with the finest
linen and the costliest lace, in both of which his taste was perfect; he had
a guitar to play on, his table was excellent, and the governor rarely
sat in his presence."
Voltaire added a few further details which had
been given him by M. de Bernaville, the successor of M. de Saint-Mars, and by
an old physician of the Bastille who had attended the prisoner whenever his
health required a doctor, but who had never seen his face, although he
had "often seen his tongue and his body." He also asserted that M.
de Chamillart was the last minister who was in the secret, and that
when his son-in-law, Marshal de la Feuillade, besought him on his knees,
de Chamillart being on his deathbed, to tell him the name of the Man in
the Iron Mask, the minister replied that he was under a solemn oath never
to reveal the secret, it being an affair of state. To all these
details, which the marshal acknowledges to be correct, Voltaire adds a
remarkable note: "What increases our wonder is, that when the unknown captive
was sent to the Iles Sainte-Marguerite no personage of note disappeared
from the European stage."
The story of the Comte de Vermandois and the
blow was treated as an absurd and romantic invention, which does not even
attempt to keep within the bounds of the possible, by Baron C. (according to
P. Marchand, Baron Crunyngen) in a letter inserted in the
’Bibliotheque raisonnee des Ouvrages des Savants de d’Europe’, June 1745.
The discussion was revived somewhat later, however, and a few Dutch
scholars were supposed to be responsible for a new theory founded on history;
the foundations proving somewhat shaky, however,—a quality which it
shares, we must say, with all the other theories which have ever been
advanced.
According to this new theory, the masked prisoner was a young
foreign nobleman, groom of the chambers to Anne of Austria, and the real
father of Louis XIV. This anecdote appears first in a duodecimo volume
printed by Pierre Marteau at Cologne in 1692, and which bears the title,
’The Loves of Anne of Austria, Consort of Louis XIII, with M. le C. D.
R., the Real Father of Louis XIV, King of France; being a Minute Account
of the Measures taken to give an Heir to the Throne of France,
the Influences at Work to bring this to pass, and the Denoument of
the Comedy’.
This libel ran through five editions, bearing date
successively, 1692, 1693, 1696, 1722, and 1738. In the title of the edition
of 1696 the words "Cardinal de Richelieu" are inserted in place of the
initials "C. D. R.," but that this is only a printer’s error everyone who
reads the work will perceive. Some have thought the three letters stood for
Comte de Riviere, others for Comte de Rochefort, whose ’Memoires’ compiled
by Sandras de Courtilz supply these initials. The author of the book was
an Orange writer in the pay of William III, and its object was, he
says, "to unveil the great mystery of iniquity which hid the true origin
of Louis XIV." He goes on to remark that "the knowledge of this
fraud, although comparatively rare outside France, was widely spread within
her borders. The well-known coldness of Louis XIII; the extraordinary
birth of Louis-Dieudonne, so called because he was born in the
twenty-third year of a childless marriage, and several other remarkable
circumstances connected with the birth, all point clearly to a father other
than the prince, who with great effrontery is passed off by his adherents
as such. The famous barricades of Paris, and the organised revolt led
by distinguished men against Louis XIV on his accession to the
throne, proclaimed aloud the king’s illegitimacy, so that it rang through
the country; and as the accusation had reason on its side, hardly
anyone doubted its truth."
We give below a short abstract of the
narrative, the plot of which is rather skilfully
constructed:—
"Cardinal Richelieu, looking with satisfied pride at the
love of Gaston, Duc d’Orleans, brother of the king, for his niece Parisiatis
(Madame de Combalet), formed the plan of uniting the young couple in
marriage. Gaston taking the suggestion as an insult, struck the cardinal.
Pere Joseph then tried to gain the cardinal’s consent and that of his
niece to an attempt to deprive Gaston of the throne, which the
childless marriage of Louis XIII seemed to assure him. A young man, the C. D.
R. of the book, was introduced into Anne of Austria’s room, who though
a wife in name had long been a widow in reality. She defended herself
but feebly, and on seeing the cardinal next day said to him, ’Well, you
have had your wicked will; but take good care, sir cardinal, that I may
find above the mercy and goodness which you have tried by many
pious sophistries to convince me is awaiting me. Watch over my soul, I
charge you, for I have yielded!’ The queen having given herself up to love
for some time, the joyful news that she would soon become a mother began
to spread over the kingdom. In this manner was born Louis XIV, the
putative son of Louis XIII. If this instalment of the tale be
favourably received, says the pamphleteer, the sequel will soon follow, in
which the sad fate of C. D. R. will be related, who was made to pay dearly
for his short-lived pleasure."
Although the first part was a great
success, the promised sequel never appeared. It must be admitted that such a
story, though it never convinced a single person of the illegitimacy of Louis
XIV, was an excellent prologue to the tale of the unfortunate lot of the Man
in the Iron Mask, and increased the interest and curiosity with which
that singular historical mystery was regarded. But the views of the
Dutch scholars thus set forth met with little credence, and were
soon forgotten in a new solution.
The third historian to write about
the prisoner of the Iles Sainte-Marguerite was Lagrange-Chancel. He was just
twenty-nine years of age when, excited by Freron’s hatred of Voltaire, he
addressed a letter from his country place, Antoniat, in Perigord, to the
’Annee Litteraire’ (vol. iii. p. 188), demolishing the theory advanced in the
’Siecle de Louis XIV’, and giving facts which he had collected whilst
himself imprisoned in the same place as the unknown prisoner twenty years
later.
"My detention in the Iles-Saint-Marguerite," says
Lagrange-Chancel," brought many things to my knowledge which a more
painstaking historian than M. de Voltaire would have taken the trouble to
find out; for at the time when I was taken to the islands the imprisonment of
the Man in the Iron Mask was no longer regarded as a state secret. This
extraordinary event, which M. de Voltaire places in 1662, a few months after
the death of Cardinal Mazarin, did not take place till 1669, eight years
after the death of His Eminence. M. de La Motte-Guerin, commandant of the
islands in my time, assured me that the prisoner was the Duc de Beaufort,
who was reported killed at the siege of Candia, but whose body had
never been recovered, as all the narratives of that event agree in stating.
He also told me that M. de Saint-Mars, who succeeded Pignerol as
governor of the islands, showed great consideration for the prisoner, that
he waited on him at table, that the service was of silver, and that
the clothes supplied to the prisoner were as costly as he desired; that
when he was ill and in need of a physician or surgeon, he was obliged
under pain of death to wear his mask in their presence, but that when he
was alone he was permitted to pull out the hairs of his beard with
steel tweezers, which were kept bright and polished. I saw a pair of
these which had been actually used for this purpose in the possession of M.
de Formanoir, nephew of Saint-Mars, and lieutenant of a Free Company
raised for the purpose of guarding the prisoners. Several persons told me
that when Saint-Mars, who had been placed over the Bastille, conducted
his charge thither, the latter was heard to say behind his iron mask,
’Has the king designs on my life?’ To which Saint-Mars replied, ’No,
my prince; your life is safe: you must only let yourself be
guided.’
"I also learned from a man called Dubuisson, cashier to the
well-known Samuel Bernard, who, having been imprisoned for some years in
the Bastile, was removed to the Iles Sainte-Marguerite, where he
was confined along with some others in a room exactly over the one
occupied by the unknown prisoner. He told me that they were able to
communicate with him by means of the flue of the chimney, but on asking him
why he persisted in not revealing his name and the cause of his
imprisonment, he replied that such an avowal would be fatal not only to him
but to those to whom he made it.
"Whether it were so or not, to-day
the name and rank of this political victim are secrets the preservation of
which is no longer necessary to the State; and I have thought that to tell
the public what I know would cut short the long chain of circumstances which
everyone was forging according to his fancy, instigated thereto by an author
whose gift of relating the most impossible events in such a manner as to make
them seem true has won for all his writings such success—even for his Vie
de Charles XII"
This theory, according to Jacob, is more probable than
any of the others.
"Beginning with the year 1664.," he says, "the Duc
de Beaufort had by his insubordination and levity endangered the success of
several maritime expeditions. In October 1666 Louis XIV remonstrated with
him with much tact, begging him to try to make himself more and more
capable in the service of his king by cultivating the talents with which he
was endowed, and ridding himself of the faults which spoilt his conduct.
’I do not doubt,’ he concludes, ’that you will be all the more grateful
to me for this mark of my benevolence towards you, when you reflect how
few kings have ever shown their goodwill in a similar manner.’" (
’Oeuvres de Louis XIV’, vol. v. p. 388). Several calamities in the royal navy
are known to have been brought about by the Duc de Beaufort. M. Eugene
Sue, in his ’Histoire de la Marine’, which is full of new and
curious information, has drawn a very good picture of the position of the
"roi des halles," the "king of the markets," in regard to Colbert and
Louis XIV. Colbert wished to direct all the manoeuvres of the fleet from
his study, while it was commanded by the naval grandmaster in the
capricious manner which might be expected from his factious character and
love of bluster (Eugene Sue, vol. i., ’Pieces Justificatives’). In 1699
Louis XIV sent the Duc de Beaufort to the relief of Candia, which the
Turks were besieging. Seven hours after his arrival Beaufort was killed in
a sortie. The Duc de Navailles, who shared with him the command of
the French squadron, simply reported his death as follows: "He met a body
of Turks who were pressing our troops hard: placing himself at the head
of the latter, he fought valiantly, but at length his soldiers
abandoned him, and we have not been able to learn his fate" (’Memoires du Duc
de Navailles’, book iv. P. 243)
The report of his death spread rapidly
through France and Italy; magnificent funeral services were held in Paris,
Rome, and Venice, and funeral orations delivered. Nevertheless, many believed
that he would one day reappear, as his body had never been
recovered.
Guy Patin mentions this belief, which he did not share, in two
of his letters:—
"Several wagers have been laid that M. de Beaufort is
not dead! ’O utinam’!" (Guy Patin, September 26, 1669).
"It is said
that M. de Vivonne has been granted by commission the post of vice-admiral of
France for twenty years; but there are many who believe that the Duc de
Beaufort is not dead, but imprisoned in some Turkish island. Believe this who
may, I don’t; he is really dead, and the last thing I should desire would be
to be as dead as he",(Ibid., January 14, 1670).
The following are the
objections to this theory:
"In several narratives written by
eye-witnesses of the siege of Candia," says Jacob, "it is related that the
Turks, according to their custom, despoiled the body and cut off the head of
the Duc de Beaufort on the field of battle, and that the latter was
afterwards exhibited at Constantinople; and this may account for some of the
details given by Sandras de Courtilz in his ’Memoires du Marquis de Montbrun’
and his ’Memoires d’Artagnan’, for one can easily imagine that the
naked, headless body might escape recognition. M. Eugene Sue, in his
’Histoire de la Marine’ (vol. ii, chap. 6), had adopted this view, which
coincides with the accounts left by Philibert de Jarry and the Marquis de
Ville, the MSS. of whose letters and ’Memoires’ are to be found in
the Bibliotheque du Roi.
"In the first volume of the ’Histoire de la
Detention des Philosophes et des Gens de Lettres a la Bastille, etc.’, we
find the following passage:—
"Without dwelling on the difficulty and
danger of an abduction, which an Ottoman scimitar might any day during this
memorable siege render unnecessary, we shall restrict ourselves to declaring
positively that the correspondence of Saint-Mars from 1669 to 1680 gives us
no ground for supposing that the governor of Pignerol had any great prisoner
of state in his charge during that period of time, except Fouquet
and Lauzun.’"
While we profess no blind faith in the conclusions
arrived at by the learned critic, we would yet add to the considerations on
which he relies another, viz. that it is most improbable that Louis XIV
should ever have considered it necessary to take such rigorous measures
against the Duc de Beaufort. Truculent and self-confident as he was, he
never acted against the royal authority in such a manner as to oblige the
king to strike him down in secret; and it is difficult to believe that
Louis XIV, peaceably seated on his throne, with all the enemies of
his minority under his feet, should have revenged himself on the duke as
an old Frondeur.
The critic calls our attention to another fact also
adverse to the theory under consideration. The Man in the Iron Mask loved
fine linen and rich lace, he was reserved in character and possessed of
extreme refinement, and none of this suits the portraits of the ’roi des
halles’ which contemporary historians have drawn.
Regarding the
anagram of the name Marchiali (the name under which the death of the prisoner
was registered), ’hic amiral’, as a proof, we cannot think that the gaolers
of Pignerol amused themselves in propounding conundrums to exercise the keen
intellect of their contemporaries; and moreover the same anagram would apply
equally well to the Count of Vermandois, who was made admiral when only
twenty-two months old. Abbe Papon, in his roamings through Provence, paid a
visit to the prison in which the Iron Mask was confined, and thus
speaks:—
"It was to the Iles Sainte-Marguerite that the famous prisoner
with the iron mask whose name has never been discovered, was transported at
the end of the last century; very few of those attached to his service
were allowed to speak to him. One day, as M. de Saint-Mars was
conversing with him, standing outside his door, in a kind of corridor, so as
to be able to see from a distance everyone who approached, the son of one
of the governor’s friends, hearing the voices, came up; Saint-Mars
quickly closed the door of the room, and, rushing to meet the young man,
asked him with an air of great anxiety if he had overheard anything that
was said. Having convinced himself that he had heard nothing, the
governor sent the young man away the same day, and wrote to the father that
the adventure was like to have cost the son dear, and that he had sent
him back to his home to prevent any further imprudence.
"I was curious
enough to visit the room in which the unfortunate man was imprisoned, on the
2nd of February 1778. It is lighted by one window to the north, overlooking
the sea, about fifteen feet above the terrace where the sentries paced to and
fro. This window was pierced through a very thick wall and the embrasure
barricaded by three iron bars, thus separating the prisoner from the sentries
by a distance of over two fathoms. I found an officer of the Free Company in
the fortress who was nigh on fourscore years old; he told me that his father,
who had belonged to the same Company, had often related to him how a friar
had seen something white floating on the water under the prisoner’s
window. On being fished out and carried to M. de Saint-Mars, it proved to be
a shirt of very fine material, loosely folded together, and covered
with writing from end to end. M. de Saint-Mars spread it out and read a
few words, then turning to the friar who had brought it he asked him in
an embarrassed manner if he had been led by curiosity to read any of
the, writing. The friar protested repeatedly that he had not read a line,
but nevertheless he was found dead in bed two days later. This incident
was told so often to my informant by his father and by the chaplain of
the fort of that time that he regarded it as incontestably true.
The following fact also appears to me to be equally well established by
the testimony of many witnesses. I collected all the evidence I could on
the spot, and also in the Lerins monastery, where the tradition
is preserved.
"A female attendant being wanted for the prisoner, a
woman of the village of Mongin offered herself for the place, being under
the impression that she would thus be able to make her children’s
fortune; but on being told that she would not only never be allowed to see
her children again, but would be cut off from the rest of the world as
well, she refused to be shut up with a prisoner whom it cost so much to
serve. I may mention here that at the two outer angles of the wall of the
fort which faced the sea two sentries were placed, with orders to fire on
any boat which approached within a certain distance.
"The prisoner’s
personal attendant died in the Iles Sainte-Marguerite. The brother of the
officer whom I mentioned above was partly in the confidence of M. de
Saint-Mars, and he often told how he was summoned to the prison once at
midnight and ordered to remove a corpse, and that he carried it on his
shoulders to the burial-place, feeling certain it was the prisoner who was
dead; but it was only his servant, and it was then that an effort was made to
supply his place by a female attendant."
Abbe Papon gives some curious
details, hitherto unknown to the public, but as he mentions no names his
narrative cannot be considered as evidence. Voltaire never replied to
Lagrange-Chancel, who died the same year in which his letter was published.
Freron desiring to revenge himself for the scathing portrait which Voltaire
had drawn of him in the ’Ecossaise’, called to his assistance a more
redoubtable adversary than Lagrange-Chancel. Sainte-Foix had brought to the
front a brand new theory, founded on a passage by Hume in an article in the
’Annee Litteraire (1768, vol. iv.), in which he maintained that the Man in
the Iron Mask was the Duke of Monmouth, a natural son of Charles II, who
was found guilty of high treason and beheaded in London on the 15th
July 1685.
This is what the English historian says:
"It was
commonly reported in London that the Duke of Monmouth’s life had been saved,
one of his adherents who bore a striking resemblance to the duke having
consented to die in his stead, while the real culprit was secretly carried
off to France, there to undergo a lifelong imprisonment."
The great
affection which the English felt for the Duke of Monmouth, and his own
conviction that the people only needed a leader to induce them to shake off
the yoke of James II, led him to undertake an enterprise which might possibly
have succeeded had it been carried out with prudence. He landed at Lyme, in
Dorset, with only one hundred and twenty men; six thousand soon gathered
round his standard; a few towns declared in his favour; he caused himself to
be proclaimed king, affirming that he was born in wedlock, and that he
possessed the proofs of the secret marriage of Charles II and Lucy Waiters,
his mother. He met the Royalists on the battlefield, and victory seemed to be
on his side, when just at the decisive moment his ammunition ran short. Lord
Gray, who commanded the cavalry, beat a cowardly retreat, the unfortunate
Monmouth was taken prisoner, brought to London, and beheaded.
The
details published in the ’Siecle de Louis XIV’ as to the personal appearance
of the masked prisoner might have been taken as a description of Monmouth,
who possessed great physical beauty. Sainte-Foix had collected every scrap of
evidence in favour of his solution of the mystery, making use even of the
following passage from an anonymous romance called ’The Loves of Charles II
and James II, Kings of England’:—
"The night of the pretended
execution of the Duke of Monmouth, the king, attended by three men, came to
the Tower and summoned the duke to his presence. A kind of loose cowl was
thrown over his head, and he was put into a carriage, into which the king and
his attendants also got, and was driven away."
Sainte-Foix also
referred to the alleged visit of Saunders, confessor to James II, paid to the
Duchess of Portsmouth after the death of that monarch, when the duchess took
occasion to say that she could never forgive King James for consenting to
Monmouth’s execution, in spite of the oath he had taken on the sacred
elements at the deathbed of Charles II that he would never take his natural
brother’s life, even in case of rebellion. To this the priest replied
quickly, "The king kept his oath."
Hume also records this solemn oath,
but we cannot say that all the historians agree on this point. ’The Universal
History’ by Guthrie and Gray, and the ’Histoire d’Angleterre’ by Rapin,
Thoyras and de Barrow, do not mention it.
"Further," wrote
Sainte-Foix, "an English surgeon called Nelaton, who frequented the Cafe
Procope, much affected by men of letters, often related that during the time
he was senior apprentice to a surgeon who lived near the Porte Saint-Antoine,
he was once taken to the Bastille to bleed a prisoner. He was conducted to
this prisoner’s room by the governor himself, and found the patient suffering
from violent headache. He spoke with an English accent, wore a gold-flowered
dressing-gown of black and orange, and had his face covered by a napkin
knotted behind his head."
This story does not hold water: it would be
difficult to form a mask out of a napkin; the Bastille had a resident surgeon
of its own as well as a physician and apothecary; no one could gain access to
a prisoner without a written order from a minister, even the Viaticum could
only be introduced by the express permission of the lieutenant of
police.
This theory met at first with no objections, and seemed to be
going to oust all the others, thanks, perhaps, to the combative and
restive character of its promulgator, who bore criticism badly, and whom no
one cared to incense, his sword being even more redoubtable than his
pen.
It was known that when Saint-Mars journeyed with his prisoner to
the Bastille, they had put up on the way at Palteau, in Champagne,
a property belonging to the governor. Freron therefore addressed
himself to a grand-nephew of Saint-Mars, who had inherited this estate,
asking if he could give him any information about this visit. The
following reply appeared in the ’Annee Litteraire (June 1768):—
"As it
appears from the letter of M. de Sainte-Foix from which you quote that the
Man in the Iron Mask still exercises the fancy of your journalists, I am
willing to tell you all I know about the prisoner. He was known in the
islands of Sainte-Marguerite and at the Bastille as ’La Tour.’ The governor
and all the other officials showed him great respect, and supplied him with
everything he asked for that could be granted to a prisoner. He often took
exercise in the yard of the prison, but never without his mask on. It was not
till the ’Siecle’ of M. de Voltaire appeared that I learned that the mask was
of iron and furnished with springs; it may be that the circumstance was
overlooked, but he never wore it except when taking the air, or when he had
to appear before a stranger.
"M. de Blainvilliers, an infantry officer
who was acquainted with M. de Saint-Mars both at Pignerol and
Sainte-Marguerite, has often told me that the lot of ’La Tour’ greatly
excited his curiosity, and that he had once borrowed the clothes and arms of
a soldier whose turn it was to be sentry on the terrace under the prisoner’s
window at Sainte-Marguerite, and undertaken the duty himself; that he had
seen the prisoner distinctly, without his mask; that his face was white, that
he was tall and well proportioned, except that his ankles were too thick, and
that his hair was white, although he appeared to be still in the prime
of life. He passed the whole of the night in question pacing to and fro
in his room. Blainvilliers added that he was always dressed in brown,
that he had plenty of fine linen and books, that the governor and the
other officers always stood uncovered in his presence till he gave them
leave to cover and sit down, and that they often bore him company at
table.
"In 1698 M. de Saint-Mars was promoted from the governorship of
the Iles Sainte-Marguerite to that of the Bastille. In moving
thither, accompanied by his prisoner, he made his estate of Palteau
a halting-place. The masked man arrived in a litter which preceded that
of M. de Saint-Mars, and several mounted men rode beside it. The
peasants were assembled to greet their liege lord. M. de Saint-Mars dined
with his prisoner, who sat with his back to the dining-room windows,
which looked out on the court. None of the peasants whom I have
questioned were able to see whether the man kept his mask on while eating,
but they all noticed that M. de Saint-Mars, who sat opposite to his charge,
laid two pistols beside his plate; that only one footman waited at table,
who went into the antechamber to change the plates and dishes,
always carefully closing the dining-room door behind him. When the
prisoner crossed the courtyard his face was covered with a black mask, but
the peasants could see his lips and teeth, and remarked that he was
tall, and had white hair. M. de Saint-Mars slept in a bed placed beside
the prisoner’s. M. de Blainvilliers told me also that ’as soon as he
was dead, which happened in 1704, he was buried at Saint-Paul’s,’ and
that ’the coffin was filled with substances which would rapidly consume
the body.’ He added, ’I never heard that the masked man spoke with
an English accent.’"
Sainte-Foix proved the story related by M. de
Blainvilliers to be little worthy of belief, showing by a circumstance
mentioned in the letter that the imprisoned man could not be the Duc de
Beaufort; witness the epigram of Madame de Choisy, "M. de Beaufort longs to
bite and can’t," whereas the peasants had seen the prisoner’s teeth through
his mask. It appeared as if the theory of Sainte-Foix were going to stand,
when a Jesuit father, named Griffet, who was confessor at the Bastille,
devoted chapter xiii, of his ’Traite des differentes Sortes de Preuves
qui servent a etablir la Verite dans l’Histoire’ (12mo, Liege, 1769) to
the consideration of the Iron Mask. He was the first to quote an
authentic document which certifies that the Man in the Iron Mask about whom
there was so much disputing really existed. This was the written journal of
M. du Jonca, King’s Lieutenant in the Bastille in 1698, from which
Pere Griffet took the following passage:—
"On Thursday, September the
8th, 1698, at three o’clock in the afternoon, M. de Saint-Mars, the new
governor of the Bastille, entered upon his duties. He arrived from the
islands of Sainte-Marguerite, bringing with him in a litter a prisoner whose
name is a secret, and whom he had had under his charge there, and at
Pignerol. This prisoner, who was always masked, was at first placed in the
Bassiniere tower, where he remained until the evening. At nine o’clock p.m. I
took him to the third room of the Bertaudiere tower, which I had had
already furnished before his arrival with all needful articles, having
received orders to do so from M. de Saint-Mars. While I was showing him the
way to his room, I was accompanied by M. Rosarges, who had also
arrived along with M. de Saint-Mars, and whose office it was to wait on the
said prisoner, whose table is to be supplied by the governor." |
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