<h2><SPAN name="Page_191"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
<h2>THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS</h2>
<div style="text-align: center;"><img
style="width: 312px; height: 431px;" alt="Caroline of Brunswick, wife of George IV."
title="Caroline of Brunswick, wife of George IV."
src="images/court009.jpg"><SPAN name="img009"></SPAN><br/>
<h5>CAROLINE OF BRUNSWICK, WIFE OF GEORGE IV.</h5></div>
<br/>
<p>It was an ill fate that brought Caroline, Princess of
Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel to England to be the bride
of George, Prince of Wales, one April day in the
year 1795; although probably no woman has ever
set forth on her bridal journey with a lighter or
prouder heart, for, as she said, "Am I not going to
be the wife of the handsomest Prince in the world?"
If she had any momentary doubt of this, a glance
at the miniature she carried in her bosom reassured
her; for the pictured face that smiled at her was
handsome as that of an Apollo.</p>
<p>No wonder the Princess's heart beat high with pride
and pleasure during that last triumphal stage of her
journey to her husband's arms; for he was not only
the handsomest man, with "the best shaped leg in
Europe," he was by common consent the "greatest
gentleman" any Court could show. Picture him as
he made his first appearance at a Court ball. "His
coat," we are told, "was of pink silk, with white cuffs;
his waistcoat of white silk, embroidered with various-coloured
foil and adorned with a profusion of French
paste. And his hat was ornamented with two rows
<SPAN name="Page_192"></SPAN>of steel beads, five thousand in number, with a
button
and a loop of the same metal, and cocked in a new
military style." See young "Florizel" as he makes
his smiling and gracious progress through the
avenues of courtiers; note the winsomeness of his
smiles, the inimitable grace of his bows, his pleasant,
courtly words of recognition, and say if ever Royalty
assumed a form more agreeable to the eye and captivating
to the senses.</p>
<p>"Florizel" was indeed the most splendid Prince
in the world, and the most "perfect gentleman." He
was also, though his bride-to-be little knew it, the
most dissolute man in Europe, the greatest gambler
and voluptuary—a man who was as false to his
friends as he was traitor to every woman who crossed
his path, a man whom no appeal of honour or mercy
could check in his selfish pursuit of pleasure.</p>
<p>"I look through all his life," Thackeray says,
"and recognise but a bow and a grin. I try and
take him to pieces, and find silk stockings, padding,
stays, a coat with frogs and a fur collar, a star and
blue ribbon, a pocket handkerchief prodigiously
scented, one of Truefitt's best nutty brown wigs reeking
with oil, a set of teeth and a huge black stock,
under-waistcoats, more under-waistcoats, and then—nothing.
French ballet-dancers, French cooks,
horse-jockeys, buffoons, procuresses, tailors, boxers,
fencing-masters, china, jewel and gimcrack-merchants—these
were his real companions."</p>
<p>Such was the husband Princess Caroline came so
light-heartedly, with laughter on her lips, from Brunswick
to wed, little dreaming of the disillusion and
<SPAN name="Page_193"></SPAN>tears that were to await her on the very
threshold of
the life to which she had looked forward with such
high hopes.</p>
<p>We get the first glimpse of Caroline some twelve
years earlier, when Sir John Stanley, who was making
the grand tour, spent a few weeks at her father's
Court. He speaks of her as a "beautiful girl of fourteen,"
and adds, "I did think and dream of her day
and night at Brunswick, and for a year afterwards I
saw her for hours three or fours times a week, but as a
star out of my reach." Years later he met her again
under sadly changed conditions. "One day only,"
he writes, "when dining with her and her mother at
Blackheath, she smiled at something which had
pleased her, and for an instant only I could have
fancied she had been the Caroline of fourteen years
old—the lovely, pretty Caroline, the girl my eyes had
so often rested on, with light and powdered hair
hanging in curls on her neck, the lips from which only
sweet words seemed as if they would flow, with looks
animated, and always simply and modestly dressed."</p>
<p>Lady Charlotte Campbell, too, gives us a glimpse
of her in these early and happier years, before sorrow
had laid its defacing hand on her. "The Princess
was in her early youth a pretty girl," Lady Charlotte
says, "with fine light hair—very delicately formed
features, and a fine complexion—quick, glancing,
penetrating eyes, long cut and rather small in the
head, which gave them much expression; and a
remarkably delicately formed mouth."</p>
<p>It was in no happy home that the Princess had
been cradled one May day in 1768. Her father,
<SPAN name="Page_194"></SPAN>Charles William, Duke of Brunswick, was an
austere
soldier, too much absorbed in his military life and
his mistress, to give much thought to his daughters.
Her mother, the Duchess Augusta, sister of our own
George III., was weak and small-minded, too much
occupied in self-indulgence and scandal-talking to
trouble about the training of her children.</p>
<p>Princess Caroline herself draws an unattractive
picture of her home-life, in answer to Lady Charlotte
Campbell's question, "Were you sorry to leave
Brunswick?" "Not at all," was the answer; "I was
sick tired of it, though I was sorry to leave my fader.
I loved my fader dearly, better than any oder person.
But dere were some unlucky tings in our Court which
made my position difficult. My fader was most entirely
attached to a lady for thirty years, who was in
fact his mistress. She was the beautifullest creature
and the cleverest, but, though my fader continued
to pay my moder all possible respect, my poor moder
could not suffer this attachment. And de consequence
was, I did not know what to do between
them; when I was civil to one, I was scolded by
the other, and was very tired of being shuttlecock
between them."</p>
<p>But in spite of these unfortunate home conditions
Caroline appears to have spent a fairly happy girlhood,
thanks to her exuberant spirits; and such faults
as she developed were largely due to the lack of
parental care, which left her training to servants.
Thus she grew up with quite a shocking disregard
of conventions, running wild like a young filly, and
finding her pleasure and her companions in undesir<SPAN name="Page_195"></SPAN>able
directions. Strange stories are told of her
girlish love affairs, which seem to have been indiscreet
if nothing worse, while her beauty drew to her
many a high-placed wooer, including the Prince of
Orange and Prince George of Darmstadt, to all of
whom she seems to have turned a cold shoulder.</p>
<p>But the wilful Princess was not to be left mistress
of her own destiny. One November day, in 1794,
Lord Malmesbury arrived at the Brunswick Court
to demand her hand for the Prince of Wales, whom
his burden of debts and the necessity of providing
an heir to the throne of England were at last driving
reluctantly to the altar. And thus a new and dazzling
future opened for her. To her parents nothing could
have been more welcome than this prospect of a
crown for their daughter; while to her it offered a
release from a life that had become odious.</p>
<p>"The Princess Caroline much embarrassed on my
first being presented to her," Malmesbury enters in
his diary—"pretty face, not expressive of softness—her
figure not graceful, fine eyes, good hands, tolerable
teeth, fair hair and light eyebrows, good bust,
short, with what the French call 'des épaules impertinentes,'
vastly happy with her future expectations."</p>
<p>Such were Malmesbury's first impressions of the
future Queen of England, whom it was his duty to
prepare for her exalted station—a duty which he
seems to have taken very seriously, even to the regulating
of her toilette and her manners. Thus, a few
days after setting eyes on her, his diary records:
"She <i>will</i> call ladies whom she meets for the first
time 'Mon coeur, ma chère, ma petite,' and I am
<SPAN name="Page_196"></SPAN>obliged to rebuke and correct her." He lectures
her
on her undignified habit of whispering and giggling,
and impresses on her the necessity of greater care in
her attire, on more constant and thorough ablution,
more frequent changes of linen, the care of her teeth,
and so on—all of which admonitions she seems to
have taken in excellent part, with demure promises
of amendment, until he is impelled to write, "Princess
Caroline improves very much on a closer acquaintance—cheerful
and loves laughing. If she
can get rid of her gossiping habit she will do
very well."</p>
<p>Thus a few months passed at the Brunswick Court.
The ceremonial of betrothal took place in December—"Princess
Caroline much affected, but replies distinctly
and well"; the marriage-contract was signed,
and finally on 28th March the Princess embarked
for England on her journey to the unseen husband
whose good-looks and splendour have filled her with
such high expectations. That she had not yet
learnt discretion, in spite of all Malmesbury's homilies,
is proved by the fact that she spent the night
on board in walking up and down the deck in the
company of a handsome young naval officer, conduct
which naturally gave cause for observation and suspicion
in the affianced bride of the future King of
England.</p>
<p>It was well, perhaps, that she had snatched these
few hours of innocent pleasure: for her first meeting
with her future husband was well calculated to scatter
all her rosy dreams. Arrived at last at St James's
Palace, "I immediately notified the arrival to the
<SPAN name="Page_197"></SPAN>King and Prince of Wales," says Malmesbury; "the
last came immediately. I accordingly introduced
the Princess Caroline to him. She very properly
attempted to kneel to him. He raised her gracefully
enough, and embraced her, said barely one word,
turned round and retired to a distant part of the apartment,
and calling to me said: 'Harris, I am not well;
pray get me a glass of brandy.' I said, 'Sir, had
you not better have a glass of water?' Upon which
he, much out of humour, said with an oath: 'No; I
will go directly to the Queen,' and away he went.
The Princess, left during this short moment alone,
was in a state of astonishment; and, on my joining
her, said, '<i>Mon Dieu</i>, is the Prince always like
that? I find him very fat, and not at all as handsome
as his portrait.'"</p>
<p>Such was the Princess's welcome to the arms of
her handsome husband and to the Court over which
she hoped to reign as Queen; nor did she receive
much warmer hospitality from the Prince's family.
The Queen, who had designed a very different bride
for her eldest son, received her with scarcely disguised
enmity, while the King, although, as he afterwards
proved, kindly disposed towards her, treated
her at first with an amiable indifference. And certainly
her attitude seems to have been calculated
to create an unfavourable impression on her new
relatives and on the Court generally.</p>
<p>At the banquet which followed her reception,
Malmesbury says, "I was far from satisfied with
the Princess's behaviour. It was flippant, rattling,
affecting raillery and wit, and throwing out coarse,
<SPAN name="Page_198"></SPAN>vulgar hints about Lady——, who was present. The
Prince was evidently disgusted, and this unfortunate
dinner fixed his dislike, which, when left to herself,
the Princess had not the talent to remove; but by
still observing the same giddy manners and attempts
at cleverness and coarse sarcasm, increased it till it
became positive hatred."</p>
<p>"What," as Thackeray asks, "could be expected
from a wedding which had such a beginning—from
such a bridegroom and such a bride? Malmesbury
tells us how the Prince reeled into the Chapel Royal
to be married on the evening of Wednesday, the 8th
of April; and how he hiccuped out his vows of
fidelity." "My brother," John, Duke of Bedford,
records, "was one of the two unmarried dukes who
supported the Prince at the ceremony, and he had
need of his support; for my brother told me the
Prince was so drunk that he could scarcely support
himself from falling. He told my brother that he
had drunk several glasses of brandy to enable him to
go through the ceremony. There is no doubt that
it was a <i>compulsory</i> marriage."</p>
<p>With such an overture, we are not surprised to
learn that the Royal bridegroom spent his wedding-night
in a state of stupor on the floor of his bedroom;
or that at dawn, when he had slept off the effects of his
debauch, "pages heard cries proceeding from the
nuptial chamber, and shortly afterwards saw the
bridegroom rush out violently."</p>
<p>Nor, we may be sure, was the Prince's undisguised
hatred of his bride in any way mitigated by the stories
which Lady Jersey and others of hex rivals poured into
<SPAN name="Page_199"></SPAN>his willing ears—stories of her attachment to a
young
German Prince whom she was not allowed to marry;
of a mysterious illness, followed by a few weeks'
retreat; of that midnight promenade with the young
naval officer; of assignations with Major Toebingen,
the handsomest soldier in Europe, who so proudly
wore the amethyst tie-pin she had presented to him—these
and many another story which reflected none
too well on her reputation before he had set eyes on
her. But it needed no such whispered scandal to
strengthen his hatred of a bride who personally
repelled him, and who had been forced on him at a
time when his heart was fully engaged with his lawful
wedded wife, Mrs Fitzherbert, when it was not
straying to Lady Jersey, to "Perdita" or others of
his legion of lights-o'-love.</p>
<p>From the first day the ill-fated union was doomed.
One violent scene succeeded another, until, before
she had been two months a wife, the Prince declared
that he would no longer live with her. He would
only wait until her child was born; then he would
formally and finally leave her. Thus, three months
after the birth of the Princess Charlotte, the deed of
separation was signed, and Caroline was at last free
to escape from a Court which she had grown to detest,
with good reason, and from a husband whose brutalities
and infidelities filled her with loathing.</p>
<p>She carried with her, however, this consolation,
that the "great, hearty people of England loved
and pitied her." "God bless you! we will bring your
husband back to you," was among the many cries
that greeted her as she left the palace on her way to
<SPAN name="Page_200"></SPAN>exile. But, to quote Thackeray again, "they
could
not bring that husband back; they could not cleanse
that selfish heart. Was hers the only one he had
wounded? Steeped in selfishness, impotent for
faithful attachment and manly enduring love—had it
not survived remorse, was it not accustomed to
desertion?"</p>
<p>For a time the outcast Princess, with her infant
daughter, led a retired life amid the peace and beauty
of Blackheath, where she lived as simply as any
bourgeoise, playing the "lady bountiful" to the poor
among her neighbours. Her chief pleasure seems
to have been to surround herself with cottage babies,
converting Montague House into a "positive nursery,
littered up with cradles, swaddling-bands,
feeding bottles, and other things of the kind."</p>
<p>But even to this rustic retirement watchful eyes
and slanderous tongues followed her; and it was not
long before stories were passing from mouth to mouth
in the Court of strange doings at Blackheath. The
Princess, it was said, had become very intimate with
Sir John Douglas and his lady, her near neighbours,
and more especially with Sydney Smith, a good-looking
naval captain, who shared the Douglas home,
a man, moreover, with whom she had had suspicious
relations at her father's Court many years earlier. It
was rumoured that Captain Smith was a frequent
and too welcome guest at Montague House, at hours
when discreet ladies are not in the habit of receiving
their male friends. Nor was the handsome captain
the only friend thus unconventionally entertained.
There was another good-looking naval officer, a
<SPAN name="Page_201"></SPAN>Captain Manby, and also Sir Thomas Lawrence, the
famous painter, both of whom were admitted to a
suspicious intimacy with the Princess of Wales.</p>
<p>These rumours, sufficiently disquieting in themselves,
were followed by stories of the concealed birth
of a child, who had come mysteriously to swell the
numbers of the Princess's protégés of the crèche.
Even King George, whose sympathy with his heir's
ill-used wife was a matter of common knowledge,
could not overlook a charge so grave as this. It
must be investigated in the interests of the State, as
well as of his family's honour; and, by his orders, a
Commission of Peers was appointed to examine into
the matter and ascertain the truth.</p>
<p>The inquiry—the "Delicate Investigation" as it
was appropriately called—opened in June, 1806, and
witness after witness, from the Douglases to Robert
Bidgood, a groom, gave evidence which more or less
supported the charges of infidelity and concealment.
The result of the investigation, however, was a verdict
of acquittal, the Commissioners reporting that
the Princess, although innocent, had been guilty of
very indiscreet conduct—and this verdict the Privy
Council confirmed.</p>
<p>For the Princess it was a triumphant vindication,
which was hailed with acclamation throughout the
country. Even the Royal family showed their
satisfaction by formal visits of congratulation to the
Princess, from the King himself to the Duke of
Cumberland who conducted his sister-in-law on a
visit to the Court.</p>
<p>But the days of Blackheath and the amateur
<SPAN name="Page_202"></SPAN>nursery were at an end. The Princess returned to
London, and found a more suitable home in Kensington
Palace for some years, where she held her
Court in rivalry of that of her husband at Carlton
House. Here she was subjected to every affront
and slight by the Prince and his set that the ingenuity
of hatred could devise, and to crown her humiliation
and isolation, her daughter Charlotte was taken from
her and forbidden even to recognise her when their
carriages passed in the street or park.</p>
<p>Can we wonder that, under such remorseless persecutions,
the Princess became more and more defiant;
that she gave herself up to a life of recklessness and
extravagance; that, more and more isolated from her
own world, she sought her pleasure and her companions
in undesirable quarters, finding her chief
intimates in a family of Italian musicians; or that
finally, heart-broken and despairing, she determined
once for all to shake off the dust of a land that had
treated her so cruelly?</p>
<p>In August, 1814, with the approval of King and
Parliament, the Princess left England to begin a
career of amazing adventures and indiscrétions, the
story of which is one of the most remarkable in
history.</p>
<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
<SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIX"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />