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<h2> MARIE ANTOINETTE AND COUNT FERSEN </h2>
<p>The English-speaking world long ago accepted a conventional view of Marie
Antoinette. The eloquence of Edmund Burke in one brilliant passage has
fixed, probably for all time, an enduring picture of this unhappy queen.</p>
<p>When we speak or think of her we speak and think first of all of a
dazzling and beautiful woman surrounded by the chivalry of France and
gleaming like a star in the most splendid court of Europe. And then there
comes to us the reverse of the picture. We see her despised, insulted, and
made the butt of brutal men and still more fiendish women; until at last
the hideous tumbrel conveys her to the guillotine, where her head is
severed from her body and her corpse is cast down into a bloody pool.</p>
<p>In these two pictures our emotions are played upon in turn—admiration,
reverence, devotion, and then pity, indignation, and the shudderings of
horror.</p>
<p>Probably in our own country and in England this will remain the historic
Marie Antoinette. Whatever the impartial historian may write, he can never
induce the people at large to understand that this queen was far from
queenly, that the popular idea of her is almost wholly false, and that
both in her domestic life and as the greatest lady in France she did much
to bring on the terrors of that revolution which swept her to the
guillotine.</p>
<p>In the first place, it is mere fiction that represents Maria Antoinette as
having been physically beautiful. The painters and engravers have so
idealized her face as in most cases to have produced a purely imaginary
portrait.</p>
<p>She was born in Vienna, in 1755, the daughter of the Emperor Francis and
of that warrior-queen, Maria Theresa. She was a very German-looking child.
Lady Jackson describes her as having a long, thin face, small, pig-like
eyes, a pinched-up mouth, with the heavy Hapsburg lip, and with a somewhat
misshapen form, so that for years she had to be bandaged tightly to give
her a more natural figure.</p>
<p>At fourteen, when she was betrothed to the heir to the French throne, she
was a dumpy, mean-looking little creature, with no distinction whatever,
and with only her bright golden hair to make amends for her many
blemishes. At fifteen she was married and joined the Dauphin in French
territory.</p>
<p>We must recall for a moment the conditions which prevailed in France. King
Louis XV. was nearing his end. He was a man of the most shameless life;
yet he had concealed or gilded his infamies by an external dignity and
magnificence which, were very pleasing to his people. The French, liked to
think that their king was the most splendid monarch and the greatest
gentleman in Europe. The courtiers about him might be vile beneath the
surface, yet they were compelled to deport themselves with the form and
the etiquette that had become traditional in France. They might be
panders, or stock-jobbers, or sellers of political offices; yet they must
none the less have wit and grace and outward nobility of manner.</p>
<p>There was also a tradition regarding the French queen. However loose in
character the other women of the court might be, she alone, like Caesar's
wife, must remain above suspicion. She must be purer than the pure. No
breath, of scandal must reach her or be directed against her.</p>
<p>In this way the French court, even under so dissolute a monarch as Louis
XV., maintained its hold upon the loyalty of the people. Crowds came every
morning to view the king in his bed before he arose; the same crowds
watched him as he was dressed by the gentlemen of the bedchamber, and as
he breakfasted and went through all the functions which are usually
private. The King of France must be a great actor. He must appear to his
people as in reality a king-stately, dignified, and beyond all other human
beings in his remarkable presence.</p>
<p>When the Dauphin and Marie Antoinette came to the French court King Louis
XV. kept up in the case the same semblance of austerity. He forbade these
children to have their sleeping-apartments together. He tried to teach
them that if they were to govern as well as to reign they must conform to
the rigid etiquette of Paris and Versailles.</p>
<p>It proved a difficult task, however. The little German princess had no
natural dignity, though she came from a court where the very strictest
imperial discipline prevailed. Marie Antoinette found that she could have
her own way in many things, and she chose to enjoy life without regard to
ceremony. Her escapades at first would have been thought mild enough had
she not been a "daughter of France"; but they served to shock the old
French king, and likewise, perhaps even more, her own imperial mother,
Maria Theresa.</p>
<p>When a report of the young girl's conduct was brought to her the empress
was at first mute with indignation. Then she cried out:</p>
<p>"Can this girl be a child of mine? She surely must be a changeling!"</p>
<p>The Austrian ambassador to France was instructed to warn the Dauphiness to
be more discreet.</p>
<p>"Tell her," said Maria Theresa, "that she will lose her throne, and even
her life, unless she shows more prudence."</p>
<p>But advice and remonstrance were of no avail. Perhaps they might have been
had her husband possessed a stronger character; but the young Louis was
little more fitted to be a king than was his wife to be a queen. Dull of
perception and indifferent to affairs of state, he had only two interests
that absorbed him. One was the love of hunting, and the other was his
desire to shut himself up in a sort of blacksmith shop, where he could
hammer away at the anvil, blow the bellows, and manufacture small trifles
of mechanical inventions. From this smudgy den he would emerge, sooty and
greasy, an object of distaste to his frivolous princess, with her foamy
laces and perfumes and pervasive daintiness.</p>
<p>It was hinted in many quarters, and it has been many times repeated, that
Louis was lacking in virility. Certainly he had no interest in the society
of women and was wholly continent. But this charge of physical incapacity
seems to have had no real foundation. It had been made against some of his
predecessors. It was afterward hurled at Napoleon the Great, and also
Napoleon the Little. In France, unless a royal personage was openly
licentious, he was almost sure to be jeered at by the people as a
weakling.</p>
<p>And so poor Louis XVI., as he came to be, was treated with a mixture of
pity and contempt because he loved to hammer and mend locks in his smithy
or shoot game when he might have been caressing ladies who would have been
proud to have him choose them out.</p>
<p>On the other hand, because of this opinion regarding Louis, people were
the more suspicious of Marie Antoinette. Some of them, in coarse language,
criticized her assumed infidelities; others, with a polite sneer, affected
to defend her. But the result of it all was dangerous to both, especially
as France was already verging toward the deluge which Louis XV. had
cynically predicted would follow after him.</p>
<p>In fact, the end came sooner than any one had guessed. Louis XV., who had
become hopelessly and helplessly infatuated with the low-born Jeanne du
Barry, was stricken down with smallpox of the most virulent type. For many
days he lay in his gorgeous bed. Courtiers crowded his sick-room and the
adjacent hall, longing for the moment when the breath would leave his
body. He had lived an evil life, and he was to die a loathsome death; yet
he had borne himself before men as a stately monarch. Though his people
had suffered in a thousand ways from his misgovernment, he was still Louis
the Well Beloved, and they blamed his ministers of state for all the
shocking wrongs that France had felt.</p>
<p>The abler men, and some of the leaders of the people, however, looked
forward to the accession of Louis XVI. He at least was frugal in his
habits and almost plebeian in his tastes, and seemed to be one who would
reduce the enormous taxes that had been levied upon France.</p>
<p>The moment came when the Well Beloved died. His death-room was fetid with
disease, and even the long corridors of the palace reeked with infection,
while the motley mob of men and women, clad in silks and satins and
glittering with jewels, hurried from the spot to pay their homage to the
new Louis, who was spoken of as "the Desired." The body of the late
monarch was hastily thrown into a mass of quick-lime, and was driven away
in a humble wagon, without guards and with no salute, save from a single
veteran, who remembered the glories of Fontenoy and discharged his musket
as the royal corpse was carried through the palace gates.</p>
<p>This was a critical moment in the history of France; but we have to
consider it only as a critical moment in the history of Marie Antoinette.
She was now queen. She had it in her power to restore to the French court
its old-time grandeur, and, so far as the queen was concerned, its purity.
Above all, being a foreigner, she should have kept herself free from
reproach and above every shadow of suspicion.</p>
<p>But here again the indifference of the king undoubtedly played a strange
part in her life. Had he borne himself as her lord and master she might
have respected him. Had he shown her the affection of a husband she might
have loved him. But he was neither imposing, nor, on the other hand, was
he alluring. She wrote very frankly about him in a letter to the Count
Orsini:</p>
<p>My tastes are not the same as those of the king, who cares only for
hunting and blacksmith work. You will admit that I should not show to
advantage in a forge. I could not appear there as Vulcan, and the part of
Venus might displease him even more than my tastes.</p>
<p>Thus on the one side is a woman in the first bloom of youth, ardent, eager—and
neglected. On the other side is her husband, whose sluggishness may be
judged by quoting from a diary which he kept during the month in which he
was married. Here is a part of it:</p>
<p>Sunday, 13—Left Versailles. Supper and slept at Compignee, at the
house of M. de Saint-Florentin.</p>
<p>Monday, 14—Interview with Mme. la Dauphine.</p>
<p>Tuesday, 15—Supped at La Muette. Slept at Versailles.</p>
<p>Wednesday, 16—My marriage. Apartment in the gallery. Royal banquet
in the Salle d'Opera.</p>
<p>Thursday, 17—Opera of "Perseus."</p>
<p>Friday, 18—Stag-hunt. Met at La Belle Image. Took one.</p>
<p>Saturday, 19—Dress-ball in the Salle d'Opera. Fireworks.</p>
<p>Thursday, 31—I had an indigestion.</p>
<p>What might have been expected from a young girl placed as this queen was
placed? She was indeed an earlier Eugenie. The first was of royal blood,
the second was almost a plebeian; but each was headstrong,
pleasure-loving, and with no real domestic ties. As Mr. Kipling expresses
it—</p>
<p>The colonel's lady and Judy O'Grady<br/>
Are sisters under their skins;<br/></p>
<p>and so the Austrian woman of 1776 and the Spanish woman of 1856 found
amusement in very similar ways. They plunged into a sea of strange
frivolity, such as one finds to-day at the centers of high fashion. Marie
Antoinette bedecked herself with eccentric garments. On her head she wore
a hat styled a "what-is-it," towering many feet in height and flaunting
parti-colored plumes. Worse than all this, she refused to wear corsets,
and at some great functions she would appear in what looked exactly like a
bedroom gown.</p>
<p>She would even neglect the ordinary niceties of life. Her hands were not
well cared for. It was very difficult for the ladies in attendance to
persuade her to brush her teeth with regularity. Again, she would persist
in wearing her frilled and lace-trimmed petticoats long after their dainty
edges had been smirched and blackened.</p>
<p>Yet these things might have been counteracted had she gone no further.
Unfortunately, she did go further. She loved to dress at night like a
shop-girl and venture out into the world of Paris, where she was
frequently followed and recognized. Think of it—the Queen of France,
elbowed in dense crowds and seeking to attract the attention of common
soldiers!</p>
<p>Of course, almost every one put the worst construction upon this, and
after a time upon everything she did. When she took a fancy for
constructing labyrinths and secret passages in the palace, all Paris vowed
that she was planning means by which her various lovers might enter
without observation. The hidden printing-presses of Paris swarmed with
gross lampoons about this reckless girl; and, although there was little
truth in what they said, there was enough to cloud her reputation. When
she fell ill with the measles she was attended in her sick-chamber by four
gentlemen of the court. The king was forbidden to enter lest he might
catch the childish disorder.</p>
<p>The apathy of the king, indeed, drove her into many a folly. After four
years of marriage, as Mrs. Mayne records, he had only reached the point of
giving her a chilly kiss. The fact that she had no children became a
serious matter. Her brother, the Emperor Joseph of Austria, when he
visited Paris, ventured to speak to the king upon the subject. Even the
Austrian ambassador had thrown out hints that the house of Bourbon needed
direct heirs. Louis grunted and said little, but he must have known how
good was the advice.</p>
<p>It was at about this time when there came to the French court a young
Swede named Axel de Fersen, who bore the title of count, but who was
received less for his rank than for his winning manner, his knightly
bearing, and his handsome, sympathetic face. Romantic in spirit, he threw
himself at once into a silent inner worship of Marie Antoinette, who had
for him a singular attraction. Wherever he could meet her they met. To her
growing cynicism this breath of pure yet ardent affection was very
grateful. It came as something fresh and sweet into the feverish life she
led.</p>
<p>Other men had had the audacity to woo her—among them Duc de Lauzun,
whose complicity in the famous affair of the diamond necklace afterward
cast her, though innocent, into ruin; the Duc de Biron; and the Baron de
Besenval, who had obtained much influence over her, which he used for the
most evil purposes. Besenval tainted her mind by persuading her to read
indecent books, in the hope that at last she would become his prey.</p>
<p>But none of these men ever meant to Marie Antoinette what Fersen meant.
Though less than twenty years of age, he maintained the reserve of a great
gentleman, and never forced himself upon her notice. Yet their first
acquaintance had occurred in such a way as to give to it a touch of
intimacy. He had gone to a masked ball, and there had chosen for his
partner a lady whose face was quite concealed. Something drew the two
together. The gaiety of the woman and the chivalry of the man blended most
harmoniously. It was only afterward that he discovered that his chance
partner was the first lady in France. She kept his memory in her mind; for
some time later, when he was at a royal drawing-room and she heard his
voice, she exclaimed:</p>
<p>"Ah, an old acquaintance!"</p>
<p>From this time Fersen was among those who were most intimately favored by
the queen. He had the privilege of attending her private receptions at the
palace of the Trianon, and was a conspicuous figure at the feasts given in
the queen's honor by the Princess de Lamballe, a beautiful girl whose head
was destined afterward to be severed from her body and borne upon a bloody
pike through the streets of Paris. But as yet the deluge had not arrived
and the great and noble still danced upon the brink of a volcano.</p>
<p>Fersen grew more and more infatuated, nor could he quite conceal his
feelings. The queen, in her turn, was neither frightened nor indignant.
His passion, so profound and yet so respectful, deeply moved her. Then
came a time when the truth was made clear to both of them. Fersen was near
her while she was singing to the harpsichord, and "she was betrayed by her
own music into an avowal which song made easy." She forgot that she was
Queen of France. She only felt that her womanhood had been starved and
slighted, and that here was a noble-minded lover of whom she could be
proud.</p>
<p>Some time after this announcement was officially made of the approaching
accouchement of the queen. It was impossible that malicious tongues should
be silent. The king's brother, the Comte de Provence, who hated the queen,
just as the Bonapartes afterward hated Josephine, did his best to besmirch
her reputation. He had, indeed, the extraordinary insolence to do so at a
time when one would suppose that the vilest of men would remain silent.
The child proved to be a princess, and she afterward received the title of
Duchesse d'Angouleme. The King of Spain asked to be her godfather at the
christening, which was to be held in the cathedral of Notre Dame. The
Spanish king was not present in person, but asked the Comte de Provence to
act as his proxy.</p>
<p>On the appointed day the royal party proceeded to the cathedral, and the
Comte de Provence presented the little child at the baptismal font. The
grand almoner, who presided, asked;</p>
<p>"What name shall be given to this child?"</p>
<p>The Comte de Provence answered in a sneering tone:</p>
<p>"Oh, we don't begin with that. The first thing to find out is who the
father and the mother are!"</p>
<p>These words, spoken at such a place and such a time, and with a strongly
sardonic ring, set all Paris gossiping. It was a thinly veiled innuendo
that the father of the child was not the King of France. Those about the
court immediately began to look at Fersen with significant smiles. The
queen would gladly have kept him near her; but Fersen cared even more for
her good name than for his love of her. It would have been so easy to
remain in the full enjoyment of his conquest; but he was too chivalrous
for that, or, rather, he knew that the various ambassadors in Paris had
told their respective governments of the rising scandal. In fact, the
following secret despatch was sent to the King of Sweden by his envoy:</p>
<p>I must confide to your majesty that the young Count Fersen has been so
well received by the queen that various persons have taken it amiss. I own
that I am sure that she has a liking for him. I have seen proofs of it too
certain to be doubted. During the last few days the queen has not taken
her eyes off him, and as she gazed they were full of tears. I beg your
majesty to keep their secret to yourself.</p>
<p>The queen wept because Fersen had resolved to leave her lest she should be
exposed to further gossip. If he left her without any apparent reason, the
gossip would only be the more intense. Therefore he decided to join the
French troops who were going to America to fight under Lafayette. A
brilliant but dissolute duchess taunted him when the news became known.</p>
<p>"How is this?" said she. "Do you forsake your conquest?"</p>
<p>But, "lying like a gentleman," Fersen answered, quietly:</p>
<p>"Had I made a conquest I should not forsake it. I go away free, and,
unfortunately, without leaving any regret."</p>
<p>Nothing could have been more chivalrous than the pains which Fersen took
to shield the reputation of the queen. He even allowed it to be supposed
that he was planning a marriage with a rich young Swedish woman who had
been naturalized in England. As a matter of fact, he departed for America,
and not very long afterward the young woman in question married an
Englishman.</p>
<p>Fersen served in America for a time, returning, however, at the end of
three years. He was one of the original Cincinnati, being admitted to the
order by Washington himself. When he returned to France he was received
with high honors and was made colonel of the royal Swedish regiment.</p>
<p>The dangers threatening Louis and his court, which were now gigantic and
appalling, forbade him to forsake the queen. By her side he did what he
could to check the revolution; and, failing this, he helped her to
maintain an imperial dignity of manner which she might otherwise have
lacked. He faced the bellowing mob which surrounded the Tuileries.
Lafayette tried to make the National Guard obey his orders, but he was
jeered at for his pains. Violent epithets were hurled at the king. The
least insulting name which they could give him was "a fat pig." As for the
queen, the most filthy phrases were showered upon her by the men, and even
more so by the women, who swarmed out of the slums and sought her life.</p>
<p>At last, in 1791, it was decided that the king and the queen and their
children, of whom they now had three, should endeavor to escape from
Paris. Fersen planned their flight, but it proved to be a failure. Every
one remembers how they were discovered and halted at Varennes. The royal
party was escorted back to Paris by the mob, which chanted with insolent
additions:</p>
<p>"We've brought back the baker, the baker's wife, and the baker's boy! Now
we shall have bread!"</p>
<p>Against the savage fury which soon animated the French a foreigner like
Fersen could do very little; but he seems to have endeavored, night and
day, to serve the woman whom he loved. His efforts have been described by
Grandat; but they were of no avail. The king and queen were practically
made prisoners. Their eldest son died. They went through horrors that were
stimulated by the wretch Hebert, at the head of his so-called Madmen
(Enrages). The king was executed in January, 1792. The queen dragged out a
brief existence in a prison where she was for ever under the eyes of human
brutes, who guarded her and watched her and jeered at her at times when
even men would be sensitive. Then, at last, she mounted the scaffold, and
her head, with its shining hair, fell into the bloody basket.</p>
<p>Marie Antoinette shows many contradictions in her character. As a young
girl she was petulant and silly and almost unseemly in her actions. As a
queen, with waning power, she took on a dignity which recalled the dignity
of her imperial mother. At first a flirt, she fell deeply in love when she
met a man who was worthy of that love. She lived for most part like a mere
cocotte. She died every inch a queen.</p>
<p>One finds a curious resemblance between the fate of Marie Antoinette and
that of her gallant lover, who outlived her for nearly twenty years. She
died amid the shrieks and execrations of a maddened populace in Paris; he
was practically torn in pieces by a mob in the streets of Stockholm. The
day of his death was the anniversary of the flight to Varennes. To the
last moment of his existence he remained faithful to the memory of the
royal woman who had given herself so utterly to him.</p>
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