FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2061   2062   2063   2064   2065   2066   2067   2068   2069   2070   2071   2072   2073   2074   2075   2076   2077   2078   2079   2080   2081   2082   2083   2084   2085  
2086   2087   2088   2089   2090   2091   2092   2093   2094   2095   2096   2097   2098   2099   2100   2101   2102   2103   2104   2105   2106   2107   2108   2109   2110   >>   >|  
The papers were handed to my messenger, who pledged her word of honour that I would certainly adhere to the dying man's last injunctions. She desired they might be sealed up by the family, and by them directed to me.--[To this day, I neither know the name of the convent or the confessor.]--She then hastened back to our place of rendezvous, where I waited for her, and where she consigned the packet into my own hands. "That part of the papers which compromised only the Princesse de Conde was shown by me to the Princess on the occasion I have mentioned. It was natural enough that she should have been shocked at the detection of having suborned the clergy and others with heavy bribes to avert the deserved fate of the Cardinal. I kept this part of the packet secret till the King's two aunts, who had also been warm advocates in favour of the prelate, left Paris for Rome. Then, as Pius VI. had interested himself as head of the Church for the honour of one of its members, I gave them these very papers to deliver to His Holiness for his private perusal. I was desirous of enabling this truly charitable and Christian head of our sacred religion to judge how far his interference was justified by facts. I am thoroughly convinced that, had he been sooner furnished with these evidences, instead of blaming the royal proceeding, he would have urged it on, nay, would himself have been the first to advise that the foul conspiracy should be dragged into open day. "The Comte de Vergennes told me that the King displayed the greatest impartiality throughout the whole investigation for the exculpation of the Queen, and made good his title on this, as he did on every occasion where his own unbiassed feelings and opinions were called into action, to great esteem for much higher qualities than the world has usually given him credit for. "I have been accused of having opened the prison doors of the culprit Lamotte for her escape; but the charge is false. I interested myself, as was my duty, to shield the Queen from public reproach by having Lamotte sent to a place of penitence; but I never interfered, except to lessen her punishment, after the judicial proceedings. The diamonds, in the hands of her vile associates at Paris, procured her ample means to escape. I should have been the Queen's greatest enemy had I been the cause of giving liberty to one who acted, and might naturally have been expected to act, as this depraved woman did. "Thr
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2061   2062   2063   2064   2065   2066   2067   2068   2069   2070   2071   2072   2073   2074   2075   2076   2077   2078   2079   2080   2081   2082   2083   2084   2085  
2086   2087   2088   2089   2090   2091   2092   2093   2094   2095   2096   2097   2098   2099   2100   2101   2102   2103   2104   2105   2106   2107   2108   2109   2110   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

papers

 
packet
 

occasion

 

interested

 

greatest

 

Lamotte

 

escape

 

honour

 

opinions

 

feelings


pledged

 

called

 

unbiassed

 

qualities

 

higher

 

esteem

 

action

 

exculpation

 

advise

 

conspiracy


blaming

 

proceeding

 

dragged

 

investigation

 

impartiality

 

Vergennes

 

displayed

 

opened

 
associates
 

procured


diamonds

 

punishment

 
judicial
 

proceedings

 

depraved

 

expected

 

naturally

 

giving

 

liberty

 

lessen


handed

 

charge

 
messenger
 

culprit

 

accused

 
evidences
 

prison

 

penitence

 

interfered

 
reproach