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The Man in the Iron Mask by Andrew Lang
The
Mystery of the Man in the Iron Mask is, despite a pleasant saying of Lord
Beaconsfield's, one of the most fascinating in history.
By a curious coincidence the wildest legend on the subject, and the
correct explanation of the problem, were offered to the world in the same
year, 1801. According to this form of the legend, the Man in the Iron
Mask was the genuine Louis XIV., deprived of his rights in favor of a
child of Anne of Austria and of Mazarin.
Immured in the Isles Sainte-Marguerite, in the bay of Cannes (where
you are shown his cell, looking north to the sunny town), he married, and
begot a son. That son was
carried to Corsica, was named de Buona Parte, and was the ancestor of
Napoleon. The Emperor was thus the legitimate representative of the
House of Bourbon. This
legend was circulated in 1801, and is referred to in a proclamation of the
Royalists of La Vendee. In
the same year, 1801, Roux Fazaillac, a Citoyen and a revolutionary
legislator, published a work in which he asserted that the Man in the Iron
Mask (as known in rumor) was not one man, but a myth, in which the actual
facts concerning at least two men were blended.
It is certain that Roux Fazaillac was right; or that, if he was
wrong, the Man in the Iron Mask was an obscure valet, of French birth,
residing in England, whose real name was Martin. Before
we enter on the topic of this poor menial's tragic history, it may be as
well to trace the progress of the romantic legend, as it blossomed after
the death of the Man, whose Mask was not of iron, but of black velvet.
Later we shall show how the legend struck root and flowered, from
the moment when the poor valet, Martin (by his prison pseudonym
"Eustache Dauger"), was immured in the French fortress of
Pignerol, in Piedmont (August, 1669).
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The
Man, in connection with the Mask, is first known to us from a kind of
notebook kept by du Junca, Lieutenant of the Bastille.
On September 18, 1698, he records the arrival of the new Governor
of the Bastille, M. de Saint-Mars, bringing with him, from his last place,
the Isles Sainte-Marguerite, in the bay of Camnes, "an old prisoner
whom he had at Pignerol. He
keeps the prisoner always masked, his name is not spoken . . . and I have
put him alone, in the third chamber of the Bertaudiere tower, having
furnished it some days before with everything, by order of M. de
Saint-Mars. The prisoner is to be served and cared for by M. de
Rosarges," the officer next in command under Saint-Mars.[1] [1]
Funck-Brentano, Legendes et Archives de la Bastille, pp. 86, 87.
Paris, 1898, p. 277, a facsimile of this entry. The
prisoner's death is entered by du Junca on November 19, 1703. To that
entry we return later. The
existence of this prisoner was known and excited curiosity.
On October 15, 1711, the Princess Palatine wrote about the case to
the Electress Sophia of Hanover, "A man lived for long years in the
Bastille, masked, and masked he died there.
Two musketeers were by his side to shoot him if ever he unmasked.
He ate and slept in his mask.
There must, doubtless, have been some good reason for this, as
otherwise he was very well treated, well lodged, and had everything given
to him that he wanted. He
took the Communion masked; was very devout, and read perpetually." On
October 22, 1711, the Princess writes that the Mask was an English
nobleman, mixed up in the plot of the Duke of Berwick against William
III.--Fenwick's affair is meant. He
was imprisoned and masked that the Dutch usurper might never know what had
become of him.[1] [1]
Op. cit. 98, note I. The
legend was now afloat in society. The
sub-commandant of the Bastille from 1749 to 1787, Chevalier, declared,
obviously on the evidence of tradition, that all the Mask's furniture and
clothes were destroyed at his death, lest they might yield a clew to his
identity. Louis XV. is said
to have told Madame de Pompadour that the Mask was "the minister of
an Italian prince." Louis
XVI. told Marie Antoinette (according to Madame de Campan) that the Mask
was a Mantuan intriguer, the same person as Louis XV. indicated. Perhaps
he was, it is one of two possible alternatives.
Voltaire, in the first edition of his "Siecle de Louis
XIV.," merely spoke of a young, handsome, masked prisoner, treated
with the highest respect by Louvois, the Minister of Louis XIV.
At last, in "Questions sur l'Encyclopedie" (second
edition), Voltaire averred that the Mask was the son of Anne of Austria
and Mazarin, an elder brother of Louis XIV.
Changes were rung on this note: the Mask was the actual King, Louis
XIV. was a bastard. Others
held that he was James, Duke of Monmouth--or Moliere!
In 1770 Heiss identified him with Mattioli, the Mantuan intriguer,
and especially after the appearance of the book by Roux Fazaillac, in
1801, that was the generally accepted opinion. It
MAY be true, in part. Mattioli
MAY have been the prisoner who died in the Bastille in November 1703, but
the legend of the Mask's prison life undeniably arose out of the adventure
of our valet, Martin or Eustache Dauger. II After
reading the arguments of the advocates of Mattioli, I could not but
perceive that, whatever captive died, masked, at the Bastille in 1703, the
valet Dauger was the real source of most of the legends about the Man in
the Iron Mask. A study of M.
Lair's book "Nicholas Fouquet" (1890) confirmed this opinion.
I therefore pushed the inquiry into a source neglected by the
French historians, namely, the correspondence of the English ambassadors,
agents, and statesmen for the years 1668, 1669.[1]
One result is to confirm a wild theory of my own to the effect that
the Man in the Iron Mask (if Dauger were he) may have been as great a
mystery to himself as to historical inquirers.
He may not have known WHAT he was imprisoned for doing!
More important is the probable conclusion that the long and
mysterious captivity of Eustache Dauger, and of another perfectly harmless
valet and victim, was the mere automatic result of "red tape" of
the old French absolute monarchy. These
wretches were caught in the toils of the system, and suffered to no
purpose, for no crime. The two men, at least Dauger, were apparently mere
supernumeraries in the obscure intrigue of a conspirator known as Roux de
Marsilly. [1]
The papers are in the Record Office; for the contents see the following
essay, The Valet's Master. This
truly abominable tragedy of Roux de Marsilly is "another story,"
narrated in the following essay. It
must suffice here to say that, in 1669, while Charles II. was negotiating
the famous, or infamous, secret treaty with Louis XIV.--the treaty of
alliance against Holland, and in favor of the restoration of Roman
Catholicism in England--Roux de Marsilly, a French Huguenot, was dealing
with Arlington and others, in favor of a Protestant league against France. When
he started from England for Switzerland in February, 1669, Marsilly left
in London a valet called by him "Martin," who had quitted his
service and was living with his own family.
This man is the "Eustache Dauger" of our mystery. The name is his prison pseudonym, as "Lestang" was
that of Mattioli. The French
Government was anxious to lay hands on him, for he had certainly, as the
letters of Marsilly prove, come and gone freely between that conspirator
and his English employers. How
much Dauger knew, what amount of mischief he could effect, was uncertain.
Much or little, it was a matter which, strange to say, caused the
greatest anxiety to Louis XIV. and to his Ministers for very many years.
Probably long before Dauger died (the date is unknown, but it was
more than twenty-five years after Marsilly's execution), his secret, if
secret he possessed, had ceased to be of importance.
But he was now in the toils of the French red tape, the system of
secrecy which rarely released its victim.
He was guarded, we shall see with such unheard-of rigor that
popular fancy at once took him for some great, perhaps royal, personage. Marsilly
was publicly tortured to death in Paris on June 22, 1669. By July 19 his
ex-valet, Dauger, had entered on his mysterious term of captivity.
How the French got possession of him, whether he yielded to
cajolery, or was betrayed by Charles II., is uncertain. The French
ambassador at St. James's, Colbert (brother of the celebrated Minister),
writes thus to M. de Lyonne, in Paris, on July I, 1669:[1] "Monsieur
Joly has spoken to the man Martin" (Dauger), "and has really
persuaded him that, by going to France and telling all that he knows
against Roux, he will play the part of a lad of honor and a good
subject." [1]
Transcripts from Paris MSS., Vol. xxxiii., Record Office. But
Martin, after all, was NOT persuaded! Martin
replied to Joly that he knew nothing at all, and that, once in France,
people would think he was well acquainted with the traffickings of Roux,
"and so he would be kept in prison to make him divulge what he did
not know." The possible
Man in the Iron Mask did not know his own secret!
But, later in the conversation, Martin foolishly admitted that he
knew a great deal; perhaps he did this out of mere fatal vanity.
Cross to France, however, he would not, even when offered a
safe-conduct and promise of reward. Colbert therefore proposes to ask
Charles to surrender the valet, and probably Charles descended to the
meanness. By July 19, at all
events, Louvois, the War Minister of Louis XIV., was bidding Saint- Mars,
at Pignerol in Piedmont, expect from Dunkirk a prisoner of the very
highest importance--a valet! This
valet, now called "Eustache Dauger," can only have been
Marsilly's valet, Martin, who, by one means or another, had been brought
from England to Dunkirk. It is hardly conceivable, at least, that when a valet, in
England, is "wanted" by the French police on July 1, for
political reasons, and when by July 19 they have caught a valet of extreme
political importance, the two valets should be two different men. Martin
must be Dauger. Here,
then, by July 19, 1669, we find our unhappy serving man in the toils.
Why was he to be handled with such mysterious rigor? It is true
that State prisoners of very little account were kept with great secrecy.
But it cannot well be argued that they were all treated with the
extraordinary precautions which, in the case of Dauger, were not relaxed
for twenty-five or thirty years. The
King says, according to Louvois, that the safe keeping of Dauger is
"of the last importance to his service."
He must have intercourse with nobody.
His windows must be where nobody can pass; several bolted doors
must cut him off from the sound of human voices. Saint-Mars himself, the
commandant, must feed the valet daily. "You must never, under any
pretenses listen to what he may wish to tell you.
You must threaten him with death if he speaks one word except about
his actual needs. He is only
a valet, and does not need much furniture."[1] [1]
The letters are printed by Roux Fazaillac, Jung, Lair, and others. Saint-Mars
replied that, in presence of M. de Vauroy, the chief officer of Dunkirk
(who carried Dauger thence to Pignerol), he had threatened to run Dauger
through the body if he ever dared to speak, even to him, Saint-Mars.
He has mentioned this prisoner, he says, to no mortal. People believe that Dauger is a Marshal of France, so strange
and unusual are the precautions taken for his security. A
Marshal of France! The legend
has begun. At this time
(1669) Saint-Mars had in charge Fouquet, the great fallen Minister, the
richest and most dangerous subject of Louis XIV.
By-and-by he also held Lauzun, the adventurous wooer of la Grande
Mademoiselle. But it was not
they, it was the valet, Dauger, who caused "sensation." On
February 20, 1672, Saint-Mars, for the sake of economy, wished to use
Dauger as valet to Lauzun. This
proves that Saint-Mars did not, after all, see the necessity of secluding
Dauger or thought the King's fears groundless.
In the opinion of Saint-Mars, Dauger did not want to be released,
"would never ask to be set free." Then why was he so anxiously
guarded? Louvois refused to let Dauger be put with Lauzun as valet.
In 1675, however, he allowed Dauger to act as valet to Fouquet, but
with Lauzun, said Louvois, Dauger must have no intercourse.
Fouquet had then another prisoner valet, La Riviere.
This man had apparently been accused of no crime.
He was of a melancholy character, and a dropsical habit of body:
Fouquet had amused himself by doctoring him and teaching him to read. In
the month of December, 1678, Saint-Mars, the commandant of the prison,
brought to Fouquet a sealed letter from Louvois, the seal unbroken.
His own reply was also to be sealed, and not to be seen by
Saint-Mars. Louvois wrote
that the King wished to know one thing, before giving Fouquet ampler
liberty. Had his valet,
Eustache Dauger, told his other valet, La Riviere, what he had done before
coming to Pignerol? (de ce a quoi il a ete employe aupravant que d'etre a
Pignerol). "His Majesty
bids me ask you [Fouquet] this question, and expects that you will answer
without considering anything but the truth, that he may know what measures
to take," these depending on whether Dauger has, or has not, told La
Riviere the story of his past life.[1]
Moreover, Lauzun was never, said Louvois, to be allowed to enter
Fouquet's room when Dauger was present.
The humorous point is that, thanks to a hole dug in the wall
between his room and Fouquet's, Lauzun saw Dauger whenever he pleased. [1]
Lair, Nicholas Foucquet, ii. pp. 463, 464. From
the letter of Louvois to Fouquet, about Dauger (December 23, 1678), it is
plain that Louis XIV. had no more pressing anxiety, nine years after
Dauger's arrest, than to conceal what it was that Dauger had done.
It is apparent that Saint-Mars himself either was unacquainted with
this secret, or was supposed by Louvois and the King to be unaware of it.
He had been ordered never to allow Dauger to tell him; he was not
allowed to see the letters on the subject between Lauzun and Fouquet.
We still do not know, and never shall know, whether Dauger himself
knew his own secret, or whether (as he had anticipated) he was locked up
for not divulging what he did not know. The
answer of Fouquet to Louvois must have satisfied Louis that Dauger had not
imparted his secret to the other valet, La Riviere, for Fouquet was now
allowed a great deal of liberty. In
1679, he might see his family, the officers of the garrison, and
Lauzun--it being provided that Lauzun and Dauger should never meet.
In March, 1680, Fouquet died, and henceforth the two valets were
most rigorously guarded; Dauger, because he was supposed to know
something; La Riviere, because Dauger might have imparted the real or
fancied secret to him. We
shall return to these poor serving men, but here it is necessary to state
that, ten months before the death of their master, Fouquet, an important
new captive had been brought to the prison of Pignerol. This
captive was the other candidate for the honors of the Mask, Count
Mattioli, the secretary of the Duke of Mantua.
He was kidnaped on Italian soil on May 2, 1679, and hurried to the
mountain fortress of Pignerol, then on French ground.
His offense was the betraying of the secret negotiations for the
cession of the town and fortress of Casal, by the Duke of Mantua, to Louis
XIV. The disappearance of Mattioli was, of course, known to the world. The
cause of his enlevement, and the place of his captivity, Pignerol, were
matters of newspaper comment at least as early as 1687.
Still earlier, in 1682, the story of Mattioli's arrest and
seclusion in Pignerol had been published in a work named "La Prudenza
Trionfante di Casale."[1] There
was thus no mystery, at the time, about Mattioli; his crime and punishment
were perfectly well known to students of politics.
He has been regarded as the mysterious Man in the Iron Mask, but,
for years after his arrest, he was the least mysterious of State
prisoners. [1]
Brentano, op. cit., p. 117. Here,
then, is Mattioli in Pignerol in May, 1679.
While Fouquet then enjoyed relative freedom, while Lauzun schemed
escapes or made insulting love to Mademoiselle Fouquet, Mattioli lived on
the bread and water of affliction. He
was threatened with torture to make him deliver up some papers
compromising Louis XIV. It
was expressly commanded that he should have nothing beyond the barest
necessaries of life. He was
to be kept dans la dure prison. In
brief, he was used no better than the meanest of prisoners.
The awful life of isolation, without employment, without books,
without writing materials, without sight or sound of man save when Saint-
Mars or his lieutenant brought food for the day, drove captives mad. In
January, 1680, two prisoners, a monk[1] and one Dubreuil, had become
insane. By February 14, 1680,
Mattioli was daily conversing with God and his angels.
"I believe his brain is turned," says Saint-Mars.
In March, 1680, as we saw, Fouquet died.
The prisoners, not counting Lauzun (released soon after), were now
five: (1) Mattioli (mad); (2) Dubreuil (mad); (3) The monk (mad); (4)
Dauger, and (5) La Riviere. These
two, being employed as valets, kept their wits.
On the death of Fouquet, Louvois wrote to Saint-Mars about the two
valets. Lauzun must be made to believe that they had been set at
liberty, but, in fact, they must be most carefully guarded IN A SINGLE
CHAMBER. They were shut up in
one of the dungeons of the "Tour d'en bas."
Dauger had recently done something as to which Louvois writes:
"Let me know how Dauger can possibly have done what you tell me, and
how he got the necessary drugs, as I cannot suppose that you supplied him
with them" (July 10, 1680).[2] [1]
A monk, who MAY have been this monk, appears in the following essay, p.
34, infra. [2]
Lair, Nicholas Foucquet, ii., pp. 476, 477. Here,
then, by July, 1680, are the two valets locked in one dungeon of the
"Tour d'en bas." By
September Saint-Mars had placed Mattioli, with the mad monk, in another
chamber of the same tower. He writes: "Mattioli is almost as mad as
the monk," who arose from bed and preached naked.
Mattioli behaved so rudely and violently that the lieutenant of
Saint-Mars had to show him a whip, and threaten him with a flogging.
This had its effect. Mattioli,
to make his peace, offered a valuable ring to Blainvilliers. The ring was kept to be restored to him, if ever Louis let
him go free--a contingency mentioned more than once in the correspondence. Apparently
Mattioli now sobered down, and probably was given a separate chamber and a
valet; he certainly had a valet at Pignerol later. By May 1681, Dauger and La Riviere still occupied their
common chamber in the "Tour d'en bas."
They were regarded by Louvois as the most important of the five
prisoners then at Pignerol. They,
not Mattioli, were the captives about whose safe and secret keeping Louis
and Louvois were most anxious. This
appears from a letter of Louvois to Saint-Mars, of May 12, 1681. The
jailer, Saint-Mars, is to be promoted from Pignerol to Exiles.
"Thither," says Louvois, "the king desires to transport
such of your prisoners as he thinks too important to have in other hands
than yours." These
prisoners are "the two in the low chamber of the tower," the two
valets, Dauger and La Riviere. From
a letter of Saint-Mars (June, 1681) we know that Mattioli was not one of
these. He says: "I shall
keep at Exiles two birds (merles) whom I have here: they are only known as
the gentry of the low room in the tower; Mattioli may stay on here at
Pignerol with the other prisoners" (Dubreuil and the mad monk). It is at this point that Le Citoyen Roux (Fazaillac), writing
in the Year IX. of the Republic (1801), loses touch with the secret.[1]
Roux finds, in the State Papers, the arrival of Eustache Dauger at
Pignerol in 1669, but does not know who he is, or what is his quality.
He sees that the Mask must be either Mattioli, Dauger, the monk,
one Dubreuil, or one Calazio. But,
overlooking or not having access to the letter of Saint-Mars of June,
1681, Roux holds that the prisoners taken to Les Exiles were the monk and
Mattioli. One of these must
be the Mask, and Roux votes for Mattioli.
He is wrong. Mattioli beyond all doubt remained at Pignerol. [1]
Recherches Historiques sur l'Homme au Masque de Fer, Paris. An. IX. Mountains
of argument have been built on these words, deux merles, "two
jail-birds." One of the two, we shall see, became the source of the legend
of the Man in the Iron Mask. "How
can a wretched jail-bird (merle) have been the Mask?" asks M. Topin.
"The rogue's whole furniture and table-linen were sold for 1l.
19s. He only got a new suit
of clothes every three years." All
very true; but this jail-bird and his mate, by the direct statement of
Louvois, are "the prisoners too important to be intrusted to other
hands than yours"--the hands of Saint-Mars--while Mattioli is so
unimportant that he may be left at Pignerol under Villebois. The
truth is, that the offense and the punishment of Mattioli were well known
to European diplomatists and readers of books.
Casal, moreover, at this time was openly ceded to Louis XIV., and
Mattioli could not have told the world more than it already knew.
But, for some inscrutable reason, the secret which Dauger knew, or
was suspected of knowing, became more and more a source of anxiety to
Louvois and Louis. What can
he have known? The charges
against his master, Roux de Marsilly, had been publicly proclaimed.
Twelve years had passed since the dealings of Arlington with
Marsilly. Yet, Louvois became more and more nervous. In
accordance with commands of his, on March 2, 1682, the two valets, who had
hitherto occupied one chamber at Exiles as at Pignerol, were cut off from
all communication with each other. Says Saint-Mars, "Since receiving
your letter I have warded the pair as strictly and exactly as I did M.
Fouquet and M. Lauzun, who cannot brag that he sent or received any
intelligence. Night and day
two sentinels watch their tower; and my own windows command a view of the
sentinels. Nobody speaks to
my captives but myself, my lieutenant, their confessor, and the doctor,
who lives eighteen miles away, and only sees them when I am present."
Years went by; in January, 1687, one of the two captives died; we
really do not know which with absolute certainty.
However, the intensified secrecy with which the survivor was now
guarded seems more appropriate to Dauger and M. Funck-Brentano and M. Lair
have no doubt that it was La Riviere who expired.
He was dropsical, that appears in the official correspondence, and
the dead prisoner died of dropsy. As
for the strange secrecy about Dauger, here is an example. Saint-Mars, in
January, 1687, was appointed to the fortress of the Isles
Sainte-Marguerite, that sun themselves in the bay of Cannes. On January 20
he asks leave to go to see his little kingdom.
He must leave Dauger, but has forbidden even his lieutenant to
speak to that prisoner. This
was an increase of precaution since 1682. He wishes to take the captive to
the Isles, but how? A sedan
chair covered over with oilcloth seems best.
A litter might break down, litters often did, and some one might
then see the passenger. Now
M. Funck-Brentano says, to minimize the importance of Dauger, "he was
shut up like so much luggage in a chair hermetically closed with oilcloth,
carried by eight Piedmontese relays of four." Luggage
is not usually carried in hermetically sealed sedan chairs, but Saint-Mars
has explained why, by surplus of precaution, he did not use a litter.
The litter might break down and Dauger might be seen.
A new prison was built specially, at the cost of 5,000 lires, for
Dauger at Sainte-Marguerite, with large sunny rooms.
On May 3, 1687, Saint-Mars had entered on his island realm, Dauger
being nearly killed by twelve days' journey in a closed chair.
He again excited the utmost curiosity.
On January 8, 1688, Saint-Mars writes that his prisoner is believed
by the world to be either a son of Oliver Cromwell, or the Duc de
Beaufort,[1] who was never seen again, dead or alive, after a night battle
in Crete, on June 25, 1669, just before Dauger was arrested.
Saint-Mars sent in a note of the TOTAL of Dauger's expenses for the
year 1687. He actually did
not dare to send the ITEMS, he says, lest they, if the bill fell into the
wrong hands, might reveal too much. [1]
Duc de Beaufort whom Athos releases from prison in Dumas's Vingt Ans
Apres. Meanwhile,
an Italian news-letter, copied into a Leyden paper, of August 1687,
declared that Mattioli had just been brought from Pignerol to
Sainte-Marguerite. There was
no mystery about Mattioli, the story of his capture was published in 1682,
but the press, on one point, was in error; Mattioli was still at Pignerol.
The known advent of the late Commandant of Pignerol, Saint-Mars, with a
single concealed prisoner, at the island, naturally suggested the
erroneous idea that the prisoner was Mattioli. The prisoner was really Dauger, the survivor of the two
valets. From
1688 to 1691 no letter about Dauger has been published. Apparently he was
then the only prisoner on the island, except one Chezut, who was there
before Dauger arrived, and gave up his chamber to Dauger while the new
cells were being built. Between
1689 and 1693 six Protestant preachers were brought to the island, while
Louvois, the Minister, died in 1691, and was succeeded by Barbezieux.
On August 13, 1691, Barbezieux wrote to ask Saint-Mars about
"the prisoner whom he had guarded for twenty years." The only such prisoner was Dauger, who entered Pignerol in
August, 1669. Mattioli had
been a prisoner only for twelve years, and lay in Pignerol, not in
Sainte-Marguerite, where Saint-Mars now was. Saint-Mars replied: "I
can assure you that NOBODY HAS SEEN HIM BUT MYSELF." By
the beginning of March, 1694, Pignerol had been bombarded by the enemies
of France; presently Louis XIV. had to cede it to Savoy. The prisoners
there must be removed. Mattioli,
in Pignerol, at the end of 1693, had been in trouble.
He and his valet had tried to smuggle out letters written on the
linings of their pockets. These
were seized and burned. On
March 20, 1694, Barbezieux wrote to Laprade, now commanding at Pignerol,
that he must take his three prisoners, one by one, with all secrecy, to
Sainte-Marguerite. Laprade alone must give them their food on the journey.
The military officer of the escort was warned to ask no questions.
Already (February 26, 1694) Barbezieux had informed Saint-Mars that these
prisoners were coming. They
are of more consequence, one of them at least, than the prisoners on the
island, and must be put in the safest places."
The "one" is doubtless Mattioli.
In 1681 Louvois had thought Dauger and La Riviere more important
than Mattioli, who, in March, 1694, came from Pignerol to Sainte-
Marguerite. Now in April, 1694, a prisoner died at the island, a prisoner
who, like Mattioli, HAD A VALET. We
hear of no other prisoner on the island, except Mattioli who had a valet.
A letter of Saint-Mars (January 6, 1696) proves that no prisoner
THEN had a valet, for each prisoner collected his own dirty plates and
dishes, piled them up, and handed them to the lieutenant. M.
Funck-Brentano argues that in this very letter (January 6, 1696)
Saint-Mars speaks of "les valets de messieurs les prisonniers."
But in THAT part of the letter Saint-Mars is not speaking of the actual
state of things at Sainte-Marguerite, but is giving reminiscences of
Fouquet and Lauzun, who, of course, at Piguerol, had valets, and had
money, as he shows. Dauger
had no money. M.
Funck-Brentano next argues that early in 1694 one of the preacher
prisoners, Melzac, died, and cites M. Jung ("La Verite sur le Masque
de Fer," p. 91). This is
odd, as M. Jung says that Melzac, or Malzac, "died in the end of
1692, or early in 1693." Why,
then, does M. Funck-Brentano cite M. Jung for the death of the preacher
early in 1694, when M. Jung (conjecturally) dates his decease at least a
year earlier?[1] It is not a
mere conjecture as, on March 3, 1693, Barbezieux begs Saint-Mars to
mention his Protestant prisoners under nicknames. There are THREE, and
Malzac is no longer one of them. Malzac,
in 1692, suffered from a horrible disease, discreditable to one of the
godly, and in October, 1692, had been allowed medical expenses.
Whether they included a valet or not, Malzac seems to have been
non-existent by March, 1693. Had
he possessed a valet, and had he died in 1694, why should HIS valet have
been "shut up in the vaulted prison"?
This was the fate of the valet of the prisoner who died in April,
1694, and was probably Mattioli. [1]
M. Funck-Brentano's statement is in Revue Historique, lvi. p. 298.
"Malzac died at the beginning of 1694," citing Jung, p.
91. Now on p. 91 M. Jung writes, "At the beginning of 1694 Saint-Mars
had six prisoners, of whom one Melzac, dies."
But M. Jung (pp. 269, 270) later writes, "It is probable that
Melzac died at the end of 1692, or early in 1693," and he gives his
reasons, which are convincing. M.
Funck-Brentano must have overlooked M. Jung's change of opinion between
his p. 91 and his pp. 269, 270. Mattioli,
certainly, had a valet in December, 1693, at Pignerol. He went to
Sainte-Marguerite in March, 1694. In
April, 1694, a prisoner with a valet died at Sainte-Marguerite.
In January, 1696, no prisoner at Sainte-Marguerite had a valet.
Therefore, there is a strong presumption that the "prisonnier
au valet" who died in April, was Mattioli. After
December, 1693, when he was still at Pignerol, the name of Mattioli,
freely used before, never occurs in the correspondence. But we still often
hear of "l'ancien prisonnier," "the old prisoner."
He was, on the face of it, Dauger, by far the oldest prisoner.
In 1688, Saint-Mars, having only one prisoner (Dauger), calls him
merely "my prisoner. In
1691, when Saint-Mars had several prisoners, Barbezieux styles Dauger
"your prisoner of twenty years' standing."
When, in 1696-1698, Saint-Mars mentions "mon ancien
prisonnier," "my prisoner of long standing," he obviously
means Dauger, not Mattioli--above all, if Mattioli died in 1694.
M. Funck-Brentano argues that "mon ancien prisonnier" can
only mean "my erstwhile prisoner, he who was lost and is restored to
me"--that is, Mattioli. This
is not the view of M. Jung, or M. Lair, or M. Loiseleur. Friends
of Mattioli's claims rest much on this letter of Barbezieux to Saint-Mars
(November 17, 1697): "You have only to watch over the security of all
your prisoners, without ever explaining to anyone what it is that your
prisoner of long standing did."
That secret, it is argued, MUST apply to Mattioli.
But all the world knew what Mattioli had done!
Nobody knew, and nobody knows, what Eustache Dauger had done.
It was one of the arcana imperii.
It is the secret enforced ever since Dauger's arrest in 1669.
Saint-Mars (1669) was not to ask.
Louis XIV. could only lighten the captivity of Fouquet (1678) if
his valet, La Riviere, did not know what Dauger had done.
La Riviere (apparently a harmless man) lived and died in
confinement, the sole reason being that he might perhaps know what Dauger
had done. Consequently there
is the strongest presumption that the "ancien prisonnier" of
1697 is Dauger, and that "what he had done" (which Saint-Mars
must tell to no one) was what Dauger did, not what Mattioli did.
All Europe knew what Mattioli had done; his whole story had been
published to the world in 1682 and 1687. On
July 19, 1698, Barbezieux bade Saint-Mars come to assume the command of
the Bastille. He is to bring
his "old prisoner," whom not a soul is to see.
Saint-Mars therefore brought his man MASKED, exactly as another
prisoner was carried masked from Provence to the Bastille in 1695.
M. Funck-Brentano argues that Saint-Mars was now quite fond of his
old Mattioli, so noble, so learned. At
last, on September 18, 1698, Saint-Mars lodged his "old
prisoner" in the Bastille, "an old prisoner whom he had at
Pignerol," says the journal of du Junca, Lieutenant of the Bastille.
His food, we saw, was brought him by Rosarges alone, the
"Major," a gentleman who had always been with Saint-Mars. Argues M. Funck-Brentano, all this proves that the captive
was a gentleman, not a valet. Why?
First, because the Bastille, under Louis XIV., was "une prison
de distinction." Yet M. Funck-Brentano tells us that in Mazarin's time
"valets mixed up with royal plots" were kept in the Bastille.
Again, in 1701, in this "noble prison," the Mask was
turned out of his room to make place for a female fortune-teller, and was
obliged to chum with a profligate valet of nineteen, and a
"beggarly" bad patriot, who "blamed the conduct of France,
and approved that of other nations, especially the Dutch." M.
Funck-Brentano himself publishes these facts (1898), in part published
earlier (1890) by M. Lair.[1] Not
much noblesse here! Next, if Rosarges, a gentleman, served the Mask,
Saint-Mars alone (1669) carried his food to the valet, Dauger.
So the service of Rosarges does not ennoble the Mask and
differentiate him from Dauger, who was even more nobly served, by
Saint-Mars. [1]
Legendes de la Bastille, pp. 86-89. Citing
du Junca's Journal, April 30, 1701. On
November 19, 1703, the Mask died suddenly (still in his velvet mask), and
was buried on the 20th. The
parish register of the church names him "Marchialy" or
"Marchioly," one may read it either way; du Junca, Lieutenant of
the Bastille, in his contemporary journal, calls him "M. de
Marchiel." Now,
Saint-Mars often spells Mattioli, "Marthioly." This
is the one strength of the argument for Mattioli's claims to the Mask.
M. Lair replies, "Saint-Mars had a mania for burying prisoners
under fancy names," and gives examples.
One is only a gardener, Francois Eliard (1701), concerning whom it
is expressly said that, as he is a prisoner, his real name is not to be
given, so he is registered as Pierre Maret (others read Navet, "Peter
Turnip"). If Saint-Mars,
looking about for a false name for Dauger's burial register, hit on
Marsilly (the name of Dauger's old master), that MIGHT be miswritten
Marchialy. However it be, the
age of the Mask is certainly falsified; the register gives "about
forty-five years old." Mattioli
would have been sixty-three; Dauger cannot have been under fifty-three. There
the case stands. If Mattioli
died in April, 1694, he cannot be the Man in the Iron Mask.
Of Dauger's death we find no record, unless he was the Man in the
Iron Mask, and died, in 1703, in the Bastille.
He was certainly, in 1669 and 1688, at Pignerol and at
Sainte-Marguerite, the center of the mystery about some great prisoner, a
Marshal of France, the Duc de Beaufort, or a son of Oliver Cromwell.
Mattioli was not mystery, no secret.
Dauger is so mysterious that probably the secret of his mystery was
unknown to himself. By 1701,
when obscure wretches were shut up with the Mask, the secret, whatever its
nature, had ceased to be of moment. The captive was now the mere victim of
cruel routine. But twenty
years earlier, Saint-Mars had said that Dauger "takes things easily,
resigned to the will of God and the King." To
sum up, on July 1, 1669, the valet of the Huguenot intriguer, Roux de
Marsilly, the valet resident in England, known to his master as
"Martin," was "wanted" by the French secret police. By July 19, a valet, of the highest political importance, had
been brought to Dunkirk, from England, no doubt. My hypothesis assumes that this valet, though now styled
"Eustache Dauger," was the "Martin of Roux de Marsilly.
He was kept with so much mystery at Pigernol that already the
legend began its course; the captive valet was said to be a Marshal of
France! We then follow Dauger
from Pignerol to Les Exiles, till January, 1687, when one valet out of a
pair, Dauger being one of them, dies.
We presume that Dauger is the survivor, because the great mystery
still is "what he HAS DONE," whereas the other valet had done
nothing, but may have known Dauger's secret.
Again the other valet had long been dropsical, and the valet who
died in 1687 died of dropsy. In
1688, Dauger, at Sainte-Marguerite, is again the source and center of
myths; he is taken for a son of Oliver Cromwell, or for the Duc de
Beufort. In June 1692, one of
the Huguenot preachers at Saint-Marguerite writes on his shirt and pewter
plate and throws them out of the window.[1]
Legend attributes these acts to the Man in the Iron Mask, and
transmutes a pewter into a silver plate. Now, in 1689-1693, Mattioli was
at Pignerol, but Dauger was at Sainte-Marguerite, and the Huguenot's act
is attributed to him. Thus Dauger, not Mattioli, is the center round which
the myths crystallize: the legends concern him, not Mattioli, whose case
is well known, and gives rise to no legend.
Finally, we have shown that Mattioli probably died at
Sainte-Marguerite in April, 1694. If so, then nobody but Dauger can be the
"old prisoner" whom Saint- Mars brought, masked, to the
Bastille, in September, 1698, and who died there in November, 1703.
However suppose that Mattioli did not die in 1694, but was the
masked man who died in the Bastille in 1703, then the legend of Dauger
came to be attributed to Mattioli: these two men's fortunes are combined
in the one myth. [1]
Saint-Mars au Ministre, June 4, 1692. The
central problem remains unsolved. What
had the valet, Eustache Dauger, done?[1] [1]
One marvels that nobody has recognized, in the mask, James Stuart (James
de la Cloche), eldest of the children of Charles II. He came to England in
1668, was sent to Rome, and "disappears from history."
See infra, "The Mystery of James de la Cloche." III
The
secret of the Man in the Iron Mask, or at least of one of the two persons
who have claims to be the Mask, was "What had Eustache Dauger
done?" To guard this
secret the most extraordinary precautions were taken, as we have shown in
the foregoing essay. And yet, if secret there was, it might have got wind
in the simplest fashion. In
the "Vicomte de Bragelonne," Dumas describes the tryst of the
Secret-hunters with the dying Chief of the Jesuits at the inn in
Fontainebleau. They come from
many quarters, there is a Baron of Germany and a laird from Scotland, but
Aramis takes the prize. He
knows the secret of the Mask, the most valuable of all to the intriguers
of the Company of Jesus. Now,
despite all the precautions of Louvois and Saint-Mars, despite sentinels
for ever posted under Dauger's windows, despite arrangements which made it
impossible for him to signal to people on the hillside at Les Exiles,
despite the suppression even of the items in the accounts of his expenses,
his secret, if he knew it, could have been discovered, as we have
remarked, by the very man most apt to make mischievous use of it--by
Lauzun. That brilliant and reckless adventurer could see Dauger, in
prison at Pignerol, when he pleased, for he had secretly excavated a way
into the rooms of his fellow prisoner, Fouquet, on whom Dauger attended as
valet. Lauzun was released soon after Fouquet's death.
It is unlikely that he bought his liberty by the knowledge of the
secret and there is nothing to suggest that he used it (if he possessed
it) in any other way. The
natural clew to the supposed secret of Dauger is a study of the career of
his master, Roux de Marsilly. As
official histories say next to nothing about him, we may set forth what
can be gleaned from the State Papers in our Record Office.
The earliest is a letter of Roux de Marsilly to Mr. Joseph
Williamson, secretary of Lord Arlington (December, 1668).
Marsilly sends Martin (on our theory Eustache Dauger) to bring back
from Williamson two letters from his own correspondent in Paris.
He also requests Williamson to procure for him from Arlington a
letter of protection, as he is threatened with arrest for some debt in
which he is not really concerned. Martin
will explain. The next paper
is indorsed "Received December 28, 1668, Mons. de Marsilly."
As it is dated December 27, Marsilly must have been in England.
The contents of this piece deserve attention, because they show the
terms on which Marsilly and Arlington were, or, at least, how Marsilly
conceived them. (1)
Marsilly reports, on the authority of his friends at Stockholm, that the
King of Sweden intends, first to intercede with Louis XIV. in favor of the
French Huguenots, and next, if diplomacy fails, to join in arms with the
other Protestant Powers of Europe. (2)
His correspondent in Holland learns that if the King of England invites
the States to any "holy resolution," they will heartily lend
forces. No leader so good as
the English King--Charles II.! Marsilly had shown ARLINGTON'S LETTER to a
Dutch friend, who bade him approach the Dutch ambassador in England. He has dined with that diplomatist. Arlington had, then, gone so far as to write an encouraging
letter. The Dutch ambassador
had just told Marsilly that he had received the same news, namely, that,
Holland would aid the Huguenots, persecuted by Louis XIV. (3)
Letters from Provence, Languedoc, and Dauphine say that the situation
there is unaltered. (4)
The Canton of Zurich write that they will keep their promises and that
Berne is anxious to please the King of Great Britain, and that it is ready
to raise, with Zurich, 15,000 men. They
are not afraid of France. (5)
Zurich fears that, if Charles is not represented at the next Diet, Bale
and Saint Gall will be intimidated, and not dare to join the Triple
Alliance of Spain, Holland, and England.
The best plan will be for Marsilly to represent England at the Diet
of January 25, 1669, accompanied by the Swiss General Balthazar.
This will encourage friends "to give His Britannic Majesty the
satisfaction which he desires, and will produce a close union between
Holland, Sweden, the Cantons, and other Protestant States." This
reads as if Charles had already expressed some "desire." (6)
Geneva grumbles at a reply of Charles "through a bishop who is their
enemy," the Bishop of London, "a persecutor of our
religion," that is, of Presbyterianism.
However, nothing will dismay the Genevans, "si S. M. B. ne
change." Then
comes a blank in the paper. There
follows a copy of a letter as if from Charles II. himself, to "the
Right High and Noble Seigneurs of Zurich."
He has heard of their wishes from Roux de Marsilly, whom he
commissions to wait upon them. "I
would not have written by my Bishop of London had I been better informed,
but would myself have replied to your obliging letter, and would have
assured you, as I do now, that I desire. . . ." It
appears as if this were a draft of a kind of letter which Marsilly wanted
Charles to write to Zurich, and there is a similar draft of a letter for
Arlington to follow, if he and Charles wish to send Marsilly to the Swiss
Diet. The Dutch ambassador,
with whom Marsilly dined on December 26, the Constable of Castille, and
other grandees, are all of opinion that he should visit the Protestant
Swiss, as from the King of England. The
scheme is for an alliance of England, Holland, Spain, and the Protestant
Cantons, against France and Savoy. Another
letter of Marsilly to Arlington, only dated Jeudi, avers that he can never
repay Arlington for his extreme kindness and liberality.
"No man in England is more devoted to you than I am, and shall
be all my life."[1] [1]
State Papers, France, vol. 125, 106. On
the very day when Marsilly drafted for Charles his own commission to treat
with Zurich for a Protestant alliance against France, Charles himself
wrote to his sister, Madame (Henriette d'Orleans).
He spoke of his secret treaty with France.
"You know how much secrecy is necessary for the carrying on of
the business, and I assure you that nobody does, nor shall, know anything
of it here, but myself and that one person more, till it be fit to be
public."[1] (Is
"that one person" de la Cloche?) [1]
Madame, by Julia Cartwright, p. 275. Thus
Marsilly thought Charles almost engaged for the Protestant League, while
Charles was secretly allying himself with France against Holland.
Arlington was probably no less deceived by Charles than Marsilly
was. The
Bishop of London's share in the dealing with Zurich is obscure. It
appears certain that Arlington was not consciously deceiving Marsilly.
Madame wrote, on February 12, as to Arlington, "The man's
attachment to the Dutch and his inclination towards Spain are too well
known."[1] Not till
April 25, 1669, does Charles tell his sister that Arlington has an inkling
of his secret dealings with France; how he knows, Charles cannot tell.[2]
It is impossible for us to ascertain how far Charles himself
deluded Marsilly, who went to the Continent early in spring, 1669.
Before May 15-25, 1669, in fact on April 14, Marsilly had been
kidnaped by agents of Louis XIV., and his doom was dight.
Here is the account of the matter, written to ---- by Perwich in
Paris: [1]
Ibid., p. 281. [2]
Ibid., p. 285. "W.
Perwich to ---- "Paris,
May 25, '69. "Honored
Sir, "The
Cantons of Switzerland are much troubled at the French King's having sent
fifteen horsemen into Switzerland from whence the Sr de Manille, the
King's resident there, had given information of the Sr Roux de Marsilly's
being there negotiating the bringing the Cantons into the Triple League by
discourses much to the disadvantage of France, giving them very ill
impressions of the French King's Government, who was betrayed by a monk
that kept him company and intercepted by the said horsemen brought into
France and is expected at the Bastille.
I believe you know the man. . . . I remember him in England." Can
this monk be the monk who went mad in prison at Pignerol, sharing the cell
of Mattioli? Did he, too, suffer for his connection with the secret?
We do not know, but the position of Charles was awkward.
Marsilly, dealing with the Swiss, had come straight from England,
where he was lie with Charles's minister, Arlington, and with the Dutch
and Spanish ambassadors. The
King refers to the matter in a letter to his sister of May 24, 1669
(misdated by Miss Cartwright, May 24, 1668.)[1] [1]
Madame, by Julia Cartwright, p. 264. "You
have, I hope, received full satisfaction by the last post in the matter of
Marsillac [Marsilly], for my Ld. Arlington has sent to Mr. Montague
[English ambassador at Paris] his history all the time he was here, by
which you will see how little credit he had here, and that particularly my
Lord Arlington was not in his good graces, because he did not receive that
satisfaction, in his negotiation, he expected, and that was only in
relation to the Swissers, and so I think I have said enough of this
matter." Charles
took it easily! On
May 15/25 Montague acknowledged Arlington's letter to which Charles
refers; he has been approached, as to Marsilly, by the Spanish resident,
"but I could not tell how to do anything in the business, never
having heard of the man, or that he was employed by my Master [Charles] in
any business. I have sent you also a copy of a letter which an Englishman
writ to me that I do not know, in behalf of Roux de Marsilly, but that
does not come by the post," being too secret.[1] [1]
State Papers, France, vol. 126. France
had been well-informed about Marsilly while he was in England.
He then had a secretary, two lackeys, and a valet de chambre, and
was frequently in conference with Arlington and the Spanish ambassador to
the English Court. Colbert,
the French ambassador in London, had written all this to the French
Government, on April 25, before he heard of Marsilly's arrest.[1] [1]
Bibl. Nat., Fonds. Francais, No. 10665. The
belief that Marsilly was an agent of Charles appears to have been general,
and, if accepted by Louis XIV., would interfere with Charles's private
negotiations for the Secret Treaty with France. On May 18 Prince
d'Aremberg had written on the subject to the Spanish ambassador in Paris.
Marsilly, he says, was arrested in Switzerland, on his way to
Berne, with a monk who was also seized, and, a curious fact, Marsilly's
valet was killed in the struggle. This valet, of course, was not Dauger,
whom Marsilly had left in England. Marsilly
"doit avoir demande la protection du Roy de la Grande Bretagne en
faveur des Religionaires (Huguenots) de France, et passer en Suisse avec
quelque commission de sa part." D'Aremberg begs the Spanish
ambassador to communicate all this to Montague, the English ambassador at
Paris, but Montague probably, like Perwich, knew nothing of the business
any more than he knew of Charles's secret dealings with Louis through
Madame.[1] [1]
State Papers, France. vol. 126. To
d'Aremberg's letter is pinned an unsigned English note, obviously intended
for Arlington's reading. "Roux
de Marsilly is still in the Bastille though they have a mind to hang him,
yet they are much puzzled what to do with him.
De Lionne has beene to examine him twice or thrice, but there is
noe witnes to prove anything against him.
I was told by one that the French king told it to, that in his
papers they find great mention of the Duke of Bucks: and your name, and
speak as if he were much trusted by you.
I have enquired what this Marsilly is, and I find by one Mr.
Marsilly that I am acquainted withall, and a man of quality, that this
man's name is onely Roux, and borne at Nismes and having been formerly a
soldier in his troope, ever since has taken his name to gain more credit
in Switserland where hee, Marsilly, formerly used to bee employed by his
Coll: the Mareschall de Schomberg who invaded Switserland." We
next find a very curious letter, from which it appears that the French
Government inclined to regard Marsilly as, in fact, an agent of Charles,
but thought it wiser to trump up against him a charge of conspiring
against the life of Louis XIV. On this charge, or another, he was executed, while the
suspicion that he was an agent of English treachery may have been the real
cause of the determination to destroy him.
The Balthazar with whom Marsilly left his papers is mentioned with
praise by him in his paper for Arlington, of December 27, 1668.
He is the General who should have accompanied Marsilly to the Diet. The
substance of the letter (given in full in Note I.) is to the following
effect. P. du Moulin (Paris,
May 19/29 1669) writes to Arlington.
Ever since, Ruvigny, the late French ambassador, a Protestant, was
in England, the French Government had been anxious to kidnap Roux de
Marsilly. They hunted him in
England, Holland, Flanders, and Franche-Comte.
As we know from the case of Mattioli, the Government of Louis XIV.
was unscrupulously daring in breaking the laws of nations, and seizing
hostile personages in foreign territory, as Napoleon did in the affair of
the Duc d'Enghien. When all failed Louis bade Turenne capture Roux de
Marsilly wherever he could find him.
Turenne sent officers and gentlemen abroad, and, after four months'
search they found Marsilly in Switzerland.
They took him as he came out of the house of his friend, General
Balthazar, and carried him to Gex. No
papers were found on him, but he asked his captors to send to Balthazar
and get "the commission he had from England," which he probably
thought would give him the security of an official diplomatic position.
Having got this document, Marsilly's captors took it to the French
Ministers. Nothing could be
more embarrassing, if this were true, to Charles's representative in
France, Montague, and to Charles's secret negotiations, also to Arlington,
who had dealt with Marsilly. On
his part, the captive Marsilly constantly affirmed that he was the envoy
of the King of England. The
common talk of Paris was that an agent of Charles was in the Bastille,
"though at Court they pretended to know nothing of it."
Louis was overjoyed at Marsilly's capture, giving out that he was
conspiring against his life. Monsieur
told Montague that he need not beg for the life of a would-be murderer
like Marsilly. But as to this
idea, "they begin now to mince it at Court," and Ruvigny assured
du Moulin "that they had no such thoughts."
De Lyonne had seen Marsilly and observed that it was a blunder to
seize him. The French
Government was nervous, and Turenne's secretary had been
"pumping" several ambassadors as to what they thought of
Marsilly's capture on foreign territory.
One ambassador replied with spirit that a crusade of all Europe
against France, as of old against the Moslems, would be necessary.
Would Charles, du Moulin asked, own or disown Marsilly? Montague's
position was now awkward. On
May 23, his account of the case was read, at Whitehall, to the Foreign
Committee in London. (See Note II. for the document.)
He did not dare to interfere in Marsilly's behalf, because he did
not know whether the man was an agent of Charles or not. Such are the inconveniences of a secret royal diplomacy
carried on behind the backs of Ministers.
Louis XV. later pursued this method with awkward consequences.[1]
The French Court, Montague said, was overjoyed at the capture of
Marsilly, and a reward of 100,000 crowns, "I am told very privately,
is set upon his head." The French ambassador in England, Colbert, had reported that
Charles had sent Marsilly "to draw the Swisses into the Triple
League" against France. Montague
had tried to reassure Monsieur (Charles's brother-in-law), but was himself
entirely perplexed. As
Monsieur's wife, Charles's sister, was working with Charles for the secret
treaty with Louis, the State and family politics were clearly in a knot. Meanwhile, the Spanish ambassador kept pressing Montague to
interfere in favor of Marsilly. After
Montague's puzzled note had been read to the English Foreign Committee on
May 23, Arlington offered explanations.
Marsilly came to England, he said, when Charles was entering into
negotiations for peace with Holland, and when France seemed likely to
oppose the peace. No
proposition was made to him or by him.
Peace being made, Marsilly was given money to take him out of the
country. He wanted the King
to renew his alliance with the Swiss cantons, but was told that the
cantons must first expel the regicides of Charles I.
He undertook to arrange this, and some eight months later came back
to England. "He was
coldly used, and I was complained of for not using so important a man well
enough." [1]
Cf. Le Secret du Roi, by the Duc de Broglie. As
we saw, Marsilly expressed the most effusive gratitude to Arlington, which
does not suggest cold usage. Arlington
told the complainers that Marsilly was "another man's spy," what
man's, Dutch, Spanish, or even French, he does not explain.
So Charles gave Marsilly money to go away.
He was never trusted with anything but the expulsion of the
regicides from Switzerland. Arlington
was ordered by Charles to write a letter thanking Balthazar for his good
offices. These explanations by Arlington do not tally with Marsilly's communications to him, as cited at the beginning of this inquiry. Nothing is said in these about getting the regicides of Charles I. out of Switzerland: the paper is entirely concerned with bringing the Protestant Cantons into anti-French League with England, Holland, Spain, and even Sweden. On the other hand, Arlington's acknowledged letter to Balthazar, carried by Marsilly, may be the "commission" of which Marsilly boasted. In any case, on June 2, Charles gave Colbert, the French ambassador, an audience, turning even the Duke of York out of the room. He then repeated to Colbert the explanations of Arlington, already cited, and Arlington, in a separate interview, corroborated Charles. So Colbert wrote to Louis (June 3, 1669); but to de Lyonne, on the same day, "I trust that you will extract from Marsilly much matter for the King's service. It seemed to me that milord d'Arlington was uneasy about it [en avait de l'inquitetude]. . . . There is here in England one Martin" (Eustace Dauger), "who has been that wretch's valet, and who left him discontent." Colbert then proposes to examine Martin, who may know a good deal, and to send him into France. On June 10, Colbert writes to Louis that he exp |