Archive | February, 2010

Madame Élisabeth – the Temple days

27 Feb

Margaret Trouncer: ‘On August the 10th, Monsieur Berthélemy, the Keeper of the Archives of the Order of Malta in the Tower of the Temple, had heard the cannon of the Tuileries, but as he was a very selfish little man, ensconced in his creature comforts, like a snug angora cat, he did not allow it to trouble him unduly. True, the times were troublesome, very troublesome, but when a man had the privilege of occupying the little tower left empty by the death of the Prince de Conti, who had used it for his assignations with actresses, he does not allow revolutions to disturb his sleep. Monsieur Berthélemy furnished the three floors with exquisite taste – marquetry work, and gorgeous silk damask. His large study on the first floor, next to his library, was hung with yellow silk bordered with crimson. The drawing room on the floor above was hung with azure, and the armchairs  – ‘les fauteuils à la reine’ – were in blue and white silk damask, the footstools heart shaped, the larger armchairs or bergères were ‘couleur prune de Monsieur’ (fortunate Monsieur who had escaped to Brussels). His bedroom, next to the drawing room, was draped with white stuff embossed with flowers. He had a boulle bureau, and a writing table in rosewood. He had collected some charming though slightly risqué engravings – ‘Diana’s bath’, ‘The Coucher’ of Van Loo, ‘La Chaste Suzanne’ and on a marble console, a delicate biscuit de Sèvres group, ‘Venus whipping Cupid with a bunch of roses’. On the third floor was his pièce de la résistance of which he was justly proud – a bathroom, entirely surrounded with mirrors, in which the circular sofa was covered with lilac taffeta trimmed with fringes.’

‘Everywhere were light coloured carpets, decorative porcelain, rosewood corner cupboards, and heavy silver candelabra. His windows looked on to a vast park. The sun flooded his bedroom in the morning and his drawing room in the evening. Yes, with such a pied à terre, an expert cook and many beautifully bound books, a man could not complain. Not that Monsieur Berthèlemy was a hermit. Oh, no. He enjoyed his intimate little supper parties in well chosen company, when he and his guests would sing gaily until the small hours of ‘l”oeil vif et fripon de Catherine’ – the bright and rougish eye of Catherine and such like carefree ditties.’

‘So, on August the 10th, the honourable Keeper of the Archives heard the cannon of the Tuileries, and no doubt congratulated himself on being quite safe. On Monday, the 13th at eight in the evening, he noticed some workmen; on enquiring who they were, he was told curtly that they were preparing the royal family’s supper in the main building, which was called the Prior’s Palace. ‘Yes, no doubt,’ he said to himself, ‘they have had to move from the Tuileries.’ If they were going to stay in the palace, he would probably go and pay them his court. He remembered that the last time the Queen had been on the premises was when she had come to Paris to give thanks at Notre Dame for the birth of her last little boy.  The Comte d’Artois, who made the palace his pied à terre when he was in Paris, had entertained her there in the evening, much to the scandal of the pious.’

‘Two hours later, at ten o’clock at night, Monsieur Berthélemy heard a noise of footsteps on his stairs. ‘You must evacuate from here within an hour.’ ‘Why, what’s happening?’ ‘You’ve got to move.’ ‘To move?’ ‘The Capet family is coming here.’ ‘For one night?’ ‘For ever – prison perpétuelle.’ ‘But the palace is the Temple.’ ‘The palace is not secure enough.’ The little man tried not to have hysterics. In a few moments his precious carpets were covered in filth, for it was raining outside. Some of his furniture was put out in the rain before being hurled helter skelter into the disaffected Temple church. Alas, in that brief hour, he only had time to move the contents of the first floor and the wine cellar. He was trying to push his way upstairs to get to the second floor when he was thrown back by the inexorable guard. He saw the royal family and their suites enter his lair. But he didn’t think of them very much; he wandered about all night, trying to borrow a bed and some linen… he read in the morning newspapers that Louis XVI was reading the books in his library and sleeping in his bed. Then he heard that the King had taken down his engravings, as he thought they were unsuitable for the eyes of his young daughter.’

The royal family were depressed, exhausted and thoroughly demoralised. They had spent three days at the Feuillants monastery, with nothing but the clothes that they were wearing until the Countess of Sutherland, wife of the English ambassador sent them fresh linen. All of their clothes and belongings had been looted by the mob – the Queen’s famous collection of clothes now dispersed throughout Paris, where it was worn by the women of the streets.

When they were told that they were to be taken to the Temple palace, Marie Antoinette whispered in dread to Madame de Tourzel: ‘You will see, they will put us in the tower, and they will make it a veritable prison. I have always had such a horror of that tower, that a thousand times I begged the Comte d’Artois to have it pulled down; it must surely have been a foreboding of all that we would suffer there… you will see if I am not mistaken.’


They were taken away from the Tuileries for the final time at quarter past seven in the evening on the 13th of August, the coachman making sure to go via the Place de Vendôme so that they could look at the once proud statue of Louis XIV which had been pulled from its plinth and now lay in pieces on the ground.

At first they thought, understandably, that they would be lodged in the main palace, which was still luxurious and quite beautiful but after supper they were taken instead up the narrow spiral staircase to the apartments in the tower. On the ground floor there was a porter’s lodge; on the first floor: an antechamber, dining room and library; on the second floor there were rooms for the Princesse de Lamballe, Madame de Tourzel and the Dauphin and also the Queen and Madame Royale as well as a privy and guard room. On the third floor there was another guard room, a kitchen where Élisabeth and Pauline de Tourzel slept, a room for some servants, the King’s bedroom, a study and a room for the King’s valets. Once Mesdames de Lamballe and Tourzel had been taken away, Élisabeth moved down to the Dauphin’s room, which she then shared with Madame Royale and the little Dauphin moved in with his mother.

Monsieur Berthélemy’s cook must have been a terrible slattern as the kitchen was in a terrible state when Élisabeth went up to sleep. There were filthy utensils lying around and filth everywhere. She must have sat down on her narrow camp bed and stared about her in disbelief – it was so very different from her beautiful rooms at Versailles and Montreuil.

The prisoners did not know what to expect next and spent the next few days awaiting more drama. It came at midnight on the 19th August when the guards arrived in their rooms and took the two Tourzel ladies and the Princesse de Lamballe away to La Force prison, to an unimaginable and unknown fate.

Margaret Trouncer: ‘Élisabeth’s timetable was as follows. She rose at six. She and her niece helped each other to dress. Élisabeth tried to teach Madame Royale to be independent of help, and this literally saved her life, when she was later condemned to solitary confinement. Hué came and did their curls. At nine o’clock, they all went up to the King’s room for breakfast. At first, this was opulent – coffee, chocolate, double cream, cold syrup, barley water, milk, bread, fine white rolls, sugar. The King did not take anything, and he did not sit down. The remains of the breakfast went to fifteen other people… The royal ladies wore morning dresses of white bombasine or dimity, and simple linen bonnets, trimmed with narrow lace edging. At ten o’clock, they all went down to the Queen’s room. The King taught his son his lessons (Corneille, Racine, geography, maps). The Queen instructed her daughter. Élisabeth gave Madame Royale lessons in drawing and arithmetic, music and religion. A soldier peered over the child’s shoulder when she did mathematics, thinking she was inventing a code for plots. At midday, the ladies went into Élisabeth’s room to change into day clothes – brown linen dresses patterned with flowers. Once or twice, they were unable to change, because a soldier would come in and refuse to budge. At one o’clock, they all went into the garden for exercise. At two, luncheon, of which they ate most soberly. The Queen drank only water from Ville d’Avray, the King always added much water to his wine and only had one glass of liqueur. He never failed to put Clèry’s meal aside in the antechamber stove, pointing out the best dishes to him. Luncheon was followed by a game of piquet or backgammon. At four, the King had a snooze, while the princesses read quietly, so as not to disturb him. When he woke, Clèry gave the prince his handwriting lesson. Afterwards, this good devoted took him to Élisabeth’s room for a game of ball or shuttlecock. Then they all gathered together around a table and, until eight o’clock when the Queen or Élisabeth read aloud something which would amuse and interest the children. At seven, they would pause a little to hear the news cried in the streets.’

‘During the five months that he was at the Temple, the King read 257 volumes. The ladies read, among other things, ‘Cecilia’ and ‘Evelina’. The King ordered the 14 volumes of the Paris Missal and the Breviary, and Élisabeth 14 prayer books. The children had their supper in Élisabeth’s room, while the King asked them riddles from the ‘Mercure de France’, which he’d found in Monsieur de Berthélemy’s library. Cléry undressed the Dauphin, the Queen heard his prayers – he would pray for Madame de Tourzel and Madame de Lamballe in a whisper if a guard was listening. At nine, the King supped, while the Queen and Élisabeth stayed in turns with the Dauphin. After supper, the King took his wife’s hand and his sister’s, as he wished them good night, received the kisses of his children, and would go to his closet and read until midnight. The royal ladies retired to their rooms.’

Life was ordered and intimate and as at the Tuileries there must have been a small amount of ironic pleasure for the royal captives in the fact that they had finally been granted the quiet family life that they had always craved while on show at Versailles. The Dauphin in particular is said to have flourished thanks to this sudden closeness to his parents, who had always been more distant, glittering figures at court.

It wasn’t all idyllic though – the royal family had very few possessions and had to order new clothes and shoes to replace the ones lost in the sack of the Tuileries. Their sheets had terrible holes and the royal ladies had to spend a great deal of time darning and mending, when once they had idled away their time embroidering roses and cherubs. Their guards were a problem too and were often rude and menacing to the prisoners – blowing smoke in their faces, making crude jokes and staring at them in an insolent manner.

Élisabeth sought solace in prayer at this time, adapting a favourite ‘The perfect adorer of the Sacred Heart of Jesus’ by Gabriel Nicollet to her own purposes at this time: ‘What will happen to me today, O my God? (I know not). All that I know, is that nothing will happen to me which you have not foreseen from all eternity. That suffices me, O my God (to be at peace). I adore your eternal designs. I submit to them with all my heart: I want all, I accept all, I make a sacrifice of all to you. I unite this sacrifice to that of your dear Son, my Saviour, asking you by his sacred Heart and by his infinite merits, for patience (in our ills) and the perfect submission which is your due, to all that you want and permit.’

After the prison massacres in September 1792, during which the Princesse de Lamballe perished, life became much harder for the royal family. On the 4th of September a large delegation came to them to announce that an official decree had abolished the monarchy in France but if the revolutionaries had expected a reaction to this news, they were sorely disappointed as the King continued to read his book and the Queen and Élisabeth continued their embroidery, without so much as looking up.

Hoping to break their spirits even further, the royal family were moved on the 26th of October to the Great Tower of the Temple, which was far less comfortable than their snug little apartment. It was a horrible place with thick bars on the windows, thick, slimy damp covered walls and few comforts. There were large rooms on each floor, which were partitioned into four smaller rooms to accomodate the prisoners. Élisabeth’s room was on the third floor, next to a privy which also held a staircase which led up onto the roof.

There was another terrible winter that year and the Temple prison became even more damp and unhealthy so that all of the prisoners fell ill with colds, fevers and inflammations. Madame Élisabeth was stricken with a terrible toothache. In the end the National Assembly was sufficiently worried to send a doctor, Le Monnier, Madame Élisabeth’s former botany teacher to treat the invalids.

During that December, Louis XVI was separated from his family and put on trial, at the end of which he was inevitably condemned to death. The news broke in Paris on the morning of the 17th January, with his family hearing the terrible news second hand from the street criers outside the Temple.

Still they were not allowed to be together until the evening of the 20th of January, the night before his execution when the King waited in the tower’s small dining room for his family. They were allowed to spend almost two hours together, a time that must have been devastating for all concerned as the princesses sobbed in Louis’ arms. The Dauphin sat on his father’s knee, while Madame Royale leaned against him.

Finally, at around half past ten, the King stood up to leave, while the Queen half fainted against him, hardly bearing to let him go, the husband that she had come to as a young girl of fifteen all those years ago. He left assuring them all that he would see them again in the morning before he left for his final journey. His daughter, Madame Royale fainted into her aunt’s arms as the door closed behind him.

That evening, Élisabeth and her niece pulled their mattresses into Marie Antoinette’s room so that she would not be alone on that dreadful night. It is impossible to know how any of them must have felt as the hours went by – the royal ladies distraught because they were never going to see Louis again and wondering what was to be their own fate and Louis himself, alone in his rooms, having presumably already resolved not to put them through the ordeal of another farewell.

They waited in vain for him the next morning, but he did not come and so they sat in silence until the distant sound of cannons firing and a wave of cheering through the streets announced that the King was dead.

Margaret Trouncer: ‘At about ten o’clock, the Queen wanted the children to take a little food, but they refused. Soon after, they heard the guns. Élisabeth looking heavenwards exclaimed: ‘The monsters, so they’re satisfied now!’ Then the beating of drums, and the frenzied cries of the Temple guards drowned the sobs of the Dauphin and the piercing screams of his sister.’

‘The boy was clinging to his mother’s knees. Gently she disengaged herself, and following ancient and immemorial custom, she curtsied to the new King, Louis XVII.’

Madame Élisabeth – the beginning of the end…

27 Feb

While Madame Élisabeth busied herself with her books, her painting and her daydreams of happier days spent hunting or riding her beloved horses (Élisabeth was an amazing horsewoman and like her brother, the King, she was said to look her best when mounted on a horse), her brother and sister in law, Marie Antoinette were scheming to get themselves and their family away from France. They were frustrated by their imprisonment at the Tuileries and increasingly disillusioned with the Revolution and the National Assembly, which was becoming increasingly distanced from the needs of ordinary people.

Plans had been laid for months until finally everything was ready from the enormous travelling berline that lay in wait at the house of the handsome Swedish nobleman Axel de Fersen to the huge travelling toilette that had been delivered for the Queen, who couldn’t possibly travel without looking her very best.

Élisabeth was not informed of their imminent departure until the very day that it was due to take place – the 20th of June 1791. Margaret Trouncer wrote – ‘When she had been told, Élisabeth went to her room and locked the door, saying she wanted to rest. Quietly she got out her maps and plotted the route to Montmèdy, eastwards, near the frontier and near Luxembourg. First, the porte Clichy, then Claye, Meaux, Fromentières, Chaintrix, Châlons, Pont-de-Somme-Vesle, Sainte-Menehould, Clermont, Varennes and then… Montmèdy. Se had no diamonds to pack, as she had already sold them for the benefit of persecuted priests. What a blessing it would be, to practise one’s religion freely again. And who knows what good things would follow, when the King had put a great distance between himself and that National Assembly, which, as she so wittily said to a friend, loved liberty so much that it thought it was its own prerogative.’

She had been told by the Queen to take nothing, not even the smallest parcel: ‘I can lend you anything you need from my trunks.’ She put into one place with her wardrobe, a large grey travelling hat trimmed with a falling gauze in the manner of a veil and a simple morning dress. She packed a supply of handkerchiefs into one of the inner hanging pockets of her petticoat. Then, to prepare for a broken night, she lay down and went to sleep.’

At nine that night, the royal family had their supper together before retiring to the Queen’s drawing room. As soon as the doors were closed and the servants dismissed they fell to whispering about their plan. Élisabeth bade a sad farewell to her brother, the Comte de Provence who was also escaping with his wife the same night but had made different and much simpler plans for his flight.

At ten, Marie Antoinette went upstairs and woke up the children, who were then dressed by their governess, Madame de Tourzel. Madame Royale wore a brown dress patterned with white and yellow flowers, while the little Dauphin was dressed as a girl. The children were taken to the Comte de Fersen in one of the courtyards before the Queen returned to the drawing room as though nothing had happened.

The family went to bed at their normal time. Élisabeth was accompanied to her rooms in the Pavilion de Flore by a National Guard who left her at her door. He later attested to hearing her push the bolts across. Élisabeth prepared for bed as usual, reminding her maids to wake her at eight in time for Mass before getting into bed. As soon as they had all gone, she crept out of bed again, hastily dressed then used a secret exit to leave her rooms, running down a deserted corridor then down some stairs to the street.

It was the first time in all her life that Princesse Élisabeth had ever walked alone in the streets of Paris and we can only imagine how terrified she must have been. Fersen was keeping watch for all of the members of the royal party and spied her sitting in her veiled hat on a stone bench in front of the Hôtel de la Vallière. He pretended to walk past her and hissed: ‘You’re expected’, which was the signal for her to get into the cab which he had waiting nearby. Next was the King and then finally, heart stoppingly late was the Queen who had almost been seen by Lafayette’s coachman and had then got lost in some alleyways by the Place du Carrousel.

They drove to the Saint Martin barrier at two in the morning and changed from the cab to the magnificent berline, which was furnished with every possible comfort including a delicious packed lunch. The carriage moved slowly and had frequent stops. It’s frustrating to read about the royal fugitives’ journey through France – they were often recognised and allowed themselves to be hailed and surrounded by loyal subjects, they also got out to pick flowers and allow the children some exercise. You can’t help but cheer them on, while knowing that alas, capture was inevitable.

The carriage was surrounded by armed men in Varennes and the royal family were apprehended and seized to prevent them travelling further. We are told that the King was first indignant and then resigned, while his wife and sister ‘sulked’ and wept bitter tears, knowing that they were to be sent back to Paris and even closer imprisonment. The first stages of the return journey were hideous as a huge crowd formed to harangue and insult the beleagured royal family.

The arrival of envoys from the National Assembly, Barnave and Pétion, brought further distress as they climbed into the coach and travelled back with them, keeping them under close scrutiny. Pétion wrote afterwards: ‘I noticed simplicity and a family air which pleased me… there was ease and domestic bonhomie. The Queen calledd Madame Élisabeth ‘ma petite soeur’. Madame Élisabeth did the same … The Queen danced the prince up and down on her knees.’

Cazotte, a young guardsman who had protected the family in Epérnay when a mob had turned violent wrote: ‘It was Madame Élisabeth who kept up the conversation. To the reproaches which the deputies made about some proceedings at court, her answers were so clear, so candid, so sincere and showed so much instruction, so much energy, so much affection for the people in a princess in whom Barnave had seen until then, only a proud and ignorant woman, that the opinions of this deputy underwent a powerful revolution.’

Barnave was to become a supporter of the royal family at this point, convinced that they had been woefully misrepresented and that they could, with support, still have a place in the republic of France. Pétion however, had more base thoughts on his mind, having convinced himself that Madame Élisabeth had developed something of a crush on him. He wrote, oh dear: ‘Madame Élisabeth foxed me with melting eyes, with that languishing air that unhappiness gives and which inspires a lively interest… The moon began to shine softly… She sometimes interrupted her words, in such a manner as to agitate me. I replied…with a kind of austerity… She must have seen that the most seductive temptations were useless. I noticed a certain cooling off, a certain severity, which women often show when their pride is wounded.’

Margaret Trouncer – ‘When Élisabeth’s arm touched his in the overcrowded carriage, he imagined that she was overcome by tender emotions which she did not even take the trouble to conceal. Weber tells us that he then began making ambiguous remarks. Élisabeth pretended that she had not heard them.’

The carriage with its unfortunate inhabitants arrived back at the Tuileries at 7o’clock on the evening of the 25th of June. The fugitives returned to their own apartments to have baths and rest after their ordeal, while Élisabeth sent Madame de Tourzel a coded message in the form of a book: ‘Meditations on Death.’ It was clear that she believed that they were doomed from the moment that they were returned to Paris.

If life before the ill fated escape attempt was uncomfortable and constrained, it was doubly so now as the family were more closely guarded than before and treated even more harshly.

Élisabeth consoled herself by keeping up a correspondence with her favourite brother, the Comte d’Artois, who had surrounded himself with schemers and counter revolutionaries and was plotting with foreign powers to overthrow the revolution. It’s not certain how far Élisabeth went – some believe that she was also a key figure in the counter revolutionary plots but others think that her nature was too conciliatory and peaceful for this to have been possible. It may never be known for certain. Marie Antoinette wrote about Élisabeth: ‘She is so indiscreet, surrounded by intriguers, and, above all, dominated by her brothers outside (France), that it is impossible for us to speak to one another, or we would quarrel all day.

The days must have dragged slowly at the Tuileries, marked by the petty rows and simmering disagreements that are usual when a group of people are forced into inhabiting a relatively small space. There was drama on the 20th June 1792, when a mob broke into the Tuileries in search of the royal family and determined to wreak havoc. Élisabeth remained at her brother’s side and was mistaken for Marie Antoinette, which turned the rage of the mob upon her and could have resulted in her being injured or worse had not someone had the presence of mind to tell them that she was not the Queen after all.

The royal family went to their rooms that night, exhausted and frightened but also relieved that it was all over. Little suspecting that worse was around the corner and that on the 10th August, the Tuileries would be sacked and life as they knew it would never be the same again.

The night of the 9th of August was horribly hot and the royal ladies were disturbed by the incessant ringing of the tocsin that echoed across the still, humid Paris air. Margaret Trouncer wrote: ‘At one o’clock in the morning, the Queen said: ‘Let us go and rest on a sofa in a little closet overlooking the courtyard’. Madame Campan relates: ‘… Madame Élisabeth loosened several garments which hampered her, in order to lie down on the sofa; she had taken from her neckerchief a cornelian brooch, and before putting it on the table, she showed it to me and told me to read a device engraved on it, around a sheaf of lilies. I saw these words: ‘To forget offences, to forgive injuries.’ ‘I greatly fear’, added this virtuous princess, ‘that this maxim has little influence amongst our enemies, but for that reason it must not be any the less dear to us.’

As the tocsin continued to ring, dawn rose on that long hot day. ‘Élisabeth gazed at the sky  which was very red. She said to the Queen who was kissing the Dauphin in his bed: ‘Ma Soeur, come and see the sunrise.’ The Queen joined her. How far away seemed that day when Marie Antoinette scandalised Mesdames Tantes by watching the sunrise at Marly with her gay young friends. This was the last sunrise they were ever to watch from the Tuileries, or indeed anywhere, for the windows of their next prison were barricaded with planks. That crimson presaged all the blood that was to be shed that day – blood of all the Swiss Guards, blood of all the young noblemen, blood of all the servants left in the palace. There was one chestnut tree in the Tuileries gardens whose roots were so soaked with blood that, every spring, it always bloomed earlier than its fellows.’

‘The King, the Queen and Élisabeth all visited the defence posts in the interior of the château. We are told that the Queen choked her sobs with difficulty. ‘Her Austrian lip, her aquiline nose… gave to her face an air of majesty, difficult to picture unless one had seen it at that moment.’ As for Élisabeth, everyone admired her ‘presence of mind, the nobility and intrepidity which she showed in her least words.’ This angelic soul was full of sisterly tenderness. Her very glance inspired courage.’

As the day progressed, it soon became clear that the royal family were no longer safe in the palace and they were persuaded to seek refuge in the meeting hall of the National Assembly, which was a short walk away. Madame de Tourzel wrote: ‘Consternation was general when the King was seen to leave for the Assembly. The Queen followed him, holding her two children by the hand. By their sides were Madame Élisabeth, Madame la Princesse de Lamballe, who, as a relation of their Majesties, had obtained permission to follow them.’

Madame de Rochefoucauld was to recall: ‘From time to time she (the Queen) wiped away her tears and tried to assume a radiant air which she kept for some minutes. However, as she leant for one moment against my arm, I felt her trembling all over. Madame Élisabeth was the calmest; she was resigned to everything… Madame de Lamballe said to me: ‘We will never return to the palace.’

The family walked through a hostile crowd who shouted insults, shook their fists in their faces and even stole the Queen’s purse. The little prince it is said, amused himself by kicking up the autumn leaves that fallen upon the path. ‘The leaves are falling very early,’ his father sighed with a melancholy look.

When they finally arrived at the National Assembly, the door was closed against them and they were kept waiting for half an hour in a corridor while a debate raged inside as to whether they should be allowed to enter. Finally, the doors were opened and they walked inside – the Queen with every appearance of dignity and serenity, determined to give no sign that she was either insulted or afraid.

The royal family were crammed in the tiny and uncomfortable ‘loge du logographie’, which was used by the editor of a newspaper to record details of the debates. They remained there for sixteen long, hideous hours with no food and very little to drink, while outside the screams of the attacked and dying filtered into the hall. A huge mob had invaded the palace, slaughtering the 300 Swiss Guards who had protected the royal family then rampaging through the rooms, killing anyone who stood in their way and looting anything that came to hand. The air at the Tuileries, now so serene and tinged with an aroma of Gauloises and Chanel scent reeked of blood, burning, gunpowder and death as a battle raged in the gardens and neighbouring streets.

Finally, at ten o’clock at night, the royal captives were taken to the former Feuillants monastery nearby, where they were to spend the night. Margaret Trouncer – ‘The royal family crossed the garden through a sea of pikes still dripping with blood. Their way was lit by candles placed in the butt end of rifles.’ It must have been utterly terrifying and the little Dauphin was utterly distraught about the unknown fate of his pet dog, Citron, who had been left behind in his room.

Madame Élisabeth – the early days of the Revolution.

26 Feb

Madame Élisabeth’s life continued in its usual calm and orderly way throughout the 1780s, with an emphasis on good works and and simple country pleasures. There were touches of tragedy also with the deaths of her niece Sophie-Béatrix on the 19th June 1787 and then the Dauphin Louis-Joseph on the 4th June 1789, both of which devastated her brother and his wife.

No one could have predicted what terrible further sorrows awaited the French royal family although rumblings of discord and change had been heard for several years, reaching a peak when the Bastille fell to the populace of Paris in July 1789.

Change was in the air but life at Versailles carried on much as it had always done with the inhabitants doing their best to ignore what was happening outside their privileged bubble. The wife of a labourer who had been assisted by Madame Élisabeth requested a private interview at the end of September 1789 and told her that the people of Paris suspected the King of plotting to escape with his family to Metz and were planning to prevent this. Alarmed, Élisabeth immediately went to tell Marie Antoinette, who refused to believe that it was anything more than rumour and exaggeration.

On the 5th October 1789, Élisabeth was at Montreuil when then news arrived that an immense crowd of women were marching on Versailles. She left her house immediately and returned to the palace to be at the side of her brother and sister in law. The royal family gathered together, unable to escape the shouts of the mob that had gathered in the courtyard below them but assured that it would be impossible for them to actually get inside.


Margaret Trouncer – ‘It was a wet and windy night. The doors of the château were all guarded. Suddenly, towards two o’ clock in the morning, the storm became a violent hurricane. The wind shook the château as if it would uproot it. At three o’clock, Élisabeth went to her suite in the south wing and fell into bed. She slept until half past seven, when she was woken by her maid saying breathlessly: ‘Madame, the King is sending a detachment of grenadiers to fetch you. The Queen’s bodyguard has been attacked, some of the men were killed defending the Queen: she had to flee for her life down the secret passage to the King’s suite.’

The princess was so greatly upset to think of the dangers threatening her sister-in-law, that she ran through the blood splattered rooms, without even noticing the bodies of the guards. When she reached the Queen she was shaking in every limb.’

Always thinking of others above herself, Élisabeth sent back orders that her rooms be immediately opened and used for the care of the wounded and she herself went back to bathe and bandage their wounds until the news came that escape was no longer an option and the royal family were to accompany the mob back to Paris.

Margaret Trouncer – ‘The whole place was in disorder, and the maids seemed to have lost their heads. Élisabeth turned everyone out of her bedroom and locked the door for a moment. She went to the window and gazed out – for the last time. The rain had cleared and it was a glorious autumn day. The wind had stripped the elm avenues, and dead leaves lay in sodden heaps on the paths. She glanced to the left, towards the Satory woods, where she had hunted so often. Then down at the pink marble steps of the cent marches, leading to the Orangery. A sudden pang went through her. Was this farewell?

The royal family clambered into the King’s enormous travelling berline with Élisabeth seated beside the doors, where she got a good view of the shouting, jeering Versailles populace, who owed so much to the royal family. She was to write afterwards to a friend: ‘But the people of Versailles, Monsieur, have you ever seen such frightful ingratitude?’



The journey from Versailles to Paris usually took just an hour and a half, especially at the spanking fast pace that Élisabeth loved to travel at but on this occasion it took eight hideous hours. There was a bittersweet moment for Élisabeth as they passed by the gates of her lovely home at Montreuil.

‘Are you admiring your house?’ her brother Louis XVI  asked with a brave attempt at a smile.

‘No, Sire, I am saying goodbye,’ Élisabeth replied. She was never to see it again.

The berline arrived at the Tuileries in Paris at half past ten at night. The royal family were filthy, exhausted and thoroughly demoralised after several hours of uncomfortable travel and continual shouted insults from the feral mob that surrounded them the whole way from Versailles.

Margaret Trouncer – ‘Monsieur Lenotre gives a fascinating account of the preparations at the Tuileries at that date. On October the 6th, Mique, the architect and inspector of the château, appeared all of a sudden, looking demented. We must imagine the whole place as it was then. The Place du Carrousel, which is now so spacious and well balanced, and from which we can see Cleopatra’s Needle in the perspective of the Arc de Triomphe, was, in those days, a hotch-potch of private houses, barracks, huts, stables, (all so ill planned and huddled together that the Queen lost her way there on the night of the attempted escape to Varennes). The grille which we see nowadays dividing the Tuileries gardens from the Rue de Rivoli was then a high wall. The pavement of the Rue de Rivoli was a large grassy alley for horses. Where we now see the arcades of the shops, there were the boundary walls of the gardens of the Rue Saint Honoré. That street – Saint Honoré – contained three vast convents, and many orchards. The palace of the Tuileries was divided into three pavilions, with high roofs. Pavilions de l’Horloge, de Flore, de Marsan. The Pavilion de Flore, destined for Madame Élisabeth, overlooked the wall of the terrace near the Seine.

‘The chateau, which had not been occupied by a reigning monarch since the minority of Louis XV, had become a kind of ‘grace and favour’ lodging where the inhabitants did pretty well what they liked. This historic place was invaded by an undisciplined, turbulent crowd. Lenotre tells us that the King’s pensioners were nobles, artists and actors. They set about getting their own way, with a blend of patience and ruse; they made staircases, they turned drawing rooms into kitchens, they pierced walls to get some daylight, they cut tall rooms horizontally into two storeys, they threw up partitions. Even so, they never had enough corridors, and often had to cross each other’s kitchens. The place swarmed with hetorogeneous and squabbling humans. It was icy cold in winter and very hot in summer. The chapel was so dilapidated that the priest said Mass in fear and trembling.’

‘Mique gave a quick look round, collected his underlings and then dispatched them from one set of rooms to another, to tell the tenants that they must be out by nightfall. There were cries, screams, imprecations, prayers, recriminations, hysterics, calls for indemnities for their expenses but Mique was adamant. An army of porters fell upon the place like a cloud of locusts, moving the furniture out. At the same time, a second cloud of carpenters came in to tear down the partitions, painters rushed in with their paint brushes, and interior decorators tried in vain to hang curtains. The bedlam was indescribable. At seven o’clock at night, the dignitaries of the King’s household went around all the doors chalking up various hieroglyphics.’

Despite these preparations, the rooms at the Tuileries were unpleasantly badly furnished and also damp. Élisabeth did not last long in her rooms on the ground floor after a group of fishwives climbed in through the windows and terrified her while she was at breakfast. The fact that they only wanted to praise her beauty and goodness was besides the point – after the events in October, she was now totally suspicious and afraid of the French people.

After a while, Parisian society adjusted and although the royal family were state prisoners, life carried on almost as normal with a court of sorts being formed at the Tuileries. In some ways the change of pace was good for the family as they saw more of each other and had more time to themselves, although guards were ever present. Finally and ironically,  Louis XVI, Marie Antoinette and Élisabeth had the low key, simple family life that they had always craved.

Marie Antoinette and Élisabeth spent many hours together, working at embroidery, reading and chatting about life just as they had always done. Touchingly, Élisabeth kept up with the news about Montreuil, where work carried on just as it had always done.

In private, Élisabeth enjoyed reading, having had over one hundred books sent to the Pavilion de Flore from her personal library. Her books included ‘the works of Cicero, Seneca, Horace and Plutarch. Treatise on Friendship by M. de Sacy. Gibbon’s ‘Decline and Fall’. Sacy’s Bible in 31 volumes. St Augustine’s ‘Confessions’. The bishop of Saint-Malo on the Holy Angels. Treatise on True and Solid Piety by St François de Sales. Fénélon on the Existence of God. Fénélon on the Education of Girls. The Spirit of St Teresa, culled from her writings. Mascaron’s funeral sermons. Mezenguy’s Lives of the Saints…’

She loved walking in all weathers in the still beautiful Tuileries gardens, as well as playing draughts with her niece and nephew and billiards with her brother, the King. Another favourite pastime was painting, which she did while seated at a window overlooking the Seine, writing to her friend, the Marquise de Bombelles: ‘This amuses, occupies and distracts me, and I assure you that one needs all that.’ Rather sadly, she was most fond of painting nature scenes, which must have reminded her of all that she was now missing.


However, life was not entirely untroubled. The royal family were troubled with the insults and impudent behaviour of not just the common people but also their own guards. Comte Ferrand wrote about Élisabeth that: ‘Nearly every afternoon, during her stay at the Tuileries,  she went to the chapel. To get there she had to cross the guard rooms. Their remarks, their jokes, their sarcasms, often interspersed with impudence and impiety, did not stop her. Their spite increased when they saw she was indifferent to their derision; but their audacity was forced to lower its eyes before her. She seemed to vanquish them, less by the pride of her glance than by the influence of her virtue.

Madame Élisabeth – beautiful Montreuil

25 Feb

The reckless and hedonistic lifestyle of Madame la Princesse de Guémenée and her husband was to lead to their inevitable downfall when they became bankrupt at the end of 1781, shortly after the birth of the Dauphin. The Guémenée couple sold as much as they could then fled the court, rarely to be seen again.

Eager both to help her disgraced friends and also to please her sister in law, Marie Antoinette suggested to her husband, Louis that they should buy Madame de Guémenée’s charming country estate at Montreuil near to Versailles.

Always delighted to offer a surprise to someone that she loved, Marie Antoinette revealed the news in a typically playful manner by suggesting to Élisabeth that they drive out to Montreuil together to say goodbye now that it had been sold off then revealing the delightful truth as soon as they had arrived.

Margaret Trouncer described it: ‘The house, built in 1776, was a white, semi-circular, two-storied building, with the stables on one side and the kitchen offices on the other, quite far away from the dining room. On the ground floor, a circular chapel occupied the centre. The principal rooms were the boudoir, with wainscoting and a cupboard decorated with arabesques, the library with bookcases paned in clear glass, the buffet warming room paved in white marble, the dining room, the billiard room, the music room, the drawing room and some ante-chambers. Some of the old floors in small parquet squares were still there. Upstairs, twenty one panelled rooms. On the other side, French windows looked on to a park. One could walk straight out of the drawing room into the garden. On the right hand side was the alley of lime trees on the top of the terrace, whose wall separated the estate from the Avenue de Paris. On the left, hidden by trees and quite a distance away, an orangery, a dairy, cow sheds, farm buildings and the gardener’s cottage. There were also kitchen gardens and hot houses.’

In 1781, Montreuil was a poor, lost little hamlet with a population of nursery farmers, chateau servants and paupers. Now there are fairly good roads and streets; in those days, the lanes were so muddy and the lanes so full of ruts, that Élisabeth had to walk to the parish church instead of going in her carriage. The church of St. Symphorien is exactly the same, built on classical lines, and the bell calling the villagers to Mass was Élisabeth’s own gift.

Élisabeth was delighted with her new abode, even though her brother stipulated that she was not allowed to sleep there until she reached the age of twenty five. In the meantime she was encouraged to go there first thing in the morning and then return at dusk, which must have been a delightful freedom for a girl who hated the ostentation of Versailles.

Typically for Élisabeth she immediately shared her good fortune with friends, first of all giving Madame de Mackau a small house on the estate, which had a door that led directly into the gardens. Her friend, the botanist Le Monnier also lived on the estate and was encouraged to help her create the most exquisite gardens. Her passion for horticulture was so deep and sincere that after the Revolution, her page Adalbert de Chamisot, was able to give lessons in botany thanks to the hours spent listening to Le Monnier and Élisabeth converse at Montreuil.

As well as concentrating on the gardens, Élisabeth also began to redecorate her house in a manner that was both tasteful and also classically severe. She loved the things that surrounded her to be both beautiful and also simple.

Margaret Trouncer: ‘Immediately after Mass on festal days, Élisabeth would get into her sedan chair, go to her suite overlooking the Orangery, and change into simple country clothes or into her riding habit. But on ordinary days, when she would hear a low Mass early, perhaps at the altar of the Sacred Heart, she would not need to wear court clothes, and would go straight from the chapel to her coach, waiting outside.’

Élisabeth’s life at Montreuil was marked with its simplicity and goodness. She loved to spend time with her friends, either picnicking in the grounds, gardening, working her printing press, doing embroidery or doing good works in the neighbourhood, where she was hailed as a saint by the local people who all had reason to be grateful to her charitable ways and sweet natured friendliness. Élisabeth was naturally very thrifty and would often refuse to buy things because she reasoned that the money could be better spent on helping the poor.

Margaret Trouncer: ‘The morning at Montreuil was spent in a multitude of tasks. Hubert at the porter’s lodge had orders never to turn away any poor persons. Élisabeth and Le Monnier used to concoct herb ointments and lotions for sores, and she would distribute vegetables from her garden and milk from her dairy. Even before the Swiss cows came in 1788, the quality of that milk was so good that the only children who survived the severe winter of 1783 were those who had drunk it.

Of course, Versailles could not be kept away entirely and Élisabeth’s much disliked lady in waiting Diane de Polignac was a hovering presence at Montreuil, often accompanied by other rakish ladies of the court such as Madame de Polastron and Madame de Canillac, both of whom had been mistresses of Élisabeth’s adored brother, the Comte d’Artois. Their visits disrupted the sweet harmony and serenity of the country estate as their loud aristocratic voices discussed the latest scurrilous court gossip, much to their hostess’ discomfort.

It was at this time that Madame d’Oberkirch had a conversation with Élisabeth when they were sitting together at supper at the Petit Trianon, which she afterwards wrote down in her diary: ‘There was a supper of three tables with 100 places at each. I had the honour of being placed near Madame Élisabeth and to look at this saintly princess at my leisure. She was in the full glow of youth and beauty, and refused all marriage proposals in order to stay with her family. ‘I can only marry a king’s son,’ she said, ‘and a king’s son must reign in his father’s states; I would no longer be a Frenchwoman, I don’t want to cease being one. Better to stay here at the foot of my brother’s throne, than to ascend another.

Madame Élisabeth – an adolescent princess at Versailles

23 Feb

On the 11th June 1775, Louis XVI was crowned in Rheims cathedral in the presence of most of the court as well as his family. His younger siblings were all present and his young sisters, Clotilde and Élisabeth were seated at the side of Marie Antoinette, who was so moved at one point that she had to leave her seat in order to hide her tears. ‘I could not resist it,’ she wrote to her mother. ‘My tears began to flow in spite of myself.’


Shortly after this, on the 13th of August 1775, Élisabeth was to receive her first communion, which must have been an intensely moving and significant occasion for such a sensitive and devout young girl, who was to gain enormous consolation from her faith. It took place in the chapel at Versailles and Madame de Marsan and her niece, the Princesse de Guémenée held the housel cloth for her.

A few weeks later, she was to draw on her faith to sustain her when her adored elder sister, Madame Clotilde was married to the Prince of Piedmont, brother of the two Savoie princesses who had married her brothers and travelled to Turin to live with him. It was a terrible blow to Élisabeth, who loved her sister deeply and knew that princesses who married abroad very rarely came home again. She was devastated when the time came to say goodbye and Marie Antoinette, who had herself experienced the misery of saying goodbye to two beloved sisters when they went away to be married, had to coax her to let go and then console her when Clotilde’s coach had vanished out of view.

After Clotilde’s departure, Madame de Marsan decided that the time had come to retire from her position as royal governess and so handed in her resignation to Louis XVI, who at her recommendation immediately appointed her niece, the Princesse de Guémenée to replace her. This was not the best choice, considering Élisabeth’s peaceful, virtuous nature and way of shrinking from any court intrigue that may come near her as the Princesse was a typical Rohan drama queen, prone to having messy love affairs, squandering a fortune on fripperies, leaving a trail of debts and was also rather too fond of gambling. Marie Antoinette, beginning to become bored and restless thanks to her cloistered life at Versailles thought that she was marvellous but Élisabeth was rather less keen.

For her part, Madame la Princesse thought that her aunt, Madame de Marsan had been too strict with her charges and that Madame Élisabeth was too unassuming, pious and serious minded. What she needed, the rakish Princesse decided, was to have more fun and so she encouraged the girl to attend her parties and balls in an attempt to make her more sophisticated and frivolous. It didn’t really work as Élisabeth was also exceedingly stubborn.

As well as the parties, Élisabeth now began to attend the cosy little family suppers that took place in the lovely apartments of the Comtesse de Provence, which overlooked the rue de la Surintendance. These suppers were the envy of all the court and most of the courtiers would have loved to have been invited. However, they were strictly for family only, which is lucky as history records that the group of sisters in law loved to sit and gossip about everyone while the three young princes wrestled on the floor, knocking precious china flying.

Marie Antoinette wrote to her mother: ‘I am enchanted with my sister Élisabeth, on the occasion of her sister and in several circumstances, she shows charming sensibility and right feeling. When one is so perceptive at eleven, that is very precious. I will see her more now that she will be in the hands of Madame de Guémenée.’

As she grew older and lost some of her typically Bourbon puppy fat, Élisabeth’s good looks began to be much admired with Madame de Mackau saying that she was ‘as fresh as a rose’ and the catty Horace Walpole describing her as ‘very pretty and genteel’. High praise indeed.

The Princesse Élisabeth may have been pretty and charming but there was never so much as a whisper of a handsome prince appearing on the scene. There was a rumour at one point that she might marry Marie Antoinette’s brother, the Emperor Joseph but it all came to nothing. Instead she devoted herself to her gentle friendships with young girls of the court that she had known since childhood, such as Angélique de Mackau, who married the Marquis de Bombelles on the 23rd of January 1778. She also devoted a great deal of time to her hobbies: gardening, reading, painting and, somewhat surprisingly, mathematics which she seems to have been very fond of.

On the 17th of May 1778, there was a big change in Madame Élisabeth’s household when the Princesse de Guémenée left her post as governess in order to take care of the forthcoming baby expected by her brother and Marie Antoinette. If Madame la Princesse’s morals were hardly above reproach, she must have seemed absolutely virtuous in comparison with her replacement as head of Élisabeth’s household: the ugly, malicious tongued, witty and rapacious Comtesse Diane de Polignac, who was appointed thanks only to her relationship with the Queen’s favourite, Madame de Polignac.

It can’t have been much of a surprise to anyone, even Marie Antoinette who was determined that everyone should adore her favourites as much as she herself did, that Diane and Élisabeth did not get along. Élisabeth did her best to ignore and avoid her new lady in waiting and for her part, Diane did her best to humiliate the Princesse by making fun of her hobbies and appearance, a bit like a spiteful school bully.

On her sixteenth birthday, in May 1780, Élisabeth moved into the new grown up apartment that her fond brother and sister in law, Marie Antoinette had prepared for her at Versailles. The princess had never made any secret of her wish to be allowed to become a nun like her aunt Louise, and as the years went by without any sign of a suitable husband, it is probable that her brother and those who loved her began to worry that she too might take flight in the middle of the night and run away to a Carmelite convent.

Her new rooms overlooking the Orangery were in a complete contrast to the tiny nun’s cell that her soul desired. She had eight rooms to herself: two antechambers, a reception room, a bedroom (hung with green Lyons damask in the summer and crimson silk velvet in the winter), a grand cabinet, a billiard room, a library and then a private boudoir, all of which were furnished with the most exquisite taste and luxury.

Madame Élisabeth – the arrival of Marie Antoinette

22 Feb

When Madame Élisabeth was six years old, an event happened that was to have a profound influence on the rest of her childhood and indeed the rest of her life.

The betrothal of her eldest brother, the Dauphin Louis had been a source of intense interest at court for quite some time as preparations went on for what was to be one of the most magnificent wedding spectacles ever held at Versailles. Excitement had reached fever pitch by the time his bride, the fifteen year old Archduchess Marie Antoinette arrived at the palace at 10am on the 16th May 1770 and Madame Élisabeth, as the youngest member of the royal family must have been quite beside herself by the time the beautiful new princess, dressed in her splendid travelling costume of blue and white silk arrived in the royal apartments.

Madame de Marsan, who Marie Antoinette had been warned against and who she was to take one of her quick and unyielding dislikes to, was quick to push her favourite pupil, Madame Clotilde forward but the young Archduchess immediately knelt in front of the smallest princess, Élisabeth and gave her a quick hug.

The little princess was too young to take part in the splendid ceremonies and balls arranged for the wedding but was allowed to stay up late to watch the massive firework display that had been planned for the evening. Unfortunately they were ruined by a terrible thunderstorm, which must have been an enormous disappointment.

Marie Antoinette and her youngest sister in law become good friends, despite a large age difference. They were clearly drawn to each other by having the same fun loving, tomboyish natures as well as a mutual feeling that they were somewhat out of place in the huge sprawling palace, where neither was loved as much as they wished to be.

Rouget de l’Isle, later to be writer of the Marseillaise encountered the two princesses at this time: ‘I was fifteen years of age and was on holiday with a lady who was a relation of mine, who had her lodgings at Versailles. All of a sudden, I heard the door of her apartment in which I was, being struck in a certain manner, and my relation, very much upset, said to me: ‘Ah, Dieu, my child, hide quickly, here’s the Queen!’ And at the same time she pushed me into the next room, quickly pulling the curtains over me. An indeed, Marie Antoinette and Madame Élisabeth came in, and soon, freed from the yoke of etiquette, they began to jump, to run and to chase one another.’

Now that Marie Antoinette was at court, life became much more fun for Élisabeth with concerts, parties, picnics and visits to the neighbouring estates of favoured aristocrats. Both girls adored gardening and would spend hours in the grounds of Versailles watching the gardeners at work and planning their own future gardens.

It was at this time that Élisabeth came to know Montreuil, where she would later have her own country estate. Her governess Madame de Marsan owned a charming little house there next door to the estate of her niece, the Princesse de Guémenée. For reasons that aren’t clear, she gave it to the Baronne de Mackau as a residence for herself and her daughter, Angélique who was soon to marry the Marquis de Bombelles. Élisabeth was to spend many happy hours at Montreuil as a child, freed from the constraints of Versailles and enjoying the simple country life that it afforded.

Madame Élisabeth’s early loathing of her lessons had vanished and Madame de Marsan felt confident enough in her charge’s abilities to ask the extremely intelligent and witty Marquise de la Ferté-Imbault, daughter of the famous saloniste Madame Geoffrin to come to Versailles and give lessons in philosophy to the young princesses. Only at Versailles…

She was also taught Italian and Latin, with her teacher, Signor Goldini writing about her: ‘This young princess, lively, gay and amiable, was more of an age to amuse herself than to apply herself. I have assisted at some Latin lessons which they were giving her, and I have noticed that she had good dispositions to learn, but she did not like to linger on small difficulties. She wanted to turn her occupation into an amusement and I tried to give my lessons in the form of agreeable conversation.

As Élisabeth grew older, she also grew closer to her brothers who were so much older than herself and must have seemed like such glamorous, dashing creatures in their splendid velvet and silk suits. She would always love her eldest brother, the Dauphin most sincerely, appreciating his quiet ways and honest devotion to his family but she had a definite soft spot also for her youngest brother, Charles, the handsome Comte d’Artois who was a delightful young man with charming manners.

Charles was about to be married to one of the Princesses de Savoie, but was madly in love with the exquisite Princesse Louise-Adélaïde de Condé, daughter of the Prince de Condé and who had recently come to court from her convent school. It had once been the intention of their families that Charles and Louise be married but for some reason the match had not come about, leaving both of the young people feeling decidedly melancholy and wistful about each other. The lovely Louise was nicknamed ‘Hebé-Bourbon’ in tribute to her extreme beauty and she was to become very close friends with Marie Antoinette and her favourite sister in law, Madame Élisabeth.


The grandchildren of the King and their friends formed their own cotérie at Versailles and were often to be seen together enjoying picnics in the park, playing cards or simply enjoying each other’s company in their enormous apartments in the palace. The Comte de Provence and the two Savoie Princesses may have had malicious tongues and a sly eyed tendency to look askance at the fun of the others but the rest of the group wanted nothing more than to enjoy life to the full.

This idyllic life, enjoyed by the young people of the court was soon to come to an abrupt end when shortly after Élisabeth’s tenth birthday, her grandfather Louis XV was taken ill at the Petit Trianon and died days later from the dreaded smallpox, leaving the young and decidedly inexperienced Louis and Marie Antoinette as King and Queen of France. The old King had seemed to be in his prime and neither had expected to inherit the throne for quite some time so it must have been a terrible shock to both of them.

Madame Élisabeth – a Versailles childhood

22 Feb

The orphaned children of the Dauphin and Marie-Josèphe de Saxe were a diverse bunch. At the time of their mother’s death, the eldest was the twelve year old Dauphin Louis-Auguste, a serious, sombre boy with low self esteem and a diffident manner. Next was the eleven year old Louis-Stanislas-Xavier, Comte de Provence, already overweight with a cruel, sarcastic yet indolent nature. Next was the nine year old Charles-Philippe, Comte d’Artois, the only one of the trio of boys to have inherited his handsome grandfather, Louis XV’s good looks, in particular his sparkling dark eyes, inherited from his mother Marie-Adélaïde de Savoie.
The two girls followed: seven year old Marie-Adélaïde-Clotilde-Xaviere, who was known as Madame Clotilde, an overweight child with a sweet, endearing nature and a genuine love of music who was known at court as ‘Gros Madame’ (Madame Fatty) and then finally, the baby of the family, two year old Madame Élisabeth.

The young Madame Élisabeth was a delightful, wilful toddler who ran rings around her governess, Madame de Marsan. She didn’t care much for her lessons and preferred instead to play outside in the grounds of Versailles (to be fair, who wouldn’t?), accompanied by her beloved pet dogs for even the royal children were surrounded at all times by a coterie of delightful pugs and spaniels.

Madame de Marsan was one of the Rohan family and was not considered to be a very good influence on her young charges with Mercy later warning the young Marie Antoinette that she was both vindictive and dangerous.

As she grew bigger and ever more stubborn, Madame de Marsan found her young charge to be increasingly awkward and disobedient and was at her wit’s end as to how to control her until she hit upon the notion of taking the two young princesses to the royal convent and school at Saint-Cyr, which had been founded by Madame de Maintenon in 1684.

At length the seventeenth century red brick building designed by Mansart came into sight. All the bells were pealing. The footman leapt off his seat and let down the footboard. At the front door were the Ladies of Saint Louis, soberly dressed in that harmonious costume which Louis XIV himself had helped to design on a miniature doll. Their dresses were of a beautiful thin black stuff, with a white collar, their slippers were of marocain and their bronzed gloves were lined with white. They wore white taffeta bonnets, ruched with white gauze around the face, the whole covered with a white veil coming very low. A silver fleur de lys crucifix adorned their bosoms.’ – Madame Élisabeth – Margaret Trouncer.

The two little princesses were over awed by their surroundings. Upon being asked what they would most like to see, Madame Clotilde requested a visit to the bedchamber in which Madame de Maintenon had died whilst Élisabeth asked to see the convent kitchens, saying simply that she had never before seen a kitchen.

The little princesse was taken to the kitchens and there allowed to stir a vanilla sauce as well as cutting out some pastry and playing with the spices and flour. The memoirs of Saint-Cyr then record that she decided to play hide and seek, saying: ‘But of all the amusements which pleased her most, and which she desired more passionately than anything else, was hide and seek (cligne musette). Usually she chose for this game the tallest demoiselles, as much to appear grown up as to make a strong rampart against those who were looking for her; she wrapped herself around their clothes and their persons, enchanted that they should seek her a long time.

Gradually, the young Madame Élisabeth became an easier charge for her long suffering governess, mainly because she fell ill which knocked some of the wind out of her sails for quite some time and also because of the introduction to her circle of the Baronne de Mackau and her pretty daughter, Angélique who was to share Élisabeth’s lessons at Versailles and who exerted a very good influence on the other little girl.

The royal children were housed in apartments on the ground floor of the palace, close to the Parterre de Midi and with views across the gardens, park and orangerie. They were taken once a day to the rooms of their aunts, Mesdames Adélaïde, Victoire, Sophie and Louise who had never married and remained as close as possible to their father. Élisabeth had a dutiful love for her aunts, but seems to have been closest of all to the youngest, Louise who would later abscond from the court in secret in order to become a Carmélite nun and who shared her love of horse riding.

The little princesses were taken to visit their aunt Louise shortly after she left Versailles and Élisabeth was very much struck by her aunt’s obvious happiness in her new life where she was now known as Soeur Thérèse de Saint-Augustin and is said to have expressed a wish to also become a Carmélite when the time was right.

In her turn, Madame Louise adored her tiny niece and requested that a friend who was a priest pray for Élisabeth: ‘She has, by God’s grace, a firm determination to belong to Him; but I know too well the world she lives in; the purest virtues need most firm support therein.

Portraits from the French court…

21 Feb

Some new additions to my portrait collections, that I thought some of you might like to see.

This charming collection of portraits really caught my eye earlier on. It depicts the four lovely daughters of Henri-Jules de Bourbon, Prince de Condé. At the top left is Marie-Thérèse, the Princesse de Bourbon as Spring; top right is Anne-Marie-Victoire as Summer; bottom left is Anne-Louise-Bénédicte, Duchesse de Maine as Autumn and then bottom right is Marie-Anne, Duchesse de Vendôme as Winter.

This is another portrait of Marie-Thérèse de Bourbon, Princesse de Conti by Mignard. She was undeniably becoming but suffered somewhat at court as the sister in law of the exquisitely beautiful Marie-Anne, Princesse de Conti, who was the daughter of Louis XIV and Louise de la Vallière. However, she got the last laugh as Marie-Anne was desperately in love with her husband, who in his turn was in love with the impish Louise, Princesse de Condé and daughter of Louis XIV and Athénaïs de Montespan. They must have been interesting times at Versailles.

Marie-Anne de Bourbon, the ‘pretty’ Princesse de Conti. This is a lovely drawing of the Princesse as it shows off how women of her class genuinely dressed. Portraits of the time tend to show aristocratic women covered in artfully arranged drapes and laces, with their bosoms on display and hair flowing freely, which gives a distorted idea of how they actually would have dressed on a day to day basis.

Speaking of which, here is a portrait of the fascinating Louise-Françoise, eldest surviving daughter of Louis XIV and Athénaïs de Montespan. The three daughters of Louis XIV, Marie-Anne, Louise-Françoise and Françoise-Marie lived in close quarters at court but were never to be truly friends as they were jealous of their own rank and privileges and bitterly envious and suspicious of each other.

Françoise-Marie de Bourbon, Duchesse de Chartres by Goubert. Françoise-Marie was the younger sister of the fascinating Louise. She was a proud, imperious girl who grew up to become a troubled woman with a drinking problem and a choleric temper, which earned her the nickname ‘Madame Lucifer’.

Another portrait of Françoise-Marie, a portrait commissioned in 1834 by her great great grandson King Louis Philippe, who wished to celebrate his Orléans ancestors.

Other posts about the daughters of Louis XIV can be seen here, here, here and here.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 3,562 other followers