magic and real detectives-第12部分
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Senac de Meilhan found Madame de Pompadour's brother; M。 de
Marigny; about to burn a packet of papers。 〃It is the journal;〃 he
said; 〃of a femme de chambre of my sister; a good; kind woman。〃 De
Meilhan asked for the manuscript; which he later gave to Mr。
Crawford; one of the Kilwinning family; in Ayrshire; who later
helped in the escape of Louis XVI。 and Marie Antoinette to
Varennes; where they were captured。 With the journal of Madame du
Hausset were several letters to Marigny on points of historical
anecdote。'1'
'1' One of these gives Madame de Vieux…Maison as the author of a
roman a clef; Secret Memoirs of the Court of Persia; which contains
an early reference to the Man in the Iron Mask (died 1703)。 The
letter…writer avers that D'Argenson; the famous minister of Louis
XV。; said that the Man in the Iron Mask was really a person fort
peu de chose; 'of very little account;' and that the Regent
d'Orleans was of the same opinion。 This corroborates my theory;
that the Mask was merely the valet of a Huguenot conspirator; Roux
de Marsilly; captured in England; and imprisoned because he was
supposed to know some terrible secretwhich he knew nothing about。
See The Valet's Tragedy; Longmans; 1903。
Crawford published the manuscript of Madame du Hausset; which he
was given by de Meilhan; and the memoirs are thus from an authentic
source。 The author says that Louis XV。 was always kind to her; but
spoke little to her; whereas Madame de Pompadour remarked; 〃The
King and I trust you so much that we treat you like a cat or a dog;
and talk freely before you。〃
As to Saint…Germain; Madame du Hausset writes: 〃A man who was as
amazing as a witch came often to see Madame de Pompadour。 This was
the Comte de Saint…Germain; who wished to make people believe that
he had lived for several centuries。 One day Madame said to him;
while at her toilet; 〃What sort of man was Francis I。; a king whom
I could have loved?〃 〃A good sort of fellow;〃 said Saint…Germain;
〃too fieryI could have given him a useful piece of advice; but he
would not have listened。〃 He then described; in very general
terms; the beauty of Mary Stuart and La Reine Margot。 〃You seem to
have seen them all;〃 said Madame de Pompadour; laughing。
〃Sometimes;〃 said Saint…Germain; 〃I amuse myself; not by making
people believe; but by letting them believe; that I have lived from
time immemorial。〃 〃But you do not tell us your age; and you give
yourself out as very old。 Madame de Gergy; who was wife of the
French ambassador at Venice fifty years ago; I think; says that she
knew you there; and that you are not changed in the least。〃 〃It is
true; Madame; that I knew Madame de Gergy long ago。〃 〃But
according to her story you must now be over a century old。〃 〃It
may be so; but I admit that even more possibly the respected lady
is in her dotage。〃
At this time Saint…Germain; says Madame du Hausset; looked about
fifty; was neither thin nor stout; seemed clever; and dressed
simply; as a rule; but in good taste。 Say that the date was 1760;
Saint…Germain looked fifty; but he had looked the same age;
according to Madame de Gergy; at Venice; fifty years earlier; in
1710。 We see how pleasantly he left Madame de Pompadour in doubt
on that point。
He pretended to have the secret of removing flaws from diamonds。
The King showed him a stone valued at 6;000 francswithout a flaw
it would have been worth 10;000。 Saint…Germain said that he could
remove the flaw in a month; and in a month he brought back the
diamondflawless。 The King sent it; without any comment; to his
jeweler; who gave 9;600 francs for the stone; but the King returned
the money; and kept the gem as a curiosity。 Probably it was not
the original stone; but another cut in the same fashion; Saint…
Germain sacrificing 3;000 or 4;000 francs to his practical joke。
He also said that he could increase the size of pearls; which he
could have proved very easilyin the same manner。 He would not
oblige Madame de Pompadour by giving the King an elixir of life: 〃I
should be mad if I gave the King a drug。〃 There seems to be a
reference to this desire of Madame de Pompadour in an unlikely
place; a letter of Pickle the Spy to Mr。 Vaughan (1754)! This
conversation Madame du Hausset wrote down on the day of its
occurrence。
Both Louis XV。 and Madame de Pompadour treated Saint…Germain as a
person of consequence。 〃He is a quack; for he says he has an
elixir;〃 said Dr。 Quesnay; with medical skepticism。 〃Moreover; our
master; the King; is obstinate; he sometimes speaks of Saint…
Germain as a person of illustrious birth。〃
The age was skeptical; unscientific; and; by reaction; credulous。
The philosophes; Hume; Voltaire; and others; were exposing; like an
ingenious American gentleman; 〃the mistakes of Moses。〃 The Earl of
Marischal told Hume that life had been chemically produced in a
laboratory; so what becomes of Creation? Prince Charles; hidden in
a convent; was being tutored by Mlle。 Luci in the sensational
philosophy of Locke; 〃nothing in the intellect which does not come
through the senses〃a queer theme for a man of the sword to study。
But; thirty years earlier; the Regent d'Orleans had made crystal…
gazing fashionable; and stories of ghosts and second…sight in the
highest circles were popular。 Mesmer had not yet appeared; to give
a fresh start to the old savage practice of hypnotism; Cagliostro
was not yet on the scene with his free…masonry of the ancient
Egyptian school。 But people were already in extremes of doubt and
of belief; there might be something in the elixir of life and in
the philosopher's stone; it might be possible to make precious
stones chemically; and Saint…Germain; who seemed to be over a
century old at least; might have all these secrets。
Whence came his wealth in precious stones; people asked; unless
from some mysterious knowledge; or some equally mysterious and
illustrious birth?
He showed Madame de Pompadour a little box full of rubies; topazes;
and diamonds。 Madame de Pompadour called Madame du Hausset to look
at them; she was dazzled; but skeptical; and made a sign to show
that she thought them paste。 The Count then exhibited a superb
ruby; tossing aside contemptuously a cross covered with gems。
〃That is not so contemptible;〃 said Madame du Hausset; hanging it
round her neck。 The Count begged her to keep the jewel; she
refused; and Madame de Pompadour backed her refusal。 But Saint…
Germain insisted; and Madame de Pompadour; thinking that the cross
might be worth forty louis; made a sign to Madame du Hausset that
she accept。 She did; and the jewel was valued at 1;500 francs
which hardly proves that the other large jewels were genuine;
though Von Gleichen believed they were; and thought the Count's
cabinet of old masters very valuable。
The fingers; the watch; the snuffbox; the shoe…buckles; the garter
studs; the solitaires of the Count; on high days; all burned with
diamonds and rubies; which were estimated; one day; at 200;000
francs。 His wealth did not come from cards or swindlingno such
charges are ever hinted at; he did not sell elixirs; nor
prophecies; nor initiations。 His habits do not seem to have been
extravagant。 One might regard him as a clever eccentric person;
the unacknowledged child; perhaps; of some noble; who had put his
capital mainly into precious stones。 But Louis XV。 treated him as
a serious personage; and probably knew; or thought he knew; the
secret of his birth。 People held that he was a bastard of a king
of Portugal; says Madame du Hausset。 Perhaps the most ingenious
and plausible theory of the birth of Saint…Germain makes him the
natural son; not of a king of Portugal; but of a queen of Spain。
The evidence is not evidence; but a series of surmises。 Saint…
Germain; on this theory; 'wrop his buth up in a mistry' (like that
of Charles James Fitzjames de la Pluche); out of regard for the
character of his royal mamma。 I believe this about as much as I
believe that a certain Rev。 Mr。 Douglas; an obstreperous
Covenanting minister; was a descendant of the captive Mary Stuart。
However; Saint…Germain is said; like Kaspar Hauser; to have
murmured of dim memories of his infancy; of diversions on
magnificent terraces; and of palaces glowing beneath an azure sky。
This is reported by Von Gleichen; who knew him very well; but
thought him rather a quack。 Possibly he meant to convey the idea
that he was Moses; and that he had dwelt in the palaces of the
Ramessids。 The grave of the prophet was never known; and Saint…
Germain may have insinuated that he began a new avatar in a cleft
of Mount Pisgah; he was capable of it。
However; a less wild surmise avers that; in 1763; the secrets of
his birth and the source of his opulence were known in Holland。
The authority is the Memoirs of Grosley (1813)。 Grosley was an
archaeologist of Troyes; he had traveled in Italy; and written an
account of his travels; he also visited Holland and England; and
later; from a Dutchman; he picked up his information about Saint…
Germain。 Grosley was a Fellow of our Royal Society; and I greatly
revere the authority of a F。R。S。 His later years were occupied in
the compilation of his Memoirs; including an account of what he did
and heard in Holland; and he died in 1785。 According to Grosley's
account of what the Dutchman knew; Saint…Germain was the son of a
princess who fled (obviously from Spain) to Bayonne; and of a
Portuguese Jew dwelling in Bordeaux。
What fairy and fugitive princess can this be; whom not in vain the
ardent Hebrew wooed? She was; she must have been; as Grosley saw;
the heroine of Victor Hugo's Ruy Blas。 The unhappy Charles II。 of
Spain; a kind of 〃mammet〃 (as the English called the Richard II。
who appeared up in Islay; having escaped from Pomfret Castle); had
for his first wife a daughter of Henrietta; t