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Leave M. de Mont-Beliard alone, and do not speak to him again of his
estates. If the matter which occupies Madame de Thianges could be
arranged, it would be of the utmost propriety that a principality of
such importance rested in the Crown, at least as far as sovereignty.
The case of the Principality of Orange is a good enough lesson to
me; there must be one ruler only in an empire. As for you, my dear
lady, feel no regret for all that. You shall be a duchess, and I am
pleased to give you this title which you desire. Let M. de
Montespan be informed that his marquisate is to be elevated into a
duchy with a peerage, and that I will add to it the number of
seigniories that is proper, as I do not wish to deviate from the
usage which has become a law, etc.
The prince's decision was definite, and as his character was, there was
no wavering. I wrote to him immediately to express my lively gratitude,
and we considered, the Marquise and I, as to the intermediary to whom we
could entrust the unsavoury commission of approaching the Marquis de
Montespan. He hated all my family from his having obtained no
satisfaction from it for his wrath. We begged the Chancellor Hyde, a
personage of importance, to be good enough to accept this mission; he saw
no reason to refuse it, and, after ten or eleven days, he received the
following reply, with which he was moderately amused:
CHATEAU SAINT ELIX . . . . AT THE WORLD'S END.
I am sensible, my Lord, as I should be, of the honour which you have
wished to do me, whilst, notwithstanding, permit me to consider it
strange that a man of your importance has cared to meddle in such a
negotiation. His Majesty the King of France did not consult me when
he wished to make my wife his mistress; it is somewhat remarkable
that so great a prince expects my intervention today to recompense
conduct that I have disapproved, that I disapprove, and shall
disapprove to my last breath. His Majesty has got eight or ten
children from my wife without saying a word to me about it; this
monarch can surely, therefore, make her a present of a duchy without
summoning me to his assistance. According to all laws, human and
divine, the King ought to punish Madame de Montespan, and, instead
of censuring her, he wishes to make her a duchess! . . . Let him
make her a princess, even a highness, if he likes; he has all the
power in his hands. I am only a twig; he is an oak.
If madame is fostering ambition, mine has been satisfied for forty
years; I was born a marquis; a marquis--apart from some unforeseen
catastrophe--I will die; and Madame la Marquise, as long as she does
not alter her conduct, has no need to alter her degree.
I will, however, waive my severity, if M. le Duc du Maine will
intervene for his mother, and call me his father, however it may be.
I am none the less sensible, my lord, of the honour of your
acquaintance, and since you form one of the society of Madame la
Marquise, endeavour to release yourself from her charms, for she can
be an enchantress when she likes.... It is true that, from what
they tell me, you were not quite king in your England.
I am, from out my exile (almost as voluntary as yours), the most
obliged and grateful of your servants,
DE GONDRIN MONTESPAN.
The Marquise de Thianges felt a certain irritation at the reading of this
letter; she offered all our excuses for it to the English Chancellor, and
said to me: "I begin to fear that the King of Versailles is not acting
with good faith towards you, when he makes your advancement depend on the
Marquis de Montespan; it is as though he were giving you a duchy in the
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