How to Ruin a Queen: Marie Antoinette and the Diamond Necklace Affair (52 page)

BOOK: How to Ruin a Queen: Marie Antoinette and the Diamond Necklace Affair
4.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

154
   
‘I must arrest him’
: op. cit., p.110.

154
   
ministerial committee
: see Castries, p.298ff.

155
   
‘is excessive proof ‘ . . . ‘yet seen’
:
Louis XVI and the comte de Vergennes: correspondence 1774–1787
, edited by John Hardman and Munro Price, Louis XVI to Vergennes, 16 August 1785.

155
   
still cheerful
: see
Mémoires Secrets
, 17 August 1785.

155
   
‘horrors of tyranny’
: quoted in
Lettres de Cachet and Social Control
by Brian E. Strayer, p.xii.

155
   
‘greatest part of the nation’
:
Des Lettres de cachet et des prisons d’état
by the marquis de Mirabeau (Hamburg, 1782), p.208.

156
   
of the Enlightenment
: the picture of the Bastille is based on
The Bastille: A History of a Symbol of Despotism and Freedom
by Hans-Jürgen Lüsebrink & Rolf Reichardt and
Citizens
by Simon Schama.

156
   
‘best Moka coffee’
: quoted in
Citizens
, Schama, p.392.

157
   
‘more cruel than death’
:
Mémoires sur le Bastille et sur le détention de M Linguet, écrit par lui-même
(London, 1783), p.67.

157
   
‘you an order’
:
Mémoires Secrets
, 1 September 1785.

157
   
‘as friends’
: Castries, p.301ff. The rest of the interview with Vergennes and Castries is taken from this source.

14. Hotel Bastille

159
   
‘we will take’ . . . ‘distinguish them’
: LJSRV I, p.398.

159
   
The pair interrogated
: the transcript of Jeanne’s Interrogation is contained in AN K162/14/2.

159
   
‘reaching the courts’
: AN K162/14/2/5.

159–60
‘great man’ . . . ‘god’ . . . ‘to have done’
: AN K162/14/2/7-9.

160
   
‘appeared suspect’
: Bastille MS12457/27.

160
   
‘through medicine’
: AN F7/4445/2–4550/2, ‘Interrogation with Cagliostro’, 1.

160
   
age of eighteen
: AN F7/4445/2–4550/2, ‘Interrogation with Cagliostro’, 7. The initial set of interrogations with witnesses are contained in AN F7/4445/2–4550/2.

161
   
‘eyes of everyone’
: D’Arneth and Flammermont, vol. 1, Marie Antoinette to Joseph II, 22 August 1785.

161
   
‘in her hand’
: ibid.

161
   
‘I am accused’
: the account of this meeting is taken from Castries, pp. 303–4.

162
   
‘confound that woman’
: ibid.

162
   
‘rebuke her’
: Georgel, vol. 2, p.122.

164
   
‘mercy of the king’
: op. cit., p.126.

164
   
‘justice and goodwill’
: BN JdF 2088/36.

164
   
‘being discovered’
: D’Arneth and Flammermont, vol. 1, Marie Antoinette to Joseph II, 19 September 1785.

164
   
‘one of his subjects’
: Georgel, vol. 2, p.129.

166
   
to a secular tribunal
: for the papal reaction to the arrest see AAE CP Rome/901–3.

166
   
theft of the necklace
: Harger and Biln’s report is found in BHVP MS713/143–7.

15. Witness Protection

167
   
‘unknown to the queen’ . . . ‘La Mothe de Valois’
: Compte Rendu, ‘Pieces Justificatives’, pp. 3–5.

167
   
‘to be destroyed’
: ibid.

167
   
on 6 September
: BN JdF 2088/42.

168
   
‘offices of state’
: MCB, p.45.

168
   
‘sale of the necklace’
: BN JdF 2088/12.

168
   
‘accomplices in the crime’ . . . ‘declaration he made’
: for the changing versions, see BN JdF 2088/15–30.

169
   
the king’s largesse
: on Titon, see
La Prostitution et La Police des Moeurs au XVIIIe Siecle
by Erica-Marie Benabou, p.387.

169
   
‘morals even looser’
: Georgel, vol. 2, p.131.

169
   
‘as a sentinel’
: the account of Beugnot’s worries and de Crosne’s attempt to recruit him for Jeanne’s lawyer derives from MCB, pp. 76–81.

170
   
‘imbecile’
: AAE CP Angleterre 556/163.

170–1
‘Neither myself . . . bring a case’
: BHVP MS691/31–2.

171
   
On 3 November
: BHVP MS691/45.

171
   
‘imperious harshness’
: Georgel, vol. 2, p.115.

171
   
renewed vigour
: on Georgel’s endeavours, see Georgel, vol. 2, p.116ff. Much of his work is confirmed by the Dossier Target (BHVP MS691).

171
   
‘de Valois’
: BHVP MS691/150.

172
   
passed on copies to Georgel
: BHVP MS691/187.

172
   
Most pressing . . . all creditors
: Georgel, vol. 2, p.143ff.

172
   
Not long after
: on Loth and Georgel, see op. cit., p.148ff.

172
   
Loth was . . . dressing in mufti
: on Loth, see AN X2B 1417/54/Loth and MCB, p.53. On his extracurricular activities see BN JdF 2088/371.

173
   
‘an unattractive figure’
: AAE CP Autriche 350/289.

174
   
Georgel, now informed
: on Carbonnières in London, see Georgel, vol. 2, pp. 167–8, AAE CP Angleterre 554/158, 170 and 333, and AAE MDF 1399/248.

174
   
A crucial breakthrough
: on d’Oliva’s capture, see AAE MDF 1399/228–89.

174
   
‘take secret measures . . . have them arrested’
: quoted in
L’affaire du collier
, Lever, p.177.

175
   
‘mischievous or wicked’
: AAE MDF 1399/278.

16. Tired and Emotional

176
   
‘other matter’
: BN JdF 2088/204.

176
   
at the Palais de Justice
: testimonies are recorded in AN X2B/1417/54 and AN X2B/1417/68.

176
   
that sum of money
: Loth’s testimony is AN X2B/1417/54/Loth.

176
   
rather than cash
: see AN X2B/1417/54/Laporte and AN X2B/1417/54/ Bassenge.

177
   
‘what this means’
: AN X2B/1417/54/D’Oliva.

177
   
‘assured [him] he’ . . . ‘had been intended’
: AN X2B/1417/54/ Sainte-James.

177
   
‘no useful purpose’
: AAE CP Rome 901/373.

177
   
‘pains me’
: Castries, p.309.

178
   
She obtained a portrait
: PLMA, p.203.

178
   
‘a lot of effort’
: BN JdF 2088/196.

178
   
‘would not be right’
: PLMA, p.203.

178
   
‘have other consequences’
: d’Arneth and Flammermont, Marie Antoinette to Joseph II, 27 December 1785.

178
   
Laurencel was invariably
: Laurencel’s memorandum, from which all these quotations are taken, is found in BN JdF 2088/66–9.

179
   
‘lost man’
: Georgel, vol. 2, pp. 151–2.

179
   
On 14 December
: AN X2B/1417/69; Hardy, 14 December 1785.

180
   
‘doubtless clear him’
: BHVP MS691/294–5.

180
   
Decrets de prise de corps
: AN X2B/1417/62; Hardy, 15 December 1785.

180
   
‘forty-eight people?’
: Castries, p.309.

180
   
‘with weary watching’
: LJSRV I, p.412.

180
   
in the cell below
: see AN X2B/1417/10/Planta. On Pelleport, see
The Devil in the Holy Water, or the Art of Slander from Louis XIV to Napoleon
by Robert Darnton, pp.167–76.

181
   
‘my glory, my valour’
: AN X2B/1417/17/6; LJSRV I, p.446.

181
   
‘and was silent’
: LJSRV I, p.412.

181
   
On one occasion
: op. cit., p.442.

181
   
‘and painful succession’
: op. cit., p.435ff.

181
   
on suicide watch
: Bastille, MS12457/12.

182
   
each day
: Castries, p.321. The account of Rohan in the Bastille derives primarily from Georgel, vol. 2, p.134ff.

182
   
oysters and champagne
: see
The Diamond Necklace
, Funck-Brentano, p.244.

182
   
and his doctor
: Bastille MS12457/59.

182
   
A severe attack of asthma . . . exquisite pain
: see Hardy, 12 October 1785, 4 November 1785, 24 November 1785 and BHVP MS691/4–5.

182
   
contradictions in evidence
: see BHVP MS691/3–29.

182
   
smothering depression
: BHVP MS691/184.

183
   
‘blood off the tracks’
: BHVP MS691/6.

183
   
In normal circumstances
. . . die in prison BN JdF 2088/46; AN X2B/1417/82; Hardy, 1 January 1786.

183
   
Georgel had been
: Georgel, vol. 2, p.179.

17. Nicolas Abroad: A Picaresque

184
   
him in Scotland
: Hardy, 4 December 1785.

184
   
with Barbary pirates
: HVJSR, p.67.

184
   
in the Low Countries
: AAE MDF 1399/139.

184
   
embark for India
: CP Autriche 350/248.

184
   
the cardinal’s defence
: see Georgel, vol. 2, p.208.

184
   
With his usual
: see HJSRV, p.66 and Mémoire Rohan, p.17.

184–5
‘Madame de La Motte’ . . . ‘for a quick escape’
: MCB, p.172.

185
   
He made over . . . look after them
: AAE MDF 1399/182; BN Jdf 2088/102.

185
   
Having told his servants
: the only accounts of Nicolas’s spell in Britain are his own, which are to be found in NLM, p.67ff and MJ II, p.91ff.

186
   
an arrest warrant
: AAE CP Angleterre 554/171.

186
   
‘was most touching’ . . . ‘business’
: NLM, p.81.

18. Questions, Questions

188
   
delayed the interrogations
: Hardy, 1 January 1786.

188
   
‘What is your name’ . . . ‘Boehmer and Bassenge?’
: ‘Interrogation with Rohan’, Campardon, p.206. The full transcripts of all the suspects’ interrogations are given in the ‘Pièces Justificatives’ to
Marie-Antoinette et le procès de collier
by Emile Campardon.

189
   
during the interrogation
: BN JdF 2088/72–3.

189
   
‘want to trick me’
: ‘Interrogation with Rohan’, Campardon, p.208.

189
   
‘be the queen in Versailles’
: op. cit., p.209.

189
   
‘the shape of the letters’
: op. cit., p.208.

189
   
‘in their interests’
: op. cit., pp. 212–13.

189
   
‘all these facts’
: op. cit., p.209.

189
   
‘with which I acted’
: op. cit., p.22.

190
   
‘the august name of the queen’
: op. cit., pp. 240–1.

191
   
‘as I had done’
: op. cit., pp. 241–2.

191
   
‘police and the public’
: BHVP MS691/187.

191
   
‘to ease them’
: ‘Interrogation with Jeanne de La Motte’, Campardon, p.274.

Other books

Imperfect Contract by Brickman, Gregg E.
A Clockwork Fairytale by Helen Scott Taylor
Moondust by Andrew Smith
When Copper Suns Fall by KaSonndra Leigh
Shades of Grey by Natalie Dae and Sam Crescent
Selected Short Fiction by DICKENS, CHARLES