by the share which he took in them; and, as he paraded
the saloons arm-in-arm with her, to distinguish those
whom she noticed, so that, to quote the words of one
of the most lively chroniclers of the day, their example
seemed to be fast bringing conjugal love and fidelity
into fashion. She even persuaded him to depart
still further from his usual reserve, so as to appear
in costume at more than one fancy ball; the dress
which he chose being that of the only predecessor
of his own house whom he could in any point have desired
to resemble, Henry
iv. He had already been
indirectly compared to that monarch, the first Bourbon
king, by the ingenious flattery of a print-
seller.
In the long list of sovereigns who had reigned over
France in the five hundred years which had passed
by since the warrior-saint of the Crusades had laid
down his life on the sands of Tunis, there had been
but two to whom their countrymen could look back with
affection or respect— Louis XII., to whom
his subjects had given the title of The Good, and
Henry, to whom more than one memorial still preserved
the surname of The Great. And the courtly picture-dealer,
eager to make his market of the gratitude with which
his fellow-citizens greeted the reforms with which
the reigning sovereign had already inaugurated his
reign, contrived to extract a compliment to him even
out of the severe prose of the multiplication-table;
publishing a joint portrait of the three kings, Louis
XII., Henry IV., and Louis XVI., with an inscription
beneath to testify that 12 and 4 made 16.
In the spring of 1775, Marie Antoinette received a
great pleasure in a visit from her younger brother,
Maximilian. He was the only member of her family
whom she had seen in the five years that had elapsed
since she left Vienna. But, eagerly as she had
looked forward to his visit, it did not bring her
unmixed satisfaction, being marred by the ill-breeding
of the princes of the blood, and still more by the
approval of their conduct displayed by the citizens
of Paris, which seemed to afford a convincing evidence
of the small effect which even the queen’s virtues
and graces had produced in softening the old national
feeling of enmity to the house of Austria. The
archduke, who was still but a youth, did not assert
his royal rank while on his travels, but preserved
such an incognito as princes on such occasions
are wont to assume, and took the title of Count de
Burgau. The king’s brothers, however, like
the king himself, paid no regard to his disguise,
but visited him at the first instant of his arrival;
but the princes of the blood stood on their dignity,
refused to acknowledge a rank which was not publicly
avowed, or to recollect that the visitor was a foreigner
and brother to their queen, and insisted on receiving
the attention of the first visit from him. The
excitement which the question caused in the palace,
and the queen’s indignation at the slight thus
offered, as she conceived, to her brother, were great.