France in the Nineteenth Century eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 555 pages of information about France in the Nineteenth Century.

France in the Nineteenth Century eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 555 pages of information about France in the Nineteenth Century.

He arranged his flight with a trusted friend; it was fixed for the day succeeding Aug. 31, 1830,—­a month after the Revolution.  That evening he retired to his chamber in good spirits, though he said good-night more impressively than usual to some persons in his household.  The next morning he was found dead, hanging to one of the espagnolettes, or heavy fastenings, of a tall French window.  The village authorities were summoned; but although it was impossible a man so infirm could have thus killed himself and though many other circumstances proved that he did not die by his own hand, they certified his death by suicide.  The Catholic Church, however, did not accept this verdict, and the duke was buried with the rites of religion.

There was certainly no proof that Madame de Feucheres had had any hand in the murder of the old man who had plotted to escape from her, and who had expressed to others his dread of the tyranny she exercised over him; but there was every ground for strong suspicion, and the public lost no time in fastening part of the odium that attached to the supposed murderess on the king, whose family had so greatly benefited by her influence over the last head of the house of Conde.  She retained her ill-gotten wealth, and removed at once to Paris.  She had been engaged in stock operations for some time, and now gave herself up to them, winning enormous sums.

The new throne was sadly shaken by these events, added to discontents concerning the king’s prudent policy of non-intervention in the attempted revolutions of other countries, which followed that of France in 1830 and 1831.  The next very interesting event of this reign was the escapade and the discomfiture of the young Duchesse de Berri.

About the close of 1832, while France and all Europe were still experiencing the after-shocks which followed the Revolution of July, Marie Caroline, the Duchesse de Berri, planned at Holyrood a descent upon France in the interests of the Duc de Bordeaux, her son.[1] Had he reigned in consequence of the deaths of his grandfather and uncle, Charles X. and the Duc d’Angouleme, the duchess his mother was to have been regent during his minority.  She regretted her inaction during the days of July, when, had she taken her son by the hand and presented him herself to the people, renouncing in his name and her own all ultra-Bourbon traditions and ideas, she might have saved the dynasty.

[Footnote 1:  Louis Blanc and papers in “Figaro.”]

[Illustration:  MARIE CAROLINE FERDINANDE LOUISE, DUCHESSE DE BERRY.  Nee a Naples, le 5 Novembre 1798.]

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France in the Nineteenth Century from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.