towards the aforesaid Dame de Lamotte, who arrived
in Paris on the aforesaid day in order to conclude
with him the bargain agreed on in December 1775, and
who, for this purpose, and at his request, lodged
with her son in the house of the said Derues, who of
premeditated design poisoned the said Dame de Lamotte,
whether by a medicine composed and prepared by him
on the thirtieth day of January last, or by the beverages
and drinks administered by him after the aforesaid
medicine (he having taken the precaution to send his
servant into the country for two or three days), and
to keep away strangers from the room where the said
Dame de Lamotte was lying), from the effects of which
poison the said Dame de Lamotte died on the night
of the said thirty-first day of January last; also
of having kept her demise secret, and of having himself
enclosed in a chest the body of the said Dame de Lamotte,
which he then caused to be secretly transported to
a cellar in the rue de la Mortellerie hired by him
for this purpose, under the assumed name of Ducoudray,
wherein he buried it himself, or caused it to be buried;
also of having persuaded the son of the above Dame
de Lamotte (who, with his mother, had lodged in his
house from the time of their arrival in Paris until
the fifteenth day of January, last,—and
who had then been placed in a school that the aforesaid
Dame de Lamotte was at Versailles and desired him to
join her there, and, under this pretence, of having
conducted the said younger Sieur de Lamotte, the twelfth
day of February (after having given him some chocolate),
to the aforesaid town of Versailles, to a lodging hired
at a cooper’s, and of having there wilfully poisoned
him, either in the chocolate taken by the said younger
Sieur de Lamotte before starting, or in beverages
and medicaments which the said Derues himself prepared,
mixed, and administered to the aforesaid Sieur de Lamotte
the younger, during the eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth,
and fourteenth days of February last, having kept
him lying ill in the aforesaid hired room, and having
refused to call in physicians or surgeons, notwithstanding
the progress of the malady, and the representations
made to him on the subject, saying that he himself
was a physician and surgeon; from which poison the
said Sieur de Lamotte the younger died on the fifteenth
day of February last, at nine o’clock in the
evening, in the arms of the aforesaid Derues, who,
affecting the deepest grief, and shedding tears, actually
exhorted the aforesaid Sieur de Lamotte to confession,
and repeated the prayers for the dying; after which
he himself laid out the body for burial, saying that
the deceased had begged him to do so, and telling the
people of the house that he had died of venereal disease;
also of having caused him to be buried the next day
in the churchyard of the parish church of Saint Louis
at the aforesaid Versailles, and of having entered
the deceased in the register of the said parish under
a false birthplace, and the false name of Beaupre,