of the changing progress of the play; and although
they belong rather to the gossip of history than to
literary biography, they cannot be altogether omitted.
The duties which the minister had to perform were
unusual, delicate, and difficult; but I believe he
acquitted himself of them with the skill of a born
diplomatist. When he went to Spain before, in
1826, Ferdinand VII. was, by aid of French troops,
on the throne, the liberties of the kingdom were crushed,
and her most enlightened men were in exile. While
he still resided there, in 1829, Ferdinand married,
for his fourth wife, Maria Christina, sister of the
King of Naples, and niece of the Queen of Louis Philippe.
By her he had two daughters, his only children.
In order that his own progeny might succeed him, he
set aside the Salique law (which had been imposed
by France) just before his death, in 1833, and revived
the old Spanish law of succession. His eldest
daughter, then three years old, was proclaimed Queen
by the name of Isabella II, and her mother guardian
during her minority, which would end at the age of
fourteen. Don Carlos, the king’s eldest
brother, immediately set up the standard of rebellion,
supported by the absolutist aristocracy, the monks,
and a great part of the clergy. The liberals
rallied to the Queen. The Queen Regent did not,
however, act in good faith with the popular party
she resisted all salutary reform, would not restore
the Constitution of 1812 until compelled to by a popular
uprising, and disgraced herself by a scandalous connection
with one Munos, one of the royal bodyguards.
She enriched this favorite and amassed a vast fortune
for herself, which she sent out of the country.
In 1839, when Don Carlos was driven out of the country
by the patriot soldier Espartero, she endeavored to
gain him over to her side, but failed. Espartero
became Regent, and Maria Christina repaired to Paris,
where she was received with great distinction by Louis
Philippe, and Paris became the focus of all sorts
of machinations against the constitutional government
of Spain, and of plots for its overthrow. One
of these had just been defeated at the time of Irving’s
arrival. It was a desperate attempt of a band
of soldiers of the rebel army to carry off the little
Queen and her sister, which was frustrated only by
the gallant resistance of the halberdiers in the palace.
The little princesses had scarcely recovered from
the horror of this night attack when our minister
presented his credentials to the Queen through the
Regent, thus breaking a diplomatic deadlock, in which
he was followed by all the other embassies except
the French. I take some passages from the author’s
description of his first audience at the royal palace: