King’s troops might raise in a quarter of an
hour though it consist of a hundred thousand citizens?
I therefore conclude that the removal would be altogether
impolitic. Does it not look rather as if the
Cardinal feigns apprehension of the Spaniards only
as a pretence to make himself master of the Princes,
and to dispose of their persons at pleasure?
The generality of the people, being Frondeurs, will
conclude you take the Prince de Conde out of their
hands,—whom they look upon to be safe while
they see him walking upon the battlements of his prison,—and
that you will give him his liberty when you please,
and thus enable him to besiege Paris a second time.
On the other hand, the Prince’s party will
improve this removal very much to their own advantage
by the compassion such a spectacle will raise in the
people when they see three Princes dragged in chains
from one prison to another. I was really mistaken
just now when I said the case was all one to me, for
I see that I am nearly concerned, because the people—in
which word I include the Parliament will cry out against
it; I must be then obliged, for my own safety, to
say I did not approve of the resolution. Then
the Court will be informed that I find fault with
it, and not only that, but that I do it in order to
raise the mob and discredit the Cardinal, which, though
ever so false; yet in consequence the people will firmly
believe it, and thus I shall meet with the same treatment
I met with in the beginning of the late troubles,
and what I even now experience in relation to the
affairs of Guienne. I am said to be the cause
of these troubles because I foretold them, and I was
said to encourage the revolt at Bordeaux because I
was against the conduct that occasioned it.”
Tellier, in the Queen’s name, thanked me for
my unresisting disposition, and made the same proposal
to his Royal Highness; upon which I spoke, not to
second Tellier, who pleaded for the necessity of the
removal, to which I could by no means be reconciled,
but to make it evident to his Royal Highness that
he was not in any way concerned in it in his own private
capacity, and that, in case the Queen did command it
positively, it was his duty to obey. M. de Beaufort
opposed it so furiously as to offer the Duc d’Orleans
to attack the guards which were to remove him.
I had solid reasons to dissuade him from it, to the
last of which he submitted, it being an argument which
I had from the Queen’s own mouth when she set
out for Guienne, that Bar offered to assassinate the
Princes if it should happen that he was not in a condition
to hinder their escape. I was astonished when
her Majesty trusted me with this secret, and imagined
that the Cardinal had possessed her with a fear that
the Frondeurs had a design to seize the person of
the Prince de Conde. For my part, I never dreamed
of such a thing in my life. The Ducs d’Orleans
and de Beaufort were both shocked at the thought of
it, and, in short, it was agreed that his Royal Highness
should give his consent for the removal, and that M.
de Beaufort and myself should not give it out among
the people that we approved of it.