with not loving him sufficiently, and they quarrelled
a great deal occasionally. Goody Scarron then
appeared, restored peace between them, and consoled
the King. She, however, made him remark more
and more the bitter temper of Montespan; and, affecting
great devotion, she told the King that his affliction
was sent him by Heaven, as a punishment for the sins
he had committed with Montespan. She was eloquent,
and had very fine eyes; by degrees the King became
accustomed to her, and thought she would effect his
salvation. He then made a proposal to her; but
she remained firm, and gave him to understand that,
although he was very agreeable to her, she would not
for the whole world offend Heaven. This excited
in the King so great an admiration for her, and such
a disgust to Madame de Montespan, that he began to
think of being converted. The old woman then
employed her creature, the Duc du Maine, to insinuate
to his mother that, since the King had taken other
mistresses, for example, Ludres and Fontange, she
had lost her authority, and would become an object
of contempt at Court. This irritated her, and
she was in a very bad humour when the King came.
In the meantime, Maintenon was incessantly censuring
the King; she told him that he would be damned if
he did not live on better terms with the Queen.
Louis XIV. repeated this to his wife, who considered
herself much obliged to Madame de Maintenon:
she treated her with marks of distinction, and consented
to her being appointed second dame d’atour to
the Dauphine of Bavaria; so that she had now nothing
to do with Montespan. The latter became furious,
and related to the King all the particulars of the
life of Dame Scarron. But the King, knowing
her to be an arrant fiend, who would spare no one in
her passion, would not believe anything she said to
him. The Duc du Maine persuaded his mother to
retire from Court for a short time in order that the
King might recall her. Being fond of her son,
and believing him to be honest in the advice he gave
her, she went to Paris, and wrote to the King that
she would never come back. The Duc du Maine immediately
sent off all her packages after her without her knowledge;
he even had her furniture thrown out of the window,
so that she could not come back to Versailles.
She had treated the King so ill and so unkindly that
he was delighted at being rid of her, and he did not
care by what means. If she had remained longer,
the King, teased as he was, would hardly have been
secure against the transports of her passion.
The Queen was extremely grateful to Maintenon for
having been the means of driving away Montespan and
bringing back the King to the marriage-bed; an arrangement
to which, like an honest Spanish lady, she had no
sort of objection. With that goodness of heart
which was so remarkable in her, she thought she was
bound to do something for Madame de Maintenon, and
therefore consented to her being appointed dame d’atour.
It was not until shortly before her death that she
learnt she had been deceived by her. After the
Queen’s death, Louis XIV. thought he had gained
a triumph over the very personification of virtue
in overcoming the old lady’s scruples; he used
to visit her every afternoon, and she gained such an
influence over him as to induce him to marry.