leaving me to dress. I never saw a man so crestfallen
as M. de Lorges. He had confessed what he had
done to a clever lawyer, who had much frightened him.
After quitting him, he had hastened to us to make
us go and see Pontchartrain. The most serious
things are sometimes accompanied with the most ridiculous.
M. de Lorges upon arriving knocked at the door of
a little room which preceded the chamber of Madame
de Saint-Simon. My daughter was rather unwell.
Madame de Saint-Simon thought she was worse, and
supposing it was I who had knocked, ran and opened
the door. At the sight of her brother she ran
back to her bed, to which he followed her, in order
to relate his disaster. She rang for the windows
to be opened, in order that she might see better.
It so happened that she had taken the evening before
a new servant, a country girl of sixteen, who slept
in the little room. M. de Lorges, in a hurry
to be off, told this girl to make haste in opening
the windows, and then to go away and close the door.
At this, the simple girl, all amazed, took her robe
and her cotillon, and went upstairs to an old chambermaid,
awoke her, and with much hesitation told her what had
just happened, and that she had left by the bedside
of Madame de Saint Simon a fine gentleman, very young,
all powdered, curled, and decorated, who had driven
her very quickly out of the chamber. She was
all of a tremble, and much astonished. She soon
learnt who he was. The story was told to us,
and in spite of our disquietude, much diverted us.
We hurried away to the chancellor, and he advised
the priest, the witnesses to the signatures of the
marriage, and, in fact, all concerned, to keep out
of the way, except M. de Lorges, who he assured us
had nothing to fear. We went afterwards to Chamillart,
whom we found much displeased, but in little alarm.
The King had ordered an account to be drawn up of
the whole affair. Nevertheless, in spite of the
uproar made on all sides, people began to see that
the King would not abandon to public dishonour the
daughter of Madame de Roquelaure, nor doom to the
scaffold or to civil death in foreign countries the
nephew of Madame de Soubise.
Friends of M. and Madame de Roquelaure tried to arrange
matters. They represented that it would be better
to accept the marriage as it was than to expose a
daughter to cruel dishonour. Strange enough,
the Duc and Duchesse de Rohan were the most stormy.
They wished to drive a very hard bargain in the matter,
and made proposals so out of the way, that nothing
could have been arranged but for the King. He
did what he had never done before in all his life;
he entered into all the details; he begged, then commanded
as master; he had separate interviews with the parties
concerned; and finally appointed the Duc d’Aumont
and the chancellor to draw up the conditions of the
marriage.