of their fidelity to their engagement at the same
time that they publicly furnished ammunition to the
Austrian troops, and even recruits under pretense
of desertion. M. de Montaigu, who I believe
wished to render himself agreeable to the republic,
failed not on his part, notwithstanding my representation
to make me assure the government in all my despatches,
that the Venetians would never violate an article
of the neutrality. The obstinacy and stupidity
of this poor wretch made me write and act extravagantly:
I was obliged to be the agent of his folly, because
he would have it so, but he sometimes rendered my
employment insupportable and the functions of it almost
impracticable. For example, he insisted on the
greatest part of his despatches to the king, and of
those to the minister, being written in cipher, although
neither of them contained anything that required that
precaution. I represented to him that between
the Friday, the day the despatches from the court
arrived, and Saturday, on which ours were sent off,
there was not sufficient time to write so much in
cipher, and carry on the considerable correspondence
with which I was charged for the same courier.
He found an admirable expedient, which was to prepare
on Thursday the answer to the despatches we were expected
to receive on the next day. This appeared to
him so happily imagined, that notwithstanding all
I could say on the impossibility of the thing, and
the absurdity of attempting its execution, I was obliged
to comply during the whole time I afterwards remained
with him, after having made notes of the few loose
words he spoke to me in the course of the week, and
of some trivial circumstances which I collected by
hurrying from place to place. Provided with these
materials I never once failed carrying to him on the
Thursday morning a rough draft of the despatches which
were to be sent off on Saturday, excepting the few
additions and corrections I hastily made in answer
to the letters which arrived on the Friday, and to
which ours served for answer. He had another
custom, diverting enough and which made his correspondence
ridiculous beyond imagination. He sent back
all information to its respective source, instead of
making it follow its course. To M. Amelot he
transmitted the news of the court; to M. Maurepas,
that of Paris; to M. d’ Havrincourt, the news
from Sweden; to M. de Chetardie, that from Petersbourg;
and sometimes to each of those the news they had respectively
sent to him, and which I was employed to dress up
in terms different from those in which it was conveyed
to us. As he read nothing of what I laid before
him, except the despatches for the court, and signed
those to other ambassadors without reading them, this
left me more at liberty to give what turn I thought
proper to the latter, and in these therefore I made
the articles of information cross each other.
But it was impossible for-me to do the same by despatches
of importance; and I thought myself happy when M.