 Section 9. The Empress Catherine and Prince Potemkin. Volume 2 of Famous Affinities of History. Famous Affinities of History by Lyndon Orr. Volume 2. The Empress Catherine and Prince Potemkin. It has often been said that the greatest Frenchman who ever lived was in reality an Italian. It might with equal truth be asserted that the greatest Russian woman who ever lived was in reality a German. But the Emperor Napoleon and the Empress Catherine II resemble each other in something else. Napoleon, though Italian in blood and lineage, made himself so French in sympathy and understanding as to be able to play upon the imagination of all France as a great musician plays upon a splendid instrument with absolute sureness of touch and an ability to extract from it every one of its varied harmonies. So the Empress Catherine of Russia, perhaps the greatest woman who ever ruled a nation, though born of German parents, became Russian to the core and made herself the embodiment of Russian feeling and Russian aspiration. At the middle of the 18th century, Russia was governed by Empress Elizabeth, daughter of Peter the Great. In her own time, and for a long while afterward, her real capacity was obscured by her apparent indolence, her fondness for display, and her seeming vacillation. But now a very high place has accorded her in the history of Russian rulers. She softened the brutality that had reigned supreme in Russia. She patronized the arts. Her armies twice defeated Frederick the Great and raided his capital, Berlin. Had Elizabeth lived, she would probably have crushed him. In her early years, this imperial woman had been betrothed to Louis XV of France, but the match was broken off. Subsequently, she entered into a morganatic marriage and bore a son who, of course, could not be her heir. In 1714, therefore, she looked about for a suitable successor and chose her nephew, Prince Peter of Holstein Gotorp. Peter, then a mere youth of 17, was delighted with so splendid a future and came at once to St. Petersburg. The empress next sought for a girl who might marry the young prince and thus become the future's arena. She thought first of Frederick the Great's sister, but Frederick shrank from this alliance, though it would have been of much advantage to him. He loved his sister. Indeed, she was one of the few persons for whom he ever really cared. So he declined the offer and suggested instead the young Princess Sophia of the tiny Duchy of Analt-Zerbst. The reason for Frederick's refusal was his knowledge of the semi-barbarous conditions that prevailed at the Russian court. The Russian capital at that time was a bizarre, half-civilized, half-oriental place where, among the very highest born, a thin veneer of French elegance covered every form of brutality and savagery and lust. It is not surprising, therefore, that Frederick the Great was unwilling to have his sister plunged into such a life. But when the Empress Elizabeth asked the Princess Sophia of Analt-Zerbst to marry the heir to the Russian throne, the young girl willingly accepted the more so as her mother practically commanded it. This mother of hers was a grim, harsh German woman who had reared her daughter in the strictest fashion, depriving her of all pleasure with a truly puritanical severity. In the case of a different sort of girl, this training would have crushed her spirit, but the Princess Sophia, though gentle and refined in manner, had a power of endurance which was toughened and strengthened by the discipline she underwent. And so, in 1744, when she was but 16 years of age, she was taken by her mother to St. Petersburg. There she renounced the Lutheran faith and was received into the Greek church, changing her name to Catherine. Soon after, with great magnificence, she was married to Prince Peter and from that moment began a career which was to make her the most powerful woman in the world. At this time, a lady of the Russian court wrote down a description of Catherine's appearance. She was fair-haired with dark blue eyes, and her face, though never beautiful, was made pecanth and striking by the fact that her brows were very dark in contrast with her golden hair. Her complexion was not clear, yet her look was a very pleasing one. She had a certain diffidence of manner at first, but later she bore herself with such instinctive dignity as to make her seem majestic, though in fact she was beneath the middle size. At the time of her marriage her figure was slight and graceful, only in after-years did she become stout. Altogether she came to St. Petersburg an attractive, pure-minded German maiden with a character well-disciplined and possessing reserves of power which had not yet been drawn upon. Frederick the Great's forebodings, which had led him to withhold his sister's hand, were almost immediately justified in the case of Catherine. Her Russian husband revealed to her a mode of life which must have tried her very soul. This youth was only seventeen, a mere boy in age, and yet a full-grown man in the rank luxuriance of his vices. Moreover he had eccentricities which sometimes verged upon insanity. Too young to be admitted to the councils of his imperial aunt, he occupied his time in ways that were either ridiculous or vile. Next to the sleeping-room of his wife he kept a set of kennels with a number of dogs which he spent hours in drilling as if they had been soldiers. He had a troop of rats which he also drilled. It was his delight to summon a court-martial of his dogs to try the rats for various military offenses and then to have the culprits executed, leaving their bleeding carcasses upon the floor. At any hour of the day or night Catherine, hidden in her chamber, could hear the yapping of the curse, the squeak of rats, and the word of command given by her half-idiot husband. When worried of this diversion Peter would summon a troop of favourites, both men and women, and with them he would drink deep of beer and vodka. Since from his early childhood he had been both a drunkard and a debauchee. The whoops and howls and vile songs of his creatures could be heard by Catherine, and sometimes he would stagger into her rooms accompanied by his drunken minions. With a sort of psychopathic perversity he would insist on giving Catherine the most minute and repulsive narratives of his amours until she shrank from him with horror at his depravity and came to loathe the sight of his bloated face with its little twinkling, poor-seeing eyes, his upturned nose and distended nostrils, and his loose, hung, lascivious mouth. She was scarcely less repelled when a wholly different mood would seize upon him, and he would declare himself her slave, attending her at court functions in the garb of a servant, and professing an unbounded devotion for his bride. Catherine's early training and her womanly nature led her for a long time to submit to the caprices of her husband. In his saner moments she would plead with him and strive to interest him in something better than his dogs and rats and venal mistresses, but Peter was incorrigible. Though he had moments of sense and even of good feeling, these never lasted, and after them he would plunge headlong into the most frantic excesses that his half-crazed imagination could devise. It is not strange that in course of time Catherine's strong good sense showed her that she could do nothing with this creature. She therefore gradually became estranged from him and set herself to the task of doing those things which Peter was incapable of carrying out. She saw that ever since the first awakening of Russia under Peter the Great, none of its rulers had been genuinely Russian, but had tried to force upon the Russian people various forms of western civilization which were alien to the national spirit. Peter the Great had striven to make his people Dutch. Elizabeth had tried to make them French. Catherine, with a sure instinct, resolved that they should remain Russian, barring what they needed from other peoples, but stirred always by the Slavic spirit and swayed by a patriotism that was their own. To this end she set herself to become Russian. She acquired the Russian language patiently and accurately. She adopted the Russian costume, appearing, except on state occasions, in a simple gown of green, covering her fair hair, however, with a cap powdered with diamonds. Furthermore she made friends of such native Russians as were gifted with talent, winning their favor and through them the favor of the common people. It would have been strange, however, had Catherine, the woman, escaped the tainting influences that surrounded her on every side. The infidelities of Peter gradually made her feel that she owed him nothing as his wife. Among the nobles there were men whose force of character and of mind attracted her, inevitably. Chastity was a thing of which the average Russian had no conception, and therefore it is not strange that Catherine, with her intense and sensitive nature, should have turned to some of these for the love which she sought in vain, from the half imbecile to whom she had been married. Much has been written of this side of her earlier and later life, yet though it is impossible to deny that she had favorites, one should judge very gently the conduct of a girl so young and thrust into a life once all the virtues seemed to be excluded. She bore several children before her thirtieth year, and it is very certain that a grave doubt exists as to their paternity. Among the nobles of the court were two whose courage and virility specially attracted her. The one with whom her name has been most often coupled was Gregory Orloff. He and his brother, Alexis Orloff, were Russians of the older type, powerful in frame, suave in manner, except when roused, yet with a tigerish ferocity slumbering underneath. Their power fascinated Catherine, and it was currently declared that Gregory Orloff was her lover. When she was in her thirtieth second year, her husband was proclaimed Tsar after the death of the Empress Elizabeth. At first, in some ways, his elevation seemed to sober him, but this period of sanity, like those which had come to him before, lasted only a few weeks. Historians have given him much credit for two great reforms that are connected with his name, and yet the manner in which they were actually brought about is rather ludicrous. He had shut himself up with his favorite revelers and had remained for several days drinking and carousing until he scarcely knew enough to speak. At this moment, a young officer named Gudovitch, who was really loyal to the newly created Tsar, burst into the banquet hall, booted and spurred, and his eyes aflame with indignation. Standing before Peter, his voice rang out with the tone of a battle trumpet, so that the sounds of revelry were hushed. Peter, Fyodorovitch, he cried, Do you prefer the swine to those who really wish to serve you? Is it in this way that you imitate the glories of your ancestor that illustrious Peter, whom you have sworn to take as your model? It will not be long before your people's love will be changed to hatred. Rise up, my Tsar, shake off this lethargy and sloth. Prove that you are worthy, the faith which I and others have given you so loyally. With these words Gudovitch thrust into Peter's trembling hand two proclamations. One abolishing the secret bureau of police, which had become an instrument of tyrannous oppression, and the other restoring to the nobility many rights of which they had been deprived. The earnestness and intensity of Gudovitch temporarily cleared the brain of the drunken Tsar. He seized the papers, and without reading them, hastened at once to his great council, where he declared that they expressed his wishes. Great was the rejoicing in St. Petersburg, and great was the praise bestowed on Peter. Yet, in fact, he had acted only as any drunkard might act under the compulsion of a stronger will than his. As before, his brief period of good sense was succeeded by another of the wildest folly. It was not merely that he reversed the wise policy of his aunt, but that he reverted to his early fondness for everything that was German. His bodyguard was made up of German troops, thus exciting the jealousy of the Russian soldiers. He introduced German fashions. He boasted that his father had been an officer in the Prussian army. His crazy admiration for Frederick the Great reached the utmost verge of sycophancy. As to Catherine, he turned on her with something like ferocity. He declared in public that his eldest son, the Tsarovich Paul, was really fathered by Catherine's lovers. At a state banquet he turned to Catherine and hurled at her a name which no woman could possibly forgive, at least of all women such as Catherine, with her high spirit and imperial pride. He thrust his mistresses upon her, and at last he ordered her with her own hand to decorate the Countess Vorontsov, who was known to be his mistress on Teetra. It was not these gross insults, however, so much as a concern for her personal safety that led Catherine to take measures for her own defense. She was accustomed to Peter's ordinary eccentricities. On the grounds of his unfaithfulness to her, she now had hardly any right to make complaint, but she might reasonably fear lest he was becoming mad. If he questioned the paternity of their eldest son, he might take measures to imprison Catherine, or even to destroy her. Therefore she conferred with the Orlofs and other gentlemen, and their conference rapidly developed into a conspiracy. The soldiery, as a whole, was loyal to the empress. It hated Peter's Holstein guards. What she planned was probably the deposition of Peter. She would have liked to place him under guard in some distant palace. But while the matter was still under discussion, she was awakened early one morning by Alexis Orlof. He grasped her arm with scant ceremony. We must act at once, said he. We have been betrayed. Catherine was not a woman to waste time. She went immediately to the barracks of St. Petersburg, mounted upon a charger, and calling out the Russian guards, appealed to them for their support. To a man they clashed their weapons and roared forth a thunderous cheer. Immediately afterwards the priests anointed her as regent in the name of her son. But as she left the church, she was saluted by the people, as well as by the soldiers, as empress in her own right. It was a bold stroke, and it succeeded down to the last detail. The rectioned Peter, who was drilling his German guards at a distance from the capital, heard of the revolt, found that his sailors at Kronstadt would not acknowledge him, and then finally submitted. He was taken to Ruptia and confined within a single room. To him came the Orlofs, quite of their own accord. Gregory Orlof endeavored to force a corrosive poison into Peter's mouth. Peter, who was powerful of build, and now quite desperate, hurled himself upon his enemies. Alexis Orlof seized him by the throat with a tremendous clutch, and strangled him till the blood gushed from his ears. In a few moments the unfortunate man was dead. Catherine was shocked by the intelligence, but she had no choice save to accept the result of excessive zeal. She issued a note to the foreign ambassadors informing them that Peter had died of a violent colic. When his body was laid out for burial, the extraficated blood is said to have oozed out even through his hands, staining the gloves that had been placed upon them. No one believed the story of the colic, and some six years later Orlof told the truth with the utmost composure. The whole incident was characteristically Russian. It is not within the limits of our space to describe the reign of Catherine the Great, the exploits of her armies, the acuteness of her statecraft, the vast additions which she made to the Russian Empire, and the impulse which she gave to science and art and literature. Yet these things ought to be remembered first of all, when one thinks of the woman whom Voltaire once styled the Semiramis of the North. Because she was so powerful, because no one could gain say her, she led in private a life which has been almost more exploited than her great imperial achievements. And yet, though she had lovers whose names have been carefully recorded, even she fulfilled the law of womanhood, which is to love deeply and intensely only once. One should not place all her lovers in the same category. As a girl, and when repelled by the imbecility of Peter, she gave herself to Gregory Orlof. She admired his strength, his daring, and his unscrupulousness. But to a woman of her fine intelligence, he came to seem almost more brute than man. She could not turn to him for any of those delicate attentions which a woman loves so much, nor for that larger sympathy which wins the heart, as well as captivates the senses. A writer of the time has said that Orlof would hasten with equal readiness from the arms of Catherine to the embraces of any flat-nosed fenn or filthy convict, or to the lowest creature whom he might encounter in the streets. It happened that at the time of Catherine's appeal to the imperial guards, there came to her notice another man who, as he proved in a trifling and yet most significant manner, had those traits which Orlof lacked. Catherine had mounted man fashion, a cavalry horse, and with a helmet on her head, had reigned up her steed before the barracks. At that moment one of the minor nobles, who was also favourable to her, observed that her helmet had no plume. In a moment his horse was at her side, bowing low over his saddle, he took his own plume from his helmet and fastened it to hers. This man was Prince Gregory Potemkin, and this slight act gives a clue to the influence which he afterward exercised over his imperial mistress. When Catherine grew weary of the Orlofs, and when she had enriched them with lands and treasures, she turned to Potemkin, and from then until the day of his death he was more to her than any other man had ever been. With others she might flirt, and might go even further than flirtation, but she allowed no other favourite to share her confidence, to give advice, or to direct her policies. To other men she made munificent gifts, either because they pleased her for the moment, or because they served her on one occasion or another. But to Potemkin she opened wide the whole treasury of her vast realm. There was no limit to what she would do for him. When he first knew her he was a man of very moderate fortune. Within two years after their intimate acquaintance had begun she had given him nine million rubles, while afterward he accepted almost limitless estates in Poland and in every province of greater Russia. He was a man of sumptuous tastes, and yet he cared but little for mere wealth. What he had he used to please or gratify, or surprise the woman whom he loved. He built himself a great palace in St. Petersburg, usually known as the Tarian Palace, and there he gave the most sumptuous entertainments, reversing the story of Antony and Cleopatra. In a superb library there stood one case containing volumes bound with unusual richness. When the Empress, attracted by the bindings, drew forth a book, she found to her surprise that its pages were English banknotes, the pages of another proved to be Dutch banknotes, and of another notes on the bank of Venice. Of the remaining volumes some were of solid gold, while others had pages of fine leather in which were set emeralds, and rubies, and diamonds, and other gems. The story reads like a bit of fiction from the Arabian Knights, yet, after all, this is only a small affair compared with other undertakings with which Potemkin sought to please her. Thus, after Tarida and the Crimea had been added to the empire by Potemkin's agency, Catherine set out with him to view her new possessions. A great fleet of magnificently decorated galleys bore her down the river Niper. The country through which she passed had been a year before an unoccupied waste. Now, by Potemkin's extraordinary efforts, the Empress found it dotted thick with towns and cities which had been erected for the occasion, filled with a busy population which swarmed along the riverside to greet the sovereign with applause. It was only a chain of phantom towns and cities made of painted wood and canvas, but while Catherine was there they were very real, seeming to have solid buildings, magnificent arches, bustling industries, and beautiful stretches of fertile country. No human being ever wrought on so great a scale, so marvelous a miracle of stage management. Potemkin was, in fact, the one man who could appeal with unfailing success to so versatile and powerful a spirit as Catherine's. He was handsome of person, graceful of manner, and with an intellect which matched her own. He never tried to force her inclination, and, on the other hand, he never strove too thwarted. To him, as to no other man, she could turn at any moment and feel that, no matter what her mood, he could understand her fully. And this, according to Balzac, is the thing that woman yearns for most, a kindred spirit that can understand without the slightest need of explanation. Thus it was that Gregory Potemkin held a place in the soul of this great woman, such as no one else attained. He might be absent, heading armies or ruling provinces, and on his return he would be greeted with even greater fondness than before. And it was this, rather than his victories over Turk and other oriental enemies, that made Catherine trust him, absolutely. When he died, he died as the supreme master of her foreign policy, and at a time when her word was powerful throughout all Europe. Death came upon him after he had fought against it with singular tenacity of purpose. Catherine had given him a magnificent triumph, and he had entertained her in his Torian palace, with a splendor such as even Russia had never known before. Then he fell ill, though with high spirit he would not yield to illness. He ate rich meats and drank rich wines and bore himself as gallantly as ever. Yet all at once death came upon him while he was travelling in the south of Russia. His carriage was stopped, a rug was spread beneath a tree by the roadside, and there he died, in the country which he had added to the realms of Russia. The great Empress who loved him mourned him deeply during the five years of life that still remained to her. The realms of other men for whom she had imagined that she cared were nothing to her. But this one man lived in her heart in death as he had done in life. Many have written of Catherine as a great ruler, a wise diplomat, a creature of heroic mold. Others have depicted her as a royal wanton and have gathered together a mass of vicious tales the gossip of the palace kitchens of the clubs and of the barrack rooms. Perhaps one finds the chief interest of her story to lie in this. That besides being empress and diplomat and a lover of pleasure, she was, beyond all else, at heart, a woman, end of Empress Catherine and Prince Potemkin, read by Denis Sears in Modesto, California, for LibriVox. Maria Antoinette and Count Fersen Volume 2 of Famous Affinities of History This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org Famous Affinities of History by Lyndon Orre Volume 2 Maria Antoinette and Count Fersen The English-speaking world long ago accepted a conventional view of Maria Antoinette. The eloquence of Edmund Burke in one brilliant passage has fixed, probably for all time, an enduring picture of this unhappy queen. When we speak or think of her, we speak and think, first of all, of a dazzling and beautiful woman surrounded by the chivalry of France and gleaming like a star in the most splendid court of Europe. And then there comes to us the reverse of the picture. We see her despised, insulted, and made the butt of brutal men and still more fiendish women, until it lasts the hideous tumbrel conveys her to the guillotine, where her head is severed from her body and her corpse is cast down into a bloody pool. In these two pictures our emotions are played upon in turn. Admiration, reverence, devotion, and then pity, indignation, and the shudderings of horror. Probably in our own country and in England this will remain the historic Marie Antoinette. Whatever the impartial historian may write, he can never induce the people at large to understand that this queen was far from queenly, that the popular idea of her is almost wholly false, and that both in her domestic life and as the greatest lady in France she did much to bring on the terrors of that revolution which swept her to the guillotine. In the first place it is mere fiction that represents Marie Antoinette as having been physically beautiful. The painters and engravers have so idealized her face as in most cases to have produced a purely imaginary portrait. She was born in Vienna in 1755. The daughter of the Emperor Francis and of that warrior-queen Maria Teresa. She was a very German-looking child. Lady Jackson describes her as having a long, thin face, small, pig-like eyes, a pinched up mouth with a heavy Hobbesburg lip, and with a somewhat misshapen form so that for years she had to be bandaged tightly to give her a more natural figure. At fourteen, when she was betrothed to the heir to the French throne, she was a dumpy, mean-looking little creature with no distinction whatever and with only her bright golden hair to make amends for her many blemishes. At fifteen she was married and joined the Dauphin in French territory. We must recall for a moment the conditions which prevailed in France. King Louis XV was nearing his end. He was a man of the most shameless life, yet he had concealed or gilded his infamies by an external dignity and magnificence which were very pleasing to his people. The French liked to think that their king was the most splendid monarch and the greatest gentleman in Europe. The courteous about him might be vile beneath the surface, yet they were compelled to deport themselves with the form and the etiquette that had become traditional in France. They might be panders or stock-jobbers or sellers of political offices, yet they must nonetheless have wit and grace, an outward nobility of manner. There was also a tradition regarding the French queen. However loose in character the other women of the court might be, she alone, like Caesar's wife, must remain above suspicion. She must be purer than the pure. No breath of scandal must reach her or be directed against her. In this way the French court, even under so disillusioned monarch as Louis XV, maintained its hold upon the loyalty of the people. Crowds came every morning to view the king in his bed before he arose. The same crowds watched him as he was dressed by the gentleman of the bed-chamber and as he breakfasted and went through all the functions which are usually private. The king of France must be a great actor. He must appear to his people as in reality a king, stately, dignified, and beyond all other human beings in his remarkable presence. When the Dauphin and Marie Antoinette came to the French court, King Louis XV kept up in the case the same semblance of austerity. He forbade these children to have their sleeping apartments together. He tried to teach them that if they were to govern as well as to reign they must conform to the rigid etiquette of Paris and Versailles. It proved a difficult task, however. The little German princess had no natural dignity, though she came from a court where the very strictest imperial discipline prevailed. Marie Antoinette found that she could have her own way in many things and she chose to enjoy life without regard to ceremony. Her escapades at first would have been thought mild enough had she not been a daughter of France, but they served to shock the old French king and likewise perhaps even more her own imperial mother, Marie Theresa. When a report of the young girl's conduct was brought to her the emperance was at first mute with indignation. Then she cried out, Can this girl be a child of mine? She must surely be a changeling. The Austrian ambassador to France was instructed to warn the Dauphinès to be more discreet. Tell her, said Maria Theresa, that she will lose her throne and even her life unless she shows more prudence. But advice and remonstrance were of no avail. Perhaps they might have been had her husband possessed a stronger character, but the young Louis was little more fitted to be a king than was his wife to be a queen. Dole of perception and indifferent to affairs of state he had only two interests that absorbed him. One was the love of hunting and the other was his desire to shut himself up in a sort of blacksmith's shop where he could hammer away at the anvil, blow the bellows and manufacture small trifles of mechanical inventions. From this smudgy den he would emerge, sooty and greasy, an object of distaste to his frivolous princess with her foamy laces and perfumes and pervasive daintiness. It was hinted in many quarters and it has been many times repeated that Louis was lacking in virility. Certainly he had no interest in the society of women and was wholly continent. But this charge of physical incapacity seems to have had no real foundation. It has been made against some of his predecessors. It was afterward hurled Napoleon the Great and also Napoleon the Little. In France unless a royal personage was openly licentious he was almost sure to be jeered at by the people as a weakling. And so poor Louis XVI as he came to be was treated with a mixture of pity and contempt because he loved to hammer and mend locks in his smithy or chute game when he might have been caressing ladies who would have been proud to have him choose them out. On the other hand because of this opinion regarding Louis people were the more suspicious of Marie Antoinette. Some of them in coarse language criticized her assumed infidelities. Others with a polite sneer affected to defend her. But the result of it all was dangerous to both especially as France was already verging toward the Deluge with Louis XV had cynically predicted would follow after him. In fact the end came sooner than anyone had guessed. Louis XV who had become hopelessly and helplessly infatuated with the low-born Joan de Bruyere was struck down with smallpox of the most virulent type. For many days he lay in his gorgeous bed. Curtiers crowded his sick room and the adjacent hall longing for the moment when the breath would leave his body. He had lived an evil life and he was to die a lonesome death yet he had borne himself before men as a stately monarch. Though his people had suffered enough thousand ways from his misgovernment he was still Louis the well-beloved and they blamed his ministers of state for all the shocking wrongs that France had felt. The Abler men and some of the leaders of the people however looked forward to the accession of Louis the 16th. He at least was frugal in his habits and almost plebeian in his tastes and seemed to be one who would reduce the enormous taxes that had been levied upon France. The moment came when the well-beloved died. His death room was fettered with disease and even the long corridors of the palace reeked with infection while the mothly mob of men and women clad in silks and satins and glittering with jewels hurried from the spot to pay their homage to the new Louis who was spoken of as the desired. The body of the late monarch was hastily thrown into a massive quick-line and was driven away in a humble wagon without guards and with no salute say from a single veteran who remembered the glories of Fontenoy and discharged his musket as the royal corpse was carried through the palace gates. This was a critical moment in the history of France but we have to consider it only as a critical moment in the history of Marie Antoinette. She was now queen. She had it in her power to restore to the French court its old time grandeur and so far as the queen was concerned its purity. Above all, being a foreigner, she should have kept herself free from reproach and above every shadow of suspicion. But here again the indifference of the king undoubtedly played a strange part in her life. Had he borne himself as her lord and master, she might have respected him. Had he shown her the affection of a husband, she might have loved him. But he was neither imposing nor, on the other hand, was he alluring. She wrote very frankly about him in a letter to the count or seen. My tastes are not the same as those of the king who cared only for hunting and blacksmith work. You will admit that I should not show to advantage in a forge. I could not appear there as Vulcan and the part of Venus might displease him even more than my tastes. Thus on the one side is a woman in the first bloom of youth, ardent, eager, and neglected. On the other side is her husband whose sluggishness may be judged by quoting from a diary which he kept during the month in which he was married. Here is a part of it. Sunday, 13th. Left Versailles, supper and slept at Campignet at the house of Monsieur de San Florentin. Sunday the 14th, interview with Madame Le Dauphane. Tuesday the 15th, supper at La Mouette, slept at Versailles. Wednesday the 16th, my marriage. Apartment in the gallery, royal banquet in the cellée de l'opera. Thursday the 17th, opera of Perseus. Friday the 18th, stag hunt. Met at La Belle Lémage, took one. Saturday the 19th, dress ball in the cellée de l'opera, fireworks. Thursday the 31st, I had indigestion. What might have been expected from a young girl placed as this queen was placed? She was indeed an earlier eugénie. The first was of royal blood, the second was almost a plebeian, but each was headstrong, pleasure-loving, and with no real domestic ties. As Mr. Kipling expresses it, the colonels Lady and Judy O'Grady are sisters under their skins. And so the Austrian woman of 1776 and the Spanish woman of 1856 found amusement in very similar ways. They plunged into a sea of strange frivolity, such as one finds today at the centres of higher fashion. Marie Antoinette bedecked herself with eccentric garments. On her head she wore a hat styled a what-is-it, powering many feet in height and flaunting party-coloured plumes. Worse than all this, she refused to wear corsets, and at some great function she would appear in what looked exactly like a bedroom gown. She would neglect even the ordinary niceties of life. Her hands were not well cared for. It was very difficult for the ladies in attendance to persuade her to brush her teeth with regularity. Again, she would persist in wearing her frilled and lace-trim petticoats long after their dainty edges had been smirked and blackened. Yet these things might have been counteracted had she gone no further. Unfortunately, she did go further. She loved to dress at night like a shop girl and venture out into the world of Paris, where she was frequently followed and recognized. Think of it. The Queen of France elbowed in dense crowds and seeking to attract the attention of common soldiers. Of course, almost everyone put the worst construction upon this, and after a time upon everything she did. When she took a fancy for constructing labyrinths and secret passages in the palace, all Paris found that she was planning means by which her various lovers might enter without observation. The hidden printing presses of Paris swarmed with gross lampoons about this reckless girl, and although there was little truth in what they said, there was enough to cloud her reputation, when she fell ill with the measles, she was attended in her sick chamber by four gentlemen of the court. The King was forbidden to enter lest he might catch the childish disorder. The apathy of the King indeed drove her into many a falling. After four years of marriage, as Mrs. Maine records, he had only reached the point of giving her a chilly kiss. The fact that she had no children became a serious matter. Her brother, the Emperor Joseph of Austria, when he visited Paris ventured to speak to the King upon the subject. Even the Austrian ambassador had thrown out hints that the House of Bourbon needed direct heirs. Louis grunted and said little, but he must have known how good was the advice. It was at about this time when there came to the French court a young Swede named Axel de Fersen, who bore the title of Count, but who was received less for his rank than for his winning manner, his nightly bearing and his handsome sympathetic face. Romantic in spirit, he threw himself at once into a silent inner worship of Marie Antoinette, who had for him a singular attraction. Wherever he could meet her they met. To her growing cynicism, this breath of pure yet ardent affection was very grateful. It came as something fresh and sweet into the feverish life she led. Other men had had the audacity to woo her, among them Duke de Lausanne, whose complicity in the famous affair of the diamond necklace afterward forced her, though innocent into ruin, the Duke de Biron and the Baron de Besenval, who had obtained much influence over her, which he had used for the most evil purposes. Besenval tainted her mind by persuading her to read indecent books in the hope that at last she would become his prey. But none of these men ever meant to Marie Antoinette what Fersen meant. Though less than twenty years of age he maintained the reserve of a great gentleman and never forced himself upon her notice. Yet their first acquaintance had occurred in such a way as to give it a touch of intimacy. He had gone to a masked ball and there had chosen for his partner a lady whose face was quite concealed. Something drew the two together. The gaiety of the woman and the chivalry of the man blended most harmoniously. It was only afterward that he discovered that his chance partner was the first lady in France. She kept his memory in her mind. For some time later, when he was at a royal drawing room and she heard his voice, she exclaimed, Ah, an old acquaintance! From this time, Fersen was among those who were most intimately favored by the Queen. He had the privilege of attending her private receptions at the Palace of the Trionon and was a conspicuous figure of peace given in the Queen's honor by the Princess de Lambeau, a beautiful girl whose head was destined afterward to be severed from her body and borne upon a bloody pike through the streets of Paris. But as yet, the Deluge had not yet arrived and the great and noble still danced upon the brink of a volcano. Fersen grew more and more infatuated, nor could he quite conceal his feelings. The Queen in her turn was neither frightened nor indignant. His passion so profound and yet so respectful deeply moved her. There came a time when the truth was made clear to both of them. Fersen was near her while she was singing to the harpsichord and she was betrayed by her own music into an avowal which Song made easy. She forgot that she was Queen of France. She only felt that her womanhood had been starved and slighted and that here was a noble-minded lover of whom she could be proud. Some time after this, announcement was officially made of the approaching accouchement of the Queen. It was impossible that malicious tongues should be silent. The King's brother, the Comte de Provence, who hated the Queen, just as the Bonaparte's afterward hated Josephine, did his best to besmirch her reputation. He had indeed the extraordinary insolence to do so at a time when one would suppose the vilest of men would remain silent. The child proved to be a princess and she afterward received the title of Duchess de Angoulène. The King of Spain asked to be her godfather at the christening which was to be held in the cathedral Notre-Dame. The Spanish king was not present in person but asked the Comte de Provence to act as his proxy. On the appointed day the royal party proceeded to the cathedral and the Comte de Provence presented the little child at the baptismal front. And the Comte de Provence presented the little child at the baptismal front. The Grand Almoner, who presided, asked, What name shall be given to this child? The Comte de Provence answered in a sneering tone. Oh, we don't begin with that. The first thing to find out is who the father and the mother are. These words, spoken at such a place and such a time and with a strongly sardonic ring, set all Paris gossiping. It was a thinly veiled innuendo that the father of the child was not the king of France. Those about the court immediately began to look at Fersen with significant smiles. The queen would gladly have kept him near her but Fersen cared even more for her good name than for his love of her. It would have been so easy to remain in the full enjoyment of his conquest but he was too chivalrous for that or rather he knew that the various ambassadors in Paris had told the respective governments of the rising scandal. In fact, the following secret dispatch was sent to the king of Sweden by his envoy. I must confide to your majesty the young Count Fersen has been so well received by the queen that various persons have taken it amiss. I own that I am sure that she has a liking for him. I have seen proofs of it too certain to be doubtful. During the last few days the queen has not taken her eyes off him and as she gazed they were full of tears. I beg your majesty to keep their secret to yourself. The queen wept because Fersen had resolved to leave her unless she should be exposed to further gossip. If he left her without any apparent reason the gossip would only be the more intense. Therefore he decided to join the French troops who were going to America to fight under Lafayette. A brilliant but disillute duchess taunted him when the news became known. How is this? said she. Do you forsake your conquest? But lying like a gentleman Fersen answered quietly had I made a conquest I should not forsake it. I go away free and unfortunately without leaving any regret. Nothing could have been more chivalrous than the pains which Fersen took to shield the reputation of the queen. He even allowed it to be supposed that he was planning a marriage with a rich young Swedish woman who had been naturalized in England. As a matter of fact he departed for America and not very long afterward the question married an Englishman. Fersen served in America for a long time returning however at the end of three years. He was one of the original Cincinnati being admitted to the order by Washington himself. When he returned to France he was received with high honors and was made colonel of the Royal Swedish Regiment. The dangers threatening Louis and his court which were now gigantic and appalling forbade him to forsake the queen. By her side he did what he could to check the revolution and failing this he helped her maintain an imperial dignity of manner which she might otherwise have lacked. He faced the bellowing mob which surrounded the two liaries. Lafayette tried to make the National Guard obey his orders but he was jeered at for his pains. Violent epithets were hurled at the king the least insulting name which they could give him was a fat pig. As for the queen the most filthy phrases were showered upon her by the men and even more so by the women who swarmed out of the slums and sought her life. At last in 1791 it was decided that the king and the queen and their children of whom they now had three should endeavor to escape from Paris. The person planned their flight but it proved to be a failure. Everyone remembers how they were discovered and halted at the end. The royal party was escorted back to Paris by the mob which chanted with insolent additions. We've brought back the baker the baker's wife and the baker's boy now we shall have bread. Against the savage fury which soon animated the French a foreigner like person could do very little but he seems to have endeavored night and day to save the woman whom he loved. His efforts have been described by Grandin but they were of no avail. The king and queen were practically made prisoners. Their eldest son died. They went through horrors that were stimulated by the wretched Iber at the head of his so-called madmen on Raj. The king was executed in January 1792. The queen dragged out a brief existence in a prison where she was forever under the eyes of human brutes who guarded her and watched her and jeered at her at times when even men would be sensitive. Then at last she mounted the scaffold and her head with its shining hair fell into the bloody basket. Marie Antoinette shows many contradictions in her character. As a young girl she was petulant and silly and almost unseemly in her actions. As a queen with waning power she took on a dignity which recalled the dignity of her Imperial mother. At first a flirt she fell deeply in love with a woman who was worthy of that love. She lived for most part like a miracle cut. She died every inch a queen. One finds a curious resemblance between the fate of Marie Antoinette and that of her gallant lover who outlived her for nearly 20 years. She died amid the streets and execrations of a maddened populace in Paris. He was practically torn in pieces by a mob in the streets of Stockholm. The day of his death was the anniversary of the flight to Varenne. To the last moment of his existence he remained faithful to the memory of the royal woman who had given herself so utterly to him. End of Marie Antoinette and Count Fersen recording by Miriam Esther Goldman. The Story of Aaron Burr Volume 2 of Famous Affinities of History This is LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer please visit LibriVox.org recording by Miriam Esther Goldman. Famous Affinities of History by Lyndon Orr, Volume 2 The Story of Aaron Burr. There will come a time when the name of Aaron Burr will be cleared from the prejudice which now surrounds it. When he will stand in the public estimation side by side with Alexander Hamilton whom he shot in a duel in 1804 but whom in many respects he curiously resembled. When the white light of history shall have searched them both they will appear as two remarkable men each having his own undoubted faults and at the same time his equally undoubted virtues. Burr and Hamilton were born within a year of each other Burr being a grandson of Jonathan Edwards and Alexander Hamilton being the illegitimate son of a Scottish merchant in the West Indies. Each of them was short in stature keen of intellect of great physical endurance, courage and impressive personality. Each as a young man served on the staff of Washington during the Revolutionary War and each of them quarreled with him though in a different way. On one occasion Burr was quite unjustly suspected by Washington of looking over the latter's shoulder while he was writing. Washington leaped to his feet with the exclamation How dare you, Colonel Burr! Burr's eyes flashed at the question and he retorted haughtily Colonel Burr dare do anything. This however was the end of their altercation. The cause of Hamilton's difference is that his chief is not known but it was a much more serious quarrel so that the young officer left his staff position in a fury and took no part in the war until the end when he was present at the Battle of Yorktown. Burr, on the other hand helped Montgomery to storm the heights of Quebec and nearly reached the Upper Citadel when his commander was shot dead and the Americans retreated. In all this confusion Burr showed himself a man of metal. The slain Montgomery was six feet high but Burr carried his body away with wonderful strength amid a shower of musket balls and grapeshot. Hamilton had no belief in the American Constitution which he called a shattered, feeble thing. He could never obtain an elective office and he would have preferred to see the United States transformed into a kingdom. Washington's magnanimity and clear-sightedness made Hamilton a military of the Treasury. Burr, on the other hand, continued his military service until the war was ended routing the enemy at Hackensack enduring the horrors of valet forge commanding a brigade at the Battle of Monmouth and heading the defense of the city of New Haven. He was also attorney general of New York was elected to the United States Senate was tied with Jefferson for the presidency and became vice president. Both Hamilton and Burr were effective speakers but while Hamilton was wordy and diffuse Burr spoke always to the point with clear and cogent reasoning. Both were lavish spenders of money and both were engaged in duels before the fatal one in which Hamilton fell. Both believed in dueling as the only way of settling an affair of honor. Neither of them was averse to love affairs though it may be said that Hamilton sought women while Burr was rather sought by women. When secretary of the Treasury Hamilton was obliged to confess and adulterous some more in order to save himself from the charge of corrupt practices in public offices. So long as Burr's wife lived he was a devoted faithful husband to her. Hamilton was obliged to confess his illicit acts while his wife formerly Miss Elizabeth Schuyler was living. She spent her later years in buying and destroying the compromising documents which her husband had published for his countrymen to read. The most extraordinary thing about Aaron Burr was the magnetic quality that was felt by everyone who approached him. The roots of this penetrated down into a deep vitality. He was always young, always alert, polished in manner, courageous with that sort of courage which does not even recognize the presence of danger, charming in conversation and able to adapt it to men or women of any age whatever. His hair was still dark in his 80th year. His step was still elastic. His motions were still as spontaneous and energetic as those of a youth. So it was that everyone who knew him experienced his fascination. The rough troops whom he led through the Canadian swamps felt the iron hand of his discipline, yet they were devoted to him since he shared all their toils, faced all their dangers and ate with them the scraps of hide which they nod to keep the breath of life in their shrunken bodies. Burr's discipline was indeed very strict so that at first Raw recruits rebelled against it. On one occasion the men of an untrained company resented it so bitterly that they decided to shoot Colonel Burr as he paraded them for roll call that evening. Burr somehow got word of it and contrived to have all the cartridges drawn from their muskets. When the time for the roll call came, one of the malcontents leaped from the front line and leveled his weapon at Burr. Now is the time, boys! He shouted. Like lightning, Burr's sword flashed from his scabbard with such a vigorous stroke as to cut the man's arm completely off and partly to cleave the musket. Take your place in the ranks, said Burr. The mutineer obeyed, dripping with blood. A month later every man in that company was devoted to his commander. They had learned that discipline was the surest source of safety. But with this high spirit and readiness to fight, Burr had a most pleasing way of meeting everyone who came to him. When he was arrested in the western forests, charged with high treason, the sound of his voice won from jury after jury verdicts of acquittal. Often the sheriffs would not arrest him. One grand jury merely exonerated him from all public misdemeanors but brought in a strong presentment against the officers of the government for molesting him. It was the same everywhere. Burr made friends and devoted allies among all sorts of men. During his stay in France, England, Germany and Sweden, he interested such men as Charles Lamb, Jeremy Bentham, Sir Walter Scott, Goethe and Heron. They found his mind able to meet with theirs on equal terms. Burr indeed had graduated as a youth with honors from Princeton and had continued his studies there after graduation, which was then a most unusual thing to do. But of course he learned most from his contact with men and women of the world. Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe, in the minister's wooing, has given what is probably an exact likeness of Burr, with his brilliant gifts and some of his defects. It is a strong testimony to the character of Mr. Burr that Mrs. Stowe set out to paint him as a villain. But before she had written long she felt his fascination and made her readers in their own despite admirers of this remarkable man. There are many parallels indeed between him and Napoleon in the quickness of his intellect, the ready use of his resources and his power over men, while he was more than Napoleon in his delightful gift of conversation than the easy play of his cultured mind. Those who are full of charm are willing also to be charmed. All his life Burr was obstinous in food and drink. His tastes were most refined. It is difficult to believe that such a man could have been an unmitigated profligate. In his twentieth year there seems to have begun the first of the romances that run through the story of his long career. Perhaps one ought not to call it the first romance, for at eighteen while he was studying law at Litchfield a girl whose name has been suppressed made an open avowal of love for him. Almost at the same time an heiress with a large fortune would have married him had he been willing to accept her hand. But at this period he was only a boy and did not take such things seriously. Two years later, after Burr had seen hard service at Quebec and on Manhattan Island his name was associated with that of a very beautiful girl named Margaret Moncrief. She was the daughter of a British major but in some way she had been captured while within the American lines. Her captivity was regarded as little more than a joke but while she was thus a prisoner she saw a great deal of Burr. For several months there were comrades after which General Putnam sent her with his compliments to her father. Margaret Moncrief had a most emotional nature. There can be no doubt that she deeply loved the handsome young American officer whom she never saw again. It is doubtful how far their intimacy was carried. Later she married a Mr. Coughlin. After reaching middle life she wrote of Burr in a way which shows that neither years nor the obligations of marriage could make her forget that young soldier whom she speaks of as the conqueror of her soul. In the rather florid style of those days the once youthful Margaret Moncrief expresses herself as follows. Oh, may these pages one day meet the eye of him who subdued my virgin heart whom the immutable unerring laws of nature had pointed out for my husband but whose sacred decree the barbarous customs of society fatally violated. Commenting on this paragraph Mr. H. C. Merwin justly remarks that whatever may have been Burr's conduct towards Margaret Moncrief the lady herself who was the person chiefly concerned had no complaint to make of it. It certainly was no very serious affair since in the following year Burr met a lady who while she lived was the only woman for whom he ever really cared. This was Theodosia Pravost, the wife of a major in the British army. Burr met her first in 1777 while she was living with her sister in Westchester County. Burr's command was fifteen miles across the river but distance and danger made no difference to him. He used to mount a swift horse, inspect his sentinels and outposts and then gallop to the Hudson where a barge rode by six soldiers awaited him. The barge was well supplied with buffalo skins upon which the horse was thrown with his legs bound and then half an hour's rowing brought them to the other side. There Burr resumed his horse, galloped to the house of Miss Pravost and after a few hours with her returned in the same way. Mrs. Pravost was by no means beautiful but she had an attractiveness of her own. She was well educated and possessed charming manners with a disposition both gentle and affectionate. Her husband died soon after the beginning of the war and then Burr married her. No more ideal family could be conceived than his and the letters which pass between the two are full of adoration. Thus she wrote to him, Tell me, why do I grow every day more tenacious of your regard? Is it because each revolving day proves you more deserving? And thus Burr answered her, Continue to multiply your letters to me. They are all my solace. The last six are constantly within my reach. I read them once a day at least. Write me all that I have asked and a hundred things which I have not. When it is remembered that these letters were written after nine years of marriage it is hard to believe all the evil things that have been said of Burr. His wife died in 1794 and then he gave a double affection to his daughter Theodosia whose beauty and accomplishments were well known throughout the country. Burr took the greatest pains in her education and believed that she should be trained as he had been to be brave, industrious, and patient. He himself who has been described as a voluptuary delighted in the endurance of cold and heat and of severe labour. After his death one of his young admirers was asked what Burr had done for him. The reply was characteristic. He made me iron, was the answer. No father ever gave more attention to his daughter's welfare. As to Theodosia's studies he was very strict making her read Greek and Latin every day with drawing and music and history in addition to French. Not long before her marriage to Joseph Alston of South Carolina Burr wrote to her, I really think, my dear Theo, that you will be very soon beyond all verbal criticism and that my whole attention will be presently directed to the improvement of your style. Theodosia Burr married into a family of good old English stock where riches were abundant and high character was regarded as the best of all possessions. Everyone has heard of the mysterious tragedy which is associated with her history. In 1812 when her husband had been elected governor of his state her only child, a sturdy boy of eleven, died and Theodosia's health was shattered by her sorrow. In the same year Burr returned from a sojourn in Europe and his loving daughter embarked from Charleston on a schooner, the patriot, to meet her father in New York. When Burr arrived he was met by a letter which told him that his grandson was dead and that Theodosia was coming to him. The week sped by and no news was heard of the ill-fated patriot. At last it became evident that she must have gone down or in some other way have been lost. Burr and Governor Alston wrote to each other letter after letter of which each one seems to surpass the agony of the other. At last all hope was given up. Governor Alston died soon after of a broken heart. But Burr, as became a stoic, acted otherwise. He concealed everything that reminded him of Theodosia. He never spoke of his lost daughter. His grief was too deep-seated and too terrible for speech. Only once did he ever allude to her and this was in a letter written to an afflicted friend which contained the words, ever since the event which separated me from mankind I have been able neither to give nor to receive consolation. In time the crew of a pirate vessel was captured and sentenced to be hanged. One of the men who seemed to be less brutal than the rest told how in 1812 they had captured a schooner and, after their usual practice, had compelled the passengers to walk the plank. All hesitated and showed cowardice, except only one. A beautiful woman, whose eyes were as bright and whose bearing was as unconcerned as if she were safe on shore. She quickly led the way and, mounting the plank with a certain scorn of death, said to the others, Come, I will show you how to die. It has always been supposed that this intrepid girl may have been Theodosia Alston. If so, she only acted as her father would have done and in strict accordance with his teachings. This resolute courage, this stern joy and danger, this perfect equanimity made Burr especially attractive to women who love courage the more so when it is coupled with gentleness and generosity. Perhaps no man in our country has been so vehemently accused regarding his relations with the other sex. The most improbable stories were told about him even by his friends. As to his enemies, there took boundless paints to paint him in the blackest colors. According to them, no woman was safe from his intrigues. He was a perfect devil in leading them astray and then casting them aside. Thus one Matthew L. Davis, in whom Burr had confided as a friend, wrote of him long afterward a most unjust account, unjust because we have proofs that it was false in the intensity of its abuse. Davis wrote, It is truly surprising how any individual could become so eminent as a soldier, as a statesman, and as a professional man who devoted so much time to the other sex as was devoted by Colonel Burr. For more than half a century of his life they seemed to absorb his whole thought. His intrigues were without number. The sacred bonds of friendship were unhesitatingly violated when they operated as barriers to the indulgence of his passions. In this particular, Burr appears to have been unfeeling and heartless. It is impossible to believe that the Spartan Burr, whose life was one of incessant labor and whose kindliness toward everyone was so well known, should have deserved a commentary like this. The charge of immorality is so easily made and so difficult of disproof that it has been flung promiscuously in all the great men of history, including in our own country. Washington and Jefferson, as well as Burr, in England, when Gladstone was more than 70 years of age, he once stopped to ask a question of a woman in the street. Within 24 hours the London clubs were humming a sort of demonic glee over the story that this aged and austere old gentleman was not above seeking common street amours. And so with Aaron Burr to a great extent, that he was a man of strict morality it would be absurd to maintain, that he was reckless and licentious profligate would be almost equally untrue. Mr. H. O. Merwin has very truly said, part of Burr's reputation for profligacy was do no doubt vanity respecting women of which Davis himself speaks. He never refused to accept the parentage of a child. Why do you allow this woman to saddle you with her child when you know you are not the father of it? said a friend to him a few months before his death. Sir, he replied, When a lady does me the honour to name me the father of her child, I trust I shall always be too gallant to show myself ungrateful for the favour. There are two curious legends relating to Aaron Burr. They serve to show that his reputation became such that he could not enjoy the society of a woman without having her regarded as his mistress. When he was a United States senator from New York he lived in Philadelphia at the lodging-house of a Mrs. Payne whose daughter Dorothy Todd was the very youthful widow of an officer. This young woman was rather free in her manners and Burr was very responsive in his. At the time, however, nothing was thought of it. At presently Burr brought to the house the serious and somewhat pedantic James Madison and introduced him to the Heuden. Madison was then forty-seven years of age, a stranger to society, gradually rising to a prominent position in politics. The great little Madison, as Burr rather lightly called him. Before long he had proposed marriage to the young widow. She hesitated and someone referred the matter to President Washington. The father of his country answered in what was perhaps the only opinion that he ever gave on the subject of matrimony. It is worth preserving because it shows that he had a sense of humor. For my own part I never did nor do I believe I ever shall give advice to a woman who is setting out on a matrimonial voyage. A woman very rarely asks an opinion or seeks advice on such an occasion till her mind is wholly made up and then it is with the hope and expectation of obtaining a sanction and not that she means to be governed by your disapproval. Afterward when Dolly Madison with her yellow turban and kittenish ways was making a sensation in Washington's society, someone recalled her old association with Burr. At once the story sprang to light that Burr had been her lover and that he had brought about the match with Madison as an easy way of getting rid of her. There is another curious story which makes Martin Van Buren, the eighth president of the United States, to have been the illegitimate son of Burr. There is no earthly reason for believing this except that Burr sometimes stopped overnight at the tavern in Kinderhoek which was kept by Burr and's putative father and that Van Buren in later life showed an astuteness equal to that of Aaron Burr himself so that he was called by his opponents the Fox of Kinderhoek. But as Van Buren was born in December of the same year, 1782, in which Burr was married to Theodosia Pravost, the story is utterly improbable and we remember, as we must, the ardent affection which Burr showed his wife not only before their marriage but afterward until her death. Putting aside these purely spurious instances, as well as others cited by Mr. Parton, the fact remains that Aaron Burr, like Daniel Webster, found a great attraction in the society of women, that he could please them and fascinate them to an extraordinary degree and that during his later life he must be held quite culpable in this respect. His love-making was ardent and rapid as we shall afterwards see in the case of his second marriage. Many other stories are told of him. For instance, it is said that he once took a stagecoach from Jersey City to Philadelphia. The only other occupant was a woman of high standing and one whose family deeply hated Burr. Nevertheless, so the story goes, before they had reached Newark, she was absolutely swayed by his charm of manner and when the coach made its last stop before Philadelphia she voluntarily became his mistress. It must also be said that, unlike those of Webster and Hamilton, his intrigues were never carried on with women of the lower sort. This may be held by some to deepen the charge against him but more truly does it exonerate him, since it really means that in many cases these women of the world threw themselves at him and sought him as a lover when otherwise he might never have thought of them. That he was not heartless and indifferent to those who had loved him may be shown by the great care which he took to protect their names and reputations. Thus, on the day before his duel with Hamilton, he made a will in which he constituted his son-in-law as his executor. At the same time he wrote a sealed letter to Governor Alston in which he said, If you can pardon and indulge a folly, I would suggest that Madame, too well under the name of Lenora, has claims on my recollection. She is now with her husband at Santiago in Cuba. Another fact has been turned to his discrepit. From many women in the course of his long life he had received a great quantity of letters written by aristocratic hands on scented paper and these letters he had never burned. Here again perhaps was shown the vanity of the man who loved, loved for its own sake. He kept all these papers in a huge iron-clamp chest and he instructed Theodosia in case he should die to burn every letter which might injure anyone. After Theodosia's death Ber gave the same instructions to Matthew L. Davis who did indeed burden them though he made their existence a means of blackening the character of Ber. He should have destroyed them unopened and should never have mentioned them in his memoirs of a man who trusted him as a friend. Such was Aaron Ber throughout a life which lasted for eighty years. His last romance at the age of seventy-eight is worth narrating because it has often been misunderstood. Madame Jumel was a Rhode Island girl who at seventeen years of age eloped with an English officer, Colonel Peter Crawl. Her first husband died while she was still quite young and then she married a French wine merchant, Stephen Jumel, some twenty years her senior, but a man of much vigor and intelligence. Monsieur Jumel made a considerable fortune in New York owning a small merchant fleet and after Napoleon's downfall he and his wife went to Paris where she made a great impression in the salons by her vivacity and wit and by her lavish expenditures. Losing however part of what she and her husband possessed Madame Jumel returned to New York bringing with her a great amount of furniture and paintings with which she decorated the historic house still standing in the upper part of Manhattan Island, a mansion held by her in her own right. She managed her estate with much ability and in eighteen twenty-eight Monsieur Jumel returned to live with her in what was in those days a splendid villa. Four years later however Monsieur Jumel suffered an accident from which he died in a few days, leaving his wife still an attractive woman and not very much past her prime. Soon after she had occasion to seek for legal advice and for this purpose visited the law office of Aaron Burr. She had known him a good many years before and though he was now seventy-eight years of age there was no perceptible change in him. He was still courtly in manner, tactful and deferential while physically he was straight, active and vigorous. A little later she invited him to a formal banquet where he displayed all his charms and shown to great advantage. When he was about to lead her into dinner he said, I give my hand madam, my heart has long been yours. These attentions he followed up with several other visits and finally proposed that she should marry him. Much fluttered and no less flattered she uttered a sort of no which was not likely to discourage a man like Aaron Burr. I shall come to you before very long," he said, accompanied by a clergyman. And then you will give me your hand because I want it. This rapid sort of wooing was pleasantly embarrassing. The lady rather liked it and so on an afternoon when the sun was shining and the leaves were rustling in the breeze Burr drove up to Madame Jumel's mansion accompanied by Dr. Bogart, the very clergyman who had married him to his first wife fifty years before. Madame Jumel was now seriously disturbed but her refusal was not a strong one. There were reasons why she should accept the offer. The great house was lonely. The management of her estate required a man's advice. Moreover she was under the spell of Burr's fascination. Therefore she arrayed herself in one of her most magnificent Paris gowns. The members of her household and eight servants were called in and the ceremony was duly performed by Dr. Bogart. A banquet followed. A dozen cobwebbed bottles of wine were brought up from the cellar and the marriage feast went on merrily until after midnight. This marriage was a singular one from many points of view. It was strange that a man of seventy-eight should take by storm the affections of a woman so much younger than he, a woman of wealth and knowledge of the world. In the second place it is odd that there was still another woman, a mere girl, who was so infatuated with Burr that when she was told of his marriage it nearly broke her heart. Finally in the early part of that same year he had been accused of being the father of a newborn child. And in spite of his age everyone believed the charge to be true. Here is a case that it would be hard to parallel. The happiness of the newly married pair did not however last very long. They made a wedding journey into Connecticut of which state Burr's nephew was then governor and there Burr saw a monster bridge over the Connecticut River in which his wife had shares though they brought her little income. He suggested that she should transfer the investment which after all was not a very large one and place it in a venture in Texas which looked promising. The speculation turned out to be a loss however and this made Mrs. Burr extremely angry, the more so as she had reason to think that her ever youthful husband had been engaged in flirting with the country girls near the Jumel mansion. She was a woman of high spirit and had at times a violent temper. One day the postmaster at what was then the village of Harlem was supposed to see Mrs. Burr drive up before the post office in an open carriage. He came out to ask what she desired and was surprised to find her in a violent temper and with an enormous horse-pistol on each cushion at her side. What do you wish, madam? said he rather mildly. What do I wish? she cried. Let me get at that villain Aaron Burr. Presently Burr seems to have succeeded in pacifying her but in the end they separated though she afterward always spoke most kindly of him. When he died only about a year later she is said to have burst into a flood of tears. Another tribute to the fascination which Aaron Burr exercised through all his checkered life. It is difficult to come to any fixed opinion regarding the moral character of Aaron Burr. As a soldier he was brave to the point of recklessness. As a political leader he was almost the equal of Jefferson and quite superior to Hamilton. As a man of the world he was highly accomplished, polished in manner, charming in conversation. He made friends easily and he forgave his enemies with a broad-mindedness that is unusual. On the other hand in his political career there was a touch of insincerity and it can scarcely be denied that he used his charm too often to the injury of those women who could not resist his insinuating ways in the caressing notes of his rich voice. But as a husband in his youth he was devoted, affectionate and loyal while as a father he was little less than worshipped by the daughter whom he reared so carefully. One of his biographers very truly says that no such wretch as Burr has been declared to be could have won and held the love of such a wife and such a daughter as Burr had. When all the other witnesses have been heard let the two Theodosias be summoned and especially that daughter who showed toward him an affectionate veneration unsurpassed by any recorded in history or romance. Such an advocate as Theodosia the Younger must avail in some degree even though the culprit were brought before the bar of heaven itself. End of The Story of Aaron Burr Recording by Miriam Esther Goldman