You are here
قراءة كتاب Princes and Poisoners Studies of the Court of Louis XIV
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"

Princes and Poisoners Studies of the Court of Louis XIV
Princes and Poisoners
STUDIES OF THE COURT OF LOUIS XIV
BY
FRANTZ FUNCK-BRENTANO
TRANSLATED BY
GEORGE MAIDMENT
L O N D O N
D U C K W O R T H and CO.
3 HENRIETTA STREET, W.C.
1901
Second Impression, May 1901
All rights reserved.
PREFATORY NOTE
TWELVE months ago I had the honour of introducing M. Frantz Funck-Brentano to the English public by my translation of his Légendes et Archives de la Bastille, and in my preface to that book I gave a rapid sketch of his career which need not be repeated. If history is to be continually reconstructed, or rather, perhaps, to undergo a process of destructive distillation, there is no one more competent than M. Funck-Brentano to perform the feat. We lose our illusions with our teeth; the fables that charmed our childhood dissolve in the modern historian’s test-tube, and the mysteries that fascinated our forebears become clear with a few drops of his critical acid.
In his former book, M. Funck-Brentano solved once for all the mystery of the Man in the Iron Mask, showed up the impostor Latude in his true colours, and gave us surprising information about the latter days of the Bastille. In the present volume, the fruit of several years’ research among the archives at the Arsenal Library, he conclusively dispels the cloud of suspicion that has hung over the sudden death of Charles I’s winsome and ill-fated daughter Henrietta; gives us for the first time the authentic history of that beautiful poisoner Madame de Brinvilliers; suggests a very plausible explanation of Racine’s hitherto inexplicable retirement from dramatic writing; and throws a strange light upon the private history of Madame de Montespan and other fair ladies of Louis XIV’s Court. If it be objected that some of the details of the ‘black mass’ and kindred abominations are too gruesome for print, it may be urged in reply that these details are related with the cold impartial pen of a serious historian, not coloured or heightened with a view to melodramatic effect. ‘Truth’s a dog that must to kennel,’ says Lear’s Fool; Louis the Magnificent tried to stifle the damning evidence against his jealous, passionate mistress; when Time and patient research among long-forgotten papers have combined to bring the truth to light, it would ill become us to blame a scholar like M. Funck-Brentano for not joining the monarch’s conspiracy of silence.
G. M.
November 1900.
CONTENTS
PAGE | ||
MARIE MADELEINE DE BRINVILLIERS— | ||
I. | Her Life, | 1 |
II. | Her Trial, | 36 |
III. | Her Death, | 76 |
THE POISON DRAMA AT THE COURT OF LOUIS XIV— | ||
I. | The Sorceresses— | |
The Dinner of La Vigoreux, | 117 | |
Sorcery in the Seventeenth Century, | 121 | |
The Practices of the Witches, | 128 | |
The Alchemists, | 133 | |
La Voisin, | 144 | |
The Magician Lesage, | 159 | |
The ‘Chambre Ardente,’ | 163 | |
Louis XIV and the Poison Affair, | 180 | |
II. | Madame de Montespan, | 187 |
III. | A Magistrate—Gabriel Nicolas de la Reynie, |