popular voice at the time imputed to him something more than folly. The author of the Memoirs of the
Affairs of Europe since the Peace of Utrecht, says, The miserable gang who dealt in poison and prophecy
alleged that he had sold himself to the devil, and that a young girl of the name of Dupin had been poisoned
by his means. Among other stories, they said he had made a contract with the devil, in order to marry
his son to the daughter of the Marquis of Louvois. To this atrocious and absurd accusation the Marshal,
who had surrendered himself at the Bastille on the first accusation against him, replied with the mingled
sentiment of pride and innocence, When Mathieu de Montmorenci, my ancestor, married the widow of
Louis le Gros, he did not have recourse to the devil, but to the States-General, in order to obtain for
the minor king the support of the house of Montmorenci. This brave man was imprisoned in a cell six
feet and a half long, and his trial, which was interrupted for several weeks, lasted altogether fourteen
months. No judgment was pronounced upon him.
The Countess of Soissons fled to Brussels, rather than undergo the risk of a trial; and was never able
to clear herself from the stigma that attached to her, of having made an attempt to poison the Queen of
Spain by doses of succession powder. The Duchess of Bouillon was arrested, and tried by the Chambre
Ardente. It would appear, however, that she had nothing to do with the slow poisons, but had merely
endeavoured to pry into the secrets of futurity, and gratify her curiosity with a sight of the devil. One
of the presidents of the Chambre, La Reynie, an ugly little old man, very seriously asked her whether
she had really seen the devil; to which the lady replied, looking him full in the face, Oh yes! I see him
now. He is in the form of a little ugly old man, exceedingly illnatured, and is dressed in the robes of a
counsellor of State. M. la Reynie prudently refrained from asking any more questions of a lady with so
sharp and ready a tongue. The Duchess was imprisoned for several months in the Bastile; and nothing
being proved against her, she was released at the intercession of her powerful friends. The severe punishment
of criminals of this note might have helped to abate the fever of imitation among the vulgar; their comparative
impunity had a contrary tendency. The escape of Penautier, and the wealthy Cardinal de Bonzy his
employer, had the most pernicious effect. For two years longer the crime continued to rage, and was
not finally suppressed till the stake had blazed, or the noose dangled, for upwards of a hundred individuals.