SOME CAUSES OF THE REVOLUTION OF 1848.
After the signing of the treaty of
1841, which restored the entente cordiale between
France and England, and satisfied the other European
Powers, Louis Philippe and his family were probably
in the plenitude of their prosperity. The Duke
of Orleans had been happily married; and although
his wife was a Protestant, which was not
wholly satisfactory to Queen Marie Amelie, the
character of the Duchesse Helene was so lovely
that she won all hearts, both in her husband’s
family and among the people.
On the occasion of the fêtes
given in Paris at the nuptials of the Duke of Orleans,
in 1837, the sad presage of misfortune that had accompanied
the marriage festivities of Marie Antoinette was repeated.
One of the spectacles given to the Parisians was a
sham attack on a sham citadel of Antwerp in the Champ
de Mars. The crowd was immense, but all went
well so long as the spectacle lasted. When the
crowd began to move away, a panic took place.
The old and the feeble were thrown down and trampled
on. Twenty-four persons were killed, the fêtes
were broken up, and all hearts were saddened both
by the disaster and the omen.
One part of the festivities on that
occasion consisted in the opening of the galleries
of historical paintings at Versailles, a
magnificent gift made by the Citizen King to his people.
I have spoken already of the storming
of Constantine. No French success since the wars
of the Great Napoleon had been so brilliant; yet the
Chamber of Deputies, in a fit of parsimony, reduced
from two thousand to eleven hundred dollars the pension
proposed by the ministers to be settled on the widow
of General Damremont, the commander-in-chief, who
had been killed by a round shot while giving orders
to scale the walls. At the same time they voted
two hundred and fifty thousand dollars for the year’s
subsidy to the theatres of Paris for the amusement
of themselves and their constituents.
Algeria proved a valuable school for
soldiers; there Lamoriciere, Changarnier, Cavaignac,
Saint-Arnaud, Pelissier, and Bugeaud had their military
education. Louis Philippe’s three sons were
also with the troops, sharing all the duties, dangers,
and hardships of the campaign.
By the end of 1847 Abdul Kader had
retired to a stronghold in the mountains, where, seeing
that his cause was lost, he tendered his submission
to the Duc d’Aumale, then governor of Algeria.
The offer was accepted. Abdul Kader surrendered
on an understanding that he should be conducted to
some Mohammedan place of refuge, Alexandria
or St. Jean d’Acre. But this stipulation
was disregarded by the French Government, whose breach
of faith has always been considered a stain on the
honor of Louis Philippe and his ministers. The
Duc d’Aumale vehemently remonstrated, believing
his own word pledged to the Arab chieftain. Abdul
Kader, his wives, children, servants, and principal
officers were taken to France, and for five years
lived at Amboise, where some of the subordinate attendants,
overcome by homesickness, committed suicide.
In 1852 Louis Napoleon, who possibly had a fellow-feeling
for captives, restored Abdul Kader to liberty, who
thereupon took up his residence at Damascus. There
he subsequently protected a large number of Christians
from massacre, sheltering them in his house, and giving
them food and clothing. He afterwards removed
to the island of Ceylon, where, as everywhere else,
he won “golden opinions” by his generous
behavior.
Meantime, while France was in some
respects in the full tide of prosperity, great discontent
was growing up among the working-classes, reinforced
by the worthless class, always ready for disturbances.
In May, 1839, Barbes led an émeute in
Paris which might have proved formidable. His
attempt opened with a deliberate murder, and there
was considerable fighting in the streets for about
twenty-four hours. Barbes was condemned
to death. The king was desirous to spare him,
and yielded readily to the prayers of his sister, for
whom an opportunity of interceding for him was obtained
by the good offices of Lamartine.
The émeute of Barbes was
regarded with disfavor by more experienced conspirators,
but secret societies had introduced organization among
the workmen. Moreover, they were led by the bourgeoisie
with a cry for parliamentary reform, which at that
period was the supposed panacea for every kind of
evil.
The king was not popular. He
was not the ideal Frenchman. He was a Frenchman
of the epicier, or small grocer, type.
As a bon pere de famille he was anxious to
settle his sons well in life. They were admirable
young men, they deserved good wives, and as far as
grace, beauty, and amiability went, they all obtained
them; but up to 1846 not one of them had made a brilliant
marriage. This good fortune Louis Philippe hoped
was reserved for his two younger sons, D’Aumale
and Montpensier.
The Duke of Orleans was the most popular
of the king’s sons. Handsome, elegant,
accomplished, and always careful in his toilet, he
was a thorough Frenchman, the approved
type of an aristocrat with liberal sympathies and
ideas. He was born at Palermo in 1810, and did
not come to France till he was four years old.
He had an excellent tutor, who prepared him for his
college. There he took his place entirely
on a par with other boys, and gained several prizes.
All Louis Philippe’s sons were sent to public
schools.
The duke afterwards prepared for and
entered the Polytechnic, which is said to demand more
hard study than any other school in the world.
He made his first campaign in Africa in 1835, and afterwards
served with distinction in the early part of that
one which resulted in the retreat from Constantine;
but before Constantine was reached, a severe illness
invalided him. He was a liberal in politics, the
sincere friend of the working-classes, and was on intimate
terms with men of letters, even with Victor Hugo,
in spite of his advanced opinions. He was a patron
of art and artists. Some beautiful table-pieces
that he had ordered, by Barye, are now in the gallery
of Mr. W. S. Walters, of Baltimore, they not having
been completed when he died. His wife charmed
every one by her good sense, grace, and goodness.
They had had four years of happy married life, and
had two little sons, when, in July, 1842, the duchess
went for her health to the baths of Plombières,
in the mountains of the Vosges. Her husband escorted
her thither, and then returned to Paris, on his way
to attend some military manoeuvres near Boulogne.
As he was driving out to Neuilly to
make his adieux to his family, the horses of
his carriage were startled by an organ-grinder on the
Avenue de Neuilly. The duke, who was alone, tried
apparently to jump out of the carriage. Had he
remained seated, all would have been well. He
fell on his head on the pave of the broad avenue,
breaking the vertebral column.
He was carried into a small grocer’s
shop by the way-side, where afterwards a little chapel
was erected by his family. Messengers were sent
to the Chateau de Neuilly, and his father, mother,
and sisters, without bonnets or hats, came rushing
to the spot. He lived, unconscious, for four
hours. A messenger was despatched at once to
bring his wife from Plombières. She had just
finished dressing for dinner, in full toilet, when
the news reached her. Without changing her dress,
she started instantly for Paris, but when she reached
it, her husband was in his coffin.
When his will was opened, it was found
to contain an earnest exhortation to his son that,
whether he proved “one of those tools that Heaven
fits for work, but does not use,” or ascended
the French throne, he “should always hold in
his heart, above all things, love to France, and fidelity
to the principles of the French Revolution.”
Here is the poor Queen Amelies account of the death of her
son, written to a dear friend four days after:
“My Chartres, my beloved
son, he whose birth made all my happiness, whose infancy
and growing years were all my occupation, whose youth
was my pride and consolation, and who would, as I hoped,
be the prop of my old age, no longer lives. He
has been taken from us in the midst of completed happiness,
and of the happiest prospects of the future, whilst
each day he gained in virtue, in understanding, in
wisdom, following the footsteps of his noble and excellent
father. He was more than a son to me, he
was my best friend. And God has taken him from
me!... On the 2d of July he and Helene left for
Plombières, where the latter was to take the baths.
He was, after establishing her there, to come back
and spend a few days at the camp of St.-Omer, there
to take command of an army corps, which was intended
to execute great military manoeuvres on the Marne,
and which had been the object of his thoughts and employments
for a year past. Accordingly, on the 9th he returned
from Plombières, and came to dine with us at
Neuilly, full of the subject of the elections, and
talking of them with that warmth of heart and intellect
which was apparent in all he did. Next day my
fête day he came, contrary to his
usual custom, with an enormous bouquet, telling me
it was given in the name of the whole family.
He heard mass, and breakfasted with us. He was
so cheerful. He sat beside me at dinner.
He got up, drank my health with much vivacity, and
made the band play a particular tune, in
my honor, as he said. Who would have thought
that this was the last time this dear child was to
show me so much affection! On the 11th he again
returned to dinner with us, much occupied all the
time with the camp and the elections....
“On the 12th he arrived about
four o’clock in his country suit. We conversed
together about the health of Helene, which was a subject
of anxiety, about Clementine’s marriage, which
he earnestly desired; about the elections and many
other subjects, the discussion of which he always
ended with the refrain: ’In short, dear
Majesty, we finish as usual by agreeing in all important
particulars.’ And it was very true.
“After dinner we took a turn
in the park, he and Victoire, Clementine, D’Aumale,
and I. Never had he been so gay, so brilliant, so
affectionate. He spoke to me of his arrangements
for the troops, of the time when the king was to go
with us to Ste.-Menehoulde, of the time
that he would spend there, and of his own daily occupations.
He looked forward to giving his father a representation
of the battle of Valmy. I gave him my arm, saying:
’Come, dear prop of my old age!’ And the
next day he was to be alive no longer!
“We returned to the drawing-room
a little late. A great many people had arrived.
He remained with us talking until ten o’clock,
when on going away he came to bid me good-night.
I gave him my hand, and said: ‘You will
come and see us tomorrow before going away?’
He replied: ‘Perhaps so.’
“On the next day, July 13, about
eleven o’clock, we were about to get into the
carriage to go to the Tuileries. As I followed
the king to the red drawing-room, I saw Troussart,
the commissary of police, with a terrified countenance
whispering something to General Gourgaud, who made
a gesture of horror, and went to speak in a low voice
to the king. The king cried out: ‘Oh,
my God!’ Then I cried: ’Something
has happened to one of my children! Let nothing
be kept from me!’ The king replied: ’Yes,
my dear; Chartres has had a fall on his way here,
and has been carried into a house at Sablonville.’
Hearing this, I began to run like a madwoman, in spite
of the cries of the king and the remonstrances of M.
de Chabannes, who followed me. But my strength
was not equal to my impulses, and on getting as far
as the farm, I was exhausted. Happily the king
came up in the carriage with my sister, and I got in
with them. Our carriage stopped. We got
out in haste, and went into the cabaret, where
in a small room, stretched upon a mattress on the
floor, we found Chartres, who was at that moment being
bled.... The death-rattle had begun. ‘What
is that?’ said the king to me. I replied:
’Mon ami, this is death. For pity’s
sake let some one fetch a priest, that my poor child
may not die like a dog!’ and I went for a moment
into a little side room, where I fell on my knees
and implored God from my inmost soul, if He needed
a victim, to take me and spare so dear a child....
“Dr. Pasquier arrived soon after.
I said to him: ’Sir, you are a man of honor;
if you think the danger imminent, I beseech you tell
me so, that my child may receive extreme unction.’
He hung his head, and said: ‘Madame, it
is true.’
“The cure of Neuilly
came and administered the sacrament while we were
all on our knees around the pallet, weeping and praying.
I unloosed from my neck a small cross containing a
fragment of the True Cross, and I put it into the
hand of my poor child, that God the Saviour might
have pity on him in his passage into eternity.
Dr. Pasquier got up and whispered to the king.
Then that venerable and unhappy father, his face bathed
in tears, knelt by the side of his eldest son, and
tenderly embracing him, cried; ’Oh that it were
I instead of thee!’ I also drew near and kissed
him three times, once for myself, once
for Helene, and once for his children. I laid
upon his lips the little cross, the symbol of our redemption,
and then placed it on his heart and left it there.
The whole family kissed him by turns, and then each
returned to his place.... His breathing now became
irregular. Twice it stopped, and then went on.
I asked that the priest might come back and say the
prayers for the dying. He had scarcely knelt
down and made the sign of the cross, when my dear
child drew a last deep breath, and his beautiful,
good, generous, and noble soul left his body....
The priest at my request said a De profundis.
The king wanted to lead me away, but I begged him
to allow me to embrace for the last time my beloved
son, the object of my deepest tenderness. I took
his dear head in my hands; I kissed his cold and discolored
lips; I placed the little cross again upon them, and
then carried it away, bidding a last farewell to him
whom I loved so well, perhaps too well!
“The king led me into the next
room. I fell on his neck. We were unhappy
together. Our irreparable loss was common to us
both, and I suffered as much for him as for myself.
There was a crowd in that little room. I wept
and talked wildly, and I was beside myself. I
recognized no one but the unhappy Marshal Gerard, the
extent of whose misfortune I then understood. After
a few minutes they said that all was ready. The
body had been placed on a stretcher covered with a
white cloth. It was borne by four men of the house,
attended by two gendarmes. They went out
through the stable-yard; there was an immense crowd
outside.... We all followed on foot the inanimate
body of this dear son, who a few hours before had
passed over the same road full of life, strength, and
happiness.... Thus we carried him, and laid him
down in our dear little chapel, where four days before
he had heard mass with the whole family.”
The death of the Duke of Orleans was
the severest blow that could have fallen on Louis
Philippe, not only as a father, but as head of a dynasty.
The duke left two infant sons, the Comte
de Paris and the Duc de Chartres. The former
is now both the Orleanist and Legitimist pretender,
to the French throne.
In the early part of 1845 Louis Philippe,
who had already visited Windsor and been cordially
received there, was visited in return at his Chateau
d’Eu by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, accompanied
by Lord Aberdeen, then English Minister for Foreign
Affairs. The king’s reception of the young
queen was most paternal. He kissed her like a
father, and did everything in his power to make her
visit pleasant. Among the subjects discussed during
the visit was the question of “the Spanish marriages.”
The unfortunate Queen of Spain, Isabella
II., was just sixteen years old; her sister, the Infanta
Luisa, was a year younger. Isabella was the daughter
of a vicious race, and with such a mother as she had
in Queen Christina, she had grown up to early womanhood
utterly ignorant and untrained. One of her ministers
said of her that “no one could be astonished
that she had vices, but the wonder was that she had
by nature so many good qualities.” Jolly,
kindly, generous, a rebel against etiquette, and an
habitual breaker of promises, she was long popular
in Spain, in spite of a career of dissoluteness only
equalled by that of Catherine of Russia.
In 1846, however, she had not shown
this tendency, and in the hands of a good husband
might have made as good a wife and as respectable
a woman as her sister Luisa has since proved.
There were many candidates for the
honor of Queen Isabella’s hand. Louis Philippe
sent his sons D’Aumale and Montpensier to Madrid
to try their fortunes; but England objected strongly
to an alliance which might make Spain practically
a part of France. The candidature of the French
princes was therefore withdrawn.
A prince of the Catholic branch of
the Coburgs was then proposed, Prince Ferdinand,
who made subsequently an excellent king-consort in
Portugal; but to him France objected, as too nearly
allied to the English Crown. Finally the suitors
were reduced to three, the queen’s
cousin Enrique (Henry), a rough sailor of rather radical
opinions and turbulent ways; the Comte de Trepani,
a Neapolitan prince, a man of small understanding;
and another cousin, Don Francisco d’Assis, a
creature weak alike in mind and body, whom it was an
outrage to think of as fit mate for a young queen.
England was willing to consent to the queen’s
marrying anyone of these princes, and also that the
Duc de Montpensier should marry the Infanta Luisa,
provided that the queen was first married and had had
a child. All this was fully agreed upon in the
conference at Eu. But Christina, the queen-mother,
who had been plundering the Spanish treasury till
she had accumulated an enormous fortune, offered, if
Louis Philippe would use his influence to prevent
any inquiry into the state of her affairs, to further
his views as to the Duc de Montpensier.
It seems more like a scene in the
Middle Ages than an actual transaction in our own
century, that at midnight, in a Spanish palace, a dissolute
Italian dowager and a French ambassador should have
been engaged in coercing a sovereign of sixteen into
a detested marriage. As morning dawned, the sobbing
girl had given her consent to marry Don Francisco,
and the ambassador of Louis Philippe, pale from the
excitement of his vigil, left the palace to send word
of his disgraceful victory to his master. The
Duc de Montpensier, who was in waiting on the
frontier, soon arrived in Madrid, and Isabella and
Luisa were married on the same day; while M. Guizot,
who was head of the French Government, and Louis Philippe
excused their breach of faith to the queen of England
by saying that Queen Isabella was married before
her sister, though on the same morning.
Isabella at once banished her unwelcome
husband to a country seat, and flung herself headlong
into disgraceful excesses.
Queen Victoria was greatly hurt by
the treachery displayed by Louis Philippe and his
minister, and doubtless, as a woman she was deeply
sorry for the young queen. Louis Philippe not
only lost credit, popularity, and the support he derived
from the personal friendship of the Queen and the
Prince Consort of England, but he obtained no chance
of the throne of Spain for his son by his wicked devices;
for Queen Isabella, far from being childless, had three
daughters and a son. The latter, subsequently
Alfonso XII., married, in spite of much opposition,
his lovely cousin Mercedes, daughter of the Duke and
Duchess of Montpensier. She died a few months
after her marriage, so that no son or grandson of
Louis Philippe will be permitted by Providence to
mount the Spanish throne.
The affair of the Spanish marriages,
the quarrel it involved with Queen Victoria, and the
loss to Louis Philippe of personal honor, had a great
effect upon him; he became irritable and obstinate,
and at the same time weak of will.
Troubles multiplied around him.
Things with which he had nothing whatever to do increased
his unpopularity, and the secret societies kept discontents
alive. Everything that went wrong in France was
charged upon the king and the royal family.
One of the great families in France
was that of Choiseul-Praslin. The head of it
in Louis Philippe’s time was a duke who had married
Fanny, daughter of Marshal Sebastiani, an old officer
of Napoleon and a great favorite with Louis Philippe.
The Duc de Praslin had given in his adhesion
to the Orleans dynasty, while so many old families
stood aloof, and was in consequence made an officer
in the Duchess of Orleans’ household. The
Duc and Duchesse de Praslin had ten children.
The duchess was a stout, matronly little woman, rather
pretty, with strong affections and a good deal of sentiment.
Several times she had had cause to complain of her
husband, and did complain somewhat vehemently
to her own family; but their matrimonial differences
had always been made up by Marshal Sebastiani.
The world considered them a happy married pair.
After seventeen years of married life
a governess was engaged for the nine daughters, a
Mademoiselle Henriette de Luzy. She was a Parisian
by birth, but had been educated in England, had English
connections, and spoke English fluently. She was
one of those women who make a favorable impression
upon everyone brought into personal contact with them.
Soon the children adored her, and it was not long
before the duke had come under the same spell.
The duchess found herself completely isolated in her
own household; husband and children had alike gone
over to this stranger. The duchess wrote pathetic
letters to her husband, pleading her own affection
for him, and her claims as a wife and a mother.
These letters no doubt exasperated the duke, but we
read them with deep pity for her whose heart they
lay bare.
It is to be understood that there
was apparently no scandal that is, scandal
in the usual sense in the relations between
the duke and Mademoiselle de Luzy. She had simply
bewitched a weak man who had grown tired of his wife,
and had cast the same spell over his children; and
she had not the superiority of character which would
have led her to throw up a lucrative situation because
she was making a wife and mother (whom doubtless she
considered very unreasonable) extremely unhappy.
At last things came to such a pass
that Madame de Praslin appealed to her father, insisting
on a legal separation from her husband. The marshal
intervened, and the affair was compromised. Mademoiselle
de Luzy was to be honorably discharged, and the duchess
was to renounce her project of separation. Mademoiselle
de Luzy therefore gave up her situation, and went
to board in a pension in Paris with her old
schoolmistress. Madame de Praslin went to her
country house, the magnificent Chateau de Vaux, where
she herself undertook the education of her children;
but in their estimation she by no means replaced Mademoiselle
de Luzy, whom from time to time they visited in company
with their father.
In the middle of the summer of 1847
it was arranged that the whole family should go to
the seaside, and they came up to Paris to pass one
night in the Faubourg Saint-Honore at the Hotel Sebastiani.
Like most French establishments, the Hotel Sebastiani
was divided between the marshal and his daughter,
the old marshal occupying one floor during the winter,
the duke and duchess, with their family, the one above
it, while the servants of both establishments had
their sleeping-rooms under the roof. The house
was of gray stone, standing back in a yard; the French
call such a situation entre cour et jardin.
The duke had been in Paris several times during the
previous week, and had occupied his own rooms, where
the concierge and his wife the only servants
left in the house had remarked that he
seemed very busy.
It was afterwards reported in the
neighborhood, but I do not think the circumstance
was ever officially brought out, that the police found
subsequently that all the screws but one that held
up the heavy tester over the bed of the duchess, had
been removed, and the holes filled with wax; it is
certain that the duke partly unscrewed the bolt that
fastened the door of her dressing-room.
On the evening of the family’s
arrival in Paris, the father and children went in
a carriage to see Mademoiselle de Luzy. She told
the duke that she could get a good situation, provided
the duchess would give her a certificate of good conduct;
and the duke at parting promised to obtain it for
her.
The whole family went to bed early,
that they might be ready to start for the seaside
betimes upon the morrow. The children’s
rooms were in a wing of the building, at some distance
from the chambers of their father and mother.
The concierge and his wife slept in their lodge.
Towards one o’clock in the morning they were
awakened by screams; but they lay still, imagining
that the noise came from the Champs Elysees.
Then they heard the loud ringing of a bell, and starting
from their bed, rushed into the main building.
The noise had proceeded from the duchess’s chamber.
They knocked at the door, but there was no answer,
only low moans. They consulted together, and
then roused the maid and valet, who were sleeping in
the attic chambers. Again they knocked, and there
was no answer. The valet then went to the duke’s
room, which looked upon the garden and communicated
with the dressing-room of the duchess by a balcony
and window as well as by the door. The duke opened
the door of his chamber. He was in his dressing-gown.
When he heard what was the matter, he went at once
through the window into the duchess’s chamber.
There a scene of carnage unparalleled, I think, in
the history of murder met their eyes. The duchess
was lying across her bed, not yet quite dead, but
beyond the power of speech. There were more than
forty wounds on her body. She must have struggled
desperately. The walls were bloody, the bell-rope
was bloody, and the floor was bloody. The nightdress
of the duchess was saturated with blood. Her
hands were cut almost to pieces, as if she had grasped
the blade of the knife that killed her. The furniture
was overturned in all parts of the room.
At once the valet and the concierge
ran for the police, for members of the family, and
for a doctor. The duke retired to his dressing-room.
One of the gentlemen who first arrived was so sickened
by the sight of the bloody room that he begged for
a glass of water. The valet ran for the nearest
water at hand, and abruptly entered the duke’s
dressing-room. He had a glass with him, and was
going to fill it from a pail standing near, when the
duke cried out: “Don’t touch it;
it is dirty;” and at once emptied the contents
out of the window, but not before the valet had seen
that the water was red with blood. This roused
his suspicions, and when all the servants in the house
were put under arrest, he said quietly to the police:
“You had better search the duke’s dressing-room.”
When this was done there could be
no more doubt. Three fancy daggers were found,
one of which had always hung in the chamber of the
duchess. All of them were stained with blood.
The duke had changed his clothes, and had tried to
wash those he took off in the pail whose bloody water
he had thrown away. Subsequently it was conjectured
that his purpose had been to stab his wife in her sleep,
and then by a strong pull to bring down upon her the
heavy canopy. The bolt he had unscrewed permitted
him at dead of night quietly to enter her chamber.
The police were puzzled as to how
they ought to treat the murderer. As he was a
peer of France, they could not legally arrest him without
authority from the Chamber of peers, or from the king.
The royal family was at Dreux. The king was appealed
to at once, and immediately gave orders to arrest
the duke and to summon the peers for his trial.
But meantime the duke, who had been guarded by the
police in his own chamber, had contrived to take poison.
He took such a quantity of arsenic that his stomach
rejected it. He did not die at once, but lingered
several days, and was carried to prison at the Luxembourg,
where the poison killed him by inches. He died
untried, having made no confession.
His son, who was very young at the
time of his parents’ death, married an American
lady when he grew to manhood. It was a long courtship,
for the young duke’s income went largely to keep
in repair his famous Chateau de Vaux, where Fouquet
had entertained Louis XIV. with regal magnificence.
Finally a purchaser was found for the ancestral seat;
and relieved of the obligations it involved, the duke
married, and retired to his estates in Corsica.
As to Mademoiselle de Luzy, she was
tried for complicity in the murder of the duchess,
and acquitted. There was no evidence whatever
against her. But popular feeling concerning her
as the inciting cause of the poor duchess’s
death was so strong that by the advice of her pastor the
Protestant M. Coquerel she changed her name
and came to America. She brought letters of introduction
to a family in Boston, who procured her a situation
as governess in Connecticut. There she soon after
married a Congregational minister.
It seems hard to imagine how such
a tragedy could have borne its part among the causes
of Louis Philippe’s downfall; but those who
look into Alison or Lamartine will see it set down
as one of the events which greatly assisted in bringing
about the revolution of February. Mobs, like
women, are often swayed by persons rather than by
principles.
It was believed by the populace that
court favor had prevented the duke from going to prison
like any common criminal, and that the same influence
had procured him the poison by which he escaped a
public execution.