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A29289 The apology, or, The genuine memoires of Madam Maria Manchini, Constabless of Colonna, eldest sister to the Duchess of Mazarin written in Spanish by her own hand ; and afterwards made into English by a Person of Quality.; Apologie. English Mancini, Maria, 1639-1715?; Brémond, Gabriel de.; Person of quality. 1679 (1679) Wing B4344; ESTC R15149 61,211 191

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assistance I discover'd the design to none but my Sister as I pass'd through Chamberi where I pray'd her to write to his Highness in my favor to facilitate my putting my design in execution she did it readily Having past the Alpes I acquainted my Brother with my resolution He was extremely astonisht at it but durst not oppose it knowing the time and place inconvenient Being with Monsieur Boniel a learned and honest man I had taken at Gnenoble for my Chaplain who came to me at Avenay I dispatch'd him with a Letter I had written to his Royal Highness beseeching him to give me leave to retire into some Covent in his Dominions and assuring him his most Christian Majesty would not dislike of it The next day he answer'd me with much kindness he would very willingly grant me his protection if as I writ the King would be pleased with it He sent a Gentleman to complement me with a Coach to bring me to Turin My Brother took leave of me and went on his Journey avoiding to pass by Turin that he might not be oblig'd to see his Highness This Prince came to receive me a League out of Town and made me go into his Coach wherein were some Lords of his Court and with a great Train of Nobility on Horseback he accompanied me to the Covent of the Visitation where he had commanded an Apartment to be furnish'd for me and dispos'd the Abbess to receive me by the intercession of the Archbishop who was present at my entrance The Nuns were kind and obliging as possible during my three Months abode there about the end of which being inform'd Madam Mazarin was suddenly for Paris partly out of a desire to see her and partly to endeavour to repair the fault I committed in leaving France I resolv'd to go to Chamberi and desir'd his Royal Highness not to permit any Courrier to pass for two days for fear of my being pursu'd His Highness very obligingly granted my request yet forgot not to condemn my resolution and express his displeasure at it Assur'd of his word I set forward with a thousand Pistols the King had return'd me of his usual bounty Morena and my Chaplain were all the company I had With this small train I arriv'd at Chamberi more weary than ever There to my comfort I found my self frustrated of my hopes to see my Sister who prevail'd upon by interest more than by affection had hid her self from me for fear of being concern'd in my designs I slept in the Castle she dwelt in and asking her People where she was and when she would be at home I could not obtain a satisfactory answer At last not to hazard a certain enjoyment for an expectation I resolv'd to return to Turin under the protection of his Royal Highness with whom I had all the reason in the World to be satisfy'd his care and bounty having been so great while I was at Turin and particularly at my last address to him that I could not desire more I writ him a Letter to pray him send me a Coach to the Foot of the Alpes which he did with his usual exactness The Marquess Drone and a Gentleman belonging to the Constable call'd Don Mourice de Bologna who was come to me by the Constables order came to receive me near Turin They were no less glad of my return than they had been apprehensive of my executing my former design which they endeavour'd to prevent by sending Courriers into several parts to hinder my passage The same time the most Christian King at the Constables request sent orders to the Governours of the Frontiers and other Provinces of his Kingdom not to permit me entrance When I arriv'd at Turin I went to the Prince of Carignan's where I found the Count de Oreux and the Chevalier de Savoy his Nephews and mine And fearing he would not receive me if I gave him notice of my coming I took possession without saying a word to him of an Appartment where I contied above a Month till leave was come from Rome for my returning into a Covent and that I might go abroad once a-week which Cardinal Porto Carrero procur'd for me The mean time I frequented the Court and went to a House called La Venerie about which was store of all sorts of Game and Divertisements so that I never spent my time with more pleasure than there receiving continually from his Highness Royal and Madam Royal all imaginable Expressions of Affection and Honour My happiness was too great to last long Fortune making it her business to persecute me suggested to his Royal Highness Reasons of State to make me a Proposal of returning whence I came and to tell me it were better for me to be at my own House than in a Covent And that if there were no other Obstacle but the present disunion from the Constable he would undertake to reconcile us I was so offended at this and some other things he said to me at La Venerie that carry'd away by my cholerick humour I would have gone away that moment in a pet and return'd into the Cloyster and had certainly done it had not Madam Royal hinder'd it by staying me with them eight days more at the end of which they accompanied me to the Covent Our difference increased by the way through the impatience of my humour and my unwillingness to pardon him any thing which put us in a greater heat than ever Letting go my hand as I entred the Covent he told me after long silence that as humoursome and pettish against him as I was he would be still ready to serve me This offer which should have appeased me anger'd me more than ever so that I told him haughtily enough I made just as much account of his protection as I did of his person This answer madded him that he went away without saying a word more to me My Enemies look'd on this as a good occasion to work me out of favor with him and succeeded in it About this time I endeavour'd by several Letters to the Ministers of France to prevail with the King to revoke the Orders he had given to prohibit my coming into his Kingdom but I could not obtain the favour The mean time his Highness Royal past all the Summer at La Venerie without as much as sending me one complement At his return he came to see me with Madam Royal to comfort me for the death of Count Soisons he performed this melancholly Complement with a great deal of Ceremony the sadness of his Countenance suiting very well with that of the occasion Finding my self distitute of hopes from France and less honour'd than formerly by the Soveraign of Savoy I laid hold on an opportunity offer'd me by a Voyage of the Marquess de Bourgamanero to Turin to intreat him to prevail with the Constable his very good Friend to give me leave to go into France being assur'd the King would not deny me that
of my Instructors I discover'd some Charmes till then wholly unknown to me although I had not the full liberty of taking the pleasures of the place My Mother seeing me lively and brisk had not the same kindness for me she had for my Sisters but kept me Lock'd up as long as she could and watch'd me so narrowly that I stirr'd not abroad but in Company and was frequently left at home all alone This was no small mortification to me and appear'd far the greater when compar'd with the indulgence us'd to my Sisters and the liberty given Olympia now Countess of Soissons and Hortensia who came two Months after out of the Covent I Confess I was vext at the heart to see them allowed to spend their time at Court when I was mewd up alone in a Camber and depriv'd of the pleasures they enjoyed I could not forbear making my Complaint to my Mother for her using me so and told her sharply that if my Sister Hortensia deserv'd by her beauty the Chief place in her affection however she could not but know I was her Elder my Mother at this was touch'd to the quick and told my Uncle there was no living with me and that it were better make me a Nun than venture me into the World where she clearly foresaw I should be very miserable having neither ingenuity nor respect for those I was oblig'd most to esteem The Remonstrances my Uncle made me after these Complaints were so harsh and cutting they would have made impression on any other but me who minded them so little that though I remembred very well what he said I never laid it to heart The Great melancholly my Mother soon after fell into was a certain presage and fore-runner of her Death she became of so strange an humour 't was impossible to endure it And I whom she lov'd least was to bear the torment of all her ill conditions my Sister Olympia having a distinct Apartment to her self and Hortensia was at the Dutchess of Mercoeur's where her Governess Madam de Venele brought her up with extraordinary tenderness and care The life I led was very sad and my troubles unparallell'd And to mend the matter my Apartment was the worst of all and no company but an old Chamber-maid call'd Rose who waited on us when Children And to compleat my misery I saw my self on the point of returning into the Covent This was my condition when my Mother fell sick And though at first her sickness did not appear dangerous His Majesty honoured her every Evening with his presence and observing I had some wit and briskness he said to me one thing or other every day by the by which help'd me a little to bear with comfort the affliction I was in by my Mothers ill humours but this was no small addition to my Mothers disease who could not endure I should enter her Chamber when company was there My Mother at length grew better but afterwards relaps'd and dy'd The Hemettick Wine which is us'd as a remedy in Cases of extremity was given her in her sickness and quickly brought her to her Grave Education is the greatest present Parents can bestow on their Children after their being But 't is very necessary it should be attended with Gentleness too much Severity being often a means to root out Natural Affection so inconsistent are Love and Fear I speak it by Experience the fear my Mother had kept me in having made such impression in me that Two Years after her death I still dreamt she was alive and when broad awake I often fancy'd I saw her to my very great trouble Soon after Madam de Mercoeur dy'd suddenly in Child-Bed to our general affliction who could not but lament the loss of a Beauty so rare and so extraordinary Vertue My Mother being dead Madam de Venele was made my Governess with the like power and charge over my Sisters Hortensia and Mariana who was lately come to us with our Brother Alphonso who dy'd very young and very unfortunately having been wounded in the Head as he was at play with his Schollers of the College of Clermont where he boarded The death of my Mother having made me a little more mistress of my self and my Sister Olympia being marry'd I enjoyed the Priviledges of an elder Sister and was in a fair way to lead a Life full of Tranquility and Pleasure The condition I found my self in convinc'd me that the health of the Body depends almost altogether on the satisfaction of the Mind And in the condition I was then in I might have said without Vanity that Fortune had been no less favourable to me in the Gifts and Endowments of mind she conferr'd on me than in outward advantages and that the Soveraign Faculty of my Soul had a strong influence over my carriage and form'd my deportment In the mean time my manner of living with the King and his Brother was so familiar and pleasing that I had liberty to speak what I thought and the good fortune to find what I spoke very well taken At my return with the Court from Fountainbleau I was assur'd I was not hated by the King who though very young had penetration enough to understand that Eloquence which without speaking a Syllable perswades more than all the fine words in the World And the particular inclination I had for the King whose merit and Quality I easily discover'd greater than any Man 's in his Kingdom had perhaps render'd me more skilful in this than in any thing else I thought the Testimony of my Eyes not sufficient to convince me of so important a truth till confirm'd by the extraordinary respects and devoires paid me by the Courtiers who as so many spyes of the Actions of their King had clearly discover'd his Majesties Love for me In the midst of this my ravishing prosperity a small storm arose but was quickly over It was reported the King would marry the Princess Margaret of Savoy Daughter of Madam Royal and afterwards Dutchess of Parma a Lady of extraordinary merit This occasioned the Court to go to Lyons I leave it to those who have Wit and Affection to judge how capable a Proposal of this kind is to trouble and afflict a person in love and what a torment it is to fear the loss of what we have an extream passion for especially a passion grounded on extraordinary merit and occasion'd by so exalted an Object when reason doth countenance and authorize our affection and not only inclines but commands us to love But this storm was too violent to last and the marriage was as suddenly broke off as propos'd I was oblig'd for this to Don Antonio Pimental who luckily arriving with Proposals of Peace between Spain and France whereof he had a Project their Highnesses presently return'd for Savoy and I recover'd my former Tranquility and found that the pain I had newly endur'd being short and follow'd by the happiness I regain'd had improv'd my