The Royal Stuarts: A History of the Family That Shaped Britain (33 page)

BOOK: The Royal Stuarts: A History of the Family That Shaped Britain
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His mother, Henrietta Maria, as a daughter of France, spent the years of exile in Paris. During the disturbances known as the Fronde – a series of civil wars (1648–50) that seemed light-minded and whimsical in comparison with the grim and bloody constitutional struggle in her husband’s kingdoms – her circumstances were often miserable. The Cardinal de Retz, one of the instigators of the Fronde, remembered them when he came to write his memoirs:

Four or five days before the king [the young Louis XIV] removed from Paris [on account of the Fronde] I went to visit the Queen of England, whom I found in her daughter’s chamber, who has been since Duchess of Orleans. [This was the youngest child, Henriette-Anne, known in the family as Minette]. At my coming in, she said: ‘You see I am come to keep Henriette company. The poor child could not rise today for want of a fire.’ The truth is that the cardinal [Mazarin, the chief minister] for six months altogether had not ordered her any money towards her pension; that no tradespeople would trust her for anything; and that there was not at her lodgings a single banknote…Posterity will hardly believe that, to get out of bed in the Louvre, and in the eyes of France, a Princess of England, grand-daughter of Henri-Quatre, had wanted a faggot, in the month of January and within sight of the French court.
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The Cardinal arranged for the Parlement of Paris to provide the Queen of England with money for her subsistence.

Other royalists were in a like state of destitution. Sir Edward Hyde, the future Earl of Clarendon, now chancellor of the government-in-exile, in his
History of the Rebellion
wrote: ‘The Marquis of Ormonde was compelled to put himself in prison, with other gentlemen, at a pistole a week for his diet, and to walk the streets a-foot, which was no honourable custom in Paris.’ On the other hand, Lord Jermyn, the Queen’s chamberlain, whom some thought her lover, which is unlikely, was reputed ‘to keep an excellent table for those who courted him, and had a coach of his own’. Eventually, when the troubles of the Fronde were over, Henrietta Maria was better provided for, thanks to the intervention of her sister-in-law Anne of Austria, the widow of Louis XIII and mother of Louis XIV.

One member of the Stuart family was in a happier condition, materially at least. This was Mary, the Princess Royal. Married to the Prince of Orange, Stadtholder of the United Provinces of the Netherlands, she had the status and security the exiles lacked. Yet she too was not without her discontents and was often low-spirited. The immediate cause was her husband’s frequent and flagrant infidelity. Indeed, his love affairs were so open and notorious that they were made the subject of a play staged in Amsterdam – where republicanism was strong and the Orange family unpopular.
3
Mary was devoted to her brothers, especially Charles, as was, to be fair, her husband. She disliked the Dutch and made her distaste evident – which hardly added to the couple’s popularity – and spent a lot of time with her aunt Elizabeth.

Elizabeth knew more of the pain of exile than anyone else in the family. It was now over thirty years since her husband Frederick had rashly accepted the offer of the crown of Bohemia, been driven out first from Prague and then from his own Palatinate. Frederick had been dead for years, and Elizabeth had lost much of the youthful beauty that had led the diplomat Sir Henry Wotton to call her ‘the eclipse and glory of her kind’. Wotton, remembered for his description of an ambassador as ‘an honest man sent abroad to lie for his country’, immortalised her in verse:

You meaner beauties of the night,
That poorly satisfy our eyes
More by your number than your light,
You common people of the stars,
What are you when the moon shall rise?

For years Elizabeth had depended on a pension from her brother Charles and gifts from her friend and admirer Lord Craven, who had also provided £30,000 towards the cost of an unsuccessful campaign to recover the Palatinate. At the outbreak of the civil war, Parliament, not surprisingly, stopped her pension; thereafter she relied on the kindness of friends and some assistance from the Dutch government. Fortunately she had lots of friends, for her charm was legendary, though not all of her many children were equally captivated by it. Her eldest son was dead, drowned on campaign; she had quarrelled with the second, Charles Louis. Restored to part of the Palatinate by the Treaty of Westphalia (1648), he refused to allow his mother to return with him. Her favourite son, Rupert, was ranging the seas as admiral of the tiny royalist fleet. His brother Maurice, who had accompanied him to England in 1642 to fight for their uncle, was also dead, lost at sea. Four daughters survived to adulthood. Elizabeth, the eldest, an intellectual, friend and correspondent of the philosopher and scientist Leibnitz, would never marry. Henrietta found a husband in a prince of Transylvania. Sophia, having rejected the less than wholehearted advances of her cousin Charles II, married the Elector of Hanover and lived to a great age, her son George becoming King of Great Britain and Ireland in 1714. Louise, who had much of her mother’s charm, though indifferent to her appearance, fell in love with the Marquis of Montrose, who, after the King’s execution, was in no mood for romance; eventually she turned Catholic, entered a convent and died as Abbess of Maubuisson. All the girls were often irritated by their mother, Sophia complaining that her dogs and monkeys mattered more to Elizabeth than did her children. This may well have been true; it is just as likely, however, that they were jealous of the apparently effortless manner in which Elizabeth continued in her fifties to attract admirers. Her spirit seemed indomitable. ‘Though I have cause enough to be sad,’ she wrote to one of her elderly friends, Sir Thomas Roe, ‘yet I am still of my wild humour to be as merry as I can in spite of fortune.’ Like Louise, she adored Montrose, writing letters full of affection, advice and jokes, all of which he was in sore need of. She commissioned his portrait, and hung it in her cabinet ‘to frighten away the Brethren’. She also adored her nephew Charles, relishing his easy manner and dry humour. She might well have been happy to see him marry her daughter.

In Paris, Henrietta Maria had other, more ambitious plans for her son. He should be wed to a cousin on her side of the family. This was her niece Anne-Marie-Louise de Montpensier, the eldest daughter of Gaston, Duc d’Orleans. As the brother of Louis XIII he was addressed as Monsieur, and his daughter as Mademoiselle. (She is usually known as La Grande Mademoiselle, not only because she was a big woman, but because of her martial exploits on the rebel side during the Fronde.) Mademoiselle had many merits: she was brave and kind-hearted, intensely loyal to her slippery flibbertigibbet of a father and loving to her half-sisters. She was also extremely rich, thanks to the early death of her mother from whom she had inherited vast estates; and this commended her to Henrietta Maria. But she was also naïve, rather stupid, and incapable of seeing a joke, all of which did not commend her to Charles. Besides, unlike his mother, he understood that marrying a Catholic princess, no matter how well born and rich, would do him no good in either England or Scotland. He spoiled his mother’s plans by pretending to Mademoiselle that he spoke no French; she thought him singularly ill-bred. Nevertheless, the comedy went on for some years.

The Queen’s first attempt to make a match between her son and her niece was launched when he was little more than a boy in Paris in the early years of exile before the King’s execution. Soon the Prince’s time there was enlivened by the arrival of the young Duke of Buckingham and his brother Francis. They had been childhood friends, for King Charles had adopted the Villiers boys a few months after their father’s murder. The Duke, George, was almost three years older than Charles, Francis eighteen months. Both had inherited their father’s beauty, and the Duke was also very clever, endlessly amusing, witty, irreverent, and a wonderful mimic. He had entranced Charles when they were small and would continue to do so almost as long as they lived. Light-minded and utterly untrustworthy, he had only to exercise his charm to be forgiven. Now the two young men were put to study with the philosopher and mathematician Thomas Hobbes, author of
Leviathan
, regarded by the few who read it as a cynical apology for despotism. Charles almost certainly was not among its readers, though he formed a respect and affection for Hobbes. Bishop Burnet, however, writing half a century later, believed that Hobbes ‘laid before him his schemes both as to religion and politics, which made a deep and lasting impression on the Prince’s mind’.
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Perhaps. Buckingham was the readier pupil – Hobbes thought him outstandingly intelligent; yet left off teaching him mathematics when he observed him masturbating as his teacher expounded a geometrical theorem.
5

Soon Charles had other interests. Visiting his sister at the Hague in 1648, he met a girl called Lucy Walter. She was the same age as the Prince, only eighteen, the daughter of an impoverished Welsh squire. Her parents had separated when she was still a child, and at the age of fourteen or fifteen she became the mistress of a colonel in Cromwell’s New Model Army, Algernon Sidney, who paid her ‘fifty broad pieces’ to surrender her virtue – a word never used in connection with her again. A couple of years later he tired of her and passed her on to his royalist brother Robert, who in 1648 obligingly yielded her to Prince Charles. ‘Let who’s have her,’ he told the Prince, ‘she’s already sped.’
6
The diarist John Evelyn described her as ‘a bold, brown, beautiful but insipid creature’. The first three adjectives were just; ‘insipid’ Lucy certainly wasn’t, unless Evelyn was using the word in some specialised sense. He may simply have meant that she was almost wholly uneducated, barely literate. It wasn’t, however, her mind that attracted men. Charles fell in love with her, no doubt about that. She gave him a son, James, the future Duke of Monmouth, whom he loved more than any other among the fourteen children he sired who survived infancy.

The relationship with Lucy lasted on and off – more frequently off – for ten years. It ended in recrimination when he employed agents to remove the boy James from her care, and perhaps even in hatred. Lucy declared that they were married, and it is just possible that they went through some sort of ceremony. She claimed to have papers proving it, but convincing documents have never been produced. The matter remains murky. Charles always denied that they had married, but it was in his interest to do so. Some have suggested any marriage would have been illegal, though it is not clear why – especially if it took place after his father’s execution, when as king and head of the family he would not have had to seek permission from anyone to wed. Monmouth may well have believed he was legitimate. His mother had told him so, and later, when he was removed from her, his tutors, a courtier called Thomas Ross and a Catholic convert, Father Goffe, who had previously been one of the King’s Anglican chaplains, encouraged him in the belief, Ross apparently because he was so charmed by the little boy’s beauty and happy temper that he could deny him nothing and was eager to please him in all things. The rumour of the marriage to Lucy would persist to the end of Charles’s life, causing him embarrassment and political difficulty. Sometime in the nineteenth century, Monmouth’s descendant, the Duke of Buccleuch, is said to have come on a paper in the family archives that, if not a forgery, gave credence to the story. He sensibly – if, from the point of view of the historian, irritatingly – threw it into the fire.

As for Lucy, her lively career, which had included on a brief return to England a stay as a prisoner in the Tower of London, and at least half a dozen lovers after Charles, ended in 1658. According to the memoirs of Charles’s brother James, Duke of York, the cause of death was ‘a disease incident to her profession. She was very handsome,’ he added, ‘with little wit and some cunning.’
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As king, James would send Monmouth to the block, so he may have been prejudiced against Lucy.

James himself had arrived in France in 1648, making his escape from England disguised as a woman. He was his mother’s favourite child, and made a better impression at the French court than Charles. La Grande Mademoiselle certainly found him more impressive, for he spoke to her in fluent French. ‘Nothing,’ she declared, ‘detracts from a man so much as not being able to converse, and the Duke talked very well.’
8
(But then he had no fear that his mother was trying to marry him off to the lady.) Still, with his fair hair, fine complexion, good manners and graceful bearing, he was generally found to be very agreeable. He was allowed to join the French army, showed himself to be very brave, and won the approval of the greatest commander of the day, Marshal Turenne. In these days of his youth, Burnet wrote in his
History
, James ‘really clouded the king and passed for the superior genius’. This view, however widely held, was mistaken. Though in Burnet’s words ‘candid and sincere’, and intensely loyal to his brother, James was not very bright. A more acute observer than the Bishop remarked: ‘The king could see things if he would; the duke would see things if he could.’

The last member of the family to arrive in exile was young Henry, Duke of Gloucester, usually called Harry. He was a lively, intelligent and affectionate boy whom everyone seems to have liked. In 1652 Cromwell released him from prison and sent him to the Hague, in the charge of a tutor. He may have done so out of a native kindliness, or because of suggestions that England’s constitutional dilemma might be best solved by making the boy king, subject to the sort of close limitations of power his father had rejected.

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