IT seems odd that, save for the fleeting
amours of the sailor, there is no woman's name linked with that of the
gallant Paul Jones in his early life. Rover as he was, he could have had
his choice of the fair in many strange lands, from the prim Puritan, to
the more informal, grass petticoated, bead-necklaced, dusky belle of the
tropics. Was there some hidden love? Is it she to whom he alludes in his
letter to the Countess of Selkirk as "hopes of a domestic bliss"? All is
now so vague that we shall have to be content with the romantic and very
intense affair which kept his heart in France until the day of his
death. Aimée de Telusson, a fit
love for this man of mystery and strange fascination, was a king's
daughter. Supported by a pension from the Court, and living with her
protectress, Madame de Marsan, under the patronage of great ladies, such
as the Duchesse de Chartres, the Queen, Madame de Lafayette and others,
she enjoyed a unique position in society.
Louis XV, of gay memory, had in his
service a confidential valet—sometimes called by a more classical
name—le Bel, who, in company with Madame de Pompadour, looked after the
well-being of that unique retreat, le parc aux cerfs, and saw that the
inmates thereof were, literally, "to the King's taste." Le Bel, one day
lounging about the gardens of the Tuileries, ever with an eye on the
main chance, saw a most lovely child, about twelve years of age. After
some negotiation he bought her from her parents, who were impoverished
members of the lesser nobility of Provence, and assumed all the expenses
of her education. She was put in the hands of a Madame Bertrand, who
taught her the polite accomplishments and what she considered fitting,
and the girl passed two years under her influence, growing more
beautiful as time went on. When she was fourteen it was arranged that
she should be introduced into the palace by the accommodating le Bel,
where she at once charmed the critical and jaded taste of the blasé
King, and, with the connivance of Madame de Pompadour, always obliging
in these affairs, was given apartments in the vast palace, where one
girl more or less was not heeded.
Louis XV, unlike his illustrious
grandfather, had a saving and thrifty disposition. His predecessor had
legitimised and dowered the large family of natural children of whom he
was the reputed father, so they finally became a fearful drain on
France, and a scandal to the Courts of Europe. But this King inherited
the thrift of his mother, Adelaide of Savoie, and when such a
contretemps happened, gave the lady a specified sum of money, a present
of jewels, and there the matter ended. He never saw mother or child
again. More often than not, the girls were able to marry very well, for
the dowry provided by the King closed the eyes of would-be husbands to
early misfortunes. Madame de Pompadour generally managed these maria qes
de convenance, as she did the parc aux cerfs, and other details of the
secret history of the palace.
A strange connection, that—a royal lover,
bored with his mistress, yet retreading the familiar way to her
apartments from sheer force of habit. The favourite, weary of the
monarch, but clinging to her empire, cared so little that she found
playthings for him, and by this cunning in providing the toy of an hour,
was able to keep her inflexible hand on the reins of power, which she so
long and so despotically handled. With her lettres-de-cachet, her court
of sycophants, her undisputed power, la. Marquise de Pompadour was
satisfied. She had never been a woman of amorous temperament, and her
confidences about the chocolate are both spicy and edifying.
Mademoiselle de Tiercelin, upon being
taken under the King's protection, was commanded to assume the name of
de Bonneval. The King behaved generously to her when her brief reign was
over, providing amply for the child, which was born in 1758.
Mademoiselle de Bonneval, at the age of fifteen, found herself with a
daughter and a personal annuity of twelve thousand livres a year,
separate provision being made for the child. Shortly after this the Due
de Choiseul, for some reason which does not seem very clear, accuses de
Tiercelin of being in correspondence with Frederick the Great's Court,
and sends him and his daughter to the Bastille. Thanks to her powerful
protector, the lady was released immediately. It is not unlikely the
pretext of corresponding with Frederick the Great was used as a cloak
for de Tiercelin's disappearance, as he was inclined to boast and
presume on the fact of being grandfather to the child of a king. The
bar-sinister was no drawback in the eyes of the many, and once before
for the same reason he had been obliged to retire to the shadows of the
Bastille.
Madame de Pompadour in 1761 arranged a
marriage for "Mademoiselle de Bonneval" with an official in the
Clzaizcelleiie de la Marine, a M. de Telluson, widower with two
children, and her child was afterwards known by this name. So we come to
Aimee de Telusson.
The girl was well educated, thanks to the
provision of the King, constantly under the unsparing eye of the
Pompadour, and shared the every-clay life of her mother's step-children.
Possibly Madame 'de Pompadour had her part in life arranged, but that
lady's death in 1764 altered the complexion of her future. All went well
until she reached the age of sixteen, in 1774, when her father, the
King, died in circumstances too generally known to need relating. In a
moment Aimee was without income of any sort, though her mother's annuity
continued. It seems odd that this money, which, like the allowance for
her daughter's maintenance and education, was paid out of the King's
privy purse, should have been continued by Louis XVI, while Aimée was
left penniless. There were ructions of some sort, for Mademoiselle de
Telusson instantly left her step-father's house to live with the
Marquise de Marsan, who treated her as a daughter. Her education was
lavishly completed by the generosity of this good lady, and Aime's
passion for music encouraged in every way. She sang charmingly and was,
later, "spoken of as the most finished performer on the guitar at
Court."
Though without fortune, she did not lack
suitors, hut, with the indifference of a girl who has never loved, paid
little heed to their wooing. To those who delight in constancy, it may
be said that Paul Jones was her first lover, her only love. It was at a
ball given by the Duchesse de Chartres in 1778 that Aimée first met the
man of whom France was talking.
Paul, from all accounts, was very much of
a ladies' man; as keen a pursuer of Venus as in war he was a follower of
Mars. He had only to pick and choose, and danced from flower to flower
like the lightest butterfly of fashion. There were adoring dames and
'damsels ready to strew his path with roses and cast themselves under
the wheels of the conqueror's chariot at a nod from the head they would
fain have weighted with laurels. But the Captain was wise in his
generation, and, though he burned his incense at many a shrine, was most
circumspect.
The "dashing Comtesse 'de la Vandhal"
seemed to have no objection to indulge a little harmless gallantry on
the part of the famous American Commodore. She was a clever miniature
painter, one of Van der Huyt's pupils, and either she or her master
painted the best miniature of the hero which exists. This she gave to
Jones, who declared himself so enraptured with the work of art that he
was like a "second Narcissus, in love with his own resemblance." He
spared no effort to make himself popular, at the same time not
completely hiding his penchant for Mademoiselle de Telusson from eyes
that had no other aim in life than to ferret out the secrets of those
who surrounded them. From her parentage Aimée 'de Telusson enjoyed a
certain notoriety, making her movements remarked inseparably from the
sensation caused by her beauty, which was of a most striking type.
Allowing for that difference between masculine and feminine good looks,
she may be said to have strongly resembled her father, who as a youth
was considered the ideal of manly perfection. She was "petite, extremely
vivacious, and of most charming temper, and possessed of all the polite
accomplishments." Her hair, which fell in rippling masses almost to the
ground, was of a "deep auburn, often in a bright light having the hue of
red gold." Her eyes "were large, dark and lustrous, and her complexion
the perfection of pink and white, and—most important detail in feminine
eyes—" though in her twenty-sixth year, she passes everywhere for a girl
of twenty," the description being written about 1784. Thanks to her
lover's interest, she perfected herself in English and also Spanish,
singing melting little ballads in the tongue of fair Andalusia, to the
soft strum of the guitar, an instrument undeniably invented for the
display of her charms.
There has been much speculation as to the
relations of this extraordinary pair; the child of a king—and Paul
Jones. From what is known of the manners of the late eighteenth century,
the tempestuous emotions of a man of his type in the prime of life, and
a girl of her ancestry, speculation seems idle. The affair lasted
fourteen years, until his death in 1792. It endured through absence,
through the miserable farce of his command in the Russian navy, where,
for two years, he never received a letter from her or from one of his
friends, so determined were his enemies to cut him off from the world.
Aware of the espionage to which all correspondence was subjected in
France, his epistles are models of discretion. He writes of her
frequently in his letters to Jefferson, some ten years later, when the
latter was American Minister to France, and Paul in New York. He
provided financially for her, when by Madame de Marsan's death she was
left penniless, and, well aware that the contents of his letter would he
back-stairs gossip before it reached the "fair mourner," wrote to
console her in the pedantic style then in vogue.
New York, September 4,
1787.
"MY DEAR MADAME,
"No language can convey to my fair mourner the tender sorrow I feel on
her account. The loss of our worthy and noble friend is indeed a fatal
stroke! It is an irreparable misfortune which can only be alleviated by
the one reflection that it is the will of God, whose providence I hope
may yet have blessings in store for us. The noble Marquise was more than
a mother to you. We have lost her. Let us cherish her memory, and send
up grateful thanks to the Almighty that we once had such a friend."
Through the influence of her friends at
Court, it had been arranged some time previously that Mademoiselle de
Telusson should be received by the King, who, it was hoped in the
circumstances, would order some provision to be made for her, and this
Jones alludes to, saying I cannot but flatter myself that you have
yourself gone to the King in J Lily, as he appointed audience for you. 1
am sure that your present loss and bereavement will newly induce him to
protect you and render to you justice. He will hear you, I am sure, and
you may safely unbosom yourself to him, telling him frankly all your
relations, and asking his advice, which cannot but he agreeable to him
to give you."
Is it probable that the suggestion, "tell
him all your relations," could point to the fact of a contemplated
marriage between the lovers? Or was she to explain to the King the
already existing relations? The only other "relations" Aimée had, were
her half-sisters, her step-father and mother, and Jones would not have
troubled himself about them. And, again, why did they never marry Though
Mademoiselle de Telusson had no fortune, the Chevalier, as he was then,
had means for an establishment, and with his opportunities could have
assured his future.
A streak of jealousy creeps out in the
advice, "Tell him"—the King—"that you must now look to him as your
father and protector. If it were necessary, I think that the Comte
d'Artois, his brother, would on your personal application render you
good office by speaking in your favour. I should like it better,
however, if you do without him." This is rather amusing, as the Comte
d'Artois was in reality a nephew, a la main gauche, to Aimée. Canny
Paul, like the rest of the world, knew the reputation borne by this
prince, whose affability towards all charming dames made him as popular
among the ladies of the Court as with those of the opera, for whose
entertainment he spared no expense in furnishing those wonderful petites
maisons, which scandalous whispers proclaimed more amazing than the
glories of the Arabian Nights.
Paul laments the depression prevailing in
the United States in i 87, "where for thirty-six thousand livres of
prime securities I am offered fifteen thousand," declaring himself
"puzzled for, and at this moment almost without, money," and, while not
"resourceless by any means, cannot realise on my securities quickly
without sacrifices, I am not willing to make.
"I have written to Dr. Bancroft in
London, who has in his hands over forty thousand livres for me in ready
cash, to assist me in meeting your present needs. When this reaches you,
call on Al. le Grand, and presenting this as a credential, ask him to
hand you 4000 livres from my Holland account. He will know what that
means. I enclose a bit of paper in cipher with my signature. I need not
translate it to you, but it is a form of order for the amount mentioned.
I do this and mention these facts with
infinite regret, and for no other reason than because it is impossible
for me to transmit to you all supply under my present circumstances.
This is my fifth letter to you since I
left Paris.
Finally, my dearest friend, summon all
your resolution. Exert yourself and plead your own cause. You cannot
fail of success. The justice of your cause and the charm of your
entreaties would move a heart of flint! . . Present my tender respects
to your sister. . . . I persuade myself that she will continue her
tender care of her sweet little godson and that you will cover him all
over with kisses from me. . .
Who was the "sweet little godson" whom
the writer wished to have covered with kisses? There was such a
holocaust of every kind of record during the Revolution, that what proof
there may have been has vanished; we can only surmise. There is the
question, if there was a child, why is there not even the briefest
mention of him in all the voluminous papers the Chevalier left?
It is quite probable that the child died
from one of the many infantile complaints so little understood then, or,
that the papers relating to him, if he was their child, were destroyed
by Aimée or perished in the Revolution, which carried everything
relating to law and order before its tidal wave, on which, at last, we
lose sight of the fair Aimée herself.
Being always in the glare of publicity,
if the child was hers, it is odd that he was not even alluded to by some
of the light pens scratching so incessantly. There was little fuss made
about a child born in or out of wedlock, for, if all accounts are to be
believed, the chubby little cherubs appeared in families with the
promiscuousness of rabbits. Mademoiselle de Telusson's step-sister, just
mentioned, was some years her senior, and the wife of an officer in the
Marine Artillery, the Chevalier de Thouvenot.
There are constant allusions to Aimee and
the Chevalier Jones in the memoirs written around 1787, when he came to
France as agent to adjust the unsettled prize-money claims. Some say he
never lived under the same roof with her, merely cherishing her with his
natural tender gallantry towards all women. It is unnecessary to add
that this anaemic view of their relations is not the suggestion of their
French contemporaries. Like most women of her ardent colouring, she was
not lacking in temperament. She could hate, and she could love. The
charm of royal blood was hers, and at times a touch of quick, though
unconscious arrogance, which would not have disgraced her father,
displayed over some trivial concern, charmed and amused her lover, who
in the end she would cajole with an imploring appeal for the opinion of
"mon Paul." She was a woman of great intelligence, and no small aid in
guiding her lover through those niceties of French society to which,
from her childhood, she had been accustomed, and that Paul never made a
faux pas may he owing to this feminine influence.
She was a remarkable woman, this dainty
Aimee, with her rippling "sun-kissed tresses," her enchanting
coquetries, and her taper fingers, made to he kissed. Though domineering
at times, she idolised Paul. Shortly before his death he settled an
annuity on her, giving her a house in the Rue de Provence, a street
opened a few years before. Here she lived after his death, attracting a
distinguished circle around her living the life of the world, while her
heart was with her dead.
When in 1799 Capelle published his book
on Paul Jones, she aided him with much general information relating to
the Russian campaign, including letters from Potemkin, Marshal Suwarrow
and the Semiramis of the North, and allowed him to publish a few of her
lover's letters to herself. As they invariably began, "My dear Madame,"
except in one or two, where he called her his "Dear Adele," and were
mostly about current affairs, she could have no hesitancy in letting
them be read by the world. Where she was during the height of the
Revolution is not known. Perhaps she left France, for, being of royal
blood, the mob would not have spared her had its thoughts flown that
way. It is unlikely her annuity was derived from French sources, as her
lover was a man of much business acumen and probably invested in English
or Dutch securities. With the curtailment of Marie Antoinette's retinue,
when the Court moved to the Tuileries, Aimee lost her post of reader,
which she had filled for some time. From T792 to 1799 she disappeared,
but we find her in the latter year teaching English to the young ladies
at Madame de Campan's school. Her lover had insisted that she should
perfect herself in his tongue, and, besides teaching her himself,
employed Miss Edes-Herbert to give her lessons during the sojourn of
that lady in Paris. After this she taught the ladies of Josephine's
gaudy mushroom Court, also giving them lectures on the Court of Louis
XVI and the American War of 1775-83.
Aimée was consulted by Barre very
frequently, when he was editor of Napoleon's official gazette, and
translated for him those articles from the English papers which the
policy of the First Consul found wise to lay before the French nation.
She had the entree of the Imperial Court as she had enjoyed the
friendship of those former great ones Napoleon so loved to gather about
him, no matter how high the price of their favour.
"Loose as the morals of the Bourbon
Courts were, Aimee de Telusson held her head up as proudly as any woman
of less clouded birthright might have done. She was the pet of such
women as the Duchesse de Chartres, the Comtesse de Bourbon, the
Princesse de Lamballe, the Marquise de Marsan, Madame de Lafayette, and
a host of others—social leaders like them, and she even enjoyed the
sympathy, if not the patronage, of the cold and prudish Marie Antoinette
herself.
"But little knowledge of the real
character of Paul Jones, but little insight into the alike fierce and
gentle chivalry that was the inspiration of all his conduct, are needed
to perceive that his public attentions to the lovely woman who gave
herself to him with a singleness of devotion seldom seen, would
naturally have been of the most discreet character and studiously
planned to mask any relation, or semblance of one, equivocal.
"As for the absence of contemporary
animadversions, we think it may be concisely accounted for by the
knowledge, general at the time, of the Commodore's abrupt and not always
altogether harmless methods of adjusting personal affairs, either on his
own behalf or on that of those who might claim his protection or enjoy
his affection." |