Read The Hidden Diary of Marie Antoinette Online
Authors: Carolly Erickson
January 3, 1785
Dr. Sundersen says it will only be a few short weeks before my baby is born. I am very large and can only wear my loose-flowing tunic-style gowns, the ones I call my “Aristotle” gowns. I look absurd in court gowns. I am so large I might be having twins, only there are no twins in my family or Louis’s that I am aware of.
Our holidays were somewhat spoiled by all the criticism of me. In Paris it is being said openly that I have created a “Little Vienna” on the grounds of the Petit Trianon and that I have spent millions of francs on my little hamlet. It was expensive, I admit, to divert the stream that runs the mill, and to create the lake. But the eight cottages were not very costly and I have built them, along with the barns and orchards and animal pens, as an act of charity. Eight peasant families were brought here to live in the cottages, but three of the families moved
out almost immediately complaining that the chimneys were clogged and that they could not grow grain in the poor earth.
The hamlet is not yet a complete success but we have harvested many sacks of oranges and my two prize cows, Brunette and Blanchette, give rich milk which Louis-Joseph drinks greedily. The ground is fallow now but will be planted in the spring and by fall there will be grain to grind in the mill. Or so I hope.
February 16, 1785
I have a large bundle of letters from Axel, who is glad about my having another baby and hopes it will be a boy.
“Gustavus is enraptured with Italy,” he writes. “He talks of nothing but how warm it is in Florence now and how cold it would be if we were in Sweden. He cannot quite believe that it rarely snows in Florence and never snows at all in Rome. We are going south to Rome soon and will stay there several months before going on to Naples.”
I am dismayed. It sounds as though Axel will be away for a long time. I need him.
Thankfully I have had no further visits from Eleanora Sullivan.
April 1, 1785
I cannot say enough about my dear new son, my big healthy bouncing boy. After being sick so much during my pregnancy I expected a long and painful labor but he surprised me by being born quickly and easily—God be thanked!
He is taking the wetnurse’s milk greedily and almost never cries. His body is perfect, round and pink and soft. Thank
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heaven I am capable of having a healthy son. Now if poor little Louis-Joseph were to die (everyone whispers about it) there would still be an heir for France.
April 20, 1785
Joseph sends me congratulations on the birth of my little Louis-Charles but says nothing of his violations of Austria’s treaty with France. Joseph is so aggressive, so unlike our mother who was wise and content with the large domain she inherited from her august father. Joseph always wants more. Now he covets some lands in the Low Countries and our ministers are threatening to go to war over this.
The ministers seek out Louis every day or so because of some crisis, either the constant lack of money in the treasury or a diplomatic issue like this trouble caused by Joseph, or some other difficulty. Louis goes hunting to avoid them, so they come looking for me. They came this afternoon.
April 22, 1785
I dislike meeting with the ministers because I cannot possibly understand all of France’s treaties and interests abroad, and because the ministers all hate and resent me, they do their best to make me feel ignorant. But I see through this (how could I fail to, after all these years?) and stand firm. I ask them to explain, slowly and clearly, what the problem is and what our choices are. Then I say, I am going to consult my husband. Then I wait awhile, summon the ministers and give a reply.
It is all a pretense, of course. I would gladly consult my husband but he will not listen. He runs away or puts his hands over his ears. You decide, he tells me. And the worst of it is,
the more I do decide, and the more adept I become at standing up to the ministers, the more excuse Louis has to leave everything to me.
I cannot extricate myself from this dilemma, and it weighs heavily on me.
Meanwhile, on this matter of Joseph’s breaking the treaty, I have decided that France should give way on this issue of the Dutch lands. We will not threaten war—but I will write to Joseph and tell him that he must pay the Dutch a large compensation and that if he breaks other treaty promises I will tell the generals to take our troops to the borders and be ready to attack. I hope this will not be necessary as we have no funds to pay the troops. Our enemies do not realize this, but unless new loans are raised, France cannot even afford to defend herself, much less attack.
June 1, 1785
Count Mercy cautions me that someone has been reading my journal again and passing on information in it. He thinks there are spies in my household. Ever since Amélie’s arrest he has been more worried than ever. I must not write any more until I have found a more secure hiding place. The count was very angry at me for being careless in writing too candidly of things that could endanger the safety of my brother’s government and also that of France.
December 16, 1785
At last I feel I can write safely in this journal again. I have found a new and more secure place to keep it. It has been six months since my last entry, but I have been jotting down short
messages on scraps of paper and hiding them in a big yellow Chinese jar that no one ever looks in or lifts up to clean because it is too heavy.
I am now going to list the most important of these messages:
First, two hundred of my servants have been dismissed in order to reduce the expenses of my household. Some of those dismissed were caught stealing things. Second, I am pregnant again. Third, we have had a great deal of rain, far more than usual. Fourth, there was a terrible balloon crash in the Channel between France and England, the waterway we call the Sleeve. Everyone was shocked and grieved. These are the most important things.
February 2, 1786
I read Axel’s most recent letter with dread. “Dearest little angel,” he wrote, “I will be returning to Stockholm with Gustavus in May. I must attend to family matters that I have been neglecting for far too long.”
What could he mean, except that he intends to marry Margaretta von Roddinge? I am heartsore.
He will marry her, they will settle down together. He will grow to love her and I will become only a lovely dim memory. They will have children and he will become a devoted husband and father. I will never see him again.
April 24, 1786
It does me good to walk through the hamlet at the Petit Trianon and help with the spring planting. My belly is very big with the new baby, who is due to be born in three months, but I can still walk in the ploughed fields with my peasant tenants
and throw out the seeds. The air is full of the scent of apple blossoms, and I remember how, as a child, mother took me in her arms and walked with me in the palace orchards when the trees were in full bloom. Under the eaves of the cottages swallows have built their nests and the baby birds are just starting to hatch out.
Everywhere there is new life, growth, expansion. But inside the palace, all is rot and decay. My apartments, which I redecorated before Louis-Joseph was born, are still beautiful and striking, yet if I look closely I can see, even there, peeling paint and bare patches where gilding has been scraped off with a knife to be sold. Scratched floors and chipped furniture have never been repaired. Carpets are stained. A musky odor hangs over everything, especially when it rains.
My apartments are quite livable, as are the grand salons and reception rooms, but most of the hundreds of rooms in the great palace of Versailles are all but in ruins, full of mold, with rats running over the marble floors and mice chewing on the brocaded sofas and carved table legs. Holes in the roof let in all the winter rains. Each year more rooms have to be abandoned. Palace officials and servants have to find expensive lodgings in the town, and landlords take advantage of them shamefully. Something should really be done about all this sad decay but without enough money for repairs, nothing can be undertaken.
May 21, 1786
The word whispered throughout the court this spring is bankruptcy. No one has any money, everyone is borrowing from everyone else. The servants’ wages are unpaid, so they think they are justified in stealing furniture and curios and objets d’art, even the lace trimmings from gowns. All the gold curtain
tassels have been gone for years. Steel shoe buckles and steel buttons are coming into fashion, not only because they are “republican” and therefore stylish, but because the servants have stolen most of the gold buckles and jeweled buttons. The thieves cannot be found and punished, there are far too many of them. Thievery is an unpleasant fact of life, and spreads mistrust and suspicion.
Despite all the bankruptcies and complaints about lack of money, the court is lively, there is a frenzy for new fads, new styles and colors. Sophie and Loulou amuse me by showing off the new gowns with ruffs at the neck in the style they call “Henry IV” after the cynical Renaissance king. Louis’s pet zebra, a gift from the King of Senegal, has been made the emblem of fashion and his black and white stripes are on everything from hats to stockings. Charlot has a zebra-striped balloon which draws crowds when he sails in it over the palace rooftops.
André has created whimsical hairstyles called African Zebra and Hedgehog and Fat Goose to match the revived color Goose-Droppings that everyone is wearing.
It is all very amusing. We cannot be anxious and gloomy all the time. Besides, I must keep a positive attitude for the sake of the little one I am carrying inside me. I secretly hope it will be a girl this time, a pretty blond angel like my Mousseline, who is temperamental but beautiful. I wait in hope.
March 6, 1787
God help me, but there are times when I wish I were dead.
More nasty vicious unsigned letters have been sent to me, and I could not help but read them. People are so wicked, so monstrous! When will they stop trying to torment me? I am only trying to help Louis, to do my best.
March 17, 1787
This accursed Assembly of Notables—it should be called an Assembly of Nobodies, Stanny says, and I agree with him—is proving to be a miserable failure. I am being blamed, as usual, for wrecking it, but the truth is, the delegates themselves are to blame. It was the controller-general Calonne who urged that a gathering of “notables” from all over France meet in Paris to promote reforms. He organized it, and he tried to influence its discussions. When the notables rebelled and were reduced to arguing and squabbling, Louis dismissed Calonne. It was his idea, I had nothing to do with it, no matter what Calonne himself says.
I wish someone would come to my defense. It is not my fault that France can no longer raise loans or that Louis is running out of officials to appoint. He has nightmares that the English fleet will invade our shores and conquer us. He cries out in his
sleep, “I surrender! I surrender!” When this happens, Calonne is not there to comfort him, or all the Notables. I comfort him. I reassure him. And the next day I meet with the ministers, at Louis’s insistence, because he cannot bring himself to meet with them as he should. I am the only one he trusts. I cannot let him down.
April 6, 1787
The Assembly of Notables limps on, and I limp on too, though the demands of my four children are often too much for me. My littlest one, my tiny Sophie, I can hardly bear to write about. She was so small and weak when she was born that Dr. Sundersen shook his head and patted my arm in sympathy. No words were necessary. I knew he thought she would soon die. Yet to everyone’s surprise she managed to suckle, and she is still here, though tiny and feeble.
I sit beside Sophie’s cradle at night and rock her and sing to her, and sometimes Louis-Joseph climbs up into my lap and nestles against me. Louis-Charles, my healthy son, delights me with his strength and vigor, yet he fears the dark and cries out for me at night. And Mousseline sometimes needs soothing and comfort as well, even though she is going on nine years old and very much a young lady.
I need sleep. I am often worn out during the day. Dr. Boisgilbert says my body has been overtaxed with four pregnancies. Yet peasant women often have ten or twelve pregnancies by the time they are my age, nearly thirty-two, and still have the strength to till the fields and harvest the crops alongside the men. I think I am overtaxed from worry.
May 26, 1787
Yesterday the new principal minister, Archbishop Loménie de Brienne, dismissed the Assembly of Notables and sent them home. They were very angry and I’m sure we have not heard the last of them. The real question is, can the new government raise new loans?
June 12, 1787
It has been raining for a weekand I have not been able to go out. All my usual vexations irritate me. Sophie refuses to nurse.
June 15, 1787
Sophie still will not nurse and cries a lot. I stay with her. June 17, 1787
All I can do is pray. Please, dear lord, don’t let my little girl die.
June 23, 1787
Two days ago we attended the funeral mass for Sophie and buried her in the lemon grove at the Petit Trianon, next to the stone I put there in remembrance of my miscarried baby all those years ago.
Hardly anyone came to Sophie’s funeral. She was of no importance to anyone but me, even though she was a princess of
France. She did not live quite a year. May God preserve her precious soul.
July 13, 1787
I have hardly left my room since Sophie died, and I have no appetite. My children are my comfort, especially my little chou d’amour, as I like to call him, Louis-Charles, who is two years old now and cannot keep still, he is so full of high spirits. Mousseline and Louis-Joseph play cards, chou d’amour chases the pugs and runs laughing along the corridor with Sophie chasing him. Abbé Vermond has been very kind to me. His presence is always a consolation. I realized recently that he has been my confessor since I was twelve or thirteen years old—nearly twenty years. He has been with me, at my side whenever I need him, all that time.