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<h2> MAURICE OF SAXONY AND ADRIENNE LECOUVREUR </h2>
<p>It is an old saying that to every womanly woman self-sacrifice is almost a
necessity of her nature. To make herself of small account as compared with
the one she loves; to give freely of herself, even though she may receive
nothing in return; to suffer, and yet to feel an inner poignant joy in all
this suffering—here is a most wonderful trait of womanhood. Perhaps
it is akin to the maternal instinct; for to the mother, after she has felt
the throb of a new life within her, there is no sacrifice so great and no
anguish so keen that she will not welcome it as the outward sign and
evidence of her illimitable love.</p>
<p>In most women this spirit of self-sacrifice is checked and kept within
ordinary bounds by the circumstances of their lives. In many small things
they do yield and they do suffer; yet it is not in yielding and in
suffering that they find their deepest joy.</p>
<p>There are some, however, who seem to have been born with an abnormal
capacity for enduring hardship and mental anguish; so that by a sort of
contradiction they find their happiness in sorrow. Such women are endowed
with a remarkable degree of sensibility. They feel intensely. In moments
of grief and disappointment, and even of despair, there steals over them a
sort of melancholy pleasure. It is as if they loved dim lights and
mournful music and scenes full of sad suggestion.</p>
<p>If everything goes well with them, they are unwilling to believe that such
good fortune will last. If anything goes wrong with them, they are sure
that this is only the beginning of something even worse. The music of
their lives is written in a minor key.</p>
<p>Now, for such women as these, the world at large has very little charity.
It speaks slightingly of them as "agonizers." It believes that they are
"fond of making scenes." It regards as an affectation something that is
really instinctive and inevitable. Unless such women are beautiful and
young and charming they are treated badly; and this is often true in spite
of all their natural attractiveness, for they seem to court ill usage as
if they were saying frankly:</p>
<p>"Come, take us! We will give you everything and ask for nothing. We do not
expect true and enduring love. Do not be constant or generous or even
kind. We know that we shall suffer. But, none the less, in our sorrow
there will be sweetness, and even in our abasement we shall feel a sort of
triumph."</p>
<p>In history there is one woman who stands out conspicuously as a type of
her melancholy sisterhood, one whose life was full of disappointment even
when she was most successful, and of indignity even when she was most
sought after and admired. This woman was Adrienne Lecouvreur, famous in
the annals of the stage, and still more famous in the annals of unrequited—or,
at any rate, unhappy—love.</p>
<p>Her story is linked with that of a man no less remarkable than herself, a
hero of chivalry, a marvel of courage, of fascination, and of
irresponsibility.</p>
<p>Adrienne Lecouvreur—her name was originally Couvreur—was born
toward the end of the seventeenth century in the little French village of
Damery, not far from Rheims, where her aunt was a laundress and her father
a hatter in a small way. Of her mother, who died in childbirth, we know
nothing; but her father was a man of gloomy and ungovernable temper,
breaking out into violent fits of passion, in one of which, long
afterward, he died, raving and yelling like a maniac.</p>
<p>Adrienne was brought up at the wash-tub, and became accustomed to a
wandering life, in which she went from one town to another. What she had
inherited from her mother is, of course, not known; but she had all her
father's strangely pessimistic temper, softened only by the fact that she
was a girl. From her earliest years she was unhappy; yet her unhappiness
was largely of her own choosing. Other girls of her own station met life
cheerfully, worked away from dawn till dusk, and then had their moments of
amusement, and even jollity, with their companions, after the fashion of
all children. But Adrienne Lecouvreur was unhappy because she chose to be.
It was not the wash-tub that made her so, for she had been born to it; nor
was it the half-mad outbreaks of her father, because to her, at least, he
was not unkind. Her discontent sprang from her excessive sensibility.</p>
<p>Indeed, for a peasant child she had reason to think herself far more
fortunate than her associates. Her intelligence was great. Ambition was
awakened in her before she was ten years of age, when she began to learn
and to recite poems—learning them, as has been said, "between the
wash-tub and the ironing-board," and reciting them to the admiration of
older and wiser people than she. Even at ten she was a very beautiful
child, with great lambent eyes, an exquisite complexion, and a lovely
form, while she had the further gift of a voice that thrilled the listener
and, when she chose, brought tears to every eye. She was, indeed, a
natural elocutionist, knowing by instinct all those modulations of tone
and varied cadences which go to the hearer's heart.</p>
<p>It was very like Adrienne Lecouvreur to memorize only such poems as were
mournful, just as in after life she could win success upon the stage only
in tragic parts. She would repeat with a sort of ecstasy the pathetic
poems that were then admired; and she was soon able to give up her menial
work, because many people asked her to their houses so that they could
listen to the divinely beautiful voice charged with the emotion which was
always at her command.</p>
<p>When she was thirteen her father moved to Paris, where she was placed at
school—a very humble school in a very humble quarter of the city.
Yet even there her genius showed itself at that early age. A number of
children and young people, probably influenced by Adrienne, formed
themselves into a theatrical company from the pure love of acting. A
friendly grocer let them have an empty store-room for their performances,
and in this store-room Adrienne Lecouvreur first acted in a tragedy by
Corneille, assuming the part of leading woman.</p>
<p>Her genius for the stage was like the genius of Napoleon for war. She had
had no teaching. She had never been inside of any theater; and yet she
delivered the magnificent lines with all the power and fire and
effectiveness of a most accomplished actress. People thronged to see her
and to feel the tempest of emotion which shook her as she sustained her
part, which for the moment was as real to her as life itself.</p>
<p>At first only the people of the neighborhood knew anything about these
amateur performances; but presently a lady of rank, one Mme. du Gue, came
out of curiosity and was fascinated by the little actress. Mme. du Gue
offered the spacious courtyard of her own house, and fitted it with some
of the appurtenances of a theater. From that moment the fame of Adrienne
spread throughout all Paris. The courtyard was crowded by gentlemen and
ladies, by people of distinction from the court, and at last even by
actors and actresses from the Comedie Franchise.</p>
<p>It is, in fact, a remarkable tribute to Adrienne that in her thirteenth
year she excited so much jealousy among the actors of the Comedie that
they evoked the law against her. Theaters required a royal license, and of
course poor little Adrienne's company had none. Hence legal proceedings
were begun, and the most famous actresses in Paris talked of having these
clever children imprisoned! Upon this the company sought the precincts of
the Temple, where no legal warrant could be served without the express
order of the king himself.</p>
<p>There for a time the performances still went on. Finally, as the other
children were not geniuses, but merely boys and girls in search of fun,
the little company broke up. Its success, however, had determined for ever
the career of Adrienne. With her beautiful face, her lithe and exquisite
figure, her golden voice, and her instinctive art, it was plain enough
that her future lay upon the stage; and so at fourteen or fifteen she
began where most actresses leave off—accomplished and attractive,
and having had a practical training in her profession.</p>
<p>Diderot, in that same century, observed that the truest actor is one who
does not feel his part at all, but produces his effects by intellectual
effort and intelligent observation. Behind the figure on the stage, torn
with passion or rollicking with mirth, there must always be the cool and
unemotional mind which directs and governs and controls. This same theory
was both held and practised by the late Benoit Constant Coquelin. To some
extent it was the theory of Garrick and Fechter and Edwin Booth; though it
was rejected by the two Keans, and by Edwin Forrest, who entered so
throughly into the character which he assumed, and who let loose such
tremendous bursts of passion that other actors dreaded to support him on
the stage in such parts as Spartacus and Metamora.</p>
<p>It is needless to say that a girl like Adrienne Lecouvreur flung herself
with all the intensity of her nature into every role she played. This was
the greatest secret of her success; for, with her, nature rose superior to
art. On the other hand, it fixed her dramatic limitations, for it barred
her out of comedy. Her melancholy, morbid disposition was in the fullest
sympathy with tragic heroines; but she failed when she tried to represent
the lighter moods and the merry moments of those who welcome mirth. She
could counterfeit despair, and unforced tears would fill her eyes; but she
could not laugh and romp and simulate a gaiety that was never hers.</p>
<p>Adrienne would have been delighted to act at one of the theaters in Paris;
but they were closed to her through jealousy. She went into the provinces,
in the eastern part of France, and for ten years she was a leading lady
there in many companies and in many towns. As she blossomed into womanhood
there came into her life the love which was to be at once a source of the
most profound interest and of the most intense agony.</p>
<p>It is odd that all her professional success never gave her any happiness.
The life of the actress who traveled from town to town, the crude and
coarse experiences which she had to undergo, the disorder and the
unsettled mode of living, all produced in her a profound disgust. She was
of too exquisite a fiber to live in such a way, especially in a century
when the refinements of existence were for the very few.</p>
<p>She speaks herself of "obligatory amusements, the insistence of men, and
of love affairs." Yet how could such a woman as Adrienne Lecouvreur keep
herself from love affairs? The motion of the stage and its mimic griefs
satisfied her only while she was actually upon the boards. Love offered
her an emotional excitement that endured and that was always changing. It
was "the profoundest instinct of her being"; and she once wrote: "What
could one do in the world without loving?"</p>
<p>Still, through these ten years she seems to have loved only that she might
be unhappy. There was a strange twist in her mind. Men who were honorable
and who loved her with sincerity she treated very badly. Men who were
indifferent or ungrateful or actually base she seemed to choose by a sort
of perverse instinct. Perhaps the explanation of it is that during those
ten years, though she had many lovers, she never really loved. She sought
excitement, passion, and after that the mournfulness which comes when
passion dies. Thus, one man after another came into her life—some of
them promising marriage—and she bore two children, whose fathers
were unknown, or at least uncertain. But, after all, one can scarcely pity
her, since she had not yet in reality known that great passion which comes
but once in life. So far she had learned only a sort of feeble cynicism,
which she expressed in letters and in such sayings as these:</p>
<p>"There are sweet errors which I would not venture to commit again. My
experiences, all too sad, have served to illumine my reason."</p>
<p>"I am utterly weary of love and prodigiously tempted to have no more of it
for the rest of my life; because, after all, I don't wish either to die or
to go mad."</p>
<p>Yet she also said: "I know too well that no one dies of grief."</p>
<p>She had had, indeed, some very unfortunate experiences. Men of rank had
loved her and had then cast her off. An actor, one Clavel, would have
married her, but she would not accept his offer. A magistrate in Strasburg
promised marriage; and then, when she was about to accept him, he wrote to
her that he was going to yield to the wishes of his family and make a more
advantageous alliance. And so she was alternately caressed and repulsed—a
mere plaything; and yet this was probably all that she really needed at
the time—something to stir her, something to make her mournful or
indignant or ashamed.</p>
<p>It was inevitable that at last Adrienne Lecouvreur should appear in Paris.
She had won such renown throughout the provinces that even those who were
intensely jealous of her were obliged to give her due consideration. In
1717, when she was in her twenty-fifth year, she became a member of the
Comedie Franchise. There she made an immediate and most brilliant
impression. She easily took the leading place. She was one of the glories
of Paris, for she became the fashion outside the theater. For the first
time the great classic plays were given, not in the monotonous singsong
which had become a sort of theatrical convention, but with all the fire
and naturalness of life.</p>
<p>Being the fashion, Mlle. Lecouvreur elevated the social rank of actors and
of actresses. Her salon was thronged by men and women of rank. Voltaire
wrote poems in her honor. To be invited to her dinners was almost like
receiving a decoration from the king. She ought to have been happy, for
she had reached the summit of her profession and something more.</p>
<p>Yet still she was unhappy. In all her letters one finds a plaintive tone,
a little moaning sound that shows how slightly her nature had been
changed. No longer, however, did she throw herself away upon dullards or
brutes. An English peer—Lord Peterborough—not realizing that
she was different from other actresses of that loose-lived age, said to
her coarsely at his first introduction:</p>
<p>"Come now! Show me lots of wit and lots of love."</p>
<p>The remark was characteristic of the time. Yet Adrienne had learned at
least one thing, and that was the discontent which came from light
affairs. She had thrown herself away too often. If she could not love with
her entire being, if she could not give all that was in her to be given,
whether of her heart or mind or soul, then she would love no more at all.</p>
<p>At this time there came to Paris a man remarkable in his own century, and
one who afterward became almost a hero of romance. This was Maurice, Comte
de Saxe, as the French called him, his German name and title being Moritz,
Graf von Sachsen, while we usually term him, in English, Marshal Saxe.
Maurice de Saxe was now, in 1721, entering his twenty-fifth year. Already,
though so young, his career had been a strange one; and it was destined to
be still more remarkable. He was the natural son of Duke Augustus II. of
Saxony, who later became King of Poland, and who is known in history as
Augustus the Strong.</p>
<p>Augustus was a giant in stature and in strength, handsome, daring,
unscrupulous, and yet extremely fascinating. His life was one of revelry
and fighting and display. When in his cups he would often call for a
horseshoe and twist it into a knot with his powerful fingers. Many were
his mistresses; but the one for whom he cared the most was a beautiful and
high-spirited Swedish girl of rank, Aurora von Konigsmarck. She was
descended from a rough old field-marshal who in the Thirty Years' War had
slashed and sacked and pillaged and plundered to his heart's content. From
him Aurora von Konigsmarck seemed to have inherited a high spirit and a
sort of lawlessness which charmed the stalwart Augustus of Poland.</p>
<p>Their son, Maurice de Saxe, inherited everything that was good in his
parents, and a great deal that was less commendable. As a mere child of
twelve he had insisted on joining the army of Prince Eugene, and had seen
rough service in a very strenuous campaign. Two years later he showed such
daring on the battle-field that Prince Eugene summoned him and paid him a
compliment under the form of a rebuke.</p>
<p>"Young man," he said, "you must not mistake mere recklessness for valor."</p>
<p>Before he was twenty he had attained the stature and strength of his royal
father; and, to prove it, he in his turn called for a horseshoe, which he
twisted and broke in his fingers. He fought on the side of the Russians
and Poles, and again against the Turks, everywhere displaying high courage
and also genius as a commander; for he never lost his self-possession amid
the very blackest danger, but possessed, as Carlyle says, "vigilance,
foresight, and sagacious precaution."</p>
<p>Exceedingly handsome, Maurice was a master of all the arts that pleased,
with just a touch of roughness, which seemed not unfitting in so gallant a
soldier. His troops adored him and would follow wherever he might choose
to lead them; for he exercised over these rude men a magnetic power
resembling that of Napoleon in after years. In private life he was a hard
drinker and fond of every form of pleasure. Having no fortune of his own,
a marriage was arranged for him with the Countess von Loben, who was
immensely wealthy; but in three years he had squandered all her money upon
his pleasures, and had, moreover, got himself heavily in debt.</p>
<p>It was at this time that he first came to Paris to study military tactics.
He had fought hard against the French in the wars that were now ended; but
his chivalrous bearing, his handsome person, and his reckless joviality
made him at once a universal favorite in Paris. To the perfumed courtiers,
with their laces and lovelocks and mincing ways, Maurice de Saxe came as a
sort of knight of old—jovial, daring, pleasure-loving. Even his
broken French was held to be quite charming; and to see him break a
horseshoe with his fingers threw every one into raptures.</p>
<p>No wonder, then, that he was welcomed in the very highest circles. Almost
at once he attracted the notice of the Princesse de Conti, a beautiful
woman of the blood royal. Of her it has been said that she was "the
personification of a kiss, the incarnation of an embrace, the ideal of a
dream of love." Her chestnut hair was tinted with little gleams of gold.
Her eyes were violet black. Her complexion was dazzling. But by the king's
orders she had been forced to marry a hunchback—a man whose very
limbs were so weakened by disease and evil living that they would often
fail to support him, and he would fall to the ground, a writhing,
screaming mass of ill-looking flesh.</p>
<p>It is not surprising that his lovely wife should have shuddered much at
his abuse of her and still more at his grotesque endearments. When her
eyes fell on Maurice de Saxe she saw in him one who could free her from
her bondage. By a skilful trick he led the Prince de Conti to invade the
sleeping-room of the princess, with servants, declaring that she was not
alone. The charge proved quite untrue, and so she left her husband, having
won the sympathy of her own world, which held that she had been insulted.
But it was not she who was destined to win and hold the love of Maurice de
Saxe.</p>
<p>Not long after his appearance in the French capital he was invited to dine
with the "Queen of Paris," Adrienne Lecouvreur. Saxe had seen her on the
stage. He knew her previous history. He knew that she was very much of a
soiled dove; but when he met her these two natures, so utterly dissimilar,
leaped together, as it were, through the indescribable attraction of
opposites. He was big and powerful; she was small and fragile. He was
merry, and full of quips and jests; she was reserved and melancholy. Each
felt in the other a need supplied.</p>
<p>At one of their earliest meetings the climax came. Saxe was not the man to
hesitate; while she already, in her thoughts, had made a full surrender.
In one great sweep he gathered her into his arms. It appeared to her as if
no man had ever laid his hand upon her until that moment. She cried out:</p>
<p>"Now, for the first time in my life, I seem to live!"</p>
<p>It was, indeed, the very first love which in her checkered career was
really worthy of the name. She had supposed that all such things were
passed and gone, that her heart was closed for ever, that she was
invulnerable; and yet here she found herself clinging about the neck of
this impetuous soldier and showing him all the shy fondness and the
unselfish devotion of a young girl. From this instant Adrienne Lecouvreur
never loved another man and never even looked at any other man with the
slightest interest. For nine long years the two were bound together,
though there were strange events to ruffle the surface of their love.</p>
<p>Maurice de Saxe had been sired by a king. He had the lofty ambition to be
a king himself, and he felt the stirrings of that genius which in after
years was to make him a great soldier, and to win the brilliant victory of
Fontenoy, which to this very day the French are never tired of recalling.
Already Louis XV. had made him a marshal of France; and a certain
restlessness came over him. He loved Adrienne; yet he felt that to remain
in the enjoyment of her witcheries ought not to be the whole of a man's
career.</p>
<p>Then the Grand Duchy of Courland—at that time a vassal state of
Poland, now part of Russia—sought a ruler. Maurice de Saxe was eager
to secure its throne, which would make him at least semi-royal and the
chief of a principality. He hastened thither and found that money was
needed to carry out his plans. The widow of the late duke—the Grand
Duchess Anna, niece of Peter the Great, and later Empress of Russia—as
soon as she had met this dazzling genius, offered to help him to acquire
the duchy if he would only marry her. He did not utterly refuse. Still
another woman of high rank, the Grand Duchess Elizabeth of Russia, Peter
the Great's daughter, made him very much the same proposal.</p>
<p>Both of these imperial women might well have attracted a man like Maurice
de Saxe, had he been wholly fancy-free, for the second of them inherited
the high spirit and the genius of the great Peter, while the first was a
pleasure-seeking princess, resembling some of those Roman empresses who
loved to stoop that they might conquer. She is described as indolent and
sensual, and she once declared that the chief good in the world was love.
Yet, though she neglected affairs of state and gave them over to
favorites, she won and kept the affections of her people. She was
unquestionably endowed with the magnetic gift of winning hearts.</p>
<p>Adrienne, who was left behind in Paris, knew very little of what was going
on. Only two things were absolutely clear to her. One was that if her
lover secured the duchy he must be parted from her. The other was that
without money his ambition must be thwarted, and that he would then return
to her. Here was a test to try the soul of any woman. It proved the height
and the depth of her devotion. Come what might, Maurice should be Duke of
Courland, even though she lost him. She gathered together her whole
fortune, sold every jewel that she possessed, and sent her lover the sum
of nearly a million francs.</p>
<p>This incident shows how absolutely she was his. But in fact, because of
various intrigues, he failed of election to the ducal throne of Courland,
and he returned to Adrienne with all her money spent, and without even the
grace, at first, to show his gratitude. He stormed and raged over his ill
luck. She merely soothed and petted him, though she had heard that he had
thought of marrying another woman to secure the dukedom. In one of her
letters she bursts out with the pitiful exclamation:</p>
<p>I am distracted with rage and anguish. Is it not natural to cry out
against such treachery? This man surely ought to know me—he ought to
love me. Oh, my God! What are we—what ARE we?</p>
<p>But still she could not give him up, nor could he give her up, though
there were frightful scenes between them—times when he cruelly
reproached her and when her native melancholy deepened into outbursts of
despair. Finally there occurred an incident which is more or less obscure
in parts. The Duchesse de Bouillon, a great lady of the court—facile,
feline, licentious, and eager for delights—resolved that she would
win the love of Maurice de Saxe. She set herself to win it openly and
without any sense of shame. Maurice himself at times, when the tears of
Adrienne proved wearisome, flirted with the duchess.</p>
<p>Yet, even so, Adrienne held the first place in his heart, and her rival
knew it. Therefore she resolved to humiliate Adrienne, and to do so in the
place where the actress had always reigned supreme. There was to be a gala
performance of Racine's great tragedy, "Phedre," with Adrienne, of course,
in the title-role. The Duchesse de Bouillon sent a large number of her
lackeys with orders to hiss and jeer, and, if possible, to break off the
play. Malignantly delighted with her plan, the duchess arrayed herself in
jewels and took her seat in a conspicuous stage-box, where she could watch
the coming storm and gloat over the discomfiture of her rival.</p>
<p>When the curtain rose, and when Adrienne appeared as Phedre, an uproar
began. It was clear to the great actress that a plot had been devised
against her. In an instant her whole soul was afire. The queen-like
majesty of her bearing compelled silence throughout the house. Even the
hired lackeys were overawed by it. Then Adrienne moved swiftly across the
stage and fronted her enemy, speaking into her very face the three
insulting lines which came to her at that moment of the play:</p>
<p>I am not of those women void of shame,<br/>
Who, savoring in crime the joys of peace,<br/>
Harden their faces till they cannot blush!<br/></p>
<p>The whole house rose and burst forth into tremendous applause. Adrienne
had won, for the woman who had tried to shame her rose in trepidation and
hurried from the theater.</p>
<p>But the end was not yet. Those were evil times, when dark deeds were
committed by the great almost with impunity. Secret poisoning was a common
trade. To remove a rival was as usual a thing in the eighteenth century as
to snub a rival is usual in the twentieth.</p>
<p>Not long afterward, on the night of March 15, 1730, Adrienne Lecouvreur
was acting in one of Voltaire's plays with all her power and instinctive
art when suddenly she was seized with the most frightful pains. Her
anguish was obvious to every one who saw her, and yet she had the courage
to go through her part. Then she fainted and was carried home.</p>
<p>Four days later she died, and her death was no less dramatic than her life
had been. Her lover and two friends of his were with her, and also a
Jesuit priest. He declined to administer extreme unction unless she would
declare that she repented of her theatrical career. She stubbornly
refused, since she believed that to be the greatest actress of her time
was not a sin. Yet still the priest insisted.</p>
<p>Then came the final moment.</p>
<p>"Weary and revolting against this death, this destiny, she stretched her
arms with one of the old lovely gestures toward a bust which stood near by
and cried—her last cry of passion:</p>
<p>"'There is my world, my hope—yes, and my God!'"</p>
<p>The bust was one of Maurice de Saxe.</p>
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