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<h2> CHAPTER V. </h2>
<h3> 1610, 1611. </h3>
<p>THE JESUITS AND THEIR PATRONESS.</p>
<p>Poutrincourt, we have seen, owned Port Royal in virtue of a grant from De
Monts. The ardent and adventurous baron was in evil case, involved in
litigation and low in purse; but nothing could damp his zeal. Acadia must
become a new France, and he, Poutrincourt, must be its father. He gained
from the King a confirmation of his grant, and, to supply the lack of his
own weakened resources, associated with himself one Robin, a man of family
and wealth. This did not save him from a host of delays and vexations; and
it was not until the spring of 1610 that he found himself in a condition
to embark on his new and doubtful venture.</p>
<p>Meanwhile an influence, of sinister omen as he thought, had begun to act
upon his schemes. The Jesuits were strong at court. One of their number,
the famous Father Coton, was confessor to Henry the Fourth, and, on
matters of this world as of the next, was ever whispering at the facile
ear of the renegade King. New France offered a fresh field of action to
the indefatigable Society of Jesus, and Coton urged upon the royal
convert, that, for the saving of souls, some of its members should be
attached to the proposed enterprise. The King, profoundly indifferent in
matters of religion, saw no evil in a proposal which at least promised to
place the Atlantic betwixt him and some of those busy friends whom at
heart he deeply mistrusted. Other influences, too, seconded the confessor.
Devout ladies of the court, and the Queen herself, supplying the lack of
virtue with an overflowing piety, burned, we are assured, with a holy zeal
for snatching the tribes of the West from the bondage of Satan. Therefore
it was insisted that the projected colony should combine the spiritual
with the temporal character,—or, in other words, that Poutrincourt
should take Jesuits with him. Pierre Biard, Professor of Theology at
Lyons, was named for the mission, and repaired in haste to Bordeaux, the
port of embarkation, where he found no vessel, and no sign of preparation;
and here, in wrath and discomfiture, he remained for a whole year.</p>
<p>That Poutrincourt was a good Catholic appears from a letter to the Pope,
written for him in Latin by Lescarbot, asking a blessing on his
enterprise, and assuring his Holiness that one of his grand objects was
the saving of souls. But, like other good citizens, he belonged to the
national party in the Church, those liberal Catholics, who, side by side
with the Huguenots, had made head against the League, with its Spanish
allies, and placed Henry the Fourth upon the throne. The Jesuits, an order
Spanish in origin and policy, determined champions of ultramontane
principles, the sword and shield of the Papacy in its broadest pretensions
to spiritual and temporal sway, were to him, as to others of his party,
objects of deep dislike and distrust. He feared them in his colony, evaded
what he dared not refuse, left Biarci waiting in solitude at Bordeax, and
sought to postpone the evil day by assuring Father Coton that, though Port
Royal was at present in no state to receive the missionaries, preparation
should be made to entertain them the next year after a befitting fashion.</p>
<p>Poutrincourt owned the barony of St. Just in Champagne, inherited a few
years before from his mother. Hence, early in February, 1610, he set out
in a boat loaded to the gunwales with provisions, furniture, goods, and
munitions for Port Royal, descended the rivers Aube and Seine, and reached
Dieppe safely with his charge. Here his ship was awaiting him; and on the
twenty-sixth of February he set sail, giving the slip to the indignant
Jesuit at Bordeaux.</p>
<p>The tedium of a long passage was unpleasantly broken by a mutiny among the
crew. It was suppressed, however, and Poutrincourt entered at length the
familiar basin of Port Royal. The buildings were still standing, whole and
sound save a partial falling in of the roofs. Even furniture was found
untouched in the deserted chambers. The centenarian Membertou was still
alive, his leathern, wrinkled visage beaming with welcome.</p>
<p>Pontrincourt set himself without delay to the task of Christianizing New
France, in an access of zeal which his desire of proving that Jesuit aid
was superfluous may be supposed largely to have reinforced. He had a
priest with him, one La Fleche, whom he urged to the pious work. No time
was lost. Membertou first was catechised, confessed his sins, and
renounced the Devil, whom we are told he had faithfully served during a
hundred and ten years. His squaws, his children, his grandchildren, and
his entire clan were next won over. It was in June, the day of St. John
the Baptist, when the naked proselytes, twenty-one in number, were
gathered on the shore at Port Royal. Here was the priest in the vestments
of his office; here were gentlemen in gay attire, soldiers, laborers,
lackeys, all the infant colony. The converts kneeled; the sacred rite was
finished, Te Deum was sung, and the roar of cannon proclaimed this triumph
over the powers of darkness. Membertou was named Henri, after the King;
his principal squaw, Marie, after the Queen. One of his sons received the
name of the Pope, another that of the Dauphin; his daughter was called
Marguerite, after the divorced Marguerite de Valois, and, in like manner,
the rest of the squalid company exchanged their barbaric appellatives for
the names of princes, nobles, and ladies of rank.</p>
<p>The fame of this chef-d'aeuvre of Christian piety, as Lescarbot gravely
calls it, spread far and wide through the forest, whose denizens,—partly
out of a notion that the rite would bring good luck, partly to please the
French, and partly to share in the good cheer with which the apostolic
efforts of Father La Fleche had been sagaciously seconded—came
flocking to enroll themselves under the banners of the Faith. Their zeal
ran high. They would take no refusal. Membertou was for war on all who
would not turn Christian. A living skeleton was seen crawling from hut to
hut in search of the priest and his saving waters; while another neophyte,
at the point of death, asked anxiously whether, in the realms of bliss to
which he was bound, pies were to be had comparable to those with which the
French regaled him.</p>
<p>A formal register of baptisms was drawn up to be carried to France in the
returning ship, of which Pontrincourt's son, Biencourt, a spirited youth
of eighteen, was to take charge. He sailed in July, his father keeping him
company as far as Port la Have, whence, bidding the young man farewell, he
attempted to return in an open boat to Port Royal. A north wind blew him
out to sea; and for six days he was out of sight of land, subsisting on
rain-water wrung from the boat's sail, and on a few wild-fowl which he had
shot on an island. Five weeks passed before he could rejoin his colonists,
who, despairing of his safety, were about to choose a new chief.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, young Biencourt, speeding on his way, heard dire news from a
fisherman on the Grand Bank. The knife of Ravaillac had done its work.
Henry the Fourth was dead.</p>
<p>There is an ancient street in Paris, where a great thoroughfare contracts
to a narrow pass, the Rue de la Ferronnerie. Tall buildings overshadow it,
packed from pavement to tiles with human life, and from the dingy front of
one of them the sculptured head of a man looks down on the throng that
ceaselessly defiles beneath. On the fourteenth of May, 1610, a ponderous
coach, studded with fleurs-de-lis and rich with gilding, rolled along this
street. In it was a small man, well advanced in life, whose profile once
seen could not be forgotten,—a hooked nose, a protruding chin, a
brow full of wrinkles, grizzled hair, a short, grizzled beard, and stiff,
gray moustaches, bristling like a cat's. One would have thought him some
whiskered satyr, grim from the rack of tumultuous years; but his alert,
upright port bespoke unshaken vigor, and his clear eye was full of buoyant
life. Following on the footway strode a tall, strong, and somewhat
corpulent man, with sinister, deep-set eyes and a red beard, his arm and
shoulder covered with his cloak. In the throat of the thoroughfare, where
the sculptured image of Henry the Fourth still guards the spot, a
collision of two carts stopped the coach. Ravaillac quickened his pace. In
an instant he was at the door. With his cloak dropped from his shoulders,
and a long knife in his hand, he set his foot upon a guardstone, thrust
his head and shoulders into the coach, and with frantic force stabbed
thrice at the King's heart. A broken exclamation, a gasping convulsion,—and
then the grim visage drooped on the bleeding breast. Henry breathed his
last, and the hope of Europe died with him.</p>
<p>The omens were sinister for Old France and for New. Marie de Medicis,
"cette grosse banquiere," coarse scion of a bad stock, false wife and
faithless queen, paramour of an intriguing foreigner, tool of the Jesuits
and of Spain, was Regent in the minority of her imbecile son. The
Huguenots drooped, the national party collapsed, the vigorous hand of
Sully was felt no more, and the treasure gathered for a vast and
beneficent enterprise became the instrument of despotism and the prey of
corruption. Under such dark auspices, young Biencourt entered the thronged
chambers of the Louvre.</p>
<p>He gained audience of the Queen, and displayed his list of baptisms; while
the ever present Jesuits failed not to seize him by the button, assuring
him, not only that the late King had deeply at heart the establishment of
their Society in Acadia, but that to this end he had made them a grant of
two thousand livres a year. The Jesuits had found an ally and the intended
mission a friend at court, whose story and whose character are too
striking to pass unnoticed.</p>
<p>This was a lady of honor to the Queen, Antoinette de Pons, Marquise de
Guercheville, once renowned for grace and beauty, and not less conspicuous
for qualities rare in the unbridled court of Henry's predecessor, where
her youth had been passed. When the civil war was at its height, the royal
heart, leaping with insatiable restlessness from battle to battle, from
mistress to mistress, had found a brief repose in the affections of his
Corisande, famed in tradition and romance; but Corisande was suddenly
abandoned, and the young widow, Madame de Guercheville, became the
load-star of his erratic fancy. It was an evil hour for the Bearnais.
Henry sheathed in rusty steel, battling for his crown and his life, and
Henry robed in royalty and throned triumphant in the Louvre, alike urged
their suit in vain. Unused to defeat, the King's passion rose higher for
the obstacle that barred it. On one occasion he was met with an answer not
unworthy of record:—</p>
<p>"Sire, my rank, perhaps, is not high enough to permit me to be your wife,
but my heart is too high to permit me to be your mistress."</p>
<p>She left the court and retired to her chateau of La Roche-Guyon, on the
Seine, ten leagues below Paris, where, fond of magnificence, she is said
to have lived in much expense and splendor. The indefatigable King,
haunted by her memory, made a hunting-party in the neighboring forests;
and, as evening drew near, separating himself from his courtiers, he sent
a gentleman of his train to ask of Madame de Guercheville the shelter of
her roof. The reply conveyed a dutiful acknowledgment of the honor, and an
offer of the best entertainment within her power. It was night when Henry
with his little band of horsemen, approached the chateau, where lights
were burning in every window, after a fashion of the day on occasions of
welcome to an honored guest. Pages stood in the gateway, each with a
blazing torch; and here, too, were gentlemen of the neighborhood, gathered
to greet their sovereign. Madame de Guercheville came forth, followed by
the women of her household; and when the King, unprepared for so benign a
welcome, giddy with love and hope, saw her radiant in pearls and more
radiant yet in a beauty enhanced by the wavy torchlight and the
surrounding shadows, he scarcely dared trust his senses:—</p>
<p>"Que vois-je, madame; est-ce bien vous, et suis-je ce roi meprise?"</p>
<p>He gave her his hand, and she led him within the chateau, where, at the
door of the apartment destined for him, she left him, with a graceful
reverence. The King, nowise disconcerted, did not doubt that she had gone
to give orders for his entertainment, when an attendant came to tell him
that she had descended to the courtyard and called for her coach. Thither
he hastened in alarm:</p>
<p>"What! am I driving you from your house?"</p>
<p>"Sire," replied Madame de Guercheville, "where a king is, he should be the
sole master; but, for my part, I like to preserve some little authority
wherever I may be."</p>
<p>With another deep reverence, she entered her coach and disappeared,
seeking shelter under the roof of a friend, some two leagues off, and
leaving the baffled King to such consolation as he might find in a
magnificent repast, bereft of the presence of the hostess.</p>
<p>Henry could admire the virtue which he could not vanquish; and, long
after, on his marriage, he acknowledged his sense of her worth by begging
her to accept an honorable post near the person of the Queen.</p>
<p>"Madame," he said, presenting her to Marie de Medicis, "I give you a lady
of honor who is a lady of honor indeed."</p>
<p>Some twenty years had passed since the adventure of La Roche-Guyon. Madame
de Guercheville had outlived the charms which had attracted her royal
suitor, but the virtue which repelled him was reinforced by a devotion no
less uncompromising. A rosary in her hand and a Jesuit at her side, she
realized the utmost wishes of the subtle fathers who had moulded and who
guided her. She readily took fire when they told her of the benighted
souls of New France, and the wrongs of Father Biard kindled her utmost
indignation. She declared herself the protectress of the American
missions; and the only difficulty, as a Jesuit writer tells us, was to
restrain her zeal within reasonable bounds.</p>
<p>She had two illustrious coadjutors. The first was the jealous Queen, whose
unbridled rage and vulgar clamor had made the Louvre a hell. The second
was Henriette d'Entragues, Marquise de Vernenil, the crafty and capricious
siren who had awakened these conjugal tempests. To this singular coalition
were joined many other ladies of the court; for the pious flame, fanned by
the Jesuits, spread through hall and boudoir, and fair votaries of the
Loves and Graces found it a more grateful task to win heaven for the
heathen than to merit it for themselves.</p>
<p>Young Biencourt saw it vain to resist. Biard must go with him in the
returning ship, and also another Jesuit, Enemond Masse. The two fathers
repaired to Dieppe, wafted on the wind of court favor, which they never
doubted would bear them to their journey s end. Not so, however.
Poutrincourt and his associates, in the dearth of their own resources, had
bargained with two Huguenot merchants of Dieppe, Du Jardin and Du Quesne,
to equip and load the vessel, in consideration of their becoming partners
in the expected profits. Their indignation was extreme when they saw the
intended passengers. They declared that they would not aid in building up
a colony for the profit of the King of Spain, nor risk their money in a
venture where Jesuits were allowed to intermeddle; and they closed with a
fiat refusal to receive them on board, unless, they added with patriotic
sarcasm, the Queen would direct them to transport the whole order beyond
sea. Biard and Masse insisted, on which the merchants demanded
reimbursement for their outlay, as they would have no further concern in
the business.</p>
<p>Biard communicated with Father Coton, Father Coton with Madame de
Guercheville. No more was needed. The zealous lady of honor, "indignant,"
says Biard, "to see the efforts of hell prevail," and resolved "that Satan
should not remain master of the field," set on foot a subscription, and
raised an ample fund within the precincts of the court. Biard, in the name
of the "Province of France of the Order of Jesus," bought out the interest
of the two merchants for thirty-eight hundred livres, thus constituting
the Jesuits equal partners in business with their enemies. Nor was this
all; for, out of the ample proceeds of the subscription, he lent to the
needy associates a further sum of seven hundred and thirty-seven livres,
and advanced twelve hundred and twenty-five more to complete the outfit of
the ship. Well pleased, the triumphant priests now embarked, and friend
and foe set sail together on the twenty-sixth of January, 1611.</p>
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