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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Aug. 1, 1798
  • Page 8
  • DURING THE CONFINEMENT OF LOUIS XVI. KING OF FRANCE.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Aug. 1, 1798: Page 8

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    Article DURING THE CONFINEMENT OF LOUIS XVI. KING OF FRANCE. ← Page 3 of 6 →
Page 8

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

During The Confinement Of Louis Xvi. King Of France.

' Another Commissioner , whose name was Le Cierc , "a physician being in the Queen ' s chamber when 1 was teaching the Prince to wiite , -interrupted him to pronounce a discourse on the Republican education , which it was necessary to give the Dauphin , and he wanted to change the books he was studying for works of the most Ei-evolutionary nature . ' A fourth was present , when the Queen was reading to her

children , from a volume ofthe History of France , at the period when the constable de Bourbon took up arms against France , He pretended the Queen -meant by this to instil into the mind of her son ideas of vengeance against his country , and laid a formal information against it before the Council : which I made known to her Majesty , who afterwards selected subjects that could not be taken hold of to calumniate her intentions .

' A man named Simon , shoemaker and Municipal Officer , was one of the six Commissioners appointed to inspect the works and-expences at the Temple . He was the only one , who , under pretence of attending rigidly to his duty , never quitted the Tower . This man , whenever he appeared in the presence of the Royal Family , always treated them with the wildest insolence ; and would frequently say to meso near the King as to be heard by him : — ' Ciery , ask Capet if

, he wants any thing , that I may not have the trouble of coming-up twice . ' I was obliged to answer that he wanted nothing . This is the same Simon to whose care the young Louis was afterwards consigned , and who by a systematic barbarity . prolonged the tormen fs of that amiable and unfortunate child : there is also great reason to believe that he was the instrument made use of to shorten his daj- ' s .

' In teaching theyoung Prince to cypher , I had made a multiplication table , according to directions given by the Queen , which a Municipal Officer pretended was a means she took to teach her son . how to correspond by secret signs , , and he was obliged to give up the stud y of arithmetic . ' The same thing had happened with respect to the tapestry , which the Queen and Madame Elizabeth had worked on their being first

confined . Having finished some chair backs , the Queen ordered me to send them to the Duchess de'Serent ; but the Municipal Officers , whose leave I asked , thought that the designs contained hieroglyphics for the purpose of corresponding , and , inconsequence , obtained an : > rder , by which it was forbidden to suffer the works of the Queen and Princesses to be sent out ofthe Tower .

' There were some of the Municipal Officers , who never spoke of any of the Royal Family without the addition of the most insulting epithets . . . One of them , named Tuilot , one day said in my hearing : — " If no executioner could be found to guillotine this d d family , I would guiil tine them myself . ' ; 'When the King and family went to walk , they had to pass by a dumber of sentriesof whicheven at that petiodthere w-ere several

, , , stationed within the small Tower . The soldiers on ditty presented their arms to the Municipal Officers and Commanders of the Legions ; but when the King approached them , they grounded their firelocks , or clubbed them ludicrously . VOL . XI . M

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-08-01, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01081798/page/8/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
A BRIEF MEMOIR OF MASONICUS. Article 2
PARK'S TRAVELS IN AFRICA. Article 3
CHARACTER OF GENERAL CLAIRFAIT. Article 5
DURING THE CONFINEMENT OF LOUIS XVI. KING OF FRANCE. Article 6
AN HISTORICAL AND GEOGRAPHICAL ACCOUNT OF THE KINGDOM OF IRELAND. Article 12
ANECDOTES. Article 15
THE HISTORY OF MADAME AND MONSIEUR C-. Article 16
CURIOUS ACCOUNT OF A DUMB PHILOSOPHER. Article 20
THE LIFE OF THE LATE MR. JOHN PALMER, Article 27
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 35
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 41
SCIENTIFIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 47
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 51
POETRY. Article 57
PARLIAMENT OF IRELAND. Article 59
OBITUARY. Article 61
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Page 8

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

During The Confinement Of Louis Xvi. King Of France.

' Another Commissioner , whose name was Le Cierc , "a physician being in the Queen ' s chamber when 1 was teaching the Prince to wiite , -interrupted him to pronounce a discourse on the Republican education , which it was necessary to give the Dauphin , and he wanted to change the books he was studying for works of the most Ei-evolutionary nature . ' A fourth was present , when the Queen was reading to her

children , from a volume ofthe History of France , at the period when the constable de Bourbon took up arms against France , He pretended the Queen -meant by this to instil into the mind of her son ideas of vengeance against his country , and laid a formal information against it before the Council : which I made known to her Majesty , who afterwards selected subjects that could not be taken hold of to calumniate her intentions .

' A man named Simon , shoemaker and Municipal Officer , was one of the six Commissioners appointed to inspect the works and-expences at the Temple . He was the only one , who , under pretence of attending rigidly to his duty , never quitted the Tower . This man , whenever he appeared in the presence of the Royal Family , always treated them with the wildest insolence ; and would frequently say to meso near the King as to be heard by him : — ' Ciery , ask Capet if

, he wants any thing , that I may not have the trouble of coming-up twice . ' I was obliged to answer that he wanted nothing . This is the same Simon to whose care the young Louis was afterwards consigned , and who by a systematic barbarity . prolonged the tormen fs of that amiable and unfortunate child : there is also great reason to believe that he was the instrument made use of to shorten his daj- ' s .

' In teaching theyoung Prince to cypher , I had made a multiplication table , according to directions given by the Queen , which a Municipal Officer pretended was a means she took to teach her son . how to correspond by secret signs , , and he was obliged to give up the stud y of arithmetic . ' The same thing had happened with respect to the tapestry , which the Queen and Madame Elizabeth had worked on their being first

confined . Having finished some chair backs , the Queen ordered me to send them to the Duchess de'Serent ; but the Municipal Officers , whose leave I asked , thought that the designs contained hieroglyphics for the purpose of corresponding , and , inconsequence , obtained an : > rder , by which it was forbidden to suffer the works of the Queen and Princesses to be sent out ofthe Tower .

' There were some of the Municipal Officers , who never spoke of any of the Royal Family without the addition of the most insulting epithets . . . One of them , named Tuilot , one day said in my hearing : — " If no executioner could be found to guillotine this d d family , I would guiil tine them myself . ' ; 'When the King and family went to walk , they had to pass by a dumber of sentriesof whicheven at that petiodthere w-ere several

, , , stationed within the small Tower . The soldiers on ditty presented their arms to the Municipal Officers and Commanders of the Legions ; but when the King approached them , they grounded their firelocks , or clubbed them ludicrously . VOL . XI . M

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