Melbourne House
MELBOURNE HOUSE BY ELIZABETH WETHERELL AUTHOR OF "WIDE, WIDE WORLD." "Even a child is known by his doings, whether his work be pure, and whether it be right." - _Prov. xx. 11_ LONDON WARD LOCK AND C° LIMITED 1907 CONTENTS
This arrangement was so strange that I can only account for it by
supposing that as this was the date of a feeble Spanish attempt on
behalf of the Jacobites in Scotland, Comte de Bourke may not have
ventured by the direct route. Or it may not have been etiquette for
him to re-enter France when appointed ambassador. At any rate, the
poor Countess did take this route to the South, and I am inclined to
think the narrative must be correct, as all the side-lights I have been
able to gain perfectly agree with it, often in an unexpected manner.
The suite and the baggage were just as related in the story--the only
liberty I have taken being the bestowal of names. 'M. Arture' was
really of the party, but I have made him Scotch instead of Irish, and I
have no knowledge that the lackey was not French. The imbecility of
the Abbe is merely a deduction from his helplessness, but of course
this may have been caused by illness.
The meeting with M. de Varennes at Avignon, Berwick's offer of an
escort, and the Countess's dread of the Pyrenees, are all facts, as
well as her embarkation in the Genoese tartane bound for Barcelona, and
its capture by the Algerine corsair commanded by a Dutch renegade, who
treated her well, and to whom she gave her watch.
Algerine history confirms what is said of his treatment. Louis XIV.
had bombarded the pirate city, and compelled the Dey to receive a
MELBOURNE HOUSE BY ELIZABETH WETHERELL AUTHOR OF "WIDE, WIDE WORLD." "Even a child is known by his doings, whether his work be pure, and whether it be right." - _Prov. xx. 11_ LONDON WARD LOCK AND C° LIMITED 1907 CONTENTS