His Wife, Or A Woman Calling Herself So, Is Confined There
With Him, And She Is Said To Be A Woman Of Uncommon Beauty.
It is quite the
rage among the English here to go to see these illustrious captives, and
Madame Barbone, superbly dressed, receives the hommage of the visitors.
The
Duchess of D[evonshire] is said to have visited her, and made her a present
of a pearl necklace. I hope this is not true. Surely the Duchess, who is a
woman of talent and an encourager of the fine arts, might have found some
other object worthier of her munificence. What claims the mistress, or even
the wife, of a public robber can have on the generosity of travellers, I am
at a loss to conceive; but such is the bizarrerie and inconsequence of
the English, and no doubt, be this story of her Grace of D[evonshire]
having given a present true or not, it will occasion many other presents
being made to the captive Princess by a host of silly lord-aping English
men and women. Barbone has, it is said, made an excellent capitulation. He
has stipulated to be released from prison after a year and a day's
confinement, and no doubt he will then resume his old trade of brigandage.
In the meantime he has disbanded his troops, as he calls them; but will his
troops obey him, now that he is a captive? will they not rather chuse
another leader?
In the time of the French occupation, nothing of this kind took place; but
the present Government is weak and timid.
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