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I took nobody with me to the Escurial but my servants and a Milanese traiteur, who opened an empty hotel, and provided me with a chamber and my food. There were indeed myriads of annoying insects, who had kept uninterrupted possession of their quarters, against whom I had no way of guarding myself but by planting my portable crib in the middle of the room, with its legs immersed in pails of water. The court was expected, but not yet arrived, and the place was a perfect solitude, so that I had the best possible opportunity of viewing this immense edifice at my ease and leisure. I am not about to describe it; assuredly it is one of the most wonderous monuments that bigotry has ever dedicated to the fulfilment of a vow. Yet there is no grace in the external, which owes its power of striking to the immensity of its mass: the architect has been obliged to sacrifice beauty and proportion to security against the incredible hurricanes of wind, which at times sweep down from the mountains that surround it; of a scenery more savage, nature hardly has a sample to produce upon the habitable globe: yet within this gloomy and enormous receptacle, there is abundant food for curiosity in paintings, books, and consecrated treasures exceeding all description. There is a vast and inestimable collection of pictures, and the great masters, whose works were in my poor judgment decidedly the most prominent and attractive, are Raphael, Titian, Rubens, Velasquez and Coello, of which the two last were natives of Spain and by no means unworthy to be classed with the three former. Of Raphael there are but four pre-eminent specimens, of which the famous Perla is one, but hung very disadvantageously; of Titian there is a splendid abundance; of Rubens not many, but some that show him to have been a mighty master of the passions, and speak to the heart with incredible effect; they throw the gauntlet to the proudest of the Italian schools, and seem to leave Vandyke behind him almost out of sight; of Velasquez, if there was none other than his composition of Jacob, when his sons are showing him the coat of Joseph, it would be enough to rank him with the highest in his art; Coello's fame may safely rest upon his inimitable altar-piece in the private chapel. Were it put to me to single out for my choice two compositions, and only two, from out the whole inestimable collection, I would take Titian's Last Supper in the refectory for my first prize, and this altar-piece of Coello's for my second, leaving the Perla and Madona del pesce of Raphael, the Dead Christ of Rubens, and the Joseph of Velasquez with longing and regret, but leaving them notwithstanding.

The Court removed from San Ildefonso to the Escurial in a

THE ESCURIAL.

251 few days after I had been there, and I was invited to bring my family thither, which accordingly I did. My reception here was very different from what I had experienced at San Ildefonso. The king, one of the best tempered men living, was particularly gracious; in walking through his apartments in the Escurial, I surprised him in his bed-chamber; the good man had been on his knees before his private altar, and upon the opening of the door, rose; when seeing me in the act of retiring, he bade me stay, and condescended to show me some very curious South American deer, extremely small and elegantly formed, which he kept under a netting; and amongst others a little green monkey, the most diminutive and most beautiful of its species I had ever seen. He also showed me the game he had shot that morning of various sorts from the bocafica to the vulture. He was alone, and seemed to take peculiar pleasure in gratifying our curiosity. No monarch could well be more humbly lodged, for his state consisted in a small camp-bed, miserably equipped with curtains of faded old damask, that had once been crimson, and a cushion of the same by his bedside, with a table, that held his crucifix and prayer-book, and over that a three-quarters picture of the Mater-dolorosa by Titian, which he always carried with him for his private altar-piece; of which picture I was fortunate enough to procure a very perfect copy by an old Spanish master (Coello as I suspect) upon the same sized cloth, and very hardly to be distinguished from the original. This picture I brought home with me, and it is now in my possession. His majesty's dress was, like his person, plain and homely; a buff leather waistcoat, breeches of the same, and old-fashioned boots (made in Pall Mall), with a plain drab coat, covered with snuff and dust, a bad wig and a worse hat, constituted his wardrobe for the chase, and there were very few days in the year when he denied himself that recreation.

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CHAPTER VIII.

The Prince of Asturias-His pavilion-Present of horses-Anecdote of Cumberland's daughter-Honors to the English monarch-The Princess Asturias -Mode of life at Madrid-Count Kaunitz-Giusti-Pallavicini-Foreign ambassador-His visitors-Tiranna-The Duke of Osuna-Anthony SmithRecalled-Generous offer of the Spanish king-Bills dishonored-Bad treatment-Memoirs-Official letters.

THE Prince of Asturias, now the reigning sovereign, wast always so good as to notice the respect I duly paid him, with the most flattering and marked attention. He spoke of me and to me with distinguished kindness, and caused it to be signified to me, that he was sorry circumstances of etiquette did not allow him to show me those more pointed proofs of his regard, by which it was his wish to make appear the good opinion he was pleased to entertain of me. Such a testimony from a prince, of his reserved and distant cast of character, was to be valued for its sincerity. On my way from San Ildefonso to Segovia, one morning at an early hour, as I was mounting a hill, that opened that extensive plain to my view, I discovered a party of horsemen and the prince considerably advanced before them, at the full speed of his horse; I had just time to order my chariot out of the road, and halt it under some cork-trees by the way-side, and, according to my custom, I got out to pay him my respects. The prince stopped his horse upon the instant, and with his hat in his hand, wheeled him about to come up to me, when the high-spirited animal, either resenting the manoeuvre, or taking fright, as it seemed, at the gleamy reflection of my gray mules, half covered with the cork branches, reared and wheeled upon his hinder legs, in a most alarming manner. The prince appeared to me in such imminent danger, that I was about to seize the bit of his bridle, but he was much too complete a cavalier to accept of assistance, and after a short but pretty severe contest, brought his horse up to me in perfect discipline, and with many handsome acknowledg ments for the anxiety I had shown, on his account, in a very gracious manner took his leave, and pursued his road to San Ildefonso. He was a man of vast bodily strength, and a severe rider the fine animal, one of the most beautiful I had seen in

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FLORIDA BLANCA.

253

Spain, showed the wounds of the spur, streaming with blood down his glossy-white sides, from the shoulder to the flank.

This prince had a small but elegant pavilion, at a short distance from the Escurial, which in point of furniture and pictures was a perfect gem. He did me and my family the honor to invite us to see it; at the appointed hour we found it prepared for our reception, with a table set out and provided with refreshments; some of the officers of his household were in waiting; the Dukes of Alva, Granada, Almodovar, and others. of high rank, accompanied us through the apartments, and when I returned to my hotel, at the Escurial, the prince's secretary called on me, by command, to know my opinion of it. There could be no difficulty in delivering that, for it really merited all the praise that I bestowed upon it. In a very short time after, the same gentleman returned and signified the prince's express desire to know if there was anything in the style of furniture that struck me as defective, or anything I could suggest for its improvement. With the like sincerity I made answer, that in my humble opinion the fitting of the principal room in the Chinese style, though sufficiently splendid, was not in character with the rest of the apartments, that were hung round with some of the finest pictures of the Spanish and Italian masters, where a chaster style, in point of ornament, had been preserved.

I heard no more of my critique for some days, and began to suspect that I had made my court very ill by risking it, when another message called me to review the complete change which that apartment had undergone, to the exclusion of every atom of Japan work, in consequence of my remark.

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It was on this occasion that the minister, Florida Blanca, in the moment of that favor and popularity which I then enjoyed, addressed me in a very different style from any he had ever used, and with an air of mock solemnity, charged me with having practised upon the heir apparent of the crown of Spain by some secret charm, or love-powder, to the engagement of his affections, which,' said he, 'I perceive you are so exclusively possessed of, that I must throw myself on your protection, and request you to preserve to me some place in his regard.' As I had found his excellency, for the first time, in the humor for raillery, I endeavored to keep up the spirit of it by owning to the love-powder; in virtue of which I had gained that power over the prince, as to seize the bridle of his horse, and arrest him on the road, which led me to relate the anecdote of our rencounter on the way to Segovia above described. He listened to me with great good humor, appearing to enjoy my nar

rative of the adventure, and at the conclusion observed to me, that my life was forfeited by the laws of Spain; but as he supposed I had no evil design against the prince himself, but only wanted to possess myself of so fine a charger, as an offering to my excellent and royal master, whose virtues made his life and safety dear to all the world, he would, in confidence, disclose to me, that order was given out by his Catholic Majesty, to select, from his stud, in the Mancha, ten, the noblest horses. that could be chosen, and out of those, upon trial of their steadiness and temper, to select two, which I might tender as my offering to the acceptance of my sovereign; and this, he observed, was a present never before made to any crowned head in Europe, but of his majesty's own immediate family, alluding to the King of Naples.

A few days after my return to Madrid this gracious promise was fulfilled, and two horses of the royal stud, led by the king's grooms, and covered by cloths on which the royal arms, &c., were embroidered, were brought into the inner court of my house, and there delivered to me. I flatter myself they were such horses as had not been brought out of Spain for a century before, and not altogether unworthy of the acceptance of the illustrious personage who condescended to receive them. I was at dinner when they arrived, and Count Kaunitz, the imperial ambassador, was at the table with me. I had not spoken to him, or any other person, of this expected present, and his astonishment at seeing that which had been the great desideratum of many ambassadors, and himself amongst the number, thus voluntarily and liberally bestowed upon me (the secret and untitled agent of a court at war with Spain), surprised him into some comments, which had the only tincture of jealousy that I ever discovered in him. A crowd had followed these horses to the gates which inclosed my courts; one of these opened to the Plazuela de los Affligidos, and the other to the street of the Inquisition; I caused these gates to be thrown open, and when the people saw the horses with their royal coverings upon them led into my stable, they gave a shout expressive of their pleasure and applause. If my very amiable friend Kaunitz was not quite so highly gratified by these occurrences as I was, he was perfectly excusable.

I kept these horses in my stables at Madrid, and should not have used them but at the special requisition of the royal donor; when that was signified to me, my daughters and myself rode them, as occasion suited, and as a proof how noble they were by nature, the following instance will suffice. As my eldest daughter was passing a small convent, not a mile from the gate of San

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