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Rousseau, Jean-Jacques

"The Confessions Of Jean-Jacques Rousseau"


The next thing the ambassador did was to connect himself with the
Marquis Mari, ambassador from Spain, an ingenious and artful man, who,
had he wished so to do, might have led him by the nose, yet on account
of the union of the interests of the two crowns he generally gave
him good advice, which might have been of essential service, had not
the other, by joining his own opinion, counteracted it in the
execution. The only business they had to conduct in concert with
each other was to engage the Venetians to maintain their neutrality.
These did not neglect to give the strongest assurances of their
fidelity to their engagement at the same time that they publicly
furnished ammunition to the Austrian troops, and even recruits under
pretense of desertion. M. de Montaigu, who I believed wished to render
himself agreeable to the republic, failed not on his part,
notwithstanding my representations, to make me assure the government
in all my despatches, that the Venetians would never violate an
article of the neutrality. The obstinacy and stupidity of this poor
wretch made me write and act extravagantly: I was obliged to be the
agent of his folly, because he would have it so, but he sometimes
rendered my employment insupportable and the functions of it almost
impracticable. For example, he insisted on the greatest part of his
despatches to the king, and of those to the minister, being written in
cipher, although neither of them contained anything that required that
precaution.


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