The Love of a Prince

Bonnie Prince Charlie in France 1744-1748

By Laurence L. Bongie
Categories: History, World History
Publisher: UBC Press
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774843256, 424 pages, November 2011
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774857017, 424 pages, January 1986

Table of contents

List of Illustrations

Preface

Introduction to the Letters

1. From Paris to Zolkiew

2. Louise

3. "Toujours dans la balance"

4. Prisoners in Poland

5. A Death and a Wedding

6. Enter the Hero-Prince

7. "Sword in Hand"

8. Compliments and Disaffection

9. "A Dager throw my heart"

10. A New Life and Love Eternal

11. End of the Affair

12. The Outlaw Prince Postscript Notes

Appendix A: The Letters Notes to the Letters

Appendix B: Selected Translations

Appendix C: The Prince's Tale

Index

Description

Many books have been written about Bonnie Prince Charlie, but few
have brought to light as much new material as this one, including
evidence of a short-lived son, born in Paris scarcely two years after
the royal fugitive escaped to France following the unlucky Battle of
Culloden.

The book deals less with the oft-told story of the Prince's
crushing defeat in '45 than with his subsequent inability to cope
with failure and with the even more devastating personal defeat
represented by his arrest in Paris and expulsion from France in 1748.
During that critical time - a major turning point in his life - the
once generous and compassionate Prince, having failed in his noble
ambition either to vanquish his enemies or perish sword in hand, began
his long descent into oblivion.

One happy event, hitherto unnoted, nevertheless marked this crucial
period. As the Prince in 1747-48 watched his world crumbling around him
- his father and brother in Rome having abandoned him and given up hope
of a Stuart restoration -- he fell in love, for the first time in his
life, with his married cousin Louise, Princesse de Rohan, like himself
a direct descendant of Poland's King John Sobieski. The Love of
a Prince is her story too and an extensive appendix to the work is
devoted to the passionate love letters she wrote during their
clandestine affair. They convey the full tragedy of an archetypal femme
abandonnee whom we observe progressing from the initial joys of young
love to inevitable catastrophe. Ultimately, the princess's
suffering and her moral defeat become little more than an unhappy
subplot in the Prince's own saga of distrust, bad faith and angry
failure set amid the intrigues and petty jealousies of the French
court.

Nearly a decade of researach by the author in the Stuart Papers at
Windsor Castle and in private and public archives has gone into the
work. Though at times challenging for the general reader because of its
period French documentation (retained for the sake of authentic
flavour), the work is by no means directed to the specialist alone.
Indeed, at times The Love of a Prince reads more like an
historical romance than history, despite the total absence of fictional
elements. It will appeal to those interested in eighteenth-century
history and biography, followers of the royal families of Europe, and
especially those long-fascinated by the exploits of one of
history's legendary heroes.