CONGRESS, HOUSE of REPRESENTATIVES. ~T Monday, January 21. The following mefiage was this day receiv ed from the President of the United States. Gentlemen of the Senate, isf Gentlemen of the House of Representatives ACCORDING'to an intimation in my meflage of Friday last, I now lay before Con gress a report of the Secretary of State, containing his observations on some of the documents which attended it. JOHN ADAMS. January 21, 1799- TO THE PRESIDENT of the UNITED STATES. The Secretary of State refpedtfijlly sub mits the following report on the tranfa&ions relating to the United States arid France lines the l ift communications to on that fubjea. TIMOTHY ITCKERiNG. Department of State, January 18, 1799- 5 - * R E P O R T, Of the SECRETA.tr of Sr.iTE, on the. Tran- j tactions relating to tie United States and France, since toe Itist communications to Cor.gress on that subject. THE points < hiefly meriting attention, are the attempts of the French, government, I. To exculpate itfelf from the charge of corruption, as having demanded a douceur of Fifty Thousand Pounds flerling (m,ooo dollars) for the pockets of the Directors and Miniftrrs, as represented in the dispatches of our Envoys : 11. To detach Mr. Gerry from his col leagues, and to inveigle hint into a separate negotiation ; and IH. Its delign, if the negotiation failed, and a war (hould take place between the Unit ed States and France, to throw the blame of the rupture on the United States. 1. The dispatches of the Envoys publillied in the United States, and republifhed in En gland, reached Paris towards th? last of May : and 011 the 30th of that month, the French minifler, Mr. Talleyrand, affedling an entire ignorance of the persons designated by the letters W. X. Y. and Z.—calling them in triguers, whole obj'eft was to deceive the Envoys—writes to Mr. Gerry, and " prays him immediately to make known to him their names." Mr. Gerry, in his answer of the 31ft, wishes to evade Mr. Talleyrand's re que ft ; and with reason, for he and his colleagues had " promised MefTrs; X. and Y. tlia»£fl> names Ihould in no event be made public." Mr. Gerry in his letter of Oftober 1, in no ting the repetition ot Mr. Talleyrand's re quell for t-hofe names, states as an objedlion to giving them up " that they could be other wise afcertainedand that Mr. Talleyrand's melL-nger, admitting the faft that they were already known, immediately men tioned their names. Mr. Gerty ntfverthe lefs certified in writing the names of X. Y. and Z ; with the irferve " that they Ihould not be publillied on his authority and be lides jormally certifying to Mr. Talleyrand the names of his own private agents, added, that " they did not produce, to his knowledge credentials or documents of any kijxl."— " Credentials" in writing were certainly not to be expe&ed to be produced by agents em ployed to make corrupt propositions : but Mr. Gerry had Mr. Talleyrand's twn aflu rance that Mr. Y was atting by his authori ty. It is recited in the Envoy's dispatches, and upon Mr. Gerry's own report to his col leagues, that on the 17th of December, 1797, Mr. Y " stated to him that two measures which Mr. Talleyrand proposed, being adopt ed, a restoration of friendJhip between the republics would follow immediately the one was a gratuity of Jipy thousand pounds sterling ; the other a purchase of thirty two millions of Dutch refcriptions," and after converfmg on these topics, Mr. Gerrv and Mr. Y rode to Mr. Talleyrand's office, where " Mr. Gerry observed to Mr. Talley rand, that Mr. Y had stated to him that morning some propositions as coming from Mr. Talleyrand, re f peeling which, Mr. Ger ry could give no opinion," and after making some other observations, Mr. Talleyrand an swered " that the information Mr. Y ' had given him (Mr. Gerry) was just and might always be relied on." This declaration stamps with the ministers authority, all the communications made by Mr. Y to'the En voys. And Mr. Y himfelf, who" is Mr, Bellamy, of Hamburgh, in his pubKi vindi cation, declares, that " he had done Jtothiug, Cud nothing, and written nothing, without the oilers of Citizen Tally raid." The fame may be aflerted in regard to Mr. X, for he firft introduced Mr. Y to the Envoys ; and his separate comunications were fubftarttially the fame with thole of Y, and both together were present with the Envoys when the cbrff munications wer£ more than once repeated. It also def-rves notice, that in dating the preliminary demands of the FrencU govern ment, the pmate agents, X and Y, and the minifiedufe a fimifar language. Til? agents declare, that the Directory are extremely IK rits'ted at the speech of the President, and re M quire an, explanation of some parts of it, and reparation fox others j that this must give pain to the envoys, but the diredlory would not dispense with it : And that as to the means of averting the demand concerning the President's speech, the Envoys must search for them, and propose them, them selves. Being a'fked to suggest the means, the answer is " money"—the pure Wife of the Dutch refcriptions, and " the fifty thousand pounds flerling, as a douceur to the Direc tory." The Minister told the Envoys, that the Direttory were wounded by the President's speech ; and in his conversation with Mr. Gerry on the 28th of Odlober, skid, " the Direftory had pa (Ted an arret, which he of fered for perusal, in which they had demand ed of the Envoys an explanation of some parts, and a reparation for others, of the Pre sident's speech to Congress of the 16th of May, 1797 ; that he was fenlible that diffi culties would exist on the part of the En voys relative to this demand ; but that by their offering money he thought he could pre vent the effedt of the arret. Mr. Z. (the " interpreter") at the request of Mr. Gerry, having stated that the Envoys have no such powers, Mr. Talleyrand replied, they can in such cafe take a power on themselves ; and proposed that they (hould make a " loan." But this " loan," as will presently appear, did not mean the " money," which would " prevent the effedt of the arret." Mr. Ger ry then making some observations, on the powers of the Envoys—that they " were adequate to the difculfion and adjustment of all points of real difference between the two nations ; that they could alter and amend the treaty ; or, if necessary, form a new one added, " that as to a loan, they had no powers whatever to make one, but that they could fend one of their uumber for inftiuc tions on this proposition, if deemed expedi ent " That as he [Mr. Talleyrand] had exprefled a desire to confer with the Envoys individually, it was the wifli of Mr. Gerry that such a conference Ihould take place, and their opinions thus be alcertained." " Mr. Talleyrand, in answer, said, he Ihould be glad to confer with the other Envoys, individu ally, but that this matter about the money must be settled directly without fending to America ; that he would not communicate the arret for a week ; and that if we could adjust the difficulty refpe&ing the speech, an application would nevertheless go to the United Statesfora loan Vow this matter of the MONEr that must be settled directly, could only refer to the douceur ; tor a loan in the purchase of millions of Dutch refcripti ons, or in any other form, could only be the fubjedl of a stipulation to be afterwards ful filled,by the United States ; but the douceur of fifty thuufands pounds flerling, was a sum within the immediate reach of the Envoys ; for their credit would certainly command it: in fadl, a mercantile house had offered to an swer their draughts j and this, Mr. Tal leyrand unquestionably well knew; for it was a member of houfe who firft in troduced the minifler's agent, Mr. X, to Ge neral Pinckney, in the manner stated in the Envoys' dispatches. A collateral evidence that in " this matter of the money that must be fettled directly," Mr. Talleyrand referred only to the douceur, arises from this circum stance : The very next day (Odlober 29th) Mr. X called 011 the Envoys and said, " Mr. Talleyrand was extremely anxious to be of service to them, and had requested that one more effort Ihould be made to induce us to enable him to be so." After a great deal of 'the fama co"nverfation which had passed at former interviews had been repeated, the En voys fay—" the sum of this proposition was, that if we would pay by way of fees (that was his expression) the sum of money de manded for private use, the Directory would not receive us, but would permit us to remain in Paris as we now were ; and we should be received by Mr. Talleyrand, until one of us could go to America and consult our government on the subject of a loan." Although the Envoy's dispatches, and the i'afts and circumstances herein before stated, cannot leave a doubt that X, as well as Y and Z, was well known to Mr. Talleyrand, it will not be amiss to add, that on the 2d of December, X, Y, and Z, dined together at Mr. Talleyrand's, in company with Mr. Gerry; and that after riling from the table •the money propositions, which had before been made, were repeated, in the room and in the pretence, though perhaps not in the hearing of Mr. Talleyrand. Mr. X put the question to Mr. Gerry in diredt terms, either, « whether the Envoys would now give the douceur," or " whether they had got the money ready." Mr. Gerry, very justly offended, answered positively in the nega tive, and the conversation dropped. Mr. Z, who has avowed himfelf to be Mr. Hauteval, was the person who firft made known to the Envoys the desire to confer with them individually, on the objects of their million: He it was, who firft introduced Mr. Gerry to Mr. Talley rand, and served as the interpreter of their conventions r and in his letter to Mr. Tal leyrand, at the cloffe of Mr. Gerry's docu ment, No. 35,, he announces himfelf to be the agent of the Minister, to make commu nications to the Envoys. Mr. Hauteval declares " his sensibility must be much affedted on finding himfelf, un der the letter Z, afting a part in company with certain intriguers, whose plan, (he fays) it doubtless was to take advantage of the good faith of the America-n Envoys, and make them their dupes" : yet this person, the avowed agent of the French Minister, ap parently so anxious t' screen himfelf from the suspicion of an agency in soliciting the bribe required by Mr. Talleyrand, did himfelf urge a compliance with that corrupt proposition.* The sensation which these details irrefifta bty excite, is that of astonishment at the unparalleled effrontery of Mr. Talleyrand, in demanding of Mr. Gerry the names ox X, Y, and Z alter Y had accompanied him on a visit to the minister, with whom the con versation detailed in the printed dispatches then passed, and who then assured Mr. Ger ry "that the information Mr. Y. hadgiven him was just, and might always be relied on ; after Z had in the firft instance intro duced Mr. Gerry to the minister, and served as their mutual interpreter, and when the conversation between them bad also been stated in the dispatches; and after X, Y, and * Extrjuaol a letter, dated June 15th, 1708, trcm Mr. King, Minister of the United Sutes ui London, to the Secretary ol State. "Col. Trumbull, who was at Pari* soon »f ---ter the arrival there of the Commiflioners, ha. more tKan once informed me that Hauteval told him that both the douceur and the loan were in* uilpestable, and urged him to employ his influ ence with the American Commiflioners to of »er the bribe as well a the loan" 7, had all dined with Mr. Gerry at Mr. Talleyrand's Tible, on riling from which X, and. Y, renswed the proposition about the money! —The veryctrcumftance of Mr. Talleyrand's being continued in of fice, after the account of these intrigues had been published to the world, is a decisive proof that they were commenced and carried on with the privity, and by the secret orders of the Directory. It was to accomplifli the objeCt of these intrigues that the American Envoys were kept at Paris unreceived, fix months after their credentials had been laid before the Directory: and it was only be cause they were superior to those intrigues, and that no hopes remained of wheedling or terrifying them into a compliance, that two of them were then sent away—and with marks of insult and contempt. 2. The faCt that the French Government attempted to inveigle Mr* Gerry into a sepa rate negotiation will not be questioned : at firft it was made privately, and under an injun&ion of secrecy towards his colleagues : it was afterwars plainly insinuated by the minifler, in his letter of the 18th of March, 1798, in which he tells the Envoys that the Executive Directory was disposed to treat with one of the three ; and that one he o penly avowed, in his letter of the 3d of April, to be Mr. Gerry. The pretence for Telex ing him was, that his ', opinions. presumed to be more impartial, promised, in the course of the explanations, more of that reciprocal confidence which was indifpcnfable." But when before, have their " opinions" been 'stated as a juftifiable ground for rejecting the ambassadors of peace ? Ambassadors too, of established probity, whose characters were of the firit distinCtion in their own country, and whose demeanor towards the government to which they were deputed, was decent and refpeCtful ? Who had, with a franknefs which the candor of their instruCtions war ranted, communicated the important points which they contained ? Ana who unremit tingly, and with the most anxious solicitude, entreated that the negociations might be commenced ? What more proper or more ho norable qualities ought ministers deputed to negociate with a foreign nation to poifcfs I But why should a foreign Government ques tion the opinions of the ambaffadyrs sent to negociate with it on fubje&s ftf difference between the two nations ? If wifely chosen. ind faithful to the interests of their own country, they must of course poflefs differ ent opinions from the government, to which they were sent, the differing opinions main tained by the two nations on their respeCtive rights and interests, being the cause and ob jects of the negociation. A government really disposed to treat 011 fair principles would never objeCt to the opinions of foreign ambaffadoja. It would receive them, and appoint its own ministers with proper powers to treat with them, propose its terms, and receive those offered; and discuss both, and if then they could not agree, put au end to the negociation. The French government did not wish to negociate, it desired to im pose a treaty on the United States. To this practice it had oeen accuftomt'd towards the minor powers in Europe, whom it has subjeCted to its will: and it expelled equal fubraiffion from the United States. Hence Mr. Talleyrand's secret declaration to Mr. Gerry ". that if lip would negotiate, they could fodn fihifh a treaty ; for tb* Executive Directory were not in the baiit of spending much time"about such matters."' Hence the objections to Gen. Pinckney and Gen. Mar shall : they manifefted a discernment superi or to thi intrigues of the French Govern ment, and an invincible determination not to surrender the honor, the interest, or the independence of their country. It was ne cessary then to get rid of them ; and feeing that neither despair of negociating, nor rtu died indignities, could induce them to quit their posts, passports were sent to them to quit France ; it was with difficulty that Gen. Pinckney could obtain permission to stay two or three months for the recovery ©f his Tick daughter, to whom an immediate voyage would probably prove fataL Unem barrassed by the presence ot these Eavoys, the French Government, if it really desired a treaty on any terms, hoped to prevail on Mr. Gerry to negociate separately, although from the firft overture he declined and conti nued to decline it. But after the expulsion of his colleagues, it hoped, by its seductive arts, to prevail over his- scruples, and gain his consent to terms which, while they were present, would be rejected ; or at all events to retain him, with the femblante of negotiating, regularly or informally, and thus keep the United States in the torpor of indecision, without preparation for offence or defence. Unfortunately, Mr. Gerry was in duced, by the threats of immediate war a gaiuft the United States, to leparate from' his colleagues and stay in Paris ; threats, which, viewed with their motives, merited only deteftatron and contempt. Four or five months Mare, the threats of immediate or ders tp quit France* and the terrors of war in its most dreadful forms, had been held up to all the envois. t:o frighten them into a com pliance greundjefs, unjust, and cor rupt demands of the French Government. Those threats had not been executed, and the unworthy purposes far which they had been uttered, had been obvious: Happily for the United States, the character of the French government as delineated in the official dis patches of all the envoys, and the know ledge of its conduit towards other countries whose governments it had overturned, and whose people in the names of Liberty and E quality, it had enslaved, so operated as not to leave us exposed to all the evils which suspense was calculated to produce. Mr. Gerry indeed resisted all the arts of the French minister to entice him into a formal negocia tion, after that government had driven his colleagues from Paris ; a negociation which in its nature would have been a surrender of our independence, by admitting a for ign go vernment to choose for us the minister who should represent eur countiy, to treat of our important rights and interests, which that government had itfelf violated and deeply injured. The Directory and their minift.r Mr Tal- j levrand hoped and ;*pected that General Pinckney and General Mnrihail would vo- ( luntarily have ouitted I'fnflce< after the mi- | Lifter's letter of "the 18th of Ma.-A, in which j he made the offenfive diftintt on between j them and their colleague Mr. Gerry, on the j pretence, that his " opinion*" were more , " impartial" than theirs. Accordingly Mr. j Talleyrand, in his letter to Mr. Gerry of the 3d of April, fays,—" I fupjjofe, fir, that Messrs. Pinckney and Marfliallliave thought it ufeful and proper, in conference of the i intimations which the end of my note of the 18th of March last presents, to quit the ter ritory of the Republic." Yet Mr. Talley rand had given them neither passports nor letters of fafe conduCt ! The fart is, the French government wished to avoid the odi um offending them away, and the blame of ' a rupture, which Mr. Talleyrand predicted would be the consequence ; while it was pri vately intimated to them that they must leave the country. The minister's conduft on this occasion, towards General Marfliall (as detailed in his journal) was particularly marked with indignities. When it was ob served to Mr. Talleyrand, that this was not the manner in which a foreign minister ought to be treated ; Mr. Talleyrand" replied, that General Marlhall was pot a foreign minister, but was to be considered as a private Ame rican citizen ; and must obtain his passport like others through the Consul. To this it was answered, that Gen. Marfliall was a foreign minister,* and that tlie French go vernment could not deprive him of that cha racter, which was conferred upon him, not by Mr. Talleyrand, but By the United States ; and though the B>ireClory might re fufe to receive or treat with them, still his country had clothed him with the requisite powers which fie Held independently of France, that if he Was not acceptable to the French government, and in consequence thereof it was determined to fend him away, still he ougbt to be sent away like a minister ; that he ought to have his passports, with letters of fafe conduct which would proteCt him from the cruixers of France. Mr. Talley rand replied, that if General Ma r (hall wished for a passport, he must give in his name, stature, rge, complexion, &c. to the American Conftil, who would obtain obtain a passport for him : that with re speCt to a letter of fafe conduCt, it was un necessary, as no risk from the cruisers would be incurred. Ihe result of these conversatiOns was a plain demonstration of the intention of the minister, that in consequence of his intima tion at the close of his letter of the 18th of March, that the « opinions" of two of the envoys were not agreeable to the govern ment of France, Generals Pinckney and Marfliall should appropriate to themselves the character which the minister had drawn gen erally. The envoys, aware of this snare, in their answer of the third of April to the in timation that " the direttery was disposed to treat with one of the envoys," declare to the minister, " that no one of the envoys was authorized to take upon himfelf a negocia tion evidently entrusted to the whole," and " that no two of them could propose to withdraw the mfc Ives from the talk commit ted to them by their government, while there remained a possibility of performing it but that if" it should be the will of the Di rectory to order passports for the whole or any number of them," it was desired that such passports might be accompanied with letters of fafe conduCt,to proteCl them cgainft the cruizers of France. These endeavors of the Frejich Govern ment, whether real or affected, to draw Mr. Gerry into a separate negociation, constitute the substance of the correspondence between him and Mr. 1 alley rand. They appear to merit confederation in several points of view. 1. Because if real, it was only ,in the hope and expectation, that by intriguer and ter rors the French government might influence Mr. Gerry to enter into a formal treaty, on the terms which he and his colleagues had re peatedly reieCled as incompatible with the interests, honor and independence of their country. For at this time Mr» Talleyrand had not renounced the demands of loans and a douceur as the indispensable preliminaries of a treaty. Accordingly we fee Mr. Tal leyrand, in his letter of the 3d of April to Mr. Gerry, proposed " to resume their reci procal communications upon the interests of the French republic and the United States , of America."* And in his letterof July uth, to Mr- Gerry, having mentioned the arrival at the Havre of a packet, the Sophia, from the American government, he fays, " until then I never fappofed you entertained the design of embarking before we had come to an agreement upon the definitive articles to be ratified by your government."' 2- Be cause if that government had so far succeed ed, it would have insisted on its ratification by the President and Senate,on the ground constantly taken by Mr. Talleyrand, that the powers of the envoys being several as well as joint, Mr. Gerry when alone, even after the French government bad"ordered his colleagues to leave France, were adequate to the formation of the treaty and that there fore the public faith would be violated, if it were not ratified. 3. Because under such circumstances, the French government doubt lefscalculated at least on a divifiori of the public opinion in the United States in favor of the ratification of such a treaty ; by means of which it might enforce the ratifica tion, or effect still greater mischiefs. 4. But these endeavors to draw Mr. Gerry into a formal negociation are chiefly remarkable because they were persevered in during near five months, against his constant, direCt and positive refufals to treat reparately : Mr * On the 9lh of Oflober 1797, the day as , ter the Envoys had delivered to the minifler A copy of their letter of credence, " card* of hos pitality were sent t* (hem and their Secretaries, in a flyle suitable ts the'r official character." . [Difpatchesp. 17.] And inthe minifler's letter to them of the 18th of March, 1798, he calls them " the Commiflioßers and Envoys Extra ordinary of the United States of America."— 1 Di£patchc» p. 9».} Talleyrand aflerting and Mr. Gary de;vy-.r.-, the competency ot his powers. We have seen the envoys, Ironi t.R O.yot O(fl'ober, 179.7, the .date ps" tlwir firli Li ter to the French minister, to the 3d of April 1798, when their last was delivered to lurn, expre fling their earnest desire to enter upon and prosecute the great bulineis of their mil lion ; we have seen them during that long period patiently enduring iiegl<& and indig nities, to which an ardent zeal to re-eftab- j lilh hormony and peace could alone induce freemen to submit : We have seen them white held in suspense—neither received nor . rejefted—yielding to the importunities of - private agents of the French government, and hearing and discussing their insulting as tliey were, in the hope that when these should be shown to be utterly in admissible, others founded in reason and e quity, and in the usual course of diplomatic negotiation, might be brought forward. Doubtless they also wiflied, when their as tonishment at thejfirft overtures had fubfjied, by listening still longer to such dishonorable propositions, to ascertain the true chara&er of the French government. We have seen them, after waiting five weeks from the pre sentation of a copy of their letters of cre dence, ' entirely unnoticed, " solicit an at tention to their mission," and soliciting in vain. Thus denied an official hearing, they hoped by an unufuat step to excite the atten tion of that government: they determined to transmit to the minister a letter represent ing the views of their own government in . relation to the fubjefts in dispute with France. This letter dated the 17 th was de livered the 3 1 ft of January, 1798. Wait ing near a month without an answer, and " still being anxious to hear explicitly from Mr. Tafleyjand himfelf, before they sent their final letter, whether there were no means, within their powers, of accommo dating our differences with France, on just and reasonable grounds,—on the 27th of February they desired " a personal interview on the fubjett of their mission and after ter\Vards a second interview. They remark on what pasTed at these meetings, " that the views of France, with regard to the United States, were not eflentially changed since their communications with its an-olficial a gents in the preceding Odober." At length they received Mr. Talleyrand's letter of the 18th March, 1798, in answer to theirs of the 17th of January. The mi nister's letter represented the complaints of France ; as usual, charging the American Government with the inexecution of the treaties with dissimulation—« insinuating that our tribunals were fubjeft to a secret influence —holding up the Britilh treaty as replete with evir and injury, and " the principal grievance of the republic"— accusing the American government of a wifb to seize the firft favorable occasion to con summate an intimate union with Great-Bri tain, and fuggeiling that a devotion and partiality to that power have long been the principle of the condudt of the federal go vernment. To this letter of the French minister, the envoys sent their reply on the 3d of April. This reply and their former letter detest the iophifms and erroneous statements of the minister—expose his naked afiertioqs—-refute his arguments—repel his calumnies—and completely vindicate the fidelity, the justice and, as a neutral power, the impartiality of the government of the United States ; and, at the feme time, exhibit the weighty and well-founded complaints of the United States against the French republic. ' Hitherto, instead of a desire to obtain a reconciliation, we can discover in the French government only empty professions of a desire to conciliate ; while it haughtily refuf ed to receive our Envoys, and during fix months disregarded their rcfpettfuland ardent foHcitations to negotiate : And after one of them, whom it induced to remain in France had .declared that « b* bad no powers to treat separately, that the measure was impos sible," then the Dire dory expelled the other Two t If now we furcey Mr. Gerry's individual correspondence, we (hall find no folidevidence of any change in the diipofition of the French government. In his firft letter to. Mr. Gerry, Mr. Tal leyrand's avtifice is vilible : he addre flies him as " Envoy Extraordinary of the United States of America, to the French Republic •" and proposes to him to « resume their recipro oal communications." Mr. Gerry, appre hending that the Minister intended to draw him into a negotiation, repeats what he had often before declared, that for him to treat separately was imprafticable ; and that he can only confer with him informally. On the 20th of April, Mr. Gerry ad drefles. a letter to the minister, and presses. I him to come forward with propositions for terminating all differences, restoring harmo ny, and re-eftahlifhing commerce between the two nations. He receives no answer. Or> the 28th he confers with the minister, who fays he cannot make propositions, because he does not know the views of the Unitsd* States in regard to a treaty. Mr. Geriy gives him the information. He then prom li es in three or four days to deliver Mr. Gei ry the project of a treaty : This promise was never performed. On the 12th of May, the: new inftruftions of March 23d, lent by the. Sophia packet, reached Mr. Gerry ; and he gave immediate notice to the minister that he should return to America in the Sophia ar soon as she could be fitted for sea. ' " On the 25th o£ May the minister sent his principle fee re tar v to inform Mr. Gerrv that bis government did not wish to break tl e British Treaty but expedted such prov - fioas as w.ouid indemnify France, and pi.t her on a foot'mg with that nation." Yet tint treaty had been made, by the French govern ment, its chief pretence for those unjust and cruel depredations on American commerce which have brought distress on multitudes and ruin on many of our citizens ; andocca fioned a total loss of property to the Unite,d States of prsbably more than twenty millions of dollars ; besides fubje&ing our fellow citizens to insults, stripes, wounds, torture and iaiprifonmenu And Mr- Talleyrand,.