When Condé joined the party of the
Fronde, Bussy joined him, but a fancied slight on the part of the prince finally decided him for the royal side. He fought with some distinction both in the civil war and on foreign service and, buying the commission of
mestre de camp in 1655, he went on to serve under
Turenne in
Flanders. He served there in several campaigns and distinguished himself at the
Battle of the Dunes (1658) and elsewhere; but he did not get on well with his general, and his quarrelsome disposition, his overweening vanity and his habit of composing libellous
chansons made him eventually the enemy of most persons of position both in the army and at court. In 1659, he fell into disgrace for having taken part in an
orgy at
Roissy near Paris during
Holy Week, which caused great scandal. Bussy was ordered to retire to his estates at
Château de Bussy-Rabutin, and beguiled his enforced leisure by composing his famous
Histoire amoureuse des Gaules (written in 1660) for the amusement of his sick mistress,
Madame de Montglas. This book, a series of portraits and accounts of the intrigues of the chief ladies of the court, witty enough, but still more ill-natured, circulated freely in manuscript and had numerous spurious sequels. Although Bussy denied the charges, blaming Madame de la Baume (Catherine de Bonne, comtesse de Tallard, died 1692), a former intimate of his, it was said that he had not spared the reputations of members of the royal family, including Madame and the Queen Mother. In a letter of apology and explanation to the king Bussy claimed that a false friend who had asked to borrow it briefly (Madame de la Baume) had copied it and altered it without his knowledge. The king, angry at the report, was momentarily appeased when Bussy showed him the original manuscript to disprove the scandal, but a closed-door meeting (most likely with Madame de la Baume) sealed Bussy's fate. He was sent to the
Bastille on 17 April 1665, where he remained for more than a year, and he was only liberated on condition of retiring to his estates, where he lived in exile for 27 years. Bussy felt the disgrace keenly, but the enforced close of his military career was still more bitter. In 1682 he was allowed to revisit the court, but the coldness of his reception there made his provincial exile seem preferable and he returned to Burgundy, where he died. He had been elected to the
Académie française in 1665, and held his chair there until his death in 1693. == Writing ==