You know, the cliché of the blasé aristocrat tired of power and relying only on HIS men instead of competent ones, that prefers to pass the day with a rich woman rather than make the slightest effort?
He's the original one.
"Après moi, le déluge" is attributed to Louis XIV, not XV. But he actually never said that, and in fact he said by dying "Je m'en vais, mais l'état demeurera toujours" (I'm going now, but the state would stand). It's because of the french monarchist conception of state (since the Late Middle-Ages) : king is less a title than a function (Louis XIV talked about his "job of king") and during crownations, they were symbolically married to the state by the use of a ring.