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T└r┬zia Cabarrus!Comes to Paris!Married to the Marquis de Fontenay!Revolutionary sympathies!Unpopularity of Royal Family!The wig of M. de Montyon!The Comte d¨Artois and his tutor!The Comte de Provence and Louis XV.

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Of the Dauphine, Marie-Jos┬phe de Saxe, as well as of his father, their son the Comte de Provence, afterwards Louis XVIII., writes in his Memoirs as follows: ^His pure soul could not rest on this earth, his crown was not of this world, and he died young. France had to mourn the premature death of a prince, who, if he had lived might perhaps have saved the kingdom from the catastrophe of a blood-stained revolution, and his family from exile and the scaffold.^Nor I either, ̄ said the police officer, laughing; ^but why then did you say you were the devil, and what are you and your companions doing? ̄^It is a dress that belonged to my grandfather, Monseigneur; and I think that if every one here had got on the dress of his grandfather, your Highness would not find mine the most curious in the room. ̄
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THREE: FORE:As she drove with a friend down to Romainville to stay with the Comte de S└gur, she noticed that the peasants they met in the roads did not take off their hats to them, but looked at them insolently, and sometimes shook their sticks threateningly at them.

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FORE:The Duc de Chartres was horror-stricken at the crime, at his father¨s share in it, and at the hypocritical letter in which he excused his baseness, speaking of his lacerated heart, his sacrifice to liberty, and the welfare of France, &c.She and Mme. de la Fayette used also to visit the prisons, which in those days required no little courage, owing to the squalor, cruelty, and misery with which they were thus brought into contact.
FORE:The chateau, built close to the river, was large, picturesque, and dilapidated, with immense court-yards and crumbling towers; on the opposite bank was the Abbaye de Sept-Fonts, where F└licit└ and her brother were often taken for a treat, crossing the Loire in a boat and dining in the guest-room of the abbey.They lingered for a while at Florence, unable to tear themselves away from that enchanting city, with its marvellous wealth of art and that beauty of its own, of walls and towers and palaces and ancient streets then undestroyed.
FORE:^Proscribed me? ̄^You arrest me as a criminal? and for what? ̄ while a burst of laughter was heard inside.
FORE:One day at the end of May when she and her daughter were walking in the summer gardens, they noticed that all the shrubs were covered only with buds. Taking a long walk round the gardens and returning to the same place, they found all the buds had burst into leaf.The Vicomte de Noailles was also proscribed, and fled to England, whence he kept writing to his wife to join him; but she would not leave her mother and grandmother.
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^How could they let that canaille pass in! They should sweep away four or five hundred with cannon; the rest would run. ̄^See Madame, people go also to pay their court to Mme. Le Brun. They must certainly be rendezvous which they have at her house. ̄The strong affection between Alexander I. and his mother lasted as long as she lived.Her aunt, Mme. de Montesson, had, since her marriage, been on very friendly and intimate terms with her, although the two had never any real affection for each other, and now, M. de Montesson having died, his widow was aiming at nothing less than becoming the Duchess of Orl└ans, and found her niece a most useful and sympathetic confidant. For it had suited Mme. de Montesson to have a niece so well placed in society and so much sought after as the young Comtesse de Genlis. F└licit└, on her part, was by no means blind to the advantage of having her aunt married to the first prince of the blood, and did everything in her power to forward her plans. The Duke had long been an admirer of Mme. de Montesson, who encouraged his devotion, was continually in his society, but had no intention whatever that their love-making should [380] end in any way but one. It was an ambition that seemed barred with almost insuperable difficulties, and yet it succeeded, though not to the full extent she desired.^That¨s true; but I don¨t like him any the better for that, the wretch! Ah, I hate him! how I hate him! how I hate him! But there he is coming back, so I shall begin again! ̄ And so he did. [93]
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