FORE:S��il veut qu��un pr��lat soit chr��tien,Just then her mother died after a short illness, which was a great shock to her; she had lived with or near her for many years since the death of her second husband, and had been the object of her devoted care.
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FORE:At a concert in Milan she made the acquaintance of the Countess Bistri, a beautiful Pole, who was also going to Vienna with her husband. They arranged to travel together, and this was the beginning of a long and intimate friendship.The Emperor tried them on and exclaimed hastily��
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FORE:��Why? It will be putting your head in the wolf��s mouth.��
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THREE:It was in the days when the Queen was giving f��tes at Trianon, when the court quarrelled about the music of Gluck and Piccini, and listened to the marvels related by the Comte de Saint-Germain, when every one talked about nature, and philosophy, and virtue, and the rights of man, while swiftly and surely the Revolution was drawing near.
Why not give one of these popular Games a look?
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THREE:Over the other column was written, ��Let us see mine,�� and these were represented by a column of noughts. At the bottom was written, ��Total: Satisfaction!!��THE Duke of Orl��ans died 1785, and Mme. de Montesson, having been forbidden by Louis XVI. to put her household into mourning or assume the position of a Duchess Dowager of Orl��ans, retired for a few weeks into a convent and then returned to her usual life, having inherited a great fortune from the late Duke.
TWO:The history of Mme. de Genlis in the emigration differs from the other two, for having contrived to make herself obnoxious both to royalists and republicans her position was far worse than theirs.Pauline also had something like what would now be called by us a district at Montmartre, not far from the rue Chantereine, where she lived; but she had poor pensioners all over Paris to whom she gave food, firing, clothes, doctors, everything [211] they wanted, and whom she visited constantly. Old and young, good and bad, beggars, prisoners, every sort of distress found a helper in her.
TWO:She did not bear the title, which indeed would not then have been permissible; but the well-known [455] arms and blue liveries of Orl��ans re-appeared on her carriages and in her h?tel, the royal arms of Orl��ans were embroidered on the fine Saxon linen of her household, the gold plate and delicate S��vres china denounced by the Terrorists was to be seen at the princely entertainments at her h?tel in the rue de Provence, where everything was done with the stately magnificence of former days, and whither every one of the old and new society was eager to be presented.
TWO:
TWO:Catalani, then young and beautiful, was one of her new friends, and used to sing at her parties. She painted her portrait, and kept it as a pendant to the one she had done of Grassini in London.
THREE:Mme. Auguier sent her husband��s valet de chambre [81] to help him up, and take him into the kitchen. Presently the valet returned, saying, ��Madame is indeed too kind; that man is a wretch. Here are some papers which have fallen out of his pocket.�� He gave them several sheets of papers, one of which began, ��Down with the Royal Family! down with the nobles! down with the priests!�� and all of which were filled with a tissue of blasphemies, litanies of the Revolution, threats and predictions horrible enough to make their hair stand on end.��Name! Oh! my name is the devil,�� and he hurried away.
THREE:Mme. Le Brun now worked so hard that she made herself ill, often having three sittings a day, and she soon became so thin and out of health that her friends interfered, and by order of the doctor she henceforth, after working all the morning and dining in the middle of the day, took a siesta, which she found invaluable all her life. The evenings were always devoted to society.
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Freethinkers, deists, or open atheists most of them were, delighting in blasphemous assaults and attacks, not only upon the Church and religion in general, but upon God himself; and so outrageous and scurrilous was their habitual language [12] upon such subjects that they found it necessary to disguise, by a sort of private slang known only to each other, their conversation in public places where it might be not only offensive to their hearers, but dangerous to themselves.The Duchesse de Fleury, who had attached herself with such enthusiastic affection to Mme. Le Brun, was scarcely sixteen, although in mind, character, and experience she was far older than her years.She felt that she had exchanged security, the protection of a beautiful and well-ordered home, and the society of those she loved and respected, for dependence and danger.In the convent they were safe and at peace, except for another illness of Mademoiselle d��Orl��ans, which left her so weak that Mme. de Genlis was afraid to tell her of the execution of her father in the November of 1794. She persuaded her not to read the French papers, telling her they were full of blasphemies and indecencies not fit for her to see. She had already received news of the execution of her husband, M. de Sillery, by which she was prostrated for a time.