ONE:At length the Duke of Orl��ans came back, and in consequence of the persuasions of Mme. de Genlis he arranged that his daughter should be ordered by the doctors to take the waters at Bath, and they set off; Mademoiselle d��Orl��ans, Mme. de Genlis, Pamela, and Henriette de Sercey, with their attendants, furnished with a passport permitting them to stay in England as long as the health of Mademoiselle d��Orl��ans required. They started October 11, 1791, slept at Calais, and remained a few days in London in the house the Duc d��Orl��ans had bought there; they went to Bath, where they stayed for two months.The King was very fond of his daughters, but had no idea of bringing them up properly. The four younger ones were sent to the convent of Fontevrault, in Anjou, to be educated, and as they never came home and were never visited by their parents, they were strangers to each other when, after twelve years, the two youngest came back. As to the others, Madame Victoire returned when she was fourteen, and Madame Th��r��se, who was called Madame Sixi��me, because she was the sixth daughter of the King, died when she was eight years old at Fontevrault.
TWO:M. de Chalabre at first denied, but on the Queen��s insisting confessed that it was the young Comte de ����, whose father was an ambassador, and was then abroad. The Queen desired him to keep the affair secret, and the next evening when the young Count approached the tables she said, smiling��
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