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Balls were not then the crushes they afterwards became. The company was not nearly so numerous; there was plenty of room for those who were not [54] dancing to see and hear what was going on. Mme. Le Brun, however, never cared for dancing, but preferred the houses where music, acting, or conversation were the amusements. One of her favourite salons was that of the charg�� d��affaires of Saxony, M. de Rivi��re, whose daughter had married her brother Louis Vig��e. He and her sister-in-law were constantly at her house. Mme. Vig��e acted very well, was a good musician, and extremely pretty. Louis Vig��e was also a good amateur actor; no bad or indifferent acting would have been tolerated in the charades and private theatricals in which Talma, Larive, and Le Kain also took part. このページの先頭です
ONE:M. de Montagu returns to Paris��M. de Beaune��Richmond��Death of No��mi��Aix-la-Chapelle��Escape of the Duc d��Ayen and Vicomte de Noailles��La Fayette arrested in Austria��The Hague��Crossing the Meuse��Margate��Richmond��Hardships of poverty��Brussels��Letter from Mme. de Tess����Joins her in Switzerland��Murder of M. and Mme. de Mouchy��Goes to meet the Duc d��Ayen��He tells her of the murder of her grandmother, Mme. de Noailles, her mother, the Duchesse d��Ayen, and her eldest sister, the Vicomtesse de Noailles��Mme. de la Fayette still in prison.AN abyss of separation lies between the two women whose life-histories have just been related, and the one of whose stormy career a sketch is now to be given.
ONE:
ここから本文です
TWO:Thus she wandered from place to place during the rest of her nine years of exile, generally under an assumed name; going now and then to Berlin, after the King��s death, and to Hamburg, which was full of emigr��s, but where she met M. de Talleyrand and others of her own friends. Shunned and denounced by many, welcomed by others, she made many friends of different grades, from the brother and sister-in-law of the King of Denmark to worthy Mme. Plock, where she lodged in Altona, and the good farmer in Holstein, in whose farmhouse she lived. The storms and troubles of her life did not subdue her spirits; she was always ready for a new friendship, enjoying society, but able to do without it; taking an interest in everything, walking about the country in all weathers, playing the harp, reading, teaching a little boy she had adopted and called Casimir, and writing books by which she easily supported herself and increased her literary reputation.��I knew it,�� replied Fronsac, and passed on.
TWO:��What does that prove? Do not all these brutes say tu nowadays?��
THREE:��Madame, do you know what it costs to wish for once in one��s life to see the sun rise? Read that and tell me what you think of the poetry of our friends.��
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THREE:She had a large picture painted by Boucher, in which all her grandnephews were represented as Cupids, with nothing on but the Order of the Grand Cross of Malta, to show their right to belong to it. None of the family could look at or speak of it with gravity. But what was a more serious matter was her passion for stealing relics and objects of religious value. She even mixed one into a medicine for her son, the Duc d��Ayen, when he had the measles. This had been lent her by some nuns, who of course could never get it back again. The nuns were very angry, so were the Archbishop of Paris and the Bishop of Chartres; she had also stolen a beautiful chalice and they refused to give her the Holy Communion. Her [177] family were much disturbed and had considerable trouble in getting her out of the difficulties and trying to hush up the affair.