|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1901 Edition.
1901. Being her journals, letters, and conversations during her
confidential relations with Marie Antoinette with original and
authentic anecdotes of the royal family and other distinguished
personages during the revolution. Edited by Catherine Hyde,
Marquise De Gouvion Broglie Scolari in the confidential service of
the unfortunate princess. Because of the loyalty of her nature the
Princess de Lamballe was fated to be not only an eyewitness but a
victim of the Reign of Terror.
1901. Being her journals, letters, and conversations during her
confidential relations with Marie Antoinette with original and
authentic anecdotes of the royal family and other distinguished
personages during the revolution. Edited by Catherine Hyde,
Marquise De Gouvion Broglie Scolari in the confidential service of
the unfortunate princess. Because of the loyalty of her nature the
Princess de Lamballe was fated to be not only an eyewitness but a
victim of the Reign of Terror.
1901. Being her journals, letters, and conversations during her
confidential relations with Marie Antoinette with original and
authentic anecdotes of the royal family and other distinguished
personages during the revolution. Edited by Catherine Hyde,
Marquise De Gouvion Broglie Scolari in the confidential service of
the unfortunate princess. Because of the loyalty of her nature the
Princess de Lamballe was fated to be not only an eyewitness but a
victim of the Reign of Terror.
1901. Being her journals, letters, and conversations during her
confidential relations with Marie Antoinette with original and
authentic anecdotes of the royal family and other distinguished
personages during the revolution. Edited by Catherine Hyde,
Marquise De Gouvion Broglie Scolari in the confidential service of
the unfortunate princess. Because of the loyalty of her nature the
Princess de Lamballe was fated to be not only an eyewitness but a
victim of the Reign of Terror.
Of all the published memoirs relative to the reign of Louis XV, the
Memoirs of Madame du Hausset (Ladies' Maid to Madame de Pompadour)
are the only perfectly sincere ones. Sometimes, Madame du Hausset
mistakes, through ignorance, but never does she willfully mislead;
nor is she ever betrayed by her vanity to invent. Madame du Hausset
was often separated from the little and obscure chamber in the
Palace of Versailles, where resided the supreme power, only by a
slight door or curtain, which permitted her to hear all that was
said there. She had for a cher ami the greatest practical
philosopher of that period, Dr. Quesnay, the founder of political
economy. He was physician to Madame de Pompadour, and one of the
sincerest and most single-hearted of men probably in Paris at the
time. He explained to Madame du Hausset many things that, but for
his assistance, she would have witnessed without understanding.
Marie Thirise Louise de Savoie-Carignan, Princess de Lamballe, was
fated to be not only an eye-witness but a victim of the Reign of
Terror. She was born in Turin in 1749, was married in 1767 to
Stanislaus, Prince of Lamballe and son of the Duke of Penthiivre,
which brought her into the relationship of sister-in-law to the
Duke of Orlians. Her husband died within a year, leaving her, as
she expresses it, "a bride when an infant, a widow before I was a
mother or had a prospect of becoming one." A marriage was proposed
between the Princess and Louis XV, but it fell through. In her
retirement she gained the friendship of Marie Antoinette, who
appointed her superintendent of the royal household on the
accession of Louis XVI. This official connection grew into a
sisterly intimacy of the most cordial kind. Their youth of
brilliant promise was soon overshadowed by ominous troubles. The
lighter temperament of the Queen was happily balanced by the
philosophic gravity of the Princess, who foresaw the bitter fruits
of the conditions in which her royal mistress had been reared and
would not radically change. This journal-record of experiences and
reflections is as pathetic a tale as has ever been told.
|
|