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[10] Arneth, i., p.9-16
CHAPTER IV.
[1] Dates 9th and 12th., Arneth, i., pp. 16, 18.
[2] Marly was a palace belonging to the king, but little inferior in splendor to Versailles itself, and a favorite residence of Louis XV., because a less strict etiquette had been established there. Choisy and Bellevue, which will often be mentioned in the course of this narrative, were two others of the royal palaces on a somewhat smaller scale. They have both been destroyed. Marly, Choisy, and Bellevue were all between Versailles and Paris.
[3] Mem. de Goncourt, quoting a MS. diary of Hardy, p. 35.
[4] De Vermond, who had accompanied her from Vienna as her reader.
[5] See St. Simon's account of Dangeau, i., p. 392.
[6] The Duc de Noailles, brother-in-law of the countess, "l'homme de France qui a peut-etre le plus d'esprit et qui connait le mieux son souverain et la cour," told Mercy in August that "jugeant d'apres son experience et d'apres les qualites qu'il voyait dans cette princesse, il etait persuade qu'elle gouvernerait un jour l'esprit du roi."--ARNETH, i., p. 34.
[7] La pet.i.te rousse.
[8] "De monter a cheval gate le teint, et votre taille a la longue s'en ressentira."--_Marie-Therese a Marie-Antoinette_, Arneth, i., p. 104.
[9] "On fit chercher partout des anes fort doux et tranquilles. Le 21 on repeta la promenade sur les anes. Mesdames voulurent etre de la partie ainsi que le Comte de Provence et le Comte d'Artois."--_Mercy a Marie- Therese_, September 19, 1770, Arneth, i., p. 49.
[10] "Madame la Dauphine, a laquelle le tresor royal doit remettre 6000 frs. par mois, n'a reellement pas un ecu dont elle peut disposer elle-meme et sans le concours de personne" (Octobre 20).--ARNETH, i. p. 69.
[11] "Ses garcons de chambre recoivent cent louis [a louis was twenty-four francs, so that the hundred made 2100 francs out of her 6000] par mois pour la depense du jeu de S.A.R.; et soit qu'elle perde ou qu'elle gagne, on ne revoit rien de cette somme."--ARNETH, i.
[12] "Mme. Adelaide ajouta, 'On voit bien que vous n'etes pas de notre sang.'"--ARNETH, i., p. 94.
[13] Arneth, i., p. 95.
[14] "Finalement, Mme. la Dauphine se fait adorer de ses entours et du public; il n'est pas encore survenu un seul inconvenient grave dans sa conduite."--_Mercy a Marie-Therese_, Novembre 16, Arneth, i., p. 98.
[15] Prince de Ligne, "Mem." ii., p. 79.
[16] Mercy to Maria Teresa, dated November 17th, 1770, Arneth, i., p. 94.
[17] Mercy to Maria Teresa, dated February 25th, 1771, Arneth, i, p. 134.
CHAPTER V
[1] See the "Citizen of the World," Letter 55. Reference has often been made to Lord Chesterfield's prediction of the French Revolution. But I am not aware that any one has remarked on the equally acute foresight of Goldsmith.
[2] Letter of April 16th, 1771, Arneth, i., p. 148.
[3] Arneth, i., p. 186.
[4] Maria Teresa to Marie Antoinette, July 9th, and August 17th, Arneth, i., p. 196.
[5] "Ne soyez pas honteuse d'etre allemande jusqu'aux gaucheries.... Le Francais vous estimera plus et fera plus de compte sur vous s'il vous trouve la solidite et la franchise allemande."--_Maria Teresa to Marie Antoinette._ May 8th, 1771, Arneth, i., p. 159.
[6] Walpole's letter to Sir H. Mann, June 8th, 1771, v., p. 301.
[7] Mercy to Maria Teresa, January 23d, 1772, Arneth, i., p. 265.
[8] The Duc de la Vauguyon, who, after the dauphin's marriage, still retained his post with his younger brother.
CHAPTER VI
[1] Mercy's letter to the empress, August 14th, 1772, Arneth, i., p. 335.
[2] Mercy to Maria Teresa, November 14th, 1772, Arneth, i., p. 307.
[3] Marie Antoinette to Maria Teresa, December 15th, 1772, Arneth, i., p.
382.
[4] Her sister Caroline, Queen of Naples.
[5] Her brother Leopold, at present Grand Duke of Tuscany, afterward emperor. His wife, Marie Louise, was a daughter of Charles III. of Spain.
[6] They, with several of the princes of the blood and some of the peers, as already mentioned, had been banished for their opposition to the abolition of the Parliaments; but now, in the hopes of obtaining the king's consent to his marriage with Madame de Montessan, a widow of enormous wealth, the Due d'Orleans made overtures for forgiveness, accompanying them, however, with a letter so insolent that it might we be regarded as an aggravation of his original offense. According to Madame du Deffand (letter to Walpole, December 18th, 1772, vol. ii., p. 283), he was only prevented from reconciling himself to the king some months before by his son, the Due de Chartres (afterward the infamous egalite), whom she describes as "a young man, very obstinate, and who hopes to play a great part by putting himself at the head of a faction." The princes, however, in the view of the shrewd old lady, had made the mistake of greatly overrating their own importance. "These great princes, since their protest, have been just citizens of the Rue St. Denis. No one at court ever perceived their absence, and no one in the city ever noticed their presence."
[7] Lord Stormont, the English Emba.s.sador at Vienna, from which city he was removed to Paris. In the preceding September Maria Teresa had complained to him of being "animated against her cabinet, from indignation at the part.i.tion of Poland."
[8] That is, sisters-in-law--the Princesses Clotilde and Elizabeth.
[9] The Hotel-Dieu was the most ancient hospital in Paris. It had already existed several hundred years when Philip Augustus enlarged it, and gave it the name of Maison de Dieu. Henry IV. and his successors had further enlarged it, and enriched it with monuments; and even the revolutionists respected it, though when they had disowned the existence of G.o.d they changed its name to that of L'Hospice de l'Humanite. It had been almost destroyed by fire a fortnight before the date of this letter, on the night of the 29th of December.
[10] St. Anthony's Day was June 14th, and her name of Antoinette was regarded as placing her under his especial protection.
CHAPTER VII
[1] They have not, however, been preserved.
[2] Mercy to Maria Teresa, June 16th, 1773, Arneth, i., p. 467.
[3] "Marie Antoinette, Louis XVI., et la Famille Royale", p. 23.
[4] Marie Antoinette to Maria Theresa, July 17th, Arneth, ii., p. 8.
[5] "Histoire de Marie Antoinette," par M. de Goncourt, p. 50. Quoting an unpublished journal by M.M. Hardy, in the Royal Library.
[6] It is the name by which she is more than once described in Madame du Deffand's letters. See her "Correspondence," ii., p. 357.
[7] Mercy to Maria Teresa, December 11th, 1773, Arneth, ii., p. 81.
[8] "Memoires de Besenval," i., p. 304.