FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   807   808   809   810   811   812   813   814   815   816   817   818   819   820   821   822   823   824   825   826   827   828   829   830   831  
832   833   834   835   836   837   838   839   840   841   842   843   844   845   846   847   848   849   850   851   852   853   854   855   856   >>   >|  
the late Madame was better treated than I was it was for the purpose of pleasing the King of England, who was very fond of his sister. ........................... Madame de La Fayette, who has written the life of the late Madame, was her intimate friend; but she was still more intimately the friend of M. de La Rochefoucauld, who remained with her to the day of his death. It is said that these two friends wrote together the romance of the Princesse de Cloves. SECTION XVIII.--THE DUC DE BERRI. It is not surprising that the manners of the Duc de Berri were not very elegant, since he was educated by Madame de Maintenon and the Dauphine as a valet de chambre. He was obliged to wait upon the old woman at table, and at all other times upon the Dauphine's ladies, with whom he was by day and night. They made a mere servant of him, and used to talk to him in a tone of very improper familiarity, saying, "Berri, go and fetch me my work; bring me that table; give me my scissors." Their manner of behaving to him was perfectly shameful. This had the effect of degrading his disposition, and of giving him base propensities; so that it is not surprising he should have been violently in love with an ugly femme de chambre. His good father was naturally of rather a coarse disposition. But for that old Maintenon, the Duc de Berri would have been humpbacked, like the rest who had been made to carry iron crosses. The Duc de Berri's character seemed to undergo a total change; it is said to be the ordinary lot of the children in Paris that, if they display any sense in their youth, they become stupid as they grow older. It was in compliance with the King's will that he married. At first he was passionately fond of his wife; but at the end of three months he fell in love with a little, ugly, black femme de chambre. The Duchess, who had sufficient penetration, was not slow in discovering this, and told her husband immediately that, if he continued to live upon good terms with her, as he had done at first, she would say nothing about it, and act as if she were not acquainted with it; but if he behaved ill, she would tell the whole affair to the King, and have the femme de chambre sent away, so that he should never hear of her again. By this threat she held the Duke, who was a very simple man, so completely in check, that he lived very well with her up to his death, leaving her to do as she pleased, and dying himself
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   807   808   809   810   811   812   813   814   815   816   817   818   819   820   821   822   823   824   825   826   827   828   829   830   831  
832   833   834   835   836   837   838   839   840   841   842   843   844   845   846   847   848   849   850   851   852   853   854   855   856   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

chambre

 

Madame

 
Dauphine
 

surprising

 

disposition

 

Maintenon

 

friend

 
display
 

completely

 

children


simple

 

compliance

 

stupid

 

character

 
crosses
 

pleased

 

change

 

ordinary

 

undergo

 

leaving


husband

 

affair

 
immediately
 
continued
 
behaved
 

acquainted

 
discovering
 

threat

 
months
 
passionately

penetration
 

sufficient

 
Duchess
 
married
 

Cloves

 

SECTION

 
Princesse
 
romance
 

friends

 
obliged

educated

 

manners

 

elegant

 

pleasing

 

England

 

sister

 
Fayette
 

purpose

 
treated
 

written