FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1398   1399   1400   1401   1402   1403   1404   1405   1406   1407   1408   1409   1410   1411   1412   1413   1414   1415   1416   1417   1418   1419   1420   1421   1422  
1423   1424   1425   1426   1427   1428   1429   1430   1431   1432   1433   1434   1435   1436   1437   1438   1439   1440   1441   1442   1443   1444   1445   1446   1447   >>   >|  
e. She was the ornament of all diversions, the life and soul of all pleasure, and at balls ravished everybody by the justness and perfection of her dancing. She could be amused by playing for small sums but liked high gambling better, and was an excellent, good-tempered, and bold gamester. She spared nothing, not even her health, to gain Madame de Maintenon, and through her the King. Her suppleness towards them was without example, and never for a moment was at fault. She accompanied it with all the discretion that her knowledge of them, acquired by study and experience, had given her, and could measure their dispositions to an inch. In this way she had acquired a familiarity with them such as none of the King's children, not even the bastards, had approached. In public, serious, measured, with the King, and in timid decorum with Madame de Maintenon, whom she never addressed except as my aunt, thus prettily confounding friendship and rank. In private, prattling, skipping, flying around them, now perched upon the sides of their arm- chairs, now playing upon their knees, she clasped them round the neck, embraced them, kissed them, caressed them, rumpled them, tickled them under the chin, tormented them, rummaged their tables, their papers, their letters, broke open the seals, and read the contents in spite of opposition, if she saw that her waggeries were likely to be received in good part. When the King was with his ministers, when he received couriers, when the most important affairs were under discussion, she was present, and with such liberty, that, hearing the King and Madame de Maintenon speak one evening with affection of the Court of England, at the time when peace was hoped for from Queen Anne, "My aunt," she said, "you must admit that in England the queens govern better than the kings, and do you know why, my aunt?" asked she, running about and gambolling all the time, "because under kings it is women who govern, and men under queens." The joke is that they both laughed, and said she was right. The King really could not do without her. Everything went wrong with him if she was not by; even at his public supper, if she were away an additional cloud of seriousness and silence settled around him. She took great care to see him every day upon arriving and departing; and if some ball in winter, or some pleasure party in summer, made her lose half the night, she nevertheless adjusted things so well that she went a
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1398   1399   1400   1401   1402   1403   1404   1405   1406   1407   1408   1409   1410   1411   1412   1413   1414   1415   1416   1417   1418   1419   1420   1421   1422  
1423   1424   1425   1426   1427   1428   1429   1430   1431   1432   1433   1434   1435   1436   1437   1438   1439   1440   1441   1442   1443   1444   1445   1446   1447   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Madame

 

Maintenon

 
public
 

acquired

 

received

 

England

 

govern

 

queens

 

playing

 

pleasure


waggeries

 
important
 
affairs
 

discussion

 
couriers
 
ministers
 

present

 

liberty

 

affection

 

evening


hearing

 

laughed

 

arriving

 

departing

 

winter

 

adjusted

 

things

 

summer

 

settled

 
silence

gambolling

 

running

 
additional
 

seriousness

 

supper

 
Everything
 

chairs

 
moment
 

suppleness

 
health

accompanied

 

discretion

 

familiarity

 
dispositions
 

measure

 

knowledge

 
experience
 

spared

 

gamester

 
ravished