FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1696   1697   1698   1699   1700   1701   1702   1703   1704   1705   1706   1707   1708   1709   1710   1711   1712   1713   1714   1715   1716   1717   1718   1719   1720  
1721   1722   1723   1724   1725   1726   1727   1728   1729   1730   1731   1732   1733   1734   1735   1736   1737   1738   1739   1740   1741   1742   1743   1744   1745   >>   >|  
owed by Rion and the majority of her ladies and her household. M. le Duc d'Orleans informed me then of the fixed design of Madame la Duchesse de Berry to declare the secret marriage she had just made with Rion. Madame la Duchesse d'Orleans was at Montmartre for a few days, and we were walking in the little garden of her apartments. The marriage did not surprise me much, knowing the strength of her passion, her fear of the devil, and the scandal which had just happened. But I was astonished, to the last degree, at this furious desire to declare the marriage, in a person so superbly proud. M. le Duc d'Orleans dilated upon his troubles, his anger, that of Madame (who wished to proceed to the most violent extremities), and the great resolve of Madame la Duchesse d'Orleans. Fortunately the majority of the officers destined to serve against Spain, (war with that country had just been declared) were leaving every day, and Rion had remained solely on account of the illness of Madame la Duchesse de Berry, M. le Duc d'Orleans thought the shortest plan would be to encourage hope by delay, in forcing Rion to depart, flattering himself that the declaration would be put off much more easily in his absence than in his presence. I strongly approved this idea, and on the morrow, Rion received at Meudon a curt and positive order to depart at once and join his regiment in the army of the Duc de Berwick. Madame la Duchesse de Berry was all the more outraged, because she knew the cause of this order, and consequently felt her inability to hinder its execution. Rion on his side did not dare to disobey it. He set out, therefore; and M. le Duc d'Orleans, who had not yet been to Meudon, remained several days without going there. Father and daughter feared each other, and this departure had not put them on better terms. She had told him, and repeated it, that she was a rich widow, mistress of her own actions, independent of him; had flown into a fury, and terribly abused M. le Duc d'Orleans when he tried to remonstrate with her. He had received much rough handling from her at the Luxembourg when she was better; it was the same at Meudon during the few visits he paid her there. She wished to declare her marriage; and all the art, intellect, gentleness, anger, menace, prayers, and interest of M. le Duc d'Orleans barely sufficed to make her consent to a brief delay. If Madame had been listened to, the affair would have been finished before
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1696   1697   1698   1699   1700   1701   1702   1703   1704   1705   1706   1707   1708   1709   1710   1711   1712   1713   1714   1715   1716   1717   1718   1719   1720  
1721   1722   1723   1724   1725   1726   1727   1728   1729   1730   1731   1732   1733   1734   1735   1736   1737   1738   1739   1740   1741   1742   1743   1744   1745   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Orleans

 

Madame

 
Duchesse
 

marriage

 

declare

 

Meudon

 

depart

 

majority

 

remained

 

wished


received

 
daughter
 
Father
 

feared

 
outraged
 
regiment
 

Berwick

 

inability

 

disobey

 

hinder


execution

 

abused

 

gentleness

 

menace

 

prayers

 

interest

 

intellect

 

visits

 

barely

 
sufficed

affair

 

finished

 
listened
 

consent

 

Luxembourg

 
mistress
 

actions

 
repeated
 

independent

 
remonstrate

handling

 

terribly

 

departure

 
shortest
 

happened

 

astonished

 
scandal
 

passion

 

degree

 
furious