[An Attic Philosopher by Emile Souvestre]@TWC D-Link bookAn Attic Philosopher CHAPTER VII 10/18
The prayers and tears of her whom they had just snatched from death were necessary to obtain pardon for their crime.
Every one knows the anecdote related by Madame Campan of Marie Antoinette, wife of Louis XVI.
One day, being at her toilet, when the chemise was about to be presented to her by one of the assistants, a lady of very ancient family entered and claimed the honor, as she had the right by etiquette; but, at the moment she was about to fulfil her duty, a lady of higher rank appeared, and in her turn took the garment she was about to offer to the queen; when a third lady of still higher title came in her turn, and was followed by a fourth, who was no other than the king's sister.
The chemise was in this manner passed from hand to hand, with ceremonies, courtesies, and compliments, before it came to the queen, who, half naked and quite ashamed, was shivering with cold for the great honor of etiquette. 12th, seven o'clock, P.M .-- On coming home this evening, I saw, standing at the door of a house, an old man, whose appearance and features reminded me of my father.
There was the same beautiful smile, the same deep and penetrating eye, the same noble bearing of the head, and the same careless attitude. I began living over again the first years of my life, and recalling to myself the conversations of that guide whom God in his mercy had given me, and whom in his severity he had too soon withdrawn. When my father spoke, it was not only to bring our two minds together by an interchange of thought, but his words always contained instruction. Not that he endeavored to make me feel it so: my father feared everything that had the appearance of a lesson.
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