[The Touchstone of Fortune by Charles Major]@TWC D-Link book
The Touchstone of Fortune

CHAPTER I
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In early youth I had lived in her father's house and was more her elder brother than her cousin.
I suppose De Grammont was wrong in his sweeping assertion, but he was right in his judgment of Frances, for though she was admittedly the most beautiful woman--perhaps I should say girl, for she was very young--at court, she--.

But what befell her is a part of George Hamilton's history and shall be told all in its turn.
* * * * * Frances Jennings and her younger sister Sarah, who afterwards became the first duchess of the present House of Marlborough, were the daughters of my uncle, Sir Richard Jennings, of Sundridge, near St.Albans.With a fidelity more creditable to his heart than to his head, Sir Richard had clung to the cause of Charles I, had lost his entire fortune, and in the end was forced to bend his neck to the yoke of Cromwell to save his life.
When Charles II returned to the throne, he easily forgave Sir Richard his enforced apostasy, but failed to return his estates, forgiveness being so much easier than restitution to an indolent selfish nature.
So it was that at the time this story opens, which was several years after King Charles's return, Sir Richard and his two daughters were living almost in poverty at Sundridge, hoping for help from the king, though little expecting it.

Without assistance furnished by myself and a former retainer of Sir Richard, one Roger Wentworth, who had become a prosperous tanner of Sundridge, my cousins and my uncle would have been reduced to want.

But Wentworth and I kept up a meagre household, and I was on watch at court to forward my uncle's interest, if by any good fortune an opportunity should come.

At last, after long waiting, it came, though as often occurs with happiness delayed, it was mingled with bitterness.
I think it was in the year 1662 or '63--it may have been a year or two earlier or later, I cannot say at this distance of time--the Duchess of York, who, with her husband, lived in Whitehall Palace with King Charles, announced her intention of choosing her maids of honor by personal inspection.


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