the noblest kingdoms of Europe. And in that situation
we see her for a while a light-hearted, merry girl,
annoyed rather than elated by her new magnificence;
thoughtless, if not frivolous, in her pursuits; fond
of dress; eager in her appetite for amusement, tempered
only by an innate purity of feeling which never deserted
her; the brightest features of her character being
apparently a frank affability, and a genuine and active
kindness and humanity which were displayed to all
classes and on all occasions. We see her presently
as queen, hardly yet arrived at womanhood, little changed
in disposition or in outward demeanor, though profiting
to the utmost by the opportunities which her increased
power afforded her of proving the genuine tenderness
of her heart, by munificent and judicious works of
charity and benevolence; and exerting her authority,
if possible, still more beneficially by protecting
virtue, discountenancing vice, and purifying a court
whose shameless profligacy had for many generations
been the scandal of Christendom. It is probable,
indeed, that much of her early levity was prompted
by a desire to drive from her mind disappointments
and mortifications of which few suspected the existence,
but which were only the more keenly felt because she
was compelled to keep them to herself; but it is certain
that during the first eight or ten years of her residence
in France there was little in her habits and conduct,
however amiable and attractive, which could have led
her warmest friends to discern in her the high qualities
which she was destined to exhibit before its close.
Presently, however, she becomes a mother; and in this
new relation we begin to perceive glimpses of a loftier
nature. From the moment of the birth of her first
child, she performed those new duties which, perhaps
more than any others, call forth all the best and most
peculiar virtues of the female heart in such a manner
as to add esteem and respect to the good-will which
her affability and courtesy had already inspired;
recognizing to the full the claims which the nation
had upon her, that she should, in person, superintend
the education of her children, and especially of her
son as its future ruler; and discharging that sacred
duty, not only with the most affectionate solicitude,
but also with the most admirable judgment.
But years so spent were years of happiness; and, though
such may suffice to display the amiable virtues, it
is by adversity that the grander qualities of the
head and heart are more strikingly drawn forth.
To the trials of that stern inquisitress, Marie Antoinette
was fully exposed in her later years; and not only
did she rise above them, but the more terrible and
unexampled they were, the more conspicuous was the
superiority of her mind to fortune. It is no exaggeration
to say that the history of the whole world has preserved
no record of greater heroism, in either sex, than
was shown by Marie Antoinette during the closing years