France in the Nineteenth Century eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 555 pages of information about France in the Nineteenth Century.

France in the Nineteenth Century eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 555 pages of information about France in the Nineteenth Century.

Troubles multiplied around him.  Things with which he had nothing whatever to do increased his unpopularity, and the secret societies kept discontents alive.  Everything that went wrong in France was charged upon the king and the royal family.

One of the great families in France was that of Choiseul-Praslin.  The head of it in Louis Philippe’s time was a duke who had married Fanny, daughter of Marshal Sebastiani, an old officer of Napoleon and a great favorite with Louis Philippe.  The Duc de Praslin had given in his adhesion to the Orleans dynasty, while so many old families stood aloof, and was in consequence made an officer in the Duchess of Orleans’ household.  The Duc and Duchesse de Praslin had ten children.  The duchess was a stout, matronly little woman, rather pretty, with strong affections and a good deal of sentiment.  Several times she had had cause to complain of her husband, and did complain somewhat vehemently to her own family; but their matrimonial differences had always been made up by Marshal Sebastiani.  The world considered them a happy married pair.

After seventeen years of married life a governess was engaged for the nine daughters, a Mademoiselle Henriette de Luzy.  She was a Parisian by birth, but had been educated in England, had English connections, and spoke English fluently.  She was one of those women who make a favorable impression upon everyone brought into personal contact with them.  Soon the children adored her, and it was not long before the duke had come under the same spell.  The duchess found herself completely isolated in her own household; husband and children had alike gone over to this stranger.  The duchess wrote pathetic letters to her husband, pleading her own affection for him, and her claims as a wife and a mother.  These letters no doubt exasperated the duke, but we read them with deep pity for her whose heart they lay bare.

It is to be understood that there was apparently no scandal—­that is, scandal in the usual sense—­in the relations between the duke and Mademoiselle de Luzy.  She had simply bewitched a weak man who had grown tired of his wife, and had cast the same spell over his children; and she had not the superiority of character which would have led her to throw up a lucrative situation because she was making a wife and mother (whom doubtless she considered very unreasonable) extremely unhappy.

At last things came to such a pass that Madame de Praslin appealed to her father, insisting on a legal separation from her husband.  The marshal intervened, and the affair was compromised.  Mademoiselle de Luzy was to be honorably discharged, and the duchess was to renounce her project of separation.  Mademoiselle de Luzy therefore gave up her situation, and went to board in a pension in Paris with her old schoolmistress.  Madame de Praslin went to her country house, the magnificent Chateau de Vaux, where she herself undertook the education of her children; but in their estimation she by no means replaced Mademoiselle de Luzy, whom from time to time they visited in company with their father.

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France in the Nineteenth Century from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.