The Living Present eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 268 pages of information about The Living Present.
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The Living Present eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 268 pages of information about The Living Present.

Alice had had two fiances (selected by her mother) and both young officers; one, an Englishman, had been killed in the first year of the war.  She was only eighteen.  At one time the northern town she lived in was threatened by the Germans, and Mrs. Vail of Boston (whose daughter is so prominent at the American Fund for French Wounded headquarters in Paris), being on the spot and knowing how much there would be left of the wildrose innocence that bloomed visibly on Alice’s plump cheeks, whisked her off to London.  There she remained until she heard of Mlle. Thompson’s School, when Mrs. Vail brought her to Paris.  As she was not only pretty and charming but intelligent, I exerted myself to find her a place before I left, and I believe she is still with Mrs. Thayer in the Hotel Cecilia.

VII

The Ecole Feminine, I am told, is no more.  Mlle. Thompson found it impossible to raise the necessary money to keep it going.  The truth is, I fancy, that she approached generous donators for too many different objects and too many times.  Perhaps the Ecole will be reopened later on.  If not it will always be a matter of regret not only for France but for Valentine Thompson’s own sake that she did not concentrate on this useful enterprise; it would have been a definite monument in the center of her shifting activities.

I have no space to give even a list of her manifold oeuvres, but one at least bids fair to be associated permanently with her name.  What is now known in the United States as the French Heroes’ Fund was started by Mlle. Thompson under the auspices of La Vie Feminine to help the reformes rebuild their lives.  The greater number could not work at their old avocations, being minus an arm or a leg.  But they learned to make toys and many useful articles, and worked at home; in good weather, sitting before their doors in the quiet village street.  A vast number of these Mlle. Thompson and various members of her Committee located, tabulated, encouraged; and, once a fortnight, collected their work.  This was either sold in Paris or sent to America.

In New York Mrs. William Astor Chanler and Mr. John Moffat organized the work under its present title and raised the money to buy Lafayette’s birthplace.  They got it at a great bargain, $20,000; for a large number of acres were included in the purchase.  Another $20,000, also raised by Mr. Moffatt, repaired and furnished the chateau, which not only is to be a sort of French Mt.  Vernon, with rooms dedicated to relics of Lafayette and the present war, as well as a memorial room for the American heroes who have fallen for France, but an orphanage is to be built in the grounds, and the repairs as well as all the other work is to be done by the blind and the mutilated, who will thus not be objects of charity but made to feel themselves men once more and able to support their families.  The land will be rented to the reformes, the mutiles and the blind.

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The Living Present from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.