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Gosse, Edmund, 1849-1928

"Three French Moralists and The Gallantry of France"

[5]
[Footnote 4: Mme de Sevigne told her daughter that she was
sure that if one could peep at the Duke and Mme de La
Fayette "when they were alone with the cat," one would find
all the restraints of society flung aside, and see them
without the mask, their cynicism forgotten, mingling cries
and tears over the sorrows of the world. But neither she nor
any third person would ever see their social discretion thus
betrayed, and she concludes, in her droll way, "C'est une
vision!" In another letter to Mme de Grignan (June 6, 1672)
she says of the Duke, "Il connait quasi aussi bien que moi
la tendresse maternelle."]
[Footnote 5: There was unquestionably a strong vein of
tenderness running through the stoical character of the
Duke, and if we were more intimately acquainted with his
private life we should probably see many traces of it. Such
traces exist as it is. We have Mme de Sevigne's account of
his reception of the news of the Passage of the Rhine. It
was announced to him, on the 17th of June, 1672, at the
house of Mme de La Fayette, in the presence of Mme de
Sevigne, that in that terrible disaster his eldest son had
been dangerously wounded and his fourth son, the Chevalier,
killed.


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