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قراءة كتاب Court Beauties of Old Whitehall: Historiettes of the Restoration
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Court Beauties of Old Whitehall: Historiettes of the Restoration
COURT BEAUTIES OF OLD WHITEHALL
BY THE SAME AUTHOR
Cloth, 6s.
A DAZZLING REPROBATE.
A GIRL OF THE MULTITUDE.
THE SITUATIONS OF LADY PATRICIA.
Paper Cover, 1s.; Crown, 2s.
THE LETTERS OF HER MOTHER TO ELIZABETH.
THE GRANDMOTHER'S ADVICE TO ELIZABETH.
LONDON: T. FISHER UNWIN
OLD WHITEHALL
HISTORIETTES OF
THE RESTORATION
BY
W. R. H. TROWBRIDGE
WITH THIRTY-TWO ILLUSTRATIONS
LONDON: T. FISHER UNWIN
NEW YORK: CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
MCMVI
[All rights reserved.]
TO
ETHEL and HERBERT NICOL
Preface

IF we may believe so eminent an authority as M. Emile Bourgeois, whose "Le Grand Siècle," is a fascinating proof of his statement, "the age we live in delights in inquiry into the private lives of the great and into the spirit of society of the past. It loves to interrogate them directly, so that it may get at the secrets of their passions and find out their state of mind at different periods. This curiosity is not culpable. 'It almost ceases to be curiosity,' said Voltaire, 'when it has epochs and men who attract the gaze of posterity for its object.'"
Such an epoch in English history is par excellence the Restoration. It is a subject on which an immense number of books has been written. Of the eight beautiful women whose extraordinary careers are described in the following pages, the names of all are probably more or less familiar to the reader, while some—such as "Madame" and the Duchess of Portsmouth—have provided several historians with themes that have elevated them to the proud height of classical authority. Forneron's "Louise de Kéroual" is not only a monumental study of the English Restoration, but a fascinating romance and a work of real literary merit. And many distinguished writers, from the spirituelle Madame de La Fayette down to M. Anatole France, have found in the life of "Madame," the most brilliant of all the Stuarts, a constant source of inspiration.
To enter, therefore, into competition with such a galaxy of talent would seem almost presumptuous, more especially as this book makes no claim to literary erudition or grace. On the contrary, my object has been not to paint finished portraits of beautiful women, but rather to popularise characters who helped to colour one of the most memorable periods of our history. From this point of view the Restoration will be found to be a mine containing a vein from which ore may still be extracted—the ore of amusement from the vein of curiosity.
As regards the illustrations, I am especially obliged to—
The Duc de Guiche for obtaining for me the permission of his father, the Duc de Gramont, to engrave his portrait of Armand, Comte de Guiche. This portrait is, I believe, the only one of the Comte de Guiche known to exist, and is now published for the first time.
I am also indebted to Earl Spencer, the Earl of Sandwich, Dr. G. C. Williamson, and the Strand Magazine for their courtesy in granting me permission to reproduce the portraits respectively of the Countess of Shrewsbury, the Duchesse de Mazarin, "Madame," and the medals of the Duchess of Richmond.
A list of the principal sources from which the information necessary to compile this book has been gathered is herewith appended:—


