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George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 5: (search)
there, and found Niccolini, Forti, two or three artists, and a room full of other similar people, all very pleasant, and stayed there till eleven o'clock. May 15.—. . . . The evening I spent with a small party at the Prince de Montfort's,—Jerome Bonaparte's,—who lives here in more elegance than any of his family, and in excellent taste. His beautiful daughter did the honors of the house with grace, but there is a shade of melancholy over her fair features not to be mistaken. She was engagedous to see the daughters bring in the evening lights, and set and serve two rather large supper-tables, assisted by a single waiting-girl. We knew, too, the old Baron Malchus and his daughter. The old gentleman was Minister of Finance to Jerome Bonaparte when he was King of Westphalia, and afterwards to the King of Wurtemberg; and he used to make us rather long visits, and talk, much at large, of the days of his power and dignity. I have seldom found a person who had such an immense mass of<
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 6: (search)
feel as a moral stain upon us. November 7.—I spent some time this morning in the King's private library, originally Bonaparte's, and which I knew under Barbier as the library of Louis XVIII. It is an uncommonly comfortable and well-arranged estnce; and that when Burr was in France afterwards, he renewed the same offers and suggestions, both to Talleyrand and to Bonaparte. Of Hamilton he spoke with great praise and admiration; but said he must qualify it somewhat, because Hamilton once sarst time; and the way in which the old huissier, seventy years old, who has stood at the door of all the ministers from Bonaparte's time, announced these different individuals, was often amusing. He evidently did it sometimes in a tone which, but fe head of that vast establishment, as well as the head of all Egyptian knowledge in the world; indeed, from the time of Bonaparte's expedition to Egypt down to the present day, he has been one of the principal members of the Institute, and one of th
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), chapter 30 (search)
rte, Caroline, widow of Murat, II. 60, 127, 141 Bonaparte, Christine (Countess Posse), I. 182, 183 note, 446. Bonaparte, Emperor Napoleon I., return from Elba, I. 49, Dr. Parr on, 50; Byron's feeling for, 60; anecdotes of, 61, 123. Bonaparte, Jerome, I. 83, 84, 111, II. 60, 88. Bonaparte, Letizia (Madame Mere), I. 181 Bonaparte, Louis, 1. 181, II. 87. Bonaparte, Louis (Emperor Napoleon III.), II. 88 and note. Bonaparte, Lucien, I. 181, 182, II 60. Bonaparte, Madame, LuciBonaparte, Letizia (Madame Mere), I. 181 Bonaparte, Louis, 1. 181, II. 87. Bonaparte, Louis (Emperor Napoleon III.), II. 88 and note. Bonaparte, Lucien, I. 181, 182, II 60. Bonaparte, Madame, Lucien, I. 182, 183, II. 60. Bonaparte, Pauline. See Borghese. Bonaparte, Princess, Charlotte, II. 87, 88. Bonaparte, Princess, Matilda, II. 88 and note. Bond, Professor, II. 310. Bonstetten, Baron de, I. 163, 156, 167, 164, 470 note. Borghese, Don Camillo, I. 61, 66. Borghese, Princess, Pauline Bonaparte, I. 181, II. 66. Borghese, Prince, Francesco, II. 61, 62, 84, 346 note. Borghese, Princess, II. 61, 64, 66, 67, 80, 842 and note, 346. Borgieri, I. 162. Bose, Comtes