Armont reared his family. As soon as they were of age, his sons entered the army ; one of his daughters died young; and he became a widower when the other two were emerging from childhood into youth. They remained for some time with their father, but... Woman in France During the Eighteenth Century - Seite 373von Julia Kavanagh - 1864 - 491 SeitenVollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| Sarah Josepha Buell Hale - 1853 - 946 Seiten
...to inveigh, in energetic terms, against the injustice of the law of primogeniture, that M. d' Armont reared his family. As soon as they were of age, his...spent in the calm obscurity of her convent solitude. When the Abbaye aux Dames was closed, in consequence of the revolution, Charlotte was in her twentieth... | |
| Henry Gardiner Adams - 1857 - 1030 Seiten
...to inveigh, in energetic terms, against the injustice of the law of primogeniture, that M. D'Annont reared his family. As soon as they were of age, his...spent in the calm obscurity of her convent solitude. When the Abbaye aux Dames was closed, in consequence of the revolution, Charlotte was in her twentieth... | |
| Sarah Josepha Buell Hale - 1857 - 810 Seiten
...of the law of primogeniture, that Ы. D'Armont reared his family. As soon as they were of age, bis sons entered the army ; one of his daughters died...spent in the calm obscurity of her convent solitude. When the Abbaye aux Dames was closed, in consequence of the revolution, Charlotte was in her twentieth... | |
| George Frederick Pardon - 1861 - 412 Seiten
...as to the means — and disappears for ever ; lost in the shadow of time — an uufathomed mystery. The greatest portion of the youth of Charlotte Corday...of the ancient elms. It is said that, like Madame Eoland, she contemplated secluding herself for ever from the world in her monastic retreat ; but affected... | |
| Henry Mills Alden, Frederick Lewis Allen, Lee Foster Hartman, Thomas Bucklin Wells - 1850 - 870 Seiten
...criminal as to the means — and disappears forever ; lost in the shadow of time— an unfathomed mystery. The greatest portion of the youth of Charlotte Corday...her imaginative and enthusiastic mind, as she slowly paoed the sitent cloisters, or rested, lost in thought, beneath the shadow of the ancient elms, it... | |
| |