Tag Archives: “Affair of the Necklace”
“Encore Marie Antoinette”
“Encore Marie Antoinette” Last night, I read to its sad finale Stefan Zweig’s can’t-be-more-definitive biography of Marie Antoinette, the unluckiest Queen of France. She got a passing mention in “My Inner French Girl,” not a very respectful notice, but now … Continue reading →
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Tagged "Affair of the Necklace", "Liberty at the Barricades", biography, captive, chivalry, Count Axel von Fersen, couples, crowned heads of Europe, Dauphin, deficits, Delacroix, escape, French Revolution, grifter, guillotine, hero, impotence, Louis XVI, love affair, luck, Marie Antoinette, Marie Antoinette: The Portrait of an Average Woman, misogyny, mob, monarchy, pleasure, prison, public opinion, queen, Queen of France, Rococo, royalty, scandal, sexual dysfunction, Stefan Zweig, symbol, teamwork, The Night of Varennes, tumbril, voyeurism, world historical figure
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