Last post, we had (among other things) Danish kings and their favorites; Louis XIV and Philippe d'Orléans; reviews of a very shippy book about Katte, a bad Jacobite novel, and a great book about clothing; a fic about Émilie du Châtelet and Voltaire; and a review of a set of entertaining Youtube history videos about Frederick the Great.
Re: Royal Affairs
Date: 2023-03-14 06:04 am (UTC)Heeee!
but that was a disaster which quickly ended when one of the courtiers pulled the chair away from her while she sat down and G2 laughed, upon which Mary D. retaliated by pulling the chair away from him the next time he sat down to see how he liked it, forgetting he had haemmorids. It was incredibly painful and the instant end of their relationship, to the great disappointment of the English courtiers.
He may have deserved it but I must confess my first reaction was actually "gosh, that was not a smart move, Mary!" Heh, which probably says more about me than about her...
London was thrilled by Elizabeth's subsequent trial for bigamy.
Whoa! Thanks for giving the link afterwards -- I was charmed to find that even though she was found guilty, she absconded with her fortune and as far as I can tell from English wiki, continued to live her best life until she died. That's awesome!
The immediate next sentence touches on Molly's relationship with her adult children: Fortunately MOlyl remained on speaking terms with the foolish but lively Augustus. After various rows, her dull and decorous son Frederick and daughter Lepell had cut themselves off from her completely.
Huh! Iiiiinteresting.
Re: Royal Affairs
Date: 2023-03-14 03:36 pm (UTC)Well, it wasn't, and he deserved it. These are not mutually exclusive truths. :) Like Elizabeth C. later, she wanted the mistress position, she had already boasted of it and claimed she'd kick Amalie the German mistress out and what not, and as the former governess she must have known G2's temper. Now if he'd made unwanted advances and she wanted to get rid of him, she could not have chosen a better method, but the way Worsley describes it, this wasn't the case. (Not that Worsley is under the delusion Mary D. found G2 himself so hot, but she did want to be Maitresse en titre.) Then again: she was an alcoholic, so probably was not entirely able to think things through when she pulled that chair.
I was charmed to find that even though she was found guilty, she absconded with her fortune and as far as I can tell from English wiki, continued to live her best life until she died. That's awesome!
In an age where women die of make up if they don't die of childbirth or the after effects so often, it definitely is!