Authors: Nancy Goldstone
Tags: #Europe, #France, #History, #Nonfiction, #Royalty
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“A prince is… esteemed when”: Machiavelli,
The Prince,
95.
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“She did me the honor”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
44.
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“I spoke of my brother’s affairs”: Ibid.
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“Upon our arrival”: Ibid., 46.
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“She asked him why he made that observation”: Ibid., 46–47.
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“He began by observing”: Ibid., 47.
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“I did not omit to say everything”: Ibid., 48.
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“ordered me never to speak”: Ibid.
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“Sir, after doing what you have done”: Macdowall,
Henry of Guise,
25.
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“My brother’s words had made”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
48.
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“She flew into a passion”: Ibid., 48–49.
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“He came and sat at the foot”: Ibid., 49.
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“came daily to see me”: Ibid., 50–51.
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“There is nothing talked of publicly”: Macdowall,
Henry of Guise,
28.
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“The ladies at court are real stirrers”: Carroll,
Martyrs and Murderers,
189.
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“did not dare to reproach him”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
51.
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“of use to have children”: Mariéjol,
A Daughter of the Medicis,
15.
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“I tell you clearly what I think”: Van Dyke,
Catherine de Médicis,
2:11–12.
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“The King of Spain was using”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
51–52.
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“To engage in battle with these people”: Wood,
The King’s Army,
125.
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“eight or ten good leagues”: Whitehead,
Gaspard de Coligny,
227.
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“We defeat them again and again”: Roelker,
Queen of Navarre,
339.
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“I no longer have need”: Carroll,
Martyrs and Murderers,
189.
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“Not a single person”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
52.
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“forward this match”: Ibid., 51.
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“Every day some new matter”: Ibid.
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“I resolved to write to my sister”: Ibid., 52.
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“She readily saw through it”: Ibid.
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marry a “negress”: Carroll,
Martyrs and Murderers,
190.
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“One ought never to allow a disorder”: Machiavelli,
The Prince,
16.
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“will not show himself”: Van Dyke,
Catherine de Médicis,
2:57.
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“To be plain”: Whitehead,
Gaspard de Coligny,
245. The exact quote is: “To be playne, the only thinge that I feare in this matche is the consyderatyon of the delycasye of her majestyes eye and of the harde favor of the gentleman besides his dysfygurying with the smaule pockes: which yf she shoolde see with her eye, I mysdowbt mych yt woolde withdrawe her leekying to proceade.”
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“the King, my son”: Roelker,
Queen of Navarre,
346.
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“Better to die by a bold stroke”: Whitehead,
Gaspard de Coligny,
237.
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“His chief attendant, the Count de Retz”: Van Dyke,
Catherine de Médicis,
2:61.
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“My mother loves him so much”: Frieda,
Catherine de Medici,
226.
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“is to be found”: Whitehead,
Gaspard de Coligny,
238.
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call the admiral
mon père
: Roeder,
Catherine de’ Medici and the Lost Revolution,
429.
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“We are too old”: Ibid., 431.
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“I cannot imagine why”: Roelker,
Queen of Navarre,
355.
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“is a resolution I have taken”: Ibid., 358.
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“Upon the success of the Navarre marriage”: Shimizu,
Conflict of Loyalties,
160.
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“A marriage was projected”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
53–54.
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“he would be damned unless”: Van Dyke,
Catherine de Médicis,
2:56.
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“It is perfectly well understood”: Whitehead,
Gaspard de Coligny,
240.
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“the Admiral told him very politely”: Ibid., 239.
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“The war would maintain his authority”: Shimizu,
Conflict of Loyalties,
174.
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“In Paris there are a growing number”: Carroll,
Martyrs and Murderers,
200.
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“if the king ordered”: Ibid., 201.
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“Madame has paid me great honor”: Roelker,
Queen of Navarre,
368.
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“I am being obliged to negotiate”: Ibid., 372.
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“My son, since writing this letter”: Ibid., 374.
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“the Queen of Navarre wishes”: Ibid., 363.
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“Two days ago
Navarra
… Madame has pretended to be indisposed”: Ibid., 377–78.
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“Every enticement will be offered”: Ibid., 381.
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“The Queen of Navarre lies”: Ibid., 388.
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“Whilst the Queen of Navarre”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
54–55.
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“You must decide whether to obey me”: Diefendorf,
The Saint Bartholomew’s Day Massacre,
79–80.
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“After all the pains”: Sichel,
The Later Years of Catherine de’ Medici,
139.
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“His Majesty refuses to adventure”: Ibid., 148.
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“It cannot be called a virtue”: Machiavelli,
The Prince,
37.
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“The Comte de Retz and I”: Roelker,
Queen of Navarre,
355.
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“had the graces of a courtier”: Ibid., 402.
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“crude beyond the pale”: Ibid., 385.
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“Henry needed much affection”: Ibid., 407.
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“be able to get the king”: Sutherland,
The Massacre of St Bartholomew and the European Conflict,
275.
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“to make her the most”: Mariéjol,
A Daughter of the Medicis,
206.
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“So great was the magnificence”: Hotman,
A true and plaine report of the furious outrages of Fraunce,
36.
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“a garden, filled with greens”: Mariéjol,
A Daughter of the Medicis,
35.
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“So great is the familiarity”: Hotman,
A true and plaine report of the furious outrages of Fraunce,
37.
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“If he had simply walked”: Diefendorf,
The Saint Bartholomew’s Day Massacre,
88.
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“The shot came from the window”: Whitehead,
Gaspard de Coligny,
259.
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“ ’Sdeath! Shall I never have”: White,
The Massacre of St. Bartholomew,
391.
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“His face turned pale”: Ibid., 391. The Venetian ambassador’s name is Giovanni Michiel, and his exact words were: “Si facesse pallido e restasse smarrito oltro modo e senza dir parola si retirasse.”
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“Everyone supposed it had been done”: Diefendorf,
The Saint Bartholomew’s Day Massacre,
88.
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“You bear the wound”: White,
The Massacre of St. Bartholomew,
395.
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“went to the King in his closet”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
58–59.
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“the Admiral must be ever”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
59.
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“concluded with observing”: Ibid., 59–60; the italics are mine.
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“As for the harquebus shot”: Diefendorf,
The Saint Bartholomew’s Day Massacre,
92.
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“she had vowed to avenge”: Ibid., 59.
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“which rendered him deserving”: Ibid., 58.
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“The King had so great a regard”: Ibid., 57.
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“Kill them! Kill them all!”: Héritier,
Catherine de Medici,
323.
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“I was perfectly ignorant”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
62.
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“The Huguenots were suspicious of me”: Ibid.
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“They called in the duke of Guise”: Diefendorf,
The Saint Bartholomew’s Day Massacre,
94.
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“I placed myself on a coffer”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
62.
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“more dead than alive”: Ibid., 63.
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“As soon as I reached my own closet”: Ibid.
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“For my part I was unable”: Ibid.
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“as soon as day broke”: Ibid., 64.
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“Are you not the Admiral?” White,
The Massacre of St. Bartholomew,
418.
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“Well done, my men”: Ibid., 419.
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“Kill, kill!”: Ibid., 427.
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“cruelly butchering those they encountered”: Goulart,
Mémoires de l’estat de France sous Charles IX,
295.
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“Carts filled with the dead bodies”: Ibid.
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“But then… the king gave the order”: Diefendorf,
The Saint Bartholomew’s Day Massacre,
95.
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“As soon as I beheld it was broad day”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
64–66.
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“God knows if I will ever see you”: Pitts,
Henri IV of France,
63.
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“in birth and rank”: Diefendorf,
The Saint Bartholomew’s Day Massacre,
90.
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The queen mother made a point of rising: See Knecht,
Catherine de’ Medici,
163, and Van Dyke,
Catherine de Médici,
2:119.
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“As I write, they are killing them all”: Roeder,
Catherine de’ Medici and the Lost Revolution,
463.
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“She has grown ten years younger!”: Sichel,
Catherine de’ Medici and the French Reformation,
6.
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“Five or six days afterwards”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
66.
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“ ‘Madame, since you have put the question’ ”: Ibid.
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“Whoever thinks that in high personages”: Machiavelli,
The Prince,
34.
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“On All Hallows’ Eve”: Williams,
Queen Margot,
113.
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“many a time I have heard”: Mariéjol,
A Daughter of the Medicis,
48.
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the Muses or the Nymphs: Viennot,
Marguerite de Valois,
78.
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“unique pearl and everlasting flower”: Ibid., 80. The exact quote is: “Perle unique du monde et sa fleur immortelle.”
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“The king spends much”: Roelker,
Queen of Navarre,
375.
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There seems to have been: As recounted in Petitot,
Collection Complète des Mémoires relatifs a L’Histoire de France
45:82.
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“I salute you as the mother”: Van Dyke,
Catherine de Médicis,
2:135.
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“For my part, the most becoming”: Bourdeïlle and Saint-Beuve,
Illustrious Dames at the Court of the Valois Kings,
159.
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“She seemed to them so beautiful”: Ibid., 154.
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“a second Minerva, goddess of eloquence”: Ibid., 164.
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“that divine woman”: Freer,
Henry III,
1:236.
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“For some months before he quitted”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
67.
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“Go! Go! You will not stay long”: Sichel,
The Later Years of Catherine de’ Medici,
215.
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“The Huguenots, on the death of the Admiral”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
67.
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“M. de Miossans, a Catholic gentleman”: Ibid., 68.
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“I went immediately to the King”: Ibid.
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“I begged they might be excused”: Ibid., 68–69.
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“All this while my brother Alençon”: Ibid., 69.
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“Madame, you are the cause of all!”: Freer,
Henry III, King of France and Poland,
1:244. The exact phrase is “Madame, vous êtes cause de tout!”
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“The excitement was very great”: Mariéjol,
A Daughter of the Medicis,
59.
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“We set off”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
70.
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“daily growing worse”: Ibid., 69.
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“They could at least have waited”: Roeder,
Catherine de’ Medici and the Lost Revolution,
511.
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“I was suffered to pass”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
71.
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“God! May I die”: Van Dyke,
Catherine de Médicis,
2:159–60.
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“My husband, having no counselor”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
70.
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In fact, the image: Petitot,
Collection Complète des Mémoires,
45:84.
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“to them both, a very humble”: Mariéjol,
A Daughter of the Medicis,
62.
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“With God’s help I accomplished”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
70.
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“You see, my lords”: Mariéjol,
A Daughter of the Medicis,
62.
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“May God and the Blessed Virgin”: Petitot,
Collection Complète des Mémoires,
45:84. In French: “Dieu ait merci de mo name, et la benoiste Vierge! Recommandez-moi bien aux bonnes graces de la reine de Navarre et des dames!”
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But the memoirs of the duke of Nevers:
Les Memoires de Monsieur Le Duc de Nevers,
1:75.
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“begged that I should take”: Van Dyke,
Catherine de Médicis,
2:165.
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“my mother”: Ibid.
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“the only stay and support”:
Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois,
71.
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“He begged me that I should send”: Van Dyke,
Catherine de Médicis,
2:165.
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“You know how much I love you”: Ibid.