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He next approached the bed of the Queen: "M'amie" he said tenderly, "rejoice! God has given us what we asked." Mézeray and Matthieu both assert that the birth of the Dauphin was preceded by an earthquake, which, with the usual superstition of the period, was afterwards declared to have been a forewarning of the ceaseless wars by which Europe was convulsed during his reign.

"Pardonnez mon refus, Pelerine jolie, Sans avoir vu m'amie, Je ne chanterai plus." "Ne la revois tu pas Oh Troubadour fidele, Regarde la C'est elle, Ouvre lui donc tes bras. Priant pour notre amour J'allois en pelerine A la vierge divine Demander son secours."

"What, Madame! is he not at Narbonne? for it is the Cardinal of whom you speak, no doubt; and have you not heard that these cries were for you, and against him?" "Yes, 'm'amie', he is three hundred leagues away from us, but his fatal genius keeps guard at the door.

"What, Madame! is he not at Narbonne? for it is the Cardinal of whom you speak, no doubt; and have you not heard that these cries were for you, and against him?" "Yes, 'm'amie', he is three hundred leagues away from us, but his fatal genius keeps guard at the door.

They smiled amiably at us, too, the eight little faces framed in Henrietta Maria curls; and their eyes said to me, "If you want to be happy, m'amie, it is better not to be too beautiful; or else not to have any sisters. Or if Providence will send you sisters, go away yourself, and visit your plainest friend, till you have got a husband."

There came a bright little flourish, and she sang, joyous and blithe as a lark: "Si le roi m'avait honné Paris sa grand'ville, Et qu'il m'eut fallu quitter L'Amour de m'amie; J'aurais dit au Roi Henri Reprenez votre Paris, J'aime mieux m'amie O gai! J'aime mieux m'amie O gai!"

For verily, m'amie, nothing in life has ever been so fair to me as those days when we stood hand in hand on its threshold, and talked, boy- bridegroom and child-bride as we were, of the morrow that lay beyond." "Ah, Richard, even in those days thy ambition sometimes vexed my woman's vanity, and showed me that I could never be all in all to so large a heart!" "Ambition!

In a few minutes she arrived at the hotel, and entering her parlor stood face to face with the stranger, who had risen with the most easy coolness, and advanced to meet her. "Mille pardons m'amie, for the intrusion, but I have not seen you so long, that I was quite unable to resist the temptation of a call."

"My priest-brother is chafed," said the earl, smiling. "Pity he was not born a trader, he would have made a shrewd hard bargain. Verily, our priests burn the Jews out of envy! Ah, m'amie, how fair thou art to-day! Methinks even Isabel's cheek less blooming." And the warrior drew the lady towards him, and smoothed her hair, and tenderly kissed her brow.

We have a twofold existence, 'm'amie': our internal life, that of our feelings powerfully works within us, while the external life dominates despite ourselves. We are never independent of men, more especially in an elevated condition. Alone, we think ourselves mistresses of our destiny; but the entrance of two or three people fastens on all our chains, by recalling our rank and our retinue.