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Updated: July 2, 2025
There, being exhausted with hunger and weariness, he laid himself down in the sunlight out beyond the borders of the forest and presently fell into a deep sleep that was like to a swoon. Now it chanced at that time that there came that way a certain damsel attendant upon the Lady Loise.
The Lady Loise said, "Messire, how came you here in this sad case?" And Sir Tristram said: "I know not whence I came, nor how I came hither, nor who I am, nor what it is that ails me, for I cannot hold my mind with enough steadiness to remember those things." Then the lady sighed for sorrow of Sir Tristram, and she said: "Alas, Sir Tristram, that I should find you thus!
With them was a young girl, Louise Loisson don't you see the name? and she is carefully described as a descendant, not of Paul Loise, but of the Comte de Loisson, a nobleman who came to St. Louis shortly before 1825." Blount sat up still straighter in his chair. "This here is mighty strange," said he. "Names sound right near alike." "Yes," said Eddring.
So Sir Tristram remained a gentle captive in the castle of the Lady Loise for nigh upon a month, and somewhiles she would sing and harp to him, and otherwhiles he himself would harp and sing.
Now that damsel had beheld Sir Tristram a great many times when he was at the castle of the Lady Loise; wherefore now, in spite of his being so starved and shrunken, and so unkempt and unshaved, she remembered his face and she knew that this was Sir Tristram. Yet he is but half-clad and in great distress of body so that I know not of a surety whether it is really Sir Tristram or not.
He seems to have learned from this Indian lawsuit, whether or not he was concerned other than as counsel in that lawsuit and the record does not show whether or not he was that Delphine, or his claimant, whoever that was we'll say Delphine, for we don't know Delphine's real name, perhaps could and did stick on the pay-rolls of an Indian tribe. That meant that she was Loise, and not Loisson.
They won their case by means of this book as evidence; for here is full proof, printed in Paris in 1825, that these Indians went to Paris, accompanied by Paul Loise, and by one Louise Loisson, a white girl, noble, and not his daughter; which meant that he had a mixed-blood daughter elsewhere, from whom the claimant had descent.
Marston were seated together on a cane lounge imagining they were sewing, but in reality only talking on subjects dear to every woman's heart. Quite near them, and seated on mats, were the old nurse Mâlu, who held Mrs. Marston's baby-girl, and Raymond's own little daughter Loisé, who was playing with a young native girl Olivee grey-haired old Main's assistant.
That was about the time the Redhead Chief Clark, of Lewis and Clark, you know was Indian commissioner at St. Louis. "Now Paul Loise, at that time engaged in the government treaty work with the tribes, was moving about from tribe to tribe, and he seems to have had an Indian wife in pretty much every one of them. He also had a white wife, or one nearly white, whom he left at his headquarters in St.
He was a lawyer; so much the more dangerous, as I'll show you. Now Paul Loise was official interpreter for the United States government at St. Louis in 1825. He was of absolutely no kinship to the Comte de Loisson, the similarity of names being a mere coincidence, though one which has made much trouble in the records since that time, as I have discovered.
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