- Abrégé chronologique, Hénault’s,
238,
239.
- Adelaide, Madame, allowed to remain at Versailles,
246;
- her apartment,
255.
- Aix-la-Chapelle, the peace of,
130,
131.
- Almases, performed at Versailles,
140.
- Austria, France’s alliance with,
203et seq.;
- an Austrian party at Versailles,
205.
- Artois, Count of,
265.
- Asturias, Prince of,
19.
- Bachelier, the confidant of Louis XV.,
51.
- Barbier, quoted,
40,
44,
55;
- his criticism of Bishop Fitz-James,
80.
- Barthélemy, Édouard de,
245.
- Beaujolais, Mademoiselle de, her birth,
19;
- affianced to Don Carlos,
19;
- sent back to France,
20;
- later life and death,
21.
- Beaumont, Christopher de, summoned to the archbishopric of Paris,
196;
- his integrity to the Church,
196,
197;
- exiled,
197;
- his charge sent from Conflans to Paris,
198,
199;
- recalled by the King,
197;
- again exiled,
197.
- Bellevue, Château of,
145,
146,
151.
- Bernis, Abbé de, verses quoted,
126;
- his attitude towards Madame de Pompadour,
183,
184,
185;
- accused of drawing up the treaty of Versailles,
206;
- his words on the convention of Cloister-Seven,
207,
208;
- counsels peace,
208,
209;
- threatened,
210;
- resigns,
210,
211.
- Berry, Duke of,
265.
- Bonhomme, Honoré, his book on Louis XV. and his family,
245,
246;
- his description of Madame Henriette,
249.
- Bossuet, quoted,
195,
229.
- Bourbon, Duke of, prime minister,
16;
- ruled by his mistress, Madame de Prie,
16–18;
- his uneasiness at court,
18;
- his description of Marie Leczinska,
25;
- endeavors to overthrow Fleury, Bishop of Fréjus,
34;
- his downfall,
34,
35.
- Burgundy, Duke of,
264.
- Campan, Madame de, quoted,
255;
- her words concerning Marie Leczinska,
270.
- Carlos, Don,
19.
- Charles X.,
265.
- Charolais, Mademoiselle de,
50.
- Chartres, Duchess de,
76,
78.
- Chartres, Duke of, sketch of his career,
114,
115;
- efforts to effect a marriage between Madame Henriette and,
250,
251;
- his marriage,
251;
- his unhappiness after marriage,
252.
- Chateaubriand, quoted,
222.
- Châteauroux, Duchess de,
1,
6;
- words of the Goncourts concerning,
71;
- wishes to follow the King to the army,
73;
- joins the King,
76,
77,
78;
- falls sick,
78;
- is compelled to leave the King,
79;
- her return to Paris,
84–86;
- believes she will regain the King’s favor,
84,
86,
87;
- the type of the passionate woman,
87;
- among the crowd at the King’s triumph,
88;
- visited by the King,
88,
89;
- invited to return to Versailles,
89,
90;
- her final illness and death,
90–92.
- Choiseul, Duke de,
211;
- his popularity,
213.
- Christianity, the soul of France,
271.
- Cloister-Seven, the convention of,
207.
- Clotilde, Madame,
265.
- Coaslin, Madame de, her insolent conduct toward Madame de Pompadour,
157.
- Conti, Princess de,
125.
- D’Alembert,
215.
- Damiens, wounds Louis XV.,
180–182.
- D’Argenson, quoted,
44,
105,
106,
218;
- his attitude towards Madame de Pompadour,
183;
- possesses confidence of Louis XV.,
186;
- misled as to the feelings of the King towards Madame de Pompadour,
186;
- proposes that meetings of the ministers be held in the Dauphin’s apartments,
187;
- dismissed from service,
188;
- his words on women in politics,
194;
- a true prophet,
218,
219.
- Dauphin, the,
109,
110;
- marries,
110,
186,
187;
- surrounded by the people,
220;
- his delight at visit of his sister Elisabeth,
248;
- his character,
258;
- marries Marie Josèphe of Saxony,
261–263;
- falls ill,
265;
- his last hours and death,
266,
267.
- Dauphiness, the,
220;
- see Marie Josèphe.
- Deffand, Madame du,
36,
37;
- her sketch of Marie Leczinska,
237,
238.
- Desmarets, Père,
181,
186.
- Devin du Village, Le, performed at Bellevue,
146.
- Diderot, his words concerning Madame de Pompadour,
232.
- Duclos, quoted,
215.
- Economists, the,
218.
- Elisabeth, Madame, daughter of the Dauphiness,
265.
- Elisabeth, Madame, the Infanta, marries,
247;
- goes to Spain,
247;
- visits her parents at Versailles,
247,
248;
- her grief at her sister Henriette’s death,
252,
253;
- spends a year at Versailles,
253;
- did not esteem her husband,
253;
- her ambitions,
253;
- her final return to France and death,
253,
254;
- accused by Michelet of causing the Seven Years’ War,
253,
254;
- a selection from one of her last letters,
254.
- Elisabeth of Russia, death of,
211.
- Encyclopedia, the,
216,
271.
- Encyclopedists, the,
217,
218.
- Enfant prodigue, L’, performed at Versailles,
139,
154.
- Erigone, performed at Versailles,
139.
- Étioles, Madame d’, Marquise de Pompadour, see Pompadour, Marquise de.
- Étioles, M. Lenormand d’,
118,
120,
121,
175;
- not anxious to take back his wife,
176.
- Europe, condition of, after treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle,
202,
203.
- Favart, verses by,
228.
- Félicité, Pauline, Mademoiselle de Nesle comes to Versailles,
54;
- becomes mistress of Louis XV.,
54;
- marries Count de Vintimille,
56;
- see Vintimille, Countess de.
- Fitz-James, Bishop, forbids Louis XV. absolution while Madame de Châteauroux remains with him,
79;
- administers extreme unction to the King,
80;
- his detractors,
80.
- Fleury, Bishop of Fréjus,
30;
- his origin and advancement,
32;
- preceptor of Louis XV.,
32;
- his influence over Louis XV.,
32;
- Madame de Prie’s plot to get rid of,
33;
- departs from the court,
34;
- is recalled by Louis XV.,
34;
- his death,
68,
246.
- Fontanelle, his verses to Marie Leczinska,
239,
240.
- Frederick the Great,
205,
214,
222.
- Fréjus, Bishop of, see Fleury.
- Helvetius, quoted,
215.
- Hénault, President, his words concerning Marquise de Pompadour,
118;
- offers manuscript of his Abrégé chronologique to Marie Leczinska,
238;
- his verses to Marie Leczinska,
239.
- Henriette, Madame,
247,
248;
- of her by Honoré Bonhomme,
249;
- her death,
248,
249;
- her sad love affair,
250,
251;
- her death,
252.
- Hermitage, the,
151.
- La Tour, his pastel of Madame de Pompadour,
216;
- his pastel Marie Leczinska,
236.
- Leczinska, Marie, see Marie Leczinska.
- Leczinska, Stanislas, his life of exile,
23;
- his death,
266.
- Louis XV., women of court of,
1 et seq.;
- daughters of,
2,
112,
113,
245et seq.;
- his character and career reviewed,
4–10;
- his mistresses,
6,
7;
- his melancholy,
8,
158;
- his death,
10;
- beginning of his reign,
14;
- affianced to Infanta Marie Anne Victoire,
14,
15;
- established at Versailles,
15;
- coronation of,
15;
- his health delicate,
18;
- his marriage to Infanta Marie Anne Victoire broken off,
20,
21;
- his beauty,
25;
- marries Marie Leczinska,
26;
- meets Marie Leczinska,
27;
- his early married life exemplary,
30,
39,
40;
- his affection for Fleury, Bishop of Fréjus,
32;
- recalls Fleury,
34;
- expels Duke of Bourbon,
34,
35;
- his growing indifference towards Marie Leczinska,
42;
- influences about him,
43–45;
- makes a favorite of Madame de Mailly,
47,
48;
- changes his apartments,
48;
- his trifling life,
49,
52;
- becomes tired of Madame de Mailly,
53,
59;
- makes a favorite of Pauline Félicité,
54;
- his remorse,
54,
55;
- his dismay at death of Countess de Vintimille,
58;
- makes a favorite of Madame de la Tournelle,
62 et seq.;
- his severity towards Madame de Mailly,
61;
- dismisses Madame de Mailly from court,
65;
- his economy,
69;
- makes Madame de la Tournelle Duchess of Châteauroux,
69,
70;
- isolates himself at court,
71;
- hesitates to join his troops,
72–74;
- at the head of his troops,
74;
- misses Madame de Châteauroux,
76;
- receives Madame de Châteauroux at Lille,
77;
- goes to Metz,
78;
- falls ill,
79;
- is compelled to dismiss Madame de Châteauroux,
79;
- receives extreme unction,
80;
- grief of France at illness of,
81;
- his reconciliation with the Queen,
81;
- repentant only when sick,
83,
180,
181;
- returns to Paris,
88;
- visits Madame de Châteauroux,
88,
89;
- his neglect of Madame de Châteauroux during her last illness,
90;
- his emotions transitory,
92;
- his personal attractions,
97;
- his religious feelings,
98;
- his ennui,
92,
99,
100,
133;
- his monarchical faith,
101;
- how he differs from Louis XIV.,
101,
102;
- among his troops,
102;
- not as indolent as accused of being,
103;
- his sensuality,
103,
104;
- his distrust and timidity,
104;
- his dissimulation,
105,
205;
- his indecision,
105;
- D’Argenson’s portrait of,
105,
106;
- neglects the Queen,
107;
- receives Marie Thérèse Antoinette Raphaelle at Étampes,
110;
- his meeting with Madame d’Étioles at the Hôtel de Ville ball,
120;
- installs Madame d’Étioles at Versailles,
121;
- joins the army,
122;
- confers title of Marquise de Pompadour on Madame d’Étioles,
124;
- returns to Versailles,
125;
- relinquishes his military activity,
129,
130;
- his policy in the peace of Aix-la-Chapelle,
130;
- yields up the fruit of his conquests,
130,
131;
- Voltaire’s lines to,
131;
- change of public feeling toward,
132;
- his interest in the theatre of Madame de Pompadour,
138;
- becomes bored by dramatic spectacles,
145;
- transfers performances from Versailles to château of Bellevue,
145,
146;
- his conscience uneasy,
158;
- equestrian statue of,
159,
160;
- public attacks on,
165,
166;
- his Jubilee,
169,
171,
172;
- his religious tendencies,
166,
173;
- retains Madame de Pompadour only through compassion,
174;
- wounded by Damiens,
180–182;
- public sympathy for,
182;
- receives Madame de Pompadour graciously,
187;
- his attitude towards Jansenism,
196;
- his spirit of compromise,
197;
- summons Christopher de Beaumont to the archbishopric of Paris,
196;
- sends de Beaumont to Conflans,
197;
- recalls de Beaumont,
199;
- his enmity to Parliament,
198,
200;
- his indecision,
203,
204;
- his attitude toward Austria,
205;
- accepts resignation of Abbé Bernis,
210,
211;
- gives up cities possessed in Germany,
212;
- his words concerning famous men of letters of France,
214;
- revokes the privileges of editors of the Encyclopedia,
216,
217;
- anonymous letter to,
217,
218;
- called a Herod by the people,
219,
220;
- his words at the funeral of Madame de Pompadour,
231;
- fond of the society of his daughters,
255,
256;
- selects a second wife for the Dauphin,
258;
- at the death-bed of his wife,
273.
- Louis XIV.,
13,
101;
- his attitude towards Jansenism,
195.
- Louis XVI.,
265.
- Louis XVIII.,
265.
- Louise, Madame,
247,
255.
- Luynes, Duchess de,
127,
128;
- Marie Leczinska’s letters to,
241,
242;
- Marie Leczinska’s friendship for,
241,
242.
- Luynes, Duke de, his gift to Marie Leczinska,
241,
242.
- Machault, M. de, his attitude towards Madame de Pompadour,
183;
- his interview with Madame de Pompadour,
184,
185.
- Mailly, Countess de,
1,
46;
- her birth and marriage,
47;
- description of, by Le Roy,
47;
- becomes mistress of Louis XV.,
47,
48;
- loses affection of the King,
53;
- introduces her sister, Pauline Félicité, to the King,
54;
- her grief at death of her sister,
58;
- dismissed from court,
60 et seq.;
- pitied by every one,
64;
- pensioned by the King,
67;
- her last years,
93;
- her last days and death,
170–172.
- Mariage fait et rompu, Le, performed at Versailles,
139.
- Maria Theresa,
204;
- her display of admiration for Louis XV.,
205.
- Marie Anne Victoire, Infanta, affianced to Louis XIV.,
14,
15;
- sent back to Spain on account of her youth,
18,
20,
21;
- marries Joseph Emanuel,
21.
- Marie Antoinette,
2.
- Marie Josèphe of Saxony, the Dauphiness,
259;
- the marriage of, with the Dauphin,
259 et seq.;
- the Duke de Richelieu’s words concerning,
261;
- leaves Dresden for Versailles,
261;
- Marshal Saxe’s words concerning,
261,
262;
- marries the Dauphin,
261–263;
- burdened by court etiquette,
263,
264;
- makes herself beloved,
264;
- her children,
264,
265;
- a perfect wife and mother,
265;
- her words at the death of the Dauphin,
267;
- her death,
268;
- her life a symbol,
271.
- Marie Leczinska,
2;
- her birth,
23;
- her character,
23–25,
272,
273;
- Duke of Bourbon’s words concerning,
25;
- suddenly called to the throne of France,
24,
25;
- her marriage to Louis XV.,
26;
- her letter to her father concerning her reception by the French people,
26,
27;
- meets Louis XV.,
27;
- her gifts to the ladies of the court,
27;
- pleases every one,
28;
- goes to Versailles,
29;
- her early married life happy,
30;
- jealous of influence of Fleury over Louis XV.,
32;
- her worthy life,
40;
- gives birth to twins,
40;
- her pious excursion to Paris,
40,
41;
- her children,
41,
245 et seq.;
- her behavior towards Louis XV.,
41,
42;
- her suffering on account of the favor of Madame de Mailly with the King,
48;
- her sympathy for Madame de Mailly,
64;
- visits the King ill at Metz,
81–83;
- her disappointment regarding the King’s feelings towards her,
83;
- her feelings at the death of Madame de Châteauroux,
91;
- D’Argenson’s words concerning,
106;
- her tenth child,
106;
- neglected by the King,
107;
- her daily life,
107,
108;
- her peace of heart,
109;
- called the “Good Queen,”
109;
- her reception of Madame de Pompadour,
126;
- her feelings towards Madame de Pompadour,
128;
- refuses to permit Madame de Pompadour to take part in religious service,
169;
- her words concerning Madame de Pompadour after the latter’s death,
231;
- compared with Madame de Pompadour,
233–235,
276;
- her character,
233 et seq.;
- portrait of, by La Tour,
236;
- Nattier’s portrait of,
237;
- sketch of, by Madame du Deffand,
237,
238;
- her circle of friends,
238;
- her words to President Hénault,
239;
- President Hénault’s verses to,
239;
- Fontanelle’s verses to,
239,
240;
- her letters to the Duchess de Luynes,
241,
242;
- her friendship for the Duchess de Luynes,
241,
242;
- her solid information,
243;
- a tender mother,
245,
255;
- the daughters of,
245 et seq.;
- her resignation in grief at loss of two of her daughters,
255;
- her relations to her children,
255,
256;
- her apartments,
256,
257;
- her liking for Marie Josèphe, the Dauphiness,
264;
- loses her son and father,
266,
267;
- crushed by sorrow,
268;
- goes to the Carmelite convent of Compiègne,
270;
- Madame de Campan’s words concerning,
270;
- universally beloved,
272;
- falls ill,
273;
- her last moments and death,
273–275;
- her funeral,
276;
- the last Queen who ended her days on the throne of France,
276.
- Marie Thérèse Antoinette Raphaelle, her marriage to the Dauphin,
110;
- her amiability,
111;
- her death,
129,
130,
258.
- Massillon,
275.
- Maurepas,
89,
90,
162.
- Memoirs of court of Louis XV.,
3.
- Mère coquette, performed at Versailles,
142.
- Michelet, his words concerning Madame de Prie,
36;
- his effort to cast ridicule on the daughters of Louis XV.,
245;
- accuses Madame Elisabeth of being the cause of the Seven Years’ War,
253,
254.
- Montpensier, Mademoiselle, her birth and marriage,
19;
- becomes Queen of Spain,
19;
- sent back to France,
20;
- her later life,
21.
- Motte, Mademoiselle de la,
117.
- Nattier, his portrait of Marie Leczinska,
237.
- Nesle, Mademoiselle de, see Félicité, Pauline.
- Nuptial ceremony of putting to bed, described,
262,
263.
- Orleans, Duke of,
16;
- sketch of his career,
113,
114.
- Palissot, verses by,
228.
- Parliament, Madame de Pompadour’s conduct towards,
194;
- Louis XV.’s attitude towards,
196–198,
200;
- one hundred and fifty members of, resign,
198;
- members of, pose as protectors of liberty,
200.
- Pérusseau,
79.
- Philip, Don, son of Philip V. of Spain, marries Madame Elisabeth,
247;
- obtains sovereignty of Parma, Piacenza, and Guastella,
247;
- not esteemed by his wife,
253.
- Philip V. of Spain,
18,
19.
- Poisson, Abel,
148,
149,
160.
- Poisson, François,
117.
- Poisson, Jeanne Antoine, afterwards Marquise de Pompadour,
117;
- see Pompadour, Madame de.
- Pompadour, Marquise de,
1,
6;
- her character,
116,
117;
- her birth and early life,
117;
- her accomplishments,
117;
- her marriage,
118;
- President Hénault’s words concerning,
118;
- plans to capture the fancy of Louis XV.,
119;
- appears as Diana at the Hôtel de Ville ball,
119,
120;
- her children,
120;
- makes her way into Versailles,
120,
121;
- concealed by Louis XV.,
121;
- withdraws to her chateau at Étioles,
122;
- receives title of Marquise,
124;
- her presentation,
125;
- treatment of her by the court,
127;
- her attitude toward the Queen,
127–129;
- her theatre of the little Cabinets,
132 et seq.;
- her fear of losing the interest of the King,
133;
- her successes as an actress,
132,
134,
139,
140,
142,
145;
- wants to play comedy at Versailles,
135;
- draws up regulations for players at her theatre,
137,
138;
- plays and sings,
139;
- in the ballet of Almases,
140;
- her last performance,
146;
- Rousseau’s letter to,
146;
- her power, pomp, and opulence,
147 et seq.;
- her sepulchre,
149;
- her beauty,
149,
150;
- what she cost France,
150;
- her dwellings and apartments,
150–152;
- verses to, by Voltaire,
122–124,
145,
152–154;
- her griefs and sadness,
156 et seq.;
- threatened with death,
157;
- insulted by Madame de Coaslin,
157;
- her lack of confidence in the King,
156,
158;
- like Scheherezade,
158;
- her desire to marry her daughter Alexandrine,
160–162;
- death of her daughter Alexandrine,
160;
- verses at death of her mother,
160;
- Sainte-Beuve’s words concerning,
161;
- Paris implacable towards,
162;
- verses abusing her,
163–166;
- suffers under public abuse,
167;
- ready to do anything to hold her place,
168;
- makes a show of devotion,
168–170,
173;
- has a statue made of herself,
170;
- is attacked by fever,
170;
- her feeling of insecurity,
170,
171;
- endeavors to obtain absolution from the Jesuits,
173,
174;
- refused absolution by Père de Sarcy,
174,
175;
- solicits a place as lady of the Queen’s palace,
175;
- declares her willingness to be reconciled to her husband,
175,
176;
- receives communion,
177;
- becomes a lady of the palace,
177,
178;
- her conduct when Louis XV. was wounded by Damiens,
182,
183;
- attitude of the three principal ministers towards,
183;
- interview of M. de Machault with,
184,
185;
- meets the King and resumes her domination,
186–189;
- her grudge against the Jesuits,
189;
- her note to the Pope censuring the Jesuits,
189–192;
- her methods in politics,
193,
194;
- held responsible for the Seven Years’ War,
201;
- her interest in porcelains,
202;
- her attitude toward the Austrian alliance,
205 et seq.;
- her obstinacy,
209,
211;
- the object of public vindictiveness,
213;
- her attitude towards Voltaire,
215;
- her attitude towards Quesnay,
215;
- her attitude towards the philosophers,
214 et seq.,
221;
- La Tour’s pastel of,
216;
- anonymous letters to,
217,
218;
- reviled by the people,
220;
- effects the expulsion of the Jesuits,
221,
222;
- eulogized by Voltaire,
223;
- foresees the crumbling of the government,
224;
- aged prematurely,
226,
227;
- her courage in suffering,
227;
- falls ill at Choisy,
227;
- feels the coming of death,
229;
- fears the King more than God,
229;
- her death-bed,
229,
230;
- her will,
230;
- her death,
230,
231;
- funeral service of,
231;
- regretted by the men of letters,
232,
233;
- compared with Marie Leczinska,
233–235,
276.
- Porcelains, Madame de Pompadour’s interest in,
202.
- Précis du siècle de Louis XV., Voltaire’s,
154.
- Préjugé à la mode, Le, performed at Versailles,
139.
- Prie, Marquise de, mistress of the Duke of Bourbon,
16;
- influence of, at court,
16,
18;
- her life,
17;
- pleased at marriage of Louis XV. to Marie Leczinska,
31;
- plots to get rid of Fleury, Bishop of Fréjus,
33;
- expelled from court by Louis XV.,
35;
- the bitterness of her last years,
36,
37;
- her death,
38;
- rumored to have poisoned herself,
38.
- Provence, Count of,
265.
- Quesnay,
183,
185;
- the confidant of Madame de Pompadour,
215;
- his character,
216.
- Revolution, the, prophecies of,
218,
219,
224.
- Richelieu, Duke de, description of, by D’Argenson,
61;
- his plan at court,
62;
- made first gentleman of the chamber,
71;
- his exasperation at the favor of Madame de Pompadour with the King,
127;
- quarrel of, with Duke de la Vallière,
142–144;
- his treatment of Madame de Pompadour,
143,
261;
- his words concerning Marie Josèphe of Saxony,
259.
- Rohan, Cardinal,
26.
- Rousseau, his letter to Madame de Pompadour,
146.
- Sainte-Beuve, his words concerning Madame de Pompadour,
161;
- his description of La Tour’s pastel of Marie Leczinska,
236.
- Saint Monica,
269.
- Sarcy, Père de, refuses Madame de Pompadour absolution,
174,
175,
190.
- Saxe, Marshal, negotiates the marriage of Marie Josèphe of Saxony with the Dauphin,
258–261;
- his words concerning Marie Josèphe,
261,
262;
- his description of the ceremonial of putting to bed,
262,
263.
- “School of Man, The,” a pamphlet attacking Louis XV.,
165,
166.
- Seven Years’ War, the, Madame de Pompadour held responsible for,
201;
- the results of,
212.
- Sophie, Madame,
247,
255.
- Soubise,
209.
- Surprises de l’amour, Les, performed at Versailles,
142.
- Tancred, performed at Versailles,
142.
- Tartuffe, performed at Versailles,
139.
- Theatre of the little Cabinets, at Versailles,
136,
137 et seq.;
- regulations for players at,
137,
138;
- dramatic performances at,
139,
140;
- collection of comedies performed at,
141.
- Thétis et Pélée, performance of,
170.
- Toulouse, Countess de, her apartment at Versailles,
49;
- accused of aiding the intimacy of Louis XV. and Madame de Mailly,
50.
- Tournehem, M. Lenormand de,
117.
- Tournelle, Madame de la, her birth and marriage,
60;
- appointed lady of the palace,
60;
- becomes a favorite of the King,
62;
- determines to have Madame de Mailly dismissed from court,
62,
63;
- her triumph,
65–67;
- inferior to Madame de Montespan,
68;
- becomes Duchess of Châteauroux,
69–71;
- see Châteauroux, Duchess of.
- Tournelle, Marquis de la,
60.
- Trois Cousines, Les, performed at Versailles,
139.
- Vallière, Duke de la, quarrel of, with Duke de Richelieu,
142–144.
- Vanloo,
232.
- Versailles, deserted after death of Louis XIV.,
13;
- festivities at,
111,
112;
- theatre constructed for Madame de Pompadour at,
136;
- Madame de Pompadour’s apartments at,
150,
151;
- the treaty of,
204,
206;
- an Austrian party at,
205.
- Victoire, Madame,
247,
255.
- Vintimille, Countess de, gives birth to a boy,
57;
- her death,
57,
58;
- see Félicité, Pauline.
- Vitzthum, Count,
259.
- Voltaire, his words concerning Marie Leczinska,
27,
28;
- his Henri IV.,
28,
29;
- obtains a pension,
29;
- with Madame d’Étioles at her château,
122;
- his lines to Madame d’Étioles,
122–124;
- his lines to Louis XV.,
131;
- his lines to Madame de Pompadour at her toilet,
145;
- his flattery of Madame de Pompadour,
152–155,
215;
- his Enfant prodigue produced at Versailles,
139,
154;
- turns against Madame de Pompadour,
166,
167,
208;
- quoted,
211;
- his words concerning Seven Years’ War,
212,
213;
- eulogizes Madame de Pompadour,
223;
- his pleasure in foreseeing the French Revolution,
224;
- his words concerning Madame de Pompadour after the latter’s death,
232.
- Women of court of Louis XV.,
1 et seq.