us except my brother Nemours, whom he 
questioned about his Latin lessons. Nemours began to stammer, and 
was only saved from disgrace by the opportune entrance of the Prince 
de Carignan. 
At dinner the Twelfth Night customs were duly observed, and when I 
broke my cake I found the bean within it. I must confess the fact had 
not been altogether unforeseen, and my mother had consequently 
primed me as to my behaviour. This did not prevent me from feeling 
heartily shy when I saw every eye fixed on me. I got up from the table,
and carried the bean on a salver to the Duchesse d'Angouleme. I loved 
her dearly even then, that good kind Duchess! for she had always been 
so good to us, ever since we were babies, and never failed to give us the 
most beautiful New Year's gifts. My respectful affection deepened as I 
grew old enough to realize her sorrows and the nobility of her nature, 
and I was always glad, after we were separated by the events of 1830, 
to take every opportunity of letting her know how unalterable my 
feelings for her were. She broke the ice by being the first to raise her 
glass to her lips, when I had made her my queen, and Louis XVIII. was 
the first to exclaim, "The Queen drinks." A few months later the king 
was dead, and I watched his funeral procession from the windows of 
the Fire Brigade Station in the Rue de la Paix, as it passed on its way to 
Saint-Denis. 
Then came the echo of the excitement caused by the coronation of 
Charles X., that great ceremonial of which the Cathedral of Rheims was 
the scene, and which, coming as it did after all the horrors of the 
Revolution, gave rise to the sanguine hope that the ancient monarchy 
would repair every disaster now, just as it had in the time of Charles 
VII. But our childish ideas were not of so far-reaching a nature. It was 
the splendour displayed that interested us--the dresses, the carriages, 
and so on, of the princes and ambassadors who came from all parts of 
the world to greet the opening of the new monarch's reign. Numbers of 
artists solicited my father's permission to do his portrait, in the gold and 
ermine robes of a prince of the blood which he wore at the coronation, 
and our pet amusement at the time was to go and see papa "sitting as 
Pharamond." I said Pharamond, like my elders, although my own 
historical knowledge was of the most elementary description. To be 
frank, I was exceedingly backward, and have always remained so. My 
mother had taught me to read, but beyond that I had reached the age of 
six knowing nothing or hardly anything. But I was a very good rider 
and went out alone on a pony Lord Bristol had given my father, which I 
rode boldly, and I might even say recklessly. The pony's name was 
Polynice. He and I understood each other perfectly, and I was his friend 
to the last. I took care he should end his days in the park at St. Cloud, 
where he roamed in freedom, with a stable of his own to retire into if 
the fancy took him. Often and often I have been to see him, in that
same stable, which he ended by never leaving except to come and greet 
us, and warm himself in the sunshine. He died, there, fortunately for 
himself, full of years, just before the pleasant revolutionary occurrences 
of 1848, in which he would certainly have had his share. But my father 
desired me to be something more than a mere horseman. He got me a 
tutor, and from that day out, for several years, my recollections are 
divided, to the exclusion of everything else, between my education and 
my life with my family. My tutor was called M. Trognon, and his name 
brought many 
[Illustration: Looks a little like a courtroom unfortunately without a 
caption.] 
a jest upon him, amongst others a line of Victor Hugo's in Ruy Bias 
about that 
Affreuse compagnonne, Dont la barbe fleurit et dont le nez trognonne. 
"Fleurit" was an allusion to Cuvillier-Fleury, my brother Aumale's tutor, 
and Victor Hugo thought he owed both the gentlemen a grudge. M. 
Trognon, a distinguished pupil of the Ecole Normale, had begun his 
teaching career as professor of rhetoric at the college at Langres, where, 
coming in one day to take his class, he found his desk occupied by a 
donkey, which his pupils had established in his seat "Gentlemen," he 
said as he went out, "I leave you with a professor who is worthy of 
you." Soon after, he was recalled to Paris, as assistant to M. Guizot in 
his    
    
		
	
	
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