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See also: VICHY-CHAMROND, MARQUISE Du (1697-1780), a celebrated Frenchwoman, was See also: born at the chateau of Chamrond near See also: Charolles (department of See also: Saone-et-See also: Loire) of a See also: noble See also: family in 1697
.
Educated at a convent in See also: Paris, she showed, along with See also: great intelligence, a sceptical and cynical turn of mind
.
The abbess, alarmed at the freedom of her views, arranged that Massillon should visit and reason with her, but he accomplished nothing
.
Her parents married her at twenty-one years of age to her kinsman, See also: Jean See also: Baptiste de la Lande, See also: marquis du See also: Deffand, without consulting her inclination
.
The union proved an unhappy one, and resulted in a separation as early as 1722
.
Madame du Deffand, See also: young and beautiful, is said by Horace Walpole to have been for a See also: short See also: time the See also: mistress of the See also: regent, the duke of See also: Orleans (Walpole to
See also: Gray,
See also: January 25, 1766)
.
She appeared in her earlier days to be incapable of any strong See also: attachment, but her intelligence, her cynicism and her esprit made her the centre of attraction of a brilliant circle
.
In 1721 began her friendship with Voltaire, but their See also: regular See also: correspondence See also: dates only from 1736
.
She spent much time at Sceaux, at the See also: court of the duchesse du Maine, where she contracted a close friendship with the president Henault
.
In Paris she was in a sense the See also: rival of Madame Geoffrin, but the members of her See also: salon were See also: drawn from aristocratic society more than from See also: literary cliques
.
There were, however, exceptions
.
Voltaire, Montesquieu, Fontenelle and Madame de Staal-Delaunay were among the habitues
.
When Henault introduced D' See also: Alembert, Madame du Deffand was at once captivated by him
.
With the encyclopaedists she was never in sympathy, and appears to have tolerated them only for his See also: sake
.
In 1752 she retired from Paris, intending to spend the rest of her days in the country, but she was persuaded by her See also: friends to return
.
She had taken up her abode in 1747 in apartments in the convent of St See also: Joseph in the rue St Dominique, which had a See also: separate entrance from the street
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When she lost her sight in 1754 she engaged Mademoiselle de Lespinasse to help her in entertaining
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This lady's wit made some of the guests, D'Alembert among others, prefer her society to that of Madame du Deffand, and she arranged to receive her friends for an See also: hour before the appearance of her See also: patron
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When this See also: state of things was discovered Mademoiselle de Lespinasse was dismissed (1764), but the salon was broken up, for she took with her D'Alembert, Turgot and the literary clique generally
.
From this time Madame du Deffand very rarely received any literary men
.
The See also: principal friendships of her later years were with the duchesse de Choiseul and with Horace Walpole
.
Her affection for the latter, which dated from 1765, was the strongest and most durable of all her attachments
.
Under the stress of this tardy passion she See also: developed qualities of See also: style and eloquence of which her earlier writings had given little promise
.
In the opinion of Sainte-Beuve the See also: prose of her letters ranks with that of Voltaire as the best of that classical epoch without excepting any even of. the great writers
.
Walpole refused at first to ac-knowledge the closeness of their intimacy from an exaggerated fear of the ridicule attaching to her age, but he paid several visits to Paris expressly for the purpose of enjoying her society, and maintained a close and most interesting correspondence with her for fifteen years . She died on the 23rd of See also: September 178o, leaving her See also: dog Tonton to the care of Walpole, who was also entrusted with her papers
.
Of her innumerable witty sayings the best known is her remark on the See also: cardinal de See also: Polignac's account of St Denis's miraculous walk of two See also: miles with his See also: head in his hands, Il n'y a que le premier pas qui col2te
.
DEFINITION
The Correspondance inedite of Madame du Deffand with D'Alembert, Henault, Montesquieu, and others was published in Paris (2 vols.) in 1809
.
Letters of the marquise du Deffand to the Hon
.
Horace Walpole, afterwards See also: earl of See also: Orford, from the See also: year 1766 to the year 1780 (4vols.),edited,with a See also: biographical sketch, by See also: Miss Mary See also: Berry, were published in See also: London from the originals at See also: Strawberry See also: Hill in 181o
.
The
See also: standard edition of her letters is the Cotrespondance See also: complete de la marquise du Deffand
.
. . by M. de Lescure (1865) ; the Correspondance inedite with M. and Mme de Choiseul and others was edited in 1859 and again in 1866 by the marquis de Ste-Aulaire
.
Other papers of Madame du Deffand obtained at the breaking up of Walpole's collection are in private hands
.
Madame du Deffand returned many of Walpole's letters at his See also: request, and subsequently destroyed those which she received from him
.
Those in his possession appear to have been destroyed after his See also: death by Miss Berry, who printed fragments from them as footnotes to the edition of 1810
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The correspondence between Walpole and Madame du Deffand thus remains one-sided, but seven of Walpole's letters to her are printed for the first time in the edition (1903) of his correspondence by Mrs See also: Paget See also: Toynbee, who discovered a quantity of her unedited letters
.
See Sainte-Beuve, Causeries du lundi, vols. i. and xiv.; and the See also: notice by M. de Lescure in his edition of the correspondence
.
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