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Authors: Annemarie Selinko

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical

Désirée

BOOK: Désirée
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Désirée

is the amazing true story of an irresistible girl from Marseilles who followed her heart to a throne in the bold, glittering years of Napoleon's rise and fall. Annemarie Selinko has told this sweeping story with such brilliance and charm that it has already made its own spectacular history throughout Europe and the United States as one of the great best-selling ' novels of the decade.

"The most fascinating historical novel since
Gone with the Wind."
     

Boston Post

"An epic love story . . . it's irresistible reading."

Chicago Tribune

". . . an historical novel that may be rated along with
Anthony Adverse
and
Gone with the Wind."

Houston Press

". • . contains enough inside information to have come from the pen of that scandalously extravagant courtesan, Josephine Bonaparte."

Sterling North,
New York World-Tele gram

Originally published by William Morrow & Company,
Désirée
was also a selection of the Literary Guild.

A CARDINAL GIANT

This
Cordinal
Giant
edition includes every word contained in the
original, higher-priced edition. It is printed from
brand-new plates made from completely reset, clear, easy-to-read type.

Désirée

William Morrow edition published January, 1953

                                   
10 l'KINTINGS

Literary Guild edition published February, 1953

Dolla
r
Book
Club edition published June, 1954

Condensation' in
Omnibook
August, 1953

Cardinal Giant edition published November, 1954

3rd printing
....................
December, 1954

The publishers wish to acknowledge the special assistance of Joy Gary in the preparation of the final American version of this novel.

     
Translated from the German

Copyright, 1953, by William Morrow & Company, Inc. All rights reserved

Library of Congress Catalog Card No. 52-9706. This
Cardinal GiaW

edition it published by arrangement with William Morrow & Company, Inc

Printed in the U. S. A.

A
   
Notice:
Cardinal editions are published in the United States by Pocket

 
Books, Inc. and in Canada by Pocket Books of Canada, Ltd. Trade

 
marks registered in the United States by Pocket Books, Inc. and regis

 
tered in Canada by Pocket Books of Canada, Ltd. Application for

 
registration filed in the British Patent Office by Pocket Books, Inc.

 

 

 

To the memory of my sister, Liselotte, to her joyous spirit, her greatness of heart.

 

CONTENTS

PART I
The Daughter of a Silk Merchant of Marseilles

Marseilles, at the beginning of Germinal, Year II
                3
(The end of March, 1794, by Mama's old-fashioned reckoning)

Twenty-four hours later                                         
11

Marseilles, at the beginning of Prairial                     
31
(The lovely month of May, says Mama, is almost over)

Marseilles, middle of Thermidor                           
52
(Beginning of August, Mama says)

Marseilles, end of Fructidor                                 
66
(Middle of September)

Paris, twelve months later__Fructidor, Year III
                   
77

Paris, twenty-four hours—no, an eternity—later                  
85

Marseilles, three weeks later                                 
100

Rome, three days after Christmas in the Year V                    
103
(Here in Italy they still use the pre-Revolutionary calendar: December 27, 1797)

Paris, end of Germinal, Year VI                           
118
(Except in our Republic, where everyone calls it April, 1798)

Paris, four weeks later                                           
131

 

PART II
Marshall Bernadotte's Lady

Sceaux, near Paris, autumn of Year VI (1798)
                 
143

Sceaux, near Paris, New Year's Eve                     
             
   
157
(The last year of the eighteenth century begins)

Sceaux, near Paris, 17 Messidor, Year VII               
167
(To Mama, probably July 4, 1799)

Sceaux, near Paris, a week later                             
167

Paris, 18 Brumaire of the Year VII                         
180
(In other countries: November 9, 1799. Our Republic has a new Constitution)

Paris, March 21, 1804                                             
195
(Only the Magistrates stick to the Republican calendar, and write today: 1 Germinal of the Year XII)

Paris, May 20, 1804                                             
217
(1 Prairial of the Year XII)

Paris, 9 Frimaire of the Year XII                             
227
(By the Church calendar: November 30, 1804

Paris, at night after Napoleon's coronation December 2, 1804                               
238

Paris, two weeks after the Emperor's coronation
       
                 
                 
256

In a stagecoach between Hanover in Germany and Paris, September, 1805                                 
268
(The Emperor has forbidden our Republican calendar. My late mama would be pleased—she never could get used to it)

Paris, June 4, 1806                                             
281

Summer, 1807, in a travelling coach somewhere
in Europe  
                         
                                           
286

In our new home in the rue d´Anjou in Paris.
July, 1809                                           
               
               
302

Villa la Grange, near Paris. Autumn, 1809             
311

Paris, December 16, 1809                                   
319

Paris, end of June, 1810                                     
332

 

 

PART III
Our Lady of Peace

Paris, September, 1810                                       
341

Paris, September 30, 1810                                   
372

Helsingor in Denmark, the night of
December 21 to December 22, 1810     
                     
375

Helsingör, December 22, 1810                         
380
(Today I arrived in Sweden)

In the Royal Palace, Stockholm
End of the interminable winter of 1811               
384

Castle Drottningholm in Sweden
Beginning of June, 1811.                                     
396

Paris, January 1, 1812                                         
403

Paris, April, 1812                                               
413

Paris, middle of September, 1812                         
417

Paris, two weeks later                                         425

Paris, December 16, 1812                                   
430

Paris, December 19, 1812                                   
438

Paris, end of January, 1813                                 
448

Paris, February, 1813                                         
452

Paris, beginning of April, 1813                           
459

Paris, summer, 1813                                             
466

Paris, November, 1813                                         
470

Paris, last week in March, 1814                           
481

Paris, March 30, 1814                                         484

Paris, March 31, 1814                                         
495

Paris, April, 1814                                                 
494

Paris, middle of April, 1814                                 
518

Paris, early May, 1814                                         
533

Paris, Whitmonday, May 30, 1814
Late in the evening                                             
540

Paris, late autumn, 1814                                      546

Paris, March 5, 1815                                           
552

Paris, March 20, 1815                                         
557

Paris, June 18, 1815                                           
560

Paris, June 23, 1815                                           
563

Paris, during the night of
June 29-30, 1815                                                 
566

 

 

PART IV
The Queen of Sweden

Paris, February, 1818                                         
587

Paris, June, 1821                                                 
594

BOOK: Désirée
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