Dancing to the Precipice: Lucie De La Tour Du Pin and the French Revolution

Author(s) : MOOREHEAD Caroline
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Dancing to the Precipice: Lucie De La Tour Du Pin and the French Revolution
© Chatto & Windus

 
From the publishers:
Born Lucie Dillon, to a half-French mother and an Anglo-Irish father, her world was Versailles and the court of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. She married a French aristocrat, and narrowly survived the French Revolution, escaping to America at the time of Washington and Jefferson. Here, she lived a life of milking cows and chopping wood, having previously been accustomed to the lavish life of the French court. Returning to France prematurely, Lucie had to flee again, this time to England, where she took up sewing in order to support herself and her family. Repeatedly in the right place at the right time, Lucie saw the Battle of Waterloo, the fall of Napoleon and the return of Louis XVIII, and the Restoration. She was an outstanding diarist and a remarkable woman, who witnessed one of the most dramatic and brutal periods of history, playing the part of observer, commentator and, often, participant. For the last years of her life she was ambassadress to Holland and the Kingdom of Sardinia. Her friends included Wellington, Lafayette, Alexander Hamilton, Talleyrand and Madame de Stael. She died, aged 83, in Pisa. Mixing politics and court intrigue, social observation and everyday details about food, work, illness, children, manners and clothes, Caroline Moorehead paints a vivid portrait of an era – lasting three-quarters of a century – that saw the fortunes of France, as well as those of Lucie herself, rise and fall and rise again.

This book has been shortlisted for the Fondation Napoléon Grand Prix history prizes.
 
Click here for a review of the book on the Guardian website (UK) (external link).

Year of publication :
2009
Place and publisher :
Chatto & Windus
Number of pages :
496
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