RELATIVE TO MARIA-ANTOINETTA, Archduchess of Austria, QUEEN OF FRANCE AND NAVARRE. CHAPTER I. Birth of the Queen. Her education, departure from Vienna, murriage, prosperity, character, and generally all that relates to her previous to the commencement of the French Revolution. MARIA-ANTOINETTA-JOSEPH-JANE OF LORRAINE, ARCHDUCHESS OF AUSTRIA, daughter of FRANCIS I. Emperor of Germany, and of the immortal MARIA-THERESA, Empress of Germany, Queen of Hungary and Bohemia, was born on the 2nd of November, 1755. A short time previous to her birth, the Empress gave orders to her governess to look for a nurse in some respectable family, of pure morals and unspotted character; a description com B pletely applicable to my virtuous parents, to whom I am proud to pay this public tribute of respect. My father, Mr. George Weber, was a Counsellor in the Magistracy of Vienna, and at the head of the Victualling-Office: my mother, Maria-Constantia Hoffman, was distinguished for the beauty of her person, and still more for that of her mind. Their marriage had constantly presented a union of the domestic virtues. My mother was fixed upon to be the nurse of the Archduchess, and I was three months old when she had the honour of receiving the charge. MARIA-THERESA was a good mother as well as a great Queen. Her tenderness seemed as soft as her courage appeared majestic and sublime. No sooner had she entrusted her child to my mother than she adopted us all. She rewarded the long services of my father with a considerable pension, and a grant of apartments in the Hotel de la Chancellerie. A pension was settled on my mother, and one also on each of her children. As for me, whose lot it was to be nourished with the same milk that MARIA-ANTOINETTA was, Her Imperial Majesty desired my mother, while I was a child, to take me with her whenever she went to pay her respects to the young Princess whom she had suckled. The daughter of the Cesars then made me join in the sports of her infancy, in which the Empress herself took a part; and, as at that age nothing had yet made me sensible of the immense distance between myself and her with whom I played, the august and good MARIA-THERESA, fearing to give me pain if she bestowed her caresses partially, often took me on one of her knees when she held her daughter on the other, and honoured me with embraces similar to those she lavished upon her. It was from my mother, and from her Excellency the Countess de Brandeis*, that I afterwards learned these scenes of goodness; nor did I learn them, or have I ever recollected them, without the warmest sentiments of respect and love. They were accompanied with a thousand little presents, given to me either by the Empress or by the young Archduchess, and sometimes by the Archdukes. We still preserve in our family one of those gifts; a little room, in which the Lord's Supper is represented with moveable figures; a precious relic, which we now cherish more than ever from the too painful additions of memory. How often has MARIA-THERESA deigned to say to my mother; "Good Weber, I desire you * Governess to Her Royal Highness the Archduchess. |