[477] Eugène Coudert, Charles Coudert's elder brother.—B.
[478] Eugénie Bernardine Désirée Clary, later Désirée Queen of Sweden (1781-1860), née Clary, married Bernadotte in 1798, after having been engaged to Napoleon Bonaparte.—T.
[479] Agnès Dame de Bourbon, second daughter of Humbert II. Count of Savoy, and married to Archambad VII. Sire de Bourbon, who died in 1171.—T.
[480] Adelaide of Savoy, Queen of France (d. 1154), daughter of Humbert II., not of Humbert the White-handed, married, in 1114, to Louis the Fat, King of France, and, four years after his death, which occurred in 1137, to the Constable de Montmorency.—T.
[481] Humbert I., first Count of Savoy (circa 985—circa 1048), surnamed the White-handed.—T.
[482] Louis VI. King of France (1078-1137), surnamed the Fat.—T.
[483] Mathieu I. Seigneur de Montmorency (d. 1160), appointed Constable of France in 1130. He married, first, Aline, illegitimate daughter of Henry I. King of England, and, secondly, Queen Adelaide of France.—T.
[484] Julia Queen of Naples, later of Spain (1777-1845), was Marie Julie Clary, sister to Madame Bernadette, and was married to Joseph Bonaparte in 1794.—T.
[485] CHATEAUBRIAND, Moïse, Act III. sc. IV.-B.
"Where the great are concerned, I am nowise suspect:
Their misfortunes alone win from me my respect.
I hate this King Pharaoh, while glory's his own;
Let him fall: on the instant I honour his crown:
By reason of grief he is king in my eyes;
I bow down before tears as great magistracies;
Misfortune's sad courtier, etc."—T.