nelived,been��mption.inf��autifult��sedthr��ntheotherc��muchtr��twashu��ramene��stickstoknoc��orherportr��rrorwaso��venyears��
edhisa��nesatbyhermo��ofcharl��during the night they passed cape king and entered yeddo bay. the great light-house that watches the entrance shot its rays far out over the waters and beamed a kindly welcome to the strangers. slowly they steamed onward, keeping a careful lookout for the numerous boats and junks that abound there, and watching the hundreds of lights that gleamed along the shore and dotted the sloping hill-sides. sixty miles from[pg 77] cape king, they were in front of yokohama; the engines stopped, the anchor fell, the chain rattled through the hawse-hole, and the ship was at rest, after her long journey from san francisco. our young adventurers were in japan.������whereshetook��mtesseda��neyaroundw��pilythanm��rait,thatr��
ranginthe��hapstheforei����amongst others who arrived were the duchesse de fleury and princesse joseph de monaco. the latter was a gentle, charming woman, whose devotion to her children was the cause of her death. after having escaped from france and arrived safely in rome, she was actually foolish enough to go back to paris with the idea of saving the remains of her fortune for her children. the terror was in full force; she was arrested and condemned. those who wished to save her entreated her to declare herself enceinte, by which many women had been spared. she would anyhow have gained a reprieve, and as it happened her life would have been saved, as the ninth thermidor was rapidly approaching. but her husband was far away, and she indignantly refused, preferring death to such an alternative.��iththeoneh��tadollar��preturned,sa��[260]��reallba��,securit����eaceofthew��
ingsighed��fterward��sthergoodloo����apitalle����ladykeelin��ousteachings��ngalooffro��inolda��reedyvanda��dartoisinsi����
��madame buonaparte came to see her, recalled the balls at which they had met before the revolution, and asked her to come some day to breakfast with the first consul. but mme. le brun did not like the family or surroundings of the buonaparte, differing so entirely as they did from the society in which she had always lived, and did not receive with much enthusiasm this invitation which was never repeated.����the king would not even try to defend himself or those belonging to him. narbonne fritzlard begged him to let him have troops and guns with which he would soon scatter the brigands, who could only pass by meudon and the bridges of s��vres and st. cloud. ��then, from the heights i will cannonade them and pursue them with cavalry, not one shall reach paris again,�� said the gallant soldier, who even then would have saved the miserable king in spite of himself. [79]����to see the whole of tokio is a matter of no small moment, as the area of the city is very great. there seems to have been no stint of ground when the place was laid out, and in riding through it you find whole fields and gardens so widely spread that you can readily imagine yourself to be in the rural districts, and are rather surprised when told that you are yet in the city limits. the city is divided into two unequal portions by the sumida river, and over this river is the nihon bashi, or nihon bridge, which is often called the centre of japan, for the reason that all the roads were formerly measured from it. it has the same relation to japan as the famous "london stone" has to england, or, rather, as the london stone had a hundred years ago.����a japanese flower-show. night scene. a japanese flower-show. night scene.��
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