Some Old Time Beauties - After Portraits by the English Masters, with Embellishment and Comment by Thomson Willing
page 47 of 58 (81%)
page 47 of 58 (81%)
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One day the housekeeper of Hampton Court was showing the palace to
visitors when the sisters were there. She threw open the door where they were sitting, saying, "This is our beauty-room." The pictures and galleries were forgotten by the crowd, which gazed on the beauties instead. For a decade their beauty was regnant in London. They were not politicians as were their Graces of Gordon and Devonshire, nor had they the ability to become such. Neither were they the associates of brilliant, intellectual men, but participants in the gay, vacuous, showy society of the rapid set of the aristocracy. The elder sister gained the coronet of Coventry, but her vanity caused her own undoing; the younger was a part of the exhibition of "Beauty and the Beast." A high price was paid for her position by the endurance of a period of tyranny and terror. Some praise must be accorded the beauties, for at a time of much licentiousness of a profligate society and tolerated coarsenesses, the sisters determinedly kept their names free from ignoble soil and scandal. [Illustration: MARIA COUNTESS OF COVENTRY by HAMILTON] MARIA GUNNING |
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