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From
Vive la Reine:
Marie Thérèse and her father shared an affectionate relationship that
began during the first days of her life. Ambassador Mercy wrote, of the
week after her birth, that the king “did not want to leave the chateau
even to take a walk,” and that he spent most of his day in the Queen’s
chambers, dividing “his time between the Queen and his august child, to
whom he shows the most touching love.” Some of the first words spoken by
the young Marie Thérèse were, to the delight of her parents, “Papa.”
In his recollections of the royal family’s imprisonment in the
Temple, Jean-Baptiste Cléry recalled the pain that the king felt in
being separated from his family during his trial proceedings, but
especially from being separated from his child on her birthday:
On the 19th of December the king said to me while dining: ‘Fourteen
years ago you got up earlier than you did to-day.’ I understood His
Majesty at once. ‘That was the day my daughter was born,’ he continued
tenderly, ‘and to-day, her birthday, I am deprived of seeing her!’ A few
tears rolled from his eyes, and a respectful silence reigned for a
moment.
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