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Fronde   Listen
noun
Fronde  n.  (F. Hist.) A political party in France, during the minority of Louis XIV., who opposed the government, and made war upon the court party.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Fronde" Quotes from Famous Books



... "Sapho" of her Saturday salon, a true precieuse, as good of heart and quick of wit as she was unprepossessing of person, supplied the sentiment and metaphysics of love to match the gasconading exploits of her brother's invention. It was the time not only of preciosity, but of the Fronde, with its turbulent adventures and fantastic chivalry. Under the names of Medes and Persians could be discovered the adventurers, the gallants, the fine ladies of the seventeenth century. In Clelie an attempt is made to study the curiosities of passion; it is a manual of ...
— A History of French Literature - Short Histories of the Literatures of the World: II. • Edward Dowden

... erat primis virides mortalibus Herbae; Quas tellus nullo sollicitante dabat. Et modo carpebant vivaci cespite gramen; Nunc epulae tenera fronde ...
— Acetaria: A Discourse of Sallets • John Evelyn

... Basle, was, as you know, a very amiable young man who, besides, knew his New Testament by heart in Greek and German. When he was twenty his parents sent him on a journey. He was charged to carry some books to the coadjutor of Paris, at the time of the Fronde. He arrived at the door of the archbishop's residence; the Swiss told him that Monseigneur saw nobody. "Comrade," said Ornik to him, "you are very rude to your compatriots. The apostles let everyone approach, and Jesus Christ desired that people should suffer all the little children to come ...
— Voltaire's Philosophical Dictionary • Voltaire

... assassins of the Terror, to keep them company. Nor yet quite all on murder bent, some on pleasure; the Knights and Ladies of the Cloth of Gold and the hosts of the Renaissance: Cyrano de Bergerac and Francois Villon leading the ragamuffin procession; the jades of the Fronde, Longueville, Chevreuse and fair-haired Anne of Austria; and Ninon, too, and Manon; and the never-to-be-forgotten Four, 'one for all and all for one;' Cagliostro and Monte Cristo; on the side, Rabelais taking notes and laughing under his cowl. Catherine de ...
— Marse Henry, Complete - An Autobiography • Henry Watterson

... inhale and guess at in the spirituous life surrounding them, that the servants of the devil are the valiant host, this world's elect, getting and deserving to get the best it can give in return for a little dashing audacity, a flavour of the Fronde in their conduct; they sin, but they have the world; and then they repent perhaps, but they have had the world. The world is the golden apple. Thirst for it is common during youth: and one would think the French mother worthy of the crown of wisdom if she were not so scrupulously provident ...
— The Shaving of Shagpat • George Meredith

... the German "higher" and "lower" nobility, with the exception of the so-called Fronde, who proudly absent themselves from it; the Ministers; the diplomatic corps; Court officials; and such members of the burghertum, or middle class, as hold offices which entitle them to attend court. The wives, however, of those in the last category are not ...
— William of Germany • Stanley Shaw



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