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EarlAn Earl is a member of the British peerage ranking below a Marquess and above a Viscount. The Earl is the British equivalent of the continental Count. The wife of an Earl is a Countess[?]. The eldest son of an Earl generally has the courtesy title of Viscount or Lord, younger sons are known as the Honourable [Firstname] [Lastname] and daughters are known as Lady [Firstname] [Lastname] (the most obvious example being Lady Diana Spencer). The word derives from Middle English "erl" meaning warrior, nobleman, equivalent to the jarl in Old Norse. It's unclear whether there exists connection by ethymology to the Anglo-Saxon term "Ealdorman" which translates literally as "Elder", "Senior", and refers to a chief counselor of the realm. That term survives in modern English as "Alderman[?]", a councilman or representative in local government or a local church governing body. An Earl presides over an Earldom. See: Earls of Chesterfield, Earls of Cork, Earls of Derby, Earls of Norfolk, Earls of Pembroke, Earls of Shrewsbury[?], Earls of Warwick[?], Earl of Holland summer?--what an imp of mischief! and then what eyes! eh?--how they
very uncommon expression for her age."
"If she has kept what her witching, luring face promised, she must be
-for, between ourselves, if she had been a tradesman's daughter, instead
that she would be as good as pretty, and it is not speaking ill of her to
so bright, so sunny, and to suit so well her snowy complexion and black
sure, that now this very color of her hair, which would be a blemish in
She must have such a sweet vixen look!"
"Oh! to be candid, she really was a vixen--always running about the park,
manner of naughty tricks."
"I grant you, Mademoiselle Adrienne was a chip of the old block; but then
new merino frock to a poor little beggar girl, and came back to the house.html">house
she does things at Paris--oh! such things--"
"What things?"
"Oh, my dear; I can hardly venture--"
"Fell, but what are they?"
"Why," said the worthy dame, with a sort of embarrassment and confusion,
Mademoiselle Adrienne never sets foot in a church, but lives in a kind of
her up like a goddess, and scratches them very often, because she gets
of massive gold--all which causes the utmost grief and despair to her
wife.
"Now tell me," said he, when this first access of hilarity was over,
called at Saint-Dizier House, to see Madame Grivois, her godmother.--Now
who told her all this--and surely she ought to know, being in the house."
"Yes, a fine piece of goods that Grivois! once she was a regular bad 'un,
like man, they say. The princess herself, who is now so stiff and
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