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The Maiden of Moscow

A Poem, in Twenty-One Cantos. By the Lady Emmeline Stuart Wortley
  

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SUPPLEMENTARY NOTICE TO THE READER.

Perhaps I ought to state, before the work proceeds further, that the chief authority to which I am indebted for the facts alluded to in the foregoing pages, relative to the movements of the French Army in Russia, the Defence of the Russians, &c.,—is Count Ségur. Every circumstance (such as the falling of Napoleon's horse on the banks of the Niemen, —the appearance of the single Cossack at the first invasion of the territory by the French, &c. &c.) is taken from his work, “Histoire de Napoléon, et de la Grande Armée, pendant l'Année 1812;” excepting merely those incidents which refer to the love of De Courcy and Xenia. The story of the Priest, however, who collected his flock in the Great Church of Smolensko, and who was afterwards admitted to an audience of Napoleon, is from the above work; and the sentiments he is made to express, together with the clemency and lenity the Emperor displayed towards him, are copied pretty closely from the historian. But though I have taken Count Ségur for my principal guide, I have also largely profited by the pages of Labaume, Sir Walter Scott, &c. Perhaps I should do well to add, that in the Greek religion the priests are permitted to marry once.

For any slight oversights in the text, I am anxious to plead as an excuse, severe indisposition and much suffering, which has rendered the revision of these pages a most painful task.