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  1. This chapter considers Marie d'Agoult's separation with Franz Liszt. Marie returned to France in the autumn of 1839 with encouragement from Liszt to rebuild her life in Paris and renew her contact with her family. She was again able to create a salon which would become a meeting place for artists and intellectuals. In April 1844, and Marie at ...

  2. This chapter looks at the time of the adolescence of Marie d'Agoult. It discusses the relocation of d'Agoult's family back to Frankfurt in November 1820 and her experiences of life in the city. It also describes her meeting with French author Francois de Chateaubriand who became influential in her later career as a writer and her meeting her ...

  3. It is a remarkable fact that in years to come both of Maria Bethmann's daughters, Augusta Bussmann and the future Marie d'Agoult, would become famous for similar acts of folly inspired by love. In 1807, when Augusta was sixteen, she decided to marry the poet Clemens Brentano in spite of his reluctance.

  4. Grave of Marie d'Agoult (Père-Lachaise, division 54) burial plot reference. 54. 1 reference. stated in. La sculpture dans les cimetières de Paris, 1897. page(s) 117.

  5. Marie d'Agoult. State University of New York Press, Feb 1, 2012 - Fiction - 247 pages. Winner of the 2004 Soeurette Diehl Fraser Award for Best Translation presented by the Texas Institute of Letters First published in 1846 under the pen name Daniel Stern, Nelida tells the story of a beautiful French heiress who surrenders everything—marriage ...

  6. 4Travel chronology is derived from [Marie de Flavigny, Comtesse d'Agoult], Memoires par Daniel Stern [pseud.], ed. Daniel Ollivier (Paris, 1927), pp. 73-132. Ollivier as-sembled d'Agoult's unfinished memoirs from diaries (1837-39) and material written in 1866. For an as yet unsur-passed biography, see Jacques Vier, La Comtesse d'Agoult et

  7. Franz Liszt. Annees de pelerinage, 1st year, Switzerland, S160/R10. Following the tragic death of her daughter Louise, Marie d’Agoult found herself pregnant with Franz Liszt’s child. Since she was still married to Charles d’Agoult, it was impossible to stay in Paris. She wrote her husband in May 1835, telling him that their marriage was over.