through the Barriere d’Enfer, which has been
destroyed since 1860, at the moment when Jacques Collin
murdered his uncle. At that time he entered a
house of ill-fame, where he had unwittingly for mistress
Lydie Peyrade, his full-blooded cousin. Theodose
then lived for three years on a hundred louis which
Corentin had secretly given to him. On giving
him the money, the national chief of police quietly
advised him to become an attorney. Journalism,
however, at first, seemed a tempting career to M.
de la Peyrade, and he went into politics, finally
becoming editor of a paper managed by Cerizet.
The failure of this journal left Theodose once more
very poor. Nevertheless, through Corentin, who
secretly paid the expenses of his studies, he was able
to begin and continue a course in law. Once licensed,
M. de la Peyrade became a barrister and professing
to be entirely converted to Socialism, he freely pleaded
the cause of the poor before the magistrate of the
eleventh or twelfth district. He occupied the
third story of the Thuillier house on rue Saint-Dominique-d’Enfer.
He fell into the hands of Dutocq and Cerizet and suffered
under the pressure of these grasping creditors.
Theodose now decided that he would marry M. Thuillier’s
natural daughter, Mademoiselle Celeste Colleville,
but, with Felix Phellion’s love to contend with,
despite the combined support, gained with difficulty,
of Madame Colleville and of M. and Mademoiselle Thuillier,
he failed through Corentin’s circumvention.
His marriage with Lydie Peyrade repaired the wrong
which he had formerly done unwittingly. As successor
to Corentin he became national chief-of-police in
1840. [Scenes from a Courtesan’s Life. The
Middle Classes.]
LA PEYRADE (Madame de), first cousin and wife of the
preceding, born Lydie Peyrade in 1810, natural daughter
of the police officer Peyrade and of Mademoiselle
Beaumesnil; passed her childhood successively in Holland
and in Paris, on rue des Moineaux, whence, Jacques
Collin, thirsting for revenge, abducted her during
the Restoration. Being somewhat in love, at that
time, with Lucien de Rubempre she was taken to a house
of ill-fame, Peyrade being at the time very ill.
Upon her departure she was insane. Her own cousin,
Theodose de la Peyrade, had been her lover there,
fortuitously and without dreaming that they were blood
relatives. Corentin adopted this insane girl,
who was a talented musician and singer, and at his
home on rue Honore-Chevalier, in 1840, he arranged
for both the cure and the marriage of his ward. [Scenes
from a Courtesan’s Life. The Middle Classes.]
LA POURAILLE, usual surname of Dannepont.
LARAVINIERE, tavern-keeper in Western France, lodged
“brigands” who had armed themselves as
Royalists under the first Empire. He was condemned,
either by Bourlac or Mergi, to five years in prison.
[The Seamy Side of History.]
LARDOT (Madame), born in 1771, lived in Alencon in
1816 on rue du Cours—a street still bearing
the same name. She was a laundress, and took
as boarders a relative named Grevin and the Chevalier
de Valois. She had among her employes Cesarine
and Suzanne, afterwards Madame Theodore Gaillard.
[Jealousies of a Country Town.]