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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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fortunate period when some strong individual's personal predilections and ambitions coincide with what happens to be good for the society at the moment.”

I remember thinking that that was an odd kind of philosophy, but he was very intelligent and very pleasing. He was a very agreeable conversationalist, a very agreeable companion for a luncheon and the afternoon. He was very sharp and very cynical, though.

All of these people were great friends of Anne Morgan's, who was no Fascist. She was a real humanitarian. She was in love with France. She made great sacrifices for anything to help the French people. When the French collapsed and the German war was on, she saw how much decay and crumbling there was in France. That was a great disillusionment to her, a great blow to her. She had believed, as had others, that they were strong.

It was that afternoon that I heard something interesting not from the Marshal, but from M. Tardieu and one or two others. I can only remember that Petain, Tardieu and M. Verne were there, but there were many high officials of government present. Now they have retreated from my mind, although the picture of that luncheon table set out in a garden, under the shelter of some lovely vines and trees that ran over a trellis, remains.





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