Petite 
                    Fée, ill. R. de 
                    la Nézière, 1920 (Bibliothèque 
                    de Suzette 2nde série), 1939
                    Pauvre Charlotte,  
                    ill. (Paul Adolphe) Kauffmann, 1921, 
                    1932 
                    
                    
                    Marie 
                      Alexandrine d'Agon de la Contrie was the daughter of François 
                      Guillaume, and Pierre Louise Marie Fanélie Couppé 
                      du Portblanc. 
                      Her mother was born in 1810 at  Petit Canal de la Grande 
                      Terre (Guadeloupe) into an old Breton family who had settled 
                      between Martinique and Guadeloupe at the end of the XVII 
                      Century.
                      
                      Her father "un excellent homme"  [cfr. L. 
                      Chauvet (1) born in 1804 at Spire in the kingdom of 
                      Bavaria joined the Army as a volunteer in 1822 and ended 
                      his military career as  Chef de Bataillon. He met his 
                      wife during his posting in Guadeloupe (1837-1842). They 
                      married in Petit Canal the 1st October 1839. Chevalier 
                      de la Legion d'Honneur in 1845. In 1842 D'Agon returned 
                      to France settling with his family in Brest. His own father 
                      Louis Bernard Antoine was a lawyer and jurist, author of 
                      the classic Ancien statuaire d'Alsace ou Recueil des 
                      actes de notoriété fournis en 1738 et 1739 
                      à M. de Corberon... sur les statuts, us et coutumes 
                      locales de cette province, suivi d'une notice sur les emphytéoses, 
                      les colonges, les locatairies perpétuelles Colmar: 
                      impr. de J. H. Decker, 1825. 
                    Marie, 
                      had an older brother, Edmond Joseph (b. 
                      Basse Terre, Guadeloupe 27 gen 1842-d.Toulouse 27 July 1901). 
                      He joined the Navy aged 19 and became a Navy administrative 
                      officer. In 1877-1879 he was in Sénégal as 
                      aide-commissaire de la Marine at the same time as the explorer 
                      Louis-Parfait Monteil and (as he was then) lieutenant Joseph 
                      Gallieni with whom he became close friend. In 1881 he was 
                      posted, like his father, to Guadeloupe where he met and 
                      married Aline Paul Dubois de la Saussais d'Estreban (b. 
                      ca 1849 - d. Toulouse 20 novembre 1903) descendant 
                      from a French Creole family. They had a daughter Jehanne. 
                      Subsequently he served in Cochincine and Réunion 
                      (1886-ca.1890).
                     
                      Around 1852 Marie's father was posted to India with his 
                      family in what proved to be his last mission overseas. He 
                      died suddenly in 1853 just a few days before he was due 
                      to return to France.  Pierre-Louis-Honoré Chauvet 
                      in his L'Inde Française, Deux années sur 
                      la côte de Coromandel 1877 mentions his untimely 
                      death (1).
                    Marie 
                      Alexandrine was sent to La Maison d'Education de la 
                      Legion d'Honneur de Saint-Denis, a boarding institution 
                      founded by Napoleon to educate the female relatives of Légionnaires. 
                      The pupils entered the school between the age of six and 
                      twelve and left at eighteen; they were taught arithmetic, 
                      reading, writing, grammar, history, geography, cosmography, 
                      botany, dance (as a form of physical activity),  some 
                      domestic skills and according to their talent, received 
                      design and music lessons. Intensive religious education, 
                      prayers and daily masses were de rigueur. 
                    After 
                      completing her education, in 1868, without any relatives 
                      in France to whom she could return, (her mother had also 
                      died) she remained at La Maison to become part of the staff, 
                      which was organized in  dames postulantes au noviciat, 
                      dames novices, dames de 2me classe, dames de 1ère 
                      classe,  dignitaires, under the direction 
                      of the Superintendante. The dames performed 
                      the task of teachers, supervisors, pharmacists, proctors, 
                      concierges, nurses. By 1871 Marie had reached the grade 
                      of dame novice with a stipend of 400fr/year.
                      By all accounts she would have remained all her life 
                      at St Denis, where no man was allowed to enter (with a few 
                      grand exceptions) but in 1872 she was asked in marriage 
                      by Commandant Brunot. The Ministry of War deemed  her 
                      credentials impeccable (daughter of a Légionnaire, 
                      grandaughter of an eminent jurist) and though her dowry 
                      was too modest for the future wife of a Navy officer it 
                      was considered sufficient to grant permission to marry. 
                      It was a marriage arranged in the close-knit milieu of the 
                      creole families, maybe with the input of her brother Edmond, 
                      but it proved to be a happy one. 
                    Thanks 
                      to l'Abbé Bethleem, who so described her in the first 
                      edition of Romans à lire et à proscrire, 
                      Marie D'Agon has been  known to this day as "M.me 
                      Brunot, femme du Commandant Brunot de l'Infanterie de Marine".
                    The 
                      elusive "commandant Brunot de l'infanterie de Marine" 
                      is Colonel-Lieutenant Napoléon François Ernest, 
                      born Fort-de-France, Martinique, in 1839. son of Jacques, 
                      Commandeur de la Legion d'Honneur, Military Commander-Governor 
                      of Martinique in 1853 and Marie Colombe Aglaé Goy. 
                      After un-promising beginnings in the Army owing to his strong-willed 
                      character, which earned him various disciplinary actions, 
                      Brunot performed a distinguished military service with the 
                      2e Régiment d'Infanterie de Marine (RIMa). He took 
                      part to: two campaigns in Sénégal (1858-1862)  
                      with the Bataillon de Tiralleurs Sénégalais, 
                      two in Cochinchine (1863-1865) the Prussian War 1870 
                      with l'Armée du Rhin (he fought valiantly at the 
                      battle of Bazeilles). He was made prisoner in September 
                      1870 at Sedan returning from captivity in 1871. Promoted 
                      Lieutenant-Colonel in 1876. Chevalier Légion d'Honneur 
                      in 1874.
                      
                      The Brunots married in Saint-Denis on the 12th of Nov. 1872. 
                      They had four children  Georges Léon Jacques 
                      (b. 1874) who became a colonial 
                      civil servant, Jacques Edmond Paul Henri (b 
                      Brest, June 1876) who died aged two months, Marie 
                      Madeleine Juliette Fanélie, (b. 
                      Brest 1878 - d. Saint-Germain-en-Laye 1976) who in 
                      1901 married Auguste Cornet, Paul (b.1881), 
                      Richard Edmond Maurice Edouard (b. 
                      9 April 1883 Saint Ciers du Taillon - d.Aix les Bains 1958).
                      After their marriage they settled in Brest, 20. rue Dalgesiras. 
                      In 1879 Brunot was again in Indochina in Saigon returning 
                      to Brest in January 1880. 
                    Commandant 
                      Brunot retired in 1881. After a spell in Marseille (July 
                      1881), the family moved to 8, Place du Commerce Paris-Grenelle 
                      (1882) then to Saint Ciers  du Taillon Charente Inferieure 
                      (1882-1886) then to Le Bouscat nr. Bordeaux (1886-1891) 
                      returning to Brest in 1891, rue du Chateau. They moved to 
                      Versailles in 1894, rue de la Bonne Aventure 24bis. Their 
                      next-door neighbours were the Petitjeans de la Rosière, whose 
                      daughter Marie Jeanne Henriette became known in literature 
                      as Delly. It is quite possible that d'Agon knew of Marie 
                      Petitjean's literary ambitions and may have introduced her 
                      to Henri Gautier, the publisher of Delly's Dans les 
                      ruines in 1903. 
                    D'Agon 
                      divided her time between the social obligations of a military 
                      wife and the care of her family (which during their time 
                      in Marseille included her father-in-law who died aged 84 
                      in 1883) with the help of just one maid who in 1901 was 
                      one Reine Le Sergeant. Though she had been for many 
                      years a very popular writer, one of Blériot flagships, 
                      she appears as "sans profession" in the 1901 
                      census, a clear indication of how in her time female writers, 
                      receiving little recognition, did not consider their activity 
                      to be a profession. 
                    Owing 
                      to her family commitments d'Agon started writing late in 
                      life, after her chidren began their secondary education. 
                      She immediately established herself as a successful writer: 
                      she won the prize of the Société d'Encouragement 
                      au Bien for Les Colères du bouillant Achille. 
                      Her first  books Reconnaissance ed. Société 
                      française d'éditions d'art. and Marjolaine, 
                      ed. May & Mantoux, were published in 1890.
                    She 
                      dedicated some of her books to grandaugthers, nieces and 
                      children of family friends.
                    •Miss 
                      Bengali: "A ma petite-fille, Jeanne Cornet. Ce 
                      livre a été terminé le jour même 
                      de ta naissance ! Quand tu seras assez grande pour le lire, 
                      tu ne seras pas plus chérie que tu ne l'es à 
                      cette première heure de ta vie par ta grand'mère, 
                      M. D'Agon de la Contrie à Versailles, le 22 Novembre 
                      1901".
                    • 
                      Le fils du cordier: 9 Éd. Imp. 37, rue Gandon, 
                      Paris, 1902 "A Marie la Prairie, Je t'offre ce livre, 
                      ma chère petite fille, parce qu'on y parle de ton 
                      pays natal; parce que tu y verras que les enfants de marsouins 
                      sont bons et généreux; et puis, surtout, parce 
                      que je t'aime très maternellement, Versailles, le 
                      6 Janvier 1902" (Gabrielle Sophie Marie la Prairie, 
                      born in Brest 1888, was the daughter of Brunot fellow officer 
                      Paul La Prairie, Lt Colonel 2e RIMa. She died in 1976).
                    • 
                      Fraternité, Société française 
                      d'éditions d'Art, 1900 : "A Marie-Louise Accary - 
                      je t'offre ce livre ma chère enfant parceque je sais 
                      que l'on t'apprend à aimer les malheureux" (Born 
                      in Versailles in 1885, Marie Louise Charlotte was the daughter 
                      of  Léon Accary Controleur Générale 
                      de l'Armée).
                    Contributions: 
                      Mon Journal, Les Veillées des Chaumieres 
                      (es. La Dette de Noëlle, 1907), L'Ouvrier, 
                      Semaine de Suzette, Le Journal de la Jeunesse.
                    She 
                      wrote also under the name Mme Brunot: La Revanche de 
                      François Talence, 1905 and Les Victoires 
                      de mademoiselle Laurence, 1904 both published by Librairie 
                      nationale d'éducation et de récréation.
                    D'Agon 
                      shared with Roger Dombre the honour of launching La 
                      Semaine. The first episode of her novel Pauvre 
                      Charlotte — which takes place in Guadeloupe 
                      — opened La Semaine de Suzette  n. 1, 
                      February 1905. 
                      The author was thus introduced by the publisher: "... 
                      cet écrivain qui depuis des longues années, 
                      exploite au profit de la jeunesse les trésors d'une 
                      imagination féconde et colorée et qui mieux 
                      que personne, sait glisser le bon précepte sous les 
                      attraits de l'action captivante."
                    The 
                      Brunot moved once more, this time to 5 
                      rue La Boëtie Périgueux in Dordogne where 
                      the Commandant died  on 29 July 1908. Between 1904 
                      and 1906 she was a member of  the École 
                      felibréenne du Périgord the literary society 
                      for the diffusion and knowledge of occitan and published 
                      three short articles in its monthly bulletin Lou Bournat.
                    The 
                      family connection with the colonies continued with the next 
                      generations: Richard Brunot, a Law graduate, entered the 
                      colonial administration and became Gouverneur général 
                      des Colonies, Senator for Mauritania at the Assemblée 
                      Nationale, Conseiller de la République de Mauritanie 
                      1946-1948.
                      As late as the Fifties the Cornets were still in West Africa; 
                      in 1976 two male descendants Jean-Luc, Marie, Léon 
                      Cornet, b. 15 Aug. 1954 at Kaya (Haute-Volta ), and Jean- 
                      Michel, Georges, Marie Cornet, b. 12 sept. 1956 at Versailles 
                      applied to have the surname d'Agon de la Contrie added to 
                      Cornet.
                    (1) 
                       "Le 
                      commandant d'Agon de la Contrie attendait le passage du 
                      prochain paquebot anglais pour rentrer en France avec sa 
                      famille. Il s'entendit avec son ami F., auquel il céda 
                      la maison qu'il avait encore plusieurs mois à occuper. 
                      Mais, l'avant-veille du jour fixé pour le départ, 
                      le pauvre commandant mourut subitement: le départ 
                      de la famille fut retardé par cet événement, 
                      et F., pressé de mettre sa lune de miel dans ses 
                      meubles, pria la veuve d'aller s'installer ailleurs, ce 
                      qu'elle fît en se lamentant de l'impatience de son 
                      ami. Mais l'ami, pour l'empire du Grand Mogol, n'aurait 
                      pas voulu condamner sa jeune fiancée à passer 
                      la première nuit de ses noces à la belle étoile, 
                      ni retarder d'une heure son réengagement dans l'armée 
                      des maris". (from L'Inde Française, 
                      Deux années sur la côte de Coromandel  
                      by Pierre-Louis-Honoré Chauvet, Challamel, 1877).
                    *****
                    (sources: 
                      Abbé Bethléem, 1928 & Mnémosyne, 
                      & SedeSu & La guerre de 1870-71, L'armée 
                      de Chalons and Philippe Castel ENTRAIDE FDA78, with thanks 
                      to Jean Luc Buard for kindly supplying Brunot's military 
                      dossier).