Charles became a Doctor of Medicine (professor of physiology) 
                  and a Doctor of Literature graduating at Université de 
                  Paris. He was a celebrity in his own right in the fields of 
                  medicine, botany (he studied the medical properties of plants) 
                  and phisiology. He was referred to as "Dr Saffray" 
                  tout-court. 
                  He was also a great traveler, one of the first explorers of 
                  Colombia (then New Grenade) where he lived between 1860 and 
                  1862.
                  From Colombia he went to Panama and from there to New York where 
                  he arrived in 1864. In 1865 he worked as an Assistant Physician 
                  in the Lunatic Asylum of the Corporation of New York. He returned 
                  to Colombia around 1869. In 1870 he was in Louisville (Kentucky) 
                  where he became Professor in the local Medical College and Professor 
                  of French at the Louisville Female College. His reputation was 
                  such that in February 1871 he was proposed by the U.S. Representative 
                  E. W. Shore to Ulysses Grant personally as Professor of French 
                  in the Military Academy of West Point to fill the chair made 
                  vacant by the death of the incumbent. In 1876 he attended the 
                  Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia. 
                  Fluent in Spanish and Portuguese he was a translator and wrote 
                  near to sixty books, almost as many as his sister. Was made 
                  Officier de l'Instruction Publique.
                  Returned to France around 1880. In February 1885 he married 
                  Marie (Martiale) Molin de Teyssieu widow of Guillaume de Roberthie 
                  and a cherished friend of Pierre Loti. Dr Saffray died at home 
                  in Paris Avenue des Ternes 102 (XIV) the 17th Febr.1890.
                  
                  
                  
                  Eugénie 
                  Saffray was educated by the Dames du Sacré-Coeur in Vannes: 
                  large part of the school curriculum was taken by history and 
                  classical literature. Eugénie showed a literary talent 
                  from an early age which was encouraged and nurtured by her teachers. 
                  Her quiet demeanour hid a strong willed personalitiy, but she 
                  enjoyed the convent years and later declared they had been the 
                  best of her life. She did very well in her studies receiving 
                  many prizes, which she kept with books and girlish trinkets 
                  in an old trunk. 
                  Upon her father's promotion to the position of Receveur Principal 
                  and Entreposeur des Tabacs, the family moved to to Argentan 
                  (61) rue du College. There on the 23rd of November 1846, to 
                  escape her oppressive domineering mother, de Navéry consented 
                  to marry Eugène Jean Baptiste Chervet, rédacteur 
                  à la Prefecture d'Ile et Vilaine, born in Paris (IX) 
                  15th January 1815. 
                  Saffray starts her career as a poet with Le Testament de Jésus 
                  poème évangélique, by Mme Eugénie 
                  Chervet 16 pages printed in 1850 by Imprimérie Julllien, 
                  Falaise, and available in Argentan chez M. Pesnel and chez Mme 
                  Lefoyer, libraires. This was most certainly printed at her own 
                  expenses.  
                  Afterwards 
                    she used the names S. David, Marie David and Marie Saffray; 
                    in 1853 the lyrics for a sérénade Si tu m'aimais 
                    are signed Mme Marie Saffray, musique de F. Ponchard.
                    Followed Les Marguerites, poésies, par Mme Marie Saffray, 
                    E. Dentu, 1854. Though she continued to write poetry receiving 
                    many mentions and winning a Carnation and (1875) a Violette 
                    d'Argent in Jeux Florals de Toulouse for her poem La Saisie, 
                    poetry was not bringing in any money and around 1860 she switched 
                    to the historical travel genre which made her famous under 
                    the name Raoul de Navéry. For the next twenty years 
                    her books will be constantly, regularly and immediately reviewed 
                    by the Parisian and provincial press.
                    Saffray separated from her husband (who died 14 July 1871 
                    in Rennes) and apparently took refuge in the Convent of the 
                    Sacré-Coeur in Metz. She was there In 1856-1857 where 
                    she published Souvenirs du pensionnat. Drames et mystères 
                    dédiés aux élèves des maisons 
                    du Sacré-Coeur, by Marie David, C. Douniol, 1857. This 
                    is not the story of her convent life but a collection of plays.
                    She spent some time (1861) at la Prieuré de Basses 
                    Loges Fontainebelau-Avon, at the time a private country house 
                    where she composed Le Chemin du Paradis 
                    But to become somebody one has to be in the capital "[ 
                    ...]...Il fallait courir à Paris, forcer l'admiration, 
                    enlever le succés ...; il fallait défier l'indifférence 
                    , la jalousie, voir le monstre en face [....] "(in La 
                    Clé de la cassette, feuilleton Le Mémorial d'Aix, 
                    1883) 
                  Thus 
                    three years later, in 1864, Marie is in Paris where she will 
                    live all her life. She reinvents herself as Raoul de Navéry 
                    (1) soon becoming a feature in the Parisian society. It is 
                    a tiring carousel of receptions, balls, concerts, theaters, 
                    matinées littéraires, soirées de musique, 
                    «cinq à sept», dinners weddings and funerals, 
                    culminating with the opening of Exposition de Beaux Arts, 
                    knwon as "Le Salon" (Raoul de Navéry writes 
                    Le Salon de 1868). 
                    La Presse (10 May 1864) reports her presence vetue en écossaise 
                    at a reception given by Mme O'Connell (2) together with Nadar 
                    the photographer and "l'élite de la littérature 
                    feminine" which included Comtesse Dash (3) . 
                    August 1865: le beau monde littéraire is "en masse" 
                    in Ems, watering-place in the Prussian province of Hesse- 
                    Nassau, for the opening of Valse et Minuet opera by Méry 
                    et Deffès; the musical and critical Tout-Paris is there: 
                    Armand de Pontmartin, Raoul de Navéry, Houssaye, Frédéric 
                    Béchard and "un parterre des princesses: 3rd December 
                    1868: dinner Société des Gens de Lettres ("la 
                    très aimable Mme de Navéry" was wearing 
                    a "robe de moire bleu); 23 November 1872: Théâtre 
                    Parisien opening of Les Fils aînés de la République, 
                    drame en 5 actes et 9 tableaux, par MM. Michel Masson et Raoul 
                    de Navéry; May 1881: annual meeting of La Societé 
                    d'Encouragement au Bien; January 1882: osbèques de 
                    Mme Michel Masson in Batignolles. Then there are her comings 
                    and goings to and from "les vacances: in the last years 
                    of her life she spends a lot of time at the château 
                    de Rueil which at the time belonged to the Baron de Fleigny. 
                    
                  In 
                    1864 E. Dentu published anonimously in Paris the saucy Mémoires 
                    d'une femme de chambre, avec Portrait photographié 
                    de l'Auteur (4) , a chronicle of the amourous adventures of 
                    a society lady. The critics were unanimous in attributing 
                    the book to Marie David and, as such, it appeared in some 
                    bibliographies as late as 1868. She never denied nor confirmed 
                    but the company Mme de Navéry kept in her first Parisian 
                    years was decidedly beyond the pale for a Catholic writer. 
                    ( see 2 & 3). Indeed it may have been her inspiration. 
                    
                  
                  
                  
                  Many 
                  periodicals made specific reference to de Navéry's authorship. 
                  To quote just one, between 1864 and 1865 Journal pour toutes 
                  wrote: 
                  "Une femme d'ésprit qui pourrait bien être 
                  pour quelque chose dans la rédaction des Mémoires 
                  d'une Femme de Chambre, Mme Raoul de Navery a été 
                  recemment couronnée pas la Societé d'Encouragement 
                  au bien. On connaissait de cet auteur des poésies habilement 
                  tournées qui ne lui eussent pas valu le prix de vertu. 
                  Les Baisers Lesbiens, La Grappe et les Oiseaux, à la 
                  picorée, sont au dire des connaisseurs du genre risqué 
                  des chefs-d'oeuvre d'audace. Sans doute Mme de Navery commence 
                  sa seconde manière et MM de l'Encouragement au Bien ont 
                  pu dès lors la couronner" ( 1864-1865 pag 368)
                  ".... Après ça, de nos jours, qu'est ce qui 
                  n'a pas son roman ou ses mémoires des sommités 
                  sociales à la loge du portier? Telle s'est inspiré 
                  du boudoir, telle autre de l'antichambre; demandez à 
                  Mme de Navéry" (1864-1865 pag 527) (5) 
                  
                  
                    
                      |  |  |  | 
                     
                      | Portrait 
                          photographié de l'Auteur.Is this woman really Marie David?
 Possibly 
                            by Nadar (1820-1910), whose name appears frequently 
                            at the same social functions de Navéry attended. | 
 |  | 
                  
                  Twenty 
                    years later La Presse was still wondering at the audacity 
                    of some of her writing in their issue n143 (1881) they wrote 
                    : "la vue de cette dame maintenenant d'âge respectable, 
                    (she was 49!) fait faire des reflexions amusantes. Mme de 
                    Navéry a publié des livres et des vers d'une 
                    morale austère et c'est à juste titre si on 
                    en a recompensé l'auteur ; mais elle a publié 
                    des choses excessivement erotiques et osées...étrange!..." 
                    
                  Yet 
                    the matter had been settled once and forever, without mincing 
                    words , in 1866 by La Revue du XIX Siêcle (pag 294, 
                    tome III): "Mme Raoul DE NAVERY est poëte, journaliste, 
                    romancière profane et romancière sacrée"
                    Thus de Navéry could be the character depicted by Josephin 
                    Péladan (he of the Rose+Croix) in Femmes Honnètes, 
                    1888, in the short story Edelburge-Nina (he does manages to 
                    include a réference to de Navéry, who had been 
                    dead for three years). It is the portrait of a Jekyll-Hyde 
                    authoress who writes saintly books as Edelburge and pornography 
                    as Nina sometimes mixing by mistake the two genres in the 
                    same book. 
                    An example of such an occurrence can be found in de Navéry's 
                    L'Autel et le foyer, Dillet (6), 1860 a novel about the New 
                    World. In the introduction de Navéry stresses and laments 
                    the shortage of suitable chaste and moral books for young 
                    girls describing the habits of the Indians of the New World. 
                    chastising even the famous Atala by Chateaubriand "qui 
                    porte les traces ineffaçables d'un esprit maladif et 
                    d'une âme inassouvie".
                    She then writes (absent-mindedly?) that the saintly heroine, 
                    a nun, is wearing a floating robe "dont les manches très 
                    larges laissaient voir un bras d'un galbe parfait" Later 
                    on "Le capitaine [.....] avait étendu un lambeau 
                    de voile sur la jeune femme. Il la regardait comme Des Grieux 
                    dut regarder Manon à l'heure où la mort la couchait 
                    dans sa fosse de sable" What kind of inopportune curiosities 
                    are these two people going to arouse in the minds of innocents 
                    virgins? 
                    Mme de Navéry must have mended her literary ways enough 
                    to become a member of La Societé d'Encouragement au 
                    Bien and be crowned with its medals. In 1873 Dame Patronesse 
                    (cinquième section: Mme Raoul de Navéry publiciste) 
                    at the Exposition Universelle, in 1879 she received Les Palmes 
                    Académiques awarded to those who had made major contributions 
                    to French education and culture. She was also a member de 
                    la Société des Gens de Lettres. 
                  We 
                    are in 1870 annus horribilis in the history of France. Paris 
                    is under siege. Many families and society ladies transformed 
                    their hotel particuliers in ambulances that is field-hospitals: 
                    women of all walk of life worked infaticably to tend the wounded; 
                    de Navéry was a nurse in the field hospital set up 
                    by doctor Centomani in the foyer of the Théâtre 
                    Italien. During la Commune (of 1871) she was in charge of 
                    the general field hospital rue Condorcet (IX), the street 
                    where she lived at n°59. She gave proof of great courage 
                    saving some Army Officers from the prisons of La Commune. 
                    
                    Saffray travelled extensively visiting Switzerland, Germany, 
                    Italy Spain, all countries which became the background for 
                    some of her stories. In 1876 she was in Spain: the painting 
                    of San Francis of Assisi in the Cathedral of Toledo (at the 
                    time attributed erroneously to Alfonso Cano) inspired her 
                    'Le pardon du moine' a fictional history of Cano's life. A 
                    best selling book it went through ten French and one American 
                    edition: The monk's pardon. A historical romance of the time 
                    of Philip IV. of Spain. New York, Benziger brothers, 1883. 
                    
                  Navéry 
                    was a great admirer of the very unconventional George Sand 
                    ( qui avait l'indulgence moins facile pour les debutantes 
                    que pour les debutants). They certainly knew each other; they 
                    were both members of Societe des Gens de Lettres and they 
                    had many friends in common: Gonzales, Claretie, Pontmartin, 
                    H: Malot, et als.
                    An extremely attractive woman in her youth, in her dotage 
                    de Navéry used to dress either with a peplum or a pourpoint.
                  She 
                    wrote about 100 novels, and was also a prolific playwriter, 
                    but her enduring work is the PATIRA trilogy (Patira, Blériot 
                    1874, Le Trésor de l'Abbaye, Blériot, 1876 Jean 
                    Canada, Blériot, 1877) a fiction inspired by the adventures 
                    of the powerful Breton family de Coëtquen which has gone 
                    through prints and re-prints to our day. 
                    She contributed to Les Vieillées des Chaumières. 
                    L'Ouvrier, La Patrie, La Ruche Parisienne, La France, La Revue 
                    de Paris, Gazette des Etrangers, Gazette du Dimanche (Editor) 
                    Les veillées Chretiennes Illustrées (Editor-in-chief), 
                    Magazine des Demoiselles, Le Mémorial d'Aix (La Main 
                    quii se cache, feuilleton 1867; La Clé de la Cassette, 
                    feuileton 1883) La Semaine des Familles, La Petite Revue, 
                    Le Rabelais, La France illustrée, Salons de Paris, 
                    Messager de la Semaine (rédacteur) Polybiblion (from 
                    1875) and many many others magazines. She was translated in 
                    English and Italian. : Idols (1882), Captain Roscoff (1899) 
                    The queen confessions (1900) Father Fitzroy(s.d.) The English 
                    translations increased after her death.
                    De Navery died in 1885 aged 57 at the Château de Reuil-en-Brie 
                    (Seine-et-Marne) near La Ferté-sous-Jouarre. Her funeral 
                    service was held in Paris on the 19th of May in the parish 
                    of Notre Dame de Lorette (IX). She was buried at the Cimetière 
                    de Montparnasse. 
                  Much 
                    popular, a beacon of Catholic rectitude and much respected, 
                    many French newpapers reported her death, headed by Les Veillées 
                    de Chaumières which published a long obituary praising 
                    her artistic and moral qualities.
                    However the majority (including the Figaro) used a press release 
                    which got her name half wrong calling her Marie de Saffron 
                    Dame Chervet. It was particularly dismissive in a short ten 
                    lines paragraph : "Une femme de lettres qui a beaucoup 
                    produit sous le pseudonyme de Raoul de Navéry et qui 
                    s'appellait de son vrai nom Marie de Saffron Dame Chervet 
                    .... Ecrivaine catholique Raoul de Navéry a eu pendant 
                    un certain nombre d'années une reputation de romancière 
                    de talent". The same week Victor Hugo was seriously ill 
                    and all the front pages were covering his illness. He died 
                    five days after de Navéry; by then the press had forgotten 
                    her. 
                  
                  (1) 
                    Raoul was her grandfather name but Raoul de Navéry 
                    is also the King's Page in the novel L'Épée 
                    de Suzanne, histoire du temps de François Ier, par 
                    Emmanuel Gonzalès - L. Hachette (Paris) - 1865. 
                    Emmanuel Gonzales, a Frenchman of Spanish extraction, was 
                    a well-known novelist, president since 1863 of the Societé 
                    des Gens de Lettres founder of La Revue de France Director 
                    of Le Siècle. De Navery had known him since her arrival 
                    in Paris. She attended the funeral of his daughter Eva the 
                    10th May 1883, who died in childbirth at 34, together with 
                    political an litérary personalities such as A Dumas, 
                    de Claretie, Tony-Robert Fleury, Hector Malot, Nadar and Dentu 
                    the publisher, Alphonse Daudet, and als.
                    Eva, Mme Henry Guerard had been a pupil of and a sitter for 
                    Edouard Manet. 
                  (2) 
                    Mme Frédérique-Auguste O'Connell a fashionable 
                    portrait painter (portrait of Dumas fils, Rachel, the actress, 
                    Théophile Gautier & als) born in Berlin had married 
                    a man of Irish descent who workshipped her and fought many 
                    duels for her: she was part of the set of comtesse MacMahon 
                    who used to keep a salon under the reign of Louis Philippe. 
                    Comtesse MacMahon was very close (like sisters) to the writer 
                    Comtesse Dash. After a life of successes, ( she exhibited 
                    at the Salon ) triumphs and wealth following the end of a 
                    long love affair with a working class younger man Mme O'Connell 
                    lost the will to work , her mind and her considerable fortune 
                    and had to be committed to a mental institution. The last 
                    blow was, in 1870, the German siege of Paris, where she had 
                    lived all her life. She died in 1872. 
                  (3) 
                    Comtesse Dash pseudonym of Gabrielle Anne de Cisterne de Courtiras 
                    viscountesse de Poilloüe de Saint-Mars (Poitiers 1804-Paris 
                    1872). Wife of a Cavalry man she turned to writing after she 
                    separated from her husband, to support herself . A successuf 
                    prolific writer friend of Dumas, the real author of some of 
                    his books, friend of Gérard de Nerval and all the Parisian 
                    glitterati that counted. She chronicled society life from 
                    the First Empire through to the Second in Mémoires 
                    des autres published after her death (Paris: Calmann Lévy, 
                    1895), According to Le Gaulois de Navéry recited her 
                    first poem as a child on the knees of Comtesse Dash
                    Countess Dash's love life was no less romanesque than O'Connell's. 
                    Aged forty she fell in love with Grégoire Sturdza (1821-1901) 
                    the young son of the hospodar of Moldavia , a youth half her 
                    age she had met in Paris and though she was still technically 
                    married, albeit living apart from her husband, she followed 
                    the prince to Moldavia where if not the forgiveness of the 
                    hospodar she obtained a local divorce and married the prince 
                    in 1845. They were exiled to Jassy by the hospodar and the 
                    marriage was promptly declared nul by the Othodox Metropolitan. 
                    Still she had the time to acquire a taste for all things Moldavian 
                    especially furs. Her temporary husband gave her one as a parting 
                    gift on her inevitable return to Paris in 1847. She cherished 
                    it to the end of her life. Surdza served in the Ottoman forces 
                    under the name of Mukhlis Pasha and died in 1901.
                    
                    (4) Nouveau dictionnaire des ouvrages anonymes et pseudonymes, 
                    avec le nom des Auteurs et Editeurs Accompagné de notes 
                    historiques et critiques par Louis Charles J. de Manne, Conservateur 
                    Adj à la Bibliothèque Impériale, N Scheuring 
                    Libraire Editeur, MDCCCVXIII (1868) - Page 236 
                    The book was later attributed to Henry Le Pène (1830-1888) 
                    journalist writer, founder of Le Gaulois
                    Not to be confused with Journal d'une femme de chambre by 
                    Octave Mirbeau, 1900. 
                  (5) 
                    " ...this woman must have some skeletons in her sentimental 
                    closet..." (cit "The forgotten ones" by Rosemary 
                    Barr, Virgin Press, London 1985, ; out of print) 
                  (6) 
                    Dillet (Constant-René), Libraire Imprimeur, Editeur, 
                    Passage Sainte-Maire, 2bis (in 1856) then rue de Sèvres, 
                    was bought by Henri Gautier ( in 1889?). In 1885 Gautier had 
                    bougjt Blériot's catalogue. Blériot was the 
                    major publisher of de Navéry religious literature, 
                    thus de Navéry became and is mainly known as a Blériot-Gautier 
                    author.
                  
                    (source: Archives Departementales Ile et Vilaine & Archives 
                    de Paris & Dictionnaire des Romanciers de Bretagne by 
                    Bernard Le Nail, & Le Figaro, & various periodicals 
                    in Gallica2)
                    Special thanks for her contribution to Mme Françoise 
                    Godet Entraide FGW77