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Well�The Queen told the King but her words fell on deaf ears.  He went directly to Maurepas, who went directly to d'Adhemar.  During their conversation, Saint-Germain appeared and warned them that they'd only see him again when the country had fallen to ruin.
He sent a second warning to the Queen in 1789 when she was saying farewell to the Duchesse de Polignac.  The warning was a letter that literally said, "My words have fallen on your ears in vain, and you have reached the period of which I informed you.  All the Polignacs and their friends are doomed to death.  The Comte d'Artois will perish."
His farewell letter went to the Countess d'Adhemar a few months later.  It said, "All is lost, Countess! This sun is the last which will set on this monarchy.  Tomorrow will exist no more.  My advice has been scorned.  Now it is too late�"  He asked her to meet him early the next morning when he informed her that the time in which he could have helped France was gone.  "I can do nothing now.  My hands are tied by one stronger than myself.  The hour of repose is past and the decrees of Providence must be fulfilled."  And then he foretold the death of the Queen, the complete and utter ruin of Bourbons, and the rise of Napoleon.
She asked if she would see him again and he said, "Five times more.  Do not wish for the sixth."  And she did see him five more times: at the beheading of the Queen; on the 18th Brumaire (I'm not sure exactly what that was); the day following the death of Duc d'Enghien in 1804; once in January, 1813; and on the eve of the assassination of the Duc de Berri in 1820.  They say the sixth time was the day of her death in 1822.
How did he know that the last time she'd see him would be her death day?  How did he predict the downfall of the monarchy and the rising of Napoleon?  Those are things that I want to know.
There was a man named Richard Chanfray who, in the 1980s, claimed that he was Saint-Germain; he (like is suspected of Saint-Germain) had been living since the time of Christ; he was there when water was turned into wine; and he had discovered the secret of life and could live for years and years into the future if he really wanted to.  There isn't much information on this man or what happened to bring about his "confession" but it's said that the day he committed suicide is the day that Saint-Germain died.
Honestly, I don't believe that.  I believe that Saint-Germain is still out there somewhere and I hope that someday I'll get to meet him because�think about it.  How many people do you know who have more-than-likely lived forever?

I've got a little more information if you need it.  This paper definitely doesn't include everything, and I really don't want to add anything else onto it, so just drop me an email with something like  "the Count" or "Saint Germain" in the title and tell me what you need in the text.  I'll search my stuff and see if I can help you out.
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