<mobileonly>[[File:Marie Antoinette in 1775.jpg|thumb|upright|Marie Antoinette (1755–1793), Queen of France]]</mobileonly>
And secondly… Marie Antoinette never really said anything like that. This sentence was originally attributed to an unspecified princess by Jean-Jacques Rousseau in an anecdote of his device. Back then, Marie Antoinette was ten years old and not even thinking about moving to France. It was only long after her death that the gibe was taken from the anonymous princess's mouth and put into the French queen's – most likely to justify provide some justification for why she was 'd been guillotined. Interestingly, in Samuel William Orson's translation of Rousseau's ''Confessions'' it's neither brioche nor cake, but pastry!
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