Atlantida - Page 93/145

"'Picadilly! Shops, palaces, bustle and breeze,

The whirling of wheels and the murmur of trees.' "Fox hunting in a briska, driving a buggy in Hyde Park, the rout,

not to mention the delightful little parties with the light Venuses of

Drury Lane, this took all my time. All? I am unjust. There was also

gaming, and a sentiment of filial piety forced me to verify the

systems of the late Count, my father. It was gaming which was the

cause of the event I must describe to you, by which my life was to be

so strangely changed.

"My friend, Lord Malmesbury, had said to me a hundred times, 'I must

take you to see an exquisite creature who lives in Oxford Street,

number 277, Miss Howard.' One evening I went with him. It was the

twenty-second of February, 1848. The mistress of the house was really

marvelously beautiful, and the guests were charming. Besides

Malmesbury, I observed several acquaintances: Lord Clebden, Lord

Chesterfield, Sir Francis Mountjoye, Major in the Second Life Guards,

and Count d'Orsay. They played cards and then began to talk politics.

Events in France played the main part in the conversation and they

discussed endlessly the consequences of the revolt that had broken out

in Paris that same morning, in consequence of the interdiction of the

banquet in the 12th arrondissement, of which word had just been

received by telegram. Up to that time, I had never bothered myself

with public affairs. So I don't know what moved me to affirm with the

impetuosity of my nineteen years that the news from France meant the

Republic next day and the Empire the day after....

"The company received my sally with a discreet laugh, and their looks

were centered on a guest who made the fifth at a bouillotte table

where they had just stopped playing.

"The guest smiled, too. He rose and came towards me. I observed that

he was of middle height, perhaps even shorter, buttoned tightly into a

blue frock coat, and that his eye had a far-off, dreamy look.

"All the players watched this scene with delighted amusement.

"'Whom have I the honor of addressing?' he asked in a very gentle

voice.

"'Count Bielowsky,' I answered coolly to show him that the difference

in our ages was not sufficient to justify the interrogation.

"Well, my dear Count, may your prediction indeed be realized; and I

hope that you will not neglect the Tuileries,' said the guest in the

blue coat, with a smile.

"And he added, finally consenting to present himself: "'Prince Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte.' "I played no active rôle in the coup d'état, and I do not regret it.

It is a principle with me that a stranger should not meddle with the

internal affairs of a country. The prince understood this discretion,

and did not forget the young man who had been of such good omen to

him.