Vanity Fair - Page 548/573

They say that, when Mrs. Crawley was particularly down on her luck, she

gave concerts and lessons in music here and there. There was a Madame

de Raudon, who certainly had a matinee musicale at Wildbad, accompanied

by Herr Spoff, premier pianist to the Hospodar of Wallachia, and my

little friend Mr. Eaves, who knew everybody and had travelled

everywhere, always used to declare that he was at Strasburg in the year

1830, when a certain Madame Rebecque made her appearance in the opera

of the Dame Blanche, giving occasion to a furious row in the theatre

there. She was hissed off the stage by the audience, partly from her

own incompetency, but chiefly from the ill-advised sympathy of some

persons in the parquet, (where the officers of the garrison had their

admissions); and Eaves was certain that the unfortunate debutante in

question was no other than Mrs. Rawdon Crawley.

She was, in fact, no better than a vagabond upon this earth. When she

got her money she gambled; when she had gambled it she was put to

shifts to live; who knows how or by what means she succeeded? It is

said that she was once seen at St. Petersburg, but was summarily

dismissed from that capital by the police, so that there cannot be any

possibility of truth in the report that she was a Russian spy at

Toplitz and Vienna afterwards. I have even been informed that at Paris

she discovered a relation of her own, no less a person than her

maternal grandmother, who was not by any means a Montmorenci, but a

hideous old box-opener at a theatre on the Boulevards. The meeting

between them, of which other persons, as it is hinted elsewhere, seem

to have been acquainted, must have been a very affecting interview.

The present historian can give no certain details regarding the event.

It happened at Rome once that Mrs. de Rawdon's half-year's salary had

just been paid into the principal banker's there, and, as everybody who

had a balance of above five hundred scudi was invited to the balls

which this prince of merchants gave during the winter, Becky had the

honour of a card, and appeared at one of the Prince and Princess

Polonia's splendid evening entertainments. The Princess was of the

family of Pompili, lineally descended from the second king of Rome, and

Egeria of the house of Olympus, while the Prince's grandfather,

Alessandro Polonia, sold wash-balls, essences, tobacco, and

pocket-handkerchiefs, ran errands for gentlemen, and lent money in a

small way. All the great company in Rome thronged to his

saloons--Princes, Dukes, Ambassadors, artists, fiddlers, monsignori,

young bears with their leaders--every rank and condition of man. His

halls blazed with light and magnificence; were resplendent with gilt

frames (containing pictures), and dubious antiques; and the enormous

gilt crown and arms of the princely owner, a gold mushroom on a crimson

field (the colour of the pocket-handkerchiefs which he sold), and the

silver fountain of the Pompili family shone all over the roof, doors,

and panels of the house, and over the grand velvet baldaquins prepared

to receive Popes and Emperors.