Lola Montez - The Original Classic Edition. d'Auvergne Edmund
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LOLA MONTEZ
UNIFORM LIBRARY EDITION OF THE WORKS OF GUY DE MAUPASSANT, newly translated into English by Marjorie
Laurie.
Volume 1. BEL-AMI.
"Bel-Ami" is an extraordinarily fine full-length portrait of an unscrupulous rascal who exploits his success with women for the furtherance of his ambitions. The book simmers with humorous observations, and, as a satire on politics and journalism, is no less biting because it is not bitter.
Volume 2. A LIFE.
This story of a woman's life, harrowed first by the faithlessness of her husband and later by the worthlessness of her son, has been described as one of the saddest books that has ever been written; it is remorseless in its utter truthfulness.
Volume 3. "BOULE DE SUIF" and other Short Stories.
A story of the part played by a little French prostitute in an incident of the war of 1870. It was published in a collection of tales by distinguished French writers of the day, and was so clearly the gem of the collection that it established the Author at once as a master.
Volume 4. THE HOUSE OF TELLIER.
LOLA MONTEZ.
Countess of Landsfeld
LOLA MONTEZ
AN ADVENTURESS OF THE 'FORTIES
1
BY
EDMUND B. d'AUVERGNE
ILLUSTRATED
LONDON
T. WERNER LAURIE, LTD.
30 NEW BRIDGE STREET, E.C.4
First Printed April 1909
Second Edition, December 1909
Third Impression, November 1924
Fourth Impression, February 1925
Printed in Great Britain by
Fox, Jones & Co., at the Kemp Hall Press, Oxford, England
[Pg v]
PREFACE
The story of a brave and beautiful woman, whose fame filled Europe and America within the memory of our parents, seems to be worth telling. The human note in history is never more thrilling than when it is struck in the key of love. In what were perhaps more virile ages, the great ones of the earth frankly acknowledged the irresistible power of passion and the supreme desirability of beauty. Their followers thought none the less of them for being sons of Adam. Lola Montez was the last of that long and illustrious line
of women, reaching back beyond Cleopatra and Aspasia, before whom kings bent in homage, and by whose personality they openly confess themselves to be swayed. Since her time man has thrown off the spell of woman's beauty, and seems to dread still more the competition of her intellect.
Lola Montez, some think, came a century too late; "in the eighteenth century," said Claudin, "she would have played a great part." The part she played was, at all events, stirring and strange enough. The most spiritually and aesthetically minded sovereign in[Pg vi] Europe worshipped her as a goddess; geniuses of coarser fibre, such as Dumas, sought her society. She associated with the most highly gifted men of her time. Equipped only with the education of a pre-Victorian schoolgirl, she overthrew the ablest plotters and intriguers in Europe, foiled the policy of Metternich, and hoisted the standard of freedom in the very stronghold of Ultramontane and reactionary Germany.
Driven forth by a revolution, she wandered over the whole world, astonishing Society by her masculine courage, her adaptability to all circumstances and surroundings. She who had thwarted old Europe's skilled diplomatists, knew how to horsewhip and to cow the bullies of young Australia's mining camps. An indifferent actress, her beauty and sheer force of character drew thousands to gaze at her in every land she trod. So she flashed like a meteor from continent to continent, heard of now at St. Petersburg, now at
New York, now at San Francisco, now at Sydney. She crammed enough experience into a career of forty-two years to have surfeited
2
a centenarian. She had her moments of supreme exaltation, of exquisite felicity. Her vicissitudes were glorious and sordid. She was presented by a king to his whole court as his best friend; she was dragged to a London police-station on a charge of felony. But in prosperity she never lost her head, and in adversity she never lost her courage.
[Pg vii]A splendid animal, always doing what she wished to do; a natural pagan in her delight in life and love and danger--she cherished all her life an unaccountable fondness for the most conventional puritanical forms of Christianity, dying at last in the bosom of the Protestant Church, with sentiments of self-abasement and contrition that would have done credit to a Magdalen or Pelagia.
In my sympathy with this fascinating woman, it is possible that I have exaggerated the importance of her role; probable, also, that I have digressed too freely into reflections on her motives and on the forces with which she had to contend. Those who prefer a bare recital of the facts of her career, I refer at once to the admirable epitome to be found in the "Dictionary of National Biography." Here I have not hesitated to include all that seemed to me to throw light on the subject of my sketch, on the people around her, and on the influences that shaped her destiny.
Edmund B. d'Auvergne. [Pg viii]
[Pg ix]
CONTENTS
CHAP.
PAGE
I.
CHILDHOOD 1
II.
A RUNAWAY MATCH 11
III.
FIRST STEPS IN MATRIMONY
17
IV.
INDIA SEVENTY YEARS AGO
21
V.
RIVEN BONDS 31
VI.
LONDON IN THE 'FORTIES
39
VII.
WANDERJAHRE 47
VIII.
FRANZ LISZT 59
IX. AT THE BANQUET OF THE IMMORTALS 65
X. MERY 75
XI. DUJARIER 79
XII. THE SUPPER AT THE FRERES PROVENCAUX 83
XIII. THE CHALLENGE 87