I should have liked to start immediately, but as he pointed out he would have to fit the balloon up and it was a great responsibility for him to undertake. We therefore fixed upon the following Tuesday, just a week from then. I asked M. Giffard to say nothing about it, for if the newspapers should get hold of this piece of news, my terrified family would not allow me to go. M. Tissandier, who a little time after was doomed, poor fellow, to be killed in an aërial accident, promised to accompany me. Something happened, however, to prevent his going with me, and it was young Godard who the following week accompanied me in the Doña Sol—a beautiful orange-colored balloon specially prepared for my expedition. Prince Jerome Napoleon (Plon-Plon), who was with me when Giffard was introduced, insisted on going with us. But he was heavy and rather clumsy and I did not care much about his conversation, in spite of his marvelous wit, for he was spiteful and rather delighted when he could get a chance to attack the Emperor Napoleon III, whom I liked very much.
We started alone, Georges Clairin, Godard, and I. The rumor of our journey had nevertheless spread, but too late for the Press to get hold of it. I had been up in the air about five minutes when one of my friends, Count de M——, met Perrin on the Pont des Saints-Pères.
“I say,” he began, “look up in the sky! There is your star shooting away.”
Perrin looked up, and pointing to the balloon which was rising he asked: “Who is in that?”
“Sarah Bernhardt,” replied my friend. Perrin, it appears, turned purple, and clenching his teeth, he murmured: “That’s another of her freaks, but she will pay for this.”
He hurried away without even saying good-by to my young friend, who stood there stupefied at this unreasonable burst of anger.
And if he had suspected my infinite joy at thus traveling through the air, Perrin would have suffered still more.
Ah, our departure! It was half past five. I shook hands with a few friends. My family, whom I had kept in the most profound ignorance, was not there. I felt my heart tighten somewhat when after the words “Loose all” I found myself in one instant fifty yards above the earth. I still heard a few cries: “Attention! Come back! Don’t let her be killed!” And then nothing more.... Nothing.... There was the sky above and the earth beneath.... Then, suddenly, I was in the clouds. I had left a misty Paris. I now breathed under a blue sky and saw a radiant sun. Around us were opaque mountains of clouds with irradiated edges. Our balloon plunged into a milky vapor all warm with the sun. It was splendid! It was stupefying! Not a sound, not a breath! But the balloon was scarcely moving at all. It was only toward six o’clock that the currents of air caught us and we took our flight toward the East. We were at an altitude of about 1,700 yards. The spectacle became fairylike. Large fleecy clouds were spread below us. Large orange curtains fringed with violet came down from the sun to lose themselves in our cloudy carpet.
SARAH BERNHARDT, PORTRAIT BY PARROTT, 1875, IN THE COMÉDIE FRANÇAISE, PARIS.