Show J C. C C. C Goodwin I II I Editorials by byC I The Prince Imperial Augustus AugUstus' Filon Filori who was was' tutor to Napoleon IV has- has written writ writ- written ten a book about the prince the son of Napoleon UI In III and and Eugenie ugenie the beautiful Spanish mother and born in 1856 and was a killed in in inthe the the Zulu war warin in 1879 The author autho describes him as s a kindly a ave avery avey ve very vey bright boy how he passed under his baptism sm o of fire re at atthe the battle of and a few days with his banished fa father her to Chiselhurst where he grew up up an and J was Yas edu edu- The rite writer thinks he was pr preparing paring all his young life tobe to tobe tobe be ready dy w when n the opportune moment c came me to assume the he throne of France and says he enlisted d in the English army for the sole purpose of f being more fitted for that event which he lie V was S l look looking ok ing f forward to There we thi think the author is mi mistaken young oung Napoleon l had g been educated at a great English military school but in the meantime he became desp desperately in love with Princess Beatrice arid ana his bis going to South Africa to fight o out t the te war warth th thre re was vas more lnore to endear himself to the English people than to prepare himself to be a possible emperor All the accounts that have been made public make clear that the affection was very great between the prince arid and the princess It drew Victoria and Eug Eugenie nie close dose together and they were near friends a as l long ng as aa the theold theold theold started for the Zulu I old queen lived but when the young prince war the thought in his mind was not h half lf so much to prepare himself for a possible coming revolution in France as it was to endear himself irn to tg t the E. E English gli l people that he might have their blessing when h he married one one of their princesses princess s It was a pitiable ending of of'S the Napoleon tragedy When Whet he was born France went wild His friends of royalty believed the throne was permanently reinstated He lived but twenty-three twenty years but in that thit b t f time ine the throne went vent ent down to dust een as did he and there has been no talk of thrones in that country since And about all that keeps him in memory memory is that his aged mother now three thre score y years and fifteen of age still walks abo about the shadow of what hat once n e w was s the most beautiful ul sovereign i in all the earth |