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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Memoirs of Napoleon--1815, v13
+#13 in our series by Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne
+#13 in our Napoleon Bonaparte series
+
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+Title: Memoirs of Napoleon Bonaparte, v13
+
+Author: Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne
+
+Release Date: December, 2002 [Etext #3563]
+[Yes, we are about one year ahead of schedule]
+[The actual date this file first posted = 04/20/01]
+[Last modified date = 11/15/01]
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+Edition: 11
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+Language: English
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Memoirs of Napoleon, by Bourrienne, v13
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+
+MEMOIRS OF NAPOLEON BONAPARTE, VOLUME 13.
+
+By LOUIS ANTOINE FAUVELET DE BOURRIENNE
+
+His Private Secretary
+
+Edited by R. W. Phipps
+Colonel, Late Royal Artillery
+
+1891
+
+
+
+CONTENTS:
+CHAPTER I. to CHAPTER VI. 1814-1815
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+1814.
+
+ Unalterable determination of the Allies with respect to Napoleon--
+ Fontainebleau included in the limits to be occupied by the Allies--
+ Alexander's departure from Paris--Napoleon informed of the necessity
+ of his unconditional abdication--Macdonald and Ney again sent to
+ Paris--Alleged attempt of Napoleon to poison himself--Farewell
+ interview between Macdonald and Napoleon--The sabre of Murad Bey--
+ Signature of the act of unconditional abdication--Tranquillity of
+ Paris during the change of Government--Ukase of the Emperor of
+ Russia relative to the Post-office--Religious ceremony on the Place
+ Louis XV.--Arrival of the Comte d'Artois--His entrance into Paris--
+ Arrival of the Emperor of Austria--Singular assemblage of sovereigns
+ in France--Visit of the Emperor of Austria to Maria Louisa--Her
+ interview with the Emperor Alexander--Her departure for Vienna.
+
+When Marmont left Paris on the receipt of the intelligence from Essonne,
+Marshals Macdonald and Ney and the Duke of Vicenza waited upon the
+Emperor Alexander to learn his resolution before he could have been
+informed of the movement of Marmont's troops. I myself went during the
+morning to the hotel of M. de Talleyrand, and it was there I learnt how
+what we had hoped for had become fact: the matter was completely decided.
+The Emperor Alexander had walked out at six in the morning to the
+residence of the King of Prussia in the Rue de Bourbon. The two
+sovereigns afterwards proceeded together to M. de Talleyrand's, where
+they were when Napoleon's Commissioners arrived. The Commissioners being
+introduced to the two sovereigns, the Emperor Alexander, in answer to
+their proposition, replied that the Regency was impossible, as
+submissions to the Provisional Government were pouring in from all parts,
+and that if the army had formed contrary wishes those should have been
+sooner made known. "Sire," observed Macdonald, "that--was--impossible,
+as none of the Marshals were in Paris, and besides, who could foresee the
+turn which affairs have taken? Could we imagine that an unfounded alarm
+would have removed from Essonne the corps of the Duke of Ragusa, who has
+this moment left us to bring his troops back to order?" These words
+produced no change in the determination of the sovereigns, who would hear
+of nothing but the unconditional abdication of Napoleon. Before the
+Marshals took leave of the Emperor Alexander they solicited an armistice
+of forty-eight hours, which time they said was indispensable to negotiate
+the act of abdication with Napoleon. This request was granted without
+hesitation, and the Emperor Alexander, showing Macdonald a map of the
+environs of Paris, courteously presented him with a pencil, saying,
+"Here, Marshal, mark yourself the limits to be observed by the two
+armies."--"No, Sire," replied Macdonald, "we are the conquered party, and
+it is for you to mark the line of demarcation." Alexander determined
+that the right bank of the Seine should be occupied by the Allied troops,
+and the left bank by the French; but it was observed that this
+arrangement would be attended with inconvenience, as it would cut Paris
+in two, and it was agreed that the line should turn Paris. I have been
+informed that on a map sent to the Austrian staff to acquaint Prince
+Schwartzenberg with the limits definitively agreed on, Fontainebleau, the
+Emperor's headquarters, was by some artful means included within the
+line. The Austrians acted so implicitly on this direction that Marshal
+Macdonald was obliged to complain on the subject to Alexander,
+who removed all obstacles.
+
+When, in discussing the question of the abdication conformably with the
+instructions he had received, Macdonald observed to the Emperor Alexander
+that Napoleon wished for nothing for himself, "Assure him," replied
+Alexander, "that a provision shall be made for him worthy of the rank he
+has occupied. Tell him that if he wishes to reside in my States he shall
+be well received, though he brought desolation there. I shall always
+remember the friendship which united us. He shall have the island of
+Elba, or something else." After taking leave of the Emperor Alexander, on
+the 5th of April, Napoleon's Commissioners returned to Fontainebleau to
+render an account of their mission. I saw Alexander that same day, and
+it appeared to me that his mind was relieved of a great weight by the
+question of the Regency being brought to an end. I was informed that he
+intended to quit Paris in a few days, and that he had given full powers
+to M. Pozzo-di-Borgo, whom he appointed his Commissioner to the
+Provisional Government.
+
+On the same day, the 5th of April, Napoleon inspected his troops in the
+Palace yard of Fontainebleau. He observed some coolness among his
+officers, and even among the private soldiers, who had evinced such
+enthusiasm when he inspected them on the 2d of April. He was so much
+affected by this change of conduct that he remained but a short time on
+the parade, and afterwards retired to his apartments.
+
+About one o'clock on the morning of the 6th of April Ney, Macdonald, and
+Caulaincourt arrived at Fontainebleau to acquaint the Emperor with the
+issue of their mission, and the sentiments expressed by Alexander when
+they took leave of him. Marshal Ney was the first to announce to
+Napoleon that the Allies required his complete and unconditional
+abdication, unaccompanied by any stipulation, except that of his personal
+safety, which should be guaranteed. Marshal Macdonald and the Duke of
+Vicenza then spoke to the same effect, but in more gentle terms than
+those employed by Ney, who was but little versed in the courtesies of
+speech. When Marshal Macdonald had finished speaking Napoleon said with
+some emotion, "Marshal, I am sensible of all that you have done for me,
+and of the warmth with which you have pleaded the cause of my son. They
+wish for my complete and unconditional abdication . . . . Very well.
+I again empower you to act on my behalf. You shall go and defend my
+interests and those of my family." Then, after a moment's pause, he
+added, still addressing Macdonald, "Marshal, where shall I go?"
+Macdonald then informed the Emperor what Alexander had mentioned in the
+hypothesis of his wishing to reside in Russia. "Sire," added he, "the
+Emperor of Russia told me that he destined for you the island of Elba, or
+something else."--"Or something else!" repeated Napoleon hastily," and
+what is that something else?"--"Sire, I know not."--"Ah! it is doubtless
+the island of Corsica, and he refrained from mentioning it to avoid
+embarrassment! Marshal, I leave all to you."
+
+The Marshals returned to Paris as soon as Napoleon furnished them with
+new powers; Caulaincourt remained at Fontainebleau. On arriving in Paris
+Marshal Ney sent in his adhesion to the Provisional Government, so that
+when Macdonald returned to Fontainebleau to convey to Napoleon the
+definitive treaty of the Allies, Ney did not accompany him, and the
+Emperor expressed surprise and dissatisfaction at his absence. Ney, as
+all his friends concur in admitting, expended his whole energy in battle,
+and often wanted resolution when out of the field, consequently I was not
+surprised to find that he joined us before some other of his comrades.
+As to Macdonald, he was one of those generous spirits who may be most
+confidently relied on by those who have wronged them. . Napoleon
+experienced the truth of this. Macdonald returned alone to
+Fontainebleau, and when he entered the Emperor's chamber he found him
+seated in a small armchair before the fireplace. He was dressed in a
+morning-gown of white dimity, and lie wore his slippers without
+stockings. His elbows rested on his knees and his head was supported by
+his hands. He was motionless, and seemed absorbed in profound
+reflection. Only two persons were in the apartment, the Duke of Bassano;
+who was at a little distance from the Emperor, and Caulaincourt, who was
+near the fireplace. So profound was Napoleon's reverie that he did not
+hear Macdonald enter, and the Duke of Vicenza was obliged to inform him
+of the Marshal's presence. "Sire," said Caulaincourt, "the Duke of
+Tarantum has brought for your signature the treaty which is to be
+ratified to-morrow." The Emperor then, as if roused from a lethargic
+slumber, turned to Macdonald, and merely said, "Ah, Marshal! so you are
+here!" Napoleon's countenance was so altered that the Marshal, struck
+with the change, said, as if it were involuntarily, "Is your Majesty
+indisposed?"--"Yes," answered Napoleon, "I have passed a very bad night."
+
+The Emperor continued seated for a moment, then rising, he took the
+treaty, read it without making any observation, signed it, and returned
+it to the Marshal, saying; "I am not now rich enough to reward these last
+services."--"Sire, interest never guided my conduct."--"I know that, and
+I now see how I have been deceived respecting you. I also see the
+designs of those who prejudiced me against you."--"Sire, I have already
+told you, since 1809 I am devoted to you in life and death."--"I know it.
+But since I cannot reward you as I would wish, let a token of
+remembrance, inconsiderable though it be, assure you that I shall ever
+bear in mind the services you have rendered me." Then turning to
+Caulaincourt Napoleon said, "Vicenza, ask for the sabre which was given
+me by Murad Bey in Egypt, and which I wore at the battle of Mount
+Thabor." Constant having brought the sabre, the Emperor took it from the
+hands of Caulaincourt and presented it to the Marshal "Here, my faithful
+friend," said he, "is a reward which I believe will gratify you."
+Macdonald on receiving the sabre said, "If ever I have a son, Sire, this
+will be his most precious inheritance. I will never part with it as long
+as I live."--" Give me your hand," said the Emperor, "and embrace me."
+At these words Napoleon and Macdonald affectionately rushed into each
+other's arms, and parted with tears in their eyes. Such was the last
+interview between Macdonald and Napoleon. I had the above particulars
+from the Marshal himself in 1814., a few days after he returned to Paris
+with the treaty ratified by Napoleon.
+
+After the clauses of the treaty had been guaranteed Napoleon signed, on
+the 11th of April, at Fontainebleau, his act of abdication, which was in
+the following terms:--
+
+ "The Allied powers having proclaimed that the Emperor Napoleon is the
+ only obstacle to the re-establishment of peace in Europe, the
+ Emperor Napoleon, faithful to his oath, declares that he renounces
+ for himself and his heirs the thrones of France and Italy, and that
+ there is no personal sacrifice, even that of life, which he is not
+ ready to make for the interests of France."
+
+It was not until after Bonaparte had written and signed the above
+act that Marshal Macdonald sent to the Provisional Government his
+recognition, expressed in the following dignified and simple manner:--
+
+ "Being released from my allegiance by the abdication of the Emperor
+ Napoleon, I declare that I conform to the acts of the Senate and the
+ Provisional Government."
+
+It is worthy of remark that Napoleon's act of abdication was published in
+the 'Moniteur' on the 12th of April, the very day on which the Comte
+d'Artois made his entry into Paris with the title of Lieutenant-General
+of the Kingdom conferred on him by Louis XVIII. The 12th of April was
+also the day on which the Imperial army fought its last battle before
+Toulouse, when the French troops, commanded by Soult, made Wellington
+purchase so dearly his entrance into the south of France.--[The battle of
+Toulouse was fought on the 10th not 12th April D.W.]
+
+Political revolutions are generally stormy, yet, during the great change
+of 1814 Paris was perfectly tranquil, thanks to the excellent discipline
+maintained by the commanders of the Allied armies, and thanks also to the
+services of the National Guard of Paris, who every night patrolled the
+streets. My duties as Director-General of the Post-office had of course
+obliged me to resign my captain's epaulette.
+
+When I first obtained my appointment I had been somewhat alarmed to hear
+that all the roads were covered with foreign troops, especially Cossacks,
+who even in time of peace are very ready to capture any horses that may
+fall in their way. On my application to the Emperor Alexander his
+Majesty immediately issued a ukase, severely prohibiting the seizure of
+horses or anything belonging to the Post-office department. The ukase
+was printed by order of the Czar, and filed up at all the poet-offices,
+and it will be seen that after the 20th of March, when I was placed in an
+embarrassing situation, one of the postmasters on the Lille road
+expressed to me his gratitude for my conduct while I was in the service.
+
+On the 10th of April a ceremony took place in Paris which has been much
+spoken of; and which must have had a very imposing effect on those who
+allow themselves to be dazzled by mere spectacle. Early in the morning
+some regiments of the Allied troops occupied the north side of the
+Boulevard, from the site of the old Bastille to the Place Louis XV., in
+the middle of which an altar of square form was erected. Thither the
+Allied sovereigns came to witness the celebration of mass according to
+the rites of the Greek Church. I went to a window of the hotel of the
+Minister of the Marine to see the ceremony. After I had waited from
+eight in the morning till near twelve the pageant commenced by the
+arrival of half a dozen Greek priests, with long beards, and as richly
+dressed as the high priests who figure in the processions of the opera.
+About three-quarters of an hour after this first scene the infantry,
+followed by the cavalry, entered the place, which, in a few moments was
+entirely covered with military. The Allied sovereigns at length
+appeared, attended by brilliant staffs. They alighted from their horses
+and advanced to the altar. What appeared to me most remarkable was the
+profound silence of the vast multitude during the performance of the
+mass. The whole spectacle had the effect of a finely-painted panorama.
+For my own part, I must confess I was heartily tired of the ceremony, and
+was very glad when it was over. I could not admire the foreign uniforms,
+which were very inferior to ours. Many of them appeared fanciful, and
+even grotesque, and nothing can be more unsoldier-like than to see a man
+laced in stays till his figure resembles a wasp. The ceremony which took
+place two days after, though less pompous, was much more French. In the
+retinue which, on the 12th of April, momentarily increased round the
+Comte d'Artos, there were at least recollections for the old, and hopes
+for every one.
+
+When, on the departure of the Commissioners whom Napoleon had sent to
+Alexander to treat for the Regency, it was finally determined that the
+Allied sovereigns would listen to no proposition from Napoleon and his
+family, the Provisional Government thought it time to request that
+Monsieur would, by his presence, give a new impulse to the partisans of
+the Bourbons. The Abby de Montesquiou wrote to the Prince a letter,
+which was carried to him by Viscount Sosthenes de la Rochefoucauld, one
+of the individuals who, in these difficult circumstances, most zealously
+served the cause of the Bourbons. On the afternoon of the 11th Monsieur
+arrived at a country-house belonging to Madame Charles de Dames, where he
+passed the night. The news of his arrival spread through Paris with the
+rapidity of lightning, and every one wished to solemnise his entrance
+into the capital. The National Guard formed a double line from the
+barrier of Bondy to Notre Dame, whither the Prince was first to proceed,
+in observance of an old custom, which, however, had become very rare in
+France during the last twenty years.
+
+M. de Talleyrand, accompanied by the members of the Provisional
+Government, several Marshals and general officers, and the municipal
+body, headed by the prefect of the Seine, went in procession beyond the
+barrier to receive Monsieur. M. de Talleyrand, in the name of the
+Provisional Government, addressed the Prince, who in reply made that
+observation which has been so often repeated, "Nothing is changed in
+France: there is only one Frenchman more."
+
+ --[These words were never really uttered by the Comte d'Artois, and
+ we can in this case follow the manufacture of the phrase. The reply
+ actually made to Talleyrand was, "Sir, and gentlemen, I thank you; I
+ am too happy. Let us get on; I am too happy." When the day's work
+ was done, "Let us see," said Talleyrand; "what did Monsieur say? I
+ did not hear much: be seemed much moved, and desirous of hastening
+ on, but if what he did say will not suit you (Beugnot), make an
+ answer for him, . . and I can answer that Monsieur will accept it,
+ and that so thoroughly that by the end of a couple of days he will
+ believe he made it, and he will have made it: you will count for
+ nothing." After repeated attempts, rejected by Talleyraud, Beugnot
+ at last produced, "No more divisions. Peace and France! At last I
+ see her once more, and nothing in her is changed, except that here
+ is one more Frenchman." At last the great critic (Talleyrand) said,
+ "This time I yield; that is realty Monsieur's speech, and I will
+ answer for you that he is the man who made it." Monsieur did not
+ disdain to refer to it in his replies, end the prophecy of M. de
+ Talleyrand was completely realised (Beugnot, vol. ii, p. 119)]--
+
+This remark promised much. The Comte Artois next proceeded on horseback
+to the barrier St. Martin. I mingled in the crowd to see the procession
+and to observe the sentiments of the spectators. Near me stood an old
+knight of St. Louis, who had resumed the insignia of the order, and who
+wept for joy at again seeing one of the Bourbons. The procession soon
+arrived, preceded by a band playing the air, "Vive Henri Quatre!" I had
+never before seen Monsieur, and his appearance had a most pleasing effect
+upon me. His open countenance bore the expression of that confidence
+which his presence inspired in all who saw him. His staff was very
+brilliant, considering it was got together without preparation. The
+Prince wore the uniform of the National Guard, with the insignia of the
+Order of the Holy Ghost.
+
+I must candidly state that where I saw Monsieur pass, enthusiasm was
+chiefly confined to his own retinue, and to persons who appeared to
+belong to a superior class of society. The lower order of people seemed
+to be animated by curiosity and astonishment rather than any other
+feeling. I must add that it was not without painful surprise I saw a
+squadron of Cossacks close the procession; and my surprise was the
+greater when I learned from General Sacken that the Emperor Alexander had
+wished that on that day the one Frenchman more should be surrounded
+only by Frenchmen, and that to prove that the presence of the Bourbons
+was the signal of reconciliation his Majesty had ordered 20,000 of the
+Allied troops to quit Paris. I know not to what the presence of the
+Cossacks is to be attributed, but it was an awkward circumstance at the
+time, and one which malevolence did not fail to seize upon.
+
+Two days only intervened between Monsieur's entrance into Paris and the
+arrival of the Emperor of Austria. That monarch was not popular among
+the Parisians. The line of conduct he had adopted was almost generally
+condemned, for, even among those who lead most ardently wished for the
+dethronement of his daughter, through their aversion to the Bonaparte
+family, there were many who blamed the Emperor of Austria's behaviour to
+Maria Louisa: they would have wished that, for the honour of Francis II.,
+he had unsuccessfully opposed the downfall of the dynasty, whose alliance
+he considered as a safeguard in 1809. This was the opinion which the
+mass of the people instinctively formed, for they judged of the Emperor
+of Austria in his character of a father and not in his character of a
+monarch; and as the rights of misfortune are always sacred in France,
+more interest was felt for Maria Louisa when she was known to be forsaken
+than when she was in the height of her splendour. Francis II. had not
+seen his daughter since the day when she left Vienna to unite her destiny
+with that of the master of half of Europe, and I have already stated how
+he received the mission with which Maria Louisa entrusted the Duc de
+Cadore.
+
+I was then too intent on what was passing in Paris and at Fontainebleau
+to observe with equal interest all the circumstances connected with the
+fate of Maria Louisa, but I will present to the reader all the
+information I was able to collect respecting that Princess during the
+period immediately preceding her departure from France. She constantly
+assured the persons about her that she could rely on her father. The
+following words, which were faithfully reported to me, were addressed by
+her to an officer who was at Blois during the mission of M. de Champagny.
+"Even though it should be the intention of the Allied sovereigns to
+dethrone the Emperor Napoleon, my father will not suffer it. When he
+placed me on the throne of France he repeated to me twenty times his
+determination to uphold me on it; and my father is an honest man." I also
+know that the Empress, both at Blois and at Orleans, expressed her regret
+at not having followed the advice of the members of the Regency, who
+wished her to stay in Paris.
+
+On leaving Orleans Maria Louisa proceeded to Rambouillet; and it was not
+one of the least extraordinary circumstances of that eventful period to
+see the sovereigns of Europe, the dethroned sovereigns of France, and
+those who had come to resume the sceptre, all crowded together within a
+circle of fifteen leagues round the capital. There was a Bourbon at the
+Tuileries, Bonaparte at Fontainebleau, his wife and son at Rambouillet,
+the repudiated Empress at Malmaison three leagues distant, and the
+Emperors of Russia and Austria and the King of Prussia in Paris.
+
+When all her hopes had vanished Maria Louisa left Rambouillet to return
+to Austria with her son. She did not obtain permission to see Napoleon
+before her departure, though she had frequently expressed a wish to that
+effect. Napoleon himself was aware of the embarrassment which might have
+attended such a farewell, or otherwise he would no doubt have made a
+parting interview with Maria Louisa one of the clauses of the treaty of
+Paris and Fontainebleau, and of his definitive act of abdication. I was
+informed at the time that the reason which prevented Maria Louisa's wish
+from being acceded to was the fear that, by one of those sudden impulses
+common to women, she might have determined to unite herself to Napoleon's
+fallen fortune, and accompany him to Elba; and the Emperor of Austria
+wished to have his daughter back again.
+
+Things had arrived at this point, and there was no possibility of
+retracting from any of the decisions which had been formed when the
+Emperor of Austria went to see his daughter at Rambouillet. I recollect
+it was thought extraordinary at the time that the Emperor Alexander
+should accompany him on this visit; and, indeed, the sight of the
+sovereign, who was regarded as the head and arbiter of the coalition,
+could not be agreeable to the dethroned Empress.
+
+ --[ Meneval (tome ii. p. 112), then with Maria Louisa as Secretary,
+ who gives some details of her interview with the Emperor Francis on
+ the 16th of April, says nothing about the Czar having been there; a
+ fact he would have been sure to have remarked upon. It was only on
+ the 19th of April that Alexander visited her, the King of Prussia
+ coming in his turn on the 22d; but Bourrienne is right in saying
+ that Maria Louisa complained bitterly of having to receive
+ Alexander, and considered that she was forced by her father to do
+ so. The poor little King of Rome, then only three years old, had
+ also to be seen by the monarchs. He was not taken with his
+ grandfather, remarking that he was not handsome. Maria Louisa
+ seems, according to Meneval, to have been at this time really
+ anxious to join Napoleon (Meneval, tome ii. p. 94). She left
+ Rambouillet on the 28d of April stopped one day at Grossbois,
+ receiving there her father and Berthier, and taking farewell of
+ several persons who came from Paris for that purpose. On the 25th
+ of April she started for Vienna, and later for Parma, which state
+ she received under the treaty of 1814 and 1815. She yielded to the
+ influence brought to bear on her, became estranged from Napoleon,
+ and eventually married her chamberlain, the Comte de Neipperg, an
+ Austrian general.]--
+
+The two Emperors set off from Paris shortly after each other. The
+Emperor of Austria arrived first at Rambouillet, where he was received
+with respect and affection by his daughter. Maria Louisa was happy to
+see him, but the many tears she shed were not all tears of joy. After
+the first effusion of filial affection she complained of the situation to
+which she was reduced. Her father sympathised with her, but could offer
+her no consolution, since her misfortunes were irreparable. Alexander
+was expected to arrive immediately, and the Emperor of Austria therefore
+informed his daughter that the Russian monarch wished to see her. At
+first Maria Louisa decidedly refused to receive him, and she persisted
+for some time in this resolution. She said to her father, "Would he too
+make me a prisoner before your eyes? If he enters here by force I will
+retire to my chamber. There, I presume, he will not dare to follow me
+while you are here." But there was no time to be lost; Francis II.
+heard the equipage of the Emperor of Russia rolling through the courtyard
+of Rambouillet, and his entreaties to his daughter became more and more
+urgent. At length she yielded, and the Emperor of Austria went himself
+to meet his ally and conduct him to the salon where Maria Louisa
+remained, in deference to her father. She did not, however, carry her
+deference so far as to give a favourable reception to him whom she
+regarded as the author of all her misfortunes. She listened with
+considerable coldness to the offers and protestations of Alexander, and
+merely replied that all she wished for was the liberty of returning to
+her family. A few days after this painful interview Maria Louisa and her
+son set off for Vienna.
+
+ --[A few days after this visit Alexander paid his respects to
+ Bonaparte's other wife, Josephine. In this great breaking up of
+ empires and kingdoms the unfortunate Josephine, who had been
+ suffering agonies on account of the husband who had abandoned her,
+ was not forgotten. One of the first things the Emperor of Russia
+ did on arriving at Paris was to despatch a guard for the protection
+ of her beautiful little palace at Malmaison. The Allied sovereigns
+ treated her with delicacy and consideration.
+
+ "As soon as the Emperor Alexander knew that the Empress Josephine
+ had arrived at Malmaison he hastened to pay her a visit. It is not
+ possible to be more amiable than he was to her. When in the course
+ of conversation he spoke of the occupation of Paris by the Allies,
+ and of the position of the Emperor Napoleon, it was always in
+ perfectly measured language: he never forgot for a single instant
+ that be was speaking before one who had been the wife of his
+ vanquished enemy. On her side the ex-Empress did not conceal the
+ tender sentiments, the lively affection she still entertained for
+ Napoleon . . . . Alexander had certainly something elevated and
+ magnanimous in his character, which would not permit him to say a
+ single word capable of insulting misfortune; the Empress had only
+ one prayer to make to him, and that was for her children."]--
+
+This visit was soon followed by those of the other Allied Princes.
+
+ "The King of Prussia and the Princes, his sons, came rather
+ frequently to pay their court to Josephine; they even dined with her
+ several times at Malmaison; but the Emperor Alexander come much more
+ frequently. The Queen Hortense was always with her mother when she
+ received the sovereigns, and assisted her in doing the honours of
+ the house. The illustrious strangers exceedingly admired Malmaison,
+ which seemed to them a charming residence. They were particularly
+ struck with the fine gardens and conservatories."
+
+ From this moment, however, Josephine's health rapidly declined, and
+ she did not live to see Napoleon's return from Elba. She often said
+ to her attendant, "I do not know what is the matter with me, but at
+ times I have fits of melancholy enough to kill me." But on the very
+ brink of the grave she retained all her amiability, all her love of
+ dress, and the graces and resources of a drawing-room society. The
+ immediate cause of her death was a bad cold she caught in taking a
+ drive in the park of Malmaison on a damp cold day. She expired on
+ the noon of Sunday, the 26th of May, in the fifty-third year of her
+ age. Her body was embalmed, and on the sixth day after her death
+ deposited in a vault in the church of Ruel, close to Malmaison. The
+ funeral ceremonies were magnificent, but a better tribute to the
+ memory of Josephine was to be found is the tears with which her
+ children, her servants, the neighbouring poor, and all that knew her
+ followed her to the grave. In 1826 a beautiful monument was erected
+ over her remains by Eugene Beauharnais and his sisters with this
+ simple inscription:
+
+ TO JOSEPHINE.
+
+ EUGENE. HORTENSE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+1814.
+
+ Italy and Eugene--Siege of Dantzic-Capitulation concluded but not
+ ratified-Rapp made prisoner and sent to Kiow--Davoust's refusal to
+ believe the intelligence from Paris--Projected assassination of one
+ of the French Princes--Departure of Davoust and General Hogendorff
+ from Hamburg--The affair of Manbreuil--Arrival of the Commissioners
+ of the Allied powers at Fontainebleau--Preference shown by Napoleon
+ to Colonel Campbell--Bonaparte's address to General Kohler--His
+ farewell to his troops--First day of Napoleon's journey--The
+ Imperial Guard succeeded by the Cossacks--Interview with Augerean--
+ The first white cockades--Napoleon hanged in effigy at Orgon--His
+ escape in the disguise of a courier--Scene in the inn of La Calade--
+ Arrival at Aix--The Princess Pauline--Napoleon embarks for Elba--His
+ life at Elba.
+
+I must now direct the attention of the reader to Italy, which was the
+cradle of Napoleon's glory, and towards which he transported himself in
+imagination from the Palace of Fontainebleau. Eugene had succeeded in
+keeping up his means of defence until April, but on the 7th of that
+month, being positively informed of the overwhelming reverses of France,
+he found himself constrained to accede to the propositions of the Marshal
+de Bellegarde to treat for the evacuation of Italy; and on the 10th a
+convention was concluded, in which it was stipulated that the French
+troops, under the command of Eugene, should return within the limits of
+old France. The clauses of this convention were executed on the 19th of
+April.
+
+ --[Lord William Bentinck and Sir Edward Pellew had taken Genoa on
+ the 18th Of April. Murat was in the field with the Austrians
+ against the French.]--
+
+Eugene, thinking that the Senate of Milan was favourably disposed towards
+him, solicited that body to use its influence in obtaining the consent of
+the Allied powers to his continuance at the head of the Government of
+Italy; but this proposition was rejected by the Senate. A feeling of
+irritation pervaded the public mind in Italy, and the army had not
+proceeded three marches beyond Mantua when an insurrection broke out in
+Milan. The Finance Minister, Pizna, was assassinated, and his residence
+demolished, and nothing would have saved the Viceroy from a similar fate
+had he been in his capital. Amidst this popular excitement, and the
+eagerness of the Italians to be released from the dominion of the French,
+the friends of Eugene thought him fortunate in being able to join his
+father-in-law at Munich almost incognito.
+
+ --[Some time after Eugene visited France and had a long audience of
+ Louis XVIII. He announced himself to that monarch by his father's
+ title of Marquis de Beauharnais. The King immediately saluted him
+ by the title of Monsieur le Marechal, and proposed that he should
+ reside in France with that rank. But this invitation Eugene
+ declined, because as a French Prince under the fallen Government he
+ had commanded the Marshals, and he therefore could not submit to be
+ the last in rank among those illustrious military chiefs.
+ Bourrienne.]--
+
+Thus, at the expiration of nine years, fell the iron crown which Napoleon
+had placed on his head saying, "Dieu me l'a donne; gare a qui la touche."
+
+I will now take a glance at the affairs of Germany. Rapp was not in
+France at the period of the fall of the Empire. He had, with
+extraordinary courage and skill, defended himself against a year's siege
+at Dantzic. At length, being reduced to the last extremity, and
+constrained to surrender, he opened the gates of the city, which
+presented nothing but heaps of ruins. Rapp had stipulated that the
+garrison of Dantzic should return to France, and the Duke of Wurtemberg,
+who commanded the siege, had consented to that condition; but the Emperor
+of Russia having refused to ratify it, Rapp, having no means of defence,
+was made prisoner with his troops; and conducted to Kiow, whence he
+afterwards returned to Paris, where I saw him.
+
+Hamburg still held out, but at the beginning of April intelligence was
+received there of the extraordinary events which had delivered Europe
+from her oppressor. Davoust refused to believe this news, which at once
+annihilated all his hopes of power and greatness. This blindness was
+persisted in for some time at Hamburg. Several hawkers, who were marked
+out by the police as having been the circulators of Paris news, were
+shot. An agent of the Government publicly announced his design of
+assassinating one of the French Princes, in whose service he was said to
+have been as a page. He said he would go to his Royal Highness and
+solicit to be appointed one of his aides de camp, and that, if the
+application were refused, as it probably would be, the refusal would only
+confirm him in his purpose.
+
+At length, when the state of things was beyond the possibility of doubt,
+Davoust assembled the troops, acquainted them with the dethronement of
+the Emperor, hoisted a flag of truce, and sent his adhesion to the
+Provisional Government. All then thought of their personal safety,
+without losing sight of their honestly-acquired wealth. Diamonds and
+other objects of value and small bulk were hastily collected and packed
+up. The Governor of Hamburg, Count Hogendorff, who, in spite of some
+signal instances of opposition, had too often co-operated in severe and
+vexatious measures, was the first to quit the city. He was, indeed,
+hurried off by Davoust; because he had mounted the Orange cockade and
+wished to take his Dutch troops away with him. After consigning the
+command to General Gerard, Davoust quitted Hamburg, and arrived at Paris
+on the 18th of June.
+
+I have left Napoleon at Fontainebleau. The period of his departure for
+Elba was near at hand: it was fixed for the 17th of April.
+
+On that day Maubreuil, a man who has become unfortunately celebrated,
+presented himself at the Post-office, and asked to speak with me. He
+showed me some written orders, signed by General Saeken, the Commander of
+the Russian troops in Palls, and by Baron Brackenhausen, chief of the
+staff. These orders set forth that Maubreuil was entrusted with an
+important mission, for the execution of which he was authorised to demand
+the assistance of the Russian troops; and the commanders of those men
+were enjoined to place at his disposal as many troops as he might apply
+for. Maubreuil was also the bearer of similar orders from General
+Dupont, the War Minister, and from M. Angles, the Provisional Commissary-
+General of the Police, who directed all the other commissaries to obey
+the orders they might receive from Maubreuil. On seeing these documents,
+of the authenticity of which there was no doubt, I immediately ordered
+the different postmasters to provide Maubreuil promptly with any number
+of horses he might require.
+
+Some days after I was informed that the object of Maubreuil's mission was
+to assassinate Napoleon. It may readily be imagined what was my
+astonishment on hearing this, after I had seen the signature of the
+Commander of the Russian forces, and knowing as I did the intentions of
+the Emperor Alexander. The fact is, I did not, and never can, believe
+that such was the intention of Mabreuil. This man has been accused of
+having carried off the jewels of the Queen of Westphalia.
+
+Napoleon having consented to proceed to the island of Elba, conformably
+with the treaty he had ratified on the 13th, requested to be accompanied
+to the place of embarkation by a Commissioner from each of the Allied
+powers. Count Schouwaloff was appointed by Russia, Colonel Neil Campbell
+by England, General Kohler by Austria, and Count Waldbourg-Truchess by
+Prussia. On the 16th the four Commissioners came for the first time to
+Fontainebleau, where the Emperor, who was still attended by Generals
+Drouot and Bertrand, gave to each a private audience on the following
+day.
+
+Though Napoleon received with coldness the Commissioners whom he had
+himself solicited, yet that coldness was far from being manifested in an
+equal degree to all. He who experienced the best reception was Colonel
+Campbell, apparently because his person exhibited traces of wounds.
+Napoleon asked him in what battles he had received them, and on what
+occasions he had been invested with the orders he wore. He next
+questioned him as to the place of his birth, and Colonel Campbell having
+answered that he was a Scotchman, Napoleon congratulated him on being the
+countryman of Ossian, his favourite author, with whose poetry, however,
+he was only acquainted through the medium of wretched translations.
+On this first audience Napoleon said to the Colonel, "I have cordially
+hated the English. I have made war against you by every possible means,
+but I esteem your nation. I am convinced that there is more generosity
+in your Government than in any other. I should like to be conveyed from
+Toulon to Elba by an English frigate."
+
+The Austrian and Russian Commissioners were received coolly, but without
+any marked indications of displeasure. It was not so with the Prussian
+Commissioner, to whom he said duly, "Are there any Prussians in my
+escort?"--"No, Sire."--"Then why do you take the trouble to accompany
+me?"--"Sire, it is not a trouble, but an honour."--"These are mere words;
+you have nothing to do here."--"Sire, I could not possibly decline the
+honourable mission with which the King my master has entrusted me." At
+these words Napoleon turned his back on Count Truchess.
+
+The Commissioners expected that Napoleon would be ready to set out
+without delay; but they were deceived. He asked for a sight of the
+itinerary of his route, and wished to make some alterations in it.
+The Commissioners were reluctant to oppose his wish, for they had been
+instructed to treat him with all the respect and etiquette due to a
+sovereign. They therefore suspended the departure, and, as they could
+not take upon themselves to acquiesce in the changes wished for by the
+Emperor, they applied for fresh orders. On the night of the 18th of
+April they received these orders, authorising them to travel by any road
+the Emperor might prefer. The departure was then definitively fixed for
+the 20th.
+
+Accordingly, at ten on the morning of the 20th, the carriages were in
+readiness, and the Imperial Guard was drawn up in the grand court of the
+Palace of Fontainebleau, called the Cour du Cheval Blanc. All the
+population of the town and the neighbouring villages thronged round the
+Palace. Napoleon sent for General Kohler, the Austrian Commissioner, and
+said to him, "I have reflected on what I ought to do, and I am determined
+not to depart. The Allies are not faithful to their engagements with me.
+I can, therefore, revoke my abdication, which was only conditional. More
+than a thousand addresses were delivered to me last night: I am conjured
+to resume the reins of government I renounced my rights to the crown only
+to avert the horrors of a civil war, having never had any other abject in
+view than the glory and happiness of France. But, seeing as I now do,
+the dissatisfaction inspired by the measures of the new Government, I can
+explain to my Guard the reasons which induced me to revoke my abdication.
+It is true that the number of troops on which I can count will scarcely
+exceed 30,000 men, but it will be easy for me to increase their numbers
+to 130,000. Know, then, that I can also, without injuring my honour, say
+to my Guard, that having nothing but the repose and happiness of the
+country at heart, I renounce all my rights, and exhort my troops to
+follow my example, and yield to the wish of the nation."
+
+I heard these words reported by General Kohler himself, after his return
+from his mission. He did not disguise the embarrassment which this
+unexpected address had occasioned; and I recollect having remarked at the
+time that had Bonaparte, at the commencement of the campaign of Paris,
+renounced his rights and returned to the rank of citizen, the immense
+masses of the Allies must have yielded to the efforts of France. General
+Kohler also stated that Napoleon complained of Maria Louisa not being
+allowed to accompany him; but at length, yielding to the reasons urged by
+those about him, he added, "Well, I prefer remaining faithful to my
+promise; but if I have any new ground of complaint, I will free myself
+from all my engagements."
+
+At eleven o'clock Comte de Bussy, one of the Emperor's aides de camp, was
+sent by the Grand Marshal (General Bertrand) to announce that all was
+ready for departure. "Am I;" said Napoleon, "to regulate my actions by
+the Grand Marshal's watch? I will go when I please. Perhaps I may not
+go at all. Leave me!"
+
+All the forms of courtly etiquette which Napoleon loved so much were
+observed; and when at length he was pleased to leave his cabinet to enter
+the salon, where the Commissioners were waiting; the doors were thrown
+open as usual, and "The Emperor" was announced; but no sooner was the
+word uttered than he turned back again. However, he soon reappeared,
+rapidly crossed the gallery, and descended the staircase, and at twelve
+o'clock precisely he stood at the head of his Guard, as if at a review in
+the court of the Tuileries in the brilliant days of the Consulate and the
+Empire.
+
+Then took place a really moving scene--Napoleon's farewell to his
+soldiers. Of this I may abstain from entering into any details, since
+they are known everywhere, and by everybody, but I may subjoin the
+Emperor's last address to his old companions-in-arms, because it belongs
+to history. This address was pronounced in a voice as firm and sonorous
+as that in which Bonaparte used to harangue his troops in the days of his
+triumphs. It was as follows:
+
+ "Soldiers of my Old Guard, I bid you farewell. For twenty years I
+ have constantly accompanied yon on the road to honour and glory. In
+ these latter times, as in the days of our prosperity, you have
+ invariably been models of courage and fidelity. With men such as
+ you our cause could not be lost, but the war would have been
+ interminable; it would have been civil war, and that would have
+ entailed deeper misfortunes on France. I have sacrificed all my
+ interests to those of the country. I go; but you, my friends, will
+ continue to serve France. Her happiness was my only thought.. It
+ will still be the object of my wishes. Do not regret my fate: if I
+ have consented to survive, it is to serve your glory. I intend to
+ write the history of the great achievements we have performed
+ together. Adieu, my friends. Would I could press you all to my,
+ heart!"
+
+During the first day cries of "Vive l'Empereur!" resounded along the
+road, and Napoleon, resorting to his usual dissimulation, censured the
+disloyalty of the people to their legitimate sovereign, which he did with
+ill disguised irony. The Guard accompanied him as far as Briars. At
+that place Napoleon invited Colonel Campbell to breakfast with him. He
+conversed on the last war in Spain, and spoke in complimentary terms of
+the English nation and the military talents of Wellington. Yet by that
+time he must have heard of the battle of Toulouse.
+
+On the night of the 21st Napoleon slept at Nevers, where he was received
+by the acclamations of the people, who here, as in several other towns,
+mingled their cries in favour of their late sovereign with imprecations
+against the Commissioners of the Allies. He left Nevers at six on the
+morning of the 22d. Napoleon was now no longer escorted by the Guards,
+who were succeeded by a corps of Cossacks: the cries of "Vive
+l'Empereur!" accordingly ceased, and he had the mortification to hear in
+its stead, "Vivent les Allies!" However, I have been informed that at
+Lyons, through which the Emperor passed on the 23d at eleven at night,
+the cry of "Vive l'Empereur!" was still echoed among the groups who
+assembled before the post-office during the change of horses.
+
+Augereau, who was still a Republican, though he accepted the title of
+Duke of Castiglione from Napoleon, had always been among the
+discontented. On the downfall of the Emperor he was one of that
+considerable number of persons who turned Royalists not out of love for
+the Bourbons but out of hatred to Bonaparte. He held a command in the
+south when he heard of the forfeiture of Napoleon pronounced by the
+Senate, and he was one of the first to send his recognition to the
+Provisional Government. Augereau, who, like all uneducated men, went to
+extremes in everything, had published under his name a proclamation
+extravagantly violent and even insulting to the Emperor. Whether
+Napoleon was aware of this proclamation I cannot pretend to say, but he
+affected ignorance of the matter if he was informed of it, for on the
+24th, having met Augereau at a little distance from Valence, he stopped
+his carriage and immediately alighted. Augereau did the same, and they
+cordially embraced in the presence of the Commissioners. It was remarked
+that in saluting Napoleon took off his hat and Augereau kept on his.
+"Where are you going?", said the Emperor; "to Court?"--"No, I am going to
+Lyons."--"You have behaved very badly to me." Augereau, finding that the
+Emperor addressed him in the second person singular, adopted the same
+familiarity; so they conversed as they were accustomed to do when they
+were both generals in Italy. "Of what do you complain?" said he.
+"Has not your insatiable ambition brought us to this? Have you not
+sacrificed everything to that ambition, even the happiness of France?
+I care no more for the Bourbons than for you. All I care for is the
+country." Upon this Napoleon turned sharply away from the Marshal,
+lifted his hat to him, and then stepped into his carriage. The
+Commissioners, and all the persons in Napoleon's suite, were indignant at
+seeing Augereau stand in the road still covered, with his hands behind
+his back, and instead of bowing, merely making a contemptuous salutation
+to Napoleon with his hand. It was at the Tuileries that these haughty
+Republicans should have shown their airs. To have done so on the road to
+Elba was a mean insult which recoiled upon themselves.
+
+ --[The following letter, taken from Captain Bingham's recently
+ published selections from the Correspondence of the first Napoleon,
+ indicates in emphatic language the Emperor's recent dissatisfaction
+ with Marshal Augereau when in command at Lyons daring the "death
+ straggle" of 1814:
+
+ To Marshal Augereau.
+
+ NOGENT, 21st February, 1814,
+
+ ....What! six hours after having received the first troops coming
+ from Spain you were not in the field! Six hours repose was
+ sufficient. I won the action of Naugis with a brigade of dragoons
+ coming from Spain which, since it had left Bayonne, had not
+ unbridled its horses. The six battalions of the division of Nimes
+ want clothes, equipment, and drilling, say you? What poor reasons
+ yon give me there, Augereau! I have destroyed 80,000 enemies with
+ conscripts having nothing but knapsacks! The National Guards, say
+ you, are pitiable; I have 4000 here in round hats, without
+ knapsacks, in wooden shoes, but with good muskets, and I get a great
+ deal out of them. There is no money, you continue; and where do you
+ hope to draw money from! You want waggons; take them wherever you
+ can. You have no magazines; this is too ridiculous. I order you
+ twelve hours after the reception of this letter to take the field.
+ If you are still Augereau of Castiglione, keep the command, but if
+ your sixty years weigh upon you hand over the command to your senior
+ general. The country is in danger; and can be saved by boldness and
+ alacrity alone....
+ (Signed) NAPOLEON]--
+
+At Valence Napoleon, for the first time, saw French soldiers with the
+white cockade in their caps. They belonged to Augereau's corps. At
+Orange the air resounded with tines of "Vive le Roi!" Here the gaiety,
+real or feigned, which Napoleon had hitherto evinced, began to forsake
+him.
+
+Had the Emperor arrived at Avignon three hours later than he did there is
+no doubt that he would have been massacred.--[The Royalist mob of Avignon
+massacred Marshal Brune in 1816.]-- He did not change horses at Avignon,
+through which he passed at five in the morning, but at St. Andiol, where
+he arrived at six. The Emperor, who was fatigued with sitting in the
+carnage, alighted with Colonel Campbell and General Bertrand, and walked
+with them up the first hill. His valet de chambre, who was also walking
+a little distance in advance, met one of the mail couriers, who said is
+him, "Those are the Emperor's carriages coming this way?"--"No, they are
+the equipages of the Allies."--"I say they are the Emperor's carriages.
+I am an old soldier. I served in the campaign of Egypt, and I will save
+the life of my General."--"I tell you again they are not the Emperor's
+carriages."--"Do not attempt to deceive me; I have just passed through
+Organ, where the Emperor has been hanged in effigy. The wretches erected
+a scaffold and hanged a figure dressed in a French uniform covered with
+blood. Perhaps I may get myself into a scrape by this confidence, but no
+matter. Do you profit by it." The courier then set off at full gallop.
+The valet de chambre took General Drouot apart, and told him what he had
+heard. Drouot communicated the circumstance to General Bertrand, who
+himself related it to the Emperor in the presence of the Commissioners.
+The latter, justly indignant, held a sort of council on the highway, and
+it was determined that the Emperor should go forward without his retinue.
+The valet de chambre was asked whether he had any clothes in the
+carriage. He produced a long blue cloak and a round hat. It was
+proposed to put a white cockade in the hat, but to this Napoleon would
+not consent. He went forward in the style of a courier, with Amaudru,
+one of the two outriders who had escorted his carriage, and dashed
+through Orgon. When the Allied Commissioners arrived there the assembled
+population were uttering exclamations of "Down with the Corsican! Down
+with the brigand!" The mayor of Orgon (the, same man whom I had seen
+almost on his knees to General Bonaparte on his return from Egypt)
+addressed himself to Pelard, the Emperor's valet de chambre, and said,
+"Do you follow that rascal?"--"No," replied Pelard, "I am attached to the
+Commisairiers of the Allied powers."--Ah! that is well! I should like
+to hang the villain with my own hands.
+
+"Ah! if you knew, sir, how the scoundrel has deceived us! It was I who
+received him on his return from Egypt. We wished to take his horses out
+and draw his carriage. I should like to avenge myself now for the
+honours I rendered him at that time."
+
+The crowd augmented, and continued to vociferate with a degree of fury
+which may be imagined by those who have heard the inhabitants of the
+south manifest, by cries, their joy or their hatred. Some more violent
+than the rest wished to force Napoleon's coachman to cry "Vive le Roi!"
+He courageously refused, though threatened with a stroke of a sabre,
+when, fortunately; the carriage being ready to start, he whipped the
+horses and set off at full gallop. The Commissioners would not breakfast
+at Orgon; they paid for what had been prepared, and took some
+refreshments away with them. The carriages did not overtake the Emperor
+until they came to La Calade, where he had arrived a quarter of an hour
+before with Amaudru.
+
+They found him standing by the fire in the kitchen of the inn talking
+with the landlady. She had asked him whether the tyrant was soon to pass
+that way? "Ah! sir," said she, "it is all nonsense to say we have got
+rid of him. I always, have said, and always will say, that we shall
+never be sure of being done with him until he be laid at the bottom of a
+well, covered over with stones. I wish we had him safe in the well in
+our yard. You see, sir, the Directory sent him to Egypt to get rid of
+him; but he came back again! And he will come back again, you maybe sure
+of that, sir; unless--" Here the good woman, having finished skimming her
+pot, looked up and perceived that all the party were standing uncovered
+except the individual to whom, she had been speaking. She was
+confounded, and the embarrassment she experienced at having spoken so ill
+of the Emperor to the Emperor himself banished all her anger, and she
+lavished every mark of attention, and respect on Napoleon and his
+retinue. A messenger was immediately sent to Aix to purchase ribbons for
+making white cockades. All the carriages were brought into the courtyard
+of the inn, and the gate was closed; the landlady informed Napoleon that
+it would not be prudent for him to venture on passing through Aix, where
+a population of more than 20,000 were waiting to stone him.
+
+Meanwhile dinner was served, and Napoleon sat down to table. He
+admirably disguised the agitation which he could not fail to experience,
+and I have been assured, by some of the individuals who were present on
+that remarkable occasion, that he never made himself more agreeable. His
+conversation, which was enriched by the resources of his memory and his
+imagination, charmed every one, and he remarked, with an air of
+indifference which was perhaps affected, "I believe the new French
+Government has a design on my life."
+
+The Commissioners, informed of what was going on at Aix, proposed sending
+to the Mayor an order for closing the gates and adopting measures for
+securing the public tranquillity. About fifty individuals had assembled
+round the inn, and one among them offered to carry a letter to the Mayor
+of Aix The Commissioners accepted his services, and in their letter
+informed the Mayor that if the gates of the town were not closed within
+an hour they would advance with two regiments of uhlans and six pieces of
+artillery, and would fire upon all who might oppose them. This threat
+had the desired effect; and the Mayor returned for answer that the gates
+should be closed, and that he would take upon himself the responsibility
+of everything which might happen.
+
+The danger which threatened the Emperor at Aix was thus averted; but
+there was another to be braved. During the seven or eight hours he
+passed at La Calade a considerable number of people had gathered round-
+the inn, and manifested every disposition to proceed to some excess.
+Most of them had in their hands five-franc pieces, in order to recognise
+the Emperor by his likeness on the coin. Napoleon, who had passed two
+nights without sleep, was in a little room adjoining the kitchen, where
+he had fallen into a slumber, reclining an the shoulder of his valet de
+chambre. In a moment of dejection he had said, "I now renounce the
+political world forever. I shall henceforth feel no interest about
+anything that may happen. At Porto-Ferrajo I may be happy--more happy
+than I have ever been! No!--if the crown of Europe were now offered to
+me I would not accept it. I will devote myself to science. I was right
+never to esteem mankind! But France and the French people--what
+ingratitude! I am disgusted with ambition, and I wish to rule no
+longer!"
+
+When the moment for departure arrived it was proposed that he should put
+on the greatcoat and fur cap of General Kohler, and that he should go
+into the carriage of the Austrian Commissioner. The Emperor, thus
+disguised, left the inn of La Calade, passing between two lines of
+spectators. On turning the walls of Aix Napoleon had again the
+mortification to hear the cries of "Down with the tyrant! Down with
+Nicolas!" and these vociferations resounded at the distance of a quarter
+of a league from the town.
+
+Bonaparte, dispirited by these manifestations of hatred, said, in a tone
+of mingled grief and contempt, "These Provencals are the same furious
+brawlers that they used to be. They committed frightful massacres at the
+commencement of the Revolution. Eighteen years ago I came to this part
+of the country with some thousand men to deliver two Royalists who were
+to be hanged. Their crime was having worn the white cockade. I saved
+them; but it was not without difficulty that I rescued them from the
+hands of their assailants; and now, you see, they resume the same
+excesses against those who refuse to wear the white cockade.". At about
+a league from Aix the Emperor and his retinue found horses and an escort
+of gendarmerie to conduct them to the chateau of Luc.
+
+The Princess Pauline was at the country residence of M. Charles, member
+of the Legislative Body, near the castle of Luc. On hearing of the
+misfortunes of her brother she determined to accompany him to the isle of
+Elba, and she proceeded to Frejus to embark with him. At Frejus the
+Emperor rejoined Colonel Campbell, who had quitted the convoy on the
+road, and had brought into the port the English frigate the 'Undaunted'
+which was appointed to convey the Emperor to the place of his
+destination. In spite of the wish he had expressed to Colonel Campbell
+he manifested considerable reluctance to go on board. However, on the
+28th of April he sailed for the island of Elba in the English frigate, in
+which it could not then be said that Caesar and his fortune were
+embarked.
+
+ [It was on the 3d of May 1814 that Bonaparte arrived within sight of
+ Porto-Ferrajo, the capital of his miniature empire; but he did not
+ land till the nest morning. At first he paid a short visit
+ incognito, being accompanied by a sergeant's party of marines from
+ the Undaunted. He then returned on board to breakfast, and at about
+ two o'clock made his public entrance, the 'Undaunted' firing a royal
+ salute.]
+
+In every particular of his conduct he paid great attention to the
+maintenance of his Imperial dignity. On landing he received the keys of
+his city of Porto-Ferrajo, and the devoirs of the Governor, prefect, and
+other dignitaries, and he proceeded immediately under a canopy of State
+to the parish church, which served as a cathedral. There he heard Te
+Deum, and it is stated that his countenance was dark and melancholy, and
+that he even shed tears.
+
+One of Bonaparte's first cares was to select a flag for the Elbese
+Empire, and after some hesitation he fixed on "Argent, on a bend gules,
+or three bees," as the armorial ensign of his new dominion. It is
+strange that neither he nor any of those whom he consulted should have
+been aware that Elba had an ancient and peculiar ensign, and it is still
+more remarkable that this ensign should be one singularly adapted to
+Bonaparte's situation; being no more than "a wheel,--the emblem," says
+M. Bernaud, "of the vicissitudes of human life, which the Elbese had
+borrowed from the Egyptian mysteries." This is as curious a coincidence
+as any we ever recollect to have met; as the medals of Elba with the
+emblem of the wheel are well known, we cannot but suppose that Bonaparte
+was aware of the circumstance; yet he is represented as having in vain
+made several anxious inquiries after the ancient arms of the island.
+
+During the first months of his residence there his life was, in general,
+one of characteristic activity and almost garrulous frankness. He gave
+dinners, went to balls, rode all day about his island, planned
+fortifications, aqueducts, lazarettos, harbours, and palaces; and the
+very second day after he landed fitted out an expedition of a dozen
+soldiers to take possession of a little uninhabited island called
+Pianosa, which lies a few leagues from Elba; on this occasion he said
+good-humouredly, "Toute l'Europe dira que j'ai deja fait une conqute"
+(All Europe will say I have already made a conquest). The cause of the
+island of Pianosa being left uninhabited was the marauding of the
+Corsairs from the coast of Barbary, against whom Bonaparte considered
+himself fully protected by the 4th Article of the Treaty of
+Fontainebleau.
+
+The greatest wealth of Elba consists in its iron mines, for which the
+island was celebrated in the days of Virgil. Soon after his arrival
+Napoleon visited the mines in company with Colonel Campbell, and being
+informed that they produced annually about 500,000 francs he exclaimed
+joyfully, "These, then, are my own !" One of his followers, however,
+reminded him that he had long since disposed of that revenue, having
+given it to his order of the Legion of Honour, to furnish pensions, etc.
+"Where was my head when I made that grant?" said he, "but I have made
+many foolish decrees of that sort!"
+
+Sir Walter Scott, in telling a curious fact, makes a very curious
+mistake. "To dignify his capital," he says, "having discovered that the
+ancient name of Porto-Ferrajo was Comopoli (the city of Como), he
+commanded it to be called Cosmopoli, or the city of all nations." Now
+the old name of Porto-Ferrajo was in reality not Comopoli, but Cosmopoli,
+and it obtained that name from the Florentine Cosmo de' Medici, to whose
+ducal house Elba belonged, as an integral part of Tuscany. The name
+equally signified the city of Cosmo, or the city of all nations, and the
+vanity of the Medici had probably been flattered by the double meaning of
+the appellation. But Bonaparte certainly revived the old name, and did
+not add a letter to it to dignify his little capital.
+
+The household of Napoleon, though reduced to thirty-five persons, still
+represented an Imperial Court. The forms and etiquette of the Tuileries
+and St, Cloud were retained on a diminished scale, but the furniture and
+internal accommodations of the palace are represented as having been
+meaner by far than those of an English gentleman of ordinary rank. The
+Bodyguard of his Imperial Majesty the Emperor of Elba consisted of about
+700 infantry and 80 cavalry, and to this handful of troops Napoleon
+seemed to pay almost as much attention as he had formerly given to his
+Grande Armee. The men were constantly exercised, particularly in
+throwing shot and shells, and he soon began to look out for good recruits.
+
+He early announced that he would hold a Court and receive ladies twice a
+week; the first was on the 7th of May, and a great concourse assembled.
+Bonaparte at first paid great attention to the women, particularly those
+who possessed personal attractions, and asked them, in his rapid way,
+whether they were married? how many children they had, and who their
+husbands were? To the last question he received one universal answer; it
+happened that every lady was married to a merchant, but when it came to
+be further explained that they were merchant butchers and merchant
+bakers, his Imperial Majesty permitted some expression of his
+dissatisfaction to escape him and hastily retired. On the 4th of June
+there was a ball on board the British frigate, in honour of the King's
+birthday; the whole beauty and fashion of Elba were assembled, and
+dancing with great glee, when, about midnight, Bonaparte came in his
+barge, unexpectedly, and masked, to join the festivity. He was very
+affable, and visited every part of the ship, and all the amusements which
+had been prepared for the different classes of persons. On his birthday,
+the 15th of August, he ordered the mayor to give a ball, and for this
+purpose a temporary building, capable of holding 300 persons, was to be
+erected, and the whole entertainment, building and all, were to be at the
+expense of the inhabitants themselves. These were bad auspices, and
+accordingly the ball completely failed. Madame Mtire, Madame Bertrand,
+and the two ladies of honour, attended, but not above thirty of the fair
+islanders, and as the author of the IEineraire remarks, "Le bal ful
+triste quoique Bonaparte n'y parut pas."
+
+Having in an excursion reached the summit of one of the highest hills on
+the island, where the sea was visible all round him, he shook his head
+with affected solemnity, and exclaimed in a bantering tone, "Eh! il faut
+avouer que mon ile est bien petite."
+
+On this mountain one of the party saw a little church in an almost
+inaccessible situation, and observed that it was a most inconvenient site
+for a church, for surely no congregation could attend it. "It is on that
+account the more convenient to the parson," replied Bonaparte, "who may
+preach what stuff he pleases without fear of contradiction."
+
+As they descended the hill and met some peasants with their goats who
+asked for charity, Bonaparte told a story which the present circumstances
+brought to his recollection, that when he was crossing the Great St.
+Bernard, previously to the battle of Marengo, he had met a goatherd, and
+entered into conversation with him. The goatherd, not knowing to whom he
+was speaking, lamented his own hard lot, and envied the riches of some
+persons who actually had cows and cornfields. Bonaparte inquired if some
+fairy were to offer to gratify all his wishes what he would ask? The
+poor peasant expressed, in his own opinion, some very extravagant
+desires, such as a dozen of cows and a good farmhouse. Bonaparte
+afterwards recollected the incident, and astonished the goatherd by the
+fulfilment of all his wishes.
+
+But all his thoughts and conversations were not as light and pleasant as
+these. Sometimes he would involve himself in an account of the last
+campaign, of his own views and hopes, of the defection of his marshals,
+of the capture of Paris, and finally of his abdication; on these he would
+talk by the hour with great earnestness and almost fury, exhibiting in
+very rapid succession traits of eloquence, of military genius, of
+indignation; of vanity, and of selfishness. With regard to the audience
+to whom he addressed these tirades he was not very particular.
+
+The chief violence of his rage seemed to be directed against Marshal
+Marmont whom, as well as Augereau, he sometimes called by names too gross
+for repetition, and charged roundly with treachery. Marmont, when he
+could no longer defend Paris by arms, saved it by an honourable
+capitulation; he preserved his army for the service of his country and
+when everything else was lost stipulated for the safety of Bonaparte.
+This last stipulation, however, Bonaparte affected to treat with contempt
+and indignation.--[Editor of 1836 edition.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+1814.
+
+ Changes produced by time--Correspondence between the Provisional
+ Government and Hartwell--Louis XVIII's reception in London--
+ His arrival at Calais--Berthier's address to the King at Compiegne--
+ My presentation to his Majesty at St. Ouen-Louis--XVIII's entry into
+ Paris--Unexpected dismissal from my post--M. de Talleyrand's
+ departure for the Congress of Vienna--Signs of a commotion--
+ Impossibility of seeing M. de Blacas--The Abby Fleuriel--Unanswered
+ letters--My letter to M. de Talleyrand at Vienna.
+
+No power is so great as that resulting from the changes produced by time.
+Wise policy consists in directing that power, but to do so it is
+requisite to know the wants of the age. For this reason Louis XVIII.
+appeared, in the eyes of all sensible persons, a monarch expressly formed
+for the circumstances in which we stood after the fall of Napoleon.
+
+In the winter of 1813-14 some Royalist proclamations had been circulated
+in Paris, and as they contained the germs of those hopes which the
+Charter, had it been executed, was calculated to realise, the police
+opposed their circulation, and I recollect that, in order to multiply the
+number of copies, my family and I daily devoted some hours to
+transcribing them. After the definitive declaration of Alexander a very
+active correspondence ensued between the Provisional Government and
+Hartwell, and Louis XVIII. was even preparing to embark for Bordeaux when
+he learned the events of the 31st of March. That news induced the King
+to alter his determination, and he soon quitted his retirement to proceed
+to London. Louis XVIII. and the Prince Regent of England exchanged the
+orders of the Holy Ghost and the Garter, and I believe I may affirm that
+this was the first occasion on which any but a Catholic Prince was
+invested with the order of the Holy Ghost.
+
+Louis XVIII. embarked at Dover on board the Royal Sovereign, and landed
+at Calais on the 24th of April. I need not enter into any description of
+the enthusiasm which his presence excited; that is generally known
+through the reports of the journals of the time. It is very certain that
+all rational persons saw with satisfaction the Princes of the House of
+Bourbon reascend the throne of their ancestors, enlightened by experience
+and misfortune, which, as some ancient philosopher observes, are the best
+counsellors of kings.
+
+I had received a letter addressed to me from London by the Duc de Duras,
+pointing out the route which Louis XVIII. was to pursue from Calais to
+Paris: In this he said, "After the zeal, monsieur, you have shown for the
+service of the King, I do not doubt your activity to prevent his
+suffering in any way at a moment so happy and interesting for every
+Frenchman." The King's wishes on this subject were scrupulously
+fulfilled, and I recollect with pleasure the zeal with which my
+directions were executed by all the persons in the service of the
+Postoffice. His Majesty stopped for a short time at Amiens, and then
+proceeded to Compiegne, where the Ministers and Marshals had previously
+arrived to present to him their homage and the assurance of their
+fidelity. Berthier addressed the King in the name of the Marshals, and
+said, among other things, "that France, groaning for five and twenty
+years under the weight of the misfortunes that oppressed her, had
+anxiously looked forward to the happy day which she now saw dawning."
+Berthier might justly have said for "ten years"; but at all events, even
+had he spoken the truth, it was ill placed in the mouth of a man whom the
+Emperor had constantly loaded with favours: The Emperor Alexander also
+went to Compiegne to meet Louis XVIII., and the two monarchs dined
+together.
+
+I did not go to Compiegne because the business which I had constantly to
+execute did not permit me to leave Paris for so long an interval as that
+journey would have required, but I was at St. Ouen when Louis XVIII.
+arrived on the 2d of May. There I had to congratulate myself on being
+remembered by a man to whom I was fortunate enough to render some service
+at Hamburg. As the King entered the salon through which he had to pass
+to go to the dining-room M. Hue recognising me said to his Majesty,
+"There is M. de Bourrienne." The King then stepping up to me said, "Ah!
+M. de Bourrienne, I am very glad to see you. I am aware of the services
+you have rendered me in Hamburg and Paris, and I shall feel much pleasure
+in testifying my gratitude."
+
+At St. Ouen Louis XVIII. promulgated the declaration which preceded the
+Charter, and which repeated the sentiments expressed by the King twenty
+years before, in the Declaration of Colmar. It was also at St, Ouen that
+project of a Constitution was presented to him by the Senate in which
+that body, to justify 'in extremis' its title of conservative, stipulated
+for the preservation of its revenues and endowments.
+
+On the 3d of May Louis XVIII. made his solemn entrance into Paris, the
+Duchess d'Angouleme being in the carriage with the King. His Majesty
+proceeded first to Notre Dame. On arriving at the Pont Neuf he saw the
+model of the statue of Henri IV. replaced, on the pedestal of which
+appeared the following words: 'Ludovico reduce, Henricus redivivus',
+which were suggested by M. de Lally-Tollendal, and were greatly
+preferable to the long and prolix inscription composed for the bronze
+statue.
+
+The King's entrance into Paris did not excite so much enthusiasm as the
+entrance of Monsieur. In the places through which I passed on the 3d of
+May astonishment seemed to be the prevailing feeling among the people.
+The abatement of public enthusiasm was more perceptible a short time
+after, when Louis XVIII. restored "the red corps" which Louis XVI. had
+suppressed long before the Revolution.
+
+It was not a little extraordinary to see the direction of the Government
+consigned to a man who neither had nor could have any knowledge of
+France. From the commencement M. de Blacas affected ministerial
+omnipotence. When I went on the 11th of May to the Tuileries to present,
+as usual, my portfolio to the King, in virtue of my privilege of
+transacting business with the sovereign, M. de Blacas wished to take the
+portfolio from me, which appeared to me the more surprising as, during
+the seven days I had the honour of coming in contact with Louis XVIII.,
+his Majesty had been pleased to bestow many compliments upon me. I at
+first refused to give up the portfolio, but M. de Blacas told me the King
+had ordered him to receive it; I then, of course, yielded the point.
+
+However, it, was not long before I had experience of a courtier's
+revenge, for two days after this circumstance, that is to say, on the
+13th of May, on entering my cabinet at the usual hour, I mechanically
+took up the 'Moniteur', which I found lying on my desk. On glancing
+hastily over it what was my astonishment to find that the Comte Ferrand
+had been appointed Director of the Post-office in my stead. Such was the
+strange mode in which M. de Blacas made me feel the promised gratitude of
+the sovereign. Certainly, after my proofs of loyalty, which a year
+afterwards procured for me the honour of being outlawed in quite a
+special way, I had reason to complain, and I might have said 'Sic vos non
+vobis' as justly as Virgil when he alluded to the unmerited favours
+lavished by Augustus on the Maevii and Bavii of his time.
+
+The measures of Government soon excited complaints in every quarter.
+The usages of the old system were gradually restored, and ridicule being
+mingled with more serious considerations, Paris was speedily inundated
+with caricatures and pamphlets. However, tranquillity prevailed until
+the month of September, when M. de Talleyrand departed for the Congress
+of Vienna. Then all was disorder at the Tuileries. Every one feeling
+himself free from restraint, wished to play the statesman, and Heaven
+knows how many follies were committed in the absence of the schoolmaster.
+
+Under a feeble Government there is but one step from discontent to
+insurrection, under an imbecile Government like that of France in 1814,
+after the departure of M. de Talleyrand, conspiracy has free Scope.
+During the summer of 1814 were initiated the events which reached their
+climax on the 20th of March 1815. I almost fancy I am dreaming when I
+look back on the miraculous incapacity of the persons who were then at
+the head of our Government. The emigrants, who, as it has been truly
+said, had neither learned nor forgotten anything, came back with all the
+absurd pretensions of Coblentz. Their silly vanity reminded one of a
+character in one of Voltaire's novels who is continually saying, "Un
+homme comme moi!" These people were so engrossed with their pretended
+merit that they were blind to everything else. They not only disregarded
+the wishes and the wants of France; which in overthrowing the Empire
+hoped to regain liberty, but they disregarded every warning they had
+received.
+
+I recollect one circumstance which was well calculated to excite
+suspicion. Prince Eugene proposed going to the waters of Plombieres to
+join his sister Hortense. The horses, the carriages, and one of the
+Prince's aides de camp had already arrived at Plombieres, and his
+residence was prepared; but he did not go. Eugene had, no doubt,
+received intimation of his sister's intrigues with some of the
+individuals of the late Court of Napoleon who were then at the waters,
+and as he had determined to reside quietly at the Court of his father-in-
+law; without meddling with public affairs, he remained at Munich. This
+fact, however, passed off unnoticed.
+
+At the end of 1814 unequivocal indications of a great catastrophe were
+observable. About that time a man, whom I much esteem, and with whom I
+have always been on terms of friendship, said to me, "You see how things
+are going on: they are committing fault upon fault. You must be
+convinced that such a state of things cannot last long. Between
+ourselves, I am of opinion that all will be over in the month of March;
+that month will repair the disgrace of last March. We shall then, once
+for all, be delivered from fanaticism and the emigrants. You see the
+intolerable spirit of hypocrisy that prevails, and you know that the
+influence of the priests is, of all things, the most hateful to the
+nation. We have gone back a long way within the last eight months. I
+fear you will repent of having taken too active a part in affairs at the
+commencement of the present year. You see we have gone a very different
+way from what you expected. However, as I have often told you before,
+you had good reason to complain; and after all, you acted to the best of
+your judgment."
+
+I did not attach much importance to this prediction of a change in the
+month of March. I deplored, as every one did, the inconceivable errors
+of "Ferrand and Company," and I hoped that the Government would gradually
+return to those principles which were calculated to conciliate the
+feelings of the people. A few days after another of my friends called on
+me. He had exercised important functions, and his name had appeared on a
+proscription list. He had claims upon the Government, which was by no
+means favourably disposed towards him. I asked him how things were going
+on, and he replied, "Very well; no opposition is made to my demands. I
+have no reason bo complain." This reminded me of the man in the 'Lettres
+Persanes', who admired the excellent order of the finances under Colbert
+because his pension was promptly paid. I congratulated my friend on the
+justice which the Government rendered him, as well as on the justice
+which he rendered to the Government, and I remarked that if the same
+course were adopted towards every one all parties would speedily be
+conciliated. "I do not think so," said my friend. "If the Government
+persist in its present course it cannot possibly stand, and we shall have
+the Emperor back again."--"That," said I, "would be a very great
+misfortune; and even if such were the wish of France, it would be opposed
+by Europe. You who are so devotedly attached to France cannot be
+indifferent to the danger that would threaten her if the presence of
+Bonaparte should bring the foreigners back again. Can you endure to
+think of the dismemberment of our country?"--"That they would never dare
+to attempt. But you and I can never agree on the question of the Emperor
+and your Bourbons. We take a totally different view of the matter. You
+had cause to complain of Bonaparte, but I had only reason to be satisfied
+with him. But tell me, what would you do if he were to return?"--
+"Bonaparte return!"--"Yes."--"Upon my word, the best thing I could do
+would be to set off as speedily as I could, and that is certainly what I
+should do. I am thoroughly convinced that he would never pardon me for
+the part I have taken in the Restoration, and I candidly confess that I
+should not hesitate a moment to save my life by leaving France."--"Well,
+you are wrong, for I am convinced that if you would range yourself among
+the number of his friends you might have whatever you wished--titles,
+honours, riches. Of this I could give you assurance."--"All this, I must
+tell you, does not tempt me. I love France as dearly, as you do, and I
+am convinced that she can never be happy under Bonaparte. If he should
+return I will go and live abroad."
+
+This is only part of a conversation which lasted a considerable time,
+and, as is often the case after a long discussion, my friend retained his
+opinion, and I mine. However, this second warning, this hypothesis of
+the return of Bonaparte, made me reflect, and I soon received another
+hint which gave additional weight to the preceding ones. An individual
+with whom I was well acquainted, and whom I knew from his principles and
+connections to be entirely devoted to the royal cause, communicated to me
+some extraordinary circumstances which he said alarmed him. Among other
+things he said, "The day before yesterday I met Charles de Labedoyere,
+who, you know, is my intimate friend. I remarked that he had an air of
+agitation and abstraction. I invited him to come and dine with me, but
+he declined, alleging as an excuse that we should not be alone. He then
+asked me to go and dine with him yesterday, as he wanted to talk with me.
+I accepted his invitation, and we conversed a long time on political
+affair's and the situation of France. You know my sentiments are quite
+the reverse of his, so we disputed and wrangled, though we are still very
+good friends. But what alarms me is, that at parting Charles pressed my
+hand, saying, 'Adieu; to-morrow I set off for Grenoble. In a month you
+will hear something of Charles de Labedoyere.'"
+
+These three successive communications appeared to me very extraordinary.
+The two first were made to me by persons interested in the event, and the
+third by one who dreaded it. They all presented a striking coincidence
+with the intrigues at Plombieres a few months before. In the month of
+January I determined to mention the business to M. de Blacas, who then
+engrossed all credit and all power, and through whose medium alone
+anything could reach the sovereign. I need scarcely add that my
+intention was merely to mention to him the facts without naming the
+individuals from whom I obtained them. After all, however, M. de Blacas
+did not receive me, and I only had the honour of speaking to his
+secretary, who, if the fact deserve to be recorded, was an abbe named
+Fleuriel. This personage, who was an extraordinary specimen of
+impertinence and self-conceit, would have been an admirable study for a
+comic poet. He had all the dignity belonging to the great secretary of a
+great Minister, and, with an air of indifference, he told me that the
+Count was not there; but M. de Blacas was there, and I knew it.
+
+Devoted as I was to the cause of the Bourbons, I thought it my duty to
+write that very day to M. de Blacas to request an interview; I received
+no answer. Two days after I wrote a second letter, in which I informed
+M. de Blacas that I had something of the greatest importance to
+communicate to him; this letter remained unnoticed like the first.
+Unable to account for this strange treatment I again repaired to the
+Pavilion de Flore, and requested the Abbe Fleuriel to explain to me if he
+could the cause of his master's silence. "Sir," said he, "I received
+your two letters, and laid them before the Count; I cannot tell why he
+has not sent you an answer; but Monsieur le Comte is so much engaged . .
+. . Monsieur le Comte is so overwhelmed with business that"--"Monsieur
+le Comte may, perhaps, repent of it. Good morning, sir!"
+
+I thus had personal experience of the truth of what I had often heard
+respecting M. de Blacas. That favourite, who succeeded Comte d'Avaray,
+enjoyed the full confidence of the King, and concentrated the sovereign
+power in his own cabinet. The only means of transmitting any
+communication to Louis XVIII. was to get it addressed to M. de Blacas by
+one of his most intimate friends.
+
+Convinced as I was of the danger that threatened France, and unable to
+break through the blockade which M. de Blacas had formed round the person
+of the King, I determined to write to M. de Talleyrand at Vienna,' and
+acquaint him with the communications that had been made to me. M. de
+Talleyrand corresponded directly with the King, and I doubt not that my
+information at length reached the ears of his Majesty. But when Louis
+XVIII. was informed of what was to happen it was too late to avert the
+danger.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+1814-1815.
+
+ Escape from Elba--His landing near Cannes--March on Paris.
+
+About the middle of summer Napoleon was visited by his mother and his
+sister the Princess Pauline. Both these ladies had very considerable
+talents for political intrigue, and then natural faculties in this way
+had not lain dormant or been injured by want of practice. In Pauline
+this finesse was partially concealed by a languor and indecision of
+manner and an occasional assumption of 'niaiserie'; or almost infantine
+simplicity; but this only threw people the more off their guard, and made
+her finesse the more sure in its operation. Pauline was handsome too,
+uncommonly graceful, and had all that power of fascination which has been
+attributed to the Bonaparte family. She could gain hearts with ease, and
+those whom her charms enslaved were generally ready to devote themselves
+absolutely to her brother. She went and came between Naples and Elba,
+and kept her brother-in-law, Murat, in mind of the fact that the lion was
+not yet dead nor so much as sleeping, but merely retiring the better to
+spring forward on his quarry.
+
+Having taken this resolution and chosen his time, Napoleon kept the
+secret of his expedition until the last moment; and means were found to
+privately make the requisite preparations. A portion of the soldiers was
+embarked in a brig called the 'Inconstant' and the remainder in six small
+craft. It was not till they were all on board that the troops first
+conceived a suspicion of the Emperor's purpose: 1000 or 1200 men had
+sailed to regain possession of an Empire containing a population of
+30,000,000! He commenced his voyage on Sunday the 26th of February 1815,
+and the next morning at ten o'clock was not out of sight of the island,
+to the great annoyance of the few friends he had left behind. At this
+time Colonel Sir Neil Campbell was absent on a tour to Leghorn, but being
+informed by the French Consul and by Spanocchi, the Tuscan Governor of
+the town, that Napoleon was about to sail for the Continent, he hastened
+back, and gave chase to the little squadron in the Partridge sloop of
+war, which was cruising in the neighbourhood, but, being delayed by
+communicating with a French frigate, reached Antibes too late.
+
+There were between 400 and 500 men on board the brig (the 'Inconstant')
+in which Bonaparte embarked. On the passage they met with a French ship
+of war, with which they spoke. The Guards were ordered to pull off their
+caps and lie down on the deck or go below while the captain exchanged
+some words with the commander of the frigate, whom he afterwards proposed
+to pursue and capture. Bonaparte rejected the idea as absurd, and asked
+why he should introduce this new episode into his plan.
+
+As they stood over to the coast of France the Emperor was in the highest
+spirits. The die was cast, and he seemed to be quite himself again. He
+sat upon the deck and amused the officers collected round him with a
+narrative of his campaigns, particularly those of Italy and Egypt. When
+he had finished he observed the deck to be encumbered with several large
+chests belonging to him. He asked the maitre d'hotel what they
+contained. Upon being told they were filled with wine he ordered them to
+be immediately broken open, saying, "We will divide the booty." The
+Emperor superintended the distribution himself, and presented bottle by
+bottle to his comrades, till tired of this occupation he called out to
+Bertrand, "Grand Marshal, assist me, if you please. Let us help these
+gentlemen. They will help us some day." It was with this species of
+bonhomie that he captivated when he chose all around him. The following
+day he was employed in various arrangements, and among others in
+dictating to Colonel Raoul the proclamations to be issued on his landing
+In one of these, after observing, "we must forget that we have given law
+to the neighbouring nations," Napoleon stopped. "What have I said?"
+Colonel Raoul read the passage. "Stop!" said Napoleon. "Omit the word
+'neighbouring;' say simply 'to nations.'" It was thus his pride revealed
+itself; and his ambition seemed to rekindle at the very recollections of
+his former greatness.
+
+Napoleon landed without any accident on the 1st of March at Cannes, a
+small seaport in the Gulf of St. Juan, not far from Frejus, where he had
+disembarked on his return from Egypt sixteen years before, and where he
+had embarked the preceding year for Elba. A small party of the Guards
+who presented themselves before the neighbouring garrison of Antibes were
+made prisoners by General Corsin, the Governor of the place. Some one
+hinted that it was not right to proceed till they had released their
+comrades, but the Emperor observed that this was poorly to estimate the
+magnitude of the undertaking; before them were 30,000,000 men uniting to
+be set free! He, however, sent the Commissariat Officer to try what be
+could do, calling out after him, "Take care you do not get yourself made
+prisoner too!"
+
+At nightfall the troops bivouacked on the beach. Just before a
+postillion, in a splendid livery, had been brought to Napoleon. It
+turned out that this man had formerly been a domestic of the Empress
+Josephine, and was now in the service of the Prince of Monaco, who
+himself had been equerry to the Empress. The postillion, after
+expressing his great astonishment at finding the Emperor there, stated,
+in answer to the questions that were put to him, that he had just come
+from Paris; that all along the road, as far as Avignon, he had heard
+nothing but regret for the Emperor's absence; that his name was
+constantly echoed from mouth to mouth; and that, when once fairly through
+Provence, he would find the whole population ready to rally round him.
+The man added that his laced livery had frequently rendered him the
+object of odium and insult on the road. This was the testimony of one of
+the common class of society: it was very gratifying to the Emperor, as it
+entirely corresponded with his expectations. The Prince of Monaco
+himself, on being presented to the Emperor, was less explicit. Napoleon
+refrained from questioning him on political matters. The conversation
+therefore assumed a more lively character, and turned altogether on the
+ladies of the former Imperial Court, concerning whom the Emperor was very
+particular in his inquiries.
+
+As soon as the moon had risen, which was about one or two in the morning
+of the 2d, the bivouacs were broken up, and Napoleon gave orders for
+proceeding to Grasse. There he expected to find a road which he had
+planned during the Empire, but in this he was disappointed, the Bourbons
+having given up all such expensive works through want of money.
+Bonaparte was therefore obliged to pass through narrow defiles filled
+with snow, and left behind him in the hands of the municipality his
+carriage and two pieces of cannon, which had been brought ashore. This
+was termed a capture in the bulletins of the day. The municipality of
+Grasse was strongly in favour of the Royalist cause, but the sudden
+appearance of the Emperor afforded but little time for hesitation, and
+they came to tender their submission to him. Having passed through the
+town be halted on a little height some way beyond it, where he
+breakfasted. He was soon surrounded by the whole population of the
+place; and he heard the same sentiments and the same prayers as before he
+quitted France. A multitude of petitions had already been drawn up, and
+were presented to him, just as though he had come from Paris and was
+making a tour through the departments. One complained that his pension
+had not been paid, another that his cross of the Legion of Honour had
+been taken from him. Some of the more discontented secretly informed
+Napoleon that the authorities of the town were very hostile to him, but
+that the mass of the people were devoted to him, and only waited till his
+back was turned to rid themselves of the miscreants. He replied, "Be not
+too hasty. Let them have the mortification of seeing our triumph without
+having anything to reproach us with." The Emperor advanced with all the
+rapidity in his power. "Victory," he said, "depended on my speed. To me
+France was in Grenoble. That place was a hundred miles distant, but I
+and my companions reached it in five days; and with what weather and what
+roads! I entered the city just as the Comte d'Artois, warned by the
+telegraph, was quitting the Tuileries."
+
+Napoleon himself was so perfectly convinced of the state of affairs that
+he knew his success in no way depended on the force he might bring with
+him. A 'piquet' of 'gens d'armes', he said, was all that was necessary.
+Everything turned out as he foresaw. At first he owned he was not
+without some degree of uncertainty and apprehension. As he advanced,
+however, the whole population declared themselves enthusiastically in his
+favour: but he saw no soldiers. It was not till he arrived between Mure
+and Vizille, within five or six leagues from Grenoble, and on the fifth
+day after his landing, that he met a battalion. The commanding officer
+refused to hold even a parley. The Emperor, without hesitation, advanced
+alone, and 100 grenadiers marched at some distance behind him, with their
+arms reversed. The sight of Napoleon, his well-known costume, and his
+gray military greatcoat, had a magical effect on the soldiers, and they
+stood motionless. Napoleon went straight up to them and baring his
+breast said, "Let him that has the heart kill his Emperor!" The soldiers
+threw down their arms, their eyes moistened with tears, and cries of
+"Vive l'Empereur!" resounded on every side. Napoleon ordered the
+battalion to wheel round to the right, and all marched on together.
+
+At a short distance from Grenoble Colonel Labedoyere, who had been sent
+at the head of the 7th regiment to oppose his passage, came to join the
+Emperor. The impulse thus given in a manner decided the question.
+Labedoyere's superior officer in vain interfered to restrain his
+enthusiasm and that of his men. The tri-coloured cockades, which had
+been concealed in the hollow of a drum, were eagerly distributed by
+Labedoyere among them, and they threw away the white cockade as a badge
+of their nation's dishonour. The peasantry of Dauphiny, the cradle of
+the Revolution, lined the roadside: they were transported and mad with
+joy. The first battalion, which has just been alluded to, had shown some
+signs of hesitation, but thousands of the country people crowded round
+it, and by their shouts of "Vive l'Empereur!" endeavoured to urge the
+troops to decision, while others who followed in Napoleon's rear
+encouraged his little troop to advance by assuring them that they would
+meet with success. Napoleon said he could have taken 2,000,000 of these
+peasants with him to Paris, but that then he would have been called "the
+King of the Jaequerie."
+
+Napoleon issued two proclamations on the road. He at first regretted
+that he had not had them printed before he left Elba; but this could not
+have been done without some risk of betraying his secret designs. He
+dictated them on board the vessel, where every man who could write was
+employed in copying them. These copies soon became very scarce; many of
+them were illegible; and it was of till he arrived at Gap, on the 5th of
+March, that he found means to have them printed. They were from that
+time circulated and read everywhere with the utmost avidity.
+
+The address to the army was considered as being still more masterly and
+eloquent, and it was certainly well suited to the taste of French
+soldiers, who, as Bourrienne remarks, are wonderfully pleased with
+grandiloquence, metaphor, and hyperbole, though they do not always
+understand what they mean. Even a French author of some distinction
+praises this address as something sublime. "The proclamation to the
+army," says he, "is full of energy: it could not fail to make all
+military imaginations vibrate. That prophetic phrase, 'The eagle, with
+the national colours, will fly from church steeple to church steeple,
+till it settles on the towers of Notre Dame,' was happy in the extreme."
+
+These words certainly produced an immense effect on the French soldiery,
+who everywhere shouted, "Vive l'Empereur!" "Vive le petit Caporal!"
+"We will die for our old comrade!" with the most genuine enthusiasm.
+
+It was some distance in advance of Grenoble that Labedoyere joined, but
+he could not make quite sure of the garrison of that city, which was
+commanded by General Marchand, a man resolved to be faithful to his
+latest master. The shades of night had fallen when Bonaparte arrived in
+front of the fortress of Grenoble, where he stood for some minutes in a
+painful state of suspense and indecision.
+
+It was on the 7th of March, at nightfall, that Bonaparte thus stood
+before the walls of Grenoble. He found the gates closed, and the
+commanding officer refused to open them. The garrison assembled on the
+ramparts shouted "Vive l'Empereur!" and shook hands with Napoleon's
+followers through the wickets, but they could not be prevailed on to do
+more. It was necessary to force the gates, and this was done under the
+mouths of ten pieces of artillery, loaded with grapeshot. In none of his
+battles did Napoleon ever imagine himself to be in so much danger as at
+the entrance into Grenoble. The soldiers seemed to turn upon him with
+furious gestures: for a moment it might be supposed that they were going
+to tear him to pieces. But these were the suppressed transports of love
+and joy. The Emperor and his horse were both borne along by the
+multitude, and he had scarcely time to breathe in the inn where he
+alighted when an increased tumult was heard without; the inhabitants of
+Grenoble came to offer him the broken gates of the city, since they could
+not present him with the keys.
+
+From Grenoble to Paris Napoleon found no further opposition. During the
+four days of his stay at Lyons, where he had arrived on the 10th, there
+were continually upwards of 20,000 people assembled before his windows;
+whose acclamations were unceasing. It would never have been supposed
+that the Emperor had even for a moment been absent from the, country.
+He issued orders, signed decrees, reviewed the troops, as if nothing had
+happened. The military corps, the public bodies, and all classes of
+citizens, eagerly came forward to tender their homage and their services.
+The Comte d'Artois, who had hastened to Lyons, as the Duc and Duchesse
+d'Augouleme had done to Bourdeaux, like them in vain attempted to make a
+stand. The Mounted National Guard (who were known Royalists) deserted
+him at this crisis, and in his flight only one of them chose to follow
+him. Bonaparte refused their services when offered to him, and with a
+chivalrous feeling worthy of being recorded sent the decoration of the
+Legion of Honour to the single volunteer who had thus shown his fidelity
+by following the Duke.
+
+As soon as the Emperor quitted Lyons he wrote to Ney, who with his army
+was at Lons-le-Saulnier, to come and join him. Ney had set off from the
+Court with a promise to bring Napoleon, "like a wild beast in a cage, to
+Paris." Scott excuses Ney's heart at the expense of his head, and
+fancies that the Marshal was rather carried away by circumstances, by
+vanity, and by fickleness, than actuated by premeditated treachery, and
+it is quite possible that these protestations were sincerely uttered when
+Ney left Paris, but, infected by the ardour of his troops, he was unable
+to resist a contagion so much in harmony with all his antecedents, and to
+attack not only his leader in many a time of peril, but also the
+sovereign who had forwarded his career through every grade of the army.
+
+The facts of the cane were these:--
+
+On the 11th of March Ney, being at Besancon, learned that Napoleon was at
+Lyons. To those who doubted whether his troops would fight against their
+old comrades he said, "They shall fight! I will take a musket from a
+grenadier and begin the action myself! I will run my sword to the hilt
+in the body of the first man who hesitates to fire." At the same time he
+wrote to the Minister of War at Paris that he hoped to see a fortunate
+close to this mad enterprise.
+
+He then advanced to Lons-le-Saulnier, where, on the night between the
+13th and 14th of March, not quite three days after his vehement
+protestations of fidelity, he received, without hesitation, a letter from
+Bonaparte, inviting him, by his old appellation of the "Bravest of the
+Brave," to join his standard. With this invitation Ney complied, and
+published an order of the day that declared the cause of the Bourbons,
+which he had sworn to defend, lost for ever.
+
+It is pleaded in extenuation of Ney's defection that both his officers
+and men were beyond his control, and determined to join their old Master;
+but in that case he might have given up his command, and retired in the
+same honourable way that Marshals Macdonald and Marmont and several other
+generals did. But even among his own officers Ney had an example set
+him, for many of them, after remonstrating in vain, threw up their
+commands. One of them broke his sword in two and threw the pieces at
+Ney's feet, saying, "It is easier for a man of honour to break iron than
+to break his word."
+
+Napoleon, when at St. Helena, gave a very different reading to these
+incidents. On this subject he was heard to say, "If I except Labedoyere,
+who flew to me with enthusiasm and affection, and another individual,
+who, of his own accord, rendered me important services, nearly all the
+other generals whom I met on my route evinced hesitation and uncertainty;
+they yielded only to the impulse about them, if indeed they did not
+manifest a hostile feeling towards me. This was the case with Ney, with
+Massena, St. Cyr, Soult, as well as with Macdonald and the Duke of
+Belluno, so that if the Bourbons had reason to complain of the complete
+desertion of the soldiers and the people, they had no right to reproach
+the chiefs of the army with conspiring against them, who had shown
+themselves mere children in politics, and would be looked upon as neither
+emigrants nor patriots."
+
+Between Lyons and Fontainebleau Napoleon often travelled several miles
+ahead of his army with no other escort than a few Polish lancers. His
+advanced guard now generally consisted of the troops (miscalled Royal)
+who happened to be before him on the road whither they had been sent to
+oppose him, and to whom couriers were sent forward to give notice of the
+Emperor's approach, in order that they might be quite ready to join him
+with the due military ceremonies. White flags and cockades everywhere
+disappeared; the tri-colour resumed its pride of place. It was spring,
+and true to its season the violet had reappeared! The joy of the
+soldiers and the lower orders was almost frantic, but even among the
+industrious poor there were not wanting many who regretted this
+precipitate return to the old order of things--to conscription, war, and
+bloodshed, while in the superior classes of society there was a pretty
+general consternation. The vain, volatile soldiery, however, thought of
+nothing but their Emperor, saw nothing before them but the restoration of
+all their laurels, the humiliation of England, and the utter defeat of
+the Russians, Prussians, and Austrians.
+
+On the night between the 19th and 20th of March Napoleon reached
+Fontainebleau, and again paused, as had formerly been his custom, with
+short, quick steps through the antiquated but splendid galleries of that
+old palace. What must have been his feelings on revisiting the chamber
+in which, the year before, it is said he had attempted suicide!
+
+Louis XVIII., left the Palace of the Tuileries at nearly the same hour
+that Bonaparte entered that of Fontainebleau.
+
+The most forlorn hope of the Bourbons was now in a considerable army
+posted between Fontainebleau and Paris. Meanwhile the two armies
+approached each other at Melun; that of the King was commanded by Marshal
+Macdonald. On the 20th his troops were drawn up in three lines to
+receive the invaders, who were said to be advancing from Fontainebleau.
+There was a long pause of suspense, of a nature which seldom fails to
+render men more accessible to strong and sudden emotions. The glades of
+the forest, and the acclivity which leads to it, were in full view of the
+Royal army, but presented the appearance of a deep solitude. All was
+silence, except when the regimental bands of music, at the command of the
+officers, who remained generally faithful, played the airs of "Vive Henri
+Quatre," "O Richard," "La Belle Gabrielle," and other tunes connected
+with the cause and family of the Bourbons. The sounds excited no
+corresponding sentiments among the soldiers.
+
+At length, about noon, a galloping of horse was heard. An open carriage
+appeared, surrounded by a few hussars, and drawn by four horses. It came
+on at full speed, and Napoleon, jumping from the vehicle, was in the
+midst of the ranks which had been formed to oppose him. His escort threw
+themselves from their horses, mingled with their ancient comrades, and
+the effect of their exhortations was instantaneous on men whose minds
+were already half made up to the purpose which they now accomplished.
+There was a general shout of "Vive Napoleon!" The last army of the
+Bourbons passed from their side, and no further obstruction existed
+betwixt Napoleon and the capital, which he was once more--but for a brief
+space--to inhabit as a sovereign.
+
+Louis, accompanied only by a few household troops, had scarcely turned
+his back on the capital of his ancestors when Lavalette hastened from a
+place of concealment and seized on the Post-office in the name of
+Napoleon. By this measure all the King's proclamations' were
+intercepted, and the restoration of the Emperor was announced to all the
+departments. General Excelmans, who had just renewed his oath to Louis,
+pulled down with his own hands the white flag that was floating over the
+Tuileries, and hoisted the three-coloured banner.
+
+It was late in the evening of the 20th that Bonaparte entered Paris in an
+open carriage, which was driven straight to the gilded gates of the
+Tuileries. He received the acclamations of the military and of the lower
+classes of the suburbs, but most of the respectable citizens looked on in
+silent wonderment. It was quite evident then that he was recalled by a
+party--a party, in truth, numerous and powerful, but not by the unanimous
+voice of the nation. The enthusiasm of his immediate adherents, however,
+made up for the silence and lukewarmness of others. They filled and
+crammed the square of the Carrousel, and the courts and avenues of the
+Tuileries; they pressed so closely upon him that he was obliged to cry
+out, "My friends, you stifle me!" and his aides de camp were compelled to
+carry him in their arms up the grand staircase, and thence into the royal
+apartments. It was observed, however, that amongst these ardent friends
+were many men who had been the first to desert him in 1814, and that
+these individuals were the most enthusiastic in their demonstrations, the
+loudest in their shouts!
+
+And thus was Napoleon again at the Tuileries, where, even more than at
+Fontainebleau, his mind was flooded by the deep and painful recollections
+of the past! A few nights after his return thither he sent for M. Horan,
+one of the physicians who had attended Josephine during her last illness.
+"So, Monsieur Horan," said he, "you did not leave the Empress during her
+malady?"--"No, Sire."
+
+What was the cause of that malady?"--"Uneasiness of mind . . .grief."--
+"You believe that?" (and Napoleon laid a strong emphasis on the word
+believe, looking steadfastly in the doctor's face). He then asked, "Was
+she long ill? Did she suffer much?"--"She was ill a week, Sire; her
+Majesty suffered little bodily pain."--"Did she see that she was dying?
+Did she show courage?"--"A sign her Majesty made when she could no longer
+express herself leaves me no doubt that she felt her end approaching; she
+seamed to contemplate it without fear."--" Well! . . well!" and then
+Napoleon much affected drew close to M. Horan, and added, "You say that
+she was in grief; from what did that arise?"--"From passing events, Sire;
+from your Majesty's position last year."--" Ah! she used to speak of me
+then?"--"Very often." Here Napoleon drew his hand across his eyes, which
+seemed filled with tears. He then went on. "Good woman!--Excellent
+Josephine! She loved me truly--she--did she not? . . . Ah! She was a
+Frenchwoman!"--"Yes, Sire, she loved you, and she would have proved it
+had it not been for dread of displeasing you: she had conceived an idea."
+--"How? ... What would she have done?" She one day said that as Empress
+of the French she would drive through Paris with eight horses to her
+coach, and all her household in gala livery, to go and rejoin you at
+Fontainebleau, and never quit you mare."--"She would have done it--she
+was capable of doing it!"
+
+Napoleon again betrayed deep emotion, on recovering from which he asked
+the physician the most minute questions about the nature of Josephine's
+disease, the friends and attendants who were around her at the hour of
+her death, and the conduct of her two children, Eugene and Hortense.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+1815.
+
+ Message from the Tuileries--My interview with the King--
+ My appointment to the office of Prefect of the Police--Council at
+ the Tuileries--Order for arrests--Fouches escape--Davoust
+ unmolested--Conversation with M. de Blacas--The intercepted letter,
+ and time lost--Evident understanding between Murat and Napoleon--
+ Plans laid at Elba--My departure from Paris--The post-master of
+ Fins--My arrival at Lille--Louis XVIII. detained an hour at the
+ gates--His majesty obliged to leave France--My departure for
+ Hamburg--The Duc de Berri at Brussels.
+
+Those who opposed the execution of the treaty concluded with Napoleon at
+the time of his abdication were guilty of a great error, for they
+afforded him a fair pretext for leaving the island of Elba. The details
+of that extraordinary enterprise are known to every one, and I shall not
+repeat what has been told over and over again. For my own part, as soon
+as I saw with what rapidity Bonaparte was marching upon Lyons, and the
+enthusiasm with which he was received by the troops and the people, I
+prepared to retire to Belgium, there to await the denouement of this new
+drama.
+
+Every preparation for my departure was completed on the evening of the
+13th of March, and I was ready to depart, to avoid the persecutions of
+which I expected I should be the object, when I received a message from
+the Tuileries stating that the King desired to see me. I of course lost
+no time in proceeding to the Palace, and went straight to M. Hue to
+inquire of him why I had been sent for. He occupied the apartments in
+which I passed the three most laborious and anxious years of my life.
+M. Hue, perceiving that I felt a certain degree of uneasiness at being
+summoned to the Tuileries at that hour of the night, hastened to inform
+me that the King wished to appoint me Prefect of the Police. He
+conducted me to the King's chamber, where his Majesty thus addressed me
+kindly, but in an impressive manner, "M. de Bourrienne, can we rely upon
+you? I expect much from your zeal and fidelity."--"Your Majesty,"
+replied I, "shall have no reason to complain of my betraying your
+confidence."--" Well, I re-establish the Prefecture of the Police, and I
+appoint you Prefect. Do your best, M. de Bourrienne, in the discharge of
+your duties; I count upon you."
+
+By a singular coincidence, on the very day (the 13th of March) when I
+received this appointment Napoleon, who was at Lyons, signed the decree
+which excluded from the amnesty he had granted thirteen individuals,
+among whose names mine was inscribed. This decree confirmed me in the
+presentiments I had conceived as soon as I heard of the landing of
+Bonaparte. On returning home from the Tuileries after receiving my
+appointment a multitude of ideas crowded on my mind. At the first moment
+I had been prompted only by the wish to serve the cause of the King, but
+I was alarmed when I came to examine the extent of the responsibility I
+had taken upon myself. However, I determined to meet with courage the
+difficulties that presented themselves, and I must say that I had every
+reason to be satisfied with the manner in which I was seconded by M.
+Foudras, the Inspector-General of the Police.
+
+Even now I am filled with astonishment when I think of the Council that
+was held at the Tuileries on the evening of the 13th of March in M. de
+Blacas' apartments. The ignorance of the members of that Council
+respecting our situation, and their confidence in the useless measures
+they had adopted against Napoleon, exceed all conception.
+
+Will it be believed that those great statesmen, who had the control of
+the telegraph, the post-office, the police and its agents, money-in
+short, everything which constitutes power--asked me to give them
+information respecting the advance of Bonaparte? What could I say to
+them? I could only repeat the reports which were circulated on the
+Exchange, and those which I had collected here and there during the last
+twenty-four hours. I did not conceal that the danger was imminent, and
+that all their precautions would be of no avail. The question then arose
+as to what course should be adapted by the King. It was impossible that
+the monarch could remain at the Capital, and yet, where was he to go?
+One proposed that he should go to Bordeaux, another to La Vendee, and a
+third to Normandy, and a fourth member of the Council was of opinion that
+the King should be conducted to Melun. I conceived that if a battle
+should take place anywhere it would probably be in the neighbourhood of
+that town, but the councillor who made this last suggestion assured us
+that the presence of the King in an open carriage and eight horses would
+produce a wonderful effect on the minds of the troops. This project was
+merely ridiculous; the others appeared to be dangerous and impracticable.
+I declared to the Council that, considering the situation of things, it
+was necessary to renounce all idea of resistance by force of arms; that
+no soldier would fire a musket, and that it was madness to attempt to
+take any other view of things. "Defection," said I, "is inevitable.
+The soldiers are drinking in their barracks the money which you have been
+giving them for some days past to purchase their fidelity. They say
+Louis XVIII., is a very decent sort of man, but 'Vive le petit Caporal!'"
+
+Immediately on the landing of Napoleon the King sent an extraordinary
+courier to Marmont, who was at Chatillon whither he had gone to take a
+last leave of his dying mother. I saw him one day after he had had an
+interview with the King; I think it was on the 6th or 7th of March.
+After some conversation on the landing of Napoleon, and the means of
+preventing him from reaching Paris, Marmont said to me, "This is what I
+dwelt most strongly upon in the interview I have just had with the King.
+'Sire,' said I, 'I doubt not Bonaparte's intention of coming to Paris,
+and the best way to prevent him doing so would be for your Majesty to
+remain here. It is necessary to secure the Palace of the Tuileries
+against a surprise, and to prepare it for resisting a siege, in which it
+would be indispensable to use cannon. You must shut yourself up in your
+palace, with the individuals of your household and the principal public
+functionaries, while the Due d'Angoulome should go to Bordeaux, the Duc
+de Berri to La Vendee, and Monsieur to, the Franche-Comte; but they must
+set off in open day, and announce that they are going to collect
+defenders for your Majesty.--[Monsieur, the brother of the King, the
+Comte d'Artois later Charles X.]
+
+". . This is what I said to the King this morning, and I added that I
+would answer for everything if my advice were followed. I am now going
+to direct my aide de camp, Colonel Fabvier, to draw up the plan of
+defence." I did not concur in Marmont's opinion. It is certainly
+probable that had Louis XVIII. remained in his palace the numerous
+defections which took place before the 20th of March would have been
+checked and some persons would not have found so ready an excuse for
+breaking their oaths of allegiance. There can be little doubt, too, but
+Bonaparte would have reflected well before he attempted the siege of the
+Tuileries.
+
+ --[Marmont (tome vii. p. 87) gives the full details of his scheme
+ for provisioning and garrisoning the Tuileries which the King was to
+ hold while his family spread themselves throughout the provinces.
+ The idea had nothing strange in it, for the same advice was given by
+ General Mathieu Dumas (Souvenirs, tome iii. p. 564), a man not
+ likely to suggest any rash schemes. Jaucourt, writing to
+ Talleyrand, obviously believed in the wisdom of the King's
+ remaining, as did the Czar; see Talleyrand's Correspondence, vol.
+ ii. pp. 94, 122, 129. Napoleon would certainly have been placed
+ in a strange difficulty, but a king capable of adopting such a
+ resolution would never have been required to consider it.]--
+
+Marmont supported his opinion by observing that the admiration and
+astonishment excited by the extraordinary enterprise of Napoleon and his
+rapid march to Paris would be counterbalanced by the interest inspired by
+a venerable monarch defying his bold rival and courageously defending his
+throne. While I rendered full justice to the good intentions of the Duke
+of Ragusa, yet I did not think that his advice could be adopted. I
+opposed it as I opposed all the propositions that were made in the
+Council relative to the different places to which the King should retire.
+I myself suggested Lille as being the nearest, and as presenting the
+greatest degree of safety, especially in the first instance.
+
+It was after midnight when I left the Council of the Tuileries. The
+discussion had terminated, and without coming to any precise resolution
+it was agreed that the different opinions which had been expressed should
+be submitted to Louis XVIII. in order that his Majesty might adopt that
+which should appear to him the best. The King adopted my opinion, but it
+was not acted upon until five days after.
+
+My appointment to the Prefecture of the Police was, as will be seen, a
+late thought of measure, almost as late indeed as Napoleon's proposition
+to send me as his Minister Plenipotentiary to Switzerland. In now
+accepting office I was well convinced of the inutility of any effort that
+might be made to arrest the progress of the fast approaching and menacing
+events. Being introduced into the King's cabinet his Majesty asked me
+what I thought of the situation of affairs. "I think, Sire, that
+Bonaparte will be here in five or six days."--"What, sir?"--"Yes, Sire."
+--"But proper measures are taken, the necessary orders given, and the
+Marshals are faithful to me."--"Sire, I suspect no man's fidelity; but I
+can assure your Majesty that, as Bonaparte has landed, he will be here
+within a week. I know him, and your Majesty cannot know him as well as I
+do; but I can venture too assure your Majesty with the same confidence
+that he will not be here six months hence. He will be hurried into acts
+of folly which will ruin him."--"De Bourrienne, I hope the best from
+events, but if misfortune again compel me to leave France, and your
+second prediction be fulfilled, you may rely on me." During this short
+conversation the King appeared perfectly tranquil and resigned.
+
+The next day I again visited the Tuileries, whither I had at those
+perilous times frequent occasion to repair. On that day I received a
+list of twenty-five persons whom I was ordered to arrest. I took the
+liberty to observe that such a proceeding was not only useless but likely
+to produce a very injurious effect at that critical moment. The reasons
+I urged had not all the effect I expected. However, some relaxation as
+to twenty-three of the twenty-five was conceded, but it was insisted that
+Fouche and Davoust should be arrested without delay. The King repeatedly
+said, "I wish you to arrest Fouche."--" Sire, I beseech your Majesty to
+consider the inutility of such a measure."--" I am resolved upon Fouches
+arrest. But I am sure you will miss him, for Andre could not catch him."
+
+My nocturnal installation as Prefect of the Police took place some time
+after midnight. I had great repugnance to the arrest of Fouche, but the
+order having been given, there was no alternative but to obey it. I
+communicated the order to M. Foudras, who very coolly observed, "Since we
+are to arrest him you need not be afraid, we shall have him fast
+tomorrow."
+
+The next day my agents repaired to the Duke of Otranto's hotel, in the
+Rue d'Artois. On showing their warrant Fouche said, "What does this
+mean? Your warrant is of no force; it is mere waste-paper. It purports
+to come from the Prefect of the Police, but there is no such Prefect."
+In my opinion Fouche was right, for my appointment, which took place
+during the night, had not been legally announced. Be that as it may,
+on his refusal to surrender, one of my agents applied to the staff of the
+National Guard, requesting the support, in case of need, of an armed
+force. General Dessolles repaired to the Tuileries to take the King's
+orders on the subject. Meanwhile Fouche, who never lost his self-
+possession, after talking to the police officers who remained with him,
+pretended to step aside for some indispensable purpose, but the door
+which he opened led into a dark passage through which he slipped, leaving
+my unfortunate agents groping about in the obscurity. As for himself, he
+speedily gained the Rue Taitbout, where he stepped into a coach, and
+drove off. This is the whole history of the notable arrest of Fouche.
+
+As for Davoust, I felt my hands tied with respect to him. I do not mean
+to affect generosity, for I acknowledge the enmity I bore him; but I did
+not wish it to be supposed that I was acting towards him from a spirit of
+personal vengeance. I therefore merely ordered him to be watched. The
+other twenty-three were to me in this matter as if they had never
+existed; and some of them, perhaps, will only learn in reading my Memoirs
+what dangerous characters they were thought to be.
+
+On the 15th of March, after the conversation which, as I have already
+related, I had with Louis XVIII, I went to M. de Blacas and repeated to
+him what I had stated to the King on the certainty of Bonaparte's speedy
+arrival in Paris. I told him that I found it necessary to devote the
+short time still in our power to prevent a reaction against the
+Royalists, and to preserve public tranquillity until the departure of the
+Royal family, and that I would protect the departure of all persons who
+had reasons for withdrawing themselves from the scene of the great and
+perhaps disastrous events that might ensue. "You may readily believe,
+Count," added I, "that considering the great interests with which I am
+entrusted, I am not inclined to lose valuable time in arresting the
+persons of whose names I have received a list. The execution of such a
+measure would be useless; it would lead to nothing, or rather it would
+serve to irritate public feeling. My conviction of this fact has
+banished from me all idea of keeping under restraint for four or five
+days persons whose influence, whether real or supposed, is nil, since
+Bonaparte is at Auxerre. Mere supervision appears to me sufficient, and
+to that I propose confining myself."--"The King," replied M. de Blacas,
+"relies on you. He knows that though only forty-eight hours have elapsed
+since you entered upon your functions, you have already rendered greater
+services than you are perhaps aware of." I then asked M. de Blacas
+whether he had not received any intimation of Bonaparte's intended
+departure from the island of Elba by letters or by secret agents. "The
+only positive information we received," answered the Minister, "was an
+intercepted letter, dated Elba, 6th February. It was addressed to
+M. -----, near Grenoble. I will show it you." M. de Blacas opened a
+drawer of his writing-table and took out the letter, which he gave to me.
+The writer thanked his correspondent for the information he had
+transmitted to "the inhabitant of Elba." He was informed that everything
+was ready for departure, and that the first favourable opportunity would
+be seized, but that it would be desirable first to receive answers to
+some questions contained in the letter. These questions related to the
+regiments which had been sent into the south, and the places of their
+cantonment. It was inquired whether the choice of the commanders was
+conformable to what had been agreed on in Paris, and whether Labedoyere
+was at his post. The letter was rather long and it impressed me by the
+way in which the plan of a landing on the coast of Provence was
+discussed. Precise answers were requested on all these points. On
+returning the letter to M. de Blacas I remarked that the contents of the
+letter called for the adoption of some decided measures, and I asked him
+what had been done. He answered, "I immediately sent a copy of the
+letter to M. d'Andre, that he might give orders for arresting the
+individual to whom it was addressed."
+
+Having had the opportunity of closely observing the machinery of a
+vigilant and active Government, I was, I must confess, not a little
+amazed at the insufficiency of the measures adopted to defeat this well-
+planned conspiracy. When M. de Blacas informed me of all that had been
+done, I could not repress an exclamation of surprise. "Well," said he,
+"and what would you have done?"--"In the first place I would not have
+lost twenty-four hours, which were an age in such a crisis." I then
+explained the plan I would have adopted. A quarter of an hour after the
+receipt of the letter I would have sent trustworthy men to Grenoble, and
+above all things I would have taken care not to let the matter fall into
+the hands of the police. Having obtained all information from the
+correspondent at Grenoble, I would have made him write a letter to his
+correspondent at Elba to quiet the eagerness of Napoleon, telling him
+that the movement of troops he spoke of had not been made, that it would
+take eight days to carry it out, and that it was necessary to the success
+of the enterprise to delay the embarkation for some days. While
+Bonaparte was thus delayed I would have sent to the coast of Provence a
+sufficient body of men devoted to the Royal cause, sending off in another
+direction the regiments whose chiefs were gained over by Napoleon, as the
+correspondence should reveal their names. "You are perhaps right, sir,"
+said M. de Blacas, "but what could I do? I am new here. I had not the
+control of the police, and I trusted to M. d'Andre."--" Well," said I,
+"Bonaparte will be here on the 20th of March." With these words I parted
+from M. de Blacas. I remarked a great change in him. He had already
+lost a vast deal of that hauteur of favouritism which made him so much
+disliked.
+
+When I entered upon my duties in the Prefecture of Police the evil was
+already past remedy. The incorrigible emigres required another lesson,
+and the temporary resurrection of the Empire was inevitable. But, if
+Bonaparte was recalled, it was not owing to any attachment to him
+personally; it was not from any fidelity to the recollections of the
+Empire. It was resolved at any price to get rid of those imbecile
+councillors, who thought they might treat France like a country conquered
+by the emigrants. The people determined to free themselves from a
+Government which seemed resolved to trample on all that was dear to
+France. In this state of things some looked upon Bonaparte as a
+liberator, but the greater number regarded him as an instrument. In this
+last character he was viewed by the old Republicans, and by a new
+generation, who thought they caught a glimpse of liberty in promises, and
+Who were blind enough to believe that the idol of France would be
+restored by Napoleon.
+
+In February 1815, while everything was preparing at Elba for the
+approaching departure of Napoleon, Murat applied to the Court of Vienna
+for leave to march through the Austrian Provinces of Upper Italy an army
+directed on France. It was on the 26th of the same month that Bonaparte
+escaped from Elba. These two facts were necessarily connected together,
+for, in spite of Murat's extravagant ideas, he never could have
+entertained the expectation of obliging the King of France, by the mere
+force of arms, to acknowledge his continued possession of the throne of
+Naples. Since the return of Louis XVIII. the Cabinet of the Tuileries
+had never regarded Murat in any other light than as a usurper, and I know
+from good authority that the French Plenipotentiaries at the Congress of
+Vienna were especially instructed to insist that the restoration of the
+throne of Naples in favour of the Bourbons of the Two Sicilies should be
+a consequence of the restoration of the throne of France. I also know
+that the proposition was firmly opposed on the part of Austria, who had
+always viewed with jealousy the occupation of three thrones of Europe by
+the single House of Bourbon.
+
+According to information, for the authenticity of which I can vouch, the
+following were the plans which Napoleon conceived at Elba. Almost
+immediately after his arrival in France he was to order the Marshals on
+whom he could best rely to defend to the utmost the entrances to the
+French territory and the approaches to Paris, by pivoting on the triple
+line of fortresses which gird the north and east of France. Davoust was
+'in petto' singled out for the defence of Paris. He, was to arm the
+inhabitants of the suburbs, and to have, besides, 20,000 men of the
+National Guard at his disposal. Napoleon, not being aware of the
+situation of the Allies, never supposed that they could concentrate their
+forces and march against him so speedily as they did. He hoped to take
+them by surprise, and defeat their projects, by making Murat march upon
+Milan, and by stirring up insurrections in Italy. The Po being once
+crossed, and Murat approaching the capital of Lombardy, Napoleon with the
+corps of Suchet, Brune, Grouchy, and Massena, augmented by troops sent,
+by forced marches, to Lyons, was to cross the Alps and revolutionise
+Piedmont. There, having recruited his army and joined the Neapolitans in
+Milan, he was to proclaim the independence of Italy, unite the whole
+country under a single chief, and then march at the head of 100,000 men
+on Vienna, by the Julian Alps, across which victory had conducted him in
+1797. This was not all: numerous emissaries scattered through Poland and
+Hungary were to foment discord and raise the cry of liberty and
+independence, to alarm Russia and Austria. It must be confessed it would
+have been an extraordinary spectacle to see Napoleon giving liberty to
+Europe in revenge for not having succeeded in enslaving her.
+
+By means of these bold manoeuvres and vast combinations Napoleon
+calculated that he would have the advantage of the initiative in military
+operations. Perhaps his genius was never more fully developed than in
+this vast conception. According to this plan he was to extend his
+operations over a line of 500 leagues, from Ostend to Vienna, by the Alps
+and Italy, to provide himself with immense resources of every kind, to
+prevent the Emperor of Austria from marching his troops against France,
+and probably force him to terminate a war from which the hereditary
+provinces would have exclusively suffered. Such was the bright prospect
+which presented itself to Napoleon when he stepped on board the vessel
+which was to convey him from Elba to France. But the mad precipitation
+of Murat put Europe on the alert, and the brilliant illusion vanished
+like a dream.
+
+After being assured that all was tranquil, and that the Royal family was
+secure against every danger, I myself set out at four o'clock on the
+morning of the 20th of March, taking the road to Lille.--Nothing
+extraordinary occurred until I arrived at the post-office of Fins, in
+front of which were drawn up a great number of carriages, which had
+arrived before mine, and the owners of which, like myself, were
+impatiently waiting for horses. I soon observed that some one called the
+postmaster aside in a way which did not appear entirely devoid of
+mystery, and I acknowledge I felt some degree of alarm. I was in the
+room in which the travellers were waiting, and my attention was attracted
+by a large bill fixed against the wall. It was printed in French and
+Russian, and it proved to be the order of the day which I had been
+fortunate enough to obtain from the Emperor Alexander to exempt
+posthorses, etc., from the requisitions of the Allied troops.
+
+I was standing looking at the bill when the postmaster came into the room
+and advanced towards me. "Sir," said he, "that is an order of the day
+which saved me from ruin."--"Then surely you would not harm the man by
+whom it is signed?"--"I know you, sir, I recognised you immediately.
+I saw you in Paris when you were Director of the Post-office, and you
+granted a just claim which I had upon you. I have now come to tell you
+that they are harnessing two horses to your calash, and you may set off
+at full speed." The worthy man had assigned to my use the only two
+horses at his disposal; his son performed the office of postilion, and I
+set off to the no small dissatisfaction of some of the travellers who had
+arrived before me, and who, perhaps, had as good reasons as I to avoid
+the presence of Napoleon.
+
+We arrived at Lille at eleven o'clock on the night of the 21st. Here I
+encountered another vexation, though not of an alarming kind. The gates
+of the town were closed, and I was obliged to content myself with a
+miserable night's lodging in the suburb.
+
+I entered Lille on the 22d, and Louis XVIII. arrived on the 23d. His
+Majesty also found the gates closed, and more than an hour elapsed before
+an order could be obtained for opening them, for the Duke of Orleans, who
+commanded the town, was inspecting the troops when his Majesty arrived.
+The King was perfectly well received at Lille. There indeed appeared
+some symptoms of defection, but it must be acknowledged that the officers
+of the old army had been so singularly sacrificed to the promotion of the
+returned emigrants that it was very natural the former should hail the
+return of the man who had so often led them to victory. I put up at the
+Hotel de Grand, certainly without forming any prognostic respecting the
+future residence of the King. When I saw his Majesty's retinue I went
+down and stood at the door of the hotel, where as soon as Louis XVIII.
+perceived me he distinguished me from among all the persons who were
+awaiting his arrival, and holding out his hand for me to kiss he said,
+"Follow me, M. de Bourrienne."
+
+On entering the apartments prepared for him the King expressed to me his
+approval of my conduct since the Restoration, and especially during the
+short interval in which I had discharged the functions of Prefect of the
+Police. He did me the honour to invite me to breakfast with him. The
+conversation naturally turned on the events of the day, of which every
+one present spoke according to his hopes or fears. Observing that Louis
+XVIII. concurred in Berthier's discouraging view of affairs, I ventured
+to repeat what I had already said at the Tuileries, that, judging from
+the disposition of the sovereigns of Europe and the information which I
+had received, it appeared very probable that his Majesty would be again
+seated on his throne in three months. Berthier bit his nails as he did
+when he wanted to leave the army of Egypt and return to Paris to the
+object of his adoration. Berthier was not hopeful; he was always one of
+those men who have the least confidence and the most depression. I could
+perceive that the King regarded my observation as one of those
+compliments which he was accustomed to receive, and that he had no great
+confidence in the fulfilment of my prediction. However, wishing to seem
+to believe it, he said, what he had more than hinted before, "M. de
+Bourrienne, as long as I am King you shall be my Prefect of the Police."
+
+It was the decided intention of Louis XVIII. to remain in France as long
+as he could, but the Napoleonic fever, which spread like an epidemic
+among the troops, had infected the garrison of Lille. Marshal Mortier,
+who commanded at Lille, and the Duke of Orleans, expressed to me their
+well-founded fears, and repeatedly recommended me to urge the King to
+quit Lille speedily, in order to avoid any fatal occurrence. During the
+two days I passed with his Majesty I entreated him to yield to the
+imperious circumstances in which he was placed. At length the King, with
+deep regret, consented to go, and I left Lille the day before that fixed
+for his Majesty's departure.
+
+In September 1814 the King had appointed me charge d'affaires from France
+to Hamburg, but not having received orders to repair to my post I have
+not hitherto mentioned this nomination. However, when Louis XVIII. was
+on the point of leaving France he thought that my presence in Hamburg
+might be useful for the purpose of making him acquainted with all that
+might interest him in the north of Germany. But it was not there that
+danger was to be apprehended. There were two points to be watched--the
+headquarters of Napoleon and the King's Council at Ghent. I, however,
+lost no time in repairing to a city where I was sure of finding a great
+many friends. On passing through Brussels I alighted at the Hotel de
+Bellevue, where the Duc de Berri arrived shortly after me. His Royal
+Highness then invited me to breakfast with him, and conversed with me
+very confidentially. I afterwards continued my journey.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+1815.
+
+ Message to Madame de Bourrienne on the 20th of March--Napoleon's
+ nocturnal entrance into Paris--General Becton sent to my family by
+ Caulaincourt--Recollection of old persecutions--General Driesen--
+ Solution of an enigma--Seals placed on my effects--Useless searches
+ --Persecution of women--Madame de Stael and Madame de Recamier--
+ Paris during the Hundred Days--The federates and patriotic songs--
+ Declaration of the Plenipotentiaries at Vienna.
+
+At Lille, and again at Hamburg, I received letters from my family, which
+I had looked for with great impatience. They contained particulars of
+what had occurred relative to me since Bonaparte's return to Paris.
+Two hours after my departure Madame de Bourrienne also left Paris,
+accompanied by her children, and proceeded to an asylum which had been
+offered her seven leagues from the capital. She left at my house in
+Paris her sister, two of her brothers, and her friend the Comtesse de
+Neuilly, who had resided with us since her return from the emigration.
+
+On the very morning of my wife's departure (namely, the 20th of March) a
+person, with whom I had always been on terms of friendship, and who was
+entirely devoted to Bonaparte, sent to request that Madame de Bourrienne
+would call on him, as he wished to speak to her on most important and
+urgent business. My sister-in-law informed the messenger that my wife
+had left Paris, but, begging a friend to accompany her, she went herself
+to the individual, whose name will be probably guessed, though I do not
+mention it. The person who came with the message to my house put many
+questions to Madame de Bourrienne's sister respecting my absence, and
+advised her, above all things, to conjure me not to follow the King,
+observing that the cause of Louis XVIII. was utterly lost, and that I
+should do well to retire quietly to Burgundy, as there was no doubt of my
+obtaining the Emperor's pardon.
+
+Nothing could be more gloomy than Bonaparte's entrance into Paris. He
+arrived at night in the midst of a thick fog. The streets were almost
+deserted, and a vague feeling of terror prevailed almost generally in the
+capital.
+
+At nine o'clock on the same evening, the very hour of Bonaparte's arrival
+at the Tuileries, a lady, a friend, of my family, and whose son served in
+the Young Guard, called and requested to see Madame de Bourrienne. She
+refused to enter the house lest she should be seen, and my sister-in-law
+went down to the garden to speak to her without a light. This lady's
+brother had been on the preceding night to Fontainebleau to see
+Bonaparte, and he had directed his sister to desire me to remain in
+Paris, and to retain my post in the Prefecture of the Police, as I was
+sure of a full and complete pardon.
+
+On the morning of the 21st General Becton, who has since been the victim
+of his mad enterprises, called at my house and requested to speak with me
+and Madame de Bourrienne. He was received by my wife's sister and
+brothers, and stated that he came from M. de Caulaincourt to renew the
+assurances of safety which had already been given to me. I was, I
+confess, very sensible of these proofs of friendship when they came to my
+knowledge, but I did not for a single moment repent the course I adopted.
+I could not forget the intrigues of which I had been the object since
+1811, nor the continual threats of arrest which, during that year, had
+not left me a moment's quiet; and since I now revert to that time, I may
+take the opportunity of explaining how in 1814 I was made acquainted with
+the real causes of the persecution to which I had been a prey. A person,
+whose name prudence forbids me mentioning, communicated to me the
+following letter, the original copy of which is in my possession:
+
+ MONSIEUR LE DUC DE BASSANO--I send you some very important documents
+ respecting the Sieur Bourrienne, and beg you will make me a
+ confidential report on this affair. Keep these documents for
+ yourself alone. This business demands the utmost secrecy.
+ Everything induces me to believe that Bourrienne has carried a
+ series of intrigues with London. Bring me the report on Thursday.
+ I pray God, etc.
+ (Signed) NAPOLEON
+ PARIS, 25th December 1811.
+
+
+I could now clearly perceive what to me had hitherto been enveloped in
+obscurity; but I was not, as yet, made acquainted with the documents
+mentioned in Napoleon's epistle. Still, however, the cause of his
+animosity was an enigma which I was unable to guess, but I obtained its
+solution some time afterwards.
+
+General Driesen, who was the Governor of Mittau while Louis XVIII.
+resided in that town, came to Paris in 1814. I had been well acquainted
+with him in 1810 at Hamburg, where he lived for a considerable time.
+While at Mittau he conceived a chivalrous and enthusiastic friendship for
+the King of France. We were at first distrustful of each other, but
+afterwards the most intimate confidence arose between us. General
+Driesen looked forward with certainty to the return of the Bourbons to
+France, and in the course of our frequent conversations on his favourite
+theme he gradually threw off all reserve, and at length disclosed to me
+that he was maintaining a correspondence with the King.
+
+He told me that he had sent to Hartwell several drafts of proclamations,
+with none of which, he said, the King was satisfied. On allowing me the
+copy of the last of these drafts I frankly told him that I was quite of
+the King's opinion as to its unfitness. I observed that if the King
+should one day return to France and act as the general advised he would
+not keep possession of his throne six months. Driesen then requested me
+to dictate a draft of a proclamation conformably with my ideas. This I
+consented to do on one condition, viz. that he would never mention my
+name in connection with the business, either in writing or conversation.
+General Driesen promised this, and then I dictated to him a draft which I
+would now candidly lay before the reader if I had a copy of it. I may
+add that in the different proclamations of Louis XVIII. I remarked
+several passages precisely corresponding with the draft I had dictated at
+Hamburg.
+
+During the four years which intervened between my return to Paris and the
+downfall of the Empire it several times occurred to me that General
+Driesen had betrayed my secret, and on his very first visit to me after
+the Restoration, our conversation happening to turn on Hamburg, I asked
+him whether he had not disclosed what I wished him to conceal? "Well,"
+said he, "there is no harm in telling the truth now. After you had left
+Hamburg the King wrote to me inquiring the name of the author of the last
+draft I had sent him, which was very different from all that had preceded
+it. I did not answer this question, but the King having repeated it in a
+second letter, and having demanded an answer, I was compelled to break my
+promise to you, and I put into the post-office of Gothenberg in Sweden a
+letter for the King, in which I mentioned your name."
+
+The mystery was now revealed to me. I clearly saw what had excited in
+Napoleon's mind the suspicion that I was carrying on intrigues with
+England. I have no doubt as to the way in which the affair came to his
+knowledge. The King must have disclosed my name to one of those persons
+whose situations placed them above the suspicion of any betrayal of
+confidence, and thus the circumstance must have reached the ear of
+Bonaparte. This is not a mere hypothesis, for I well know how promptly
+and faithfully Napoleon was informed of all that was said and done at
+Hartwell.
+
+Having shown General Drieaen Napoleon's accusatory letter, he begged that
+I would entrust him with it for a day or two, saying he would show it to
+the King at a private audience. His object was to serve me, and to
+excite Louis XVIII.'s interest in my behalf, by briefly relating to him
+the whole affair. The general came to me on leaving tile Tuileries, and
+assured me that the King after perusing the letter, had the great
+kindness to observe that I might think myself very happy in not having
+been shot. I know not whether Napoleon was afterwards informed of the
+details of this affair, which certainly had no connection with any
+intrigues with England, and which, after all, would have been a mere
+peccadillo in comparison, with the conduct I thought it my duty to adopt
+at the time of the Restoration.
+
+Meanwhile Madame de Bourrienne informed me by an express that seals were
+to be placed on the effects of all the persons included in the decree of
+Lyons, and consequently upon mine. As soon as my wife received
+information of this she quitted her retreat and repaired to Paris to face
+the storm. On the 29th of March, at nine in the evening, the police
+agents presented themselves at my house. Madame de Bourrienne
+remonstrated against the measure and the inconvenient hour that was
+chosen for its execution; but all was in vain, and there was no
+alternative but to submit.
+
+But the matter did not end with the first formalities performed by
+Fouche's alguazils. During the month of May seven persons were appointed
+to examine, my papers, and among the inquisitorial septemvirate were two
+men well known and filling high situations. One of these executed his
+commission, but the other, sensible of the odium attached to it, wrote to
+say he was unwell, and never came. The number of my inquisitors, 'in
+domo', was thus reduced to six. They behaved with great rudeness, and
+executed their mission with a rigour and severity exceedingly painful to
+my family. They carried their search so far as to rummage the pockets of
+my old clothes, and even to unrip the linings. All this was done in the
+hope of finding something that would commit me in the eyes of the new
+master of France. But I was not to be caught in that way, and before
+leaving home I had taken such precautions as to set my mind perfectly at
+ease.
+
+However, those who had declared themselves strongly against Napoleon were
+not the only persons who had reason to be alarmed at his return. Women
+even, by a system of inquisition unworthy of the Emperor, but
+unfortunately quite in unison with his hatred of all liberty, were
+condemned to exile, and had cause to apprehend further severity. It is
+for the exclusive admirers of the Chief of the Empire to approve of
+everything which proceeded from him, even his rigour against a
+defenceless sex; it is for them to laugh at the misery of a woman, and a
+writer of genius, condemned without any form of trial to the most severe
+punishment short of death. For my part, I saw neither justice nor
+pleasantry in the exile of Madame de Chevreuse for having had the courage
+(and courage was not common then even among men) to say that she was not
+made to be the gaoler of the Queen of Spain. On Napoleon's return from.
+the isle of Elba, Madame de Stael was in a state of weakness, which
+rendered her unable to bear any sudden and violent emotion. This
+debilitated state of health had been produced by her flight from Coppet
+to Russia immediately after the birth of the son who was the fruit of her
+marriage with M. Rocca. In spite of the danger of a journey in such
+circumstances she saw greater danger in staying where she was, and she
+set out on her new exile. That exile was not of long duration, but
+Madame de Stael never recovered from the effect of the alarm and fatigue
+it occasioned her.
+
+The name of the authoress of Corinne, naturally calls to mind that of the
+friend who was most faithful to her in misfortune, and who was not
+herself screened from the severity of Napoleon by the just and universal
+admiration of which she was the object. In 1815 Madame Recamier did not
+leave Paris, to which she had returned in 1814, though her exile was not
+revoked. I know positively that Hortense assured her of the pleasure she
+would feel in receiving her, and that Madame Recamier, as an excuse for
+declining the perilous honour, observed that she had determined never
+again to appear in the world as long as her friends should be persecuted.
+The memorial de Sainte Helene, referring to the origin of the ill-will of
+the Chief of the Empire towards the society of Madame de Stael and Madame
+Recamier, etc., seems to reproach Madame Recamier, "accustomed," says the
+Memorial, "to ask for everything and to obtain everything," for having
+claimed nothing less than the complete reinstatement of her father.
+Whatever may have been the pretensions of Madame Recamier, Bonaparte, not
+a little addicted to the custom he complains of in her, could not have,
+with a good grace, made a crime of her ingratitude if he on his side had
+not claimed a very different sentiment from gratitude. I was with the
+First Consul at the time M. Bernard, the father of Madame Reamier, was
+accused, and I have not forgotten on what conditions the re-establishment
+would have been granted.
+
+The frequent interviews between Madame Recamier and Madame de Stael were
+not calculated to bring Napoleon to sentiments and measures of
+moderation. He became more and more irritated at this friendship between
+two women formed for each other's society; and, on the occasion of one of
+Madame Recamier's journeys to Coppet he informed her, through the medium
+of Fouche, that she was perfectly at liberty to go to Switzerland, but
+not to return to Paris. "Ah, Monseigneur! a great man may be pardoned
+for the weakness of loving women, but not for fearing them." This was
+the only reply of Madame Recamier to Fouche when she set out for Coppet.
+I may here observe that the personal prejudices of the Emperor would not
+have been of a persevering and violent character if some of the people
+who surrounded him had not sought to foment them. I myself fell a victim
+to this. Napoleon's affection for me would perhaps have got the upper
+hand if his relenting towards me had not been incessantly combated by my
+enemies around him.
+
+I had no opportunity of observing the aspect of Paris during that
+memorable period recorded in history by the name of the Hundred Days,
+but the letters which I received at the time, together with all that,
+I afterwards heard, concurred in assuring me that the capital never
+presented so melancholy s picture as: during those three months. No one
+felt any confidence in Napoleon's second reign, and it was said, without
+any sort of reserve, that Fouche, while serving the cause of usurpation,
+would secretly betray it. The future was viewed with alarm, and the
+present with dissatisfaction. The sight of the federates who paraded the
+faubourgs and the boulevards, vociferating, "The Republic for ever!" and
+"Death to the Royalists!" their sanguinary songs, the revolutionary airs
+played in our theatres, all tended to produce a fearful torpor in the
+public mind, and the issue of the impending events was anxiously awaited.
+
+One of the circumstances which, at the commencement of the Hundred Days,
+most contributed to open the eyes of those who were yet dazzled by the
+past glory of Napoleon, was the assurance with which he declared that the
+Empress and his son would be restored to him, though nothing warranted
+that announcement. It was evident that he could not count on any ally;
+and in spite of the prodigious activity with which a new army was raised
+those persons must have been blind indeed who could imagine the
+possibility of his triumphing over Europe, again armed to oppose him.
+I deplored the inevitable disasters which Bonaparte's bold enterprise
+would entail, but I had such certain information respecting the
+intentions of the Allied powers, and the spirit which animated the
+Plenipotentiaries at Vienna, that I could not for a moment doubt the
+issue of the conflict: Thus I was not at all surprised when I received at
+Hamburg the minutes of the conferences at Vienna in May 1815.
+
+When the first intelligence of Bonaparte's landing was received at Vienna
+it must be confessed that very little had been done at the Congress, for
+measures calculated to reconstruct a solid and durable order of things
+could only be framed and adopted deliberately, and upon mature
+reflection. Louis XVIII. had instructed his Plenipotentiaries to defend
+and support the principles of justice and the law of nations, so as to
+secure the rights of all parties and avert the chances of a new war.
+The Congress was occupied with these important objects when intelligence
+was received of Napoleon's departure from Elba and his landing at the
+Gulf of Juan. The Plenipotentiaries then signed the protocol of the
+conferences to which I have above alluded.
+
+
+[ANNEX TO THE PRECEDING CHAPTER.]
+
+The following despatch of Napoleon's to Marshal Davoust (given in Captain
+Bingham's Translation, vo1 iii. p. 121), though not strictly bearing
+upon the subject of the Duke of Bassano's inquiry (p. 256), may perhaps
+find a place here, as indicative of the private feeling of the Emperor
+towards Bourrienne. As the reader will remember, it has already been
+alluded to earlier in the work:
+
+To MARSHAL DAVOUST.
+COMPIEGNE, 3d September 1811.
+
+I have received your letter concerning the cheating of Bourrienne at
+Hamburg. It will be important to throw light upon what he has done.
+Have the Jew, Gumprecht Mares, arrested, seize his papers, and place him
+in solitary confinement. Have some of the other principal agents of
+Bourrienne arrested, so as to discover his doings at Hamburg, and the
+embezzlements he has committed there.
+ (Signed) NAPOLEON.
+
+
+
+
+ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+Had neither learned nor forgotten anything
+Nothing is changed in France: there is only one Frenchman more
+Rights of misfortune are always sacred
+
+
+
+
+End of this Project Gutenberg Etext of The Memoirs of Napoleon--1815, V13
+by Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne
+
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