CHAPTER X: THE FALL OF THE EMPIRE
1810-1814
Just before the opening of the year
1810, which marked the beginning of Bonaparte’s
decay, Fouche demanded an audience.
“Well, Fouche,” said the Emperor, “what
now?”
“This Empire can’t go
much further, Your Majesty, unless more novelty is
introduced. I’ve had my men out all through
France taking notes, and there’s but one opinion
among ’em all. You’ve got to do
something new or stop the show. If you’d
only done what I suggested at Austerlitz, and lost
a leg, it would have been different. The people
don’t ask much song-and-dance business from a
one-legged man.”
“We compromised with you there,”
retorted Napoleon. “At Ratisbon our imperial
foot was laid up for a week.”
“Yes—but you didn’t
lose it,” returned Fouche. “Can’t
you see the difference? If you’d lost
it, and come home without it, there’d have been
evidence of your suffering. As it is, do you
know what your enemies are saying about your foot?”
“We do not,” said the
Emperor, sternly. “What do they say?”
“Well, the Bourbons say you
stepped on it running away from the enemy’s
guns, and the extreme Republicans say your wound is
nothing but gout and the result of high, undemocratic
living. Now, my dear sir—Sire, I
mean—I take a great deal of interest in
this Empire. It pays me my salary, and I’ve
had charge of the calcium lights for some time, and
I don’t want our lustre dimmed, but it will be
dimmed unless, as I have already told you a million
times, we introduce some new act on our programme.
1492 didn’t succeed on its music, or its jokes,
or its living pictures. It was the introduction
of novelties every week that kept it on the boards
for four hundred years.”
“Well—what do you
propose?” asked Bonaparte, recognizing the truth
of Fouche’s words.
“I—ah—I think you ought
to get married,” said Fouche.
“We am married, you—you—idiot,”
cried Bonaparte.
“Well, marry again,” said
Fouche. “You’ve been giving other
people away at a great rate for several years—what’s
the matter with acquiring a real princess for yourself?”
“You advise bigamy, do you?” asked Bonaparte,
scornfully.
“Not on your life,” returned
Fouche, “but a real elegant divorce, followed
by an imperial wedding, would rattle the bones of this
blase old Paris as they haven’t been rattled
since Robespierre’s day.”
Bonaparte reddened, then, rising from
the throne and putting his hand to the side of his
mouth, he said, in a low, agitated tone:
“Close the door, Fouche.
Close the door and come here. We want to whisper
something to you.”
The minister did as he was bidden.
“Fouche, old boy,” chuckled
the Emperor in the ear of his rascally aide—“Fouche,
you’re a mind-reader. We’ve been
thinking of just that very thing for some time—in
fact, ever since We met that old woman Emperor Francis
Joseph. He’d make an elegant mother-in-law.”
“Precisely,” said Fouche.
“His daughter Marie-Louise, an archduchess
by birth, is the one I had selected for you.
History will no doubt say that I oppose this match,
and publicly perhaps I may seem to do so, but you
will understand, my dear Sire, that this opposition
will serve, as it is designed to serve, as an advertisement
of our enterprise, and without advertising we might
as well put up the shutters. Shall we—ah—announce
the attraction to the public?”
“Not yet,” said Napoleon.
“We must get rid of our leading lady before
we bring on the understudy.”
It is a sad chapter in the history
of this eminent man wherein is told the heart-breaking
story of his sacrifice—the giving up through
sheer love of his country of the only woman he had
ever loved, and we should prefer to pass it over in
silence. We allude to it here merely to show
that it was brought about by the exigencies of his
office, and that it was nothing short of heroic self-abnegation
which led this faithful lover of his adopted native
land to put the beautiful Josephine away from him.
He had builded an Empire for an opera bouffe people,
and he was resolved to maintain it at any cost.
In March, 1810, Bonaparte, having
in his anxiety to spare the feelings of the divorced
Josephine, wooed Marie-Louise by proxy in the person
of Marshal Berthier, met his new fiancee at Soissons.
“It is three months since we
lost our beloved Josephine,” he said to Fouche,
with tears in his voice, “but the wound is beginning
to heal. We fear we shall never love again, but
for the sake of the Empire we will now begin to take
notice once more. We will meet our bride-elect
at Soissons, and escort her to Paris ourself.”
This was done, and on the 2nd of April,
1810, Marie-Louise became Empress of France.
Josephine, meanwhile, had retired to Malmaison with
alimony of 3,000,000 francs.
Fouche was delighted; Paris was provided
with conversation enough for a year in any event,
and Bonaparte found it possible to relax a little
in his efforts to inspire interest. His main
anxiety in the ensuing year was as to his family affairs.
His brothers did not turn out so highly successful
as professional kings as he had hoped, and it became
necessary to depose Louis the King of Holland and place
him under arrest. Joseph, too, desired to resign
the Spanish throne, which he had found to be far from
comfortable, and there was much else to restore Bonaparte’s
early proneness to irritability; nor was his lot rendered
any more happy by Marie-Louise’s expressed determination
not to go to tea with Josephine at Malmaison on Sunday
nights, as the Emperor wished her to do.
“You may go if you please,”
said she, “but I shall not. Family reunions
are never agreeable, and the circumstances of this
are so peculiar that even if they had redeeming features
this one would be impossible.”
“We call that rebellion—don’t
you?” asked Bonaparte of Fouche.
“No,” said Fouche.
“She’s right, and it’s for your
good. If she and Josephine got chumming and
compared notes, I’m rather of the opinion that
there’d be another divorce.”
Fouche’s reply so enraged the
Emperor that he dismissed him from his post, and the
Empire began to fall.
“I leave you at your zenith,
Sire,” said Fouche. “You send me
to Rome as governor in the hope that I will get the
Roman fever and die. I know it well; but let
me tell you that the reaction is nearly due, and with
the loss of your stage manager the farce begins to
pall. Farewell. If you can hook yourself
on to your zenith and stay there, do so, but that
you will I don’t think.”
It was as Fouche said. Perplexities
now arose which bade fair to overwhelm the Emperor.
For a moment they cleared away when the infant son
of Marie-Louise and Bonaparte was born, but they broke
out with increasing embarrassment immediately after.
“What has your son-in-law named
his boy, Francis Joseph?” asked Alexander of
Russia.
“King of Rome,” returned the Austrian.
“What!” cried Alexander,
“and not after you—or me? The
coxcomb! I will make war upon him.”
This anecdote is here given to the
world for the first time. It is generally supposed
that the rupture of friendly relations between Alexander
and Bonaparte grew out of other causes, but the truth
is as indicated in this story. Had Fouche been
at hand, Bonaparte would never have made the mistake,
but it was made, and war was declared.
After a succession of hard-fought
battles the invading army of the Emperor entered Moscow,
but Napoleon’s spirit was broken.
“These Russian names are giving
us paresis!” he cried. “How I ever
got here I don’t know, and I find myself unprovided
with a return ticket. The names of the Russian
generals, to say nothing of those of their rivers
and cities, make my head ache, and have ruined my
teeth. I fear, Davoust, that I have had my day.
It was easy to call on the Pollylukes to surrender
in Africa; it never unduly taxed my powers of enunciation
to speak the honeyed names of Italy; the Austrian
tongue never bothered me; but when I try to inspire
my soldiers with remarks like, ‘On to Smolensko!’
or ’Down with Rostopchin!’ and ’Shall
we be discouraged because Tchigagoff, and Kutusoff,
and Carrymeoffski, of the Upperjnavyk Cgold Sdream
Gards, oppose us?’ I want to lie down and die.
What is the sense of these barbed-wire names, anyhow?
Why, when I was told that Barclay de Tolly had abandoned
Vitepsk, and was marching on Smolensko with a fair
chance of uniting with Tormagoff and Wittgenstein,
I was so mixed that I couldn’t tell whether
Vitepsk was a brigadier-general or a Russian summer-resort.
Nevertheless, we have arrived, and I think we can
pass a comfortable winter in Moscow. Is Moscow
a cold place, do you know?”
Marshal Ney looked out of the window.
“No, Your Majesty,” he
said; “I judge from appearances that it’s
the hottest place in creation, just now. Look!”
Bonaparte’s heart sank within
him. He looked and saw the city in flames.
“Well,” he cried, “why
don’t you do something? What kind of theatrical
soldiers are you? Ring up the fire department!
Ah, Fouche, Fouche, if you were only here now!
You could at least arrest the flames.”
It was too late. Nothing could
be done, and the conquering hero of nearly twenty
years now experienced the bitterness of defeat.
Rushing through the blazing town, he ordered a retreat,
and was soon sadly wending his way back to Paris.
“We are afraid,” he murmured,
“that that Moscow fire has cooked our imperial
goose.”
Then, finding the progress of the
army too slow, and anxious to hear the news of Paris,
Napoleon left his troops under the command of Ney
and pushed rapidly on, travelling incognito, not being
desirous of accepting such receptions and fetes in
his honor as the enemy had in store for him.
“I do not like to leave my army
in such sore straits,” he said, “but I
must. I am needed at the Tuileries. The
King of Rome has fallen in love with his nurse, and
I understand also that there is a conspiracy to steal
the throne and sell it. This must not be.
Reassure the army of my love. Tell them that
they are, as was the army of Egypt, my children, and
that they may play out in the snow a little while
longer, but must come in before they catch cold.”
With these words he was off.
Paris, as usual, received him with open arms.
Things had been dull during his absence, and his return
meant excitement. The total loss of the French
in this campaign was 450,000 men, nearly a thousand
cannon, and seventy-five eagles and standards.
“It’s a heavy loss,”
said the Emperor, “but it took a snow-storm to
do it. I’d rather fight bears than blizzards;
but the French must not be discouraged. Let
them join the army. The Russians have captured
three thousand and forty-eight officers whose places
must be filled. If that isn’t encouragement
to join the army I expect to raise next spring I don’t
know what is. As for the eagles—you
can get gold eagles in America for ten dollars apiece,
so why repine! On with the dance, let joy be
unconfined!”
It was too late, however. The
Empire had palled. Bonaparte could have started
a comic paper and still have failed to rouse Paris
from its lethargy, and Paris is the heart of France.
Storms gathered, war-clouds multiplied, the nations
of the earth united against him, the King of Rome
began cutting his teeth and destroyed the Emperor’s
rest. The foot-ball of fate that chance had kicked
so high came down to earth with a sickening thud,
and Mr. Bonaparte of Corsica yielded to the inevitable.
“Fouche,” he said, sending
for the exiled minister in his extremity, “when
I lost you I lost my leading man—the star
of my enterprise. During your absence the prompter’s
box has been empty, and I don’t know what to
do. The world is against me—even France.
I see but one thing left. Do you think I could
restore confidence by divorcing Marie-Louise and remarrying
Josephine? It strikes me that an annual shaking-up
of that nature would sort of liven matters up.
“No!” said Fouche, “it
won’t do. They’ve had one divorce.
You mustn’t repeat yourself now. You
forget the thing I’ve always tried to impress
upon you. Be New; not parvenu or ingenue, but
plain up and down New is what you need to be.
It would have been just the same if you’d thrashed
Russia. They’d have forced you to go on
and conquer China; then they’d have demanded
a war with Japan, after which they’d have dethroned
you if you didn’t annex the Sandwich Islands
to the United States, and then bag the whole thing
for France. This is what you get for wanting
to rule the French people. You can’t keep
quiet—you’ve got to have a move on
you constantly or they won’t have you.
Furthermore, you mustn’t make ’em laugh
except at the other man. You’ve had luck
in that respect, but there’s no telling how
long it will continue now that you have a son.
He’s beginning to say funny things, and they’re
generally at your expense, and one or two people hereabouts
have snickered at you already.”
“What do you mean?” said
Napoleon, with a frown. “What has the boy
said about me?”
“He told the Minister of Finance
the other night that now that you were the father
of a real Emperor’s grandson, you had a valid
claim to respectability, and he’d bite the head
off the first person who said you hadn’t,”
said Fouche.
“Well—that certainly
was standing up for his daddy,” said the Emperor,
fondly.
“Ye-e-es,” said Fouche,
“but it’s one of those double back-action
remarks that do more harm than good.”
“Well,” said Bonaparte,
desperately, “let the boy say what he pleases;
he’s my son, and he has that right. The
thing for us to decide is, what shall we do now?”
“There are three things left,” said Fouche.
“And they?” asked the Emperor.
“Write Trilby, abdicate, or
commit suicide. The first is beyond you.
You know enough about Paris, but your style is against
you. As for the second, abdication—if
you abdicate you may come back, and the trouble will
begin all over again. If you commit suicide,
you won’t have any more rows. The French
will be startled, and say that it’s a splendid
climax, and you will have the satisfaction of knowing
that some other man will try to please them with the
same result.”
“It shall be abdication,”
said the Emperor, with a sigh. “I don’t
mind suicide, but, hang it, Fouche, if I killed myself
I could not read what the papers said about it.
As for writing Trilby, it would do more for royalty
than for me. Therefore I will go to Fontainebleau
and abdicate. I will go into exile at Elba.
Exiles are most interesting people, and it may be
that I’ll have another chance.”
This course was taken, and on the
20th of April, 1814, Bonaparte abdicated. His
speech to his faithful guard was one of the most affecting
farewells in history, and had much to do with the encore
which Napoleon received less than a year after.
Escorted by four commissioners, one from each of
the great allied powers, Austria, Russia, England,
and Prussia, and attended by a few attached friends
and servants, Bonaparte set out from Paris. The
party occupied fourteen carriages, Bonaparte in the
first; and as they left the capital the ex-Emperor,
leaning out of the window, looked back at the train
of conveyances and sighed.
“What, Sire? You sigh?” cried Bertrand.
“Yes, Bertrand, yes. Not
for my departed glory, but because I am a living Frenchman,
and not a dead Irishman.”
“And why so, Sire?” asked Bertrand.
“Because, my friend, of the
carriages. There are fourteen in this funeral.
Think, Bertrand,” he moaned, in a tone rendered
doubly impressive by the fact that it reminded one
of Henry Irving in one of his most mannered moments.
“Think how I should have enjoyed this moment
had I been a dead Irishman!”