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Napoleon

Page 46

by Emil Ludwig


  In this atmosphere of intrigue, when he has to rub shoulders with princes who dare not fight either for him or against him, traitors are his best confidants.

  The Emperor therefore summons Fouche, to whom he says : " Your friends Bernadotte and Metternich are my worst enemies. Your Bernadotte can do us an immense amount of harm, for he is able to give my enemies the key to our policy, and he can explain to them the tactics of our armies. . . . His head has been turned because legitimate princes flatter him ! " There we have it once more, the word whose mystical power explains half of Napoleon's perpetual unrest. He can never

  Rulers by Divine Right

  refrain from a tremor when he speaks of the legitimate rulers, whom he regards with mingled contempt and envy. Whether he is mimicking them, or whether he is railing at them, he, who is an upstart, is always pondering this problem of birth.

  Instead of listening to the call of the nations, which soon rises clear above the babble of the princes, he can only look on with malicious delight at the manoeuvres of the chessplayers in the cabinets. He watches how England doles out subsidies to Prussia; how Alexander and Francis hold converse about the weakness of their ally, the king of Prussia; how Frederick William, in his dread of revolution, disbands the enthusiastic Landsturm, refuses to give high office to Scharnhorst the boldest and to Stein the ablest of his advisers, dismisses and banishes Schleiermacher for a speech voicing the popular sentiment. The Emperor sends Fouche on a secret mission (in plain words, as a spy) to the congress of Prague.

  In Spain, meanwhile, though Napoleon in the north has been strengthening his position by two victories, Joseph has been utterly crushed by Wellington at Vittoria. The king of Spain has run away. When the princes learn in Prague that the south of France now lies open to an English invasion, their inclination to defiance is promptly strengthened. The Emperor, who had left the best of his generals to fight for Joseph in Spain, is beside himself with wrath. " He alone is to blame ! " writes Napoleon to Paris. " The English reports show how utterly stupid was his command. Never was anything so absurd! Of course he is no soldier, but he is responsible. . . . Make the king understand that he is not to see any one till I come back. . . . Otherwise his house in Paris will become a centre of intrigue, and I shall have to put him under arrest, for my patience is at an end. I will no longer have my affairs imperilled out of consideration for idiots who are neither soldiers nor statesmen ! "

  His eldest brother is his closest intimate in the family,— and now the Emperor thinks that Joseph in a private house in Paris

  Dangerous Brothers

  is more to be dreaded even than as king in Madrid ! Will Napoleon at length learn his lesson, and, after this outburst, leave Joseph at peace ? Hardly! For even little Jerome has an army once more, and is again making a mess of things ; he gives one of the generals new marching orders, with the remark that he is acting on instructions from the Emperor. The latter hears of it too late. " I will not tell you in plain terms what I think of your conduct; enough that I will not tolerate it any longer 1 If you again make false representations of the kind, I shall publish an order of the day to the effect that in future no attention is to be paid to anything you say. ... By such behaviour you may disturb the march of my whole army. It is sheer cheating ! "

  Soon afterwards Junot, one of the oldest of his comrades, becomes affected with megalomania; he loses a battle in Illyria, and then, in a fit of frenzy, throws himself out of a window. Bourrienne, who had for a time been cashiered on account of peculation, and had then been appointed charge d'affaires in Hamburg, had, after all, to be dismissed once more for the old offence. " If he dares to interfere in public business, I will have him arrested, and make him disgorge his ill-gotten gains ! " Bernadotte, the most faithless, has actually landed in Pome-rania with his Swedes, has advised the allies to stand firm, and will deceive them as he has deceived others. To crown all, a sworn enemy of the Emperor is now to join the opposing combination. General Moreau, who had been exiled to America for his share in Cadoudal's conspiracy, is on his way to join the foes of France, and will share with Bernadotte the distinction of fighting against his native land.

  In this situation, on the horns of a dilemma, too cautious to turn his victories to account, and too powerful to accept the terms on which alone he would be able to make peace, the Emperor has recourse to his whilom methods. He invites Metternich to Dresden, and tries to win over the Austrian diplomat by suggestion. The interview is typically Napoleonic, lasting nine hours without a break. The Emperor gains

  A Memorable Conversation

  nothing by it, but posterity gains a great deal.

  Standing in the middle of the room, his sword buckled on and his hat under his arm, the Emperor receives the minister. After making formal enquiries about his father-in-law's health, he forthwith assumes the offensive: " So you, too, want war. Well, you shall have it. I have crushed the Prussians at Liitzen, and have beaten the Russians at Bautzen. You are waiting for your turn ? Be it so, we shall meet again in Vienna. Men are incorrigible! Three times I have replaced Emperor Francis on his throne; I have promised always to live at peace with him; I have married his daughter. Even at that time I thought: ' You are making a fool of yourself.' Still, I did it; and now I regret it! "

  We see that he is not disposed to be civil; that to his father-in-law's envoy, on whom he wishes to make a good impression, he is blunter than he had been to Francis on the day after Austerlitz. Metternich speaks of world peace, which will only be possible if the Emperor is willing to accept a reasonable curtailment of his dominions. It will be necessary to give back Warsaw to the tsar and Illyria to the emperor of Austria, to set the Hansa towns free, to enlarge Prussia.

  " What you are asking is that I shall dishonour myself. I will die rather than cede a hand's breadth of soil. Your born kings can accept defeat twenty times over, and still go back to their palaces. I am the child of fortune, and I cannot do this ! My power will not outlast the day on which I cease to be strong, on which I cease to be feared. . . . Through the cold of Russia I lost everything except honour. . . . Now I have a new army ; you shall see it; I will hold a review for your benefit! " Here we have once more the pride of the born soldier facing those who are born kings; here we have General Bonaparte. When the minister ventures to declare that this army of which Napoleon speaks would be glad if peace were made, the Emperor cuts

  How Many of You Are There?

  Metternich short with one of his amazing outbursts of frankness :

  " It is not the army that wants peace ! My generals want it! Really, I have no generals left. The cold of Moscow has demoralised them all. There, the bravest among them cried like children. A fortnight ago, I could still make peace; now, after two victories, I can no longer do so."

  " Europe and you, Sire, will never come to terms. When you have made peace, it has been nothing more than a truce. To you, success and failure are equally strong motives for war. This time the whole of Europe will fight against you."

  The Emperor laughs savagely :

  " Do you think to destroy me by a coalition ? How many of you are there, then, Messieurs les Allies ? Four, five, six, twenty ? The more, the merrier ! " He goes on to warn Metternich against counting on Germany, whose peoples he is holding together by the presence of his soldiers and whose princes are held together by their dread of Austria. He advises armed neutrality, so long as the negotiations are going on in Prague, whereas Metternich talks of armed mediation. These finesses of the old diplomacy are to mask the gulf between them. Then, for a whole hour, they dispute about the relative strength of the opposing armies, each claiming the possession of exact information about the other side.

  " I have detailed and accurate lists of your forces," says the Emperor. " I have had so many spies at work, that I know to a unit even how many drummers you have. But no one knows better than myself how much or how little value to attach to these secret service reports. My calculations are based on more exact data, upon mathematical infe
rences. In the last resort, no one has more than he can have." The Emperor shows the Austrian envoy the muster rolls of the Austrian army, which till yesterday had been part of the French alliance. Metternich can see for himself whether the figures are accurate.

  The Emperor then spends hours upon a description of the

  The Hat

  Russian campaign. When the minister remarks that the imperial troops are composed of striplings, and asks what Napoleon will do when these children, like those who have gone before them, have been swallowed up by the war, the Emperor is overcome with wrath. He turns pale, his features are distorted, and he shouts at Metternich:

  " You are not a soldier. You do not know what passes in a soldier's mind. I grew to manhood on the battle-field. Such a man as I does not care a snap of the fingers for the lives of a million men ! " He flings his hat into a corner of the room. Now, there is nothing assumed about his anger, and what he has just said is the revelation of an innermost truth. The man who turns pale at the sight of a dying horse, who cannot bear to see a human being pass away, remains and must remain impassive when, in his army lists, he adds up the figures, shifts the hundreds of thousands from column to column, and erases the myriads of slain. Is not war made with human lives, and does it not end with corpses ? What is the use of reproaching a craftsman for using the tools of his trade ? But as far as morals are concerned, the minister has the best of the argument, and he would have been glad if all France could have heard Napoleon's words.

  " France has no reason to complain," says the Emperor more calmly. " To spare France, I have sacrificed Germans and Poles. In Russia I lost three hundred thousand men, but only a tenth of them were Frenchmen! " Meanwhile, he has picked up his hat for himself, a thing he has certainly not done for the last ten years; he has acted sensibly, as if he had still been General Bonaparte. Then he plants himself in front of the Austrian and says :

  " It was exceedingly stupid of me to marry an archduchess. I was trying to weld the new with the old, to make Gothic prejudices square with the institutions of my own century. Now I can see the whole extent of my error ! The blunder may cost me my throne, but I will bury the world beneath its ruins ! "

  A Great Gambler

  This tragical admission is the climax of the interview, and the turning-point of the problem of war or peace. The rancour engendered in him by his own mistake spurs him on, regardless of prudential considerations, into the fight with a coalition whose forces outnumber his by three to one. Like a great gambler who realises that he has made an irretrievable blunder, he is impelled by the stubbornness characteristic of such natures as his to stake all upon a single throw. He will show that, blunder notwithstanding, he can still win.

  By the time he dismisses Metternich, he has fully recovered composure. His hand on the door-handle, he says : " We shall see one another again before you leave ? "

  " I am at Your Majesty's service. But I have no longer any hope of succeeding in my mission."

  The Emperor looks at him quizzically, and taps him gently on the shoulder : " Do you know what will happen ? You will not make war on me ! "

  After three days' negotiation, Metternich wishes to depart, but the Emperor is afraid of the final rupture. Napoleon summons the Austrian envoy several times, and then invites him to an early interview in the garden. The two men walk up and down.

  " Now then, you must not assume this injured air ! " In ten minutes they arrange for a prolongation of the truce, and talk about further conversations in Prague. Everything is left hanging in the wind; and in the memorandum he signs with Metternich, the Emperor recognises his father-in-law's position of armed neutrality, which can only be a stage on the way to war. Then he drives off to Mainz, that he may see once more the wife who is daughter of that same Austrian ruler. He has appointed her regent in Paris again, but has expressly forbidden his ministers to submit certain kinds of documents for her consideration. " There are details with which a young woman's mind must not be besmirched."

  Had the Habsburg archduchess been a staunch wife and an

  The Game of Chess

  affectionate daughter, she would have journeyed on to Vienna, and would have brought about a reconciliation which there was really nothing to prevent except the two men's wounded pride. She had a passably good understanding. Only a few weeks before, the Emperor, writing to Francis, had said : " She fills the post of prime minister to my great satisfaction." We cannot for a moment suppose that now, at the height of the crisis, he can have failed to let her know all the hazards of the hour, were it only to ensure that in the event of a breach her feelings would be on his side. But the little goose made no move. Her only concern was to send costly gifts which would make an impression on her relatives.

  In Prague, each party keeps the other in suspense; Fouche does his master harm by gossiping with all and sundry; Ber-nadotte cements his alliance with his new friends. When, at the last moment, it seems possible that the Emperor may give way, Alexander and Frederick William are so much alarmed at the prospect that they compel Metternich to make the terms more exacting, for they realise that so favourable an opportunity is not likely to recur. The Emperor now angrily draws back, and on the day after the expiry of the truce he receives his father-in-law's declaration of war. No doubt, in the interval, he has secured reinforcements; but he can no longer trust the Confederation of the Rhine, and has to keep watch upon his German auxiliaries. He stands to arms in Saxony and Silesia, faced by Schwarzenberg in command of three armies, two of them, respectively led by Bliicher and Bernadotte, holding Silesia and the north. With Schwarzenberg is Moreau, who has just arrived, and who, on his last visit to Germany, had been the conqueror of that country.

  Thus paradoxical is the marshalling of forces in the game of chess. Under the Emperor of the French, are fighting three German kings against a German general, who a little while back had been the Emperor's subordinate in the war against Russia. Against Napoleon, are fighting two French generals. One of

  Hesitations

  them is leading Prussian troops against the man who had for years pushed him to the front; nor is this general really a royalist, for he, too, is a son of the revolution. Bliicher is the only true-hearted foe, for Bliicher, whom Napoleon defeated seven years earlier, has never fought on the Emperor's side, and has never espoused his cause. The one element in Napoleon's favour is that three monarchs have their fingers in Schwarzenberg's pie, three commanders who know as little about the trade of war as Brother Joseph did in Spain.

  At the end of August, the Emperor opens the second Saxon campaign with a great victory near Dresden. But on the third day, when he might have followed up the allies and scattered them, he is seized by a violent attack of gastric spasm. For a whole hour he fancies he has been poisoned ; his will is paralysed, and he withdraws instead of pursuing. Thereby he loses an army corps, and thus (according to the report of Daru, his daily companion) " causes the disaster of 1813." In this first battle against the hated Bonaparte, Moreau falls. Is it an omen ? When the Emperor hears the news, the rivalry of his youth flames up anew, and from his very soul he cries : " Moreau is dead ! My star ! "

  His other army has been defeated by Bliicher on the Katz-bach. Once more, considerations of statesmanship outweigh those of generalship. How can I divide my adversaries ? It will be better to spare Bohemia for the sake of Austria, for the defeat has aroused alarm there. He will make a surprise march on Berlin, and will thus lure the Prussians out of Silesia.

  But what the tsar had said years ago is still true. . . . Miracles only happen when the Emperor is present, and he cannot be everywhere. He is thus hampered in his great enterprise. Lack of fighting spirit, difficulties of food-supply, and the frequency of desertion, are continually making it necessary for him to visit his flanking armies : so that in popular parlance, in consequence of his rushings to and fro, he is nicknamed the " Bautzen

  " My Game Is Going Awry "

  Messenger." His armies suffer more and more from lack of food. The
y are so thickly set upon the ground that they have long since eaten the country bare.

  Nevertheless, he has not nearly enough soldiers. Since the 1814 levies are already with the colours, he orders the Senate to call up also those of 1815, and even the men whose liability to service has nearly expired on account of advancing years—the very peasants whom, when setting forth on this campaign in a mood of self-pity, he had envied for their fortunate position. But when will the reinforcements arrive ? Who will train them, and how long will it take ? Vainly now, at the end of September, he sends an envoy to his father-in-law, to talk of peace ; he is prepared to make great sacrifices, "if only you will listen." But Francis remains firm, and is at length able to detach an important member of the Confederation of the Rhine : the king of Bavaria falls away. Thereupon the anxious chessplayer, round whom the clouds are gathering, says to his old comrade something which he has never before been willing to admit:

  " Marmont, my game is going awry."

  With this admission, the Emperor's genius spreads its wings and flies away.

  XI

  On Diiben Heath is a Saxon fortress, Diiben Castle. There, one morning, the Emperor is at work, planning the march on Berlin, the defeat of Bernadotte and Bliicher, smashing blows which will finish off the enemy.

  Then a number of generals are announced. He comes out of his study to meet them, knowing what they want, for his intimates have kept him informed of the growing discontent among the leaders, who wish to winter quietly on the Rhine. Marshal Ney has recently reported : "I am no longer master of my army." One of the visitors begins to speak hesitatingly; a

 

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