.EEy OLI rTION^Ia Y PT.TT^rA R "'M / CONTATJTIN BIOGRAPHICAL, HISTORICAL SECRET MEMOIRS OF THE • BTJOnXpARTE FAxilLY. — Miserum est alitma incvmbere famcc, Nc t'ollapsa ruant subductis tccta columnis. lis poor relying on another's fame : For t^e the j^lars but away, a^d all The superstructure must in ruins' fall. Stepnei^, ■■ iMai Mi I, FIRST AMERICAN EDITION, WITH ADDITIONS, ORlf^lNAL AND SELECTED. BALTIMORE: ^''^' ':^M^^'' PillNTED FOR G.KEATINGE AND L. FRAILEY. SEPTEMBER 1806. I "i-m^iML COPY-RIGHT SECURED ACCORDING TO LAV, ■iLlt \_ / /if 4 TO THE READER. .7 In the foUoimng pages you tmll perceive the M system of monarchical projligacy carried to a greater extent than any %ve read of in history. Under the specious garb of Republicanism^ Buonaparte , like a th\ef hi the night, has stolen by intrigue the liberties of a nation, ivhich had ex^ tricated itself from its fetters, and astonished Eu^ rope by a Revolution noble in itsfrst appearance y but permitted all the glory of the act to vanish, and nexv chains forged for their liberties, which nothing short of a miracle can free them from. That the French Revolution, at its commence- menl, icceivcd the approbat on of the good and truly great is no way extraordinary ; that the American people should be of the first to admire that great event is no i&ay wonderful ; the princi^ pies of gratitude and honour vibrated in unison for the success of their former allies and for the prin^ ciples which they advocated. The counter Revolution in France by the in^ trigues of Buonaparte and his acomplices, is an axvful lesson for the people of this country ; xvhen they can see a nation of 30 millions of free citizens alive to the most feeble exertion of arbitrary pow- er, and ready to a man to check any measure that could have a tendency to restore monarchy, yet zve find in a very little time, that same people ca- "Vifr ^'-^-mivis ■ 'y-^m TO THE READER. jokd info a surrender of their rights andjinally become the slaves of a base hereditary empire. It is- in vain zee look in history for an individual to match the ambition of Buonaparte, who treats kings as his subjects; like Gregory VII. moimt^ ing on horse-back ivith his feet on the neck of an Emperor, ivhile two monarchs held the stirrups . In this publication, it is presumed that the English writer has brought to vieio those traits of character, of the Buonaparte family, which are reprehensible, and coloured to the brightest shade his fancy and zeal for his country dictated. But in the display of the principles which actuated him, that he should silver tvanton attacks on some of our xvorthy citizens, is by no means justifiable ; the exposure of the fallacy of those remarks has been attended to in this edition. It is the intention of the publisher of this work to add to it another volume of the same size, and extracted from the same works, which will contain the characters of those who distin-- guished themselves by placing Buonaparte on the throne, and the exaltation of that family to su- preme power, Talleyrand, Barras, Fouche, Moreau, Piche- gru, Sfc, xcill display a complete developement of the establishment of an empire, which seems in- deed as a burlusque on monarchy^ and may in the end overturn every throne in Europe. LONDON REVIEWERS' CHARACTER OF THE REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH LITERARY JOURNAL. " The author, "whom we understand to be an old officer, gives in these volumes, a sketch of the most remarkable passages in the Jives of the relatives of Buonaparte. He had an opportuni- ty of being personally acquainted with many of the characters whom he describes, whose lives, with a few exceptions, exhi- bits only a detail of crimes, at which human nature revolts. The style is simple and perspicuous, and the work is deserving of public patronage. EUROPEAN MAGAZINE. " The contents of these volumes are interesting in a remark- able degree ; as detailing, either from personal knowledge, or from accredited works of other writerc, the lives, conduct and fcrimes, of every person distinguished as a relative of the Cor- sican upstart, who has hitherto with impunity oppressed and plundered the continent of Europe ; and as exhibiting at the same time, a clear display of the extraordinary kind of police by which Paris is now regulated. Such a mass of moral turpi- tude as is here displayed, yet iu a form that leaves us little room to suspect its authenticity, makes us blush for our species. The public crimes of the Buonaparte family, are not more odious than the vices of their private lives are flagitious. We believe that no reader who begins to peruse this collection of republi- can biography, will feel inclined to relinquish it till he has gone through its pages. The subject is universally interesting and the incidents are so well narrated, as to justify us in giving the book our unqualified recommendation. ANTI-JACOBIN REVIFAV. " It were much to be wished that these volumes could find their way into every house, and into every cottage in the unit- ed kingdoms : the perusal of them would scarcely fail to excifc abhorrence of the wretches who now threaten to convert oyr country into the same scene of desolation, blood and vice, as they have converted all other countries into, in which their in- trigues, or their arms hare secured them a footing," VI CHARACTER OF THE WORK. BRITISH CRITIC. " It gives us much satisfaction to see this work so soon appear in a second, third and fourth edition, and not a little pleasure to think that our just commendation may in some degree have promoted its successful circulation. Of the men who now make so distinguished an appearance upon the theatre of France, who are exercising in their several spheres the crudest tyranny, rolling in luxury and wealth, the greater part arose from the meanest situations, and have only attained the highest by a se- ries of the most abominable crimes. The principal facts al- ledged of tkem are alike recent and notorious. Besides this the character of the writer, with which we have been made ac- quainted, stamps on the publication the sanction of unqestion- BLE AUTHENTICITY. Many of the relations, ipse misserrimus vidz. His friends and relations, and property, have been the victims of their cruelty. He himself has languished in their dun- geons, and there it was he collected materials for this work, and probably for others, from which we doubt not, he will obtain an equal degree of reputation.** IMPERIAL REVIEW. " The Revolutionary Plutarch is the production of a * Lite- rary recruit', though an officer of ancient date ; and it is not choice that has made him exchange the sword for the pen, and exhibit to public animadversion from his stud)^ those regicides and rebels, whom he should have preferred to have combatted in the field, rather than to be a biographer of persons, many of whom he has known in the ranks, commanded, or seen confound- ed in a nameless croud, and in a well deserved obscurity. From 4he style of this specimen, the reader will judge of the spirit in which the biography is written ; but he should not hastily pro- nounce the author corrupt or partial, because he expresses in strong and unreserved terms, the feeling of his mind on the events he records — Of Napoleonc Buonaparte, perhaps ; no co- temporary, nor any futurf* historian, will write in such terms as to give general satisfaction. The author of the Revolutionary Plutarch, presents him in the least favourable color ; the ob- scurity of his early life, the meanness of his origin, his personal vices, and the accumulated infamy of his family, are unsparingly portrayed. " In the life of Napoleonc, the author has rendered a com- mendable service to those who are deluded by speculations on the cheapness of a republican government. itACTER OF THE WORK. Yii " On the whole, and subject to the cautions that we have gi- ven, we have no hesitation in recommending these volumes to the attention of the public." • From the above it will appear, that the memoirs of the Buo- naparte family, selected from a work which is acknowledged by all the reviewers, as worthy of perusal, has justly excited the curiosity of the citizens of these states, as well as those who dare peruse it, in his dominions. It would be satisfactory to the publisher, if in this work the author had not introduced se- veral American citizens, whose conduct and character certainly cannot be exajted or admired, by ranking with such revolution- ists, whose progress has been jnarked by the downfall of every virtuous principle, and during the course of these ' Eventful years, no instance occurs of the triumph or reward of virtue — vice defeats vice — faction surmounts faction — public spirit and patriotism are the daily themes of all leaders — but the facts present only a deformed and hideous prodigy^, the shame of the age and a blot on the page of history. CONTENTS. Page, Preface, 3 London Reviewers' Character of the Work, 5 CARLO BUONAPARTE, the Father of the EmpcroT, g XETiTiA BUONAPARTE, the Mother of the Emperor^ 19 CARDINAL FESCH, the Emperor's Uncle, 19 JOSEPH BUONAPARTE, the Empcror^s cMest Brother, 23 jfAFOLEONE BUONAPARTE, the Emperor^ 28 JOSEPHINE BUONAPARTE, the Emprcss, 97 EUGENius DE BEAUH'ARNOis, her Son , 152 FANNY DE BEAUHARNOis, her Daughter, 153 xuciEN BUONAPARTE, ^/le Empcrofs Second Brother, 155 LOUIS BUONAPARTE, the Emperor's Third Brother^ 174 JEROME BUONAPARTE, the EmperoTs Fourth Brother, l84 Vindication of JOSHUA barney, 191 HER IMPERIAL HIGHNESS, PriuCeSS JOSEPH BUONA- PARTE, 201 MADAME LUCIEN BUONAPARTE, 205 PRINCESS LOUIS BUONAPARTE, 214 Remarks on the Conduct of the Patterson Family, rela- tive to the marriage of jerome buonaparte. 223 MADAME JER03IE BUONAPARTE, ibid. MADAME BACCHioci, the Empcror's eldest Sister, 238 PRINCESS SANTA CRUCE, the Emperor^s second Sister, 244 PRINCESS BORGHESE, ci-devant Madame Le Clerc, the Emperor's youngest Sister, 231 GENERAL MURAT, the Empcr'ors Brother-in-law, 261 MADAME MURAT, the EiuperoTS third Sister, . 292 THE REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH, OR MEMOIRS OF THE '/ BUONAPARTE FAMILT. THE families cf legitimate sovereigns are known ; and their ancestors are esteemed^ extolled^ censured^ or calumni' ated^ according to their irierits^ talents^ and vices; or as envy is excited^ or hatred provoked. Of the lineage of usiu-pers^ generally-t little account is given^ and that little is doubtful; because^ -while their adherents fatter them, their opposers revile them; and -while some assert that they descend from an ancestry as illustrious as eminent^ others pretend to prove their forefathers to have been as ?nean as they were criminal, — • Carlo Buonaparte, the father of him who has usurped the throne of France, and dragged his race and relatives from obscurity, was a gentleman descended from a Tuscan family, but settled two hundred years in Corsica ; although they are forced to acknowledge that, during the civil trou- bles, he had served as a common soldier under General Pao- li ; and that it was the beauty of his wife, and her connexion with Mr. De Marboeuf, commander for the King of France in Corsica, which made him leave the field for the forum, by procuring him a place as the King's attorney. Carlo Buonaparte, however, was a man of so little ability, that it required all Mr. De Marboeuf 's partiality for Madame Buonaparte to keep him in a situation where he could not transact even the little that was necessarily required of him. Ue was dull and mischievous, but not jealous ; his wife B 10 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. brought him eight children, whom the ami de la mahon^ Mr; D.i ?*iarbc£uf, assisted to bring up, and to provide fnr : and if they owed their existence to a Corsican, their education was paid for by a Frenchman. Possessing no more indus- try than capacity, he lived and died poor, and bequeathed his offspring and their mother to the kind care of her protec- tor and supporter. So far, and no farther, go the ingenious admirers or adu- lators of the First Consul ; but who were his grandfather or great-grand-father, they pass over in silence. On the other hand, the enemies more to usurpation than to the usurper, enter into several distinct particulars ; which, although pub- lished in France, have never been contradicted, or proved not to be genuine, except by sending the supposed author to the Temple, and afterwards, without a trials to Cayenne : there was printed in 1800 a pamphlet, which they called '* The Genealogy of Brutiis^ Aly, Napoleone Buonaparte^ the Corsican Successor to the French Bourbons ;" of which the following is an extract : '* After the disgrace of Theodore, King of Corsica, the Republic of Genoa published an oficial paper, to make him and his adherents more ridiculous and despised, entitled, * A List of all persons ennobled by the Adventurer calling himself King Theodore of Corsica.* This list was printed by the widow Rossi, at Genoa, in 1744 ; and contains, pages 6 and 7, some curious remarks upon, and concerning the usurper's family, more to be depended on, than those which f^ar, interest, meanness, and adulation have fabricated since he seated himself upon the throne of the Bourbons. *' When, on the 3d of May, 1736, Porto- Vecchio was at- tacked, a butcher from Ajaccio, called Joseph© Buona^ brought a seasonable assistance with a band of vagabonds amd robbers ; who, during the civil troubles, had chosen him for their leader ; in return. King Theodore the next day created him a nobleman, and permitted him, as a memento of his services, to add to his name of Buona, the final termi- nation, parte. His wife's name was Histria, daughter of a journeyman tanner at Bastia. Carlo Buona, the father of Josepho Baona, kept a wine-house for sailors ; but being ac- cused and convicted for murder and robbery, he died a gal- ley-slave at Genoa in 1724 ; his wife as an accomplice, and who, on account of her extremely vicious character, was THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 11 called La Rirba, died at Genoa in 1730, in the house of cor- rection These were the grand and great-grand parents of his Consular Majesty : who his father was, is well known ; as also, that he by turns served and betrayed his country du- ring the civil wars. " After France had conquered Corsica, he was a spy to the French governors, and his wife their mistress. From this pure and virtuous source descends Brutus, Aly, Napo- leone Buonaparte, the successor of the Bourbons, born in a country whose inhabitants were, in the time of the Romans, held ill such detestation for their infamous and treacherous disposition, that they would' not have them evc^n for slaves ; and of whoni Seneca, who resided long among them, has said, as if he had imbibed the prophetic spirit, Prima lex, illis ulcisci ; altera^ vivere rapto ; Tertin^ mentire ; quarta^ negare Deos, SENECA DE CORCICIS. 12 LETITIA RANIOLINI, MOTHER OF BUONAPAnXE. IT is no coynmoii fortune, that has changed a mistress of one of the governors of the King of France into a mo- ther of an Emperor of the French ; and transformed an obscure^ poor^ and guilty Corsican adult r ess into a conspi- cuous and wealthy French Imperial Princess. Such a sur- prising occurrenccy is another evidence of the immoralitij of our age^ of the perversity and degradation of Republican Frenchmen^ and of the selfish and dangerous policy of ma- ny continental cabinets. What hereditary rank can here- after pretend to respect; xuhat virtue hope for rewards ; Tvhat honor e?cpect distinction; what talents advancement; and what eminence consideration or admiration P In a time Tphen tlie highest authority is seized^ saluted and revered 171 the greatest of criminals^ who with audacity and impu- ?iity elevates native meanness : bestows titles on corruption and vileness. and surrounds an imperial throne rvith the dregs of society ; what encouragement has honesty^ what support^ what consolation has loyalty^ and zvhat dread has rebellion and infamy ? There is no goal in the universe that coidd not furnish a purer Emperor than Napoleone the Firsts and no house of correction^ no brothel can be disco- vered in the worlds from which might not be dragged for- rvards a more innocent Empress than fosephine^ and a more innocent and worthier Imperial Prmcess than Letitia Buonaparte^ and the other Imperial Princesses of the same vile race. Letitia Raniolini, the motlier of the Buonapartes, is by some said to be the daughter of an attorney, by others, of a blacksmith. At the age of fifteen, she made a faux pas with a friar, and at sixteen married the soldier Carlo Buonaparte, Her edueatioh had been so totally neglected , that when she \\ras picked up by Mr. De Marboeuf, she could neither read nor write ; and her own brother, a poor curate, was engaged and paid by him for instructing her ; "ivhile he himself taught her to perform the honours of his ' THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 13 liouse. Possessing a natu'-al, though uncultivated genius, she soon repaid, by her improvement and attentions, the expences and anxiety of her friepd. In her younger years she was pretty, rather than handsome ; her conversation was trivial, but rendered pleasing and agreeable by her man- ner of expressing herself. She was accused of blending the Italian cunning with the Corsican duplicity, and prudery with wantonness ; and, to cover all fashionable vices with religious hypocrisy, she went regularly to church, and reli- gion always appeared to occupy a mind, vacant, if not wicked. She confessed once in the week, got her absolu- tion, sinned, and confessed again. She wore, and yet wears, upon her person, the relics of some saint ; she was, and is 5^et, strict in her external devotions, fast-days, and inflictions on herself of severe penances and mortifications^ After the death of her benefactor, and by the Revolution, which deprived her of a pension settled on her by him, she was reduced to the greatest indigence, tier eldest daugh- ter haying married Bacchiochi, a Corsican, established as a cotton-manufacturer at Basle, she received from him an an- nuity of six hundrpd livres (25/. Fterling) ; upon which, and some millinery work of her other daughters, she sub- sisted, until Napoleone obtained Irom the hands of Barras^ the widow of the guillqtined General Beauharnois. Before Napojeone went to Egypt, in 1798, he deposited a capital, of which the interest, twelve thousand livres (of 500/. sterl.) was left at her disp(?kal, to provide for herself, her youngest son, and two daughters, yet unmarried. Ouring the absence of Napoleone, she was regarded with such an air of caution, suspicion, and superiority by his wife, that, notwithstanding all her Christianity, she cai^ hardly forget or forgive it. She was despised as a person without birth ^nd education, and shunned or insulted be- cause she was believed to watch the conduct of her daughter- in-law, which could not always stand the scrutiny. ' When Napoleone had usurped the supreme power, she obtained apartments in the castle of the Thuilleries ; but though she lives under the same roof with Madame Napoleone ; she neither likes her, nor has she spared any pains to set her son against his wife. With the charitable disposition of a Corsican bigot, she has more than once intrigued to persuade the Consul to a seperatjon^ if not to a divorce ; but his po.- 14 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. licy and fear have gotten the better both of his own desire, and the' intrigues and hatred of his mother. Since her daughter's marriage with Louis Buonaparte, Madame Napoleone has gained much influence over her husband, and in proportion lessened that of his mother, whom the Arch-bishop of Paris and her own confessor, both in the interest of Madame Napoleone, have advised to seek a reconciliation, and forget what has passed, or is supposed to have passed, injurious or offensive to her ; and their advice has so far been followed, that these two ladies live in {>eace, though not in friendship or familiarity. When the religious concordat had been agreed to and ra- tified in France, the Pope-s nuncio, the Cardinal Legate Caprara, presented her from his Holiness with some very- precious relics ; amongst others, a finger of St. Xavier, having the quality to keep off evil and haunting spirits, be- cause though her consular son neither believes in a God, nor in his angels and saints, she dreads ghosts, goblins, and the devil ; and such is her superstitious and ridiculous ter- ror, that she never dares to remain alone in a room, or af- ter dark to go out without somebody to accompany her. — She passes several hours every day in consulting soisdisant witches, in whom she places great confidence, and in hav- ing her fortune told by cards or in coffee-cups. It is reported in the Corsican family, that when Madame Buonaparte was pregnant with Napoleone, " an Algerine woman, slave to a Sardinian lady, travelling in Corsica, predicted that the child in her womb should live to create kings aiyl dictate to emperors ; but that he should perish at an early age by the hands of a young woman, with a large lip, small nose, fair hair, and black eyes." She has such an implicit faith in this prediction, that two of her relations, whom she sent for from Corsica, were ordered back to that island, under the idea that they bore some resemblance to such a person. It is even said that Napoleone himself is not entirely free from scruples, and therefore approves his mother's failings, and weak and laughable precautions. A priest lately made his fortune by staggering her belief in this j)rophecy, and assurmg her, as a christian astrologer^ that, arcording to the Apocalypse, " She is to live to the age of ninety ; after her death be proclaimed a saint, and that her ^.on Napoleone is to be present at her canonization." As THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 15 she is onlj^ sixty-two years old, and this priest is respected as a very virtuous and devout man, this has weakened or taken away a part of her apprehension of Napoleone dying young. Many of her intimates think that this priest was engaged by Somebody in the Buonaparte family to diminish her own and her son's alarms. Madame Buonaparte's apartments, besides relics, are crowded with phials, with drops to prolong life, and to res- tore youth and vigour j with boxes, contauiing sympathetic powders for the continuation of her son's success in the world, and his affection for her, and with counter-poisons to preserve his life from the attempts of his enemies. At certain periods of the year she does not suffer any body besides herself to prepare and dress the Consul's victuals ; and when he is not travelling, she tastes every plate con- taining nourishment destined for him, because a necroman- cer has calculated, that during some months of every year Napoleone is exposed to die by poison ; but that at all times her care and inspection over his food is useful, and a preser- vative of his existence, health, and safety. Madame Buonaparte has rather been a weak than a good mother to her children, oftener over looking their faults than correcting their errors, or reprobating their offences. — She has taught them to pray to God, but not to let their conduct bespeak their reverence of religion, and their faith in a Divinity. All her sons are of vicious and immoral principles, and all her daughters have been early relaxed, corrupted, and licentious. Lucien and Madame Lc C lerc were her favourite children fror/fi their youth : but Napoleone was his own master, and her's, even when a boy ; and she rather dreads than loves him, rather fears any accident hap- pening to him on account of its consequence to the v/hole family, than with regard to him as her son ; and it is for the life of the First Consul, not for the life of Napoleone Buonaparte, that she is so very anxious, that she ransack? scriptures, consults conjurors, believes in witchcraft, prays to God, and excommunicates the devil. When Napoleone had determined to place an Imperial diadem on his guilty head, though he was certain of the sub- mission of his slavish senators, legislators, and tribunes, he feared some explosion, or at least some resistance, from Moreau, Le Coiube, and other discontented generals, and le REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. therefore; under different pretences, sent his nearest and dearest relatives either abroad, or into the provinces on the frontiers, to wait quietly there for the issue. To his brother Joseph he gave a commission in the army on the coast, and made him president of the Electoral College at Brussels ; Lucien had already retired to Italy in disgrace, on account of his marriage virith an honest woman who was no princess j and Louis was made president of the Electoral College at Turin j Jerome was wandering for pleasure on the other side of the Atlantic ; and his sisters travelling for their health on the othc r side of the Alps. The cause of these measures of safety was easily perceived and penetrated mto, even by the Corsican's French subjects ; he could therefore, without add- ing deception to suspicion and fear, send his dear mother to Italy. But thinking, no doubt, that those who in such a cowardly manner had renounced their liberty, could not have much sense left, and that they would easily be induced to adopt as realities even the greatest absurdities and improba- bilities, he exiled his mother to Rome ; and his pensioners and spies disseminated, that this dutiful act of her affection- ate son, was a punishment for her disobedience in not oppos- ing with vigour her other son, Lucien Buonaparte's impro- per marriage. It also told his favourites and courtiers to be upon their guard, not to incur the displeasure of a despot whose severity did not spare even the most beloved by him. During her journey to and in itaiy, Madame Letitia was attended by a numerous suite in six carriages, and an escort of twenty-five guidtis. Her manner of travelling from Paris in 1804, forms a curious contiast to her manner of travelling to that capital in 1794; at that period she had taken only three places for herself and five of her children in the waggon from Foulon to Paris, so that when three of her party were riding, the other three were walking ; and notwithstanding this economy, when arrived at her destination, the clerk at the waggon-office detained her and her cmldren's bundle of clothes, sue being unable to pay thirty livres, 1/. 5s, due for her journey. In 1304 siie was addressed and complimented every where, lodged in chateaus or palaces, and feasted by governors, generals and prefects. In 17.4, she was suspect- ed, from her color, of being a wandering gvpsey, stopped and insulted in every village, often lodged in prisons, or half starving with her children in the receptacles for the lowest THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 17 vagabonds. The cannons of the Fort St. Angelo announced^ in 1804, her arrival at Rome , where, after being hailed by cardinals, she fraternized with a Pope, dined with princes, and slept in a princely hotel fitted up for her reception. Differ- ent indeed was her modest entry at Paris in 1794: after be- ing detained and stript at the waggon-office, she was for hours repulsed, and refused shelter in garrets or in cellars, and would probably have paesed the night in the street, had not the pretty eyes of her daughters inspired Charitable senti- ments in the bosom of a national officer on duty in a guard- house near the Palais Royal, where he, upon certain condi- tions, allowed them to share a part of his supper, and of the straw upon which he reposed. After violence, treachery, and cruelty had delivered into Buonaparte's hands the Duke of Enghien, Pichegru, Geor- ges, and Moreau, and the tliree former had been murdered, and the latter disgraced, terror silenced discontent, despo- tism banished opposition, and tyranny crushed patriotism ; and no person in France dared murmur, much less complain, at the death-blow given to the rights of subjects, as well as to the prerogatives of legitimate soveieigns, by the Corsican Napoleone the First proclaiming himself Emperor of the French. To organize this abominable usurpation, and to effect both a religious and political reyolution, the succours of the Pope were nece&sary. To delude this pontiff, whose mental and corporeal weakness are not inferior to his spiri- tual power, could not be a very difficult task, since all his car- dinals and counsellors were bribed, and all his favorites and relatives purchased. The newly created Imperial Highness Letitia was^ however, charged by her son to employ her pious zeal in this affair. Devout from idleness and habit, more than from sincerity and conviction, being above the age of temptation ; chari- table because she had more money than she wanted, and not because she had herself been poor i and diffident, not from modesty, but from knowing her own incapacity and origm ; her conduct at Rome, from not being searched through, had not only been considered as prudent, but edifying, and had often obtained the applause of Pius VII. She never missed a religioujs ceremony, matins, masses, vespers or processions ; and her brother, Cardinal Fesch, took care that her i)iety should not pass unnoticed. She was never refused any pri- C i8 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. vate audiences of the Pope when she demanded them, orA h6 listened to her conversation not only without suspicion, but with pleasure. He had presented her with relicks of the most famous Saints of Rome ; she received his blessing when with him, and his prayers accompanied her when absent. He had for her sake condescended to consecrate with his own hands not only a double velvet helmet she had made for Napoleone, but some part of her own and of all her other children's wearing apparel. His Holiness had himself, dur° ing her first six weeks residence in his capital, given her four general absolutions of all her sins ; and in a secret bull, writ- ten with the miraculous blood of martyrs, absolved Napo- leone as a renegade from all his sins of apostacy, as a rebel from his sin of perjury, and as an assassin from the sins of all his murdering and poisoning deeds. To augment with his mother the number of his emissaries round the Pope, was therefore not a bad speculation of the revolutionary Emperor. And indeed, if report be true, af- ter his Holiness had repulsed the unanimous council of the Sacred College, he could not feel strength enough to resist the devout supplication of Madame Letitia, who alone, by her influence, occasioned the Pope's sacrilegious journey to Paris, where' she, at her return, on her first interview with Napoleone, in reward for the service she had rendered him, was kicked out of the room, because she dared to implore his forgiveness and ask for his reconciliation with his brothers Lucien and Jerome. The allowance of this revolutionary Princess amounts now to six millions of livres a year (250,000/.) Her jewels and diamonds are valued at four millions of livres (173,000/.) She is lodged gratis in the Imperial palaces, and one hundred and fifty persons, including four confessors, are attached to her household. 19 CARDINAL FESCH. UNCLE OF BUONAPARTE. This Sketch of " his eminence," Cardinal Fesch, the Unck of his Imperial ow^ Royal Majesty, ^^e Emperor of the French, is extracted from the ^'Secret History of the Court and Cabinet of St, Cloud.** Joseph, Cardinal Fesch, was born at Ajaccjo, in Cor- sica, on the 8th of March, 1753, and was in infancy re- ceived as a singing boy, Cenfan* de chaeurj in a convent of his native^place. In 1792, whilst he was on a visit to some of his relations, in the island of Sardinia, being on a fishing party, some distance from shore, he was, with his compa- nions, captured by an Algerine felucca, and carried a cap- tive to Algiers. Here he turned Mussulman, and until 1790 was a zealous believer in, and professor of, the Alco- ran. In that year he found an opportunity to escape from Algiers, and to return to Ajaccio, when he abjured his rene- gacy, exchanged the Alcoran for the Bible, and in 1791 was made a constitutional curate, that is to say, a revolutionary Christian priest. In 1793, when even those were proscribed, he renounced the sacristy of his church for the bar of a ta- vern, where, during 1794 and 1795, he gained a capital by the number and liberality of his English customers. After the victories of his nephew Napoleon in Italy, during the following year, he was advised to re-assume the clerical ha-r bit ; and after Napoleon's proclamation of first consul, he was made archbishop of Lyons. In 1802 Pius VII, deco- rated him with the Roman purple, and is now a pillar of the Roman faith, in a fair way of seizing the Roman tiara. If letters from Rome can be depended upon. Cardinal Fesch, in the name of the emperor of the French, informed his holi- ness the pope, that he must either retire to a convent, or travel to France, either to abdicate his own sovereignt\', or inaugurate Napoleon the first, a sovereign of France. With- out the decision of the sacred college, effected in the man- ner already stated, the majority of the faithful believe that tiais pontiff would have preferred obscurity to disgrace. 2a REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. While Joseph Fesch was a master of a tavern, he mar- ried the daughter of a tinker, by whom he had three child- ren. This marriage, accordinj^ to the republican regula- tions had only been celebrited bv the muTiicipality at Ajac- cio. Fesch, therefore, u')on again entering the bosom of the church, left his maiicinal wife and children to shift lor themselves, consideri'^g himself, still, according to the ca« norical laws, a barheU r. But Madame Fesch, hearing in IPOI, of her cidevant husband's promotion to the archbishop- ri-'! of Lvons, wrote to him f r some succours, being with her children reduced to great miserv. Madame Letitia Bo- naparte answered her letter, inclosing a draft of six hundred livres, (25l.) informing her that the same sum would be paid for every six months, as long as she continued to reside at Corsica j but that it would cease the instant she left that island. Either thi iking herself not sufficiently paid for her discretion, or enticed by some enemy of the Buonaparte fa- mily, she arrived secretly at Lyons in October last year, where she remained unknown until the arrival of the Pope. On the first da} his holiness gnve there his public benedic« tion, she found means to pierce the crowd, and to approach his person, when cardinal Fesch was by his side. Profiting hy a moment's silence, she called out loudly, throwii^g her- self at his feet—*"'' Holy father ! I am the lawful wife of car- dinal Fesch, and thes€ are our children ; he cannot, he dare not, deny this truth. Had he behaved liberally to me, I should not have disturbed him in his present grandeur ; \ supplicate you, Holy Father, not to restore me my husband, but to force him to provide for his wife and children accord- ing to his present circumstances— i^/?ia — aUoe a matta^ san- tlsimo padre ! — She is mad — she is mad — Holy father, said the cardinal ; and the good pontiff ordered her to be takea care of to prevent her from doing herself or her children any mischief. She was, indeed, taken care of, becau e nobody ^ver since heard what has become either of her or her child- ren ; and as they have not returned to Corsica, probably some snug retreat has been allotted them in France. I'he purple was never disgraced by a greater libertine than cardinal Ftsch j his amours are numerous, and have ofti n involved him in disagreeable scrapes. He had, in 1803, an unpleasant adventure at Lyons, which has since made his ctaj^ in that city but short* Having thrown his haixdker- THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 23 chief at the wife of a manufactiirer of \ht name of Girot, she accepted it ; and gave him an appointment at her house, at a time in the evening, when her husband usually went to the play. His eminence arrived in disguise, and was received with open arms — But he was hardly seated by her side before the doors of a closet were burst open, and hit shoulders smarted from the lashes inflicted by an offended husband In vain did he mention his name and rank ; they rather increased than decreased the fury of Girot, who pre- tended it was utterly impossible for a cardinal and archbishop to be thus overtaken with the wife of one of his flock ; at last madam Girot proposed' a pecuniary accommodation, which after some opposition was acceded to j and his emi- nence signed a bond for one hundred thousand livres, 40001. upon condition that nothing should transpire of this intrigue — a high price enough for a sound drubbing. On the day which the l?ond was due, Girot and his wife were both arrested by the police commissioner, Dubois, (a brother of the prefect of police at Paris) accused of being connected with coiners, a capital crime at present in this country. In a search made in their house, bad money to the amount of 3000 livres, 1251. was discovered ; which they had received the day before from a person who called himself a merchant from Paris, but who was a police spy sent to entrap them. After giving up the bond of the cardinal, the emperor grar ciously remitted the capital punishment upon condition that they should be transported for life to Cayenne. This is the prelate on whom Buonaparte intends to confer the Roman tiara, and to constitute a successor of St. Peter, It would not be the least remarkable event in the beginning of the remarkable nineteenth century, were we to witness the Papal throne occupied by a man, who from a singing boy, became a renegado slave ; from a Mussulman a con- stitutional curate ; from a tavern-keeper, an arch-bishop ; from the son of a pedlar, the emperor ; and from the hus- band of the daughter of a tinker, a niember of the sacred college. His sister, Madame Letitia Buonaparte, presented him in 1802, with an elegant library, for which she had paid six hundred thousand livres, 25,000l. — and ;^s nephew NapoT leone, allows him a pension double that amount. Besides his dignity as a prelate, his eminence is ambassador frcm France 22 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. at Rome, a knight of the Spanish order of the golden fleece, a grand officer of the legion of honor, almoner of the empe» ror of the French. The archbishop of Paris is now in his 96th year ; and at his death, cardinal Fesch is to be transferred to the see of this capital, in expectation of the triple crown, and the keys of St. Peter, [^ 23 JOSEPH BUONOPARTE, The emperor's eldest brother^ Joseph Buonaparte, the eldest brother of the Firsi Consul, was. before the Revolution/ a clerk to an attorney at Ajaccio in Corsica. Having less vanity and less talents than nviny of the other members of his family^ he passed his time in obscurity and penjary, and continued quietly to reside in his country during its occupation by England. When the crimes of his brother Napoleone had thrown the mistress of Barrass into his arms, with the command over the army in Italy^ the intrigues of the Directory caus- ed Joseph to be chosen, for the department of Liamone, a member in the Council of Five Hundred. In this place he seldom ascended the tribune, or made himself remarked for any thing but his silent vote, always in favour of the Directorial faction and its plots to oppress and enslave Frenchmen* In the spring of 1797, he was suspected to be Barras' spy upon the conduct of the loyal members of the Legislative Body, who shunned, despised, and insulted him. From this disagreeable situation he was relieved by his brother's demand, and his promotion by the Directory, in August the same year, to be Ambassador at Rome. Pius VI. the virtuous sovereign over the Papal territory, had some few months before, by numerous territorial and pecuniary sacrifices, bought and concluded a peace with Napoleone Buonaparte, lor the French Republic and its governments. Of the contracting parties, the Pope, the only sufferer, and who alone had any real complaints to make, was the only sincere one. The directorial rulers and their general were at this period tormented by the fury of an universal republic ; and their favourite plan and ambition was to revive the ancient Roman commonwealth. No sooner, therefore, was the peace at Tolentino signed^ than a swarm of jacobin emissaries were sent to Rome, to conspire and spread disaffection and atheism among the subjects of the Holy See. Determined to carry their point by their old means of exciting insurrections, the Directory had chosen m 34 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCIL Joseph Buonaparte to protect, by his diplomatic character, and as a privileged person, the rebellious and revolutionary- insurgents and traitors instigated and instructed by republi- can France. From the moment of his arrival, plots, in- surrections, and incendiary placards w<.re daily produced ; under his influence, all persons confined for treason and sedition, or, as he gently termed it, for political opinions, were liberated from prison ; his palace became their constant rendezvous ; and he appeared as the paifon of a fete, at which all the vagabonds and desperadoes in Rome were col- lected, called The Feast of Libtrty I \ hese men, headed by French jacobins, formed a plan for revolutionizing Rome. They begun their career by erecting poles, as trees of libera ty^ surmounted with red caps, and dancing round them at midnight, and by forming false patroles to elude the police, and to throw the city into confusion ; and fixed on Innocents- day for the completion of their project. In the afternoon of the day, or on December 28th, 179f, a large palty as- sembled in the street called the Lungara, opposite the Am- bassador's residence, where a Frenchman attended, deliver- ing to them national cockades, and six Paul-pieces, (35 shil- lings) to be expended in liquor. Their conversation, direct- ed by prepared incendiaries^ turned on the common topics of popular complaint, the distresses of the poor, and the dearness of provisions : a revolutionary abbe made a long harangue, interlarded and enforced by perverted texts from Holy Writ, to prove that the time was arrived lor the over- throw of their existing government. Animated by these discourses, and secure of ptdtection from the French Ambassador, Joseph Buonaparte, the mob sallied forth, seized the guard-house, and attacked the Ponte Sesta. At this place, however, they were repulsed by the military, and pursued to the Ambassador's hotel, the Cor-* sini palace, whither they retired for shelter. Joseph Buona- parte and his associates, hastening from their apartments, rushed into the midst of the mob with drawn swords ; a great tumult and some firing ensued, in which a dozen per- sons lost their lives, among whom was General Duphot, af- fianced to Joseph's sister. Immediately on this event, Joseph Buonaparte retired to his palace, and, on the ensuing morning, at six o'clock, quitted Rome, obstinaiely deaf to all propositions of ex* THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 25 planation or apology. He forwarded from Florence an ex- aggerated account of this ti ansaction to France, which fur- nished the Directory with the pretext that they had so long and ardently desired. In vain did the Papal Government offer every kind of acknowledgment and atonement ; in vain did they tender implicit and unconditional submission ; or- ders were immediately issued for General Berthier to revo- lutionize Rome, and give up the country to pillage. This faithful detail, related by loyal and able contempo- rary writers, unties the Gordian knot of French republican diplomatic chicanery, and the revolutionary Machiavelism of its ambassador ; and almost proves what an Italian au- thor printed at Verona in 1799, that General Buonaparte destined his brother Joseph, and his brother-in-law Duphot, for the two first consuls of the (by France) renewed Roman Republic; but which the well-merited death of Duphot, and the different views, and perhaps jealousy of the Direc- tory, prevented from taking place. Of the conduct of Joseph Buonaparte on this occasion opinions are not much divided ,• even Frenchmen agree, that he must want as well honour, religion, delicacy, and probity, as talents and sense, to suffer himself to become the despicable tool of ambition, or of the ambitious ; and it is not a little degrading to the present Chief of the Roman Catholic religion, that he signed, in 1802, the concordat for establishing religion in France, with this same man, who, by his intrigues in 1797, signed the death-warrant of religion in Italy, and of his own religious predecessor. During Napoleone's absence in Egypt, Joseph was again elected a member of the Council of Five Hundred ; but the cabals of the factious at this period, the danger of no- toriety, the defeat of his brother before St. Jean d'Acre, and his critical situation in Egypt, made him resign his place as a deputy, which he could no longer enjoy either with profit or safety. At his brother's unexpected return to France, after his desertion from the army of the East, Joseph left his retreat, and, with Napoleone and Talleyrand, plotted the revolution which was effected at St. Cloud, and seated a Buonaparte upon the throne of the Bourbons. He was soon after ap- pointed a counsellor of state in the section of the home de- partment, or interior. D 26 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH, Frenchmen were now as insensible to losses as indiilerent about advantages ; disgusted with the war, they disregarded victories ; and their only wish, their only cry^ was Peace. Napoleone was the favourite of the people, not so much for his conquests, aS for his policy of always talking of peace> and of his endeavours to obtain it. He knew, therefore, that any person of his family negotiating and signing the termination of hostilities would endear themselves to the giddy French nation ; and, by procuring a general pacifica- tion, produce a temporary tranquillity, lessen the injustice, and palliate the tyranny of his usurpation, and g ve him time to organize his consular government. Jo&eph Buona- parte was therefore sent to negotiate with Austria at Lune- ville in the winter of 1800, where he signed the Definitive Treaty on the 9th of February 1801. On the 10th of Sep- tember following, he concluded, at Paris, ''a Convention with the Pope ; and at Amiens, on the 27th of March, 1802, he terminated the war with England. When a person is backed by 500,000 bayonets, assisted by well-drawn instructions, and accompanied by able secre- taries, it is neither difficult to negotiate, nor to dictate trea- ties, conventions, or concordats. The arguments of bayo- nets always carry conviction with them, shorten conferences force sacrifices, bring about conclusions, and bid defiance to the acknowledged laws of nations, balance of power, political justice, the prerogatives of sovereigns, and the rights and liberties of the people. Austria was Weakened and humiliated by the treaty of Luneville ; by the Conven- tion at Paris the Pope was insulted, and religion degraded ; and, at the same time, the politics, morals, and religions of the Continental Nations were reduced to the same level, and made to depend entirely upon the caprice, passions, or am- bition of the revolutionary and military despot in France. — Fortunately for the civilized world, — tiiat this was not exact- ly the case with the Treaty of Amiens, its short duration proves ; England, therefore may yet claim the respect of contemporaries, the gratitude and admiration of posterity, as the protector of the weak, the barrier to ambition, the check to selfishness; the example of virtuous moderation, and the guardian angel of the liberty and independence of mankind. THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 27 In the summer of 1802, Joseph Buonaparte was nominat- ed a senator, and a grand officer of the Legion of Honour ; and he has lately received the Senatorie of Brabant; or, which is the same thing, is made Napoleone's governor-ge- neral over Belgia, and his future residence is fixed at Brus- sels. He has often, particularly since the war broke out anew, been employed in missions in different departments, and, as his brother's pro-consul, presided at the Electoral Colleges, where, according to the consular constitution, candidates for the Senate, the Legislative Body, and the Tribunate, are elected. That Joseph formerly possessed the esteem and friendship of Napoleone, is evident by a letter from the latter. It was sent to him at a time when the General dreaded the consequences of his absurd and ambitious schemes, and therefore wished for retirement rather than publicity, to bury himself in ob- livion upon an estate in Burgundy, rather than to head ar- mies in Egypt and Syria. Since Napoleone has usurped the supreme power, Louis has superseded Joseph in the consular friendship, and is worthy to have done so when vice and wickedness are the principal recommendations to favour. Joseph is a good father and husband, a dutiful son and an affectionate brother, but an indifferent and dangerous citizen in a commonwealth. He is married to a woman of obscure birth and low manners, but an estimable and good character ; he loves his family and relatives, and nothing but his family and relatives. His native country, Corsica, he dislikes ; he hates France and Frenchmen, and would willingly sign the destruction of any kingdom, were it ne- cessary for his family elevation, ambition, or pretensions. According to the Livre Rouge by Bourrienne, Joseph has received for an establishment two millions of livres, and as presents for his negociations one million five hundred thousand livres ; he enjoys, besides, the salaries for his many high places, a yearly pension of one million two hundred thousand livres, and, as an annuity for four rela- tions of his wife, two hundred thousand livres. NAFOLEONE BUONAPARTE, EMPEROR OF THE FRENCH. ^iels traits me presentent vosfastes^ ImpitoyaUe conquer ansf JDes vftiix outreSy des projets vastes Des rois vaincus par des t} rans ; Des mitrs que lajlamme ravage Un vainqueur fumant de carnage^ Un peuple aiifffrs abandonne ; Des meres pales et sanglantes Arrachujit leursjilles tremblantes Des bras d^unsoldat effrene* J. B. ROUssEAU. A TRULY great man wants neither the often-envied merit of an ancestry, nor the doufetful hope of a brilliant pro- geny. He alone constitutes his whole race ; he makes a blot of what has been before him, and apprehends nothing of what is to succeed him. Without virtue there is no real greatness, as without religion there is no genuine virtue. — - Fortune, as frequently as talents, makes the warrior victo- rious and the conqueror successful ; but not the fame of bat- tles, or the renown of prosperity, any more than terror of power, can command the admiration of the good, the ap- probation of the humane, or the applause of the just and generous. Who were those praising and worshipping a Caesar, ex- tolling and adoring an Octavius Augustus ? Were they not the base slaves of an usurpation, and not the free citizens of a commonwealth, who would as willingly and as cordially have prostrated themselves before their rivals or opposer&, before a Sylla, a Pompey, a Brutus, 6r an Anthony? Who are those that lavish encomiums, preach obedience, and ex- hort submission to a Buonaparte ? Are they not the already degraded and dishonoured slaves of a Robespierre, a Marat, a Brissot, a Merlin, and a Barras ; who have been fighting their battles, submitting to their tyranny, and magnifying" their clemency, just as they now do that of the Corsican ? THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 29 All usurpers have been despised by the virtuous, dreaded by the weak and timorous, obeyed by the vicio W8 and th^ cowardly, associated with by the tre^acherous, disaffected, and guilty ; and if all usurpers are " damned to everlastingfame," their base tools deserve everlasting contempt ; -because they are the accomplices of their crimes, the obscure instruments of their elevation, without an adequate profit or advantage to diminish their infamy, to extenuate their rebellion, or to palliate or excuse their seduction or desertion from the cause of honor .ind of loyalty. Of the accomplices or slaves of ancient usurpers, but lit- tle is known; oblivion has 'erased and concealed most of their names, although history has recorded their guilt ; but we know that Csesar descended from a noble family, and that Octavius was his nephew ; we are ignorant, however, who were their relatives, what places they filled, what authority they exerted, what riches they possessed, v*^hat influence they had, what good they effected, or what evil they pre- vented. By the short and imperfect sketches contained in this small volume, some of Buonaparte's revolutionary prede- cessors, and many of his criminal associates, are made known, as they deserve, without flattery and without false- hood J and the pedigree of his family has been traced, both as it has been represented by his friends and by his adver- saries. The plan of this work does not permit the author either to follow him through his campaigns in Italy, or to wander with him in Egypt ; to discuss the cause, means, and mari- ner of his usurpation ; to penetrate into the secret views of his ambition, or to speci^late upon his future intentions, as a First Consul in France, as a President in Italy, or as a Ty- rant over thirty millions of Frenchmen, six millions of Itali- ans, two millions of Helvetians, and three millions of Ba- tavians.* Others have already painted the hero, admired the victor, illustrated the conqueror and bowed to ihe usurp- er. Panegyric has been exhausted, comparison worn out, praise wasted, made common and nauseous. The annals, the monuments of the ancients, and the memoirs, the works, * We refer our readers to the history of the military life of Buonaparte^ published by Warner ^ Ilanna, of this city. Se REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. the history, and all the productions of the modems, and of modem ingenuity, have been ransacked to find words appli- cable to a man, who, for the honuor of humanity, had no equal in fofmer times, and only one person nearly resembling him in the present age, who, like himself, from a subject and citizen, became a rebel, and from a rebel a tyrant— The parallel between Maximilian Robespierre and Napole- one Buonaparte is more striking than many are aware of ; and their revolutionary and cruel characters bear surprising traits of likeness ; more, no doubt, than will be remembered or recorded in this sketch. — In 1793, France suffered, and Europe was disturbed by the revolutionary anarchy of Ro- bespierre ; in 1803, France is enslaved, and Europe disho- noured, by the revolutionar}^ tyranny of Buonaparte. Robespiefre and Buonaparte are both children of the same parent — the French Revolution : they are brother sans-cu' lottes ; brother jacobins; fellow-subjects of the sovereign people ; fellow-propagators of fraternity ; fellow-apostates of equality ; and fellow-destroyers of liberty in the name of li- berty itself. Fellow-rebels to their King, they have both usurped his throne ; and fellow- apostates of their religion, they have both used religion as an instrument to support their usurpation. Robespierre had but little revolution ar)^ experience ; Buo- naparte has had a perfect revolutionary education. That the same blood runs in the veins of both, the equally san- guinary measures employed to obtain power, and the equally Lloody deeds to preserve it, prove beyond contradiction ; but (the impolitic terror employed by the one, has strengthen- ed and confirmed the political oppression of the other. The murder and massacre of the Parisians in the prisons, September 1792, laid the foundation of the greatness of Ro- bespierre ; the murder and massacre of the Parisians in the streets, October 1795, laid the foundation of the greatness of Buonaparte. — Both were, however, previously known in the bloody annals of the Revolution; both had already given proofs of their revolutionary civism. Robespierre planned the massacre at Avignon in October 1791 ; and Buonaparte headed the massacre at Toulon in December, 1793. Robespierre had his Danton — Buonaparte his Barras. — The advice of Danton assisted Robespierre ; the protection of Barras advanced Buonaparte. Robespierre, to beconie THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. SI Dictator, espoused the interest of Danton ; Buonaparte to become a general, married the mistress of Barras. Robes- pierre sent Danton to the scaffold ; Buonaparte sent Barras into exile. The one murdered an accomplice ; the other disgraced a benefactor, whom he dared not murder. At the head of the Committee of Public Safety, Robes- pierre crowded the prisons with suspected Frenchmen j at the head of the army in Egypt, Buonaparte poisoned the wounded Frenchmen who crowded his hospitals. Robes- pierre guillotined en masse French aristocrats ; Buonaparte poisoned en masse French soldiers. Fear moved the axe of Robespierre's guillotine ; cru^elty distributed the poisonous draught of Buonaparte. Cowardice made Robespierre a murderer ; calculation made Buonaparte a poisoner, The one destroyed those whom he feared as enemies ; the other poisoned those friends who had served him as soldiers. — Robespierre gave no quarter to his enemies ; Buonaparte massacred, in cold blood, enemies to whom he had given quarter. Robespierre declared a war of extermination against La Vendee ; Buonaparte, by a perfidious peace, exterminated the Royalists of La Vendee. The one burned and plun- dered their property as enemies ; the other imprisoned, transported, and murdered their persons when friends. Robespierre, in his proclamations, threatened all Europe with a revolution; Buonaparte, by his negociations, has re- volutionized the whole Continent of Europe. Robespierre^ with his guillotine, proposed to establish an universal anar- chy; Buonaparte, with his bayonets, proposes to establish an universal slavery. Robespierre spoke of humanity, while sending hundreds every day to the scaffold ; Buonaparte talks of generosity, while sending to prison thousands of innocent travellers, pro- tected by all the laws of nations and of hospitality. Robespierre bravely ordered no quarter to be given to Bri- tish soldiers , Buonaparte nobly imprisons Britons who ar© no soldiers. Under Robespierre, thousands of Frenchmen were in fetters ; under Buonaparte, the whole French nation is en* slaved. Robespierre called all legal Princes tyrants ; Buonaparte wishes to tyrannize over all legal Princes. 32 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. Robespierre, in his speeches, abused and insulted all Mo- narchs ; Buonaparte, by his negociations, has degraded Mo- narchy itself. Robespierre proscribed commerce in France, by publish- ing a maximum ; Buonaparte expects to revive commerce, by establishing a maximum upon thrones. Robespierre, when a Dictator, to undermine thrones, con- tinued to use the manners and language of a citizen sans-cu- lotte ; Buonaparte, when a Consul, to crush thrones, speaks to kings as if they were sans-culottesy and emperors as if they were his fellow-citizens. Robespierre was a revolutionary fanatic ; Buonaparte is a revolutionary hypocrite. The one was blood-thirsty through fear and fanaticism ; the other is cruel by nature, from am- bition and self-interest. I he one boldly told all mankind, that he was its enemy ; the other acts as the enemy of all mankind, while pretending to be its friend. The one de- creed death to any one who should speak of peace ; the other meditates slavery, plots ruin, and prepares death by his pacifications. The" names of the victims who perished by Robespiercan cruelty were published in the daily papers ; the names of those victims of Buonapartes's cruelty who perish by the arms of his military commissions, by poison in his dunge- ons, by suffering during transportations, or by misery in the wilds of Cayenne, are only known to himself, to his accom- plices, and to his executioners.— Robespierre's victims were tried and condemned before they were executed ; the vic- tims of Buonaparte are condemned without a trial, and exe- cuted without condemnation. The revolutionary fanaticism of Robespierre, like the re- ligious one of Cromwell, sent his king to the scaffold ; the revolutionary hypocrisy and ambition of Buonaparte, like that of Cromwell, keeps his legal king from his hereditary throne. The friends of Robespierre pretend that he died a martyr to his cause, as a revolutionary enthusiast ; Buonaparte is a revolutionary sophist, who probably will perish the martyr of his own Machiavelism. Robespierre was a Fleming ; Buonaparte is a Corsican ; the one bom at Arras in Flanders, the other at Ajaccio in Corsica ; the one in the northern, the other in the soudiern part of the French empire — neither was a Frenchman. THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 35 Robespierre has only been seen during the existence of fo- reign wars, civil troubles, and domestic factions ; Buona- parte is firmly seated upon the throne of the Bourbons, all enemies are vanquished, all troubles are quieted, and all factions dissolved. What Robespierre would have done in his situation, it is impossible to say ; but we have all wit- nessed, and yet witness, the proscription of liberty, the sub- version of laws, the incertitude of property, and the organ- ized military despotism of Buonaparte. The First Consul of the French Republic, and the sovereign of forty millions of slaves, shews every day the low whims, the mean ca- prices, the degrading vices, and the unbecoming passions of a Corsican adventurer, and the little soul of a fortunate up- start. After this brief comparison. It may, however be said, without exaggeration, Le masque tombe^ Vht^mme reste, Et le her OS s'*evanoult* And indeed, when, without any colouring, amplification^ or aggravation, only some of the atrocities of the Corsican First Consul have been related, it is to be apprehended, that even the man will disappear, and a monster remaia j hav- ing nothing human but the shape, Vith the heart and fero- city of a tiger, and the cunning and treachery of the fox ; artful and mischievous as a monkey, and blood-thirsty as a wolf. Educated in a public military school at the expence of his virtuous sovereign, Napoleone Buonaparte received, at the age of seventeen, from the same Prince, a commission as lieutenant of artillery, and new duties were added to former obligations ; but no sooner sounded the trumpet of revolt, than he was one of the first to join its colours ; and he be- came a traitor and a rebel before he was a man. Among the many other loyal officers in the regiment which Buonaparte disgraced by his principles and conduct, was Lieut. Philipeaux, who was educated with him in the college at Autun, and afterwards at the military school at Brienne, and who had hitherto been his friend. Philipeaux was frank, )3rave, and liberal ; Buonaparte conceited, selfish, and mean^ these opposite characters could not, therefore, long remain 34 REVOLUTIONARY PLU«TARCH. in unison, when experience and maturity, while they im proved the judgment of the one, served but to expose, in more pointed colours, the vicious propensities of the other. Both Philipeaux and Buonaparte had, from the absurd and dangerous system of education prevailing in France du- ring its monarchical form of government, imbibed at an early age an admiration of the Grecian and Roman repub- lics. Each had his chosen heroes of an|;iquity, whom he desired to imitate in his method, manners, and language. While Philipeaux rather inclined to the mild and amiable philosophy of a TuUy, the cruel and unfeeling stoicism of a Cato and of a Brutus was the admiration of Buonaparte. When the Revolution broke out, these two young men dixussed, according to their different notions, what they o\\ ed to their king, to their country, and to themselves. — Buonaparte, confounding stoicism with egotism, as he more than once already had done with cruelty, tried in vain to persuade his friend to regard the present political convul- sions of France as referring only to themselves, and the hape it held out to them of rapid advancement among the civil troubles of parties, and the struggles of factions. Phili-- peaux's loyalty remained unshaken by all the efforts of his friend's sophistry; and neither certainty of rank, nor pros- pect of riches, could move the heart of a person firm in his duty, both as a subject to his king, and as a Christian to his God. The revolutionary fanaticism of Buonaparte soon exceed- ed all bounds ; by associating with Championet, and other persons notorious in the cause of rebellion, he insulted the feelings of Philipeaux, who soon ceased to be any longer his friend. In 1790, by taking the decreed oaih of the na- tion, which annulled his former oath of allegiance to his prince, Buonaparte proved that he was unworthy the attach- ment of the friend of his youth ; and, in proportion as their mutual affection had been great, their reciprocal hatred be- came violent. At the mess of their regiment, Philipeaux publicly insulted him as a perjured traitor ; but, as this fa- shionable patriotism had been combined with a no less fashionable prudence, he declined (though so contrary to the nice principles of honour among the French military serving the King) either to demand an explanation, or to take satislaction as a gentleman or as an cfticer. He was, THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 35 in consequence, excluded from the mess ; and, in revenge, he excited the jacobins to attack the whole corps of officers with their usual calumnies, abusing them as aristocrats, and threatening them with the lamp-post, or, as it was then call- ed, the lantern of the sovereign people. To spare their countrymen from fresh crimes, most of the officers, and among others Philipeaux, emigrated. Imprudence, or the want of discrimination, often mis- leads young and warm minds, who feel as a want, the plea- sure to be derived from communicating with and confiding in a friend; but who cease to feel so forcibly that sym- pathy when age has matured their reason. Tiiis base and cowardly behaviour of Buonaparte, therefore, convinced Philipeaux that he had hitherto fostered a serpent in his bo- som, and made him remember many particulars of their ear- liest youth, which caused him to be ashamed of having so long been the dupe of a man, whose ferocious and atrocious sentiments he had often witnessed ; but which, instead of ascribing to a deeply vicious heart, he conceived to originate from a head turned by wrong ideas of stoicism. He recollected, that at the age of twelve, in the College of Autun, buonaparte had a favourite dog which had be- longed to his deceased father, who was particularly fond of him, and on his death-bed had bequeathed him to Napole- one to be taken care of. For fifteen montns this dog had been his constant and faithful attendant ; when one night, by stealing a part of his master's supper, he offended him so much, that after a cruel beating, Buonaparte swore the dog should never live another supper-time ; the next day he put his threat into execution, by nailing the poor animal alive against the wall, and cutting him up deliberately, that he might be the longer tormented ! ! ! At the age of fifteen, in the military school at Brienne, Buonaparte had an intrigue with the daughter of a washer- vroman, who found herself in a state of pregnancy. He consulted Philipeaux how to extricate himself from this dis- agreeable affair ; and was advised by him to give her some money to carry her to the lying-in-hospital at Lyons, and Philipeaux offered his purse to assist him. The money was accepted ; but within twenty^-four hours the unfortunate girl perished with her child, victims to the early cruelty of this Vdoung monster, who had brought her some pills, as he said, i I I {16 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. to produce an abortion or a miscarriage; but which, in fact, were composed of, or mixed with verdigris and arsenic. — - The protection of M. de Marboeuf, however, the interest and reputation of the school, and a sum of money given by his protector to tjie girl's mother, saved him from a well- deserved punishment. On the day that his poisoned mistress had been buried, he began to court her younger sister, and thus augmented his former unrepented guilt by base insensibility. Friendship, often as blind as love, ascribed to imitated stoicism, what was the mere effect of rooted wickedness. His greatest amusement, when a boy, was to frequent the public hospitals when any dreadful or disgusting operations were to be performed, and to regard the pains and agonies of the sufferer, and of the dying. With what little money he had, he paid the attendants in these abodes of misery, to be informed when any scene of horror, conformable to his feelings, was expected to take place ; and he diverted him- self often with his comrades, in mimicking the convulsive struggles of suffering or expiring humanity. He piqued himself on having seen, before he was fifteen, 544 opera- tions, or amputations, and the agonies or deaths of 160 persons. After the emigration of most of the officers, Buonaparte was promoted td the rank of captain. In the course of the revolution he was often employed in differetit expeditions ; but his situation was obscure, his exertions unnoticed, and his character suspected, on account of his known connec- tions with intriguers of all parties, either aristocrats or ja- cobins, either Frenchmen or Corsicans. After resigning Jiis company in the regiment of artillery de la Fere, he ob- tained a battalion of National Guards in Corsica, where, being suspected of plotting the surrender of that island to the English, Lecourbe, St. Michael, and two other de- puties of the National Convention, ordered hun to be ar- rested. This circumstance obliged him to leave the army ; and he was residing, in indigence, eight leagues from Toulon, when, in 1793, that city was in the possession of the English ; Salicetti, one of the deputies on mission with the republican army, having some acquaintance with Buona- J)arte, recommended him to his colleague Barras, and he was employed during the siege witih the yank of a clicf de THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. ar brigade. The cruelties which followed the surrender ol Toulon he commenced or committed. By a deceitful pro- clamation, all the inhabitants who had employment under the English during their occupation of Toulon, who had served or lodged any Englishman, or who had been slispected to have favoured their entry and the capitulation of that city, either directly or indirectly, were ordered, under pain of death, to meet in the grand square, called Le Champ de Mars, on a fixed day and hour. Upwards of fifteen hundred men, women, and children, assembled there in consequence of this proclamation ; Buonaparte then desired all those who wished to escape punishment and death to cry out — Vive la Republique ! With one voice these unfortnate per- sons called out, the Republic forever ! 1 his was the signal for their destruction. Cannons loaded with grape shot kill- ed some and wounded and maimed others, who were dis- patched with swords and bayonets. The official report of this ferocious performance is coptaihed in the following let- ter from Buonaparte, addressed to Citizen Barras, Freron, and Robespierre the younger, representatives of the people^ dated Toulon, the 29th Frimaire, Year 2, (December 24th, 1793.) *^ CITIZEN REPRESENTATIVES, " Upon the field of glory, my feet inundated v/ith the blood of traitors, I announce to you, with a heart beating with joy, that your orders are executed, and France re» venged ; neither sex nor age have been spared ; those who escaped, or were only mutilated by the discharge of our re- publican cannon, were dispatched by the swords of liberty and the bayonets of equality. *•• Health and admiration, '' Brutus Buonaparte, '' Citizen sans-culottes." It was the fashion in 17'92 and 1793, among the exclusive patriots, as they were called, to assume Roman and Grecian names ; intending thereby to exclude from modern republi- canism, and to regard as suspected, or to proscribe every citizen, who, as Dubois Creance, one of them proposed^ at the club of the jacobins, could not prove, that, in case of a return of order and religion, ^ gibbet was merited { 58 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. by and would reward his patriotism. — This was the first time, but not the last, that Napoleone Buonaparte chang- ed his Christian name. In 1796 he was again Napoleone Buonaparte; hut in 1798 he became Ali Buonaparte; and in 180(^ tout courts Buonaparte. After the dt ath of Robespierre, the horrors that he had excited at Toulon caused him to be arrested as a terrorist, and sent prisoner to Nice. As, however, it was imposbible to prosecute all the subordinate agents in those disgraceful scenes, he was, with many of his accomplices, released by the amnesty of the National Convention ; but, on his return to Paris, failing in his efforts to procure employ, he was re- duced to extreme distress and penury. In this desperate situation, he was again recommended to the notice of Bar- ras, drawn forth from his place of concealment, and invest-* ed with the command of the artillery to be employed in murdering and subjugating the people of Paris. The regicide National Convention (which had overthrown the monarchy and the church, murdered its king, disturbed all Europe, and made all Frenchmen wretched), when forced to resign its usurped power, wishing partly to conti- nue it, decreed the re-election of two thirds of its guilty members. This was opposed by all respectable and ioval citizens ; among others, by the sections, and by the inha- bitants of Paris, who prepared, with arms in their hands, to defend their violated rights. Pichegru, Moreau, and other known and distinguished generals, were applied to ; but refused to command the con- ventional troops destined to perpetuate rebellion by exttrmi- nating its opposers. Buonaparte and other millitary crimi- nals, were then resorted to, and dragged forward from their hiding-places ; and thus, by perpetrating new crimes, they exchanged their well-deserved obscurity for a dreadful notoriety. On the night of the 4th of October, 1795, preceding that which was to decide the fate of the National Conven- tion and the new constitution, the two parties drew out their forces under circumstances widely different. The soldiers of the Convention were well armed, long disciplined, am- ply supplied with ammunition, and drilled into unanimity : the insurgent Parisian sections were deprived of the greater part of their ai'ms, in consequence of the late insurrections ; THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. n they had no artillery, and but a small supply of ammunition for their muskets ; they had never seen any military service ; and so far were they from being unanimous in any polical sentiment, save that which occasioned their momen^ry com- bination, that it was judged expedient to avoid ever^^iscus- sion, and every allusion to general affairs, and to limit their demands, and their rallying word, to the single proposition of a free election, and no compulsory return of the two-thirds from the members of the Convention. 1 he individuals who appeared in this insurrection were not, as on former occasi- ons, the refuse of villany and infamy, the dregs of the su- burbs, and the sweepings of tHe gaols ; but their decent ap- pearance, and the neatness in their dress, exposed them to the ridici'le of their adversaries, who contemptuously inquir- ed whether a successful insurrection had ever been conduct- ed by gentlemen with powdered heads and silk stockings ? General Danican, the commander of the troops of the Pa- risian sections, feeling the insufficiency of his force for a ma- nual contest, was anxious to avoid hostilities, and spent great part of the night in haranguing the troops of the Convention, under Barras and Buonaparte, and attempting to persuade them, that, as fellow-citizens, the cause of the people was their own. He found great difficulty in making himself heard, amid the persevering cry of Five la Conventwn ! which the battalions on duty \vere instructed to vociferate. Many hot-headed men oi his own party were eager to engage ; and Buonaparte, and the other satellites of the Convention, con- fiding in their superior numbers, were desirous of hostilities, as the sure means ol establishing their own power, and re- pressing all future exertions to counteract their imwarrant- able assumption of authority. Danican did not, however, neglect other precauiions suitable to his situation ; and, by his eflorts in the coure oi the night, his adherents were placed in a more respectable position than their numbers or their force had appealed to promise. Several of the sections, summoned by missionaries from the Convention to lay down their arms, had returned a resolute refusal j and the dread least the soldiery should be persuaded to decline fir- ing on the people, rendered the strongest party uneasy, tho' they persevered in their original determination to try the ut- most extremes oi blood, fire and famine, rather than recede. I '■tl^ I ioi REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. The troops of the Convention were reinforced during the next night, by twenty thousand rhen from the country- ; the generals who were suspected of an inclination to avoid the ef- fusion ^J^lood, were exchanged for others incapable of re- morse W shame ; the troops were intrenched, and the bes^ positions secured. The Primary AssemHies were convened in the section of Le Pelletier ; but the sanguine confidence ot some, and the treacherous insinuations of others, bore down the prudent counsels of General Danican ; and it was resolv- ed to attack the troops of the Convention in their stronghold, not from the expectation of advantage in a regular conflict, but from a blind hope and foolish confidence that the military would not fire on the people. The line of defence occupied by the Convention extended from the Pont-neuf along the quays on the right bank of the Seine, to the Champs Elysies^ and was continued to the Bou- levards. The people were masters of the Rue St. Honore, the Place de Vendome^ St, Roch^ and the Place du Palais Roy- al ; but they were without order, or a common point of acti- on ; and the nature of the insurrection had rendered it im- possible to establish any. The Convention, pursuing the sys- tem which they had so often before tried with success, wasted a great portion of the day in sending deputies to harrangue the sections, and in receiving and discussing propositions of peace ; but during the whole time thus gained, they were employed in reinforcing their positions, adding to their sup- plies, and raising the spirits of their troops. They knew that the insurrection must grow languid towards the evenings especially as those engaged in it had been exposed during the whole day, and part of the preceding night, to a storm, with a torrent of rain. Their scheme was attended with as com- plete success as they could wish for. Fervent debates in the Convention, messages, and an equivocating letter from the committets to Danican, kept the people employed in discus- sion instead of action daring the day ; but as evening ap- proached, when the general of the insurgents was preparing to withdraw his troops in separate portions, ea'ch of its own arrondissement, the forces of the Convention changed iheir posi.ion ; the post of the citizens 2XSt. Roch was fired upon irom a house in the Culde Sac Dauphin, and the scene of car- nage was begun. 1 he cilkens made at first some resistance, but the artillery, commanded by the cruel Buonaparte, swept THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 41 the streets in every direction, killed or wounded evety per- son walking in them ; and the insurgents, neither sufficiently numerous nor desperate enough to rush forward and seize the cannon, retreated in every direction, conceajpg them- selves in houses and under gateways, and finally in the church of St. Roch ; while great numbers fled from the spot, crying treason, and spreading alarm and despair in every direction. All the bnrricades erected to oppose the progress of the troops of the Convention, were beaten down by Buonaparte's cannon, and men, v/omen, and children, killed without mer- cy. Every expedient for r^esistance failed ; and the insur- gents being dispersed, and Danican himself obliged to en- sure his safety by concealment, the regicide Convention re- mained victorious ; and during the whole night repeated dis- charges of cannon announced their triumph, and prevented any new rallying of their opponents. Eight thousand mutilated carcasses, of both sexes and of dW ages, were the horrible trophies presented to the French nation by Buonaparte's first victory as a general ; but as he never before had filled any superior command, it is necessary to exhibit his principles and patriotism in their true colours, by showing, from impartial and loyal authors, of what sort of n en a Convention was composed, for whom Buonaparte had been fighting, or rather butchering. The general character, however, of this body, at once contemptible and formidable, atrociously wicked, and ab- jectly mean, cannot be given complete, without a distinct revision of its acts, which, in government, religion, finance, jurisprudence, and warfare, exhibit but one principle — a re- solute pursuit of a given object, with a total disregard of the opinions of mankind, and a contempt of all established or avowed principles of morality or good faith. But perverse and ignorant men, suddenly possessed of all the wealth, strength, and resources of an ingenious, rich, and powerful nation, could not, without a peculiar mixture of ferocity and wickedness, have committed the acts which stigmatized the Convention ; nor could the mighty energies which they aroused and guided have been directed to so few purposes of real national good, but for the folly which ganerally ac- companies extreme vice and depravity, and renders the triumphs of villany bitter, even in the most ardent moment of enjoyment. F I v>? 42 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH- The general abstracts of the acts of the Convention, «na the effects of its existence, is thus detailed by Prudhomme, who, from an outrageous jacobin, becanae a repentant citi- 2en, anft, to prove his sincerity, recorded the atrocities of his former accomplices. The sittings of the French Na- tional Convention continued thirty-seven months and foui*' days; during which time, 11,210 laws were enacted ; 360 conspiracies and 140 insurrections denounced; and 18,613 persons put to death by the guillotine. The civil war at Lyons cost 31,200 men ; that at Marseilles, 729; At Tou- lon, 14,325 were destroyed; and in the reactions in the South, after the fall of Robespierre, 750 individuals perish- ed, i'he war in La Vendee is computed to have caused the destruction of 900,000 men, and more than 20,000 dwellings. Impressed with images of terror, 4790 persons committed suicide, and 3400 women died in consequence of premature deliveries ; 20,000 are computed to have died of famine, and 1550 were driven to insanity. In the colo- nies, 124,000 white men, women, and children, and 60,000 people of colour, were massacred ; two towns, and 3203 habitations, were burnt. The loss of men in the war is es- timated, though certainly below the real truth , at 800,000 ; while 123,789, who had emigrated in the course of the Rs^ volution, were, by the Convention, for ever excluded from their country. Enchanted with Buonaparte's humanity and bravery in the streets of Paris, his protector Barras first made him second in command in the army of the Interior, and in a short time afterwards commander in chief over the same army. During the winter of 1795, to qualify himself for his new appointment, and to retain an interest with the Di- rector Barras, Buonaparte wedded the widow ef Alexander Beauhamois, who had, since the murder of her husband, in the time of Robespierre, exchanged with Barras complai- sance for protection, and who brought her new husband, as a portion, the command over the army in Italy. The military talents of Buonaparte were not unknown to, or undervalued by, the Allies ; but their armies in Italy were not put on a footing sufficiently respectable to encounter those of the Republic ; they were vastly inferior in number, and of different nations!^ Austrians, Italians, Sardinians, Neapolitans, Swiss, and Tuscans, all divided among thena- THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 44 selves by national jealousies instigated or kept up by French emissaries. Buonaparte's troops were both numerous and united, and mostly composed of veterans and warriors in- structed in the school of Pichegru, and by him accustomed to order, bravery, discipline, and victor}/'. The Duke of Modena paid millions to Buonaparte for the neutrality of his dominions, and to obtain the guarantee of the French republic for their integrity. But the French General, after pocketing tlie money^ continued to treat Modena, as a conquered country ; and by his advice, with- in six months after this treaty of peace, neutrality, and guarantee, the French Govertunent incorporated this dutchy with the Cisalpine Republic, and the Duke of Modena died an exile in Germany. JVithout being at xvar, the Pope was forced to conclude a peace with Buonaparte, and to give up some of*his most valuable provinces to augment the depart- ments of the Corslcan's newly-formed republic ; and, two yjears afterwards, the Pope died a prisoner in France, after having seen the wretchedness of his subjects, and the ruin of his country with that of his government. The King of Naples made numerous pecuniary ar>.d other sacrifices to obtain peace and neutrality ; but French intrigues and con- spirators were more dangerous than French soldiers. When France was no longer an enemy, its emissaries perverted the loyalty of his subjects ; and fourteen months of French friendship obliged his Sicilian Majesty (to avoid the destiny pf the Pope) to fly from his capital, and be indebted to an English fleet for his safety, for his throne, and for his life. In such a manner did Buonaoarte act, and such were some of the consequences of his victories over, and his negotia- tions with, most of tlie powers in Italy, whom French am* bition treated as enemies, French cupidity received as friends, and French treachery weakened, ruined, or annihilated.—- When a man is destitute of every sentiment of common justice, generosity, and liberality ; has no political faith or honour, and no religious principles ; he must be as unfeel- ing ; barbarous, and tyrannical over his countrymen, and and those immediately under his command and disposal, as he has been biise and cruel with foreigners and strangers. In the opinions of the inconsistent and degenerated French republicans, as well as in those of some people jn other countries, the conqueror* of Italy had erased the ■^- 44 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. crimes of the murderer at Toulon and at Paris : but that a vicious nature does not change with fortune, nor a depraved character with public opinion, the following letter, written in 1 797 by a French general, and transmitted to this coun- try by an ambassador of one of the powers allied to the French Republic, will prove. Its original will be found in No. 101 of •''• Paris pendant VAnnee 1797." Its republican tion at present adds new conviction to what has already been affirmed; it identifies the Hero oi 1797 with the Consul of 1803 ; and ser\^es to establish more firmly the truth of those atrocities of which the Corsican has been publicly accused, both before and since the time at which it was written. '•' Escaped at last from the long and cruel fatigues of the most mu' derous of wars, I am just arrived from the army of Italy, after being lamed for life at the battle of Areola.— I have paid the debt of gratitude which I owed to my coun- try ; I have given her proofs of my zeal and of my love, and have sealed them with my blood. Become an invalid irl the bloom of youth, and no longer able to fight in her ser- vice, I am entitled to her protection. In her bosom have I sought an asylum ; and no longer able to serve her with an arm paralysed by the steel of the enemy, I nevertheless devote to her a heart which adores her, and a holy boldness in denouncing to her (I will not say abuses, that would be too cold an expression, but) deeds of atrocity, at which Nero himself would have blushed, and which Suetonius would not have dared to impute to that monster. '• Believe me, I do not dispute the great military talents of Buonaparte ; his successes speak lor themselves. But what I contend for is, that Buonaparte is the most dangerous of all the French citizens ; that Buonaparte is a citizen in the manner of Caesar ; that it is in the manner of Caesar that he loves equality ; and that it is with all the contempt which Caes ir entertained for the senate of Rome, that Buonaparte speaks of the government of France. For the truth of my assertion, I appeal to all who are in the habit of being con- stantly about his person. He is Gustavus in the midst of battle : bat, like Gustavus, he pants for a throne and a crown, not to set it upon the head of this or that prince, but to place it upon his own. *' The most violent satraps of the great king had less power, and certainly less insolenpe and less vanity, than *,. THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 45 Buonaparte has given proofs of during his campaigns in Italy. *' Thesp are facts of the greatest notoriety. I only relate what all have seen, what every general has heard, and what all are ready to depose whenever they are called on by the Directory, with the exception of a wretch of the name of Le Clerc (the slave of Hobespierre), of Rusca^ a drinker of blood and a shameless robber, and of a few brigands of the same stamp. " Ardently do I hope that some one more skilful than myself will furnish the public with a detail of the atrocities committed by Buonaparte : tl)ey exceed all possible belief ! I call upon every true Frenchman, now at the head of our armies in Italy, to save their country and their fellow-citi- zens, and to declare to the Directory what they know of the facts which I am about to denounce. I call too upon the Directory, to interrogate the best generals in the army. Guarantee them but from xho, poniard oi Buonaparte; then yrill they speak out, and this is what they will depose : " Buonaparte, besides the contributions which he levies, exacts also enormous sums for himself, and appropriates to his own use as much of the spoliation of the countries that he has devastated as suits his convenience ; this money is lodged in the hands of several bankers at Genoa, Leghorn, and Venice. Very considerable sums also have been sent into Corsica. '' Buonaparte is at once the vainest and the most impu- dent of mortals. But he unites the vanity of a child with the atrocity of a demon. " I say — (and it is what twenty thousand men know without daring to say it, but what all will say, now that, like another Curtius, I throw myself into the gulf, for the safety of my brethren in arms) — I say, that in no age, and under no tyrant, have crimes more enormous been commit-, ted, than those which are daily perpetrated under the direc- tion and authority of Buonaparte ! '^ Will it be credited, that in the hospitals appropriated to the sick and wounded, the surgeons devoted to liuona- parte have a constant order ^ as soon as they see a sick soldier past recovery, or one whose incurable wounds will render him no longer of use to the service, to set a mark upon his bed } which fatal mark announces to the attendants that this 46 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCIL victim is to Be carried away xvith the dead ! He is accord- ingly thrown into a waggon appointed to remove the dead bodies to the grave, and is generally strangled or smothered I But notwithstanding these precautions, as the carriages, move along to the place of interment, the cries and groans of the unfortunate men about to be buried alive may be dis- tinctly heard on all sides ! To this horrible fact I have my- self been an eye-witness, as well as to what I am going to relate. -^ '' In the month of July -1797, after an action which took place near Salo, on the Lac de Guarda, Jbuonaparte gave orders that, not only the dead^ but the dying and zuourtded, should be buried! The wretched victims were placed upon five waggons, and at midnight were dragged to an enormous ditch, and precipitated therein. The cries of the living be- ing distinctly heard, the monsters threw down eight loads of burning lime upon them, which, falling upon the undress- ed wounds of the poor victims, caused them to scud forth such piercing moans, that the virtuous curate of Salo, sciz-* ed with horror at the transaction, died in consequence of the affright ! *' Such are the atrocities to which I have been an eye- witness, and which I denounce to all men and to all ages ! If the Directory wish to be satisfied as to the truth of my assertions, they have it in their power to be so. I do not sign my name to this letter, as I am not desirous of being assassinated before the examination of the crimes that I have denounced can take place. I call upon the Directory to ve- rify the facts; and, that done, I will immediately present myself before them as a witness. In the mean time, I shall make myself known to Rewbell.^' This letter speaks for itself; and if Rewbell did not de- nounce or punish Buonaparte at that time, it was because he had shared with him some of his plunder of Italy ; and that vhe Corsican was, besides, necessary to the revolution which Rewbell, Barras, and La Reveilliere prepared, and which actually took place on the 4th of September, 1797. Nearly at the same period when Buonaparte committed, or ordered to be committed, these enormities, he dispatch- ed a letter to the Arch-duke Charles, with proposals for a termination of hostilities couched in terms of the most im- pudent hypocrisy as to his own sentiments, and insult as to THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 47 the Gonduct of Great Britain. ** As for me. General (said Buonaparte), if the overture xvhich I have the honour to make to you can save the life of a single man^ I shall pride r>iyself more upon the civic crown which my, gonscience will tell me I shall thus have deserved^ than upon the melancholy glory which arises from milifary success.^^ What a heart must that man have, who coldly speculates upon sufferings and destruction, by commanding, with a cruel indifierence, the burial alive of his wounded soldiers ! What barefaced impudence must he possess, and hov/ great must his con- tempt have been, both for the prince to whom he wrote, and for mankind in general, to dare to tulk of a conscience, and to make use of expressions of tenderness and humanity, whilst acting as the most profoundly perverted and atrocious of all tyrants, either ancient or modern? But such has been the hypocritical and deceitful jargon of all revolutiona- ry heroes. Demons in their minds, sentiments, and beha-» viour, they were angels in their words. Robespierre spoke of liberty and virtue, v/hile two hundred and fifty thousand families crowded his prisons, and hundreds daily ascended bis scaffolds ; just as Buonaparte writes of a conscience^ when all his actions bid dtfiance to a divinity as well as to humanity. Before the atrocious and sanguinary tragedy of the reduc- tion of Switzerland was accomplished, treachery and ambi- tion had carried Buonaparte into Egypt, and with him the wretchedness of French fraternity and the horrors of un- provoked aggression. While the uninformed in France, as well as other countries, were amused by pretences of a pow- erful preparation for the invasion of England, and Buona- parte went even so far as to swindle monied men out of a loan upon the credit of the plunder of this country ; thoso who examined more considerately the place and manner of equipping the armament, were satisfied that its destinatioi^ was for some other coast, and public expectation had already pointed out that of Egypt. It was so secret, that, during the monarchy, many projectors, who hoped to recommend themselves by suggesting extensive enterprises, had lodged, as far back as in the time of Louis XIV. in the offices of different ministers^ projects for the subjugation of Egypt ; but the old government, having always some regard to ap- pearancc-s, and some (ionsideration for the livd® gf the peo- 48 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH* pie, had not ventured to patronize an undertaking, which could not be atchieved without the infamy of assailing the dominions of an ancient and unprovoking ally, and the pro- bable sacrifice of a great portion of the army in conquering a tract of land situated in an untried climatie, where priva- tions and diseases of every kind v^ould thin their ranks, and make them execrate the fatal ambition of their rulers. Re- cent travellers from France had described Eg) pt in terms widely different from those in which the experience of earlier and more honest ages had depicted it ; and the hopes of possessing a land replete with means of colonization and commerce, combined with that of destroying the power of Great Britain in India, were supposed sufficient motives with republican France for the violation of all treaties and the oblivion of all rights. Buonaparte was entrusted with the command of this ex- pedition ; and in assuming this station, his personal ambi- tion to tread the ground which had been impressed by the victorious footsteps of Alexander and Csesar was subser- vient to the views of the Directory, who hated, feared, and, according to Carnot, were anxious to destroy him. Proba- bly boih the rulers and the general were acting with refined artifice and duplicity ; they hoped to deprive him of the advantages resulting from the command of an army which he had led to glory ^ by involving that army in a tedious and imcertain expedition ; while he, relying on his renown and popularity, and desirous to avoid interfering personally in the transactions of the congress at Rastadt, which then engaged the attention of all Europe, accepted the com- mand of the expedition, though intended, as his intercep- ted letters prove, to accomplish the first part of its des- tination only, and to return to France in the autumn. Whatever sagacity might be exerted in conjectures res- pecting the destination of the French fleet, which, includ- ing transports, amounted to upwards of four hundred sail, nothing certain could be learnt : the troops sent for embar* kation were called the right wing of the army of England ; but the squadron being assembled in the port of Toulon, and the collection of Savans^ of printing presses, and vari- ous other implements of science, demonstrated that its des- tination was for some other country. At length, on the 4th of May, 1798, Buonaparte repaired to Toulon for the THE BUOiSTAPARTE FAMILY* 49 purpose of commanding this far*-famed and mj^sterioiis ex- pedition ; and, as a preparatory measure, published a kind of military harangue, in form of a proclamation, reminding his soldiers of their numerous victories on mountains, in plains, and before fortified places, and that nothing now re- mained for them to achieve but maritime conquests ; they would now, he said, even exceed their former exertionsyor the prosperity of their country^ the good of viankind^ and their own glory. On the 19th following, tlie fleet sailed, and soon arrived off Malta, which the intrigues of France had prepared to surrender. On the nineteenth of June, Buonaparte com- menced a farce of provoking hostilities, by demanding per- mission to water his squadron : an indirect refusal being conveyed, the military were disembarked, and, after two days of pretended resistance, a capitulation was signed, yielding the islands of Malta, Gozo, and Cumino to France. Some ridiculous stipulations were made for obtaining indem- nities for the Grand Master at the Congress of Rastadt, and for assigning to each of the knights a paltry pension of seven hundred livres (291. sterl.). Buonaparte, as usual, accommodated the new acquisition with a constitution on the French model ; and, having plundered the islslnd, again proceeded towards his final destination. Before he set sail^ however, he put into requisition all Maltese sailors, and one hundred and ten young Maltese knights, all sons or re- latives of emigrated French noblemen who were in the army of Conde, or rn the Austrian or English service. They were distributed among the republican crews of different ships J and^ in the action at Aboukir, many of them were killed or wounded in fighting with men and for a cause which they idike detested. Twenty -two of these unfortu- nate young men were blown up in the L'Onent, one of whom was a Chevalier de St. Leger, from La Vendee, whose fathet- had been killed in the army of Coude, whose brother was butchered at Quiberon, and whose uncle had been shot as a Chouan. On the 1st of July, Buonaparte with all his force appear- ed before Alexandria, being only two days after Lord Nel- son had quitted that station. Apprehensive that Fortune might, yet desert him, and the English fleet return to frus- trate his operations, Buona^^arte hastily effected 4 laiidin^ 50 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. of about four thousand three hundred men at Marabou — ^ Although this place was only two leagues from Alexandria, the French found no opposition from the natives ; not even a piece of artillery was pl^^nted for protection. Having sub- sequently augmented the number landed to upwards of twen- ty-five thousand, they advanced in platoons against the city, and reached it unopposed, except by a few Mamelukes, who, hovering around, cut off stragglers, and fought a few slight and partial skirmishes. He began, before anv attack was made on Alexandria, by circulatii.g a printed address to his army ; in which, after observing that the Romans protected all religions, he re- q ested, the soldiery to treat the '* Muftis and Imans of Africa with the same res^^ec? that they had exhibi>.ed toward the bishops and rabbins of Europe.'' He also transmitted three proclamations, prepared beforehand, and dated on board the flag-ship ; the first to the Pacha of Eg\-pt, stating, *' that he was come to put an end to the exactions of the Mame- lukesi*^ and inviting his highness, in the oriental style, *' to meet and curse along with him the impious race of Beys." — 1 he second was addressed to the chief of the caravan j and the last to the inhabitants ; in this he had the impudence to assert, *'• that he was come to rescue the rights of the pooi" from the hands of their tyrants ; and added, with his usual hypocritical cant, " that the French respect^ more than the Mamelukes, God, his Prophet, and the Koran." " Cadis, Shieks, Imans, Chirbadgees !" continued he, " tell the people that we are the friend of true Mussulmen, — Did we not dethrone the Pope^ who preached that it was ne- cessary to make war against the true believers ? Did we not destroy the knights of Malta, because those foolish 7nen tho't that God wished hostilities to be perpetually carried on against those of your faith ?" After stating, " that all towns and villages which might arm against the French should be burnt^^ he commanded every one to remain in his house, enjoined prayers to be said as usual, and concluded with '^ Glory to the Sultan^ g'^^V ^^ ^^^^ French army^ his friends, curses to the Mamelukes, and happineas to the people of Egypt." It is hardily possible to point out any page of an- cient or modern histor)'^, where impudence is more united with falsehood, deception and imposture with atheism and political treachery. Buonaparte, accompanied by his staff, THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 51 iieaded the advanced guard marching against Alexandria, a n and the inhabitants, and by some cannon shot. — The French had not yet landed their ordnance ; but the de- fences of Alexandria were so weak as to forbid all fear. — Buonaparte, therefore, bravely give orders to beat a charge; and the French, advancing towards the walls, prepared to scale them. While the generals and privates were attempt- ing to reach the summit, Kleber received a musket-shot in the head, and Menou was thrown back from the parapet, covered with contuisons ; but the walls were, notwithstand- ing, covered with republicans, Avhile the besieged fled. Here began a scene of horror and carnage, commanded by the sanguinary and barbarous policy of Buonaparte, which would hardly be credible, had it not been authenticated by the orig^inal letters of the French genera-s, intercepted by our cruizers, and made public by our government. After the butchery of every person on the walls or in the streets, all houses were forced and entered, and neither age nor sex spared. Trusting to the proclaimed respect of Buonaparte for their Prophet, numbers of Mussulmen took refuge in their sacred mosques ; but the republicans pursued them with the rage of cannibals : men and women, old and young, children at the breast, all were inhumanly murdered without resistance, as well as without pity ; and these bloody trans- actions lasted four hours ; when at last these improvers of the happiness of mankind^ glutted with massacre, desisted. From the manner in which the capture of Alexandria by Buonaparte is narrated by persons not interested to impart false impressions, it is beyond a doubt, because it is positive- ly affirmed, that this city was not summoned in order to found a pretence for storming it, and thus striking terror into the intended victims of Buonaparte's perfidy and bar- barity. In an intercepted letter from the French Adjutant- ^ REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. general Boyer, addressed to General Kilmaine, are the fol- low i:ig' paragraphs : — ^' We began by making an assault upon a place without any defence^ and garrisoned by about 500 Janissaries, of whom scarce a inaii knezv how to le'-jel a musket* I allude to Alexandria, a huge and wretched ske- leton of a place, open on every side^ and most certainly very unable to resist the efforts of 25,0(0 men, who attacked it at the same instant. We lost, notwithstanding 150 men, whom we might have preserved by only summoning the town; but it was thought necessary to begin by striking terror into the enemyy Possession of Alexandria having been thus obtained, the French commander, the Corsican i>uQnaparte, issued ano- ther proclamation among the miserable survivors of massa- cre, augmenting and improving upon his former ones, and vvhich will sigiaiise to all ages his contempt of divine insti- tutions ; a proclamation designed, undoubtedly, as a trick to allure the confidence of the natives ; but which, when- ever viewed impartially, must sink into the most degrading contempt the character of that military adventurer, who, in a piratical pursuit of plunder, not only committed the most unprincipled barbarities, but voluntarily announced the renunciation of his faith ; which, even when done thro' compulsi'.m, stamps on the delinquent the name of renegado, and is just y^considered as the last test of a depraved mind, 9,s devoid of religion, virtue, and integrity, as incapable of honour. In this proclamation, '• he expressly denies Jesus Christ ;'' affirming, '•• that he himself, his generals, officers, and soldiers, are true professors of Islamism, who adore and honour the prophet Mahomet and his holy Koran j" that " as a Mussulman, he had overturned the throne of the Christii^n Pope visited Malta, and drove out the unbe- lievers from that island.'^ From this period until his defeat before Acre, in the spring of 1799, except in some skirmishes which he deco- rated with the appellation of battles, Buonaparte had no re- gular enemy to encounter, no armies to combat ; some strol- ling Mamelukes, or Arab$, were his only foes. To judge rightly, therefore, of the bombastic descriptions of his bat- tle of the Pyramids, and others, another passage from the above quoted letter is useful, and proper to be extracted ; ^s the competency of the writer, a general communicating THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY, 55 his sentiments and opinions to another general, cannot be questioned. Its date at Cairo, July 38th, ir98> proves it posterior to all engagements for the possession of Lower Egypt. *' Our enterance into Grand Cairo," says General Boyer, " will doubtless excite that sensasion at home which every extraordinary event is calculated to produce ; but when you come to know the kind of enemy that we had to combat the little art theij employed against us^ and the perfect nuility of all their measures ^ our expeditions and our victories will appear to you very cojmnon things. After this (the as- sault of Alexandria), we marched against the Mamelukes j a people highly celebrated among the Egyptians for their bravery. This rabble (I cannot call them soldiers), "which has not the most trifling idea of tactics^ and Vi^hich knows 7iothing of war but the blood that is spilt in it, appeared, for the first time, opposed to our army on the 12th of July. " From the first dawn of day, they made a general dis- play of their forces, which straggled round and round our army, like so many cattle; sometimes galloping, and some- times pacing, in groups of ten, fifty, a hundred, &c. Af- ter some time, they made several attemps, in q style equally ridicidous ai>d curious, to break in upon us ; but finding eve- ry where a resistance which they probably did not expect, they spent the day in keeping us exposed to the fury of a burning sun. Had we been a little more enterprising this day^ I think their fate would have been decided ; but General Buonaparte temporised, that he might make a trial of his eneniy, and become acquainted with their manner of fight- ing. " This day ended with the retreat of the Mamelukes, xoho scarcely lost fve and twenty men. We continued our march up the Nile till the 21st, which was the day that put a final termination to the power of the Mamelukes in Egypt. " Four thousand men on horseback, having each a groom or two, bore down intrepidly on a nwnerous army of veterans ; their charge was an act of fury, rage, and despair. They attacked Dessaix and Regnier first. The soldiers of these divisions received them with steadiness, and, at the disi- tance of only ten paces, opened a running fire upon them, which brought down one hundred and fifty. They then fell upon Bonn's division, which received them in the same manner. In short, after a number of unavailing effons.^ 54 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. they made off; and, ca'Tving with them all their treasures, took shelter in Upptrr Egypt. The fruit of this victory was Grand Cairo, where we have been ever since the evening of the 22d." Not counting those who perished in the massacre at Alex- andria, from this official letter we learn, that no more than one hundred and s venty-five enemies were killed by the French in those brilliant victories with a numerous armij cf "veterans, over four thousand inexperienced Mamelukes, which made them masters of one of the most fertile countries in the world. At the period of the inundation of the Nile, Buonaparte, with accustomed pomp, made the cut in the dyke which conveys the water to Cairo ; and the flow into the canal of Alexandria presented an opportunity, which was judicious- ly seized by Kleber, of transporting the artillery by water to Gizeh. General Andreossy sounded the Pelusian mouths of the Nile, the roads of Damietta, the Boghass, and C- -k Boyau, as well as the Dibeh mouth , entered the Lake Men- zaleh, where he overcame the resistance of the Arabs, who opposed him with a hundred and thirty of the Egyptian craft, called dgermes ; constructed a map of the Lake, and measured with the chain the circumference of the coast, over an extent of forty-five thousand fathoms ; determined the bearings of the islands, and discoviered the ruins of Tinch, of the ancient Pelasium, and of Farama. Having performed this operation, he returned to Cairo ; and speedi- ly set out, attended by the Savan Berthollet, to su vey the Lakes of Natron, where he acquitted himself with the same diligence and success. All the other Savans who accompanied Buonaparte were engaged in pursuits of greater or lesser importance, accord- ing to their powers ; some ascertained points in geography, surveyed canals, and made drawings of buildings and monu- ments ; others made collections and investigations for natu- ral history, constructed windmills, arranged almanacks^ and even composed a journal. During these transactions. General Dessaix, in pursuance of the directions of Buonaparte, waged an active and pros- perous war against Mourad Bey, in Upper Egypt ; although his enterprize was as dangerous as his proceedings were sanguinary. THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 55. It is impossible to ascertain how far the people had been deceived, bv Buonaparte's hypocrisy, into an opinion that hii wsLS the friend of their sovereign^ and a zealous proselyte to their religion J but on the 21st of October, 1798, imme- diately on the appearance oi the Jirman declaring him an en- ttny to the Porte, an insurrection broke out, though without any apparent plan or system of operation. The assembling of the people, their discourse, and their menaces, excited neither curii sitv nor apprehension, till they began to attack and plunder the dwellings of the French. The principal meeting was before a mosque ; and General Dupuy, ad- vancing at the head of a smalt troop, to disperse them, was sliiin, with ail his followers : a few French were killed iu the streets ; but on the beating of the generale the main body flew to arms ; the streets were scon cleared ; the peo- ple took refuge in their mo;-ques, the doors of which Buo- naparte ordered to be forced, and the buildings fired ; an immense and indiscriminate slaughter followed ; friends and foes xvere alike exterminated, to glut the vindictive fury of the republicans : the horrible illumination, occasioned by the burning of part of the city ; the filing of artillery from the citadel, the screams and groans of people of all classes^ sexes, and ages ^ ^^SS'^^^S' ^^ "oainfor quarter, and the furi- ous shouts by which the French rallied and encouraged each other, formed a combination of horrors, which, in modern warfare, seldom occurs. Quarter was at last tardily and reluctantly granted by Buonaparte ; the city recovered a gloomy tranquillity ; but the most ferocious and rigorous measures were pursued for preventing future insurrection. This event occurred before Buonaparte hi-id made his survey of the Isthamns of Suez ; and while he was engaged in that research he learned that Dgezzar Pacha had seized and fortified the fort of El-Arish, and received such further intelligence as left him no longer in doubt of the hostile in- tentions of the Pcrte. Pursuing his accustomed policy, of assailing his opponents before they could become strong by union and formidable by preparation, Buonaparte arranged, witho t loss of time, a plan for attacking Dgezzar, setting apart for that purpose twelve thousand men, well supported with such artillery as could be transported according to ex- igency. He divided this force into five columns under Kleber, Regionier, Lanses, Bon, and Murat ; and, having 56 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCtt. instructed his admiral Peree to embark heavy artillery dn board three frigates for Jaffa, and taken precautions for secur* ing the tranquillity of Cairo, prepared to head the expedition himself. Before his departure, hypocrisy^ apostacy, atheism, and fanaticism, were again resorted to, as pohtical measures to keep the ignorant natives quiet and submissive. The in- habitants of the capital, if not more, loyal, had, since the late butchery, become more obedient to their new chief, who endeavoured to deceive and rule them by means of their prejudices ; and, for this purpose, not only recurred to the doctrine of fatality^ but wished to instil a belief of his im' mediate i?itercourse zvith the divinity. In an address to the " Cherifs, Imans, and Orators of the Mosque," Buona- parte enjoined them to inculcate in the minds of the people, " that those who became his enemies should find no refuge either in this world or the next*"* " Is there a man so blind," says he, ^* as not to see that all my operations are conducted by destiny f Instruct the in- habitants, that ever since the world has existed, it was written, that after having overcome the enemies of Isla- mism, and destroyed the Cross, I should come from the fur- thest parts of the west to fulfill the task which has been im- posed upon me. Make them see, that, in the second book of the Koran, in more than twenty passages, that which has happened was foreseen, and that which shall take place has also been explained; let those, then, whom the fear of our arms alone prevents from pronouncing imprecations, now change their dispositions ; for in offering prayers to heaven against us, they solicit their own condemnation ; let the true believers then pi esent vows for our success ; / could call to account each individual among you for the most secret sentiments of his htart ; for I know every thing, even that which you never communicated to any person ; and the day will come when all the world shall witness, that, as I act in consequence of orders from above, human efforts are of no avail against me." " Three days afterwards Buonaparte, who had expressed much resentment at the compassion manifested by his troops, and determined to relieve himself from the maintenance and care of three thousand eight hundred prisoners, ordered them to be marched to a rising ground near Jaffa, where a division 6f French infantr}^ formed against them. When the lurks THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 57 had entered into their fatal alignment, and the mournful pre- parations were completed, the signal gun fired. Vollies of musquetry and grape instantly played against them; and Buonaparte, who had been regarding the scene through a telescope, when he saw the smoke ascending, could not re- strain his joy^ but broke out into exclamations of approval; indeed, he had just reason to dread the refusal of his troops thus to dishonour themselves. Kleber had remonstrated iii the most strenuous manner, and the officers of the Etat Ma- jor who commanded (for the general to whom the division belonged was absent) even refused to execute the order with- out a written instruction ; bu^ Buonaparte was too cautious, and sent Berthier to enforce obedience. " When the Turks had all fallen, the French troops hu- manely endeavoured to .put a period to the sufferings of the wounded ; but some time elapsed before the bayonet could finish what the fire had not destroyed, and probably many languished days in agony. Several French officers, by whom partly these details are furnished, declared that this was a scene, the retrospect of which tormented their recollection, and that they could not reflect ou it without horror, accus- tomed as they had been to sights of cf-uelty. *' These were the prisoners whom Assalini, in his very able work on the plague, alludes to, when he says that for three days the Turks shewed no symptoms of that disease, and it was. their putrifying remains which produced the pes- tilential malady, w- ful, the external actions and transactions of the French gov- ernment, and its generals and troops, were as contemptible, dishonorable, and disastrous. The Congress at Rastadt had proved to all the world the bad faith, the dangerous preten- tions, and the ambitious views of the Directory ; and the victories of the allies in Germany and Italy were convincing evidences of the^ weakness, disaffection, cr disorganization THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 65 of the republican armies. The people, therefore, when for- tune landed Buonaparte ,n France, far from inquiring, i-to the causts of h.s past conduct, were happy to suppos° f at he brought the means of terminating their presemm s or tunes and d.sgraces • they flattered themselves tLu th ir destm.es were in his hands, and that the success which Ih formerly attended his banner in Italy would again be ex eta^ ed over the whole country. His arrival in Paris was tKre fore hailed as a great national deliverance -nd h. i «he centre of those intrigues which seeded t:rect.'e"tS: final sanction and guarantee from the addition of his nan ' 1 he two Councils prostrated themselves at his feet IT a splendid and solemn banquet in honour of h' ^"""^ the church of St. Sulpice, Called, ste L Lvd'r 'th! Temple of Victory. At this fete the n;.. , '. '"® members of both Councils attended but t ^"V^ ^'^ forts of art and taste were exhrusted'i, r 'ndt n^f h ''"' ''- illustrious and agreeable, and the fraternarh, ^ " ^"""^ ousand animating, the general as eroftlS"' '""P'"" plete with constraint and embarrassment If'"'.' ^''^^ >•«- vailed on all sides ; the machinatioi s f" the neTortK^'"" of the Government and Constitution were real inh""" ned , mo execution ; huonaparte appeared o„ivf ^^ "■■- ment in the hall, and retired'; impre's^ed, perhL ^idiT fear which was never afterwards Absent from wfr;.- ?^ an so„,e morsel or some goblet, to be presented brthe'h^f of treacherj, or vengeance he might s'^vallow his death At length, three days after this fete, which ,.. new.converted Mussulman, had profaned a Chr' V ^u, * ..nd after m.any secret inter^iewsLd 'rkl p'^Je?:^;'". 8,^'' Talleyrand, Fouche, Volney, Ucederer and ml ^^^ rators, Buonaparte ,000 [private.] secret expence3 of the first consuju year viii. To the members of the Council of Ancients, in Brumaire, year viii. - - ^ - 1,500,000 To do. of the Council of Five Hundred, do- 3,000,0 .0 To the Directorial Guard, do, - - 1,000,000 To General Le Fupals, - P * «. ^ - y 500,009 THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 93 YEAR X. Francs, For the return of some bishops and priests, 1,600,000 The Consulta at Lyons, - - - - 4,000,000 To some leading Members of the Senate, on the motion of the Consulate for life, - - 800,000 Do. -------- 700,000 Do. of the Council of State, do. - - 600,000 Do. of the Legislative Body, do. - - 500,000 Do. of the Tribunate, do. - - - 500,000 To the different Prefects, do. - - - 12,ooo,ooo To fifty generals, do. - - - - 3,5oo,ooo To the different armies, do. ' - - - 3, 000,000 To the navy at Brest and Toulon, do. - 600,000 For accelerating the votes and proposing ad- dreses at Paris, to Fouche and Dubois, - 3oo,ooo Do. in the departments, - - - - 0,000,000 For the inspection over the Bourbons, - 600,000 Remitted to Citizen Otto, - - - - 5oo,ooo For the private inspection over the ministers and at their offices, - - - - 1 00,000 Among the military at Paris, per General Junot, loo,ooo Do. in the departments, - - - - 4,000,000 To prove with what indifference and profusion millions are squandered away, and with what contempt the squander- ed millions are accounted for, the budget presented to the Le- gislative Body at its last meetings in February 1803, and pub- lished in the offcial Moniteur^ contains the following concise narration, how nearly three millions sterling have been ex« p ended. YEAR IX. 32 millions expended in negociations (pour frais des nego* liations.) year x. 10 millions unforeseen expences (depences imprevues.) 15,5o5,ooo francs expended in negociations (pour frais des negotiations.) Let those who complain of the show and prodigality of princes, who libel the expences attending monarchical go^ vernments, who praise the simplicity and economy of re- publican administrators ; who speak of the absurdity' of he- reditary sovereignty, and of the advantage of electing rulers : let them read the above authentic extract, and then say what France has gained by exchanging an ancient monarchy for a fashionable commonwealth — a Bourbon for a Buonaparte, 94 REVOLU riONARY PLUTARCH. People who have not resided for some time in revolution- ary France can form no idea of the disorder that reigns in her finances, of the uncertainty and insecurity of property, of the total want of confid'ence, of the scarcity of money, of the immorality and crimes of her government, and of the vices and slavery of her inhabitants. Of France it may truly •l^e said, for these last eleven years, that Her slaroes are soldiers^ and her soldiers slaves. Her knaves are rulers^ and her rulers knaves. And, in fact, any upstart in place or in afRuence, who is even notoriously known to have committed murders and as- sassinations, to have intrigued, robbed, betrayed or plundered ever so much, is respected as an irreproachable character. Many good and innocent persons have, besides, since the Revolution, been suspected, accused, judged and condemn- ed by former factions as criminah ; this has introduced a confusion in ideas, advantageous to those really guilty and deserving of punishment ; the public opinion is therefore al- 'ways uncertain and hesitating about the innocence or guilt of the accused. But the immoral indifference and cowardly baseness of the French republicans would be incredible, were it not manifest, that notwithstanding they are convinced of the enormous crimes, both of the First Consul and most of his senators, of his counsellors of state, Sec. crimes that, un^- der a regular government, and in a country where honour, morality and religion were revered, would long ago have forced them to descend from power, and to renounce their r-ank and riches for a gibbet, the galleys, or a prison ; — they continue to submit to Buonaparte as they did to Robespierre, and speak of xht great virtues of the former in 1803, as they did of the unparalleled humanity of the latter in 1793. On all others, as well as on the present king of fac- tion, the prostitution of praise, and every degree of enco- miastic veneration, have been bestowed. Terms peculiar to the adoration and worship of the Supreme Being have been applied to Marat and Robespierre, as well as to Buonaparte ; wretches, all, whom it was the reproach of humanity to number among men, and whom nothing but riches and power, fear or meanness, prevented those who published or pro- claimed their deification from hunting into the toils of jus- tice, as disturbers of the peace of nations. In a pamphlet called '' La Sainte Famille," the following calculation is made and published, of the number of per- THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. ^5 uons who had perished by the commands of Napoleone Buo-* naparte, before he was firmly seated upon the republican throne of France as a First ConsuL In December 1793, Brutus Buonaparte ccmimanded the cannons and bayonets which killed, or rather murdered, twelve hundred men, women, and children, at Toulon. In October 1795, eight thcusand men, wcnlen, and children, were butchered in the streets of Paris, by Earras, Buona- parte, and his satellites. During the campaigns of 1796 and 1797, in Italy and Carinthia, according to th^ cfiicial report in the war-office, twentv-six thoua.md four hundred and sixty French citizens were killed by the enemy on the fs-dds of battle, and nine thousand three hundred and fift}'- two perished in the hospitals: of v^hom the author of the pamphlet supposes at least three thousand to have been stran- gled^ pQisoned, or hurled alhc^ by the orders of Buonaparte, after having been dangerously v/cHmded in combating for this atrocious general. During the same campaign, according to Berthier's, and other generals' reports, upwards of forty- four thousand enemies in arms were killed, besides fourteen: thousand two hundred disarmed inhabitants, men, women,- and children, who perished in cities, towns, and villages given up to pillage, taken by storm, pHt under military exe- cution, or who were stabbed and shot, or burned alive as insurgents, as refractory, or as fanatics. Buonaparte's expedition to Egypt and to S^ria, and the battle of Aboukir, cost the lives of twenty-two thousand- Frenchmen, forty thousand inhabitants i-n Egypt, and six- thousand in Syria ; and, according to Menou's account, thirty-six thousand lurks and English were killed by the republicans or by the climate. (The number of Frenchmen poisoned in the hospitals by the orders of Ali Buonaparte, Menou does not mention.)- During the campaign of 1-800, in Italy, Switzerland, ancl Germany, and' until the Peace of Luneviile ensured Bouonaparte's usurpation, twenty-six- thousund eight hundred Frenchmen died on the field uf bat- tle, or in the hospitals ; and according to Morcau's, Ber- thier's, Massena's, and Mac.dcnalds accounts, more than double that number of enemies perished in the same cam- paigns. And thus upwards of three hundred thousand livs:> nave been sacrificed to procure Buonaparte a rr.nk and a power, of which he makes no other use than to cor.fer nu •rganised misery and slavery on mankind, by a CQnt;i.i;;ii 95 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARGH. oppression, plunder and tyranny ; by his religious and poli- tical hypocrisy, as much as by his revolutionary plots, pre« tensions, intrigues, and agitations. Thanks to the courageous, loyal, and able historian, Sir Robert Wilson, who relating in a style equally pure, nervous, elevated, and clear, incontrovertible facts, has exposed the hitherto unheard of, or disbelieved, atrocities of Napoleone Buonaparte, and made the world more intimately acquaint- ed with the principles and conduct of this fortunate, but mis- conceived man, and proved, that neither command nor afflu- ence, neither authority nor prosperity, neither a throne nor popularity, " can make a villain great, "* Success has some- times meliorated the sanguinary characters of former usurp- ers. The Emperor Augustus was very different from the Triumvir Octavius ; but the tyranny and ferocity of Buo- naparte increases with his prosperity ; and the fortunate First Consul never ceases to exhibit the cruel character of the adventurer and terrorist Brutus Buonaparte at Toulon of 1793, of the jacobin and murderer Barras Buonaparte at Paris of 1795, and of the poisoner and butcher, Ali Buon- aparte, at Jaffa of 1799. Future ages, more happy, more independent, and more impartial, will do the British Nation that justice, and bestow on it that admiration, whkh, terrified by revolutionary threats, and gained over by regicide indemnities, some co- temporaries have refused ; and draw an honourable conclu- sion concerning the spirit, patriotism, and morality of mo- dern Britons, from the irreconcileable hatred with which they have been dstinguished by all French rebels and regi- cides, of all factions, of all parties, and of all constitu- tions ; by the Brissot, Danton, Marat, and Robespierre of the year one, as well as by the Talleyrand, Roederer, Fou- che, and Bounaparte, of the year twelve. As to Napoleone Buonaparte, either considered as a pow- erful usurper, or as a private citizen, either as a warrior, or as a politician, it has before been justly said, "' That success may, for inscrutable purposes, continue to attend him. Ab- ject senates may decree ttim a throne, or the pantheon ; but history shall renier injured hum inity justice, and an indig- nant posterity inscribe on his cenotaph : ^^ Ille venena Colc/iica, £t quicquid iisqiiam concipiiiir n^fas Tractavit,^ 97 JOSEPHINE BUONAPARTE, EMPRESS OF THE FRENCH. Ah ! «i Von connoissait Je n^ant des grandeurs j Leurs tristes vanit^s, leurs fantomes trompeurs, Qu'on en detesteroit le brillant esclavage ! ! ! Josephine Tascher de la Pagerie is not the first per- son of her isex in Prance, whom, from a subject, fortune has elevated to be the consort of a sovereign. King Ca- simir of Poland, and Louis XIV". of France, were both married to French gentlewomen, who had, however, the modesty and prudence not to expose to derision, danger, or contempt, that grandeur which had descended from its native dignity to gratify an unbecoming and impolitic passion. And, indeed, had Madame de Maintenon been so ambitious as to desire the publicity of those sa- cred ti^s which united her lawfully to Louis XIV. not- withstanding the unlimited power of this king, vi'hich the French people had so long and so quietly obeyed and respected, it is very probable that a civil war w^ould have been the consequence. Any prince of the blood, who had then appealed to the honour of his countrymen for avenging the outrage olfered himself, his ancestors, and the throne, by such an act, would have been sure of pu- inerous adherents, not only among the nobility but among the inferior classes. Frenchmen, in the end of the seven- teenth century, were notso depraved and unprincipled as their descendants have shewn themselves in the be- ginning of the nineteenth. Men who can submit lo salute f it #^ a guilty Corsican adventurer their em^^eror, and to re- ' main his slaves;, could reasonably have po objection to bow as subjects to his worthy partner, a Creole impress, though she had previously been by turns the harlot of courtiers and of regicides, prostituting herself in the bou- doirs of Versailles, or rioting in vice and debauchery in ithe dens of a committee of public safety, or in the anti- chambers of an executive directory. Jjisephiue la Pagerie was married «\t tlteage of twenty- N 98 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. two to Viscount Alexander de Beauharnois, then second major in a regiment of infantry; a rank wliich he owed, not to his military capacity, but to his assiduity at Ver- sailles, in the anti-chambers of favourites and ministers ; and to his reputation among the courtiers, of being an agreeable and able dancer. The marriage of the rich Mademoiselle le Pagerie with the poor Viscount de Beau- harnois was concluded with love and affection on one part, and from interest and necessity on the other ; be- cause de Beauharnois was both in debt, and some years younger than his wife. Both were born at Martinique, and educated in France; and both descended from noble but obscure or reduced families, who had transplanted themselves to the West Indies, in expectation of making in the colonies a fortune, of which they had neither a prospect nor a hope in their mother country. Notwithstanding that Monsieur and Madame de Beau- harnois were, soon after their marriage, introduced at court, and presented to the king and to the royal family, yet their usual society chiefly consisted of persons who, like themselves, possessed some property, no claim to eminence, but great envy towards those who with riches united distinction and favour. Both sexes of this society were immoral citizens, ambitious and dangerous intriguers, and the principal though indirect plotters and conspira- tors both against the throne and the altar, against the pri- vileges of the nobility and clergy, as well as against the happiness and tranquillity of Frenchmen in general. Talleyrand, Charles and Alexander La Methe, Beaumetz, La Tour Maubeuge, Sillery, and Flahault, were some of the persons most visited by Madame de Beauharnois and her husband ; characters who have, with their ladies, more or less figured in the French revolutionary annals, and prepared, by their atheistical, disaffected, and seditious conversations and writings, the subversion of the monar- chical government, and the wretchedness of France and Europe. They were known/ro«c/e«7\sas the French call- ed them ; or, what is the same, sticklers against the go- vernment, without cause or reason, as well as without shame, gratitude, duty, or policy. Among these coteries of the second class, or petty nobility, vice walked bare- faced, and the sacred ties of matrimony were less respect- ed than in thefrst class, otherwise reported, or rather ca- THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 99 iumniated, as the most debauched and unprincipled ; though a regard to their names, and to the known virtu- ous character of Louis XVL forced many of them at least to save the appearance of virtue, or to be discreet in their vices, and to avoid all scandal and publicity, as the only means of preserving the good opinion and favour of their prince. This was not the case with the familiar company of Monsieur and Madame de Beauharnois : burning with desire to become notorious, their constant and criminal emulation was to obtain an infamous applause, to be fa- shionable in the immoral French capital, and to gain re- nown by making the public acquainted with their reci- procal intrigues, their mutual inlidelities, and their equal refinements in vice and debauchery. The gallants of Ma- dame de Beauharnois were therefore as numerous as they were notorious ; and her vanity was no doubt flattered, at hearing that her amours were the common topic of conversation not only at Versailles, but at Paris, in the theatres, as well as in the coffee-houses. In March 1789, at the hotel of the Countess de F — , (the bonne amie of Talleyrand) Madame de Beauharnois said, in the large circle of ladies and gentlemen assembled there, and in the presence of Mr. Beauharnois, that, of her several pregnancies, she could not reproach her husband with any, except the first, which ended in a miscarriage. This sally was heard, commended, and envied by all the ladies pre- sent; and the next day trumpeted about Paris by the gen- tlemen, and laughed at or admired every where. A few days afterwards, when Madame de Beauharnois appeared in her box at the opera, she was saluted with the repeat- ed applauses of the good and virtuous Parisians, who then were preparing the moral regener^ttion of France, of Europe, and of the world. Mr. de Beauharnois had about this period been chosen, by the nobility of the bailiwick of Blois, a deputy to the States-General. Dazzled by this honour, and by the flat- tery which his friends paid to the charms of his wife and to the good dinners of her cook, and convinced of his own superiority in dancing, he thought himself a man of con- sequence ; and, to prove himself such, determined, with a degree of impudevice, as dishonourable as ineffectual, \\\ gratitude for all the favours and benefactions that he had received from the generous bounty of Louis XVI. to de-p 'A 100 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. claim, and to declare his implacable enmity to this Sove- reign and lo the Roj^al family. But, in the assembly of the States-General, afterwards called the National Assem*- bly, when he ascended the tribune, he read his treacherous S|)eeches Avith an ostentation which his chilling and un- ffessed themselves the most faitliful subjects of the empress the most submissive slaves of Josephine. O, Bar- ras! thousand times happy Barras ! go, and hang thyself! What would not every senator, minister, counsellor of state, legislator, tribune, general, and admiral, present, have given for a single ttte-a-tte,iox one of the many tete-d-tetes of which you, wretch, did not know the value! Again, unfortunate exile, hang thyself!" " When the bustle was over in the drawing-room, her majesty entered into her petit salon, accompanied by her imperial husband, whom, by ardently pressing to her c/- devant bosom, she almost petrified with her caresses, and terrified with her embraces. This ecstacy, notwithstand- ing the silver helmet which his majesty prudently wears concealed between his waistcoat and shirt, and the expla- natory imperial robes that decorated her person, made him tremble as if pursued by another Charlotte Corday. Ko doubt he remembered that Barras was now his sworn ene- my, and that his Josephine had more than once been the tender friend of Barras. The terror was, however, as un* seasonable as the suspicion was unfounded. Her majesty w'as intoxicated ; not with wine or liqueurs, but with joy, satisfaction, gratitude, vanity, and pride. For her Napo- leone she would that instant willingly have sacrificed every Barras in the world. Her regret or passions were then not sensual. The voice of reason had silenced the demands of her senses. Every body may rest assured, that during this whole day Barras never once occurred to her. As to her thoughts or dreams in the night, they are her secrets, and will, it is supposed, remain so. She is doomed to en- dure with patience in bed by her side the insignificance of a shade, or the impotence of a phantom, recollecting at the same time to whom she is indebted for her grandeur, and that in the imperial palace, among the high and low valets, as well as among the stout grenadiers, she may at leisure find more than one Barras to console her. The Thuillerics does not tpntain a single man, in or out of Vk THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. lU very, not excepting even his majesty's favourite mainc- lukes, whom she may not command, and be obeyed." In such a manner did Josephine pass her first days as an empress. The incorrigible mistrust and innate fear of her hu>band embittered the sweets of the rank which policy liad induced him to bestow on her. She felt that, although an empress, she had still a master. Shortly after his elevation at Paris, Buonaparte determin- ed to join the camps on the coast. His object was not to invade Great Britain, but to accustom his olhcers and sol- diers to the new changes, and to be hailed as a sovereign by troops who but lately saW'in him, though supreme chief of the state, nothing but a fellow citizen. This ab- sence from his capital would also give him and his wife an opportunity to organize the new officers of their house- hold, and foreign princes time to consider about, or to make out new credentials for their representatives iu France. He at first intended to have Josephine for his travelling companion ; but upon her intreaties, and with the advice of Talleyrand, the medical section of his coun- cil of state, presided by his physician Ccrvisart, was con- voked, when it was determined that the use of the waters at Aix-la-Chapelle would probably be of eminent service to the constitution of the empress. To their benign influ- ence it was stated, that Charlemagne, who had no children by his first wife, had afterwards a very numerous offspring by his wives as well as concubines. To this opinion Buo- naparte assented, notwithstanding the protest of Cardinal Caprara, who ascribed to miracles solely the fruitfulness of Charlemagne's bed. He had no objection, however, to the empress's visit to Aix-la-Chapelle; but he desired her to have more corifidence in the prayersof the faithful than faith in the notions of the faculty. Upon which, Buona- parte ordered, that, during his wife's stay at Aix-la-Cha- pelle, an extra mass should ho said every day in all the churches at Paris, to implore the miraculous assistance of' the holy Virgin, for the accomplishment of his and his subjects wishes, which so completely reconciled the Roman prelate, that in a fit of enthusiastic fervour he predicted that the imperial throne should at all times he occupied hxf an heir in a direct line. Had Louis XVllI. any children, thii oracle would probably not have been very acceptable U4 ^ REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. to a diffident usurper, who might have chastised the well- meaning and innocent prophet as an insidious and artful conspirator* The public functionaries upon the road from Paris to Aix-la-Chapelie began, as might have been expected, a laudable emulation who should be foremost to prostrate themselves before their new sovereign. The generals, pre- fects, and mayors, consulted the dictionary of harangues and " the art of addressing princes ;" and the bishops, rectors, and curates, rummaged *' the legends of saints," the " chronicle of martyrs," and " the register of mira- cles." Never at any period was more cringing exhibited, more absurdities expressed, or more ridiculous declamation thrown awa3^ Never before was such meanness better appreciated and more despised. A letter from the gay and good humoured empress to her accomplished and charming daughter, Hortense Eugenie, commonly called Fanny de Beauharnois, the wife of Louis Buonaparte, ex- plains this assertion better than can be done by an indif- ferent pen. Aix-la-Chapelle^ Friday. " Here I have been, my dearest child, ever since last Wednesday, weary of assiduities, harassed by visits, dis- gusted by flattery, by the duplicity of men, and by the hypocrisy of women. For seven long days, and seven, nay, seventeen times in the day, I have been compelled to keep a good countenance while hearing falsehoods addressed to me as truth, impieties pronounced as compliments, and improprieties declaimed as the elegance of rank and refine- ment of wit. During the whole journey I got into a per- spiration when I saw a village; I trembled in approaching a bourg ; and I was in a fever 04i entering a town or city. I open to you my secret thoughts without disguise. Ax the introduction of every deputation, I really was in an agony for fear of not being able to conceal the feeling of my mind. My heart was always full : at one time ready to burst by concealing the laughter which my contempt inspired, at another almost choaked to stop the tears pity provoked to flow, in contemplating perversity. Oh ! if my husband felt what I do. if he perceived the wickedness of sycophants, the selfishness of his friends, and the cor- ruption of his courtiers, how much would he despise the* THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 115 whole crew! how much beneath him would he not find it to occupy all his thoughts for their welfare, to lose his rest to procure them quiet, and to expose himself to hourly risks for the happiness and comfort of a worthless, unprin- cipled, and degraded people, who worship him to day to idoJatry, but who to-morrow would be ready to hoot, insult, and murder him en masse, if the factious, envious, or treacherous, were to succeed in erecting a gibbet for him. I hear you say, that as atfeirs are now advanced the Emperor has no choice left but between a throne and a grave. True, my child ; but in the mean time, the slaves confined in our gallies are often less tormented by the weight of their iron fetters, than great folks, who, in trou- blesome and unsettled times, residing in imperial palaces, are harassed by the lustre of those golden chains which they are forced to wear as ornaments. " I have read but little, and meditated less on what I have read ; but the book of common sense tells me every day, that my Napoleone rules the most ungrateful, immoral and fickle nation in the universe, and that his dangers in- crease in proportion as he advances towards the pinnacle of supremacy. He has done too much already. Another glorious peace with England, and nothing more remains to be done; and we have all seen, that in this country the instant a sovereign ceases to be admired he is hated, and runs the hazard of ceasing to reign. " The Prince of B — , who has arrived here from Dussel- dorff, is chiefly the cause of tl^ese gloomy, or, as you will perhaps have it, anti-philosophical, ideas. No sooner had he been presented to me, than he demanded a private audience. If the shades of his ancestors had listened to his conversation, how would they have blushed at the ig- nominy of their descendant! He desired no less of me than to employ my interest with my husband to effect another revolution in the heart of Germany; and, like another Orleans, to exterminate the elder branch of his family, in hopes of succeeding to, or seizing, their autho- rity. His ofiers were brilliant indeed, if any thing could be brilliant to me, who am tired even to satiety of brilliancy itself. Upon my firm declaration, that by a promise to the Emperor I was bound not to interfere with political trans- actions or intrigues, I got rid of him, but the impression hh overtures made remain behind. 1 116 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. "Twice already bave T bathed; but to tell you the truth, neither ihe opinions of physicians nor the prayers oT priests inspire me with ihe confidence of being able to give an heir to the French empire. The cause you know, i was born a dozen years too early; but your dear boy, our little Napoleon, makes me perfectly resigned to what 1 cannot change. " In the forenoon a courier brought me a letter from the roast. 'J'he Emperor is highly satisfied with the reception given him by his brave troops, and I rejoice at it with all my sot'l. I cannot, however, help remembering, that these brave troops are the same Frenchmen, who, after obeying and adoring them, have seen with inditference, Louis XVL murdered, Robespierre guillotined, Barras exiled, Pichegru strangled, and Moreau' dishonoured. He does not expect ro join me so soon as he first intended. He is provoked to the highest degree at the audacity and insolence of the F^nglish cruizers, and he is dete-rmined to make them re- pent of it before he leaves Boulogne. May heaven preserve him ! otherwise, I am certain to find the road of my return to Pans planted with thorns, though during my late pas- sage it was strewed with roses. '* The inseparable consoles me ^very night with his roiiversaihn for a couple of hours; but he begins to ac- knowledge himself an invalid, and that an lionourallc retreat in the senate v.-i I! soon be necessary. An)ong your young and gallant conscripts at Com peigne, take care not to lay aside discretion and prudence. 1 know \'our hus- band's character, I know the character of his family ; and the revengeful spirit of his countrymen. If he once sus- pect you, you are undone: you will not only be deprived of his love and esteem, but of the regard and atfection my Napo'eone has for you. But the emperor's Argus tells me that it is time to go to bed. Ami not very complaisant lo steal from my sleep two hours to chatter [jaser) with you. Embrace your husband and child." The authenticit}^ of this and some lollowing letters the French publisher guarantees, having found them in the portfolio which was lost by Princess Louis Buonaparte in lier removal from the camj) of Compeigne to Paris, last autumn. The contents undoubtedly do credit to the judg- ment, to the honour, and to the heart of the empress, though at the expence of the morals and character of the? nation THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 117 which her husband sways with such an oppressive and un- limited power. It also removes a part of the veil which covers without concealing the disgraceful behaviour and selfish views of so many German princes. In the end, confidence and coquetry report the perpetration of adul- tery with the same inditference as if relating the particulars of a route. The mother and the daughter seem to be tolerably unreserved, and in the perfect secret of each other's intrigues. From Madame Louis's affection and generosity towards her mamma, it is supposed that at least from charity, she has taken^the hint, and spared some of her young conscripts to relieve the invalid. In what light Louis Buonaparte, who at that time commanded the camp at Compeigne, and who is not very tolerant or enduring, has, since the printinp^ of these letters, considered this ma- ternal effusion of tenderness, is not known. The scanda- lous chronicle states, however, that as a true philosopher, instead of reprobating his mother-in-law, or repudiating his wife, he consoled himself in the arms of Madame de C. the beautiful wife of his ugly aid-de-camp, colonel de C. From the following letter it is evident, that the stay at Aix-la-Chapelle did no more exalt the spirits than the use of the waters improved the liealth of the revolutionary em- press. AiX'JayChapelle, Sunday. *' I write to you, my beloved Fanny, indisposed by drinking the waters, so benign to others, and enervated by bathing, which has so often given the vigour of youth to old age, restored strength to the feeble, blessed with con- solation the unfortunate, with content the depressed, and with hope even the wretched. " I see round me so many unthinking beings, wiio judge the situation of mankind from external appearances only, who confound happiness with greatness, and internal com- fort with external splendour: how w'retchedly mistaken they are! The natural weakness, and the human frailties, from which the highest is no more excepted than the low- est, are all censured in those placed above them, while their virtuous inclinations, their generous sentiments, their liberal actions, and honourable acts, which even confounded in the crowd, would command distinction from equals, are left alwaj's nnperceived, unnoticed^ or if remarked, only lis REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. supposed an ordinary duty, expected from a superior by his inferiors. " My presence here has attracted not only a number of Frenchinen, but foreigners of all nations in amity with France. The}' are all busy and attentive to pay me their homage, and, like the statue of the virgin in the cathedral, I am for hours, nay, every hour in the day, forced to stand upon my pedestal, and receive with a good grace the wor- ship of the wicked and the good ; of the wise and the fool- ish ; of the man who, from his birth, I know must despise me; of the wcmarj who, from her pretensions to beauty, envies me ; of the enlightened, who knows liis own worth ; and of the ignorant, who despises the worth of others, having none himself. 'J'he Virgin in the heavens, or at least her statue in the church, is, however, much better off than the empress upon earth. At night, her temple is shut against all intruders. But when all the tiresome, dull, and disagreeable ceremonies of the day are over, I — poor I— am, at the cxpence of my sleep, obliged to hear read to nie all the letters or petitions with which persons of rank, pretended scavans, needy artists, the adventurer, the mise- rable, the profligate, the ambitious, the vain, the covetous, the sick, and the scheemer, so profusely choose to plague me. Poor Deschamps! (her secretary) I really pity him, who, on my part, answers this mass of nonsense, of frivo- lity, pride, imposture, want, and lamentation. Oh, how I regret my former humble, but quiet retreat in the Rue dcs V'ictoires, when, undisturbed and uninterrupted, my, ever regretted de Beauharnois and I were meditating at leisure on the time that was necessary for business, we could spare to pleasure, or was requisite to revive the corporeal as well as intellectual faculties. lis sont passe ccs jours de fete, ils ne revJendront pins. " Since my last to you, four couriers have brought me four letters, of four lines each, from my husband. He is discontented on account of the delays his plans against England are subject to; and therefore, in his ill humour, blames me for being too condescending, and not of a mind and manner exalted enough for the situation in which he has placed me. My demands to know in what I have erred, he passes over in silence, but continues to harshly repro- bate faults with which I am unacquainted, and to hold out threats of vrhich he must be well aware that I dread the THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. ^119 e(Tecf. Good God! how difTerent was your good — too good father! May heaven give me strength to siibnriit to niv destiny ! / have perhaps ahead y lived too long ! " I am glad to hear of the advanced state of your preg- nancy, and that your husband has found some diversion in the attractions of the coquetry of Madame . Show yourself prudently jealous, but not irremediably hurt. In- difference on your part, in present circumstances, would be as impolitic as an explanation w'ould be foolish, and an explosion dangerous. Be rather more reserved in your usual train of pleasure, at least until he is convinced that you are no longer a stranger to his infidelity. Then if he should discover your intrigues, he will have reason to think them rather the vengeance of an outraged wife, than the enjoyment in which a disappointed woman seeks to forget the irresistible temptations, or cruel cause, which made her renounce eternal honovar for a momentary gratification of her passions. I am always agitated in opening your dear letters, apprehensive that the want of my experience may have led you into diiiiculties, from which my, and even your, future affection will find it no easy matter to extri- cate you. I repeat again, be circumspect, but be also vigi- lant. Collect proofs, and search for evidence, before you receive his, or expose your own act of accusation. " The day before yesterday a courier from Mr. d'Arberg brought me a letter from the queen of P -. How condescending she is, or rather how agreeable is her du- plicity, in writing to a person for whom in her heart she must entertain the most sovereign contempt: and she styles me her dear sister! me whom she well knows that fortunate bayonets, and not birth or merit, have made her equal, if not superior. My husband's and my own secret correspondence with certain princes and princesses, were it made public, would be more serviceable to the plots of demagogues than all the tenets of republicans and sophistry of levellers. " To please my husband, I have t^eriousiy studied the voluminous ceremonials sent me by Champigny, concern- ing the etiquette of the court of Vietina, as well as those forwarded to me by La Foret, concerning that of the court of St, Petersburg. What ridiculous littleness, and what petty trifles am I to learn and to observe! At my time of Irfe to go to school ; to submit to be instructed like a miss I'^d REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. of twelve, to repeat lessons, and to perform parts repug- nant to reason, and a libel on the sense of ail those present- ed to me, cannot be very agreeable. What, however, will 1 not do to escape the rod of my severe master? Madame ReraOsat, as well as Madame d'Arberg, is content with my progress, and applaud my zeal. As to the regulation of our household, it is more easy to decree or invent places, than to find persons proper to iill them. You know the old nobility shun our court, from which my husband has determined to exclude all upstarts. Of ten ladies of anci- ent families, to whom I have offered places round me, two only have accepted, six have declined, and two have not even condescended to give me an answer. Although those first two are females whom Louis XVL banished from the court of Maria Antoinette, on account of the scandal of their lives, I must regard their acceptance as an honour. Take care not to mention to any body the contempt with which I have been treated on this occasion. Should it come to the ears of Napoleone, woe to the families, rela- tives, and friends, of these refractory persons. I'hey are all ruined by the revolution, and their misery is punishment enough. I embrace you, your husband, and child, aflec- tionatelv." The letter part of this letter requires some explanation. Unprincipled and vicious as many modern Frenchmen have shown themselves, the most respectable of the ancient French nobility, though beggared by a rebellion which has made a Corsican vagabond their sovereign, have, however, always refused, not only with dignity hut with obstinacy, to wear his livery as placemen and courtiers. A late pub- lication relates several interesting particulars on this sub- ject. In order to introduce into their new court a princely magnificence, Buonaparte and his wife wanted that which neither influence nor wealth could procure, viz. a nume- rous retinue of nobility. Whatever Buonaparte may have achieved, and how far he may flatter himself with having succeeded ; however assiduous and submissive Madame Buonaparte may have been towards Madame Montessan, at whose house the most ancient noblesse used to assemble, she could obtain no other favour for herself and fanjily than admission to some of their small parties, where she had occasionally the honour to be seated between dukes, marquises, counts, and barons, and to hear these fine titles THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 121 Tingling in her ears; but to draw only a few members, and even the most unworthy^ from this holy circle, in order to place them in her own retinue, was utterly impossible. " Segur, the ex-minister, being newly appointed to a high office in administration, indulged his youngest son so far as to allow him to accept the place of a vice prefect of the palace. The noble league instantly rose against him in a body, as he was reckoned among high and ancient no- bility, on account of one of his ancestors having been a marechal de France. All the citizens with " de" before their surname, who figured at the new court in the liveries of prefects, vice prefects, &c. tvere looked upon by the ri- gorists as the servile and lesser nobility of former times. " But fortune will not always smile; her greatest favour- ites will one time or other meet with some impediment in their way, some obstacle to their desires. He who rode triumphant over Mount St. Gothard, and through the san- dy deserts of Syria; he who gives law to most countries of Europe, and disposes of the finest states at pleasure; this mighty chief, at the head of so populous an empire, feels desires that he cannot satisfy. Casting his longing eye around, he fixes it, by chance, upon the saloon of Ma- dame de Montessan. It happened at that moment to be crowded with persons of the first rank. " Those nobles shall be my attendants,'* he cries, and immediately dis- patches his devoted daemons with invitations, offers, and promises. But promises, offers, and invitations, are ineffec- tual ; the messenger returns disappointed and chagrin- ed ; he tells him that all his efforts have been fruitless, that their demands were far beyond what he w^ould accede to. " The angry, fearful man, is thus compelled to stand alone on the pinnacle of his newly acquired dignity, watch- ing night and day these rebels to his will. Their words, their actions, their looks, are equally objects of his suspi- cion ; not even a gesture is suffered to escape him. Alarm- ed by continual fears when they assemble in great numbers, he immediately disperses them. If they flee back to the coast, they are driven to the mountains ; if they take refuge among the rocks, they are hunted to the sea. His slaves obey the hint, pursue them, and, panting for breath, return to catch the despot's new orders, and find their pale-faced master leaning on his still more pale-faced harlot, both Q 122 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. turning their faint and envious looks towards the saloon of Madame de Montessan, the resort of this disobedient and obstinate noblesse. These noble suflerers are the only per- sons who dare stand in opposition to Buonaparte. They live in their own country as in a strange land ; they take no notice of the new court, its festivities, or brilliant assem- blies. They adopt none of the new fashions introduced by the new comers. Even those among them who have saved great estates, or still possess sufficient property to live in a sumptuous style, do not make any pubUc display. Their small social assemblies contain alone what may be called Ja hoime compagnie ; and as most of them are men of refined manners, and many of them well informed, and of great fame, several of them, even the mo^t distinguished literari in royal France, they keep within their own circle. All ioreigners of education, naturally disgusted with the aukward behaviour and the tasteless luxury of the present court, endeavour to be admitted into their society; an ho- nour by no means easily obtained. Still it must be con- fessed, that the fine Paris of old, which had so much attrac- tion for every man of taste, talents, and good breeding, can only be met with in these select societies. I will not blame Madame Buonaparte, who lived as maid of honour to the late queen, for sighing after the only respectable company at Paris; but she must renounce the happiness of seeing these persons in her suit at court. Many inducements have certainly been given them, but they all seem to say, restore us the old court, with all its appendages, that will be well ; but we shall never be brought to acknowledge these upstarts for its rightful owners. " The very cause which renders Madame Buonaparte so desirous to associate with the old noblesse, must induce the latter to keep at a distance. There is nothing of that politeness, ease, vivacity, and grace, which signalised the societies at the royal court. Every body stares with a sla- vish gaze at Buonaparte, who treats them indiscriminately in a dry, cold, and harsh manner. He sometimes attempts ^o be polite and witty, but his politeness is a proud conde- scension, and his wit is satire. There is always something rough or low in his way of expressing himself. He fre- quently makes use of terms only to be found in the mouth of the upstart soldier, and proscribed by all good company. He is capable of uttering the most abusive language with THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 123 the greatest indifference. The tone of his voice is deep and hoarse, and what he says is often accompanied with such a disagreeable laugh, that nobody can feel easy with him, even when he intends to say the most agreeable things. The highest officers of state must sometimes hear themselves addressed by epithets which certainly never escaped the lips of a sovereign. If he supposes that he has caught any of his ministers or privy-counsellors in some- thing contradictor}^ he frequently says, " Voiis etes un homme de mauvaise foi,'^ or " Vous me trompe,'' (You are an impostor, or You deceive m^.) During the continuance of her stay at Aix-la-Chapelle the empress's only agreeable amusement until her hus- band's arrival, was the gambling-table, having by her phy- sician been strictly warned not to indulge her inclination for good eating and drinking. She was not fortunate either at cards or with dice ; and the pecuniary allowance of Buonaparte not being over liberal, she was under the ne- cessity of laying under contribution the purses of her friends and courtiers. They were, however, soon drained, and other expedients were resorted to. Several German princes and princesses having implored her protection to obtain from her husband a large share of the plunder of their country, called indemnities, her secretary Deschamps addressed himself to them on the part of his sovereign. Their supply was, as might be expected from the object they had in view, scanty. Some deputies from certain imperial cities, hearing of the express's dilemma, came voluntarily forward with offers to avoid apprehended forc- ed requisitions. But Talleyrand, regard in r the regulation of these kinds of patriotic donations as belonging exclusively to his department, stopped this resource by a letter to Des- champs, in which he threatened to inform the emperor of these exactions, if continued. He advised, at the same time, as a sure means for the eni press to recover her losses, the seizure of all the public and privileged gambling banks; to take from them the sums lost, and to restore them the remainder. Orders were given in consequence, and the police commissary Deville, under pretence that he had received depositions and denunciations from several quar- ters, that these banks contained many forged bank-notes and false Louis-d'ors,laid hands on their whole stock. After a very minute investigation, two millions of livres, in paper 124 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. and money, the exact sum lost by the empress, were con- fiscated as fabricated bills, or base coin. The bankers complained to the minister of police, senator Fouche, to whom they paid one hundred thousand livres (4000/.) a month for their privilege; but he prudently answered that he should always protect them as fair gamesters, but could do nothing for them when accused of being forgers or coiners. He recommended them to be silent about what had happened, and think themselves fortunate to have escaped so cheap, with the sacrifice of an insignificant sei^ zure, instead of being sent to the gallows, as their crimes deserved. For Deville, the empress procured in a short time afterwards the knighthood of the legion of honour. The empress has a fault common with all the members of the Buonaparte family : she 7iever pays her debts. In- stead of satisfying her creditors with the money plundered in the banks, she laid it out in purchasing brilliants or dia- mond trinkets for herself and her children. After stripping most of the visitors at Aix-la-Chapelle, of their bracelets, necklaces, and rings, she sent her valet de chambre, Tariie, to Amsterdam, to spend the remainder of her cash in the jewellers' shops of tnat city. It is supposed that the ecr?7i or jewel-box of Josephine is of more value than those of all other continental princesses together. It is estimated ^t two millions and a half sterling, or sixty millions of livres. To review, arrange and admire its contents, is her constant and most delightful occupation every morning, whilst her friseur valet de chambre is curling her hair or putting on her wigs, and when her chamber-maids of ho- nour are washing, dressing and painting her. When Buonaparte laid hold of the famous and precious crown diamond, called in France " the Regent," and in England, " the Pitt diamond," which now glitters at the hilt of his state-sword, and is hung up with other trophies at his bed-side, his Josephine would not be behindhand. She seized upon the rich and magnificent golden toilet of the late unfortunate queen, which had hitherto escaped all the former shameless thieves in authority, the natural, but depraved progeny of the revolution. The empress is^ however, growing more ugly since she looked into the mirror of the beautiful and accomplished Maria Antoin- ette. Can it be the tenderness of her conscience, that has occasioned such a s^d alteration.'^ Is it not rather from THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 125 spite and despair, at seeing her own antiquated features, and remembering the elegant and youthful form and traits of her late royal mistress ? This toilet may augment the value of her stolen treasures, but can neither make her wrinkles less numerous, change the colour of her grey hair, whiten her teeth, sweeten her breath, or whitewash her skin more than her morals. All the members of the foreign diplomatic corps in France, w^hose sovereigns had so far forgotten their own dignity and interest, as to acknowledge Buonaparte in the new title he so impudently had assumed, preceded him to Aix-la-Chapelle, where a kirld of mock congress was held by Talleyrand, who, to soften his master's rage at not being able to annihilate the independence of the British empire, published, in a revolutionary manifesto, a political excom- munication against the British government. That this act was, however, far from even calming the violent passions of the disappointed usurper, his wife's letter clearly proves. ** Aix-la-Chapelle, Friday, " From my former letters, my beloved child has seen that my mind neither possessed content, nor enjoyed tran- quillity, and that the sufferings of my body equalled the agitation of my soul. But if I was really unhappy then, what shall I call my situation since my husband has joined me ? Having been obliged to postpone his vengeance against England, all the wrath of his disappointment is poured out on me. He has never ceased to ill-use, and even to ill-treat me when we are alone; and in public, iu the presence of princes and their representatives, from whom he wishes me to command respect, he expresses, himself to me harshly, vulgarly and rudely. I am sure, because I have experienced it, that I inspire the audience with no other sentiments than those of compassion or pity, They do not want much penetration to observe, or saga-f city to conclude that the most exalted among them is also the most wretched. " To quiet his unbecoming fury, Talleyrand has in vain tried to convince him, that the political annihilation of Great Britain may be more easily effected by intrigues and influence in the cabinets of the continent, than by attacks, and battles in the plains of the British islands. These, as well as; all other efforts of his ministers and favourites tq 126 REVOLUTIONARY rLUTARCII. divert his attention and compose his mind, have not been able to produce even a momentary tranquiliit3^ ^^ ^^'^ lost all relish for the trifling rest he formerly took: he goes, however, to bed at bis usual hour, but he hardly slumbers (sleep he has none) for live minutes together; and, good God, what a slumber! all his limbs are trembling as from convulsive-fits; his eyes are rolling, his teeth gnashing, hii breast swelling, his pulse beating, and his whole body burn- ing as if consumed by a fever ; and when he wakes, he starts suddenly, and often jumps out of his bed to seize his sword, pistols, and dagger, as if pursued by assassins. Though you may easily guess I am not asleep, or if asleep, disturbed by such violent motions, I dare not, for my life, let him suspect it. The beautiful verse of De Lille often occurs to me; * Le Hi dc Cromivdl le punk pour son trone. And I am convinced that the obscure condition of Richard Cromwell, the philosopher, was millions of times prefera- ble to the illustrious one of Oliver Cromwell, the protector. This state of my husband has greatly impaired my health, and if lie is incurable, or does not lose his senses, he will drive me out of mine, or kill me. We intend, however, soon to leave this place, and to continue our journey to Mentz along the delightful banks of the Rhine. He will then have more occuj)ation to attend to, and more diversity of objects to attract his notice. May they palliate if they cannot relieve his terrible complaint I " As for the officers of our court and round our persons, I have by some pecuniary sacrifices made a very valuable acquisition. Segur has accepted of the place of grand master of the ceremonies, and has promised to recruit among the nobility persons agreeable to my husband to fill the several other vacancies. 1 have given him my bond for 600,000 livres, 25,000/. which Gauthier (the minister of finances) has promised to take up, and, when a proper opportunity otfers, discharge it with the money of the state; which certainly cannot be better employed than to keep up the necessary splendour of the chief of the first empire in the world. " General Mortier has presented me with eight bt^autiful cream-coloured horses of the King of England's stud in THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 127 Hanover, as trophies of the success of my husband's armies. 1 thought it would be an agreeable conipliment to him to surprize him with the sight of them. Accordingly I or- dered Colonel Fouler, one cf my equerries, to bring them before our windows immediately after our breakfast; but how astonished was I when, instead of appreciating my good intent, Napoleone first rebuked me with one of his terrifying frowns, and then, after a moment's silence, said, loud enough to be heard by all persons present : *' Madam, you are always stupid or malicious enough to find out some unpleasant subject or other to remind me of the ex- istence of a nation, the ruin of which I have sworn so long ago, but which unforeseen circumstances have hitherto prevented me from accomplishing." A tear I was unable to restrain procured me the order " to retire instantly to my apartments, and to remain there until he permitted me to leave them." I have now been shut up for five hours, and a part of that time I have employed in searching for the sole consolation yet left me upon earth, to unbosom myself to my dearest child, the only sincere friend fortune has left me. I hope, however, my imprisonment will soon cease. We have announced, that we will see company to night, and expect in consequence numerous attendants. His pride and vanity will therefore restore me that liber- ty of w^hich his cruelty and want of tenderness have de- prived me. " I have just received my husband's orders to dine alone in my room, but to dress immedately afterwards for the circle. I embrace you, j^our husband, and dear baby most afiectionately." This letter confirms the many reports concerning Buo- naparte's brutal, indelicate, ungentleman-like, and violent behaviour towards his wife. He is stated more than once, and for the most insignificant mistakes or trifling errors, not onl}^ to have rebuked her in gross language, but to have used her with low brutality by beating and kicking her out of his presence, and even sometimes, as a punishment, con- fined her to her room upon bread and water for forty-eight hours. Had it not been for the interference of his daugh- ter-in-law, (the present Madame Louis Buonaparte,) for her mother, it is supposed he would either lon;< ago have divorced, or, to avoid .9ca«^a/, dispatched her with a good dose of poison. She has been obliged to change ali heC \2S REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. former habits of life ; to go early to bed, to rise often before daylight, to dine at hours she formerly breakfasted, and to devour rather than to eat, because Buontiparte is always in a hurry to get up from the table. As to his pretended love for her in always sleeping with her, it is nothing else but a well calculated manoeuvre for his personal safety. A thousand little things, tending in appearance only to their comfort, are measures that suspicion, guilt, and fear, have thought necessary and dictated for the preservation of exis- tence. The empress has her instructions, which are care- fully attended to every night, and in every house where they chance to sleep. Under pretence of being fond of a good bed, she visits every mattress, has the bed made be- fore her, and, after having convinced herself that no places of concealment for revengeful or wicked persons are in the room, she locks it, puts the key in her pocket, and when supper is over gives it to her maid in waiting, who opens the door, enters with her, and, after assisting her to un- dress, retires. Then another domiciliary visit is made, and the mattresses are again turned before the ringing of the bell announces to her husband that he may enter without danger. Not confiding, however, entirely in the assurance of his wife, he begins and goes through a general search before he undresses. As caprice or fear dictates, he varies his place inside or outside of the bed, not only every night, but soraetim.es three or four times in the night. By the bedside is always suspended his sword, under his pillow lays a dagger, and by the bedside are two double-barrelled and loaded pistols. In such a state of siege the mighty empQror and empress pass their nights. Is grandeur worth possessing when it can only be acquired and preserved at the expence of happiness? The journal of one week of Buonaparte's life since an emperor would be the most va- luable gift loyalty could present to rebellion, and the best lesson lawful princes could publish for the perusal of am- bitious, conspiring, and treacherous subjects. " Buonaparte," says a work already quoted, " uses no restraint in addressing his own wife in abusive language. He can publicly speak to her in the severest manner if, by chance, he does not approve of her dress or deportment, as being too free, too improper, or unbecoming. The beautiful Madame Tallien, the intimate friend of Madame Buonaparte, when once, after a somewhat long absence of THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. log her husband, she appeared in a visible state of pregnancy f in iier saloon, which was full of company, was asked by him, quite ioud and sternly, how she could dare to appear in that situation before his wife? and he then ordered her instantly to leave the room. *' The present wife of the minister Talleyrand, who is reported not always to have acted the part of a rigid prude, when Madame Grand, was complimented by him, at her first introduction into the circle of Madame Buona- parte, in the following manner : " Sespere que Madame TaJleyrand fera oublier Madame Grand/ The poor wo- man is said to have answered in the greaiest confusion, " that she would always be proud to follow the example of Madame Buonaparte." If Madam Talleyrand had been looked upon as a lady of parts, her answer might have been thought a witty one." Such anecdottes evince that the age of chivalry is gone for ever, even in France, and that the petty vain usurper is merely a pretender to refinement of manners, as well as to noble achievements; a tyrant in the drawing-room as well as in heading armies or presiding in cabinets. It requires a man of another stamp of character to polish the language of upstarts, and to correct the morals of rebels. With the ferocity of a tiger and the cunning of a fo]t Buonaparte unites the ridiculous pride of a capricious and. spoiled child. His fury against England, which neither the humiliating fawning of foreign ambassadors, nor the base flattery of his own ministers, could diminish, the Pope, by promising, at the expence of honour, duty, and con- science, to place the crown of St. Louis upon the head of the assassin of his descendant, immediately calmed. The tears of the empress are dried up, and in present caresses she forgets past sufterings as well as those awaiting her for the future. While the gaudy plaything with which Pius VIL has consented to amuse by decorating the imperial baby, Napoleone the First, attracts his whole attention, his wife's whole study and occupation are how to profit by this re- spite, how to enrich herself and her children, and hov/ to procure places and pensions to her relatives, friends, and favourites. R 130 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. " Cohlentz, Sunday. " How fortunate I am to announce to you, my dcarly beloved child, an unexpected and favourable change in my dear Napoleone. A courier from Rome has brought him the certain intelligence of his holiness the Pope having at Jast consented to undertake a journey to France during the autumn, to perform in person the ceremony of our corona- tion. This generous condescension on the part of the Roman pontiff has been a balm on the wounded spirits of my husband. He is now what he was to me last May. Though often agitated with real or imaginary apprehen- sions, and troubled with the weight of affairs of state, he is unusually attentive to me as his wife, and confidential with me as with his sincerest friend. It would have been wrong in me to neglect profiting of this fit of good dispo- sition and good temper to advance the private concerns of myself, family, and friends. Marbois (the minister of the treasury) has already received orders to pay into my hands from the tribute of Sptiin, 1,500,000 livres, ()4,6oO/. to Eugenius (her son) 500,000 livres, 21,000/. and an equal sum to you. I gave him, before his departure for the coast, a list of thirty-two persons allied or dear to me, for whom I demanded places as senators, legislators, tribunes, pre- fects, &c. I have twice before, since he joined me, attempt- ed to mention this list, but his terrible frowns struck me mute. This niorning I was agreeably surprised when he informed me, during our breakfast, that all my recommen- dations had been attended to, except those of two persons, respecting whom he asked me some questions. Being sa- tisfied as to their attachment to his person, he bade me write, and he signed my note, to Joseph, who is to order the senate to include them among the new members of the legislative body. Of the sixty persons I presented for the legion of honour, poor La Roche alone was excluded, by somebody having informed my husband that he had for six years served in La Vendee and among the Chouans. Upon my assurance, however, that it must be a mistake from similitude of names, and by shewing him a letter, in which our friend professed himself ready to shed the last drop of blood in the support of our throne and house, he not only ordered La Cepede (the chancellor of the legion of honour) to put the name of La Roche upon the list of the other members of the legion of honour, but promised THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 131 me to grant him the first vacant place in the staff of our guard. Do you not rejoice at the hope of having such a tender friend settled at Paris ? " The people in this country seem to me not so insinu- ating as our Frenchmen, but I believe they are more sin- cere. They have almost overpowered me with their stiff caresses and aukward presents, as well as with their eter- nal petitions. As Napoleone is now in a humour to listen to me, I have strictly enjoined Deschamps to pay serious attention to their demands ; that, if the least probability of justice exists, I may, by forwarding and pleading their cause, gain, with popularity, ^their affection. " By an agent from the Prince of O I have been offered a handsome sum for procuring an electoral dignity; by another agent from the Elector of B yet more is promised for a kingly title; and the old Marquis de L has presented me with SLcarte-hlanche, could I ob- tain for his sovereign the election of a king of the Romans. Besides these, a number of German Barons wish to pay for being made counts, and these latter for being exalted to the rank of princes. I have declined giving any answer to these proposals until my arrival at Mentz, where I am assured many similar proposals are waiting for me. Could any body ever have dreamed that a little Creole wench from Martinico should once have in her power to influence in Europe the destiny of empires and nations ; to make prin- ces electors, electors kings, and kings emperors in petto? Do we not live in an age of wonders ? '* What do you think of the gallantry of my dear Na- poleone? Just as I was finishing my letter he entered my room, asking me to whom I wrote ? Upon being informed that it was to my beloved child, he said: ** Tell her, that from the day of my coronation I will increase her and her brother's allowance with 600,000 livres annually, and add to yours double that sum in the year. How lovely he is when he chuses! I pressed him most tenderly in my arms, assuring him that every minute of my existence should be employed to meditate his comfort. '* From your late pa- tient conduct I do not doubt the sincerity of your promi- ses," said he, giving me one of the sweetest kisses in his life. If you mention to your husband the late presents of Napoleone, bind him to secrecy, that his mother, bro- thers, and sisters may not hear of it. You knov/ tijat they 132 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. hsive all got enough, but ncvertlielejs they never cease to teaze him for more. " CutiareHi (Buonaparte's aide-de-camp) is ordered to set out immediately for Rome, with a letter from my hus- band to his holiness the Pope. As 1 am indebted to this respectable head of our church for all my present happi- ness, I have, with Napoleone's permission, joined to his a letter of mine, expressing my livtly feelings and sincere gratitude. Before I sealed it I gave it to my husband, who said : ** Well done, my dearest Josephine! you are as elo- quent as tender." My dearest Josephine! Tljis is the first time during seven nionths that I have been blessed with such an appel^tion. " You can form no idea how Napoleone rejoices at your present advanced stat(^ of pregnancy. Should heaven bless you with another boy, I do not know what he will not do for you. From his conversation, 1 am certain that either your husband has no suspicions, or that Napoleone has judged them unfounded and silenced them. He has not, even when angry or in ill-humour, thrown out the most distant hint on your account; on the contrary, he always speaks of you with the most tender atfection ; and 1 do not hesitate to afifirmjthat, in case of reciprocal accusation, he would sooner listen to you than to your husband, who must be well aware of the power you possess oyer him, and that it therefore is his interest to preserve peace and good understandmg, were he even informed of intrigues, which it will be your own fault if he ever penetrates into. Be, however, always on your guard. In yoiir actual and delicate condition I know from experience that-^w cannot stand in need of manij. consolers, or the assistance of lovers to supplij the absence or neglect of your husband. At pre- sent any etl'orts of yours, from idleness or a heated imagi- nation, to obtain pleasure or force nature, may be injurious to your own health and destroy the fcetus- A plain diet, simple nourishment, calming and cooling liquors, with mo- derate but frequent exercise, are more necessary for your vyelfare than the tclc-d-tcte or embraces of all the most handsome, elegant, and powerful beaux in the universe. For my sake, as well as for your own, spare yourself, and do not indulge a momentary gratification, which may cause eternal regrets or instant death. What would become of me^ of your brother, whom you love so affectionately, was THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 133 any passionate ctourderie or foolish caprice to bereave us of our sole support? You know that all the Buonapartes envy and detest us. Depend upon it, that any imprudence of yours at this moment may make you not only a fratricide but a matricide ; and instead of living the pride, preserver, and protector of your mother and brother, die their assas- sin and executioner. Some few weeks more patience, and when once you are safely delivered, depend upon it that you shall again find in me the same most mdulgent and atfectionate mother and friend." Never a princess or a favourite mistress of a sovereign existed who was so eager to' seize wealth and to obtain every thing as the Empress Josephine. She always accepts, and often extorts, presents or money from all persons who demand her protection, or who owe to her their promo- tions, places, or pensions. She hasher fixed price for each office m the empire, from that of a senator to that of a clerk, from that of a cardinal to that of a curate. The recommendation of a law-suit or the release from a state prison, contracts for the navy or army, or commissions for the colonies, have all their regulated prices in her imperial tarifi'. If this be contrasted with the unheard-of prodi- gality by which her husband enriches her children and his own brothers and sisters, it can only be explained either by supposing all the French and Italian members of the family infested with the meanest and most insatiable ava- rice, or by imagining in them a due sense of their preca- rious situation, a design to be at all events prepared lor the worst, and to possess means to command respect from their affluence, should they survive the destruction of the power of Napoleone, to which alone, and not to their ta- lents, they owe their rank and distinction. Arrived at Mentz, the empress and her husband found plenty of food for vanity, as well as abundance of prey for cupidity. The oldest legitimate reigning prince from age, i^.nd the most respectable by character, the venerable^ Elector of Baden, the grandfather of the Empress of Rus-. sia, of the Queen of Sweden, and of the Electress of Bavaria, had, at fourscore, by the unrelenting and barbarous Corsi- can, been forced to attend there. Instead of obtaining redress in his rights as a sovereign for the outrage com^ mitted in his territory by the seizure of the Duke of Eng- hicn, or any relief to his feelings as a man, a friend, and a 134 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. christian, for the murder of this princely hero, he was under the necessity of dancing attendance at the levees of the assassin, bowing in the drawing-room of his strumpet, and waiting^ in the anti-chambers of his ministers and sa- traps, the instruments of his cruelty and the accomplices of his guilt. The elector arch-chancellor, though deserv- ing, on account of his Gallo-raania, less pity, was subject to the same insulting, and, to his exalted station, unbe- coming, humiliations. Besides these, many other inferior German princes and, nobles, their wives, their sons, their counsellors, and favourites, volunteered their high rank in this race of ignominy and degradation within the ramparts of Mentz. Here, instead of being ashamed of their base- ness, they seemed proud of their infamy. The revolution- ary empress faithfully depicts those loyal visitors, those heroes of the genealogies of sixteen centuries. *' Mentz, Wednesday. ** The journey from Coblentz, beloved child, though through a wild country, on bad roads, and among a peo- ple with whose language I am unacquainted, was, never- theless, very agreeable. As usual, I was feasted every where, addressed every where, petitioned every where, and prayed for every where. Every where they did the best in their power to please me; and being the object of all their attentions, it w^ould ill become me to blame well meaning ignorance, or to hold good intentions up to ridi- cule. Happy in knowing my Napoleone content, persons, as well as things, shewed themselves to me in an agreeable form, in an enclianting view. Rags inspired me with no disgust, precipices with no fear, and the darkest forests with no melancholy. All nature seemed to dance round me, and I heartily shared in the general joy. " I believed that I had seen at Aix-la-Chapelle enough of the pride and meanness, ostentation and poverty, am- bition and imbecility, of some of the great folks from the other side of the Rhine, to judge tolerably of their national character; but the scene presented to me here is not only new and variegated, but surpasses what the most fertile imagination can invent, and the most inventive genius ima- gine or produce. When I am surrounded by my German visitors here, 1 think myself, from their dress, gait, and manners, among our fas;hionable gentry of the sixteenth • THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 135 and seventeenth centuries, so diflerent are they from the former courtiers at Versailles, and from ours at the Thuil- leries. " No person can he introduced to me or to the emperor without previously iiaving })roved to Talleyrand, that from his birth or rank he is worthy of such an honour. This etiquette was necessary, to prevent hundreds of German .9ai;rz7w-sansculotte and sansculotte-6«i-a7w, thousands of beg- garly German patriots, illumhmti^ and other revolutionists, without probity, as well as without capacity, from intrud- ing upon us; and under pretence of having plotted or written for the French revolution, demand rewards, claim pensions, and ask for protection and support in their pre- sent plots against their own soveieigns. Five waggon loads of this patriotic or rebellious crew were, by our po- lice commissary, exported early this morning to Cassel. The patriotism of the vile Irish raggamufiins in our pay, has perfectly cured Napoleone of ail inclination to encou- rage patriots of other countries to settle in France. I am therefore sure to converse here only with gens comme U fmit, who all, however, take care to let me understand that they are so. After two minutes conversation with the young prince of S. he said, " My ancestors have long been attached to France, the}^ even fought under St. Louis in Palestine." The emphasis with which bespoke, convinc- ed me that he only repeated a lesson of his vain mamma; T, therefore, perhaps rather maliciously, determined to iiumble, not him but his preceptor. " Sir," observed I, " being ail descendants from the same parent, Adam, I am inclined to think, that we have all the same number of ancestors, and that few, if any, iamilies exist, that had not some of their former members who, from an absurd fana- licism, fought or bled in the pretended sacred wars." He seemed cor. fused, and I have not since heard of the boast- ing of ancestry, or the exploits of ancestors. " I wish that I could persuade my Napoleone to show himself above the prejudices in favour of birth, and declare to all these proud and pompous idiots who glory in the merits of others, having none themselves: " I Napoleone the First, Emperor of the French, ccc. &c. am the son of an humble sansculotte : you, with your brilliant and ancient parentage, are all at my feet, n:iy petitioners, nay, my valets. It depends npo*i me to make you sovereigns, or 136 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. to continue you my slaves ; to indemnify your cringing ^vith a principality, or to commiserate your poverty, by giving you, from charity, a commission in my corps of guides. I do not ask who were your forefathers, but what are your own achievements to deserve the rank you desire, or the property after which you seem so greedy." Unfor- tunately, my husband is as proud of lus nobility as any German. A Bavarian philosopher taking advantage of this weak side of his, presented him with a curious genealogy, which makes it clear as day, that the Buonapartes were seven hundred years ago rich and powerful nobJes in Tus- cany. My Napoleone rewards like an emperor. Five hun- dred Louis-d'ors were given the Bavarian for his discovery. Another German genius has offered me to prove that my family name, de la Pagerie, originates from a favourite page of Charlemagne, a thousand years ago, one of whose descendants was aide-de-camp to Coiun»bus in his discovery of America, and hence our possessions in the VV^est Indies. I declined the honoijr, and with the loss of ten Louis, got rid of a forger, fool, and impostor, and my ancestry re- niain in statu quo. Far be it from me, however, to blame the em.peror; he has too great a soul not to despise all ar- tificial grandeur. Policy, in present circumstances must require that he should condescend to count birth any thing. " How you would have, smiled with contempt or pity, had you witnessed the behaviour at the emperor's review, or in my circle, ot these birth-proud gentry! Their rivalry to watch every one of liis words, and to catch every one of his looks, was truly ridiculous. As at a word of command, or a given signal, they were all ready to faint when he frowned, and to kneel when he smiled. You will conclude from this, thai the branchesof the adulation family are very extensive, and have taken root on the right as well as on the left side ot the Rhine. " My campaign on the banks of this river has been suc- cessful beyond my most sanguine expectation. Not only my cofters are full, but Tarue is on hi;? way to Paris with good bills of exchange, for sums su(hc"ent. to make the most precious c'^.oices and purchases in the jewellers' shops, both in thy Palais Royal, in the Rue St. Honore, and on the Quay c/' Orfavre, Thanks to my Napoleone, I have really already gathered and housed here a golden harvest. THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 137 It has, nevertheless, cost him nothing but promises, which chance, fortune, and time, may carry into effect, or make impracticable to fuHil. But I am not the only one who has profited by his good nature. Talleyrand and his agent, by their political transactions, and Fouche and his agent, by their adroitness at the gambling tables, have not only entirely emptied the pockets of the poor Germans, but have extorted bills which they will hardly be able to pay, and mortgages which, if paid, will ruin their posterity for ages. I do not approve of such selfish and interested acts, so contrary to the laws of hospitality, and to the known French generosity. *' Yesterday I passed a very un pleasing quarter of an hour. With an irony of which I w^ell know the meaning, as well as the danger, my husband said to me, " Count de L , I dare say, is not a favourite of yours?" I di- rectly assumed those looks of innocence which you have so often admired, answering, " that the count had indeed twice obtained from me private audiences, but his whole conversation turned on oi^e single topic, how, through my recommendation, to gain your kind assistance to be elected a coadjutor to his uncle, the elector arch-chancellor. My dear, retorted he kindly, such a step would alienate from me Austria, with whom, for certain reasons, 1 must for a year or two, live upon good terms; but Count de L is an insinuating man, and malicious tongues are very busy; I therefore have asked his uncle to send him back to Ra- tisbon. He fixed his eyes on me to discover if this step vexed me; fortunately, the count had, by a confidential friend, informed me of it ; and I therefore said with indiffer- ence, " so much tTie. better, I am glad to 1* delivered fronn his importunities." You see that the daemon of jealousy still sometimes torments him; this makes me remember the fable of the dog and the hay-stack. Two persons only knew of my secret interviews with the count : uncertain which of them has betrayed me, I am under the necessit}^ and shall take the first opportunity, of dismissing them both. I pay my attendants too well, to let want tempt them to sell themselves to my husband, and become his spies on me. Upon the whole, however, the emperor is vrell satisfied, and of more even temper than he has beeu for a long time. And can he be otherv/ise, having the S 135 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH, Pope's promise to crown him an emperor of the French^ the certainty of being, when he likes, proclaimed a king of Italy, and even an mfaJUhh prospect of one day unit- ing wilh these diadems the imperial crown of Germany. *' You know, my beloved child, that we are such ma- chines, that when th€ mind is not at ease, the body always suffers. Restore happiness and tranquillity of soul, corpo- real complaints will soon cease. My health is now better than it has been for years ; Doctor Napoleone has cured me entirel3% " Your approaching ^c(?ozfc/ze?we«^ will hasten our return to the capital, t shall present you a collection, rare in its kind, of upwards of five hundred poems, addressed to me by the wits on both sides of the Rhine. Deschamps is ar- ranging them, and adding notes to them. They may serve as models for poetical flatterers of all countries, and of all times. Their extravagance or absurdity, I am convinc- ed, will l>e an entertainment for you during the tinic you are obliged to keep your bed. I embrace you all af- fectionAtely." It must make every partial observer, as well as every friend of rational freedom, revolt to think that in France, persons on the eminence where Madame Buonaparte iv were not married in this world, though they run the risk of being damned in the next. To avoid, however, nume- rous law-suits, with fatal and cruel consequences both to parents and children, it was resolved to keep this determi- nation secret. But, according to the Pope's requisition, Portalis was to write confidential letters to all French pre- lates, that they might send monitories to the clergy of their dioceses, exhorting them to make it a scruple to confess, or at least to absolve those of their parishioners who have been married since 1793, and refuse to re-mar- ry again according to the rights of the Roman catholic church. To set an example of submission to the decrees of his 144 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. holiness, Napoleone Buonaparte and Josephine de la Page- rie, widow of Viscount de Beauhavnois, were re-married on the 6th of January, 1805, and Pius VIL gave them the nuptial benediction in his private chapel of the Pav^ion of Flora, in the palace of the Thuilleries, twelve yearsbefore inhabited by the harlot who was worshipped by the truly religious French republicans as a Goddess of Reason. The act of marriage was signed by the Pope, by the elector, arch-chancellor of Germany, and by eight cardinals, with the different princes of the Buonaparte hlood. The former and municipal wedding of the imperial couple, had, on the Sth of March, 179(3, been celebrated with different pomp, in the presence of persons of different descriptions. The municipal officer and Septembriser Panis, had joined their immaculate hands, and the butcher Septembriser and regi- cide Legendre, the Septembriser and regicide Tallien, and the regicide Ex-viscount Barras had signed the municipal registers as witnesses of their union, worth, and affection. From the hall of the municipality, they went to dine in the then directorial palace of the Luxembourg, where Barras presented Buonaparte with his wife's fortune, the commission as commander in chief of the army of Italy. In a week afterwards, Madame Buonaparte was delivered of a still-born child — a dead-born Barfas! Much might be said on these curious occurrences, and many conclusions drawn not honourable to our age, to the parties, and particularly to the nation that has suffered, and still suffers itself to be the play-ball of every villain in power, of his interest, vices, and passions. But discussi- ons of such a nature appertain to historians : they require too wide a space for the biographer. As soon as Napoleone's and Josephine's new marriage was performer!, Joseph and Louis Buonaparte, Bacchiochi, and Murat, and all other relatives of the Buonapartes, were re-married by the Pope. Even Talleyrand w^as sud- denly seized with scruples which his holiness alone could remove, and the ex-bishop was also for a second time mar- ried to his chaste spouse. The fashion of re-marrying af- terv/ards spread quickly among the French republican tiger-monkies. It was a golden harvest^time for the French clergy. Those of all classes of Frenchmen, whom motives of religion did not influence, were, to avoid ridicule or pontempt, under the necessity of imitating their neigh- THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. Us bours, whom faith sent to the altar. It became in the highest degree unfashionable to live together without a new wedding, and it is well knoWn that fashion sways every thing among the fickle and corrupted French. Within six months, 52,000 couples were i*e-married at Paris and in the department of the Seine, and a hundred times that number in the diiferent provinces. What a people! The feafsting and dancing usual on such occasions en- tered not a little into this matrimonial rage. Nothing was heard of in France, from January to March, 1805, but Wedding-dinners and nuptial-balls. It may easily be guess- ed that Buonaparte did not interrupt the rejoicings of his slaves, as long as they did not attempt to shake off the yoke or complain of the weight of their fetters. No pub- lic feast was, however, given at the Thuilleries on this oc- casion, but Josephine was permitted to invite to a private or family ball at Malmaison, his brothers, sisters, and some select favourrtes. A trifle here caused a coolness betv/een him and his brother Joseph, and his sister the Princess Santa Cruc'e. He supposed or suspected them of not hav- ing admired his adroitness in dancing, and his complacency to dance with persons whom he regarded so much beneatli him. The fact was, however, that Buonaparte having learned to dance at the common \vine-houses in Corsica, is a very aukward dancer; and in seeing him jump about, tread upon the feet of his partner, kick one neighbour, tear the dress of another, and put all m confusion, it is more difficult to refrain laughing than to express admira- tion. At all these balld, where he thus has exhibited him- self, the pleasure expected has been changed into disap- pointment. To many persons, orders of exile, mandates of imprisonment, and condemnations to transportation have shortly followed his cards of invitation. He is a tyrant in the ball-room as well as every where else; and truth is excluded, and common sense must be laid aside there, as well as at his military reviews or diplomatic levees. Num- bers of anecdotes are related and have been published oni this subject, even when he was a first Consul. In the winter of 1S03, Madame Buonaparte had a small party at Malmaison, where he ventured to dance with his dear step-daughter, Madame Louis Buonaparte. As usual, T U6 REVOLUTIONARY PLtJTAlicil. ^ his performance was ridiculous, and, as usual, he found an opportunity of shewing his despotic and unfeeling hearts When it came into his head to dance, he took off his sword and offered it to the next by-stander without looking at him. This person happened unfortunately to be a man of birth and an officer of rank, who thought it against the point of honour to accept it, and therefore stepped back to wait till one of the servants might come and take \U Observing this act of becoming dignity, IheCdrslcan usur- per looked kt the officer sternly, and said in a terrible hoarse kind of voice, " Mais out ! Je'me suis bien trompe,'* He then made a sign to General La Grange, on whose rea- diness he could depend, and gave him the sword^ which this cringer siiatched with great eagerness. When the too punctilious officer returned home he already found an order, by which he Was directed to depart on the next day for St. Domingo. La Grange, on the other hand, was made a grand officer of the legion of honour, and in 180^, ob- tained the profitable, though not very honourable, place of leader of the gang of freebooters Buonaparte sent to plunder the British West India islands. The usurper has no favourite near his person, and no man in his service, who, with the livery of bondage, does not also possess the soul of a slave. As the revolutionary gentry admitted to these private parties have always IJeen proposed by Madame Buonaparte before approved of by her husband, he often bestowed upon her abuse for What displeased or offended him in their behaviour. To avoid suffering from their disgrace in future, she, with the advice of her privy-counsellor, Ma- dame Remusat, determined, in February, 1805, in sending him the usual list of persons proper for her private society, always to write at bottom : " This list contains names of gentlemen and ladies knoWn to you as Well as to myself, and I believe agreeable to us both, and deserving your par- ticular distinction: but Temejnber, that I recommend nobody* Approve, therefore, of them or disapprove of them, erase the names of some or of them all, you shall punctually be obeyed. I have no favourites, no companions, as far as I know, who do not merit and have your esteem and confi- dence." As the Coi-sican regarded this clause as an indi- rect reproach, he ordered his wife to give up the adviser to just chastisement, or to rejtire immediately for thrice THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY, 147 twenty-four hours to her private apartments at Malmaison, where he prohibited her from seeing any company what- ever. She chose the latter. Her daughter, Madame Louis, going to pay her a visit, and being refused admittance, sus- pected the cause, and immediately went to St. CJoud, with an intent of becoming a reconciler or mediator ; but her generous father-in-law ordered her back to her hotel at Paris without seeing her. She then addressed herself to Cardinal Caprara, who, at times, has much authority over his revolutionary majesty; but even he failed on this occa- sion. He, however, applied to the Pope, who with much difficulty succeeded in arranging this great state affair. This is another evidence of the generous heart and/org/u- ing temper of Napoleone Buonaparte. To reconcile him to a beloved wife, a favourite daughter and a favourite courtier in vain empolyed their supplications. His abom- inable vanity required that a favourite pontiff should agairi forget his sacred character, and ask as a favour what his predecessors would have scorned to notice, or commanded as a religious duty. Shame to France! and shame to Rome! a cardinal and a pope to be seriously engaged in settling differences between an adventurer and his strum- pet about a ball! The age when legitimate sovereignty held the stirrups for the popes in mounting their mules, was less disgraceful and depraved than our days, when a pope crowns and consecrates a criminal usurper and blood- thirsty murdurer, and afterwards stoops to kneel before this diabolical idol, created by his dangerous pliability and impolitic weakness. Early in the following month Josephine received notice to prepare herself for another coronation on the other side of the Alps. In one of the foregoing letters she has men- tioned her corr^pendence with the Queen of P during her residence at Aix-la-Chapelle in the summer 3604. But, according to report, this princess was not the only lawful sovereign with whom her husband forced her to try by letters to establish equality and assume familiar- ity. The accomplished consort of the noble-minded Alex- ander, and amiable partner of the throne of the virtuous Francis II. were also insulted with letters and presents, with offers of lace gowns and other elegant productions of the same description, frail as their donor. The presents were, however, declined, as contrary to custom and ^ti- ^43 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. guette; and, as usual with strangers, a secretary answered the letters in a civil but dignified style. According to the sanje publication, had the overtures for a peace with Eng- land been accepted by our government last January (1805), the modest Josephine had a lace gown ready fabricated, and a letter ready written to our beloved queen. This imper- tinent intrigue not succeeding, and Buonaparte having re- solved to degrade the kingly as well as imperial title by im- pertinetly usurping the name of a king of Italy, this lace gown was forwarded to the Queen Dowager of Etruria,with ^n appropriate letter, pretended to be written by the em- press's own hand. The usurper had, ever since the death of her husband, fixed upon this princess for a victim of his ambition. He ^irst destined her to marry his brother Lu- cien ; but he having married, and being disgraced for hav- ing married a woman he loved, she was intended for the other hopeful brother of his, Jeromp Buonaparte. The republican parents of a female American citizen being, however, tormented with the absurd vanity of making their daughter a revolutionary highriess, he was disap- pointed a second time, Firiuly bent (after having robbed them of their throne) upon dishonouring the Bourbon fa- mily with his family connections, he put her Etrurian ma- jesty into requisition for his son-in-law, Eugenius de Beau- harnois. In the letter that accompanied the lace gown the empress Josephine hinted a disinter,ested wish " to strengthen those political ties which united the Queen Pegent of Etruria with France into a family alliance wit!) the house of the sovereign of the French empire." Euge^ "nius de Beauharnois was himself the bearer of this letter. Being properly instructed, he acted his part tolerably well, By bribes he gained several of the favourite courtiers at plorence, and by presents, malice says, that he even came to share the beds of some of the most intimate female attendants of the princess. All these worthies of course planned to give their sovereign a high opinion of their hero, who, when he believed that his friends had suffici- ently reconnoitred the ground, began the attack in person. *' He was dying of love, but this merely regarded himself, and was only a secondary object. The Avelfare and gran- deur of the sovereign and good people of Etruria were, and would always be, his principal and first consideration, jfhe study of his life." He then delivered another letter of THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 149 his mother, in which she formally demanded the hand of the queen dowager for her son, olfering in return, or as an indemnity, not only her husband's guarantee of the inde» pendence of the kingdom of Etruria, but his promise to incorporate the island of Elba and the duchies of Parma and Plaisance with that kingdovn. Having long been prepared for such an insult to her fa- mily and rank, and being forewarned by her royal rela- tives, the Kings of Spain and Naples, particularly by the ]atter, she toid Eugenius de Beauharnois, " that she would shortly return an answer to^ his mother's letter; frankly informing him that her mind was made up, and that she had fixed rather upon a retreat into a convent for the re- mainder of her days than to give her young son a father- in-law. Two days afterwards a letter to the Empress Josephine was put into his hands, and he departtd for Milan, where Buonaparte and his wife were daily ex- pected. No sooner had they entered this ancient capital of Lom- bardy, than they sent General Duroc to Florence, charged to invite the Queen Dowager of Etruria to assist at the approaching coronation ceremony. The excuse in her letter to the empress for npt uniting herself with de Beau- harnois had been couched in terms not to hurt the vanity even of the proudest. " The youth of her son, her remain- ing affection for her former husband, her family name, and the opinions of her royal relatives, were her motives for declining the honour offered. Real illness prevented her from accepting the invitation to Milan." Thus the usurper and his wife were prevented from seeing a princess of the house qf Bourbon for their daugh^ ter-in-l^W, and a queen dowager pf royal birth waiting in their anti-chamber and attending their circle or drawing- room. They took, however, a vengeance worthy of their noble minds. Ten thousand more French troops were or- dered into Etruria, and a loan of 6,000,00Q of livres, 250,000/. was required under pain of military execution. Admonitory epistles, with revolutionary threats, were be- sides forwarded to their Spanish and Neapolitan majesties. Many persons both in France and Italy, notwithstanding this dignity on one side and anger on the other, are con- vinced that Buonaparte still conspires to disgrace tht Bour- bon family with his fratejnity or parentage. They think 150 HEVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. that the Prince of Peace, another revolutionary upstart, will in due time either oblige her Etrurian majesty to be less delicate, or, in case of her obstinacy, dishonour and degrade some Spanish infanta by a marriage with Eugeniua de Beauharnois, or with some other of the low and guilty relatives of the infamous Buonapartes. During Josephine and her husband's journey to and from Italy, the greatest precaution was taken on the road to avoid assassins and to escape the machinations of conspira- tors. At every station where they changed horses were regular relays of gens-d*armes, of dragoons, of mounted riflemen, or of hussars, who delivered over, in the manner of state prisoners, to the detachments of each other's corps, the imperial couple. Buonaparte did not dance at Milan, but Josephine gambled there, to the great comfort of some female Italian sharpers of fashion. They pillaged her re- volutionary majesty of four millions of livres in cash and six on parole. They will probably be prudent enough not to reclaim the latter. Of the ready money lost, Talley- rand advanced two millions, for which he will obtain some future indemnity on Italy, Germany, Holland, or on the Hanse Towns. The other two millions her majesty had obtained from her Italian subjects as a free gift for her gra- cious protection, or for her disinterested recommendation to places in the Italian consulta, legislative corps, or legion ©f honour. The theatre at Paris, formerly called Theatre de Lou- yois, is now baptised the Theatre of the Empress. The f battle Buonaparte was well accustomed, and habit had there rendered him inaccessible to fear ; but this was a new occasion, and one on which all the greatness of his future life depended; the risk of a battle was not to be compared to it, and having time for reflection, this thought presented itself fully to his mind and overwhelmed him. The Council of Ancients, after hearing what had passed in the other assembly, proceleded to some resolutions and debates of little importance; but finding that they could not decide any thing effectually, without the initiative from the Council of Five Hundred, determined that all the members of that council who could be brought together should immediately assemble ; and accordingly, about nine o'clock in the evening, a large number beingcollected they met in their former apartment under the presidencey of Lucien Buonaparte. Their first proceeding was to inform the other council of their having met, and the next, to pass a vot6 of thanks to the commander in chief, and the officers who had co-operated with him in saving the country from the violence of the anarchists. Chazal then proposed that a secret committee of five members should be appointed to take into consideration the mean^ of forniing a new government; after this was adopted, Lucien Buonaparte quitted the President's chair, mounted the tribune, and pronounced a most animated and eloquent harangue, on the disasters of the republic, arising from the misconduct of the late government, and the necessity of appointing a new one. His speech was received with the loudest ap- plause, and repeated cries of " Long live the republic." Boulay de la Meurthe soon after returned With the report of the secret committee, containing the project of a de- cree for appointing a neW government : he prefaced his motion by a long speech, in which he enlarged on the profligac}?^ and incapacity of the Directory, as well as oii the defects of the constitution itSelf, and thenecessity of a strong executive power to give solidity to the state and prevent the return of anarchy. The first article of the decree declares " That there is no longer a Directory." The second *' That there shall be created provisionally an W 170 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. executive Consulate to consist of three members, Sycyes, Ducos, and Buonaparte, who shall bear the name of Con- suls of the French republic." The next related to the legislative power, which it left to be settled by the two councils on their meeting at Paris, but appointed tvi'o com- mittees in the mean time to draw up the form of a new constitution. The Council of Five Hundred then com- posed a proclamation addressed to the French people. At one o'clock in the morning the Council of Ancients an-* nounced their approbation of the proposed decree. Frege- "ville then moved ihat the three Consuls should be invited to the sitting and take the oath of fidelity to the sove- reignty of the people, &c. before which the President ad- dressed the assembly and the Consuls in a suitable speech, and measures were then taken to ensure the tranquillity of Paris, which were in a gieat measure superfluous, as there had been no disposition shewn to insurrection or A tumult, though various, contradictory, and alarming re- I ports had reached the city of what was passing at St. Cloud. \. The Consuls returned to Paris about four in the morn- ing on the 11th of November, and entered upon their functions that same day, after taking the refreshment which nature, after so much fatigue of mind and body, required. The first sitting held by the provisional consulate was em- ployed in the nomination of many individuals to places of importance ; the seal of the republic was changed, and the newspapers were stopped at the post-office and new ones printed to inform the departments of sill that had been transacted, and in the evening an address from the Consuls was read through all Paris by torch light to the same pur- port, though Buonaparte had on the night of the 10th ad- dressed one of the same sort to the citizens of St. Cloud. The new Consuls were Received at Paris with every testimony of satisfaction and applause, and on the 12th of November they held their first sitting at the Luxembourg, where the inscription " Directorial Palace" was taken down aver the principal gate, and replaced by the follow- ing, " The Palace of the Consuls of the republic." The two committees held their meetings also in the same place, which they continued till the 15th of December, when the new constitution was proclaimed. In the mean time they repealed some ©f the most odious and oppressive 4 THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY, 171 laws of the Directory, which prepared the people to ex- pect the happiest effects from the operations of the new government. When Napoleone had usurped the reins of government, he appointed Lucien minister for the home department, and recalled Fontanes, who in 1797 had been condemned to transportation, to be his secretary: and it was this Fon- tanes who v/rote all his eloquent speeches and proclama- tions during his ministry. Lucien was now in his element ; possessing the means of gratifying all his degrading and cruel passions. Not a w^oman whom chance ej^poseid to his view, or caprice to his fancy, and whorri money, power, violence, or intrigue, could procure, but was seduced, dishonoured, and ruined by him: neither the innocence of youth, the misfortunes of beauty, the sanctity of marriage, nor the sacredness of consanguinity, were respected by him* In six months, he was guilty of more crimes than all the Princes of the house of Bourbon have been accused of in six centuries. At a ball in April, 1800, at the hotel de Richelieu, where upwards of two hundred women of fashion were present (amongst others, two of his own sisters), he often and loud- ly repeated. Here is not a woman with whom, I have not intrigued / After the battle of Marengo, ambition, for some time, got the better of debauchery : Lucien imagined, because his brother could dictate to emperors, and create kings, that he might easily marry into some imperial or royal family ; and, as his wife was an obstacle, he gave her some ice cream, which she ate, and died : — that she was poisoned, not only her relations, but all Paris, proclaimed. Two days after his v^^ife's death, five of Lucien's armed spies carried away to his country-house, against her con- sent, the beautiful wife of a rich banker ; she was confined there several days to console him, not for the loss of his wife, but for the refusal of his brother to marry him to some German Princess. Lucien had long intrigued to get Fouche disgraced, and to unite the ministry of the police with the home depart- ment; but here he met with an equal, if not a superior, as well in plots as in guilt. Fouche informed Napoleone not only of Lucien's scandalous conduct, and of the public clamour against him, of his extravagant expences and of U!3 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. his numerous debts ; but also told him, that Lucien had bpoken of him (Napolt^one) with contempt, and dared hin })ower, for which, he said, Napoleone was indebted to him: the reports of Fouche's spies proved his assertion, and Lucien was forbidden the presence of his consular brother, and ordered tp resign his ministry ; not for his vices and crimes, for they had been long known, but because he had been indiscreet; and, besides, by circulating a pamphlet, ^vritten under his orders by Fontanes, had discovered son^e I'^niily secrets; and 'among the rest, ttie arriere pensc of [^^apoleone, one day to assume the imperial crown of the Gauls. By the mediation of his mother, and the advice of Talleyrand, his disgrace was changed into a lucrative embassy to Spain, to sell Tuscany, and to plunder Portu- gal. Lucien left Paris with a debt of three millions of livres ; ■which Napoleone promised to ])ay, but which is yet un- paid. Sorpe of his creditors have died after being ruined; the Temple and Cayenne have silenced the complaints of the others. In Spain, and chiefly at Madrid, Lucien continued his debauched and vicious life : his prodigality there surprised every one; his n'regularity gave offence, and his impudence disgust. He treated the king and royal family as his equals, and the ministers and grandees as his servants ; but ^uch is the degraded situation of the Continent, the de- jected or abject slate of many of its sovereigns, and the >veakness, ignorance, or treachery of their ministers and counsellors, that this revolutionary sans-culotte was not only suffered, but bribed, entertained, and complimented. By his negociations at Madrid and with Portugal, Lu- cien added twenty millions of livres to the fortune of his brother, and ten to his own ; he degraded royalty by creat- ing a kingdom in Tuscany, and insulted loyalty by swind- ling a province of Portugal. After the peace with England, when Lucien returned to Paris, he was made a Senator, and one of the grand offi- cers of the Legion of Honour; and he now shows away in a style to which the most extravagant manner of living pf any modern prince, brother or son to any emperor or king, cannot be compared : his jewels and diamonds are valued at upv\ards oi three millions of livres; his cabinet ©j" pictures cost him more than that sura; and his seraglio THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 173 and debaucheries more than both these sums together. 1'he millions that he carried with him from Spain and Por- tugal are expended; and notwithstanding that his brother allows him an annuity of 1,200,000 livres, besides what he receives from his lucrative places, he is said to be four millions in debt. Lucien is as insolent and despotic in his present eleva- tion, as he was formerly vile and cruel ; illiberal, ungene- rous and unfeeling, he uses his mistresses as if they were his slaves — and his friends qs his inistre^ses ; he is a ty- rant to his domestics, and a terror to all who approach him. t The glitter of affluence may dazzle the unthinking, and the renown of prosperity puzzle the weak ; but Lu- cien's greatness can neither cover the infamy of the guilty, nor the guilt of the infamous ; and his rank is unable to conceal the ignoble and base sentiments of a base and ignoble miqd. 1T4 }LOUIS BUONAPARTE, BROTHES OF TH£ £MP£I10X> Et l*on voit des commis mis Commc des princes Qui d'hier sont venus nus De leurs provinces. When, in 1795, through a medley of successful crimes, and of foul forgotten deeds, fortune was wantonly pleased to raise Napoleone Buonaparte from the dregs of obscuri- ty ; his brother Louis was a petty clerk, with a salary of twenty pounds a year, at the petty police commissary Pierre Pierre's office at Marseilles; a notorious terrorist, married to the daughter of an inn-keeper, and brother-in- law to Lucien Buonaparte; who when a minister of the home department, promoted him to the lucrative office of general-commissary of police at Bourdeaux. In the autumn of 1796, Louis left Marseilles for Italy, and began his mi- litary career at the age of eighteen, as a chief of battalion, or lieutenant-colonel, and aid-de-camp to his brother Na- poleone. In this capacity he followed him to Egypt in 1798 ; but suffering in Africa the consequences of his de- baucheries in Europe, his stay there was but short ; and he returned to France in October of the same year, with dispatches from General Buonaparte for the Directory. Of all the Buonapartes (not excepting either Joseph th^ negotiator, or Napoleone the warrior) Louis is the only one who can correctly w^ite and spell the French language. A letter of his to his brother Joseph, dated Alexandria, July 6th, 1798, was intercepted by our cruizers, and contains some accounts of the operations of the French army of the East, and some remarks on the inhabitants of Egypt. In speaking of the Bedouin Arabs, he says — " They are an invincible people, inhabiting a burning desert, mounted on the fleetest horses in the world, and full of courage. We have treated them kindly. They live with their wives and children in flying camps, wkich ar^ never pitched tw THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 175 nights together at the same place. They are horrible sava- geSf and yet they have some notion of gold and silver ! a small quantity of it serves to excite their admiration. Yes, my dear brother, they love gold (not more than the French) they pass their lives in extorting it from such Europeans as fall into their hands: and for what purpose? for con- tinuing the course of life which I have described, and for teaching it to their children. O, Jean Jacques! (Rousseau) why was it not thy fate to see these men, whom thou cal- lest " the men of nature ?" thou wouldst sink with shame, thou wouldst startle with horror, at the thought of hav- ing once admired them ! Speaking of the city of Alex- andria, he continues, " The remarkable objects here, are Pompey*s column, the obelisks of Cleopatra, the spot where her baths once stood, a number of ruins, a subterraneous temple, some catacombs, mosques, and a few churches. But that which is still more remarkable, is the character and manners of the inhabitants. They are of a sang-froid absolutely ?i%\.oms\\\x\^. Nothing agitates them; 2cc\d death is to them what a voyage to America is to the English, Their interior is imposing. The most marked physiogno- mies amongst us are mere children's countenances, com- pared to theirs.'* He finishes his letter with an observation that shews both the difficulty and honour of the conquest of Egypt by General Buonaparte, and of his boasted vic- tories : " Their/or/^ (says Louis) and their artillery are the most ridiculous things in nature ; they have not even a lock nor a window to their houses; in a word, they are still in, volved in the blindness of the earliest ages," Lucien Buonaparte often repeats, that his brother Louis est le seul htte de la famille (the only fool in the family) : but when at the age of twenty he was able to make such obser\'ations as those contained in this letter, his sense waar certainly as good, and his instruction and judgment better than that of Lucien himself, who, not long ago, when mi- nister of the home department, wrote to Citizen Lalande, " to stop the eclipse of the moon until his arrival,'^ It is true, that since 1793 an immoderate use of mercury has rather impaired Louis's intellects, and prevented his ad- vancement to the rank of a general, and perhaps to that of a constable of France ; but though a libertine, in common with his brothers and sisters, he has neither the crimes of Napoleone and Lucien, nor the treachery of Joseph, to re» i^G REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. proach himself with, and is therefore less disliked in France than either of them. In December 1799, after Napoleone had proclaimed himself the First Consul of France, Louis was nominated Colonel of a regiment of dragoons; and in October 1800 was entrusted with a political mission to the courts of Ber- lin and St. Petersburgh. His reception at the former was brilliant, and he was honoured by the condescension of the King and Queen to fraternize with him, as if he had been the brother of a lawful King of France ; so much so, that it was not only a real scandal to a number of loyal foreign- ers who passed that winter at Berlin, but even to those Prussian Generals, princes, and courtiers, who had wit- nessed the etiquette at the courts of former kings and queens. The impertinent and unbecoming familiarity of the ill-bred Louis Buonaparte, was only surpassed by the impolitic, but patient endurance of the royal family ; from which this sans-culottc, brother of a guilty sans-cuhtte usurper, took the opportunity to insult, if not to degrade monarchy, by his ridiculous, vulgar, and audacious con- versation at the table of a monarch ; and by his too fami- liar, if not indecent behaviour before the public when in the King's box at the opera ; where he publicly and boldly dared to converse with the young and beautiful Queen, as if he had been with the old painted wife of the First Con- sul. Infected by a known infamous disease, which kept him for weeks in his lodgings at the Hotel de Paris, he fortunately did not often repeat those scenes, which ex- cited so much the astonishment, animadversion, and com- plaint of birth, rank, and loyalty. Many persons are yet of opinion, that nothing can ever indemnify legal and he- reditary sovereignty for the sutfenmce of so many humili- ations. Before he left Berlin for the Russian frontiers, Louis was infoTmed by the Russian ambassador. Baron Krudncr, that he had not yet obtained any orders from his sovereign to invite the consular brother to St. Petersburgh. The Em- peror Paul, though seduced by French intriguers, dazzled by the victories of the First Consul, offended with Austria, and embroiled with England, did not forget what he owed to himself, to his rank, to his family, to his country, or to his subjects. Louis Buonaparte's purposed journey to Russia therefore ended at Koenigsber^ in Prussia, only on THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. ^ nr the Russian frontiers; from wliicli place he expeditecT re- mittances and smuggled instructions to the emissaries of Napoleone at St. Petersburgh; and, to the great satisiac-' tiou of all loyal men, he returned to Berlin without bein^ ' able to dishonour another sovereign. After a few more weeks residence in the capital of Prussic^,' jhe. was recalled to France by Napoleone, and sent to jVIontpellier, as Lucieti said, on a mercurial (and not on;, a political or military) mission, preparatory to receiving the liaiid of the lovely Fanny de Beauharnois. His marriage with'thia.lady is a convincitig proof that he is a greater fci-/: vou rite with the First Consul than Lucien, who was one ' of the pretenders to this acconiplished beauty. The de- clared promise of Napoleone to bequeath to the son of Louis his Consulate, and the sovereignty over the French Republic, has disj)leased all the other members of the . Buonaparte family: and his numerous and valuable pre- sents, both to Madame Louis and her husband, have ex- ; cited the envy of all the Corsican relatives, who are plot- ling to diminish the increasing consideration of this youn- . ger brother, or rather the repeated donations to his wife. Surrounded by every thing that can make existence de- sirable, Louis is an invalid at the age of twenty-three ;'an(l v.:ith ruined health, and a broken constitutionj he cannot enjoy the blessings which Providence has so liberally pour- ed down upon him; he suffers, therefore, in the midst of his prosperity, pains and pangs unknown even to wretch- edness itself when accompanied with innocence and vir-- ■ tue. According to the Livre Rouge, by Bourrienne, Louis Buonaparte received as an establishtnent two millions of livres; he has a yearly pension of one million two hundred thousand livres. One million of debts were paid for hinj in 1800 and 1801, at Berlin and in Germany ; at his mar- riage Napoleone presented him with six hundred thousand livres, and the same sum at the birth of his son. X Its REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. We subjoin to the above account of this Illustrious Pcr^ sonage, the invitation of the people of the Batavian Re- public, to accept of the throne of that Republic, as King of Holland and Constable of the Empire. What a Consta^ hie ! What an Empire ! and luhat an Emperor ! Paris, June 3, 1804. Presentation of the Ambassadors Extraordinary from the States of Holland. Arrived at the hall of the throne, they went through the usual ceremonies, after which, V ice-Admiral Verhuel, Pre- sident of the Deputation, delivered the following ad- dress : — "Sire, " The representatives of the people distinguished by their patience in times of difficulty, and, we dare to say, celebrated for the solidity of their judgment, and their fidelity in fulfilling the engagements they have contracted, have confided to us the honourable mission of presenting ourselves before the throne of your majesty. This people have suffered a long time under its own agitations and those of Europe* Witnesses of the catastrophes that have overthrown some states ; victims of the disorders by which the whole have been shaken ; they have been made sensi- ble, that the force of interests and connections, by which the great powers are at present united or divided, has ren- dered it indispensably necessary for them to place them- selves under the first political safe-guard of Eiarope. They have felt, that even their weakness has prescribed the ne- cessity of reducing their own institutions into harmony with those of that state whose protection alone can guaran- tee them against the danger of servitude or ruin. " 7^hese Representatives have maturely and solemnly deliberated upon the circumstances of the present times, and the dreadful probabilities of the future ; they have seen, even in the term of the calamities with which Eu- rope has been so long afflicted, both the causes of their own evils, and the remedy to which it is necessary they should have recourse. " Sire ! We are charsjed to express to your Majesty the wishes of the representatives of our people. We pray that you will grant us as the Supreme Chief of our Repub- lic, Prince jLouis Napoleone, your Majesty's brother, t© THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. no J^hom we deliver, in full and respectful confidence, the guarantee of our laws, the defence of our political rights, and all the interests of our dear country. Under the sa- bred auspices of Providence — under the glorious protec- tion of your Majesty— and, in fine, under the power of the paternal government, which we require of him. Sire, we dare to hope, that Holland, assured in future of the un- changeable affection of the greatest of Monarchs, and strictly allied even by its destiny to thc^t of your immense and immortal Empire, will see the renewal of its ancient glory and prosperity and repose it bas so long been de- prived of. Its losses then will no longer be considered as irreparable, and will only leave behind them a future re- membrance." His Majesty answered in the following terms :. ** Gentlemen, Representatives of the Batavian People, " I have always looked upon the protection of your country as the first interest of my crown. Every time I have been called upon to interfere in your internal affairs, 1 have been struck, from the first, with the inconvenience attached to the uncertain form of your government. Go- verned by a popular assembly, it had been under the in-* trigues, and agitated by neighbouring Governments. " Governed by an Elective Magistracy, every time this Magistracy was renewed, produced a crisis of alarm to the rest of Europe, and the signal of new maratime wars. None of these inconveniencies can be guarded against otherwise than by an hereditary Government. This I re- commended to your country by my councils, when the last constitution was established ; and the offer that you have made of the crown of Holland to P. Louis is consistent with your true interests and my own; and it is adapted to secure the general tranquillity of Europe. France has been sufficiently generous, in renouncing all the rights which the events of war had given her over Holland ; but I cannot intrust the strong places which cover my northen frontier, to the keeping of an unfaithful, or even to a doubt- ful hand. " Gentlemen, I agree to the request of their High Migh- tinesses. I proclaim Prince Louis King of Holland. You, Prince! reign over this people. Their forefathers only acquired their independence by the constant assistance of France— Holland afterwards became allied to England ; sh« 180 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. has been conquered ; still she owes her existence to France. Let them then owe to you, their King, the protection of their laws and their religion, but never cease to be a Frenchman. You and your heirs will possess the dignity of Constable of the Empire; you will recollect the duties you have to fulfil towards me, and the importance that I have attached to the safe keeping of the strong places upon my northen frontier, and which I confide to you. Prince! maintain among your troops that spirit which I have ob- served among them in the field of battle. Cherish the sentiment of unioji and love for France among your new subjects. Be a terror to the wicked, and a father to the good; this is the character of great Kings." His Highness Prince Louis then advancing to the foot of the throne, said, "Sire — I had placed all ambition in sacrificing my life in your service. I made my happiness consist in a close inspection into those qualities that, equally dear to myself ond others, have so often testified the power and effects of your genius. Permit me then to express my regret in se- parating from you ; but my life and my wishes belong to you. I go to reign in Holland because it is the desire of the people, and because it is your Majesty's order. ** Sire, when your Majesty quitted France to go and con- quer Europe, which had conspired against you, you in- trusted to me the defence of Holland against the invasion that threatened it. On this occasion I appreciated the -character of the people, and the qualities which distin- guished them. *' Yes, Sire, I shall be proud of reigning over them ; ]jut however glorious the career may be that presents itself, the assurance of your Majesty's constant protection,the love and patriotism of my new subjects, will give me the hopes of healing those wounds occasioned by so many wars, and the events that have accumulated within the course of a , few years. . " Sire, when your Majesty shall put the last seal to your glory, in giving peace to the world, the places which you shall then entrust to my care, to that of my children, to the Dutch troops that have fought at Austerlitz under your inspection shall be well guarded. United by inter- est, my people shall at the same time be attached by the THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. isi sentiments of iove and gratitude to their King, to your Majesty, and to France." The Dutch representatives had an audience of the Em- press, and were afterwards conducted to their hotel in the same manner in which they left it. Message from his Majestif the Emperor and King. "We have commanded our cousin, the Arch-Chancellor of the empire, to acquaint you, that in compliance with the wishes of their High Mightinesses, we have proclaimed Prince Louis Napoleone, our well beloved brother. King of Holland ; the throne to be descendible to his heirs, male and legitimate, in orderof primogeniture. It is our intention also, that the King of Holland and his posterity, preserve the title of Constable of the empire. This deter- mination of ours has appeared conformable to the interests of our people. As Holland, in a military point of view, included all the strong places which protected our north- ern frontier, it was necessary, for the security of our states, that the custody of it should be entrusted to persons re- specting whose attachment we could entertain no doubt. In a commercial point of view, Holland, being situate at the mouths of many great rivers which flow through a considerable part of our terrirory, it was necessary that we should have security that the treaty of commerce, which we shall conclude with her, shall be faithfully executed in order that we may adjust our manufacturing and com- mercial interests with the commerce of that people. " Holland, besides, is one of the first political concerns of France. An elective Magistracy would have produced this inconvenience, that it would have oftener exposed the country to the intrigues of our enemies, and tliat every fresh election would have been the signal for a new war. " Prince Louis, v,'hohas no personal ambition, has given us a proof of his affection for us, and of the love he bears the people of Holland, by accepting the offer of a throne which imposes upon him such great obligation. *' The Arch Chancellor of the German empire. Elector of Ratisbon, and Primate of Germany, having signified to us that it was his intention to appoint a Coadjutor, and that with the concurrence of the Minister and principal members of his Chapter, having conceived that it would be for the advantage of religion and the German empire, that he should appoint to that situation our uncle and cou- 18^ REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. «in Cardinal Fesch, our grand Almoner, and Arcbbishopf of Lyons, we have accepted the said nomination in the name of the said Cardinal. If this determination of the Elector Arch-Chancellor of the empire, be useful to Ger- many, it is no less comfortable to the political interests of France. " Thus does the services of the country call far away from us, our brothers and our children ; but the happiness and prosperity of our subjects are also among the object*, of our dearest affection." " At our Palace at St. Cloud, 5th of June, 1806. " NAPOLEONE." (Countersigned) " MARET." TREATY. " His Imperial and Royal Majesty Napoleone, Empe- ror of the French and King of Italy, and the Assembly of their High Mightinesses the Representatives of the Bata- vian Republic, presided by his Excellency the Grand Pen- sionary, accompanied by the Council of State, the Mini- sters, and Secretary of state, considering — " I. That from the prevailing turn of mind, and the ^actual organization of Europe, a government without so- lidity, and certain duration, cannot fulfil the objects for which it is instituted. " 2. Tliat the periodical renewal of the head of the state would always be a source of dissention in Holland, and a constant subject of agitation and disagreement among the powers friendly or inimical to Holland. " 3. That an hereditary government can alone secure the quiet possession of all which is dear to the Dutch people, the free exercise of their religion, the preservation of their laws, their political independence and civil li- berty. " 4. That its first duty is to secure to itself a powerful protection, under the shelter of which it may freely exer- cise its industry, and maintain itself in the possession of its territory, its commerce and its colonies. ** 5, That France is essentially interested in the happi- ness of the Dutch jDeople, in the prosperity of the state, in the permanence of its institutions, as well in consideration of northern frontiers of. the empire, open and unfortified/ as from general political interests and principles: THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 183 Have nominated for their minister plenipotentiary, of his Majesty the Emperor of the French and King of Ital}?^, " Charles Maurice Talleyrand, Great Chamberlain, Mi- nister of Affairs, knight of the Great Order of the Legion of Honour, Knight of the Order of the Red and Black Eagle of Russia, and of the Order of St. Hubert, &c. and " His Excellency the Grand Pensionary — C. PL Ver- l>uel, Vice-Admiral, and Minister of Marine of the Ba- tavian Republic, having the Grand Eagle of the Legioiv of Honour. " T. T. A. Gogel, Minister ,of Finance. " J. Van Sty rum, one of their High Mightinesses. " W. Six, Member of the Council ot* State, and G. Brantzen, Minister Plenipotentiary of the Batavian Repub- lic, having the Grand Eagle of the Legion of Honour, who after having mutually interchanged their respective full powers, have agreed as follows: " Art. 1. His Majesty the Emperor of the French and King of Italy, as well for himself as for his heirs and suc- cessors for ever, guarantees to Holland the maintenance of its constitutional rights, its independence; the whole of its possessions abroad and at home, its political, civil and religious liberty, such as is ordained by the existing laws, and the abolition of all privileges with respect to taxes. " 2. Upon the formal request made by their High Migh- tinesses, the Representatives of the Batavian Republic, that Prince Louis should be appointed Hereditary and Constitutional King of Holland, his Majesty has yielded to their wishes, and has authorised Prince Louis Napole.. one to accept the Crown of Holland, to descend to hiin and his male heirs legitimate, to the perpetual exclusion of females and their descendants. " In consequence of this permission. Prince Louis Na- poleone, will take the Crown under the title of King, and with all the power and authority determined by the Con- stitutional Laws, which the Emperor Napoleone guaran- teed by the preceding article. " It is, nevertheless, agreed, that the Crown of France and Holland can never be united in the same persons. " The Royal domain consists of, *' First, A Palace at the Hague, which is to be the resi- dence of the Royal Family. " Second, The House in the Wood. ]Si REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH " Third, Tlie domain of Soelsdick. " Fourth, A landed income of 300,000 florins. " The law, besides, assures to the King a further reve- nue of fifteen hundred thousand florins, payable by month- ly instalments. '' 4. In case of a rninority, the regency shall belong by right to the Queen, and in her default to the Emperor of the French, in his quality of perpetual head of the Impe- rial Family. He shall choose among the Princes of the Royal Family, and, in their default, among the natives. The minority of the King shall be completed within his eighteenth year. .- : "5. The dowry of the Queen shall be determined by her marriage contract.; At present it is agreed to fix it at the annual sum of Ian- kind, however, was ignorant of the real cause that put the bullets in my pistols. *"" I had long in my own mind resolved to reduce to dust tlie pagan idol I had erected. Yes ! you know that the first day of your Consulate would have been the last, had not my misguided affection commiserated the pale ^^nd trembling conspirator, and preserved a cowardly impostor from the national vengeance, I reperi,ted of my v/ork very soon in- deed ; because I very soon observed that all liberal ideas of liberty, generosity, and humanity, were excluded from your despotic, depraved and unfeeling bosom. I was, however^ until lately, weak enough to expect an amendment ; but every public and private transaction of yours, during these last two years, convinced me finally that my expectation would l>e vain* Then my duty as a citizen, as a patriot^ and as a philosopher, called on me to annihilate tyranny, by destroy- ing the tyrant. '' The late Senatus Consultus of your base and slavish Senate, in making the distance between you and me — a ty- rant and a patriot — so immeasurable, will reconcile me to all friends of real liberty ; and present and future generations, in cursing you and your memory, will bless me, and mine^ only for having intended to punish you. "But tremble, tyrant! though I am absent ; near your own person, among your own guards, among your own courtiers, in your own palace^ the avenger of violated free- dom, of outraged humanity, and of oppressed nations, re- sides. He accompanies you as your shade* Depend upon it, your tyranny is at an end the moment you least expect it. Perhaps even at this instant you reign no more—- you have reigned." It is said that this letter was stopped by Madame Buona- parte the mother, and never reached Napoleone ; but copies of it were circulated by Lucien and his adherents, both in Italy and France, at Milan and at Paris. At tlie same time that Lucien wrote thus to his Imperial brother, he sent a confidential person to Warsaw with ano*^ ther letter to Louis XVIII. wherein he offered his Sovereign '*■ a.l his rich;:'S, his influence, and his arm ; with the influ- B b 210 REVOLUTIONARY PLUI ARCH. cnce and arms of his nutnerous friends ; nil ready to sacri- fice themseh'^es with him for the restoration of their legiti- mate King to the throne of his ancestors." He protested " that his brother had solemnly declared, on the 7th of No- veniber 1799, in the presence of himself, lalleyrand, Vol- ney, Rcederer, Moreau, M'Donald, Murat, and Lasnes, th^t he would only keep the supreme authorit}% could he ob- tain it, until a fit occasion offered itself to restore it to ita lawful owner with safety to all parties." From tliat period until his return from the battle of Marengo, he had fre- quently held the same language. It was only after that event that he evinced an intention of establishing his usurpation for himself on a permanent footing," etc. To this tardy and selfish repentance, the King of France could not listen, nor was any notice taken, either of the letter or the mes- senger. By his ill acquired wealth, and political hospitality, Lu- cien however gained many partizans in Piedmont, in Lom- bardy, and in the Papal territory. Holding himself out as a deliverer, all persons suffering from, or detesting the Re- volution, or wishing to break the yoke imder which they groaned, were assiduous in paying their devoirs to him. — Watched as he was by his brother's spies, those manoeuvres could not remain unnoticed or escape suspicion. His mo- ther warned him, by command^ to cease his machinations, but without effect. On the 19th of October 1804, his house near Rimini was therefore surrounded by the staff officers of General Jourdan's army. By this General he was arrested, and carried under safe escort a prisoner to the citadel of Mantua, where he was delirered up to its commander, Ge- neral Mainoni, who, on his own head, was to answer for his confinement. When the Pope in the following month arrived at Fontainbleau, the first favour he asked the Em- peror, according to Madame Buonaparte, the mother's in- structions, was the liberty of Lucien, and a permission for him and his wife and children to reside at a retired country sejit in the Ecclesiastical States. I'o this Napoleone con- sented with repugnance and bad grace ; and only on condi- tion that his brother should see lew strangers, keep up no correspondence, and bind himself never more to visit the territories of the French and Italian Republics. During her husband's imprisonment, Madame Lucitn THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 211 was closely guarded In her own room by some gens d^armes d'Elite- For fear of being poisoned, her children's and her own nutriment consisted only of vegetables, eggs, milk, and biscuits baked withher own hands, and of flour ground by her servants in her presence. As she juvStly considers her appre- hensions still the same, she continues to follow the same diet, notwithstanding her husband's dissuasions, who fears it is injurious to her constitution. By her former husband she had two children, who are still alive ; and since her present marriage she has been delivered of two sons, baptized, ac- cording to Lucien's orders^ Julius Brutus, and Junius Brutus. In March .1805, Madame Lucien Buonaparte was sur- prised by an unexpected visit from Eugenius de Beauhar- nois, on a day when her husband was absent on a hunting party with two neighbouring noblemen. He informed her, *^ that he came on the part of the Emperor, to advise her, if the lives of her children were valuable to her, and if she had any real love for Lucien, to depart that day with her in- fants for France, where she and they should be treated with all possible delicacy and distinction, her fortune safe, and the advancement of her sons certain, upon her voluntarily renouncing her marriage, which a bull of the Pope should soon dissolve." This proposal she refused with firmness, and Eugenius said on leaving her, '*• One day. Madam, and not very far distant, you will be obliged to subscribe to harder conditions, and think it an imperial favour not to end your days at Cayenne." He left behind him a letter from Napo- leone to his brother, in which the latter was again txhorted to give up or divorce his wife. As the price of his obedi- ence, he should be directly created a Doge of Genoa, and an Imperial Highness, an annuity of three hundred thousand livres settled on his two sons, and Madame Lucien likewise enjoy her own property unmolested." — " In a month," said Napoleone, ** I hope to be at Milan; if you by submission to iny will, prove yourself worthy of the grandeur fortune has bestowed on our family, come there and embrace me- I shall then forgive you all that has happened, and reinstate you in the same rank and favour with Joseph and I^ouis. If you continue obstinate and refrectory, you must eternally re- nounce all hope of reconciliation, as I renounce you for ever as a brother." Instead of answering this letter, Lucien sent ^13 REVOLUriONARY PLUTARCH. the very next day a trusty agent, to conclude, in his \^ife's name, the purchase of an estate in Bohemia, for which he had been bargaining near twelve months. On his anival at Turin in May 1805, Napoleone dis- patched his aid-de-camp, Le Brun, with another fraternal letter, but in it a sine qua 7ion to favour, was a divorce with Madame Lucien. He again offered him "to be a Doge of Genoa, and an Imperial Highness in France ; and he was given to understand, that the hand of a beautiful Princess of one of the most ancient sovereign families in Europe, would also recompense his obedience and his repentance." As no more notice was taken of this letter than the former, Napoleone in spite incorporated the Dogeship of the Ge- noese with his Emperorship of the French. This i ' not the only occasion, since Buonaparte's reign, that a petty family quarrel, or a momentary whim, has changed the destiny of a state, What can be the reason of this perseverance of Napole^ one to conciliate or to destroy Lucien ? A few words will explain the mystery. Of all his brothers, Lucien is the most enterprising, the most audacious, the ablest, and most criminal j af a disposition as obstinate, malicious, and re- vengeful, as his own. Could he persuade or commjind him to acknowledge a favour ; to stoop to be looked upon in France as a reprieved felon, and to renounce a wife he loves for another forced on him, the usurper's vanity would be as much flattered as his safety and interest promoted. But those worthy brothers well knew each other, and therefore must either be soon friends again, or one of them will in a short time cease to pollute the earth with his guilty existence* After the many astonishing changes witnessed within the last sixteen years, it would not be very surprising if a Julius Brutus or a Junius Brutus Buonaparte should one day pro- claim himself, by the support of the same bayonets that have elevated Napoleone, an Emperor of the French, and a King of Italy. As to Lucien's present patriotic jargon, of its value every loyal man is well aware, and it cannot make ma- ny dupes. Because he is disagreeing with his upstart bro- ther, he speaks now of liberty and philosophy, with the same sincerity, when quarrelling with his fellow-regicides, as Ro- bespierre, in 1794 (when thousands of victims perished daily by the guillotine, by shooting, and drowning,) spoke of his THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 313 humanity and patriotism. French rebels always become pa- triots and philanthropists when their popularity begins to de-» crease, or the day of their punishment approaches. Liberty, equality, and fraternitys are words always in their mouths when the daggers of rivals touch their breasts, or the halters of suspended justice their necks. Madame Lucien Buonaparte is in her twenty-third year ; her person is handsome, her manners accomplished, and her sentiments refined. But she was no doubt uninformed, be-» fore her present marriage, that in Lucien Buonapaitc she should embrace an assassin and a Septembri^^er. 214 PRINCESS LOUIS BUONAPARTE, AN IMPERIAL HIGHNESS. HORTENSE-EUGENIE, commonly called Fanny dc Beauharnois, is the daughter of Madame Napoleone Buon- aparte by her first husband, Viscount de Beauharnois, and was born on the 10th of April 1783. [See the early part of her life under the head of Fanny beauharnois, daughter of the Empress.] Princess Louis had scarce reached her first lustre when she saw her father a rebel. She had hardly passed her second lustre before she saw him punished for his rebellion by his fellow-rebels, and her mother prostitute herself in the arms of one of the regicide assassins of her King — an indirect assassin of her father. Before she was thirteen she witnes- sed her mother exchanging the adulterous embraces of a re- gicide Barras for those of a sanguinary terrorist, Buonaparte — a murderer, stained with the blood of eight thousand men, women and children, just butchered by him in the streets of Paris. If, after such examples of depravity before her eyes, she was preserved from the common contagion, it is to be ascribed to that innate worth, on which both seduction and corruption sometimes in vain throw out their venom, their insinuations, and their allurements. Immediately after her marriage, Madame Napoleone ob- serving her revolutionary husband's particular attention to his daughter-in-law, who was tall and much grown of her age, enquired after some boarding-school, in the vicinity of Paris, where she might place her. The republican philosophers of the National Convention and of the Jacobin Club, in des- troying and selling the public schools, academies, and colle- ges of France, had openly declared all education, private as well as public, both hurtful and unnecessary. " Children destined to be the defenders of the rights of man, and of liberty and equality," said these wiseacres, " should learn nothing but the republican constitution." Several school- masters and schoolmistresses, who continued, nevertheless, to instruct youth, were tried, condemned, and executed, as THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. ^15 conspirators against the Republic^ because they had permit- ted their pupils to read books in which Kings were mention- ed with other epithets than those of tyrants. These exam- ples of national justice^ abolished all private instruction soon- er than the decrees of the legislature or the threats of the Jacobins. At Robespierre's death, in July 1794, not a sin- gle school existed in the French capital. Had his reign been of some few years longer duration, Buonaparte would at present have tyrannized over slaves as ignorant and bru- talized as they would have been base, corrupted and wicked. U he Directory, which sucjceeded the National Conven- tion, permitted the establishment of private schools, under the inspection of the republicans, who were members of these public schools, called then, in their revolutionary jargon, Norman schools, free-thinkers in politics and morality as well as in religion. But though these establishments were permitted, they were neither numerous nor well conducted when Madame Buonaparte went in search of one for her daughter. She fixed, however, on that house at Versailles where an acquaintance of hers, Madame Campan, boarded and lodged young ladies. Madame Campan, a chambermaid of the late unfortunate Queen of France, Marie Antoniette, was from 1789 a se- cret admirer of the French rebellion, and secretly served the French rebels with whatever information she could pick up at court. She was accused of being one of the traitors who, in 1791, discovered to La Fayette the intention of the King and of the Royal Family to escape their goalers at Pa» ris ; she, of course, shares with some others the cruel re- proach of being one of the causes of all the enormous crimes perpetrated since, and all the consequences of the arrest of the Royal travellers at Varennes. This lady had hired at Versailles, one of the spacious hotels confiscated by the na- tion, as belonging to emigrants, where she had organized^ rather upon an extensive scale, a seminary for young persons of her own stx. Having had herself the advantage of a lib- eral education, and at court numerous lessons of good-breed- ing ; she was very fit for the undertaking, had not her revo- lutionary mania, though she had suffered from, and seen all the evils of the Revjlution, made her introduce, even in teaching youth, some revolutionary innovations. It is very- probable, that these very defects procured the preference 216 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH- Napoleone Buonaparte gave her. But although he approx'ed of the general plan of her institution, he too had his revo- lutionary mania. Having his reasons for fearing the exist- ence of a remunerator of virtue, and an avenger of guilt, he was particularly zealous to overthrow all belief in the Christian religion. He therefore gave Madame Campan some private instructions concerning the religious creed in which she was to bring up his dear Fanny, They are too sacrilegiously curious, as coming from the pen of the pre- sent MUST Christian Emperor of the French, to be left out. " 1. He positively forljids all visits to his daughter-in- law of priests, constitutional as well as refractory, and all conversation with this class of fanatics or impostors. 2. He enjoins the governess to prevent all attempts of instilling in- to the mind of her pupil the usually erroneous ideas concern- ing Christianity ; a faith proved by historians false, by phi- losophers absurd, and by moralists dangerous. 3. The re- ligion of Nature is more than sufficient to improve the wise, to console the good, and to terrify the wicked. 4. I'he ca- techism, and other works of the theophilanthrophists, might be given his daughter to read and meditate on, were she judged to harbour any natural inclination to vice. 5. As it is however supposed, from what has hitherto been seen of her, that Nature has created her originally good, and that her natural instinct is for virtue, the reasonable philosophy 2iiid pure morality of Spinosa and of Helvetius may be taught. 6. An implicit obedience to her parents is to be implanted in her mind, and she is to be taught always to submit her own understanding and thoughts to their better and maturcr judg- ment ; if she seems to hesitate about obeying this duty, it will be necessary to remind her often, that to them alone she is indebted for her physical and moral existence ; that they alone, not from duty but from generosit}-, supply her neces- sities, and even procure her superfluities at a time when so many other children of her age are starving from want, or perishing from diseases brought on by penury, 7. She is never to be permitted or instructed to pray ; if she believes in a God, her prayers are improper and insulting ; because by them she evinces no confidence in, but doubts of his pro- vidence ; her prayers in telling him her wants and desires, reproach him with want of omnipotence, or of bounty. S. If she is found worthy of being educated a Spinosist, she THS BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 2ir yv'Al soon be convinced of the inefficacy and inutility of pray- ers ; that they jprocure no good aiid prevent no evil ; that "destiny, with or without them, goes on in its usual train, determined from and for eternity. 9. Let her well consider, that if the Grand Mechanic can prevent our troubles, and does not do it, he is no good being ; if he will but cannot prevent them, he is not all-powerful ; but if he neither will nor can prevent our misfortunes, his impotence is unworthy of the worship of such rational beings as men and women. These hints are sufficient to shew the ridicule of prayers, and to whom — to a Nonentity." Five other paragraphs follow these, but they are too blas- jphemous to be laid before loyal and religious readers. Those above translated, from their puerility and absurdity, are un» able to delude even the weakest, to dupe even the most igno- rant, or to furnish arguments even to the most sceptic. Tehy are, however, undeniable evidences of the impious sentiments of that infamous hypocrite and sacrilegious apos- tate, who at present perverts the heavenly morality of the Christian religion for the preservation of his tyranny, as he formerly employed the sophistical arguments of ah abomi- liable and dreadful atheism, to seduce and deceive the viciousj vile, and foolish instruments of his usurpation. Madame Campan was too much attached to her own in- terest, not to follow strictly the instructions of Buonaparte, who, at his return to Paris, after the peace of Campo For- inio, was highly delighted to find his dearest Fanny so much improved in her mind, manners, and conversation. His iirst question to her was, " Do you know, my dear girl, any thing of Jesus Christ ?" *' No, papa," said she ingenious- ly, *'• I have not the honour of being acquainted with sueh a citizen." *' And what do you think of God T" •"• Nothing ; if he does iiot think of me t never trouble my head aoout him." *^ Are you not afraid of him ?" *' No, I do nothing to fear any bod}." Several similar questions followed, and received similai: answers. '1 hey all persuaded Buonaparte that he had been punctually obeyed, and he therefore reward- ed Madame Campan with a diamond ring, originally worth twelve thousand livres (500/.) bat which did not cost him more than the signature of his name to an order forstrippino- it ctf the finger of a Madona at Vincensa. A gift presented C c ^18^ REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. by Christian devotion to a Saint, was thus bestowed b)fa& atheistical zealot for propagating infidelity. In the winter 1796, during Buonaparte's absence in Egypt, his wife, contrary to his orders, introduced Mademoiselle de Beauharnois in the Directorial and other fashionable cir* cles. In one of those she met with a middle aged, respect- able looking man, who passed for a country farmer, whose relations were of the then haut ton. Speaking to her of her own father, and of the proscribed persons of the same class^ he demanded of her some trifling gift for children, who, like herself, had been made orphans by the revolutionary axe, but less fortunate — no succeeding prosperous circumstances had restored lost wealth or relieved present and pressing ne- cessities. She had no money in her pocket, but struck with his conversation, and always commisserating the unfortu- nate, she asked his address, promising to call on him early the next morning. Before her mother was up, she dressed herself secretly, put four Louis d'ors in her purse, and or- dered her maid to accompany her. When she presented the money, the pretended farmer, Saunier, who was a disguised priest, said, '* thank God the success of the wretched infi- dels has not been general ; when charity has not excluded France, Christ still has his adorers there." She told him that she was no. Christian, and that she did not even believe in a God.. " Your own heart and these Louis d'ors, Made- moiselle, contradict your assertion.'* He then entered into a long discussion about that genuine and disinterested chari- ty, which, without the example of our Saviour, would have been unknown upon earth. " Had Athens, Persepolis, and heathen Rome," said he, " like the Christian capitals, those hospitals for age and disease, those orphan-houses for de- serted infancy and destitute youth, those asylums for correct- ing vice, for encouraging virtue, and for relieving the wants and lessening the misery which assail mankind from the cra- dle to the grave ? What is become of the charitable insti- tutions of our own country, since ruled by infidels? our streets swarm with beggars, our high roads with robbers, our goals with criminals ; and there is hardly a house in France where persons have not expired from neglect, from desertion, from distress, or from despair ; from that selfish insensibility, the characteristic of infidelity, which sees with indiflference a brother sulfer without any attempt to succour or THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. '* 519 console him, and a friend agonizing, without even pitying him. Look round you. Mademoiselle, and I am sure it will almost rend your very heart, to observe one generation descending into eternity without faith, without hope, and another entering the dreadful career of life, exposed to all its vicissitudes and calamities in this world, without any ex- pectation of remuneration for virtue, or punishment for vice in another— in an hereafter." Her eyes confessed those sen- timents which her heart felt, but her mouth hesitated to pro- nounce. Profiting by the impression, Saunier put a book into her hand, and desired her to read it with attention, and to honour him with a visit as soon and as often as she was at leisure. Her maid was not less moved than herself by what she heard. They read the book both with application and edifi- cation. For two months they continued regularly to see the worthy ecclesiastic at the same hour, in the same way. To this day Princess Louis ackuQwledges that the information she obtained from his conversation, the precepts of his doc- trine, and the conviction of the truth of the religion of her fore-fathers, from his arguments and example, preserved her from many evils, particularly from the seduction to which she was exposed by young Rewbel, the son of the Director, who, under pretence of marrying her, had free admittance to her private company, but whose views, she had reason to suspect, were not honourable. Even after Buonaparte's usurpation, she, by the same re- ligious notions, resisted and escaped the incestuous and un- natural attempts of this her father-in-law, who was furious when he heard of her conversion to Christianity. Policy, however, soon got the better of lust, and took advantage of her devotion and dutiful resignation, to marry her to his bro- ther Louis, whom she not only did not like, but who was repugnant to her on account of his debaucheries and other vicious propensities. Whether she afterwards was the dupe of her own sensibility, or became culpable, because she had been obedient, her scrupulous conscientiousness is evinced in a letter to her mother. In it she so frankly explains her situation, and deplores her errors, that early repentance makes it proba )le that her continuance upon the road of per- dition will be but short. 220i I REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. *''• Compiegne^ Atigust 19?A, 1804. ** Yes, my dearest mother and only friend, I am encom'* passed with everv thing that can make life not only agreeable but enviable. Of my sex, I am here the first by a rank I ne-? ver dreamt to attain, and I am hailed and complimented by every body,, as having no superior in the beauty of my per- son, or in my mental accomplisl'ii^ents. , *^ These gifts of fortune, of nature, are valuable, charm- ing, and flattering indeed, I have, however, experienced that they are unable to confer what constitutes the sole bles- sing and only worth of existence — content with one'^s selj] and above all^ peace and tranquility of mind. " How si igular are those occurrences of my life that have preceded and produced my present brilliant misery ! At eleven years of age the public executioner made me an or- phan, and at thirteen I had another father. From mistaken, ill-conceived, or criminal tenderness, he ordered me to be educated without belief in a Divinity. This was not easily effected. 1 he lessons, the prayers of my infancy, though the giddiness and playfulness common to youth made them often neglected, were never entirely forgotten or erased. I found I do not know what consolation, in secretly confiding my wishes, my griefs, my joy, in my prayers to a Supreme Being, to act as I thought would please him ; to enjoy an heavenly satisfaction when I had done right, and a torment- ing anxiety when I had any wrong with which to reproach myself ; on the other hand, an invincible horror seized me the instant the idea of total annihilation put me on the level with the brute, or insinuated to my bewildered senses, that my production and end were the same with the plant in our garden, the dog tied in our court-yard, or the insect I tram- pled under my feet. I often made these remarks to Madame Campan, because they often perplexed me. She in return, shewed me my father's instructions, to which she added her own comments, corresponding with his desires. " But the fashion of impiety was to me the most danger- pus of teachers and seducers. All other girls, my compan- ions, strove who should be foremost to pride themselves of infidelity, and throw ridicule on Christianity. They were always applauded — fatal applauses ! In two years I left them all behind me, and was saluted the most amiable atheist of the whole seminary. The approbation of my father, on THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 221 his return victorious from Italj^, did not at all tend to make me change my opinions. " You know, since the unexpected light which Providence gave me in the precepts of my ever regretted virtuous in- structor Saunier, how much I changed f6r the better, in my behaviour towards the best of mothers, and how much eve- ry good person approved that decency of gait, of language, which succeeded my presumptuous and indecorous boldness. This, the only time of my life I was truly happy, was short, too short. '* After my father-in-law had been made a First Consul, and continued those unnatural insinuations I dreaded and detested, the pain it caused me to avoid giving offence, and to conceal my disgust and contempt, made me agitated when alone, and uncomfortable when in company. You know that he was insupportable to me from the day I heard him use such shocking language to you. My innocent caresses, which he took for affectionate sentiments, were only the consequence of a duty my obedience to my mother's commands imposed on me. But when he had from jealousy so cruelly exiled my only lover, the worthy choice of my heart, the dearest De S , when he murdered De S 's friend, Frotte, I abhorred him. " You since know the daily combats of my mind, and that they would long ago overcome my strength, had not the hope relieved me, that my power over a barbarian might prevent the commission of more crimes. You know also, how lit- tle he has kept that promise (which bound me for life to a husband I must despise) of sparing all Roya:!ists ; sacred shades of D'Enghien, Pichegru, and George, revenge on your assassin the pangs of your friend, caused by your mur- der. *•'• I m.any times v/ished that my principles of religion, of morality, were as easily reconciled v,nth my conduct as your's, dear mamma. I should not now deplore the pollution of my nuptial bed by intruders ; of not having resolution enough to resist temptations I condemn as culpable ; of having per- mitted my passions to govern my reason, and my senses to silence my duty, aiid for some short and temporary enjoy- ments, endure the perpetual reproaches of a guilty conscience. i hese would be insupportable to me, were my husband's be- iiaviour to me kind, and if, in some manner, his repeated in- ass REVOLUTIONARY jPLUTAHCH. fidelities did not extenuate my adultery. For one of my lovers, he has twenty mistresses. The indelicacy of his in- trigues, of his amours, goes beyond what you can imagine. The embraces of the common harlots of the camp are often as acceptable to him as those of the wives of his aids-de- camp, and always preferable to mine. Is it not outrageous ! Is it not provoking ! If your walks are sown with thorns, you may guess that mine are not strewed with roses. " Believe me, my sole friend, that the young conscripts are nothing to me. Had I a husband I could love, or only esteem, I should always have remained pure and irreproach- able. I am, however, determined, if I survive my approach- ing accouchement, to dismiss for ever, even those consolers you think so necessary to my comfort. This is a vow I have this morning made before the altar, and God will enable me to perform it. As to Louis's jealousy, I fear it is less than I suffer from his negligence." The Princess had frequent audiences of the Pope during the winter of 1804, and his Holiness bestowed on her indul- gencies in abundance. Her life has since been very retired, and as she has perfectly recovered from her accouchement, it is supposed that her vow has not been forgotten. The yearly allowance of the Princess Louis amounts to four millions of livres ; her jewels, plate, china, and pic- tures, are valued at twelve millions ; a bishop is her almo- ner, and two grand vicars her chaplains ; Madame Deviry is her lady in waiting, and Madame Boubers ; Madame Villeneuve, Madame MoUien, and Madame Lery, arc her maids of honour ; Mr. Darjuson is her first chamberlain, and Colonel Caulincourt her master of the horse ; Mr. Tuy- got her equerry ; Desprez her secretary ; Dalichoux Sene- gra her intendant ; Robert Villars her librarian ; Raguideau her notary ; Le Roux her physician ; Assaliny her siirgeon, and Dufau her apothecary ; besides these, sixty-six other persons are attached to her household. Her Imperial Highness has been delivered of two sons. Napoleone Charles, born on the 18th of Vendemaire, an. xi. or 10th October, 1802 ; and Napoleone Louis, born on the 19th Vendemaire, an .xiii. or 11th October, 1804. 223 MADAME JEROME BUONAPARTE, In a work of this nature^ written and published in Eng- hndwith a vitw to vilify the family of Buonaparte ^ it could not be expected that correct Jnfcr7nation was the object tf the author^ but that every character directly or indirectly in" troduced to answer his pmpQse should be represented tvithout regard to truth ^or decency. It may be properly asked where was the necessity for the unjust and illiberal refections here cast on the President^ and the national character of mcr citizens ? With respect to Mr, Patterson^ and the share he had in effecting the marriage of his daughter ^ the most su- perficial acquaintance with the laws of this country would evince the impossibility of his acti7ig the part attributed t(? him. Parents have no authority whatsoever over their chil- dren in what relates to marriage^ in this they are left a per- fect freedom of choice. But Mr. Patterson^ so far Jrom. ^Tging his daughter to the uniony or being actuated by the unworthy motives with which he is charged^ foreseeing the evils of which it must be productive advised strongly against it, and did every thing in his poiver to prevent the match ; it was therefore an act of the parties themselves^ suggested by mutual inclination and founded on 7nutual attachment. It is due to the character of Mr, Jerome Buonaparte to observe^ that during a residence of nearly two years in Baltimore^ be- fore and after his marriage^ that no man could have conducted himself more correctly ^ or with more propriety, and that ht endeared himself to everyone rvho knew him by his amiaile man?iers and engaging disposition. The magistrates of the ancient republics of Athens, Spar- ta and Rome, would have degraded, disgraced, banished> or put to death, a citizen who permitted his children to marry into a family either of tyrants or of slaves ; either ot foreign princes, (/r of ibreign upstarts. But his Excel- lency My. President Jcfter^on is no nxre r.n Arift.dLs, a 224r REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. Lycurgus, or a Cato, than Citizen Patterson is a Socrates^ or a Brutus. In the free commonwealth of the United States of America, such is the general liberality and hospi- tality, that had a Spartan citizen, with his contempt of riches and stern principles of freedom, presented himself there, if he had refused to sell himself for a slave, he would have perished from >vant like a wretch ; he would have found no choice between bondage and death. On the other hand, the example of Monsieur Jerome Buonaparte, proves the unambitious disinterestedness of American citizens, and that any foreign adventurer, let his relatives be ever so vile or ever so wicked ; let them owe their elevation to the most enormous crimes, their power to the basest treachery, and their wealth to the most infa- mous plunder ; let himself be an accomplice of their guilt, provided he has a prospect of sharing in the spoils, he is certain of being adopted into the families even of those called the most respectable citizens. The greedy trader will heap upon him hoarded treasures, renowned beauty bestow her hand, austere virtue her caresses, and staunch republicans their commendations, their flattery — their cring- ing. On a young person of Miss Patterson's age and repub- lican education, love must generally exclude all other con- siderations. The ambition of the females of a common- wealth of equality, must chiefly confine itself to obtaining for husband's the most handsome or the richest among their tellow-citizens. The shameful cupidity, and foolish am- bition of her parents, therefore, no doubt, dictated her unbecoming marriage with a low Corsican. To suppose it otherwise, would be a libel on her hearty on her sense, and on her judg}ne7it» She was the wife of Monsieur Je- rome after an acquaintance of some few weeks only. VVas he a little more hairv, the yellow and diminitive figure or Monsieur Jerome would hardly improve the ugliest mon- key capering in the forests either of the western or eastern world. Monsieur Jerome is ill-bred as well as uninformed ; possessing neither natural cr acquired parts to recommend him. Parental disposition alone could have united the beau- tiful and accomplished Miss Patterson with such an igno- rant, mean, vicious, and corrupted personage. THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. S25 - What could give Mr. and Mrs. Patterson the hope of a fraternity with the Buonapartes? Then' worth, their ere- 'Jit. These may, perhaps, he well known upon the ex- changes of America, but Napoleone despises and detests merchants. Mr. Patterson has hitherto no military achieve- ments, no revolutionary crimes, to recommend him, and he is too honest a man, to be transformed hereafter, either into a bravo or an accomplice of the Corsican usurper. The domestic virtues of Mrs. Patterson ? 'I'hese are the most pointed epigrams on the hereditary vices of the female Buonapartes. They must therefore resign themselves to see their pleasing scheme miscarry, of being the parents of a revolutionary Imperial Princess. . In the creation of Imperial Highnesses in May 1804, Monsieur Jerome was excluded ; and in the subsequenfi dignities and distinctions thrown in such a scandalous profusion, on every person related to the upstart tyrant, no mention is made of this his younger brother, llis name is not found even upon the list of those French banditti forming a Legion of Honour. He is only a captain of a, frigate, without property and without talents, and will remain in these narrow circumstances, in that humble sta- tion, until he renounces a match he was not of age to con- clude. Is it to be supposed that the feelings of Jerome will oppose such a dishonourable, though not unlawful act ? Will his stoicism prefer obscurity and penury to rank and riches? To judge of his present sensibility from his past transactions, he is as unfeeling as a brute; and to de- termine his firmness, constancy, and inconsistency, from those of the other members of the Buonaparte family, he must regard all ties of honour and of honesty merely as steps to advancement and gratification of passions, and dis- regard them the instant they cease to be such, whenever they do not promote or only oppose his interest. Thus* absurd ambition, as well as all other unbecoming passions, carries v/ith it its own chastisement. The disappointment of the Pattersons is certain, while their design of grandeur and splendour is problematical,if not improbable. Should also their good and sacrificed daughter sutler from affec- tion, love, or defeated confidence, her misfortunes must bo to them tormenting and unrelenting reproache&. B d % 2^26 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. The only event that coulc? make Monsieur Jerome con- tinue the husband of Miss Patterson, is of such a nature, that had it occurred in 1802, her parents would never have permitted her to bestow her hand on him. Was Provi- dence in itsjustice, to precipitate the sanguinary Napoleone from the blood-stained throne which he so treacherously seized, and so illegally occupies, and let the punishment due to his enormities overtake him in this world, Jerome would then certainly be fortunate, to seek in America a rpfuge from the proscription of his criminal relatives in Europe. When, in the beginning of January 1805, the Pope was busy at Paris, in marrying again all the Buonapartes, who had previously only been coupled according to the impious code of the Republic, and the rites of atheism, he is said also to have signed a bull dissolving the marriage of Je- rome, as contracted by a minor, against the consent of his relations, and contrary to the canon laws, with an heretic. As Jerome did not set sail from America before the April following:, it cannot be doubted but that he was acquainted with this his family arrarigemevt^ and that he left his wife in the Tagus, with an intent never to see her again without the consent of his brother Napoleone. That this was his determination, his supplications before the Imperial throne when at Genoa, shortly afterwards, and when they were unavailing, his acceptance of the inferior command of a frigate, as a penance for past offences and an indication of future amendment, clearly evince. He shewed that he was determined, at any rate, to merit indulgencies of the Pope, and to obtam indemnities from the mock Emperor, his sovereign and his master. Nothing has, however, happened, or can happen in this business, or rather intrigue, which the Pattersons should not have prepared themselves to expect, both from the so well known outrageously vain character of Napoleone, and from the letters intercepted by British cruizers, addressed by the usurper's minister of the marine department, to Monsieur Jerome himself, as well as to his political Trans- Atlantic emissary, Pichon. The following is an official and authentic copy of the THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY, 257 minister of the marine, Decre's letter to his friend Mon- sieur Jerome Buonaparte. " PariSy SOth Germinal, year 12 {April 18, 1804.) *' I have just been fulfilling, my dear Jerome, a rigorous duty imposed upon me by the First Consul; that of for- bidding the Citizen Pichon to supply you with money, and prescribing to him to prohibit all the captains of French vessels from receiving on board the young person to whom you have attached yourself; it* being the intention of the First Consul, that she shall on no pretext whatever come into France; and should she happen to present herself, that she shall not be received, but be re-embarked for the Unit- ed States without delay. " Such, my- dear Jerome, are the orders which I have been obliged literally to transmit, and which have been given me, and repeated after the interval of a month, with such a solemn severity, as neither allowed me to with- hold them altogether, nor to soften them in the slightest degree. " After the discharge of this severe duty, I cannot, my dear Jerome, deny myself the pleasure of lengthening my letter in a way which the attachment I feel for you will warrant, and our military association entitle me to. If I loved you less, if the sentiments with which you have in- spired me did not so perfectly accord with those which I owe to your family ; if there were not between you and me a sort of companionship in arms, and of intmiacy which I delight in keeping up, 1 would confine myself to the dispatching of the orders which I have received, and to an accurate official correspondence ; the result of which would give me very little uneasiness. Instead of this, I am going to chat witli you at a great rate, and without knowing be- forehand what I am about to say ; of one thing I am cer- tain, I shall tell you nothing of which I am not well per- suaded. " War is carrying on, and you are quiet and peaceable at 1500 leagues from the theatre on which you ought to uct a great part. If unfortunately you come not back in ^$S REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. ibe first French frigate which returns to Europe, and I have already given you that order by C — tds, an order which I repeat to you by the ConsuTs command, in the most formal manner: if, I say, you shall not return to France till after the peace, what dignity will accompany your return ? How will men recognize in you the brother of the regulator of Europe? In ^\hat temper of mind will yqu find that brother, v;ho, eager after glory, will see you destitute even of that of having encountered dangers; and who, convinced that all France v;ould shed its blood for him, would only see in you, a man without energy, yielding to etfemintite passions, and having not a single leaf to add to the heaps of laurels with which he invests his name and our standards. " O ! Jerome, this idea alone should determine you to return with all expedition amongst us. The sotind of arms is heard in every quarter, and of the preparations for the noblest enterprise. You are inquired for, and I vexed that I should be at a loss what answer to give to those who ask where you are — declare that you are just at hand ; give me not the lie, I beseech you. ** Your brother Joseph, father of a family that he adores, possessed of a fortune ])roportioned to his rank, invested with the highest civil honoursof the state, known through- out Europe for his sagacity, and his diplomatic labours, wishes to add to so much glory, that of sharing with the Consul the dangers of war, and has just got one of the rce^iments that are about to embark. Louis, known by his military services, a general of division, is desirous of adding to that glory, that of displaying talents for civil arrange- ments; he iiasjust entered into the Council of State — the section of legislation. " Lucien, it is true, has just quitted France, and has ex- iled himself to Rome, m consequence of a marriage repug- Ijant to the views of the Fir^t Consul ; but Lucien is known by the services he has rendered, by his genius, by his ta- lents, by the dignity of a senator. He is possessed of a jiijreat and iudependant fortune; but notwitlistanding the ccnnections (disavowed by his brother J which he has cc: THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 22D traded, have been found, incompatible with his abode in France, " What has taken place in your family, points out to you sufficiently what the First Consul expects of you, and his inflexibility concerning what you shall do in opposi- tion to his views. Sole architect of the glory of which he has attained the summit, he acknowledges no family but the French people, and in proportion as he exalts his bro- thers, who press around him, so have I seen him show cold- ness, and even aversion, to tjiose of his own blood, who push not forward in the career which his genius traces out for them. Whatever is foreign to the accomplishment of his great designs, seems to him treason against the high destiny ! And believe me, for I know your brother better than you know him yourself, if you should persist in keep- ing yourself at a distance from him, he would get angry at it at first, and would conclude by entirely forgetting you; and heaven knows what regrets your obscurity would lay up in store for you. Scarce can a more brilliant career be opened to a man of your age. Shut it not up yourself. The union which you have formed, has deeply affected him. While I, thought he, am doing every thing for glory, for my own, for that of my name, for the happiness of the people that have put their fate into my hands, by whom may I hope to be seconded, if not by my brothers? and the youngest among them forms an inconsiderate connection, on which he has not even asked my opinion. He has dis- posed of himself as a private individual ; it is therefore cis a private individual he wishes me to consider him. What claim does he show to my benefactions? — None; for instead of being useful to me, he takes the route dia- metrically opposite to what I wish him to follow. In vain ^vailing myself of the freedom which the First Consul permits in domestic privacy, did I wish to make the voice of natural affection be heard; 1 became sensible, from his conversation, that he neither felt, nor was liable to feel, any j)liancy of that kind. " / will receive Jerome, if, leaving in America the youn^ person in question^ he shall come hither to associate himself io my fortune. Should he bring her along with hitn, she .'hall not put afoot on the territory of France, and you muU 130 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. answer to me for this, by the orders wh'ch you are bound to give to prevent her landing. If he comes alone, I shall ne^er recall the error of a moment, and the fault of j^outh. Faithful services, and the conduct which he owes to him- self, and to his name, will regain him all ray kindness ; such, my dear Jerome, are nearly the words of the First Consul. Bethink yourself, my friend, that he is only your brother, and that as I have already told you, a brother feels not the yielding condescension of a father, who identifies himself in some measure with his son — Consider that you have as yet done nothing for him, and that in order to ob- tain the advantage attached to the honour of being connect- ed v^ith him, you have not a moment to lose for deserving them. For it is his character, that merit and services ren- dered, or to be rendered, are the only things on which he sets a real and solid value. *' In truth, I am frightened at the regrets you are pre- paring for yourself, and the person with whom you have connected yourself, should you go to the length of opposing the views of your brother; your passions will pass away, and you will reproach yourself with the injury which you have done yourself. Perhaps you will accuse, even involun- tarily, the young person who will have been the occasion of it. Listen to reason, and she will tell you, that at any rate 3^ou have committed the fault of failing in respect for your brother, and for a brother fed for a length of time with the love and veneration of all France, and with the respect of Europe. You will be sensible how happy it is for you, that you are able, by returning to France, to obtain the pardon of this fault; that it would be inconsistent with your personal dignity to carry thith^rr a woman who would be exposed to the mortification of not being received. I know not whether you can hope to overcome your bro- ther's unfavourable dispositions towards her; and, to deal frankly with you — I see no probability of such a thing ; but if there be any means of obtaining it, it must be by your presence — by your compliance with his views, by proofs of your devoted attachment to him, you can bring it about. You are so young, that if you unhappily let slip the opportunity of placing yourself about the Consul, you Will have many years of regret steal upon you. The obscurity to which you would thus condemn yourself THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 231 would be long; and long and bitter the comparison be- tween the lot you had chosen for j'ourself, and that which once awaited you. Without distinction, fame, or evea fortune, how could you bear the weight of the name with ■which you are honoured ? To you, a stranger to the glory attached to it, it would become an insupportable burthen. I repeat it for the last time, my dear Jerome, come hither, come hither by the first French frigate whidi shall sail from the United States, and you w'ill meet with such a reception as ycu could desire; but I regret that you know not the Consul sutliciently, because you would then be persuaded that you cannot regain his good will but by this expedient, and his good will is essential to your happiness and your glory. I conclude with the expression of the most sincere attachment, which I shall never cease to re- tain ; happy, if I have been able to influence your deter- mination in the wa}^ I could wish, more happy still, if my letter was unnecessary for that purpose. A thousand good wishes. (Signed) *' Decres." Paris, 1st Floreal, year 12, April 19, 1S04. Not unnecessarily to swell the volume, another letter from the same minister to the French charge d'affaires in Ame- rica, Pichon, is left out, as being nearly a repetition of the above. A French periodical paper, published on this subject some other curious particulars, under the head of " IMPERIAL FAMILY CORRESPONDENCE. (From Les Nouvelles a la Main.. Vendcmaire, an xiii. or Octo* ber, 1804, No. 4. p. 3, et seq.) " British cruizers on the coast of America have inter- cepted a parcel containing original, confidential, and offi- cial letters from Napoleone Buonaparte to his brother Je- rome, and from Talleyrand to the French agents in Ame- rica. The names under some of these letters are signed at full length, others only wiih initials. Among the lat- ter is one signed J. B. supposed Joseph Buonaparte, and 2S2 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. Jknotlier L. B. supposed Letitia Buonaparte, addressed to Monsieur Jerome. " In the letter from Napoleone, Jerome is severely re- proached for his degrading marriage in a family of la ca- naille marchande, or of the mercantile rabble; ordered im- mediately to renounce his wife, and embark for France, "where honours, r2iuk, and riches await him, if obedient; whilst, on the contrary, if refractory, poverty and obscu-^ rity are to be his only lot, as a Se7iatus Consultus which, were he in France, would proclaim him an Imperial High- ness, shall otherwise prevent him and his posterity for ever from using and disIio7iouring the great name of Buona- parte. The sword of the Grand Admiral, intended for him, shall then be disposed of to distant, though more worthy relatives. ** Joseph's letter to Jerome is merely a copy of Napo- leone*s. Though he presses Jerome to obey the Emperor's commands, he does it with so bad a grace, as if he seemed apprehensive that the arrival of a younger brother in France, would diminish his own ambitious views or avari- cious expectations. Two-thirds of the letter are said to express, in the strongest terms, the terrible anger, and the terrible effects, of the terrible Napoleone's displeasure, which te(\mxe years of good conduct in Jerome, before the Emperor's/ra/erwa/ aft'ection can be restored. *' The letter of Madame Buonaparte, the mother, to her Jerome, is full of Catholic sentiments. As a true Christian of the Catholic church, she fears as much the damnation of her son in the next world, as his disgrace in this, for having married into a family of heretics, and united him- self to a woman educated in the same principles of eternal perdition as her parents. She exhorts her son not to go to France, but to join her in Italy, where she will endeavour to make his and Lucien's peace at the same time with his Imperial brother. She hints that his Holiness the Pope has shown no objection to pronounce his marriage with an he- retic void, and that she has fixed upon a young Roman Princess of the Colonna family as his future wife, whose religion is as pure as her birth is illustrious. To console the iemporarj) Madame Jerome, she offers to settle upoa THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 233 her an annuity of six thousand livres (250/.) if she will be- come a Roman Catholic, and retire into some Spanish or Italian convent. " The Frencli agents in America are informed by Ta!-. leyrand, tluit the Emperor's command is, that the\- shall try all means in their power to persuade Jerome to take his passage immediately for Europe, and if without suc- cess, stop the Imperial allowance; entice him on board, and even use secret violence in forcing him to embark with- out his pretended v,'ife, to remove whom out of the way, the agents have full authority* to employ whatever secret means they think necessary. The principal agent is or- dered to repeat to the President Jeiferson, the Emperor's displeasure for not having interfered with regard to his brother's match, w-hich, if lawful according to the laws of America, is illegal according to the laws of France: to these ah?}c Frenchrnen are subjected, icherever they reside. He is to be requested tacitly to permit those measures of vigour, which the family honioiir of the Buonapartes re- quires on this occasion, and to equip an American frigate to carry Jerome, v/ithout his incumbrance, to France at the expence of the Emperor, who in return will ensure his re-election as President, and even, upon certain condition^;, a presidency for life over the American States. General Turrean (of terrorist memory), whom the Emperor hss appointed his representative in America, will inform the President of his Majesty's demands and intents. This ge- neral ambassador has instructions to support him, and eveii to head any party that shall take up arms against the Angloman federalists, who are to be exterininated, should the}' dare to oppose his re-election. Should his f'lture conduct be approved of, Turreau will let Mr. Jefferson more into the secret views of his Imperial Majesty with regard to Spain and her colonies, which, when Em-ope is pacified, may easily be partitioned between the subjects of the President and those of the Emperor." ** These are the principal contents of the intercepted IMPERIAL FAMILY CORR ESPONDENC E, of which W^C haVC obtained copies from our correspondent at Baltitnore : there, as we 1 as every where else in America, they are cir- culated by English emissaries, enemies to the quiet and E e 234 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. glory of our 27/?(5inoM^, revolutionary, Corsican sans-culotte Dynasty; which with so much modesty, and so many vir- tues, has put the rank, the throne, the palaces, and the property of the French Bourbons in requisition for them- selves. " When Monsieur Jerome is safely arrived in France, and Madame Jerome is safely removed to America, we shall publish a ])anegyric on the former, and a funeral sennon on the latter." The inveteracy of the Emperor against the premature marriage of Jerome, is besides evident, from the strict or- der he gave his minister at Lisbon, to prevent the landing of Madame Jerome in that neutral kingdom, and the civil departure she was forced to take from the allied Batavian Commonwealth: an indelicate insult, which the becom- ingly proud republicans of old would have considered as an act of premeditated hostility, had it been offered to one of their feliow-citizens. But it may be repeated again, that the Americans are modern republicans, more ready to worship Plutusthan to draw their swords in the service of Mars. Their political consciences are not so nice or scru- pulous as those of the republicans of antiquity. They would sell and dispose of all the Helens, all the Venuses in the world, with the same indifference as any other com- modity, provided the bargain was profitable. Another occurrence has not lessened the wrath of Ma- dame Jerome's barbarous brother-in-law, Napoleone. Her husband, according to report, in announcing his arrival in Europe with the young person his wife, had also stated, that although she had the misfortune of being under the Emperor's ban, his enemies were her's. She would ex- pect with submission his gracious directions in neutral Embden, where she was friendless, instead of landing in hostile England, where her relatives were many, and the friends of her parents numerous. His revolutionary Ma- jesty had hardly finished the reading of this letter, when the public prints informed him that Madame Jerome was quietly laivded opposite to where his Army of England bravely, but quietly encamped. THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 233 As be, however, at the same time was shewn translati- ons of some English prints, mentioning the distinguished reception she had met with at Dover ; that an honourable gentleman had performed the part of his Imperial Ma- jesty's grand master of the ceremonies, and handed heron shore ; that generals, colonels, and mayors had waited on her; that their wives had complimented her ; that her anti-chambers had been crowded with fashionable ama- teurs, and her hotel surrounded with greeting John Bulls; his fury was somewhat softened, and his rage less violent than usual, particuiarl}^ when honest Talleyrand, the Em-i peror's grand sycophant of honour, had addressed him thus : " Sire! and my most gracious Sovereign, Emperor, and King! notwithstanding the ungenerous endeavours of the British Government to cloud your Majesty's glory, to diminish the inestimable value of your Majesty's great actions, to calumniate your Majesty's patriotism, disinter- estedness, and liberality, and to excite the people of Great Britain against your Majesty*s sacred person. Englishmen of all classes strive who shall be foremost to bow to a lady, who had no other claims to their veneration, than that of having usurped the brilliant name of Buonaparte. Sons of peers cringe to touch her hand ; superior and confiden- tial officers of his Bri tan ic Majesty, with their wives, emu- late to be admitted and remarked in her drawing-room ; and his subjects of every rank are anxious to pay their de- voirs to the soi-disant Madame Jerome Buonaparte, who, had she landed as Miss Patterson, would not only have been unnoticed, but perhaps insulted. From this voluntary and flattering behaviour, your Imperial and Royal Ma- jesty may conclude what a reception he would have ob- tained, had he graciously condescended to land in the Bri- tish Islands. Sire ! some little more patience, and the So- vereign who has lately been consecrated Rex ItalicuSj will soon be saluted, nay hailed. Rex Britannicus T* Whether this speech of Talleyrand is fabricated or real, whether it is composed as a conjpliment to Buonaparte, or as a censure on the conduct of certain British subjects, who suffered their curiosity or politeness to get the better of their duty and policy, it is equally just, proper, and point- ed. What a disgrace to the character of a free, dutiful, and loyal nation, to have published accounts of persons of ^3G REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. rank and eminence dancing attendance on a Madame Je- rome (the wife of a pett}^ insignificant rebel and adventur- er, brother of an usurper, tyrant, and assassin, the sworn enemy of their country), who, as Talleyrand truly observ- ed, would scarcely have been regarded or spoken to, had she arrived here as Miss Patterson. Her misfortune of having accepted for a husband Jerome Buonaparte, cer- tainly deserves compassion and pity, but cannot be allevi- ated by an unexpected and undeserved attention and trou- blesome bustle. As to her sex, it would have been respect- ed the same, less pompously indeed, but perhaps more sincerely, by all true Britons, had she set her feet upon British ground as the unmarried daughter of an American trader, instead of the disappointed and deserted wife of a revolutionary Imperial Highness in petto. Our laws, our manners, cur civilization, and our gallantry, protect it, without all the impolitic and ridiculous show and parade witnessed at Dover, and transmitted thence to fill the columns of London newspapers, or to announce to conti- nental nations our rapid advancement towards a degrada- tion which we have so often censured in them, when pros- trating themselves before a Napoieone, Joseph, Lucien,or Louis Buonaparte, before a revolutionary Emperor, or be- fore a revolutionary Empress. In what light have the Emperors of Germany and Russia considered such an hu- miliating infatuation! Have they not reason' to believe that the conclusions drawn by Talleyrand, though exag- gerated, may not be improbable? States that know nothing of our loyalty, resources, and public spirit, but from the libels in the AjGnhuer, may they not suppose that our ex- travagant acts of good breeding are the dictates of fear, and that our necks are stretched out ready to receive the Corsican yoke? Will not the loyal and disinterested cabi- net of Berlin rejoice at such progression towards Corsican fraternity? Britons are but little aware of the hateful ef- fects such ridiculous scenes here, produce on the still inde- pendant continental nations. Had Madame Jerome, like a Madame Tallien, shewn herself bold, daring, vain, and presumptuous, instead of being modest and amiable, she would have been visited by our great folks, invited by our fashionables, followed by crowds in her walks^ gaped at in churches^ stared at in ^ THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 237 theatres, and, finally, after being caressed by our first peo- ple, envied by her equals of the niiddle classes, and hooted and abused by the rabble. Her prudence and good sense in avoiding publicity, are as praiseworthy as her marriage is deplorable. All persons who have enjoyed the pleasure of her company, are unanimous in their admiration of the charms of her person, as well as of the ornaments of hef mind. i # * m 238 HER IMPERIAL IIIGHJJESS ELIZA BUONAPARTE, SOVEREIGN PRINCESS OFPIOMBINO, ttUas MADAME BACHIOCCHI. " If any farmer wants an able housewife, any cattle- keeper a good dairy-maid, any inn-keeper an attentive and clean bur or chamber-maid, or any bleacher an expert ?r^ laundress, my Eliza," said Madame Buonaparte the mo- ;- ther, " is a valuable matcl). She will keep at home for months, never going out but to hear mass or to make her confession, continualh- looking after the house, watching, instructinsj, and, when necessary, scolding the servants. She can milk the cows or goats to perfection, churn butter, to a nicety, discover cows lost in the woods, or runaway goats capering upon the mountains. She can^^bake bread, brew beer, feed pigs, and nurse lambs or kids. She is a competent judge of all sorts of good winesf spirits, and liquors; can mix negus, punch, or syllabubs, lemonade, colfee, or chocolate ; can make feather or stra^^j^ds; can sweep to perfection sitting and bed-rooms, and^f splash- ing and mangling, spare (he washing of sheets and curtains for years. By a method her own, and invented' t?y herself, she hangs up, lays down, or spreads out her linen in such a systematic manner, that not a drop of rain, or a ray of the sun, is lost to whiten or dry them. For citizens of such description, of such occupation,' repeated Mother Buona- parte, " my Eliza is an inestimable treasure." This eldest sister of the First Consul married in 1788, a countryman of her's, BLichiocchi, who, with a capital of twelve thousand livres (500/. sterling), had established a cotton manufactory at Basle in Switzerland. The match was at that period regarded ii^her country as a brilliant one for the petty and poor Buonaparte family. Before her marriage, she had done all the drudgery of a dairy-maid THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 239 on the small farm rented by her parents near Ajaccio, in Corsica. Thus spoke the simple, plain, and poor Letitia Buona- parte, when cultivating a small farm near Ajaccio in Cor- sica; when following the plough, or guarding flocks of goats; when surrounded with nine ragged or naked children, calling, and often calling in vain, for bread. Notwithstand- ing her faith in the predictions of gypsies, and in the pre- science of her own dreams, she then little supposed that thrones, grandeur, and wealth were in store for those brats, whom she expected to vegetabe in penury, meanness, and obscurity ; whom she would have thought rich, if not ex- periencing immediate want, and exalted, if necessity or misery did not force them to become troublesome to the parish ; to augment the numbers of needy vagabonds beg- ging on the highways, or the sturdy, starving beggars in- festing and asking for alms in the streets of cities and towns. A countryman of her Imperial Highness Princess Eliza, considered affluent, because he possessed property to the amount of twelve thousand livres (500/.), was struck with the boasts of Mother Buonaparte, of this her daughter's domestic qualities, which her friends in charity circulated all over the island of Corsica. He therefore hired a jack- ass to go to Ajaccio, where he surprised her Imperial High- ness occujiEd in gelding pigs. As he wanted a wife of all work,^nis did not frighten or dishearten him. With- out being captivated by a beauty, that, if it ever had exist- ed, had not been improved by the scorching rays of a burn- ing climate, he was pleased with her sensible conversation and rustic accomplishments. For him to demand and ob- tain the hand of a virgin, already the mother of a child of many fathers, was the same. Their nuptials were cele- brated with a pomp that made Mother Buonaparte weep for joy, and all the other raggamuffinsof Ajaccio envy her felicity. The adventures of Princess Eliza's husband. Citizen Fe- lix Bachiocchi, his present Serene Highness, Sovereign Prince of Piombino, were no less extraordinary than her Qwn qualities were wonderful. The son of a shoe-black •^ 540 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. &t Bastia, or at least of the wife of a shoe-black (whose very frequent visits to a neighbouring convent of Recollets scandalized the devotees, and furnished matter for the chat of gossips), he was gratuitously brought up by one of the friars, until, when about twelve years of age, he eloped, and engaged himself as a drummer in the regiment of Royal Italien. Destined, no doubt, to make a noise in a higher sphere, he was in some few months tired of the military service, and deserted into Switzerland. After four weeks' wanderings, during which he subsisted by begging and pilfering, he was received into a coffee-house at Basle, in the capacity of a waiter, and marqueur, or marker at a billiard table. Being soon expert in playing, he w^on con- siderable sums and bets, particularly from English travel- lers, who then visited the Swiss Cantons. Within six years he had money enough to set up a manufacturer of chocolate. In that situation he married the daughter of a cotton manufacturer, who took him into partnership, which, however, the death of his wife shortly dissolved. When he became the husband of Princess Eliza Buonaparte, he was in business for himself. As from compassion he be- haved very generously. towards the distressed relatives of his wife, he had nearly ruined himself, when the plunder of Italy enriched the sans-culotte Napoleone Buonaparte. He was then indeed relieved of a part of the incumbrance which he had supported ; but until Xapolcone had usurp- ed the Consulate, he was not indemnijied for his liberality, or paid his advances. Even then a great olJfction was harboured in the Consular bosom against him. "He had no crimes with which to reproach himself; his hands were neither polluted by pillage, nor stained with blood; hi.» quiet submission, and his wife's patient assiduities about her powerful brother, made him hov/ever, at last, m 1803, within twelve month, a Colonel, a General, and a Senator; in 1S04 a Serene Highness, and in 1805 the Sovereign Prince of Piombino, a petty principality on the borders of Tuscany, which Napoleone seized and bestowed on this his awkward brother-in-law, that he might no longer with his presence disgrace, at Paris, the Imperial reviews, levees, drawing-rooms, and circles. Mr. Bachiocchi is a good honest man, more fit to head the mechanics of a manufactory than to shine in the revo- THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 241 lutionary manufactory governed by Napoleone Buona- parte; and as he has hitherto committed no crime to ac- quire celebrity, he is despised by all the Buonapartes, even his own wife not excepted ; and it surprises all France, that a dose of the same preparation which made Lucien in 1800 a widower, has not before now made Madame Bac- liiocchi a widow and a princess. Madame Bachiocchi's character bears great resemblance to that of her mother; she is both superstitious and de- vout ; both licentious and religious ; she. intrigues and con- fesses, wears the hair of her loVers, and the relics of saints ; she kneels before the holy picture of St. Francis, and ogles the profane portrait of her lover on her bosom ; all her ap- pointments are in churches, ^vhere, in adoring her Creator, she gazes and smiles at her admirer. Her love letters are the common talk of Paris, because she preaches to the sin- ner, when she intends to flatter the lover. Before the fortune and grandeur of Napaleone turned her head, she was the best of daughters, sisters, wives, and mothers; and she still fulfils these several duties better thiin any of her sisters ; and in Corsica she is respected as the most virtuous of them all, because, like her mother, she had only one child before her marriage. Since her elevation to an Imperial Highness, Eliza Buo- naparte has much altered her foibles as well as her habits. Formerly by turns devout and amorous, her occupations and passions were divided between heaven and earth; at present she is transformed into an invincible coquet, and a disbelieving infidel, notwithstanding that she was the lirst and the last of her family to demand and obtain froni his Holiness the Pope, indulgences and relics, abso'.utioa for former sins, consolation for past troubles, and hope for future happiness. The reason for this unaccountable change, is reported to be a disappointment of having children, and a temporary folly occasioned by the surprizing and unheard of succes- ses of her guilty brother. She is said to have, in Ihe be- ginning of April 1805, invited Cardinal Capraru to wait Ff % 242 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. on her. When his Eminence arrived, he was, by her orders, shown into the innermost room of her hotel. Be« lieving that a repenting sinner would unbosom her frailties before him, he without suspicion went through six rooms before he entered the apartment of the penitent, which was her boudoir. As soon as he was seated, she told her chamberlain, that she was visible to nobody before sh'e rung the bell. She then bolted the door, placed a brace of pistols by her side, and ordered the Cardinal to approach her. Instead of iniagining the real cause of this state of siege, his Eminence supposed her in a state of religious despair; he began, therefore, to talk of the bounty of our Saviour, of the power of his vicar at Rome, and the exam- ple of the crucified robber, which proved that sincere re- pentance, however tardy, was not too late. Here she in- terrupted him abruptly, with ** none of your nonsense, Eminence! you are not asked here to preach, but to act. I am told, that for these thirty years past you have never slept with a woman; you are short and ugly, it is true, but it is no matter to me ; a child I want, and a child I will have; here I am laying myself down on the sofa at your service. No retreat, Cardinal, if you hesitate a mo- ir.ent, if you begin speaking instead of obeying, here are the pistols, and you are a dead man." " But," said the trembling Cardinal, " my vows to my God, and my dig- nity in the church." " Your God," answered the prin- cess, " what does he care about you making me a child, when he has made Napoieone an Emperor and a King. Your dignity ! did not your superior in dignity, the Pope, consecrate the same Napoieone on his Imperial throne, he who is so deserving and so fearful of the gallows." As the Cardinal all the time she was raving had been ringing the bell, her whole household was in an uproar, and, headed by chamberlains, ladies in waiting, maids of honour, pre- fects of palace, equerries, and pages, forced open the door. They were all unanimous in laying their hands upon the poor pale Cardinal, suspecting from the position of her Imperial Highness, that he attempted to commit a sacrile- gious and high treasonable rape. She, however, soon un- deceived them, by calling out to them to get out of the way, that she might shoot the ungallant coward, for refu- sing to procure her a child, a future heir to the thrones of France and Italy. This avowal of Princess Eliza procured # THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 243 Cardinal Caprara his release, and an opportunity to escape to the castle of the Thuilleries, where he informed the Emperor of the curious indisposition of his sister. The consequence was, that his Majesty forced her Imperial Highness Princess Eliza, and his Serene Highness her hus- band, to set out with an escort of honour, within four days for Ual3\ Arrived at Milan, Prince Bachiocchi alone went to Piombino, his princely consort being in a most deplora- ble situation, screaming out every instant, " Is Napoleone an Emperor and a King! am I an Imperial Highness! are my brothers and sisters to have children, and am 1 to have none ? Princess Eliza continued indisposed at Milan even in June 1805, and w^as attended by her physician, Dr. Hus- son, member and secretary of the Vaccine Committee. The yearly allowance of her Imperial Highness, in France, amounts to three millions of livres,and at Piombino, to two hundred thousand livres. Her diamonds, plate, and china, are valued at six millions of livres. Ninety-two persons form her household, of whom a bishop is her almo- ner, and two grand vicars her chaplains. Madame la Place is her lady in waiting; Madame Brehan-Pelo de Crecy,and Madame Chambaudouin, her maids of honour; Messrs. D'Esterno and Phillippi, are her chamberlains ; De Montrose, is her master of horse, and Picault her equerry ; Lesperut is her private secretary, and Villeneuve, her in- tendant. 244 CHx\RLOTTE BUONAPARTE, PRINCESS OF SANTA CRUCE; When, in 1796, success crowned Buonaparte's army in Italy, the Princess Santa Cruce was an assistant to Madame Ramiiaud, a niantua-maker at Marseilles (with vrhom she had tor six years been an apprentice), and at the same time in the keepin;^- of a soap-manufacturer, a married man, in that city, of the name of Julien, by whom she had two children. In 1797, she and the present Madame Murat accompanied their brother Joseph to Rome, where he was appointed by the Directory ambassador of the French Republic. The irresistible arms of Napoleone convmced the patriotic Roman prince, Santa Cruce, of the all-subdu- ing and irresistible attractions of his sister; and she was made a princess within twelve months after she had been a mantua-maker, and commanded in an elegant hotel in a short time after she had left otf serving in a shop. INIarricd into this revolutionary family, the Prince Santa Cruce tried to become a revolutionary hero : and when the plots and intrigues of Joseph Buonaparte had etfected a revolution at Rome in 1798, he was made a Roman gene- Tai, and commander of the Roman National Guard; but in fighting against the Neapolitan troops under Generiil Mack, in 1799, be had his leg shot otf. This weak and rebellious prince is as ignorant as he is disloyal ; and not- withstanding his name and his riches, his crowned head and his wooden leg, his rank and patriotism, he is the con- tinual object of the jokes of the consular courtiers, of the epigrams of the republican wits, and is as much despised Its he is really despicable. Madame S^^nta Cruce, v/hen she is in health, laughs at THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 245 her mother's devotion ; but on the least symptom of illness she sends sooner for her mother's confessor than for her husband's physician: when well, her conversation is blas' phemous; when ill, edifying: prosperity makes her an atheist; wretchedness would probably make her a chris- tian, if not a saint. Her mother often repeats, that the Princess Santa Cruce w^ill never be saved if she does not die in an hospital. When Lucien Buonaparte liad determined to marry ac- cording to his own inclination, but contrary to the ambi- tious views and absolute orders of Napoleone, he invited his brothers Joseph and Louis, and his four sisters, with their husbands, to assist at his nuptials. Through fear of the Imperial WTath, most of them, however, under differ- ent pretexts, declined the invitation. Joseph was tor- mented by the gout; Louis suffered from rheumatism; Bachiocchi was suddenly taken ill, and Murat had a very bad cold : in such circumstances, t!)e wives could not leave their husbands, and he received their common apologies at the same time. The Prince and Princess Borghese were not among the number of these; they had no excuse, no complaint being unexpectedly visited by Lucien, 'and found all well, an hour before the ceremony was to take place. A message to the Emperor informed him of their dilemma, and be<,;arty last night, I do think, that, with the exception of Pius VII. and one of his six Cardinals, there v/as nobody who was a real Christian in his heart. You observed, iiowever, how much they all felt themselves hurt by your imprudent sortie, your indiscreet sally ; because all for the preservation of civilized society, were, with myself, per- suaded of the necessity, at least of being externally Chris- tians, of not saying any thing to be reprobated by the piety of the faithful, or scandalizing the scruples of the conscien- tious or devout. Let me therefore conjure you to be hereaf- ter more decent, prudent, and discreet. Believe me, that notwithstanding my sincere affection for yoy, should you H h 55S Rl^VOLtrtlONARY PLUTARCH. not cease your profane and irreverent language and expres- sions when in company with strangers, or with our family and visitors at my court, I shall, for the safety of us all, bfe obliged to silence my own inclination, and listen to my duty as a sovereign, by ordering you into exile on one of your husband's estates on the other side of the Alps ; and re- nounce for ever all the satisfaction and pleasure I have pro- mised myself from your conversation and tenderness.*' "Admire my patience, brother," repleied the Princess of Boighese, " in listening with attention and silence to your excellent sermon and eternal capuciiiade. It is very easy for you, dear Napoleone, who are so eiKhusiastically fond of your rank and authority, and who from your youth have studied dissimulation, and made duplicity habitual, to stifle your real sentiments, and be as much at your eas? in the company of ithpostors and hypocrites of every des- cription as with men of honour, veracity, and integrity. But as l^o me whom from ^ prostitute you have made a princess, and who do not care a pin about it, were you to make me a harlot again, provided I can gratify my passions and inclinations ; I who never concealed my real thoughts, nor spoke what I did not think, was I to promise you to esteem what 1 scorn, and to scorn what I esteem, I should deceive you, and for the first time in my life not act frank- ly with you. For example, was it not disgusting, last night, to see the apostate and atheist Talleyrand, who has so frequently confirmed me in my infidelity, throw him- self down at the feet of a pontiff (who has not so much sense in his whole body as the ex-bishop and minister has in his little finger) and to remain on his knees, during a good quar- ter of an hour, until Pius VII. had finished his mummery ? was it not enough to excite one's laughter, to see this same grave Pope placing his old and ugly hands to be kissed by th? most beautiful women of France ? who could help smiling at observing your own chaste and religious Josephine &o devoutly demand, and so readily obtain his Holiness'* blessing ? and when our own dear and imbecile uncle Fesch, moving in his brilliant cardinal's dress, as if he had been shut up in a sack, after the departure of the Pope, began in his turn his ridiculous solemn grimaces, was it .possible to be serious, or rather was not laughter irresistr- ble? Do you not suppos'j that, many besides myself re-- THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. ^ofli tnarkiecl these and other absurdities and contradictions, repugnant to the eyes, and repulsive to the mind ? and do you imagine that their respect for the visible head of the Roman Catholic religion was so much augmented, that they went away improved or even satisfied ? As a friend, I advist^you not to expose this idol of the faithful to their view too often, for fear that they may discover its deform- ities, or their own fallacy. If you do not wish to have your own works undermined and perhaps blown up,send away as soon as possible, or shuf-up as closely as you decently can, the Roman Pontilf. Without the least intention of hurting your pride, vanity, or policy, I tell you with sin- cerity, that by his consecration of you as an Emperor, he certainly has lost a great deal of the veneration formerly paid to the tiara and to his holy pftice. " As to your menaces of banishing me from your pre,- sence, or of exiling me to the country seats of my husband in Italy, when you call to your remembrance that you alone have made me what I am, and such as I am, I do not fear them much. I do not think it possible that you could thus treat a sister who is and has always been your confidential and trusty friend ; whom you converted loan atheist, and seduced to become incestuous ; who, without your reasonings and your persuasion, might still have been among the number of the select pure and chaste few\ But I see that what I say affects you, and I believe even afflicts you, let us therefore embrace each other and make peace ; as, however, the ratifications of treaties of peace are always accompanied with presents, I expect from you something more substantial than an embrace." — The Emperor im- mediately took from a closet a diamond necklace, worth half a million of livres (20,0001.) which he fastened round the ivory neck of the Princess, assuring her, " that when in future displeased with her words or transactions, he should not use his own power, but apply to her own feel- ings." The same day the Prince of Borghese was made a grand officer of the Legion of Honour, and was presented ^SO REVOLUTIONARY TLUTARGH. with a watch set with diamonds, as valuable as the neck- lace given to his wife.* ^ "'^he Princess Borghese is now (1805) in her twenty- eighth year, and has been married two years to her present husband, and was three 37ears the wife of General Le Clerc, who died in the spring of 1803, by whom she had two sons, who have survived him. The Prince of Borghese is not yet a father. Her yearly allowance from her brother amounts to four millions oflivres; her diamonds, plate, pictures, china, &c. are esteemed worth teti millions ; and iier property in the funds or in estates, is calculated to be Worth above fifteen millions, of which ten millions were left her by her former husband, of his plunder in Portugal and St. Domingo. As well as all her brothers and sisters, bhehas her chamberlains, maids of honour, lords and ladies in waiting, equerries, and pages ; but she has not, as all her other Imperial relatives, a bishop for an almoner, or grand vicars for her chaplains ; she is, however, the only Imperial Highness on whom Napoleone has bestowed a suit of elegant apartments in the castle of St. Cloud. At her former marriage, according to the Livre Rouge hy Bourrienne, the now Princess Borghese obtained one million of livres for an establishment, half a million for going to St. Dcmin.2:o, three hundred thousand livres as an- nuities for some of her husband's relations, presents, jewels, &c. for six hundred thousand livres; and she enjo3^s the same sum of six hundred thousand livres as a yearly pen- sion during her life. *ln LesNouvelles a la Main, Ventosr, an xiii. No 3, p. 4, ct seq. from which the above particulars are translated, it is st&ted that they were written by the Princess herself, and circulated by her, to shew her influncc over her brother* £6i GENERAL MURAT, BKOTHER-IN-LAW OF BUONAPARTE. C'est du sein des sifflets. Que naissent les succes. Since the destruction of the Roman empire by the Goths, Huns, and Vandals, no political convulsions have, in so short a time, brought forv^^ard from obscurity so many Jov7 and unknovi'n individuals as revolutionary France. During the last twelve years more persons have appeared upon her bloody stage, who, from their more or less inter- esting posts, have unexpected!}^ become the objects of public curses, curiosity, inquiry, or conversation, than in the twelve preceding centuries. Not only every year, but ahuost every month, has changed the performers, though not the scene ; and men who but lately were regarded as the underlings of this shocking theatre, start suddenly for- ward, usurp the place of the first rate tragedians, proscribe, crush, or butcher their predecessors, and rule with an iroa rod until, in their turn, we see them overpowered, dead, or dethroned. Republican tyrants have been killed by repub- lican tyrants : Brissot, Condorcet, Petion, and their ac- complices, were guillotined or outlawed by Danton, Ro- bespierre, and their blood-hounds ; who after devouring each other, were nearly annihilated by the Barras, by the Talliens, by the Merlins, by the Rewbels, &c. who, in their turn, were removed or exiled by Buonaparte. Un- fortunately, the republican tyranny has survived them all ; the republican scaffolds erected in the year I, are yet standing in the year 12 ; and if the regicide Maximilian Robespierre murdered one Bourbon in 1793, the poisoner and assassin Napoleon Buonaparte butchered another Bour- bon in 1804. If in 1795, the regicide Director Barras poi- soned in the Temple, his rival, Louis XVII, in 1804 the abominable First Consul Buonaparte strangled in the same £62 THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. prison his rival, General Pichegru ; and the republican dungeons contain as many innocent victims under the reign of terror in Buonapartes Consulate, as they did- under that of Robespierre's vile Committee of Public Safety. General Murat, who stands foremost among the many iactive and guilty instruments or accomplices of Buona- parte, is the son of a water-carrier at Pans, who, for some crime, to save himself from the search of the police, fled into the mountains of Dauphiny, where he joined a gang of smugglers and coiners, and vvhere General Murat was born in 1764."^ Being accused of belonging to that corps of brigands commanded by the famous captain of smugglers Mandrin, Murat's father was tried at Valence, and there broken upon the wheel in May ifbY) : and young Murat was sent to the orphan-house at Lyons, where he remain- ed, until an actor of the name of St. Aubin took him as an errand boy procured him to be a Garcon du Theatre^ or a servant attached to the theatre in that city, and paid, besides, a master for teaching him to read and write. Being of an intriguing disposition and good appearance, he easily insinuated himself into the favour of the principal actresses, and was in 1780, upon their recommendation, permitted to appear upon the stage, first in the parts of valets, and afterwards in those o^ petits maitres ; but in neither was he «uccessful, wanting manners, memory, and application. He was, however, endured until 17S(), when, being hissed while playing the Marquis, in the comedy called he Circle lie dared to threaten the spectators by his gestures. From that time hisses pursued him so much whenever he pre- sented himself, that he was obliged to quit the stage ; and after leaving Lyons secretly to avoid the demands of his creditors, he enlisted in the regiment of cavalry called Royal Allemugne, which was with other corps ordered to the neighbourhood of Paris, when, in 1789, Orleans, La Fayette, and other rebels of the Constituent Assembly, «et up the standard of revolt against their King: he was *It is said that Murat is the son of a corporal in the Guet,and was in I7yO, a soldier of ihe regiment of Flanders ; but several raore authentic works quoted heraft^er, giv# him the parentage, &c. related here. tHE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. m &mong the few men of that loyal regiment whom their emissaries seduced, and he deserted when it was encamp- ed in the Elysian Fields on the 12th of July. After the capture of the Bastile had completed the Revolution, and several companies of the King's guard had joined the 'Parisians in arms, a National Guard under the command of La Fayette was decreed, in which Murat was made a corporal. In the plots and disagreements of different factions he always assisted the Terrorists : and in return, Santerre promoted him to^a Lieutenancy in the battalion of St. Antoine, of which that brewer then had the com- mand. On the 20th of June, 1792, he accompanied hii patron and the brigands who insulted the unfortunate Louis XVI. and his family in the Castle of theThuilleries, "where he was heard to repeat : Louis, tu es un traitre, il nousfaut ta tete ;* and when the courageous Madame Eli- zabeth said : " Are you not ashamed to insult the most patriotic of Kings with such language?" he impudently answered: Tais toi coquine, autrementjete coupe en deux.f The next day Santerre advanced him to be his aid-de- camp ; and as such he was employed on the 10th of August in the attack of that dreadful day, which made the best of Princes the most wretched of prisoners, by changing the throne into a dungeon. Marat, Danton,Mehee, Tallien, and other assassins, who prepared the massacres of the prisoners, regarded Santerre as a man possessing little or no character: they therefore sent him on an expedition to Versailles, that he might be absent when these cruelties were perpetrated ; and the command of different districts of the city of Paris was con- fided to men as barbarous as themselves. Murat headed the troops who on the 2d, 3d, and 4th of September, of the same year guarded the prison called La Force; where, with other innocent persons, the beautiful Princess of Lam- balle was butchered, and a refinement of savage barbarity was exercised on her person, even when a corpse, almost * Louis, thou art a traitor ; we must ha^e thy head ! t Hold thy tongue b — h, otherwise I will cut thee in two. 264 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. incredible, if it were not authenticated.* For these infa- mous and ferocious deeds he was promoted by Marat to be a Colonel. But, instead of going to the frontiers and com- batting the enemies of his country, he remained at Paris, denounced at the clubs, and plotted in the committees. On the llth of December, when Louis XVL was carried from the Temple to be interrogated at the bar of the Na- tional Convention ; and on the ^Ist of January, 1793, when the regicide members of that Assembly sent the most virtu- ous of sovereigns and of men to die like a criminal ; the gens d'armes of the escort were commanded by Murat, who had passed the night before on duty in the Temple, regarded then as a post of confidence and oihonour : In March, during the pillage of the grocers shops, he Avasa Secretary in the Jacobin Club, and signed with Marat the proclamation of the 10th, addressed to the citizens sans- culottes at Paris, inviting them to do themselves justice for the cifistocracy of the bankers, merchants, and shop-keepers, *' If you want money," expresses this curious proclama- tion, *' you know where the bankers live ; if you stand in need of clothing, visit the clothiers ; and if you have no other means to procure yourselves coffee, sugar, soap, &c. fraternize with the grocers. What you take from them is only your property restored to you, and of which you and your brethren have been robbed by their aristocratical cupidity. In May he was president of the Club of the ^Cordeliers ; and in a speech printed in Marat's paper, Uami dn Peuple, of the 25th of the same month, he de- mands the heads of sixty-nine politicians of BrissoVs and Roland's factions as the sole promoters of the defeats of the armies, and of the troubles at Lyons, Bonrdeaux, and Mar- seilles ; accomplices with Pitt and Cohourg, as well as with Dumourier. After the revolution of the 31st of May, and the victory which the terrorists gained on the two following days over the moderate party, Santerre obtained the command of an * All the particulars of Murat's birth, &c. and transaction* until 1796, are taken from Les Annates dtr Terrorisme, and Le Recucil d* Anecdotes. In the latter, chap xi. page 97, it is said, that he ordered the head of the princess of Lamballe to be car- ried to the Queen, with whom she was a favourite; and had a wig made of her hair, which he cut otT before she was cold. ^ tpHE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. oqs trmy of 14,000 men, with whom he marched agahist the royalists of La Vendee ; and Murat, who was then advan- ced to a general of brigade, commanded the cavalry ; but, either from misfortunes or from incapacity, he was conti- nnally routet state prison. When one neutral and independant country in Italy had already been unlawfully attacked, as Buonaparte advanced with his armed banditti, all other weak states might, in iU invasion and subversion, read their own destiny. The vi- olent hatred of this General against England, has shewn itself from the first month that his crimes and fortune eleva- ted him into notoriety. 7'he Grand Duke of Tuscany, af- ter unwillingly renouncing his neutrality in 1793, renewed, on the 9th of February, 1795, his former treaties vyith France; a French minister resided at Florence; and the South of France, sutfering from a famine, was liberally provided with supplies from Leghorn. But advantageous as the neutrality of Tuscany was to the French Republic, and sacred as the ties should have been which united these two Governments^no sooner bad the Genoese territory been invaded, terrified, and plundered, than Buonaparte gave ordera for one division o*" his army, under the command of Generals Vaubois and Murat, to advance by forced march- es toward Leghorn, cmd to seize upon that city, the rich depot of Englivsh product and industry; and on the 2Sth of June his orders were executed by these Generals, who on that day occupied all the forts; and, in a proclamation, declared all British property in this neutral place to be confiscated to the French Republic. In some few days more/finesj imprisonment, and even death, was inflicted THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY, 26g on ^11 persons who did not make fair declarations. The consequence was, that in twelve days, or before the 11th of July, according to the pamplet called Les Crimea des Republicams en Italic, p. 177, General Murat carried away from Leghorn 500,000 sequins, or 250,000/. ; a sum of mo- ney that he no doubt more than shared with his Comman- der, who, by this robbery ,from which British subjects were the chief sutferers, had an opportunity to gratify two of hi$ many nohle passions : his spiteful malice against this coun- try, and his unbounded cupidity every where ! in Italy a* in Germany, in Europe as in Africa. On the 18th of the same month. General Murat com- manded [the attack to the left, on the entrenched camp of the Austrians near Mantuaj and succeeded in carrying it. For several weeks gained almost daily advantages over the Imperial General Wiirmser, who commanded an harassed, defeated, dispirited and inferior ai'my. In the retreat which this General was forced to make on the 9th of September, Murat pursued him at the head of a corps of chasseurs ; and on the 11th tried to cut otf his retreat towards Ceva, But after having routed several divisions of the enemy, he was repulsed in his turn,though superior in number.Rallying, however, and continuing the attack, he was wounded in an engagement on the 15th, where the courageous Austrian veteran charged at the head of the light troops of his army. This wound forced him to demand leave of absence, and he resided at Milan until December, when he re-assumed his former station in the blockading corps round Mantua. During the campaign of 1797 he displayed the same ac- tivity. On the 14th of January, at the head of a demi- brigade of light infantry, he advanced by Monte-Baldo, forced the Austrians, who occupied La Corona, routed them after a very obstinate resistance, and obliged their cavalry to cross the Adige by swimming; and he contri- buted not a little by his indefatigable vigilance to the sur- render of Mantua. Notwithstanding the astonishing cou- rage and frequent sorties of General Wurmser, this city was forced by famine and disease to open its gates to the French republicans, by a capitulation signed on the 2d of February the same year. The defence of this place, which excited the admiration of the enemy, and the praise of 270 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. Buonaparte himself, cost the Austrians 24,000 men; and 22,000 Frenchmen perished in the ditFerent engagements during the siege and the blockades, of wliom 9000 are cal- culated by the author of the Campaigns in Italy of 179(5 and 1797, to have been killed in fighting under Murat. After the reduction of Mantua, Buonaparte ordered some divisions of his army to invade the defenceless Papal ter- ritor}^ ; but upon the unexpected approach of the Arch- duke Charles towards Italy, with a small, but well-aftected and well-disciplined body of troops, the French Comman- der postponed his intention of dethroning the Sovereign Pontiff, whom he obliged, however, to sign a humiliating and ruinous peace. On the 24th of February, Murat was ordered to attack the enemy, strongly fortified near Foy ; where, after being repulsed twice, and having two horses killed under him, he finally succeeded ; though he on this occasion had more men killed, than the number of Aus- trians whom he combated and vanquished; but he, like most other republican generals, has justly been reprobated for the profusion with which they squandered away, often unnecessarily, the lives of their soldiers. Had he, after being repulsed once, waited half an hour only before he renewed the assault, according to the last quoted author, seven hundred Frenchmen less had perished on that day; as the Austrians were preparing to evacuate their entrench- ments when they were attacked a second and third time. Upon the determination of Buonaparte to penetrate in- to Carinthia, many petty skirmishes took place between the advanced posts of the Imperialists and the French un- der the Generals Murat, Belliard, and Killermann. The Archduke, already under the necessity of acting on the defensive, in continuing, however, to retreat, avoided as much as possible any serious engagements; and therefore in crossing the Taglimento cut down the bridges behind him, and threw up entrenchments, which extended from the passes of the mountains to the neighbourhood of Bel- ;^rado. In this position the young prince halted for some days, determined to dispute the passage of that river, which, though naturally impetuous and rapid, might then be ford- ed, the stream being greatly diminished, in consequence of the severity of the frost in the mountainous regions. THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 271 Taking advantage of this fortunate circumstance, Buona- parte, on the Ifith of March, ordered Murat at the head of one division, and Duphot heading another, to cross the ford, so as to advance against the right of the enemy's en- trenchments, while the troops under General Gqieux exe- cuted the same operation in a dinerent quarter. Murat and Du pilot precipitated themselves nearly at the same time into the water, and gained the opposite bank, where the French infantry was repeatedly, but ineffectually, char- ged by the Austrian horse, ^w horn they received, without flinching, on the points of their bayonets ; but it was prin- cipally to the murderous fire of their artillery, that the republicans were indebted for this day's victory, as the cannon were stationed so as to shower down such terrible and incessant discharg.es of grape-shot on the foe, that all opposition soon became ineffectual. The Austrians, how- ever, still presented an undaunted front, fearless of danger and of death. But Murat and Guieux having penetrated to the village of Cainin, where the Archduke had establish- ed his head-quarters, they fell into some disorder, and re- treated towards the mountains. On the 19th, in pursuit of the vanquished enemy, Murat distinguished himself again at the passage of Lizonzo, where he had a horse killed un- der him, and his clothes pierced with bullets. After the preliminaries of Leoben had been signed, Buo- naparte, with his usual treacherous policy, overturned the Republic of Venice ; and while the definitive treaty was negotiating at Campo Formio, he first intrigued to change this form of government, and afterwards openly attacked the independant and neutral republic of the Grisons and of the Valteline. Murat was ordered by him in September, 1797, to march with a column towards the frontiers of the Valteline, and to settle the difierences between these two States. After some previous plunder aiul requisitions, Murat published a declaiation, " That considering the many wrongs of the Grisons towards their ally, and the una» nimous desire of the citizens of the Valteline, this latter coun- try was incorporated with the Cisalpine Republic," Such, however, was the unanimity, that the very day, September f26, when this impertinent and false declaration appeared, this republican General ordered ^29, of the most respect- able citizens, who had formerly occupied places as magi^ ST2 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. irates, to be tried as conspirators, by military commission, for protesting against tliis union with the Cisalpine Repub- lic, and they were all shot the very next day. Such has been, and will always be, the conduct of revolutionary Frenchmen wherever they penetrate. Of the timid and cowardly they make slaves — of the traitors, friends — the patriots they butcher — the rich they pillage : plots gene- rally precede them — tyranny enters with them — ruin and wretchedneFs remain behind them ; and the curses or detes- tation of the good and the virtuous, of the religious and of the moralists, accompany them both under their triumphal arches and to their graves. In November, when Buonaparte left Italy, and accord- ing to the treaty of Campo Formio, a congress for the pa- cification, or rather partition, of the German Empire, was assembled at Rastadt, he went by way of Switzerland, where he sent Murat to prepare for his reception, and to gain information of the public spirit, previous to executing the plans of destruction which the Corsican had formed against this once prosperous Republic. This mission was delicate and difficult, because Buonaparte was disliked and suspected by the Swiss democrats, and despised, if not ab- horred by the aristocrats. Murat, however, by intimidating some by threats, deceiving others by specious promises, and buying over others with asmall part of the plunder of Italy, procured his Chief to be received with the same honours as are paid to Sovereigns. Deputations flattered, guns were fired, and cities illuminated; and the deluded Helvetians entertained, treated, feasted, complimented, and extolled u petty villain, to whom, from the scenes of horror that he had just left, their innocence, quiet, and happiness, were not only reproaches, but incitements so much the sooner to bury their independanceand riches in the rubbish of Italy and Germany. Murat was now so greatly advanced in the good graces of his commander, that when the latter chose his compa- nions for the invasion of Egypt, the province of another friendly autl neutral state, the former was the fourth upon the list of Generals which he presented, not to the appro- bation, but for the in for/nation of the directory. In Egypt he always attended Buonaparte, and generally dined with THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 27^ him every day. He was of the expedition into Syria in the spring of 1799, and commanded one division, consisting of the cavalry, during tiie memorable siege of St. Jean d'Acre, whilst the other four divisions of the French army were headed by Generals Kleber, Regnier, Lannes, and Bon. At; the battle of mount Tabor, on the 16th of April that year^ while Buonaparte was burning the Naplonsian village, and killing such of the inhabitants as he suspected of havino' appeared in arms against him, Murat chased the Turks from Jacob's bridge, and su-rprised the son of the Governor of Damascus. At the battle ofAboukir, on the 25th of July following, the light wing, consisting of 4000 cavalry, and nine battalions of infantry, with some artillery, was commanded by Murat, v/ho after their defeat, cut off the retreat of the Turks, who, according to General Berthier's report, stnick with a sudden terror at being surrounded on every side with death,precipitated themselves into the sea, where no less than ten thousand perished by musquetjy, grap€^ shotf and the leaves. In the next month, when Buonaparte unexpectedly and basely deserted the French army in Egypt, Murat was one of the four Generals whom he selected to accompany him in his flight. On this disgraceful subject General Dugua, at present a Consular Prefect, writes the following remarks, copied from his letter to the Director Barras : — " I shall say but little to you on the departure of the General ; it w^as only communicated to those who were to accompany him : \t was precipitate. The army was thirteen days icith- out a Commander-in-chief. There loas not a sous in any of the military chests ; no part of the service arranged ; the enemy, scarcely retired from Aboukir, was still before Da* mieta. I confess to you, Citizen Director, I could never have believed that General Buonaparte would have abaii^ doned us in the condition in which we were ; without money without powder, without ball., and many of the soldiers with- out arms. Debts to an enormous amount y juore than a third of the army destroyed by the plague, by the dysentery, by ophthalmia, and by the war ; that which remains almost naked, and the enemy but eight days march from us. What- ever may be told you at Paris, this description is but too true.'* Such are some of the particulars of the last infamous K k m REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH actions of Buonaparte, as a General-in-chief of the army in Egypt, and of which Murat shared the infamy. When the annihilation of that constitution was deter- mined upon, which Buonaparte had so often sworn to de- fend and obey, Murat, in the confidence of his friend, re- ceived, first, the command over the posts near the Coun- cil of Five Hundred ; and when the revolution was eftected which seated the usurper upon the throne of the Bourbons, the command over the Consular Guard. To bind more firmly those bands which united these two loorthies, Buo- naparte gave him in marriage his sister Caroline Buona- parte, who, in 1797, had been betrothed to General Du- phot, murdered in an insurrection provoked by Joseph Buonaparte at Rome, on the 27th of December that year. What' had become ofMurat*s former sans-culotte wife is not known for a certainty. In a pamphlet called " La Sainte Famille,'* it is said he had been divorced in 1795 ; and in another pamphlet, ** Lettre cCun gentilhomme Fran- cois a Vusurpaleur Corse" it is reported that she had died of hard drinking. In the spring of l800 an army of reserve was collecting near Dijon, under the command of General Berthier, and Murat was appointed one of his lieutenant-generals. After the negligence of General Melas had permitted this army to cross the Alps and to enter Italy, the Austrians were de- feated atMontebello on the lOlh of June, and the next day General Murat, who commanded the advanced guard, suc- ceeded in driving them across the Bormida. At the battle of Marengo on the 14th, he led on the cavalry, and, though at the onset completely routed, rallied again ; and when the valorous General Desaix took advantage of the imbe- cility of the Imperial General, he, with Generals Mar- mont and Bessieres, pierced the third and last line of# the Austrian infantry ; in consequence of which a defeat en- sued, and the horse infantry, fled promiscuously towards one of the bridges laid across the Bormida. But such was the undaunted courage of the Imperialists, deserving to be . headed by a more able chief, that the rear-guard presented a rcgular front, though Murat cut many of them to pieced in protecting valourously the retreat of the main body. THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 275 On his return to Paris in August, he found the scanda- lous boasting of his brother-in-law Lucien, concerning an ince'^.tuous intrigue carried on with Madame Miirat, the common topic of conversation. Three duels during two months were the consequence ; and had not the First Con- sul interfered, and for this and /or some other offences, re- moved Lucien from the Ministry to the Interior, and sent him in disgrace as Ambassador to Spain, Murat would ei- ther have been divorced from hisv/ife, perished himself, or killed his brother-in-law. ^Twelve months absence of Lu- cien, and even an apology on his arrival from Madrid, in 1801, did not produce a reconciliation with Murat, who challenged, fought, and wounded him again. To put an end to these family quarrels, Napoleoiie Buonaparte pro- moted Murat to the command in chief over the French army in Italy, or,which is the same, made him Viceroy over the Italian and Ligurian Republics,and over the revolutiona- r}^ kingdom of Etruria. His wife accompanied him ; and when he was last December recalled to Paris, Lucien was first sent off to plot at Naples,and afterwards ordered to visit his senatories on the Rhine, and to travel in Germany, so discordant is yet the fraternity, between these two brother Septembrizers, of whoni may be trul)^ said ; II faut rendre justice a Pun et I'autre membra, lis ont ete parfaits les deux et trois Septembre, During Murat's reign in Italy, his manner of living was more expensive and more sumptuous, his retinue more brilliant, his staff more showy, his palaces were more magnificent, and his guards more numerous, than those of any lawful European Sovereign, and hardly surpassed by the Corsican usurper at Paris. He introduced at Milan nearly the same etiquette that prevailed at the Thuilleries and at St. Cloud. Madame Murat had her maids of ho- nour, her routes, her assemblies, her petit aud grand entree, her petits souptrs, and her ^rand circles ; as lier husband had his pages, his prefects of palace, his aids-du-camp, his military reviews,his diplomatic audiences, his presentations, his official dinners, his sallies of humour against foreign Ministers, and his smiles of complaisance to his minions ; with all the other farago of the pedantic, insolent, affected. 276 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. but revolutionary liaut ton, introduced by the upstart and foreign tyrant of the French Republic. After Buonaparte's second visit to the army on the Coast, t\here his Admirals as well as his Generals tried to con- vince him of the danger, if not the absurdity, of attempt- ing an invasion with his flotilla, which two or three of our small craft kept blocked up; to occupy the public atten- ticn and to divert the discontent which dela}^ or disap- pointment must excite among his soldiers, who had alrea- dy been ten months devouring the riches of Great Britain, and regarding her conquest as easy and certain, a plot was necessary to be invented. The treachery of the spy Mehee, and the impudence and indiscretion of others, unfortunate^ \y procured him documents enough to cause his French slaves to think it not only probable but certain. If all oc- currences during last winter are remembered, and if the changes and promotions, and every thing else which has been known of his internal as well as external policy, be considered, little doubt remains but that the arrest and disgrace of Moreau, the death of the Duke of Enghien, and the publication of the pretended conspiracy in Febru- ary 1804, hud been determined upon in December ISOo. In that month Moreau's base enem}^ Jourdan, was nomi- nated Commander-in-Chief in Italy, and his impertinent and cowardly calumniator, Junot, Commander-in-Chief over the corps d' Elite of the Army of England : Louis Buo- naparte received a command in the Camp on the Coast ; Joseph Buonaparte was sent to Brabant, and Murat recal- led from Italy to be the Governor of Paris, and Conmiand? fLr i)i' the Army of the Interior, I'll this post Murat continues the same pageantry, osten- tation, profusion, and pomp, as in that be had resigned in Italy; which evinces that he is certain of no resistance in the execution of the revengeful, political, or ambitious schemes of his brother-in-law the First Consul ; but that Frenchmen WMJI see with the same indiflerence, or sile/it indignation, the condemnation of Moreau, as they did tharbarous murder of the Duke Enghien. THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 277 General Murat was the person who had the command of the murder of the Duke of Enghien, we deem the particulars of that horrid act to be worthy of perusal. MURDER OF THE DUKE OF ENGHIEN". On the 15th of March 1804, the armed banditti of the Corsican usurper violated the independanceof the German empire, by forcing the Duke Enghien from Ettenhein ■where he had resided for some time ; they carried him the same day to Strasburg where he remained shut up in the citadel until the 17th; when orders were received by the telegraph from Paris, that he should be immediately car- ried to that city, a distance of near 400 miles» He travel- led day and night, and was escorted from relay to relay, by the gens d'armes, a corps of French thief-takers, spies, and informers. He was chained hand and foot the whole way. At six o'clock in the morning of the 20th he arrived at Paris, where he was first carried to the Temple, as if it were only to shew him a prison in which so many of his royal relatives had suffered, and which they had left only to perish ; and after vizards to the castle of Vincennes, where, by the orders of Buonaparte, a mock tribunal, under the appellation of a Special Military Commission, had been convened. At nine o'clock in the forenoon, though almost fainting, from want of nourishment, and almost asleep from want of rest, he w^as carried before the assassins, mem- bers of this military commission, who, at eleven o'clock, barbarously passed the following sentence : SPECIAL MILITARY COMMISSION, Formed in the First Military Division by virtue of a Decree of Government dated the 19th March, I2th year of the Uepublic, one and indivisible, JUDGMENT, In the name of the French People This day, 20th March, 12th year of the Republic : The Special Military Commission, formed in the first military division, by virtue of a decree of Government of 278 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. the date of the 19th March, 12th year, composed accow]- ing to the law of the oth September, year a, of seven members, that is to say : Citizens Hulin, General of Brigade, Commander of the fort grenadier guards, President; Guiton, Colonel, Com- mander of the 1st regiment of Cuirassiers; Bazancourt, Colonel, Commander of the 4th regiment of light infan-* try. Ravier, Colonel, Commander of the 18th regiment of the infantry of the line. Barrois, Colonel, Commander of the 96th regiment of ditto. Rabbe, Colonel, Commander of the 2d regiment of the municipal guard of Paris. D'Autencourt, Captain Major of the gens-d'armerie d'elite, performing the functions of Captain Reporter. Molin, Captain in the 18th Regiment of infantry of the line. Register: all appointed by the General in Chief, Mu- rat. Governor of Paris, and commanding the first military division; which president, members, reporter, and regis- ter, are neither related nor allied (o each other, or the ac- cused, within the degree prohibited by the law. The Commission convened by order of the General ii] Chief, Governor of Paris, met in the castle of Vincennes, in the apartment of the Commander of the place, for the purpose of trying Louis Antoine Henri de Bourbon, Duke D'Enghien, born at Chantilly upon the 2d of August, 1772, about 5 feet six inches high, fair hair and eye-brows, oval face, long, well made, grey eyes inclining to brown, small mouth, aquiline nose, the chin a little pointed, anc| well turned. Accused, 1st, of having carried arms against the French Republic; 2d, of having olVered iiis services to the English Government, the enemy of the French people ; 3d, of hay- THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. stQf ing received and accredited agents of the said Government — of having procured for tbem the means of maintaining an understanding in France, and having conspired v^-ith them against the internal and external safety of the State ; 4th, of having placed himself at the head of an assemblage of French emigrants, and others in the pay of England, formed in the countries of Fribourg and Baden ; 5th, of having maintained a correspondence in the tovvn of Stras- burgh, tending to stir up the neighbouring departments, for the purpose of effecting there a diversion in iavour of England ; (5th, of being one of the favourers and accom- plices of the conspiracy planned by the English against the life of the First Consul, and intending, in case of the suc- cess of that conspiracy, to enter France. The Sitting having been opened, the President ordered the Reporter to read all the documents ; as well those in the charge as those in the defence. The papers having been read, the President ordered the guard to bring in the accused, who was introduced free, and without irons, before the Commission. Being interrogated as to his christian andsur-names, age, place of birth, and residence: He answered, Louis Antoine Henri de Bourbon, Duke of Enghien, asjed 32 years, born at Cliantilly, near Paris, having quitted France on the 10th July, 17Sy. After having interrogated the accused through the me- dium of the President, with respect lo every part of the contents of the charge against him : having heard the Re- porter in his report and in his conclusions, and the Accus- ed ill his means of defence ; after the latter had declared that he had nothing to add in his justification, the Presi- dent demanded of the members, whether they had any ob- :iervation to make. Upon their answer in the negative, and before he put it to the vote, he ordered the accused to withdraw. The accused was then conducted back to pri- son by his escort : and the Reporter, the Register, as also 1 280 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. the citizens who attended as auditors, retired at the desire of the President. The Commission having deliberated in private, the Pre- sident put tlie following questions : Louis Antoine Henri de Bourbon, Duke of Enghien, accused, 1st, Of having carried arms against the French Republic — Is he guilty ? 2d, Of having offered his services to the English Govern- ment, the enemy of the French People — Is he guilty ? 3d, Of having received and accredited about him agents of the said English Government ; of having procured for them the means of keeping up an understanding in France ; of having conspired with them against the internal and ex- ternal safety of the State — Is he guilty ? 4th, Of having put himself at the head of a body of French emigrants and others, in the pay of England, form- ed, upon the frontiers of France in the countries of Fri- bourg and Baden — Is he guilty ? 5th, Of having kept up a correspondence in Strasburgh, tending to procure a rising of the neighbouring depart- ments, to effect there a diversion favourable to England — Is he guilty ? 6th, Of having been one of the favourers and accomp- lices of the conspiracy framed by the English against the life of the First Consul ; and intending in case of the sue cess of that conspiracy, to enter France— Is he guilty ? The voices being received separately upon each of the above questions, beginning with the junior in rank, the President giving his opinion the last; The Commission declares Louis Antoine Henri de Bour- bon, Duke of Enghien — THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. ^sl 1st, Unanimously, guilty of having carried arms against the French Republic. 2dly, Uftf^imouslVi guilty of having offered his services to the Ei,ovisU Government, the enemy of the French Peo-ple. 3dly, Unanimously, guilty of having received and ac- credited about him agents of the said English Government, of having procured them the* means of keeping up an un- derstanding in France, and of having conspired v^^ith them against the external and internal safety of the State. 4thly, Unanimously, guilty of putting himself at the head of a body of French emigrants and others, in the pay of England, formed upon the frontiers of France, in the countries of Fribourg and of Baden. 5thly, Unanimously, guilty of having kept up a corres- pondence in Strasburg, tending to stir up the neighbouring departments to eft'ect there a diversion favourable to Eng- land. Gthly, Unanimously, guilty of being one of the favour-* ers and accomplices of the conspiracy planned by the Eng- lish against the life of the First Consul ; and intending, in case of the success of that conspiracy, to enter France. Upon this the President put the question relative to the application of the punishment. The voices were received again in the form above mentioned. The Special Military Commission condemns, unanim- ously, to the pain of death, Louis Antoine Henri de Bour- bon, Duke of Enghien, in satisfaction of the crimes of being a spy, of carrying on a correspondence with the ene- mies of the Republic, and of an attempt against the inter- nal and external safety of the State. The said sentence is pronounced in conformity with ar^ tide ii. title iv. of the military code of crimes and punish- ments of ihe 12th November, year 5 ; 1st and 2d section of L 1 2S€ REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. the first title of the ordinary penal code of the 6th of Octo- ber 17yi, thus expressed, viz. 2. Of the 12th November, year 5, " Every '^'-^son what- ever may be his state, quality, or profession, jnvicted of being a spy for the enemy, shall be punished with death.'* Art. 1. Every conspiracy and attempt against the Re- public shall be punished with death. 2. (Of the 9th of October 1791,) Every conspiracy and plot tending to disturb the State by a civil war, by arming the citizens against each other, or against the exercise of the lawful authority, shall be punished with death. Orders the Captain Reporter to read the sentence, in presence of the guard assembled under arms^ to the con- demned. Orders that there shall be sent within the time prescrib- ed by the law, due diligence being used by the President and the Reporter, a copy to the Minister at War and the Grand Judge, the Minister of Justice, and the General in Chief, Governor of Paris. Done, concluded, and judged, without separating, the 3:^id month, day, and year, in public sitting ; and the mem- bers of the Special Military Commission have signed, with the Reporter and Register, the minute of the judgment. Signed — Guiton, Bazaxcourt, Ravier, Barrois, Rabbe, d'Autencourt, Captain Reporter, Molin, Captain Register, and Hulin, President, In this mock trial, accusations as ridiculous as groundless are presented, but no evidence is produced; which proves the truth of the Duke's assertion, when before the tribunal of his murderers, that his senteiice was pronounced before he had left Strashurgh ; that he was only the innocent victim, of the ferocious Buonaparfs rage against the Bourbons. Should other Sovereigns not avenge this atrocious crime, they or their children must sooner or later share the fate THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. Qgs of the Duke afEnghien ; because, whatever rank Buona- parte assumes, he is unable to change his birth ; and guilty as he is, he will consider every good prince, as much a cen- suring enemy as a proud superior, with whom neither an Imperial crown, however brilliant, nor enterprizes, how- ever successful, can make him even an equal. He knows that he is despised and detested by all hereditary Sover- eigns ; and his dark, barbarous, and revengeful soul will never cease to plan subversions, or to commit or command murders, until the grave of ttie last lawful prince is inun- xlated with the blood of the last loyal subject. The Dukeof Enghien shewed himself a worthy descen- dant of the Cond6s,even in the den where he was surrounded by the hired assassins ofthe usurper of his family's throne.His fn'mness was as great during his trial, as his resignation af- ter being condemned, and would have moved even revolu- tionary brigands, had not Buonaparte, from all his ruftian accomplices, procured the most wicked to dispatch a Bour- bon. His Highnesses calmness and courage on this trying occasion were the more surprizing, as during the five pre- ceding days and nights, every indignity had been offered him that could irritate his mind, and he had indured every suffering that could enervate his body. From the time of his arrest, bread and water had been his only nourishment — he had never been once permitted to lie down on abed, to undress, to shave, or to change his linen. From the weight of his fetters, and from the fatigue of a long jour- ne}^ his feet and legs were so swollen that he could hardly stand. For the fourteen hours that he lived after condem- nation, he was shut up with four gens«d'armes d'elite, or chosen spies, in the dungeon at Vincennes, without a bed, and even without a chair. In a corner only was some rot- ten straw, on which he sat down ; but he was prevented from a moment's lest by the noise, questions, and cannibal songs, of these satellites, who had orders to prevent even his slumbers. From the moment of his arrest he ^vas not allowed ei- ther clean linen, a comb, or a razor. After his sentence, be asked three favours of his murderers, two of which were partly granted ; the first was, to be allowed a priest to at- tend him in his lust moments, this was permitted for an f84 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. hour ; the next was, that a lock of his hair might be sent to a lady whom he named ; and the last, that he himself might give the signal when the soldiers were to fire at him, this was positively refused. The clock in the great tower of Vincennes had just struck two, when the drum beat to arms, as a signal for execution ; and the dismal procession began to move in solemn silence from the castle to the park.* A company of grenadiers marched first, then came the guiltless prisoner, faint, languid, and exhausted with fatigue, supported by two soldiers, his hair dishevelled, and his person dirty; near him were the officers of the guard, and another company of grenadiers behind. The night was still,, dark, and heavy, forming a frightful contrast to the blaze of above sixty torches which lighted these midnight murderers to their horrid task. When they had arrived at the fatal spot, near the great oak of St. Louis, the 3'outhful hero seemed for a moment lo recover all his strength and spirit, he entreated that they might not bind his eyes ; and when he heard the language of his assassins, for they were Italians, he ejave God thanks that he was not to be murdered by his countrym.en, and having pronounced these emphatic words, '* O God save my king, and deliver my country from the yoke of a foreigner," the fatal signal was given, they fired, and in an instant he was pierced through with balls, and fell lifeless to the ground. Thus ended a race of heroes, illustrious for their virtues and their valor ; and thus the last branch of a noble tree being cut off, the aged trunk was left to perish, without support or shelter. Bofore day-light in the morning of the 21st, General Murat, under (.scort of Mamelukes, arrived at Vincennes ; he was accompanied by four aids-de-cam p,and Generals Ed- ward Mortier, Duroc, Hulin, and Louis Buonaparte, who had come on purpose from the coast. Each Mameluke held a flambeau ; and Italian troops and gens-d'armes surrounding the castle, prevented the approach of every one, and guarded all the avenues to that part of the wood of Vincennes appointed as the place of execution. The * This account of his execution we have taken from a wit- ness of tlie horrid scene,its correctness-withlhe author's accouut iq this >vork bears marks of authenticity. THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. *>83 Duke being told that his sentence was to be executed, said calmly, " 1 am ready and resigned 1" Ce malheureux heros, sans armes, sans defense^ Voyantcju^il faut perir, et perir sans vengeance, Voulut mourir, du moins, comma ii a"vait vecu, Avec tonic sa gloire et ioutd sa vcrtu. voltaire. When his Highness heard, upon inquiry, that the grena* diers commanded to shoot >him were Italians of Buona- parte's guard, he said, *' Thank God ! they are not French* men — I am condemned by a foreigner, and God be praised that my executioners are also foreigners — it will be a stairi less upon my countrymen! At the place of execution he lifted his hands towards heaven, exclaiming, " May God preserve my King, and deliver my country from the yoke of the foreigner !'' Two gens-d'armes then proposed to tie an handkerchief over his eyes ; but he said, " A loyal soldier, who has so often been exposed to fire and sword, can see the approach of death with naked eyes and without fear. He then looked at the grenadiers, who had already pointed their fusils at him, saying, " Grenadiers ! lower your arms, otherwise you will miss me, or only wound me !" Of the nine grenadiers who fired at him, seven hit him : two pier- ced his head, and five his body. Immediately after his murder General Murat sent his aid-de camp to Buonaparte 5it Malmaison. A small cofFm, filled with lime, was ready to receive his corpse, and a grave had been dug in the gar- den of the castle, where he was buried. Such was the end of the Duke of Enghien, inhumanly butchered in the 32d year of his age, by the barbarous fo- reign usurper of the throne of his family : a prince, who would have illustrated obscurity by his talents, but who often forgot his rank, when the misery of others made it ne^ cessary to descend to that of an individual ; whose human- ity preserved the lives of thousands of republicans van- quished by his valour, and whose generosity relieved those of them in an enemy's country, who were destitute, in pri- sons or suffering on a sick bed ;— they all found in him a second providence. 286 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. In Les Nouvelles a la Mairiy Fructidor 20th, year 12, o? Septembers, 1804, pages 9 and 10, is related, as a known fact at Paris, " that Madame Buonaparte implored her fe- rocious husband, upon her knees, * to spare the hfeof the Duke of Enghein, tu whose father and graiidfather herself and her family owed the greatest obligation, for their pro- tection and generosity during monarchy.' Napoleone let her repeat her request several tunes, while he was march- ing, much agitated, backwards and forwards in the small saloon at Malmaison, without paying attention to what she said. At last, her patience being tired, she threw herself, at his feet, crying ' Pardon ! Pardon !' He then regarded her with tiie most terrible look, which terrified her so much, that she fainted away, and was carried senseless out of the room. In this state of insensibility she remained near three hours, and at her recovery, INIadame Remusat, her lady in waiting, presented her a letter from her husband, full of reproaches for her impolitic and unscasamihle interference, when it v/as a question about un grand coup d'etat, which surpassed her comprehension. He declared, at the same time, that both his and her life and rank depended upon the removal of the Duke of Enghien, more than even upon that of the Duke of Augouleme, because the former had ■many frie^ids in the French armi/y where the latter was hardly known. * That we, besides," added Buonaparte, ' have more to apprehend from his enterprising character than from that of any other Bourbon, the following letter may convince you ;* TO HIS MOST CHRISTIAN MAJESTY LOUIS XVII. KING OF FRANCE AND NAVARRE. " SIRE, " The letter of the Qd IVIarch, with which your majesty has vouchsafed to honour me, reached in due time. Your Majesty is too well acquainted with the blood which flows in my veins, to have entertained a moment's doubt respect- ing the tenor and spirit of the answer which your Majesty calls for. I am a Frenchman, Sire, and a Frenchman /a?7/N ful to his God, to his King, and of course to the oaths that are binding to his honour as much as by his religion. Many others may, perhaps one day envy this triple advantage. Will your Majesty, therefore, vouchsafe to permit rue to annex THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. osi H>y signature to that of the Duke of Au^ouleme, adhering, as I do, with him in heart and soul, to the contents of the note of my Sovereign ? It is in these invofi^iable sentiments, that I remain. Sire, " Your Majesty's most humble, " most obedient, ** and veyfdilhful subject and servant, " (Signed) LOUIS a?itoine henry de bourbon. " Ettenheim, in the Dominions of the Margrave '' of Baden, March 22d, 1803." This letter was written in consequence of the humilia- ting proposal made by the Prussian President, Meyer, at Warsaw, in February 1803, in the name of one legitimate king upon his throne, to another legitimate king in exile, of resigning his hereditary right to the throne of France to the foreign adventurer, the svi'orn and natural enemy to all hereditary sovereignty, who had usurped it by force and fraud, and pree .ved his usurpation by the im- punity that he held out to regicide, and by the national plunder with which he rewarded his criminal accomplices, those who had butchered with him in Europe and poisoned with him in Africa and Asia. In his person the Duke of Enghein was handsome, and of a noble and a graceful figure. The sound ofhisvoicf^ was harmonious, and his expression correct and natural. In his manners he was condscending,in his conversation lively, but becoming. Ever master of himself, his temper w^as al- ways equal and moderate. He was frequently so polite and obliging, that it might have been taken for familiarity, but that air of dignity which never left him, which w^as born with him, and which followed him to the grave. From his youth he was an enemy to idleness, and fond of those exercises which contribute to strengthen the constitution, and to accustom a person intended for a military life to the tatigues of war. Fencing and hunting were often hia amusements before he headed batallions or commanded armies. His courage and capacity were known before they were tried. Nature, as well as education, had made him a general. His brilliant quallities during the first campaign ^a REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. made him distinguished even in the midst of so many he- roes of his family. Faithful to the noble principles of his ancestors ; convinced, with them, that a good general may be defeated, but cannot be taken by surprize, he was de- termined never to be attacked unprepared. He was there- fore always sober, active and vigilant ; hearing all reports, receiving all advices, and attentive even to rumours that were circulated in his camp. He never ceased to observe his enemy, aiid to meditate on their lesser movements, ei- ther to discover or to prevent their projects ; either to turn them against themselves, or to render them of no use by. his defence. Fully aware of that dangerous confidence, which want of rest after long fatigues is often inclined to give, he depended only upon himself to reconnoitre the ground, to estabhsh posts, and to fix the place of rendez- vous in case of sudden attacks. Constantly the first every where, every part of the service equally fixed his attention, particularly what could in any way contribute to the com- forts, or relieve the pains of his soldiers. Though severe with others as with himself, he was always liberal, just, and good, with those who served under him, and therefore soon became their idol. A competent judge of military as well asof all othei' kinds of merit, the Archduke Charles on all occasions extolled his Highness's talent ; admired his cou- rage ; desired and obtained his friendship; and now deplores his untimely loss. If Campagny, the consular emissary at Vienna, has reported what he has heard and seen in that capital, the usurper is informed, that England, Russia, and Poland, are not ihe only countries where loyalty mourns, and where virtue abhors, Buonaparte's atrocities. To the honour of the British nation, the feelings were the same, and unanimous among all classes of people; and the wan- ton murder of the Duke of Enghien has made Bounaparte execrated even by those who hitherto had doubted, pallia- ted, or disbelieved, his former enormous crimes. The motives which impelled Buonaparte to this horrid deed it is not easy to penetrate: he could hardly expect to destroy the whole race of the Bourbons while so many of them remain in different countries ; and without this, the death of one was useless : the most probable motive •items to be that of striking a panic into the rest, and deter ring their adheients frona any other further attempts upou THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. S8^ his life: possibly he might think also, that after removing those nearest the throne the people would not be so much interested for the remainder ; but on the other hand, had he weighed the matter deliberately, he must have found that he was likely to raise himself many powerful enemies among those who were either neuter or his friends, by stri- king at so great an object : lesser men might have passed unnoticed, and been murdered vvith impunity, but when men of exalted rank are put to death, they excite a degree of interest in their fate among those both above and below them, which seldom attaches to meaner objects, and find avengers in all ranks, independant of their moral or politi- cal worth. Buonaparte therefore reasoned ill, if he thought he was adding to his security by the murder of so illustri^ ous a sufferer; for those sovereigns who have perhaps look- ed with indifference on the most flagrant violation of the laws of nations, and the rights of individuals, will probably be roused to vengeance by the cruelty ?.nd injustice exer- cised against one of their own rank or their own family. The sensation which this atrocious murder, and the more secret destruction of Pichegru, occasioned in Paris, may be guessed at by the followmg paper, pasted on the walls by the order of General Murat : — " The governor of PariR recommends to all the officers of the garrison and the national guard, whenever they shall have an opportunity, to enlighten the citizens on the sub- ject of tnany false reports which the ill disposed have en- deavoured to circulate : they have omitted nothing in their power to spread alann ; sometimes they publish that the death of Pichegru was not the result of suicide; and sometimes they dare to affirm that numbers of suspected persons are shot every night. The citizens of Paris ought to know thai military justice, any more than civil justice, cannot be executed without public formality ; and that no guilty person has been condemned by the military tribunals without his sentence being printed and publicly pasted up. The arrests which have taken place, since that of General Moreau, all tend to prove his guilt. Ducorps^ one of the brigands, mentioned in the list published by the M m 290 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. Grand Judge, has been taken at Chartres. To this moment all that the Grand Judge has asserted, and nothing but what he has asserted, is true. Although the governor well knows that idle reports do not occupy the attention of the citizens of Paris, yet he thinks it requisite to recommend to the officers of the national guard who are dispersed in different parts of the city, not to suffer the public opinion to diverge; that of all classes of the people is essentially connected with the confidence and affection which the First Consul has a right to expect from Frenchmen. (Signed) MURAT." Murat has 150,000 livres (60001.) in the month for ap- pointments, as the Governor of Paris, besides hotels fur- iiished at the expence of the Republic for himself, his wife, and his aids-de-camp. 30,000 livres (12501.) are al- lowed him for the open table that he keeps for officers on busines, or on leave of absence in the capital ; and ac- cording to a French publication, when Buonaparte assumes the Imperial diadem ; he is to be declared a Marshal of France, or rather of the Empire of the Gauls, a place for- merly occupied by Princes of the House of Bourbon. In landed property in France and Italy he has laid out seven millions of livres, and his wife's diamonds are valued at four millions. The painful and disgusting task which the author's loy- alty has imposed upon him in delineating this man's life^ as well as those of many of his accomplices, is mixed with the satisfaction, that future ages will not be ignorant of the infamous means to which they owe ther notoriety, their rank,wiid riches ; and this may probably prevent other am- bitious individuals, if they are not entirely deprived of all honcnrable or luoral principles, from attempting to gain advai:cer;ient and obtain affluence in following their foot- steps, by rirnembering that neither an Imperial sceptre, nor the braff^ of Constable, have been able to silence the virtuous D'dgnation of contemporary writers, from whose evidence t'l'.y must expect to be judged by an impartial posterity. THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. Q91 There is something romantic in most of these revolution- ary lives: had Murat been a good actor, he probably would have figured no where but upon the stage. The hisses which his incapacity as a comedian provoked, changed the scene ; and he is become not an indifferent tragedian upon the great political and military theatre of modern Europe, ^99 HER I,MPERIAL HIGHNESS ANNUN. CAROLINE BUONAPARTE, PRINCESS (CI-DEVANT MADAME) MURAT. Sous son legne indolent, bientot tout va changer ; Le bien s'y fait sans gloire et le mal sans danger. "When, in December 1797 the honest man of the Corsi' can famihj^ Joseph Buonaparte, had intergrity and loyalty enough to cause General Duphot to be murdered, in order to furnish a pretext for the pillage of Rome, and for the subversion of the Papal Government, his sister, the present Madame Murat, was betrothed to this general, then one of the most frantic jacobins, and the confidential friend of Napoleon e. Madame Murat had been an apprentice to the mantua- jnaker Madame Rambaud at Marseilles, as v^^ell as her sister the Princess Santa Cruce; but, in 1794, she left that city with anactorfrom Paris, Baptist, who, not being able to provide for her wants, recommended her to a mantua- maker in the Rlie de Montmatre. She had by this actor two children, of whom one is yet alive, and educated by the father, formerly an intimate friend of Napoleone. In ISOO the First Consul presented the hand of this his modest sister to the virtuous General Murat, who had ac- companied him to Egypt, deserted with him from Egypt, assisted him to dethrone his benefactors the Directors, and commanded his guard when a consul. During Buonaparte's campaign in Egypt, the Scanda- lous Chronicle of Paris said, that the present Madame Murat cohabited with her brother Lucien, and had a child by him; and as the depraved Lucien had himself publicly THE BUONAPARTE FAMILY. 203 boasted of this infamy, he has been three times challenged by General Murat, and twice wounded by him, without disavowing or apologizing for his crime. Madame Murat is vanity and affectation itself. All rebels of all countries are her heroes ; and a republic her wishes during the day, and her dreams in the night. Liberty is in her mouth, equality in her heart, and fraternity on her garters. A cup of liberty decorates her hotel, and a tree of liberty her court-yard. ^In her drawing-room are the busts of Gracchus, Brutus, Cato, Brissot, Marat, and Ro- bespierre. In her bed- room, those of Machiavel, Cromwell, and Napoleone. While talking of liberty and equality, however, she is a despot in her house; she is arrogant with her friends, overbearing with her companions, and a tyrant over her lovers. In her dress, and manners, and pretensions : she is an aristocrat, and often a successful rivaf to her sister-in-law Madame Napoleone. To prevent the probably fatal consequences of the jeal- ousy of General Murat against his brother-in-law Lucien, Napoleone sent Madame Murat to reside with her husband at Milan ; where, notwithstanding the great honours shewn her by the Italians, she regretted Paris, and considered herself, as she wrote to the First Consul, " as transported to the European Cayenne,'^ and therefore tormented him with her letters until he recalled her, " to her dear, dear Paris.'* As General Murat does not inspect his wife's con- duct so much as formerly, many think indiffernce has suc- ceeded to jealousy, and that he properly appreciates the real value of her precious person and honourable sentiments. Her suitors are now very numerous ; g.nd in their number the most ridiculous of all is the old debauched senator Roederer, who, according to Les Nouvelles a la Main, by turns, sighs and laughs, sings and cries, writes love letters, and prints tender or flattering verses. In his Journal de Paris of the 31st of October 1803, Roederer, in despair, wiote the following quatrain, ado reu- sed to her husband, — ^4 REVOLUTIONARY PLUTARCH. VERS ADDRESSES AU GENERAL MURAT. Adore Caroline, f et regne surson coeur ; JL'A?nour avec orgueil peut dire a la victoire;, v - / "^ii ^^:'\^ ^ ♦ .^. ^^^ n^ "^. \ rO^ N^ .-I 9. _ S" %0^ 3^ Q, < ...^ .^ ^ ^ ^-^ ;^^ ^>^^^; -^^ <> ^ % .->^s^~^ '^.^^--t^.^^^ ^^^ 0^ cP^' c,"^ ^ J.^^ % t "'i^'-^' >. r.^ ^ ^ '- :^/-^ s -ay ^ cP .^^ 95. *' <^°^ o : •- % -^ ■^ *'''\,r .C^ ^-> ^y> \ .^^' -^ .-^ aO^ -'O.^^^' .*/ oQ\- 0. < ^ ^ *J ^ V ^ 0^ .' ^^o"^ .^^ ^ ^ 9>. ^ ,^.--'\ ^ -^^ js- -fo n_ '// ^'-^ , N ^A^* ^ ' -^ -:^ o'^ .